tfc'jrs&y, rcpr.tcr 10, 1073 1 1 f Jj - A' .tfJ J1 iflr S tr' p "" ' I-' j I 1 i ! t , -J1- s ' : ' r . " i 1 'iBL dl 'J ,j; 1. . m 1 ; , r V . t - i - ' j, o ' r : w r i 1 r. - ) J : "' ! : ; " ifi , rt ; I I; 1 .j a;. 4i, ,. "' tl ". i4 $ t, - ' .,? : - It i ' - 9 i & Photo by Seott Swboda Fo?&r cats in peace behind ssppcrters dtmrg a recent casspdga party-picsx. Senator Fowler: A 'nice guy with no spare time' Four yeas ago, at as 22, Steve Fowler was elected state senator, the youngest ever in Nebraska. lie began campaigning for the seat in the Legislature barely after turning in his gavel as president of ASUN. ' The year he was president was 1971-72. Not quite the activist 60s, but close. . . That year, -ASUN sponsored a controversial Time Out Conference on Human Sexuality at UNL and made birth control handbooks available to students. It also actively supported a threatened mass violation of coed visitation rules in the residence halls. Student services were expanded including a record store with more records than the year before (and the lowest prices in town, Fowler said), an art and gif t shop and two book exchanges. He gave donations to child and infant day care centers. In addition, ASUN supported Free University, coordinated group independent study and helped set up interim study sessions between semesters. Special inserts were sent to students with their registration forms explaining new pass-fail policies and independent study programs.' Fowler said he doesn't fed students were apathetic when attending UNL, and neither are they now. There's always been a problem getting students to vote (in ASUN elections)," he said. Eat when something was going on which students were concerned about, they showed their interest. For example, 10,000 birth control handbooks were distributed, and, "Large numbers of students were mobilized for the visitation issue," he said. UNL administrators were "always very sympathetic'' to students needs, Fowler added. But inevitably they would return from the Board of Regents and explain to the students that the Board would not grant the students' request, he said. "I don't know what they told the Board of Regents," Fowler said with a smile. As a state senator, who is running for re-election this fall, Fowler hasn't forgotten his former constituency. Last year he introduced a bill which would have b my Br v t wm vm vm m r trm mw c it m t ws m:w fen tat m m.3 n est I'm m rt a WW (Cosdxsed from p. 1) Stagecoach Lake in the Conestoga State Recreation area by Seward is close to Lincoln, and at times offers 30-35 feet of visibility. The sand quarry at the Minden 1-80 exit, while only 18 ft. deep, has good visibility and interesting wildlife, in cluding bluegCls, walleye, bass, turtles and crayfish. The description of a spring zooplankion bloom opening this article came from an experience of the author at the Minden quarry. . The Hard Lake State Recreation Area near Central City, Louisville Recreation Area, and sand quarries around Fremont provide accessible but low-visibility (5-15 feet) diving spots. Lake McConaughy , near Ogallala, is the state's largest and deepest lake with visibility at times reaching 100 feet. Separffching and deep diving are the major activities, al though there is a sunken town in the lake that was vacated and then drowned when the reservior was flooded. The Oahe Reservior near Pierre, South Dakota, con- -tains a sunken Indian burial ground and U.S. Cavalry fort. Divers have found arrowheads, pottery, buttons, coins, bottles, and other artifacts while exploring these. There have also been finds of buffalo skeletons near the dam. Table Rock Lake near Branson, has year-around diving with up to 1 00 feet of visibility. One of the feature attractions here is a sunken forest of black oak. Isle Royale National Park in Minnesota is about eight miles south of the Canadian border. Here are several still intact shipwrecks that are protected from salvage and arti fact collecting. One can swim into and through the steamer "America" to see china stSl on table, crew's quarters, and the rest the same as it was the day the ship went down. Lake Okaboji, la., has been the site of many historical finds. There is a covered wagon and a Model A Ford ice truck in the lake, apparently fallsn through the ice during the early years of settling the Midwest. The diver with money and inclination can always pack up and go to some tropical paradise with crystal-clear blue waters, but there are many fascinating experiences for those who try local waters. TourviSe said people dive for a number of reasons. -"It's a good recreational sport, requiring fitness, confi dence, and experience," he said. "There is the sense of open freedom from the diver moving almost effortlessly through a supporting medium in three dimensions. And it gives people a majestic value of nature, because it is such an alien environment. But most of all, I'd say divers were stimulated by an interest in the unknown. The sport is only twenty years old, so anyone who goes underwater is an explorer a pioneer." All in all, the cost of a divicg course doesnt seem to be a bad price for a ticket to a new world. u This is the first issue of what we hope will become a distinctive publication at UNL. For years, the Daily Ncbra&an has covered news of the caz?pus faithfully four days a week. Last year, the UNL Ess&ii department started publishing a semi annual Iitsrrv ai2zine, Aikrra o give r outlet to students with tshnt for writing fiction and poetry. TLiri Disra wO be unLke either. UNL has never had a gtneral magazine with an identity of its own and this, first, is vhat we hops to make 3-D. Ve hope it will be the kind of publication students will save longer than a day or two, and read at their liesure. Vell try to do creative things with layout and art to enhance that Third Dsxzbn's scope will be entirely ofTcsspas. That rarit be hard to imagine how after rcadirg the DiUy Nehra&an, but we believe students are mud) more than students. They are aba young voters, consumers,Lincohites (at IzzZL "tporarily) sometimes half of a ciarrbd couple and u:uI2y about-to-be job seekers. In tr.nl, they're ycurg adults who ars interested in a of thirds. ia 3-D, we will try to cover ixues mere in depth tin c-i- allow. VhUa we won't print fiction, we wl use a more creative, freer style of writ ing than "hard news." - At least twice this semester we will devote the entire issue of 3-D to one subject, whkh we feel needs to be examined in depth. UsuaSy, we w21 strive for a variety of ssrs, sash as personality profHas, consunr stories, "things-to-do" stories and cswsfastcres. Nat ional israss arsnt beyond cur reabL - To make TL!rJ Dtra more your megaziae, we want to print frse4ance artkles from students or faculty members. If you have an interesting experience' under your teit, are an authority on a subject cr have always wanted to try writing, don't hesitate to try us. Yea don't have to be a journalise nor. TLri Cltraa will pay fcr aH articles it uses. We also welcome your letters, if you have a com ment about something we've run. There will be seven issues cf Tiiri Dlsssha this semester, counting today V Publication date is every other Thursday, except Thanksgiving. So sit back, lock at us through new eyes and an open mind, and enjoy reading in the third dimension. 3rd DIMENSION TSia Staff Ncncy J. Stc! Terry KccCo Tcrri VKlzzn Thd Kien:a is published biweekly Thursdays as a magazine supplement to the DaCy Nibrtan, UXL student newper. Ttti DIesa wetomts free lance subsusiDns.