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For details call Edye at ext. 353: i \ 1-800-654-4626 j \ M/k LINCOLN s \ SAVINGS I ™ A SubsnSary of Amnncan Coohnerilai Ccirporabon J - • An tqusl Opportunity Imptoyrt * ILincoln Suv»*» S Lo*n Acva Minn t | 475-6363 230 N. 17th I Mon.-Sat. 11:00 a.m.- 2 a.m. Sunday 11:00 a.m.- 1 a.m. ^MENU FEATURE ONE SIZE PIZZA. 10 INCHES. 1 PIZZA^^2 PIZZAS 6 SLICES. FEEDS ONE TO TWO PEOPLE. Our Small Our Medium Our Large J I STANDARD a nano tasnionioc us «NtN a gtmaous r N nn «^nn (Ann ll rurrttr TOPPING 0» TOMATO SAUCI MB CHitttS INI *tluu 9/UU *U«U I LHtlot staming point ton roun tavoniti _ _ • M# I tQ.mi.o.EACH ADDITIONAL PIZZA ‘2°° | VALL TOPPINGS 504 PER TOPPING PER PIZZA J “NO COUPON SPECIALS” □ WE ACCEPT CHECKS Chmrym, I hi i am i mm • mm i mm Valuable Couoons ■■ i h a b ■ mm ■ h ■ m m • h i b ■ m ■ ■■ ■ _ ‘200 OFF Any Three Pizzas • NAME_ • ■ ADORESS - . DATE ___ I txpints iz-Ji •> iHiHiaaiaaiHiB M00 OFF Any Pizza Ordered 475-6363 11am -4pm j name_ ADDRESS_ DATE _ I EXPIRES IMI S/ i • 50c OFF ■ Any I Pizza 475-6363 NAME _,__ I ADDRESS_| DATE __ . I tlPiWS l? II *' LIMITED DELIVERY AREA WE DELIVER DURING LUNCH! (NOW ACCEPTING DELIVERY APPLICATIONS) Recruits sign this week; year of effort bears fruit By Jeff Apel Senior Editor A year-long wait for Nebraska men’s basketball coach Danny Nee and women’s coach Angela Beck will come to a decisive conclusion Wednesday when the early signing period for high-school and junior college basketball players begins. Nee and Beck said they arc anxious for the week-long signing period to begin because they both have spent almost a year recruiting potential athletes. Both coaches said the re cruiting process begins with a phone call or a questionnaire and climaxes on the first day recruits are allowed to sign national letters of intent. “It’s a long process,” Nee said. “You sec the kids, you make a home visit, you tell them about the program — then hopefully they will sign. “It makes me anxious - very much so.” Beck agreed. “You work hard all summer and now you start to sec results,” Beck said. “It’s exciting.” Beck said she is particularly pleased with her recruiting class be cause she has already received four verbal commitments. She said the players who plan to sign Wednesday include three post players and a guard. “We had a real good summer,” Beck said. “Everything fell into i place.” ■ Beck said the Comhuskcrs may I add a fifth recruit if another commit L ment is made during the early signing period. She said Nebraska wants to get m all of its recruiting finished by Nov. 18. “We want to sign them early,” Beck said. “Thai’s our philosophy.” Nee said there is a trend developing among college recruits to sign early rather than wail until the next spring. He said about 60 to 70 percent of all athletes sign between Nov. 11 and 18. “That’s in the last couple years,” Nec said. Nec said he doesn’t know how many recruits he will sign during the early period. Nec couldn’t comment on any of his potential recruits be cause that would violate NCAA rules, he said. Two players Nec was recruiting — James Voskvillc from Calvin Chris tian High School in Grandville, Mich., and forward Michael Brown from James Madison High School in Houston, Texas — have indicated they arc going elsewhere. Tom Vandcrlana, Voskville’s high-school coach, said the 6-foot-7 forward will attend Michigan. He said although Voskvillc enjoyed his re cruiting visit to Lincoln and was impressed by Nec, the Wolverines’ engineering college and strong bas ketball tradition steered him away from Nebraska. Waller Yates, Brown’s high school coach, said the 6-foot-6 for ward vull attend Wyoming. Brown attends the same high school that produced Nebraska defensive end Broderick Thomas. Another player being recruited by Nec, 6-fool-5 Anthony Peeler of Pasco High School in Kansas City, Mo., will wait until spring to sign, said Pasco coach Willie Bowie. • f ueity s overcompensation [ condescends to simple folk f BOOK from Page 8 Lincoln spreading fitfully under the | duress of an ever-increasing demand f on Us enrollment. Its architecture is a rummage of style and shade; its epi dermis a variety of brick and stone and, as a concession to modern tastes, glass and metal. An aerial view is dominated by two enormous grain silos on the north edge of town and to the west is the Memorial Football Stadium.” Similarly, Doug Looney contem plates the state’s reliance on the al mighty pigskin in a 1975 issue of the same magazine: ‘‘It’s not as if there’s nothing in the state of Nebraska except football. You can go to a museum in Lincoln and sec the fossil of the world’s largest elephant. Or sit on a fence and wail for a pheasant to fly up. Or go to any town and applaud the changing traffic sig nal, booing when it gets stuck on yellow. “Or you can do some dull things. It’s up to you. What happened, for those of you that slept through this in school, is that when God went to work creating Nebraska, He thought: ‘OK, I keep giving other areas of this coun try mountains, beaches, stuff like that. Everywhere I look, beauty. I need change.’ What resulted is a landscape of wall-to-wall dust. It’s the perfect environment if you’re a vacuum sweeper. To try to make up, God later gave Nebraska football.” For those of us who would much rather buy a pint of Yukon Jack, trudge out into the country and sit on a fence watching pheasants lift off in a blur of concentrated autumn while the sky snaps and cracks around us as if it’s made of glass, than be conde scended to by a mere game, God overcompensatcd. Ohio high-school star considering Nebraska Hy Kent hndacott Staff Reporter One of the top high-school basket ball players in Ohio may sign with Nebraska, his coach said Monday. Mansfield (Ohio) Senior High coach Joe Prats said DaPreis Owens, a 6-foot-9 center projected as a power forward in college, is deciding be tween Nebraska, Cleveland Stale and Tennessee. He said Owens will visit Tennessee this weekend before decid ing. Prats said Owens will sign during the early signing period, which begins Wednesday. Owens averaged 22 points and six rebounds a game as a junior. He also set a school record with 96 blocked shots. He runs the floor very well,” Prats said. “He handles the ball well for his size.” He said Owens is a great juniper. “He touches 11-6 on the back board,” Prats said. Owens attended the Kansas-Nc braska football game during his visit to Lincoln. Prats said Owens came back from his recruiting visit brag ging about what he saw. “It wasn’t a very close game, but not many of them have been,” he said. “But anyway, he was very impressed with the facilities. He really liked it.” Prats said 60 major colleges have offered Owens scholarships. He had been deciding between five schools, but recently eliminated Ohio State and DcPaul from his list, Prats said. Bears coach displeased My Inc Associated Press LAKE FOREST, 111.—Coach Mike Dilka has nothing against win ning, hut he’s not happy about the way his Chicago Bears arc doing it these days. “That’s not the way we’ve de signed it,” Ditka said Monday of the three come-from-bchind triumphs since the end of the NFL players’ strike. “It defies exploration.’’ What bothers Ditka most is that the Bears aren’t playing ‘‘Bear Football,” which is a combination of strong running attack along with defense.