I Friday September 8,2000 Volume 100 Issue 15 dailyneb.com Since 1901 ZM/yNebraskan Columnists Emfly Moran and Yasmin McEwen explore the choice of love over religion In Opinion/4 Notre Dame, Huskers meet for first time in 27 years In SportsWeekend/10 The bodacious bard better known as Shakespeare takes a groovealicious turn this weekend In Arts/8 Not all answer when opportunities to leave UNL knock Editor’s Note: With UNL in a state of flux because of vacant posts in its senior administration, the Daily Nebraskan this week exam ines those vacancies and their effects. BY VERONICA DAEHN If Irv Omtvedt had wanted to leave the University of Nebraska Lincoln, he could have. Throughout his 25-year tenure at UNL, the former vice chancellor for the Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources had offers from other schools will ing to pay him more money. But unlike so many other administrators tempted by a high er salary and more benefits these days, Omtvedt stayed at UNL because of the chances he was given to excel. "I had several opportunities to leave,” Omtvedt said. “The University of Nebraska treated me very well in terms of giving me professional growth opportuni ties throughout my career.” The same is true for other administrators at UNL Like Omtvedt, James Griesen, vice chancellor for student affairs, said he has had no desire to leave the university. Griesen has been at UNL for 16 years and said he loves what he is doing. "I have a very challenging and rewarding job right here,” Griesen said. “So why move?” Griesen came to Nebraska from Michigan in 1978 when he took a position as vice chancellor for academic affairs at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. In 1984, he moved to UNL as associate vice chancellor for aca demic affairs and soon after became interim vice chancellor for student affairs. Griesen liked the student affairs position at UNL so well that he has been there ever since, despite offers from other schools. Griesen said two Big 10 insti tutions had aggressively recruited him since he’d been at UNL. “I thought about (leaving),” he said. "But I like where I’m at” Griesen said he enjoys being an administrator and wouldn’t change anything about his job at the university. Cecil Steward, retired dean of architecture, agreed that UNL was a good place to grow. Steward, who retired in January, said he decided early on in his 27 years at the university that it was the right place for him to devote his talents. But Steward, too, was approached by other schools dur ing the middle of his career at UNL. He stayed in Nebraska because it was a healthy program, he said. “There was a sense of progress here that I could see and feel,” he said. "I had no reason to go any where else." Steward said the university’s architecture program had a good