You need money? We pay the best prices on used compact discs. ‘ fickleg IlF.COnDS TAPES -COMPACT DISCS 17th & P * 237 S 70th * 3814 Normal Blvd Downtown store only. FEZZA is in / from ITALY % Suits, Sportcoats and Slacks i -- • $20# Off I Haircut & Blowdry 1 Reg. from '13.(X) ■ With this coupon only ■ Nut valid with other otters or promotions I ■ Offer Expires 10/6/90 *10°° Off Perm, Haircut & Style Keg. from S43.(X) With this coupon only Not valid with other oilers or promotions |.onp httit h> consultation Offer Expires 10/6/90 Pentagon budget cuts will decrease number of UNL ROTC scholarships By Michael Ho Staff Reporter Budget cuts at the Pentagon are making it tougher for ROTC cadets to get scholarships, University of Ne braska-Lincoln ROTC leaders said. Lt. Col. Robert Jacobson of UNL’s Army ROTC program said decreas ing demand for young officers has led to reductions in the number of schol arships offered to Army ROTC stu dents nationwide. “We know the services will be cut by 20 to 25 percent by 1995,” he said. In anticipation of the cuts, the Army is accepting about 6,000 officers per year. In the past, Jacobson said, about 9,000 officers per year received commissions. He added that ROTC supplies about 70 percent of the Army’s new officers. Because it takes four years to get through the program, Jacobson said, ROTC officials must begin to pare class sizes now. Otherwise, students would have to be forced out. ‘‘So far we haven’t,” he said, “and if we manage our numbers properly, we won’t have that problem.” Col. Daniel McKnight, chairman of the UNL naval science program, said he wasn’t reducing class sizes but that requirements for scholarships were more strictly enforced. ‘ ‘ Before, if they didn T meet it (the requirement),” he said, “we’d give them a second chance.” Now, he said, many cadets will find that they have only one shot at the scholar ships. Now, he said, many cadets will find that they have only one shot at the scholarships. More than 1,600 scholarships are handed out each year. By 1995, McKnight said, the Navy hopes to cut that number by about 500. That means more competition for those who want Navy money for school. Side-load scholarships are awarded to freshmen based on scholastic achievement and military potential. Before the cuts, he said, a fresh man with a 3.0 grade point average and at least one math course had an 80 to 85 percent chance of getting a three-year scholarship. Now, it’s not as automatic, McKnight said. Navy ROTC officials are looking at the difficulty of fresh men course loads as well as their grades. Air Force ROTC is run differently from the other programs, Col. Mi chael Carr said. The Air Force pro gram has no enrollment limits at the campus level; UNL students are compared with national averages instead of other local cadets. Although the program suffered a setback in 1987, Carr said, Air Force ROTC at UNL is now “stable” and consistently receives excellent rat ings in its inspections. The program had been shut down from January through May of 1987, he said, and was restored with the help of the chancellor and a U.S. senator. Nationwide, 50 Army ROTC pro grams have been discontinued, Jacob son said, but UNL is in little danger of being cut off. “The University of Nebraska in the past has had an excellent pro gram, and continues to have an excel lent program,” he said. No Navy ROTC programs have been cut, but McKnight said a few arc being looked at for possible reduction or elimination. He said UNL’s pro gram is “quite secure.” The Air Force again is eyeing ROTC detachments for removal, Carr said, but this time UNL is in little danger of being cut. Three of 150 programs arc being examined, he said, but there’s no assurance any of them actually will be discontinued. Department of Defense cuts arc hitting other local military programs besides ROTC, but the changes arc less dramatic. Maj. Joseph Johnson, spokesman for the Nebraska Department of the Military, said no recruiting reduc tions arc planned. “The only difference,” he said, 4 4 is that we used to have an authoriza tion to exceed our authorized strength,” and that permission now is gone. The Air National Guard used to run typically at 104 to 105 percent of standard size. The Air Guard will he pared to 100 percent, Johnson said. The Air Guard isn’t planning to release any soldiers, he said. The reductions will be handled by replac ing retiring officers slower than usual until the 100-pcrccnt level is attained. No changes arc planned for the Army National Guard, which cur rently is running at 90 percent of authorized size, Johnson said. Army and Navy ROTC units still arc recruiting at full speed. Both Jacob son and McKnight agreed that strong recruiting is the key to attracting quality cadets, and neither expect the recruit ing methods to change. I Kerrey: Middle East goals clash By Michael Ho Staff Reporter Differences between U.S. military and political goals in the Persian Gulf threaten long-term progress in the Middle East, U.S. Sen. Bob Kerrey said at a press conference in the Nebraska Union on Tuesday. Kerrey said government officials face a tough decision in determining whether to invade Kuwait with Ameri can forces stationed in Saudi Arabia. He said President Bush’s original decision to send troops to Saudi Ara bia was “legitimate,” citing intelli gence reports that indicated an Iraqi invasion was imminent. “No one else in the world could mobilize quickly enough to get there,” he said. But he called a unilateral Ameri can invasion of Kuwait “a very big mistake,” saying it would lead to “a considerable loss of life,” especially on the Iraqi side. I .... m Michelle Paulman/Daily Nebraskan Kerrey “You’re talking about a country who, itself, has been held hostage by Saddam Hussein,” he said. Kerrey said the underlying prob lem is a conflict between military and political objectives. The military objective, he said, is to get Iraq out of Kuwait as quickly as possible. This objective, taken alone, would justify a unilateral invasion, he said. But he weighed that objective against political goals such as “the restoration of the legitimate govern ment of Kuwait” and general stabil ity in the Persian Gulf. American forces would not help stabilize the Gulf, Kerrey said, and the goal of stability is “one that’s never been achieved by an> Ameri can forces in the past.” He stressed that he didn't think the United States was at war. However, the Iraqi invasion “illustrates that the potential for war is always there,” he said. “I think that diplomatic and eco nomic sanctions will work,” he said, adding that he had no specific time table in mind. “Like the president, I’m not in the business of setting a deadline” for peace, he said. Minority advocate to be added Davis selected to create position By Sara Bauder Schott Senior Reporter A University of Nebraska-Lincoln alumnus and former Nebraska full back is busy deciding exactly what a new minority affairs position at UNL should involve. Dick Davis will help develop a job description and possibly a title for the position, UNL Chancellor and NU Interim President Martin Masscngalc announced Aug. 25. Davis, a former principal in the Omaha Public Schools system and currently a director of Administration and Government Relations at the Northern Plains Natu ral Gas Co. of Omaha, said the prob lems minorities face on campus would never change, although the intensity of the problems vary. “There’s always the same con , cents,” he said. “People need to belong; they need to feel successful. People want to be able to survive.” In assessing the way the new posi tion would function on campus, Dav is will talk to students as well as faculty and administrators to find their ex pectations for the position. Masscngalc said the position was being established to improve cultural diversity and to create a positive environment for minorities on cam pus. He said the person who fills the minority affairs position might func tion to improve the recruiting of minority students and faculty mem bers. .pleased wlS lhc ^ V * ™ was making in the arc« wM ‘nga,c Many major universufe?h?,nor,t,Cs nonsuch as the one iJ C hdvcy P«si lo create. he 10 Masscn8a,c wants lion would be involved in both me diation and development for minori ties on campus. Mediation might include helping a minority person who was having problems with a campus employer or group, he said. In the area of development, the university needs to recruit more mi nority students and to challenge them to greater involvement in college life, Smith said. More minority employees could be brought to campus, he said, anil could be promoted into areas where they arc not traditionally found, such as the Office of University Housing or Caicei Planning and Placement ‘ ‘ Minorities can do those jobs, but the number you’ll find is miniscule. Smith said. Herb Howe, associate to the chan cellor, said Davis was selected to assist the chancellor because he has been a strong sup|K>rtcr of UNL. He holds three degrees from UNL, in cluding a doctorate in education. Davis was largely responsible lor getting a minority scholarship Pr'' gram established at UNL, Howe said Howe said Davis probably would have the job description finished ny the end of October or the beginning ol November. Once the job description is decided, a job search will begm Howe said.