- V V- V v s.. -f' "V V -to 11 ,1' 1 -p i iitr" '" COMING SOON Senior Information Day Saturday , September 21 9 A.M. 1:00 P.M. Briefing for tour guides will be heid at 8:00 A.M. in the Union Harvest Room. If you're interested in being a guide call 435-7014 for details. 1 " !. Tf-J.!tfSOT' mi-,. I If I M ' i Sponsored by UNL Builders V- r'l S ...-. ' - ' j 1 r-' I r University of Nebraska Bowling Team Tryouts Tryouts for the University of Nebraska Men's and Women's bowling teams will be held this weekend, Sept. 20, 21 & 22, at the Nebraska Union Bowling Alley. Women's Tryouts: friday Sept. 20 at 4:00 p.m. Finals: Saturday 9:oo a.m. (8 game total) Men's Tryouts: Saturday 12:00 noon (9 games) Finals: SUNDAY 1:00 p.m. (9 game final) Any undergraduate cr grad student may try out for the teams, bign up at tne Bowling desk for a starting time. $5.00 entry fee 472-2458 A 11 i a 8 i the Apartment Lounge 13th & M presents AMATEUR NIGHT vocalists-musicians-eomedians-niagH"iaiis-ESI-daneers- strippers Nightly winner receives $10.00 and ehance for finalist night. Finalist winner receives paid engagement. for details vail the Dutchman 4112-4 171 ALSO Daily free popcorn Monday 6. to 8 pm - Free Hors'duerves Tuesday 7 to 9 pm - 2'fcrs Old Time Movies Buster Keaton - Charlie Chaphn -Keystone Cops II I fmil J.'Z Mai' iWfani inn mmm f I'- error antasy S IIIII&9 rr- v.. -T" MS J s I i si . I I,:.. 1; it- ? .. . - V i f ii r ' ''''i f '',;' ' ''-' ' ; i VVAL KED WITH A ZOMBIE M U.S.A. 1943 ij plus 4 THE CAT PEOPLE U.S.A. 1943 Directed by Jacques Tourncur ! Friday September 20 & Saturday September 21 N Screenings at 3, 7 & 9:30 p.m. :j Sheldon Art Gallery, 1 2th S'R'St i li ft P ff 1 CR 1 5i 3 i V ' As j "ii. i . ''win ' 1 ' E f"""v ' ' ' " . ...-was . . . Volunteers helped clean up the condemned Martin Llndell home last weekend. Volunteers saved Lindell home oage 2 By Deb Gray Mr. and Mrs. Martin Lindell believe in miracles. They don't understand the-housing codes and legal proceedings that threatened to evict them from their home 6f 24 years. But a week ago they thought they would be leaving their graffiti-covered house at 618 S. 19 St. And now they're staying. To them, it's God's Providence at work. "We think it's the writing 6n ike house that protected us," said Mrs. Eva Lindell. Pam Snively, paralegal counsel at the Legal Aid Service, has handled the Lindell's case. She said the LindeU's problems started this spring, when residents in the apartment building at 623 S. 19th St. complained to Lincoln's Housing Administration. ;'TheV said they didn't think the house was safe for . the Lindell's," Snively said. "But I think some people objected to the appearance of the house itself." Eva Lindell said her husband. - a former UNL janitor, painted the grafetti on the house after his retirement 15 years ago. He completed the project within a year's time. Snively said the Lindelis received an eviction notice August 8 from the Housing Administration. Noting the house's faulty wiring, poor ventilation and leaky roof, trie building was designated an emergency case oy the Housing Administration. Most residents are allowed time to bring condemned homesjjp tohousing stanaaros, Sniveiy said. Tmc Emergency status labeling spelled immediate re location for the Lindelis. ' Snively said the Lindelis first came to the Legal Aid Service after the encouragement from friends. "It was obvious these people didn't understand what was happening to them," she said. "They did not want to move. This home is all they have to show for their whole life." Mrs. Lindell said a real . estate representative offered to buy tho house. Snively said she didn't know the roan's name. But some real-estate company hoped to erect an spartment on the Lindell's lot. Another woman canvassed the area soliciting neighborhood contributions to paint the house green, Mrs. Lindell said. Snively said she appealed the Hous ing Administration's decision. "This emergency status rating made daily nebraskan . no sense," Snively said. "This said the house was dangerous to the public. The only people endangered by the house were the Lindelis themselves. "And the LindeMs have lived under the same conditions for 24 years. Why would it' be an emergency' ait' of" a sudden?" Leo Scherer, Jpirector,of Community Development said the accusations aimed at his off ice were not completely true. r,if - T: The Housing Administration had tried to negotiate with the LindeMs for a year, he said, but the Lindelis did not understand the necessity for enforcing housing codes. "They thought that since they lived in America that they could live any way they chose," Scnerer said. They didn't see the sense of housing regulations." The house's Biblical slogans, he said, die not affect the Housing Administra tion's ruling. Their actions, he said, were based on the house's bulging foundation; faulty wiring and roofing and lack of hot water. "Legally, we would have the right to proceed simply on the basis or the Biblical writings," Scherer said. .. "Heopfe may not beiieve this, but we are concerned about the safety of these people." . Snively said Carl Kopines, Housing Administration director, relaxed his earlier decision last Tuesday. He allowed the Lindelis a week to snow that something could be done to the house. Saturday morning volunteers began clearing out the house and yard. They would nave to work about three more weekends, Snively said, before the house would meet occupancy standards. Mrs. Lindell said she and her husband were not worried about their future. "We just leave our lives in uoa s hands," she said, "Whatever happens to us will be His will." Scherer was uncertain it the volunteer efforts would succeed. "Structurally, I don't know it the house will meet standards even after all the work," he said. "It will take a lot of money to fix the foundation." The LindeMs took no part in Saturday morning's operations. They sat apart while ve'unteers sorted and threw away boxes of belongings that they'd kept for years. To them, Snively said, it was like seeing part of their lives thrown away. "This is the only home I've ever known," Mrs. Lindell said. friday, September 20, 1974