I OPINION Page 4 Friday, January 15, 1982 The Michigan Daily Edie mtudtsahnig an l Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Wasserman A Vol. XCII, No. 86 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, M1 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Eroding press freedom RESIDENT Reagan's recent move to restrict media access to government information indicates that the president is ready and willing to forfeit free speech and free press prin- ciples simply to spare his ad- ministration from embarrassment. At Tuesday's Cabinet meeting, Reagan announced that in the future, administration officials would have to receive prior approval from the White House communications office before participating in major news inter- views. . Reagan cloaked his announcement in innocuous terms. Using the frequen- tly abused rubrick of national security, he implied that his move was necessary to block potentially harmful leaks of classified information. White House officials offered assurances that use of the new directive would be almost exclusively limited to em- ployees in such sensitive areas as the Defense Department and the National Security Council. But it is now apparent that what provoked Reagan to invoke such a restrictive gag order on his Cabinet was not a national security question, but rather disclosures on budget in- formation he found embarrassing. And now, Reagan plans to extend his gag order to several other departments: Labor, Treasury, and even to Agriculture-not exactly a hotbed of national security. To put muscle into his new directive, Reagan also disclosed plans to initiate thorough investigations of any em- ployees found to overstep the new limits, hinting that even wiretaps would be resorted to as a means of stopping leaks. It is clear that the only thing Reagan truly hopes to accomplish with his new restrictions is the total suppression of information he doesn't care to release. Reagan's move expresses dangerous disregard of American free press prin- ciples. The order is especially appalling in light of Reagan's recent denouncement of free expression restrictions in Poland. Reagan should realize that he cannot claim to be a proponent of First Amendment freedoms, until he becomes a practitioner himself. STUDENT LOAN z T o- p-r- cKPT/W ii;E t AQIof5 My NOW AMIt AN StDVCATioWN' (4 .4 sI STAT1E AUMT1Y ?L.An1 tENRAL gAJD&ET i -a' t. y \ Y EDUCATION (c + Recognizing the market F OR THE FIRST time in years the United Auto Workers and General Motors management have bargained and both have truly compromised. The result: A contract issue that is amenable to both sides and one that will ultimately benefit the consumer. Earlier this week, the UAW announ- ced it had agreed to wage concession with General Motors-provided GM passes its savings on to the consumer in the prices of cars. For once, both sides have seemed to recognize the value of the market. The union has recognized that if GM does indeed sell more cars, more jobs will become available. GM officials have finally realized that if auto prices are lower, more people will purchase cars. But now that GM has been sold on the idea, it's Ford's turn. Ford has con- tinued to balk at the idea, insisting that GM acted foolishly in making the precedent-breaking agreement without waiting for them. Obviously, however, if Ford is going to be competitive in the market, it eventually will have to lower the price of its cars as well. In GM's case, union and management have taken long-term planning into consideration, rather than short-term greed. It is time Ford takes on the same long-term con- siderations, and reaches a similar compromise with the UAW. NON THE OTHER HMAP'~ ~71 OleR r s(J" 5 a Yr 1 MIAMI-One of the rings is known as the "Veggie Group," because, its members own a string of vegetarian restaurants on both coasts. Another is called the "Remodelers," after the series of houses it has restored in an eastern city. Even when the rings have no name, however, they are quietly recognized by the bars, the clubs, the boutiques, the apartment buildings and the condominiums they have established from the profits of their trade. They are, in the words of their clients, the New Age Syn- dicates-an ever-broadening network of middle-class, college- educated, financially savvy cocaine dealers whose annual gross sales have been estimated as larger than those of all but the seven largest corporations on the Fortune 500 chart. FEDERAL NARCOTICS agen- ts have acknowledged for some time that the cocaine traffic by far is the most profitable drug trade in merica, well above heroin. According to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Ad- ministration, some 50 metric tons of cocaine were imported into the United States last year, with street sales as high as $35 billion. Unlike heroin, which is largely a drug of escape and psychic relief among the poor, who must steal to support their habits, cocaine is the elixir of the upwar- dly mobile. As a result, its proliferation has brought into being a whole new layer of en- trepreneural speculators which did not exist even a decade ago. "We're the true capitalists," argued Rick, a moderate coke dealer who owns his own loft in Manhattan. "We operate a pure market system, like the black market in Russia. There is no law but the law of supply and demand. No tax law. No quality control." MANY OF Rick's friends use the drug trade to gather enough capital to start legitimate businesses. One, he said, had opened a chain of hair salons on the East Coast. Others invest in high-yield paper-Treasury notes or even Mexican Pemex bonds paying 20 percent interest. But real estate is an easier invest- ment. "First you buy false tax for- ms-remember, there's nothing that's not for sale. With the phony tax records you can then go to a bank and take out a regular mor- tgage and purchase a run-down building. Then you use your coke cash to turn it into a palace. You pay cash to the carpenters, the plumbers, the electrical contrac- tors. You can even buy the fix- tures hot (stolen) and at the same time buy inflated receipts to account for materials. Everybody loves it because there Are no real records and no taxes. "There's an old, East Coast city where a bunch of us are buying up -old houses. We have between 10 and 15 so far-and that's just our gang. There are at least 10 different groups working in the same town . . . that's probably 100 to 150 houses being remodeled. We're keeping a lot of people in work." RICK CLAIMS that Mafia syn- dicates seldom are directly in- volved in the coke and marijuana traffic except as financial lenders to the big Colombian and Cuban wholesalers, or perhaps in taking a cut for use of boats, barges and trucks. "It's so disorganized that everybody's doing it. Housewives are dealing on the side. The cops just busted an 82-year-old gran- dmother for dealing. Even if the mob wanted into the trade, how would they deal with an 82-year- old grandmother?" Michael Metzger, a former federal prosecutor in New York who now is one of the nation's leading drug defense attorneys, agreed. "It's an entirely new set of people in the cocaine trade. they're far more diversified than marijuana dealers, or even the old mob heroin dealers. These are airline pilots, shipping Cocaine: America 's 8th largest . industry By Frank Browning executives, manufacturers. And the money goes into the economy a lot quicker than before because these people themselves are already established." TYPICAL IS the case of a Seat- tle watei ski manufacturer, Herb O'Brien, who was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison for packing cocaine into hollow pockets within his company's skis. O'Brien's company apparently was highly sprofitable but ready for a major expansion. Although the coke trade . seemed a reasonable way to raise the necessary cash, unfortunately O'Brien walked into the arms of a federal narcotics agent instead of a bonafide drug dealer. Said Metzger, who still .is working on a related case, "Here was a man who wasn't a long- haired, dope-smoking hippy-a married man and father, the owner of a big business, the sort who by all outside criteria could be pointed to as a model of respectable American success. And that's the way it usually is." YET IN COLLEGE towns, resort towns and even the idyllic villages of the Poconos, cocaine and marijuana profits have become mainstays of the local economy. In Miami, universally recognized as the cocaine capital of the world (Dade County police claim 80 percent of all the coke snorted in the country transits through southern Florida), some 19 banks have been under in- vestigation for laundering cocaine profits and several bankers there have been indicted on drug charges. According to one prominent real estate in- vestment analyst, 75 percent of all houses in Dade County valued above $250,000 are purchase4 with cash-much of it presumably generated in the drug trade.. The special popularity of-- cocaine among the affluent kid- and young professionals account for the vast opportunities that- have opened to the so-called New Age Syndicates. The Veggie group, for example, is aandful of bright men in their early.30s who went to prestigious colleges and who have established a "syndicate" based around., vegetarian restaurants they operate in Florida, New York and the Northern California coastal counties. The dealers, in other words, come from the same. world as their customers. IT IS THEIR very background,,, - and financial sophistication moreover, that have enabled them to permeate "legitimate" businesses, especially land and, housing developments, almost, x overnight-something that took nearly a generation for the heroin smugglers of older syndicates. Thus, if a major cocaine operation is busted, the economical consequences go farj beyond the drug trade. Sam, a San Francisco furniture maker and one-time anti-war ac- tivist, explained that he gets nearly all his work from midlevel to high-roller cocaine operators. "They- only want the best," he said. "A lot of them are kind of paranoid. They always want fan- cy walnut desks and armoires with invisible compartments built in. It's hard to take out theft insurance on a quarter-million dollars in coke, you know." How big a role Sam's customers play in sustaining the San Francisco economy is im- possible to assess, though it clearly is significant. "Just say a goddamned lot of carpenters, roofers, and craftsmen would be way up the creek if the coke trade stopped tomorrow. And yeah, maybe that lawyer's right. They are greedy scum bags and mod- squad robber barons. But until the revolution comes, they're keeping me in crackers." Browning is the co-author of The American Way of Crime. He wrote this article for Pacific News Service. LETTERS TO THE DAILY: End U.S. involvement in El Salvador To the Daily: The time hii~as cme when this to the corrupt and criminal pup- net dietatnrshin in Fl Salvandor- always demanded;. the right to ministration has chosen to give them terror-tortuire.and rdea~th-