Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 1, 1988)
OFFICE OF CAMPUS RECREATION PRESENTS: JANUARY 8-13, 1989 KEYSTONE COPPER MOUNTAIN VAIL BRECKENRIDGE ARAPAHOE BASIN $195.00 * '; AT THE OFFICE OF CAMPUS RECREATION, 1740 VINE DEADLINE: NOVEMBER 22,1988 SIZE LIMIT: 20 PARTICIPANTS MORE INFO: BILL GOA OR LINDA CAPOCCIA 472-3467 TMP SHZE ns LnMHTEIB, SnGN UP NOW I,..W,,T = CONDOMINIUMS Jgf? INCLUDE: j|P FIREPLACES MICROWAVE OVENS I BALCONIES flip DISHWASHERS SKI STORAGE ggll SWIMMING POOLS jjlgj§ WHIRLPOOLS RACQUETBALL GAME ROOMS ^71 Fall Session-November 8,10,13-17,22 7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. University Health Center 15th & U Streets, Lower Level Registration Fees: $30.00 Advanced registration requested Phone now! For More Information 472-7440 Community Health Department University Health Center 1 ISaoe up to $75 on your Nebraska College Ring through Herff Jones. I Mg HERFF JONES fgf... 9 tradition of axcoHonca Your Herff Jones representative will be in the University Bookstore, Friday, Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday, October28,31 & November 1 & 2, "... from 8:30 am to 4 pm. ssT^^J STUDENT SPECIAL! 3 6 WEEKS — ONLY $99| FOR NUTRI/SYSTEM®SERVICES* vl To get those pounds off before the holiday J] season call us for a free consultation! li Meadow Lane HOURS: \| Shopping Center Mon.-Thurs. 9-7 '1 70th and Vine Friday 9-5 Jl 467-3555 Saturday 9-1 \% 'Special offer does not include the cost of NUTRI/SYSTEM foods and cannot be combined with [j other offers. As people vary, so does their rate of weight loss Valid only with the purchase of a w new program at a participating center. One discount per person li ifijilTTn ii -■g^irl^>~d8Sr'— Bush calls ‘L-word use a miracle The Republican ticket of George Bush and Dan Quayle snickered Monday at Michael Dukakis' late campaign declaration of liberalism in the race for the While House. Dukakis was running as heir to a great Demo cratic tradition of “caring govern ment” as lie struggled to gain ground. ‘‘Miracle of miracles,” taunted Bush, who has waged a campaign long effort to depict Dukakis as a liberal outside the mainstream. Quayle said lie was glad the Massa chusetts governor had resolved his political “identity crisis.” Dukakis invoked the names of Roosevelt, Truman and John F. Ken nedy as he campaigned in California, saying those Democrats, stood for “caring government and caring politi cal leadership. That’s the kind of president 1 want to be.” Public polls continued to show Bush-Quaylc. the solid leaders in the race over Dukakis and running mate Lloyd Bcntscn, with one week and one day to go to judgment day. Democrats said their own private surveys showed late gains for their side, but Bush advisers said their man was leading in virtually all the large stales that Dukakis would need to carry to forge an upset. A survey in Missouri gave Bush a 14-poinl mar gin. Bush and Dukakis threw them selves into the frenzied final week of campaigning while carpenters were at work outside the Capitol in Wash ington, erecting the inaugural stand where one of the would-be presidents will stand on Jan. 20 and take the oath of office. The battle of television commer cials entered their latest phase, as well. Dukakis charged the Republicans with “running for the highest office in the land by waging the lowest level campaign in modem history” in a five-minute network commercial to be aired Tuesday night. In a bid to steal one of Bush’s most memorable campaign lines, he said his values_ not the vice president’s — would make America “a kinder, gentler nation.” Bush’s latest commercials included one depicting Dukakis as an incorri gible tax raiser, saying he increased levies on interest, dividends, meals, corporate, payroll and state income and had signed a sales tax on items “never taxable before.” “And now he wants to do for Amer ica what he’s done for Massachu setts,” says a narrator. “American taxpayers can’t afford that risk" • i . • NeSrSskan Editor Curt Wunw 473-1760 Managing Editor Diana Johnson Assoc. News Editors Jane Klrt Lea Rood Editorial Page Editor Mika Hailtay Wire Editor Bob Nalaon Copy Desk Editor Chuck Green Sports Editor Slava Sipple Arts & Entertain ment Editor Mlctd Haller Diversions Editor Joeth Zucco Graphics Editor Tim Hartmann Photo Chief Eric Gregory Asst. Photo Chief David Fanlaaon The Daily Nebraskan(USPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board, Ne braska Unton 34, 1400 R St., Lincoln, NE (except holidays), weekdays durinf the school year. Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1763 between 9 a m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. The public also has access to the Publications Board For information, contact Tom Macy, 475 9868. Subscription price is $45 for one year. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 34,1400 R St .Lincoln, NE 68588 0448. Second-class postage paid at Lincoln, NE ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1988 DAILY NEBRASKAN Israelis to vote in elections JERUSALEM — Israelis vole today in an election lied to 11 months of violence that has cost the lives of more than 300 Palestinians and 10 Jews, including a rabbi’s daughter and her ihree children killed in a weekend attack. Sunday’s firebomb attack on a bus that killed 27-year-old schoolteacher Rachel Weiss and her children was expected to boost the chances of Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir of the conservative Likud bloc, who advo cates tougher measures against the Arab uprising in the occupied lands. “There’s no question it will help Likud,’’ said Daniel Etazar, a political analyst of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs. “For most voters, this will only reconfirm their beliefs, but for those voters sitting on the fence something like this could push them off to the right.” Zeev Eitan, a political analyst at Tel Aviv University’s Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies, said: “In this election, that could be the difference between a clear victory by one party or a tie.” Polls taken before the attack and published Monday in the newspaper Maariv either gave Likud the edge or indicated a dead heat similar to the one that forced Likud and the center left Labor Party into a “national unity” coalition in 1984. mmmmmBSmSmSSSSmmmmm 1 I The UNL School of Music and The UNL Departmen t I A Musical Thriller Music and Lyri :s by Stephen Sondheim Book by Hugh Wheeler From an Adaptation by Christopher Bond Originally Directed by Harold Prince Originally Produced on Broadway by Richard Barr, Charles Woodward, Robert Fryer, Mary Lea Johnson, Martin Richards in Association with Dean and Judy Manos Friday Saturday Sunday November 4, 5,6 7:30 pm / Tickets: $10, $8 S UNL Students ' and Senior Citizens All Tickets 1/2 price ) k mp hum 1—1—1 For Tickets Call 472-3375 (Monday - Friday, 11-5 pm)