rncrcby, scptcrr.bcr 20, 1973 d:;!y r T Qn nrrn us sale nov VCdlG s 1 ,200 Removing enough Gvl Defense rations to fi3 51 rail road boxcars is no easy chore. Cut Jim Eerden, 31, is doing just that. For $5400 fee bought 1,200 tons of the governnnt srpplles. He is removing them from 93 Lincoln fallout shelters, including 27 UNL locations. Eurden was one of two biiders for the supplies. The supplies are throwbecks from an era when large-scale fear cf nuclear attack prevailed in the TJaited States. ictiex snonaaes. M medical center When the Dig Red football team plays its first home game this Saturday, many University of Nebraska Medical Center students and faculty members won't attend. Jo TTagncr, medical center assistant registrar, said a2 medical student orders requested in the spring were di ed and 502 tickets were ordered. This fall, an additional 505 medical students requested tickets. The UNL ticket office had aSoted only 319 tick ets for fall sales. Tagner said Friday an additional 31 tick et orders will be filled from UNL refunded tickets. Yagner said that when she was informed by the UNL ticket office of the shortage, a lottery was organized. Six persons, including representatives from the medical cen ter College of Nursing, ran the IiA, Wagner said she has received many complaints, and many students are complaining to their deans, but she said nothing can be done about the ticket shortage. Forty-one medical center students who ordered their" tickets directly throught the Lincoln ticket office received them. ' Wagner said many of the refunded tickets may end up in fraternity or sorority blocks and that it is permissible for a medical center student to sit there. Medical Center students will have more difficulty " scalping tickets because of photos on their identification cards. UNL students can scalp, their tickets more easily because their ID's don't have photos. The demand for tickets was greater than anticipated, said Jean Yalcott, athletic ticket office cashier. "We have higher enrollment, phis more requests from the medical center and the Curtis agricultural school. The simple fact is that wew " mt of tickets. This marks the second year employes participated in a lottery. The UNL ticket office issued 200 tickets to cover 3300 requests, according to Tracy Walker, secretary in the medical center's finance office. ' The shelters are dusty, and lifting box after 24pound box of crackers quickly becomes tiring, according to Eurden. lie said he is working as many as 16 hours a day, seven days a week, to remove the goods. And that's using conveyors, a truck and a warehouse provided by Jim Eurden Sr Surplus Center owner. So far, 43 shelters have been cleared. On campus, they include Able and Sandoz residence haEs, Love library, SheUon Art CaSery, l!orri3 IL3 and the East Stadium. They contain water, candy, crackers, medical kits and sanitation kits. " Curdea said the candy is good and will be sold to wholesalers. Crackers xrZl be sold for ammal feed. The water wi3 be dumped and cans sold for scrap metal or whole. Host of the medicine wO be thrown away, he said, with the rest of the medical kit being sold separately. Sanitation kits also will be divided. There are 40 JXOtcZs of toilet paper, and 33C3 plastic liners. The rations were sold because water containers were improperly dad and beginning to rust, Burden said. The biscuits were getting stale, and the medicine was out of date, he added. Similar problems have occurred in other cities. Omaha decided to resupply their shelters, while Denver and Lincoln have sold out, he said. Another man in Colorado Springs bought that city's Civil Defense supplies, Eurden said. . "He says he made good money, but he's never do it again, Eurden said. h r rn.it V ' mm . 9 A Jia Esfea cSh seme cf Lis 24-D. bases cf Vm&sl ciadcm. Hiey wQ fee tall as asssd feed. Regents to consider I AMR request . A delayed budget request from the Institute of Agri culture and Natural Resources (IANIl) will be ccfdered at the October NU Board of Regents meeting. The IANR's new and improved programs request was not submitted at the Sept. 8 regents meeting because UNL Chancellor Roy Young and IANit Vice Chancellor !.!artin ilassengsle wanted more time to review the budget, according to Charles Koopmann, assistant to Massecgile. Koopman said Young and IZassecgaJe asked Vamer for the delay because "they're both new (administrators) and they wanted to have more time to review the budget with the agricultural industrialists cf the state. The new and improved programs request contrasts with the continuation portion cf the DJAR budget. IaNR's continuation program money, which is needed to carry out existing programs, was approved by the regents in the total university continuation request, Koopmann said. The request caHsu - for a five and one-half per cent LI. borbar chop irstytirtg Scpcrb CsU for eppoiatmcnt cr 477-5221 Lower Isml DosigSss III Thsstre bfdx 203 13th I IP- ly amai Tin ill liniff iut" iiiiBI) mm 14 f V I . -7 ' 5 A What csn you do wttfi only a bachG!ors decree? How thcra is a wsy to bridsa tf gsp between anl urtcsrgracus eaucatiort and a crt&nenging, respen- sicia career, ine Lsvwyers Assistant is ab:a to do work traditionally done by lawyers. Three months of. intensive training cart ctva vcu tho skills tho courses aro taught by lawyers. You, cnccco cno cr tno seven courses cnerea cheese tv.e city in which you want to work. Since 1S7Q, The Instltuvfor Paralegal Training ! has placed mora than 1UH graduates in km firms, bar..s, and corporations in over 75 cities. 1? you are a senior of hscri academic standing and era interested in a career as a Lawyer's Assistant, rad Ilka to mest veu. j cur representative. , . Wa wi'l visit ycur csntpsas cn .... i f L "u-i W.J ULu. . , - CsSsi fey Pera-Les tss. I , 1 e f"- p. 0 PX3. salary increase for a3 staff members with an adiitienal three per cent increase for the faculty. Koopmann sail there may be a request in the new and rnproved prcgrsm portion for sslsry fciprcvement money, such as the $23CXr IMHt received from the Nebraska Legislature last year. TVre considering a request for additlonsl funds to a level where we can meet the competition in the market place for faculty" Koopmann said. He said that in 1975-75 IANXl faculty salutes ranted 40th out of 54 land grant institutions, which receive fed eral funds for agriedtoal research. The budget also will include a faculty increase request, he said. "The IANR has had an et per cent increase in stu dent enrollment this year," Koopman said. "As a result the classrooms are bulging...-- Koopmann would not specify on the cumber of teach- "era or the total dollar amount requested. - v f" :: ....... .y. ii'.: ..J ; f 5.- - sf Visits CqMqt. cs aretsid sssid? Vbtea Ceer Essies : . . . .... ta. isesl cse!!r.a esa ctck? fed trr.l Ctssr e? tstad . . . c?ar 13 crarsci tints. Csssssts tura ccta a srnca Li ra ji sea Ca sr!d . . . ' end best t sttd ases jex v? l . ail t Htta 7 c