ff The Wire National and international news from the Reuter News Report o i i in TONDTE PLOVE THOSE LEGS PARTY' DUINEC SPECIALS If it II 11 in 0-10 so drinks 25 DRAWS $1.50 PITCHERS SPONSORED BY RANIER BEER RANER SPECIALS ALL NIGHT 0-10 pm "OLDEN OLPiES NITE" R FIR. it k .1 59" PITCH EEIS Come Hock To The Hits Of The 50's, 60 & 70's! if t r 1 11 -r..rnn7sr ill Vr 111 If it ' FRIDAY J i J If If it II "TrT-Tfl Ufa WET T-SHIRT CONTEST $100 - 1st PLACE PRIZE Monday 8 p.m. OYLESQUE MALE REVUE DANCE TO STOOGES' NEW VIDEO SYSTEM PTTi f" Tf"8 (( ))))(( Tllf 9th & P ST. IVE KOCIC LINCOLN g it it ii if ii ! 3 l If 9fi ii ; Is ii Peoples City Mission suffers from image By Donna Sisscn . For more than 77 years the Peoples City RJission has offered a variety of human services from its location at 124 S. 9th St. The mission was started in 1907 by the Rev. W.B. Howard who, together with concerned churches, wanted to help indigent people, said Jerry Ann Ortega, development assistant for the mission. The Peoples City Mission offers three programs: a men's shelter, a family shelter and a restoration and renewal program, Ortega said. Shelter programs provide temporary emergency housing, food, clothing, counseling and a free medi cal clinic. Transient men, single women and families also receive help, Ortega said. The restoration and renewal program is designed to help people become productive community mem bers outside the mission. Ten to 15 people are enrolled in the program. It offers daily classes rang ing from scriptual teaching to job int -viewing. The only qualification needed to get aid from the mission is for a person to have no other place to go, Ortega said. Interviews determine an applicant's needs, she said. The mission also has a "walk-in" clientele which uses the furniture and clothing rooms, Ortega said. One strict rule of the mission is that no one who is intoxicated may receive services, Ortega said. They must be dry before they can come in, she said. The mission stresses spiritual and physical well being and offers chapel services seven nights a week, Ortega said. The services are interdenominational and attendance is voluntary, she said. The Peoples City Mission is open 24 hours a day and is the only human service agency that doesn't close its doors on holidays, Ortega said. , Each year the number of people served by the mission increases, Ortega said. Through May of this year, the total number of people housed was 8,839, up almost 2,000 from 6,953 through May 1983, she said. Fifty percent of the mission's support comes from individuals and churches, 30 percent from the Uni ted Way and the rest from fees and grants, Ortega said. The mission's staff consists of about 20 volun teers and 20 paid employees, she said. The mission is considering relocating to an indus trial area near First and O streets in the next two years,- Ortega said. The present building needs updating, she said, especially with regard to fire codes. " The new location would also provide a park for single men, a playground for children and would be more accessible to handicapped people, Ortega said. The mission's biggest problem is public misunder standing. People picture the mission as as place that serves drunks and other no-accounts, Ortega said. But they don't realize the amount of work and care that goes into dealing with real human needs and problems, she said. People need to understand that the mission doesn't create the people it serves; those people would exist whether the mission was there or not, she said. iimmer lace 9 Continued from Page 1 Marcy said remodeling ideas began forming in 1978 with the Union Planning Committee's five-year plan. The Union Planning Committee gave five reasons for the remodeling: the Crib's drab appearance, its high use, its first-floor location, a need to tie it into Union Square and a need to improve it as a lounge and program center. Robert Strong, a UNL Physical Plant employee, was the architect. A panel of five judges, - which included union director Daryl Swanson, two faculty members from the architecture college and two Student members of Union Board, selected a winner from competing UNL architecture classes. Strong used the winning class' ideas to make a new Crib design, Swanson said. The university's bond fund is financing the pro ject, Swanson said. The bond fund is financed through student facilities fees, he said. According to the proposal submitted to the NU Board of Regents, total estimated cost of the project is $170,000. Kuhn said the soon-to-be Crib has a history of change dating back to 1059. Then it was known as the Corn Crib, a name selected through a student . contest, he said. After the union's addition was built, the Corn Crib became the South Crib. The room presently called Union Square then was called the North Crib. The North Crib became Union Square 2Vfc years ago, leading to the South Crib's. present name change, Kuhn said. DCiiy Nebraskan BEIRUT Shells crashed into residential areas Monday and gunfire echoed through the city after nine people were killed and 30 wounded overnight in the heaviest fighting in three weeks, police said. The violence erupted only hours after the last of the three main militia groups on both sides of the divided city agreed to stop fighting and accept a govern ment peace plan. As usual in this war-torn city, no one had an explanation for the outbreak of shelling and shootinjg. The violence increased suddenly late Sun day after Lebanese forces announced qualified acceptance of a government plan under which the army is expected to -start taking over responsibility for security for the city on Wed nesday. The Druze and Shi'ite militias had accepted the plan earlier. The Druze Progres sive Socialist party headed by cabinet minister Walid Jumblatt pulled several heavy weapons away from the front lines over the weekend as a peace move. Christian militia commander Fadi Frem broke a long silence yesterday and agreed to the peace plan, saying his militia would accept the deployment of the army in Christian East Beirut if the army moved simul taneously into the Moslem-held western sec tion. Most of the overnight casualties were in West Beirut's heavily populated Shi'ite south ern suburbs. Beirut radio broadcast a state ment from the Shi'ite militia Amal, led by cabinet minister Nabih Bern, expressing sur prise at the fighting and saying it remained committed to peace. Monday, the Military Council, a committee of senior army officers, met under the new army commander, Maj. Gen. Michael Aoun, to dis cuss details of the latest government plan designed to end more than nine years of intermittent civil war. Two reunified brigades of Christian and Moslem troops are expected to carry out security operations in Beirut, clearing militia strong points and banning non-army uniforms from the streets. A third brigade will be ready to give support. The government hopes the army deployed will be followed by the reopening of the port and air port, which have been closed for almost five months. Vote watchers pleased GUATEMALA CITY U.S. observers attend ing Sunday's elections in Guatemala said Mon day they were encouraged by the large turnout and that the polls could help restore U.S. mil itary aid to the Central American country. According to electoral officials, 70 percent of Guatemala's 2.5 million voters showed up at the polls to elect an 88-member assembly and pave the way for the return of civilian rule next year. None of the 22 members of the official U.S. observer delegation has visited any of the human rights groups working here who de nounce abuses in the military's more than two-decade-old war against left-wing guerrillas. But they said after visiting ail of Guatemala's major communities, they have seen no signs of military intimidation in the voting. Congress has balked at proposals by the Reagan admin istration lit $10 million in military aid to Gua temala for 1985, part of an overall $100 million aid package. Czechs prefer patriarch VIENNA Radical Czechoslovak Commu nists have revived a Stalinist plan to replace the pope with the Russian Orthodox patriarch as spiritual leader of the nation's Catholics, the Catholic news agency Kathpress said Monday. The agency, which monitors the church in Eastern Europe, said the state-controlled cler ical organization Pacern in Terris was told to split with the Vatican last week by party offi cials led by ideologist Vasil Bilak. The report followed an attack on the pope earlier Monday by the Communist Party organ Zivot Strany, which accused John Paul of attempting to degrade humanity. Kafhpress said Blink's group proposed, in party, that "the Czechoslovakia Catholic Church should break from Home, declare itself a national church and submit itself to the spiritual leadership of the patri arch of Moscow." Paae2 Tuesday, July 3. 1984