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A.J. Coleman sorts plants Oct. 4
during the Horticulture Club's
annual Fall Foliage Plant Sale in
the Nebraska Union. The sale
helped raise money to fund upcoming
club events and fund a scholarship
established by the club this
year.
Emeriti Association
Meeting Oct. 17
The UNL Emeriti Association will meet at
12:30 p.m. Oct. 17
in the Nebraska East Union. Prem Paul, Vice
Chancellor for Research,
will speak on the topic "New
Developments in Research at
UNL."
Online Travel Training
A
demonstration of the travel Web site, http://www.tandt.com/ts/unl/,
including online reservations, travel coordinator setup, profile
manager update and online tutorial will be from 2-3:30 p.m. Oct.
22
at the Nebraska Union and from 9-10:30 a.m. Oct. 23 at the
Nebraska
East Union.
TIAA-CREF Free
Individual Counseling Sessions Schedule For
October
A TIAA-CREF consultant will be in the Nebraska Union on Oct.
16,
29 and 30 and in the Nebraska East Union on Oct. 10, 17 and
31 to
provide free one-on-one counseling sessions about investment
planning issues. Sign up by calling (800) 842-2009 or going to
the
Web at http://www.tiaa-cref.org
and choosing Meetings/Counseling.
Repetitive Strain Injuries & Physical Therapy
Repetitive strain injuries, such as carpal tunnel syndrome,
thoracic outlet syndrome and chronic back pain, can develop through
a combination of muscle tension, repetitive motion, overuse and/or
poor posture. To prevent these, it's important to rotate jobs,
take
breaks, pay attention to posture and exercise. Physical
therapy is
available on campus if repetitive strain injuries
occur. The
therapist can evaluate the injury and develop a treatment
program
to address the problem. To make an appointment, call
the UHC
Physical Therapy Department at 472-7490.
RealCBT online courses now being offered by
CBA
CBA offers online training in more than 140 courses,
including
business applications, networking, developer training and
preparation
for multiple certifications including Microsoft, A+,
and Cisco.
RealCBT uses full-motion video, challenging exercises
and comprehensive
tests. Online training allows students to become
more proficient
in a number of software applications while working
at their own
pace and at their convenience. Cost is $50 per session
for UNL
students and employees and can be paid by check or cost
center
number. For more information, contact the CBA Training and
Support
Manager at 472-5246 or email cbaits@unlnotes.unl.edu.
Ethics Colloquium Oct. 14
As part of the Fall 2002 Ethics Colloquium, British philosopher
Roger Trigg will lead a discussion at noon Oct. 14 in 222 CBA.
The
discussion will center on topics related to risk and uncertainty
in
high-tech businesses, biomedicine and genetic engineering.
The
public is welcome.
Trigg's work has centered on the role of
reason in confronting
reality, whether in science, social science
or religion. He has
been concerned with the relationship of science
and religion
and edits the Ashgate series of international
monographs in the
subject. His most recent book, "Philosophy
Matters,"
deals with the challenge to philosophy of
contemporary versions
of materialism and relativism.
Trigg has been president of the British Society for the Philosophy
of Religion and of the Mind Association. He is chair of the National
Bench-Marking Group, setting benchmarking standards for philosophy
degrees in all British universities. He is also chairman of the
National Committee for Philosophy, the subject association representing
all philosophy departments in the United Kingdom.
Call for New UCARE Project
Proposals
Some additional funds are available to
support UCARE students
for the academic year 2002-03. These funds
are available to support
a UCARE student between Nov. 1, 2002, and
June 30, 2003. Applications
are available on the UCARE webiste, http://www.unl.edu/ucare/.
The application deadline for these one-year-only awards is
Oct.
18.
For more information contact Laura Damuth, UCARE
coordinator,
at 472-5024, or email ldamuth1@unl.edu.
UCARE
Recruitment Night Oct. 16
A UCARE recruitment night will
be offered from 6-7 p.m. Oct.
16 in the Nebraska Union. This event
is an opportunity for faculty
and students to learn more about the
UCARE program and will include
a brief presentation at 6:15 p.m. by
Laura Damuth, UCARE coordinator.
Questions are welcome.
Faculty members are also invited to recruit students that
night
for the academic year 2003-04 by either giving brief presentations
or by submitting materials for distribution. Contact Laura Damuth
at <ldamuth1@unl.edu> or call 472-5024 for more information
or to participate in the presentation.
Credit Union Car Sale Oct. 18, 19
Find the vehicle of your dreams and save money during the
Credit
Union Car Sale Oct. 18 and 19. Participants will receive
special,
no-hassle pricing on new and selected used vehicles
at
participating dealerships.
Stop by the Credit Union to get
a loan pre-approved and receive
an additional 1/4 percent off our
already low loan rates. Participants
will also receive a free $25
gas card. For a list of participating
dealers or for more
information, call the Credit Union at 472-2087.
Scarlet schedule
The Scarlet
will not publish Oct. 24 because of fall break.
After the Oct. 17
edition, weekly publication will resume Oct.
31.
Grant to coordinate state behavioral health
care
A multimillion-dollar grant received last week by the
University
of Nebraska Public Policy Center will result in better
coordination
of the state's behavioral health care service
system.
According to officials at the Nebraska Health and
Human Services
System, nearly 275,000 Nebraskans confront
behavioral health
problems ranging from substance abuse to eating
disorders. Someone
with behavioral health needs may require any
number of services,
ranging from basic information and referral,
counseling, transportation,
supportive housing, or employment or
education assistance.
Many individuals and families have
multiple problems, and
often there are gaps in services within
communities or a lack
of accessibility because of long waiting
lists. The problems
are especially acute in rural communities and
poorer areas of
Nebraska's cities, said George Hanigan, deputy
director for behavioral
health services for the Nebraska Health and
Human Services System.
Experts like Alan Tomkins, director of the
University of Nebraska
Public Policy Center and a professor of law
and psychology at
UNL, say that a coordinated and integrated
behavioral health
care system could help fill some of these
gaps.
Nebraska will get a chance to do just that with the
receipt
of $1.16 million from the U.S. Department of Health and
Human
Services. A similar amount will follow for the next two
years,
totaling more than $3.7 million. The federal grant, awarded
to
the Public Policy Center, the coordinator of the project, will
allow academics, policymakers, service providers and community
members across Nebraska to work together to enhance coordination
of
the behavioral health care system at the state and community
levels.
In addition to providing funds to support the
development
of a coordinated behavioral health system, the grant
provides
funds that will allow faith- and community-based
organizations
to participate in such a system.
"Often there are gaps in behavioral health services within
communities or a lack of accessibility because of long waiting
lists," Tomkins said. "Like many states, Nebraska has
been taking a serious look at how to create a more seamless system
of behavioral health care. One of the objectives of the project
is
to look at local and state policy solutions for a more integrated
system."
The project brings together representatives
from all campuses
of the University of Nebraska, numerous state
agencies, the legislature,
statewide programs, local service
agencies and the business community.
Partners will also include
local health departments, regional
mental health providers,
schools, religious groups, community
foundations, local businesses,
the justice and law enforcement
systems, social services providers,
and medical and behavioral
health organizations.
Tossing and turning

Mike
Montgomery and Laura Mechtenberg bounce around during
the
Trampoline-O-Thon on Oct. 3 in the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity
driveway. The philanthropy event, sponsored by the fraternity
and
the Pi Beta Phi sorority, ran for three days straight and
raised
money for the Heartland Big Brothers/Big Sisters.
Photo by Richard Wright.
Research office changes name
The Office of Research Management, formerly known as Pre and
Post Award, Research Grants and Contracts, Sponsored Programs-Finance,
has changed its name again to reflect more accurately the mission
and purpose of the office.
Effective Oct. 1, the office was
renamed the Office of Sponsored
Programs, said Prem Paul, vice
chancellor for research and dean
of graduate studies.
The office will continue to provide pre-award and post-award
services to the campus community. Phone numbers and addresses
remain the same, with the office in 303 Canfield Administration
Building.
Two other changes were announced by the vice
chancellor.
- Effective immediately, fringe
benefit rates for faculty and
staff on all new and continuation
grant and contract proposals
should be estimated at 26 percent of
salaries. The new rate takes
into consideration the increased
cost of health insurance borne
by the university. The fringe
benefit rate for graduate students,
undergraduates or temporary
workers remains unchanged. For information
visit http://www.unl.edu/osp/faq.html.
- Investigators preparing grant proposals to the National
Science
Foundation should be aware that guidelines require that
their
review criteria, "Intellectual Merit" and
"Broader
Impacts," are addressed both in the project
description
and project summary. Effective Oct. 1, NSF will
return without
review proposals that do not address the two
review criteria.
For information, visit http://www.unl.edu/research.
Career Services begins
Spotlight program
Career Services is beginning a new
Career Spotlight program
for students who are undecided about their
majors and want to
learn more about career options in specific
areas. Students will
be able to speak with alumni who work in a
chosen field to learn
more about jobs in that area.
The first Career Spotlight event is 4:30-5:30 p.m. Oct. 17
at
the Nebraska Union and will focus on communications careers.
Three
panelists who work in this field will discuss their jobs
and offer
advice for those interested in similar careers. For
the Oct. 17
event, the panelists are UNL graduates with degrees
in English,
news-editorial journalism and communications studies.
Another Career Spotlight event will be offered in the spring
and
is scheduled to focus on human- and public-service careers.
Any
faculty or staff members who are interested in participating
in
this program or on events related to other career fields should
contact Kelli Smith, Career Services, at 472-8217 or ksmith4@unl.edu.
Financial Accounting Standards Board Member to
Speak
Katherine Schipper, a member of the Financial
Accounting Standards
Board, will speak at 10 a.m. Oct. 25 at the
Kauffman Center as
part of the College of Business Administration's
Eminent Speaker
Series.
Since 1973, the FASB has been
the designated organization
in the private sector for establishing
the standards of financial
accounting and reporting that govern the
preparation of corporate
financial reports. Schipper was appointed
to the FASB in September
2001. Before that, she was a professor at
Duke University's Fuqua
School of Business.
Schipper
has published papers on a range of financial reporting
and
corporate finance issues and has been the recipient of several
grants and awards, including the American Accounting Association's
Outstanding Educator award. She has served the American Accounting
Association as president and as director of research, and as
president of the Financial Accounting and Reporting Section.
Research on Big Game is seminar
topic
Research on conditions for three big game species in
western
Nebraska will be the topic of the next Paul A. Olson
Seminar
in Great Plains Studies at UNL.
W. Sue
Fairbanks, assistant professor of biology at UNO, will
present
"Conservation Research on Deer, Bighorn Sheep and
Pronghorn
Antelope in Western Nebraska" from 3:30-5 p.m.
Oct. 16 in the
Great Plains Art Collection in the Christlieb
Gallery, 1155 Q St.
Her lecture and a 3 p.m. reception in the
gallery are free and open
to the public.
Fairbanks will discuss several current field
research studies
that are designed to contribute to broad knowledge
of conservation
biology.
She will describe a study of
pronghorn antelope in northwest
Nebraska that looks at the effects
of changes in vegetation composition
on a population near the edge
of the species' range, a second
study in northwest Nebraska that
focuses on habitat selection
by a reintroduced population of
bighorn sheep in the Pine Ridge,
and a third study at Crescent Lake
National Wildlife Refuge that
looks at interactions between native
mule deer and relatively
recent arrivals, white-tailed deer.
The Olson seminars are presented by the Center for Great Plains
Studies at UNL. For more information, call 472-3965.
Information Services - Communications
Announces Videoconferencing
Services
IS-Communications is now offering videoconferencing services.
This is a bit like using the phone, except that participants
can
see as well as hear one another. Benefits of videoconferencing
include:
- Improved Communication - People meet
more often and share
information more easily;
- Distance Education - Extend the classroom beyond the campus;
- Research - Collaborate with colleagues on projects in real
time;
- Business Meetings - Spend more time interacting and
less
time traveling;
- Cost - Reduce travel and
communication expenses using the
UNL data network.
ISCommunications can provide videoconferencing demonstrations,
systems for sale or lease, and hosting of multi-site calls.
Videoconferences
with up to 24 individual sites in one conference
are available.
For more information, visit http://telecom.
unl.edu/conferencing/vc_welcome.asp.
Demonstrations of
this technology can be arranged in your
office. Call John Gilliam
at 472-2015 or e-mail telecomtech2@unl.edu.
UNOPA Seeking Nominations for Boss of
the Year Award
The University of Nebraska Office Personnel
Association is
seeking nominations for its 2002 Floyd S. Oldt Boss
of the Year
Award. Any full-time employee with management,
administrative
and/or supervisory responsibilities is eligible. The
recipient
of the 2002-2003 award will receive $500, a framed
certificate,
and a one-year UNOPA membership. The application
process can
be found at http://www.unl.edu/unopa.
The
deadline is Oct. 11. Send nominations to Barb Carley, awards
director, 1700 Y St., Lincoln, Neb., 68588-0645.
CBA offers software training classes
CBA offers training in Microsoft Office software as well as
other popular software products. View the new fall class schedule
or register for classes on the web at http://www.cba.unl
.edu/its/support/training.asp.
Classes are $20 for all students
and for faculty and staff not
affiliated with CBA. Classes are in
one of the computerized classrooms
in CBA for hands-on instruction
led by Jan Hime, Microsoft Office
specialist certified in Access,
PowerPoint, Word and Excel. For
more information, contact Hime at
472-5246 or jhime@unl.edu.
Seeking out
transmitters

Fisheries and wildlife majors
Jason Luebbe, left, and Jeff
Koch, holding antenna, move their
antenna to find transmitters
hidden in prairie grass on Oct. 1 on
East Campus as Cameron Nuss,
center, and Brenda Woodward, far
right, collect data during the
wildlife techniques class. The
students learned to use radio
telemetry to simulate tracking an
animal that was wearing a transmitter.
IANR
Photo by Brett Hampton
World Food Day to be observed Oct. 16
World Food Day
will be observed with speeches, panels and
a viewing of the
internationally broadcast World Food Day teleconference
beginning
at 9 a.m. Oct. 16 in the Great Plains Room of the Nebraska
East
Union. For more information about this event, contact Reshell
Ray
at rray1@unl.edu.
Schedule of events:
- 9 a.m.: Welcome from
Harriet Turner, UNL professor.
- 9:15 a.m.: Panel discussion,
"From Farm Gate to Dinner
Plate: The Family Farm, Why Should
We Care?" Panel will
be moderated by Roy Frederick and will
include livestock, grain
and alternative crop producers,
university program representatives
and rural leadership
development experts.
- 11:30 a.m.: Lunch, featuring the types
of foods grown in
Nebraska. Nebraska East Union cafeteria.
- Noon: Participants will reconvene in the Great Plains room
for lunch to watch the internationally broadcast World Food Day
teleconference. The theme for this year's World Food Day teleconference
is "Hungry Farmers: A National Security Issue for All."
- 1:15 p.m.: Tour participants gather in the Great Plains Room
for tour of UNL Food Processing Center at the Dairy Store.
- 2:15-2:30 p.m.: Steve Taylor of the Food Processing Center
will speak in the auditorium, room 42.
- 2:30-2:45 p.m.: Joan
Scheel, marketing programs and services,
will speak.
- 2:45-3 p.m.: Jill Gifford of the Food Entrepreneur Assistance
Program will speak.
- 3-3:15 p.m.: Bethany-Product Development
and other technical
services will be addressed.
- 3:15-3:30 p.m.: Ice cream at the Dairy Store available for
participants.
UNL
plans 'Week Without Violence'
In conjunction with the
National YWCA's Week Without Violence
campaign, the UNL Women's
Center has coordinated activities for
the Oct. 14-19 event to
encourage peace and stimulate positive,
proactive responses to
violence in society.
The week will begin with a
moment-of-silence ceremony at 8
a.m. Oct. 14 in Union Square of the
Nebraska Union. The University
Program Council will sponsor
"Sex Signals," an improvisational
program that addresses
topics such as date rape and relationship
violence, at 7 p.m. Oct.
14 in the Great Plains Room of the Nebraska
East Union.
The Rev. Melissa Finlaw-Draper will lead a healing circle
at 6
p.m. Oct. 15 in the Nebraska East Union Cottonwood Room.
Finlaw-Draper and student volunteers will lead an interfaith
discussion about reflection and healing from experiences with
violence. Kathy Bosch, extension family life specialist at the
university's Panhandle Research and Extension Center in Scottsbluff,
will present "No One Deserves to be Abused," a program
about battery and abuse, at 7 p.m. Oct. 15 in the Nebraska East
Union Great Plains Room.
The Rape/Spouse Abuse Crisis
Center will sponsor a candlelight
vigil in memory of victims of
violence at 7 p.m. Oct. 16 at the
center, 2545 N St. Those who want
to walk to the center as a
group should meet at 6:30 p.m. at
Broyhill Fountain north of
the Nebraska Union.
Members of the UNL community can voice their opinions and
concerns about violence during the "Speak Out! against
violence"
from 1-3 p.m. Oct. 17 in Union Square in the
Nebraska Union.
Participants are invited to listen to or to share a
piece of
music, poetry or personal vignette that reflects an
experience
with violence or a sentiment of peace.
A
Global Violence Panel will address the effects of violence
worldwide from 8-10 a.m. Oct. 18 at the Culture Center, 333 N.
14th
St. Panelists will be Robert Hitchcock, professor of anthropology
and geography and coordinator of African Studies at UNL; Paul
Olson, UNL professor of English; and Sidnie White Crawford, chair
of classics and professor of religious studies at UNL.
The
week will culminate with "Swim Against the Tide of
Violence," a free swim event sponsored by the YWCA and YMCAs
of Lincoln.
In addition, a Flowers for Friends Fund-raiser
will be offered
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. daily Oct. 14-19 at the
Nebraska Union
food court as a benefit for Friendship Home. Flowers
with a message
or tribute about the Week Without Violence will be
sold.
The Silent Witness Project, a display from the Victim
Witness
Unit of the Lincoln Police Department will be on display
from
8 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily in the Nebraska Union Rotunda Gallery.
It includes life-size cutouts of victims of violence; placards
on
each cutout describe each victim's story.
All events are
free and open to everyone. For more information
or for special
accommodation requests, contact the Women's Center
at 340 Nebraska
Union or call 472-2597.
Activities planned for Love Your Body Day
The
University Health Center Sexuality Education eXchange
and several
other sponsors will offer events to mark Love Your
Body Day from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. Oct. 16 at the Nebraska Union.
Keri Wayne
will conduct a workshop on fertility awareness
from 9 a.m. to noon
in the Georgian Room. Registration isn't
required, but please wear
comfortable clothing.
A panel on "Women and the Body
Politic" will take
place from noon to 1 p.m. in the Nebraska
Union Square. Panelists
are state Sens. DiAnna Schimek and Marian
Price, county commission
candidate Kandra Hahn and county clerk
candidate Tami Robinson.
Bobbie Kierstead will moderate the panel.
The League of Women
Voters will offer voter registration between
11:30 a.m. and 1:30
p.m.
Two half-hour classes of mat
pilates will be offered free
at 2 and 2:30 p.m. in the Georgian
Room by Cathy Jewell of the
Campus Recreation Center.
Peer sexuality educators and peer nutrition and body image
educators will staff display and information booths in the union
entrance from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Hand massages will be offered
by
Brianna Bracker Cobb, a licensed massage therapist, and Mehndi
henna painting will be available.
For information, call Pat
Tetrault at 472-7447.
Forums
set to discuss transit fees
Later this month, Parking and
Transit Services will offer
five forums to address options to ease
the financial pressures
of offering transit services at UNL.
Last spring, the parking advisory committee recommended to
Christine Jackson, vice chancellor for business and finance,
that
UNL implement a transit fee to be charged to faculty, students
and
staff who rode the UNL and StarTran buses but did not purchase
parking permits. The basis for the recommendation was that a
portion of the transit system costs should be borne by transit
riders, not just the parking permit holders. Campus discussion
and
a final decision were deferred until this fall.
Three
options are being discussed to address these financial
pressures.
One of them will be implemented in August 2003. The
options
are:
- implement an optional transit fee of
$45/semester for those
using the buses;
- implement a
mandatory student transit fee of $17/semester;
- implement no
transit fee and instead downscale transit operations.
The five sessions to discuss these options will be open to
the
public and will be at:
- 7 p.m. Oct. 23 at the
Nebraska Union;
- 9 a.m. Oct. 24 at the Nebraska Union;
- 2 p.m. Oct. 25 at the Nebraska East Union;
- 6 p.m. Oct. 28
at the Nebraska East Union;
- 2 p.m. Oct. 31 at the Nebraska
Union.
The Association of Students of the
University of Nebraska
is also scheduling sessions to discuss these
options.
Parking and Transit Services also will post a
presentation
of these issues on its Web site at http://www.unl.edu/park/park.htm
l
and will take comments via e-mail at park@cwis.unl.edu.
CBA Open
House
The College of Business Administration is offering
an open
house at 7 p.m. Oct. 16 beginning in the auditorium, room
143.
All are welcome to tour the building, see the classrooms and
meet the people of CBA. Information and refreshments will be
available.
Research Council
Application Deadlines
The UNL Research Council's
applications for faculty seed grants,
grants-in-aid and
interdisciplinary research grants must be received
by Oct. 15.
For more information, visit <www.unl.edu/research/council.html
>or call 472-2851.
Call for papers and poster
presentations
Oct. 18 is the deadline for registration for
the second annual
UCARE Fall Symposium, which will be held from
3-5:30 p.m. Nov.
21 in the Nebraska Union. Both presentations and
poster displays
will showcase the research of some of UNL's
undergraduates. Students
do not have to be in the UCARE program to
participate. Registration
forms can be found on the UCARE Web site,
http://www.unl.edu/ucare/forms
.html.
For more information, contact Laura Damuth, UCARE
coordinator,
at ldamuth1@unl.edu or
472-5024.
Fall Break Hours
for Campus Rec
The Campus Recreation Center and the East
Campus Activities
Building have set special hours for fall
break.
The Campus Recreation Center will be open from 6
a.m. to 9
a.m. Oct. 18, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Oct. 19, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Oct.
20, 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Oct. 21, and 7:30 a.m. to noon Oct.
22.
The East Campus Activities Building will be open 6:30
a.m.
to 7 p.m. Oct. 18, closed Oct. 19 and 20, and open from 11
a.m.
to 7 p.m. Oct. 21 and 22.
E-news process for e-mail to all
E-News is a weekly
compilation of notices distributed to all
faculty and staff and
replaces the "e-mail to all"
system. The deadline for
submission is 5 p.m. Monday; E-News
is distributed Tuesday
evenings. Submitted items must be sponsored
by a UNL department,
program or organization. No commercial or
personal announcements
are allowed. Announcements must have news
rather than opinion
content. Submit items to: http://www.unl.edu/e-news.
To view a sample e-news, see: http://www.unl.edu/e-news/sa
mple.html.
Previously announced URL links are still
active but the above
are updated links.
James Elkins to Lead workshop, give
lecture
James Elkins, professor at the Art Institute of
Chicago, will
lead a free, one-day workshop from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Oct. 21 at
the Nebraska Union. All faculty members and graduate
students
who are interested in art and aesthetic theory, the nature
of
critique as analytical practice and its role in the education
of visual and performing artists and designers are invited to
participate. Elkins is author of such books as "The Object
Stares Back," "How to Use Your Eyes," "Why
Art
Cannot be Taught," "The Poetics of Perspective"
and
"The Domain of Images."
During the workshop,
Elkins will guide participants in questioning
the problems of the
critique's inherent imbalance of power considered
from both the
teacher's and the students' perspectives. Participants
will explore
critique strategies in different arts disciplines
to see how they
might inform one another and challenge the conventions
that define
the "comfort zone" in individual departments,
schools or
media.
Lunch will be provided at no charge, but seating is
limited
and pre-registration is requested. To register, call
Michael
James at 472-0289 or by e-mail at mjames2@unl.edu.
Elkins'
visit will also include a free public lecture at 7:30
p.m. Oct. 21
in Richards Hall 15. Elkins, the 2002 Tom Osborne
Visiting
Lecturer, will speak on "What Can Art History Say
to Studio
Practice? or Why Art Historians Should Draw."
Dental artifacts on display
The
UNMC College of Dentistry at 40th and Holdrege streets
will present
its entire collection of dental artifacts to the
public in its
dental museum through Oct. 12. Admission and parking
are free.
The museum has one of the largest regional collections of
historical dental equipment and artifacts dating from 1850s.
Also
on display will be a collection of tooth extraction instruments
dating from the 1500s.
The museum will be open from 8 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Oct. 11 and
8-11 a.m. Oct. 12.
For more
information, call Stan Harn, 472-1353.
Car Buying Lunch n' Learn Oct. 15 &
16
The University of Nebraska Federal Credit Union will
offer
a car-buying "Lunch n' Learn" session from 11:45
a.m.
to 1 p.m. Oct. 15 in the Nebraska Union and from 11:45 a.m. to
1 p.m. Oct. 16 in the Nebraska East Union.
Seating is
limited; make reservations by calling the credit
union at 472-2087.
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