Weather: Friday, mostly sunny, very cold, high of 5-10 above. Friday night, mostly clear, 5-10 below. Saturday, mostly sunny, not as cold, high 10-15 above. A&E: Cleaning up the Temple. —Page 6. Sports: Nebraska men’s gymnastics coach Francis Allen is prepared for twj crucial meets. —Page 8. Foundation gets $10 million endowment By Anne Mohri Senior Reporter University of Nebraska Foundation officials announced Thursday that they received a S10 million endowment from the late Richard Lar son of Lincoln. The endowment is the largest direct bequest received by the foundation in its 52-ycar his tory, a press release stated. Larson, former state railway commissioner, died Dec. 25, 1987, at the age of 92. Terry Fairfield, foundation president, said the money will be divided equally among four different areas of the university: • University of Nebraska Medical Center at Omaha. • University of Nebraska-Lincoln College of Law. • UNL intercollegiate athletic department. • graduate and undergraduate scholarships at UNL. Each area will be given about $2.5 million to invest. The money donated to UNMC will be used to research emphysema. Larson established the Margret Larson Distinguished Professorship in 1972 in memory of his late wife, according to a university press release. Larson donated money to the UNL College of Law to add to support of the faculty members and any other needs of the college. The money to he donated to the UNL Inter collegiate Athletic Department will be used for athletic scholarships. The rest of the money will be used for graduate and undergraduate scholarships as the foundation sees fit, Fairfield said. Larson’s will was drawn up in 1973 and it said the various areas of UNL were to receive in excess of SI 2 million after money had been donated to other staled charities and individu als, the release said. Fairfield said Larson had a strong feeling for the university. In the past, Larson established professorships for pulmonary research and for the music school and was interested in the College of Law. Larson also had a large interest in water research and quality, and Big Red Boosters, Fairfield said. Before Larson’s death, he had given the university more than S75(),0()() in donations, he said. Larson did not donate money to any of Nebraska’s other post-secondary educational institutions. “His main loyally was to the university,” Fairfield said. Fairfield said Larson adopted the university because he was concerned with Nebraska’s national image. ■IBM_I Dave Hansen/Daily Nebraskan Torah scribe Eric Ray repairs Hebrew letters. Scribe fixes God’s words By Natalie Weinstein Staff Reporter “Lamed,” he sings, then writes the Hebrew letter. “Hay,” he sings, then writes that letter. To ensure he doesn’t make mis takes, he checks each word and letter in a book called the Tikkun. Then he sings each word and letter before he repairs or rewrites it. For almost 25 years, Eric Ray, a scribe, has been writing and repair ing Torahs. The Torah consists of the first five bix>ks of Moses in the Old Testament. Singing serves as a “memory guide” and is a requirement, he said. The 61-year-old Englishman is repairing two of three Torahs at B’nai Jeshurun, one of Lincoln’ s two Jewish congregations. He is repairing one of them here for a week, and will take the other back to England. He will have tp work on that Torah for three to six months, he said. There arc fewer than 100 scribes in the world, Ray said. About 20 of them arc called Master Scribes. Ray is one of them. He can write about 2,000 differ ent scripts. He has repaired or writ ten hundreds of Torahs, he said, including the first Torah released from Russia about 10 years ago. Ray loves his work. “Scribing is the oldest and great est art of the Jewish people,” Ray said. Moses was the first scribe. “It’s a great privilege to work on the words of God,” he said. Ray said he never expected to I>ecomc a scribe. He began his ca reer as an artist. During World War II, he became a guard at Bucking ham Palace in London and later joined the navy. After the war ended he joined the Aliyah Bet, a volunteer group that illegally helped Jews leave Nazi concentration camps. See SCRIBE on 3 pffSK :. ■ ■ ■ .^bB*^ M l £jl, Avt‘tA r‘>i:0ij^ Low attendance at GLC lunches 4Apathy’ mars senators’ visits By Lee Rood Staff Reporter Student apathy at the University of Ncbraska-Lincoln may be hurling efforts to increase faculty salaries, Jeff Petersen, president of the Gov ernment Liaison Committee, said Thursday. Petersen said that through the Senators on Campus program, GLC members have been trying to show senators positive aspects of the uni versity without confronting them about money. Since the program started 1 1/2 weeks ago, 12 senators have come to eat lunch, tour both campusesand talk about university issues. But Petersen estimated only 25 students, mostly GLC members, have attended the lunches. Petersen said the turnout is espe cially disappointing because UNL students, faculty members and ad ministrators have been working hard all year to convince senators that faculty salaries need to be raised. Because the Legislature is ex pected to vote on the faculty salary issue before the end of the month, the Senators on Campus program is the best way for students to do some quick and easy lobbying for faculty salaries, he said. Petersen said when senators and students get together, students usu ally lobby for money. Senators on Campus is a way to let senators see for themselves good things about the university, things that need improvements and pro grams the university risks losing without proper financing, Petersen said. When the program started, GLC members started calling constituents of the 35 senators who agreed to par ticipate in the program, he said. Petersen said hundreds of students were called and told their senator would be on campus. When students don’t show up to tell senators their concerns about the university, Pe • ‘But the whole university is in my district, so I wasn't too disappointed. ’ —Landis tcrscn said, he worries dial the pro gram could do more harm than good. For years senators have had ihc impression that students are apa thetic, and GLC has been working all year to change that, Petersen said. Because students aren’t coming to meet their senators, it may give sena tors the impression that students don’t care, he said. Petersen said senators have said positive things about the program. But because they are politicians, he said, he doubted if senators would admit if it was a waste of time. Sen. Chris Abboud of Ralston, who serves on the Legislature’s Ap propriations Committee, said he was not disappointed with the number of students who met him this week dur ing the program. Abboud estimated about five of his constituents from District 12, as well as GLC members and faculty mem bers, attended the program. But because the meeting only lasted an hour, Abboud said, he couldn’t have talked to too many students and faculty members. Abboud said that from his conver sation w ith students, he could tell they were worried about increasing the caliber of UNL. Students and faculty members said the main w ay to do that is by increas ing research money and faculty sala ries, he said. Sen. Dave Landis of Lincoln said he enjoyed coming to campus Wed nesday. ‘‘I enjoyed the experience and found it educational,” he said. Landis said that while GLC members toured the campus with him, no other students from his dis trict were present. “But the whole university is in my district, so I wasn’t loo disappointed,” he said. Faculty salaries did not come up at the meeting, Landis said, but the stu dents did discuss other issues. Rights violation alleged UNL police sergeant files suit against chief Lincoln (AP) — A University of Nebraska-Lincoln police sergeant has sued UNL Police Director Gail Gadc and other officers, alleging that the sergeant’s civil rights were vio lated in an incident that led to his suspension without pay last fall. Sgt. John Lustrea filed a S2(X),000 lawsuit in U.S. District Court allcg that Gadc and Lustrea’s supervisors, Lt. Ken Caublc and Lt. John Burke, denied him due process of law by suspending him and forcing him to take a lie detector test without cause. Lustrea was suspended after a banner disappeared from an ESPN TV truck he was assigned to watch on Sept. 11-12. He was reinstated after passing a polygraph examination he took under protest. During the examination, he de nied taking the banner or knowing who might have taken it. Lustrea was awarded back pay through internal grievance proce dures at UNL butcontinues to seek an apology and attorney’s fees through iheChanccllor’sGrievanceCommit tee. His attorney Thom Cope of Lin coln, said the grievance procedure has not compensated Lustrea for the damage to his reputation or for civil rights violations. ESPN hired Lustrea as a private security guard during his off-duty hours to watch network trucks and equipment brought to the campus to televise the Sept. 12 Nebraska UCLA football game. When Lustrea checked the trucks at 2:40 a.m. on Sept. 12, he noticed nothing unusual, he said in his federal court suit. His replacement, who came on duty at 3 a.m., discovered the banner missing. Lustrea, who was suspended with out pay after questioning by Burke, says he was not informed of his rights before being questioned. In Sept. 17 and Oct. 2 letters, Gade ordered Lustrea to take the polygraph test or be dismissed, the suit alleges.