Monday, Dcccrr.b-r 5, 1C33 Psgo 4 Dtily Ncbrsskan 'V'o A O - v 1 . .V'. . 1 ... , ( .-.-4 . .V " Thank men behind tlie Huslcers For Nebraska football fans, last week end was a time for celebrating a long list of accomplishments. Friday, more than 3,000 people gathered at Pershing Auditorium to honor two Nebraska coaches Bob Devaney and Tom Osborne who each have more than 100 victories to -their name. Saturday, to no one's surprise, Husk er I-back Mike Rozier was named the winner of college football's most presti gious award, the Heisman Trophy. The accomplishments of the three men honored during the weekend are phenomenal. They go beyond the world of sports and are a source of pride for many Nebraskans. . Rozier's record as a Cornhusker is staggering. In three years, he has broken countless school, conference and national records. He has helped lead the team to three straight confer ence championships and, this year, has played a large role in the team's 12-0 record and No. 1 ranking. Rozier has had a season most play ers can only dream about, but through it all he has maintained his poise and kept things in perspective. Even more impressive is the impact these two coaches have had on their players. Former wingback Johnny Rod gers, also a Heisman Trophy winner, had some run-ins with the law in the early part of his career. But Devaney did not succumb to public pressure to release him from the team. Rodgers, who now is a success ful publisher in San Diego, said being able to remain on the team probably set his life straight Osborne, too, has gained a nation wide reputation for much more than his winning football teams. He is known for his integrity and honesty, attributes that seem to be a rarity in sports these days.'' '" Nebraska football fans have a lot to be thankful for. Like it or not, the Cornhuskers are the state's biggest source of pride. But without men like Mike Rozier, Bob Devaney and Tom Osborne, you can bet the record over theJast 22 years wouldn't be nearly as impressive. GO? abando onD emocratic .1 But t the r.r.3 t;r:?,,0V h about to support a D:r..vr;rr:t!a candidate. Indeed, when tzlizd iJ hr.d to choose which mzs mere Important for women, dcf:-:-t;r l:c;ir.:.l Il:c-n or passing the EHA, Gc'.ir;.lth replied, "There's littb qucctbn b my rind that it's more important to (!::, :! Ronald - & Ellen X I Goodmnn Judy Goldsmith isnt keen on the suggestion that NOW may be turning into N0DV: The National Organization for Democratic Women. Equal rights b the sort of idealistic all-American no tion that is supposed to be above party labels. Tint thi hpad of the largest woman's rights organization in the Rern. I doutt tlt the EIIAcsn pass countryGoldsmith is at the center of while he's predicr.t. It wodd take a nniiHrni mows destined to bitetl loni time to repair the domsr.e he we had to cheese cne cf the two, I would choose the dcfr.at of Ronald Reagan. Tlie ERA can wdt one more year." So the question b whether NOW has already turned Into NODW. Are women's rights advocates la the 1934 Democratic beg? From what I can see, the answer is a qualified "yea." But before we wring cur hand3 wor rying about the evils of turning equality into a partisan Issue, take a moment of calm. If women's rights have become basically a one-party is sue, it's because the other party has turned them down. Consider the ERA for a moment. It would be lovely if the ERA crossed party lines in a great surge of justice. It began life supported by Republicans. But in 1 930, the Republicans took it off the platform. In the recent House vote, 85 percent of the Democrats were for the amendment while two-thirds of the Republicans were against it. Then there is the No. 1 Republican, Ronald Reagan, who has personally opened a gsnder ip the size of a canyon. As Goldsmith concludes, "It would be naive to pretend that there is genuine bipartisan support for wo men's issues. Are there Republicans who support women? Of course. It is one thing to use party politics to support women's issues and quite another to use the issues for party politics. We dont kno.v whether the House ERA vote would have changed if O'Neill had played the rules diTTerenth. But we do know that the amendment would never have left Congress in one piece. - It would be nice to be wooed by competing suitors. It would be nice if both parties were dueling for the honor of equality. But the reality is that women haven't left the Re publican Party, the Republican Party has left women. It's up to the GOP to come baclv 18S3, T&e Ccttsa Clt-e newspaper Cs: joy to the hearts of Democratic Party regulars and questions to the minds of women's rights activities. The first occurred Nov. 15 when the ERA failed to get a two-thirds majority in the House and went down by six votes. The second will occur Sunday when NOW plans to endorse a Demo cratic candidate for president, pro bably Walter Mondale. In the ERA fandango, Majority Leader Tip O'Neill, with the support of NOW and other women's groups, call ed for a suspension of the rules in order to bring the amendment up for a floor vote. His tactic cut off debate and stopped a raft of crippling changes that opponents wanted to attach to the ERA. But it also may have affected passage. Seven Democrats and sewn Republicans who previously had co sponsored the legislation voted against it In the process, O'Neill got what he may have wanted most: a campaign issue for the Democratic Party. He now has almost all members of the House on record on equal rights. In these gender gap days, the ERA will be a good litmus test for voters who want to know simply: Were you with us or against us? It isnt entirely paranoid to suspect that O'Neill would rather have the ERA as an campaign issue than as a con stitutional amendment. But it is harder to swallow the suspicious that women's rights groups also might have sacrificed the ERA to Democratic Party politics. Goldsmith disputes this roundly. "We didn't lose votes; they weren't ours to begin with " she insists. "I am fam iliar with the phenomenon of alleged supporters: 'I would have been with you if only ... Those people are not truly with us." (DE I have a friend named . Holly. I havent changed her name becauseshe would figure out whom I was writing about anyway, and there is no one to protect or criticise in this article. I love Holly. One cf the great assets toj being human is being able to love many people in many ways. IHolly and I get in big arguments at . president, if she were qualified. And I would like to see everyone vote for her t because she is iualiSed. Not a case of -women voting for her because she b a -- woman, and men voting against her' because she is a woman. , f- I would like to see a culture where men and women take an equal part in raising a child. I would like to see them :"7-; llz2 that child according to its needs j -3 interests and not impose societ:J it , i cultural stereotaxes on him rr t : tix. ever (SJL.kt 'z,2ozZj in cur : sc :ty.HorcaUi5 herself ah Uuianbt, thagh I stO say she if a feministShe i is cauHtJup. in this idedistic . ewthat-. " with - jr. :3.,ll,Ij :cnt hepca' sooiC It wont happen in 50 years. I would love for things to be as HoDy visualizes therrf fccjf.g.1 ' ;" " -" " -: 1 would 11-2 .to. know that every person, be they man, sroman, black or white, could strive for whst they went without handicaps like social rcstric- AVfcnWiS V. j"4 . v-, -v I rrczU I2z2 to see a woman be ' - I would fjt:i li ce'eiety" where - L'j nr. l!i peh strive fcr: their . jCTa-carr-rrirbd within, ."the -frame- " " , ii cf a v.-erkhg, grolT.g marriage. - j itscTticdly, I see thmgj aren't that . vjt I per" "-": "y trh3 to rtzkt people cthitk olL!igs in there terms, but I 3 ritllzs ttzt zotizty prciatlyr. sver wl X-be thu rcy,:;u "bz: ? ;r.ct fer several As a whole,' husbands make the ( . mcr.ey ar.d wives raise the kids and "stay home. When women do work it is XA&tA.'&AbJ Ug- 0Ltb irltC kite. i 3 imffvs - - . ' The first woman ' r reciter.! will ah-Yeys te the Jlrtl will te tl;ev':t cf n r5" th2 r sident in the eyes cf the press and in the minds of the people, , : Attitudes change slowly. - f . . .1 '-, I occasionally make a comment to Holly that goes totally against my own personal wants or beliefs. I might say that a woman, because of society, can't be as aggressive as a man in the business world. I might stereotype women by saying things lie' ah women want irom men 13 money 5 ana security," I.want Holly to know why I bait her ' with this kind of stagnant thinking. It's , certainly not because I feel those ; things are intrinsically true. : I do it because I want to challenge ; Holly. I went her to tx what I say and ' ; prove me wrong. 1 Realistically, she cant" Reality " b"' : society and the attitudes sheped by a ' : thousand years. But on another level ."en al',?ap beat me. That's the thmldng hveL I Iovb to lcze cn this bxl ; when I make statments Lies the pre vious cr.es. ... In 10 years I can see IlsHy carina me to er.y she- is frustrated bscauaa i cha lmoT.s a woman who hr.'i hni .- by her hpband repeatedly ar.d etn gees ,t"ek to him. Cha h frurtrated because gome man with an equal decree b makmn twiee o misch money .0 she because he hrs awlTe and kids : to support. . -. ' . And if this heppens I hope with all that's inside cf me I have the strength to say something L!:e "Well, Ke"y, you know a. woman needs to depend on a I dont believe that. It vzll hurt me to have to say that to HcUyJust as it does item, .'.-. But I hope she gets so mad at what I say that she redediectea herself to the ideeb she believes b, L-eecue some one, anyone, who thinks Ll:e she does can make a d.lTercr.ce. ; ' ; Where would the civil rights move ment he new if Martin Lcther King Jr. had Ibea that n K 23 tliela irould still be second no, third-class citizens, ar.d because cf his fctrMedge he hid seii "I 73 upT Kfcg.lenrr thr,t r:- ce man he cculint char-2cwhe'.2 culture and a ' who! 3 wry cf tl-.i-llr " :i 15 yens. As bt;l'. r::.;i I; 5 L::r.7t,iJ. D: .3 t!v.T! I--" 2 1 -" 7 !T.eT;sthat a let cf :.y r. :r -' ; . ..; : : - 1 fcur.ded. I he.-2 the L:j a t':: -