PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 1969 PAGE SIX THE MIChIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MARCH 8,1966 Distinctive H aircutting fr people who care! " 6 Hairstylists * No waiting * Razor cutting Z e ADS i Government Truthfulness Discussed try . Dascola Barbers near Michigan Theatre I I' 'II' ISNTMI1SERY ES NOT WATCHING TV THIS TERM NEJAC TV RENTALS, has Zenith 1-9" AII-Channel portables (Continued from Page 3) of its pants and do more itself in the war. Casualty Reports Among war reporters in Viet Nam, the question often is asked, is the government leveling with us on enemy and American casual- ties? The government insists it is. How, asks the reporter, can you call our losses "light" when a whole company was wiped out? You can, says the government, when a batallion was involved. But was a battalion involved, asks the reporter? The question goes round and round. Jim Hagerty has been on both sides of the fence as press secre- tary for President Eisenhower and now as a television news executive. "Are reporters getting the truth in Viet Nam?" he asks. "I don't know. Probably we're not getting the whole story. But should we? I kind of think it's legitimate for a government not to tell the whole story., But then I am forced to remember how White House re- porters used to scream at me for more information and sometimes they turned out to be right." Government vs. Press In the eternal war between government and reporters, be- tween the keepers and the seekers of the facts,-there is a disposition on the highest levels of govern- ment to charge news media with pious hypocrisy. When, it is ask- ed, do editors admit their own contributions to the credibility gap, their own errors in print and on the air? In this context, a high official of the Johnson administration told this reporter somewhat bit- terly: "I have never lied to the press. Compare the government's stand- ards of credibility with other seg- ments of our society, including the press, and you'll find the govern- ment's standards high. Little Secrecy "Only two to three per cent of government business involves any secrecy. And only a tiny fraction of that remains secret. The gov- ernment has an obligation to be as open as possible, and is. But the government is not given the presumption of good faith we gve to other things. "The American people have a right to know but they also have a right to have dangerous prob- lems handled properly by respon- sible officers and not by the press. Nobody elected them." The view from the government foxholes also includes a sensation or contradictory assault. On one hand, it was criticized for saying too little about the first alleged Hanoi peace feeler. On the oth&r, it was criticized for talking too much about the second feeler, one relayed by Italian officials. Peace Overture In the latter case, the story was broken by a reporter who said Washington had rejected that peace overture. This was not true. "We could not say nothing or make a 'no comment'," said a State Department officials. "To do so would have made it appear that we were rejecting the offer. We hadn't." Transcending the battle of press, and government in the arena of credibility is the ultimate agency of the Viet Nam problem itself. A war difficult to understand is easy to misunderstand. A m b i g u i t y breeds dissent and dissent, espe- cially as it hardens, breeds suspic- ion. The war in Viet Nam has no battle lines, no chartable progress, no easily seen goals. The United States is not fighting the real vil- lians, we are told, but their prox- ies - the Viet- Cong for Hanoi, Hanoi for Red China, with the Soviet Union a questionable stock- holder. We are not fighting all out because we dare not, it is said, risk a large war. We are fighting them on the ground but we dare not risk commitment to a ground war in Asia. We advise, we esca- late, we bomb, we pause, we seem seems to be more of it." makes for grease in our social re- "We are constantly torn be- lationships. tween our notions of democracy Gentle Deception and what the world today de- "In foreign affairs we us" the mands," says Henry Grass, Co- same gentle forms of deception, lumbia University historian. "But which deceives no one but gets no m o s t successful governments one mad. There are accepted maintain some mystery. forms of deception but we do not As it is with all nations, Amer- deceive our enemies or friends or ican history abounds not only in ourselves about our serious intent. examples of official secrecy but These recent difficulties you men- also contradictions between gov- ernment postures and government acts, between the promises of can- didates and their deeds after elec- tion, between the "inside" atti- tudes of government and the pub- lic positions taken under political pressure. Jefferson's Role Thomas Jefferson as a candi- date opposed creation of a na- tional bank, and supported it as president. During the Texas revo- to beg the world, anybody, to get lution against Mexico, the U.S. us out and to the conference ta- government pretended to be neu-! ble, we bdmb again, we ask the tral but wasn't. The contemporary' United Nations to do something public was never told of Grover while we firm up our commitment Cleveland's cancer operation in to Saigon with a hastily called 1893 nor later the extent of the conference in Hawaii. illnesses of Woodrow Wilson in Cold War Complexities 1918 and Franklin Roosevelt in The complexities of'the cold war 1945. almost defy understanding, if not Wilson, the apostle of "open hope. covenants openly arrived at," was tion don't require a change in pol- icy but a change in stage manage- ment. "Where spies are involved, we must decide in advance how we will behave in all contingencies. It was ridiculous for Eisenhower to deny that that U2 plane over Russia was engaged in espionage and then admit it was. In my time, we had planes that strayed off course. We never admitted anything else or used cover stories. We simply said they wandered off accidentally, so sorry. This sort of thing went on in Britain for 1,000 years and there was no fuss because it was done so skillfully. "The government did not le about its Dominican intervention. But I think there is a grave dan- ger of the government talking too much. It was a confused situation which suddenly became worse. The government should have said nothing until it had the situation under control and then issued a white paper. No Immediate Explanation "No, I don't think our relations with Latin America required an immediate explanation. My friends in Latin America, in gov- ernment and business, tell me pri- vately they thanked God we in- tervened. They had to complain publicly or be crucified at home. "Old tyrants depart," a sad, Harry S. Truman noted recently. "New ones take their places. Old differences are composed, new dif- ferences arise. Old allies become the foe. The recent enemy be- comes the friend. It's all very baffling and trying." "There were hawks and doves arguing loudly in 1941," recalls a State Department official. "But then came Pearl Harbor and we were in it and the arguments stop- forced, when the chips were down at Versailles, to negotiate the t r e a t y in secrecy with Lloyd George and Clemenceau while an American Marine with bayonet kept out all intruders, including representatives of minor allies, de- feated Germany and, even, the president's own associates in the American peace delegation. In 1939 Franklin Roosevelt, the president, at the start of World War II, said America would be Fillet -o.- Fish . . . . . 29c " Triple ThickShakes.. 22c Deicious Hamburgers 15c 2000 W. Stadium Blvd. y ) / 1 r ' A ; '' : s FOR ALL YOUR FORMAL NEEDS! ~] TUXEDOS Q WHITE DINNER JACKETS rWEDDINGS-PROMS-DANCES "Special Student Rates" R USSELL'S TUXEDO RENTAL SERVICE ped. In a declared war, there is "neutral in fact, if not in spirit." But they don't believe it for a less questioning of ourselves. and the country was neither. In moment. It was all window dress- Gray World 1952, the Eisenhower admiristra- ing. "Now we are in a gray world tion came in with much tax of Among students of the Lyndon fighting dirty little wars without "massive retaliation" and tlhe "un- Johnson school of wdow dress- a declaration of war, where the leashing" of Chiang Kai-shek, and iig there are those who detect a enemy is not a uniformed army, delivered neither. tendency to be passionately secre- where there is no wartime censor- Stevenson and China tive about innocuous details, to be- ship and none of the regimenta- In 1961, according to the A'- come righteously indignant when tion we customarily accept in war. thur Schlesinger memoir, Presi- transparent political motives the And hilewe fght, F 'suggested, to give reporters the And while we fight, Detroit sells dent Kennedy told U.N. Ambas- feeling that everywhere in govern- nine million cars to add to the un- sador Adlai Stevenson: "You have ment "Big Brother" is watching, reality." the hardest thing in the world to and to overdress the window. Always there is the big bomb to sell. It really doesn't make any andeforerdethitmd s-i complicate the complications, to sense - the idea that Taiwan rep-P Before his death, it is saidd quicken the doves and slow the resents China. But, if we lost this President Kennedy had commited hawks. fight, if Red China comes mnIo the himself to a budget under $100 "The last three presidents of the U.N. during our first year in town, billion and the work in that direc- United States," it is pointed out your first year and mine, they'll tion was already well advanced on a penultimate level of govern- run us both out. We can delay the when President J o h n s o n was ment, "have had to think of a full admission of Red China till afterI sworn in. Then Washington began nuclear exchange as a real possi- the election." to hear about the monumental bility. Thus, neither President In the campaign of 1964, Lyn- difficulties involved in keeping Johnson nor Secretary Rusk ever don Johnson appeared as the the budget under $100 billion. blasts the other side by name. apostle of restraint in Viet Nam Groans and Moans They have avoided creating a war and Barry Goldwater, the' knight "The most wonderfully dra-' psychology because it would be too of escalation, and the war was matic, superbly audible groans and dangerous in the nuclear age. escalated a year later under Pres- moans began to be heard from the Thus, the dissenters are left more ident Johnson. White House," wrote columnist room to creat a psychology in the "Reader's Choice" Joseph Alsop. "They were the bat- other direction." In all these examples in history, tle sounds of a conservative Her- Views of Historians the reader takes his choice, be- cules, fighting the hundred-head- Among historians, tne whole tween a suspicion of deliberate de- ed Hydra ,of left-wing extrava- question of government credibility ceit or a more gentle consider- gance. Bulletins were issued from is viewed with varying degj ees of ation, that events can make a lie time to time to a breathless na-. concern. of the best of promises. tion, suggesting that Hydra had Henry Steele Commager is dis- There is in Washington today Hercules cornered.; turbed, he says, by the "increased a man of great experience in gov- "Finally, a budget below I100 trend" in Washington to disguise ernment and the world, who has billion was breathlessly unveiled, the truth. ben high in the inner councils of as an astonishing triumph of nard "It is due to the heavy role of several adminstrations. He no work and fiscal responsibility - the military. Countries confronted longer holds office and, in semi- and naturally in a White House, with military problems act this retirement, enjoys a relaxed ur- all but deprived of electric light, way. They justify it in terms of banity about recent world history. in order to dramatize the Presi- national security. I don't- think All the talk of double-talk in dent's penny-pinching principles.! it's justified now. The habits of Washington, from the U2 incident The flim-flam got results ... per- deception carry the danger of self- onward, fills him with an amused suaded businessmen that President deception; you can begin to be- sense of irony. Johnson was a sound fellow, with lieve your own propaganda." "For a people with a supposed his heart in the right place." No Trend sense of humor," he says, "we Among others, .Alsop suspected' Samuel Eliot Morison is less Americans are so ponderous. In elaborate stage management in disturbed. 'I think in war or at diplomacy and government, there the intensive series of White a time of delicate negotiations you are various grades of the truth as House conferences last summer can't hold a government to admit there are in private life. When a that preceded announcement of" everything. There is no more of hostess we detest invites us to escalation in Viet Nam. a trend now than there has ever dinner, we don't tell the truth. Big Expectations been but in recent years events We say, 'Oh, darling, I'm simply "Day after day, the bulletins have come so fast and thick there devastated but we're tied up.' This were issued, suggesting that the Reserves and the National Guard hundreds of press agents. He can, might soon be called up, that a by the timing of his announce- state of war emergency perhaps ments, achieve maximum effect impended. Then very softly, the favorable to him and unfavorable na ion was at last told that the to his opposition. Headlines and Reserves would not be called up TV cameras follow a president after all. The step that was taken, everywhere. which was really a very big step, Thus, there was nothing un- was made to seem no more Lhan American in the suggestion that a tiny, modest step by the care- perhaps one of the reasons John- fully created expectation of some- son hurried to Honolulu for a con- thing bigger still." ference about Viet Nam was to Politics includes many kinds of take the play away from a Senate charades and one of the tradition- inquiry into his Viet Nam policy. al favorites among incumbent News Manipulation candidates is to rise above the "Manipulation of the news is a battle in the role of a statesman constant activity of both parties. who is too concerned with tne Only they do it better." This was public business to engage in crass said by a Republican, who was an campaigning. This is effective assistant to President Eisenhower, campaigning. Roosevelt did it in with equal parts of envy and in- 1940 with a "non-political insiec- dignation. tion tour" of defense plants. Ear- Under Lyndon Johnson, the ly in the campaign of 1964, the White House controls the vast White House kept insisting that flow of official information from Lyndon Johnson, a Roosevelt dis- the countless mimeographs of the ciple, was making "nonpolitical" executive branch. For example, It speeches. announces monthly national rec- "But there was a big difference," ords of personal income, which says a man who knew both cam- used to be announced by the Com- paigns. "FDR did it with tongue merce Department. in cheek. He knew that we knew The President is almost never that he knew his 'non-political' lacking in announcements. On the trip was very political. But early last Labor Day weekend, which in the 1964 campaign, wheni we he spent at his ranch in Texas, suggested those 'non-political' sp-. there were 42 news releases in pearances were political, the White four days from the "Pedernales House jumped down our throats." Press Service." Sense of Secrecy Intense Interest Lyndon Johnson has been known The President takes an intense to have an acute sense of secrecy interest in what is written about dating back to his Senate day. An him and his administration. With- old friend and aid once tried to in minutes after he reads the explain it: "I think it's the gai- news tickers in his office, he has bler or politician in him. He just been known to complain to re doesn't like to reveal his next porters about stories he considers move. He plays things close to inaccurate. the vest." Finally, no study 'of government Thus, there have been occasions credibility is complete without when neither the press covering considering the question of "free- him nor the Secret Service pro- dom of information." Periodically, tecting him nor thet crew flying over many years and administra- him knew precisely where the tions, reporters and editors have President was going until they complained fiercely of undue of- were airborne, ficial secrecy under which bureau- Thus, nothing is said to infuri- cratic error or worse might have ate the President more than to been hidden under the veil of "na- have one of his appointments tional security." leaked before he makes the an- Ten years ago a committee was nouncement. It is a common joke set up in the House, chaired by in Washington that the best way Rep. John E. Moss, a California to kill a presidential appointment Democrat, to investigate. s u c h is to rumor it in advance. One complaints. It found many, rang- former government official insists ing from official reluctance to di- he knows of two appointments vulge details on government con- that were rescinded because of ad- tracts-where there was no com- Vance leaks. petitive bidding - to the Penta- Occasional Confusion gon's insistence that the Pentagon' Thus, occasional confusion and telephone book was classified, as incredulity; James Deain, White was the work of the Lincoln Cen- House reporter for the St. Louis tennial Committee. Post-Dispatch, wrote in the New Many Improvements Republic: The Moss committee, Demo- "On July 27, at an impromptu cratic-controlled, brought many press conference in his office, the improvements. It appears to have President said he had not begun been busiest during the Republi- to consider an appointment to the can adiminstration of Dwight Eis- Supreme Court to replace Justice enhower. It is considerably less Goldberg. The next day he an- busy during the Democratic ad- nounced the appointment of Abe ministration of Lyndon Johnson. Fortas as Goldberg's successor. Why? Why mislead when you don't have "On the basis of complaints we to? Whatever happened to 'no receive," said Moss, "this admmn- comment'?" istration has a reputation for an On Jan. 22; 1965, two days after almost perfect score in not abus- the inauguration, reporters asked ing the handling or withholding of White House press s e c r e t a r y information. We get fewer conm- George Ready whether the Presi- plaints now. If anyone feels I'm dent had made a disability agree- playing politics, let him bring in ment with Vice President Humph- E a complaint." rey. "No," said Reedy.. "We just But then there is Sam Archi- haven't gotten to that yet." bald, staff director of the commit- Agreement Revealed tee, who told this reporter: "Yes, Later that month, when the there have, been improvements. President went to the hospital But it is also a fact of life that with a cold, reporters again asked Democrats are less inclined to about the disability agreement. clobber a Democratic president." Ready answered two days later: Archibald, an appointee who can Johnson and Humphrey had made be fired by the committee, auth- the agreement "sometime before orized the use of his name behind the inauguration." that quote. Either he has a pri- The tools for image-making, a vate income or he must be one of common phenomenon in America, the bravest men in this town, are prodigious in the presidency. where anonymity is fearless and He controls the vast machinery of truth, a sometime mystery of mir- the executive branch and its rors. s 14 E 4 4 9 1230 Packard NO 5-4549' r~ -11 i _I Delta wants you Ia r t :.::Y"::; i"i;. COMPARISON WILL PROVE a shirt laundered at Greene's is as white as the day you bought it. Claiming to produce a sparking white shirt is one thing, but proving it is another. 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