Attention May 1997 Graduates Your Degree Application is Due: February 7,1997 Apply at 107 Canfield Admin. Bldg. Raw Nerve •Classic Rock & Roll* ~ I February 7th, Ki'ftGo-iaaohsiJ • Wednesday Night Dancing 8-11 p.m. • :.^ jmmwtfftMto &i.....: i—--—-8-1 \ I ' FOR TICKETS CALL 1-800-8-BK3RED husker5nvmm^NAE ; • ’ - Fri., February 7 Field Events: 4 p.m. - 7 p.m. Running Events: 4:30 p.m. - 10 p.m. Pdb* i-If. - '$)£&,' i^l'iVr7-n-^:> -Jf NU women look to show up Wolverines Wrestlers travel to Michigan By Antone Oseka Staff Reporter Coming off an upset dual vic tory over Iowa State, the Nebraska wrestling team will try to keep its winning streak alive this weekend. The Comhuskers (11-4) travel north to take on Michigan State and Central Michigan Sunday at East Lansing, Mich. With its victory over seventh ranked ISU, No. 10 Nebraska broke into the top 10 for the first time. NU starts off against the 13th ranked Spartans at 1 p.m., and fol low with the dual against Central Michigan at 7 p.m. The last time Nebraska saw Michigan State, the Spartans placed fifth at the Cliff Keen National Duals in Lincoln. Nebraska Assistant Coach Mark Cody said the Huskers don’t match up well with the Spartans. “Hopefully, we can pull another upset like Iowa State,” Cody said. NU also takes bn Central Michigan, an unranked team that could pose a problem for Nebraska, Cody said. CMU fields one ranked wres tler, No. 7 Casey Cunningham at 142. Ironically, the 142 spot is the only weight not set for Nebraska. Allen Hankins and Dusty Morris, last year’s 142-pounder and na tional qualifier, will wrestle off to night for the spot. By Gregg Madsen Staff Reporter Nebraska gymnastics will be on the road this weekend. The women’s team competes against Michigan nd Illinois at Arbor, Sunday af 2, while the NU men battle New Mexico Sat urday night at 7 in Albuquerque, N.M. Nebraska KMfllf Women’s Coach Dan Kendig said the No. 6 Comhuskers will face their toughest competition of the year in the seventh ranked Wolverines. Michigan edged NU 193.975 to 193.95 in the NCAA semifinals last year for the final spot in die Super Six. Nebraska has used that .025 loss as motivation this season. Kendig said the Huskers are ready to avenge that loss. “The number six team in the coun try is ready to go up and show the num ber seven team a thing or two,” Kendig said. The Huskers are leading the na tion in the uneven bars, averaging a 49.005 team score in the event. Senior all-arounder Shelly Bartlett — January’s Big 12 Conference women’s gymnast of the month — leads the Huskers* attack. Bartlett, a native of Spokane, Wash., has won the all-around in three of NU’s five meets this season. Freshman Heather Brink won the all-around in Nebraska’s other two meets. Against Oklahoma last Satur day, Brink set a new school record in the all-around with a 39.4. Kendig said sophomores Amie Dillman and Courtney Brown would be able to compete Sunday. Dillman competed against Oklahoma despite a thigh bruise, and a stress fracture has kept Brown out of action this sea son. “I don!t know if you’d define them as being 100 percent,” Kendig said. “But they’re going to give a 100-per cent effort.” Men’s Coach Francis Allen said his team — also ranked sixth — is ready to improve following a 227.57 226.15 loss to Oklahoma last Satur day. The No. 11 Lobos lost to Nebraska, 226.65-219.075, at the Jan. 17 Rocky Mountain Open in Colorado Springs. “I’d say we’re going to improve on our 226 and they’ll be about at a 226,” Allen said. “I’d say it’s going to be a good competition. They’re not going to beat us, but it will be good.” Junior Bill Mulholland and fresh man Derek Leiter will look to improve in the all-around. Mulholland has placed second and first in the all around in Nebraska’s two meets this season. He scored a 56.3 at the Rocky Mountain Open and a 56.625 against the Sooners. Leiter placed third at the Rocky Mountain Open (54.5) and sec ond against Oklahoma (56.325). Red Raiders hold edge on NU WOMEN from page 7 ~ NCAA Tournament in each of the past five years, and in 1993 they won the NCAA title. Tech is also coming off one of its most impressive wins of the year: a 96-73 trouncing of eighth-ranked Texas. “They are rolling on all cylinders now,” Beck said. “Texas Tech is a great, great basketball team even though they have a few more losses this year than normal. We have to come out, compete and believe that we can challenge.” Against the Longhorns Wednes day, junior All-American candidate Alicia Thompson scored a career-high 47 points, 26 of which Came in the first half as the Texas Tech built a 37 26 lead. Thompson has been the Red Raid ers’ leading scorer and rebounder in 14 of Tech’s 19 games this season. Nebraska guard Jami Kubik said the Huskers are going to have to im- - prove their defense from Wednesday’s loss at Colorado. The Buffaloes shot 49 percent from the flow against the Huskers, Kubik also said it’s going to take a team effort to slow down Thompson, who has scored double figures in ev ery game this season. “Our defense really let us down in Colorado,” Kubik said. Besides the Nebraska defense, Beck said she is also looking for im provement on the offensive end. Junior Anna DeForge was the only Husker to score in double figures against the Buffaloes. “We had a lot of people that were nonexistent against Colorado,” Beck said. “Obviously if we get a win against Texas Tech all is forgotten. We have to get back to some of the funda mentals that made us 16-1. We just have to have the mentality to show up in a big game and have the type of mentality it takes to win one of them.” - Women's Basketball Starters Sunday, Noon Devaney Canter 16-3(6-3) ____ » • Huskers scare Tfexas Tfech coach MEN from page 7 til last month. Colorado ended the streak with an 80-78 win in Lubbock on Jan. 11. Before falling to Texas on Mon day, Tech dropped consecutive league games to No. 1 Kansas and sixth ranked Iowa State, a three-game stretch Dickey called “the toughest he’s had as a coach.” “We haven’t executed well at all,” said Dickey, in his sixth season as * - Tech’s top man, “but you’ve also got to give credit to our opponents. Still, you’ve got to win your league games, and you have to win at home if you want any chance to win your conference.” Last season, Tech swept through the Southwest Conference and ad vanced to NCAA Tournament’s Sweet 16 before losing to Georgetown to fin ish 30-2, the best season in Red Raider history. - Only one starter, 6-foot-11 center Tony Battle, returns. This year, Battie tops the Big 12 in rebounding, aver aging 11.7 per game. Battie also scores 20.1 points per. game, and guard Cory Carr leads the team with a 22.5 point per-game average, forming the league’s most productive duo. Dickey said Nebraska’s Tyronn Lue-Mikki Moore duo holds the po tential to be just as strong as the Red Raider combination. Lue averages 21.8 points in nine conference games, and Moore ranks among the league’s top seven in rebounding and blocked shots. NU played one of its best games of the season on Wednesday, holding Colorado to 40.7 percent shooting and committing just 11 turnovers. The vic tory, after a four-game losing streak, provides the Huskers with the momen tum necessary to play well in Lubbock, NU Coach Danny Nee said. “(The Nebraska players) don’t have a panic button,” Nee said. “They don’t lose their cool. They have a calmness that’s nerve-racking to me. But they’re starting to come together.” . •