The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 26, 1979, Page page 5, Image 5

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    Wednesday, September 26, 1979
daily nebraskan
page 5
Nig
ena .
University of Nebraska
Continued from Page 4
Robinson said the United States uses its economic aid
"too much for political reasons and too little for human
itarian reasons." For instance, he said, Sudan, which re
cently had its assistance more than doubled to $130
million, gets far more aid than any other sub-Saharan Afri
can country, not because it is the neediest but because it
has been supportive of U.S. policy in the Mideast.
On the other hand, Tanzania, which has helped the
U.S. in its Southern African diplomacy and also by its
Perspective...
Continued from Page 4
The trend is gone which encourages saving our generat
ion, and what has replaced it varies from a Walden-type
vision of finding a private new frontier and starting over,
(regardless of the rest of humanity, society, or the guys
living on the floor below), to radical changes which put
ME in total control and let ME impose MY answers on
everyone else because I really do have the solution to
overpopulation-the solution most beneficial to ME-, that
is.
But yet, it's not all our fault. Issues are so much cloud
ier and delicate for us, especially regarding foreign affairs.
Maybe there are no practical, workable solutions. The
question today seems to be, who can we afford to offend
least, the Saudis, Israelis, American blacks or Jews?
Also, the economy and nuclear power proliferation
issues quickly lend themselves to "side-talking", without
exposing all the sticky consequences.
Maybe selfish idealism, rebellion without revolution, is
the best method for us. I don't know. Whatever happened
to grass-roots involvement? Even here in the micro-society
of UNL, we want to fight back against anti-student
actions, but generally let ASUN struggle for all of us. So
tuition is raised yet again, and maybe I would love to see
everyone refuse ta pay and transfer out-of-state, but I
won't advocate it, and .1 probably won't do it, because I
can rationalize that - the bills do have to be paid, and the
most important thing to me is to finish school and go on
to something better. So I go along, and fantasize about
the day the budget jsvill be handled MY way.
economically devastating military action against Uganda,
has asked the United States to pick up the interest charges
on money it borrowed from a consortium of U.S. banks.
So far, there has been no response.
What black spokesmen here have been demanding is
not less aid to Israel, Egypt or Sudan, but a more realistic
ordering - and humanizing-of piorlties.
Nigeria's breaking of the OPEC oil-price ceiling, though
it is certain to be denounced in some quarters as black
mail, may trigger just such a reordering of priorities,
(c) 1979, The Washington Pott Company .
A caresr m to
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