eoicofiQ Into a den of thieves Let's hear it for Gerald R. Ford, President Hichard Nixon s most recent selection for his vice president. ( Chosen from a presumably select group of men and other individuals," as the President l:m f ca,,cd 't. Ford has made a large sacrifice in agreeing to accept the post recently v.icatpd by convcterl tax evader Spiro T. Agnew Alter 25 hord has placed his political future in jeopardy by wi.hngly joining a ring of suspected criminals. Even the San Clemente executive seemed to i ? e that he might be in for trouble. Otherwise 't would be unusual for him to mention in his wxvci to his follow countrymen that he wanted to choose someone who could, if necessary, step into the; Presidency, as has been the case for seven other administrations. It could be, therefore, that Ford, once desenbed by former President Lyndon B. Johnson a fuulbal! player who played too long without a he, met, will be forced to drop back and punt. A Congressman with a clean record for all those vea's a col.ego football star and a Nebraska native i-oro had everything going for him. Now he wants' an office in a den of hoodlums. a!riW,y has begun changing his ideological stance. Originally, he said he thought the President should reveal the information on those now famous tapes. Now he says he wants to qualify that statement. He's not sure the President should release them to the cour t. Could it be that Ford, already kissing his wife on the front pages of the nation's newspapers, is headed for a fate similar to Nixon and his former sidekick? Ford says he owns about $9,000 worth of debentures in a paint company and his wife has a few inherited stock?. He sV.-n; to resign from the board of directors of fksupath, Inc., a label manufacturing firm which paid $1,800 a year for attendance at six meetings. He owns three pieces of real estate: homes in Washington's Virginia suburbs and Grand Rapids, Mich., plus a condominium in Vail, Colo. Let us hope that he sticks to his crystal clear record and that he never finds out that an industrial state like Michigan probably would be willing to grant kickbacks to a famous son Let's also hear it for Sen. Carl T. Curtis, who will be on East Campus Friday. It must have made the senator happy during his recent trip to Argentina to finally be called senor Senator, after being Sen. Roman Hruska's junior for so lonp. Tim Anderson 7 :V ;,U '? ' Atl1 A hhr if H A- !V O ft If"1, ;t I '' l ' ' t fit, I wrtuwat,,,,. ''-V. " t ' (JjCS-i tV.S. inferiority complex due to lack of leaders With th: )u',ino of Sir0 A,,,,, f wnnv, ut annrouriiitc tiitu- t.i' i " " i . . the (JiKctiof, At n,.,iUi ,., ,.lkif,;, ,;: ' L I ' I I '" 1 "';jd I didn't see 01 eMotfkul. ' 1 i'w' ll UK )P fXnOn I ,,JI ' 'm.-mh,,, doing it. Rather, Sine; the d.-m,.,. .-,( , .. , J . ' " wi v-xl ...ysi.on,. Lu()S heroicallv firkin "f.-e the dfmre ;,f , Vl( , ,,, it '.v,ir, Arnt.'fic.n', ,,.,.,,., )n (, ,, '''V, ',nn; (jf tlvnr.elvcv 7 i. i,,,. , confidiMit luitional spirit !h,a I., Hie Med,;,- Corps im.v .. IM i( 'f ('f ntJrioi,ol ',. if (.orr.f-iMM,,.,.,, ,,1 emljtiridssmrnt. Auii.'i ictirr, no loiiii'r see tin i dS ,h,; 'Jf'J(i fjuys, ,irid oft,,, uniuestioiiinrjly uccept themst.-lvi-, s the I), id iijVs. '' ' ' .ith this national inferiority complex comes un apparent confusion or lack of purpose. To a yre.it extern this seems to rx; Ix-cause of the near alwencc of any viable leadership. II the 00; vvi.'ie c.illed ,i tin ... (, le.ide"., uithiMit t,.,.i.i . ..j.,, l" known ,Vj a tim o , . ,, leudef!,. And without tl.-,.- !.,..,(, ,., America suffer,. This leadiMship v,k hum s. ti direct result of ,i .r, iii- U , !, I'tr,iy,il, or pcrh, ips shl-ei, I., ,f! 1 micnoe osheo ant Ihondr tO O" !' Oi " '.'. " r I ,"li r , t. A',"'M,'"fM- -HI .dl.HISt "nv,A "i Hie poh,,,,,! "" '! t( ,,l,.(J,,,y (;f , !)"vmiiu:, o: off,,.,;, fh ri' is soriwlhiiiy iacred ulx)ut hn;h nate;i,,,! office that shields it from t'i.' p,;tty political tricks and scanr'.ih, of lower office. A town m.yor m,,y ff..t k,ckbatks from construction contracts, but not the ice pr...K,;nt of the United States. 1 1 ' 1 ' h be.-ri sr:,:,ri(f()!s jn 'I"'-"' Ma-f. , hut n.'ver su " ihh.sc, p. ,!,;,.. "' "' ' hi'!.- fir in a. ' ' ' '' ' :'' '. '.h.il'efi. not iii tfieir '"" ' ' ' ' 1 l'it r.ithc-r in this I''" i.l-i'.-" on:p r,. p-jliji, U'MUlit Of piihlic sl.,ViJ(l,s j fiothin., new here, t WiVi pe,Ulp(j th(1) lofjheld Yank..e skept.ci,m, coupled with the public outraoe at WateiMJte th.it moved A(iiew to try for House impeH.hnK;nt proceeding rather than face a qrand jury. Other politicians know and fear the (hmrjetous chain reaction that Watergate ha:, started. And they beum fearing their own pasts, Agnew would never have been removed bom olf,Ce by Congo,':,. The current plight of politicians is similar to that of police. I recall reading how a group of policemen on the Niagara River formed a human chain into the current to pluck out a man being drawn swiftly towards the falls. r"- I read tin., niere I ,itn't modern policemen d,.in,i ;t . l-eyslone Cops heroically drawing till; rn.in O, .,(..!,, J '''''''''i;'- 'his when; the erosion '''. '.,. c oik,, were seen as good '" 'O" .-irul hepfU. But for ' ( ''""J dunng the 60s the police y oitry,d, and often justly so, as 'f Dohtical and.acial oppiession. Mor,..(f, pohc-., not the Keystones, Ml'1,l"'l do,r, m r.,;ma and went s.'fk in Chicago, Like the ,H,,,,;lt)":'. "i"y now are not trusted. moral of these rambling on ""' und learfc.'iship i5 simp0. n tnis ("nod of skepticism, the burden of proof is on government. . i needs .iirec.ion and "'"''''''i'- -he mere selection of a ;::u!;:;;:"" win n0t MT,i!' '"!:' '""st prove its ' : ly or rJoom itself '''' "" ' """" 'Mri of .,ng a page 4 daily hebria.uti ''"'y. orjtohor 1b, 1973