The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 19, 1992, Page 6&7, Image 6

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CFA finalizes recommendations
By Rainbow Rowell
Staff Reporter
The Committee for Fees Alloca
tion completed its final recommenda
tions for student fee allocations Tues
~ day.
After hearing
the University
Health Center’s
appeal, CFA
amended its 1992
93 UHC recom
mendation, add
ing S8,(XX). It now equals UHC’s origi
nal request— $2,933,141.
The Campus Recreation Center,
which requested a$ 1,615,288 operat
ing budget lor next year, was rccom
mended a $ 1,613,283 allocation. CFA
approved the center’s Repair and
Improvement of Facilities request of
$196,376.
The final CFA Fund B recommen
dation is $6,307,591. This includes
the health center, recreation center
and the unions. Without taking into
account salary increases, each 1992
93 student will pay $142.62 per se
mester in Fund B fees — a S7.48
increase from this year.
For each student per semester, the
health center will receive $73.89, the
recreation center will receive $36.86
and the unions will receive $31.87.
The Association of Students of the
University of Nebraska recommended
allotment was increased by S300 to
meet the cost of a contract with Lan
caster County totally ASUN election
ballots. The new CFA recommenda
tion for ASUN is $143,886.
The final CFA Fund A recommen
dation is $375,696.51. This includes
ASUN, the Daily Nebraskan and the
University Program Council. Each
1992-93 student will pay S8.03 per
semester for Fund A fees—a 17 cent
increase from this year.
For each student per semester,
ASUN will receive S2.92, the DN
will receive 98 cents and UPC will
receive S4.13.
Alter CFA recommendations for
Fund A and Fund B Ices, and a S18
debt service fee to pay off bonds,
each student will pay S168.65 per
semester next year. This does not
include salary increases.
Society requests funds
From Staff Reports
The Nebraska State Historical
Society requested $80,000 from the
Nebraska Legislature at its Appro
priations Comm ittcc hearing T ues
day.
Tony Schmitz, chief financial
officer for the historical society,
presented the request, and said the
money would be used over the next
two years to record and cross-check
prehistoric remains.
The historical society already
had returned identifiable skeletal
remains to the Pawnee Tribe of
Oklahoma because of a legislative
bill passed in 1989. The bill, LB340,
required state agencies to return
any reasonably identifiable skcle
tal remains and burial goods to
descendants for reburial.
Sen. Scott Moore of Seward,
chairman of the Appropriations
Committee, said the remains in
question weren’t covered by LB340
because they weren't identifiable.
Schmitz said the unidentifiable
remains would be returned to the
Nebraska Indian Commission to
give back to individual tribes alter
recording.
“This is something our board
wants us to do, he said. “It’s not
something we're required to do.”
I
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Voice
Continued from Page 1
Green said, students have heard the
promises before.
The students’ list included con
cerns that the Association of Students
of the University of Nebraska is not
inclusive of black students, that mi
nority students face a hostile environ
ment on campus, that there is a need
for a center just for black students and
that racial incidents need proper fol
low-up.
The list also included requests for
a separate budget for the Afrikan
People’s Union, a University Programs
Council committee.
The separate budget is needed
because the Committee for Fees Al
location docs not understand the need
for Afroccntric programming and
makes its judgements from a white
perspective. Green said.
“Members of UPC don’t under
stand why we may want to have cer
tain events,” she said. “If we had the ,
money to do programming, we could
do it more effectively because the
way it is now, everything is judged
from a white perspective.”
Gricscn said he thought the meet
ing was a step in the right direction,
but he admitted that much remained
to be done.
“There arc a number of things that
we can work towards on the list of
requests and concerns,” he said. “For
example, we’ve already started plan
ning orientation sessions for students
and faculty to address minority is
t sues.”
But other issues, such as changing
the hostile environment, will require
student participation if they arc to
succeed, he said.
Gricscn said recent media atten
tion was not the reason the admini
stration was addressing minority is
sues.
“I think anyone who says (that the
administration is just responding to
media attention) has been ignoring
what we’ve been trying to do for the
last several years,” he said. “We’re
obviously not where we want to be
yet, but we have made progress.”
Senate to vote on fee distribution
; Amendment
would increase
ASUN budget
By Kara Morrison
-_Staff Reporter
Proposed student fees appropria
tions and a bill that
calls for student
government to
adopt national
education goals
will highlight to-'
night's ASUN
agenda. .> Z
ASUN’s Committee for Fees
location has proposed the following
distribution of 1992-93 student fees
to be voted on tonight: University
Programs Council, about $186,117;
Association of Students of the Uni
versity of Nebraska, $143,236; and
Daily Nebraskan, S45,693.
Speaker of the Senate Steve Th
om lison said that he did not expect a
lot of changes in student fees alloca
tions, but he did plan to propose an
amendment to increase ASUN’s op
erating expenses budget by $2,300.
Thom lison said that this money
would be used to run weekly public
service announcements in the Daily
Nebraskan so that students would be
kept informed about issues such as
parking.
Thomlison said he would propose
culling other funds to accommodate
his $2,300 request for ASU N, but that
he was not yet sure where those cuts
would fall.
ASUN also will vote on a bill that
calls for student government to adopt
and devise strategics to achieve the
educational goals of President Bush’s
America 2000 plan and the postsccon
dary education goals of Nebraska 2000,
initiated by Gov. Nelson ancUhc NU
Board of Regents.
Thomlison, who wrote the bill,
called it “a worthwhile endeavor for
the senate to look at.”
“The president’s program has some
very worthw hile goals that we need to
address,” he said.
According to the bill, two of the
Nebraska 2000 goals include making
Nebraska students among the world’s
best in science, mathematics and other
subjects necessary for competition in
a global society, and making all
postsccondary institutions drug- and
violence-free.
In other business, if a College of
Business Administration funding bill
is passed tonight, ASUN will ask
university officials to spend extra funds
on classroom equipment for that col
lege. The leftover funds were from a
lowcr-than-expcctcd bid for the CB A
addition.
The senate could not vote on the
bill last week because it did not have
a quorum.
POLICE REPORT
Beginning midnight Monday
11:01 a.m. — Stereo stolen from
vehicle, University Health Center
parking lot, $235.
1:10 p.m. — Stereo stolen from
vehicle, Harper-Schramm-Smith
parking lot, $1,535.
4:49 p.m. — Indecent expo
sure, Mabel Lee Hall.
6:36 p.m. — Watch stolen, 501
Building, $90. -i
8:41 p.m. — Stereo speakers
stolen, Harper-Schramm-Smith
parking lot, SI85.
WERE FIGHTING FOR
. VOUR LIFE
American Heart
Association
Nebraska Affiliate
Kerrey
Continued from Page 1
fellow' Kerrey supporter, joked.
The evening started on a festive
note, with tables loaded with food.
Valentino’s set up three tables in the
back room covered with pizza and
cinnamon brcadsticks.
Thirty-two people sat in folding
chairs, ale pizza and chatted while
keeping an eye on the 14-inch televi
sion at the front of the room. Tuned to
CNN for any information on Kerrey,
the television was draped with red,
white and blue “Kerrey for Presi
dent” t-shirts.
At 8:30 p.m., when a C-Span re
porter announced the tight race be
tween Kerrey and Harkin for third
place, cheers erupted from viewers in
the back of the room.
“I’m here!” Kerrey blared from
the television at 8:45 p.m., and stopped
, the chatter in the room.
“We may not be golden yet, but
bronze ain’t bad,” Kerrey said.
Kerrey supporters from the smaller
rooms, including Kristin Clark, a
Valentino’s employee, filtered into
the main room to watch Kerrey.
Clark, a University of Nebraska
Lincoln senior chemistry major, is
also a Kerrey supporter.
“I just happen to get (work at
Kerrey’s headquarters) by chance,”
she said.
The crowd of high school and
college students, as well as adults,
kept a close watch on the tally hang
ing near the television of who re
ceived what percentage of the vote.
As of 8 p.m., the tally read: Tson
gas 32, Clinton 30, Kerrey 15, Harkin
13 and others 7; Bush 51, Buchanan
46 percent.
As the crowd of 32 supporters at
Kerrey’s headquarters began to leave
around 9:45 p.m., one UNL student
stayed behind.
Mandi Cohen, a UNL freshman
majoring in political science, trans
ferred back from Guilford College at
Greensboro, N.C., to help with the
Kerrey campaign.
“I would have stayed in the first
place if I knew he was going to run,”
she said.
Lundestad
Continued from Page 1
economic production.
But that position of supremacy is
not assured, he said, because of a
“social deficit” that the United States
faces. A move from the world’s larg
est creditor to the world’s largest debtor,
an increase in vulnerability.^ its energy
needs and a decreasing lead over
competing countries arc contributing
to this social deficit, he said.
America’s problems must be de
scribed partly as a “decline by de
sign,” Lundestad said, because the
nation ’sCold War policy “was bound
to strengthen Europe at America’s
expense.”
The United States will find its
greatest challenge from the European
Community, not Japan, he said.
He said he did not think Japan
would emerge as a superpower be
c'iiisc it did not have the will to do so.
“Japan really doesn’t stand for
much,” he said. “I think a superpower
really needs some kind of ideology.”
Lundcstad said that he saw four
trends emerging in the post-Cold War
world.
He predicted that the United Stales
would remain the dominant power in
the world, but would face increasing
competition; that economic issues
would take precedence over military
ones; that Europe would regain some
of its role in world affairs; and that
conflict would increase between na
tions,
Although he said that there would
be increased conflict w ithout the United
States and Soviet Union -to provide
stability for the world, Lundcstad said
that the spread of democracy could
lead to greater peace in the long run.
“There is much evidence to sup
port the view that with the Soviet
Union defeated, peace w ill prevail,”
he said.
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