Opinion Monday, October 31,1994 Page 4 Nebraskan Edtorial Board University of Nebraska-Lincoln JeffZeleny.Editor, 472-1766 Kara Morrison.Opinion Page Editor Angie Brunkow..Managing Editor Jeffrey Robb.Associate News Editor Rainbow Rowell.Columnist/Associate News Editor Mike Lewis.Copy Desk Chief James Mehsling.Cartoonist -a i- - - Campaign ‘94 Daily Nebraskan Endorsement Gutsy politician Kerrey is a mighty force for Nebraska Democratic incumbent Sen. Bob Kerrey is too valuable a political voice for Nebraskans to lose in November. Kerrey is simply a leader. He is well-known and respected in Washington and throughout the nation. He has made himself a force to be reckoned with. Kerrey was the only freshman senator to sit on the Appropriations Committee for the 101st Congress. In these days of strictly partisan politics, Kerrey often has had the guts to challenge his own party for new and better solutions, and has consistently received bipartisan support for his views. Republican challenger Jan Stoncy has offered nothing new to her party’s platform. Undoubtedly she has been a successful business leader in the state, but she lacks the vision and insight to look toward the long-term progress of the state and the country. Stoney will add nothing positive to Washington. Kerrey has consistently been unafraid of talking about substan tive issues such as health care, and like Stoncy has advocated finding ways to control spending. He also has been a needed friend of education. The University of Nebraska-Lincoln can thank Kerrey for the new George W. Beadle Center for biogcnetics research. And, Kerrey is not a Clinton clone as Stoncy charges. He was a leading critic of Clinton's initial economic plan. Kerrey and Sen. Hank Brown, (R-Colo.), proposed an amendment that would have cut $94 billion in spending over five years. The amendment was defeated in the Senate. In August, White House lobbyists failed to convince Kerrey to support the president's $496 billion deficit reduction plan. Last year, Kerrey voted for family and medical leave, which allowed workers to take up to 12 weeks in unpaid leave for the birth or adoption of a child or to care for a family member. Stoney supports tightening what she deems “the lax Criminal Justice system,” advocates capitol punishment and opposes any gun control legislation. Throughout the campaign, Stoney has consistently misrepre sented Kerrey's views by painting him as soft on crime and inconsistent on a number of views — despite her own admission to seeking a lighter sentence for a personal friend who plotted to kill his own family. If you happened to sec the banner flying over the Nebraska Colorado game Saturday, the Stoney camp even failed to spell Kerrey’s name correctly. Kerrey, on the other hand, is a visionary and respected senator who, unlike most politicians, acknowledges his mistakes and accepts criticism, yet remains a strong leader. In the Nov. 8 election, the Daily Nebraskan endorses Bob Kerrey for the U.S. Senate. Staff editorial* represent the official policy of the Fall 1994 Daily Nebraskan. Policy is set by the Daily Nebraskan Editorial Board. Editorials do not necessarily reflect the views of the university, its employees, the students or the NU Board of Regents. Editorial columns represent the opinion of the author. The regents publish the Daily Nebraskan. They establish (he UNL Publications Board to supervise the daily production of the paper. According to policy set by the regents, responsibility for the editorial content of the newspaper lies solely in the hands of its students. The Daily Nebraskan welcomes brief letters to the editor from all readers and interested others. Letters will be selected for publication on the basis of clarity, originality, timeliness and space available. The Daily Nebraskan retains therighl to edit or reject all material submitted. Readers also are welcome to submit material as guest opinions. The editor decides whether materia] should run as a guest opinion. Idlers and guest opinions sent to the newspaper become the properly of the Daily Nebraskan and cannot be returned. Anonymous submissions will not be published, letters should included the author's name, year in school, major and group affiliation, if any. Requests to withhold names will not be granted. Submit material to the Daily Nebraskan. 34 Nebraska Union, 1400 R St., Lincoln. Neb. 68588-0448. Hu- Yoo Wf ^ PteTVU'fQO L Kite s(Ov& l\m ) S&MTfc StKT TOO! \. -_ — . i -* i l, Bully fights have global effect President Clinton has revealed why he could be so surprisingly tough in the way he confronted Saddam Hussein of Iraq and disposed of the military thugs of Haiti. It all goes back to his childhood in Arkansas. When he was just a lad in school, Clinton told Time maga zine, a bully wanted to pick a fight with him. “There was a guy who was a year older than me but not as big as me. “He started picking on me at school one day when I was in the eighth grade. “I felt sort of sorry for him, because I knew he had a difficult life, and he was always in kind of a sour mood. “...I was walking home from school. I bet that fellow followed me for 30 minutes trying to hit me on the shoulder. And finally, I turned around and decked him, and he ran off. “I was really afraid I’d hurt him. But finally I told him not to do it, and he didn’t believe me. “And the people who are dealing with me in the U.S. will find that out. I realize since the people I deal with around the world may not know me as well as the people I grew up with, and may have never seen that story — that's something that I have to be very clear and explicit about. “I think it is clear and explicit now in a way that it may not have been six months ago. “And I would hope that what happened in Haiti and Iraq would make it clear for all other countries in the future for as long as I’m sitting here. It is a revealing story in many ways. For one thing, it shows that President Clinton has always been a compassionate person, because he felt sorry for the bully, even while being taunted. And it shows that he has remarkable restraint and patience, because he waited 30 minutes — * I had an experience that was eerily similar to that of Clinton. It has been many years since I thought about it. But his story brought my own back to me in vivid detail and with greater understanding of what it meant in my development. just walking along — before he decided to settle the matter. But finally, he confronted the problem and dealt with it firmly and decisively, putting a quick end to it. Most important, though, is that he recognizes the significance of that incident. Think about that. We all had unpleasant childhood tussles. But we lack the vision to put them into a global context. By coincidence, I had an experience that was eerily similar to that of Clinton. It has been many years since I thought about it. But his story brought my own back to me in vivid detail and with greater understanding of what it meant in my development. There was this obnoxious kid in my eighth-grade class who was always swinging cats by their tails, pulling the wings off butterflies and pigeons and shouting fire in crowded movie theaters. I felt sorry for him because he always seemed glum. He disliked me because 1 was the only person in the school who understood Einstein’s theory of relativity, and I refused to explain it to him, because I knew he would put the knowledge to evil use. One day, he followed me for 10 hours, dropping spiders down my shirt, shaking his soda bottle and squirting me in the eye, eating Twinkies without offering me dibs and swinging a three-foot machete within an inch of my Adam’s apple. Finally, 1 decided to resolve the conflict. I threw my best punch. Unfortunately, it missed, so he dealt me a vicious karate kick to the brow, sending me spinning into the street, where 1 was grazed by a big black car belonging to an alderman I was not injured, but in ex change for a signed release from liability, the alderman gave me two cigars and $S, a large sum in those days. This sudden wealth gave me the means to rid myself of the bully. I went to the next neighborhood and looked up the notorious Belch brothers, Bruno and Bronco, and used the cigars and $5 to hire them. They then sought out the bully, chasing him into a vacant lot, where they beat him with sticks, jumped on his chest, twisted his ears, gave his scalp noogie-rubs, tickled his bare feet and pantsed him, thus revealing to the world the humiliating fact that he did not wear clean underwear. From that day on, the bully knew that he could not mess with me. And he also learned to wear clean underwear in case he got into^an accident and didn't want the nurses laughing at him. In truth, 1 did not see a signifi cance in that incident until I read of President Clinton's experience. Then I was able to put it into a global context and recognize how it had shaped my development, just as Clinton’s childhood experience with a bully shaped his. And what knowledge did I gain from that experience? I guess it must mean that I am a Saudi prince. Copyright 1994 Trtbi ne Me4ta Service* Inc.