The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 10, 1971, Page PAGE 8, Image 8
Union will evaluate facilities The Union Board now offers students "a chance to shape their own e n vironment"--if that environment is the Crib or some other part of the Nebraska Union. The Board recently created a Nebraska Union Planning Committee "to initiate, plan and coordinate facilities changes in the Union-" and the plaza, according to Union Board member Ron Alexander. Three students, to be chosen by interviews March 20, and two faculty members, to be appointed by President Joseph Soshnik, will form the committee. Alexander noted that the latest addition to the Union building was designed with little student input. The new committee will "start planing ahead" on expanding and upgrading facilities, he added. The Student Union is financed through student fees. HELP WANTED Student workers are needed for help. If you have some time to give to a student running for city gov't. Please call 435 2260. 4349955, 475-4389 or write Box 81672, Lincoln. Need $10? Design a cover for 1971-72 Builder's Buzz Book. Contact Thorn Rosenbaum (732 Abel) or Doug Severs (Alpha Gamma Rho). Can you work 3 evenings weekly, have car and need to earn over $75 weekly? Leading local photography studio has this job opportunity in their advertising sales department. Phone 466-6642 days. Student to do part time T.V. graphics work. Call 477-0533. FOR BENT Wanted Roommate! Apt. near . campus. For more info call 475-2127 mornings. FOR SALE . Stereo Components, Discounts, Fisher, Kenwood, Dual 466-Q930. Fender Super- Reverb Amp. $200 or best offer. Call Jeff, Cather 210. BUILDER'S BUZZ BOOK and Calendar -25c apiece at Union Bookstore. Sony TC-20 Stereo Car cassette Player with 2 speakers. Brand new. 475-2216. '70 Honda Scrambler, 3000 miles, excellent condition, $635. 434-5473 evenings. Ampeg Guitar Amp 1 15" JBL Speaker, Tremelo, Reverb, Wsh-wah, $170. cost $470. 4752073. Stereo components. Uher 9000 stereo tape deck, Miracord 50 h turntable with dust cover and base. 432-8342. MISCELLANEOUS Sewing and alterations. Call Pat Moore at 799-261 5. Personal: TOMMY' I love you. Sally Simpson. Wilderness hiking and climbing courses. Spend 3 weeks In Colorado this summer, ASM, Box 9765, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55440. WATCH & CLOCK REPAIR CAMPUS BOOKSTORE 13TH & fl. Any kind of typing desired. 40c a page. 423-6126, Team Electronics gives quick service on Craig, Automatic Radio, Ranger, Tenna Kraco tape players. Team Electronics 2055 "O" SL Proposed Ibudget cutbacks University's The University's list of possible cuts is divided into schedules to show the effect of the proposed adjustments on the four major areas of operations and tax fund savings. Schedule I, which proposes reduction or elimination of direct university services to the state: - MAKE the University Extension Division entirely self-supporting, $208,500. - DELAY by one year the opening of the new educational television building. $100,000. - ELIMINATION of the Bureau of Business Research, $106,000. "The absence of readily available data on Nebraska business . . . would hamper those who monitor the progress of our state's economy," the report said. - REDUCTION by 40 percent of the funding for the Engineering Research Center, $100,000. - PERSONNEL AND OPERATING CUTS in the ETV programming. $100,000 to $320,000. The higher figure would eliminate all ETV programming by the university. - CLOSING of the State Museum and Mueller Planetarium to all but a limited number of on-campus users, $53,500. - REDUCTION OF OPERATIONS of the Conservation and Survey Division, $30,000 to $50,000. - ELIMINATION of the Center for Economic Education, $21,500. - ELIMINATION of the "all state" fine arts project, $19,700. - ABOLISHMENT of educational services to elementary and secondary schools, $32,000. - GENERAL CUTS, $16,200. These would include college newsletters, museum bulletins and speakers services. - REDUCTIONS AND ADJUSTMENTS in agricultural extension and agricultural experiment station operations, $900,000. Schedule II, which covers curtailment of educational opportunities": - ADUSTMENTS in summer session staffing and tuition, $250,000. About 100 courses and 40 faculty positions would be eliminated, affecting the "educational choices" of about 1 000 students. Tuition would be increased. - CURTAILMENT of faculty and graduate student activities financed through the Research Council, $170,000. - DELAY BY ONE YEAR the opening of the engineering building, $100,000. - REDUCTION of instructional improvement programs, $50,000. - ELIMINATION of graduate engineering courses in Omaha, 58,600. - DEFERRAL of equipment purchases by teaching departments. $130,000. - REDUCTION of 30 to 50 faculty positions, $300,000 to $500,000. - ELIMINATION of convocations, music programs, etc., $15,200. . .. Schedule III. which covers "reduction or elimination of direct university services to students": - STUDENT ACADEMIC SERVICES that would be made self-supporting or curtailed, $128,500. - CURTAILMENT of scholarships, tuition waivers and remissions not based on financial need, $100,000. - MAKE THE PLACEMENT SERVICES totally self-supporting, $24,000. - CURTAILMENT of the new student orientation program, $1 6,300. Schedule IV, which covers "cutbacks in purchase of goods and services": FOREGOING of the 4.2 percent inflation factor figured into the budget request for purchases of goods and services, $500,000. - REDUCTION of expenditures for maintenance of the physical plant, $400,000. - TERMINATION of purchases of services from the Alumni Association and the University Foundation, $62,200. Included are lists and records purchased from the alumni group and handling of endowments by the foundation. -NO SALARY INCREASES for personnel in the "higher income levels," $300,000. - REDUCTION in miscellaneous support of instruction, $45,000. - REDUCTION in faculty travel to professional meetings, $43,000. - REDUCTION in travel of administrators, $10,000. - DEFERRAL of non-instructional equipment, $25,000. Exon's The list prepared by the Exon administration shows how the University could reduce its spending of state tax funds by more than $1.2 million. , The Exon report states its 20-item list includes "only some examples of the reductions. There are many more like these Here is the governor's list, with some of the comments, and the possible savings in state tax funds: - MAID for the chancellor's house, $5,000. RFC RUITER for regular student programs, $18,000. I THE POST OF VICE CHANCELLOR FOR STUDENT AFFAIRS, $34,500. This post currently is unfilled. - ADMISSIONS operating costs reduction, $48,000. I ne Exon list said this would leave the University with the same pcr-student amounts set by the state colleges for admissions. - THE POST OF SPECIAL COUNSEL to the (Lincoln campus) president, $28,000. Carl Donaldson holds this position which, the Exon report said, "didn t exist until the man reached 65 and they put him in this post to give him three years post-retirement salary." - STUDENT HOUSING, $74,000. "Should besupported from dormitory payments as is done in the colleges," the Exon report said. "This should not require an increase in room rates as the dormitory account is carrying a surplus." - PLACEMENT SERVICE, $24,000. "Should be supported by those students who benefit from the education. The placement fee probably would be less than the $10 that students in the state colleges are already paying and much less than the $100 or more a public agency would charge," the report said. ... - ACCOUNTING, $29,000. The State Administrative Services Department assumed "a large amount" of the accounting load and the transfer wasn't reflected in the N.U. budget, the report said. - DATA PROCESSING, $110,000. Elimination of one university computer would cut the costs, according to the report. - PUBLIC RELATIONS, $80,000. The report says: "A reduction of 3.5 professional and one clerical (positions), plus supporting costs, on the grounds that state funds shouldn't be spent in image-making and lobbying." - PUBLICATIONS, $31,000. Publishing should be self-supporting, the governor's office said. - CATALOGS, $7,400. The report suggests printing fewer catalogs or charging for them. - NEBRASKA LAW REVIEW, $5,000. "This cost should be carried by the lawyers and libraries which benefit from the Review." - ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, $35,000. The report says: "The alumni should be willing to pay a few cents each to support their association." - GENERAL EXPENDITURES, $30,500. "This really was a slush fund or it would have been allocated to specific programs," the report said. - INSTITUTIONAL TRAVEL, $8,000. This would be half of the present travel budget. - SUNDRY EQUIPMENT, $25,000. "Again a slush fund," the report said. - PLANNING AND DESIGN, $210,000. The report says: "Probably set up when new buildings were constantly being built - even the NU request would indicate this will no longer be the case." - REMODELING, $400,000. Here are the comments: "Not requested in capital construction (budget). There is still $300,000 in the budget and when asked what this would be used for, the reply was that they didn't know, but felt they needed it because remodeling and renovation needed to continue in an orderly fashion . , . and yet specific remodeling projects were included in the capital construction budget." - CHANCELLOR'S RESIDENCE EQUIPMENT, $4,500. This comment: "Surely someone who makes $40,000 and lives in a free house should be able to furnish it himself." Ex-Senator will head rural America lectures Former U.S. Senator Albert Corp of Tennessee will be the keynote speaker at the University's 1971 Montgomery Lectures April 6-7 entitled "The Nation Outside The Cities." Through a series of guest speakers and panel discussions, members of the planning committee hope to emphasize rural alternatives for urbanization, according to Lynn Webster, a junior from Lyons, chairman of the planning committee. Guest speakers and their topics include: - Former Nebraska Governor Norbert Tiemann, "Education Today." - Fred Schroeder, member of the National Humanities Society at Princeton, N. J., formerly of Minnesota, "Culture in Rural America." David Brower, president of the Friends of Earth, San Francisco, Calif., "Mental and Physical Environment." - U.S. Senator Mike Gravel of Alaska, "Getting It All Together." The Montgomery Lectures were established in 1946 from the income of the James Henry Montgomery Memorial, an endowment provided in 1941 by the Ora Clair Montgomery Estate. Purpose of the lectures is to generate constructive thought on contemporary problems. This year the Montgomery Lectures also are being sponsored by the Associated Students of the University of Nebraska and th East Union. PAGE 8 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1971