"Presidents can make mistakes" MO.- By JAMES WECHSLER IN AN "EQUAL TIME" radio reply to President Nixon's message on human resources, Sen. Walter Mondale (D- Minn.) has recalled a memorable pas- sage from a speech delivered by Frank- line D. Roosevelt in his first term four decades ago. These were Mr. Roosevelt's words: "Governments can err. Presidents can make mistakes. But we are told that divine justice weighs the sins of the warm-hearted on a different scale. Better the occasional faults of a gov- ernment living in the spirit of charity than the consistent omissions of a government frozen in the ice of its own indifference." Mondale validly suggested that FDR's statement has real and immediate rele- vance to the battle provoked by the Administration's reversion to the gospel of rugged individualism and Washington aloofness. IN PROMOTING his program of re- treat from federal responsibility, Mr. Nixon has repeatedly contended that his stand is inspired by "the failure" of na- tional efforts. And it is not hard to find examples of error, maladministration, even fraud in such areas as housing and in anti-poverty enterprises. Yet what he is now essentially prposing is that the doctrine of benign neglect replace the sometimes flawed federal programs that have meant so much to so many - and have kept alive the hope of others. There will, of course, be admirers of Mr. Nixon who are affronted by Mon- dale's quoted use of such words as "cold- blooded" and "indifference". Those of us denied access to Mr. Nixon's private cir- cle can hardly claim to assess his emo- tional temperature; his family and de- puties attest to his sympathetic vibra- tions. The issue transcends Mr. Nixon's in- ner chemistry. It is his continuing alleg- iance to the comfortable view that this is a land of free and equal opportunity in which those who have the energy and de- sire can make it, and that those who lag behind are generally the victims of their own indolence or lack of resolve. (It has been frequently observed that these exacting standards are not vigor- ously applied to such corporate blund- erers as the managers of the Lockheed Corp.) AN INSTINCTIVE reverence for pro- positions that last prevailed in the ste- wardship of the late Herbert Hoover re- peatedly emerges in the President's im- promptu pep-talks. Thus, when Sammy Davis Jr. was in- vited to perform at the White House the other night in minimal reward for cam- paign services above and beyond the call of duty, Mr. Nixon seized the chance to cite Davis as a luminous example of the success of the "American can-do spirit." Referring to the 17 astronauts who were also present, he said "a landing on the moon is pretty hard to beat as an illustration of American can-do spirit" and then added: "But the guest tonight exemplifies that can-do spirit. He (Davis) began as a relatively poor boy, overcame poverty and prejudice and went on to the top because he had that spirit." Davis re- sponded with an exuberant obsequious- ness befitting the occasion; one cannot fail to note wryly that among the songs he carelessly selected for his perform- ance was the one entitled "What Kind of Fool Am I?" IN OTHER SETTINGS, the President has not hesitated to depict his own rise to eminence as similar proof of the limit- less horizons still beckoning those un- favored by artistocratic birth or inherit- ed wealth. That his political career was advanced by oil and real estate interests who contributed to the controversial "Ni- xon Fund" does not seem to him a fatal challenge to his thesis; presum- ably he would argue that only the "can do" spirit enabled him to reach a posi- tion in which he was deemed a worthy investment. Under increasing fire over his budge- tary policy, Mr. Nixon has indignantly affirmed his compassion and vision. Per- haps in recognition of opinion polls in- dicating more widespread concern over the cutbacks than he had anticipated, he has also simultaneously advanced t h e theory that the crisis of the cities is real- ly over. This ,remark may yet achieve the dubious immortality won by Hoov- er's 1929 proclamation (as the economic roof fell in) that "prosperity is just around the corner." Yet it is too early to determine whe- ther the spirit of ondale's speech (and of the Roosevelt credo) will prevail in the gathering political storm. Too many Americans may be persuaded to believe that the time for retrenchment at the expense of the poor is at hand; as one critic has pointed out, Mr. Nixon is "ap- pealing to instincts of crass materialism" and waging a crusade "to think small, think simple and think selfish." There is a new cult of intellectuals of- fering elaborate apologia for Mr. Nix- on's counterrevolution against the war on poverty. It has become fashionable to rationalize the least generous impulses of "middle America." We are bogging down in arguments that had seemed fin- ally resolved long ago. It was, after all, Sen. Robert A. Taft - "Mr. Re- publican" himself - who decided 25 years ago that housing was the proper, urgent concern of the national govern- ment. James Wechsler is the editorial direc- tor of The New York Post, Copyright 1973 by the New York Post Corpora- tion. : t a ?'' ti, . a ' 5 :> , . , w + MS 1 r: .. E a 11 ^5 Y.. kF w r rx3. i. ' pit _ ::. . , , , P s ;:, : " s I'P , JY b . , J I t" , " . x w "I' lie to see my lawyer . . A Getting people together on the Left Eighty-two years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1973 Vengeance does not pay By JIM CONLEY NIXON IS assuming basically dic- tatorial powers - control of the press, abolition of programs by administrative order, discre- tionary tariffs, use of government police to maintain his personal power. His programs, wisely de- scribed as "socialism for the rich, private enterprise for the poor", is the political underpinning for the :eveloping American fascist sys- tem. Thousands of young intellec- uals were forced to flee the country during the height of the Vietnam War. The president has let it be known that young men who are not willing cannon fodder have no place in America. He has b e e n turning the war down slowly for years; it has served its purpose. For several years, the interest of progressive elements has been dis- tracted from social concerns by a made-to-order war that removed millions of young men from civil- ian life during the social upheaval of the late 1960's. Nixon's "volun- teer" army will perfect the can- ning policy of militarizing the low- er classes. What better way of preventing their becoming revolu- tionary? THE PATHETIC American Left has been playing into the hands of the reactionaries for a long time. The blatant elitism and plain snob- bery of so many leftists nauseates the American people, alienates them even more than the machina- tions of Tricky Dick. Too iany leftists and activists in youth groups see the average American worker as the enemy. The workers and farmers are too often the objects of their cruel jokes and massive contempt. The concept of a "counter-culture" is based on a country-club mentality. A coalition of students and heavy .::::.:.: aa i *,{;{.r i ::.h: .... ..... :..... r.""?" e....... w av......:.:.::: ..: :.:...: ":::.f ai........ ...i J' r:..i-'r:- $ ~i: "Workers and farmers are too often the ob- jects of . . . massive contempt. The concept of a 'counter-culture' is based on a country-club mentality." ......t.... ... .. . .... .. ::":::..:. .. .::: . $i d i ax: s},a. " thought they would. Their flash-in- the-pan hysterical leftism of delib- erate misfits was a form >f bour- geois individualism. AMERICAN MARXISM must ma- ture so that it is no longer a "phase" that people can grow out of, and it must become the clear voice of the American farmers and workers. Imitating Cuba, Vietnam, I r e- WE F I N D President Nixon's pro- posals to bring back the death pen- alty and impose life imprisonment with- out parole for certain crimes to be short- sighted and unrealistic. Nixon announced Saturday that he will ask Congress to restore the death pen- alty for certain federal crimes and to require life imprisonment without parole for twice-convicted drug felons. We do not agree with the President that the death penalty is a deterrent to crime. The death penalty can only be a deterrent when the potential criminal rationally weighs the possibility of suc- cess against the risk of failure and death at the hand of the state. But "the hijacker, the kidnaper, the man who throws a fire bomb, the con- vict who attacks a prison guard or an officer of the law," in the President's words, are 'not acting rationally. The fear of the death penalty is not even relevant in such cases. FURTHERMORE, in the ethical sense, we doubt whether the state has any more right to deprive individuals of their lives any more than the individuals themselves. In this context, along with the doubtful effectiveness of the death penalty, capital punishment is reduced to an act of senseless vengeance. Neither do we believe that manda'tory life imprisonment for second - time drug felons would effectively combat the heroin problem in this country. First of all, most of those so convicted would be small-time dealers who sell to support their own habits. There would be plenty more junkies to take their place, as long as heroin is smuggled into the country. Unfortunately the govern- ment has been unable to either stop the heroin flow or to arrest the major traf- fickers. Mandatory life sentences will probably not change that situation. We do not believe that such punish- ment can eradicate heroin use in this country, and a presidentially appointed study group will soon officially release a report that agrees. According to NBC news, " the report states that rehabilita- tion, not punishment, is a better solu- tion. PROGRAMS such as methadone main- tenance, if easily accessible, would be more humane and more effective in combating heroin use - and resulting crime than life imprisonment. Unfortu- nately the President, as he did with other commissions regarding pornog- raphy and marijuana, has chosen to ig- nore presidential commission findings unless they agree with his own personal moral code. dopers is a somewhat too limited base for a successful political movement, though it may net a few thousand votes in a few col- lege towns. This statement will provoke some anger, I realize. In 1968, 1 told Bill Ayers and his SDS cohorts that their fate would be the same as the wobblies, that within a f e w years the brutal suppression of a few riots, the hounding of lead- ers and the regular forces of co- optation would utterly dissolve their student movement of direct con- frontation. They laughed and call- ed me a liberal. They defeated themselves faster than I h a d land, or China is misguided; dis- tinct adaptations of Marxism are necessary in each country. Marx- ian thinkers around the world have often grieved over the inability of American Leftists to accustom their style to local traditions. in what Freud called 'pious America', Judeo-Christianity a n d Marxism can be interwoven into a strong and popular faith, which is t h e basis of any successful revolution. That wizened academic George McGovern likewise played Nixon's game with consummate skill. In him, the workers perceived a man speaking even more deviously and vaguely than Nixon. He tried the old Democratic strategy of uniting minorities, basically the welfarers, the blacks, and the young. McGovern's perspective was so narrow that millions of people who hate Nixon, voted for him because they saw him as the lesser evil. Of course, all minorities (except the tiny managerial elite) are op- pressed in this country, but a poli- tical coalition based on minorities is especially unstable and event- ually just divisive of oppressed peo- ples. AMERICA is the Melting Pot; the managerial elite and its sociol- ogical ancestors have proven mast- ers at playing off one= oppressed group against another - farmers against workers, "poor white trash" against blacks, the masses of Anglo-German Protestants against Catholics and Jews.V!ere the lines are drawn determines who wins the fight, and McGovern helped draw the lines so that Nix- on's reelection was inevitable. The distinction of the welfare masses from the other segments of the proletariat is a reactionary in- vention: the welfarers are workers forced out of their jobs, farmers forced off their land by the acceler- ating force of capitalist industrial- ization, now called automation. This distinction is matched by that of factory workers vs. white collar clerks, small businessmen, and professionals and semi profes- sionals, who have been propagand- ized into believing they are not part of the working class. A youth-culture oriented toward the students and hangers-on con- nected with the more selective col- leges can only alienate the major- ity of young people who do not at- tend college or end up attending Podunk U. THE ONLY REAL distinction is this - 98 per cent of the American people are slaving for the benefit of 2 per cent.The fat must be skim-It med off the top. Any distinctions drawn farther down than the neck of the capitalist elite work to the benefit of the 2 per cent. We must not divide ourselves as the over-ex- tended investment and the shoddy quality of the products of the Amer- ican capitalist are producing a financial crisis that is steadily deepening. The disillusionment of farmers and workers is growing daily. If the would-be Leftists of Ann Arbor do not sense this, so much the worse for them. There are many people in Ann Arbor who feel that the masses of people in this coun- try are brutal and simple-minded. There is a lot of cruel stupidity in all people; students merely ex- press their stupidity in a some- what more grammatical fashion. Those who practice hip elitism and, youth culturalism simple direct the brutality of many people against themselves. THE MOST radical thing that has happened recently in the State of Michigan does not involve se.-A date Ann Arbor. In right-on fashion, the building trades have thoroughly trashed scab-employing contractors. In one instance, several dozen s t a t e police stood by lamely as t h r e e hundred workers burned and ex- ploded a partially built school building. I relate this not to condone large- scale violence, but to demonstrate the growing disgust of the working class and their continued willing- ness to /resist exploitation. The ne- gative attitudes of workers toward students and "freaks" must be con- demned and corrected, so also must I condemn the negative atti- tudies" toward workers that I find so prevalent in Ann Arbor. Jim Conley is a senior psychot- o, y student at the University. Letters to The Daily *n n rr i a j II ' ' I - =r 'ps ._..' ' F' ' ( .l A' DES dangers To The Daily: REGARDING THE recent DES controversy, doctors, and drug companies: The "anti - miscarriage" drug DES (a synthetic estrogen) which was widely given in the 1940's caused epidemic proportions of vaginal cancerin the female off- spring. What did the doctors do? They removed their vaginas and "replaced them with a mold made from intestinal tissue which need- ed daily dilating to keep it open but which "comfortably admitted two examining fingers one year after operation." (What for???) Another "anti - miscarriage" drug, progestin, was also widely used in the 1940's. Progesterone turns into testosterone (male sex hormone) in the body and IT af- fected the female fetuses with masculinization: they grew up with enlarged clitorises and with- out menstrual cycles. What did the doctors do? They performed cli- torectomy. (What for??) States Dr. John Money: "The only cases that don't get a clitorectomy are those in which the clitoris is sufficiently small and sufficiently in its "hid- ing place" where it does not ap- pear as an embarrassment to ei- ther the parents, the doctor, or the child." That was in the 1940's when the man needed a large population (we were at war) and every pregnancy had to be saved. Today these same drugs, DES and progesterone, are given out like water for the op- posite effect (miscarriage) be- cause babies aren't needed a n y more. What will the effects be and why aren't the WOMEN important?? Kay Weiss Advocates for Medical Information March 12 local health groups. People who want the refund should leave a self - addressed envelope for the Ann Arbor CIC c/o LSA Student Government, Room 3-M, at the main desk on the first floor of the Michigan Union no later than Thursday, March 15. Ann Arbor Counter- Inaugural Committee March 12. Dump Sylvia To The Daily: A HOROSCOPE? Give us a break!!! A real waste of space ... especially asanyone who's serious- ly into astrology knows that they are almost entirely useless. Why are you trying to fill up all this space; can't you find enough news happening in Ann Arbor? And which intellectual level are you trying to appeal to this time? Is it post-kindergarten or not? We subscribe to The Daily for a different viewpoint on the news,' not as a substitute for doodling or TV soap operas. Now you've added to the crossword puzzle, the cute- ness in the today column, and the overspecialized full page book re- views . . . a horoscope! Why don't you put Sylvia to work getting the Culture Calendar to the point where it is complete and ac- curate? Or hire her to deliver in the mornings? Our delivery person definitely needs someone with a lot of foresight. Or you could have her cover city council meetings . . . local conventions and conferences - . . Tenants Union news . . . the A.A.P.D. . . . the Community Cen- ter . . . Drug Help and Ozone news . . . the health care struggle of the Free Clinic and N. Lassin et al. . . . the students and freaks who work with the P.D. on "sen- sitive"' cases . . . the transit prob- Dump Orr To The Daily: OUR INFLUENTIAL student newspaper The Michigan Daily ought to consider initiating a move- ment to lure Fred Snowden back to our University as head basketball coach. His success as a basketball coach is unheralded. We sh o u I d never have lost him. -Michael Snabes, Gra.d March 2 Write, please To The Daily: I AM PRESENTLY serving time in the Ohio Penitentiary sys- tem at London, Ohio. I am doing fairly well except that I have no one with which to correspond. As you might guess, it is quite lone- ly for me. I was hoping that per- haps you could print this in The Daily in hopes that some of the students might wish to write to me. They would be doing a great favor and have my heart-felt thanks. My address is: William N. Churcott 134255 Post Office Box 69 London, Ohio 43140 William Churcott March 9 Brotherly love To The Daily: ONE AFTERNOON at about 12:10, a car drove by a group of students waiting to cross State St. near Angell Hall and covered us with a combination of slush, sslt, and muddy water. I know this is not the worst thing that will hap- pen to me in my life, but I'd like to say this to that bastard: I have only one winter coat and I can't afford to get it cleaned. Well, what else can I say? You destroyed my faith in people? Corny, but you did a little. That I hope it happens Sylvia's Sign S TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1973 Pisces are Restless Sleepers Pisces (Feb. 19 - March 20). Avoid pro- crastination. Work projects should be suc- cessfully completed. With vacation over you will find yourself rather mixed up and ir- ritable. Make the UGLI your home. Aries. (March 21 - April 19). Tense day is in store. Guard you possessions . well against theft. Others make changes without telling you. Think before you speak; don't argue. tB6ware of the Wrath. Taurus. (April 20 - May 20). A letter of great importance is on its way, possibly an acceptance from another school. Upcoming elections may stir you into controversies. Stay clear as tensions build. Gemini. (May 21 - June 20). Success is in store if you listen to others. Favors will be given and rewards can be reaped. Keep a good disposition. Response strong from present lover. Frequent pleasure zones. Cancer. (June 21 - July 22). Stay calm. Avoid sudden actions and reactions. Study favored. A passive attitude should dominate. Take advantage of any trick. Repeat an offer previously refused. It will be accepted. Leo. (July 23 - Aug. 22). Plan for summer now. Shop for jobs and new clothes. Make contacts. Friendships may falter a little. Drive to Detroit this evening for a change of pace. Virgo (Aug. 23 - Sept. 22). Control your actions and emotions well. Anything can happen today from a temper tantrum to a passionate affair. Don't get too involved! Libra. (Sept. 23 - Oct. 22). -Don't be gullible. Promises made to you will not necessarily be kept. Suddenness of events catches you off guard. You tend to be too unscrupulous. Scorpio. (Oct. 23 - Nov. 21). Your prestige and knowledge will have an immense effect on others. Shaky affairs with sexual 'i A ... !.i - .-z .gar-) .