By Tasha E. Kelter StaffReporter Chancellor James Moeser will pre view UNL’s new alma mater at tonight’s meeting of the Association of the Students of die University of Ne braska. Moeser will play a tape of the new school anthem — minus the lyrics — for the senators. The song will be per formed for the public on Oct. 12, dur ing halftime of the homecoming foot ball game against Baylor. The alma mater will add to the strong tradition at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and create a “braid between all the graduates of the uni versity,” ASUN President Eric Marintzer said. ASUN also will vote on the ap pointment of a new senator for the graduate college. The status of the Law College senate position has not been determined yet, Marintzer said. ASUN also will select members fra various committees, he said. These are positions that open annually fra ASUN committees and usually are filled dur ing the fall semester. Many of the mem bers will be voted on fra approval at tonight’s senate meeting* the remain der will be voted on next week. The senate also will vote on ap proval of the Committee for Fees Al location bylaws. CFA’s first meeting was Tuesday. Several student organizations are up for official recognition at the meet ing. All student groups must be recog nized by A SUN to have full access to university facilities, Marintzer said. The homecoming committee will also give a status report. Web workshop aids in job search SEARCH from page 1 students can search by entering the name of a company and city. “It will give students information about the company and even draw a map for students, showing them how to get to the company,” Mann said. The second site, The Salary Calcu lator, is found at . It provides student who are considering a job in another city the ability to compare the cost of liv ing, salaries, cost of moving and other economic factors. Mann said most students who at tended the workshop preferred to stay long after the workshop ended. “They usually get caught up in all possibilities and surf the web until five, when we close,” Mann said. The possibilities include posting a resume on the UNL Career Services web page where companies can then view it, Mann said. While students have had success with the workshop* Mann said, the number of computers in the UNL Ca reer Services computer lab was begin ning to become a concern. The center will try to make more room for computers, she said, and wants to offer the service to everyone. UNL Career Services is at . Sigerson wants board to tune in to students SIGERSON from page 1 UNL, said the regents should force administrators to justify increasing costs. Students need to have more in fluence cm the regents, too, and re gents don’t even know what student issues are, he said. “Some of the regents are out of touch,” Sigerson said. Sigerson said he would make sure a student voice would always be present at regents ’ meetings. “Some regents would feel bet ter with no student regents,” he said. “That would be a serious mistake.” If regents would listen to stu dents, Sigerson said, they would hear complaints that students aren’t getting proper training for the real world. He said regents should be working to change that. Faculty should be encouraged to get out and work in the real world, Sigerson said, so they can pass on real-world skills. “To waste your first year (out of college) trying to learn those types of things makes you less valuable,” Sigerson said. Good teachers, on the other1 hand, should be rewarded, he said. Students critiques and evaluations should have more impact on re warding tenure, he said. He also said teaching, not research, should be highly valued. Obriens credits include N-roll O’BRIEN from page 1 the engineering school in Omaha also marked her accomplishments, she said. The college was denied, but improve ments were made to the shared engi neering program. “Everybody’s satisfied, and it’s on target,” she said. Other issues that have arisen dur ing O’Brien’s term have not left every one satisfied. Sigerson has said O’Brien took advantage of access to bowl game tickets last year. “The people I got the tickets for gave thousands, even millions, of dol lars to the university,” she said. “I did the right thing.” “The fact is, those people the tick ets went to are friends of the univer sity,” she said. “That’s what a regent is all about, trying to foster relationships with those who give to the university.” A look at crime on campus and in the community Robbery A 45-year-old man was robbed at gunpoint and punched at his south Lincoln apartment Monday night. At 10:30 pm, Gerald Sewell walked upstairs to his apartment on the 4400 block of south 48th Street and found a man waiting at his door, Lincoln police Sgt. Terry Sherrill said. After a brief conversation with the man, Sewell told him to leave, Sherrill said. Another, taller man appeared from a nearby staircase and alleg edly brandished a handgun and de manded money from Sewell, Sherrill said. The man at the door also held a gun on Sewell, Sherrill said. After Sewell gave them cash from his wallet, they told him to open his apartment and get more money, Sherrill said. After searching the apartment, Sewell told them die money in his wallet was all the money he had, Sherrill said. One of them punched Sewell in the face before the two fled, Sherrill said. Sewell described both men as white. One was between 5 feet 8 inches and 6 feet tall and heavy. He was wearing a pull-over, short sleeved shirt and blue jeans. The other was at least 6 feet tall, weighing 160 to 180 pounds, with brown or black hair. He was wear ing a colored shirt and blue jeans. A homeless man was attacked Sunday night by another man wield ing a baseball bat at the People’s City Mission. Raul Antonio Ramirez was talk ing to four other men on the west side of the building on North First Street at about 1:13 a.m., Sherrill said. They started arguing and one man went to a nearby car and re trieved a baseball bat, Sherrill said. He allegedly hit Ramirez several times about the head and chest area, Sherrill said. Ramirez was taken to Lincoln General Hospital and treated fa- a broken nose, broken rib and a cut on the back of his head that required staples, Sherrill said. He was then taken to detoxification. Police have identified a suspect based on a vague description, but have not yet made any arrests, Sherrill said. &&&fkIntern4itiotuil WrW. Contact Lens OumSic^ VISION CENTERS. 3200 ‘O’ St. 473*1030 •Eye examinations for glasses and contact lenses •FREE in-office CONTACT LENS CONSULTATIONS •Prescriptions filled from any eye doctor •Eye glass guarantee •Emergency service available •Hundreds of frames; Fashion and •BUDGET PLAN-CREDIT CARDS BIG RED SPECIAL!!! 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