Tuesday, January 24, 1934 Pago 4 ' Daily Nebraskan T7l TI O rt 0 11 .1 1 1 1 i Mil tQMiy im a&sm of eLesizoia year Marines die in Beirut. The Reagan Administration wants more aid, especially military aid, sent to Cen tral American countries. The deficit threatens to put a cavernous crimp in the burgeoning economy. And Congress returns for an election year session described in an Associated Pres3 article as "long on politics and short on substance." That, readers, is poor timing. The report said Sunday that Congress' second session is likely to be uneventful because it is unpopular to make decisions. Especially in an elec tion year. Raise taxes to curb the deficit, which rapidly approaches the $200 billion-a-year mark, and the politician angers taxpayers. Pull the Marines out of Beirut, and a lot of people will be mad. A lot will be happy, too. Right now, our elected officials are more con cerned with courting special interest groups with hackneyed promises and endless rhetoric. Politi cians seek votes rather than solutions to the prob lems facing our country. : The problem is unique to our democratic type of government. Election year inactivity cannot be en tirely attributed to weak character or greed in politicians. The American political system carries the bulk of the blame. A congressman has two years in office. That's enough time to settle into office and then begin preparing for the next election. That lag cripples part of our political system every election year. In a year when crises abound, the lag creates problems. President Reagan, although not yet an official candidate, has been campaigning with down-home folksy speeches. Even the traditional phone call to Coach Tom Flores in the winning locker room after the Super Bowl had a political twist. Reagan said the LA. Raiders proved "that a good defense can also be : a good offense." Campaigning is more arduous for congressmen. Speeches must be made, press releases written, money collected. We can never avoid election-year fear in politi cians. But electing congressmen for four years instead of two would decrease the severity of the problem. With the deficit rising, our men dying, and Central 'America boiling, we need decisions. Not political wish-wash. Chris Welsch vsr.f ( - ' j 1 -ri- ;3T ::3r is '..IlTAUtJ 3 1 s i i . .... . t' 0 V ("taxpayer...' X X ) I -1 - r 1 REEIECTIO:!.." v J' V ( Time-less lives cry out for more I met Paul Tsongas once on a late-afternoon flight from Washington to Boston. The senator from Mas sachusetts was traveling light that day. No bags, no briefcase, no aides. All he had with him was a daughter. It was rare enough to see a man alone on a plane with a pre-school child. But Tsongas reason was 1 V M Ellen Goodman even more unusual. He was going to Boston for a meeting and he wanted to spend some time with his middle daughter. So he was taking her along for the ride. Together they would get the late plane back. I've thought about that scene a dozen times, with mixed feelings of admiration and poignancy. Here was a father struggling with the demands of work and family. Here was a father who had to capture minutes with his child, on the fly, at 35,000 feet. This scene, repeated over and again in Tsongas' life, seems somehow symbolic of a whole generation of men and women: parents with schedule books. It is barely even a pardoy of the way many of us cram work and children into calendars that won't expand to fill the needs, into lives that cry out for more hours. Tsongas was one of us, trying to make it all fit together. But last October, the senator and father of three young girls discovered something that wasn't on his agenda. He had a tumor that was "not benign." The mild lymphoma that Tsongas has is not life threatening in the immediate sense. The statistical average life expectancy for those with this disease, as he related it, is eight years and he is planning for more. Many of his political colleagues are given shorter sentences by the actuarial tables. But Tsongas decided not to run again. He is com ing home to Lowell, Mass., and home to his family in a way that politics doesn't allow. Continued on Parte 5 Breakup brings breakdown Phone service lousy5 after AT&T breakup It has been less than a month since the breakup of the telephone com pany, and already things are getting lousy. Officials of the various spinoff cor porations that were created when the Bell System was broken up will tell you that nothing of subtance has changed; Jiff -ZTT-. " (rv-l) Bob Tj Greene that there is no reason why service should be any worse than it was before the breakup. It's just not true. The people I hear from are telling me ludicrous stories about problems they've been having with service' not a day has gone by since Jan. 1 without at least one call or letter from a person informing me of a new telephone horror story. Many of these stories come from people who have tried to order a telephone for their home or business, and have been bounced along from one person to another to another none of whom seem to understand who is responsible for what under the new telephone sys tem. I knew we were all in trouble when, on Jan. 1 the first day the breakup took effect I tried to call my sister in California, I tried dialing her number for four hours; each time a recording told me that "all circuits are busy." Now, I realize that New Year's Day is a holiday, and long-distance lines are in constant use on holidays. But I've been calling my sister on holidays for years; not once, under the old system, did this kind of trouble occur. Only 'after four hours of trying to get through do you realize just how good the old system was. . Phone company officials, of course, would argue that the four-hour delay was just a coincidence; that virtually nothing had changed in the hours after midnight Jan. 1. But last Friday I tried to call my office at the newspaper from my home. Twice in a row I got an "all circuits are busy" recording on a local call. I never heard of all circuits being busy inside the city before; this was a new one on me. Of course, if you've tried to direct dial New York City lately, you know what happens as often as not: You complete your number and nothing happens. Nothing. No ring, no busy signal, no dial tone. Just dead silence. After a few minutes you hang up and try again usually only to find that you get a dead line again. And if these kinds of things are going on during the first month of the broken up system during the time when all . the new phone subcorapaaies are try ing to impress us all think how bad they're going to get once a little time passes by. It vcn't matter if you're in Ohio, Oklahoma or Nevada every time you pick up the phone, youH think you're in Europe. Of course, there is one segment of America that should be overjoyed at the breakup of the phone company. That is the advertising community. The contemptible decision that abol ished the Bell System maybe an abom ination for the rest of us, but it's a blessing for the ad folks. All of the var ious telephone-service concerns that are vying for our business will be tak ing out ads anyplace they can buy them in an effort to persuade us that one phone operation is better than the next. And some of them are destined to be right; after all, if you have 10 companies offering you something, it stands to reason that one of them has to be first-best and one of them has to be tenth-best. This all comes back to the one thing that anyone with any sense knew from the beginning: The telephone company was just fine the way it was. Sure, it may have had a stranglehold on the nation's personal communications bus iness - but it deserved to. It offered service that was as close to perfect as anyining available to the general pub lie in America: it had the trust rn? confidence of an overwhelming nslnr ity of its users; its rates, even in a society in which prices have run away with themselves, were by and large considered reasonable.. If there had been a national vote to determine what Americans wanted done with the phone company, most people undoubtedly would have voted for nothing at all to be done. Common sense dictated that a service so many people liked deserved to remain as is. But it didn't happen that way, the judge who oversaw the telephone company case evidently felt we would all be better served by killing the Bell System, and it is to my everlasting regret that the judge's last name hap pens to be Greene. Oh, welL There's no going back now. I don't know if you've noticed this or not but on a lot of long-distance calls now, you get the added entertainment of listening to one or more other con versations while you're trying to con ' duct your own conversation. The sounds of the other folks talking bleeds over into your line. This used to happen once in a great while; now it happens all the time. The officials of the various new telephone companies would prob ably call this another coincidence. We could all complain about this, I suppose, but who knows who to com plain to? The people w ho have told me about their telephone troubles have all tried to lode comnlaints with some- nd one in author!"; when they make their cans 01 compmnt they are mvsnsoiy told they've reached the wrong culce. Which is as good a pcxable as any for the reality of the phone coiispny break up: No mutter what you did, it's gua ranteed to 1 2 a wrcr.3 number. eHI4 Tr&vnt Ce;xny CynIszU, Inc.