Wednesday, april 26, 1978 daily nebraskan page 1 1 Regent candidates focus on salaries, fees and budget By Rod Murphy Faculty salaries, student fees and the university budget are important issues to the regents candidates in the upcoming May 9 election battle. Ed Schwartzkopf, who holds the 1st District seat, and Kermit Hansen, from the 2nd District, are both seeking re-election. The challengers running for the 1st District post are Leo Hill, Richard Halvor sen and write-in candidate Kirk Erlich. Hopefuls in the 2nd District are Arden Means, Edward Wenzl, Steven Shovers and Harlan Nelson. Leo Hill, 65, retired Lincoln business man and 1934 UNL graduate, is running for the board because, he says, he has a gift of leadership. "I have a knack for getting people to do things," he said. "I don't say you do this' I say 'let's do this together.' " Hill is a past president and member of several organizations and many university groups. If elected as a regent, Hill said one of his first priorities would be to help raise money for the university through the NU Foundation. On the issue of speakers, Hill said, he supports the program. He said he thought campus groups should bring speakers in on their own. Hill said it was important for students to get involved with raising money for speakers. Other goals Hill has if elected to the board, would be to improve Architectural Hall and authorize prevention maintenance on existing buildings. Richard Halvorsen, 31, of Lincoln who also is running for the 1st District regents seat, said the most important need at the university is the overcrowding problem. Halvorsen said he thinks there are plenty of classrooms but not enough faculty members to teach in them. Some money, now earmarked for re novations or building projects could be shifted to pay the salaries of more faculty personnel to help end the overcrowding, he said. Another reason he is running for regent, he said, is his dissatisfaction with the regents' action concerning student fees for speakers. Halvorsen said student support for the previous speaker fees program was "fairly well substantiated." He referred to a petition presented to the board at the Feb ruary meeting containing some 5,000 signa tures from students indicating their support of mandatory student fees for speakers. 'The regents just looked at it (the petition) and seemed to say, 'That's nice,' and then dropped it in file 13," he said. Halvorsen also addressed the issue of faculty salaries, saying money should be spent for salary increases rather than new buildings that are not needed. Halvorsen works for the state Depart ment of Correctional Services and is a 1969 UNL graduate. He now is attending graduate school at UNL part time where he is studying criminal justice. Kirk Ehrlich, 23, is the only write-in candidate for regent. He also is running in the 1st District race. Ehrlich said he is running because he is dissatisfied with the job the regents have been doing, particularly in the area of stu dent fees funding for campus speakers. "I don't like the way the regents knuck led under to a pressure group on speaker fees," he said. Ehrlich is a broadcast journalism major and a theater major. As a student, he said he could better represent student views than Hill or Schwartzkopf. If elected to the post, Ehrlich would like to see the student fee structure chang ed and a new parking policy enacted, he said. He said campus speakers should again receive student fee funding. He said he also would like to see a depth study of how student fees are spent. Concerning parking, Ehrlich said, "While the regents are preoccupied with such important issues as stadium expan sion, they should be trying to get some decent parking!" Ehrlich said he also supports allowing the student regents the right to vote at meetings and alcohol consumption in the residence halls. In the 2nd District race, there are four challengers for the board position. Arden Means, 50, is seeking the seat now held by incumbent Kermit Hansen. Means said he disagrees with the board decision regarding campus speakers. He said the student support for speakers should be restored. Means also said he was concerned about low faculty salaries. For many instructors, he said the teaching load was too high. Means said he thinks a better liaison between the governor, Nebraska Legisla ture and university has to be forged before many needed changes can be made. He added that he hoped, if elected, he could bring a "common sense approach" to university government. Edward Wenzl, 30, also is running for the 2nd District regent post. Wenzl said the board should look into the possibility of faculty unionization to replace the tenure system. Such a program would help solve various problems, includ ing working benefits, that the faculty now experiences, he said. Wenzl said he thinks student fees should be spent for speakers. He said speakers were for everyone and it was a matter of choice whethei to attend a speech or not. The problem of low faculty salaries, he said, is not unique to the University of Nebraska. "All colleges think they have to re cruit higher quality faculty through higher salaries," he said. He said that as student enrollment de clines in the next few years, faculty al so will have to be cut back. This will free money for higher salaries for those who re main. At the present time, he said, it would be better to offer more benefits to faculty members, not more money. Wenzl is an Omaha life insurance agent. Steven Shovers is the only student candidate running in the 2nd District race. Formerly UNO student body president and non-voting member of the Board of Regents, Shovers is now three credits short of his masters degree in urban education. If elected to the board, Shovers said he would like -to act as a watchdog to make the board more fiscally accountable. He suggested a zero-based budgeting system be implemented for each depart ment. Shovers also said he was alarmed to learn that "42 percent of all state employees were employed by the univer sity." He suggested that the number of staff personnel could be cut, which would allow more money for faculty salaries, and education programs. He said he would like to raise faculty salaries, if possible. However, he said he did not know if it could be done given the budget now allocated the university by the Legislature. Shovers said, if elected, he would push for holding regent meetings outside Lincoln. meet in every said. "This is a 'The regents should district of the state," he statewide university." The last candidate on the ballot for the 2nd District seat is Harlan Nelson, 62, who is a businessman with a petroleum company. Nelson, a graduate of the University of Minnesota, said he is running for regent in order to "put something back from what I received at land-grant colleges," he said. If elected regent, Nelson said he would try to end some of the remedial courses now taught at the university. "Universities are sometimes prone to do things that should be done in the high schools," he said. The university's function is to provide people with background that they can use in their vocation, he said, as well as help them become a more viable citizen in the community. On the issue of student fees, Nelson said there should be both voluntary abd manda tory fees. Fees for speakers would fall into the first category, he said. On the issue of faculty salaries, he said faculty members were facing the same problems as the rest of the community. 'Those people face inflation like every body else and should be treated accord ingly," he said. Because of his involvement in the business world, Nelson said he believes he is qualified to sit on the board of regents who manage the "largest business in the state of Nebraska." Robert Raun Continued from page 9 interested in social and political matters as they were 8 or ten years ago. I don't mean that students shouldn't be concerned with idealogical matters but I think that students today have a better balance between those things and prac tical concerns than they did eight or ten years ago. Every Wednesday i Night 1 AO Pitchers 30 Orauus 1228 '?' St. It 's Your Choice! Get What You Want and Expect: Experience that's put many in good beauty and bartering positions. Where you get that College Feel. Where there's 2 floors of training. Where there's true "College Spirit". Where there's modem facilities and specializing faculty. Where work is student priced. llth&MSts. "Lincoln's Corner on Hair Styling' S1 Draws Cans 9 cm - Close Get your ale at the rail! SPEAKER SELECTION 78-79 The final meeting for Speaker Selection will be held this afternoon 3 p.m. in Rm. 232 Nebraska Union. Students. Faculty and Administrators Welcome. DOS Talks & Topics Committee 1 Prooonto UTi Drn Citmu tmnprtm, Inc. rro radio's roots Hear it this Saturday, 10 a.m. Midnight VW need repairing? Call Olston's We repair VW Vehicles and sell parts and accessories for Volkswagen vehicles. Olston's independent Specialists, tic 467-2397