Thursday, June 6, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Fie Young aides unsure about Nixon WASHINGTON (R') - Five years ago, dozens of young peo- ple flocked to the White House to serve President Nixon. They had supped on the headiness of the 1968 campaign and were full of energy, ambition, ideas and ideals. It had been, as one of them put it, "an extraordinary van- tage point," a chance to be in- volved in the highest levels of government, a tremendous ca- what they were doing was good for the country," said one dis- illusioned former Nixon aide. "I found myself saying so many times, the bureaucracy isn't go- ing to help these people. t'm go- ing to help them with the pow- er of the White House. But it was illegal. Where do you draw the line? "IF YOU did it by the rules and regulations, you'd be there 'You got so carried away in the White House with a feeling of moral righteousness that it's understandable some thought what they were doing was good for the country. I found myself saying so many times, the bureaucracy isn't go- ing to help these people. I'm going to help them with the power of the White House. But it was illegal. Where do you draw the line?' reer boost, an ego trip beyond their wildest dreams. TODAY MOST have departed, their rose - colored vision shat- tered or shredding at the seams. And they are bewilder- ed, saddened, betrayed and confused by the complexities surrounding the W a t e r- gate scandal. And, with the release of the transcripts, it is soul search- ing time again, more whats and whys and hows. "You got so carried away in that place with a feeling of moral righteousness that it's understandable some thought 25 years. We didn't have that time. So sometimes you'd fudge and say, 'The President wants this done,"' Even so, the aide and most of his departed colleagues do not agree with Gordon Strachan, the tall, sad-eyed young man who fought tears as he told the Senate Watergate committee last summer that based on his experience at the White House, he had this advice for young people interested in govern- ment service: "Stay away." The White House often point- ed out that almost one-third of the President's staff was 30 or under. In 1969 a reporter in- terviewed some of 30 White House aides with the title of staff assistant, deputy secretary or research assistant. Today, only about a half dozen remain. JOHN PRICE, a former ex- ecutive secretary of the Urban Affairs Council and special as- sistant to the President, left the administration in 1971. Price, now 35 and a vice president of Manufacturers Trust Co. in New York, was interviewed aft- er reading the edited tran- scripts of Nixon's Watergate conversations. "It's very depressing there w a s not more leadership shown," he said. "The only things that come out of is the instinct for survival . . . "The irony of the Nixon years was brought home to me by a memorandum (Daniel) Moyni- ham wrote to Nixon just before he was inaugurated. The gist of it was that it was Nixon's task to restore confidence and re- spect to the office of the presi- dency and American institu- tions.' THEN PRICE added: "It is time for the President to step aside in favor of Vice President Ford." Of the dozen former Nixon PHOTO ao, S e it i forPH TO Staton t makes etters fun to wrte and fun to receive Re tu pa epon eve rlope d. .. S 5.5 MANn PR STING C. au.tPpr a~nfk CtS ic tu a t a f f e r s interviewed, all between the ages of 28 and 35, most said they left the White House with mixed emotions: proud of having worked for the president of the United States, sickened to see so many of their colleagues facing indictments, court trials and jail, and re- lieved not to have been sucked into the whirlpool themselves. Lee Huebner, a former Nix- on speechwriter, offered these reflection on his five years in the White House: "When I first came to Washington, it was a great, glittering, glamorous and exciting place. When I left, it was sad and depressing. "EVERYONE who re- members what it might have been is saddened it hasn't turn- ed out the way we wanted it to." See AIDES, Page 9 Eastern Michigan University Theatre T H U R., F R#I., SAT.-JU N E 6, 7, 8 Quirk Auditorium 8:00 P.M. r l 487-1221 A *1914 Summer Abroad* CFS Summer Flights Available and Study Programs Leave-6 28 JFK Paris Return-8 /22 Paris/JFK Cost-$295.00 OR Leave-6 29 JFK/Luxembourg Return-Open return up to 1 year Cost $315.00 CONTACT: CENTER FOR FOREIGN STUDY 216 South State Street (above Marti Walker) 662-5575 I Next time you see someone polluting, point it out.{ It's a spewing smokestack. It's litter In the streets. It's a river where fish can't live. You know what pollution is. But not everyone does. So the next time you see pollution, don't close your eyes to it. Write a letter. Make a call. Point it out to someone who can do something about it. People start pollution. People can stop it. Keep America Beautiful rF ''/'P'kAoenu., New York, NewYork 10016 A POI.cSerieo t D wepr Th Ars qCoueal Ann Arbor - 1974! Greek Festival Friday, June 7 and Saturday, June 8 GREEK FOOD BAKE SALE 11:00 a.m. to Midnight 9:00 a.m. to Midnight ance to the Music of "WCe Rhodians " Entertainment Live Bouzouki Band Evening Admission: $1.50 St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church 414 N. Main Street