Il ST IN FIRKSTONK High-tech stuff misleads society I watch a lot of television. The programs and commercials I’ve seen lately have made me worry that our society is headed in the wrong direction. While there’s debate about wheth er or not television actually influences peoples’ actions, it doesn’t concern me. What does concern me is what people feel is important. Specifically, I’m concerned that people look to science for answers now instead of looking to philosophy or the classics. To demonstrate what I mean, let me tell you about the new Tylenol Gelcaps commercial. If you’re like me and a fan of the boob tube, you’ve seen the commer cial I’m talking about. In “man on the street” style, we see various people being introduced to the new Tylenol Gelcaps. Eventually, we see a lady holding two gelcaps in her hands. She looks at the gelcaps and says, “It looks so high-tech!” For all we know, she’s never used the product, but she is impressed enough with its high-tech appearance that she will use the product soon. Sure, people are naturally attracted to shiny objects and the like, but would you take a medicine merely because it looked high-tech? Here’s another way to look at this: I, as a human being, am naturally attracted to shiny objects and fire, and would rather be in the 1 ight as opposed to the dark. But when I walk downtown at night and see a lamppost with a light on it, do I walk over to it and stare at it like a moth? No, I don’t. While I like the light, I realize I shouldn’t be infatuated with it. For this same reason, I don’t go around town setting things on fire, nor am I easily impressed with high-tech-look ing .nwdipipe. Sure, people are naturally attracted to shiny objects and the like, but would you take a medicine merely because it looked high-tech? As a human, I’m also attracted to charts and figures. I especially like charts that are brightly colored, like those found in USA TODAY. The best facts and figures are those with decimal points. That means they’re scientific, and if they’re scien tific, they’re true. These charts and figures have in fluenced the earth ’ s population to th ink the entire planet will self-destruct by the year 2000. Scientists have figures (with decimal points) to show that the earth has gotten warmer during the last 100 years, but they can’t say for sure what has caused it. For all they know, it could be a natural cycle of change in the elliptic ity of our orbit around the sun. If this is the case, I would like to be the first to propose that everyone in China jump up and down at the same time to correct our maligned orbit. I figure that if I can get some brightly colored, high-tech charts and some figures with decimal points in them, I can prove it will work. The medical scientists are the big gest hoot. I remember reading an ar ticle in a local newspaper about a new drug that was going to aid in open heart surgeries. When tested on dogs, it worked wonderfully. When humans tried it, they died. The punch line here is the sc ien t ists couldn ’ t understand w hy the drug killed the humans. Allow me to suggest dogs are just slightly different biologically from humans, and what’s good for a dog isn’t necessarily good for a human. Scientists are looked up to as great problem solvers, yet scientists make two problems for every one they solve. Remember the DDT debacle? Sure, we killed dem bugs, but we also killed many birds and polluted the air. It’s as if scientists create new tech nologies simply because they can and never think about whether they should. This was the moral behind “Jurassic Park,” although the book seemed to stress this point a little more than the movie. , What if a scientist wants to help Wendy’s out by genetically engineer ing a tomato to grow in cubes, so that the slices more easily fit their square hamburgers? They could call it “Dave ’ s Deluxe Tomato” or just “Davato.” That’s fine, you may say, but this leads to the greatest threat of all. Soon, we could genetically engineer people so that everyone looks like Oprah. I hope people make intelligent de cisions about what they think is im portant and aren’t easily convinced to buy things simply because they look high-tech. Now if I could just quit staring at those brightly lit lampposts ... Fires to ae ii a sophomore economics ma jor and a Dally Nebraskan columnist. .1 \N ( \U SI Yet another McEducation to go 1 won’t be in class today. In fact. I’m not even in town. I’m several hours away finding out more about a job awaiting me after I graduate — knock on wood. Of course, one obstacle prevents my en tering the real world. I must first put the finishing touches on my McDegrec. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, it's that 1 ittle Me- prefix that has come to mean bland and mass-produced. That’s a little bit like how I feel after fi ve years at this uni versi ty, bland and mass-produced. I know a number of people who dropped out because of the impersonality of life at a large university. I guess I’ve grown accus tomed to it. Take the class I’m missing today. There’s no need to bother the profes sor with a “What did I miss?” phone call. He wouldn ’ t even know 1 had flown the coop except for the absence of my name among dozens of others on the attendance sheet — a veritable menu of today’s McStudcnts. My college experience didn’t have to be this way. I received a plethora of pamphlets from colleges during my senior year of high school. “ Most of the smaller schools had a common selling point: They prom ised a personalized education, com plete with photos reminiscent of Lulu and Sidney Poitier, “To Sir With Love”-type friendships. But I chose dear old Nebraska U. Why? It was nice that the university had a journalism college with a great reputation and that tuition was rela tively low, and of course it helped considerably that the campus was in credibly close to friends and family. When I went to the Nebraska foot ball games that fall, as I had been going to as long as 1 could remember, my decision was finally made for me. Yes, academia nuts, the football program runs the university. Accept it. Crowds funnel in, attend Mr. Frat’s Wild Party, take a ride on the Roommate Express and generally enjoy the same manufactured experience that everyone else is having. It’s fun to watch Nebraska play an opponent that provides worthy com petition. That one Saturday in Octo ber when all the planets are in perfect alignment and Mother Nature pro vides an ideal weather situation, it’s nice to have an excuse to just sit outside for four hours. But the best part of the football games is being one of the red crowd of 76,000 united in a common goal of watching the Huskers win. If the game dissolves into another whomping of some nonconference opponent, one can always watch the lucky few in the crowd who success fully snuck their flasks past the yel low-jacketed ticket takers. The same experience also is avail able Monday through Friday. It’s fun to hear a professor discuss a topic that provides worthwhile information. During that one class a semester when a controversial subject isbrought up and a spirited debate erupts, it can be nice to just sit and listen. But the best part of going to this college is being one of the 25,000 bookbaggers united in a common goal of “getting an education.” If the class dissolves into another obscure lecture on an uninteresting topic, one can always watch the brave few in class who sneak a few Z’s right in front of the corduroy-jacketed in structors. Classes are some of the things that interrupt one’s college experience. College is just like an amusement park, another Disneyland. Crowds funnel in, attend Mr. Frat’s Wild Party, take a ride on the Room mate Express and generally enjoy the same manufactured experience that everyone else is having. When it’s time to leave, everyone has a smile and a few souvenirs in hand. The beauty of the experience comes not from actually interfacing with the attractions at Disneyland or the pro fessors at the university. Its being able to go home and tell everyone where you were and what you saw. All this was thrown off kilter this week when a professor greeted me with a “Hello Jay, how arc you?” It wasn’t just me; all of the students in my class received the same. For a split second, I felt uncomfortable. I learned my lesson in high school when 1 went back to visit my favorite teacher after two years, and she didn’t remember my name. Let’s keep it impersonal, profes sor. No attachment, no difficult goodbyes. Treat me like the visitor at Disneyland, the fan at Memorial Sta dium and the customer at McDonald’s. Just give me a depersonalized experi ence and send me on my way. I’ve come to expect it. I’ll suggest a class of ’94 going away gift to the university. Let’s erect an “OVER ??,000 GRADUATED" sign right under the large red N on the west side of Memorial Stadium. Let’s leave no doubt that the emphasis is on quantity and not always quality. 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