Opinion Media not balanced GOP not receiving fair press coverage Midnight meetings straining to decide how to handle the embroiled Persian Gulf. A failing economy at home. A democratic Congress against him from the start. Clinton leading in the polls by a wide margin. At this point, the upcoming election does not look good for George Bush, and the tension is showing. Rumors are rampant. The president is in ill health. Members of his own party are asking him to step down in favor of a stronger candidate. The only way he can win is to get rid of his sidekick Dan Quaylc and to fight and win a decisive war with Iraq before November. Right now, it seems the only leg Bush has to stand on is his foreign policy, and a lot of people at home don’t care much about that. umu now, me ucmocrais nave oecn coasting on men own convention high, helped in great part by the media. In fact, the media seems to be playing an unusually big (and a little slanted) part in the way the candidates are being viewed. They have been writing a surprising number of soft, compas sionate reviews of the Clinton-Gore baby-boomer ticket while writing scathing editorials about how Quaylc can’t spell potato. Did anyone think to ask the teacher why he/shc spelled it wrong on the spelling card in the first place? How come the public never reads about the more frequent good things that Quaylc says? What happen to equal coverage? Balance? Giving each side equal lime so that the public could make an educated decision based on the unbiased reporting of where the candidates stand on the important issues? If someone had been locked in a box for the last year and a half, and read this week’s newspapers and magazines, they’d probably think Clinton had just won the election by a landslide and Bush was making his farewell speeches from a hospital bed before being planted six feet under. In two weeks, the Republican Convention will be held in Houston. This is Bush’s time to kickstart his campaign and the media’s chance to redeem themselves — but the question is will they? AL -EDITORIAL POLICY Man editorials represent tne om cial policy of the Summer 1992 Daily Nebraskan. Policy is set by the Daily Nebraskan Editorial Board. Its mem bers are: Adcana Leftin, editor; Cindy Kimbrough, features editor; Jeff Singer, copy editor; Stacie McKee, photo chief; James Mchsling, art director. Editorials do not necessarily re flect the views of the university, its employees, the students or the NU Hoard ot Kegcnts. Editorial columns represent the opinion of the author. The Daily Nebraskan’s publishers arc the regents, who established the UNL Publications Board tosupervisc the daily production of the paper. According to policy set by the regents, responsibility for the edito rial content of the newspaper lies solely in the hands of its students. -LETTER POLICY The Daily Nebraskan welcomes brief letters to the editor from all read ers and interested others. Letters will be selected for publica tion on the basis of clarity, originality, timeliness and space available. The Daily Nebraskan retains the right to edit or reject all material submitted. Readers also arc welcome to sub mil material as guest opinions. Whether material should run as a let ter or guest opinion is left to the edi tor’s discretion. Letters and guest opinions sent to the newspaper become the properly of the Daily Nebraskan and cannot be relumed. Anonymous submissions will not be considered for publication. Letters should include the author’s name, year in school, major and group affili ation, if any. Requests to withhold names will not be granted. Submit material to the Daily Ne braskan, 34 Nebraska Union, 1400 R St., Lincoln, Neb. 68588-0448. AV\ SORB VJVP \(M COME \M\TH V p0 N\MU I Ml THE PADpfe WITH (30ALITY I % THE WOW. 1C I % Does female chauvinism exist? i How many of you fellows out there have ever been walking down the street just minding your own business, when, all of a sudden, an angry woman comes storm ing out of nowhere, spits on your brand new sports coal and calls you a male chauvinist pig? Maybe this particular scenario is a bit of an exaggeration, but you get the idea. Men are accused almost daily of being sexist, chauvinistic and some times downright beastly. And a lot of them deserve those titles. But there’s a flip side to this coin that many people arc unaware of— female chau vinism. That’s right—female chauvinism is alive and well probably in most parts of the world. It's an easy trap to fall into and a difficult habit to break. I know this. I’ve been there. I can’t tell you exactly when I discovered that I was a female chau vinist. Actually, I had always prided myself on being completely fair to everyone, male and female alike. In fact, I was always the first one to argue when my girlfriends would elaborate on what horrible creatures men were, pointing out how many “nice guys” we had as friends and how we just couldn’t make those kinds of sweeping generalizations. But in the back of my mind, I believed that these men were the ex ceptions. I also believed that the men who smiled at me when I passed them on the street, exchanged notes with me in class or in any way treated me with kindness were very likely brutal, wicked and cold-hearted in other situ ations. I never considered this to be an unfair assessment — I simply be lieved it. In fact, 1 thought everyone believed it. I suppose the reality of my chau vinism started to kick in sometime during my sophomore year of college. This is usually the lime that most of us begin to question things that we’ve always taken for granted and begin to adopt a more mature, realistic per spective. It was around this lime that the women whom I’d spent hours with a few years before, discussing the innate evil of the male species, no longer seemed to agree with my harsh judgment. It was also around this lime that 1 found myself surrounded by many people I respected and cared for as friends who happened to be of this vile,evil species. I often slipped up by going on anti-male rampages, forget ting that these people I confided in belonged to the target group. But the main thing that alerted me to my status as a female chauvinist was my nit-picking. Men could do no right. And if they did, 1 drove myself crazy looking for the catch. It was after I realized that in rare cases there was no catch, that it dawned on me. I haled men. I disliked them, I dis trusted them, and, in fact, I feared them. It was very easy for me to feel this way. One of the first things women arc taught is that men arc not to be trusted. It’s almost impossible for a female child to spend any lime around adult women without hearing stories of what conniving, insensitive pigs men arc. I, personally, was subject to many such stories and, for years, believed them unqucstioningly. But it was more than that. I was jealous of men. I was jealous that they seemed not to worry about things as much as women, to get angry and belligerent in situations where a woman would feel hurt and self-blaming and (here’s the big one) I not to care as much what happened in relationships as women. I spent years trying to perfect these traits in order to outdo the men in my life. I resolved that if men were strong, I would be invincible; if men were intimidating, 1 would be terrifying; if men weren ’lopen, I would be locked. I make no secret ol the lact that this didn’t work quite the way I’d planned. In other words, most of the men who I tried these tactics on saw through it. The egotist in me wants to believe that this was because I’d broken the code and had been speaking to them in their language. I’ll never know whether or not this was the case, but there is something I’ve started doing since then that has helped me to put my female chauvinism into perspective. I’ve started talking with none other than those evil, threatening creatures themselves. I decided that if I was ever going to get past my fear, hatred and envy, I had to go straight to the source. And I was amazed at what I learned. The more men I spoke to and questioned about the reasons that men respond differently in certain situa tions than women, the more I realized that they were only human beings and not entirely different from me. Of course, I’m referring to the majority. There will always be those who fall into the category of male chauvinist pigs. However, as a recov ering female chauvinist, I realize that I am capable of the same unfairness and hostility as they are. I am happy to say that I am now much more selec tive about the men I criticize. I now narrow it down to the men I know. Katherine Audi isa senior English nud«>r and a Daily Nebraskan columnist.