page 4 daily nebraskan Wednesday, may 3, 1978 C Union Board leaves students out with no-tell policy Personal conflict has been pegged as the reason for the Union Board closing its April 26 meeting. Mark Knobel, Union Board presi dent, said a "personal conflict" be tween Nebraska Union Director Al Bennett and "several" members of the Union Board led to the closed session. There seems to be a differ ence of opinion between the mem bers and Bennett, but Knobel de clined to say what that difference was and who it involved. It seems that when students are appointed by ASUN to serve on the board they should be serving in the best interest of the students, letting them know what is going on with the Union and showing their effective ness. The closed session provided a "confrontation" between Bennett and the parties involved, Knobel said. When a body that is representing the students and how they spend their monies is not willing to air its dirty linen in public, we begin to ask if these representatives are truly act ing on behalf of the students. These "personal differences" be tween the union director and the members could just be some students acting in the best interest of the 22,000 other students at UNL. We will never know, though, will we? The Union Board executive com mittee is tight-lipped, and mum is the word with Al Bennett. And where are the rest of the stu dents left? They are left not knowing who is representing their best interests. The effectiveness of student opinion getting across to the Union Board members, and eventually to the planning and programming of the two Unions by Bennett and the ad ministration, is being hampered by the problems on the board. Some students are coming out on the short end of being represented, and it is not the nine student mem bers of the Union Board. Dissected flies don't necessarily die,.. neither do students When Ponce de Leon was finished dragging his sagging libido through the Florida swamps, he must have been frustra ted. What began as an extended trip to eternal youth ended as a hot, sticky re affirmation of his own mortality. Strangely enough, the end of the semes ter always has given me ample reason to identify with the old fart. (You guessed it, this is the "I-won't-write-a-self-indulgent-end-of-the-year-column column." This year, however, as I look down the loaded barrel of finals week, I have a new attitude. It is a non-verbal attitude. One that is usually expressed by placing one's thumb on one's nose and wiggling one's fingers to and fro. michael zangan It's gratifying to know I've learned something in the past few years. Actually I've learned quite a bit in the last few years. That is why I keep coming back. That, and I have a high threshhold for pain. AH of which has nothing to do with to day's subject, which is "Our Friend the Fly." But we'll get to that later. Speaking of pain, (and we were a line or two ago), death has proved to be an ex cellent, and possibly the only long term cure for pain. Death, however may be a little extreme in many cases. Medical sci ence has made death confusing in the last few years, and it may be hardly worth the effort. Technological advancements have not cleared up the matter any; in fact, it is harder now to determine when a patient has died. In the old days it was easy. If it didn't move, you buried it. Now we have moral conflicts along with medical ones. Maybe the individual isn't moving for a reason. Having warmed up to the subjects of school, pain and death, we now can approach the subject of flies. From Newscript news service comes the following item about an entomologist at the University of California at Riverside. (For those who are under the impression from reading this column that all things good and pure come from California, I sincerely apologize. As Hoyt Axton has said, ". . they tell me I was born there, but I realiy don't remember. . . .") Thomas Miller, the entomologist, is saying that we are being forced to "define death in new terms for insects." According to Miller, insects don't have vital functions the way humans do. This being so, he says you can remove a fly's heart, (assuming that you can find it) and nothing will happen. The fly will go on like nothing happened. Miller also says you can remove the fly's head (did the French remove Marie Antoinette's head?) and the only reason the operation would prove fatal is because it would inhibit the fly's ability to eat. The Daily Nebraskan, being basically morally sound, must bring up the possibili ty that although some of the fly's vital functions continue to work, the insect may be as good as dead from a human standpoint. At any rate, scientists say that a fly is considered dead when it fails to move for 24 to 48 hours. There is a great deal of comfort in the knowledge that we are still progressing at this Jate date. Remember, you read it here first. Having discharged my responsibilities for writing a weekly column this semester, I am reasonably prepared to face anqther finals week. My thumb and fingers are oiled and ready, I'm on the verge of mental collapse, and judging from my own incom prehensible ramblings and those of my friends, we seem to have more in common with the common housefly than Ponce de Leon this time around. Let's cut student fees. Almost every UNL student worth his social security number would say that this would be in his or her economic interest. Why, then, are so many of these same students passively (or worse, yet compul sively) willing to allow their hard-earned dollars to be spent by organizations of which they have never heard, for the services of which they have little use. or which support political views unfavor able to some fee payers'.' The answer apparently lies in the holy mystique which surrounds that nohle term, "public interest." Very few interests, except survival, can he attributed to every member of a group so diverse as at I'N'L. The public interest is in fact merely a loose association of the individual interests of those involved. I suggest that the crucial question regarding the funding of NUPIRG is, "What's in it for me?" If an individual can answer this, his monetary contribution is proper. If one cannot, then the so-called "public interest" organizations have not business spending his money for him. I am not saying that we must beat each other to the ground in pursuit of our own interests. I am saying just the opposite: if each individual at UNL would give more serious consideration to the question, "what's in it for me." perhaps our earnings wouldn't have to be confiscated in order to pursue the question, "what's in it for us?" That consideration would be automatically taken care of. Then we who earn what we spend could, believe it or not, spend what we earn. Becky de la Motte Freshman, journalism Nuclear fusion In early April I listened to a presenta tion on fusion energy by Professor Dennis Alexander, nuclear engineer, of the UNL mechanical engineering department. He speculated that one of the main rea sons the fusion program was going ahead is because the military would like to have re search done on fusion bombs, and in parti cular, the neutron bomb. Alexander also stated that this is one of the reasons he is involved in nuclear research. A fusion reactor works on the same principles as the sun. There is a rumor that fusion reactors do not have the dangerous radiation, but this is not true. The reason the sun's radiation does not hurt us that much is because we arc protected by a dis tance of 9.1,000,000 miles and our atmos phere. I see the following problems with fusion energy. 1. They are not sure if a fusion reactor will really work or not. 2. Because fusion plants require a large sie. electricity would have to be transmitted longer distances which means longer, larger power lines and therefore greater inefficiencies. 3. There will be a problem with obtain ing lithium which is needed to make tritium which is used as fusion fuel. 4. This problem requires a lot of capital invest ment. 5. The radioactive wastes are in part gaseous and hard to contain. The military developed this technique of taking minerals for making both energy and bombs at the same time from the fis sion program. A different tactic must be emphasized to prevent the escalation of war through arms competition with Russia I like to think of this tactic in the following words let's organize, make friends with the Rus sian people and get rid of the arms " tactic This means changing a pattern of war which has persisted in humanity as long as we have known in about one lifetime If to the editor our species is to coninue we must change to meet the crisis. At the present, our military spends no money on this tactic and in fact it spends money to prevent it by labeling people who are against it as subversives and then spends money to investigate them. The United States should start empha sizing real friendship and cooperation be tween Americans and Russians. What we really need in this world is cooperation, thought, and love. Larry Hassebrook Senior, electrical engineer Classics 180 The article (on) "grade inflation" ( April 20) was based on an inaccurate report with regard to Classics 100 as having the highest grade average of 3.712. The report should have indicated that Classics 1 80 has this 3.712. Thomas E. Rinkevich acting chairman. Classics Self-righteous Christians I never cease to be appalled by the selt nghteousness of those who profess Christ ian love of neighbor and simultaneously spew forth hatred for anyone who docs not express love within the awesome sanc tity of marriage and family. A letter was printed April 26 which condemned homo sexuality because it was not procreative. If the "enjoyment of sex" is only to be "justified because it makes babies, then is sex unjustifiable during a woman's non fertile cycle9 Are all birth control measures also unjustifiable ? The fear and ignorance which relegates homosexual acts to society-dooming Continued on page 5