Summer Daily Summer Edition of T HE MICHIGAN DAILY Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Tuesday, August 14, 1973 News Phone: 764-0552 Camwbodia bomb. ver say die PENTAGON SPOKESMAN Jerry Freidheim has set the pace for the latest bout between the U.S. government and the civilized world on the question of Cambodian bombing. Freidheim, a man whose principal function is the verbal communication of obfuscation, said yesterday the bombing would end tomorrow as demanded but that in the near future the Pentagon might have to "reassess the situation" if any U.S. reconnaissance or cargo planes are shot down. Moreover, the B-52's won't be rushed home to fill military museums just yet. In a moment of extraordinary clarity, Freidheim remarked, "I wouldn't look for all the aircraft to come home in the first few days." HE ALSO SAID, "We have no intention of becoming in- volved in hostilities after the 15th of the month." That statement had a funny ring to it. The words sound very much like those spoken in 1969 and 1970 when the U.S. professed to observe Cambodia's neutrality: And now we know what was really going on: numerous bombs ostensibly slated for visits to. less-than-neutral Vietnam were actually dropping in on many surprised Cambodians, "neutralizing" them out of existence. PE OLD don't - mess - with-our-unarmed-reconnais- sance-planes line shouldn't fool anyone. For months during the last bombing pause the Nixon administration policy was to send bombers out every time the North Vietnamese so much as locked their radar systems in on U.S. reconnaisance aircraft. Bombing runs became justi- fiable homicide in that "other" Indochina war. We shudder to think that even Congress can't stop false reporting of bombing runs. Yet we have at least learned to keep our eyes open. In the future it will be very difficult for Mr. Freidheim and others to present justifiable homicide as an excuse for getting away with murder. Rennie Davis: A rare leader and the Guru's most famous convert By TOM PAYTON JN A SMALL building on farm- land (a radio station!), 'twixt the dials and the glass we await Rennie Davis, driving out from Detroit to speak with the D a i I y and WNRZ. Incisive, clear-headed, gentle, this is how we remember Davis from the days of the anti- war movement, we know what he has achieved and now we know that he has proclaimed a fifteen- year-old boy an a motorcycle the savior of our poor planet. We are curious. He enters slowly through the door and he is beaming, fresh fromia good mood. Ansattractive girl in a maroon pants suit ac- companies him. Sensing that we have no mood to offer (just stand- ing around, we), Davis mocks him- self and asides with a laugh that he is "wandering around like an invalid." The radio people give us a room and the interview begins. SO DAMN HAPPY he is,-you see it right away, just one of us, but infinitely relaxed and alert. "You just take your mind, which tradi- tionally is like a grasshopper - jumping everywhere, going here, going there-and just focus it on a sound, and you. focus your mind on this one point and the mind be- comes 'more steady and you ex- perience something you might call steadiness of mind, which is ac- tually something approaching peace of mind. And in this state, it makes you high." Well, we loos- en up a little and hear the sound, but we will not be able to loosen into a real dialogue. His tone is alernately woman- ish and cocky, he is essentially in- tinimate and kind but he will defy us with a touch of arrogance. He, will pause, thoughtfully qualify a phrase with "rather," and end the sentence grinning with "you know, man?" - still a student, bell, yes. He tells us frankly that there are no words to describe his exper- iences with the Guru, but he finds his words easily enough, with eyes closen he has seen "a light bright- er than the sun" and this is clearly beyond the range of any sceptical probe we may launch. The resonant exuberance of his voice is m o r e than once to remind us of Allen Ginsberg. Questions about the Guru Maharaji always elicit gleeful laughter, and Davis himself could easily be fifteen at these points save for the lines in his face. "I've seen him push what I regard as the most spiritual people in India into swimming pools." CROSS-LEGGED he meditates for ten minutes in a dark room before going on the radio to re- peat his truth. He wants us to feel always within us "the energy that supports creation." He tells the story of finding out about the Guru and its cannot help but seem sym- bolic. He has been in Paris for the signing of the peace treaty and has spoken at length with Madame Binh and other leaders of the Viet- its depth and subtlety, Rennie tells us that "it's like the world has been waiting for a lover." For a long time. For a very long time. And just when it seemed sure, quite sure, no lover . . . then, at last, here he is: 1957! The young miss smiles and nods. AND THAT'S PRETTY much how it went. He won us with his warmth and openness. He had no interest to argue. He spoke briefly of the Stanford research being done into mind-over-matter phenomena and of the recent medical discover- ies about the functions of the pineal gland (see The Parable of the Beast by John Bleibtreu). These are staggering and portentous ad- Guru Maharaji: Rennie Davis: The Perfect Master? The Perfect Follower? namese struggle. The bombing of Cambodia will continue in criminal secrecy, but this nevertheless must be for Davis a victorious culmina- tion of a long and heroic effort. Who will deny that he has helped change the shape of history? (One recalls Henry Kissinger's startling deference to the Vietnamese lead- ers on the day of the signing, his steping back as if to stay, "this is your day." Kissinger's buried shame surely has been forced to reckon with the presence of Davis and his people in Paris.) So he speaks with Madame Binh after the signing and boards his plane to return home. On the plane he sits next to a young French radical, be- gins a conversation, and is soon informed that the savior of the world has been born in India on December 10, 1957. Wholly incred- ulous he is, but it begins for him then. 1957? The girl on WNRZ pounces on this arbitrariness. 1957? Why did God wait? Surely misery was not unknown to at least the nineteenth century? Well, no doubt but that logic cannot serve up anything at al here, and Rennie resorts to metaphor. With the voice of a man who has surely known love in all vances of science, but Rennie's concern with them is always sub- ordinate to his experiences of joy. The Guru himself, however, re- mains an enigma, establishing his Missions here in America, propa- gating "the Knowledge," managing his company, which manufactures business machines. At present there are 150 Missions in the Unit- ed States, all connected by Telex wire service. The Guru last week skipped an appearance on the Dick Cavett Show, and Rennie has told us most humbly that "there is a sense that the Guru Maharaji will not be in Detroit as planned." One fears that a crazy kid in a Rolls Royce has spellbound a rare and fine political leader. Ever Rennie shrugs his reluctance to believe and welcome the Guru's prediction of an imminent world catastrophe. WELL, RENNIE DAVIS is or- ganizing a massive festival for the Guru, and he hints to us that peo- ple from other planets may attend. The festival is in the fall. In the Houston Astrodome. In the Milky Way. Yes, Quite clearly, in t he Milky Way. -Tom Payton is a g u e s t writer for The Daily. I Letters to The Daily Pious platitudes explain some salaries will identify recente To The Daily: . have had long servic SPARE ME, please, your pious university before cor platitudes about wanting to know Undoubtedly you individual faculty salaries in order pndopbtedls aou to see whether minorities or women press opinions aboui are being discriminated against, judge. Do you feol Your real motive,I suspect, is Judge a professor'sfi simply to satisfy your curiosity his profession or fit about what certain positions pay, ization? Will you kno who is considered top dog in a de- salaries at other fron partment, whether the professors versities? Can you you like are paid less than those those you consider t you islke, tc.teachers"? Your op you dislike, etc. point is quite likely t I DOUBT if you intend to publish five or ten years af the names of all the thousands of the university, as als employes and their salaries. You fessed. will discriminate by selection. Then what will you actually learn? Will nItd CETAIkNLY his you be able to distinguish between versity spends on those faculty paid for two terms theyd bu a of' teaching from those* paid for they do; but I can't.. two, anda half orthreeaterms? of additional informs And those paid for two terms plus one's individual salar a third term of research? And the significant figure those persons who work twelve -Howard Pec months without observing the uni- Director of V versity vacation periods? You may Clements L s, but nothing employes who e at another ing here. intend to ex- t certain sal- competent to competence in ld of special- w comparative nt-ranking uni- 'even identify to be "go o d inion on this to be different fter you leave mni have con- k the public is much the uni- salaries, and see the value ition on every- ry. The total is e. kham William ibrary i1, Pob ses-Hall Syndicte,1913 THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL You have to understand the complexity and importance of issues involved in restraining US bombing of your country.'