EDITOR Doug Kouma OPINION EDITOR Anthony Nguyen EDITORIAL BOARD Paula Lavigne Joshua Gillin Jessica Kennedy Jeff Randall Erin Gibson Our VIEW Weed whacker Public view of AD rooted in misconception Beverly Ledbetter, a private consultant hired to examine the climate for women ath letes at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, presented her report Tuesday afternoon. Surprise! It was good. It was very, very good. She found, during a six-month study, women student-athletes at the university liked the Athletic Department. They liked the way athletes support each other. They liked the coaches and supporting staff. nowever, Leuoener saiu, uie aimeies sne interviewed did not feel comfortable with the public’s perception of the NU Athletic De partment and its programs. Athletes said a few bad seeds had ruined the grand and successful garden that is the NU Athletic Department, and have given the nation the impression that the garden is over grown with weeds. Although women student athletes have said the perception is wrong, that statement goes only a small distance toward changing the public’s attitude. Ledbetter suggested a series of reforms the department could make to help change the public’s negative opinion of NU athletics. To start, the department could hire more women in senior staff positions, provide clearly marked channels for complaints of ha rassment to be reported and make some physi cal changes in facilities, she said. Instead, perhaps the most effective means of altering public perceptions would be to hoe the garden — to get rid of the weeds before they have a chance to take over the better plants. Athletes should meet stringent require ments of both academic and moral character to set foot in an athletic competition, whether it be on the football field, the basketball court or the wrestling mat. The quality ot NU athletics means the university can recruit the nation’s best ath letes each year. NU does not need the weeds to fill in its garden. An athlete who will disgrace the univer sity and the state is an unnecessary addition to a team and an unaffordable risk. Granted, the university cannot know ahead of time whether an exemplary fresh man will become an assailant or drunken driver by his senior year. But coaches, who know players and their talents well, must know who problem athletes are. They must know to keep close watch over those athletes and discipline them fully for the first rule infraction, no matter how small. But until UNL learns the elusive secret to keeping all athletes felony-free, the univer sity must accept the fact that media watch - only the best athletes in the best programs. NU will take the bad press for as long as we keep the top athletic programs. Let us hope that’s a long, long time. Editorial Policy Unsigned editorials are the opinions of the Spring 1997 Daily Nebraskan. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the Univer sity of Nebras ka- L incoln, its employees, its student body or the University of Nebraska Board of Regents. A column is solely the opinion of its author. The Board of Regents serves as publisher of the Daily Nebraskan; policy is set by the Daily Nebraskan Edito rial Board The UNL Publications Board, established by the regents, supervises the production of the paper According to policy set by the regents, responsibility for the edi torial content of the newspaper lies solely in the hands of its student employees. Letter Policy The Doily Nebraskan welcomes brief let ters to the editor and guest columns, but does not guarantee their publication. The Daily Nebraskan retains the right to edit or rqect any material submitted. Sub mitted material becomes the property of the Daily Nebraskan and cannot be re turned. Anonymous submissions will not be published Those who submit letters must identify themselves by name, year in school, major and/or group affilia tion, if any. Submit material to: Daily Nebraskan, 34 Nebraska Union, 1400 R St. Lincoln, Neb. 68588-0448. E-mail: letters@unlinfo.unl.edu. Mehs ling’s VIEW Iwjrmi -* UKWHMCHL OTRfcOJTIE Ml&WET. j DN 1 LETTERS Who’s Next? I cannot believe the DN would allow this statement to be printed in a newspaper that is paid for with my fees: “Homosexuality is not something that should be protected and not discriminated against such as race or gender, but is a plague that affects many lost people.” (JJ. Harder’s column, “ A broken bond”, DN, Friday). 1 am personally offended. In light of the recent tensions on campus in regards to race (e.g. cross burning), how can you people justify printing an article that calls for discrimina tion against homosexuals? The right to free press you say Mr. Harder? How about a person’s civil rights to attend a public institution without facing discrimination? Or live their lives any way they want to as long as they don’t harm anyone? With each new article you write Mr. Harder, you show your immaturity and ignorance. it is truly remarkable. Adolt Hitler decided that brown-eyed people were inferior to blue-eyed people and should be put to death. You had better hope no one proposes this now or you and I will be in trouble, subjected to cruel experi ments without anesthetic to change our “wrong” eye color to the “acceptable” eye color. Anthony Nguyen shows a great deal of common sense in his article when he uses the analogy of interra cial marriages not being accepted (or legal) in the past. Mr. Harder, you can discriminate all you want in the privacy of you own home but don’t subject the students of this university to your propaganda. Brian J. Brislen senior sodology/communications studies Editor’s note: In regards to the writer’s comments on student fees, 95 cents of the $194 students paid this semester helps defray the Daily Nebraskan’s printing and circulation costs. These refundable Fund A fees constitute approxi mately 4 percent of the paper’s total operating budget. The remaining 96 percent is self generated, mostly through adver tising. It’s the Principle I must commend J.J. Harder on his column “A broken bond” — it takes balls to write something so conservative in a college newspaper. You clearly have a very warped idea of who this God that you love so much is. Every word in your column is the spawn of fear and hatred. The God I believe in is the exact antithesis of these things. Our country was founded on the FREEDOM of religion, yet the religious right hinders the rights of those who choose not to be Chris tians. If there are people who disagree with your personal set of morals, does that make any of them less of a person? Attribute the lack of “family values” to the prejudice you encour age, rather than to an American citizen’s right to be free. If you think God loves a person any less if they are gay or lesbian, you are mistaken. Wouldn’t God be happier if you spent your time loving your fellow man, rather than wasting your time hating him? Perhaps Matthew 5:43 48 will shed some light on the subject for you. as xor your argument mat marriage is for procreation, you are wrong. Marriage is, first and foremost, about a spiritual love reflecting God’s love. Any other thing, such as procreation, is secondary. Also, if people don’t want to have children, they are still allowed to marry. Whether they have children or not, whether they are different sexes, religions, races or the same, is inconsequential, as long as they reflect God’s divine principle of love. Jennifer Seitelbach freshman English and political science Not my God As I walked into Andrews Hall on Tuesday I was suddenly taken aback by a noxious odor. Further investigation proved that it was the foul stench of hypocrisy — emanat ing from the Daily Nebraskan. On Page 71 learned that hate crimes have steadily risen at the University of Missouri where graphic and graffiti was cataloged in vast amounts into their “hate log.” Incidentally, 70 percent of the • J epithets were aimed at homosexuals. I thought to myself, “How nice it is that I do not attend a university where homophobia is documented at such a phenomenal rate of occur rence.” I was chagrined to remember that I do. I remembered the words of poor, misguided and religiously brainwashed J.J. Harder in “A Broken Bond” in Friday’s DN. I turned to the DN opinion page to see if anyone had rightly written in to attempt to curtail young J J. before he had the chance to convince others that homosexuals deserve no rights. The only response was from freshman Josh Dieckmann, another grossly misinformed person whose head is so full of religious dogma that there is no room for anything else. I’m sorry Josh, no matter how you may justify it in your head, you do have something against gays, quite a lot against gays. How frightening it is to me that I go to a university where Bible thumping, self-righteous fanatics will actually try to convince me that the God I believe in would condemn to hell someone, because of his or her choice in life. I would like to point out, if I may, that I did not use the word “lifestyle,” it’s a life, not a lifestyle. T ¥ _¥ ¥_1- ¥ J_1__ • j.j. turn jusu, i uuxx x ucxxcvc ui the God you do, one who, if we follow your verbatim interpretation of scripture, hates homosexuals, blacks, Jews and other minorities. Pay attention you two, and all others out there who tow their narrow mined line, people have a right to their own lives. Stay out of them. Practice your conservative platform of less government and stop trying to legislate morality. So homosexuals want to get married, let them. I seriously doubt any of them would want to marry you. I doubt any girls would want to marry you, except maybe the vacuous ninnies with vacant stares who are as equally mentally and morally challenged as you. In short J J. and Josh, grow up, take some sociology classes, open your mind and stay out j of people’s personal lives. Andrew Muller junior political science 11 • ;l