Read They Marched Into Sunlight Online
Authors: David Maraniss
Tags: #General, #Vietnam War; 1961-1975, #History, #20th Century, #United States, #Vietnam War, #Military, #Vietnamese Conflict; 1961-1975, #Protest Movements, #Vietnamese Conflict; 1961-1975 - Protest Movements - United States, #United States - Politics and Government - 1963-1969, #Southeast Asia, #Vietnamese Conflict; 1961-1975 - United States, #Asia
Cheney, Lynne: UW doctoral student in English literature
Cheney, Richard B.: UW graduate student in political science and future vice president
Cipperly, Jack: UW assistant dean of students
Cohen, Robert: UW graduate student and leftist orator
Coyote, Peter: San Francisco Mime Troupe actor
Davis, Ronald G.: San Francisco Mime Troupe director
Dietrich, Cathy: UW student politician and Soglin girlfriend
Doan, Herbert Dow: Dow Chemical Company president and grandson of founder
Dow, H. H.: Dow Chemical Company founder
Edelson, Morris: UW English graduate student and
Quixote
editor
Emery, William: Madison chief of police
Fleming, Robben: UW chancellor before Sewell
Gabriner, Bob: UW history graduate student and
Connections
editor
Gabriner, Vicki: UW graduate student and mime artist
Genack, Judy: UW senior and March on the Pentagon participant
Gerstacker, Carl: Dow Chemical Company chairman
Goldberg, Harvey: UW professor of European history
Goodman, Jerilyn: UW freshman and observer
Goodwin, Everett: UW music school student at Dow demonstration
Hanson, Ralph: UW chief of protection and security
Harrington, Fred Harvey: UW president
Harrington, Jack: Police inspector
Haslach, Henry: UW Students for a Democratic Society leader
Hendershot, William (Curly): Dow Chemical Company college recruiter
Julian, Percy: Madison lawyer representing student activists
Kaplan, William: UW junior and antiwar activist at Dow demonstration
Kauffman, Joseph: UW dean of student affairs
Keene, David A.: UW graduate student and Young Americans for Freedom chairman
Krasny, Michael: UW English teaching assistant and Dow demonstration observer
Lenburg, Norm:
Wisconsin State Journal
photographer of Stielstra picture
Leonard, Jerris: Wisconsin senate majority leader and Nixon supporter
Leslie, Jack: Dane County deputy sheriff
Lipp, Jonathan: High school senior and March on the Pentagon participant
McCarthy, Tom: Madison police detective injured at Dow demonstration
McGovern, Susan: UW sociology senior at Dow demonstration
McMillin, Miles: Editor of the
Capital Times,
Madison’s liberal newspaper
Menacher, Betty: UW freshman inside Commerce Building during demonstration
Mosse, George: UW European history professor and expert on nationalism
Nathan, Eric: UW junior at Dow demonstration
Oberdorfer, Michael: UW graduate student and
Connections
photographer
Pickart, John: UW music school student and observer of Dow demonstration
Reiter, Michael: UW doctoral student and lawyer for antiwar protesters
Roehling, Al: Madison police officer at demonstration
Rolf, Ray: Dow Chemical Company director of recruiting
Roseleip, Gordon: Conservative orator in Wisconsin senate
Rowen, Jim: UW English graduate student at Dow demonstration
Schiro, George: Madison police captain inside Commerce Building
Seward, William B.: Dow Chemical Company publicist
Sewell, William: UW chancellor in 1967 and professor of sociology
Shapiro, Marshall: WKOW radio news reporter
Simons, Billy: UW student leader at Dow demonstration
Smail, R. W.: UW history professor and expert on Vietnam
Smith, Kent: UW student and March on the Pentagon participant
Soglin, Paul: UW graduate student at Dow demonstration and future Madison mayor
Stark, Evan: UW sociology graduate student and leader of Dow demonstration
Steiner, Alison: High school senior and March on the Pentagon participant
Stielstra, Jonathan: UW junior who cut American flag cable atop Bascom Hall
Wagner, Dave: UW student and
Connections
writer
Wheadon, Dave: Worker at Oscar Mayer and March on the Pentagon participant
Williams, William Appleman: UW history professor and theorist on American imperialism
Zeitlin, Maurice: UW sociology professor and antiwar activist
Washington Story
Califano, Joseph: White House assistant to the president
Cater, Douglass: White House assistant to the president
Christian, George: White House press secretary
Christopher, Warren: Assistant attorney general
Clark, Ramsey: Attorney general
Fortas, Abe: Supreme Court justice and LBJ confidant
Helms, Richard: Director of the Central Intelligence Agency
Johnson, Lady Bird: First lady of the United States
Johnson, Lynda Bird: Daughter of the president
Johnson, Lyndon Baines: President of the United States
Johnson, Tom: Assistant press secretary, note taker
Katzenbach, Nicholas: Deputy secretary of state
Kissinger, Henry: Harvard professor and Johnson administration consultant
Leonhart, William: Assistant to the president
McNamara, Robert S.: Secretary of defense
Robb, Charles S.: Marine Corps major, Wisconsin graduate, future LBJ son-in-law
Rostow, Walt V.: National security adviser
Rusk, Dean: Secretary of state
Wheeler, Earle G.: Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman
A Brief Preface
T
HIS BOOK
is shaped around two events that occurred contemporaneously during two days in the sixties—October 17 and 18, 1967. The first was an ambush in Vietnam that occurred when the Black Lions, a renowned battalion of the First Infantry Division, marched into the jungle on a search-and-destroy mission forty-four miles northwest of Saigon. The second was a demonstration at the University of Wisconsin where antiwar protestors staged a sit-in aimed at preventing the Dow Chemical Company, manufacturers of napalm, from recruiting on the Madison campus. The title is taken from the first line of “Elegy” by Bruce Weigl, a poem about U.S. infantrymen in Vietnam marching into sunlight on their way to a deadly ambush. But the image applies to all the people of this book who were caught up in the battles of war and peace during that turbulent era. Soldiers in Southeast Asia, student protesters in the United States, President Johnson and his advisers at the White House—they lived in markedly different worlds that were nonetheless dominated by the same overriding issue, and they all, in their own ways, seemed to be marching toward ambushes in those bright autumn days of 1967.
Book One
Some say that we shall never know and that to the Gods we are like flies that the boys kill on a summer day, and some say, on the contrary, that the very sparrows do not lose a feather that has not been brushed away by the finger of God.
—Thornton Wilder,
The Bridge of San Luis Rey
Chapter 1
Sailing to Vung Tau
T
HE SOLDIERS REPORTED
one by one and in loose bunches, straggling into Fort Lewis from late April to the end of May 1967, all carrying orders to join a unit called C Packet. Not brigade, battalion, or company, but packet. No one at the military base in Washington State had heard of C Packet until then. It was a phantom designation conceived by military planners to meet the anxious demands of war.
The early arrivals were billeted on the far northern rim of the army base in a rotting wooden barracks with flimsy walls known derisively as “the pit.” Many of them checked in at night after long flights and bus rides from forts in Louisiana and Texas or home leaves in the Midwest, and for them morning sunlight revealed an ethereal vision. Out the window, in the distance, rose majestic Mount Rainier. But after gaping at the snowcapped peak, they had little to do. Some were attached temporarily to an engineering battalion, the 339th, but they had no duties. A captain named Jim George, trim and handsome, a marathon runner fresh from the Eighth Infantry Division in Germany, led them through morning calisthenics and long-distance running, which was a drag except for the sight of flaccid lieutenants wheezing and dropping to one knee. One lazy Saturday they organized a picnic at the beach club and grilled hamburgers but ran out of beer, so a young officer rounded up a squad of privates and marched them to the PX and back on a mission for more. It was perhaps the best executed training maneuver of their stay.
When they could, the bored enlisted men slipped across the border into Canada. Gregory Landon of Vestal, New York, who wound up in the infantry after dropping out of Amherst College, rented a car for the trip and paid cash, not even having to use a credit card. He thought it odd to be provided a means of escape from Tacoma to the sheltering north but returned as scheduled. Mike Troyer, drafted out of Urbana, Ohio, while working the graveyard shift at the Navistar truck plant, made his way to Vancouver with another weekend squad. Some soldiers got drunk and climbed atop a memorial fountain before being run off politely by the Canadian police. Peter Miller, drafted out of the assembly line of a Procter & Gamble soap factory in Quincy, Massachusetts, found himself in jail in Seattle following a dustup at the bus station.
After a few weeks of this military being and nothingness, the men of C Packet were told to get their wills in order, their teeth fixed, and their dog tags ready because they were being shipped to Vietnam as permanent overseas replacements in the First Infantry Division. Most of them knew what was coming, but some were taken by surprise, and the news provoked a round of concerned calls to the base from relatives, congressmen, and clergy.
“Morale of the men is fairly good considering the situation we’re in, but there is an underlying gloom,” Greg Landon wrote home to his parents. There had been no attempt by the military to explain the war, he reported, and he felt “relatively ignorant” about jungle warfare even though there had been a Vietnam focus to his advanced infantry training at the notorious Tigerland compound at Fort Polk, Louisiana. What he thought he knew was discouraging. “Vietnam seems to be a real hell-hole,” he lamented, reciting a litany of horrors: Viet Cong (from
Viet Nam Cong San,
meaning Communist Vietnamese), poisonous snakes and plants, mysterious diseases, leeches, chiggers, ticks, tigers, contaminated water. With all that, he was shipping off to a war that from his “lowly Pfc’s viewpoint” could not be won short of a miracle because the Viet Cong could “easily blend into the populace while the large American” could not.
The one certainty Landon confronted was morbid. “Sad to think that a certain percentage of people here are sure to die in Vietnam,” he wrote. In a P.S. he confided that he could sense even then who would die and who would survive and that he had to “extricate” himself from the doomed so that he would not die with them. Mike Troyer had similar thoughts. The favorite epigram of a gruff Tigerland drill sergeant stuck in his mind: It’s not your duty to die for your country. It’s your duty to make an enemy soldier die for his.
Most of the enlisted men in C Packet entered the military as draftees or volunteers for the draft. Few had attended college. Even fewer were from professional, comfortably middle-class homes like Landon, whose father, an Amherst graduate, was a lawyer for IBM, or Troyer, who had studied psychology at Urbana College and whose dad was a labor leader at the truck plant. They were working-class kids drawn from a handful of states scattered around the country: Landon, Peter Miller, David Halliday, and Frank McMeel among a group from New York and Massachusetts; Faustin Sena and Santiago Griego part of a cluster from New Mexico; Troyer, Bill McGath, Doug Cron, Terry Warner, and Tom Colburn, five of the large contingent from Ohio and Michigan; Michael Taylor from Alaska; Doug Tallent from North Carolina; and Jack Schroder in a group from Nebraska and Wisconsin.