Friday Weather: Today, high around 28 with a chance of flurries. Low about 1 7. Weak winds from the northeast. Temperatures de clining for the weekend, with teens expected. New film parodies celebrity myths Arts and Entertainment, page 9 Saturday wrestling often three top-15 ranked teams Sports, page 6 I 7 . Tl P?lTl February 7, 1986 University of Nebraska-Lincoln Vol. 85 No. 97 r" rr,v-,n, ,. I ' Hi I I I 1 M 1 King of the crane Ml Mark DavisDaily Nebraskan Francis Seberger of D.E.B. Construction Company in Perry, Iowa, takes a couple of minutes off before refilling the gas tank on the crane. Seberger is in charge of demolishing the former University Publishing building. "She's a tough one," Seberger said of the building, which has taken almost two weeks to bring down. The company originally had planned to spend a week demolishing the building, Seberger said. Seberger said he enjoys the job. "I never go home mad," he said. ASUW approves budoet committee By Kent Endacott Senior Reporter ASUN senators Wednesday approved a proposal to form an evaluation com mittee to review budget cuts for 1986-87. On a unanimous voice vote, ASUN approved an Academic Planning Com mittee proposal to form an ad hoc budget review committee to hear faculty and student responses on budget cuts within specific areas. ASUN president Gerard Keating said the committee will involve student- in the budgetary process. "It will give students a chance to give their opinions on cuts," he said. "It's open." The proposed committee would be composed of APC members and repre sentatives from the UNL Office of Busi ness Affairs and Student Affairs. It also would include two undergraduate and two graduate students. Faculty Senate president Desmond Wheeler, who negotiated for three hours with the APC on the wording of the document Wednesday, said the document has been amended to the point of acceptibility. Wheeler wrote a letter to the committee criticizing the proposal because it did not provide faculty members the opportunity to UML t m $25,0 fund to atirao'S SYaisnoGlty faculty By Todd von Kampen Senior Reporter A special fund to attract minority faculty members to UNL should help counter the university's image as a "really lily-white" institution, UNL's affirmative action director said Thurs day. Martin Bradley Munn said the $25,000 fund, if spent properly, could allow UNL to bring in several candi dates for each faculty vacancy and take a closer look at qualified minority candidates. Robert Furgason, vice chancellor for Academic Affiars, set up the fund as part of a drive to encourage search committees to look at more minorities. Furgason said the money was set aside when UNL administrators were deciding on permanent budget cuts for 1986-87. Despite the $1 million reduc tion Furgason said, the minority fund needed to be established. "We don't think that overnight we'll have 40 Chicanos, blacks or Native Americans on this faculty," Munn said. "But if we can get five or seven or eight or 10, that will be a tremendous in crease for this university." Furgason outlined his plans for re cruiting more minority faculty members in a Jan. 31 memorandum to UNL's Academic Deans Council. He said UNL needs to try harder to recruit minori ties to improve the high ratio of white faculty members to minorities. The testify on proposed cuts within their programs. In response, the APC amended the document to say: "Every attempt will be made to provide oral testimony from those directly affected by the proposed budget reduction with the time availa ble to the committee." Wheeler said he is pleased with the proposal and that it is likely to pass at Tuesday's Faculty Senate meeting. But, he said, the time schedule doesn't give UNL Chancellor Martin Massengale enough time to evaluate the cuts before advancing them to the NU Board of Regents. After deliberating on the ad hoc committee's report, the APC will report to the Massengale on March 31. The APC also amended the proposal in response to Wheeler's charge that faculty members wouldn't have ade quate access to materials on proposed budget cuts. Under the original proposal, copies of proposed cuts would be placed on file in the Office of Institutional Research and Planning. The amend ment calls for the budget reduction proposals to be filed at a second loca tion open for public access. AH deans and department chairmen whose programs are involved in budget reductions will be notified by Monday. Daily Nebraskan reported Oct. 10 that 1,062 members of UNL's faculty were white and 70 were black, Hispanic, Native American and Asian. Several factors contribute to the lack of minority faculty members at UNL, Furgason said. They include: Lincoln's small minority pop ulation. O Competition from other institu tions who want "minorities of good quality" on their faculties. O Few vacancies in fields such as teacher education and social sciences, which have a large supply of minority candidates. O Competition from the private sector. Minorities with doctorates in engineering and computer science, Furgason said, often are more inter ested in getting a job than they are in teaching. Furgason said he doesn't think racial discrimination has kept minority fac ulty members away from UNL. Studies of the extent of discrimination have not singled out UNL, he said. The $25,000 fund, Furgason said, could be used to provide travel ex penses for minority candidates to come to UNL for interviews. He said the search committees also could announce and advertise vacancies more widely, look for candidates at more schools with high percentages of minority stu-, dents and offer fellowships for them to come to UNL and work on advanced degrees. Search committees should be care ful to keep job descriptions from being so specific that a large number of can didates would not qualify, Furgason said. Furgason said use of quotas to ensure hiring of minority faculty members was ruled out by a U.S. Supreme Court rul ing in 1978 that banned the use of inflexible quota systems. Munn bristled at the idea that quotas could be used. "Quotas are illegal," he said. "They've been illegal since the begin ning of time. Some people at this uni versity don't like me because I don't allow quotas." In the past, Munn said, UNL could afford only to bring in the single most qualified candidate for an interview. The fund, he said, will help UNL take advantage of its central location be cause it should be able to bring candi dates to Lincoln for no more than $500. Munn said increasing the number of minority faculty members is important if students are to receive a better pic ture of life outside UNL. The Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources, which oversees the UNL College of Agriculture and related programs, has no similar plan to seek out minority faculty members. But the omission was not intentional, said Alan Moeller, assistant for finance and per sonnel to institute vice chancellor Roy Arnold. See FACULTY on 8 Former South African to address apartheid at Model United Nations By Scott Thien Staff Reporter South African native Donald Woods, noted author and lecturer on apartheid and South African pol icies, will speak Wednesday at UNL's Model United Nation Conference. Woods, a former editor-in-chief of the Daily Dispatch, a South African newspaper, is a fifth-generation, white South African banned from South Africa because of his ediu. ial criticisms of the country's govern mental policies. About 400 people are expected to participate in the 19th annual con ference, which will be Wednesday through Feb, 1 5, s:id Georgia Patios, general secretary. Although most of the participants are UNL students, Panes said, many other groups, in eluding several local high schools and c-ut-cf-state colleges, will pnrtici- The conference is a mock U.N. General Assembly session Partici pants chocca a country, research its ticr.d policies and then represent that country in discussions similar to these cf the actual organization. ncl pcui- cn ccntGi to drL. tr ficking and agricultural develop ment. "It's a great opportunity for peo ple to learn about the United Nations," Panos said, "and to take a viewpoint different than that of the (United States). "All countries have something to say, no matter what the topic or if the issue cf discussion involves thera directly or not." Although interest in the UNL conference hit a low four years ago, Panos said support is increasing again because of the November Geneva summit between President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev and the rash of terrorist attacks, Amor the mere popular coun tries to be represented at the con ference this year are the U.N. Secur ity Council timbers France China, the Soviet Union, the United King dom and the United States, and non merabcrs Mexico, El Salvador, Can ada, Iran End Irs. To participate in the conference, Panos zdi, participants must form a cz'.'y cf dree to six delegates befora thsy can request a country. A:r they apply, participants are assipjJ their preferred .country !indi ciCwSSiCn tcpic if evcliIiLIBj ar.i zn vcrt a har.dbock outlining conference rules and procedures. Participants also must pay an application fee of $28 for UNL stu dents and $38 for nonstudents, Panos said. About half of the $10,000 confer ence is paid for by University Pro gram Gouncit funds. The rest is made up by application fees dona tions and admission charges, Panos said. The conference is free to stu dents with UNL identification cards and costs $2 for the public. "Our conference is unique be cause we involve both college and high school students," Panos said, "and also because we're one of the few conferences that is funded by student fees." Panos also said the United Na tions Association will a,vard $74 and $100 scholarships to hih school and college delegates for outstand ing participation in the conference. The conference is ideal for stu dents because it provides an oppor tunity to meet people and promote campus involvement, Panos said, and improves speaking skills a quality employers often lock for during interviews. For more information about the Model United Nations, contact Georgia Panos in the Nebraska Union 200 or 237, or callNUPC at 472-2454, 411 II iG u S:;W wi:i f ' ' ii ,