Page 4 Daily Nebraskan Tuesday, March 31, 1987 r" I. . sfrraslcan University ot Nebraska-Lincoln Qmips amid quote Winter's reprise hits hard Is anybody out tluTe? Last weekend the Daily Nebraskan stall' stumbled upon the same problem many UNL students came across: how to got back to Lincoln. The untimely snow storm left many students stranded. Those staffers who made it back were wary of putting out a paper for today because we didn't know if anyone would be back to read it. For those who made it. . .welcome back. O Congratulations to the Ne braska men's and women's bas ketball coaches. Danny Nee and Angela Beck found success in their first year- at the helm. Beck guided her team t o a 10-13 record and a fourth-place finish in the Big Light. Her feats earned her the Converse District V Coach of the Year award. Nee put excitement back into Nebraska basketball as he guided his team to a third-place finish in the National Invitation Tour nament and Jinished the season 21-12. Many people never expected the lluskers to win 20 games. In fact, many never expected them to finish above .500. The same went fov the women. O Two weeks ago the ASUN electoral commission penalized the Unite party for violating electoral-commission rules by Letters m 1 . 1 i uu mucn smoKe in The amount of space designated as non-smoking in the Nebraska Union by the large-screen television is ridicu lously small. Over 90 percent of this room is allocated to those who feel the need to pollute the air and commit suicide. A recent article in the Lincoln Jour nal (March Hi) notes that only 25 per cent of Nebraskans now smoke. With this statistic in mind, a much fairer division would be to designate the south end of this room as the smoking area. This more equitable distribution of space would have other benefits as w ell. Many of the smelly and unsight ly sandbox ashtrays would be eliminated, reducing the number that accidentally get kicked over. It would also reduce the number of chairs and rug areas thai are burned because of cigarettes that inevitably get dropped. Quoting the American Lung Associa tion in the same Lincoln Journal arti cle, "Non-smokers have the right to breathe clean air, free from harmful Gillette Dairy Company complimented I am writing in response to the uninformed critics of the Gillette Daily Company's campaign to solicit funds for the new recreation center. First, some have suggested that Bob Devaney's and Tom Osborne's pictures on Gillette milk cartons has replaced pictures of missing children. This is incorrect. The Gillette Company ran the missing children campaign for approximately two years, and the campaign ended more than six months ago. The roc-center fund drive is not preventing missing children from being reunited with their families. Others have suggested that it is pathetic to see Bob and Tom on milk cartons t lying to solicit donations for JoITKoihelik, Editor, 472-1766 James Honors, Editorial Pa ye Editor Lise Olson, Associate News Editor Mike Heilley, Niyht News Editor Joan Rcziic, Copy Desk Chief exceeding their campaign spend ing limit. Before the election can be certified by the commission, Unite must agree to four condi tions. Their biggest task: signing a contract to prepare a manual on the proper conduct of an elec tion campaign. The guide must be approved by the ASl'N direc tor of development and a faculty adviser before Sept. 1. It's too bad Unite got off on the wrong foot, but it may be beneficial in the long run. The manual Unite will prepare should them on possible pitfalls. O The Chronicle of Higher Education reported in its March 18 edition that the athletic department at the University of South Carolina has given $.")()4,()l)() to the campus's libraries. The donation represents athletic department earnings from the broadcasts of two of the univer sity's football games last season on ESPN, a cable TV channel. Of course, South Carolina probably isn't being hit by budget cuts as hard as NU is. But the NU athletic department should take note for future reference. A spokesman from the South Carolina athletic department, wJio knew the libraries needed money, said it best: "We're part of the same university." a 1 riir 7 uie union i v areas and irritating tobacco smoke. This right supersedes the right to smoke when the two conflict." This article also stated that cigarette smoking kills more Americans each year than cocaine, heroin and other illicit drugs, alcohol abuse, car accidents, homicide and suicide combined. It is hard to believe that students attending a school of' "higher education" even smoke, know ing this! We have strict standards on the quality of water we drink; the same standards should apply to the air we breathe indoors. A smoker should not be allowed to pollute what is otherwise clean air. If smokers wish to have breath and clothes that smell like ash trays, let them, but not in such a large area that non-smokers are forced to breathe it too.! In fact, a much better solution would be to prohibit cigarette smoking indoors. Harry Heafer graduate student teachers college the rec center. Gillette therefore has donated the space on their milk cartons to support the rec center because it feels that it will benefit NU and the community. I think this generous offer is far from pathetic and should be commended. I would like to thank the Gillette Dairy Company for its generous donation in support of UNL recreation, and 1 hope that in the future people are open-minded enough to get all the facts before forming an opinion about the rec center. Jeff J. Warren senior computer science llim off tike naw Book banners are freezing the heart, mind, soul of America "Are you still cold?" ashed the Snow Queen, and she kissed hint on the forehead. Oh, that was colder than ice; it went quite throuyh to his heart, half of which teas already a lump of ice; he felt as if he was yoiuy to die; hut only for a moment; for then he seemed ju He well, and he did not notice the cold all about him. "The Snow Queen," Hans Christian Anderson Her name is Vicki Frost and she found herself one day in control of the apparatus that legally freezes hearts and minds. Like those shards of the goblin's mirror in the Anderson tale, the splinters Frosi left in the hearts and minds of the children of the South reflect and perceive only ugliness and intolerance. And like the goblin's glass, the pieces of Frost's perceptions spread across the land until no one noticed the cold anymore. For Vicki Frost took a most unlikely case to court. Its premise was so entrenched in the paranoia of the ignorant and so riddled with ambigui ties that even the right-wing intelli gentsia found her logic repellent. Frost wanted any books that mentioned, even in passing, nudity, witches, the imagination, fantasy, the sexual act, "unwholesome" attitudes, and gods other than the one and only, banned from Tennessee schools. Frost won. In court. Her children and the children of other fundamentalists could leave the classroom whenever "disputed" mater ials were used and could refuse to do any assignment that violated their religious beliefs. God as an excuse for redneck belligerence. The worst is yet to come, for Frost .shattered her mirror of narrow-mindedness over the Reagan-era court system in a t housand pieces. The jagged-edged glass spread throughout the South, resulting in the banning of 40 school textbooks that promoted "secular humanism" in Alabama and the ridicu lous line of reasoning by District Judge W. Brevard Hand that "secular huma nism" was as much as religion as fun damentalism. Hand (yet another name Too many youngsters at Beasties shows too few parents really care The Beastie Boys' March 15 show at Pershing Auditorium produced a Hood of indignation that would be hilarious if it weren't so ominous. Controversy centers on the presence of an untoward percentage of junior high and younger children at a concert which was, if not X-rated, certainly a hard R. The show included profuse pro fanity, several hymns to the glories of beer, a caged go-go dancer and a 40-foot erect penis that emerged center stage during the last song. The letters in the Lincoln Journal on the subject have been running about 2-to-l against the Beasties. One partic ularly ironic letter (March 2;)) was from a mother who took her sixth-grade daughter to the show and was aghast at how "obscene" all three acts were that evening. This person closed with a wish that "there will be a more thorough screening of the types of groups we allow to perform in our city." The irony here is obvious. If she was so shocked at what her daughter was being exposed to, why didn't she just screen it herself, take her daughter and leave. - I attended. the concert. I was impressed with the show's vitality and professional execution. I was encour aged by the enthusiastic but well behaved crowd and by the fact that both black and white young people attended the show. I found the concert, overall, very positive. I agree, however, that the show was much too raw for pre-adolescents and that too many young children were there. Like many Lincoln parents I am indignant that young children were resounding of a fairy tale), in the face of the Parents for the American Way and the American Civil Liberties Union, once again introduced into the letter of the law a pack of ambiguities and a legally irresponsible rationale for book banning. But whereas the ACLU used to be able to simply grunt in disdain at the decision of some backw ard good of boy in long black robe and prepare for an appeal before someone who made the advance from single-celled organism with more grace, now even the chances of appeal look discouraging, fliere's glass everywhere. 1 wonder if Vicki Frost still has enough of it to apply her rouge properly. Charles Lieurance Jv And while court decisions are being made to force publishing companies to turn their textbooks into annotated Bibles, legislators are tackling other sources of learning and exposure (pun absolutely intentional) from the blind side. In Nebraska LB1 17, sponsored by Senator Carol Pursh, and LB181, spon sored ly Loren Schmidt and Scott Moore, are slinking their way through the prairie priapism, each coldly and flatly supporting the kind of boorish censorship most thought had disap peared when Judge Woolsey of the U.S. Supreme Court let Joyce's "Ulysses" into the United Stales. The same eter nally arguable terms pop up again and again in both bills: "obscene mate rials, ' "harmful to minors," "prurient interest," etc. Both bills already have advanced beyond committee. LBH7 would make it a felony for a bookstore to sell "obscene" material, l itis puts an unjust and unprecedented burden of critical judgment on a book seller, the merchant would be ham pressed even to find a version of the Bible that floundered in the kind of abysmal mediocrity this bill suggests. exposed to this. But my indignation is not directed at the Beastie Boys or at Pershing Audito rium or at the Lincoln city government. The only people who rationally can be held responsible for children's expo sure to a concert beyond their level of maturity are the children's parents. Chris McCubbin The content ol litis show was not a secret. If parents had read the Jour nal's preview they would have known about the dancer and the group's glori fication of alcohol. If they had played the album, they would have known that the Beasties use nasty language. If they had watched the video, they would have known that the band advocates non-conformity and rebellion. If. they had listened to the Beasties' No. 1 hit song "Fight For Your Right," they would have heard lyrics like "Your dad catch you smokin' man he said 'No way'hypocrite smokes 10 packs a day" and "Your mom threw away your best porno mag." Obviously, few parents did this. There is a growing, dangerous attitude among parents that the moral education of their children is the responsibility of the government, which must ensure, by law, that their children be exposed to nothing unwholesome through any medium. Qmeeiu The only positive side effect such a bill might produce would be a reduction in stores' stock of novels by Danielle Steele, Sidney Sheldon, Judith Krantz and their execrable lot. LBlSl i urns booksellers into moral administrators and bookstores into sterile warehouses full of sealed pack- ages. The bill bans the display of books or magazines that are "harmful to minors" in stores that allow minors to enter. Apparently any work that "con tains descriptions of nudity, sexual conduct or sexual excitement" cannot be displayed in public bookstores. Of course this eliminates almost any book of consequence, including most books of paintings, the greatest novels of the last 100 years and the edifice by which all obscenity is judged, the Bible. That bills and court decisions like these are once again slithering under the foundations of the constitution and gnawing away at the First Amendment is enough to make the ACLU and most progressive lawyers begin beating their heads against jurisprudence like shell shocked veterans. Once again, lawyers have to pound away at the sketchy definitions of obscenity and deal with words like "evil," "unwholesome" and "prurient interest" in a profession built on specific facts and details, fhe bills are passed and the judges gavel the unconstitutional into being. Then the decisions are tied up in legalese from Tennessee to Oregon, wasting the world's time for the benefit of those who want the complexity of the uni verse, of a single human life even, in a inanageraole nutshell. A nutshell made of ice. And with all things frozen and children's minds rendered inoperable, the world will be simple, and the sexual act and the physical universe will be reduced to gfunting in the dark like animals lor the sake of procreating more souls made of solid ice. The only iiglu will come from the burning of books, afire colder than the kiss of Vicki Frost itself. hieurance is a senior Knlish, philo sophy and ail major and Daily .Nt-bras-kan senior reporter. Another example of this attitude is the controversy surrounding the book "When The Sky Begins To Roar" by Alice Bach. Although many educators find this book truthful and well-written, a group of Lincoln parents has taken action to have the book removed from public-school libraries, because of its graphic depictions of real problems that young people face today. In today's society children will be forced to make choices about sex, drugs, alcohol and crime. The Beasties Boys' show illustrated that few parents are willing to give their children this help, even to the simple extent of listening to a hit song and saying, "1 don't think you're ready for this. I don't want you to go." These people want the government to do this job for them, even if it means depriving older or more mature individuals of a pleasant evening's entertainment. I think a parent would have better luck with an approach like: "This song is about rebelling because sometimes parents are hypocrites. Do you think I've asked you to do anything which is hypocritical? If you think I'm being a hypocrite, let's talk about it. Promise me you'll come and talk to me if you ever want to do something dangerous or illegal like drinking or taking drugs." I know it's not easy to be a parent. I know this because I wasn't easy to raise. I do not envy you parents all your work and pain. But monitoring your child's entertainment is yourjob. Yours and nobody elses. Please do it. McCubbin is a senior English and philo sophy major and Daily Nebraskan Div ersions editor.