The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, November 30, 1987, Image 19

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    By The Associated Press
MCI Harbor Classic
BALTIMORE It was another night and anoth
er Brian Williams.
After struggling in Maryland’s season-opening
victory Williams gave himself a talking to and
responded by leading the Terps to a 77-69 victory
over Mississippi in the championship game of the
MCI Harbor Classic basketball tournament.
The heralded 6-foot-ll freshman center scored
20 points including awe-inspiring dunks
grabbed 12 rebounds and blocked five shots
against Ole Miss. The performance came one
night after he lasted only 27 minutes before fouling
out with five points, one rebound and no blocks.
We looked at the films yesterday. Brian was
sort of play-acting. He was not aggressive playing
defense,’’ Maryland Coach Bob Wade said. “He
was trying to draw the charge calls and the
officials were not giving them to him and he was
coming up with the cheap fouls.
“We set him down and let him see it and we just
told him, ‘lf you’re going to foul someone, loul
someone. Don't be giving up the cheap fouls.’ He
really felt bad last night because he really felt he
did not contribute to his teammates.
“Today he just made a little solemn oath to
himself that he was just going to go out there and
play hard, which he did."
Williams scored seven points in the Terps’ 16-2
game-opening run and. along with brothers Der
rick and Cedrick Lewis, helped Maryland take
control behind an intimidating inside game.
“That’s what you really look for. We’ve got some
kids who can block some shots and be intimidators
inside," Wade said. “Derrick and Brian and Ce-
Wunsch wins marathon in Philly
!L S " F , A 1 FATS " •. About 1 700 people entered the miles but had enough of a lead to Ellis with a 4 50 surge in the 18th
Associated Press Writer racewhich was run in steady ram. win by 20 seconds. mile after Using him on a down
PHIT AHKI PHI a t' w u us erj '| vlnds and tem P eratures in “I was feeling really good until hill
PHILADELPHIA - Tim Wunsch the mid-to upper 40s. the 23rd mile or so and then kind of .. r . . .
o t U N h Y ldoff t Ch d arl f EUi |H of N ° runners ualified the fell apart?’ take olfthaTeaflvbuThe" if"smd
E "n “ILH Pu y , e !i , i, ay a l " the U.S. Olympic trials in April, bothered by tight leg and shoulder Elite 27 whofinttiSa M ■‘if
dene M k d fh hl ad o u hia In .^ epen ' Wunsch and Lawson both missed by muscles. “I was fortunate to hold it I had had another 300 or 400 cards 1
dence Marathon in 2 hours, 24 mm- 4 minutes in •• He led naa another 300 or 400 yards. I
utes, 8 seconds 4 minutes. in. He led from the 10-mile mark. think I would have had him. ”
The winning times were also The whole race was very, very ... v .
Lori Lawson, a 21-year-old medi- short of the race records of 2:14:59 windy." Wunsch said. "It seemed ■ , en ~y „ °r ~, phl ' 1 M u d “ a L s
cal student from Philadelphia, fin- and 2:32:16. set on a different like the wind was in vour face the w - ln f ollow ed bv Bob
ished in 2:54:12 to win the women's course in 1982. whole way. I was really disap- 22744 ° ogunquit ’ Mame ’ in
division of the 26.2-mile race from Wunsch 26 who is in his last pointed in the time but on a day like ' ' '
Independence Hall to Memorial semester at Missouri Baptist Col- this you just hope to win. ” of wa^se^d^.n
Hall in the city s Fairmount Park, lege, faded over the final three Wunsch opened a big lead over 2:55:07.
DOWNHILL SKIING
FOR
PHYSICAL EDUCATION CREDIT
ALL ABILITY LEVELS
- TELEPHONE REGISTRATION PERIOD - Nov. 18 ■ Dec. 11
""Physical Education Basic Instruction Program once again offers DOWNHILL
SKIING at the local Tussey Mountain Ski Area. Students should reference
page 90 of the Spring Semester Schedule of Classes for schedule numbers
and course/sections to be used during the telephone registration procedure
A limited number of spaces are still available in each section.
PLEASE NOTE: DOWNHILL SKIING classes are held on Tuesday, Wednesday
Thursday, Saturday, and Sunday. However the Sunday sections appear in the
schedule of classes as “APPT”. If you desire to have your class on Sunday
refer to page 90 of the Schedule - Schedule number 542909 is for the 1100
A.M. to 1:30 P.M. Sunday class and Schedule number 542918 is for the I'3o
P.M. to 4:00 P.M. Sunday class.
All students who register for DOWNHILL SKIING must pick up a DOWNHILL
SKHNG INFORMATION SHEET at Room 105 White Building before the end of
Fall Semester - This contains important information regarding cost and first
meeting time and place.
FREE TRANSPORTATION IS AVAILABLE.
drick did a fine job inside. They got us out of the
gate and we were able to come up with some cheap
baskets. That’s what we need.
“Those are things that have been missing from
our program. Hopefully we’ve got them in place
now. We've just got to continue to build from
them.”
The Terps. who are off to a 2-0 start this year
after a 9-17 campaign a year ago, succeeded in
impressing Mississippi Coach Ed Murphy.
“They've made vast improvement over last
year. They're a very good team," Murphy said of
Maryland. “(Wade has) probably one more year
away as far as getting up into the middle of the
(ACC) league and really being a really solid
team."
Murphy was not disappointed with his young
Mississippi team, which pulled within 22-20 in the
first half and 61-59 in the second half but could not
get the lead.
“When you rebuild with freshmen, there still are
difficulties you've got to go through. You've got to
be patient,” Murphy said. “I’m not going in there
and yell and throw things at them. I didn't go in
and hug them last night. All the matters is the next
one."
Mississippi made just 25 of 74 shots from the
field (33.8 percent), but outrebounded Maryland
44-36. Tim Jumper led the Rebels with 19 points.
Derrick Lewis led Maryland with 27 points and
junior-college transfer Rudy Archer ran the
Terps offense almost flawlessly, passing for six
assists with only one turnover.
In the third-place game earlier Saturday night,
St. Joseph’s defeated Loyola of Maryland 64-52
behind freshman Richard Stewart's 16 points.
Great Alaska Shootout
ANCHORAGE, Alaska Gary Grant sank three
free throws in the final 35 seconds as ninth-ranked
Michigan edged Alabama-Birmingham 78-76 yes
terday for third place in the 10th Great Alaska
Shootout basketball tournament.
Michigan, coming off a 79-64 loss to No. 17
Arizona on Saturday, squandered a 13-point first
half lead and trailed UAB by five points with 4:20
to go. Two 3-pointers by Glen Rice cut the deficit to
one, setting the stage for Grant's free throws.
UAB had the ball and a 76-75 lead with 53 seconds
left, but Reginald Turner was called for palming
the ball, and Michigan took over.
Grant missed a shot as he drove the lane, and
was fouled after grabbing the rebound and at
tempting another shot.
Trailing 77-76, Alabama-Birmingham played for
the last shot, but Larry Remberts eight-foot
jumper hit the front of the rim
Grant was fouled immediately and made the
front-end of a 1-and-l with five seconds left.
Michael Charles’ desperation 30-footer at the buzz
er was way wide.
Michigan scored the first six points of the game
and, aided by a 19-9 rebounding edge, built a 13-
point lead. Terry Mills’ shot at the buzzer gave the
Wolverines a 39-30 halftime lead.
Rembert’s strong inside play fueled L’AB's
comeback. The Blazers took the lead with just
over eight minutes to go and pushed th . margin to
67-62 with 5:12 left.
Charles scored the Blazers’ next nine points as
Alabama-Birmingham fought off the Wolverines
2-1, until Turner’s turnover.
Rice led all scorers with 27 points, including
three 3-pointers in the second half. Grant scored 17
of his 20 points in the second half.
®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®®XSXSX§ ) ®®®®( S) < S)<S><S>(S>
® Minnesota Fats wishes he could enter... He can’t; but YOU can ' ®
| PENN STATE INVITATIONAL 3
| BILLIARD TOURNAMENT!! |
§ Collegiate Nine-Ball Tournaments for Men & Women! ®
<$ (Singlesand/or Mixed Doubles) |
® Found Robin Preliminary Rounds Double Elimination Final Rounds ®
I TROPHY PRIZES FOR ALL WINNERS! I
| Singles Tourney SATURDAY, DECEMBER sth |
| $3.00 entry fee any player then eligible for free entry Sunday ®
| Doubles Tourney SUNDAY, DECEMBER 6th I
® $5.00 entry fee per team alternating shots each inning §
1 ENTER BY HFP Icfll for MORE INFO stop by ®
® C^ICnD T VEX*. I Si.. the HUB Billard Room |
® ® ® ® ® ® ® ® <D <§> ® ® ® ® ® ® ® ® ® ® ® ® ® ® ® ® <§> ® <§> d) (§) <§> <§> (§) ® <§> @ ®
DEALS* u>
■"►CUICICN DINNER''* *4*s NOW 3*5/
Rl6 PlNN6R^ ? fc9s NOW "G 25 ff
»»COMBO CUICKN RlB^s9Snow^s 2s /
* elU dinners or potato salap or
PpeNCH-R2-I&S, CDteSCAW, Atop BR-6AD //
- 9 PM'/
Boy ONe Rec ß\\ie of eQvA
or cessed, vauje for HALF Pwce.y©:
6f ft*_ (JfJOeiZ. Sl^BodLs//
LlifdP
* DON
4?^
Haircuts-$lO.OO
includes wash, cut, and blowary
Perms - starting at
$30.00
cut ana styles included
Business Hours
M.W.F 8-5 T.Th 8-7
Sat. 8-4
Aiter. Street & fester Averse 237-2201 II
'“ONIYfIT I^
iCB^PEHS?
ON COLLEGE AVE/
DAILY FEOM 4-9 Pm'
asj P?
The Daily
ollegian Monday, Nov. 30, 1987—1
'l tuitions c Hen for
the V 'ntveisthi C hoi',
The Choir rehearses on
Tues./Thurs., 6:30-8:00 p.m
Call Dr. Dauner 863-4219
BEFORE the end of the
semester to audition!
I ere.lt
jjj fCINEMEnEj;
CINEMA 5 1
Nightly 7 00 Matinees 1 30. 3 30 5 30
DATE WITH AN ANGEL ,»=,
Nightly 915
ALL SEATS $2 50 UNTIL 6 OO
DIRTY DANCING
Nightly 7:40 9 40
Matinees T4O. 3 40. 5 40
ALL SEATS $2 50 UNTIL 6 00
HELLO AGAIN
Nightly 7 45 Matinees 1 45 3 45 5 45
TEEN WOLF TOO pq
Nightly 9 45
ALL SEATS $2 50 UNTIL 6 00
FATAL ATTRACTION
Nightly 7-20 9 45
Matinees 2 15 4 45
ALL SEATS S 2 50 UNTIL 6 00
FLOWERS IN THE ATTIC ,e 0„,
Nightly 7 50. 9:50
Matinees 1 50 3 50. 5 50
ALL SEATS $2 50 UNTIL 6 00
STATE 1
PLANES,TRAINS AND
AUTOMOBILES
Nightly 7.45. 9 45 Matinees 1:45 3:45 5 45
ALL SEATS $2.50 UNTIL 6 00
THE RUNNING MAN
Nightly 8:00. 10 00
Matinees 2 00. 4 00 6 00
AIL SEATS $2.50 UNTIL 6 00
jMiuysimo / i4i- mi
HELLO AGAIN
Nightly 7 15. 9:30
Matinees 2 15
ALL SEATS $2 00
?W|e! •
3 ° J & /
114 H«—l— 237-7657
CINDERELLA , 0 ,
337-7t»+