ic n V Weather: Sunny, breezy and pleasant today. Winds southerly 15-25 mph with a high of 75. Fair and cool tonight with a low of 43. Much the same again for the weekend with lots of sunshine and highs in the mid 70s. Freshman team tries to settle score Sports, page 9 VlastertraK owners mix local sounds Arts and Entertainment, page 12 October 25, 1985 Large to only iiiir By Linda Hartmann Staff Reporter Students will be the losers if the Legislature makes major cuts in NlTs budget, said Robert Furgason, vice chancellor for Academic Affairs. And, he added, UNL students should be concerned. Talk of large budget cuts is a real threat to quality education at NU, Fur gason said. NU not only is losing valua ble faculty members, but it also can't enhance the students' education. Attempts to add a new freshman orientation course and more honors courses have failed. Now administra tors may have to cut existing courses, he said. The College of Arts and Sciences is among those schools facing possible . CUtS. - - -- - ;- G.G. Meisels, dean of the college, said he will do his best to minimize the effects of possible cuts on students. But, he said, heavy cuts this late in the year could cause serious problems since most of the college's funds al ready are used. Around 80 percent of the college's budget is committed to staff salaries, and cutting courses won't save money that is not available to spend, he said. The remaining 20 percent of the budget also is committed, Meisels said. For example, faculty members in the chemistry department buy all supplies at the beginning of the school year. Money in the personnel categories of the College of Engineering and Tech nology budget also is committed, said Dean Stanley Liberty. The college is operating on the assumption that next mdg coll d Police arrest 49 in local drug raid By Donna Sisson Staff Reporter Nearly 50 people were arrested and more than $600,000 in personal prop erty and illegal drugs were confiscated in a series of drug raids Wednesday morning. No UNL students were arrested. The raids were the result of Opera tion Southern Line an investigation conducted over the past four years by the personnel from the Lincoln and UNL Policej the Nebraska State Patrol, the Drug Enforcement Agency, the FBI, the Internal Revenue Service and the Lancaster County Sheriffs Office. Organized Criminal Drug Enforce ment in Nebraska Task Force has been working on the case for about VA. years, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Kokrda. UNL police have been part of the et cut student eait semester's class schedule will remain unchanged, even with large budget cuts, he said. The college may have to close some courses eventually, but such closings would not be possible next semester, Liberty said. The engineering college depends heavily on part-time teachers to fill class schedules. Liberty said layoffs to cut sections of these courses would create havoc among students unable to get courses in the proper sequence for graduation. No classes in the College of Journal ism are expendable, said Dean R. Neale Copple. But, he said, if budget cuts eliminate many part-time facutly mem bers, the number of course sections offered will be cut. Coppl&said most of the Journalism College's 1,036 students can get needed courses. But, offering fewer sections will cause many students to delay tak ing necessary courses, he said. "We have the leanest budget of any major journalism program in the coun try," he said. Copple said the college has main tained its high reputation despite a student-professor ratio that is nearly double the average ration of other Big Eight journalism schools. The Journalist laboratory newspaper, operation of KRNU radio and other profession-oriented programs in the college could be eliminated to com pensate for budget cuts, he said. That would hurt the reputation of the school, he said. "We've pushed the facultyjust about as far as we car " Copple said. drug unit for about three years, said Gail Gade, director of the department. Three or four UNL police officers were involved in the case, he said. About 100 law officers from the various agencies were involved. Seventy-four people were charged in 12 indictments issued Oct. 18 by the Federal Grand Jury in Omaha. The indictments alleged that these people were invovled in a series of conspira cies to distribute cocaine, maryuana and LSD in Lincoln. The various federal charges included selling, distribution andor possession with intent to distribute controlled substances, use of communications systems in the distribution of con trolled substances and transporting controlled substances across state lines. . The arrests are just the beginning of the court process for the case, which could last more than a year, Kokrda said. j j Daily -n University of Nebraska-Lincoln Native Americans say life is taken for granted By Jane Campbell Staff Reporter When Charlee Archambault came to UNL from the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota, she said, she thought people didn't respect each other. Archambault, now a sophomore, said people stress respect for life at her home. At UNL, she said, it seems as though life is taken for granted. "We were told you never know when life will end so you should try to be kind to each other," she said. "You don't want to leave bad feel ings behind." Most UNL freshmen experience some culture shock when they begin college. But for 'about 35 Native American UNL students, the shock is stronger. Besides adjusting to the univer sity, roommates and a larger com munity, Native Americans often encounter major cultural differen ces, said Webster Robbins, an asso ciate professor of ethnic studies at UNL. "Values on the reservation are not the typical middle-class values," he said. Although many people on the reservation are poor and unemploy ASUN votes By Jen Deselms Staff Reporter The ASUN Senate passed an amend ment Wednesday supporting construc tion of the proposed Lied Center for the Performing Arts. Sen. Jerry Roemer said the senate supported the center because Nebraska needs a performing arts center and the money from the Lied Foundation, a gift f; v Archambault ment and alcoholism rates are high, Archambault said, people would offer everything they have to others. Archambault said Native Ameri cans don't express themselves verb ally. "If somebody did something I didn't like," she said, "I wouldn't say anything, out of respect." Archambault said most people have no eye contact with each other. When she came to UNL, she said, eye contact made her nervous. Con temporary Native Americans are be ginning to have eye contact, she said, but many still feel uncom fortable. "I've never seen my grandparents look at each other (in the eye)," she said. Archambault said she thinks Native Americans avoid eye contact out of respect for the other person. Archambault said she has never had eye contact with her 6-year-old brother. "(Avoiding eye contact) is not something you're told," she said. "It's something you grow up with." Native Americans are taught to respect everything the land, the people, and especially their elders, said Shawn Bordeaux, a freshman who also is from the Rosebud Indian to support to the university, can't be used for any thing else. "We would be fools to turn it down," Roemer said. The center is being financed by a $10 million gift from the late Ernst Lied, a former Omaha businessman. The uni versity has raised another $10 million in private contributions. "It's the biggest single contribution to the university ever," Roemer said. Vol. 85 No. 44' N David CreamerDaily Nebraskan Reservation. "White people don't respect one another as much," Bordeaux said. He said he has met people at UNL who walk into another person's room and help themselves to what ever is in the refrigerator. Bordeaux said he was taught to knock and show courtesy in another person's home. Respect is part of his religion, he said. Catholicism, integrated with traditional Native American cus toms and ceremonies, is the pre dominant religion on the Rosebud Reservation. Bordeaux said many people are naive about Native Americans. He said he met a girl at UNL who thought Native Americans still lived in tipis. "Yeah," Bordeaux said, "I have a four-bedroom tipi with two bath rooms." People judge others for being Native American, he said. Bordeaux said he hasn't been affected as an individual by prejudice at UNL, but many people can't tell he is half Native American. People who have darker skin and typical Native American features probably are more affected, he said. Please see NATIVE on 7 Lied Center J r ( The resolution gives ASUN's reasons for supporting construction, including: O The Lied Center is vital to stu dents' cultural growth and development; ' P It fills a cultural void; O Ernst Lied estate is giving $10 million as a challenge gift, and univer sity supporters statewide and nation wide have responded with more than $10 million in additional support. Please see ASUN on 7