4. A seven-member governance committee of a corporation is charged with allocating funds for end-of-year bonuses, and a special subcommittee is appointed to research and then pro- pose to the full governance committee a total value of all bonuses. The corporation's rules state that the subcommittee may bring a proposal before the full committee under a prede- termined amendment procedure (either an open or closed rule). All subcommittee and committee decisions are made using majority rule; the minimum the committee may allocate is $0 and the maximum is $12,000. The preferences of each members of the seven-member governance committee over al ternative total amounts to allocate for the bonuses are single- peaked and symmetric about each member's ideal points, and are arrayed as follows: a Sidney Verba et al., 1967, "Public Opinion and the war in Vietnam," Ameri- can Political Science Review 61, no. 2 (1967): 317-33. 4. A seven-member governance committee of a corporation is charged with allocating funds for end-of-year bonuses, and a special subcommittee is appointed to research and then pro- pose to the full governance committee a total value of all bonuses. The corporation's rules state that the subcommittee may bring a proposal before the full committee under a prede- termined amendment procedure (either an open or closed rule). All subcommittee and committee decisions are made using majority rule; the minimum the committee may allocate is $0 and the maximum is $12,000. The preferences of each members of the seven-member governance committee over al ternative total amounts to allocate for the bonuses are single- peaked and symmetric about each member's ideal points, and are arrayed as follows: a Sidney Verba et al., 1967, "Public Opinion and the war in Vietnam," Ameri- can Political Science Review 61, no. 2 (1967): 317-33