The Battalion V IE WPOINT Slouch By Jim Earle ‘Of course I might be wrong, but a strap-on TV doesn’t turn me om Reagan ready for new By HELEN THOMAS WASHINGTON — President Reagan has a new set of priorities now that he has had smashing success in passing the bulk of his economic recovery program through Con gress — defense, foreign affairs and the war on crime. Reagan’s personal lobbying — he hates to have it called “arm twisting” — defeated Democratic leadership to obtain a $35 bil lion slash in federal spending and a 3-year, 25 percent, across-the-board tax cut. His super salesmanship and television appeal turned the tide for him. He did not mind “listening” to the private interests and accommodating them where he could to win votes. He has satisfied the oil indus try, the milk industry and those who sought peanut and tobacco subsidies. His top adviser, Edwin Meese, says Reagan will now turn his attention to a full agenda that will include major and controv ersial Pentagon decisions on whether to go ahead with the B-l bomber that former President Jimmy Carter rejected. He also has to make up his mind on an MX missile basing system with Nevada and Utah opposing the so-called “race track” system for rotating the missiles to keep the Russians guessing. Defense Secretary Cas par Weinberger is reported to be leaning toward a system of keeping the missiles airborne in specially built cargo planes. Unlike most presidents, Reagan has kept foreign policy on the back burner but is defensive when critics say he has none. Nevertheless, Reagan himself has said that he will be devoting more time to fore ign affairs in the months to come and the Middle East tinderbox is expected to be at the forefront. The Israelis and the Arabs are obviously waiting to see what Reagan has in mind to bring about what his goals for "a lasting peace.” His predecessors had the same goals to no avail. He is committed to maintaining the Camp David peace process, but so far there has been little movement in that direction. The president also may face a battle to sell five AWACS, sophisticated surveill ance planes to Saudi Arabia that has strong opposition on Capitol Hill. Reagan also must make moves to bolster the NATO alliance with West German Can- cellor Helmut Schmidt, already serving notice that high U.S. interest rates will force his country to reduce its defense spending. The drive for independence among Afri- August 6, 1981 priorities can nations and the so-called northi dialogue between the industrialnatii developing countries is another I policy issue Reagan will confront i| months ahead. On the domestic front, Meese s Reagan will initiate new tougher! curb crime and to step up enforcen) the narcotics laws. He also hopes to establish the" prise zones” which he promoteddn campaign as part of his urban ecoq velopment program. But the most controversial issues! abortion, school prayer and busi wli.it Heagan is hopini; he can keepi the spotlight for awhile. He managed to keep them offtl burner in Congress during the cun sion. But how long it is quest whether he can keep these touchyi from reaching national debate leveliI Clearly he hopes that he may keepi at bay while he pursues someofthei( which will be less explosive. At any rate, he has his workcuto him and he cannot rest on his laurelsl with his economic recovery program!^ place. How Japan can survive without alien workers NEW YORK — Nearly all advanced in dustrial nations depend on alien workers, mainly to perform unskilled tasks. But the exception is Japan, which functions with remarkable success without immigrant labor. The presence of Turks in West Ger many, Algerians in France and Mexicans in the United States, though valuable to the economy, causes ethnic and cultural ten sions as well as competition for housing, education and medicl care. The Japanese avoid these social conflicts by keeping out foreign workers — and yet their economy flourishes. During a recent trip to Japan, in which I interviewed some 50 executives, scholars and officials, I reached the conclusion that the Japanese cope without foreign workers because of their extraordinary system of labor-management relations, which mobil izes indigenous employees. Despite different institutions, history and values, therefore, the Japanese may be able to to offer some lessons in this re spect to the United States and other mod ern industrial societies. In Japan, as elsewhere, there is clearly no shortage of menial work to be done such as cleaning, laborious construction jobs, jani torial duties, and the like. But those tasks are not badly paid or held in low esteem, as they are in other countries — and they are often not dead-end assignments. Indeed, salaries among occupations in Japan do not differ as much as they do in America. Wage levels and pay raises there are governed mainly by age, seniority and sex. They are promoted regularly and given pay raises. But their tasks are rotated within the firm, and some of these tasks are me nial. Young Japanese employees accept these jobs, largely because there is no stigma attached to them. They have learned to do manual labor from childhood at home and in school. Thus industry in Japan has been able to integrate a “low-level” work ethic into the nation’s social behavior, and em ployees benefit in welfare terms that go well beyond their wages. As a consequence, Japan holds little attraction for foreign workers, since job vacancies there are rare. Registered aliens, most of them Koreans, represent only 0.7 percent of the entire population. Should labor be needed, the Japanese can always count on poor Asian countries nearby to provide it. But Japan itself can draw on large labor reserves, especially among retiring middle-aged workers, from employees being laid off from declining in dustries, or from services being machin- ized and enlarged in scale. It would be simplistic to suggest that the Japanese system could be easily imported into the United States. For one thing, Japanese labor unions are geared to indi vidual companies, while those in America are independent and antagonistic toward management. Nor would American work ers accept the Japanese concept of unequal pay for equal work according to the work er’s age, sex and seniority. But the United States might consider further extending the ideas from Japan of contracting out low-grade tasks to special ized firms, notably in cleaning and repair ing services, which would provide for im proved regularity, productivity, pay and social status. A more complicated and controversial lesson to be drawn from the Japanese ex perience might be the introduction of youth wage differentials, a possiblity that is already being debated in America. Advocated of this approach promise in creased employment for youth, especially for minority youths suffering from severe joblessness. Its opponents say it would ex ploit youths through low pay as well as im pair employment and labor standards for adults. But what the Japanese do — and what might be applied in America — is to make up the low wages initially paid to young workers through a seniority system that raises their salaries as they ascend into adult salary brackets, and are kept in the firm thereafter. It may be that the United States, which lacks Japan’s sense of social responsibility and national cohesion, can only introduce such an innovation through protective legislation. But it could contribuS£ to re solving an American dilemma, which has certainly not been settled by current U.S. immigration policies. the small society by Brickman TOLP Ate TO TA«£ A PILL A* &FT&H X CAr\ AFFc?fZP 1T- mmmmi&ar ^^0 'M> i €>1961 King Futures Syndicate. Inc. Wortd rights reserved. 3-/0 Thanks for the mammaries By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON — Me and of Jimmy both grew up in small southern towns, so I had no trouble figuring out what he was trying to get at while he was president. But Ronald and I have such disparate backgrounds I can’t always be sure I am tuned in on his wave length. It was for orientation as much as any thing that I recently spent a couple of weeks in Reagan country, observing the famed California life style. Here are a few of the things that caught my eye: Temporal mores — Teenyboppers, if that is what they are called nowadays, everywhere. Mini-micro-bikinis plastered to residues of baby fat. And that was in the drug stores. No telling what the beaches were like. I asked one of my hosts why so few older people were about. “They mess up the image we are trying to project,” he replied. “For that reason, we have a law preventing them from being seen in public. “Occasionally, some of them may wan der out on the street but every so often the Golden Age patrol comes by and herds them back into the geriatric ghettos where they are confined.” “I sure hope they don’t get you,” he added, mischievously rolling his eyes. I think he was putting me on, but it was the kind of legpulling a gullible easterner could easily believe. Architecture — In one area I visited I saw a genuine architectural innovation — a house that was neither neoSpanish, quasi- Spanish nor pseudo-Spanish. It had a small porch with a single Ionic column. Or maybe it was a Doric column. Dilapidated rather than rustic. I used to pass it as I was walking to a neighborhood shopping center to pick up a morning paper. Another thing I noticed was that I was the only person in the area who used feet for anything except getting to and from auto mobiles. One morning as I was walking past the non-Spanish house, I saw a small boy on the porch. “Look, Momma!” he cried. “There’s a man out here who is walking.” His mother quickly reached out the door and yanked the kid inside. Then she pull down the blinds. I’m pretty sure it was the same kid I encountered in a health food store a couple of days later. “Look, Momma,” he hollered. “There’s a man wearing long pants.” Water rights — Apparently, there is some sort of dispute between Southern California and Northern California over wa ter diversion. When I asked a Southern Californian about the issues, he blamed the whole thing on Northern California petulance. “They resent sending us water for our swimming pools, hot tubs and Jacuzzis,” he said. I think he was putting me on, but I feel closer to ol’ Ronnie already. 'flora, w USPS 045 360 MEMBER Texas Press Association Southwest Journalism Congress imb to fa The Battalion * es « d oonora i-Califor 'Velopec ; ion fron fered si Ore of be neur rr Editor AngeliqiieG;' ( \P^ as ' s City Editor Janet ™ a st Photo Editor GregCi ^ng th Sports Editor RitcW'f mines Focus Editor Cathy News Editors Marilyn FaulW' 1 ; ai. Greg Gammon, Venita MiG I W© StaffWriters Bernie Fette, KathyO’W| ’ Denise 11 Cartoonist Scott Mijj^ Tij-Nf EDITORIAL POLICY Takai The Battalion is a non-profit, self-supporting0t$ operated as a comm unity service to Texas A&M K and Bryan-College Station. 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