16—The Daily Collegian Thursday, Feb. 15,1979 :Collegian scoreboard NBA Eastern Conference Atlantic Division Washington VIiKHS New Jersey New York Boston Central Division San Antonio Houston Atlanta Cleveland Detroit New Orleans Western Conference Midwest Division 35 21 31 28 25 34 24 33 20 36 Kansas City Denver Milwaukee Indiana Chicago Pacific Division Seattle Los Angeles Phoenix Portland San Diego Golden State I.ate games not included Wednesday's Games Kansas City 108,7SERS106 Detroit lit, Denver 107 Indiana 106, New York 97 San Antonio 149, Boston 119 Milwaukee 115. New Jersey 94 New Orleans at Golden State, (n) Atlanta at Seattle, (n) Five trackwomen to run Five members of the women’s track team will compete in the Amateur Athletic Union Indoor. Nationals Feb. 23 at Madison Square Garden. Coach Chris Brooks said that running in Nationals exposes the girls to high levels of competition. ‘‘Our girls will be competing against top athletes in the country,” Brooks said. “We’re just going to try and make the finals.” About three trial heats for each event are held during the morning of the competition. A few runners with the best times from each trial get to compete in the finals.- The five Lady Lions competing will be Sandy Miller, Patty Mufnane, Tina Leatherman, Penny Fales and Lea Ventura. They have all participated in this meet before. “I just hope to do well,” Fales said. “Being in the first four or top three in the finals would be really good.” Fales finished sixth in the finals last year. Leatherman, who will be running in the Kings beat 76ers to snap win streak PHILADELPHIA (AP) Otis Bird song. and Bob Nash combined for 50 points yesterday as the Kansas City 1 Kings snapped a Philadelphia 76ers’ three-game winding streak by 108-106 in | National Basketball Association game. Julius Erving,who missed the 76ers’ last game with a sprained ankle, returned to the lineup but was held to nine points. Sixer center Darryl Dawkins was the game’s high scorer with 27 points, many on fall-away jumpers. ! The Sixers closed to 107-104 with 1:12 left on Maurice Cheeks’ layup and foul shot. Erving hit Dawkins for a dunk with :02 left to make it 107-106, but Birdsong was fouled by Cheeks and converted one of two free throws for the winning j margin. i Kansas City’s 7-foot-3 center Tom [ Burleson had to leave the game when he (hurt his left knee in a fall with 2:04 j remaining in the third period. The injury j occurred on Steve Mix’s basket capping J an eight-point run by the 76ers from 66-80 i to 74-80. ; Birdsong tallied 26 points, while Nash ' scored a season-high 24 points, two better than his previous best. Darnell Hillman added 16 for the Kings. Bobby Jones had 19 for the Sixers, • while Cheeks had 18. Dawkins’ previous ; best effort had been 25 points. Philadelphia, 32-20 and second to the Washington Bullets in the Atlantic Divison of the NBA’s Eastern con ference, took a 19-10 lead, but was tied 28-28 at the end of the first period. The Kings, first in the Midwest Division of the Western conference with a 34-21 record, led 54-50 at the half. George Washington upsets Duquesne PITTSBURGH (AP) George Washington, taking the lead early in the second half at 50-49, went on to score an upset 87-84 win over the faltering Duquesne Dukes. The Colonials built a 13-point margin at 70-57 with 8:24 to play and, while the Dukes cut the margin to three points with 46 seconds left on a field goal by Bruce Atkins, the visitors’ Tom Pate, a 6-foot senior guard, went to the foul line and made both ends of a one-and-one foul giving the team its victory. The Dykes fell to their sixth loss in the last eight games, while the Colonials, winning four in a row, are keeping alive their hopes for a finish in the top four of the Eastern Eight. George Washington took its 12th win overall against 10 losses, while Duquesne stands at 11-10. The Colonials placed five men in double figures led by 6-foot-4 senior Bob Lindsay with 24 points. Lindsay has been injured most of the season, having played in only four games with a 3.5 average coming into tonight’s contest. Second high scorer for the winners was Tom Glenn, a 6-foot-8 junior with 17 points, and guard Brian Magid, a 6-foot-2 junior who, with a total of 12 points, made six of the team’s last 10 points. The Dukes’ high man was 8.8. Flenory, with 19 points. W L 38 16 32 20 27 27 25, 34 23 33 Pet. GB .704 .615 5 500 11 424 15 1 ;? N.Y. Islanders N.Y. Hangers Atlanta FLYERS 411 16 34 24 31 24 30 27 22 34 20 37 19 38 564 I>2 .526 3 '2 .393 11 Chicago Vancouver St. Louis Colorado .625 525 424 .421 .357 Boston Buffalo Torontp Minnesota 34 20 35 22 33 22 28 25 27 31 25 32 *2 I'a s'- 9 10« j Montreal Los Angeles PENGUINS Washington Detroit NHL Campbell Conference Patrick Division W I- T Pts Of GA 34 10 10 78 243 146 30 18 5 65 221 183 29 22 5 63 221 194 23 18 12 58 172 165 Smythe Division Wales Conference Adams Division 32 14 9 22 19 11 22 22 11 22 24 7 Norris Division 37 9 7 24 24 7 21 23 .8 17 29 8 11 30 14 Wednesday’s Gaines New York Rangers 5. Boston 1 Los Angeles 3, Detroit 2 FLYERS 2, Toronto 2. tie Buffalo 2. New York Islanders 1 Atlanta 4, Chicago 4. lie Minnesota 8, Vancouver 1 mile relay along VOll EDITION tit, All Remaining Woolrich Down & Polar Insulated Parkas...4s% off '"Hfl All Remaining Herman, Timberland ;>* SWING WGf The Vectors, comprised of philosophy and anthropology grad students, were led by a 13-point effort from Denny Landine, 12 points from Len Ortmann and eight points from captain Tom Melancon. Melancon credited his team’s victory to tough workouts and hard work. He said he thought his team’s strength came from “ team play.” It was the inside game against the outside and the strong versus the fast in last night’s fraternity basketball- final between Phi Gamma Delta and Kappa Alpha Psi. Phi Gamma Delta took advantage of its huge size advantage and defeated Kappa Alpha Psi, 44-32. Kappa Alpha Psi used good outside shooting to jump to a first half lead, 17-15. The second half was a little different. “We were a little shaky in the first half,” said Phi Gamma Delta leading scorer Mike Guman. “In the second half we settled down. We knew we could go inside.” —by Gayle Bodin Phi Gamma Delta’s front line con sisted of Guman, Bucko Stewart, and 6-2, 260 pound power forward Bruce Clark. oosasooseoascosoooooseeo99& All Remaining Woolrich Dress Flannels...4o% off ▲ &.A. W MfcRMAN SURVIVORS basketball. Fraternity TEUTON ADVERTISERS! Business Office will close Feb. 16 at 4 p.m. and won't reopen until 9 a.m. on March 5. Deadline for display advertising in our March 8 issue is Tues., March 6 at noon. For our March 9 issue, deadline is March 7 at 4 p.m. Classified: deadline's March 7 at 11 a.m. VE A GOOD TERM BREAK! 'soosocosoososoocsessecoeecosgoocoscoceo - & - tzr£sS< All Remaining Duofold Underwear...4o% off All Remaining Gloves & Knit Hat5...50% off thfinckr Working almost totally inside, and usinjf more than a few picks by Clark, the winners dominated the second half. 1 Kappa Alpha Psi was led with 12 poirtfe by Byron McMillan. McMillan was stilt proud of his team, despite the loss.' " “I’m glad we made it this far,” Me*? Millan said. ’" Phi Gamma Delta Coach, Terry Curley, had strong priase for his op-* ponents. ’ <' “They’re a hell of a good teanrt,!’ 1 Curley said. “They played a tough man-' to-man defense.” Club names Prothro, to prsonnei position t- CLEVELAND (AP) - The Cleveland’ Browns said Wednesday that former Satv Diego Chargers Coach Tommy Prothro has been named executive vice" president in charge of player personnel/,, for the National Football League team: Prothro, 58, coached the Chargers for • five years before retiring after the first' four games of the 1978 season. Prior -tb that, he coached the Los Angeles Raihs ‘ for two years and was coach for Sirfv years at UCLA and 10 years at Oregon - State. CCOOOOOaSfiOOOOMOOOOCCCOOJft w 1 If cosooo> '”* cf ...Oh Be I'l M>l i K)\ —by Tim Beidel * ’ •* ■t IVOI D„ UjC/l Timbei fflo wef fo/c*