Was there a diorama at the Chicago Museum of Science where children could play shooting at a Vietnamese...












83















In books and interviews, Noam Chomsky recalls that during the Vietnam War a diorama of a Vietnamese village was built at the Chicago Museum of Science where "children were supposed to come and play, and shoot at the village with the guns".




There was in item in the New York Times that described an event that
took place in Chicago. The Chicago Museum of Science, which is a very
respectable place, had put up an exhibit. The exhibit was a Vietnamese
village, sort of a diorama of a Vietnamese village, and around it
there were guns, and children were supposed to come an play, and shoot
at the village with the guns. That was the game.




Power and Terror: Conflict, Hegemony, and the Rule of Force,
by Noam Chomsky, John Junkerman, Takei Masakazu. Available on Google Books.



or see this interview with Chomsky on Youtube.



It also reports that the New York Times published an article criticising a group of mothers protesting outside the museum. However, I can not find any other sources that confirms the facts.
Is Noam Chomsky's version of the events accurate?










share|improve this question




















  • 3





    According to the accepted answer, it looks like it is a partial truth. The description of the diorama sounds more like an enemy military encampment than a village, and there were no models of humans in it.

    – Aaron
    Nov 15 '18 at 19:14


















83















In books and interviews, Noam Chomsky recalls that during the Vietnam War a diorama of a Vietnamese village was built at the Chicago Museum of Science where "children were supposed to come and play, and shoot at the village with the guns".




There was in item in the New York Times that described an event that
took place in Chicago. The Chicago Museum of Science, which is a very
respectable place, had put up an exhibit. The exhibit was a Vietnamese
village, sort of a diorama of a Vietnamese village, and around it
there were guns, and children were supposed to come an play, and shoot
at the village with the guns. That was the game.




Power and Terror: Conflict, Hegemony, and the Rule of Force,
by Noam Chomsky, John Junkerman, Takei Masakazu. Available on Google Books.



or see this interview with Chomsky on Youtube.



It also reports that the New York Times published an article criticising a group of mothers protesting outside the museum. However, I can not find any other sources that confirms the facts.
Is Noam Chomsky's version of the events accurate?










share|improve this question




















  • 3





    According to the accepted answer, it looks like it is a partial truth. The description of the diorama sounds more like an enemy military encampment than a village, and there were no models of humans in it.

    – Aaron
    Nov 15 '18 at 19:14
















83












83








83


3






In books and interviews, Noam Chomsky recalls that during the Vietnam War a diorama of a Vietnamese village was built at the Chicago Museum of Science where "children were supposed to come and play, and shoot at the village with the guns".




There was in item in the New York Times that described an event that
took place in Chicago. The Chicago Museum of Science, which is a very
respectable place, had put up an exhibit. The exhibit was a Vietnamese
village, sort of a diorama of a Vietnamese village, and around it
there were guns, and children were supposed to come an play, and shoot
at the village with the guns. That was the game.




Power and Terror: Conflict, Hegemony, and the Rule of Force,
by Noam Chomsky, John Junkerman, Takei Masakazu. Available on Google Books.



or see this interview with Chomsky on Youtube.



It also reports that the New York Times published an article criticising a group of mothers protesting outside the museum. However, I can not find any other sources that confirms the facts.
Is Noam Chomsky's version of the events accurate?










share|improve this question
















In books and interviews, Noam Chomsky recalls that during the Vietnam War a diorama of a Vietnamese village was built at the Chicago Museum of Science where "children were supposed to come and play, and shoot at the village with the guns".




There was in item in the New York Times that described an event that
took place in Chicago. The Chicago Museum of Science, which is a very
respectable place, had put up an exhibit. The exhibit was a Vietnamese
village, sort of a diorama of a Vietnamese village, and around it
there were guns, and children were supposed to come an play, and shoot
at the village with the guns. That was the game.




Power and Terror: Conflict, Hegemony, and the Rule of Force,
by Noam Chomsky, John Junkerman, Takei Masakazu. Available on Google Books.



or see this interview with Chomsky on Youtube.



It also reports that the New York Times published an article criticising a group of mothers protesting outside the museum. However, I can not find any other sources that confirms the facts.
Is Noam Chomsky's version of the events accurate?







vietnam-war






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edited Nov 18 '18 at 21:24









Laurel

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11k54858










asked Nov 13 '18 at 22:15









pinponpinpon

478128




478128








  • 3





    According to the accepted answer, it looks like it is a partial truth. The description of the diorama sounds more like an enemy military encampment than a village, and there were no models of humans in it.

    – Aaron
    Nov 15 '18 at 19:14
















  • 3





    According to the accepted answer, it looks like it is a partial truth. The description of the diorama sounds more like an enemy military encampment than a village, and there were no models of humans in it.

    – Aaron
    Nov 15 '18 at 19:14










3




3





According to the accepted answer, it looks like it is a partial truth. The description of the diorama sounds more like an enemy military encampment than a village, and there were no models of humans in it.

– Aaron
Nov 15 '18 at 19:14







According to the accepted answer, it looks like it is a partial truth. The description of the diorama sounds more like an enemy military encampment than a village, and there were no models of humans in it.

– Aaron
Nov 15 '18 at 19:14












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















114














The exhibit and the protesting was widely reported in newspapers at the time, including the NYT, which seems to have had at least two articles about it.



This NYT article is vague (page 19; Mar 18, 1968):









This other NYT article actually describes the exhibit somewhat positively, so it's probably the one Chomsky is referring to (page 16; Mar 19, 1968):









Pictures of the exhibit were published in the National Catholic Reporter:



A machine gun, a museum plaque, and a model valley



People around a helicopter and a nearby sign says "US Army modern and efficient"



I was able to find another image of the exhibit, but I can't access it due to not having a newspapers.com subscription and I'm also not sure if I have the sentences from the article in the right order (if anyone has a subscription feel free to edit). In any case it's an article from The News-Herald:




Part of a U. S. Army display at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago is this realistic, self-service war studio. In this news photo a 14-year-old boy is aboard the real "Huey" armed helicopter, firing a 7.62 millimeter machine gun at targets on a backdrop. Visitors to the museum are able to test their marksmanship electronically as they hit targets on what is a view of the Central Highlands in Vietnam. This is the ultimate in vicarious thrills killing Vietnamese from a hovering helicopter. This is real conditioning for embryo warriors, far more effective than the art of the toy makers. This goes beyond jingoism. It exhibits a lack of conscience. This is an insane Disneyland!




Admission to the museum (at least around that time) was free. According to the Freeport Journal-Standard, the exhibit was taxpayer funded:




There Goes Your Income Tax



The question of a demonstration over it aside, it is little short of incredible that the Army would have had the gall to construct the exhibit that ended up in the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. On display at the museum is a "Huey" troop-carrying helicopter equipped with a machine gun with which visitors can simulate firing at a painted target of thatched hut. Flashing lights indicate a hit. According to news dispatches, the display has been popular with children. What motivated the army — if indeed it is thinking at all these days — to use tax funds, or any funds, for such a project is something that is probably just well left unexamined. Suffice it to say that our nation has already become enough of a military state that we do need anything to add encouragement to that trend, especially an army-financed game of which youngsters can say: "Hey, let's go down to the museum and shoot up an Asian village." They will probably have their chance to do that for real all too soon.




Another article, from The Daily Times (Salisbury, MD) calls it a "mockup of a Vietnamese village":




What next? A U.S. Army display in the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago permits a visitor to climb into a Huey helicopter and fire electronic machineguns into a mockup of a Vietnamese village. A direct hit is recorded by a bright burst of light simulating a fire and explosion. A fun-and-games approach to the Vietnam tragedy is out of step with the current of anguish pulling at the heart of America. It is shocking even to hardened human sensibilities that such a display would be included in a U.S. Army exhibit of weapons used in Vet-nam. Will the next shooting gallery idea and replace the moving bear target with a Viet Cong that turns around and runs the other way when a direct his is recorded? Has the American sense of proportion about death and destruction gotten so far out of kelter that displays permitting civilians to get a feel of the almost real thing will be accepted by the public without a protest? We don't think so. We believe there are many Americans who share with us a sincere hope that the Army will fold its exhibit tent and steal quietly away. Anyone who wants to know what it feels like to shoot up a Vietnamese village can ask a returning American serviceman. They have the full story.




Yet another account of the events was mentioned in The Argus, which has the same wording as the one NYT article:




Flower bedecked teen-agers chanting anti-Vietnam war slogans Sunday forced a temporary shutdown of an Army weapons exhibit at Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry.



About 150 of the teen-agers swarmed around and onto an armored personnel carrier, shouting, singing and chanting, "LBJ, LBJ, how many kids have you killed today?"



Police moved in and cleared the exhibit hall, warning any who tarried they would be arrested. Officers carried at least three demonstrators from the museum. Six persons were taken into custody and hauled to Central Police Headquarters, where they were being questioned.



It was not immediately determined whether the demonstration inside the hall was linked to the picketing outside the museum by an estimated 300 representatives of two schools and two peace groups.




I also found another really good account of the event in Delaware County Daily Times:




Too Much, Too Soon



If one has to be arrested in a demonstration, we can think of few better causes than the "sit-in" at the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry this week.



An Army exhibit there included a helicopter equipped for simulating firing of a machine gun at targets in a diorama of the Vietnam Central Highlands.



The targets included a hut, two bridges and an ammunition dump. A light flashed when a hit was scored.



Some youngsters apparently found it great sport. On Monday, some 150 pickets "infiltrated" the exhibit, some occupying the helicopter, others sitting on the floor to prevent people from entering the exhibit.



Outside, another 300 pickets handed out antiwar handbills and carried signs such as, "Don't teach your child to kill."



Police removed those inside the building, arresting six. But the helicopter simulated firing has been ended.



At the rate we're going, our youngsters will be firing down on Vietnamese villages from helicopters soon enough. We see no need to advance the timetable with simulated war in museums.




Another account, mostly describing a man who was protesting while carrying his child can be found in the Columbia Missourian.






share|improve this answer





















  • 19





    So... definitely not a village.

    – RonJohn
    Nov 15 '18 at 4:56






  • 11





    @RonJohn If we assume the hut is a residential structure "definitely" seems to definite. A mix of civil and military installations would properly reflect the reality of many asymmetrical conflicts, with all the problems arising from it.

    – Peter A. Schneider
    Nov 15 '18 at 19:58








  • 8





    @RonJohn Did I say "only" or did I say "mix"? You are saying "definitely" though, in bold. "Hut" without further qualification is neutral: We don't know. The articles do not call it a "shelter" or "shed" or "barrack" though. Then I wouldn't take issue.

    – Peter A. Schneider
    Nov 15 '18 at 20:25








  • 2





    @PeterA.Schneider the scenario: a hut with an ammo dump next to it. Do you think, "a poor innocent civilian lives there!", or do you think, "it's associated with the ammo dump"? Now, maybe the VC put the ammo dump next to the poor civilian hut like Saddam put AA guns on top of hospitals (then who's fault is it that the hut gets shot up?), but the first thought is that the hut is associated with the ammo dump.

    – RonJohn
    Nov 15 '18 at 20:33






  • 3





    @RonJohn Nothing says the hut is next to the ammo dump. The article just says that the targets "included a hut, two bridges and an ammunition dump." It gives no information about how they were positioned with respect to one another (or what other targets were available).

    – David Richerby
    Nov 16 '18 at 10:02





















1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









114














The exhibit and the protesting was widely reported in newspapers at the time, including the NYT, which seems to have had at least two articles about it.



This NYT article is vague (page 19; Mar 18, 1968):









This other NYT article actually describes the exhibit somewhat positively, so it's probably the one Chomsky is referring to (page 16; Mar 19, 1968):









Pictures of the exhibit were published in the National Catholic Reporter:



A machine gun, a museum plaque, and a model valley



People around a helicopter and a nearby sign says "US Army modern and efficient"



I was able to find another image of the exhibit, but I can't access it due to not having a newspapers.com subscription and I'm also not sure if I have the sentences from the article in the right order (if anyone has a subscription feel free to edit). In any case it's an article from The News-Herald:




Part of a U. S. Army display at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago is this realistic, self-service war studio. In this news photo a 14-year-old boy is aboard the real "Huey" armed helicopter, firing a 7.62 millimeter machine gun at targets on a backdrop. Visitors to the museum are able to test their marksmanship electronically as they hit targets on what is a view of the Central Highlands in Vietnam. This is the ultimate in vicarious thrills killing Vietnamese from a hovering helicopter. This is real conditioning for embryo warriors, far more effective than the art of the toy makers. This goes beyond jingoism. It exhibits a lack of conscience. This is an insane Disneyland!




Admission to the museum (at least around that time) was free. According to the Freeport Journal-Standard, the exhibit was taxpayer funded:




There Goes Your Income Tax



The question of a demonstration over it aside, it is little short of incredible that the Army would have had the gall to construct the exhibit that ended up in the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. On display at the museum is a "Huey" troop-carrying helicopter equipped with a machine gun with which visitors can simulate firing at a painted target of thatched hut. Flashing lights indicate a hit. According to news dispatches, the display has been popular with children. What motivated the army — if indeed it is thinking at all these days — to use tax funds, or any funds, for such a project is something that is probably just well left unexamined. Suffice it to say that our nation has already become enough of a military state that we do need anything to add encouragement to that trend, especially an army-financed game of which youngsters can say: "Hey, let's go down to the museum and shoot up an Asian village." They will probably have their chance to do that for real all too soon.




Another article, from The Daily Times (Salisbury, MD) calls it a "mockup of a Vietnamese village":




What next? A U.S. Army display in the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago permits a visitor to climb into a Huey helicopter and fire electronic machineguns into a mockup of a Vietnamese village. A direct hit is recorded by a bright burst of light simulating a fire and explosion. A fun-and-games approach to the Vietnam tragedy is out of step with the current of anguish pulling at the heart of America. It is shocking even to hardened human sensibilities that such a display would be included in a U.S. Army exhibit of weapons used in Vet-nam. Will the next shooting gallery idea and replace the moving bear target with a Viet Cong that turns around and runs the other way when a direct his is recorded? Has the American sense of proportion about death and destruction gotten so far out of kelter that displays permitting civilians to get a feel of the almost real thing will be accepted by the public without a protest? We don't think so. We believe there are many Americans who share with us a sincere hope that the Army will fold its exhibit tent and steal quietly away. Anyone who wants to know what it feels like to shoot up a Vietnamese village can ask a returning American serviceman. They have the full story.




Yet another account of the events was mentioned in The Argus, which has the same wording as the one NYT article:




Flower bedecked teen-agers chanting anti-Vietnam war slogans Sunday forced a temporary shutdown of an Army weapons exhibit at Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry.



About 150 of the teen-agers swarmed around and onto an armored personnel carrier, shouting, singing and chanting, "LBJ, LBJ, how many kids have you killed today?"



Police moved in and cleared the exhibit hall, warning any who tarried they would be arrested. Officers carried at least three demonstrators from the museum. Six persons were taken into custody and hauled to Central Police Headquarters, where they were being questioned.



It was not immediately determined whether the demonstration inside the hall was linked to the picketing outside the museum by an estimated 300 representatives of two schools and two peace groups.




I also found another really good account of the event in Delaware County Daily Times:




Too Much, Too Soon



If one has to be arrested in a demonstration, we can think of few better causes than the "sit-in" at the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry this week.



An Army exhibit there included a helicopter equipped for simulating firing of a machine gun at targets in a diorama of the Vietnam Central Highlands.



The targets included a hut, two bridges and an ammunition dump. A light flashed when a hit was scored.



Some youngsters apparently found it great sport. On Monday, some 150 pickets "infiltrated" the exhibit, some occupying the helicopter, others sitting on the floor to prevent people from entering the exhibit.



Outside, another 300 pickets handed out antiwar handbills and carried signs such as, "Don't teach your child to kill."



Police removed those inside the building, arresting six. But the helicopter simulated firing has been ended.



At the rate we're going, our youngsters will be firing down on Vietnamese villages from helicopters soon enough. We see no need to advance the timetable with simulated war in museums.




Another account, mostly describing a man who was protesting while carrying his child can be found in the Columbia Missourian.






share|improve this answer





















  • 19





    So... definitely not a village.

    – RonJohn
    Nov 15 '18 at 4:56






  • 11





    @RonJohn If we assume the hut is a residential structure "definitely" seems to definite. A mix of civil and military installations would properly reflect the reality of many asymmetrical conflicts, with all the problems arising from it.

    – Peter A. Schneider
    Nov 15 '18 at 19:58








  • 8





    @RonJohn Did I say "only" or did I say "mix"? You are saying "definitely" though, in bold. "Hut" without further qualification is neutral: We don't know. The articles do not call it a "shelter" or "shed" or "barrack" though. Then I wouldn't take issue.

    – Peter A. Schneider
    Nov 15 '18 at 20:25








  • 2





    @PeterA.Schneider the scenario: a hut with an ammo dump next to it. Do you think, "a poor innocent civilian lives there!", or do you think, "it's associated with the ammo dump"? Now, maybe the VC put the ammo dump next to the poor civilian hut like Saddam put AA guns on top of hospitals (then who's fault is it that the hut gets shot up?), but the first thought is that the hut is associated with the ammo dump.

    – RonJohn
    Nov 15 '18 at 20:33






  • 3





    @RonJohn Nothing says the hut is next to the ammo dump. The article just says that the targets "included a hut, two bridges and an ammunition dump." It gives no information about how they were positioned with respect to one another (or what other targets were available).

    – David Richerby
    Nov 16 '18 at 10:02


















114














The exhibit and the protesting was widely reported in newspapers at the time, including the NYT, which seems to have had at least two articles about it.



This NYT article is vague (page 19; Mar 18, 1968):









This other NYT article actually describes the exhibit somewhat positively, so it's probably the one Chomsky is referring to (page 16; Mar 19, 1968):









Pictures of the exhibit were published in the National Catholic Reporter:



A machine gun, a museum plaque, and a model valley



People around a helicopter and a nearby sign says "US Army modern and efficient"



I was able to find another image of the exhibit, but I can't access it due to not having a newspapers.com subscription and I'm also not sure if I have the sentences from the article in the right order (if anyone has a subscription feel free to edit). In any case it's an article from The News-Herald:




Part of a U. S. Army display at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago is this realistic, self-service war studio. In this news photo a 14-year-old boy is aboard the real "Huey" armed helicopter, firing a 7.62 millimeter machine gun at targets on a backdrop. Visitors to the museum are able to test their marksmanship electronically as they hit targets on what is a view of the Central Highlands in Vietnam. This is the ultimate in vicarious thrills killing Vietnamese from a hovering helicopter. This is real conditioning for embryo warriors, far more effective than the art of the toy makers. This goes beyond jingoism. It exhibits a lack of conscience. This is an insane Disneyland!




Admission to the museum (at least around that time) was free. According to the Freeport Journal-Standard, the exhibit was taxpayer funded:




There Goes Your Income Tax



The question of a demonstration over it aside, it is little short of incredible that the Army would have had the gall to construct the exhibit that ended up in the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. On display at the museum is a "Huey" troop-carrying helicopter equipped with a machine gun with which visitors can simulate firing at a painted target of thatched hut. Flashing lights indicate a hit. According to news dispatches, the display has been popular with children. What motivated the army — if indeed it is thinking at all these days — to use tax funds, or any funds, for such a project is something that is probably just well left unexamined. Suffice it to say that our nation has already become enough of a military state that we do need anything to add encouragement to that trend, especially an army-financed game of which youngsters can say: "Hey, let's go down to the museum and shoot up an Asian village." They will probably have their chance to do that for real all too soon.




Another article, from The Daily Times (Salisbury, MD) calls it a "mockup of a Vietnamese village":




What next? A U.S. Army display in the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago permits a visitor to climb into a Huey helicopter and fire electronic machineguns into a mockup of a Vietnamese village. A direct hit is recorded by a bright burst of light simulating a fire and explosion. A fun-and-games approach to the Vietnam tragedy is out of step with the current of anguish pulling at the heart of America. It is shocking even to hardened human sensibilities that such a display would be included in a U.S. Army exhibit of weapons used in Vet-nam. Will the next shooting gallery idea and replace the moving bear target with a Viet Cong that turns around and runs the other way when a direct his is recorded? Has the American sense of proportion about death and destruction gotten so far out of kelter that displays permitting civilians to get a feel of the almost real thing will be accepted by the public without a protest? We don't think so. We believe there are many Americans who share with us a sincere hope that the Army will fold its exhibit tent and steal quietly away. Anyone who wants to know what it feels like to shoot up a Vietnamese village can ask a returning American serviceman. They have the full story.




Yet another account of the events was mentioned in The Argus, which has the same wording as the one NYT article:




Flower bedecked teen-agers chanting anti-Vietnam war slogans Sunday forced a temporary shutdown of an Army weapons exhibit at Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry.



About 150 of the teen-agers swarmed around and onto an armored personnel carrier, shouting, singing and chanting, "LBJ, LBJ, how many kids have you killed today?"



Police moved in and cleared the exhibit hall, warning any who tarried they would be arrested. Officers carried at least three demonstrators from the museum. Six persons were taken into custody and hauled to Central Police Headquarters, where they were being questioned.



It was not immediately determined whether the demonstration inside the hall was linked to the picketing outside the museum by an estimated 300 representatives of two schools and two peace groups.




I also found another really good account of the event in Delaware County Daily Times:




Too Much, Too Soon



If one has to be arrested in a demonstration, we can think of few better causes than the "sit-in" at the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry this week.



An Army exhibit there included a helicopter equipped for simulating firing of a machine gun at targets in a diorama of the Vietnam Central Highlands.



The targets included a hut, two bridges and an ammunition dump. A light flashed when a hit was scored.



Some youngsters apparently found it great sport. On Monday, some 150 pickets "infiltrated" the exhibit, some occupying the helicopter, others sitting on the floor to prevent people from entering the exhibit.



Outside, another 300 pickets handed out antiwar handbills and carried signs such as, "Don't teach your child to kill."



Police removed those inside the building, arresting six. But the helicopter simulated firing has been ended.



At the rate we're going, our youngsters will be firing down on Vietnamese villages from helicopters soon enough. We see no need to advance the timetable with simulated war in museums.




Another account, mostly describing a man who was protesting while carrying his child can be found in the Columbia Missourian.






share|improve this answer





















  • 19





    So... definitely not a village.

    – RonJohn
    Nov 15 '18 at 4:56






  • 11





    @RonJohn If we assume the hut is a residential structure "definitely" seems to definite. A mix of civil and military installations would properly reflect the reality of many asymmetrical conflicts, with all the problems arising from it.

    – Peter A. Schneider
    Nov 15 '18 at 19:58








  • 8





    @RonJohn Did I say "only" or did I say "mix"? You are saying "definitely" though, in bold. "Hut" without further qualification is neutral: We don't know. The articles do not call it a "shelter" or "shed" or "barrack" though. Then I wouldn't take issue.

    – Peter A. Schneider
    Nov 15 '18 at 20:25








  • 2





    @PeterA.Schneider the scenario: a hut with an ammo dump next to it. Do you think, "a poor innocent civilian lives there!", or do you think, "it's associated with the ammo dump"? Now, maybe the VC put the ammo dump next to the poor civilian hut like Saddam put AA guns on top of hospitals (then who's fault is it that the hut gets shot up?), but the first thought is that the hut is associated with the ammo dump.

    – RonJohn
    Nov 15 '18 at 20:33






  • 3





    @RonJohn Nothing says the hut is next to the ammo dump. The article just says that the targets "included a hut, two bridges and an ammunition dump." It gives no information about how they were positioned with respect to one another (or what other targets were available).

    – David Richerby
    Nov 16 '18 at 10:02
















114












114








114







The exhibit and the protesting was widely reported in newspapers at the time, including the NYT, which seems to have had at least two articles about it.



This NYT article is vague (page 19; Mar 18, 1968):









This other NYT article actually describes the exhibit somewhat positively, so it's probably the one Chomsky is referring to (page 16; Mar 19, 1968):









Pictures of the exhibit were published in the National Catholic Reporter:



A machine gun, a museum plaque, and a model valley



People around a helicopter and a nearby sign says "US Army modern and efficient"



I was able to find another image of the exhibit, but I can't access it due to not having a newspapers.com subscription and I'm also not sure if I have the sentences from the article in the right order (if anyone has a subscription feel free to edit). In any case it's an article from The News-Herald:




Part of a U. S. Army display at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago is this realistic, self-service war studio. In this news photo a 14-year-old boy is aboard the real "Huey" armed helicopter, firing a 7.62 millimeter machine gun at targets on a backdrop. Visitors to the museum are able to test their marksmanship electronically as they hit targets on what is a view of the Central Highlands in Vietnam. This is the ultimate in vicarious thrills killing Vietnamese from a hovering helicopter. This is real conditioning for embryo warriors, far more effective than the art of the toy makers. This goes beyond jingoism. It exhibits a lack of conscience. This is an insane Disneyland!




Admission to the museum (at least around that time) was free. According to the Freeport Journal-Standard, the exhibit was taxpayer funded:




There Goes Your Income Tax



The question of a demonstration over it aside, it is little short of incredible that the Army would have had the gall to construct the exhibit that ended up in the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. On display at the museum is a "Huey" troop-carrying helicopter equipped with a machine gun with which visitors can simulate firing at a painted target of thatched hut. Flashing lights indicate a hit. According to news dispatches, the display has been popular with children. What motivated the army — if indeed it is thinking at all these days — to use tax funds, or any funds, for such a project is something that is probably just well left unexamined. Suffice it to say that our nation has already become enough of a military state that we do need anything to add encouragement to that trend, especially an army-financed game of which youngsters can say: "Hey, let's go down to the museum and shoot up an Asian village." They will probably have their chance to do that for real all too soon.




Another article, from The Daily Times (Salisbury, MD) calls it a "mockup of a Vietnamese village":




What next? A U.S. Army display in the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago permits a visitor to climb into a Huey helicopter and fire electronic machineguns into a mockup of a Vietnamese village. A direct hit is recorded by a bright burst of light simulating a fire and explosion. A fun-and-games approach to the Vietnam tragedy is out of step with the current of anguish pulling at the heart of America. It is shocking even to hardened human sensibilities that such a display would be included in a U.S. Army exhibit of weapons used in Vet-nam. Will the next shooting gallery idea and replace the moving bear target with a Viet Cong that turns around and runs the other way when a direct his is recorded? Has the American sense of proportion about death and destruction gotten so far out of kelter that displays permitting civilians to get a feel of the almost real thing will be accepted by the public without a protest? We don't think so. We believe there are many Americans who share with us a sincere hope that the Army will fold its exhibit tent and steal quietly away. Anyone who wants to know what it feels like to shoot up a Vietnamese village can ask a returning American serviceman. They have the full story.




Yet another account of the events was mentioned in The Argus, which has the same wording as the one NYT article:




Flower bedecked teen-agers chanting anti-Vietnam war slogans Sunday forced a temporary shutdown of an Army weapons exhibit at Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry.



About 150 of the teen-agers swarmed around and onto an armored personnel carrier, shouting, singing and chanting, "LBJ, LBJ, how many kids have you killed today?"



Police moved in and cleared the exhibit hall, warning any who tarried they would be arrested. Officers carried at least three demonstrators from the museum. Six persons were taken into custody and hauled to Central Police Headquarters, where they were being questioned.



It was not immediately determined whether the demonstration inside the hall was linked to the picketing outside the museum by an estimated 300 representatives of two schools and two peace groups.




I also found another really good account of the event in Delaware County Daily Times:




Too Much, Too Soon



If one has to be arrested in a demonstration, we can think of few better causes than the "sit-in" at the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry this week.



An Army exhibit there included a helicopter equipped for simulating firing of a machine gun at targets in a diorama of the Vietnam Central Highlands.



The targets included a hut, two bridges and an ammunition dump. A light flashed when a hit was scored.



Some youngsters apparently found it great sport. On Monday, some 150 pickets "infiltrated" the exhibit, some occupying the helicopter, others sitting on the floor to prevent people from entering the exhibit.



Outside, another 300 pickets handed out antiwar handbills and carried signs such as, "Don't teach your child to kill."



Police removed those inside the building, arresting six. But the helicopter simulated firing has been ended.



At the rate we're going, our youngsters will be firing down on Vietnamese villages from helicopters soon enough. We see no need to advance the timetable with simulated war in museums.




Another account, mostly describing a man who was protesting while carrying his child can be found in the Columbia Missourian.






share|improve this answer















The exhibit and the protesting was widely reported in newspapers at the time, including the NYT, which seems to have had at least two articles about it.



This NYT article is vague (page 19; Mar 18, 1968):









This other NYT article actually describes the exhibit somewhat positively, so it's probably the one Chomsky is referring to (page 16; Mar 19, 1968):









Pictures of the exhibit were published in the National Catholic Reporter:



A machine gun, a museum plaque, and a model valley



People around a helicopter and a nearby sign says "US Army modern and efficient"



I was able to find another image of the exhibit, but I can't access it due to not having a newspapers.com subscription and I'm also not sure if I have the sentences from the article in the right order (if anyone has a subscription feel free to edit). In any case it's an article from The News-Herald:




Part of a U. S. Army display at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago is this realistic, self-service war studio. In this news photo a 14-year-old boy is aboard the real "Huey" armed helicopter, firing a 7.62 millimeter machine gun at targets on a backdrop. Visitors to the museum are able to test their marksmanship electronically as they hit targets on what is a view of the Central Highlands in Vietnam. This is the ultimate in vicarious thrills killing Vietnamese from a hovering helicopter. This is real conditioning for embryo warriors, far more effective than the art of the toy makers. This goes beyond jingoism. It exhibits a lack of conscience. This is an insane Disneyland!




Admission to the museum (at least around that time) was free. According to the Freeport Journal-Standard, the exhibit was taxpayer funded:




There Goes Your Income Tax



The question of a demonstration over it aside, it is little short of incredible that the Army would have had the gall to construct the exhibit that ended up in the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. On display at the museum is a "Huey" troop-carrying helicopter equipped with a machine gun with which visitors can simulate firing at a painted target of thatched hut. Flashing lights indicate a hit. According to news dispatches, the display has been popular with children. What motivated the army — if indeed it is thinking at all these days — to use tax funds, or any funds, for such a project is something that is probably just well left unexamined. Suffice it to say that our nation has already become enough of a military state that we do need anything to add encouragement to that trend, especially an army-financed game of which youngsters can say: "Hey, let's go down to the museum and shoot up an Asian village." They will probably have their chance to do that for real all too soon.




Another article, from The Daily Times (Salisbury, MD) calls it a "mockup of a Vietnamese village":




What next? A U.S. Army display in the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago permits a visitor to climb into a Huey helicopter and fire electronic machineguns into a mockup of a Vietnamese village. A direct hit is recorded by a bright burst of light simulating a fire and explosion. A fun-and-games approach to the Vietnam tragedy is out of step with the current of anguish pulling at the heart of America. It is shocking even to hardened human sensibilities that such a display would be included in a U.S. Army exhibit of weapons used in Vet-nam. Will the next shooting gallery idea and replace the moving bear target with a Viet Cong that turns around and runs the other way when a direct his is recorded? Has the American sense of proportion about death and destruction gotten so far out of kelter that displays permitting civilians to get a feel of the almost real thing will be accepted by the public without a protest? We don't think so. We believe there are many Americans who share with us a sincere hope that the Army will fold its exhibit tent and steal quietly away. Anyone who wants to know what it feels like to shoot up a Vietnamese village can ask a returning American serviceman. They have the full story.




Yet another account of the events was mentioned in The Argus, which has the same wording as the one NYT article:




Flower bedecked teen-agers chanting anti-Vietnam war slogans Sunday forced a temporary shutdown of an Army weapons exhibit at Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry.



About 150 of the teen-agers swarmed around and onto an armored personnel carrier, shouting, singing and chanting, "LBJ, LBJ, how many kids have you killed today?"



Police moved in and cleared the exhibit hall, warning any who tarried they would be arrested. Officers carried at least three demonstrators from the museum. Six persons were taken into custody and hauled to Central Police Headquarters, where they were being questioned.



It was not immediately determined whether the demonstration inside the hall was linked to the picketing outside the museum by an estimated 300 representatives of two schools and two peace groups.




I also found another really good account of the event in Delaware County Daily Times:




Too Much, Too Soon



If one has to be arrested in a demonstration, we can think of few better causes than the "sit-in" at the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry this week.



An Army exhibit there included a helicopter equipped for simulating firing of a machine gun at targets in a diorama of the Vietnam Central Highlands.



The targets included a hut, two bridges and an ammunition dump. A light flashed when a hit was scored.



Some youngsters apparently found it great sport. On Monday, some 150 pickets "infiltrated" the exhibit, some occupying the helicopter, others sitting on the floor to prevent people from entering the exhibit.



Outside, another 300 pickets handed out antiwar handbills and carried signs such as, "Don't teach your child to kill."



Police removed those inside the building, arresting six. But the helicopter simulated firing has been ended.



At the rate we're going, our youngsters will be firing down on Vietnamese villages from helicopters soon enough. We see no need to advance the timetable with simulated war in museums.




Another account, mostly describing a man who was protesting while carrying his child can be found in the Columbia Missourian.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 18 '18 at 21:25

























answered Nov 13 '18 at 23:37









LaurelLaurel

11k54858




11k54858








  • 19





    So... definitely not a village.

    – RonJohn
    Nov 15 '18 at 4:56






  • 11





    @RonJohn If we assume the hut is a residential structure "definitely" seems to definite. A mix of civil and military installations would properly reflect the reality of many asymmetrical conflicts, with all the problems arising from it.

    – Peter A. Schneider
    Nov 15 '18 at 19:58








  • 8





    @RonJohn Did I say "only" or did I say "mix"? You are saying "definitely" though, in bold. "Hut" without further qualification is neutral: We don't know. The articles do not call it a "shelter" or "shed" or "barrack" though. Then I wouldn't take issue.

    – Peter A. Schneider
    Nov 15 '18 at 20:25








  • 2





    @PeterA.Schneider the scenario: a hut with an ammo dump next to it. Do you think, "a poor innocent civilian lives there!", or do you think, "it's associated with the ammo dump"? Now, maybe the VC put the ammo dump next to the poor civilian hut like Saddam put AA guns on top of hospitals (then who's fault is it that the hut gets shot up?), but the first thought is that the hut is associated with the ammo dump.

    – RonJohn
    Nov 15 '18 at 20:33






  • 3





    @RonJohn Nothing says the hut is next to the ammo dump. The article just says that the targets "included a hut, two bridges and an ammunition dump." It gives no information about how they were positioned with respect to one another (or what other targets were available).

    – David Richerby
    Nov 16 '18 at 10:02
















  • 19





    So... definitely not a village.

    – RonJohn
    Nov 15 '18 at 4:56






  • 11





    @RonJohn If we assume the hut is a residential structure "definitely" seems to definite. A mix of civil and military installations would properly reflect the reality of many asymmetrical conflicts, with all the problems arising from it.

    – Peter A. Schneider
    Nov 15 '18 at 19:58








  • 8





    @RonJohn Did I say "only" or did I say "mix"? You are saying "definitely" though, in bold. "Hut" without further qualification is neutral: We don't know. The articles do not call it a "shelter" or "shed" or "barrack" though. Then I wouldn't take issue.

    – Peter A. Schneider
    Nov 15 '18 at 20:25








  • 2





    @PeterA.Schneider the scenario: a hut with an ammo dump next to it. Do you think, "a poor innocent civilian lives there!", or do you think, "it's associated with the ammo dump"? Now, maybe the VC put the ammo dump next to the poor civilian hut like Saddam put AA guns on top of hospitals (then who's fault is it that the hut gets shot up?), but the first thought is that the hut is associated with the ammo dump.

    – RonJohn
    Nov 15 '18 at 20:33






  • 3





    @RonJohn Nothing says the hut is next to the ammo dump. The article just says that the targets "included a hut, two bridges and an ammunition dump." It gives no information about how they were positioned with respect to one another (or what other targets were available).

    – David Richerby
    Nov 16 '18 at 10:02










19




19





So... definitely not a village.

– RonJohn
Nov 15 '18 at 4:56





So... definitely not a village.

– RonJohn
Nov 15 '18 at 4:56




11




11





@RonJohn If we assume the hut is a residential structure "definitely" seems to definite. A mix of civil and military installations would properly reflect the reality of many asymmetrical conflicts, with all the problems arising from it.

– Peter A. Schneider
Nov 15 '18 at 19:58







@RonJohn If we assume the hut is a residential structure "definitely" seems to definite. A mix of civil and military installations would properly reflect the reality of many asymmetrical conflicts, with all the problems arising from it.

– Peter A. Schneider
Nov 15 '18 at 19:58






8




8





@RonJohn Did I say "only" or did I say "mix"? You are saying "definitely" though, in bold. "Hut" without further qualification is neutral: We don't know. The articles do not call it a "shelter" or "shed" or "barrack" though. Then I wouldn't take issue.

– Peter A. Schneider
Nov 15 '18 at 20:25







@RonJohn Did I say "only" or did I say "mix"? You are saying "definitely" though, in bold. "Hut" without further qualification is neutral: We don't know. The articles do not call it a "shelter" or "shed" or "barrack" though. Then I wouldn't take issue.

– Peter A. Schneider
Nov 15 '18 at 20:25






2




2





@PeterA.Schneider the scenario: a hut with an ammo dump next to it. Do you think, "a poor innocent civilian lives there!", or do you think, "it's associated with the ammo dump"? Now, maybe the VC put the ammo dump next to the poor civilian hut like Saddam put AA guns on top of hospitals (then who's fault is it that the hut gets shot up?), but the first thought is that the hut is associated with the ammo dump.

– RonJohn
Nov 15 '18 at 20:33





@PeterA.Schneider the scenario: a hut with an ammo dump next to it. Do you think, "a poor innocent civilian lives there!", or do you think, "it's associated with the ammo dump"? Now, maybe the VC put the ammo dump next to the poor civilian hut like Saddam put AA guns on top of hospitals (then who's fault is it that the hut gets shot up?), but the first thought is that the hut is associated with the ammo dump.

– RonJohn
Nov 15 '18 at 20:33




3




3





@RonJohn Nothing says the hut is next to the ammo dump. The article just says that the targets "included a hut, two bridges and an ammunition dump." It gives no information about how they were positioned with respect to one another (or what other targets were available).

– David Richerby
Nov 16 '18 at 10:02







@RonJohn Nothing says the hut is next to the ammo dump. The article just says that the targets "included a hut, two bridges and an ammunition dump." It gives no information about how they were positioned with respect to one another (or what other targets were available).

– David Richerby
Nov 16 '18 at 10:02





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