ul r irl igttn ttil : SOUND and FURY by Clarencee FaniU. Viet Nam: It's T ime Now T o Pack It In Whbeo Optnons Are Free T'ruth Will Prevail Editorials printed in' 0 THURSDAY, MAY 26, 1 Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS 420 The r th 966 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Michigan Daily express the inidividual opinions of staff writers e editors. This must be noted in all reprints. NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL HEFFER European Nationalism Finally Comes of Age HEN THE HISTORY of the sixties is written, nationalism may be surpris- ingly discovered to have its strongest re- surgence neither in Africa nor Asia, but in Europe, homeland of the nation-con- cept some 400 years ago. For Europe is alive today, alive and vig- orous, ready to assert its great economi- caklpotential and leadership ability on the world scene. European nations are be- ginning to cast off their moorings to the huge nation-states Russia and America: the disassociation of de Gaulle from NATO, the reluctance of Britain to send troops to Viet Nam, the German pressure to procure her own nuclear weapons, and the Polish and Rumanian nationalism spelling trouble for the Warsaw Pact. THE NATO CRISIS is the headline catcher today, of course. The decision of French President Charles de Gaulle to pullout will cause a shift of NATO head- quarters from Paris to probably Brussels and an elevation of West Germany to prominence in the defense of Western Eu- rope. While a Mike Mansfield suggestion that the U.S. remove all but a token force from the Atlantic alliance met strong support in Congress-"We think that we are try- ing to keep peace in the world and those fellows are happy to let us do it, making a dollar any chance they get"-Americans too often see the crisis growing out of bad faith solely on the part of the other side. Grievances stemmed from an apparent- ly lack of U.S. commitment to a whole- hearted interest in European welfare. The U.S. stand on Algeria, Suez, Morocco and request for UN investigation of Portuguese Angola did not win friends among con- servatives in London, Lisbon and Paris. The failure of Britain and America to totally integrate the higher commands of the European Defense Community left Germany and France believing that Washington and Moscow would try to uni- laterally create a demilitarized Central Europe as a buffer zone. E GAULLE HAS REJECTED a narrow military alliance, while striving to en- large the economic basis of that alliance Editorial Staff CLARENCE FANTO.................. Co-Editor CHARLOTTE WOLTER................. Co-Editor BUD WILKINSON......................Sports Editor BETSY COHN ...... ............Supplement Manager NIGHT EDITORS: Meredith Eiker, Michael Heffer, Shirley Rosick, Susan Schnepp, Martha Wolfgang. Business Staff SUSAN PERLSTADT..............Business Manager LEONARD PRATT............. Circulation Manager JEANNE ROSINSKI .............. Advertising Manager RANDY RISSMAN .............. Supplement Manager The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to the newspaper. Al rights of re-publication of all other matters here are also reserved. Subscription rate: $4.50 semester by carrier ($5 by mail); $8 two semesters by carrier ($ by mal). The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and Collegiate Press Service. Second class postage paid at Ann arbnr, Mich. Published daily Tuesday through Saturday morning. from "the Atlantic to the Urals." This naturally has caused him to seek an en- tente with Moscow and other East Euro- pean Communist capitals. What will be the move of West Germany, torn between a promising Franco-German partnership and a share in American nuclear deter- rents, probably depends on how success- ful de Gaulle is in resisting the political onslaught Washington will throw at him. Pressure from Washington for Bonn to regulate foreign trade with Communist' countries, as in the sale of the $150 mil- lion steel plant to Peking, can be seen from European capitals as an assertion of American economic autocracy. Trade patterns, carrying or following shifts in political patterns, are vastly changing the character of Western Eu- rope from what it was 20 years ago. France, Britain, Germany, Belgium and Switzerland all have a hand in the steel mill deal and have been carrying on trade of non-strategic materials with Commu- nist nations for years. The United States, with a facile con- clusion that the nature of the Commu- nist community also remains unchanged after 20 years, has missed a similar op- portunity to open up avenues of under- standing by shelving in Congress a bill to expand trade with Eastern Europe. THE EUROPEAN Economic Communi- ty (EEC), commonly called the Com- mon Market, has been stalled for more than a year over a new 5-year program, hinging on French desire for huge agri- culture subsidies. At the same time the Common Market is facing one of its worst crises, interest in expanding membership is stronger than ever. One of the election promises of Brit- ain's Harold Wilson was speedy entry into the EEC. This may open the way for a merger of the six-member EEC with the "outer seven" European Free Trade As- sociation countries, for while EFTA will be tarifless at the end of the year, both Denmark and Austria are eager to join EEC. Market strength within the European nations is at an all time high. Germany is riding the crest of a boom, Italy is edging up from a bout with inflation, worker opportunities outside their native countries go begging. And to the East, the decentralization of Communist re- gimes goes quietly ahead. Tito's Yugo- slavia and Ceausescu's Rumania, maver- ick states which have declared their in- dependence of Soviet military and eco- nomic domination, are rapidly expanding domestic programs and welcoming the products and assistance of more tech- nologically advanced Atlantic nations. Last year, the Western European nations did only $2 billion trade with the Eastern bloc, out of a total market of $38 billion. THE POSSIBILITIES for new markets between East and West are immense; at stake is the sustaining of the Western European production boom and for the East, a "goulash" standard of living for the populace. -DAVID KNOKE Few writers have come to the essential truth abo country's involvement in Nam than the New York talented young columnist Hamill. Inasmuch as he ex es many of my own sent about the war far better could, I am devoting my this week to a reprint of h umn which appeared in th York Post on May 21, 1966 By PETE HAMILL THE GUY was wearing th beret of the Special Fore he was standingnin a bar Do St. in Saigon, drinkir kind of desperate silence. He would not talk, even slim young bar hostess c him, who was happily tak money. After three whisk stood up, cursed Saigor lurched out the door. T1 all giggled. I saw him again a fe later, being helped by an R a jeep. His face was mash bloody, and some- of hi; were gone. I guess he ha mugged. Three young Viet Post's SO WHEN I think about Sai- t, Pete gon now, or look at the photo- xpress- graphs coming in on the photo- iments printers, I always remember the than I way the girls laughed at that space man, and the incredible cruel faces his col- of those boys, standing in safe- he New ty, enjoying his torment. I am' i. sure that when the moral giants -C.F. of the United Buddhist Church call out the civilian troops, they are with them. Those young men are free in e green Saigon, while the sons of Ameri- ces, and cans are being killed in thecoun- on Tu tryside. For the third time in re- ig in a cent weeks, more American sol- diers were killed in that war than to the Vietnamese, which means that the opposite Vietnamese have simply stopped sing his fighting. They are more interested :eys, he in killing each other in places like n, and Da Nang or Hue than they are in he girls fighting the Viet Cong, and that means we will do the fighting for w days them. MP into That means that all this year, ied and the American dead will be piling s teeth up while the sweet propaganda d been comes smoothly out'of Washington namese telling us they will not be dying closer ut this n Viet in white shirts stood on the corner, laughing. in vain. It says here that Wash- ington is lying. Those men are now dying in vain. THERE IS A CASE to be made, I suppose, for fighting for the ideals which this country once represented, and at its best still does. Anyone who has ever visit- ed a Communist country knows that freedom is not a cheap word, even when it becomes debased. I need not apologize for saying that after seeing a lot of other coun- tries, I love this more than all. But it is becoming increasingly difficult to accept certain thingsy We civilians run this country; Lyndon Johnson, Dean Rusk, and Robert McNamara work for us: we do not work for them. And lrrour name, they are saying that our children and our brothers must die because Satanism in the form of the Red Chinese and the Viet Cong has suddenly sprung up in a half- country in Southeast Asia. The representatives of Satanism are striking evil blows at a pure and shining legitimate government, and we, the American People, will risk even death to defend that government. BUT THAT government has nev- er governed anything. It does not govern in the countryside. It must kill its citizens in places like Da Nang and Hue to even come close to governing there. It governs Sai- gon the way a rather cynical madam handles a brothel. They will fight to the death to control Saigon, all right, because that is where the Americans sign the tabs. But they will not be fighting much out in the countryside any more. They don't have to do that. My kid brothers and your children will do that for them, They will not even defendthemselves poli- tically. They have Dean Rusk to do that for them. * * * THEY HAVE the most powerful nation in the world to do every- thing for them now. We'll fight for them, apologize for them, feed them, feed their bank accounts, populate their brothels, sleep with their women for them; if they ask we will certainly oblige. Forget about Harlem. Forget about Bedford-Stuyvesant, and Hazard, Kentucky, and the back-_. woods of Alabama. The people who live there will fend for themselves. We have more important things to consider. We have to take care of My Tho and Da Nang and Qui Nohn and Can Ne. It will cost only $18 billion this year. Who cares if there are rats in the Red Hook schoolrooms? First things first. We have to keep those three kids on a 'Saigon street corner out of the insidious clutches of Ho Chi Minh. I have two brothers in the army now and my mother has three more waiting in the wings. The supply of kids like that is now deemed inexhaustible, so we can keep this war going as long as we want. ENOUGH: I am no pacifist but this war has lasted too long. Those men who are dying there tonight are dying like men, with courage and tenacity. But with Buddhists rioting in the streets, General Ky shooting down civilians, Henry Cabot Lodge nodding in approval, while we apologize again and add that more men are on the way, then somebody had better think of something to tell their parents. If one more dies under the pres- ent conditions, someone is guilty of a murderous sin. Now, finally, we should pack it in. A Moment of Truth in Southeast Asia THE HARDEST QUESTION fac- ing us at the moment is wheth- or not the disintegration of the Saigon government and army can be stopped and reversed. The of- ficial position is, of course, that it can be. But there is little evidence to support the official will to believe, and there is mounting evidence that Gen. Nguyen Cao Ky or any- one like him is in an irreconcilable conflict with the war-weary people of Viet Nam. There is no prospect now visible that the South Vietnamese people and the South Vietnamese army can be united and rallied for the prosecution of the war. Unless this condition changes radically we shall increasingly be fighting alone in a country which has an army that is breaking up and a government which has little authority. WE CAN ALREADY see on the horizon the possibility of an American Army fighting on its own in a hostile environment. We must hope that the President and his strategic planners are prepared for such a development. For if the South Vietnamese government and army continue to disintegrate as is now the case, our troops may find themselves without serious organized military support and forced to find their way in a seething unrest where friend and foe are indistinguishabie. If the Saigon forces disintegrate, it will no longer be possible to continue the war on the theory that the mission of our troops is to smash the hard core of the enemy while the Saigon troops occupy and pacify the countryside. WHAT THEN? We shall be hearing from the Goldwater fac- tion, whose first article of military faith is unlimited belief in air- power. They are arguing that the way to repair the breakdown in South Viet Nam is to bomb Hai- phong and Hanoi in the North. The administration, as we are told by Secretary of Defense Rob- ert McNamara and Dr. Harold Brown, the secretary of the Air Force, knows the folly and the futility of that course of action. Is there any real alternative to a holding strategy, sometimes called the enclave strategy, pend- ing the negotiation of a truce and an agreement for our phased with- drawal from the Asian mainland? If the Vietnamese war cannot be won by the Air Force, if it cannot be won by American troops fight- ing alone in South Viet Nam, what other strategic option is there? THE ONLY other option would be to make no new decisions and pursue the present course and hope that things are not so bad as they seem and that something better will turn up. The President is bound to be strongly tempted to take this line. The alternatives open to him are dangerous or in- glorious and repulsive to his cau- tious but proud temperament. A great heaa of government would have seized the nettle some time ago, as long ago as 1964, and would have disengaged gradually our military forces. But that would have taken a highmindedness and moral courage which are rare among the rulers of men. For rulers of men nearly always will do almost anything rather than admit that they have made a mistake. Today and Tomorrow By WALTER LIPPMANN Yet the moment of truth comes inexorably when a radical mistake has been made. The mistake in this case has been to order Ameri- can troops to fight an impossible war in an impossible environment. The American troops, which may, soon number 400,000 men, are committed to an unattainable ob- jective - a free pro-American South Viet Nam. They are com- manded to achieve this on a con- tinent where they have no impor- tant allies and where their enemies have inexhaustible numbers. THE SITUATION, not anyone's pride or the nation's prestige, must be our paramount concern. THE BEST HOPE of an orderly and honorable outcome in South Viet Nam lies in the forma- tion of a government in Saigon which can make peace with the Viet Cong and with Hanoi. Few can believe that an unrigged election in South Viet Nam will produce a government which is determined to -fight for a military victory. That there is little chance that the Vietnamese people would elect such a government is attest- ed to by the fact that Gen. Nguyen Cao Ky is doing his best to put off the elections to an indefinite future. DESPITE Secretary of State Dean Rusk's view, that Gen. Ky had been misinterpreted and that he is not really opposed to U.S. policy, the truth is that Gen. Ky has not been misinterpreted. The Associated Press interviewed him all over again on Wednesday (Saigon time), and Gen. Ky said all over again that he expected to remain in office at least until the middle of next year. He added that if the "neutralists" win the elec- tion he will fight them. In this situation we are con- fronted with exceedingly difficult choices of policy. If we let Gen. Ky talk about staying in power and continue to support him, it is likely that the existing political truce in South Viet Nam will dis- integrate. Central Viet Nam may break away from Ky's government, and there would be continuing disorders in the streets. ON THE OTHER HAND, it would not be easy for the United States to discipline the military junta on which it is depending for the prosecution of the war. The result of doing that might well be to leave us with the whole burden of fighting the war. It is a difficult dilemma before us, and it is likely to remain un- resolved unless there is a clarifi- cation of our own intentions and policy. The, reason Gen. Ky talks as he does, defying the official views of the American government, is that he knows that the Ameri- can government is of several minds in regard to the whole business. What he is saying out loud is what many influential of- ficials are thinking privately. For while the official position is to support elections and to abide by the, result, this official view does not reflect an unequivocal decision by the President. There are plenty of officials around him who do not want an election, who do not want a negotiated settle- ment, who indeed do not intend, if they can help it, ever to reach a settlement which calls for the withdrawal of American military forces from the mainland of Southeast Asia. THE GREAT DECISION which has still to be taken is whether it is. in fact, the United States' policy to favor the holding of elections and the acceptance of the results. If and when the de- cision is taken that this is our policy we shall act accordingly. We shall recognize the fact that in a country where there are a quarter of a million American soldiers, a country which is wholly dependent on American support, it is impossible for the United States not to take a posi- tion in regard to an election, To refuse to take a position would be to let the election be rigged by those who have the most guns and the most money. The most straightforward and promising position for us to take is, after studying the situation carefully, to protect those whom we believe to} be the majority and to restrain those who would con- spire to nullify the will of this majority. THE ALTERNATIVE to mak- ing a judgment of this kind would amount to conniving at a clande- stine effort to rig the elections in favor of Gen. Ky, or of someone like him. On this course there is almost no likelihood that internal stability can be produced, and there would be no prospect o: bringing the war to an end. (c), 1966, The Washington Post Co. A War Needs Stifle Research Programs /;~~Ib 'P.~ w -.J~46 y a w . rye ' s 1' t /r \ Y'c -c By W. J. H. IMMEN THE NEW POLICY, that gov- ernment expenditures on the development of devices for the Viet Nam war effort take prece- dence over other research grants, will soon divert enough money from institutions to drastically sti- fle the nation's huge basic re- search capabilities. But although the immediate ef- fect will only produce a wave of protest from many capable re- searchers who are unable to con- tinue their projects, the long teflm effect of the curtailment of pres- ent plans in order to fight a war may well be disastrous to the en- tire nation. NEARLY $7 BILLION dollars, one-sixteenth of the nation's to- tal budget has been allotted for military research and develop- ment this year. The majority of these funds will be spent on pro- grams related to Viet Nam, at the expense of institutional and pri- vate basic research grants, Certainly some amount of new developments are necessitated by the very conditions of the battle- fields of the war and the combi- nation of guerrilla and conven- tional warfare. The conflict poses urgent demands for new methods and equipment to cope with the jungle environment, alien to Amer- ican military operations. The question which must be consider- ed soon, however, is whether the needs encountered are worthy of the several billion dollars to be spent. FANTASTIC ADVANCES in non- miliary scientific research have been made in the past 20 years. pendent experiments depending upon a government fellowship? Surely someone will be hurt as the coffers of the National Science Foundation, which administers many of the grants, begins to empty. Many researchers, unable to continue their work, will be forced to abandon projects which could lead to important scientific breakthroughs with far-reaching benefits. The University will find these problems especially acute, because of its extensive research program. Also, the future of important long range programs, such as the Atom- ic Energy Commission's exciting 200 billion electron volt nuclear particle accelerator, will be en- dangered. WHILE INSTITUTIONS and na- tional programs are struggling, the military expenditures are very profitable to large industries, which stand to make huge profits from the high-geared technical work. More than 70 per cent of military R & D grants go to the private corporations and the mon- ey is so inviting that over 250 in- dustrial "representatives" are kept busy full time "conferring" with military officials. But the profit margin is not the only point at which money could be saved through more careful control. Most of the development work is being pushed to early comple- tion in order to meet "require- ments" of commanders in the field. These needs are related to the Joint Research and Test Activity (JRATA) Committee, based in Viet Nam. It was established by Gen- eral Westmoreland as a centraliz- ing agency to expedite and unify ly, this speedup is often at the expense of thorough testing, re- sulting in a product which is prac- tical only for limited use. FOR EXAMPLE, even the Air Force was skeptical of and saw little practicality in a plan to equip the old C-47 transport plane with a six barrel gattling gun to strafe jungle areas where there is no sure target. After an ex- pensive program of testing, the planes were converted and put in- to operation. The system has proved fairly successful in Viet Nam, but it has been officially conceded that in any area besides jungle this weap- on system is useless because the plane is dangerously vulnerable. Fighter jets could have done the job nearly as well. Could not this money have been put to wiser use in the search for the cause of a universal problem, such as can- cer, rather than in creating weap- ons of such limited use? Much duplication of effort al- so increases the costs and brings about questions of the effective- ness of the research effort. In one case, in order to combat the prob- lem of distortion of radio signals through dense jungle growth, a large rubber company was award- ed a lucrative contract to design and build balloons to carry an antenna which would be "aero- dynamically stable." This device, similar to some used during the Second World War, made excel- lent targets, besides that they were quickly rendered obsolete when a new type of VHF radio system was developed that wasn't disturbed by jungle. THE NEED is growing quickly for the establishment of a cen- tral control in Washington, man- ned by an adequate staff to sob- erly judge the merits of each pro- posed weapon development to con- sider their urgency and weed out duplications. Taxpayers should al- so be encitled to receive detailed information of how the one dol- lar out of every 16 in the budget is being spent. .In most cases, devices already available are more than sufficient for the combat conditions of oper- ations in Viet Nam. Emphasis should be placed on areas in which our development is noticeably in- adequate, such as methods of sur- veillance, security, and detection of the enemy in jungle areas. But there are many areas in which expensive research will have little effect and here is where part of the billions taken from basic re- search can be given back to in- stitutions where it will invariably do more lasting good. IT MAY BE HOPED that our all-out campaign of military re- search can soon be reevaluated in view of our domestic research and development needs so that the re- routing of funds to fight the war will not engender a crisis. As Seen by a Question Mark!f JT IS PARTLY because my Dou- ble Bubble fortune said I would be a world famous misanthrope by the time I am 52; but there is more to it than that; why I am feeling exceptionally low. It started at the age of eight when my legs began to elongate at an enormous rate leaving me with a rather unproportional tor- so as a result; I was a humorous, incongruous sight, and I knew it. Unable to cope with my rather awkward appearance, I began to I IN A NUTSHELL By BETSY COHN I ' ing but at the same time advan- tageous. Throughout my lifetime I have accumulated a minor fortune in pennies, nickels, coupons, and raffle tickets which I have found wedged in cracks and beneath au- tomobile tires. BUT DAYDREAMING in the sewers is only a minor manifesta- tion of my physical declination. Not being able to hide myself be- hind a curtain of long flowing hair, I find that walking in my usual question mark manner still keeps me out of the faces of oth- ers. I can avoid the well-fed puff- ed jowls of cigar smoking coun- try club gentlemen as well as the pursed-lipped silk dressed ladies who sit stiffly in their steel backed chairs and dispute endlessly about