The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, September 23, 1987- Page 3 Pentagon: attack }was no 0 .19 accident' (Continued from Page 1) had been tracked by radar and by air for several days as it steamed through the central gulf toward Bahrain "because it had been seen loading suspect devices" before qleaving an Iranian port. "It was no accident" that U.S. helicopters from the frigate USS Jarrett were flying near the Iranian ship Monday night, using infrared sensors to monitor its activities, one official added. President Reagan, meantime, defended the U.S. attack on the ship as clearly "authorized by law" because the vessel was sowing mines in international waters. Yesterday, Michigan's Democrats and Republicans in Congress said that the U.S. Navy acted properly in attacking an Iranian ship believed to be laying mines in Persian Gulf shipping lanes. Vietnam vets see 'light at the end of the tunnel' By EDWARD KLEINE For 17 years, Jim Wade w a s ashamed of the fact he was a Vietnam veteran. "People treated you like you were weird," he says. He remembers how strangers pointed to his medals on his uniform and asked, "How many people did you have to kill to get this one?" College students who opposed the war "took it out on us," he says. But now, Wade, who served three- and-a-half terms with the Navy during the war, wants people to know he is a veteran. He joined the Vietnam Veterans of Washtenaw County when the group formed about a year-and-a-half ago, and speaks to local school groups about h i s experiences. HE ALSO wears his uniform - proudly - when he and other veterans march in parades. Wade also doesn't face the negative reactions he used to get. Now, he says, people walk up to him and say things like, "Welcome home." When he and other veterans marched in a parade in Ypsilanti this summer, spectators along the entire three-mile parade route cheered them all the way. "It's been unbelievable," Wade says. "We are finally being treated like human beings... a lot of anger, and frustration have melted off." The attitude towards the veterans has changed, says History Prof. Gerald Linderman, who teaches a class called 20th Century American Wars, because non-veterans can now sympathize with the soldiers. "The effects of the war on the Vietnamese are slipping into the mist, and that leaves the effects of the war on Americans," Linderman said. Fifteen years ago, college students would have been the last group a veteran would turn to for sympathy. But students now say they respect those who fought in Vietnam, regardless of what they think of the war. "They haven't been paid the re- spect they were due," says LSA first- year student Steve Brown. "The stu- dent today sees the predicament they were put in. There's more compas- sion." VIETNAM veteran Paul Dumsch of Ypsilanti finds the reaction gratifying. "There's light at the end of the tunnel now," he says. But the change in attitude has come only recently. "It took a long time to be able to form a group," says Wade. The group now has 46 members and meets once a month in the Saline United Auto Workers hall. They try to increase awareness of veterans' problems and let the public know that "we're not bad people," or "crazy, whacked-out baby killers," says Wade. The group occupies booths at events - such as the Ann Arbor Art Fair - where they hand out leaflets and answer questions. Members also speak about their experiences at local schools. When they're not talking with the public, they talk with each other and try to work through their problems. "We talk about the good times that we had, not about the bad times... so what if you had nightmares? If your wife or husband can't help you out, you can call one of us," Wade says. "SO MUCH of it for me is just the relief of being able to talk to people who know what you're talking about," says member Dumsch, "I've talked about things I haven't talked about in 20 years. Going to the meetings is like having a load lifted off their chests, say Dumsch and Wade. "It's a great feeling when you walk in there for the first time," Dumsch says. "Any- time someone new comes in, you tell him 'Welcome Home'... some of them cry," Wade says the bad dreams he used to have have "dwindled down to where they're rare" since he joined. Wade said that at times, he used to wake up with his hands wrapped around his wife's throat. Still, he says, "I don't think there's ever a day goes by that you don't think about (the war)." Cuomo visits Kremlin -A "cte"rs New York Governor Mario Cuomo and his wife, Matilda, center, re- ceive a guided tour of ther Kremlin yesterday while visiting Moscow. i What's happening in Ann Arbor toda: Speakers Baha'i Cl Dr. Ihsan Bagby - "Islam and the Leue. Modern World," 8:30 p.m., 2231 - Mass e Angell Hall. -Ms Prexy Nesbitt - "The Struggle in Auditorium Southern Africa: The Frontline States and U.S. Policy," 3-5 p.m., CAAS Further Lounge, 111 West Engineering., Universi R.P.S. Jefferies - "The Ancestry Students of Vertebrates," 4 p.m., Room 4001 video: "D C.C. Little Building. Socialism Kevork Bardakjian - Business S "Impressions from a Recent Trip to Armenia," Noon, Commons Room, Seda Lane Hall. Send a Gary A. Molander - "Stereo- coming e controlled Cyclization Reactions," 4 The M p.m., Room 1300, Chemistry Maynard Building. 48109. In Gerhard Gritzner - "Solvent formatior Effects on the Redox Potentials and number. ther RlaiontoSolvent Parameters," nounceni their Relation to Suvnoen eona em 4p.m., Room 1200 Chemistry Sunday e, Building.before U cements Meetings must be LASC, UCAR, FSACC - Representatives will discuss each organization followed by a speech by Prexy Nesbitt, long-time Civil-Rights activist, 8:30 p.m., R a c k h a m Amphitheater Salvadoran Dinner - Prepared by the Celaya family, a Salvadoran family living in Sanctuary in Ann Arbor. Followed by a discussion of their experiences in El Salvador. 6 p.m., First Congregational Church, corner of William and State. U A C - Comedy Company Auditions. 5-12 p.m., UAC Backroom, 2nd Floor, Michigan Union. Socley of Women Engineers - Pre-Interview, Bell Communications Research.1-4p.m., 143 Chrysler Center. (ocr East Quad Music Co-op - Mass meeting. 7:30 p.m., 126 East Quad Hahn testifies that she is 'not a bimbo' ub - 6 p.m., Michigan ervice Intern Program meeting, 6 p.m., Rackham m. more ity of Michigan of Objectivism - ebate 84', Capitalism vs. ," 8 p.m., Room B-235, chool. nnouncements of up- vents to "The List," c/o ichigan Daily, 420 St., Ann Arbor, Mich., clude all pertinent in- n and a contact phone We must receive an- nents for Friday and vents at least two weeks he event, and announ- for weekday events received at least two ore the event. CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Jessica Hahn, declaring "I am not a bimbo," says in a Playboy magazine interview that she "hated every second" of her sexual encounter with PTL founder Jim Bakker seven years ago and "it has ruined my life." A copy of the November issue of the magazine, which includes a 31- page interview and semi-nude layout of Hahn, became available yesterday as she concluded two days of testimony before a federal grand jury looking into hush money paid her after the liaison. "I've been treated as less than human, as a thing, as a pawn," she said. PIRGIM funding to' begin in January -(Continued from Page 1) approve funding for the group which engages in environmental lobbying. PIRGIM members referred to a referendum vote last spring in which 69 percent of the students voted in favor of funding the group. Much of the opposition in the assembly stemmed from questions about PIRGIM's finances. Business School representative Jon Bhushan questioned whether student fees collected on campus were being spent on programs at the University. Bhushan said funds could be shuttled to a national group in Boston to which PIRGIM is linked. "I fear that there will be a lack of accountability in tracing student funds and PIRGIM's relationship with (the national group) severely compounds this problem," he said in a report presented to the assembly last week. PIRGIM officials denied this saying that student funds were kept in a separate bank account and not tied to any monies collected in statewide canvassing. CORRECTIONS Paul Pintrich is an assistant professor in the School of Education, not a graduate student, as stated in a photo caption in yesterday's Daily. The caption also incorrectly stated that the Dean of the School of Education and two graduate students were awarded Spencer Fellowships. The Dean and three graduate students were awarded grants. f '3 1 t, - L. t Ru uw Watching every dollar? l q5m3mw r w W 'gimp'- w Copies, Binding, Passport photos. 540 E. Liberty 1220 S. University oss from the Mich. Theater) (across from Village Corner) 761-4539 747-9070 17777F-15-4-77 7f Michigan National makes checking convenient and less expensive. If you watch your finances carefully...you'll welcome Independence Checking and its truly affordable service charges. You'll receive a Michigan Money" card, allowing you to make unlimited withdrawals or deposits for no extra charge at one of the hundreds of Michigan Money automatic teller machines (ATMS). Bank 24 hours a day, seven' days a week, nearly anywhere in Michigan - quickly and conveniently. A And you'll be able to write up to five checks per statement WIN-*,- -', n r4Rm vfr