The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 25, 1981, Page page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    friday, September 25, 198t
daily nebraskan
page 5
Yachting. . .
Continued from Page 4
Fortunately, our yacht boasts a hot shower in the
middle of the one tiny bathroom aboard. Unfortunately,
we can't use it as we are chronically short of water. Our
captain allows us half a cup, though, in which to brush
our teeth, shave, bathe and do our laundry.
We then fish in the chill waters of the ice chest for eggs
and whatnot which we cook on the tiny, little, are-you-sure-it-wont-blow-up?
stove. Then we eat in the joyous
sunrise in the cockpit. If it isn't raining.
Heigh-ho, it's time to weigh anchor! The anchor weighs
116 pounds. Amidst gay cries of "Loot out for that
rock!" "Back her down, for Chrissakes!" and, from
Glynda, "Do something!" We idle rich are off on another
merry day of yachting.
Some days we have a spanking breeze. Other days we
are lucky. If we have a spanking breeze, we must hoise
sail, about seven hectares of it. On a 40-foot yacht, you
don't merely pull on a line to hoise sail. You wrap the line
around a winch and crank and crank and . . .
The captain says these special winches cost $2,000
each. And they're almost as much fun as pushups.
We yacht until mid-afternoon when the discussion be
gins as to where we should anchor for the night. This lasts
several hours and we invariably wind up in the wrong
place. But we idle rich can then enjoy our tepid cocktails
(we are chronically short of ice) in the glowing sunset in
the cockpit. If it isn't raining.
m Yet all good things must come to an end. Tomorrow,
we must renounce the life of the idle rich and return to
the trials of civilization.
I must admit, however, that I was deeply touched this
morning by what Glynda had to say as she heaved gamely
on the slimy anchor chair, pearls of perspirition bedewing
her upper lip.
"I wonder," she said, between gasps for breath, "what
the poor people are doing today?" What couched me
deeply was the plaintive note in her voice of wilfulness.
(c) Chronicle Publishing Co.
Minorities. . .
Continued from Page 4
Thanks, but no thanks, said Sowell, too much a
maverick to want to run a bureaucracy he doesn't believe
in.
The message of his books lies less in their conclusions,
he says, than in their approach, which is empirical.
"I'm amazed at how many people regard facts as
impediments at best, and red herrings at worst," he says,
describing his position as "anti-foregone conclusion." lie
does not regard the free market as a universal "solution,"
but as - for many purposes - a sound approach to social
realities.
He attributes increased black success much less to civil
rights legislation than to the pressures of the free market:
qualified blacks were improving their status rapidly in the
decade before the major civil rights act of the '60s were
passed.
"I don't believe that the market is magic," he says. All
he claims for it is that, on the record, it has worked far
better than policies based on the notion that government
can produce social and economic miracles.
The Los Angeles Times Syndicate
ooooooooooooooooooooooo
S SufievSud Sftofis,
ooooooooooooooooooooooo
I
jmwmwmwmwm iClip & Return
Register for FREE
Rolling Stones Tickets
I
I
I
REGISTER FOR FREE
ROLLING STONES TICKETS
J NAME
I ADDRESS
PHONE
I Return to the nearest
Red Cross is counting
you.
12 TO BE GIVEN AWAY -DRAWING OCT.l . SSI s-b----
The best hot and cold sandwiches in town.
NOW FEATURING THE LATEST AND BEST VIDEO GAfTlES. Ti
REGISTER EREE AT:
o 13th y E 333 N. Cotner (Plaza Bowl) o 850 N. 27th
48th V Hwu. 2 03822 Normal Blvd
23
V2
Win One for the Godfather!
Beat Penn State!
A Use our draft 2
OK, team . . .
j i I, cold draft S.
let's go over da gp J5L
game plan! jspcclal plays! js
overwhelming N Sx2JSC3t 1 TpK 5
Go Big Red!
DOWNTOWN SOUTH I10!1?!.
12th & "Q" 48th & Hwy. 2 48th&Vme
474-6000 483-4129 466-8264
Open Daily at 1 lam for lunch, Sunday at 4pm
I 9 tah a vr nn rrn akdo. 1
"Create Your Own"
Decorate a wicker fan with silk flowers. $2.50 for
supplies. 1 1 :30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. Nebraska East
Union-Garden Room
Travel Information Booth
9:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Nebraska Union-Lobby
Sidney Poitier Film Festival
"Heat of the Night" "They Call Me Mr. Tibbs"
Free Admission 7:00-1 1 :00 p.m. Nebraska Union-
The Rostrum
Hoedown Dance
Featuring "Sandy Creek Pickers" $1.00 Admission
FREE Admission with Cowboy hat or farmer's cap.
9:00 p.m. - Midnight Nebraska East Union -Great
Plains Room
W University Program Council
If you want to join
UPC - City or
Culture Center
call 472-2454
Join UPC East
Today Call
472-1780