eSfiaun DaiI Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan POW wiyes: Braying the Pentagon's fire 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. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT SCHREINER Fleming and heis police AS THE FUSS subsides over the regental "alteration" of the Office of Student Services' policy on job recruiting by cor- porations coitplicit in racist and sexist activities, two other important issues re-' main for the University community to examine. First there is the entire issue of the openness in which such meetings are held and secondly ,and perhaps more im- portantly, there is the question of the use of police officers as a means of curb- ing dissent within the University. A 1969 ruling of Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley stated that the governing boards of state institutions must conduct official busi- ness at open meetings; yet the locked doors of the Administration Bldg. last week surely constitute a clear violation of the spirit, if not the letter, of that ruling. President Fleming, fearing disruption, attempted to circumvent the law by im- plementing a "pass". rrequirement for admission to the meeting. While this policy might have been con- sidered defensible if properly administ- ered, the actual manner in which t h e pass policy was instituted was not. Stu- dents and members of the public were not advised that such a policy was in existence prior to the. meeting; and no information as to where and when such passes were available was disseminated to the University community by the office of the president. Upon arrival at the meeting many found that without prev- iously-obtained passes they were barred from witnessing the supposedly open Re- gents meeting. To further heighten the frustration of those wishing to attend the meeting, the lobby of the Administration Bldg. was visibly full of police officers and Uni- versity security personnel. When several of those outside the building eventually attempted to enter through a side door these was a scuffle and two arrests re- sulted. THE EVENTS that occurred last Friday were highly predictable, however. Though one might suggest that if a building is occupied, or large numbers of students congregate in front of the Ad- ministration Bldg., police action becomes essential, that misses the point. The rea- sons why students must resort to such tactics comes as a result of their general impotence within the Univerity's system of governance. Consequently, their sup- pression by police is, in a sense, limiting their dissent. Two cases present themselves when Fleming has used police against students after legitimate attempts to influence decision-making failed to elicit positive response from the University. In Sept., 1969 107 students sitting in at the LSA Bldg. were forcibly arrested. The students were protesting regental re- fusal to establish a student-faculty con- trolled bookstore. And they had done so for nearly a month, more peacefully at first - discussing their demands with the Regents and pointing to a student refer- endum in which a clear majority had vot- ed for a student-controlled bookstore. But the administration arrogantly ig- nored the student drive, until the ooccu- pation of the LSA Bldg. A second example was the demonstra- tion last March outside the Administra- tiol Bldg. by the Black Action Movement (BAM). BAM and its supporters w e r e demanding increased minority group enrollment at the University, b u t their demands were turned down at the meeting. They had presented their de- mands in weeks prior to the meeting - discussing the matter with Fleming and the Regents, but in vain. Thus a demon- stration was the only recourse, and alert- ed by the University, police arrested four persons - all black. THERE HAVE ALSO been cases where the summoning of police has result- ed in the exacerbation of the existing situation. At a protest last year against the use of University-subsidized placement fa- cilities by the General Electric Corp. -- involved in the manufacture of war ma- terial used against Vietnamese and in business - with South Africa's apartheid government - the arrival of police re- sulted in a riot which ended with .a dozen arrests. The protests had been peaceful until police began to take video-tape pic- tures of the protesters. A FINAL consequence of using police on campus, with the chaos virtually in- herent in the decision to use their serv- ices, is the creation of mistrust and fear of students by members of the public. Distorted and over-dramatized, coverage of student protest by the more irrespon- sible elements of the press combined with the willingness and eagerness of many politicians to make political hay out of the situation has taken its toll also. Such are the consequences which police intervention brings. And clearly the fault lies with Fleming. If he would concede genuine power to make decisions to the students at the University,' there would never be a need for our campus to re- semble a battlefield. So far he has not, and he promises no change in his orienta- tion. The response of students to this policy should not surprise him. -JONATHAN MILLER By SEYMOUR M. HERSH Third in a five-part series WASHINGTON - Throughout 1970, America's sym- pathy instinctively went out to the wives and families of the missing and captured men. During the year, millions of Americans signed petitions asking Hanoi to stop mistreating the captured men. Hundreds of thousands of letters were mailed to Communist capitols around the world urging officials to pressure Hanoi into implementing all of the provisions of the Geneva Convention. Most of the Senate and more than 400 of the 435 members of the House expressed dismay and outrage over the treatment of United States prisoners. The Post Office issued a special stamp commemorating their cap- tivity. Wives and mothers of the missing and captured men formed groups and clubs around the nation - with. a national office in Washington - demanding that the Nixon Administration do all it could for their men. Bumper stickers said: "Don't Let Them Be Forgotten." A poll conducted by Gallup International showed that most Americans who had heard about the treat- ment of prisoners inside North Vietnam believed they were being tortured and beaten, receiving poor care and medical attention, and were not allowed to communicate with their families. Only seven percen of those queried thought the Aemrican prisoners were "treated well," while 33 percent said they were sure that the Vietnamese had killed prisoners. The Administration seemed to have little to do with these impromptu outpourings. By early 1971, military men were angrily rejecting the notion that the pub- licity over the prisoner issue was in any way aimed at public opinion. YET, SHORTLY after the decision to go public was made in May, 1969, newsmen were told and wrote that Secretary Laird and other officials believed the prisoner issue coulld be used to turn world opinion against Hanoi: it would "deflect some of the heat" over Vietnam from the U.S. to North Vietnam. In addition, there is a great deal of evidence - made available privately to me by wives and mothers - the the government had far more to do with creating the cast amount of publicity over the prisoner issue than it has acknowledged. In fact, the Pentagon's attitude toward the wives and mothers - particularly those whose men are listed as missing - can be described as a dual one: it is both extremely considerate and extremely purposeful. On details sueh as pay and allowances, the military - aided by sympathetic Congressmen - has been anx- ious to ease the situation for the suffering families of prisoners. The prisoners' famiiles have been provided with extended GI education and home loan benefits, a chance to invest unlimited savings at 10 per cent interpst. (other families may invest up to $10,000), and special per- mission to utilize military transportation when avail- able. MOST WIVES and parents have had nothing but the highest praise for the military's tact in initially in- forming them of their new status. All four services have special personnel sections dealing with the missing and captured families, and each family is provided the name of an officer or whom they can call for personal help or comfort. Most of the family members, especially the wives, share their husband's love of the service. Anti-war de- monstrators are anathema to the families and difficult for the wives and mothers to understand. The families are loath to do or say anyhing publicly that could hurt their pilot's careers. The women, by and large, have one major point of view in common: they will do whatever the Pentagon tells them to. The Pentagon began asking them to do things since shortly after the May news conference making the POW issue public. On July 25, Air Force wives were told of a relaxing of policy regarding newspaper interviews with the next of kin. "As you may have been aware," a private letter to them said, "such interviews were discouraged in the past. However, our government now believes that more pub- licity concerning the plight of our missing in action and captured members and their families may result in better treatment for American prisoners and their even- tual release." Those family members who wanted to speak out were advised to call on the information office of the Air Force for help, because the men there can "offer guid- ance as to what can be expected during the interview and how it can be most effectively handled." THE RESULTS. of the policy were quickly apparent as stories began appearing around the country about wives and mothers "breaking their self-imposed si-' lence," as one newspaper said, to speak out on Hanoi's treatment of their men. To dramatize their plight, the wives - armed with the Frishman account of inhumanity inside N o r t h Vietnamese prisons - began making a series of around- the-world trips seeking support and information. The trips, initiated by the women themselves, were usually financed by local newspapers, television stations, or civic clubs. There is no direct evidence that the Pentagon or any other federal agency initiated the first few trips over- seas or financed any of them, but the Pentagon certainly attempted to encourage such trips. On October 7, 1969, Air Force wives received another private letter from the service, discussing the Paris trips. "Although the government does not feel this pro- cedure is proper in view of he existence of established channels for exchange of such information," the Air Force letter said, "we do not intend to stand in the way of any family members who might decide to travel to Paris." The next paragraph told wives how to apply for passports and offered to assist them with military ad- visers while in Paris. Wives whose husbands were shot down over, Laos were urged to write the North Vietnamese and say only that he was "downed by North Vietnamese forces in Southeast Asia." The reason, said the Air Force, was that such an approach would "thus (avoid) forcing the North Vietnamese to admit their' involvement in the complex Laotian situation." At the time, of course, it was the United States which was refusing to acknowledge that American bombers were operating at will inside Laos. The family's pressure on the North Vietnamese at 4 Paris tied in neatly with the Administration's posture at the peace talks. On Dec. 6, 1969, Ambassador Lodge left his post in Paris and a few days later President Nixon, in what the North construed to be a deliberate downgrading of the meetings, named career diplomat Philip C. Habib to head the American delegation. Habib, obviously acting under instructions from Washington, elevated the prisoner issue at the weekly meetings to the top of the American agenda. Among other things, he attacked Hanoi's refusal to provide a list of the men captured. It was a valid criticism; many strong anti-war leaders inside the United States could not understand why Hanoi refused to provide such lists, although its refusal was consistent with its adamant legal p o s i t i o n that none of the provisions of the Geneva Convention was applicable. The wives and mothers were a handy asset for the American war of words, yet the' Administration could never be direct about it. Family members were often as- sisted by French-speaking wives of embassy members, and lunched with military aides to the embassy. Others told how, before going back home, they planned to stop off in Washington for a "debriefing" by officials. One father of a prisoner said the embassy even mimeograph- ed a statement he had written for the press. AS THE PUBLIC relations drive for better treatment of the American prisoners grew in late 1969, so did the efforts of the Pentagon to broaden the involvement of the families. That fall, Air Force family members were carefully told in private letters that the service was being urged by Congressmen and Senators for lists of con- stituents whose sons or husbands were missing or cap- tured in North Vietnam. "If you desire that your name and address be made available to your Senator or Representative upon his request, it will not be necessary for you to advise us of your decision," said an Air Force letter. "However, should you prefer to maintain your anonymity, we ask that you notify us of this in writing by 24 October 1969 (seven- teen days after the date of the letter). In the case of those whom we have not heard from by that datewe will assume that their permission has been given." In November, the Air Force letters included advice for the family members on how tq give interviews with reporters. "It is suggested that the best way to handle the interview is to use a humanitarian approach, e.g., my children and I are required to bear additional anxieties because the enemy refuses to release welfare information concerning my husband: this is in violation of the Geneva Convention" Wives were told that, it "would be in your best interest not to discuss the situation in terms of national policy or politics as relates to our involovement in South- east Asia. The rationale for this recommendation is that policy and politics are not germaine to the disregard of the Geneva Convention by the enemy." There is no record that any wife ever publicly pro- tested over the Pentagon's efforts to encourage them to participate in the public debate: most of the women simply had taken the Frishman account of torture at face value and were desperate to do anything that could help their men. WHAT FEW FACTS were available were inevitably exaggerated. Thus one wife, Mrs. Ivan Appleby, in the midst of an around-the-world trip in early 1970, told a group of skeptical English journalists that prisoners in North Vietnam had been hung to walls, h a d t h e i r fingernails pulled out, their knuckles broken and re- broken, and kept in solitary confinement for years. Mr. William Tschudy of Virginia Beach, Virginia; told a magazine writen that "in some places they just dig holes in the ground and drop them (the prisoners) in. They throw food down to them, and let them live there in their own waste." @ Reporters News Service 4 1 x 4 $ Ignoring women's courses UNDERGRADUATE, graduate and fac- ulty women from all over the Mid- west met in Chicago last weekend to dis- cuss the future of women's education about women. And the information that came to light there showed that the University, despite its "affirmative action plan" for women, has made less of an attempt than several other schools to include courses dealing with 'women in its curriculum. While curricula at most schools are de- ficient in this respect, some schools at least appear to be making efforts. For ex- ample, entire curricula are devoted to wo- men at San Diego and Cornell. The State University of New York at Buffalo has a huge introductory course, including a section for mature women, as well as half a dozen more specialized advanced cours- es. All of these are working closely with women's liberation groups in their cities. Yet the University, supposedly an inno- vator among the.nation's schools of high- er education, has a mere sprinkling of courses in women. A FEW OF the things that have been left out: Women Authors Roles of women in Literature Shakespeare's women Women in the Media History of Women's Liberation History of women in America World History of women Women in primative cultures Cave women Matriarchies Sociology of women Roleplaying Consumerism Women and capitalism Philosophy of women's oppression History of women artists Women and the law The list is endless. There is a v a s t amount that has b e e n totally ignored. The invisible woman is nowhere to be seen in most textbooks, courses, and de- partments. There is so much that is still unknown about women. Research is just beginning to unearth the true roles t h a t women have played from the frontier days of American history. What is known of wo- men in the past, present and future is not widely available or taught. Most re- mains to be learned. (TILL, THE University is expending no effort in this area. If the University were committed to a serious attempt to respond to the sentiment and education- al desires of its students and society, it is difficult to see how it could fail to con- sider committing money and facilities for LETTERS TO THE DAILY Creating a radical women's studies program To The Daily: AFTER SEVENTEEN or so years of school one would get the impression that one half (actual- ly 51 per cent) of the population had done ABSOLUTELY NOTH- ING in building this nation. Our textbooks, our teachers, o u r courses very rarely spend any time talking about the role women have played, in our nation and throughout the world. We a r e lucky to see even a paragraph de- voted to the womens suffrage movement, even in the more lib- eral texts. Long before women's suffrage the women in this country were active, both in the sweatshops of this nation and fighting for free- dom for other oppressed groups. Do they think we can be satisfied by being told that behind every great man there is a woman? I'm afraid that just won't do any long- er. History is the history of the white male. Psychology is the normality of the white male. Sociology talks about the nuclear family - an oppressive institution for women. The list is endless. ONE WAY to make our educa- tion relevant to us as women, as well as raise the consciousness of the men around us, is to demand the University establish a women's studies program, under the con- trol of women students. Courses on women, and on what vomen have contributed to society are long overdue. Women's studies programs at other universities (Cornell, S a n Diego, and American University) can give us models to work with, but clearly we have to establish a program particular to the needs and wishes of women students at Michigan. Here are some of the ideas that have been talked about: -The program or t h e center could possibly coordinate general academic counseling f o r women (to end the University policy of pushing women into certain fields such as English and psychology and away from the technical skills.) We would hope that University women will come up with many other ideas for developing a com- plete, radical women studies pro- gram. SURE THERE a r e many de- mands and issues that women can bring up in relation to their fight f o r a womens studies program. Won't we need free 24-hour day care for the children of new wo- men faculty that we will be hir - ing? (as well as women students taking the courses?) We might al- so feel we need many of the class- es taught at night to make it possible for working women to at- by women students, taught by wo- men faculty) will not be an easy task. As with every other legiti- mate student demand, the Uni- versity does not listen until we be- gin to yell. Then they tell us thcy have no money. No money for in- creased black enrollment, no mon- ey for the AFSCME workers, no money for day care, and no mon- ey for housing. Well, we believe the University has orcangget the money or all these things, and that it has the social responsibility and rabliga- tion to do so. It chooses right now to spend its money in other -xays. For women to win a meaningful and relevant womens studies pro- gram we will have to build mass, visable support. -Nancy Wechsler '71 Highest contempt To The Daily: Because of your attempt to cre- ate another "faggot issue" trying to set one oppressed community against another I must regard you with the highest contempt possi- ble and charge you with complic- ity along with the University in attempting to polarize the pro- gressive forces of this community. We recognize the importance of some of the issues being raised by Women's Liberation and the Gay Liberation Front and encourage them to intensify their struggles. However, our quest is to make a Revolution, a Black Revolution in- volving the reshaping of the prior- ities and values of the black com- munity. We want our men to be men, to be warriors! We want our women to bear our children and to give us love and inspiration to fight on - for this is as Allah intended. Your attempt to change the issue raises the question as to whether 4- $