daily r.cbrcxcn friday, epril 0, 1977 PC 4 ... 1 1 iOdsiiis vote possible Y07C9 In light of the recent Omaha ar.d Lincoln primary elections, it seems that voter apathy exists among other groups besides UNL students. A whopping 20 per cent of Lincoln voters cast their ballots in Tuesday's primary elections. A slightly better 30 per cent of Omaha voters went to the polls. : While some may suggest that low voter turnout indicates voter satis factions with the current regimes, the cause should go deeper than that. But maybe there are no causes. The voter gambles away his vote when he lets other voters cast their ballots for him. Unpredictable happenings always take place in elec tions in which voter turnout is low. For instance, generally write-in candidates seem to have weights on their ankles throughout the campaign race. But Omaha Al Veys overcame this myth Tuesday when he left Michael Albert tabulating his campaign expenses. Lincoln Election Commissioner Bill Davidson expressed disappoint ment at the city's polls. He said that even lowering the voting age to 18 ha has not increased voter turnout. About 1 6,000 ballots were case in Lincoln's primary election. The 22,000 students at UNL could have had an enormous effect on the out come of the elections. Perhaps stu dents are ignoring the power they could wield in city government. letters Praising Foreigner In response to Doug Weil's review on the new band Foreigner, I must add some remarks in support of the band. In these Jimes of heavy metal (Aero smith, KISS, and the Led Zeppelin) 1 find myself praising the sound of Foreigner. Everyone should know all music today is produced and affected by past styles. On Foreigner you 11 hear the sound of the Who, Wings, Bad Company Tull, Queen and Pink Floyd. Lou Gramm's vocals are effective. His style is obviously moded from the Freddie Mercury, Peter Frampton, and Roger Daltrey style. I seem to think Brad Delp from Boston is very comparative too. "Cold as Ice" is by far the greatest song on the LP. The song's backing vocals are like Queen's classical sound. "Headknocker" has the heavy sound of Bad Company. Just as good is the McCartney sound of "Starrider." Both are supreme. The instrumentation on the LP is excit? ing. The classic Tommy sound of holy one Pete Townsend (Who) are evident on "The Damage is Done." The ending will startle you. . This album is almost thematic. It's like a young Pink Floyd or Ambrosia. Please don't mess with the commercial success of this disc. Look at the Osmonds, they sell millions of records but would you really achieve Utopia with "Crazy Horses" really. No!! Really??? - Seriously, if you want a young, pure and noncommercial sound, get Foreigner. If your Boston or Foghat or pretty Peter F. is getting worn and warped, march on down and squeeze together $4.49 and get it. Danny Darst raw &0 fcSVEALEO mm COOQQ of 4 GkziarA: JZT n -iflrf s,.mm,x m.mmm Arthur E leppo Carter's recipes true grits The American publishing industry h in grave difficulties. Authors are running out of recipes. . The mainstay of the industry lias long been cookbooks. It is conservatively estimated that more than 13,678 different cookbooks are published in this country each year. Unfortunately, no matter how you mix or mash it, the number of Tccipcs is finite. And thus the number of reasons innocent bystander for bringing out a new cookbook is limited. This rapidly-dwindling resource has test ed the ingenuity of our authors. One who has passed the test with flying colors is Ceil Dyer, a veteran with no fewer than " five previous cookbooks to her credit. Ms. Dyer is about to hit the book stalls with that long-awaited bombshell, The Carter Family Favorites Cookbook, J fcjsiay tikes vegetables In a press release heralding the event, her publishers announced that she had talked to several members of the Carter family about their favorite dishes. "President Carter likes fresh vegetables, according to his wife, Rosalynn," Ms. Dyer found. "His first choke is eggplant pre pared just about any way." Ms. Dyer has opened a fertile field for all cookbook writers. Eggplant alone can be prepared in many, many ways, such as f fried, fc::ked, steamed or boiled. That four recipes right there! Rushing to capitalize on this new bonanza, I am already hard at work on my entry into the field, The Hoppe Family Favorites Gxtkbook. Aunt Addle 's recipe Luckily, I do love to putter about the kitchen at all hours, whipping up this and that to tempt the palate. While 1 have many, many favorite recipes, 1 suppose my first choice is one that's been handed down in my family for generations. When I was just a tad, my Aunt Addie (who was admittedly none too reliable) told me this particular recipe was first brought over to this country by my great-grcat-great-grandfather, Jeremiah Cobcy, who emigrated from the Isle of Man in 1763 after losing his entire herd of Manx sheep in an outbreak of bovine coreopsis. It is called Manx Ghlum. And here it is: MANX GHLUM 2 slices Wonder bread, white 2 T Mary Kllen grape jelly or similar 2 T Skippy peanut butter (crunchy, if desired) Lay bread slirces flat on counter. Place jelly on one. Spread carefully. Do not go over edges. Place peanut butter on other. Coat entire surface evenly. Avoid ""white spots."" Now, with a quick confident motion, flip slice with peanut butter on top of slice bearing jelly. Under rut circumstances attempt to flip jellied slice on top of peanut buttered slice. Serve at room temperature. (Copyright Chronicle Pt!ising Co. 1S77) ,01010 - -i Too much food going to ..-waist Look-alikes, stfund-alikcs. Can a word be its own homonym? asks Donald M. Maclay of Springfield, Pa., referring to words like wear, let, and cleave, recently cited here as words that arc spelled alike but have different meanings. Webster's unabridged dictionary, third edition, says a homonym is "one of two or more words spelled and pronounced alike but differ ent in meaning."" I would amend that bernstein on words definition by saying that words must be pronounced alike though need not be spelled alike. For instance, waste and waist arc homonyms; you could say that too much food goes to waste or waist. " Puzzler. The number of a noun denoting something shared by a number of persons often presents a problem, which was taken up here once before. The problem is easily solved in a sentence such as 4Thc three stu dents have interests in architecture." Gear ly and idiomatically the noun should be interest. But John Schneider Jr. of College ville, Minn., asks how about this sentence: "We must make this a part of our lives . (life?). I would favor lives since those are individual things, thought of separately in this instance. The thought is not the same as in, "The fliers plunged to their death," where one docs not think of individual deaths but rather of an abstract, common condition. Perhaps if there were three fliers in three planes, deaths would be accept- . able; the deaths would appear more as individual things rather than as a common abstraction. It is difficult to lay down a general rule for these situations. ,'-..' ?--'' Word oddities. The difference between excuse me and pardon me is sought by Donald W. Loomis of Philadelphia in a letter sent to this rectangle. I am afraid he will not get a satisfactory answer because I shall have to indulge in guesswork. My guess is that excuse me is and should be the more commonly used because it sounds less formal. The word pardon, because of its governmental and ecclesiastical back ground, seems to have a faint, though very faint air of ccremoaiousness about it. If I am wrong, pardon me and excuse me. 4 Hemic and heroics are quite unrelated in meaning. In Editor & Publisher Roy H. Copperud quoted from a news story about two earthquakes as follows: "Luck and heroics saved the 13 00 people of Gazli last spring "He points out that heroics does not mean acts cf heroism. Rather it means shameky extravagant, pretentious or melodramatic conduct or talk. Astonish ing what that little V can do. (c) lf77 Th-tia CI. CJW!tn The Daily Nebraskan welcomes fetters to the editor and guea opinions. Choices cf material pub lished will be based on timeliness and originality. Letters must be accompanied by writer's name, but may be published under a pen name if requested. Guest opinions should be typed -triple -spaced on nonerasable paper. They should be accompanied by the author's nsnie, diss standing and major or occupation. AU material submitted to these pses Is K&jsct to editing and eoRfenxsticm, 2nd cannot be returned to the writer. ;:o S wovfT v:;2 r::o still fir jTi1 ."a ..--' LL Y' V !"a S 1 f ' tuT f