n tuesday, deccmber 8, 1981 lincoln, nebraska vol. 107 no. 70 Copyright Daily Nebraskan 1981 University of Nebraska-Lincoln m (o Xt 1 v t i " . 'v 1 VI vcn 4 .1 n wrHBF ...... 4 -ixiM L i& ,iLfm J Photo by Kent Morgan Olsen And the dentist said to avoid sweets. Jim Anderson, 72, of Ceresco, seems to have forgotten what one of the dental students probably told him after having some Aanti n,n.As Ann at tlip Tnllpup of Dentistry, as he enjoys an ice cream cone from the Dairy Store. CouncH, others discuss changing city road plan By Mary Louise Knapp The Lincoln City Council and members of community groups discussed a proposal to amend the city s Comprehensive Plan Monday that would delete from the plan all references to the Northeast Radial and propose an alternative roadway between 17th and 19th streets from lloldregc to V streets. Lincolnites, in an election last April, voted down a proposal for the radial, which would have connected downtown Lincoln to the llavclock area. The Planning Department had recom mended earlier that the radial be eliminat ed from the Comprehensive Plan and that a corridor between 17th and 19th streets be designated as an alternative. A previous proposal that 16th and 17th streets be des ignated as alternatives was rejected by the council because UNL officials said that solution would bisect the campus. Council member Mike Steinman pro posed an amendment to the proposal which would delete references to the radial from the Comprehensive Plan, and make no references to an alternate roadway. Steinman said passing the original pro posal would mean bypassing the normal channels by which amendments to the Comprehensive Plan are formulated. Amendments to the plan are usually dis cussed by various subcommittees of the council before they are brought to a pub lic hearing, Steinman said. Playing God Louis Shackelford, another council member, said Steinman was employing "political demagoguei-y by proposing the amendment and said that Steinman had previously proposed the original resolution to the Planning Committee. Steinman replied that he had merely di rected the issue to the Planning Committee for its consideration. "I think we should honor the vote of the people in the spring (against the radi al)," Steinman said, adding that a proposal for an alternate roadway might revive fears of a "son of radial," that is, the radial proposition under a different name. C. lidwin Murphy, a member of the Uni versity Place Community Organization Board of Directors, spoke in favor of the resolution with Stcinman's amendment at tached. "The University Place Community Or ganization has had a consistent record of opposition to the proposed Northeast Ra dial and has had representatives of the Board of Directors addressing the City Council on this matter on a number of oc casions," Murphy said. Voters said "no" "I should not have to remind you that the people voted 'no build,' " Murphy said. "They did not express themselves concern ing alternatives." Mark Hunzeker, 2015 Park Ave., said he supported the resolution without the Stein man amendment. "To use the 'planning process' as an ex cuse to avoid the issue seems odd to me when the planning process has already been subverted (by the original amendment)," Hunzeker said. "To use it now would not be shooting straight with the voters." "The real substance of the issue is to provide an alternative," he said. A vote by the council members on the resolution is pending. UNL lacks money chairman By Roger Aden After four years as chairman of the Department of Speech Communication, Gustav Friedrich is leaving UNL for a similar post at the University of Oklahoma at the semester's end. He is also leaving some bad memories. In a letter published in yesterday's Daily Nebraskan, Friedrich said he recalled "too vividly the countless frustrating barri- Chairman's resignation is debated By Roger Aden The resignation of the chairman of the UNL Department of Speech Communicat ions said his subsequent criticism of people and groups connected with the university, has drawn mixed responses from UNL officials. Gustav Friedrich submitted his letter of resignation to the press last week. In that letter, he said his resignation, which is effective at the end of this semester, was prompted by the following: low faculty salaries; the importance of athletics in comparison to academics; a self-interested governor and legislators; an unsupportive university president; and a board of regents selected by poor methods. NU Regent Ed Schwartzkopf of Lincoln said Friedrich's contentions and his method of pointing out his allegations were wrong. "I've heard some good things, that he is really providing leadership in the speech communication department," Schwartz kopf said. "But if he's really a professional educator and he's really concerned about his students and colleagues, he shouldn't have just written a letter. "You have to meet the change-makers and say 'this is what we have to do.' I don't think you make things better by blasting them and then taking off," Schwartzkopt said. Schwartzkopf added that if Friedrich was really concerned about faculty salary increases he should have been out front pushing for those changes. Schwartzkopf said he has seen no evidence that Friedrich was doing such work. However, Friedrich said he has been fighting for salary increases at multiple levels since he assumed the chairmanship of the Speech Communication Department in 1977. In his letter, Friedrich contended that electing members of the NU Board of Regents, instead of appointing them, re stricts their concerns to matters other than education. Schwartzkopf said that charge was "almost ridiculous." "In states where the boards are appoint ed, the governor appoints people who have supported him and expressed a desire to hold such a position," Schwartzkopf said. "They (regents) usually support the philo sophy of the person who put them in." Schwartzkopf said Friedrich's content ion about athletics being emphasized over education does not seem reasonable. "Well, geez, going to an Oklahoma foot ball game certainly isn't in the interest of de-emphasizing education," Schwartzkopf said. Regent John Payne of Kearney, said there are many universities with a lower faculty pay scale than UNL. In fact, he said UNL is above average in faculty salaries nationwide, pointing to what he termed a substantial number of professors earning over $40,000 a year. However, Payne did say that some faculty members within the university might be receiving lower salaries than their counterparts across the country Noting Friedrich's new position, Payne said the University of Oklahoma can afford to pay their faculty members more because of the oil boom in that state, compared to Nebraska's agricultural picture, which he said is not good. Friedrich has accepted a position in Oklahoma similar to his present one. Salaries of UNL faculty members in 1980-81 were below average when compar ed to other land-grant institutions similar to UNL, said Harry Allen, UNL director of institutional research and planning. Allen said no faculty salary rankings are kept of the nine land-grant institutions in the Association of American Universities rankings to which UNL salaries are compar ed. The AAU members include Illinois, Iowa State, Michigan State, Minnesota, Missouri-Columbia, Ohio State, Penn State, Purdue and Wisconsin-Madison. Continued on Page 3 ers thrust in the way of the university's achieving academic respect." Friedrich specifically cited "low faculty salaries, high student fees, an NU Board of Regents whose method of selection re stricts their concerns to matters other than education, a state which values athletics at the expense of academic achievement, (and) a governor and state legislature who willingly sacrifice the welfare of Nebraska to self-interest." He also wrote of "a university president who accomplishes his prediction that 'con tinued and pervasive erosion of quality is probably inevitable,' by reducing the faculty 2 percent in the face of significant ly increased responsibilities." In an interview, Friedrich said the state equates the success of the football team with the success of the university. "I have nothing against athletics, I go to the games," Friedrich said, "but the state of Nebraska thinks that if the football team is doing beautifully, the university is doing beautifully. "They equate the success of the football team with the success of the university, de spite the fact that the library is hurting, professors are doing their own typing be cause of a lack of secretaries which takes away research time and computer budgets are running out before the year's over, hurting research," Friedrich said. Continued on Page 3 n m taesdlay No to Norden Dam: Water conservation groups plans to go door to door to ex press opposition to dam project . Page 7 Pershing Promo: Pershing Auditorium hopes to spur business with a new adver tising push Page 10 Husker Hoops: Complete coverage of last night's Nebraska-South Dakota State basketball game Page 12