The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 02, 1988, Page 2, Image 2

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    Need A Lawyer?
ASUN Student Legal
Services Center offers
free legal advice and I
representation to /
UNL Students. /
For an appointment call 472-3350 ^
or stop by Room 335 Student Union
KIWANIS 31st ANNUAL
te resnvai
Thurs., Nov. 3rd at
Pershing Auditorium
6:30 A.M. to 8 PM.
CONTRIBUTION
$2.50
Children Under 6 /
FREE (,
Tickets avertable from Kiwanis \
Club members or at the door. '
Net Proceede To Youth Program*
is the topic of the second Steinhart Lecture
Michael L. Sachs
presents a free lecture
7 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 2nd
in the Great Plains Room
of the East Campus Union
High turnout in pivotal Israeli Election
JERUSALEM — An exit poll
Tuesday night indicated the right
wing Likud bloc has the best chance
of gaming control after an election
fought on the issues of rebellion in the
occupied lands and peace with the
Arabs.
For the deeply divided nation of
4.4 million, whose 40-year history is
a calendar of war and violence
Tucsday ’ s election was a crossroad in
the future of the West Bank and Gaza
Strip, which Israel captured from
Jordan and Egypt 21 years ago.
Israel television said its poll was
based, on interviews with about
20,000 voters at 46 polling stations.
It said results indicated Likud, led
by Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir,
and the center-left Labor Party of
Foreign Minister Shimon I%res
would win 40 seats each, but Likud
would have the edge in forming a
coalition with small religious and
nationalist parties.
In seats, the TV poll predicted the
right would have 62 of the 120 in the
Knesset, or parliament, and the left
would get 58. The interviews were
conducted two hours before the polls
closed at 10 p.m. (3 p.m. EST).
Independent pollster Hanoch
Smith also said the exit poll showed
Shamir “definitely in a better posi
tion.”
Finance Minister Moshe Nissim
proclaimed at Likud headquarters in
Tel Aviv: “Yitzhak Shamir will form
the next government.” If the exit poll
“reflects the reality, it’s clear that
Labor has no coalition to block the
Likud,” Nissim said.
Throngs of Israelis voted in an
atmosphere of violence cieated by the
11-month-old Palestinian rebellion
coupled with a sudden outburst of
attacks on Jewish civilians.
Politicians from both lei tana ngnt
said the attacks on civilians in recent
days would help Likud, which wants
to keep the occupied lands, and hurt
Labor, which is willing to return some
territory.
About 80 percent of the 2.9 million
eligible voters turned out, reflecting
the galvanizing effect of the rebel
lion, which has cost the lives of 10
Israelis and more than 300 Palestini
ans since it began Dec. 8,1987.
A huge force of 13,000 police and
other security personnel protected the
4,800 voting stations. The army
sealed off the occupied territories,
where the 1.5 million Palestinian
residents conducted a general strike.
No significant results were ex
pected until Wednesday and a vote as
close as predicted could mean a wait
of days, at least, to learn whether
either major party could form a coali
tion.
Bush campaigns like president-to-be
George Bush campaigned like a
president-tobe Tuesday, saying he
hoped for a meeting with Soviet
Leader Mikhail Gorbachev soon after
moving into the Oval Office. Demo
crat Michael Dukakis said “Made in
America” was the only label he cared
about as he bid for union support
The polls one week before Elec
tion Day showed Bush a solid leader,
and the contrast in campaign styles
between the front-runner and the
underdog couldn’t have been plainer.
rhe vice president situck an
above-the-fray pose in a speech at the
University of Notre Dame, saying he
wanted to meet Gorbachev for a
“serious and direct examination” of
superpower relations.
Dukakis was in the political
trenches, blending his appeal for blue
collar support with an attack on al
leged Republican influence peddling.
His aides said their private polls
pointed to a race that was narrowing.
Privately, some Democrats expressed
aouDts, wniie aul saia us survey 01
California showed Bush a leader by
seven points in the nation’s biggest
state.
President Reagan was on the road
for the benefit of Bush and other
Republicans, ripping into Dukakis for
describing himself as a liberal in the
mold of Roosevelt and Truman.
Dukakis is no “Harry Truman and
he’s no FDR,” the outgoing president
said.
■ ■■■
p
■
Lori Sippet
University of Nebraska •
First Team Softball •
Special Education Major •
3.75 GPA •
Senior •
Hometown:
Stratford, Ontario, Canada •
GTE Academic All-American
of the Year-University
Division •
1
Margie Ogrodowicz
University of Nebraska •
Second Team Softball •
Criminal Justice Major •
3.55 GPA •
Senior •
Hometown: Willis, TX •
Congratulations to the GTE Academic All-Americans.®
They are the leaders of the team. But what makes them even more special is their
outstanding academic records. They are the GTE Academic All-Americans, selected by
the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) for being high achievers—
in the game as well as the classroom. GTE is proud to be the official sponsor of this
36-year-old program and congratulates these student-athletes on their Academic
All-American achievements.
GTE Acadcmk: All-Amerka Team AfriLA
SELECTED BY CoSIDA WIBSlfEl#
! jf*
lid j. * Acodxwc Al Armnco a o fqstfd wdh <h» U.S. rtaOnt and TrodenwrV Officw
NdSraskart
Editor Curt Wagner Night News Editor Amy Edwards
472-17M Asst. Night News
Managing Editor Diana Johnson Editor\ibrarian Anne Mohr!
Assoc. News Editors Jane Hlrt Art Directors John Bruce
Lee Rood Andy Manhert
Editorial Page Editor Mike Rellley General Manager Dan Shettil
The Daily NebraskanJUSPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Boar d. Ne
braska Union 34.1400 R St., Lincoln, NE (except holidays): weekdays during the schoo1
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, 4759868.
Subscription price Is $45 tor 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 IBM DAILY NEBRASKAN
The UNL School of Music and The UNL Department
of Theatre & Dance Present
-
The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
A Musical Thriller
Music and Lyrii 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 j
For Tickets Call 472-3375 (Monday -Friday, 11-5 pm)