| 2 Public? For a long time we have wondered whose in- terests are paramount with Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission. Is the PUC for the public—the first word in their title? Certainly, the ‘public’ should be first in interest as well as title. Or, as far too many of us believe, is the PUC for the “utility” —which should come second always? We think we got a partial answer recently when one of PUC’s own members called the commission ‘““utility-oriented.”’ Louis J. Carter, the newest member of PUC, wrote a letter to C. Jackson Grayson Jr., chairman of the Federal Price Commission, in which Mr. Carter noted, in part, ‘‘state public utility com- missions cannot be entrusted with the regulation of public utilities to avoid inflation. The regulatory laws which they administer are designed to avoid for the utilities any injury as a result of inflation, and therefore by their very nature fuel inflation.” Mr. Carter has been a frequent dissenter from PUC decisions. His was the lone ‘voice in the wilderness’ against the rate increase granted by PUC in December to Luzerne Electric Division of UGI Corporation. This commission member also has gone on record against other utilities and their services. He 10-cent telephone call from a coin-operated phone than to make a call from a home phone. He was quoted as saying it cost 13 cents for a two-party message subscriber to make a Bell Telephone local call in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. According to Mr. Carter, he has been supported in many of his statements against PUC by Philip K. Kalodner, counsel to the commission. We believe, as Mr. Carter indicates he does, that public utilities should be treated like any other manufacturing company and should not have the benefit of special rules which effectively allow them to inflate their prices. Beyond Busing Last week we editorialized on the subject of busing. We stated that we felt the central, although unstated, issue surrounding the current con- troversy was racism. We are not in favor of busing per se, but we feel that busing holds the only practical means to racial school integration, a goal we hope this nation has not abandoned. We do not mean to imply, however, that busing alone is enough to cure the racial ailments of our busing is that in many cases children will be forced to leave a school offering better educational op- portunities than the school he will be required to attend. In most cases the discrepancies in the quality of education between one school and another is a direct result of the amount of money available to a school district. In recent months we have seen the concept of property tax thrown out as unconstitutional by various courts throughout the country. In light of this development we now have the opportunity to insure more equal funding for school districts with unequal tax bases. This issue is far more important to equal educational opportunity than busing; the latter’s only one step toward true integration. Where communities and neighborhoods have failed to integrate, the federal establishment is now trying to determine whether busing is a partial step toward this end while promoting more equal education. : Busing has become a political issue for that reason. Its too bad that school financing has not also become such an issue. The controversy over school district financing will affect more local boards of education than the busing issue. And therefore, the-real challenge in both episodes lies in whether school trustees will use their more controlled financial powers to not only seek federal help in the manner of busing to promote equal educational opportunity, no matter whether busing is needed to accomplish this or not. ‘By Eric Mayer Snow, sifting out of a pale sky, seemed to materialize between the buildings that frowned at each other from their shadows on either side of the street. Big, windblown flakes of snow scudded across the sidewalk before coming to rest, swirled above the traffic, at times appeared to be leaping up from the pavement rather than falling. When Steve stepped down from the bus the wind caught at his hair. For a moment he paused, studying his surroundings, as if he were lost and deciding on some random direction, though, up until six months ago, he had lived here. Now he was in his first year of college. He was only home for the weekend, and only because his parents expected it of him. He had excelled in high school. Everyone had expected him to apply to the Ivy League, or some large western university, but he had chosen to attend a small school several hours away from home. At first his visits had been frequent but now they were a nuisance which he avoided. The bus moved ponderously away, exhaust steam writhing about its mud- spattered flanks. Steve thought with a pang of regret followed quickly by guilt, ‘“The next bus doesn’t leave until Sunday evening.”’ He crossed the street, hunched slightly to let the cold pass over his head. The beginnings of a headache knotted above his eyes. The town was unfamiliar, the streets too narrow. The buildings, mean brick structure sporting facades of wood or plaster, scowled at him before lapsing back into the stupor he had roused them from. Had he left this place only last September? It might have been years ago. He passed by the shopping center which laundromat. He walked up the hill where, when snowstorms closed both roads and schools, he had gone sledding. Sometimes, Suppose you are board chairman of a lively little multi-million dollar company, earning profits, doing fine, with stock quoted at a gratifying $34—up from $15 just a few years ago. Then along comes ITT, the giant conglomerate, and says, “We want you; we will buy your stock for $50 a share and double your salary; better come quietly because we are going to take you anyway!” Preposterous? That’s what ITT did to Avis drive-it-yourself (We Try Harder). It paid 50 percent more for Avis stock than the stock sold for on Wall Street and after a little dickering popped Avis into its bag. It has done this to lots of companies in 50 countries. In this world of conglomerates the old rules don’t hold. When Mr. Nixon gets to Moscow he may find ITT ahead of him. Or perhaps he will act as its traveling front man to expand trade with Russia. Don’t laugh. This is an era you never heard of before, where super-giants deal with global leaders, are as powerful as kingdoms, where one of them has entangled attorney general- designate Richard Kleindienst in its folds as a king of laughable side show. Did it or did it not promise to foot the bill for the GOP Presidential convention at San Diego to the tune of $400,000? So what? An item like that for ITT is like sending a bottle of liquor to your friend at Yuletide; just a nice amenity. It would do the same for Democrats if they controlled the Justice Department and would settle anti-trust suits out of court. -To grasp ITT’s size approach the thing by degrees. Back at the turn of the century it was a small company engaged in cables and communications. Then came the merger. ITT during those past winters, his father and mother had taken him tobogganing in the country or skating. He hadn’t liked the skating. It made his feet too cold. The tobogganning was better. He remembered how his father, usually red faced with the cold, had always managed to steer them to a long ride and had never seemed to tire from pulling the big toboggan back up the hill, Steve imagined he was somewhat of a disappointment to his parents now, having given up political science and vague notions of law school for philosophy. When he was very small his mother had often referred to him, affectionately, as “our little lawyer’’. Laten on she took pleasure in her friends knowing that Steve was ‘‘going into law, of course.”” When he told her about his change in plans, during his last visit, she kept repeating the only invocation to common sense she could think of, “But is there a future in it, J Stephen? Is there any future in it?’ How much better everything would have been had he only chosen a familiar, legitimate career; some career with ‘good money’’ to be made. He turned the corner where the theatre stood. Shorn of its marquee, its entrance boarded over with plywood, it looked more like the warehouse it had become. The theatre had been gone for years but today, for some reason, he felt in a dim and fleeting manner the same sense of loss he’d felt at its first closing. The snow was sticking to the sidewalks now, though Steve’s footprints still revealed dark cement. The houses on this part of the street - sleek modern houses - regarded each other with approval. The sight of his own home (he’d never noticed how like the others it was) left him without feeling. As he went up the walk he saw Mrs. Hatcher's house wink a shade at him, glimpsed the old neighbor’s head in the window, then he was hesitating in front of his door, wondering whether he should ring the bell. But his mother answered, as if she too had been watching. “Imagine, having to walk all that way in this weather,” she said. “You, must be frozen.” w= No, he was fine. And school? Yes, that was fine too. She was anxious to show him his old room. It had been turned into the guestroom his parents had always dreamed of but could never quite afford. Violets and foliage plants flourished on the window sills. “A new hobby” his mother explained, “since we had all this extra space I thought I'd do something with it.” Light filtering in through the snow that fell heavily, melting in runnels where it hit the window pane, fell around his mother’s face. It was like the island of lamplight they had both sat in long ago, when she read to him from Beatrix Potter. Stephen was left alone then, while his mother worried over her special dizer. How strange it was to feel out of place Hour own room. How unexpected. When his father came home they all sat: down at the dining room table, just as they always had. Steve was obliged to answer the usual questions about school and about his health. His parents talked about relatives, talked about the weather. The conversation ran slower and slower like a mountain stream that empties out onto a broad plain. His father was smiling. His mother was urging him to take seconds. Suddenly it seemed funny to Steve. Were they really that blind? Couldn’t they see that things were no longergfge same. Once, back when it seemed thar nothing would ever change, they had discussed im- portant matters together. And now-was it suddenly or did it only seem it?—they had nothing to say. : branched out, not buying other com- munications companies but wildly in- congruous things. It shortly was the largest bread producer, the largest homebuilder, the largest hotel chain, the second-largest car- rental firm in the country with dozens of other firms, and its merger with the Hartford Fire Insurance Company was the biggest in history. How did it pay? Simple enough. It let companies it acquired pay for themselves. It got a loan from some bank and serviced it from the profits of the companies it bought. Hartford, for example, has a billion-dollar cash flow. Merger-hungry ITTis ravenous for cash. Very well, take breath! ITT was merely doing what other conglomerates were doing. The statistics are available; the difficulty is to get people to believe them. In manufac- turing the top 200 US firms held ‘“‘only” 49 percent of all the nation’s total assets in 1950. By 1967 this was up to 59 percent, and by now it might well be two-thirds. The big com- panies are not all conglomerates. Five of the top corporations in the [Of are oil companies. They are aided by amusingly light Federal taxation. This light taxation is defended by congressmen from oil states who never have any trouble getting campaign funds. (The 23 largest oil com- panies pay Federal taxes at a rate of only about 8 percent contrasted to around 40 percent for most corporations. You might remember that and rejoice with them as you make out your own income tax!) Now comes the next stage. The rise of corporate giantism isn’t confined to the United States; it’s going on with great strength abroad. Most of these companies are international. Where it will end, God knows. One economist has plotted a curve and figures that just 300 international giants will dominate the economics of all the principal non-Communist countries of the world by 1985. Maybe that exaggerates; maybe the year will be 1990, or even 2000. Or maybe it won’t happen at all. The question is what governments will do about international companies that are almost taking over the functions of governments. Take Mr. Nixon and Russia for example. Mr. Nixon wants to expand trade. Last November Commerce Secretary Maurice Stans made his much publicized trip to Moscow in the interest of US trade; now he has resigned to become the GOP’s top money- raiser for the campaign. Hardly a month after the Stans visit, ITT opened its own trade explorations with Russia, reportedly with Administration encouragement. It was about to send a follow-up team to Moscow ahead of Mr. Nixon when the Kleindienst affair rudely interrupted. Washington hasn’t been so absorbed in anything since the Sherman Adams affair. The governmental problem is the almost unbelievable size of these giants, ITT with $6.7 billion of assets, for example. It used its own size shrewdly in its successful argument to hold Hartford, charging that its divorce by an anti-trust suit would cost its stockholders a billion and might cause a Wall Street panic. Kleindienst, to whom Mitchell delegated the affair, first told senators he had no part in negotiations leading to an out-of-court set- tlement. Now it appears that he directed them. Former attorney general Ramsey Clark was appalled when he came to turn the Justice Department over to Mitchell, a Wall Street bond attorney who managed Mr. Nixon’s campaign, and Kleindienst, who managed the Goldwater campaign. They seemed quite ignorant of the workings of the Department and insensitive to its dey role. They politicized the department. indienst was at the center of the litigation over the Pentagon Papers, he ratified Haynesworth and Carswell, and he broke the heart of black leaders by halting civil rights programs; 2 As for ITT, it regards politicig@,, as in- vestment opportunities. In 1960 a group of ITT executives made contributions to both parties in an effort “To ‘butter’ both sides so we’ll be in a good position whoever wins’ according to former vice president J. T. Naylor, in a sworn affidavit. Naylor quoted ITT president Geneen as saying the system is ‘paying off big in Washington.” The company is probably no worse than other great conglomerates. Rep. Celler’s House Anti-trust Subcommittee investigated them in 1969-70. Object, to find whether they are more efficient than medium-sized companies. Answer, no. They should be, perhaps. Their advertising is vaster, their unit costs smaller, their proce-fixing power stronger, their ability to transcend laws of supply and demand, and even government controls, unequalled. But the prices they charge the public remain about the same. The Kleindienst show is fun but the deeper question is whether politicians can control these monsters. WN) by Carl T. Davies It was a sad day for people still concerned with truth and rationality. Imagine the most hideous nightmare that leaves you restless and disoriented for en- dless days and nights. I was sitting in my living room watching television, half listening (ironically) to Beethoven's Eroica Symphony and half absorbing Walter Cronkite’s latest and lowest figures on American dead in the Vietnam non- war. Non-police action? Non-protective- reactionary operation? It’s of no consequence. Language, too, has died an ignoble death. Not unlike those “few” brave boys who died last week. Who just died. Oh, yes, the nightmare. Walter had just about finished his nightly rendering (in the fullest sense of the word) of the earth's news—as seen through the cataracted eye of CBS—news edited for television. It must have been a key word in Walter’s enumeration of the body count. He spoke so methodically of dead bodies as if they were mere tallies in a football game. President Nixon’s ‘‘game plan,” no doubt. “ONLY.” Now I remember. The key word was ONLY. “ONLY three Americans dead.” ONLY had triggered an eruption in my smoldering unconscious. I fell fast asleep and began falling and falling and falling into a bottomless, swirling vortex. In a split second which seemed like an eternity, I found myself again in front of a television set. But this time things were different. Radically different. “And now a word from our sponsor, Baboon’s Farm Banana Brine,” drawled the husky, deep voice of the commentator. It was a commercial. A very weird com- mercial. Two thousand inebriated apes were jumping and gyrating on a glistening beach were all swizzling a yellowish liquid from wine bottles labeled ‘‘Baboon’s Farm Banana Brine.” All of a sudden a very attractive looking chimp wearing a polka-dot bikini leaped into the arms of a big, brutish life- guard who just happened to be a gorilla and shouted: “What a way to live!” The scene abruptly switched back to the news commentator who was no longer Walter Cronkite, the human announcer of my awakened existence. His name was Hairy Unreasonable, the simian truth-teller in the murky underworld of my dreams. “And now, fellow anthropoids, we shall close tonight’s broadcast with our daily reading from The Quotations of Chairman No- Nok, our illustrious leader whose hallowed words have been sanctified by the great Ape- God, Agnus.” And then Hairy Unreasonable began a throughly undisguised mass hypnotic ritual. “Today’s subject will be: “Forgetting the Police Action Initiated by the Great An- thropoid Alliance Against the Northern Yellow-Striped Lemurs.” I could not believe my inner ears. will believe everything I tell you.” obviously. Anthropoid World, I want you to forget.” existed.” buildup of troops. It never happened.” familiar. “Forget the Gulf of Tonkin resolution,” he droned on, more forcefully, more like a @ tragic lullaby. “It never existed.” The mesmeric lull of his voice was beginning to lure my thoughts. “Forget My Lai. Forget the bombing of the north. They never happened.” I was on the verge of believing him. “Forget the peace talks. Forget . . . Summoning all of the forces of my willpower and reason, I shouted into the cavernous darkness of that nightmare world, “No! No! I will not forget!’’ And I woke up... At the precise moment that Walter Cronkite announced: “The United States Military Command in Saigon has stated that no further news reports shall be issued concerning protective-reactionary air strikes in North Vietnam.” (A And that’s the way it is. b. Editor emeritus: Mrs. T.M.B. Hicks Editor: Doris R. Mallin News editor: Shawn Murphy Advertising: Carolyn Gass