Summer Daily Sunmer Edition of THE MICHIGAN DAILY Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Saturday, June 16, 1973 News Phone: 764-0552 Indochina exit in sight IN DECLARING an end to his support for Nixon's war policies in Indochina Thursday, Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott emphatically declared that: "I have had it!" And so have, it appears, many other former Nixon supporters in Congress. By a 67-15 Senate vote Thursday, Congress moved ever closer to pulling the U. S. out of Indochina once and for all. We strongly applaud the Senate vote, and can only impress upon the House of Representatives the urgency for quick, affirmative action on this measure. As provided by the Church-Case amendment to a State Department authorization bill, no funds would be appropriated to fi- nance U. S. military activities in Indochina, unless spe- cifically authorized by Congress. This would mean an end to the bombing in Cam- bodia, and would finally prevent any further escalation of Nixon's war activities. IT IS INDEED ironic that the Senate vote came a day after "peace negotiator" Henry Kissinger wrapped up yet another agreement to cool the situation in Vietnam. Unfortunately however, early reports indicate that he Norh and South Vietnamese are still strongly engaged in combat despite the new cease fire. And in Cambodia, where another civil war rages on, Kissinger defends the bombing as necessary to pressure the insurgents into giving up. This attitude only reflects the stupidity of U. S. leaders, who after almost a decade of bombing, refuse to accept its ineffectiveness in bring- ing an end to the Indochinese conflict. It also shows us their supreme arrogance in believing that the U. S. has the right to decide which side of a civil war should win. Hopefully, because of the Senate action, this will be the last time we will have to demand: OUT NOW! Summer Staf ROLFE TESSEM Edi tor MART'Y STERN Edi orilPageEdi tor Terror and violence strike at a group By PETER LaFRENIERE BEING DISILLUSIONED with academic gamesmanship and in need of a breath of really fresh air, I left Ann Arbor after the semester ended to make a pilgram- mage. After traveling down the road for nearly a month through the South and West, I was ready for some peace and tranquility. So I turned homeward and drove 24 hours straight to New Vrindaban, completely unaware of the terrify- ing events that had just occured there. Vrindaban is India's most aus- picious village, for it is the birth- place of Lord Krishna and the site of His pastimes with the cow- herd boys and His beloved Gopis (milkmaids). New Vrindaban is sne of the oldest (founded in 1968) and most successful of America's communal farms. It is actually rural Vedic village situated in the foothills of West Virginia near the Ohio river, patterned after its namesake. WHEN I REACHED the turnoff at Limestone road my conscious- ness was almost instantly trans- formed. My eyes leaped across the lush green pastures dotted w it h grazing cows to the wooded high- lands of the surrounding country- side. As I drove up the front drive everything seemed peaceful and normal. The men could be seen cultivating the fields and gardens, while the women were engaged in chores around the main ashram. However, I soon found out differ- ently as the devotees quietly nar- rated the story of the terrorism which had taken place two days before. It happened at dawn. As usual, the devotees were into their third hour of meditation and t h e i r leader Kirtanananda Swami w as about to begin the first morning lecture. Suddenly a gun barrel burst through a temple window of Krishna disciples shattering the early morning still- ness. Radha Kanta reacted swiftly by grabbing the barrel and wrest- ling with the unseen attacker, eventually breaking the rifle. But there were five heavily armed men and before long they were keeping the devotees at gunpoint as they shouted obscenities and began tear- ing apart the inner temple, pis- tol whipping the harmless a n d shocked devotees who got in the way. KIRTANANANDA, the represent- ative of the Spiritual Master of the Hare Krishna movement was led Suddenly a gun barrel burst through a tem- ple window shattering the early morning still- ness. outside the temple, where he too was abused and beaten. Meanwhile the attackers completed the job of destroying the temple room, fin- ally stripping garments and orna- ments from the marble images of Radha and Krishna, pushing them off the altar, smashing them and making crude jokes. The devotees, including women and children, continued chanting, offering no resistance. The phone had been cut and the farm is in an isolated area, 12 miles from Moundsville, the nearest town. Al- ready 4 devotees had been shot and wounded. The statue of Rad- harani was held high in the air and dropped on the marble floor creating a frightening crash. Start- led out of his wits, the gangleader, who was outside guarding t h e Swami, hastily got his men to- gether and left. The police at their leisure arrived one and one-half hours after the nick of time. NOW, ONE WEEK later, life goes on at the farm as naturally as ever. The only difference - a tear in the eye of a devotee singing the evening Aratrik, or a quiet and quickly hushed sob as a devotee remembers that morning. Three of the four who had been wounded have recovered. The fourth h a s lost the usage of his left hand. And at a small fortress overlooking the farm, a 24 hour watch is being kept to protect Radha and Krishna from further abuse. The significance of the incident analyzed from a devotee's point of view is .awesome. The injuries to the devotees and the destruction of the temple is certainly bad enough. However, the abuse to the person who purely represents the m o s t confidential servant of the Lord, and the demoniac treatment of the deities or arca- vigraha form com- pletely dwarfs the injuries and de- struction. Though the all inclusive Vedic philosophy appears different from that of Christianity, the parallels between the shotgun terrorism of 1973 America and the persecution of the early an'd devout Christians of Rome are striking. Both fear- lessly put forward the truth that theirs was a materialistic age, an age of hypocrisy and quarrel. Both suffered persecution and ridicule at the hands of those who were the most degraded and material- istically inclined. Both accepted the abuse passively, almost joyously, as the inexplicable will of the Su- preme. Both developed strength as a result. ONLY TIME will be able to re- veal what the future holds. Hare Krishna. Peter LaFreniere will be teaching a Course Mart course this summer called Intro. to Vedanta. U.S. frustrated by attempts to -achieve 'negotiation with honor' DAN BIDDLE ...... .. DAV EBURHENN .. CHRISTOPHER PARKS GORDON ATCHESQN LAURA BERIMAN... KATHY RICKE SUE SO.\ \ER . . nAVi s AR(OLICK -TF' ','RY MCARTHY .. Ass't. Ass't. STits Night Editor Night Editor Night Editor Night Editor Night Editor Plo an erl By DICK WEST ~HE WATERGATE-weary world was cheered this week by a new Vietnam cease-fire agreement under which both sides agreed to cease firing in violation of the old >c> Op Now that I think of it, there may have been some abuse of Phase 3 wage guidelines.' cease-fire agreement. The second cease-fire, known as Pause It, is expected to bring North and South Vietnam a step closer. But closer to what? Only time can answer that ques- tion. Pause It could bring'the Viet- nam a step closer to peace. Or it could be a step closer to another peace agreement. For if the new agreement to stop violating the old agreement is vio- lated, a third agreement Pause III may also be negotiated. And if it also should be violated? "WE ARE prepared to negotiate as many cease-fire agreements as may be necessary to bring about a cessation of hostilities," a source close to the negotiations told me. Pause I, the original cease-fire, rolled back the fighting to the ap- proximate level of 1962, when the Vietnam War was being fought by the Vietnamese. If Pause II and any subsequent agreements are equally effective, we may eventually find the Viet- namese fighting the French again. IN ANY EVENT, continuation of the Vietnam peace negotiations could have a. heavy impact on American politics. During the 1968 campaign, Pres- ident Nixon won many votes by confiding that he had a secret plan for ending U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. By 1976, one of the candidates may be telling the voters he has a secret plan for ending U.S. in- volvement in the Vietnam peace agreements. There are, of course, a number of advantages in American partici- pation in the negotiations, one of them being that it provides Henry Kissinger an opportunity to visit Paris. NEVERTHELESS, there is strong sentiment in favor of a ceasefire Vietnamizatio program. Under that formula, U.S. negotiators Dick West is a writer for United Press International. would gradually withdraw from the peace talks and turn the bargaining over to the South Vietnamese. There would not be a total dis- engagement. America would con- tinue to supply South Vietnamese negotiators with briefcases, scratch pads, ball-point pens and other par- ley hardware. Additionally, American advisers would be on hand to instruct the South Vietnamese in modern hag- gling techniques. Otherwise, how- ever, the South Vietnamese would be assuming full responsibility for protecting themselves at the con- ference table. Until they are prepared to speak for themselves, the "generation of peace" sought by Nixon. could well become a generation of negotia- tion. God bless America WASHINGTON (UPI) - The next three weeks - until July 4 - have been proclaim- ed an "honor America" period by President Nixon. Nixon issued his proclamation saying that "this year, for the first time in a dozen years, America will be at peace on In- dependence Day." "This should not be a time in which we ignore our coun- try's problems," Nixon said, "but it should be a time in which we gain renewed appreciation of those physical and spiritual re- sources which can enable us to meet those problems - and so make our nation greater still."