~7, , - * 1 ' ' f ^ 1 , ^ ^ '' * . ^ SPORTS^^ MTV 11 Grant Top . 77/55 | Today, mostly sunny and | II nice.Tonight and ■ V tomorrow, increasing xi__u 9 XI..X10 clouds and a chance of nasn & miff: storms. I Ownership of bones disputed by officials By Chuck Green Senior Reporter Kentucky officials have some bones to pick with the Nebraska State Museum. And directors at the Kentucky De partment of Parks arc hoping to pick them as soon as possible, one Kentucky attorney said. Fossilized remains of mammoths, bison and other animals unearthed ala Kentucky archeo logical site have resided in the Nebraska State Museum since the early 1960s, where they have been catalogued, preserved and studied by University of Ncbraska-Lincoln students and researchers. Now, officials in Kentucky apparently want them back. But Hugh Gcnoways, director of the Ne braska State Museum, said that exactly who wanted the remains returned was unclear. “The last correspondence we’ve had with anyone in Kentucky was in 1988,” Gcnoways said. “We haven’t heard anything from anyone personally smcc then.” That year, Gcnoways said, he received a request from the Kentucky Department of Parks for records of the 1962 digs. Gcnoways said he complied with their request and had not heard Kentucky Department of Parks wants fossils returned; UNL reluctant to give back major scientific collection from them since. “I don’t know where they’re coming from,” he said. “I think that maybe this,is just some slick Kentucky lawyer trying to negotiate through the newspapers.” The bones were uncovered between 1962 and 1966 during a series of digs at Big Bone Lick Staid Park near Union, Ky. The fossils accumulated because of sal l and sulphur springs at the site, which attracted animals between 20,000 and 12,000 B.C. Once there, bison, horses and other animals apparently became trapped in the soil soil, where they died. When the project began, the National Sci ence Foundation provided UNL with a scricsof grants to finance the dig and specifically called for the bones to be housed and studied at UNL. The excavation was led by.C. Bertrand Schultz, the Nebraska Stale Museum’s director in the 1960s, and was conducted by UNL researchers. Henry Curtis, an attorney for the Kentucky Department of Parks in Frankfort, said he didn’t understand why Nebraska Slate Museum offi cials were reluctant to return the remains. “Nobody really wants Ip lake this deal to "court, but we will if we have to,” Curtis said. “Hopefully, we can gel it resolved before any thing like that transpires. But I don’t understand why they’re dragging their feel.” Genoways said one rpajor^issuc was money. “We’ve sunk scvcrakihousands of dollars into these artifacts,” he said, “and we’re not ready to turn them over to Kentucky, where they would no longer be available for scientific study.” Curtis said thcboncs were partof Kentucky’s history,and that Kentucky park directors wanted to pul the bones on display at Big Bone Lick State Park. Genoways said he knew of no existing facili ties in Kentucky that could adequately display the 2,(XX) specimens currently housed at UNL. Thcspccimcns include everything from bone fragments to intact, individual bones, but the collection “certainly is not a massive one,” Genoways said. Remains from Big Bone Lick — considered by researchers to be one of the most important archeological sites in North America — arc displayed and studied at museums throughout the world, .including London’s British Mu seum, the Philadelphia Academy of Science and the Natural History Museum in Paris. The first digs at the site were ordered in the early 1800s by President Thomas Jefferson. Genoways said he didn’t know if any of the other museums displaying the artifacts had been asked to return them. He said the. fate of UNL’s collection de pended on researchers in Kentucky, and added that he would be willing to negotiate the return of the bones if they would remain available for scientific examination. , But, he said, the loss of the collection would cause problems for UNL. “Obviously, the artifacts arc of major scien tific importance to us,” Genoways said. “These bones are from the Ice Age, and we at UNL study artifacts from that time period very closely. “To just give up something we’ve had here for 25 years or more would be a little hard to do.A, — | |. ' onaun oarurvurM Takin a dive Jenny Brabec, a freshman accounting major, plunges for the ball Sunday afternoon during a game at the Harper Schramm-Smith Complex sand volleyball court. (Jmcials advise [ students about parking changes By Shelley Biggs Senior Reporter __ UNL Parking Services has been working hard to advise students ol changes made , this summer in parking on campus, an | official said. Parking officials arc taking extra initiative to warn students of changes that were made for their benefit, said Mike Cacak, manager of ! UNL’s Transportation Services. “We’ve done what we can to notify students and be helpful,” he said. For example, Cacak said, parking officials ! arc posted around the loop near Memorial Stadium to let students know of the changes there. Forty-two meters were pulled from the loop and added to the parking lot north of Mabel Lee i Hall at 14th and W streets, he said, and 22 meters were added to the lot. The existing space ; near the stadium was made into an Area 10 lot and is reserved for faculty. Parking officials also mailed and delivered reminders to students who parked in the two rows designated as reserved spaces in lots near Pound and Abel residence halls, Cacak said. In the past, he said, reserved spaces have been located around the edges of the lots. This year, the first two rows in each lot are reserved parking. Cacak said the reserved spaces were moved closer to give students who paid extra for them their money ’s worth. Annual permits cost S54, while reserved spaces are SI55 lor a year. NU to continue offering free tickets, oy oneiiey oiyys Senior Reporter rwi he disclosure of S 12,045 in I tickets given to state senators ^ and elected officials over the past year will not change NU’s prac tice of offering free tickets for foot ball and basketball games and other events, officials said Sunday. The University of Nebraska re ported the value of event tickets given to state officials for the first lime Friday. It did so because of a Ne braska Accountability and Disclosure Commission ruling that the value of the tickets and other entertainment spending by NU must be reported under state lobbying laws. The disclosure pul the university at the top in entertainment spending among groups that lobby the Nebraska Legislature,- — Richard Wood, NU’s chief legal counsel, said giving away tickets to slate senators and elected oiliciais was a regular practice. The value of the tickets always has been a matter of public record in the chancellor’s office, he said, and the amount of money reported this year is not uncharacteristic of past years. “The university is not actually spending the money; it is only the value of the tickets,’’ Wood said. Dannie Traulwein, executive di rector of the Nebraska Accountability and Disclosure Commission, said that prior to the disclosure of the tickets’ value, the commission became aware that NU wasn’t reporting the value of admissions to social events. .She said she contacted Wood, university lob byist Lee Rupp and NU President Marlin Massengale to discuss the is sue, Al ter the meeting, she said, they reached an agreement and the tickei amount was reported to the commis sion. i inc university man t report tnc value of the tickets in past years, Massengale said, because NU offi cials thought the university wasn’t required to. He said the meeting with Trautwein simply clarified the law, because it was N U’s first disclosure of that kind. “The meeting was held for the refinement of the interpretation of the law,” Massengale said. Each year, the university offers 49 state senators and six constitutional officers — the governor, lieutenant governor, treasurer, auditor, secre tary of state and attorney general — a pair of season football tickets, for a total of 55 pairs. Last year, 19 officials paid for the tickets or declined them. Massengale said the university would continue to offer free tickets, but officials could choose to buy them instead. •72 season football tickets, worth $136 each. Total value of $9,792. Additional single-game tickets given out worth $187. •Basketball game tickets valued at $1,316. •Tickets for events at the Lied Center for Performing Arts worth $750. .: - Scott Maurer/ON