TUE Michigan Daily Edited and managed by Students at the University of Michigan Tuesday, June 18, 1974 News Phone: 764-0552 fl-6 C0ยง06eE )OT HA' AUTHOR- FROM CRN(-{UAL- FROSICUTW. W A tg75 '-)G FOUR e&D6(4- F6OR OFU2A) W2 CAM) AEALV GO6 AL, TH6 tXX)'H - AJP A&AIM AK WIL- - HAVC (,J- AaCL" THAII NGKOK, THAILAND: BA Resignations, royal decrees, reappointments, rumors of a new coup - the sudden and confusing activity in Thailand only reveals the real effects of last fall's student-led coup. The collapse of Thailand's military regime fol- lowing massive student demonstrations last Oc- tober was hailed as a first step on the road to democracy for this Southeast Asian monarchy of 35 million. But in terms of power, the real win- 'ners have been the king and royal family. At the same time, the country's "new left" now enjoys unprecedented freedoms, and in large parts of the country, insurgent forces operate without fear of military attack in countless "quiet zones.", The large American community here has tend- ed to be cynical about these changes. They see the caretaker government of Premier Sanya as purely transitional - not to some new freedom but back to the pattern of militarist leaders who saw their interests as one with United States economic and political interests. THE MAN counted upon to return things to the "good old days" is General Kris Sivara, present head of Thailand's armed forces. Unlike Prem- ier Sanya, who comes from the rarefied atmos- phere of the university (and has said he wants to retire to a Buddhist monastery), Kris has strong ties with U.S. military and economic figures. This view ignores the new and independent poli- tical role assumed by the king after he stepped into the power vacuum created when the military failed to back the regime against the students. The king's support of the students at that point proved decisive. After the coup, he appointeO Sanya and selected the pool of notables from which Sanya chose the National Assembly, whose members are drawing up the new constitution. Not surprisingly, the first draft of this con- stitution gives the monarchy considerable power. For it provides an upper house appointed by the "Privy Council" - which will be named by the king. Only the lower house will be democratically elected. ON THE other side of the picture is a resurg- ence of political activism in all segments of Thai society. Perhaps rost important for the country as a whole, peasants in central Thailand are now organizing without fear of being jailed. Demon- strators in front of Government House in Bangkok have demande dreal action about peasants' prob- lems. Chief among these problems is land. Ten years ago, there was no land problem in.central Thailand. Now, with the changes brought by large amounts of capital, principally from Bangkok, and rapid population growth, the picture is very dif- ferent. In the province of Phitsanulok, for exam- ple, at least half the peasants have lost their land to money lenders and most of the rest are heavily in debt. PEASANT ISSUES have sparked new interest LAND among Thai students. In October, students came by the trainload from technical schools and high schools in far reaching provinces to join the demonstrations in Bangkok. Now thousands of city stdents have spent their summer vacations (March through May) visiting remote villages, and talking with country people. Many have browght back first hand accounts of massacres and village burnings by the U.S. trained and' eqtuisnped Thai army and border police, engaged in Vietnam-style "anti-communist" clearing oper- ations. The most publicized of these, at the vil- lge of Baan Na Sai, created a national scandal on the scale of My Lai. Thousands of student-produced books and pam- phlets, outlinging the actions of Thailand's "coun- ter insurgency forces" are on sale at bookstands in Bangkok and other cities. LOOKING TOWARD the elections (scheduled sometime before the end of the year) the stu- dent-led New Left has agreed to unite behind a common platform: out with foreign (U.S.) bases, foreign (U.S. and Japanese) investment, neutral- ity and land reform, and the nationalization of certain industries. The underground left is also in a strong posi- tion: The Thai Patriotic Front (TPF) has bases operating in 41 of 71 provinces ranging along the border from Burma and Laos along the Mekong River down to Cambodia. The TPF calls them not liberated but "quiet zones" - quiet in the -sense that the government can't make anything happen there. In the quiet zones particularly in the north- east, the social transformation is already in pro- gress. Cattle rustling has been eliminated, dykes and irrigation channels built, and technical advice offered to peasants. Schools and health services have been set up. THE TPF also runs a radio station which re- ports on Thai events within 24 hours. A law against listening to the station has had little ef- fect. In the southern Moslem provinces bordering Malaysia, the situation is more complicated. Three insurgent groups operate here alongside the TPF: the Thai Bandits Associatian, which specializes in robbery and kidnapping business people for ransom; the Pattani (Moslem) inde- pendence movement, itself divided over the ques- tion of secession from Thailand; and the Malayan Communist Party, which is the best equipped force of the three and has the most military experience. The TPF is now consolidating; it 'ias no desire for any offensive for fear that such action might be used as an excuse for a new militry takeover. As things are, the army cannot claim "tbe peo- ple are tired of democracy" - at least until after the election. Doss de Canspos has written widely on South- east Asian political affairs, particularly in the European press, and recently visited Thailand. Copyright, Pacific News Service, 1974. I tl&V ARE RPR1 TO 3FFvR CASH( O k - 3 0 1 7 1 A T & . 0 J vl TO Fa~T1 ,IK( PE C00- ' lv^&) I MEDICATING THE MEDIA ..Scalpels into'six-irons By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) - BEING EVER grateful f or free medical advice, I wish to thank the West Virginia Med- ical Journal for its recent exam- ination of the news media. The prognosis, alas, is unfav- orable, but it only hurts when I laugh. The Journal said uncovering the Watergate scandals had pro- duced an "orgy of self-adulta- tion and self-inflation" on -the part of the media. It "makes one ponder the depths of news gatherers' need for appreciation and the empti- ness of their callings," the Jour- nal said. And it "engenders clin- ical curiosity about mob psy- chology." Well, the doctor knows best, I suppose. But while reading this analysis of the journalist psyche, I developed a nonclinical curio- sity of my own. SPECIFICALLY, I began won- dering what might have happen- ed in the Watergate case if the two investigative reporters who exposed many of the scandals had been trained as doctors My guess is that the sources who were feeding them informa- tion never would have gotten past the answering service. But in event the call did come through: "Good morning. Washington Post." "Let me speak to Dr. Wood- ward please." "Dr. Woodward is in confer- ence and cannot be disturbed." "How about Dr. Bernstein? Is he available? "Do you have an appoint- ment?" "No. I tried to call.earlier but it never seemed to be during office hours." "I'M SORRY. Dr. Bernstein's schedule is full for today." "Look, this is an emergency. I've got a hot tip that won't keep long." "One moment, please. I'll try to locate them ." "Burning Bush Country Club." "This is Dr. Bernstein's of- fice. I'm trying to locate him for- an emergency. Would you have him paged, please." "I'm sorry, Dr. Bernstein is already out on the course." Too late for the first edition, the source finally makes contact with Dr.. Woodward at his hunt- ing lodge in the backwoods of Michigan. "Dr. Woodward speaking." "Thank heavens. I have reach- ed you in time for the last edition. I've got a news leak that will blow someone right rut of the water." "WHAT IS the nature of the leak." "It's a major development in the Watergate case." - "Take two aspirin and call back tomorrow." Letters to TheDaily hodnl be mailed to the Editorial Dire etor or delivered to Mary Rafferty in the Student Publications business office in the Michigan Daily build- ing. Letters should be typed, double-spaced and normally should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Directors re- serve the right to edit all letters submitted. ll l4