Wednesday, August 24, 1933 PageG Daily Nebraskan Y ki J,Ust'n. HathYSh)ru & Accessories for the discriminating gentleman We have Lincoln's largest selection of quality knits, silks, repps, clubs, ana designer ties. Brands include Hooster, Lion Heartea. briar, uamon, naiston, ana Wembley. Also a line selection of tie jewelry, belts, suspenders, pocket scarves, and tie racks. We invite you to see our "big red narrow ties". East Park Plaza 464-1113 MJ to seek ettacs mmsmi? , j BIRKEW STOCKS ARE THE SANDALS THAT PEOPLE WEAR INSTEAD OF SHOES. Have you noticed? 476-6119 By Kclli Kellogg The search for candidates for t he newly-created ethics chair at NU is yet to begin. Jim Kaolin, university director of public affairs, said t he final selection of a professor won't happen overnight. Raglin said the delay is due to unresolved financial arrangements with Missouri Valley Construction Co. of Grand Island. U.S. District Court Judge Warren Urbom ordered the firm to pay the university $1,475,000 to establish an ethics chair. The ethics chair was part of an alternative sentence to a bid-rigging conviction. Payment in full to the NU Foundation is due Sept. 1, 1985, but Raglin said the company could pay in three installments instead of one. Payments in the amount of $550,000, $525,000, and $400,000 would be paid on September 1 of the years 1983-85, respectively. The search for candidates can begin only after these arrangements have been confirmed. That process starts with the appointment of a search committee by NU President Ronald Roskens, Raglin said. Soon after that happens, the university will begin ft-t-t--!--' T. .... n t L o- l . .. ., I""" rTl nn iv i " Jot IV Iff J I: .- A t- -4 lt; J V 1 - q n. LJS L .? nr. VV. ( p; o w (i 0 & , if- ;" -if -If t t 9. 1. - - 14. I.-rM - ft-- v--- - o o o o o o o y an5 o Interest No Carrying Charge Budget Plan Special 24 Hour Contact Lens Information service 4754040 Free Contact Lens consultations Over 50 types of Soft Lenses and gas permeable lenses (tinted or clear) 45-60 day trial on all contact lenses Guarantee on all glasses Expert consultation for patients with contact lens problems Help for patients with lens problems fill) mM(siiMm r? n placing advertisements for applications in numerous major magazines, some of which will be higher education publications. Raglin said university by-laws require the search committee to submit its selection of top candidates to the NU Board of Regents within 1 20 days after the application deadline. The Board of Regents then selects t he professor to the chair. The federal court order made no restrictions as to qualifications for the chair. "It's really kind of open-ended," Raglin said. "That should add to the diversity of the applicants." Interest has already been expressed in the position, he said, but didn't elaborate. Raglin said the alternative sentence payment was the first to be designated for a university use. He stressed the chair is university-wide. "It may be located in Lincoln, but it doesn't restrict this person to one campus," he said. Although a salary has not yet been established, Raglin said it "should be a well-paid position." He hopes that the promise of a lucrative salary, as well as a staff secretary and graduate assistant, will attract many applicants. "It w ill be a great thing for the university," Raglin said, "and it should go on for many, many years." Sheldon . . . Continued from Page 2 Neubert refuses to con centrate on that time period exclusively, how ever. "I'm the kind of person that one month will turn an exhibition on a very traditional subject of Am erican painting, and the next month I've curated something that is off the wall and experimental," he said. "In addition to the pro gramming, I hope we do some things that are ridi culous." He understands, though, that on a limited budget, "ridiculous" and "frivol ous" can't be equal in sig nificance. Neubert estimat ed the gallery's operating budget at "around $40,000" (excluding salaries), which which he said couldn't begin to cover the cost of the pieces the Sheldon will acquire. But, Neubert said private con tributions make up what the gallery's budget can't allow: Still, it is the works them selves not the method of procurement that are important to Neubert. "Art has that incredi ble potential and capac ity to alter our view of the world," he said. "Once you've experienced it, the world is never quite the same." Kerrey . . . Continued from Page 4 Section VII: Bob runs on his record. He loses in a landslide election to Scottsbluff Sen. Terry Car penter, who has been dead for nine years. Section VIII: Bob says he has seen the light. If he is re-elected, he promises to support the University system, restructure the tax system and support Reagan for a third term. Somehow, Bob manages to pull this one out. He is inaugurated in January 1987. He is a happy man, the chief ex ecutive in a state just like yours. Unfortunately, he soon grows bored. He decides something must change. If you would like Gov. Bob to do what he prom ised during the election, read Section I. If you would like him to become nationally prominent, read Section II. If you would like a more novel ending, read "Treasure Island. "