Pa go 4 Tuesday, February 21, 1934 Daily Ncbraskan O O "1 r Arts center 'dream' reveals C3 '3( )( x )" 1 10 1 1 , w 1 as ciiecLioiiiL Delias heuFAC tMeii' fsmdSmr? trouble Political Action Committees buy and sell government influence at the federal and state level. Special interest groups also play a role in this capitalist compromise. It takes money to get elected. You need to be rich from the start, and court -the , PACs and industry in order to fund the massive advertis ing campaigns that make or break politicians. State Sen. Vard Johnson of Omaha has introduced a bill that would decrease the influence of special interest groups and PACs in Nebra ska. LB1012 would create a box on state income tax forms where voters could check off a $1 donation to a legislative campaign fund. Legislators could choose to run or not to run according to the rules of the bill. If they did, a $ 1 6,000 spend ing limit would be placed on spend ing for primary and general elec tions. A maximum $7,200 could be used from the new fund for the gen eral election. If a candidate chooses not to par ticipate in the bill's restrictions, there would be political disadvan tages. One opponent, using LB1012, can sail re - A re-election of President Reagan is a clear threat to American security. The recent military operations in Gren ada, Nicaragua, Lebanon, El Salvador and in Europe, to name a few, have put Opinion the United States at an all-time low in foreign policy relations with the Soviet Union, Europe and Latin America since the Cold War. Reagan, and his administration, are solely responsible for these new developments. These military operations have not only des troyed the arms negotiations between the Soviet Union and the United States, but have also brought heavy criticism from U.S. allies. - . The Reagan administration deploy ment of nuclear weapons into Europe noor n 1 say honestly: "Special interest is funding this man's campaign. Who is he accountable to? The public? Or the PAC thatjust gave his campaign $5,000." ' . As well as decreasing the influ ence cf PACs, LB1012 would curb skyrocketing campaign costs. A candidate who isn't already rich would stand a chance in a state senate race. A similar bill in New Jersey got $ 1 from 31 percent of the voters there, Johnson said. He estimated in a legislative hearing Thursday that if 20 percent of Nebraska's 800,000 voters checked off a dollar, $16,000 would be raised for the fund. Since there are two years before senate races, $320,000 could be raised. ' At the hearing of the Miscellane ous Subjects Committee, Sen. Merle Von Minden of Allen asked Johnson why the system should be changed. "It's worked this way for years," he said. Johnson responded that LB1012 was an experiment. There would be no harm if the Legislature decides it would not work. LB1012 is a worthwhile experi ment. Politicians are continually los ing credibility with voters. This is one way to regain some of it. -Chris Welsch eiecaon f has not only stifled any type of arms control agreement with the Soviet Union but has also provoked the Soviet Union into deploying more of its nuc lear arsenal force into the 'European theatre." This disproves the "hawkish" theory that the Soviet Union will threat en the United States at the same pace, regardless of U.S. foreign policies. This is also the first administration unable to get the Soviet Union to agree on an arms control agreement of any land in over a decade. The strife bet ween the United States and the Soviet Union is the major threat to world stability. . President Reagan has also worsened the relationships between the United States and its own allies. The United States gave the Soviet Union a power ful propaganda weapon when it invad ed Grenada, beside 3 adding to 'an al ' ready growing - anti-American senti 1. I t x j i 1 1 u v y i 1 - i t 1 ' I If progress synaromc Plans to construct a $20 million per forming arts center on the UNL cam pus reveal a fundamental error in uni versity officials' thinking, an error which may well be one of the bases of their institution's current malaise. That error is equating progress with increasing the square footage of uni verity property and buildings, an idea (Ttirifiomier ( a, Burbacli which reveals a deeper philosophy of mandating progress and rejecting the status quo. - In light of Nebraska's economic straits, now is an excellent time to question both notions. Monday's Daily Nehraskan carried three stories which provide fine ex amples of the misjudgment caused by the Progress Syndrome. The stories reported events at Satur day's meeting of the NU Board of Regents. Those events included an announcement of the $10 million Lied Foundation gift and resulting arts cen ter construction plan, a decision to spend $400,000 to purchase land ad joining the UNO campus, and considera tion of funding cutbacks and realloca tions. The proposed arts center would re quire $10 million in university funds for its construction alone, plus an undetermined amount for its mainte nance. The administration hopes to V un I 2a Voices of wmest serve planet Daniel Zariski's letter (Daily Nebras kan, Feb. 14) is a masterpiece of mean ingless rhetoric. Although the purpose of the letter is obscured by the conser vative double-talk, I think Zariski in tended to decry the liberalism and pol itical activism of the late 1960s and early 1970s. I don't believe Mr. Zariski remembers or understands what was the cause of the political activism cf the period. America was involved in a purposeless war in Southeast Asia in which many thousands of American soldiers were being killed. The country had sat still for this through most of the '60s, but as the body counts on the nightly news rose, so did the level of political acti vism and social unrest among the younger generation, especially on col legs campuses. Young Americans be- TO jT, r - jTK i-M . I M 1 ment stemming from other military operations involving U.S. forces and covert military actions throughout the world. The Economist reports that Euro peans see "Reagan as trigger-happy, unreliable, an alarming president to have control over nuclear wcapons...a jumpy hard-liner." Net only is the East ern Bloc alarmed with Reagan but the leaders of such prominent .allies as France, Germany and England are as well. This is evident in their condem nation cf US. foreign policy (the UN. General Assembly voted 103 to 9 to deplore "armed intervention" in Gren ada). Again, Reagan is not securing safe foreign' policy relations, not only with the Soviet Union, but with US. allies as well - - . - Europe's opinion end support of the United States i? crucial becnass of its international .power and the balance r, r "1 1 4- 1LV talk legislators out of $7 million of the construction costs and solicit $3 mil lion from private sources. One has to wonder if such a prop osal is not frivolous when home eco nomics students have to watch classes on television, degree programs in two colleges and the NU Medical Center are being eliminated and UNL faculty members remain among the lowest paid in their profession. N A $10 million donation is hard to decline, but the Lied gift carries strings which make it understandable $10 million strings. The gift demands that its recipient bear a burden which it is simply not capable of bearing. To attempt the feat would be nothing short of foolhardy. The money, if it did not require matching funds, would be a tremend ous boon to the UNL theatre depart ment. As it stands, it would be a detri ment. Even if UNL could raise match ing funds,, the proposed facility would suffer from lack of support. Attend ance at current theatre department productions indicates that the de mand for such activities is being met. Chancellor Martin Massengale called the proposal part of a dream. A dream it is, a dream of grandeur. Unfortu nately, it is a dream we at UNL cannot afford to pursue, at least for now. We must open our eyes and recognize the fact that fiscal bonds prevent progress through capital construction. Such a realization could dispel the myth that more square feet of property equals progress and allow the university to improve itself in less tangible, but more important areas'. gan exercising some of the basic free doms we value so highly in this country the freedom of assembly, the right to dissent and the freedom of speech. These rights were won for us by the political activists who founded this country in 1776. as American soldiers are again dying in far away lands, so are the seeds of political unrest sown. The people will once again have to join together to make their voices heard to the self serving bureaucrats in Washington. The people's message will serve to make the government act with the best interests of the entire human race and of the planet itself in mind. Tim Kettler - junior natural science Letters cciitbiEsd ca Pc."3 5 interests of power. European support has degen erated to a point of questionable sta bility with Reagan's administration. The United States cannot tolerate or afford to risk'the lives and well-being of its citizens for another four years. President Reagan in only three years has reduced the United States status within the international balance of power to that of an aggressive coun terpart to the Soviet Union. Recent trend of aggression under Reagan have given new impetus to anti-American trends around the world, and have again gambled away US. credibility. As concerned US. citizens we should heed the warnings frc'n the Eastern Bloc concerning U.S. aggression. We should also heed the warnings rever berated from those we trust and need . most concerning foreign policy our ' UNL Collet Young Democrats