Friday, March 6, 2009

Stephen King




Stephen King is celebrating 35 years of being published. I'm not sure how anyone else feels about King and I don't know how I feel about him. So Lets make a list.



Good things about Stephen King

1. The book IT was amazing!
2. He likes driving I-80 through Nebraska and this led to Children of the Corn.
3. Some of his books are entertaining and can hold my interest.
4. The Green Mile. Both book and movie.
5. The Ending of the movie The Myst

Not so good

1. His voice puts me to sleep when I am trying to listen to his books on tape.
2. The movie IT (Not really his fault)
3. Not all of his books are entertaining
4. The rest of the movie The Myst.


Well, I'm going to call this one a draw. I like some of his books and there is no doubt he is a writer. But I can't say I think he is the best writer I have ever read.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Editorial #3 UNK Issue

A paycheck is important to everyone. Bills and rent need to be paid, food to eat, and some entertainment is always a nice perk. At the University of Nebraska, across all campus, the budget is once again come into question. The economy is down and money needs to be cut from the budget. This is bound to have an effect on someone. It should be university staff paychecks that are affected.

Tuition is always on the rise at universities. This has a direct impact on students and their ability to afford a higher education. The University of Nebraska President James B. Milliken posted on his blog information regarding the Collegebound Nebraska program. This program helps with fees, books, and room and board. Tuition rates should not be a concern because they just added more money to this program and there are many other programs like it. The rise in tuition does not have enough of an impact on the budget to cover the problem.

The universities could let go of staff that isn’t tenured and put a freeze on hiring new employees. This solution only hurts the students. Not having enough professors to teach the classes means that class size increases. This is not good for the University of Nebraska at Kearney where the small class size is a drawing power. Putting a freeze on hiring other staff is not a plausible option either. When a custodian leaves then it is better to replace them. Having the remaining staff pick up the extra work leads to lowered productivity. An unhappy custodian means dirty buildings. These options for cutting the budget don’t make sense in a community like Kearney, Nebraska.

So what option does make sense for our community? Helping out a neighbor by taking a little less for ourselves is what makes Kearney a great community. If all the employees at the university go two weeks without pay then this will help to cut the budget without a neighbor or a friend completely losing their job. This solution would tighten up everyone’s purse strings but it would keep people from losing their job. If they don’t lose their job then they are not at risk of losing their house. In a small friendly community like Kearney we can afford to go without that little extra if it helps others. Lets all help a neighbor by giving up a paycheck for two weeks.

a paycheck is important to everyone

A paycheck is important to everyone. Bills and rent need to be paid, food to eat, and some entertainment is always a nice perk. At the University of Nebraska, across all campus, the budget is once again come into question. The economy is down and money needs to be cut from the budget. This is bound to have an effect on someone. It should be staff paychecks that are affected.

Tuition is always on the rise at universities. This has a direct impact on students and their ability to afford a higher education. The rise in tuition should not be a concern though. The University of Nebraska President James B. Milliken posted on his blog information regarding the Collegebound Nebraska program. This program helps with fees, books, and room and board. Tuition rates should not be a concern because they just added more money to this program and there are many other programs like it.

The universities could let go of staff that isn’t tenured and put a freeze on hiring new employees. This solution only hurts the students. Not having enough professors to teach the classes means that class size increases. This is not good for the University of Nebraska at Kearney where the small class size is a drawing power. Putting a freeze on hiring other staff is not a plausible option either. When a custodian leaves then it is better to replace them. Having the remaining staff pick up the extra work leads to lowered productivity. An unhappy custodian means dirty buildings. These options for cutting the budget don’t make sense in a community like Kearney, Nebraska.

So what option does make sense for our community? Helping out our neighbors by taking a little less for us is what makes living in Kearney great. If all the employees at the university go two weeks without pay then this will help to cut the budget without you neighbor or your friend completely losing their job.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

parking

Parking on UNK is great for a University. For example at UNL they sell 200% of the available parking spaces and at UNK they only sell 110% of available parking spaces. The price at UNK is a lot cheaper, too. Not to mention that the parking spots are a lot closer.

When I lived off campus it was much easier to find parking that was close to the buildings that I needed. Living on campus I may have to walk a long distance to my dorm but I now I'm right on campus to walk everywhere else.

Parking at UNK is great compared to the other colleges I have gone to.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Local issues

Being able to expunge one F off of your record if it doesn't count for anything for you to graduate. I don't need to elaborate on why that should be a given. It doesn't count for anything why is it hurting my GPA.

There is only one major street running north and south in Kearney and this leads to most of the accidents in town.

The dating scene in college. This might not sound like an important editorial but it is. When there are three to four columns in the school newspaper regarding dating or the lack there then it is a problem. At college you meet someone, at the bar, then go home with them and you don't feel to bad about the bad mistake, even when they don't call you back, because they were kinda cute. This is how STD run rapid in small college towns. Is this really the future we want to leave to the next generation, and our children?

Saturday, February 21, 2009

high fructose corn syrup and the health risks

By now we have all seen the commercials about HFCS (high fructose corn syrup) and how it is not that bad for you in moderation. The problem is HFCS is in almost everything that we eat and in some of those products, soda for example, it is not used in moderation. Most Americans are eating way more then they should.

HFCS's chemical compound is very similar to sugar and just like sugar does nothing but ad empty calories to your diet. Both sugar and HFCS makes your blood sugar spike and then drop rapidly. We all know the myth that an hour after eating Chinese food you will be hungry again. Turns out this isn't a myth, the refined carbs of the white rice act on the blood sugar the same way HFCS and sugar do. Makes your blood sugar spike and drop rapidly making you hungry again sooner then you should be.

There are studies that show a coalition between HFCS and obesity and diabetes. It is no secret that obesity causes all kinds of problems for the body and is a major player in the increase of type II diabetes. Journal of the American Medical Association did a study that lasted from 1991 to 1999 and showed that women who drank more then 1 sugar sweetened beverage per week had greater magnitude of weight gain and were at a significantly greater risk of developing type II diabetes. How many people drink 1 or less sugar sweetened beverages per week? Most people are drinking at least one per day.

The majority of the sugar-sweetened beverages are sweetened with HFCS. Although they haven’t proved that HFCS directly leads to obesity and diabetes doesn’t mean that we can eat as much HFCS as we want.

Here is what has been shown in studies. Americans are obese and this obesity is leading to higher rates of type II diabetes. They also know that over consumption of sugar, including HFCS, refined grain products like white bread, white rice, white anything, are leading to this obesity epidemic.

My challenge to you is to look at the foods you eat the most and check out the ingredients. The higher on the list the more of that ingredient it has. So if HFCS is second on the list that means HFCS is by volume the second greatest ingredient in the product.

Another problem is that many products say “made with whole grains” on the front but if on the ingredient list it says anything other then “whole grain wheat” or rice or oats, then it is considered refined. If in doubt about the whole grain factor look at the amount of fiber in the product. It should have at least 1 gram of fiber per 90 calories and whole grain products will have at least that if not more.

HFCS may not be the only thing leading to health problems but it is one of the leading offenders.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Editorial #2 Final Draft

Nebraska Death Penalty

The Nebraska death penalty has recently come into question in the state unicameral. Electrocution was the sole method until the Nebraska Supreme Court ruled the method unconstitutional in February 2008. Nebraska tried to pass a life sentence without parole to replace the death penalty but it fell one vote short of passing. The death penalty is wrong and should be replaced with a life sentence without out parole.
The death penalty is cruel punishment. There are reports of botched deaths when it comes to any form of execution. The last reported case of an electrocution gone badly was July 8, 1999 in Florida. Blood had poured from the mouth of the man being executed and oozed through the buckle holes on the straps across his chest. There are a number of cases more resent then that where lethal injection has gone wrong. The problems reported with lethal injection is not being able to find a vein, going through the vain and the poison being pumped into the surrounding tissue, and unusual violent reactions to the lethal drugs. Even if you could guarantee that you could use lethal injection without harm to a person, killing someone is still wrong.
The death penalty is wrong because you may execute an innocent person. The death penalty is also a long and complicated process. It clogs up the courts and cost millions of dollars. This long process also causes prolonged pain for the victim’s family, who must relive the trauma through multiple court hearings and appeals. If there were a way to guarantee that no one innocent would be killed, if the cost of the death penalty were cheaper then life without parole, and if the death penalty helped the victims families, taking the life of another is still wrong.
The most compelling reason for revoking the death penalty, and replacing it with life without parole, is that to kill another human being is wrong. Most death penalty cases involve the defendant being charged with murder. We cannot claim that murder is wrong when we turn around and kill someone who is convicted of murder. We are all human and none of us have the right to say that because it is a jury, judge, or law (which were written by man) that means it is acceptable to kill the killer. No one has the right to judge who should live and who should die, that is why there are laws against murder. We should not look the other way when someone is being killed, even if it is the authorities that are making that choice.
Fourteen states do not have the death penalty. Nebraska needs to adopt this practice, too. We were the last state to have electrocution as our sole method of capital punishment. Let us become one of the early adaptors of life with out parole. We all have a responsibility to do what is morally just. Choosing to let the state murder someone is no more just then letting anyone else get away with it. We need to let our state know that we do not support the death penalty; that it is wrong and we will not stand to let any more blood be spilled, even when the blood is not that of an innocent person.