The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 02, 1983, Page Page 2, Image 2

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    Daily Nebraskan
Friday, September 2, 1G33
MMM KB
BUB
SE3-GC3
Construction. . .
Extravagance
N., J. exceeding reasonable limits,
2. lavishness, 3. Ted & Wally's
Premium Ice Cream.
Premium Ice Cream
6)
Coming Soon
312 North 12th
(just south of the Temple Building)
Continued firon Pass 1
Sieckmeyer said that the
transportation department
met the Lancaster County .
SherrLTs Department end
the Lincoln police about
traffic problems related
to UNL campus activities.
A press release contain
ing suggestions for travel
and alternate routes will
be released today.
StateF&ftMartagerHenry
Brandt said he doesnt
expect many prcemsfrom
the road construction. He
said most roads can still
be traveled easily.
For those motorists who
are wary of parking prob
lems, Brandt suggested
parking in outlying aieas
and using the shuttle ser
vice to the fair. Shuttles
GOKART
FUN
1A
r
ft.
OPEN EVERY
EVENING
6-10 PM
Sat & Sua
1-10 PM
KART & PUTT
12 mik east of 10
Waverfy Exit
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Cv3itj AvailrisSo Yfoipsjrglli
'JEWELERS
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Guci!:!3 Co hc!p
on ell yon? Srcc!i
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1-1- I
JEWELERS
CO.INER OF 13th 2. P
will run from Holmes Lake
and Southeast Commun
ity College and from many
other parking lots around
the fairgrounds.
Brandt recommended
travelers from the north
or the west use Interstate
0 to Highway 77 to the
27th street gate, or 1-80
directly to the 14th Street
gate. Travelers from the
south are urged to take
27th Street or 10th Street
to the 14th Street gate, or
27th Street to the 27th
Street gate.
With the State Fair, the
first Nebraska home foot
ball game and the John
Denver concert all in the
same weekend, the UNL
Police will be kept busy.
Lt John Burke, parking
administrator for the UNL
Police, said that the main
problem is to guide
everyone into the right
parking areas.
Burkes&M drivers should
use common sense, leave
about an hour early and
have alternative routes
ready.
It's going to be a mess,"
he said.
THANK YOU
FOR CARING)
GIVE BLOOD
few
American
Red Cross
DrunJcen driving
a riskier business
Driving between visits to local pubs Is more
dangerous now than in past years, according
to new figures released by the Lincoln Council
on Alcoholism and Drugs.
Figures for 1983 indicate that the risk of
being Involved in an accident after drinking
alcohol remains relatively high, but that added
danger lies in the increased chance of arrest
for driving under the influence of alcohoL
A total of 050 people were Jailed for driving
while intoxicated during the first half of 1SS3,
compared with 009 during the same period
last year, the council's statistics said.
Richard Jochem, executive director of the
council, said alcohol is the drug of choice.'1
People from 19 to 24 years of age are more
mobile than past generations, Jochem said, so
much of their recreation involves driving from
place to place. Many young people drive
between bars, and this results in an increase in
the number of arrests.
Jochem said people in the 19- to 24-year-old
age group are arrested for DWI more often
than those in any other group. Statistics show
that more than 44 percent of those arrested
for DWI are in that age group.
Lincoln Police Chief Dean Leitner said his
department has maintained a high degree of
enforcement for DWI. That enforcement is
emphasized when police officers are trained,
he said, but no special programs or details
have been created to crack down on drunken
driving.
The highest number of arrests occur
between midnight and 2 a.m. Bars are
responsible for refusing service to patrons
before they become extremely intoxicated,
Leitner said, although the intoxication level fa
often difficult to determine.
An increase in the use of hard drugs also has
occurred, Leitner said. While marijuana is still
the most commonly used drug, cocaine use has
increased in the Lincoln area
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bwer level Douas Ip
204 N. 13th
Moa-FA9t3O90O Sat 930300
Ons coupon per person per visit
Expires Sept. 10, 1933
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fc ..,,.;v-. itJk am m u mw' u iLm yy
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Naiv
Recdndllzonsd
Ussd Factory Seconds Abandoned
Dcsk $20
Lamps $3
Sofa S3S .
Stereos $50
Dressers $45 "
Dinettes $20
Cockcsses $15
DukE2ds$50
Sofa deeper $20
Rcffi-erstcn $50
Cars and Stocls $50
Oisst cf Drawers $20
OKrrDisnd Chdrs $3
V;cn and Drkrs $53
CcbrtndB&WTV,s$20
Tvi'ia tzi rteIr $25
1CC3'i cf Vlzumm
Prfew era sterling priest end vti'A
vsrf with Uwriory
10 Discount
to UNL students and facully
noiv CI Sept 1
OPEN 10am to 7 pm
7 days
4333.N6tol-
next to Itevcloxk ?czt QZz2
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