Veterans Day deserves honor Thursday is Veterans Day, in case you’d forgotten. For many, it’s merely an other paid holiday from work, an in convenience with the banks closed, or nothing special at all. And that’s a tragedy, because Veterans Day com memorates the sacrifices made by American military men and women for the past 200 years. The American Legion and Veter ans of Foreign Wars posts here in town will individually sponsor events to mark the occasion. The city of Lincoln and the state of Nebraska, as far as can be detected, have no such plans. It’s a real shame, too. I grew up in a small town in west ern Kansas, which I still like to think of as “real America.” Smack in the middle of the Great Wheat Belt of the High Plains, Lamed, Kan., was a place stuck in time, created by the brush of Norman Rockwell. Like any American small town, it was a very patriotic place, where schoolchildren still recited the Pledge of Allegiance before class and the Lord’s Prayer. The American Civil Liberties Union never got to Larned. Every Nov. 11, school let out, busi ness suspended, and the citizenry gathered on Broadway Avenue for the annual Veterans Day parade. For me, being in the school band, it meant marching with a sousaphone. And, being western Kansas in November, it meant freezing cold, valves icing up, lips in danger of sticking to the mouthpiece, and a sore shoulder. But, when the procession stopped and the tornado sirens blew at 11 a.m. sharp, I knew what I was really there for. It was the 11th hour of the 11 th day of the 11 th month. The end of the War to End All Wars. My dad always watched, stood at attention when the sirens blew. I always won dered what he saw or what he was thinking at those moments. 1 grew up in a family that was, on my father’s side, thoroughly steeped But, when the procession stopped and the tornado sirens blew at 11 a.m. sharp, I knew what I was really there for. It was the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month. The end of the War to End All Wars. in American military tradition. My ancestors came here from Ireland during the Civil War to fight for the Union Army. Their sons went to Cuba in 1898. Their grandsons went to France in 1917. And when the time came, my fa ther went to the Pacific in 1943. He was only 17, but with the resolve of young men eager to join a great cru sade, he enlisted in the Marine Corps. His father had to sign the enlistment papers, as my dad was underage. Grandad Kepficld could have said “No,” but he remembered all too well the fire he’d felt doing the same thing in 1918. Dad served for three years, seeing action in places like Saipan, Tinian and I wo Jima and got sent to China for a brief stint after the war. Later, as a reservist, he did drill instructor duty at the local unit. A physical ailment kept him from going to Ko rea; just as well, since that unit took heavy casualties at the Chosin Reser voir. And, of course, I heard all the stories from him about being stuck in mudholes on some godforsaken Pa cific island, listening to Japanese sol diers march a few feet away in pitch dark. 1 heard the stories from his friends, too. One was a belly gunner on a B-25 over Europe; another went into the Navy as an anti-aircraft gun ner in the Pacific. It was an intense, nerve-wracking hell they went through. But it was also probably the best lime of their then-young lives. They were young, in their prime, on the side of good fighting an inde scribable evil that would have de stroyed all that we take for granted today. They arc the men we honor to morrow. I also remember my dad talking about how, in his boyhood, Veterans Day featured aging Civil War vets. Union and Confederate. In their 80s and 90s many still wore their uni forms every year — riding in sepa rate cars, of course — still fiercely proud of the great deed they had done three-quarters of a century before. We arc seeing the same thing now. The 18-ycar-olds who went to fighi the Japanese arc now in their 70s. They will soon be gone, taking a crucial part of American history and character with them. They gave ev erything, risked death, so their un born children would grow up in free dom, never knowing the shackles o( tyranny. If you’ve never really thought about how precious your liberty and freedom arc, if you’ve never pon dered about how it came to be and how it was preserved for two centu ries, you might take a few moments tomorrow to thank those who went to foreign countries. Remember those who didn’t come back. 1 will, as I do every Nov. 11. Semper Fi, pop. Kepfield is a graduate student in history and a Daily Nebraskan columnist. Too many remain blind to sides ast week I wrote about being a white man — this isn’t going to be a column about writing a column, so don’t worry. At least one reader, the editor of the paper as a matter of fact, com mented that it was conservative’s day on the opinion page because my col umn, which he considered conserva tive last week, regularly appears along with Sam Kepficld’s: arch con servative columnist for the Daily Nebraskan. This reminded me of all the times I have been accosted on the streets and sidewalks and in the bars of this city by people who demand to know why I go on working for such a reac tionary, right-wing paper. Curiously, the number of times this has happened is roughly equal to the number of times I’ve been simi larly accosted by those who would like to know why I still work in such a hive of political correctness — as a tool of the liberals on campus. Mostly these individuals are drunk, highly politicized or both. But the interesting fact remains that, to many people, all subjects of discussion can be approached through only two mutually exclusive avenues. It’s the old on/off binary model of reality that our culture inherited from misinterpretations of Aristotle, which arc themselves unspeakably ancient. “He who is not for me, is against me," as Jesus said so long ago. Of course the same guy also said the reverse: That whoever was not against him was for him. At least he saw the ambiguity of the situation. It all reminds me of a routine Gar rison Keillor did the first time 1 ever heard him. Someone had returned from a trip to the then-Soviet Union, at least that’s how I remember it. But the interesting fact remains that, to many people, all subjects of discussion can be approached through only two mutually exclusive avenues. His friends asked him about his trip; he said it had been a “positive experience.” “Doesn’t that limit you tojust two kinds?” Keillor wanted to know. In a way I feel sorry for those who are trapped in the two-way street that is modern American politics, partic ularly as the right and left begin more and more to resemble one another. Their choices are so limited and limiting: Anyone who fails to see at least six sides of any two-sided prob lem can’t find much interest in the world, or so it seems to me. The binary switch in people’s heads is not wired in, no matter how much it may seem so at times. And I li admit it may do naruer for some to learn to sec outside the received categories. But it’s harder for some people to learn to add and subtract; that doesn’t mean we should limit their education so they never have to learn. In politics in America, jingoism is the order of the day. Debate never escapes the damning labyrinth of par ty doctrine. “Which of these two proposed so lutions is the best for the problem of drugs? Inner city violence? Poverty? Health care?” The very question is stupid, limit ing debate from the outset. The problem is that it’s hard to think for one’s self. It’s so much easier to accept or reject an offer. Asking a politician if he or she is “for" or “against” NAFTA, for in stance, belies the question entirely. NAFTA was conceived for a pur pose. The real question is how does that purpose serve us and is NAFTA the best instrument of that purpose. But that kind of inquiry requires understanding, patience and the abil ity to follow an argument longer than a sound bite. There were signers of the Consti tution who were “for" the inclusion of blacks under the rights of citizens. There were others who were “against” the inclusion of a Bill of Rights, for fear that these rights would be considered all-inclusive — as if we re ever going to get even tnose few paltry rights guaranteed in our Bill of Rights. They came to a regrettable com promise as the best they could hope for then and there. In an on/off proposition, the best possible result is compromise: the third option that emerges with the conflict of opposites. If we could learn to seek these kind of third options — or fourth or fifth — we’d be that much closer to real solutions to our social and polit ical problems. Baldridge Is a senior KngHsh major, a Dally Nebraskan arts and entertainment se nior reporter and a columnist. SEE THE STAFF AT THE UNIVERSITY MEDICAL ASSOCIATES EYE CLINIC! To celebrate the holiday season, Eye Special ties is pleased to offer all UNL, UNC) and UNMC faculty, students, employees and their immediate families, the following specials during November and [December 1993 and January 1994: Routine Eye Exam.$35.00 Contact Lens Package.$85.00 Includes eye exam, contact lens fit, 1 pair of disposable lenses and 1 follow-up visit. (Other types of contact lenses arc available.) Discouni on all NEW eyeglasses prescriptions ordered at Benson Optical.$35.00 off (Must include new lenses and frames. 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