American Heart Association Fighting Heart Disease and Stroke DON’TGIVE I MONEY TO STRANGERS i Trust your heart: The American Heart Association I Since 1924 we’ve sponsored lifesaving education i programs and funded more than $1.2 billion in research. Other organizations may copy us, but they can’t hold a candle to our heart and torch. To learn more, call 1-800-AHA-USA1. i I i This space provided as a public service. ©1995. American Heart Association_j Come PlayOur^^^^^l New Batman Game. I Get 10% Off I with this coupon. I taco J||g^ BELL ® I The Universit^fealt^Cente^^^™ Dental Office 472-7495 15th & “U” Streets Blue Cross/Blue Shield PPO Provider Summer Appointments Available! • UNL is a Nondiscriminatory Institution UNL science program receives grant brom Staff Reports The University of Nebraska Lincoln has been awarded a $325,000 grant from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute for “Wonderwi.se: Women in Science Learning Series.” Wonderwise is an inquiry-based multimedia learning tool composed of five educational science kits devel oped for fourth to sixth graders. Each kir provides a week-long science unit focusing on one prominent female scientist and one science topic. It also includes video field trips with hands on, multi-disciplinary science activi ties. The grant will be used to help teacners and expand science opportu nities for young people. This is the second time the program has received a grant from the institute; the first was five years ago for $500,000. “We’ve been testing and working with teachers across the state for the past five years,” said Judy Diamond, assistant director for public programs at the Museum and director of the Wonderwise project. “With the new grant we’ll launch an on-line version of the project, where we can train teachers over the satellite or on-line, as well as support a new kit which will focus on the prairie.” The kits are designed to integrate literature, science and math curricu iums and bring women scientists into the classroom. Diamond said the kits will be distributed nationally by the end of the summer Current topics include: ♦ “Sea Otter Biologist,” fea turing Brenda Ballachey, project leader for the Sea Otter Oil Spill Studies Project for the National Biological Service; ♦ “Pollen Detective,” with Margaret Bollick, curator of botany and associate professor at UNL; ♦ “Rainforest Ecologist,” with Janalee Paige Caldwell, who worics with the ecology of tropical amphib ians; ♦ “Parasite Sleuth,” featuring Judy Sakanari, a parasitologist who studies the genetics of tiny worms called nermatodes; and ♦ “African Plant Explorer ” featuring African-American biologi cal anthropologist Fatimah Jackson. The Howard Hughes Medica Institute, the nation’s largest philan thropic organization, awarded $8 mil - lion in four-year grants to 45 muse urns and other institutions across tn^ country. The Wonderwise program received the fourth-highest total. The awards were made from 239 propos als submitted by 590 institutions invited to participate in the competi tion. Recipients include 33 museums, eight botanical gardens, three zoos and one aquarium. Engineering students, teachers at UNL from Staff Reports Twenty-four students and three teachers from Nebraska high schools have been awarded internships with the Nebraska Research Initiative Engineering Research Centers at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. The interns will spend July 20-25 with Engineering Research Centers researchers learning about lasers, computers, electronic materials, infrastructure, the environment and nontraditional manufacturing. Each student intern receives a fel lowship that includes room and board in university residence halls and an honorarium of $250. The teachers receive honoraiiums of $750. Activities planned for the interns include creating World Wide Web pagd$, conducting balloon tests of the atmqsphere, creating a laser light show, sampling wetlands soils, study ing engine emissions and creating laser-generated manufacturing prototypes. This is the fifth year the centers have offered the internships, which attracted 105 applicants this year. The six centers were created in 1988 with funding from the state legislature's Nebraska Research Initiative pro gram. Their goals are to conduct research applicable to state industry, accelerate the flow of technology from laboratories to users and increase economic development n Nebraska. The teacher interns are Sara Hartzell of Hallam, a teacher at Wilber-Clatonia High School; Jon Mayo, who teaches at Omaha ? Brownell-Talbot College Preparatory School; and Janette Payne of Kearney High School. Hie teachers will spend time in each of the centers. -i ft American Heart CA Association*!^^ Fighting Heart Disease and Stroke LLiBE"^ 17th & ‘N’ No Appointments Necessary 476-9466 $6 Off Oil Change Service with UNL student ID. Now Only $19.70 (reg.$25.70, Enviromental disposal fee included.) • Oil & filter change (up to 5 qts) • Lubricate zerk fittings • Check & fill fluids: brake, power steering, battery, washer, and automatic transmission fluid only • Check antifreeze, air filter, wiper blades, and tire pressure • Vacuum interior & wash windows Best Service in Just 10 Minutes Most brands available Expires 8-31-97 Open Mon-Fri, 8-6 * Sat, 8-4 -'-J American Heart Association^^ Fighting Hearr Disease and Stroke ' 728 Vi Q St. HAYMARKET 475-8683 SPORTS BAR & GRILL Saturdavs.-fJulv Special) $7.00 cover - 1 cent Busch Lights draws & well drinks. Complete coverage all sports GET IN THE ZONE!!!! Seashells. Driftwood. Skin cancer. It’s amazing what kids pick up at the beach. 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