—The Daily Collegian Monday, May 1, 1972 BU..'RGER','..I:KIN . ..G . : ~..,".......................,..:.„.....,:,..,: ~..:..,..,........:.:,.....,.......,.,.:.......,........... ~:.,.,...,.,::.......„..,.:-:::.: • •••••-•••'t ja.. : l.) . . ', ' • • A . wall.lo-well broiled beef blow ' ' IWO% pure IwwW) served on • ollo• toned bun with otwo lettuce, loomfews. . • . 'it. • • pleklos, onions. ketchup aoo towoonolm. POI uP your 11 10•1 two hoods to henell• • Whopper Homo of the WHOPPER! A MEAL IN ITSELF 521 University Drivo -ANIMA PARKING E d .4172- • it s/7 -the N Q sect clhd supplus' left 6 - „ c• • ci otwvAc i fno usedrorduroKeis , o gr eaget t i ,2_4(oje7blosa vq• of +he. cerrle;c) • Ara. -sf r REYS 14fP TS 6c12. Thepeople are the power. Use the power 18 and vote. For the first time in American history you have more power than ever before. The 18-year old vote is a thing of the present. So, register now. Save your registration receipt. Send it in to us. And we'll return it to you along with a special 2-record album. FREE. Or if you don't have a voter registration receipt, 'lust send us $1.50 (check or money order) and the album's yours. It includes selections from the A&M albums of all the people you see on the cover - he right. (Or the left, depending • political perspective.) Fredericks sets 3-mile mark at Penn By BILL HORLACHER Collegian Sports Writer Greg Fredericks won the three-mile run to lead Penn State's "not great, but good" performance in the Penn Relays, held Friday and Saturday at Philadelphia's Franklin Field. "With more than 100 colleges entered, things really spread out," coach Harry Groves said. "Our smattering of places is a darn good showing. Not great, but darn good." Fredericks' three-mile race broke the Penn Relays record of 13:36.1 that he set last year. The Lion senior finished in 13:31.5 and defeated Western Michigan's Gary Harris by one tenth of a second. "It was a tight competitive race; well-paced by Greg," Groves said. "He had a really outstanding weekend," he added. Fredericks' individual performance also included exceptional mile legs in both the distance medley and the four-mile relay. In the distance medley, held Friday, Fredericks posted a time of lend your voter receipt with this coupon and get 'HE ALBUM free. OR send your check or money ,rder (no cash, please) for $1.50 payable Bo Aik/Il Records, Inc. to: HE ALBUM,A&M Records, Inc., P.O. Box 782, overly Hills, Calif. 90213 ;TATE ZIP ALLOW 6-3 WEEKS FOR DELIVERY. (REGISTRATION RECEIPTS MUST BE DATED AFTER MARCH 10, 1972. OFFER ONLY VALID THRU MAY 30, 1972. SUPPLY LIMITED.) 4:04. He ran 4:03 in Satur day's four-mile relay. briives considered this -- APenri State record was set they - ran out of the zone and year's effort at the Penn by the 880 relay team, were disqualified. Relays, "a step up from last competing in a trial heat Scott Chatham placed third year." "Last year we had all Friday. Doug Finkel, Fred in the finals of the 440 in those good placings, but most Singleton, Ed Chubb and termediate hurdles, "a tough, of them were in non- Jimmy Scott claimed a PSU grueling race," according to champioship races. This year record with a time of 1:25.4. Groves. Chatham's time of everything we won was in the In the championship finals 52.8 was his best of the year. championships," he said. Saturday they ran 1:25.5, Just one victim of the stiff finishing fifth. Jim Allahand's competition at Philadelphia The same group of sprin- steeplechase time of 9:01 flat was sophomore distance man ters failed to place in the 440 established another Penn Charlie Maguire. Maguire relay. The Lions were in a State school record. But, in ran the three mile in 13:48-12 very strong position until line with the demanding seconds under his previous Singleton and Chubb missed competition of the Penn Lion ruggers finish third ~,.~,,•, ~ ~ r ..~~~.;: ~; t i 7 it 4 ; : 2 , - 44 1 « ' still in one piece, as this Penn State rugby player demon- Teets, don't strates. Penn State which hosted the 10th Annual Phyrst cup tournament Saturday and Sunday, had the lead after the first day but finished third behind George Washington and fail me now!' Washington. Is dorm living getting Expensive Confining Noisy Then come to Bluebell where we offer - Freedom Privacy Inexpensive rents This rent includes . - gas for cooking, heating and hot water wall to wall carpeting 10 channel cable TV Free parking Free bus service Free swimming pool And we ' re near Burger King The Lemon Tree Mini Mart Located at: Office Hours 818 Bellaire Avenue 10 - 12 to 1 - 5 State College, Pa. . 238-4911 Mon. thru Fri. best—and still finished twice in attempting to ex seventh change the baton. As a result THE BASIC IDEA is to get out of the "scrum" while you're .~,.® ,~ ~~ —photograph by Noel Roche Lakers square NBA playoffs LOS ANGELES (AP) Wilt Chamberlain went to the basket and Happy Hairston led a runaway third quarter as the Los Angeles Lakers coasted past the New York Need Nel ? Women's Pregnancy Counselling is a group of people who care about you. We will provide you with free Pregnancy Coun selling on a confidential basis. Don't delay. Time is important we will help you. arnericcn faiamrd Phone 4490 i 6 a or 449-200 7 Pregnancy termination up to 12 weeks $150.00 A non-profit organization Relays, Allahand finished fourth. State's four-mile relay team chopped a full 21 seconds of the school mile but somehow finished fifth. Dan Supulski, Matt Chadwick, Bob Hillman and Fredericks compiled a time of 16:40.7. "We had a couple legs that were run wrong and that put us out of it," Groves said. Bob Gill, Penn State's top javelin thrower, also earned a fifth place. Gill threw 226-6, his second best effort of the year. in Phyrst Penn State's rugby team turned out to a most cordial host in the 10th Annual Phyrst Cup Tournament held Saturday and Sunday on the East Halls playing fields. After taking the lead after the first day of competition by shutting out Baltimore, 9-0, and Army, 3-0, the Lions bowed out Sunday dropping a game to George Wahington, 16-4. The Colonials captured the top honors in the com petition by winning all three of their bouts. Washington, although it also posted a 3-0 record, finished second on total points. George Washington amassed 45 points while Washington compiled only 28 points. Penn State wound up third with a 2-1 mark. The tourney, which featured a collection of top teams in the Eastern Rugby Union, saw the Cleveland Blues finishing fourth (1-2, 16 points) and Army fifth (1-2, 10 points). Old Maroon of New York and Baltimore tied for the sixth spot as both clubs posted 1-2 records and nine total points. Richmond, which dropped all three of its games, ended up seventh. Penn State could not be too disappointed with its per formance since losing to the Knicks 106-92 yesterday to square their National Basketball Association Championship playoff series at one victory apiece. The Knicks fell apart in the third quarter, playing most of it without Dave Deßusschere, who was injured, and Jerry Lucas, hampered by foul trouble. Deßusschere, who led first half rebounders with 10, pulled a muscle in his right hip in the second quarter. Although he started the third quarter, he had to leave early in the period, in which the Lakers outscored the Knicks 28-11. Hairston outscored the whole New York team by himself with 12 points in the quarter. The Knicks tried to rally in the fourth quarter, several times pulling to within 10 points, but Laker reserve Leroy Ellis applied the finishing touch when he hit an By far the most impressive team at the relays was little known North Carolina Cen tral University. The Eagles used just five men to win three championship relays. They set a national collegiate record for the mile relay and a Penn Relays record for the 880. But North Carolina Central didn't stop at the local level. The team of Julius Sang, Larry Black, Jeff Horsley and Bob Ouku took a world record with a time of 3:14.8. tourney eventual winners of the tournament. Rugby club president Gene DePorter agreed. "I thought we played ex tremely well," he said. "Penn State was not favored to win the tournament. We felt before that George Washington and Washington would be the class teams of the tournament." Phyrst owner Ernie Oberman presented George Washington captain Len Ceder with the Phyrst Cup and the traveling tournament trophy. Gridders hurt Penn State defensive tackle Randy Crowder and fresh man defensive lineman Jim Zitch will miss the remainder of spring football drills. Crowder, who started oc casionally last year, suffered a broken thumb. Zitch tore medial ligaments in his left knee. He was operated on Saturday morning at Centre County Community Hospital. The Lions earlier lost fresh man linebacker Jim Rosecrans, who also tore knee ligaments. acrobatic left-handed hook shot and Gail Goodrich followed with a 16-foot jumper for a 14-point lead. In the final minute, suc cessive buckets by Jerry West, Goodrich and Cham berlain capped the Lakers' revenge of a 114-92 defeat by the hot-shooting underdog Knicks in the series opener. Goodrich led all scorers with 31 points, including 22 in the first half, which ended with Los Angeles ahead 51-50. Chamberlain, who scored only 12 points in the first game, had 23 pqints and 24 rebounds this time. The nationally-televised, best-of-seven series moves to New York Wednesday and Friday nights for the third and fourth games. The fifth game will be played next Sunday night at the Forum here.