Z e t gan th2 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of the author, This must be noted in all reprints SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1972 News Phone: 764 0552 Digging at the war OPPOSITION TO America's war effort in Indochina has taken many forms in Ann Arbor, In the past seven years, the local antiwar movement has held sit-ins, marched through the streets, occupied buildings, walked in candlelight processions, shut down the campus, block- ed intersections, and demanded that the city of Ann Arbor and the University of Michigan pull themselves out of the war effort. And now the movement digs holes. The holes supposedly resemble the craters made by American bombs in Indochina. And in some small ways, there probably is a similarity: in both places, a gaping, unexplainable hole in the ground is as incongruous and unbelievable as the war itself. Big round holes don't belong in front lawns or Diags or villages or rice paddies any more than young men belong in uniforms, or col- leges belong in classified weapons research. BUT THE similarity between the craters in Ann Arbor and the craters in Vietnam ends there. No festive "crater digs" have been held in Indochina, and real craters are not welcomed by crowds of happy people and live rock music. The Ann Arbor craters have not brought with them the smell of burning flesh or the sounds made by human beings during a bombardment. The people of Indochina have lived with bombard- ments for nearly 30 years. They would no doubt laugh bitterly if they knew American young people were at- temating to stop the bombardments by using time and energy to dig symbolic craters. 'THE RATNBOW POPLE say the local craters are in- tended to give neonle "a real sense of the terror and destruction by U.S. bombs suffered every day by the people of Indochina." But few peoale will get a "real sense" of the war when they see the big hole on Hill Street. Few, if any, will be moved to vote for McGovern, or write to their representatives, or picket the White House and Dow Chemical, or refuse to pay their tele- phone tax. - Is digging a hole really the best way we can think of to stop the war? Busting sod is a lot easier than busting an attitude. No front lawn ever asked for an explanation of the im- morality of bombing or the insidiousness of anti-per- sonnel weapons. In fact, the people who direct America's war effort or profit from it probably delight in seeing us dig holes. For them, it's better for protesters to undermine the topsoil than the technocracy. THE ACT OF digging holes may not be an entirely use- less one. For a few, it will no doubt keep the horror of Vietnam a little closer to home. But to say "we've tried everything else" lets the government off much too easily. We have not exhausted the possibilities. We have not reached a point where all we can do is dig a hdle. As long as the war goes on, we've got to find a louder, stronger way of channelling our energies into saying "stop" -DAN BIDDLE "jiiid'; WASHINGTON --Last fall, Anr Force General John LaVelle or- dered bombing raids of Nor.th Vietnam against the expressed orders of President Nixon. These illegal air strikes not.-only cost General LaVelle his job, but they may well have delayed a peace- ful settlement of the Vietnam war. What hasn't been reported is that Air Force pilots have flown many more unauthorized bomb- ing raids than the 28 LaVelle has acknowledged. This word comes from a secret report orepared by Air Force General Louis Wilson, the same man who investigat- ed LaVelle. Here are the facts: The President ordered o a rl pilots not to fire unless f i r e d upon. Many pilots stayed within the letter of the order, b u t still managed to hit the targets they wished. The trick was to lure the enemy into firing first. To do this, the pilots employed a variety of schemes. One might be called bait and bite. U. S. reconnaissance planes were sent over North Vietnam targets as bait. Not far behind came the fighter-bombers. If the enemy nibbled at the bait, the fighter- bombers 'swept in for the kill. Even without bait, planes made fake bombing runs, sweepint low over enemy targets. This usually would provoke the C'smmunist gunners. Then the pl-anas made a second run - this time w it h guns blazing. Technically, the pilots were au- thorized to return the fire. But, morally, they were violating the President's orders. -MIL LIB- one of the last bastions, still holding out against. Women's Llb, is the military. At.the Tactical Air Command, the brass h a t s have gone so far as to put it in writing. At the taxpayers' expense, the brass recently published 15.000 copies of a little booklet called "Customs and Courtesies for the Air Force Wife." This reminds the military wile. for example, that her position is "created by her husband's rank." It tells her how to dress for morning, afternoon and evening affairs. It cautions the ladies to "take their cue from.the gentle- men" when attending formal af- fairs. When going through re- ceiving lines, adds the booklet, "the man precedes his wife." The Air Force wife is also told when to wear gloves, how to shake hands, where to sit at a dinner table, and how to con- verse. She is reminded to avoid "any discussion of service life which may be construed as com- plaining." "When shopping with the fait- ily " asks the booklet, "is it periissible for an officer to lap his wife carry packages or it, fants?" The answer: "An of- ficer in uniform is expected to avoid situations in which it is necessary to carry bulky nack- ages or small children. However, these days . . . compromise with tradition must be made. It is therefore acceptable for an of- ficer to assist his wife with pack- ages and/or children as long as he keeps his 'saluting arm' free." The booklet seems to acknow- ledge that wives have their place in the Air Force. It's somewhere below that of airman first-class. -SINKING SUMMIT- The Central Intelligence Agen- cy has now learned that Presi- dent Nixon came close to missing his historic trip to Moscow. Sov- iet Party Chief Leonid B r e z- hnev did some fast shuffling to keep the Nixon visit from being cancelled. A secret CIA report reveals that Brezhnev got h i s leading opponents out of town shortly before a crucial debate inside the Kremlin over the summit meeting. had arranged in advance for to to be sent to Paris, another to Warsaw, still another to Stock- holm. Defense Minister Andrei Grech- ko, perhaps the most poweiful opponent in the Kremlin, was in Cairo when he heard of the meet- ing. Grechko rushed back to Moscow just in time for the meeting. But he found himself in the minority. The skillful Brezhnev had won the round and President Nixon was spared a rebuff. -TWIST AND PULL- President Nixon continues to twist and pull at the knobs of the great American war ma- chine in Indochina trying to find the right combination to bring this endless war to a halt. He has pulled nearly 5C0,000 troops out of Vietnam. At the same time, he has quietly in- creased our air power in Indo- china to an all-time high. Meanwhile, the enemy contin- ues to replenish itself. Battered, bombed, now even mined, t he enemy always seems able to find the necesary resources to continue the conflict. Secret in- telligence reports reveal that 7,000 new North Vietnamese re- cruits will move South next month for combat in Vietnam and Cambodia. Intelligence sources also con- firm that 100,000 new enemy soldiers have entered the war since January to replace the dead and wounded of the last six months. -GEORGE-OR ELSE!- If George McGovern is den- ied the Democratic nomination in Miami next month, the young radicals are threatening to make Chicago four years ago look like a Sunday school service. The veteran radical, Abby Hoffman, founder of the Yippies, told us on the telephone about his Miami convention battle plans. Hoffman says he hopes to assemble an army of 300,000 pro- testers outside the Miami con- vention hall. They will go into full cry, he says, if the party regulars deny McGovern the nomination. Already, thousands of young militants have streamed in"o the city, but so far there have been no major incidents. Miami's big- gest headache, in fact, involves not politics but logistics. The city can't decide where to put the dissidents. Meanwhile, Miami Beach po- lice chief Rocky Pomerantz has prepared a private list of 15 things he should do to maintain law and order. The last is: Pray for a huriicane. 1972 United Feature Syndicate, Inc. Leonid Brezhnev: Comrade for the re-election of t h e president Brezhnev was under fire froi a number of Kremlin leaders to cancel the Nixon invitation. The Kremlin's hard-liners had become incensed over the U.S. mining of Haiphong harbor and the stepped-up bombing of N o r t h Vietnam. By mid-May, a major political storm was brewing. The secret report reveals that Brezhnev scattered the storm clouds at a decisive meeting of Kremlin leaders. This took place on May 19 - just eight days be- fore Nixon's scheduled arrival in Moscow. ' Noticeably absent were fouir Kremlin hard-liners. Brezhnev Letters to The Daily To The Daily: MR. JAY HACK wrote an arti- cle (Daily, June 17) which, while distinguished throughout for i t s monumental supply of errors and inaccuracies, was in particular in- correct on several matters con- cerned/ with me and my research. I would like to set the record straight. 1. Mr Hack is correct in say- ing that I am doing research on decision making. 2. Mr. Hack is totally incorrect in saying that this research is concerned with or based on per- sonality patterns of world leaders. 3. Mr. Hack is totally incorrect in saying that this research is based on any variety of informa- tion provided to me by the CIA or any other intelligence agency. 4 Mr. Hack is totally incorrect in saying that this research is sup- ported by funds furnished directly or indirectly from the CIA or any other intelligence agency. At no time has any research of mine been supported directly oi' indirectly, by any intelligence agency. I have, on occasion, con- sulted as a private individual with intelligence agencies, but am not doing so at present. Actually, I have four sponsors for my research on decision process- es. One is the Advanced Research Projects Agency of the Depart- ment of Defense, one is the Office of Naval Research, one is the Na- ticnal Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism and one is t h e Wood Kalb Foundation, a small private foundation that sponsored some experiments I conducted in Las Vegas. The two DOD agen- cies are supporting a research pro- gram that originally began under DOD sponsorship in 1951, and has continued, with a variety of spon- sors, including the National Aero- nautics and Space Administration and the National Institute of Mea- tal Health, ever since that time. All of this information, and a great deal more concerned with the technical content of the re- search programs that I am con- ducting, Mr. Hack could have eb tained by the simple expedient of asking me. He chose not to do so. I presume that he prefers wild- ly inaccurate but sexy assertiens to the less sensational truths, even when these truths can be obtain- ed at the cost of a phone call. I doubt that Mr. Hack has any signi- ficant future in journalism given his lack of interest in the journal- istic responsibility of discovering the facts; I wonder at the editor- ial judgment that permits such an irresponsible and baseless story to be printed. -Ward Edwards Professor of Psychology Head, Engineering Psychology Iboratory "Smile! You're on Candid Camera!" Today's staff .. . News: Dan Biddle, Alan Lenhoff, Diane Levick Editorial Page: Carla Rapoport Photo Technician: David Margolick