friday, September 25, 1981 page 4 daily nebraskan poiifeoDAsteoi:! Money fi A presidential 'commission has recommended restitution be made to the Americans held hos tage for 444 days in Iran. The commission recom mended the hostages be paid $12.50 per day for their ordeal. The per day amount totals 55,550 for those held the entire 444 days. Jerry Plotkin, a businessman among those taken, would not be eligible for the benefits. The commission ruled private citizens who went to Iran after travel warnings were issued were on their own. Meanwhile, seven Secret Service agents who helped save President Ronald Reagan from the as sassination attempt on March 30 received com pensation for their work on the job. Four of the agents received $10,000 each and the Treasury Department's exceptional service award. In neither the hostage nor the Secret Service agent examples is monetary compensation an ade quate reward for their services. A Secret Service Agent's job is to protect the president. This is exactly what agent Tim McCar thy did when he used his body to protect the president from the gunfire. But why call this a heroic deed? It was his duty to use his life to save the president's. Rewarding him or anyone else in the agency for performing their job is an admission that we don't expect these people to risk their lives without some monetary reward. Paying the hostages a mere $12.50 a day is a sham. No amount of money can compensate the hostages for what they endured. Some say $12.50 is a good "symbolic gesture." A lawyer for some hostages and their families is suggesting a minimum of $1,000 a day as restitution. V? ri"!!"'"""",","M,"("lfl!lfli; 7 it 1 - mm, in i nn . mm "It's God and Satan. Good versus bad." - Larry Nolte, Faith Baptist Church parishioner as quoted Sept. 22 in the Lincoln Journal ip'rAojjfuin'ni'iiJ'JiiJiiim - , V ANIL Minorities rise fastest through market I once saw a reference to Thomas Sowell in which he was described as "an economist who happens to be black. n The tone was somehow wrong, as if his race were an incidental embarrassment, on the order of calling Marlene Dietrich an entertainer who happens to be fe male. Sowell was in New York recently to promote his three new books. He is a sternly handsome man who looks much younger than his 51 years. He talks with the ease of a stand-up comedian. jJ8pD sooran His basic thesis, as a commentator on public policy, is that ethnic minorities have always risen fastest through Ithe free market, rather than through politics. "I do not have faith in the market," he says. "I have evidence about the market." That evidence is amassed in bthnic America and Markets and Minorities, two of his three current books. As Sowell sees it, the market ignores the very factors of socially-ascribed inferior status that keeps minorities "in their place." Instead, it rewards them for what they do. An employer who hired a less-qualified white over a more-qualified black is imposing upon himself what Sowell calls "the costs of discrimination," and leaving the superior job candidate to some competitor. He points td such homely examples as the Washington Redskins of a few vears back, who were the National Football League's whitest-and-worst-team. The costs of discrimination are inherent, he says, in a competitive sys tem. Therefore blacks should favor free competition. The death of Roy Wilkins has been widely remarked on as signaling the end of the old civil rights movement. Cur rent black leadership has abandoned the Wilkins-era stress on merit hiring and on opposing double standards, in favor of group entitlements and "Affirmative Actions" -divisive and, in Sowell's view, self-defeating policies. What does Sowell advise blacks to do? "I am not the Dear Abby of black people," he said. He dislikes talks of "solutions." In the real world there are only "alternatives," which must be compared with each other, not with some hypothetical ideal. - - Sowell is an original thinker whose method is not easy to grasp, but he owes a heavy debt to Friedrich von Hayek, the Austrian economist whose epistemology of the marketplace forms the basis of Sowell's widely hailed book, Knowledge and Decisions. He rejects the state-imposed "solutions" favored by liberalism and adopted, unfortunately, by most of the black establishment. This has not endeared him to that establishment; nor has his blunt ridicule of what he sees as its social elitism; nor has his penchant for independent theorizing. Born in North Carolina, Sowell grew up in New York, dropped out of high school, joined the Marines and eventually got his doctorate in economics at the Univer sity of Chicago where he gave over his early radicalism in favor of the free-market economics fostered by the Chicago school. At one time he was an oddity, and his first teaching job was at a private women's college. But he made his mark, and last fall Ronald Reagan offered him a Cabinet position in the Department of Education. Continued on Page 5 Few people believe money will help ease any mental anguish the hostages suffered. Yet we are willing to award these victims of circumstance money, although we turn our backs on others. There are many other groups who could claim a right to some compensation. Vietnam veterans and Japanese-Americans, whose civil liberties were denied during World War II, are just two groups. Many descendants of the first Americans, the Native Americans, would have a legitimate gripe about having their ances tors land stolen by the U.S. government. What happened to the hostages, the Vietnam veterans, and the Native Americans was unfair. But life is unfair and we must accept it. And it is just as unfair to give money away to the hostages or Secret Service agents when it could be better spent on the entire country and not just one small group. you have to ask, you can't afford it My wife, Glynda, came into a small inheritance. We decided to discover how the other 1 percent lives by go ing yachting. "If you have to ask how much it costs to charter a 40 foot yacht," as J. P. Morgan once said, "yu should be ashamed of yourself." It costs $200 a day, not counting gin, Band-Aids and food, in that order of importance. I was sorry we asked. "For that amount of money" said Glynda, who is terrified of any and all waters over four feet deep, "we could afford to sit in an ice-cube-filled bathtub and flagellate ourselves with chains." But I pointed that we would be sharing this luxurious sailboat with our dear friends Captain and Mrs. Bligh (1 have changed their names to protect our friendship). And thus it would cost us a mere $100 a day to experi ence the sybaritic existence of the idle rich while cruis ing the magnificent fjords off The Inland Passage. This bargain proved too much for Glynda to resist and I am thus able to report to you first hand how the idle rich live. The idle rich arise each morning very early and very carefully. The reason for the latter is that the distance between my bunk and the shelf overhead is 26-54 inches. The reason for the former is obscure. But it seems there is always a tide in the affairs of men, which, taken at the flood, requires getting up at some ungodly hour. Continued on Page 5 (M7 nebraskan Editorials do not necessarily express the opinions of the Daily Nebraskan's publishers, the NU Board of Regents, the University of Nebraska and its employees or the student body. UPSP 144-080 Editor: Tom PrenJss; Managing editor: Kathy Stokebrand; News editor: Steve Miller; Associate news editors: Dan Epp. Kim Hachiya, Alice Hrnicek; Night news editor: Martha Murdock; Assistant night news editor: Kate Kopischke; Entertainment editor: Pat Clark; Sports editor: Larry Sparks; Art director: Dave Luebke; Photography chief: Mark Billingsley. Copy editors: Linnea Fredrickson, Patti Gallagher, Bill Graf. Melanie Gray, Deb Norton, Betsy Miller, Janice Pigaga. Phyllis Schroeder, Reid Warren, f ricia Waters. Business manager: Anne Shank-Volk; Production manager: Kitty Policky; Advertising manager: Art K. Small; Assistant adver tising manager: Jerry Scott. Publications Board chairperson: Margy McCleery, 472-2454. Professional adviser: Don Walton. 473-7301 . 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