Page 4 Daily Nebraskan Tuesday, March 2, 1982 Editorial Students can fight Regents Hall with their votes Children. That's what the NU Board of Regents thinks students are. Children who are un able to sort out issues and address them ef fectively. And so, the regents believe it is their du ty to guide and direct student's lives for them. They see no need to seriously con sult students on issues that significantly af fect their college careers and their futures. Well, the regents are wrong. Students do care about quality of edu cation, faculty salaries, building mainten ance, tuition and housing costs. Further more, students are fully capable of explain ing and fighting for their views. So, what has led the regents astray? What has given them the impression that students are apathetic and lack initiative? The consistently low voter turnouts at ASUN elections. Students must shoulder some of the blame. When only about 10 percent of the student body goes to the polls, how can student leaders persuade the regents that they represent the will of the student body? The regents repeatedly refer to low vot er turnout as an excuse for not listening to student concerns. Students have literally handed the board its most effective wea pon in fighting student pressure. And, in the process, students have not only lost self-respect, but also any effect they had on concrete issues. For example, the regents adamantly re fuse to pay the student president a salary. They refuse to trust students with alcohol on campus. They deny our instructors the pay and academic freedom they need and in the same blow, deny students the educa tion they have so dearly paid for. When students try to fight these battles, the re gents drive back their forces with the cry, "Students don't really care." Watching the candidates, the political maneuvering and the haggling over proce dure in this year's election, a student could RSI 7 ?r I easily think, "What difference will it make if I vote for one pretty face over another, for one unfamiliar name over another?" The ASUN election often seems like just one more game for students to play. But in reality, the election is serious stuff. It's the one time students can make a dif ference. If students would turn out in large num bers on election day, the student president and ASUN senators would face the regents and administrators with a real constituen cy. They could say the student body stood together and supported them. With that sort of backing, student leaders would gain respect, and perhaps students could gain some leverage over those who control the pur'sestrings and the policy at this universi ty. So, don't pass a polling booth Wednes day and think, "What's the use?" Your vote Joes matter. With it, the stu dent body could beat the regents at their own game -and take its rightful place in university affairs. BBun election NSSA should be reapproved UNL students will vote Wednesday on continued mem bership in the Nebraska State Student Association. The Innocents Society, a UNL senior honorary, encourages students to vote yes for a continued 50 cents per semester refundable membership fee. Last March, students at UNL voted to form the NSSA and fund it for two years. Because of a UNL administra tion decision, students at UNL will be required to vote again this year on funding. Students at Peru State College also voted to form the NSSA last March and since that time, the UNL and Wayne State campuses also have voted to join. In addition, stu dents at Kearney State will be deciding on membership Guest Opinion March 30. The NSSA has spent an ambitious first year or ganizing Nebraska students, and has just hired two experi enced, professional staff members, who are representing students fuh time. The NSSA advocates the interests of students at the legislative level. Proposed cuts in financial aids, for e '.am ple, could price many students out of an education, and so the NSSA has begun lobbying against cuts in seeded fi nancial aids. The NSSA will also be dealing with the avail ability of financial aids to students from agricultural fami lies. Presently, financial aid formulas exclude families with large property holdings, regardless of real student need, which discriminates against many rural students. Another concern facing students is the declining quali ty of education. Meager legislative appropriations have translated into low faculty salaries and an actual 2 percent cut in university faculty and staff. UNL will have difficul ty maintaining quality faculty if its faculty salaries remain the lowest in the Big Eight. Students will continue having difficulty obtaining needed classes if the university cannot increase its faculty as student enrollment increases. For years, students have tried to influence Nebraska legislators. Individual campuses have made occasional lob bying efforts, but students have often been frustrated by a lack of organization and continuity. On a year-to-year basis, legislators have not had regular student liaisons. In dividual campuses have often fought each other for appro priations, negating the potential for a collective student voice. The NSSA has a full-time staff that can work with legislators on a day-to-day basis. Furthermore, the staff can coordinate efforts across the state, such as voter reg istration drives and legislative lobbying efforts. This sort of organization is impressive to legislators, and in fact the NSSA has already been asked to draft a legislative propo sal for the distribution of state financial aids. In times of fiscal austerity, education tends to be ar. all-too-vulnerable target. However, on Wednesday students will have an opportunity to bolster their support for edu cation. Looking ahead, the Innocents Society repeats the NSSA philosophy, that education is an investment in Ne braska's future. The Innocents Societv Editorial policy Unsigned editorials represent the policy of the spring 1982 Daily Nebraskan but do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Nebraska, its employees or the NU Board of Regents. The Daily Nebraskan's publishers are the regents, who have established a publication board to super vise the daily production of the newspaper. Accord ing to policy set by the regents, the content of the UNL student newspaper lies solely in the hands of its student editors. Nebffskam Editorials dn nnt nrtraccr!!,, , .. - cfj,Cii u,ff opinions or tne Daily Nebraskan s publishers, the NU Board of Regents, the University of Nebraska and its employees or the student' body USPS 144-080 Npi?'2r; Ma?ht Mcurdock Managing editor: Janice Pigaga; News editor: Kathy Stokebrand; Associate news editors- Patti Uallagher, Bob Glissmann; Editorial assistant: Pat Clark ' Niqht news ed.tor: Kate Kopischke; Assistant night news editor Tom Hass.ng; Entertainment editor: Bob Crisler; Sports editor: Larry lZ i,,lTapl ?porVditPr: Cindy Gardner; Art director: jS.gS chief: D-Eric K,rcher; Graphic de- Business manager Anne Shank -Volk; Production manager: Kitty Pohcky; Advertising manager: Art K. Small; Assistant advertising manager: Jerry Scott. RnJXDa!iV N?braskan Published by the UNL Publications Board Monday through Friday during the fall and spring semes ters except during vacation. 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