Sunday, January 16, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Sunday, January 16, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five SUNDAY MAGAZINE BOOKS The' BLIND AMBITION, by John Dean. New York: Simon and Schuster, 415 pp. $11.95 By JEFF RISTINE W HAT WOULD h a v e hap- pened, had there been no John Dean? Questions of that nature have been tossed around a lot in the last four years, almost as if it were luck that saw the United States through the national trauma called Watergate. What would have happened if there were no White House tapes? What would have happened if the burglars made it out of the Democratic National Committee headquarters safely that night? What if Ben Bradlee had asisgn- ed the story of the "caper" to the Washington Post's summer intern? The answers, expressed in jokes, shudders and serious po-' litical commentaries, are al- ways the same. They depict a lonely, paranoid and ruthless figure sitting behind a huge desk in the Oval Office, smiling because he and his men got away with it, laughing at the prospect of repealing the Bill of Rights. Watergate has given us plenty of cause for cynicism toward the men who lead our nation, but not so much that John Dean can be considered the product of luck. As his book Blind Ambition makes clear, Dean might be thought of instead as the driver of a car who con- stantly comes to critical forks in the road-call it, the road to Jeff Ristine is managing edi- tor of the Daily. bind Richard Nixon's fate, if you want to be corny-and must make continual decisions which affect not only his own destiny but that of virtually everyone around him. The inevitable con- clusion is that too many '"wrong" turns on these forks would have given us the now unthinkable-29 more months of President Nixon. Dean has written an absorbing acount of those forks he en- countered as counsel to the President, how he decided to deal with them and what his decisions meant for the rest of us.-Blind Ambition suceeds be- cause its author was firmly committed to disclosing the truth about the culpability of the President, his palace guard and their aides, his Cabinet members and, of course, his counsel in the Watergate break- in and its ensuing cover-up. THE BOOK'S primary value lies in its rich detail. Dean has applied his computer mem- ory to give color and life to dozens of familiar episodes, in- cluding many of the infamous White House conversations that until now existed only in dry transcript form. Dean takes us inside his mind under the hot klieg lights of the Senate Cau- cus Room in the summer of 1973; to Camp David where he l fruitlessly attempted to follow orders to contain the Watergate cancer with a less-than-truthful "Dean Report"; in the offices of prosecutors so obtuse they had to be told by Dean's flam- boyant lawyer how valuableI their witness was; and in jailj at Fort Holabird, Maryland, as he rubbed elbows with formerI leading the arnbitious UNDERGRADS: SUNDAY EVENINGS SUPPER AND FELLOWSHIP , 5:30 P.M.-CELEBRATION r56:l5 --MEAL 7:00-PROGRAM Meals prepared cooperatively FIND FOOD, FRIENDS, FELLOWSHIP, COST 75c Join us EACH week WESLEY FOUNDATION 602 E. HURON at State St. 668-6881 (Across from Campus Inn) comrades Jeb Magruder and Charles Colson as well as a cast of Mafia hit men. For Dean, it wasn't just a matter of deciding to tell the truth. First he was forced to acknowledge and abandon his lust for upward mobility, pres- tige and praise at the White House. "Deep down, I knew I was a m e e k, favor-currying staff man, not hardboiled enough to play the game I had watched Ehrlichman and Mit- chell play," he writes. "T h e same mental predilections that had propelled me to the White House and into a leading role in the cover-up now made it im- possible for my mind, to ignore the grave weaknesses of our position." But in the end it was fear, not courage, that drove Dean to bring the stonewalls of the Watergate cover-up crum- bling down. For all his honesty and his role in bringing Nixon's corrupt career to an end, Dean is still a difficult man to admire or respect. But a squealer is unwilling to take any rap alone. Hardly any- one, including his wife "Mo," enjoys a favorable image in this book. Press Secretary Ron Zieg- ler is listed in a famous hooker's address book. CBS Reporter Daniel Schorr is a liar. Senator Howard Baker is a flunkey for the White House. Gerald Ford "might have some problems" if there were an inquiry into cam- paign contributions. And Richard Nixon? As he was in The Final Days, Nixon.isI a sympathetic and comic figure at points in Blind Ambition, struggling to remove the cap from a pen, hurriedly staging a phony discussion on "budget priorities" with Dean so that a group of college newspaper edi- tors visiting the White House would see the President work- ing with someone he thought looked. "hippie." "He would have bursts of lucidity and logi- cal thinking," Dean says later,! "but mostly he was rambling and forgetful, and as I grew used to talking with him I nursed the heretical notion that the President didn't seem very3 smart." Womanwork'77 an exhibit of Michigan Women Artists ,tOUR r a- a Iw Join uh WEDNESDAY, JAN. 19 when the U-M Jewish community brings you another GRAD HAPPY HOUR Popular Mixed Drinks 50c Cheese and snacks-free Everyone is Welcome 1429 HILL STREET 0 0i AP Photo Where would we be without John Dean? Sunday. ay Discussions An opportunity for discussion on ques- tions of personal meaning. A brief presentation on a different topic each Sunday afternoon at 3, followed by dis- cussion and a social hour. JANUARY 16: THE NATURE OF LOVE Marry Me: What happens to, love? Dean almost seems to be tell-. ing us, in fact, that Watergate! can be blamed at least in part on the goals of roughly a dozen' men who unfortunately weren'ta very smart. They lacked the in- telligence to appreciate the na-! tion's laws, they were too dumb to cope with defeat, too inept to halt their disastrous cover-up, until one bright man did it for them. In painting that style of pic- ture, even as only a partial ex- planation of Watergate, Blind Ambition leaves us with that chilling question: What would have happened had there been no John Dean? THE COLLABORATIVE Winter Art and Craft Classes BATIK Chinese Brush Painting Contemporary Quilting Design with Natural Material Drawing Jewelry Leaded Glass Macrame and Fiber Baskets Native American Design _ ...._ . -- - w r I JANUARY 23: JANUARY 30: ANDROGNY-TH.E INTEGRATION OF, FEMININE AND MASCULINE PRINCIPLES GAYNESS AND ISOLATIONISM MARRY ME, by John Up- dike. Knopf: New York, 303 pp., $7.95. By DAVID KOSS T M WORD "adultery" has a funny ring to it. One hears' the Ten Commandments being invoked, or, Csee Hester Prynne' with a scarlet 'A' sewn to her dress, her daughter at her side. "Extra-marital affair" doesn't sound right, either; it's too clin- ical, too antiseptic. Bnt no mat- ter what you call it, it's a com- mon occurence in modern life and John Updike, in his novel Marry Me, focuses on virtually nothing else. A concise, unpre- tentious novel, it examines clearly and realistically what happens to a man and woman who love each other while mar- ried t6 others. Marry Me is not an elaborate novel by any means. The four characters - Jerry, Sally, Ruth and Richard - dominate the novel, and do so to the exclusion of any other characters. The theme is adultery among con- temporary Americans and what it does to them emotionally and what it might mean for. them philosophically. And within that framework, the novel is a suc- cess. Jerry Conant is a frustrated cartoonist t n r n e d advertising agency artist. Sally Mathias is a sexy blonde neighbor of his in 1962 Connecticut. Both are mar- ried, thirtyish, and have kids. When they commence an affair of their own, neither knows that their respective spouses oncehad an affair of their own, but broke it off some time ago. So the summer of '62 drags on, with Jerry finally telling his wife "I think I'm in love"-and not with her. Nevertheless, he stays with his wife and leaves us to wonder whether he does so out of cowardice or out of love. If it's out of cowardice, is that necessarily more moral, more right than leaving? Marry Me is not set in 1962 accidentally. Reading the novel we remember that time as be- ing the era of John Kennedy and Camelot, and Updike wants' us to think of it as "the twilight of the old morality." Whether he's right is not important. He succeeds in making us think about those things. And, finally, we think about the dream of ideal love, a love that the reali- ties of life make impossible for Jerry and Sally to have, but a love Jerry can imagine. ASIAN M~ARTIAL ARTSrUDto' 217' Fi. Wr V41 4woN * ANN ?ARBOR- IAle IfyCN 994"/620Q r' r ., , Photography I & 11 Photo Images Water Color Sculi ptu re WV"' n1q FEBRUARY 6: STRAIGHT FRIENDS SUNDAYS AT 3 P.M. CANTERBURY HOUSE 218 N DIVISION STREET corner of Catherine and Division for information call 665-0606 (-n ld. ic4n 2ni Fl o o r Michiggn union Join The Daily Staff JAN. 1 0-FEB. 5 UNION GALLERY First Floor Mich. Union HOURS: Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat., Sun.: noon-6 oCover Tonit0 David Koss is an English major at the University.1H AIKWQO MARTIAL ART OF SELF DEFENSE DEMONSTRATION BY TAKASHI KUSHIDA, 7th don CHIEF INSTRUCTOR, NORTH AMERICA TUESDAY, January 18-5:00 p.m. I.M. BUILDING WRESTLING ROOM Call Tom O'Bryan, 994-5533 for information WHAT IS AIKIDO? The word- Aikido comes from a combination of the three JAdpanese worssmeaning 'Harmony," "Mind, and "way." It is then, a way of harmony of the mind and as this explanation would indicate it is a study which is? as deep as the student has time or patience to pursue, because it involves a study of the mind and the working of the human body with all its weakness, and yet with all its strength. THE STRENGTH? The first thing which the student is taught is the fact that in understanding an opponent, and in fact subduing him, no force or brute strength is necessary. The strength used, if any, is tht strength of the opponent-not your own, and his body is led by the way of the lines of least resist ance to a point of no return-a point where he loses his balance and of his own accord is rendered helpless or harmless. THE ATTITUDE:# The martial arts begin with gratitude and end withagratitude. If there is an error at the important starting point, the marital arts can become dangerous to others and merely brutal fight- ing arts. Civilization then ecomes a murderous weapon with which one nation threatens another. AIKIDO strives truly to under- I Why wait years? Prepare now to enter a world of responsibility and authority immediately after graduation. . . . Through~the Marine Corps Platoon Leaders Class Program. All required training is completed during the summer and will not interfere with your academic studies. After gradu- ation move quickly into a wide variety of interesting, rewarding and chal- lenging fields, including aviation. t STARTING SALARIES TO $12,600 INCREASING TO $15,600 IN TWO YEARS. " NO ON-CAMPUS TRAINING " OPTION TO WITHDRAW WITHOUT OBLIGATION " $100/MONTH EDUCATION STIPEND AVAILABLE 0 SUMMER TRAINING PAID AT $105/WEEK " GUARANTEED AVIATION Gerry Peirce You never seem to hear about the people who are cured of cancer. I am one of them. My cancer was discovered early. Because I went for a PAP test regularly. I want you to have a PAP test. Make an appointment for one right now. And keep having the test regularly for the rest of your life. The rest of your life may be a lot longer if, you do. I knew . Ih acancer and 1li;ed