P TAT Cl F11 O' O C I" Associated Press X ^ Ww »J JL-X J. CL W L? Edited by Brando ' i^oomis Langford: student immaturity is ‘fact of life’ State Sen. Lorraine Langford says she was right in contending that stu dents aren’t mature enough to vote as members of college governing boards — but she didn’t mean to hurt their feelings when she said so. “1 did say it and I do believe it’s so,” Langford said Wednesday. ‘‘I feel that we should have a student on the board, but they Sen. Langford should not have a vote.” Lawmakers gave first-round ap proval Tuesday to a proposed consti tutional amendment that would allow voters to decide in November if higher education should be coord mated by a Board of Regents of Higher Educa tion and the seven public colleges and university campuses be governed by five-member boards. One member of each of those governing boards would be a voting student. During floor debate last week, the senator from Kearney said supporter? of voting rights for the students were all about 25 years old. “They haven’t raised children They don’t realize that the 18- to 20 ycar-old probably makes the worsi decisions in the world,’’ Langford said last Thursday. “More youn$ people ruin their lives in those twe years than any other lime in thcii lives.” She was immediately chastised b> some senators, and later in ncwspapci columns, including the Lincoln Jour nal. An editorial in the Daily Nebras kan began: “OK, boys and girls, it’s time foi ‘Sen. Langford’s Neighborhood.’ Car you say ‘Out of touch?’ 1 thought yoi could.” “I hurt their feelings,” Langforc said after reading commentary on hci remarks. “I didn’t mean to hurt thcii feelings, but what I’m saying is true. They probably don't even know that “All they have to do is look arounc at their friends and see some of the messes their friends are in. And it’s because they’re not emotionally mature. It’s just a fact of life,” she said. Giving student board members a vote won’t cause students to be any . more interested and involved in the higher education governing process than they already arc, Langford said. “I know full well how involved ; the kids arc. You can’t get them to even vote for their own student sen ates. You can’t get them to vote for their own officers,” she said. ‘‘We have had some fine young people on the boards,” Langford said, “and their input is very important, because after all, we want them to be happy, we want them to have the kind • of courses they want, we want to i supply their needs while they’re in i school. But we arc doing it with our taxes.” I The Daily Nebraskan editorial said that many 18- to 20-year-olds, sup ■ porting themselves while working their way through school, arc quite ca pable of making adult decisions. ‘‘A lot of them work very hard for their tuition,” Langford said. “I feel they should have every opportunity. When someone comes to me and says ‘Well, I’m in school, I work two jobs lo support my family,’ I tell you they have made a bad decision, probably sometime between the age of 18 and 20. “They should not be in school trying to support a family and work ing two jobs. If they want to do that that’s fine, but they have made an error in judgment, because loo many of them in dial situation drop out ol -4 4 My experience conies from working with young sorority girls for years. Sen. Langford -* 9 ~ school, and that’s too bad,” Langford said. “I have only their best interests at heart. And the insult was not to any one student. The insult — if it was an insult - was the fact that they arc not mature yet.” Another reason student board members shouldn’t vote, she said, is because ihc governing boards would then have six voting members. “That’s not good composition for any committee,” Langford said. “You need an odd number for votes.” “And more than that, I don’t back off. I have three eh i Idren. Our kids arc fine, they’re doing well,” she said. “That’s not what my experience comes from. My experience comes from working with young sorority girls for years.” Langford was a member of a Kear ney State College sorority governing board. She declined to name the so rority. “The kinds of decisions they (young people) make are not well thought out. Young people arc inclined to make spur-of-the-moment decisions and think about them later. They don’t like to hear that, but that’s what hap pens.” “I’m certainly not against young people,” she said. “This was taken up with great fervor, by evidently UNL students. I'm certainly not anti student. In fact I do more for higher education probably than anybody in the Legislature, or at least as much.” Gadhafi threatens revenge for fire ROME - A fire caused exten sive damage to a Libyan chemical plant suspected of producing poi son gas, and Libyan leader Col. Moammar Gadhafi on Thursday threatened to punish West Germany if its agents set the blaze. West Germany, whose compa nies helped build the plani, denied the accusation and filed a protest with Libya over an angry demon stration outside Bonn’s embassy in the Libyan capital, Tripoli. Gadhafi insisted that the heav ily guarded plant in Rabta,60 miles southwest of Tripoli, was designed to produce only pharmaceuticals. But he said Libya would pay mil lions of dollars to any company willing to build it achemical weap ons facility. “In such eventuality, 1 will sign the contract myself unhesitatingly,” Gadhafi was quoted as saying by Libya’s official JANA news agency, which was monitoried in Rome. He said Libya would not hesi tate to manufacture weapons of "total devastation” if it had the ability, but he said it would lake 20 years for Libya to develop such weapons. Libya was accused of using chemical weapons in its war against Chad. The plant, once described by CIA Director William Webster as the world’s largcslchcmica! weap ons factory, caught fire Wednes ♦ day. There were conflicting reports about damage and how the fire started. ABC News quoted unidentified Libyan security sources as claim ing the plant was burned to the ground by U.S. and Israeli agents. The United States and Israel de nied involvement. Mahmoud A/.zahi, press secre tary at Libya’s U.N. mission in New York, said there was specula tion saboteurs infiltrated Libya from neighboring Tunisia. A previously unknown group of Libyan dissidents, the Organiza tion of the Patriotic Wing of the Libyan Army, claimed responsi bility for the blaze in a statement sent to West Germany’s ARD tele vision network. A journalist for JANA, reached by telephone from Cairo, said he was unsure whether there were casualties in the fire but said the plant was badly damaged. “You may consider it has been burned down,” he said, speaking on condition of anonymity. White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwatcr said damage was extensive but the plant was sull standing. “Common sense would tell you it’s not functioning,” he said. “We assume it’s not func tioning.” Fitzwater refused to speculate on the cause of the blaze or to disclose the source of his informa tion. Yitzhak Rabin, who resigned as Israel’s defense minister Tuesday, denied Israel was involved in the fire and called the speculation “nonsense.” The JANA report quoted Gadhafi as saying that the cause of the blaze was under investigation. He said if investigators prove West German intelligence services were involved, “the presence of Germany eCO nomically will be eliminated and the country involved in espionage and subversion for imperialism and Zionism will lose.” fhmm John 3nice/Dally Nebraskan West Germany’s ambassador in Tripoli was summoned to meet with Libya’s Foreign Office, but no threats were made during the meet ing, according to a West German government official in Bonn. Gadhafi West Germany’s Foreign Min istry in Bonn summoned a Libyan diplomat to protest a demonstra tion by about 800 Libyan demon strators who temporarily blockaded access to the West German Em bassy in Tripoli. The United States has accused Libya of using the plant to make chemical weapons, including mus tard and nerve gases. Last week, the White House said the plant was dangerous and should be shut down. The White House refused to rule out the possibility of military ac tion to close it. When Western reporters were taken to die chemical plant in Janu ary 1989, they found it guarded by soldiers, tanks and surface-to-air missiles. The journalists were not allowed to inspect the plant. An Associated Press correspon dent from Rome was refused entry to Libya on Thursday on grounds that Libyan officials did not have authorization for him. Correspon dents from the U.S. television net works ABC and CBS also were turned back. Libya’s Radio Tripoli urged Arab support for Libya in the face of “an aggressive campaign of American imperialism.” “The American campaign against the pharmaceutical factory at Rabla is a conspiracy against this important strategic achieve ment, which should furnish medi cine for the entire Arab nation and break the foreign monopoly in this area,” said the broadcast, moni tored in Tunis. Gorbachev elected president; promises strengthened union MOSCOW - Mikhail Gorbachev assumed a powerful presidency Thurs day despite surprisingly strong oppo sition in the Soviet Congress, then pledged to keep the country from breaking up and to mend its economy with market-oriented reforms. As the first Western-style presi dent in this country’s history, Gor bachev strengthened his already for midable powers and shilled them further from the Communist Party leadership to the government. Gorbachev, mindful of the coun try’s history of dictatorship and ter ror, promised deputies he would use his new powers to nurture the Soviet Union’s “young and not fully devel oped democracy.’’ Voting results announced Thurs day at the Congress of People ’ s Depu ties indicated a significant drop in support for the Soviet leader since he was chosen chairman of the Soviet legislature in May. That position was essentially a weak presidency. Congress elected Gorbachev to a five-year term by a vole of 1,329 495. He was the only candidate. His total was 800 votes less than what he received one year ago, and not much more than the 1,123 he needed to win. In a separate ballot, the Congress chose Gorbachev’s former vice presi dent, Anatoly Lukyanov, as its chair man. The Congress chairman holds many of the responsibilities of vice president, including the right of suc cession if the president cannot con tinue in office. One reform-minded deputy, Igor Shamshev, said Gorbachev had lost the support of extreme conservatives and radical reformers, but held the moderates. Teimuraz Avaliani of the western Siberian mining town of Kemerovo accused him of leading the country to the brink of collapse, and said, “I ask you not to vole for Gorbachev under i--—— any circumstances.” Yevgeny Kogan, a representative of Russians living in the Baltic repub lic, accused Gorbachev of being soft on separatists. Estonia is pressing for independence. Gorbachev will have wide powers to propose legislation, negotiate trea ties, veto bills, appoint the Council of Ministers and void its decisions. He will have power to declare war if the country is attacked, and to impose direct presidential rule in certain conditions. This means he could overrule a local government. President Bush called Gorbachev “a reasonable man” and said he was not troubled that Gorbachev has had his powers strengthened. ‘‘They’ve come out of the totalitarianism of the past. I don’t see it as a threat,” Bush said in Washington. Gorbachev closed the day by giv ing a news conference, his first in the Kremlin. Spokesmen said ho would meet with the press more frequently as president. Some deputies from Lithuania, Eston ia and other rcpublics boycotted the Congress proceedings because they consider their republics independent rather than part of the Soviet Union. Gorbachev said he would work to keep the Soviet Union from breaking apart and would be the president for ail of the more than 100 nationalities living in the country. Gorbachev said he intended to work to conclude a new agreement binding the Soviet republics together in fed eration. Soviet law should allow for repub lics to secede if they wish, Gorbachev said, but he did not specify under what conditions. Gorbachev said he would work to create a ‘‘viable market” economy, governed not by bureaucrats but by taxation, bank control of balance of payments, and adjustable interest rates. 1 —'" ' 1 ■■■ ■ '■ 111 Netfraskan Editor Amy Edward* Photo Chief Dav* Hansan .. 472*1766 Night News Editors Jana Padersan Manaoing Editor Ryan Staavaa Diana Braylon Wire Editor Brandon Loomis Advertising Manager Jon Daahnka Copy Desk Editor Dare I# Wlagert Sales Manager Kerry Jeffries Sports Editor Jeff Apal Publications Board Arts & Entertainment Chairman Bill Vobelda Editor Michael Deads 436-9993 Diversions Editor Mick Dyer Professional Adviser Don Walton Graphics Editor John Bruca 473-7301 The Daily Nebraskan(USPS 144-080) Is published by the UNL Publications Board, Ne braska Union 34,1400 R St., Lincoln, NE, Monday through Friday during the academic year; weekly during summer sessions ' Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1763 between 9 a m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, The public also has access to the Publications Board. For information, contact Pam Hem 472-2f>aa Subscription price is $45 for one year Postmaster: Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 34, 1400 R St..Lincoln, NE 68566-0448. Second-class postage paid at Lincoln NE ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1990 DAILY NEBRASKAN