r doilu thursday, September 20, 1973 lincoln, nebraska vol. 97 no. 13 v. I" .'. ! ... - 1 1 v 1 Ken Bader, vice chancellor for student affairs. Senators demand Council name committee members The Council on Student Life (CSL) apparently won't be getting any two-fers from ASUN. Lacking a quorum, the ASUN Senate Wednesday unanimously approved a sense of the senate statement favoring a resolutuion by. Sen, Myron Molacek to send only one nominee for each CSL appointment rather than two-for-one as CSL had requested. The senate's original quorum was lost when Son, Karl Cochrane left. The controversy centered around five ASUN nominees to the Publications Committee, which publishes the Daily Nebraskan. According to ASUN President Ann Henry, CSL opposed the nominations because Sam Brower, former ASUN first vice president, was one of them, Henry said CSL opposed student government leaders being involved with the publication of the Daily Nebraskan. Several sources have indicated they believe the government-press involvement argument is specious. The souices said that CSL's opposition actually was aimed at Brower, who is allegedly hostile to the Daily Nebraskan because of editorial criticism of him by the paper last year. Another nominee, Mark Molacek, was an ASUN senator last year and is again this year. However, Molacek was not a senator at the time he was interviewed for the Publication Board post. Mark is the brother of the senator who introduced the resolution. Of the other nominees, Bob O'Neal was an ASUN senator last year, Karen Richardson is chairperson of ASUN's Human Riahts Committee, and Kelly Baker is a former Daily Nebraskan editor. Sen. Myron Molacek's resolution opposed CSL's request on the grounds that ASUN executives had served on the Publication Board in the past, that the distinction between leaders of student government is hazy, that there was a precedent of ASUN's sending the exact number of applicants for appointment to CSL, and that the Faculty Senate has ruled that all of ASUN's appointments be made on a one for-one basis. In other action, the senate confirmed the appointments of Mark Molacek, Steve Timmons, and Jan Jones to fill senate vacancies from the Graduate and Professional College. There are still two vacancies in the senate, one from the Graduate and Professional College and another from the College of Engineering. New committee to investigate fee controversy By Bob Ralston If Ken Bader's perceptions are correct, the new Program and Facilities Fee Allocation Board, designed to eliminate some of the past controversies over student fees, may soon find itself facing hassles over fee increases. "I am dedicated to making sure that all agencies using fees that I'm responsible for are using them to the fullest extent possible," said Bader, vice chancellor for Student Affairs. "However, I am concerned about tremendous increases in costs which have not been accompanied by increases in student fees," Bader added. He said he would not speculate on what the allocation board would do about this issue. At present, the board exists only on paper. No members have been appointed, although Bader said he believed the board would be complete by he Oct. 1 deadline. ASUN is to appoint five persons to the 12-member board, one each from ASUN, Union Board, Publication Board, University Health Center Advisory Committee, and Student-Faculty Advisory Committee to the Recreation Department. ASUN President Ann Henry said she has asked each of the organizations for nominations and expects replies by Friday. The Faculty Senate Committee on Committees will recommend four faculty members. Three students-at large will be chosen by the Council on Student Life's Student Organizations Subcommittee. According to Bader, the creation of the allocation board is an effort to depoliticize the student fees issue and "open up" the allocation process. "It's no secret that student fees has been the subject of some controversy for some years, both in the ways they were collected and distributed," Bader said. "One of the conflicts I saw in the (old) process was that it was not basically an open process. One of my goals is to open up the decision of how fees are used and should be used." He said there had been conflicts with ASUN in determining representation on the allocation board. "ASUN wanted to be the sole appointing authoiity for students. I did not go along with this because another goal I had was to remove political vested interests from fee allocation," he said. However, Bader said he was unwilling to give students complete control of the allocation of their fees. "Students perhaps are not awaie of the fact that the regents are the final authority for any fund distribution, They delegate this to the chancellor and myself and we are accountable for it," he said. "If students have control, where is the accountability? Neither the chancellor nor myself want to be accountable for something we have no pait in. We want rather to shaie in the (allocation) process with students." Bader said he believed the board's zero base budget concept, which would force each student group to start from scratch each year in requesting funds, will increase "sharing" in the allocation process by opening up budgets to analysis. However, Bader said he did not believe economics should be the only consideration in fee allocation. "Wo shouldn't get mouse-tiapped into a situation where everything has to be a paying proposition," he said. Japanese seminar includes art, tea Demonstrations of brush painting, music, flower arranging and paper folding set an aesthetic mood at the opening session of the Japanese Symposium being held Wednesday and Thursday-at Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery. Gail Butt, UNL art professor demonstrated oriental written characters and discussed their relation to art in Japan. Butt said the characters, originally brought from China, often portray their own meaning which is why it evolved into an art. In many cases the form of the character is more important than it's meaning in a painting, he said. A form might be aesthetically beautiful but it could possibly mean something like "danger hole in road," he said. Butt explained that the style varies greatly because of the many inks and brushes that are used. Demonstrating how to make a brush by smushing a bamboo stalk with a hammer, Butt said that brushes were also made from a variety of hair and bristles. Each brush is used according to the quality of mark wanted. The team crremuny which was scheduled for the afternoon session was not performed until evening because Tateo Sauki, wife of the Japanese Consul of Chicago, had not arrived from Chicago. The ceremony is an art in itself in Japan and is steeped with formal tradition that might make even an Englishman with tea and crumpets tingle. While the English have had stiict i riles of etiquette surrounding the serving of tea, the Japanese carry it a bit further by making it a solemn ceremony set in a simplistic background with low keyed music. Several distinctive Japanese instruments were demonstrated in a section of the program by Donald Lentz, professoi of ethnomusicology at UNL. The main address will be given 10:30 a.m. Thursday by Edwin 0. Reischauer, former US ambassador to Japan and a professor at Harvard University. A pnel discussion is scheduled at 2:30 p.m. and a movie at 8 p.m. All sessions are at Sheldon Art Gallery.