Page 4-Sunday, January 7, 1979-The Michigan Daily 01 b Mt"6'cbtgan tlU 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Eigh ty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom No walls against junk U I * - ~ - Vol. LXXXIX, No. 81 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan An irresponsible faculty When the faculty Senate Assembly voted last month to reject proposed guidelines which would restrict relations between U.S. intelligence agencies and members of the University community, it proved one thing - the faculty cannot responsibly govern their own actions. A little history is needed to t nderstand the situation. The need for auidelines on this and other American dollege campuses arose in 1976 when the Senate Select Committee on 1>telligence Activities revealed that t'he CIA was using academics (professors, administrators, and graduate students involved in teaching) for various activities. ' The Select Committee report, .eavily censored by the CIA, stated the Agency used academics at more than 100 American colleges to make "introductions for intelligence :purposes," write propaganda, and other "minor activities." ; The Select Committee, in its final recommendations, expressed concern, "that American academics involved in such activities may undermine public confidence that those who train our youth are upholding the ideals, independence, and integrity of American universities." In response to the select Committee's report, Harvard ;University President Derek Bok appointed a prestigious group of individuals to explore the issues raised ,vith respect to CIA activities on :campuses and to consider whether "new rules of conduct for members of the Harvard community might be needed." The group, led by Archibald :Cox of Watergate fame, concluded that guidelines were needed despite the fact ithat these restrictions "may make it difficult for the CIA to perform certain tasks." The conclusion continues: "This loss ,s one that a free society should be willing to suffer. We do not believe that present relationships between the CIA ,and the academic community, as ,:outlined by the Select Committee, can ,continue without posing a serious threat to the independence and integrity of the academic community." The guidelines recommended by the Harvard group, which are similar to those vetoed by the University Senate Assembly, prohibited professors from giving the CIA the name of a student without the student's express prior consent. The Harvard guidelines also prohibit members of the community from performing intelligence operations for the CIA and writing .propaganda if it involves lending their ;names or position to gain public acceptance for something which they know to be untrue. The guidelines do not prohibit relationships with the CIA. w Members of the Harvard community ,were asked in May 1977 by President lok to follow this guidelines. One year .ater, the Director of Central .ntelligence Stansfield Turner wrote in f letter to President Bok that the CIA Aould not abide by the Harvard guidelines. Director Turner stated that $ re CIA treats academics as "sources f intelligence" important to the :ecurity of the nation and therefore Yiust be protected from .unauthorized Disclosure. Although President Bok saw the :heed for guidelines, then President Ilobben Fleming did not. Rather than pppointing a committee here to study the, problem and develop guidelines, President Fleming said it was a faculty concern and they should deal with it. So they did. The Civil Liberties oard developed guidelines with espect to all intelligence agencies. the draft was discussed and modified by the faculty Senate Assembly Committee on University Affairs in ,,' ;- , _,- P. __ J- s st ,;,; . / j .1 ld, ,r ': l,. _ _ ' ---._ . >.° i /Y. V f _ : <. .' ,.2:' If' I,-., -,y 7' I -- mmmmm-w 'a - - ~ w c .E , e" ? . Most professors, it seems, felt that the guidelines inpinged their civil liberties, their freedom to speak to whomever they may wish. Certainly everyone should be concerned about freedom and be ever vigilant to maintain our priceless rights. But the faculty seems to be only concerned about its rights. What about the rights of students? Are those rights any less valuable? After all, students, especially those from other countries, are the targets of most CIA activities on campus. Students suffer the infringement of personal freedom when, after a professor has given names to the CIA, they are secretly investigated by the Agency to see if they might qualify -as spies. Don't students deserve the right to know they are being investigated by a government intelligence agency and that, whatever the result of the investigation, there will always be an intelligence file with their name on it. The faculty cries about its precious academic freedom. No one denies the value of academic freedom, but what price must we pay? What civil liberties should any member of the University community forsake to preserve some ill-defined notion of academic freedom? Yes, faculty members do have the freedom of speech. The guidelines do not prohibit a faculty member, or any member of the University community, from having a relationship with an intelligence agency. Faculty members have the freedom to speak to whomever they wis. They'have freedom - not license. Obviously the faculty does not understand that the "freedom" to give names of students to an intelligence agency without prior consent results in an infringement of that individual's right to privacy. It seems as though the faculty members think they are doing a student a favor. Some faculty members argue the effectiveness of guidelines. They say that if these relationships are secret there is no reason to believe that anyone would come forward and admit a tie to an intelligence agency. What these individuals fail to see is that the guidelines, like laws, set a standard for society. Guidelines would say to the University community: this is what we believe to be acceptable behavior; anything contrary is wrong and cannot be tolerated. Guidelines could also raise the consciousness of the community. They make persons aware that relationships with intelligence agencies could be dangerous and should be considered carefully. The CIA is the root of this evil. But faculty members who cooperate with an intelligence agency to infringe on the rights of others, for whatever reason, and now by their refusal to do what is right, the Senate Assembly, are guilty by complicity. The Senate Assembly has shown it cannot be responsible for its actions in this area - unfortunate, but true. We urge acting President Allen Smith to adopt the guidelines proposed by the Civil Liberties Board as University policy. The Regents, however, should not sit idle on such an important issue, which directly effects the entire University community. The Regents should collect all available information on this subject, confer with the Civil Liberties Board as well as any interested community members, and pass a Regental bylaw which would govern relationships between members of the University community and intelligence agencies. Congressman Carl Pursell (R-Ann Arbor), Senator-elect Carl Levin, and Berlin, Hei Ccrmum This divided city has become a major heroin center, feeding a huge and growing number of German addicts and American GIs. So says the top U.S. drug agent here, Thomas Cash, narcotics at-, tache from the Drug Enfor- cement Administration (DEA) to Last in a series West Germany. Cash also says there is little the U.S. can do about it, because of our foreign policy and touchy diplomatic agreements that date back to World War II. "Dealers here aren't messing with quarter-pounds or hits," Cash says. "They're dealing in kilos-left and right-just like they were dime bags." Conditions are right for a Berlin Connection to replace the old French Connection for drug traffickers looking for new ways to smuggle heroin into the United States, Cash has found. "There is so much heroin here and it is so cheap it is just a mat- ter of time before soldiers or dope dealers who want to make a quick buck begin taking it into the States," he told a House sub- committee investigating drug abuse in the military recently. "Just last week, we got two women heading for the States. They had a couple of kilos when they were arrested in London." However, most of the heroin traffic right now seems to be within Germany, with West Germans and American GIs. "It's amazing," Cash says. "Germany is where the States were 20 years ago. It's happening all over again, right beforemy eyes. Germany has a huge drug problem and it doesn't know what to do about it." The Golden Shot Officials here realized they had a major problem with drugs, mostly heroin, when the "Golden Shot" began appearing. "The Germans are a very, very proud people," says Cash. "Even a German junkie has pride. When he realizes he is about finished, he makes one final score. Then he'll write a suicide note, perhaps talk about his life, and then take the final Golden Shot. "He'll overdose.". Not all German junkies do away with themselves so dramatically, Cash admits, but enough junkies were either taking the Golden Shot or simply overdosing by accident to con- vince German officials a problem existed. By E.N In 1975, Germany recorded 194 overdoses-31 in Berlin. One year later there were 337 overdoses with 87 in Berlin. In 1974, German officials con- fiscated 31 kilos of heroin. An estimated 73 per cent of the junk was headed out of the country. By late 1978, German officials had confiscated172 kilos of heroin and they now believe 73 per cent stays in the country. "Heroin creates its own new markets," Cash says. "One junkie helps turn on five more. Trying to stop drugs is just like stepping on a balloon. A lot of the time the stuff just moves-especially heroin." It constantly shifts. Most heroin in the States originally came from the Golden Triangle-Thailand, Burma and Laos, Cash says. Rebels in the Shan Hills area used the opium poppy, which is used to make heroin, As a cash crop to support their fighting. When pressure was applied to those markets, new heroin sup- pliers emerged, Cash says. Opium started coming from the Silver Triangle-the Mideast. The U. S. again applied pressure-especially against the Turkish government. Then the heroin started coming from Mexico-brown heroin. The active spraying program in Mexico killed many of the opium poppies, Cash says, so on- ce again a new supplier was needed.. This time, it came from an old source, the Mideast. The Turkish government had banned poppy farming, but it now claims it needs the plants to make morphine. Cash and the DEA claim the heroin being ship- ped to Berlin is coming from Pakistan and Afghanistan into heroin labs in Turkey. "It's very easy for opium to move from rural Afghanistan and Pakistan into Turkey," he says. "From there it is made into heroin and sent out to dealers." It could go to Italy or Austria over land' routes, but that is risky-Berlin is not. When Berlin was divided into four sectors after World War II, the countries involved pledged that the city would always remainone city. Great Britain, France and the United States kept that promise, but the Soviet Union built the Berlin Wall. The U.S. refuses to recognize East Berlin as a separate city. If it did recognize it, U.S. troops would lose the right to move in and out of the East Berlin section at will, as they do now, and the original agreement would be void. Therefore there are no U.S. customs searches when travelers . Earley cross from East Berlin into West Berlin, Peter Smeler; deputy political adviser to Germany, ex- plains. Cars bearing West German license tags are not searched when they enter the city and workers from East Berlin are never searched. Berlin has 85,000 Turkish workers, police say. There are an estimated 20,000 Turks here illegally. "The Turks can fly cheaper on Soviet Union airlines from East Berlin to Turkey, so they use Schoenfeld Airport in East Berlin," Smeler explains. If there are any custom checks there, Cash says, he has never heard of them. "The East Berlin officials worry about what and who leaves Berlin, not what they bring in," he says. Oklahoma Rep. Glenn English, who lead an11-day House sub- committee tour of U.S. Army bases in Germany studying drug abuse, claims huge amounts of heroin are brought into Germany by Turkish workers via East Germany and East Berlin. He says the East Germans do nothing about it because they know the drugs are destined in part for U.S. troops. He claims 1,100 pounds of heroin moved through East Germany into West Berlin last year. Another 6,000 pounds was smuggled into West Germany from East Germany, he says. In late November, English became the first U.S. Represen- tative to meet with East Berlin officials. They denied there was any conspiracy aimed at sup- plying GIs with heroin and claimed they were doing their best to stop illegal drug traf- ficking. English demanded proof. He gave the East Germans the names of 50 known drug traf- fickers-selected by the DEA-who use the Schoenfeld Airport-West Berlin route. The officials said they would examine the situation. Ironically, the East Germans were more cooperative than the West Germans, English says. "They (West German officials) said it was an American problem," he says. "It wasn't un- til we threatened them by saying we might have to close dow U.S. bases here that they got in- terested." Cash says the West Germans are still struggling to realize the "scope of the problem." Yet, he says, "all they have to, do is go into a Berlin subway to see how bad it is here." The subways are filled with junkies. They gather together in small groups to talk nervously, darting their bloodshot eyes back and forth, looking for police. Most are young. Their clothes are unkempt. And their faces look tired. There are two easy ways to pick them out if you can't tell by their looks, Cash explained during a quick subway tour. "Watch who doesn't get on the subway or watch who is sweating." A chilly breeze swept through the subway everytime a train whistled through, but the junkies were sweating huge drops. "They gotta score," Cash said. "They gotta be -fed or the shakes will start coming." Cash questioned one woman who apparently was high. Her eyes-puffy and red-were halflclosed. Her speech was slurred, her hands were swollen and covered with sores. She could barely stand. She said she had shot up two hours ago. She was at the peak of the high. "How much was she shooting?" One and a half grams. "That's the worst I've ever heard," Cash said. "Purity here is 40 to 60 per cent. She's using enough to send 20 or 30 American junkies sky high." Her habit cost about $48,000 per year.'She made the money as a hooker, she said. She used to charge $30 per trick, now she only charges $10. Prositituion is legal in Germany and competition keeps prices down. Her condition forced her to lower the price even more. She said she had been using heroin eight years. "She won't be using it much longer," Cash said, as the woman smiled dreamily, weaving back and forth. "She's nearly dead now. "I'll give her a few weeks, then I think she'll be ready for the Golden Shot. "Maybe someday," Cash says. "We'll pop that damn balloon-someday." E.N. Earlev, correspondent for the Tulsa Tribune, accompanied Rep. Glenn English (D-Okla.) on a House subcommittee fact-finding tour of U.S. bases in GermanV, investigating drug abuse. The subcominmit tee's report, no w complete, is expected to plav an important role in the growing debate over reinstating the draft. This article was written for Pacific News Service. WASHINGTON (UPI)-The CIA once considering capturing an African crocodile and, with the help of a witch doctor's secret recipe, cooking the animal's gall bladder up into a special poison, newly released documents revealed Friday. Hitherto secret documents did not indicate whether the unusual project actually came of f. No comment department "Crocodile Gall Bladder" was part of a massive, 23-year-long CIA project terminated in 1973 that included mind, behavior control and brainwashing experiments and a search for exotic poisons and incapacitating agents that could be used in assassinations and clan- destine operations. Many details of the project have come out during Senate and House hearing during the past few years. The latest 363 pages to be released-some heavily censored and names A Feb. 7, 1962, memo from an unidentified CIA officer to the "chief" of an unidentified division said: "We have approached the problem of picking up a Tanganyika (now Tanzania) crocodile's gall bladder from two points of view. The first is to have one of our (blank) buddies in Tanganyika find, capture and eviscerate a native crocodile on the spot and then tryp to-ship its gall bladder and/or other poisonous viscera to the United States... The second alternative would be to acquire a crocodile ... through a licensed collector and ship the live animal to the United States." The memo writer expressed confidence that two contacts then in Tanzania "can provide us with the details concerning methods and techniques employed by the wit- ch doctor in preparing the poison." The contacts, he said, also might collect "more data concerning other natural poisons derived from other reptiles and/or vital organs. I