Americans owe much to fallen I 1 omorrow is Veterans Day. M Time to relied on the men and women who served and died lor their country. Who were they? People a lot like us. Many of those who*served and died in our nation’s wars were our age. The mighty American armies we read about in grade school were made up of people just like the ones you would find on a college campus. If you want to imagine what these soldiers w ere like, take a look at your lricnds — or in the mir ror. What did they serve and die for? For us. For you and me. We often lake them for granted today, but our basic freedoms — to speak and write freely, to have our human rights protected — did not come cheaply. The veterans we honor tomorrow paid for them with their service and often their lives. We would not be a able to enjoy our freedoms today if pas^genera tions hadn’t been brave enough to stand up lor them when they were threatened. Now, with the Cold War over, it seems unlikely that our generation will have to sacrifice in the way so many bclorc us have. It seems un likely we will have to die in large numbers to protect our freedoms. So people our ageespccially should take time tomorrow to remember those people who died so we could be free and so we would not have to light. We owe something to those veter ans who had their lives cut short de fending America. We owe it to them to make sure the country they died to protect in war doesn’t come apart in peace times. Even though our generation may not have to go to war and many of us die to protect our freedoms, we can sti 11 serve in other ways to honor those who sacrificed before us. On Veteran’s £)ay, we should think about past generations of Americans who gave their lives so we could live in freedom today. They died for America and for us. They d icd to protect people they didn T even know. They gave their lives for this coun try. What will we give? •:* Because if we let this country de cline, if we let our domestic problems continue to worsen, then we will be saying that the sacrifice of those who died to let us have a free life meant little. Past generations of Americans have faced great challenges and adversar ies and defeated them so we could live bur lives safely. Now our generation has its chal lenges and adversaries as well. Our challenge is not from without, but from within. Can we improve this country that has been given to us?Can we make it work? Our new cnem ics arc not overseas, but on our street corners. Our new adversaries arc homelessness and hun ger, unemployment and poverty, ig norance and AIDS. We can start doing something about these domestic problems right away. Our new president will lead us. We elected him because he said he wanted change. But Bill Clinton can’t do it all. The real test is what we arc willing to do. Presidents can make the speeches and push us forward, but we must do the work. Or refuse to do it. We will decide whether we have real change in America. Ourcountry’s severe domestic challenges will only improve if you and I arc willing to work and sacrifice to solve them. I lived in Washington, D.C., two summers ago, and the thing I rcmcm. ber most about the city, even more than the While House or the Con gress, was Arlington National Cem etery. A garden of stone, it has been called. There arc just rows and rows of tombstones — each representing a person who fought for America. The rows seem to go on forever, blending in with the green grass and tall trees. The graves of John and Robert Kennedy are there, tributes to a lime when sacrifice and service were val ued and rewarded. An honor guard paces before the tomb of the unknown soldier with machine-like precision. Arlington is a monument of sacri fice, representing what people were willing to give up to protect their freedom and their country. I hope the monument of our gen eration will be a country where people do not have to live in our streets, whcrcevcry American has the ability to fulfill his or her potential, where all our citizens arc treated equally and fairly. That might seem like a dream, but it can be a reality if we arc willing to. work and sacrifice for it. All generations before us have been up to the challenges they faced. Will we be up to ours? Free of a real threat of war, we arc the first generation in many years that hasthcabilily to focus its energies and talents on its domestic problems. We have the ability and opportu nity to make our country truly great. We have the ability to make America a great country for all our citizens. Past generations of Americans served and sometimes died so we could have the America we have to day. What we do with our country now will be the legacy of our genera tion. We could offer no higher tribute to the men and women we honor on Veterans Day than to make that legacy a great one. Fitzpatrick is a junior political science major, a news and sports reporter and a Daily Nebraskan Columnist. Election offers change of pace While I was pleased with the election results Nov. 3 — surprise — and am actually glad to be done with the whole thing, I cannot help myself from reviewing one last time 1992’s election. Obviously the most visible result was the Bill | I Clinton-AI Gore vic lory. Now the Demo I pjl crats have the opportu S|mJ| nity to pul their money where their mouths arc. tj It should prove intercsl K9IHH ing lo see ihc results we gel from Washington, D.C. No longer can governmeni inac tivity be blamed on gridlock. And no longer can government blame grid lock for not gelling anything done. Although I am optimistic, a wait and-see attitude may be wise. Clinton proved himself adept at creating and holding together an election coali tion. The real lest will be if he can now remove himself from the numerous special interest groups and lead the United States. Vice President-elect Gore has the opportunity to influcnccsomc much needed environmental direction. Say what you will, and interpret the data however you please, but the bottom line is that humanity is ruining the earth. We are ruining the earth only in respect to our continued existence upon this planet. The Earth will sur vive with or without humanity. What we need are intelligent, far sighted, economically sound environ mental programs. These are whatGorc proposes, and I hope they will be implemented. The Year of the Woman. While women made definite in roads this year, the overall results were disappointing. Carol Moscly Brown from Illinois will be the first African-American woman in the Senate. She will be 3 joined by Dianne Fcinsicin and Bar bara Boxer from California and Patty Murray, the self-styled “mom in ten nis shoes” from Washington, D.C. This brings the total number of women in the Senate to six. With women casting 54 percent of the vote this year, this number seems woefully inadequate. Other women were not so success ful. The man perhaps most respon sible for thefyear of the woman, Arlcn Specter, defeated Lynn Ycakcl. Spec ter was heavily criticized — properly so — for his treatment of Anita Hill during the Clarence Thomas confir mation hearings. Although the voters of Pennsylva nia were convinced Specter’s trcal mentof Hill was an anomaly, I remain unconvinced. Of course, I am also keenly disappointed in our own Sen. James Exon who was among the first Democrats to support Thomas after the hearings ended. Women in general were not so fortunate next door in Iowa. I’m not really sure why the voters were so fearful of giving women ex pi ic it equal ity in the Iowa stale constitution by adding the word “women” after “men” in the phrase “all men arc created equal.’’ To those who argue that women already do have equality, I would like to point out the 70 cents on every dollar that women earn compared U) men, not to mention the glass ceiling keeping women out of the lop man agement positions. An extensive and grossly inaccu rate anti-ER A movement centered on Pal Robertson and Phyllis Schally. For those of you not familiar with Schafly, she is a major player in the national anti-choice movement and now has increased her scope to in clude being anti-women. What busi ness her and Robertson had in Iowa is unclear. That movement targeted elderly voters in a scare campaign that in cluded Robertson’s now infamous lesbian and witchcraft quote. The ir rationality of these anti-choice, anti women, just plain anti-people never ceases to ama/c and frighten. On a brighter note, the voters of Oregon soundly defeated an initiative that would have called homosexual ity perverse and required th is view be taught in public schools. The ridicu lous elosed-mindedness of this initia tive guaranteed its defeat— this time. Even so, Colorado passed a mea sure that reversed the progress made thus far by nullifying anti-gay bias laws already on the books. Individual rights did not fair well in the Midwest. All 14 stales with term limits on their ballots passed them. I still main tain that Nebraska made a mistake. It is wishful thinking that there will be a national movement for term limits. As more states pass term limits, those remaining states will have more and more to gain by not having them. Their senators and rcprcscnlativcswill rapidly gain control of the powerful positions with catastrophic results for term-limited slates. Now Exon is in the running to be the powerful committee chairman of the Senate Armed Services Commit tee if current chairman Sam Nunn lakes a position in the Clinton admin istration. That fact highlights the mis take we made. A curious aspect of this is that although 70 percent of Nebraskans voted in favor of term limits, we re elected all three representatives. This is like the serial killer turning himself in, saying, “Stop me before I kill again.” The next four years should prove interesting. Although I lament the passing of excellent column material as supplied by Bush ct al, I look forward to being a partof these chang ing times. So should you. Heckman is a graduate student in politi cal science and a Daily Nebraska editorial columnist. Relieve Your Parking Headaches OVER 1500 SPACES % CLOSE TO CAMPUS 1 block CKnIerat west of Rth^Qth Memorial 8t*? & 9tfh Stadium Call 474-2274 NATIONAL GARAGKS, INC. 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