Monday, February 6, 1034 Pcr;3 6 Dailv Nsbrsskan Freshmen find home isn't always home I thought I'd write down a few thoughts, some my own and some borrowed, foryou freshmen who had a rough first semester. One of the worst things about college is those first few trips home. For the first time in your life you have almost complete control of your life and lifestyle. Unfortunately, many abuse this newfound free dom and forget, or never learned, that with freedom r V Bill Allen comes responsibility. Mainly, responsibility for your self. You can blame your parents for not preparing you for this responsibility, but eventually you have to forget blaming and accept things. I think that's why the freshman dropout rate is so high. It's not so much that they can't handle their classes as it is they can't handle the responsibility for themselves. Almost all of us know people who come up here PERFORMING ARTS MINI SERIES 8384 1. Dsnlcl Hc'fctz, vic!!n With the support of the Nebraska Arts Council Friday. February 10 Two Hit Crocd.vcy Chows 2. "Master HsroEd"-. i'. and Ui3l)oys. Thursday, February 23 This emotionally charged drama follows a young white student's transformation from innocent childhood to poisonous bigotry in 1 950 South Africa. 3. Agnes of God Saturday. February 25 A spellbinding drama about a young nun who gives ' birth in a convent and whose child is mysteriously murdered. Starring Peggy Cass and Susan Strasberg 4. Cssux Arts Trio, piano, violin & cello Jelinek Memorial Concert With the support of the Nebraska Arts Council Saturday, March 3 5. Alvin Alley American Danco Theatre A Mid-America Arts Alliance Program Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, March 5, 6, 7 Jelinek Memorial Concerts are supported by a fund made available to the University of Nebraska Foundation by Viola Jelinek, as a memorial to her father Stephen Jelinek. Mid-America Arts Alliance Programs are made possible by support from the Nebraska Arts Council and the National Endowment tor the Arts through their participation in Mid-America Arts Alliance, a regional arts organization. All programs in this year's series are supported in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. oHt (tjit;in;jHv 'til Only orders of 3 or more events available at this time. Individual tickets available approximately 2-3 weeks before performances. For information or to order tickets, contact the Kimball Box Office at (402)472-3375, 11am-5pm, Monday through Friday. Individual Ticket Sales Daniel Hcifeiz, violin With the support of the Nebraska Arts Council Friday, February 10 st 8 p.m. Danial Heifstz will be giving Mini Concerts 1 ThtlTSrfav. Fehniftrv 9 at fi-3fl nm mrin k irva nf Unmsr un 1 " - ww I w.W ft! MMI I IUI I y VI IW frH I Mil Thursdy, February 9 at 8pm main Icungf of San.cz Hl Thursday, February 9 at 8:30 am 119 Wss5rook Music E!.g. CI BALL HALL 11 R Box Offict (11-5, Won-Fri) 113 Music tld2- 11th It R 472-3375 wwfi wsy ' -) 1 cf Ksbraska JJ Lincoln and partied their first semester away and treated classes like something that would go away if they were ignored. Suddenly staying out until 3 or 4 a.m. isn t unus ual, even on a school night. You find yourself with a different person every weekend and only realize what that did to you when you find someone you really care about. And the phone calls from your parents say how proud they are of you and you feel guilty, but only until you hang up the phone. Or late at night. Then you go back home for the first time. I think many people who get back home for the first time miss the fun of the university. You're back in Ogallala, or Papillion, or wherever and you see that everything is pretty much the same as it was when you left a month ago. You wonder how you ever enjoyed running around on a Saturday night in such a dull place. Your parents, of course, still go to bed at the same time they always did, and by then you might be leaving. All they want to talk about is school, which is what you know the least about and you can't tell them about a lot of other things. You can't tell them about coming home at 5 a.m., knowing you have a midterm at 10:30 and you haven't even begun to study. You can't tell them why you don't want to call the guy or girl you were dating before you left for college. And it's hard to just sit around the house. I remember the worst part for me was trying to look up old high school friends. These were people you grew up with. You knew what their dreams were. You got drunk for the first time with these people. All through high school you thought life would just go on like that forever. It was hard to accept the fact that someday everything would be different. It hurts when you realize that the friends that didnt come to college have so little In common with you now. The next few trips home are more insightful. By now you've given up trying to recapture the good times of the past and you've learned to enjoy the time you have with your family. You argue with your parents less, and you can sleep in the room your little brother has almost entirely taken over without feeling resentful because it's not the way you had it. You open up the hometown paper and feel a sense of longing when you see people you know getting married. You start thinking that maybe you missed something while you were away getting educated. I said at the beginning that these were thoughts for those freshmen that had a hard time their first semester, but I'm sure a lot of upperclassmen can remember some of these feelings. Dy the time you are here two or three years you are a little more accepting of the way things are. You start to form ideas on how your life will be. That's scary, too, when you start to feel caged in as little by little your choices are narrowed down. So you won't be able to be a Nobel Prize-winning physicist, but at least you know that you can be a physicist. Just a little more hard work. And maybe you cant buy that Ferrari for a few more years. At least you can make it. Security takes the place of a lot of dreams. And, for you freshmen, by then, the trips back home are fewer, but you look forward to them more. And you don't feel bad about the way things used to be back home. You realize that not a lot of things do change. People just grow into the years. Hopefully you've begun to realize that you should have fun at college, and you should have fun in life. But with that fun should come responsibility for yourself. Ultimately, you're the one you have to answer. It's much easier if you have the questions narrowed down. fe 1 . .."1 Editorial laclcs logic r The editorial regarding the controversy surround ing whether to change the women's lounge in the Nebraska Union to a 24-hcur student computer center (Daily Nebraskan, Jan. 3) must have taken a full two minutes to think through (though the word think' is not really appropriate here). The issue con cerning the value of the Women's Resource Center is not in any way connected with the issue of the women's lounge, yet the editorial ties the two together. It is interesting that this form of logical fallacy is often found in the writings of sexists, racist and bigots. Regarding the issue of the women's lounge, the editorial makes the error of assuming that since only 170 women signed the petition, only 170 women use the lounge. Such an assumption might be expected of an elementary school student, but surely not a college student. Finally, the editorial makes the unwarranted assumption that the desires and needs of one seg ment of the student population are more important than those of other segments. Obviously (according to the editorial), the desire and need to keep the women's lounge is only the desire and need of mere women. I hope some thought will go into future editorials. JeffSchank graduate student philosophy Don aim at NSSA As a UNL student, I feel compelled to respond to the position taken by the Aim party regarding the Nebraska State Student Association. I feel clarifi cation concerning the NSSA's role in the promotion of higher education is needed. I would also like to point out that I am not a member of one of the other parties seeking an ASUN victory, only a concerned student. NSSA represents individual students, not cam puses. Each student pays 50 cents per semester on all of the member campuses. It is the individual student who is important to the association. If the members of Aim are so concerned about specific campus issues, then they should openly address those issues, not the organization that has been working to promote the student's perspective and working to gain tangible benefits. I do not feel the NSSA should be used as an issue in the ASUN election. The NSSA has made significant gains in its short (3-year) history. It h time to actively support the NSSA and work within its proven mechanism. Pull up your sleeves and get involved! Contact your NSSA representative on this campus (116 Nebraska Union), contact your state senator, and voice your opinion on those issues that concern you as a student. Patrick D. Edwards junior architecture Cartoon misrepresents I am writing in reference to your editorial cartoon of Jan. 23. In an attempt to characterize the debate regarding the governance of the university, it is my opinion that the cartoon did a great disservice to all entities represented. It is with particular dismay that I view the char acterization of Sen. Kilgarin. While Sen. Kilgarin is one of three sponsors of LR225, which I take the cartoon is meant to address, the manner in which the senator is represented is both unfair and mis leading. Throughout her legislative career Sen. Kil garin has been an unyielding supporter of higher education and the student perspective. The sena tor's voting record in committee and on the floor provides clear and specific proof of her commit ment to quality higher education in Nebraska. Deb Chapelle executive director Nebraska State Student Association 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 the right to edit all material submitted. Readers also are welcome to submit material as guest opinions. Whether material should run as a letter or guest opinion, or not run, is left to the editor's discretion. Letters and guest opinions sent to the newspaper become property of the Daily Nebraskan and can not be returned. Anonymous submissions will not be considered for publication. Letters should include the authors name, year in school, major and group affiliation, if any. Requests to withhold names from publica tion will not be granted. Submit material to the Daily Nebraskan, 34 Nebraska Union, 1400 R St, Lincoln, Neb. 68588-0448. Jl ...OMBUDSMAN Jjy LyTivin jlaH 4723633