Plug Into the World with FREE Netscape Classes Find out what you've been missing on the World Wide Web. The WWW allows more than just black and white text, it offers users interactive graphics, photographs, sounds, movie clips and more. Learn how to access these features using Netscape. You could be missing more than you think. These classes are free and no reserva tions are required. Seats are available on a first come, first served basis. Call 472-9050 if you have any questions. Intro to Netscape Thursday, November 30 10:00 - 1 1:30 a.m. Bancroft Hall, 239 Friday, December 1 3:00-4:30 p.m. Bancroft Hall, 239 k Plug Into the ■ World with FREE ’ Internet Classes Now that you have your computer account on BIGRED, Herbie, UNLCLASS1, and UNLGRAD1, you can discover how to tap into the resources available to you on the internet. These classes are free and no reservations are required. Seats are available on a first come, first served basis. Call 472-9050 if you have any questions. File Manager Tuesday, November 28 10:30 - 12:00 noon Bancroft Hall, 239 Finger/Talk Tuesday, November 28 2:30 - 3:15 p.m. Bancroft Hall, 239 Tuesday, November 28 3:30 - 4:15 p.m. Bancroft Hall, 239 FTP Wednesday, November 29 2:30 - 4:00 p.m. Bancroft Hall, 239 Advanced Email Thursday, November 30 2:30 - 4:00 p.m. Bancroft Hall, 239 Friday, December 1 10:00- 1 1:30 p.m. Bancroft Hall, 239 Hello, my name is Bruegger’s Bagel Bakery. A funny name, we know. What’s it mean? Bagels. Old-fashioned, kettle-boiled bagels. Baked fresh all day. It also means delicious cream cheeses, terrific fresh-ground coffee, fresh bagel sandwiches, and a nice place to take a load off. Come on in. We’re new here. But we’ve got just what it takes to make a name for ourselves. BRUEGGER’S^BAGEL BAKERY The Best Thing Round® 1205 "Q" Street, Lincoln, Nebraska 402-474-6001 11 Bmegger’s Travel Mug ! | 4 with this coupon or not... i I ◄ brueggersTsagel bakery* The Best Tiling Round* • A 1205 "Q" Street, Lincoln, Nebraska 402-474-6001 Noc valid with any other offer • One per custo | ▼▼▼▼▼▼ W ^ ^-W ^'WWW'W^^'WW | \ m . . Beatles go back to backwards LONDON (AP) — Keab era seltaeB ehT. The Beatles are back — backward? Nearly three decades after fans thought Paul was dead, a BBC pro ducer said the three surviving Beatles arc again recording secret messages backward into a song. Simon Clifford said he heard John Lennon say “Turned out nice again,” backward at the end of the Beatles reunion number “Free As A Bird.” Clifford first noticed the phrase while watching the video, which con cludes with a man in 1940s dress mounting a stage and playing a uku lele. The song closes with a ukulele. George Formby, a popular uku lele-playing music hall comedian from England’s north—like the Beatles— used to end his act with the phrase, “Turned out nice again.” Formby died in 1961. “I regard it as being very spooky, almost like a subliminal message to fans,” Clifford told listeners Friday. The Beatles’ use of tapes spooled backward on songs like “Tomorrow Never Knows” (1966) and “Because” (1970) prompted rumors of secret messages. Fans argued over whether what sounded like “I buried Paul” on “Strawberry Fields Forever” (1967) and “Turn me on dead man” on “Revo James Mehsling/DN lution No. 9” (1968) were clues that Paul McCartney had been killed and replaced by a look-alike. Spokesmen for the group or for the recording label EMI could not be reached over the weekend for com ment. pel ‘ Jy Sculptured Nails | 4201 ”0” St. 483-6388 | NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING FOR THE NATIONAL POLLUTANT DISCHARGE ELIMINATION SYSTEM (NPDES) PERMIT FOR ASH GROVE CEMENT PLANT Location: Louisville Public School Gymnasium Time: 7:00PM, Thursday, November 30,1995 History: Ash Grove Cement Plant in Louisville, Nebraska has a pending NPDES permit for discharges into the Platte River. Ash Grove is currently not in compliance with their present NPDES permit The discharges to be discussed are two domestic sewage treatment plants and one discharge from their quarry. Please attend if you are concerned about water quality in the Platte River. Paid for by Eastern Nebraskans Against Chemical Trespass ---- Northwestern College of Chiropractic 2501 West 84th Street Bloomington, MN 55431 1-800-888-4111 Northwestern College of Chiropractic Professional Success Through Clinical Excellence For 53 years. Northwestern College of Chiropractic has been preparing doctors of chiropractic. We have more than 3,000 graduates across the globe who are successful, productive clinical practitioners. Northwestern College of Chiropractic will provide you: • A well-rounded, rigorous education integrating the basic and clinical sciences, diagnosis, X-ray, chiropractic therapeutics and practice management • Clinical education through every step of the curriculum, beginning with hands-on chiropractic technique classes in the first trimester • Limited enrollment, small classes (11:1 student to faculty ratio), individual attention from faculty, and easy access to educational resources • Clinical internships within 35 Minnesota community clinics and five College public clinics • A research center known internationally as a leader in clinically-controlled research trials, which is dedicated to advancing the knowledge of chiropractic • Extensive financial aid resources • Final term, full-time private practice internships in clinics around the world For a personal visit or more detailed information, call a Northwestern Admissions counselor at 1 -800-888-4777. You'll discover the exceptional difference an education at Northwestern can make in your life. Courtesy of Omaha Community Playhouse Dick Boyd, in his 20th year as Ebeneezer Scrooge, and the rest of the cast of “A Christmas Carol” open the holiday season tradition tonight at the Omaha Community Playhouse. Returning cast keeps ‘Carol’ sold-out show By Brian Priesman Staff Reporter In 1976, the curtain rose for the first time on the Omaha Commu nity Playhouse production of “A Christmas Carol.” Now, 20 years and 500 curtain calls later, the Play house is cel ebrating the an niversary of the* holiday produc tion that has become a holiday tra dition to thousands of Midwestern ers. And Dick Boyd has been there every single night for all 20 years: He hasn’t missed a performance as the crotchety old miser, Ebeneezer Scrooge. Boyd, 72, is the very picture of Scrooge — his weathered face and his scowling voice making Scrooge and “A Christmas Carol” a. sell-out every year. But Boyd isn’t the only veteran in “A Christmas Carol.” Marianne Young appears as Mrs. Cratchit for her 19th year; Bob Snipp as the giant Ghost of Christmas Present for his 20th year; A1 DiMauro as Jacob Marley for his 15th year; Connie Wilkins as Nell, the de lightful street vendor for her 17th year; and Cindy Borchman, who has literally grown up with the show, in her 17th year. The company is large, with 28 adults, 15 children and 20 stage crew members a night. But not much has changed in 20 years. The story remains the same as Scrooge goes from skinflint to family man as his life is played out before his eyes. John J. Bennett’s musical score also has remained constant under Jonathan D. Cole’s and Jim Boggess’ musical direction, and Joanne Cady’s dances have been consistent each year as well. And under the direction of Charles Jones, “A Christmas Carol” remains fresh and new. One of the high points for audi ences arc the special effects, de signed by James Othuse. A flying bed, falling snow, a ghost rising through the floor and the 15-foot Specter of Christmas Yet to Come are just some of the effects created to dazzle the audience. “A Christmas Carol” opens to night, running Tuesdays to Sun days through Dec. 22 at the Omaha Community Playhouse, 6915 Cass St., in Omaha. Ticket information is available from the box office at 553-0800. j http://www.unl.edu/DailyWeb/!