The States: New Way to Spell Nebraska
When he began his campaign for Governor, few Nebraskans outside his home town of Wausa (pop. 725) had ever heard of Republican Norbert Tiemann. To overcome that disadvantage, Nobby" Tiemann, 42, son of a Lutheran minister, dotted the state with billboards and filled the airwaves with spot commercials plugging the slogan: TIEMANN, Nebraska's New Way to Spell Governor." What the tall (6 ft. 3 in.), trim, small-town banker was actually telling the voters was that the time had come to find a new way to spell
NEBRASKA.
This month, Tiemann gave his constituents their toughest spelling lesson to date. By a 38-to-ll vote, the new Governor pushed through Nebraska's conservative, unicameral legislature a sales-income tax package that left New Hampshire the only state in the union with neither a sales nor an income tax. Nebraska still stands far down the list of states on public services. It is 39th in educational expenditures per pupil, 41st in teachers' salaries, last in state aid to public schools. Though its two conservative Republican senatorsCarl Curtis and Roman Hruskahave given the state an image of doughty self-reliance, it is not reluctant to accept federal handouts: in 1965 only five other states received more federal funds per capita. As it began its 100th-birthday celebration this year, Nebraska was the very paradigm of uncreative federalism.
Time to Turn Loose. When he challenged former Governor Val Peterson in the G.O.P. primary last May, Tiemanna former semipro baseball playerwas determined to change all that. After a punishing campaign involving 600 appearances and 65,000 miles of travel, he beat Peterson by 15,000 votes. "We paced him just right," says Tiemann's campaign manager, David Pierson. "When election day came, we figured he was just about 14 hours away from total collapse." In the general election, Tiemann walloped liberal Democratic Lieutenant Governor Philip Sorensen, younger brother of ex-Presidential Speechwriter Ted Sorensen, by more than 100,000 votes.
Nebraskans still recalled indignantly that Ted Sorensen had castigated his native state as an "educationally depressed area" that was "old, outmoded, a place to come from or a place to die." Yet from the moment he took office in January, Tiemann has been telling them much the same thing. In his inaugural address, he warned that the only alternative to growing federal dominance was "the development of more responsive and more responsible state government." When he submitted his tax package to the legislature, he declared. "It is time to turn Nebraska loose."
Though the fetters are strong, tight and timehonored, Tiemann has gone a long way toward doing just that. "It's as if Nebraska has been shaken awake like some long-slumbering Rip Van Winkle," remarks a Lincoln Star political writer, "and is not too happy at the abrupt and rude awakening."
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