4B Thursday, October 12.1995 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN SUN FILMS THE BRIDGES OF MADISON COUNTY Friday Saturday Sunday CLINT EASTWOOD & MERYL STREBBP 7:00 & 9:30 PM 7:00 & 9:30 PM 2:00 PM THE EXORCIST Friday Midnight Saturday Midnight The horror movie always it all for demonic possession. ALL SHOWN IN WOODCROSS AUD. TICKET $2.50, MINIMUM $3.00 AT BRYAN'S 815-746-7299, CALL 864-FLOW FOR MORE www.theexorcist.com Crown Cinema BEFORE 6 PM ADULTS $3.00 (UNLIMITED TO SEATING) SENIOR CITIZENS $3.00 VARSITY 1015 MASSAC HUSEITS 841 5191 Seven ® 4:55,7:15,9:45 Assassins $ ^{8} $ 4:55, 7:25, 9:55 To Wong Foo $ ^{90} $ 5:00, 7:15, 9:30 Devil in a blue Dress $ ^{91} $ 5:15, 7:30, 9:45 American Quilt $ ^{92-13} $ 5:00, 7:15, 9:55 HILLCREST 925 IOWA 811.5191 CINEMA TWIN $1.25 3110 WA 84-5161 The Nel PG$7.00, 7.15, 9.30 Pocahontas $6.00 STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES SUA FILMS Thursday Oct. 12 medium cool THURSDAY 7:30PM THURSDAY 10:00PM DO THE RIGHT THING BJ's Catering II Anytime Anywhere 749-0292 Sat-Sun Fri. Men-Thurs. Halloween Curae$^a$ 1:55 4:45, 7:30, 9:50 Dangerous Mind$^a$ 2:00 4:40, 7:30, 9:50 The Big Green$^a$ 2:00 4:30, 7:15, 9:50 Steal Big, Steal Little$^{n}$ 11:45 7:15, 9:40 To Die For$^{n}$ 2:10 4:30, 7:10, 9:30 Dead Presidents$^n$ 2:10 4:30, 7:10, 9:45 *except Wednesday ART FUNDS SURRENDED AT WOODRIBE AUDIORECORDING DEVELOP 5, KANNIS UNION. FREE WITH SEA MOVIE CARD. CALL BG4-SHOW FOR More Info. a world class dance fiesta every Saturday night 10pm-2am 943 Mass St. Lawrence, KS 913-842-1414 749-1555 LIMITED SEATS! Open 7 Days $ 390 Adult Before Heating Air Conditioning Phones AQR M P Impairment Access CLASSIC TRAVEL 520 W.23RD STREET Cocoloco SPRING BREAK CANCUN March 22-29.1996 FROM $519 ROUND TRIP AIRFARE, HOTEL AND TRANSFERS KAPPA ALPHA THETA Sunday, Oct.15, 1995 8:00 A.M. (Late registration at 7:00 A.M.) For more info. see table at Wescoe Beach or call 843-3120 Textile Art Exhibit! Apply! thru October 16th at 5:00pm ALL STUDENTS WELCOME TO APPLY !! Exibit Dates are October 30th thru November 11th To be exhibited in the Kansas Union Gallery Pick up applications at the SUA office from 9-5 pm, level 4, Kansas Union For more information call 864-3477 EARN CASH $15 Today $30 This Week By donating your blood plasma Florida not afraid of Bowdens Lawrence Donor Center Walk-ins welcome 816W.24th Behind Laird Noller Ford 749-5750 See our ad in the classified section Hours: M-F 9-6:30 Sat.10-2 Spurrier's lone success against the Bowdens was a 14-9 triumph over Florida State in 1991—and the last two years have been especially galling. Terry Bowden, who came to Auburn in 1993, has pulled off two upsets of the Gators, including a last-minute, 36-33 victory to knock Florida from the No. 1 ranking. ing the game at Auburn (4-1). Since Steve Spurrier became coach in 1990, Florida has a record of 54-12-1, including three Southeastern Conference titles. But against Auburn coach Terry Bowden and his father, Florida State's Bobby Bowden, Florida is 1-6-1. It's a bedeviling phenomenon for the Florida football program, a constant menace to the Gators' national championship hopes, a touchy subject in general around these parts—even if no one is willing to admit that such a jinx even exists. Florida State became the first visiting team to win at Florida Field during the Spurrier era on its way to the 1993 national championship. That was followed up last year by a 31-31 tie in which the Seminoles rallied from a 28-point deficit in the fourth quarter, then a 23-17 loss to FSU in a Sugar Bowl rematch. Still, as the third-ranked Gators prepare to play No. 7 Auburn on Saturday, it's impossible to ignore the Bowden factor. He can even recite his USFL record against current New Orleans Saints coach Jim Mora—"When you count the exhibition games, we were one up," Spurrier said, "but in the regular season games he was one up on us"—so it's obvious he gives more than a passing thought to the Bowdens. GAINESVILLE, Fla. — The Bowen Curse. "I'm not going to answer that," defensive lineman Mark Campbell said when the subject was raised Tuesday. "I hate hearing that. What does that have to do with the game?" "No, it doesn't bother me," said Spurrier, who has lost to Terry Bowden the last two years and has a 1-4-1 record against the elder Bowden. "Shoot, if you're going to lose somebody, you might as well lose to teams that don't lose very often." Terry Bowden said his family's success against Florida is just a phase. Spurrier pointed out that he has losing records against several coaches, not just the Bowdens. But he had to go back to his days coaching Duke and the USFL's Tampa Bay Bandits to find them. The Associated Press "I don't think we really get into a big deal about the Bowden curse or whatever," linebacker Ben Hanks said. "Unfortunately, we haven't been able to beat those two teams the last few years. But this is another year. We haven't played 'em yet, so let's go on from here." Bowden remembered that his father lost six straight years to Florida in the 1980s. His players insist they don't worry about who's standing on the opposite sideline. Other than his failure to win a national championship, the father-son tandem are the only chink in the sterling record of "Coach Superior," a proud, demanding, sometimes arrogant man who has his 5-0 team en route to another SEC title enter- "The point is: it's just a phase, something they went through," Bowden said. "We don't make a big deal out of the (dominance over Spurrier). I personally consider him, next to my dad, the best offensive coach out there." Nebraska's Frazier knows football The Associated Press LINCOLN, Neb. — It was 1992 when Nebraska coach Tom Osborne first turned to a freshman named Tommie Frazier with just a few weeks of experience and started him against Missouri. Since then, Frazier has lost just one regular-season game in 26 starts, won two Orange Bowl Most Valuable Player awards and a national championship. Frazier is now a senior helping No. 2 Nebraska (5-0) prepare for Saturday's game against Missouri (2-3). Frazier still remembers the 1992 game against Missouri when he ran for three touchdowns to lead Nebraska to a 34-24 road win; his 234 total yards were a season high. "Coach Osborne kept the offense real basic — basic Tommie Frazier Few have learned it better than Frazier. He has rushed for 1,612 yards (21st on Nebraska's career list) and 28 touchdowns in 29 games; he has thrown for 31 touchdowns and 2,667 yards (sixth). option, basic dive, hand off, nothing fancy," Frazier said. "That's something I could look back on and tell any freshman who's going into a college game that if you're capable of playing, the coach will keep it real simple. After that, it's up to you to learn the offense." But it's Frazier's intangibles that Osborne loves. The guy wins games. It was Frazier's two-point conversion pass that tied the game at 17-17 against Miami in last January's Orange Bowl; his 25-yard run on third-and-four set up the winning score. Frazier led Nebraska to a come-from-behind 21-20 win in Kansas in 1993 with an injured shoulder. He finished with 238 total yards in the 1994 Orange Bowl loss to Florida State — the same as Heisman Trophy winner Charlie Ward. But while Frazier has led Nebraska to five victories amid off-field problems and injuries to the team's tailbacks, there has been little talk of the Heisman for the Bradenton, Fla., native. "That doesn't concern me," he said on Tuesday. "I've said all along that it's nice to have your name mentioned, but I couldn't care less about winning that. The main goal is to be successful as a team. It's just a trophy — it's not guaranteeing you a good job after football." The Cornhuskers are running well this year, with an NCAA-best 491.2 yards-per-game average. Frazier, fourth on the team with 261 yards, missed the second half earlier this year against Michigan State with a thigh bruise. The quarterback position, thin last season because of Frazier's blood clots and backup Brook Berringer's collapsed lung, is thin again. Berringer, a senior, may not practice until late this week because of a sore knee and his availability for the Missouri game is uncertain. That leaves junior Matt Turman (4-of-10 for 73 yards and a touchdown), though freshman placekicker Kris Brown has taken snaps. Osborne said redshirt freshman Frankie London would be an emergency backup.