t F 1 wi .1- .Olympic atMetes, fams lost pegspedive It's a little sad to see the Olympics end. Frankly it's going to be hard to give up all that hype and hysteria cold turkey. As commentator Jim McKay might say in a blather of patriotic sentiment, "Gee, there's just nothing like catching that Olympic spirit." Ain't it the truth. The Olympic spirit, loosely defined, is that bull headed stubbornness that pushes the athlete to new heights of greatness. For the fan, Olympic spirit is that chest-puffing, button-busting, all-out yahoo ing pride in one's country. Now the Olympics are over and the mythical Olympic spirit will be put back into its box for another four years. Strange thing this Olympic spirit. It's often inspiring and always exciting. It's been responsible for some absolutely fantastic accomplishments. But it turns dangerous and ugly when it's allowed to triumph over common sense. It's great to talk about the Olympic spirit that finally pushed punch-drunk Gabriella Andersen Schiess over the finish line to place 37th in the women's marathon, all but unconscious from ex haustion. It's great, that is, only after she had been declared okay by the local Olympic hospital. That's just so much Olympic 2020 hindsight. She should have been stopped. t I'll never forget the sight as she almost incoher ently teetered her way into the stadium. She was lost, exhausted, confused, emotionally naked in front of millions of people. Track officials were con fused as well but refrained from giving her the help she so desperately needed. She continued to sway, stumble and stagger around the track, seemingly oblivious to her peril but proclaiming it louder with each rubbery, gro tesque step. And still the officials did nothing. That's not perpetuating the Olympic spirit as much as it is abusing common sense. Push your body to the limits of its capabilities. Fine. But this woman was way out of her league and ner body knew it. She was on automatic pilot with no gas left. The warning signs were obvious and ignored. The fact that she by some miracle happened to be all right after the race hardly diminishes the argu ment What would they have told her family if she had sustained permanent brain damage? "Sorry, we just wanted to see her make it?" "She was a brave little competitor?" "At least she finished"? Hardly consolation. She should have been stopped. The gutty, potentially dangerous effort put out by Andersen-Schiess makes me think of Jim Fixx, the man credited with starting the jogging craze with "The Complete Book of Running." He wrote once in nn M 13 vc;. AH AU WgfS w V, 17, u,i s-:; m Lm-sz T7. A the book, "The qualities and capacities that are important in running such factors as willpower, - the ability to apply effort during extreme fatigue and acceptance of pain have a radiating power that subtly influences one's life." It not so subtly influenced Fixx right into his grave. Fixx died of a heart attack while jogging through a rural village in northern Vermont. I wonder if he just might like to put an asterisk by that passage now? Don't miss my point. The Olympic spirit is glorious if tempered with reason. But at times it simply gets out of hand. That goes for the fans as well as for the athletes. Recently, as I listened to the insessant chants of U-S-A, U-S-A, for the umteenth time, it seemed to me that this, too, was Olympic spirit run amok. Be proud of your country, sure. But to the point that the Olympic spirit turns even the most sensible among us into jingoistic atomatons, rooting for any thing with a USA on its shirt, no. Let's keep the Olympic spirit let's keep it in proper perspective. Jsraea A. Fcssell lax increases comin despite 2.478 If you have tears, prepare to shed them for one of President Reagan's 2,478 favorite ideas. He got these ideas from Peter Grace. When conservatives say "Let Reagan be Reagan," they mean "Let Reagan be Grace." One of the most radical fellows in or aruund government, Grace, a businessman, chaired the commission that recently rendered 2,478 recom mendations for "cost control" in gov ernment. Reagan has seized upon these recom mendations as a refutation of the notion that a tax increase will be required to reduce the deficit to man ageable proportions. Vowing at a press conference to rely instead on spending George Will 'EDITOR GENERAL MANAGER PRODUCTION MANAGER ADVERTISING MANAGER ASSISTANT ADVERTISING MANAGER CIRCULATION MANAGER NEWS EDITOR ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITOR SPORTS ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR WIRE EDITOR COPY EDITORS NIGHT NEWS EDITOR ASSISTANT NIGHT NEWS EDITOR PHOTOGRAPHERS ARTiST PUBLICATIONS BOARD CHAIRPERSONS PROFESSIONAL ADVISER Laurl Hopplt, 472-1760 Dt nit! Shtttll Kitty Policky Tom Bymt Ktlly Mtngan Sttvt Mtye Jim FusmII Jam Nyittltr Christophtf Burbach Ttri Sptrry Dlanna Sleigh Jtlf Goodwin Ju(! Jordan Craig Andrtttn Dvt Trou!a Lou Annt Zactk Nick Foiy, 476-0275 Angtla Nlttftid, 475-4881 Don Walton, 473-7301 The Daily Nebraskan (USPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board Monday through Friday in the fall and spring semesters and Tuesdays and Fridays in the summer sessions, except during vacations Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and com ments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-2583 bet ween 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The public also has access to the Publications Board. For informa tion, call Nick Foley, 476-0275 or Angela NietteSd, 475-4381. Postmaster Send address changes to the Daily Nebra ska 34 Nebraska Union, 1400 R St.. Lincoln. Neb. 68588 0448 ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 84 DAILY KtSASXAN cuts, Reagan said, "We have a task force working on 2,478 recommenda tions ... of ways in which government can be made more economic and ef ficient by simply turning to modern business practices." Reagan has not read the 10-foot-high stack of documentation for the 47 Grace volumes, so he can be forgiven for not knowing that they involve a lot more than "modern business practices." Brigades of public-spirited persons donated their time to the commission, and identified hundreds of possible efficiencies that could indeed save bil lions of dollars. But most of the large sums pertain not to more efficient administration of policies not with diminishing "waste, fraud and abuse" but with changing policies. For example, the report proposes cutting federal pensions for more than 5 million federal workers, and their spouses. Were Reagan to endorse all 2,478 ideas, he would lose 50 states. He and other conservatives who use the Grace report to suppress talk of tax increases are, shall we say, selec tive in their enthusiasm for the partic ular recommendations. This was shown when Congress recently tumbled over itself in aniic haste to send to Reagan a bill that does the opposite of the Grace proposal concerning federal sales of hydroelectric power. The proposal was that federal power marketing administrations charge for their electricity something more than mere cost-recovery rates, if not the full rate the market would bear. Congres sional conservatives recently had a chance to stop praising and start im plementing the Grace recommenda tions with respect to the Hoover Dam. Since 1937 the dam has been gener ating electricity under a contract that guarantees cheap power to parts of Nevada, Arizona and southern Cali fornia for 50 years. Although the con tract still has three years to run; al though Congress has so much work and so little time that it can not pass even appropriation bills in a timely manner; although the Depression-era Hoover rates are from one-fourth to one-fourteenth those that unsubsid ized Americans pay nevertheless, Congress has rushed to extend for 30 years, until 2017, the cheap sale of this federal resource. The vote in the Republican controlled Senate was 64-34, with every senator from west of Missouri voting to con tinue the subsidy. That is Reagan country, pardner, but it also is where there are other cheap federal power arrangements. Furthermore, conservative cowboys can spot trouble coming across a far mesa and they saw a slew of troubles in the suggestion that federal resources should be sold'at something approach ing market rates. Suppose that obnox ious principle were applied to water, or grazing, fees. All those folks whose church-going clothes include cowboy boots and Adam Smith neckties wor- ship at the altar of the GFM (Glorious Free Market), but this is hitting close to home. Conservative Republican senators said (hang on tight this argument can give you ideological whiplash) it would be "laissez-faire economics the public be damned" to end federally subsidized rates. They said it is good conservative government-bashing pol icy to continue this subsidy. Why? Because it is "consumer protection to prevent big government from charg ing big (market) rates. Anyway, they said, it is sound anti-government pol icy to prevent government from going "into business to make a profit." (What happened to Reagan's sound business practices? Hush.) Besides, subsidized power is stand up and salute, con servatives a "tradition." As Mark Twain said, get the facts first you can distort them later. The fact is that the Congress has again demonstrated the real conservatism of modern government, which labors to protect people from disagreeable change. Twain also said that thunder is im pressive, but lightning does the work. The Grace report is thunderous, but Congress must do the work. Will Rea gan, who praises the Grace approach, veto the bill by which Congress shreds a Grace idea? No, Reagan now says he will veto any increase in "personal" income taxes. The adjective is a modifier, modifying his opposition to taxes. His pledge leaves as it should lots of kinds of taxes unmentioned. The Hoover Dam vote illustrates why today's 2,479th idea that tax increases arc coming will net go away. KZl, Washington Post Vriitrs Group Tuesday, August 14, 1984 Page4 Daily Nebraskan