WEATHER: INDEX Thursday, mostly sunny, high mid 50s, News Digest.2 light SE breeze 15 mph. Thursday night, Editorial.4 partly cloudy, low mid-30s, Friday, high Sports'008.13 23, 1989 University of Nehraska-Lincoln_ Vol. 88 No. 127 Student control of fees rejected By David G. Young Staff Reporter SUN Sen. Brian Svoboda said he thinks students will gain more control over student fees in the future despite action taken by the Committee for Fees Allocation Tuesday night. CFA voted 6-1 to reject a bill submitted by Svoboda that would urge changes in bylaws of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln to allow for direct student allocation of University Pro grams and Facilities Fees. V s v A SS ‘ > s , % 7 get a sense that the natives are getting rest less.’ ~Svoboda Under the current structure, UPFF alloca tions go through the Association of Students of the University of Nebraska, Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs James Griesen, Chancellor Martin Massengale and the NU Board of Re gents. avoooua saiu ne ininits uns sysicui pruuauiy will change. “I think that there will be questioning of the student fee process in the future,” he said. ‘‘For ASUN’s sake, it should be ASUN who takes a lead in this move. “I get a sense that the natives are getting restless,” he said, “that people want change in student government. I hope that student gov ernment realizes this before it’s too late.” If the bill had been passed, Svoboda said, it completely would have changed “the attitude of the student body that ASUN has no power. ’ * “I want to give (ASUN) something to do that has a real binding effect,’ ’ he said. “I think that can only be done through a structural change.” Svoboda said he was surprised CFA mem bers questioned the bill. ‘ *Tt cave c/Mn^thinntn mr» ahrtnt th/a ahi litv rtf " J ---O —--/ - ' our student leaders to engage in thoughtful debate,” Svoboda said. CFA member Jill Durbin said giving stu dents total control over student tees would cause more problems than it would solve. ‘‘I don’t think people at UNL would want CFA to have total control,” she said. “If I had total control, I’d have to quit school to look at these budgets.” Svoboda disagreed. “I think that argument is a kind of red herring,” he said. “It implies that CFA is not doing an adequate job now with the student fee process. If CFA is doing its job now, it should be able to do its job regardless of who is making See CFA on 3 ■S inn , , ... . -—--——.”.... i wmwn uuw/uwy inanMwi 1 UNL Chancellor Martin Massengale talks wHh journalist end former U.S. State Department spokesman Bernard Kalb before Kalb’s speech Wednesday. I Kalb: Reporters are surrogates By Brandon Loomis Former journalist and U.S. State De partment spokesman Bernard Kalb said that despite the public's view that journalists are pushy, reporters should press harder to disclose government actions and policies. Kalb, who gave the year’s final Coopcr UNL series lecture Wednesday, said jour nalists are the "surrogates” of the Ameri can public and need to pry into government affairs so Americans know what their gov ernment’s policies are. Kalb worked for CBS and NBC news from 1962 until 1984. He was a State De partment spokesman in 1985 and 1986. Having had first-hand experience, Kalb said the government unnecessarily covers up issues when it should discuss its policies and get feedback from citizens "An administration should disclose more and classify less,” he said, so the public will understand policies. “You cannot create a policy that is in full collision with what America stands for and what Americans perceive of the world,” Kalb said, referring to the Vietnam War, when the U.S. government ignored public sentiment. He said the State Department gives its spokesmen carefully-previewed answers for reporters’ questions, with obscure back up categories of answers labeled “If pressed,” and “If pressed further,” in case reporters are persistent However, information is sometimes withheld for legitimate national security reasons, Kalb said. But the government does hide facts for ridiculous reasons, he said, or for no other reason than to avoid embarrassment. Spokesmen often respond to questions by telling journalist old news. “There’s a heavy percentage of re sponses ... that are suffering from acute anemia.” When the government will not disclose information, he said, reporters should dig for it, pressing spokesmen until they talk. If the spokesmen won’t talk, reporters should find die information themselves, he said. “The fact that the doors are locked doesn’t mean that you (reporters) stop being aggressive,” he said. The nosey image of the press is a product of planning by the White House, he said. Former President Ronald Reagan staged confrontations with the press near helicop ters and noisy areas to make reporters seem rude to television viewers, Kalb said, “That’s precisely what the White House wanted them to think.” In response to a question about how ag gressive the Soviet press has become under glasnost, Kalb said Soviet reporters write about the evils of Stalin and the stagnant Soviet economy, but are still restrained by the government “There is still the quick, brutal hand of censorship,” Kalb said. “The idea of criti cizing Gorbachev is a no-no.” Regents meet nationally to discuss issues I By Eric Pfanner Staff Reporter ix members of the NU Board of Regents were among 1,500 LI regents and trustees from around the United States who gath ered in Boston last weekend to dis cuss issues affecting higher educa tion. Rosemary Skrupa of Omaha said that at one meeting she attended dur ing tne Association ot uoveming Boards for Higher Education Confer ence, the consensus of governing board members was that student re gent votes should be unofficial. Donald Fricke of Lincoln, Robert Allen of Hastings, Kermit Hansen of Elkhom, Don Blank of McCook, and Nancy Hoch of Nebraska City also attended the conference, which lasted from Saturday to Tuesday. Skrupa said those who said they supported the unofficial student vote m the meeting opposed omciai votes because they were a “conflict of interest” for the student regent, Skrupa said. At some universities, she said, student regents are not chosen by student vote. At the University of Maryland, student regents are chosen by a “selective process” of the re gents, she said. If candidates are re viewed favorably, she said, they can be “eligible to become part of the club.” oKrupa saia sne is giaa rs u siuucni regents are elected by the student body because in the past, the elected student regents have done an “out standing” job. Hansen said the conference was divided into two parts. Sessions Sat urday and Sunday were for new re gents, while sessions Monday and Tuesday dealt with specific problems faced by governing boards, he said. Skrupa said one interesting ses sion concerned the effects of student loans on society, dome speakers saiu women and minorities have diffi culty paying back student loans on time. Therefore, she said, these speak ers proposed starting payback pro grams for these loans two years or more after graduation, instead of af ter six months, as is commonly done now. Some of the sessions also con See REGENTS on 3 lASUN rejects bonuses for three legal services employees I By Ryan Steeves Stiff Reporter r ■ i he Association of Students of the University of Nebraska Wednesday night struck down a proposal to give $150 in bonuses to three employees of Student Legal Services. Senators voted 17-3 against the resolution proposed by Committee for Fees Allocation member Keith Malo. Some senators and ASUN President Jeff Petersen said it is an inappropriate way to allocate money. The proposal would have given a $50 bonus to Shelley Stall, director of legal services, Susan Tast, part-time attorney, and secretary Mary Henres. Sen. Missy Peters, a member of CFA, said the services’ employees “performed their duties beyond the job description by far’’ and deserve the bonus. Peters, who represents the College of Arts & Sciences, said the attorneys get paid much less than Lincoln attor neys. A bonus would have shown that senators appreciate the employees’ performance, she said. The $50 bonus is half the amount of an earlier bonus approved this year for two other ASUN employees, Pe ters said. ASUN voted on March 8 to appro priate $100 to Marlene Beyke, ASUN director of development, and Paula Allen, ASUN executive/senate secre tary. Sen. Chip Drcescn of the College of Arts & Sciences said the appropria tion to Beyke and Allen was approved for performing extra duties after Jackie McCullough, an administra tive assistant for the Government Liaison Committee, resigned Jan. 16. Dree sen said employees in legal serv ices have simply performed their job. Sen. Jill Durbin of the College of Arts & Sciences said ASUN should allocate more money to employees through budgets, not bonuses. “But now we need to be realistic about how we spend our money,” Durbin said. Sen. T.K. Olson of the College of Law voted for the bill, saying the employees deserve the bonus for handling an increased workload. Olson said it takes an enormous amount of time to prepare that many cases. “There’s a tremendous amount of work,” he said, “and I think son)e reward is in order.”