4 Daily Nebraskan Tuesday, January 11, 1983 rr3 nn' n i (f (i ) A 4 Decision making: A process as wild as the end results As vacationing students, most of us probably spent the week before Christmas sitting around watching presents pile up under the tree. In Washington, however, tilings were not quite so placid. The lame-duck Congress was finishing up its session and the situation was a bit tense as bargaining went on over the bud get for the next fiscal year. An examina tion of that bargaining process may give us a clue why the problems of the country are not ironing themselves out quite as fast as we would like. As outsiders to the Washington wrestl ing match, it is convenient for us to blame Congress and the Reagan administration for our economic woes. Put the recent bustle that resulted in the passage of the infamous gas tax demonstrates that the blame is not so easily pinned. Our own Sen. Edward Zorinsky didn't even hang around for the final vote on the bill. He split for Omaha instead. He told the World-Herald that he left "when it became apparent that the inmates had taken over the asylum." The fact that a senator is having problems unraveling the tangle of the legislative process doesn't exactly fill one with confidence in the system by which we govern ourselves. Could it be that our problem is not only the economy but also the methods by which economic decisions are made? If the inmates have indeed taken over, that may be the case. It is normal for items to be juggled in and out of the spending bill before it resembles the budget that Reagan will present later this month. The jobs pro gram got knocked out, as did the funds for basing and deploying the MX in Wyoming. Then, however, came the nickel-a-gallon gas tax proposal. Reagan supported it, claiming it would provide jobs and re vitalize America's highway and interstate system. But four Republican senators -Jesse Helms, Donald Nickles, Gordon Humphrey and John East - ganged up in opposition to the tax. Together they managed to filibuster for 10 days, stalling a vote on the bill. East held the floor un til after midnight Dec. 18, determined to keep the tax from being passed. According to Time magazine, cots were set up in the cloak rooms of the Senate for the senators to take catnaps on while they waited for the filibustering to end so the vote could take place. When the confusion finally did subside, the tax was included in the spending bill. k ?J MTT rT o J 19S3 Copier New Srntc J 111 1 V ;0 H 1- 'J M a X it' ) 1 'Ke&rey- Kemnmedy A new era was ushered into Nebraska politics Thursday afternoon: The Robert Kerrey era. Never in state history has a governor ever received such phenomenal amounts of national attention. Newsweek and the New Yorker printed paragraph after paragraph of platitudes i Mike Frost I on the new chief executive. MacNeil and Lehrer gave him a whole segment (the PBS equivalent to the Congressional Medal of Honor) on Kerrey's burgeoning political dynasty.- In the eyes of many, Robert Kerrey has arrived as a national political figure. While quite a bit of media attention has been paid to Kerrey's rise from political obscurity, considerable space has also been given to the notion that Kerrey, in the words of Newsweek . .reminds (one) of young John Kennedy." The Kerrey-Kennedy similarities are many indeed. Now, Ripley's Believe It or Not, the same people who gave us the The bill, however, was 300 pages long. "There is no way anyone can under stand what is in there," Sen. J. James Exon said when the World Herald asked him about it. Furthermore, before the Senate fili bustering ever started and the bill came to the House for a vote, there were only 35 copies of the bill to be distributed among the 435 members of the House of Re presentatives, according to Darwin Olof son of the World-Herald's Washington bureau. How can a legislative body be expected to effectively examine the pros and cons of budget proposals when they cannot even teview the material thoroughly? How can an inclusive, coherent, effec tive budget be drawn up in the midst of a flurry of filibustering and feisty senators? What is important here is not whether or not the gas tax should have been in cluded in the spending bill, but whether Congress even had the chance to make that or any other decision effectively. It is scary to think that decisions with potentially vast impact were made in the circus that went on at the close of the 97th Congress. In her column in Newsweek magazine, Meg Greenfield wrote that the problem is chilling Kennedy-Lincoln connection, now are issuing the Kerrey-Kennedy correlation. Included in this list are the following coincidences: 1 . Both Kerrey and Kennedy start with the letters "Ke" and end with "y." 2. Both were war veterans. 3. Both had their younger brothers manage their election campaigns; both younger brothers then became key members of their older brothers' staffs. 4. Bch came from large families. 5. Both were Democrats, elected to seats previously held, by a Republican. 6. Kerrey comes from Nebraska, Kennedy from Massachusetts. Both are states. 7. Kennedy was born in 1917. Kerrey was born in 1943. 19 17 is 36, and 19 43 is 62. Both 36 and 62 are divisible by two. 8. Both Kennedy and Kerrey took their inaugural oaths in suits. Additionally, both raised their right hands during their oaths. 9. Bob Kerrey is divorced, while his youngest brother isn't. John F. Kennedy that our representatives are shirking their responsibilities as legislators. She is right when she says that they spend more time arguing than they do reaching decisions. But perhaps that is the fault of the legis lative process rather than the legislators. A system more closely aimed at reach ing agreement would suit us much better than a menagerie of flustered senators finally conceding to compromise in the wee hours of the morning. Our economy is having problems because it is unprepared to deal with the changes it is undergoing, and it could be that our legislative system is suffering from the same malady. David Thompson Editoral Policy Unsigned editorials represent the policy of the 1983 Daily Nebraskan but do not necessarily reflect the views of the Uni versity of Nebraska, its employees or the NU Board of Regents. The Daily Nebraskan 's publishers are the regents, who have established a pub lication board to supervise the daily pro duction of the newspaper. According to policy set by the regents, the content of the UNL students newspaper lies solely in the hands of its student editors. r ..... , Letters i l , , . many was never divorced, but his youngest brothe Edward is getting one. 10. President Kennedy loved to sail. Governor Kerrey loves to go to sales. 11. Kennedy's secretary's name was Lincoln. Kerrey lives in Lincoln and has driven a Lincoln as well. 12. While President, John Kennedy awarded many deserving Americans medals of honor. While governor, Bob Kerrey will probably make several people honorary members of the Nebraska Navy. 13. Both Kerrey and Kennedy were members of the Bo Diddley Fan Club. 14. President Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas. Occasionally, Governor Kerrey views the TV show "Dallas." Yes, the coincidences are uncanny. One would expect Kerrey to use such similarities to catapult him into national office. His inaugural address, stressing such Nebraska issues as nuclear defense, federal budget deficits and the computer age, clearly illustrated his mind is only on state government. However, it will be interesting to see if the New John Kennedy can be happy with Mel Mains after he's had MacNeil-Lehrer. A fire on every TV I have a modest suggestion for the natural gas companies that serve us. It wouldn't cost them very much 'and should help natural gas users especially the middle- and low-income users. I can well appreciate the need for gas companies to have price increases so that they can make investments to find new gas supplies. By paying our gas bills, we con sumers can "keep a good thing going" as the gas company ads say. Natural gas is a clean, efficient way to cook our food and heat our homes. I must confess, though, that many gas users are having difficulty during these hard times in paying their gas bills. I have an idea that just might work. But the gas companies have to do their part so we could have an alternative source of energy to warm up our chilly homes. I suggest that InterNorth, the Omaha Metropolitan Utilities District and Minne gasco sponsor a new 24-hour cable TV channel. The channel's TV camera would be aimed at a big roaring fireplace during the cold winter months, so for very low cost, all of us could experience a fireplace in every room that had a TV. Also there wouldn't be a pollution problem of burn ing wood. We could then afford to pi.y our gas bills and conserve gas by watching what I propose we call the "Fireplace Channel." Please send your letters of" support to the gas companies and your cable TV company. If we all work together we should be able to solve our heating problems. Ron Kurtenbach Letter Policy The Phil - - uj in,uiajMii cuLuuiages unci letters to the editor from all readers and interested others. " Anonymous submissions will not be considered for publication, and requests to withhold names will be granted only in ex ceptional circumstances. Submit all material to the Daily Nebras kan, Room 34, Nebraska Union, 1400 R St., Lincoln, Neb. 68588.