The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 19, 1998, Page 6, Image 6

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    Man arrested for assault
Police arrested a man this
week involved with burning two
teen-age girls with a wire coat
hanger as part of a gang initiation
ceremony.
The mother of one of the 16
year-old girls noticed the bums on
her daughter’s shoulder and
reported them to the police March
6, Lincoln Police Sgt. Ann
Heermann said.
The victim said her back was
burned with a wire coat hanger as
part of a gang initiation ceremony
Feb. 21.
Another 16-year-old girl who
was branded at a similar ceremony
the next day reported the incident
herself. A pitchfork, covering her
entire shoulder, was burned into
her back.
Police arrested Robert
Mahoney, 21, this week for first
degree assault in connection with
the incidents.
Both incidents allegedly took
place in Mahoney’s home in the
2700 block of California Court.
— —
Citation issued for assault
Police cited a man for assault
Tuesday after he allegedly pulled a
knife on a woman in traffic Tuesday.
An 18-year-old woman
noticed a gray car following her
closely at the intersection of 48th
Street and Cornhusker Highway,
Heermann said.
When she turned onto
Havelock Avenue the car contin
ued to follow her all the way to
70th Street, then to Adams Street
where the two cars were stopped
by a traffic light.
A man got out of the gray car
wielding a knife and began
approaching her car.
To escape him the woman
turned into Gas ‘N Shop on the
comer of 70th and Adams streets.
The man got into his car and
drove away, but not before the
woman took down his license
plate number.
Police cited Adam Cardoza,
22, for assault. Police did not
know what provoked the incident.
Compiled by Senior
Reporter Josh Funk
Energetic teacher rewarded
PARDY from page 1
Tim Hagge, a UNL graduate stu
dent who works for Pardy, said Pardy
was responsible for an important
new biological discovery.
He said Pardy found a molecule
in algae that originally was thought
to exist only in bacteria.
The discovery was important,
Hagge said, because the molecule
was toxic and could cause health
problems for humans if undetected.
Besides his intensive research,
Pardy is known for excellent speak
ing skills and for enthusiasm in his
classroom, Hagge said.
Pardy often roams his classroom
in order to interact with his students
and hold their interest during lec
tures, Hagge said.
Good teaching requires him to do
more than just present the informa
tion, Pardy said. He must make sure
students participate.
“The goal is to take 50 minutes
and have people’s lives change,”
Pardy said. “That is the real chal
lenge.”
Pardy first became interested in
biology when he was a junior high
student in Middletown, N.Y. After
graduating from high school in
Middletown, he spent two years ait a
community college.
Pardy’s love for biology, howev
er, sent him to Northern Arizona
University in Flagstaff, Ariz., which
he said had an exceptional science
program. ■> y '' *
Pardy earned his bachelor’s
degree there, and went on to earn his
master’s and doctorate degrees at the
university. He later did post-doctoral
a
The goal is to take 50 minutes and have
people s lives change. That is the real
challenge.”
TedPardy
UNL professor of biological sciences
research at the University of
California at Los Angeles.
Since then, Pardy has taught at
the University of California, Irvine
and currently teaches at UNL, where
he was selected to the Teaching
Acadepry in 1996.
“There are some very, very fine
instructors in the academy,” Pardy
said. “I’m quite honored and hum
bled to be in it.”
In addition to teaching, Pardy
said he has published more than 40
research papers - “a continual source
of intellectual stimulation,” he said.
Outside of teaching, he busies
himself with various hobbies includ
ing his favorite, cycle touring.
He and his wife, Ann Pardy, have
toured many states including
Missouri, Vermont, Wisconsin,
Michigan and North Carolina by
bicycle. They have toured Germany,
Italy and Nova Scotia by bicycle.
Besides cycling, Pardy said he
also enjoyed racquetball, playing the
flute and fishing with his son. He has
traveled as far as Prince of Wales
Island in Alaska for a fishing expedi
tion. . 5 4
Though he enjoys traveling with
his family, Pardy said one of his most
memorable trips was to the South
Pacific, where he led a geographical
expedition to study coral reefs in the
Western Carolina Islands.
“It’s a scientific experience that’s
hard to match,” he said.
Lawrence Harshman, Associate
Professor of Biological Sciences,
said Pardy’s teaching reflected his
active lifestyle.
“He’s very energetic,” Harshman
said.
Pardy does an exceptional job
teaching his students how to under
stand concepts, Harshman said.
Pardy said his goal as a professor
was to break the one-way flow of
information that usually occurs
between a lecturer and students in a
classroom.
“The more ways of interacting,
the better chance of internalizing,”
he said. “When you’re teaching each
other, there’s more chances to get it
in your head.”
Pardy said he enjoyed teaching,
because working with students con
stantly rejuvenated him.
“I have the greatest job in the
world.”
I I
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First-Rate
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