r Cambodia Ele £frilign Daith Eighty-four years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Wednesday, March 12, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 1 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 UF W boycott worthy cause ANN ARBOR'S UNITED Farm Work- er sympathizers are once 'again trying to drum up local support for the union cause. The same folks who made table lettuce a cause celebre a few years back have now shifted their emphasis to a more vintage staple-table wine, specifically the Gallo. Brothers pro- ducts that can be found gracing the shelves of nearly every local party and grocery store. The Gallo label is in most cases easily identified and avoided, unlike nonunion iceberg lettuce which in many cases, even carries a symbol similar to the UFW's Aztec eagle. The year-long wine boycott has met with considerable success to date. Gallo profits reportedly are down nearly 16 per cent from last year. At the same time, the gigantic California-based winery has been forced to boost its advertising budget from six million to thirteen million dollars. A CCORDING TO LOCAL UFW boy- cott organizers, Gallo sales in Ann Arbor have dropped off fifty per cent. As enthusiastic as support has been across the nation, chances are the Gallo Brothers will prevail in their efforts to crush the UFW's progres- sive inroads in the grape industry unless more consumers pick. up the UFW banner and refuse to buy scab products. On this campus as elsewhere, what once were causes are now cliche, and it is easy for many people to dismiss the farm workers plight as too re- mote or even imagined by those over- ly anxious for an activist cause to latch onto. US. aid By RICHARD BOYLE THEN REBEL artillery hit a U.S. cargo plane flying supplies into Phnom Penh last week, the shells were U.S. made 105 mm howitzer rounds, sold to the rebels by Lon Nol's generals. While examples of corruption are widely known, senior U.S. Embassy officials will only admit to them in "off the record" briefings. It was at such a briefing last year that the acting ambassador, Thomas Enders, just before his departure, told this reporter the Lon Nol generals were more interested in "creating their own private armies" than winning the war. He said the generals, competing with rival officers for U.S. aid, tattle on each other by showing "little black books" filled with gossip. Although it is commonly known by high ranking embassy officials and the press that much of the military aid, such as the howitzer shells, often helps the rebels more than the Lon Nol government, that information is not relayed to Congress. The vintage 105 mm howitzers, which were captured last year from fleeing Lon Nol troops, are the largest and most accurate artillery pieces used by the rebels. However, neither the Soviet Union nor China, which uses either 100 mm or 130 mm rounds for their medium guns, could supply the rebels with howitzer ammunition. So the rebels were forced to buy the shells from Lon Nol's generals who were more than own This is just the sort of attitude the Gallo Brothers are counting on and other union busters of greater or lesser stature are counting on. The uninformed public is all too willing to ridicule as sensationalistic the ef- forts of Cesar Chavez and his cohorts to ease the plights of workers. WHAT THEY DON'T understand is that the Gallos, along with the Guild and Franz California wineries turned out the UFW last year without the benefit of secret ballots. The growers were aided in their power play by the Teamsters, who somehow emerged from a private session with a lucrative contract that completely eliminated all the benefits the UFW had struggled for over the previous years. The teamsters interest in the agri- culture is easy to understand if not to condone. In California alone there is a $7.7 billion agribusiness. The teamsters hope to control the workers and thus their product from farm to market-in effect, a monopoly on distribution. The truckers' union's concern for the farm workers' condi- tion obviously doesn't measure up with its concern for spreading the union bureaucracy throughout the agricultural industry. DESPITE REPEATED DENIALS from the growers, all the workers are really asking for is the right to an honest, secret-ballot election. That's not much to ask-just the same con- sideration guaranteed every labor group by federal law. If you are in the market for wine, try to remember that more than taste and'slogans are on the line. wor r glad to make an extra profit by selling the shells to their enemies. The Lon Nol government has so far been successful in clamping a lid on this information. For example, when Lynn Newland of UPI began work last spring on the story of the sale of 105 mm shells, he was visited by two members of Lon Nol's secret police, who expressed "great displeasure" with his investiga- tion. The message to Newland and other journalists was clear - the Lon Nol government, which had expelled several journalists and censored all news copy, would not tolerate the filing of stories about corruption. Al- though Lon Nol's generals continued to sell not only 105 mm artillery ammunition to the rebels, but mortar and M-16 automatic rifle ammunition as well, further reports were stonewalled by threats. Senior U.S. embassy officials freely admit to the press in "off the record" briefings that the Lon Nol generals are corrupt, but they tell a different story in reports to Washington or in interviews with con- gressmen. In fact, embassy personnel have consistent- ly lobbied for increased military aid to the Lon Nol government, knowing that much of that aid is simply pocketed by corrupt generals. Thomas Enders, the lanky charge d'affairs of the U.S. embassy in Cambodia, served as acting ambassa- dor until he was replaced last March by John Gun- 4t ene M ther Dean. In his last. "off the record" briefing, he told this reporter and about a dozen others what he really thought of the U.S. aid program - for "in- formational purposes" and "background" only. The reporters asked Enders about the alleged de- fection of an entire rebel battalion to the Lon Nol side. The Lon Nol government, which had ballyhooed the defection as a sign of rebel demoralization, want- ed Enders to put the 600-man unit on the U.S. payroll, equipped with new M-16 rifles. Enders refused, know- ing that the battalion would probably quickly "de- fect" back to the rebels, with pockets full of money and new rifles. Enders said that Lon Nol generals had frequently re- quested that defecting battalions be added to the U.S. payroll, but he had refused. He noted that often gen- erals would try to add more battalions in an effort to get more money. Many of these units were padded by non-existent soldiers, the so-called "phantom" army. Each general would try to get the U.S. embassy to finance as many battalions as possible, Enders said, so they could create their own fiefdoms. In the Byzan- tine world of Cambodian politics, the more battalions a warlord had, the better his chances in a coup, or counter coup and, of course, the more money he could make. "All they want around here," Enders stated, "is their own private armies." In Tam, the warlord of Battambang, for instance, told Enders he knew of several rebel battalions ready to defect, but only to In Tam personally. Enders added that in the competition for the aid - sometimes the U.S. spends as much as one and a half million dollars a day - the generals would come to the embassy to tattle on other warlords. "They carried little black books," Enders said, which con- tained nasty information and tidbits of gossip about rivalIs. Other U.S. officials voiced similar complaints about blatant misuse of American aid, but seldom for publi- cation. For example, Ney Si Chan, the province chief of Kampot, a coastal town, melted down U.S. artillery shells, sent as military aid, and soid the scrap metal to the Thais. He was later replaced after the Lon Nol army suffered a disastrous military defeat there, due in part to the lack of ammunition. U.S. officials also admit, "off the record," that the aid has contributed to the spiraling inflation, now over 250 per cent per year. Even the so-called human- itarian assistance, shipments of rice and other food, has been squandered. Much of the rice, meant for re- f~gees, ended up in the Phnom Penh black market, where it was sold at inflated prices. But possibly most painful for the embassy officials to admit, is the fact that without the U.S. military aid, the Khmer Rouge would soon run out of ammuni- tion for their captured 105 howitzers. In effect, it seems, the U.S. government is supplying both sides. Richard Boyle worked as a reporter in Indochina in 1965, 1969, and 1971, and 1974 and has been wound- ed twice. Copyright, 1975. Pacific News Service. pan jewelry d will begin When you look at Indian jewelry, think about how Native Americans are forced renness. If to sell their culture in order to survive ore matrix) in a capitalistic economy. Indians only bably cheap get a small share of the profit since the factories are owned by entrepreneu- exture. If it ers and even the handcrafted work pass- Scoop: Master of sidestep QENATOR HENRY "SCOOP" Jackson (D-Washington) is running full speed along the 1976 Presidency track, trying to jump the hurtles set up by critics who label him dull and without charisma. Scoop entered the race in 1972 when he made a pass at the nomination, attacking McGovern, and alienating party liberals with his hawkish views on Vietnam. Jackson has been chugging uphill in his battle to gain recognition from the press. Although he has logged 23 years in the Senate, he lacks firm leadership qualities and incisive in- sights into the nation's problems. Jackson has no remedies for the na- tion's two biggest headaches-the economic crisis and our foreign af- fairs policy. TODAY'S STAFF: News: Jay Levin, Jim NicolI, Cheryl Pilate, Cathy Reutter, Jeff Ristine, Stephen Selbst, Jeff Sorensen, Dav- id Whiting Editorial Page: Paul Haskins, Sara Rimer, Steve Stojic Arts Page: George Lobsenz Photo Technicians: Stu Hollander, Karen Kosmauski JACKSON DID STRIKE a severe blow at detente by co-sponsoring the Soviet trade bill with'Senator Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) which called for an easing of Soviet-Jewish emigration laws. Battered by the 1972 disaster the Democratic Party badly needs fresh ideas and talent. Although the Demo- crats swept the November elections, their overwhelming success repre- sented more a voter rebellion against Watergate, the economy and the Re- publicans than a Democratic man- date. If the economic crisis remains in full gear, President Ford's chances at reelection will be slim. The coun- try is striving for a leader. From a state that is economically dependent on large defense contracts with Boeing Aircraft Corporation, Jackson has long been a staunch ad- vocate of the Defense Department. Jackson pushed our involvement in Vietnam right up until the last U.S. soldier was pulled out. As Jackson works at glossing up his image for the American public he will continue to waver on specific programs and guard against alienat- ing any party members. U.S. rice being unloaded by Lon Not government soldier. All airlifted rice is being stockpiled exclusive- ly for military use. R0poffs on native Amerh By CONNIE HEALY YOU'VE SEEN IT worn, admired it or owned it - the so-called "authen- tic" A m e r i c a n Indian turquoise and silver jewelry. Unfortunately, if it was made to be sold to you it's a rip-off on Native American culture. Most of it is mass-produced, and some of it is manu- factured in sweat shops employing ex- ploited Indian labor. The real Indian jewelry is made, not for sale, but for ceremonials marking turning points in a person's life: birth, initiation, marriage, and death. Once worn it is sacred and treated as part of the wearer, bearing whatever signi- ficance occasioned its offering. Imitations of this work are now sold in half a dozen Ann Arbor stores. They are often overly ornate, made of thin, machine-stamped metal and cheap tur- quoise dyed to look high quality. AUTHENTIC Indian jewelry has its origin in the craft of three tribes living in the southwestern United States - the Hopi, the Zuni, and the Navaho. They learned silverworking techniques from the Spanish in the eighteenth century, and each uses silver and turquoise in a traditional way. Navaho work is set off by the bold use of a single stone centered in silver. The Zuni characteristically inlay coral and turquoise into their silver, and the Hopi overlay their silver, usually without any stones at all. With the sacred blue turquoise's bur- geoning popularity among tourists, re- putable Indian craftspeople have opened shows in places like Santa Fe and Al- buquerque where they sell jewelry and teach others their craft. Most commercial jewelry is manufac- tured on assembly lines, in the western United States, Czechoslavakia and Jap- an, or assembled out of kits. A WORKER at a local craft shop ex- plained how commercial jewelry merits its "Indian made' label, "The Indians just buy the piece of jewelry and pop the stone in or they operate the machin- ery at marginal wages. Ways to spot the more blatant fakery are: -leave the stone out in the sun for several hours and check for grease. If the turquoise is light-colored and cheap, the fat in which it was boiled or the grease in which it was soake to come off; -examine the color's ev there aren't black lines (iron running through it, it is pro turquoise; -check the surface for to ms':imsmmmE S Wfl.5W4.asamN##isilaammtV...#5% S * 5.555 5 "Those people who buy the jewelry in the stores, who of them has seen inside a medicine box? For the white person to wear the pieces is for me to wear a plastic cross." .;: r,{.ism aa.::;:;-{^.°" ,,.e : iA;r i , mm rit$;~ii!dYT:J$': ^v:": '":. ''t " '.iTi ,,r'Jf i1{ ' : ' is smooth and highly glossed, the piece is probably mass-produced; and -Jewelry made from kits can be re- cognized by its garish, even grotesque appearance and its many large stones. The metal in manufactured jewelry is usually thin and discernible through stamped dyes. The mass produced work's high polish is obtained from professional lapidaries who process the turquoise in large quan- tities. While the mass-produced pieces usually do not bear any identification, smith-crafted jewelry will probably bear a proud identifying mark, often on the piece's inside. es through middle hands before it reach- es the consumer. Craftspeople must compromise their sacred traditions in order to make their traditions appealing to strangers. People with money can buy good taste, but not good culture. "I can feel the heaviness of a piece that has been fasted over," says a Native American silversmith who lives in Ann Arbor. "Those people who buy the jewelry in the stores, who of them has seen inside a medicine box? For the white person THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL rsew Newngaw Sysdkw e. IM ..7 ,,#.. to war plastic the pieces is for me to wear a cross." l Letters. To The Daily: I HAVE TODAY sent the fol- lowing open letter to my ad- versaries, Mr. William Bronson and Ms. Judy Gibson, in the Fourth Ward race for the City Council seat: Without question, my chief frustration in this campaign - and I'm sure yours - is that when the voters finally go to the polls April 7 most will know virtually nothing about us - about how, apart from party lab- els, we really do think, believe, feel, or act. We each seek as much public awareness as pos- sible for the principle reason that we only want the public to know who and what we really are. I speak honestly when I say that I know of no butter way to reveal widely our true positions, temperaments, pten- Fourth Ward debates periods, each for a length of 45 minutes. If creating an honest and full impression of ourselves is what we each genuinely seek, then we would be remiss not to use all three debate oppor- tunities. PLEASE KNOW my real in- tention: I do not challenge you publicly to three debates, hop- ing that you'll decline or remain silent. Byno means do I wish this. Rather, if you believe in your principles - which I'm sure you do -as much vs I believe in mine, then surely you, as I, will fly to the opportunity to promote and defend those principles. If our views are so weak as to be untenable when encountered, then xe ought not to be Council members. It is from a position of strengtn, Shen, tives on issues as answer ques- tions side by side. PROMOTION OF these debat- es, 'as our letter from the Cable Commission reads, 'is the re- sponsibility of the candidate." Display ads in the Ann Arbor News are our best outlet; and since the debates will allow each of us to present to a wide aud- ience our true selves, should we not share equally thecost of the ads? We must also find someone to operate the video- tape equipment, and someone to act as an impartial moderator, but these are minor details we can work out together. Finally this: my m )to for this campaign - a orilliant line from John Stuart Mill's "On Lib- erty" - is, "He who knows only his own side of the case, knows Palestinians To The Daily: THE Palestinian people were unjustly displaced from their lands in 1948 when Israel w a s created by, force in Pales:ine. The United States supported the creation of Israel under these circumstances, and continues to oppose the Palestinians' rights of equality in their land. Israel has the audacity to call herself the only democracy in the Middle East; the only "fra.&' country in the area. We submit to you that Israel has never been democratic and free. Israel was created in opposition !o the wishes of two-thirds of the popu- lace of Palestine, Israel h a s continued to deny not only equal righbts to these nenle.but ceven urged J oppression of the Palestinian people, the deprivation of the Palestinian heritage, and their human rights as stated in the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights. This "honor" further alienates the U.S. from the Third World reality and only further under- mines the U.S. position in the Mid-East as a peace seeking party. SEARCH asks you to boy- cott this honorary convocation. By so doing we will be showing our disapproval of the Univer- sity's acceptance of Israel's pol- icy of constant and continued oppression of the Palestinian people, implied in its honoring an Israeli minister of govern- ment. NO *0m