n O Wednesday, august 20, 1980 lincoln, nebraska vol. 105, no. 1 Pride, planning are priorities interim chancellor Dy Alice 1 1 mice k Developing a campus-wide planning process and help ing UNL students overcome an "inferiority'' complex are top priorities for Robert Rutford, UNL interim chan cellor. The Minnesota native said decreased university growth in future years because of fewer high school graduates must be considered in any planning process. Rutford called for a campus-wide planning committee such as the one initiated last year by former chancellor Roy Young, whom Rutford replaced Aug. 10. Young has accepted a research position at a Cornell University institute. Young's replacement has been vice chancellor for re search and graduate studies at UNL since 1977. Rutford first came to UNL from the University of South Dakota in 1972 to head the Ross Ice Shelf Coring Office. He was director of the Division of Polar Programs for the National Science Foundation in Washington, D.C. from 1975 to 1977. Turned administrator Rutford said his move from being a geologist to an ad ministrator was prompted when he was an administrative assistant at the University of Minnesota for expenditions to Anarctica. "I enjoyed it and I could get things done," he said. "There are a lot of very good scientists who look at ad ministration as a necessary evil. I thought it might be my place to make things easier for thern." The interim chancellor said that a response to the NU Board of Regents five-year plan, released in May, would include studies of Teachers College, the department of food science and technology and food service manage ment. However, he said, revisions probably will be made. "A plan is out of date the day it is written," Rutford said. Rutford said he hopes the students can realize the high quality of education at UNL. "Students have the idea that they aren't getting a good education. Every measure we have indicates they are. We want to infuse back that pride," Rutford said. Taxpayer awareness A greater taxpayer awareness of the funds necessary to upgrade faculty and student resources is needed, he said. "If we want to maintain the level of excellence, it will take financial support," he said. Rutford sees his goal as being similar to Young's but it will be accomplished by a "different means." Young, who has been criticized for not dealing in a hard-line fashion, was one of UNL's "most humane" administrators, Rutford said. "The mark he left is an emphasis on scholastic pro grams." Rutford will get a $300-a-month raise for serving as interim chancellor. His salary is $58,100, a year. The approved salary for Young this year would have been $59,950. An interim vice chancellor for research and graduate studies is expected to be chosen near the beginning of the fall term, Rutford said. The search for a new chancellor has been on since the end of Jury. t Pf ft - i Robert Rutford Daily Utbrmkan photo Rutford said he is in the running for the chancellor position, but doesn't "intend to act as a candidate. I don't intend to let my interests alter my actions. Schmit's vet school idea Legislature hearing topic By Steve Miller Alternatives to Bellwood Sen. Loran Schmit's proposal f lat Nebraska build a veterinary school will be djscussed Sept. 10 at a conference of the Legislature's Edu cation Committee. Schmit recently trinounced he would sponsor legislation fo a veterinary school in Nebraska. Legislation last ye. r called for a study of building a school vith Nebraska funds being matched by four other states. Schmit proposes that Nebraska put the money up for construction. There is always the need for someone" to take leadership," Schmit said. "With fjve states interested in joining in this kind of venture it is too easy for everybody to just sit back and wait for someone else to make the first move. "Since the school will be built in Ne braska we should take the. leadership." The other four schools interested in the original proposal are Wyoming, Montana, South Dakota and North Dakota. Dale Siefices, senatorial staff member, said he had been instructed by Sen. Gerald Koch, Omaha, to arrange the September meeting. Siefkes said Sen. Chris Beutler, Lincoln, and Sen. Tom Vickers, Famam requested that Koch have the meeting. Vickers and Beutler both oppose the new construction proposal. Expensive operation Vickers said he thought both construct ion and operation of the school would be u an- Don't Say Charge It: UNL students will no longer be able to use charge cards for housing and tuition payments . . Page 2. Loans on the Line: The federal govern ment threatens UNL with a cut off of National Defense Student Loan money. Page 8. Same Old Song: Inflation has increased the cost of a bus ride in Lincoln Page 24. extremely expensive, possibly more than the.state could afford. "I have to have it proven to me that that's the way we have to do it," Vickers said. "There are other options." Vickers said he would 'rather expand present regional agreements with out-of-state veterinary schools. He said he thought there were adequate openings at other schools to handle Nebraska students. Vickers saiq at least one school, Iowa State, might be interested in opening up more contracts for Nebraska students. Vickers said that earlier this summer he had sent a letter to Martin Massengale, vice chancellor for the institute of agriculture, accusing him of sitting on information that Iowa State was interested in opening an additional 15 spots for Nebraska students. The addition would make a total of 31 contracts at Iowa State. Vickers said that Massengale had responded that the offer was not official. Something to negotiate "It was an offer though," Vickers said, "It gives us something to negotiate. We don't have to build our own facilities." Massengale said that Iowa State had only expressed an interest in offering more contracts and nothing had been com mitted yet. "The thing that some people are missing is that if we build our own school we would control a complete program," Massengale said. "Not only would the school benefit the students but the whole state and the live stock industry." Massengale said he thinks the cost to Nebraska for construction of a school wiO be made up when other states pay for con tracts for their students. Earl Dickinson,- UNL head of veterinary science, said he doesn't think opponents of Schmit's proposal realize what it costs the state to send students to other schools. "First of all, the number of students we can get into schools is up to someone else," -Dickinson said. "We've recovered from when Colorado and Oklahoma cut us off completely. We're all right now. But down the road who is to say what might happen as far as guaranteed contracts." Continued on Page 3 WfW Mr 2 iRwM Mm rnaT) UNL: frosh Twilight Zone Analysis By Tom Prentiss Every year at this rime thousands of unsuspecting freshmen arrive in the educational and social equivalent of the Twilight Zone. "Caught in a world they know nothing of and surrounded by peo ple they do not, know" might be the way Rod Sterling would have begun his introduction. But Rod Serling isn't here. You, Joe and Josi College Freshman are and it's time to let you in on what the whole place is all about. Being a freshman is like being a baby. In a way, it sends us all back to the playpen for awhile. Remember all the neat times in the playpen? Well, now those times are replaced by college: rah-rahs instead of rattles, studying instead of sucking your thumb and as in the playpen, you have one objec tive on your mind-you want to get out. But fear not, for college is and can be a Good Time in the truest sense of the words. Like a fine golfer playing . a tough hole, it depends on your approach. There, are several philosophies that parents, brothers, sisters and anyone who has ever been to college like to impress upon incoming freshmen as "The Way to Go to College. Listen attentively when they speak. Nod frequently and as soon as they drive off go play Bob Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone" on your stereo. The words should tell you . that you are now captain of your fate for probably the first time in your ,life. Do not let it scare you. You are not alone. Some of the doctrines of "The Way to Go to College" warrant examination. The Purpose of College is to Obtain Useful Employment Upon Graduation" Theory-Sounds very nice but is highly impractical If you wanted employment you wouldn't be sitting through geology lectures that make Ronald Reagan's proposals look like current events. Continued on page 13