Page 6 Legal services director defends budget By Eric Paulak Staff Reporter The director of the Student Legal Services (-enter presented her case for the 198087 budget to ASl.'N Wednesday. Shelly Stall asked ASUN to approve the cent er's $ M.SGO budget proposal. . According to Stall, legal services at the University of Kansas has a total budget of $120,000, and it serves 23,000 students. Legal servi ces at the University of Colorado has a budget of $100,000, and it serves Sl Bnl Quarter Poundor OcD.L.T. Use these 1 GOOD A MAR. r- 3rd gfe THRU !S MAR. 1986 - TO Cheek your favorite sandwich. Limit one discount ESI GOOD FEB. 27th THRU and sane f 2nd Be t? 20,000 students. UNL serves about 20,000 students. Since the center began repres enting students in court in Sep tember 1084, the amount of stu dents using the service has increased a great deal, Stall said. In January 1984, 50 students con tacted the center and 51 of them were represented by the center. In January 1M0, 121 students contacted the office, and (!H of them were represented. Stall proposed giving Webb Ban croft, the center's part-time attor ney, more hours 50 the center will 1 allots to V J I arito OeEHonaldV sandnieh! ESI El 1 E3 Bay your favorite after 4 EEL and get a second of the same sandwich FEEE! VOTE: Ontrter Founder" with Cbses Sandwich coupon redemption per customer per visit All store visits wittim 1-hour time period equal 1 visit. Not valid with any other coupon, or tree tood otter. Valid only at participating McDonald s in Missouri. Illinois. Nebraska. Tennessee. Arkansas, Mississippi, and Iowa Void where prohibited Cash value 120 ot 1C Ballot good Mar. 3rd thru 'Coca-Con and Cow are registered Irademartis ot Trie Coca Cota Umpany S3 ES3 1RI wLJ gi n C3 ca rsa isa t f C3 C3 133 fV" C3 EES Cay year livcrite after 4 P.O. ce t a siccsd of the f sanawicn r uLs yTi: Cheek jonr favorite sandwieh. . CJnarttr rHBltr" with ChMs Sandwich Limit one coupon redemption per customer per visit All store visits within 1-hour time period equal ! visit. Not valid with any other coupon discount or free food offer. Valid only at participating McDonald's in Missouri. Illinois, Nebraska. Tennessee. Arkansas. Mississippi and Iowa Void where prohibited Cash value 120 of le Ballot good Feb. 27th thru traoemaiKS ot uca uu uirnpany CT Daily Nebraskan be u!,le to handle more cases. Stall said she doesn't think that charging 87 cents is too much to ask for being represented in court. Stall said the center has handled cases that awarded students as much as $5,000. An attorney in pri vate practice would receive at least one tenth of the settlement, she said. Landlord-tenant disputes account for 32 percent of the cases handled by the center and 22 percent of the cases are criminal. Thirty percent of all cases that go to trial are for drunk driving. -A. " ---J. m.,.1!; 'u te lirfiir .i 'if 'S'l. Bi( Hie" Sandwich MeD.L.T. M Sandwich Mar. 5th 1986 Weight betwe cooionq 4 07 (113 4 qm( c 1986 McDonald s Corp Ut, 1 m-.t4 itj a ca la is rsa em ca eo clj s 0 D D D III Kac' Sandwich : KeS.l.T." Sandwich Mar. 2nd 1935 wyj'i iimr vwnv t U f J qm) L. two iwcuonau s urp - , rs-' Despite Peace EW1 By Dorothy Pritchard Special to the Daily Nebraskan Tin- (iirat Peace March, scheduled to leave Angeles this Saturday, is still on despite a shortage of funds, according to marchers. David Mixner, march organizer, called on marchers to walk door-to-door to raise $r00,OI)0, the Denver Post reported Sunday. Jennifer Vassos, a 22-year-old marcher from Santa Barbara, Calif., said, "The march starts Saturday regardless. We just won't eat if we don't have the money." . PRO Peace, the march sponsor, esti mated it would cost $3,235 a person, or $ 1 a mile, to cover food and ot her supp lies for the nine-month trek. Marchers, t hree of whom are UNL students Sheila St ration, Lori Shields and Kris Hayfte- Child care to relocate By Diana Johnson Senior Reporter A new home has been found for the University Child Care Project, accord ing to director Joyce Wagner. The Prince of Peace Lutheran Church, located at North 12th and Benton streets, gave final approval for an offi cial invitation to the center last week. The project's present locat ion at 333 N. 14th St., known as Commonplace, will be used as officespace for student organizations. Wagner said the project would begin moving into the church in June or July when child care enrollment is down. Wagner said the church will cost $20,000 to remodel, including $14,000 for restrooms. Remodeling will bring the church up to state health licensing standards. But because the university will not fund the remodeling, Wagner has pro posed several different ways to raise the needed monev. Research cuts could limit ability to recruit faculty BUDGET from Page 1 Decreasing the college's research branch also could hamper its ability to recruit quality faculty, said Earl Elling ton, associate dean of the College of Agriculture. Most ag professors want to find jobs where they can do research and t each. If UNL reduces its research scope, chances are fewer quality j)ro fessors would come to Lincoln, lie said. PERSONNEL: ($35,300) The college has frozen hir ing of personnel, except in extreme instances, Hartungsaid. Becauseofthe faculty shortage, the college might have to rotate classes, making them a ailable only at specific semesters, he said. Students would have to plan their schedules around these problems. "I don't know what the (teacher student) ratio is going to end up being," Hart ung said. In addition, successive cuts over the years have made I'NL's ag college vulnerable to outside recruiting. Ellington said. EXTENSION SERVICES: ($150,500) Coupled with federal! reductions, the proposed cuts to UNL's extension services could force officials to close some counties' extension pro grams, said Leo Lucas, dean of UNL's Cooperative Extension Service. All vacancies have been frozen and won't be rilled until extension officials decide where te make permanent cuts, he said. For example, one county's extension office might have to serve three addi tional counties. Because of this, some programs, such as beef cattle nutrition information for farmers and ranchers might have to be cut, he said. CONSERVATION AND SUR VEY SERVICES: ($27,800) The university now moni tors soil and water in the state, check ing quality and quantity of both. Cuts would mean less time for monitoring, Thursday, February 27, 1986 problems, n rem man, were asked to raise this monev but would not be turned down if t hv didn't reach the $3,235 mark. "It was just easier for many of us t wait until we got to LA. to raise money," Vassos said. Many of the marchers arc plume canvassing now, and they hogging going door-to-door as soon as they receive a permit to solicit funds in Los Angeles, "We'll take it to the street s. We'll get the money there is not doubt Nothing is going to stop us now," Vni Jenny Sarpolis, 1!), another marcher from Santa Barbara. About 1,000 marchers are in Los Angeles to kick off the march, which is support ing global nuclear disarmament . The march ends wit h a rally in Washing! ton P.C. on Nov. 15. UNL's participants were unavailable for comment. project in church Wagner said she will propose to Vice Chancellor Martin Massengale that the project be allowed to seek funds through the NU Foundation. From there, Wagner said, she plans to appeal to former employees and par ents of former participants for dona tions. Wagner said she also is exploring the possibility of getting a grant from the American Lutheran Church Synod in Lincoln. Wagner said she is excited about relocating because the project will have more space, better park ing access for parents and added playground space. "My only concern is that it won't be as convenient for university faculty and students," because the church is about a five-minute drive from city campus, Wagner said. About 70 percent of those enrolled at t he project are children of university faculty and students, Wagner said. and even termination of some mea surements, Hartung said. This would hamper the data used for making soil and water-related decisions in the future, he said. VETERINARY STUDENTS: ($38,000) The cuts also will decrease money that the college gives students to at tend out-of-state veterinary schools. Since UNL has no veterinary school, the state sends its students to other Midwestern universities for training. The state pays the students' tuition difference between the two states. It costs about $14,000 per student. ADMINISTRATIVE SUP PORT: ($12,100) These cuts would reduce the number of administrative assist ants, the people who "keep the univer sity operating," Hartung said. All these cuts, however, are only proposals. Nothing is final. UNL's Aca demic Planning Committee now is looking over the budget-cutting pro posals from the ag college and other UNL departments. Hartung and Ellington say they prefer the package of cuts, rather than elimi nating the school at Curtis. "While alternative one (the package of cuts) would be better than alterna tive two, Nebraska still loses," Hartung said. Ellington said Nebraska needs Cur tis graduates because the state will need more trained agriculturalists in the future. In addition, Curtis complements UNL's ag college because it trains peo ple to assist those who graduate from UNL with professional degrees, he said. Ellington also said Curtis students would attend schools in other states or not get an education at all. He said several Curtis students originally are reluctant to go to college, then find out they like it at Curtis and transfer to UNL to further their education. Nearly 15 percent, or about 25 students, go on to Lincoln every year.