Small things add up to change I nless your roommates locked J you in the closet, you know the presidential debates have been a big deal for the past 10 days. I watched about 20 minutes of each one. That was enough for me. The good stabs, quotes and soundbites were in the newspapers the next day. I’ve seen and read enough to know that no one really said anything I hadn’t al ready heard. Bush preaches trust. Clinton offfcrs change. Perot is all cars. But none of them have spent the night with Maxine Moul. I did. For you closet dwellers, Moul is the lieutenant governor of our fair state. Maxine Moul was in attendance at the Great Plains Winter Slccpoul ben efit for the homeless Friday night. ,As were Jeff, a fearless reporter, Corey, another fearless reporter, and myself, a fearless photographer, to cover the event. Moul spent the early morning hours in a cardboard box in the shadow of the Capitol, the scat of our fair state’s government. Jeff and I spent the early morning hours in a warm building, drinking lots of coffee and chatting with the medical crew since everyone else, including Moul, was asleep. So, after our umpteenth cup, we decided we could say we spent the night w ith the lieutenant governor. Maybe you had to be there. Maybe you should have been there. More than 100 people braved the cold Friday night to raise about 525,000 for organizations that aid the homeless. Student participation from the University of Ncbraska-Lincoln was sorely lacking. True, student-athletes and mem bers of Golden Key National Honor Society collected food and clothing for donation. But when it came lime for Corey to find a camping UNL student tb inter view, he had to hunt awhile. Union College, an institution sig nificantly smaller than UNL, had a significantly larger warm-body count at the slccpout. It’s a big deal that out of some 26,000 students, only a handful cared enough about homelessness to show their support. Really, it wasn’t that hard. The Salvation Army canteen handed out lots of coffee, sandwiches, pizza, doughnuts and orange juice. Sure, the temperature dipped into the low 20s, but with lots of clothes and a nice, warm sleeping bag, the chill was probably minimal. OK, so 1 spent the really -chilly hours inside, but I stepped out fre quently to check on my sleeping sub jects, like Moul, and to get more coffee. I care about homelessness. I can not imagine not having a place of my own where I was able to sleep, shower and cal. Some of you feel the same way, I’m sure. We need to be concerned, because any one of us, rich or poor, young or old/could find ourselves living on the streets someday. Being on the streets is entirely different from what happened Friday night. Comparing the slccpout to ac tually being homeless is like compar ing a paper cut to getting bone marrow sucked out of your body. My friend Kara has donated mar row in two separate operations to help a little girl she has never met who is suffering from a blood disease. That, to me, makes the slccpout look like a cakewalk. The slccpout wasn’t even on a debate night, when citizens every where were glued to their televisions. However, it was a Friday night, much like this Friday night, and I know how Friday nights arc for slu y dents: “Hey, Debbi, you going to that big party on 19th Street?” “Oh God, no, Heather, I’m going to the bars with Steph and Jenn and Bart. I am, like, SO stressed out, I need a drink big time.” *“Wcll, maybe we’ll sec you at Duffy’s.” “Yeah ... on the floor!” (Hysteri cal giggling under professor’s mono tone.) We drink ourselves into stupors on weekends and watch the debates with bated breath, hoping that some politi cal savior will step into the White House and cure what ails us. Get your head out of the closet, and smell the Salvation Army coffee. If you want trust, act responsibly. If you want change, then act. If you want to be all ears, well, Halloween is right around the corner, and I’m sure you can find some sort of attach ments. The government, the bureaucracy, the deficit, the debates, the special interests, the baby-kissing and the pcrk-protccting are all out of control. Expecting the government to solve this nation’s problems is like expect ing Nebraska to win the national title this year — it ain’t gonna happen unless someone gels busy. In the ease of this grass-roots na tion, that someone is us. You don’t have to donate marrow or sleep outside or stay out of the bars or give up all your worldly posses sions to be a responsible citizen. Do nating old clothes, food, money or time helps a little, and every little bit helps. You also might register to vole, if you haven’t already. Today’s the dead line. But don’t expect your vote to change the world. Only we can do that. Paulman is a senior news-editorial and history major and a Daily Nebraskan pho tographer and coluhinitt. Finnegan has tools for Congress In 1 1/2 weeks the voters of the 1st Congressional District will decide whether Democratic challenger Gerry Finnegan should represent Nebraska in the U.S. House of Representatives. To this point, Finnegan’s attempt to win the scat of seven term incumbent Doug Bcreutcr has been an uphill battle. Because challengers have de feated incumbents in less than 4 percent of the Congressional races in recent history, however, Finnegan’s battle is nothing strange. The nationwide mood of anti-in cumbency may improve those odds slightly this year, but it is still unlikely that a challenger who is not indepen dently wealthy or facing a scandal ridden incumbent will break the trend. Although Finnegan is not wealthy, he docs stand out from the typical Congressional candidate in a number of other ways. Perhaps ~'foremost among Fiflncgan s assets arc the leadership skills he developed as a U.S. Navy pilot. Anyone who has ever been around him will not only testily to his unassuming and down-to-earth man ner, but the confidence of someone who is accustomed to being a leader. Forthoseol us who have not served in the armed forces, however, Finnegan’s recent endeavors as an instructor in the finance department at the University of Ncbraska-Lin coln may strike closer to home. 1 never had the privilege of taking Finance 260 from Finnegan during my years as an undergraduate, so I contacted Manfcrd Peterson, chair man of the finance department, to get a better feel for how Finnegan’s peers on the faculty fell about him. . Peterson had only positive things •to say about Finnegan and noted that he was always well-liked among the faculty and continually received fa vorablc reviews in his student evalu ations. Peterson had never taken a course from Finnegan, however, so I called several of Finnegan’s former students to learn about his effectiveness as an instructor. As someone who was al ready convinced of Finnegan’s ex traordinary character, the results of my inquiry were not surprising. Pete Castellano, the first ol Finnegan’s former students I spoke with, took Finnegan’s class in the spring of 1991. Castellano said that as a certified financial planner, Finnegan was uniquely able to connect the concepts he was leaching into real-world expe riences. Finnegan was eager to pre pare his students for the problems they were beginning to face, Castellano said, and his personal ex periences were an extremely effec tive leaching tool. While esoteric discussions arc use ful in many subjects, it struck me as significant that Finnegan was wise enough to focus on the pragmatic aspects of finance that students could apply directly to their personal expe riences. Learning for the sake of learning can be thrilling, but it’s equally im portant for college instructors to pre pare tomorrow’s work force to face the problems they’re certain to en counter. Castellano also mentioned a prac tice of Finnegan’s that illustrated the instructor’s interest in each student as a person. On the first day of class, Finnegan would have each student write his or her name on a placard he had handed out prior to class and place the placard on each student’s desk. After only three or four classes, Finnegan had learned the names of each of his 40 or 50 students so that he could call on them by name in discus sions. As I look back on my years as an undergraduate, 1 would guess I’ve^ had more than 40 professors. Al the most, three or four took the time to learn the names of those of us in the class. The professors who did reaped the rewards, as the classroom discussion was always more exciting. People who didn’t normally participate felt more at case volunteering their opin ions, and students were generally bet ter prepared. At a large institution, a professor who knows your name can give you the extra incentive to be prepared and ask the questions you might have, as opposed to letting you melt in with the classroom scenery. Another student I spoke with, Barry Eby, took Finnegan’s class last fall. Eby, who will graduate in December, said Finnegan was one of the best professors he had had al the univer sity. Eby said he particularly enjoyed Finnegan’s ability to present the class material in realistic terms. Finnegan was also extremely approachable, he said. Eby talked with Finnegan after many of the classes about a wide variety of subjects and was impressed by Finnegan’s ability tocxplain things in a clear, straightforward manner. Approachabilily and clarity arc priceless characteristics for a con gressman to have, and Finnegan has demonstrated both in his capacity as an instructor. Finnegan’s exemplary record as an instructor at UNL is one more reason he will receive my vole to represent Nebraska’s 1st Congres sional District. I encourage you to think about some of the characteristics you re spect most in your instructors and congressman — honesty, straightfor wardness and approachabilily. When you cast your vote on Nov. 3, consider the person who has all of those quali ties, Gerry Finnegan. Rrunibg is a second-year law student and a Daily Nebraskan columnist. Are You Late? I • Free Pregnancy testing Women's : abort?onCprocedures Medical Center to 14 weeks of Nebraska • aSva»U^y app0m,men,S 4930 "L" Street • Student discounts 7 • Visa Mastercard (402)734-7500 visa, Mastercard Toll free (800) 877-6337 HE RIDE OF TERRO IS BACK! 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