The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 29, 1973, Image 5

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

    | Bannon only Lionl
banned to All-Star A
I ft
Bruce Bannon, a fifth-round draft choice of the New £•
York Jets, was the only Penn Stater named Saturday to
g the 50-member collegiate squad which will face the
g Miami Dolphins in mid-summer.
g A defensive end during the regular season, Bannon was :ji
•£ selected as a linebacker for the 40th All-Star Football S
Game, scheduled for Friday night, July 27 in Chicago's :S
S: Soldier Field.
Southern California coach John McKay, making his
debut in the annual all-star classic, named five players
from his own national champion team, four from second
ranked Oklahoma, and three each from Nebraska,
Purdue and Michigan.
McKay selected the biggest physical all-star squad ever
in the hopes of breaking a nine-game losing streak against
the champions of the National Football League. Among 31
All-Stars weighing 220 or more are defensive linemen
Dave Butz of Purdue, 280, John Matuszak of Tampa, 270
and offensive lineman John Hannah of Alabama, 270.
Louisiana State's Bert Jones heads the quarterbacks
named, which also included Joe Ferguson of Arkansas
and Ty Paine of Washington State. Running backs include
Oklahoma’s Greg Pruitt, Purdue’s Otis Armstrong,
Southern Cal's Sam Cunningham and Nebraska’s Bill
Olds.
Olds’ teammate, Heisman Trophy winner Johnny
Rodgers, will be unavailable because of his recent signing
with Montreal in the Canadian League, which starts play
early in July.
major league standings
National League
East
W. L. Pet. G.B.
Chicago 27 18 .600
New York 20 21 .488 5
PIRATES IS 20 .474 s'.
Montreal 17 21 .447 6> 2
PHILLIES 19 24 .442 7
St. Louis 16 24 .400 B> 2
West
San Fran 31 19 .620
LosAng 27 19 .587 2
Houston 28 20 .583 2
Cincinnati 26 19 .578 2> 2
Atlanta 17 26 .395 10‘ 2
San Diego 16 31 .340 13‘ 2
Results
Pittsburgh 4, Houston 2
Cincinnati 6. Chicago 5
San Francisco 6, New York
Atlanta at St. Louis
-Montreal at San Diego
Philadelphia at Los Angeles
Homophiles of Penn State
present a •
SPRING DANCE
with
TROOPER RABBIT
Wednesday, May 30th
8- 11 pm
in the Hub Ballroom
SO cents admission
Come and dance -
EVERYONE WELCOME!
—RMc
American League
East
W. L. Pet. G.B.
Detroit 23 20 .535
New York 22 22 .500 1> 2
Baltimore 18 20 .474 2‘ 2
Boston 18 21 .462 3
Cleveland 19 23 ’ .452 3‘ 2
Milwaukee 19 23 .452 3> 2
Chicago 24 14 .632
California 23 18 .561 2' 2
Kan City 25 21 .543 3
Minnesota 22 19 .537 3‘ 2
Oakland 23 21 .523 4
Texas 13 27 . 325 12
Results
Minnesota 10, Baltimore 3
Texas at New York, post
poned
Oakland at Detroit
Boston at Kansas City
California 7, Milwaukee 4
Cleveland at Chicago, 2
PSU brigh
By RICK STARR
Assistant Sports Editor
The Lion baseballers swept
two Saturday games and
advanced to the semifinals
before rain forced a weeks
delay in the completion of the
NCAA District 2 baseball
playoffs.
The tournament, which
Penn State now is favored to
win, and which will deter
mine the district’s
representative in the College
World Series next month, will
continue next Saturday with
Temple meeting Buffalo and
the winner then facing Penn
State.
Temple and Buffalo now
have 1-1 marks in the double
elimination tournament while
the Lions have a perfect 2-0
record after taking Seton Hall
5-3 and Buffalo 3-1.
Freshman righty ace Mitch
Lukevics picked up his sixth
win on the season by
traveling the distance against
Seton Hall, scattering six hits
and allowing only one earned
run. Lukevics went into the
PUB COFFEHOUSE
INTERNATIONAL
Johnnv T man °* mar, y
* instruments
classical Spanish . .
guitarist RICK JOCkmOD
Kathy O'Donnell ic ,olk
Hawaiian-American r-n ** i
folk music ta AAonao
Wed. May 30 8-11 p.m.
P.U.B. Rec Room Free Refreshments
Travel to the
TRAIN
Super Special Daily
11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
With TWA
it pays to be young.
Armed with just your Stutelpass,* and
a pack on your back, you can get a lot more
for a lot less with TWA.
Here are some ways we help.
Stutelpass.
For a mere $5.20 a night you’ll be
JyfllplpPffllll guaranteed student hotel accommodations
tat the least) without reservations in
50 European cities. That includes breakfast,
tips, service charges and, believe it or not,
even some sightseeing. Pick up your
Stutelpass Coupon Bosks at any TWA 01
or see your Campus Rep.
Destination Europe Pack.
A free pack full of everything you need
to know about getting around when you
don’t know the language well enough to
ask. Student flights, student tours, Eurail
pass application, Britrail Pass applicatioi
student I.D. applications and more.
Europe Bonus Coupon Books.
___ Take your boarding pass to any TWA
■ Ticket Office in London, Paris, Rome,
\ BOMJC I Frankfurt, Madrid, Athens or Amsterdam,
boUPOtd and you’ll get a book of bonus coupons good
I Rnrorc If° r all kinds of free things and extras in
i those cities. Like we said, with TWA it pays
to be young. For all the details write: TWA—
IT PAYS TO BE YOUNG, Box 25, Grand
Central Station, New York, N.Y. 10017.
t/tff.fnrf
Mitch Lukevics
contest as the nation’s
strikeout leader based on
wiffs per frame. While he
picked up only four strikeouts
on the afternoon, Lion coach
Chuck Medlar said Lukevics
had good control and had his
usual fast stuff and curve
working.
The Lions scored what
proved to be the winning run
in the seventh on a double by
presents
STATION
for
lunch
tens playoff
second baseman Greg Vogel,
an infield out and a wild pitch
by losing Seton Hall pitcher
Joe Flannery.
Before the game, a
helicopter was enlisted to
help dry the field which was
still damp from Friday’s
rain.
After the Seton Hall victory
lefthander Brian Masella
picked up a five-hit decision
over Buffalo. The Lion
sophomore struck out 11 as
Penn State pushed its record
to 18-5.
“Masella had a real good
moving fastball,’’ Medlar
said. “He pitched tough in a
real tough ball game."
Masella was given a three
run lead to work with after
the third inning. The key to
that frame was a triple to
right center by Lion cen
terfielder Denny DeWitt with
two men on. Shortstop Jerry
Micsky then singled him
home.
The Lion hurler was also
aided by a good defensive
play by Vogel. In the seventh
' Stuteipass is a service mark owned exclusively by TWA.
with nobody out, Vogel
chased down a short fly that
helped Penn State avoid a no
out, first-and-third occupied
situation. The Lions’ second
baseman hustled after the
Texas leaguer and, according
to Medlar, made a great play,
diving for the snag.
Temple opened the tour
nament Thursday with a win
over Buffalo in a slight
drizzle. Penn State was then
scheduled to take on Seton
Hall but the game was moved
to Friday after the drizzle
became a downpour.
\/ l l C)lj S'
0 I Living Things
Perfect for j dome terrariums,
Graduation Gifts planters
terrarium kits &
The £ nc j Result
S. Allen Street
nono^nQ / *ytQfr phcvyQCVifln fiOopOOfyOn-
SALE!
STARTS TODAY
at College & Garner ONLY!
All clothes at o fraction
of the original pricell
•pants 9blouses •fops
•halters esweafers •raincoats
ALL SALES FINAL
li _ - i
The Daily Collegian Tuesday, May 29, 1973—3
position
However the rains con
tinued Friday with no letup
and started up again right
after Saturday's games.
Sunday, Temple and Buffalo
began their showdown for the
right to take on Penn State.
But the rains came again and
cancelled the contest after
three innings.
“We’ll play it by ear now," seton Han 003 000 000—3 6 4
Medlar said. “We wanted to Penn state no too 110—5 4 2
.. . , _ . Flannery ana Tennant
finish up the tournament over Lukevics and Coval W- Lukevjcs
the weekend because we had ton u-Fiannerv is ji
the momentum going for us. I
don’t think the team will lose
it, though.’
STOLEN BASES Penn
State’s scheduled contest
with Navy today has been
cancelled due to Beaver
Field, which was diagnosed
yesterday as unplayable. The
game will not be rescheduled
as Navy has no more open
dates.
Buffalo 000 000 100—1 5 3
Penn state 003 000 oox— 3 T I
Dean. Niewcyk J). BuS2ka 7i,
and Cox, MaseJJa and Coval W
Masella (5 1 ) L Dean