i Due process for everyone INS should not be able to detain immigrants after they serve their prison sentences You have the right to due process. It’s a right you may take for granted, but several criminals across the nation would love to have it. Now, it looks like they might. Immigrants to the United States have been forced to play by different rules than the rest of us for years, but many peo ple never knew exactly how far those differences extended. Let’s say an immigrant from a foreign country commits a crime. If the crime is severe enough, the person is deported back to his or her country of origin. Sometimes, however, the country refuses to take the person back. So, since these people can’t be sent back, they are held in prison for the tenure of their sentences and then released. Or at least that’s the way it’s supposed to work. Instead, Immigration and Naturalization Services has the ability to hold these people in prison detention centers indefi nitely after their prison sentences are over. So, even if you’ve done your time, you can’t get back out unless the government feels like it. Most of the people in this situation served approximately three years of prison time for their crimes. According to the Associated Press, more than 130 prison ers in California are in this situation. U.S. District Judge Terry J. Hatter ruled on Saturday, however, that this practice must stop. For those 130 or more Californians, it was a joyous day, indeed. “Theoretically, everybody gets out, hopefully over the next couple of months,” Deputy Federal Public Defender Robert Boyle said in an AP story. According to Boyle, one prisoner was sentenced to a day in jail for stealing some food and a razor from Sears. He has been in prison for three years now. These prisoners don’t just get out scot-free without a sec ond glance, though. Their cases will be reviewed by a magis trate before they are released. According to an AP story, the INS holds about 3,800 pris oners indefinitely nationwide. Their crimes include those as diverse as petty theft and murder. This policy has been upheld by federal judges in Nevada and San Diego, as well as in federal appeals courts in Philadelphia and New Orleans. But now one district judge has ruled against the practice, and the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has agreed to hear a similar case from Seattle. The INS does not deserve this type of power. Like citizens, immigrants have served their time and deserve to be let go. Let’s start playing by the rules for everyone. _-*SC Editorial Board Josh Funk (editor) • J.J. Harder • Cliff Hicks • Samuel McKewon • Dane Stickney • Kimberly Sweet • Lindsay Young 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 submissions.Submitted material becomes property of the Daily Nebraskan and cannot be returned. Anonymous mate rial will not be published. Those who submit letters must identify themselves by name, year in school, major and/or group affiliation, if any. Submit material to: Daily Nebraskan, 20 Nebraska Union, 1400 R St., Lincoln, Neb. 68588-0448 or e-mail to: let ters@unl.edu Editorial Policy Unsigned editorials are the opinions of the spring 2000 Daily Nebraskan. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 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 acts as publisher of the Daily Nebraskan; policy is set by the Daily Nebraskan Editorial Board. The UNL Publications Board, established by the regents, super vises the publication of the paper. According to policy set by the regents, responsibility for the editorial content of the newspaper lies solely in the hands of its student employees. The Daily Nebraskan strives to print fair and accurate cover age; any corrections or clarifications will be primed on page three. Obermeyer’s VIEW /Guncontrol^ f 15 sooo [ yew of rue Beauty redefined Media sets unrealistic, sometimes dangerous standards Now, more than ever, it doesn’t matter who you are, but what you look like. Janet was just 25 years old. She had a great job and seemed happy. She committed suicide, in her sui cide note she wrote that she felt “un pretty” and that no man ever loved her. Amy was just 15, hospitalized for ; eating disorders. She suffered from both anorexia and bulimia. She lost more than 100 pounds in two months. David suffered from low self esteem, and he had problems gaining weight. He was constantly made fun of because he was too “skinny.” He quit school because he couldn’t cope with the daily pressure. All three victims battied problems with their body images and physical appearances. “Oh, I’m too fat.” “I’m too thin.” My butt is too big, and my breasts are too small.” “I hate my body, and I feel ugly.” “I want to be beautiful.” All of the above are common beliefs individuals have about them selves. Both men and women face issues concerning their body images. The media can be blamed for con tributing to their illnesses. I can identify two main categories of body-image problems: additive vs. subtractive. People who “enhance” their bodies through plastic suigery are in the addi tive group. People who “improve” their bodies through starvation are in the subtractive group. - Both groups have two things in common - they are never satisfied, and they are both obsessed. Eating disor ders and body images can be related in the psychological-problems-related-to looks area. Often these individuals with these problems seek to please oth ers and have low self-esteem. As many as 5 to 10 million women and 1 million men in the United States are struggling with eating disorders; One out of four female college students suffers from an eating disorder. But why? Carri Kirby, a mental health coun selor at the University of Nebraska Lincoln, says that body image prob lems and eating disorders are continu um addictions, in which individuals seek to find their identities. L looking a certain way and being a certain shape is instilled at a very early age. Young girls play with Barbie dolls with comical, impossible proportions and see an overload of images of super models, which imprint an image in “ We immediately identify physical attractiveness to mean success and happiness. Images of fat are associated to be unattractive, laziness and unsuccessful.” Carri Kirby, UNL mental health counselor their minds of what a body should look, like. You cannot walk into a book store without seeing a woman who is beauti ful and has a 36-24-36 figure or a handsome male with the perfect body on the front cover of a magazine. Celebrities such as Kate Moss and Calista Flockhart are extremely thin women whose tiny flames are often criticized by the public. People say their images have influenced women to starve their bodies. We see it every day. We see it in commercials, billboards, on television and in movies. These images are con stantly in our faces, reminding people of the cultural expectation to be thin. It gives the perception that in order to be happy in life, you must meet these requirements. .■ » Being beautiful evidently means - being thin. It is not surprising that peo ple buy into this notion. The main objective of the fashion, cosmetic, diet, fitness and plastic surgery industries is to make money. This ideal is working for them - but is it working for us? Are people who lose weight to be Q-tip-thin really happy? Are people who have breast implants really happy? What really defines a person? Is it body or character? We seem to allow popular culture to dictate to us what we must look like. Kirby says there is a halo effect when it comes to body image. “We immediately identify physical attractiveness to mean success and hap piness. Images of fat are associated to be unattractive, laziness and unsuccess ful,” she said. I recently was approached by a modeling agent who was very interest ed in working with me. He said I had the perfect height, a great figure and great skin and facial features. He asked how much I weighed, and I told him. When I revealed my weight, he asked me to lose 20 to 30 pounds if I was serious about modeling. I started laughing. I imagined what skeleton resemblance I would have if I lost 30 pounds. But why should I? I am a very confident young woman, and I love my body. As a track athlete I fully under stand my genetic composition, and I would never dangerously diet for any one. v If society thinks young women like myself (whom I consider to be of aver age weight and health) are not thin enough, then what is happening to our country? > Americans are thinning away. The toothpick body image has gone toofar. The media brainwash our minds into 'i believing that to be beautiful in society means looking a certain way. Beauty is supposed to be “skin deep.” But we all can be beautiful inside. As long as the media continues to portray that “thin is in,” then the prob lems our society faces with body image w dl continue to grow. | Lesley Chvusu is a junior broadcasting major and a Daily Nebraskan columnist