Drily f ':brr.:!:an Frsd:y, lev. 4 Jfe v- t- A ! :M3,1C:3 1 O rl ' O V J Pegs 4 4 I CJAWs gain is consume The United Auto Workers union scored a victory .last week in its contract negotiations with Chrysler Corp., but the American consumer came out a big loser. Chrysler agreed to en Increase cf almost $ 1 billion in wages End fringe benefits over a two-year period beginning Oct 1. Chrysler employees will see their paychecks increase by about 3 percent during that period, according to the current edition cf Newsweek. UAW officials are, of course, elated at the cut come, but for the consumer, it s'gr.als a return to the dangerous trend cf excessive wage increases for autoworkers. The higher wages are nice for those who receive -them, but they force the company that pays them to raise prices and that's where the consumer loses. In the end, it also could be where the UAWs victory Richard Nixon thinks that pacifist activists are "idiots," that people favor ing nuclear disarmament are suffering from "a form of radiation sickness," that Soviet leader Yuri Andropov is "a hard-headed pragmatist, not a mad man" and that Ronald Reagan would do well to go to Moscow to address the Soviet people on television. Those are some of the highlights of a new manuscript written by Nixon, call ed "Real Peace" which is published and distributed privately by the former president Some 700 copies of the manu- yx! Greene script will be printed in book form by Nixon and sent to government officials and leaders around the world. The book will not be available to the gen eral public. In light of news developments in recent days, Nixon's specific thinking about the prospects of peace and war between the United States and the Soviet Union are worth taking note of. Some excerpts: - On nuclear disarmament: "In his heart everyone knows that the only people who get rich from the 'get rich quick' books are those who write them. But just as there are countless 'get rich quick schemes, there is a wide array cf seductively appealing 'get peace quick? schemes. These are the myths cf peace. Myths are fairy tales that people make up about things they otherwise would not understand . ... Some, out of des peration or supreme naivete, have sug gested that an international authority be established to banish nuclear wea pons and make sure they are never built again . . . That the disarmiets would propose some outlandish wcrld government' shows that most of them, to put the most charitable light on the matter, are Irving in a dream world, in which problems between nations can be solved by some authority other than national governments. This delusion is a form of radiation sickness. If.you lock directly at an atomic blast you may go blind; apparently intellectual blindness can resultirom contemplat ing the nuclear weep ens issue for too 1 On nuclear war vs. conventional v.a r. "One cf the raazt caapty-hcad:d cr.J dangercu3 fallacies cf the nuclear v.. . U would necessarily 1 3 letter cl x ' ' -ut ni!cl:rr wcrper.3. Tkrre v. ho ,';-:d the trcrcli warfare cfWerld If the public refuses to pay Inflated prices for the Inferior automobiles turned out by Detroit, the Dig Three automakers will see more and more cf their business go to foreign companies. The UAW may see its members in the unemploymentlines again. Right now, American auto sales are booming. With the economy well on its way to recovery, auto mobile company prci3 are bound to skyrocket We dent deny that the employees should get a share cf that extra refit, but a 25 percent increase over two years seems a bit large, especially considering that Inflation rates have remained under 5 percent Workers at Chrysler have been earning less than the employees at Ford ilotor Co. and General Motors Corp. because cf wage concessions made several years ago. But it's hard to feel sorry for any cf ventional war brings its own unique horrors. We must not allow our under standable fear cf a nuclear war to blind us to the increasingly awful des tructiveness of conventional weapons. Conventional weapons killed 15 mil lion in World War I and over 54 million in World War II. Casualties in a con ventional World War III would be far greater." On Andropov: The West knows little about Andropov himself! When he came into power, he was the subject of intense speculation in the West Some media observers suggested that he was a closet liberal, a pussycat who would be easy to deal w ith because he liked American jazz and drank Sect eh Such ta tors are forever confusing style with substance. They are suckers for style because style is their bread and butter. In the 1950s, they dismissed NiMta Khrushchev as a lightweight because he spoke bad Russian, drank too much, wore ill-fitting clothes and had crude manners. They were wrong about Khrushchev, and they are wrong about Andropov. Anyone who claws his way to the top in the murderous jungle warfare cf the Soviet hierarchy is bound to be a formidable adversary. Only the strong survive and reach the top in Communist regimes. We know this for sure about Andropov. He is an intelli- who shares the global ambitions cf every Soviet dictator since the Bcl shevsk Revelation. Those who expect . the Soviet Union to moderate its bel ligerence as soon as Andropov consol idates his power are -deluding them selves. Fortunately, however, he is a hard-headed pragmatiat, not a mad man." On Reagan and the Russians: "One great benefit cf a summit, meeting in Moscow would be that President Rea gan would have the opportunity to address the Soviet people cn televi sion. Net only could he dl pcl his image in the Soviet pree3 as a reckless war monger, but he could also present our point cf view as the free world's most .ectii e spokesman. Some scoff at the . thought that such aspeech can accomp lish anything. After all, the Kremlin leaders are hardly concerned by their Gallup rating. But I had the opportun ity to address the Soiiet people in lCCD, 1072 and 1874, and if the level cf cfncial anriety ever theae Lrcr t3 W" pvr""'T" f f ' " " -' - t i Ie ffei T T5 f, 5 why the fermer pre: LJ Ui B i ... 3 iJc'ielied . " .4 ; vz: C?" ... tween theUr.itc ICr 'pffl . I was driving home the other even-' ing when a man in a blue Chevrolet cut in front cf me illegally, immorally "Stupid idietT l eaid aloud, quickly accelerating the two tons of metal in which I sat I would catch up with him and cut him cf the way he'd cut me cX I would teach him a lesson. ": But, as usually happens, I was unable to get around him in the heavy trafZe and he escaped unpunished. I A m !1 mm' I gK i&s arrived home angered and frustrated. Justice had not been served. That evening, I was sitting nest to an intelligent and attractive . woman at dinner. The conversation, as it does these dap, got around to The Plane. She said she was convinced the Rus sian military was behind the shooting down cf the Korean airliner. They, wanted to open, a confrontation with ur., eke said, to scuttle the disarma rr.cr.t tails, which they viewed with cur" icion. " .. - ',. -.: And, anyway, she said, she was glad Pre: '.dent Reegan had closed down the V,. j ArrcHst c.zzi in this country. ' Che wished .he coa!4 have done mors in retaliation. '"We have to show them - ir.-y can i ce..a.e L '2 L raar;ar.3 LZ3 ::.T.an. I'm sure jrhriia-sdD tin v 4 . - V. Jt the UAW members. The new contract is expected to bring Chrysler salaries up to par with those cf the ether two major automakers. . According to Newsweek, production line workers currently make 1 2 1.40 an hour at General I lctcrs and $23.37 an hour at Ford all cf this for a pro duct that continues to decline in quality. The UAW has been among those unions telling us to buy American-made products, but considering the UAWs constant demands for increased wages and its apparent lack of regard for quality, it h hard to take those please seriously. The American consumer should not be expected to pay the UAWs inflated wages out of a feeling cf patriotism. taTy sterile cmstien it is. . I suppose vengeance was part cf us . long before we swung down from the trees. I suppose it served a civilizing . have hesitated to braia hb neighbor for fear his neighbor would brain him back. And thus vcrgcar.ee kept an Yet .vengeance has alweys borne with it the seeds cf tragedy: the saakef Troy, Idedea, the salting cf Crrthr -.e, Dick,' the Irish, the Aj:--:rJ;.r.5, the . Ixbanese. . .Vengeance lies in the dark side cf cur natures.". ' The Har.3 has brought it' cut :il We zzlz not what course we::li best sere cur interests; we r,:!? cr.'y f;r f W ! J9 ...... -, ' - "Lleod must pay 'for blood!" cries a Tia ready to stand up ralr.-i Ccn munbm,"Twri:3 an irate reader. "V.'hat about you?" : ' . And even that ir,tc"'"ar:t ' we:-a.an who believed the Russian miliary were behind the tragedy weald plry ir.to their hand3 by givir.g them the confrontation she.. thought they Such a powerful c a: a tic a! Co power ful that world peace r.ew ii.lz cn the ceaeert that vcngear.ee, if unleaal.ed, will destroy mankind. Cl.aald the Zz eians incinerate us, we r;H b.eLa:rate ...., jr . .... . 71, . v call cur global itr ' ," - --co ij its key. And yet what uiillj crao- 1 t:;.:;.a:: cl f I'c- I cv"-" Iucl7lr.-a.3lC:,Vtc: : Lh I weald haa-et;-cat I. in c .." rai I i - ' cZ'zlZ::::!:-"! Ln Ger- : - - n Curia a Wei id War II, C'V". r