Couple donates professorship to UNL college By Kimberly Sweet Staff writer A donation by a New York couple will make a top department at UNL world-class, according to university officials. The University of Nebraska Foundation announced this week that the Department of Textiles, Clothing and Design will receive the gift of a professorship from Ardis and Robert James of Chappaqua, N. Y. Ardis James will speak tonight at 6 at an opening reception for an exhib it of quilts opening at the International Quilt Study Center and University of Nebraska State Museum. The Ardis James Professorship in Textiles, Clothing and Design will be funded by the same couple that donat ed 950 quilts to the university in 1997, making UNL home to the largest pub licly held quilt collection in the world, said Patricia Crews, chairwoman of the department. Crews said the college hopes to recruit a scholar who is an expert in textile design and quilt history to build studies of the two at UNL. Recruiting a scholar of national prominence will help the department build on its textile history and design strengths. “We’re thrilled at the prospect of being able to advertise for someone who is already known in their own right to create for us a niche in this area,” Crews said. io UNL. Chancellor James Moeser said in a statement that the professor ship would help the program gain top status. “We are closer to completing our vision of a world-class international center for the study of quilts, textiles and associated arts," he said. James, a Nebraska native, and her husband began collecting quilts in the mid-1980s, pursuing a whim to col lect something other people didn’t. “When they bought their first quilt, they had no idea it would lead where it has today,” Crews said. Ten years later, the Jameses owned more than a thousand quilts. Seeing quilts and textiles as a “lens on society,” the couple donated the quilts to the university to support the study of them, Crews said. The collection is worth an esti mated $6 million. It has antique quilts dating from 1790 to 1992. They are from the United States, Europe and Japan. The addition of a professorship comes at a time when die department and the International Quilt Study cen ter is flourishing, said Rita Kean, interim dean for the college of human resources and family sciences. Since 1997, 10,000 visitors from around the world have visited the quilt studies center. The department just recruited world-renowned textile designer Michael James to its faculty, Kean said. “This will bring further visibility to the program,” she said. In February, the department of textiles received the universitywide departmental teaching award. A faculty search to fill the new professorship won’t take place for another three years to allow time for the endowment to build. But when the professorship is filled, it will allow the department to be more complete, Crews said. “This will give us an opportunity to fill a need,” she said. Conference celebrates women ■ Two keynote speakers star at annual No Limits Conference this weekend. By Margaret Behm Staff writer An annual conference will bring two keynote speakers to campus this weekend as part of the Women’s Week celebration. “I think it’s a really good confer ence that’s growing every year, and I wanted to be a part of it,” said Roxane Gay, graduate student and conference presenter. The No Limits Conference, “Feminist Visioning: Re-Imaging, Re-creating, and Re-Telling,” will take place today and Saturday. The conference is free and will be on the third floor of the Nebraska East Union. The conference is for everyone, and it will address important women’s issues, said Tagi Adams, graduate research assistant for the Women’s Studies Program. M It offers a lot of diversity and a lot of different viewpoints that you don’t normally hear.” Roxane Gay conference presenter The conference speakers will be Larry Kirkwood and Nomy Lamm. Larry Kirkwood will speak dur ing a luncheon on Friday at 11:45 a.m. in the Nebraska East Union. His speech is titled “Beauty is a Relative Concept.” People who want to eat during the luncheon must pay $7.50. Nomy Lamm will speak at 9 a.m. on Saturday. Her speech “New Directions for Feminist Communities,” will address trans gender issues. Various speakers will be present ing from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. today and 9 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. on Saturday. “It offers a lot of diversity and a lot of different viewpoints that you don’t normally hear,” Gay said. People wanting to attend the con ference must register first. Pre-regis tration begins at 8:30 a.m. on both days. Gay said that she recommends everyone attend the conference to get some perspective on women in histo ry and how that affects society today. “I hope that people walk away with a greater understanding of women’s roles historically and the context of those roles,” she said. check out more news on: AOL executive says industry can ensure competition itself WASHINGTON (AP) - A year after urging government action to ensure competition on high-speed Internet lines, America Online execu tive Steve Case told senators Thursday he believed the industry, including a combined AOL-Time Warner, could do the job itself. In the second Capitol Hill hearing this week about the company’s $133 billion merger, Case said he remains committed to giving consumers a choice of providers for the next gen eration of super-fast Web connec tions. He said that fact is unchanged by his plan to acquire Time Warner, which gives AOL a network of high speed cable pipes to deliver Internet service. Last year, AOL pressed the same committee to ensure other cable oper ators offering Internet service would open their lines to competing providers. The Federal Communications Commission and lawmakers chose not to step in, and in the meantime the market has started to address those issues, Case said. AOL and Time Warner promised this week to open up cable television lines to other Internet service providers. Some senators questioned Thursday whether that pledge would hold without any binding agreement. “You could make a determination to change it,” said Sen. Richard Bryan, D-Nev. Giuliani says latest police controversy different NEW YORK (AP) - The morning after an undercover officer shot a man to death in the Bronx neighborhood where Amadou Diallo was killed, Mayor Rudolph Giuliani on Thursday called it a completely different situation, even though both cases involved unarmed victims. Authorities described the man who was shot Wednesday night, Malcolm Ferguson, as a career criminal with arrests for robbery, burglary, heroin traf ficking, gun possession and resisting arrest. Diallo had no record. At the time of Ferguson’s death, he was on parole for a heroin-selling con viction. “He’d been arrested several times while on parole but somehow was never put back in prison, which is where peo ple who violate parole should go,” Giuliani said. Ferguson also fled after being stopped by officers, police said. “They had their shields out, and they, in fact, said, ‘Police officers, don’t move,”’ Police Commissioner Howard Safir said. At that point, Ferguson ran, and Officer Louis Rivera, a four-year veter an, gave chase. “It appears that at some point a struggle took place, and the police offi cer’s gun went off,” Giuliani said. “We don’t know if it was accidental or inten tional - intentional meaning as part of the struggle in protecting his life.” Police said they found several envelopes of heroin on Ferguson’s body. Ferguson’s mother, Juanita Young, said that her son had problems but was moving forward with his life. “We were straightening him out. He was not a bad kid,” Young told WCBS TV “What they say about him is a lie. It’s a stone, bare-faced lie. They abused Chris Hondros/Newsmakers NEW YORK CITY Police Commissioner Howard Safir listens Thursday as Mayor Rudolph Giuliani speaks to 1,500 new NYPD recruits at Queens College in New York. Giuliani’s address comes amid brutality controversies involving the police force. him, and they killed him.” The Ferguson shooting, which brought about 100 angry protesters to the neighborhood Wednesday night, came at a particularly tense time in police-community relations. I^ast week, an Albany jury acquitted four white undercover officers for firing 41 times at Diallo in the vestibule of his Bronx apartment building, and a Brooklyn jury is considering the fate of three officers charged with concealing the police torture of Abner Louima. On Thursday, the Rev. A1 Sharpton and Diallo’s parents met with Justice Department officials in Washington to try to persuade the federal government to pursue civil rights chaises against the four officers. During the meeting, protesters marched outside to demand federal action. And a nationwide Harris Poll released Thursday found that 76 percent of black Americans and 45 percent of whites believe police brutality against minorities is relatively common. The Bronx district attorney’s office is investigating the latest police shoot ing. Club 815 O Street 2 476-8802 Dance Floors with The Music You Want to Hear. Salsa Techno Club Mix e Hip Hop Merengue House Cumbia High Energy Ranchera Raggae WED FRI SAT -18 and Over Must Have I.D. Every Thursday, Friday and Saturday night 11:00 p.m. to 3:00 a.m. Must present NU student ID HOW TO USE MU OM WHEELS: 1) Call 475-RIDE. 2) Give your name, pick-up location and exact home address. 3) Wait at pick-up location. Be watching for yoUr taxi! 4) Show your NU student ID to the taxi driver. Your NU student ID is required! 5) Tips are appreciated! - \ ' 1 * * Questions? Comments? Suggestions? E-mail NU on Wheels at: nuonwheels@unl.edu or call 472-7440 J^iU A program of Project CARE »nd lh* Uniwreity H«Hh !|lj^ C*n». 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