Page 4-Friday, November 2, 1979-The Michigan Daily 4c 4 Ninety Years of Editorial I Vol. LXXXX, No.50 Edited and managed by students at the U IwL __ ____ Freedom High prices spark a new gold rush in the west News Phone: 764-0552 niversity of Michigan Chrysler gets a check HE CARTER administration's de- 5. cision to bail the Chrysler Cor- 'poration out of its fiscal straits brings a welcome sign of relief from the state of 'ZMichigan, the city of Detroit, and from the hundreds of thousands of Chrysler ,employees and workers for whom bankruptcy would have meant unem- -loyment. 3 In saving Chrysler, the ad- ininistration is not, as some have 'suggested, intruding hopelessly into the free enterprise system and shoring -,ip a company that the market forces have destined to financial ruin. The aid ,package is not a reward for the bad decisions of Chrysler management, and the bail-out does not set any kind of precedent for government intervention when private companies cannot meet their payroll. Rather, what the president is doing in recommending $1 billion for 'Chrysler is recognizing current economic realities. The only thing to gain by letting Chrysler collapse would be a severe economic recession, ,massive unemployment, and a blow-up 'of racial hostilities in the-city of Detroit "that would make the '67 riots look like a fistfight. The "drop dead, Chrysler" attitude may be intellectually more satisfying than a slap on the wrist and a check for $1 billion, but in the long run, helping Chrysler is in the best in- terests not of Chrysler, but of the coun- try. - What's more, the Chrysler management, and the powerful United Auto Workers, have shown that they are willing to take the first steps to shouldering responsibility for Chrysler's economic collapse. Chrysler reshuffled the management staff, promoted outsider Lee Iacocca to the board chairman position, and recommended UAW President Douglas Fraser for a seat on the Chrysler board. The Fraser recom- mendation is in itself an indication of management's willingness to open its decision-making process to outside parties, including workers, and marks e t. .. I Iacocca what is perhaps the first real step towards labor involvement in American corporate decision-making. The union too, under Fraser's steady helm, has sailed against the winds of high-wage settlements and settled for less with Chrysler. For the union to ac- cept a settlement less than that for the other two automakers is a major con- cession 'on the part of a union that historically prides itself on across-the- board equity. For the first time, the union was forced to put a priority other than the interests of its members at the top of its bargaining agenda. The UAW was forced to consider the economic stability of Chrysler Corporation and of the nation's economy in accepting a less-than-fair deal for the Chrysler workers, and in that courageous stand, the union leadership must be congratulated. Now if the bail-out is approved, the company will be able to avert bankrup- tcy and collapse, and start on the long road to recovery and a re-entry into the competitive automobile market. But the lesson of Chrysler must not be lost, since it provides a test case of the government's commitment to private corporations, only when that company and all involved, including labor, can prove they can work together. L . A I - TI1O T'! 11 f EDITOR'S NOTE. T he high price of gold has led to another gold rush in the West. But it's very different from the one in the frontier days, reports Mark Black- burn, who writes on Western business trends for PNS and the New York Times. SAN FRANCISCO-Gold fever is raging again in the West as the dollar declines. Gold diggings are re-opening in the Mother Lode country of California, and the Homestake Mining Co.-a San Francisco firm which owns the largest U.S. gold mine, in South Dakota-is spending more on ex- ploration than ever before. BUT THE ACTION is hottest in Nevada, where environmental restrictions are the loosest. "Quite an exciting time out there in Nevada," said Robert Shoemaker, a Bechtel Corp. metallurgist who is, reworking the refuse of an old Nevada mine for his own ac- count. "There's practically a geologist for every rock. "Helicopters are flying around all over the place," he added. "They're staking claims by helocopter." THERE HAS EVEN been some gunplay as prospectors have attempted to force their way over rqancher's land-hence the airbor- ne approach adopted by those who knew the problems they face. Old mines that have been reopened include sites in the Comstock Lode, whose discovery led 10,000 Californians to Nevada in 1860 and made the fortune of the Hearst family. Up to 25 new mines might come into produc- tion in the West in the next few years, in- creasing U.S. gold production by about 200,000 oz., or 20 per cent a year, according to W. C. Bptterman, gold specialist in the U.S. Bureau of Mines in Washington. The U.S. is small fry among the world's gold producers, however. INDIVIDUAL PROSPECTORS are also in- creasingly searching rivers for gold either by panning the old-fashioned way or diving in with wetsuits and a kind of water-borne vacuum cleaner that sucks up gravel, from which particles can be separated. But while visions of riches provide the motive now as before, this new gold rush is occurring in a context way from that of the expanding republic of 100 years ago. "The price of gold simply reflects the loss of value of the paper dollar," said Homestake Mining chairman Paul Henshaw. "America is getting to be like a banana republic." AT THE SAME time, the techniques used to By Mark Blackburn recover gold today involve refinements unknown during the great rush that began in California in 1849. Nuggets are no longer to be found, but in- visible traces of gold around old deposits, as well as untouched deposits of gold too fine to be seen, can be found by chemical tests. In the Comstock Lode, said Donald Hopkins of Houston Oil and Minerals Corp., "the low- grade deposit forms a halo around the higher- grade vein system that was mined out back in its heyday." THE MICROSCOPICgold-sometimes called 'no-see-um gold"-can be located by testing rock samples for arsenic and mer- cury, which are associated with it. "We've never seen any of the gold prior to processing it," said William Wilson of Idaho Mining Corp., which operates the Windfall Mine at Eureka, Nev. "It's all been . walked over probably a thousand times," said Shoemaker. The key to the new ventures is that gold prices have risen to a point-$385 an oun- ce-where it pays to move five tons of rock to obtain a single ounce of gold. "YOU CAN MOVE rocks for about $50 a ton and make a profit," said Ray Hunter of the California Mining Association. "A few years ago you couldn't touch it." The modern, chemical method of locating this trace gold is accompanied by techniques for separating it from the ore which were equallt unheard of by the miners of '49. One of' these, known as heap leaching, involves piling up the ore and sprinkling it with cyanide solution from rainburd sprinklers until the gold leaches out. It is then separated from the solution by another process. Using such techniques, a Newmont Mining Corp. operation at Carlin, Nev., the second largest U.S. gold mine. produced 12 million dollars in net income last year-a profit of $80 an ounce. Handsome as this profit seems. more gold may be obtained as a by-product of copper mining. Kennecott Copper Corp., obtained nearly three times as much gold from a Utah copper mine last year as Newmont did from Carlin-400,00 ounces compared to 152,000. BUT THE REWARDS are still suf- ficient to persuade Houston Oil and Minerals that it is worthwhile to remove 3.5 million tons of rock from an old pit mine in the Comstock Lode to get at trace gold-and silver-200 to 300 feet below the surface. Much of the activity in Nevada is concentr- ated in the northern part of the state-the Comstock is on its western border with California. Near Elko, best known in the recent past for its numerous brothels, Freeport Gold Co. has made a strike that may be as big as Newmont's at Carlin. A joint venture of Freeport Minerals Co., and FMC Corp., Freeport Gold is expected to send president Joseph Farrell from New York to Elko to direct operations. MEANWHILE, ON the California side of the Sierra Nevada, Placer Service Corp..has leased old mines neae what were known as the Malakoff Diggings and begun studies to see if the faint traces of gold still undergroung can be brought out at a profit. Showmaker was not sanguine. "In my opinion," he said, "the Mother Lode will never produce again on a large scale-because of the environmentalists." Residents around the Malakoff Diggins, who include many who moved there from cities in recent years in search of a more quiet life, recently rallied for a giant poetry reading the featured Gary Snyder and Allen Ginsberg in a rare joint appearance to raise funds for the fight against the renewal of mining. OPENING THE mines notonly disturbed the landscape but rased problems of what to do with the waste, according to a Sierra Club spokesman. If dumped in rivers, he said, it could cause damage downstream. Dredging for gold in the rivers could do likewise, he ad- ded. In Nevada, the miners' renewed gouging of the earth has also aroused resentment among those who have no expectation of sharing in the profits. Hopkins said that around Virginia City, built on the Comstock and now the cen- ter of a retirement area, "the retired people raised a lot of commotion against our operation." * But the commotion was not enough to keep mining from going ahead in Nevada. "The mining climate is very good there compared to the rest of the states," said Shoemaker. Environmental restrictions have, however, forced the closing of a Kennecott copper mine where gold was recovered as a by-product. With that, Nevada, which had been number one among gold producing states, dropped to third place behind South Dakota and Utah. But when the new mines come into produc- tion, said Robert Warren of the Nevada Mining Association, "we do not expect that Nevada will become and remain number one." Mark Blackburn wrote this piece for the Pacific News Service. Letters to '..iuy 01 orutneriy iove: J UST TWO months before relinquishing his mighty throne, Philadelphia Mayor Frank Rizzo - the king of big city corruption - has been granted one last triumph. Like so ;many of his other victories during his eight-year stint, this one threatens to interfere with fair judicial process, and the right of individual liberties to be protected. His latest win came not from his cronies throughout the patronage- dominated system, but from the cour- ts. Three days ago, Federal District Court Judge J. William Ditter dismissed the major portion of a federal lawsuit charging the mayor !and other city officials with condoning systematic and criminal violence by the Philadelphia Police Department. The judge has thereby succeeded in kicking out of court the first potentially powerful move to find the truth about :the alleged atrocities committed by the city's police officers. The charges have been made for years. Ever since a local newspaper exposed numerous accounts of police brutality, the issue has been a source of friction for Rizzo and the citizens of Philadelphia. By filing the suit, the Justice Department was seeking to finally determine the validity of those accusations before a federal judge. It was a bold move, the first time that the federal government has gone after an entire police department rather than after individual complain- ts of police brutality. Filed in late summer, the case has soared to a high spot on Attorney General Benjamin tempt to investigate the alleged brutality. In recent years, hundreds of cases have been brought locally by the district attorney against the depar- tment. Most of them have been drop- ped due to lack of evidence as the only witnesses in many cases have been the officers themselves. Protected by the Fifth Amendment, many of these of- ficers have refused to testify. . This is not to say that all of the cases of alleged police brutality can be proven true. It is just that many cases have never had a chance, either because of lack of witnesses or illegal intervention from Rizzo who used to be police commissioner. What is needed is the weight of a federal investigation, and the resources it could command. Unlike local investigators, the Justice Department could send an army of lawyers into Rizzo's territory to either scrape up the dirt or leave the city alone. But the judge's ruling leaves the mystery and uncertainty in place. While some police brutality cases have been proven, others have remained suspended for years. The government, as well as the city of Philadelphia, are entitled to know the truth about thej city's police department once and for all. Have there just been isolated in- cidents of brutality, or does it represent a systematic pattern? For now, Judge Ditter has prevented the search for an answer. BUSINESS STAFF LISA CULBERSON.......................... Business Manager To the Daily: I had a chance to read the en- tire Daily today, instead of my usual habit of merely reading the front page news. As always, I found your newspaper to be quite good. However, the page con- taining Eric Zorn's Feoplemania has me both disgusted and incen- sed. Never in my life have I seen such a poor example of what I'll call journalism, although the word hardly fits. Entitled Peoplemanis, the column would seem to be a copy of the widely read "people" columns found in the Detroit News and Free Press. Whether or not these columns deserve their poularity, at least they do not break the basic jour- nalistic rule of printing unbiased articles. Apparently, by putting his name in the headline, Zorn feels he has the right to place his opinions in the column. Not so. Many blurbs contained in the peoplemania page were news items, and should have been treated as such. The first rule of journalism is not to report news in a biased manner. Well, referring to Amy Carter as "first brat" in a news article is cer- tainly breaking that rule. There are places in a newspaper for opinion; I would not try to suggest that there aren't. However, this is definitely not one of them. A movie reviewer is entitled to give his/her opinion, for she/he is supposed to be a cinema expert. Does Zorn believe that he is a people expert? I don't know, but I tend to believe that Zorn is a first term staff writer with a good idea about what people will read. But while he may understand proper journalistic technique, certainly his editors are aware of the kind of material they should not print. Let me refer to specifics. In Oc- tober 24's issue of the Daily, Zornl referred to Farrah Fawcett as "overrated" and Tom Hayden as famous people invariably have their private lives open to public scrutiny, but such a sensitive story should be dealt with delicately, if at all. The kind of cute, sarcastic s tone used by Zorn does not belong in any story that deals with sensitive topics. Not that I condone the type of writing on the rest of the page. It is easy to knock everyone one wr- ties about, as long as one does not have to substantiate one's remarks. In addition, Zorn's frequent use of sarcasm is a little nausisting. Sarcasm is the humor of idiots; most ten year olds can use it effectively. If Zorn wished to put some hum into the Daily, let him develop something original and intelligent, don't allow him to insult the newspaper's readers. Zorn is perhaps the only writer I've ever read who tries to be cute. I half expected to see him dot his i's with little hearts. It's bad enough that he makes himself look like a total fool, but he is giving the Daily a bad name in the process. I found one amazing irony in the article of October 24. Zorn saw fit to call Bo Talbert an "in- flamed idiot", when in fact it is Talbert's style that Zorn himself tries to emulate. If Zorn wishes to be thought of as the Bob Talbert of the Daily, then he should con- tinue his column. If not, perhaps he can find a different outlet for his classless cuteness. To the Daily: In response to your editorial (Tuesday, October 9, 1979) on the Pope's hypocrisy, I wish to offer an apology on behalf of the Pope, in his absence. I fully agree with you that "there are no legitimate views that lie contrary to the brotherhood of man." I acknowledge that in the past and present many evil and immoral actions have been committed in the name of God or some other The L this country to preach the teachings of the church," after all, he is the Pope. Ultimately the question which demands to be raised is, "Was what John Paul said inconsistent with promoting the unity of the brotherhood of man?" Your answer was a booming NO! as you rallied around the banner of brotherhood And yet I can not help but wonder what your conception of brotherhood is that allows this childish and irresponsible pran- cing, among other things. For it is your brotherhood that has caused the situation of the poor, that has caused the alar- ming nuclear escalation, that has caused the issue of abortion, etc. For it is your brotherhood which seeks to gratify its wishes and desires without recognizing the responsibilities inherent in those very desires. Let us take the issue of abortion for an example of this insane pethodology. Sexual in- tercourse is extremely pleasurable, and even Freud . recognized sexual activity to be a major drive in human beings. Naturally you seek to satisfy that drive, and in order to avert the responsibility of that action, you cry out for abortion. Then you justify murder by pleading that the child would not have a good life anyway. Your morality was summed up in a joke heard by Carson recently when he said, "You know we have a very low crime rate out here in California . Everything is legal." The fact that you have slated the Pope as a hypocrite only ser- ves to prove that you are ignorant of the brotherhood and unity that the Pope is fighting for. If you can only see Christianity as steeples and bells, rules and regulations, then I say to you that you do not see Christianity. Rules and regulations are for people who cannot take responsibility, and to be auite truthful this world )aily,, the ideals of unity and brotherhood. Your very own ethic, which is egoistic hedonism, by its very nature destroys all hopes of brotherhood and unity, for it only provides a base for conflict. It is a shame that your lofty ideals are in direct op- position to your base system. - In the Christian Church the scriptures are authoritative, and it is on the authority of scripture, not man, that John Paul takes his stand. In the scriptures is con- tained a blueprint for living which works if it is followed. It is much easier to do a jigsaw puzzle with a complete picture than it is to guess where the pieces go. If you do not accept the authority of scripture, then there is little I can say to you at this juncture, for you obviously know more about men than their creator. All I can do is to'remindc you of the covenant that God wishes to establish with men, and point out what must inevitably happen. Go on with your lifestyle, do what you please, follow your desires, yet know that the effects of your irresponsibility and self gratification will multiply beyond your wildest nightmares. -James T. Watson . November 1 To the Daily: Re: your article "Signing for the E.R.A." in the October 24 Today column. The Equal Rights Amendment is an often misun- derstood piece of legislation and I'm afraid your article may in- crese such misunderstanding. It doesn't make it clear whether McClenny, an E.R.A. advocate, is telling us that the E.R.A. is "against the concept of the whole family structure" or whether it is the Mormon Church which is the perpetuator of this belief about the E.R.A. After speaking with Ms. McClenny I found that the latter was the correct inter- pretation. The E.R.A. is not, as