- 1 i EDITOR Josh Funk OPINION EDITOR Mark Baldridge EDITORIAL BOARD Lindsay Young Jessica Fargen Samuel McKewon Cliff Hicks Kimberly Sweet • vJj&S 'vv~ Our VIEW A right to know Research should go on without secrecy Last week the University of Nebraska was exposed for doing something perfectly legal, and the state is in an uproar. The discovery that NU Medical Center doctors are doing research using fetal tissue from abortions stirred up a hornet’s nest of contempt among anti-abortion rights groups. The idea that this research somehow pro 44 The University of Nebraska is a public university; and information about its activities should be public. motes abor tion is unfounded. In 1993, the National Institutes of Health issued guide lines to ensure that fetal research, which dates to the 1930s, would not encourage abortion. Women will continue to choose abortion 'regardless of what happens to their fetuses afterward. Scientists take care to make sure the decision to use fetal tissue for research is separate from the woman’s decision to have an abortion. What concerns us is the possibility that administrators hid the practice, hoping no one would find out. It should not take an in-depth investiga tion by the state’s largest newspaper to find out what our university is researching. Even after the disclosure that fetal research is ongoing, it has remained difficult to get information about the study or even which grant is paying for it. Certainly this is beneficial research, but we should be able to find out more about it The university should be open about what it is researching and supply details on request. It is important for the public to be able to know what its state university is doing. - The academic community balked at the criticism of this research calling it an affront to academic freedom, and we agree that it is. But the university has committed an affront against the public’s right to know. The University of Nebraska is a public uni versity, and information about its activities should be public. In the case of the university’s fetal tissue research, critics must realize that this is not an abortion issue, nor does it encourage abortion. Research using fetal tissue is important to the development of vaccines and cures, and it provides important clues to neurolog ical disorders. Research should continue, and the details of its funding and other sources should be forthcoming. Editorial Policy Unsigned editoriaJsjre the opinions of the Fall 1999 Daily Nebraskan. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Nebraska-Uncoin, 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 pubisher of the Daily Nebraskan; policy is set by the Daily Nebraskan Bdtotitf Board. The UNL Publications Board, established by ttje^nts^^^^iwgeprod^tiOT the hands of tesk^S^mployees. Letter Policy The Daily Nebraskan welcomes brief letters to the editor and guest columns, but does not guarantee their publication. The Daily Nebraskan retains the right to edit or reject any material submitted. Submitted material becomes property of Nebraskan and cannot be Anonymous submissions wffl not be published. Those who submit letters must identify themselves by name, year in school, major and/or grotto sbraskan>20 fcjincolrt, Obermeyer’s VIEW SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE— Polar lankr!'] [ Mow was m m? j scXU LL&Jt! IHOSZ^W f NASA GooBBRS TH/NR \ \\ L zwi on w\rs! \\h ha? J \ ^7/7vew,mL -cwfN / 'T\\&Y\X &\)RNEP 1 UP IN A/#®- /rt 'my 7\ DN LETTERS Fishmonger Too often NU student groups, particularly ASUN, are criticized for their lack of significant influence and/or progress. - But I am a big believer in the stu dent experience. The University of Nebraska offers too many programs and organizations for us to leave here as simply lecture-listeners and note takers. Although the things many groups accomplish are quite respectable, I feel it is the experience of “doing” that is most important. If future ASUN candidates choose adding fish to the fountain as a foundation of their platform they will, undoubtedly, benefit more from the gathering of die fish than from their ultimate presence in the pond. Robert N. Joseph incoming president Intra-Fraternity Council Fatal Flaw in Fetal Argument? The debate over the ethics of using aborted fetal tissue for research - brings to mind an earlier University of Nebraska controversy where the interests of research had to bow to questions of ethics and morality. In the earlier instance, the purely religious convictions of a very tiny population were sufficient to per suade federal lawmakers to mandate that ancient, long-dead human remains and artifacts be removed for ever from the reach of legitimate sci entists. While I respect the beliefs of the American Indians who have shared my home and my life, I am convinced that the moral and spiritual claims of developing human organisms on the verge of being born are infinitely greater than the claim that respect must be paid, regardless of the cost to society, to our dusty, decaying bones. It might be aigued that the good to be obtained by advancing treatment of neurological diseases like Alzheimer’s disease justifies the research. Even with so noble an end in view, I judge that the cost is still too great to pay. It is not a theoretical issue to me: I write this as I am filling out a leave form that will allow me to spend time supervising my father with Alzheimer's disease while my mother deals with a family emer gency in California. The losses and suffering of my family from this disease should not be used to argue for a naive code of ethics that always justifies the means by the ends. Paul Marxhausen electronics technician III College of Engineering and Technology Stand and Cheer! I read in the Daily Nebraskan that the university wanted increased stu dent support at basketball games this year and even cut season ticket prices in half. That was good - many more tick ets were sold this year. But where are students going to be put if our seating is taken away? The D section? I attended the Eastern Illinois game with a group of friends and found just a few single seats open in the middle of a crowd. Some of us were lucky enough to find seats in the student section. The rest of our group was escorted up to the D section. If this was the case for a n o n - con fer ence game, what will it be like when Big 12 teams come to Devaney? A The students are the people who provide the majority of the enthusi asm at Nebraska men’s basketball games. We are the ones who stand and make some noise when the team needs to get fired up or when the game is on the line. For example, during the last game against Western Carolina, the Huskers’ Kimani Ffriend beckoned the crowd to stand up and make some noise late in the game. The students in the student sec tion of the floor seats were on their feet, while their counterparts across the way remained seated and relative ly quiet. Half the noise, half the enthusiasm, half the support for the team. I have to point out other universi ties with premier athletic programs around the nation, where students are an integral part of a home-court advantage, and are treated as such. I wish that UNL students would be treated the same. Brent Claassen senior mechanized systems management Lane HiGiffiNBcnTOM/DN