hH rinhf.Q antiwtef i .1 rafts nhn&Q hr f I SS Mi M I . 0y Deb Gray The man some have called the "Lone Ranqsr of the civil rights movement'1 challenged young uevuiu iota I ruQltt moral force to change the course of the country. Dick Gregory spoke to about 750 people in the Nebraska Union Ballroom Sunday even lag . He covered a wida ranga of topics from nutrition to the Symbionese Liberation Army. "1976 doesn't seem too far away but these next years will be the hardest two years ot this nation," he said. Gregory said the government was formed to "preserve the money people's position.' ' "If most people knew what government was up to, u t i Activistentertainer Dick Gft:ry tiprJ en Interview for tfta Nebraska Educational Television Network prior to his speech in the Nebraska Union Ballroom Sunday evening. they'd realizo that 1973 is going to be very hard , " ha t aidLv Gregory criticized' the Centra! Intelligence Agency (CIA) which he catied ;;."cm' of. .tne;.-most vicious,: degenerate, ; inhuman groups that ever Mas been put together In the .history of this planet." . . . .: ... - "We can get five 10-yccr-olds and on& 15-year-old to march downtown to the Federal Build ing seeking a cutback in the defense budget and the CIA will run dossiers on these 10- and 15-year-clds but they can't run files and Intimidate Junkies, dope pushers, whores, prosti tutes and Mafia syndicates . . . something's wrong.!' . Gregory said Watergate, the Patricia Hearst kidnapping, and John Kennedy's assassination are traceable to the CIA. He said America was "Idoliz ing the wrong people." "Although many people in America have so much admira tion for Teddy Kennedy, he knew damn well that the CIA killed his two brothers. But he would never tell you because he puts his family and himself above his country." Gregory said the "country was morally bankrupt on one side, and nature's closing in on uQIU uTjLTLSi(ni monday, October 7, 1974 lincoln, nebraska vol. 98 no. 25 the other." Morals have sunk to new levels of lowness, he said. , Gregory warned that the world would soon face a world- wide food shortage. The Amer ican people must learn to start eating for the nutrition of food, instead of for taste, he said. The patterns In nature, he said, point to a worldwide famine which i began this sum'mer, : "Ths government knew about these signs of nature and they have done nothing to Inform the American people," he said. Gregory also said that the university was formed to serve the students, not for students to serve the university. , "They should be educating you, not indoctrinating you," he said. "They should teach you how to live, not how to make a living, because by the time many of you graduate, there won't be any jobs." Gregroy challenged UNL stu dents to sacrifice for starving people in the world. "If you could find a group that would be willing to sacrifice one or two meals a day, and send that money and, that food around the wortd to hungry people who are on the brink of starvation, you krow what that would do for America? . "In 10 years it could mean a generation of kids would drop turnips on hungry people in stead of napalm bombs. Ycu may not be the number one football team in the nation, but you could win the Nobel peace prize. That's something that no number one football team cou!d ever get you." ouni rv racma lead r .. - . " if p .crisis By Randy Gordon Omaha Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D Mass.) said Saturday the nation faces a presidential leadership crisis and that President Gerald R. Ford is running out of time in his search for solutions to economic problems. "I have not to date seen a willingness on the part of the administration to deal with the hard decisions President Ford will need to take it we are going to get a handle on the economy," Kennedy said. "I think we shouid give a reasonable amount of time, but we are not going to give him until July, 1976, as some of his economic advisors have suggested," he said. - Kennedy said Congress is willing to cooperate with Ford on economic matters "if he is prepared to give us a program." Wage and Price Council . Kennedy was in Omaha Saturday morning to support the campaign of Dan Lynch, Democratic candidate for the 2nd Congres sional District seat In the House of Fepresenatives. That seat is currently held by John Y. McColiister. Kennedy spoke before a group of about 700 at Crelghton University at 8 a.m. before appearing at a $50-a-p!ate fund raising breakfast. He said the Congress has already shown this willingness by passing a bill establishing a federal Wage and Price Council and by 'Sennits auiiun wiiichiiaai uui $6.5 biiiiun ffum federal programs. The council, which does not have the 4" I authority to re-impose wage and price controls, depends on moral suasion, which Kennedy called jawboning, to persuade industry and labor officials to hold down wages and prices. Kennedy said jawboning has been effec tive in the past and should be the first step used In an attempt to control what he called runaway inflation. - "If that is not effective, we may come to wage and price controls, tax reform, a reduction of taxes for low and middle income families and public service employment in art effort to stimulate the economy," Kennedy . said. " ":''' Jawboning useful Ford's success in pressuring General Motors to roll back auto prices and the similar rollback of steel and auto prices during the 1960 show the usefulness iof jawboning, according to Kennedy. " ' Kennedy, who hasruled out a presidential bid in 1976, said the Democratic party "will offer a wide range of different candidates." " think we've got a number of members of the Senate who are obvious in their intentions, as we do in the House and in the statehouse. I think that after the 1974 campaign we will have an additional roster of . people. ' . "I think the Democratic party will have the candidates. The real challenge will be whether tha party can develop a program to deal with the issues.. .the economy being number one," Kennedy said. To the Creighton University audience, Kennedy said "the real challenge is for r -' r ; : Dyas supports veteran benefits A Congressional bill asking for increased veterans' benefits represents an "invest ment, not a hand-out," 1st congressional district Democratic candidate Hess Dyas told student veterans Saturday at a meeting of the Student Veterans' organization. The proposed bill provides for a 23 per cent increase in G.I. bill monthly payments from to $260. and extends ths period a veteran may receive G.l. bill support from 38 months to 45 months, according to Red Cook, regional coordinator of the National Assoc. of Concerned Veterans. The bill was approved by a House-Senate conference committee last week. !t must now be approved in its new form by the House and Senate before being sent to rresiaem Gerald Ford for approval. Congressman Charles Thone, Dyas' oppo nent in the November election, has also announced his support for the bill. Dyas said the cost of the ' proposed bill would be $1.5 billion. "An interesting sidelight," Dyas said, "is that the cost-overrun on the B-10 bomber is $1.6 billion." According to Cook, estimates on the return of the investment for money provided for G.l. bill benefits are 300 to GOO per cent. I - f f ' ii sou young people to make a difference in the .electoral process. Young people usually right . "The lesson of Watergate is that ft was an aberration of 200 years of American history. It is the exception, not the rule." Kennedy said that in his 12 years in the Senate, he has found that "on most of the important issues we have been facing in this country, the young people have usuaHy been right." he said such issues indluded school desegregation and the equal rights move ' ment in the 1960s, the protest againsi ' American involvement in the Vietnam War and environmental issues. ! Kennedy said his role in the Democratic "party is now one of making his views known and "moving the party toward the kind of goals I have in various issues." ' Kennedy, in an appearance at Southern Illinois University Friday night, said ne would not support the Democratic president ial ticket in 1976 If Alabama Gov. George WAlisca is en it. Ike- . . -i , " "w' - I Sssistsr Edward M . Kennedy