FOOTLOOSE & FANCY Birkenstock Headquarters ___ Comfort & styles for everyone. TRUST the Original Miscellaneous specials: ^fllTT Selected styles, sizes & colors. Clothing 50% OFF thru Saturday. 1219 P St. Mon. - Sat. 10am - 5:30pm Thnrs until 8:30om 476-6119 L S cU5 t^aoua Evals Continued from Page 1 said David Brinkerhoff, Interim Associate Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs. He said the new policy would be more in depth. “It still needs a little fine tuning and has not been fully established,” Brinkerhoff said. Harvey Perlman, dean of the University of Nebraska’s Col lege of Law, said the five-year plan would be appropriate. Yearly evaluations are not very easy to do on administrators, he said, because they are expected to have long-term goals. Robert Simerly, dean of the Division of Continuing Studies, said the new policy would en able administrators as well as those working for them to com municate about expectations and job environment. “This is t very far thinking idea,” Simerly said. “I think it’s a very positive step and I whole hearti ly endorse it. We need to have that two-way communica tion.” There has been no opposi tion to the plan as of yet, Spanier said. Choobineh said the goals of the five-year plan were to create a better faculty-administration relationship, giving way to a better working environment and consequently a better learning environment and better univer sity. - “I think this is going to be a step in the right direction to achieving those goals,” he said. LET’S BE JAMMIN’! JULY J .A M M t a 9 t e t h e fun! This weekend in Downtown Lincoln . July 23, 24,25 . 12th & ‘N Streets Art, Music, Food, and More! r___VALUABLE COUPON ----------- j ONE FREE ADMISSION <5^T°V l WITH ONE PAID ADMISSION g) k Q j TO THE JULY JAMM STREET DANCE. DOWNTOWN LINCOLN ASSOCIATION I Coupon good Friday or Saturday, July 23 or 24, 1993 only. Buy on# gat# admission I ($3) and g#t on# fr##l ($3 valu#). Must pr#s#nt coupon at tim# of purchas#. __ David Baddars/DN Insects donated to NU By DeDra Janssen Staff Reporter An insect collection donated re cently to the University of Nebraska State Museum gives researchers a view backward in time, which en ables them to look forward to the future, an insect expert said. Brett C Rate line. Professor and Curator of Insects at the NU State Museum, said a collection of about 4,000 insect specimens given to the museum by Erwin Froemel of Co lumbus, as part of his estate, contains a number or species that can no longer bt found in the Platte County area. Because die natural habitat of that area has been significantly altered to accommodate agriculture, Ratcliffe, said many of the insects in Froemel’s collection have been wiped out in that area. "Insects found there in the ivjus can't be found there anymore," Ratcliffe said. "This collection gives us a view backward in time as to what the ecosystem was like in those days.” But, it will also provide insight for the future. "The more we know about what happened in the past, the more we know about what could happen in the future,” he said. Beginning in about 1930, Froe mel's collection covers a 50-year span It includes mostly butterflies and moths native to Nebraska, which Froemel caught with a light trap in his backyard. Particularly abundant in the col lection are Underwing Moths, which have brightly colored orange and red markings on their hind legs. Ratcliffe said these specimens, which are espe cially hard to catch, are all perfectly labeled and mounted. The collection also includes some tropical butterflies and moths, mostly from Asia and Africa, that Froemel purchased from dealers. It also in cludes some other specimens, such as beetles. Froemel also left NU some books and cabinetry from his estate. Ratcliffe said the appraised value of FroemePs collection was $17,000, but that figure is conservative. However, Ratcliffe said, the real value of the collection lies in the educational value it provides. As well as documenting SO years of change in the Columbus area, Froemel’s collection represents some species that the museum has never had in its collection of about 2 million specimens. “We have increased our divors^ty," « Ratcliffe said. “This puts us in a better position to identify insects people bring in. It increases our reference capability.” And some of the new specimens, like the Birdwing Butterflies, would be nearly impossible to obtain now because they are protected by law as endangered species, and collectors are not permitted to collect them any more. Ratcliffe said the insects also made a fine teaching tod. “In the USA, most people are afraid of insects or don’t like them,** he said. “Yet adults interact with insects more than any other lifeform. Most people recoil when they see an insect be cause they are not educated. “We’re all screwed up as a society in the way we think of insects; we’re led as a society to fear them. It’sreally craz> They’re more beneficial than harmful,” he said. Ratcliffe said he was pleased that Froemel left NU the collection be cause all the information it contains would have been lost if he hadn’t “If it had remained in the attic, his . collection would have been totally degraded,” he said. “What a loss that would have been — we would have lost a lot of good scientific informa tion.” Since proper care is essential for the preservation of such important information, Ratcliffe said he wants other collectors to know about NU’s facility. The museum does not have funds to buy new specimens, so it must rely on gifts such as Froemel’s to continually diversify its library. “Itmight sound I ike a funeral home, but we offer a perpetual resting place for their collections,” he said. “TTtis is the state depository for animals in the state of Nebraska.”