aturdoy, June 19, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page $even Woodstein' dissects Nixon's final days THE FINAL DAYS by Bob Wood- ward and Carl Bernstein. New York: Simon and Schuster, 476 pages, $11.95. By GORDON ATCHESON ' 1UUCH OF THE thunder of The Final Days has unfortunately been stolen by a shapely blond who claims she has slept with half the U.S. Congress-or something like that. Billed as a sex scandal, Elizabeth Ray's carnal exploits with Rep. Wayne Hayes (D-Ohio) have been strewn across the front pages conveniently timed to coincide with the release of her own book. The scandal is not so much that Hayts enjoyed Ray's pleasures several times a week, but that he kept her on the congressional payroll at $14,000 a year just for those services. That's chicken feed compared to the transgressions of the Nixon administra- tion. Very titilating chicken feed, but chicken feed nonetheless. AND IT HAS diverted attention from an excruciatingly penetrating view of Richard Nixon as he squirmed to free himself from his scandals. The Final Days deserves to be looked at, read, and talked about because it is essential in understanding Nixon's behavior. But the public forum has been filled with questions of "did she or didn't she?" And that's not a reference to whether Ray is a natural blond or not. It could be argued that The Final Days got plenty of discussion, what with Newsweek excerpts and the. subsequent hoopla. That certainly stimulated sales -yet may have done the book a great disservice in the long run. The Newsweek articles made the book seem catty and its authors, Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, the biggest gossip mongers this side of Rona Barrett. All of which is too bad, because The Final Days is not gossipy-it's a detailed account of the convulsions and contortions of the Nixon administration and the Nixon family, as the nation moved closer and closer to impeachment or resignation in the summer of 1974. Woodward and Bernstein put together a complete view of those last few weeks before the president stepped down, as seen by the immediate White House staff. But the media-as it all too often does-jumped on the most sensational material and ripped it out of context. OR EXAMPLE, the m e d i a made much of the fact that the book re- counted Pat Nixon's drinking problem which developed in the months before her husband left office. What Wood- ward and Bernstein said was Ms. Nixon had begun taking a nip or two in the afternoon - because this was out of character for her, she had been trying to do it secretly. They also said it in one sentence. One sentence in a 476 page book. That cer- tainly can't be considered sensational- istic. And Woodward and Bernstein should have printed it, since that formed part of the tableau of action in the White House. The same can be said of the vecton Woodward and Bernstein pot togtner a complete view of those last few wczks in which Woodward and Bernstein de- scribe a meeting between Nixon and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, dur- ing which the president collapses in tears after praying. Certainly such be- havior is not surprising considering the strain on Nixon as he saw his carefully constructed world crumbling before him. The authors present the incident in the same low key style which they use to describe the much more mundane goings 011. Part of the brilliance of The Final Days is that crisp, taut style. The sen- tences are simple and diract-free of convolutions and excess words. They move quickly, and in doing so heighten the tensions. WOODWARD AND Bernstein a v o i d editorial commentary and resist the effort to interpret what unfolds. They report it the way it was told to them by their sources. But many of the book's critics attacked their use of unnamed sources and un- attributed information, essentially a red herring raised by those who didn't like what was in The Final Days. The pre- mise of the criticism seems to be that since Woodward and Bernstein are re- porters by trade, they should use the techniques and constraints of their craft in writing a full length book. That notion is patently absurd. Should James Dickey, a poet, have been forced to use nothing but rhymed couplets in his novel Deliverance? Woodward and Bernstein talked to some 390 people in researching The Final Days. All spoke to them on "back- ground" - journalistic jargon meaning the name of the sources could not be used. The authors claim at least two sources for each item used in the book. See DICK, Page 10 Gordon Atcheson is a former Daily co-editor in chief. ery untenable position - and we don't it at all. But to the American people, don't even know there's been a war tg on, it looks like there's been a big akthrough. 'Kissinger's going to bring ce to Rhodesia.' But really, it will only ig more problems. 'Lately, too, I've been getting the feel- that Dr. Kissinger might be trying to us up for another civil war like An- - the way he's getting all out be- one faction (ZAPU) and setting it inst another. Maybe that's really what United States wants - to get the cats fighting each other." Shat do you think about Ronald Rea- 's promise to send troops to keep peace odesia if he's elected? AUGIIING) WELL, in terms of the American political situation, it made feel pretty good, because a lot of peo- suddenly realized what kind of per- Reagan is. People who had never heard Rhodesia see saying, 'What? Send Ps to Rhodesia? What for?' So it prob- helped Ford a little bit. But it shows you something - that are certain circles in your country it Britain who encourage Smith. Those le nay keep the war going until it n annihilation of the settler commu- in that sense Reagan's remarks were unfortnate" ZANU ultimately wins, what kind of nment do you plan to set up? ELL, IF IT'S A ZANU government, we're quite clear about what we t We want the closest thing that you get to a mass democracy. That's dif- t, Of course. We're aware that not Y nations have come anywhere close. But, you see, the war has given us al feeling for the people. Ten years We were elitists, all of us from the we'd use the masses out in the vil- S once in a while. You know; you call eeting, and they come and they cheer, then you get in your cars and drive See MGABE, Page 10 /ie Norton is a Daily copy-editor. 'HEAT AND DUST': 'Vignettes 4 HEAT & DUST. By Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, N.Y. Harper & Row, 1976. $7.95. By RAVI SARATHY ENGLISHMEN CAME to colonial In- dia to govern with firmness and im- pose order on an ancient, somnolent, chaotic culture. This massive force of civil servants would have nothing to do with indigents after office hours; re- treating behind the lines to the cool comfort of bungalows, servants and mannered western society. Both Indians r and civil servants took care not to over- step established bounds. Though invar- iably some did - and so called down the wrath of the British community. The time is 1923 and Gandhi is only a distant noise as the story about Doug- las Rivers, an English civil servant and his wife unfolds. The only Indian to en- ter their social circle is a petty prince, the local Newab. The English have a sneaking regard for this prince; para- site though he is, he has a strong hawk, like face and rides horses well He is an ..-: _... .....r.. ....ist: of a decaying palace' aristocrat and thus one of their class if not one of their race. Naturally Doug- las's pretty wife Olivia is mesermer- ized by him and there is a scandal. The British community regards the whole mess as an unseemly display of an excess of feeling for the country, the culture. As one character says, "Like good parents (the British) all loved In- dia whatever mischief she might be up to . . ." but this love had to be re- strained, else, horror, one would go na- tive. IRONICALLY ENOUGH there is no real passion between the Newab and Olivia. She loves her husband Douglas, but he has not fathered her a child; the Newab is overwhelming and thus Olivia accedes to an instinct. Perhaps the lack of any deeper emotion between the char- acters produces a similar effect in the reader. I remember reading Jean Rhys once, a story about a drunken Englishwoman in Paris waxing in personal misery - who cares? I felt the same way concern- ing Jhabvala's attempt to give a fiction- alized account of India in 1923. There is not a hint in the story of the ferment, of the salt marches, of the growing revo- lutionary fervor, that could have lent more than just a tinge of excitement to Olivia's experience. It is not until the book jumps two generations to arrive at the present, that the reader begins to feel the pulse- beat of modern day India. The reader abruptly travels out of the fantasy-like past, as Douglas's nameless grand- daughter (from a second marriage) vis- its the now independent nation to find out more about the wayward Olivia. The studied symmetry of story that follows may be elegant, but it seems strained at times. Both women take on Indian lovers and get pregnant; they are seduced at. the same spot and the same jokes are made. And they both See HEAT, Page 10 Ravi Sarathy is a native of India and a recent University graduate.