IRONIC, HEALTHY ISN T IT? j-g XHC Examine yourself regularly and see your dermatologist. FIRST SI^N Of SKIN 'AAD " CANCER. %MAt°V www.aad.org We're More Than You Think! Confidential & Affordable Reproductive Health Care P Planned Parenthood® of Lincoln 2246 ‘O’ Street 441-3300 * 3705 South Street 441-3333 .-.i? : Tb _ ill Map, Decembilaft?aP£f§|lPiiiiIalRfl» J§ \ Sunday, Beeefflber 7 at 8 p - Harpe^Ritj Sgwfce 24 BrStodf Rim Siplaj, December 7 at Motiieital Siilii In' Moniaj, December 8 at 7 pi - Culture Center Q4tb & It Street) Wednesday, December 10 at? pi - Abel Hall Ballroom Wednesday, December 10 at 7 pm Barr HaD Dirt I Itoaday, Jannalt BE dt?pi ply DUea Jj y Tuesday, January 13 aflp -SeOeekliCiBfiMtal DMai Rem jjjji Take advantage of this special price on lecture notes fronr Grade A Notes and start preparing for finals NOW! At Grade A Notes we know that even good students can take bad notes. Whether you missed a day of class or simply want a great study aid our lecture notes can help! Lecture notes are typed in paragraph format so they are easy to read and understand. Lecture notes from Grade A will give you that extra edge you need to make finals a breeze. Stop by and browse our library of notes! jLECfURENOTES 'mm | _ Receive a full term set of lecture notes for only $22. if VMd wifi coupon NcX v«d wit) (XhM olltfs Grade A Notes at Nebraska Bookstore *47^7400* 1300 QSL, lower Level 1 JJ_ email: Bncolnftyaaeaftotw.com www.gradeanotes.com NU wrestlers finish seventh I 1 By Sabah Dose StaffReporter All-Americans Brad Canoyer and Temoer Terry didn’t wrestle Saturday at the Cliff Keen Championships in State Line, Nev., because of injuries. And that could have been part of the reason why the Nebraska wrestlers posted a seventh-place fin ish, even though the Comhuskers had several good individual perfor mances. Although the Huskers finished seventh, Nebraska Coach Tim Neumann said, they can learn from this weekend. “You have to look at the team we took to Nevada,” he said. “Temoer and Canoyer didn’t wrestle. They would have given us about 45 more points to put us up where we really belonged. “Some guys did better than what we thought they would do. Some guys didn’t do what we hoped they would.” Not only did the team miss Terry and Canoyer, but it also missed senior All-American Ryan Tobin in the 190 pound weight class. Tobin finished third in the heavyweight division. The senior from Brandon, S.D., is currently ranked third at heavyweight but is the national title favorite at 190 pounds. He still has weight to cut to get to that position. There were some other notewor thy individual performances, includ ing fourth-place finishes from Brad Vering (177 pounds) and Scott Munson (190). No. 7 Jeramie Welder placed fifth at 126 pounds, and Allen Hankins finished seventh at 142 pounds. “Vering should now be in the top eight in the nation, and Hankins lost to the No. 4 guy in the country because he stalled with one second left,” Neumann said. “We still have a couple of weight classes to pick it up in.” But Neumann is not worried about the shape of his team. He said the Huskers are about where they need to be at this time in the season. “When a team like Nebraska gets seventh at a meet like this, it looks like a disappointment,” he said. “But if we would have wrestled like the team we’re going to be in January, we would have been second. “We wanted to be in the top five, so we were a little short But some of the better teams in the nation were there. It was a good meet to use to gauge where we are.” Top-ranked Oklahoma State won the team tide. The Huskers return to dual action against a NCAA Division-II North Dakota State team on Friday in Fargo, N.D. Terry, the No. 1 158-pounder in the nation, will not wrestle until Jan. 2. “We still have time,” Neumann said. “We have the meet on Friday, then we have five weeks to get Tobin down to 190 and Temoer and Canoyer healthy. That’s when you’ll see the real Nebraska wrestling team.” I NU, Tennesse head to Miami BOWL from page 1 higher ranked team in order to cre ate the most attractive matchup. “We wanted to always get the No. 2 and No. 3 ranked teams,” Tribble said. “Tennessee is the third-ranked team.” While NU is undefeated, its national title chances need some help. Michigan is currently ranked number one in both polls and likely needs to lose to eighth-ranked Washington State in the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1 if NU is to have a shot at the title. “That’s just the way it goes in this game,”5 Osborne said. “Sometimes it happens that way. All we can control is the our level of play. We’ll leave it in the hands of the voters and see what they think.” Osborne said the polls will not affect his team’s play in the bowl game. “It might have gotten in our way against Colorado,” Osborne said. “So everybody has learned their lesson. We understand we have a tremendous challenge against Tennessee.” The student lottery for Orange Bowl tickets begins today and will continue throughout the week. The University of Nebraska was allot ted 15,000 tickets at the price of t $80 a ticket. The number of student tickets is undetermined at this time. Going bowling On Sunday afternoon the Orange, Fiesta, and Sugar Bowl made their selections for the Bowl Coalition. Nebraska was selected as the top spot for the Orange Bowl. n;T ** . \ Florida State (10-1) Ohio State (10-2) Big loss embarrasses Aggies AGGIES from page 9 Branndon Stewart completed one of his first seven passes and the Aggies did not record a first down in the opening quarter. “We kind of shot ourselves in the foot a couple of times,” Stewart said. “They were where they were sup posed to be, and they made good plays.” NU scored on each of its first seven possessions and put up 348 yards of total offense in the first half. Aggie inside linebacker Dat Nguyen, a Butkus Award semifinal ist, said field position gave the Nebraska qffense a big advantage. Nguyen led Texas A&M with nine tackles. “We always had our back to the wall,” Nguyen said. “And we made a lot of mistakes that hurt us.” Despite trailing 37-3 at halftime, Texas A&M did not give up, Slocum said. In the second half, the Aggies were outscored 17-12 , but put up 194 yards of total offense to the Huskers’ 188. Stewart completed 18 of 38 passes for 227 yards and one touchdown. But even with a solid second half, Stewart said, the Aggies felt they let down the entire South Division of the Big 12. “We are here and we are repre senting all the teams in the South,” Stewart said. “We’re a reflection of the strongest team this year, and we didn’t do a good job of showing that I’m land oTembarrassed.” ... A failure to gain significant yardage on first down forced Texas A&M to pass more. So the Aggie running game never really got going. Texas A&M finished with 13 yards on the ground, led by running back Sirr Parker, who carried the ball 10 times for 28 yards. Stewart was sacked four times and lost a total of 28 yards. “We knew we couldn’t just line up and run right at them,” Slocum said. “If we could have gotten to a mode where we could hit some pass es, maybe we could have run more. I thought we’d run more effective. “You just have to get more physi cal on the offensive line. We’ve got to get bigger guys.” Saturday’s score wasn’t indica tive of how far the Aggies are frbnf playing at Nebraska’s level, Slocum said. And that’s the direction ttyeyfre heading. “It just takes time,” Slocum said. “I don’t think we’re that far away. “I think it’s fair to say we were thoroughly beaten by a good football team. But it doesn’t mean we’ve had a bad season.” Arizona cools offNU in tourney final LOSS from page 10__ ball team,” NU Coach Paul Sanderford said. “We took away some inside stuff early, did a nice job on the boards. We just couldn’t get the ball in the basket.” • NU’s Jami Kubik and her sister Nicole were a combined two-of-27 shooting in the championship game, while the Huskers’ leading scorer, senior Anna DeForge, scored just 13 points on five-of-17 shooting. Forward Charlie Rogers, the only Husker on the all-tournament team, scored 21 points and grabbed eight rebounds. Arizona senior forward Adia Barnes, named the most valu able player, scored eight of the Wildcats first 13 points and finished with a game-high 23 points. Arizona Coach Joan Bonvincini said her team’s quickness and defen sive pressure were enough to make up for the Huskers’ size advantage. “I knew our pressure would get to them,” Bonvincini said. “I feel fortu nate that we won this game.” A bright spot for the Huskers came on the glass. The more physical NU team outrebounded the Midcats 51-39, including a 24-10 offensive rebounding edge. “Thank God, they weren’t scor ing a lot,” Bonivincini said. Jami Kubik agreed. “I feel, and I know the coaches feel we’re better than Arizona,” Kubik said. “If they’re a top-10 team. than I feel we should be right up there. ” But there was no explanation for the cold shooting, she said. “Some nights the ball goes in, and some nights the ball doesn’t,” Kubik said. “We were getting good looks at the basket. We were getting layups.” The Huskers (7-2) opened the game with a 4-0 lead but never led after that and trailed by as many as seven before intermission. In Friday night’s game against the Shockers, junior forward Cori McDill hit two free throws with 17 seconds remaining to give the Huskers a 71-69 victory. i