Page 70 Daily Nebraskan Wednesday, August 24, 1933 Lincoln Electric System 1 200 N St., Suite 300 Main office 475-4211 To order service 475-4211, ask for order dept. Mlnneg&sco Business office 24 -hour service Emergency service Cablevision Business Office Advertising Production Repair Service 1201 NSt. 475-5921 475-5921 475-5921 390 N. Cotner Blvd. 407-2356 406-8194 467-4545 Make connections with Lincoln utilities Lincoln Telephone Company Residence phones Directory assistance Repair service Lincoln Water System Emergency service Distribution meter shop 1440 M St. 476-4321 113 114 2021 N. 27th St. 471-7571 471-7573 n "BARBECUE HEAVEN59 IF YOU HAVENT TRED CROCKETTS MOUTHWATERING r i "TEXAS STYLE" HICKORY SMOKED BARBECUE BUFFET -YOU'VE MISSED SOMETHING SPECIAL! l) special offer Good 5:00 pm. to close, Sunday 6.00 pm. to close WITH THIS COUPON YOU GET TWO BARBECUE BUFFET DINNERS WITH FULL SOUP & SALAD BAR PLUS TWO EXTRA LARGE FRUITED Crockett's Restaurant MT1SL0R 33rd & Pioneers Expires 91283 D it - w aiin; - mv ' x pMip jjfljM NBC Offers Students s Two Bank-In-The-Box Locations and a Campus Money Center in the Nebraska Union. ilV:jOj)jv j q"0( 'fh;o b; I i Apply for your own Bank-In-The-Box card at the NBC Campus Money Center or at any NBC bank location. It makes 24-hour banking easv as NBC. With two Bank-In-The-Box machines and the NBC Campus Money Center, the Nebraska Union is the perfect place to get cash, make deposits, transfer funds or cash checks. In fact, you can use your Bank-In-The-Box card 24 hours a day at the south entrance of the Nebraska Union. If you need any other banking services, NBC's main bank is just a few blocks away. We're mailing1 banking on campus easy a c ( rw Nebraska Union, City Campus, 14th & R Streets, Lincoln . BJ&tional Bank c2 Commorco Main Bank, 13lh & O Parkway Drive-In. Walk-In. 40th & South K.ist Park Drive-In. Walk-In. With & O Rampark Drive-In. Walk-In 12th & P MEMBER FDIC Accounts Insured to $100,000 472-4321 One of the Commerce Group Banks serving Lincoln and Nebraska Home. Continued from Page 67 The coverings are durable, he said. They can be vacuumed, and water does not damage them. If a square is stained, it can be replaced. Once the walls, floor and windows are set, the student can accessorize the room to reflect his or her interests, Van Dervoort said. "Plants always make a room look lively and plea sant," she said. The potted plants can be put in inexpensive baskets. Basket, wicker and rat an chairs are also good decorating ideas. Creal said buri chairs, made of a flexible fiber, can be bought at Pier 1 Imports for $30, and a "king chair" costs $40. Van Dervoort also suggested colorful beanbag and director's chairs. "Use a lot of pillows, too," she said. Pillows of various sizes and colors can be put on a mattress and springs against a wall to serve as a couch. Lee Ann Patterson, an interior designer with Van Dervoort & Van Dervoort Inc., graduated from UNL two years ago. She said she lived in Smith Hall when she lived on campus. Magazines often give good ideas for sleeping and shelving in small spaces, Patterson said. "Bunk beds' save a lot of space," she said. Boards propped on cement blocks and then painted make sturdy shelves for stereo equipment or a television. She also suggested putting wooden shelves be tween the steps of two step ladders for a different look. Kim Grossoehme, a UNL senior in commercial interior design, also suggested using a wooden ladder to decorate a room. "Put plants on each step," she said. An old ladder has more "personality" than a metal one. 'The more beat up it is, the better." Grossoehme, a member of the Delta Gamma sor ority, said with a little creativity, a student can do "thousands of things" on a small budget. She painted a galvanized metal trash can white, and then painted colorful designs on it. "It can be used for storage or as a dirty clothes basket," she said, "and it saves space and can be left in the middle of the room." Trash cans cost between $10and$15at hardware stores. A wicker hamper can be used for the same purpose, and it also saves closet space, she said. "Colorful tack paper used to line shelves can brighten up a lot of things," she said. The paper can be cut in strips and stuck along the top of the wall as a ceiling border. Thepaper costs about $2 a roll, she said, "and it peels right off," when it's time to move. Thrift and antique stores are full of old items to fix up, Grossoehme said. For example, old trunks can be painted and then used to store sweaters. Colored milk crates can be. used as shelves for books or stereo equipment. "You can put anything on walls," she said. Her suggestions included wicker baskets, matted prints, posters and old hats. When decorating, she said, "Let your imagination go." Hungry For Chicken? PETE'S CHICKEN 'N A SKILLET m u w-Hicom 5 uowmown uiicken Mouse) 14th & O 474-7923 Eat-in Take -Out Have your drink on us I rree Med Pepsi with Purchase of $250 ort j more. Present this Ad to Pete's Chicken I 'N A Skillet 1408 "0B. i (Coupon valid thru 91S83) mm mm mi mm m Also Stcakburgcrs, Hamburgers, Cheese, I Ham & Cheese Frcnchces, Salads & Much Mora We're Open at 6 AM. for Breakfast! co