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DN Alumni Articles

100 Years of Alumni Photos

Many Daily Nebraskan staff members became "family" after working many hours together. Here are some of the "family members" over the past century.. Click here to view the staffs from the 1910s 1920s Staff 1930s Staff 1940 Staff 1941 Staff 1942 Staff 1943 Staff 1944 Staff 1945 Staff 1946 Staff 1947 Staff 1948 Staff 1949 Staff 1950 Staff 1951 Staff 1952 Staff 1953 Staff 1954 Staff 1955 Staff 1956 Staff 1957 Staff 1958 Staff 1959 Staff 1960 Staff 1961 Staff 1962 Staff 1963 Staff 1964 Staff 1965 Staff 1966 Staff 1967 Staff 1968 Staff 1969 Staff 1970 Staff 1971 Staff 1972 Staff 1976 Staff 1977 Staff 1978 Staff 1979 Staff 1980 Staff 1982 Staff 1983 Staff 1984 Staff 1985 Staff 1986 Staff 1988 Staff 1989 Staff 1990 Staff 1991 Staff 1992 Staff 1993 Staff 1994 Staff 1995 Staff 1996 Staff 1997 Staff 1998 Staff 1999 Staff 2000 Staff 2001 Staff 2002 Staff  2003 Staff 2004 Staff 2005 Staff If you want copies of these on a CD-ROM, send $15 to the Daily Nebraskan, PO Box 880448, Lincoln, NE 68588-0448.

Daily Nebraskan & Cornhusker Yearbook Alumni Directory

To add or modify an e-mail or name of a former Daily Nebraskan or Cornhusker Yearbook staff member, contact dshattil@dailynebraskan.com. To add your comments for everyone to see, select the feedback button on the bottom of the list. Grad yr., First, Birth name, Last name, e-mail 1933 Katharine Howard Leslie kaleslie@earthlink.

Two DN alums celebrate 20th year together

Heidi Ore walked into work on Valentine's Day 1986 and was met by giggling coworkers. She tried to figure out why everyone in the Daily Nebraskan advertising office was staring at her. Then one coworker piped up: "Have you read the paper yet today?" Confused, Ore picked up a copy of the Daily Nebraskan and scanned it for anything out of the ordinary.

1983-'84 DN Staff Holds Reunion

Will get together again

By

    1983-'84 Editor Larry Sparks and Ad Manager Tracy Beavers hosted 21 DN alumni at a reunion Labor Day weekend, 2005.     Both Sparks and Beavers pledged to host another reunion and to not wait another 22 years.

Past UNL issues echoed four decades later

By DAKARAI I. AARONS

Web editor's note: This is one of three stories focusing on past presidents of the Association of Students of the University of Nebraska. Find out where they are now and more. It was a different era at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln when Don Burt was president of the Student Council during the 1962-1963 school year.

Thirty years later, ex-ASUN president still utilizes experiences

By AMBER BROZEK

Web editor's note: This is one of three stories focusing on past presidents of the Association of Students of the University of Nebraska. Find out where they are now and more. Thirty years ago Ann Henry became the first woman president of the Association of Students of the University of Nebraska.

Ivy Days echo from UNL's past

By Suzanna Adam

  The scent of lilac blossoms fills the air and bird songs return as the University of Nebraska-Lincoln campus enters yet another spring, just the way it always has - perhaps. Though many traditions core to the university have remained unchanged for the past 40 years, some traditions that were once staples of UNL life have fallen between the cracks of wars, budget cuts and possibly just the changing times.

Students enjoyed experimental Centennial college

By Rachael Seravalli

  All that's left of the Centennial Educational Program is what former students of the now defunct program can see on their transcripts. Gene Harding, retired journalism professor at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and chief professor of the program, recently found out that files for each student who participated in the experimental program are no longer kept by UNL.

Swanson retiring after 39 years at UNL

By JENNA JOHNSON / Daily Nebraskan

He stands in the Nebraska Union Plaza, a mass of student energy swirling around him. He smiles for the camera, squinting as the bright sun hits his eyes, chatting about his retirement plans and wondering out loud how this crazy photo will turn out. “I’ve never been photographed from this angle before,” he said.

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