1 if 7 r-1 Uk X V i Wednesday, September 26, 1984 University of Nebraska-Lincoln Vol. 84 No. 24 i H i! il l - ft ! V ( I 1 U1C II i TTTT "IS U boto all Satur By Jeff Dnnvsa' Di!j Nefcr&sfc&a Scxior Eeportsr Editor's nsts: TI3 ib tho third rxtMcs ti a ffcs-pist scr les vsristu Issues behind Nctr It's all out in the open, for the nation to see. The nation, duly perplexed, gawks at it for a while, takes down a few notes and then offers some condescending chortles. Behind MX "My lord. Those people are plum crazy." "Ail that fus about a foot ball game. I'm glad we have more important things to worry about." "So what if you win? You're still from Nebraska." Call it a fever, call it a mania. But most Nebrsskans think of it as a disease they just can't live without. Lourene Wishart of Lincoln lives for football Saturdays, And football Sundays, football Mon-. days, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, ' Thursdays and Fridays. Laurene is 92 years old and Nebraska's self-proclaimed oldest fan. Whenever she wants it to be football time, she just ambles down the stairs to the basement of her Lincoln home. Down there, if you take a right just after the first left (the other way gets you to the laundry room) ia the Wishart Big Eed Room. Twenty years in the making, the Big Eed Room details a Nebraskan's fanati cism for the team more than the team's perils. "I'm sure you think this is all quite childish," Lourene ex plains to her visitors. "But I just love the team." Glasses, mugs and unopened whiskey decanters in the forms of Nebraska's opponents line the tables and shelves of the red room. A hanging tree, replete with nooses so as to better strangle the assorted Longhorns, Jayhawks and Wild cats, adorns one corner. "I think that hanging tree is awfully cute," Lourene said. "That Army mule there is one of my favorites. My driver thought for sure we were going to lose, but we whipped 'em, 69 to nothin'." "It was 77 to 7, Mrs. Wishart." . "Whatever." Lourene has been attending Nebraska home games since 1 923. On a gray October day in 1023, Lourene saw her first Nebraska game and it was a classic. The Huskers, led by sophomore tackle Ed Weir, de feated Notre Dame and the backfieid that was to become the Four Horsemen, 14-7. She may not have worn red that day, but she's been wear ing red ever since. Except once. "One day I decided to go to the Big Red Breakfast wearing blue. I wore my blue boots because we were playing Penn "State arid I thought I'd have a little fun. Nobody recognized who I was." ' Fun on fall Saturdays begins early for Lourene. She follows fans out to the Villager Motel for the Big Red Breakfast sponsored by KLIN. "I havent missed one of those, for years," she said. "Sometimes my driver doesnt get up too early, so I miss a bit." Lourene then hangs around the Villager for a while greet ing friends and acquaintances before she is off to the Lincoln Country Club for lunch and more Big Red chatter. From there it's on to her West Stadium seat, where she cheers for her favorite player. rYou may not like this," she warns. "But my favorite player is Craig Sundberg. I think he's just great. He's a Swede, you know. I'm a Swede, too. "Craig and his father came to visit me just the other day. He's the nicest boy." Many Nebraska fans may be enthralled by the Wave, but Lourene thinks it's all just fool ishness. She says today's stu dents have more on their mind than just watching a football game. "Back then (in the '20s), the students were more enthusi astic," she said. "The other fans have always been enthusiastic." After the game and the proper hellos from visiting dig nitaries, Lourene heads home to host a cookout for a few close friends. Last week, Lourene watched days herlluskerson television with friends at her home. She in tends to do the same this week when Nebraska takes on Syra cuse in New Yorlc "I'm a bit worried about Syr acuse " she said. "I think theyYe rough. I think they're tough. But I think well win." Lourene is ever ready with an opinion and is quick to praise her three favorite coaches. She has personally autographed letters from Lou Holtz and an autographed book by Joe Paterno. Nebraska's Tom Osborne is still her favorite. "I had a phone call after the UCLA game," she said. "It was from a cousin of mine out in Los Angeles. He told me, 'I believe youVe got the best coach in the world back there.' I think that's quite a compliment, don't you?" Lourene relives every game on Tuesday evenin gs. She plants her wiry frame in front of her television to watch Don Gill and John Melton on Nebraska Public Television. Thursdays she goes to another Big Red Breakfast, this one is hosted by Gill. Nebraska has the national championship in the bag this year, Lourene said. They just need to convince the rest of the country. "We've won it the last three years," she said. "Maybe this year they'll let us keep it." The tour of the Big Red Room is over and Lourene leads the way back upstairs. "I broke my hip a few years ago. The doctors in Las Vegas didn't do too good a job. I'm a little bit ljke Craig Sundberg. I don't move like Turner Gill, but I get the job done." hi ' ' 'r " "L f , , -'-z, v X " i X J David CrtcmtrDcily Mefcraskan Lourene Wishart, 92, a log-time Husker fan in her Big Eed room. property decision s anger area bu sine; By Gall Y. Ilucy June Oldenkamp, manager of Dippy Dzliy NcbraSiut Senior Reporter Donuts, 1227 R St., said she was never contacted by UNL when talk of the center As plans to construct the proposed $20 began last spring, and has yet to hear million Lied Center for the Performing from anyone about the latest decision. Arts come closer to reality, two business ' UNL finalized purchase agreements managers say they still are steaming Sept. 10 to acquire the Nebraska Book Co. because they think they got the short end property at 1 2th and R streets and some of the stick. commercial property at 13th and R streets. -i r 1 1 ! i r.' :t f V Elaine Cass, ss!stsnt msuasgsr hossss. Css Elory cn Tsl 8. fce onivereity food stcrea in cna cf tlie wsre- The NU Board of Regents on Sept. 14 approved the agreement and the trans fer of UNL and NU Foundation property at 13th and Q streets to Nebraska Book Co. According to a Sept. 13 Lincoln Star article, the NU Foundation, under the provisions of a second agreement, will buy the present sites of Tommy's Game Room and Deli, Dippy Donut, Taco Inn and the former Cotner School for Reli gion building. With a down payment of $50,000, the foundation has a remaining balance of $450,000 and interest to be paid by Oct. 1, 1985, university legal counsel Dick Wood told the Star. The university's present ownership and the foundation's eventual ownership of the property means business operators must move a step that will be hard for many. "Neither the university nor the Nebraska Bookstore talked to us about the changes in landlord," Oldenkamp said. "Well be out of business because we can't relocate. There's no place for us to go." "We got the short end of the stick," Steve Mathews, owner of Tommy's, said. "The university said they'd work closely with the business and they haven't. It's discouraging to us." Mathews said no one from the univer sity or the foundation contacted him until the agreement was final. By then, it was too late to find another place to relo cate, he said. "We're university oriented, if we move even a block away, we'll lose our busi ness," he said. Under the agreement, a new Nebraska Bookstore will be built on the present site of Kinko's, a duplicating store at 330 N. 13th St. and the two university parking lots adjacent to the building. Kinko's will move into the Cotner build ing for one year and relocate on the Tommy's site after Tommy's lease expires in about 18 months. Tim Thietje, vice president and counsel for the foundation, said that before the agreement, the university was in no posi tion to contact the leasees. The university needed to decide with Nebraska Bookstore before it had any business talking to the leasees, he said. The university is now contacting ail people involved, and so far the negotia tions have been friendly, he said. David Fowler, foundation liaison per son for the center, said the university and the foundation still are working on agree ments for remaining property. Mea nwhile, the construction of the book store may begin Oct. 1. After the book store is completed, the center's construc tion may start next fall, he saidL