Friday, September 7, 1934 Pago 2 Daily Nebraskan Speaker pEVBmtfces- m,i&e'i& if or UBJiL mm By Scctt Ahktrsnd Dally Net-rx&fc&a ClzZtWtiitr Fran Loetterle, chairman of the UNL Franchise Studies Develop ment Program wants UNL's aca demic program to get the same recognition its football team en joys. Loetterle, speaking Wednesday night before UNL's Franchise Club, said a center for Franchise Stu dies at UNL could solve the school's academic notoriety prob-. lem. "It's my belief that if we can pull this off we will help put this uni versity on the map academically," he said. "Our end objective is to create a center that will be rec ognized nationally and perhaps internationally as an authorita tive source of information about franchising for industry and other colleges and universities who want to get into a program." Loetterle outlined several ob jectives set for the center this academic year: Raise a minimum of $150,000 in donations and gifts and secure $1.5 million in endowments in order to reach a "stand-alone status" financially. Present and refine a fran-(fenrxr.tcounscttheundcr-graduate level. Refine and re-edit course mat erials for the franchise course and publish a textbook by 1086. Develop a graduate level course for 1035-86. Develop two- to three-week executive seminars. Found the academy of fran chising, with a kick-off meeting in May or June of 1085. Secure six internships with franchise companies. Loetterle said the center also would like to secure research grants, chair a professorship and fund some scholarships. The center's major problem is funding. "We started on a shoestring and we're still there," Loetterle said. "At first, GO percent of our funding will have to come from industry. And even after we have proved ourselves three of four years down the road and are get ting some state support, we will still have to get at least 60 per cent from industry, friends and large donors." The center has spent $63,000 this year and taken in $53,000. Loetterle estimates the full-blown course, including a journal and academy of franchising, will have an annual operating budget of $500,000. "If our budget is that high, we're going to have to find a regu lar source of $300,000 a year out side this state, or at least outside this university and outside this state legislature allocation," Loetterle said. "That's the size of our project." Continued on Page 8 1 0 percent tuition hike approved DyAdlludler Daily Nebrtskan Stiff Writer In summer meetings, the NU Board of Regents approved a 1985-86 budget, which calls for a 10 percent increase in tuition charges. The proposed budget, which would raise undergraduate resi dent tuition from $38 to $41.75 a credit hour also would provide salary increases for university em ployees. The academic and ad ministrative staffs at UNL will get a 10.7 percent salary increase, and UNL and NU Medical Center faculties will receive a 9 percent raise. An 11.5 percent increase was set for non-faculty employees on all campuses. In addition to the budget issue, the regents approved a proposal to buy more land for the UNO campus. The new land will be used for an access road, parking lots and garages. The regents also decided to Li Li U tJ O wlJLJl . n ft I SGLVJITS UIll PUT A C'JIIZl XZZ2 VSIZj ren o uzifsniD msa vrj 1:7:1. to fit; us Class fee includes use of acoustic guitar, case, eight weekly 1-hour classes and all class materials. Fee (?i I? Hi applies in toll it you decide to purchase, you II V ! - (earn chording, strumming and rhythm techniques i- O by playing country, folk and pop songs. t y y -rf Banjo ; 1 .' p l Classes .,U..., -.. - , -.- - -,- -- Available tjC ' Tool 01S3S EC"! HZ UiO CF ESPTEIIE. 11 schmltt rnus:c CCntSrS Schmfir fci Uncc&i Gateway Mall 4S7-2303 seek eight parcels of land for the proposed Lied Arts Center, a $20 miilion performing arts complex . which is being considered for the UNL campus. The center would be built on a square-block area, bordered by 1 1th and 12th streets and Q and R streets. NU Attorney Richard Wood has said property owners on this block will get help relocating. The board also approved an expansion of the UNL Student Legal Services. Students now will be eligible for in-court representation. Shel ley Stall, director of Student Legal Services in the Nebraska Union, said students would have more power in court when they con front legal problems, such as landlord-tenant disputes. j MR j v":r"' F Shore tho Rood; Share the Ride it! Placo tto to! BEFORE THE GAf.lE c?zn at 10 am Watch other football games & sporting events on our 20 TV's Buffet Lunch will bo served 1 1 AM to 1 PM only $2.89 for all you can eat, catered by Hy-Vea Deii Of course we will be serving your favorite cocktails & beer all day DURING THE GAME We're open with Football on our 20 TV's AFTER THE GAME Entertainment provided by the TRI DELTA Washboard Band (show starts approximately 30 minutes after the game.) Watch other football games on one of our 20 TV sets Food & snacks will be available And your favorite cocktails & besr will be served. FOOTBALL f.1A?2IA'S FEATURING 20 TV's ho AMD DCJ4T FOHGET AD OUT THE AVAY TELEVISED GA?.!ES WITH OUR We Let The Good Times Rock & Roll ""l rr? , a Tt 826 P St. National and international news from the Reuter News Report nsiitQ set recor for time spent la opae MOSCOW Three Soviet cosmonauts aboard the Salyut-7 space station set a new space endurance record Thursday when they entered their 212th day in orbit. Leonid Kizim, Vladimir Solovyov and Oleg Atkov have spent 30 weeks in the station since they blasted off from Earth on February 8 to carry out a wide range of experiments. During that time they have been visited by two separate crews including SvetLana Savits kaya, the first woman to walk in space, and Rakesh Sharraa, the first Indian in space. The new record, beating the 2 1 1 days two cosmonauts spent in orit two years ago, emphasizes the substantial lead the Soviet Union has over the United States in permanent manned space stations. Kizim and Solovyov also have set records for time spent in open space, clocking more than 22 hours between them on six walks to repair fuel lines and check the station's condition. When asked by a Soviet reporter how long he thought people could now stay in orbit, Blagov said, "I would say that man has already learned to live and work in space for up to one year." Feds 8nap New York ring NEW YORK Federal agents, Thursday said they had smashed a major New York City drug ring that sold $36 million worth of heroin and $4 million worth of cocaine in the last three months. A spokesman for the Federal Drug Enforcement Administration said 30 members of the ring were arrested Thursday, including two of its key figures, supermarket owner Louis Garcia, 38, and Little Italy cafe owner John DeLutro, 30. The agency said the ring wholesaled drugs to street dealers who in turn sold the heroin for $200 million and the cocaine for $30 million. The arrests took place after drug agents secretly tapped the phones of drug-ring members, recording thousands of hours of conversations. South African unrest continues SHARPEVTLLE, South Africa Senior South African cabinet ministers who tried to tour a riot-torn township near here Thursday retreated before hundreds of blacks who blocked the road, witnesses said. They said the Ministers of Defense, Law and Order, Internal Affairs and National Education drove into Sebokeng in two buses sandwiched between armored person nel carriers. But their attempt to defuse tension after 3 1 people died in riots this week ended prematurely when they were forced to turn back before the crowd and retreat to their helicopter. Township violence, centered on Sharpeville, Sebokeng and Evaton, erupted on Monday, sparked by protest over rent rises and the quality of black education. Police said this week's death toll reached 31 when a youth was stabbed in a township near Johannesburg and the body of a black man was found at Sebokeng Wednesday. Police said townships were quiet Thursday, although a strong police presence was maintained. A line of about 150 people formed at a food shop outside neighboring Sebokeng, witnesses said, after widespread looting this week emptied the shelves of township stores. Education officials said more than 100,000 pupils stayed home from school throughout South Africa Thursday, either because of the rioting or because of school boycotts, which began earlier this year over a varity of grievances. Ortega appeals to United Nat MANAGUA Nicaraguan juntal coordinator Dante! Ortega is planning to address the United Nations General Assembly next week on what he sees as plans for a United States invasion of his country, senior government sources said Thursday. The U.N. Security Co 4icil is to take up Frid&v Nicaragua's complaint over a rebel air attack on a military school in which seven people were killed, including the crew of a helicopter involved in the raid. Two of the crewmen have been identified as U.S. citizens and described as volunteers belonging to a private anti-communist organization in the United States. The attack last weekend prompted fresh Nicaraguan state ments that the United States is on the verge of direct military intervention in Nicaragua, where the army has been fighting thousands of US.-backed right-wing insurgents. Wall Street journalist indicted NEW YORK A former columnist for the Wall Street Jour nal aiid two associates pleaded innocent Thursday to a 61 count federal indictment charging them with conspiracy and fraud. R. Foster mans, a former principal author of the Jour- f ntial !?Icard on the Street column, is charged with leaking information to others, including co-defendants David carpenter, his roommate, and Kenneth Fells, a former stock mnrnWtl?!,Kid,dr ?eaboy, enabling them to net about ? 'iT'000 in stock-trading profits. Winans was said in the indictment to have earned $31,000 from feeding information about the companies he planned to write about. The column is considered so powerful that stocks rise or fall based on infor mation contained in it. 2