Monday, Decembers, 1C34 PcgoO Daily Nebr&skan wine a '0) miUl 1CS!E6 tfl,- nw'-Mi mi c '"v. ""'Ml . . .jTj, 1 11 Dy Word 7. Trlplctt III Dal!7 Kxtsaslxa ScssS Editor Pittsburgh volleyball coach Shelton Collier raced his red pen across the Panther slat book for the last time of the 1934 season. Pittsburgh had lost in three sets to Nebraska, taking the seventh ranked Huskers to an extended 18-16 game in the last set. Nebra ska would move on to face West ern Michigan, a four-set winner over Illinois State. Pittsburgh had nowhere to go but home. "We had several chances to win that last set . . .more than a few opportunities," Collier said. "If we had, who knows what could have happened?" But Nebraska came back on each one and played tough. We were making adjust- because, Collier said, "when you're raents, but Nebraska a4jused to down two sets, you've get to try that too something new." The Huskers won the first two sets 1 5-6, 1 5-1 0 and didnt look to be in much trouble before the last set. That's when Pittsburgh start ed to play like the team that had won 13 of its last 14 matches and jumped to a 9-6 lead behind the serving of its two seniors Cathy Rupp and Ulana Kchutiak. The reason for the advantage was a Pittsburgh rotation switch and momentum, said Nebraska coach Terry Pettit. The Panthers just started doing things the way they were used to, Collier said. The Panthers started rotating its line up in the third game In response, Pettit went to his bench more, putting in Michelle Smith for Julie Hermann, and little-used freshman Jenny GcU for one of hb setters, Mary Buysse. That left Cathy Ncth to run a 5-1 (single-setter) attack that the Huskers havent run regularly in four years. With the score tied at 1 1. Nebra ska took the lead when Hermann got a tap past the Pitt block on a play set up when Buysse thwarted a Panther short set and spike with a single-fist save. The advan tage wavered from one side to the other until Pitt had the serve with a 14-13 lead. The server was Rupp, who had already burned the Nebraska de fense for six service aces. "I was telling everybody this week that that was the best server in the nation," Pettit said That serve doesn't act like a serve . . .it acts like a backcourt attack. You just gut it out, get anything under the ball and get it up." This time, Hermann did dig out the fast-dropping serve near cen ter court. After a Pitt return, Hermann saved the point with a kilL Nebraska scored the nest two points of the match, but lost their chance to win when one of the Pitt reserves, Pat Belcher, got her ninth epike cf the match between the tleek. 'Annie Adamcz&k hit the r.cit spike attempt long for another tie at 15-15. Then, Enid Cchcne wi:e hit a set leng to give Pitt another chance to win tX 16-15. But, freshman Louise CChau2hn33V hit the sen's long. Nebraska didnt waste that chsnce. Schonewise and Karen Dahlren blacked a Kchutbk spike Into the Pitt forecourt for point 1 6. Eehcne wise slammed a kill cffKrb West ell's shoulder for point 17, then Dahlren placed a kill to the left of the Pitt defense for the final point. 1 ? 'L-f J J S In Nebraska eporti cctiss. tMj weekend, sX z Nebraska traestlsr Kecsaa Tenser bears &mm ca Iswa Ct&te's Tin llsssisg as referee litis Les ciaals two paints. At iit, Amis Adaaesak Qeft) asd Jslla llemaaa cess dcrni rJSer reject! a Httsbsii ejike. Bslsw, Erisi Esdey ccaej cH tit. fclacs ca ft Its cf ffebrsaka wcnear3 4C3 IsiMfal ceiley 4-Njv-t- ' -'-ft-'' L Si "f -Ur- I J - V flWt ... The Nebraska men's and backstroke (60.87). He also won In the women's meet, Dana women's swimming and diving the 200-yard individual medley Powers won the 50 freestyle, the teams rolled to impressive victo- with a time of 1:54.74. 200 individual medley and the ries Saturday in the Husker In- Nebraska's Pat Klaren set a 100 butterfly. Her 200 medley vitationaL meet record in the 500 freestyle, time of 2:07.65 set a meet record. The Corn husker men edged finishing in 4:31.13. Diver Rey- Recketts took the 500 freestyle, Southern Methodist, the nation's naldo Castro took the three-meter the 400 individual medley and sixth-ranked team, 624-613. Ne- diving with a national qualifying the 1,650 freestyle. Her l,650time braska was unranked entering score of 424.15, while teammate 0f 17:10 qualified as new meet the meet. Iowa took third with Levis Myers finished third and record. 402 points and Iowa State fin- also qualified nationally with a n nvtA ished fourth with 356. North score of 476.00. K ?n 3 Dakota and Kansas sent only Other Husker winners included f.Q 2 vtt'Zt divers to the meet and finished Ernie Duran in the 400 individual fcw with 3S and 11 points, respectively, medley and 1,650 freestyle, Mike yv? , S IS!?, Nebraska dominated the Edmcndson in thelCO butterCy. win the yzid medley women's division, scoring 1,014 Nebraska also took the 800 frees- . , nnints tn whin sprnnrt nlar Inwn tve relav with A time of 6:44 4S. KlCkettS, Sebesta, Kelly and State. The Cyclones finished with Jeff Brown, Dave Hecker, Duran Shauna Gilmore won the 800- j 590 points, North Dakota scored and Jon Under comprised tne " "CCSI' oi i 219 and Kansas wound up with winning team. record time of 7:34.41. 33. Southern Methodist set two Other Nebraska winners in Ed Jowdy led the Nebraska meet records. Tom Genz won the eluded Sebesta in the 100-yard men, setting two meet records 100 breastroke with a time of freestyle, Kelley in the 200-yard and qualifing for the NCA meet 50.87, qusli'ing him for the NCAA backstroke, Penny Sianek in the in both events. Jowdy's record meet. The Mustangs' 400 medley 10O-yardbreaststroke. Hurley tied times came in the 200-yard back- relay, team finished in a meet a meet reoerd in that event, fin stroke ( 1 :40.5) and the 1 00-yerd record tirr.e cf 3:24.03. ishing in 1:06.63. 1 ... !.. A f ' -,J' v v.r J w r i j - i . n - -V . r h ( J , I I r' "At i .. v.. ;! " j . - i j 1 ! 1 jar CO-EEC DASKSTDAI-L ' ' Kappa DeltaTheta Xi 65 (3.6), Gcof-Ups 38 (4.0) " - Lemmings 59 (3.5), Misfits 62 (3.2) llecr.ers 73 (4.2), Road Warriors 77 (3.7) Jean Joyce and the BlackSiearts a (2.7), SJITs 23 (2.7) Wreck Crew'def. Dummy Varia-- bles 15-3, 15-5 Phi Kappa Psi del Beta Theta Pi 15-8,2-15,15-12 Delta Ups2ca det Phi Gambia . Delta 15-2, 8-1 5, 15-1- Beta Theta Pi del. Chi Phi 16-14, , 15-7' ' Piper Two def. Abel Eleven 15-9, 12-15, 15-8 - -Beta Sima Pfei del Simga Phi Epsilon 16-1, 15-11 Triane del i-a Oii 13-11, 16-9 - Phi Delta Theta del Delta UpsUon - 15-8, 16-8 ', ' . ' 0 te