Paga4 Daily Nebraskan Tuesday, April 30, 1985 o A o nrattonoitne The NU Board of Regents' decision to rename Regents Hall, 3835 Holdrege St., after NU Foundation chairman D.B. "Woody" Varner and his wife, Paula, honors a worthy couple. Regent John W. Payne of Kearney, chairman of the board, announced t he decision at a special NU Foundation dinner honor ing university donors Saturday night. The Varners have served the University of Nebraska since 1970, when Varner served as chancellor and later as NU president. Regents Hall was built in 1973, during Varner's presidency, to house administrative offices andjhe foundation. Varner resigned from the presidency in 1977 to beeJme chairman cf the foundation. Varner, 69, said in a December 1884 Daily Nebraskan article, tJat he tries to "find sources of funding from the private sector to 1 '3 the university achieve its goals. - Despite a tight economy, the farm crisis ar TCa, Varner has succeeded ' . . ; v": ; ',-.,., 1 ' helped Cs:d private financial suppcrtfor psgrup such as the Center for the Study cf .the- Great PJiMfi tM pAmeriia Arts AlSance and irrigation development andM-lefrcsssreh:. -: ,: ( Varner's 'latest project is the. Lied Center forthaTeVfomihg ,hs. The foiindstion is Hearing the halfwcy'pkt it itst3miClon cjapaign to' cc.I$t9 funf&3 for tat $2$ tiTpt project, to be tdlt on the scathwest ccrnet of 12th and B.stti ' ,: r ; ;"The late Ernst Lied, ev Omaha car. d?-,kr,d Us Vega, businessman,' UX a $10 minion estate for &Vc,cr.teflr wltich must be 'matched 'bytheunheRity'. ,,":-::.X-:-: 'V ' y.y Earlier this week,, WIisms' Companies rod&fen of Tulsa, Okla., announced a gift of $50,000 to the: tied Center. It's no coincidence that Varner has been a member of the Tulsa com pany's board of directors for the past 10 years. Varner always finds private support for the university, and that support is needed now more than ever with the state Appropriations Committee's 1.6 percent NU budget increase recommendation. "Despite Vamer's bypass operation in June and prostate surgery in August, he still serves half time at the foundation and attracts many private donors. Varner and his wife are an asset to NU and they deserve permanent recognition. All NU students, faculty and alumni are grateful for Varner's leadership, hard work and success. 5n "THl tTpc 1r;r - v .... j xl&&Z - -0jL .... . lWY ;" - CJoIummatsays refugees ii 'tfifcsttedback for forth KSe atcr.fj!3 objectives of the movement. rr,:.; ". i tIia the American Mclccd fcc j First, restrict! immigratidn tothe ; -vtb- over. Cetttial.'Aaertesal pcCB.' United States is evii:.(?r.i beccsSJ Qte, VtSSifvadoraa refugeft On the cr.eh'ar.'4' perverse if individuals Eeeinr theirs ;.:i2Hibi5f skepUdsm''of thaSdritur:; lives from left-wing ortfwf-3h'' ;. arjK. lldveiaenw" (that is uie chsrch move-; .:. squads, are not allowed 'to imaiej. eed'MSMid feifiri. offering "sanctuary" to prfesrpy 1 saivesoran refugees illegally la the United States) alms and objectives. Much of the time I sense that the movement has little concern for the refugees beyond their pro paganda value in criticizing the Reagan administration's Central American policy. Jim Rogers Editorial Policy Unsigned editorials represent official policy of the spring 1985 Daily Nebraskan. Policy is set by the Daily Nebraskan Editorial Board. Its members are Chris Welsch, editor in chief; Chris Burbach, editorial page editor, Michiela Thuman, news editor; Vicki Ruhga, copy desk chief and editorial writer; and Kelly Mangan, assistant advertising manager. Editorials do not necessarily reflect the views of the university, its employees, the students or the NU Board of Regents. The Daily Nebraskan's publishers are the regents, who established the UNL Publications Board to supervise the daily production of the paper. EDITOR GENERAL MANAGER PRODUCTION MANAGER ADVERTISING MANAGER ASSISTANT ADVERTISING MANAGER CIRCULATION MANAGER NEWS EDITOR CAMPUS EDITOR WIRE EDITOR COPY DESK CHIEF EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR SPORTS EDITOR ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR NIGHT NEWS EDITORS PUBLICATIONS BOARD CHAIRPERSON PROFESSIONAL ADVISER Chris Wttteh 472-1 7S8 Daniel thtV.l Kalherirte Pcllcky Tom Byrns Kslly Mangart Steve Meyer Michiela thuman Lauri Hopple Judl Nygren Vlckl Ruhga Christopher Burbach Ward W. Trlplett III Stacle Thomas Christopher Burbach Ad Hudfer Gah Y. Huey Chris Choate 472-8788 Don Walton, 473-7301 The Daily Nebraskan (USPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board Monday through Friday in the fall and spring semesters and Tuesdays and Fridays in the summer sessions, except during vacations. Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and com ments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1 763 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The public also has access to the Publications Board. For information, call Chris Choate 472-8783. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, 34 Nebraska Union, 1400 R St., Lincoln, Neb. 68588-0448. Second class postage paid at Lincoln, NE 63510. ALL t'ATir.lAL COPYRIGHT 1S-5 DAILY NISHASXAN At the same time the Reagan adminis tration's reaction to Salvadoran refugees smacks of an equal, if not greater, uncon cern for the immigrants. The Reagan administration rushes to allay the belief that true and continuing political unrest still exists in El Salvador. Because of both sides' ideological commitments, I doubt we are getting a clear picture of the events in El Salvador. Nonetheless we must face the facts that political or economic refu gees is tentative I am always quite I admit that the conclusion I make regarding the aiding of Salvadoran refu gees is temtative I am always quite equivocal whenever actions I forward would violate government policy (especially when few of my fellow conservatives admit to the same conclusion). Yet in affirming the fol lowing three propositions, I find myself in accord with the goal of the Sanctuary Movement to the extent of aiding Salvado ran refugees, although certainly and emphatically not the broader ideological Second, Christians are morally oM!sted to show serious hospitality to tamisnts. Third, Christians may morally violate civil law when obedience to it would cause a violation of the law of God as contained in the Old and New Testaments of the Chris tian Church. " The. question of conscience revolves around the claim that the nexus between the first and the second proposition affirm ed above is of sufficient clarity that one is excepted from obeying the federal govern ment's immigration policy. It is to the establishment of this nexus that we now attend. Libertarian author David Friedman caustically, correctly, observes that given the immigration policy of the United States over the past 70 years or so, the inscription on the Statue of Liberty ought to be changed from: Give the your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to be free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send those, the homeless, tempest-tost to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door. To more appropriate inscription, namely: America, America The closed preserve, The dirty foreigners, Don't deserve. Immigration restrictions find no foot hold in the claims of justice. Use of force by the government is only justified if injury is ' threatened hi a recorrihle person. Each, person 8?ess2d iiinsf by the state must have ..comnlitsatne' wrong for the state's response tats just Yet immi grants' do rict?sss cr.:tu3 simply by the act or attempted act c immigration; : and'thus it is unjust" to foke&bly restrain immigrants from pursuing their desired end. Since immigrants are not to be halted by state coercion, those professing a belief in Christ must hold open the door of hospi tality to those refugees willing to be aided by the covenant household. Biblical hospi tality is by-and-large lost in modern cul ture, yet it was regarded as an important witness of God's grace by the covenant community. As. the law of God declares in Leviticus 19.33-34: "When a stranger re sides with you in your land, you shall do him no wrong. The stranger who resides with you shall be as the native among you, and you shall love him as yourself; for you were aliens in the land of Egypt: I am the LORD your God." Additionally, on a na tional basis it is quite inhospitable to pursue a closed-door policy. Thus it seems difficult to justify obeying the federal government's law ordering us not to extend hospitality to those in need. Ultimately as the apostle Peter pointed out when faced with government order violative of the law of God, "we must obey God rather than men." Although there are a host of policy prob lems on macro level respecting Central American immigration (such as what enti tlements, if any, immigrants may or ought to be able to legally claim), on a personal level it appears that we cannot morally wait for the resolution of such questions, we must act now and aid the aliens among us. Letters Search procedures frustrate depositor's Do you trust the state of Nebraska to respect your rights and treat you as a citizen of this country should be? If you do, you are living with an illusion! This is about Commonwealth deposi tors and how they are being mistreated. At public gatherings, depositors have been subjected to search procedures. The most recent incidence occurred at the City County Building on April 22. Security guards opened women's purses and one man had a clipboard pulled away from him before entering the court room. Who order ed these searches? Why are depositors, most of them elderly folks, being sub jected to this? When the president of the WATCH H6, SUTiM SHE'S PACKING A CAM. 4 United States appears publicly, they don't search the crowd, so why is this being done in Nebraska? If public officials have received threats, it could be that they are trying to provoke an incident with depositors. On April 17 at a gathering of depositors, banking direc tor Roger Beverage called one irate depos itor, "you loud-mouthed old man" a totally unappropriate response from a public official who claims to be represent ing the interests of depositors. Beverage was protected by two plain clothes body guards at this meeting. One must realize that Beverage's department is not funded by taxpayers. It is a state agency, but sponsored by the very people they regu late, the bankers. Nebraska is not working toward deregulation... it has un-regulation in banking. These search procedures are an over reaction on the part of the state. All the Commonwealth depositors have sought is justice and proper treatment in a state that doesn't know the meaning of either. Howard Vosika Lincoln