CORRECTION In a preview of an upcoming wrestling meet between UNL and Northern Iowa (DN. Feb. 2), a drop quote was attnbuted to UNL basketball coach Danny Nee. UNL wrestling coach Tim Neumann made the comment. _ WEATHER: Friday, blustery winds INDEX and snow, 5-10 below zero with wind chills reaching 40-50 betow zero Friday night. con- Ednonai.4 Itinued cold with temperatures 10-15 degrees Sports.5 betow zero Saturday temperatures 5-10 be- Art & Entertainment. 6 low zero Some relief expected by Tuesday Classifieds.7 February 3, 1989_University of Nebraska-LincolnVot. 88 No. 93 Engineering surcharge could continue By rat uinstage SiWT Reporter and l>ee Rood Senior Hditor Students in the College of Engi neering and Technology could pay a tuition surcharge of S9 per credit hour for the second con secutive year if the Nebraska Legisla ture doesn't approve funding to keep the college’s accreditation. Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs Robert Furgason said the sur charge “is certainly an option that will be considered,” if the Legisla ture doesn’t appropriate $525,000 to the college over the next two years. Furgason said the money, used to replace and update lab equipment in undergraduate programs, is needed to meet accreditation requirements set by the Accreditation Board tor engi neering and Technology during its 1987 visit to the engineering college. Gov. Kay Orr did not include any money for the equipment in her 1989 91 NU budget recommendation, he said. Furgason said that if the Legisla ture does not include the engineering college equipment funding in the final biennial budget, other options will ha'c to be considered or the college’s accreditation will be “in severe jeopardy.” One option would be a continu ation of the surcharge, he said. Another option, Furgason said, includes transferring funds from other university department budgets. Funds also could be taken from the temporary instruction budget, a dis creiionary lund administered oy Academic Affairs. These funds arc currently used to provide extra ses sions of courses in high demand, he said. Stan Liberty, dean of the engineer ing college, said he would never rec ommend the surcharge as an option. “It would have to come from someone else,” he said. To keep its accreditation, Liberty said, the college will need the ongo ing ability to update and replace equipment. Another one-time sur charge won’t do that, he said. The first surcharge, which caused many students to complain last year, served its purpose of showing the accreditation board that the college intends to fix the equipment funding problems, he said. But to solve the problem once and iot an, me siaie ana me university, not students, need to deal with the problem, Liberty said. “I just feci this is something that needs to be dealt within the base budget of the university,” he said. Furgason said he felt NU “ex plained the issue quite well,” to the governor and the Legislature, but understands Orr has to balance the total budgcL If the surcharge is continued for the engineering students, the admini stration may consider surcharges for other departments with similar lab equipment funding problems. Fur gason said those departments could include, but are not limited to, com puter sciences, biological sciences and modem languages. “There arc no simple answers,” he said. “We didn’t used to have the scicniuic equipment nccas mat now exist in (traditional) non-scienlific areas.” Bryan Hill, chairman of the Gov ernment Liaison Committee, said funding problems for lab equipment not only plague the engineering col lege, but the whole university. Hill said the NU Board of Re gents’ two-year budget included re quests for $525,000 in engineering lab equipment and $1.2 million for lab equipment in other UNL depart ments. No money was included for cither in Orr’s budget, he said. Hill said it is unfortunate that UNL officials would consider surcharges to cover the costs of lab equipment, but that the consideration might be just what he needs to get students’ See CHARGE on 2 Bill would require NCAA to abide by due process laws By Jana Pedersen Staff Reporter A bill directing any intercollegiate athletic association to abide by Nebraska’s re *■ ^quircments for due process was ad vanced Thursday out of the Judiciary Commit tee of the Nebraska Legislature. The bill’s sponsor, Sen. Ernie Chambers of Omaha, said LB397 is necessary to prevent national organizations such as the National Collegiate Athletic Association from ignoring due process under the state’s Civil Rights Law when administering sanctions against colleges and universities in Nebraska. Federal requirements for due process under the 14ih Amendment do not apply to private national organizations, according to a recent ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court, Chambers said. Because of this ruling, Chambers said, the state “is now in a situation where the NCAA is not bound by due process to any of the state institutions.” If the bill is passed, he said, future NCAA sanctions against any state college or univer sity could be reversed if the institution can prove the NCAA violated Nebraska due proc ess laws. ‘ ‘Enforcement is placed on the institution,” Chambers said. Richard Wood, vice president and general counsel to the University of Nebraska, spoke in a neutral position on the bill. Wood said the university generally agrees with the bill’s in tent, but said he had some concerns about its legality. According to a 1947 Nebraska Supreme Court decision, the primary purpose of state due process laws applies to government, not private, actions, Wood said. During executive session,Chambers said he would consult Wood further on the constitu tionality of the bill. • NCAA on 2 u - — WMam Lmm/Dally Nafcratiken The UNL E-Z Ride” shuttle will give students rides from parking lots to campus. Van service helps combat weather conditions By Brad Rundquist Suff Reporter The University of Nebraska-Lincoln Police Department started operating a free shuttle van Thursday between the parking lots and campus in response to arctic temperatures. Lt. John Burke, police parking administra tor, said three vans, marked UnL E-Z Ride, will operate “until it warms up/' Burke said the shuttle has no set pick-up points. People wanting a ride should "flag down” the vans, he said. He said that two of the vans have a capac ity of eight and the third can hold IS. The shuttles will begin running at ? a.m., he said, and will run until night classes are done. They will be driven by employees of the UML Police Department, he said. Burke said the idea for the shuttle was ‘Must a good idea” by an employee of his office, and is something they should, and are glad to, provide. He said the shuttle service, including leas ing of the largest van from University Auto pool, costs about $100 a day. The vans have been used in the past to transport people to and from university con ferences, Burke said. Dr. Gerald Bleischli, medical director of the University Health Center, said that no cases of frostbite have been treated so far his year at the health center, but that the shuttle “certainly would help" rediscc the chances. Campbell: Campus Rec refund unnecessary By David G. Young Staff Reporter Student fees allocated to Cam pus Recreation should not be refundable since everyone can benefit from its programs, said Stan Campbell, director of Campus Rec. Campbell presented Campus Rec’s 1989-90 budget request to the Committee for Fees Allocation Thursday. Responding to comments made by CFA member Keith Malo, Campbell told CFA members that using student fees to finance the Campus Recrea tion Center is the same as using fees for the University Health Center. “Physical activity is one of our best forms of health insurance,” Campbell said. ”1 guess I feel that the amount of money going into the rec reation center in light of the services involved is a very reasonable re quest.” Malo had suggested that student fees allocated to Campus Rec, which are non-refundabic Fund B fees, should be refundable, as Fund A fees are. ‘Tm not a Campus Rec person - l don't use the facilities,” Malo said. ”Of all the Fund B users, this is the only one 1 would suggest a refund for. 1 teci like l m being obligated to join the Campus Recreation Center.” Fund A organizations arc the As sociation of Students of the Univer sity of Nebraska, the Daily Nebras kan and the University Program Council. Organizations in Fund B are the Nebraska unions, the University Health Center and Campus Rec. James Griescn, vice chancellor for student affairs, said refunding stu dent fees allocated to Campus Rec is inappropriate because of the costs of processing refunds, Griescn said refunds are made available to Fund A organizations because students may object to ideas presented by r und A tec users, borne students request refunds from fees allocated to the University Program Council because of disapproval for certain speakers, he said. Likewise, Daily Nebraskan refunds are re quested by some students who dis agree with its editorials. This prob lem is not present with Campus Rec, Griesen said. Campus Rec has requested a $7 per student per semester increase in student fees. If the request is ap proved, Campus Rec will receive $963,689 for 1989-90. The 1989-90 student fee request represents an in crease of 32 percent from this year. Campbell said S6.76 per student per semester of the requested in crease is needed to support Phase II ot the Campus Recreation Center. Last year, Campus Rec received a $3.54 per student per semester increase. “There’s no doilbt in my mind that the $6.76 would represent the largest yearly increase.'' he said. “As phase III comes on line, we will have additional services which need to be financed. I'm quite confident that they will not total Quite as high an increase as the $6.76. The remaining 24 cents of the -§i?ePA an 2