Friday, September 26, 1986 Page 6 Daily Nebraskan V SP 0 on SUNDRY! ! f!;tf Open 4-7:30 pm Frc j cltrS fiid p iiil) thj rrCiiS9 cf cry $MiiiI -SOW) $ im parawi 435-1414 1414 "0"St. 1 it n o NACHOS lo7S) ONLY dfi9!l fSfi & ill! Will) MIA! Organised aid saves jeans Red Cross First Aid Team supports the Cornhuskers By Mike Meehan Staff Reporter Wearing red to Memorial Sta dium on football Saturday means more to three UNL students than just showing support for the Corn huskers. To Sara Egan, Carla Jans and Tim Schulz, red is part of the uniform of the Red Cross First Aid Team. They are three of the more than 56 volun teers who watch over the safety of football fans during every game. According to Egan, a graduate student, each member must have fulfilled the required CPU and mul timedia first aid training. In addi tion to fulfilling those basic re quirements, Chuck Elsom, director of the first aid team, said that eve ryone who wants to work on the stadium team goes before a screen ing committee and then attends training sessions. They also have to work 20 other events during the year, he said. Jans, a senior pre-med major team member, is also a CPR instructor, as are about half of the team members. "I enjoy working with the Red Cross and the campus red Cross," she said "The people are profes sional and well-organized. The team's professionalism and effectiveness has not gone unno ticed by the fans. Nancy Osborne related an incident in which she discovered the great need for such a team. She said she was in another Big Eight stadium when she noticed someone who needed help. "Two rows in front of me an elderly man suffered a heart attack. We couldn't find help in the sta dium. There were no Red Cross crews, no ushers, no one to help," Osborne said; Schulz said the number of calls they get varies from game to game and depends on the weather. "I have never used my CPR train ing, but it can happen," he said. Elsom said, "We're the first to respond. We render help and access the situation to the people below who are in contact with the Eastern ambulances and the Bryan Heart team." There are two first aid sta tions located in the northwest and southwest corners of the stadium. Calls to the Red Cross during the games range from bee stings to heat exhaustion, said Steve Lewis, pub lic relations director. Twenty-five calls make for a busy game, he said. "At last year's Florida State game, 125 people suffered from heat stroke. Some were our people, who were carrying people down from the stands," Lewis said. In order to operate in the third largest populated area in the state, the, first aid team is divided among the four areas of the stadium. Two members are placed at the top of each of the bleachers along with a litter crew, which is located lower in the stands. More members are on the sidelines. This organization is designed to insure the safety of the fans. The volunteers of the stadium team are faced with possibilities of emer gency situations but they said they still find their jobs rewarding. "It's fun and an exciting expe rience. You meet a lot of people," Schulz said. This Saturday's home game also is the Red Cross's First Aid Team Appreciation Day. The goal is to raise $20,000 during the game to help support the numerous com munity and campus activities spon sored by the Lancaster chapter of the Red Cross. Bank looking for clothing donations LnnnaM On our rich basic sauce & spaghetti Meal includes a trip to our salad bar and an order of garlic bread. Mmnneir plus tax 228 North 12th Street OUTFITTERS from Page 3 Many donations of clothes have already been received and are being stored in the YWCA and the homes of some of the board members because the room is not finished, said Dorothy Seaton, Job Outfitters board member. Many local beauty salons have given Job Outfitters coupons for free cuts and styles. The group also is taking donations of uniforms and special clothing needed for some jobs. Someone donated a pair of steel toed boots and someone will surely need them, said board member Emilia Gon zalez Clements. Users of Job Outfitters must be referred to the free program by a human service agency. Job Outfitters does ask that the women they help donate some piece of clothing back to the program after they are employed. "That allows the woman who has received help to help somebody else," Gonalzez Clements said. Barret said she brainstormed and came up with the idea for a clothing bank and other people and groups got interested. Personal Free Video Rental with Check Cashed Out of State Now Open $ Fast Elicits $ Check Cashing Service 1 1 08 North 27th Street Phone 435-4352 Two-Party Checks Cashed Any Kind From Anywhere Open 24 Hours Payroll For all those schedules that just don't mesh . . . TTTXXTTT students have been UJlXJlu CALLING ST. PAUL CHURCH THEIR CHURCH FOR YEARS, BECAUSE THEY FEEL AT HOME. COME WORSHIP SUNDAYS AT 9:30 OR 1 1 AM ST. PAUL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 12TH AND M 3 BLOCKS SOUTH OFTHP hmi pampiic ... let UNL independent study help. Day and night testing hours; syllabi available for examination before you sign up. Visit room 269, Nebraska Center, 33rd and Holdrege, or call 472-1926 for information. UNL is a non-discriminatory institution i Campus Job Outfitters is a project of the Women of Color Task Force and is co sponsored by the Lincoln-Lancaster Commission on the Status of Women; YWCA; Horizons Chapter, American Business Women's Association; Axis Business & Professional Women. Several other Nebraska towns have expressed an interest in starting their own clothing bank, Gonzalez Clements said. She said Job Outfitters isn't ready to start advising other groups yet. Ideas on how to expand the bank's service are still coming in, Gonzalez Clements said. One new idea is to pro vide clothes in larger sizes. She said Job Outfitters plans to call diet centers and ask women to donate their clothes that are too big, she said. The planners of Job Outfitters expected the bank to be open by mid September, but cleaning and painting still needs to be done. People interested in donating clo thing or time to Job Outfitters can call the Lincoln-Lancaster Commission on the Status of Women (471-7716) or the YWCA (476-2802). Police Report Tuesday 10 a.m. Disturbance reported at Andrews Hall. 2:29 p.m. Office equipment reported stolen from Administration Building 127. 3:52 a.m. Drunken person reported at Broyhill Fountain. 7:05 p.m. Police asked to check welfare of a person reported missing who lives in Cather Hall. Wednesday . 10:51 a.m. Burglary reported at Sandoz Hall; wallet taken. REO - CCR - THREE DOG NIGHT - ROLLING STONES - I o H N N I Q E Z to Q X z I z I Ui O LU I Celebrate the Weekend in BIG RED STYLE ' With live music by: "Those Guys" Friday and Saturday Nights 9 - Close 476-0664 Never A Cover Friday - Stesk & Shrimp Dinner $4.00 Huge Grilled Steak Cheese Sandwich $2.95 U Big Red Super Saturday Specials 50 Burritos $1.00 Bloody Marys Dig Screen TV Drink Specials I PLACE TO r VPARTn JACKO OO DHTtEO 07th G Holdrcgo C3 m H r m CO I I r- co I m 33 O -4 X I CO o CO m o m THREE DOG NIGHT - ROLLING STONES - EAGLES - x Posters 20 S OFF i ! Dirt Cheap Records and Gifts I 3 i 217 N. 11th 477-6061