The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 22, 1999, Image 1

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    VOL. 99 COVERING THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA-LINCOLN SINCE 1901 NO. 23
I SPORTS
Corn Star
I Though staying in her home state wasn’t in her
I original plans, NU midfielder Meghan Anderson
1 has gone on to blossom as a Husker. PAGE 9
A&E
A New Spin
Central Dance Theater founders hope to take
professional dance in Nebraska in a new
direction. PAGE 12
t, low 50.
k
Practice makes perfect
Nate Wagner/DN
SCATTERED TENNIS BALLS cover the court that junior tennis player Ndali Ijomab plays on during practice. The team goes through buck
ets of balls at practice.
Large party bust
leaves big dilemma
■ Sheriff’s department
is left with 60-70 cases of
beer after busting a Delta
Tau Delta Fraternity party.
By Jake Bleed
Senior staff writer
Lancaster County Sheriff’s deputie
do not know what to do with the 60-71
cases of beer confiscated from a Delt
Tau Delta Fraternity party outside
Lincoln on Friday night
Chief Deputy William E. Jarrel
said the beer could not be dumpei
A 11
because its large quantity represented
an environmental hazard.
The beer is currently being housed
in a county impound lot in west Lincoln.
Deputy Sgt. Robert Marker said the
beer bust was one of the largest involv
ing canned beer. Police are more accus
tomed to disposing of beer in kegs.
Deputies responded to a distur
bance call at the intersection of
- Southwest 72nd Street and West Bennet
5 Road around 8:30 p.m., Jarrett said.
) They found between 60 and 70 peo
i pie in a field an eighth of a mile west of
; the intersection, Jarrett said. Deputies
estimated that half of the people were of
t -
1 Please see BEER on 3
i
Nate Wagner/DN
CHIEF DEPUTY WUIAM E. JARRETT stands next to the towering
stack of 60 cans of confiscated beer Itoesday afternoon. Police
officers confiscated the alcohol from a fraternity party Friday.
• i i
Allergy season may oe on its way out
I This year’s allergies have been the high pollen counts. that cause allergic reactions to heavy rains during
•11 i_ j i , Laurie Saathoff, allergy clinic manager at the the summer, but she said die first hard frost could
especially bad, DUl COld Weather University ofNebraska-Lincoln Health Center, make things much better.
pmil/1 hriria mpocurp of rplipf said the severity of allergic reactions has been “In the summer, the weeds grew more large
LUU1U I/I1II5 lllCdMilC ui 1C11C1._ fluctuating in the past few weeks. and luscious because of die moisture,” she said.
“This year has been pretty bad for allergies,” “The result is more pollen. If the frost doesn’t
By DANE StICKNEY she said. “But we’ve had worse in the past.” come, then the pollen counts won’t drop.”
Staff writer Cheryl Urban, a nurse at die Great Plains Ear, Urban agreed that a frost would help, but
-:- Nose and Throat Institute, said this year’s rag- some pollen could still linger.
Students who are suffering from runny weed pollen has been bad. “The first freeze will definitely help (the
noses, sneezing and post-nasal drip may soon “The ragweed is high this year,” she said. “It pollen count) go down some, but not totally,” she
find themselves feeling better. was bad last year, but it is just as bad this year. said.
Allergies have been especially troublesome The mold is probably worse.” --
this year, but the colder conditions may help end Saathoff attributed the abundance of plants Please see ALLERGY On 3
Parking,
landscape
positions
still vacant
By Kimberly Sweet
Senior staff writer
The search is on to fill two positions left vacant
this summer by former university directors.
Advertisements are out to fill the directorships
of Parking and Transit Services and Landscape
Services, said James Main, assistant vice chancel
lor for business and finance.
Until the vacancies are filled, two university
staff members have stepped up to take on the lead
ership duties until a national search is completed
and the director- * *_
ships can be filled. ••
a The variety of
studyingcommuni- experience I’ve
ty and regional r
planning, was gained over
named the interim 7 7 7 „
director of Parking the last It)
and Transit
Services on Sept. 1. years SliltS 17ie
repST" very well to
M'DoweU, who serve with a
left the University
of Nebraska- high degree of
Lincoln this sum- ° r °. _ .
mer for a job with COWjOrt in thlS
Carl Walker » ... ,f
Associates, a park- position,
ing consultant firm
in Denver. JOHN MARKER
Carpenter interim director of
served as a gradu- Landscape Services
ate assistant in the ______
omce oeiore oerng
appointed as the
interim director this fall. The duties he performed
as graduate assistant have helped prepare him for
the post, Carpenter said. _
Going around campus counting stalls, helping
design the Parking and Transit Master Plan and
doing research on parking issues are some of the
tasks that have given Carpenter knowledge about
parking at UNL.
As a graduate assistant in the office, Carpenter
said he worked closely with McDowell.
Working next to die former director has given
him insight on die workings of the office and the
challenges of Parking and Transit Services.
Carpenter said he would stick to the previous
plan to deal with a parking crunch that has devel
oped on UNDs campus.
“We’re going to keep on going with the previ
ous plan to replace existing parking as it goes away
to maintain stall count,” Carpenter said.
Parking structures will hawe to be built to cany
out this plan, Carpenter said
But other than increasing the transit system and
looking at how to maintain the number of stalls on
campus, Carpenter said he anticipated no major
changes during his temporary tenure.
Along with Carpenter, former director of
Custodial Services John Marker was appointed as
Please see VACANT on 3