i The Mirhigan Date Servesty-n ine years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan the jaundiced eye Stalking new political strategy with Nixon by ron IlandSmiani 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Ediorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in alt reprints. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: JiM NEUBACHER Goiii Spiro one I)etter WASHINGTON RICHARD NIXON'S speech to the na- tion Nov. 3 on his resolution to end the Vietnam War didn't say very much. But it did a great deal. Despite early rumors of troop cut an- nouncements or a de facto cease-fire pol- icy, the President gave the anti-war seg- ment of the country nothing. Not even a token nod. Rather than meet the op- position, rather than even recognize its legitimacy, the President moved to under- cut and destroy it; and he did so with consummate political skill. Not only did it anger those Senate doves who have opposed the war for many years, but it demoralized them as well. Nixon made it clear he was not on speaking terms with them. NIXON DID WhAT every President has the option of doing, though few dare: he appealed to, and won, an expression of support from the public, leaving his op- ponents in a tenuous position. The expressions of support, like the ones he got in his famous "Checkers Speech" in the 1952 campaign and which Ted Kennedy got last June, represent a majority, though not necessarily a decisive one. It seems to be an axiom of Amer- ican politics that the President can always win trust from a substantial part of the population on any issue at any time. How lasting that support is, is hard to say, but Nixon was successful this time and the waning of the effect is yet to be seen. NIXON WILL EVENTUALLY have to pay a price for that support, however, for it is logically inconsistent support. When he spoke Nov. 3, the President ap- pealed successfully in his peace-making efforts, to the kind of support that goes with waging war. It was the support of the patriotic that hu sought, and the patriotism involved is of the America-first type, which does not tolerate American embarrassment eas- ily. Yes, his plan, what he's told of it so far, is a plan for withdrawal, not victory. It is a plan the patriots will not like. If Nixon was honest in saying he had a plan to get the U.S. out of Vietnam, and not neces- sarily with victory, then the patriots have been duped. YET THESE WERE the people support- ing the President who announced just a week before that he had a secret plan for withdrawal. He may yet try to sell them his peace plan, but there is little reason to think they will buy it. These reports come amid reports in Thursday's "Washington Post" that Nix- on has assured Republicans worried about the 1970 elections that the war will be an issue in their party's favor, which means America will be on the way out of Vietnam, not more deeply in. An aide to Sen. George McGovern (D- S.D.) supplied one explanation of how Nixon might work his way out of that box-blaming the American withdrawal on the anti-war protesters "who made Amer- ican victory impossible." Nixon himself hinted at such an ap- proach in his Nov. 3 speech when he said the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong could never win the war - "only Ameri- cans can lose it." The McGovern aide discounted such a tactic as "transparent," but American poli- tics is not known for its penetrating vis- ion. The seeds for this tactic are readily transparent as heard from the very vis- ible and very audible mouth of V i c e President Agnew. AGNEW HAS CLEARLY functioned as a stalking horse for Nixon, saying things for the Administration that the President cannot say. The administration could have silenced him without ever really being blamed for what he said. But if what Agnew said is well-received, Nixon will know that he can move in right-wing directions himself and still gain in the next round of elections. The suc- cess of Agnew's speeches so far seem to indicate Nixon's proposed political route. PIRO AGNEW's speech last night hit in three stages. His attack on the TV news commentators made clear what role Nixon has in mind for his Vice President. Agnew will bc used to capture the senti- ment which went to Wallace last year and to hitch that sentiment to the Re- publican Party. In the process, Agnew will also be loosed as hatchet man upon the liberal wing of the establishment (Senators, eastern press) whenever it gets too far out of line. In the process, Agnew will use the grossest demagogy and the crudest smear tactics available. Predictably, then, one's first reaction mingled revulsion with fear. 4S THE speech rolled on, however, other thou vht' occurred. The Vice Presi- dent's eritiqut of the TV networks as a power elite which presides over one of te treatest power monopolies in Ameri- (ca istory was accurate. Also correct was his assertion that this power is used for explicit political goals in very political ways. But as Agnew recalled Chicago, others might have recalled Vietnam. Particularly relevant are some remarks made last year by a Mr. Nicholas John- .son, FCC Commissioner. Radio Corpora- tion of America, he mused, which owns NBC, gets 18 to 20 per cent of its income from defense contractors. "Many of the top defense contractors are multiple (TV) station owners," lie xent on. "Here is a conflict of interest; a corporation which is profiting from war reporting the war to a nation which, in turn, is going to d etermine the future course of th'at var based upon ., what they've seen on television." Agnew to the contrary, the networks' real bias seems less than loft-wing. How to insure "demo- cratic" control of the media? A ND HERE Agnew balked. Having fumed against that "small group of men" who run TV, insisting that "the airwaves . . . belong to the people," Agnew could only sputter that the small group should watch its step. Public, democratic control of the network - corporations was, of course, out of bounds. Which brings one to a third set of thoughts. If we're to start questioning the legitimacy of elitist power-conglomerates, why consider only television? What about that "small group of men" which controls American industry, andkthelives of mil- lions of American workers and consum- ers? Why not democratize TV-and in- dustry along with it? Nor should yet another "small group of men" effectively beyond popular control be overlooked: the national government. Using Agnew's own criteria, the two-party monopoly and the seniority system-not to mention the self-servicing government bureaucracy-is an unacceptable cancer on American democracy. How about turn- ing all power over to the people? SUCH PROPOSALS are clearly beyond Agnew's ken, and it is probably even unfair to include his name in the same editorial which makes them. After all, Agnew is only out to sling some mud. He undoubtedly had no idea what kind of puddle he was splashing around in. -BRUCE LEVINE Some facuity views on campus ROTC... .. s a symbol of the military ... as a means of civilian control On curtbinig DDT r HE :NIXON ADMINISTRATION'S plan- ned curb on DDT is an important step towards removing the threat to the environment posed by pesticides. The planed curb on the domestic user of the insect killer represents another step in the declining use of DDT brought about by mounting public concern over the detrimental effects of DDT residue accumulation in the environment. Because of the growing evidence against DDT, it has already been banned in California, Michigan and Arizona, while Canada is reducing its use dras- tical ly. While the effect of DDT residue on humnis is not known, recent studies show that high levels of DDT in rats and mice causes cancer, and may influence the . birt h rates of birds and fish. Concern over high concentrations of DDT has already prompted the Food and D r u g Administr'ation to prohibit th e sale of certain foods for consumption because of possible contamination by the chem- ical. ,4LTHOUGi THE Government's two- year phase out will help to halt the damage to the environment by DDT, the danger is by no means eliminated. The use of DDT within the United States will have ended in two years, but it may be 10 years or longer before the effects caused by it will no longer be felt. The long term effects of DDT, how- ever, is not the only concern in the minds of scientists and conservationists w h o have been disturbed by the widespread us of the so-called "hard" or persistent pesticides. DDT is only one member of the persistent pesticide group. The plhase out of the use of DDT could cause increased use of other pesticides which can build up in the environment in the same manner as DDT did. These pesticides include other chlorinated hy- drocarbons such as dieldrin and aldrin, along with other chemicals containing arsenic, lead or mercury. THE CURB ON DDT is rather pointless if these other hard pesticides are not banned. If they are widely used, t h e s e chemicals would be.'in to accumulate in the food chain resulting in contamination of food be dieldrin or aldrin rather than DDT.. Curbing the use of DDT in the United States is only an important first step to control hard pesticide residues. THE CURB proposed should be expand- ed to include not only the use of DDT, but also the use and manufacture of all hard pesticides in the United States. With the replacement of hard pesticides by effective, non-persistent chemicals the threat of possible damage to the environment by pesticides would be eliminated. -JOHN R. LUTON (EDITOR'S NOTE: This Monday, tie senate Assembly will be considering a r'- port on ROTC >rograms at the University. which recommends cutting all financial and most academic ties with the pro- grans. A minority of faculty support a different report by P'rof. Eugene Litwak, which argued that the Univeraity should dissociate itself entirely from the mili- tary training programs. T1he majority posi- tion enunciated by Prof. Theodore Buttrey, calls for modification of ROTC. History Prof. Gerhard Weinberg has been an outspoken supporter of the majority report in Assembly and writes reasons why hie thinks RtOTIC should be kept on campus in some form. Social Work Prof. ldger Lind, has slight- ly different views on the question. With Weinberg, he serves on the Assembly and the top faclty committee (the Senate Ad- visory'Committe on University Affairs) and has been a critic of ROTC.) By ROGER LIN) THE DISCUSSION about whether to eliminate ROTC or only to modify it drastically assumes proportions which a friend of mine used to refer to as "a lot of shifting of the dishes for the fewness of the 'vittles'." The universities will not control the ROTC programs. They never have, partly because of the basic incom- patibility of the two institutions outlined in Professor Litwak's minority report calling for total abolition of ROTC. The very principles so strongly held by the academic community as necessary to its survival as an institution of free and open inquiry make it impossible for us to force ROTC to such a pattern. The majority report recommended that an academic committee supervise ". . . the curricula . . . including evaluation and approval of the content of all military courses and alterations proposed in them ..." This gesture toward control by the university is about to be eliminated by the Weinberg motion calling for a return to "general supervision" because anything more would infringe upon the freedom to conduct instruction as each of us sees fit. This is a freedom which is not avail- able for ROTC training and which there- fore we cannot preserve for it. In at- tempting to preserve the idea, we lose even the possibility of giving any sub- stance to it in this program. THOSE PEOPLE who want to alter the status of ROTC (credit, titles, who finances) but retain the program appear either to (a) hope that this will be un- acceptable to the Department of De- fense - in which case they might better say so rather than asking the Defense Department to do all their work; or (b) consider ROTC inappropriate as an aca- demic pursuit but all right as an extra- curricular activity. The argument about ROTC, like the role of ROTC itself, is far more symbolic than real. If this is the case, we should decide what symbolic act we wish to as- sociate ourselves with and then make clear its nature. Anyone who argues that eliminating ROTC is a political act must realize that retaining it is equally a polit- ical act. The question of what to do regarding ROTC is not essentially one of participa- tion in the Vietnam war, of loyalty to one's country, although these issues may be what have brought ROTC into the public arena at this time. It is rather a question of the character of the university, its role in the society, and the effects of that role upon the society. And this posi- tion or role is not immutable and natural, but chosen and upheld. IN CONSIDERING this matter one must distinguish individual preferences and external pressures from the objectives of the university community. If we are to maintain the university as an open community, characterized by free and open discussion, debate, exchange of ideas and freedom to explore any area and to determine whether the discovery is worth disseminating, we must be willing to ac- cept some limitations on our behavior in order to achieve this end. We seem then really to be discussing two competing philosophies: that of science and the intellectual community (which admits of no national boundaries to the pursuit of knowledge) and that of international competition, or national security. The latter contributes to the perpetuation of rivalries between nations and helps to postpone the time when international cooperation and exchange in other areas of human life become more widespread. THIS POSITION favoring removal of ROTC from the University should not be mistaken for unilateral disarmament, be- cause it allows continuation of other ef- forts in the community but does not at- tempt to mix incompatible structures. It should be seen as attempting to continue and strengthen the role of the Univer- sity as an open community of open in- tellectual, scientific inquiry, not as "all things to all people." As I have said before, the inconsisten- cies and contradictions in arguments for retaining ROTC are exemplified by the suggestion that we approve the program as long as killing is not taught. We know that war is about killing. We argue that ROTC should remain on the campus in order that it be subjected to the human- izing influences of academia, but we ex- clude that feature of the program to which all the others are directed. What is more in need of humanizing influence? We cannot humanize it, only depersonal- ize it. By GERHARD L. WEINBERG IN VIEW OF THE current discussion of ROTC in the Daily, may I take some space to suggest one way of looking at the issue? A major concern of mine is effective civilian control of the army. This re- quires three things: First, there must be a constitutional, legal, or customary as- sertion of the civilian power's authority to control the military. Second, the mili- tary must perceive itself as subordinate to the civilian authorities; that is, it must accept orders from those whose power ov- er it is, in the final analysis, purely ver- bal. Third, the civilians must be willing to make effective use of the authority that they legally have and that the mili- tary in fact, even if reluctantly, recog- nizes. Current problems in the U.S. are, in my opinion, concentrated in the t h i r d of these areas; and the ROTC issue is large- ly irrelevant to them. (I am confining myself here to the question of the pres- ence of ROTC on campus, and am ex- cluding the terms under which it is pres- ent.) THE WIDELY HELD assumption that the first element - legal authority for the civilians over the military - is all tha t is needed, is a preposterous and dangerous illusion, as ought to be evi- dent to readers of the Daily whom you keep informed of military coups in coun- tries around the world in which legal au- thority of the civilians over the military theoretically exists. On a day in March, 1920, the govern- ment of the Weimar Republic was faced with an uprising by a group of right- wing armed bands. The President a n d Minister of War turned to the army to suppress the uprising - as the consti- tution entitled them to do - only to be informed by the officers that the German army was taking that day off. In the Little Rock incident, the Gov- ernor of Arkansas tried to use the Na- tional Guard to defy a school integration order. The President federalized the Ar- kansas Guard to get it out from under the governor, and sent in a unit of the reg- ular army. The Guardsmen obeyed and the regulars obeyed. The former were all, by definition, from Arkansas; the latter were commanded by General Walker, not otherwise known for his enthusiastic sup- port of equal rights for all. Central High was integrated. IN ALL SUCH SITUATIONS, the key issue is whether the division, regimental, battalion, and company commanders see themselves as the constitution says they should. If they don't, the texts are not particularly helpful. It is this aspect of the background, recruitment, and educa- tion, of the officer corps that concerns me in the ROTC question. How does the military see itself in relation to the so- ciety they are supposed to serve? A r e problems in this area -- and there sure- ly are some - likely to be ameliorated by shifting the recruitment away from the campus and into increasingly segregated, military-controlled, institutions? It is entirely possible that the basic inter-connection between civilian society and the officer corps can be maintained by other means; but since no other society has yet found a better solution to the question of handling this with a large standing army, I would like to see any other scheme tried out a bit first. There is a special reason for this reluctance to move without a very good idea of where we are moving. For over a hundred years, a stock argument against any civilian rule of the military that extended deep into the military establishment has al- ways been that civilian "meddlers" did not have the expertise of the regulars. (This is precisely the argument we now hear when we propose devices for effec- tive civilian control of the police.) What worries me is that if we eliminate ROTC and subsequently find that the substitute procedures are more objection- able than the defects of ROTC, the argu- ment about expertise-in an age of in- creasing technical specialization-will be too strong for the advocates of effective civilian control to overcome. The chance of a return to greater civilian involve- ment, once we cut the ties, is not good. What then? LET ME ADD a brief word about out- side committee control of the classroom. Like all invasions of basic freedoms, this will start at the fringes where public ap- proval may well be forthcoming. Whether it is teacher-banning in philosophy at UCLA or class supervision of ROTC at Michigan, the precedent is usually set at a point where interest or enthusiasm about a current policy may be presumed strong enough to obscure or override is- sues of a more fundamental sort. It is only later, when teacher-banning and classroom snooping are extended to oth- ers, that we realize that it is very dif- ficult to lock a door after giving away the key. I have no doubt that many improve- ments could be made in ROTC classes- and in other classes at the University, including my own. But if the price paid for those improvements is the establish- ment of committees to see to it that no un-Mehigan thoughts are voiced in ROTC or other classrooms, that price is too high for me. ...at war with the concept of a university education ly ('AIZ. ,(fO IN I lie aunor is a p injt" or of j1i1 ospiy andi teauhs in the Residential tollege. Athogh he is nt a wember Ow RTC ( 1retJiir, rof. Cohern Nwro1tr a lengtypilosophiCal ("say o" " 1 plrngrani. 'rhe folo1w1ing 1ar11dek is1 sho1rtrcid f1orm ofthle 1originl pic.() SIIOULD A university be the home 01 reserve officI' training to]' our miiitariy services? Of all questions regarding relations between the uni- versity and the military this is the mtost dlelicate. lReserve officer training (ROTC, NROT'C, AI"IOTC) establishes the physical presence of military exercises and discipline on the university cam- pIts, and incorporates military of- MI', itu when the manner and sub- Iate of miliary training take root in t lie daily ilfe of a good university serious conflicts between the two sys- teni are forcibly exposed; tension is inevitable. Thje intelectual partnership of the ttniversity and the military is, I sub- mit, an unhealthy business. That is what studems and faculty members are coming to appreciate more fully. soi of those who now object to the presence of ROTC on campus do so as one way, largely symbolic, of protestinig the war in Vietnam. But ti ia t war, however barbarous and wrongful, is by itself no reason to op- P')Sc reserve officer training. If such t raining is inappropriate in a uni- versity, 'a I believe, the argument Military history, the role of the mili- tary in human societies, the char- acter of military organization and action, the nature of war and its causes-all these are rightly studied in appropriate disciplines. But there is a great difference between the study of military phenomena on the one hand, and training for service as a military officer on the other. The latter, not the former, is the explicit function of ROTC, and it is, I argue, not an appropriate function of a university. FIVE KINDS OF REASONS may be adduced in support of this claim: First: Narrow, technical prepara- tion, training to perform specific functions in specific organizations, is But such technical training is not properly the job of a university. Its goal is to educate students and to cause them to educate themselves. Even when a university encompasses some professional school or schools, it does so not with the aim of serving special institutions, but with the aim of developing men and women who understand the theoretical problems of that profession generally, and who can devise new solutions for new problems arising in that field. No one will deny, of course, that instruction of very specialized con- cern does go in every university. But this activity is narrow or technical in another sense. Some studies may indeed be of interest to only a few, or understandable only by a few. ROTC. If so, let that be a warning to those who teach such courses. Cer- tainly their presence is no good de- fense of ROTC. Second: Between the university and military organizations lies a funda- mental inconsistency. The kind of organization essential to military units is in basic opposition to the spirit of university study. Here lies the root of the present controversy. Of course we can teach about mili- tary organization, and seek to under- stand it. So also we can teach about fascism, seeking to deepen the under- standing of fascist philosophy. But we do not think it appropriate in a university to prepare students for specific functions in a fascist struc- ture. No more should we do so for That purpose may be good or evil; but the military, as its instrument, is not self-determined or self-direct- ed. The objectives of a military unit, from the smallest to the largest, are set from above. Every military unit is and must be acutely conscious of its mission, and operates with the ac- complishment of that set mission as its guiding star. The result is the hierarchical structure familiar to us all. Authority lies in the hands of superior officers, who present the tasks for their subordinates' direc- tion. All is ordered on the principle of the chain of command. Instruction in military classes is pursued with the mission of the unit above all in mind. Authoritarian princioles Drovide both a good university is inevitable. Real university teaching and learning can- not go on that way. The headquarters in which courses must be designed, judgments made, and thinking done, are the heads of faculty and stu- dents. Everything is at risk when in- quiry is genuidely free-including the aims and standards of any and all institutions or governments. That university inquiry be guided by spe- cific and externally set directives is an intolerable contradiction. The issue can be put in these terms. The university is the intellectual manifestation of broadening and deepening civilization; ideally, it is a very civilized place. The military is not civil at all. It is explicitly not a civilian institin--nl it franlyr ADnipq