PfeRy OF a . The carefree days of Everyday we search They operate the The work has made my 1 simple vacationing are for the Tiberius bust boat while Leo and body hard and tan I 'onfl 6or,e-Tims hair with two drunken I dive. Tim is the suspect Ive become '* start,n6 to $row fishermen Leo hired map maker somewhat of a sex to assist us. symbol to the local I tease them but none We work all day Sometimes our ass- They fight until one of them get any play then we drink Tio istants drink too of thern throws up because Im too Pepe and watch the much and get mto from overexertion, busy with work. sun set over the a fist-fight Spain is beautiful _£Sean ^ _ a 8. it AIDS Facing the unseen enemy I went to Washington, DC. last weekend with my mother, Jean, and my older brother, KC, to see the AIDS Names Quilt. It’s huge—about 15 acres and grow ing — made of panels bearing the names, dates, pictures, me mentos, poems, images and wordscommemoraiing individu als who have died of AIDS. It nearly filled the west side of the grounds around the Wash ington monument. This was the first international display and probably the last time it will all be shown in one place because it’s gelling so big. In this one weekend it grew from about 22,000 panels to more than 27,000 panels with the panels brought from around the world for the occasion. The additions included the panel my brother made for JC, his partner of 14 years who died in July, just a few days short of his 45lh birthday. Not everyone who hasdied of AIDS has a panel on (he quilt. In the United Slates there have been 226,281 reported cases (June ’92); over 150,000 of those have died. In Nebraska (through Septem ber) 299 people have been diag nosed with AIDS; 207 of them have died. It cannot be known how many other people carry the virus but have not yet been diagnosed. The World Health Organization estimatcsthercareSmillion to 10 million cases worldwide (World Press Review, Jan. ’92, “I low other nations suffer and cope”). The nu mber of people infected with the virus include my brother who tested HIV positive nearly five years ago. He’s one of the lucky ones so far, but he eventu ally may die of some AlDS-re lated infection. It angers me that some people find something amusing about that, but that’s not the point here. Besides the effect that AIDS will have on the human popula tion — some kind of dent in the growth curve — it shares some thing else with the global threats more commonly considered "en vironmental.” It is one of an increasing nurmjcr 01 mings mai can effect us — things that can kill you — that you can’t sec, can’t feel, can’t immediately reg ister with your physical senses. The Industrial Revolution in cluded an enormous increase in the knowledge and use of phe nomena that arc, in a sense, ‘‘extrasensory.” We’ve been- messing around with things that require special instru ments to mcasu re or detect at all: from metallurgy t(> preci sion engineering; chemistry to particle physics, from electronics to telecommunications and mi croscopy to molecular biology. Hut there is something all loo human about the way we tend to ignore what our unaided senses can’tdetect.even when we know belter. I suppose that is related to the way people can behave as if the minor impact of one piece of litter, one cigarette, one baby, or one vote won’t really makemuch difference. It’s easy to ignore the fact that a minor impact multiplied by hundreds of thousands, millions or billions can become a global impact. Our brains are not equipped to perceive that many things a* once. And to conceive of that many things requires an intellec tual process without the support of confirming evidence from our five senses. Maybe that ability represents a milestone of development simi lar to the awareness of “object per manence" when an infant realizes that things don’t disappear forever when they slip out of visual range. I think there’s something wrong with an education that fails to make these lessons slick Sometimes such lessons can be learned by actual ly seeing the cumulative effect of things too small to perceive. A small part, 1,100 panels, of the AIDS quill will be displayed at the Civic Auditorium in Omaha the week end of Dec. 5. There’s no charge for admission though donations are welcome to support educa tion about AIDS/IHV. — Dan Clinchard SundayDinner?_ i Use Your Noode! Stuff Your Face • Choose from one of our ten sauces. /-v • Al the spaghetti you can eat (Cal about] • Piping hot garlc bread & Salad Bar ^ party Meals startins at $3.99 475^00 228 ft 12tMJxoh .Just 2 Blocto From Campus