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Box 483, Rock Hill, New York 12775. Parking Problems? Need a Place to Park? Park by Day $1.00 Park by Month $25.00 Don t1 ignt t or ranting: Enter at 8th & S Streets, 1 Block West of Memorial Stadium Contact: 1033 "O" St., Suite 120,474-2274 Oklahoma follows NU’s lead From Staff and Wire Reports The NU Board of Regents jokingly considered a motion Saturday that would have congratulated Oklahoma for following Nebraska’s lead in the hunt for Micron. Omaha, Oklahoma City, Okla., and Utah County, Utah, are finalists for the Boise, Idaho, company’s pro posed $1.3 billion plant. The site of the plant, which would employ up to 3,500 people, is expected to be se lected by March 1. Oklahoma Gov. Frank Keating said last week that master’s degree programs would be offered at the Micron plant if the Oklahoma City site was chosen. University of Nebraska President Dennis Smith said Friday that was fine with him. “If Oklahoma is saying they are starting something, then they are way behind,” Smith said Friday on the regents tour of the University of Ne braska-Lincoln. Smith said an NU program called CorpNet had been offering on-the job master’s programs for years. He said the program would be expanded under his recommendations to im prove engineering education in Ne braska. Micron officials have said the prox imity of a trained work force and an engineering college were factors in deciding where to locate the plant. Micron officials are expected to meet with university officials this week during visits to Nebraska. Regents Continued from Page 1 May said the report was written by all four chancellors’ commissions to bring one voice to the regents. “This report should not and cannot be interpreted as assigning blame,” she said. “The slate is relatively clean.” The report says the percent of women faculty at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln increased 4 percent in ten years. In 1984,13.7 percent of UNL fac ulty were women, earning the school a seventh-place ranking among peer universities. However, the report shows that UNL slipped to ninth among its peers in 1994, when the percent rose to 17.7 percent. The Omaha and Kearney campuses posted similar numbers. Both showed a rising number of women faculty, but their growth was slower than at other universities. NU President Dennis Smith sup ported the recommendations, and said NU had been doing better at hiring women faculty. He said, however, that reaching a goal of the midpoint among peer uni versities by the year 2000 might be difficult because of uncertain hiring numbers. He asked for a strong com mitment to the goal but not an abso lute requirement. May said a significant rise in the number of women hired at each of the four campuses would be needed to catch up with peer universities. How ever, she said, that would be difficult because NU was already behind, and other university’s numbers kept ris ing. Miller questioned the recommen dations in the report and the regents’ goal of leadership among peer univer sities. “Your recommendations are really a blatant call to sex discrimination,” he said. Miller said it was question able whether a recommendation call ing for hiring based on sex was defen sible in court. May said Miller’s concerns laid with the board’s goals, not with the report. “There is absolutely nothing rep resenting a quota in the report,” May said Sunday. “We took great care to reject the use of quotas. It’s hard to imagine how anyone who read the report would conclude otherwise.” She said Miller’s criticism of the use of peer groups was unfair. She said it was a valid comparison, which was why the regents used them. In other business, the regents unani mously approved an almost 6.5 per cent increase in room and board rates at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln for 1995-96. Tour Continued from Page 1 Even Mother Nature or deferred maintenance couldn’t put a tarnish on UNL’s shine. The sun was out for most of the day, and Richards and Burnett halls were not on the tour. The tour was part of a change in the regents’ meeting agendas. Instead of hearing reports from each of the four chancellors at their monthly meet ings, the regents will tour the indi vidual NU campuses. During the tour, the regents were shown some of the newer parts of UNL, such as the multimedia lecture hall in Henzlik Hall, where biology professor Anthony Joem was busy hustling remote controls and comput ers as he taught cellular mitosis. Regent Robert Allen of Hastings and Regent John Payne of Kearney watched, as if they were students, a cell split on the screen in front of the class. The regents also saw a food sci ences center in Mabel Lee Hall and the Physics InfoMall in Brace Labora tory. The regents said the cost of these centers concerned them, but they thought the centers were needed in vestments. HOW TO KEEP PEOPLE'S HANDS OFF YOUR MONEY. A Carry only enough cash to last the day. Anyone who tries to borrow your last five spot isn’t a friend, anyway. A Label your spare-change jar “beetle farm.'* Then, put your beetle farm in a jar labeled “spare change." 6 Mark up every space on checks. Don't leave room for someone to fill in their name and extra zeros. 6 Keep your wallet in your front pocket. It discourages pickpockets. So does wearing really tight pants. 6 Put your picture on your credit card. A Citibank Photocard is tough for anyone else to use, unless they look just like you.