4r mlrhigau Baligy Seventy-Fifth Year EDrYED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSrrY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS The Teach In Sponsors Need Somfe New Ideas * ere Opinions Are ree 420 MAYNARD $T., ANN ARBOR, Mici-l. Truth Will 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. ATURDAY, JUNE 5, 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN MEREDITH Putting Olympus Behind The Residential College Plans for the University's resi(iential college, a new departure for indergraduate education here, have been well formulated by interest- ed students and faculty. What is needed now is high-level support to bring in the needed noney and see the project through to successful ulfill ient. By CAL SKINNER, JR. S0 McGEORGE BUNDY has agreed to reschedule his de- bate with the protesting profes- sors, the outside world thinks that the academic community is united against President Johnson's Viet Nam policy and some of the public at-large is beginning to wonder why the U.S. really is in Viet Nam. This much the teach- ~* in movement has accomplished. But can it change foreign poli- cy? It seems rather obvious from President Johnson's commence-, ment address to his daughter's graduating class that "rational discussion" from the professors is not going to change his mind. "After all, they don't have the facts," Johnson probably reasons. If intellectual argument won't do the trick, the profs will have to take the long route of chang- ing public opinion. Teach-ins iso- lated on college campuses haven't accomplished this. Not even a teach-in televised nationally was able to do it. Certainly a rerun will have little more effect than again raising questions regarding our Viet Nam policy; it will not change many people's minds. (This is to be expected since neither side has an air-tight case.) A KEY QESTION' now arises * that must be answered by the Inter-University Committee for a ~Public Hearing on Viet Nam: where does the teach-in movement go from here? If the committee decides to di- rect its primary efforts at the campus it will take years before - any policy changes result. (Even now on campus where administra- tion supporters have tried to dem- onstrate the extent of student sup- port a majority is usually found that disagrees with the protes- If the committee decides to 2oncentrate on the national tele- sion and press audience, it should 'emember that the Survey Re- search Center has discovered that TV serves mainly to reinforce ex- isting opinions, rather than to :hange people's minds. The latter trust be the committee's goal. PERHAPS it would be worth- while to glance at where the teach-in movement has been in order to gain an insight as to where it can go and under what conditions. This spring the United States was in the process of changing its foreign policy with regard to Southeast Asia. A stronger com- mitment was being made. While it was obvious that this was the course of events, the administra- tion did not explain why the change was taking place. Congress refused to press for an explana- tion. Into this informational void stepped the teach-in movement. To put it bluntly, the teach-in movement was a situational mir- acle. IT IS DOUBTFUL that a sim- ilar combinationi of events and. non-events will repeat themselves now that Johnson must have real- ized that he must explain what he does in critical foreign policy areas. Evidence of Johnson's reali- zation for the necessity of keep- ing the public' informed can be seen almost weekly on TV. If situational leadership can be planned, that is the task facing the Inter-University committee to- day. Continued innovation is defi- nitely called for. FOR SEVERAL YEARS the idea of a small residential college at the Uni- versity has been lovingly nursed toward fulfillment by a small, select and dedicat- ed group of students, faculty and admin- istrators. But theyhave carried the ball as far as they are able, and unfortunately, this is not far enough to see the plan move from dreams to brick and mortar. It's now in the hands of the gods. President ;Hatcher and his vice-presi- dents can't afford to play Olympians very often, for the politics of their offices (both internal and external) and prob- lems of finance place far too many limi- tations upon :them. Power and influence are, in any case, limited commodities to be dealt with sparingly. THEY MUST BEstored up carefully and saved for the day when that truly ex- traordinary opportunity, that creative idea crying out for recognition, is pre- sented. Every effort in behalf of that new idea, that one opportunity, no mat- ter how difficult or painful it may seem at the time, will be many times repaid. The residential college is such an oppor- tunity. It calls for the single-minded thrust- ing aside of perennial economic delaying tactics and of the political derailing schemes that beset such projects at every turn. It calls for what Michael Olinick, Daily editor in 1962-63, called "vision." It calls for Olympians. No equivocation. Just commitment. Philosophical arguments for the resi- dential college have been rehearsed many times. Most of them add up, to a pro- found interest in providing an intellec- tually and emotionally exciting environ- ment for undergraduates. Though elusive, it is a goal worth seeking at this univer- sity. T'S AN IDEAL that cannot be bought- but neither does it come cheaply. If careful, toilsome planning could buy it, then we would have it. But the ultimate power to kill; or implement the college doesn't rest with Associate Dean Burton Thuma and the series of advisors and committees that have hashed over detail after detail and idea after idea. It rests with President Hatcher and Vice-Presi- dents Heyns and Pierpont. The great problem of implementation facing the residential college is money. The present trend is toward compromise, if anything. In this case, the correct path should be clear. Cut too many costs, im- pose too many financial restrictions, and it will be all over. Half a residential college would be worse than none at all. New ideas and creative experiments have high death rates under the best of :conditions. As various limitations are placed on what can be done, various paths that, the project can take are cut off and barred. Cut off 75 per cent of such paths, and you may cut off just that one that would have led sto the success that every- one had dreamed of. Funds can be pared down to a certain level-an unfortunate- ly high one in this case-but below that threshhold the residential college would be born unequipped to explore new paths, barely able, even, to struggle down the same old paths-paths with which we are already all too familiar. SO WHERE IS $12-15 million to come from? Thuma hasn't got it, that's for JUDITH WARREN ........ ..Co-Editor ROBERT HIPPLER Co-Editor EDWARD HERSTEIN................ Sports Editor JUDITH FIELDS.................Business Manager MICHIGAN ON THEMOVE sure. The literary college has pulled an awful lot of rabbits out of some awfully thin hats in its time, but such a figure is beyond even the magician's capabilities. It becomes, therefore, a challenge to the vision and resources of President Hatch- er and his vice-presidents. A lot of alumni money is flowing in right now. Some can be channeled in the direction of the residential college. If the vision of the residential college is power- fully presented, as it should and can be, some large alumni gifts will be forth- coming. Neither is the Legislature totally immune to a well-documented and well- founded argument (it sees, after all, very few). Money for the library facilities is avail- able in the federal Higher Education Act's Title II. Money for psychology teaching facilities is available from the National Institutes of Health. And an extension of the National Science Foundation's gen- erous graduate teaching facilities pro- gram to the undergraduate level is in the works in Washington. INTERNALLY, the residential college can be compared to "seed money" the Uni- versity spends on promising research projects. Several hundred thousand dol- lars goes for such projects every year, and the returns are immeasurable. (Some research leading to a Nobel prize project got started this way.) Money for the resi- dential college would be seed money (al- beit a pretty large sum) in the name of undergraduate education. There are no really large, untapped sources of wealth within the University, but the days of "payless paydays" are past- Given generous doses of fiscal in- genuity, an impressive fund could be put together to, to quote a phrase, "insure the vital margin." It is done quite often in the name of research, and a change in that tune would be refreshing-for fac- ulty and students alike. Of course it's going to hurt like hell. Putting real money into undergraduate education to destroy the status quo in a frontal assault rather than a slow, inglor- ious retreat is a rather novel idea. (The UGLI may have been a frontal assault and an even brilliant maneuver, but the initial motivation was largely to relieve intolerable pressures on the library sys- tem as efficiently as possible. Putting money into the residential college will un- doubtedly cause added strains in the short run, rather than relieving any.) FINALLY, YOU GET down to a ques- tion of administrative leadership with- in the University. Here is a thought- through, hashed-out plan to infuse new directions and new sources of creative energy into the University. It has been put together' over several years by many stundents and faculty. It is what they want. Administration exists to serve the students and faculty who are the univer- sity. Students and faculty rarely say what they want (and almost never do they work together), and they certainly aren't in the habit of backing words with con- certed thought and action. This isn't to say that faculty and stu- dents are unanimous in their support; that isn't to be expected on any issue. It is to say that a sizable and respectable segment has held up a vision of what the University might create within this vast, swirling vortex of. generally uncontrolled and uncontrollable intellectual currents. A residential college integrated into the University in thought and facilities, yet able to provide some measure of new freedom to experiment in tackling hard core issues of undergraduate excellence, led by students and faculty personally in- volved in what they are doing, is a very DOMINICAN WAR: According to High Sources . . By MARK KILLINGSWORTH j" .. .99 per cent of our rea- son for going in there was to try to provide protection for these American lives and the lives of other nationals . . . The lives of our citizens were in danger and men were running up and down the corridors of the Ambassador Hotel with tommy guns shooting out win- dows, and through the roof, and through the closets, and our citizens wererunder the beds and in closets trying to dodge this gunfire and our ambassa- dor, as he was talking to us (Wednesday, April 28) was un- der the desk." --President Johnson. June 2, 1965 on his decision to in- tervene in the Dominican crisis 'HE TRUTH about the United States intervention in Santo Domingo is finally beginning to filter through the vast mass of propaganda inspired by left- leaning critics who seem to prefer to let that country languish in the throws of anarchiac violence and godless Communism than to have it find peace and, freedom. Newly available evidence-from the highest sources-is proving the utter hypocrisy and falsehood of a number of "issues" about U.S. intervention. AMONG THOSE "issues"-and among the proofs that they are phony-is myth number one: that the U.S. intervened to prevent a Communist takeover. In raising this issue the presi- dent's left wing critics demon- strate their utter insincerity. As the President himself point- ed out, "99 per cent of our reason for going in there was to provide protection for these American lives and the lives of other nationals." IN OTHER WORDS, this is ob- viously no "issue" at all. And those who don't believe , the President ought to be convinced by the simple facts of the case. The President is a precise man. When he says 99 per cent, he means 99 per cent, and not more or less. As we will see below, there were approximately 56 agents of the International Communist Con- spiracy in the Dominican Repub- lic-at least. We helped evacuate over 5600 American citizens and foreign na- tionals. INFORMED SOURCES in Washington point out that the sum total of these two numbers (5,656) divided into 5600 is 99 per cent. In short, 99 per cent of the problem was, indeed, protection A Pragmatic' Defense Of Viet Nam Policies WVhy Is This Man Laughing? By JAMES BURNHAM National Review THE SPOKESMEN for the Unit- ed States government offer an. inadequate and unconvincingmo- tive for our intervention in Viet Nam. In the Johnson as in the Ken- nedy administrations, they insist that we seek only to defend the right of the South Vietnamese people to choose their own form of government, that we help the Viet Cong only because it is es- sentially a foreign force interfer- ing with that choice. According to the official expla- nation, our troops and technicians are in South Viet Nam in response to a request by a legitimate gov- ernment to assist it-by "advice and economic aid"-against an external, aggressor. THAT IS REALLY preposterous in the face of what has been go- ing on in South'Viet Nam and what. we have been doing there. The U.S. statements have come to seem rather silly, fraudulent or hypocritical. As a consequence they are vul- nerable targets for the domestic and foreign opponents.of U.S. pol- icy, and the more so as a) the So u t h Vietnamese population grows weary of the war; b) the successive coups drain legitimacy out of the Saigon government; c) the U.S role progresses several orders of magnitude beyond "ad- vice," and d) we escalate the qial- ity and range of the fighting. No doubt these formulas ("at the request of a friendly govern- ment," "to help defend freedom against aggression," etc.) are thought to be diplomatically con- venient. They may easily turn into traps. WHAT IF A NEW coup or coun- ter-coup produces a government in Saigon that orders a cease-fire, joins the National Liberation Front, asks us to start packing? This is not excluded, is even likely. . What if North Viet Nam and its allies did stop all traceable aid, and yet the war continued? Our formulas would tumble about our ears. IF WE HAVE an excuse for be- ing in South Viet Nam, it can only be our own security. Our security would be critical- ly threatened by the advance of the Communist enterprise into Southeast Asia and the South Seas; we therefore resist that ad- vance by what means are neces- sary. Resistance is the means, also, of protecting the freedom of the local nations and serving the long- term interests of the local in- habitants, and we are therefore present in their country as allies and friends. pur action, however, should not be made dependent on their pos- sibly changing wishes but on our own interest and decision. Our ac- tion, if successful, will incidental- ly make possible a free, peaceful Laos and South Viet Nam, but its fundamental aid should be. to meet the challenge of the Communist enterprise. Only thus understood can our action in Southeast Asia be ef- fectively conducted, intelligibly ex- plained and convincingly justified. A for American and other nationals. Although Johnson has not re- vealed it yet, a highly placed Washington source has said that the final decision to intervene came after one top Johnson ad- visor, Srank M. Charrette, chief of the statistices and reports di- vision of the agency for inter- national development in the state department, established those .two basic figures and then computed the 99 per cent-one per cent breakdown which was, as has been seen, crucial. After all, you can't just sit idly while marauders with tommyguns are shooting up the best hotel in Santo Domingo. China might be sitting idly by in Asia, but that's the inscrutable East for you. SPEAKING of Communism, it is obvious that the presence of Communist elements in itself would have justified our interven- tion. But administration critics believe myth number two-that the "minimal" preserce of Com- munism in the country did not justify intervention. Some will say we could not pos- sibly know how many Communists there were in the country, and especially hdw many were actually influencing the course of the re- volt. Nonsense. The state department counted 54 Communists in the country of 3 million people (or 58, depending upon which report you read) who were active in the revolt. At any rate, this averages only 56, or about five times the number of an average presidential cabinet-or four cabinents plus a supreme court, which is far worse. OF COURSE some of those 54 54 (58) (56) on the list (s) were found to be in jail or deceased at the time of the revolt. But anyone who knows the influence of Lenin or for that matter, the resurgence of Stalin in today's Russia, is not impressed. Some will say Ambassador W. Tapley Bennet couldn't have known the extent of Communist influence of the revolution. They point out he was hiding under his desk as he called Washington. But-as is usual-these left- tainted critics do not point out where his secretary was. They re- fuse to admit that anyone with a name like W. Tapley Bennet ought to be hiding under a desk anyway. AND THEY absolutely ignore the obvious fact-which President Johnson jointed out on June 2- that Ambassador Bennet had been getting periodic intelligence re- ports from U.S. citizens who have done research on the situation- by looking for Communists under their beds. MYTH NUMBER THREE that the critics of intervention believe is that President Johnson "shot from the hip" in sending the troops to Santo Domingo, whether or not the danger of Communism and violence justified it. Ridiculous. Secretary Rusk pointed out in his news conference last week that the administration acted quickly only after getting a top secret telegram on the dan- ger ridden situation from Ambas- sador Bennett. "It was that telegram, which was emergent, which was what we call a critic telegram-that is, it 4. "'l Where I'm In Charge, There's Danger Of Government Bein-- AhsobillyNo Subve~rted" /} -10 Moll's Adventures: Fun for All1 At the Michigan Theatre "THE AMOROUS Adventures of Moll Flanders" is a morality play- with very little morality and a great deal of play. Patterned roughly after Tom Jones," the picture makes no apologies: "Any similarities between this film and any other film are purely coin- cidental," we are told. Moll, taken as a child from an orphange by a country squire, is raised as a servant in the squire's home, and grows into quite a well- rounded lass, She is seduced by one of his sons and marries the other who supbsequently drowns after falling from both a carriage and a bridge (figure that one out!). Since she is dealt out of her late husband's will by his family, Moll leaves for London to seek her fortune-in the form of a rich husband. She finds one right away-or so it seems. But Sir William, her prospective benefactor, swears off women as a result of a stroke of apoplexy, and Moll is on her own again. A HIGHWAYMAN (known only as Jimmy) who robs the carriage Moll rides to London, draws a wrong conclusion and thinks that she Is~ a Lady of some means. He poses as a wealthy ship owner and captain in order to marry her and live off her money. Their hilarious courtship around London (and the "Captain's" ever-growing fleet of ships) enids when they find out that they were really after each other's money. But meanwhile they have fallen in love. However, in order to pay the debts he ran up courting Moll, Jimmy takes once again to 4 /0 I