Friday, March 9, 1934 Daily Nobraskan Pago 7 s ASUN recommends fee increase By George Phillips P WW Wr W T r -w 5P 1' t"; -I0 , ASUN recommended that the CFA-requested Uni versity Programs and Facility Fees charge students $90.71 each semester of the 1934-85 academic year. Brad Knuth from the Committee for Fees Alloca tions presented the proposed budget at a Wednes day night ASUN meeting in the Nebraska Union. The UPFF funds seven campus organizations, permanent employee salary increases and debt service. The Nebraska State Student Association will have the same 50 cents per student that it did in 1893-84, Knuth said. He said UPC will increase its cost per student by 16 cents to a total of $2.58. The increase will get more contemporary films for the American Films Series; obtain access to video lines for cover age of concerts, sports events and presidential debates; and help finance the performing arts, Knuth said. ASUN will get $ 1 .78 per student with expansion of Student Legal Services accounting for most of the change from $1.34, Knuth said. Expansion includes a litigation service and the hiring of two law clerks and a full-time secretary. . The Nebraska and East unions will receive $18.53 per student in 1984-85, an increase of 81 cents. Knuth said that 70 cents of the increase resulted from money the NU Board of Regents had trans ferred to contingency from last year's budget. The remaining 11-cent increase came from a mandate requiring utilities budgets to increase by 14 percent and from student handbook production costs, he said. The 1 2.8 percent increase in printing costs for the Daily Nebraskan was thought to be offset by increas ed advertising revenue, Knuth said. However, he said, the budget was increased to 92 cents, or two cents per student, to cover the new semiweekly summer publication. The University Health Center budget will increase by 91 cents to $40.33 per student in 1984-85. Knuth said the required 14 percent utilities budgets in crease and the debate on forming an alcohol aware ness program caused the health center's fee increase. I r? QPr Lowest Prices f tne Year I 3 Fresh Cut Hoses 2 I i Dittmer Plantation CO SCGD C?S yM V1A s iiA XAjfrt, A W vA'A-rtA vvV'Wy'V A N f V V 1 '' V1 J .,1 aw. ' rwvv , w I, ' l "'fl ' . f. - p ' Vi ' ... If S vv X i t. x r. , JSk f , s positions for; Committee Chairs Executive Coordinator " Executives Publicity Public Relations Chairman apply at the CAP Office 200 Nebraska Union 472-2454 or 300 Nebraska East Union 472-1780 Deadline March 12 , . f Univtrtily Projram Council Trl-cullur City Est The Recreation Department is understaffed, Knuth said. An 84-cent increase to $8.07 per stu dent for the Office of Campus Recreation should cover the cost of hiring two graduate students and the utilities budget increase, Knuth said. Andy Carothers, an ASUN College of Arts and Sciences senator, said more options need to be deve loped for night towingWithholding registration records does not look likely because of staffing and paperwork problems, Carothers said. Using student staffing is one option to solve this, he said. Another possibility, he said, is to use a jeep loaned to Student Watch Group to pick up stranded students. T)(T) JjwO V ,- Q - World Famcu3M m 1 ? ' I AT 15 AFTEa MIDf.lCHT yT7-iii SEPARATE ADKJSC'OKS 8.50 EACH l L-'Cn'i frm fir :orJTy PYTHON HQLy wm ir-n II LilUli f" -l J.P1 1 TEJIS SUNDAY I at St. Paul's United Methodist Church 1 2th and M Streets Downtown 5 blocks south'of campus PARABLES H "A FOOL IN THE EYES OF GOD" Dr. C. Rex Bevings, preaching ? i iovin,?o . You're maneuvering 445 feet of guided missile frigate through the navigational hazards and non-stop traffic of one of the world's busiest ports. But you'll dock safely. Because you know your equipment. You know your men. 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