■T\ *1 ptoy — TBC "IT Tl j Cl XX y Tj WEATHER INDEX l^9C ■ m -rm ^ -^- m _ ^ Friday, cloudy and colder, 60 percent chance of News 2 I m Bl.^liBIlk jlffStfJhk JPi ^P*“ aj^lfifck light snow by afternoon, high in the upper-20s, Editorial. 4 5 Jff H Be ^BSp SB"" 1 w 1 III * ^B lg| northeast wind 10-20 miles per hour Friday night, Sports 5 I m W m ^r0**Wt ^feiafc H ■ 70 percent chance of snow, low 15-20 Saturday, Arts & Entertainment .6 ISSl H S| W B M ai I mam m I cloudy, 50 percent chance of snow, high 25-30 Classifieds .7 March 23, 1990_University of Nebraska-Lincoln Vol. 89 No. ^^77 Proposal for agriculture research approved Senators agree complex needed By Jerry Guenther Staff Reporter The Nebraska Legislature gave second round approval Thursday to a proposal that would allocate $190,000 for plan ning of an agricultural research complex at Mead. The proposal was approved after Sen. Loran Schmit of Bellwood offered it in an amend ment to LB898, which appropriates $100,000 for the design of the Trailside Complex at Fort Robinson Stale Park in northwest Nebraska. Senators advanced LB898 by voice vote after lengthy discussion of Schmit’s amend ment. Sen. Sandra Scofield of Chadron, co-spon sor of LB898, said she is against the amend ment because the additional funding for the Mead complex might jeopardize approval of the Trailside Complex. Although Scofield said she isn’t against the research complex at Mead, she said it should be treated separately from LB898. The Trailside Complex needs to be started because it would house historical artifacts that could be destroyed, as evidenced by a fire around the area last summer, she said. Schmit said the Mead complex is needed to help keep the agricultural industry up to date with new advancements. 1 ne appearance of existing facilities at Mead “does an injustice” to the importance of re search the University of Nebraska conducts, he said. “Ladies and gentlemen, I have told you before on this floor,” Schmit said, “Agricul ture is the only basic industry in Nebraska which contributes to the new wealth of this state.” Senators have approved all kinds of propos als this legislative session, Schmit said, but if the agricultural industry is not healthy, that won’t be possible in the future. Sen. Owen Elmer of Indianola also said the foundation of industry in the state is agricul ture. The Mead complex would keep the state on the “cutting edge” of technical advances in biotechnology and other related fields. Sen. George Coordsen of Hebron said the Mead complex is needed so that agriculture in the state can keep up with the latest interna tional technology. Political change in Central European coun tries, Coordsen said, will lead them to increase agricultural output as they move away from their current governments. Poland, Czechoslovakia, parts of Germany and the U.S.S.R. have some of the most fertile lands in the world, he said. If the United States doesn t keep up with technology, Coordsen said, some day it will have to import agricultural products. Sen. John Weihing of Gering said he thinks the Mead complex is needed, but he doesn’t want to jeopardize approval of the Trailsidc Complex. Weihing said the existing research building at Mead was built during World War II and only was supposed to be temporary. But he said the Mead complex isn’t as urgently needed as the Trailside Complex. If members of the NU Board of Regents thought the Mead Complex was so important, Weihing said, they would have listed it high on their list of priorities. The Mead complex is listed 13th on the list. Scofield also said she thinks the regents should have listed the Mead complex higher. “It seems to be that it’s awfully difficult sometimes to get agriculturally related proj ects high enough on the priority list to do any good,” Scofield said. Sen. Rod Johnson of Sutton said he thinks both complexes should be financed. Johnson said about $500 million of the 1990 federal farm bill will go toward research, and he thinks the state could get some of that money to build the Mead complex. Schmit’s amendment was adopted 27-13. Recount adds one vote for VISION From Staff Reports CISION presidential and first vice presidential candidates Phil Gosch and Stacy Mohling picked up one more vote in Thursday’s recount of the ASUN runoff election. The Association of Students of the University of Nebraska Electoral Com mission recounted at the request of TODAY’S campaign manager. W ednesday ’ s coun t showed fi ve votes between the two parties’ candidates. Jim Langenberg, electoral commis sioner, said that after the recount VI SION received 1,350 votes to TODAY’S 1,344. Marlene Beyke, ASUN director of development, said the results still are unofficial. That’s because Electoral Commission rules require parties to file their financial statements today and campaign complaints by April 2. If the parties comply with those rules, the commission will vote to validate the results. If there are complaints, the commis sion must hear them and decide accord ingly, Beyke said. 1-^ Butch lr«tand/D«lty Nebraskan Casanova ... Dodae High School freshman Mike Emanuel watches as fellow students perform a Spanish version of “Who’s on first?” during Thursday’s University of Nebraska-Lincoin Language Fair held on campus. ‘Person living with AIDS’ condemns denial mentality By Emily Rosenbaum Senior Reporter CC A IDS. It’s a word.” Richard Carper, who describes himself as a “person living with AIDS,” told about 30 people Thursday in the Nebraska Union that “we need to start talking about AIDS in a normal manner.” Carper said the lack of communi cation about acquired immune defi ciency syndrome is one of the reasons the disease has spread so quickly. “This is what we call denial,” he said. “We don’t want to talk about it.” Carper said the media help to cre ate a picture of the disease - a picture that says “AIDS equals death.” Carper was diagnosed as HIV positive in 1986 and then developed AIDS in 1988. At the time of the HIV diagnosis, he said, he was happily married, had his own business as an electrical contractor and was seven months into recovery from heroin addiction. In 1988, doctors told him he was going to die, he said. He was running a 105-dcgree temperature, weighed 117 pounds and said he “bought into” accepting death. Standing in the Harvest Room on Thursday night. Carper told the audi ence that 19 months ago, “I was supposed to be dead.” Carper said he tells his story - a story of discrimination by friends and strangers who wonT shake his hand -- not to gain sympathy, but to get the message out about wnat \s nappemng. “1 refuse to lay down and die,” Carper said. Part of that refusal included a walk across the United States, from Port land, Ore. to Washington D.C., to show that people with AIDS arc not “victims,” he said. Carper left May 1,1988 and walked 3,300 miles. Current statistics indicate that -4 4 I refuse to lay down and die. Carper -f f - 120,000 Americans now have AIDS. By 1992 that number will reach 480,000, he said. Six million Ameri cans are HIV-positive. At that rale, in five years, AIDS will personally affect every Ameri can, “in some way or another.” Carper describes AIDS as a “ test AIDS will determine whether people act as Christians or treat other human beings with criticism, he said. “Rather than throwing blame, we need to educate,” he said. While the federal government has spent billions of dollars on AIDS research, it has allocated nothing toward caring for people with AIDS, he said. A national health-care system is needed to provide for those who can not afford health care, Carper said. Drunk driving bill advances to final reading Proposal complies with Supreme Court ruling By Victoria Ayotte Senior Reporter___ Nebraska legislators on Thurs day gutted one bill to get tough on drunk driving as they amended another bill into it which tightens up drunk driving laws. LB799 was advanced to final read ing on a voice vote. The bill, sponsored by State Sen. Emil Beyer of Gretna, originally would have authorized the Department of Motor Vehicles to automatically re voke drivers’ licenses within 30 days after arrest if a hearing was not held to decide if the alleged drunk driver was guilty. With only nine days left in the session and about 13 amendments pending to the bill, Sen. Doug Kris tensen of Mindcn proposed ridding the bill of its original provisions and including the provisions of his bill, LB 1020. Kristensen said that instead of wasting more time in the waning days of the session with the probability that many priority bills will not get passed, the Legislature needs to pass LB 1020. This need is based on the tact that the Nebraska S upremc Court recently ruled it unconstitutional to use only a urine lest to prove drunk driving, Kristensen said. Some Nebraska counties do not have breath tests and instead must use blood or urine samples to prove a person drunk when driving, he said. The person under current law can choose which test they want the law enforcement officer to give, Kristensen said. Since the Supreme Court ruling, a drunk driver could not be convicted if they were4 4 lucky enough ’' to chose the urine test, he said. LB 1020 specifies that a person may be required to submit to more than one test to show if they are under the influence of alcohol or drugs. The bill also states that the court may require those convicted of driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs to attend a treatment program. Beyer and Sen. Jerome Warner of Waverly, supporters of the original provisions of LB799, supported gut ting that bill to include Kristcnsen’s biU. “At least let’s save what we have,” Warner said, and make sure that those arrested for drunk driving can get caught instead of allowing the urine test loophole. “As important as 1 think 799 is,” Beyer added, “1 will acquiesce and support this...” Kristensen said senators must act quickly so as not to “condone the behavior of letting them (drunk driv ers) go scot-free. Kristensen’s proposal was adopted 29-1 after an emergency clause was added to make the bill effective upon the governor’s signature.