Sex and death, the stuff of life and drama throughout history, stalked the 26th special session of the Nevada Legislature via testimony supplied by Chancellor Dan Klaich.

The University of Nevada Systemโ€™s top dog provided a dog and pony show that blew away all others your scrivener has observed in a lifetime around politics and government. Klaich leaned on a drama called Sophieโ€™s Choice.

Appearing before the Assembly as legislators revisited the state budget swoon, Klaich said he represented the flip side of state government counterparts running corrections and social services. Without solid education, he asserted, more young people will wind up in later life behind bars or on welfare rolls.

He also said a budget-starved state education system will decimate quality or require fewer students. As chancellor, he indicated, he will limit access rather than destroy what is left of quality should budget cuts keep coming.

โ€œReally, those are the unfortunate choices that we are making here today,โ€ he said. โ€œTheyโ€™re Sophieโ€™s choices.โ€

Sophie of Sophieโ€™s Choice dominated William Styronโ€™s novel and Alan J. Pakulaโ€™s film adaptation. The searing story, steeped in sex and death, is set against the backdrop of postwar Brooklyn and the earlier Holocaust in Europe.

Styron proved adept at capturing existentialism exported by Franceโ€™s Jean Paul Sartre (life, absurd and pointless, still requires choices). Styronโ€™s existential question turned on life, which follows sex, and death, which follows life.

In the film, Sophie reveals in flashbacks that she was forced at Auschwitz to choose life for one of her two offspring and death for the other. She chose life for her son, death for her daughter and anguish for herself.

The son eventually disappeared from her life and, in the end, Sophie and her disturbed partner Nathan chose double suicide in America. Readers and viewers chose this dark drama in droves.

Stingo, Sophieโ€™s brief lover and the taleโ€™s narrator, finds an Emily Dickinson poem with the bodies of Nathan and Sophie on their death bed:

โ€œAmple make this bed / Make this bed with awe. /

In it wait โ€™til judgment break / Excellent and fair. /

Be its mattress straight / Be its pillow round

Let no sunriseโ€™ yellow noise / Interrupt this ground.โ€

Pakulaโ€™s movie catapulted Meryl Streep into superstar status, made newcomer Kevin Kline a bankable film actor and gave Klaich a powerful metaphor.

Klaich used Sophie deftly and answered lawmakersโ€™ questions with aplomb in a bid to keep higher education in the hunt for survival, if not revival. He featured the dog in his show, flea-bitten but his champion for helping economic recovery via a trained Nevada workforce. He threw in a pony, promising transparency and accountability in exchange for avoiding death by a thousand Gibbons administration budget cuts.

His performance was a preview of coming attractions, including a drive by Klaich & Co. next year for more taxation to save Nevadaโ€™s future from what many liberals fearโ€”a final scene akin to the one in Pakulaโ€™s film. That begs the question whether the final sceneโ€™s point was the double suicide or the poetic choice.

Anti-tax conservatives will choose to ignore Sophie as metaphor, battling for their own views. Until robust economic recovery, though, whoever triumphs on governmentโ€™s stage wonโ€™t disguise the lack of ample beds for either offspring of sexโ€”life or death.

Without a growing economy, a different Emily Dickinson poem should bedevil Nevada liberals and conservatives alike:

โ€œIn this short life / That only lasts an hour /

How much โ€“ how little โ€“ is / Within our power.โ€

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