t Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Military-Industrial Collusion: How Much? I Where Opinions Are Free. 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail NEws PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily ex press the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SUNDAY. OCTOBER 10, 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM Free Speech: Could It Be Endangered in the Future? IT APPEARS, if vague threats from of- ficial sources are to be taken seriously, that the honeymoon of free speech in this country and the upsurge of political activity that has accompanied it for the last year may be somewhat endangered in the near future. Serious objections have been raised to many protest activities recently, particu- larly in the area of Viet Nam demon- strations and the work of campus ac- tivists. Attorney General Nicholas DeB. Kat- zenbach in a speech delivered Friday said that, although he had no objections to "student demonstrations" which were, in his opinion, constructive, he was op- posed to "coercive" protests which were "not in the American tradition." Such remarks. are significant in the light of the planned International Days of Protest, Oct. 15-16 against the war in Viet Nam; Katzenbach added at the end of his speech that such groups are no longer tolerable and "would be dealt with accordingly." [N THE CONTROVERSY last month over the Fishbowl sign which accused U.S. soldiers of war crimes, University officials debated at considerable length before reaching a decision to allow the sign to remain. While their decision was in favor of free speech (within certain limits), a significant part of the discussion was concerned with the possible damage that might have been done to the image of the University if the sign remained. The practicalities of University public relations were hardly the basis on which to consider a moral and ethical matter such as free speech. In addition, at a recent meeting of the literary college faculty, objections to po- litical activity in the Fishbowl were rais- ed, some admittedly on the basis of the content of the political views expressed there. Add to this the frequent objections to criticism of our involvement in Viet Nam made by U.S. government officials, not- ably President Johnson, and the pressure that can be brought to bear on this and other state-supported universities by state legislators. The events at Berkeley last fall and winter undoubtedly have influenced the upsurge in campus political activism all over the country. This activism has been allowed by university administrators in part because they fear the same sort of explosion on their own campuses. In addition, the upswing in activity and political consciousness has been al- lowed freer expression simply because it has produced, to an ever increasing de- gree, the constructive criticism that At- torney General Katzenbach claims to favor. WHY, THEN, this cryptic reference to "coercive" demonstrations to be "dealt with accordingly?" One by-product of the Viet Nam pro- tests has been a reorientation of the nor- mal lines of communication and criticism, not only on this issue but in all areas of foreign policy. Admittedly the change is slight, but the publicity accorded the National Teach-in in Washington on May 15 indicates that it had a significant effect on the news media's sources of in- formation. Officials in the government, realizing that they have lost complete control over the sources and dissemination of infor- mation know that, consequently, they have lost some part of their political power as far as the general public is con- cerned. The creation of new sources of information such as the Viet Nam pro- tests have shown that traditional struc- tures can be circumvented or ignored. Therefore, a part of their function and reason for existence is destroyed. THESE DEVELOPMENTS alone are enough to strike a spark of fear in the hearts of government officials, fear for their power and the institutions whose existence is largely responsible for that power. As may be expected in a bureauc- racy, any disturbance of the normal rhythm of its operation is viewed as a serious threat. Campus protests have done more than create a dialogue between the points of view on U.S. policy in Viet Nam, how- ever; they have also established that there is, indeed, an alternative to the present policy, that our course of action is dangerous in a world of nuclear pow- ers and that an immediate search for an endto the conflict must be instigated. For men in prominent positions who are convinced that their chosen course of action is correct, this dissent must produce both shock and anger. And, as these men may hold considerable power, it also produces the wish and eventually the actual decision to minimize the dis- sent as much as possible. This wish and decision may be found, at least in some degree, in Katzenbach's speech. But would they do it? It should be obvious that it is not their wish to suppress, in a totalitarian way, the right of free speech. It may also be said, how- ever, that they would not consider some limitation of political activity, at least on the campus, a violation of the prin- ciple of free speech. ONE IS, THEREFORE, left with the am- biguity of the Attorney General, and one can only imagine what is meant when a government official says that certain campus demonstrations will be "dealt with accordingly." -CHARLOTTE WOLTER By BRUCE WASSERSTEIN W HEN President Lyndon B. Johnson announced this sum- mer that he planned to double the draft call and send 50,000 mnore troops to Viet Nam, stock prices took a dive. Explaining the drop in prices, the Associated Press reported that "Some brokers said the pullback was caused by a speech not as warlike as had been expected." Other brokers, according to the AP, "said that the decline came in part from profit taking on de- fense stocks. These stocks have risen recently in anticipation of further military escalation in Viet Nam." REPORTING ON the buildup, Business Week said in its Au- gust 7 issue: "Stock market psy- chology has taken a new turn with the administration'smoveto step up spending in Viet Nam." This move puts a new prop under economic expansion at a time when some analysts figured the business outlook was clouding. The stocks moving up are a se- lect group. Defense issues natur- ally are winning more favor as "war babies.' IT IS STARTLINGLY obvious from these quotes that the giant corporations which comprise the nation's defense industry have a vested interest in war or warlike tensions. The major question for American society is to what extent those companies which depend on war for their survival have a de- leterious effect on mankind's search for peace. To what extent do those cor- porations which thrive by creat- ing weapons of destruction deter- mine American foreign policy? The indications are strong that there is collusion between the mammoths of the arms industry and the military establishment. America is paying more than $50 billion a year for defense - more than half of every tax dollar goes to support the military. Are these expenditures necessary? Perhaps. But the determination of how much money should be spent on what should not be left up to the profit motives of cor- porations and the self-aggrandiz- ing desires of the military. THIS COALITION of defense corporations and the military is so close that many military of- ficials join defense company staffs after their retirement from the services. The possibilities of con- flicts of interest in such situa- tions are staggering. One can eas- ily imagine a military man favor- ing the bid of his prospective em- ployer for a given contract or favoring the company which his old boss, now retired from the mil- itary, represents. One of the best examples of this coalition is mentioned in Fred Cook's eye-opening article "Jug- gernaut: The Warfare State," in the October 28, 1961, Nation. According to Cook, General Dy- namics, one of the leading mili- tary contractors, had, in 1961, 187 retired military officers in its employment, including 27 gener- als and admirals and a president, Frank Pace, who was a former sec- retary of the Army. Even Dwight D. Eisenhower, a man who was all too often obvi- ous to his political milieu, recog- nized the danger of this coalition between business and the military. In his farewell address Eisen- hower said, "In the councils of government we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or un- sought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the dis- astrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist." A GOOD CASE study by Cook pointing out the deleterious ef- fects of the coalition between the military and the defense contrac- tors is the controversy in the late '50's over whether the Defense Department should purchase Nike Hercules missiles produced by Western Electric and operated by the Army, Bomarc missiles pro- duced by Boeing and operated by the Air Force, or neither. According to Cook, Army spokesmen acknowledged to a House committee that they en- couraged Western Electric to mount a nationwide advertising campaign "extolling the virtues of Nike Hercules." On th' other hand, according to Cook, Boeing, spent considerable money publicizing the Bomarc. "THE PICTURE that emerges from this sequence," Cook says, "is clear. The President and Congress were both being pressured through the wave of advertising, paid for largely with funds derived from war contracts, to throw literally billions of dollars into missile sys- tems of dubious value." In fighting for contracts the branches of the armed services be- came enemies whose only allies are those defense companies which are producing materials for their branch. To build up its power and stat- us, to get more personnel and higher appropriations, each of the branches becomes a strong parti- san involved in pressuring the gov- ernment to support its favorite project. One can easily imagine Army men pushing Army projects even if the Air Force projects are better. LEAFING THROUGH any mag- azine of national readership, one notices colorful advertisements with rockets blasting off and cap- tions such as, "Keeping Our Na- tion Safe." What the reader does not gen- erally realize is that these adver- tisements are paid for out of his tax dollars through "overhead costs" included in defense con- tracts. For example, Victor Perlo, in his book, "Militarism and Indus- try," cites the case of a North American Aviation contract for 380 FJ-3 airplanes in which over half the costs were "overhead and administrative," for which no ac- counting was given. Where does this money go? ASIDE FROM legitimate over- head and advertising, one of the prime places these funds go to is to support lobbyists. For exam- ple, the Hebert congressional probe of the defense industry in 1959 showed that 79 defense con- tracts supported a lobbying orga- nization called the Aerospace In- dustries Association. The yearly assessments from the defense com- panies supporting the organization range up to $75,000 by Boeing, Douglas, Curtiss Wright, North American Aviation, United and Lockheed. And the Aerospace Industries Association is just one organiza- tion prsenting an industry-wide front. Imagine, in addition to the oth- er lobbying bodies for industry- wide interests, all the separate lobbyists for specific companies. The problem of the military wishing to aggrandize itself is ac- centuated by the fact that mod- ern weapons systems are practic- ally incomprehensible to the ama- teur. The average congressmen or senator must rely on the judgment of the military experts, thus leav- ing little check on the belligerent propensities of the armed forces. ONE SHOULD keep in mind, however, that the American mili- tary and defense contractors can- not be blamed for all the bellig- erence in the world. Unless a real- istic path to disarmament can be thought out, there is a definite need for defense weapons and mil- itary might. - It is also hard to imagine mili- tary men and corporation officials with wives and children conscien- tiously advocating destruction and death. Yet these people are fomenting the tensions which one day may blow up the world. Domestically, the garrison state also embodies the negation of the principles for which we are al- legedly fighting. For example, news censorship is already quite blatant regarding the Vietnamese war, and the informaton which is released in such documents as the white paper is distorted, according even to Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. Clemenceau's comment that "war is too important to be left to the generals" is more relevant today than ever. ONE POSSIBLE solution would be the nationalization of the de- fense industries. Although this would eliminate the profit motive of the large corporations - thus' perhaps eliminating their vested interest in increased armaments -it would tend to accentuate the problems of collusion between gov- ernment and a large military es- tablishment by formalizing the connection between these two and by increasing the power of the military. One could argue, on the other hand, that this accentuation would not significantly offset the bene- fits accruing to elimination of the profit motive and closer public control over defense production. Already therdefense industry doles not operate under the traditional capitalistic concept of separation of state and private enterprise. Rather, most defense companies are nearly completely dependent on government contracts and act in collusion with the military. IN ANY CASE, the American people will not presently accept the idea of nationalization. Rath- er, they prefer the concept of prop capitalism in the arms in- dustries in which companies are privately owned but depend for most of their business on pub- lic contracts. Perhaps this attitude is unfor- tunate, for although there are positive aspects to capitalism - such as its potential for offset- ting the latent tyranny of big gov- ernment-prop capitalism accen- tuates the capitalism's negative side. The search for profit is not worthwhile when it may result in needless destruction. Nevertheless, the likelihood of nationalism as a solution which can be put into practice is remote. BUT THERE ARE other meas- ures which are more realistic which could help offset the prob- lem. For example: * The branches of the armed forces should be unified to elim- inate the interservice rivalry which results in waste, needless expenditure and attempts to pro- mote anachronistic weapons sys- tems. Civilian who are knowledge- able about weaponry systems should play a greater hole in the selection of defense weapons and congressmen should set up a civil- ian review board to point out any malpractics on the part of the mil- itary. t All government contracts should be let in closed-bid com- petition. * Gifts from defense compan- ies to military officials should be made illegal and conflicts of in- terests regulated by law. These proposals are only sug- gestions of the type of regula- tions which might be enacted. They are by no means inclusive. THE MAIN POINT is that the defense industry coalition with the military is getting out of hand. As the former senator from Ver- mont, Ralph Flanders, pointed out, the effect of our current defense system is that "We are being forc- ed to shift the American way of life into the pattern of the garri- son state." Action is needed now before it is too late. I A 4 I Two Views on the Pope's Visit to the United Nations .,..P ro TODAY anI TOMORROW By WALTER LIPPMAN The Advantages of Golf Courses ANOTHER REGENT wants to make a gift. Regent Frederick Matthaei feels the University needs another golf course, so he is contributing the land for it. Recently, a leading national magazine reported the average cost of upkeep of one hole of a golf course was $3500 each year. With a 19-hole course, this would cost the University $66,500 each year for upkeep alone for the 19 holes of Regent Matthaei's gift. The building of one green itself is reported to cost from $18-20,000. This might seem exhorbitant, but the advantages of an additional golf course are limitless. It would first of all curtail the amount of time the golfer must wait to play at the other golf course. The time Editorial Staff ROBERT JOHNSTON, Editor LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM JEFFREY GOODMAN Managing Editor Editorial Director JUDITH FIELDS...Personnel Director LAUREN BAHR .... Associate Managing Editor JUDITH WARREN......... Assistant Managing Editor ROBERT IPPLER ... Associate EditorialnDirector SAIL BLUMBERG ............... Magazine Editor LLOYD GRAFF .................. Acting Sports Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Susan Collins, John Meredith, saved could be used studying, marking three week old tests or writing letters home. SECONDLY, the course would encourage the much-sought-after high school varsity golfer to come to the University instead of going to Michigan State Uni- versity, which only has one golf course (and this one course would be ancient compared to the University's new one). The nation's potential golf pros would certainly soon be banging on the gates of the most famous golf club in the Unit- ed States-the University. The banner headlines in the New York Times would make us all very proud-"Michigan Cops NCAA Golfing Crown." Third, by building a golf course we would be negating the Regents' ruling which is causing so many problems for the construction of a University book- store. The club would definitely be ille- gal under the ruling which states the University can't be in business and com- pete with the friendly Ann Arbor mer- chants (or country clubs). In addition, the building of the club would be post- poned for two years, and the money ON MONDAY when the Pope came to the United Nations we witnesses an event of which we shall be able to appreciate the significance only as time goes on. His journey and his address were a blinding illumination in, which the immediate consequences will only gradually become visible. "We are the bearer," said the Pope, "of a message for all man- kind," and, he went on to say, "like a messenger who, after a long journey, finally succeeds in delivering the letter which has been entrusted to him, so we ap- preciate the good fortune of this moment, however brief, which ful- fills a desire nourished in the heart for nearly 20 centuries." The letter which the Pope was at last able to deliver said that the church, now at peace with all mankind, was able to ratify the purposes of the United Nations, which is a human institution as- piring to be universal. That has never been possible before. NEVER BEFORE has there existed an institution in which there is a place for all the na- tions of the world. The moral ra- tification of the United Nations, which the Pope declared on Mon- day, could be given by him only Free, Democratic Elections? "DIEM (according to Life Mag- azine in 1957) had 'miracul- ously' overcome one apparently in- surmountable obstacle after an- other. His most significant 'hur- dle'," according to Life 'was the famous Geneva election': after the Roman church had reached a religious peace-only after the religious wars and per- secutions of the past had been brought to an end. This historic act of ratification marks the progress made under the inspiration of Pope John XXIII in the rejuvenation of the church. The modernizing church has brought itself into the main- =stream of human affairs. It has done this by committing itself to the religious reconcilia- tion of mankind and also by mak- ing itself no longer the support of reaction and privilege but "the voice of the poor, the disinherited, the suffering, of those who hun- ger and thirst for justice, for the dignity of life, for freedom, for well being and progress." This is the Johannine church, of which Pope Paul is a faithful and convincing apostle, and there is now new hope in the world be- cause this enormous transforma- tion has gone so far. WE MUST REALIZE that the moral ratification of the United Nations by the Catholic Church does not mean and cannot mean the moral ratification of the poli- cies and the behavior of all the member states, even of our own. The Pope spoke with great gentleness. But what he said so gently cut to the quick. No one who heard him attentively, or will read him now, can fail to realize that he was speaking a different language from that which is cur- rent and conventional. In fact, the Pope, who is with- out pride and has nothing to fear, was thinking what is unthinkable for so many, and he was saying it out loud. HIS CONCEPTION of the sec- ular world is quite different from the conception which underlies public discussion-be it in Peking or in Washington. The crucial dif- ference is that in the Pope's ad- dress the paramount issue is not the cold war of hostile ideologies. Although religion in general and the Roman church in particular have been treated as the chief enemies of the Communists, the Pope said that the pursuit of peace transcends all other duties and that the paramount crusade of mankind is the crusade against war and for peace. This is a different set of values than are accepted as righteous in the public life of the warring na- tions. The Pope was, of course, in~tendijngyto makethis lknown. ."..Con To the Editor: O THROW cold water on any- one's efforts for peace is not a pleasant task. We applaud the efforts of Pope Paul VI to seek an end to the threat of war. But if the Pope's efforts were really as sincere as he would have us believe, and if he was truely more concerned about peace than in the Catholic church's antiquated po- sitions, he would have taken a positive rather than a negative stand on birth control. In most other areas in the quest for peace, all the Pope can do is to hope to influence others to action-by saying a good word for peace-which is nothing really new. Other people have been say- ing the same things, the same way for a long time. And by refusing to act in the one area he had some real influence, he has help- ed to keep the Catholic Church's 16th Century position on birth control alive. We are not impressed with his call of others to action when he has failed so miserably himself. THERE IS no more pressing problem in the world today than overpopulation. Nations, unable to feed their people, feel themselves forced to expand beyond their borders by intimidation and by force. Nations, unable to provide for their people, become callous to human life and are willing to sac- rifice large numbers of people, knowing that at least they will have fewer mouths to feed. Poverty, disease and ignorance thrive in overpopulated nations. Fishbowl Congestion And Political Activity The Pope speaks in moral terms- yet we cannot think of anything less moral than perpetuating the obstructions to effective birth con- trol which keeps millions in the chains of hopeless suffering. FOR EXAMPLE, due to the Catholic church's backward stand on birth control, Brazil's popula- tion is growing at an alarming rate. In this predominately Cath- olic country, industry must grow at a rate of six to seven per cent. This will just maintain Brazil at the low standard of living it now has. Statistics show industry has not kept pace, and even with the aid of the Alliance for Prog- ress it has grown only four to five per cent per year. The result is that this South American giant is slipping further and further into the pit of poverty. Consider this in light of the pope's United States speech where To the Editor: MAY I AMPLIFY the somewhat ambiguous statement attribut- ed to me in your story of Oct. 7 on "Fishbowl Politics?" I do not at all believe that there Is "a definite problem of con- gestion in the Fishbowl because of political activity." Of course prob- lems of noise and congestion arise there, but they have no unique relationship to "political" activi- ties. What I tried to emphasize was that the issues of freedom of If, he came out squarely against "ar- tificial birth control" devices. The Pope on one hand preaches moral- ity and on the other advocates a policy which will keep people in poverty and encourage nations to go to war in this dangerous atomic age. There is no single position which has more lethal implications than opposition to ar- tificial birth control devices. FOR YEARS we have been ex- cusing the Catholic Church and its officials on the grounds of religious freedom. We can do this no longer. For to do so jeopar- dizes the survival of mankind. If the Catholic Church and its Pope wish to remain one of the impor- tant voices in the world, they must become aware of the prac- tical implications of their stands,. -Thomas Bissell, '66L David Croysdale, '66L Stan Lubin, '66L i speech should be totally divorced from those of traffic and noise- the former to be defended and the latter to be attacked. -Prof. Theodore M. Newcomb Sociology and Psychology Dope? To the Editor: ALTHOUGH I haven't been a student on this campus for long, it doesn't take long to find out about The Daily. It's bad enough that the whole paper is written by left-leaning sopho- mores, but now you came out in favor of narcotic addiction. The police have long known of the dangerous effects of mari- juana on people's moral sense. John B. William (Assistant Pro- fessor Police Science and Admin- istration, Los Angeles State Col- lege), wrote in "Narcotics," a book on drug addiction, that "it disrupts and destroys the brain and distorts the mind, resulting in crime and degeneracy. It at- tacks the central nervous system and violently affects the mentality and five physical senses . . Marijuana, like cocaine, is the immediate and direct cause of the crime committed."