EDITORIAL Sex content should be told to students In the past few months, virtually every student on this campus has had the experience of perusing the Sched ule of Classes, Many undoubtedly noticed the column on the right hand side of each page that lists ’'Notes’* about each class, designed to help students pick their classes care fully. Some classes require instructor approval. Some have a prerequisite course. Others may include an extra fee for enrollment. All of these notes are signified by initials or abbreviations. Now imagine if all those classes contained another descriptive note: PC, K or NC-17. Such a scenario may just come to pass at the public universities of Iowa, if current trends continue. Instructors in three of Iowa's state universities have been ordered to provide warnings before showing films or videos that contain “explicit representations of human sexual acts." This comes in the wake of two recent incidents at the University of Iowa, which result ed in a storm of complaints from students, parents, alumni and legislators. In the first of these incidents, students in a German language class were shown the movie Taxi zum Klo, or Taxi to the Bathroom, which was billed as an erotic comedy and a landmark in gay filmmaking. In the other incident, 160 students enrolled In an art seminar were shown an eight-minute video that con tained three scenes, totaling about 15 seconds, of men engaging in oral sex. The immediate argument that was raised against the new policy, which so far only includes a verbal warning to be issued just before the display, was that it consti tuted a form of censorship — a hefty claim that simply isn't supported by the facts. A policy can only be considered censorship if it restricts in some way a person's access to certain infor mation. There was no attempt made to remove these films from the curriculum, or to edit out any of the so called “offensive" parts. The only difference is the warning. The effect of such a warning will bo negligible because only a handful of people will pay any atten tion to it anyway. College students are not exactly the typo of people to say, "You better not show me that. 1 don't think 1 can handle it." The policy is aimed only at the relatively few students who are easily offended. It's just a courtesy. If the warnings did end up scaring more moderately minded students away, however, that would be a shame. People need to be shocked from time to time. Students who are afraid to bo shocked are essentially afraid to learn. Despite this, a university must be responsive to t he desires of the students, and if some of them want to escape images that they find unsettling, then they should have that right. 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