o—The Daily Collegian 'Monday, Jan. 8, 1979 College Basketball Roundup No. 7 LSU stuns Kentucky By The' Associated Press After all these years, they were saying it would be a freak for Louisiana State to beat Kentucky's basketball team at Lexington. That's actually what it took Saturday night. Using what they called a "Freak Defense", the Tigers beat the Wildcats on their home court for the first time in history with a tingling 93- 89 decision. "We practice it a lot, but this was the first time we've used it," said Dale Brown, coach of the seventh ranked Tigers. "It's a three-man zone in the back, where we form a triangle, and we play the guards man for man. It worked pretty well for us tonight." The unique defense helped break the backs of the ninth-ranked Wild cats, and complemented an offense led by DeWayne Scales, who scored 25 points. "We played composed and that really had a lot to do with the win," said Brown. "We shot some miserable free throws in the first half (7 of 16) and I told the kids we would just have to forget about that. And they did." Three other Top Twenty 'teams were not as composed Saturday *********************************** Do you get lower marks than you could on exams? Do you freeze up, or get distracted by worrying, even when you're prepared for a test? Free training to help with this is available. Call 863-0395 and ask problem about the Test Anxiety Program. ********- ******** ltt******);i-Aouit******-*At)OL Performance and price are the keys in choosing a calculator. One of these Texas Instruments slide-rules is right for you. Capability. Quality. Value. The right combination can help you make short work of problems in fields like math, engineering, science and business statistics and give you more time for other important things. Choose the TI calculator that's right for you and get ahead of the game. TI-55. Advanced slide-rule functions with statistics, programmability and valuable problem-solving applications book. The versatile TI-55 calculating system is packed with the features and func tions you need to handle almost any mathematical operation, from loga rithms and trigonometry to advanced statistical problems. Thirty-two steps of programmability add new dimen sions of accuracy, speed and ease to performing repetitive calculations and "what-if" analyses. You just teach the TI-55 a series of operations and it per forms those steps for you. For more help in makin tive decisions, the TI-55 comes with the Calculator De- cision - Making Sourcebook, a $5.00 Value. The book, 140 pages of easy- to u nderstand, real- life applications, Texas Instruments to 'U S suggested retail price Ci 1979 kxas Instruments Incorporated All-star lineup. Slimline TI-50"" Economy and value go hand-in-hand with the Slimline TI-25, a pocket- Slimline 11-50. A powerful, stylish slide-rule- portable LCD scientific calculator that with new Constant MemoryT" feature. has what it takes to handle advanced The pocket-portable Slimline TI-50 is math. It provides the most-needed today's most powerful liquid crystal slide-rule functions. Trigonometry in display (LCD) slide-rule calculator. It , degrees, radians or grads. Plus basic has 60 functions including common statistical power, too: Mean, Variance, and natural logarithms and six trigo- Standard Deviation. nometric operations that can be per- Three levels of parentheses can formed in three angular modes (de- handle up to three pending operations grees, radians or grads). to make your work easier. Four-key Seven built-in statistical functions memory allows you to store and recall make it easy to "boil down" large values, add-to memory contents and amounts of data so you can perform exchange stored and displayed accurate analyses and draw reliable numbers. conclusions. The TI-25 goes far on a pair of min- Two constant memories retain their iature batteries—includes APDTM cir contents even when the calculator is cuitry. Vinyl wallet included, $33.00". turned off, so frequently used con- See the complete lineup of Texas stants and other basic values are at Instruments slide-rule your fingertips when you need them. calculators at your dealer . tp, ° Two miniature batteries provide today. There's one ex over 1000 hours of operation in normal actly right for the work use; Tl's APDTM automatic power down you're doing. hnology bringing affordable electronics to your fingertips. quantita- Gioia' or Zr Sourcebook Oiscision4lakiv ~-----r-c-....- TEXAS INSTRUM ENTS night. lowa upset 13th-ranked Michigan 85-79; Georgia edged No. 18 Mississippi State 69-67 and Wake Forest defeated No. 20 Maryland 66- 60. Elsewhere, top-ranked Michigan State defeated Minnesota 69-62; No. 2 Notre Dame stopped Villanova 75-64; No. 3 North Carolina tripped Virginia 86-74 in two overtimes; No. 4 Illinois swept past Northwestern 74-56; No. 5 Duke trimmed Tulane 74-64; No. 6 UCLA whipped Rutgers 78-57; No. 8 North Carolina State routed 15th ranked Long Beach State 100-73; No. 11 Indiana State heat West Texas State 98-77; No. 12 Georgetown hammered Samford 73-50; No. 14 Arkansas nipped Houston 62-61; and No. 16 Louisville turned back Southwestern Louisiana 73-60. Kentucky had an eight-point lead at one stage late in the game, but had problems against LSU's "Freak Defense" and was able to score merely six points in 8 1 / 2 minutes. The Tigers, meanwhile, were scoring 25. Later, Ethan Allen's two free throws with one second remaining nailed it down for LSU. "That scoring streak was the big turning point," noted, Kentucky Coach Joe Hall. "Right at the last, there probably were some things that shows you how to use the power of statistics, financial math and program mability in analyzing relationships in data, verifying quality and perfor mance, measuring change, forecast ing trends and projecting returns... in short, how to make better decisions, today and tomorrow. Calculator and book combination, only $50.00*: INCORPORATED could have been called that would have swung the game our way. But I give credit to LSU. They played well and shot well (61.8 per cent). They hit their free throws down the stretch and did what they had to do to win. They've got a great future." Ronnie Lester scored 29 points, including six straight free throws in the final 90 seconds, to lead lowa's upset of Michigan. With 8:50 left, Michigan held a 62-61 margin, but then Lester took command of the Hawkeye offense scoring eight points and dishing out two assists to lift lowa into a 75-70 advantage. The Hawkeyes never trailed thereafter. Mark Slonaker's controversial tip in at the buzzer gave Georgia its victory over Mississippi State. Mississippi State, losing for the second time after eight victories against opposition outside the Southeastern Conference, ,claimed that Slonaker's basket had come after the final buzzer sounded. Frank Johnson and Mark Dale combined for 41 points to help Wake Forest upset Maryland. The Deacons, normally a fast-breaking team, played a ball-control style most of the game. I:' Slimline TI-251u feature helps prevent accidental bat tery drain by turning off the Calculator after approximately 10 minutes of non-use. With imitation leather wallet, $40.00*. Slimline 11-25. Slide-rule power at a small price. Icers drop Drexel, 5-2 By A. J. SPIEGEL Daily Collegian Sports Writer Enroute to Mechanicsburg: "Hey," a player shouted from the back of the van, "how good is Drexel?" Mark Horgas, the assistant coach, lifted a hand from the steering wheel and gave the thumbs down sign. Defenseman Gary Dent said, "We're gonna win this game." The icers won 5-2 despite questionable officiating. "The players shouldn't even know the referees are there," said coach Clayton John. "They ( the refs) are there to keep the game under control." "When they make bad calls the ,- ~ , SAVE 44% Reg. 1.99 yd. SAVE 88$ YD SAVE 46% Reg. 2.49 yd. SAVE 1.15 YD SAVE 45% Reg. 2.99 yd: SAVE 1.35 YD SAVE 44% Reg. 3.99 yd. SAVE 1.77 YD.‘ SAVE 41%-47% Reg. 4.49-4.99 yd. SAVE 1.83-2.33 YD SAVE 35% Reg. 5.99 yd. SAVE 2.11 YD A . - - - -..- current .. : H:- , ..' . ..,1": : ...f '1 4:175/0 ~, . ....f . -,...i: ::.,.: prices WOVEN & DOUBLEKNIT REMNANTS Fall-offs from bolts. In solid colors and prints. I/ 3 OFF , ALL SPECIAL PURCHASE REMNANTS, POLYESTER/WOOLS, CORDUROYS, INTERLOCK PRINTS AND MORE. SALE EFFECTIVE MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY JANUARY 13 • **. , .• ' ... EVERYTHING FOR SEWING Hills Plaza Hours: Monday-Saturday 10-9 players get angry. That takes away from their concentration," John said. Penn State scored two goals in the initial period. The first resulted from a shot in the slot by Dave Brodie, at 3:46. The second was a power ,play , goal by Dave Brubach with 2:28 remaining in the period while Drexel's Dino Scanzell was off for holding. Jerry Fry scored Penn State's third __ goal on the power play at 15:42 of the some • second period. Seconds earlier, while the Lions were shorthanded, Fry almost scored but the puck slid through the crease Up until the third period Heppner was bidding for a shutout. He averted several of Drexel's two on one breakouts. are at the following ow clearance prices. current prices All knits and woven fabrics marked with a RED TICKET Ztrd 3• yard lANKAYIIMICAMO • <... miser -charge • Then, with 15:13 remaining in the game, Willy Rapp scored. Drexel's second goal was a shorthanded breakaway. At 5:22 into the final period, Bob Criscuoll won the face-off and go ' the puck to John Kelponis who sent Scott Schaeffer in alone. With 10:42 left in the game, Joe B'at tista set up Horgas for the Lions' fourth goal, , A minute and ten seconds later Randy Fardelmann received a tripping penalty which could have cost Penn State a goal as John Grainda was breaking Or Drexel's net. However Fardelmaml made up for his mistake by scoring A power play goal with 7:35 remaining. :, 1 11 yani lyard iyard 22 yard ,„„ 4s , *:11!
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers