The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by Students at the University of Michigan Tuesday, July 8, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 Biljotoo much for tub 'OR THE FIRST eight months following Gerald Ford's slippage into office, before the reins of power felt comfortable in his hands and he went over the hump in the popularity nolls, the new President was quite willing to line up behind the nation's conservative bastions in policy feuds, preferring not to stand alone lest his politi- cal weight prove too flimsy to prevail. But with the recent surge of national esteem for the chief exec. Ford has donned a new headiness spurring him to bypass even such old guard pillars as the Depart- ment of Defense in his stalwart journey to the right. The latest product of Ford's love affair with govern- ment by decree is a $1.2 billion nuclear cruiser the Presi- dent is preparing to steamroll through Congress on be- half of his old buddy Adm. Hyman Rickover of the Navy. Even the butch-cut crowd at the DOD, who've never been ones to bold a zillion-dollar price tag against a proiect as lone as it had a nifty name and one of their buddies got the contract, advised Ford that dumping a bundle dollars on the tub still wouldn't let it be in two places at once, and that for the same price they could get several less lavish but perfectly adequate ships, a couple dozen simulated kapok life preservers, ten free passes to the Tokyo Boat Show, and the inside track on the Lower Marianas. EVEN FORD'S BUDGET Office came down against the cruiser, noting that fiscal responsibility wasn't one of the proposal's strong suits, but Ford will have none of it. When a President pursues a policy of uncompromised opposition to all people-oriented programs that come before him and of complete support for the powers of U.S. expansion, that is something to mull over. When a President begins to build walls around him- self and rely on his own instincts to decide the course of national policy, that is a clear and present danger both to the American people and to the right to self- determination to which they're secured. WHITE HOUSE SECURITY Keeping their guard up By STEPHEN B. SELBST Special To The Daily .WASHINGTON - They s a y opportunity knocks but once in life. It that's so, it's all down hill for me. I set a new University of Michigan record Tuesday by be- ing the first reporter kicked out of the White House inrJuly, per- haps the first all year. =: What happened was de-eptive- ly simple. Assigned to cover my first White House function, I had arrived minutes early to ge_ my official temporary press clear- ance at the gate. Convinced I wasn't a murderer, likely to in- volve myself in acts of crazi- ness, or wanted for any out- standing crimes, the guards quickly waved me through. As casually as if I had been attending for years, I walked in for Ron Nessen's daily prees briefing among a slew of media heavies. Although 5 wasn t cov- ering the event, I stood quietly in the corner, taking down ev- have the run of the swanky ery word said, asking no ques- joint. She sauntered through, tions, and just soaking up the jabbed a paunchy reporter in atmosphere. the gut, and told another he was After the briefing was over, I losing his hair. went over to the head of the Eventually I was led out with White House staff, introduced the others to the fabled E a s t myself, and asked when the Garden. I had been assigned to "One doesn't go wandering around the halls of the White House. Newsmen need escorts and clearance to go anywhere. Only moronic creeps like Susan Ford have the run of the swanky joint." news reporters would he led out to where the day's main event would take place. One does'nt go wandering around the halls of the White House, I learned to my chagrin. Newsmen need escorts and clearance to go anywhere. Only moronic creeps like Susan Ford WNW HAVE AL. 1'tub 6t46? - cover the Presidential Schol- ars, a group of 121 snot-n's.ed youngsters who were ges'lng bronze medallions imprinted with the graven image of Ger- ald Ford. The meals qualify the brats for admission to the right schools, good jobs and a perpet- uation of their upper middle class economic domination over the rest of the country. After watching the dorky-look- ing eggheads parade across the stage, the big bozo himself, the ex-Wolverine center, appeared and made typically vapid re- marks. When he disappeared with most of the press carps trailing behind him, I just as- sumed none of the CBS h o t- shots wanted to talk to these brats, which was my assign- ment. I had two kids to inter- view for the papers 1 cover. So when the scholars and their proud parents filed into the Executive Mansion, I followed, having been told that the recep- tion was open to the press. Without too much trouble, I found one of the kids I w a s supposed to talk to, and asked him tough questions like, "How do you like Washingeon?" I finished the talk ad started to look for the other yo-yo when a grim man who looked like a lie-in for a horror movie saun- tered up. The extra they hire to lie in the coffin and look dead and ghoulish. This cat had the face for it. Thin and gaunt, he had bags under his eyes a porter couldn't have carried. In his grey pin- stripe suit which billowed around his slim frame like a tent, he looked recently exnumed. In his best funeral manner, he asked if he could help ne, notic- ing my press tag. I told him I was a reporter looking for a kid, and asked him to help me find another one. He said he'd help, but hard- ly in the manner I had hoped. He made a quick call to a faceless voice in the p r e s s room, and handed me the line. A curt voice told. me I had crashed a reception closed to the press. I protested that the Of- fice of Education liason had said the affair was open. She cooly reminded me that the Office of Education was not the White House, and that t h e White House decided what w a s open, and what was not. She spoke briefly on the phona to a guard; hethen turned and pointed me to the door. He told me to head out to the Northwest gate. I acrepted the comand with hidden strategy. I'd exit through the front door, all right, b u t head back to the press office and press my complaint. I wasn't going to be pushed around, and I could outsmart these dunder- heads. So I casually sauntered out the door, convinced that my plan had outwitted the palace guard, and headed for the brief- ing room. To my surprise I discovered that not only was I not going to get away with my plan, I wasn't even going to get close. As soon as thay saw where I was heading, one of the frscists came running after me. Where was I going, he wanted to know. Just to the press of- "In the best German tradition, he told me that when one is invit- ed to leave the White House, t h a t means don't pass the press of- fice and don't pass fire I savuely replied, wavipg my press pass at him to 'cdi- cate I was cleared to go. Not any longer. In the best German tradition, he told me that when one is invited to leave the White House, that means don't pass the press office, and don't pass go. With that he reached over and took the temporary press tag off my jacket. So much for clearance. Then the Nazi-h-training took my elbow the way you grab an old grandmother too mentally in- firm to walk alone, and march- ed me to the Pennsylvania Ave- nue exit. At the gate, the buzzer sound- ed; I pushed the handle, walted out, and the gate clicked be- hind 'me, locked. Just like in the movie, I was gone in 60 s6 conds. Sic transit gloria. Stephen Selbst is T h e Daily City Editor and an al leqed summer intern for the Thomson Newspapers Washington Bureau. 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