The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 06, 1972, Page PAGE 9, Image 9

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Newly-elected ASUN Senate takes office
Three ASUN Senate
executives and 30 senators
swore Wednesday afternoon to
"act in the best interests of the
students" for the 1972-73
school year, then set up
housekeeping, passed one
resolution and tabled another.
Newly 'elected President
Bruce Beecher, First Vice
President Sam Brower, Second
Vice President Michele Gagne
and the 30 senators replaced
this year's sparsely represented
senate after some "parting
words" "from out-going
President Steve Fowler and the
presentation of awards to
out-going senators.
The new senate elected
George Ayoub permanent
speaker pro-temp, which
automatically puts him on the
Executive Committee. Ann
Henry, John Berg and Vince
Boucher were also elected to
the committee which includes
the executives.
A resolution appropriating
$150 to publicize and rent vans
to take students to the
CouQty-City Building for a
voter registration drive April
10-13 was passed 26-5.
Sen. Stephen Lewis
robjectecT during the discussion "t
ito what . -.h-e called the
'politicizing "of this body" by j
spending student fees on the
registration drive.
Resolution sponsor John
Berg said student fees had been
spent on the earlier on-campus
voter registration drive and the
resolution was a
"continuation" of a senate
attempt to reach more
students.
The senate tabled a motion
by David Zeek to give $250 to
the Engineering College's
Annual E-Week program.
Zeek's original resolution
would have tied no strings to
the money but he accepted a
"friendly amendment" from
" Patti Kaminski to limit use of
the funds to paying for a
speaker which, she said, was a
program "a lot of University
students would benefit from."
Zeek refused to accept as
friendly a motion, also offered
by Kaminski, saying "the
senate cannot condone the
sexist attitude inherent in the
choosing of a Miss E-Week."
The senate accepted the
amendment, though, 16 voting
in favor, 12 against and three
not voting.
In a earlier meeting of the
out-going senate, Human
Rights Committee Chairman
Ann Pedersen announced a
proposal now being presented
to the Council on Student Life
that would, with CSL's
approval, set up a
discrimination board and
judicial board.
The discrimination board,
composed of two faculty
members, two administrators,
four students appointed by
ASUN and one person-aMarge,
will investigate discrimination
complaints brought to them,
determining if action is needed.
If so, the board can pass the
case to the judicial board,
composed of five people
appointed by the
discrimination board and
approved by the University
president, UNL chancellor and
Board of Regents chairman, to
decide "what action is to be
carried out."
Awards given and their
THURSDAY APRIL 6,1972
recipients were: the Mary Carol
Poulsen award, awarded to a
non-senator for outstanding
work for the senate, Mary
Harding; Outstanding Senator,
Patti Kaminski; Distinguished
Service Award, Duane
Sneddeker, Chris Harper, Meg
Hall, Denice Gemache, Roy
Baldwin, Bruce Beecher, Ann
Pedersen, Mike Berns and
Senate Faculty Adviser,
Associate Professor Paul
Byerly.
ASUN's secretary, Mary
Carol Poulsen, who's taking a
leave of absence after five years
in the office, was "awarded" a
photo of the ASUN office's
mimeograph machine, a
machine, she said, that "has
kept me company many
years."
UNL Ombudsman James
Suter told the senate he's
handled 12-15 cases since his
office has been open. They've
dealt mainly with "academic
penalties for .non-academic
offenses," he said, such as
withholding grades for unpaid
parking tickets or loans.
He said he's largely been
trying to make his services
known to the 21,000
people-including students,
faculty, and non-academic
staff-who his office serves.
Fowler, in his "parting
words," said he had "no
regrets" for the controversial
services for which ASUN used
student fees this year.
"They were legitimate
functions of student
government filling legitimate
needs of students," he said.
Fowler called the year
"moderately successful" and
listed expanded student
services and Free University
courses,.-the ombudsman.
i.nerim and freshman
orientation t classes and
implementation of the PACE
low-income scholarship program
as accomplishments by this
year's senate.
And he said he believed the
"confrontation politics" used
in loosening coed visitation
rules were "successful in
getting students what they
wanted and deserved."
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.THE. DAILY. NEBRASKAN
, PAG E 9
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