1 I v I!; S. . . Paiiy mm i is issterfial For a Good l ime, and a Good Daal! Monday- Chicken Basket with Salad Bar and Fries 3.95 Tuesday- Pork Chops with Salad Bar and Potato 3.95 Wednesday- Breaded Shrimp with Tossed Salad and Potato 3.95 with Salad Bar and Potato 4.95 Thursday- BBQ Pork Ribs with Salad Bar and Fries 3.95 Fridav- Fish and Chips with Tossed Salad 3.60 Saturday- CB & P Burger and a lb. of beer 3.60 Available 11:00 am-1 0:00 pm irisik fecials Monday- imparl (High All Import Beer-$L25 . Tuesday- 'Rflulligan IHsgll Double-Shot Drinks for the price of one! Wednesday- Wheal of f Pay the price on the wheel for All bar liquor drinks. Only 55cf-$115; Thursday- Tequila Might Most Tequila Drinks 75 ldchosQ1.75 n n Monday-Thursday 4:30-6:30 Sunday 6:00-8:00 pm FAC-3:30-6f30 Chesterfield Bottomsley & Potts 245 North 13th Gunny's Mall Lower Level Lincoln, Nebraska 475-8G07 Faculty salary increase part of three-year plan; approaching comparable ByJudi Nygren The 1984-85 11.1 percent salary increase that the legislature granted UNL faculty members has enabled the university to make progress in its competition with peer universities, Vice Chancellor John Yost said. . Last July the NU Board df Regents decided to aim for a 4.1 percent increase over peer institution's 1984-85 faculty salaries and budget increases. Yost said that according to information administrators have received, UNL may surpass its goal by about 1 percent. The salary increase is part of UNL's three-year plan to reach the mid-point among 10 peer universi ties established by the regents, Yost said. UNL's cur rent faculty salaries and budgetary support ranks the university near the bottom, he said. UNL's peer universities include the University of Illinois, Iowa State University, Michigan State Uni versity, the University of Missouri, Ohio State Uni versity, the University of Maryland-College Park, the University of Minnesota, Purdue University, the University of Wisconsin and Penn State University. The regents established different peer colleges for UNO. This resulted in a lesser budgetary increase for that campus. UNL and UNO were put into separate categories because UNL is the only Nebraska institution that grants doctorate degrees, Yost said. "That puts us in a position to compete with the countries best." Janet West, president of the UNL American Asso ciation of University Professors, said that the 8.1 percent salary increase for UNO was discriminatory because UNO was compared to schools of lower quality and UNL was compared to schools of higher quality. But Senator Jerome Warner, chairman of the appropriations committee, said he thought the peer colleges accurately reflect UNL and UNO's dif ferent roles and missions. When the Legislature voted to allocate different amounts to the two campuses, Warner said, it was also decided to increase salaries over a period of time. Faculty members who were judged satisfac tory by their departments received a 3 percent increase March 1. Most individuals who received a March increase will receive another 3.7 percent increase July 1. Faculty members who were judged to be exceptional employees by their departments will receive an additional increase July 1 from a merit fund. UNL Chancellor Martin Massengale chose to dis tribute 60 percent of the funds for satisfactory per formance anp! 40 percent for meritorious perfor mance. The last faculty salary increase was the 1982-83 increase of 2.5 percent. Warner said UNL received the increase because of the improved economy. But he said he is not sure the Legislature will be able to help UNL meet its goals for the next two years. It will depend on the economy, competition from other state-aided institu tions and gubernatorial vetos, he said. Yost said UNL will not be stopped from working towards its goals. 'The university will continue to give the highest priority to faculty salaries because it is the most important thing we can do to improve and maintain the highest quality faculty," he said. Yost said he hopes the current increases will encourage the faculty and build morale. Roskens, will speak at Brotherhood dinner NU President Ronald Roskens will be the featured speaker at the annual Brotherhood Awards Dinner sponsored by the National Conference of Christians and Jews Thursday at Peony Park. Each year the National Conference presents the Brotherhood Award to individuals who have made outstanding contributions to improve human rela tions within the community. This year the confer ence will honor Robert B. Daugherty, chairman of the board and chief executive officer of Valmont Industries and Lloyd E. Skinner, chairman of the board and chief executive officer of the James Skinner Company.. Roskens, an Iowa native, has served as president of the University of Nebraska since 1977. He re ceived his doctorate from the University of Iowa. He presently is chairman of the board of directors of the American Counsel on Education, and is a member and past chairman of the AFROTC Air Advisory Panel. He also is on the board of directors of the Foundation for the Study of Presidential and Congressional Terms and the American Council on Education, Business-Higher Education Forum. Tickets and additional information regarding this event can be obtained by calling the NCCJ office at 346-3357 in Omaha. Off The Wire National and international news from the Reuter News Report Reagan guarantees assistance to Saudis WASHINGTON - President Reagan has told King Fahd of Saudi Arabia the United States is prepared to consider using military action if necessary to protect oil tankers in the Persian Gulf, administration officials said Monday. Since the escalation of the Gulf War, in which both Iran and Iraq have launched air attacks on neutral shipping in the Gulf, Reagan has vowed to keep the gulf open to oil traffic. Rea gan informed the king through a letter that the Saudis could count on the United States if there was a request for U.S. action. Meanwhile in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, U.S. and Saudi officials met Monday to discuss the escalating Persian Gulf crisis as six key Arab states demanded an urgent meeting of the U.N. Security Council to deal with the conflict. That meeting may be Thursday, officials predicted. Pornography crackdown WASHINGTON President Reagan Monday signed legislation providing for tougher federal action against the distribution and production of child pornography materials. "There is no one lower or more vicious than someone who would profit from the abuse of children," Rea gan said in a Rose Garden ceremony at the White House. This pornography is ugly and dangerous. If we do not move against it and protect our children then we as a society are not worth much," he added. The bill raises the maximum fine for a first offense from $10,000 to $100,000, and for later convictions from $15,000 to $200,000 and also increases federal powers of obtaining evidence. Cocaine haul seized HAMBURG West German police have seized 103 pounds of cocaine, worth up to $6 million on the street, and arrested seven Colom bian nationals in their biggest haul of the illicit drug, a police spokesman said Monday. The spokesman said the police were tipped early this month by U.S. Customs that the cocaine was hidden on a Colombian coffee freighter bound for Bremen and Hamburg. They raided the Rio Magdalena this weekend and found the drugs hidden in the ship's ventilation, in five pairs of shoes, and behind the bulkhead insu lation, the spokesman said. West German police confiscated 198 pounds of cocaine in the first four months of this year, more than twice as much as in all of 1982. Grain talks underway WASHINGTON - The United States, after a two-week delay caused by Moscow's boycott of the summer Olympics, has announced the next U.S.-Soviet grain talks will open today. Administration officials said announcement of the grain talks initially was set for release on the same day, May 8, the Kremlin ordered the pullout from the Olympic games. The two days of grain consultations, widely anticipated in the grain trade for weeks, will be in Moscow and are required under a long-term grain deal between the two nations. The talks include a review of the world grain situation and the prospects for shipments and U.S. grain sales in the current year of the agreement. Miner nails self tofloor EDINBURGH, Scotland A striking Scot tish miner nailed himself to the floor of his home in a protest against miners who have not joined a 10-week-old strike in the British coal fields, police said Monday. Abraham -Moffat, 50, spent more than 24 hours with six-inch nails through his feet and left hand before police discovered him, a police spokesman said. The strike over planned mine closures and job cuts in the state-run coal industry has led to bitter divisions among Britain's 180,000 miners, with only a quarter of them continuing to work. President to talk tonight WASHINGTON President Reagan will hold a news conference at 8 tonight. It will be his first formal news conference since April 4. Page 2 Doily Nebraskon Tuesday. May 22. 9i