Tht foHoering it a Rat of goto ASUN has eat, and the progress ft Use msds. 1. Tb create succeeaM programming for Marti Luther King, Jr Day on Jrtl 19 aa wal aa create a Martin Luther tong, Jr. Diy coordinating conaateBion for 199& ri!!?.t!?^ape^rf^a8^^W8V8»ASUNwasaponsotoBflVBnlBtDrM(#dyaaBmoon ntw Nebraska UriontW would include stodent groups such as teMadcan American Stodsnt Associate^ AHcan People* tteion and tie Woman* States Aseodalon. Hoang said ASUN ataowR to aporaortng aoorinuai ahoMtngoftiel Hbm Qeanf speech by tw UNuara^ Rogram Oouid in tw 04x Thw year, ASUN Reddent Curt Rjwe said, tiara hae been a lot of confusion aboutwho was doing WW tor twhoUayRjwa said nad yea he wanted one commis6ton,poeaUyconeiafcig of faoAy; atteifctatera,siudtaoqgarBafonlaadereaW ASUN menteretocoordbWedi events for twhofcfey. znaaarach and wwiktowiBro the Implementation of mkttann and atondard academic evaluations in addRton to the exisfog departmental evaluations. —Rave said ASLtf started woric last sonestor on new evatoeffans and several Academic Senate members have beenVey receptor to tie idea and areoorttodng to woritfor A Rjwb sebUMy goal totohaM an anuatB comparison acraes departments an tie efiBcMneas of hBtuoioa'he said. 1 Cortinueto work tovord Implementation of a parking education class. -Rave 8aid9enelorawoddcorinuetoworicwth lad McOowaidkactor of Paridng Services, poestoly to grrasfcjderfeadwnrotodecreaeetwtnanciai burden of paridngtckste fay taktogaparitegeducaion cIbb Rjwb said tie dess wl educate students who Vt drtrt toiow twy couidnl peri( taWt* 4 Work toward Internet registration for dataae. -The increased use cftwhtenWhae created aneedforregtetationofdassesonordne.Rjwasaid, Wfch twUtoreiyrfNetxaskadamalwabBttV has. Restoring fvcaisaesontoBaTxJtenfcJy cheaper raaouce,1'Rare said, by aMxfng long dstance phone chagas. 5. Lobby for aludent support for a Jury deferment ML —A^aydetomwtbl tat woddeMamptskJdsrb ton jufydutyfcatedtodutydutog tie semester Wwntwyareaaencftigctaseescid not pass last yea in tw Nebraska LegfcietJB,Rjwe said. This yea ASUN W^ pushing tor twbl agate. The blwodd let stodente defer tWrjufydJtyunRtwsumma aaineWientiey ware not taking daseea. As »is, Rjwb said, a student calad far jjydutodibwtrWs week may hewe to go to juy duly and mtea a InaL 6. Work toward toeping the Student bnpact Teem and Government Uason CommittM busy through working toward campus bewtiMatiton projects. -TheStudenthpactTeamandGbwmmentUasonCommllwhawttogoelafgatetegmoneyto purchase tees on Ciy and East campuses to replaoetw ones tw ware desboyeddumg 1997% winter StofTTL " 7. Recoretruct the Outstandtog educator Award. —Rmw said twaMwrd was set ipuiabty so tWtoachere of smala desses dd not hewe ttw same chance a winnteg te award as teednre in Wga, 10CHevei ctaaaes. to tw two yeas tW tw award has eodsted, Pad Keter, associate prefassa of chorteby has won tw awod, Rjwb said. PSAT scores show smaller gender gap WASHINGTON (AP) - The gap between, boys and girls on a qualify ing test for national scholarships has narrowed with the addition of a writ ing segment on which girls did bet ter. Changes in results on the Preliminary SAT, released Wednesday, mean more girls will have a shot at more than $25 million in National Merit Scholarships when the girls graduate from high school next year. However, critics say the test is still biased and a reliance on it continues to exclude too many girls who outperform boys in school. The College Board added the writing skills section to the October 1997 PS AT, taken by 1.2 million high schoolers, mostly juniors. The addition followed a gender bias complaint to the Department of Education by the National Center for Fair & Open Testing, a Cambridge, Mass., group that opposes reliance on standardized tests to determine scholarships and admissions. “Test scores simply do not mea sure merit,” said Bob Schaeffer, director of the group known as FairTest. The group says the PSAT, with its reliance on multiple-choice ques tions, favors a test-taking style in which boys do better because they ^re more apt to risk a guess after nar rowing down the possible answers. The test, also used for guidance and to prepare for the SAT, still mea sures math and verbal reasoning. Girls did better than in previous years on the verbal part of the PSAT but dropped slightly in the math por tion. TTiey lagged behind boys in both sections, but not as much as in the past. Girls outdid boys in the writing part, which tests grammar, usage, sentence and paragraph structure and the ability to revise. The College Board and National Merit Scholarship Corp. says the bias lies not in the tests but in exter nals such as the pool of test-takers, course selection and disparate treat ment of boys and girls in the same classroom. With more girls taking challenging courses, especially in math and science, the gap is bound to narrow, the College Board and National Merit Scholarship Corp. said. Fifty-six percent of the National Merit Scholars last year were boys, compared with an average of 61 per cent in the late 1980s and early 1990s, according to figures in a recent annual report. For four years this decade, the Evanston, 111.,-based organization declined to release numbers on the ground that they were not relevant, said spokes woman Elaine Detweiler. “The gap is smaller, and we think that it coincides with the better acad emic preparation of girls,” she said. Some 15,000 of the October 1997 test takers will become semifi nalists, due to their PS AT scores. One-half of those will get scholar ships as seniors based on a range of criteria, with scholarship amounts ranging from $1,000 to $40,000. Schaeffer, the FairTest director, said the new test and revised weight ing formula mean the score gap was narrowed in just one year by 40 per cent. However, it will be later this year before anyone knows how many more girls will become scholarship semifinalists based on test scores. The semifinalists will be chosen from among the top scores in each state. The scores, on a scale of 20 to 80: ■ The national average score on the PSAT was 48.7 in verbal, 49 in math and 49.4 in writing skills. Verbal was up 0.5 points and math down 0.2. ■ Boys averaged 48.9 in verbal, up 0.3. They scored 50.9 in math, unchanged, and 49 in writing. ■ Girls averaged 48.7 in verbal, up 0.8, but their score of 47.6 in math was down 0.2. Their written score was 49.8. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, boys scored about a point higher in verbal and three to four points higher in math -'>1 0 WASHINGTON (AP) - Republican lawmakers pressed President Clinton Wednesday to join them in changing income tax rules that they say penalize people for being married. In a letter signed by 123 House members, including Speaker Newt Gingrich, lawmakers asked Clinton to use his State of the Union address later this month to endorse their pro posal to eliminate the so-called mar riage tax penalty. “It’s immoral that our tax code punishes our most basic institution,” said Rep. Jerry Weller, R-Ill., chief sponsor of the legislation along with Rep. David McIntosh, R-Ind. Weller and McIntosh said 42 per cent of all Americans, 21 million mar ried couples, pay higher taxes than if they were single because filing joint returns pushes them into a higher tax bracket. For example, a couple jointly making $60,000 a year, putting them in the 28 percent tax bracket, would have to pay nearly $1,400 more in taxes than if they were single and each paid taxes on incomes of $30,000, which is in the 15 percent bracket. The two lawmakers, who intro duced their legislation last September, said they now have 232 co-sponsors, including about a dozen Democrats. They said their bill, which would give married couples the option of fil ing separately if that meant a smaller tax burden, would cost the govern ment $18 billion in revenues a year, and could be paid for with the budget surpluses expected in the coming years. Similar legislation has also been offered in the Senate, including a pro posal by Sen. John Ashcroft, R-Mo., that would allow married couples to split their tax burden. Clinton last month said he was opposed in principle to the “marriage penalty,” but added that there are “a lot of tax cuts that might be desirable, but how would you pay for them?” Christensen makes tax hill priority ■ The Nebraska representative joins his peers in aiming to remove the penalty. OMAHA (AP)-Rep. Jon Christensen, R-Neb., is mak ing the elimination of the so called marriage tax penalty a priority for this session of Congress. Could that have anything to do with the fact that Christensen plans to marry former Miss America Tara Dawn Holland in late November or early December of this year? No, according to his administrative assistant, Lori Wall, who said Christensen has been inter ested in the issue for almost two years. In a letter signed by 123 Republican House members, including Christensen and Speaker Newt Gingrich, law makers on Tuesday asked President Clinton to use his State of the Union address later this month to endorse their proposal to eliminate the penalty. Christensen, 34, divorced his first wife in 1996. Ms. Holland, 24, is the former Miss Kansas and has been regularly with him on the gubernatorial candidate’s campaign stops in Nebraska. Clinton prepares for deposition WASHINGTON (AP)-Loath to see Paula Jones tread on White House grounds, President Clinton’s legal team has moved his weekend deposition even as the president says it is “proba bly” inevitable that he will stand trial on a sexual harassment accusation. Clinton is expected to give a sworn deposition in the civil suit on Saturday at the downtown Washington firm of his attorney, Robert Bennett. Mike McCurry, White House press secretary, said Wednesday that Clinton had a mid morning appointment on Saturday and all but confirmed that he will be at the law offices near the White House. The president’s testimony was orig inally expected toJbe taken at the execu tive mansion. After the date was disclosed last week - and a spokeswoman announced that Jones would exercise her right to attend - the Clinton camp moved to change the venue to deny news cameras the chance to photograph Jones at the White House, two sources confirmed Tuesday. Given a court-ordered ban on any discussion of depositions given in the case, sources spoke only on condition of anonymity. Clinton, meanwhile, made rare comments on the case in an Oval Office interview Tuesday. He was asked by U.S. News & World Report whether it seemed inevitable that the lawsuit would go to trial on May 27, when jury selection is set to begin. "Probably,” Clinton replied with what reporters described as a resigned smile and slow shake of his head. “You know, I let my other people talk for me on that because I just try to put it over in a little box and go on and do my work.” Clinton rarely speaks publicly of the case and has been known to snSp at reporters who question him about it. With Jones’ settlement demands reach ing as high as $3 million, negotiations for an out-of-court resolution have stalemated. The evidence-gathering portion of the case is to end by Jan. 30. ■