s4L 3;rimq n ear Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under authority of Board in Control of Student Publications Finding the answers inside some tiny glass 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-05521 Editorials printed in The Michigan Doily exp ress thy- individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: HENRYt GRIX 1, _1 By JIM HECK IF IT WEREN'T for inventions, someone once said, then there would be no progress. Consider the world without universal jointed air-pow- ered screw drivers or 99 per cent pure Kentucky blue grass seed. Consider life without machines, hate without wea- pons or love without a porchlight lamp. And every once in a while comes one invention which is'much greater than common inventions. For example, think of the magnamity of Edison's lightbulb when com- pared to the light of a bonfire; or Harrison's trido-buteyl rubber for Sealy posturepedic mattresses when compared to straw beds. And such a time has arrived again. Science has an- nounced an invention hailed as the most important dis- covery since the discovery of the transistor. And we all know how important the invention of the transistor was: (It was hailed as the most important invention since the invention of the vacuum tube, and we all know how im- portant that was.) THIS NEW THING, science says, will allow us to have television sets that we can hang on the wall or computers we can carry in our pockets. "'Science says this new thing that looks like some tiny ball of glass will replace and supplement transistors. Specifically, the new thing is supposed to have a better memory than a transistor. I know this sounds funny, but that's what the New York Times said. Apparently tran- sistors haye memory-not as good memory as the new thing, bud memory. I'm not sure, if vacuum tubes have memory or not, but more than likely they at least have brains. Furthermore, we are told that a pocket computer has the potential for adaptation to many specific physiological functiors. And it could be used by a person to increase his sensitivity to his surroundings. FOR EXAMPLE you call your mother in Florida, say, "Hello, how are you?" and ask "How's the weather, Mom?" "We have an isobaric cold front moving in from the east-southeast at 2.653 miles per hour, trailed by 671.1 cubic meters of cold mass of which at least 428.6 cubic meters are below 34.2 degrees centigrade." The computer would increase the absurdities in life. Consider the picayune housewife, who tpday won't buy a dented can of chicken noodle coup because she associates the dent in the can with the soup. Imagine what would happen when she discovers with the aid of her computer that the pressure in the Motts Apple Sauce jar .2 psi below what the label says it is. But there are more serious applications of the new thing. Education would simply be a matter of plugging one's new computer into other more experienced computers and transferring facts. This is of course, simply an im- provement over modern day education. WE WOULD BE ABLE to gather the facts much more quickly because of the computer's transfer systems. We would retain the knowledge without error or misconcep- tion. We would become the perfect student. And if the computers could transfer methods of reason- ing and prejudice, bias and passion, in their determination of conclusion, then we wouldn't have to be brought up in . . .We could put the names of thoseto be born into a hat, pull them randomly and match certain bodies with certain computer personalitiesand characters. We could make some people prejudiced against celery or Saturday evenings at home or anything . .. On the other hand, we could erase all prejudices . a family or particular surroundings to develop into the unique persons we are today. Our computers would do it all for us. We could be arbitrary about it if we want to maintain the status quo. We could put the names of those to be born into a hat, pull them randomly and match, certain bodies with certain computer personalities and characters. We could make some people prejudiced against celery or Saturday evenings at home or anything. On the other hand, we could also erase all prejudices by a completely scientific approach in determining our conclusions. BUT FIRST, and I think we must begirt this endeavor immediately since science is progressing so rapidly, we must choose who will make the initial determinations. Who will decide whether there should be prejudice or not, and what kind, for whom, etc. I don't want to be in such a position, and I know of a lot of other people I don't want in that position either. I suppose 1ve will have to gather together everyone who wants to be in that position and then have them fight it out. The new thing has even made this an objective pos- sibility. For the new thing makes simpler !bombs and missiles. It makes missiles and bombs impervious to target dis- tortion. Present antiquated missiles and bombs can be diverted from their target by many ways: destroyed by a counter missile, mixed up by jamming transistors with radiation, made impotent by certain electrical emissions- but this thing can only be stopped one way. The only pos- sible way this thing can be stopped is by knocking it down with a duplication of itself before it gets to its target WAR WOULD be much fairer. Still, I think the greatest asset of this new thing is in the realm of personal affairs. I have difficulty in deciding who I really love and if I can really hate. All I'd have to do is ask my thing: "Say, thing, do I hate blacks?" Or like at the porch door when she asks if I really love her, simply pull out my computer, feed it my impulses, give her the perfect ticker-tape answer and leave. Peace. We must seek peace alone -- without Thieu THE 'DUPLICITY of t h e actions sur- rounding the bombing halt and the subsequent diplomatic disruptions be-, comes clearer every day. And Saigon's{ announcement yesterday that it will con- sider all peace negotiations between the United States and North Vietnam inval- id can only serve to clarify further the direction in which blame must fall. Though it seems likely that President Johnson's decision to ,halt the bombing of North Vietnam involved political con- siderations, the real culpability for the diplomatic fiasco which has resulted can- not be placed on the President. Although it is possible to accuse him of political maneuvering, it cannot be maintained that he would sacrifice the peace talks in order to help Hubert Hum- phrey. The President would not h a v e risked the possibility of Thieu's refusal to attend the Paris talks if only because that refusal would hurt, as it did, the Vice-President's chances for election: Nor would the President have taken that risk in the face of his desire tp place himself in history as the man who brought peace to Vietnam. INSTEAD, the man on whom the onus must fall for endangering the Paris talks is Nguyen Van Thieu, President of South Vietnam, Faced with a possible end to a war he does not care to end, and his own loss of power in a more democratic regime, Thieu made a ruthless and self- seeking stab at not only the President and his country, but the security of the entire world. All of the diplomatic sources in Saigon indicate that Thieu had entirely agreed to the provisions he now claims he never agreed to. He told United States Ambas- sador Ellsworth Bunker that the South Vietnamese government would agree to talks, following a bombing halt, 'in which the National Liberation Front would take part as a separate entity. But only a few days later he announced that his govern- ment would not attend the talks. It is obvious what Thieu hoped would arise from his actions. In the Presidential race Thieu could easily see where his best interests lay, and he attempted to pro- mote them. By making his statement and timing it for effect he hoped to bring in- to power an American president more favorable to his dictatorial position., THIEU'S DESIRE to block peace efforts is further demonstrated by his recent invitation to Richard Nixon to visit South Vietn'am. The machiavellian cast of Thieu's suggestion that Nixon come over and "make an on-the-spot assessment of' the war and the situation" cannot be taken for anything other than a blatant attempt .to circumvent the attempts of' the President to end the war. It is greatly to the credit of Nixon that he refused the invitation. The United States must now make a choice - the alternatives ,are outlined in bold relief. We may continue to allow Thieu to make the controlling and ob- structing decisions which have and will continue to block any peace settlement or we may, as Secretary of Defense Clark Cliffoid suggested yesterday, proceedj without him to seek peace. ' If Thieu continues in his course of blat- ant intransigence this country should pursue that second alternative - all po- litical support for the Thieu regime should be withdrawn and t h e United States should enter substantive talks in Paris with representatives f r o m North Vietnam and the National Liberation Front. THIS ACTION on the part, of the United States would most likely bring to a cdlose Thieu's undemocratic regime. Thieu would hopefully be overthrown by those with a greater concern for the people of South Vietnam and a willingness to come to Paris to find peace. -CHRIS STEELE Irly one mo rning * By WALTER SHAPIRO OME PERVERSE urge found me seated one morning last week on one of those fiendishly uncomfortable cold stone benches in the Fishbowl desperately clutching a morning newspaper to shade my eyes from the bright light of early morning. At times like this when I retreat behind a newspaper as the nearest substitute for a cup of hot coffee, my mood can best be described as misanthropic. So when a tall sandy-haired fellow looked down at me with a "don't you remember me" expression, I inwardly prayed for a case of mistaken identity. This hope faded as he said, "Hi, how's it going?" and sat down be- side me. Trying to recognize the speaker, I saw nothing more disting- uishable from the hundreds of faces passed every day than a pair of brown rimmed glasses and a dark blue Michigan windbreaker. In the nett 45 seconds I was gently reminded that I had met hin at a friend's apartment over eight months ago. Desperately trying to make conversation, I asked him where he was living now, although I had no knowledge and little interest even in where he had been living. j EVEN THIS siall conversational opening was enough to start him going on what turned out to be almost his life stor. "When I came here as a freshman last year they assigned me to live in Baits way out on North Campus and I lived with two grad stu- dents, but neither of them are here anymore. This year I' really didn't have anyone to live with, so I got a room by myself near the new Ad- ministration Building." "Good location," was about all I could say in reply, "Yeah, but most of the other people in the building are graduate students or foreign students studying things like physics or math. You know, I really don't have many friends.here. Back in high school I had a lot of friends and I really thought it would be the same way here," TRERE REALLY isn't too much you can say in response to self deprecating comments like this, so I tried to change the subject_ by asking how he was doing academically. "I'm really not doing that well, I have just barely a two point. But -I'd have a 2.9 if it wasn't for the two E's I got in my Spanish courses last year. And it looks like I'm flunking Spanish again this semester." "Don't you study." I asked since I had heard the same lament be- y fore from people who had opened their Spanish books twice all semes- ter. g "I try to, but I really don't seem to get anywhere. It really screws me up when I try to study for anything else, as well." Grasping at straws I asked, "Have you talked at all to your coun- s selor about this? e "Yeah, but he keeps telling me that I've got to fulfill my language t requirement to graduate. I'd like to try one semester without taking a s language, but he wouldn't let me. What I may do is drop out- for a e semester and take a job. Then I'd come back here in the summer be- cause I've heard that counselors aren't nearly as strict then." d THAT WAS just too much - I burst out caffine &privation head- ache and all. "Haven't you tried to see another counselor, have you tried s talking- to anybody but your counselor?" d "I didn't know you could do that," he said apologetically. Then I remembered something else I had heard about language v requirements. "Hasn't anyone told you that there is a test you can take d to see 'if you're congenitally unable to learn another language? There d are people who just can't learn a language for that reason and they're excused from the requirement." Now he was really amazed, "Do you know where I can sign up to n take this test?" d With the suggestion that he try the counseling office. he drifted - off and I retreated back to my morning paper, e The other day he passed me on the street and said, "I've taken the I' ' ! ' StTr Ig a lo er7ih9 Comments by the Secretary of Defense (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following remarks are excerpts taken from a press conference held Monday by Secretary of Defense Clark Clifford.) DO NOT BELIEVE that you can work along with your partner up to the very last instant, with the understanding full and complete as to what the arrangement is, and then suddenly have Saigon change its mind and decide not to go ahead. "I think the president owed it, under his constitutional duty, I think he owed it to the American people to proceed with the talks. has the constitutional responsibility of proceeding with the talks, ' "There are a great many subjects that can be covered between the United States ,and Hanoi of a military nature and that's our real function. "BUT WE CAN work out arrangements with Hanoi in Paris that could be very valuable. We could work out steps that could lead to a diminution in the level of the combat, which we all desire very much. "I cannot speculate on what came up that caused the Government in Saigon NEW YORK, Nov. 7 - T he President-elect's first public appearance as such had the grace note of the revelation that Julie Nixon had spent what time she could wrest from the family en- terprise embroidering the Presi- dential Seal for her father. It was an affecting gesture to a man both lonely and single-mind- ed; but it did suggest that there is absent from the new F i r s t Family that mockery which tinges the relationship between even the best parents and the bestachild- r'en these days. It is just a little out-of-date, as Mr. Nixon is without being quite as refreshing- ly so. But then, the whole election'was out-of-date, belonging somewhere in the '50s, rather as though some angry god had decided just to wipe :out the last eight years, to begin all over again with the 1960 election and to give Mr. N i x o n those tiny fractions of the big states which were so whimsically and cruelly withheld from h i m seems permanently enmeshed in it. If majesty was absent from his words, we cannot blame him too much; we live in the '60s, where the angst is over national pur- pose; Mr. Nixon comes from the '40s when the fret was over per- sonal careers. The problem he will present as a President is whether a man who has had to spend all this time worrying about himself can now rise to worrying about all of us. For he remains so intact a man of his time, which is just not ours. It is hard to believe that he can make the leap. The night before he was elected, he found himself warning with no more visible evi- dence than Mr. Johnson used to 'have that, thanks to the bombing halt, the North Vietnam local of the teamsters union was loading its 10-ton trucks and pouring them down the Ho Chi Minh Trail. He was crying out that we had betrayed our allies in South Vietnam. flict us and the world. Secretary Dulles never had to learn the les son of the experience of carryin his language to the logical con clusion of action, because Gen. Ei senhower always denied it to him Eisenhower used to call Dulles hi conscience - which meant hi could safely be repressed - bu Nixon plainly felt that Dulles wa his teacher, which meant that th studies were sacred. MR. NIXON learned the world on State Dept. tours, which means that all he knowsis the resulta shaking hands with tyrants as various as Trujillo, Batista an Nkrumah. He is cursed by the no tion that. all you need to know about a country can be gained from conversation with its hea( of state. He even has faith in gen erals; could any illusion seem more comic to President Johnson after What he has learned or more dangerous to us who have live through eight years with a his- tory of nations made no more aft: n hby h~ar1, nf -t~tahan, by