|——-POLICE REPORT mgiuuiug uiiumgiu i nur>ua> 7:25 a.m. — Windshield on car broken, Abel fire lane. 7:54 a.m. — Check stolen, Love Library. 11:08 a.m. — Belated report of male student assaulted by three other males, Harper-Schramm Smith parking lot. 11:48 a.m. — Stolen backpack, Abel food service, $150. 2:56 p.m.!— Bike stolen, Cather Hall, $210. 3:23 p.m.—Injury/sickness, party refused treatment, Oldfather Hall. 6:04 p.m. — Fire alarm pulled, __ Walter Scott Engineering Center. 10:43 p.m.—Injury/sickness, stu dent transported to Saint Elizabeth Community Health Center, Uni versity Health Center. Beginning midnight Friday 1:16 p.m.—Purse and coat stolen, parking lot 6, $180. 1:41 p.m. — Stolen stereo equip ment and broken window, parking lot 6, $540. 2:55 p.m. — Two-vehicle acci dent, parking lot south of College ui Law, g>ouv7. 2:47 p.m.—Items stolen from car, CatHer-Pound parking lot, $180. 4:17 p.m.—Items stolen from car, Beadle Center parking lot, $227. 5:21 p.m. — Auto accident, alley south of Westbrook Music Build ing, $200. 6:08 p.m. — Person transported to detox, Nebraska Union. Beginning midnight Saturday 12:25 a.m. — Fire alarm pulled, one arrested, Neihardt Hall. 12:35 a.m.—Assault, one arrested, Neihardt Hall. 1:30 a.m. — Person driving while intoxicated, 16th and W streets. 10:04 p.m. — Items stolen from car, $510. 10:42 p.m. — Vehicle window broken, 19th and Vine streets, $ 150. Beginning midnight Sunday 2:22 a.m.—Fire box glass broken, Cather Hall, $15. 10:46 a.m. — Stereo stolen from car, parking lot at 20th and Vine streets, $330. JOIN |Vf*slTY PROGRAM Sv upc THE CHOICE IS YOURS LEADERSHIP, EXPERIENCE ENTERTAINMENT, EXCITEMENT APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE AT 117 NEBRASKA UNION 300 NEBRASKA EAST UNION APPLICATIONS ARE DUE FEBRUARY 15! T JL-/iza Minnelli Oct. 18th-19th First Time In Nebraska 2 tickets for $20.00 i * . M * iLUS DISCOUNTS FOR ^ RODEO, RIVER CITY ^ - ROUNDUP, CORONATION rooks & Dunn, August 14 ball, omaharacer $5.00 off admission price of $15.00 a dScmd a ASP r AKSARBF.N RACES For Just $20, Ak-Sar-Ben members receive discount coupons for .ill these events, plus coupons for FREE admission to the George Strait Show in the Bob Devaney Center! Membership coupons also available at your local Russ's IGA stores and Radio Station KZKX By Michelle Leary Senior Reporter ■ __ A UNL biology professor said he hopes “to create a metabolic pathway that docs not already exist in nature.” To do this, Tyrrell Conway, an assistant professor of biology, said > he would research the area of ethanol production. Through a grant, he will alienjpi to construct a genetically engi neered bacterium that will enable him to capture waste carbon dioxide and convert it into ethanol. Conway and F. Robert Tabita from the department of microbiol ogy at Ohio State University were awarded a $76,000 grant from the Midwest Plant Biotechnology Consortion, an organization that supports research with potential application. The one-year grant is entitled “Bioconversion of Carbon Dioxide, Major Byproduct of Fermentation, to Ethanol.” Ethanol, which is a cleaner burning fuel than petroleum, is used The Knights of Ak-Sar-Ben present A GALAXYyOF STARS JOIN AK-SAR\BEN IN '93 \Jeorge Strait, July 26 FREE SHOW IN LINCOLN!! to Ak-Sar-Ben members only 2 tickets per membership (14,000 tickets av ailable on first come-first serve basis) Micneiie Pauiman/DN Tyrrell Conway, assistant professor of biology at UNL, recently received a grant for ethanol research. He said increased ethanol production would benefit the economy and the environ ment. Alternatives UNL, Ohio State to begin ethanol research - in the production of gasohol, which is a motor fuel mixture with about 90 percent unleaded gasoline and 10 percent ethyl alcohol. Currently, ethanol production plants and industries, which create ethanol from corn starch conver sion, use the waste carbon dioxide for beverage carbonation, he said. “There’s not a lot of value in carbon dioxide for that purpose. Ethanol production is a billion dollar industry,” Conway said. “And if we could capture thd waste carbon dioxide and convert it into ethanol, we could increase produc tion by 33 percent.” “Ethanol is an excellent alterna tive fuel,” Conway said. “We have to look to the day when petroleum will be limited.” An increase in ethanol produc tion also would benefit Nebraska’s economy because it would lead to an increase in the number of farmers needed to harvest com, which is a large cash crop for the state, Conway said. Ethanol is made from com, which is grown in the United Stales, while petroleum is often imported from foreign countries, he said. “Petroleum must be pulled from the ground, creating a net increase of carbon dioxide in the atmo sphere,” Conway said. “It is a one way flow of carbon dioxide because the plants use the carbon dioxide from petroleum, but they do not turn it back into petroleum.” “Ethanol has several benefits,” he said. “It has no effect on the greenhouse effect, and there’s no net loss of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere.” Conway said he hoped to begin his research within the next few months. “It’s an exciting project that I think will lead to improvements in the process of ethanol production,” he said. The University of Nebraska Lincoln and Ohio State University will each contribute $36,500 to the project, and private industries will donate an additional $3,000 to match the funds of Midwest Plant Biotechnology Consortion. 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