/ -•Lecture Notes ^ ''•^• pAUi’se Packets. I'-' /-♦ r. Copy & Bindery . ; VV£ax, Seiyices ‘v„r-Vv ,\> Laminating \ N Vv -;' Vv - ' • v > V ■> > x •-" > * Tltrt rttlif itUfCtr. N - -■■ V % ' •' • r - ■1 i i. ■ Grade A NoteTakers are Seniors and Grad Students. They attend class and take accurate and complete lecture notes. These notes can make great supplemental study guides. Anthro 110 Bio Sci 312 History 101 Astron 103 Chem 251 Mngmt 475 Bio Sci 101 Crim Just 101 Nutr 151 Bio Sci 112 . Econ321 PoliScilOO Bio Sci 241 Geog 140 Fin/Econ 365 Stop by and check them out! Grade A Notes at Nebraska Bookstore Lower Level • 13th & Q Street • 477-7400 \ PB » ~ I 1 Nebraska vs. Michigan Friday, December 8 7:30 p.m. Nebraska vs. Nicholls State SUNDAY, December 10 2 p.m. GENERAL ADMISSION: Adult - $4; Youth - $2; UNL Student - FREE THEY’RE COMING. • 7 I - ■ i'j • v http://www.mca.com/ pniversal_pictures/12 Regents to approve Moeser By Paula Lavigne Senior Reporter A minor addition to the NU Board of Regents’ December agenda will make a major change at the Univer - sity of Nebraska NU Regents M^ay, .he board is sched uled to' approve the appointment of James Moeser, 56, as the 18th chancellor of UNL. Moeser, provost and vice president for academic affairs at the University of South Carolina, was in Lincoln when NU President Dennis Smith an nounced his recommendation Mon day. He returned Tuesday to Columbia, S.C., and will not attend the Saturday meeting. The regents’ approval is just a for mality, and Regents Chairwoman Nancy O’Brien of Waterloo said the approval should pass without any problems. The regents met each of the three candidates at informal dinners and brunches during their campus visits late November. Upon Smith’s announcement, sev eral of the regents and UNL Student Regent Shawntell Hurtgen said they would support Moeser and looked for ward to working with him. Interim Chancellor Joan Leitzel will be present on behalf of UNL at the meeting. Moeser does not take over until Feb. 1. The board is scheduled to act on other issues, including the elimination of seven UNL degrees in the Teachers College. These degrees are: • Art education, bachelor of fine arts education.—Theater arts educa tion, bachelor of fine arts education. •Athletic training, bachelor of sci ence education. • Recreation, bachelor of science education. • Elementary education, bachelor of arts. o • Administrative office manage ment, bachelor of science education. • Health occupation, bachelor of science education. The degrees are being eliminated after a 1994 review by the Coordinat ing Commission for Postsecondary Education. In cases such as elementary edu cation, elimination of a certain degree does not mean elimination of a major. Fewer than 10 students were en rolled in many of the programs, which were slowly phased out so the remain ing students could still graduate, said David Brinkerhoff, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs. Future students interested in the eliminated programs may be able to find similar options in other areas, he said. Other scheduled UNL issues the board will act on include: • Officially appointing Melvin Jones as vice chancellor for business and finance with a $140,000 a year salary. • Approving acquisition of single family residence in the Malone neigh borhood for $38,500. • Approving budget for replace ment of two boilers at the City Cam pus utility plant and approving Farris Engineering firm to design the project. • Approving budget for East Sta dium repair and waterproofing. • Approving firm of E & A Con sulting Group to design service for the State Capitol Steam Line improve ments plan. • Approving Dorothy E. Leland Memorial Fund as a quasi-endowment fund with income going to the Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery. • Reviewing report for University of Nebraska operating budget of $ 1.1 billion as of Sept. 30. Psychiatrist testifies for defense By Ted Taylor Staff Reporter Severe depression and suicidal ten dencies kept Gerald Schlondorf from knowing right from wrong on Sept. I-12, 1994, a Lin coin psychiatrist told jurors Thurs day. Dr. Lewis Mar tin, the Chief of Service for the state’s Forensic Psychiatric Ser '' ’JIP Vices, was the •-*- only defense wit Schlondorf ness to take the stand Thursday, the eighth day of Schlondorf’s attempted second-de gree murder trial. Martin said he met Schlondorf in 1991, as one of the psychiatrists who evaluated him at the Lincoln Regional Center after a failed suicide attempt. Martin said the meeting, along with three others after the September 1994 shooting of UNL police officer Rob ert Soflin, allowed him to construct a psychological history of Schlondorf. Martin testified that as soon as Schlondorf graduated from high school in 1984, he started to feel more depressed and unhappy. “He was dissatisfied with what he was doing,” Martin said. Martin said the depression escalated when Schlondorf came to UNL. Al though Schlondorf attended six coun seling sessions at the University Health Center, he did not benefit from them, Martin said. Martin eventually diagnosed Schlondorf with having a recurrent major depression disorder. The doctor specifically mentioned Schlondorf’s writings, repeated hospi talizations, documents from those hos pitalizations and Schlondorf’s peculiar relationship with the police depart ment. He said the three hospitalizations and the events in the residence halls gave a clear history of recurring de pression. Martin also called Schlondorf’s viewing of the movie “Natural Bom Killers” just days before the shooting, “a trigger that reactivated ongoing feel ings Jerry had manifested about his helplessness, futility and meaningless of life.” At the time of the shooting, Martin said, Schlondorf’s vision of things were so narrow, he did not know what he was doing was wrong. “His knowledge was seriously im paired because of the depressive dis order,” he said. However, Chief Deputy Lancaster County Attorney John Colbom said he believed Schlondorf’s immediate actions Sept. 12, indicated he was aware of right and wrong. Colbom questioned Martin as to why Schlondorf got in his truck and drove away from police when lie was supposedly suicidal. “He did things to avoid the police, and avoid being shot,” Colbom said. “It seems he could have ended his life at any time that day.” Martin conceded Colbom’s point. “He obviously knew what he was doing was wrong,” Martin said. “In a sense that he knew shooting at po lice officers was wrong. He knew he wasn’t passing out hot dogs at the car nival.” According to Colbom, Schlondorf not only knew his actions were wrong, but were punishable. Colbom continued his cross-ex amination by citing a discrepancy be tween Martin’s testimony and a No vember 1995 police deposition. In the deposition, Martin had said Schlondorf “knew the wrongfulness of his acts because he expected the police to react.” Netiraskan Editor J. Christopher Hain 472- 1766 Managing Editor Rainbow Rowell Assoc. News Editors DeDra Janssen Brian Sharp Opinion Page Editor Mark Baldridge Wire Editor Sarah Scalet Copy Desk Editor Kathryn Ratliff Sports Editor Tim Pearson Arts & Entertainment Editor Doug Kouma Photo Director Travis Heying Night News Editors Julie Sobczyk Matt Waite Doug Peters Chad Lorenz Art Director Mike Stover General Manager Dan Shattil Production Manager Katherine Policky Advertising Manager Amy Struthers Asst. Advertising Mgr. Laura Wilson Publications Board Chairman Tim Hedegaard 436-9253 Professional Adviser Don Walton 473- 7301 http://www.unl.edu/DailyNeb/ FAX NUMBER 472-1761 The Daily NebraskanfUSPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board, Nebraska Union 34,1400 R St., Lincoln, NE 68588-0448, Monday through Friday during the academic year; weekly during summer sessions. Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1763 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The public also has access to the Publications Board For information, contact Tim Hedegaard, 436 9253,9am-11 p.m. Subscription price is $50 for one year. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 34, 1400 R St.,Lincoln, NE 68588-0448. Second-class postage paid at Lincoln, NE. ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1995 DAILY NEBRASKAN Local cardiologist Wilson, running for regents seat By Paula Lavigne Senior Reporter A Lincoln cardiologist is going to make his second bid for a seat on the NU Board of Regents. Charles Wilson, 57, announced Thursday that he was running for re election to the eight-member board. He was first elected in 1990 to rep resent Lincoln and Lancaster County. Regents serve a six-year term. Wilson has been a spokesman for several board issues, including open meetings, a strategic agenda and higher admission standards. “My commitment to pursue excel lence in teaching and research at the University of Nebraska is as strong as ever,” he said in a statement released Thursday. “We have moved toward that goal, but much remains to be done. I am seeking re-election to solidify the gains we have made and to work for continued improvements in our uni versity.” In recent issues, Wilson has been: • Against creating a separate engi neering college in Omaha. • Against defining limits on re search. • For using student-approved stu dent fees for the Nebraska Union ex pansion. • Against a board of governor-ap pointed regents. • For raising admission standards. • Against providing financial in centives to coaches to win games, say ing pay should be based on merit not wins. • Against differential tuition, which would charge every student based on his or her field of study. • For a stronger core curriculum to expose students to courses in math ematics, science and humanities and writing skills. His work with Regent Drew Miller of Papillion on defining the three roles of a land-grant university—teaching, research and outreach — ended in the declaration of teaching as the university’s No. 1 priority. Wilson is a graduate of Lincoln High School and the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. He and his wife, Linda, have three children. 0Your cholesterol level A number to live by American Heart Association