Monday, April 15,1935 Pfio4 Daily Ncbraskan "3 1 4 Jt : s . - 1 .D On o - 1 M IU 0 I IS rfH pn ake a lock at seme facts collected by ths ASUN Government I Liaison Ccr.r.ktee: i 0 Over the last five years, tuition revenue has increased 43 percent at UML while statfl aid ha3 increased cr.ly 23 percent. O UNL students fund more cf their education through tuition than any other Big Eight School except the University cf Colorado. Now take a lock at what the NU Board cf Regents was up to this weekend. Regent Kermlt Hansen said he may introduce a proposal that would increase tuition 20 percent. Regent Robert Koefoot said he may introduce a proposal freez ing faculty salaries. Both declined to introduce the measures Saturday because they didn't want to "intimidate the Le$sla ture" by threatening dire consequences, according to the Sunday Lincoln Journal and Star. However, Hansen, Koefaot and four other regents voted to approve a new plan for a regional College cf Veterinary Medicine in cooperation with either Xansaa State or Mississippi State universities. The plan the regents OXed will create $14.3 million -to SI 7.8 million worth of new buildings on East Campus, the Meat nimal Research Center at Clay Center and possibly some student lousing in North Platte. The university is faced with the lowest budget Increase in its liistcry but that has not stopped the regents from approving mother costiy program. When drastic measures, such as a 20 percent tuition increase and no increase for faculty salaries are being considered, it seems stupid to spend more on new presets. About half the cost cf the programs would come firem federal monies the rest would come from state tax dollars and private donations. ' But the capital costs are cn?y the tedr.g. Salaries and maintenance are long-terra expenses UiSt wM! come .from the general budget allotment Those expenses will diminish the whol 3 university. Yes, it would be wonderful to have a vet school, bit we can't atferd one now. We can't tSbrd tar pay our feculty decent salaries now either. Shining new buildings are pretty, but without adequately paid faculty they are empty, neardnglcss shells. . ' Eight new, the university is facing "dire consequences" if the 1.6 percent budget increase is passed by the Nebraska Legisla ture. The Regents should consider which programs tfcfy want to cut net widen new ones they want to tend. It doesn't nirita that the vet school has been an issue for years, 11 2 need for new veterinarians dees not outweigh the need cf the university to preserve its core programs at average levels. Across the board cuts and rcaliecaiicr.3 will add to the univer sity's overall mediocrity and will make farther cuts attractive to next year's Legislature. By axhg whole programs, the cere cf the university can be preserved, and the Legislature will clearly see the damage it is causing the university and the future of the state. Students are caught in the middle and they probably will pay at ' least 10 percent more in tuition next year. There's a good chance the increase will be greater than that. Between cut3 in federal aid and tuition increases, students are going to be pinched. It's likely the university will be too a lot of students will not be able to afford school. The GLC is trying to do something about tlus mess we're in. . For the next four days the GLC will have a booth imlde the north entrance of the Nebraska Union from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily. The committee is starting a letter-writing campaign. The first two days are dedicated to getting letters of protest sent to the Legisla ture in hopes cf a bigger' budget allocation. Wednesday and Thursday will be devoted to generating letters to cur representa tives in WisMrcten, D.CL The GLC will provide Interested studssts with a packet ccatdning stationary aad hints oa hew to writ .each a letter. Then thejrll mail the letter free. This service cegstes many excuses you my have for net taking the time to write. Do something aicut your fctare and the fctsra cf this state. Write cowl .a ll EDITOR GENERAL MANAGER ' PRODUCTION MANAGER . SPORTS EDITOR ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT EDITGD cr.APrt!C3 kmtci assistant fhoioccf acc.3tamt t ioto cv,. -? 0t eH,t U Katnfte P$!$tef ' '"..'' 7-' EC x: in, c:$7zzi Tha t:. :y L'.l .:- in . J isr ."-".shji tf f i summers;;:. .T.a,c-c. 'tc '.fvscilicns. Ftssirt rd : J 13 k-Xti'A itory i" s eni ce.Ti- rcrr.c..".;r.C; i. Sascr.di c': ir'.'" "its J a4 I;,. If I. I s v ..r . wv ... u?i - Falwetl nealeas omer reiimons vr. id the Eev. Jerry Falwell watch the I i Academy Awards? And if he did, did ILJ he see Dr. Haing S. Ngor, a C-l year eld Cambodian refugee, gleefully accept his Ocar? "1 thank God Buddha that I am here tonight," Ngor exulted. Falwell must have slapped his forehead in stemation: Thank who? t" Eicliard Granted there's not an cverahehning number of Americans who call the diety Buddha, but there are still about 4 million cf them and the numbers are growing. l!r ether Americans are Muhsmmadsi or Hindu and there are many others who pray to no one and nothing at all, having rejected relien for whatever reason suits them. I tho'cU cf Ngor because Falweli, who envisiens America as a vast private club, has opened his membership rolls to Jews. In the last several months, he's been appearing before Jewish groups, telling them that he repudiates the doctrine that America is a Christian nation. "Now we say Judso-Chrisiian republic," Falwell has announced. Wonderful. But where does that leave Ngor? One cf the beneSts of Falwell's celebrity is that he has spawned a cottage industry devoted to keeping an eye on him. These FsiweH-watchers are in some disagreement about why he's now granting Ml citizen ship to Jews. It might be, as he has 9 T9 Wf i . . 1 , 5 fc,t a , t ! claimed, that he got tolerance or it just might be, as some suspect, that he looked "at the results cf the last election and decided he had to clean up his act. It was Falwell, after all, who is given almost universal credit for. keeping American Jews overwhelmingly in the Democratic column. Some 70 percent cf them voted fcr Waiter Mondale. Thai was the outcome despite Ronald Reagan's strong support for Israel, his antipathy to quotas and the fact th:t American Jews, overwhelmingly aMuent, benefited fccm both Eeagsn's tax-reductien program and the economic boom the president claimed as his own. And what Eesgan had not dar.e cn his own, It seemed Jesse Jickson would do for Mm. Between Jackson and his traveling companion, the Rev, Louis Farrakshn, Jews had seemed certain to vote Republican. Then along came Ealw ell At the Republi can Convention in Dallas, he and his cohorts in the Christian right seemed ubiquitous. Over and over, they described America as a "Christian nation," words the president finally uttered himself. That did it. The movement of Jews toward the COP stalled and then went into reverse. By election day, they were back in the Demo cratic Party and everyone, was pointing a finger at Falwell. Moi? he drawled. But the finger should not be relaxed. It hardly matters for what reason Falwell has now changed his rhetoric and whether Ms words reflect what he really thinks What matters is that Falwell continues to en vision America is a qetsi-religlous state. Where once it was j?ist Christian, now it is both Christian and Jewish. The result is the same. By any name, such a state excludes. It withholds 100 percent citizen ship from these who are neither Christian aorJews and suasts th&t their rights are dispensed by the Ecriiy rather than being to mz the vz:d empb'ed in the Declaration cf Ind?ptndne3 unalien able. History alSrins that the American ethic is largely a CLrhtl c:-:o. Thst's evidenced in everythirtg fzzL ttie obnoxious to the lofty, from bke i,;3 to ths vary laws of the land. But a part of that ethic, too, is secularism th conviction that religion is essentially a personal matter and its public role ought to be limited. Falwell, for instance, is entitled to Ms strong and, ' to my mind, repugnant, views on homo sexuality. Bat if they were translated into law, they wedd btcense cksr violations of civil liberties. ' The best you can trj is thst Falwell's heading in the right direction. But his new position is Rctarepa;ii3 cf his Christian Nation doctrine, but a modification of it an expansicn not cf his tolerance, but of the limited welcome he extends. Now he includes Jews in his community of true Americans. But the invitation h net Ms to offer and in no way changes the ts&m cf America. It-is a Ratten in w!'3eh ocrity of the people are Osristteri crises, and not, as Falwell stys, & Js-CMstiaHi nation. That's ' a distiaetka t!at makes a dif fersrxe. Ar.cric2r.3 Ki3 Dr. Ngor thank fcr It 1 1 myT ce Fraternity is a rich daddy's boy m tl t a - .i wao ess cease sown iq scnoci to piay. v ' He helps haze those pledss because, wsll, thqr need it. Jca is a campus EII.O.C and he and his Greek friends . isa.7 kept their plee to purge the system cf these unworthy donnies. ' Ja.ne Sorority is a stupid little sorority girl who has come to ached to get her "ME3" decree. Like Joe, Jaaejust doesn't speak to those nsn-scrority girls because, well, It just isn't proper. Yes, Joe and Jane tsd their Greek menss are the lucky ones. well off, but to tiate that tMs is the norm nther than the exception is Mse. Another fallacy is that the tsenga fetterrity man's msla college goal is to t-a pcrpetuaay laebrlatei This stereotype Is acceuieu oy saca mCTies as "Anlstsl He-use" tzi "Fii.terr.ity Vacation." Thm can be no douM that Creeh, Eke t'J ce. Mast cstsrii'css rre cospesssd cf volastssy nss&srJ;? tr.d welcome all BtWKsrsbcrs. If ccivGrt;! cscss Rot to psrUdpte, ess cca hssSJjr criticise these Tt$ mm chctlaa w cpea to all csiferdtf stuicr3. K3 ens denies rest dschsll c? c-c:rr itisnts the coiegestadenta, liketosodslhe. Oowmr, - Ai tovata crro f:r cZ:3. They simply J i . It has been my eiparkn-:- that, for ths m&i part, iiree&s hndla ilcehcl m spcasibly and place its fatpcrtar.ee in Ufa in proper perspective. A prominent delusion of Greek ills is hat associated with h&dng. Without -a .. t did Ect ehcrsr o csch Interest in the 3 thia fa exempli- aou&t, tasmg his been a part cf rsci ummm' pasts. However, hazfe hi CrtaRate!y, many non-Greek students that and faculty think that J03 and hm rsprcssat the average ftstendty erssrerity raster. The? could net be mere wrens. If Greeks axe ao wealthy, why do so cf my Greek Mends have psrt-tirae j:b: tska est ttudeat lxsa and work drkj tha susr.er? If Greek livfa2 is so expensiys, ra are so marr? fetp.rr.?tv id rsie a cylM a sliw. but ztzsJv he early lgJCs. Whila i cannot t-t hat ell fcstemitf plel-es hsva hA a simuar exesritsea ta cr!a 1' sal c""-f T-v T-i t electisn. Tiui Critks rrprsssst a larger fisi by thdr rr.b To cdsp3 esrerity wissca as dumb id3 wheaa sa!3 rurpxea la college is to Rcth-3 thsirr-r e::723 belittle women ia gr.:rsl d:3 est evsa deaa a respcKss. Ths b t!S3 cf the belief tl rri rr f-rbldaea w 1 a;a ia er;yw2j.Tne isteSsttrsdty Cctpdi prsntly is worldni had to inaki hszlssathki cftha r-.-t i 13.3 ssme Us r: "i d ill Often I hear Roa-Greek rt in is act to iZLza in t.;.::::: r-aa tajr lira cf K.::n3 d7 ct! - Cree wju!i d-y e it e 2 oi-"3 still has many Roust cius nesriy equal to ta price pa. g- 4.v w plain that Greeks "centre!" most its At organizations and the student cawm- uuaa RuaHfrecss even p? f- tnere is a cenrpiracy to k cut cf student adhitips tm.iCA": fc"3 this frr.- ! L.:CrSl- b a - ?a b t: t r -: c r 3 f . 11? StaScntS ricf to ti;: ::!:! t: c.s. Perhsp in ths fit--, C:::i cr.i Ssn69 Iktl V.gk c;.:i te C3sb!r.cd into a JTr,..-.ISV. w. muj tit iw ..J k..,