Opinion Netsskan V^X XX 1 XVyl 1 Thursday, Juna 24,1993 Netjraskan Editorial Board University of Nebraska-Lincoln Jeff Singer..Editor, 472-1766 Jeremy Fitzpatrick. .Features Editor Jeff Zeleny. ........Copy Desk Chief Sam Kepfield.. ..Columnist Anne Sleyer. .Staff Reporter -1_I Tuition quandaries Five percent increase raises questions The NU Board of Regents’ unanimous approval last Saturday of a 5 percent tuition increase might cause some occasional grumbling from pan of UNL’s student body, but the raise is warranted if the extra fees go to helping save departments and university jobs. But the question is will it? The majority of students who will be affected by the in crease will be resident undergraduates, whose tuition will go up from $61.50 to $64.50 per credit hour. But the University of Nebraska-Lincoln is ranked 10th among its 11-member peer group in 1992-93 for basic cost of attendance, with only the University of Kansas being cheaper. Overall last year, Nebraska was $1085 less expensive in basic costs as compared to its fellow counterparts in the Midwest. So UNL students’ complaints about the upcoming tuition raise are unjustified. Unless, of course, if departments continue to be cut and university employees continue to be eliminated. With the recent cuts to several UNL departments and 36 faculty, administrative and support staff positions being eliminated at the end of the month, it would seem that funds created from the tuition increase could help not only save some of these areas, but future areas as well that will no doubt feel the blade of the budget-cutting axe in the near future. True, the fees that will be generated from the tuition hike probably would not be able to save all departments from cuts or all of the employees from receiving their final UNL pay checks next week, but it could help alleviate some of the financial burden that are causing these cuts. The Nebraska Legislature’s recommendation in April for the tuition raise was believed to be a necessity to keep the high quality of faculty and staff at the stale’s largest academic institution. UNL student regent Keith Benes said at the regent meeting last weekend that “we’re doing what we have to do to maintain the quality of programs at the university.” But in order for UNL’s student body to see these tuition hikes as vital and justified, something positive and productive must come from them. And cutting departments and firing employees on the eve of their implementation in the fall isn’t the way to do it. -VuiJL-LL 1 Suff editorials represent the official policy of the Summer 1993 Daily Nebraskan. Policy is set by the Daily Nebraskan Ldilorial Board. Ldilorials do not necessarily reflect the views of the university, its employ ccs, the sludcnlsorlhcNU Board of Regents. Ldilorial columns represent the opinion of the author. The regents publish the Daily Nebraskan. 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Submit material to the Daily Nebraskan, 34 Nebraska Union, 1400 R St., Lincoln, Neb. 68588-0448. me MORE I WHAT ARC WB n THE gUDGiFT T) Tka^s an hT * c V ee. i | - r -" --- - Hormones, not harassment Teenagers looking lustfully at one another, making teasing remarks. Guys “accidentally” brushing against girls in the hallways. Both sexes grabbing one another. Sounds like the high school I went to 15 years ago. Sounds like any normal high school in America today, with normal teenagers. But, now, horror of horrors, we learn that this activity, formerly at tributed to racing hormones, is in fact the vilest form of behavior known to our society today, sexual harassment. According to a study by the Ameri can Association of University Women, 85 percent of girls say they have expe rienced harassment. Surprisingly, 76 percent of boys said they had as well. While praised by radical feminists as proving how girls are being op pressed by men, a closer look at the study shows that it is social science research at its worst, akin to studies showing blacks as genetically infe rior to whites. The AAUW cast its net far too broadly, including such things as be ing the subject of graffiti on restroom walls, or being looked at wrong. De fining mere looks or comments as sexual harassment docs not fit the definition of real harassment. When all of the politically correct gobblcdy gook is taken away, the rates for being forced into unwanted sex arc roughly the national average. Even then, it might be claimed that such behavior is sexual assault, but “date rape” is another can of worms. Someone ought to take these re searchers aside and shout a few words of common sense into their ears. IT’S HORMONES, NOT HARASS MENT!! Adolescents are, by definition, in capable of thinking straight. That first powerful rush of hormones overrides all other brain processes. It’s a left over from more primitive days when We bombard kids with sox on TV, In movies and In print all day long, and we claim to be surprised when they (or their hormones) act on those messages. a boy was a man at 15 and ready to procreate after killing his first wild beast, with no delayed development through high school. And, notice if you will, it occurs on both sides. While 66 percent of boys admitted to this behavior, 52 percent of fcirls said they had sexually ha rassed others. But, of course, all we hear about in this study is how girls are affected, how they drop out be cause of low self-esteem aggravated by sexual harassment. Is it because boys arc such brutish louts that they aren’t affected? The AAUW had an objective in mind when they began this study, and they worked backward from that to rationalize their findings. Nan Stein of Wellesley College, a big advocate of this sort of research, has called playground antics such as boys lifting up girls’ skirls “gender terrorism,” in politically correct/radical feminist lingo. Stein and the AAUW arc part of what author Christina Hoff Summer called “the gender bias industry,” people and organizations who exist solely to find sexism, real or (mostly) imagined, and pimish it. The sad thing is that some schools already take this seriously. Listening toagpoupof counselors on “Nightline" detail their heroic rescue of a victim and the banishment of the tormentor to re-education, one almost thought they were making themselves out to be comic-book superheroes. I can see it now — the new Sensitivity Police Liberal Action Team (SPLAT) Comix from DC! If only this were a comic, then we could laugh at it. Hannah Arenat once aennea a to talitarian regime as one where the lines between public and private be havior are blurred. This seems a per fect description of what the AAUW and NOW are trying to do. They seek to publicly regulate every little nu ance, every word, between the sexes to fit their own twisted agenda. Rela tions between the sexes are coming to resemble the elaborate court protocol of Louis XIV’s court at Versailles. If there is a problem, it’s one of a general breakdown in order and disci pline in schools and society. We bom bard kids with sex on TV, in movies and in primal! day long, and we claim to be surprised when they (or their hormones) act on those messages. Funny thing is, those who wanted to “liberate” speech and remove censor ship are those who are now crying the loudest about its aftereffects. Dan yuayie ana Katuucnanan were criticized about wanting to politicize private behavior—abortion and “re production." But this little bit of stu pidity from the AAUW ought to show that the knife cuts the other way, that the totalitarian leanings of NOW and Big Mother are a far more pernicious threat to individual liberty. Kepfldd la a graduate student in history, an alumnus of the UNL College of Law and a Summer Daily Nebraskan columnist.