
The fact that the University of Nebraska finally got a student union
is really the work of one student leader, Jack Fischer. Fischer became
president of the student council in the spring of 1935 and took on getting
a student union building as his project. He organized a Committee
of One Hundred, which endorsed the need for a student center and the
necessity of applying for federal assistance. Since PWA (Public
Works Administration) money would pay only 45 percent
of the estimated $400,000 cost, the students agreed to tax themselves
through student fees to pay off the bonds issued for the remaining 55
percent.
Jack Fischer and the students had no support from the
Chancellor and his cabinet and some Regents were irrationally
hostile to accepting any federal money. Still, confronted by an organized
student proposal, they could not reject it out of hand; and when the
students went home in June, 1935, the application for federl money seemed
ensured and the student union a sure thing. However, when they
returned to campus in September they discovered the administration and
the Board of Regents had not made an application for federal funding
and by the nearly all PWA money had been allocated to other projects.
Fischer, who had then become the editor of the Daily Nebraskan, reopened
his campaign and wrote in the student newspaper “We feel that utter
disregard of our work is unjustified and that the university and the
student body have both suffered as a result”. Other student
leaders joined Fischer to revive the issue of building a student union. The
students began collecting pledges to support the new building and by
January, 1936, they had more than $10,000 promised. The Alumni
Association also established a fund-raising committee
to raise money for furnishings.
In January, 1936, the Board of Regents finally approved
the application for PWA funds, and in November they
voted to accept a PWA contract which paid $180,000
toward the new union and provided bonds for the remaining $220,000 of
the $400,000 total cost of the project. The
Alumni Association eventually raised enough funds to provide $75,000
to furnish the new building. Both the Daily Nebraskan and the Alumni
Association were granted office space in the new student
union when it opened on May 4, 1938.
In the early 1950s, Chancellor Clifford Hardin decided
that because the Union was being used at near capacity,
a building addition would be necessary to meet the
needs of current students and prepare for an expected increase in the
student population. Funding for an expansion project was drastically
reduced and by January 1958, bids for the new facility were at $1.25
million. The project was completed in July 1959 and a dedication ceremony
was held on the fall of 1959. During the renovation, the student union
was renamed. The named changed to “Nebraska Union” because
the facilities were now considered facilities for all
elements of the campus population: students, faculty, staff, and alumni.
The 1959 addition only met the needs of the increasing
student population for a few years. In 1963, G. Robert
Ross, Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs determined an immediate need
for another addition to the Nebraska Union. Construction for the new
facility began in 1968 with completion and dedication ceremonies held
in 1969. The memorial plaza was added in 1969 and the Broyhill Fountain
was dedicated in 1970.
Planning for another renovation began in January 1994. In March
1995, the Nebraska Union was placed on the ASUN election
ballot and was approved. The Broyhill Fountain was shutdown in October
1996 and temporary entrances were built in November 1996. Actual renovation
of the building began in January 1997. In April 1999, the Nebraska Union
reopened after undergoing renovations. The addition added 55,000 square
feet and cost $13.5 million. It increased usable space by 25 percent.
New features included a 24-hour computer lab, more lounge space, new
meeting rooms and offices and a state-of-the-art auditorium. The building
is a barrier-free environment and has been approved by the ADA.

