Tuesday, July 16, 1985 Page 4 The Nebraskan Remember the POWMIA 's The official flag of the POW-MLVs was raised Monday at the State Capitol to mark the beginning of Prisoner of WarMissing in Action Recognition Week, July 15 to 20. The flags will fly all week over offices and homes. A state-wide moment of silence will be observed at 11:59 a.m. Friday, July 19th, in honor of the Nebraska POW MLVs who have not yet returned home. The State of Nebraska has 401 men still listed as prisoner of war or missing in action from major conflicts the Uni ted States has been involved in, accord ing to J. Gonzales, Jr., Director of the State Department of Veterans Affairs and acting coordinator for an ad hoc committee composed of several repre sentatives from state and federal agen cies and other interested groups, Gonzales and his committee are ask ing the citizens of Nebraska to observe the moment of silence, 11:59 a.m. Fri day, and to participate in POW-MIA Recognition Week activities across the state. All Nebraskans are urged to partici pate in POW-MIA Recognition Week, even if only by considering what has gone before and to remember, with respect, the sacrifice the POW-MIA's made for their country. This year marks the tenth anniver sary of the end of our involvement in the Vietnam War. Gov. Kerrey said ten years is a long time, especially when we consider those Americans, 28 of them Nebraskans, who did not return at the end of our involvement. Some groups in the state believe that some of these men may still be alive. Steve Durbin, Executive Director of the Vietnam Veterans MIA Task Force in Grand Island said it is possible that individuals are still being held captive in Southeast Asia. Durbin said he believes the Vietnamese are still hold ing these men as pawns to be used in negotiations to receive more aid from the United States. Terry Montgomery, coordinator for VFW Post 10617 said, "No matter how the memory of Vietnam may pain peo ple, they must see that some of our servicemen are still in physical pain and being held captive by the Vietna mese." The very least Nebraskans can do is to recognize that these men are still missing. ... In an effort to raise public con sciousness of the war and related issues, a portion of American History classes should be devoted to the study and understanding of the Vietnam ex perience. This idea was recommended by the Nebraska State Legislature in Legisla tive Resolution 250, passed earlier this year. The resolution also calls for flying the official POW-MIA flag and for the Unicameral to consider a special com mendation of Nebraska POWs in yp tivity for five years or longer, and ol those Nebraskans who remain listed ML. Another thing that can be done to show America's respect for its military is to call for an accounting of those missing. "This is an issue of importance to every American. If the American public does not stand up now and demand an accounting it will happen again," TJ. Jarecke, State Chairman for the Forget-Me-Not Association for POW-MIA's said. Now is the chance for Americans to foster a deeper understanding and appreciation of the issues of war, even if the war is long over. Observing Fri day's moment of silence and partici pating in POW-MIA Recognition Week is one way to show that those who are out of sight are not out of mind. EH n 0 T MltOTlM (JOTS OP PRIMS TIMi mXJ i H Vs 4a g & ' nmS JTTTi. .; -rTT , . ... t- ,,. - rnn.,, I M A ..1 1 II" " iiim mi hiimi V m H E M-L W J" 1 i I -r A-Jfji - . . -a. .riLt. , ,n t h rysr . 4- First Amendlmemt misnnsed Meese says Bill of Rights daesn 't apply to states Last week in a speech to the Amer ican Bar Association Attorney General Edwin Meese struck a blow for a return to proper constitu tional interpretation by arguing that the Supreme Court has consistently been mistaken over the past sixty years Si Jim Rogers in applying the U.S. Constitution's Bill of Rights to state governments. Said Meese, "the Bill of Rights, as debated, created and ratified, was designed to apply only to the national government." Meese correctly pointed out that the notion that those rights are good as against states is only an "intellectually shaken foundation," and that nowhere else "has the principle of federalism been dealt so politically violent and constitutionally suspect a blow as by the theory" of the Bill of Rights appli cation to the states. W ell, needless to say, liberal mudslingers were standing in lines to attack and distort Meese's claims. In Nebraska we have our very own local purveyor of distorted alarm in the person of George Green, President of the Board of Directors of the (mistitled) Nebraska Civil Liber ties Union. Ignoring any semblance of reasoned opinion, Green predictably posited the charge in a NCLU "news" release that because Meese doesn't believe the Bill of Rights was incorpo rated by the Fourteenth Amendment that "apparently the administration wants to repeal" that provision. In real ity, however, the charge is quite over blown, for such is hardly the logical consequent of Meese's claim. The weight of the historical evi dence supports Meese's claim and underscores the reactionary nature of Green's objections. A number of years ago Stanford law professor Charles Fairman exhaustively examined and critiqued the historical evidence asserted by Supreme Court Justice Black to indicate that the Fourteenth Amendment was intended to make the Bill of Rights applicable to the states. A federal judge recently summar ized Professor Fairman's conclu sion as follows: "The historical record clearly establishes that when the Fourteenth Amendment was rati fied in 1868 that its ratification did not incorporate the First Amendment against the states. The debates in Con gress at the time the Fourteenth Amend ment was being drafted, the re-election speeches of the various members of Congress shortly after the passage by Congress of the Fourteenth Amend ment, the contemporaneous newspaper stories reporting the effect and sub stance of the Fourteenth Amendment, and the legislative debates in the var ious state legislatures when they con sidered ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment indicates that the amend ment was not intended to apply the establishment clause (of the First Amendment) against the states be cause the Fourteenth Amendment was not intended to incorporate the federal Bill of Rights (the first eight amend ments) against the states." Other scho larly analysis concur. The tone and intention of Green's tirade is almost frightening from a jurisprudential perspective. He seems unwilling (or unable) to provide histor ical refutation of Meese's claim, relying in the stead upon wild charges that the administration desires to repeal the entire Fourteenth Amendment rather than, more accurately, viewing Meese's claim as simply an attempt to return it to its proper province. By implication of his argument, the NCLU's Green rejects the basis for reasonable policy-making and adjudi cating. Constitutional interpretation ought not to be based upon some small, select group of individual's interpreta tion of how the times have changed since a provision's enactment for that is ultimately a foot in the door for the potential tyrant or despot. But instead, constitutional interpretation should be based upon the common sense idea, as articulated by Meese, that "only the sense in which that Con stitution was accepted and ratified by the nation and only the sense m wmcn laws were drafted and passed provide a solid foundation for adjudciation." The absurd vituperations of the NCLU indi cate that, in this instance at least, the administration has the superior histo ricalinterpretive support. k h- M3 r SEZ WHO? J 4 3 Every war is a national misfortune. Helmuth Von Moltke Nebraskan EDITOR GENERAL MANAGER PRODUCTION MANAGER ADVERTISING MANAGER ASSISTANT ADVERTISING MANAGER CIRCULATION MANAGER NEWS EDITOR WIRE EDITOR COPY DESK CHIEF Sttclt TNmbm. 472 WBfl OMlfl SfclHIl Kittorlnt Poiicky Sandt Stumi SUryHupl BrlM Hoglund Gtni Stmrup 0mm Siissn Julia Jordsn Hm)rlcki The Nebraskan (USPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board Tuesdays ano days during the summer. The Daily Nebrasnan published Monday through Friday during spring and fall semesters. .... Readers are encouraged to submit story iaea and comments to the Nebraskan by Phon'"9 , ' h 1763 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday 'n,ou9. Friday. 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