Thursday March 8, 2001 Volume 100 Issue 123 dailyneb.com Since 1901 Daily Nebraskan Nebraska legislators develop a policy that would ban racial profiling In News/5 Nebraska’s tournament slate becomes tougher without Kimani Ffriend In SportsThursday/10 / English professor brings hands-on approach to the classroom lnArts/8 ASUN President Joel Schafer (right), explains the reasons for his veto of a bill that would have cut the Daily Nebraskan's stu dent fee alloca tion by nearly 80 percent on Wednesday. Senators failed to override the veto. After a meeting that lasted over three hours, senators tabled discussion on the newspaper's budget until after spring break. ASUN asks for apology from regent BY MARGARET BEHM The student government voted unanimously Wednesday to ask for an apology and clarification from Regent Drew Miller over statements he made at an NU Board of Regents meeting, which some people have deemed racially insensitive. Angela Clements, Human Rights Committee chairwoman, presented Senate Resolution No. 6, which asks for Miller to clarify his statements and to issue an apology. Miller’s statement was made during a Saturday discussion about recruiting students to the University of Nebraska. During the discussion, Miller said stepping up the university’s efforts to recruit minorities could hurt NU’s aca demic rankings because he said minorities score lower than their non minority counterparts on standardized tests. Miller was responding to a sugges tion by University of Nebraska at Kearney Chancellor Gladys Styles Johnston, who is black, that NU should recruit more minorities. Since the meeting, some students and administrators have voiced con cems over Miller's comments. But Miller said his comments were taken out of context. Miller wrasn't being racist, he said, he was simply pointing out the cultural biases that exist in standardized tests, including the ACTs and SATs. Recruiting moreminorities then, Miller said, will bring down the univer sity’s standardized test average - a measure often used in academic rank ings, including those in the often touted U.S. News and World Report rankings. These bad rankings will steer peo ple away from the university, Miller said. If NU's academic rankings go fur ther down, overall recruitment vvill suf fer, Miller said. “If we ignore the issue and let our selves drop in the ratings, wee’ll pay a price,” he said. But some students said rankings shouldn’t be administrators’ only con cern. Rami Nabulsi. a senior electrical engineering major, spoke in favor of the resolution during the ASUN meeting. Diversity is an important element to education, Nabulsi said. “It’s not about how they score on tests, it's about what that contribute, and they contribute a lot,” he said. “Minorities bring so much to the edu cation that students get here.” As an international student from the Middle East, Nabulsi said he is a resource to students in the classroom. “I learn, and I teach at the same time,” he said. Joel Schafer. AS UN president, said it doesn't matter why Miller made the comment, the ramifications of it need ed to be addressed. Schafer attended the Saturday Board of Regents meeting in Kearney where Miller made the statements. "I have spoken with faculty of color and students of color, and they told me that it had this way of making them feel completely insignificant," Schafer said. Despite his comments. Miller said he is in favor of minority recruitment, and in fact voted along with the rest of the regents to approve the overall recruiting plan discussed at the Saturday meeting, including the call for increased minority recruiting. Miller said he made the comments Please see MILLER on 6 NateWagner/DN Journalists in full force forfunding BY MARGARET BEHM Members of the journalism community came out in full force at Wednesday’s ASUN meeting to voice their concerns over possibly substantial cuts in the Daily Nebraskan’s student fees allocations. They came in response to a bill student senate passed March 1 that would have cut the newspaper’s funds more than 80 percent - from $50,300 to $9,513. That bill was vetoed Wednesday by Association of Students of the University of Nebraska President Joel Schafer, and despite an effort to override the veto, the veto Please see JOURNALISTS on 3 ASUN DN funding underfire from ASUN BY MARGARET BEHM After about three hours of bickering and play ing pick the magic number, student government Wednesday postponed making a decision on the Daily Nebraskan’s budget. Association of Students of the University of Nebraska President Joel Schafer vetoed a bill passed March 1 that would have cut the Daily Nebraskan’s funding by more than 80 percent. Speaker of the Senate Jason Mashek, leading a charge to override Schafer’s veto, encouraged sen ators not to be intimidated by the president. To override the veto, two-thirds of the entire ASUN senate - not just the senators at the meeting - had to vote to override it. A veto override failed with six senators for and 13 against. i ne committee tor bees Allocation previously voted 6-2 in favor of a giving the Daily Nebraskan $50,300 to pay for a portion of the newspaper’s printing and production costs. With this funding, the newspaper estimated a profit of $61,350 for this year. Mashek proposed an amendment March 1 that would have given the Daily Nebraskan $9,513. With the student fee decrease, the newspaper’s profit would be an estimated $20,000. The amend ment passed 10-8 on March 1. When asked how he determined $20,000 to be an acceptable profit, Mashek said he “just pulled it out of the air." 1 Brent Stanfield, CFA chairman, said the Daily Nebraskan hasn’t justified why it needs to make such a profit. The newspaper doesn’t need a substantial profit because it doesn’t pay rent or utilities and also has a hefty savings account, Stanfield said. Russell Willbanks, Daily Nebraskan Publications Board chairman, said student fees pay for only 20 percent of the newspaper’s printing and circulation costs - making the $1.19 per stu dent a subscription of sorts. Advertising revenues pay for the rest of the newspaper’s printing and production costs along with all other costs, including salaries and equip ment, he said. But because advertising revenue fluctuates and the economy looks as though it’s taking a turn for the worst, the newspaper’s profit estimates might be off - especially if advertisers start pulling Please see ASUN on 6 Senators extinguish bill banning smokes ■ LB227, which would stop smoking in restaurants, was defeated. BY GWEN TIETGEN Smokers won’t have to worry about changing their restaurant eating habits this year. Legislators defeated the restaurant smoking bill on Wednesday in a 19-29-1 decision after the bill waited to be debated on the legislative floor for more than a month. LB227, introduced by Sen. Nancy Thompson of Papillion, would have banned smoking in restaurants unless they had a liquor license or a separately attached room used for private social functions. Thompson said the bill came down to several senators who sup ported the bill talking about public health benefits and senators who opposed the bill not wanting to impose regulations on businesses. The debate on the restaurant smoking bill is similar to the debate that surrounded the Nebraska Clean Indoor Air Act before it was finally passed in 1979, Thompson said. The Clean Indoor Air Act, which mandated separate smok ing and nonsmoking areas in restaurants among other things, took several years of being intro duced and debated in the Legislature before it was passed. During debate, Thompson Legislature amended the bill to take out the definition of a bar, included in section four of the bill, because the Department of Health and Human Services are working on a more specific definition of a bar. Several other amendments were proposed during the course of a three-dav debate on the bill but failed to get adopted. Among the proposed amend ments that failed was an amend ment by Sen. Gene Tyson of Norfolk to exclude small restau rants from the smoking ban. Another failed amendment, proposed by Sen. Adrian Smith of Gering, would have banned smoking in cars if children under 18 were present. Smith said he voted against the bill because of loopholes in the bill and because it infringed on private property rights. “I am actually allergic to smoke and try my best to avoid it,” Smith said. “But who am I to say to private property owners that they can’t allow consumers of a legal prod uct on their property.” Sen. Doug Cunningham of Wausa said his wife can't stand going to smoke-filled restaurants and neither can he. Banning smoking in restau rants is not a function of govern ment, he said, and restaurant owners should make the deci Please see SMOKING on 5 Feathered friends fly with a purpose ■The memory capability of birds has amazed Kamil for nearly 20 years. BY SHARON KOLBET The definition of the phrase “bird-brained” may need to be revised. As a University of Nebraska Lincoln researcher has shown, birds can posses an astounding memory. Anyone who has ever forgot ten where they parked their car could take a few lessons from the Clark's nutcracker. "The nutcracker has an amazing ability to remember locations,” said Alan Kamil, a UNL professor of biology. The Clark’s nutcracker lives in the high altitude regions of Arizona and Colorado. It spends each fall harvesting and burying pine seeds. With a special throat pouch that allows it to earn,' up to 90 seeds at a time, the nut cracker deposits this future food in numerous locations. “Each fall, an individual bird will bury as many as 20,000 seeds in five to six thousand locations,” Kamil said. In winter, the birds will return to these sites, finding the hoarded food even when the area is blanketed with snow. Field studies have shown that the nutcrackers have a very high rate of seed recovery. “Biologists are trying to understand exactly what it is that allows the bird to remember the sites,” he said. Kamil has been studying birds for nearly 20 years. When on sabbatical in Sydney, Australia, Kamil said he devel oped his hypothesis. "Once it occurred to me, it was so obvious,” he said. Kamil has found that the Clark's nutcracker is capable of a very' precise search for its stored food because of its ability to find metric relationships between multiple landmarks. While some species of birds may navigate by magnetic com passes, solar or astral indicators, the nutcracker uses landmarks to find its cached seeds. Though a spatial location can be found by a single landmark, an increase in the number of landmarks used resulted in an increase in successful seed searches. The use of these multiple landmarks is not mere redun dancy. The nutcracker, like the homing pigeon, has an internal compass that helps them to nav igate. Kamil said his research showed that the multiple land marks counteracted the effects of compass error in the nut cracker. Kamil published his findings last month in the Journal of Experimental Biology and said he has already received feedback from other ornithologists. In April, he will be traveling to England to speak on his find ings. In the meantime, Kamil and his research group have con structed a new laboratory sce nario for the birds in the base ment of Manter Hall. Sharon Kolbet/DN Alan Kamil, a UNL biology professor, stands next to a photograph of a bird known as the Clark's nutcracker. In his research, Kamil has found that the nutcracker uses mul tiple landmarks in the winter to find the thousands of seeds it buried in the fall. In a 24-sided room, the researchers have put posters on the wall. The posters serve as visual landmarks for the birds when they go to bury their seeds in the lab’s sandy floor. After the birds have become familiar with the room, Kamil plans to shift all of the posters 90 degrees to see what effect the change will have on the nut cracker's seed finding abilities. Kamil said the research has many implications. “Other animals use land marks. This research may help us understand how humans navi gate.” he said. “If you have ever asked someone for directions, you have seen how some people use landmarks while others don’t.”