Saturday, June 1, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Saturday, June 1, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page FIve daily dialogue op/ed (Continued arom Page 4) denced by such local groups as the Women's Crisis Center of Ann Arbor, and by the individ- ual women who are its leaders and spokespersons. Unabashedly, Ms. Jan Ben- Dor and her companions stand before legislative bodies and maintain that they are concern- ed about the well-being of poor, black women who are victims of rape, while, in their own homes, this same peer group of middle- class, university-educated wo- men actively oppresses . the very women Ms. BenDor claims to be defending. FURTHERMORE, it is a rac- ist mentality which assumes that black and poor people can- not plan and implement their own solutions to the problems in their community. Indeed, I see no black or poor women calling for the imprisonment of more people as a solution to rape. Rather, women and men working together are success- fully changing the economic and physical maladies that have long plagued their community. White women are not doing this. Those at the Women's Crisis Center are doing nothing to bring about the economic self - development of women. They are taking a psychological approach to a problem that is essentially economic and en- vironmental. Women may shout "male chauvinism" as long as they want, but until they can design, build, and control new physical structures as well as create and determine new cul- tural images, they can do noth- ing to prevent women from hav- ing to assimilate into the pres- ent systems which are destruc- tive to them as people. THE SITUATION of domestic workers exposes "sisterhood" for the lie it is. There will be no sisterhood until white, profes- sional women stop exploiting and start helping black, brown, and poor white women. This means being able to generate well - paying employment. It means developing the resources to enable people to redesign and rebuild their communities. Unfortunately the women at the Women's Crisis Center show no interest in developing these resources; they are content to remain a referral agency. Rac- ist women have no desire to change things for anyone but themselves, and don't even care whom they injure in so-doing. The reality is that those with a limited scope cannot imple- ment economic self - develop- ment. But as long as women fail to do this, they will remain racist as well as totally inef- fective in making positive change. -Eileen Scheff May 27 due process To The Daily: SINCE EVERYONE seems to feel themselves an authority on Watergate, let me add my two cents. The stance of the press in general and of this school pa- per in particular - in its edi- torials, and biased selection of syndicated columns - strikes me as childish and scapegoatish in the extreme. I don't care if Richard Nix- on is Caligula reincarnate, the guy is entitled to due process. What kind of precedent would it be if you could get the Presi- dent of the United States to re- sign just because you don't like him any more? That's point one. Point two is that whatever sort of personality conflict may exist between Nixon and a pos- sible majority of this country, he is clearly not a simple man, to be summed up by the sort of cartoon caricatures the Daily is fond of printing. Remember the detente with Red China, and Russia, if nothing else. If Nixon has been somewhat less spec- tacular in domestic affairs, it is just possible that - in this age of imminent world annihilation, and with the United States still far and away the most affluent nation on earth - it is a matter of priorities. If anyone thinks these accomplishments trivial, let them ask themselves why they didn't come about sooner, and what might have been our future if they didn't come when they did. I DON'T WANT to defend Nixon. What I want is to stop reading this garbage where ev- eryone and his uncle has found a scapegoat to pour his frus- trations on. It seems it would take a mongoloid idiot not to recognize the rational basis of "executive privilege" which Nixon is trying to defend. If there is something of which he is otherwise guilty, let the courts find a way of proving this without sacrificing the former. Nixon has himself been much more cooperative in indicating the way to workable compro- mises in this conflict than ei- ther Congress or the Courts, who seem bent on throwing out the baby with the bathwater. This is poor recommendation, then, for the recent suggestion (N.Y. Times, May 27, 1974) by Chesterfield Smith, President of the American Bar Association, that Nixon repent and acknow- ledge himself but a poor hu- man, like himself subject to a higher law; viz., the Supreme Court, If the law were something presented to us from on high, and were in fact as sensitive and discriminatory as to de- serve the reverence Mr. Smith would like, this might not be a bad idea. But in actuality, it boils down to who is going to have the ultimate authority on presidential policy - the Su- preme Court judges, or the President himself. In view of recent behavior, there's little to recommend the former, at least. IT SEEMS dLEAR that there is a larger issue of defining and limiting executive privilege, which is being avoided. I don't think this is a simple problem; but I wouldn't suppose it was unsolvable. But apparently, there are not presently enough brains in the legal world to figure it out. -Aaron Corbet, '74 May 27 Chuch WdvAeip £eI'ice4 For Hunters THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS -ake d nteresting reading , UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (LCMS) 1511 Washtenaw Ave. Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday Service at 9:15 a.m. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, 1432 Washteaaw Ave. Ministers: Robert E. Sanders, John R. Waser, Brewster H. Gere, Jr. "Where Christ, Campus and Community meet" Worship Services at 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Sermon Title: "On Presbyo- pia." ST. ANDREW'S EPSICOPAL CHURCH, 306 N. Division 10:00 am. - Holy Communion and Sermon. 7:00 p.m. - Holy Eucharist in chapel. CANTERBURY HOUSE 218 N. Division--665-0606 Holy Eucharist at noon at Canterbury House. UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH, 1001 E. Huron Calvin Malefyt, Alan Rice, Ministers Services at 10:30 a.m. 5:30 p.m.-Student Supper. BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 423 S. Fourth Ave. Ph. 665-6149 Minister: Howard F. Gebhart 10 am-Worship Service and Church School. Eastern Michigan University Theatre THUR., FRI., SAT.-JUNE 6, 7, 8 Quirk Auditorium 8:00 P.M. 487-1221 The 20/20 musical"Visions" of Paul Horen of today's finest free-form/ progressive musicians turns his eyes to a new style and substance. The result is "Visions," Paul Horn's new album, in which he sees the possibilities of songs by top contemporary composers (David Crosby, Stevie Wonder, Joan Baez, and Joni Mitchell-who lends her voice and piano playing to her own "Blue") and trans- forms them into an album that combines tone and color, sight and sound. only thru 613 th. /3 The "Visions" - he sees here are real and " fl beautiful. 40 Air there's o thru C/assifed i