eije 3rirtgan Datig Eighty-one years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan superseription Peace Pilgrim's Progress by lynn wener 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRI DAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: LINDSAY CHANEY Trying to forget My Lai IT SHOULD BE HARD to forget the murder of 102 people. They were unarmed civilians - men, women and children. The people of My Lai were massacred, victims of men cut loose from humanity by the terror of war. It should be hard to forget the My Lai massacre of 102 people, except for Amer- icans. For Americans, it seems, the mas- sacre is hard to remember. At the time, the revelation that U.S. troops had committed atrocities in the name of America, justice and democracy shook the country. Twenty-five soldiers were charged in the Mar. 15, 1968 incidents - 12 with partici- pating in the slaughter, 12 with covering it up and one with both. IN THE COURSE of two years, time and the Army began to whittle away at the list. Five of the 13 soldiers accused of assault and murder were court-martialed. Charges against the others were even- tually dismissed. With the acquittal Wednesday of Capt. Ernest Medina, the company commander of the troops at My Lai, four of the, five tried to date have been acquitted. Medina had been charged originally with the premeditated murder of at least 100 civilians, the murders of a woman and a small boy, and two counts of assault against a prisoner. By order of the military judge, the charge of murdering 100 civilians w a s reduced to involuntary manslaughter, and the charge of murdering the child was dismissed. IT TOOK the jury 57 minutes to con- sider the final charges of murdering the woman; assaulting a prisoner by shooting twice over his head, and, being aware of the mass killings as they occur- red, declining to halt them. Only Lt. William Calley, leader of the infantry platoon that made the assault, Editorial Staff ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ Editor JIM BEATTIE DAVE CHUDWIN Executive Editor Managing Editor ' STEVE KOPPMAN .. Editorial Page Editor RICK PERLOFP .. Associate Editorial Page Editor PAT MAHONEY .. .Assistant Editorial Page Editor LYNN WEINER Associate Managing Editor LARRY LEMPERT.A......Associate Managing Editor ANITA CRONE.... .. Arts Edito- JIM IRWIN....................Associate Arts Editor JANET FREY . ...... . Personnel Director ROBERT CONROW ..P Books Editor JIM JUDKIS......Photography Edito t Business Staff JAMES M. STOREY, Business Manager RICHARD RADCLIFFE SUZANNE BOSCHAN Advertising Manager Sales Manager JOHN SOMMERS ............Finance Manager ANDY GOLDING .. . .. Circulation Manager Sports Staff MORT NOVECK, Sports Editor JIM KEVRA, Executive Sports Editor RICK CORNFELD Associate Sports Edito TERRI FOUCHEY Contributing Sports Ed 0 BETSY MAHON ........ Senior Night Editor was convicted of actually murdering 22 civilians at the South Vietnamese hamlet. The nation reacted with such shock to the My Lai massacre that an equal and almost opposite reaction followed the one, and only, conviction. Calley was dubbed a hero by his s u p- porters; the .anti-war movement, w h i I e applauding the conviction, recognized him as a scapegoat for the crimes of oth- ers in higher echelons of the military and the government. In August, the Army reduced Calley's life sentence to 20 years at hard labor. The case still awaits further review by two military courts and finally by Presi- dent Nixon. Even as it stands, Calley will be eligible for parole in six or seven years. MEANWHILE, THE LIST of officers charged with attempts at whitewash- ing the My Lai slaughter has dwindled from 13 to one. Only Col. Oran Henderson is still on trial for failing to report and investigate the killings and for later ly- ing, about them before an official board of inquiry. No one denies that there was a mas- sacre at My Lai. Yet the record points only to Calley, not to a nation that has allowed an immoral war to continue, not to commanding officers who gave orders to search and destroy, not to generals who methodically covered up the m o s t shocking event in American history since the Indians were cheated of their lives and land. With the reliable, non-polluting deter- gent of Time, America is trying to wash the "damn spot" of My Lai off its hands. And America may succeed, as cases are dropped, charges tempered, sentences re- duced. THEN AGAIN, we may be walking at night, wringing our hands for years to come. Because it's hard to forget the murder of 102 people - harder than most Americans now believe. -LARRY LEMPERT Associate Managing Editor Outranked "LAST SATURDAY," began the letter to the editor in the New York Post, "in an otherwise excellent editorial, you in- sist that Justice Hugo Black's successor must be a man of stature, dignity and learning." The letter was from none other than Dorothy Schiff, publisher of the Post, and she went on: "What an opportunity you have given Mr. Nixon to appoint to our highest court a highly qualified woman, thus proving himself to be less of a male chauvinist than our own Editorial Page Editor." That was a reference to James Wechs ler, who said yesterday, "I thought her note livened things up" -THE NEW YORK TIMES Sept. 22 SHE IS ageless, nameless, home- less. She is clothed in navy blue - tunic, slacks, and well-worn gym shoes - and she wears a mes- sage on her body. "Peace Pilgrim" is stitched on the front, "25,000 miles on foot for world peace" on the back. She was here Wednesday, in the midst of her now 18-year walking pilgrimage, and she spoke of ,"inner" and "outer" peace. Outer peace describes a world without war. Inner peace evolves when one lives "with the empha- sis on giving and not getting." The two require each other. PEACE PILGRIM is a vibrant woman. White-haired, with large, pale blue eyes, she exudes char- isma. She is "old." perhaps 75 or 80. Her energy, she says, "comes with inner peace." She has walked the breadth of the country to spread her mes- sage. She is a free spirit - unen- cumbered by things or close per- sonal ties, she says. She carries her worldly possessions in h e r tunic - letters, a comb, a tooth- brush, and a ball-point pen. She once owned material geles. When she left, she says, she "left no one behind w h o would worry about me." Her ac- cent is a blend of regions separat- ed by 3,000 miles. She arrived in Ann Arbor after visiting Kalamazoo and Jackson, and today she is in Detroit. Next week she will be somewhere in Indiana. Peace Pilgrim has a "magic formula" for resolving and avoid- ing conflict. "It is this," she of- fers. "Hhave as your objective the resolving of the conflict - n o t the gaining of advantage," and "be concerned that you do not offend - not that you are not of- fended." Although she speaks harshly of political parties and politicians, she has a fundamental faith in the electoral process. She admits, however, that she is not registered to vote. "I used to vote," she says, abut when I began the pilgrimage, I sort of retired from voting." WILL SHE EVER retire from walking? "Only when peace comes to the world." She has her inner peace, and her blue gym shoes. But for outer peace, the road seems to stretch mighty far, -Daily-Robert Wargo I goods, she remembers. A car, a house, money. She had achieved ''success'' in the eyes of society. But, she says, "My life was full of things, not happiness or mean- ing." And, after a 15-year "prepara- tion period" of inner peace, she began to wander in 1953. SHE DATES her life from this "spiritual awakening." She' carries no money or cloth- ing, and reliesncompletely on oth- ers for food and shelter. "I don't think of food until its offered," she says. "Once I fast- ed 45 days." "I start off in the morning, and often don't know where I'll be that night. Three-fourth of the time I'm given a bed by strangers." She walks an average of 25 miles a day, and has walked as much as 50. She makes vague long-range plans geared towards the seasons. She treks north in the summer and south in the winter - but she often makes ap- pointments in specific towns. Here, she stayed as a guest of the Rev. Edgar Edward at Guild House. Peace Pilgrim has a general schedule arranged until 1977. She plans to be back in Ann Arbor sometime in late summer, 1976. "After you've found inner peace, you have unshakable faith, a deep, abiding happiness." she says. She is confident she will see outer peace in her lifetime. Times have changed, she ob- serves. "When I began, I was but a voice in thewilderness. B tt now, people have seen the folly of war." "I've watched the youth awak- ening," she adds. "The rebellion against false values - pollution, war, materialism - and t h e search for inner peace." "They have begun to recog- nize the 'opposites', she says. "We are taught to be kind, but order- ed to kill and maim. We are taught to be generous, but told that to grab and to take is to be a success." SHE REFUSES to speak of her past, saying she has left it far behind. She admits only that she was born in a small town, and began her journey from Los An- ;'I -Daily-Robert Wargo videre: est Uredere AEC propaganda: Selling a nuclear testI During the preliminary phase of the Milrow public relations effort-policy did not permit confirming that a nuclear test would be detonated on Amchitka. Public statements were framed in such language as "deter- mining the feasibility of Amchitka for possible use in underground nuclear testing." T HIS SURPRISINGLY candid statement comes from an Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) report on the agency's public relations efforts preceding an under- ground nuclear test in the Aleutians on October 2, 1969. Called Milrow, the test was a forerunner of Cannikin, another test on Amchitka scheduled for early next month. With a force of five megatons (five million tons of TNT), Cannikin is the largest underground weapons test ever scheduled by the United States. To prepare for underground blasts though, the AEC does more than consult nuclear engineers. For months before the test, a sophisticated public relations operation is conducted to minimize opposition and encourage favor- able news media reactions. Later a detailed evaluation of the program is made. One such report was found this summer by the General Accounting Office during an investigation of the Milrow test requested by Sen. Mike Gravel (D-Alaska). For the AEC, the Amchitka Public Affairs program was a smashing success. Nineteen newsmen covered the test from the site. Two were allowed on the island while the rest remained .on the carrier Princeton, to which personnel evacuated from the island were taken. After detonation, newsmen were carried by helicopter to Amchitka. STARTING AT 9 a.m. on the day of the test, over 250 people, included nearly 100 invited guests, witnessed the preparations and the actual detonation in the Public Information Center at the Anchorage Westward Hotel, 1400 miles from the site. Attendance remained on a "Standing Room Only" basis until 2 p.m. when the formal program was completed. Reporters were later given interviews with scientists in the program and sum- maries on seismology, ecology, containment and radia- tion monitoring. For five hours, the AEC had a captive audience in the Information Center, where, as the agency's report points out, "it was possible to impress the guests-all leaders of the community-with the care taken in nuclear test- ing, and the extent of AEC safetyaprograms." SUPPORT FOR THE AEC from Alaskan newspapers was almost unanimous after the test. With the excep- tion of The Andhorage Daily News, the report claims that 'the AEC was credited with doing a good job . Several newspapers published editorials ridiculing the pre-event campaign of fear conducted by test opponents and suggesting the AEC had earned the confidence of the public." This success in the Amchitka Public Affairs program was the culmination of almost three years of work. The first announcement of the test was made on Dec. 20, 1966, Three months earlier, however, Henry G. Vermillion, director of the AEC's Office of Public Affairs, discussed possible opposition to the test with then Alaska Gov. William Egan. Until October 1969, the AEC conducted a public re- lations campaign to encourage support for the test among government officials and minimize public opposition. Alaska's Congressional delegation and state officials were given information "on a continuing basis, when- ever there was a change of personnel in these positions and whenever new developments made additional brief- ings advisable." Since the AEC felt that possible injury to the sa otters around Amchitka "might provide the most serious problem in connection with the Amchitka program", a documentary film was made on a sea otter transfer pro- gram. During 1968, distribution was limited to Alaska. In 1969, a "public information type film was edited, printed and made available for widespread general use." Widespread publicity of the sea otter program and "hundreds of showings of the sea otter film in Alaska," the AEC report says, "appeared effective in convincing the public that . . . the Amchitka sea otters would not be placed in jeopardy." Until June 1969 the AEC refused to confirm that a test was planned on Amchitka. For two and a half years the public was told only that the feasibility of using the island for a test was being studied. During the last 80 days before the test, an intensive effort was made to win public support for Milrow. Free exhibit space was obtained at Alaska's two largest fairs to show displays on Amchitka's archaeology and nuclear testing. Thousands of AEC publications were distributed. Altogether the agency estimates it reached 50,000 people at the two fairs. by pat mahoney1 IN ANCHORAGE, the Alaskan Office of Information was opened. Schools and organizations were invited to ask the office for movies, slides, briefings and conferences on AEC activities. Newspapers in Kodiak, Juneau and Fairbanks cooperated in making the sea otter film avail- able to the public. At the beginning of August, 15 Alaskan newspaper, television and radio reporters took what was planned as a 12-hour trip to Amchitka. Bad weather delayed a land- ing on the island and the trip actually lasted 40 hours, but the AEC report points out this worked to the agency's "advantage since it provided many hours of extra time for briefings, individual interviews and be- coming better acquainted with the newsmen." Even one of the AEC's supporters in Congress was eager to get favorable coverage of the Milrow test. Early in September a Seattle newsman asked to be allowed to cover the underground blast from an aircraft carrier that would be near the island at blast time. At the reconimendation of Rep. Chet Holifield (D-Calif.), news- men were allowed on the carrier. Holifield also arranged for two reporters to be on the island at the time blast. During an Anchorage press conference shortly before the blast, Holifield strongly supported the AEC test pro- gram and its safety precautions. HOLIFIELD IS chairman of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy. His close cooperation with the agency he supposedly helps to regulate hampers any Con- gressional attempt to exert some control over the AEC. While details of the AEC's promotion efforts for the Cannikin test this year have not surfaced, it seems un- likely that the agency's tactics have changed. When public hearings were held in May, the AEC flew dozens of officials to Alaska. In July, about 60 Alaskan legisla- tors, civic leaders and reporters were given a glamorous all-expense trip to Las Vegas by the AEC. CONGRESS, however, seems unaware of or unwilling to do anything about the AEC's promotion operation. Opposition to Cannikin has become so strong that a ban on the test, "unless the President gives his direct ap- proval" was inserted in an appropriations bill passed Wednesday by Congress. No matter what decision the President reaches, though, the AEC's well-oiled propa- ganda machine will remain intact. 4 j J jiL.7711 .. 'V ('V I Z , . ii. sI 4 r r Letters to The Daily: Taylor recall dispute k I"- To The Daily: BY NOW many students know of the drive to recall Brad Taylor from SGC for his "friendly wit- ness" testimony before the House Internal Security Committee. They have heard how he malign- ed individuals and groups involved in the Peoples' Peace Treaty con- ference, and may have noticed how Taylor's story keeps chang- ing as new facts or more atten- tion to old ones force him to es- calate the level of deceit. Rather than go over the substance of his Wilson, was also subpoenaed by HISC - he was glad to comply and they were glad to play host to him. For Taylor, too, the order was a formality: this we know because he provided much more informa- tion than the law or the subpoena required (even lying when t h a t went over well), and providing photographs he didn't take and still refuses to account for. A photograph is as good as a name. and many students at the confer- ence may be haunted for years by TT ",r cqanrnu e raiim that the former Un-American Activities Committee is quite another. Tay- lor objects to our once using the phrase "Conspiratorial Right,"' which we hereby withdraw as mis- leading, but HISC and its agents are nothing more than a perm- anent conspiracy against the Bil) of Rights. A final point: In a reckless at- tempt to divert attention from his own acts, Taylor accuses the Recall Committee of plotting "to further their own political ambi- tions by stealing his SGC seat for themselves." For one who will- appointive seat. If we are haras- sed, we will announce this pub- licly, and the voters may decide if Taylor, who says what he did is "no big deal," has changed his ways since subjecting Brian Spears, Robert Williams and oth- ers to harrassment and anxiety. If in fact none of us run for SGC, chalk it up as one more gratuitous lie from a master of past deceit. -The Committee to Recall Brad Taylor Sept. 20 sonable eating places in town. (I recommend their lime shakes). Also I think you might have mentioned a horror to come: an- other copy of Gino's nearing com- pletion under its brash red roof on the corner of State and Wash- ington. Not only will this place continue the familiar Gino's tra- dition of greasy chicken and soggy fries but as we gulp down these treats we can reflect that this new Gino's occupies the site of a Civil War house (set off by lawn, flow- ers and trees) that a delay in the enactment of Michigan Preserva- -MRHUer., ice --N7 x 1% TV V-1 I