Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS June 1: Play That One Again, John Wher W Opinions Are Free MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Th. W! PrevaiS NEws PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the inidividual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: MEREDITH EIKER i The War: A Plague On Both Your Houses' DESPITE SOME SIGNS that South Viet Nam's Buddhist monks may now be seeking a temporary agreement with Pre- mier Nguyen Cao Ky's military regime, the political turmoil in that war-battered nation seems destined to persist. The warnings of many critics of admin- istration policy-that the Viet Nam war must be solved primarily by political rather than military means-have been proved correct. But President Johnson and his advisers continue to pursue an elusive battlefield victory which presumably would turn back "the tide of Asian Communism" while assuring freedom and independence to South Viet Nam. Those who disagree with the administration's methods and means of achieving this laudable goal are branded "nervous Nellies" by the Presi- dent himself. At the same time, Arthur Sylvester, public-relations whitewash man for the Pentagon, assails the truthful reporting of U.S. correspondents in Viet Nam be- cause these dispatches so often contradict the administration's official propaganda line- ''HEMYTH that U.S. policy in Viet Nam is founded upon a desire to "preserve freedom and independence in that nation has been proved to be a deceitful evasion of the truth. There is no freedom or in- dependence to preserve in that fragile society of conflicting minorities, uncer- tain religious groups, and war-weary peasants, students and soldiers. The fragmented world of South Viet- namese politics offer no fertile ground for "free elections" in the Western sense of the term, since it seems evident that whichever power is in control in Saigon at the time of the elections will win. ADMINISTRATION PLANS to continue escalating the war have not been changed by the past month of political unrest. At least 400,000 troops are likely to be in Viet Nam by the end of the year. The tonnage of bombs dropped on North Viet Nam each month exceeds the total monthly tonnage in the European theater of World War II, and the intensity of the bombing is steadily increasing. The administration seems intent upon forcing North Viet Nam to its knees, thinking that this will solve the problem of Saigon's lack of political leadership and refusal to allow the South Vietnamese people to effectively participate in repre- sentative government. ON THE HOME FRONT, confusion has mounted with advocates of a hard- line policy and critics of administration policy drawing increasing numbers of converts to their respective camps. Ameri- cans are rightly asking why their sons and husbands must be sent to a war which the U.S. is fighting essentially without al- lied support (except for token contribu- tions from Australia, New Zealand and South Korea), a war which is to a great extent a civil conflict aided by the north- ern segment of a culturally and histor- ically united land, a war which causes untold death and destruction to those Vietnamese civilians we have taken upon ourselves to save from the clutches of Ho Chi Minh and Mao Tze-tung. No one has asked the South Vietna- mese whether they welcome the Ameri- can presence in the war. Given a chance to reply, they would probably say to the U.S. and Viet Cong "a plague on both your houses" and would opt for a peaceful settlement with some Viet Cong partici- pation in a coalition government. THIS WAR OF FUTILITY thus will drag on, evidently for an indefinite period of time. Last week there were nearly 1000 U.S. war casualties (146 dead, 826 wound- ed). The number of Vietnamese civilians killed or maimed either in combat zones or in U.S. bombing raids is unknown, but probably even higher. U.S. entry into the war has thus transformed a guerrilla conflict (undeniably one which caused misery to many South Vietnamese) into a modern theater of war with infinitely greater hardships for the South Vietna- mese. U.S. officials measure .their success in the war by the number of "V.C." killed each week. Evidently, our hope is to end the war by killing every V.C. in the land, but somehow more of them keep on com- ing. Most of our allies look in dismay as we sink deeper into the morass of escala- tion and futility.t The unprecedented op- portunity for new agreements with Rus- sia goes down the drain, and while Viet Nam burns, serious problems in Europe and Latin America receive inadequate at- tention from the tired group of officials conducting our foreign policy. WHAT TO DO? The U.S. should cease unconditionally its useless bombing of North Viet Nam, offer to open negotia- tions with North Viet Nam and repre- sentatives of the Viet Cong, work behind the scenes through Russia and Eastern Europe intermediaries to reopen commu- nication with Hanoi, and redouble its efforts to enable Communist China to join the family of nations through UN membership and diplomatic relations with the U.S. The chances are that these steps will not be attempted and the slaughter will continue. There is too much sterility and rigidity at high levels of U.S. decision- making to allow bold new steps to at- tempt to end the war. But this country will pay a severe price for persisting in its relentless, often mindless anti-Com- munist worldwide crusade. That price will be loss of prestige, re- spect and cooperation with its allies, and the enmity of the world's uncommitted, underdeveloped nations. Even more im- portant, the stain on America's national consciousness and self-respect will be difficult to erase for years to come. -CLARENCE FANTO -CHARLOTTE WOLTER Co-Editors By LEONARD PRATT "THERE ARE FEW things quite as unnerving," runs a line from a short story, "as finding out that your best girl is a prostitute." The nation's academic circles suffered just this kind of shock when revelations of Central In- telligence Agency involvement with a/Michigan State University mis- sion to the Vietnamese government of Ngo Dinh Diem came to light. Suddenly the homilies about aca- demic independence and respon- sibility that everyone likes to think still mean some thing were shat- tered by the frightening prox- imity of an every-day world of hasty self interest. IT IS SHOCKING in the same sense, but to a profoundly greater degree, to discover both that there is a good deal more to the involve- ment story than has been or, prob- ably, will be printed and that most of it stands an excellent chance of being hushed up by the Legisa- ture's investigation of the affair. It should be admitted that there are times when a writer's ignor- ance is his most powerful weapon and that this is the case now. I do not know the full story of the MSU-CIA involvement and stand no chance of ever knowing it. But talks with many people, who are in a position to know parts of that story, lead to no other con- clusion than that MSU is in up to its ears and that the Legislature, by attempting to cover up that fact, is adding chapters to one of the most shameful stories of our time. If a more significant comment on those times than what has already been brought to light of this affair is needed, it is surely that there is even more there to be brought out and that the pub- lic officials responsible for bring- ing it out are shirking their duty. IN THE FIRST PLACE it is clear from many sources that the Legislature is in the process of burying the damning evidence it has found, to issue only a non- committal report that will ensure that the issue will be soon for- gotten. As one state reporter put it, "John Hannah has friends." Rep. Vincent Petitpren (D- Wayne) has evidently been one of the more crucial pawns in this game. He has been angry for a long time at Rep. Jack Faxon (D- Detroit), who was holding the rump-session hearings on the case. Faxon stepped on his toes last fall in ignoring legislative protocol and going over the head of Petit- pren's Committee on Colleges and Universities to investigate the University's tuition hike. All Petit- pren needed was the suggestion, for he had certainly had the power all along, to take the rec- ords of Faxon's investigation away from him, thus taking from him the little authority he did have over the affair. There is a good deal of evidence to suggest that partisans, if not always employes, of MSU were the little birds that put the idea in Petitpren's ear. THAT THE HIGHEST officials of the House suddenly cared more for Legislative protocol than for academic ethics is an interesting phenomenon. There are clearly times when doing nothing is doing everything, and these officials have done nothing to salvage the MSU investigation. This is certainly not an al- together conscious conspiracy on the part of all involved to save what is left of MSU's reputation. Yet even those who are not fully aware of what they are doing must surely be faulted for great negli- gence. What makes this all the worse is the great likelihood that there are important facts left unknown about just how bad things were in the good old days in Viet Nam. The record here is less clear than in the Legislature's case, but it is still evident that there are a great many things which need clearing up. ARE THE SALARIES which the professors in Viet Nam were paid their only reward for teaching there? What other privileges did they have? Were so many MSU personnel on the scene as incredibly ignorant of a fairly good-sized CIA con- tingent in their midst, as their testimony would indicate? Was MSU President Hannah really unaware of the CIA con- nections with the mission? If so, why are the project's key officials still occupying important positions at MSU? How free were those professors to print what they felt about the project and its effects? Above all, what was the relation between the assuredly rosey re- ports from the MSU and CIA mis- sions to the State Department and the policies which the depart- ment finally put into motion re- garding Viet Nam? The reports must clearly have been in error. What of the policies based upon them? And what of the respon- sibilities of the men who wrote the erroneous reports? A GREAT DEAL of this is spilled milk. The real danger lies in a related area which the Legis- lature is evidently similarly hesi- tant to touch. Where are the Viet Nam-project men now? No one much cares about the errors they may have made in Viet Nam. But where might they be making errors today? MSU, for example, currently has a Project Nigeria. Nigeria will be one of the most important nations in Africa in 15 years and clearly what influences its government now is molding that nation of 15 years hence. How closely linked are the administrations of the two projects? What is being done to ensure that Nigeria does not be- come another Viet Nam? These are the real questions at issue, but the Legislature is re- fusing even to acknowledge their existence. IT IS HORRIBLE that Ameri- can soldiers may be dying par- tially because of MSU. It is even more horrible that those who could at least ensure that history does not repeat itself do not care enough about those deaths to shake themselves out of their in- tellectual lethargy. As was noted above, I know little of this for a fact. But I do have excellent reasons for suspecting all of it. SO I AM LOOKING for some- one with political authority who both realizes the gravity of the situation and cares to do some- thing about it. I am looking for someone who will ask these ques- tions and be able to demand answers. I am looking for someone who, when asked if he cares to leave the finest ideals of education and government in the muck in which they evidently rest in Michigan, will echo Sargent Shriver's answer to a request that Peace Corps workers be used to infiltrate the rural areas of the Dominican Re- public during the intervention there: "Not only no, but hell no!" 4 - The Cold War Veterans Lose Europe WE ARE SEEING brisk activity in European affairs. It has been aroused by Gen. Charles de Gaulle's decision to evict the NATO military establishment from France and to withdraw the French troops in Germany from the integrated command and by his impending visit to the Soviet Union. All this can be viewed as the beginning of a systematic cam- paign to abrogate American lead- ership in Europe and to reduce drastically American influence in European affairs. Gen. de Gaulle himself has frequently said that this is one of his purposes. BUT THERE IS another way of viewing the situation, and it is, I believe, more realistic and might lead to more constructive conclu- sions. It is that while Gen. de Gaulle does indeed have the ini- tiative today he has it by default. He has the initiative by virtue of American inability and unreadi- ness and unwillingness to exercise leadership in Europe, now that the postwar era is ending. Only when we look at the situation in this perspective can we understand how France, which is not a very great power by contemporary standards, has such political pre- dominance in - the Western alli- ance. THE CENTRAL purpose of the Gaullist enterprise is to make an opening to the East and to bring about a relief of tension, an in- crease of economic and cultural in- tercourse and an end to the cold war between the Soviet Union and Western Europe. The moral influ- ence of Gen. de Gaulle in Europe is far greater than France's mili- tary and economic power, and the reason for this is that the general has identified himself with what, for the rising generation of Euro- peans, is the wave of the future. They do not like or agree with all of his ideas, his tactics or his monners, and there is very wide- spread opposition to a too-power- ful France. But Gen. de Gaulle is going in the direction in which the Europeans want to go, and which they believe is the way to peace in Europe, to expanding trade and prosperity and to the elimination of the most dangerous I~ Today and( Tomorrow By WALTER LIPPMANN situation in Europe-the parti- tion of Germany. ALTHOUGH our officials would in theory agree with most of these European aspirations, the Ameri- can government is not, for a varie- ty of reasons, identified with the European feeling that the time has come to bring the postwar era to an end. It is a fact that the men who have shaped and are shaping U.S. policy in Europe are the veterans, many of them the distinguished veterans, of the cold war. They do not speak convincingly to the rising generation of Europeans who have no memories of the world war and its aftermath. In many critical circumstances they cannot even speak with their con- temporaries in Western Europe. This is an intellectual default which makes us unable to exercise leadership in Europe today. But there is another reason, a more obstinate reason, why American influence in Europe has fallen so low. It is that the Vietnamese war has made us unable to act in Eu- rope by negotiating with the other great power, the Soviet Union. If it were not for the Vietnamese entanglement, more precisely if we were not attacking North Viet Nam, the United States could play its natural role of counterpart to the Soviet Union in the great ne- gotiations which Europeans now desire. WE CAN BE reasonably certain that without the United States playing the part which it ought to be playing, there can be no really far-reaching and permanent set- tlement of European problems. For that, the participation of the Unit- ed States as well as the U.S.S.R. is necessary. But for the time be- ing we are not really present in Europe, and we are not able to talk with the Soviet Union. By failing to grasp the intel- lectual and moral changes that have come with the end of the postwar era and the departure of the war generations, we have shut down our corpmunication with contemporary Europe. Because of our military preoccupation with Southeast Asia we cannot fulfill our indispensable role in the Eu- ropean settlement, which is to be in the West the counterpart of the Soviet Union in the East. We have, moreover, confirmed by our actions, by the character and scope of our military deploy- ment in Southeast Asia, one of Gen. de Gaulle's prime arguments which is that the United States is no longer vitally interested in Eu- rope and that our vital interests now lie in the other continents. HOW LONG it will take to bring the Vietnamese entanglement to an end, and how long it will take before our European policy is in the hands of new men with fresh minds, it is impossible to guess. But we can be certain that our political influence in Europe is greatly diminished today and that more and more the Europeans are trying to act accordingly. (c), 1966, The Washington Post Co. .4- .4 Viet Nam: Fallacies Come Home To Roost Slaughter on the Spaceways ONE OF THE GEMINI 9 astronauts re- portedly replied "oh shucks" when in- formed of the scrapping of the first planned launch due to the loss of the Agena rendezvous rocket. True or not, this incident hints that, lulled by many successes, space officials are becoming over-confident and complacent. Manned space exploration is no less dangerous than it was four years ago. The flights are still experiments and much of the equipment is redesigned after each mission, and is far from infallible. MORE THAN the expensive equipment is at stake when one of these vehicles is launched, two human lives are depend- ent upon the excellence of the prepara- tions. The scientists responsible for these preparations smile and make assurances that nothing can go wrong. Yet things are going wrong with frightening repeti- tion. -The failure of one small piece of the Agena, most likely not properly inspected, cost $13 million and set the space pro- gram back two weeks. -The Agena replacement has been de- .nriai ac "Maracif ad 0111 s Q ah1 i tank destroyed a $3 million stage of the Saturn rocket, the manned moon rocket, injuring five. Blamed on faulty design or hasty workmanship, the incident brought the comment "I think it is a major thing, it will mangle the schedule of landing on the moon by 1969," from a space official (who made no mention of costs or steps taken to correct the failure was made). FOUR YEARS AGO these events would have prompted concern and argument from a number of space scientists fear- ing the consequences of seeking speed over safety. We were content to pursue quality and leave the "spectaculars" to the Soviet Union. This week, however, we have planned not only a manned flight complete with spacewalk and rendezvaus; but we will also try to soft land a camera on the moon's surface. We have developed a strong compulsion to outdo the Russians in space technology. But many mishaps have already given warning that perhaps our speed is more costly than its benefits. Unfortunately, we will not heed such warnings until a tragic event such as the loss of an astronaut By DAVID KNOKE Special To The Daily EVEN AS THE pro-American candidate was winning in Ore- gon, the latestapublic opinion poll showed that approval of John- son's handling of the Viet Nam war had fallen below 50 per cent for the first time. In Da Nang, a marine officer in the South Vietnamese military questioned a captive rebel soldier, then shot him point-blank in the face. Reporter Richard Critchfield wrote of his ordeal along with 40 other journalists as hostages in a Buddhist pagoda. The monks, he said, had dragged persons wounded elsewhere into the pago- da so the press "would fix the blame on Mr. Ky's forces and not themselves." AT PRINCETON University, the President called his harshest crit- ics "nervous Nellies," then asked them to back his policies to the hilt. While Nguyen Cao Ky flatly disregardedgconsultation with Americans before flying troops to crush the Da Nang revolt, Dean Rusk, seemingly for the hundredth time, said we will continue to as- sist free nations of Southeast Asia "who are struggling for their sur- vival against armed minorities di- rected, supplied and supported from without." WHEN MONTHS AGO a few clergymen, columnists and ordi- nary citizens protested what they called an "immoral war," they were scorned or ignored by the political and military establish- ment backing American interven- tion in Viet Nam. Today only a superpatriotic fool would not see that the futility and senselessness of the war which could not be exposed through mor- al indignation has suddenly been laid bare as a material and politi- cal fiasco by the events of the last two months. If intervention in a civil war, napalm bombing of villages, de- foliation of crops, and illegal pros- ecution of a undeclared war did not show the American adventure lose the honor of the United States than a plane load of bombs can win it before Asian eyes. -There is no exterior aggres- sion nor can legal treaty require- ments be invoked to give U.S. in- tervention a leg to stand upon. Neither the United Nations, SEA- TO nor Senate-ratified treaties with the legal South Vietnamese government give atprecedent. In the confused legal chronology of the two Viet Nams, it would be impossible before a world law body to differentiate between "aggres- sor," civil war, rebels and invad- ers; the majority of the North Vietnamese troops were commit- ted after a similar U.S. build-up. -THERE IS NO "freedom lov- ing" government or peoples in South Viet Nam whom we pro- tect. Ky and his junta are pirates, perpetuators of the war lord ban- ditry which thrives off black mar- kets, caste favoritism, graft and vice dollars flowing from the anti- Communist American commit- ment. 'T-ruth' TRUTH, as U Thant once ob- 1- served, is one of the first vic- tims of war. His words were con- firmed once again this weekas Secretary of State Rusk and Vice- President Humphrey once again proclaimed the administration's dedication to the search for peace in Viet Nam. Mr. Rusk repeated his offer to go to Geneva whenever anybody was there to negotiate with. Mr. Humphrey detailed anew the var- ious peace; offensives of the past and devoutly adopted U Thant's "prayer and wish" for peace as our own. WHAT IS the simple truth? It is that the administration spurned peace talk feelers repeatedly in 1964 and 1965. It is that U Thant's own efforts to arrange talks have been repeatedly and roughly re- jected. It is that while publicly taking no sides in South Viet NAcm'rn' rmlitiral fril d+.,n oa Aumin The United States does not want free-read "uncontrolled" - elec- tions nor will Ky's regime permit them. Any election would be mean- ingless with 50 per cent of the population not under Saigon con- trol being allowed to vote, any- how. Buddhists on the other hand are just as ruthless a minority in disregarding universal civil liber- ties as the Catholics or military minorities. But the Buddhists are unamenable to U.S. control and too likely to negotiate a settlement di- rectly with the Viet Cong for the United States to permit them to gain control. -The ".domino theory" of the defense of Southeast Asia is a fig- ment of the imagination that has become reality only because so many people act as though it were true. The theater of the war is being steadily enlarged, with the "no sanctuary" policy for any ene- my aircraft, sorties across the Lao- tian and Cambodian borders, and preparation of Thailand as a second line of defense. Thailand-land of the free - is another myth in the debacle. The country is no freer than the two Viet Nams; the military clique that rules the country has stam- peded American dollars by pro- moting banditry in the northeast as "Communist infiltration." DESPITE CLAIMS that internal dissent does not hamper the war effort, the U.S. finds it increas- ingly harder to project plans for an end to the war. Saigon's troops begin to fight among themselves and were always incapable of hold- ing territory cleared by the U.S. U.S. manpower commitments call for upwards of 600,000 for a five to 10-year war. Dollars, flow- ing now at over a billion a month, and permanent installation con- struction, approaching $1 billion by mid-1967 attest to the deter- mination of the U.S. not to de- escalate in the foreseeable future. The back-lash from such a pro- longed effort can only create do- mestic complications. Creeping in- flation is now trotting. A tax in- crease before the election date is imminent. Republican leaders have already begun to exploit the un- effect as a psychological demor- alizer; but the. military establish- ment of this country favors air power. It perilizes the world politi- cal situation much more than a ground war (generals, like oth- ers, want job security), and gives a new generation of bomber pilots practice under real war conditions. The military would like to call up the reserves and be given a free strategic hand in Viet Nam. The argument goes, if you're in a war, you might as well turn its man- agement over to someone who knows how to win one. This argu- ment finds civilian backers among men like song-and-dance Senator George Murphy, who wants the military to take control from Mc- Namara and carry on operations "without regard for political con- sequence." But the political consequences from the Viet Nam imbroglio are unforeseeable and therefore likely to be dangerous. But a war with Red China, sure to be short and devastating, may be exactly what the "contain China" advo- cates would like to provoke by mining Haiphong harbor or blast- ing Hanoi's oil depots. CHINA at this time is extremely cautious in risking its infant atom- ic power to destruction by U.S. bombers. There may be more than a few five-star generals who share Barry Goldwater's conviction that it would be a good thing if China made an aggressive move so we could do just that. In terms of the possibilities of World War III, or of diplomatic isolation from the rest of the world, Johnson cannot afford to give in to the military's bid for a free hand in Viet 1Nam just be- cause of their naivete about "po- litical consequences. MEANWHILE, the individual soldiers confront each other in the brakes and across the pad- dies. The shooting and the dying goes on; 20 years of someone's love and devotion and worry be- comes a nameless statistic on the balance sheet, while the politi- cians and generals play their games. .A "Why, Next Thing People Might Even Wonder About The FBI-Or Batman And Robin" Ifm 4 i I