Veto keeps senators on committee By Angie Brunkow Staff Reporter_ AS UN President Andrew Sigerson vetoed Wednesday a senate decision to have students at large replace sena tors on the Five-Year Projection Com mittee. , Sigerson said thecommittee, which makes recommendations to the Asso ciation of Students of the University of Nebraska about improvements for campus, needs more senate represen tation. Last week, senators voted to re place senators with students at large because senators believed they were too busy with other activities and committees. j Sigerson fa vored replacing senators on the committee last ’■■.‘‘““p' week. But he said he decided that senators should serve on the com mittee despite their workload because AS UN ’ s primary job was to represent students. “It’s irresponsible of us to try to get out of it,” he said. Speaker of the Senate Andrew Loudon said the Appointments Board already had appointed students to the five positions. Sigerson said he would support a bill that gave three of the senate posi tions to students at large and left two positions to senators. That bill will be considered next week. In other business, ASUN passed a resolution recommending that next year’s campus maps mark emergency phones and list the numbers of the campus escort service, University Health Center and the University of Nebraska-Lincoln Police Department. Harmonizing with Mother Earth By Trish Spencer Staff Reporter_ The 500-year war that began with the arrival of Christopher Columbus in 1492 won’t end until Americans understand what the war is about, an internationally known Native Ameri can speaker said. Reuben Snake, a member of the Winnebago Tribe, spoke at the Cul ture Center Tuesday during a Nebras kans for Peace event. Snake said the struggle was not between races, but between people who had respect for the Earth and people who did not. Intuitive thinkers believe in a Mother Earth with a spirit, he said. They want to maintain balance and harmony rather than dominate the Earth. Rational thinkers practice a new religion called scientism, Snake said. For them, something must be proved or it doesn’t exist. “Scientism says there is no need to believe in a divine power,” Snake said. “This is where rational thinking has led us.” He said this thinking also had led to the destruction of the Earth’s re sources, because rational thinkers saw everything as objects. When people came to the New World, they came to the Garden of Eden, he said. “Everything was here, and we de stroyed it all in our hunger.” Now, 4 percentof the Earth’s popu lation consumes40percentof its natu ral resources each year, he said. This kind of living cannot continue if the Earth is to survive, he said. “Un less we change direction, we’ re going to wind up where we’re headed.” Snake said he hoped that things would change. Albert Einstein was a rational thinker, Snake said, yet he recognized that everything was con nected by a greater power. If Einstein recognized this, then so can other rational thinkers, Snake said. Ending the 500-year war requires an attitude change, he said. To bring about the change, Native Americans must keep singing, chant ing and praying, he said. Held over by popular demand 1 Session.$3 10 Sessions...$25 20 Sessions...$40 Mon/Wed/Th urs... 9- 8 Tues/Fri .9-7 Sat.9-4 - (Next to Ken's Kegs) 466-8044 •Eyebrows •Nails i HE RIDE OF TERRO IS BACK! The Haunted Forest at the Acreage 2601 Saltillo Road October Dark 'til 11:30 p.m. 23, 24, 25, 28, 29, 30, $1 The Acreage Snack liar will he open! For Group Reservations or Information, call: 474-7644 $2.50 per person , Under 5 years of age free at parent's discretion. tnsored by The Sertoma Club of Lincoln POLICE REPORT Beginning midnight Tuesday 12:50 p.m. — Intoxicated men, 16th and R streets, transported to detoxification center, 721 K St. 3:08 p.m. — Vehicle scratched, parking.Io t east of Nebraska Un ion, $150. 3:56 p.m. — Vehicle scratched, parking lot north of Harper Schramm-Smith complex, $ 1 (X). 4:05 p.m.— Hit-and-run accident, Nebraska Hall parking lot, $25. . 10:49 p.m. — Center of hubcap stolen, parking lot north of Harper - Schramm-Smith complex, S10. Race Continued from Page 1 The deficit is something “my gen eration is passing on to your genera tion. We spent money we didn’t have, and now we need to make adjust ments,” Fisher said. Another major concern of both candidates is the environment. Fisher said a realistic environmen tal initiative was needed and alterna tive energy resources should be stud ied. Barrett said that as people turned their thoughtsaway from the military, they would turn thciraiicniion toward the environment. He said he also was involved in government reform and hoped people would vote for him based on his integ rity and experience. Fisher said the United States was "created by non-professional politi cians, and that was when it was at its best. “It’s difficult to change the system if you are a product of the system,” Fisher said. “Lowell Fisher is not a product of the system.” Homecoming Continued from Page 1 This increases the likelihood of reciprocal trcalmcni in Lincoln, Cauhlc said. On lop of all that, the Huskers’ volleyball gamcagainst Missouri also is.Salurday night, Caublc said. Cauble said he planned to send officers to as many events as he could to ensure security. He said he believed the weekend would be busy for his force, but it was all just a part of the job. ‘‘My over-time budget is going to be strained,” he said. 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