Husker starter built confidence TYRANCE from Page 15 a starter went about as well as he ex pected. He’s made 12 unassisted and five assisted tackles in the Cornhuskers’ firstthrecgamcsagainstTexasA&M, Utah State and UCLA. “I’m kind of hard on myself as far as expectations go,” Tyrance said. “I’ve made some progress, but I’m still not totally satisfied with my game. “I just want to contribute to the team. I was happy with the way I was playing early. I made improvement from the A&M game to the Utah State game. Then, I fell off a little. But I was glad 1 was able to play. I just want to play better.” Tyrance said his improvement fell off in the Husker’s 41-28 loss to UCLA Saturday. He was credited with six unassisted and eight total tackles against the Bruins. He said Nebraska’s defense had a major breakdown in the 1st quarter. The Bruins jumped out to a 28-0 1st quarter lead. “It’s kind of hard to explain,” Tyrance said. “We pretty much broke down. We missed a lot of assignments and blew some key plays. It wasn’t a good performance, but it’s behind us now.” Tyrance considered his perform ance below par, he said. “1 was having trouble with my quadriceps,” he said. “I had that in the back of my mind. I thought I played pretty well, but I was overaggressivc on a few plays.” Melton said Tyrance played “pretty well” against UCLA. “When you get beat, sometimes you have the tendency to get down on yourself,” Melton said. “He missed a couple tackles, but he wasn’t the only one. He’s the kind of guy who will work hard and will come back and play a good ball game against Arizona State. He has a lot of personal pride.” Tyrance, who is 6-foot-2 and weighs 230 pounds, said his thigh muscle is still only 75 percent uoug oarroii/uany raeDrasKan Sophomore linebacker Pat Tyrance takes a breather after Tuesday’s practice at Memorial Stadium. The Millard North High School graduate came out of nowhere to rise to the top of Nebraska’s depth chart. healthy, but he should be ready to play against Arizona State on Sept. 24. The Husker’s other starting inside linebacker, LcRoy Etienne, has 17 unassisted tackles and 24 total. Tyr ance said Etienne is always around when he needs him. “He makes up for a lot of my mistakes,’’ he said. “It's good to have somebody there who knows the de fenses so well. He makes things easier for me.” Melton said Etienne’s experience allows him to help the younger line backers. “LcRoy’s been around so long and Randall Jobman is a seasoned player,” Mellon said. “Those guys leach the other players because they know the younger guys need some help.” But against UCLA, Tyrance said, Etienne and the rest of the defense wasn’t so perfect. “We’re all human,” he said.“It just happens.” Because of the loss to the Bruins, Tyrance said, the defense has been working extra hard on tackling. “We worked on it Tuesday and we’ll probably have to work on it some more,” he said. “Thai’s really what hurt us. We all know what we have to do.” ‘World’s best’ finally get chance to dive into after-boycott pool of competition SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Los Angeles 1984 was a party without the hard stuff. It was lively but lacked kick. The East Germans were invited but declined. RSVPs from the Soviet Union, Hungary and Poland said, sorry, we’re not coming cither. American swimmers had the punch bowl to themselves. They dove in and came up with 20 of the 29 gold medals at those Sum mer Olympics. But the gleam was tarnished by the Eastern-bloc boycott that locked out some of the world's best swimmers. “There’s a lot of great racing going on and, because it was in the United States, it was very exciting. So it wasn’t hollow. But it is misleading from a statistical standpoint with regard to the number of medals that were won.” There are 31 swimming events in Seoul, 16 for the men and 15 for the women. Quick predicted his team will win more gold medals and more total medals than any other nation. Another 20-win season is unlikely. Fifteen is a more realistic number. Of the 26 individual events, East ern-bloc swimmers hold records in 11. Among ihc men with very good chances to win arc Poland’s Artur Wojdat in the400-mctcr freestyle, the Soviet Union’s Igor Polianski in the 100 and 200 backstroke, Hungary’s Josef Szabo in the 200 breaststroke and Tamas Damyi in the 400 individ ual medley. The women’s competition will resemble a dual meet between the Americans and East Germans. Kristin Otto, Hcikc Friedrich, Cornelia Sirch, Silkc Horner, Birtc Wcigang and Danicla Hunger head the East German team. Now those nations have relumed to crash this month’s Seoul soiree. Welcome back, the Americans say, and get ready for a fight. “When this meet’s over with, there’s no debate,” U.S. swimming coach Richard Quick said. “We’re going to add up the results and people will know, and that’s what athletes and coaches thrive on.” For decades, Americans, particu larly the men, have dominated inter national swimming. In the last three Olympics that brought ^together the Eastern bloc and the West — 1968, 1972 and 1976 — U.S. swimmers won 14 of the 63 individual events. The East had a feast in Moscow in 1980 and the West was best in Los Angeles in 1984. Those results, though, had a hollow ring because of the missing competition. “I don’t think, at the time, the coaches or athletes looked at it that way,” said Quick, an assistant coach on the 1984 team. “We kind of did months in advance, but when you’re in the Olympic Games and the excite ment lakes over and all that kind of thing, then it’s not hollow.” Sprinter's outfits dazzle CHIBA, Japan(AP)—In less than two months, U.S. Olympic sprinter Florence Griffith-Joyner’s appear ance fee has skyrocketed from $ 1,500 to more than $25,000. If she wins gold at the Olympic Games, the figure will increase sub stantially, said her business adviser, Gordon Baskin. ‘‘I cannot project what she will be worth,” Baskin said at a press confer ence. “But each deal will be sclcc tive.” . Griffith-Joyncr’s athletic ability, attire and beauty were accentuated during the U.S. Olympic trials in July. Wcaiing outfits with one leg cov ered and capping her appearances with an “athletic negligee,” Griffith Joyner set the world record of 10.49 seconds in the women’s 100-meter dash and broke the American record in the 200 with a 21.77 clocking, barely missing the world mark of 21.71. “Don’t call her outfits sexy,” Baskin said. “Call them sensuous. “If you stop to think about it, she’s wearing more clothes on the track than anyone else. It’s the perception of what she’s wearing that’s exciting. It’s the way she does her clothes.” Griffith-Joyncr, the silver medal 4.11411 mt/ imni ist in the 200 at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics, created the one-legged look. “The one-lcggcr is my favorite,” she said. “I came upon it by accident. I was looking in a mirror trying some thing else and I decided to try it this year. I wasn’t sure how it would go.” Griffith-Joyncr had previously worn unique outfits, including many with hoods that made her look like a spccdskatcr. But since she never had attained results comparable to those at the trials. “The spark was her world record and her fashionable outfits,” said Baskin, whose West Coast offices have been flooded with requests for Griffith-Joyncr since the trials ended July 23. Griffith-Joyner, who is married to A1 Joyner, the 1984 Olympic triple jump gold medalist, also has been featured on magazine covers throughout the world and has been besieged for radio and television in terviews, commercial advertise ments and endorsements. So far, Baskin said, he has ac cepted one big offer, with Disneyland studios if Griffith-Joyner wins a gold medal in the 100 or 200 dashes or the 400-mcter relay. Starkey’s Pizza ! 1 Large Pizza 1 Medium Pizza 2 cokes 2 Cokes only (JK only $7.11 $5.95 i Call 477-1211 j For Free Delivery Expires Sept. 30, 1988 Party Animals Different Color A night on the town doesn’t have to mean a trip downtown anymore. State Fair Park is only a few blocks from campus, and horse racing is more exciting than ever this year because we're racing under the lights! What’s more, general admission is free every night and on Saturday and Sunday, too, so a tnp to the tk won’t eat up your college budget Change the way you party, and join your friends for a different kind of fun at Lincoln’s newest nighttime hot spot—State Fair Park. Post time: 7 p.m. Wednesday - Friday, 5 p.m. Saturday 2p.m. Sunday ■ NEBRASKA STATE FAIR NORSE RAdNC September 16 * November 13 Nebraska State Fair Park Lincoln ..lMHMUlw.Wffy.ffrT- 1 J . I/'1-.: