monday, October 20, 1975 daily nebraskan pago7 -.PT" U i" - 4 - 11 pfeota by Td Kkt Michael Lewis catches the win ning point for the Nebraska Penal Complex flag football team as the inmates defeated the UNL Intramural All-Stars 7-6 Saturday in Memorial Stadium. Huskers hold on;lafe OSU fry fails Stillwater, Okla.-Maybe defensive coordinator Monte Kiffin had the right idea Saturday when he told reporters the next time the Huskers play Oklahoma State (OSU) in Stillwater he's staying home. The Huskers escaped with a 28-20 win as the Cowboys ripped the Husker defens- Field hockey tourney ive for 319 yards total offense (294 rush ing), more than any opponent this season. The blackshirts may have prevented a tie game, holding the Cowboy onslaught inside its own five-yard line with less than a minute left in the game. With a third and one on the two-yard UNL boasts 3 all-stars By Susie Reitz - Three UNL field hockey players placed on the eight-member all-star team while finishing second behind Missouri in the first Big 8 field hockey tournament Friday and Saturday in Lincoln. Nebraska center-forward Mary Claire Franssen, center-halfback Jean Vrbka and left-wing Jean Shandera were named to the team along with two Missouri players, two from Oklahoma State (OSU) and one from Kansas. The all-star team was select- spoils shorts Nan Circo's two-day total of 172 led the UNL women's golf team to a fifth place finish in the 14-team Missouri Women's Invitational Golf Tourney at Columbia, Mo. Friday and Saturday.' I-back Mike Burton scored thres touch downs, and Richard Berns added two more to lead the Nebraska freshmen to a 63-0 won over MarshaUtown College Saturday in Marshalltown, Iowa. UNL's volleyball team placed fith in the Graceland College Invitational last weekend in Lamont, Iowa. UNL fencing club member Martin Taylor won the foil competition to pace the UNL fencing club in a 10 team tourna ment at Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa over the weekend. ed by coaches from the five teams partici: paring in the tournament. - : Missouri, UNL and OSU each finished with identical 3-1 records in the round robin tourney, but Missouri was awarded first place on the basis of penetration time. The Tigers had 44: 17 J minutes compared with 35:253 for UNL and OSU's 35:20.7. Penetration time is the amount of time a team has the ball within the opponent's 25-yard line. UNL won the opening game with 2:38 minutes more penetration time, beating Kansas after a 2-2 tie. Franssen and Sue Hansen each scored goals for UNL in the first half. ' After a scoreless first half against Oklahoma, the Huskers scored three second-half goals to win the game 3-0. Hansen had two goals and Franssen, one. Saturday, the Huskers beat previously unbeaten OSU 3-0 on two goals by Franssen and one by Peg Conradt. Conradt's goal followed Franssen's first in the opening half by less than two minutes. Franssen added another goal in the second half. . But Missouri won the Huskers' second game of the day 2-1 by holding off a late UNL rally. Franssen scored Nebrsaka's only goal with less than eight minutes left in the game. line, Husker cornerback Chuck Jones stopped OSU's Terry Miller for a two-yard loss. With fourth and four on the five, Miller, the game's leading rusher with 90 yards on 20 carries, tried another end run and was stopped by Dave Butterfield and Wonder Monds. The Huskers had a 2 1-7 halftime lead as quarterback Vince Ferragamo came off the UlC UC1IW1 1JI UlC lUJUIfcVi H.IIJT bUVIV HI UIV first quarter and passed to I-back John O'Leary from eight yards for Nebraska's first score. Ferragamo scored the Huskers second touchdown on a four-yard quarterback sneak in the first quarter and passed to Dave Shamblin. to set up a one-yard quar terback sneak in the second quarter. Early in the second half, split-end Bobby Thomas fumbled an OSU punt on the Husker 14-yard line and Miller scored three plays later from the five. The kick made it 21-14. Ferragamo marched the team back for another socre. hittina tight-end Brad Jenkins on a 10-yard touchdown pass with 5:58 left in the third quarter. OSU made the score 28-20 only 58 seconds later when quarterback Scott Burk went 53 yards on a keeper, followed by Miller's 23-yard run for the touchdown. The Cowboys had one touchdown called back in the fourth quarter on a con- iroversiai p;ay in wuiui ujus ugiu cuu Rickey Taylor was called for interfering with Husker safety Jim Burrow in the end zone. The penalty gave the Huskers the ball on the 20-yard line. Unable to move, the Huskers and Cow boys exchanged punts, until with just more than a minute remaining, Tom Thomas snapped the ball over punter Randy Less man's head, which set up the goal-line stand. I n n 1 E mm -uiietil 1 if j CENTER on pssoHFi.May la !f y will very Uenday flight Hugo Screen TV.-v 2-fers & 15 Hat Bogs Toes-Ood-Thups limpPfP riffs' Pure 8's Rock.?! P.:' tritirspscisl guest tttristinii u&fr ' tm f bsghs onb of tlio top' collage aeto in tbd country. $1 tmt Tm-ffsd-TfcsiV P OP Frl, lit: U . I If Si II : ; " Jo lifillillGllS ' I I 1 i I I J-feroflE ! HI" '!- J... nrin-Tnnn-Ond y S I m mm w Va w n& a w liiiopo Good i loioo I: I; '! a Si riobraslia's- Brdatoot I . Light !io7 1 , IlLaioc' Mil Thups. tot drmd itt ; ....... li wtwcj's WWW