j 'S -y -H- ify " K . $7.88; incr recommendei By Wes Alters . ff the Fee Allocations Board (FAB) has its way, UN L students will be . pay inn mr In ttirjer fjs; next than ever before. The board voted . Sunday to recommend a $7.83 per student, per semester increase in fees. It also ; recommended that six programs no longer be fee supported, according to FAB chairman Dave Morrison. , " ' A full-time student now pays $51.50 per semester in fees. If approved, the 'increase Would be the first since 1968. ;' :,;Th9 ' board's . recommendation go first to Ken'.ga&r, vice chancellor of' , 4hki tu urn. cnanceiior James., Z.umberge . before final considerion by the Board of ., Regents.'.; ; .-.-' ' ;Accord)rs'g to Morrison, a $4.49 Increase is designated for the University Health Center (UHC), 48 cents for the Nebraska Union, 91 cents for the Recreation Dept. and $4.63 for unallocated fees. ' "rtBBaMaMMMiirMiitiiHMiiiiiM m m,, 'fiHMfflffliwi Finals week p doily P tmmrnm thjrsday, may 2, 1974 lincoSn, nebraska vol. 97, no. 55 A FAB subcommittee had recommended a $4 per student, per semester increase for UHC, $2 for the Nebraska Union, $1 for the Recreation Dept. and $3 for unallocated fees. "The only place we actually asked a fee increase to increase services was in the unaitoc&ftd cMegory," IVIorrison sakl Tuesday, "everywhere else the increase is needed simply to maintain present . programs in the face of Inflation." .,. ., ' y He said the 43 cent increase per student per semester for the Nebraska Union is misleading because the Union Program Council (UPC) now is being funded separately. According to Morrison, the board also has recommended that $185,389 of the fees collected be allocated to the A-1 funding category (covers UPC, the Daily Nbraskan, ASUN and student organizations.) .' Such funding would depend on approval of the proposed fees increase, he said. Only $118,000 would be available for the A-1 category if the Increase is not approved, he said. ., Forty-two student organizations applied to the FAB for funding by student fees. The organizations will be contacted by mail by Friday as to how much, if any, they have been , appropriated, Morrison said. Final approval of th appropriations will be made by Zumberge. Appeals by student organizations must be made to the : Council on Student Life. The board also recommended that -fee support for six programs be discontinued because "they could be self-sufficient or are organizations which perhaps are not a legitimate function of student fee funding." - Programs recommended for discontinuation of funds are the' ; Overseas Opportunities Center, the Travel Flight program, the New .. Student Program, - the Placement Office, the Alumni Assoc. and the Health Education Program. "It's not that we have anything against any of these . programs," Morrison said. "It's just that we felt there are' probably better methods of funding them." According to Morrison, cutting the six programs from fee support will save $119,850. An increase in fees of $10.51 would be needed if those programs were left in, he said. , By Rebecca Brite . ' ... . . '.',' "'.' . For most Lincoln citizens, next Monday will be simply the beginning of another working week-possibly exciting, probably ho-hum and nothing to think twice about. , . ' But for more than 20,000 UNL students. May 6 is Black Monday, and its advent is dreaded almost, ' universally. May 5 begins a week of final exams at' . ' . U.NL. Wondering how different students prepare for the. . . week, a Daily Nebraskan reporter roamed the streets and sidewalks of the city campus Tuesday and questioned a variety of haggard,: bleary-eyed . individuals, v.-. ' .; ' Answers to the question, "How c?o jots ttsidy for ' "'. tetr weri dlKrtiijtimafeKiliia. --i, .!,.' appears to differ considerably from that of the freshman. Of the more than 20 students interviewed, ' all of those in their junior and senior years said they prefcrrred the "procrastination method," which. ; involves putting off till the last minute everything which should have been done earlier in the semester. '" "I have a 'research project due in a' week, which . was assigned at the beginning of the semester," one , senior woman said. "I'll probably start work on it . over the weekend." , ' ' In contrast, most freshman students end soma sophomores said they had kept up on course readirtg . and projects fairly regularly through the semester.. However, one. freshman and two sophomores said they were beginning to wonder if it was "really worth, . the hassle. .. 1 . ' " "It seems like I miss out on so much, busting my ass over those books every night," the freshman said.'-. The two sophomores concurred. ... "I'm beginning to discover that I do just as well, if ' not better, on the exams that I cram for (as opposed ; to those consistently studied for)' a sophomore woman said. "So I'm starting to wonder if I shouldn't just spend most of the year havfr,g fun." Om graduata student professed to ba a wholehearted supporter of the procrastination ; method. - " "Ihe only course I've studied for regularly this semester is one in which I had to turn in weekly assignments," he said. A junior and a first semester senior were the only ' v upperclassmen interviewed who disagreed with their fc!!c.v;' doraiV)cit uf ptucrasiiriisuon. - ; ; "You just don't learn as much by cramming," the -senior said. "And I really question the idea that you can make just as good grade by cramming." The junior, an engineering student, agreed. ' i ressure s on "Maybe they can get away with, it over there (in ', the College of Arts and Sciences), hut you just can't make it in a professional field unless you keep up v with the work," he said. All the students Interviewed were asked whether their study habits took any peculiar turns during ' finals preparation. Almost all said the increased stress produced some idiosyncrasies in study methods. .The smokers in the group said , their csgaret '7 'consumption increases by anywhere from to two , packs 8 day. Chain-smoking seemed to crop up during particularly heavy study sessions. : "Especially when , I'm typing," one graduate student said. "I always have a cigaret burning in the eshtray by the . typewriter, end sometimes I have "til go through as many as three big packs day during finals. , "Juicyfruit is my favorite," she added, "but I'll chew Doublemint in a pinch." . Another graduate student said he often talks to himself while studying, end "I Writs little notes to myself on any scrap of papr I can find. I usualiy lose them, but it helps to write things down." One junior woman said that, as finals near, she becomes "a compulsive listmaker." "I have to sit down every two or three hours and write down all the things I. have to do for the next ; two or three hours, or I get completely lost," she ; said, with a slightly ragged edge to her voice. The use of. "speed," or amphetamines, to stay , awake while studying , has nearly disappeared, . according to four seniors who have been at UNL at least three years. "It used to be, in the dorm, that everyone was ' strung out on diet pills for two weeks straight," a senior woman said. "Now most people I know just use No-Doz or Vivarin. "I prefer yoga, myself," she added. The four seniors also agreed that, since the University changed to shorter semesters and more concentrated final exam weeks two years ago, pressure during finals has increased considerably. "It's easier in the spring, I guess," one man said. "You know that once those exams are over, you've got three months to lie around in the sun and never look at a book. , , . "Unless, of courje, you're going to go to summer school," he 8dded. ' " Aj' oS v"'" . L jy'-- w "Jhr' ' 'Kfi ..... D)) Starrs carpools set up v Following the leads of legislators and employes at the Capitol, DHL has set up a carpooling system. Originally initiated by the Nebraska Jayeees, the Energy Conservation Carpooi Operation (ECCO) is a movement by local citizens to dear congested streets ami conserve fuel. "When we became aware of the . program being carried on, at the Capitol, we thought we'd try to put one into effect here," said GaN Gade, director of Campus Security end Traffic. Gadi ssIJ t &tmut 4,C0.' liners, txpfa!n!rt3 tht'. 'crpool cpsratfon, mi forms were sant.ut to Unhttuiy faculty trd staff. "Two thousand psopSa responded," 'said flay Coffey, assistant' business manager- of tusintis and finance; , we finished the only 1,101 forms "however, when computer processing were valid. "There were a lot of simple errors made on the data to be programmed. For example, 150 forms lacked addresses, so wa were unable to send the printouts back," Coffey said. Tha printouts showed the names and phone numbers of 1 other ' .interested carpoolers who live In the recipients' neighborhoods and park in the same area st UNL Gada said the program now would bo left up to ptople who received printouts. Gad said there are two Incentives for car poolers to consider besidfj high p$ prices: reduced cost when sharing the ity to price of a $25 parking permit and priority ror oesirabie parking spaces given carpools. Coffey said a similar carpcoi program also had been considered for students. At the same time forms were being sent to University faculty and staff, a booth advertising a separate student carpooi was .set up in the North Union. "if I was a bit disappointed with the adult carpooi, this second attempt was disastrous," Coifey said. "We placed an ad in the Daily ficbrakan and two meter maids were in the booth for three mornings. Out of 20,000 student on this campus, do you know how many were interested in caroool mo?" ha Kkft "Seventeen." J imi.L.mwi i iiimnMnm.,, n inmn iiiwiiHMiiiniwimB mum p A. , .4, M . A. A. A . .. ft.. .A - -A Jh A.. .A A-.,. A. ...J. 4 4. r- 4k 4k. .