O n O iJ( r f rx if - ; U U By Theresa Foreman Most UNL colleges wl3 have hired additional professors by Aug. 1 to teach undergraduate classes, according to college deans. Undergraduate colleges were allocated $351,000 by the State Legislature this spring to upgrade the quality of under graduate teaching at UNL. The money is a result of an amendment to the university budget by Utica Sen. Douglas Bereuter. Ronald Smith, dean of UNL's College of Business Administration, said prospective faculty members have bees interviewed and all offers will be made by July 15. All new positions should be filled by Aug. 1, he said. Smith said he is confident the college can 11 open positions. "We will be getting some good people here, " he said. The college was allocated twenty six per cent of the C51,CC3 to add five positions and to upgrade nine positions. Oae-ycarpsdtieas The positions being filled are one-year appointments but are subject to reappointment. Smith said the one-year stipulation did net cause as much of a problem in reeru&ing qualified professors as he thought it might. He said the highest demand for college professors now is in some areas of business administration, so that recruiting qualified professors was difficult. Having to compete with the outside market also posed temporary problems for - the College : of Enjriaserinj and Technology, said Dean George Hanna. It is difficult to entice quaMsd people when there are good engineering jabs to be had," Hanna said. Hanna said he is very pleased with the applicants selected to til the two pcclZtezs created in the college, but added that he did net get as many applicants as he expected. The engineering college was allocated seven per cent of the funds to add one and one-half positions and to upgrade two positions. Cecil Steward, dean of the College of 'Architecture, said he has filled the two positions being opened in the college with five per cent of the undergraduate funds. He said the one-year stipulation had no ' effect on the quality of those applying for the positions. Sevea per eest to Teachers CeZsje Robert Egbert, dean of Teachers College, said he would have three positions filled by the beginning of August. Teachers College was given seven per cent of the funds to add three positions and to upgrade one position. Egbert said he is pleased with the candidates being considered for the job, but added that the one-year stipulation did make a difference in the number of applicants. "We lost three good candidates because we could not promise them more than a year," he said. Irvin Omtvedt, chairman of the Animal Science Dept. in the College of Agriculture, said if the positions are not extended beyond one year, the department will be worse off than it was. without the new positions. "We've made some changes in the program which we feel are absolutely necessary," Omtvedt said. He said one-year positions is not the way to buOd permanent improvement into a program. The College of Agriculture has five per cent of the undergraduate funds . to add two positions. One position has been Hed, and Omtvedt said the other, one should be filled by July 15. Thirty six per cent of the funds will be used by the College of Arts and Sdences to add lSVs positions and to upgrade six positions. - . . V J- - W 'A ' 2i ' f i ATTJT; i j l I J t 4 I 1 t i I i i n i July 8 & 10 8 pm July 11 3 pm Tickets: Adults $3.00 Students $2,50 65 & Over $2.50 All seats reserved Available at Kimball Box Office 113 Music Building . Eleventh & R Mail orders accepted Phone orders tfi Piaster Ctarga or Bank Americard number only Call 472-3375 ' RECITAL MMnvvt cut m&A Host of the interviewing of applicants is finished, and offers are being made, said llax Larsen, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences.' He said he is optimistic that most cf the one-year appointments will be renewed. He said the one-year limit posed no problems in finding qualified applicants. The academic market is such that qualified people are available," Larsen said. The department (in the college) Lave dffse aa excellent job fa finding people who are good teaebers at the usdsrgrads&te level," he said. Adam Breckenridge, UNL vice chan cellor of academic affairs, said the one-year stipulation may have helped UNL "recruit some talent we would not otherwise get." Some departments are hiring pro fessors who are on one-year leaves of absence from their school. "We have an indication," Breckenridge said, "that it (the undergraduate money) is part of our base budget. English TV series returning Two outstanding television series about Englishwomen, produced by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), win return to the Nebraska ETV Network broadcast schedule in July. Jennie: Lady Randolph Churchill, a series dramatizing the life of Winston Churchill's American mother, will start Wednesday, Jury 14, at 8 p.m. repeating Sundays at 9 p.m. Lee Remick stars as Jennie in the seven-part series which drew rave renews when it was first aired on national public television in the fall of 1975. -. The Duke and Duchess of Marlborough and the eminent historian Lord Norwich are among those interviewed in special segments following each episode of Jennie: Lady Randolph Churchill. S s 8 VrfMlIj2i(II)9 me Shoulder to Shotdder-the story of the violent early suffragette movement in Britain-returns to the Nebraska ETV Network starting Sunday, Jury 25, at 8 pjn. The series was first broadcast by NETV in October of 1975. The six-part series which repeats on Fridays at 9 pjn. traces the real-life story of the Pankhurst family-four women who mobilized a women's army in England to gain political recognition for women. The bitter struggle involved violence, hiding from police, and going to prison. Created and produced by three Englishwomen, Shoulder to Shoulder stars Tony Award-winner -Georgia Brown as Annie Kenney, a colleague cf ths Pankhursts in the fight for women's rights. T I J 9 8 I I 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 Italisii Food 8 8 8 ..- .-. ' k t s,: '. "" 'y' ' 8 8 8 n . 457-SSll 0 483-2811 .tf-n ' J ;: ; Hosed inssday- Friday 4 pjen.- 12:30 aja. 8 8 6 8 8 j VcVs Peoph Keep Coming 8 8 8