Dance Contest Every Tuesday 9:00 pm i&j'O1 Street • HO COVER ! L f* American Heart Association^^ Fighting man Da*kt* and Strok* STA Travel is the world's largest travel organization specializing in low-cost travel for students. PSST! Got the urge to travel? STA Travel has great student airfares to destinations around the world. Go shopping on our website for current student airfares. (800) 777-0112 _S71 www.sta-travel.com_ 5 FREE ONLINE HOURS WTTH THESE NAVDTUNL PLANS.' Low Usage Plan: 15 hours for $6.50 a month. Medium Usage Plan: 40 hours for $10.00 a month. High Usage Plan: 250 hours for $19.50 a month. And whichever you choose, we’ll give you 5 FREE HOURS every month. Additional minutes are $.02. INSTALLATION IS FREE. Call 472-5151 (students) 472-3434 (faculty or staff) > or stop by 211 Nebraska Hall. * You must be a UNL student, faculty or staff member to qualify for these plans. Netscape software is available in Windows and Macintosh versions. Aliant Communications MAKING IT EASIER TO COMMUNICATE." Visit our web site: www.aliant.com A Whole New Feel for Birkenstock Birko-Flor™, textures so rich, you’ll think it’s leather. $67.95 suggested retail ;?:'■ :V 1---1. « **: ';„v . • ••* - . - ‘ -' - n tt I understand there are better people than me,1 just want the team to win” Kristie Bilecky NU women’s tennis player By Jay Saunders I Staff Reporter Kristie Bilecky has proven an ath lete doesn’t have to be in the public eye to make a huge impact for her team. Bilecky, a senior .on the Nebraska women’s tennis team from Vacaville, Calif., transferred to Ne braska after two seasons at Cal State-Sacramento Junior College. Bilecky After two years in Sacramento, Bilecky knew it was time for a change. “I was unhappy with the program there,” Bilecky said. “Tennis is taken more serious here. I knew it was what I wanted.” Bilecky made an instant contribu tion last year, playing No. 5 and 6 singles and No. 3 doubles. But this year, a talented freshman Comhusker class bumped Bilecky out of NU’s ro tation. Instead of having her ego bruised by not playing, she has done everything in her power to help this year’s young squad. “I try to make everyone feel re laxed,” Bilecky said. “I understand there are better people than me, 1 just want the team to win.” NU Coach Scott Jacobson at tributes a big part of the team’s 15-7 record to the help of Bilecky. Jacobson said his job is made easier by Bilecky’s rapport with the rest of the players. “She has a more powerful impact on her peers than I can ever have,” Jacobson said. “She brings a certain comfort level to the players. She is truly interested in the people in the program.” As an education major, Bilecky hopes to become a high school teacher in the future. She said she hopes a lot of what she does with the younger players will help her future career. “When I have something to say, people usually listen,” Bilecky said. “I try to let the younger players know everyone has to go through this.” Part of the responsibility of being a teacher is also being a leader. Bilecky said leaders are people who will say what they need to say and respect what others have to say about themselves. She doesn’t know if she is a leader cm this year’s team, but Jacobson said he has no doubt. “She is truly a leader,” Jacobson said. “She is accepting of others, non judgmental and always trying to find the bright side. We can all aspire to be a little bit more like Kristie.” Notes: The Nebraska women will be the sixth seed at the Big 12 Conference tournament which begins Thursday. NU will play No. 11-seed Iowa State in the first round. If the Huskers win they play third-seed Texas A&M in the second round. The Nebraska men’s team is the eighth seed and will play either Baylor or Texas Tech. If NU wins it will play Texas, the tournament’s top seed. NU golf team in fourth From Staff Reports The Nebraska women’s golf team moved up one spot to fourth after the second round of the Big 12 Tourna ment in Lawrence, Kan. The Comhuskers, who shot a sec ond-round score of 313 Monday for a two-day total of 624, are 18 strokes behind leader Texas (606) entering die tournament’s final round today. Tfexas A&M is second with a score of 616 and Oklahoma State is third with a 622. “We had a real shaky start and didn’t play very well on the front nine,” NU Coach Robin Krapfl said. “We’d definitely like to move up to second and obviously our goal is to finish as high as we can get.” Freshman Elizabeth Bahensky, who was in sixth after the First round, moved into a three-way tie for third with a round of 77 on Monday. Bahensky has a total of 153 for the tournament. NU’s Hanne Nyquist also shot a 77 pn Monday and is in sixth place with a 154. Nyquist ended her round with a triple-bogey on No. 18. Texas’ Heather Bowie leads the tournament with a 139 after Firing a round of 68 on Monday. Other Nebraska scores: Rachelle Tacha is in ninth with a 156; Shirin Homecker is tied for 43rd with a score of 165 and Maureen Regan is tied for 51st with a 169. Beck may leave for ABL BECK from page 7 changes, that’s what my emphasis is and what my focus is on. When I’m at liberty to discuss something, I will.” Anne Cribbs, ABL vice president for sponsorship and community devel opment said the league wasn’t ready to make a comment. Cribbs said Beck was one of a number of candidates interviewed for the opening. “We would like to name a head coach soon, but we’re not ready yet,” said Cribbs who was a part of the in terviewing process. “I just love her energy and enthusiasm. I could say paragraphs about her.” When Lowrey was fired, ABL of ficials said they wanted to hire some one who had more experience work ing with top-level athletes. Before her one-year stint at San Jose, Lowrey was the coach at Division II Threlton State University in Texas for 20 years. Cribbs said another positive in Beck’s favor is her experience coach ing at the Division-I level. Before ar riving at NU in 1986, Beck spent three years each as the coach at Bradley and Southwest Missouri State. Gary Cavalli, the ABL’s vice presi dent for communications and market ing, was in Seattle Monday night and unavailable for comment. However, both Cribbs and Cavalli have stated publicly that they want to have a head coach hired before the pre draft player combines, which begin Thursday at the University of San Francisco’s Koret Center. This past year, NU opened its sea son with a school-best nine-game win ning streak and, at one point, was 16 1 and ranked in the Top 25. Along with that, the Huskers defeated then No. 9 Iowa, which was the highest ranked opponent a Beck-coached team has ever defeated. However, Nebraska lost eight of its last 11 games and, despite a 19-9 over all record, the team was denied an in vitation to the NCAA Tournament. In Beck’s 11 seasons, her teams averaged 17 wins per year and finished below .500 only three times. The Lasers finished last season 18 22 with a second-place finish in the Western Division behind Portland. San Jose was hampered when start ing guard and former Stanford player Jennifer Azzi, who played on the gold medal-winning U.S. Olympic Basket ball team, suffered a season-ending shoulder separation in December. Other members of the Lasers in clude former Stanford players Anita Kaplan, Sonja Henning and Val Whit ing. Azzi, Henning and Whiting all played on Stanford’s 1990 national championship team, while Whiting was also on the 1992 team that won the title. Also on the Lasers’ 10-player ros ter is former Colorado star Jamillah Lang. • Unlike the National Basketball As sociation, the ABL was organized as a single entity that owns all the teams and pays all the players’ salaries. Cavalli and Gibbs, along with Steve Hams and Bobby Johnson, organized the league with the intent to keep the nation’s test women basketball players playing in the United States. « Brown has experience BROWN from page 7 “I knew that he was going to be tested a lot for the simple reason that he was a freshman,” Nebraska Defensive Backs Coach George Darlington said. “But he was the best player we had at that time at that position. Quite frankly, he per formed as well as we could expect a freshman to perform.” The 5-foot-11, 180-pound na tive of Hacienda Heights, Calif., broke up 12 passes—second most in a single season ever at NU — and returned four interceptions for 83 yards and a touchdown against Oklahoma, earning him Big 12 Conference Defensive Newcomer of-the-Year honors. “I’m glad they picked on me,” Brown said. “It made me better as a player and a person. I would make mistakes but I’d just try harder on the next play. It helped my confi dence level a lot.” Brown carried that newfound confidence into spring practices, whprp no n ortnhnmnrp ho to ()u> Huskers’ lone returning starter in the secondary. Nebraska’s young secondary includes only eight play ers with any NU playing experi ence, a junior college transfer, and three recruits — including Joe Walker, who is already on campus for spring ball. “We have a lot of young guys who don’t have that much experi ence on the field,” Brown said, “So that really motivates me to get out there and work harder.” Brown’s hard work and leader ship have been an important factor in die development of the second ary this spring, Darlington said. “We have the potential to have a very good secondary with younger players,” Darlington said. “He’s played a tremendous part in that, and he’s done a really nice job of leadership even though he’s only been on campus for a year. “You can’t just tell somebody they have to be a leader if it isn’t in their nature. He’s talked to kids like Joe Walker and helped him with things he obviously doesn’t know yet. He’s made a real impact, and we’ve been really pleased with