12— The Daily Collegian Monday, February 14,1077 Bowling teams take pair from American By NEIL RUDEL Collegian Sports Writer Coach Don Ferrell’s men’s and women’s bowling teams both chalked up wins Saturday against. American University but their margins of victory differed like day and night. The Penn State men rollers escaped with their eighth triumph, in as many starts, but not until a Lion surge late in the final of a best of three set sealed a 10-9 victory. Ferrell’s alleywomen experienced much less difficulty as they mangled fADVERTISEDI [\rm policyJ items is required to be reedily available for sale at or below the advertised price in each A&P Store, except as specifically noted in this ad. WHOLE or SHANK PORTION FRESH Orange Juice I • > % PAID! •• •< t PRlOf •*] ONE Vj.QALLOnN ' I GLASS BOTTLE I , i “A&P Fresh ii| ii Orange Juice ii ! ft ___ __ |- . I' i -“S" fil 0 WITH || ; 1 i I ° allon nrB?V this § ;, | Boitis ahv coupon I.! wi timil On* Coupcn per Cuatomar ’ ! "?i Valid thru tit, FeO It IMF , Olvliton • AtP tleiaa ■ > min fi l s PAIDt I % PRIOI • > • PRiOt • ■ Retails in this ad effective thru Saturday, February 19,1977 in State College & Bellefonte A&P stores. American, 19-0, to extend their season chart to 6-2. American’s visiting men’s team held a 7-5 lead after two sets but the Lions, particularly Terry Wenz and Barry Kubala, rallied to win four individual matchups and earned the high team total to set the final score. Saturday’s scoring format differed from most of the scoring procedures of the bowling teams’ previous outings. In each of the three sets, five Lions matched up against five Americans Each of these advertised 1 /2-gallon 0 WITH COUPON for a total of 15 points at stake. An additional point was awarded each set’s high team total and one for total pins on the day. Trailing by 70 pins after two sets, Ferrell’s club caught fire and squeaked by American, 2690-2672. Kubala, a sophomore, led the charge with a high game of 236. His high series of 628 and average of 209 were the day’s best. “The men were extremely sharp,” Ferrell said. “The lineup was shaken up a little but we complemented each other very well.” There were no seniors in the men’s lineup which, due to rules of the league that Penn State hopes to join next season, was shuffled. The lineup changes were such that both teams’ number one bowlers rolled from the five spot; four took the second position; and number five rolled from the fourth slot. 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But Saturday’s shuffle saw Tom DeNoi, a newcomer, being shuttled into the prestigous number four spot. The pressure was on the rookie. “Tom did really well, though,” Ferrell said. “He beat his man by 20 pins in the final game.” The same lineup rules pertained to the Lady Lions who apparently didn’t seem to mind who bowled where as they played a rude welcoming committee, blasting American, 19-0. "The girls just bowled superbly all day; they were not to be denied,” Ferrell said. Tina Clark paced the onslaught with a high series, game and average with a 574,225 and 190, respectively. xriXhi^iUegs KRAFT CHEESE SPREAD Woolite Rug Cleaner A&P Frozen Onion Rings Nutley Margarine-Quarter Carnation Coffee Mate A&P Cotton Puffs Jane Parker Potato Chips Bacon Ends and Pieces Grade A Turkeys average Pascal Celery Golden Ripe Bananas PORK SALE! 89° 99° SAVE .20* Velveet Indiana stuns Michigan BytheAP The Indiana Hoosiers have a “Mr. Outside” and a “Mr. Inside.” What’s more, he’s the same guy. Scoring inside, outside and all around the court, Mike Woodson was unstoppable yesterday and as a result the Hoosiers were unbeatable in their nationally-televised game With Michigan. With the efficient freshman forward scoring 26 points before a roaring hometown crowd at Bloomington, Indiana salvaged some of its season’s pride with a 73-64 upset of the fifth-ranked ; Loins i L.:99 0 1 300-ct pkg. 6*oz. bag 3-lb. box s ‘ ,en ’»^S&‘- ° y law) j Ml COMPLETE I'l DESIGNER COLLECTION by Danielle ON DISPLAY IN OUR STORES Wolverines. “I really can’t say why I got so many open shots," said Woodson. “The shots were just there.” Michigan Coach Johnny Orr was just as puzzled with Woodson’s free-lance ac tivities on the court. “They just ran their offense in the second half,” said Orr. “I don’t know how they got Woodson opened so often.” For a while, the Wolverines looked as good as their previous week’s 89-84 victory over Indiana at Ann Arbor. But their troubles started directly after intermission. Applying a high-pressure WEEK ENDING 2/19/77 defense, Indiana held Michi gan scoreless, for the first four minutes of the second half and took charge of game. "We concentrated all week on defense,” said Indiana Coach Bobby Knight, whose team had beaten Michigan in last' year’s NCAA cham pionship game. "We thought we had gives' r up some easy baskets last week in the loss to Michigan before we had even set up. We told our kids this week that our defense started when the shot went up.” Michigan, which was averaging 88 points a game and 50 per cent shooting from 1 the field, was held to 38 per cent by the Hoosiers. In ad dition, the Wolverines committed 20 turnovers. “We were able to get control of the game in the second half,” said Knight. “There was only one dif ference between this week and last week we were able to hold onto the lead. ” Yesterday’s game capped a weekend of heavy activity in college basketball. Top ranked San Francisco clinch ed at least a tie for the West Coast Athletic Conference championship with a 99-82 rout of St. Mary’s Saturday night behind center Bill Cartwright. While San Francisco was rolling toward the NCAA playoffs, the second-ranked Bruins had a stufhbling block thrown in their way Saturday night with a 78-73 loss to Washington. It was the second Pac-8 defeat for the Bruins this season and put them just a-shade ahead of three teams_ tied for second i Oregon, Washington and Washington State. The Bruins have lost one less game than the others. In other Top Ten games, No. 3 Kentucky trimmed Auburn 89-82; No. 4 Wake , Forest defeated North'*' Carolina State 84-77; No. 10 Nevada-Las Vegas nipped No. 6 Louisville 99-96; No. 7 Alabama turned back Mississippi State 73-69; No. 8 Minnesota outscored lowa 61- 58 and No. 9 Marquette hammered Manhattan 86-60. Elsewhere, No. 11 Ten nessee whipped Louisiana State 91-64; No. 12 Cincinnati stopped Georgia Tech 84-73; No. 13 Arkansas routed Rice 78-51; No. 14 North Carolina bested Tulane 106-94; Maryland upset No. 15 Clemson 84-78; No. 16 Providence tripped Long Island 99-85; St. Bonaventure stunned No. 17 Syracuse 91- 84; No. 18 Arizona beat New Mexico 88-84; No. 19 Detroit downed Wayne State 123-77 and No. 20 VMI turned back Richmond 92-87. Major league standings National Hockey League CAMPBELL CONKEIIENCE Patrick Division W L T Pis OF GA Phila 33 n 12 7B 225 153,.. NYIsl 33 15 8 74 100 13iW Allan 24 21 11 59 185 182 NYRng 20 24 13 53 198 204 Smvthe Division SI Lou 24 20 0 54 107 193 Chgo 20 27 10 50 170 198 Colo 17 31 9 43 170 211 Minn 13 29 13 39 103 221 Vancvr 10 35 0 38 150 221 WALES CONFERENCE Norris Division Mont 41 7 9 91 270 131 Pitts 25 23 9 59 178 180 L.A. 19 20 11 49 180 183 Wash 10 32 10 42 154 230 Detroit 15 32 7 37 139 197 Adams Division Bsln 32 19 0 70 215 184 Buff 31 17 0 08 194 153 Tnto 27 21 7 01 211 170 Cleve 18 28 9 45 104 194 Saturday’s Games New York Islanders 2. Philadelphia 1 Montreal 8. Boston 3 Toronto 10, Washington 0 Chicago 4, Colorado 2 Detroit 2, Minnesota 2, tie St. Louis 3, Atlanta 1 Pittsburgh 3, Los Angeles 2 Yesterday's Games Montreal at Detroit, afternoon Minnesota at Buffalo Cleveland at Boston Toronto at New York Rangers Atlanta at Chicago Monday’s Games St. Louis at Philadelphia • New York Islanders at Vancouver National Basketball Association EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W I. Pet. «B Philphia 33 20 .023 Boston 20 27 .491 NYKnks 24 29 .453 Buffalo 19 33 .305 NY Nets 17 30 ~321 Central Division Washton 30 22 .577 Houston 29 23 558 Cleve 28 24 .538 S Anton 29 25 .537 NOrlns 24 30 .444 Atlanta 22 34 .393 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Denver 34 19 .042 Detroit 32 23 .582 Kan City 28 28 .500 Indiana 25 30 .455 Chicago 23 32 .418 Milwkee 17 42 .288 Pacific Division LosAng 35 19 .048 Portland ' 35 21 .025 GoldnSt 30 24 .550 Seattle 29 20 .527 Phoenix 25 27 .481 Yesterday’s (Same West 125, East 124 Today's (lames No games scheduled today Tomorrow's Games Detroit vs. Boston at Hartford Washington at Buffalo 7 9 13* a 10 3 7'a 10 12 20 1 5 O'.- 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers