The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 02, 1973, Image 1

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OQIU
Wednesday, may 2, 1973
lincoln, nebraska vol. 96, no. 108
Robinson wins council seat
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Tuesday's city election might draw a
mixed response today at the UNL Law
School.
A UNL law student was one of three
persons elected to the City Council, but one
of his professors didn't fare so well in the
Board of Education race.
The student, John Robinson, placed
second in a field of six candidates for three
seats on the council while UNL Law
professor Wallace Rudolph lost in the Board
of Education race. He placed fourth, also in
a field of six. Only three persons were
elected to the board.
Robinson, 29, tallied 13,688 votes in the
contest He trailed Sue Bailey, the first place
candidate, by about 1,500 votes. Finishing
third was Max Denney with 13,518 votes.
Rudolph was nudged out of the winning
third place position in the Board of
Education race by Pearl Goldenstein. She
trailed incumbent Ted Dewey and Louis
Roper.
Two of three City Charter amendments
also were defeated. But voters approved a
third which grants the new council members
a raise.
Amendment 1, which would have
changed Lincoln's city council from a
city-wide race to district elections, was
defeated by approximately 2,000 votes.
Amendment 2, the so-called Northeast
Radial highway amendment, also was
defeated. If passed, it would have increased
the number of procedures the city must go
through before undertaking any major street
construction.
City Council members were given a raise
as voters approved Amendment 3. It
increases the salary of council members from
$20 per meeting attended to as much as
$4,000 a year. The amendment passed by
less than 300 votes.
The unofficial results of the City Council
race:
Sue Bailey
John Robinson
Max Denney
William Thierstein
Emmett Junge
Nancy Childs
For the Board of Education:
Ted Dewey
Louis Roper
Pearl Goldenstein
Wallace Rudolph
Martin Dinsmore
Robert Rauch
15,094
13,688
13,518
11,922
10,607
8,975
15,631
13,431
12,722
10,212
9,869
7,938
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UNL Law student John Robinson. ..won in Tuesday's
City Council election.
Rape.
It's a word which provokes fear,
anger and to a few, eroticism.
Campus rapes were the reason for
tightened security in UNL residence
halls and the beefing up of the
Campus Security police force last
year.
It is a crime so repugnant to
many Americans that, until
recently, in some states convicted
rapists could be executed.
In today's Close Up, staff writer
Ken Kirk takes a look at the crime,
its causes and its effect on victims.
Read about it on pages 10 and 11
of today's Daily Nebraskan.
Appointments to come
on UNL equality boards
A proposed two-step process for
investigating discrimination complaints
at UNL will be implemented as soon as
committee appointments are made,
according to John Stephens, assistant
to the chancellor.
Stephens said UNL Chancellor
James Zumberge has asked for student
and faculty nominations to the
nine-member committee on Equality
and the seven-member Judicial Board
on Equality outlined in the proposal.
The Committee on Equality would
investigate charges of "limitation of
access to participation in education,
social, cultural or other activities of
the University," according to the
recommendation of the Council on
Student Life (CSL) in January.
Discrimination ilso would be
prohibited in housing "supplied or
regulated by the Unversity for
students and staff, including
fraternities and sororities," unless
based on distinctions between the
sexes.
ASUN and the UNL Faculty Senate
were asked last week to nominate
members to the two bodies, Stephens
said.
Neither ASUN President Ann
Henry nor Faculty Seriate President
Wallace Rudolph have nominated
members, they said.
Zumberge plans to appoint
members to the two bodies when he
leceives the nominations, Stephens
explained. The chancellor will also
make administrative appointments to
the bodies.
The establishment of a Committee
on Equality and Judicial Boaid on
Equality initially was recommended in
a 1970 report on racial discrimination
prepared by John Robinson, fonner
CSL chairman.
Day
Care
petitions
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Mike and Eric Schafer and Jamie and Pat Strong . . . helped collect over 900 signatures on petitions supporting
the Child and Infant Day Care Centers. The petitions will be presented today to Chancellor James Zumberye.