lonigtit: Rockabilly/Hillbilly Music From Doko Dickerson and Ike Ecco-Fonics norrow: and Swing Candye Kane There are those who shy away from challenges. And then there are those who travel 9,000 miles looking for them. • Stop by a Peace Corps Information Session and find out about the hundreds of overseas jobs awaiting you! www.peacecorps.gov 800-42V-8580 Nebraska - Lincoln CAMMm CONNECTIONS: 10 am - 4 pm • Tuesday, October 10th Pershing Auditorium FILM SHOW: 6:30 pm • Tuesday, October 10th Student Union, Room TBA INTERVIEWS: 8:30 am - 4 pm Wednesday, October 11th City Campus, Large Room ' ■ EARN $650 TO $1,722 Call 474-7297 gf ' \ ASSIST MEDICAL RESEARCH The University Wants You... To be a New Student Enrollment Leader Applications available at: Office of Admissions ♦ Student Involvement ♦ Culture Center ♦ Multi-Cultural Affairs All Residence Hall Front Desks ♦ ASUN Office ♦ Hewit Academic Center Please attend an Information Session: Thursday, October 12th 6:00 p.m. @ City Union Thursday, October 19th 7:00 p.m. @ Neihardt (Blue t.v. lounge) Sunday, Octobef 22nd 5:00 p.m. @ East Campus Union Tuesday, October 24th 6:00 p.m. @ Harper/Schramm/Smith 24 hour study lounge Applications due Thursday, October 26th by 5:00 p.m. at the Office of Admissions. Questions? Call 472-4646 •New Edgewood 'Expanding Location South 48th & R I of Target 30+ Units . Scott McClurgVDN NU tight end Tracey Wistrom tries to outrun Cydone defensive bade Breon Ansley in the second quarter. / . ."i: Huskers'late scoring barrage proves too much for Cyclones GAME from page 11 164 yards and rushing for 138. It was the seventh time in Crouch’s career that he went over the 100-yard rushing mark, but the first time he accounted for more than 300 yards total offense. Solich was high on Crouch’s performance and particularly pleased with the junior quarter back’s three for three passing performance in the game's final 30 minutes. All three of those passes, for 25 yards to Correll Buckhalter, and 20 and 8 yards to Tracey Wistrom, came on the touch down drive that put NU ahead 28-20. “Eric gives us that extra dimension to win ballgames,” Solich said. “He was extremely sharp throwing the ball in the second half.” Crouch wasn’t alone in rack ing up the yardage. The Husker offense averaged 6.5 yards per play during the game. “We felt like we could pretty much move the ball at any time,” Crouch said. “That’s why we were so frustrated at half time.” Most of what Crouch and NU did came on the ground. Dan Alexander almost topped the 100-yard mark in industrious fashion. Alexander ground out 96 yards in 21 car ries. Buckhalter also con tributed 24 yards on nine carries but was most effective on the scoreboard by tying a career high three touchdown effort. "Iowa State is a great team,” Buckhalter said. “We came in at halftime knowing that we had two more quarters and we had to play Nebraska football.” After the break, the NU defense got it done as well. Vanden Bosch keyed a defensive unit, which picked off two passes and limited the Cyclone offense to five of 15 third down conversions. Vanden Bosch recorded four tackles for losses and one sack. During one sequence, the senior co-captain forced Rosenfels into pitching on an option and then also chased *We felt like we could pretty mcuh move the ball at anytime. That’s why we were so frustrated at halftime.” Eric Crouch NU quarterback down the pitchman for no gain. “I’ve been working to make the big plays in practice,” Vanden Bosch said. “As a senior and a captain, I needed to step up and make them today.” Holding the Cyclones to just 13 second-half points was due to a series of adjustments, Bohl said. One of the most important was mental, Bohl said. “We instilled a sense of con fidence and went out and set the tone early in the second half,” Bohl said. It was a tone that left ISU fans with only a moral victory and the goal posts intact. Cydones start strong, falter in the stretch ISU from page 11 when ISU was driving against the, wind, was called in the sec ond quarter on a fourth-and five on NU’s 24-yard-line. The option by Cyclone hold er Casey Baldwin to the right side was stopped for a two-yard loss and the Huskers took over on downs. “It looked like a slow motion option,” McCamey said. “It looked better in practice than it did today.” Iowa State’s second blunder featured an interception of a Lane Danielson pass by NU’s Troy Watchorn. Danielson rolled to the right after receiving a pitch from Rosenfels and threw up a wobbly pass as Chris Kelsay and Randy Stella pres sured him. The turnover followed an 11-play, 70-yard scoring drive for NU, which gave the Huskers a 28-20 lead. NU scored shortly after the pick on a one-yard Correll Buckhalter run and went up 35-20. Despite the ineffectiveness of some of his calls, McCamey was there to leave everything he had on the field, and Cyclone players were not questioning his decisions after the game. “I think we just tried to throw everything we had at them today,” Rosenfels said. “I don’t think we had anymore exotics than normal today.” An emotionally draining defeat might spell doom for any other team, but McCarnev and tfWe know that one game doesn’t make your season. You can play with the best team in the country one week and not be sound against another opponent the next week.” Jamarcus Powers ISU defensive back others vowed to keep up the intensity in the next couple of games and for the rest of the season in ISU's quest for a bowl bid. “We know that one game doesn’t make your season,” Powers said. “You can play with the best team in the country one week and not be sound against another opponent the next week.” Moses, a senior, said he wouldn't let Nebraska become Iowa State’s Kansas State of last year. - “I promise you that this will not happen to this year’s ball club,” said Moses, who saw his team drop six out of its last seven games last season after losing to the Wildcats. “We got a good team and showed it, but we have to learn how to play third and fourth quarters.” ISU blows chance of a lifetime CAMENZINP from page 11 be right. But the 'Clones reeked back then and have not learned the biggest lesson yet - how to win. They have learned to com pete, judging by their perform ance last season against the likes of Colorado and Kansas State and their 4-0 record coming into the game this season. Don’t be surprised if ISU bounces back and still qualifies for a bowl game - they only need two more wins. But a bowl is not where the Cyclones and McCamey want to be. They want bigger and better things - things that are achieved by beating teams like the Huskers and the Wildcats of the world. They have already gained the respect of the state by dominat ing Iowa in recent years, but they want the respect of a national audience as well. Some Cyclones believe they got it after hanging with the Huskers for more than three quarters. They didn’t prove anything to all the folks at home in Florida, California and New York. All they see is another 22-point Cyclone whipping. Those same folks will see the same thing next year and for sev eral years after that. Because you only get some chances once in a lifetime.