The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 18, 1978, Page page 6, Image 6

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    page 6
daily nebraskan
monday, September 18, 1978
Union Task Force wrestling
with internal conflict of views
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18 & 19 September Nebr. Union 230 9:00 am-3:30 pm
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By Brenda Moskovits
Members of the Nebraska Unions
Services and Facilities Task Force spent
much of their first meeting Friday voicing
conflicting opinions about the group's
duties.
The task force also was addressed by a
representative of Touche Ross and Co.,
certified public accountants who are con
ducting an audit of the unions.
The task force's charge, handed down
by Richard Armstrong, vice chancellor for
student affairs, is twofold; first to consider
alternatives in conducting a needs assess
ment survey of the union, and second serv
ing Armstrong as advisers while the survey
is implemented.
Also addressing the group was James
Van Horn, assistant dean of the College of
Arts and Sciences and Chairman of the
Fund B study committee.
Task force members Ira Dolich, chair
man of the marketing department of the
College of Business and Bob Simonson, a
graduate economics student, took oppos
ing sides on what the group should do.
Dolich said he felt that the needs assess
ment should have been done before
Touche Ross conducted their audit, so the
firm could figure alternatives into their
cost figures.
Simonson disagreed, saying that the
Touche Ross audit should be completed
before the task force begins measuring
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Glen Schumann, task force member and
coordinator of residence hall administra
tion, said the two functions, measuring
consumer needs and auditing management
and cost are separate and will be brought
together later in formulating the action
plan.
Armstrong told the Daily Nebraskan
that the Union Board will be responsible
for integrating the two.
Jack Bowerman of Touche Ross told
the group that the firm would be winding
up their investigation in the next two
weeks and will issue a report by October
15. The firm is investigating the unions'
cost area (labor, operating costs, equip
ment costs and renovation and expansion
costs) and its support bases (student fees,
state funds and internally generated funds),
Bowerman said.
Van Horn told the group that the fund
B study committee, composed of faculty,
students and staff members, has admini
stered a questionnaire to the major Fund B
users, which include the union and another
survey to be a representative group of stu
dents. The surveys are now being compiled
by the UNL Bureau of Sociological re
search, he said.
Armstrong suggested three options in
conducting a needs assessment of students,
faculty and staff: hiring a professional
college union group out of Minneapolis
who began an evaluation last year which
was discontinued, hiring a professional
consultant as suggested by UNL Chancellor
Roy Young, or using university resources
such as the Bureau of Sociological Re
search or business college students.
The task force has $15,000 to $20,000
available for needs assessment, Armstrong
said.
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