OPINION Thursday, July 11, 1985 The Michigan Daily Page 5 Vol. XCV, No. 28-S 95 Years of Editorial Freedom Managed and Edited by Students at The University of Michigan Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily Editorial Board Follow the leader MASSACHUSETT'S Public Health Commissioner Bailus Walker announced yesterday that smokeless tobacco manufacturers must begin to label their packages with a warning. The warning would be similar to the ones currently on cigarette cartons. Michigan should follow Massachusetts' example and require warning labels on smokeless tobacco sold in the state. Currently, the advertising for smokeless tobacco fails to inform the public about the harmful affects. Many com- panies pay well-known sports figures a fee to endorse the product. Many well-known players use the product. The advertising campaigns and the lack of a warning of- ten convince young people that smokeless tobacco is less damaging than cigarettes. This is not the case, however. Dr. Gregory Connolly from the Massachusetts Dental Health Division recommended a label warning users that smokeless tobacco can be addictive and can cause cancer and other mouth disorders. Smokeless tobacco also contains nicotine, a drug that triggers the release of adrenaline and increases the heart rate and blood pressure. Massachusetts has become the first state to require warning labels on smokeless tobacco. Michigan could be the second. Warning labels are never a "bad" idea. They help the public make a more informed decision about a product. The heath hazards of smokeless tobacco have been overlooked by public officials for entirely too long. The health division officials in Massachusetts finally came to their senses and made the right decision to require war- ning labels. Michigan should be encouraged to do the same. Powell WNA D Ya UWOf T (r~IfHl1t5Fire ±.N2e . /AS Rewnt+IzN Aw& uN GAl-IdA1 7 EetROPEAbI' x '" t $SCCER ~ - ~ ~ < \ Navy evaluates spy threat By John Ross In sub-launched missiles, the United States is far ahead of the Soviets. Although the Soviets have more ships and CENTERVILLE, Ca. - Waves break against the un- more missiles, geography makes it difficult for their fleet trammeled beach here, and wash to the foot of a steep to offer much more than coastal protection, and 60 percent bluff near where thick cables disappear beneath the san- of all their subs are penned in port on any given day. ds. One factor keeping them bottled up is the U.S. detection A hundred yards above, cows chomp blissfully near two system which could, until recently, track nine out of every low, windowless buildings from which the cables extend. ten Soviet subs in the oceans. A lone sentry stands at the gate of the Centerville Beach Insiders won't say how far the lead has narrowed or Oceanographic Facility in this remote corner of northern why, but there is little question the Soviets are now able to California. Asked what the Navy does behind the elec- build quieter subs and move them around with less chance tified fence, he replies tight-lipped, "If I were to tell you of detection. Some of the new technology comes cheap - that, I'd be in big trouble." like attaching noisemakers to ships to make them appear John Walker, his brother, his son and a freind are now in to run louder than they actually do - but new designs, big trouble, for allegedly telling the wrong people what new coatings, and the ability to dive deeper are also goes on behind the fence here and at similar submarine makinga difference. tracking stations that girdle the globe. Each is a listening SOSUS and other systems also track U.S. subs to help post, a part of the Sea Sound Surveillance System develop evasion techniques. "If we can hear our own subs, (SOSUS). we figure the Soviets can, too," says Capt. Jim Bush - Centerville is the westernmost SOSUS station in the con- John Walker's commander on the nuclear sub "Quijote," tinental United States, one of 22 worldwide maintained by in the 1960s, and now an analyst for the Center for Defense 1,800 sailors - many of them women - which track Soviet Information. fleets, above and under the water, day and night. Some observers have suggested that the accused spies On one end, the cables extending from the anonymous - all of whom spent long years in submarine operations building here are hooked to arrays of sensitive and communications - might have so seriously com- hydrophones laid in the early 1960s along the continental promised the Navy's sub detection system that it will have shelf. On the other end, the lines are plugged into a com- to be scrapped. plex computer network which can reportedly sift through Officially, the Navy says damage has been "short-term millions of sea sounds - and pick out and identify a loose and operational," but some old salts are not so sure. propeller screw on a Soviet Victor II class attack sub "Walker was right at the nerve center in our tracking across the Pacific. operations,' retired Admiral Eugene Carroll told repor- So tight is the security at Centerville that personnel ters. "He was in a position to give them information on have reportedly been court-martialed for discussing base how we track their subs and how successful we were." activities with their wives. With or without spies, Soviet technology has altered the In all, five stations on the U.S. West Coast transmit a power balance between the two fleets. Observers surmise continual stream of raw data to the San Diego Naval In- that this might be having an impact on the sputtering ar- teligence Center, where the material is unscrambled and ms control talks. sent on to fleet command in Hawaii to fit in with air and Arms control advocates, such as Robert Aldridge, who sea tracking. Similarly unobtrusvie SOSUS stations dot designed Trident underwater launching systems for 16 the Atlantic coast, interfacing with fleet command in Nor- years, think the U.S. Navy's longtime ability to nullify folk, Va. Soviet missile-carrying subs in effect represents a first- The locations of SOSUS tracking stations in the North strike advantage - an advantage which encourages Atlantic is considered so sensitive that the editorial staff Soviet defensive zeal. Aldridge suggests that if the Soviet of a Norwegian magazine has recently been charged with fleet is better able to escape detection, that could have a violating that country's official secrets act for revealing positive, stabilizing effect. the existence of a facility in one of Norway's northernmost The Walkers are unlikely peace ideologues - Walker islands, near Soviet sub pens. reportedly was a member of both the Ku Klux Klan and The Navy has other ears for tracking the Soviet fleet the John Birch Society and had an official portrait of thorugh narrow "chokepoints" into the deep oceans. Ronald Reagan on his desk. But the importance of the in- From the air, PC-3 Orions drop sonar buoys in areas formation the group is alleged to have peddled is fraying a where Soviet subs are believed to be lurking, and surface lot of nerves. ships trail long arrays of listening devices - in 1983, to its "We will probably never know the extent of the damage great embarrassment, a Soviet sub tangled with such an done," according to one insider, who says that if the 25- array off the Carolina coast. year-old SOSUS system is compromised, "we'll have to All these detection devices are linked through a web of accelerate development of new technologies." satellite communication systems, the most classified area Those technologies - involving fiber optics laid in of the surveillance apparatus - and the area in which ac- SOSUS-like arrays, thermal analysis of wakes laid by cused spy ring members had the most expertise. subs, satellite-mounted lasers - could one day make the Anti-submarine warfare is a $13 billion operaton - fully oceans transparent enough to nullify the cover of both 16 percent of the Navy's budget - and projected to double superpower's submarine fleets. In the wake of the current by 1987. Despite the huge outlays, research, development spy scandal, the race to that end is surely being re- and deployment are carried out as silently as the subs evaluated. running the murky undersea. This is because of the im- portance of anti-submarine warfare in the nuclear triad - Ross wrote this for Pacific News Service. land-, air-, and sea-based delivery systems. BLOOMCOUNTY by Berke Breathed 16C BINKCY? MitO. I'mA7H C/NIC. /Ct 15 CIK& SWOOTY. ANP I rCV'T KNOW WHAT 115 PAMgtM 15.. jN~ ' / fIU /15K HMl. mar' NitG, ARE YOR66NTF/ THAT IW T K CCNIKOL Of fvR PIRITE If, 1760 YOl P ANO W6K6P YOU UfPINA 1ACEC W'RO tl i '. O. WER OR P 10 RT17C/M IN PR/ilM&-5C OAM' HRAPY WIl G/Z TYLOR