[ I GUARANTEED SCHOLARSHIPS '^Wa i^EjSI Amigos offers you the opportunity to earn from 15% to 50% of 'W/a your tuition through tlie Student Tuition Employment Program. {fjwf The scholarship money is in addition to the salary you earn. IDid you know if you were to graduate from the University of Nebraska with 130 credit hours you would spend $6,305 for tuition alone? By starting employment with Amigos your junior year in high school you could get $2,206.75 of that tuition paid W But that's not all. Amigos offers: Su? •Insurance -Flexible Schedule •50% Meal Discount Paid Vacation 5?? -Opportunity To Transfer To Another Location tt| Slop by your local Amigos today and fill out an application. For pr more information on the scholarship program call 1 -800-825 0012, ask for Lome gk 8 Lincoln Locations 1% Close to Campus jwv JJLrOiy Reunion (UNL) Lincoln Square (jj^A ^ 1407 "Q" 29th & Comhusker FOR MORE INFORMATION: 216 No. ’N’ St., Suite 102 Lincoln, NE 68508 475-7010 Service offers free legal advice I By Emily Rosenbaum Staff Reporter___ Students who need an attorney have an alternative to using an entire paycheck to pay for an hour of legal advice. Free legal counsel is available through the Student Legal Services Center, part of the Association of Students of the University of Ne braska. Student Legal Services is funded by student tees and is handled through student government. Every semester each UNL student pays $1.27 in student fees to finance the service. Started in 1976, the center offers free legal advice and represen tation to students with legal concerns. Most of the cases involve misde meanors and traffic violations, said Shelley Stall, attorney and director of the center. In March, 45 percent of the cases handled involved misde meanor and traffic charges. Legal services closed 108 cases in March 1989 compared to 84 cases in March 1988. ) “I’m excited because the statistics are going up,” Stall said. “Students , are using the service more and more I each year.’.’ The first step for a student who > wants to use legal services is to make ? an appointment with one of the two ; attorneys at the center. During the '/ scheduled meeting, the attorney will listen to the student’s problem and Shelly Stall, UNL Director of Student Legal Services, gives legal advice to Jerry Lof berg, a junior Criminal Justice major. offer legal advice. The attorney will represent the student in court if nec essary or refer the student to another source, such as a private attorney. Stall said a referral is needed when the case involves a large settlement. A student may also be advised to take a case to small claims court. In addition to misdemeanor and traffic cases, legal services handles landlord/tenant, consumer, family law, employment and business prob lems. Landlord/tenant cases made up the second largest percentage of cases for March this year. Twenty one cases were closed, and in one of those cases a student recovered $950 in a dispute with a landlord. Student Legal Services also pub lishes a handbook which gives basic legal information to students. The handbook offers advice on how to handle auto accidents, student disci pline, sexual harassment and race and sex discrimination. It also tells stu dents how to win in small claims court. Students are not always aware of I where they stand in terms of the law, Stall said. They often don’t realize that legal action can be sought in many circumstances, she said. ® Q Scholarships available ? UNL welcomes minority students By Deanne Nelson Senior Editor 7 The past year has brought in '{. creased action by state and Univcr ' sity of Nebraska-Lincoln officials to ? make UNL a more warm and accept fj ing place for student minorities, said / Paul Miles, special assistant to Vice « Chancellor for Student Affairs James J Griesen. State action has come in the form of a bill passed by the Legislature that allots $1 million in minority scholar ship funding, said Peg Johnson, di a rector of special projects for Griesen. / About $800,000 of the funding will be state-supported, she said. University officials also have sup ported cultural diversity, Miles said. Griesen and Robert Furgason, vice chancellor for academic affairs, have requested reports from college deans and university depariments’as to what they are doing for student and FREE CATALOG of Government Books Send for your copy today' Free Catalog Bo* 37000 Washington DC 20013-7000 faculty minorities, Miles said. Although the university tries to make all students feel welcome, Miles said, officials’ recent efforts have been aimed at minority students in particular. 4 4 Last year was deemed the year of appreciating cultural diversity (at the university), and definite support was shown by Chancellor Martin Massen gale and other administrators,” he said. The growth of this appreciation also can be seen in increased student and faculty interest in the variety of cultural and cross-cultural organiza tions at UNL, Miles said. Campus organizations designated as Ethnic Minority groups include the Afrikan People’s Union, the Mexican American Student Association, the Native American Students Associa tion and the Vietnamese Student Organization. UNL organizations designated as International groups include the Chi nese Student Association, the Free China Association, the India Asso ciation, the International Student Organization, the Korean Student Association, the Malaysian Student Association, the Nigerian Students Association, the Organization of Arab Students, Permais (Indonesian) and International House. Information about these organiza tions can be obtained by contacting the Campus Activities and Programs office, 200 Nebraska Union, for a brochure. There is also a CAP office on the third floor of the East Campus Union. DREAM, Developing Realistic Educational Activities for Minori ties, is a cross-cultural organization which was started last year to bridge gaps between the aforementioned campus organizations and to foster “involvement from a cross-cultural perspective,” Miles said. “DREAM is a combination of all the groups’ voices and tries to address problems facing minorities,” he said. Miles said a trial-and-error period last year showed that there was enough interest for DREAM to be come a reality. Since DREAM was in an embryonic stage in the spring of 1988, the group was not formally recognized until a year later. “It has been tough to deal with going across the cultures because of certain sensitivities,” Miles said. Johnson agreed and said “there arc many sensitive issues which need to be addressed. One of them is the ignorance within and between the groups.” “Part of students’ overall educa tion is learning about different people, and you can’t get that from a book,” she said. Miles added: “The best thing about these groups for new students, and not only minority students, is that they may come to the university not knowing anybody and can go to any one of these groups and be ac cepted.” A Questionnaire For New Students — Who Offers All Of These Services, All On Cum Am All Under One Roof? SW Hb=wm. union BanK Plump Tomato Pizza, Bf mmemmm- Hair Tech Bfww S- Astro s Copy Center Hobbies Etc. Coin Fun f^f Bodies By Design Answer — Only The Reunion Stop in and G^ us out. 16th & W Streets By The Engineering College l. - ■ -■— ■■ 1 — --—-■ _