Tuesday, February 14, 1934 Paga2 Daily Nebraskan 1 r-r y 7- A Ji.il lIiliiilQ L : -iLi C4. 'V T ft Sirloin and Steak dinners ivith Champagne for two. You and 'Your . Valentine, may each choose from three dinners complete with choice of potato, . salad bar, garlic toast, jmd.. champagne . All fer ity lI5." from 6-10 p.m. " ' ' 'dinner try-'out the dance floor or enjoy a game of pool in Gicstcr field's Big Red Pool Room. It's Cjicstrfjic!d JJottcrrislsy & Potts " - for Va'sntina's Dayr - Strawberry Daiquiri's ir,.ri. Only'75 cents;". BrinffYourl.D. 245. N. 13th, t G i . - V FUO 0ROADUAY HITS!!! nciar Hcroltl ... and Iho boyo written and directed by Athol Fugard Thursday, Fcbrusry 23 ti tpm This emotionally charged drama follows a young white student's transformation from innocent childhood to poisonous bigotry in 1950 South Africa. Aqh 33 of Got! starring Peggy Cass & Susan Strasberg Saturday, February 25 et pm A spellbinding drama about a young nun who gives birth in a convent and whose child is mysteriously murdered. IndiYiwUd Ticket Cwv3 Tickets on sale to everyone for the two plays. Individual tickets for the Beaux Arts Trio and Alvin Ailey on sale only to UNL Students February 13-17. On sale to others beginning February 20. OccuiiArtD i no piano, violin & cello with the support of the Nebraska Arts Council CzZitCzy, t 'zrdh 3 ti Cpm Program includes: Schubert, Mozart, and Shostakovich 25th Anniversary Season AMn Alloy 7 American Dnnco Tho'ctro' A Mid-America Arts Alliance Program Threa P&lomzziz Monday, Tuesizy, XZt&m&sy .- V.zwh 5, 6 & 7 et tpm Supported in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts I 1 at I l-va ' MAI I tlAI tax OfI!e (11-5, Kon-Fri) 113 Kmls ilti 11th & R 472-3375 ! 1 J Ur?cc!n University budget... Continued Crcn Pag 3 1 Funding for computer equipment in particular 13 becoming more crucial every year, UNL Chancellor Martin Massengalc said. The need for modern com puter facilities is more pressing than most depart ment's equipment needs in today's highly technolog ical job market, he said. Sen. Karen Kilgarin of Omaha questioned Roskens on how some of last year's allocations were spent. After reviewing the past year's expenditures, she said she was distressed to find that some areas designat ed as "high priority" never received funding. "After we went out of our. way, to approve these high priority areas, I find it unusual that you do not go back and fund then," Kilgarin said. ....... Roskens responded that last session's final alloca tion was much less than what was requested and . left inadequate funding for these high priority areas. "It, was a matter of having to do what we could , with what we. got"-he said. r After subtracting , allocations ' which were ear- - marked for specific projects, Roskens said, the uni versity was teft with only about a $300,000 increase over the previous year's budget. Concern ever tuition increases was also expressed by Ruth Bohanv Government Liaison Committee chairman , i ,: ,: ; z: . i: v Tuition rates baye increased 50 percentin the last five.year? Boham said, and.Gov. Kerrey has-proposed further increases, to meet the.c.ost, pf reduc tions instate .support,-.' .; r.-o r. With federal financial aid reduced and the. scar city of part-time jobs, more and more students are unable to fund their education, she. said..- .; : Finally, Sen. Dave Wesley addressed the issue of hall renovation on behalf, of the Friends of Morrill HaiL r,v7.. .' ., ... .'.".; z " Wesley asked for $130,000' ta begin architectural plans aimed at preserving the historical exhibits in Morrill Hall. The exhibits are deteriorating because the building lacks a climate control system. "I think that upkeep of the exhibits is the state's . responsibility," Wesley said. "We've lost private invest ment the last couple of years because the building's not taken care of." Upward party announces campaign for RHA exec spots. The Upward party announced its candidacy for RHA executive positions Monday night in Neihardt Hall. John Christian, presidential candidate and current RHA executive assistant, said "We are look ing to raise your standard of living." Requests for cable television in residence halls is one way Upward plans to improve life in the halls, said Christian, a freshman computer science major. Other proposals include a standing food service committee, increased programming and increased sound system rental. Lisa Bredthauer, vice presidential candidate, said she is a strong supporter of RHA, having seen what it has done and is able to do. Bredthauer, a sophomore pre-physician's assistant major, is Smith Hall presi dent, a health aide and a College Republicans member. Treasurer candidate, Tom Lauder, a sophomore computer science major, is the present RHA trea surer. Efeb Baker, a sophomore business major and cur rent Neihardt representative, is the candidate for secretary. Baker said the feasibility of cable televi sion in hall lounges and rooms looks promising. Housing Assistant Director Guriana Wittstruck.is conducting a feasibility study that should be com pleted within a week, Baker s aid. The proposed elim ination of council salaries is evidence that Upward is in the race to make a difference, not money, Baker said. - : - ' Upward Party p redds,:;!! il cr.liate Joa Christie tnd vice prc-I-cr.tizl candidate 7i rr 7 o National and international news rr. f1- P rf-rn TvTfinAfc- T?rr!frf Chemenlio appointed , f.s new Soviet lecder MOSCOW Konstantin Chcrnenko, 72, a close aide to the late President Leonid Brezh nev, was Monday appointed; leader of-the Soviet Communist Party in succession to Yuri. Andropovs The choice of Chcrnenko, a Siberian; peasant's son who left school at 12, was widely seen as a remarkable personal come-b etc ! and a victory for the conservative, older generation ; of party officials 'opposed to Andropov's re-' forms, Chernehko is older than any of the five previous Soviet leaders' were when they took office. State !radio, and television announced his "election , by , the. party Central Committee . , four. days after Andropov's death. The post of "state president, also held by Andropov,, re-. ; mains vacant Informed Soviet, sources said resistance' 'to, Chernehko .from former . An-. ' drbpoy supporters", in. the 12-man . Politburo.', ; was! behind, the, unprecedented delay ih. the., nomination of a new leader.' " . . Buoli, 'Cliciiieniib mcetin "welcomedv. WASHINGTON A White House officialisaid " ' Monday it would welcome a meeting between Vice President George Bush and Chernenko. Bush is to attend the funeral in Moscow today for Andropov, who died Thursday. Referring to Bush's plans, the official said: "At this time, he .; has not scheduled a meeting with the new '. General Secretary (Chernenko). We would welcome such a meeting." A senior adminis tration official who asked not to be named said that a meeting between Bush and Chernenko was likely if the Soviet Union followed past , practice. - Rertan, Hussein discuss Lebanon : WASHINGTON President Reagan and Jord-; I an's King Hussein Monday discussed the Leb- .. anon situation and Jordanian fears it is divert ing attention from the Middle East peace process. Hussein returns to the White House today foMunch with both Reagan and Egyp- : tian President Hosni Mubarak. The two mod erate Arab leaders arrived in Washington over the weekend. A senior U.S. official who asked not to be named said Hussein had long been concerned that Lebanon had be come a diver sion from the Middle East peace process. In the United States, he added, the danger to 1,600 U.S. Marines stationed as a peacekeeping force at Beirut's airport had caused Lebanon to become a VS. "national obsession." EMMETSBURG, Iowa Once again this year , the 4,500 residents cf Erametsburg will be asked to forecast the winner of the presiden tial election, by flushing their toilets, "We call it the cess-poll," John Schad, owner cf radio sta tion KEMB-FM told Reuters. Next Monday when Iowans choose among the eight Demo cratic presidential hopefuls in precinct cau cuses across the state, the radio station will attempt to forecast the outcome by asking its listeners to flush on command to indicate their support for the various candidates. The same poll will be taken on general election day in -November. Drops in the level of the town's water tower translate into numbers of flushes COO for every one-tenth foot and provide a yard stick for public opinion, Schad said. Residents of Palo Alto County of which Emmetsburg is the county seat have voted for the winning presidential candidate in every general elec tion since the lEOOs, and the county is thus considered a "bell weather" area by pollsters. 1 In 1930 the caucus day flush-poll correctly forecast former President Jimmy Carter as a two-to-one winner over his Democratic rival, Sen. Edward Kennedy of M assachusetts. In the general election poll that year, Emmetsburg joined the rest of the nation in flushing Carter away as President Reagan canty red the White . House.. Princcs3 cpsctin second child LONDON Britain's Princess Diana, wife of Prince Charles, is expecting a second child in late September, Buckiafhsm Palace announc ed Monday. The new baby will come third in hue to the throne after the coupla's first child Prince William, who will be two years old on June 21.