--I ~71Alorcktgan Bkitg Seventy-Fifth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS A h -lr Government Goes Down LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Rumors Still in Circulation rere Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD sr., ANN AFOr&. MTcH. Truth Will Prevail NErs 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. FRIDAY, 12 FEBRUARY 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: JEFFREY GOODMAN '/ . - - - Finding Willow Run A Place in the University C P'4 1r C4Vr-UA '/ ~' IKGM r .,1 FACULTY DISCONTENT and uncer- tainty with respect to the role of the Institute of Science and Technology's Willow Run Laboratories need to be re- solved. Since unofficial sources indicate that a new director for Willow Run will have to be selected soon, a chance will be provided to review the labs' relation to the University and define their role more explicitly than it has been. Of the different paths which Willow Run can follow, the movement up to now has been toward integration with the teaching and research programs of the rest of the University through the IST organization headquartered on North Campus. This goal has a great deal to recom- mend it. Willow Run's access to Defense Department research money and its ac- cumulation of talent and facilities could make great contributions to the Univer- sity's research and teaching efforts. BUT THE OBSTACLES have been num- erous and many very serious problems and conflicts have arisen in attempting to implement a Willow Run-IST-Univer- sity integration program. The process has been greatly complicated by the prob- lems and confusion that have come about as the rest of the IST organization has attempted to define its own place in the University. Rather than expect the leadership of IST to continue to struggle with these issues, a faculty advisory committee com- posed of representatives from IST, Wil- low Run and interested departments could address itself to the problems of Willow Run. SOME OF THE DIFFICULTIES requiring consideration are:" -The physical location of the labs at some'distance from the University's main campus makes contacts with students, faculty and administrators difficult to maintain. This means that student and faculty participation in Willow Run pro- grams will tend to wither and die unless it is strongly encouraged. It also means that the IST administration is put at a, disadvantage in trying keep in close touch with what is happening at Willow Run. -The extensive security systems at Willow Run are inimical to a spirit of free, academic inquiry. Guards posted at every door to every lab at Willow Run so that entry can be closely supervised play havoc with the free flow of information so necessary to a University's function and spirit. -If Willow Run is to become truly a part of the University, it cannot be in overt competition with private research corporations. The $4 million infrared tele- scope being built by IST in Hawaii should not have been undertaken unless the work could make contributions to basic research and education programs within the University. -The quality and type of work done at Willow Run have come in for criticism. The research and education done there need to be evaluated. It is quite possible that the Willow Run programs are not in accord with the research and educa- tion goals of the University as a whole. If they cannot be adjusted, a successful program of integration would be impos- sible. POSSIBLE LONG-RANGE solutions the committee might consider -are trans- fer of as much Willow Run work as possi- ble to North Campus; transfer of lab re- sponsibilities to faculty members; or the setting up of another campus at Willow Run for graduate study (another North Campus). If the advisory committee feels that complete integration of Willow Run with the rest of the University is impossible, its next task would be to survey what place the labs should occupy within the University. The labs could be disassociated from University functions in the same man- ner as MIT's Lincoln Labs or Chicago's Argonne National Laboratory. That is, the University would assume the respon- sibility for running Willow Run, but the labs would be administered as a separ- ate enterprise. But whatever direction it is decided that Willow Run should move in, the goals and the methods of achieving them should be spelled out ex- plicitly now. AN ADMIRABLE and heroic job has been done thus far in the attempt to bring Willow Run within the University. But what has been done should be assessed, and what is to be done should now be decided by a committee of concerned fac- ulty and researchers. Willow Run is too big and too valuable to be a victim of a policy of non-policy. -ROBERT JOHNSTON A "-" r ' ---.. t .-.w.., , lA ~ A y J _ _ r.C., ' O ,S T 7" , j .,G/G. " : A!4y rsebFh r. }>r<':> ', a; : v'11 r 4JASI M/r16"'f nr1 PGST TODAY AND TOMORROW: Interpreting the Lesson Of the Viet Cong Attack By WALTER LIPPMANN IT IS HARD to believe that the raid on the American instal- lations in South Viet Nam was not closely related to Prime Min- ister Kosygin's visit to North Viet Nam. It is hard to believe, too, that Kosygin would have picked the day after his arrival in Hanoi to touch off the raid. He was in no position to help the Viet Cong carry out the raid, nor to protect North Viet Nam against American retaliation. It is most probable, therefore. that the affair was ordered and directed by men who intended to spoil Kosygin's mission in South- east Asia and to interfere with his role as a principal power in bringing about a negotiated setrt,!- ment. MOST PROBABLY, then, the gambit was directed against both the Soviet Union and the United States, which happen to have a parallel interest in preventing a big war in Eastern Asia and of containing the expansion of China. The administration is no doubt right in interpreting the raid on Pleiku as a test of American will. Had the United States refrained from retaliating, the Chinese and their supporters in Asia and else- where would have called it a dem- onstration that the United States is a paper tiger and that, there- fore, the Soviet policy of peaceable coexistence is unnecessary and absurd. The other side of the calcua- tion was that if the United States reacted, as in fact it did react, it would demonstrate that in Asia the Soviet Union is a paper tiger unable to defend its clients. From the Chinese point of view the gambit worked successfully. It showed on the one hand that the Americans are highly vulner- able on the ground in South Viet Nam; it showed on the other nand that the Soviet Union has no power to protect East Asia against the United States. MUCH DEPENDS on what les- sons are drawn in Moscow, Peking, Hanoi and Washington from the the affair. We have had a very clear dem- onstration of the strategic reality in Southeast Asia. The American Army at Pleiku was unable to protect itself against a compar- atively small guerrilla attack, against a force estimated officially at about two squads and one platoon. The American forces got no warning of the attack from the Vietnamese people in the nearby hamlets where the raid was prepared. In fact, when asked at his Sun- day press conference whether the United States could not protect its own forces in South Viet Nam, Sec. Robert McNamara replied that he did not "believe it will ever be possible-and I think when I say this I reflect the views of our own joint chiefs-to protect our forces against sneak attacks of that kind." BUT THAT IS only half of the lesson which was demonstrated this past weekend. The other part of the lessonis that the U.S. fleet, standing 100 miles offshore, is capable of inflicting devasta ing and unrequited damage on the A ian mainland. There was no power in South Viet Nam to pro- tect our own forces or to retaliate. But at sea there exists an enor- mous American power which is quite independent of our forces on the mainland. For us, the meaning is that the commitment to participate in the land war in South Viet Nam is an entanglement, is a hostage to fortune, which exposes us to de- feats and humiliations. The best that the more convinced believers in the commitment can say is that if we stay there long enough and accept the losses which they re- gard as "tolerable," the Chinese and North Vietnamese will even- tually grow tired and become in- different. For myself, I would not count too much on American pa- tience being greater than Chinese patience. THE MEANING of the affair must not be missed in Moscow, Peking and Hanoi. Let them re- member that, reduced to its fun- damentals, the situation is that the United States possesses para- mount sea and air power _in the far Pacific, and no one can count on such a degree of restraint in the use of that power that it will never be used., The United States is not a paper tiger. That phrase reflects the greatest delusion on which our adversaries could possibly gamble. The truth is that Presi- dent Lyndon Johnson profoundly desires to avoid war, but his power to do that is not unlimited, nor can he be counted on not to be provoked if the provocation is -on- tinual and cumulative. (c). 1965, The Washington Post Co. To the Editor: REALIZE that The Daily has a conservative approach to re- porting the news and is continu- ally looking for ways to conceal blemishes on the public image of the University-regardless of the fact that most of The Daily's readers are students and faculty who are already only too aware of the existence of these so-called "taboo" subjects. However, when events occur that could conceivably affect about one quarter of the student body (i.e. the co-eds) I feel that they should receive front page atten- tion. The image of the University should not be an all-powerful cen- sor through which all potential publication must pass before printing. Rumors are a poor ource of facts, but if there are no other sources how are we go- ing to know what is happening in the University community? SINCE I started this letter 30 minutes ago, two more victims have been added to the collection of rumors begun this semester. Originally, the story was that two girls had been criminally assault- ed in Ann Arbor, now the rumored total has risen to 14. The safety of many women at the University depends upon their knowledge of the facts inthese cases: someone has the responsibility of inform- ing the students of precautions which could prevent further at- tacks. The Daily must not ,.nsider the image of the University m:e important than the safety of the students. As the main source of information, The Daily should feel justified in printing the faets which might easily prevent a spread of panic caused by dis- torting the truth. "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure." Is The Daily going to give the student that ounce by printing relevant information, or is Uni- versity Hospital to be held in ac- count for the pounds of cure? If we have to gather news by lis- tening to rumor, The Daily is not fulfilling its function as a stu- dent publication and is ignoring its responsibility to the students of the University. -William Chapo, '66 EDITOR'S NOTE: While you lab- elling of our news policy has prob- ably done much to reassure our board, The Daily never has been and never intends to be the guard- ian of the university's image. We do, however, happen to be somewhat concerned with fact. There's no electronic tote board at The Daily tabulating the number of rumors concerning rape attempts because they are far out of propor- tion to the deed. As our story of two days ago declared, there is no supporting evidence for the rumors which have been going around cam- pus. This means: -University officials flatly deny them. -The hospitals have no record of treating any assaulte4 women with- in the time span of the rumors. -The Ann Arbor. police have recorded three assault attempts in the last, three months and none in the last three weeks. They have checked all rumors and have bee unable to substantiate any of them. Furthermore, The Daily's own in- dependent investigation has failed to unearth a single individual with concrete knowledge concerning the "rapes." 'those we have talked to have amitted the' information is rumor to them, too. If you know anything to the contrary, Mr. Chapo, I'd be glad t talk to you. --HN.B. Diag Rally To the Editor: I DEMAND a public apology and retraction from The Daily to the effect that they falsely re- ported I led "20 pickets from the Young Republicans and Young Americans for Freedom," in a re- cent anti-anti-government dem- onstration on the Diag, I and others who carried signs were acting entirely as individuals who were deeply concerned with the critical Viet Nam problem and felt that the decisive action of President Johnson would prevent a war and a Communist take- over in all of Southeast Asia. The McCarthy-like 1 falsely 'associating my other demonstrators w group, without even app me when I am allegedly1 er, shows the low qualit porting in The Daily. If ' wishes to identify us as of the groups to which us belonged it could als the Young Citizens for ACLU, NAACP. CORE,! Institute of Chemical E fraternities, housing u Clearly we did not .repr viewpoint of these gro more than we intended t resentatives of YAF or Y * d FURTHERMORE. I did this group. I am flatt Daily thinks I did lead the group was well organ orderly, but this is not s To try to associate me Young Americans for is a malicious misreprei since, as mentioned, no The Daily asked me w represented, and to all from spectators my reply we represented ourselves. -Alan M. Sag EDITOR'S NOTE: sorry,i apology, no retraction. T stands by its story. Schle tactic of self and ith any proaching the lead- ty of re- The Daily members some of o include Johnson, A in IN TALKING about the test engineers, ban treaty, he noted that we must nits, etc. not always believe the Russians. esent the He pointed out two other times )ups any when the humanitarians believed o be rep- what the Russian Communists R's. said. Logically, he then went on to give three good reasons why Inot le we should believe them now. it since I am sure that anyone who was nized and fooled one of the other times o. could have come up with half a 0.h h dozen good reasons. But it was with the still a mistake. Freedom He said that the treaty involved nt fton Soviet acquiescence to U.S. super- heofrom tority. As far as testing goes, they on we inquiries have conducted more advanced was that tests than we have. If' anything, the treaty benefits them. He also said that since the er, '65L Cuban crisis the U.S. and Russia Alan. No have been friendlier than ever. He he Daiy overlooked the dues in the UN, -.N. he incipient Soviet aid to North Viet, Nam, and the periodic de- parture of Russian embassy per- ,singer sonnel at the recommendation of the FBI pride to the graduated income tax and government regulation of business. He should have gone to .the trouble of defining a "free" econ- omy. If he means "free" as op- posed to Communism, then he is right; but if he means "free" in the sense of "free," then he isn't and it isn't. To the Editor: A RTHUR SCHLESINGER, JR. almost gave a good speech Saturday night. Almost. I would like to comment briefly on a few of his assumptions and contra- dictions. Quoting President Kennedy, he said that our foreign policy was based on the "acceptance of di- versity." In the same 'breath he found fault with what he called the policy of "isolationism" that our government followed until a generation ago. It seems that up until a gen- eration ago, the U.S. government insisted on keeping out of for-, eign entanglements. But at the same time American businessmen were trading all over the world, and the country was accepting hundreds of thousands of immi- grants a year, at least up until the end of the last century. This seems "internationalism" at its finest. * * * BUT THEN we made the big change to official "international- ism," better called "interven- tionism." We have made more alliances than we know what to do with, most of them meaning- less, and have become involved in local quarrels that were none of our business. At the same time, our tariffs are as high' as ever, and the immigration quotas are almost as low as ever. it seems that the policy Schlesinger criticized so welt was a lot closer to his ideal than the second-rate substitute. But what does the "acceptance of diversity" mean? ifKennedy believed in it, why couldn't he leave the Congo alone instead of lending our planes to the UN to impose a type of government on the people of Katanga that they obviously didn't want? Did the "principle of diversity" give him permission to destroy the Diem government in South Viet Nam? On the home front, does the "principle of diversity" allow the people of the North to tell the people of the South how to run their businesses? * *I I. WHAT DOES the "principle of diversity" mean? Or does it mean anything? On the other fronts he gave the usual diatribe against laissez faire. Pointing to the ad- mittedly rough working conditions of the last century, he blamed them all on the free economy. Maybe it has never occurred to him that if it had not been for laissez faire, these poor souls would not have been working at all. He consistently called our pres- ent economy a "free" economy. At the same time, he pointed with The Writer-in-Residene LIKE ALL the other great minds, he was really down on Soviet censorship In this coun- try we call it "managed news" and, since Kennedy practiced it, it must be all right. He blames the conservatives for wanting to impose our type of government on other countries. This is a common illusion, but totally at variance with the facts. Which side supported the UN action in the Congo? Which side insists on sending out billions every year in a vain effort to get nations on our side? Which side sends out the Peace Corps to con- vert the world to our way? The conservative insists on force and money in foreign affairs only when our interests are at stake. It is the liberal and the statist that insist on government action to convert the world to our sys- tem of Peace and Justice aid. HumanitarianisI and . all the other goodies. INDEED, if Schlesinger 'means by "acceptance of diversity" that we should allow other nations to go their way, then he has the only basis for international friend- ship and goodwill. But if it is just a piece of rhetoric, as it seems it is, then his speech was what he said it would be, "clish after clish after clish." -Walter W. Broad, '66E Trimester To the Editor: T HAS BEEN i nteresting to ob- serve the rise of the trimester issue until it has gained entrance into that exclusive circle of such perennially favorite topics on your editorial page as the definition of liberal education and the role of the student at the University. The .privilege of membership in this elite group is. that editorial writers, after a platitudinous title like "Facing Reality Will Make A Meaningful Trimester" (Feb. 2) and a few paragraphs of intro- duction, can launch into a diatribe against any and all of the world's ills under the aegis of a title that has already brought all red- blooded all-Amedican students to their feet. Why is it, for example, that Miss Butcher does not once use the word "trimester" in the second half of her editorial except in the final clause, which, in well- schooled journalistic style, para- phrases the title to emphasize the unity and cohesiveness of the work? If anyone can show me how the problems of the competition between' graduates and under- graduates for professors' time, the unenlightened grading system, dis- tribution requirements, the credit- hour system and "a community of scholars rather than of students" are peculiar to or products of the trimester, I would be very appreciative. THERE ARE several points to be made concerning the trimester when it is considered in the proper context, that is, in the context of schedules which eliminate the waste of overhead costs of Uni- versity facilities during the sum- mer months, The main "bug" in the new sys- tem was the failure on the part of professors to properly adapt their materials to a shortened calendar. This problem already has, with very few exceptions, been eliminated. I much prefer the trimester to a quarter system which necessitates the waste of half again as much time on :Id- ministrative procedures such as final exams, registration, coun- selling, orientation, adding and dropping courses, and buying books. I 0 1 4 I"SkIAftD TO EXPLAIN why student groups are rallying behind Elizabeth Sumner's proposed writer-in-residence program and equally hard to understand the reluctant support by certain segments of the administration. While words and praise often flow eas- ily, purse strings are loosened with great- er difficulty. Nevertheless, student groups such as the Women's League and SqC were so impressed by the thought of Louis Lomax serving as a faculty member for three weeks that they generously dipped into their own funds to support the ven- ture. The individual academic depart- ments, although less wealthy, are consid- ering lending a financial hand and want to help coordinate the program. BUDGET PROBLEMS or not, it is a strange state of affairs when students have to pay money in addition to their tuition payments for an opportunity to get a complete college education. True, many organizations have their own speaker programs in which they bring characters like George Lincoln Rockwell to campus for a two-hour dissertation in Hill Auditorium. But Lomax's appearance would not re- senible such a lecture series. He would stay here for a three-week period and would be available for seminars, private consultation, public addresses and talks and discussions in individual classes. Rather than just appealing to a very small group of students, his comments would be pertinent to courses in English, history, American studies, journalism, po- litical science, sociology, economics, phi- losophy and psychology. Thus in effect he would be an at-large member of the WHILE THE ADMINISTRATION'S lack of action is most disheartening, this is no time to display dissatisfaction. Theoretically there is no reason why stu- dents should have to shell out the money, but, since they are willing to do so, one can examine the unique advantages of such a system. First, Lomax will not be subject to any restrictions or time infringements from the administration because it will not be running the show. Even more important is that the pres- ent arrangements would mean that the faculty and students would be working together. Without official help, they are raising the money and planning the ven- ture together. This represents somewhat of a milestone in curriculum organiza- tion. Thus, it might seem that things will be better without the administration. And perhaps the necessary cash can be collected without its support. But while the administration may not be vital to the success of the program, it would be an even more meaningful affair with its participation. RECENT RELATIONS between the ad- ministration and the student body have not been extremely cordial. The writer-in-residence program is something the students obviously want and some- thing the administration can help them get. But it is more than just a case of ce- menting relations. The project really should be the responsibility of the ad- ministration, and the least it can do is supply the money still needed. The Office of Religious Affairs, one branch of the administration, conceived ONCE FESTIVAL: Way-Out Spectaculars Highlight Concert HE ONCE FESTIVAL opened last night with a bang at the VFW Hall. Gongs were caressed, crashed. Paper posies were destroyed. Rock 'n' roll ruled the roost. M * * GUEST PERCUSSIONIST Max Neuhaus provided a high spot of the evening with his rendition of-three percussion work, Surrounded by an incredible battery of instruments, he sensitively refused to create sensational effects. In the third; piece, he packed up every last instrument carefully, throwing each to produce abundant resonance; and departed with four locked trunks. The Jelloman stalked the stage. Guitar strings twanged. Cotton candy and karate flowred freely. *, THE SENTIMENT. of the evening' centered in "My Piece," by Richard Waters, in five picturesquely titled movements. The ONCE Theatre Ensemble performed mutely behind a wall of polyethylene. Prepared pianos and sopranos let loose.