The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, August 20, 1987, Page 26, Image 24

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Gateway
—
Lied Center work
quiets, continues
By James Lillis
Senior Reporter _
Round two of construction on the
Lied Center for Perfoming Arts is half
completed, and construction firm offi
cials say it will be six more months
before the third phase begins.
Concrete for the center’s foundation
and walls has been poured, Builders
Inc. vice-president Jim Beard said.
During the first phase, 80-foot steel
rods and 40-foot wooden rods were
driven into the ground, Beard said.
Students and professors complained
about the noise from the pile driver last
spring.
Kerry Grant, professor of musicology
and director of the School of Music in
Westbrook Music Building, said the
pile driver “introduced new rhythms
here.”
The second phase has been quieter.
“We’ve had absolutely no problem so
far other than a little bit of mud and
the usual construction site hurdles,”
Grant said.
Future phases of the project will
include construction on the roof, exte
rior walls and the interior, Beard said.
He said he expected the Lied Center to
be completed on schedule in 1989.
“We don’t think of the prqject in
terms of phases so much as we think of
it as one continuous process," Beard
said.
Me said ne aian i ininK me noi
weather during the past few weeks has
hindered progress, but added* “I
wouldn’t want to be down there (on the
construction site.)”
The Lied Center is also on schedule
financially, said Harley Schrader,
director of the UNL physical plant.
‘‘We are not authorized to spend any
more than the project was budgeted
for, but it’s going to cost every bit of
that money,” Schrader said.
Schrader said that his people are
working with Builders Inc. every day to
help reduce costs and insure that the
Lied Center is a "quality building."
Students say
Curtis has family
atmosphere
CURTIS from Page 17
Lipska said she is upset that the
school may close.
‘‘It’s a very good school,” she said.
“The students work closely with their
instructors. You feel like one of the
family.
‘‘The teachers help out individu
ally,” she said.
Other students also were disap
pointed.
Koa Knutzen, a sophomore, said he
thinks closing an agricultural school in
an agricultural state doesn’t make
sense.
# “When you’ve been here so long, you
begin to like the school and the town,”
he said. “You hate to see the school
close up. .. it's going to hurt the town
so bad.
“It’s like you second home."
Phyllis Kaczor, a sophomore from
Osceola, said students receive hands
on experiences.
UNSTA has two-year programs In
agricultural business, commercial hor
ticulture, agricultural machinery
mechanics, soil and water manage
ment, and veterinary technology.
The students attend classes seven
hours a day, five days a week.
Half of the curriculum centers on
theory and half on practical application.
UNSTA’s grounds are on 470 acres
and have $10 million worth of buildings
and equipment. The school also has
swine and cattle herds.
Van Der Werff said that 92 percent of
the college’s students are employed in
Nebraska.
Thirty-six percent of the students
are employed in business; 1 percent in
teaching; 11 percent in government; 12
percent infarming or ranching; and 19
percent in graduate study. One percent
don’t seek employment and 20 percent
find employment in miscellaneous
fields.
“If the school was inefficient and
the graduates were not getting jobs and
they weren’t happy with their educat
ons . . . (then) I’m completely in favor
of cutting off the school,” Van Der
Werff said, “but none of these situa
tions exist at Curtis.”