Di b McAdams Nutrition should take priority Perhaps Amigo’s will get fat free refried beans now that Hillary Rodham Clinton has included nutrition counseling in the administration’s health-care reform proposal. Maybe that’s a long shot, but a typical American diet contains 40 percent fat. That figure would proba bly be a lot lower if that 40 percent was a white slab of grease covering almost half of a dinner plate. Unfortu nately, it’s cleverly incorporated into just about everything that doesn’t taste like Styrofoam, like the frijoles at our favorite fast Mexican diner, which are refried in the clarified, melted fat of hogs. The most prevalent diseases in the United States, heart disease and can cer, appear to be related to our fat consumption. Aside from genetic pre disposition, saturated fat is the big gest bugaboo in heart disease. High fat diets have also been linked to breast cancer, the second most com mon cancer among women. U.S. wom en have a one in eight chance of developing breast cancer; four times that of women in Japan, who consume a diet averaging 15 percent fat. The administration’s emphasis on nutrition is part of a larger intention: to encourage people to take responsi bility for their health. With a little education, fat con sumption is something individuals can control, but passively waiting for nu trition counseling doesn’t constitute taking responsibility for one’s own health. Nutrition information is avail able on every food product that comes in a package. Reading food labels should be as compulsory as wearing seat belts, but Americans would riot at the suggestion of grocery police. Reading food labels is a great motivator for changing one’s eating habits. It’s somehow less appealing to dress a salad with the same thing that lubricates the ball bearings in the John Deere. Processed foods contain all sorts of goodies not found in nature. Contrary to Saturday morning TV commercials, fruit is a whole, unaltered plant ovary, not a sug ary paste inside of a rectangular toaster food. Processed foods contain all sortsof goodies not found in nature. Contrary to Saturday morning TV commer cials, fruit is a whole, unaltered plant ovary, not a sugary paste inside of a rectangular toaster food. The fact that fruit can be purchased as paste, glue, spread or leather dem onstrates the consumer’s distance from the source of the food. In the United States, food travels an average of 1,200 miles before it reaches a dinner table. There are artichokes that have seen more of America than I have. Our distance from food production is a 20th century phenomenon. The United States has become an urban nation, with 2 to 3 percent of the population remaining on farms. Farms are where much of our food is pro duced. Food comes from dirt, not conveyor belts. We are so disinclined to be in volved in food production that we let illegal aliens stay in our country as long as they are picking strawberries and living in station wagons. We toss them out when they get uppity and try to live in a house and take those good janitorial jobs. Western society’s relationship to food has become one dimensional. We select foods on the basis of taste, not nutrition. Our desire for taste in cludes an addiction to sugar. We each eat roughly one-third of a pound of sugar per day. It seems too bizarre for science fiction that a nation with the cheapest, most plentiful food in the world lives on fat and sugar. Beyond our astounding ignorance and indifference to what our diets do to our health, we have our lifestyles to contend with. Students are a good example. All of the residence halls include a meal plan. The meal plan defies students’ rights to make certain choices about their nutrition, although many students would choose to live on pizza, Mountain Dew and vending machine food. For the handful of stu dents who may want to chose an egg free or dairy-free diet, meal plans can be obstacles. The other major aspect of student life affecting nutrition is time. Most college students function at warp speed. Eating anything at all is a logistical nightmare when you’re chained to a computer and a deadline. Fourteen hours later, when you re member to eat something, it’s hard to care what it is as long as it’s not clawing orbiting. Changing one’seating habits takes time. People need to understand that eating should maintain the body, not their taste addictions. We also need to know what we are eating, just in case we prefer not to turn into clarified, melted hog fat. McAdams Is a sophomore news-editorial major and a Daily Nebraskan columnist. • HSJ <' (illsl ( )IMM< >\ Guilty should come forward Rage and anger swelled in my mind one day in April 1992. Confusion and animosity were all I could feel as the verdict came across the airwaves — not guilty! It was the discussion in every class room, all over campus, in my home town and where 1 worked. The rage I felt against those police officers who beat Rodney King is not entirely different from the rage that many international students, as well as other students, felt on this campus after the beating of Boon-Chung Ong on Oct. 17, 1993. These two incidents are worlds apart, because police officers beat King, even though they were sup posed to uphold the law and protect citizens. And yet, although the inci dents are different, I continue to ask myself, when will justice be served when injustice is committed? The assault against Ong was a beating that was ignorant and uncalled for. After reading the numerous arti cles in the Daily Nebraskan and The Journalist about the assault, I felt it was time to write on behalf of the Afrikan People’s Union. First of all, to clear up some incor rect information printed in those pa pers, APU turned in an event registra tion form at least one week prior to our event, campus police were notified of our event as per normal procedure and campus pol ice were not initially called to our event because of a disturbance. APU was told that in order to re serve a room in the Nebraska Union, we needed to get various signatures. Those signatures were to come from our adviser, staff people in the union reservations office and the student activities and funds office. The final approval came from the Office for Student Involvement. We were never instructed to get signatures from cam pus police. There is space on the event registration form specifically for the signatures of the aforementioned peo ple, but not for campus police. Although the incidents are different, I con tinue to ask myself, when will justice be served when injustice is committed? APU had all the necessary paper work turned in for the event. From our understanding, as long as we called the police department and they were made aware of the event, then we could turn in our form. The event registration form also states in bold print: “An event is not officially ap proved until this form has been re turned to the Office for Student In volvement and received final approv al signature.” If there had been no event registration form turned in, the event would not have been allowed to take place. Since we didn’t hear any thing back, we thought everything was OK. The initial call placed to campus police was not made because of any disturbance. They were called only to make their presence known to those attending the event. APU’s treasurer, who placed the call, was told by a campus police officer that an officer would be sent out to monitor the event temporarily. After almost two hours and no sign of police, the treasurer again called campus police. The sec ond call was because of minor distur bances at our event. A few moments later, campus police arrived, remained for about 10 minutes and left. Now that I have established that APU did everything it was supposed to do, the fact remains that Ong was assaulted outside of the union, not in the ballroom. Security at the event would not have prevented what took place outside. APU cannot and will not take full responsibility for what took place outside of its event. There was no need to escort any one out of Rapfest because those who were causing disturbances left on their own. There was no indication that those who left Rapfest were going to cause problems outside, and there is still no indication that those same individuals assaulted Ong. It was homecoming weekend, and many groups of people were on campus that night. I am not here to put the blame on anyone because that is irrelevant at this point. What is relevant is the fact that Ong was severely injured alleg edly without a motive. Although Ong was Malaysian, I strongly believe this was not a racially motivated incident. I don’t believe these men set out to maliciously attack a Malaysian stu dent before the night was over. But I can’t speak for them. I am just makina my own observation from what took place that night. I am not trying to justify by any means the act of violence that took place that night, but if we are to evaluate the situation, we must eval uate the whole thing and not just bits and pieces. I do believe it is time for these young men, whoever they may be, to admit the night $ot out of hand and to publicly apologize for their acts. It is time for them to come forth and take on the responsibility they took on that night. I realize this will not take away the pain and suffering Ong has faced, but it will start to break down the racial wall they built that night and ease the minds of other international students. After all, it takes a boy to walk away from his responsibilities, but it takes a man to stand up and admit he was wrong. Uadi Kay Morgaa b a tea lor broadcast lag major aad prealdcat of the Afrikaa Peo ple* Uatoa. Interested in Diversity? SCOPE Educator Applications now available at: •300 Nebraska East Union •200 Nebraska Union •Culture Center Equity Pursuit of Opportunities in Creating Students If you have questions call Reshell or Nancy at 472-2454 — Deadline extended to NOVEMBER 5 — HEY PUMPKIN HEAD, COME SEE US FOR YOUR HALLOWEEN THREADS! Second Wind Vintage Clothing and Collectables 720 "O" Street (Under the Viaduct) /&\ /^v /&\ /)&\ /$?\ /&\ /& The Pakistan Students Association would like to thank the following students for making Pakistan Nite '93 a success. Devindran Chelliah Raj Joshi May Quen Faraz Hajoory Aya Horikawa Saad Alui Iqbal Ahad Saud Shaikh Nabeel Memon Amir Mangi Ahmad Faraz Kashif Hassan Ayyaz Siddiqi Farooq Majeed Rehaan Naqvi Asim Siddiqi Ali Sohwiwaza Noman Khan Masroor Malik Zahid Nazir Yousuf Qureshi Asif Hasan Zahid Qureshi Adnan Anwar Nabeel Hannan Amaar Hyder Omar Farooq Tauseef Nagi When your schedule isn't flexible, it's nice to know that UNL courses are. UNL's most popular courses in: Educational Psychology Management Psychology Available through UNL College Independent Study: • Study and take exams when your schedule allows, when you're ready. • Take as long as a year or as few as 35 days to complete a course. • Send an average of six assignments per course to your instructor, and receive rapid turnaround of your materials. Call 472-1 926 for a free College Independent Study Program Bulletin or stop by our office at 269 Nebraska Center for Continuing Education, 33rd and Holdrege Streets, UNL East Campus. 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