Sunday beer sales illegal SUNDAY from page 1 rants and bars to sell liquor on Sun days after noon. Even with that provision, and with a six-pack just minutes away, some Lincoln residents still hit the road to buy beer on Sunday. Ralph Tomonelli, a senior me chanical engineering major at the Uni versity of Nebraska-Lincoln, said that when he and his friends would get off work on Sunday, they wanted to have a couple of beers. But the law put them on the road to find a cold one. “It was kind of a nuisance that you would have to drive out of town,” he said. “It was a pain in the ass, now that I think about it.” He said he still doesn’t understand. “Sunday’s just like any other day.” Proponents of Sunday sales argue that Lincoln residents leaving the city limits to buy beer turns into lost busi ness and tax revenue for the city. Opponents say more sales mean more chances for people driving while intoxicated and more police work. Jerry Shoecraft, a Lincoln City councilman and owner of Shoe’s Bar in the Haymarket, said revenue loss was a major concern. “Everything is about competition and revenue generation, trying to pay your own bills,” he said. “These people who have been doing business in Lin coln for 15 or 20 years deserve the right to compete.” The last attempt to pass an ordi nance came in 1993, Shoecraft said, and that caused division in the com munity and on the council. He said there have been rumblings in the community signaling to him there may be another attempt to pass an ordinance. “There will come a time again ... they will come forward with this idea,” he said. “One day, the pressure will come.” Shoecraft’s bar is not open on Sun days — he calls it his day of rest. But he said he sympathizes with liquor store owners and off-sale outlets. “I do understand their position,” he said. “We need a consensus on this ... before we go forward on this.” Jim Mumgaard, the owner of Mum’s Liquor, 841 N. 27th St., guessed that if they could sell pack aged liquor on Sundays, they would do as much business as a Monday or a Tuesday and boost their yearly total. For now, Lincoln’s no-sale Sun days are the law, Pedersen said. And preventing the sale of packaged liquor on Sunday is not a hard law to enforce. “Sunday sales of package liquor are illegal and if you do it, you are going to get a ticket for it,” Pedersen said. Stores with large liquor aisles, such as Super Saver at 48th and O streets, don’t chance anything when it comes to Sunday liquor sales, said Rod Weckman, assistant grocery manager. Weckman said technology allows the stores to stop liquor sales at the checkout counter. With computerized scanning of bar codes, managers can lock out the the codes for alcohol on Sundays, not allowing the checker to even scan them, he said. Signs are put on all the alcohol dis plays around the store, he said, and a chain is stretched across the large' open-faced refrigerator. r. • Even with all the signs and barri ers, Weckman said one or two people a week ask why they can’t get beer on Sunday. “Bqt thaf s not that many when you think that we s&l (groceries) to 5,000 people a day, ■ he said. “Most of the time, people are aware of it.” ' ° ' \ : . . Room, board rates to rise By Erin Gibson Senior Reporter Room and board rates for the University of Nebraska residence halls will increase by about 5 per cent next year, the NU Board of Regents decided Saturday. By unanimous vote, the regents approved proposals to raise room and board rates at the University of Nebraska’s Lincoln, Kearney and Medical Center campuses. The Omaha campus has no residence halls. In Lincoln, the cost of a double occupancy room and 19 jn^gg&ger week for the 1997-98 acacremfc year will rise to $3,700of frpm&is year’s cost of $3,525. A double room and 14 meals per week will cost $175 mqre?*mJrom $3,440. The same roomijpb^jf) meals per week will cdst an extra ; $190, up from $3,370. ^ Regent Chuck Hassebrook of Walthill asked the board why pro posed rates would rise faster than the overall cost of inflation in Ne braska. The board cited a significant rise in the cost of wages that resulted from an increase in the federal num t mum wage last year. In other action: ■ The board approved. a 4hfe& year contract with dtefpfp opment Corp. to purchase ;j^ptus Notes software and hardware neces sary to bring the entire NU system online with a single e-mail system. Two UNL chemistry professors objected to the boarcFs approval and testified against the Lotus pro posal. Lotus Notes does not keep up with the future of the Interpet, they said. V Lotus Notes will now^jpjace about 30 separate e-mailsy stems at the umvejjflawifeif wt ; incompatib^nraprbventl Board backs renovations REGENTS from page 1 to happen again, Blank said. Van Horn said, at its current pace, the university would never eliminate its maintenance backlog. The $95 million in planned reno vations would allow NU to catch up with needed maintenance in 20 years, he said. Van Horn said total renovations planned will include about 10 per cent of total NU building space, or 1.5 million square feet of NU struc tures. “The impact is tremendous,” he said. The project’s financial impact would be shared equally by the state of Nebraska and die university. NU President Dennis Smith said the university would issue bonds to help cover the cost, and could raise tuition about 1.5 percent over a four-year period. The tuition in crease would generate about $1.3 million, he said. Reallocation of internal funds also would help cover costs, Smith said. fer of documents and applications among campuses. Implementation of the new sys tem will cost about $312,000 over the next three years. ■ Hie board approved a plan to build Husker Authentic, a new store to showcase NU athletic merchan dise on the U£IL campus. Hie store will be built facing Memorial Sta for the west side of Stadium Drive. The store, will sell exclusive Husker ^thegitic merchandise, and include displays featuring 25 tele vision sets and a Husker athletics hall of fame. Melvin Jones, UNL vice chan cellor of business and finance, said the $587,GOO reqo|§ed Jor the store would.epme from extra Athletic , Thie^store will join a new ath letic ticket office in 5,500 square feet of the first floorefthe parking structure, he said. The Affair DepiRiiSfSivi ously contributed to parking struc ture costs, Jones said. The rest of the structure will hold 600 parking spaces, he said. ■ The board approved a 3-per cent pay raise for faculty and staff of the University of Nebraska at Kearney and the University of Ne braska at Omaha. The 3-percent raise will take ef fect in each of die following two years. Union members of each cam pus had already approved the ne gotiated raise with the NU Board of Regents. ■ The board approved the es tablishment of a NU Center for En vironmental Toxicology to study the effects erf chemicals on the en vironment, including agricultural chemicals. The center will involve faculty from both UNL and the University of Nebraska Medical Center, which have joindy developed a graduate program in environmental toxicol ogy over the past seven years. _______ . V .... V-; ■■ ' , ■ - - ■' - 3i%; % A mm jfc & tk jl 4 j I k: : 9 I ; I r’s Electrolysis Center Private Entrance • Offstreet Parking • Men & Women 13 Years Experience Ann Cheek j35. 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