Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS et Nam: The Whole Thing a Lie onh Are Free 420 MAYNARD Sr., ANN ARBOR, MICHI. 11 Prevail NEws PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: CLARENCE FANTO Academic Reform: Spitting in the Wind? AMOTION now up before Student Gov- ernment Council, sponsored by Bob Bodkin, proposes that a permanent com- mittee of students be set up to serve as an advisory board to aid the vice-president for academic affairs in the formulation of policy. In most cases, proposals of this sort would be like spitting in the wind. There is a good chance, however, that the Bodkin motion will not only be adopt- ed by SGC, but may also have some real consequence in giving students a voice in the decision-making which affects their lives since one of those in favor of it seems to be Vice-President Smith him- self. The first step in the actual formation of such a committee took place last Sat- urday when members of the faculty, stu- dent body and administration spent the day discussing academic problems. There was a general recognition among the con- ferees that there is need for some kind of reform in the University's academic policy, although there was no total agree- ment for any of the specific proposals made. THE SIGNIFICANCE of this conference was not in its substantive accomplish- ments, but instead in its symbolic import-, ance. The fact that some 40 people rang- ing from deans and vice-presidents to de- partment chairmen and student leaders were willing and able to initiate some kind of meaningful dialogue about the prob- lems of the University shows not only that those problems exist, but that there are potential means of solving them above and beyond established institutional channels.. There were some specific suggestions which came out of the meetings, and most of them were pretty good ones. The idea that there must be a revision' of the cur- rent credit hour system was one of the over-riding concerns of the conferees, and one. of the best motions made at the con- ference. The current credit-hour system just does not make much sense. There are al- most no four hour courses past the 100 level in most departments, and thus when a student takes advanced level courses he must sacrifice depth for a breadth, which is of dubious value. Making a stu- dent carry five three-hour courses during the upperclass years, when he is theoret- ically prepared to concentrate at length on certain aspects of his field of study, is academically ludicrous. ONE PROFESSOR called the existing credit-hour system "uncivilized" and he may have been understating the case. Acting Editorial Staff MARK R. KILLINGSWORTH, Editor BRUCE WASSERSTEIN, Executive Editor CLARENCE FANTO HARVEY WASSERMAN Mariaging Editor Editorial Director Business Staff CY WELLMAN. Business Manager S4ubscription'rate: $4.50 semnester by carrer ($5 by nall); $8 yearly by carrer ($9 by mall Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Mich. An alternative to the current policy is that the various departments upgrade their courses, making advanced level courses worth as much as the introduc- tories. If this attempt at reform is un- satisfactory, then the University-wide policy should be changed from one re- quiring students to take a minimum num- ber of hours to one requiring them to take a minimum of four courses. Either one of these proposals would serve two purposes: first, reduce the pres- sure on the student by requiring hir to take less courses, and also increasing the value of individual courses by giving them more depth. Since both alternatives would ultimately require professors to redesign most of their courses, the real obstacle to these proposals could be faculty resist- ance. Yet from the tone of Saturday's conference, it dips not sound as if the fac- ulty would be overly hostile to this move. A second major proposal made at the conference was that upperclassmen be al- lowed to take one class p'er semester on a pass-fail basis. Perhaps this action seems a bit radical at first glance, how- ever with further consideration its vir- tue becomes evident. There are many courses which students do not take for fear that they would not get a good mark. A pass-fail option would allow a social studies major to take a course in physics if he so desired, and not be afraid that the icourse would prove disastrous to his average. SIMILARLY, this proposal would effec- tively lessen some of the current pres- sures which are created by the grade sys- tem and perhaps restore some emphasis on "learning for learning's sake" rather than studying for a grade. There is also a good case to be made for instituting a plus-minus element into the grading system. The current University policy of awarding straight letter grades without plus-minus options makes the idea of a grade point carried out to the fourth place seem awfully absurd. The difference between an A and a B, or a B and a C, may be minimal in many instances, yet in the compilation of the final gradepoint there is no distinction made between the C that "just missed" and the B that "just made it." Increas- ing the grade optiong wouldalso be fairer to the teacher, allowing him to make a more realistic evaluation of the student. IT IS NOT FAIR to say that the admin- istration officials in the office of aca- demic affairs are not aware of student complaints; it is, however, accurate -to say that there is at present no effective means of channeling student discontent into policy formulating dialogue, if not the actual process. It has become a rather hackneyed phrase to demand that students be al- lowed to have a say in the affairs that directly effect them. But hackneyed or not, perhaps what the Berkeley revolu- tion of last year best represents is a dramatic expression of what happens when the students are consistently ig- nored. -NEIL SHISTER By STEVE WILDSTROM AN ARTICLE in the current is- sue of Ramparts magazine calls the American government's story of the war in Viet Nam into question with a most uncommon degree of incisiveness. Entitled "The Whole Thing Was a Lie," it is written by Master Sergeant Donald Ducan, a former member of the Special Forces in Viet Nam who was' the first United States enlisted man to be nominated for the Legion of Merit in that con- flict. The myths of the Special Forces and of the war are unequivicably exploded. In speaking of Special Forces training Ducan says, "Ini- tially, training was aimed at hav- ing U.S. teams organize guerrilla movements in foreign countries. Emphasis was placed on the fact that guerrillas can't take prison- ers. We were continuously told 'You don't have to kill them your- selves-let your indigineous (South Vietnamese) counterpart do it'." Duncan relates rampant racial and ethnic prejudices among the Special Forces. One soldier was waiting for the day when he would lead the first team into Latvia. When asked "How about Viet Nam?" he replied, "To hell with Viet Nam. There are not many blue-eyed gooks." Gooks is a term that came into use during the Korean war to refer to the natives there and has since migrated to Viet Nam. It is not commonly re- garded as highly honorific, DUNCAN SERVED for a time as a recruiter for the Special Forces. One of his final orders before taking over the job came from a captain who said, "Don't send me any niggers. Be careful however. not to give the impression we are prejudiced. "You won't find it hard to find an excuse to reject them. Most will be to dumb to pass the written test. If they luck out and get by that, you'll find they have some sort of criminal record." When reading this account, it hurts to remember that our excuse for fighting in Viet Nam is to protect freedom and democracy. According to Duncan, American officers and noncommissioned of- ficers regard the South Vietnam- ese army (ARVN) and the Viet- namese in general with unanimous contempt. "THERE WAS a continual put down of Saigon officials, the Sai- gon government, ARVN, the LLDB (Luc Luong Dac Biet-Vietnamese Special Forces) and the Vietnam- ese man-in-the-street." They were considered corrupt, liars, thieves, cowards or all four. It occurred to me," he con- tinued, that if the people on 'our side' were all these things, why then were we supporting them . .? The answer was always the same: 'They are anti-Communists,' and this was supposed to explain everything. It's not democracy we'ce brought to Viet Nam, it's anti-Communism." Duncan questions the frequent American assertion that "the Viet- namese are cowardly . . . the Viet- namese can't be disciplined.der. the Vietnamese just can't under- stand tactics and strategy," with the statement "But the Viet Cong are Vietnamese." "It became obvious," he adds, that motivation is the prime fac- tor in this problem. The Viet Cong soldier believes in his cause. He believes lie is fighting for national independence . . . His government counterpart . . . knows that his leaders are in their positions be- cause of family, money or reward for political favors. "HIS ONLY MOTIVATION is the knowledge that he is fighting to perpetuate a system that has kept him uneducated and in pov- erty. He has had so many promises made to him only to be broken, that now he believes nothing from the government." There are two major rationales for the American presence in Southeast Asia. One is that we are' fighting for the freedom of the Vietnamese people. The attitude of the U.S. military towards the citizens of South Viet Nam belies that assertion. "The whole thing was a lie," says Duncan. "We weren't pre- serving freedom. There was no freedom to preserve. To voice op- position to the government meant jail or death. We aren't the free- dom fighters. We are the Russian tanks blasting the hopes of an Asian Hungary." THE OTHER, more pragmatic. justification, is that we are fight- ing to prevent the spread of com- munism. Duncan claims that dur- ing his stay in the country, the number of communists increased. Although his original reason for volunteering for duty in Viet Nam was anti-Communism, Duncan now asks "But are we stopping Communism? The more money and troops we'poured in, the more people hated us. Countries all over the world were losing sympathy with our stand in Viet Nam. The real question was whether Communism is spreading in spite of our involvement or because of it." Sergeant Duncan's report on the war in Viet Nam is likely to meet with incredulity on many fronts. Most information American citi- zens receive about that faraway war which they are paying for is filtered t h r o u g h government spokesmen. The representatives of the news media there are depen- dent on sketchy military briefings for information on actions. OCCASIONAL.Y, a bit of first hand film such as the burning of Cam Ne gets through and even in this case there was government pressure on CBS to block its showing. Groups such as the Spe- cial Forces, the "Green Berets," are glorified. Thus, it is quite likely that many people, if they ever see it, will find it hard to believe Duncan's story, which contrasts so sharply with the "official" reports they have heard for months. Nevertheless, the arguments generally used against those who protest our involvement in Viet Nam simply do not hold in this case. No one could possibly brand Duncan a "Vietnik." Certainly no one can say that he was motivated out of cowardice. He is a ten- year, decorated and honorably- discharged veteran'of the army with no di'aft to fear. IT IS IMPOSSIBLE for one to read Duncan's account of the war without being overcome with a feeling of hopeless and helpless frustration. Patriotism is difficult to maintain in the light of what appear to be cold lies from the government. It is nearly impossible to reconcile American ideals with a Special Forces captain who says "Don't send me any niggers." The article presents a great deal of food for thought. It may cause a good deal of indigestion. 40 Johnson Risks ConfrnainwtCha THE TELEVISED HEARINGS, at which Gen. James Gavin and Ambassador George Kennan appeared before the Senate For- eign Relations Committee, have. done an inestimable service to our people. For they broke through the official screen and made vis- ible the nature of the war and where our present policy is leading us. On the rule that if you cannot beat them, join them, which in its modern form is that if you cannot debate with them, say you agree with them, the President takes the position that there is not much difference between the Gavin-Kennan thesis and the Rusk-McNamara policy. There is, in fact, a radical dif- ference-the difference between a limited, and an unlimited war. The President may not want to fight an unlimited war. I have no doubt myself that he does not want to do so. But the promises he made in Honolulu which the Vice-Presilent is now broadcasting so lavishly in Saigon and Bangkok, are-if they are to be taken seriously-an unlimited commit- ment of American soldiers and American money. It is this unlimited commitment which those of us who belong to the Gavin-Kennan school oppose. For we see that as the numbers of our troops and the range of our bombing are escalated, and as the theater of the war becomes widen- ed, it is highly probable, indeed it is well nigh inevitable that the United States will find itself con- fronting China in a land war on the mainland of Asia. LAST WEEK'S hearings made visible that this is where the course we are taking leads. Con- gress and the people would be frivolous if they did not examine with the utmost seriousness how real, how valid, how significant is the hypothesis that the kind of war the Johnson administration is conducting is leading to a con- frontation with China. Gen. Maxwell Taylor, who since 1961 has played a leading part in our military intervention 'in South Viet Nam, has recognized that the prospect of a land war with China is today our greatest worry. In an interview published in the current issue of U.S. News and World Report, Gen. Taylor is asked about the danger of "a military confron- tation with Communist China." He replies that "One can never rule out the possibility. But I would list the probability quite low in terms of percentage." This has an ominous resem- Today Tomorrow By WALTER LIPPMANN blance to the colloquy in 1950 be- tween President Truman and Gen. Douglas MacArthur (cf., Lawson, "The United States in the Korean War," Page 79): "In your opinion," President, Truman asked Gen. MacArthur,' "is there any chance that the Chinese might enter the war on \ the side of North Korea?" MacArthur shook his head. "I'd say there's very little chance of that happening. They have sev- eral hundred thousand men north of the Yalu, but they haven't any air force. If they tried to cross the river our Air Force would slaughter them. At the most per- haps 60,000 troops would make it. Our infantry could easily contain them. I expect the actual fighting in North Korea to end by Thanks- giving. We should have our men home, or at least in Japan, by Christmas." AT THE very moment that President Truman and Gen. Mac- Arthur were talking there were already more than 100,000 Chinese- Communist troops in North Korea and another 200,000 were ready to cross the Yalu. By mid-November at least 300,000' Chinese would be poised to strike-and the ROK, the American and other UN forces would not even be aware of their presence. Before the war. was over the Chinese Communist armies in Korea would reach a peak strength of more than a million men. f On the question of the need to contain the military expansion of Red China, there is virtually uni- versial agreement in this country. today, like the containment of The containment of Red China Stalinist Russia after the world war, is necessarysto the peace of the world and is a vital interest of the United States. What is de- batable is the diplomatic policy we are pursuing in order to contain Red China. If we compare what Rusk and William Bundy are doing with the diplomatic policy by which some 15 years ago Stalin was contained, the differences are very striking. The cardinal difference is that our Chinese containment policy is a unilateral American policy whereas our Stalinist containment policy was shared with and par- ticipated in by all the Western Allies. IT IS OFTEN said officially that in the Far East today we are repeating what was done so suc- cessfully in Europe. If this were what we are doing, there would be an alliance to contain China in which Japan, Russia, India, Pakistan, the United States, Great Britain and France were aligned in a Far Eastern Marshall Plan and NATO. Instead, owing to the miscalculations and blundering of the Vietnamese war, we have alienated and indeed neutralized all the great powers of the Asian mainland. The difference between the two containment policies-in Europe and in the Far East-is the dif- ference between realism and ver- balism, between professionalism and amateurism. .Our present pol- icy is as if we had set out to contain Stalinist Russia by ignor- ing the British, the French, the Italians and the Germans and had decided to make our stand against communism by the defense of- let us say-Bucharest. (C), 1966, The Washington Post Co. 'p 0 Letters.:*Senators Regaining Policy-Making Role 4, '.' IN TZ M y ~T - V yc ,a LAll To The Editor: WISH TO EXPRESS support for the current Senate hearings on Viet Nam. The Senate should act now to recover its rightful, constitutional role in foreign af- fairs. This role has been, to date, conspicuously absent on Viet Nam. Presidential maneuvering, pres- sure, subtle coercion, combined with Senatorial caution and in- ertia, has resulted in the President having sole and unchecked au- thority for almost all policy de- cisions concerning war or peace in regard to Viet Nam. This amounts to a dangerous concen- tration of power in the hands of one individual. There is no in- dividual who is infallible in any field of endeavor, and history suggests this is especially true of foreign affairs. Most Napoleons have their Waterloos, and Presi- dent Johnson may not be the exception. IN THE NUCLEAR AGE the seeds of destruction of the United States lie not so much in a delib- erate attack by an enemy (against which we are protected, in a sense, by retaliation), but by a miscal- culation caused by major errors in judgement on our part in for- eign policy. If, for instance, we lose Viet Nam, the United States in actuality would receive only a minor set back in the ;long run (Dean Rusk notwithstanding). If, however, we chose to wage a nuclear war over Viet Nam, when China finally does intervene mas- sively to protect her interests, we will in all probability insure the massive destruction of the major part of our own country and so- ciety in the United States. The potential grave error in judgement on foreign policy in this instance, lies in the assump- tion that Russia will ultimately sit by passively while we wreck havoc among her Allies in the Orient. There is, however, only a slight chance that Russia would not match our escalation and in- tervene with nuclear weapons, if of the constitutionally sanctioned checks and balances on our for- eign affairs, and may point to a way out of the morass that the administration has led us into. -John Duane, '58 Involvement To the Editor: IN TUESDAY'S DAILY it is in- teresting to note that SGC leaders were complaining about lack of representation and power in the task of picking a new Uni- versity President. The same issue also carried a report that the SGC Course Evaluation Booklet was not going to be published on time because there was a shortage of student help, and student organ- izations hadn't kept their promise to help. When students can't handle the task of compiling questionnaire results, why should they expect, let alone demand, that they have a say in picking a new University President? -J. Downs Herold, Grad Old Middle To the Editor: GEORGE PLATSIS' LETTER, which appeared in yesterday's Michigan Daily about the New Left, Aptheker, God, country, and apple pie in general, is notable for boldness of ignorance and' sheer American arrogance-qualities not uncommon in the present conduct of foreign policy. Mr. Aptheker may not be the New Left's most vigorous speaker, nor in fact, a speaker for the New Left. But at the very least, he is a welcome change from the Old Middle that has been running this country, running it into the ground, for the past twenty years. He is clearly differentiated from that Old Middle by a quality that appears to have passed Mr. Platsis by ("dead" it would seem, like Marx, Stalin, and Nietzsche) - Mr. Platsis has a good deal of fun playing with historical anal- ogies (which never seem to fit). He also opts for "absolutes" and "standards," but tr'ies to suggest a certain relativism by telling us that Marx, Stalin, and Nietzsche are dead. Clever. But what about their ideas? Are they dead too? Mr. Platsis would have us believe that only the "good guys" (Sen. Long) have been running this country and they don't need any help or criticism to do it (Hear that Spock & Thomas & Co.!!). Just let them have their way, let them go about the world doing good with all the IMMENSE power they have for doing good (A- Bombs, H-Bombs, Wars ion pov- erty]), and everything will turn out hunky-dory. SCRIPTURE TELLS US that we are to be God-like, not God. Mr. Platsis, in his catalogue of what America has done for' humanity (past & present) has confused the two. We should be wary of that kind of absolutism and its advocates, for it is the very difference be- tween "greatness" and the "grand- lose" -George Abbott White Both Sides To the Editor: IF I WERE a fifth ward demo- crat, I would vote for LeRoy Cappaert rather than Dr. Larry McDonald. Publicity given to Dr. McDonald, a University Hospital staff member, by the Daily in the primary campaign has not been fair, however. As a long-time subscriber to the Michigan Daily, I have been' pleased to see recent articles con- cerning the registration of stu- dents. The February 21 primary and the April 4 city elections are of great importance to everyone connected with the University. I hope that the issues and can- didates will all receive objective News does not mention these broadcasts in its daily program guide, and I see no way for new students to find out what local radio stations are doing. Here in Ann Arbor, local radio is not limit- ed to news and music; it is possible to hear rebroadcasts of Radio Moscow, teen-age conservatives, and all points of view. STUDENTS SHOULD hear var- ious points of view before they vote in any election. If the col- umns of the Daily cannot present so much information on Ann Ar- bor candidates and issues, they should call attention to other sources of such detailed informa- tion, the best of which is cur- rently local radio. Any news medium should pre- sent even those facts which do not support its own editorial opinion. The Daily currently leans toward the left, which is its right if it will report other points of view or refer its readers to other sources. I personally hope to con- tinue the Daily for many years to come, whether I agree with the editorials or not, because this newspaper can perform a real service to the community. -Carl H. Zwinck, '48E, '52, '56 To the Editor: LAST THURSDAY just as I was about to start my nightly cul- tural hour by viewing a "Batman" episode, there came upon my door a harsh, peremptory BANG, BANG, BANG. I opened the por- tal and there in the gloom stood three men, unscrupulous cads I should say. "Are you a student at the U. of M.?" asked one. "Shore nuff," I answered amicably (I'm from the South). "Then you'll have to come with us," they chanted in unison. "How so?" quoth I, am- icably. "You are to be part of a captive audience we have select- ed to be subverted this evening by the hypnotic charms of Herbert Antheker." they chanted in uni- -fate by an impersonal random sampling process. There had been talk in the VOICE politburo of selecting victims from a secret psychology department list of weak-ego persons, easily deluded by propaganda. However, this line of action turned out to be im- practical, since ;most of these in- dividuals were busy writing 15,000 letters to Senator' Dzendzel sup- porting his Stop and Frisk Law. During the entire march to the auditorium I could see out of the corner of my eye a man who was observing the bizarre recruitment. He tood out because of two plac- ards he carried, one in either hand --SCOPES GOT A FAIR TRIAL and STOP AND FRISK--NOW. I knew who it must be. This letter and the facts it un- veils, demonstrate why we must al- ways be on our guard against su- perficial jndgments of ideas and opinions. It would be very easy. not knowing what I've related here, to dismiss a statement as incredibly stupid which referred to those who heard Dr. Apetheker as a "captive audience." But is it? Let me conclude, amicably, "Shore nuff." -Art Poskocil, Grad Misdirected To the Editor: ANYONE who writes critically for the press must suspend cer- tain functions of the ego as a necessary precondition. In laying bare his ideas before the eyes of strange readers, the thought that his inevitable lapses in judgment will become crystallized in print along with hishappier moments, must not offend him. I have made this necessary suspension and so will outlast my shame following the publication of my misdirect- ed praise of Olivier's Othello in Friday's Daily. All this did .not stifle a hot flush which I experienced upon noting that in the published re- view, the entire paragraph criti- cal of Sir Laurence had been de- leted (although I mad marked * F FZI liii 4 W&i~ ~iUL ~ ~"i '~