PAGE 2 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN TUESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1969 VENDETTA by Fred Schmidt . . . Looking into the coming decade from the tail of the Sinking Sixties . . Love asks something of the future, and nothing was left ns but a series of present moments." Albert Camus, The Plague This miserable decade was only four days old when Camus was killed. It's doubtful that he could have thought of anything more absurd than the ensuing ten years. Now, as the Sixties close with a whimper, few people look to the future with anything that resembles hope or love. The future, especially for those of us with low Selective Service numbers, doesn't offer anything particularly appetizing; our lives are reduced only to a series of present moments. Ten years ago we were told that the "Soaring Sixties" would be the greatest decade In the history of the human rare. But the credits of the decade mass media, the moon, and Bob Devaney cannot make the Sixties anything other than the Decade of the Bullet. While football and rock music made the time go more quickly, a steady barrage of gunfire kept spoiling the fun. First it was Hemingway; then Medgar Evers, Jack Kennedy, Malcolm X, Dr. King, and Bobby. Not to mention 40,000 of our brothers, whose honor we shall protect by adding to their number. A full measure of devotion is not the question. The question is, devotion to what? ("Push that stone up that hill, boy! Put your back into it!" And back it rolls, back it rolls.) Where do we go from here? How shall we approach the Seventies? We could spend the next ten years at the movies. (How about Hair, starring Pat Boone and Julie Andrews?) Or we could all Join the Weathermen and not know which way the wind blows. Perhaps we could prescribe an enema for Spiro and then put him in a shoe box. But most likely we'll Just settle down in Darlen, get Jobs, get married, and get little crnmbcrushers. And who can water the earth when he has to keep his swimming pool full? So let's play the waiting game of fear. Let's watch Frank Reynolds on the Five O'clock News (at least until the feds get him) and observe from a safe seat how things are going. It's not as much fun as it used to be, we have no more heroes. (We shot 'em all off, remember.) But with the exception of a very few of us (some people are just too dogmatic to see that we shall not overcome), the best thing we can do is just get out of the way. A recent poll showed that we WASPs are a lot shorter on optimism than minority peoples. So let George do it. And Jesse, and Julian. Why get your head smashed for nothing? Sometime during the Seventies we ourselves will become the Establishment. Things will sure be dif ferent then, won't they? Everything will be Just ducky. We can go back to reading Herman Wouk Instead of Camus. Unhapplness will be illegal. Everything will be the way we want it. Dissent? Nonsense! Why should anyone dissent? t And somewhere in the Third World (or even in the USA) some malcontent who's just watched his baby starve will see a Coca Cola sign and long to kill the dudes who make it. Open Forum Dear Nebraskan: Racism is a cancer, a sickness ... the antidote is human love. But as we all know it is sometimes like rabies and the antidote cannot be ad ministered in time to save the victims of the racist. George Wallace is a racist, and does not have much support among the American people, but he might infect many with his racist sickness and many lives might be destroyed. Richard Nixon is not a racist but I have never heard him disown or repudiate Wallace, Thieu or the Pentagon . . . who all are daily sending young men to slaughter and be slaughtered in Vietnam. Senators M c Govern, McCarthy and other senators, governors, ambassadors . . . antiwar leaders, Black Panther leaders . . . men of conviction and love for humanity , . . light a puth into the light of morning fur us. The thunder of their voices In hope of peace among men is no louder than the crying of children anywhere in the world . . . and yet millions are following them on the road to mankind's Ideal of brotherhood. The Moratorium committee of our state deserves the highest praise, for their work has been outstanding. We will follow their direction to end the war, but the revolution for peuce will not end until all the world's children are fed and out of danger. "No man is an island, each man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main, and if a clod be washed away by the sea . . . Europe is the less. . ." (John Donne) C. M. Dulrymple Dear Editor: 1 hate to see the drug issue beaten to death by excessive coverage, but I would be more disturbed to see Doug Hord ("Open Forum," Dec. 5) have the last word on the subject. In stating that drug ad vocates fail to recognize "the more subtle, long range and negative effects" and that they encourage experiences "that nobody In the world is qualified to handle," Mr. Hord Is reaching both unfounded and n a rrowminded conclusions. Among these negative effects, he says, are mental in coherence. Inability to express oneself, and loss of purpose. The fact Is, however, that the considerable laboratory research done so far, though far from complete, has reveal ed no definite short or long range negative effects from moderate use of the non narcotic drugs according to Dr. Helen B. Knowies. author of "Drugs on the College Cam pus." Rather what has been con cluded (s that drug experiences arc mostly dependent on the Individual his present state of mind and environment, physiological and psychological makup, etc. which includes so many variables as to make predictions concerning the ex perience difficult if not Im possible. This holds for all drugs including alcohol a good example as we are all aware of the extreme variety of behavioral responses it pro duces, ranging from passive contentment to obnoxious ex hibitionism. To say that nobody in the world is qualified to experience drugs is at best a slightly dogmatic statement, for the researchers seem to be telling us this: with alcohol as with LSD, some can handle it, some can't. At the House of Represen tatives Select Committee on Crime meeting (Oct. 23, 196s In San Francisco) the majority of researchers testified that alcohol w a s by far the m o s t dangerous drug so far In vestigated and contributed more to crime than all the others combined. Unfortunately, the hundreds of murders, suicides, and serious accidents resulting from alcohol abuse draw little more than a passing sigh from most people while a very rare accident or suicide committed on acid (e.g.,Art Linkletter't daughter) draws front page headlines as well as the wrath of the older folks. Face It, one LSD suicide is more sensational than a hundred alcohol murders, right? My point is this: it is hardly democratic to deny drug users the right to the experience, especially since so many believe drugs to be not only safe (at least safer than alcohol) but enlightening also. What about possible long range effects of which we might be ignorant? Well, we could wait another hundred years or so for the researchers to give us more accurate information, but it is absurd to ask so many curious, critical-thinking people to wait indefinitely when they want, and need, answers now, or at least before they die. Centuries of philosophy have failed to yield a thorough, con vincing metaphysical system. The social and behavioral sciences have yet to teach the individual to view himself ob jectively and resolve his Inner conflicts. We must admit the unaided intellect has limita tions, and if there Is any possibility of drugs dissolving some c! these limitations, then they should be explored. Should we wait for more information from the laboratory? Well, perhaps Columbus should have waited for the ocean liner and map of the world. As Dr. Knowies and most other authorities conclude, the drug problem lies not in the drug but in the people. And the problem there is misinforma tion; people fear drugs from the conflicting Information they receive; they have guilt feel ings about taking them; but their curiosity often prevails over this uncertainty. Serious problems are inevitable under these circumstances. An acid trip can be beautiful if one knows what to expect and does not fear the drug; otherwise it can be terrifying and will result In serious hang ups. Drug use is increasing; they are here to stay. We must acknowledge this fact and structure it into our society. We must learn to respect the drug, not fear it; we must see it as a potential source of knowledge while realizing that the self, not the drug, must ultimately sup ply the answers. The drug is not an escape from reality but rather a means of viewing our environment from a different perspective. Keep in mind that I have advocated use, not abuse; ex ploration, n o t indulgence. There is potential good and evil in everything Including drugs. But it will be impossible to realize the good and minimize the evil so long as Victorian attitudes, like Mr. Hord's, re main. BUI Brunell Nebraskan editorial ONE SHOULt) NOT SMAA ALONE." U.S. needs informed public by Frank Manklcwlci and Tom Braden Washington When the Columbia Broadcasting System put a former soldier named Paul Meadlo before the cameras one recent evening to say that he had shot civilians at My Lai, a number of senators were shocked into public outcry, not so much at what Meadlo said as at the fact that CBS kt him say it. Sen. Peter Dominick (R-Colo.), although also con demning the massacre, was the most outspoken. In general, the Hawks' annoyance may have betrayed embarrassment. They cannot have enjoyed the public presentation of still another horror about the way they have advocated. And yet, Dominick has a point that Meadlo's public confession and implication of the superior whose orders he said he was obeying may jeopardize the ancient American privilege of fair trial. What Dominick was asking is simply this: Can Lt. William Calley and others who may follow him Into the dock be fairly tried after the country has been shocked into anguish by details of the deed? It Is an important question but to raise lt Is to raise another. For if CBS and other news media had not described what happened at My Lai, the American people might never have known about It. Which right is more important? The right of the public to know? Or the right of an accused to a fair trail? Are the two antagonistic or Irreconcilable? Sen. Sam Ervin (D-N.C), who Is Washington's leading constitutional authority within the legislature, believes that where there is any doubt, it must be settled In favor of the right of the public to know. "Pre-censorship," says Ervln, who has frequently criticized the press for commenting on trials, "is a hazard which a free country cannot endure." In fact, however, there is not so much conflict between the two rights as Sen. Dominick appears to believe. Both were Imbedded Into the first 10 amendments to the Constitution and both were viewed not as a matter of form. It Is relatively recently, as Vermont Royster, editor of the Wall Street Journul, has pointed out, that we began to think of a trial as a presentation of evidence to a jury totally un familiar with the case. Originally, jurors were chosen from the locul citizenry because they hud some knowledge, some background gossip about the people Involved which might be helpful In securing justice. "There Is," Royster has said, "no antiquity in the modern idea that a jury should be composed of people who come to court with minds blank . . . left to struggle as best they may without guidance and dependent solely on the skill of advocates for the Justice of their verdict." Little antiquity and, he might have added, little sense. In this world of rapid and total com munication, it is nonsense to believe that a Lee Oswald or a Sirhan B. Sirhan could be tried by Jurors who had never read anything about them. If such were found, they would not be 12 "good men and true" but 12 Ignoramuses. So Lt. William Calley will be tried and ought to be tried by men who have read a good deal about the crime at My Lai. Moreover, he will be fairly tried unless we have come to worship form to such a degree that we hold pre-knowledge to be the same thing as prejudice. In Britain, press reporting of crime ends with the arrest, and does not resume until the trial. Newspaper and TV reporting about My Lai, of police comments on the accused murderers of Sharon Tate, would result in prison sentences for editors, publishers and printers. This system has advantages, not so much In Justice as in taste. But those who advocate lt must decide whether the price for keeping the nauseating details of the Tate killing out of public view Is not too high if it also keeps us from a national consciousness of for example My Lai. Americans have always agreed with Sam L'rvin that lt is. lot Anjtlti Timet DAILY NEBRASKAN Second clan poilaqa paid at Lincoln, Nak. Teltphontii tailor 7Juu, Newt 71 isif , Ivtlnott VMM. Subuription ratal art M par lamoitar or M par w Pvbllihod Monday, Wadnatday, Thunday and Friday oferlaa clwol yor anna durlni yacatloni and mem parladd" UrytcV ",,,r"l,al "' ""' OKaHaiul Adrorflilna: f,!!LN'!r" .V, .". 'Madam aj M, Addrowi Dally Nasraikm 34 Nabraika Union Unlvamty ol Nebraska Lincoln, Nabraika UNI Subsidized society denies most needy by Whitney M. Young Jr. Side by side on the front page of a major dally were two stories. One told of the bankruptcy of public housing authorities In a dozen cities; the other an nounced a new Administration plan to give several hundred million dollars to private companies to build ships. These stories symbolize wierd priorities on spen- Li 7 "Ali-ha! Now I see the enemy P ding tax dollars. Public needs keep taking a back seat to private profit. For all the speechmuklng and talk about how costly welfare and public subsidies to the poor are, the blunt truth of the matter Is that Industries and the well-off get four times as much federal aid as do the poor. Some of this aid Is In outright dollar gifts, tome of it In the form of tax concessions. But whatever name It goes by. it amounts to a federal welfare program for the well-off. Farmers, for example, get subsidies not to grow some crops. The prime beneficiaries are large farm corporations who own vast tracts of land. Many of these get more than $1 million each to keep their land cropless each year. The total bill comes to about $4 billion a year. Stock market speculators also are subsidized in that they don't have to pay tax on the Interest they pay for borrowing money with which to play the market. Private companies have a range of subsidized activity, from tax relief on investments In new machinery to rent free use of government-owned fac tories. The average American homeowner is also subsidized. Secretary of Housing and I'rban Develop ment George Romney, recently talked about the "housing subsidy" that lets people take tax writeoffs for Interest paid on home mortgages and housing loans guaranteed by the government. "The people who benefit usually ore not aware that they are being helped," he" said. They are also usually among the people who scream so loudly about federal "handouts" to the poor while getting handouts themselves. Public tax policy and roadbuilding led to the creation of the very subsidized suburbs that, through overt discrimination and zoning laws, exclude blacks and other minorities. And this policy of subsidizing the well-off and the middle classes is partially behind the shortage of public housing today. In 1968, for example, the government spent a mere $000 million on public housing, but the revenue loss from letting private homeowners write off property taxes and mortgage Interest from their federal tax bill came to close to $4 billion. Even welfare Itself can be seen as a subsidy to business and not to the poor. By providing a minimum subsistence level to relief recipients, local governments provide a pool of cheap labor for seasonal industries. Hundreds of thousands of low-wage and seasonal workers move from jobs to welfare and back again to other low-wage jobs. Businessmen, agitating for a law to allow welfare only to residents who had lived In their city for more than a year, changed their minds when it was pointed out to them that he city's hotel, restaurant, and laundry industries would be crippled by lack of manpower. This Is a subsidized society. By and large, in spite of obvious Inequities, federal subsidies of ene sort or another spur greater economic activity. And some, like the GI Bill veterans benefits, help many people to economic security. It is now time to help millions more out of poverty by a more rational use of subsidies. And it Is Mine for the great majority of Americans who have hvwh ed from subsidies to count their blessings and extend the same privilege to those who have been loss favored.