The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 10, 1976, Image 8

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    —The Daily Collegian Monday, May 10, 1976
. ,
Photo by Laurie E. Usher
No, Penn State's Sharon Duffey (2) is not inventing a new dance on the lacrosse field. Rather,
the sophomore is shooting for another goal against Cortland in Saturday's 16-1 romp.
Linkswomen best Invite field
By LESLIE CALDWELL
Collegian Sports Writer
The Penn State women's
golf team retained its title as
winner of the annual Lady
Lion Spring Invitational,
defeating squads from the
University of Massachusetts
and Western Michigan in play
Friday and Saturday on the
White Course.
Three Lady Lions won
individual awards as Penn
State golfed its way to an
impressive 39-stroke win over
second place UMass. The
Lady Lion victory was made
easier when Marshall and Mt.
Holyoke, expected to be the
strongest challengers to the
women, were unable to bring
full teams because of exams.
In first-round team com
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* HEYYY . . . ! *
t ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA *
*
* WOULD LIKE TO THANK *
4( THE SISTERS AND PLEDGES OF *
*
PHI MU *
*
FOR THE BEST OF ALL *
SPRING WEEKS ! ! *
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Fashion Today," fashion show, 12 noon: Virginia Palazzari, man-environmental
relations, on "Fashion Design and Style through the Ages," 12:45 p.m., Room 101
Kern.
Valerie Ferrone, violin,ll: 30 p.m., Music Bldg. recital hall.
Concert White Band pops concert, 6:30 p.m., Herman G. Fisher Plaza
SEMINARS
New Communities, Architecture, 2 p.m., Room 322 Sackett. Dr. Daniel Hillel, soil
physics, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, on "Water Supply Systems for an Arid
City."
Genetics, :3:55 p.m., Room 111 Tyson. Dennis Peffley on "Possible Mechanisms
Involved in Chromosome Inactivation."
Astronomy, 4 p.m., Room 445 Davey. Alan T. Koski, University of California, Santa
Cruz, on "Spectrophotometry of Seyfert Galaxies."
Biochemistry and Biophysics, 4 p.m., Room 101 Althouse. Dr. Per P. Schollander,
physiology. Scripps Institute of Oceanography, on "The State of Water in Osmotic
Pressure."
Organic Chemistry, 8 p.m., Room 333 Whitmore. Harold Gerdes on "Elementary
Pattern Recognition in Organic Chemistry "
Agriculture, 4 p.m., Room 101 Althouse. Dr. Per F. Scholander, Scripps Institution of
Oceanography, on "The State of Water in Osmotic Pressure."
MEETINGS
OTIS, 6 p.m., Room 307 HUB.
Alpha Phi omega, 7 p.m., Room 304 Boucke.
.Eco-Act ion, 7:30 p.m., Room 119 Boucke.
Penn State Folklore Society, 7:30 p.m., Room 323 HUB
EXHIBITS
I\luseum of Art: Portraits USA: 1776-1976.
Zoller Gallery: MFA show by Brigitte Henry and William Diaz, painters, and Fred
Snitzer, sculptor.
IIUI3 Gallery: Retrospective exhibit of work by French architect Auguste Perret.
11UB Main Lounge: Suiting Everyone ( Smithsonian Traveling Exhibition Service).
Kern Gallery: Bruce Johnson, Watercolors. Ist Annual Graduate Commons Sculp
ture Invitational.
Chambers Gallery: Undergraduate Student Exhibition, all media.
Paace Library: Main Lobby - Entomology Department Exhibit by David Shetlar,
until May 10. East Corridor Gallery: Drawings and Prints by Allan Larkin.
Lending Services Lobby - Drawings by Neil Feather.
petition, Penn State's Blue
team led with 346, followed by
UMass, Western Michigan,
and the Lady Lion White
team. The team standings
remained the same after
Saturday's action, with Penn
State's Blue team on top with
a 697 total for both days.
In individual competiton on
Friday, Marshall's Nancy
Bunton led the field with an
80. Bunton, who Penn State
Coach Annette Thompson
called "an excellent golfer,"
won the Midwestern AIAW
golf championship for the
past two years and took first
place in the Marshall
Invitational in April. On
Saturday, however. Bunton
carded a 91 and dropped to a
fifth place finish. '
UNIVERSITY CALENDAR
Monday, May 10, 1976
SPECIAL EVENTS
11111
11101. •
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UMass' Debby McCulloch,
who was in second place after
Friday's action, shot an 80 on
Saturday to take first place
honors in the tournament. Jan
Van Munching
. of Mt.
Holyoke, who was tied for
third with Penn State's Judi
Mitchell on Friday, took
second place with a 163.
Mitchell, was Penn State's
highest finisher, taking third
place.
In first flight action, Penn
State's Hallie Bunk finished
in the top position with a 102-
92 for 193. Bunk also won the
award for low putts with an
18-hole total of 29. UMass'
Meg Groden was runner-up in
the first flight with a two-day
total of 202.
Other awards went to Penn
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State's Renie Kelleher for her
closest to the pin shot on the
159-yard sixth hole, and to
Debby McCulloch for longest
drive a 253-yarder on
number nine.
The weather was certainly
a factor, as chilly tem
peratures and strong winds
kept scores higher than had
been expected. According to
ThoMpson, Penn State's
location and weathei create a
built-in scheduling problem.
Cool spring temperatures in
Happy Valley force the Lady
Lions to schedule events late
in the spring, when many
schools have already begun
giving final exams.
The fact that Penn State is
located far from most schools
with good golf programs also
makes scheduling difficult.
According to Thompson,
"The Big 10 schools have such
good competition so close to
them that they are unwilling
to make the long trip here."
ECO-ACTION
RECENT FILM
"JOHN MUIR'S HIGH SIERRAS"
featuring Muir's philosophy
and birth of conservation ethic
319 BOSCH' TONIGHT 7:30
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STATE COLLEGE
Hills State College Plaza
2121 South Atherton Street
State College, PA 16801
Monday - Saturday 10.9
Smash Cortland,
LaXwomen keep rolling
By BARB PARMER
Assistant Sports Editor
The Penn State women's lacrosse
team continued to devastate its op
position Saturday, scoring 16 goals and
holding the visitors to one tally en route
to victory number seven in a row.
Cortland became the latest victim of
the Lady Lions in a contest that might be
viewed as a letdown after Penn State's
exciting 8-7 win over East Stroudsburg
last Thursday and Tuesday's 11-3 win
against Lock Haven.
Second home Sharon Duffey set the
Penn State scoring machinery into
motion just one munute after the
opening draw as she came from behind
the net to dump the ball past Cortland
goalie Lynn Hambel.
The Lady Lions increased their lead to
3-0 before Cortland hit for its only score
of the afternoon. Right attack wing
Kathy Vangeli took advantage of a foul
deep in the Penn State zone to douse
freshman goalie Jody Field's hopes for a
Lion netters win season finale
By JACK PATON
Collegian Sports Writer
The Penn State men's tennis team concluded its regular
season Saturday at Colgate, beating one of the east's top
teams, 6-3, for its 11th win in a row.
The win gave the netters a 13-3 record for the year and a
good dose of momentum and confidence going into the
Easterns at month's end.
Coach Holmes Cathrall had warned throughout the winning
streak that the toughest match still lay ahead at Colgate, and
Saturday's match did nothing to dispel that notion. The teams
split the singles matches, and all three doubles matches went
to three sets before the Lions could put the Red Raiders away.
"I had no idea which way that thing was going to go," said
Cathrall. "We had already lost the first set of a doubles match
before the singles matches ( taking place at the same time)
had been decided."
Cathrall was referring to Alex . Davidson and Jim Howell
losing their first set while Miguel Maurtua, on top court, was
struggling to put Rich Finn away, 7-6, 4-6, 7-5. Maurtua's win
tied the match and Davidson-Howell rallied to defeat Bruce
Horowitz and Steve Gallagher, 2-6, 6-1, 6-4.
The Lions still needed another doubles win to clinch the
match and they got two for good measure. Maurtua and Jim
Ellis dumped Pete Ogilvy and Bill Danzell, 7-5, 5-7, 6-1, and
No OSU title this year for softballers
This time last year, the Lady Lion
softballers were riding high after cap
turing the championship title at the Ohio
State Invitational Tournament. This
year, they're not.
Perhaps the writing was on the wall
when the Penn State women first took
the field on Friday against the host
team. The Lady Lions quickly grabbed a
5-1 lead in the tournament opener, but
Ohio State, with seven tallies in the third
and fourth innings, forced the exit of
§tarter Joan Frailey. the last of those
seven, and the eventual game winner.
crossed the plate when reliever Kathy
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BEER LOVER'S NIGHT
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16-1
shutout
In spite of some problems with
inaccurate passes and several shots
wide of the goal cage, the Penn Staters
built a comfortable 7-1 halftime lead.
"It's very easy to drop to somebody
else's pace and I think we dropped a
little to their pace in the first half," Penn
State coach Gillian Rattray said.
Penn State continued to pressure
Cortland's defense in the second half,
netting nine goals in 25 minutes. Duffey
led all scorers with six tallies, giving
the sophomore 35 goals in seven con
tests. She needs • three more point
makers in the final game against
Ursinus to tie her scoring record of 38
goals set last year (over 10 games)
games).
Third home Chris Larson found the net
four times against Cortland, her season
high following last week's hat trick
against East Stroudsburg. Larson also
picked up two more assists to remain on
Frame uncorked a bases-loaded wild
pitch. The final was 8-7.
Hoping to improve their seeding for
Saturday's elimination round, the Lady
Lions jumped to a first inning 2-0 lead
over Ohio University later on Friday.
Starter Kathy Frame made that pair
hold up against the tournament favorites
until the fifth, when Ohio U. put together
three singles, a walk, a passed ball, and
a sacrifice fly for the three runs which
finished the Penn Staters.
The two one-run losses meant that the
Lady Lions would begin their Saturday
8 - 1 AM
Misery Hours 2- 6 p.m.
ylOO% POLY6O INCH
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DOUBLEKNITS
BANKAMERICARD
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Mark Darby and Randy Whiteside beat Finn and Dave Dubin,
6-3, 3-6, 6-4.
"We knew what we were up against," Cathrall said. "They
were something like 17-9, they were playing at home, and we
were on hard courts there while we're used to clay. It was a
gooa win.
The Lions (13-3) got singles wins from their top two courts,
as Ellis got past Dubin, 6-3, 3-6, 7-5, and from fifth court
Davidson, who beat Horowitz, 7-5, 6-2.
Singles defeats came at third court (Darby lost to Danzell, 6-
0, 6-2), and sixth court ( where Whiteside was beaten by
Gallagher, 6-2, 6-2).
The team will now get a well-deserved rest for the beginning
of this week, but will be back to the grind before week's end.
"I don't want to get stale waiting for the Easterns," Cathrall
pointed out. "After a few days off, we'll be back to work on the
different phases of our game. Also, we want to get some work
in on hard courts for when we go to Rochester (site of the
Easterns )."
NET NOTES: Final season records for the Lions: Maurtua,
12-4; Ellis, 12-4; Darby, 11-5; Davidson, 13-3; Valdivieso, 12-2;
Whiteside, 11-3; Maurtua-Ellis, 13-2; Darby-Whiteside, 12-4;
Davidson-Howell, 10-2 Easterns will be held May 29-
31.
on Friday
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FABRICS
...EMERYTHING FOR BEWING:
top in that category.
Left attack wing Charlene Morett,
consistently adding to Penn State's
coring punch all season, picked up four
more goals Saturday. Center Becca
Garwood netted two tallies in the
lategoing to give the women the 16-1 win.
The Lady Lions dominated on offense,
outshooting Cortland, 47-9.
"We're really capable of cutting better
than we did today," Cortland coach Sue
Wills said after the game. "And catching
we couldn't even catch it today."
"We're finally playing together,"
Larson said. "Starting with the Lock
Haven game, we've been really playing
together well."
In jayvee action, Penn State rolled up
an impressive win to move its record to
6-1.
The Lady Lions face Ursinus in the
final regular season action of the year
Thursday on Pollock Field.
drive for the championship against
Indiana's Ball State. It would now take
three consecutive triumphs for Penn
State to reclaim their title. They got
none.
The 7-1 defeat against Ball State
spelled the end of tournament com
petition for the Lady Lions and dropped
their season's mark to 2-8. The soft
bailers close their 1976 campaign with a
home contest Thursday against Ursinus.
Michigan State downed Ohio U. for the
championship.
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