,4r mrigalt ailly Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Letters to the Editor s Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail NEWs PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID KNOKE I Supporting Our Boys By Keeping Them Home A N ADVERTISEMENT in Sunday's New York Times heralded the birth of a nev organization with the potential to change both the nature and impact of the anti-draft activity generated by the war in Vietnam. Spawned by the indictments last month of five men on charges of con- spiring to promote draft resistance, the C;vil Liberties Legal Defense Fund will attempt to transcend the narrow grounds of merely supporting the five defendants in the Spock trial. Rather, the Cambridge-based organi- za tion intends to take on the far more ambitious task of raising "money for legal defense of conscientious resisters and their supporters." THE FORMATION of such a draft oriented legal defense group is ex- ceedingly welcome on two distinct planes. On one hand it adds another voice to the outcry against the denial of freedom 'of speech represented by the Spock indict- ments-focusing on advocacy rather than overt actions. But the unique role which can be play- ed by the new group centers on their conception of draft resistance cases on a political as well as a civil libertarian level. A special ad hoc legal defense group is nccessary for draft resistance cases be- cause the traditional libertarian defense organization, the American Civil Liber- ties Union (ACLU), is not structurally NO Comment T.HE FIRST MEETING of the College Sexual Freedom League came off with a loud fizzle last night as only 15 males showed up for the planning session. "I was quite encouraged by the num- ber of phone calls that I received about the League," said the founder, a Win- throp House sophomore, "but I guess too many people were merely curious. I'm very disappointed with Radcliffe's re- sponse to this idea." Since no girls appeared, he decided to cancel the meeting. "That's just not the type of sexual freedom I had in mind," was his explanation. -THE HARVARD CRIMSON February 10, 1968 geared to take on such a politically ac- tivist role. It must be remebered that the ACLU is neither a draft resistance nor an anti- A ar group. They are now-as they have always been--exclusively a civil liberties organization. Hampered by a small budget, the ACLU is concerned furthermore with preceder-t-setting cases rather than un- dertaking to represent large numbers of defendants on relatively similar charges. The new organization recognizes the significance of the draft in a free society, since it is one of the few ways the coercive powers of the government can profoundly alter and even eradicate hu- man lives with little chance of individual resistance. Furthermore, a legal challenge to the existing draft system can bring to the fore many contradictions inherent in' 'the growing confrontation between mili- tary necessity and the maintenance of individual freedom. Despite a growing hesitancy on the part of the judiciary not to impinge on the military options of the executive, the court system still provides the best me- chanism for safeguarding the rights of the individual. THE ORGANIZERS of this new civil liberties group, intend to utilize ag- gressive jurisprudence in addition mere- ly to passively reacting to government indictments. In this way they intend to challenge the government in a series of draft related "show cause why" suits. Consequently the effort at forming a group 6 ttuned to the legal problems and political questions generated by this war 4 epresents one of the most far-reaching and constructive actions taken by anti- war groups to date. An extensive legal challenge to the draft system through the courts like the one envisioned will require the kind of large scale financing reserved previously for political campaigns and marches on the Pentagon. But unlike such traditional --- and wholly unsuccessful-attempts at protest, the massive legal challenge which the Civil Liberties Legal Defense Fund could generate has the potential of transform- ing both our foreign policy and domestic freedoms. --WALTER SHAPIRO Th emilitarized Krean border, across which two tigers eye each other warily, with 50,000 American troops there to guard ... Two Tiers: Arms and the Me'n By DAVID HOUSEZ LIBERATION News Service Editor's Note: This is the first of a three-part series by David Housez, a reporter for LE MONDE DIPLOMATIQUE who has recently returned from both North and South Korea. It is translated by Ellie Dorsey and Raymond Mungo of Liberation News Service. PARIS-More than 20 members of the American eight Army, attached to the UN forces in South Korea, were killed in the demil- itarized zone (DMZ) between the two Koreas in 1967. At the same time, more than 800 encounters between soldiers of South and North heightened the tension at the 38th parallel, Arthur Goldberg recounted at the UN. On Nov. 16, 1967, the North Korean navy confirmed these words by carrying off 12 South Korean fishing boats and 74 crew Smembers at the maritime demar- cation line, increasing tenfold the number of frontier incidents from 1966 to 1967. The tension is growing on the Korean peninsula with the con- frontation of two ideologies, two economies, and especially two armies imposed on a single people. The Republic of North Korea, whose president is Kim Il Sung, has an army of 450,000 men at its command: the air force makes up 30,000 of them and uses more than a thousand Soviet-made planes including MIG 17's and bombers. The navy is 100 ships strong, and 400,000 infantry com- plete the military potential of the North. In case of a conflict, the Chinese liberation armies, based on the other side of the Yalou River (the common frontier of China and North Korea) can be delivered to Seoul in several hours. FACING the Tiger of the North, the Tiger of the South has not neglected the reconstruction of its army since the 1953 armistice, also violating the signed accords. Today more than 650,000 soldiers are in active service, which per- mits this country of 28 million civilian inhabitants and a surface area less than one-fifth that of France to pride itself on the label of the fourth largest armed force of the "free world." Under the Taegueuk, the em- blem of South Korea and symbol of Eastern dualism, are grouped 25,000 "Marines," 15,000 aviators, 20,000 sailors, and 560,000 infan- try. Equipped with HAWK mis- siles, and atomic cannons pro- gressively modernized by the Americans, the First Army is sup- posed to assure the security of the "hot" points of the region. This crack army, with 330,000 soldiers, protects two-thirds of the DMZ and the mountains of the East coast provinces: Gang- weon Do and Gyeongsang Bug Do. The -0 divisions of the Second Army are associated with the First in the rest of the country for de- fense against "infiltration" by "Communist agents of the North," principally in the provinces of the South: Jeolla Nam Do and Jeolla Bug' Do. The navy and air force control surveillance of the fishing zones near the maritime demarca- tion line in the East and Yellow Seas, and two thousand islands off the West coast, another chosen site of North Korean in- filtration. To this army are joined two American divisions which main- tain 45,000 men, the fleets of the Pacific, and especially the U.S. air forces based in Korea or in Japan, at Okinawa and at Fu- kuoka - all of which represents nearly four-fifths of a million soldiers to guard the security of South Korea. A CONFUCIAN story relates the eternal conflict that set the tiger of the North against the tiger of the south, with the latter hoping for help from the "fairy of the mountains.". The South Korean soldiers no longer believe in this "fairy" and at the Seoul military academy or at First Army head- quarters in Wanju, they are taught instead to imitate the Is- raelis in the June six-day war. With their training well-known as physically exacting in tradi- tional combat, the Taekwandu has inspired all the armies of the world by its perfection of self-de- fense methods. The South Korean "Rangers" specialists in isolated combat, use a formation unique in Asia-escalade methods, free call- up, valley crossings on cables-. all well-adapted to geographic conditions in the North. Intensive psychological training aimed at preparing soldiers for two and a half years of anti-Communism is added. The practical work is car- ried out in liaison with the CIA and the police on all South Korean territory by route supervisions, systematic regional investigations, and the vigorous search for North Korean 'infiltrators." If 90 per cent of the equipment of the Korean army is assured by the U.S.A., one cannot accuse the Koreans of ingratitude toward the "Meegou"; their conscience takes them to Vietnam to learn there the handling of the latest "gad- gets" of the Pentagon. SINCE THE dispatch of the 2,000 "doves" with the Dove Unit of general Cho Mun Kwan in April, 1965, Vietnam has received the "Blue Dragons" and the 'Tiger Unit." At the request of Nguyen Cao Ky and of Johnson, President Park agreed in February, 1966, to sup- plement participation of Korean army in Vietnam to 20,000 men, while assuring his country that this number 'would hot be sur- passed. Since then, the manpower has increased to 47,000, to which are added 17,000 Korean non-com- batants, labor used by the Amer- icans, who prefer it to that of the South Vietnamese. Gen. Chae Myung Sin, comman- der-in-chief of the Korean troops in Vietnam, controls 7,000 square kilometers and "protects" 1,200,000 South Vietnamese. Thus his men, like the GI's, benefit from the sub- structure of American combat. In all, one-twelfth of. South Vietnam is in the hands of the Koreans, divided between the "Blue Dragon Marines," the "Tiger Division," and the "White Horse Division." The "doves" were grafted onto U.S. forces in April, 1965. If it is true that the soldiers of the Coun- try of the Calm Morning have since performed exploits for which generals from Saigon to Seoul envy them, a Colonel Pah at the Ministery of National Defense in Seoul gave me this reasons: "The Koreans get better results than the other combattants of the 'Free World' because they are commanded directly by Korean of- ficers, in areas that are reserved for them alone. Not all the Korean officers em- ploy euphemisms, and one of them, when questioned about the astonishing diminuation in the number of prisoners captured by his man inoperations, answered me, irritated by the detail: "We kill them first " There is nothing surprising in the fact that the pacification headed' by the Ko- reans is going at a cracking pace; the NFL does not wish to improve their lack of discrimination. At the special training center of the First Army in Wanju, a Colonel Yoon explained to me the military hopes: "By using 12- month rotations, if the war con- tinues, all the officers and under- officers will profit from this com- bat experience. In a year, we will have nothing more to fear from the North Korean Communists." Sports Money To the Editor: iT'S ABOUT time someone blew the lid on big ten football. Con- gratulations to The Daily for taking on the job. Why a few pri- vileged individuals should be given such concessions by the university and local merchants certainly re- quires an explanation. I suspect the locker rooms and training facilities for big ten athletes are equally plush compared with what the IM building has to offer the general campus population. One wonders just what incentive the local merchants have for sup- porting our team in such a man- ner. Perhaps the 25 cent service charge levied by the theatres is their break-even rate but this is known only to people like man- ager Hoag who will deny every- thing if pressed. Apparently the team does not get enough money from the tuition bite and exhor- bitant ticket prices but must rely on indirect student financing through the local merchants. I believe I enjoy the Saturday football games as much as any- body but in recent years have felt that the sports program was be- coming geared to a passive audi- ence of affluent people. I hope the sports program was becoming geared to a passive audience of affluent people. I hope the sports money will now be more equally distributed and perhaps the IM building can afford new showers. -J. T. Tielking, Grad. On Research To the Editor: MAY I take this opportunity to state why I oppose the con- tinuation of classified research at the University? As an anthropologist, I view with alarm the growing loss of opportunities for field work in various parts of the world, if an- thropologist associated with U.S. institutions come to be identified in the host countries as accessories to war-oriented work. The loss of such opportunities is tragic, since it impairs our ability to gain a further understanding of human institutions, at a time when we could benefit by more rather than less knowledge. As a member of the University faculty I fear the continuation of classified research, because it pro- vides an all too easy answer to problems of financial support. I do not believe that he who pays the piper always calls the tune, As a citizen, I oppose the in- vasion of universities by the De- partment of Defense, because the erosion of previously autonomous institutions and their inclusion in a highly centralized structure damages some of the most impor- tant checks and balances of our society: the genesis and propa- gation of alternative types of in- formation and interpretation. Power is inimical to data and theo- ry that is not congruent with its exercise. This is hardly the point in history where the United States can afford a reduction in its abil- ity to generate new modes of thought and action. -Eric R. Wolf Prof. of Anthropology Library Fines To the Editor: WISH TO make a formal and public complaint against the Undergraduate Library for a situ- ation I believe is totally injustified and unwarranted. On Jan. 23, 1968, I received a notification stating that a book charged by me was found on the shelf not properly discharged, though I was not aware of what an "improper discharge" was. As this was supposedly the second oc- currence, a fine of $7.50 had been assessed against me. Apparently, upon the first oc- currence, a warning notice is sent, according to University policy. It was pointed out to me that a warning was sent in June, 1967, for an improper discharge which occurred in April. 1967, but I never received it because I was out of the country at the time. Nevertheless, my concern is this: Why should a fine be assessed against me when I was completely unaware that a warning notice was sent to me nearly one year ago? To penalize a student in this manner is unfair and wholly un- reasonable. Does this mean that if a student received a warning five years ago (assuming he is now a graduate student), he is expected to pay a fee for a "second" oc- currence this year? I had been under the impression that records are kept by academic year, that whatever notices, letters, fee as- sessments, payments sent by the University pertain only the par- ticular academic year in question. Therefore, it is my belief that I should not be obligated to pay the fine, that I should have received a warning notice rather than a fee assessment since this was the first occurrence of this academic year and the first time that I was aware of such a policy. I am hope- ful that some action can be taken to remedy the situation. -Evy Eugene, Grad. 'Fantasticks To the Editor: TF NEIL SHISTER didn't miss the point of "The Fantasticks," he did a good job of keeping it a secret in his review of the show (Feb. 6). It is not, in the first place, a play about people, even a generalized kind of people such as are in a play like "Our Town." It is rather a play of ideas and at- titudes, of naivete and disillusion- ment. Mr. Shister seems to see the play as always on the verge of slipping into unwarranted sentimentality. "It is reality which serves up the hurts and keeps the play from dis- solving into saccharine," he says, and again, "It is the second act which saves the play, which makes it more than simply nice . ." Saying that such and such saves the play (novel, film) from going too far in some specified direction is a reviewer's cliche which is not applicable here. The second act does not save the play, it is the play or at least half of it, and without it there would be no play. It does not modify the initial statement of the play as Mr. Shis- ter suggests but is the second half of that statement. The first act is meant to be just as sugary as it is. Reality intrudes in the second act to completely reverse the pic- ture, to tell us that we don't, after all, live in a story-book world where romance arrives on cue. These are two opposing sides of the fable which are harmonized at the end with the moral that al- though we may look back lovingly to the time when we were inno- cent, romantic, and utterly op- timistic for ultimately this is what our lives are' built on, we cannot live blinded by the romance and, optomism with which we began. Mr. Shister begins his review by saying, "It (The Fantasticks) is sugar and spice and everything nice, and comes across just true enough so that you don't resent it , . ." Aside from his patronizing attitude which I ' have already commented on, I wish to point out that the scene in which Louisa looks through the glasses and sees various atrocities as being beauti- ful is hardly sugar and spice. Though not very subtle, it is at least chilling if not ugly. This is a play about the conflict between romance and reality. It is nether dominated or saved by either one. -Kathe Geist, '70 AuOLOb- Due to technical dificUldes be- yond our control, the answers to The Daily Crossword Puzzle sched- uled to run on the editorial page ofutoday's Daily could not be printed. Full answers and names of winners are now slotted to run sometime this weelt. a w 0 The Daily is a memner of the Associated Press and Collegfate Press Service. Fall and winter subscription rate: $4.50 per term by carrier ($5 by mail); $8.00 for regular academic school year ($9 by mail). Daily except Monday during regular academic school year. Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Micbigan, 42 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, Michigan. 48g04. Editorial Staff ROGER PAPOPORT, Editor MEREDITH EIKF', Managing Editor MICHAEL HEFFER ROBERT KLIVANS City Editor Editorial Director SUSAN ELAN...........Associate Managing Editor STEPH~EN FIRSHEIN...... Associate Managing Editor LAURENCE MEDOW......Associate Managing Editor RONALD KLEMPNER .... Associate Editorial Director JOHN LOTTIER........Associate Editorial Director SUSAN SCHNEPP ...... .....Personnel Director NEIL SHISTER ................... Magazine Editor CAROLE KAPLA ........ Associate Magazine Editor LISSA MATROSS......... ..Arts Editor ANDY SACKS......................Photo Editor ROBERT SHEFFIELD.................,Lab Chief NIGHT EDITORS: W. Rexford Benoit, Neal Bruss, Wallace Immen, Lucy Kennedy. David Knoke, Mark Levin,rPatricia O'Donohue, Daniel Okrent, Steve Wildstromn. DAY EDITORS: Marcy Abramson, Rob Beattie, Jill Crabtree, Aviva Kempner, Carolyn Miegel, Walter Shapiro, Lee Weitzenkorn. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS. Eleanor Braun. Henry Grix, Jim Heck, Richard Herstein, Helen Johnson, Lynne Kilhn, Ron Landsman, Urban Lehner, David Mann, Ann Munster, Steve Nissen, Dan Share, Jenny Stiller, Michael Thoryn, Richard Winter, Greg Zieren. Sports Staff CLARK NORTON Sports Editor BOB McFARLAND..........Executive Sports Editor GRAYLE HOWLEr'.........Associate Sports Editor RICK STERN ................ Associate Sports Editor 4 Thich Nhat Hanh: The Burdens of Peacemaking 1* By DAVID KNOKE "THE PRESENCE of the Na- tional Liberation Front in the cities must be considered by Americans as a message that ter- rorism is not the essence of the Front. If you exit solely by ter- rorism, you cannot last for even a few months." Rain lashes the windows of the tiny Union room where Thich Nhat Hanh, Buddhist monk and poet, expresses his conviction about the Viet Cong insurrection in hushed but forceful tones. He leans forward in the light of a desk lamp to listen intently to a bulletin from the transistor radio. Ten thousand miles away guerrillas and government troops battle around An Quang pagoda in Saigon. Nhat Hanh is worried for the safety of his friends and fellow monk Thich Tri Quang, the ernment elements, such as the Buddhists and increasingly the Catholics want to be forced into alliance with the Front. Nhat Hanh is a virtual exile. The Saigon regime will revoke his passport if he returns home and he may be assassinated in reprisal for his peace activities. His one hope is that Washington will abandon its pursuit of a military solution to the war. "Washington knows how to stop the war if it wants to," he is convinced. "Even if they would just stop supporting the govern- ment, then we would be able to bring down the government in just a few days." In its place, he believes, nation- alist elements and religious groups would form a government that would be legitimate and independ- ent enough from the Americans tor. a fnr. nn ann r. n hnmnhinar leaders, Saigon and Washington have caused them to see the Front is closer to their position than the Americans." Nhat Hanh left South Vietnam in 1966 to take his plan for a' neutralist solution to the war on a world speaking engagement. He met United Nations Secretary- General U Thant and Pope Paul. Shortly thereafter the Vatican sent delegates to Saigon and Hanoi to probe peace possibilities. While in Paris, Nhat Hanh wrote "Vietnam: Lotus in a Sea of Fire," which outlines his pro- posals for a "third way" out of the war between military destruc- tion and Communist takeover. The book was banned in South Viet- nam where since over 100,000 copies have been smuggled in; Hanoi radio blasted the author as a "tool of the Pentagon." Nhat Hanh believes the attempt because they think of us as a new popular movement that threatens their existence." National reconstruction will be the first aim of the nationalist government if the war is ended. "South Vietnam will have to adapt to some form of socialism. But we think it is best to stand on a neutral ground, independent from both sides," he gestures. The NLF, he says, wants to d a l a y reunification with the North until the economy has been rebuilt. "Hanoi will have to wait. Without the cooperation of the population-and both Front and non-Front don't want unification now-the war will go on," he adds. NHAT HANH'S lonely pilgrim- mage of peace takes him on long gurelling lecture circuits to spread his message to small groups of sympathetic li s t e n e r s. He is -e s I I I I