The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 29, 1991, Page 6, Image 6

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    Award winner praises volunteer experiences
By Wendy Navratii
Staff Reporter
Tausha Gilbertson never would
have guessed last fall that two of her
most memorable experiences in col
lege would be associated with the
General Motors Corporation.
Gilbertson, a junior majoring in
industrial engineering, began work
ing for GM in Saginaw, Mich., in
January, after being selected to par
ticipate in a co-op program between
the corporation and the University of
Nebraska-Lincoln.
Barely two months after settling
into her new job, she received a phone
call informing her that she had won
the General Motors Volunteer Spirit
Award.
The GM spirit award winners are
chosen on the basis of outstanding
volunteer contributions to their com
munities. The three UNI. recipients
were honored at a reception in March,
but ironically, Gilbertson was unable
to return to Lincoln because of her
GM position.
She submitted an application for
the award last fall—the same semes
ter in which she applied for the GM
co-op, not expecting to receive ei
ther, she said. The selection process
for the spirit award was not connected
with the co-op selection process.
“It was so funny. When they called
me in Michigan (about the GM spirit
award), I just thought someone was
joking with me,” Gilbertson said.
Before going to Michigan,
Gilbertson was a Young Life leader at
Lincoln High School and a mentor in
the Odyssey program through UNL.
She was a counselor at the Nebraska
Human Resources Institute as well as
a participant in the Leadership De
velopment Project through the resource
institute.
“I just really feel like it’s part of
my education. It’s more than just going
to class. That’s where you meet so
many people. It’s the best part of my
activities.” Gilbertson said.
She even extended her volunteer
spirit to the Michigan community
where she will be living until August
— she is a Big Sister in Saginaw.
“I just had to get out there and do
something. Whatever I do, I have to
be with people. I just make it my
priority.”
Having a desire to work closely
with people isn’t as far removed from
typical careers in engineering as people
tend to think, Gilbertson said. She has
applied much of what she learned
while volunteering to the work place.
“Everyone has kind of a stere
otype about what engineers are sup
posed to be like. I love the challenge
of engineering and the technical, but
I love to work with people—working
as a team, commitment. Volunteer
ing has helped me with everything,
from cooperation to dealing with all
different types of people,” Gilbertson
said.
In turn, Gilbertson will draw upon
more than just her technical and prac
tical experience at GM when she re
turns to UNL to finish her degree. The
relationships that have formed be
tween her and the other members of
her “valve,” the group of people with
whom she works on a daily basis at
the Saginaw subdivision of GM, are
not based solely on professional con
cerns.
When her co-workers read about
her being selected as a spirit award
winner in the GM publication, they
chided her for not sharing the news
with them, Gilbertson said.
“They said, ‘You won that award
and you didn’t even tell your valve
family about it’ — They’re just like
my family.
“I just feel that I’m very blessed,
with all the opportunities I’ve had,
people giving so much. I want to give
something back.”
Michelle F'aulmau Daily Nebr a-.kan
Tausha Gilbertson returned to Lincoln this weekend to be in
ducted into Mortar Board during the annual Ivy Day celebra
tion.
Look who's playing in your own backyard...
Artists of the tied Festival
Stars of ths 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/$1Q/$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 & Nov. 1,1991 8 p.m., Kimball HaU
Students: $8/$6
Wynton Marsalis
Slated 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 aH time.'
Nov. 8, 1991 8 p.m. Students: $12/$1Q/$8
Great Orchestras Near end Far
■
Eugene Istomin with
The Lincoln Symphony Orchestra
Sept. 6,1991 8 p.m. Students: $12/$1048
Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra
Oct. 25,1991 8 p.m. Students: $1241048
Mostly Mozart Festival Orchestra
Feb. 25,1992 8 p.m. Students: $1241048
The Omaha Symphony Orchestra
“West Meets West”: Governor’s Official
Statehood Day Celebration Concert
March 1,1992 2 p.m. Students: $104846
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 arid American classics and Soviet and
Western avant garde.
April 3,1992 8 p.m. Students: $16414412
Art in Motion
Hubbard Street Dane# 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 AHey.
April 16 8.17,1991 8 p.m. Sludents: $11/$9/$7
Master Works
Emerson String Quartet
April 30. 1992 8 p.m. .KirrrbaH Hall Sludents: $9/$7
American String Quartet
Sept. 21,1991 8 p.m., Kimball Hail
Dec. 6,1991 8 p.m., Kimball Hall
Feb. 14,1992 8 p.m., KimbattHaH
April 1& 1992 8 p.m., Kimball Hall Students $8/$6
Hot Attack
Taka 6
Take 6. an ma capetta 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 Spttre Lee's film‘Do the Right Thing’.
Sept 11,1991 8p.m. Students: $10/$8/$6
The Count Basle Orchestra
with Dizzy Gilleapie
Dizzy Gillespie has 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 38 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: $14412410
The Minneapolis Children’s Theatre
“The CantervUle Ghost" spomofd by ibu
Jan. 10 8 p.m. & Jan. 11 2 p.m., 1992
Students: $74645
Emmy Gifford Children’s Theatre
“The Velveteen Rabbit"
March 27 8 p.m. & March 28 2 p.m., 1992
Kimball Hail Students: $746
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 Las Miz and CA TSI
Feb. 21,1992 8 p.m. Students: $29425421
Feb. 22. 1992 2 p.m. Students. $25421417
Feb. 22,1992 8 p.m. Students: $29425421
Feb. 23,1992 2 p.m. Students: $25421417
Feb. 23, 1992 7 p.m. Students: $25421417
Bobby McFenin
with Nebraska Chamber Orchestra
Jan. 24, 1992, 8 p.m., Students: $1341149
Mstislav Rostropovich
with Omaha Symphony Orchestra
May 22. 1992, 8 p.m., Students: $25417.50412.50
Don't Miss outl Order your season tickets toda>
Order forms available at:
City Union
City Campus CAP Office
East Campus Union Information Desk
East Campus CAP Office
Lied Center Box Office
UNivca«mr or NIMABKA LINCOLN
LIED CENTER
FOR PERFORMING ARTS
L/vyyy\ tlad Cantor prog ramming la auwortad by Wanda of LJad and (panto from tha National Endow manl lor tha Aria, MM-Amartoa Aria AIManca and
Nabraaha Aria CounoN. Ad avanta In tha Uad Cantar aw mada poaafcla andtaly or In part by tha Uad Parformanoa fund which haa baan
aatobdahad In mamory of imat f. Uad and Ida paranta, imat M. and Ida It Uad.
Soviet imitator
teaches students
about capitalism
By Jean Lass
Staff Reporter
Soviet Union official “Viktor Usti
nov” is teaching students just how
effective the American capitalist
system is by criticizing it.
Usunov is part of the new Young
Entrepreneur Seminars, and has helped
his creators earn the $7,500 Leavcy
Award for Excellence in Private En
terprise Education.
Robin Anderson, director of the
Nebraska Center for Entrepreneurship,
and Richard Kimbrough, a Crete
businessman, have given 85 seminars
in more than 100 schools, teaching
high school students the advantages
Americans receive from private en
terprise and a free market economy.
During the seminars, Kimbrough
impersonates the Soviet official Usti
nov, who challenges student assump
tions about American capitalism.
Kimbrough iscffcclive in this role,
Anderson said, because he has spent
time in the Soviet Union and has read
Soviet publications that speak against
America’s free enterprise system.
The students get angry when they
hear and think about the supposed
problems of entrepreneurship, An
derson said, so they start to question
the “Russian” and defend the Ameri
can free enterprise system. The stu
dents start to realize that capital ism is
better than any system in the world,
Anderson said.
Anderson said he developed the
organizational aspects of the entre
preneur seminars, such as the money,
the sponsors and the concept of how
he and Kimbrough were going to give
seminars across Nebraska.
Kimbrough, president of Cretin
Unlimited in Crete, composed the
content of the seminars, Anderson
said.
The seminars arc effective, An
derson said, because they challenge
students to think about the free enter
prise system in America and defend
it.
“Unless students gel inquisitive,
they don’t learn anything," he said.
“The seminars force students to ask
questions so they can learn.”
More importantly, the seminars
help students realize that entrepre
neurship opportunities exist in Ne
braska, he said, by emphasizing suc
cessful Nebraska entrepreneurs, the
“heroes and heroines.”
UNL students also contribute to
and learn from the seminars by help
ing Anderson and Kimbrough sched
ule the seminars in high schools, find
ing Nebraska businesses to sponsor
the seminars and arranging topics.