Daily Nebraskan Since 1901 Editor Sarah Baker Opinion Page Editor Samuel McKewon Managing Editor Bradley Davis Secret's out Refusal to discuss openly gay member reeks of intolerance It took courage for Ryan Grigsby and Jaron Luttich to come out of the closet. It took amazing courage to announce their homosexuality to their fraternities. And it was yet another act of courage when Grigsby and Luttich agreed to be interviewed by Rolling Stone magazine, which in its Oct. 26 issue, profiled the two in the article, “Coming Out on Fraternity Row.” Grigsby and Luttich must be commended for their bravery, as should Chi Phi Fraternity President Jason Bottlinger, who spoke to the Daily Nebraskan about his and other house members' support for Luttich. But Grigsby's fraternity, Sigma Nu, has shown an act of cowardice by refusing to com ment to the Daily Nebraskan on the Rolling Stone story. Sigma Nu members’ tight lips are an abom ination to the spirit of diversity talked about so much on this campus and are a slap in the face to Grigsby, who is also under an apparent all fraternity gag order - forbidden to discuss the situation. Dan Sindelar, Sigma Nu president, told the Daily Nebrsakan numerous times he simply would not comment on the story- a story that, by the way, painted the fraternity and the uni versity in a positive light. i “Won’t you at least say you support Grigsby, your fraternity brother?” the Daily Nebraskan asked Sindelar. “Do you realize what kind of message this sends?” we pleaded. “Don’t you understand that not commenting on the Rolling Stone story makes it look as if you have something to hide - that you don’t support Grigsby?” we prodded. “We will have no comment,” Sindelar said. Sigma Nu’s refusal to even discuss their first openly gay member reeks of the hatred and intolerance so many in the Greek system and elsewhere on campus have tried to eradicate. It makes one wonder if the fraternity didn’t want Grigsby to “go public” with his homosex uality, perhaps for fear that Sigma Nu would be labeled the “gay house.” A Sigma Nu member Russell Willbanks freely admitted in the Rolling Stone article that some in the fraternity were worried if Grigsby’s homosexuality became common knowledge, the house could suffer come recruitment time. “It’s a sad state when one brother coming out in the house can kill rush, but it’s the truth,” Willbanks said in Rolling Stone. Willbanks, also presumably under the Sigma Nu anti-gay gag order, wouldn’t com ment to the Daily Nebraksan. Willbanks is chairman of the Daily Nebraskan Publications Board, the body that sets policy for the news paper. bigma Nu s lack ol comment on the situa tion, while maddening, ludicrous and quite simply wrong, is also cruel and sad. Sad for Grigsby, who tried desperately to gain his fraternity brothers' acceptance, despite the fact that his homosexuality was taboo in the Greek system's underworld. Sad for the fraternity and the Greek system, which has paid lip service to increasing diver sity and inclusiveness, but has failed to do so in practice. And sad for the campus as a whole - that such outright and vicious discrimination and hatred is accepted in a cloak of secrecy. What does this say about Sigma Nu? About the Greek system? About the university? About society? We have no comment. Editorial Board Sarah Baker, Bradley Davis, Josh Funk, Matthew Hansen, Samuel McKewon, Dane Stickney, Kimberly Sweet — Letters Policy The Daiy Nebraskan welcomes briefs, totters to the editor and guest columns, but does not guar antee their pubfcabon. The Daly Nebraskan relains the right to edit or reject any material submitted. Submitted material becomes property of the Doily Nebraskan and cannot be returned. Anonymous submissions w* not be published. Those who submit letters must identify themselves by name, year in school, major anchor group affiliation, if any. Submit material to: Daily Nebraskan, 20 Nebraska Union, 1400 R St Lincoln, NE 68588-0448. E mat. letlersOunlnfo.unl.edu. Editorial Policy Unsigned editorials are the opinions of the Fail 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 a cartoon is solely the opinion of its artist. The Board of Regents acts as publisher of the Daily Nebraskan; poli cy is set by the Daily Nebraskan Editorial Board. The UNL Publications Board, established by the regents, supervises the production of the paper. According to policy set by the regents, responsi bly for the edtorialcontBrt of the newspaper Ses solely in the hands of its employees. ll'WKTI&ATINfr' wtfo WAS S£Nt>)N&- 'rw&tfmWr £m»-s 1&TME CIT/OCMNCIL, P3hc£ /NfflAW-y SMSPf-TfiP SW CUj$'?KTfiom~. — “ 1 — UHM...H0VJ -D’YA SPEiL KEEL, AS IN'I’Z GL/NNA KEEL You"? n—r I’tf WITH MUSSV / Beautiful Nebraska I would like to address Dane Stickney’s column in Wednesday’s DN. Iflowa is such a great place, then go live there. It seems to me that you, sir, have never been off of the interstate. Nebraska’s landscape is very diverse. We have rolling hills down in south central Nebraska. Or per haps you should drive through the Sandhills some time. Another option would be to drive down toward Nebraska City and southeast Nebraska if you would like to see trees, and it is beautiful this time of year. Of course you are going to feel like you are sur rounded by cement if you are in the middle of the city on 1-80. Omaha is very beautiful in places if you just take time to look. So Mr. Stickney, before you bash the state I love, maybe you should make an effort to see more of it than what you can see from 1-80. Your views represent those of most people who just pass through this state on die Interstate and never get to see the real beauty of Nebraska. After all, there is no place like Nebraska. SamMortensen senior ag education Dubya s wealthy buds George W. Bush insists that he can spend less of the federal surplus on education, health care, mili tary defense, debt reduction and environmental protection, and greatly improve them all, and still get rid of all the money. Those spooked by the thought of a return to voodoo economics might cry out, woe oh woe is me, are we not all bound to be cast once again into a deep pit of economic deficit? The answer is no, not all of us. Bush plans on putting a huge chunk of the surplus into die pock ets of wealthiest beneficiaries of our system. You ask, what might this cost the rest of us? Well, if hardheaded conservatives like Reagan and Bush Sr. could leave us a tax on our future that runs into trillions of dollars, just think what a com passionate conservative like George W. Bush might be able to do. Been there, done that? Me too and I will vote for AlGore. Sam Osborne West Branch, Iowa The wide world of discovery erasing i^aigary irum my mind isn't a human possibility. Driving home, the trees melt into one another above me, creating this pattern of green and brown. They drown out the sun above me; only shadowed light drips down to the street, light spanking die street Pockets of this golden river reiaiuma Watson await me. There’s a guy crossing the street ahead of me; I almost hit him. I want to know, I want to know. I want to know. If please God, somebody could explain the iceberg, if somebody could break it down for me, I’d wish it so. Sifting the back part of my history, I find nothing, like surface tension is all I have for a back story. I look around, at them looking at me and start to wonder if the fixed gaze is actually a non-gaze. How much of me is real? Why don’t their eyes move? Why is my universe self-contained? Why is any of it the way it is? Why am I seeing the same pocket of light, the same pattern of trees, over and over? Am I that boring? Is this what we come to, some sort of record that skips to the same part over and over? I feel like breaking down on the stoop of my car and crying crying crying. My God, do you know what I think? I think somebody is seriously messing with my life over and over over over and scene to scene to scene to we women of the house trot about in nightgowns and terry cloth robes and steal single finger massages when we think no one was looking. This is me, at this moment, on the grape-colored couch. There’s Nadia, above me, peering down at me from behind the grape, down on me with her bread sopping eyes. Black bow in her hair, tied back tight, she grasps a yellow dropper bottle of dye. Her dye. That she found in my room. The explanation of dye is simple as a tracer - in that you eat say, triple stack fudge cake and, consider ing one has reached a particular stage of bulimia, a stage in which texture and body of food have no meaning, one can goop the fudge cake all up into bitty chunks and drown all soup-like in milk, swirl it around and make this cold, fudgy gruel. Dye comes in when you want to make sure that you exit all the fudge gruel, and so you add the dye, so it traces the food into your tum-tum, and when it comes up yellow, all yellow, then you know it wasn't just water, not just left over amino acids from the pre vious binge and purge, but said cake, triple stacked and fudgy once but now all soupy, staring one back from the bowl below. Dye is an insurance plan. Upon her discovery of-what? My bulimia, my dis covery of her dye, I don’t know, I haven’t been told - Nadia’s voice is wavy, unsure. How does she figure this? Am I her replicant? Am I playing games with her? Hiding her tools of the trade? "What were you doing with this?” Nadia says, crouching, peering, searching. I shrug, sheepish, smiling weakly. I don’t tip my hand. “Look, I want you to tell me,” Nadia presses. “Are you doing this?" Bulimia, for her, has simply tran scended into pronoun status. And I look to her, my browns meeting her deep, sopping, muddy eyeballs. And I want to scream, in the I umuuiicu wuius ui uie poimeiMup iui a uiug-ucc America: “ I learned from watchingyou, MOM! I learned it from watchingyou!” But I don't say a word. Nadia shakes just this bitty bit, afraid of an oncom ing breakdown, quite sure, in fact, that if her daughter drops into chasm of addiction, she may never forgive herself for it My brain, of course, is this globule of pus. Like I know what’s going on. I’m thinking “this is under the iceberg, this is under the iceberg.” At this moment, I recall nothing, I breathe in the moment I couldn't tell you, now, here, what my own name is. Have I spoken it? Nadia snatches up the dye from my face, brushes her teased hair angrily from her face, storms into my room. My pus brains stays that way, I’m thinking “plot twist plot twist” Did I write this? I follow her in, and she’s standing at the closet door, odd shock gracing her face like an aborted fetus was slimed all over the carpet Oh God, what a gross reference! Oh, God, I’m being self-referential! So I look inside the closet and see them, all stacked up like Lincoln Logs: mason jar after mason jar of corn-colored puke, all nicely preserved for winter. Like 60 or 70, right next to my sandals. “Oh my God,” Nadia says. Um, yeah. Moms can’t hesitate to pluck one of the top jars, or at least what she thinks is one of the top jars, and inspect it up close. But it isn’t the top jar. There a stack above it, and just like Jenga, the top one comes toppling down, right on her arm. jarcrasnes. LX>m puKe gusnes. i\aaiauoesanmie rior hack, then looks at me. "This puke is so acidic that it has broken down the walls of the glass mason jar!” she screams. What? “This puke is so acidic that it has broken down the walls of the glass mason jar!” “Stop saying that!” I scream back. "But it is.” “I can see it! I know!” “But I mean, you did this all this time, never telling me. you’ve been doing this?" I don’t remember it "I don’t remember this,” I say. "I didn’t do this.” “So this is somebody else’s... oh I can’t even say it I can’t even say it” “Mom, I’m not a bulimic.” Nadia looks up behind me, scowling. “Get out of here,” she says. I turn, and it’s Jayme. Whatever brain matter I had left is truly pusified now. But I’m getting smarter; my toes tingle in anticipation of my newest discovery. "So you found it," Jayme says to Nadia. “’Bout time.” “Get out get out out out out out," Nadia screams. “OK, I’m out,” Jayme says. She’s got this squirrely grin. When Jayme leaves, I make a hitchhiker motion backward toward the now empty doorway. “My sister?” I ask. “Oh God,” Nadia snorts, “nice time to joke.” I ask a pardon of my written French, but consider ing my life has become somebody's idea of dramatic, cheap joke, I find profanity an appropriate response. Fuck. See you in the eating disorder ward. V Bush plus Gore equals snooze time According to a webcast from OnHealth with Dr. John Shepard, 100 million Americans suffer from insomnia. That's a lot of sleepless nights. But last Seth Felton Wednesday night, something strange and exciting happened. Insomniacs all across the country could be found in their beds, on their couches, even collapsed on the floor, sound asleep. What caused this national wave of rest? I ’ll tell you. I’m selling it That’s right for only $5, you too can cure your insom nia for good! I'm selling a special tape that quickly lulls you into beneficial REM deep. Let’s hear an excerpt "Boy, with all this fuzzy math, I’m beginning to think not only did he invent the Internet but the calculator too. Sighhh.” Wow, my eyelids are drooping already! Still not convinced? Let’s hear another “The fact is that he spends more on the wealthiest 1 percent than he does on Medicare, education...” Oh that's it! No more, I’m out! That’s right, lucky consumer, it's the 2000 Presidential Debate Series!! Cure insomnia for good! $5 for individual tapes, $12 for die set of three! *** Seriously, there’s a reason why people snooze over die debates. It’s not because of the average American’s apathy, dull ness of mind or laziness as we are led to believe. Not at all. I have a lot more faith in average Americans than I do in the coun try's leaders, to be honest The public snores because it knows a debate when it sees one, and these aren’t it I would go fur ther and say that it’s the media, the / don’t Care two parties and {f R . the candidates */ DU$ri who are lazy and hangs unimaginative. UY)c\dp And I’m tired of upsiae Americans get- down from ting blamed for it n rhprrv Get this: Last u Lntsrry week I opened tree While the Lincoln gnawing on Journal Star to 17 , 17 find this head- Q turkey line: “Stand-up leg, he’s Still guys. Tonight’s rnnrnn (Oct. 11) face-off a "lOron. will be the first - sit-down presi dential debate. It might matter.” One of the captions reads “Republican George W. Bush insisted at least one debate be held with the candi date sitting, believing that would favor his laid-back demeanor.” You’re kidding! We’re going to pick the president based on whether he likes to sit when he’s jawin’? I don’t care if Bush hangs upside down from a cherry tree while gnawing on a turkey leg, he’s still a moron. This is the guy who last week said we need to be less dependent on foreign oil “Yeah,” I thought, tentatively. So let’s drill more in Mexico, he finished. Less foreign oil, so drill in Mexico? Are we annexing it soon? I hadn’t heard. I don’t want to elect a leader based on how comfortable he looks while sitting. I don’t want the media to tell me that I should care about what each president will give me. I want to elect a leader hased on what he will do for everyone, how he will work to improve both this country and our relations with other countries. Iwanthim to seriously reduce poverty, not just kick everybody off welfare and then talk about what a big shot he is (like Clinton and his cronies). I’m tired of the bar being lowered, of calculating my vote on who will do the least damage rather than who will do the most good. And I’m tired of people telling me that’s the way it is, so I’d better get used to it. It’s our country, our democracy. We deserve and should demand better In the meantime, I hope Gore wins. Now I know what some of you are saying. “Hey, isn’t this the same fruitcake who wrote about voting for Ralph Nader, and that Bush and Gore are a couple blobs of protoplasmic goo with little American flags stuck in them?” Yes, and I stand by that Butl’mnotso delusional that I think Nader will win this election. However, the point of Nader’s campaign is more to provide a voice of dissent against mainstream assump tions, and help solidify a sizable number of people who want change (rather than empty promises), but are less than thrilled with the choices provided. The strength of a democracy lies in the vigilance of its citizens. Out of the realistic choices, I think Gore will do the least damage. But I’m not about to let him lull me to sleep either. ad m.