The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 11, 1976, Image 1

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inside C:
Easiness Not Booming: The UNL College of
Business Administration may loss it's
accreditation while professors leave
for more money pS
Co Team!: Batten the hatches, it's
Nebraska Boys' State Basketball
Tournament time cain p.7
Baby Face: Does your face stand out in a
crowd of 22,000 students? p.6
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am sl
thursday, march 1 1, 1970 vol. CO no. Co Uncqln, ndbruska J
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By Kim Shepherd
Many people arc talking about it.
Nobody knows who's on it.
And only three people admit to having formed it.
It is a slate for the March 17 ASUN election. But, un
like most slates, it is comprised of candidates from three
of the four recognized parties in the election and repre
sents only candidates from Greek Houses.
The Greek slate endorses Phi Delta Theta member EI3
Mueller, a junior in pre4aw and independent candidate for
President; Alpha Qmicron Pi member Paula Haeder, a
junior in Integrated Studies and independent candidate for '
first vice-president; and Farmhouse member Dennis
Martin, junior law student and New Student Coalition
candidate .for second vice-president, according to Al
Eveland. Eveland sail he formulated the idea of a Greek
slate last year while president of the Interfraternity
Coff3
shop
site
of bud
Several state senators and Got. J. James Exon sat down
in the capital's basement coffee shop Wednesday for what
Newman Grove Sen. Thomas Kennedy had called a press
conference. But it turned into a forum questioning the
Nebraska . Legislature Appropriations Committee's
proposed $94 million NU budget
Kennedy, who began the meeting, said coffee shop
conferences were needed to get the facts about the pro
posed university budget to the senators constitutents.
"I asked Mm what he did when he wasn't lobbying,
Kennedy said, "and he said he was an English professor."
Kennedy said John Robinson called him Monday night
to inquire about his position on the university budget.
. CcsIat answer"
Kennedy said he asked Robinson why he (Kennedy)
should support a 23 per cent tax support increase in the
university budget when cattle prices are down and there
appears to be a droughts " " . -
"He could not answer my questions," Kennedy said.
Sidney Sen. Robert; Clark, vice-chairman of the Appro
priation's Committee, said he opposed all general fund ad
ditions to the committee's previous tentative $37.9
million NU budget, except for an addition for a brain
scanner at the University of Nebraska Medical Center.
Exon's proposed budget, scrapped earlier by the com
mittee, presented a "more business like approach."
His constitutents have told him to hold down the
budget, he said.
Exon outlined his objections to the Appropriations
Committee bill. He said the committee's budget includes
a provision o cash fund ceilings for a tuition increase,
Council (IFC). '
Eveland, a senior art major from North Bend, refused
to identify other candidates on the Greek slate.
Eveland said he, Barb Hengen, and a committee of
select Greeks have been working on the slate since
January. At that time, Eveland said he introduced the idea
to some IFC representatives after one of their meetingsr
Hengen, a senior secondary education major from Wahoo,
is the former president of FanheSenic and a member of PS
Beta Fhi sorority.
Another admitted member of the slating committee,
John Kane, a senior speech and drama major from Kansas
Gty, Mo, and president of Phi Delta theta fraternity,
said he presented the idea of a Greek slate at a sorority
and fraternity presidents meeting Feb. 11. He said he
asked the presidents to find members of their houses who
would be willing to run on a Greek slate.
ctaf-shop folk
which he saU he opposes.
Exon said maybe, although he didn't recommend it,
tuition, which he said is a large amount of the university's
cash income, should be set each year to cover 25 per cent
of the university's 'costs. In that way, he said, some stu
dents, although not a majority, would stop being what he
called pawns for the university system.
Professional fees
The governor sail Lis 1202 Commission on University
Funding could not get medical center figures on profes
sional fees faculty members receive for treating patients.
dark explained that if a patient is sent to the medical
center, fees that a person pays go to medical center opera
tions. Eat, he continued, if a patient is referred to a
specific doctor, those fees are put in a professional fee
fund distributed among doctors.
r Exon called the medical center the "sacred cow of
sacred cows," at the university.
dark said he would sponsor a resolution for a commit
tee study of professional fees and the way they are
handled over the summer.
"Over-lobbied'
As the conversation turned to the NU budget in
general, Kennedy said, "I don't think the public knows
how much we've been over-lobbied."
Exon said, "We haven't begun to match the lobbying
with unlimited funds, especially from the University (of
Nebraska) Foundation," on these issues.
Pro-university lobbyists have done a much better job
putting out facts, he said.
Continued on p.10
Eveland sail Kane is a member of what Eveland
referred to as The Faction. Currently, The Faction is com,
prised of Greek house presidents, Eveland said, adding
that he considers himself The Faction coordinator al
though he is not president of Delia Tan Delta, the fra
ternity to which he belongs. ,
The group that did the slating does not include all the
members of Ihe Faction, Eveland said. He said there were
about six or seven persons who had worked on the slating
with Hengen and him. Eveland would not identify those
people, but he referred to them as The Committee for The
Faction.
Eveland said he first heard about The Faction from his
father, a former university student and Farmhouse fra
terntiy member. However, Eveland said, his father was not
a member of The Faction, which he said was active ca
campus from the 1920s to the early 1960s. ,
.
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Ftiow by Tad Kit
Sidney State Sen. Robert Clark
Credibility, sincerity are USA campaign bywords
Editor's note: This is the fourth article in a series on
the 1976 ASUN elections. Before the Parch 17 baHotirg,
all parties and candidates wO be interviewed.
By George RHIIcr
Establishing ASUN Senate ' credibility is the first
priority of the University Student Awareness (USA)
party, according to party executive candidates.
."You achieve credibility by establishing that you have
a sincere interest in the job, by doing adequate research
into projects before you start them and by taking
to do the job," said Scott Cook, USA presidential
candidate.
Cook, a junior political science major from Sdney,
spoke about the goals of his party in a Tuesday night
interview. Cook was joined by his running mates, first
vice-presidential candidate Susie Reitz, a sophomore
journalism major from North Flatte and second vice-presi-
dential candidate John Welch, a junior political science
major from Curtis.
'T.Vre dons with toy politics (in Senate),w Cook said.
aw
"Ve have people (in USA) who take seriously their
relationship with the (NU Board of) Regents, the NU
administration and the State Legislature.
TNot dome overnight
Welch said that after the senators and executives prove
they can do substantive things for students, they will gain
the students respect. -
"This is not done overnight, Welch said, "but with
strong execs and senators, we can go a long way towards
establishing credibility. :
Noting that he and Welch currently are ASUN senators
and that Reitz is a former senator, Cook said USA execu
tives would understand Senate problems and would be
able to provide better leadership than the current Senate
administration. -tack
cf lenders!??
"This years Senate has done a lot and could have done
more if it had had effective leadership, Cook said.
The current ASUN Senate administration "has no game
plan, he said.
"Nobody knows where the Senate is going to go,
Cook said. "Its become bogged down in trivia lots of the
time. .
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Cook said the Snsle was lad into and became kend
dojn in the drpute wth its tppoatees on the Cc&neii on
Studsit Life (CSL) becausa cf a lack of laadsrsL.
We should have bcked into IX (the CSL controversy)
more deeply before jumping into it, Rsita sail.
Cook caH attention to the Miersity of U2.V,"
sayfeg it iadudss persons from "ill walks cf s&dast liTs
Gretkrausss.
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