The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 20, 1971, Page PAGE 11, Image 11

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    Nixon reverses himself on wage-price controls
by Norma Milligan
Newsweek Feature Service
WASHINGTON-When
President Richard Nixon talks
about wage-price freezes, he
talks from experience. He's
been there before.
It was January 1942, and
there was another period of
inflation and another price
freeze, when Dick and Pat
Nixon moved out of their
garage apartment in Whittier,
Calif., and took their first long
train-ride to Washington, D.C.
Vast new governmental
bureaucracies were forming all
around the city and lawyers
were in demand, expecially
young lawyers who couldn't
command large salaries. The
28-year-old Nixon walked into
the newly created Office of
Price Administration and asked
for a job. He was interviewed
by Thomas I. Emerson, now a
law professor at Yale.
"DICK NIXON came into
my office without warning,"
Emerson now recalls. "He just
walked in and said he had
come to Washington to get into
the war effort. I found he had
a very good record at Duke and
a good law practice in Whittier.
I gave him a job right then and
there."
It was not the kind of job a
young lawyer dreams about.
The pay was low ($2,800 to
start) and the working
conditions were rugged.
FOR SALE
1968 VW, Excellent condition,
23.000 miles. AM FM radio, air,
475 0749,435,6225.
Stereo Components. Discount
prices. Fisher, Dual, Kerrvood,
Ampex. 466-0930.
Royal portable typewriter. $20.
Call 475 5833.
1968 Volkswaqon Bus Rebuilt
engine camper top driving
lamps new brakes and battery.
$1395.00 or best offer. Call
collect 766 3826.
8 track car Stereo tape. Afternoons.
434 3901.
Motorcyle chroming. Guaranteed.
Nominal profits. Lowest
process. 648 S 19th.
Beer Steins Mugs Mugs Mugs Cliffs
Smoke Shop. 12th & O Streets.
HELP WANTED
Needed Roller Skating Instructor.
To teach beginning and
advanced classes on Saturday
morning. Call Northeast YMCA
at 434 7481.
PART TIME CASHIER. Needed to
work evenings and weekends.
Ability in math necessary,
duties involve bookkeeping.
Apply in person. Robert Hall
Clothes. 6105 O St.
Wanted -Girl 18 or over to work
evening, part time, selling
concessions. Apply in person,
afternoon and evening. Embassy
Theatre, 1 730 "O" St.
STUDENTS, Route work $1.75hr.
plus bonuses. Car not necessary
434 6963 after 4 p.m.
HELP WANTED- Your Union
needs YOU APPLY NOW for
Nebraska Union Board in Room
2 0 0 Nebraska Union.
InterviewThurs. September 23.
College student looking to make
good money for working 1
hrday call (215) 877 7700.
PART TIME SALESLADY, To soil
lady'i clothing evenings and
weekends. Apply in person
Robert Hall Clothes. 6 1 05 O St.
mm itif i iWi
"The offices were crowded
and very hot in the summer,"
Thomas E. Harris, Nixon's first
boss at OPA. "Out in the bays
where Nixon was, there was no
air-conditioning and the
temperature ran around 110."
Harris is now general
counsel of the AFL-CIO and
more or less on the other side
of the political spectrum from
his former employe.
Understandably, he takes a dim
view of Nixon's unhappiness
with price controls.
"NIXON COULDN'T have
worked on price control for
more than a week or two-and
that experience was at a fairly
low level-before he was
transfered to work on tire
rationing. So when he refers to
his experience at OPA on price
control, he's giving you the old
stuff. As an exceedingly junior
lawyer, he would never have
been in an important
conference on prices."
Though Harris was never
close to Nixon, he remembers
him as "conscientious,
hard-working, rather shy and
self-effacing. I think he was
probably considerably less
sophisticated than a good deal
of the staff."
For his own part, Nixon felt
something of an outsider
among the largely liberal OPA
staffers. In later years, he
spoke often of his
"disillusionment" with
government bureaucracies, of
) 472-2789
472-2990
Freshman wanted as
CORNHUSKER YEARBOOK
Sales Representatives, Earn
money selling the
CORNHUSKER in your living
unit and on campus. Sign up
Room 34 STUDENT UNION. . .
.or call CORNHUSKER
OFFICE at 472-2586 for more
information. . .
Men. . . Half days? Full days. We
need fellows who can work half
or full days on temporary
unskilled labor jobs. Work the
days you want. Good pay, daily
draw. Manpower 122 N. 11th.
Student needs help completing
Philosophy 20 correspondence
course. Will pay $5lesson, Call
432 6850.
Male, part time painter needed,
$3.50hr., call 477-3458 after 8
p.m.
PERSONALS
SUE KOBZA: Goodbye. You're so
wonderful.
ROOMMATE WANTED
Female roommate wanted. $55mo.
utilites paid. Phone 4750019.
To mature male student who wants
to live nicely but inexpensively.
30x15 recreation room; rugs,
fireplace, private bath,
refrigerator, draperies, garage
stall, kitchen privileges; quiet
study. In home of employed
widow, 4 miles from campus.
$40 a month plus shoveling
snow. University Ext. 2614,
2615. Evenings 488 3481.
LOST
Lost wallet on campusSeptember
15th. Reward. Dennis Maun
466 0469.
MISCELLANEOUS
Students, Professors, Interested
Bodies. Let me give you an A
in your economy. Contact
Charles Pelikan. 315 Bruce Dr.
Notice: If you left shoes for repair
at Big Red Shoe Shop, 1342 P
St., they can be picked up at the
Community Saving St.imp Co.
238 N. 13th. 432 8591.
Sewing and Alterations. Call Pat
Moore at 799 2615.
Watch Rep.iir All makes including
Tiniex. Campus Bookstore East
side look for yellow door.
the "mediocrity of so many
civil servants," and he
disapproved strongly of "the
remnants of the old, violent
New Deal crowd."
BUT THERE WERE a few
kindred souls in the OPA and
Nixon found companionship.
He was particularly close to J.
Paul Marshall, a Yale law
graduate who is now with the
American Association of
Railroads and a director of the
Washington Redskins pro
football team.
"We were young lawyers,
the same age and probably the
only two who were so-called
conservatives," Marshall
remembers. "A number of the
others at the time were quite
far to the left, so we had a
closer natural bond."
Nixon stayed half a year at
OPA, got several advancements
and was making nearly $6,000
when he left to join the Navy.
Subsequently, and in speech
after speech, he harked back to
the experience as all the proof
he needed that controls do not
Write ad below using one
7 IT 3. 4. K 6.
7 a 9. 10. TT 12!
- 18.
iT 20. 21. 22. 23 24.
25. 26. 27! 28" 29 30.
Print Name-Address-Phone No. Below:
NAME PHONE No
ADDRESS CITY
ZIP CODE
Daily Nebraskan Classifieds may be placed in Room 34 Nebraska Union between 9:00 AM
and 5:00 PM daily weekdays. Cost for one ad is $.08 per word (S.80 minimum) for one
insertion. Call 472-2590 for more information, or use the above form and bring it into the
office. No refunds. No complimentary ads unless the error is brought to our attention within
the first business day after publication.
NEW ADDITIONS TO NEBRASKA FREE UNIVERSITY
TENNIS AN ALTERNATIVE TO
UNIVERSITY P. E.
LEADER: JOANN TANSEY
FIRST MEETING: Wednesday, September
September 22, 6 pm
WHERE: University Tennis Courts
EXISTENTIAL PHILOSOPHY
LEADER: JIM LEESTMA
FIRST MEETING: Wednesday,
September 22, 8 pm
WHERE: 3326 Kingsley Drive
POLISH HISTORY
LEADER: MIKE ZGUD
FIRST MEETING: Wednesday, September
22, 8 pm
WHERE: Selleck Quadrangle Rambler,
Fairfield Lounge
FOOD COOPERATIVE
LEADER: DENNIS BERKHEIM
FIRST MEETING: Monday, September
20, 7 pm
WHERE: Lincoln Free School, 700 N. 27th
CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN
POETRY
LEADER: BART BECKER
FIRST MEETING: Wednesday,
September 22, 7 pm
WHERE: UMHE
MOUNTAIN CLIMBING
LEADER: VERN BRETHOUR
FIRST MEETING: Wednesday,
Septembei 22, 7:30 pm
WHERE: Centennial College, Sun Room
work. On October, 17, 1969,
for example, he told a
nationwide television audience:
"My own first job in
government was with the old
OPA, and from personal
experience let me say this:
wage and pric; controls are bad
for business, bad for the
workingman and bad for the
consumer. . . and I will not
take the nation down that
road."
BUT TIMES CHANGE and
so, now and then, do the
strongest-held opinions. People
change, too, and few who
knew Dick Nixon in 1941
could have foreseen his rise.
"We had quite a bright
crew, and he was not exactly a
shining light," says Ann L.
Diamond, another OPA veteran
who now practices law in San
Rafael, Calif. "But he was very
dependable and hard-working,
and I must admit that he didn't
try to fit into the mold by
pretending to be a New
Dealer."
Mrs. Diamond was bowled
blank for each word.
F. BUCKMINSTER FULLER
LEADER: JERRY ANDERSON
FIRST MEETING: Tues. Sept. 21,
7 pm 7:30 pm
WHERE: W.T.H. International House
JESUS, THE REVOLUTIONARY
LEADER: GRANT HOUSER
FIRST MEETING: Tuesday,
September 21, 7:30 pm
WHERE: UMHE
USE OF PSYCHED E LICS
LEADER JACKI BARRETT
Fl RST MEETING: Monday, Sept. 20,
7:30 pm
WHERE: Centennial College Sun Room
THE AMERICAN INDIAN
LIMITED TO 12 PEOPLE
LEADER: WEBSTER ROBBINS
FIRST MEETING: Thursday,
Sept. 23, 7:00 pm
WHERE: Nebraska Union
CHANGES IN ORIGINAL PUBLICITY
NEW TESTAMENT FOR THE NEW AGE
MYSTICAL CHRISTIAN PHILOSOPHY
Will meet on same scheduled days and times
but will both meet at Schramm Hall instead of
1 116 'G'
over by Nixon's early political
successes: "Did I ever think
he'd run for public office?
Heavens, no!"
: I3:
'MiwMorotts
ssmuMr'
Lojjejr Foreign Car Setice
UOO. FsA PRlC i.lT tYj
IN THE UUI0U fa
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1971
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
PAGE 11