FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1967 Page 4 The Doily Nebraskan No Winner In Vietnam Crow's Foot War (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is the sixth in stallment of series on the war in Vietnam written by Howard Moffett, Collegiate Press Service correspon dent in Saigon. The Daily Nebraskan last semester ran another series by Mof fett, who was former editor of the Yale Daily News.) SAIGON, South Vietnam (CPS) Who's winning the war in the Crow's Foot? I don't know. The 1st Cavalry Division has searched and destroyed it some five times in the past year. American opera tions have become almost as big a joke as ARVN oc cupations. Operation Thayer II rep resented a new answer to the problem of pacifying areas hostile to the central government Crew's Foot Plan The plan-s it developed in the Crow's Foot cam paignwas to declare the area a war zone and move the whole population out Deprived of their popular sapport, the guerillas would be forced to stand and fight by themselves with no friendly communi ties to mett into or dis perse and withdraw, giving up the Crow's Foot. -American officers believ March 6, 16, 23 . . . NFU Co-Sponsors Program On Man's Role In World l By Cheryl Tritt Senior Staff Writer " Nebraska Free Univer lity and the YWCA-YMCA fill co-sponsor a series of programs entitled 'M a n in Tomorrow's World" be ginning March 9 at 8:30 Out Of The Past . . . Gannon Balls, Crockery Sparked Demonstrations 7 (ACP) If college ad ministrators think they have it rough dealing with today's demonstration-happy students, a look at some "demonstrations" in the early 1880'g might convince them that they don't have it to bad after all, comments the University of Maryland Diamondback. In those days students were fined, suspended or ex pelled for such offenses as billiards, associating with "idle or dissolute persons," traveling more than two miles from campus or at tending the theater. Reacting to such harsh discipline, students at Hob art College heated cannon balls till they were red-hot and rolled them down a dormitory corridor, serious ly injuring a faculty mem ber. In 1807 Princeton ex pelled more than 80 per cent (125 of an enrollment of 200) of its student body for rioting. Seven years later aome pyrotechnically - in clined Princeton Tigers con structed a giant firecrack er out of a hollow log packed with two pounds oi gunpowder and nearly blew up a campus building. (Side Of Johnson Administration Speak$ On Latin America Monday . A noted critic of the John ton Administration's poli cies will t peak at the small auditorium of the Nebras ka Union Monday at 3:30 pas. '.Sidney Lens, author and lecturer, will speak on the question "Are there New Vietnams in Latin Ameri ca?" His speech is spon sored by the History Club. "Lens is the author of nine backs including, "Left, Right and Center," "The Counterfeit Revolution," "A World in Revolution," "The Crisis of American Labor," "Working Men," "Africa Awakening Giant" and the futile Crusade: Anti Cemmunism as American Credo." He also wrote "Revolution and Cold War," one of the American Friends Service Committee's "Beyond De terrence" aeries which has attracted national interest. . .He has travelled exten sively, visiting 17 countries en a round-the-world trip in 184. In the summer of 1966 hs revisited Latin America. Thomas Meesner, presi !!: ed that whichever they did, the 1st Cav. could effecive ly clear and hold the area. Once the Viet Cong had been cleaned out of the war zone, government Revolu tionary Development teams were to move into the area, establish local security in conjunction with nearby ARVN units, and welcome the returning refugees such as would be consider ed safe risks and allowed to return to their homes. Work With People The RD teams would then work side by side with the people, and life would re turn to normal, except that government control would have been substituted whole cloth for that of the Viet Cong. (We shall note in pass ing that using Revolution ary Development teams to secure an unpopulated area runs counter to the whole theory of Revolutionary De velopment. But if it works in this case, the textbooks will probably be adapted to make room for it) The new theory wheth er it meets its limited ob jectives or not leaves oth er questions unanswered. Foreign Troops Can a central government which uses foreign troops to clear and hold a hostile area, expect that its own p.m. in the Nebraska Un ion. Three programs, based on a series of tape record ings narrated by American economist, Robert Theo bald, have been scheduled, according to Gene Pokorny, Not to be outdone by Princeton, students in 1827 set off powder charges un der several tutors' chairs. Three students were ex pelled and 20 more were disciplined. Smashing things was in vogue at several colleges. At Harvard it was crock ery. In 1817 freshmen and sophomores demolished ev ery piece of china the col lege owned. At Princeton, students, for some Teason, felt the windows had to go. Prince ton students did it with rocks but North Carolina students got in some target practice by shooting out ev ery window in sight. But today's faculty and administrators will perhaps be most thankful that they don't feel student anger as directly as many of their predecessors in the 1800's did. For example, University of Virginia students, upset over what they considered excessive classroom work, horsewhipped several fac ulty with wine bottles and firewood. And just before graduation in 1824, Dart mouth students stoned a professor. dent of the KiEtory Club, termed Lens "a very out spoken critic of the admin istration and a very contro versial figure." GRADUATING SENIORS! Buy a new '61 Ford today, defer payments until June. Over 150 new Fords from which to choose. Mustangs from $2,195. Buy naw beat, 14th b "M army too weak to do the first job will be able to maintain order when the Americans have gone? Could a new insurgent battalion, perhaps from the North, reestablish a base in the Crow's Foot after "pacification" has been achieved? What will keep the 1.500 refugees, resettled in Hoai An, from hating even more the authorities who have moved them off their land in order to hunt down their sons and uncles? What will keep them in Hoai An? How will it be determined whether a 14-or 18-year-old boy is a safe risk, or wheth er he should be detained as a confirmed guerilla? Move Population? Should the population be moved out of an area in order to establish military control over it? A number of high-ranking U.S. gener als, including the command er of the 1st Cav. Major General John Norton, think so. The current Crow's Foot campaign apparently came from higher up. Finally, will "pacification schedules" and other poli tical pressures be held off long enough for the RD teams to establish rapport with the people and win a hearing for the govern- member of the Coordinating Committee for a Free Uni versity. Mao And Environment The first tape is a dis cussion of man's increasing power over his environ ment Pokorny said, and explains the new policies which will be needed to pre serve human values when technology replaces a natural environment Guest speakers "will dialogue with the tape," he said, and explain the ideas presented in the tapes. Dr. Campbell McConnell, University economic profes sor; Dr. Alan Bates, head of the University psychol ogy department; and Dr. Robert Sittig, political science professor, will be guest speakers for the first program. A free discussion period will follow the tapes. Computers "What Can Computers Do?" is the topic for the second program series March 6. Robert Davis bead of the learning service at Michigan State University narrates the tape with Theobald. The tape will discuss the areas where the computer is taking over jobs from man, Pokorny said, and study the computer's poten tial for the future. Man's Knowledge The third program March 23 concerns "Man's Knowl edge of Himself." Pokorny said this tape explores the limits which should be placed on activ ities to "improve man," in terms of psychology and biology. The tape series "Man in Tomorrow's World," was first aired on the nationa ized Canadian FM radio network, he said, "and was widely acclaimed." The original series contained 13 thirty-minute recordings. ARNOLD PALMER Deluxe Shirt Service 2Ht & 0 13th i F the sales tax! 432-2853 ment? How long will it take for the wounds to heal, how long for the development of popular government pro grams which might make the guerillas forget why they fought? Given their history, will these people be allowed to govern them selves in the forseeable fu ture? No one I know has ready answers to these. Though the battle for the Crow's Foot is dramatic and bitter, it is not typical of anything except one sec tion of the Central High lands. There is no typical battle in Vietnam. Unlike Korea, this is not a war for territory. Strickly speaking, it seems to make little differ ence how much of the popu lation either side controls: the government now admin isters roughly two-thirds of South Vietnam's 15,000,000 people, the s a m e percent age as a year ago yet in surgent armed strength has increased markedly, 350,000 American troops have been imported, and the war in every respect is a much bigger one than it was then. Economic Base In other wars, the enemy could be crippled by strik ing at his economic base. Here neither side will try too hard to do this, for each actually depends on the other's supplies. Nor is the final goal sim ply to kill large numbers of people, though some American officers think it is. MEET DENNIS BARK. He read all these texts the first 15 days of the semester, with excellent compreliension . . . and, HE STILL HAD TTMS F02 A WiGHT OUT WITH THE SOYS. STUDY PROBLEMS? GRADES HURTING? If so, you've got plenty of company. Dennis Barr solved this very neatly. He took the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics course. RAPID READING IS THE KEY! If your grades are suffering, it's because yon have a reading problem. Most of us read at an average rate of 300 words a minute, with only average comprehension! Average just isn't good enough to keep p with today's college demands. ' Reading Dynamics absolutely guarantees to teach you how to read at least three times faster, with excellent comprehension, or refund your entire tuition! Special attention is given to developing study skills. Actually, most of our graduates read over 15D0 words a minute without sacrificing comprehension or pleasure after just eight weekly lessons. Dennis Bart, by the way, does over 3000 words a minute. ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE! Based on beginning and ending tests, measuring speed and comprehension, only 1.6 of oar students have qualified for a tuition refund. Reason? Our system is simple. Our method works ... and so do our teachers! Reading Dynamics teaches ye not only how to read faster, but how to study, how to recall what you read, how to do your homework! And, still nave time for social activities. WHERE IS READING DYNAMICS TAUGHT? ... in over 250 cities in the United States and foreign countries. In this region contact the nearest office listed below for schedules and information. BnnrHnmm fokTninrsn Jmnmnk'rfrn KANfAi WICN1T mm m m-im ALBIMUMOUC Mtf In fact, it is very difficult to state precisely what the goal is. In a sense, though the Crow's Foot is one of those things multiplied a thou sand times that the Viet nam war is all about. It is a local complex of land, people and institutions, in separable from each other, reinforcing each other. To Win Area To win the Crow's Foot, one side or the other will have to: (1) clear the area and hold it; (2) destroy the enemy troops that use or dominate it; and (3) as sert its control over each small community of farm ers who make up its popu lation. The last requirement will involve, as a minimum: (a) demonstrating that it can defend and keep order in the area; (b) giving the people a vested interest in itself, through representa tive institutions capable of and wants; and (c) a num ber of years. To win the Vietnam war, one side or the other will have to do this in a thou sand areas the size of the Crow's Foot but with widely different terrain, cli mate, and food supply, and in communities whose ori gins, customs and sympath ies vary so dramatically that many have despaired, of trying to make of them one nation. Does Lyndon really think he's going to WTap it up in time for the 1968 elections? OMAHA m .. 7m (PIIMM 1. TlM Lew Diskin Might On Communist Forty Hole April 6 is the tentative date for a possible speaking appearance by Lew Diskin of the American Communist (All meetings are at the Nebraska Union unless otherwise noted) ENGLISH Department, 12 p.m. PLACEMENT Lunch eon, 12:30 p.m. ALPHA "Jim Putnam", 1:30 p.m. HILLEL Candle-lighting, 4:45 p.m., Sigma Delta Tau. KOS.MET KLUB Re hearsal, 6 p.m. UNIVERSITY of Ne braska Soccer Club. 7 p.m. PALLADIAN Literary Society. 8 p.m. JR. IFC BALL. 8:30 p.m. Bill To Preserve JFK's Birthplace A bill has been intro duced in the House to make the Brookline, Mass., birth place of President John F. Kennedy a national his toric site. Rep. Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. filed the measure Wednesday. The late Pres ident was born in the frame house at 83 Beals St in the Boston suburb, 50 years ago this May 29. PPl5JHflP r- f jg ii 1 " s "W Z f lf . nrirJ Sat., March 4 2 & 4 P.M. CORNHUSKER HOTEL LANCASTER ROOM .Evelyn ttfcsdLS i KAfi (89PM TD84Y J 124 N. 16th ! Lincoln, Nabr. Dec. MS LIMCSLM 114 M. U 4H4IM Party of Illinois, according to George Olivarri, pres ident of the University SDS. Diskin, who wrote asking if he could come and speak, would finance his own visit. No subsidation of his trip would come from SDS, Oli varri said. New Plan' The party member's speech would allow the stu dent and the people of Ne braska to s e e what the American Communist Party stands for, Olivarri explained. Should Diskin come, Olivarri thought he would speak on what he termed the party's "new plan." It would be up to Diskin where and when he would speak, Olivarri said. He said the SDS group would allow him to speak on cam pus under its name. Action is also underway by University SDS to hold a draft teach-in at the Uni versity, probably the last weekend in April, according to Olivarri. Replies Positive replies of partici pation have been received from the Nebraska Selective Service, the Student Peace Union ( a New York city organization of concientious objectors, and peace pro moters, Olivarri said); in vitations have also been sent to the W.E.B. DuBois Club, the John Birch So ciety and the Blacks ATTEND FREE DEM ONSTRATIQN SZ "u : : Speak Against Needless Dying (BAND), (a group of mil itant Negroes against the draft, Olivarri said). Regional, SDS groups in the Midwest have expressed interest in attending the proposed teach-in, Olivarri said. The possibility of a regional conference is being considered. Carl Davidson, former University student and na tional vice-president of SDS, is being contacted to speak. Olivarri said he hoped to bring the regional SDS or ganizer to the teach-in, but said he had been indicted in Topeka for refusing to be inducted. RENTS New 1967 Cars for Less! SPECIAL WEEKEND RATES Only $6.00 a day and 6c a mill OS $12.50 and 7c a milt, from 3 p.m. Friday to 6 p.m. Mon day. One low price includes gas, oil ond insurance. Ph. 4894222 1732 0 St. 1 1 CUSSES START: !ML, MAICH 13 WED., MARCH 15 V- TV