pagQ4 daily nebraskan monday, march 5, 1979 v-' Freedom of speech abuse causes anger, amrioyaiice Contrary to popular belief, free dom of speech is not a freedom limited to Iranian and Arab students on this campus. The spectacle created at Yitzhak Rabin's speech last Thursday proved for the second time this year the lack of understanding or respect some foreign students have for this country's freedom of expression-the same freedom they are extended and use so freely. The former Israeli prime minister managed to get through his speech mainly because he could shout loud er than the taunts of 'Liar and 'Jerk. He finished, but not without an angry interruption by NU Regent Ed Schwartzkopf who said he "came here to listen to this man speak.' Schwartzkopf was not alone in his desire to hear Rabin. That's what the overwhelming majority of the audi ence were there for and the actions of the noisy protestors violated every member of the audience's right to hear Rabin as much as they violated the speaker's rights. The angry, vociferous students interrupted even their own com rades' questions at the end of the speech. This country's zealous guarding of the freedom of speech is based on the idea that truth is easier found in a forum of many different voices than in a single commanding voice. It is obvious, despite efforts of the Organization of Arab Students' lead ers to avoid disruption of the speech, that many students last week wanted only one opinion "heard-their own. The dissenting students had every opportunity to express their opin ions during their demonstration in front of the Union immediately be fore the speech, and through the signs they carried into the Union Centennial Room., Campus feelings run. from annoy ance to hostility toward the various Iranian and Arab protests. But with the exception of a little blaring music from a fraternity, these protesting students' right of dissent has been respected With the cost of bringing political speakers to this campus so dear, it is a shame that once we get them here we can't listen to them. . . Anne Carothers Rabin visit helps to put thaw on chilling speakers program Spring came Thursday, and, as Tenny son romantically wrote, in the spring a young man's fancy turns to thoughts of the prospects for peace in the Middle East. Actually, it was appropriate that the smog-encrusted snow was melting just in time for the arrival of Yitzhak Rabin, spokesman of a land where snow is as rare as peace. Rabin, former Israeli Prime Minister and ambassador to the United States, is an undisputed, although admittedly subjec tive, expert on the Arab-Israeli conflict. But while the crowd that heard Rabin's speech learned much about the Middle East, they may have learned even more about the Middle West-Harvard of the Plains division. In the first place, they should have been surprised that Rabin was even here. After failing the test for being a 'non-political speaker' (A rare creature somewhat akin to the jackalope, unicorn and the Loch Ness monster), Rabin could not be paid by stu dent fees. Reshaped history Thanks to the NU Board of Regents, - who 'decided a year ago that political speakers were hazardous to our health, we nearly missed hearing a man whose actions have reshaped history. Fortunately, the Chancellor's Office, the Faculty Convocation Committee and the University of Nebraska Foundation dis agreed with that opinion and admirably donated the money needed to pay for Rabin. But there were other, less praiseworthy things that Rabin's coming said about UNL. Before his speech a group of students protested Rabin's appearance. It was then that an unnamed fraternity decided to unfairly stifle the protesters by setting their 140-watt stereo speakers in their windows and turning the- sound up full blast-right in the middle of Rabin's press conference: Rude hecklers But those protesters, whose rights had not been respected, apparently believed that one wrong justified another, and so heckled Rabin throughout his speech. Their shouts were' not as disruptive Jrit those during Westmoreland's speech last fall, but they were equally rude and unwarranted. Perhaps more importantly, the heckler's efforts again backfired. Although the Arabs' case is perhaps as strong as Rabin's, the hecklers' actions generated "only antipa- -thy end little if any sympathy for their cause, - 'And then there was Lincoln Regent Ed Schwartzkopf. Although he and Omaha's Kermit Hansen were the only Regents last : year with the courage to stand up for free ; rpccch by supporting UNL's speakers pro Erarn.Schwartzkoprs' action Thursday . rJit, while nobly motivated,' was dis heartening. Concern Rabin, who has verbally sparred with the world's leading politicians, handled the hecklers quite well and probably considered their remarks easier to deal with than Billy Carter's. But as the shouting died down, Schwartzkopf apparently decided that Rabin was incapable of defending himself and so proceeded to give the hecklers a tongue-lashing which, though well-deserved, also proved that In loco parentis applies to UNL students and Israeli prime ministers alike. Yet Rabin's appearance did say some thing good about UNL students: they were there. Despite the spring weather, Mork and Mindy and the pressure of mid-term exams, the Centennial Ballroom was full of students who came to hear and to question Rabin. And if so many students are concerned about something other than football, are concerned about something other than Nebraska, are concerned about their own lack of knowledge, then despite the three inches of snow drifting outside my win down, perhaps spring is still coming. MEHACHE1,OL&UPDr, OL PAU..." In the buff exposure degrades men too By Arthur Hoppe Playboy, the magazine for consenting voyeurs, managed to get itself a page of publicity in Time by embarking on a pho tographic essay project entitled "Girls of the Ivy League." As a first step, Playboy attempted to take out an ad in the Harvard Crimson of fering $400 to any coed who would pose in what is referred to in the Ivy League as "the all-together." 0GQD(2X3M ,4 Needless to say, the Harvard Crimson re jected the ad amidst cries that such photo graphs "degrade womanhood." This is ab solutely true and I feel strongly that Play boy, having garnered its publicity, should abandon its otherwise ill-conceived project forthwith-for the good of all concerned First of all, due to more stringent college entrance requirements, the average Ivy League woman has an IQ 23.4 percent above the national norm. Keeping that in mind, let us recall the study Dr. Homer T. Pettibone, the noted; physical anthropolo gist, made in 1968 of. 12,316 American women in which he proved conclusively that the size of a female's bosom was-in direct inverse proportion to the size of her brain. Knowing the artistic taste of its male readership, these figures should cause Play boy to give up on "Girls of the Ivy League In favor of, say, 'Girls of the South Dakota College of Auto Upholstering.' With that out of the way, let us ask whether nude photographs of women de grade womanhood in general. Yes, they do. You may well wonder what I, a mere man, know about the subject. Plenty. It so happens I attended Heathcliffe College, at thst time one of the most prestigious Ivy League schools with none but accredited geniuses in residence. One accursed day, a photographer from Swinging Girl magazine slinked on to our campus and offered any full-time student $25 to be photographed in what was then known as "the buff " That was big bucks in those days and six of us weak-willed in dividuals succumbed to mammon. How well I remember the morning Swinging Girl with its story on "Boys of the Ivy League" hit the stands. The results ; were disastrous. - For a good two weeks, my phone rang night and day with obscene phone calls purportedly humorous obscene phone calls, which are the worst kind. Swinging Girt, its readership devastated, ceased pub lication the following month. And it was seven long years before a Heathcliffe man was able to obtain dates with a Vassar woman. To this day, I will occasionally run into women of my vintage at cocktail parties who blurt out, "Say! Aren't you the fellow who posed with the volleyball . -. But I must carry my burderfof shame to my grave. And if nude photographs of men degrade men, then nude photographs of women degrade women. J As for you, should you think the entire issue -is nonsensical, may you wake up to morrow with a staple in your belly button. Copyright Cruvnide; Publishing Company 1579''"" ' f ;-. ' - I was very intrigued by several American -reactions to the heckling of Mr. Rabin's speech The first was by a university official .who protested ithis infringement of free speech.. , . . " :. 1 His reaction; was typical of the selftf righteousness :of self-centered Americans who are moved to action only when they themselves are personally: inconvenienced. If this official is so concerned about free . . speech he should do something about a situation where Mr. Arafat and other lop Palestinian leaders are prohibited from touring this country and giving their view point of the Mideast. He should do something about the sad ; fact that the PLO (the sole legitimate rep resentative of the Palestinians as recognised by the UN) is only allowed one office of information in the United States. He should 'protest to the news media wruch.'until 1973, only allowed pro-Israeli reports to reach, the American people; and which is still anti-Palestinian. ' ; v If this official is willing to do these things I suggested, I will then take his pro testations about free speech seriously. Continued on PS