ATTENTION SCIENCE MAJORS APPLICATION DEADLINE FOR | MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY CLASSES BEGINNING JULY, 1989 APPLY NOW POR CLINICAL LABORATORY SCI ENCE EDUCATION TOWARD A B.S. DEGREE IN MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA MEDICAL CENTER. f, l. )) APFIJCATIONS & INFORMATION CONTACT: PI IYLI.IS MU ELLEN BERG, PROGRAM DIRECTOR 559-7628 VICKI FREEMAN, EDUCATION COORDINATOR 559-7627 SECRETARIAL ASSISTANT' 559-7693 Attention University Employees Introducing The PACE Lifestyle The PACE lifestyle is simply eryoying the best while saving the most. A lifestyle that affords you the name brand products you want at wholesale prices. The PACE Commitment T>> Its Members -4 Absolute wholesale prices on top name brands ~4 Exciting product selection for home and family 4 100% Member Satisfaction — Unconditionally Guaranteed -4 Exclusive member discount services Individual Membership — You Are Already Qualified Individual Members join FREE and shop at 5% above the absolute wholesale prices. 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Zip - Business Phone _ _ Home Phone - . ... .... —, Participating tiroup_Authorization -Date SPOUSE CARD First Name _:— l-ast Name Primary Member's Social Security Number_—-— -- Authorization By_Date , -; See What’s New at PACE Today! Warehouse Hours Monday - Friday 11 a.m. • 8:30 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Sunday 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. Business Members Only Hours Monday - Friday 9 a.m. - 11 a.m. iohio Miu Valley Kd. Landry says Walker ‘dominating IR VING,Texas (AP)-“America’s Team” has become the “The Herschel Walker Cowboys.” It became clear Monday night that the 1988 NFL fate of the Dallas Cowboys rests solcy on the perform ance of Walker. Walker carried nine times on the winning 81-yard touchdown drive as -the Cowboys defeated the Phoenix Cardinals 17-14. Dallas ran 24 plays in the fourth period and Walker touched the ball on 17 of those plays, accounting for 88 of the club’s 122 yards. “Thai’s what I envisioned when I decided to put Tony Dorset! on the bench,” said Dallas coach Tom Lan dry. “Herschel can just dominate a game. You can be in perfect position and he will still break a tackle and make a big play.” The loudly objecting 33-year-old Dorsctt was traded to Denver so the 26-ycar-old Walker could become the Cowboys’ prime offensive weapon. “I like to carry the ball a lot,” Walker said. “1 get into the llow of the game that way. ” Walker ran 29 times for 149 yards against the Cardinals. “Ideally, we like to gel the ball into his hands 30 to 35 limes a game,” Landry said. “Phoenix did a good job of double-teaming Hcrschel on pass coverage, so we just pitched it to him. He’s powerful and always seems to be stronger in the fourth quarter than he is in the first quarter.” Landry did admit he may have stretched Walker to his limit on the 81-yard drive. “That’s the hardest workout he’s had since summer camp,” Landry said. “I was wondering if he had any spring left in his legs down there.” Walker said he enjoys getting the ball and ducking behind Dallas’ 300 pound offensive linemen. “They are young but they’re learn ing and they do a great job,” Walker said. “It’s fun to run behind them.” Landry said the Cowboys’ are Walker’s team. “I’d buy a ticket just to watch the guy run,” the coach said. “I would love to be an offensive lineman for Hcrschcl.” All total, Walker touched the ball receiving or running 32 times against Phoenix and gained 171 yards. Series to be played at night NEW YORK (AP) - There will be no day games in the World Series this year but if there is a Game 6 it will be played at 5 p.m., the commissioner’s office announced Wednesday in re leasing the limes for the baseball playoffs. Game 6 of the World Series, scheduled for the city of the National League champion on Saturday, Oct. 22, will be the only non-night game in the World Series. Last year, Game 6 started at4 p.m. EDT but it didn’t make much differ ence since it was inside the Met rodome, the ballpark of the American League champion Minnesota Twins. The NL playoffs begin on the night of Tuesday, Oct. 4 in the city of the West Division winner. The AL play offs begin the next night in the city of • the East Division winner. The World Scries begins Saturday, Oct. 15 in the city of the National League cham pion. ABC-TV will televise the league championship scries. Al Michaels, Jim Palmer and Tim McCarvcr will work the National League games while Gary Bender and Joe Morgan will broadcast the American League games. NBC-TV will broadcast the World Scries, with announcers Vin Scully and Joe Garagiola. AP’s Nissenson picks Miami Hurricanes By Herschel Nissenson AF’ F;ooiball Wntcr Do you know whal happened on Sept. 8, 1984? Even George Bush knows - now - that date had nothing to do with Pearl Harbor. Clue: Top-ranked Miami visits No. 15 Michigan on Saturday and Michi gan Coach Bo Schembcchlcr pro vides the following hint - “The thing that will hopefully help us is we’re playing on our turf.’’ Answer: On Sept. 8. 1984, Miami suffered its only road loss - 22-14 to Michigan - under Coach Jimmy Johnson. Not counting bowls, Johnson and the Hurricanes have since won 19 straight on the road. Miami also has winning streaks of 13 in a row overall and 33 straight regu lar-season games. “I’m not so sure that they’re not better than last year’s national cham pionship team,” says Schcmbcchlcr, whose only 0-2 start in his 26-year coaching career was at M iami of Ohio in 1965. Michigan hasn’t been 0-2 since 1959. Miami is a 7-point favorite. The pick is ... Miami 24-14. Last week’s record was 34-19-.642; for the season. 68-27-.718. Against the point spread, last week’s mark wasonly 11-19-.367; for the year, 22 25-.468. No. 10 Florida Slate (favored by 2 1/ 2) at No. 3 Clcmson: Clcmson 21-17. Long Beach Stale at No. 2 UCLA (no line). UCLA63*0. Arizona at No. 4 Oklahoma (by 23): Oklahoma 28-14. Kansas at No. 6 Auburn (by 37): Auburn 49-0. No. 7 Georgia (by 14) at Mississippi Stale: Georgia 30-13. No. 8 Notre Dame at Michigan Stale (pick ‘cm): Michigan State 17 10. No. 9 LSU (by 3 1/2) at Tennessee: Tennessee 24-21. Maryland at No. 12 West Virginia (by 20 1/2): West Virginia 28-14. No. 13 Alabama (by 2 1/2) at Texas A&M: Texas A&M 20-13. East Carolina at No. 14 South Caro lina (by 23): South Carolina 35-7. Boston College at No. 16 Penn State (by 7 1/2): Penn State 27-14. Army at No. 17 Washington (by 21 1/2): Washington 38-7. No. 18 Ohio Stale at Pitt (by 4): Pitt 21-14. Colorado at No. 19 Iowa (by 6): Iowa 24-14. California (by 6 1/2) at Oregon State: Upset Special of the Week ... Oregon Suite 28-24. Chatwin praises Husker program By Jeremy Felker Stalf Reporter Nebraska softball player Ruth Chatwin was surprised to receive a scholarship to play softball at Ne braska. Especially since Chatwin is from the land Down Under. Chatwin, a senior catcher from Melbourne, Australia, is the first Australian to play softball for the Cornhuskers. “I’m one of probably 60,000 sofl ballcrs at home, and I just didn’t know that it (the scholarship) was ever going rhatwin to be real, she said. cna,wm Even in Australia, Chatwin said, Nebraska’s athletic reputation is growing. The Huskers’ softball pro gram is an example, she said. “Of the schools that recruited me, Nebraska had ihc best reputation as far as its softball program was con cerned,” Chalwin said. ‘‘It also has its academics above sports... whereasat some schools, it is sports and then academics.” Chalwin has maintained a 3.35 grade point average and was a mem ber of the 1987 GTE Academic All American 3rd team, the Big Eight Academic Honor Roll and the Aca demic All-Big Eight softball team. Chalwin said she has not pul soft ball anywhere near the backseat. “I believe that if I don’t try my hardest or give that 1(X) percent, 10 years down the road, when I look back on my final year, I’m the only one who’s really lost,” she said. The Huskers will be young and inexperienced following the loss of four seniors from the roster this year, but according to Chalwin, inexperi ence may not be a disadvantage at all. “They arc very young, but they have so much enthusiasm for the sport,” she said. “I think the inexperi ence is really going to be a catalyst too, because every year the preseason rankings arc cither one, two or three, and that puls a lot of pressure on from the start, whereas right now who cares where we arc.” “Right now, we set our fortune and we establish ourselves.” Husker coach Ron Wolforth said the Huskers will achieve success through senior leadership and posi tive altitudes. Chatwin, he said, will be one of Nebraska’s leaders. ‘‘The whole team has that atti tude,” he said, “but Ruth gives leader ship in her judgment or selection ol pitches,on the hitting /.one and hitting situation.” ' “She’s a clutch hitter," he said. Wolforth said that last season, Chatwin nearly doubled her 1986 total for runs baited in. Such an im provement, according to Chatwin, is due to a “totally new concept on bat ting, which I think is very consistent, very effective.” “I think we’re the first one in soft ball (to use the new balling tech niques),” she said. Chatwin said it is because of these new tcchmqucsanda positivcattitudc that a Big Eight title can be attained. “I don’t mean definitely we’re going to win, but definitely that is what we arc striving for. If we win the Big Eight, everything else will come from that.” Chatwin has another goal entering her senior season. “I hope that when 1 finish playing, I will end my career playing for my country in the Olympics,” she said. “That’s how I want to end my career — on a high note. I don’t want to go out in some slow-pitch, beer-drinking league."