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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 26, 1996)
BIG 12 ^kCO Daily Nebraskan Preview October 4 Take a Bite of Bliss. Authentic New York Style Bigger, Better Bagels. ..... Grand Opening Giveaway! 13th & Q Street Three Free Bagels . mni\if. is< j<;. .!; }< »; jcV No purchase required Choice of 15 kinds Toppings not induded Limit 1 coupon per visit. Expires Nov. 1, 1996 13th & Q • 438-0088 NEW YORK BAGEL at 3th & R) (Formerly Denny's open 8 A.M. CLOSEST TO THE STADIUM Indoor/Outdoor Seating Runza* will be serving food. TV's Music Provided by the Point Bring in your Student ID for $2.50 Mini-golf, Go-kart, or Bumper Boat Rides! (5 pm to does) 15th & Cornhueker 1 436-7364 B P.O. PEAttS THURSDAY IMUSTT' \ ^WATCH YOUR A Tri SEE nvTT^TTrri FAVORITE NBC INIGHT! srrcoMS 75$ DRAW5*100 3oaDOG5, sex on rj / /yAcr BEACH, MORGAN, tfAUBC O ~ LLUot: SHOTS. &ALL WELLS! UNL students paying less tuition than national average COSTS from page1 not counting room and board, now av erage $2,811 at public four-year col leges and $12,823 at private schools. The average annual cost at two-year schools was about half that amount. The College Board’s annual report states that $50.3 billion in aid was available in 1995-96 from federal, state and school sources-up4 percent from 1994-95 and 75 percent higher than a decade ago. Most of the increase was in the form of loans, however, not in grants. Stu dent and parent loan volume rose 65 percent since the 1992-93 school year and, adjusted for inflation, was 8 per cent higher than in 1994-95. Despite the numbers, John Joyce, an associate director at the College Board’s scholarship service, said higher education remains affordable. “If the family focuses just on the high-priced institutions, it can be ■I--_ downright scary, but a majority of un dergraduates are paying less than $4,000 a year” in tuition and fees, Joyce said. The College Board survey said only 4.3 percent of undergraduates at four year schools pay $20,000 or more a year in tuition and fees, and many of these are getting a hefty financial aid package from the institution. Some schools have cut tuition or promised not to raise it by more than the inflation rate. Muskingum College in New Concord, Ohio, gained atten tion when it slashed tuition by 29 per cent for entering freshman this fall. Bob Massa, dean of enrollment at Baltimore’s Johns Hopkins University, doesn't expect many private schools to follow Muskingum’s lead. Daily Nebraskan senior reporter Erin Schulte contributed to this re port Keeping cost down lM. s tuition and lot’s increase t’roni to this year was only about half of the national average for public four-year college*. SAFE SBC REALUT PAYS! You could win $10,000 in the Second Annual uiescyies wfioorns ana Nicr xx Yiaco contest! It's ba-ack! Here's your second chance to enter the contest that proves safe sex pays off in more ways than one. Here's the deal Shoot a 20-second video on how you'd sdl condoms and safer sex today You can be serious, off-the-wall, or fall-down funny. JilS knock our socks off—and you could win the LifeStyks grand prize of $10,000. To enter our contest for FREE, just check out the Lifestyles Web site at http: / / wwwJifestylesxom or, for $5.95, you can enter by calling 1-800-213-4560. Then it's lights-camera.-action! LifeStvles CONDOMS to wd fc 11«alfe Opa to Ui. ratal Nfc ii Ms* IfcnM ari fM* Mi art b nofcri ■ « Mm DmA« SI,IMi Pltac Gm4 ftte (Ik SI MOO M fin (1): $$(U oh; M Pbi (lk $2,500 ok Ok Pin* (lk $1,500cafe 56i fraph lOi Plan(0k $1,000 (Mt%p 250Man: UM|fe'Mi1ariM.Mpriasbn aetatana!Mnrf$30,000. lMaas al b aaato a a Min Mnay 1$ 1W. Ohan ata kf artW arf a a da« Mnay 15, Iff/, to omIm nla ari • atakaai Mapri "Mlto lUl&IJfaSlyfota Cota M.0ai7S,taifc,IU 070454075. Data of Oa Mo* ntM Void abnpratad. Canrt ynarb by balbepaab, PimbPnbrtrOMgB. Ifolin (bar 1,1a Ma>b ton EMtoa,HJ 07724 C lPHbal, b. -—.. LIED 1996/97 11 ii ■ n iHI» 11-■- o 1*10700101 MOOK qc Ensemble The Politics of Quiet Contemporary Mutti-Media Opera Sponsored in part by the Cooper Foundation ■'-m !' 1I Fri., Sept. 27,8pm, Kimball Recital Hall Tickets: 4024724747 or MM&3231 U«30pa