UNL’s best to motivate students By Jan Calinger Staff Reporter The bestof U NL brainsand brawns will be working together to keep Lin coln students in school. The University of Nebraska-Lin coln Athletic Department and Golden Key National Honor Society arc ob serving American Education Week by sending students to eight Lincoln j un ior and sen i or h i gh sc hool s to speak. Keith Zimmer, alhlclie/carccr counselor for the UNL Athletic De partment, said the university students would speak about motivation in school, selling goals anil committing oneself to full potential. Alter the speeches, the sessions will be open for questions. Isaac Cursory a .member of the UNL track team, said Education Week was a good opportunity to talk to younger students about the impor tance of education and athletics. He said he believed the program was the best way for high school students to be reached about educa tion. “I think it’s a great program,” Carson said. “When I was in junior high, the only people who came to us were adults. I think kids will look up to us, because we’re going through the same things.” Carson said the program also had a positive effect on him. “(Zimmer) telling me that 1 was a role model, motivated me to keep my grades up,” he said. Susan Doerr, a member of the Golden Key National Honor Society, echoed Carson s opinions about the program. “I thought it would be fun and good for kids as well as a learning experi ence for me,” she said. “I think the kids will look up to us. They’ll really listen to what we have to say. They’re not just going to ignore us. “We have to pass on our knowl edge, so (students) don’t make the same mistakes we did.” Zimmer said American Education Week was ideal as a community ser vice project and was well-received during its first year. He also said he was expecting a good reception this year. “StudenLshave made brochurcsand decorated the schools to prepare,” he said. “It’s a really big deal to them. There’s a lot of enthusiasm.” RHA opposes guard tor parking lot By Irish Spencer Staff Reporter A proposal to spend S16,000 for a security guard in the Cathcr-Pound Neihardt residence hall parking lot met with opposition from members of the Residence Hall Association at Monday night’s meeting. Mark Goldfcdcr, a student repre sentative on the University of Nc braska-Lincoln Parking Advisory Board, said his informal proposal would place a certified security guard in a booth from at least 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. Funds to pay the officer’s salary, about SI6,(XX), would come from re allocation in the parking advisory board’s budget, Goldfcdcr said. I Andrea Casart.Ncihardt president, said the booth would be a waste of money and that the money would be better spent on paving lots. Goldfcder said the booth would be useful because some students did not think the new security phones were enough. UNL police work with a “skeleton crew” of four of ficers and one dispatcher at night. Jodi Veylupek, Ncihardl senator, said it was no secret that the parking lots were unsafe. If residents come home late at night, they call a friend to ride with thenuo find a parking space. she said, or they call the Lampus Escort Service. She said she thought the new security phones would in crease safely. Casart said she thought the new phones would be more useful than one security guard. One person couldn’t cover the parking lot in the time it wou Id take pol ice to respond to some one who uses the phone, she said. Goldfcdcr said the security guard also would protect the cars in the lot. There have been complaints about cars being broken into, he said. Goldfcdcr said students or faculty who had suggestions or comments should attend the UNL Parking Advi sory Board meeting Thursday at 3 p.m. in the Nebraska Union. 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Bum Rush the Show" •Beastie Boys-"Licensed to IU" •Beastie Boys-"Paul's Boutique" •1401 'O' St. *Eait Park Plaza 6105"O" St. *48th & Van Dorn 434-2500 434-2510 434-2520 434-2530 Letter Continued from Page 1 can males in the class. “I truly believe the situation would have been avoided if ibis information gap had not been there,” Caublc wrote. • The absence of an explanation to the students of the objective of the questioning. “To begin questioning without advising someone of the circum stances being looked into and ensur ing the individual is aware of the possible results of any information obtained in the interview is not stan dard procedure,” he wrote. • A line of questioning that had no bearing on the situation being inves tigated. McGill asked each student if he knew Harms was in the class, and each one answered that he did not. “From that point,” Caublc wrote, “no subsequent questions relating to Candice Harms were asked. The ques tions were of a more personal type. This should not have happened.” The students said they were asked, among other things, their heights, weights, current and previous ad dresses and social security numbers. “Personal questions ... were not appropriate in this instance,” Caublc wrote. • A demand by McGill to photo graph the students, rather than a re quest the students could have refused. “Each of the students had a right to decline the taking of a photograph,” Caublc wrote. “1 do not feel this op tion was properly presented to them.” He also wrote that a photograph was nQl necessary for the investiga tion. * . Caublc said McGill made errors, but the chief said he didn’t think they were intentional. “I realize the pain caused (to the African-American studcnls)can never be removed,” he said. “But, in re sponse to the incident, I have taken several steps to prevent any similar incidents from taking place.” Those steps include soliciting in formation from minority students and I personnel at IheOfficcof Multicultural Affairs about problems minorities encounter with police. From there, recommendations for solutions can be made, he said. Also, he said, UNL police officers will receive training in cultural diver sity. Chambers said he wanted to know wfio gave the orders to conduct the “harassing escapade.” “If they took orders from the Lin coln Police Department, something is drastically wrong,” he said. Chambers said he had been dis turbed with Gricscn’s behavior since the incident occurred. “Everything Gricscn has done has muddied the water from the begin ning,” he said. “His remarks have been flippant, and he has attempted to trivialize the situation.” After the investigation began, Gricscn said he thought the police investigation was appropriate. Chambers said that because Gricscn already had said he thought the police action was justified and appropriate, he rendered himself un suitable to conduct the investigation with Goebel. _ > + _ Each of the students had a right to decline the taking of a photo graph. I do not feel this option was properly presented to them. -Cauble UNL police chief -99 ~ In the report to Spanicr, Gricscn and Goebel said the description given of the man that Harms was allegedly scaled beside was “an African-Ameri can male of large build.” Three of the five students ques tioned by police were interviewed by the Daily Nebraskan. Phil Bales, a former fullback on the Cornhuskcr football team, is 6 feet 2 inches tall, 260 pounds. Mitchell Strong, a fresh man sprinter on Nebraska’s track and field team, is 5 feet 11 inches tall. Anthony Briggs is 5 feet 5 inches tall and heavy-set. Briggs said one of the other stu dents questioned was light-skinned, and did not look African-American. “The description excluded some of the students, yet all were set upon by the UNL officer.” Chambers said he thought Spanicr was “very poorly served” by Gricscn and Goebel, and that the two misrep resented facts. Neither Gricscn nor Goebel could be reached for comment. Dorms Continued from Page 1 The major difficulty officials arc facing, Morgcnscn said, is a lack of cash (low to construct the student housing. Joe Rowson, director of public af fairs at UNL, said residence halls would be built on UNO campus only if they were self-supportive through room rentals. But the traditional high-rise dor mitory is not a feasible option at UNO because of h igh construction costs, he said. Room rental, Rowson said, would have to be about twice the amount charged by either the University of Ncbraska-Lincoln or the University Coordination Continued from Page 1 list of capital construction priorities for state-run colleges and universi ties, which was reviewed at the re gents monthly meeting Saturday. The commission’s priorities were at odds with the regents. The commission’s lop priority for the list is universitywide compliance with lire, safely and asbestos regula tions. The regents had made the com pliance projects 1 Ithon theirpriority list. The regents’ top priority — asbes tos removal and renovation in Burnett Hall at UNL — was relegated to 1 Oth place on the commission’s list. Martin said the commission had set up an objective process for evalu ation of projects where criteria was weighted on a point plan that was consistent with the statewide compre hension plan. Regent Don Blank of McCook said he thought the use of a point system to of Nebraska al Kearney lo be sell supportive. The only other option, he said, would be to construct a series of one or iwo-siory buildings lo house stu dents. “But they don’t have the room for that,” Rowson said. “Either way it Tdoks like a pretty lough proposition.” He said that Regent Charles Wil son of Lincoln interviewed UNO stu dents and found it was a major issue on the campus. • The regents, Rowson said, want UNO officials to pursue all options lo build housing. “The subcomm i lice be I ic ves, based on student input, that it isan important issue,” he said. “The board is not willing to totally forget it.” make the project priority lists was a frustrating part of the meetings with the commission. Blank said a lot of time and effort went into pulling priorities together for the NU system. To see it com pletely “flip-flopped” at the meeting was discouraging, he said. “We need subjective thought on capital construction; it can’t just be from a point system — you have lo look al needs and priorities,” Blank said. Herb Howe, associate to the chan cellor of the University of Nebraska Lincoln, said the frustrations con cerning the commission were not par ticular to the NU system. The amount of time it takes to respond to the commission’s requests is even more of a burden for smaller institutions, he said. “This should not be seen as a NU vs\ the commission issue,” Howe said. “Other institutions don’t have the stall in place or the institutional research and planning functions of some other institutions. I