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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (March 30, 1983)
2 Wednesday, March 30, 1983 Daily Nebraskan Student Scientific Program scheduled for tonight at College of Dentistry The Sixteenth Annual Student Scientific Program will be tonight from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. at the UNL College of Dentistry on East Campus. Junior and graduate dental students, senior dental hygiene students and dental assistant students from Lincoln's Southeast Community College will compete by presenting programs ranging from research to clinical treatment of patients. Topics that may be of interest to the public include: the use of acupuncture for analgesic therapy in dentistry, caries vaccine, esthetic restorations, the paleontology of the human dentition, pharmaceutical comparisons in dental practice, the role of the dental profession in detecting high blood pressure, home care for the orthodontic patient and orthognathic surgery. Each program will be evaluated b . committee of faculty and students from the College of Dentistry. The first-place winner will be awarded the chance to present his program at the National Meeting of the American Dental Association in Anaheim, Calif., and compete with students from other dental schools in the United States for additional prizes and honors. Lee Shackelford, winner of the 1981 Student Scientific Program at Nebraska, placed second in the national competition. itudent Photography Contest! 2 DIVISIONS - B&W & COLOR PRIZES IN EACH DIVISION 1ST -$25.00 2nd - $15.00 3rd - $10.00 Honorable Mention Ribbons in all four places. 8" x 10" maximum size for prints. Must be matted and labeled. $2 entry fee per item. Sub mit entries to East Union CAP Office by April 5. Judging on April 7. urc-tast visual Arts Corrections In the March 18 issue of the Daily Nebraskan a cutline under a page-one photo graph of David Rice mis identified him as Chico Watkins. PLACE A PERSONAL AD IN THE Nebraskan High-tech hair. Slick. Sleek. Sharp. The best of all the latest styles from New York to LA now at El Torn. El Toro's stylists use only Roffler products and can show you how to use them at home to keep your hair looking sharp long after you cO' leave. Make an appointment today at El Toro. We've aot the best stvles nninn " -1 3 J' z :.- ' Jf 1 s 1 1 i TON m 1 0 CI ! W J :r l' , 'J v i r H Staff photo by Dave Bentz Diners enjoy food in the Nebraska Union Harvest Room. ablest Room gefe Dost Editor's note: This is the final article in a four-part series on the Nebraska Union food service. By Ward VV. Triplet t III With the Union Square and the Colonial Dining Room in the Nebraska Union doing an about-face in the last 14 months, the spacious Harvest Room cannot be far behind. However, it probably won't be until 1985 that union officials get around to changing the food service, whose menu is becoming out-dated, Ronald Pushcar, director of union food services, said. "What we find here, and it's recurrent throughout the food industry, is that people do not buy the big lunch, meaning the meat, potato, vegetable and dessert, anymore," Pushcar said. "Part of that is dieting, part of it is the economy and part of it is that people are out working out instead of eating lunch." The Harvest Room's figures look much worse than what they might actually be Your gift can make a difference, v.-- y-.,ja Association WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE because they are compared with those recorded when the Union Square was being built. "For one semester, our entire service was thrown into the Harvest Room, and to my surprise, it handled it very well," Daryl Swanson, Nebraska Union director, said. "Naturally, the numbers shot up." Swanson said the Harvest Room was not expected to continue pulling Wi times its normal productivity when the Square opened. However, that service's opening drew away much more business than anticipated. "I had predicted the Harvest Room was going to stay strong because it had done a better job with the hot meal," Swanson said. "That's where I was wrong." Swanson said the gradual change toward the smaller or quicker meal was occuring as the Union Square transition was made, but its impact has been much greater than expected. The result has been a year of struggling for the Harvest Room. Although changes are being considered, Pushcar said it is too early to make any definite decisions. Swanson said union officials see a need to consolidate at least one of the operations. "Management's proposal then probably will be to develop a line of service there that more closely combines the current Harvest Room service with the CDR (Colonial Dining Room) service. That area would definitely be comfortable enough for a soup and sandwich service." viJj J L CD V it THE QUEEN O THE BLUES TvnD TT A wn f "All-out, damn-the-torpedos performances, full of raw, gritty power and plenty of energy."-DOWNBEAT 'The most impassioned and exciting of women Blues singers." ua -wwi- -NEW YORK TIMES $4.00-Advance Tickets Available at the Zoo Dar and Larry's Showcase. 933 s y ,m".;L Class of 83 I ' v lit 1 49 r s a AO ea 10 for $3.75 Otien Monday f r.dy, 8 5 30 Salufriay 9 5 30 mvr 1 2th tR StrMU In Lincoln Citw 47M111