Page 2- The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 25, 1991 Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson 'U' Profs. debate censorship IF WE Go FAS3T E C34 AND& P'UL OP JUST AS WE NIT TIM05 ROK, EM IZAT, IF WE'RE UKCO, CLE~AR fl4E RAVINE MAD NIAVE 1N IDE ~t~OF OUR LVES.' . ap ~ON "- O'P AND, IFWE WkR VFY4 REMMIPDtAIt~ S /C5 EIm mSET &R UHBEPBIn ESUCCESS, COQ CRUSIAtNG, FlOY~lES$ DEFEAT.' oK, IIAERE is A MIDI G r.*KD, BUT ITs EoR ' StSS ! WEASELS . f Q ras1 A of wartime press coverage ____j -- - - Nuts and Bolts 4A"4$.AQ* oThe a. 'F,4 tSR . NIE CBPW 5TILL.. WATC 4NG THE NWU1HcJN. AGAMN. .. = HSAD HE'VE COT OUR POwt4EpP Pji-ors, KNCoR, H0F TrA<7r-. H-IEAD - THAT 7WY'RE SAVING NERVE GAS5Es POP. CON~VENflONAL.. WARFAE.. ~AE!'b by Judd Winick TOUGH $TAY NE, LIW~S~J.d 1 r III;a TOUG by Lari Barager Daily Staff Reporter While media scholars across the country weigh American citi- zens' right to know against the need for military security, two University professors are voicing their opinions on wartime censorship. Prof. Charles Eisendrath, Michigan Journalism Fellow, sup- ports the Pentagon's censorship of American journalists' reports of the Gulf war, because he believes Americans are not missing any pertinent facts about the war due to censorship. "I think Americans are getting the basic story. I don't think un- censored reports would lead to a great deal of difference. Those re- ports only lack immediacy and de- tail," Eisendrath said. "If I thought that censored reports were with- holding a great deal of sensitive detail, I wouldn't feel that way." Eisendrath added, "The mate- rial that the military is holding is information which would endanger our troops. Most journalists think they should have the right to judge what is sensitive militarily, but I don't think we have the ability to judge that.". Eisendrath said he believes that if reporters discovered a military cover-up, they would be able to write the story regardless of the censorship. "In a story of enormous propor- tion, there is nothings in the Pen- tagon rules to prevent them from writing," Eisendrath said. Eisendrath explained that the stiffest penalty a journalist could receive would be to lose access to the warzone. Communications Prof. Jonathon Friendly, disagrees that possible leakage of troop movements justi- fies censorship of the press. "I think it unlikely that re- porters will give away secrets. If the Pentagon made clear its rules as it did in Vietnam, no troop movements or campaigns would be printed. When there is reasonable potential for assisting the enemy, you don't print that," Friendly said. Friendly also noted that if our military is as technologically supe- rior as it claims, there is little risk that even an inadvertant leak of in- formation could assist the Iraqi military. "I'm pro-information," Friendly said. "I think the press has to be the independent witness - at least you have to have the people with- out an ax to grind there to see the event." Ir \ Vi ' w DEAN Continued from page 1 Moreover, the candidates will be judged on the basis of a strong commitment to academic values, the inclusion of women and mem- bers of underrepresented groups in the faculty, students, and staff, and leadership and fundraising skills. "We hope to have a dean in place by the end of the semester," said George Seidel, Search Advi- sory Committee Chair and profes- sor of Business Law. "The finalist will come back to meet with the regents and the regents have to approve the selection." "The new candidate would have to meet the selection criteria. Essentially we'd like to be posi- tioned as the best business school in the country. We want to in- crease the quality of curriculum and research," Seidel added. Business Week magazine re- cently ranked the University's business school in the middle of its top 10. r MEDIA Continued from page 1 sualties. Although the "smart weapons" (such as the Tomahawk and Patriot missiles) have been widely applauded, some experts have already raised questions about their efficiency. The Tomahawk cruise missile has been used extensively against military targets in Baghdad, and the Pentagonreports that 90 per- cent have hit within 25 feet of their intended targets. But in an Oct. 1990 article in The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientist, Dr. Eric Ar- nett, an expert on sea-launched cruise missiles, raised serious doubts about the Tomahawk. "The Tomahawk's small war- head would do little damage to most military targets even if it managed to find them," wrote Ar- nett. "Specially protected targets such as underground nuclear, bio- logical, and chemical research ac- tivities would emerge from Toma- hawk attacks unscathed." Anthony Cordesman, a de- fense analyst currently in resi- dence on ABC News, also ex- pressed wariness about sophisti- cated weapons in a Sept. 12 semi- nar at the Brookings Institute. Cordesman commented that even if the U.S. targeted Iraq's mil-. itary installations alone, the strikes could only be considered surgical in the sense that "using an electric chainsaw" for amputation is surgery. Cordesman also said that there would be "massive" casual- ties on both sides. It now appears that last week's optimism was unwarranted, and the media have been blamed for the euphoric tone of their initial reports. But reporters were only in- ARY'S . u- .A.R.. terpreting the information the Pen- tagon was feeding them. While the U.S. military esti- mates that there have been 150 Iraqi casualties, the British Broad- casting Corporation has reported upwards of 10,000 Iraqi civilians ° dead. When U.S. jets bombed a fac- tory in Baghdad on Tuesday, Iraq claimed that the factory had been an infant milk powder plant, but Gen. Colin Powell, chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, claimed that' it was a biological weapons plant. CNN reporter Peter Arnett was not able to discern who was telling the truth. "CNN tries very hard to view itself as a global network," said Kolodzy. "We are in over 100 - countries, and we try to think of' how information relates to the rest of the world rather than the United States." American students and other stu- dents who are speaking out against the military intervention. "I support my country. The im portant thing is to be behind the', President. Supporting troops is secondary," he said. "The anti-war protesters had five months between Iraq's inva- sion of Kuwait and the start of the * war. They didn't do anything. Now that their families may get hit, they care about stopping the war." Sophomore Trace Farnum agreed with Cole, saying, "The people out there complaining are professional protesters. They don't like anything." PA ..AIt r "O AKA UEL Hours: Sunday 1-6 pm Monday - Thursday 7-10 pm Room 2006 DEARBORN Continued from Page 1 Dzovigian. Mammo agreed. "This campus has always been harmonious. I haven't witnessed any discrimination. I've always felt very comfortable here," she said. Jeremy Margolis, a senior psy- chology major said, "The amount of tension will increase if the war drags on - which it will." The students and faculty at the Dearborn campus hold widely dif- fering opinions about the morality and necessity of American military involvement in the Persian Gulf. "I'm anti-war in this situation because the only reason we are there is to fight for oil. It's not worth getting killed. There was a WAR Continued from Page 1 U.S. submarines, operating from the depths of the Mediterranean and Red seas, are continuing to fire Tomahawk cruise missiles at targets inside Iraq. Gen. Colin Powell, chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Wednesday in Washington that air attacks would intensify along sup- DAILY CLASSIFIEDS Religious Services FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AMERICAN BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER 502 E. Huron SUN.: Worship-9:55 a.m. WED.: Supper & Fellowship-5:30 p.m. LUTHERAN CAMPUS MINISTRY LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN CHURCH, EiCA 801 South Forest (at Hill Street), 668-7622 SUNDAY: Worship-10 a.m. WEDNESDAY: Worship-7:30 p.m. Campus Pastor John Rollefson ST. MARY'S STUDENT PARISH (A Romah' Catholic Parish at u-M) chance for peace which George Bush, imperialist that he is, didn't go for," said Margolis. "I was disappointed that we went to war because we didn't give the alternative solutions to the problem a chance to work. I hope for a victory and a speedy victory," said political science professor Bernie Klein. "Now that we are in the war, we have to sup- port it." Dzovigian added "I'm against the war but I'm not against our troops who are there. We have to support our troops." Lynne Cole, vice president of the student government and a se- nior studying international studies, Spanish, and French disagreed with the others. He supports the war and is critical of the Arab I ply routes and lines of communica- tions around the Iraqi city of Basra, near the Persian Gulf and Kuwaiti border, in an attempt to strangle the Iraqi army in Kuwait. Despite the allied air assault, Saddam Hussein reportedly visited his troops on the front lines in southern Iraq and Kuwait on Wednesday. The official Iraqi News Agency said Saddam's commanders dis- cussed the latest developments in the war with their commander-in- chief. "The enemy tried to avoid establishing any serious con- tact...and preoccupied itself with bombing from high altitudes." the news agency said. The news agency said that as of Tuesday, 90 Iraqi troops had been killed by the allied bombing of Iraq and Kuwait. The allies have; not released casualty figures from the aerial bombardment. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates via U.S. mail for fall and winter $39 for two terms, $22 for one term. Campus delivery $28.00 for two terms. Prorated rates: Starting March 1, 1991, $11 for balance of term to 4/24/91. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the College Press Service. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. 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