-~1 Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Military grows lean, stays 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News 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, SEPTEMBER 4, 1970 NIGHT EDITOR: STEVE KOPPMAN a4 FIVE YEARS of spiralling opposition to the war in Vietnam are finally having their effect on the U.S. military establishment. But the changes that are taking place are frustratingly small, and they foreshadow plans not to disengage from the corpsemanship of the Indo- china Theatre, but to ensure that the war goes on in- definitely. Total armed forces personnel are being reduced from a peak of 3.3 million to probably about 2.4 million by next May. Coupled with future reforms in the military pay scales, this troop reduction will presumably allow the Pentagon to comfortably accept an all-volunteer Army in time for the 1972 elections - a step which militarists hope will mollify anti-war sentiment among both old and young. The troop reduction will, of course include the con- tinuing withdrawal of U.S. troops from Indochina, but it seems highly unlikely that South Vietnamese forces will ever be able to maintain control of their rebellious coun- try without American assistance. And given President Nixon's preoccupation with not becoming the first man to preside over a U.S. military defeat, the continued pre- sence of tens of thousands of troops in Indochina seems, likely. EVEN WHILE U.S. ground forces are leaving the area, our bombers continue to devastate the South Vietnamese countryside, to make numerous "retaliatory strikes" over North Vietnam and to fly increasing numbers of combat support missions for the forces of Cambodia's dictator Laon Nol. Thus, while communist and nationalist forces maintain control of the Indochinese countryside, U.S. bombers provide what at times approaches a no-man's land of devastation around the government headquarters in Phnom Penh and Saigon. In Cambodia, as in South Vietnam in the past, defoliation of the countryside, forced urbanization of the rural population and the use of "free-fire zones" are likely to be employed as a means of terror-laden repression. A On the whole, the military establishment, despite the surface changes induced by the anti-war movement, re- mains ubiquitous, omnipotent and seemingly immutable. Vast programs of troop support (e.g. our 63,000-man force in S. Korea) and military aid to a slew of un- popular regimes in the underdeveloped world seem un- changed in recent years and continue to define the basic thrust of U.S. foreign policy - repression of left-wing opposition groups in favor of friendly, proto-fascist gov- ernments. Yet American public opinion remains relatively mute. Even disclosures of atrocities by the military draw little attention. For example, in July the prestigious Interna- hungry martin hirschman tional Commission of Jurists reported that U.S. personnel were aiding the Brazilian government in instituting a virtual Inquisition against opposition forces including the widespread use of torture. The report went almost unnoticed. FOR THE AMERICAN LEFT, the continued strength of the military -- as well as the business interestsathat benefit from the maintenance of friendly, stable rela- tions with dictators in the underdeveloped world - is both frustrating and compelling. Years of confrontation with the military have pro- duced a small show of retreat designed only to numb the American people to the real repression, bloodshed and destruction that continues unabated. But at the same time, left-wing nationalist groups in many nations are putting up staunch resistance to the tyranny of their U.S.-supported governments, and per- sisting in struggles that offer the only real source of hope for the neglected, poverty-stricken masses of the Third World. These courageous struggles, by groups like the Tupe- mero in Uruguay, the Viet Cong and Cambodian nation- alist groups, deserve the support of the American people.. They provide us with an undeniable call for renewed action, compelling us to build a massive anti- imperialist movement which can hasten the demise of our blood-and-iron approach to foreign policy. Games we can play while, slowly choking to death Violence 1 1111politics: A three-sided dilemma DEFENSE SECRETARY Melvin Laird's suggestion Wednesday - that federal research facilities which are becoming targets of violent action may have to be built elsewhere than on the campus - gives great hope to those determined to cleanse the universities of this country of their affiliation with the Pentagon. Yet at the same time it is genuinely de- pressing to realize that only through years of continued violence, capped by the blast at the University of Wisconsin which killed one and injured four others, was. Laird moved to his conclusion. Depressing because increasingly, in the past year, it has become nearly impos- sible to refute the argument that violent tactics are the most effective means of change and persuasion on the campus and in the nation. Experiences in Ann Arbor - the bookstore sit-in, the Par- sons sit-in, the Black Action Movement class strike and trashing, the pressure on ROTC - where such tactics have been extraordinarily successful after requests, petitions, demands and cold logic have failed, give strong support to those who believe that political efficacy is greatest in the streets. Thus it becomes increasingly impos- sible to condemn those on the left who choose -violence as a tactic unless one is willing to abandon the belief that ending repression and 'militarism are key factors in the building of a better American society. And yet violence remains an uneasy al- ternative to many, especially when it leads to the death or injury of innocent humans. The dilemma posed by this con- flict involving tactics and efficacy recalls the reaction of a local radical to the Weatherman bombings in Manhattan last winter. "I can't condemn those people. That's their analysis of the situation. I don't agree with it, I won't contribute to it, but I can't bring myself to say they are totally wrong." AT THE University of Wisconsin, history will be the eventual judge of the ef- fect of the Nev Year's Gang bombing. in the meantime, the Army Mathematics Research Center is disfunctional, and those who would condemn violence as a tactic -across the board can only look on that accomplishment as a testimonial to the impotence of their own philosophy. The Wisconsin bombing, of course, has not "solved" anything on a lamge scale. Even if the Pentagon decides to build its war. machine elsewhere the war ma- chine still exists. Yet if the universities can someday free themselves of their ties with the military and the corporate pow- er structure, then perhaps they can re- establish themselves as a strong moral force in this society. In that light, the recent retreat of ROTC from the campus, coupled with Laird's announcement yes- terday is encouraging. Meanwhile, we can wait for something to happen that will make our elected and appointed officials change their perspec- tive, and take steps to dismantle the war machine and throttle back the corporate power structure. But that is pointless, and begs the entire question of this dilemma. That sort of change can only c o m e through action. Action can be non-violent or violent. The three-sided dilemma of efficacy and conscience and impotence continues. -JIM NEUBACHER- Editorial Page Editor (EDITOR'S NOTE: This article ap- peared in the Aug. 29 issue of the New Republic.) By DANIEL ZWERDLING Daily Magazine Editor Smog, water pollution and rac- ism all have new social purpose: they're making some game manu- facturers a bundle of money. The newest games on the market which teach us that social con- cern can be fun are SMOG and Dirty Water, companion b o a r d games which pit the player, as an elected pollution control manager, against conflicting demands by big business, .government, voters, and the dying environment. Players hop around a Decision Tree where they must confront suchymatters as industrial a n d family growth, zoning, public transportation systems, pollution control schemes and public rela- tions campaigns. Whoever balanc- es the different demands b e s t w i n s; astute players soon learn that a dollar or two in the pock- et brings them a lot closer to vic- tory than making small improve- ments in the air. Outrageous Fortune Cards com- plicate the 90-minute g a m e by making it unpredictable: the wind direction m a y suddenly change, blowing your industries' smoke ov- er nearby homes (you lose votes), or the legislature may propose outlawing the internal combustion engine (you lose votes but gain good air points if you support the bill; if you oppose it the air gets worse but Detroit sends you $500). Youngsters who find SMOG dif- ficult to understand (many adults have found the rules obscure and tedious, as well) may enjoy Dirty Water. The object is to stock your lake first with a nicely balanced supply of bass, sunfish, algae, ro- tifers and copepods. DDT, phos- phates and herbicides will thwart nature (and the player) at every step. SMOG and Dirty Water come from a Cambridge consultant firm, Urban Systems Assoc., manned by former Boston mayor John Col- lins and a slew of Harvard-MIT graduates. Their clients include large corporations who want to see about cutting down on their own pollution, presumably at cut- rates. The game's chief developer and company president, Richard Rosen, says he invented SMOG to set straight frustrated youths who are dedicated to cleaning up the environment, but too naive to cope with political realities. According to SMOG's instructions, "While the most important sources of air pollution are automobiles 'and the smoke emitted by industries which burn sulfur-containing fuels, the players soon find that it is neith- er wise nor possible to indiscrim- inately restrict industry." Rosen thinks SMOG and Dirty Water will also change the thinking of big businesses which don't realize that fighting pollution can often increase their profits in the long run (by making workers happier, increasing t h e i r productivity, slowing dispoilment of valuable natural resources) and parochial government technicians who nev- er see the Big Picture. All the education that SMOG and Dirty Water offer comes for $10, about 25 per cent more than P r o g r a m m e d discriminations thwart the "black" players at ev- ery move. For example, "blacks" start with $10,000 and "whites" get $1 million. "We rejected one version of the game in which it was impossible for "blacks" to win," says David Popoff, who de- veloped the game in two months for the March issue of Psychology Today magazine. "Black players got so frustrated by the middle of the game that t h e y wanted to quit." Popoff thinks his game enables white players to transcend an in- tellectual understanding of the Fighting the tide as time hurries On By RICK PERLOFF The scruffy blue jeans with their streaks of fading pallor; waves of falling hair nestled around the forehead shagging beyond the neck; eyes marching ahead, glancing about, quietly absorbing the mood of Ann Arbor. Well, the campus looks pretty much the same after the summer: the students are back, coloring the streets in tattered appearance, weary understanding and with a smile here, a nod there, it's kind of nice to be back in Ann'Arbor. The summer away blends easygoing misadventures, travelling, or loafing, with the hassles of reality - parents, -employment, society's straights, and now that it's over, it's over, with a shrug of what-do- you-expect indifference and curious'anticipation for the, fall. Another year here; well, it could be worse. Ann Arbor is tucked away from the grimy depressions of life in the cities, hidden from the tired routine of rural towns, and their people's sleepy cynicism and hostility to outsiders' diversity. There are few flashy billboards or greedy office buildings,.and the skyscrapers here are so out-of-place to be anything but absurd. It's all quite pleasant, particularly those interim days before classes begin, that period ,of unresponsibility, encountering friends, grabbing ice cream and walking about campus. One almost wishes these days never ended and it is tempting to behgve as if they didn't and assume schools exists in name only. It is tempting for it appears that many of us belong to that na- tionwide middle class chain, linking summer camps, suburbs, parental friends and all- the people we met here and there, and, well, it seems that we are all related, in some way. You know Joan; she knows Paul from a high school student lead- ership conference, and Paul is rooming with Doug who sits next to you in your 10 o'clock. As it turns out, Doug used to work for UAC and met Gary who, the way these things work, probably knew Joan from that conference too. After the first months of freshmaninity, it is difficult to conceive of the place any longer as a "Big University." It' becomes friends, friends of friends or members of the chain strumming the guitar on the Diag, so why not join them? It is fun and there'll probably be some- one strumming who went to Europe, felt guilty when he returned and saw what system his money maintains. So it goes. The idea of college ending is a disconcerting thought; it will some- day be time to face up and declare the moratorium over,/and make a living in the "real world," where people are rumored to work all day and worry about such things as mortgages. Well, perhaps it's only a rumor. Perhaps we can avoid the future hassles and evade adulthood. Maybe we can become Peter Pan and live in blue jeans forever. How nice it would be too, maintaining this idyllic existence - how nice for a while. After a while, "the student thing should become a drag," in cur- rent lingo, and reassuringly so. It would be dreadfully boring to per- sist exclusively among one's socio-economic peers, restricting one's ac- tivities to' plodding around campus, continuing the Diag culture. Those of us who sometimes yearn for a permanent haven in stf- dentdom would, for all the pleasure and freedom from hassle, be de- nying the fulfillment in confronting and conquering the problems of adjustment to. changes in our life-style and ourselves. We would be missing the new experiences that come with questioning, juggling and perhaps altering aspects of our self-concept, for in our kingdom of stu- dentdom we would only be continuing what we, did as youth, while denying what we could do as adults. This doesn't mean settling down as nice middle-class hyprocrites; it simply means not restricting our self-development exclusively to this town or this culture or believing our development stops when we have found our niche as students. It continues, college ends, our eyes march ahead once again. ' most games on the market, which are less sensitive to social prob- lems. "That's because we made the game j u s t beautifully," de- clares developer Rosen, who ap- parently has never grappled with SMOG's plastic industry pegs and snap-on plastic smoke plumes. "Most games have instruction bookletsmade out of toilet paper, the pieces don't fit, and the boards are flimsy. We hope peo- ple will play our game at least six or eight times." By far the hottest social game seller is Blacks and Whites, a Psy- chology Today game which claims to give middle class white players a taste of the frustration t h a t comes with being poor, black, and in the ghetto. Players divide themselves into "blacks" a n d "whites" (always more "whites" than "blacks") and then move to the roll of dice around a property board, trying to purchase as many neighborhoods as possible. The in- structions urge "blacks" to devel- op wild strategies and grab every opportunity 'to buy their way in- to white areas. The game looks like an au courant Monopoly - instead of Boardwalk the board has Shaker Heights, and when/ a player goes to jail it's because Ma- yor Daley's cops have run him in. ghetto and actually experience it. The game sells Ii k e hot-cakes. Half a million were snapped up in the magazine version, thousands more have been purchased in box form and the publishers are 15,000 orders behind. "There's a tremen- dous interest on the part of peo- ple to participate rather than ob- serve,"declares Popoff. You can buy Blacks and Whites in such fashionable stores as Lord a n d Taylor and Woodward and Loth- rop. It's not for ghetto blacks any- way. "The game is happening on the street," Popoff says. SMOG, Dirty Water and Blacks and Whites are only forerunners of more social crisis games slated to hit the mass market this fall. Urban Systems will soon distrib- ute Ecology and Population; who- ever makes the biggest per capita income in the face of ecological odds, wins. Psychology Today has almost completed Man and Wo- man, a game about the potentials and hazards of human relation- ships. The goal is to achieve "Per- sonhood" first. The game won't stick to traditional views of men and women, says designer Popoff. "Were allowing a lot of leeway for women's liberation." I i 1 Letters to the Editor WWPA LUAS13 HAVE'-Ak) OF'- 3 E2W' ~o,® 00 A VFAR'. Lb i 1 t %-.' 1 = WC RIAVE NOTHING6 STA R WAS rA$ 'a V~ '4 0l Vice President To the Editor: AS MEMBERS of the student- faculty search committee which nominated candidates for vice president for student services, we noted with interest the re- cent appointment of Law Prof. Robert Knauss to that posi- tion. This appointment officially ends the bizarre 16-month poli- tical struggle surrounding the vice presidency which followed the establishment of our com- mittee in March, 1969. Finally, it appears, President Fleming has achieved what he has for the past year anal a half rather crudely sought - he has, rail- Fleming with five candidates, all of whom we felt were out- standing prospects for the posi- tion. The recommendations were the unanimous opinion of the four faculty members and three students who made up our com- mittee. And they were the result of many months of careful re- search and interviews. Fleming, nevertheless, either ignored or insulted each of these candidates while, in an amazingly sudden shift, main- tained that he couldn't decide from among the nominees until students, faculty, and admin- istration could agree on the exact nature and responsibilities of the post.,As the months roll- Fleming obfuscated the p ol 1 c y board issue and refused to con- sider making' the appointment until the Student Government Council could be blackmailed into accepting Fleming's ver- sion of how the Office of Stu- dent Services should operate. The president adamantly refus- ed to consider appointing a per- manent vice president until SGC agreed to permit the pro- posed policy board to occupy a subordinate role in the office. Thus, in order to set the re- cord straight, we wish to point out what must be obvious: no one so highly visible as Prof. Knauss was ignored in t h e search committee's interviewing 0 E5 If PAY 000 A AGAR? 'tO A ri-..TAK& Ill 5'YVO('5T. ""0 r /1 "