FHitnrial Nebmyskan University of Nebraska-Lineoln Mike Reiliey, Editor, 472-1766 Jeanne Bourne, Editorial Page Editor Jann Nyffeler, Associate News Editor Scott Harrah, Night News Editor Joan Rezac, Copy Desk Chief Linda Hartmann, Wire Editor Charles Lieurance, Asst. A & E Editor I Bad precedent Surcharge sends dangerous message The University of Ne braska may set a dis turbing precedent next month if the Board of Regents approve a tuition surcharge for UNL engineering students. The 20 percent surcharge would be used to update exist ing lab equipment in the College of Engineering and Technol ogy. If the regents approve the surcharge, many similar re quests are bound to follow. Ultimately, any college on campus could come up with a “vital” project and seek a sur charge to support it. The regents would then be obligated to pass the surcharge based on its previ ; ous decision with the Engincer I ing College. At least one regent said a sur charge would cause problems. The Omaha World-Herald re ported that Regent James Moylan of Omaha said the uni versity could be “treading on thin ice” by approving the pro posal. He said the university , would expect “many more re 1 quests” if the surcharge was \ passed. It also opens the lid on the Engineering College. A one time surcharge may not be I enough a year or two from now, ! and the college could tack on another if it wished. Besides, UNL students al ready are paying much more tuition than they were four years ago. They also pay an additional lab fee for classes that require extra costs or use of equipment. Tack on book costs and the extra surcharge, and a student could be looking at a $900 price tag for one semester of education. The proposed charge appar ently is a last resort for the col lege, which needs the updated equipment to gain re-accredita tion in November. But the proposal has another significance. It shows to what extremes UNL has to go to sup port its colleges. The university desperately needs money—and if only Gov. Kay Orr and the Legislature would listen. The surcharge sends a dan gerous message to the Legisla ture. Senators will think stu dents’ tuition will make up the difference every time the Legis lature doesn’t appropriate enough money. Meanwhile, Orr has said that UNL needs to expand and im prove its research. But it’s hard for professors and students in the Engineering College to improve research when they’re working with inferior equip ment. Organs desperately needed to save lives Ethics under fire Medical ethics arc again under criticism, this time for treating brain dead babies like organ banks. While the critics’ caution is understandable, other babies desperately need these organs to stay alive. The brain-dead ba bies will not have a life. Between 2,000 and 3,000 ba bies are bom each year with a condition called ancncephaly. They virtually have no brain. Yet because they do have a rudi mentary brain stem that allows them to breathe on their own, they can’t be classified as brain dead. Babies bom with this condi tion were ordinarily allowed to die naturally. But as their status worsens, the lack of oxygen makes their organs unusable. George Annas, professor of ■ public health at Boston Univer - sity, doesn’t think the babies should be kept “alive” to enable a transplant “The question is,” he said, “is this a baby or not? At its stark est, these children arc not being treated as human beings but as organ banks.” Others are concerned that if these babies arc declared brain dead, babies with other kinds of handicaps will also be used for organ transplants. A line must be drawn. In de ciding where the line should be, doctors need to consider the length of time the baby might live on its own and how much suffering it would endure. Anencephalic babies tend to live only a few days at most. They are bom dying, one doctor said. Some parents insist on donat ing vital organs to give the baby’s short life some meaning. Organ donation is a touchy issue for those who believe life is sacred, no matter what. But what is so sacred about being bom only to die, in vain. If their organs are donated, at least some value can be placed on their lives. ' Editorial Policy Unsigned editorials represent offi cial policy of the fall 1987 Daily Nebraskan. Policy is set by the Daily Nebraskan Editorial Board. Editorials do not necessarily reflect the views of the university, its em ployees, the students or the NU Board of Regents. The Daily Nebraskan’s publishers are the regents, who established the UNL Publications Board to supervise the daily production of the paper. According to policy set by the re gents. ■T rne n„gg^06>^MfMaSa^feidl illf kuT DMP^P Wgu>5 ^yr1^ A'gvetf imlllfc ill i^n/CAfel?^5'17^ R,5^rS 1» ue&j tt> FMtR °f \ I fr 1* iv/06 wJp»vAw/ep v*p*0m rHe •enGuM'0**') •!• (§ sit5^^ /i^A^gp m r %o^^etjr, yj ||IL WH,te ffllL uf'Tf' lit^k ^f.,rf;A^g'^guATepP 'uf7~n Society insults injured women Victims of sexual abuse too often re victimized by the courts A Washington judge recently awarded a wife-battering husband 25 percent of the proceeds from a book his ex-wife wrote about her experiences in a vio lent marriage. Ironically, he upheld the tradi tional sexist beliefs regarding vio lence against women during Domes tic Violence/Sexual Assault Aware ness Month. This ruling should certainly make us all aware of the inequities that still prevail. John M. Fedders resigned from a top post at the Securities and Ex change Commission in 1985 after wife-beating charges against him were wideiy publicized. Fedders openly admits that he beat his wife, but claims it was her fault. She denied him emotional support during hisbouLsofdcpression, he said. The judge ruled that both partners were equally responsible for the breakup. Charlotte Fedders received $750 a month in alimony — which the judge lowered to $500 — and $750 a month in child support. She supplements her income with a part-time job in a flower shop. She is raising five chil dren. And now her husband will share in her publisher’s advance and royalties. Historically, violence against women has not been thought of as a crime. The law, years ago, did not prohibit a man from beating his wife. In face it defined how it should be done. The “rule of thumb’’ said the beating stick could be no wider than the man’s thumb. Apparently some remnants of this line of thought still exist. If John Fedders had beaten a woman who was not his wife, he probably would be serving a prison sentence. Our criminal justice system has been very slow to recognize the seri ousness of domestic violence. It occurs in one out of 10 house holds in the United States. The cyclical pattern of domestic violence is hard to stop. After an out burst of violence, the couple usually goes into the “honeymoon” stage. The batterer becomes remorseful, is very loving and promises it will never happen again. This stage could last months, days or hours. Then pressure and tension build up to another explo sion of battery. Both the victim and the criminal justice system are caught in this cycle. A woman who sta^s in a violent relationship is often stuck economi cally, or she may believe she can change her partner. Frequently she is “disciplined” into thinking she de serves the punishment and it is all her fault. The criminal justice system has traditionally sought to stay out of the privacy of marriage. A recent case in Somerville, Mass., illustrates this point. Judge Paul P. Hcffeman berated a battered wife for wasting the court’s time when she sought police protec tion. Jeanne Bourne The judge told the husband,’’You want to gnaw on her and she on you, fine, but let’s not do itat the taxpayer’s expense.” Five months later, in August 1986, Pamela Dunn was found in the town garbage dump, severely beaten, strangled and shot in the abdomen. Her husband is now awaiting trial for murder and the judge is under investigation. Even if the criminal justice system wanted to help battered women, it is often difficult, as well as frustrating. After a woman has been beaten her state of mind often leads her to press charges. But later, fearing the ramifi cations of her actions, she will drop the charges. The socialization and attitudes of the courts obviously play a big role in whether women will press charges. If cases like Pamela Dlinn’s are at all common, many women won’t bother to go through the court hassles. If women think they won’t receive any help from the courts, they won’t risk the embarrassment or the wrath of their husbands. While I can understand the frustra tion inherent in the vicics cycle of violence, the courts have no excuse for excusing domestic violence with these attitudes. Rape has also been condoned, in a way, by our criminal justice system. In the recent past, women who reported rapes were often treated as if they were the criminal. They were questioned about their behavior: Why were you out alone after dark? Why were you wearing such seductive clothing? What did you expect? This is changing, but ever so slowly. Often, unless the woman had been beaten, she would not be believed. This is especially common in date rape. Police would frequently pass her off as a woman who had changed her mind — too late. In rape cases that did make it to court, few convictions were made. A 1982 Justice Department report said one in 150 suspects was convicted of rape. Women’s pasts were frequently dragged out for public inspection. If the victim had ever had a date, she was considered to have “loose morals.” The court system is changing in this regard. But, while I was working on a story this summer, a rape-victim counselor told me victims arc still sometimes asked the old sexist ques tions. Victims have asked her, she said, why the criminal justice system is revictimizing them, as if they hadn’t been through enough. Our society seems to condone vio lence in general and violence against women in particular. This is evident in television shows, advertising, popular music and some pornography. Men are seldom portrayed as victims in these media and, unlike women in the same context, never appear to like pain or brutalization. As with many social problems, 1 think our socialization process is to blame. 1 read of one study which said that by the time a child reaches high school, be or she will have witnessed more than 13,000 violent crimes on television. This exposure has to have some negative effect, even if it only desensitizes. - If the media only portrays women as victims, then that is an idea, sub conscious or otherwise, that many men and women grow up believing. Some people simply have violent tendencies. The criminal justice sys tem can’t do much to prevent their behavior. But if they send out the message that this behavior won’t be tolerated, things might change. Awareness is tne only answer. Awareness will help women realize they don’t have to be a victim. Aware ness will help change the criminal justice system. And maybe awareness will make people realize they can’t get away with this any longer. Bourne la a senior news-editorial major and Daily Nebraskan editorial page editor.