Regent candidate: Minority recruitment lacking By Sara Bauder Schott Senior Reporter Administrators at the University of Nebraska should be held account able for the recruitment of minority students and fac ulty, a candidate for NU Board of Regents said Monday. Dick Pow ell, a Lincoln op tometrist, spoke at a meeting of Prm,«n lhc Afrikan roweil Peoples Union in the Culture Center. He said the Board of Regents needs to set a goal in minority recruitment and make sure the administration accomplishes that goal. “We need to do a better job re cruiting minorities,” Powell said. “We need to out-recruit the other Big Eight schools.” Many of Nebraska’s most gifted minority students go to school out of sute because other schools have more vigorous recruiting programs, Powell said. Recruited students should be as sured that they will have the financial help to attend school, Powell said. He said students should know what kind of aid they can expect over the course of their college career so they can plan ahead. Because many high school stu dents in Nebraska do not have the money to attend college, Powell said, he would not support scholarships for foreign students, such as South Afri cans. The Association of Students of the University of Nebraska, with the — LL - endorsement of Powell’s opponent Chuck Wilson, has called for a South African scholarship program as a way to combat apartheid. “We should instead help the un derprivileged of Nebraska,” Powell said. ‘‘When it’s all taken care of and the underprivileged of Nebraska can go to school, then I’ll go after the underprivileged of the world.” W V Providing funds for minority stu dent governments might help keep minority students at the university, Powell said. He said he would be in favor of a reasonable plan to support the organizations, although the re gents wouldn’t be able to finance every student organization. The university needs to recruitand retain minority faculty, as well as minority students, Powell said. Powell said the university should try to help the spouses of faculty find jobs when they relocate to Nebraska. Putting one person in charge of recruiting minority faculty would get the program underway quickly, Pow ell said. He said there is probably someone on the Lincoln campus right now who is qualified to do the work. “It would take a little money,” Powell said. “Administrators tend to pay a little lip service to the idea of minority recruitment, but no one is holding dcodIc accountable.” We should instead help the underprivileged of Nebraska. When it’s all taken care of and the underprivileged of Nebraska can go to school, then I’ll go after the underprivileged of the world. Powell regent candidate ----- A A - Teaching assistant files complaint Leaking roof destroys display oy idoixna Miner Staff Reporter_ An art display damaged by a leaky roof has prompted a teaching assis tant to file a formal complaint about the deteriorating condition of Richards Hall. Susan Moss, a graduate teaching assistant, sent a letter last week to Joseph Ruffo, chairman of the De partment of Art and Art History, complaining about the leaking roof. The leak that Moss reported three weeks ago recurred last week, alter ing a still life for beginning drawing students, she said. Bob Carpenter, campus architect, said the leak in Room 107 will be fixed. Its repair was delayed because 1 T- • the leak originally was reported in the Nclle Cochrane Woods Art Building, he said. The still life included draped fab ric, a bowl and bottles. While nothing valuable was damaged, Moss said, the still life as a whole was ruined because objects had been altered from one day to the next. The leak that ruined the still life is symptomatic of the draining condi tion of Richards Hall, Moss said. Richards Hall needs painting, re pairing and cleaning, she said. “I certainly haven’t gone around and itemized things, but it’s really obvious to the untrained eye that the building is in bad shape,” she said. Carpenter said Richards Hall is 11th on the university’s capital con struction budget request list. The list is created every two years and includes 20 priorities for mainte nance and construction projects at the University of Nebraska campuses, Carpenter said. The list was approved by the NU Board of Regents and will go before the Nebraska Legislature in 1991 to use when making decisions on which projects can be financed, Carpenter said. The Richards Hall project will be a complete renovation and is estimated to cost $9.7 million, Carpenter said. The project will take atx)ut two to three years once it is approved by the state, he said. Richards Hall has been high on the maintenance department’s list of renovations, but nothing can be done until financing is approved, he said. Novice Spanish class is offered By Shelley Biggs Staff Reporter Complaints from students who felt like foreigners in their beginning Spanish classes have prompted changes in the course. A section of Spanish 101 has been converted to a beginning class for students without any Spanish back ground, said Tom Carr, professor of modem languages and literatures. “The class is specifically for stu dents who have never been intro duced to Spanish before,” Carr said. Antonio Martinez, assistant pro fessor of modem languages and lit eratures and instructor for the begin ning Spanish class, said the class operates at the same speed as the other 101 classes, but the instructor is more aware that students never have had Spanish before. “The class is not exactly slower than the other 101 classes," Martinez, said. They cover the same amount; the professor just doesn’t take any thing for granted.” Martinez said the department added the beginning course because some -u It’s an experiment to see how it works. There seems to be a need for it. Link interim chair modern languages and literatures department -ff - students complained about feeling left behind. Before, beginning Spanish classes mixed students who already had taken some Spanish with students who were taking Spanish for the first time. “Students that had no background in Spanish were feeling very inade quate,” Carr said. Next spring, the department still will have 15 sections of Spanish 101, but four of those sections will be strictly for beginners, said Frederick Link, interim chair for the modern languages and literatures department. “It’s an experiment to see how it works,” Link said. “There seems to be a real need for it.” Rita Ricaurtc, assistant coordina tor for first-year Spanish, said three sections for beginners originally were offered this semester, but two were closed because the department wasn ’ t able to gel the class in the spring bulletin on lime. “Students mainly found out about this class through their University Foundations classes,” Martinez said. Beginning Spanish sections (X)l and 002 at 8:30 a.m. and 005 and 006 at 9:30 a.m. will be offered next semester, Carr said. NU regents acknowledge lid opposition From Staff Reports The NU Board of Regents Friday passed a resolution that recognizes University of Nebraska students’ opposition to the 2 percent spending lid. The lid, which would limit spend ing increases each year to 2 percent, would be “counter-productive for the University of Nebraska by failing to allow state appropriations to kocp pace with rising inflation,” the resolution states. Students arc concerned about at tracting and retaining quality faculty, maintaining facilities and keeping tuition rates at reasonable levels, it states. They “have a true responsibil ity to do all they can to protect the best interests of our future and wish to sec that Nebraska remains vital and ‘open for business,’” according to the resolution, sponsored by UNL Stu dent Regent Phil Gosch, UNO Stu dent Regent Kelli Sears and UNMC Student Regent Mark Meyer. n s i d e r College ♦ Independent # Study College Independent Study credit is UNL credit. Credit that can keep you on your academic timetable. 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