The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 15, 1998, Page 3, Image 3
By Kim Sweet Staff Reporter While UNL students take a quiet moment to bask in the spring sun, Landscape Services is racing against Mother Nature. For landscape crews, work that began more than five months ago on a cold night with the infamous October snowstorm continues at a rapid pace. • Crews struggle to prune as many trees as possible before the trees begin to blossom this spring. If they don’t beat the clock, insects and disease will destroy more trees. This task is a large one for University of Nebraska-Lincoln land scapers on both campuses, said Kirby Baird, City Campus landscape supervi sor. And the tree repair is added to a full schedule of regular spring work that needs to be done. Long healing process While crews work quickly to get the repairs done, the healing process the dees need will take much longer than a few weeks. “It will take years to get the replace ment done,” he said. “The big trees could go on for another one to two years and then begin to show problems.” Each tree is assessed to see what repair needs to be done. Some will lose only a limb or two; others could require major pruning or complete removal, Baird said. Between 35 and 38 percent of the campus’s 10,000 trees were damaged, Baird said. About 1,000 had to be removed. The rest will be repaired. The first step in the process of sav ing the trees - cutting off branches that presented safety concerns - has already occurred. The next step - fine pruning - requires a time consuming, tree-by-tree assessment of damage and needed repairs. The fine-pruning stages are often more difficult than major trimming stages that come first Crews try to maneuver around trees using bucket trucks to prune hard-to reach places, Baird said. Unpredictable spring weather makes this stage difficult. When it is windy or rainy, bucket trucks can’t be out Crews also climb trees to reach places the bucket truck can’t, which often can be tricky for landscape per sonnel, Baird said. The next stages involve waiting and watching to see what kind of problems arise. Baird estimates that 1 to 2 percent more trees will develop snowstorm related problems. Saving as many as possible This summer, tree loss will contin ue as insects and disease take over some of the remaining trees that are trying to heal. If the summer is dry, tree damage Gould be highest. “We try to save as many trees as possible,” Baird said. “Sometimes they die due to circumstances out of our con trol.” Trees will continue to be moni tored. Older trees will receive more attention. Newer ones are not as critical to monitor, Baird said. Landscape Services also will slow ly begin to replant trees this spring. “We can only replace certain plants at once,” Baird said. “We can’t just plant a thousand new trees.” Trees around buildings that are being rebuilt, such as the Nebraska Union, won’t be replaced until building is complete. The loss of trees also has affected other campus vegetation, Baird said. Shade plants located on the south side of Love Library have to be removed until die trees are replanted. The area is too sunny for them now, and it will take two to four years until the shade will return. Logging heavy hours Since the storm hit in October, the employees of Landscape Services have logged more than 10,000 hours clean ing up campus, Baird said. An extra 150 to 200 hours was put in by workers over spring break. Crews on East Campus have shared in logging long hours and continue tb prune hanging limbs, said Susan Budler, East Campus grounds supervi sor. “Right now we’re plugging along with the other spring cleanup that we have to do, “ Budler said. ' I i But, even as the campus nears recovery, another weather disaster could reverse all progress, Baird said. “Ninety-nine percent of everything depends on the weather,” Baird said. “People said this was a 200-year storm, and I’ve never seen anything like it” In absence of another disaster, Baird said, he hopes to get all trees pruned by December 1998. But even then, the process of replanting will be far from over. Baird said he can’t predict exactly how many years will pass before the campus returns to its pre-storm beauty. “It will take a long time.” UNO to begin architectural engineering program By Lindsay Young Assignment Reporter Some college students are happy to get one job interview before they grad uate. But consider this: All 12 of former Pennsylvania State Professor Gren Yuill’s heating, ventilation and air con ditioning students got a job before February of their graduation year. What’s more, one of those students, Roger Thies, received 10 interviews and 12 job offers - two firms wanted to hire him without interviews. The students were part of Penn State’s architectural engineering pro gram. The University of Nebraska at Omaha is starting a similar program m fall 1998. “Penn State is recognized to have the best architectural engineering pro gram in the country,” said Yuill, direc tor of UNO’s new architectural engi neering program. “What we want to do is replicate the Penn State program here ■ only improve it” The program is being brought to UNO because of high employment prospects, he said. Building construc tion is one of the biggest industries in the country. Three of the 12 biggest architecture/engineering firms in the country - Dana, Larson, Roubal and Associates; Leo Daly; and Henningson, Durham and Richardson Inc. - are in Omaha. Paul Seaburg, former director of Penn State’s architectural engineering program, said a lot of the Penn State graduates have come to Omaha to work. But those Omaha firms would like to use a few local graduates as well, he said. There are 14 similar programs in the country, including those at the University of Wyoming, the University of Kansas and the University of Colorado. However, most programs are in the South, Yuill said. “Our field is very narrow,” Yuill said. “Our students know that they are going to be building designers.” ■ Architectural engineers design the heating, ventilating, air conditioning and lighting and electrical systems of u-— What we want to do is replicate the Penn State \ 1 program here - only improve it ” GrenYuill UNO architectural engineering director buildings. Engineering students also will take beginning architecture class es. It is easy to transfer to the program from architecture and other engineer ing disciplines,Yuill said.. Ai ‘^lot of peopte go into architecture and find dufthiey ar&inoi^iiiter&sted in the technical aspects but not the aes thetic aspects,” Yuill said. And the course load for all first year engineering students is similar so students can start their second year in architectural engineering. -j , About 20students hwewwJlod.for the first-year program, Yuill said. And hb is hbt planitiing bnlimiting the num ber of students for the program yet I_ • Deep Cleansing • AU About • Naturally • Lip-Shading & • Dramatically • Different • Clinique Happy I Mask Lips ,• Glossy Mascara Eye Shading Pencil in Different Lipstick Perfume Spray in Jet Black Neutralizer and Pewter Moisturizing Lotion in Plum Brandy _I I *! 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