Deficit , Continued from Page 7 now,” he said. “There arc definitely some pros and cons.” Only about 30 percent of season ticket holders currently donate to the athletic department, Fourakcrsaid. A change to priority scaling, he said, could raise as much as $2 million to S3 million a year. A third option the athletic depart ment is already pursuing and may expand, Fouraker said, is corporate sponsorships of athletic events. Corporate sponsors already adver tise on the scoreboards in Memorial Stadium. This year is the first in which advertisements have also been in other areas of the stadium, such as behind the end /.ones. The athletic department is looking into further expanding its corporate sponsorships of football games and selling them for basketball games as well, he said. / The main difficulty in eliminating the athletic department’s S1.8 million deficit, Fouraker said, is the athletic department’s financing of the Cam pus Recreation Center. He said the athletic department makes a S1.2 m il lion toSl .5 million payment yearly to pay for the center. The athletic department’s obliga tion to the SI5 million center will probably end during the 1995 football season, Fouraker said. “It’s hard to make (the deficit) up when we still have that item,” he said. The Computing Resource Center is offering free1 microcomputer seminars to UNL students. The seminars will feature an introduction to Microsoft Word for the Macin tosh and WordPerfect for IBM machines. No reservations are required. Lab Location Dates Times Introduction to Microsoft Word for Macintosh Andrews Wednesday, October 14 3:30-4:30 p.m. Advanced Microsoft Word for Macintosh Andrews Wednesday. October 21 3:00 - 4:30 p.m. Introduction to WordPerfect 5.1 for IBM Sandoz (IBM) Thursday, October 15 3:00 - 4:30 p.m. Advanced WordPerfect 5.1 for IBM Sandoz (IBM) Thursday. October 22 3:00 - 4:30 p.m. Woolridge Continued from Page 8 offers to play basketball from col leges throughout the nation. Oklahoma, California and South ern California were on the top of his list with Nebraska, but he was in clined toward attending Syracuse. But when the Syracuse basketball program underwent an NCAA inves tigation earlier this year, Woolridge said he knew his choice was clear. “(Nebraska) was close to home, and I knew I could come and fit in with the rest of the players,” Woolridge said. As for the 1992-93 Nebraska team, Woolridge said the Huskcrs had the talent to be one of the top teams in the nation. “We compete talent-wise with the best of them — not only in the Big Eight but in the entire country,” Woolridge said. “We’ll be as good as we allow ourselves to be.” WASTED YOUTIL Bad boy image hampers ‘Canes CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) — The latest complaint about the behav ior of the M iam i Hurricanes has coach Dennis Erickson angry. Captains from both Miami and Penn State skipped the handshake ritual during the coin toss prior to the Hurricanes’ 17-14 victory Saturday. Nittany Lions guard John Gcrak per ceived it as a snub by the Hurricanes and termed it, “gradc-schoolish.” At Erickson’s weekly news con ference on Tuesday, he said hisplay ers were innocent of an etiquette er ror. “I watched what happened,” he said. ‘‘Our guys stuck their hands out, and Penn State ran off the field. So who’s wrong there?” Publicity about the incident upset Erickson, who has struggled since arriving at Miami in 1989 to improve the Hurricanes’ bad-boy image. “Now all of a sudden Miami doesn’t shake hands,” Erickson said. “Please.” Erickson acknowledged that he instructed his captains to shake hands at Penn Stale after Miami players declined to lake part in the coin-loss formality prior to at least two other games. He was able to find some humor in the matter. Leaving the room, he made a point of shaking quarterback Gino Torrctla’s hand. What’s not so funny to the Hurri canes is the idea that their image hurts them in the rankings. Despite con secutive victories over Florida Stale and Penn State, Miami (5-0) trails No. 1 Washington by one point in this week’s poll. “I think some people still have that nasty taste about us on the inside of them,” linebacker Jessie Armstead said. “But we’ve changed our ways a little, you know?” The defending national champi ons take a 23-game winning streak into Saturday’s home game against Texas Christian (1-3-1). A decade of success, like the Hur ricanes’ lingering black-hat image, may work against them with poll vot ers, Armstead said. “When somebody stays on top so i _ _- **_.1 __:_*i__ — lung, yuu lu^u ui avi/iug mt/iii uu lop,” he said. Narrow victories have also hurt the Hurricanes in the rankings, and Saturday ’ s game m ay pro v idc a chance for a lopsided margin. Erickson said there should be no need to run up the score. “What I think poll voters look at is, ‘Did you dominate this opponent like you’re supposed to?”’ he said. “It’s when you struggle against a team you’re supposed to beat that it hurts you.” Erickson said the Hurricanes de serve to be crowned champions in at least one poll if they finish 12-0. |gg£ TwlsI#:,8®1' - *TLC* Boomerang •Nylons*Annie Lennox* J[tAC DIVA INCLUDES WHY LITTLE BIRD WALKING ON PRECIOUS ^ Annie Lennon •1401 'O' St. 434-2500 •East Park Plaza 434-2510 •6105 "0* St. *48th & Van Dorn 434-2520 434-2530 Pricei effective through 10-27-92 OllClUL SIMITHfk ti ll M BOOMERiNG uinta (FctturiftQ ION HAlTONi Gin u m mat ton ti hw mo or Tm kao • run ' one hugs it IK UTAQ (Aim r« DAM uuma yfC. Boomerang Nylons wmmmmmmammmmm > 1. UCLA 13-0 2. Stanford 11-1 3. Long Beach St. 13-1 4. Pacific 14-2 ><^a0 5. Nebraska 10-2 6. Southern California 7. Florida 16-1 8. Illinois 15-3 9. Brigham Young 12-3 10. Texas 14-2 11. Louisiana State 11-4 12. Penn State 14-2 » 13. New Mexico 8-6 14. Ohio State 12-3 15. Colorado 12-3 16. Texas Tech 12-3 17. Georgia 15-3 18. Arizona State 13-4 19. Kentucky 14-4 20. Hawaii 7-6 ^ 21. UC-Santa Barbara 10-4 22. Washington State 13-4 23. Notre Dame 15-3 24. Colorado State 13-3 25. Fresno State 8-6 Husker volleyball keeps 5th place in AVCA poll From Staff Reports The Nebraska volleyball team stayed fifth in the American Volley ball Coaches Association poll released on Tuesday. The 10-2 Comhuskcrs, who are riding an eight-match winning streak, received 838 points. They arc the only non-Wcst Coast team in the top six. Nebraska is also ranked fifth in the Volleyball Monthly poll. Two-time defending national champion UCLA is ranked first in bothpollsand wasaunanimouschoicc among the voters. Five opponents on Nebraska’s schedule this season — UCLA, Pa cific, Southern California, Illinois and Texas — arc ranked in the top ten. The only other Big Eight team ranked in the top 20 is 12-3 Colorado, which is ranked 15lh in the AVCA poll and 18th in the Volleyball Monthly poll. Nebraska will return to action 7:30 p.m-. Saturday with a home match against Oklahoma.