THE NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWSPAPER” By prartitiaf e wide ranft ii optruons >nd kjeas repnnted from hundreds of campus newspipen wehope to enhance the quality of campus life u we inform, entertain and frigate the national student body We acknowledge the commitment oI student journalists taw the notion, supported by their medio adnsers end joumoiitra profeiaorv to report the odjnues, tomes end concerns of their fellow students PRESIDENT A!b*rt T Ehrmf*r PUBLISHER Gerald L TfcyVor MANAGING EDITOR Jacks Hampton EDITORS ON FELLOWSHIP Jramfrr U Biakm TV Tlhn, Hullabaloo. TUlarw U Douf DiFranco, UuUa*Dotty, Cal Poly, San Luu Obtapo Sony* Cioodwvn, Tht Lumbrryofit. NortSrrn An LOO» U Ron A Kodv TV Indiana Statesman Indiana Stata U EDfTORlAl ADVISORY COUNCIL TOM ROLNICKJ. Ea*culiv* Director. Amchiiu i CoUcfiate Ptra* DR nAVTD ADAMS, Crffcp M«ba Adnwri, /edieno Do«/i Student Indiana U KRir JACOBS, Coll*** Newapaprr Huamett A Adeemting Manaftr*. TAr Daily /Vnaayfmawn. U of Pennsylvania EDMUND SULLIVAN. Director Columbia Scbolaetx Praia Aaeooaljon. ( oiutnba U . NY DR. J DAVTD REED. Society for Collepatr JoumalttU. Tkt Daily BaeUr*t S'rw. Eaatern IlUama U FKKD WEDDLE. Weatem Aiaonsticti of Uruwatly l\*bbc»tww>» Miniem. Oklahoma Dotty. U at Oklahoma MONA CRAVENS. Director oi Student Publication*. Daily 'Dayan U ot Southern California DR PRANK RAtJULSKT Mana*rr at Student Media Daily Aerometer Orefon State U JAN T CHILDRESS Director of Student Pubhcation! Unweruty body. Trial TVS U W.B. CAMKY, Pttbhihar. Die Daily /mo* U of Iowa ED BARBER. General M*n*gat. Independent Florida Alligator. U of Honda HARRY MONTEVIDEO, General Manager The Hed and Blofk, U of Georpa BRUCE D ITULE. Manager of Student Publication*. State Dr*e Anion* State U RICHARD C. I.YTIJE. General Manapr Teiaa Student Publication! The Daily Teton. U of "fria* Aurtin CAMPUS REIATIONS DIRECTOR Dtck Subirttr Regions! 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All right* rwssrvnd Subscriptions 61A PUast fUcyeU V. 1 COMMENT AND OPINION f HI, W(*R( MT foot QMCACTnU -T- -rim ' I « TMT UMOI f NLOMjmtr wKun m m rf JiW»n fMMuratWMUir ! o* trvu.im mm. m turns. jSHMsoamt.tng* iw M*nr 0f rm *tmr nm ctm**m*r fwmwirrw tnun WICK TAM. THE SPECTATOR COLUMBIA U Putting on a show for the folks By Jamie Stanek ■ Collegiate Ttmes Virginia Tech U. What on earth could be more horrify ing than waking up the Saturday of Parents’ Weekend — hung over — at 10 o’clock in the morning to the beam ing faces of Mom and Dad? ‘Hi, Mom Hi, Dad Be right with you.’ "Gee, son," clucks my all-too impressed father as we walk around campus, ‘there sure are a lot of skate boards on campus “Are they in some kind of club or orga nization? Is this an engineering lab? “When 1 was at school we had all kinds of crazy engineering things going on. You know, it's not too late to become an engineer ... just like your brother.’ So now 1 hear it again The "Why-can’t-you-be-more-like your-brother-the-megalomaniacal-elec trical-engineer- with-the-silicon-brain” speech. “Aw, c'mon Dad. You know 1 harely passed Math for Art Majors 101.’ Anyway, it's getting pretty awkward about now. Needing to change the sub ject, I try to think of some diversion that will lead us to more pleasant topics. Seeing where this is going, it’s high time for me to call an audible. “Hey, let's all go to the duck pond," I suggest, know ing how much Mom really digs the nature scene. So now people see the happy trio traipsing on down to the duck pond. All the while my dad is muttering, “Eight thousand dollars a year and he isn’t going to be an engineer.” Yep, you guessed it. 1 broke Dad’s heart when I came to Tbch to study biology. Tb this day my mother still shakes her head and tells me about his blood pressure whenever the subject comes up Lunch has come and gone. I’m still hung over Somehow, 1 managed to get 15 bucks off my dad. 1 told him I’d think about taking a dynamics course. “Hey, I really have to go .. three tests next week Have to keep those grades up,” 1 say. Okay, so 1 lie I lie like a rug. I lie like a big, hung over rug that wants to sleep all Sunday afternoon. So I give Dad a firm handshake and Mom a peck on the cheek, then 1 wave cheerfully as they drive merrily away. Then I slmk back to my room and cry myself to sleep. Parents’ Weekend: a beautiful, sharing experience or a night marish, guilt-filled hell? You decide. Life after college I’ve recently dis covered that the only thing 1 really know about America is nothing. We’re not part of the world when we come to campus. Not even part of the country. And nothing I’ve read has ever painted a clear picture of American life. That is, nothing until I found “On an Average Day” by Tom Heymann. This should be on the bookshelf of every stu dent who wants to know what America is all about. For example, if you’re interested in finding out about America’s eating habits, Heymann writes that on an aver age day: ■ 101,280,321 adults are on diets ■ 24,657,534 hotdogs are eaten. ■ 16.3 million people eat atMcDonald's. Better off in school These figures might account for the $1.37 million we spend daily on laxa tives and the 2,005,497 heartburns that Americans have each day. Want to know about relationships'’ I Want to know how you and your sweet heart are going to fare out there? Again, on the average day in America: ■ 6,567 couples get married. ■ 3,197 couples get divorced. • Men spend 26 minutes cleaning the house; women spend 59 minutes at the task . I say we live on campus for the next 20 years. Everyone cleans — or doesn’t clean — their own dorm room ■ 1,109,589 condoms are bought; women purchase 443,836 of them So, we’ve come a long way in some areas, but not as far in others; women buy almost as many condoms as men do, but they still do more than half of the housework America’s spiritual state isn’t looking so good either. While Christian book stores sell 34,932 Bibles a day, 41,096 calls are made to dial-a-pom services. The worst news of all, however, is that every day four people call Graceland asking to speak to Elvis. Well, that’s America for ya. Stay in col lege as long as you can. Don’t go out there Statistics don’t lie. ■ Bob Bobala, The Daily Collegian, U. of Massachusetts, Amherst Is it a violation of the First Amendment to regulate music and art for obscenity? In the September issue, we asked students if regulating music and art for obscenity is a violation ol First Amendment nghts. Eighty percent ot students who responded said they think it is a violation, white 20 percent said it is not. u It’s definitely a violation, but I think u>e can all out live 2 Live Crew’s articula tion of the English lan guage. ..." Michelle Krauss Monmouth College. N. J. No, because those are forms of entertainment, and they must fall under the norms of society. “ John Durham, U . of Cincinnati 44 It is definitely against our rights to have any mem ber of society judge what we say, read, write or record. ” Jett Brown, U. of Missouri, Columbia NOVEMBER QUESTION Do you want ’60s-styte activism to return to American campuses? 1-800 662-5511