:611111100 -- -0 , *1,14' AP Wlrephoto The Flyers' Gary Dornhoefer gets the elbow from Montreal goalie Ken Dryden during last night's 4-3 Canadien victory Phils rout Dodgers, Bucs down Braves PHILADELPHIA (AP) Jim Lonborg pitched 6 1-3 perfect innings, Larry Bowa drove in three runs and Garry Maddox knocked in two yes terday to lead the Philadel phia Phillies to a 10-3 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers. Lonborg, 4-0, retired the first 19 batters before Bill Buckner doubled with one out in the seventh. He eventually gave up six hits and three runs, and was replaced in the ninth by Ron Reed with one run in, a runner on first and nobody out. Doug Rau suf fered his first loss after four triumphs. Rau had won 10 straight over two seasons. The Phillies grabbed a 4-0 lead in the first inning on a triple by Dave Cash, a double by Maddox, Greg Luzinski's fourth home run and a pair of singles. The Phils, who ended the Dodgers' 12-game winning streak Saturday night, added another run in the third. Lions capture seven Trackm en By RICK WEBER Collegian Sports Writer The Penn State trackmen were cer tainly the class of the field at the sixth annual Pitt Invitational at Pitt Stadium over the weekend. They won seven events, four more than - any other team, and broke three meet and stadium records, but more importantly, they produced two Olympic•qualifying performa - nces (by Mike Shine and George Malley) and the meet's most valuable performer I Sh ine) . Shine showed why he's one of the top hurdlers in the country by winning both the 120-yd. high hurdles and the 440-yd. intermediate hurdles in meet and stadium record times, His 120 HH vic tory In :13.8 qualified him for the Olympic trials to be held in Eugene, Ore. June 19.27, but he didn't need it because he's already qualified. His time broke the meet and stadium record which he previously shared with former Penn Stater Fred Singleton. Shine whipped Seton Hall's Larry Bunting ( :14.1) and Sam Phillips ( :14.2) and Marvin Rankin ( :14.2), both from East Carolina , Penn State's Dennis Rock finished fifth in :14.4. Shine's victory in the 440-yd IH ( :50.4) also set new meet and stadium records. He whipped Villanova's Greg Eckma ( :52.5 I and West Virginia Wesleyan's Frank Hedderlich ( :53.8). Freshman Penn Stater Bill Austin finished fourth in :54.1. For his two record-setting per formances and his participation on the victorious mile relay and the second place 440-yd. relay teams, Shine was awarded the Arthur C. Toner Memorial PITTSBURGH ( AP) —Dou bles by Richie Zisk and Rennie Stennett sparked a four-run fourth inning yesterday as the Pittsburgh Pirates stretched their winning streak to six while handing Atlanta its 13th straight, loss by beating the Braves 5-2. Jerry Reuss, who picked up his fourth victory against two defeats, lost his bid for a shutout in the seventh when he walked pinch-hitter Rod Gil breath and served a home run pitch to Cito Gaston. The Pirates' four-run burst against Dick Ruthven began when Dave Parker singled, Zisk doubled, and Manny San guillen singled for one run. Mario Mendoza singled, scor ing Zisk and, after Reuss sac rificed the runners ahead, Stennett doubled down the right field line. The Pirates added another run in the fifth when Richie Hebner doubled and Al Oli ver singled. Award as the Meet's Most Valuable Performer. • "The significant thing about Mike is that he is able to run qualifying per formances on a regular basis," said coach Harry Groves. "That's a good level to be at but there's a lot of guys that are at that same level. There's still some room for improvement for Mike." George Malley qualified for the Olympic Trials by devastating the field in the :3000-meter steeplechase in a new meet and stadium time of 8:31.8. Malley's winning time shaved a full 15 seconds off the previous meet record of 8: 46.8, which he set himself in last year's meet. In addition, the time was just eight seconds off the existing United States record. "George really ran his race he's starting to come along in an event that requires a lot of experience," said Groves. "He won by over 200 yards which is pretty amazing because he wasn't being pushed by the other guys." Ed Perkins of Richmond finished a distant second, over 30 seconds behind Malley, in 9:02.4. West Virginia's Joe I lawkins captured third in 9:18.7. Penn State freshman John Ziegler outkicked West Virginia ace Alex Kasich on the last lap to win the six-mile run on Friday evening. Ziegler's winning time of 28:48.2 was good enough to qualify him for the NCAA Ziegler, a Meadville High School product, ran with the top four runners throughout the race. He went through a mile in 4:42.5, two miles in 9:27, three te i ti tt' . li Mt tf t . ' 1 'f 4 411 " ... t t ‘.1 . 1 .14 tt'..ti .s 4 > 7 . 4 4: 1:1 'sAilitro4witi k t' .• t t " Its" 4 ) * .• 1111 14 '"‘ 4 , 11411/11.--,‘„,,,‘• kas4 Major league standings NATIONAL LEAGUE East W' I. Pet. GB New York 15 , 7 .682 Milwkee 18 10 .643 Detroit 15 9 .625 1 Cleveland 12 14 .462 , 5 - Baltimore II 16 407 6' l Boston 9 15 375 7 We%i New York Pats St. Louis Chicago Montreal Cincinnati 15 in 600 Los Angeles F 11 577 '2 Houston : 14 14 500 2 , , San Diego • 13 13 "910 2 , z, San Francisco • 9 17 346 6 1 , Atlanta 8 18 .308 7,, Saturday's Results New York 7, San Diego 2 Pittsburgh 5. Atlanta 3 Montreal 7. San Francisco 5 Cincinnati 14. Chicago 4 Philadelphia 6. Los Angeles 4 St. Louis 5. Houston 1 Yesterday's Results Philadelphia 10, Los Angeles 3 Pittsburgh 5, Atlanta 2 San Diego 4, New York 0 San Francisco 4-0. Montreal 241 Cincinnati 14, Chicago 2 Houston 10, St. Louis 5 SOCCER PLAYOFFS FRATERNITY Beta Theta Pi def. Tau Kappa Epsilon, 4.3 i a ) sudden death; Tau Phi Delta def. Sigma Pi. 1.0: Phi Kappa Sigma def. Phi Kappa Psi. 1.0; Delta Sigma Phi def. Sigma Chi, 1-0. first places romp Flyers blow 2-0 lead Canadiens capture opener MONTREAL (AP) Defenseman Guy Lapointe netted a 25-foot slap shot with just 1:92 remaining last night, giving the Montreal Canadiens a comeback 4.3 triumph over the Philadelphia Flyers in the opener of their National Hockey League final playoff series. Lapointe took a pass from left wing Steve Shutt and broke across the Philadelphia blue line with Guy Lafleur against Flyers' defenseman Jim Watson. He faked a pass to Lafleur, then blazed his shot past Philadelphia goalie Wayne Stephenson to win a game in which the Canadiens had trailed 2-13. Montreal goalie Ken Dryden saved the victory with a lunging toe stop on a Jim Watson shot in the frenzied final seconds. Jacques Lemaire had brought the Canadiens even for the second time in the contest when his 30-foot backhander with 9:58 left tied the score 3-3. Just under five minutes earlier, Philadelphia defen semen Larry Goodenough had broken a 2-2 tie by sending a 35-foot power play wrist shot past Dryden's late-kicking right leg. The Flyers, on goals by the red-hot Reggie Leach and Ross Lonsberry, had taken a 2-0 first period Mauti, Caravella lead Something was bothering lacrosse coach Dick Pencek as he reflected on past ac complishments and failures while preparing his charges for their make-or-break game with 13th ranked Penn. "It's a funny thing," Pencek said. "I was looking at our 1973 brochure this week and I got this funny feeling in my stomach. I used to be embarrassed to walk into Rec Hall I would hide." Pencek's fears were erased to a great extent Saturday night at Jeffrey Field when the 14th ranked Lions kept their bid for a playoff spot alive by thrashing the Quakers, 20-13. The main panaceas for Pencek's bad stomach were middle Rich Mauti and goalie Rich Caravella. Mauti played his usual outstanding game with three goals and three Kan Ctty Minnesota Oakland Chicago California Saturday . .. Results Texas 6.12, Boston 5.4 Detroit 7, Chicago 1 Minnesota 13, Milwaukee 2 New York 8, Oakland 4 Kansas City 6, Baltimore 3 California 4, Cleveland 3, 13 innings Yesterday's Results Chicago 4, Detroit 2 Texas 6, Boston 5 Kansas City 7, Baltimore 4 Minnesota 6, Milwaukee 4 California 3, Cleveland 2 Oakland 4, New York 3,12 innings Intramural Scores DORMITORY Carbon def. Jotter• son, 2.1: New Kensington def. Hemlock, 2.0: Tinge def. Adams, 2-0. INDEPENDENT Wally One Eyes def. Gun and Nut Club, 2.1. at Pitt miles in 14:18, four miles in 19:11.5 and five miles in 24:10.5. Ziegler ran the final quarter mile in 62 seconds. Kasich was second in 28:53.9, Platts burgh's Bruce Teague was third in 28: 56,,pnd PSU's Walt Majak was fourth in 29:01.2. Majak lost a shoe early in the race and was forced to run the final four miles with one bare foot. Lion senior Ron Secord captured fifth in 29:20.0. The Lions captured two titles in the field events. National-class fieldman Al Jackson won the hammer throw with a toss of 191-1 as the Lions swept the first three spots. Gary Greaser recorded a toss of 168.4 and Steve Sheely notched a throw of 163-7. In the javelin, Penn State's. Vern Sidberry took first place with a throw of 215-5. Freshman Jay Behm captured third with a toss of 208.6 and junior Tom Kryger took forth with a throw of 204-20. The Lion trackmen recorded their seventh meet victory in the one-mile relay. The team of Steve Hackman, Steve Evans, Keith Falco, and Shine covered the distance in 3:10.1 to edge out the Villanova squad, which finished second in 3:11.0. "The nice thing about this meet is that there's usually a lot of talent com peting," Groves said. "And this year's meet was no exception." "Our mile relay victory was one of the most significant things about our per formance in the meet," Groves con tinued. "It was a pleasure to beat Villanova because they were shooting their mouths off. Man-for-man, we really beat them. Shine killed their anchor man by seven or eight yards. By JERRY LUCCI Collegian Sports Writer %MI.:RICAN LEAGUE W I. Pet. GB 15 6 .714 10 7 .588 3 10 9 .526 4 10 12 455 5 , 2 9 13 .409 6 , 2 6 14 .300 8' 15 6 .714 - 11 8 .579 3 10 10 .500 4' 12 13 480 5 7 11 .389 6 1 , 10 16 .385 712 assists but Caravella was the big difference in the game with 29 superior saves on 58 Penn shots. "They had a super night," losing coach Jim Adams said in describing the duo's play. "Not to slight Caravella, but Mauti was especially out standing. He may have hurt us the most." "Mauti should be right up there in the All-American voting," Adams said. "He's a great all-iround player. He wins the big faceoffs, leads the breaks and there aren't many faster or stronger than he." Slow starts have plagued the Lions in several games this season especially the North Carolina loss but against Penn the laXmen played evenly and intensely from the start, taking a 2-1 first period lead with a lot of help from Caravella's 10 saves. Penn kept things close throughout the game, mostly Playoffs NBA Playoffs Eastern Conference Boston def. . Cleveland, 94-89; Boston leads best-of seven series, 2-0. Western Conference Phoenix def. Golden State, 133-129; best-of-seven series is tied 2-2. Blue-White features big offense By JERRY LUCCI Collegian Sports Writer It's funny how things change in one year's time. At last year's Blue-White scrimmage, the fans dozed through a 3-0 sleeper and afterwards loudly complained about the lack of offense. This year everyone enjoyed the of fensive antics as the Blue team bested the White 35-29 and then when the smoke cleared, those same fans chastized the defense. The fans cheered the long runs of newcomers Kevin Thrower and Bob Torrey, and the impressive passes of soph-to-be quarterback Chuck Fusina, who continues to keep the pressure on ailing senior John Andress. Fusina hit on 20 of 35 passes for 289 yards and on touchdown. But what, the fans asked, happened to the Big D? Mike Reid, Jack Ham, and Mike Hartenstein ... where have you gone? "We didn't play well defensively," coach Joe Paterno said after the game. "Our lack of depth shows. When you don't have that depth it's hard to divide the tehm evenly." There are other ST Photo by Erlo Fslack Rich Milot (25) tries to run away from the grasp of Chuck Benjamin (70) before some of Chuck's friends show up in Saturday's Blue-White game zyColro% lead before Montreal frustrated by a disorganized and often sloppy opening session stormed back on tallies 2:26 apart by Jim Roberts and Larry Robinson in the middle period. Leach's 16th goal of the playoffs had gotten Philadelphia started just 21 seconds after the opening faceoff. It was the 10th consecutive playoff game in which Leach had scored, extending the playoff mark he set in the last game of the semifinals. The goal made Leach the leading single season goal-scorer in Stanley Cup history, eclipsing the mark of 15 Montreal's Yvan Cournoyer set in because of the play of its leading scorer, Pete Hollis, who tallied three goals and five assists. Attackman Gary Alex contributed five goals and one assist to the Lion cause while fellow attacker Keith McGuire had three goals and two assists. Frosh defenseman Fred Lomady kept Hollis in check fairly well until he injured his knee early in the third period with the score 10-6. "It really hurt us when Baseballers romp to sweep of high-scoring doubleheader Penn State's baseball team returned to action yesterday and swept a doubleheader from Pitt, 5-1, 18-5. In the opener, Jim Farr scattered five Pitt hits over seven innings en route to his third straight win. Pitt's lone run came in the third on a solo homer by Mike Miller, which gave the Panthers a brief lead. Then, in the fourth, Dave Delenick drove two runs across with a single to center, followed by another run-scoring punch by George Weigel. The Lions, now 14-4 on the year, added single runs in the sixth and seventh. The second game was a close, high-scoring affair through four innings before the Lion bats clobbered it out of reach. Penn State scored four each in the first and The offensive show was well worth seeing, however, as the Blue team, under Fusina's direction, built a quick 20-0 lead before the frosh was lifted midway through the second quarter to give Doug Pysher some playing time. Thrower was the main ground threat in the first half as he made many bystanders forget about the absence running back Duane Taylor with seven and twenty-yard touchdown runs. He suffered a bruised shoulder near the end of the half, yet still exited with 69 yards on 12 carries. The White team got on the scoreboard at 12:50 of the second period on a 25-yard pass from Doug Hostetler to senior end Tim Kissel, offsetting a 33-yard run by Kevin Mannix on the Blues two minutes earlier. problems according to Pa terno. "I don't think we're a physical team," he said. "We were more concerned in spring practice with the skill positions. We worked more on our offensive timing and spent very little time an goal line scrimmages and other tough work that is necessary to make a team tough physically." The Daily Collegian Monday, May 10,1976- 1973 the last year the Canadiens took the title. It also was the only shot Philadelphia could manage in the game's opening 10 minutes. Montreal finished with a 36.20 edge in shots on net. Leach's tally was followed 12 minutes later when Lonsberry, seemingly checked by Robinson 10 feet in front of the net, backhanded a pass from Mel Bridgman past a startled Dryden. But Montreal, skating with the speed which has been its trademark through the years, suddenly began to leave the Flyers behind on their rushes. And with 4:04 played in the second period, left wing Bob Gainey slid a pass under the falling body of Philadelphia's Bill Barber. The disc skimmed to Roberts, whose 20• foot wrist shot found the far side of the net. The Canadiens narrowly missed another goal just 15 seconds later, when Lafleur shot past a yawning cage on a three on one break. But the momentum continued and Robinson, taking a drop pass from Pete Mahovlich, wristed and another 20-footer past Stephenson to even the count. For both Roberts and Robinson, it was the third goal of the playoffs. laXmen Freddy went out because he was all over Hollis," Pencek said. Free of Lamad's har assment, Hollis scored a quick goal in an extra man situation to close the margin to 10-7 and cause Pencek to mumble some quick prayers. McGuire answered his prayers with a fastbreak goal off the ensuing faceoff. Penn never got within four goals again as the Lion of fense, featuring an un- second, but the Panthers responded with five of their own to keep it close. Tfm Pearson started for Penn State but was lifted in the third with the bases loaded two runs in and none out. Dick Miller, who eventually got the win, releived and ended the rally with two strikeouts and a ground out. John Carrol finished the 7th for Miller. Penn State collected 17 hits in the second game and put the game on ice with seven runs in the sixth inning. STOLEN BASES Penn State second sacker Greg Vogel is second in the country in hitting with a .472 average. Vogel also leads the country in home runs per game. Through 13 games ( recent ones haven't been recorded yet), he has seven round trippers ... Lions return to action this afternoon at Juniata. believable display of pinpoint passing, scored the most goals ever against Penn this year. The next highest tally was 14 by none other than number one ranked Cornell. The next target for the 7-1 laXers is Bucknell Wed nesday night and Pencek said he feels the Bisons will be primed for an upset even though they are just a college division team. "I'd be worried about St. Mary's Home for the Poor at this point," Pencek said. Pysher ran the score to 26-7 at the half with a 62-yard pass and run play to Steve Jackson. Both Fusina and Hostetler hit TD passes in the third quarter as both teams put the ball in the air quite frequently. Fusina was switched to the White team midway through the third quarter and set up a 42-yard touchdown by Torrey and a 30-yard field goal by Matt Bahr with his passing. Rich Milot ran two yards for a White tally with less than a minute in the game for the final 35-29 score. As expected, the defensive-minded Paterno wasn't exactly thrilled with the high score. "Personally I would rather have a strong 10-7 game where you do the strong things well. I never like to be in basketball games. 1 like to have some control." Paterno is in control of the quar terback situation. "Fusina is a good ball player but he still has to clear up some inconsistencies like the two interceptions and tht• dropped ball. He still has to beat out John Andress."