page 6 daily nebraskan Wednesday, april 12, 1978 I A WU I .. .11 . WSi--T 1 Photo by Marie Bill Sillingsley Jack Saltzman's apartment in the Eldorado has 10 chandeliers. Saltzman, facing eviction, is searching for a new apartment. Eviction ... Continued from Page 1 Jack Saltzman is one neighbor who has helped the two women with their apartment hunting. Saltzman said he has spent a lot of money fixing his apartment and has enjoyed living in the Eldorado. He has decorated the walls with pictures done by himself or friends. Saltzman has lived in the building for seven years. He said he, too, is having trouble finding an apartment because he wants a large one to decorate. The walls of his apartment are covered with pic tures, most in ornate frames. There is a chandelier in every room. He said that at one time, he had 13 chandeliers even one in every closet. Elegant would be the only way to describe the apart ment with its matching Oriental rugs and off-white sofas. Saltzman said apartment buildings like the Eldorado are "part of a dying era." Mary Levisay is not going to find a new apartment. Instead she will move to Omaha. One roommate, Patti Robinson, decided to join the Army and the other, Nancy MacDonald, a junior in advertising at UNL, is planning to spend the summer in South Dakota. The women liked the apartment because it had what Levisay called character with its old-fashioned woodwork and squeaky floor. The Eldorado is the smallest of four apartment build ings in a row. It is the one that was chosen to be torn down to build a parking lot. "There will be so many places to park but no place to go," she said. Levisay said, last year they tore down a private home across the street to make a parking lot. She said she watched as two elderly ladies stood on the sidewalk and cried each time the crane hit the building. There is no one to blame for the destruction of the Eldorado except time. Don Dixon, owner of Lincoln Securities Company, who manages the Eldorado, said Farmers' Mutual bought the building five or six years ago to tear it down for a parkine lot. 8 He said there had been problems with the roof leaking and the estimated repair bill would be about $15,000. He said there also had been problems with the boiler which would cost $5,000 to $6,000 to repair. The 'city had inspected the building, he said, and given the owners a list of necessary repairs. The cost of the re pairs makes it uneconomical to repair the building, Dixon said. All of the leases have expired and purposely have not been renewed, Dixon said. According to Nebraska statutes, the landlord or the tenant must give at least a 30-day notice to "terminate a month-to-month tenancy." Dixon said the tenants have been given an extra 30 days. ASUN agenda The ASUN senate will meet at 6:30 tonight in room 202-202A of the Neb raska Union. The agenda is: I. Call to order and roll call II. Minutes III. Appointments IV. Open Forum V. Executive reports VI. Committe reports A. Academic Poli cy B. Budget and Fees C. Campus Life D. Special Topics E. Community Re lations F. Constitutions G. Internal Affairs VII. Old business VIII. New business A. Appropriations Bill No. 1 B. Appropriations Bill No. 2 C. Resolution No. 3 D. Amendment to Organic Act No. 1 E. Senate Bill No. 2 IX. Announcements ASUN committee to examine allegations between two groups By Brenda Moskovits The ASUN Special Topics Committee decided Monday to conduct an investiga tion into the UNL Young Americans for Freedom and the Nebraska University Pub lic Interest Research Group. The committee will check for compli ance with UNL guidelines for student or ganizations, and the proper handling of finances under the guidelines, and will ex amine the factual and ethical nature of public allegations made by the two groups about each other. Committee chairman Dan Lamprecht said that according to the 1977-78 UNL Student Handbook, "all money must be deposited in the bank downstairs Gateway Bank if they are a student organization." "Technically, donations would have to be deposited in the account first and then expended." Gateway Bank officials have reported that NUPIRG's two accounts have been "ongoing and active" this fiscal vear. During the 1976-77 fiscal year, YAF made two deposits and one withdrawal, but there has been no activity during this fiscal year which ends June 30, according to Lamprecht. Friday, Jeff Chizek, UNL's YAF presi dent, told the committee that its funds are handled through the national headquarters. "There is apparently some violation of banking privilege," Lamprecht said. Lamprecht also said YAF's constitution ''makes references to nonstudents," and said legality of nonstudent members in a student organizaton also should be examined. The investigation grew out of a contro versy between the two groups beginning March 22, when YAF state chairman Ter rell Cannon announced his organization would write 10,000 conservative Nebras kans charging that NUPIRG is a political organization which should pay for its of fice space in the Nebraska Union. Chizek and NUPIRG Director Don Macke addressed the committee in separ ate sessions Friday. The committee went into closed session to discuss the issue at Macke's request. Macke said he requested the closed ses sion because his remarks were of a "specu lative and circumstantial nature." "We don't have access to legal counsel," Macke said, adding, the closed session was "to protect our liability." Macke said he did discuss specific indi viduals with the committee. He said they also discussed possible financial violations on YAF's part. "We have indications that the national YAF program diverts funds. . .to specific campuses with the intention of eliminating liberal groups." 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