SPORTS Ace In The Hole NU sophomore Sarah Sasse led the Huskers to the top of the pack through the first day of com petition at the Big 12 Preview. PAGE 8 Hi Small City, Big Art The Wagon Train Project, founded by Amy Lamphere, brings cutting-edge art into Lincoln and into our hearts. PAGE 11 TUESDAY September 14, 1999 Gray Mostly cloudy, high 67. onight, low 43. VOL. 99 COVERING THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN SINCE 1901 Homicide study moves toward start By Matthew Beermann Staff writer Lawmakers may gain a new under standing of Nebraska’s death penalty with a massive homicide study commis sioned by the Legislature. Members of the Nebraska Crime Commission met Monday to hammer out the details of the study, which will start in 2000. When completed, it will be the first ever comprehensive survey of homicide cases in Nebraska. The committee appointed to carry out this task includes Lancaster County Attorney Gary Lacey, Department of Corrections Director Harold Clark, as well as Phyllis Anstine and Steve Exon, both part of the 18-member Crime Commission. The study will look at the demo graphics of those convicted of homicide and details of how the homicide cases were handled. The study outline should be finalized later this month, when it will be made available to the public and voted on by the full commission. The commission will then contract with an outside individual or agency to gather and compile the data. Allen Curtis, director of the com mission, said he hoped a contractor would be chosen and data gathering started by Jan. 1,2000. Seeking balance The study is the result of LB76 and its companion bill, LB76A, passed by the Legislature this spring. The bills instructed the crime com mission to study “the race, gender, reli gious preference and economic status of the defendant and victim; the charges filed; the results of the trial; and the sen tence imposed” in all homicide cases since 1973. During the study, a moratorium on the death penalty would have been put into effect. But Gov. Mike Johanns vetoed LB76 and its moratorium, along with the companion bill, LB76A, which appropriated $160,000 for the study. Senators unanimously overruled his veto on LB76A, the part that appropriat ed $ 160,000 for the study. This left the Crime Commission in an unusual position: They had been given the money to implement a bill that didn’t pass. After consulting with Attorney General Don Stenberg, the commission elected to go ahead with the study, Curtis said. “We decided to use the original text of the bill as an outline, and then solicit u Even if the results of the study point toward a disproportionality, they probably won’t be statistically conclusive.” Allen Curtis director of the Nebraska Crime Commission ..— ii V" athers’ opinions on the scope of the study,” said Curtis. The committee held a pair of meet ings this summer to gamer public input. These meetings, held Aug. 3 in Omaha and Aug. 5 in North Platte, included ■ senators, attorneys and citizens. Gary Piccolo, president of the Nebraska Criminal Defense Attorney’s Association, stressed the need for fair less in the study. “Justice is often displayed as a bal ance,” Piccolo said at a hearing. “And so should be your study, a balanced study, me that considers both sides of the equation concerning the death penalty.” Professor Michael Radelet, chair nan of the sociology department at the Please see DEATH on 6 house stays, renovation plans grow By Veronica Daehn Staff writer Sara Miley said her fellow Alpha Chi Omega Sorority sisters love their house just as much as she does. And because of this, they all breathed a sigh of relief this summer after finding out they won’t have to give up the house. Because of the master plan the University of Nebraska-Lincoln released a year ago, Alpha Chi Omega’s house was to be destroyed to make way for a pedestrian-friendly grassy mall. Miley, Alpha Chi Omega president, said the uni versity decided to let the sorority keep its house. “We love our house,” she said. “There is an aes thetic feeling of having an old house on greek row.” The grassy mall was to extend from Memorial Stadium to the Beadle Center, cutting off traffic at 14th, 16* and 17* streets. Alpha Chi Omega, located at the comer of 16* and Vine streets, was in the way of the proposed mall, as was the vacated Sigma Alpha Mu Fraternity house. Miley, a junior exercise science major, said soror ity members were shocked when the university told them of the plans to move their house. “It was hard for us to be prepared to handle ques tions (die next day),” she said. “We were just as clue less as everyone else.” Sorority members were frustrated with the deci sion Jo destroy the house, Miley said, and were upset because they thought there was nothing they could doaboutit. At the time, members were unaware that die plan still needed approval from the NU Board of Regents. Members and alumni decided to see what their options woe. A task force was formed, and a lawyer was hired. Please see SORORITY on 6 ByEricRineer Staff writer Just four months after becoming the new boss of Student Judicial Affairs, Rosemary Blum is already collecting high praise from her colleagues. “She Is very supporting, understanding anc encouraging,” said Tonda Humphress, assis tant director of Student Judicial Affairs. “Rosemary seems to work well with every body.” Blum, who took over as director in May, replaced Charles Green, who now serves as student ombudsman in the office of Student Affaire. Blum was previously the ombudswoman. Humphress, and others, say Blum has adjusted well to the new position. Chuckvan Rossum, special assistant to the vice chancellor for student affairs, said Blum was an excellent choice for the position. Van Rossum said he’s known Blum for about eight years and has seen her progress tremendously. His relationship with Blum has grown stronger since the two met at Southern Illinois Univer^y in 1991, be said. Then a graduate student, Blum worked Please see BLUM on 6 Read the Daily Nebraskan on the World Wide Web at dailyneb.com