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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 17, 1989)
Another day of great prices at Pickles. $6.97 LP or cassette $11.88 Compact Disc $6.37 LP or cassette $11.88 Compact Disc MICA PARIS S MICA PAFWs”"^ SO GOOD MARIA McKEE hjnmnf IM MKKj'TTTMHAT rT*AS ISVlK (THAT PI T THI NIID IN HI i • TO MBS KNttONI ElARIA McKEE p^ >» ’**»*»»«« iwm**u (MivaatM m ..1 Q) 1_v CEFFCN KING’S X GRETCHEN GOES TO NEBRASKA todd rundgren Nearly Human THE WANT OF A NAIL I IIHII Hi V ■UWAEQGDK) FROM WARNER/ELEKTRA/ATLANTIC pickles RECORDS TAPES-COMPACT DISCS 17th & P • 237 S 70th *3814 Normal Blvd Regents to study structure of NU REGENTS from Page 1 tion for our education dollar,” he said. Blank said the regents had thought about studying Central Administration even before they removed Roskcns. Blank said no major changes have been made in NU’s Central Administration since it was formed. He said the regents have a planning subcommittee which is always looking at the system. The subcommittee always has examined the system “pas sively,” he said. By initiating a study, he said, the regents would be taking a more active role in examining the system, he said. Blank said a thorough investi gation o£ the university structure also will give the regents a better idea of what they are looking for in a top administrator. “We’re not just looking at the system to make change,” Blank said. “We need to look at where we’re at, where we’re going and where we want to be going.” UNL gives back burial remains BURIAL from Page 1 been positive and that UNL and the Omaha tribe will continue to work together. UNL is now storing a sacred pole which the Peabody Museum at Har vard University returned to the Omaha tribe. The tribe must com plete a case in which to store the pole before they get it, he said. UNL comes clean in crime report CRIME from Page 2 UNL scored first for the lowest num ber of violent crimes and sixth for lowest reported property crimes. The report also shows that UNL went from 969 reported incidents of property crime in 1987 to 887 reports in 1988. This category includes bur glaries, larceny, motor vehicle theft and arson. Total figures for all Big Eight schools in 1988 as recorded in the report are as follows: •Nebraska - no murders, no rapes, no robberies or aggravated assaults. •Colorado - no murders, five rapes, two robberies, one assault. •Iowa Slate- no murders, two rapes, one robbery, 15 assaults. •Kansas Stale - no murders, two rapes, no robberies, five assaults. •Kansas - no murders, four rapes, no robberies, five assaults. •Missouri - one murder, two rapes, one robbery, seven assaults. •Oklahoma State - no murders, no s, one robbery, six assaults. Jahoma - no murders, one rape, seven robberies, 12 assaults. Even though there weren’t any violent crimes reported last year, Gale said, that didn’t mean those crimes weren’t being committed on campus. Gale said these crimes must be reported in order to be listed on the report.