I Page 2 The Daily r!ebraskan Thursday, October 3, 1968 - kl I JrmMeKt Affair I iff Jter Oitr man Hoppe 'Stamp Out hex' stickers to save our great country MLY "Hi, Millicent. I guess your folks went down to the Sup port Your Local Police & Cut Local Taxes Rally?" "Yes, but come on in, Rodney. I'm just sitting in the living room all alone, ad dressing 'Stamp Out Red China' pamphlets for the Young Americans for In dividual Freedom. But what's wrong? You look depressed." OH, IT'S this book I've been reading by a couple of political scientists, R o g o w and Lasswell. It's called . . . Well, it's called 'You Know, Culture and Politics in America.' " "You know?" "Yeah, you know. It says the reason we're young con servatives is because of child hood conflicts over . . . well, you know. And we've got un healthy, repressive attitudes toward . . . well, you know." "Oh, Rodney, what bosh. I've got the normal healthy attitudes of any red-blooded, patriotic American girl. I can even say the word." "You can?" "Sex!" "GOSH, MILLICENT. You're wonderful. And I want you to know I'll never think the less of you for doing it." "Thank you, Rodney. I guess that takes care of those sick, no-nothing scientists." "Not quite, Millicent. You see they also say that these same childhood conflicts pro duced all these dirty, long haired Left Wing radicals only they're rebelling against NEBRASKAN Editorials CommeMary The right to hate does it exist? Every student who marches on City Hall today will be operating on a fundamental assumption: That the right to discriminate on a racial basis does not exist. The march, with the support of ASUN, will be one of the largest and most significant in the history of this University. Fundamentally it is a protest against a continuing and pervasive Injustice: The refusal of landlords to rent to blacks. The marchers will urge Lincoln landlords to aban don this policy. They will urge that the Lincoln City Council also pass an open housing ordinance. The march illustrates a fundamental problem In American justice. Does the right of a landlord to rent to whom he pleases pre-empt the right of the individual to live where be pleases? IDEALLY, we should have both freedoms. Until the public learns to view minorites from a viewpoint free of the usual racial hang-ups, however, it seems that we must emphasize the right of the in dividual. If we are to live collectively and not in anarchy, tt is impossible for a democracy to oppress any group. The choice is between a true democracy and a police state designed to keep certain segments of society In their place. The choice is between open bousing and sprawling ghettos with a heavily armed occupational police force. The question is whether we are to put priority on keep-'em-in-their place attitudes ala George Wallace, or priority on a free society. Do we really want to equip the kind of military force that will be necessary to preserve our present system? This If the first march. Indications are that It win be effective. It will be orderly, attended largely by students with no radical bent, and aimed toward a definite end. The march will take place because so many of the students at this University have realized the importance of granting the individual rights guaranteed in our laws to every individual. Get some fresh air this afternoon. Take a walk to City Hall. it iif iiiiiiiiiriiiiiif iiiif iiiiiitiMiiiMJiiirtjiiiiiiitiiMiniiiiiiiirn i ti 1 1 1 tiitiiisiiMiiiiniiii ju MiniiiiiiiriiiJ jiii t MiiMiiitiiii mil tritiniit iriiii t m fit iiimiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiim iiiriif liiiiiiiitiiiniiiiisit niiiiiiMiuiittiiifiitiitiMiitiif iti' John Defrain ... at we got here ... "lama radical. I'm so radical you just wouldn't believe it: I'm against the war, the draft, racism, compulsory school attendance, violence, parking meters. Humphrey-Wallace-Nixon-McCarthy, the Presi dency, Congress, grades, cir cumcision, curriculum, pris on, teachers who lecture, Time Magazine, taxes, the Omaha World-Herald, contrac tors, dormitories; and I think Ramparts is Establishment. BUT ALL that is beside the point. You see, before being a radical, the fact that I am a human being comes first. What I believe doesn't really matter. Whit I am is what matters. What I am is what matters, ters. And when you get right down to the bottom of each one of us human beings, you find that we're all the same: we're all basically messed up. Messed up in the sense that we don't REALLY know what this whole scene is all about. We don't really know why we are alive or what we're to do with our lives. A rather precarious posi tion. AND SO WHAT do we do? Our insecurity causes hostili ty. And the hostitlity we take out on somebody else. For example, take me, the radical type: Picturing me walking down the street in my typical attire (I wear my typical attire the days when I'm not working at a job when I have to dress up a bit). Here I am walking down the street in my hush puppies blue jeans, khaki army shirt, peace button, mustache, long hair, stupid smile. Here I am walking down the street, thinking all the time: "Hey, DeFrain, you're really hot stuff. Look at that straight over there with the grey suit, black wing tips, clack Italian-made umbrella, conventionally-cut hair. He'll work for General Electric as a manager when he graduates and dictate memos about washing machine dials to his secretary for forty years. Wow." When I catch my self doing this, I know that I, too, am a bigot. For a bigot is any person who looks at any other person and can instantly despise him. And why can you instantly despise another person? Maybe because you despise yourself a bit. Maybe because you realize how messed up you are. We're all messed u p . Scared, confused, uncertain, crouched and ready to spring. I can't really explain it to you on paper, but I don't have to explain it. You know how it is yourself. SO IF YOU, dressed in a grey suit, black wing tips, etc-, etc., spy me, dressed in blue jeans, khaki army shirt, etc., etc., walking down the street, don't ignore me. Don't spit at me. Don't tell me to get a haircut. And I won't tell you what I think is wrong with you. Instead, let's both try to stop and say to each other, hand in hand: "Come, let us reason together." And then walk off into the sunset, understandingly, to Tom and Millie's Tavern for a few beers. And over the beer we will talk about how messed up we all are. Now, this column may seem to the reader to have ended on a silly note. But I assure you it didn't. I just added the humor because I get self conscious trying to put down my most sincere thoughts. I become afraid that someone will laugh at them or not be favorable, and so I protect myself by jesting a bit before the reader gets his chance to react. At any rate, though it ends up silly, the thought is there. And the idea is that we have to get together and talk to each other. Man has to. No lie. Jack Todd Come on now, Jack. That was quite a hot potato you dropped in our hands Thurs day. You know, the editorial, "Student power: the catalyst." Perhaps I already agree with you, perhaps I'm already a quasi-SDS'er chomping down on the backside of The Establish ment, but I wouldn't want to use your editorial as my manifesto. I mean, who could keep a straight face quoting, a la Mao's red book and his cadres, such inspired prose as: "... We are still pro ducing officers to run an im moral war; we are still pro ducing executives to continue the corporate domina tion .. . ?" "I'D BUY the immoral war bit though "immoral" is redundant, but the gross con demnation of corporations? Don't tell me the men who created my sexy, new, im proved peppermint-pistachio toothpaste hang around with , . . No, not that. I must have a point, and I guess, as much as anything, I want substantiation. My appetite for atrocity stories, fed first by accounts of Nazi World War II activities, then by Robert Ruark's Mau Mau fictions, and finally by Viet nam via Ramparts and Biafra via Life, Newsweek and Time, is vast and unlimited. I know what Student Powerists want Look, Time and Newsweek again and I felt tears during Chicago. So don't you think you'd do better service for the vast numbers who don't remember Dow to sock it to them with documented facts? Just the facts, and none of this soap box anarchist stuff, please. There, see what you've made me do? For two years, I've carefully cultivated my apathy, have allowed my eyes to glaze to filter The Light, and have avoided such news worthy congregations as sit ins, be-ins, love-Ins, and woodman spare this tree ins. And you, with one dubious editorial, have spoiled that. See if you rest securely in your newsprint domination of campus views. (With all due . respect, I can't bring myself to call it "news.") If some day you feel a seething under current swoop down through the Rag newsroom, do worry: it will be I, chomping at your backside. Yours, Doug G. Thomas Daily Nebraskan fterond-tlnan poaiaga pah) at Uncoil, . , TKIJEPHONWP Editor 47MSM, Nwi 47i-25M, ButntM 47HM0. Subacrlptlon ram rt U vm aamaatar or HI lor tha academic yaar. Publlahrt Monday Wadnaada Thnraday and rrtdai ' diiruia tf f exempt durlM vacntlona nd aaaro wrtodt by tha unita of tha llnlvorilty Of riebraaka oiidor tha turldlctlo of tht Faculty Sulwommlttoo en Bhidml Pabtlcatluna PubllcaUona ahall tx freo from cananrahlp by Iho ftaboommlttoa or any otraoa outalda th Unlvoraltf. Mambara of Uw Nabraaku ara raaponalbla " uSL2flS& Su5llt?'-r- Notion., CddeattoMj AdvarttalB, SWIM Editorial Staff Kdtior Jack foddi Managing Editor Bd Icanoglti Nawa Editor Lynn OotUchalkj Nlnht Nawa Editor Kent Cockwoi Rdltorlal Paga Aaalatairt Molly Murrjlli AaalaUnt Nlht nawa Editor Phil Madcalfi Sporta Editor Mark Oontoni Aaalatant H porta Kdltor Randy Vorki Sonlor HUH Wrltera- John trak, Urry fcc Ikholt, Gooraa Kaulman. Julia Moreta, Jim Padaraaoi Junior Stuff Writ: Bari Omnia, Tarry Groba. Holly Roaenboraar, Bill Smltharman. Omnia Wlnklnri Sanlor Copy editor Joan WnMonari Copy Kdltorai Phyllla Adkl.n. Dava Flllpt. Juna Waaaonar, Andran Woodai Photo, graph Chlaf Dan Ladelyi Photofrapbar Jim Shawi Arliata Brant Skinnar and Gail Plea? man. ... Business Sta.f Bnalnaaa Mannaar J. L. Schmldti Bookkaapn- Ro-r Boya; Production Manatar John Flamlnai National Ad Mnnaum rnn (thoomakari Bualnaw Bacratary and Claaalflrd Ada Unda Itlrlchi Subacrlptlon Manager Jan Boaunam Circulation Man. naara Hon Pavclka. Kick Dorani Halcaman Maf Brown. Joal Davla, ttlam FrtandU Nancy UutlllaU, Dan Lookar. Todd aUaucotar. Dear Editor: If Carmichaels, R a p p Browns, and E 1 d r i d g e Cleavers are spokesmen for the Black people, I pity them Why don't you creeps do a little studying, instead of marching on a man's property-. SEEMS TO me a citizen should be able to rent to whom he pleased. Besides I'd be leery about renting to a black student for fear he'd burn me down or loot my property. Chambers said the black man was going to take what he wants. Well, this is my country also, and I'll have my "slice of pie" in the American way. If some of these creeps would wash, shave and cut their hair, they might get somewhere. White Power Militant Taxpayer Dear Sir: The frenzied grasp .for power by those who are con vinced they can do things better is now a generic level character of Homo sapiens, not the holy property of students. As an educator committed to objectivity and human use of human brains, I have only one comment re: "BALONEY." Sincerely, John Janovy, Jr. Assistant Professor these restraints. That's why "Gosh, Rodney, when you they believe in free "excuse look into my eyes like that the word love." "Ugh! Those scientists are right. Free love certainly has no place in our free enterprise system." "But don't you see, Millie? The basic problem, if I can speak frankly, is that because these beatniks believe in licentious free love, they're going to forgive me out breed us Conservatives." "I don't see the connection, Rodney." "JUST TAKE my word for it. Unless we do something, they'll overpopulate the world with little Left Wing radicals. They'll overwhelm us by sheer numbers." "Oh, Rodney, what can we do?" "Well, first let me put your Guy Lombardo record on in case anyone's eavesdropping. There. Then I'll just pull these shades. You never know who's watching. There. Now come close and I'll whisper my plan." "It's up to each of us to do his or her part, Millie, to save this great country of ours." "And when your voice goes all husky like that, Rodney , - 'SOME1JMES MILLIE, we have to violate the con ventional morality in order to preserve it. Sometimes, we have to sacrifice ourselves on the altar of freedom to keep our Nation strong " "Oh, Rodney, when you take my hand in yours like that, I just melt inside. I'll do anything you ask." "Anything?" "Anything." "I knew I could count on you, by golly. Meet me in front of the Youth for Wallare Headquarters after breakfast and we'll pass out these bumper stickers. They say, 'STAMP OUT (forgive me, Millie) SEX!' " Chronicle Features Inside report . . . Labor vs. Wallace Detroit Michigan's Democratic-labor coali tion last week quietly but drastically curtailed its efforts to register votes in white working-class neighborhoods, the newest evidence of profound pessimism over curbing the Wallace revolution by Election Day. Indeed, both labor leaders and Democratic politicians concede privately that their belated campaign to wean the white unionized worker away from George Wallace is a long-shot. And this glum prognosis directly affects Democratic registration strategy. JUST A MONTH ago, party chieftains were convinced that the key to victory in Michigan was registration of voters in normally Democratic areas who were purged from the rolls for failue to vote in 1966. This failure to vote was especially high in industrialized Macomb County adjoining Detroit, a Democratic stronghold. While it was recognized that some of those purged were potential votes for Wallace or Nixon, party leaders determined on a calculated risk to register them anyway. That decision was reversed last week by the United Auto Workers (UAW), which supplies most , of the money and manpower for the registration drive. Alarmed by the Wallace tide in Macomb County, the union quietly pulled in its registration horns. Instead, the registration drive which closes Friday (Oct. 4) is now concentrating on Detroit's inner city, where four out of five Black voters can be expected to vote for Humphrey if they get to the polls. In sum, the unregistered black is apt to be for Humphrey; the unregistered white is apt to be for Wallace. Despite the pessimism, an anti-Wallace cam paign aimed at white workers is under way. Doug Fraser, head of UAW's Chrysler division and one of President Walter Reuther's ablest lieutenants, runs the campaign in the union's Solidarity House, ffn downtown Detroit at state Democratic head quarters, a "Wallace desk" was established (undor the direction of Sid Woolner, aide to Sen. Philip A. Hart) to coordinate with Solidarity House. But like so much of the Humphrey campaign, this effort comes pathetically late. Although a private poll conducted for Reuther 18 months ago revealed rising Wallace strength in UAW locals, the union's leaders shrugged it off. On our last visit here in July, labor and party officials con fidently predicted that Wallace was hurting Nixon more than Humphrey and had peaked, anyway. Such talk now has disappeared. Apart from the lateness of the hour, however, nobody knows how best to sour the union members on Wallace. Party leaders doubt that labor's emphasis on bread-and-butter issues has much Im- pact on today's affluent workers. ON THE OTHER hand, labor strategists scoff at proposed leaflets linking Wallace with Louisiana racist Leander Perez and the Ku Klux Klan.fearing they might help rather than hurt Wallace with racially motivated white workers. Potentially most effective is the theme that Wallace is a force for disorder, not order. Facing Wallace hecklers in suburban Taylor Township last week for the first time in his vice-presidential thir!fal8nSe1- Edmund Muskie eloquently silenced . y dec,a!;in tha Wallaceite separatist clttrfind""1 hat my f3ther Came t0 this mmILtri',th,,h0rWetver' Muskie's eloquence, UAW Democratic leaflets, or paid political broadcasts instruSlK' WOrkers' The most effve t r is union shP stewards and taS2 S6!!; ?!8 intense Walla, sentiment not rd ?v tllat e,ected union officials will not risk all-out anti-Wallace missionary work for fear of jeopardizing their union jobs tirtZfZtTl11' rrkera are kP ,n contatnt stale or agitation not so much by Wallace aeents nIlna!Iy' , the gaP between the urbane fanSSe,ead atfSoUdary HoU and their ranK-ana-fiie is massive. That is whv WBit.r ' wlThthGeohrgSe reverses worker Tt or ihe soold of the auto 37 act that Re"ther can no longer with confidence register his own men to vote mJs? the cause of some chortling down in Montgomery! (o) 1(61, PubUahara-HaU Srad. i aa-