I AGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAYLY ,.. 't=}7111 iTT.1 C#s a f 1Mwr9iw...ww .. +. , RAG TW TE MCHa aT nATay WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1966 WASHINGTON AND VIET NAM: A Dissenter Exits: Ball Leaves Johnson Release State Draft Figures (Continued from Page 1) t was, until the later phose, accept-t ed more or less passively. The Viet Nam war is generating an expand- ing literature from observers andr analysts at home and abroad. Week after week the volume in- creases-and the great preponder- ance is critical of the Americanc position.- A remarkable series of articlest has been appearing in the Paris1 newspaper Le Monde written byc Robert Guillain who has spent 30 years in Asia. The series exam-1 ines the current American stancex and finds it virtually hopeless in-c sofar as any possibility remains ofr winning the Viet Namese people tos our side. Analyzing the infiltrationE of the Viet Cong into every as-r pect of life in South Viet Nam,i including high ranks of govern-c ment, Guillain concludes that upt to a full division is infiltrated in the Saigon .area.s The rule here is to dismisst French criticism because, so thet line goes, they failed in their war1 in Indochina and they cannot be- lieve the Americans can succeed. But far from being a Gaullist or-1 gan, Le Monde is one of the few1 independent newspapers in Francet and one of the most respectedi journals in all Europe, both for itst reporting and its editorial judg- ment. Guillain has a reputation; as a scholar. . On another level is Phillip L.t Geyelin's book, "Lyndon B. John- son and the World" which is being widely read here. Although itl covers the whole range of the Johnson foreign policy, inevitablyI it centers on Viet Nam. The ques-1 tion Geyelin raises is whether con-i sensus is a sufficient guide in1 such a perilous passage as Viet Nam with the ever looming threat of a wider war.; To the expanding library on Vi- et Nam, Bernard Fall has contri- buted several volumes out of his long background in both North and South Viet Nam. These are men with not merely opinions but; authoritative knowledge. There is , no evidence, however, that any of this penetrates the circle of ad- visers who shape Viet Nam policy. That cirle is hermetically closed. Recently a knowledgeable Asian analyst w a s passing through Washington and a White House aid was asked if the President would not be interested in picking his brains. The reply was that the President was not in the least in- terested in talking to any writer or commentator on Viet Nam. The President talks with a great many people about what is for him a constant source of an- guished concern. But he talks to them. He talks as a persuader. He talks as he did when he was Ma- jority Leader in the Senate and his goal was to win and hold a majority. Mr. Johnson inherited the di- lemma of Viet Nam and at what point he might have found a way out his critics seldom say. He also inherited the advisers who shaped the initial Viet Nam policy under President Kennedy and he has clung fiercely to them. It is because the advice of the Undero Secretary of State has been contrary to the top level consensus that his departure means more than an inevitable shift in the foreign policy hier- archy. Short of some opening for new ideas, for exchange of opin- ions that may be contrary to the consensus, the blind alley is likely to have no exit. When he steps out, probably some time in September, Ball in- tends to rejoin the law firm in which he was formerly a partner. First, however, he means to take a rest of at least three months. He has no intention of making public his strong views on Viet Nam. In Ball's opinion a public official who has held a confiden- tial position has a duty to contin- ue to keep the confidences of his office although the parliamentary system in Britain, when a member of the government goes over to the opposition, he'speaks his mind. As government operates in this country, he does not have that privilege as Ball sees it. In the frequently announced high level conferences on Viet Nam, the discussion centers al- most entirely on operational de- tails. Out of these conferences comes the President's conviction of the middle course which he in- sists he hold to. Certainly he re- sists the demands of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to bomb Hanoi and Haiphong. Both Rusk and Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara al- so make the case for restraint in this concept. McNamara has tak- en it upon himself to reject the recommendations of the military chiefs who argue that the war cannot be "won" without destruc- tion of the facilities, industrial and transportation, in the North Viet Namese capital and its prin- cipal port. Ball's differences with the Pre- sident's other civilian advisers go much deeper. He argued strongly at the time of the month-long pause in the bombing of the North in January for the continuation of the pause, at least until some time after the appeal was taken to the United Nations to help find a way to a peaceful settlement. To resume bombing while at the same time appealing to the UN was, he argued, bound to be self-defeat- ing. He has also constantly stressed the danger of bringing China into the war. In his consistent stand, Ball has made enemies in the Johnson Administration. Conspic- uous among them is Ambassador Henry Cabot Lorge in Saigon who is one of the leading hawks in the Johnson aviary. In off the record briefings with reporters in Saigon, Lodge has not hesitated to blame Ball for slowing down moves that Lodge and the generals believed were imperative. The relationship with Rusk is on a different level. Behind his outwardly stolid facade, the Se- cretary has a deeply emotional commitment to going through with the Viet Nam war regardless of the cost. This comes out in virtually his every utterance. Yet he respects Ball's dissent as the right of one who holds a sincere intellectual conviction. The Under Secretary's temperament is much more detached and objective. On this, however, it might be necessary to add a qualifier. He has been deeply aroused by what he sees as President Charles de Gaulle's plot to take France out of the NATO alliance and elimi- nate American influence on the European continent. Ball, who has carried the responsibility of Eu- ropean policy almost exclusively as Rusk became more and more engaged in Viet Nam, is convinced that De Gaulle means to follow a neutralist policy in aligning France with the Soviet Union in an old-fashioned, pre-war alli- ance. Before he was named Under Secretary, he was the lawyer for the French government and for Jean Monnet, who initiated the European Economic Community. Talk of Ball's successor is at this stage speculation. If the president names a consensus- minded replacement, the ring will be completely closed and discus- sion will deal wholly with the ways and means of prosecuting the war. Reprinted by permission of United Features Syndicate, Inc., and the Ann Arbor News. By The Associated Press Michigan draft boards will call up 2898 men for induction into the army in August, Col. Arthur Holmes, director of the state Se- lective Service said yesterday. Washtenaw board No. 341, which includes Ann Arbor, will call up 23. Wayne county, including De- troit, will call up 918. Holmes said he expects many local boards to call up registrants married before Ang. 26, 1965. Also yesterday the Defense De- partment announced U.S. mili- tary strength around the world amounts to more than 3,057.360. This figure, as of May 31, is 53,000 higher than the previous month's and much above last May's figure of 2,641,319. Included in it are about 265,000 men in Viet Nam. The strength figures represent full-time active duty personnel in the regulars and Reserves, and of- ficer candidates, including cadets and midshipmen at the service academies. While these figures were being released, however, the method of selecting men for the armed forc- es was receiving considerable cri- ticism from congressmen. The Selective Service system was pictured as a "sacred cow" and a California congressman said low grade civil service clerks are running local draft boards. Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, (D- N.Y.), criticized current draft de- ferment tests, saying: "First, we provide an inferior education for black students. Next, we give them a series of tests which many will flunk be- cause of an inferior education. Then we pack these academic fail- ures off to Viet Nam to be killed." Rep. Chet Holifield, (D-Calif.), appearing at a House Armed Ser- vices Committee hearing on the Selective Service system claimed "the civil service clerks are run- ning the boards, not the mem- bers." Rep. Richard S. Schweiker, (R- Pa.), blistered what he termed a draft procedure "operating in a hodgepodge of confusion and in- consistencies." "I cannot accept the implica- tion of some that the Selective Service system is a sacred cow, above reproach and impervious to improvement," he declared. The local board concept was de- fended by Rep. Joe Waggoner, (D-La.), who called it "the real strength of the draft." The hear- ings into the draft's operation are in their second week. Holifield said board members of local businessmen and community leaders are supposed to decide the draft status of registrants. But he said in most cases, mem- bers are merely asked to approve the decision reached by the clerks. Joining those who advocate more uniform deferment stand- ards, Holifield said four boards operate in his district from the same building, but each applies different standards. Passport Pictures Application Pictures Group Pictures Wedding Pictures Availabfe at any time Ready Quickly CALL NO 3-6966 DIAL 662-6264 0 ENDING TODAY e "THE GLASS BOTTOM BOAT" STARTING THURSDAY .....: r.i: .tr ........,"r.V:.;.1};::": t: r:r: :"Y,':. :^: .'.'," t}" .v ....... r..;: r.j;. r.:"::r":.:": "r .^ :: J.v:::: w::.v v v: r.:va:vv:.w:::.;y:v:::::.:v :":. ~. ;. y.,,J. . .v}; ..,:::v:1: "}}:}: "r {..y} .y.. .r " ..t'.::y:{v:"}:1, {:tin;.}}:"'{{ "."'?.r rr.:'r.~. .. r. to .. " ,. .,", ... y. :{.: 't:,;:. J.: V:"rr.":. :r1:rr:::.^,":::.":::::.: : t::y::":':":ti": ""... ":::: f. 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'..1 "".:".":"}:{":{.V1r'"}1:{":;{:":."::":....V,:'::~.vt'{'.1y1J....Y.y:.{.}.ry...{"".04::"::{'."."::"1t.y{{{'t:"::}rrt.'.:r:1:N:;.;1 r1:1:::r.".":: rtrJJ Jrr.".":":"rt.ti:":":rtJ,{'::i:'.i'.mJ:~..nrr~h.,t.C^!",~.J......LJ~.{...r.rr.{'.Yr.^~.,....~N}ry.e.{ AY.#"{r":""''+1 " : DAILY OFFICIAL rr BULLETIN f{ r{. ti{{ ..,. y:.....,... .... t.S"rth{".y:::: "....:::'::1:.. ....... .,v.':.1}.......:".. r:':: '::":^:';{':'.^:{':is :t:':.:'}. ...w".1....w.,.a.. ...... ."A." rt : .'."t:tr." : y't:: Jt V ::"" "., : ayr yr y. .... ,..:.a...,;..,r..n::ii^:w"...^^.^r:::...."Xw::::C:Jr ..... r}:i ...,.... a.... r...: r fr .' :,^..:y:.v...... ...v::::.....a..::r .............n.{v}:f}}.yy::v':r;4:^;:..J.vvrw,.vv............a.....,....:....,.:}:?:SCS :"7:"i}}}?:.v:a.{.:..........,.ra:,.;.:".va"}i:"}:v:r}}}i}:y:{":":4i??>i:.Fax..vr.:":^i:::1: }X":":":":"4:tf. }.4."n dv:.".t~« The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a miaxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1966 Day Calendar Center for Programmed Learning for Business Clinic - "Advanced Program- ming": Michigan Union, 8:00 A.M. Audol-Visual Education Center Film Preview - Men Against the Arctic and Wales: Multipurpose Room, Undergra- duate Library, 1:30 p.m. Department of English Lecture-Ro- bert F. Hogan, Associate Executive Se- cretary, National Council of Teachers of English, "The Changing Shape of English": Auditorium C, Angell Hall, 4:10 p.m. Department of Speech University Players Performance - William Sh~ak- espeare's A Winter's Tale: Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. General Notices Doctoral Examination for: Elliot Re- dalieu, Pharmaceutical Chemistry; the- sis: "Synthesis of Cyclic Epinephrine Relatives," Thursday, June 30, Room 2521 Chem.-Pharm, Bldg., at 2 p.m., Chairman: J. H. Burckhalter. Doctoral Examination for: Dale Olaf Olsen, Education; thesis: "A Study of the Occupational Prestige of Teaching at the Elementary School Level," Wed- nesday, June 29, 1408 UES, at 4 p.m. Chairman, F. C. Penix. Doctoral Examination for: George Al- lan Gogo, Education; thesis: "Teacher- Pupil Perceptions Regarding Education- ral Television in Selected Metropolitan Area Elementary Schools," Thursday, June 30, Room 3206 UHS, at 2 p.m., Chairman: L. W. Anderson. Doctoral Examination for: Joseph Penberthy Johns, Education; thesis:' "The Relationship Between Teacher Behaviors and the Incidence of Thought-Provoking Questions by Stu- dents in Secondary Schools," Thursday, June 30, Room 3203 UHS, at 3:30 p.m., Chairman: L. M. Anderson. Doctoral Examination for: Bruce Lee Gensemer, Economics; thesis: "Deter- minants of the Fiscal Policy Decisions of Local Governments in Urban Areas: -'Public Safety and Public Education." Thursday, June 30, Room 205 Econo- PLOT! irddielaughing! ATION Pres mics, at 4 p.m., Chairman: H. E. Bra- zer. Placement PLACEMENT INTERVIEW: July 8, Friday-VD Branch of U.S. Public Health Service, Detroit-Men, all degree levels in Econ, Gen. Lib. Arts, Journ., Math, Pub. Health, etc. for mgmt. trng. Locations throughout the, U.S. For appointment, please call 764- 7460. General Division, Bureau of Ap- points. POSITION OPENINGS: Electro Counter & Motor Co., Chicago -Chief Engr. 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