Page 4-Saturday, January 20; 1979-The Michigan Daily A portrait of untempered A power By Jon Stewart C HARLES (CHUCK) DEDERICH, the alcoholic who 20 years ago founded one of the most successful alcohol and drug treatment programs in the country, had a fantasy about his own funeral arrangements. According to a former associate, Dederich once told a group of friends somewhat jokingly: "I want my body to be dropped into a glass case of brandy, a huge fish tank. My hair would float. My eyes would roll back. I'd also like a constant tape-loop of one of my lectures. I'd loll and float in the brandy. People could come and look and see me, and the tape-loop would play on and on... Whether he was serious or not, Dederich's odd little fantasy has become almost a self-fulfilling prophecy. Through the fish tank lens of the television screen and newspaper column, Americans have had a disturbing glimpse of what many former followers believe is the symbolic death of both Dederich and the organization he founded-Synanon. "He was unsconscious," said a police officer who participated in Dederich's Dec. 2 arrest on charges of conspiring in the bizarre rattlesnake murder attempt on Los Angeles attorney Paul Morantz. "He was sprawled out in front of an empty bottle of Chivas Regal." Too drunk to be arraigned on the day of his arrest, Dederich was later legall declared to be "mentally incompetent." He is now recuperating in Arizona while his attorneys fight an extradition request to California, where authorities want to try him in connection with the Morantz g murder attempt. The rise and fall W ITHIN RECENT memory the story of Dederich's rise to great power, wealth and influence through good works was still framed in almost mythic proportions. From a stumbling drunk with no money and little education he had risen Phoenix-like to build a non-profit corporation ,.valued at $30-$50 million, founded on a unique approach to teaching drunks and drug addicts to help themselves. Within a decade after being sobered up by Alcoholics Anonymous, Dederich had built Synanon into a program that was admired and emulated throughout America and Europe. It grew into one of the richest and largest land- owning non-profit companies in California. Dederich, using an intensive kind of encounter therapy that came to be known as the Synanon Game, took people whom he scornfully called "the scum of the earth" and tuned them into the pioneers of a brave new utopian, communalist world. It was built on a foundation of no- nonsense morality, self-reliance, rigid honesty and hard- nosed business principles. It was, as Dederich often said, "the sane society." Today, Dederich is once again a victim of the alcohol he avoided for 20 years, and Synanon is as much feared as it was once respected. Reduced to a hardcore of about 900 devoted members, the organization is under investigation by numberous law enforcement agencies for a bizarre series of gruesome beatings, intimidations, possible tax frauds and massive weapons purchases. Former members hint darkly that millions of Synanon dollars have been moved 'to numbered Swiss bank accounts and that the organization maybe preparing a mass exodus to a foreign country. Some even suggest -that Dederich's return to alcohol was encouraged by others in the Synanon leadership as a means to "kill him off and make him a martyr." A high official of the California Attorney General's office who has been conducting an investigation of Synanon echoed a comrnon sentiment when the told Pacific News Service he sees "some similarities between Jonestown and Synanon-the obedience to cult values, the attitude of 'if you are not with us, you are against us."' What had happened to bring this once acclaimed man and his life's work to such an ignoble pass? Some answers are provided by another factor that Synanon has in common with the People's Temple-a large body of former members who dropped away from the organization and warned of a dangerous new course. In Los Angeles, hundreds of former Synanon members remain loosely affiliated through the "Network," a dues- paying "alumni organization" with its own newsletter. While most of these and other former Synanon members remain leery of speaking to the press, they do stay in close touch with family and friends who remain in Synanon. Thus, they have watched with growing concern as the organization has progressively become more isolated, more involved in violence and ever less involved in treating alcoholics and drug addicts. These "former members-many of whom were personally close to Dederich-agree almost unanimously that the undoing of Synanon began long algo when middle- class people began joining the organization not for drug or alcohol treatment, but simply to participate in what was an exciting alternative lifestyle. "Chuck Dederich was headed on the course that he has followed since 1968," Says Terry Hurst, who was known as Snyanon's "Second Lady-In-Waiting" because she was the wife of Synanon Foundation president Jack Hurst. She left her husband and one child (two had already left) in Synanon when she quit in 1974. "That's when he began to discover how powerful he was. He found he not only had control over dope friends and alcoholics, but that the could control people in the community for whom he had respect-merchants and doctors and attorneys and psychiatrists. He saw that he could turn them around, that they were just as willing to go along as the desperate people." Another key factor, says Hurst, was Dederich's deep need to always have "an enemy, somebody to fight." "The enemy without ceased to be-he won the battles with the media and the community and with tryingto get recognition and money. What was the use of going on if there was no one left to fight. We always had to have'bigger and better challenges. So he started turning people against each other. The enemy became (people) within Synanon. It began with a stew that later came to be known as the "bloodbath stew" when he started turning husbands and wives against each other. Nobody could have any secrets. Nobody could have any discussions outside a public forum. In order to maintain any position in Synanon you had to really turn on your friends and your mate. People had to relate through Synanon. If you weren't for us, you were against us. And if you were against us, you were an enemy." Ellis Kaplan, a prominent San Francisco architect who designed many of Synanon's buildings during his seven years in the organization, quit 14 months ago. Kaplan was V-, director of Synanon's San Francisco house and head of the advertising sales products division, a multi-million dollar Synanon business. Kaplan, who says he had "no regrets" during his years in Synanon, nor the $60-70,000 he donated over the years, believes the "unraveling" came quite recently: "It began when his wife fell it. No one really knew the role she played in his personal life. Above all, she tempered him in an extraordinary way.", Dederich's wife Betty was diagnosed with terminal cancer in December 1976 and died the following April. She was a black woman from a lower-middle-class Kansas background. After moving to Los Angeles she became peripherally involved in movies, then drugs, and then prostitution. "She was a very high-class hooker before she cane to Synanon and married Chuck," said Kaplan, who came to know both of them well. "She could humor him," he said. "She'd kid him in. games, poke fun at him in ways no one else could." Her influence was critical, Kaplan believes, because even Dederich "described himself as an intolerant person. He didn't like minorities. Dope fiends were a real albatross for him. He despised them. As an ex-drunk, he looked down on dope fiends. And he had no respect for people who were poor. "He was a man of tremendous intolerance and rage who was tempered by a woman-a black dope fiend. When she went, he simply lost that temper." Nina Bauman, another recent Synanon "splitee," as quitters were called, agreed that "the lid came off with the death of his wife, but it started way before that. Everybody in Snyanon thought this man was god. Nobody would do anything bad about him. You couldn't question him, you couldn't express any doubts. Betty could't do that either, but she could temper him and cajole him. He always went in the same direction, the direction he wanted, but she could temper it." A "real world" bigshot K APLAN BELIEVES that behind much of Dederich's drive and ambition was a desire to be recognized by what he called "the real world" as a "bigshot," a word he often used to describe himself. "He felt he had created a $33 million corporatio and was entitled to relate to big executives as an equal. But the call never came. Even after he got all his money, he was never accepted into the circles of the big corporate and financial leaders." Even when prominent figures joined Synanon, sai Kaplan, the very fact of their joining made them "weak" in Dederich's eyes. "He felt that anyone who moved into Synanon had to have some kind of weakness. He's often say 'You come to my house; I didn't go to your house. "Chuck had no peers in Synanon in terms of his own age and wealth. His only peers were outside, in 'the real world. Even when he was suing Time magazine he liked to say that he had more in common with (Time publisher) Hedley Donovan than with Synanon." But as more and more professional people joined Synanon, said Kaplan, "Chuck felt increasingly that the outside world had little to teach him. Synanon was the 'same society.' Kaplan left Synanon because he "didn't like the lifestyle anymore, and I didn't trust the younger leadership that was coming up to have respect for the older members. I watched my best friends, people who had given much more than I had to Synanon, become so dependent on Chuck that they had no life they could call their own." Kaplan was still present in Synanon when some of the more recent quirks began to occur, things like the enforced vasectomies and abortions for all members and the formation of militaristic self-defense units called the "Imperial Marine" and "Synanon National Guard," armed with hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of guns and ammunition. "I stood by and watched things that were despicable," he recalls. Nina Bauman viewed the latest twists as part of a process that had begun at least a decade ago. "It was a result of his restlessness, and the fact that he could never accept what was. He'd get bored. Then, as he became more imbued with his own sense of power, he wanted to see not only changes in his personal life, but he began to say to himself, 'How far can I change people. I got them to give up their booze. I got them to give up their dope. I got them to give up their smoking. I got them to give up sugar. I even got them to give up their sperm and their babies and their wives and husbands."' Asks Bauman, "What's the next step?" In fact, the next step is what now concerns former Synanon members more than anthing. Several formesr members who have been outspoken about the organization have in the past few weeks received ominous telephone calls from current members accusing them of being responsible for Dederich's renewed drinking. According to many sources, the heavy drinking began last August in Rome, while Dederich, his daughter Jady and other Synanon leaders were on a business trip, allegedly opening Swiss bank accounts and setting up a new corporation in Lichtenstein. Now, with Dederich "mentally incompetent in Arizona and wanted in California, no one knows who can lead the organization or what will become of it. Dederich's daughter Jady, 27, is now nominally in charge of Synanon. And Dan Garrett, his longtime legal counsel, is considered a top challenger for the leadership. Otier recognized leaders have left the organization in recent months. "The top leadership is bankrupt. They sat by and allowed the old man to drink," says Kaplan. He'pridicts "a big stink" over Synanon's millions, much of which he believes has been siphoned off into the private accounts of Dederich's family and top associates. Dederich himself was given a $500,000 retirement gift by the foundation when he retired earlier this year, and his son and daughter have been paid salaries ranging up to $60,000 a year. He says the non-leadership members will attribute Dederich's condition to the pressures brought on him by the ex-members and the media. "They'll feel that everyone is out to get Chuck. Is there a capacity for violence? You bet. I really don't know what would happen if the sheriff's department tried to take their guns away from them. I just hope we get out of this thing without a tragedy." Nina Bauman is concerned that Dederich might die. "If he dies he will be a martyr, and that's the worst thing tha could happen," she says. "If that happens, it will become that much harder for those still in Synanon to ever sort out the real from the unreal." Jon Stewart is an editor of Pacific News Service. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Fighty-Nm(e Years of Editorial Freedom Letters Congratulations on Union Mr. Stechuk's common error Vol. LXXXIX, No. 92 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan The child's welfare T HE MICHIGAN Supreme Court's decision to allow a mother, who happens to be a lesbian, to maintain' custody of her 12-year-old girl was a bit surprising, but welcome news for those who believe that the government has no right to legislate morality. Margareth Miller has been fighting in the courts since 1976 to retain custody of her daughter Jillian. The Millers divorced in 1973. A temporary arrangement was made; Ms. Miller took custody of Jillian and Mr. Miller took custody of the other child, Rick. Mr. Miller remarried and in 1975 began procedings to obtain custody of Jillian. In 1977, Oakland County Circuit Judge Frederick Ziem ruled that Mr. Miller The high court, in its decision, put the emphasis, and rightly so, on the welfare of the child. The court stated: "The record does not present clear and convincing evidence that the change of custody is in the best interests of the child." What the court's ruling means is that no longer, at least in this state, will the sexual preference of a parent be a relevant factor in the decision to award custody of children. The landmark decision brought two victories. First, it demonstrates an increased awareness in society that a person's sexual preference does not decide what kind of human being they are. Second, and most important, the court has made To the Daily: On behalf of the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA ) Student. Union lobby, I'd like to give my thanks to everyone who helped us, and to MSA, the University ActivitiesaCenter (UAC), and the Michigan Daily. Special thanks go to Scott Kellman and Steve Carnevale who started this entire process. Never at the University of Michigan have I ever seen such a united student effort on behalf of a common goal. This is further evidence to me that there exists a strong desire for a student center, and we're now looking forward to seeing the results of our efforts. We must give a lot of credit to the Regents of the University for taking the time to listen to students. They received our phone calls, and heard everything we said to them. A few of, the Regents met personally with us, and again were very open to our ideas. We (the students) have accepted a great responsibility. It is important that we now do our got the student Union that we wanted; we now all have a responsibility to see that the Michigan Union becomes the student center. -Jeff Lebow Film and book burners To the Daily: I. was pleased to read that apparently none of the persons who came to view the "controversial" showing of Birth of a Nation on campus were swayed from their intentions by the NAARPR protesters. After all, unless one actually sees the film oneself, as I did one year ago, one cannot know what all the furor is about! If it were sufficient merely to. listen to the opinions of others who had viewed a film firsthand, there would be no need of theaters. We could rely instead on the movie reviews of film critics. Next, we could dispense with the printing of books, the production of plays, etc. To the Daily: Much as I value the activities and intellectual tolerance of LS&A Student Government, I must challenge Bob Stechuk's Open Letter of January 13 for its commonly held error. It is false to assert that "the relationship that exists between the University, corporations, and government agencies directly impinges on students' education and access to different opinions and analyses of issues and events, both current and historical." There is not a shred of evidence to prove direct or indirect impingement. How the University behaves as a corporate institution cannot and does not affect an individual faculty member's teaching unless that member so chooses. However, if a professor comes under the influence of business or government, the instance belongs to a more general category of liability that no faculty member can hope to avoid. That is, each professor is responsible for justifying the shape and scope of issues in why information is structured as it is, and why some methods rather than others are demonstrated for understanding it. But both the information and the methods are freely selected by teaching individuals. An abstract, collective Universityis a myth. All existing alternatives are made available in the course of examining the subject matter (the definition of a "course"). But since preferences are unavoidable as well as rationally defensible, a scale of alternatives emerges. In plain terms: class discussion, outside reading, counsultation with faculty. Professors teach by private conscience and informed choice. Students must feel free to question the packaging, and to pursue alternative opinion. Both freedoms are necessary in an honest learning (or research) process. Not necessary is a confused abstraction that viewi the University as a collectivity: The fiction of institutions impingement on access to opinio is a crutch that LS&A-SG does n i