: (jw r mlan Baal 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 Hue: Death of Vietnam's Beautiful City Lr na-, 74" 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. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: RICHARD WINTER Rocky vs. Johnson: Choosing Between Tweedledum and Tweedledee N ONE OF THE contenders for the Presidency this year is more similar to President Johnson in temperament and political philosophy than New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller. And for that reason none at this juncture has a better chance of beating him. A Natio O Losers IN A CURIOUS bit of about-face follow- Sen. Robert Kennedy's declaration of candidacy, the Johnson Administration has discovered a new fondness for Sen. Eugene McCarthy. Despite McCarthy's strong challenge to the President in New Hampshire, Vice-President Hubert Hum- phrey lauded the Minnesota senator: "McCarthy's campaign has been decent, honest and gentlemanly." The Johnson forces have not, of course, seen the light of McCarthy's reasoning against administration policy in Vietnam. Rather, the LBJ strategists realize that Kennedy is the more formidable foe and have set out to do exactly what the New York Senator says he is trying to avoid -split 'the dissident Democratic vote among two peace candidates. The idea is to depict Kennedy as an irresponsible, deal-making and expedient politician. Humphrey disclosed a 1962 Kennedy statement saying "We are going to win in Vietnam. We will remain here unt'il we do." McCarthy has already added to the peace wing's disaffection for Kennedy by declining the New Yorker's offer to cam- paign for McCarthy in Wisconsin. He further lambasted Kennedy's proposal to Johnson for a commission to review Vietnam strategy as "untenable and pointless." WITH THE ANTI-JOHNSON vote spread between two rivals, the Johnson Ad- ministration can pick up enough support to be renominated in, the August con- vention. Therefore, it is expedient to en- courage as much dissension between Mc- Carthy and Kennedy as possible. The real losers of a knock-down drag- out battle will not be the two senators, however. The American-young, for whom McCarthy says he entered the race to give a legitimate political channel, will now split their efforts between an ideal- istic but improbable candidate and a more attractive but cynical politician. The Johnson-Humphrey team has reason to rejoice over two rivals. For the moment they can attack Kennedy and bolster McCarthy without serious harm to their own chances. Politics, afterall, does create very odd bedfellows. -DAVID KNOKE Both are New-Deal, welfare-state lib- erals. Both analyze foreign policy in the Cold War, anti-Communist cliches of containment and preparedness. And both cull their main political support from men like themselves: the hard-on-Com- munism, welfare state liberals of the '40's and '50's. But these same liberals have never really liked Johnson. His ambition has always been too transparent, his corn- pone Texas style too undignified for men of their more sophisticated tastes. In a year when "protest" has become fash- ionable, a vote for Rockefeller is the only protest these liberals have. If Rockefeller can continue to convince opponents of the war that he shares their convictions, his base of support will be easily broad enough to sweep him into office in November. ALTHOUGH Rockefeller's public state- ments on the war up to now have been either frankly hawkish or non-com- mittal, many moderate doves insist that he is their man. Walter Lippmann and Gen. James Gavin are just the foremost names on a growing list of those bam- boozled by the Rockefeller mystique. Whether Rocky can continue to juggle both hawks and doves without dropping either may determine the success of his campaign. Despite the evidence, one might hope that those who oppose the war will not indefinitely support a man whose only stated opinions on the war so far might have been made by H. L. Hunt. TOMORROW Nelson Rockefeller will announce his candidacy. Soon he will have to make some kind of statement on Vietnam. Can he continue the juggling act? Why not? All he need say to soothe both hawks and doves is that he doesn't like (or, better) has reservations about the way the war is currently being waged. Although this position will not distin- guish Rockefeller materially from Nixon (who has promised to "end the war" without saying how), Nelson, because he does not have Dick's "slippery" image to overcome, may be able to pull it off suc- cessfully. Rockefeller would win a Nelson-Lyn- don race hands down. Two questions, however, remain unanswered. WILL THE RACE be Johnson-Rockefel- ler? If Rockefeller picks up momen- tum in the primaries there will possibly be enough liberal switchover votes and cross-registrations to deny Johnson the Democratic nomination. Secondly, if the race is Johnson-Rocke- feller - does it make any difference which of them is elected? -URBAN LEHNER By STEVE D'ARAZIEN H UE, SOUTH VIETNAM (CPS) -"Hue is something special to the Vietnamese. It is not like Sai- gon. In Hue the people walk tall. They wear their most beautiful clothes. They are proud. Hue is Vietnam." The speaker was a Vietnamese cameraman for CBS. Hue holds a special place in the hearts of the Vietnamese. It is the ancient cap- ital of Vietnam, her oldest city, the city least tainted by foreign influence. And it is her most beautiful city. In 1966, when Venerable Trich Tri Quang led the Struggle Move- ment against the Ky regime for free, representative government, Hue was aligned with the militant Buddhists and almost succeeded in ousting the government forces from the I Corps area. Ever since then Saigon has held a grudge against Hue. The government's opportunity to crush Hue came just two years later. On the morning of January 31, the National Liberation Front took the city with little loss of life. The NLF flag was raised on the tall flagpole over the imper- ial palace. It was not until Feb- ruary 24 that the banner was lowered, and even then fighting was fierce in some parts of the city. Only when the last brick was smashed and the dust had settled was the empty victory claimed. The flags were switched but once- proud Hue lay in ruins. It is be- lieved 3,000 civilians had died - an exact count is not yet known- and 60,000 residents of Hue are now refugees. Saigon had had its vengeance. WHEN I ARRIVED in Hue, I was confined to the South side of the Purfume River where fighting was sporadic. The bridge had been blown by the NLF in the first days of the battle then almost a month old. I went to the hospital. It was a once-beautiful, spacious and lushly-landscaped 30-building complex, now half in ruins. Only one ward was func- tioning in a situation where the whole hospital, if intact, would have been crowded. Bombs had ripped the roofs off. Rockets and recoilless rifles had torn huge holes, sometimes ten feet across, in the sides of build- ings. All the glass was shattered by the concussions. Most of the walls were peppered with the sil- ver-dollar sized pock-marks of the fifty calibre machine guns. Every- where there was rubble. Why was the hospital so hard- hit? A Canadian doctor with me began asking people in the area- one-time patients, personnel, and refugees now living in the rubble was a VC. "Of course," he said. "Every dead one is VC." "MY HOUSE IS GONE," said one ARVN soldier. Many of the ARVN soldiers had fought their way into Hue only to find their homes destroyed by American guns and bombs. From their military and po- litical viewpoint, the Americans had no choice. The alternative to the destruction of Hue was to let the NLF have it. They couldn't be starved out - they'd brought enough supplies for months. They were dug in deep. "We had to destroy the city to save it," an of- ficer said in a now-famous state- ment. As the days of liberation turned to weeks, the American command put the pressure on to retake the city. They decided anything goes and that led to the massive fire- power thatnwas employed. Big eight-inch naval guns and 155 mm howitzers bore down on the city from mlies away. We could hear the thud as the shells ex- ploded from the barrels; hear them whistle overhead, grow si- lent; and then count one, two. .. ten seconds before the deafening explosion was heard from miles away on the other side. They used mortars and rockets, 750 pound bombs and napalm. For the first time in the city the Marines got to use a thing called Ontos, a small tracked vehicle with six 106mm recoilless rifles on it. Fired in sequence, the six guns could level a two story build- ing. .. * * AN ENGLISH-SPEAKING stu- dent from the University of Sai- gon. in Hue for the Tet period, said many students at the Uni- versity of Hue assisted the NLF. But "the Vietnamese people want neither Ho nor Thieu," Le Nu Buu insisted. He was careful to add "I know many American students are against the war." Trinh Tien Khanh is a student at the University of Hue. His home was destroyed and he had only the clothes on his back. He said, "Some faculty here, in liter- ature and law, have a good idea of the VC. They and students as- sisted." He said he thought the destruction of Hue would make many more people turn to the NLF'. Vo Lien, also a Hue student, said many people had died of starvation during the attack. He believed students and faculty in the Faculty of Medicine had also joined the Front. "The North Vietnamese did not burn houses and kill people. The Americans and the ARVN did that," another Hue resident said. It was certainly true that it was American firepower that destroyed the city. The NLF had the city and was careful not to damage it. They had evacuated the resi- dents from areas the Americans were likely to strike. This ac- counts for the relatively low num- ber of casualties, considering the massive physical damage. lo Buddhist Struggle Movement in Hue . . * -"Were there any VC in the hospital?" One man said none. Another said a few. The largest estimate was six. Yet U.S. mili- tary spokesmen claimed the hos- pital had been a command post. We met a young man who was living in one of the few unscathed buildings. He was a medical stu- dent who had been studying there. He was afraid to leave be- cause, not being in the South Vietnamese army (ARVN), he would be mistaken for a VC. "I think you Americans have de- stroyed' much for a few VC," he said plaintively. THE NEXT DAY we were roused for the flag raising cere- mony by an eager young marine. The province chief, Colonel Phan Van Khoa, had returned from hiding and was anxious to lower the NLF flag. He wanted some re- porters there for the historic mo- ment. We were practically herd- ed into his jeep. He had assembled a group of refugees to watch his ceremony, to sing the national anthem as the flag went up. They did not look joyous as they stood, bewil- dered, in the rain. The Colonel made a long speech -too long-all the while carefully positioning himself behind a monument just in case there ws s sniper fire from across the river where fighting continued. The flag went half-way up the pole and disappeared. Someone had shot it down. LATER I CROSSED over to the north side of the city. I spent the day among the ruins covering about half of the six square kil- ometer area of the citadel. Only in the Northeast corner were any buildings still intact. These were the poorest houses. Along the river on the main street, Tran Hung Dao, the beautiful shops were in ruins. Inside the citadel wall, the fine homes and colorful little pagodas were leveled for as far as the eye could see. About 90 per cent of the citadel area was devastated and will probably be bull-dozed. Along the river ARVN soldiers and marines were looting the fashionable stores. Liquor and camera shops were the hardest hit. At one point the soldiers brought in a truck to help them haul away the loot. Back at the hospital I had noticed the ambu- lances had been stripped. While bodies were still rotting on the ground - I counted 14 and I wasn't looking for them - the U. S. marines were recklessly rac- ing up and down the streets on stolen motorcycles, unsure of how to operate them. In another part of the city body-less four wheel vehicles, smaller than a jeep, called mules, were hot-rodding through the streets, sending the few remaining refugees scurry- ing for cover. The soldiers were lapping up "liberated" La Rue beer by the case. At one point I spied a body and asked a marine if he thought it ... Revenged by Saigon Two Years Later 1Gm 4 Letters: For a McCarthy-Kennedy Effort Drop Mosher-Jordan Protest HE REQUEST by the women of Mos- her-Jordan Hall that their unit not be converted to a coed facility should be abandoned. The conversion is being made to correct shortages in men's hous- ing units and faculty office space. The women, who apparently fear they will be moved to undesirable rooms, should re- consider their request in light of the benefits to come from the change. With the current housing situation, a surplus of women's housing and a short- age of men's housing has developed. This is a fact of cold arithmetic and a situa- tiori which the Housing office has no choice but to correct by shifting housing designations. The decision to convert Alice Lloyd and Uj4r Iutc~jigauu Daily Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Michigan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan. 48104. The Daily is a member of the Associated Press, Collegiate Press Service and Liberation News Service. Daily except Monday during regular academic school year. Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Fall and winter subscription rate: $4.50 per term by carried ($5 by mail); $8.00 for regular academic school year ($9 by mail). Editorial Staff MARKA LEvIN, Editor STEPHEN WILDSTROM URBAN LEHNER Mosher-Jordan to coed units was not a hastily-made move. It came after care- ful consideration of recommendations made by the Hughes Committee on Hous- ing. The change-over of Mosher-Jordan was proposed for the fall of 1969, but a pressing need for faculty office spaces -- a shortage critical by any measure--caus- ed the move to be pushed ahead a year. because of the conversion of part of West Quad to office space. THE OBJECTION boils down to an in- sistance that the University not meet pressing needs in the areas of office spaces and men's housing units. Objec- tions based on attachments to rooms or fear that suitable rooms are not available elsewhere seem inappropriate if not trivial in an academic setting. The one complaint that the women do hold legitimately is the unfortunate timing of the announced changes. John Feldkamp, director of University Hous- ing, has apologized for the inconvenience which the change is causing. Alternative locations for the conver- sions have been selected. But if plans to turn Mosher-Jordan into coed housing were abandonned, the residents of the al- ternative locations would be confronted with an even shorter notice of impending To the Editor: IN A TIME as dangerous a. any the nation has experienced in a century, this committee has organized to help achieve the,nom- ination of the Democratic Party for a candidate who would: 1) Achieve a prompt negotiated settlement to a calamitous war in Southeast Asia; 2) Urgently at- tack the problems of domestic poverty and urban decay and work for the establishment of racial jus- tice and harmony in the United States; 3) Restore standards of personal candor and integrity to the highest office in the land. UNTIL THIS WEEK only one man, Sen. Eugene McCarthy, had offered his candidacy on these principles. We wholeheartedly ap- plauded his courage, supported his campaign in New Hampshire and rejoice in the growing success and momentum of his effort. His strong performance in New Hamp- shire demonstrated both the degree of disaffection of Democrats with the present Administration and the ability of Sen. McCarthy to serve as articulate rallying-point for that disaffection. The New Hampshire results were an indispensable first step toward preventing the present Adminis- tration from controlling the Na- tional Convention in August. Un- precedented efforts, however, still remain ahead of those of us de- termined to see the nation assume a fresh course in national and international affairs. With the announcement of the candidacy of Sen. Robert Ken- nedy, those efforts received a new impetus. The Democratic Party is privileged to be able to consider two candidates capable of return- ing it to the cause of world peace and dynamic domestic reform which are the only bases on which it can hope to maintain the al- legiance of the majority of the American people in the decades ahead. THE COURSE of the campaign will tell which of these dedicated men is better able to assume leadership of the Party and the nation. In the meantime, we would hope that no differences among Democrats dedicated, as we are, to a change in the present leader- ship would be permitted to weaken their vital common effort. Thi -nm mn .glt n fini, f A Lame Excuse To the Editor: IT IS with extreme concern that I note the comments of one Michael Davis and Mark Schrei- ber concerning the failure of the referenda in this past election. Their allusions to plot to defeat the referenda and pronouncements of future "education" of the stu dent body to the so-called "evils" of classified research and mem- bership in the IDA can only serve to stir feelings of revulsion among those who seriously considered the' issues and cast their ballots against them. Although the number of voters who cast ballots on the questions was far from a substantial repre- sentation of the student body, the overwhelming rejection (58.7% and 57.5% respectively) should serve, at least, to indicate the leanings of the average student. A defeat of such proportion of any candidate or issue in a public election would certainly be cause for assessment by the defeated of the reason for theirhrejection. But do Schreiber and Davis ad- mit that their ideas are not held by the student body? No, they wish to press their worn out plati- tudes upon us after we have clear- ly indicated we want no part of them. THE ACCUSATIONS of a con- spiracy to defeat the referenda are the most ludicrous, lame ex- cuses for defeat that have been heard since Richard Nixon's defeat in California.' I was never co- erced nor had the slightest pres- sure placed upon me nor even heard any suggestion of how to cast my ballot even though I am a student of engineering and am constantly in contact with those whom Mr. Beattie's article (Daily, Mar. 14) would seem to intimate were "planning carefully against the passage of the referenda." In fact, I voted for Mr. Schreiber, who impressed me with his activ- ity in housing. He was not en- dorsed by the Engineering Coun- cil; and I am sure many of his votes were cast by those not ap- proving of the referenda. It is my sincere hope that Mr. Schreiber and Mr. Davis will re- consider their statements as well as their positions on classified re- search. There is a point to which the patience of the student body can be tried, and it is rapidly be- ing approached. -Bruce S. Levine, '71 LBJ & SGC To the Editor: THE REACTION of SGC lead- ers, as reported in The Daily, to the defeat of the referenda concerning classified research is most amusing (or depressing) when compared to events on the national level. In spite ,of world- wide opinion to the contrary, President Johnson pursues a pol- icy in Vietnam which he believes to be correct. In spite of an over- whelming defeat of the referenda, the SGC leaders pursue a policy which they believe to be correct. As Daily editors are fond of say- ing, "Only in America . . After the new Hampshire pri-, mary, I can imagine President Johnson saying, "It appears as, though some people were plan- ning carefully to beat me." It's probably just coincidence that this sounds like Mark Schreiber say- ing "It appears as though some people were planning carefully against the passage of the ref- erenda." Such an infantile remark makes me wonder if the barber still gives Mr. Schreiber a sucker, when he gets a haircut. -Prof. M. David Curtis Chemistry department Incomprehensible To the Editor: IN SEPARATE letters (Mar. 16), Howard Miller, Brian D. Ze- mach, and Mark E. Bowles accuse Michael Koeneke and me of being bad representatives because we said, even before all the votes had been counted, that we thought the students had made a mistake by defeating the referenda on clas- sified research and IDA. I don't know how Mike feels, but I find the accusation incomprehensible -for two reasons. FIRST, If I hadn't made my position on classified research clear during the campaign, then, perhaps, I would have been in- discrete to make it known so soon after elections. However, anyone who read my platform or heard me speak before Voice or Engin Council, knew my position. I was elected-presumably by people who thought I meant what I said. I should suppose that part of being a good representative is not going back on one's word. SECOND: I have not advocated and I won't advocate-SGC le- gislating against a valid vote of the students. That, I think, is what "Let the students decide" means. What I have advocated- ~, _.) n - .4rii - to oraxn a 'p trying to get students to recon- sider. That, I think, is what my "we have to go back and do a lot of educating" means. I am, even though I hold elec- tive office, entitled to have opin- ions, to believe them contrary to a valid vote of the students, and to try to convince others that I'm right. Indeed. I am, I think, even entitled, as an individual, to act in accordance with them. If my constituents want to deny me that, then let them say so and I will give up my office for hon- est work. -Michael Davis, Grad CGonfusing To the Editor: WOULDN'T take the results of the two referenda too serious- ly; what they probably show is how confusing it is to set up a ballot whereon people vote "no" by marking "yes." -Tucker T. Coon, Grad. .Davis Speech To the Editor: IT WAS CERTAINLY gracious of Michael Davis to take it upon himself to represent the stu- dent body at the inauguration of President Fleming. He succeeded in presenting himself as an un- mannered ass before the distin- guished representatives of 470 col- leges and universities, not to men- tion Dr. and Mrs. Fleming. As a member of this body which he claimed to represent, I feel I must protest. Davis' veiled threats of student power were lost on the audience, who greeted the moving climax of his political diatribe ("We must seek . we must wait. . .") with a smattering of applause and some scattered laughter. Certainly the listeners were convinced of stu- dent concern and involvement at the University; they were also convinced that a student does not know when political comment is appropriate and when it is not. That this generation of students was able to witness the inaugur- ation of a president who is aware of their interests is gratifying. It is unfortunate that an opportun- ist like Davis was chosen to spot- light himself, instead of givng tr.., a n n,.mimy n hpalf -)Ali - ~ ,.r. 4