i Bring Because Bring > your The Sidetrack Tavern your >. Imm Is Opening Af 1:00 PM, «***~? > choir— Saturday, October E For YourJ -J Hie it..' NU vs. K-State Game Viewing Pleasure. 4 925 'O' Sheet :■ 4-25*9171 ;i Kari Uppinghouse, 1996 Co-Captain s Nebraska vs. Tulsa Friday, October 4 @ 7 p.m. Nebraska vs. Alabama Sunday, October 6 @ 1 p.m. at Abbott Sports Complex located 11/2 miles north of Comhusker Highway on 70th Street. Season Tickets: • Adult General Admission - $20 • Youth General Admission -$10 • Team Admission -$5 per person Single Game: • General Admission -$2 i j • UNL Student with ID -FREE For more information cal! the Ticket Office at 472-3111. Common sense helps to stop campus crime CRIME from page 1 Bushing said crimes of oppor tunity usually were the result of people being too trusting. The two campus buildings with the most thefts are the Lee and Helene Sapp Campus Recreation Center and the Nebraska Union, according 1995 and 1996 campus police records. Bushing said taking time to lock up items is the difference between leaving with them and having them stolen. “You may think you are in the immediate area when ... you throw your jacket cm top of your wallet, but it’s still not a safe practice to do,” he said. “Get it locked up where you don’t have to keep an eye I___ : - , _ _---1 . on it.” University police are trying to educate students — especially younger students, who are the larg est victims of crime on campus — about crime prevention, Bushing said. Starting next week, the police department and the health aides on campus will be distributing a news letter to students in the residence halls and the greek units dealing with crime prevention and health issues, he said. The weekly newsletter will in clude tips on campus escorts, do mestic violence, vehicle thefts, street sense and information about Rohypnol, sometimes called “the date-rape drug,” Bushing said. HARRY'S The Wonder Bar $1 Danesfcuaignecks Thursdays, Fridays 8 Saturdays, 10 in Midnight 1621 'CT Street m w $09 g)HLLPoort Sandy Creek Country Night 9pm-12:30am doors open at 8:30 Saturday, Oct. 5 $6 Admission Ali ages welcome Natural grub at veggie dub By Kasey Berber Senior Reporter Vegetarians, potential vegetarians and even omnivores simply interested in a tasty veggie dish now have a stu dent organization to call their own. The Vegetarians Eating Good Grub in Nebraska Society will hold its inau gural meeting Sunday, which is World Vegetarian Day. Currently, the society is the only student-recognized vegetarian organi zation at UNL. The meeting will feature a potluck dinner, information about vegetarian ism and a presentation by speaker Kay Young, author of the native plant cook book “Wild Seasons.” The organization will hold similar meetings every other Sunday. Carol Klein co-founded the VEGGIN Society this year with her husband, Robert Klein. “We felt it was important for people to be eating lower on the food chain,” Klein said. Carol Klein said vegetarianism can lead to a healthy body and healthy en vironment. She said the potluck din ners appeal to non-vegetarians inter ested in good food or healthier lifestyles and isn’t exclusive. “You don’t have to be a vegetarian to be a part of this,” Klein said. Klein said that the society had about 20 unofficial student members so far, with others expressing interest from outside the campus community. The VEGGIN Society hopes to dis cuss plans for World Vegetarian Day, Earth Day and possible participation in the Nebraskan Vegetarian Society’s “Vegetarian Awareness Festival.” For more information about the society, call 472-8823. i \cw Light Show! Shot Specials! u ■m iiiii It • • Live with