— The Daily Collegian Friday, May 7,1976 Indiana Quad lures linksmen Penn State has won the Indiana Quadrangular golf match 12 times in its 14 year history, but the Lions play there today not as defending champions, but as defending runners-up. The linksmen finished a distant second to host Indiana last year, 509-536. The scores of all seven golfers for each team are used in determining the team champion in the 18-hold event. The Lions hopes for an individual champion could rest with the hot Tom Amendola, last weekend’s Nittany Lion Invitational winner. Amendola finished seventh at Indiana last year, carding a two-over 73 at the Indiana Country Club. The remaining six Lions will include Bob Dine and Gary Durbin, both high finishers last weekend. Softballers look to Frame The Lady Lion softballeers are in Columbus, Ohio this weekend trying to repeat as champions in the second annual Ohio State Invitational Tournament. The Penn State gals walked away with the title last year with a display of offensive prowess which has yet to be matched by this season’s squad. Coach Pat McTarsney hopes that her star hurler, Kathy Frame, can keep the opposition in reach until the Penn State bats take com mand. Frame is expected to start against tough Ohio University later this afternoon, while Joan Frailey will get the nod against the host team in the Bosox suffer through 'streak' BOSTON (AP) The defending American League champion Boston Red Sox are stuck in their longest losing streak in two seasons, and captain Carl Yastrzemski wonders when it will end. “The game ... has breaks whether you win or lose,” Yastr zemski said Wednesday night after Boston was downed by Kansas City 8-4. That victory gave the Royals a sweep of the two-game series and pushed Boston’s consecutive defeats to six. “When they hit balls, they go to either side of our guys,” Yastrzemski continued. “When we hit balls, they go right at them.” Intramural Scores lIAN'OKAI I 1)01 'HI KS INDEPENDENT Ungowa Brothers Championship • def. Wally One Eyes. 3-2; Bruisers def. 1 1 OPEC, 1-0; Intrepids def. Jokers, 3-2, FRATERNITY Beck and Bauman corner kicks, of Phi Kappa Sigma def. Senn and Bros- DORMITORY Carbon def. Snyder, clous of Phi Kappa Sigma. 21-11, 13-21. 3-0; Freedom def. Northampton, 2-0; 21-10. Bethlehem def. Elk, 2-0; Jefferson def. VOI.I.EYIIAI.I. Easton, 1-0, corner kicks; New Konsing- Champinnsliips ton def. Wilkes Barre, 2-1; Warren def. FRATERNITY Triangle def. Zeta Montour, 1-0: Tioga def. Aliquippa, 1-0; Psi, 15-12,15-7. Lackawanna def. Birch, 2-1; Watts DORMITORY Clearfield def. def Erie, 1-0; Hemlock def. Beaver, Northampton. 16-14,9-15,15-7. , 2-1; Clearfield def. Chester, 1-0. INDEPENDENT Ducks def Bon- SOFTBALL ers. 15-6.15-12. FRATERNITY Sigma Chi def. SOCCER Alpha Epsilon Pi. 10-2; Kappa Delta FRATERNITY Phi Kappa Sigma Rho def. Tau Kappa Epsilon. 14-10: def. Sigma Phi Epsilon. 2-0; Delta Phi Phi Kappa Theta def. Pi Lambda Phi, Mu Delta def Alpha Chi Rho, 1-0; Sigma 28-6; Alpha Chi Sigma def. Tau Epsilon Chi def. Phi Delta Thela, 5-2, corner Phi, 10-3; Alpha Tau Omega def. Alpha kicks; Tau Phi Delta def. Alpha Tau Chi Rho, 18-12; Phi Sigma Kappa def. Omega, 1-0. Lambda Chi Alpha, 8-2. The Carriage House <£, v Mothbe’B Bay Bim in tourney noon game. < A pair of wins today would give the Lady Lions a bye in Saturday’s elimination round. And with that bye, Penn State would need just four victories in the two-day tournament to take the championship; a loss today, _ however, means that the' Lady Lions would have to win 'three games tomorrow to repeat as champs. Frame cannot carry all of the load, so much will depend on the second-line pitching. Besides Penn State -and their two Friday foes, Michigan State, Ball State (Ind.), and Ohio Northern will be vying for the title. The Alley Cat Four Great Names For Fashions and Fragrances Terrific idea! Think about it! Then Come on in to tttyp (Carriage Wtttxßt 109 8. PUGH ST.. STATE COLLEGE. PA. ’-.V J'SfhK iv J vfcir->>'V SfgSig:;;, * f \ -VX '- : r' Photoby Denise Gill Penn State's Sherm Hostetter is about to drop one in recent action. Hostetter will be joining his Lion teammates in this weekend's action at the Indiana Quadrangular Yaz was speaking from very recent experience. With the bases loaded in the bottom of the eighth Wednesday, he lined to first baseman John Mayberry who caught the ball and stepped on first, doubling up Carlton Fisk. It was quickly two out with no runs across. “Be patient, be kind,” Red Sox relief pitcher Tom House said. “It’s going to.take a super effort by someone to get us going a grand slam or a relief pitcher punching out the side.” The current string of setbacks for the Red Sox began during a dismal road trip in which the club got only one victory in five games and fretted through four rainouts. Last season, Boston lost five straight—between May 12 and May 17 but managed to pull out of it and eventually wind up in the World Series. However in 1974, Boston went into an eight-game tailspin 'said yesterday, late in the season and dropped out of a close pennant fight. Miss Hamill, 19, will per- Thinking back on how his team pulled out of the 1975 losing form approximately six streak, Yastrzemski said, “Although it’s tough to accept we months with the ice show, have to do that, and just take advantage of the situation when beginning Sept. 15 in Pitts our breaks start to come.” burgh. Manager Darrell Johnson doesn’t pinpoint the blame for the fact that his team is mired in last place in the AL East. “If it were just one thing,” Johnson said. “But it’s everything. Nothing is going right. “I have no idea how to shake the club out of it,” Johnson said. “I guess I’m just going to have to let it run its course. We certainly haven’t put itall together.” There are aUvayS a few bright spots. Fred Lynn, most valuable player last year, is leading the league in batting and has extended a personal hitting streak to 14 games. The defense has been good, and veteran pitcher Luis Tiant has a 3-1 record. I I I | From May 6th - May Bth m with this coupon ■ MOTHER’S DAY IS I SOON (This Sunday!) L WmmMmmmmmmwmmmmmwm wmwmwmwm ✓ \ 'A % V ¥ '• ■ •r • *f, , '' '.ir&Z.'+.r r' Former Ramsay assistant Locke gets Braves BUFFALO (AP) Tates Locke, a former college coach who joined the pro ranks just last year, was named head coach of the Buffalo Braves of the National Basketball Association yesterday. Locke, 39, succeeds Jack Ramsay, who Braves owner Paul Snyder dismissed as coach last Monday, one day. after the Boston Celtics eliminated Buffalo from the playoffs. Snyder said Locke signed a two-year contract, but details were not revealed. Locke, a Braves assistant last season, told a news conference that he had not asked for the head coaching job and was Young claims foul in A/i NEW YORK (AP) Jimmy Young charged yesterday he didn’t get a fair deal from officials in his title bid against heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali and that he definitely deserves a rematch. “I really think there was some side talk somewhere,” Young said by telephone from Philadelphia when asked if he thought the officials had been unduly influenced. It was the second time in the week following Ali’s con troversial but unanimous 15-round decision that Young blasted the officials. Earlier, he said in a copyrighted interview with the Mississippi Sun of Biloxi-Gulfport, Miss.: ‘‘ln my honest opinion I think the officials were tampered with, in one way or another. Yes I really feel they were tampered with. I think they were talked with before or even during the fight. I think the decision may have been a little political. You know, there was a lot of money involved in the fight for Ali purses for future defenses.” Referee Tom Kelly scored the fight 72-65, judge Terry Moore 61-64 and Larry Barrett 70-68, all for Ali. A strong majority of writers covering the fight scored it for the champion ( but many disputed the wide margins Kelly and Moore gave Ali. “The only thing I think will clear things up is a rematch,” Young said yesterday. Chester O’Sullivan, chairman of the Maryland State Athletic Commission, scoffed at Young’s charges and said he obviously was looking for a rematch. “I’m a pretty decent guy and I’m not making statements like he does,” said O’Sullivan by phone from his office. The three fight officials could not be contacted and O’Sullivan declined to make them available, saying he did not want them harassed. Hamill goes professional LOS ANGELES (AP) Dorothy Hamill, America’s queen of the 1976 Winter Olympics, has signed a two year contract to skate with the Ice Capades, a spokesman The attractive brunette captured the gold medal in the women’s figure skating competition at Innsbruck, Austria, earlier this year and became world-famous after numerous television ap- However, Miss Hamill is pearances and her elec- also associated with ABC. She trifying performance at the has signed with that network world championships at to star in two specials un- Goteborg, Sweden. connected with the Ice “I have known Dorothy a Capades. THE CANDLE SHOPPE UP TO 20% OFF ALL MERCHANDISE flattered that it was offered to him. He also spoke of his admiration for Ram say. "Jack’s and my relationship grew deeper than anyone I have known in recent years,” Locke said. Locke had 11 years experience as a college coach before joining the Braves at the start of this past season. - A graduate of Ohio Weslyan University, he first coached two seasons at West Point and four at Miami of Ohio before taking at Clemson. In five seasons at Clemson, his teams won 62 games and lost 70, posting a long time, while she was an amateur, and I .felt I established a good rapport with her after meeting her in Goteborg,” said George Eby, president of Ice Capades. Terms of the contract were not announced and Miss Hamill’s manager, Jerry Weintraub, declined to even categorize her salary as being in the same ballpark with television newscaster Bar bara Walters, who recently signed a $1 million contract with ABC. 208 S. Alton I The Penn State Glee Club 1 under the direction of I Mr. Bruce Trinkley 1 presents a I Motha’s Day Concert 1 Schwab Auditorium Sunday, May 9 3:30 P.M. Admission Free “These judges are as qualified as any judges in the coun try,” O’Sullivan said. “They’re honest, sincere and dedicated people. They’ve been with the commission quite awhile and they gave a very honest decision on the fight and I see no reason they’ve been harassed the way they have been. • Newspapers and ABC, which televised the fight, got numerous calls complaining of the decision. O’Sullivan said the commission has received letters but they all started the same way and were mostly from “Ali haters.” “If I were to do it again I would use the same three people,” O’Sullivan said. “Look that fellow has gotten a fair deal here,” O’Sullivan added. / Young fought once before at the Capital Centre, in Landover Md., site of the Ali fight. In 1974 he fought a 10-round draw with Earnie Shavers after being knocked down in the third round. Young also complained that without warning, referee Kelly once started counting when Young leaned through the ropes and that Kelly never said anything to Ali for roughing. “It’s not so much that I want a rematch,” Young said of his complaints, “I just want a fair deal. The only thing I got out of it was a payday.” Prelims underway for Indy 500 cars INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Although formal opening of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway is not until tomorrow, preliminary work began yesterday on some of the cars that will seek a starting spot in the May 30 Indy 500, the world’s richest automobile race. Twenty-two of the 71 entries were wheeled into the Speedway’s garage area yesterday and eight un derwent preliminary technical inspection necessary before they can be run on the 2>/.>-mile oval. Another dozen or so cars were in garages in the Indianapolis area. The eight which started inspection included defending Indy champion Bobby Unser’s Cobre. Still in the garage was the Vollstedt to be driven by Janet Guthrie, the first woman ever to enter the Indy 500. Car No. '75, wrecked by Gary Allbritain in last week’s job record of 31-23 during his final two seasons there. Snyder talked briefly about his decision not to renew Ramsay’s con tract, who had coached the Braves four seasons and guided them into the playoffs the past three seasons. “I consider Jack Ramsay a good coach,” Snyder said. "I think he’s done a good job here. I just thought it was time fora change.” Buffalo sports writers had said a personality conflict between Ramsay and Synder apparently led to Ramsay’s dismissal. bout Trenton 200, was rebuilt, renumbered No. 8 and will be driven by Indy veteran Steve Krisiloff. Miss Guthrie, who was given the green light to take her Indy rookie test following an impressive championship car debut at Trenton, probably will have her car tested by teammate Dick Simon before she practices in it here. The 38-year-old Miss Guthrie, a 13-year sports car racing veteran, probably will start on the first phase of her 100-mile rookie test tomorrow afternoon. Saturday’s opening will mark the first practice at the Speedway since a two-day period of tire testing last month. Only a handful of cars participated at that time, however, but included 1974 winner Johnny Rutherford. A week of practice precedes pole position qualifying Saturday May 15.