> > I By Lindsay Young Assignment Reporter Chicano Awareness Week is not just for minorities, and it’s not just for Chicanos - the week is for everybody, organizers said. “I want everybody to (participate) regardless of whether they feel uneasy,” said Juan Izaguirre, UNL Mexican American Student Association vice president “I want it to be an everybody celebration.” The week, sponsored by MAS A, will give people a glimpse of what it is like to be a Chicano student in Nebraska, he said. The issues Chicano students face are different in Nebraska than in New York or California, said Izaguirre, a sophomore social sciences major. The theme organizers chose for the week was “Dias de la Raza - Day s of the Race.” The week kicks off today at noon in the Nebraska Union Crib with dancers and speakers such as Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs James Greisen. Each day focuses on a different aspect of the Chicano culture, includ ing today’s “Day of Education” and “Day of the Youth” on Friday and Saturday. Tuesday is “Day of the People,” Wednesday is “Day of the Children,” and Thursday is “Day of the Arts.” The main event is the banquet on Friday in the Nebraska Union Centennial Room, said Cameya Ramirez, MASA treasurer. The ban quet will feature Mariachis Zapata, a band out of Omaha, and Fred Soto, a nationally renowned speaker out of Washington, D.C. M : : . ..... I want everybody to (participate) regardless of whether they feel uneasy. I want it to be an everybody celebration.” Juan Izaguirre MASA vice president Some MASA members saw Soto speak at a Chicago Hispanic Leadership Conference last fall. Izaguirre said he was a great motiva tional speaker who kept his audiences awake. “I know he had everybody waving their napkins in the air,” Izaguirre said. Other events include alumni recognition, presentation of the MASA member-of-the-year award and authentic Mexican food horn Los Mendoza Mexican Restaurant, 1400 N. 48th St The banquet costs $ 10 at the door. Anyone interested in buying a ticket before Friday can contact Ramirez at (402)467-1739. Anyone can register on-site for the talent show, which is scheduled for 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Culture Center. Izaguirre encourages every one to try, regardless of talent “If your talent is balancing a spoon on your nose, then you can come do that for five minutes,” he said. Ramirez hopes those who attend the week’s events will gain “a sense of what we stand for, who we are and the things we do.” Other events include: ■ Bilingual Education Seminar today at 7 p.m. in the Nebraska Union Centennial Room. ■ Graduate Student Brown Bag Tuesday at noon in the Nebraska Union. ■Gender Roles Workshop Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Culture Center. ■ Chicano Videos Viewing and Discussion Wednesday at noon in the Nebraska Union. ■ Children’s Carnival and Lowrider Model Contest Registration and Judging Wednesday at 6 p.m. in the Culture Center. ■ Mexican Food Lunch Wednesday at noon in the Selleck Residence Hall Dining Hall. ■ Mexican Dance Instruction Thursday at 8 p.m. in the Culture Center. ■ MASA Alumni Reunion Reception Saturday at 6 p.m. in the Culture Center. ■ Chicano Awareness Week Community Dance Saturday at 9 p.m. at the First Avenue Banquet Hall. Tickets are $5 for University of Nebraska-Lincoln students and $7 for nonstudents. Meat evaluators win contest UNL team places first in all three areas By Ryan Brauer Staff Reporter Fifteen Grade-A meat evaluators recently returned to UNL from a suc cessful trip to Wyoming. The 1998 University of Nebraska Lincoln Meat Animal Evaluation Team placed first overall in the 1998 Northwestern Meat Animal and Carcass Evaluation Contest held April 2-4 at the University of Wyoming in Laramie, Wyo. Besides UNL, the regional contest played host to teams from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in Madison, Wis., the University of Wyoming, Utah State University in Logan, Utah, California Polytechnic University in Pomona, Calif., and Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah. The UNL team, made up of 15 stu dents, placed first in all three of the con test’s divisions: Market Animal, Breeding Animal and Carcass Evaluation. Each division was held on separate days of the three-day contest Keith Gilster, livestock extension evaluation specialist and the team’s coach, said team members evaluated the fat and muscle content of live cattle, hogs and sheep on the first day for the Market Animal division. Contestants then estimated the market value of each animal. The second day was spent evaluat ing breeding animals. On the third day of the contest, har vested carcasses were measured and evaluated for price. Actual fat and mus cle-content results were compared to estimates to determine scores. “The contest is really tied to the meat-animal industry,” said Gilster, who is in his 14th year as coach of the team. “Nebraska is a large meat-animal state so this also ties nicely to our land grant university mission of education, extension and research.” Gilster said the team also placed fifth out of 11 teams at the national competition in St. Joseph, Mo. Doug Setlick, a senior animal sci ence major from Stanton, said the con tests are a very practical experience. Setlick was the Wyoming contest’s overall individual champion. “It teaches you to evaluate animals on many different qualities,” Setlick said. “I want to be a cattle buyer, and this gives you a good eye for livestock.” Travis Farran, a senior animal sci ence major from Stanton, agreed. “It’s an excellent opportunity, and you learn a heck of a lot” Student cited for marijuana UNL freshman Nickolas Terrio was cited for possession of marijuana Tuesday. A residence hall official smelled marijuana smoke coming from Terrio’s fourth-floor Schramm Residence Hall room and called police, University Police Sgt. Mylo Bushing said. The officer knocked on the door several times before Terrio answered, and then he asked Terrio for permis sion to search the room. Terrio, 18, consented to the search in which the officer found part of a marijuana cigarette in one corner of the room and a plastic bag containing what he suspected to be marijuana. Terrio was cited for possession of less than an ounce of marijuana. Robbery attempt failed A would-be robber was thwarted by some strong words at daVinci’s Thursday night. The suspect was waiting near the trash container behind the 120 N. 66th Street restaurant when a 16-year-old female employee came out with trash just after 11 p.m., Lincoln Police Sgt. Ann Heermann said. He told her to be quiet, and he put her hands behind her back. The suspect asked how many peo ple were inside and then prepared to enter. Just then another employee, a 25 year-old man, came out die back door and encountered the robber. The girl broke free of the robber and fled to the southeast The robber pointed his pistol at the other employee who called the robber a “son of a bitch.” m> Then the robber fled. The robber is described as 5 feet, 4 inches tall, 150 pounds, wearing a black wind breaker, black jeans, black sunglasses, a dark ball cap and a black bandanna tied over his face. Police said this description is simi lar to the robber who held up the Arby’s Restaurant, 27* Street and Nebraska Highway 2, Wednesday night. Shooting damages cars Several shots were fired into two parked cars as part of a drive-by shooting early Friday morning, Eleven 9 mm shell casings were found outside an apartment on the 1200 block of Arapahoe Street where two cars, parked next to each other, were hit with gunfire, Heermann said. The rear window of a 1990 Toyota Celica was shot out, and there were several bullet holes in the car, causing $800 damage.The taillights of a 1985 Ford Tempo also were broken in the shooting, causing $200 damage. Compiled by Senior Reporter Josh Funk We're More Than You Think! Confidential & Affordable Reproductive Health Care Planned Parenthood® of Lincoln Education & Administrative Offices 2246 ‘O’ Street 441-3332 Clinics: 3705 South 441-3333 _ 2246 ‘O’ Street 441-3300 _ Mascot Tryouts: Sat., April 25 (during the Spring Game) Informational Meeting* Tue., April 21 at 4:30 pm The tryouts are open to all male and female full-time students. *For more information call Amy at 472-9839 or Marlon at 476-0076 I-I Register NOWfor Summer Classes! Check our website for On-line Class Schedule: www.unl. edu/summer UNL Summer Sessions Dates: Pre-Session—May 18-June 5 8-Week Session—May 18-July 10 ,v 1“ 5-Week Session—June 8-July 10 2nd 5-Week Session—July 13-August 13 SUMMER SESSIONS ‘98 There*s No Place Like Nebraska in the Summer!