v Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will prevail NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions oft staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: BRUCE WASSERSTEIN U.S. Brutality in Viet Nam: Private vs. Public Morality STRANGE ARE THE FOLKWAYS of U.S. military morality. The United States feels that it is able to justify the most brutal of acts in Viet Nam with the ex- cuse that it is for the freedom and even- tual good of the people and, furthermore, that the Viet Cong have committed or ultimately will commit acts of greater brutality. If the U.S. is acting for the good of Viet Nam and feels its actions are jus-' tified, why does the U.S. attempt to conceal the methods that it employs in the war in Viet Nam? Consider the recent controversy at the University of Pennsylvania. Several weeks ago the University of Pennsylvania Committee to End the War in Viet Nam discovered that the Insti- tute for Cooperative Research on the Penn campus was conducting investiga- tions and development work on the feas- ibility of aerosol poisoning of basic food crops, specifically rice and specifically in the area of Southeast Asia. The work was classified and was supported by funds from the U.S. Army. The president of the University made a statement condemning "research of which the results may not be revealed" and the faculty senate at Pennsylvania passed a resolution with the same word- ing. However, no other action was taken. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE officials at fidst refused to acknowledge that any such plans were being considered. They maintained that only at the request 'of the South Vietnamese government could chemical toxins be used, and that these poisons were weed killers that would stop the growth of the rice crops. After all they said, it was their coun- try and their war, and, if the South Viet- namese wished to destroy their most im- portant food supply to stop the Viet Cong, the U.S. was obliged to supply the planes and other equipment to do it. Despite the protestations of innocence from the Department of Defense, the edi- tor of the Daily Pennsylvanian managed to corner one high ranking department official, who declined to be identified, at a recent foreign policy conference in Washington and deceived confirmation from him that the U.S., on its own initia- tive, was indeed using chemical toxins in Viet Nam. Most shocking is the nature of the chemicals being used. The U.S. is spraying rice crops with arsenic and cyanide com- pounds which do not destroy the crops themselves, but, rather, kill the people who unknowingly eat them. NOW, NO EXPEDIENCE of war can pos- sibly justify, except at the most in- human level of reasoning, the use of poi- sons to kill; indiscriminately a civilian population, even if there is some hope that the enemy soldiers are being sig- nificantly affected. Use of such poisons is inconsistent-unless the United States is willing to admit that the real object of the war is the destruction of the civil- ian population of Viet Nam. This is where the difference between U.S. public morality and U.S. private acts becomes apparent. The U.S. has declared that its intention in Viet ;Nam is to in- sure the freedom and self-determination of the Vietnamese people, but does this noble aim justify its methods of insur- ing this freedom and independence, especially when the U.S. considers it necessary to conceal the exact nature of those methods? Perhaps to soothe the outraged moral- ity of those at the University of Penn- sylvania and elsewhere the U.S. could stop the use of agricultural poisons that kill so indiscriminately. But it would then be left with only saturation bombing, na- palm, tear gas, and village-burning. Perhaps the U.S. could even halt the use of these methods, which have, ac- cording to Bernard Fall's recent article in the New Republic, killed at least one quarter of a million Vietnamese since 1961, but then it might lose the war and above all, above the killing and the tor- ture, the U.S. believes that it cannot af- ford to lose this war. S0 THE U.S. will probably continue to murder indiscriminately, by striking out at an enemy that it cannot see, un- til it has made the Vietnamese people free-even if it has to kill every last one of them. -CHARLOTTE WOLTER TolT CHRISTOPHER JENCKS, edu- cation editor of the New Re- public and principal author of the Byrne Report on the University of California, has challenged the academic profession, in two mag- azine articles reprinted earlier this week in The Daily (on Wednes- day and Thursday), to justify its traditional role as guardian of American learning and teaching beyond high school. Some questions are in order for this university's faculty, and they deserve some response. The passage last spring of the Elementary and Secondary Educa- tion Act has already assured the 89th Congress of a place in the history of American education. The act was drafted in such a way as to encourage local districts to narrow the gap between rich and poor ... and bring new kinds of teachers and new ideas about teaching into their classrooms. 1) What has this university's faculty, presumably expert in han- dling knowledge, now the U.S.'s most valuable commodity, done so that this knowledge isn't distrib- uted exclusively to one segment of the population to the preju- dice of another? Isn't this as im- portant a responsibility as that discovered by the atomic scien- tists following the dropping of the bomb-responsibility for both the intended and unintended effects of one's actions? 2) What has this university's faculty, again presumably expert in handling knowledge, done to bring "new kinds of teachers and new ideas about teaching into their classrooms" for the diverse new kinds of people they are now Tuedi Making of the President, 1964 By CLARENCE FANTO T HIS WEEK'S off-year mayoral and gubernatorial elections have revived Republican hopes for a gradual resurgence from the abysmal defeats of 1964. Rep. John V. Lindsay's stunning triumph in the New York. City mayoral contest was exciting news for moderate-liberal Republicans across the country. The election demonstrated that even in a city with a 7-2 preponderance of Democratic voters and the dis- traction of a strong third-ticket campaign by an ultra-conservative candidate, an attractive, middle- of-the-road Republican with pro- gressive programs designed to ease typical urban problems can achieve a significant victory. Lindsay's 136,000-vote margin over Democratic contender Abra- ham Beame was all the more sur- prising because of Beame's strong support among the city's Jewish voters, who constitute one-third of the electorate. Oliver Quayle, a political analyst for NBC, reported that Beame received about 60 per cent of the Jewish vote through- out the city. However, Lindsay picked up unexpected strength in the city's Catholic, Irish and Italian areas. A breakdown of the returns in- dicates that Lindsay ran strongest in the boroughs of Manhattan and Queens, where he defeated Beame by margains of 90,000 and 101,000 votes respectively. Beame achieved slight margin victories in the Bronx and Brooklyn. It was clear that Lindsay's sup- port cut through all economic classes and ethnic minorities. He picked up more support among Jewish voters than any candidate could have expected, running against a Democratic, Jewish op- ponent. Jewish voters in the city are registered Democrats by a 9-1 margin. Lindsay also picked up strong support from four newspapers (in- cluding the New York Times), the local CBS television outlet and Life Magazine. Even the Jewish Daily Forward, a newspaper print- ed in Yiddish, declared its sup- port of Lindsay. IT MUST BE admitted that Lindsay did not set out to pub- licize his affiliation with the Re- publican party. He did not ask for any help from party leaders or organizations, nor did he re- ceive any. He conducted a non- partisan campaign, reserving his harshest attacks not for his Dem- ocratic opponent, but for Conser- finding there and the diverse new things they are responsible for teaching? Residential colleges, pilot pro- grams and honors programs not- withstanding, isn't it true that 99 per cent of the teaching, grad- ing and credit hour system the undergraduate comes in contact with is exactly as it was 40 or 50 years ago, and much of it the same as it was hundreds of years ago? Is this task to be left to the federal government while faculties hold committee meetings ad naus- eum? For research purposes the uni- versity has been turned into a federation of independent entre- preneurs, regulated by panels of academicians who meet regularly in Washington to give out money. My judgment is that the same thing ought to be done in teach- ing. In other words, professors ought to be given the same free- dom to plan and execute a pro- gram of instruction that they now have of research. Again, are not faculty, who pi-i ously proclaim autonomy and free- dom, just leaving the real job to the federal government while they sit on yellowed lecture notes? On virtually every major uni- versity campus in America there are professors who want to de- velop an interdisciplinary science. program for non-scientists . . . or whatever. Often they are vetoed by the rest of the faculty, or by one or another faculty committee. Is this the faculty version of freedom, responsibility and auton- omy? No one but the collective+ group has sufficient intelligence and responsibility to undertake a new project or a new departure? *zy'~s Vo te vative candidate William F. Buck- ley, the urbane, 39-year-old editor of the National Review, who gain- ed 13 per cent of the total vote. Lindsay pounced on Buckley's suggestion that welfare recipients be sent out of the city to "re- habilitation centers" and that nar- cotic addicts be quarantined on an island "where no one can see them." In turn, Buckley accused Lindsay of attempting to win over Jewish voters by creating a Nazi- like fear of the Conservative can- didate. The New York Times printed a letter from Buckley asking the paper to explain its statement that he was appealing to "brutish in- stincts." The paper responded with a scathing denunciation of Buckley's proposals and campaign tactics. Buckley's final vote total was about 4 per cent short of what political analysts and pollsters had predicted. LINDSAY'S MOST effective campaign strategem was his ap- peal to the independent and the nonpartisan Democratic or Repub- lican voter. Reviving the image of Fiorello H. La Guardia, the city's last Republican mayor who was elected 25 years ago on a fusion ticket, Lindsay won the endorse- ment of the state's Liberal party, a labor-oriented organization which can play a decisive role in city or closely contested state- wide elections. Any interpretation of the sig- nificance of Lindsay's victory upon the Republican party must be tempered by the realization that he ran as a maverick Republican and not because of his party af- filiation but in spite of it. Goldwater-style politicians, who still control the party at the grass- roots level in most areas, are likely to stress Lindsay's refusal to endorse the 1964 Presidential ticket, his liberal voting record during his years in Congress, and his reluctance to wear his party's mantle during the campaign. They may point to an advertise- ment placed in the city's news- papers by Democrats shortly be- fore election day, the purpose of which was allegedly "to remind the voters that Lindsay actually was a member of the Republican Party." On the other hand, Buckley's failure to take away enough votes from Lindsay to stop his bid for control of City Hall has been a blow to the ultraconservatives. Liberal-moderate leaders such as Michigan MAD By ROBERT JOHNSTON Undergraduate education has more important functions than the sorting and screening of potential PhD's. Are faculty fulfilling, or even trying to fulfill, their responsibil- ities toward the undergraduate? "If nobody now on the faculty wants to teach illiterate freshmen, new kinds of faculty should be hired who do." Would the "meaning of the BA" be diluted? What does the BA mean now. 1800 lectures? 64 exams? A year or two in a quad? A year or two in a fraternity or sorority or apart- ment? Memorized texts and lec- ture notes? 32 courses that teach neither scholarship, sensitivity, humanity nor wisdom? Despite rhetoric about "train- ing leaders," the better colleges are organized on the assumption that the good life is in fact the academic life. They offer few ex- periences outside the classroom, no future except graduate school, and no adult models except scholars. The librarian, confronted with an exponential increase in demand for his materials (and a similar increase in the flow of material to him for inclusion in his sanc- tuary), has been redesigning his libraries to cope with this. The' Undergraduate Library has been called by one researcher "the most efficient purveyor of information in the world." Doesn't it behoove faculty to hose Behind the Barricades redesign their systems a little so that students might learn what to do with this vastly increased flow of knowledge, how to judge it mor- ally and intellectually, how to sort it and catalog it mentally so that it is of some use to those students in search of a good and full life, however they would define it? The sociologist studies humans through charts and graphs and chi squares; the English professor through the sensitivity to human life found in great literature; the historian sees what humans have been about for thousands of years; the psychologist studies them one at a time; the doctor and lawyer are constantly in contact with human suffering and degradation, both physical and mental. Yet it is the federal government, spurred by an aware and probing younger generation that has rec- ognized and tackled the problems of poverty as it apparently never occurred to any of our faculty to do. Might not faculty take a lesson from their students and learn about involvement, about a feel- ing of responsibility for just a few of the things that happen in our world? The disease which afflicts the American university today is in some respects analogous to the one which gripped colleges in the middle of the nineteenth century. The academy was then dominat- ed by a sterile classicism, which disdained any contact with the workaday world. The concept of the academy is similar to the concept of the col- lege or the university, entities ded- icated to meaning and study and traditions but most of all dedi- cated to preserving and nurturing Vague Hopes for GOP A YEAR AGO this week Lyndon Baines Johnson was swept into the White House by virtue of the largest margin of victory ever attained by a United States President. Last week his 89th Congress adjourned after completing one of the most pro- gressive chapters in American legisla- tive history. Medicare made it, southern Negroes got the right to vote and students from kindergarten through graduate school were voted financial aid. A department of housing was established as were Re- gional Medical Centers and a National Arts Foundation. Immigration restrictions were relaxed, and even excise taxes were reduced. But amid all the rejoicing the public has ignored that selfless American who made it all possible. By virtue of his presidential campaign, Barry Goldwater gave the Democrats the votes of millions of moderate Americans. Hence the Democrats enjoyed overwhelm- ing congressional majorities. and were able to pass desperately needed legisla- tion., During the campaign there were those who questioned whether or not Gold- water knew what he was doing. ONLY BY CONSIDERING the hereto- fore undisclosed background of the Goldwater campaign can one understand the magnitude of his sacrifice. After his nomination in San Francisco Goldwater's advisors conducted a quick nationwide poll testing out Goldwater's views on voters. After analyzing the re- r twAicIigaltu &ili sults it was decided that the best cam- paign strategy would be to send the senator on a three month safari to Kenya and let Eisenhower do all the campaign- ing. Goldwater refused to take the safari. "But Barry," his advisors said, "if you go out and spout your views you'll not only get beat but you'll take all kinds of good Republicans down to defeat with you." The senator said, "this country is 30 years behind the times; we need more federal aid for schools and medical care. We need a voting rights bill for Negroes and legislation to control pollution. The only way to get these things is through a huge Democratic victory, and that's what I intend to create." "BUT BARRY," his advisors screamed in horror, "The Grand Old Party . . ."1 "Oh, fiddlesticks," retorted the senator, "The Grand Old Party is decadent; we've got to get this country on the move and I intend to help the Democrats do it. I'd rather be right than be president." So out he went on the campaign trail, preaching against Medicare to the elder- ly in Florida, lashing out against the TVA in Tennessee and blasting farm sub- sidies in Iowa. The man urged defoliation of Vietna- mese trees, spoke out against Social Se- curity and foreign aid. He recommended sawing off the Eastern seaboard and let- ting it float out to sea. Every step of the way he swayed more and more voters into the Democratic columns. Finally on election night, two minutes after the. polls had closed in Cornish, New Hampshire, and the CBS computer projected an overwhelming Democratic victory, his dejected advisors told him, "You selfish idealist, now look what you qualities and standards of hu- manity and beauty (whether in math or in literature) in an oth- erwise insane and ugly world. Is that what this faculty is do- ing? Or is it smugly defending, behind a brick wall of tradition, autonomy and collective respon- sibility, qualities and standards that are in fact indefensible when faced squarely? AM NOT TRYING to be an- tagonistic or belligerent. It just seems that some of the questions that flow naturally from Jencks' articles need to be strongly put. It seems especially that his bas- ic point, the inability of faculty government to allow, let alone en- courage, experimentation and in- novation on the part of its mem- bers interested in such activity demands serious reconsideration of the practice and assumptions of faculty government as we now know it. Several weeks ago President Hatcher handed out about $10,000 worth of annual awards for dis- tinguished teaching. Every week faculty receive about $1 million worth of incentive for good re- search directed to them by ex- perts in their fields with distribu- tion based on carefully prepared presentations of new ideas and new departures thought worthy of support. The academy, the college, -the university, or whatever you want, to call it, deserves as much mean- ing, as much scope, as much rele- vance to a difficult world as its faculty can pump into it. THERE SHOULD BE some re- plies to the questions raised here. We'll be glad to print them. Gov. Mark Hatfield of Oregan, Sen. Thomas Kuchel of California and Sen. Clifford Case of New Jersey have undoubtedly reaped the rewards of increased prestige and power because of Lindsay's victory. The victory of Arlen Specter (a registered Democrat who ran on the Republican ticket) in the Philadelphia district attorney con- test may also increase the strength of GOP progressives. Specter's candidacy was sponsored by lead- ing state Republicans such as Sen. Hugh Scott and Gov. William Scranton. His victory was the first by any Republican in Philadelphia in 12 years and is likely to be followed by a strong Republican challenge to the Democrats' grip on City Hall in the 1967 election. REPUBLICANS SUFFERED de- feats in several areas, however. New Jersey Gov. Richard Hughes' second-term victory margin over Republican State Senator Wayne Dumont was so large that the Democrats gained control of both houses of the legislature for the first time in 52 years. It was the worst Republican showing in New Jersey's political history. The only ether gubernatorial contest .was in Virginia, where Democrat Mills E. Godwin, a rela- tively progressive Southern Dem- ocrat, won handily over Republi- can and Conservative party con- tenders. Godwin's campaign pledges and his support among Negro, labor and urban groups points to a closer relationship be- tween Virginia Democrats and the national party organization than at any time in recent memory. Repercussions of the most sig- nificant contests were also felt in Democratic party headquarters, particularly in New York. Lindsay's victory leaves Sen. Robert F. Kennedy as the only statewide Democratic office hold- er of any national stature. With New York Mayor Robert Wagner stepping down in January after 12 years in the post, there is no other figure to challenge Kennedy at this time. Wagner, however, may present a challenge at some point in the future if he becomes a candidate for the 1966 guberna- torial contest. The Democrats are conceded to have a good chance of capturing the State House in Al- bany next year because of the un- popularity of Republican Gov. Nel- son Rockefeller's state-wide sales tax. KENNEDY has close relations with Democratic state chairman John Burns. He has also establish- ed himself as a nonfactional Dem- ocrat by refusing to take sides during the primary contest for the mayoral nomination. However, his endorsement of Beame did antagonize some reform-minded city Democrats who identified the Beame ticket with party hacks and machine politicians like Adam Clayton Powell, Stanley Steingut and Charles Buckley. Beame open- ly accepted the support of these old-line politicians as well as other "bosses." The only politician who might eventually challenge Kennedy's 4 Rockefeller, who is expected to run for re-election. As for Lindsay's own political 'ambitions, he told newsmen who. asked him about speculation re- garding his Presidential possibili- ties: "Thank you for the compli- ment, but it is out of the question. As far as I'm concerned, I want to be mayor of New York and nothing else." It is an old political tradition never to admit to interest in a Presidential nomination while holding another important politi- cal post, particularly on the day after election to that position. LINDSAY'S political future will to a large extent depend upon his performance in the nation's sec- ond most demanding political po- sition. He faces staggering prob- lems, including a growing budget deficit, a worsening water short- age, the worst narcotics problem in the nation, a soaring crime rate, inadequate city transportation, air and water pollution, and festering Negro and Puerto Rican ghettoes with some of the worst slums of any city in the country. Furthermore, his running mates for City Council president and Controller were defeated because of heavy ticket splitting. Demo- crats control the City. Council, 30-7 and the Board of Estimates, 16-6. However, President Johnson, in a telegram of congratulations to Lindsay, pledged federal aid to the city as well as cooperation "with- out regard to party affiliation." The bipartisan nature of Lindsay's campaign proposals may ease his problems of working with long- time Democratic politicians. However, Lindsay will be unable to perform any miracles unless he takes steps to halt the city's deep- est problem: the steady exodus of middle-class families to the su- burbs which leaves the stark con- trast of expanding lower-class slum areas surrounding an upper and upper-middle class enclave on the East Side and a few middle- class districts outside Manhattan. During the last ten years, nearly one million white, mostly middle- class New Yorkers have moved to the suburbs. They have been re- placed by poor, often unskilled Negro and Puerto Rican laborers and their families. THE CITY'S JOB market has been insufficient to cope with the demands for service, unskilled and semi-skilled jobs, with the result that nearly 500,000 residents are on relief, an increase of 40 per cent since late 1962. A deteriorat- ing public school system and ever- increasing tax rates have also forc- ed many families to flee the cities. At the same time, a growing num- ber of businesses are relocating in the suburbs, where most of their employes live. Thus, Lindsay faces a monu- mental; task in attempting to strengthen the city's middle class by making city life more pleasant, less expensive and safer. How he intends to accomplish. all this without massive federal aid, which may not be forthcoming, is still an unanswered question. But he does have the dedication, energy and perservence to make a val- iant effort. In spite of a mixed patter na- tionally, the luster of Lindsay's victory cannot fail to engender renewed optimism among progres- sive Republicans as well as those independents and Democrats who have voiced concern over recent Republican weakness and the con- sequent threat to a healthy two- party system. IF THE 43-year-old Mayor-elect can succeed where so many others have failed, his Presidential cre- dentials will be greatly strength- ened. Lindsay may choose to take the long road to the pinnacle of political power in this country, however. Two terms as mayor, followed by 'a term as governor of New York might constitute just the kind of political training Lind- say wants. In 1976, he will be 54 years old, and the country may be ripe for a progressive Republican candi- date whose political style and speaking voice are reminiscent of the late President John F. Ken- nedy. 1* "Goodness, I Must Have Been Walking In My Sleep" Schutze s Corner: The $64 Question LEE HORNBERGER, '66, has convinced Student Government Council to hold a referendum next November 17. Students will be able to express their opinions of Pres- ident Johnson's Vietnamese poli- cy by voting yes or no. The question is a meaty one. Should we have a Viet Nam or shouldn't we? A no vote would one-armed piano player position would be patently irresponsible. THE NEXT QUESTION is per- haps the most perplexing of all. Where is Viet Nam? And why? If Viet Nam is not in Michigan as several reliable sources have in- dicated, why are Michigan stu- dents voting on Vietnamese poli- 4 I 'lz " y , 'y'1(pl ' H4NV ' . IFITM"'I I