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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 2, 1981)
daily nebraskan Wednesday, September 2, 198', page 2 tit) Trnrrrn n w ji . . r v wifininii WEEKLY SPECIAL BU31AJEISER ra 12 pack warm MILLER LITE ri -i 12 pack warm PLAIN LABEL BEER Pr Casewam lOaOBv JACK DANIEL e& inra Black Lable 750 rri&OaUs) RIUEUITE Bianco-Rosato-Lambrusco. 750 ml S2.79 10 liter v r5.29 Citizens offer suggestions to NU president's council By Laure Perlinger NU "scored high points" last week at the President's Advisory Council meeting, said Jim Raglin, NU director of public affairs. About 150 Nebraskans with diverse backgrounds form the council, which met last week in North Platte. Council members, invited by President Ronald Ros kens to meet four times a year, learn more about the university and act as ambas sadors of information in their communities, Raglin said. Traditionally, the meet ings are in Lincoln, he said, although attendance was higher at the North Platte meeting. Although the president does look for a demograph ical mix, being an NU grad uate is a criteria, Raglin said. "There are editors, doc tors, housewives, retired people, businessmen and businesswomen on the council," he said. "The members give us a perspec tive of what people through out the state are thinking about the university." However, Raglin pointed out that the council is not a group formed to reinforce attitudes of the administra tion, but to challenge them with candid, honest sugges- The Collegiate Money ,uis K.ii ' I 11 J ' V f y if f $ v im - Problem: You borrowed $25 from a friend last month. You hear he's looking for you. He is 6'5" and 240 pounds. You are not. You have his $25, but it is in your checking account. He does not accept checks. What do you do? a. Leave town and change your name b. Run and hide whenever you see him coming c. Ask for police protection until you can cash a check d. Use your Bank-In-The-Box card to get the $25 out of your checking account so you can pay him immediately. We're making banking easy as Tat uu 1 1 Ml I ii vi National Bank of Commerce Main Bank. 13th & O Parkway Drive-In, Walk-In, 40th & South East Park Drive-In, Walk-In, 66th & O Rampark Drive-In, Walk-In, 12th & P AHJLtN MttMtfUJH tuiKi Accounts insured to $iuo,ooo 472-42,50 VRVir t iV n T?i 9JI jnoA sa'bs Avw i -pjuo xog-aqx -ui-nUBa v pu lunoooti Suuioaqo soj &iddv pws uoiun tsjqa 9 ui jajuao Aauo snduio p asooip 0 diq-Q 8q jou A-bui no 'PJBD XOa-8lIl-Ul-5lUBe 8Aq ;,uop no ji 'jtaAaMoji spuni jajsui pu 'sitsodap aui aP sjnoq $z Hsbo loS ubo noX 'piBo xoa-aqi-ui-jfUBa miAV aojauiwoo jo ua luoij uiojj pjieo xoa-aqx-ui-HUBa jnoA asn p st aju jnoA 3abs Abui jaAvsuB aqx raMsuy tions and criticisms. Members are free to ask questions during the meet ings and usually do, Raglin said. Numerous topics are covered and serious ques tions are raised. At the recent meeting, a five-member panel of North Platte area citizens re vealed their perceptions of the NU system. Raglin said North Platte Telegraph editor Keith Blackledge, one of the panel members, gave general recommendations and was not argumentative, despite his recent editorial that called the university "a bur eaucracy out of control." "The University of Ne braska is parochial and snobbish," the editorial read. "It is Lincoln and Omaha, where the money and power and prestige are. "I think that in spite of it all, the university pro duces many fine things be sides a football team," Blackledge wrote at the end of his comment. Overall, Raglin said the comments from the panel members were favorable. James Whitaker, president of Whitaker Furniture in North Platte, asked for an increase in the number of outstate seminars for businessmen, and William Morrison, director of ele mentary education for the North Platte Public Schools, requested more student teachers in western Ne braska. Paul Schaffert, an Indianola farmer and Kear ney State College graduate, emphasized the value of ex tension agents in helping with day-to-day farming problems. Raglin said Schaffert voiced concern about popu lation increases in relation to decreasing acreage for food production, adding that Nebraska needs the finest research available to expand agriculture. The council was formed in the early 1970s, under NU President Durward B. Varner. Burglaries reported A university flag, hay and telephones were among the items reported stolen on campus during the weekend. UNL police said two black telephones with computer capabilities were taken from Nebraska Hall. The university-owned phon es were removed by cutting their cables, police said. Police said the phones to gether were worth $100. Fifty bales of hay, worth about $113, were taken from the Livestock Judging Pavilion on East Campus, police said. A flag valued at $225 was stolen from a pole at Regent's Hall, 3835 Hold rege St., police reported. The theft occurred between Friday and Sunday. TO PSEYlOaS PUZZ11 tiuiiisni.!iifljLUIiiM4 juiin m ---4 Kiii i -i -o- Fi if a 1 r 1 e TEL iliip T TmrpTt cTiTEi LAPEL SOj E l iL-J i t T T ? as I l a JpU M SUPREMAC VCf i-Ui s AjShp a wtQgIiilJL4 jets' e a iIJ. JRlrfi Mjoiiitpteil iK-ift .BANK,