OH NON Nebraskan Editorial Board University of Nebraska-Lincoln Chris Hopfensperger.".Editor, 472-1766 Dionne Searcey.Opinion Page Editor Kris Karnopp. Managing Editor Alan Phelps. Wire Editor Wendy Navratil. Writing Coach Stacey McKenzie.. ...Senior Reporter Jeremy Fitzpatrick.. .. Columnist Steering clear Campaign trail should include Nebraska ' 9 Nebraska has been ignored in the race for the presidency. Candidates have steered clear of the state on the campaign trail. They don’t realize Nebraska could provide them with some bonus votes. To win the presidency, a candidate must receive a majority — 270 — of the Electoral College votes cast. Electoral voles arc acquired by winning in individual states. _ Most states work on a winncr-takc-all system. But Nebraska’s electoral votes arc awarded by congressional district instead. All three presidential candidates could win an electoral vole in Ne braska by carry ing one of the state’s three districts. Nebraska’s other two electoral votes will be awarded to the candidate who wins the state. Those votes come from Nebraska’s two senators who arc elected by the state rather than by districts. In all other David Badders/DN stales but Maine, the? presiden-. lial candidate who wins the majority of the votes receives all the states’ electoral votes. That means any one of the candidates could pick up a few extra votes from Nebraska. Granted the state has only five electoral votes. California has 54, New York 33, Texas 32. Iowa has seven electoral votes. But Bill Clinton campaigned in, Iowa Saturday. George Bush was there this morning. No one came to Nebraska. Well, almost no one. * Barbara Bush was here this summer spreading love and cheer to youngsters by reading them a book. Marylin Quaylc came to the state and did something of equal importance. Jerry Brown was even in Scottsbluff, for heaven’s sake. The highest-ranking government official to cross the state's boundaries was Al Gore when he visited Omaha last week. But Lincolnitcs who wanted to rally in direct support of Clinton or Bush this week had to drive three hours. Nebraska has more than 1.1 million people of voting age. And normally those voters lean toward the right come polling lime. In 1988, only six states — Florida, Idaho, New Hampshire, South Carolina, Utah and Wyoming — had a higher percentage of Republican votes than Nebraska. Bush may think he has the state wrapped around his finger. The World-Herald, the state’s largest newspaper, has already endorsed the Bush/Quayle ticket. But both candidates should realize that Nebraskans aren’t all Republicans. A growing crowd of Democrats exists on liberal college campuses where students are exposed to the real world and the way it works. That fact should scare Bush. It should motivate Clinton to campaign stronger in this state. But so far it hasn’t done either. And more than likely, it won’t. Nebraskans must realize their vole still counts, even though the state will be ignored by both candidates. Staff editorials represent the official policy of the Fall 1992 Daily Nebraskan. Policy is set by the Daily Nebraskan Editorial Board. Editorials do not necessarily reflect the views of the university,itsemployccs,the studentsorlhc NL Board of Regents. Editorial columns represent the opinion of the author. The regents publish the Daily Nebraskan. They establish the UNI. Publications Board to supervise the daily production of the paper. According to pojicy set by • the regents, responsibility for the editorial content of the newspaper lies solely in the hands of its students. * **. The Daily Nebraskan welcomes brief letters to the editor from all readers and interested others. Letters will be selected for publication on the basis of clarity, originality, tmiclincss and space available. 'I he Daily Nebraskan retains the right to edit or reject all material submitted. Readers also are welcome to submit material as guest opinions. Ihe editor decides whether material should run as a guest opinion. Letters and guest opinions sent to the newspaper become the property ol the Daily Nebraskan and cannot be relumed. Anonymous submissions will not be published. Letters should included the author’s name, year in school, major and group affiliation, if any. Requests to w ilhhold names w ill not be granted. Submit material to the Dailv Nebraskan, 34 Nebraska Union, 14(H) R St., Lincoln, Neb. 68588-0448. KTW ^f1 ttEfvRV 'SOU.fotiL, -tCM., 'WESfaKTE S*TO^F ^\&WT WERE Hoo V4M?\| \Wlfc ^9{R WttN •^K^,.. . i \ / ,& Finding refuge in the final frontier ■ he space shuttle is in space £ again this week. I’m not sure exactly what the astronauts arc doing. Pulling a satel lite in orbit, I think. Most people aren’t paying much more attention to the space shuttle than I am. Many Americans seem bored with s ace missions. Some question whether the m issions arc of any use at all. That attitude is unfor tunate, because space is the last safely valve left for our increasingly crowded planet. When the rest of the world became too crowded — politi cally and otherwise— the first Ameri cans came across theoccan and settled here. When early America became too crowded, explorers moved out again, settling states like Nebraska. People have always had a new frontier to settle if conditions became too constraining. People could always start over by moving. Now the United Stales is growing more crowded again, as witnessed by our increasing social problems, but we have nowhere to go. Nowhere, that is, but up. space, as u nas been noted, is our final frontier. But just when space could serve so critical a role to our country, we seem to be giving up on it. Sure, there is still talk of pulling bases on the moon or going to Mars. But are we really excited about it? Do we really care if we go or not? Somewhere we lost that drive — that vision. Somewhere we stopped dreaming of such things. It’s time we started again. We need to revive the spirit that began the space movement, the spirit with which John Kennedy pushed Americans to land a man on the moon. “We chose to go to the moon and do the other things,” Kennedy said in 1962, “not because they arc easy, but because they are hard, because that goal will serve to organize and mea sure the bestofourenergiesand skills, because that challenge is one we arc willing to accept and one we intend to win.” Space then provided us with a na :_ m tional goal and direction. Now with the end of the Cold War, America needs such a focus again. We have spent so long fighting to keep the world free that we don’t know' what to do now that freedom reigns. Many areas that have been ne glected in recent years need our atten tion. Education, health care, cconom ic competitiveness and our deteriorat ing cities arc only a few. But it would be a mistake in turn ing our national attention inward to turn our cyds downward. We should keep them raised to the stars. Space can provide us with a national goal we need so badly. We do not have to become an old and tired nation as we leave this cen tury and enter a new one. Space and its possibilities can makcus young again. Think of the potential that space offers us. Imagine what we might accomplish. Now is the perfect lime for America, wandering aimlessly after the Cold War, to turn it’s focus back to the stars. It is a natural role for a nation of explorers. Some w ill say space exploration is too expensive, or too foolish. But the same people would have laughed at explorers coming 10 America, or me Wrighi brothers, or someone who said that one day men would walk on the moon. America was made great by people who were not discouraged by such voices. In these days, with our cities crowded and our national purpose unclear, we need a common goal. America is com ini apart at the scams, and we need something to pull us together. / Space is that opportunity. It would require us to have courage. It would require us to dream. It would require us to work very hard. But Americans—when chal lenged — can do those things better than anyone in the world. Working to gether, there is nothing we cannot accomplish. What will we discover? What will we gain? Who might we encounter? That we cannot know. Columbus, preparing for his voyage 5(X) years ago,could hardly have imagined what would result from his journey. But the world would have been dillcrcnt had he not sailed. ExplorerscomingtoAmcricacould not comprehend that they began what would become one of the great na tions of the world. But still, they came. Today, we cannot know what will become of our efforts of space explo ration. We cannot look 500 years into the future and see the results. But the resulls will be great. Be cause the inevitable courseof human ity is toward progress, and space is the next step in that journey. The citizens of the United Stales can decide to pick themselves up and lead the world in that effort. Or weean choose to refuse the opportunity be cause it is loo risky, because it is too expensive, because we don’t have it in us anymore. The choice is ours to make. Our generation will be remembered as the first explorers of space — or as a people too timid to try. 1 think we should try. And I think wc will. Robert Fulghum writes that when a bystander asked Benjamin Franklin at the launching of the first hot air balloon what good it could possibly be, Franklin replied, “What good is a newborn baby?” The exploration of space is yet a baby. The good that can come from it is completely up to us. ck is a junior e major, a news reporter ly Nebraskan tnnisL