Page 6 Daily Nebraskan Friday, December 6, 1985 ATTENTION Faculty and Staff University of Nebraska, Lincoln Watch for a special announcement in Monday's Daily Nebraskan. ':''.A '4. V If you're looking for professional, personal attention while you're buying contact , lenses, you'll find it well worth looking into Pearle. (pearleY vision center J NOBODY CARES FOR EYES MORE THAN PEARLE. Gateway Mall 4647416 1132 "0" St. 476-7583 Mortar Board cites Brown By Kyle Brunkow Staff Reporter Recognizing the contributions of the assistant to the Vice Chancellor of Stu dent Affairs to UNL, the Black Masque Mortar Board gave Suzanne Brown a Mortar Board Citation. Brown, the current assistant, will leave UNL to te the Assistant Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs with the Pennsylvania System for Higher Education. Brown said she will work with 14 Pennsylvania universities. She will generate faculty development programs, review new academic programs and work with accreditation, reviews and academic planning. Mary Marcy, UNL Black Masque Mor tar Board president, presented Brown with the citation. Choosing recipients is a selective process based on confor mity to Mortar Board ideals: scholar ship, leadership and service, Marcy said. Also, Marcy said, Brown has pro moted equal opportunity and has worked for advancement of the status of women. Brown will begin working in Harris burg, Pa., on Jan. 2. Brown came to UNL in 1971 and worked as an editor of the college Cor- f ...:-':v.-.. - - I e- 'I (' Zj.- 1 I ' .: u, , 2 - I' : -i ' I I " " Dave CreamerDaily Nebraskan Brown Continuing Studies. In 1972, she became program adviser for the Nebraska Union respondence Courses of the Division of and was promoted to assistant director in 1974. Brown became UNL's assistant to the vice chancellor for student affairs in 1977. ASUN urges policy enforcement ASUN from Page 1 In other business, the senate passed a bill urging the vice chancellor of aca demic affairs, the vice chancellor of student affairs, college deans and the UNL Faculty Senate to keep UNL faculty members' grading procedures compat ible with UNL's established grading policies. Sen. Dan Hofmeister said that an ASUN study of course syllabi showed that many teachers weren't treating "plus" grades as distinct grades. "Plus" grades should be given an equal per centage increment as whole letter grades, he said. Sen. Anita Nichols said modern lan guage department practices are an example of what the bill would try to eliminate. The language department has a scale of 80 percent to 87 percent as a B and 87 percent to 90 percent as a B, she said. Hofmeister 'said this grade squeez ing is unfair to students. He said some teachers do this to prevent grade infla tion. Teachers should try to give stu dents more "meat" in courses to pre vent grade inflation and not squeeze grades, he said. n m2 (mm mmi oin Paul Johnsgard, John E. Carter and John Janovy, Jr. for an autographing on Saturday, Dec. 7th. All 3 will be together signing their new books from 12:30-l:30pm at Nebraska Bookstore and 2-3pm at J&L Lee Booksellers. rrs " 1 ."5r- r Solomon D. Butcher jj ' ON 'BIOLOGIST JOHMVNY.IR. Prairie Children: Mountain Dreams by Paul Johnsgard. Photographing the American Dream by John E. Carter On Becoming a Biologist by John Janovy, Jr. oung Jerry is a collector of everything animal, mineral, vegetable. His latest find, F however, turns out to be more ihan he bargained for. The events of Pairie Children: Mountain Dreams offers information about survival in nature, the Cheyenne culture, and the beauty of Wyoming terrain . . . not to mention excitement and adventure! Children's Hardcover $3.95 or millions of Americans, Soloman T. Butcher's photographs epitomize the sod- house frontier. His images from western Nebraska constitute the most extensive of the generation that settled the Great Plains. John E. Carter, curator of the photographs at the Nebraska State Historical Society, offers this bio-critical essay and collection of 120 photographs. Hardcover $28.95 N oted Naturalist and teacher John Janovy, Jr. brings a humanist's vision and supurb prose to this investigation of man as an inquirer into the natural order. On Becoming a Biologist, the third volume in Harper and Row's acclaimed Series on the Professions, is an inspiring testament to this vocation, written not only for serious students, but for the dedicated backyard conservationist and the practicing professional as well. Hardcover $15.95 This Christmas give the gift of Nebraska Autographed copies of books by Nebraska Authors! $A holMay autographing this Saturday, Dec 7 Open Monday-Friday, 8-5:30, Saturday, 95:30 Li i J 1 1 L A mi rf "r Mt .;. f Ann p."''"3f .inn II m M mmm M tm M w -mmmm " " 1 ' j, 'f 'f, , jVijj" '' ' - : : ' : ' ' " ' $1 OFF Any 14" medium pizza (2 toppings or more) 22 oz. Reusable plastic glasses of pop 50 each. (Limit 2) One coupon per pizzalimited delivery area. Expires Dec. 31, 1985. 2 OFF Any 16" large pizza (2 toppings or more) 22 oz. Reusable plastic glasses of pop 50 each. (Limit 2) One coupon per pizzalimited delivery araa. Expire Dec. 31, 1985. $3 OFF Any 20" party pizza (2 toppings or more) 22 oz. Reusable plastic glasses of pop 50 each. (Limit 4) One coupon per pizzalimited delivery ares. Expires Dec. 31, 1985. Open very day East Park Plaa 66th &. "O" Lincoln NE 6S505 :M.C3.i