The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 11, 2000, Page 3, Image 3

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    Floodplain plan to allow UNL expansion
BY JOSH FUNK
After more than 1,200 public
meetings over the last four years,
the Antelope Valley Plan to
reshape downtown Lincoln and
City Campus is ready for approval.
The $225 million, 20-year plan
will redirect the bulk of traffic
around City Campus on a new six
lane road while alleviating flood
concerns along Antelope Creek.
University of Nebraska
Lincoln officials adopted the
Antelope Valley Han into the cam
pus master plan in 1998, and they
are looking forward to its advan
tages.
“We’re very excited about this
and it will benefit our university,”
said John Benson, UNL director of
institutional research and plan
ning.
Benson said after the project is
completed, the university will be
able to expand into the area
between Vine, R, 17th and 19th
streets, which was off limits as part
of the 100-year floodplain.
The 100-year floodplain is the
area that could potentially flood in
heavy rains.
"This is one area where we can
expand within the campus,”
Benson said. “If we’re going to
grow in research activities, we’ll
need facilities.”
Another benefit will be the
reduction of traffic. Through-traf
fic will be routed around campus
along the new six-lane road, and
16th and 17th streets will be
reserved for local traffic, Benson
said.
Last week, the Lincoln
Lancaster County Planning com
mission unanimously endorsed
the plan and cleared the way for
an Oct. 30 public hearing before
the city council.
If die city adopts the Antelope
Valley Plan as part of its compre
hensive plan, final design work
can begin almost immediately,
said project manager Roger
Figard, who is also city engineer
for public works and utilities.
Throughout the development
of the Antelope Valley Plan, city
officials sought as much public
input as possible, Figard said.
From elements of four main
alternatives identified in 1997, city
officials and community mem
bers fashioned the current plan,
Figard said.
“The goal has been consensus
building," Figard said. "Consensus
doesn’t mean 100 percent (agree
ment), but I believe this is a com
munity plan and as a package, it is
the best series of solutions.”
This summer, the city com
pleted its environmental impact
study for the Antelope Valley Plan
in preparation for the final round
of approvals.
The Antelope Valley Plan
would create a six-lane road along
19th Street from K to Q streets. The
road would then snake east
between the Beadle Center and
Malone Center and come back
west along an expanded Antelope
Creek.
Much of the land along
Antelope Creek is in the 100-year
floodplain where new construc
tion is restricted. The expanded
, creek would be able to contain
most of the floodwaters within the
creek bed.
Photos draw chaser to eye of storm
■Photographer Warren Faidley
shows his work and warns of
the dangers of storm-chasing.
BY USA BEHRNS
Contrary to the movie
Twister, seven tornadoes don’t
often erupt in the afternoon, stop
for a dinner break and then
regain full force for an evening
chase.
With 14 years of chasing
storms under his belt, Warren
Faidley, a full-time storm chaser
and photojoumalist, addressed
this fiction and showcased his
talent Tuesday evening in the
Nebraska Union Auditorium.
Faidley’s photographs of
storms have been featured on the
cover of Life magazine, used on
Hollywood movie sets and graced
the cover of the Twister movie
poster.
To shoot his pictures, Faidley
often finds himself in the eye of
the storm.
“There were times when
being in the middle of the storm
was almost the end of me,” he
joked. “But I still got the shot.”
Faidley’s first photo was a
shot of a lightning bolt from 400
feet away. As he captured the first
bolt, a second nearly killed him.
But he survived, the picture
turned out, and Faidley’s career
was launched after the photo was
published in Life magazine.
Contrary to popular belief,
being a storm chaser isn’t a full
time job, Faidley said. Everyone
who chaSes storms has another
9-to-5job.
Each storm takes on its own
personality, which is one of the
reasons he accepts the challenge
of being a storm chaser.
But storms aren’t always as
exciting as they’re made out to be,
he said.
“Chasing is about 99 percent
boredom” while waiting for a
storm to develop, Faidley said.
Faidley showed slides of his
photography, which includes tor
nadoes, hurricanes and hail
storms.
Faidley stressed the dangers
of being caught out in a storm.
Storm chasing is becoming a
popular hobby, but Faidley
offered his cardinal rule: “Always
have an escape route, and never
underestimate a storm,” he said.
With Faidley’s book in tow,
Brad Burke, a junior broadcasting
and former meteorology major,
was one of the self-professed
Faidley fans to take in the event.
Racial-profile resolution signed
BY JOSH FUNK
Four state law enforcement
organizations joined the governor
in signing a resolution against
racial profiling and discrimina
tion TUesday.
The resolution was intended
to reinforce existing policies and
send a message that discrimina
tion in law enforcement will not
be tolerated, Gov. Mike Johanns
said in a statement.
The Nebraska Sheriffs
Association, the Police Chiefs
Association of Nebraska, the
Police Officers Association of
Nebraska and the State Troopers
Association of Nebraska signed
the non-binding resolution.
“This is something that those
of us in law enforcement feel
strongly about," Lincoln Police
ChiefTom Casady said. “TWo peo
ple of different races driving 10
miles over the limit are equally
likely to be pulled over.”
The effort was applauded by
the Nebraska Mexican American
Commission, the Nebraska
Commission on Indian Affairs
and the Urban League of
Nebraska.
American Civil Liberties
Union lawyer Amy Miller said she
welcomed the resolution but it
needed to be backed with action.
"We’re starting to acknowl
edge the problem. (This message)
needs to filter down to individual
officers, and I’m not sure a procla
mation is enough to do it,” Miller
said. The ACLU has a couple of
racial-profiling cases pending in
Nebraska, Miller said.
Casady said his department
has received complaints of racial
profiling but said the complaints
did not have merit
Even though racial profiling
has become a popular topic for
politicians, there has not been
much research to determine the
scope or nature of the problem.
Miller said that several states -
either voluntarily or at the court’s
order - have started keeping
records of every traffic stop, even
when no tickets were issued, to
determine if people are being
stopped on the basis of race or
other discriminatory factors.
Nebraska State Patrol Col.
Tom Nesbitt said in a statement: “I
think it’s very important for the
public to understand how seri
ously we take the subject of racial
prejudice.’’
The Associated Press con
tributed to this report.
<3? flptarQf
Energizer will be on campus November 1st, 2nd, and 3rd
interviewing December 2000 May and August 2001 graduates
and students who are interested in spring or fall co-ops.
IE, EE, MF, ChemF, Chemistry, Business Admin and Business
Mgmt majors are invited to submit resumes to Career Services
Center by Oct. 17th for pre-selection. Energizerr is an equal
opportunity employer.
^^^^^^^^J/isitus^atj^wwwener^izercon^^^^^^^
■
■
A
STREB / Action Heroes
Led by choreographer and "action architect" Elizabeth Streb, daredevil dance troupe STREB
explores the boundaries of human motion using muscle, wit, speed and precision to defy
conventional movement. Their energy-packed performances are filled with performers that fly,
bounce and ricochet off mats, harnesses and trampolines. Elizabeth Streb and her commandos
hurdle over, under and through the challenges of their archenemy: gravity. STREB's credo is,
'If you're not flying, what's the point?"
NE Funded in part by the National Dance Protect of the New England Foundation for the Arts, with lead funding from the National
..1 Endowment for the Arts and the Doris Duke Foundation. Additional funding provided by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and
13 j the Philip Morris Companies Inc.
Saturday, October 14,2000 • 7:30pm
Lied Center programming is
supported by the Friends of Lied
and grants from the National
Endtwnent for the Arts a federal
agency; Heartland Aits Fund, jointly
supported by Arts Midwest and
Mid-America Arts ASance; and
Nebraska Arts Ccuicii. All events in
the Lied Center are made possible
by the Lied ferformance Fund
Mtich has been established in
memory of Ernst F. Lied and his
patents Ernst M. and Ida 1C Ued.
n University of
Nebraska-Uncoln
An equal opportunity educator and
employer with a comprehensive
plan for diwrsity.
• >
Lied Center for Performing Arts
Lincoln, Nebraska
Tickets: (402) 472-4747 or (800) 432-3231
Box Office: 11:00am - 5:30pm M-F
www.liedcenter.org
"Faidley is one of my idols,"
Burke said. "I do amateur pho
tography work myself and work
with local spotting teams.”
Freshman theater major Lori
Jensen said she thought storm
chasing sounded interesting and
admired Faidley’s dedication.
“It’s incredible how he seems
to have everything down to a sci
ence,” Jensen said.
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Mercy. Is that too
much to ask? One
more class and you
could graduate in
December One. The i
class that isn't being
offered until next fall.
Before you squash
plans for winter
graduation, consider 1
INIs College
Independent Study
Program. You can
complete a class in as
linle as 35 days and
take your place at
graduation. No joke. j
Call us at 472-4321
for a free catalog or
visit our office at the
Nebraska Center for
Continuing Education.
Room 269.33rd and
Holdrege St.
Division of Continuing
Studies • Department of
Distance Education
Web: dcs.uni.edu/disted
—
UNL’s most
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