monday, november 26, 1979 Oklahoma. Continued from Page 10 Center Kelly Saalfeld snapped the ball to Quinn who purposely dropped the ball. Offensive right guard Randy Schleusencr picked up the ball and ran away from the flow of the defense. The play-an 1 1 option special re verse left-worked perfectly and Schleusencr only had to mow down OU cornerback Mike Babb at the goal line to score. Dean Sukup's kick cut the lead to 17-14 with 4:43 left and the Nebraska offense had two more last ditch chances to pull out the win. However, Quinn was intercepted by Babb with 1:56 left and a- fourth down was broken up with just nine seconds left. - Nebraska just came up short by one big play. Okla homa had one other big play-and it didn't include Sims. Nebraska's 7-3 halftime lead (on an 1 1 -yard pass from Quinn to Jarvis Redwine) evaporated early in the third quarter when Watts threw 58 yards to tight end Forrest Valoraforal0-7OUlead. Both starting Nebraska cornerbacks were out of the game at that point because of injuries. "Those injuries were critical," Osborne said. "Means (Andy) is our best man-on-man corner and Lindquist (Ric) is also a good corner." daily nebraskan Senior Paul Letcher, who was filling in for Lindquist on the play said, "I read run and came up. Then I saw J.C. back up and I turned around. The tight end had four steps on me so I could just hope for an overthrow." Quinn, who directed the Huskers attack the entire game, may Have summed up the Husker feelings best. The whole story of the game is that they had their day and we had ours. They'll represent us (the Big Eight) well in the Orange Bowl." . Nebraska will finish the season New Year's day in the Cotton Bowl probably against Arkansas. But if Texas loses next week, .Houston could still be the Southwest Confer- ence representative. '; Big 8 standings Oklahoma Nebraska Oklahoma State Missouri Iowa State ' Kansas Kansas State Colorado Conference W L Pts Opp W 7 0 242 76 10 6 1 208 62 10 5 2 127 149 7 3 4 144 103 6 2 5 69 140 3 2 5 100 231 3 1 6 89 168 3 2 5 123 168 3 All Games L Pts Opp 382 138 366 114 191 212 236 151 137 221 172 346 154 225 168 274 Bowl tickets discounted for students The UNL athletic ticket office is offering Cotton Bowl tickets at a reduced rate for students, according to Jean Walcott, ticket office spokesperson. Although Cotton Bowl tickets will be $12.50 for the general public, student tickets will sell for $6.50. Because of the reduced student rate, all tickets must be accompanied by a valid student I.D. at the game. "Although we have no idea what the total allotment will be, we feel we will have ample tickets available for the students," Walcott said. "We felt the $6 reduction is worth having to show the I.D. at the game." , Tickets will be on sale at the Athletic Department Ticket Office Dec. 3-5 from 9 ajn.to 12 noon and 1 to 4 p.m. Students must present a valid I.D. when they pur chase the tickets. Each person buying a ticket must pay for his or her ticket individually by cash or check. Tickets will be sold one, to a customer, unless the student is married. Because tickets will be sold over the counter rather than by lottery , purchasers can pick up their tickets as . they buy them. UNL team digs Antarctic ice samples The second of two teams from the UNL Polar Ice Cor ing Office (PICO) left Lincoln for Antarctica last Friday. Accompanying them in the journey south was Robert Rutford, Vice Chancellor for Graduate Studies and Research. Friday's team included Karl Kuivenen and John Litwak of UNL. Their project 'involves ice core drilling in two locations, the first at a station at the South Pole and the other at the Russian research station at Vostok on the East Antarctica Plateau. The ice core samples will be anal yzed by researchers from the University of Kansas and Virginia Polytechnic Institute. T7T Vice Chancellor Rutford will be returning to the Ells worth Mountain Range, where he headed a research ex pedition in 1964 while a geologist on the faculty of the University of Minnesota. Rutford said the expedition is funded by National Science Foundation under the direction of Gerald Webber of McCallister College in Minnesota. Several universities, private research laboratories and the U.S. Geological Sur vey are collaborating the project. Rutford said he expects to return to Lincoln about mid-January. The teams from PICO will return to Lincoln about Feb. 1. H'i.y doctor E3CBrctI cm. My boss didn't under stand that I was healthy again. So I was let go. A lot of people are like ny boss. They think that everyone dies of cancer. I thought so, too. Until the American Cancer Society, through one of its service and rehabilitation programs, helped me return to a normal life. The ACS also has local Units that help Americans who've never had cancer understand it better. Today, more and more, cancer is a curable disease. Ignorance about cancer is curable, too. American Cancer Society paga 11 Enrollment . . . Continued from Page 1 Strong said he expected women's enrollment to continue at that level. "I don't sec any possibility of reverting to the earlier pattern and would not expect that there would be any marked increase,' he said. During the last 10 years, women law students have changed in more than number, Stone said. "I don't feci that the maioritv of women are as defensive now as when the numbers began to increase," he said. "Because of the long pattern where they didn't figure in things they were apprehensive and more vigilant to not be slighted. "IN THE OLD DAYS they had to be pretty tough. People gave them a hard time," he said. "Now I feel they feel this is their school, too. and there's not much difference between them and other students. " Assistant Dean of the Agriculture College Earl Ellington said the rapid growth in women's enrollment in tl c Agriculture College "is something we're pleased about." "Women are starting to look at possibilities they haven't looked at before," he said. "They're finding positions and they're doing well in them." Having more women in the college hasn't caused any changes, he said. "You get to working on academic activities and let sexuality go to the back of your mind," he said. It's the individual and not the individual's sex that matters, he said. Women's enrollment in other colleges has changed as follows: Arts and Sciences, 1 ,975 to 2,399; Home Economics, 924 to 1,100; Teachers, 2,937 to 1,795. THE TEACHER'S COLLEGE figures do not represent a decline in women's enrollment, Associate Dean Ronald Joekel said. Teacher's College enrollment as a whole has declined, he said, but the percentage of women enrolled has increased. - The peak enrollment year was 1971, he said, when nearly 4,000 students were enrolled in the college. This year's total is "slightly under 3, 000," he said. "1 think the percent has actually increased," he said. Women's career goals in education have changed, Joekel said. Previously, the primary area of women's study was elementary education, he said, but now more are involved in other areas like secondary education. Women are studying to coach and to teach industrial arts, fields which before were male dominated , Joekel said. "More women are entering into graduate programs designed toward administrative positions," Joekel said, positions such as school principals, curriculum directors and school superintendants. The greatest growth in women's enrollment is in that field, he said. X vSlS to share The Gloss Onion Natural Food Restaurant 235 N. 11th Phone 475-3355 Every Mon. & Tuei. 5 9 pm HALF PRICE ON ENTIRE MENU (txcept beverages) TO ALL STUDENTS WITH STUDENT ID Close to Campus at 11th and "Q" OQQ y- L J V. r "V OFFICIAL OLYMPIC T-SHIRTS Join the Lake Placid Winter Olympics Great Christmas Gifts Get your Grandmother ont ORDER VOUR OLYMPIC T-SMiRT NOW WITH COLO" OtVMHC IOGO TWIN RIVER ENTERPRISES river road LAKE PLACIO. NY tiM SIZE ANO , OUANTITY 8M MEO i l ADULT CHILDREN I l OUANTITY f tSM PIUS 7U HANOI INO TOTAL ENCLOSED I NAME I ADDRESS, - ; . From Jazz To Dlucs At Tho ZOO November 26 - December 1 Monday & Tuesday The SPENCER WARD QUINTET "Their first 'appearance at The Zoo. Quality Jazz." only $1.00 , Wednesday thru Saturday Direct from Chicago, Alligator Recording Artists MAGIC SLIM & THE TEARDROPS "Magic Slim & The Teardrops were one of the first V Chicago bands to play The Zoo. They continue to be one of the most popular. Raw, Straight-Ahead Southside Chicago Blues." $2.00 cover . My 133 No. 14th. Lincoln photo by Ted Kirk i M t 1 -. - 1 ' i r; t m 1 1.'4 1 V. V -t V 4