1 .. I | I in jb' ::: ji mijm' '' ' ' ' ' ' ''!"; ■ _ _J Jiff Cauderon/DN NEBRASKAE-ERS (from left) Jamel Williams, Jay Foreman, Eric Stokes, Jason Peter and Grant Wistrom celebrate after Foreman returned an interception 21 yards for NlPs first touchdown Friday. Hie Huskers beat Colorado 17-12 at Memorial Stadium to win the Big 12 North Division. Louis Comhuskers and Longhorns are ready to face off for Big 12 bragging rights. By Mitch Shebman Sports Editor _ * One more hurdle and die Ne braska football team is headed to Bourbon Street ... The Comhuskers, ranked thud in the nation after Friday’s 17>12 win oyer Colorado at Memorial Stadium, earned the first-ever Big 12 Conference North Division championship and the right to play Texas Saturday in St. Louis. “We feel like we are playing good enough football to beat any body in the country right now,” quarterback Scott Frost said, “and we are going to have a chance to prove that” Nebraska can prove on Saturday that it is the best of the Big 12, and with a win in the league’s champi onship game, the 10-1 Huskers will be invited to the Sugar Bowl, Jan. 2 in New Orleans, t. Awaiting at the Superdome: No. 1-ranked Florida State. By virtue of their 24-21 win over Florida on Saturday in Talla hassee, Fla., the 11-0 Seminoles clinched a spot in the Bowl Alliance's premier showdown. If Nebraska gets past Texas, the Sugar Bowl would pit die winners » 11 of the last three national champi onships and renew a rivalry be tween two of college football’s most successful coaches, Tom Osborne and Bobby Bowden. It would also be a rematch of the 1994 Orange Bowl, in which FSU beat Nebraska 18-16 to claim the 1993 national tide, Bowden’s first. Nebraska has lost only one game since and Osborne has doubled Bowden’s championship total with wins in 1994 and’95 ova* Miami and Florida, respectively. But the Huskers say they aren’t looking past the Longhorns, who defeated Texas A&M 51-15 on Fri day to claim the Big 12 South Di vision championship. Tickets are still available for Saturday’s 12:04 p.m. game at the ^ i ^ MPM^ Trans World Dome in St. Louis. Nebraska, which has sold nearly all of its 7,500 tickets, received an ad ditional 1,200tickets from the other five North Division schools. Athletic Department donors will be given priority, but any fans can purchase tickets (which cost $40 and $60) beginning today at 8 a.m. on a first-come, first-served basis. The ticket office phone number is 1-800-8BIGRED or 472-3111. Despite small community, Judaic studies thrive Professors work to expand teaching and research to maintain students’ enthusiam. By Erin Schulte Senior Reporter 1 " 1 . 11,1 l in a state with a small Jewish popu lation, the university’s Judaic studies program thrives on the interest of stu dents of all faiths. What the University of Nebraska " * Lincoln began tbe Harris Center for Judaic studies three years ago, educa tors knew it would be an uphill battle to find students who had a base knowl edge of Judaism. But many non-Jewish students are enthusiastic about the program, said Jean Caban, an assistant professor in political science and philosophy who was instrumental in developing the program. “Sometimes one finds a program established where one thinks there wouldn’t be a large (Jewish) commu nity,” Cahan said. “We lack a pool of students who are already knowledge able about basic things in Judaism.” In its newsletter, the Judaic studies program is described as the “only Ju daic studies program in the U.S. cre ated to serve a primarily non-Jewish constituency.” But the program is mak ing great strides toward educating stu dents about Jewish culture, customs, religion, literature and history, she said. Non-Jewish students usually join the program for one of two reasons, Cahan said. “Students are drawn to it because they think Judaism is somewhat ex otic and different, and they want to learn about a culture that in many ways is non-Westem,” Cahan said. “Another type of student sees Judaism as a foun