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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 28, 1990)
Mid West National Life Students Health and Accident Insurance UNL has tried to find a medical plan to suit the needs of most of our students, graduate or undergraduate. MidWcst Student Insurance Com pany and the University Health Center are working together to provide such a plan. The premium for student coverage is affordable, and works in conjunction with the Student Health Center fees to provide the best medical care available and as economical as possible. The student is required to seek treatment at University Health Center whenever possible. To effectively utilize this policy your Health Center fees must be paid. In the event of an emergency, if you are more than 50 miles from UHC, or when a referral has been obtained from a UHC physician, there is a $75.00 deductible and MOST charges are paid at 80%. Dependent coverage is also available for an additional premium. The policy is designed to help off-set the cost of major medical care and hospitalizations. It docs not cover routine physicals, dental visits or pre scriptions. Dependents must use community medical resources, and the deductibles will apply. Rates for 1990/91 School Year are as follows: Student Only $308.00 Student/Spouse 1144.00 Add for each Child 370.00 Open enrollment is from August 24 through October 5, 1990 .For a breakdown of quarterly or semi-annual payments, please refer to the enrollment card. Detailed information and rates arc available by mail or at the Student Health Center. There is also a 24-hour information line you can call at 472-7437. Butch Ireland/Daily Nebraskan Shaun Theye of Bone Gravy pounds those skins in a sideburn furor. Bone Gravy Continued from Page 11 without sideburns has no place in society as far as we’re concerned. It also it has a something to do with Sly and the Family Stone. I’m not sure what, I just know that they were the greatest family group of all lime.” As for the name “Bone Gravy,” band members say they came up it during a collective drunken stupor. “We were talking about different sauces for a name,” Shoemaker said, “and I said, ‘yeah, sauces are fine, but gravy is better. It’s thicker.’ A lot of people thought it meant something dirty. By God, that just shows you where people’s minds are.” In fact, food is one of the common denominators that Shoemaker, Theye and Hager share, according to them. Theye even aspires to be a chef. “1 guess we’ve all had cooking jobs at one time or another,” Hager said. “We know about gravy.” Hyatt provides relaxing music By Michael Deeds Senior Editor Waiter Hyatt “King Tears” MCA Soft and tasteful, masterful and refined, Walter Hyatt’s jazz/blues vocal stylings take hold on “King Tears” and blow serenity in each car. Hyatt, a veteran baritone, mixes the old with the new into a classic form of musical fluidity. Accompa nied by a simple acoustic combo, Hyatt trots through standards like “Ruby,” jazz ballads like “Tell Me Baby,’ ’ and even an eclectic vision of depression - “Que Rcste-t-il dc Nos Amours,” where il doesn’t matter whether or not the listener speaks French as Hyatt’s textured vocals exude utter sadness. Hyatt wrote most of the songs on “King Tears,” and his natural vocal adaptation shows his ease of perform ance. Bom in Spartanburg, South Carolina, Hyatt has broadened his musical horizons from folk to blues to jazz over the years. Producer Lyle Lovett captures the simplicity of the music well, sticking to tried and true engineering tech niques that enhance Hyatt’s warm whispers and drawling singing style. But none of the excellent quality is surprising for Hyatt. Hyatt has been a part of Uncle Walt’s band, the Con tenders, and has teamed up with the likes of B J. Thomas, Jenry Jeff Walker, Gary P. Nunn and Shake Russell. Lovett is an old friend of Hyatt’s, whose success only adds to the com mercial appeal of “King Tears.” But the big force of attraction lies in the album’s diverse stylings, covering virtually all facets of Hyatt’s career. This is the stuff you put on to impress a date in a modem New York studio apartment. But more impor tantly, it is music to relax to - roman tic, unthreatening and sophisticated, it only improves any atmosphere. Move 10 years ahead of the class. The new HP 48SX and a free ‘library card’ can get you there. With over 2100 built-in functions, our new HP48SX Scientific Expandable calculator takes a quantum leap into the 21st century. Buy an HP 48SX between August 15 and October 15, 1990, and HP will send you a free HP Solve Equation Library card (a $99.95 retail value). The plug-in application card alone contains more than 800 science and engineering equations, as well as the periodic table, a constants’ library, and a multi-equation solver. It’s like having a stack of reference books right at your fingertips. The* HI' 48SX caiculatoi is so advanc ed, it will change the way \ou solve prob lems forever. It integral es graphics with calculus, lets y<xi ( liter equations the way you write them, and does automatic unit management. Check your c ampus bookstore or HP retailer for HP’s range of calculators and special back-to-schcx>l offers. Then check exit the calculators that are years ahead of their class. There is a better way. HEWLETT mi!rJk PACKARD