An Appeal to Reason and Conscience In Defense of the Right of Freedom Of Inquiry in the United States On June 8 the Board of Superintendents of New York City schools closed the schools to 'I'll E NATION, the oldest liberal magazine in the United States. This action was taken without advance notice to THE NATION or to the people of the city, without hearing, and announcement of any kind, cither to the magazine or to the public. The only opportunity afforded to the magazine to defend itself, or to citizens to ne heard, was at a meeting of the Hoard from which the press was excluded, and which was called as the re sult of public protests some weeks after the decision had accidentally become known. Following this proceeding, the board reaffirmed its decision by unanimous vote. Other communi ties thereupon followed suit by similar unilateral action. In Mas sachusetts, THE NATION was banned from the state’s teachers’ colleges by a public official who admitted he had not, It the time of the banning, himself investi gated the reason given by the Stifling Free Expression (Editor’s Note: We’re devoting our entire page today to the pre senting of a single issue. This, we know, is a bit unusual. However, we feel completely justified. In our opinion, the issue at stake here is one about which each student at the University should feel vitally con cerned. What would you sav if the state board of higher education were to suddenly ban a certain magazine from the shelves of the University librarv because the board members had decided that the magazine, in their opinion, had printed objectionable material which you should not read? You’d holler, wouldn’t you? Some one of you would very likely organize a committee to fight for the removal of the ban. On I line 8, the board of Superintendents of the New York city schools shut its doors to THE NATION, the oldest liberal magazine in the United States. Monday of this week 107 prom inent Americans, acting as a special committee, made public a request for the liftingof the ban by issuing a 1700-word docu ment entitled "An Append to Reason and Conscience." Included among the signers of the document is Palmer Hoyt, University graduate, former editor of the Portland Ore gonian. and now publisher and editor of the Denver Post. Other members of the committee include such outstanding Americans as Henry Steele Commager, professor at Columbia university; Dorothy Canfield Fisher, noted author: Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick, religious leader; Sumner Welles, former undersecre tary of state; Dr. Robert M. Hutchins, chancellor of the Uni versitv of Chicago, and Dr. Zechariah Chafee, Jr., professor, I Iarvard law school. Chairman of the committee is Archibald MacLeish, well known author-poet, former assistant secretary of state, and United States representative in UNESCO. The ban was placed on THE NATION because of a series of articles bv Paul Blanshard. for many years commissioner of investigation and accounts in New York under Mayor Fiorello l.aC.uardia. in which Blanshard described and criticized the official position of the Catholic church in such matters as edu cation, science, medicine, marriage, divorce, democracy, and fascism. In challenging the New York board, the document, which appears on this page, draws striking attention to the dangerous consequences to the country if the premises on which the ban was based are accepted. Should these premises be accepted as precedents for the establishing of similar rulings in the United States, this country might one day find itself marching swiftly down the disastrous road toward fascism. A fellow named Hitler not so many years ago used similar methods to stifle opposition to his dreams for a glorious new Germany. The Ori'i'ov D \u.\ Km krai d. published daily during the college year except Sundays, Mondays, holidays, and final examination periods by the Associated Students, l niversity of Oregon. Subscription rates: $J,00 per term and $4.00 per year. Faltered as second-class matter nt the postoffice. Eugene, Oregon. BILL YATES, Editor VIRGIL ll t KEK. Business Manager Don Fair, Managing Editor Tom McLaughlin, Adv. Manager Associate Editors : June Goct/e, Boholee Brophy. Diana Dye. Barbara Iloywood, Boh Feed. Assistant Editor UPPER NEWS STAFF Mike Callahan. Stan Turnbull Co-News Editors ( A nn Gillespie. Sports Editor Vinita Howard, Women’s Editor Boh Funk. Clutroh Editor Don Smith. Assistant Managing Editor Evelyn Nill and Ann Goodman Assistant News Editors Phyllis kohlmeior. Editorial Secretary New York board for its action. The reason was the publication by THE NATION in 1947 and 1948 of a series of articles by Paul Blanchard, for many years Commissioner of Investigations PALMER HOYT ... he signed document. and Accounts of the City of New York in the La Guardia adminis tration. Mr. Blanchard’s articles de scribed and criticized the official position of the Catholic church in such matters as education, sci ence, medicine, marriage, divorce, democracy and fascism. The board stated that there were pas sages in these articles which a Catholic would find objectionable on grounds of faith. It is the opinion of the under signed that the action of the New York Board of Superinten dents raises an issue of the great est gravity to the people of the city and of the country. IT IS NOT AN ISSUE BE TWEEN CATHOLICS AND NON-CATHOLICS. There are Catholics among us and none of us, whether Catho lic or not, have been moved to protest by reason of hostility to the Catholic faith. Neither is the issue raised a mere issue of fact with regard to the articles themselves. Y've agree wan uie uuaiu there are sincere Catholics and men of good will who object on grounds of faith to certain state ments in Mr. Blanchard’s articles. Indeed, some of us who are not Catholics disagree with certain of Mr. Blanchard’s statements. The issue as we see it is the is sue of principle which the board’s action, and 'the board’s state ments in defense of its action, present. The question before the board was not the question of the suit ability of THE NATION as a text book in the city’s schools. The question was whether THE NATION, which had long been one of the periodicals available to New York City students, should continue to be available to them. Destructive Principles In ruling that it should not, and giving its publication of the Blanshard articles as justifica tion. the board in effect enunciat ed two propositions both of yvhich in our opinion are contrary to American ideaso of freedom and destructive of American princi ples. The first is the proposition that any published material regarded, or which could be regarded, as ob jectionable, on grounds of faith or creed by any group in the com munity should be excluded from the community’s schools and school libraries. The second is the proposition that the appearance in any publi cation of mateerial of this kind justifies the suppression in schools and school libraries of the publication as a whole. In the case of a periodical this means that the past publication of such material justifies the suppression of future issues regardless of the general character and record of the periodical. The vice of the second of these two propositions is apparent upon its face. The exclusion from pub lic institutions, by public officials on the basis of particular mate rial published in the past, rather than on the basis of the character of the publication as a whole, cannot be defended even as cen sorship. It is extra-judicial punishment pure and simple, and it involves a power of intimidation and pos sible blackmail in officials of gov ernment which no free society can tolerate and which a free press could not long survive. Vicious Proposition To permit public officials, in their unlimiteed, extra-judicial discretion, to stigmatize an estab lished and respected magazine or newspaper as unfit for students to read because of the publication of a specific article or series of articles, or of particular para graphs in a specific article or se ries, is to confer an arbitrary and dictatorial power which is whol ly foreign to the American tradi tion and to the laws and constitu tion in which the American tradi tion is expressed. The first proposition—that any publication objectionable on R1CHAKU L. NEUBERGER . . . helped form committee grounds of faith to any group in the community should be sup pressed in the schools—though more plausible on its face, is equally vicious in fact. It is a re pudiation, on one side, of the principle of the separation of church and statee. The meaning of that latter ten et, so far as education is con cerned, is that no church may use the public schools as instru ments of its propaganda. To give the churches of the country, or any of their members who might seek to exercise it, the power to determine by simple veto what shall not be available to students in the public schools, or worse, for public officials to exclude au tomatically anything any group might be expected to wish ex cluded, is to do by negative action what the Constitution and courts forbid by positive action. The argument offered in de fense of this revolutionary pro posal is apparently that religion cannot be criticized in American education. THERE IS NOTHING IN AMERICAN LAW OR IN THE AMERICAN TRADITION WHICH -SAYS THAT RELIGION CANNOT BE CRITICIZED IN EDUCATION, NOR DOES THE ' PRINCIPLE OF THE SEPARA TION OF CHURCH AND STATE . INVOLVE ANY SUCH CONSE QUENCE. On the contrary, the American ’ Republic was founded, and the Signers of Document Samuel Hopkins Adams, Dr. Henry A. At- 4 kinson, George Axtelle, Dr. Wade Crawford Barclay, Ralph Bennett, Mrs. Mary McLeod Bethune, George Biddle, Sarah Gibson Bland ing, Isaiah Bowman, Charles C. Burlingham. * Erwin D. Canham, Robert K. Carr, Zechariah Chafee Jr. , Grenville Clark, Henry Steele Commager, Arthur Compton, J. M. Dawson, Dale De- # Witt. W. E. B. DuBois, Mark F. Ethridge, Marshall Field III, Dorothy Canfield Fisher, Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick, Nathan Frank el, Gilbert W. Gabriel, Lewis Gannett, Lloyd K. Garrison. Ray Gibbons, Bishop Charles K. * Gilbert, Virginia C. Gildersleeve, Frank Gold man, Frank Graham, Martha Graham, Er win Nathaniel Griswald, Harold K. Guinz burg, Oscar Hammerstein II. ' > Moss Hart. Arthur Garfield Hays. Rt. Rev, Henry W. Hobson. William Ernest Hocking, Hamilton Holt, Mildred McAfee Horton, Charles H. Houston, Byrn J. Hovde, Palmer Hovt. Charles E. Hughes Jr.. Robert M. Hutchins. Samuel Guy Inman, Alvin John ton, Charles S. Johnson, Howard M. Jones, Alice V. Keliher, Dorothy Kenyon, William Heard Kilpatrick. Leon Kroll, Christopher * LaFarge, Dr. Harry Laidler, Herbert Leh man, Monte Lemann, Max Lerner, Eduard C. Lindeman, Alani Locke, Robert S. Lynd, Marshall MacDuffie. Dr. John A. Mackay. * Archibald MacLeish. Thomas Mann. Ben jamin E. Mays, Ralph E. McGill, Millicent Carey McIntosh, Alexander Meicklejohn, Er nest O. Melby, Frederick Melcher. Clyde R. Miller. Perry Miller, Lewte Mumford, Ed- 4 ward R. Murrow, Allan Nevins, Reinliold Niebuhr. Howard W. Odum, Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam. Bishop Edward L. Parsons, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt. Mrs. Henry P. - Russell. Rose Russell, Rose Schneiderman, Budd Shulberg, Lisa Sergio, Charles Sey mour, Dr. Guy Emery Shipler. Paul C. Smith, Arthur B. Springarn. William B. Spofford Jr., Justice Meier Steinbrink, Rex Stout, Clarenee Streit, Harold Taylor, Norris L. Tibbetts. Carl Van Doren, Mark Van Doern, James P. Warburg, Goodwin Watson, Sum ner Welles, Gene Weltfish, James Waterman 1 Wise, Dr. Stephen S. Wise, Louise Leonard Wright. American continent was settled, by people whose actions were in large part an expression of their criticism of certain established religions. The truth is that the suppres sion of ideas impoverishes human life and warps the human mind in an increasing and progressive sickness. Those who practice it are led by the logic of one exclu sion to the tragedy of the next. If the suppression of THE NA TION for having published the Blanshard articles is allowed to stand, and if the propositions up on which it is justified are ac cepted, the consequences to the schools, to the press, and to the vitality of American freedom may well be very serious indeed. Newspapers and periodicals will be obliged to omit news and comment which any group in any denomination, Catholic or other, ' regards as objectionable or run the risk of being suppressed in the public schools, with all that such suppression means in terms of the loss of good name and good will. No Formula The standard of education will become the teaching, not of the truth, but of that part of the truth to which no group objects— with the result that the bigotry and ignorance of minorities will dictate the knowledge of the whole people. Scientific works containing accepted scientific facts about the shape of the earth, the history of the universe and the functions of the human body, objectionable to various de nominational groups, will be withdrawn. The events of the last ten years should have taught us all—the New York Board of Superinten dents included—that there is no escape from the difficult prob lems of our time by suppression. (Please turn to page seven)