William Lauer/Daily Nebraskan Bottoms up Mike Vontz tightens a bolt on a balcony seat in the Lied Center lor Performing Arts on Tuesday. Vontz said he has spent a week fixing squeaks, replacing bolts and adding lock washers to nearly 300 seats in the auditorium. T-shirts Continued from Page 1 Bui Eric Aspcngren, a member of Students for Choice, said there is no guideline for what can be displayed in the union. Rachel Murray, another member of Stu dents for Choice, said the group will meet with university representatives because it wants to be allowed to distribute the T-shirts again. Aspcngren said the group is consulting pri vate and university lawyers and plans to lake action. Group member Nell Eckcrsley said the shirts were ordered from California out of a catalog. Gregg said the T-shirt was religiously bi ased and created animosity. “What one person considers satirical, one person would consider outright religiously biased,” he said. The T-shirts foster hatred of religious groups. he said. They propagated anti-religious feel ings and should have been removed, Gregg said. Sales of shirts by Phi Kappa Psi fraternity last semester were banned from the union because they “were clearly racist,” he said. The issue with Students for Choice’s shirts isn’t that they support the pro-choice view, Gregg said, but that they contain a religiously biased statement. If the statement “Rated PG, papal guidance suggested” were removed from the shirts, he said, he would have no complaints about them. James Gricsen, vice chancellor for student affairs, said he thinks Students for Choice should appeal the decision if members think their rights have been violated. Students’ rights, responsibilities and free dom of expression and the rights administra tors have to restrict those expressions must be clarified, he said. Welch Continued from Page 1 “She will give the same amount of effort in teaching that a student gives to the proj ect, if not more,” Ovsiovitch said. Ovsiovitch said that in terms of being a good teacher and researcher, Welch’s achieve ments speak for themselves. 4 'Good luck lifting her resume,” he said. It spans 12 pages. A few of her achieve ments include 16 research grants and fel lowships, the Outstanding Research and Creativity Award at UNL in 1988, and in 1989 serving on the Chancellor’s Commis sion on the Status of Women. Ovsiov ttch said Welch has shown him that working with others is a big part of success. “She’s an unbelievable lady who sets a very good example for most students,” Ovsiovitch said. Welch said she enjoys working with her graduate students, but in order to balance this with her research, she doesn’t come to her office in the mornings. In the afternoons, Welch comes in strictly for her students. “I don’t plan on getting much else done,” she said. Before coming to UNL, Welch received a bachelor’s degree in history, and her master’s and doctor’s degrees in political science at the University of Illinois. She was a teaching and research assistant and later an instructor there. Welch said she enjoys working at UNL because colleagues in her department are supportive and friendly. Also, she said, she is encouraged by a new sense in the slate that UNL is an important place. Welch has co- written seven books, ed ited two and written more than 100 articles. Now, she also edits the American Politics Quarterly. Welch recently completed “A Dream Deferred: Black Attitudes cm Race and Ine quality.” Other works of Welch’s include “Women: Elections and Representation,” “The Challenge to Public Policy Making” and “Legislative Reform and Public Pol icy.” She said her main areas of interest are women in politics or why more women don’t take pan in politics. She said she also enjoys researching urban politics and mi norities in politics. Besides her career, Welch ’s husband and 13-year-old son keep her busy. She said that to keep her career and family life balanced, she sometimes has to cut out the “less important things.” “I hardly watch one hour of TV a month,” she said. “I certainly don’t pul my work ahead of my family. ” In addition, Welch said, she enjoy s play ing racqucibail, reading and water sports. Welch recently was appointed to the Lincoln-Lanc aster Commission on the Status of Women. Welch said she wants to become more active in her position on the board of Lincoln Planned Parenthood and continue writing. “I’m not somebody who thinks about achievements,” she says. 1 TWISTERS TWISTERS TWISTERS TWISTERS TWISTERS TWISTERS TWIST 1 2 to to rv m uu 73 t- to <✓> -H to to i H LU M 73 I— % to i s CO £_ “H rv m uj TO JM tO to "* ■Grand Opening; I Sale! 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