WEATHER: INDEX Wednesday, sunny and warm, high in the mid 70s with south winds 10 to 20 mites per hour. News Digest.2 Clear Wednesday night, low of 50. Thursday, Editorial 4 sunny, breezy and warm, high in the low 80s. „ Friday through Sunday, warm and dry, highs in TZ. Pntortainm_nt “' i n the 80s and lows in the 50s. Arts 4 Entertainment.10 Classifieds.10 September 27,1989 ____ University of Nebraska-Lincoln*. Vol. 89 No. 22 Parking complaints continue as students press for changes By Emily Rosenbaum Staff Reporter Student complaints and sug gestions voiced at Monday’s open session of the Parking Advisory Committee will be consid ered and some changes will be imple mented, said committee members and University of Nebraska-Lincoln officials. , Lt. John Burke, University of Nebraska-Lincoln parking adminis trator, said the committee will give top priority to concerns about parking lot safety, which students brought up at the session. There is no lighting at the lot at 19th and R streets, but lights will be installed there as soon as possible, Burke said. Limited funding and the high cost of installing lights make it difficult to complete the project quickly, he said. Six months ago, estimates showed it would cost $39,000 to put in lights at the 19th and R lot, he said. “Safety is an utmost concern,’’ said Mark McVicker, landscape manager for the East Campus grounds and a member of the com mittee. “I don’t want anyone to feci afraid walking to their car.” __McViflrw cai^ Ki» ljj^ ji\ see plans made for a parking garage on campus, but now the parking budget is “bursting at the seams.” “The money has got to come f rom somewhere,” McVicker said. Burke said students and faculty members would have to pay $40 a month to park in a 600-space parking garage to help offset the $3 million initial cost of the structure. “Right now I just don’t see how we can do it without raising people’s rates and that isn’t fair,” Burke said. Franz Blaha, Faculty Senate rep resentative to the parking committee, said he wants to see available space used beforeadding any more parking. “I don’t agree with the complaint that there isn’t sufficient parking,” he said. Blaha said he loured the parking area near the Bob Devaney Sports CenierTuesday morningand saw 500 to 700 empty commuter stalls. “1 can understand the frustration of students who can’t find close spaces, but it is not true that there arc not any parking spaces,” he said. Blaha said complaints from stu dents about the long walk to and from the outlying areas are not valid. He said a walk from R Street to the parking lot near the Devaney Sports Center Tuesday took him 15 minutes. ‘‘We want students to get to cam pus, but convenience is not one of our top concerns,” McVicker said. ‘‘There are always people that aren’t going to have that front spot,” Burke said. Kyle Haubcrg, student representa tive to the committee, said the periph eral parking lots are not feasible be cause of the long distance from cam pus. The lots could be made accessible through a shuttle system, which is one of the suggestions the parking committee will consider, Hauberg said. The university already uses the asy ride” system to transport stu dents on New Student Enrollment and Red Letter Days, Burke said. The vans also were used last w inter during extremely cold days to transport stu dents. Burke said itcosts about 30cents a person to maintain the vans, which would make the shuttle system an affordable possibility. ‘‘Eveiy year things change,” Burke said. ‘‘What worked last year might not work this year.” Ray Coffey, business manager of business and finance at UNL, said the committee also will look into provid ing additional and closer spaces for commuter students. Another possibility is making special permits available to students, such as a Tuesday/Thursday permit and cheaper rates for outlying park ing areas, Coffey said. Blaha said the committee will study faculty lots that students See PARKING on 7 /»• » r» David Fahleson/Daily Nebraskan In Defined Space Kim Hervert, junior business major, studies Tuesday afternoon in the Sheldon sculpture Kirden next to “Sandy - In Defined Space." The bronze sculpture was created by Richard iller in 1967. Ecology Now asks students to recycle Editor’s Note: This is the first story in a four-part series about recy cling. By Jana Pedersen Senior Reporter ' As the beginning of what they hope will become a cam puswide recycling program, members of the UNL student group Ecology Now are preparing to audit waste products generated in Ne braska Union. James Zank, Ecology Now s recy cling committee coordinator, said(i)l7f'W>jrf 17 the group eventu- ItHtv HLU!i ally wants to imple-lIFTYf I V ment a recycling program for all wEfc^YOJi the University 17 Ncbraska-Lincoln, liluly X involving several nvr'iVPl 17 different types of IHHI'H'Ml waste products. As a first step, he said, the group will audit just two products, paper and aluminum, in the union Oct. 9 through 20. “These programs don’t automati cally work,’’Zank said. “They take a while to gel motivated in the right way and get cooperation from the university system to make them work properly. So right now, we’re basi cally at step one.” To conduct the audit, Zank said, metal barrels, donated by the Game and Parks Commission, will be used as receptacles for collecting recy clable paper products, and plastic bins will be used to collect aluminum cans. Ecology Now will place recep tacles throughout the union, Zank said. They will have bright colors so people will notice them, he said. After recyclable products are gathered in the bins, he said, they will e weighed and compared to the total See RECYCLE on 6 AIDS pamphlet to list services and hotlines By Jana Pedersen Senior Reporter A list of resources for students who want support services or information on AIDS soon will be available through the Univer sity Health Center. Margaret Nellis, head of the com munity health department at the Uni versity Health Center, said the list of resources will be included in a pam phlet that is being developed by the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s Task Force on AIDS Education. The pamphlet does not contain preventive information, Nellis said, but instead is a list of how students can get help or information if they want it. “We wanted to point out services on campus,” Nellis said, “not only for people who might be infected with the HIV virus, but also for fam ily members of people with the virus and others who might know someone with the virus.” Right now the pamphlet, called “AIDS Resources for the UNL Community,” is in rough draft form, but it should be ready for distribution in a few weeks, she said. Included in the pamphlet will be a list of services offered by the health center, a list of community support ‘We wanted to point out services on campus.. .’ — Nellis groups and professional counseling available in Lincoln, a list of AIDS information hotlines and a list of drug and alcohol referral centers as well as other information, Nellis said. She said the task force also devel oped the pamphlet to send a message to the university community that UNL needs to and does provide re sources for those affected. The task force also offers AIDS education programs and distributes American College Health Associa tion pamphlets that include informa tion on transmission and prevention of AIDS, Nellis said. Another project the task force is working on, she said, is printing post See AIDS on 7 City planning Plains Indian culture center By Cindy Wostrel Suff Reporter The city of Lincoln an nounced Tuesday that it is planning a Plains In dian culture center. The center wjll be estab lished to preserve Plains Indian culUiie and to draw tourists from Interstate 80, said Steve Sands, chairman of a task force working on the project The center will benefit people of all races and the citi zens of Nebraska, but also will serve people who visit from other parts of the country, Sands said. Sands said a center such as this is important for conserving the culture of this area. A task force has been formed to evaluate possible best devel opment routes, and will have three subcommittees to direct the planning of the center, Sands said. A