Monday, February 20, 1934 Daily Nobraskan Parjo 2 !!UP ..SYRniCiMT W.U's Binnil WONDER THnT SOfllE FnCULITY PRE CONFUSED c5 National and international news from the Reuters Mews Report THIS nSTICLE 13 . Cc:r. Dy Kc:h!ccn Rutlcdga tscsxss cf the situation at tha University of rpernl to altcrCis authority cf the : would d wa kcrcasa for faculty members there, tf aiTl-iratic-a chose, ta cl&natJbs - Etrcv tl t:irr:Yi rrcrrr:; for iaia em- w y ff - - - - - . iyzzs, izzt rcprcaeniauves waraca itu use we renravws u- taevuvwit; " . ncaazy. CIR to eperite?" asked Sea James G;J of :. Ttey ccrjr.es.ted ca LC"17, sponsored by " Tekarr.ah, a member cf tie Business and ; - Sea. Jcrtr Yarccr cf Wavcrly. It would let ' Labor Ccrnmittee, which heard the til . tba Lecture sppmve cr disapprove any " Warner said only the Legislature has the .." : . ' . ; , CIH crdcr affecting waes, hours cr condi- authority to appropriate money to finance : " . tons cf employment for people who work for CIR crdeis for state workers. He siestcd the state, Uia University cfNebraslacr state .that it would be tetter for the Legislature to iT'"---'"1'1 wsKsa-aiww. - face the decision "straight vp rather than Cl-'" Warner said the 111 was written primarily - ' ' ' Ss3 CIR on pcg3 23 J; r L;;nn nn ndustnal Relations. weanYu ld indicate it snouia. hh TnwHAT a larger part of th,s c" lranSation process. nirTATED BY COLLECTIVE UTiL I CMUl 1 u.i w r v. 13104 Letters Finally, you must compare us with other AAlthiriarries in gfczizzy, ana tnus nna we are iz.j t,rr- cent below their salaries, not 15 per cent. And since trie cited 1hn "r-le ence trial LaXlicms. Law forbids public employees to strike in Nebraska. Vae u poiv tre 1 c;; . 01 maus- URATE AS S UtT0's union received a 6.6 percent salary increase and UNL received 2.5 percent, not "zero," for the year 32-83. Last fall the regents authorized elimi nation of 19.25 UNO faculty positions to meet the anticipated median of 4 faculty salary increases within tb located budget. Salary ra'"" v ,,c re- Jn firings, p -., at UNL It tarikw..v-i,, ioay picture of "intelli .. cTt"' V.t'x'j emitted applicants" being THS o 1 attra.:ted there. 1 WHETHER THESE STATEMENTS ARE UNINTENTIONAL PERPETUATION OF "MYTHS" OR DELIBERATE MISINFORMATION, THEY MISREPRESENT THE FACTS, CONFUSE THE ISSUES AND DO NOT SERVE THE BEST INTERESTS OF THE FACULTY. AAUP IS NOT ATTEMPTING TO PAINT A RAINBOW; BUT WE DO WANT THE FACTS STRAIGHT. FACULTY WORKING HOURS ARE 0 to 5 m-F. ? IF A NOTICE LIKE THIS IS POSTED IN YOUR DEPARTMENT. IT INFRINGES ON YOUR RIGHTS AS FACULTY AND IS NOT SUPPORTED BY REGENT'S BYLAWS LEGAL INTERPRETATION OF BYLAWS REGARDING "WORKING HOURS" (sea 4. IF Regent's Bylaws) 12? WEDNESDAY, FEB. 8, 1S34 Letters (according to Bruce Wright, UNL legal counsel) is: . . . regularly scheduled class time and office hours. . . . " Correcting inaccuracies Professor Nels W. Forde's letter ' acuy mefabers had to be fired to f Daily Nebraskan. Jan. 3H attemctina 1 over ine ?- Percent Py increase, in to correct the "errors of fact" in Eric Peterson's column of faculty collective bargaining itself has numerous factual errors. Two are so dramatically in accurate as to demand refutation. Professor Forde says that "last fall the regents authorized elimination cf 19.25 UNO faculty positions to meet the anticipated median of faculty saiiry increases within the allocated budget", and that "UNL received 2.5 percent, not "zero" for the year '82-83." More accurately, the 6.6 percent pay raba ordered by the Commission of Industrial Relations of UNO faculty for '82-83 has already been paid and was covered within the mor ry available in the university budget without having to eliminate" permanent faculty lines. January of 1934, however, the regents approved a contingency plan that could resuitin the elimination of 1 9.25 UNO faculty lines ("the CIR orders another pay increase of as much as 3.3 percent for the UNO faculty for the current '83-84 year. The working of the resolution adoped at the January meet-. ' ing makes clear that the plan would go into effect only if the current negotia tions break down and the CIR orders another UNO pay increase. . In "82-83 the UNL faculty technically received a 5 percent pay raise, not a 2.5 percent pay raise. The "catch" was that only half of the 5 percent was delivered in '82-83, though the S3-84 salary reflects the 5 percent which was the approved base increase for '82-83. The 2.5 percent which was withheld in '82 83 has never been distributed back to us. Professor Forde savs that our salar ies for"83-84 "are reportedly "zerothough most nave received a minimal in crease." Our salary increases for '83-84 are indeed "zero," though perhaps rorae misunderstands that the "min imal increase" is nothing more than me Deiatea addition or the 82-83 in crease to the salary base." If -"most' have received something more than last year's due, the rest of us would like to near aoout it. . . . Linda Ray Pratt President UNL AAUP THE "BEST". SALARY COMPARISON WITH AAU LAND GRANT INSTITUTIONS WF COULD FIND .WAS 13.3. THIS MEANS ALL OTHERS WERE WORSE . . . RANGING FROM 14.5 to 18.2 to,1 8.2, ACCORDING TO FACULTY SENATE FIGURES FOR 1983-84. FINALLYOUR" QUESTION FOR THE DAY-HOW RECENTLY HAS REGENT SIMMONS TALKED TO YOU ABOUT YOUR CONCERNS AS A MEMBER OF THE FACULTY? '"v.u, TV Monday, Januarys), 1S34 ' - ' ' y: -"J' Reeilts ;disMke:collective bargair' , :Jv1AIL YOUR CARD TO AAUP 333 NO. 14th, COMMONPLACE". Hiving a bargaMr. mist would change the board's , business policy with faculty members, Simmons said "You don't talk to faculty members, you talk to - bargaining units," he aaid nUL I i ........ Icrceli plr,i:c3 b anb . " rebel po3it:c::3 in Lcanon BEIRUT, Lebanon I: rccU p!anc3 Sunday bombed Eeyerd posit.icr.3 in r.rcr.i in Lebanon held by SvTian and ar.tl novcrnmcnt forces, radio stations reported. Both the Druse Mos lem "Voice of the Mountain rr-.'.lo, and the "Voice of Lebanon" station of its rishtwing 'Christian Falant rivcJs reported the raids. "Voice of the Mountain" said hradi aircraft had bombed the Druse-held towns of Naameh, on the cdast a few miles south of Beirut, and the Shouf Mountain town cf Eharndoun, also held by Druse fighters. It also said the planes had bombed Falougha and Hammana, villages in the upper Metn Mountains to the east of Beirut, where both Syrian and Druse forces are present. "Voice of Lebanon" said Druse-held territory around the towns of Damour and Aramoun, both near Naameh, al;o was hit. In Tel Aviv, the military command announced that Air Force planes had bombed "terrorist targets" in Lebanon east and south of Beirut. Guerrilla brir3 dovm 2 helicopters SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador Guerrilla rocket fire Sunday brought down two U.S. built helicopters in eastern El Salvador, killing all 28 soldiers aboard, a hfeh-rankiag Salvado ran military officer said. CoL Ramon Morales Ruiz told reporters at the scene of the crash that left-wing guerrillas fired an RPG-2 rocket launched grenade on a column cf 10 army Bell Uh-IH "Huey" helicopters deploying troops in the northern part of San Mijucl province. Lef-' tist guerrillas fchtLng the army claimed respon sibility for the incident in a radio broadcast Military spokesmen said earlier that the two helicopters collided between the villages of San Gerardo and San Luis da la r.eina in San Miguel, where about 2.CC0 troops are involved in an anti-guerrilla drive. CcL Morales Ruiz said the projectile hit one oftha helicopters in the tail area, forcing the craft to spin into another helicopter flying nearby. r. Joriudlo Cm1 LH p C"C.CII3 poll DES MOINES, Iowa Former Vice Presi dent Walter Mondala has surged ahead and Sen. John Glenn has dropped far back accord ing to an Iowa survey released Sunday on the eve of the state's first-in-the-natian prcsidential perference vote. The poll, which sun-eyed those who say they are sure to vote in the Iowa pre cinct caucuses Monday niht, gave Mondale 44 percent among opposition Democrats and put Glenn, long seen as his closest challenger, fourth in a field ofeSht. A three-way fiht for second found Sen. Alan Cranston cf California at 17 percent, Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado at 14, and Glenn of Ohio at 11. Because cf the poll's margin of error 12. percent: points Cranston, Hart and Glenn were considered vir tually tied. The survey was conducted by the newspaper Des Haines Register. Percinn Gulf war Iioziz up MANAI.IA, Bahrain Heavy f.v.litir.g flared again on the central sector of th3 Persian Gulf war front Sunday as Iran accused Iraq of breaking its pledge to suspend air and artillery attacks on Iranian cities. Beth rides reported heavy fighting south of the Lanian border town of Mehran, where Iran launched a mid night offensive last Wednesday. There were conflicting claims of success. Haydn mass found in cttic BALLYCARRY, Northern Ireland The manu script of a long-lojt mass by the Austrian com poser Joseph Haydn has been discovered in a farmhouse attic. The work, in Haydn's own hand and called "Miss Sunt Bona Mixta Malis" (the good is mixed with the bad), is expected to fetch at least $20,000 when it is put up for sale March 28, Christie's auction house said Sunday. Farmer John McClintock found the mass, which is incomplete, in a music album belonging to his late mother. There also was a . page of Beethoven's musical notes. The Haydn work was authenticated by H.C. Bobbins Lan don, a world authority on tha pomcoser. who 'riniiirv nnUr 10 cAiu uie i ma was -Haydn scholarship.