C OPINION Page 4 Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Vol. XCIV - No. 18 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, Ml 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Why Watt stays employed SECRETARY OF the Interior James Watt's time has long since passed. He has slighted or insulted group after group of people. The policies for which he is largely respon- sible benefit only big business at the expense of the resources he was sup- posed to protect. So why hasn't Watt been replaced? The answer is simple: He is politically too valuable for President Reagan to fire him - yet. In his checkered career as a cabinet- level secretary, Watt has linked the weaknesses of Indian reservations with the failure of socialism, accused Democrats of being communists and - worst of all - said the Beach Boys attract the "wrong element." In his most recent verbal miscue, Watt; managed to offend blacks, Jews, women, and the handicapped all in one breath. Worse, his policies have shown an unmistakable disrespect for the nation's wilderness areas. He has opened off-shore oil drilling areas previously closed because of environ- mental concerns. He has opened up millions of acres of federal land to bid- ders for ridiculously low prices. More recently, Watt began selling coal Where's t Dr ON'T YOU hate showing up for a party at the wrong time, or t:even worse, the wrong place. Well, don't get this one wrong - Harold and Vivian Shapiro moved their annual party from their house to the student Union. Why move down the street, though? Having it at the University president's house was a tradition. Okay, it's not the beer olympics or the mudbowl, but it was fun to grab a glass of punch and peek at how those who don't study live. Did we do something wrong, :Heal? Were we rude last year? We tried not to trample mud on the carpet, or spill punc on the sofa, or stay too late (after all, nobody wants to be like John Belushi in "The thing that wouldn't leave.") And leaving that goal post in reserves at a time of zero demand at a price to match. Despite these comments and policies - or rather because of these commen- ts and policies=- Reagan keeps Watt employed. Watt takes too much negative attention away from Reagan. The secretary is a much-needed con- duit for the president. The liberal press, environmentalists, Democrats, and even some Republicans scream at Watt instead of screaming at his boss. On top of that, Watt is an excellent fundraiser, one of the best for his par- ty. He gets his fellow Republicans angry at the people angry at him. Those angry Republicans then open their checkbooks. So Reagan won't get rid of James Watt just yet. He'll wait until he can get the most political mileage out of such a move - around May or June next year, as the race for president shifts into high gear. Then the president can get up in front of a whole bunch of people and say, "James Watt was a good guy in my book, but the people wanted him out. I'm a man who listens to the people. Vote for me." After that he'll leave the podium, call Watt, and thank him for the great job he did for his president. he party? your front yard after the Purdue game last year was all in fun. We just got a little carried away. Why move to the Union? They won't even let you bring your own food in. And besides,.we can go to the Union anytime, how often do we get to drop by your house and chat. Sure, the "new" student Union is having its grand opening, but that is no reason to move your reception. We don't get enough attention around here as it is. Most of the University's professors don't even have time to teach our classes, much less have us over for cocktails. Your reception was a small break from the norm. Bring the party back home. It was more fun that way. Wednesday, September28, 19 AMMAN, Jordan - While the eyes of most of the world were riveted on the drama of Menachem Begin's resignation, another top-level personnel shift was taking shape more quietly in the Middle East. As a result, the future of Yasser Arafat could be decided by the end of this month. BY IRONIC consequence, Arafat was being handed what may be his walking papers from the Palestine Liberation Organization.(PLO), just as Israelis were pleading with their own prime minister to stay in of- fice. In the long run, an Arafat dismissal could prove far more significant-for Arabs and Israelis alike-than Begin's departure from the scene. The bad news for Arafat came from the PLO's 18-member Reconciliation Commission, which issued a report here that, in effect, asks the organization's longtime chairman to step down from, or at least dramatically scale down, his role. Headed by a prominent Palestinian lawyer, Ibrahim Bakr, the commision served notice on Arafat to give way to a new caretaker leadership from Al Fatah, the largest sub-group within the PLO coalition. The report proposed that elections be held under these interim auspices to select a permanent new leader. SINCE THE bitter defeat at. Israeli hands in Lebanon, Fatah has been wracked by internal dif- ferences, leading to bloody con- frontations between followers of Arafat's moderate policy line and Yassar PLO maybe squeezing out By Ibraham Abu Nab a rebellious, more radical fac- tion. Commission members said they were convinced that the grave divisions within the PLO, .and especially inside the Fatah, required drastic measures in or- der to regain confidence and credibility for the organization. Their words carry great weight, because the commission is drawn from inside the Palestinian community itself and is not an- swerable to "outsiders" in the Arab world. The commission was established in July by the Palestinian Central Council in Tunis and mandated to in- vestigate the divisive aftermath to the Israeli invasion. Its fin- dings were to be binding on all, but particularly on the two warring Fatah factions. After taking affidavits from the Fatah Central Committee, the com- mission interviewed Syrian The Michigan Daily Foreign Minister Abd el-Halim Khaddam in Damascus and then met with PLO dissidents in Leb- anon's Bekka Valley. BOTH SIDES in the Fatah power struggle have been asked to respond to the commission's report by September 21. In all probability, the results will profoundly alter the Mideastern picture. For in ad- dition to shifting control of military, financial, information, and other organizational matters to a caretaker leadership, the commission has recommended that the PLO reaffirm its adherence to armed struggle and renounce participation in all American-sponsored efforts to achieve a political settlement in the region. These recommendations mark a dramatic swing toward radical views, a swing about which moderates here have been war- ning the United States for mon- Arafiat ths. The commission, whose members are not all radicals, would have found it difficult -to reach any other conclusion. Arafat's moderation had not only produced no results, but, in the eyes of most Palestinians, led to the twin disasters of Lebanon and the current fratricidal conflict in the PLO. THE commission may have been forced to lean even harder on Arafat than was required by4 these events, thanks in part to the PLO chairman's own maneuvering. In violation of specific promises to the com- mission, Arafat has persisted in a war of words with Syria, and in efforts to solicit foreign help on his behalf. Indeed when the commission left Damascus, Arafat was on his way to Yemen, Kuwait, and Iraq where he escalated his propaganda war against Syria. Unlike most Palestinians, who are convinced that their problems must be solved inter- nally, he appears to believe that the solution lies in outside Arab intervention. As for his response to the com- mission, he already has made public statements to the effect that the investigation "had failed." What remains to be seen;,' however, is whether Yasser Arafat is in a position to judge-or to be judged. Abu Nab is a widely syn- dicated columnist for. the Kuwaiti daily. He wrote this article for the Pacific News Service. Sinclair 4 'DANNHo MOS- SER1ES "EM~ ".t HAIt4NI hT TH&Vs A FEW LES JUNKIES To WORNM -x 4I 4 7 A NIGGER AW~T -/ IT? ..y - \ 'D( A 4 "AW IVE GOT A FUNNY 3LACKFAE ROUTlIE FOR YOU" COAL COALLEASOAG ~ S~lA~ STUDY I cometSSIR 510 \7 o . Y 1S (N . tq 3 LETTERS TO THE DAILY Students love communication 101 To the Daily: There are several things I want to say in answer to Barbara Misle's commentary upon the Department of Communication ("Communication department masks fluff," Daily, September 21). Her judgement of Com- munication 101 is sharply at odds with most of her fellow students. The course was taught by the same teacher last term, and received a 6.28 rating on student evaluations. This is based upon a seven-point scale. Reagan handicap not funny To the Daily: It is reprehensible that the Daily should participate in the vicious satirizing of the President of the United States because of a. hearing handicap ("Ronnie, can you hear us?", Daily, September 11). Having a hearing loss, and the resulting need to wear a hearing aid, is no worse than wearing glasses to correct a visual handicap. Do we poke fun at past Presidents and other officials of high rank in the world who need to wear glasses? Not at all. What, then, justifies tasteless, ill- humored cartoons at the expense of President Reagantand millions of other Americans who suffer success, and the probability of future success in life, puts me on a higher scale than millions of "normal" people across the country who are working at menial or even executive level jobs. Now, if my handicap is not worthy of being made fun of, then are we justified in poking fun and attempting to cause great political harm to the man who holds the highest office in the land? Again, the answer can only be an undeniable, and emphatic, no. -Fredrick S. Cohen September 22 BLOOM COUNTY She is obviously put off at at- tending a 300-student lecture class aimed at freshpersons. It is not even a concentration course, but a pre-concentration course. Ms. Misle's anger apparently has been stoked by the fact that it took three terms to get into it. A good many seniors have had the same problem, or worse, and frankly, with our faculty and budget constraints, we cannot see any way to solve that. Almost all of our courses have waiting lists every term. We are moving to reduce that, reluctantly, by steps which will reduce the number of concentrators. Finally, there is the matter of that headline, which I assume was written by someone else, as it is in normal newspaper usage. "Department of Communication Masks Fluff", it says. Headline writing is a numbers game, a matter of counting let- ters and spaces. There are daily examples even in major papers of heads that may be misleading or nonsensical, but, which, by God, fit. Charitably, that is the excuse for this one. But, it nevertheless slanders a solid department which has the leading role in an interdepar- tmental Ph.D. program which is as tough as any in the country; two professional M.A.programs whose journalism and telecom- munication graduates are sought after by some of the country's most important newspapers and television stations, and has an undergraduate program which is highly popular and rated highly by most of its students. To dismiss all that on the basis of attendance at fewer than ten percent of sessions of two classes which should have been taken two or three years earlier seems a bit much. - William E. Porter September 26 Porter is chairman of the communication department. by Berke Breathed .8E YOU MOVE REACNE1P FAVAT, yE XRVY _ I