Friday, December 7,1934 Pago 6 Dally Nebrcskcn - J j Nelson, left, nr.d her dsg!iter, Meri, wrk together ct the computers. THE 1984 AL CHRISTMAS j ID O I lf 1 j V I it nr 1LJ1L1A December 6th and 7th (Thursday and Friday) 7:00 a.m. ' t , n c .k I!orAt r j. Nebraska Student Union Sponsored by UPC Arts Committee tf) - iu:uu p.m. AlAUlA" ""b Celebrate The Seaooii With Savings! jfev.v- - O ftp V Fifteen years ago, Mario Puzo wrote a new chapter in publishing history, The Godfather sold more than 15 million copies in the United States alone; the world it depicted won a permanent place in our idiom. Now Mr. Puzo has forged out of history, myth and imagination a hook that surpasses his own modern classic. The Sicilian is a novel of explosive suspense, heroic action and evil on an epic scab. Here the reader knows again the terrible magic of the Mafia, and of the author's brilliant sinsister talent Now at a Special H c J! JLL 0t 6J)88 o $ Regular Price 017.95 v sOpTSday-Friday, 8-5:303:30 Mam thm a Batfmnml I OarHMBookSshcoEdss3ss... Y I I 1 IV i 1 r i i T I IMS lift V J 1 I I. ' T ikJifi R Ctrc. j In Unccln CChtcr 47111 Student parents. . . Continued From Pegs 1 up her son, gets everybody dressed and to day care In time to make it to her 7:30 am. class. All of her studying must be done between classes because she needs the evenings to spend with her children. "I feel overloaded a lot of times like IVe spread myself too thin, but then I ask myself; Where will I be if I dont go to school.' ... Two women. Two students. Friends. Mother and daughter. Nette Nelson and her daughter, Meri Blaylock, started at UNL in the fall of 1980 and graduated in the summer of 1083 together. Nette went on to Harvard for a master's in public administration. Meri began work on her master's at UNL in cartography. "Two people either grow to gether or they grow apart," Nette said. Nette and Meri shared the ex perience of college, something few mothers and daughters do. i learned to walk in her Kerrey budget... mocassins for awhile, and she had to put up with me succeeding in her world for awhile." We moved from a parentchild relationship to a peer relationship"...and became best friencb, Nette said. In the beginning, however, there were doubts. Anxiety. Insecurity. She wondered about fitting in, being herself; revealing herself, succeeding. She worried about what her fellow students might be thinking. Nettie soon developed a partnership with her fellow students. They asked her for advice, and helped her lose her "formal approach to living." "It took thera a year to get me into jeans." It was difficult to go from a structured 8-to-5 job with a regular paycheck to no foreseeable income for four years. Nettie said she was happy to tell her story because "if we're succeeding, it's going to touch persons with the same apprehensions." Continued fren Page 1 $7.6 million for economic development, an increase of $5.3 million or 234.5 percent. $211.1 million for elementary and secondary education, an in crease of $18 million or 9.3 per cent. Kerrey said he had to cut agency requests by about $100 million to arrive at his recommended budget He said since Nebraska currently has a deficit of about $36 million, he personally would like to see the state's tax base broaden to raise revenue more. He said he does not think he will cut spending further. Kerrey said the deficit would be erased by the time the fiscal 1985-86 budget goes into effect. He will announce how the state will finance the proposed budget after the State Economic Fore casting Advisory Board meets Dec. 20 to predict revenue for that year. Three of Kerrey's four main priority area3 NU's student contracts and scholarships, eco nomic development and water may receive an extra $3.3 million each through the proposed Neb raska Future Fund. The $9.9 mil lion for this fund would come 1 from the 8-cent cigarette tax cur rently collected by the federal government. must decide whether it will repeal that tax. If it does, Kerrey said he wants it to become a state tax and use it for his proposed priority areas. The budget process will continue after the Legislature reconvenes Jan. 9, 1985, and the Appro-I priations Committee proposes its own budget. Any group that! receives state money may appear! before the committee to "state its case" as NU will Raglin said. "Their's seldom mirrors the governor's," he said. The Legislature then votes on the committee's proposed budget. A vote of 25 senators passes the budget. "Obviously the university willf try to narrow the discrepancy,"! Raglin said. University officials might achieve that through the Appropriations Committee or by talking to Kerrey himself, he said. At the press conference, Kerrey, said he proposed the budget irv December so he could "take it to. the people" and encourage debate.! Usually, the budget proposal is not announced until January. 9 een suwiaes. . . Continued from Pags 4 things that seem important, we often look into the faces of children and see a false matur ity masking what in reality is fatigue, confusion and aloneness. We sometimes share too much of our adult world with those who will grow into it fast enough. Our children must know that they can come to us for love and warmth and fir iendship and com fort For understanding. For order. For the best possible answers we can give to the things that con cern them most. The crisis of the American family is the real issue we must deal with, and it is in times such as these that we must realize, if nothing else, we need each other. MicMela Thssiaan Dalr Nnkaa New Editor TsfYii.nl no o Continsied Srcsi P&ge l Douglas h charged with lying to that committee when he re ceived $32,500 instead of $40,000 and with obstruction of govern- mnt Stions when he discus sed an FBI letter concerning that agency's Commonwealth probe with Copple. Copple testified Wednesday that he paid Douglas only when Dou glas came to him and asked for money. Morrow noted that Dou gais toid Domina he did not like tnat payment scheme, and that Douglas wanted to establish a specific pay schedule before work ing on the Timber Ridge lots. That property was not developed before the investigation, Morrow said. Douglas' statements in the DominaMiHer report show that he said he also worked on some motels for Copple. There was always something coming up," Morrow emoted Dou glas' testimony, "and periodically I would remind him (Copple) of it and he would pay me."