C4e M1,4,* gan ma4*11 Eighty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Alumnus asks halt to covert' CIA Friday, September 24, 1976 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Ohustlers and hucksters JIMMY CARTER, according to for- mer house speaker John McCormack, has "the vision of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the courage of Harry S. Truman, the intellect of John F. Ken- nedy and the compassion of Lyndon B. Johnson." It is debatable as to whether or not these are accurate comparisons, but it's hard to imagine Harry Tru- man or Franklin Roosevelt giving an interview to Playboy Magazine, though the periodical orientation has increased in recent years. It is quite easy to see that this is an odd election year: a pair of cam- paigns based predominantly on non- issues, one candidate an ice age slick- ster ,the other one a Pepsodent-flash without exception . . . and both of them straining to be media-popular with the whole affair appearing as a Kafkaesque joke. Trouble is, it's a borderline case. You can't tell if it is for real or If it's just a cruel joke. Carter said he doesn't think one man should con- sider himself better than another if that other guy goes around and "screws" a lot of women. Well, that is a little surprising for a presidential candidate to say, but as long as at least one candidate seems to have di- rection, he should carry it to its fur- thest extreme so we know exactly where we're sitting. He should have given the interview to Hustler, and spiced it up some for these purposes. So, unless we make the candidates go to extremes to show us their true colors, we're wasting our time. As Dickens said, "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times." And that applies to us especially. Moreover, he should have said "it was the oddest of times" because it cer- tainly is now. TODAY'S STAFF: News: James Tobin, Jeffrey Ristine, William Turque, Stuart McGonnell Editorial Page: Robert Meachum, Thomas Stevens, Jon Pansius, Lisa Zisook Arts Page: Lois Josimovich, Michael Jones Photo Technician: Scott Eccker CAPTAIN TRUT- UORThY~ Editor's note: The following open letter to University Presider ben Fleming. By JAMES HIPPS AS A 1976 GRADUATE of the 1 sity of Michigan I am great cerned by the possibility of the ence of covert relations betwe< University and the Central Intel Agency. In its final report issued in the Senate Select Committee on gence reported that the CIA car clandestine activities on over 100 ican campuses. The Committee "It is the responsibility of priv stitutions and particularly the An academic community to set the sional and ethical standards of its bers." As an alumnus, I call on university president to accept ti sponsibility and take action to e secret CIA presence on campus. The Senate Select Committee's revealed a wide range of CIA ac which raise important questions the independence and integrity University. For your information, enclosing a copy of the relevant ages, which you will note were "a ed" at the CIA's request. IN THE PAST, according to t port, the CIA secretly funded ind professors and even whole depar to carry out secret research and erwise perform covert missions f CIA. In his Executive Order of] ary 18, 1976, President Ford ga CIA authority to contract for sec: search - with knowledge of th involvment limited to "appropriat Nuke WITH NUCLEAR POWER slated to play a major role in South American develop- ment, concern is mounting that the region could become the scene of a nuclear arms race. Already Argentina and Brazil - traditional rivals - have joined the nuclear club. Brazil, whose atomic energy plants are being built by West Ger- many, will soon have an atomic fuel reprocessing facility cap- able of producing atomic bombs. Shortly after Brazil and West Germany concluded their nu- clear agreement, the influential Jornal do Brasil predicted that Brazil would build a bomb once it had the capacity to do so. Unlike Argentina, Brazil has not signed the Nuclear Non- Proliferation Pact. BRAZIL'S FIRST NUCLEAR plant will go into operation next year, while Argentina al- ready generates 11 per cent of its electricity by nuclear power. But the greater sophistication of the Brazilian nuclear system has led to calls in Argentina for more nuclear development. Both countries have been trying to develop nuclear power since the early 1950s - Brazil to com- plement its inadequate oil and coal resources, and Argentina as a hedge against depletion of its plentiful oil deposits. Latin American nations, many of which joined the non-aligned Third World movement three years ago, were either absent or strangely silent during the recently concluded Conference of Non-Aligned Nations in Co- lombo, Sri Lanka. The low-level participation was seen as a sign of the continuing rightward shift among Latin American governments. Chile, for exam- ple, an enthusiastic supporter of non-alignment at the 1973 con- ference, was conspicuous by its absence. And Peru, which has hosted similar conferences in the past, was virtually silent. O F T H E S E V E N Latin American nations that are full members of the non-aligned movement - as well as the 10 observer countries - only Pan- ama sent a top-level delegation, headed by Gen. Omar Torrijos, who was appointed a vice pres- ident of the conference. Among the full members, Jamaica was the only other Latin American country to come out in strong support of the socialist econom- ic policies adopted by the con- ference. Just a month after the deaths of two top guerrilla leaders activitie, an for officials of the academic institutions Rob- and to senior project officials." Those officials presumably would include you and a few other key administrators and professors. ver- However, unless your a.lministration con- alerts the University community as z xist- whole, lower level professors, research- the ers and students may unwittingly be ence enlisted to work for the CIA on projects they would find ethically unacceptable pril, of they were aware of the funding source elli and the possible application of the re- elli- search. I call upon you to make public on the past or present existence of such ter- secret CIA research on campus - or in' elsewhere under the university's auspi- ican ces - and make it university policy that the true funding source of all re- .fem- search be publicly identified. em- The Senate report states that the CIA ias is currently using several hundred Amer- re- ican academics located on over 100 cam- any puses for "providing leads and, on occa- sion, making introductions for intelli- port gence purposes." These professors and ities other university personnel apparently s to are under secret contract to the CIA the and specilize in "spotting" foreign stu- am dents who are then covertly recruited ass- as American intelligence agents (and idg- hence become in most cases traitors to their own countries). Whereas open re- cruitment on campus can be defended Re- on First Amendment grounds, the ef- dual ployment of professors as spies against ents their own students - whether foreign oth- or American - is a violation not only the of principles of academic freedom but bru- of fundamental notions of decency. the ADDITIONALLY, the Senate report re- states that some of the academics with CeA whom the CIA maintains secret rela- CIA tionships "occasionally write books and sen- other material to be used for propagan- s on ca da purposes abroad." These publications were part of the more than 1,250 books the Senate Committee reported were pub- lished over the last three decades by the CIA both in the United States and overseas. The Center for International Studies at the Massachusetts Institute for Technology was one of the institu- tions identified as having cooperated with the CIA and accepted covert funds to publish works of this sort. I am sure you share my objection on ethical and professional grounds to professors par- ticipating in such deceptive practices. I call on you to make it university policy that no employe shall perform services of any kind for any government agency, unless that employe's relation- ships to the government is made a mat- ter of public record within the Univer- sity. The Senate report states that Ameri- can academics are used abroad by the CIA for operational purposes. In other words, so-called professors and students overseas are actually intelligence opera- tives under cover. According to the Sen- ate report, Fulbright scholars are the only category of American academics abroad exempt from use by the CIA, and even that exemption is not complete. I believe that as long as foreigners have reason to fear that some American aca- demics are secretly working for the CIA, then all legitimate scholars traveling and working abroad will be suspect and po- tentially subject to limitations. The CIA has already issued internal prohibitions against the operational use of accredited newsmen and missionaries, as well as Fulbright grantees. These prohibitions should be extended to all American aca- demics abroad and at home. I call upon you to make your voice heard in Wash- s to play seemed to signal success for activist the Argentine military junta in squads. its "war against subversion," WHIL the junta is facing rising resist- is stric ance in civilian sectors. sities a Industrial workers, angered lice he by wage freezes in the face of discipli' continued inflation and govern- bellion ment drives to increase produc- campus tivity, have staged slowdowns, section strikes and even acts of sabo- lit upc tage. At a Mercedes Benz plant, was re workers pounded factory walls the stri with hammers and shouted for wall sl pay raises during a series of 15- -- have minute strikes. At an Ika-Re- calling nault plant, worker painted the jun newly finished car bodies with litical ' slogans like "down with the A ke military" and lists of exorbi- junta i tant prices of basic goods. High are spo voltage cables feeding iron ore ganized ovens have been cut; prime politica beef has been hacked by meat- leftist cutters to prevent export. In- cidents continue to mount de- IN C spite laws against strikes and Boliviar despite arrests of key union Hugo leaders and assaults on labor onstrat major Latin role rmpus ington for a total ban on CIA operation- al use of people associated with univer- sities or of CIA operatives representing themselves as students, researchers, or professors. THE UNIVERSITY has a long his- tory of cooperation with our government. Whether that cooperation has always been fruitful for both parties is a de- batable question. However, I would main- tain - and I hope you will agree - that secret cooperation with an intelligence agency is another matter altogether. It is contrary to the openness and trust necessary for true academic freedom. This is the position of the American Association of University Professors, whose convention in June 1976 adopted a resolution calling for an end to the use of academics in covert intelligence operations. The time has come to clear the air and to end any secret ties to the CIA. I call upon you to sever any such ties and to make a full report on any past or present connections between the CIA and your university. You may have been informed of some of these connections - if any - In your capacity as uni- versity president. If you do not believe you are fully informed, however, you might consider using the Freedom of Information Act or a direct letter to CIA Director Bush to obtain a list of all past or present CIA activities on your campus. I am sending a copy of this letter to the student newspaper and the alumni magazine to open up a cam- pus-wide debate on the question of the CIA's use of the University community. James Hlipps graduated from the Una- Versity last May and now resides in Washington, D.C. s by para-police death LE POLITICAL activity tly prohibited at univer- s well - and secret po- lp maintain order and ne - small acts of re- have sprouted up on ses. In one philosophy , almost an entire class cigarets when a student primanded for violating ct ban on smoking. And ogans strongly penalized begun to appear, some for the overthrow of ta or the freeing of po- prisoners. y question now for the s whether the protests ontaneous - or being or- in part by clandestine A groups with ties to guerrillas. "RUSHING THE recent to miners' strike, Gen. Banzer again has dem- ed the combination of sophistication and force that has helped him stay in power for five years - a modern record for Bolivian rulers. Avoiding the kind of bloody clash between troops and work- ers necessary to crush past strikes, Banzer arrested hun- dreds of union leaders, tem- porarily cut off food to mining areas, fired more than 400 min- ers and put strike areas off limits to the press. He then invited 100 carefully screened miners to La Paz, where they were wined and dined by gov- ernment officials while wage negotiations were resumed. The selected miners agreed to a 30 per cent wage boost, the same offer union leaders - who had demanded 100 per cent to keep up with inflation - had re- jected before the strike. SIMILAR TACTICS have been used against stu- dents who shut down seven of the nation's nine universities and many high schools in sup- port of the miners and in pro- test against compulsory mili- tary service. Just as the Peruvian junta has stopped calling itself "so- cialist, reports have begun to circulate that Peru has con- cluded a deal with the Soviet Union to buy 40 Russian fighter- bombers. Several newspapers and magazines in Latin Ameri- ca and Europe, including the respected L o n d o n - b a s e d Flight International, have car- ried the reports. If they are true and the purchase is car- ried out - which some observ- ers doubt because of Peru's re- cent turn to the right - the planes would change the mili- tary balance on Latin Ameri- ca's Pacific coast, now in Chile's advantage after the re- cent purchase of 18 U. S. planes. THE FROSH EXPERIENCE: Tri'bulati'ons for the uninitiated RIDL, VPREM4t6! M t" IS NELSON4 tROK F~,uR WELTIEST An)M06T I).Ct yfMEN1 M OR THE UNITED STATnS OF AmEIA ... .., SO up F YbuRt ! F By MELINDA SCHULTHEIS A S AN INCOMING freshwoman this fall, I have to admit that I didn't know what to anticipate. I had heard that the school was tough, and that it was fantastic for football, basketball and MRS degrees, but beyond that, my knowledge amounted to a huge void. As I am out-of-state, I knew next to nothing of Michi- gan as a school or state. I was understandably shocked Septem- ber 5th, when arriving in Ann Arbor, I checked into East Quad, my home for the next eight months. I have often wondered during my brief three weeks here who it is that prepares the heart-warming brochure sent to naive freshmen that describes the dorms. In this particular bulletin, the Quad was defined as "rustic-looking". In my mind I had pictured a quaint, ivy-covered villa, a meeting place for mild-mannered philosophers and poets. When I arrived, my dreams were shat- tered. My parents and I pulled up to a monolith of brick, glass, dirt and utter confusion. I entered timidly with such necessities for learning such as hot curlers, Hershey bars and a tennis raquet, when I was swept into a mob of total hysteria. I followed the crowd from sign-in sheet to sign-insheet, and watched in horror as one poor boy tried to inform the main desk that he had no mattress in his room. The people at the desk were very optimistic and undauntedly informed him where he could go in the basement to find some form of sleeping apparatus for his fourth floor room. Off he trudged and I felt a growing feeling of insecurity envelope me. After all, how rustic could it be? Happily, when I did get to my room (also on the fourth floor), there was a bed. Unhappily, there were three. I was in a triple that was so small, we practically had to turn in unison. But that was tolerable. It was getting used to the Ann Arbor ime schedule that was a trip. I do believe that 70 per cent of all Ann Arborites are nocturnal. Being uninformed freshmen, we went to bed around 11:30 p.m. What a surprise it was to discover that the whole town rouses itself from slumber around midnight, followed by a period of revelry until approx. 5:00 in the morning. Minnie Ripperton was express- ing her love loudly throughout the courtyard while Joni Mitchell definitely had her say in our corridor. IT'S NOT THAT I object to being deafened to sleep by music, but around the wee hours of 4:30 a.m., some jovial characters were having a little morning exercise throwing beer bottles at the Quad windows. I'm not against intramural sports, but I am partial to my windows, especially when they're in one piece. But I really didn't have to'worry as their interests soon shifted to throwing trash cans in the street and fighting wih each oher, after which they all had a good cry and frolicked home the best of friends. The food situation tended to irritate some, and it left me to- tally unprepared. I didn't expect Chateaubriand weekly, but I did expect something in the way of edible. One cannot imagine the frustration experienced after waiting ravenously in line for a half hour to discover (rightly so) that the cafeteria has been christened the Quad's Official Fecal Headquarters. They often conjure up something known as Tian which should actually be called Pee-on as that is generally what one should do with it when it is deposited on the plate. Tian is produced about three times a week. However, life at Michigan can be fun. There are such intra- dorm activities planned such as communal hunts in the lava- tories for toilet paper and camping out in the main lobby for room changes. Although it may not appeal to the weak of heart, it does induce togetherness and lasting friendships. Happily for most, life at the University is enjoyable. There is a lot of bureaucracy and red tape, but it can be circumvented. And as soon as I discover the method behind it, I'll let every incoming freshmen in on the big secret. I'm still looking, but I hope I'll find out soon. Graduation is only four years away. Melinda Schultheis is a freshwoman living in East Quad. Letters can assure everyone that the makeup of the team was as t to the Daily some eight years of work. Smith's excuses about the To The Daily: ALTHOUGH THE basketball with Green's talents and statis- tics can see that such mediocre wishes. I certainly hope Michi- gan fans will not accept his