monday, aprll 30, 1079 llncoln, nebraskavol. 101 no. 119 Matefce Boosalis and candidates debate city iooues fly Toni Prentiss kesldenti of northwest Lincoln Were given 4 chance to meet candidates at i forurrt at Whlttler Junior High School Friday night. Mayoral candidates Helen Boosalis and Stan Matzke . along with Northwest district candidates Steve Cook and Eric Youngberc, answered question at the forum organiz ed by helghborhbdd associations lii the Northwest district; Bach segment of the program allowed an Opening and closing statement and a half art hour of questions from the audience. !ri her opening statement Boosalis said she Mid not iaik aboUt what she has done as mayor but about what areas need attention in the future. She stressed proper handling of Inflation because of its effect on government conservation of resources and the continuation of the growth of neighborhoods. Employment opportunities must be continued to be made available she added. Matzke experience Matzke countered by Saying he could "make 4 differ ence." He cited his service as director of administrative services Uride former Gov. J. J. .Exdri as part ofhls tralrU tag for the job. He again said he could bring a new attitude to the City Council saying he coUld "disagree without being dis agreeable' Matzke Was asked Why he didn't sigrt a petition calling for a referendum on the Lincoln General Hospital lease. After the Boosalis-Matzke debate on April 22 Matzki signed and then crossed his name off a petition. He said he didn't sign it because the sponsor of the petition Charies rdwrthadg6niul4d SoUthi Community College' and 'tone through the files in an attempt id discredit me," Matzke said. He signed a petition at a League df Wo tiient Voters meeting the next day.; 1 Traffic problem . Boosalis reiterated her previous statements thai releas ing control of the hdspital Would be "bad for the future of this city." Both candidates admitted the existence of a traffic problem hi Lincoln but had different proposals for solut ions. Matzke Said the city Was in need of a total transportat ion plan. He said he did not have a Specific plan in mind bUt said he would work With the department heads to for mulate dne. Driver behavior, Boosalis Said is the cause of the traffic problems, not street design. The relationship of the mayor and the City Council Was brought up by Matzke, is he has done throughout the campaign; Matzke Said he could "bring the department heads to gether td solve problems' because of his leadership style and administrative ability. VVatchdog for the city Boosalis also stressed cooperation between the mayor and the council. But she added, "Cooperation does not mean capitulation." Calling herself a "watchdog for the city", she said it Was her job id tell the council items that she thought were not in the best interests of Lincoln citizens. In the session between incumbent Cook and challenger Youngberg, Cook said he Was the "fiscally conservative" person the council needs. Youngberg said the city has lost confidence in the council, primarily because of little public accountability. Youngberg said that after the primary Cook answered a question about the northwest district by saying, "They need help." He said this showed that Cook "does not think of himself as tint of us." ,; ' Both candidates expressed displeasure at the city for not standing up td UNL rndre In areas of land acquisition; Wiped out neighborhoods Youngberg kid the western neighborhoods have been wiped out by the University! land gains. Cook Qualified his Statement by saying that much give and take has gone on in the past between the city and tJNL and he hoped it would continue. ' " The two agreed that with the university pdwer tit Eminent domain, buying private property for public good, cooperation is essential. i ... We have to get the university to wdrk with us, and tooUgainst us said Youngberg. The question , of the tactics of the Lincoln Alliance were also raised. C ' ,. Cook Hid he resented conduct of the Alliance on certain Issues. He said they often bus In residents to hear Ir.ss Without the residents being totally informed about thefcsueathand; - Contend ca tzz 2 Mideast never same again '-Ehan Dy Shelley Smith Former Israeli Prime Minister Abba Eban told an audience Sunday night that the key td peace after the Israeli-Egypt treaty is compromise. And compromise he said means accepting today what you swore last week you would never accept. . Eban addressed about 900 people in a speech spon sored by the Lincoln Jewish Community and the UNL Hillel Foundation. He said he believes the treaty, signed last month by Egyptian President Anwar Sadat Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and President Carter is a marked turning point In the life Of the Israeli nation and that life hi the Middle East will never be the Same again. He credited Carter's role as 4 third party in the Camp David talks saying that because of Egypt's and Israeli $ hostile background they could never have reached an agreement on their own. And he said while praising Egypt's and Israeli's ability to compromise enough to form 4 treaty, he argued that it far not an equal treaty in terms ofimple mentation. By forcing the Israeli's to give up territory on the West Bank and Gaza strip, it causes a pain and trauma that only Israeli Will feel. HoWevei an important outcome of the treaty according td Ebart, is Egypt's Acceptance df the Israeli nation. "They've always Said we Would appreciate a Middle East Without you. Now, they say because Israel's strength and tenacity, we can't have a Middle East without yoU'' he said. Signing the treaty proves the Arabs Were unable id get their territory back by War but are able td get it back by peace he said. He said while there is a common signing about the G&a and the- West Bank there is hot a cdmmdn policy i "In this, casi it Was mobilizing language td hide di$ ajeemen V'-hl saidr . -v - "Howevili wepreffer, the pairi f ctf4xisIettM riteihaft war," he addeti. - 'Eban, Said; the treaty will create niW tensidttS and hew hdrizdnS that Will challenge bdth Israel and Egypt and there" is a chance that the treaty cduld be revoked. What could revdke it, he said, could be the Palestin ian situation. He added he hdpes bdth cduntrie Will join irt bringing about the elections df 4 Self-governing authority for the Palestinians in the Gaza and West Bank. He said although they will not have a self-governing ' state they will have a self-governing Institution, Which creates 4 self-governing state. Also, Ebart commented oil the economic stability of Egypt saying that after such a prolonged absence Of peace it is impossible ever td recover financially, However, he said the peace Will open Up Egypt's options. He also said he believes American financial backing of Israel is in America's best interest. "The alternative td backing Israel is a weak Israel Which means war which would lead td global con frontation with Soviet intervention," he said. Ebart also said that the twd-month recesi hi treaty negotiations is a pause for celebration . "this is a great important and revolutionary event," he said. fv t ' Daily Nebraanphotd former Israeli foreign minister and NU delegate Abba Eban. Senators handle char By Randy Essex A study df allegations made by Regent Robert Prokop is being handled in a "qUiet fashidn"by sdme state senator, as opposed td conducting the investigation through a legis lative resolution, Pleasent Dale Sen. Harold Sieck said Sunday. Sieck said that by initiating the study irt a quiet way the sertatdrs Will get more informatidrt than if they held formal interim study hearings. to the case df an interim study, "then everyone is pre pared," and pedple becdme defensive abdut What is being investigated Sieck explained. Prdkdp charged that outside consulting pdsitidrts held by UNL Banking Prdfessdr L. Wayne Dobson have been excessive, may have created conflicts of interest and had not been approved by the regents. Other accusations in a letter Prokop Wrote td seven state sertatdrs concerned testing fees at the East Campus Veterinary and Diagnostic Testing Laboratory, financial operations df the NU Foundation and the legal fees paid for the Eppley Cancer Research Institute. Quiet approach Sieck said that the quiet approach is netting informat ion for the senators how that they may not have had if an interim study resolution had been introduced. ' For example, he laid, that University officials have not been reporting their overall financial status, but that they art ndw. He said "other things are being done that were , riot being done before,' and should have been, 1 We don't want to belittle the university,' Sieck said. '"We're getting the information anyway. He added that he will continue to talk . With university officials and others close to the university for quite some time. Sieck said he tlreiJy Ulked with rnany people concerning the allegations. . And, lpp:r:ntiy, Dobson hss talked td at least one per son .concemks the allegations m&Ja aplnst him. The Lincoln Joumd reported Friday that a letter from attorney Kila Xchnsoc told Dobson that Prokop! aUegat . es informally ions constituted a cause for a suit charging Prokop with defaming Dobson. Grounds for suit According to the Journal, the letter said that although Dobson was ndt specifically identified in the letter frdm Prdkdp, the substance of the allegations identified Dobson, giving him grounds for .suit. The Journal reported that Dobson would ndt comment as td whether a suit would actually be filed. The Journal also reported that the letter had been circulated td UNL faculty members and the senator who had received Prdkdp's letter. But Sieck said he had not received the letter yet, as did Adams senator Bill Burrows. Faculty Senate President William Campbell had not received the letter either. Campbell did say he has talked to several people con cerning Prdkdp's allegations about Dobson, and has heard that the charges probably were false, apparently based on some misinformation . Campbell said he thinks It would have been better for Prokop td being his charges to the Professional Conduct Committee of the Faculty Senate than td go td the Legis lature. He said the committee was established just to investigate such charges. But Campbell said the committee is not Investigating charges against Dobson because "no one has come to. them" with the charges. fe)s3(2(3 el: i7 food for thotiiti Speaker rams that land-grant .. tiniversities must maintain excellence in cri- ; culture research ,pr.e 6 Cest ti vie: Reviewer lays Sims TLue, Next Yccr Is nothing Special. $zzz 8 Defend still on top: Nebraska! scrirnnie proves . the offense still needs work ; V. . .p3 10