Page 4 EDITORIAL School Financing - The Supreme Court’s recent 5-4 decision handed down by the Republican majority upholding the constitutionality of Texas laws governing property taxes as a means of financing public education may be indicative of the Burger Court’s insensitivity to the plight of our nation’s underprivileged, but in no way does it signal the death of much-needed, widely sought school tax reform measures. In its decision in favor of the defendants in the case of Rodriguez v. the San Antonio Independent School District the majority termed “a system of public education that can fairly be described as chaotic and unjust’”’ the means of school finance challenged by 15 Mexican-American families residing in the Edgewood District where the 1967-68 expenditure from all sources per pupil was $356. That same year in the nearby Alamo Heights District, $594 was spent to educate each student. Numerous comparable examples of the depri- vation of equality in educational opportunity can be cited in Pennsylvania, as well as in almost every other state, in which acting president of the National Education Association Allan M. West fears: ‘“The yield of crops and the concentration of wealth in individual communities will continue to determine the kind of education each child receives.”’ Mr. West's fears that such factors as crop yields, concentration of wealth, and, to extrapolate, abundance of industry, geographic conditions, and ethnic concentrations will continue to determine the quality of education in school districts, may be dispelled by hopeful signs of reform. Already a citizen’s committee to study school financing has been working on a report to be submitted to Governor Shapp in June which will most likely call for a more equitable distribution of state funds to local districts through revisions of aid-ratios. The administration, itself, is sponsoring legi- slation to professionalize tax assessment proced- ures and revise local property tax laws. The burden of school financing pressing heavily on the shoulders of municipal officials must be eased, but never at the expense of quality edu- cation. Measures must be taken to prevent niggardly-legislators from reducing the quality of education statewide to the lowest common denomi- nator. Benevolent Despot Benevolent despot is the name historians have come up with for a man who had power and in- fluence over a large group of people and, amazing- ly enough, used that power and influence to their advantage. (Or, at least, to what they thought was “their advantage’’.) What happy men they must have been. Satisfied and gratified to be doing something for others; con- tent that their lives were being spent doing what, they thought, was right; and, through the luck of birth, influential enough to be able to carry their noble ideas to thousands of others. How lucky David Brinkley must, or should, feel, some luck, much hard work, and years of service, he now has the opportunity of reaching millions with ideas he believes in. The intermittant chapters of ‘David Brinkley’s Journal’”’ as they appear on “NBC Nightly News’ do, indeed, have power behind them. They have the power and influence that is so frightening in the hands of some advertisers. The Power of Televi- sion. (Something that is increasing steadily, as pre- school children are ‘‘baby-sat’’ by television, and, reaching school age, are taught by it.) It’s hard to tell whether David Brinkley’s predic- tions of the present fight between the President and the Senate anticipated this important, and abrupt, turn of events or caused it. It seemed, watching his “Journals” of a few months ago, that he saw, what he felt was, a president becoming too powerful, and set about to “right” things. . His predictions (that even, what he inferred was, this weak and apathetic Senate would soon wake up to the rape of their powers and fight back) were a catalyst that almost had to cause Senators who heard them, or of them, to react strongly against the next attempt to lessen their powers. It was a challenge with a purpose (David Brinkley’s); the Senators knew it, but if they had any pride they al- most had to accept it. It seems that they have. If Dave Brinkley truly is a benevolent despot (whether or not I agree with where he’s trying to take us), long may he reign! eam od Thissa 'n Thatta by H. H. Null, III (Editor’s Note: Henry Null III, former editor and publisher of the Abington J ournal, and the author of this column for many years, died last Wednesday. This is one of three columns he wrote before his death.) About 30 years ago, I was a patient in a hospital for the first time. The late Dr. Russell Wall had diagnosed my trouble as appendicitis and in a matter of hours had skilfully extracted it. The events which T still remember vividly, were the anesthesia - I thought myself in an open Greek-type cir- cular temple, where I could see wide stret- ches of country between the pillars, and my home, which was one in a long row of similar beds, with a like row facing it across an aisle. down this aisle from time to time and provided interest and assistance. 'I'ne lovely landscape soon disappeared and Iregained my thinking processes to learn that my appendix was gone and the nurses had been treated to a rare bit of conversation - the kind one addresses to a mine mule. It was embarrassing, but it had gone the one-way track of all spoken words, so nothing could be done about it. The bed, which did well enough, was one in a ward, something I am informed has been done away with. If so, I am sorry to hear it. I was in that ward and in others after that, largely because it was the cheapest and in those days, when my two boys were growing up, cheapness was an absolute must. But there were other good and sufficient reasons for electing to be bedded in a ward. They were more fun than a private room; which I later learned to be the same thing ag solitary confinement and, unless one was able to hire a private nurse, one wasted one’s time by ringing for help. A ‘‘semi-private’ or two in a room, was simply a ward in miniature, with no chance whatsoever of choosing an interesting conversationalist as a roommate. After a few trips to a hospital with the semi- private habitat, I opted for a ward and was ancient history at that refuge for the afflicted. These wards invariably had as an inmate, a recuperating clown, who kept those who were able to enjoy the banter in time-devouring laughter and who was always willing to turn you over, or get you a bedpan when the paid nurses were at parts unknown. There was also a system, whereby one kept moving to a better bed as the others either got well and left or died and left, so that it was TRB from Washington Let’s turn the impoundment issue over to the Court, says Mr. Nixon. Why, yes, the Court. We had almost forgotten it. Mr. Nixon has brought the Supreme Court into politics more than any other President in modern times. He attacked the Warren Court before he got elected. He made law and order the issue in 1968 and 1970. He bought prime time on election eve, 1970, to promise to “give the peace forces new muscle to deal with the criminal forces.” He carried his desire for a conservative Southern appointee to such lengths that Dean Pollack of Yale declared Judge Carswell ‘presents more slender credentials than any nominee for the Supreme Court put forth in this century.” Mr. Nixon told the nation that he was nominating men who ‘‘share my conservative philosophy.” He has kept up a running commentary on the court that irks the Journal of the American Bar Association. And he has all but done what he set out to do, won the historic battle to gain control of the court after Earl Warren retired. Mr. Nixon has named four members and stands within one beat of a mechanical heart- timer implanted in Justice William O. Douglas (74), to name a full majority. “President Nixon’s place in history is secure,” says Pulitzer prize winner Louis M. Kohlmeier Jr., of the Wall Street Journal in a superb new book, God Save This Honorable Court (Scribners). ‘Nixon politicized the Supreme Court more dramatically than any President in history.” - Guest Editorial Do you like your job? Do you really (honest-to-goodness) enjoy your work? If your answer is ‘“‘Yes’’, great! keep it. If your answer is ‘No’, quit. If your answer is, “What a dumb question; they wouldn’t call it ‘work’ if you were supposed to like it.”’, you show what a sad situation this work thing can get in. You're probably like most people; your job takes up way more time (way more of your life) than does any other thing you do, with the possible exception (big deal) of sleeping. So if you don’t like it, you’re missing out big. And don’t let anybody (including yourself) tell you that you shouldn’t or can’t like your work. You can. You should! Don’t tell me (or yourself) that you can’t quit your rotten job because ‘I'd probably have to take half the pay for the job I'd really like’. Take a third and be happy. Being happy is what it’s all about. As long as you have enough to eat, a place to sleep, and you're happy (or at least satisfied) you've got it made. ; But don’t feel too bad or too responsible for the mess you're in, Mr. (Mrs. or Miss) Dissatisfied. Things started getting goofed up a long time ago. There didn’t used to be any- thing called work (primitive peoples of today don’t even have a word for it!); people just lived. They killed and gathered food, they slept in caves, and they just lived. They may not have been very happy, (they may have), but they definitely were / / possible to end up with your bed beside a window, if you hadn’t antagonized any of the Florence Nightengale sorority. Thirty years mercy. I was much better looking then. Now I couldn’t kindle a spark of tender, loving, desire from Bella Abzug. Somewhere along the line, I learned that the young beautiful nurses regarded their male patients, all- which helped out the service. The other day, my jaundiced eye fell on a newspaper article which stated that a floor or two of the Scranton-State Hospital was unusable because it didn’t meet bureaucratic approvai - it had 30 beds in one room and only two bathrooms - in short, it was a ward so for that reason, had to lie idle, even when the beds were needed for incoming sufferers. I remember that ward or one like it, very well. Not long after the appendicitis bout, I sud- denly developed a nose bleed, which nothing would stop until my nasal passages were stuffed with yards of gauze and I was put in one of the 30 beds at complete rest. In a few days I got well, the gauze was removed and tests showed 1 had anemia, indicating other trouble, but that is another story. I spent the time much more enjoyably than would have been the case had I been marooned in a private room or sentenced to a semi-private buddy who died in the middle of the night-it happened twice in my hospital experience. So it was suddenly revealed to me just what had caused the hospitals to raise their prices to the stars - state standards. Back in the 40’s, there were, no doubt standards of cleanliness and care and all that, but they were practiced where footsteps were saved and a single nurse could look after a large number of patients, all of them practically in'front of her eyes. It was all plain - the bureaucrats had homed 4n. Just as they have homed in on our schools, our sewers, our automobiles, our back yards and anything else they could find to interfere with and change and make more expensive. With the added expense of themselves - a class of people, who in the 40’s were content to A Greenstreet News Co. Publication serve government at reasonable wages, mind their own business and retire on pensions as soon as possible. They have succeeded in minimizing ef- ficiency and maximizing cost, just as they have done with hospital wards. They are no longer public servants, but have become public masters, harrassing us frgm day to day and demanding an annual inc pe from our meagre pockets. 2 It may be seen on every. side - acres of recreation areas with nobody using them, but more on the planning boards; “scientific” treatment of criminals at a huge increase in cost (you can’t beat capital punishment costwise or effiencywise) and now, I call to your attention a quotation from a recent bureaucratic report “The center is staffed with individuals who have each attained academic achievement at the master’s degree level and have experience in the various social science fields’. Aw, nuts! Now they have set up a nobility and can keep the lofty positions and salaries among the elite. ; % We 2 4 The public wants a Supreme Court of which it can be proud. Including Justice Rehnquist, the latest ‘appointment, exactly 100 men have sat on the great tribunal. Some have been great, others less so. Two years ago a group of scholars and historians ap- praised the justices up to Mr. Nixon’s appoin- tees. It found 12 ‘‘great”, 15 ‘“‘near-great’’, 55 “average” and eight “failures.” The great were Marshall, Story, Taney, Harlan, Holmes, Brandeis, Stone, Cardozo, Hugo Black, Frankfurter and Earl Warren. The near-great included two sitting judges, Douglas and William J. Brennan. The failures included three of the ‘Nine Old Men” con- fronting FDR when he took office - Van- Devanter, McReynolds and Butler. What makes success on the Court? The overwhelming answer is that what is not wanted is narrowness of vision. Previous judicial experience means little; itis a ‘‘zero’’ factor, Frankfurter once said. The court is not just a court. It is the instrument that recon- ciles the constitutional verities to the times we live in. It links past experience with future hopes. It demands men steeped in diverse fields; philiosophers with vision. How do the Nixon appointees, and near- appointees, stack up? The Senate rejected Haynsworth and Carswell. The President Black vacancy and he hit on Rep. Poff (R) of Va., signer of the Southern Manifesto of 1956 (a pledge to reverse the school desegregation decision) and against every major civil rights Love It often satisfied. Everytime they filled their stomachs, they were satisfied. Everytime they got a good night’s sleep, they were satisfied. Catching animals and gathering fruit and nuts was not ‘‘work’’ back then, it was “life.” They were hungry, so they ate. They were tired, so they slept. That was life. That still is life, but it’s become much more complex. Agriculture probably started it all. It was great at first, man didn’t have to ‘keep moving each time he used up what grew naturally in a spot. He could stay in one place. Fix up a nicer cave. Even build a “log cave” or a “mud cave’. But some clown started specializing. He’d just grow corn, maybe. ' Tons of it, and trade it for the other things he needed with neighbors, who soon stopped growing any corn. Before you knew it, after a few tens-of- thousands-of-years, almost everybody was specializing. One guy just made and fixed ploughs; one lady just delivered and helped care for babies, and so on. But he couldn’t eat ploughs and she didn’t care to eat babies, so they had to trade (their product or skill) for food. Money then came about when some genius discovered that it was easier to trade his big, clumsy ploughs for a little gold. Then he didn’t have to carry a plough out to a farm that grew his favorite strawberries. He'd just carry a little piece of gold with him, to swap. He could then ‘‘buy” from someone who bill since. While a dubious ABA committee examined Poff’s qualifications the latter fight. as i Then the President considered Demo- cratic Sen. Byrd of West Virginia. Sen. Byrd had voted against confirmation of Thurgood Marshall, and for Haynsworth and Carswell, and he once suggested that Douglas be im- peached. How=ver, the ABA committee implied that Byrd would not get its highest rating. By now there were two vacancies as Harlan died. There followed a ludicrous episode: Mr. Nixon submitted six names -confidentially to the ABA committee, in- cluding a woman, Judge Mildred Lillie of the Los Angeles District Court of Appeals. In no time at all the names were all in print across the nation, and the embarrassed ABA com- mittee found little in their favor. Judge Lillie’s decisions, it appeared, had not done too well in the state Supreme Court. Messrs.. Nixon and Mitchell hastily sub- stituted two other appointees - conservative Lewis Powell, of Virginia, former past presi- dent of the ABA, and William Rehnquist, top assistant to Attorney General Mitchell and a resisted- local and state desegregation measures. Mr. Nixon proudly introduced them to a TV audience as ‘‘judicial conser- vatives,” who shared his desire to defend “the peace forces’. The Nixon Four tend to vote alike. Last June all of them dissented when the majority, ot Leave It didn’t need a new plough, or his old plough fixed, too. Well, you know how it kept getting more and more specialized, until it got to how it is today. Now there are guys whose total job is just to put a couple of screws in a few thousand ploughs a day. (He should quit!) Somewhere along the way, in that process, ‘living’ got transferred to ‘“‘work’’ for a lot of people. The idea was the same. You worked for silver or gold (or these days for that worthless, bastardized metal we presently refer to as money), so that you could buy the same things your ancestors made or grew themselves. But now so many jobs are so far from essential, that there is little or no satisfaction to be found in them. (it’s difficult, for instance, to feel happy with yourself if your job is selling shoddy mer- chandise at the highest possible price, or 5-to-4, ruled out capital punishment and spared the lives of 600 persons on death row in the country’s prisons, Now Mr. Nixon wants Congress to reimpose the death @nalty. Mr. Nixon publicly suggested that it would be constitutionally improger for the Senate to refuse to confirm Cars ll. After it refused, he angrily declared tw&t as then composed it would not confirm any strict constructionist from the South. He declared at one point, “I am persuaded that Congress has the constitutional power’ to amend the Constitution by legislation. : Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, all gave creative enforcement to the Warren court’s four big unanimous desegregation decisions, but Mr. Nixon publicly repudiated his own civil rights staff at HEW when it proposed a mild busing plan for Austin, Texas. *‘Skillfully,. purposefully, and politically,” Kohlmeier writes, ‘Nixon converted the school bus from symbol of equality into a symbol of racism.” The ABA in its official Journal criticized the Presidesl’s narrow approach to court nomination®@W¥is talk of “peace forces” and the like. It said his run- ning commentary on the Court “places an unfair burden on the President’s nominees.” Always in modern days the Supreme Court has been the moral symbol of hope for the poor, the oppressed, and the undefended. There can be no turning back; not without some fear of violence, that is. trying to make somebody buy your com- pany’s deodorant, which is no better than lower priced brands, etc.) Also many people’s specialized jobs are so small a part of the whole process (they might not even un- derstand what part their job plays in that “whole’’) that they can’t even think of what they do as any part of the overall service being done. (They may feel that all they are doing is “putting in screws’’, rather than that they -are “helping to secure ploughs so that farmers can grow the nation’s feod crop”.) First try thinking about a jo you don’t like. Think of it as an essential part of a larger service. If that doesn’t help, quit. It’s not your fault that many jobs have become “work”. But it is your fault if you're staying in one that is “work” to you. The job is a huge part of your life. You shouldn’t hate it. You might find yourself next hating life. per year. Call 675-5211 for subscriptions. 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