The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 27, 1973, section b, Page page 7b, Image 18

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paqe 7b
by Bart Becker
At 9:30 a.m. Good Friday one basement classroom in
Andrews Hall contains the following items: 19 desks, ona
chair, one table, seven cigarette butts and their ashes, nine
used book matches, two cold drink cups carrying the message
"Careless Hands Earn First Aid Bands," one chewing gum
wrapper, and one wastebasket. The wastebasket holds two
cigarette butts, two matches and one toothpick. The other
items have been deposited on the vinyl-tiled floor.
Discounting the desks, table and chair, somebody has to
clean up that stuff. Since it's unlikely students will, the task
falls to University custodians. But the custodial corps at UNL
is below maximum strength.
"We're budgeted for 160 custodians," said John Dzerk,
physical plant operational manager," but we're short 20 as of
today. People just aren't coming in looking for this kind of
full-time work."
The UNL custodians police living units, classroom buildings
and office buildings. No work-study students are assigned as
custodians, but about 20 to 25 part-time students work up to
four hours per day, according to Derk.
Bill Behmer punches in at 7 a.m. Then, he said, "I click on
the automatic pilot and don't think for the next nine hours."
Behmer works in the Cather-Pound dormitory complex. He
is mainly responsible for the recreation area: the TV lounge,
the games areas and the places students hang out. He also
cleans both lounge bathrooms and the Cather and Pound trash
chutes.
Behmer, who corrected the reporter's terminology from
"menial workers" to "custodial technicians," said he doesn't
notice students peering down their noses at janitors.
"The first few weeks I worked, I didn't have the uniform so
I looked a lot like any student who just happened to be
cleaning up," he said. "Since I got the uniform I'm more like a
piece of furniture. The students don't really notice me. There's
a certain anonymity to the job."