Bucs fall to Cards; Expos top Phiflies PITTSBURGH ( AP) Bake Mcßride hit a two-run homer and added a run scoring single to lead the St. Louis Cardinals to an 8-7 victory yesterday over the Pittsburgh Pirates. • It was the Cardinals', third triumph in as many games With the Pirates, beaten despite a two-run homer and a pair of run-scoring singles by left fielder Bill Robinson. St. Louis jumped in front 2-0 in the opening inning on four hits, including a double by Hector Cruz off losing pitcher Jim Rooker. • The Pirates countered with four runs in their half of the first off Cardinals starter Pete Falcone. Dave Parker .drove in two of them with a single up the middle. Baseball: Indians bomb Boston , By The Associated Press It was just an average game for the Cleveland Indians and, Boston Red Sox yesterday. Batting average that is. The Indians banged out 19 hits and scored 19 runs, 13 in the eighth inning, and trounced the Red Sox, who managed 11 hits and nine runs. • Rick Manning triggered the 13-run eighth off million-dollar reliever Bill Campbell, who entered the game after the Red Sox tied the score at 3-3 with two runs in the seventh: Manning scored on Duane Kuiper's single to the left, and a sacrifice, an intentional walk and John Lowenstein's pinch single sent Campbell to the showers. But the Indians were just warming up and a total of 17 men batted before it was over. There were 10 hits, three walks and an error in the inning which lasted almost 30 minutes. The Red Sox scored six runs in their half of the eighth. The 19 runs in one inning by two clubs was an American League record, breaking the old mark of 17 which the Red Sox set themselves by scoring that many runs in an inning against Detroit in 1953. In other American League single games, Toronto beat the Chicago White Sox 3-1, Milwaukee edged the New York Yankees 2 7 1, Texas nipped Baltimore 3-2, Kansas City blanked Detroit 5-0 and California trounced Seattle 1275. The Minnesota Twins played a doubleheader at Oakland, with the A's winning the opener 9-6 on six unearned runs. Two of the runs came on Wayne Gross's first major league homer in a four-fun fifth. Shortstop Roy Smalley made an error in 'that , inning and another when the A's scored four runs in the second. In the National League, Montreal topped Philadelphia 9-8; - San Diego clubbed Cincinnati 12-4; St. Louis edged Pittsburgh" 8-7; the Chicago Cubs downed the New York Mets 5-2; Atlanta beat Houston 6.0, and San Francisco defeated Los Angeles 8-4 At Toronto, the combined six-hit pitching of Jerry Garvin and Pete Vukovich helped the new Blue Jays to their second victory in the opening three-game series against the White , Sox. Dave McKay drove in two Toronto runs with a single and a squeeze bunt. Sixto Lezcano hit two home runs as Milwaukee beat the ' welcomes back Theta alu 11 0 KAPPA ALPHA THETA Marion Dougherty P.S. U. 1977 Alumni Fellow _ . & R EA D 0 et RE CYC LE The Collegian , &- ' Mother Earth Thank You. Italian rSpaghetti & Meatballs $2.15 nSunday through Thursday o pper Wtchen TALIAN RESTARAUNT 114 S. Garner St. Stele College Serving the dinner hour daily PHILADELPHIA , (AP) Tony Perez batted in four runs with a three-run homer and a sacrifice fly as the Montreal Expos, outslugged the Philadelphia Phillies 9-8 yesterday to complete a sweep of the two-game season-opening series. With one out in the eighth, Philadelphia reliever Gene Garber fielded Dave Cash's tapper to the - mound but was late throwing to first. , Warren Cromartie walked • and after Ellis Valentine struck out, Perez sent his se cond home run of the season over the left field fence for a 9-7 Expos lead. The Phillies had completed a comeback from 5-0 and 6-2 deficits , with a three-run' seventh. State College Optical welcomes you back for Spring r COUPON- This Coupon Worth Hours: 5 Telephone: 9:30-5:00 0 234-1040 Tue. to -Fri. Mon. 8:00 0 Sat. to 1:00 , towards the purchase of. • any pair of glasses STATE COLLEGE OPTICAL 119 S. Fraser St. L (This coupon will not supplement INFLATION FIGHTER CARD) • • APRIL SUPER SPECIAL prescription sunglasses at no extra cost!!! We Can Duplicate Your Prescription 119 S. FRASER STREET (INSIDE THE MINI-MALL) • Baseball standings NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST W L 3 0 2 0 2 1 1 2 0 2 0 3 WEST St. Louis Montreal New York Chicago Philadelphia Pittsburgh Los Angeles 2 1 .667 Houston 2 1 .667 Cincinnati 2 2 .500 San Diego 2 2 .500 Atlanta 1 2 .333 San Francisco 1 2 .333 • Saturd's Games Montreal 4, Philadelphia 3 New York 8, Chicago 6 St. Louis 8, Pittsburgh 2 San Mega 6, Cincinnati 3 • Houston 2, Atlanta 0 • Los Angeles 8, San Francisco 2 Sunday's Games Montreal 9, Philadelphia 8 St. Louis 8, Pittsbtirgh 7 San Diego 12, Cincinnati 4 Chicago 5, New York 2 Atlanta 6, Houston 0 San Francisco 8, Los Angeles 4 Today's Games Chicago (Bonham 0.0) at Philadelphia (Twitchell 0-0), n Cincinnati (Fryman 1.0) at Houston (Konieczny 0-0), n Atlanta (LaCorte 0-0) at Los Angeles (John 0.0), n Only games scheduled Yankees for the second straight day and spoiled the American League pitching debut of left-hander Don Gullett, who played last year for world champion Cincinnati. Texas completed a three-game sweep of Baltimore as Paul Lindblad squelched a seventh-inning threat by the Orioles who got an inning-opening homer from Doug DeCineces. Texas scored twice in the first inning when John Ellis singled in one run and Bump Willis dashed home on the fiont end of a double steal. Ranger Tom Grieve homered in the second. Jim Colburn and Larry Gura blanked Detroit on six hits to help Kansas City to a three-game sweep. John Mayberry drove in two runs and Al Cowens and Darrell Porter homered for the Royals. , Joe Rudi hit a bases-loaded homer and doubled honie'a fifth run, helping California power past Seattle as left-hander Frank Tanana beat the Angels for the second time in a five game series. Tanana yielded just three hits in six innings. Bob Jones, Ron . Jackson and Don Baylor also homered for the Angels. • Cincinnati fell to a four-hit, •11 strikeout performance by rookie left-hander Bob Shirley. Dave Winfield drove in four runs for San Diego. The Cubs won their first game of the season, beating the Mets as Ivan DeJesus drove in four runs, three on his first big league homer. Ed Kranepool homered twice for New York. Dick Ruthven pitched Atlanta to its first win, shutting out Houston on a seven-hitter. Cliff Johnson was ejected when he charged the mound and tackled Ruthven after being hit by a pitch in the sixth inning. San Francisco's Ed Halicki gave up 11 hits but beat Los Angeles for the fifth straight time for the Giants' first victory of the season. Darrell Evans delivered a two-run homer and an RBI single for the Giants. Alpha Phi Omega, 7 p.m., Room 108 Henderson. College of Education Student Council, 7 p.m., Room 123 Chambers. Colloquy, 7 p.m., Room 318 HUB. , Penn State University Society of Student Social Workers, 7 'p.m., Room 160 Willard Aristotelian Society, 7:30 p.m., Room 2 Faculty Club. Eco-Action, 7:30 p.m., Room 319 Boucke. Women United, 7:30 p.m., Room 218 Willard. SPECIAL EVENTS Artist in Residence, Wib Lauter, tinsmith, will demonstrate his craft, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., HUB Gallery, Political Science coffee hour, 3:30 p.m., Room 101 Kern. French filni, "A Gentle Creature,"l and 9 p.m., Room 112 Kern. History of PhotOgraPhy Week Lecture. Estelle Jtssim, Simmons College, on "Photography, Wood Engraving and the Art of Illusionism," 8 p.m., Zoller Gallery. Ronald Arden, viola, and Cynthia Arden, violin, 8:30 p.m., Music Bldg. recital hall. Chambers Gallery: Jamaican Child Art. HUB Gallery: SmitMonian Institution exhibit, "Ride On," the storylif the bicycle. Kern Commons Gallery: Rotogravure prints from the Herald Tribune, 1926-1932; Margery Johnstone and Jean Jiddings, rugs and weavings; Sylvia*Rogers, patch work quilts. Pattee Galleries: Art History Department exhibit on historical preservation, Main Lobby; Jim Masitelli, drawings, East Corridor Gallery; Mike Lucas, drawings, Lending Services Lobby; Fay S. Lincoln, photographer of Williamsburg, from the Penn State Historical Collection, Rare Book Room. Zoller Gallery: Invisions; Hietory of Photography. American League EAST Pct. GB 1 4 :000 1.000 iii .667 1 .333 2 :000 2 1 / 2 .000 3 Cleve Toronto Milwkee N York Boston Balt . Detroit Texas Oakland Calif Seattle Chicago Minn Yesterday's Results Kansas City 5, Detroit 0 Toronto 3, Chicago 1 Texas 3, Baltimore 2 Milwaukee 2, at New York 1 Cleveland 19, Boston 9 Oakland 9-1, Minnesota 6.7 California 12, Seattle 5 Today's Games Detroit ( Rozema , 0-0) at Toronto Jefferson, 0-0), n New York (Ellis, 0-0) at Kansas City (Splittorff, 1-0), n Cleveland (Eckersley, 00) at Texas (Blyleven, 1-0), n Minnesota (Zahn,- 0-0) at Seattle (Segni, 0-1), n California (Ryan, 1-0) at Oakland (Norris, 0-0), n , UNIVERSITY CALENDAR Monday, April 11 MEETINGS EXHIBITS Goalposts save Tar Heels N.C. laXers edge Lions W L Pct. GB 2 0 1.000 2 1 .667 , h 2 1 .667 'b 1 2 .333 1 1 / 2 0 2 .000 2 0 3 .000 2 1 / 2 0 3 .000 2 1 / 2 WEST ' By GEORGE BERMAN "That goal put us down by three and Collegian Sports Writer knocked the starch right out of us," The goalposts in a lacrosse game can Pencek added. prove to be the goalie's best friend or a The pipes weren't the only reason for coach's headache as Penn State coach the lack of Lion progress; the tenth Dick Pencek found out Saturday in his ranked Tarheels proved to be even team's 18-14 road loss to North Carolina. tougher than expected. Coach Pencek The combination of goal pipes and cited the outstanding play of Larry North Carolina goalie Steve Volker were Turkheimer and Dan Cox, but was quick outstanding while withstanding , 59 Penn to praise the play of the entire North State shots on goal (of_which Volker Carolina squad. recorded 22 saves). "They're tenth in the country but they 3 0 1.000 -- 3 0 1.000 -- 2 1 .667 1 3 2 .600 1 2 3 .400 2 1 2 .333 2 1 2 .333 2 But coach Pencek cited the pipes 'for their most efficient work in the last quarter when, with the score tied at 10, Penn State attackers hit the Carolina goal pipes on three different occasions; "If only we could have got one there," Pencek said. Almost fittingly, North Carolina scored a crucial last period goal as a result of a crazy bounce off the Penn State pipes. "John (Devine) deflected a shot, it hit pipe and popped straighrup," Pencek said describing the play. "No one knew where it was. We thought it•might,have gone out to midfield, but it fell right down into a North Carolina attacker's basket with no one in the nets. Racers on top in longest CINCINNATI (AP) After five hours, 111 shots, and 48 minutes and 40 seconds of overtime, the longest World Hockey Association game ended at 1:15 a.m. Easter Sunday morning on a shot Gene Peacosh called "too good to be true.". The game-ending goal came when Mark Lomenda's long slap shot missed the net, but caromed back to Peacosh, who was standing alone near the right side of the net. "I just tried not to fumble it at that point. I knew it was over if I didn't get nervous," said Peacosh, whose goal gave the injury-riddled Indianapolis Racers a 4-3 triple overtime victory over Cincinnati. "I didn't think it was ever going to end," said Peacosh. The marathon was the longest game in pro hockey in won't stay there for long," Peileek said. "They're as good as their basketball team is," he added. _ _ "Turkheimer is unbelievable . . . he's got a super shot. And Cox, he's a very good player," Pencek said. The coach was also quick to praise the play of his own personnel. , "The kids deserve a heck of a lot of credit. We didn't have Bobby Cooper because he was sick and Steve (Ezratty) decided to quit the team," Pencek said. " . . . We basically played two midfields to four." . The Lions, who opened their season last week, faced a team which had already gone through an extensive schedule. "This was their (North 41 years and came in the first game of the WHA's best-of-7 semifinal playbffs. Both goalies went the distance, a total of 100. minutes and 40 seconds. "Youd don't expect to see a carom like that," said Peacosh, a left winger who scored 22 regular season goals. "To tell the truth, I thought the puck was over the blue line. Then I saw Mark shoot, so I turned back to the net." The loss left the favored Stingers winless in 13 over time outings this season. The Racers lost only two of 17. "The pressure was on them," said the Racers' Pat Stapleton. "We could afford a mistake and they couldn't. It was a matter of sitting and hoping for the break." Winning Coach Jacques Demers called it "a picture Get Great Food 24 Hours' a Day The Famous Munchies Cheese steaks. . . Italian, Regular, Cheese, Tuna and 'Ham Hoagies. Foot-long hotdogs with bacon and cheese. Eggs, omelets, and hotcakes served 24 hours a day. Bacon burgers. The Daily Collegian Monday, April 11, 1977- hockey game." minutes and 30 seconds of The longest pro game on playing time, before Mud record occurred in 1936 when Bruneteau gave Detroit a 1-0 the Detroit Red Wings and the victory. Montreal Maroons went six Demers said he utilized overtimes. It lasted 5 hours shorter line shifts as the game and 51 minutes, with 176 dragged on. Hot sausage sandwiches. Fried Haddock Sandwiches Tuna and Egg salad platters. Chef Salad platter. (Vegetarian Deli Hoagies) Fresh, real ice cream. Hand-dipped milkshakes. Home-made soups, salads & pies, and the famous Munchies grilled sticky buns. Carolina) fourteenth contest this season," Pencek said, "That was probably a deciding factor at the end." Although the end proved crucial, the Lions'fate was probably fixed in the first period when North Carolina jumped off to a 7-2 lead. Behind Gary Alex's six goals, Keith McGuire's two goals and five assists and Paul Repp's pair of goals,' State fought back only to be frustrated by pipes, and stifled by lack of manpower. "If we had had Coop (Cooper), and Izzy (Ezratty) hadn't packed it in, it might have been different," Pencek said. The possible return of Cooper should help tomorrow when Penn State plays Franklin and Marshall in Lancaster. But more importantly, the coach of the 0-2 lacrossers must worry about the mental attitude of his young charges. ' "There's a concern about Tuesday," Pencek said, "You don't want to have a letdown. They were as frustrated a bunch of kids after the game as I've ever seen: Five or six of them were stretched out in the training room' exhausted because they gave it all they had." WHA game