12 Monday, November 2, 1992 NATURAL WAY Natural Fiber Clothing and Body Care 820-822 Mass. St. Downtown 841-0100 Available at 928 Massachusetts PRIVATE PILOT GROUND SCHOOL NOVEMBER 6,7,8,1992 FRIDAY$16M - 10PM, SAT& SUN8AM - 5PM $240 (INCLUDE BOOKS AND CREDIT FOR WRITEN EXAM) PRESENTED BY LE MASTERAERIAL ATJOHNSON CO. INDUSTRIAL AIRPORT CALL 913-242-5310 FOR MORE INFORMATION Do you know why Sandy Praeger has been an effective legislator for KU? STATE SENATOR SPORTS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN She listens. Paid Political Advertisement Keep a strong voice in the Kansas Senate. PAID FOR BY A LOT OF PEOPLE WHO WANT SANVY PRAGER IN THE SENATE PETE WIKLONG, TREASURER Nebraska silences critics; Sooners, Iowa State win in conference play The Associated Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. — When a good streak ended for Colorado and a bad one bit the dust for Nebraska, it all happened with a thud. A loud, declarative thud. Colorado is through going unbeaten in the Big Eight every year, and Nebraska does not plan on spending the next four years losing to every top 10 team it encounters. Kansas must wonder what is in store this week in Nebraska, where the 13th-ranked Jayhawks (7-1 overall, 4-Big Eight) will battle a seventh-ranked Cornhusker team (6-1, 3-0) for first place in the Big Eight. Nebraska, finally ending its string of losses to top 10 clubs, put a 52-7 loss on Colorado. At game time, both were ranked No. 8. "We wanted to shut everybody up about not beating a top 10 team," said tailback Derek Brown. Even coach Tom Osborne was taken aback by the rout. Kansas got in position for its title showdown by doing something it hadn't done in 24 years The Jayhawks beat the Oklahoma State Cowboys in Lawrence. The Jayhawks, unhappy with the way they played, carved out a 26-18 triumph that was not as close as the eight-point spread might suggest. "I was really surprised by the way it went." he said. It was the only surprise of the day in the Big Eight, but just barely. Oklahoma, which used to vie for things like conference leads this time of year, was playing purely for pride at home against Kansas State. The Sooners (4-3-1, 2-1-1) needed Kansas State to miss a short field goal to pull out a 16-14 win over the Wildcats (3-4, 0-3). Iowa State fell quickly behind Missouri 7-0, then used a couple of big punt returns by James McMillion and assorted Missouri mistakes for a 28-14 victory that kept the Tigers witness on the road for a ninth straight time. Nine straight road losses may be an embarrassing stat. But it hardly compared to the four-year drought Nebraska had endured in games against the elite. "Coach Osborne wanted this badly," said Nebraska punter Mike Stigge. "Colorado has been bragging about their winning streak and coach said that if anybody has dominated the series it's us. We should win." But speaking of streaks, Nebraska had won 18 straight over the Buffs until Colorado's breakthrough in 1986. Calvin Jones rushed for 101 yards and three touchdowns while freshman quarterback Tommie Frazier, in his second start, had 86 yards rushing and two touchdowns passing. Setting the tone for the day, Colorado freshman Koy Detmer, a surprise starter over sophomore Kordell Stewart, threw an interception on the game's first play. The two combined to hit just 12 of 34 passes for 136 yards, about half their average. "Nebraska played well and they didn't make any mistakes," Colorado coach Bill McCartney said. "They had a lot of things going their way. For us, it was one mistake after another." Kansas State might have beaten Oklahoma for the first time since 1970 if, late in the third period, Warren Claassen's 27-yard field goal had been called good. Claassen swears it should have been. "I sure thought it was good," he said. "It went over the top of the upright, so that makes it an official's judgment." "Our players thought it was good," said Kansas State coach Bill Snyder. "They're looking straight at it, but then again they're not underneath the goal posts." Oklahoma coach Gary Gibbs said, "I think everybody's relieved. They are happy about the victory. We've had a couple disappointing weekends." Missouri quarterback Jeff Hardy, who set a Big Eight record by passing for more than 400 yards, was held to a mere 307 by the Cyclones. But he still got his name in the record book. His 51 attempts are the most ever by an Iowa State opponent. "I don't care about the yardage," Handy said. "The yardage doesn't mean anything when you lose." Iowa State's James McMillion returned a punt 40 yards to set up one touchdown and then unleashed a 78-yard touchdown putt return. "The summation was that we can't play any team and make the mistakes that we did in the kicking game and then have turnovers and expect to win." Missouri coach Bob Stull said. It was Dan Eichloff day at Kansas. The All-Big Eight junior kicked four field goals and set a school record with his 54th straight extra point. Eichloff has hit 14 of 16 goal attempts this year. His only two misses were blocked. The Kansas secondary intercepted four passes and had a total of 98 return yards. But it also yielded 259 passing yards and two touchdowns to Oklahoma State freshman quarterback Gary Porter. The Cowboys scored 15 points in the last few minutes. "There were a lot more down sides than up sides," said Kansas coach Glen Mason. "A 7-1 team should play better than that." If Graduate School SEE THE CLASSIFIEDS World Travel Graduate School might be in The Perfect Job Your Future attend the Graduate/Professional School Information Fair Tuesday, November 3, 1992 10:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. Upper Level, Burge Union - Information on how to fund graduate study - Information on graduate school entrance exams: LSAT, GRE, MCAT, GMAT, etc. - Talk with representatives from these schools: - Washburn University Law School - Indiana University Pub & Environ. Aff - Texas Tech - University of Tulsa MBA program - KU School of Medicine - University of Missouri-Kansas City - Widener University - University of Oklahoma - University of Nebraska-Lincoln - Texas Christian University - Oklahoma State University - Univ. of Nebraska Medical Center - KU School of Law - Kirksville College of Osteopathic Med. - Kansas State University - KU School of Social Welfare - KU School of Business ·KU School of Engineering .Univ. of Osteopathic Medicine/Health Svcs. ·Palmer College of Chiropractic ·University of Missouri-Columbia ·Wichita State University ·Avila College (MBA, Educ., Psychology) ·Central Baptist Seminary ·Creighton University (MBA, Pharmacy) ·Am. Grad. School of International Mgmt. ·University of Nebraska Dental School ·University of Minnesota-Industrial Relations ·KU School of Nursing ·University of Minn. School of Public Health ·University of Kansas Graduate School for more information, call 864-3891 1992-1993 H.O.P.E. Award The H.O.P.E. Award stands for Honorary Outstanding Progressive Educator and is awarded each year to an educator by the Senior Class. The Board of Class Officers Senior Advisory Board would like to recognize these educators who were nominated for this great honor. G. Douglas Atkins Tim Bengston John Brown Marilyn Carlson Allan Cigler Cal Downs John Easley Grover Everett David Frayer Sally Frost-Mason Russel Geffer Lois Greene David Griffin Janice Harris Claire Holmes Helmut Huelsbergen Theodore Johnson James LaPoint Cheryl Lester Thomas Lewin Dana Leibengood V. Parker Lessig Alice Lieberman Denise Linville Charles Marsh Mike Martin Steve McCabe Marsha McCoy Eli Michaelis Louis Michel Tim Miller John Nalbandian Bob Nunley Joseph O'Brien James Orr Stephen Parker Glenn Prescott Robert Rankin Joshua Rosenbloom James Rowland Robert Rowland Horst Schaefer Kirk Shaffer Sam Shannugan Lawrence Sherr Rick Snyder Annette Stanton Bruce Swain Max Sutton Constantinos Tsatsoulis Gary Warner Greg Wegst Bev Wilson Frank Wray Bedru Yimer Kathy Zanolli Carole Zebas Voting for the finalist will occur today and Tuesday, November 2nd and 3rd between 9 am and 2 pm. Voting tables will be set up at Wescoe, Summerfield, Learned and the Kansas Union. Three runners-up and one winner will be announced at the KU versus Colorado pre-game show. Sponsored by: board of class officers Sponsored by: