The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 17, 1986, Page Page 3, Image 3

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    Friday, October 17, 1986
Daily Nebraskan
Pago 3
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Boosalis says won't pledge to 'cut or not to cut' NU budget
OMAHA (AP) All state programs
would be fair game for budget cuts if
Helen Boosalis were governor, the Lin
coln Democratic candidate told UNO
students Wednesday.
"I can't tell you what programs
would be cut," she said. "If cuts need
to be made, you have to look across the
board at everything."
Boosalis said before any decisions
made would be on potential cuts, she
would analyze the state's budget
carefully.
In response to a student's question,
Boosalis said she would not "pledge to
cut or not to cut" the NU budget until
she had reviewed the budget system.
In a Lincoln speech to state officials
last week, Boosalis said she always has
opposed an across-the-board approach
to budget cutting. Her campaign com
munications director, Roger Aden, said
Wednesday that if elected Boosalis
would examine all programs for possible
cuts but that she does not advocate
arbitrary percentage cuts of all pro
grams. At UNL, Boosalis said, "The university
system is important to me." She lists
education as one of her three major
campaign priorities.
Boosalis said that as mayor of Lin
coln, she developed a comprehensive
system for evaluating government pro
grams, including a set of performance
indicators for city departments.
UNL conference focuses
on French literature
To maintain secondary-education
quality, leaders of both public and
private institutions ought to create a
central planning group, she said. "They
must develop a common data base and
clearly state and understand their mis
sions as valuable, worthwhile research
bases."
She said that instead of relying on
higher taxes for education funds, she
would promote more privately endowed
positions at colleges and universities
and would encourage administrators to
work harder for federal grants.
"The next governor must pay parti
cular attention to the young people of
Nebraska because you are our future,"
she said.
Boosalis said Nebraska should have
an educational system second to none.
"Our governor must lead this state
in such a way that your choices are
magnified" in the job market, she told
the students. "I don't want any of you
to leave Nebraska because you can't
find a job or because the quality of life
is better elsewhere."
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By Shirley Roenfeldt
Staff Reporter
The 1 2th annual Colloquium in Nine
teenth Century French Literature will
be at UNL next Thursday through
Saturday.
Marshall Olds, assistant professor of
French and French literature, said the
colloquium is "one of two or three best,
highly respected literary conferences,
and we are very fortunate to have it on
our campus." It is a "relatively small
but high-quality" event that focuses on
the study of 19th century French
literature in its artistic and social
context, Olds said.
The conference will be international
in scope, with people attending from
Canada, France, Belgium, Switzerland,
Norway and across the United States,
Olds said.
Charles Rosen, "one of the four or
five more prominent concert pianists
in the world today," will give a piano
recital in Kimball Hall at 8 p.m. Thurs
day. "He is also a widely recognized
writer on musical subjects," Olds said.
Rosen was originally invited to speak
at the colloquium. The recital is some
thing extra, he said. Rosen's book,
"The Classical Style: Hayden, Mozart,
Beethoven," won the 1972 National
Book Award, Olds said. Rosen's talk on
French novelist Honore' Balzac and
romantic composer Franz Liszt is also
open to the public, Olds said. UNL
received a grant from the Research
Council to bring Rosen and prominent
literary critic Michael Riffaterre to
UNL The colloquium is also sponsored
by the Office of the Dean of the College
of Arts and Sciences, the Institute for
International Studies, the department
of modern languages and others, he
said.
Riffaterre will handle the third open
session, a talk on semiotics on Friday,
Olds said. Semiotics is the study of
signs and symbols in literature, he
said.
All the events for the colloquium are
scheduled to take place on the second
floor of the Nebraska Union except for
Rosen's recital and lecture, which will
be at Kimball Recital Hall.
The Colloquium previously has been
held at Vanderbilt, Duke and Harvard
Universities and is quite a varied pro
gram, Olds said. For more information
about specific events or to register,
contact the department of modern
languages in Oldfather 1111.
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