Inside tccioaj II: The Husers bard tfir limit on thdr trip to Lsvrsnce ... .p. 6 mcnd, nccnibff 1, 1973 vol.1G9 rco.34 Ifocoln, mbnzka n o 1 rnn w sLJ DyPsdaDitJnri In 1st minute bids for votes, nsmy candidates knocked on doors and shock hands this weekend and will continue to do so todry. Republican vice presidential candidate Robert Dole wa stop at Omahas Eppley Airfield at 11:30 ajn. Monday, according to Frzn Vestner, a volunteer for Republican Senate candidate Rep. John Y. McCcHister. McCbZister is slated to meet with Dole during the 30 minute stop before Dele goes to Council E'uffs. McCoHisier is scheduled to canvass at Lincoln Gateway Shopping Center at 2 p jn. today. McCcIIister attended a spaghetti dinner at St. Ann's Catholic Church in Omaha Saturday night, Vcstner siad. He attended the dedication of Gen. George Crook's house in Omaha and was at the Crossroads and Vestroads Shopping Centers Svzidzy afternoon. CIcsc race Although the race is close, Vestner said, McCoHister is confident and will continue to meet with voters before the election. , UlcCoHisterother Republican candidates and campaign workers will watch election returns at Omaha's Holiday Inn at 3321 S. 72nd St. Campaign volunteers are busy phoning and urging "registered voters to Tuesday's polls. Both major parties have phone banks in Lincoln and Omaha. . Yvonne Ilardesty, a volunteer at Lancaster County Democratic Headquarters, said Democrat campaigners are "doing basically the same things that we have been doing." A3 arable plscses She said Democratic party volunteers were .using all available phones to call voters. Office workers for First District House of Representa tives candidate Pauline Anderson started phoning Democrats Friday and other Democratic candidates office workers began Saturday, according to Diane Schimek, Anderson's campaign coordinator. "If we can get Democrats to the polls, we can win,"- Schimek said. Anderson, her husband AH) in, and me of the Young Democrats canvassed prectKts in western Lincoln Saturday, Schimek said. Lancaster County Democratic candidates and workers will watch the pell results at Southwood Community Center, 5CC0 Tipperary Trail Second District Congressional candidate Lee Terry continues to go from door to door in many precincts, according to Willie Vatters, Terry's Republican campaign youth director. Terry attended church and social functions this weekend, and he spent afternoons and evenings campaign ing at bowling aSeys, Vatters said. Meanwhile candidates for Nebraska's Legislature also ' continue to campan. According to Mrs. Richard Vylie, her son, Ronald Vylie, was canvassing Saturday. Vylie is running for the Legislature in the 29th District. Steve Fowler, 27th District candidate, also said he would canvass Sunday. "Its been a long campaign," Fowler said. y: . ' '"'7- -X j c y : - :::: I -: - V , ' - I i j !:-s. 1 v " - ' . - - t, j i .' jf j , ' I Dofe asmidaims for Rchin visiJsd Phots by Ted Kiril Dels, dster cf Sen. Revert Ds!e, nepL!xan vice presldentH ccminee, . the UNL campus Friday aftsraocn to do a HtSe csmpaslsg far her father. Cy Rlziy Jo Fitzl Kobm Dole stopped at UiNL aay as ' she continued a &!Mwest campaign tour for her fatter, Republican vice presidential candidate Robert Dole. Dole distributed campaign literature and shook hands with UNL students at the Nebraska Union Friday afternoon. At a press conference, she spoke of the cam paign and her father, as well as her own life. . "If Fm reading the students right, they're interested in me as an individual what I'm doing on the campaign, what Fm doing when I'm not campaigning," she said.: "I'm just- an average, run-of-the-mO 22-year-old." Dole's campaign tours have taken her to many tzxuversfties- 1 was a bit apprehensive at first about going to college campuses and campajn icg with my peer group," she said, explain ing that college students often are the most critical and skeptical voters to reach. Several visits have cured her- hesitation, she said. f Ceating the political drum is nothing new to Dole, who hit the campaign trail at age five when her father ran for the US. ' Senate. "If you're any kind of family and interested in your father, you cant sit , home," she sail. Enjoys campaqpsag Dole said she appreciates and enjoys campaigning. "It's hard for people to understand, but this (campaigning) is like a vacation for me." : Dole's campaign tour has swept her through the 15 Midwestern states in the past five weeks. "If I'm effective at all, it's in urging people to take a good hard look at the candidates," she said. "I don't think I can change minds." Dole said she has been stressing the importance of Americans voting." 1 really think things are going to turn around," she said of the President Gerald Ford-Dole ticket. "Those undedded people are gaing to see Ford and Carter and go with the man they trust." She predicted a Republican victory at the polls Tuesday. riins to relax ; After the presidential race is over, Dole said she will stay hi the background and not take a" vocal role in the political world. She plans to return to her Virginia home and take a few weeks to relax. Finding a job will be Dole's next con cern. She was graduated this spring from Virginia Itotytechnic Institute with a bachelors degree in psychology. She said her campaign tours have helped her decide to pursue a career in occupational therapy. Dole said her stay in Lincoln was very : enjoyable. She said she has seen a lot of interested students and it is hard for her to believe the stories about apathetic young voters. TiSlTUOBTi Masters Veek, sponsored by UNL honor societies Mortar Board and Irmcocents, is Vednesday through Friday. The masters, who are 10 UNL alumni, will- speak in classes. The masters are: -M. Anne Campbell of Lincoln, Nebraska commissioner of education. . Campbell, a 1969 NU graduate, is former national president of the American Association of University Women and former NU director of public affairs. She has been named the 1976 Key Nebraska Woman Administrator by the Nebraska Association of Women Administrators. Edwin CoSiss, professor of com munity dentistry and dental clinic co ordinator at the University of Texas at San Antonio. He is a fellow in the American College of Dentists . and a member of the American Academy of Oral Pathology and the American Dental Association. Collins is a 1949 graduate of the NU CoSege of Dentistry. Doris Eby, a senior department head of food and nutrition at Better Homes and Gardens Publishing Group in Des Moines. Eby, a 1957 UNL graduate, is a member of the American Home EconcmicsAssocb tion and Home Economists in Business. Edward . Foster, Board chairman of Foster-Semtana Co., Western Engineering Co., and Nicholas Industries; Inc., in Omaha. Foster was named 1968 Engineer Innocents sponsor 9 of The Year by the Nebraska Society of Professional - Engineers. The 1923 NU graduate is a fellow of the American Society of CM! Engineers. Roy Proffitt, law professor and director of law school relations at the University of Michigan. Proffitt, a 1940 NU graduate, also has taught law at the Universities of Nebraska and Missouri. He is a former director of the Michigan Institute of Continuing Legal Education. -Gail Rock, New York City freelance film critic and author. A 1961 NU graduate, Rock has worked. for NSC-TV, Vomm's VSezr DsSy, and Ms. KZzgszme. She is the author of four children's bocks based on her Valley childhood, which have all appeared as CBSTV'specials. .. . Thomas Sorensen, general partner of Advest, Co., an investment, brokerage and tanking firm serving the northeastern United States. He formerly served as deputy director of the US. Information Agency and has worked la the Middle East and Europe. He was graduated in 1947. David Thomas, senior vice president of finance at Dunn and Bradstreet, Co. Inc., New York City. The 1949 NU graduate formerly served as comptroller for McCaU Corp. and the General Dynamics Corp. William Toraek, agriculture economics professor at Cornell University. Tomek, a 1947 NU graduate, 'teaches graduate fevel agricultural marketing and econo- metrics courses at Cornell. He co-authored a book on agriculture economics and is editor of the American Journal of Agri ctdimdEcommfcs. - Jan Veir, creative director of Meffcrd Veir, Inc., an advertising agency in Denver and Albuquerque. Veir was the first woman president of the Denver Advertis ing Foundation and founder of Fantana Media Corp., an FM radio company where she serves as chairman of the board of directors. Weir is a 1945 graduate. , jhi(fcaW!ft.''WJ-s- t :t' K rs V l&sby led iCfc To Cd cut why tlis ycurg lady is smrg sec pc s-