wcdnccdr, September 15, 1970 rriitf3pl mnnSrrl rlhfsiirif)! OfTOlcMJS OO u y fdzly ncrcc!ccn Co- By Lcrry Lctz A new lock for UNL' City Campus east boundary, would be the first effect of Lincoln's latest proposed Northed Radial, ' according to a UNL official. . Ray Coffey, UNL assistant business manager, said the proposed radial would cut through UNL land and skirt the pro jected east boundary. It also might have long-range effects on East Campus en trances and create paired arteritis with 16th and 17th streets, he sail. However, before any of this can take place, the plan needs to be taken out of the political arena of the Gty Council and be finalized, Coffey said. Qacc the final Northeast Radial To Be Widened Hwy. a East Campus Loop Leighton I St. O 0. Fair St. 3o V University of 0 Nebraska in -Q St. East Campus Holdrege St. m PSt. plan is drawn up, the university's Central Banning Committee will take a second look at the university's long range campus plans, he said. The final plan should be on paper by the end of the year and available in printed form by January, according to city counc3 man Dob Jeambey. Fuh on schedule Jeamby said Tuesday that the city's contract with the Chicago consulting firm of Barton-Ashman calls for completion of the plan by Jan. 1, 1977. Even with the latest revision, Jeamby said he thought the plan could be completed on schedule. That latest revision, a compromise on the Northeast Radial, was reached last Fri day by the City Council and the City-County Planning Commission. The proposal in cludes a modified version of the radial, a road most council members and county commissioners did not want in the Com prehensive Plan. The consultants are taking the proposal, along with other recommendations, and putting them into their overall plan, lie said. They will be evaluated by the plan ning commission and council early next month before -being incorporated into Lincoln's Comprehensive Han. At that time, the council will have to "fish or cut h-it", according to Jeamby, and decide if they want to accept the con sultants final plan. He said that would be the final step in the planning process which was altered by LD1 1 1 , passed by the Under the new law, the planning com mission has the power to prepare the plan, but the council must approve it. Wis proposed radial, if adopted, could have some long range effects on UNL's pro jected campus growth, Coffey said. The university owns some kits on both sides of 20th and 21st streets south of Vine St, where the proposed radial would be. If the radial does go through there, he said, the university might do some land trading to consolidate their holdings and form a buffer between the campus and the radial. The radial also could affect entry to East Campus, he said, because it does not connect to any existing entry and bypasses the East Campus Loop. A residential street would have to be used to get from the pro posed radial to East Campus or the loop. Coffey ' speculated that the most far reaching effect of the proposed radial might be on 16th and 17th streets. Once the radial is constructed, the streets might ultimately be closed to through traffic, en hancing the safety of the campus, he said. These changes are far off, he said, be cause any alterations to the UNL campus would have to be devebped by the Central Planning Commits and approved by the NU Board of Regents. news digest By The Associated Press Viet vote delayed United Nations, N.Y.-A UN. source said the Security Council agreed privately Tuesday to postpone the ques tion of UJN. membership for Vietnam to November to enable the General Assembly to discuss the matter. The United States said Monday it would veto the Vietnamese application in the Security Council. The French proposal that produced the agreement, the source told reporters, was made in line with a request that a high U.S. official put to French Foreign Minister Louis de Guiringaud on Friday. The postponement means the council will not act on the Vietnamese membership bid until after the Nov. 2 American presidential election. Six killed Johannesburg, South Aftica-At least six blacks were killed Tuesday by police gunfire in the African township of Soweto on the second day of a massive job boycott by tens of thousands of workers, the black newspaper the Vorld reported. The newspaper said the latest victims bring to eight the number of deaths resulting from police action in. the touihip since the three-day job boycott was launched Monday. Police have r.ft confirmed the report . Viking 2 ordered Pasadena, Calif-Scientists ordered the Viking 2 lander to extend its sampler arm more than a foot Tuesday so a camera could photograph a reluctant hinge scientists be-- daily nebraskan Editor-irxhkf: Thertsa Foreman, Lne-irg Editor: Randal C'atmEt. Kawa E&rsr: Candy Lwhr. AssocisSt Nam Editors: Ran Russia -and Rax Sslirta. - Lev& Editor: Liz Esard. Entartaiftmant Editor: l&chssl Zanrsri. sorts Ed:tor: Ftta Yftsnan. Third Cimansion Editor: Kancy'&ohs. Night Nam Editor: Jo. Hudson. Fftetoraphy Editor: &tvt Eocrnar. Fhoto grsphy Cfist: Tad Crk. Copy Edgars: Chuck Cack. r&ncy Gark. Fvtar l&son. Ga3 6nith and Randy Vricht. Easiness tnsar: Jarri H&usslar. Advertising t&mer: Crej ljrdsnan. Assacista AdwtSsing lsnaar: Gruca lc!3rris ftoductkin ttcm-ar: Kitty Colicky. Tha Oaiiy fMsraskan ia pubiitad by tha UTL Pubtkttbns Committaa on Lbnday. Wadnasday. Thuraday and Friday during fta O and spring ssmastars. axcept during vacations. Addms: Tha Cs firtan. tssa Ution S$. 1th and fJ Erects. Lincoln CZZZX Tciaphona (4:) 472-2X3. CcYTlht t S73, tha Dsy Ndsraskan. Ittrtal may ba rtpr int ci il:3ut parmisskin if cttributsd to tha Daily rlstmksn. txeept rrtsrI caverad by anothar ccpyrtsht. Ssssnd c!ss pos&sa paid at Lincoln. fi. . lieve may have caught on a tiny pebble. The hinge, con necting a trench-digging "back hoe" to the sample scoop at the end of the arm, was thought to have picked up the piece of rock during the lander's first sampling operation on Mars' Utopia Plain. The pebble prevented the hinge .from closing properly and stopped the robot lander's search for life on me Martian surface. - Death rate lower Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y. Smoking low tar and nico tine cigarettes results in lower total death rates in general, as well as lower death rates from both lung cancer and coronary heart disease, the American Cancer Society re ported Tuesday. A statitician for the society said the study was "the first definitive evidence" of the effects of smoking low tar and nicotine cigarettes. The results were -based on an analysis of deaths occurring in more than one million men and women over a 12-year period and were reported here to a meeting on the origins of human cancer at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. n ir it r" i" i -11411 rMfr run .parking offenders That UNL Campus policeman you may have seen in UNL parking lots in the morning is there to keep cars without the proper sticker from getting in. UNL Campus Police Chief Gail Gade said that this has been done in the past with some success and that it would continue. Gade said the department is primarily concerned with the Area 16 parking lot north of the Nebraska Union. "In the past, this lot has filled up with people that just wanted to use the Union, and kept the staff members from finding a place to park," he said. Gade said he did not expect the men to stay there much longer. hone ignores constituents-Anderson Dy Janet Fix . The Democratic candidate for the US. Congress from the First District said Wednesday that her Republican opponent, incumbent Charles Thone, doesn't take time to karn what the voter wants. Pauline Anderson will make a campaign appearance to day at the BroyhUl fountain at 11:30 ajru, and later will answer questions in the Nebraska Union Ballroom. "I feel that I have a great deal to offer to the stu dents," she said. "My hopes are to encourage the students to become involved in the campaign, get them to register, and get than out to vote in November." Anderson said she has had a lot of contact with the students in the past years through her husband. Albin Anderson, who is accompanying his wife on her campaign tour, has been a UNL history professor for 30 years. "The people of Nebraska feel that Washington has lost the ability to communicate. Washington needs someone with some pizzazz and luster, I think my wife has that to offer,' Anderson said cf his wife's campaign. Mrs. Anderson backs Democrataic presidential candi date Jimmy Carter, and said she believes he has a lot to offer. - .. "With a Democratic president, we need a strong Democratic congress to support him. I feel that the two most important, issues for Nabraskass include the econo mic concerns cf the fanners ?sd the special problems con cembg the tging. Anderson said that if elected she would be interested in developing specM citizens advisory groups through whom she could keep contact. These groups would represent the people who have great inieresi in congressional legisla tion, she said. Anderson said that she would support postcard regis tration, but that at least two county officials are against it because of the increased office work it would present. "The idea of change is very great in this election," she said, "Nationally, what we have now is a nice man from Grand Rapids, but he is not a man for the third centen nial. We need someone new and fresh." Anderson added that the thinlr tMi? wnmiin PtVPS her an advantage and though she is not emphasizing it, au? ictus mai rteorasxans are reauy ror a c& Dslly ttsran p&oto Andssaa, Dsssacrc cairfide far the Nebrsska Fcst Dk&kt ccr-tsdcss! st.