Friday, January 24, 1986 Page 2 Daily Nebraskan Bv The Associated Press rs V. I ti V . J ff, J 4 "SW li i tin . ri . Study links religion, democracy NEW YORK A study by a noted "think tank," the Brookings Institu tion, has concluded that the stabil ity and future strength of American democracy depends on the under pinnings of religion. After three years of examination and analysis of basic ingredients holding society together, the report concludes that secular value sys tems fail "to meet the test of intel lectual credibility" for doing the job. Representative government "de pends for its health on values that over the not-so-long run must come from religion," the report says. Through religion, "human rights are rooted in the moral worth with which a loving Creator has endowed each human soul, and social author ity is legitimized by making it young) Pus House considering check-hold bill WASHINGTON The head of the House Banking Committee asked his colleagues on Thursday to approve a bill to shorten the time banks can hold deposited checks and thus cur tail an "outlandish policy" that allows banks to profit from the so called "float." The House bill would force finan cial institutions to give customers access to their money under a set timetable in some cases quicker than they do now. House Banking Committee Chair man Femand J. St Germain, D-R.L, said banks now play "the float" game with customers' money to earn bil lions of dollars through interest and fees on checks inadvertently bounced by depositors. 1 Daily ebraskan 34 Nebraska Union 1400 R St., Lincoln, Neb. 68588-0448 Editor Managing Editor News Editor Assoc. News Editor Editorial Page Editor Editorial Associate Wire Editor Copy Desk Chiefs Sports Editor Arts & Entertain ment Editor Photo Chief Asst. Photo Chief Night News Editor Assoc. Night News Editors Art Director Asst. Art Director Weather Vicki Ruhna. 472-1766 Thorn Gabrukiewicz Judi Nyqren Michelle Kubik Ad Hudler James Rogers Michiela Thuman Lauri Hopple Chris Welsch Bob Asmussen Bill Allen David Creamer Mark Davis Jeff Korbelik Randy Conner Joan Rezac Kurt Eberhardt Carol Wagener UNL Chapter. American Meteorological Society Daniel Shaitil Katherlne Policky Barb Brands Sandi Stuewe Mary Hupf Brian Hoglund Mike Honerman. 475-5610 Don Walton. 473-7301 James Sennett, 472-2583 General Manager Production Manager Asst. Production Manager Advertising Manager Marketing Manager Circulation Manager Publications Board Chairperson Professional Adviser Readers' Representative The Daily Nebraskan (USPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board Monday through Friday in the fall and spring semesters ano Tuesdays and Fridays in the summer sessions, except during vacations. Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1763 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The public also has access to the Publications Board. For information, contact Mike Honerman, 475 5610. Subscription price is $35 for one year. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 34, 1400 R St., Lincoln, Neb. 68588-0448. Second-class postage paid at Lincoln, NE 68510. ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1936 DAILY NEBRASKAN answerable to a transcendent moral law," the report says. The report advocates allowing a "moment of silence" that could be used for voluntary prayer in public schools, making school facilities available for student religious meet ings, and giving tax credits for tui tion paid to religious schools. Rejecting arguments of strict church-state separationists that bar ring all expressions or symbols of religion from public life would mean government neutrality about reli gion, the report says: "A society that excludes religion totally from its public life, that seems to regard religion as some thing against which public life must be protected, is bound to foster the impression that religion is either irrelevant or harmful." "Millions of hard-working Ameri cans carry their paychecks down to the bank every week in anticipation that they can use the funds to buy groceries, pay the rent, buy clothes and other necessities," said St Ger Germain. "In all too many cases, depositors don't have access to the money they have earned. It is tied up by banking policies check hold policies that -say the customer has to wait days and days, and sometimes, weeks and weeks, before the bank says the money is available," he said. It was not clear when the measure, up for debate Thursday, would come to a vote. Rep. Norman Shumway, R-Calif., Asbestos ban proposed WASHINGTON The government moved Thursday for the first time to ban deadly asbestos, a widely used substance that officials say causes up to 12,000 cancer cases annually in the United States. Under a two-phased attack, the En vironmental Protection Agency pro posed an "immediate" ban in five pro duct categories, mostly in the construc tion area. During the next decade, EPA said, it wants to cleanse the environ ment of all products containing the known carcinogen. The decision, attacked by an indus try group as "unwarranted," culmi nated more than six years of regulatory Cancer misdiagnosis common, doctor says OMAHA Physicians are writing off as hopeless a number of treatable lung cancer cases and underrating others, a Creighton University re searcher said. Dr. Tom DeMeester, chairman of surgery for the Creighton University School of Medicine, said the deaths of at least 14,000 Americans each year from lung cancer could be prevented with better diagnosis. DeMeester based his comments on his experiences as former chief of tho racic surgery at the University of Chi cago Pritzker School of Medicine, where he headed a 10-year study of 160 lung cancer patients. Medical experts for years have as sumed that the larger the tumor, the less likely the cancer patient's chances for survival. DeMeester said his research Chasm between blacks, whites widening, WASHINGTON The National Urban League on Wednesday called the Rea gan administration "a Rambo-like des troyer of civil rights gains" and said its economic policies have left black Ameri cans struggling to survive. The chasm between blacks and whites widened even more in 1985, as most whites enjoyed economic recovery while blacks "slipped further and further to the rear of the parade," league president John E. Jacob said in issuing the organization's 1 1th annual assessment of black America. "The signs of a nation moving toward a state of being permanently divided between the haves and the have-nots were plain to see over the past months," he said. Jacob noted that unemployment among whites was 5.9 percent at the end of last year, while 14.9 percent of offered an amendment that would allow financial institutions to hold soul-searching within the government and months of infighting between EPA and the Office of Management and Budget. EPA Administrator Lee M. Thomas said human health not monetary cost was EPA's foremost concern. Thomas said it would take about one year for the agency to complete public hearings and administrative review of the proposed asbestos rule, which has been in the works since late 1979. The ban, when fully implemented, will avert as many as 1,900 deaths from asbestos-related lung cancer over the next 15 years, Thomas said. indicates the opposite may be true in many cases. "Traditionally, we thought of tumors as going from stage one to stage two to stage three in a nice continuum," he said. Stage one is the first phase of cancer growth, and stage three is the most advanced stage. "We didn't take into account the different growth patterns of tumors," he said. The traditional thinking has caused physicians to misdiagnose as untreat able some patients with large but self contained tumors, DeMeester said. The traditional thinking also had led to the undertreat ment of some smaller tumors, he said. Lung cancer took the lives of 1 26,000 'Americans in 1985, the American Cancer Society estimates, making it the most deadly of all cancers. Urban League says the nation's 27.9 million blacks were out of a job. "If whites had such a high unemployment rate, it would be called a depression," he said. Jacob was particularly harsh on the Justice Department's efforts to revise a presidential executive order signed by Mf whites had such a high unemploy ment rate, it would be called a depression.' Lyndon Johnson in 1965, which autho rized the government to set numerical hiring goals and timetables for firms holding government contracts. "Black people today have jobs and opportunities they would not have had without the executive order," said Carol WagenerDaily Nebraskan checks longer if there was "reasona ble belief a check would not clear In Brief U.S. operations hold off Libyan cccst WASHINGTON The United States, in what appear to Is a thinly veiled warning to- Libya, has notified ehilkn air trciSe cdais that fighter pk&es from Navy aircraft carriers will be conduct; fU.t opera tions off the Libyan coast during the next week, sources said Thursday. The sources, all of whom agreed to discuss the instter criy if not identified, confirmed the U.& 6th Fleet had mi latcKUStiocal notifica tion procedures on Wednesday to Mom the air ttsde csatrtl facility at Tripoli, Libya, of "csrrier flight operations" within its area of control Rural families offered hcip LINCOLN Kursl families forced off the ftrra by economic problems ct find temporary refuge through a model prcran fcassched by three Lincoln agencies, Tabitha Inc., Lutheran Family and Social Services z?A Cedr$tae for Children are cooperating to provide shelter, food, spirited! 6c;pft, job referral, counseling and child care for tmxlizs forced fcy tzi times to abandon their homes and communities. The itt&ercn Church in Ameri ca's Nebraska Sped h serving as a fourth sponsor by usir.g it$ network of churches h loccte families in need. Families would be housed for up to three r.eriti.5 htUc! Jpsrsoncga on the Tabitha ces$v$ in Usxxlx itlllsililf Be r;-;mber ex tills r.e&s$ V kibtcn v.!!! ftrtte'j tets 8 &ixx:r:i U ptlUs h;.:io tsstU the f rzi 'id Li ! !:rA, ht2 c-y lit wc b in ths tzz'Zv ttVA C:n tl f.t C 1 at, - fumrr s oiliest regents, vtn ta.y &ed at the tors ere tzt tX I ' J Ilitai, where &he had Iked fee 1 972. She was born Nov, 23, lST3t In a L;ut Vt rAlzj r.crtbvc:t of Cambridge in Furnas County. She wj trilVJ cidiite cf Cssie Jacob. "If there is any single message we want to send the president today it is this: 'Hands off affirmative action,' If the administration wants to be a Rambo like destroyer of civil rights gains, it should not pretend that its efforts are good for black citizens or that they reflect the color-blind society we have yet to become." Economically, blacks still are reel ing from the recession of 1981-82 while most whites have recovered, Jacob said. The report said median family income for blacks in 1984, the most recent figure available, was $15,432. In con stant dollars, that was $540 less than in 1980 and almost $1,500 less than in 1970, according to an economic sum mary by David Swinton, director of pub lic policy studies at Clark College. because of check kiting, fraud or bankruptcy. St Germain opposed the so-called "good faith" clause, saying it would give bank tellers authority to reject checks "if you are from the wrong side of the tracks, speak with a for eign accent, or a certain color." Anyway, he said, it is not needed because more than 99 percent of all checks written are paid the first time through the collection process and half the 350 million checks returned unpaid each year go through the second time. The banking industry has said in congressional hearings that the pur pose of holding customer checks was not to reap interest or fees on the "float" created by those funds, but rather to protect them from check "kiters" and bad checks. But St Germain said, "my heart can't bleed for an industry" that makes $290 million a year by using the money in the float period, and another $3.5 billion a year from returned check fees. if t f - . .1 A i Tr ' - r x -i 1 17.