Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1991)
DEVIL WORSHIP: THE RISE OF SATANISM WHEN: 7:00 PM-WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30 WHERE: CITY UNION, CENTENNIAL ROOM A CHRISTIAN INVESTIGATION SPONSORED BY CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST ~Navy~ROTC I .IJHIIIBB-i NROTC can pay for your books, tuition, and educational fees plus $100 a month— CONTACT LT. OSMUNDSEN AT 472-2475 OR IN THE M&N BUILDING You owe it to yourself to find out! i — Art department students protest use of old, deteriorating kilns By Adeana Leftin Senior Reporter More than 15 students filled the conference room of the dean of the College of Arts and Sciences Monday to protest “dysfunctional” equipment in the art department. After meeting with Dean John Peters, Kjell Cronn, a junior art ce ramics major, said the deteriorating condition of the department’s last functioning kiln had prompted the protest. Deb Oden, a junior art major with a ceramics emphasis, said that at the beginning of the fall semester two or three of the four electric kilns were functioning. Both of the gas kilns were broken. According to Oden, most of the kilns had been with the department for decades and had been on their “last leg” for the past few semesters. The broken kilns still are in the Nelle Cochrane Woods Art building. “(Ceramic students) can’t keep mending with wire and bubble gum,” Cronn said. Peters said he was willing to fi nance the replacement of the kilns by diverting funds that were to be used to build an outdoor pavilion. “It appears to us that we have an emergency,” Peters said. “We can’t wait for the pavilion.” Oden said the education of art students had been stunted by the lack of equipment. Five classes have had 1 to use one kiln that should handle only one class, she said, and many students’ works have been destroyed. The department needs more kilns of more than one variety, Oden said. Larger and hotter gas kilns would allow students more experience and experimentation, she said. “It will be the end of the ceramics department... if we’re not able to get these,” Oden said. Questionnaire Continued from Page 1 had not been adequately consulted in the budget-reduction process. “Some people even said, ‘In my department, I didn’t even know what was happening until I read it in the newspaper’,” she said. Mace said the UAAD hoped the information would give the BRRC additional insight about the budget reductions. “All we can ask the BRRC is to take the information into considera tion in what I consider to be a difficult and controversial process,” she said. “If our information helps them in their deliberations, then we will have had some degree of success.” -POLICE REPORT-, Beginning midnight Friday, Oct. 25 9:09 p.m. — Radar detector, jumper cables and socket set stolen from automobile, parking lot west of Harper-Schramm-Smith complex, $290. 2:52 p.m. — Backpack stolen, East Union, $83. 6:38 p.m. — Burglary, bicycle stolen, Abel Residence Hall, $475. 7:21 p.m. — Bank book stolen, Nebraska Union, unknown amount. 9:55 p.m.—Bicycle stolen, Archi tecture Hall, $550. Beginning midnight Saturday, Oct. 26 11:57 a.m. — Criminal mischief, windshield broken on automobile, parking lot north of Harper Schramm-Smith complex, $200. 4:44 p.m. — Vehicle stolen, Col lege of Dentistry parking lot, $23,000 plus $8,800 in contents. 5:44 p.m. — Criminal mischief, damage to fire hose glass, Abel Residence Hall, S5. 6:12 p.m. — Vehicle stolen, park ing lot at 14th and Avery streets, $700. 2 vehicles stolen from UNL lots last week From Staff Reports Two vehicles were stolen from University of Nebraska-Lincoln park ing lots last week, a UNL police offi cial said. Lt. Mylo Bushing said one vehicle was stolen from the College of Den tistry parking lot on East Campus between noon and 4:44 p.m. Satur day. The vehicle was valued at $23,000 and had contents worth $8,800. Bushing said the owner said he believed the vehicle was locked; however, the owner did leave a pair of house and auto keys in the console between the seats. Cass County Sheriff Department officials found some of the vehicle’s contents by Elmwood but did not find evidenceof the vehicle, Bushing said. The vehicle had a full tank of gas. Bushing said the vehicle was en tered into a national computer net work so other states will know that it is a stolen vehicle and to use caution when approaching the drivers. The second vehicle, valued at $700, was stolen from the parking lot on 14th and Avery streets sometime between Oct. 24 and Oct. 26, Bushing said. The owner said she was sure that the vehicle was locked and that she had the only two sets of keys to the auto. This vehicle had half a tank of gas. -1 LAST CALL FOR PREP! Get 9 weeks of the most effective LSAT preparation in just 2-4 weeks! Time is growing short, but you can still take advantage of Kaplan’s special Compact LSAT Prep Course for the December 7th exam. It’s not a cut version. It’s the same number of hours of live instruction — same number of classes — we’re simply offering them in the few remaining weeks before the test. So you have one last chance to prepare with the #1 in test prep and attain your highest possible score on the December LSAT. If you want to score your highest, don’t let this opportunity pass you by. And if you feel you need more time, check your local Kaplan Center’s free repeat policy. To enroll, just visit your nearest Stanley H. Kaplan Center, or enroll by phone: 1-800-KAP-TEST\ Our First LSAT Compact Prep Course begins: November 2,1991 Check you local Kaplan Center for additional dates. 216 N. 11th St., Suite 102 Lincoln, Ne. 475-7010 § STANLEY H. KAPLAN JL EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD. © 1991 Stanley H. Kaplan Educational Center Ltd.