Poge Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY JFK ten years after: Man and myth IlitllA I I II I I IP PIgy11 IPMIPP li 4. Tomorrow is the tenth anniversary of the assassination of President John Ken- nedy. Presented here are three perspee- tives on the impact of Kennedy, the man and the President. Co-Editor Christopher Parks reminis- ces about the Ann Arbor visit of a young senator, hot on the Presidential cam- paign trail, inspired by the enthusiasm of young people, and having the com- mon touch. Sports Editor Dan Borus revisits Came- lot and finds that, while the castle is gorgeous, it is made of papier mache and a good press image. Editorial Page Editor Chuck Wilbur analyzes Kennedy's amplification of American post-war foreign policy, trac- ing a spiral from the Alliance for Pro- gress and the Bay of Pigs to the Vienna Summit and the Green Berets in Indo- china. The time for eulogies is long past. It1 is now appropriate to examine the objec- tive historic rniche occupied by one of the most charismatic pubic figures in recent American history. That examina- tio iis all the more critical since most Americans feel themselves to be apart f rom history. Stting th e stage for activism By DAN BORUS IT IS FASHIONABLE among revi- sionist historians these days to debunk t h e Kennedy "Camelot" myths. And well they should. Ken- nedy's Presidency was not particular- ly progressive. In point of fact, JFK's administration touched upon some of the most conservative trends in Amer- ican life. Kennedy's civil right programs were minimal and had to be forced upon him. His foreign policy was steeped in the macho anti-commu- nism of the late forties and fifties. Major legislation was not his forte. Nor were the everyday practicalities of government. Those program he did pass through Congress had a very short life span. The Peace Corps is abandoned. The Alliance for Progress, that latter-day Dollar Diplomacy, has been forgotten. It should be further noted that Kennedy was not above using the Jus- A Michigan wh~l By CHRISTOPHER PARKS third of the student body is here WHEN JOHN KENNEDY arrived in Ann Arbor early in the morning of October 14, 1960, he was tired and wanted to go to bed. He had just come from a televised debate with Vice President Richard Nixon and was scheduled to arise at dawn for a fre- netic 11-hour, nine-city whistle-stop tour of Michigan to kick off the final three-week stretch of the Presidential campaign. He had not intended to give a speech in Ann Arbor that night- just a few words of encouragement to the faithful, and then straight to bed. But when his motorcade arrived at the Union, Kennedy saw some- thing which changed his mind- thousands of wildly cheering students who had waited for three hours in the mid-autumn cold and damp to see him. He would later tell then University President Harlan Hatcher that it was their enthusiasm which inspired him to issue the call for vol- unteer service which historians now credit as the birth of the Peace Corps idea. For an event which was to acquire historical significance, Kennedy's stay in Ann Arbor began inauspicu- ously enough. HOURS BEFORE his arrival, the Senator's advance men had sought to secure the comfortable Ingalls House --the University's official guest resi- dence-as headquarters for his over- night stay. University officials balked at the idea, fearing that granting such a request would have political overtones. So it was decided to put Kennedy and his party in the Union, but even there the hassles did not end. The Kennedy people wanted the use of Anderson Room as a press center- a move which was opposed by the Union management. David Pollack, then an employe of University Information Services and liaison to the Kennedy party, says that Union management also feared that special favors for Kennedy would smack of playing political fav- orites. "He was a political figure and they didn't want to do anything spe- cial for him," Pollack remembers. "The PR position was that he was a national figure accompanied by a large party of reporters who wanted accommodations. We said, If you want to play in the Big Time you have to respond (to such requests),"' Pol- lack recalls. THE "PR POSITION" eventually won out and for the duration An- derson Room was taken over by some 50 ladies and gentlemen of the press and filled with the sound of chatter- ing teletypes and typewriters. Kennedy was due to arrive in the city at 11 p.m. But he didn't even make it to Willow Run airport out- side Ypsilanti until after midnight. There he was met by Governor G. Mennen "Soapy" Williams, Lt. Gov. John Swainson, the Democratic can- didate for governor, and a crowd of several thousand students. He told them it was the responsi- bility of every citizen "to make the tonight." EN ROUTE FROM Willow Run to Ann Arbor knots of cheering sup- porters forced Kennedy's motorcade to make three unscheduled stops - two of them in Ypsilanti to speak to Eastern Michigan University students. Despite this, the Senator and his party were hardly prepared for what they saw when they finally reached Ann Arbor. At quarter to two in the morning a crowd of over 10,000 stu- dents was gathered in front of the Union to meet him. They had been standing around talking and listening to music over loudspeakers for hours. Some of them had been waiting since 10 p.m. Ann Arbor Police Chief Walter Krasny, who headed up the security detail that night, remembers the riotous scene. "There were 12 to 15 thousand people there," he says. "They covered the front lawn of the Union and had completely blocked State St. to traffic. We were very con- cerned with how to get the motorcade through the crowd." THE SECURITY detail made plans to rope off the area around the Union's north side and bring Kennedy through the side door. But the Ken- nedy people, particularly the Sena- tor himself, wouldn't have it. "He thought our precautions were- n't necessary," Krasny recalls. "He wanted to be with the people. He felt he was Dart of the group (in front of the Union) and was perfectly safe." So Kennedy entered the way he wanted to enter-through the front. -"We brought him right up the front steps," Krasny says. "We had to phys- S Itie stop moments-the right crdwd, the right time, the right mood. Inspired by the intense emotion of the scene, Ken- nedy gave a fervently idealistic- even patriotic - speech, and wound up asking a now-famous question: "How many of you who are going to be doctors are willing to spend your days in Ghana? Engineers and technicians? . . On your willingness to do that . . . on your willingness to contribute part of your life to this country, I think depends the answer to whether a free society can com- pete. I think it can." A ND THEN, KENNEDY directly chal- lenged the middle class syndrome of education and job security, offer- ing an alternative to success and comfortable suburban apathy. He be- gan it with a characteristic piece of self-deprecatory wit. "This university-this is the long- est short speech I've ever made-this university is not maintained by, its alumni, by the state, merely to help its graduates have an economic ad- vantage in the life struggle. There is certainly a greater purnose. And I'm sure you recognize it. Therefore I do not come here tonight asking for your support for this campaign. I come asking your support for this country over the next decade. Thank you." The senator finally got to bed around 2:30, waking up five hours later to prepare for a grueling swing throiupgh the state. PRESIDENT HATCHER remembers the scene in Kennedy's suite when he visited him on that early October morning: "He (Kennedy) talked to us in his suite while his breakfast was getting cold. He didn't tice Department to "get Jimmy Hof- fa" or truculent steel executives. BUT THE KENNDY Presidency was not without its major contribu- tion to American history. The con- tribution comes from the personality of the man who held the job. Ken- nedy through his own actions (and the greatest political press image in American history) transmitted a spirit of efficacy to the nation. Kennedy convinced Americans that they could act and their ac- tions could count. After all he was the Navy lieutenant who had single- handedly saved a PT boat crew. He was the man who had faced death and become the President. Kennedy was the activist President who didn't act. He did, and this is probably just as important, give the appearance of acting. In doing so he created a climate that allowed the turbulent sixties to follow his death. Civil rights, the war protests, the radical critiques of society followed logically from a hero President who was impatient. Kennedy was a man who wanted the future now and all the subsequent movements share in common that trait, even if their fu- tures were not coincidental with JFK's. THIS MARKED a departure in style f r o m the Eisenhower years. Bland, uneventful, conformist, they serve as the prelude to the storm. Eisenhower is, these days, termed a national "father figure." The term is misapplied. A father figure must discipline, instruct, and correct when the situation calls for such actions. Eisenhowever never did. He allowed the Little Rock School crisis to pass before the nation without much com- ment. He allowed the witch .hunts and the blind China policy. Eisen- hower may have been kindly, but he was a grandfather, accepting none of the resoonsihility for the govern- ance of the nation. Such a laisez - faire policy, spur- red by visions of a President blasting from sand-traps in his free time, soured the country. America in the late fifties was a nation in spiritual arrest. A nation is not constructed on bricks and welfare programs alone. It needs myths, normative beliefs to jus- tify existing institutions. Myths dur- ing the Eisenhower years were hard to come by. BUT KENNEDY was a man of myths. His inaugural address, no matter how trite it reads as printed word, is stirring when spoken. "Ask not what your country can do for you. Ask what you can do for your country," is exactly the activist myth America needed after the Eisenhower stagna- tion. It is true that not much was done for the country, but Americans believed something was. Kennedy was chief proof of the non-pragmatic American postulate that some critics forget-what mat- ters is not originality, but timing and style. While loveable old Ike played golf, Jack had Pablo Casals at the White House. Kennedy made Ameri- cans proud to be Americans-and after the doldrums of the fifties, a feeling of national unity, of com- munity was an achievement. But this accomplishment by the last of the true American heroes had its unfortunate effects. Vietnam, the stain on American conscience, is a manifestation of this belief that Americans can do things that count. Armed with the wrong ideology, led by men who believed the myth of "doing," Americans trudged to the greatest atrocities of the post-war era. FUELED BY THE belief that people can change history and that Americans were the ones to tackle that task, the nation willingly fol- lowed a course that has transformed America from that charming West- ern democracy to a leading interna- tional villain. Domestically, this myth has led to a false belief in consensus rather than diversity. The Camelotians speak glowingly of the second term, of the changes Kennedy would have wrought. The talk is moot and probably untrue. His main contribution, the vitalization of American life, was already accom- plished. When the shots rang out in Dallas his deed was done. It has tak- en us ten years to realize a combina- tion of action and a "can-do" spirit is not a cure-all. AP Photo Imperialism an d aggression marred the 'Camelot' era By CHUCK WILBUR IN THE CURRENT spate of re- trospective on the Presidency of John F. Kennedy, numerous comparisons are made between the United States in the early sixties and the nation today. Many of these comparisons will find the former period more at- tractive, especially in light of the rule of deception and com- mon thuggery that now seems to prevail in Washington. It is probably true that t h e Kennedy Administration deser- vedly enjoyed far more popular faith and respect thandoesthe current government. What is equally true is that neither this popular public image nor a fav- orable comparison with the scan- dal-ridden Nixon Administration offers significant insight into the meaning of the three years of the Kennedy presidency. The first years after the as- sassination produced precious lit- tle critical analysis of Kennedy's term, while the events of the in- tervening years have cast an air of virtue upon his administra- tion which it hardly deserves. WHILE KENNEDY may w e I have captured the p u b I i c imagination, it was the style of his leadership rather than the content of his policies that did so. No where is this dichotomy of form and content more appar- ent than in the Kennedy foreign policy. While much of Kennedy's at- tention in foreign policy was fo- cused on confrontation with the Soviets in Europe and cracks in the Western alliance, the young President underscored the im- nortance of nolicv in the Third the Kennedy administration set out to renovate the military es- tablishment for the task at hand. The Eisenhower-Dulles policy of massive retaliation was abandon- ed in favor of a flexible-response approach that would be aole to combat a variety of situations, including wars of ai tional liber- ation in the backvrds of the world. FOREMOST AMONG these al- terations were the ; reation policy wedded to' oligarchic re- gimes was thought to be do med. As Administration ideologue Ar- thur Schlesinger put it, "the only question was the shape of the future." Kennedy's Alliance then was designed to make sure that whatever that future miglit be, American interests in Latin America would not be seriously threatened. The long term effects of te Alliance for Progress may wvel "Kennedy is said to have felt that 'the Third World had become the battleground between democracy and communism.' His responses to this situation constitute the most significant and long-lasting aspects of his foreign policy." tion on the missiles. Fortunatejy for humanity, Soviet leader Khruschev had, the wisdom to withdraw the missile in exchange for a firm American pledge against any further interventioa in Cuba. OF ALL THE areas of Ken- nedy's foreign policy, his role in the Vietnam conflict is the most widely debated. Repub- licans, notably President Nixon, have tried to use Kennedy's m- volvement to wash the blood from their own hands while liberals have assured us the Kennedy would never have gone as far in Vietnam as either Johnson or Nixon. Both these views try to fit the Kennedy legacy into a mold formed by the political real- ites of the present. Kennedy in fact say Vietnan as a crucial battlefield in the, world wide struggle against soc- ialism. After his summit w i t h Khruschev at Vienna, Kennedy told James Reston, "We have a problem making our power look credible. And Vietnam looks like the place." Apparently concern for the people of- Vietnam was to be sub- ordinated to the American need for an arena in which to flex its muscles. The continuation of this line of thinking could well have led to long American entangle- ment in Indochina. THE KENNEDY foreign policy then, was hardly as sterling then as we are sometimes led to believe. It wo>>ld be a mniAimke, h 'wever, to attribute these unde- sirable policies to Kennedy as an individlal. His foreign policy of the elite Green Berets and other counter-insurgency forces. Combined with Kennned' 3 anti- communism, these new forces gave the liberal administration both the ideological motivation and the military muscle for in- tervention in the Third World. Soon after taking office Ken- nedy underwent his first c o n- frontation with the forces of re- volution in the underdeveloped world at the Bay of Pigs. While the plans to invade Cuba with CIA trained and directed refu- gees had been a product of the Eisenhower Administration, Ken- nedy failed to challen -e either the fallacious assumptions or the questionable means of the ill- fated venture. The miserable failure of the invasion only led to the belief that "we just hav: to try harder the next time." have been negligible, and it cer- tainly had no effect whatsoever on the continued existence of a government in Cuba allied to the nations of the Socialist b) ;. In- deed Cuba was to provide the seeing for what to date has been the most serious clash between the nuclear superpowers. THE CUBAN MISSILE Crisii is often looked upon as Ken- nedy's finest hour, perhaps be- cause it is believed he stood up to Soviet power. This view ig- nores the fact that the blockade of Cuba and the threatened w- vasion violated both internation- al law and this nation's world- wide defense posture. Perhaps Soviet missiles in Cuba did con- stitute a threat to this nation's security, but surely no more than the presence of American ically fight our way through the crowd. "We got Kennedy and Wil- liams through okay, but Swainson had considerable difficulty because of his physical problem (Swainson lost both his legs in the Korean War)." TVEN LISTENING to scratchy old tanes of the event. I could feel seem very interested in it. I remem- ber the charm with which that busy and harassed young man treated us. It was as though we were the only en- gagement he had all day. We talked about the idealism of our young peo- ple-especially college people. He was very moved by the response he had gotten." I.