thursday, September 1, 1977 daily nebraskan page 15 Rec trips offer study relief Students who already have hernm rii. enchanted with textbooks and musty class rooms may find relief in the UNL Recrea tion Dept. This semester students have the chance to take to the hills for rock-climbing semi nars that will prepare students for moun taineering trips planned. Seminars this month will teach students the basic art of backpacking and climbing. The Recreation Dept. also has scheduled a canoeing trip on the Niobrara and a Back packing trip to Mexico. .The department, which offered about 14 trips last year, expects each participant to be in excellent shape before beginning a trip, according to Mark Ebel, department coordinator. Conditioning is more important than ex perience on most trips, Ebel said. Ebel traveled with students on four trips this summer, two canoe and two moun taineering trips. The biggest problems encountered on the trips happen because students are not prepared for the physical demands of the trip, he said. "We reccmmend that each student be gins preparing a month in advance with a self-determined daily exercise routine," he said. Jogging, running, swimming and cycling on a daily basis are excellent con ditioners, he said. Good physical condition is especially important on mountaineering trips, Ebel said, because it makes adjusting "to alti tude change easier, Ebel said. Ebel is working on plans for a trip that would combine recreational experience with university credit hours. r. Learning while on a trip is like learning in a classroom, he added. , Rock-climbing seminars have been scheduled for September to prepare stu dents for upcoming mountaineering trips. There also will be a canoeing trip on the Niobrara, a rock climbing trip to South Dakota and a backbacking trip to Mexico this semester. - ; II'. ; " - 1 ,n r i-1 - -t Photo courtesy of the UNL Recreation Dept. It sure beats sitting at a desk. The UNL Recreation Dept. offers relief to the student tired of musty classrooms. v iye brows go up when winners lose their jobs In an era in which losing coaches are fired without causing the slightest stir, it is suspicious when 'a winner is given his walking papers. ; George Nicodemus' dismissal as UNL women's basket ball and softball coach earlier this summer raised such suspicions. .. v.'.'. m .i.," However, as in many cases, the whole story may never be told. Although such seemingly unsubstantial reasons as "disorganization" and "players complaining about not. playing" were -given for the firing, the problem apparently ran much deeper. v Nicodemus first gained recognition at John F, Kennedy College in Wah.oo where he produced national champion Amateur Athletic Union teams in 1972 and 1973 and the national runner-up in 1974. J.F.K. folded, and Nicodemus came to UNL two years ago to coach the women's basket ball team without pay. ; That team finished with a 23-9 record, prompting fellow coaches to select him as the Daily Nebraskan Women's Coach of the Year. Last year he was officially hired as both basketball and softball coach. The basketball squad dipped to 21-16; the softball record '. was 12-15 , although the team did win the state championship. Five reasons Nicodemus said Jay Davis, UNL women's athletic director, gave him five reasons for his dismissal: dis organization, he was hard to locate, he didn't' submit - said she doubted the seriousness of the in-state recruiting problems and added she knew of only one high school coach who encouraged players to go elsewhere. ' "I think most of the coaches around the state respect the guy," she said. if v dennis onnen 1 Ji nd 20 j wegman travel times for road game's soon enough, players com plained about not playing and some Nebraska high school coaches would not send their players to UNL. One could argue all year over whether such reasons should be sufficient, but it seems the players might pro vide a moderate view on the subject. But five players contacted were as strongly divided as Davis' and Nicodemus on the issue. Junior Jan Crouch the leading scorer on last year's basketball team, is an adamant Nicodemus supporter. She TfTYrp ) 13th &P (Below the Douglas Theatres next to Burger Chef) (RFrogurt it a Registered Trademark of H.P. Hood Company. 00 Meet your friends at the Frogurt & Ice Cream Place. It's the fun place to enjoy America's newest natural wonder . . . Frogurt frozen yogurt. Our delicious Frogurt is 98fat free and comes in several scrumptious flavors - . strawberry, lemon, raspberry, blueberry, peach, passion fruit and strawberry-lemon delight. Order Frogurt in cups, cones, shakes and sundae boats. Top 'em off with your choice . of natural fruit toppings. We have soft serve Ice cream in cups and cones, plus Frogurt ' in handy take home pints and quarts. QQaSQ eft m i u 13th & P (Bolovv the Douglas Theatres next to BurgorChof) " (FREE Frogurt sample available through September 14, 1977) Sophomore Anita Bahe, who played basketball and softball last year, tells a different story. She alleged that Lincolnites Barb Hart and Deb Van Dusen, two of the better high school players in the state last year, enrolled at UNO rather than play for Nicodemus. Bahe said she and some other players would not have played for Nico demus this year. Nicodemus said that when he asked Davis for the names of high school coaches who wouldn't send their players to him, she refused to give them. Never lost one "Every player I went after in Nebraska whom I had financial aid to offer, I got," he said. "I never lost a one." The players don't dispute that Nicodemus is knowledg able, in basketball. Crouch said she has talked to Julie Simpson, a former player at J.F.K. and co-captain of the 1976 U.S. women's Olympic team, who called Nico . demus one of the most intelligent basketball coaches she has had. What some players complain about are his methods of imparting that knowledge. One basketball player, who wished to remain anony mous said Nicodemus failed to work enough on funda mentals and suggested that he might have been looking too far ahead to a national championship rather than de veloping the present team. "He let things get out of hand," she said. "He took for granted that we knew a lot of things we didn't." Bahe said the situation was worse in softball. Nico demus showed a lack of interest in practice, she said, and often based his starting team on game performances rather than rewarding good practice efforts. She said this made starters complacent, knowing their starting spots were sewn Up as long as they performed adequately in games. Softball sideline Betsy Anderson, a senior on last year's softball team, said Nicodemus considered softball only a sideline. "I think the girls ran the practices more than he did,' she said. Senior Jan Bartels, the top pitcher on last year's team, called his organization "poor to terrible." She told of one incident where he moved up the starting time of a game to accommodate a visiting team but failed to notify all of his players. Although complaints from players not playing are heard on virtually every team, Bahe said sour grapes aren't the whole story here. "I didn't mind not playing," she said. "It was not knowing why." Nicodemus admitted that some of his athletes didn't play, but said, "I think you have that problem in any sport. Everybody can't play." "I really don't know what the big gripe was," Crouch added. "You can't fire a coach because he doesn't play everybody, and I don't feel any of the reasons were sub stantial at all." Nicodemus dismissal apparently was handled unpro fessionally, no matter how valid the reasons for the dismissal. The players said they took their complaints to both Nicodemus and Davis last year, but according to Nicodemus, Davis never asked him to change his coaching before his dismissal. "I was completely surprised by her announcement," he said. : A better solution would have been for Davis to stipu late exactly what was required of Nicodemus and give him another year to make the changes. It's undoubtedly too late for such a suggestion now, but in the future perhaps Davis can make more of an effort to reconcile differences with a coach before sending him to the unemployment lines.