Milk contest postponed because of weather From Staff Reports The weekend’s snow storm has forced the “Milk, Where’s Your Mustache?” advertisement contest at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln to be postponed until later this month or next month. The contest, which picks a student to be pictured in a milk ad, was scheduled to be in the Nebraska Union Monday. yU^o^UUat and hiv/aids. Community VtuuoWiiy JfeaUU £o*w% £eod qjj^ mz-IMO jp* mow mloMtuUiott. This space provided as a public service. Copyright 1996, American Heart Association I Find your direction with aHNL education Through the Part-Time Student Program Attend FREE evening sessions 10-11,1998 tart-Tim Stadnt iiformation ftwnion 5-7 p.m. Tuesday, March 10 (Stop by anytime.) Meet representatives from UNL colleges and administrative offices. inn hit Bnp^Hnj Soars® Program 5-6:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 11 (Stop by anytime.) Check out 32 courses from 13 departments, meet instructors and register. i-_ _ _ mmm . mam Tiansnmn ■ ■ ronKsnop 6:30-8 p.m. Wednesday, March 11 Discuss issues that anyone returning to college or changing careers should consider. Ail sessions meet at the Clifford Hardin Nebraska Center for Continuing Education, 33rd and Hoidrege Streets. ! Free parking is availatj^orth of the building. UNI k • nondboMmlofy Mfedon. New clinic to treat anxiety By Brian Braun Staff Reporter When many students enter UNL, they leave behind homes, families and friends. Many struggle with finances for the first time and must cope with greater academic demands than they faced in high school. As a result, some of these stu dents suffer from an overwhelming fear of future events - a feeling called anxiety, said Debra Hope, director of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s Psychology Consultation Center. To help students, faculty and community members deal with anxiety-related problems, Hope opened an Anxiety Disorders Clinic at UNL this semester. The clinic is the first of its kind in Lincoln. Clinic psychology graduate stu dents working toward their doctoral degrees will treat patients, Hope said. She rejected any assertions that having students treat patients would lower the quality of care. “Everyone will receive the best treatment available,” Hope said. “The clinic is not experimental.” Hope, who is a nationally rec ognized expert on the assessment and treatment of anxiety, said she has worked to treat anxiety at UNL for the past eight years. Anxiety is one of the most com mon mental health problems, Hope said. About 6 to 8 million Americans will deal with anxiety in their lifetimes, including famous past sufferers Kim Basinger, Johnny Depp and Alanis Morrisette. Students in their late teens through early 20s are most likely to experience anxiety, Hope said. But some new, effective treat ments for anxiety are not being used in Nebraska, Hope said, and she wants to use the clinic to bring these treatments to UNL. She also hopes the clinic will allow her to expand her research in understand ing and treating anxiety disorders. David Hansen, an associate pro fessor of psychology and director of the Clinical Psychology Training Program, said the clinic will sup port the research and training of some of the best clinical psycholo gy graduate students nationwide. Work at the clinic also will strengthen students’ skills in treat ing anxiety disorders, because they will treat patients with state-of-the art techniques and the best treat ments possible, Hansen said. Hope said the clinic offers a complete psychological evaluation for all who believe they have an anxiety disorder and want treatment. If it is appropriate, individuals will then receive therapy from professors and graduate students at the clinic. All therapy is short-term - usu ally no longer than 14 sessions - and referrals for prescription med ication will be provided if needed. Therapy may be coordinated with psychiatric treatment. Hope said similar, successful clinics operate at many other large colleges, including Boston University, the University of Kentucky in Louisville, the University of Nevada-Las Vegas and the University of California Los Angeles. The clinic, in 325 Burnett Hall on City Campus, is open Mondays through Thursdays between 9 a.m. and 9 p.m. and Fridays between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Fees for treatment are assessed depending on patients’ income level. Those interested may call the clinic at (402) 472-2351. All treat ment is confidential. Snow causes woes for students, staff SNOW from page 1 cleared and safe for students who headed to morning classes, he said. Classes at many schools, including Lincoln Public Schools and the University of Nebraska at Omaha, were canceled Monday. ASUN President Curt Ruwe said the decision to not cancel classes would be OK if the school had a set policy saying the profes sors could not penalize students for missing classes. “I think if there is no policy in place on a day like this where there is a good population that cannot make it to class then we shouldn’t (have classes),” Ruwe said. Ruwe said students had to make a choice Monday whether to stay home or brave the icy roads. But not everyone decided to take a day off from classes. aaran fisner was one oi me lew students sitting in the Nebraska Union main lounge Monday. Fisher, a graduate student in English, was waiting for her hus band, who had driven her to class that morning because her trans portation was not adequate. “I just have a Buick - it can get stuck,” Fisher said. Others, like Anthony Gabrielli, a political science graduate stu dent, saw no problem with the 11 inches of snow on the ground. Gabrielli walked a mile to classes without a second thought - the same mile he walks everyday. “This is fun,” the Boston native said, comparing the weekend’s snow to the 30 inches of snow Boston sometimes receives during winter. Unlike Fisher, many opted not to make the journey to the university. Fisher said only six students - instead of the usual 15 and 30 - showed up to each of her two class es Monday. Even one of her profes sors had trouble making it to cam pus, leaving the teacher’s assistant to teach the class. v Some students and professors from small surrounding towns or those who regularly commute from Omaha were unable to make it to classes, since Interstate 80 was closed for part of the morning. It opened by mid-afternoon. Doris Smith, a receptionist in 66 Probably the biggest problem was the fact that the roads were closed today” Doris Smith receptionist the English department, said after the department received a call from a stranded professor, it alerted the students or tried to find someone to cover. “Probably the biggest problem was the fact the roads were closed today when people were ready to go to school,” Smith said. “It was a handicap for everybody.” wuiy iuui ui live muucui& in classes of 20 to 25 showed up for modern language classes Monday, said Loree Peery, an editorial assis tant in the Department of Modern Languages. Eight of the departments’ pro fessors did not make it to class. Any other day, students would lose participation points for not going to class, “but a day like today is just ignored,” Peery said. Bob Peters, a mechanical engi neering professor, said 15 of the 25 students in his 8:30 a.m. class showed up, and two-thirds of his second class came. Because some snowplows failed to make it to some areas of Lincoln until the morning, it was expected that a lot of students would not make it for the earlier classes, Peters said. University Police Sgt. Mylo Bushing said there had not been any injuries reported on campus. Ruwe said he saw potential for injuries on campus throughout the day. Blocks of ice and snow hung off buildings. “If one of those huge blocks of ice and snow were to fall off a building and hit someone” it would be just as dangerous as the fallen tree limbs after the October snow storm, Ruwe said. ! \ a Alleged rapist at large Lincoln Police still are search ing for a suspect who allegedly raped an 18-year-old UNL fresh man woman whom he met at a party Saturday night. The woman met the suspect during a party in a house on the 200 block of North 18th Street, Lincoln Police Sgt. Ann Heermann said. The two engaged in some sexu al activity at the house during which the victim removed her clothes, Heermann said. The woman wanted to stop and tried to put her clothes back on, Heermann said, but he threw her down and sexually assaulted her. Store robbed on Sunday Sunday’s snow and cold weath er didn’t keep someone from rob bing a north Lincoln convenience store. A clerk said the suspect entered the 7-Eleven store at 2243 N. Cotner Blvd. at 10:40 p.m. Sunday. The suspect - a 5-foot, 6-inch black male, about 30 years old and weighing 175 pounds - demanded the clerk give him the money in the register, Heermann said. He did not have a weapon, though. The clerk complied, and the suspect left on foot. Headstones damaged Police caught three boys tipping over headstones in Calvary Cemetery Saturday night A neighbor spotted the boys - one 12-year-old and two 13-year olds - knocking over stones in the cemetery at 145 S. 40th St., Heermann said. The boys were contacted on the edge of the cemetery at 40th and O streets where they were cited for vandalism and trespassing. Five headstones had been tipped over, causing $450 damage. Compiled by Senior Reporter Josh Funk