Seventy -Sev en Years of Editorial Freedom EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS A'here Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. NEws PHONE: 764-0552 Truth Will Prevail Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. *' .',r}ti3}^: t. q R"r+;'nv:'t " ,i''w}°.'.:: '. '*,; ,P, '^.'i, 2. ";+} *, a <' _.. .. .......... ROGER RAPOPORT: On Classified Military Research r N~JV.".....r."''r.".Yr:.'. ^i M .".'h.V: 4:.r..' ....".4 h . ......... .:....«.......... :4:?..: :"'4.'i' v^x, :h { '..,.....:::tiff;:ti.;$;::;:":';ti :;:ti": ti.%'' :?d5ti+:v ' Vtii :ti'}:ti tiv > .$: $x. .," x ;'$ tt'{ ''.*'k ';2+i : 1 Y, OCTOBER 25, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: DANIEL OKRENT i It ! ! Y . « z LAST WEEK the Gallup Poll reported that more Amer- icans (48 per cent) now believe the United States should "scale down the fighting or get out" of Vietnam than believe the "war should be stepped up." (37 per cent) Why then is the national leadership moving in the opposite direction? Why is the war escalating instead of deescalating? A close look at this campus, which is traditionally viewed as a leading center of anti-war protest, suggests some sobering answers. President Harlan Hatcher, President Designate Rob- ben Fleming, and Vice President Pierpont have all come out against the war. Students here have protested the war through a draft board sit-in downtown, by picketing Dow Chemical in Midland for making napalm, Fort Wayne in Detroit for inducting draftees, and they have participated in numerous national demonstrations. In the process the anti-war movement has placed the blame for the war on the President, his cabinet, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the military-industrial complex and a host of other deserving targets. Vice President Pierpont has questioned Secretary Mc- Namara's judgment, President Designate Fleming has challenged State Department policy on the war and President Hatcher has indicated he believes the national military is taking the wrong course. But until last week, when the Vietnam conflict was edging into its third year, (with over 100,000 American casualties) no one on campus had made a serious effort to examine the University's relationship with this war effort. FRANKLY THIS NEWSPAPER is as negligent on this score as anyone else. Although its editors and writers have continually challenged U.S. policy in Vietnam, it has not been until October, 1967, that this serious issue was fully reviewed. One thing clearly emerges from all the reports on military research at the University: for all the outward anti-war sentiment voiced by administration, faculty and student leaders, the University of Michigan is playing an integral role in the Vietnam war. Officials here, of course, publicly hold to the fiction that we are not directly involved: "We are only filling orders." We only developed the side-looking radar, they argue that makes it possible for jet pilots to pick out the targets for Dow's napalm. And when the University gets involved in military maneuvers, it claims this is only for defensive purposes. For example, consider Electrical Engineering Department Chairman Hansford W. Farris' explanation of a classified contract on radar jamming work: "We only do research on defensive projects, not of- fensive'projects. Now on this jamming project, you might say that finding a better way to jam radar is offensive because it permits us to get bombers past enemy defenses. But in our parochial view, this is defensive, beacuse we're protecting our pilots from counterattack." And when you ask Willow Run director Rune Evaldson about the University's $12,666 project on the Strat-X ICBM project for the Army Ballistic Missile Agency: "If they (the Defense Department) count that as part of the Strat-X ICBM, it's their bookkeeping." And when you ask Vice President for Research A. Geoffrey Norman for a look at the full list of projects at Willow Run he refuses to oblige. "Some of the names are misleading," he explains. INDEED THEY ARE. They are misleading the Uni- versity into the kind of classified military work that can't be defended here. Why else would a public university re- fuse to give out a full list of its own projects? (All this must come as a contrast to President-elect Fleming. At Wisconsin, contract title statements are all open for in- spection.) One can hardly expect that Evaldson or Norman would feel otherwise about the situation. After all, Willow Run Labs is an $11 million research factory (less that 3 per cent of the WRL staff is teaching any courses) that de- pends on war research for sustenance. And Dr. Norman, who worked for the Army's Ft. Dietrick biological warfare laboratory in the 1940's, voices few qualms about classified military research on campus. But all those who are opposed to the American role in Vietnam have an obligation to challenge the University's virtually open policy on accepting classified war research. Make no mistake, this University has profited finan- cially-from playing a direct role in the war effort. The school currently takes $9.7 million in secret mili- tary contracts, which helps to fund a vast research fac- tory at Willow Run Laboratories. Over the past 14 years, the army has poured more than $70 million into Project Michigan, a classified battlefield surveillance project at WRL. All this finances the careers of 600 full-time employes at Willow Run, and pays overhead for military research facilties. In addition, the electrical engineering department has relied on classified contracts to fund Cooley Laboratories, a modern facility on North Campus. The money helps to fund research and these projects from graduate stu- dents. The war research also helped to bankroll the political career of Weston Vivian, who just completed a two-year term as Michigan's 2nd district Congressman.,Formerly involved in military research at the school, he put his talents to work for Conductron Corp. and made a small fortune that enabled him, to run and win a seat in Con- gress, where he was a "liberal" who spoke out against U.S. policy in Vietnam. THE ANTI-WAR MOVEMENT can't continue to have it both ways. President Hatcher can't -legitimately con- tinue to say he opposes the war while sitting on the board of the Institute for Defense Analysis, a war research "think tank" that is studying "Tactical Nuclear Weapons --Their Battlefield Utility, Chemical Control of Vegeta- tion in Relation to Military Needs," and "Small Arms for Counterguerilla Operations." Nor can Vice President Pierpont justify opposing the war while the schbol continues{ to line its coffers with lucrative secret war research contracts. And if President Designate Fleming's opposition to the war is to mean anything, he is obliged to lead the Uni- versity in elimination of classified military research. Most important, if the general campus anti-war move- ment is to be meaningful, students and faculty must take direct action to end secret war research. The "Mother -of State Universities" should not be allowed to prostitute herself any further. r ' J 4-.: r/ 7y .I -'. ~Ab e end Tr, bAufSy ia 'The Pentagon March' in Cinemascope AA TheWashing] THEN THERE WAS Ray Mungo of LIBERATION News Service who tells of his night in a cell with Tuli Kup- ferberg of the Fugs. "Your name?" said the guard. "Tuli Kupferberg," said Tuli Kup- ferberg. "Look, kid, your name," said the guard to the forty-odd year old Kup- ferberg. "Tuli Kupferberg," persisted Kup- ferberg. The guard recorded the name. The point, said Mungo, was what other name could a guy who looks like Tuli Kupferberg have, other than Tuli Kup- ferberg. AND THEN Dick Gregory telling the thousands at the Lincoln Memorial rally that his first act as president, that is, his first act after . repainting the White House, will be . OR THE BOY standing on the bridge leading to the Pentagon holding the sign which read: "Johnson pull out like your father should have." "That's gross," s a i d an awed marcher. "So's war," retored the boy. STEVE DAVIS, a student at Boston University complained sadly of the "forced-feeding" that went on through Saturday night as the nice peace ladies carted in boxes and boxes of food - friend chicken, pickels, ba- nanas -- for the all-night sit-inners. "I didn't want to hurt anyone's feelings so I ate twelve goddamn ba- loney sandwiches . . . and I can't stand baloney!" * * * AND DICK GREGORY again: What I want to do, he said, is walk into the White House garden, step on Lady ton. Bird's t band, "I ONE IF gon the Chi March. "The were 10 today. V people w Wee kend ulips and yell up to her hus- Hey, boy!" RATE SPEAKER at the Penta- plaza spoke disparagingly of cago Tribune's coverage of the Tribune reported that there ,000 marchers in Washington Why, there were over 10,000 waiting to use the john." AND THERE WAS back-bending dem- ocracy. After the demonstrators voted unanimously for non-violence before the imminent arrests on Sun- day night, someone noticed that the military police had not taken part in the voting. "Let's let guards vote, too," said the speaker. "Will any guards planning to use violence tonight please raise their clubs?" And, to a man, the guards voted for non-violence. * * AGAIN AT THE Pentagon plaza. A hippie, in a show of love, offered. the guards a string of beads. There was wild applause when a federal mar- shal stepped forward to accept the gift. Presumably the guard had sold the Pentagon for the same- price that, years earlier, had bought Manhattan Island., rJgHE HIPPIE named Sharpe apolo- gized for the failure to exorcise the Pentagon. The five men (one to a side, naturally) needed for the ceremony could not make it to Washington to- gether. So, the three that did get there would raise the structure for twenty seconds at midnight. "What will occur, however," con- ceded Sharpe," is that you will all ex- perience total mental blackout im- mediately and no one will remember the act." --LISSA MATROSS By WALTER SHAPIRO , IT WAS LIKE the set for one of those old Cecil B. DeMille movie spectaculars as the cast of thousands kept milling around this massive five-sided building and impatiently waited for the filming to begin. But what was wrong with Sat- urday's massive march on the Pentagon was that the director never got .up out of his funny white chair and shouted, "Ac- tion!" So the imprssive array of extras was forced to muddle through without script or guid- ance. Consequently the m illi n g around continued, the demon- strators played peculiar, semi- violent games of tag with the soldiers and eventually most of the mobilized got bored, cold and hungry and wended their way in a kind of disorganized retreat back to their buses or to the al- most abandoned, city of Wash- ington. The problem was that as murch as the scene resembled a psyche- delic French Revolution, the Pentagon just wasn't a techno- cratic Bastille. Thus Saturday's Mobilization became merely an object lesson in the politics of frustration. For - as was discovered Sat- urday - what can 30,000 uni- formly variegated young white middle-class demonstrators do with a five-sided building - es- pecially a building which was heavily guarded? Still, over 600 demonstrators managed to solve this dilemma by getting themselves arrested. And while few were as conspicuously driven as Norman Mailer to prove their virility, there was something intrinsically masochistic about their actions, no matter how con- scientiously and courageously motivated. For the civil disobedience at the Pentagon last weekend, un- like draft resistence for example, had little tangible connection with the war in Vietnam. Con- sequently, the only real purpose served by being arrested was to salve an individual's conscience. Furthermore, the mass arrests will require the mobilization of large financial resources to pay for both bail and court costs - money which could be more prof- itably used by the far from sol- vent anti-war movement for or- ganizational and educational projects. THE IRRELEVANCE of the march on the Pentagon was em- phasized by the absence of war- makers whom the demonstrators could confront. The soldiers and military police were paltry substi- tutes for the policymakers who use them as pawns in pursuit of national honor and American in- terests in Vietnam, While there were several cele- brated defections by soldiers, the mass of the armed forces de- ployed around the Pentagon on Saturday were far too steeped in the justifications for American military involvement abroad to simple declarative, "I've been gassed by my own government." But to the vast majority of Americans at home, the govern- ment was justified in deploying this traditional riot-control de- vice and therefore such events will generate little sympathy for the anti-war movement. For what the Detroit News, over-enthusiastically billed as the "Battle of the Pentagon" proved was that the Johnson Adminis- tration is deeply aware of the dangers of emulating the Oak- land Police and thereby creating a legion of martyrs. MANY demonstrators were sur- prised to learn this weekend that although the Government is not particularly adverse to using force, this Administration is too politically sagacious to be so re- pressive and violent as to risk triggering the anti-war move- ment in the way Bull Conner's dogs once set off the civil rights movement. The Administration's relative tolerance of the demonstration was based on a recognition of the probability of their getting sat- isfaction. STUDENT PROTEST is rooted in a reaction from the material- ism of their parents and the American value system which is premised upon it. Since the stu- dents are concerned with Ameri- can military intervention abroad and the draft, the government cannot head off their protest by passing a law or appropriating a few billion dollars. Since the appeals of the stu- dent left run so counter to the in- tellectually suffocating American values of anti-Communism ad- mixed with chauvinistic, patriot- ism, the Johnson Administration believes that it cannot accede to their demands for withdrawal from Vietnam, for example, with- out alienating the mass' of the voting. American people. In terms of Vietnam, in all probability the best the anti-war movement could gain from the Administration would be some; new bombing halt or peace of- fensive - which in reality would only be a signal for renewed es- THIS THE ADMINISTRATION can do relatively successfully be- cause, in the final analysis, the student left is devoid of signifi- cant allies. I The middle-aged, concerned Democrats and members of peace groups such as SANE are in gei- eral far too committed to con- temporary America and, out of necessity, far too pragmatic not be pacified by the tokens of a liberal Administration. While the Negro. is the only major group in America which is alienated from society to the same extent as the "new intel- ligentsia," the basic demands of the black community differ significantly from those of the student left. For this reason, it is still pos- sible for the government to pre- vent a large portion of future black protests and violence by making a massive financial com- mitment to. alleviating the misery of the urban ghetto. Even if the government decided not to pay the high price of paci- fying the Negro, it is likely that the growth of the black power movement has placed new and THE MOST VIRULENT example to create a transcendent cause are the attempts of John Gerassi and others to forge a link between white radicals here and the op- pressed 'potential revolutionaries both in the black ghettoes and the underdeveloped world. Seen from this perspective, the frantic search of Saturday's Washington Mobilization for "Ac- tion" becomes clearer. Called to- gether out of the frustration of apparently ineffective -- if im- passioned - dissent, the "new in- tellegentsia" sought to create a kind of melodramatic revolution- ary excitement. Returning to the movie motif, the march on the Pentagon seemed to be a collage of scenarios from the great political and war movies of our time. For example, the march across the Potomac, behind row after row of banners as helicopters hovered overhead, somehow con- jured up images of that last great lost cause, the Spanish Civil War, and that frantic retreat into France as the fascist planes strafed the bridge. 0. I Can Bill Buckley Do It for Eli? EW HAVEN, Oct. 20-William F. Buck- ley Jr. announced today that he would b as an insurgent candidate for the man Yale Corporation, to protest the .versity's "liberal bias." Mr. Buckley, who was graduated from e in 1950, expects to run in a nation- e vote among the 82,000 alumni next ing to select one new member of the poration. He will oppose a slate of didates to be selected by a commitee >ointed by the corporation, which is university's board of alumni trustees His candidacy, he said, is based on ob- tions to the "almost total absence of cara~t~vr n t.1Q fmilt_" nd t to effect a wide diversity in the student body. "Somebody's got to protest the im- balance at Yale," said Mr. Buckley, who is the editor of the National Review. "The students simply don't have access to the conservative point of view." In admissions, Mr. Buckley, whose father was graduated from the Univer- sity of Texas, decried Yale's move away from its role as "the kind of place where your family goes for generations," and said: "The son of an alumnus, who goes to a private preparatory school, now has less of a chance of getting in than some For Whom The Bell Tolls ?-For Thee, Students! reality behind the feelings of im- potence which generated the Pentagon protest. A large majority of the crowd at the Lincoln Memorial and an overwhelming percentage of the participants in the Pentagon pro- test were young, white middle- class students, ex-students, and others deeply influenced by the milieu of the New Left. This is significant, for it is the unique character of what could almost be described as a "new intelligentsia" which is primarily responsible for the intense frus- frnfin which mf su tcl calation. This is because it ap- pears unlikely that the North Vietnamese and the National Lib- eration Front will render mean- ingless their years of intense suf- fering by accepting the face- saving compromise peace which is the maximum America will ac- cept. Even if the anti-war movement were to succeed in ending the war in Vietnam, it is highly un- likely that the postulates under- lying American foreign policy would be significantly altered. And our present policies almost guarantee massive American com- conceivably insurmountable bar- riers between deep and successful co-operation with the white stu- dent left. Many white radicals have spent endless hours decrying the de- pendence of the New Left on the campus enclaves. The results of their efforts to reach the white workers have bordered on the pathetic because almost all white Americans are too materially comfortable to risk radical change. The pervasive effect of this iso- lation and impotence of the "new intellegentsia" are accentuated by the efforts of many in the stu- dent left to find nrsnnal ful- And ascending a steep elu. bankment on the way to the Pen- tagon mall, as protesters helped one another clamber over the top, one was reminded of the really good World War II movies and somehow expected to find an en- campment of Nazis on the other side. These cinematic exaggerations are important because they illus- trate exactly what was wrong with this weekend's Mobilization. For romanticizing the political process and the struggle for radical change can only be destructive to the anti-war movement. Th imnotnc nf the "new in- A