News Digests*^ Little debate drama apparently favored Bush LOS ANGELES — Presidential rivals George Bush and Michael Dukakis Thursday night gave Ameri can voters a review of familiar themes, providing little drama in a debate that apparently went the Re publican way. Drama was not what Bush needed to protect his lead in the polls; it was Dukakis who needed a high voltage peiformance to propel his Demo cratic candidacy. It never happened. As in their first debate, the Repub lican vice president was more ani mated and smiled more easily than did his Democratic rival, a fact that polls suggested tilted vie wers his way during their Sept. 25 confrontation. ABC’s instant poll following this second televised confrontation indi cated a lopsided preference for Bush, and an Associated Press panel of debate experts likewise delivered a verdict for the Republican. The first time around the same judges decided for Dukakis. In a sense, it was clear the two candidates had learned from the first debate that they would be judged on two levels, not only on what they said but how they said it, on such intan gible factors as body language. Once the debate began, the candi dates were on familiar terrain. “Liberal, liberal, liberal,” was Bush ’ s favorite way of referring to his Democratic rival. “If I had a dollar, George, for every time you used that label, I’d qualify for one of those tax breaks for the rich that you want to give away,” said Dukakis, gelling off one of his best lines of the evening. The first question to Dukakis con cerned his opposition to the death penalty and he quickly shifted the subject to drugs and made his familiar pledge to wage “a real war and not a phony war against drugs.” And, of course, the debate no sooner ended than the partisans of both candidates swarmed into the press room to declare their favorite the winner and to claim the “liability factor,” about which much was made after the first debate. Democratic Sen. Alan Cranston of California said Dukakis “overcame, the impression some people have had that he’s too cold— He’s not a cold guy, he’s a warm guy.” Former deputy Treasury secretary Richard Darman, who played the role of Dukakis during Bush debate prepa rations, said that on the question of likability, he thought Dukakis “didn’t help himself tonight, probably that he hurt himself a liule bit.” President signs major welfare overhaul WASHINGTON — President Reagan on Thursday signed the first major overhaul of the nation’s wel fare system since it was created in the Great Depression. He said the new law is a ‘message of hope” to those mired in a life of dependency and destitution. But that message to welfare recipi ents, said the president, also contains a demand from the citizens who pay the bills: “That you will do your share in taking responsibility for your life and for the lives of the children you bring into this world.” Reagan said the best part of the new welfare plan is that it actually poses “an alternative to life on wel fare.” “For too long the federal govern ment, with the best of intentions, has usurped the responsibility Lhal appro priately lies with parents,” said Re agan at the signing ceremony in the Rose Garden. “In so doing, it has reinforced dependency and separated welfare recipients from the main stream of society.” The legislation contains the most sweeping revision of the nation’s principal welfare program — Aid to Families with Dependent Children — since it was created in 1935. Under the agreement reached after two years of legislative struggle, the government has pledged to provide training and support systems to desti tute parents if they take steps to be come independent. Each state must operate a Jobs Opportunities and Basic Skills (JOBS) program to educate, train and find employment for the AFDC re cipients. Over seven years, states will be entitled to receive $6.8 billion in federal matching funds to pay for employment and training activities. The president touted the measure’s work and education re quirements, as well as its provisions increasing pressure on absentee par ents to pay child support. Also present for the signing was the chief architect of the bill, Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y. ‘‘I’ve been waiting 20 years for this day,” said the exultant senator fol lowing the ceremony. He added thai he hoped its features would take hole fully by the end of the century. Undei the complex piece of legislation, various programs have differing start ing dates. Under the bill, states are required for the First time to offer people on welfare a broad variety of education, training and work programs. Mothers of young children are required to participate. They retain medical coverage for a year after they find a job, and they will be far more likely to get child support payments. For the first time, the federal gov ernment will require all states to pay cash benefits to two-parent welfare families. Only 27 do so now. Starting in 1994, one adult in each I two-parent welfare household must ' participate in a job search and, if it fails, work 16 hours a week in a state organized work activity. A young parent may work instead toward'a high school diploma. All states will be required to pro vide at least some cash benefits to families with unemployed fathers living at home. Non-custodial fathers will face new pressure for child support pay ments, with slates required to identify more of them and automatically with hold payments from their wages. Those most likely to feel the immediate effects of the welfare bill are able-bodied women with children aged 3 and over. They are the prime targets of the new JOBS programs to be developed by each state. Notes show Peary never at North Pole BALTIMORE — Newly un covered notes kept by Robert E. Peary show the explorer claimed to be the first person to reach the North Pole even though he knew he hadn’t come closer than 121 miles, an astronomer and historian says. The new evidence indicates Peary knew exactly how far away he was and turned back when sup plies ran low and warming weather threatened to make the floating ice too dangerous, Dennis Rawlins said in an interview today. Peaty had been under pressure to publicly declare his 1909 expe dition a success, said Rawlins, who uncovered a previously sealed file in the Johns Hopkins University library. “My feeling is his reaction was he had to make the claim because he had published a book in 1907 saying he got close and it didn’t sell at all,’’ Rawlins said. “He had the task of hoaxing the world while under the harshest spotlight, all the while accusing his archrival (explorer Frederick A. Cook) of faking the very same at tainment. The amazing thing is he had the guts and the intelligence to pull it off.” Rawlins’ findings, published Wednesday in the Washington Post, arc the latest salvo in an 80 year geographical dispute over whether Peary was the first to reach the North Pole, and, if not, whether he knew how far off the mark he had been. The Peary controversy erupted almost immediately after the ex plorer lodged his claim because he did not provide evidence, such as the records of his sextant readings, to show he had been at the pole. A slip of paper with Peary’s sextant readings and other naviga tional calculations, apparently written while he was at his north ernmost point during the expedi lion, was suppressed by Peaiy and then was sealed and placed in the National Archives along with his other papers many years after his death m 1920. In* 1984, Peary’s descendants unsealed the papers, containing mostly numbers that remained undeciphered until Rawlins ob tained them. Peary’s scrawled calculations, understandable only to someone familiar with navigation by the stars, show the explorer came no closer to the pole than 121 miles, according to Rawlins. Despite the cover-up, Rawlins says Peary still discovered the northernmost point of land in the world, Cape Jesup in northern Greenland, and ranks as the great orer. In addition, credited with completing a difficult 400-mile crossing over land through an ob stacle course of drifting ice floes. Illinois students protest campus sexism URBANA, 111. — University of Illinois students, shaken by a series of rapes, are taking steps to protect themselves and to fight the sexism many blame for the attacks, student leaders and school officials say. The attacks around the campus stopped when police identified a sus pect, but students are labeling sexism a factor — a message underscored with a candlelight march and rally Wednesday night “The message at the rally was that sexism is in our society and it is the cause of a lot of things that go wrong — rape, discrimination and women feeling low self-esteem,” Jane Brouwer, president of the Panhellenic Council, said Thursday. The council represents about 3,500 sorority members on the 35,000-studcnt cam pus and helped organize the demon stration. “A lot of people just don’t think about sexism,” Ms. Brouwer said. About, jfJQtStudents demonstrated i Wednesday, carrying candles to draw attention to the role of sexism in the series of assaults that police attribute to a serial rapist. “We have a suspect,” Champaign Detective Gerald Schwcighart said Thursday. “He was identified just before the series of rapes stopped - around Sept. 10.” Police are awaiting results of tests on the suspect’s blood and have made no arrest, Schwcighart said. Investigators believe about nine rapes have been committed by the same man since spring, said Schwcighart. The rally Wednesday united groups as diverse as the Panhcllenic Council, the campus chapter of the NAACP and a political coalition, United Progressives. The aim was to jgMfc the role of sexism in society, fflMrpin-up calen dars and pornography to references to women in casual conversation, par ticipants said “We need a general respect of men and women for each other,” Ms. Brouwer said. “If we are serious, we can make a change.' Jenny Keller, a senior at the school majoring in political science who identified herself as a victim of rape, was one of the speakers at the rally. “We’re not asking for pity... we’re demanding respect... for the strength it takes to go through this experi ence,” said Ms. Keller. “The vast majority of women are raped by friends, relatives, people who live in their dormitories.” Petitions were circulated urging pay equity at the university, more education on the problems of sexism, and more emphasis on ensuring cam pus safety. Partic ipants also condemned cam pus traditions such as panty raids. Jeff Jochinis, president of the Interfratemity Council, acknowl edged the fraternity system has not done a lot to fight sexism. “We need 10 realize the Greek system has always had a problem with sexism,” Jochims said at the rally. “It’s ugly, but it’s a reality.” Mary Ellen O’Shaughnessey, as sistant dean of students, said Thurs day the demonstrators’ concerns are justified. Sexism is not just a campus prob lem, she said, “it is a cultural issue.” Ms. O’Shaughncsscy said her of fice has organized seminars on per sonal safety, and supervised pro grams providing women with whistles to use in sounding the alarm if they feel threatened and van service to avert the need for women to walk home alone from class or work at night. Emergency telephones also have been placed around campus. In addition, Jochims said frater nity members escort women on cam pus so they do not have to walk alone, and are preparing a program to patrol areas where attacks have occurred. Nebraskan Editor Curt Wagner 473-170# Managing Editor Diana Jghnean Assoc News Editor* Jana HM Lao Road Editorial Paga Editor Mtfce RaPey ml CWm B9V PNMQn Copy |>mk Editor Cimoti Qmn Sports Edftor Stava Slppta Arts A Entertatn mont Editor Mtcki HaNer Diversions Editor Jaath Zuooa Sowar Editor Andy PaMack Graphics Editor Tkn Hartmann Photo Ch»f Erie Gregory Asst. 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