! RJomens .Services P.C. • Abortion eTrvk»s Provided During All Legal Stages ! • Awake or • Outpatient Care • Full-Time rsidans • Birth Control • Saturday; liable • TotalOB/GYN Healthcare TOLLFREF* 1.4004224331 ! 201 S * I /*! ^ ired tf burgers? " ri nte We *f|er Authentic Italian Dining fcatwing Pacta, Chkkes, Veal and Seafood. He ah* have great inexpensive ladies and a new Vegetarian Menu. AoA P1 Street • 425-3M) ' ' ' ' - . This week at UPC l flbii'oo Sifebigg-aofrcfcbfiT /r.v v-*;?*?. v •=; 1 kVmkHMte HOW DO YOUQBSBIOI- STARTED? Thursday, April 17 9-11 p.m. to the top 3 best performances. This is a free event. Applications for lott^ tickets ready for football From Staff Reports The Athletic Department ticket of fice today will start collecting entries for its lottery of 1997 football tickets. Students can pick up applications for season tickets at 117 South Sta dium, 110 Canfield Administration Building or Nebraska East Uhioiirfc formation desks, v '* by 5 p.m. Friday. Full-time students dents must pay $175. Students’ money The ticket office will notify ticket winners by mail: next week. p1" 1 1 a Check us out on the World Wide Web at: http:/ lwww.unl.edu/ DailyNeb APPLY NOW!!! Student Summer Employment in Housing May 12 - August 22 Custodial....$5.70/hour Building Maintenance....$6.10/hour Building Painter....$6.10/hour •Weekend schedules available for summer school studentsl •Occasional overtime available! Apply in person between 8:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.to : • Jerry Lokie at Burr-Fedde Maintenance (East Campus) • Pat Carlin at Cather-Pound-Neihardt Maintenance • Mike Kansier at Harper-Schramm-Smith Maintenance • LaVem Priest at Selleck Maintenance • Lyle Harris at Abel-Sandoz Maintenance For further information, call Central Housing Maintenance, 472-3753. College considers geosciences program GEOSCIENCE from page 1 -tology graduate program of UNL. The proposal states die current ge ology faculty is “too small to achieve national stature.” A recent program review of the geology department “made clear ■** the need to refocus the unit and its programs,” the proposal states. As a result, die current under and doctorate programs in geology ^uld b^ reconfigured to reflecti “It’s somewhat a rethinking of the academic programs of the (ge ology) department,” Foster said. “It’s not adding anything to what we do so much as trying to re-ar ticulate what we do.” The proposal states that the new geosciences structure will enhance research support for affected pro grams and enhance the prestige of geology graduate programs. The proposal does not mention whether the geography department was in need of restructuring to’braid strength. The National Science Foundation reported enrollments .'hose about 33 pereenr in graduate geogr^hy^rogram^uarion^^ -->■ . j- - ■ ' UNL’s Academic Planning Committee recently decided to hold off a decision on the new depart ment until they could learn how the geography department would be affected by the restructuring. The proposal was written by Foster’s office with a committee of faculty froth the geology, geogra phy and anthropology departments, he said. Foster said the proposal reflects hundreds of Jbours of research on •the benefit&of restructuring. Faculty .members have voiced opinions both for and against the geosciences proposal, but there is \ a “substantial majority of people who would be affected by this whu t- d favor the proposal,” Foster said. Some extraordinary university programs in earth sciences are con figured similarly to the proposed structure of die geosciences depart ment, Foster said. Examples in clude the University of Arizona in Tucson and the University of Chi cago. If the proposal passes the ap proval process, an external search for a geosciences department chair man would begin this summer, the 1 proposal states. No faculty members would be fired as a result of the new depart ment formation. -.w--. , __ -demic achievements had grade point averages of at least 3.0 fbr either the fall 1996 semester or the 1996 calen dieyear. I^Ceynote speakers Renita Robinson-Tyrance and Pat Tyrance, former UNL academic All-Ameri cans, ceqimende& the students for their academic and athletic achieve ments, as well as their'work in the community. I Robinson-Tyrance, a former track and field athlete, said student-athletes needed to remember their peers and the less-fortunate around them, suggested students teap educationafed understanding from eVisfy^jutuation ij they encountered. - rounded individuals. Tenacious students who^^rgiil toward success in both ajreaifiadtack led adversity along tl%*ray were bound to succeed mlife^real worfcf” “Your experience in athletics and the classroom are going to prepare you for success,” Tyrance said. Award winners, speakers honor journalism students By Jessica Fargen Staff Reporter Award winners and speakers at the UNL journalism honors convocation Friday stressed the excellence of the UNL College of Journalism and Mass Communications. Richard Starmann, senior vice president of communications for the McDonald’s Corp., gave University of Nebraska-Lincoln journalism students advice about succeeding and being happy after graduation. UNL journalism students should be proud, Starmann said, to be attending (me of the most prestigious journalism schools in the country. He said he only speaks at three universities: Notre Dame, the University of Mississippi and UNL. Starmann said Will Norton Jr., dean of the journalism college, cared about people and was responsible for the high quality program at UNL. Norton was one of Starmann’s pro fessors at the University of Missis sippi. Education is a lifelong process, Starmann said, and it does not end with graduation. He shared his “formula for success” for students after they gradu ate. Young go-getters, he said, need to have an unquenchable thirst for knowl edge, be risk takers and persistent lead ers and love their jobs. Don Bryant’s love for his job is why he stayed for so long, he said. Bryant is retiring as UNL’s associate V athletic director in charge of public relations. Bryant received an Outstanding Alumni Award along with two other ' UNL alumni at the convocation— ] Kris Malkoski, category general 1 manager for the Procter & Gamble | in Cincinnati and John Knicely, TV news anchorman for Omaha’s WOWT. Wilma Crumley, who in 1972 was ! the first woman to reach the rank of full professor of journalism at UNL, received the Outstanding Non-Alum nus Award. Also recognized at the ceremony were the college’s student advisory ! board, UNL students who maA». the ^ dean’s honor roll and journalism stu- l| dents winning scholarships and * awards. Bryant said winning the alumni award was “a tribute to the education I got here as much as it was an award.” Bryant said he most valued the broad curriculum of the journalism l school. He said taking classes other than journalism classes, like history courses, gave him the background he needed to understand current issues. • *1 Starmann said his education also was a part of his success, but most of his most important college skills were not learned in textbooks. “Through education you learn to organize, discipline and you learn to stick it to it when it is important.”