Tuesday, September 11, 1034 Pago 4 Daily Nebraskan TI O rl on rf! i! ft Vw to ' mi ai i TTrffl : L , F mHA' loan coo cneap to The Farmers Home Admin istration plays a major role in Nebraska's rural econ omy. Without it, more than 10,000 farms in this state probably could not have obtained loans. A large portion of those farms probably would have gone bankrupt. Since 1 935, the FmHA has been the last resort for farmers every where in the United States. When farmers couldnt get loans any where else, the FmHA was, and is, there. Almost all of the loans made to farmer by the FmHA have been repaid, according to the Sept. 10 issue of Newsweek. . . . mmr rt J 1 .. a fmt j . FmHAhasfoursectors:thefarm- the business program isnt rignt z wj? rural j ids irom iwj to er program - the biggest sector now. t at about $33 a Job. That s a - handles farm loans; the rural Nebraska's FmHA has only 24 cheap way to create jobs too Of Nebraska's about 10,000 bor- housing division; community pro- business loans, me tmau dusi- cne.ipiuM.rap. rowers, 28 percent are behind in grams and business and industry, ness Administration makes all Even If the rural economy is theirpayments,saidFrankMarsh, In Nebraska, Marsh said, the loans less than $500,000. In Neb- improving, ,as the 'Reagan lAdmbv state director of FmHA. business and industry sector has raska's rural economy, not many stration claims, the need for the The FmHA is one of the best been combined with the com- businesses need more than loan program may arise again, and most enduring of the New munity sectonThe business sec- $500,000. The FmHA has tightened the lend- Deal programs. It ha3 saved tor of FmHA guarantees loans to But the program, as a whole, Ing process to prevent bad loans, thousands of farms. businesses starting up in towns should not be scrapped. and if there is no need for the In 1972, Congress added the of 50,000 or less. Estimates by the House Agri- loan guarantees, the money is responsibility of stimulating the Although the farmer and com- culture Committee show that the still in the US. Treasury a no-non-farm rural economy to the munity programs are essential to loans to rural industries guaran- rfclhih-gdnpropcdaon ifever there FmHA. According to Marsh, the Nebraska's agricultural economy, teed by the FmHA saved or created was one. Catholic clergy break church-slate barrier A t some point during this long summer, the "wall of sen ar at ion" between church and state became a battleground. Not the least well-armed of the contenders were the Catholic hierarchy assembled under the anti-abortion banner. First we had New York Arch bishop John J. O'Connor saying 5 Ellen Goodman that he didn't "see how a Catholic in good conscience can vote for a candidate who explicitly supports abortion." In tandem, Bishop James W. Malone, the president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, said that Catho lics couldn't draw a line between "personal morality and public pol icy." They were both taking spe cial aim at Catholic politicians of the Cuomo-Ferraro stripe who are "personally opposed to abor tion but ..." Then last week, 18 New Eng land bishops signed a statement that put two issues at the top of their moralpolitical agenda. These things were to be consi dered by voters above all others: abortion and nuclear war. To the amateur observer this might have suggested that the Catholic church is splitting its ticket, since Reagan is seen as more sensitive .to the unborn, while Mondale is regarded as more sensitive to the born. But the bishops said that the abortion issue comes first because: "While nuclear holocaust is a future pos sibility, the holocaust of abortion is a present reality." Presumably ir I it 'ft f XsJ iff. Ml MVJ liV 1 I ltJ 1 r ' ' soman? mmummwmm w m mi ommw 10 immm they will allot nuclear war prime time during the nuclear winter. Frankly, I am not one of those who believe that every clerical collar should come with a muzzle. Clergy have every right to speak on moral issues. They even have the right to endorse legislation and candidates. But when reli gious leaders start to talk like lobbyists and politicians, the pub lic has to judge them as they would any other public-interest group, like The Sierra Club or the National Rifle Association or the National Abortion Rights Action League. At some point, we are no longer getting a sermon but a mass mail- EDITOR GENERAL MANAGER PRODUCTION MANAGER ADVERTISING MANAGER ASSISTANT ADVERTISING MANAGER CIRCULATION MANAGE NEWS EDITOR ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITORS COPY DESK SUPERVISOR SPORTS EDITOR ARTS ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR MIGHT NEWS EDITORS PHOTO CHIEF ASSISTANT PHOTO CHIEF PUBLICATIONS BOARD CHAIRPERSONS PROFESSIONAL ADVISER Cht1tW4ch, 472-173 DanM thaltil Kitty Pollcky Tom Bynw IKScfiWs thuman Thorn GabrofeSewici l&sma Se&erbcrg Stacla Thome Vicfci Rtflwa Ward W. Triptett HI Chrtatephef Burbaeh Lsurl McpFa Julia Joracn Judl Nygran Joa) Sartora Davkl Craajftar KtekFolay ,478-0275 Anfa kisifaWI, 47S-43S1 Don tt'i:on, 473-73:1 Ths Day NabrasVan (USPS 144-CSOJ Is published by th UNL PubSicationa Board Monday through Friday in th fall and apring tsmestars and Tuesdays and Friday in trs ummar aesaions, except during vacation. Readers are encouraged to submit story id and com ments to the Daily Ne&rasnsn by phoning 472-2383 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The public also hes access to the Publications Board. For information, call Nick Foiey. 478-C275 or Angsia Nietfwtd, 475-4SS1. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, 34 Nebraska Union, 1400 R St., Lincoln, Nab. 63S88-0448. AU MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1SS4 DAILY K1S.ASAM iro. is ing. We are no longer a respectful congregation but a skeptical con stituency. It's altogether approp riate to deal with the lobby this way, to check their facts, to ask whom they represent and whether the public policy they support is the best way to deal with the issue. The bishops imply, for exam ple, that the "facts" on which they rest their political case against abortion that the fetus is a person and that abortion is there fore murder axe universally accepted within the Catholic church. But Catholic theologians are still arguing about when the fetus becomes a person. Before the 18th century, the Church re fused to baptize aborted fetuses because they were not viewed as human. The question of whom exactly the bishops represent beyond other bishops is also a bit murky. They do not speak for 53 million American Catholics. Cath olics share the same conflicts and attitudes toward abortion as the rest of Americans. Less than 20 percent of them agree with the bishops' support of a ban on all abortion. Indeed, at least in Mas sachusetts, Catholic women have abortions at the same rate as women of other religions. One of the things that may have prompted the hierarchy into electioneering i3 the public image of pro-choice Catholic politicians, especially Geraldine Ferraro. As Frances Kissling of Catholics for a Free Choice says, "Ferraro is such a visible sign of the Church's inability to control the Catholic people. Here is a woman cn the front page every day who doesn't agree with them and goes about the business of being a Catholic." But if the bishops prefer to think of themselves as represent ing God or His will, we get into even deeper religiouspolitical trenches. There has been no divine revelation on, say, the Hyde Amendment. It is perfectly legit imate for any citizen, including Catholics with deep qualms about the morali ty of abortion, to argue over "pro-lie" legislation. Would re-criminalizing abortion, mean less loss of fetal "life" or more loss of female life? Furthermore,, the Church has art internal quandary about its own responsibility for unwanted pregnancies. On the very day that Bishop Law was taking a political stand againt abortion, the pope proclaimed that even "natural family planning," the rhythm method, the one form of Church approved birth control, was also questionable. e In any great civilian war, poli ticians like to claim that God is on their side. If God is unavailable, a volunteer clergyman makes a for midable recruiter for the party. Archbishop Law protests, "I dont want to be a political boss." But if a clergyman talks like a political boss and walks like a political boss, he must be judged like apol itical boss. 1SS4, Tha BosS&n C'.zti N&wspsper CcnxpsyAVih!n;;n Post WrStera Group r1i ourteen years ago, then President Nixon, in a message to congress, set forth a truly remarkable call for a new relationship between the U.S. govern ment and Native American tribes. He asserted that "the time has come to break sers decisively with the past and to create the conditions for a new era in which the Indian future is determined by Indian acts and Indian decisions." Sadly, however, Nixon's remarkable proposition went unheralded in the ensu ing years and similarly remarkable legisla tion implementing the called for "decisive break" with the past was never passed. Since that time, with few exceptions, VS. policy toward American Indians has borne sorrowful witness to the old adage "out of sight, out of mind." e ior new The time is overly ripe to rectify the problems that have plagued" Native Americans because of federal misman agement and oppression. The obvious next question is that of what steps ought to be taken in the search to rectify the situation as best as possible. Three fun damental steps ought to be taken by the U.S. government to ameliorate the prob lems that have been created for Ameri can Indians. First, a fundamental shift as to the end goal of US. Indian policy must occur. To date, according to a U.S. Senate Report, "the dominant policy of the Federal govern ment towards the American Indian has been one of coercive assimilation." Re nouncing the goal of Indian assimilation requires a rethinking on the part of policy-makers of well intentioned, but misguided, legislation. Apparently benign policies such as the "Indian Civil Rights" act and massive infusions of social program funds are viewed by many with suspicion. Professor Lawrence Barsh, Foreign Affairs Counsel Til Ol QYl -, OTP a. .. to the Mikmaq 'Grand Counsel, asserts that although these policies are in some ways helpful to Native Americans, "from a political perspective " they are viewed as signs of "increasing administrative in corporation rather than emancipation." In order to avoid making an already bad problem worse, U.S. policy-makers sim ply m ust insure that any program intend ed to aid American Indians is consonant with notions of tribal sovereignty. The second step in our program to "break decisively with the past" is to set up afuH scale Rectification Board to deal exhaustively with tribal land and mone tary claims. Similar cases already are pending in courts where Indian tribes are making land and compensatory ckiris. The creation of a separate Rectification Board would hopefully encourage the development of expertise amongst the adjudicators in sorting through the enormous legal complications that &ese types of cases attract. Continued cn Pas- 5