Fond thoughts of home fill Chinese new year By Chris Hegarty Staff Reporter ~ A weekend of events is planned for some UNL students to ring in the new year. The Chinese new year, that is. The Chinese new year is marked by the first day of the lunar month, usually in late January or early February, and is the start of a Chi nese celebration known as the Spring Festival. Tuesday was the start of the new year. The high point of the celebra tion is the eve of the new year, marked by firecrackers and loud celebrations. Bin Gong, president of the Chi nese Students Association, said celebrating the holiday in America was difficult because it was not widely observed. “Here we don’t have the atmo sphere to celebrate,” he said. “In China, you can hear the fireworks everywhere. It’s quiet here. That makes it hard.” On Saturday, the Chinese Stu dents Association will host events to celebrate the new year, which include a dinner at Mr. Panda’s restaurant, 2900 N 70th St., from 2:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. The cost is $4 per person. The Association also will host a dance from 4 p.m. to 11 p.m. at the Culture Center, 333 N. 14th St. The group also will show vid eos in the Nebraska Union of new year celebrations in China. The new year is also an impor tant time of reunion for families, but for many Chinese students at UNL, returning home is not pos sible. “I miss home, -and I called them,” said Huang Xuanning, a graduate student in electrical engi neering. “It is all I can do right now.” Zhang Xuanqi, a 42-year-old chemistry research scholar, said some students called home just to uHere we don’t have the atmosphere to celebrate. In China, you can hear the fireivorks everyivhere. It’s quiet here. That makes it hard. ” m BIN GONG president of the Chinese Students Association listen to the fireworks. “For young students, they will miss home,” he said. “They called home (Monday) morning to hear the fireworks. Everyone can hear the fireworks over the phone.” The lunar festival dates back to a time when, according to Chinese legend, a wild beast appeared at the end of winter and devoured villagers. But the beast was afraid of drums, firecrackers and the color red. Every year vi 1 lagers would paint objects red and explode “bamboo crackers” to protect themselves. Jessica Chong, assistant pro gram coordinator for the Interna tional Affairs Office, said the color red was still important in the new year celebration. “Everyone still wears red. No one wears black,” she said. Chong also said when younger family members visited older ones, they received small red packets with money in them. Huang said the new year meant a lot to him. “The beginning of the new year is full of hope and full of luck. It is so important to me and my fam ily,” he said. Office helps decipher forms From Staff Reports The Office of Scholarships and Financial Aid will be offering assis tance in completing the 1995-96 Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) and Renewal Applications in the Nebraska Union during Febru ary. Financial aid staff members will be available from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Feb. 6-8,13-15 and 20-22, in the first floor lounge area of the union. Students are encouraged to bring the appropriate supporting documen tation, such as tax returns or applica tions. For more information, contact the Office of Scholarships and Finan cial Aid at 472-4242. Former student faces lawsuits From Staff Reports A former UNL student charged with five counts of felony assault is now facing a double lawsuit in con nection with the same incident. Scott Schwaderer, a senior busi ness management major last fall, ran into several people with his pickup truck Nov. 13, after they made a comment about his cowboy hat, po lice said. Jeffrey and Denise Benne, two of the victims in the incident, filed law suits in Lancaster County District Court Tuesday seeking medical com pensation for their injuries. Jeffrey Benne, 29, reported suf fering a sprained ankle, cuts and abra sions. His suit asks for $634.55, the amount of his medical expenses. Denise Benne, 27, reported suf fering fractures to her skull, pelvis and right shoulder. Her medical bills totaled more than $12,500. Both lawsuits also name Paul Schwaderer of Grand Island, Scott’s father. The lawsuits argue say the 1989 Ford pickup that Scott Schwaderer was driving belonged to hi's father, and was thus Paul Schwadcrer’s responsibility. Police reports stated that Scott Schwaderer, 22, had been at The Neighbors Lounge, 7010 O St., sing ing karaoke. When he came off the stage, reports state, someone in a group of four couples, which included Jeffrey and Denise Benne, said “nice hat.” Schwaderer was wearing a black cowboy hat at the time. He later met the group in the lounge parking lot and after a verbal ex change, drove into them with his truck, reports state. Schwaderer left the scene, but later called 911 and turned himself in. Schwaderer also was charged with one count of driving while intoxicated. Attempts to reach Schwaderer or Herbert Friedman, the Bennes’ law yer, Wednesday night were unsuc cessful. Loudon worries about costly Union By Melanie Brandert Staff Reporter The time has come to prepare the Nebraska Union for the future, Di rector Daryl Swanson told A SUN senators Wednesday night. A proposed $10 million expan sion would extend the union to the north and renovate the University Bookstore, union administrative of fices, the food court dining room and other existing areas. It also would provide additional meeting rooms, a new 300-seat audi torium and more businesses, such as a music store and a dry cleaner. In addition, the expansion would upgrade mechanical and electrical systems and modify handicap-acces sible areas to bring them up to federal requirements. Swanson gave a slide presenta tion to senators, showing vital areas in the union that were in need of renovation or expansion. James Griesen, vice chancellor for student affairs, told senators that the university could not use state tax dol lars to build non-academic facilities. “It’s very clear that we wouldn’t get another state dollar for this,” he said. Andrew Loudon, president of the Association of Students of the Uni versity of Nebraska, said his main concern with the expansion was its cost and how student fees would be affected. The senate also passed a referen dum introduced by Loudon that would ask students if they would support an increase in student fees. Plainsmen Continued from Page 1 “This is not advocating someone to pop some doctor with a bullet,” he said. He said everyone should remem ber the inalienable rights guaranteed in the Declaration of Independence. “This doesn’t mean you have the right to spread your legs in the back seat of every car you want to spread you legs in,” he said. Rights belong to die innocent, he said, and not to criminals, such as those who torture and torment chil dren. He said abortion tortured and tormented babies. He said that because fetuses “cry and struggle when their arms and legs are ripped off,” they were the same as babies. “They say if it looks like a duck, walks like a duck and quacks like a duck,” he said, “it probably is a duck.” Ball then pointed to the noose. “This stands for the judgment of God,” he said. “... Abortion is legal because the public accepts it as legal, but it’s not legal in the eyes of God.” During Ball’s demonstration, Sheryl Schrepf stood 3 feet from him and contested his statements. Schrepf is the executive director of Nebraska Planned Parenthood Voters for Choice. Schrepf, the former executive di rector of the Preterm Clinic in Brookline, Mass., — the site of two shootings — said the noose and plate demonstration would incite violence against Planned Parenthood of Lin coln. “They’re trying to say we’re pull ing the heads off babies? That’s ab surd,” she said. “That’s not exag geration. That’s lying.” Schrepf said this was the first con tact she had had with the Plainsmen. No matter what groups show up to protest, she said, the clinic will open in May. Charles and Mary Lue Gove said they hoped it wouldn’t. The couple watched the demonstration and said they supported Ball’s views. “I spent 22 years in the Air Force and went on 35 missions in World War II,” Charles Gove said. “This is not what I did it for. The Supreme Court is dead wrong.” The Goves said they were not members of the Plainsmen but had several friends who were. The Plainsmen was founded in March 1994. The organization has more than 400 members, with 80 percent in Omaha and Lincoln. The rest of the members are from central and western Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Pennsylvania, Colorado and Illinois. “Our purpose is to restore the Con stitution,” Ball said. Although the group started with a focus on repealing the assault weap ons ban — most of the members are also members of the National Rifle Association — Ball said the Plains men was not a single-issue group. “The gun has no value except in the protection of values,” he said. “The purpose of the gun is not for duck hunting. It’s to protect the val ues declared in the Declaration of Independence.” Ball said the Plainsmen advocated capital punishment, especially in cases of child molestation. “We’re grass-roots. We’re local,” he said. “We’re trying to be good citizens. “We think we’re losing our liber ties to protect the guilty and damage the innocent. We want to make sure we have public virtue back again.” John Cougar Mellencamp AMERICAN FOOL Eric Clapton TIMEPIECES - Best of Elton John GREATEST HITS U2 WAR ^ ALSO FIND MORE THAN 250 SELECTED TiTltl FROM THE FOLLOWING ARTISTS USUI m II_ "U;: Sorry —CASH ONLY Advertised titles are on sale through February 28th, 1995 — • - ' ' ’ - . ' . »>' ■ : 1 Bryan Adams Kiss Allman Brothers Bob Marley Louis Moody Blues Armstrong Van Morrison BTO. Nazareth Bee Gees Parliament Big Country The Police Bon jovi Rush j.J. 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