,qw w w 1w s -, NW _--w w -w w INTERVIEW Continued from Page 13 cused of being a propagandist be- cause they express a point of view. Actually all historians express a point of view, but only certain points of view are considered pro- paganda. The other points of view are considered, well, "that's the truth." W: If an unsanitized U.S history were to replace the one in our existing texts, what direct effect would this have on U.S. culture and society? Z: One thing it would do, it would make people more skeptical of government claims to be in the right all the time in what it does. For instance, if we had an unsani- tized history of the Vietnam War, a history which showed all the deceptions, all the lies that accom- panied the start of that war, which really told a story of the Gulf of Tonkin as a mammoth deception of the American public and of the U.S. congress; which told a story of the bombing of Vietnam of one of the most brutal exercises in modern times by any nation. If you had an unsanitized history like that, well, it would have the same effect on the public that, in fact, the increasing knowledge of the Viet- nam War did have on the American public in the '60s, where they learned what was going on in Viet- nam not from history but by read- ing the newspapers, going to teach- ins, going to meetings and demon- strations, seeing scenes on televi- sion. But the history books that then come later tend to give you a much more bland picture of the War. One which leaves the reader not as indignant as the reader might be, given a full, vivid treatment of the war. So the effect of an unsani- tized version, as you call it; that is, the effect of telling certain uncom- fortable truths - about Vietnam, about our policies in Central America, about the history of U.S. relations with Latin America - the result of that would make people very skeptical of government. In other words, the result would be a profoundly democratic one because it is the essence of democracy that people should be skeptical of gov- ernment, that the people should understand governments are artifi- cial creations, that they have their own motivations, that governments may in fact represent some minor- ity of interests in society, that governments may follow policies that are detrimental to the interests of the majority. So it is very un- democratic to have faith in what the government does. VOLUME 7, NO. 13 _ hie Mtrbtgan 13 tti1p f E12 I TWA M A G A Z . N E 'A, Studeoc co nce on Lal issues ..And Two adorable ittie individualsized pan pizzas wih cheese andpp peroni fr one low price Valid only with coupon at part icpating Little Caesars . .e D1VIOUPON IIIIIIIIII TWO SMAPZA M with cheese and 2 toppings* ValPldsTax I L~~ ne validin USA Only Valid only with coupon at participating Little Caesars. Excludes extra cheese.' 1988 Little Caesar Enterprises, Inc. MD . .- -VALUABLE COUPON -n -M MM t - i _. . s i j I I I University officials respond 0m VALUABLE COUPON - li TWOMEDIUM PIZZAS with cheese and 2 toppings* $ 99 Plus Tax ' Pe d n UsA n y Valid only with coupon at participating Little Caesars. *Excludes extra cheese 1988 Little (aesar Enterprises, Inc MD - 0 m VALUABLE COUPON m Plus: George Winston preview * 'Tequila Sunrise' Mission:. PAGE 16 , WEEKEND/DECEMBER 9,1988