page 20 Wednesday august 18, 1982 daily nebraskan welcome mmK Come to M & T Tropical Fish for the best prices on new and used aquariums and supplies. We have a wide variety of exotic tropical fish and one of the best salt selections in town. f TWshy Wli hi T TDnOirill K CM 302 South 19th 475-5259 x Open Daily Crumley instigates several changes in UNL J-School While Nealc Copplc, UNL School of Journalism dean, has taken over temporar ily the position of vice chancellor for academic affairs, Wilma Crumley has re placed him as dean of the school. Temporarily leaving her post aa associ ate dean for graduate studies at the Journalism School, Crumley has made several changes in the school's program. Here's a list of some of those changes: - Establishment of the Martha II. Hitch cock & Graduate Chair in Journalism. - Established the Fred Seaton Journal ism Chair. -Renewed publication of a magazine by magazine writing and editing classes, with opportunity for graduate students, faculty and professional mass media people to publish articles. -Renewed publication of a magazine by depth reporting class members focusing on a single topic. lb on Ik Dim 7 DSD ft (2lS ffRISti 1 SS 1 t W w ) CD , . . (Ljl gateway bank downtown 16th and P Streets Checking Accounts Savings Accounts Travelers Checks Money Orders Telephone Transfer Checking Plus Visa & Master Card Bank by Mail 24 Hour Marvelous Max the money machine Convenient Driue-in Lanes Open Mon-Fri 7:30-6 Sat 8:30-noon "You can depend on a friend" MEMBER F D I C Ask about the new GOLD KEY ACCOUNT 16 valuable services for only $5.00 a month! Gateway Downtown Bank 16th & P 467-1188 Ob -Beginning publication of an advertis ing Idea Book by advertising students, with opportunity for graduate, undergradu ate, faculty and professional media people to publish articles on the business side of journalism. -Further experimentation by the radio station, KRNU. -A new community journalism course taught by Al Pagel of the Omaha World Herald Magazine of the Midlands in cooperation with the Gannett Newspaper Co. -Organizing of School of Journalism graduates, with the first meeting scheduled for Oct. 23 during the Missouri-Nebraska football game. -A look at the accomplishments of the Journalism School alumnae during the Accomplishments of Women luncheon sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women scheduled for Oct. 28. DN selects syndicated columnists Each semester the Daily Nebraskan buys a new batch of syndicated columnists for the editorial pages. This semester we have one returning syndicated columnist and three new comers. Normally, they will each be published one time a week with the fifth day rotated among the writers. What follows in an intro duction - or in the case of returning columnist Ellen Goodman, a reintroduct ion - to each syndicated columnist. The information and picture were provided by the columnists' respec tive companies. Ross Mackenzie is the lone conservative among this semester's syndicated columnists. His syndicate company, Tribune Company Syndi cate, Inc., says he is "an unstuffer of shirts, a de flater of windbags and an exposer of idiocy public and private." He writes on topics ranging from academics to Washington politics. His degrees include a bachelor's in history from Yale and a master's in political philo sophy from the University of Chicago. Mackenzie, 39, has been editor of the Richmond (Virginia) News Leader's editorial page since 1969, succeeding another conser vative columnist James J. Kilpatrick. In 1962, he assisted William F. Buckely Jr. on a book. In 1970, he hired cartoonist Jeff MacNelly, now one of the nation's few conservative editorial cartoonists. Bom and raised near Chicago, Mackenzie now lives in Richmond. Roger Simon, a 34-year-old Chicago Sun-Times col umnist, focuses on the hu man side of the news. When covering the Mid dle East crisis, for instance, Simon interviews an Israeli war veteran for his story and then spent an evening at a Palestinian home in terviewing a young man who pledged to fight and die for the Palestine Lib eration Organization. Simon was editor of the college paper at the Uni versity of Illinois and was a reporter for the Danville Commercial News before joining the Sun-Times as a columnist in 1972. Continued on Page 26