tv 1 J . I. . t. C d i' Kir sS da a A. W".,:...-: I -toil & . . .. J. . ium '' 1 lOr v c if Ljfcit,Li- ; v tgL.'fflTi. t: . . nr Bowl float to honor Devaney The design for UNL's 1973 Orange Bowl float this year titled "A tribute to Bob. Devaney," was revealed this week. A fund drive for the float is being conducted by the Corn Cobs and Nebraska Association of Commerce and Industry. Wednesday 8:30 a.m. -Student Affairs staff-Nebraska Union 12:30 p.m. E ngineering Mechanics Department-luncheon-Union ... 12:30 p.m. I nter -Varsity Christian Fellowship-Union 2 p.m. Academic Services-Union 2 p.m. Student Activities Office-Union 3 p.m. All University Fund executive-Union 3:30 p.m.-ASUN-Pace Coordinating Committee-Union 3:30 p.m. -All University Fund-Union 3:30 p.m. -Latter Day Saint Student Organization-Union 3:30 p.m. -Builders-College Days-Union 4 p.m. Eta Sigma Gamma initiation-Union 4 p.m.-ASUN Senate meeting-Union 4:30 p.m. Union Planning Committee-Union 5 p.m. Eta Sigma Gamma-Union '5:30 p . m , E n gi neerlng Toastmasters-Unlon 5:30 p.m. Kappa Kappa Psi-Union 6 p.m. -Bed Cross-Union 6:30 p.m.-ASUN Human'Rights Committee-Union 6:30 p.m. -Builders executive-Union 7 p.m. Inter-Fraternity Council-Union . 7 p.m. Towne Club-Union 7 . p.m. Slavic Club-tutoring-Union 7 p.m. -Builders-Union 7:30 p.m. -Student Veterans Association-Union 7:30 p.m. Speech Department-Readers Theatre-Union 7:30 p.m. math counselors-Union 7:30 p.m. -Wildlife Club-Union U p.m.-Bahai Association-Union Schedules, certificates out UNL students who pre-registered for second semester will receive the schedule of classes at their campus mailing address this week. However, certificates of registration were mailed by mistake to each student's permanent home address. Students are encouraged to, pick up the c ertificate over the holidays and , S attacr.j,iAi,ihg,,toack of the student ideotilicatlon c arid before;;'. , '..'4 r. second semester?- .;,.....-,J.., Students who want to make changes in their second semester class schedule will be able to participate in free drop and add Dec. 18-22 in the Nebraska Union. A voice in the basement of the union cries KLOPSTOCKIANS , UNITE! As finals approach, (tie minds of Weekend Film Folks are beginning to deteriorate quickly. We're going crazy. If you are sharing this condition, join us in a great escape. ... W. C. Fields in "Million Dollar Legs" Friday and Saturday at 7 and 10 in the Union Small Auditorium for $.75 ... And if you're a basket case, bring your own basket ours are all full. How much longer until vacation? 7 AD r i : CHECK THESE VANTAGES Modern classrooms Progress af your ability Ffacoment assistance Financial assistance then enroll in these quality career courses . . . Secretarial: Legal Medical Executive- Steno graphic Administrative Assistant Accounting General professional Business Administration Hotel-Motel Management Key Punch CLASSES START JANUARY 2, 1973 Call or Write LINCOLN SCHOOL of COMMERCE P.O. Box 82826 Ph. 432-53 1 5 Lincoln, N. 63501 Information lady plans retirement For 13 years Norma L. Burke, receptionist and information clerk in UNL's office of records and registration, has given the "personal touch" in answering students' questions at the University. In January she will retire from her post. Burke is often the first person a student or visitor meets upon entering the Administration Building on Lincoln's City Campus. She is not only one of the first, but probably one of the most frequent contacts of University students. Her job is to answer questions about registration, dropping and adding classes, office and classroom locations and a long list of other queries. In July 1959, when Burke started her job, she said she knew most of the 7,000 to 7,500 students by name. Now that the University has grown to 21,581, she said she can't recall all the names but she does ijrecogn!ze many of the facets. . - Students also recognize her. , ,W( ,,, , . .,., "Students often come up to me when I'm downtown or somewhere else off campus and start a conversation with 'aren't you the lady' "she said. She also said that students who have graduated talk to her when they see her. "When the University's public relations office did a story on me a few years ago, I received letters from manygraduatedstudents who had seen the article and decided to write me to say 'hello' " she said. Visits with students Satisfactorily answering the questions of thousands of students would seem like an awesome and almost impossible task, but Burke said she never thinks of all the other students when she answers a question, just the one in front of her. "I take each individual at a time and step by step answer each question he may have," she said. Her approach to answering all those questions is what she calls "visiting" with the students and her "visiting" includes a smile. She considers her job one in human relations. She said the only problems between people corne when there is a lack of communication. "If I can understand the question, I usually have the answer," she said. Sometimes she said the students are not in a good mood by the time they reach her counter because they have been given incorrect information and have been running all over the campus with no solutions to their problems. "I let them yell a little and let off their steam and then I ask them what their questions are." Burke said once a father came to her window, upset that his daughter, who graduated with honors from high school, was tired and disgusted with school and refused to go to the University. "He said his wife and daughter were in the car and he'd appreciate it if I would talk to the girl," Mrs. Burke said. She said after a short conversation with the daughter, the girl agreed to start at the University, later graduated with a very good school record and married another student who Burke also knew. "The girl's grandmother, who lived in the South, once sent me a pecan pie," she said. Vantage point From Burke's vantage point of 13 years on campus, she sees no big difference in students. "They may be a little more concerned today about what is going on in the world and about job opportunities, but they still all basically want a good life for themselves and their loved ones," she said. Students still show me pictures of their families and tell me what they plan to do when the get out of school." Burke admires students who have a family, work and still go to school to educate themselves for a job. "They have to be pretty ambitious to do that," she said. She believes the increase in students at the University in the past few years was due to the avail ibil ity of more G.I. bills, more loans, more educational opportunities as scholarships, a stronger desire for education and more pressures from the outside world to get a higher education. Sudden retirement As far as her retirement is concerned, Burke said it "all came so suddenly." She said she is sad to be leaving. "I'll miss all the questions, the people I work with and the hustle and bustle of the information counter," she said. "An, I'll miss the students most of all." As far as training her replacement, Burke said, "you really can't train someone to work with people. "If they love people and enjoy working with them as much as I do, they'll have no trouble," she said. When Burke retires, she plans to relax, spend more time with her family and "take each day as it comes." "I might take another job, if it interested me," she said. "I don't feel that I am ready to retire yet". j'Q WW-. Ml 4S 'I l x ' 1 I , hiwt J daily nebraskan Wednesday, december 13, 1972 i ' " . : - . . page 10