Tk T | Dfllly | 73/50 I Imostly To 1 ll %Z L/l Ct^JVCtX 1 gswwH Official: Cuts prompt look at programs By Adeana Leftin Senior Reporter Proposed budget cuts are caus ing university officials to take a hard look at programs at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, said the acting dean of the College of Engineering and Technology. Morris Schneider said UNL offi cials were evaluating programs to see if they are in the best interest of the slate and if future changes are neces sary. “It’s always challenging to take a look and sec how we cope with the situation,” Schneider said. The cuts arc a result of a Nebraska Legislature mandate last spring that UNL should trim its budget 2 percent this year and 1 percent next year. If cuts are approved, the drafting and design engineering program would be eliminated, Schneider said, fc* 'That program is probably the least significant to the role and mission of this college,” he said. Schneider said most of the stu dents in the pro DimrcT gram are Part D U DG ET time, and few full time students would be affected by the cut. Another possible elimination would be the Center for Technology Management and Deci sion Sciences. Bill Splinter, interim vice chan cellor for research, said the center has a unique purpose. “It will be very difficult for us to find other avenues to bring our new technology of business sciences into the Nebraska community,” he said. The University Press also may face a reduction in its funding. Splinter said that last year, UNL s University Press was the only univer sity press in the nation to make more than a 10 percent profit, and he called the reductions a “negative incenti ve. ” “They’ve been very successful, and we’re going to chip away (at their funding),” he said. In an effort to comply with the proposed budget cuts, the Office of Business and Finance has recom mended eliminating several staff positions. Paul Carlson, acting associate vice chancellor for business and finance, said nine custodial positions will be cut. He said low traffic areas will be cleaned less because of employee cuts. With less cleaning, furnishings and equipment will wear out faster and need replacement sooner, Carlson said. In the chancellor’s office, the combination of the public relations director’s job and the director of uni versity relations has been proposed. Cleric presses for single hostage trade. Page 2. Huskers butt Rams back to Colorado. Page 6 &7. Record crowd witnesses NU volleyball loss to UCLA Page 8. Stuart Theater to open under new mangement. Page 10. INDEX Wire 2 Opinion 4 Sports ' 8 A&E 10 Classifieds12 Andy Frederick/DN After a 20-year absence, Janice Callum has returned to UNL to complete her degree in marketing and management. Older, wiser, more serious Woman returns for college degrees By Wendy Navratil Senior Reporter After being kicked out of col lege in 1964, Janice Cal lum is back—a little older, a little wiser and a little more seri ous about her education. Callum, 44, attended college at Indiana University in the 1960s as an art student. “I flunked out. I got kicked out of school the same day 1 conceived my son,” she said. She and her husband, George Callum, were married the follow ing summer. And, more than 20 years later, their marriage is still going strong, Callum said. Several moves because of her husband’s ca reer with Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. and the birth of two more chil dren prevented her from finish ing college, she said. “1 had to go to work to gel my husband through school,” she said. “My life got caught up in my hus band’s and my children’s lives.” . One of her husband’s transfers brought them to Lincoln in the late- 1960s, Callum said. While pregnant, she attended night classes at the University of Nebraska-Lin coln where her interests began to shift toward advertising. After moving from Lincoln, Callum landed a job as a sales representative with Polaroid Cor poration in Ohio. When her hus band was transferred to California, Polaroid created a new territory for her there. See CALLUM on 3 Speech majors solicit football fans’ support By Jeremy Fitzpatrick Senior Reporter A sign hanging from Oldfaiher Hall reads, “Speech must never be silenced.” A short distance away, University of Nebraska-Lincoln speech commu nication students collected signatures Saturday before the football game between Nebraska and Colorado State. Michele Ernst, a graduate student in the speech communication depart ment who helped organize the effort, said four students collected about400 signatures for a petition to save the speech communication department. The department was targeted in cuts proposed last week to UNL’s Budget Reduction Review Commit tee. The proposed cuts are in response to a Nebraska Legislature man date last spring thai UNL cut its budget 2 percent this year and 1 percent next year. — Ernst said Bill Seiler, chairman of the speech communication depart ment, and Vincent DiSalvo, a speech communication associate professor, supported the idea. “We figured our best bet would be * at the football game,” she said. “We wanted to get as many signatures as we could and just get visibility with the stale of Nebraska.” Mary Sully, another graduate stu dent in the departmentwho collected signatures, agreed. “More than anything, we wanted to bring attention to the situation and give the students and the citizens of Nebraska a chance to express their disappointment with what is happen ing," she said. Ernst said she thought the effort was successful. “I was really happy with the num ber of signatures we got,” she said. She said that although most people were optimistic and supportive, there had been some negative reaction. “We had a few negative comments,” she said. “I’d be lying to you if I said there weren’t. But well over the ma jority was positive and encouraging.” Sully said she had not expected the degree of support they received. “I was really overwhelmed with the positive response we’ve received this past week,” she said. Ernst said that signatures collected Saturday brought the total to 4,400. She said she thought students would attempt to get more signatures at next week’s game. Average age not climbing atUNL By Tom Kunz Staff Reporter llhough national reports show that the number of non-traditional students at post-secondary institutions is on the rise, UNL has not paralleled that increase, an official said. The National Center for Educa tion Statistics reports that 43 per cent of all college students now arc age 25 or older, up from 39 percent from 1981. A recent report in The Chronicle of Higher Education shows that about 16.6 percent of students at post-secondary institu tions arc over 25. But James Griescn, vice chan cellor for student affairs, said that the number of non-traditional stu dents at the University of Ncbraska Lincoln has remained constant. Roughly 12 percent of UNL’s students arc non-traditional, which means they arc over the age of 25, Griescn said. That percentage ex cludes graduate students. UNL’s non-traditional enroll ment may be lower than the na tional average, Griescn said, be cause the institution is not openly competing for non-lradilionals. Griescn said he has seen in creasing competition for non-tra dilional student's in the last few years, especially from private schools. These schools have started tailoring programs specifically See STUDENT on 3 NON-TRADITION AL STUDENTS I IHgur— w toe lull thw undf yAialu, Scon Maurf/DN