t daily nebrc:kcn morxi-y, cctcbcr 10, 1073 I ; t? ; -v v;.; ; ' - opinion " letters B:j2 I'm very thankful to Pete Wcgman for his article on the' Oct. 8 Deity Nebrcskm sports page. He carefully informed us about the "less than mediocre programs' in such sports as cross country, baseball, swimming and tennis, Pete proposes . to drop these sports in two years if drastic imprcveir.cn ts are not shown. - I ask Pete to consider the consequences if everyone had the same view of dropping all sports which aren't in the top four of the Big 8. After two years the bottom four wosild drop their mediocre football programs and the Big 8 would become the Dig 4. And an additional two years would probably see Nebraska and Oklahoma battling it out for the Dig 2 conference championship. I can just imagine on Thanksgiving Day. "This game is for the conference championship between Nebraska and Oklahoma. In the previous six conference games they've played this season it's Nebraska winning three and Oklahoma winning three." Now reallj Fete, I ask you to consider the possibilities before you c ienxn the UNL sports which haven't had the breaks oar football team has had and to remember that "It's not whether you win or lose, it's how you play the game." John Harris Fcns dQservQ better Being a Husker football fan for years and realizing that this subject has been brought up several times in the past without results, I sti3 must voice my opinion in regards to Nil's yell squad. They seem like such a letdown-something Nebraska fans shouldn't have to put up with each home game Saturday. It seems like they do the same thing every year with less enthusiasm each season. It's too bad the Athletic Dept. can't open their eyes and realize what a mess the squad has become. Trri sure part of the problem is the unfair and biased tryouts they conduct, plus the fact that their so-called coach is so defensive when confronted with suggestions for change or improvement of the squad. Fve seen other college, yell squads and they outdo Nebraska's squad every time! It's really sad to think of 76,000 fans having to put up with this boring and monotonous display of non-talent each Saturday. I think it's high time they stop forcing a "Greek function" on the loyal Nebraska fans. . .they certainly deserve better than what Nlfs yell squad has to offer! A fan who is not excited, .Sara Parfzing solution One of the major problems on campus appears to be the lack of parking space. Actually, this problem is not as difficult to solve as it appears. For the on-campus student, this is my solution: 1 . Number all of the spaces in the parking lots. 2. Assign each student who requests a permit a numbered space. 3. Students park in their own places, which saves them ' a lot of looking, a lot of tickets, etc. (Admittedly, there is a difference in the quality of various location of the lots. This could be solved by higher rates for more desirable locations, or a lottery of some sort.) For the off-campus students: 1. Number all of the spaces in the parking lot. 2. Assign the spaces by number. Realizing that most off-campus students don't need to use their space all day, the spaces would be assigned by hour and by day, depend ing upon the student's schedule. There still would be a shortage of parking places, I fear, so: 1. Pave the grain fields, in front of the Coliseum. 2. Steal the athletic field behind the Women's Physical Education Eldg. for parking, v 3. Bu2d a parking garage next to the union. 4. ASUN could establish and encourage a car pool program. Cars in a pool could be given lower rates for permits. 5. The university could buy some of the houses along 19th St, and could buSd more tots. The solutions really are not so hard to work out if someone in charge would worry more about getting the students parked correctly than setting a record for giving pcxkisg tickets. If cry cf my ideas need further darifkatica, I will te Izy to try to expLia them more clearly. Sincerely, - Arnold Gdnvalds Nebraskans have gone overboard assuring politics, money don't mix Nobody wants to elect politicians who are in it for the money. But in Nebraskans efforts to assure that public service and monetary reward don't mix, we are charging some politicians for the honor of representing us. State senators are paid $4800 annually. Ex-' penses for one round-trip to Lincoln plus $200 for postage also is paid annually.- Besides giving up or delaying career develop ment and financial security to serve in the Leg islature, many senators are forced to dip into per sonal cash funds to finance their terms in office. Any out-of-town senator with family andor business demands pays for those extra trips home during the session. That $4800 is expected to cover food and housing costs for the out-of-town Legislator while he is in Lincoln. Nebraska is one of 1 0 states which require a constitutional amendment to charge legislators' salaries. A proposed amendment to Nebraska's constitution would raise the monthly legislative salary to $675, or $8,1 00 annually. The proposed amendment, number eight, will be on the ballot Nov. 2 for your approval or disapproval. The job of Nebraska's state senators is becom ing a full-time one. Since 1971, the state has had annual legislative sessions. The schedule of committee meetings, the need for research, bill preparation and communication with constiuents show that demands on the leg islators' time are not limited to the 60-or 9 (Way sessions. Frequently at the university, when the subject of personnel is raised, we are reminded that it is important to remain financially competitive in the labor market. This is true for our lawmak ers, too. The salary should not prevent good legislators from staying in office or discourage qualified persons from nmning for office. Of course, service in any Legislature should not be a profit-making venture but it should be remembered that these people make policies and programs affecting our social and economic sys tem. The salary proposed in amendment eight is not high enough to reflect the responsibility of that politician, but it is a step toward assuring that we attract responsible candidates to the business of making our state laws. Except for those few who will be skeptical of the worth of politicians, no matter what they are paid, most of us should see the value of voting for amendment eight. Just as the state is not made up of the rich andor retired, the Legislature shouldn't be, either. The only flaw in amendnnt eight may be that the salary hike is too low. The 63 per cent salary increase would boost the pay to $3,100 about $2,000 below the national state legisla tor's salary of $10,027 flirt r Jf 1ST SPEMTi Economic pressures eroding family By Nicholas Von Hoffman The Peanut may be the first presidential candidate to make The Family a recurring campaign theme. Until now touring politicians have paid The Family occasional and ritual deference and then moved on to talk about peace-through-strength. . What St. Jimmy the Tempted has in mind when he brings up the topic isn't very clear. Is family a code word for more money for the police or for corporal punishment in the schools or what? Perhaps these allusions to the need to strengthen family life reflect nothing more than Carter's pollsters picking up the concern as they trip about asking the randomly select to speak what is on the mind of the great collectivity. v If that's the case it's too bad, because there is a long deep and genuine concern about our family life and its future.' Ncdesr fzssSy First, there is the question of the so-called nuclear family (mother, father, 1.8 kiddHpoos, 038 puppy dog and 02 putty tat). Can one member of that family earn enough money so that the whole group can have a half-way decent standard of living? What will be left of even the dehydrated nuclear family if both adults must work? The answer to that question by Carter has been the day-care center. It's hard to imagine a more efficient way to destroy what's left of our little families than to arrange the economic system so that it is impossible for even one of the parents to take care of the infant children. It hasn't been that many years that one of the saddest and most painful parts of the Communist system in Russia and China was forcing parents to hand over their babies to the impersonal, institutional care of the state. Now we -have a Democrat campaigning on the promise to facilitate that very thing and Republican who says nothing about the issue because for Ford to confront it he would have to talk about what the current wage-prkt ; tiuaticn is doing to family life. Is it sex, dregs? Is it sex, alcohol, drugs and mental Chess that is putting such pressure on family life or is it that the system cannot pay enough single wage earners enough money? Neither candidate has ever told us what, if anything, he thinks about this question, but from the best one can tell both of them subscribe to the notion that marriage counselors, half-way houses, juvenile-rehab programs and psychiatry is the way to go. Televisica watchers the last few weeks may have noticed the arrival of the woman alcoholic. All of a sudden we are being told that it is shocking and unforgive able that almost all alcoholic programs - both research and therapy - are aimed at men. Estimates of how many women alcoholics there may be are flung about the air waves." Social problems are medicaiized. 'As tradition, structure,. internal disciplines and the social roles of the past are rubbed out by the needs of a corporate economy just as surely as urban renewal and the freeway flattened some of our best old neighborhoods, medicine is ordered into the breach to control, contain and suppress the resultant behavior. sidevise Neither Ford nor Carter has indicated that objection able behavior can arise out of social or economic causes. The one exception that is sometimes made is low-income blacks or other minorities whose criminal members are excused on environmental grounds. The destructive, degenerate or dangerous behavior cf everybody else is either the product cf moral weakness or medical disability. Our two major presidential candidates are committed to the standard programmatic approaches, that is to say the medical explanation of socio-economic phenomena. There will be no public discussion of the possibility that it may be enough to drive someone to drink - revealing phrase - if the someone is a member of a family in which the man holds down two jobs and the woman holds one. . D0cdt to fKoctica .. The orthodoxies of the Ford-Carter approach assure iue continued, untroubled and undiminished existence of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW As the economic arrangements of our society make it more and more difficulty for the family to carry out its historic functions, the government in its delicate and sensitive way must move in and take ever the job. So long live HEW. It's Red China with air-conditioahg, color TV and frozen food for supper. Have a drink on it. Have a lotta drinks on it Carnsht. 1373 by Kfeg Fcsturts Sywfkst