Monday, February 11, 1935 Pcgo 0 Daily Nobrcskan u 1 ' n I Via O 8.-' Tnacicer qu Angela Thackcr finally hit the mark and Keith Jones barely reined It Sat urday at the Frar.k Scvigne Flasker Invitational track meet at the Bob Devar.ey Sports Center. Thicker, fourth place finisher in the Olympic long jump, qualified for the NCAA Indoor Championships in the evert. Thacker had been unit! 8 to qualify earlier in the year because of injuries. Saturday .she won the long Eusker basketball team DyJcff Apel t&JT Exporter For Oklahoma State Coach Dick Halterman, an injury in the waning moments of the Cowgirls' 65-64 victory over Nebraska might have been a bless ing in disguise. Dahrenda Jantes, a 6-7 freshman guard, was injured after Nebraska's Deb Powell bad forced a Jump ball fallowing a scuffle for a rebound vrith crdy 7 seconds remaining arid the Cowgirls clinging to the two paint bad. .' Jraes was forced to bavs ths cm tsetse of aii injury and Ealteriaaar ' hid 5-1 Dsxise Derrieux Jisp tlrM ' the 5-9 Powell. "I know no one's going to believe this, but Dehrenda (James) is actually a better jumper than Denise (Derrieux)," Halterman said "Derdss has limited jumping ability. She can .only jump about a foot high while Dahendra, being the tremendous athlete she is, has unlimited j umping ability." Despite her "limited jumping ability," Derrieux was able to outjump Powell and slap the ball into backcourt. With time running out, the Corn buskers' Stacy Imming beat a Cowgirl to the loose ball and passed to teammate Cathy Owen. Owen reached the baseline but was not able to get cf! the shot as time expired. "(Cathy) Owen was supposed to get that (last second) shot, she just took a' Sports ESItttff .. mi - Tro tetms thai have dominated the Slgut coa79ce swinnusj cmI3 pionsMps for the past five yesr3 prevsil ed once tdn whea Kcbrsclca hostsd the Kansas Jtjtoia ia a dual meet Siturisy at the Eao Dcvaasy Sports Nebraska's men's te&s, the rlv- tad cjrreKily raaked 20th ia the nation, creised to its eixth d'jal wia cf the sesscn by cnuMng the Jsjtawks, E3-2S. Mesawhils, the Lady Jajhawks, din ners sf the ccsferssce title far the past 10 years, defeated the 12lh-ranked Huskers, Kansas Cesch Gary Eenpf said it is cr.Iy a mritsr cf tiae until the domia tzz$ ti the Gasker Eiea and the Lady 6 w,'!,T?,rTa? alines Jump with a leap of 0-3 14, well under her personal best of 22-4 14. "I felt a little off," Thacker said. "I feci I can do a let better than I did today. This is really the first meet I've Jumped in all year." The meet, honoring Nebraska's late track coach Frank Sevigne, brought together some of the most outstanding coli?hte performers in the nation. No team scores were kept in the meet. In the men's C 0-yard dash, Nebraska's Jones missed qualifying for the NCAA championships by .02 seconds. He defeated Missouri's Chidi Imoh with a time of 6.24. Nebraska Coach Gary oiie dribble too many," said Nebraska Coach Kelly Hill "We played well to night, we just came up two points short." The Huskers, led throughout the game, including an 1 1 point 29-18 lead with 2:32 remaining in t he Grit half and a five point 20-24 half-time lead. Powell paced Nebraska with 22 points, which tied her for game high scoring honors with Cowgirl forward Jamie Sisss. . Adds t'zn Powell, freshmsa Mauitice Ivy added 13, Laruir.g had 12 ar.d sophomore Angle Hilar had 8. wmn A pressure defense wasjxt Eptr," Hill said. "They (Oklahoma State) hit gems ameingiy long shots (the Cowgirb hit eight baskets from outside, including two from IS feet and two from 18 feet), and w didn't stop (Jackie) Glcssen or (Kathy) Schulz (Glossen had 16 points and a game high eight rebounds while Schulz added 13 points and four re bounds) but I don't think anybody can." Schuls and Glcssen brought OSU back in the second half and, with Siess hitting three baskets, the Cowgirls scored 11 straight points midway through the half. OSU led by 10 with two minutes to play before a late Husker rally that ended with two Imming drives and baskets. The game was tied with 40 seconds left. But, Ivy fouled Glcssen with 13 seconds to play arid the Cowgirl senior made two free throws that event ually won the gams. Jayhawks ends. 'It's just a flc in time," Eempf said. "Nobody wins forever. People think Kansas is going to win the Eig Eight gwimmtel crown forever. That's not the way it is. Thinns change." lz V:z:s.z: r.tn rsr. 1 1 cf 13 tver.ts &Zl?zl tJ:3 J;;l,i:,!-.s. Jin Fellows, a eophentor ttzzx Fittst-urgh, Ohio, cliimed tcp L::,:"s h ts events, the feWU ... j - ..."' fcv L -.v.. ?a-T - -5 ...J. i ...... 3 i. . i, f. j Iluiner ar.J Erris Dunn pest: i x. io Li the CO, 1C3 and E; fx :ctIs ersr3, respecthrery. Despite the ir.prsriive wia, Ert said, his tr.:.ra must swia faster h a dual at Icwa State next SaturJ-y. "We need to take care cf scr.3 a-iall details and focus on what we v;r;t ts do," Eestz said. 4lVe need tD rrli sharper aaiast Iowa State thr nv.;cli lit the cuvln cOiapctltros, i.i.r iof Nca Pepin said he wants to see Jones make the national field. "By the time the conference meets rolls around we think he'il be able to qualify," Pepin said. "If he doesn't make it there, we might send him to a post-conference meet." Nebraska qualified several members of its women's team for the NCAA championships. The three-time national indoor champions had seven people meet the NCAA qualifying standards. Pepin said he still hopes a couple cf other members of the women's team reach qualifying marks. " "I don't know if we have enough to 's rally falls short r ' - 1 I l ! J V ' i -"I 1 - .. : M V 1 1 li ' V" j : i --.. 'S t-r-' : ! I ' j I .J ''"'' : v, -" " . 5 i s '-, " - , '1 I I: ' ' ' ' ' ' 1 J v""". ; Neferoka8 Stecy bassists (22) and Debra Powell (22) csrrsl CowsM DcteRdaJasscs siarssy from a loess ball In Sstsis two-psixt loss, fessisj, wko bad two late steals and fesststa to nss tfee pa close, fesroSr saissd a desperate C3lbst: shot at t&e exd cf the first hsM. Q ' no UjirN Mil fOUi Kill! sweep on the ens- and three-meter boards. Castro cutdualed teammates Lewis Meyers and Alvin Spencer on the three-meter fcsard and edged Meyers and Matt Clark h the one-meter corn petition. Heynaldo did well on a couple cf dives weVe been working on this week," Nebraska dicing coaahJeff Ikbsr said. ' "Ha still missed his revsrsa optbnai, it's cosing along but he still has to get tctier tt it." Kbcr ald tstrb c f C:"tra Iteitrs r v;"A be t: to t?:t i the 9. 99 .4 IT r." 'it:.. 1 3 111 5 U tv with r!n t::;:r h$ dlvL-g t.r.'rn r i: y3 tci :itol:i:t: i' win it (the nationals)," Pepin said. "I was hoping that Nicole All would get qualified In the SCO. That was a dis appointment. We thought Deb Smith had a chance in the shot put." The Nebraska men's team had only two winners in the meet Jones in the 60 and the distance medley relay team cf Glen Cunningham, Dennis Wallace, Gerard O'Callaghan end Jean Verster. The relay team barely cded Wisconsin at the tape and qualified for the NCAA Indoor Championships. Other high finishers for the Nebraska men's team included Darren Burton's second place in the high hump, Ihbcrt Metz' second place in the triple jump, David CrtiiAorDsiiy Neieskcn "She is one c? the most coschable ' young ladies I've ever worked with, on cf the hardest workers I've ever han around, and that was one cf the best wpm I've ever seen in 10 years of 'colieglate coaching," Kempfsaid. The Huskers took an early lead in the dual with victories in the 403. medley relay and the 200 freestyle. Shausa Gihicre won that event in less than a seeend over Busker "Linda Sebesta. GUnore, Penny Stanek, Erin Hurley and Dana Papers coabiasd for therskywia. Eat Hercld beat Powers ia th 2CD t afjll sscond, andtheJjyis' Tcnrny and Jackie Pease tosk Lrrt tzi sseend in tsh 1C0 fracstyls. That event pushed Kssisas to a two-pcint lead it never rslmqtishsd. Mcrcid thsa best Eidly Fieketts h a rae et record 5:03X3 in tha EOfeecstyis rad Deed P.eam outraced liuy in the 200 breaststrcks to pu tha dual out cf reach. W,'fciiii.ii.Jk,4ii' 1 skM tA imm fc o Regis Humphrey's third place in the CCO meter dash and John Hastings' third place in the 440. The Nebraska women's team won seven of 14 events. Besides Thacker's victory in the Ions jump, she won the 60-yard dash with a time of 6.70. Rhonda Blanford wen the 60 hurdles in a sports center women's record time of 7.E3. Other winners for Nebraska were Karen Grant in the triple jump, Marcia Tate in the 500-mcter dash, Michelle I tilling ia the 410 and the mile relay t rin "There were really good quality athletes here," Pepin said. "It was a good days woi Huskers buck cold Covboys in 66-48 win By B&b Assatt n When the Chicago White Sox won the American League west title two seasons ago, their rallying cry was "Win ugly." Saturday night it looked like the Nebrsska men's basketball team had that Eamemotta " -.'" ;. .; Nebraska deftated Oklahoma 'State 6-5-43 in the Ecb DvrXiiy Sports Center. 1 The gasse wss.fcigSdigMed by 45 fcul.'IO percent,'Se!4.goal. .looting called 'and peogls epnsdsd onto, the fbsr too raar.y tir.aa ts count There, were nine fouls in the Erst 3:57 of the "Tcr't was really physical," Nebra- ska center Dave Hcppen said. "We've got a talented team. There are a lot of teanis more talented than us, so we're going to have to outhuatle and outscrap Nebraska had five fouls in the first three minutes as Oklahoma State led early. The Cowboys largest lead was 16-11 at 11:10 on a basket by John Nielson. ' Curtis Moore and Happen scored the game's next eight points to give Nebra ska a 17-16 lead with 7:19 left in the half. They trailed only once more in the game.' " Despite picking up his third foul and - bavins to sit out the last two minutes of the first htlf, Hoppen' finished the period with i7 points. ' Oklahoma State's Joe Atkinson, the Eig Eight's lith leading scorer, picked up his third fe:il with 8:22 left in the first halt Atkinson played 27 minutes beta fading out and finished with ki 31-23 at half and Hansen said he thought his Cowboys still had a pod chance cf winning ths game. A nise-pcint run by Kebrs&ka early in the sscond half gave the Cornhuskers a 48-84 lead with 1 1:58 to play. Oklahoma State pulled back to witMn 4S-S9 after Heppen had bees wMstled for his fasrth faul od a technical for cursing at s referee. Eren with Eoppsa out, the Cornhusk ers were ilh to bdld the lead to 5442, beta thej"an!orcaitcr carae back into' fee rr.s. d rv mi and 4-4 in the Eig Eigri, b tied with Iowa State tuaassrl fcr third ciace in tne 1 ras. Cklahasaa Stats saw its record droto 11-lScv Eiht. The Cewte-ys die gd their six partly b? 13 t tin the Netrr,! a vvss led by K: 'lr,,,. n's 25 A' 4 Rrin fr.rr sl 10. TH! Self and Cfevs vlth 10 points each.