The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 27, 2000, Page 5, Image 5

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    Author: Boys misunderstood I
GURIAN from page 1
manage their energy.”
Ross Thompson, UNL psy
chology professor, said Pollack
and Gurian’s thinking isn’t that
far apart.
“In reality, they are fairly
small differences in a sea of
agreements,” he said.
Thompson said there have
been many attention-grabbing
books that have shed light orf
the state of adolescence recent
ly
“Reviving Ophelia," a book
about adolescent girls by
Lincoln author Mary Pipher, is
one example, he said.
“It’s delightful to see our
society is focusing on the diffi
culties of adolescent girls and
boys,” Thompson said, “It is
good to realize that boys are very
vulnerable.”
Gurian points to the fact that
there are more men in jail per
capita in the United States than
in any other country.
Men are two to three times as
likely to be hit by a parent and
twice as likely as young women
to be killed by a parent, Gurian
said.
“Boys are in trouble," he said.
Given these statistics,
Sharon Kolbet/DN
Michael Gurian answers questions at the end of his Tuesday evening speech at the
BryanLGH Medical Center East. Gurian, a family therapist who focuses on the needs
of adolescent boys, spoke on his recent book "The Good Son: Shaping the Moral
Development of Our Boys and Young Men."
Gurian encourages families to
plan a way for both parents to be
involved in a son's upbringing.
Nothing can replace a father
figure, he said. Many single
mothers have raised their chil
dren on their own, but it can be a
stressful situation.
“For some single moms it
works, and for others it doesn’t,”
Gurian said.
Society needs to educate
boys on how to become men
and needs to educate adults,
especially women, about what a
boy is, he said.
ASUN to vote on bill supporting partner benefits
ASUH from page 1
benefits in the form of health
insurance. Only state-recognized
spouses of UNL faculty and staff
members are eligible for such
benefits.
Arts and Sciences Sen. Angela
Clements, author of the bill, said
the fight for UNL faculty and staff
members to receive domestic
partner benefits has been going
on for 11 years.
Not having the benefits has
affected UNL’s workforce, she
said.
“I think that we’re more than
losing faculty - we’ve probably
not attracted both gay and
straight faculty because of the
lack of domestic partner bene
fits,” she said.
Shafer said he expects the bill
to pass.
"It’s an issue that most people
on the senate are committed to,"
he said.
With the collective efforts of
all University of Nebraska system
campuses - the University of
Nebraska at Omaha passed a
similar bill in April - Clements
said the Board of Regents will rec
ognize the issue deserves atten
tion.
But so far, the NU Board of
Regents has avoided dealing with
domestic partner benefits, she
said.
“Sooner or later, the Board of
Regents won’t be able to ignore
the issue,” she said.
But, Clements said, all strides
made in the fight for domestic
partner benefits could be lost if a
ballot initiative is passed that
would ban same-sex marriages,
civil unions and domestic part
nerships.
If Initiative 416 passes in
November, domestic partner
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CHEESE. AND TONS OF LETTUCE.
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BREAST. AVOCADO. AND CHEESE ON THE
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benefits could be forbidden by
state law.
“I think that everyone is sit
ting on their hands until
November 7th,” she said.
Despite the initiative’s threat,
Wolf said people should continue
to press for benefits, and he
encouraged members of the
Board of Regents to act.
“We have to keep pushing,”
he said. “The administration in
(Varner Hall) is very happy to sit
on this until the amendment
either passes or fails. It is time for
them to act.”
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Nebraska
winter
weather
to be mild
WEATHER from page 1
positions of the planets, the
phases of the moon and other
secret data to predict the weath
er, she said.
The Almanac’s loyal users
swear its weather predictions
are 80 to 85 percent correct,
according to its Web site.
The National Weather
Service elects to use more tradi
tional and scientific methods to
predict the weather, Smith said.
The Climate Prediction
Center in Washington, D.C.,
uses a process based on past
weather patterns and present
conditions to make long-term
predictions, he said.
Of course, whether you buy
into the scientific methods of
the Weather Service or the folk
lore of the Farmer’s Almanac,
Smith and Duncan agreed pre
dicting the weather is never an
exact science.
Tomorrow morning, stu
dents just might need their
snow boots.
please recycle your DN
i
Requests exceed budget
WISH LIST from page 1
Department, which paid for
civilian workers, Little said.
■ Federal government pro
cedures will also inflate spend
ing by the state’s largest agency,
the Department of Health and
Human Services, Peterson said.
Health and Human Services
requested $100 million to fund
aid programs for individuals,
including Medicaid, he said.
Peterson said the federal
government matches state
spending on Medicaid based on
a rate determined by the quality
of the state’s economy.
Because Nebraska’s econo
my will probably be evaluated
as good, state Medicaid bills will
rise, he said.
■ Educational spending
dilemmas concerning increased
teacher salaries and lower prop
erty tax levies will further com
pound budget issues.
The Legislature’s education
committee will hear recom
mendations, which include a
$180 million initiative to
increase teacher salaries, from a
task force assigned to the issue,
Peterson said.
Part of the money will be
used to offset lost revenues
caused by the state legislature’s
decision to lower property tax
levies from $1.10 to $1, he said.
Peterson said it will be diffi
cult to make cuts because some
proposals are “pie in the sky
requests," while others are pru
dent.
dailyneb.com
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