• _ Daily^ Page \JDTA7C S d" Assorted press Nebraskan 2 X VC ww l!5 JL*# 1 C ~ %jp 8* Edited by Brandon Loomis TueSday, January 30,1990 Bush sends 'investment in future’budget to Congress WASHINGTON - President Bush on Monday sent Congress a $1.23 trillion budget for fiscal 1991 that keeps new spending below inflation and recognizes “remarkable changes” in the world by scaling back defense and rewarding emerging democra cies. Bush called the spending plan an “investment in the future.” But Democratic leaders in Congress pounced on it as a4 ‘standpat budget” and challenged its claim to halve the federal deficit, to $63.1 billion. Fights loomed with the Dcmocratic controllcd Congress on a range of fronts: Bush’s desire to cut Medicare and capital gains taxes, to close mili tary bases he considers outmoded and, on the other hand, to preserve some expensive weapons. Bush would increase spending on space, education, the environment and the war on drugs. Losers, this year, are Medicare, college student loans, farm subsidies, energy conservation grants and mass transit. The president’s budget for the fis cal year that begins Oct. 1 calls for S36.5 billion in spending cuts and other deficit-reduction measures. It projects a 7 percent increase in revenues, to $1.17 trillion, without a general tax increase and just a 3 per cent boost in overall spending -- more than a percentage point below the current rale of inflation. Bush proposed defense spending of $292.1 billion, a cut of 2 percent measured against inflation; while boosting foreign aid to Eastern Eu rope, the Philippincsand Latin Amer ica. On the domestic front, his budget would leave in place the Social Secu rity tax increase that took effect ear lier this month. But it honors Bush’s 1988 campaign pledge to propose no general lax increase. . Still, the budget recommends $15.6 billion in lesser tax increases and a $5.6 billion increase in user and serv ice fees - most of them recycled from Reagan budgets and previously de feated in Congress. , The budget calls for “ family sav ings’’ accounts under which families could bank up to $5,000 a year and pay no lax on interest on deposits held for seven or more years. “With an eye toward future growth, and expansion of the human frontier, the budget’s chief emphasis is on investment in the future,” Bush said in a brief message to Congress ac Bush’s farm and deficit proposals get mixed reaction from delegation President George Bush unveiled his budget proposal Monday to praise and criticism from members of Ne braska’s congressional delegation. Bush’s proposal to eliminate the Federal Crop Insurance Corp. drew criticism from Sen. Bob Kerrey and Rep. Virginia Smith. “I think it’s a mistake,” said Kerrey, a Democrat and member of the Sen ate Agriculture Committee. Kerrey said there are problems with the crop insurance program but ad ministration officials have not made a good fault effort to improve the agency. A crop insurance commission made 26 recommendations but the admini stration has only implemented three, Kerrey said Monday. “They ought to get new manage ment,” Kerrey said. ”... I think the program can be self-sustaining.” The Bush proposal calls for scal ing back the crop insurance corpor tion, which provides subsidies to farm ers who carey all-risk protection for crop loss. The agency’s budget -S1.2 million this fiscal year - would fall to S430.000. In place of the crop insurance program, a new disaster assistance program would be worked out with Congress. Kerrey said relying on a disaster assistance program would put Con gress in risk-management business, a business Congress should not be. in. Mrs. Smith, a Republican, said she is concerned that “agricultural pro grams arc being asked to take unde fined cuts in programs and bear an unfair share of the burden in deficit reduction efforts.’’ Kerrey also said he was concerned that Bush’s budget coupled with Agriculture Department policies would mean reduction in target prices and a cut in net farm income. Bush’s proposal pushes off tough decisions until 1993 “as if he’s run ning for re-election,” Kerrey said. Mrs. Smith said a close look at budget recommendations for commod ity and rural programs seems to indi calc that the “Office of Management and B udgei, as they ha ve in past years, is unaware of the different needs of and issues facing rural America.” Sen. Jim Exon called the budget a “political document which docs not fully face up to the serious economic crisis created by continuing annual deficits and rapidly growing national debt.” Exon, a Democrat and member of the Senate Budget Committee, said the budget doesn’t realistically come near to meeting the Gramm-Rudman budget deficit target “Optimistic economic assump tions, unspecified spending reductions and the huge surpluses in the nation’s trust funds, including the Social Se curity Trust Fund, are used to hide the true magnitude of the budget defi cit,” Exon said. Exon did applaud the president for initiatives that call for simulating savings and investment and a new tree-planting and reforestation initia tive. Survey shows disapproval of regents A newspaper poll shows that only 38 percent of the people surveyed ap prove of the job the NU Board of Regents is doing. The poll also found most of those surveyed favored election of the re gents, agreed NU’s Lincoln campus should be the state’s flagship of higher education and the Omaha campus should allow doctoral degrees. Thirty-five percent of the 450 people polled Jan. 15-17 by National Re search Corp. don’t know how to as sess the board. Twenty-seven percent disapproved of the board’s perform ance. State Sen. Ron Withem of Papil lion, chairman of the Legislature’s Education Committee, said the 27 percent disapproval rating is high compared with most polls evaluating the performance of public officials. I-"— ‘‘I think a 27 percent disapproval rating is very high for a board like the Board of Regents,’ ’ Withcm said. ‘41 would not perceive the poll as reflect ing a strong vote of confidence by the people in the immediate past leader ship.” Withem was referring to the board of regents under the leadership of Nancy Hoch of Nebraska City. During Hoch’s tenure as chair man, the board was criticized for not telling the public why it fired former President Ronald Roskcns and for not taking a stand on whether Kearney State College should become part of the university system. Hoch was chairman until early January when Don Blank of McCook was elected to that office. The poll has an error range of plus --1 Nebraskan Editor Amy Edwards Graphics Editor John Bruce 472-1766 Photo Chief Dave Hansen Managing Editor Ryan Sleeves Night News Editors Jana Pedersen Assoc News Editors Ilea Donovan Diane Brayton Eric Planner Art Director Brian Shelllto Editorial Page Editor Bob Nelson General Manager Dan Shattll Wire Editor Brandon Loomis Production Manager Katherine Pollcky Copy Desk Editor Darcle Wlegert Advertising Manager Jon Daehnke Sports Editor Jell Apel Sales Manager Kerry Jeffries Arts & Entertainment Publications Board Editor Michael Deeds Chairman Pam Hein Diversions Editor Mick Dyer 472-2588 Sower Editor Lae Rood Professional Adviser Don Walton 473-7301 The Daily Nebraskan(USPS 144 080) is published by the UNL Publications Board, Ne braska Union 34,1400 R St., Lincoln, NE, Monday through Friday during the academic year, weekly during summer sessions Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1763 between 9 a m and 5 p.m Monday through Friday. The public also has access to the Publications Board. For information, contact Pam Hem, 472-2588 Subscription price is $45 for one year. Postmaster Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 34, 1400 R St .Lincoln, NE 68588 0448 Second-class postage paid at Lincoln, NE ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1990 DAILY NEBRASKAN or minus 4.6 percent, said National Research, which conducted the poll for The, Lincoln Star and Lincoln Journal. Poll results also indicated the public is nearly split, with 45 percent against and 44 percent for a complicated constitutional amendment to restruc ture the governance of higher educa tion institutions across the slate. Only 11 percent of Nebraskans don’t know whether to vole for or against the constitutional change that would abolish the NU Board of Re gents and the State Colleges Board of Trustees and replace them with a new Board of Regents to coordinate the slate’s seven four-year schools. Overwhelmingly, Nebraskans want regents to be elected rather than ap pointed by the governor. Eighty-nine percent of those polled want the re gents to be elected, while 7 percent favor the governor appointing them and 4 percent don t know how they should be chosen. On the issue of doctoral degrees at UNO, 79 percent said UNO should be allowed to join UNL and the NU Medical Center in offering those degrees, while 9 percent said no and 11 percent had no opinion. On whether the Lincoln campus should remain the flagship of any four-year educational system, 54 percent said it should, 30 percent said it should not and 17 percent didn’t know. On the question of whether the UNL chancellor should also be the president of the Nebraska University system, 51 percent of those polled were opposed, 21 percent favored the change and 22percent said they don’t know. :ompanying the 1,569-page document. But Sen. James Sasser, D-Tenn„ ;alled it a document of “low aspira tions_It predicts huge fiscal prob lems ahead and then goes on to pro pose no change in course.” And House Majority Leader Rich ard Gephardt, D-Mo., said, “1 think it’s a standpat budget” but he said lawmakers would “take it very seri Dusly” rather than pronouncing it “dead on arrival” as Democrats had done with several Reagan budgets. Bush’s budget asserted it was meeting the $64 billion delicit target for fiscal 1991, under the Gramm Rudman budget balancing law, “with specific and defensible measures and without gimmicks.” However, critics claimed the administration’s prescription for get ting the budget dericii down to l billion -- from a projected $123.8 billion this year -- does rely on ac counting gimmicks. “They continue to jimmy the fig ures,” said Sen. Ernest F. Hollings, D-S.C. ‘‘It’s another fraud.” For one thing, Bush’s budget uses an optimistic set of economic projec tions that assume both declining inter est rates and falling inflation. The budget also calls for overall growth this year of 2.4 percent this year - compared to the 1.7 percent forecast by private forecasters and the Con gressional Budget Office. The government’s most recent figures showed economic growth slowed to an annual rate of 0.5 per cent during the last three months of 1989. -1 ^ John Bruce/Daily Nebraskan I Expenment shows computer as good as human therapist NEW YORK - Depressed pa tients who were treated by com puter during an experiment im proved as much as those who con sulted a human therapist, suggest ing an economical treatment for a condition afflicting millions. Depression strikes about 10 million Americans within any six month period. Human therapists can now treat only a fraction of that number, but using computers might let them reach more, said researcher Greist, a psychiatry professor at the University of Wisconsin Medi cal School in Madison. Computerized treatment could be provided day and night at a cost of perhaps only 50 cents an hour, he said. And unlike a human thera pist, a computer ‘ ‘doesn’t have bad days,” he said. Humans would still be needed to screen patients for the therapy and to step in if the computer fails to treat the patient adequately, he said in a recent interview. And the therapeutic approach used in the study works best for people with only mild to moderate depression, he said. The study compared the prog ress of 12 depressed people who received therapy from a computer, 12 who consulted a therapist, and 12 who received no treatment dur ing the experiment. The two treated groups followed a six-week course of weekly cog nitive-behavioral therapy. This approach aims to correct harmful patterns in how people interpret theirexperiences, such as in people who habitually pcrcciv6 slights and conclude that they must be unliked and worthless. The therapist’s job in this ap proach is fairly routine and can become repetitious, Grclsl said. Using a program designed by coauthor Paulette Sclmi, a com puter asked such questions as how long a person had felt depressed and which activities in a list made the person feel better. It also asked about particular symptoms and asked the person to rank the sever ity of his depression on a standard scale. Responses to the computer’s multiple-choice questions shaped the course of each session and fu ture sessions. The actual therapy included teaching basics of cognitive-be havioral therapy, testing the per son’s understanding of the les sons, and assigning homework. Depending on the person’s prob lems, the homework could include such tasks as assigned reading, thinking about less damaging explanations for perceived slights or introducing oneself to new people daily to discover that one is not always rejected. Analysis showed that, as a group, patients who took compu terized therapy improved as much as those in the other treated group, both at the conclusion of treat ment and two months later. Both groups improved significantly more than the people who had received no therapy. The study is presented in this month’s issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry by Sclmi, Greist and others at the univer sity. T. Byram Karasu, professor of psychiatry at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, called the new work important. But he cautioned that cogni tive-behavioral therapy is gener ally less effective for depression than other strategics, including medication. He also stressed that while computers might be useful for some aspects of psychotherapy, they cannot totally replace a human therapist. Mostdcprcssed patients arc “starving for human contact,” he said.