u1Thk £icbigan Batty 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 A Time To Live... I =-MM Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail A Time To NEws PHONE: 764-0552 Die... Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. 4 SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: PAT O'DONOHUE Anti-Draft Summer 1968: Making Resistance Legal TOMORROW several hundred to several thousand men across the country will return their draft cards to their local selective service boards as part of a nationwide draft resistance protest. Those of us who lack a deep enough commitment to emulate these draft re- sistors can only admire their valour and defend them against the inevitable on- slaught which will follow their protest. These protesters are correct in focus- ing upon draft resistance as the key to opposing the war in Vietnam. For the draft is the one major aspect of this country's aggressive foreign policy which directly impinges upon the lives of shel- tered middle class students, and their parents. And without the draft, even in this era of mass communication, only the nation's sensitive, committed hu-, manitarians would really be affected and outraged by our actions in Vietnam. The draft is equally important as a manifestation of the deep dichotomy be- tween a free society and a militaristic one. While few will maintain that our territorial integrity is directly menaced by the war in Vietnam, young men are still being compelled to kill, and-all too often-to be killed by the power of a state whose only possible justification for this coercion is self-preservation. DESPITE ever - increasing encroach- ments on our freedom, the affluent American still has a great deal of per- sonal liberty, limited only by his relative political impotence. The draft is one of the few ways the coercive powers of the government can profoundly alter and even erradicate human lives with little chance of evasion. Yet in spite of the horror of the Ameri can war of napalm and bombings in Viet- nam, the vast majority of the war op- position believes too deeply in the unal- terability of the present system to risk violating laws, even unjust laws, when apprehension seems likely. This is a lamentable, but understand- able, symptom of the schizophrenia which has engulfed the offspring of the middle class. It is the symptom of those who are alienated from materialism- but are too comfortable to risk losing it. Therefore those who will courageously resist the draft tomorrow will probably be martyrs to an abortive cause, rather than the advance guard of a movement which will fundamentally alter the American power structure. BUT THE hesitancy of most anti-war youth to make the extreme sacrifice of violating selective service laws should not cause the draft to be neglected as an arena of protest. Neither should draft protest be limited, as it is now, to those resolute few who are willing to suffer the harsh penalties of the law. Rather, an alternative form of draft resistance must be found, which would develop the mass base necessary for maximum effectiveness. Such a program must operate within the existing legal framework to serve the twin purposes of harassing-and to some extent immobilizing - the warmakers and preventing the impressment of young men to fight a war which they consider unjust and unnecessary. The terrain of the legal system pro- vides the battlefield most conducive to this form of draft resistance. For the draft laws, which reflect the confusion of their drafters torn beween a convic- tion of military necessity and an attempt to maintain some semblance of freedom, are ripe for legal challenge. The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and Collegiate 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 mall)., Daily except Monday during regular academic school year. Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Michigan, 420 Maynard St, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48104. Editorial Stafff For example, detailed and involved appeals procedures clash violently with such inane and totalitarian concepts as the rule requiring men to carry their draft cards at all times. On a constitutional level, the issues which can be raised stretch from the le- gality of the entire draft in light of the Thirteenth Amendment's prohibition of "involuntary servitude" to the violation of religious liberty in requiring a belief in a Supreme Being on the part of con- scientious objectors. The much publicized case of Moham- med Ali illustrates the time-consuming and harassing tactics which can be based on violations of due process in individual cases. Furthermore, in an er when most other branches of the government have been repressive or apathetic, the federal courts have risen to become bastions of relative freedom. Therefore, it becomes quite conceivable that a massive challenge of all facets of the draft law will yield some land- mark decisions overturning part or even crippling all of the selective service system. THE IDEAL time for such a massive draft protest will be next summer. If current indications prove correct, almost all male members of the Class of '68 and a large portion of the current male grad- uate students will then lose the immun- ity of their student deferments. Hitherto the selective service system has been quite scrupulous about not re- moving successful students from school in the midst of an academic year. But with the new draft law-unless the government is willing to face the po- litical consequences of maintaining the de facto immunity of the predominately middle class college student population -a large number of these young men will have to be drafted next summer. The summer of 1968 is also a time of intense political activity which will probably culminate in an irrelevant Presi- dential election. Since the candidates most likely will be relatively indifferent to 'the problems of war and peace, oppo- sition to the Vietnamese war must be kept at a crescendo. Thus, what becomes vitally necessary is the mobilization of massive financial and legal resources pledged to support the courtroom battles of potential draf- tees against any and all parts of the draft law. Such a program should also provide ex- tensive draft counseling and a massive education effort to mobilize potential draftees. This will prevent young men from accepting unchallenged their in- carceration within the military establish- ment. The expansion of the anti-draft unions would be ideal to accomplish this purpose. Such a recourse to the court system should not overshadow or pre-empt the efforts of those who are willing to con- front the selective service through more radical and extralegal means. These same legal resources must also be pledged to aid all those who are accused of draft law violations. But in terms of contemporary realities, it is almost certain that long and pro- tracted legal struggles are the course which most potential draft resistors will choose to take. It is none too early to be- gin the long and arduous task of mobiliz- ing the necessary resources to support such a massive and costly effort. PERHAPS A Draft Summer 1968 will do little to alter the balance of power in this country or to radicalize the mass of alienated college students. Furthermore, because it is channeled toward the imminent induction of college students, such a program will-to some degree-help perpetuate the high preva- lence of Negroes and poor whites in the armed forces. However, such a program will have several advantages which far outweigh these drawbacks. It would achieve the broadest possible base for all forms of draft resistance and confront the selective service system at In Vietnam, the world of the "field" and the world of Saigon live side by side in stark contrast- laughter and gaiety on one hand, and terror and death on the other. For one Saturday recently, Associated Press Writers Peter Ar- nett, winner of a Pulitzer Prize, and Kelly Smith combined in keep- ing a diary of the 24 hours in those clashing worlds-life in cosmopoli- tan Saigon and the fight for sur- vival on the nearby battlefields. Here is their reprt. By PETER ARNETT and KELLY SMITH SAIGON - Dawn breaks over a sleeping city. Its first pink tones paint the red-tiled roofs of suburbia and wash the roof gar- dens of tall hotels lining the Sai- gon river. Traffic barely stirs on the shadowy streets. A helicopter, itsrotor blades slapping the cool morning air, drones overhead to- ward the still mountains of the north. On this Saturday men and wo- men will play, dance and laugh in Saigon; in the "field," some- times only a few miles away, men will die or be mutilated. The two worlds exist together in starkscontrast in Vietnam and the roles of many of the people who occupy them can easily be reversed. No two days are exactly the same anywhere, and especial- ly in Vietnam. But this is the way it was that day. IN THE white-washed mansion at 19 Doan Cong Buu, typical of those occupied by Americans in Saigon, a sleeper turns restlessly at the noise but doesn't waken. Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of American forces in Vietnam, reaches over to turn off his alarm. It's 6:15 a.m. An aide knocks on the door to make sure his boss is awake. The tanned, lean-faced general gets up, brush- es his teeth and shaves. Thirty miles northwest across the canal-laced paddy fields now brightening withamorning ight, Lt. William Howard of Cordele, Ga., crawls out of a shallow fox- hole dug into the bank of a country road. He brushes the caked mud off his wet fatigues, and yawns. Saigon had welcomed the cool- ing overnight rain, but for Ho- ward and his platoon it was an- other hazard in a night that had them on 50 per cent alert because of nearby Viet Cong. He had four hours sleep. The grimy, unshaven lieutenant searches through his pack, locates a can of C-ration chicken noodles, opens the olive drab tin, sits down with his sergeants and spoons the greasy mixture into his mouth. Today is his 24th birthday. BREAKFAST in Saigon is more elaborate, with housemaids serv- ingtfresh-baked French crois- sants, hot coffee, fresh papayas and pineapple, scrambled eggs and bacon. Westmoreland f i n i s h e s his breakfast by 7 a.m., enters his staff car at27:10 and spends an impatient 20 minutes fighting morning traffic en route to his new headquarters called the Pentagon East, one mile away. Other Americans are going to work: trim secretaries in mini- skirts, career diplomats in im- maculate Hong Kong tailored suits, shirt-sleeved minor officials attached to the labyrinth of U.S. civilian missions in the capital. There is a spring to their step today because it's Saturday, a half day of work that will permit them to swim, golf and laze from midday on in this clear; sunny Saigon day. The same reddening sun means another long, hot walk, another 12 hours hauling weapons and ammunition for Howard and his platoon from the 4th Batallion, 9th Regiment. The men gather in loose for- mations, swing their rifles to the ready and move off cautiously to- ward the booby-trapped under- brush. They will sweep along the edge of War Zone C, search for Viet Cong guerrillas and destroy tunnels, foxholes and enemy bunkers. SAIGON'S WAR game is shap- ing up as one of words, papers, typewriters and meetings. Barry Zorthian, director of the Joint United States Public Affairs Of- fice, presides over the weekly 9:15 a.m. staff meeting in an air-con- ditioned conference room. Behind him, sitting against the wall, a tanned, crew-cut Foreign Service officer, anticipating a tennis date, glances at his watch and shifts in his chair, his gaze wandering along the colorful bul- letin boards on one wall. The roar of high-powered artil- lery shudders the flimsy wooden structure where another 9:15 a.m. meeting is under way. limousines jam the narrow, tree- lined streets. U.S. Ambassador E 11 s w o r t h Bunker, dressed casually in sports shirt and slacks, shows his wife the new American Embassy. "Looks like a jail," says his blonde wife. The ambassador laughs good naturedly. He's in an especially fine humor today because his wife, Carol Laise, whom he's not seen for a couple months, has arrived to visit from her post in Nepal, where she, too, is a U.S. ambassador. NOON FOR Howard is a mo- ment of terror-a blinding flash of explosives that knocks him into mud at the edge ofca paddy field. The lieutenant had mo- tioned his platoon behind him and moved forward alone to help a wounded soldier. Howard tripped a booby trap himself. Grenade fragments drove into his right and left arms and his buttocks. "What a birthday pres- ent," he muttered, grimacing in pain as a helicopter rushed him to a field hospital. For the Saigon-based military, this noontime is the weekly bar- beque on the rooftop patio of the Brinks officer's quarters in the heart of the city, fresh potato tennis game on court No. 5, one of 15. AS WESTMORELAND lines up for his first serve, against his Vietnamese instructor, the first vehicle in a 92-truck convoy on a lonely road 40 miles northwest of Saigon gets mired in thick mud. Within minutes, the whole con- voy is up to its axles in slime, throwing all the operational planning of the 25th Division out of balance and threatening the success of a series of major as- saults planned later that day and on Sunday. Simultaneously, in the Mekong Delta to the south, Viet Cong guerrillas are deserting bunkers from which they tried to hold off an attacking American river force, losing 204 dead. U.S. casualties in the vicious two-day battle number 15 dead and 125 wounded. THREE HUNDRED miles to the north, in Quang Nam Prov- ince, U.S. Marines are picking up the last of their 127 buddies killed in 11 days of fighting. U.S. jets are flying 97 missions over North Vietnam, striking at railroads, gasoline storage areas and antiaircraft guns. These figures are not yet pub- lic. The three ambassadors, three games. What they need is a night on the town, but they never get it. , AT 4 P.M., afternoon betting is brisk at the Saigon Race track. The horsey set is pressing against the grandstand r a i 1 watching the finish of the fifth race. There are Vietnamese men in silk slacks, doe-eyed girls in graceful long ao-dais, wealthy businessmen and a sprinkling of Americans like Air Force Maj. Tom Hartman of Evansville, Ind. "Folks at home would never be- lieve it, would they?" says Hart- man, going to the betting win- dow. "Looks like everybody in town comes to the races on the weekends." AT 4:45, Saigon-based report- ers jaunter into the daily mili- tary news briefings, They pick up mimeographed news releases giv- ing the official version of the day's war, take seats in an air- conditioned auditorium and pre- pare to ask some questions of three military spokesmen. "Anything happen today in the 25th Division?" asks one. "Nothing" is the laconic reply. AT 4:45, Pfc. Robert Horn of Grand Blanc, Mich., is creeping Downtown Saigon: Liquor, Tennis, Pentagon East salad and mouthwatering ribs, chicken and spicy canapes. It is joining shapely sunbathers and swimmers from the U.S. Em- bassy staff on the Saigon river for an afternoon on what they call the embassy yacht, a 40-foot landing craft decked out as a pleasure cruiser. And it is the Cercle Sportif, last stronghold of the country club set, "an oasis of gracious living in an ocean of drabness," as one Frenchman says. AT 1 P.M., Peter Heller, deputy chief of the embassy press cen- ter, strolls up the shaded drive, swimming bag in hand, and waves to friends before changing into swim trunks and ordering lunch from a 50-item menu that in- cludes the daily specialty, bouchee a la reine. There's Gerald Hickey, Rand consultant, in a red bathing suit, one of a hundred sunning in lawn chairs; a table of American eco- nomic attaches watching girls in bikinis, an assortment of Ameri- can field grade officers munching sandwiches at the outdoor bar. Westmoreland happens toarrive today at 2 p.m. for a 50-minute generals and the 200 Americans putting on the 18-hole Saigon golf course this afternoon are not yet aware of the day's field events. Twosomes stroll down the broad, green fairways, Vietnamese girls in coolie hats toting their golf bags. They wear sports shirts and Bermuda shorts, sun glasses and Sam Snead style hats. Some 50 Americans sit around small tables at the terrace snack shop being served cool drinks by waiters in white. "I write home and tell my folks I'm teaching golf," says Spec. 5 Larry Stanfield of San Francisco, "and they write back, 'Look, kid, we know you've got it bad over there. You don't have to make us feel better.' " THERE'S NO terrace bar in the dirt lot of Cu Chi, only nine men throwing bean bags in a game similar to baseball. "Not very sophisticated is it?" says Laurae Fortner, Sterling, Colo. "There's no real way to relieve tension here," says Laurae, one of seven Red Cross girls assigned to the 15,000-man 25th Division, "I feel silly asking them to play through a hedgegrow when he hears a pop. Knowing it to be some kind of enemy device, he begins running. Three seconds later, the device explodes. Horn is thrown into the air and remembers later he was dim- ly aware of shrapnel piercing his back and legs. He passes out. BY 6 P.M., shadows are length- ening. Ambassador Bunker and his wife are walking along the gaily decorated streets of Saigon's Chinese section, shopping for a paper lantern to hang for the mid-autumn festival, which be- gins Monday. Darkness comes suddenly to Saigon, as to all tropical zones astride the equator. Minutes after the sun sets across the distant paddies, a black curtain descends over the city to be met with a blaze of neon and streetlights. Passersby barely notice the trans- formation from dusk to dark. On the veranda of the Conti- nental Hotel, a favorite watering place of Saigonese, patrons lounge midst potted palms that stir in the lazy breeze from a dozen ceil- ing fans. Waiters in white flit from table to table dispensing gin-tonics, martinis and various French aper- tifs. A television at one end of the open-air porch comes on with the 7:30 news. "The war was quiet with only scattered ground action today," But the announcer's words are lost in the babble of voices and shouts for more drinks. MOONLIGHT is the only i- lumination at the southern edge of War Zone C. Infantrymen of the 4th Batallion are settling in for a long night. Light drizzle is drifting through the rubber trees. Shivering, Pfc. Danny Anderson of Midville, Utah, eats cold meat- balls and beans. Enemy are near. He is not permitted to light a fire. Danny is picking at a wet pe- can roll from his C-rations when he responds to the whispered or- der of his platoon sergeant to move out for an all night am- bush position. IN SAIGON Saturday night is party tinie, the one night of the week most peoplencan stay up late without getting up to go to work early the next morning. A Korean band blares forth from the roof of the Rex officer's billet. The strains waft over the crowd below and onto Tu Do street, where the most noisy and gaudy of Saigon's 40anight clubs and 400 bars are located. Traffic jams every corner as nightclubbers hurry to their destination. From their dimly-lit lair on the roof of the Majestic Hotel, bar patrons gaze nonchalantly across the river at bright military flares dropping slowly around distant outposts. "What's going on over there?" a girl asks her escort. "Nothing," he replies. "Don't let it worry you." And he orders another scotch soda. BY 9 P.M., customers are being turned away at Chez Jo Marcel, where soft drinks cost $4 apiece. Maxims, where drinks cost $7 each, is packed with high-living Vietnamese and six Americans on the dance floor. Helicopter pilot Capt. Joseph L. Bird of Crestview, Fla., is at his batallion headquarters at Cu Chi watching television. Utilizing the commercial break, he goes to the club bar for two 15-cent beers, hands one to his copilot, Maj. Charles T. Brown of Gastonville, Pa., and sits down to watch the last segment of "Wild, Wild West." Their relaxation is short lived. At 9 p.m., they are alerted for an emergency troop lift. Thirty min- utes later, television forgotten, they are flying grim faced com- bat troops deep into the marsh- land to face the enemy. A F T E R MIDNIGHT, Saigon dies. Streets are dark and de- serted. An occasional jeep with armed guards patrols the empty thoroughfares. At 2:50 a.m., a light continues to burn in a windowless room in- side Pentagon East, the Saigon headquarters of the Vietnam war. Five desk officers face a darkened wall illuminated with small lights denoting tactical movements. They will soon learn that at 2:50 a.m., a tank commanded by Staff Sgt. Lee R. Bell, of Tusca- loosa, Ala., was blown off route 1 by an enemy mine. And one will duly note on a small card that miraculously, Bell and his crew were unhurt. ANOTHER LIGHT shines in Saigon, in the villa of a ranking American diplomat. Eight men sit around a table in a smoke-filled room. It's nearing the end of an eight-hour poker game that saw $2,500 change hands. A political attache from the U.S. Embassy lost $900, more than a year's pay for the maid who had set the evening buffet. They make their way home through the darkened streets at 5 a.m., the end of a long night in whichdthe war was not once mentioned. MaJ. John Caron, of Greenville, Ohio, was stirring about the same time. He would pilot the fifth helicopter in a 100-ship assault soon in an area northwest of Sai- gon long held by the Viet Cong. As Caron shaves, the blistering vibrations of a B52 strike a few miles away, 27 miles from Saigon, rocks his shaving bowl and splashes water on his uniform. AT DAWN, Caron and the heli- copter armada are airborne. They swing east towards Saigon, shim- mering in the first rays of morn- ing sun, hover briefly to regroup, then head north for their destina- tion with the enemy. In Saigon, the roar of 100 heli- A 4 4 ij - ~ .xx~w.x~x+.: _ _: _:+:::;r, j