Activists urge regents to take stand By Matthew Waite Senior Reporter_£__ Environmental activists, armed with a 35-foot, inflatable chain saw, told the regents Saturday that the com pany contracted to provide video screens for Memorial Stadium was an environmental rapist. . . mii nmpiiM Mitsubishi NU REGENTS corp was con traded by the NU Board ofRcgcnts to install two video screens, valued at $3.5 million, in Memorial Stadium for replays during Nebraska football games. Protesters from Nebraska Earth i First!, the Rain Forest Action Net work and Ecology Now said the re gents should lake their business else where. The group asked the board to break the contract with M ilsubishi to send a message to the company that its envi ronmental practices would not be tol erated. Mitsubishi has extensive log ging interests around the world. Rob Klein, a University of Nc braska-Lincoln sophomore and Ecol ogy Now member, told the regents he had visited the rain forests in Belize, South America, through a UNL pro gram. While there, he said he learned about the beauty and importance of the rain forest. “1 find it extremely disturbing ... that I return to find the same univer sity was supporting (Mitsubishi),’ Klein said. . . The university has instituted recy cling programs and other environ mentally friendly policies on campus, Klein said. “The university needs to ... prac tice what it preaches,” he said. “UNL should show that it is an institution that can stand up for what it believes Klcinsaid the protest was not meant to bring the university down, but to encourage administrators to send Mitsubishi a message. Matt Rosscll, a recent University of Nebraska at Kearney graduate and Ecology Now member, said Mitsubishi was destroying forests in Malaysia, Brazil, Chile and Canada and is mov ing into Siberia. And, he said, the destruction is not reserved just to trees. “This company is not just destroy ing forests, it’sdestroying(culturcs),” Rosscll said. “Mitsubishi’s operation is truly an example of cultural geno cide.” Rosscll said although the contract had been signed, he encouraged the regents to break it for the sake of the forests. “Trees do not grow on money, Rosscll said. “Once the forests arc — II-— UNL should show that it is an institution that can stand up for what it believes in. — Klein UNL sophomore and Ecology Now member -tt - gone... no amounlofmoncy can bring them back.” Richard Wood, NU general coun sel, said the regents’ hands were tied in this matter. If the regents break the contract, he said, they would be sub ject to breach of contract lawsuits. The environmental groups asked Wood to investigate ways to avoid legal liability, but he said he knew of none. If the contract can’t be broken, Lisa Williams of Lincoln said the regents should do something to tell Mitsubishi they disagreed with the corporation’s environmental prac tices. The regents could send Mitsubishi a letter outlining the problems, she said. Regent Chairman Charles Wilson of Lincoln said the board would have to discuss the issue of sending a letter at its next meeting. AM • Regents raise parking conce ms to bpamer From Staff Reports _ __ UNL Chancellor Graham Spanicr didn’t plan to discuss the proposed parking garage Sat urday, but he ended up answering re gents’ concerns anyway. Spanicr took the i tern otTlhc regents’ agenda for Saturday’s meet ing, but Regent Nancy Hoch of Ne braska City asked him to talk on the issue. Hoch said members anu aiumm oi Alpha Phi Sorority wrote 195 letters to regents about a proposed parking garage next to their house at 1531 S St. Span ier sa id the idea was not sprung on anyone, and an open lorum was held on the issue. When no members of the sorority attended the forum, Spanier said he called the Alpha Phi president. Regent Rosemary Skrupa of Omaha said the idea of building a parking garage was confusing. Parking ga rages were being planned as other parking areas were being torn up for green space, she said. A park, or green space, will bebuilt north of the Nebraska Union this sum mer. “It’s kind of incongruous to rip up existing parking for grass and then go down the street and build a garage,” she said. Skrupa also asked Span icr how the parking garage would be financed. She said if the garage could not subsi dize itself, it should not be built. Spanier said because financial plans for the garage had not been finalized, he had pulled the item from the agenda. <4#* We've got s°^s more tanning equipment **60ns including a NEW Walk-In Bed! 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