Page 4-Tuesday, October 30, 1979-The Michigan Daily R OTC Course credits: The affirmative .. . Editor's Note. Professor Wein- traub 's article was first submitted to the Michigan Alumnus. Professor Cohen read his essay and responded. Both were reprinted from the maga- zine. By Prof. Daniel Weintraub 'We have met the ROTC and they are us... After apologizing to Oliver Hazard Perry, the Pogo comic strip, and the* English Composition Board of the LSA College, I hasten to add that the title is apt. The citizen soldier is not alien to democratic tradition. The Swiss and Israelis come easily to mind. America can claim lineage from the likes of the Minutemen through the modern National Guard and the Ready Reserve units of the previous services. I shall accept the premise, without defending it here, that the citizen-solider concept serves American well, and argue that the University, as a public institution, bears an obligation to assist in the training of military officers. Further, as a result of its size and eminence, the University wields great influence, and ought, therefore, to serve as a model. In short, a healthy, active ROTC, engaged in bringing the realities of military training closer to the training of an ideal 'citizen soldier serves the best in- terests of the University and the coun- try. There are two classes of reasons to consider scuttling ROTC on campus, one concerning the country's capacity to make war, the other concerning the suitability of ROTC courses for a university. Strong reasons can be mar- shalled against maintaining standing armies and stocks of arms. (No purpose would be served by listing claims and counterclaims.) Many who hold these convictions are willing to act and ROTC units, as military units, represent targets of opportunity. Action against ROTC on university campuses can be viewed as maneuvers to erode military strengh or viewed more symbolically. Regardless of convictions, positive or negative, about military preparedness, one can oppose ROTC on campus by arguing that it is incompatible with the principles or practices of a university. Claims include the following: ROTC courses in history and political science are doctrinaire, and worse, they indoc- trinate. Drill and technological aspects of warfare are not fit subject matters. The instructors are military officers with poor academic backgrounds. The military subverts the crucial functions to a, university by controlling who teaches and what gets taught. What does a university's actions with respect to the military accomplish? Treat ROTC decisions as symbollic and consider the impact of the following. The LSA faculty at the University voted in 1975 to continue to dency degree credit for ROTC courses. (Withdrawl of credit took place during the Vietnam era). In 1976, the University of Califor- nia at Berkeley re-instituted ROTC credit. In February, 1979, the Univesity College of Engineering voted to permit increased ROTC credit up to the limit of a student's free electives (15 hours in some programs), while the LSA Curriculum Committee is opposed to ROTC credit and will not endorse a similar proposal if brought before the LSA faculty. It is reasonable to con- clude that none of the above actions has significantly influenced policy or public opinion. I am certain that, regardless of the convictions and actions with respect to ROTC of those at the University or any other university, the U.S. will con- -tinue to spend substantial sums on national defense. Like it or not, there will be military training into the foreseeable future. Consider the practical consequences of satisfying one's moral sensibilities by voting against ROTC or ROTC credit. Attaining the goal of eliminting ROTC at the University will in no way obstruct the supply of officers for the armed forces. I maintain that we would deny ourselves a crucial opportunity to exercise control. The chain of reasoning that leads to ROTC at Michian (and ultimately to advocating credit for ROTC) is that well-educated citizen soldiers make the best soldies. Officer training should take place in civilian colleges, those that attract outstanding students and keep outstanding faculty. Teachers in- fluence students. Administrators in- fluence students. Civilian colleges can be presumed to civilize. The military should be linked closely with the rest of society. Kicking ROTC off campus removes teachers from their major source of influence over the military, namely, through teaching. Teaching occurs in the classroom and by exam- ple. The negative statements about ROTC presented above contain truth and deserve comment. Courses in military indoctrination and drill do not now generate credit anywhere at the University and shall not generate credit in the future. Yes, there is doctrinaire material in ROTC courses. Overlap exists with courses in history and political science. ROTC instructors have tried to arrange for the co- teaching of courses with regular University faculty and for crosslisting courses (e.g., 'Navy Officer Education, Program 301, navigation, is also Astronomy 261), with only small suc-, cess. Course work can be partly con- cerned with developing various skills and a base of useful knowledge, much like the work in an accounting course in the economics department or certain courses in the statistics department. The individual programs, especially of the Air Force and Army, have a great deal of freedom in course content and organization. (The Navy program is technical and more prescribed.) The three services nominate instructors. The propose; we dispose. (The we is the University's ROTC committee ac- ting in conjunction with the President of the University. I chaired the ROTC committee last year as we disposed, much to the discomfiture of one of the services). The instructors are not academicians, and the' selection procedue is not academic. Never- theless, the University can command the- cream of the military corp. All ROTC instructors hold bachelors degrees, usually in engineering or history. A 1977-78 staff profile showed 11. masters degrees spread among the 15 instructors with eight instructors pur- suing masters degrees and two at work on doctorates at the University. They are very bright, motivated, and suc- cessful career officers. They possess professional galifications analogous to those of teachers in art, architecture, music, business administration, and the law. As in the law, role models are needed, yet students have limited con- tact with the military at a civilian univesity. The three services therefore require that ROTC students have direct interaction with military officers in the classroom. The merely doctrinaire can be forgiven, but in the University, indoc- trination cannot. At least the point of view is clearly tagged by an ROTC course title, which is not always the case for other courses. In addition, the instructor comes complete with uniform and shined shoes. Political scientists will challenge certain statements in a military course. Students are not dummies and they are capable of doing the same. Student are not dummies and they are capable of doing the same. Student course work is primarily other than ROTC so that the University's non-military instruc- tors have the edge in face-to-face hours. (In addition, ROTC instructors, through their graduate work at the University, are also directly confronted by civilian' faculty.) If you believe that ROTC courses constitute harmful political indoctrination, then ask your- self whether all that mickey mouse will take. If the course and ROTC instruc- tors are as bad as the naysayers say, and University students are as good as they are touted to be, then.,... This type of argument leads me inexorably toward the conclusion that ROTC should remain on the University cami- pus. In a phrase, the type of student we have at Michigan should compose the officer coprs of the U.S. armed forces. If one grants that ROTC deserves a place on the University campus, then it follows that we should, as always, aim for excellence. The granting of credit for ROTC by all schools and colleges will enhance the quality of our ROTC programs. Since the university system pays in credits, students will take cour- se work more seriously merely because credit is attached. The scrutiny and subsequent monitoring accompanying the credit-granting is good for ROTC. The LSA, for example, would gain a measure of control if it were to grant credit. The University's ROTC commit- tee now monitors quality, but the greater the civilian interaction the bet- ter. There should be more than teaching, and exchange teaching, and crosslisting -of courses when ap- propriate. There are many sorts of pragmatic reasons to support ROTC and credit uniformity. The ROTC units award scholarships (on the basis of merit). about $600,000 worth-and an equivalent amount in staff salaries flow into the community. ROTC provides career options with expanding oppor- tunities for women. The lack of credit means that students who take ROTC as an overload must', pay any excess tuition attached to the overload. Unequal ROTC credit across schools and colleges leads to the student inequities that now exist. But these kin- ds of arguments tend to carry little weight in decisions about ROTC. My claim is that ROTC is special. The fact the ROTC exists to train military officers must not be obscured. Military instructors and a military curriculum are necessary. In military jargon, civilianizaing military courses is a ridiculous undertaking. Upgrading them is not. We make all sorts of ac- commodations for worthy causes. The worthy cause is strengthening ROTC at Michigan and locking it ever more tightly into the University structure. This does not mean taking the soldiering out of the training of citizen soldiers. Repudiation and rejection assuage the moralist in each of us. The consequence of rejection is the loss of control, over ROTC itself, and over the military minds of tomorrow. The College of Literature, Science, and the Arts should be no less attractive,.to ROTC students than our other schools and colleges; it too, should grant credit. In 1963 Professor Carl Cohen wrote about the vulgarizing and the sub- jugation of American youth by the military ,establishment in an article concerning the place of the military in a democracy. (Having observed crowd behavior at gatherings' like Michigan football games, I am not convinced that the military has anything novel to teach us about vulgarity.) A University education should do more than in- noculate students against brainwashing tactics, whatever the source. I would hope that our students are activists who will act in the country's best interests. Professor James White, associate dean of the Law School (and pilot with an Ohio Air National Guard squadron), put it aptly two academic years ago when he challenged the assembled ROTC cadets and midshipmen at their annual awards ceremony to "make trouble." He emphasized the importan- ce of a questioning, probing, thoughtful, officer corps, even at personal cost to their careers. The talk was blunt, provocatiave, and effective. I was moved to consider the likelihood that prospective military officers anywhere else could ever have heard anything quite like it. ROTC at Michigan? Having ,an illustrious ROTC campus is worth fighting for. Daniel J. Weintraub, who takes the affirmative side in the debate, is a University. professor of psy- chology. Je 3tEIpan BatI Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXX, No. 47 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students-at the University of Michigan ... And the opposing view 'I Park caused own coup HOCKED AND puzzled by the bi- zarre scene of events surrounding the assassination of Korean President Park Chung Hee, American diplomats and Korean experts have failed to pin- point the underlying tensions in that country which caused his murder. No doubt it was the ever-increasing amount of internal discontent and general dissatisfaction with Park's repressive policies which led to his death. As the most recent accounts have shown, the premeditated plot to kill the president was orchestrated by his longtime friend but recently-turned- critic, Kim Jae Kyu, the director of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency. Kim may have been the one to pull the trigger - thus putting an end to one of the world's most oppressive democracies - but it was Park's per- sistent hardline policies which spelled his eventual downfall. Since he seized power in a coup in 1961, Park had maintained an ironclad hold on the government. Challenged both within his own clique and by members of the opposition New Democratic Party, Park moved deftly to overcome each obstacle on his road to absolute power. He rivaled former Vietnam President Nguyen Van Thieu as Southeast Asia's most repressive dictator. And like Thieu, he was an important ally of the United States, and therefore was given immunity from the verbal prosecution which is directed against most of our nation's enemies. He could. go on and restrict freedoms in South Korea - all in the name of national security - while the U.S. stood idly by, quiet and content. simply for criticizing the government or calling for more personal liberties. Throughout his continual moves to clamp down on the rights of Korean in- dividuals, Park would always point to the threat from the North Koreans as his justification for sacrificing his people's constitutional rights. He felt that any threat to the internal strength in South Korea would pave the way for communist intrusion from the north. By simply reinstating that fear, Park could keep every president from Ken- nedy to Carter in his camp. And with U.S. support, Park could continue the same course without fear of losing power. Perhaps he felt he could hold power forever. But the Carter administration entered the White House in 1977 with a radically different policy toward Korea. The President announced he would withdraw all American combat troops from Korea because he felt the Korean air force and army were com- petent enough to handle any attack from the north. This announcement shocked and angered Park and his aides. Perhaps as a desperate attempt to get Carter to change his mind, Park became more lenient toward the country's dissiden- ts. It was not that move, however, but rather the revelation that the absence of U.S. troops in Korea could stir another North Korean invasion, that made Carter announce a complete flip- flop several months ago. But in keeping U.S. troops there, Carter has not driven a tough bargain. He did openly criticize Park's repressive policies, but he failed to ob- tain a promise from the South Korean president to liberalize his gover- ..,,,. , .n_ _ 4mn -ir ic: ir: nnf By Prof. Carl Cohen What is at issue between Prof. Weintraub and myself? What is proposed by one of us and rejec- ted by the other? It is "the citizen-soldier struc- ture"? No, nothing pertaining to the concept of the citizen-soldier is in question. The acceptance of that ideal, of course, does not warrant the inference that the University of Michigan "as a public institution bears an obligation to assist in the training of military officers." The Cleveland Museum and the New York Public Library are also public institutions and they bear no such obligations-for the ob- .vious reason that training military officers is not what they were designed to do. It is not what the University was designed todo, either. Is the issue "kicking ROTC off campus"? No, neither the University nor any of its colleges have propsed that or contemplate it. Officer training programs have been long in association with the University, want to remain so, and almost certainly will remain s. Is the issue how we may' "assauge the moralist in each of us" or satisfy our "moral sen- sibilities"? No, the moral merit of military organizations, or the morality of their uses, is not in any way before us. Pro. Wein- traub mistakenly implies that his opponents are motivated by some soft-headed, quasi-moral animus against military institutions. The questions at issue here are not essentially moral at all. Well, then, what is the issue? It is simply this: Should the College of Literature, Science and the Arts at the University grant credit to ward an academic degree for courses designed, taught, and authorized solely by one of the Reserve Training Corps (ROTC)? My answer is no: Wein- traub's is yes. It is difficult to isolate, in his essay, what really bears on this issue. He thinks "military in- struction and a military curriculum are necessary" for the country. It certainly does not follow that such instruction need receive credit toward graduation in this college. He believes that if such degree credit wer. ran1 T ALS Anuld have ultimate mission. The University has a very different mission; its concerns sare and ought .to be } strictly intellectual. The intellectual standards of LS&A are very ligh. As a long- term member of its Curriculum Committee, I report this rigor proudly. Untold hours and energies, and the most thoughtful judgments enter, at many levels, into the appointment of faculty in LS&A, and the spproval of cour- ses for credit in LS&A. Many academics with PhD's and fine records would like to teach at the University but are not given the opportunity to do so. It is not snobbery but truthfulness to ex- press plainly the reason for their rejection: They are not good enough. Many of those once thought good enough are not retained after a long probationary period on the faculty. Ours is an intellectual in- stitution of the very highest category. We sometimes fail in our efforts to screen out the mediocre, but not for the lack of trying. In the College of LS&A we are exceedingly chary in our award of credit toward academic degrees. Why? Because credit is our chief instrument for recognizing our students' in- tellectual achievement; it is our only way of certifying, to other schools, and to potential em- ployers, work conpleted satisfac- torily. We do not-and should not-delegate its award without careful circumspection. It is our duty to protect the value of the credentials we issue. Whether degree credit should be granted for ROTC courses is therefore a very easy question. As a College we give credit for courses that meet the intellectual standards of one or another of our several departments, and pass the inspection of the College Curriculum Committee, and are approved by the College Executive Committee. If ROTC instructors, most of whom have masters degrees and a few of whom are doctoral students, of- "fer courses that one of our depar- tments will support for credit un- der its auspices, such a recom- mendation can come quickly to the Curriculum and Executive Committee and is likely to meet with little objection there. We -J... .. o Ddv'P, test or they cannot. Many of them cannot. Most of the military in- struc ors, after all, are here for one short ,tour during their military career and-except in a few cases-would not be seriously considered by our departments for academic ap- pointments. Much of the material in these military courses, as Prof. Weintraub agrees, is dead- fully doctrinaire. (Weintraub's parenthetical intimation that the critics are uninformed is entirely unfounded, by the way. Specially appointed committees of our college have not only visited and discussed these courses with ROTC officers, but have pored over the ROTC texts and syllabi with meticulous care). Much of, the subject matter taught, even when serious and demanding, has no place in a college of liberal ar- ts. To propose that degree credit be granted by our college simply because a course is offered by the- ROTC, thus treating these military units as though they were cademic departments, is not justifiable. Indeed, it would be irresponsible, and a betrayal of our intellectual trust as a public institution of higher lear- ning. But, it is argued, some ROTC courses do meet the highest stan- dards. Our own College of Engineering grants degree credit for up to 15 hours of some ROTC courses. Fine! Congratulations are sincerely due to those ROTC instructors whose teaching is of such quality. My colleagues and I welcome efforts to cross-list courses having appropriate con- tent and making appropriate demands. For example: Suppose the ROTC would like to have. degree credit granted for its course in military history. Let them put that before our history department, one of the finest in the country; that department's recommendation is almost cer- tain to be accepted. If our history department would not accept the ROTC course in military history as one of their own offerings, should we, as a college, approve it for agree credit nevertheless? It certainly won't get my vote. Again, courses in international politics are offered by the ROTC. When such courses are recom- mended for degree credit by our political science department, one f +,h wn.,rw'l A .' 4,.a - . u for most of us the question is one of intellectual standards and in tellectual appropriateness o There is no vendetta again. ROTC in ourcollege. Neither .. colleagues nor I seek to "scuttle" it. On the contrary, there would be an earnest effort, in the several departments, to cooperate with military scholars of distinction. To be blunt, however, most ROTC p-rograms have not been intellectually distinguished. Prof. Weintraub reports that for him the ROTC is "special." But neither it nor anyy other institution-not the En- vironmental Protection Agency, or the Tenant's Union or the U.S. StatenDepartment-is special enough, in my book, to authorize degree credit in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts without meeting the normal standards of this college. Two final comments. The claim that granting military degree credit for its courses will "strengthen" the ROTC is very doubtful. Easier credit a'- cumulation will help recruit motie students into the ROTC programs, to be sure. But re$l strength-both for the military units and for'the University-lies not in size but in intellectual. solidity and good repute. These will be best assured when all may know that ROTC courses carrying degree credit have met the normal standards of the College of LS&A. Lastly, it is sometimes argued that there are many courses 0f- fered for degree credit now, in LS&A, which cannot meet the standards here 'insisted, upon-and that it is therefore un- fair to insist upon their being met by the ROTC, I'm not sure the premise is true. If it is, let these .courses be called to the attention of the Curriculum Committee, let them be re-examined, and - if they are indeed inferior-let us eliminate them. But let us never use the presence of weak elemen- ts within our college or Univer- sity to. justify the introduction of other elements of which we will not be proud. ROTC officers do their work to the very best of their ability, applying the highest military standards. As a univer- sity faculty we must do our work,