PAKF 2 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1969 in retrospect 1 PROSPECTUS WAS ' V . dJM" . . . ' . -i-- I a ar . mssi. V 'iw wiu 'JTC ART HIPPIE LAUGHED At HIM 4n MAT R llBALLATMibNIGHf shchadto ee 'if' fcrtF Ml nets. A A Ma pawn cr i ncr ; HOURS WEwg r ; : " I VHP. Awes tupm i IT WAS iiMur f,rfji -- ee chuED- 7 . it Kill Mi 1 : z ' f Jtzri Truth note on My Lai insures against future horror by Sen. Edmund S. Muskle Thanksgiving weekend I went to England to address a Conservative Party conference and to participate in a British Boradcasting Corporation television Interview program. While there I had an opportunity to talk with a number of political leaders in the Conservative and Labour parties, and I was questioned at length by British reporters. The chief topic of Interest for Britons seemed to be the alleged atrocities In Vietnam. This was the subject of pictures and news accounts on television and In the newspapers. The reports on My Lai had shocked the British, partially because of their bitter memories of the Hitler years, and partially because they had never expected this of American troops. At the an me time, I found considerable sentiment among political leaders of both major parties In sup port of the United States presence In Vietnam. It seems clear that the margin of support for continued 1'nlted States Involvement In Southeast Asia Is higher la the British Purllument than It Is In the United States Congress. It Is almost as if the British expected us to substitute for them as a major western force In the Orient. This is not to say that opposition to the Vietnam wur is not strong. There is vocal opposition among Labour members in the House of Commons and among private citizens. That opposition gained a new focus in the incident at My Lai. I pointed out to my British questioners that the incident at My Lai cannot be explained away as an isolated act of brutality or as a simple by-product of the Vietnam war. It is a problem which will be around even when that war has ended. The Incident at My Lai Is a terrible reminder that man's capacity for Inhumanity cannot be eliminated by a mere statement on behalf of human rights or by an avowed devotion to democratic prin ciples. The Incident was sickening and shameful. Those who ure accused must be tried. Our country's official and active opposition to such actions must be demonstrated. But we must go beyond the specific trials to the underlying questions of why My Lai happened. We must take steps to prevent further incidents of such Inhumanity. That is why I have suggested that we establish a special commission to investigate tbe pro blem and to report to the country. It would be easy to write off the Incident at My Lai, to hang it on our own personal preconceptions or why It happened. That might satisfy our desire for a scapegoat, but It would not enable us to unders tand and to avoid such horrors in the future. If we are to insure the survival of the democratic traditions of human dignity and individual worth, we must learn better how to forecast and avoid developments which lead to the My Lais of our world. What we learn about the perils of conflict, confrontation and hatred, which can let loose man's capacity for cruelty and destructlveness, can help other nations avoid such problems. They need to understand what we have learned: it can happen here. Tht LMgar Syndic, Inc. Here it is, almost the end of the "Soaring Sixties" and journalists everywhere are turning out recaps of the News Highlights from that Fabulous Decade, or entrancing us all with predictions about the Future of the Human Race. Yes, it's time for journalists to prove how brilliant they are, to show how much about Our Society they know, and to beguile us all into thinking that, with enough facts and informed comment, we can all understand what's going on. Everyone, of course, tends - to overestimate his own importance, but the sad thing is that so many people believe the journalists; even if people are uninformed, they kowtow to the power of Information. Well now, I've already managed to slip Into the old Facile Generalization, so I'd better stop right away before I get carried away into a veritable sermon. Of course I'm supposed to be turning out some mind-nourishing swill because of my vast ex perience and superior intellect, but since I find getting out of bed to be a major challenge (with brushing my teeth not far behind), I hesitate to offer advice (friendly or otherwise) on Vital Matters. While the world cries for the intellectual equivalent of Ann Landers (Dear Ann: What do I do about these reactionary right-wingers? They just won't leave me alone! Confused.), I can only offer those old standbys reading (books, I'm afraid) and thinking. Yes friends, it's time to get back to the old virtues, and Marshall McLuhan is full of shit. Just how sappy the infatuation with the myths of the media has become is evidenced by the reaction to that paramount example of the New American Pretentiousness in films, "Medium Cool." It's an in teresting film, but a failure; its s i m p 1 e-mlndedness and heavy-handedness about the Violence and Insensitivlty of Our Time is disastrously apparent on a second viewing the easy ironies on the soundtrack (the cut from the roller derby to the bedroom, while roiler-derby sounds continue; the jux taposition of shots of the injured in Grant Park with "Happy Days are Here Again" from the convention); the cop-out ending with the necessity of any resolution removed by the expedient of the accident (a trick borrowed from Godard, who at least is original one would think that people would learn from him what It is impossible to do) all this for the daring revelation that the police do bad things, that pro fessional journalists may become callous, that some people are cowards, and that things aren't entirely happy down on de oP plantation. If Wexler had stuck to the only interesting characters, the mother and her child from Appalachia. he might have made something, but as it is, "Madam Cool" fails as art (too simple-minded) and as journalism (it's not news). But then, do many people want anything that Isn't simple-minded? It seems to me that evidence of the proper attitudes Is about all that a student audience looks for. Language has become so debased that "pigs" and "fascists" are no longer joking epithets, but are used seriously by those whom I am tempted to cull radical Idiots. A sort of petulant disbelief in the possibility that the "enemy" is human is pervasive; there are entirely too many people around with a too-certain sense of their own virtue. Smugness and arrogance are not found only In the Evil Establishment. Here I am, preaching again! I have only a couple of slightly tottered Deep Thoughts to offer you all; I don't know if they will be enough to make it through the 70's with, but then what will be? So, with no further adieu, my Parting Shots: "Radical" Implies getting to the root of things, not idolizing Che Guevara; Eliot Rosewater, in Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.'s "God Bless You, Jr. Rosewater," makes one if the few Profound Comments in contemporary literature when he supplies this advice to his grandchildren: "Goddammit, kids, you've got to be kind." Now that's relevance; to hell with Herbert Marcuse. DAILY NEBRASKAN tond elm pUq paid it line!, N. Tultphontti Idltar 471 ISM. Nm 471-Utf, ImIimm 471-UN. Subicrlpllon rpltt art $4 pr limnlit pr H pw VMr. Pwbllihpd Monday, Wpdnndty, Thpriday pnd Prtdpy dprtnf tk tchool yur nctpt durlnp vacillom pnd turn pprtpd. Mtmptr p intprvollpgiptp Prpw, Nahpnpl IdiKitloMI Advprtlilna tprvlcp. Thp Dally Npbrpihan I tlpdant publication, Indopondnt t tkp Unlvprtlty pi Naarptka't Mmlnltfrpllpa, (pcwlty pnd Itplpnl qovarnmtnt. AddrpMi Dally Nokrpihpn J4 NtPraika Union Unlvprtlly pi Nakratlip Lincoln, Ntbraika MSM tutorial Halt Idlfpf now tpypt Manaplnp Idllar Rani Cockion, Now Bdltpr Jim Ppdprtani Nlpht Nam dllpri J. I. Schmidt, Day Flllpli Idllorlpl aitlitant Holly Rpionborppri Aiilitpnt Now Idltpr Jan.! MpiwoIIi 1 port i Id l lor Randy Yor( Nttirpikpn Itaft Wrllprt John Dvorak, Rill Imllhprmpn, Ipr tcnwltdor. )ary (oacntl, Slav llnclplr, Rachlttar llnon. Dln WprnR, Mikp Parrttl, tup P.ttoy, lylvl tap. Ran Whman. Carpi mtrto holoprophpri Dan Ladoly, Jim Doan, Howard Roaonkor. Mlk Mavmani Copy Rdliora Dan Ladaly, Jan pr, lull tchllckp. malar, Rhyilli Adkliton. Rualnoii Haft tutlnau Mpnapar td kanopla; Local Ad Manppor J. L. tchmMtl National Ad Manapor Mop Rrawni Roobkoaptr Ron ttwllni uilnoit Jtcrotarv and tuotcrlplian Manapor Janol loalman. Circulation Manapor Jama Itolior) Clattlflad Ad Manapor Jun Waponari Advortlilnf RaprpnnKllv J. C Schmidt. Jppi Cavil, Jpp WlllPn. klndp Rutnnaoa, Nixon's self-created tax bind protends economic woes By Roland Evans and Robert Novak Washington Congressional tax-writers are set to defy President Nixon's veto threat against a tax bill with tax and Social Security Christmas presents to the taxpayer, thereby confronting the President with a dilemma of grave dimensions partly political, partly economic. The Immediate source of Mr. Nixon's problem Is his unusually explicit press conference statement Dec. 8, an unpleasant surprise to Capitol Hill, that he would veto a tax reform bill containing two costly Senate amendments: a 15 percent hike In Social Security payments and an Increase In the present $600 personal Income tax exemption to fftoo. Choosing not to believe the President' threat, the Senate-House conference now writing the final version of the bill Is determined to approve something close to the blacklisted provisions. If the tax conference meets Its difficult timetable of a finished product by Dec. 19, Mr. Nixon will have a cheerless Yuletlde choice. He can sign the bill ettly by sacrificing the credibility of both his own word and his commitment against Inflation. But because the bill's estensloa of the surtax and repeal of the investment credit produces more money than It ktf la the short run, a veto might do more economic harm thaa good. This dilemma merely illuminates one of the least understood economic facts in Washington: the Nixon administration has lost control of the fiscal situation. Whatever Mr. Nixon finally does about the tax bill, the Federal government unwittingly will be pouring out more consumer money to fuel the fires of Inflation. Actually, before last Monday 'a press conference, the President had been criticized for not speaking out In behalf of fiscal resixmstbtllty. Treasury officials wanted Mr. Nixon to publicly urge restraint on the tax bill. A similar request was made by Rep. Wilbur D. Mills of Arkansas, foremost Congressional taxwritcr and chairman of the Senate-House conference. The President's new hard line only became visible, even In private, at his weekly meeting with Republican Congressional leaders on Dec. 3 when he promised to veto any bill if necessary. But nobody In Congress certainly not Mills was prepared for Mr. Nixon's uncharacteristically blunt press conference pledge to veto a bill constructed to the Senate's specifications. What made this disconcerting to Congressional tax-writers were the hard facts of life on Cupltol Hill. No matter how much Mills cleans op the spendthrift Senate bill, the provisions that Mr. Nixon (inds objectionable cannot be eliminated. Indeed, Congressional leaders of both parties warned Mr. Nixon weeks ago that the IS percent Social Security boost would be in the final tax bill despite its inflationary impact. Acknowledging this, the President conceded privately that his proposed 10 percent increase in a separate bill was not sweet enough for Congressional taste. Capitol Hill demands for a higher personal Income tax exemption are only slightly less Insistent. Should the conferees completely eliminate the new $300 ex emption, their work would be reversed by the Senate and peili.ips the House. Thus, Mr. Nixon's allies in the conference hope for no mora than a stretch-out to delay Its Inflationary impact, and perhaps scaling the exemption down to $700. Although veteran Congressmen cannot conceive of the President's vetoing this kind of bill after a full year's work, high Administration officials in close contact with Mr. Nixon disagree. The President, they Insist, meant exactly what he said Monday night. For the President to concur In an out-of-balance tax bill, they said, would convince corporate business that his anti-inflation stance Is frivolous. But a veto of much-desired tax relief would carry Its economic liabilities. The bill contains extension of the surtax at a I percent rate for six months and repeal of the Investment credit Accordingly, the veto would remove more than tta billion from the plus side of the budget and free more dollars for both consumer and Industrialist Furthermore, If the tax bill la vetoed, It la unlikely that Congress would extend the surtax or repeal the Investment credit in separate measures next year. That is the essence of Mr. Nixon's dilemma. The much-advertised budget surplus for the current fiscal year Is turning into a deficit even under suspect new accounting procedures, and Administration economists privately say the need now is for a tax Increase to fight Inflation. But anti-tax sentiment In the country is so Intense that such a proposal would face instant death in Congress. Thus President Nixon is trapped: his strong words Monday night stnick the right note, but they came so late that they helped to set the trap. t WWL m -m m '3c , w Ma i i.w . a, in l