GET DRESSED BEFORE ^ YOU HIT THE ROAD. Gloves help you manipulate controls better. Leathers help prevent hypo- "q > thermia. And all gear protects against flying objects. Which is vitallyXtt/ important if you ever become the flying object, motorcycle SAFETY foundation^ 10% OFF SALE All general merchandise except: Rx items Pepsi/Coke Beverages American Greetings Tobacco Products All magazines & books Lottery & film club cards Charmin & all diapers 2711 So. 48th Street Lincoln General Hospital Auxiliary's STAR NIGHT BENEFIT Paula Poundstone 8 p.m., September 9, *95 Lied Center for Performing Arts DISCOUNTED STUDENT PRICES!!! Proceeds to help fund Lincoln General Hospital’s Outreach Program On Youth Violence. Tickets on sale at the Lied Center, 472-4747. -» ..... j - One dozen arranged roses $24.95 464-6361 1133 N. Cotner Blvd & 3700 Village Drive Suite 100 WOMEN'S CLINIC OF LINCOLN YOUNG WOMEN'S CENTER We offer care designed to meet the special needs of women who are 25 and younger. We provide care FOR women BY women—our Certified Nurse Practitioners. SERVICES "Yearly Gynecological Exams •Breast Exams •Any Young Women's Health Care Need EDUCATION "Healthy Lifestyles—Self Breast Exam, Nutrition, Menstruation, Hygiene •Contraception •Prevention of sexually transmitted diseases Special clinic hours for the Young Women's Center are Thursdays 4-7pm Saurday morning appointments aboavailable GM Southwest/CCN providers WOMEN'S CLINIC OF LINCOLN, P.C. Stephen G. Swanson, MD, FACOG * James J. Maly, MD, FACOG Gregory J. Hattan, MD C. Maud Doherty, MD, FACOG 220 Lyncrest Drive For Appointment Please Call 434-3370 Center to give accessible advice By Heidi White Start Reporter Two classrooms on the First floor of Oldfather Hall have been converted into a new advising center for the College of Arts and Sciences. Anne Kopera, the college’s advis ing coordinator, said the center would offer services beyond advising. Representatives from Career Ser vices, the Arts and Sciences Alumni Association and graduate and profes-' sional schools will visit the center to provide students with career informa tion, she said. The center also will have a library. “We’re looking at it to be kind of a front door to the College of Arts and Sciences,” Kopera said. Staff members will be added to the advising center, including a profes sional pre-health adviser, Vicki Fisher. A graduate assistant adviser and un dergraduate peer advisers also will be on hand to assist students. Brian Foster, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, said help for new students and undecided students would be offered in addition to gen eral advising.v “This is an effort to strengthen the advising center for the Arts and Sci ences and to get visible and more accessible to our students,“Foster said. The center will be a central advis ing location for the growing number of students in pre-health programs, Foster said. “The number of students in pre health is reaching around 1,000,” he said, “and to do a good program, you must be efficient in planning. That’s where good advising steps in.” Foster said he believed advising was an important part of undergradu ate education, and that students needed an accessible place to go for advice. “The 12th floor of Oldfather isn’t the most user- friendly place to get to,” he said. Because more than half of all classes at the university are taught out of Arts and Sciences departments, Foster said students not enrol led in the college also could go to the center for “We’re looking at it to be kind of a front door to the College of Arts and Sciences.” m ANNE KOPERA College of Arts and Sciences Advising Coordinator help. “It’s critical that students have a place to go to for good and authorita tive advice,” he said. A change in the previous advising system has long been desired by stu dents and staff of the college, Foster said. He said he made it a priority during the 1994-95 school year, his first as dean. “I consider it to be a major invest ment for undergraduate education at the university,” Foster said. The Arts and Sciences Alumni Association has been closely involved with the project, which will cost be tween $ 100,000 and $ 125,000. Money donated from the alumni association, outside gifts, the Academic Affairs office and the College of Arts and Sciences paid for the center, Foster said. The center will provide more in formation, resources and materials for students, he said. John Benson, director of Institu tional Research and Planning and as sociate professor of architecture, said the classes that were held in the con verted classrooms had been moved to other campus buildings, including Burnett Hail. The center will not inter fere with access to classes in Oldfather Hall. “I don’t see any problem with it getting in the way of classes,” Benson said. The center will be open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Hours may be extended during prior ity registration. Renovation is planned for Burnett From Staff Reports Burnett Hall will be renovated next spring to make the building more functional for classes. Woody Haecker, University ofNebraska architect and project manager, said plans for the reno vation were under way. “Currently, we are selecting architects and engineers that will provide the plans for the build ing,” Haecker said. “Then, we will gather bids from several general contractors.” The renovation will consist of removing asbestos from building, correcting draina^H - problems and starting new con struction. Although the interior will un dergo many changes, the exte rior will remain the same. No new windows or additions are planned for the hall. The university also plans to upgrade lighting, wiring, and computer services in the build ing. Those renovations are nec essary to convert Burnett Hall into a modem classroom build ing, Haecker said. “It will end up being a very nice facility,” Haecker said. “Classrooms will be more useable and functional. Overall, it will become a better teaching facility.” The first stage of the renova tion is tentatively scheduled to begin after the 1996 spring se mester. Memorial will be finished soon From Staff Reports The Candace Harms Memorial will be completed early this fall, said Marlene Beyke, director of develop ment for the Association of Students of the University of Nebraska. UNL freshman Candace Harms dis appeared Sept. 22,1992. Police found her body Dec. 6, 1992, in a shallow grave outside of Lincoln. She had been raped and brutally murdered. ASUN will know more about the memorial's progress in two to three weeks, Beyke said. “We’re waiting on contractors to give us the cost factors,” Beyke said. The memorial will be built on the northwest comer of green space, which is behind the Nebraska Union. Bcyke said ASUN had $10,000 from dona tions and student fund-raisers for the memorial. Kim Todd, UNL Landscaping Ser vices architect, said the memorial would be an “s”-shaped bench made of stone or concrete. Pardon our mess, iwe're renovatingb City Union Bakery Extended Hours 7:00a.m.-9:30p.m. Monday-Friday —* New! ' ^ Reffillable Mugs 20OZaaaa$1 a 99 1 20Zaa»$1 >79 Available at: City Unioai Bakery \ East Union Bakery i East Union Cafe Our cup pop refills...29$ + Tax Your.cup pop refills..39$ + Tax Coffee refills.49$ +Tax ..69$ +Tax PAGE ONE BOOKSTORE 206 N. 13th • 474-6316 (beneath Douglas 3 Theatres) Books used in Lit Classes 1/2 Cover Price! Monday - Saturday 10:00-5:30 Open till 8:00 Thursday! LET US WORK FOR YOU! 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