UNL Students Discover Authentic Creek & American Food 114 S. 14th (Next to Bennett Martin Library) ItrejMjsl Ctxjfions NOW OPEN SUNDAYS! Breakfast Coupons ^Chop Steak & 2 Eggs, I | Toast Hashbrowris, Butter & jelly I Expires * Oct 30. H f 1989 AM Opa Breakfast I E.p.,« $<>59 ■sr A i I includes: Two Eggs, Gyro | Meat, Cheese, Pita Bread, I Butter & Jelly Lunch Coupons l”chicken Kabob Dinner! Expire, $050 I Oct. 30. ^ 1 1989 Includes: Potato, Garden Bar, Pita Soup & Butter. Souvaki Dinner ! as $**50 | 1989 Includes: Potato, Garden Bar, Pita Soup & butter Greek Salad Supreme ! as $Q50 i 1989 Grecian Villiage Style Salad Dinner Coupons this coupon in /or"j \ as off ! ^any dinner entreej jflr/n# this coupon in forj j*S?$1 off | a Gyro Dinner “0^N“ Monday-Thursday 7am-8pm Friday & Saturday 7am-10pm Sunday 7am-8pm Serving Breakfast, Lunch A Dinner. Dine With Class! Where People fat By Choke, Not By Chance. 114 S. 14th 477-7657 (Next to Bennett Martin Library) HISTORIC from Page 9 ' grants special zoning requests for historic buildings, he said. “This allows special uses that wouldn’t be permitted under regu lar zoning,” he said. In other words, these buildings, with per mission , can be used for sornething other than what the city zoning ordinance calls for. These permits are granted on a case-by-case basis by the city council, he said. Waterpark, an old power and water plant turned into apartments, received a special permit for his toric preservation, Zimmer said. Located in a duplex area, Water park received permission from the city council to be a 39-unit apart ment building. I TH= FLYlflC K4R4H4ZOV , 5ROTH 5 When these juggling comedians were at ^ I Kimball last year, clubs and a bag of jello E weren't the only things thrown-they tossed V the audience with laughter! TWO SHOWS! SAME DAY! L SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 3 pm & 8 pm L UNLSiudcms/j £ Tickets: $15. $11 YouU 18 and under ^ 1/2 price! j With support from the National Endowment for the Arts. For Tickets Call 472-4747 (Monday ■ Friday, 11-5 pm) Another example of a special permit would be tne Harris House, which is an office building located in an area zoned for apartments, he said. Zimmer said most of the historic buildings are privately owned. Buildings in the Haymarket district also have received tax credit, he said. ‘This area is intended to be a mixed-use area,” he said. Offices, retail stores, restaurants and residences will exist side by side ‘‘with special historic charac ter,” Zimmer said. The old ware houses are representative of the railroad’s importance, Zimmer said. The exterior of Haymarket buildings is subject to review by the Historical Preservation Com mission, which is a seven-member group appointed by the city coun cil, Zimmer said. The Haymarket architecture dates from the 1880s, 1890s and 1900 through 1920; al though "the general focus is on early 20th century,” he said. The Charles F. Creighton district is just south of the Nebraska Wesleyan University campus, 49th Street to 54th Streets and Walker to Leighton streets, he said. Zimmer said the national regis try is an honorary listing and does not require any special improve ments or upkeep. Private owner ship is encouraged because the houses deteriorate quickly if they are not kept up and lived in. A few houses in Lincoln are museum houses, like the Thomas P. Kennard House, owned by the state historical society, Zimmer said. This house on H Street is one of the first homes in Lincoln. Hayward School on 9th and Charleston streets is considered a historic site for its architecture and history. Zimmer said the school was built in three stages and has three distinct architectural styles. Hayward School was in a Ger man-Russian neighborhood and the school adopted special pro grams to help children catch up with their studies when they missed school to work in the beet fields. Another historic building is the Terminal Building on 10th and O streets, which was built by the street-car company as a terminal in 1916. “It has a historical connection to the street-car line in Lincoln,” Zimmer said. Now the terminal building houses regular offices. Lincoln does well in restoring historic buildings, Zimmer said, but in some instances, a rather historic building has been torn down. The Block 35 area, slated for demolition for the downtown re development project, includes some historic buildings but not many, Zimmer said. Bill’s Saloon, which was demol ished in April, was a historic build ing, but wasn’t on the national registry or designated by the city council, he said. The cast-iron front was saved and will be used on a building in the Haymarket district, he said. The old Sam Lawrence hotel, 11th and P streets, is abandoned and also slated for demolition. Construction began on the hotel in the 1880s. See HISTORIC on 13 " (ONKS LINCOLN - EAST PARK PLAZA 200 N. 66th, Suite 208 A • 467-2727 OMAHA — HARVEY OAKS PLAZA 144th & Center • 333-8118 *new comics arrive every