1 T,'f fejwiife -f Mfixiy.r monday, march 17, 1975 lincoln, nebraska vol. 93 no. 99 dailu executive candidates 'V ' ASUN n : : . v . sum up platf orms f issus 1 ... , i ; ! . ' .J.' ?- ' V . A" j v 1 - i ; I , f -,4 as" ".i.vri;ri''i j I 1 cvm ' 1 -iYo-Hi iti'AUi wiiiii l!;iui ; ; vwH -ovllfji vijyyi iiiiiiit; LiUflTlJ iirUlit .iiviiiii- ! i liP MtiJ ja Candidates for ASUN president, clockwise from top left: Vince Powers, Charles Rosvold, Jim Say, Del Gustafson, Dave Ware, and IBM 360. By Rex Seline A new ASUN administration will be elected Wednesday from among three parties, two would-be parties and several independents. The election has been marked by controversy over new election requirements forcing parties to obtain 500 registered students' signatures to run. In cases brought before Student Court and . appealed to the Council on Student Life, the election rules were upheld. The election will be the first to elect an ASUN president to serve as a regent. The change has forcea the electoral commission to attempt to comply with state election laws. The United Student Effort party (USE) is reportedly only the second party in ASUN history (since 1965) to survive two years. Diversity, unity USE presidential candidate Jim Say said the party hopes to achieve diversity and unity among its candidates." .Say is a first semester senior from Norfolk majoring in political science. He is chairman of the ASUN Student Rights Committee. "We don't want preselected issues," he said. "Last year there was a lot of criticism that the platforms were the same." Say claimed USE will maintain credibility "just because the party will become identified with certain issues." He believes student fees should not be eliminated, but "students should have a little more control over their allocation." "There are ways to get around (restructuring) the Fees Allocation Board (FAB)," he said. "We need a more cohesive appointment system. We can get students who would at least try to work with other student organizations as one effective group." More student input As a student regent, Say would "invite more student input (than his successor Ron Clingenpeel), rather than being a spokesman for the regents." Del Gustafson and his Sons of Liberty party (SOL) call for the elimination of student fees allocated to private organizations and programs. Gustafson is a junior from Holdredge majoring in political science. According to Gustafson, the allocation of about $5.50 by the FAB to organizations should be left up to students to spend as they please. "A student should be able to contribute money to the causes he sees fit," Gustafson said. "No government agency knows how he wants to spend his money as well as he does." "Some organizations that don't fill a need might die," Gustafson said. "There are many organizations that flourish on campus without student fee support." Criticized FAB Gustafson has criticized the composition of the FAB, which includes representatives from the five organizations which receive the most student fee money. SOL and Gustafson also have called for the end of the requirement of ASUN approval for posters and constitutions, calling the practice "tyrannical." They also support a restructuring of intercampus bus system to have the state, instead of parking fees, support the bus line. Cut the Crap party (CTC) presidential candidate Dave Ware and his group have proposed a five point platform which concentrates on fees and their uses. CTC is calling for a study to revise fees allocation "so students could get enough money back to pay for what they use." They also call for the use of fees to promote cooperatives. The money would be used as "seed-money" for the "coops" and could later be paid back, under the CTC proposal. ' They also propose full refund of tuition, during the first week of classes, to dissatisfied students. They contend the proposal has worked at other schools. Bookstore, parking Strengthening and restructuring the University Bookstore as a cooperative and revising the parking ticket system to bring it in line with city procedures are also proposed by CTC. Ware has called for a more active ASUN Senate and executives. "If ASUN doesn't want to run the risk of getting a bloody nose trying to overreach themselves in an effort to get something done, then they will stay a polite version of the student council," he said. Ware is "roughly a junior" from Lincoln majoring in speech communications. He is on the Union Program Council. The computer IBM 360 is the presidential candidate of the would-be Pro-Apathy Party (PAP). Although campaign worker Bob Brehm said the computer "could answer any question," no interview was arranged. Continued on p. 11 Exon: If Unicameral ups Nil budget, I'll veto' By Ron Wylie Gov. J. James Exon said last week he will veto any University of Nebraska appropriation passed by the Unicameral which exceeds his budget recommendations. Exon said he didn't want to haggle over suns with the Legislature, ' "but, if they go over my recommendations, HI be exercising a veto, because we just don't have the money. 'it is a little ridiculous, and I emphasize ridiculous," Exon said, "for the University of Nebraska, with static or declining enrollments, to get a 25 per cent increase in funds last year, and then come back and ask for another 25 per cent this year." He said he has increased the university budget each year and this year's recommended increase of 11.5 per cent is the highest of any school in the Big 8 conference, with the exception of the University of Kansas. Not 'sacred cows" "It's time for the universities to realize that they are not sacred cows," Exon said. "They have to measure up like anyone else." The governor said his recommendation of $71.6 million, added to a projected $33.7 million in tuition and another $22.8 million in federal grants, provided more than $128 million for the university system. "This is a reasonable budget by any reasonable standards," he said, "and the university administrators and the Board of Regents have not been reasonable in their requests." Exon said administrators could cut back unneeded programs in many areas, but he declined to suggest specific cuts. "I'm not an administrator of the university," he said, "and I don't want to meddle with their areas of authority." Building, building The problem with university budgeting, Exon said, is that "once you build something into their budget, they automatically assume that they'll continue to get that. They'll want all of that. They'll never talk about doing away with a program that hasn't proved feasible or workable. They just keep building and building." Modern universities are not being run that way today, he said. "Nebraska university officials and the Board of Regents are like an ostrich with its head stuck in the sand if they think the governor, the Legislature and the people of Nebraska are always going to listen to their moans and pleas," he said. Reacting to a report which shows faculty members at the university are the lowest paid in the Big 8 conference, Exon said," "If that's true, what kind of job of administration have we done at the university?" NLTs budget has increased by $20 million in the last two years, Exon said, while most state agencies have been getting by with the same amount of money they had the year before. Exon said he understood the attempts by university officials and regents to obtain money beyond hi3 recommendations. They see it as part of their job, he said. "I guess that's part of the game they play. Stop games "But the games stop here," he said, "when I have to make decisions about a balanced state budget. I think most reasonable people will agree that an 1 1 per cent increase is something the university can live with comfortably." This year's budget recommendations for higher education are proportionally greater in Nebraska than most governors in other states are recommending for their universities, Exon said. "I had to go to the Legislature this time, like no governor ever has before because, over my objections, the State Board of Equalization reduced the income tax at a time when it should not have been reduced," 11C aaiu. The limited income from tax revenues compled with a rising unemployment rate create a time for belt-tightening in the university structure, Exon said. "I don't believe university administrators have the proper compassion for the overall economic picture," Exon said. "The University of Nebraska has to realize that the state has the resources to run a top-flight university, but these resources are not unlimited." Quoting from a Carnegie Institute study on higher education, Exon said the peak number of seniors graduating from Nebraska's high schools will be reached in three years and that university structures will have to be adjusted accordingly. Less students Today, Exon said, there are 36,000 16-year-olds in the state's school system, while there are only 18,000 1 -year-old children in Nebraska. Rather than wait until those 1-year-olds grow to university age, Exon said, "we have to start addressing ourselves to problems of tight money and reduced enrollments right now." Exon reemphasized his suggestion of a lump sum university budget allocation to be given to the Board of Regents to distribute in accordance with regents' and administrators' priorities. "Let them disperse the $71.6 million the way they want," Exon said. "And if they want to use more of it to raise teachers salaries, let them do that."