n HAVE YOU READ. . . Panel discussion by Epsihn Chi: Are the Churches Obsolete ? 7:30 p.m. MONDAY-UNION 111 rmm!b n f this O 3 LT Come in to Taco Kid this Tuesday. Give us one dollar. And well give you six delicious tostadas. Flat, crisp corn tortillas, covered with a layer of frijoles and I igfrtfy spiced with mild sauce. Topped off with tots of fresh lettuce and shredded Six f these for a dollar. That's quite a meal. When you get the "screaming munchies" Tuesday, you 11 be glad you remembered the number six, and our tostada special. T.nns n UyOy'iIwa.liyil i ii ', a at n if ticket cvolloWe ot ferhfncj Auditorium box office. Bronde!. miller Paine (downtown 1 Coteiuoy). Treaure City" mulctand t W ft Cheap olftlcket f i $5.00 J ff 1 $4.00 jgvf i ... J Voegler: 'ASUN needs untangling Doug Voegler thinks it's time for ASUN second vice presidential candidates to run against each other, not against the presidential candidates on their opponent's slates. Voegler is running a unique race-he is seeking the second vice presidential position as an independent. The office of ASUN second vice president has always been a weak point of student parties," Voegler said in his campaign material. "Last year one party didn't even bother to run a second vice presidential candidate. 'The main purpose of running a second vice presidential candidate has been to use the $50 he is alloted in campaign expenditures to absorb the excessive expenditures of the other executive candidates and of the party," he said. But the second vice president's office is an important one, Voegler said. "It's mostly procedural- the office bolder must work toward making the whole monstrosity of student government run smoother," he said. Failure to emphasize this function has. weakened some ASUN functions, Voegler said. He gave the example of ASUN student appointments to policy boards like those for Student Health, campus surveillance, Student Appeals and those set up by the UNL Faculty Senate. "People are appointed and forgotten about," be said. "Students should be checked into and required to report back periodically," he said, noting some appointees, because of class conflicts, have yet to attend a single meeting of the board on which they supposedly serve. "It's really a huge structure and needs untangling," he said. He said boards can be effective, if they have some power, but that he feels some are set up "just to satisfy students' psychic needs for self-government." Voegler sa id he's against the proposed ASU N constitution because he doesn't feel reducing the number of senators from 35 to IS will change anything. Closer study of students' opinions and comparisons with other colleges' student governments should be done, he said. "The Council on Student Life (CSL) actually makes decisions-actually has power," Voegler said. The mass visitation violations recently planned by students exemplifies, he said, ASUN's poweriessness-all they could do was pass a resolution in support of the dormitories' actions. The Residence Hall Association, ASUN, CSL, the Interfraternity Council, the Panhellenic Association and college advisory boards are part of the array of student groups that prevent a "really concrete, unified student government on this campus." Voegler said. 'These divided centers of power dilute student power," he said, and the strengthening of student power should be the main goal of a new student government constitution. An area Voegler said he would like to improve next year is public relations for ASUN, including more work with the State Legislature. A major complaint Voegler expressed against past ASUN governments is a "tendency to give too much effort to special interest groups." He said he doesn't believe enough women students use the Women's Resource Center to warrant its continuation. And he said he cant see the equity in giving $2,000 for the Time-Out Conference on Human Sexuality while barely giving $100 to E-Week, an engineers' program sponsored on campus each spring. The sexuality conference, birth control handbooks, and support of University Women's Action Group indicate ASUN "spent too much time and money on the general topic of sex," Voegler said. Voegler is chairman of the Union Talks and Topics Committee, and a member of this year's World in Revolution Conference Committee, a participant in the Model UN and a member of the past Regents' Special Committee on PACE (Program of Active Commitment to Education). Devaney scores fieldhouse victory In concert Bob Devaney, Nebraska football coach and athletic director, scored a major victory off the football field Friday when Gov. J J. Exon signed into law a bill which will permit "acceleraTed".construction of a new fieldhouse. 'We're very, very pleased with what happened Friday and hope to get things started as soon as possible," Devaney said. "It'll probably take about four or five months for the architects to formulate plans," Devaney added. 'Then of course, the bids for construction will take time, too. I can't really , approximate how long it will take to complete some of these tilings, but we hope the fieldhouse will be completed in a couple of years." . The bill, Lincoln Sen. Roland Luedtke's LB 1433, is a compromise reached by Exon and Big Red to play pros-in basketball Nebraska's national championship football team finally will get a chance to play a professional football team - the Kansas City Chiefs. But the competition between the two teams will be played with a basketball instead of a football. The seniors from the Husker football team meet a team tfrom the Chiefs March 19 at Pershing Auditorium in m benefit basketball game for the March of Dimes. Advance tickets for xhe 7:30 p.m. game can be purchased t either Pershing Auditorium or the March of Dimes off ice, 1620 M St. The Chiefs' lineup will include Buck Buchanan, Emmett Thomas, Otis Taylor, Dave Hill, Mike Livingston, Warren McVea, Bobby Bell and Jim Kearney. Jeff Kinney, She Chiefs' Wo. 1 draft Choice, will Head the Husker team which includes Jerry Tagge, Bob Terr to, Larry Jacobson, Dick Rupert, Carl Johnson, Keith Wort man, John Adkins, Jim Anderson, Van Brownson, Jeff Hughes and Bill Kosch. key senators involved in the fieldhouse project. The bill sets a $12 million limit on the f ieldhouse's cost, exclusive of parking and land costs. Bonds issued by the University will finance construction, with cigaret tax revenue paying off the bonds and interest. Another $2.4 mil lion goes to the State Board of Agriculture for development of the fieldhouse site, parking and other improvements. rat TO n voirj AM AM&RJCAfcl MAN!4. da lu tianor hi (-titp1 brry pilpar rniuioginii editor itm gray iww cli tor hmrt tosefcer ort rrutna0r -bill ornnm coordinator jofi tiauMler uHv' d""'fo nd student K!"i,V WflbrB8ka" PUtortmd by h CSL WBdnewtey, Thursday and -rUv throughout she whool yea,, xtwpt holirtayt una mtcmtmm.. 8508 to"t OBt"9e ""d m "-win, NebrMka PAGE 2 THE DAILY WEB R ASK AIM MONDAY, MARCH 13, 1972