The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 25, 1991, Page 6, Image 6

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APRIL 24-27
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Official: UNL ready to comply I
with animal-research regulations!
By Cindy Kimbrough
Staff Reporter__
While some universities arc scram
bling to comply with new rules gov
erning animal research, UNL stands
ready for the Aug. 14 deadline, the
director of the Institutional Animal
Care Program said.
Gene White said that when Con
gress passed the 1985 Animal Wel
fare Act, which suggested some
changes in cage sizes and other facili
ties in which animals are kept, the
University of Nebraska-Lincoln made
adjustments.
The new requirements were planned
during construction of the animal
science building at UNL in the mid
1980s, White said.
UNL’s planning puts it ahead of
several universities that have had to
write up new animal-care plans and
will have to spend on new “hard
ware” and on more help to exercise
research animals, according to an
article in The Chronicle of Higher
Education.
The changes came after the issu
ance of new regulations in February
. by the Department of Agriculture.
- ii ——
This is really not any
thing new that we didn t
know before. It was
something we knew
was coming and pre
pared for ahead of time»
White
director of the Institutional
Animal Care Program
-—tt -
The regulations made the changes
suggested in the 1985 act official.
“This is really not anything new
that we didn’t know before,” White
said. “It was something we knew was
coming and prepared for ahead of
time.”
The 1985 changes look a while to
come into effect because it took a
couple of years to write the regula
tions, he said.
White said agricultural animal
research at UNI. is in compliance
with all National Institute of Health
and USDA guidelines. Compliance is
ensured by NIH and USDA inspec
tions once every year, he said.
The Institute of Animal Care and
Use also inspects the facilities twice a
year, White said.
Although UNL’s animal research
labs are up to standards, there are
always improvements needed as time
goes on, he said.
“We don’t have near enough fa
cilities so we have asked for more
money for a joint-use animal facil
ity.”
Requirements other than those for
facilities also were tightened. New
nationwide requirements stipulate that
institutions have written plans for the
exercise of dogs and the psychologi
cal well-being of non-human primates.
White said the requirements don’t
really apply to UNL’s agriculture
research, because UNL does not use
non-human primates in research and
only four to five dogs, which arc not
kept longer than overnight, arc used
in a physiology teaching class.
For its research, UNL uses cattle,
sheep, swine, poulU7, rabbits, mice,
rats and guinea pigs and has used
some goats and exotic animals, he
said.
Minority
researchers
encouraged
By Tabitha Hiner
Senior Reporter
Minority graduate students should
realize they will have special pres
sures placed on them and shouldn’t
give up when submitting research S
materials to publications, panelists at ,
a symposium Wednesday said.
Miguel Carranza, an associate
professor of sociology and ethnic
studies, told the 25 people attending
the 1991 Minority Graduate Research
Symposium that minority graduate
students have unique pressures fac
ing them while researching because
of their backgrounds.
The key to successful researching,
he said, is for students to carefully
analyze their own research skills.
“As graduate students, I think wc
need to reflect on our interests, on our
values and our goals,” Carranza said.
But if minority graduate students
want to research minority issues, he
said, they should expect people to
ask, “What kind of real research do
vou do?”
Where they want to get published
and what kind of impact the research
will have are the next things minority
students should consider when re
searching, he said.
If a person gets published only in
minority publications, Carranza said,
he or she risks being accused of nol
producing material publishable by a
so-called respected journal.
During the question-and-answer
period, audience members asked how
to deal with such criticism.
Panel member Keith Parker, an
assistant professor of sociology, re
sponded that if students spend too
much time trying to dispel the myths,
they’re spending too little time on
research.
Although lime is a precious com
modity, once students submit mate
rial for publication, they shouldn t
expect to be published immediately,
the panelists said.
“My first publication came about
as a result of at least four resubmis
sions,” Parker said. “It’s not an easy
task.”
Rejection isn’t necessarily a bad
thing, he said.
“Don’t give up because your work
is rejected.... It will humble you and
make you a stronger person over the
long haul,” he said.
Panel member Elizabeth Kean, an
assistant professor of curriculum and
instruction, said a few steps should be
followed once material is rejected.
“You accommodate as much as
you can. You revise it. And then you
fire that sucker back.”
&-OOK WHO'S PLAYING IN YOUR OWN BACKYARD...
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Artist* of the Lied Festival
Stars of the New York City Ballet
Sept 27 & 28, 1991 8 p.m. Students $12/$10/ $8
B.B. King
Oct. 9, 1991 8 p m. Students. $12/$10/$8
Hubbard Street Dance Company
Oct. 18. 1991 8 p.m. Students: $10/$8/$6
Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra
Oct. 27, 1991 2 p.m. Students: $12/$10/$8
Broyhlll Chamber Ensemble
Oct. 29 8 Nov. 1, 1991 8 p.m., Kimball Hall
Students: $8/$6
Wynton Marsalis
Stated in November is the Grammy Award-winning
living legend. Raised on the harmonies ot Basie,
Armstrong and Ellington, this young jazz powerhouse
has been praised as ‘potentially the greatest
trumpeter of all time. ‘
Nov. 8,1991 8 p.m. Students: $12/$10/$8
Great Orchestras Near and Far
Eugene Istomin with
The Lincoln Symphony Orchestra
Sept. 6, 1991 8 p.m. Students: $12/$10/$8
Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra
Oct. 25, 1991 8 p.m. Students: $l2/$10/$8
Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra
Feb. 25, 1992 8 p.m. Students: $12/$10/$8
The Omaha Symphony Orchestra
“West Meets West”: Governor’s Official
Statehood Day Celebration Concert
March 1,1992 2 p.m. Students: $10/$8/$6
Moscow Philharmonic
As one of the world's finest symphony orchestras,
this group consistently lives up to its reputation, per
forming a wide variety of musical works including
Russian and American classics and Soviet and
Western avant garde
April 3,1992 8 p.m. Students: $16/$14/$ 12
Art in Motion
Hubbard Street Dance Company
Oct. 19, 1991 8 p.m. Students: $10/$8/$6
Joseph Holmes Chicago Dance Theatre
Nov. 22 & 23,1991 8 p.m. Students: $8/$6/$5
Alvin Alley Dance
America's best known modem dance company.
Celebrating life through movement, the company
radiates talent. Artistic Director Judith Jamison
continues the tradition of excellence set by the late
Alvin Alley.
April 16 & 17,1991 8 p.m. Students: $11/$9/$7
Master Works
Emerson String Quartet
April 30, 1992 8 p.m.,Kimball Hail Students: $9/$7
American String Quartet
Sept. 21, 1991 8 p.m., Kimball Hall
Dec. 6,1991 8 p.m., Kimball Hall
Feb. 14,1992 8 p.m., Kimball Hall
April 18.1992 8 p.m., Kimball Hall Students: $8/$6
Hot Attack
Take 6
Take 6, an ‘a capella pop jazz ensemble", has won
three Grammy Awards, and recorded with Quincy
Jones and Branford Marsalis. This phenomenal group
has also done sound tracks for TV's Murphy Brown
and Spike Lee's film ‘Do the Right Thing’.
Sept. 11,1991 8 p.m. Students: $10/$8/$6
The Count Basie Orchestra
with Dizzy Gillespie
Dizzy Gillespie hcis blown sound from a horn for more
than five decades. The impact the man with the
ballooning cheeks and gleaming trumpet has had on
American music is unequalled.
Feb. 9, 4 p.m. 1992 Students: $12/$10/$8
The Modem Jazz Quartet
Fusing new world jazz and blues with old world
counterpoint and fugue, the distinctive Modem Jazz
Quartet has captivated audiences for 36 years
March 19. 1992 8 p.m. Students: $11/$9/$7
For the Family_
The Flying Karamazov Brothers
Oct. 11,1991 8 p.m Students: $7/$6/$5
Cinderella on Ice
Dec. 6 8 p.m., Dec. 7 2 p.m. & 8 p.m.,
Dec. 8 2 p.m., 1991 Students: $14/$12/$10
The Minneapolis Children’s Theatre
"The Canterville Ghost" s^owd t>y mu
Jan. 10 8 p.m. & Jan. 11 2 p.m., 1992
Students: $7/$6/$5
Emmy Gifford Children’s Theatre
"The Velveteen Rabbit"
March 27 8 p.m. & March 28 2 p.m., 1992
Kimball HaH Students: $7/$6
Singular Sensations
Grand Hotel
Grand Hotel is a Broadway sensation—winner of five
Tony Awards, including Best Direction of a Musical
and Best Choreography. Let this musical version of
the celebrated 1932 movie take you dancing through
power and poverty, scandal and romance. Grand
Hotel...where fortunes are made, jewels are stolen,
live are lost, and hearts are won. Brought to you in
the Lied tradition of Les Miz and CATS I
Feb. 21, 1992 8 p.m. Students: $29/$25/$21
Feb. 22, 1992 2 p.m. Students: $25/$21/$17
Feb. 22, 1992 8 p.m. Students: $29/$25/$21
Feb. 23, 1992 2 p.m. Students: $25/$21/$17
Feo. 23, 1992 7 p.m. Students: $25Z$21/$17
Bobby McFerrin
with Nebraska Chamber Orchestra
Jan. 24,1992, 8 p.m.. Students: $13/$11/$9
Mstislav Rostropovich
with Omaha Symphony Orchestra
May 22, 1992, 8 p.m., Students: $25/$17.50/$12.50
CARSON THEATER VENTURES
Make the most of your Fridays, Saturdays
and Sundays by celebrating these intimate
arts adventures in Lied's Johnny Carson
Theater. Enjoy performances by the finest
Nebraska-based artists as well as challeng
ing, contemporary works by artists from
around the country. Seating is limited.
Events In this series will be announced
next fell.
Don’t Miss outl Order your season tickets today.
Order forms available at:
City Union
City Campus CAP Office
East Campus Union Information Desk
East Campus CAP Office
Lied Center Box Office
Ltod Cantor programming to aupportod by Frtatxto of Ltod and grante from tfw National Emiownant for ma Ana, MKVAmanea Ana AMtonca and
Hateraaha Ana Council. AM avento In tba Ltod Cantor am mada poaatoto andrtoy or In part by tlw Ltod Parfomwnoe Fund wtilch haa baan
■atobHabad In mamory of Emat P. Ltod and hla paronto, Emat M. and Ida K. Ltod.
- - - - -»- - — — ■ - - - - — ■■■---------— ■ ■ .
UN1VEMOT Of NeMAMA LINCOLN
LIED CENTER
FOR PERFORMING ARTS