. ' .-BIG" BOY FAMILY flESTAUflANT GOOD ANYTIME! BIG BOY HAFi WITH EACH PURCHASED BURGER COMBINATiO IG BOY COMBINATION m fit fw ONE COUPON PER ORDER . (No Substitutes) Sa!e Amount ... Credit Total Date & Initials . 27th & Vine RALEIGH AZUKI 1. J. - . 5, Jj? " if I ''V f GO ! H Z . 14 o 7s Bicycle " spoken here I We're in the bicycle business. We speak "Bicycle," eat "Bicycle, breath "Bicycle," live "Bicycle," we even rlde'ern. We're the newest bicycle shop in town with the largest and most varied selection of bikes. At Mr. Bike we can help you select the best bike for your size, needs, and. price range. And we promise fast, expert service after the sale. So come to Mr. Bike in the Belmont Plaza. Talk some "'Bicycle" with us. 11th The Good Life Bicycle Shop & Cornhusker '. . Belmont Plaza 10 discount with student I.D. aiLicienTs cav n additional $10 a semester in student fees. But they will have more say in where their up to $61.50 in fees goes. Both are the result of the first UNL Fee Alloca tions Board, according to board chairman Dave Morrison. Both are the result of the first U The board made fee recommendations to the NU Board of Regents at the Regents' July meet ing. included were cost-of-living increases for most University programs, fi nanced by a $10 fee increase $7.39 recom mended by the board and $2.61 by UNL Chancellor James zumberge. Similar boards were established for the Uni versity of Nebraska at Omaha and the University of Nebraska Medical Cen ter campuses as directed x by the regents in the fall of 1973. The regents also renamed the fees "Uni versity Program and Facilities Fees" at that time. The UN-L board was appointed September 1973. Of 12 members, eight are students; two, faculty; and two, UNL administrative staff. Morrison, then a senior in pre-law, said the board's hardest task was divying $185,839 after the $10 increase among programs that requested $304,000. He said the board's existence opens the fee distribution process. Board members had three public hearings on fee allocations and two on the proposed fee increase. Almost the only atten-, dants were members of the 42 groups requesting have one to three credit hour $47 for four to six hours; and $61.50 for seven or more credit hours. Last year the fees were 115, $37, and $51.50. UNL Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs Ken Bader said he likes the zero-based budget which came with the fee alloca tions board. It means programs and organizations begin each academic year with only the money allocated to it by the fee board. That forces students to keep better track of organ izations so they may decide how much money to give it the next year, Bader said. Yearly reviews are especially Important in University programs, he said, whose officers change each year, poten tially changing the organ izations wifh them The regents set up the fee board, he said, at a time when fees were the object of a student law suit. Under regent guide lines, campus chancellors put University programs in two caterqories: A, student activities: and B, longterm debts, staff and maintenance- responsibli ties. Zumberge subdivided the first category into two groups: A1, activities planned and managed by student groups; A2, acti- Requests and Recommendation for UPFF Funding for 1974-75 Organization Amount Recommended 1. Afro-American Collegiate Society $1,400.00 2. A.S.U.N. 36,998.63 3. Black United Sisters 100.00 4. Block and Bridle Club 0 5. Chinese Student Association 350.00 6. Club Ibero-Americano 0 7. Consumer Aid Group 0 8. Corn Cobs v 0 9. Cornhusker Water Polo Club 425.00 10. Council for Exceptional Children 0 11. Council of American Indian Students 1,000.00 12. . Cultural Affairs Committee 1974-75 8,000.00 13. Cultural Affairs. Committee 1975-76 9,700.00 14. Daily Nebraskan 48,639.17 15. E-Week 100.00 16. Engineering Toastmasters 0 17. Gay Action Club 400.00 18. Harper Hal! Social Fund 0 19.. International Club 200.00 20. International House 65.00 21. Judo Club 50.00 22. .Joyce Johnson Angel Glight ' Q 23. Mexican American Student Assn. 2,500.00 24. Minority Affairs Cutlural Progrmg. 1,100.00 (Black Students) 25. Nebraska Masquers 100.00 26. Pi Mu Epsilon Math Honorary q 27. Scarlet Berets 0 28. School of Music Opera Program 0 29. Student Bar Association o 30. Student Veterans 400.00 31. Tonic o 32.. TowneClub 0 33. Union Program Council 50,000.00 34. University Child Care Project . 4,350.00 35. University of Nebraska Fencing Club 0 36. University of Nebraska Hockey Club 500 00 37. University YWCA 400.00 38. University of Nebraska Rodeo Assn. ' 556.84 39. University of Nebraska Rowing Team 2,475.00 40. University of Nebraska Soccer Team 230.00 41. University of Nebraska Student Chapter 0 of American Institue of Architects 42. Women's Resource Center and Women's 800.00 Action Group Sub $170,839.64 Contingency Fund , 15,000.00 Total ' $185,639.64 Wednesday, august 21, 1974 page 16 daily nebraskan