CORRECTION^ In a story about the goals of new NU regents, William Swanson was mistakenly elected a regent. He is the NU corporate secretary WEATHER: Monday, partly sunny and not as p5*f.,5)l9e3t.\ cold, high 35-40 with S winds at 10-15 mph. sports . 9 Monday night, partly cloudy, low in the mid 20s. Arts & Entertainment. ... 6 Tuesday, mostly doudy. high around 40. Classified.7 November 28,1988 University of Nebraska-Lincoln Vol. 88 No. 62 UNL and Lincoln industry play with park By David Holloway Senior Reporter Economic competition is driving the Uni versity of Nebraska-Lincoln and indus try together with the city’s proposed Research and Development Park, according to John Yost, UNL vice chancellor for research and dean of graduate studies. “University researchers will be able to col laborate with industrial scientists like never before,” Yost said. “The park will develop a kind of brokerage between the university and industries.” The park is still in the planning stages, Yost said, but the plans are based on “solid founda tions.” He said research at the park will involve subjects important to Nebraska such as bio technology, engineering research and water quality improvement. Yost said university and industry research was separate during the 1950’s when America was at its height of industrial competition. In the past 25 years, however, university research and industry slowly have been driven together, he said. UNL Chancellor Martin Masscngale and Lincoln Mayor Bill Harris appointed officials to the Research and Development Park com mittee last December to find a location for the park, Yost said. Yost said he and others had wanted plan&for such a park for a long lime. He said the final location remains to be announced by the com mittee. The Highlands subdivision, northwest of Lincoln, has been proposed. The park will offer a “world of ideas” from university research, Yost said. “Oulof the 100 or more research parks in the United States, I have found the most successful parks to be driven by the strength of the re search of the universities,” Yost said. The park will benefit the university in many different ways, Yost said, mainly through fac ulty and money profits. “The park will enable faculty to do research, which, through industrial commercialization, will bring money back to the university,” Yost said. Yost said the park will not only retain the present researching faculty, but also “recruit faculty because of relations with businesses and industries.” “The parks are going to continue to be a trend of the future,” Yost said. “Businesses, industries and universities are coming together to maintain research strength and economic growth.” Yost said UNL will not have to help pay for the park. “Federal and private funds will be the main contributors to the park,” Yost said. “We hope industries and the government will support the park when they see the university’s involve ment.” John Bruce/Daily Nebraskan lax bill promotes college education By Eve Nations Staff Reporter A lax bill recently passed by Con gress includes a provision that will help parents who are sav ing to pay for their children’s college educations. The bill provides a lax ex emption for interest earned on U.S. savings bonds redeemed to pay col lege expenses. Susan Olson, an assistant to Doug Bercuter, R-Neb., said to qualify for the lax exemption, bonds must have been purchased by the person seeking the exemption, and owned solely by the person or their spouse. Bonds purchased by someone under the age of 24, or purchased by a parent and put in a child’s name, will not qualify for the exemption, Olson said. “It is a measure to allow parents to put away money on government sav ings bonds,” she said. “If they use the money to pay college expenses, the money is tax exempt.” Olson said the measure was in cluded in the tax bill because “Con gress was looking for a way to help in financing educations.” The bill is designed mainly to help lower income families, Olson said. The.lax exemption is phased out for persons Tiling joint returns with in comes between $60,000and $90,000, and single returns with incomes be tween $40,000 to $55,000, she said. The exemptions arc eliminated en tirely above those incomes. “It’s a real help to low-income students who don’t qualify for fund ing,” Olson said. “It is a help for families to save for the future.’' Depending on the amount of the savings bonds, the savings could be substantial, Olson said. He said the bill is a real help for the future. “The savings bond exemption will bccfTcctivc in 1990, and apply only to U.S. savings bonds scries EE that are issued in 1989 and thereafter," she said. December completion date set HUSKERnet will make universal access By Adam T. Branting Staff Reporter HUSKERnel, a University of Ne braska-LincoIn computer net* work that is set to be completed in December, will allow students to access computers virtually anywhere in the world, said a UNL computer specialist. Gerald Kulish, associate director of UNL’s Computing Resource Cen ter, said HUSKERnel will allow stu dents to send, receive and log infor mation between computers. Kuush said the system is run simi lar to a telephone system, with com puters linked together by a network of fiber optic cable. This allows a com puter to “talk” to others on campus, including microcomputers. HUSKERncl is linked to MIDnct, a system headed by UNL that allows Big Eight schools to speak to one another, which, in turn is linked to the National Science Foundation net work. The National Science Founda tion network is linked to ARPAnel, which is one of the networks of the Department of Defense. It is through the ARPAnel system that students, if they have they access codes, can reach virtually any com puter in the world, he said. “Three years ago, none of this could have happened,” Kutish said. Kutish said the network is a major advance in education because it will allow all departments on campus to speak with colleagues and to access information from other colleges and universities. “We have people on this campus who do research in other places and log into other computers, and they do it to us,” Kutish said. Kutish estimated that it cost UNL $200,000 per year during the past three years to install the fiber optic cables for HUSKERnet. Kutish said that because all instal lation was done by the resource cen ter, the cost was considerably less than if an outside contractor had been brought in. “I don’t think that, in our experi ence, local companies could do this kind of work,” Kutish said “They don’t have the experience.” Kutish said the network could tx installed in residence halls and some fraternities and sororities in the near future if grant money comes through. ‘Buddies’ to help, comfort Lincoln AIDS victims By Brandon Loomis Staff Reporter Starting in January, Lincoln AIDS victims will have “bud dies” to help them through trying times. Susan Garwood, a University of Nebraska-Lincoln health services senior, said the Nebraska AIDS Proj ect-funded Buddy Support System is already strong in Omaha. Garwood, a volunteer “buddy,” told the Mayor’s Task Force on AIDS that volunteers in the project provide emotional and physical support to victims. Volunteers do everything from taking clients to the doctor to buying groceries and listening to their prob lems, Garwood said. “You do everything they need that you arc willing to do, she said. “But the main thing you do is just be there with them.” Garwood said Lincoln needs the project, so volunteers don't have to travel to Omaha for training. The Omaha project has trained 24 volun teers, and some work with two clients. but only a few operate in Lincoln, she said. Buddies-in-training will spend three Saturdays starting Jan. 28 learn ing active listening, counseling tech niques and pastoral care, Garwood said. Volunteers should be committed to staying with their clients until death, she said, though there is no formal obligation. Garwood said she recently lost one of her clients. She said volunteers have to be trained not only to help their clients cope, but to be prepared to handle the death themsqlves. “Being a buddy is really pretty • i, intense,” she said. “It’s like losing your brother.” Only stable people who can handle becoming attached to someone and then losing them should volunteer, Garwood said. For others, the Ne braska AIDS Project sponsors a pro gram in which volunteers provide the physical support AIDS patients need, but do not become emotionally in volved. Garwood said college students should be particularly concerned about Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, and should do all they can to help viclimsof the disease. She said that one in every 300 college students tests positive for the disease. AIDS will also become an incrcas ing economic burden on sociei), Garwood said. During the average two years from diagnosis to death, sh said, each AIDS patient costs aboo* $130,000 in health care. The Buddy Support System i‘ designed to alleviate much of thus cost by keeping the patients out of hospitals, Garwood said. tlOur society is just going to have to develop more of these systems, because we're not going to be able to afford the cost of AIDS," she said.