a special feature the Sunday daily by mark dillen 4 Number 33 Night Editor: Erika Hoff Sunday, October 18, 1970 THE PEACE CORPS AFTER 10 YEARS A rocky road for John Kennedy 's dream . T E N Y E AR S A G O last week, a young Presidential candidate came to town and challenged the idealism of the student genera- tion. "How many," he asked, "would be willing to spend time in Africa and other areas work- ing for the development of emerging nations in the cause of world peace?" That speech, on Oct. 14, 1960, was John Kennedy's first mention of an idea which gave birth to the Peace Corps. It was the beginning of a long unmerciful struggle between that generation's new pas- sion for involvement and a system that would eventually alienate and suffocate that hope. The spirit of Peace Corps born that day on the steps of the Union has died, yet those close to it remember the hopeful years; and are reluctant to put it to rest.. Few can remember though, much about what transpired on that day a decade past except that there was a great feeling of excite- ment. Senator Kennedy had arrived in Ann Arbor three hours later than planned-at 2 in the morning. Still, there were nearly 8,000 stu- dents in front of the Union by the time Ken- nedy and a few aides pushed their way to a waiting microphone. He joked that he had come to Ann Arbor to "rest;" that an alumnus of Duke (Richard Nixon) would soon be beaten Just as the Duke football team had just been beaten by the Wolverines. But not much else. Groups of political partisans enthusiastically gave football-style cheers for their perference. It was either Nixon or Kennedy. That was the Age when all students felt they could work within a system which wouldn't betray them. The sign which provoked the most ;comment was carried by some young Republicans: "You can't lick our Dick." As for Kennedy, he spent the night at the Union, leaving for his next campaign stop in the morning. Few actually noted Kennedy's words. What he said wasn't as important as the enthusiasm he generated. And with the Peace Corps, it was the emotional quality'that mattered. The Peace Corps as an idea was as important as the p r o g r a m itself. The nation was being roused from the Eisenhower doldrums and it was students who were the first to awaken to a candidate promising "vigor" and demanding commitment. Kennedy, although he didn't in- itiate the idea of a "youth corps" (Senator Humphrey, among others had been pushing for it prior to that October evening), was the first to bring it to widespread attention. One local group instrumental in that movement was Americans Committed to World Responsibility. "It (the name of the group) didn't sound so trite to us them," said the group's founder, Alan G u s k i n, recently. "Students here re- sponded very strongly" to the movement for a be left behind than what they were jumping on to. Universities, especially this one, anxious to be identified as progressive and pioneering, vied for the training center which would pre- pare the volunteers for a few months before their two-year stay overseas. Six-thousand students sent letters to Washington, volun- teering even before the President made a formal announcement. And the head of the Corps, the President's brother-in-law, Sargent Shriver, assured the public the Corps status w o u 1 d be "semi-independent" as he went around the world seeking nations to send vol- unteers to. Within a year of Kennedy's chal- lenge on the steps of the Union, over 400 volunteers were serving in foreign lands. Soon, the nation would be hearing about how young white liberal-arts graduates were working un- der terrible conditions to do good and help young nations develop. Some were building schools and teaching in Ghana. Others were in Tanganyika (now Tanzania), improving farming methods in India or helping the peo- ple of Colombia develop new industry. It was the time for the new young optimists-Bill Moyers, Frank Mankiewicz, and John D. Rocke- feller IV all joined the Corps. The Peace Corps was the moral means of fighting the Cold War: the right way of "winning the hearts and minds of men." YET WITHIN a few years, the problems of the Peace Corps began to outweigh its pro- ducts. The king of Camelot was killed and with it the idealism of many young Americans. The ghettos in America exploded and many Corpsmen began to wonder what they were doing overseas. Young liberal Democrats who were running the Peace Corps fell under the reign of a new Republican ; administration. Abroad, nationalism was on the rise and na- tions began asking the Corps to leave, identi- fying Americans with the colonialists they had struggled to free themselves of. Peace Corps training became more disorganized and as an adminisjtrative bureaucracy was developed in Washington. Shriver, who shared Kennedy's "dream," was replaced by an administrator. But above all, ,the war in Vietnam and Ameri- can foreign policy shattered the Peace Corps myth. And that story is best told by the Corps- men themselves. Ray Hazelby was one of the first chosen for the Peace Corps. In June of 1961 a man came to his home in Detroit, telling him that he was in a group of the first five people in Michigan chosen for duty. "I had really for- gotten all about it," he said recently. "The guy said I could begin training and I thought about it, and decided to try it. It was kind of a non- choice. I had just graduated from Michigan THE CASE OF "the kid" in Chile began in 1967, when volunteer Bruce Murray pro- tested the war in Vietnam while in Chile. The Johnson administration had developed a policy that volunteers could only speak pri- vately on political issues and were forbidden to comment on issues involving the "host" countries. Murray mentioned he was a Peace Corps member in an article written for a South American newspaper: El Sur. The Peace Corps dismissed him,.his local board reclassi- fied him and he was drafted. Though the de- cision was later overturned in a federal court, the publicity served to further tarnish the Corps' image among many young people. Meanwhile, other letters of protest against the war and carrying the signatures of Peace 'Corps members were published. One thousand signatures were attached to another letter protesting the war, also initiated by Corps members in Chile. Others followed. While no majority of Corpsmen signed petitions pro- testing the war, a general feeling of contra- diction was perceived between the stated aims of Peace Corps' programs and the government's foreign policy-especially the Vietnam War. One group of volunteers returning home in May 1967 gave the following reasons for their opposition to the war: --It destroys in one developing country what we have worked to build in so many other developing countries. -It has largely destroyed indigenous lead- ership responsive to the needs and desires of the people. -It undercuts the democratic ideals for which we have worked abroad and which we uphold within the U.S. -The anti-communist r h e t o r i c used to justify our actions there obscures the fact that the basic division in the world today is be- tween the rich and poor. -It renders difficult, if not impossible, domestic efforts to eliminate poverty and to assure the civil rights of all U.S. citizens. -In spite of assurances to the contrary, our actions daily bring us closer to an all-out war with China or Russia, or both. Two years later, after Cambodia incursion, a small radical Committee of Returned Volun- teers (CRV) would "liberate" Peace Corps offices in Washington for 36 hours, but this wasn't the mood in the early sixties. "There was this general altruistic feeling that the Peace Corps offered a chance to help other nations," said Steve Manchester, a vol- unteer in Tanzania from 1963-65. "Foreign policy didn't affect us much at all then, though there was always some anti-Americanism. The Minister of Education called us untrained and said we were promoting a U.S. policy line. But then, it (the Peace Corps) was a big thing. It was the first thing like that to be tried. It wasn't until I was on my way home that Watts started to burn." Now the Peace Corps is gone from Tanzania. (The government of Tanzania ordered them to leave in 1967). Today, volunteers have more difficulty in accepting the moral purity built into Ken- nedy's dream and they question the validity of the whole Peace Corps concept. Actually, feelings of disenchantment began much ear- lier: "The Bay of Pigs shocked the hell out of us," said one ex-volunteer), most r e a c t e d strongest to racial troubles at home and the effect of Vietnamese war on them as volun- teers supported by the government. Frank Starkweather was a volunteer in Nigeria about the time the mood changed. "I didn't like that association (of the Peace Corps) with our government," Starkweather said. "The thing I objected to was how the initial concepts of the Corps were subverted to American foreign policy goals. From the beginning, I watched principles being com- promised. "Everyone said at first the Peace Corps wouldn't work except the kids-they dug it. The people who started it were a group of be- lievers a m o n g s t non-believers. When they pulled it off, other types came in and slowly bureaucratic forms and habits got in the way. Now the Peace Corps is associated with the establishment and the war and the best grad- uates are finding more to do in the struggles at home." INCREASING STRUGGLES in our own society have brought old volunteers home while keeping those at home from joining. Applica- tions for service, which peaked in 1965-66 at over 13,000, are barely half that number now. Since 1966, the number of volunteers abroad has diminished by a third. There is a growing sense that many of the 11,000 volunteers and trainees appear more interested in "a free trip overseas," than helping the people of a nation. And, not only radicals like the CRV are questioning the value of a Peace Corps It becomes irrelevant at best, destructive at worst. It's a dangerous thing to have a Peace Corps that tries to make us look like a benevo- lent country when we aren't." "The best thing would be to stop it, then start it up again in a few years," says Starkweather. "The Corps is on the wane because it can't co-exist with our foreign policy," says Wunglueck. Some while conceeding that the Corps may be dying, think it is only necessary to end the war and get a new administration in office to get the Peace Corps moving again. "The Peace Corps is still viable and I think it'll sur- vive Nixon," says Manchester. "After Vietnam, there'll be m o r e volunteers again." Sargent Shriver is of the same opinion. He agrees that the war in Vietnam is counter to everything the Peace Corps has stood for and is respon- sible in part for it's decline but feels that the Corps is worth trying to save. "South Vietnam wanted volunteers in '61 but we wouldn't send them. And, in '66 during the Dominican Republic crisis, the Corps stayed among the people, helping them despite American intervention." In many ways, however, the views of pres- ent Peace Corps Director Jack Blatchford and his predecessor Jack Hood Vaughn are op- dismissed twelve volunteers in the past four months because of their public opposition to the war. "A volunteer can express his dissent but can't exploit his position," said Blatchford. Later, that same month, Corpsmen in Turkey were given the chance to resign and go home. Again, ' threats by anti-American extremists had made officials wary about the program's future. Turkey has gone from a nation with one of the highest number of volunteers in 1965 (590) to one of the lowest (160) today. Last summer, results of a Louis Harris poll of ex-volunteers was made public. The poll had been commissioned by Blatchford at a cost of $119,000 after the start of his "New Directions" program. The poll's results simply confirmed, what many of corpsmen had been expressing all along: the Corps was seen as being less idealistic, less able to attract'volunteers, more conservative and more part of the establish- ment. While 92 per cent said their experience in the Corps was valuable to them, only 40 per cent thought their work was valuable to the United States. A poll wasn't really necessary except to con- firm the opinions expressed by volunteers all along. Most volunteers, while enthusiastic about their meaningful experiences abroad 4 0 -Daily--Tom Gottlieb 1970: Shriver laments misguided paths posed to Shriver's Administrators rather than idealists, they are more familiar w i t h con- cepts like "cost efficiency" than "the dream." Yet after having the Corps depart (sometimes after being told to by the "h o s t" country) from Cyprus, Ceylon, Indonesia, Pakistan, Mauritania, Malawi, Gabon, Tanzania, Libya, Nigeria and the Somali Republic the c o s t spent on training and financing each volun- teer has gone up. Blatchford, w h o mailed copies of a Republican fund raising speech he made at home to volunteers overseas, has been criticized for his "New Directions" program. Blatchford's "N e w Direction" program is essentially aimed at getting older, more skilled technical people in the Corps. It also plans to allow volunteers to take their families with them abroad. However, few are responding to this effort. Their reasons vary but people are more "tied down, and would require a high salary as an incentive. (The $100 a month vol- unteers receive now has not proved sufficient.) Even more ominous to volunteers is the pros- pect that the Peace Corps will become more closely tied to the State Department line un- der Blatchford; becoming similar to the AID program, which has been considered a failure in attempting to provide professional techni- cal assistance to developing countries. EVENTS IN THE past year seem to bear out the pessimistic evaluations. In January, 20 of the 338 Peace Corps volunteers in Ethiopia were forced to terminate their service because, according to Blatchford, "reasons of consid- erable unrest." It turned out some Peace Corps teachers had been threatened by their stu- dents. Some attributed this to the presence of an air force b a s e in northern Ethiopia. express doubt as to whether their work ach- ieved any permanent accomplishments. "As an experience for an individual Ameri- can it was a real gas," says Wunglueck. "It wasn't two years taken out of my life at all but a real contribution to it. I had two weeks in Paris after my two years were up. While there, I watched the films of Detroit burning on tel- evision. That was the real mind blower. I real- ized that Time and the New York T i m e s weren't telling what was happening. I c a m e back though. I guess I'm still suffering from thinking I can do something." "As an experience it was absolutely fan- tastic," says Starkweather. "I'm not sure I ac- complish an awful lot except the relationships with my students," says Rose. "I realize that's no long term thing, but I got so much out of it." The stories and experiences go on and on: memorable, beautiful, frustrating and tragic. A decade of hope, challenge and disillusion- ment has past. SO, IT WAS a comment on our times last Fri- day when Sargent Shriver came politiking into town and decided to go to the steps of the Union to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the Peace Corps. This time, maybe 300 of the curious stopped to hear what was said as Shriver and a few aides pushed their way to the microphone. There were no jokes. There was little enthusiasm. The comment which drew the most applause was, "there must be a new administration in Washington." Shriver called for a "political Peace Corps" (which he explained t h e young themselves must organize). He praised today's y o u t h, calling them "the most idealistic and the best hope for peace." Political candidates plugged o A -Ann Arbor News 1960: Kennedy challenges our idealism Peace Corps. "There was a great deal of feel- ing - my feeling too, I guess - that a new generation was emerging, sparked by Kennedy, which would effect change. There was a hope, naive though it may have been, that the gov- ernment could be responsive." And ex-volun- and was busy mulling over the prospects of doing several things and getting drunk in the process. Everyone was trying to get applica- tions and I finally got one from a Congress- man in Wisconsin. "So, I was sent to Colombia and stayed