iLiCii ill '1 A A" - r j u i! . i A, A Li ! n i j u m I It fir y - ( it -- 5 I: I; Friday, March 8, 1085 Vestfcsr: Mostly sunny today with licht winds and a high of 55 (13C). Partly cloudy tonight with a low of 32 (0C). Look for partly cloudy skies this weekend with a chance of showers lata on Sun day and highs in tho mid-503 (13C) to the mid-COs (1BC). 8o! CrubschsrDsHy ftebrsstan . .' r 1 L 5l Tfc.3 Esvenus Committee sent an , amendsd version cf Gov. Ecb Kerrey's sales tax bill to the Legislature on a o-l vote. The uaeRdraents attached to IE715 by the committee spared some cf the sales tax exemptions that wou!d have been repealed in the bill's initial ver sion. The remaining package will gen- erata an estimated $24 million. Michael Csdvert, Legislative Fiscal Analyst, estimated the state would fall $40 million short in next year's budget under the cnrrsr.t tax code. Sen. Don Wesely, who spencored a bill to renovate the state museum in Personal reasons prevail Ki A V, -4 f ''mm i nl f 1 . Jim n&smiea trerd towsrd ccmssrvatisia esaos3 collsge studeats hss attentian recently. Surveys csd pcl career tnd msterid thirds and a pol itical shllt io tha dl. However, little attention has been pdd to hew the conservative shift has tweeted student attitudes toward EeMsus leaders in the UTTL ccm v&imity differ in their opinions on that ssbjsct Micl&el Jackeb, assistant chepiain Lt the Newman Catholic Student. Cen ter, 320 N. ICth St., said he thinks student attention has shifted toward tm? relica affects them personally. Students are less likely to be con cerned about social issues, he said, . Jekels, a 1274 UNL graduate, said he sees a trend toward mors cesser tich includes mere emphasis cn Vi Sswi- I'VAV-.t isa! cenYsrienca It's tcuja for th in Eccid crises udess thesa causes biC4 KlikUCUW ffc4iMrtAi SnwJ Ul 1 t Are a sra Li Lrsi crstl22 rasrks tL3 Merrill Hail, told the Revenue Comidt- tee Wednesday that he had received many letters from young children who want senators to preserve the muse- urn's collection, Wesely's LB169 would appropriate $4.25 million for a climate control sys- s tern for the building. Fluctuating humidity and dust are deteriorating some of the bones, skins and hides in Board of Regents, offered that analogy Forum panelist Roger Wehrbdne, Richard Gady, vice president of eco the museum, according to interim to the Appropriations Committee Wed- president of the Nebraska Livestock nomic research for Con-Agra, Inc., said director John Janovy. Wesely read one of the letters to the committee: "Dear Sen. Wesely: Please vote for Morrill Hall. I love that place. Yours i i fA .JA "It's frustrating because you can't make people see that a concern, whether it's remete or not, is still a concern cf theirs," he said. Jackets said he wsild like to see students become mere involved in social causes like civil rights, relief to th pocr and personal freedoms around the wcrid. Don H&nwsy, priest cf St, Mark's-on-the-Caspus Episcopal Church, 1309 R St., agreed that students tend to be mere self-oriented these dsp. "The students I work with are more concerned with their careers and have less interest in delving into ' issues," he said. , Like Jackels, Hanway said he thinks students show more concern for personal religion than social religion. "They're not as driven to be acti vist as students have been in the past," be said. Bat Ec2cr Sasse, pastor &t the LuKiuul uvwiiif Vi.w-j.i, fcvJ 14. I till St., said he thinks students are becoming mere isvclved In relives. He also said ha thinks students ars feeccr4r4 mere censervath.'. Kcr.v ever, he did net draw a relationship between conservstiszt od religion. University of Nebraska-Lincoln disnges Iragono oaie?...Page 12 A, 1 .-' iir r A AA 'La " , n a f v v. s "10 ta EsnM tSjja c,t EENU. 1 - ...... T- - f Truly, Ang!&w Sen. Shirley Marsh cf Lincoln, a Revenue Committee member, said she had received several similar letters.. Can a correlation be made betwe dol ncsday. "For what it costs the Department of Corrections to incarcerate one person for one year," he said, "we can educate three to four students annually." en the number c' iwr'? in the rasricet-onented rarm environment, with improving the overall net farm tate penitentiary and the number of TTTlt ZSZ ni,' ui wim lars in the Ledslature'sNU budget? Y?ruiUia 00 ,,eui,BBU uw V? suppons wouia noi neip uie iea- John Paine, president of the NU UiUUiI- eraiion reacn mai goai. R(Bjulii( A " k I A j t A A - ; I .. , -7 A .A- -- . ; jjf -- '""W j. LML GrjifiiriierG float SoauMejrwtoes MI m Ey Jettison Taylor Staff Eeportsr ASUN President Mark Scudder on Thursday vetoed the University Prcnmis and Facilities Fees appropriations bill, "Given the financial constraints wa which the ASUM Senate passed on posed on other agencies, it's not fair to Wednesday. give ourselves an increase," Scudder said. The ASUN Committee for Fees Allo cation had proposed a 1985-85 aca- He said it was unwise to add & pro demic year UPFF charge cf $100.41 per gram with so little CFA deliberation student per semester a $5.16 and during a time when students sesm increase from this year. to have an excess of financial burdens. The ASUN Senate passed the CFA Scudder said he thought UNL did not prcpcsal after ASUN Vice President need a private lobbyist and representa- Curt Cltmans broke a tie vote to add an tion by the Nebraska State Student amendment that w ill add 24 cents per Association, student, per semester to ASUN's budget Cc&tismed on Pass 2 aneusis say larmers By Dave GccL.en Stall Eepctter - Agriculture must move toward a Feeders Association, said to survive in a fee-market world, farmers and ranchers must aim for maximum efficiency, not maximum production. They should pro- dues for the market, not government titi rrr l! - v. ID . Ir-rnA i e? TT'T A- Vol. 84 No. 119 &Op...Page 8 Jut to hire a professional legislative lobby ist specifically for UNL Scudder vetoed the budget bill because of the amendment. programs," Wehrbeine said. Bryce Neidlg, president of the Ne- bntsk a Fann Bureau Federation, agreed, but said his group is more concerned that making the United States a iead- ing world exporter again is essential to strengthen U.S. agriculture. V V-rxD y ... !