Thursday, March 14, 10S5 Daily Ncbraskan Pago 5 Of On - - . o -j teas line Irives in New lA ft Is spring-training time In Erccklp and the phencm b taking batting practice, smacking line drives eff the fences. Mario Cuomo Is a former miner-league eenterfieldcr, currently is a mrjor-te-T.ie governor, and (according to the beys In the press box) is a can't-miss candidate for the politician's Cooperstcwn. George Will Today he i3 In the Brooklyn Supreme Court building seated beneath a sign that says "Vox Pepuii." Evidently Latin Is big in Erocklyn. Cuomo certainly is. He is takhg questions from the bleachers ar.d tha natives tzz net restless. The questions are what bsscbsU people call meatballs soft tosses crccvcd ever the heart cf the plate, kite rs-Ugh. Such questions ("I want to begin by thanking you, governor, for all you have don for . . . ") do net give Cuomo a chance to be impressive, hii the questions say something impressive aboutkia governance. EL-:ts Field, home of the Brooklyn Dodgers brfcra Los Angeles' larceny, was never a garden of sbiiddfcg violets. Drocklynites, even more than normal New Yorkers, are vocal about their griev ances. But the only serious grievance voiced in two and a half hours of Cucmo's open meeting is that Brooklyn deserves a new stadium and a team to romp in it. The main argument between Cuomo and New York Republicans is how big the tax cut should be. Republicans want it bigger than Cuomo's proposal. They say he is underestimating reve nues. Cuomo promises that the cut in personal income taxes is just the start of a "pattern" of cuts that will include business taxes. This, in the Peoples Republic of New York? Yep, and it i3 like many other states: The two most popular politicians are the President, a Republican, and the governor, a Democrat. Cuomo came to the nation's attention at the 1934 Democratic National Convention with the keynote speech that proclaimed: "We can do it again." The antecedent cf the pronoun "it" was approximately this: We can use energetic govern ment to engineer a mere egalitarian society. But William Schneider, a fellow at the Ameri can Enterprise Institute, understands the Demo crat's problem. Their ambitious social agenda depends, he says, on sustained and rapid eco nomic growth to produce the economic surplus for egalitarian social engineering. However, such growth dilutes the sense of urgency for re dis tributive policies. It i3 possible that God and national jour nalism willing Americans can come to find governors interesting. Governors have many more direct responsibilities than legislators have, and inevitably have more interesting records. It is hard to be ideologically monochrome when administering education and health systems, settling strikes and prison riots, and balancing budgets as governors are required to do. Schneider notes that recent Democratic nom ination contests have not been left-versus-right contests, or young-versus-old contests. Rather, they have been "insiders" versus "outsiders." The modern history (and the decline) of the Democratic Party began in 1968, in Chicago. There, Hubert Humphrey (assisted by a protege named Walter Mondale) defeated forces outside the party establishment actually outside the convention hall, in the streets. In 1872 and 1976, the nominations went to outsiders George McGovern over Ed Muskie and others, Jimmy Carter over Scoop Jackson and ethers. In 1834 Mondale, the insider's revenge, defeated Gary Hart, whose new idea was that insiders are burnt-out cases. A governor, especially of New York, is an interesting biend, being outside the federal pub licity machine but inside the game of gover nance. Eat Cuomo does not ve the impression of wanting a presidential nomination in the con- brie sumlng way that one must want it if one b going to get it. He says that the wrong question, con stantly asked, is: Are you going to run for presi dent in 193S? The correct question is: Are you going to seek re-election in 1988? He says that if his answer to the latter is "yes," (and it almost certainly will be), then the answer to the former must be "no." It must be, because he could not, practically or properly, begin, simultaneously, a second term as governor and a presidential campaign. He often rises early, sometimes to write his diary, and occasionally he tunes in C-Span. He watches can you imagine? reruns of con gressional proceedings. Is he inoculating him self against Potomac Fever, or measuring the opposition. Whicheer, he ha3 been warned. When a New York reporter at the Brooklyn meeting asks Cuomo about the presidency, Cuomo groans. He is required to do that. Tha audience also groans. This is optional and inter esting. They like him where ha is, and will become more lik New Yorkers surly if he starts acting like a presidential candidate. When he arrived ia Erocklyn for hi3 batting practice, a female consitituent semi-swooned: "You're not as ugly in person as on TV." That was a New Yorker trying to be nice. 1SC5, WftMxigtxrci Post Wrfcsra Croc? Hi J 3 'I ..I Letters Official says budget cut mean t no extra dollars The article headlined "$100,000 More Pro gram Suspension Fills Research Coffer" on the front pags of the March 5 Daily Nebraskan gives a false impression. In the article I was quoted as saying that the faculty research leave program was suspended because it was "too expensive" and that this meant an "extra $100,000 in research funds for the university in the 1883-84 school year..." There is no way elimination of a program can generate extra money. The program was sus pended because the Research Council budget had become inadequate to support the several long-term functions of the council. It was with great reluctance that the council, in 1983, sus pended the research leave of absence program in order that the money might be spent instead on the remaining programs cf the council. Those programs allow the purchase of equipment for research, the paying of hourly help for students helping in research, travel to obtain access, to facilities unavailable afcUNl, travel to scholarly meetings and paying expenses for visiting lec turers to come to UNL In the last two years before suspension of the Faculty Research Leave program, the fraction of proposals funded in these other categories had become so low that some action had to be taken. To imply that this bad filled UNL's research coffer is to twist the meaning of words and presents a false picture of affluence. It is correct, as stated in the first paragraph of the story, that the State of Nebraska contribu tion to the research council budget decreased by $16,000 this year. In my interview we did not discuss budgets before the 1983-84 year, but it is worth mentioning that the state contribution to Research Council budget is down about $53,000 from the 1981-82 academic year and down about $141,000 frcm the 1976-77 academic year. It was budget cuts like this that made it necessary for the council to suspend the Leave of Absence program in order to fund more adequately our other obligations. It may seem like a quibble to object to the phrase "too expensive" when describing the suspended Leave of Absence program. It would be more correct to say that the Research Council budget no longer allows us to afford the legiti mate costs of such a desirable project. . V James D. Carr UNL Research Council n TTT J. TUT - -n J 'TV M MEfiKDi iiietiiag Sales' -Kepi me Part-Time evenings and weekend days 4, ART MOW ON YOIJR 8IJMME Wats Marketing Outbound is a subsidiary of American Express. 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