rncndry, mcrdi 15, 1070 rarefied V J Budget pressure is taking its ioli By Dick Hencl The strain of this legislative session is beginning to show. Or rather, the strain of being involved in this state's most political and least understood issue, the NU budget, is taking its tofl on the principals. Last week this column criticized Utica Sen. Douglas Bereuter for equivocating on an amendment to the university budget;. lis deserves an apology. When he hacked away from that amendment, raising cash fund ceilings at all three campuses, he did so because those who asked him to add the amendment had decided neither to object nor support the senator on that particular issue. Meanwhile, the govenor was blasting away at Bereuter through the press. University administrators apparency took the attitude that they could support the flexibility of a higher cash fund ceiling if enrollment swelled beyond their expec tations. But if the higher cash fund ceiling is interpreted as approval for a $4 a credit hour tuition increase, they'd rather sit on their hands. That left Bereuter alone carrying an amendment the administrators asked him to insert. Bereuter on limb Their request for the amendment itself seems to have been the result of some mis understanding among themselves. Thus they were reluctant to join Bereuter out on his limb. ' The governor and the senator seem to have come to terms. They agree to disagree. ; Hopefully, Bereuter, a consistent and hardworking legislator, will also" make peace, with the university administrators whose credibility he had begun to doubt. Again, the strain is evident and floor de bate on the higher education budget begins this week. . Exon, for his part, is often quick to comment on university matters. He calls himself the greatest governor in Nebraska history in his support for higher education. . If that means he has been . governor while the state' spent more and more money on Mgher education, he is rrJrX. Monday, March 7, the Daily Nebraskan .published an interview with Exon. He denied "penalizing" the university in his budget recommendations because it es caped the three per cent decrease in general fund appropriations many other state agen cies suffered during last year's special legis lative session. Moot poet That is not entirely correct. The Appro priations Committee killed the governor's budget plans a month ago; so the point is somewhat moot. But the fact that there was a three per cent "reallocation" of general funds in the NU continuation budget is not just corn , cidentaL ' There was an effective reduction in reve nues and expenditures although it was couched in terms of discontinuance of pro grams and made up with proposed improvements. What does it all mean? It means the governor and his budget officers hadn't talked about it for some time. The one really noticeable part of the continuing university budget issue is a real lack of communication. It exists among ad ministrators, between them and state sena tors, between senators and the governor, and also between the university and the governor. Warm greeting The nature of the university tends to obscure an issue in terms most politically advantageous to whomever happens to' be bending a reporter's ear at the time. The re sulting media exchanges usually sound lie people comparing apples and oranges. Budgeting is an example. The university, Legislature and executive all prepare bud gets differently. The result is always a cer . tain amount of misunderstanding coupled with some genteel backbiting. - It was. pleasant, however, to see Presi dent D.B. Varner and Exon greeting one another so warmly prior to the statehouse meeting last week on the proposed multi state veterinary schooL " v.-.v. . , ..'. Vs. SS. : . :v:-::-:':-:-xv:x-x-,':- yyyj m v.-.v ii ii 1 if Wi 1 w4 m V.V.V 11 ill yyyyy. m .v.v.v -v.v.v -V.V.V -yyyyy. yyyysysyysyyyyysyyM 4 vw.O Jwi"3 Oo4ULli rursuent to cerrpus concerns on tha Uzta of check ccshinj service sndor benkinj services continuing on tho U'lL cempus, end in response to concerns the tldbrzzka Union Advisory Bocrd seeks your reenso to tho survey questions below, indicating ccropus community wiinsrscss or uaarC&isnsss to uso U?FF funds or Union specs for theso fuctions. t)ls there a need for a check ceehkij service cn the UJL ccmpus? fa '0 . 2 fs there a need for a bcr&sna service on the UTIL campus? fC3 ft 3)shou!d student fees (estimated cost of C25,CC3) bo used to g fincr.es a check ceshing service? 0 4) If you voted YES to questions 1 sndor 2 do you went the eency pieced in the Uzbrszlia Union? 3 . yyy.- .V.V. r.v.v. m ,V.V. 'yyyy It m ii m Wy; Wyy .V.V, yyyyy.i