The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 03, 1978, Page page 11, Image 11

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    friday, march 3, 1978
daily nebraskan
page 11
Big Eight wrestling meet
to feature 4 top 10 teams
Four of the top ten teams in the nation
will be fighting for the Big Eight Wrestling
Championship Friday and Saturday in Still
water, Okla.
Iowa State University is ranked second,
Oklahoma State University is ranked third!
Missouri University is ninth and Oklahoma
is tenth. OSU was ranked number one until
a loss to Iowa State University last week.
Iowa State, Oklahoma State, Missouri
and Oklahoma are the top four teams in
the Big Eight with Colorado and UNL
pulling up the rear. Kansas and Kansas
State do not have wrestling teams.
The meet starts Friday with the semi
finals and ends Saturday with champion
ship matches.
In the last 14 years, 1SU, OSU and OU
have taken the top three spots in the meet.
The last team to break this stranglehold
was Colorado when they placed third be
hind the Cowboys and Cyclones in 1964.
Iowa State with a 16-1 record and Okla
homa State with a 15-1 record are expect
ed to be the top two competitors for the
Big Eight title.
Iowa State is the defending conference
and NCAA champion.
The Huskers, with a 4-6 record, stand
the best chance of winning an individual
title with junior Court Vining in the 158
pound category. Vining, co-captain of the
team, has a 22-9 record on the season. His
toughest competition will come from Kelly
Ward of Iowa State. Ward has a 27-1
record.
Other Husker competitors are freshman
Randy Glur in the 118-pound category,
freshman Mark Niblo, 126 pounds, sopho
more Agron Vasha, 124 pounds; junior
John Ruettiger, 142 pounds; junior Jim
Phillips, 150 pounds; freshman Kirby
Trump, 167 pounds; junior Marty
McCurdy, 177 pounds; and sophomore co
captain George Mink at 190 pounds.
Sophomore George Rambour will compete
in the heavyweight division.
r
Tournament Special
Lower Level The Atrium
1 3th & N Street
Your choice of The
Great Gyro all beef
hamburger or hotdog
and regular soft drink.
Only
$1.25
with this coupon.
1
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Offer expires March 4th, 1978
Hours:
11:00-6.00
B
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Intramural fraternity league
led by Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Sigma Alpha Epsilon will defend its
5-0 record in next week's Fraternity
League A intramural basketball play
offs. Gale Wiedow, intramurals director,
said his rankings of UNL intramural
basketball teams have not changed since
last week and that Sigma Alpha Epsilon
(SAE) still is in second place behind the
independent league's Top of the Tower
team.
SAE team captain Jim Meyer said he
had seen. Top of the Tower in action
during the marathon tournament in
December and that he has a healthy
respect for the independent team.
"I think they're far and away the
best team in the university intramurals.
They deserve to be ranked No. 1,"
Meyer said.
He said Steve Graham, a 6-foot-6-inch
member of the fraternity who
probably would have played center for
SAE, is playing for Top of the Tower in
stead. SAE's center is 6 feet 4 inches
tall.
SAE makes up for its average height
with good rebounding, Meyer said. Re
bounding and shooting helped the team
win its last three games. In the first
halves of those games, SAE trailed by
eight to 10 points.
Meyer said SAE is a "second-half
team"
SAE has a "pretty good chance" of
winning the fraternity division, accord
ing to Meyer. He said the members of
the team have played together for two
years and play in other tournaments
outside UNL intramurals.
Meyer said he has been dissatisfied
with the referees at intramural games.
He said at the last two games more fouls
were called than he had ever seen, but
that the team members tried not to let
questionable calls bother them.
Tournament . . .
Continued from page 10.
The Huskers will counter with All-Big
Eight guard Brian Banks. Banks, named to
the UPI All -Big Eight team earlier this
week, is averaging 14.5 points a contest.
Center Carl McRpe, averaging 15.7
points a game and 7.9 rebounds a contest
earned honorable mention All-Big Eight
honors.
Learning . . .
Continued from page 1 .
"The only problem is that I'm tired of
studying all year long," said Paustian, who
carries between 1 5 and 1 8 hours a semes
ter. She said she had no problems with
grades, but does have doubts about the
worth of summer classes.
"I don't get as much out of them be
cause everything is crammed into such a
short space of time." she said.
Frank Hallgren, director of the Career
Planning and Placement Center, said stu
dents who graduate early are not at a disadvantage.
Other UNL starters include forwards
Terry Novak and Curt Hedberg and guard
Bob Moore.
Tip-off from Kemper Arena is scheduled
for 7:05 p.m., with broadcasts on KFAB,
KFOR and KLIN.
Conference champion Kansas will battle
Kansas State at 9:05 p.m. in the other
semifinal contest.
"It is just a question of how they want
to handle their education," he said. Job
wise, three -year students really aren't any
different than four or five.
It's all in how you perceive the time
span you want to complete a particular
goal in."
Hallgren said the decision to work
quickly depends upon the student's ability.
"Some people can go through an inten
sive set of summer courses and do very
well. Some can't," he said. "It's simply a
reflection of how an individual is organized.
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B-Week generates
profits for college
The profits from B-Week 1978 were presented at the
College of Business Administrationfaculty meeting Tues
day by the CBA Student Advisory Board.
CBA Dean Gary Schwendiman accepted the $400
check for the CBA Improvement Fund from Mark Buss,
CBA Student Advisory Board president and Margaret
McCandless, B-Week chairperson. The CBA Improvement
Fund is a fund of the University of Nebraska Foundation.
Programs and speakers which are not a part of the
college's regular budget are financed through this fund.
According to Buss, the profits were made from the S75
fee charged to each business participating in B-Week.
Campus police checking
'watts9 wrong with lights
UNL students walking home from night classes may be
reassured to know the lamps lighting the way are checked
regularly for malfunctions.
Jay Thody, assistant director and design specialist for
the UNL grounds department, said University Police re
port any lighting malfunctions to the maintenance depart
ment. "There are some areas which have not been reviewed in
the last year that perhaps should be," Thody said. "But I
don't believe there are any areas that are serious prob
lems.' Thody explained that University Police and the main
tenance department share responsibility for lighting. The
police are responsible for parking areas and maintenance
for the landscaped campus areas, he said.
Students last month voiced to police fears of assault
and robbery in poorly lit areas, according to Loretta
Vanis, student assistant on fourth floor Smith Hall.
Vanis received a letter from the police stating that all
but one of the Area 3 parking lots are checked for light
ing malfunctions. Area 3 lot between 16th and 17th
streets, and Y and Holdredge streets is a temporary lot. It
is not lit or paved because UNL plans to build several
buildings there, according to the letter.