’ ‘Old Glory’ to be moved this spring SATURDAY FOOTBALL , PABST BLUE RIBBON PITCHER $2.00 HOTDOGS 25c (DURING GAME ONLY) Sliiitp tj kJUIIC Lounge 2137 Cornhuske — — — — — — — — — — — • NEW PFBCES! ONE MONTH $37.50 j unlimited use 3 MONTHS $75.00 unlimited use [ 20 TANS $35.00 J | * 2 WEEKS $25.00 unlimited use 10 TANS $21.00 I (NOPEAN I T A M S P A i Tanning Center I Suite 216-2nd Level j I Gold’s Galleria i ! I i 474-5355 ! 1-! I SEPT. 15-NOV. 19 STATE FAIR PARK By Lisa Bolin Suff -Reporter_ There soon will be an empty space in the Cather Garden where the “Old Glory” sculpture now stands, said Bob Carpenter, cam pus architect at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. “Old Gloiy” will be moved this spring to its permanent resting spot in the Pedestrian Plaza, on the north side of the Lied Center for Performing Arts, he said. 1 The sculpture, created by Mark • diSuvero, was bought specifically for the Lied Center, said George Neubert, director of the Sheldon Art Gallery. Neubert said the sculpture must be disassembled and repainted oeiore me move, i hc wm cost several thousand dollars, he said. “Old Glory” was purchased in February 1987 and has been in the Cather Garden since the spring of EDGE SCHOLARSHIP INFORMATION FOR rnCE STUDENTS WHO NEED MONEY FOR COLLEGE Every Student is Eligible for Some Type of Financial Aid Regardless of Grades or Parental Income. • We have a data bank of over 200,000 listings of scholarships, fellow ships, grants, and loans, representing over $10 billion in private sector funding. • Many scholarships are given to students based on their academic interests, career plans, family heritage and place of residence. • There's money available for students who have been newspaper carriers, grocery clerks, cheerlesders.'non-smokers . etc. • Results GUARANTEED CALL For A Free Brochure j ANYTIME _(800) 346-6401 Alligator Recording Artist Lucky Peterson and his band. At the age of five, Lucky Peterson recorded his first L.P. which was followed by television appearances on The Tonight Show, Ed Sullivan, The David Frost Show, and others. He’s now 26 years old and is touring with his own fine Blues band. So Get Lucky. Thurs., Oct. 19th 9-1:00, $4 | The Zoo Bar 136 No. 14th | Halloween is "JEST" Around The Corner! /here is still a GREAT selection to choose from at tfriutye A. Stop hy ami check out our costumes, make up and accessories to ensure a HATTY HALLO Vt EES! Halloween Hours: Vion-Fri.: 10am-‘)pm Saturdays: I0am-5pm Sundays: 12pm-5pm Knding October 31 j 2 Soft Shell Tacos! | and a ! ! Small Potatoe Ole ' i $1.99 ; Not valid with any other offers. Good only at I Limit one coupon icrn 'd* cm | per persor per visit. ^ Street Otter expires 12/31/89. — — — — — — Ji li kiMti ; VU4 , v-tti pvmu MIU. The piece cost about $500,000 Ncubert said. The money, raised specifically for the purchase of the sculpture, came from private sources, he said. AID from Page 1 longer exist and adding new scholar ships, she said. The company was founded in the late 1970s, Menzer said. Menzer said the Academic Guid ance Service is listed with the Better Business Bureau. Students who are concerned about the company’s le gitimacy may talk to the the bureau, she said. The company has a database of 10,000 entries of financial aid sources, Menzer said. |ln I Professor will deliver j Morris lecture Monday An Arizona State University professor will deliver the sec ond annual Roberta A. Morris Memorial Lecture at 3 p.m. Monday. Nancy Felipe Russo, direc tor of women’s studies and pro fessor of psychology at Arizona State, will speak on “Psycho logical Aspects of Unwanted Pregnancy and Abortion: Legal Implications.” She will discuss research findings related to maternal and child welfare issues in abortion, and will examine consequences of restrictive abortion policies to women, their families and society. The free lecture is co-spon sored by the psychology depart ment and the College of Law and will be in the Great Hall of the Wick Alumni Center. The lecture series was cstab Ilished in memory of Moms, a UNL faculty member who died in June 1988. ASUN from Page 1 be sold meets the required distance at 170 feet. Nebraska law stales that alcohol cannot be sold within 150 feet ol university property. Because the food-court area is the only part of the Reunion that would be licensed, Hunter said, that section would be separated from the rest of the Reunion by a decorative iron fence. Customers would not be* al lower to take beer out of the fenced area, hr said. Hunter called the application for 2 beer license an “opportunity fo® everyone to work together. ’ ’ ^ Senators’ support of the plan | would show the UNL administration that students are responsible enough to handle beer drinking, he said. Before deciding to apply for a beer license, Hunter said, he conducted a survey of the “pros and cons’’ of alcohol use at UNL. “Onp r*f thp mncl figurant sitU* ations that wc observed was the con tinual illegal use of the parking lots and the alcohol consumption by all o! the people that had the sizable check books that can contribute to the ath letic department,” he said. Allowing that type of alcohol use while denying students of lcgal drinking age the opportunity to drink in the Reunion is unfair, Hunter said. He said he will submit his applica tion for a license to the Nebraska Liquor Commission next week.