Pago 4 Daily Nebraskan Friday, September 0, 1833 Post-game insanity leads to injury, damage Now the fun part begins. Saturday la the beginning of Nebraska's 1933 home football schedule. For students, football Saturdays offer a rare opportunity to forget the academic world for a few hours and have a little fun cheering for one of the nation's top football teams. That's what football games should be fun. But we hope students dont allow the fun to get out of hand this year. Controlling the crowd has become a problem at UNL and other colleges. The bedlam that broke out last year after the Huskers' 28-24 win over Okla homa is a good example. While fans were savoring UNL's second straight victory over the Sooners, police officers were left at the stadium counting the damages and injuries caused by the crowd. Fans swarmed onto the field before the game was over. Both goal posts were torn down, the stadium rgg Letters Allentitled to education We are writing in response to your editorial "Obli gations come before benefits," (Daily Nebraskan, Aug. 31). You mentioned the issue at hand "is whether students who do not follow the law (regis ter for the draft) still should be entitled to the benef its offered by the federal government" To our way of thinking, the real issue is mentioned later in the editorial when you say that government financial aid is "a privilege, not a right" of those seeking help in continuing their education. We strongly disagree and suggest that you ask yourself further if the real issue may not be whether educa tion itself is a privilege or a right We feel that all American citizens and residents are entitled to pursue higher education and that when people are denied assistance, being unable to pay for schooling in any other manner, they are effectively being denied their education altogether. Must a poor student always agree with the views of the U.S. government in order to receive the right of good education? Should the rich be the only ones allowed to criticize government policy and be exempt from this kind of pecuniary punishment? Should one only be able to "afford" to dissent? The idea of enforcing certain restrictions and promoting beliefs by threat of not receiving financial aid is very dangerous. Supposedly, education devel ops critical thought, a skill very useful for changing and improving the world in which we live. Surely one of our obligations to society is to become as well educated as possible so that we can comprehend and end the wastefulness of war. It is very unfortu nate that further education can be denied to those who are practicing the very criticism and good sense that education inspires. Sharon Lewandowski Brian D. Striman UNL Law library 'Clean up your act' There are three things that annoy me greatly about the students at UNL 1. Trashing of the Nebraska Union and other buildings. Everyday, there are Daily Nebraskans, paper cups and other garbage thrown all over cam pus. It is embarrassing and unnecessary. Clean up youract 2. Five minutes before class ends, students start shuffling their books and making all kinds of noise, often interrupting the instructor. If I were the instructor, the minute this started, I would give a quiz. This shuffling and noise making is rude. Learn some manners, please. 3. The most popular question students ask is: "Is this on the test?" Who cares? Head your books, go to class, learn the material If it's on the test, you will know it If it's not on the test, you will have learned something new and expanded your mind. In addition to receiving a degree at UNL, students could learn how to act as intelligent human beings. Arnold Grinvalds Junior English AstroTurf was damaged by smoke bombs and sev eral fans suffered minor injuries in the post-game melee. One law enforcement official, Marvin Kinlon of the UNL Police Department, suffered serious injur ies after being struck in the neck by a frozen orange. The celebration didnt end at the stadium, either. There were reports of Oklahoma cars being dam aged by over-exuberant fans in downtown Lincoln. These kinds of actions are becoming all-too-familiar events at college football games and they should be stopped. Nobody's expecting serious problems Saturday. The Wyoming Cowboys are in town and it's a safe bet that excitement will be minimal, or non-existent, by the fourth quarter. But there will be other, more important games later in the season. As the tougher games come along, fans will become more emotional, especially if the Cornhuskers remain at the top of the national polls. Here's hoping that when those games come around, UNL students will take the lead in keeping things in perspective. Sure, everyone hopes Nebraska goes through the season undefeated and maintains its No. 1 ranking. But no game should carry so much importance that it leads to injuries and destruction. UNL police have tightened security for this year's games. Orange throwers and others involved in ille gal behavior now have a greater chance of being caught because of video equipment being installed at Memorial Stadium. We hope this crackdown leads to more arrests. And we hope the punishment for those caught will be serious enough to prevent others from doing these actions. Football games should be fun. An over exuberant fan shouldn't be allowed to spoil it for everyone else. 7 & p$j .1 IPsJ BATJ y Toobusy to read': Writer's pet peeve A good term that you dont hear used much any more is "pet peeve." Writers were always asking peo ple what their "pet peeve" was, and when the writers found out, they would report that "the mayor's pet peeve is people who toss litter into the street." In my recent travels, I was mildly shocked to dis cover that I have a pet peeve. Because we dont read about pet peeves these days, I suppose I had half- Bob XL Greene assumed that we dont have pet peeves. But there mine was, just sitting there. I recognized my pet peeve about the seventh or eighth time I heard someone use a variation of the same sentence: "I'd read the newspaper, but I really dont have the time" -; '-':.'--'.. - As I reached for that seventh or eighth person's throat, I realized that my pet peeve is: people who say they dont have time to read a newspaper. Obviously I'm prejudiced in this area. I make my living from newspapers and I assume that a profes sional baseball player would feel distaste for a per son who said he didnt have time to watch baseball games, or a soda jerk would get angry at someone who said he didnt have time to drink chocolate milk shakes. Nevertheless, I have noticed that some people take a perverse pride in saying that they dont have time to read newspapers. It's as if by saying that, they are impressing someone with how busy and important they are. Again, To. biased. But I think a newspaper is one of the wisest investments both in terms of time and in terms of money a person can make. . Let's take the money part first On a weekday, you get a newspaper for pocket change. What you got for that is hundreds of trained, educated reporters and editors thousands, if you count the resources of the wire services going to events all over the world, and for letting you know what, if anything, of importance is going on. In one city I passed through last week, the local newspaper had taken out billboards asking the citi zens of town to "Give us 30 minutes every day." It wasnt until I saw one of those billboards that I realized a fact that should have been obvious long ago: Newspaper executives really do feel by now that they must ask the men and women of their communities for the few minutes a day it takes to spend some time with the paper. Granted, it's a busy world. But I cant think of a better way to spent that 30 minutes than with a fresh edition of a newspaper. There is no other way a person can learn about an equal variety of subjects, asreportedand focused through the eyes of an equal number of observers, in an equal amount of time. I'm selfish about this. Because I do a specialized kind of newspaper work this little tap-dance in my own corner of the paper I tend to hear from the people on the other end the people who do, indeed, spent tune with their paper every day. In front of me I have a stack of letters from Tacoma; from San Francisco; from Tulsa; from Boston; from New York; from Philadelphia; from Richmond; from Dallas. I am not embarrassed to admit that getting those letters is probably the best pert of the job. It's an unlikely chain. I go out and see things and then write about them. An editor somewhere decides he likes what he reads, and decides he should share the stories with the readers. So he buys the syndication rights to the column for his paper, and soon enought those readers people I have never met are hearing about the things I saw. Sometimes a connection is made and the person sits down and writes a letter commenting on the way I saw the things, and the letter ends up cn my desk. If there's a more human type cf interchange pos sible in an impersonal society, I dent know about it And as I said, Fra selfish; I wouldnt miss this for the world, and every person who persuades himself that he's "too busy" to read the paper b robbing me of the chance for another connection Lka that It's too important, both for these cf us who write for news papers, and for those of you who read them. But why am I telling you? You already know that After all, here we are together crL 1SS3, TiiS'aae Casgszy fTrr.?, Isc