thL'nJ-yrncxJi 10, f 070 , , 0i n r- :! . ' jf 1. mf J u n7 " o Per : 2BBMu DhMcti III COUNTIES IN DISTRICT III Dakota Thurston Mcdison Stsnton Dixon Way no Seward Douglas Cuming Colfax Dodgs Butler Burt Washington " n ' v r " ' 1 h I f - 7..;'.-' A 3 Nebraska State Sees, (from left) Ltx Sts3 of AHssee end GSka Goodrich cf Omaha, both members cf the Ap propriations Committee, discuss the number of votes they have on LD590, the falser education aropristioss tZ3, with NU lobbyist VYCiam Swanson. , We're Iocldn for certain invars to bscexs LE3fein!s. Mtchanical and civil en gineering majors . . . areo space and aeronautical en gineering majors . . . majors in- electronics . . . computer science . . . mathematics. The Air Force needs peo ple . . . many with the above academic majors. And AFROTC has several differ ent programs where you can f it . . . 4-year, 3-year, or 2-year programs. Some of fering full scholarships. All offering $100 a month allowance during the last two years of the program. Flying opportunities. And all leading to an Air Force offi cerscommission.plus ad vanced education. If you'd like to cash in on these Air Force benefits, start by looking into the Air Force ROTC. Put it all together in Air Force ROTC MAJOR HENRY JUISTER Rm. CkJg. 472-2473 GCJo n By Dick Piersol The Nebraska Legislature Wednesday adopted aS of the Appropriations Committee's amendments to its higher education appropriations bill, LE690. With no opposition, LB690 was advanced to select file. It may be amended further at that stage. On a vote of 30-11, the senators endorsed Utica Sen. Douglas Bereuter's amendment for $850,000 to improve UNL undergraduate education. The amendment requires the university to reduce class sizes and to recruit senior classroom faculty members whose workload would be at least 75 per cent undergraduate instruction. It also requires that current faculty members' classroom time shall not decrease, and that teaching assistant classroom time won't increase. Bereuter argued that an undergraduate education at UNL was, in fact, declining. Evidence of this, he said, was . a survey of 13 university departments which showed that one-third of all freshmen 100-level course sections at the university have at least . 50 students enrolled. In 21 per cent of these classes, more than 100 students are enrolled, -and in 14 per cent of the 100-level courses, more than 150 students are enrolled. Omaha Sen. John Cavanaugh objected to the Bereuter amendment. He argued that the Legislature had provided $800,000 and $922,000 respectively in the past two fiscal years for Areas of Excellence and for improved student teacher contact. If university administrators had not taken care of undergraduate education with those programs and their own initiative, he said, they should be fired. Bereuter contended those amounts were piecemeal, and that his amendment would require the NU Board of ' Regents to account for the program expenditures and their success or failure. The senators also voted 25-2 to provide $88,000 for the UNL Office of Minority Affairs. That amendment, sponsor Sen. Ernie Chambers of Omaha said, was needed in case federal funds are lost. The amendment requires that should federal funds con tinue to be available, the general fund appropriation would lapse. Currently, six of the office's eight staff members are paid by a grant from the U.S. Department of Health, Edu cation and Welfare. That grant wi3 end June 30. The office now is in the process of trying to obtain more federal funds. , Other amendments approved and added to the appro priations bill were those effectively combining budgetary programs on all campuses. By these, appropriations for programs that include adnimistnitive costs, plant opera tions and the State University of Nebraska would be made to the central administration. : : Other appropriations would combine budgetary pro grams at UNL, the University of Nebraska at Omaha (UNO), the University of Nebraska Medical Center and the Institute for Agriculture and Natural Resources. The result is a form of single-sum budgeting. The regents had asked the Legislature for a single appropria tion to the central administration office to be distributed by the board. Previously, the Legislature has broken down each cam pus budget into separate appropriations. The senators did, however, approve an amendment appropriating and specifying a $919,546 tax fund in crease to the Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources for a computerized agriculture information network, areas of excellence, agriculture experiment stations and the extension division. 11:1 Ez:!!:n OWL AVIATION Inc. , 5401 North 43th Street LlfJCOl N. NEBR. K5C4. 4024S7-34CO 24 Hrs. rr"!r77jp LiLkb 4 '0' 01. Crivo -In TcjffcJy ccr.p3 l:;:z? stcra ir tail fc:y to C:t to cn tho ccn::? cf 22zi tzi 0 i m u p U L w-. y Li Frcsntnatatrirre; - P J1 cu?3 to curls, vi cb it ( J Z. Step in sxi C2 is etthatpef thjts, Ta f -fsnzpna.- pjsrunnx.-a rcn vzn ats v; f.tondr thru Saturday 10 ajn. to 6 psn. 432-0234 Open ti'l 9 f.!ondry and Thursisy mill pniu ftgxigiE oR sexes TftEY ACTUAU-Y BgND! 'A . AllV J H 1 vimirn !V pf fps VT ffnwa -a-xf '1 4Liln4 AU .