Netmen finish with two wins By TIM BEIDEL Daily Collegian Sports Writer It was a wonderful way for the men's tennis team to end its season, but it wasn't all that enjoyable to talk about. The Lions defeated Mercyhurst 6-3 on Friday and beat Temple 5-4 yesterday behind • some clutch playing on the part of the first doubles team. A flurry of bad manners after the last and deciding match by Temple's Bob Litterst almost overshadowed the outcome. But it wasn't quite enough. The Temple match was tied at four with only the last set of the first doubles match remaining. It was up to Jon Whiteside and Tim McAvoy to come through., Whiteside and McAvoy had already lost the first set 7-5, and won the second set 6-3. The momentum in the match had been swinging back and forth, but it was on Penn State's side at the start of the third set. Despite the pyessure, Whiteside THIS SUMMER TAKE FAL L! !'-,• ... .Ti1f :i.0f.g...0..!FF.,:::_.: PREPARE FOR: NICAT•DAT•LSAT*GMAT GRE• ORE PSYCH• GRE 810 PCAT•OCAT•VAT• MAT •SAT ININIBLII,IIFECFNIG•FLEN•IIIIE NDB I, II • NPB I • NLE Flexible Programs & Hours Join our classes now to prepare for Fall '79 exams. Full or split summer sessions available. Call for details 0, 41 Days, Evenings, or Weekends. Eleanor Coburn N 238-1423 EDUCATIONAL CENTER Located In TEST PREPARATION Armenara SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 444 E. College ßilding Ave. For Information About Other Centers In More Than 80 Major U.S. Cities & Abroad OUTSIDE N.Y. STATE CALL TOLL FREE: 800-223-1782 Perm State. A YEAR IN REVIEW and McAvoy jumped to a quick 5-0 lead, all but sewing up the match. "I was really psyched," McAvoy said. "I thought we could beat them." The Owl team of Litterst and Allen Bond managed to hold serve in the sixth game, and made a late charge, coming back to 5-3. - "When it was 5-3 and I was serving, my throat was dry, and I couldn't get a drink because my hands were shaking," McAvoy said. "But I wanted to serve. A couple of times this year our matches have come right to the end, and I like it." Penn State coach Holmes Cathrall must like it too when it comes down to McAvoyi. Cathrall was happy with McAvoy's play yesterday, but the key, Cathrall said, was the third singles match. "I figured those two guys (Ned Eames and Bill Schilling) would be the keys," Cathrall said. "I told them it was going to come down to the first and second doubles team. I knew they could get a point on the board." Mother stormy academic year has just blown by us Can you believe it? How much do you really remember since September? The Daily Collegian remembers. And we're com piling what can be considered the most remarkable scrapbook ever. This tabloid will be so aptly named: The Collegian Review. It'll be so chock-full of campus highlights. that the Review will becom&a momento—for keepsake purposes. The Review will be found inside the May Bth Daily Collegian. Conserve water. / OUR 41st A YEAR chIzOCII Eames and Schilling easily took care of their opponents, 6-4, 6-4, to get that - big win on the board. Tom Beckhard also got an important win in the last singles match, defeating Gary Soloman 6-1, 2-6, 7-6. "It was a great match," Cathrall said. "It was one that everybody enjoyed, I don't think anybody left." The Mercyhurst and Temple wins will probably place the Lions third in the Middle-States division, behind Princeton and Pennsylvania. "Our season had been up and down," McAvoy said. "These last two wins kind of salvaged it." Cathrall agreed with McAvoy about Penn State's year. "It's been a good season," Cathrall said. "The teams that defeated us were nationally ranked, teams that we haven't played before." Next year's schedule will be even tougher, with Princeton, Harvard, and newly-added Yale all away, but Cathrall is looking forward to it. WE HAVE A NEW NAME! rhasty&ls-I,ot , noi ww( women THANKS TO EVERYONE FOR SENDING IN ALL THOSE GREAT SUGGESTIONS FOR OUR NEW NAME. OUR WINNER IS GREG BERNACIAK OF 504 PORTER HALL, WHO HAS WON A YEARS' WORTH OF FREE HAIRCUTS FROM BILLY BLADES! 220 A S. ALLEN ST. 237-0884 (FORMERLY MISS HAIRCUT OF PITTSBURGH) F0ri:..i .... ..'.ii.: , , ,-. 7:::_ry.)::.i . .•:.,...1'itmt tfnii_y., ( i ) _ übtiyiy?u get $l. to spend at.....''..i•:.:.:.]":',:..;;:::::ti, siStorecheck* by mail from DuPont It's easy. Buy any number of LUCITE® All claims must be postmarked by July 2, gallons now through May 28. Hills will - 1979. DuPont® will mail you a Storecheck* give you a coupon for the gallons redeemable for $1 in merchandise at Hills. you buy. Send the coupon ___ _ ___ Imagine ... Hills already to DuPont® with your lIIIIIIIIIIIIII__ . , low prices plus $1 in free .L__ cash register receipt the words "DuPont® LUCITE®" from the front of each label. 1 111:111.1 , UUCITE . Ceiiiil9 ., Paint Itil f , it li lII' ling Paint sans hands and tools ith soap and water. No LUCITE B ' Cei Latex base m come clean w need to stir. 1 1 1111:1' LUCITE Wan Pa int Wale nOWSS 1 Moatlow. I 1 11 11111111 LUCITE! Wall Paint Never needs,stirring. Doesn't drip like other leading paints. Latex base for easy soap•and•water clean-up. state max Hills Plaza • S. Atherton Street Lacrossers' slow down strategy fails as tough Maryland romps 'By JUSTIN CATANOSO Daily Collegian Sports Writer Slow and steady wins the race The men's lacrosse team hoped Aesop's advice would help them upset Maryland, but the Terrapins better resembled hares as they outran the Lions 21-6 at College Park on Saturday. "We wanted to frustrate them by slowing down our offense and controlling the ball," midfielder Bryan Sibson said, "but they fast breaked and scored some quick goals on us, and we had to come out of our game plan." Facing its toughest competiton this season and the second best team in the country, Penn State (2-8) could not keep pace early with Maryland (7-1) as nervousness and poor passing helped the Terrapins gain an 8-1 first quarter lead. "We started off shaky," Penn State coach Glenn Thiel said, "and we threw the ball away too much, but we played just super in the second quarter." In that quarter, the Lions better (3upoo LUCITE . . House Pa int EIukt iNPRIMER • DRIES IN AM HOUR • WATER GLEANS P° . >. 10 1111ill%1 011 ,03,0 0ff..6- LUCITE! House Paint Test•proven to last longer than many other leading brands. Goes on fast and easy. Tools clean easily with soap and water. quo LUCITE • Fkjor Paint 1111 . .,, it0 ;111 LUCITE' Floor Paint Just pour and roll ... it's that easy. Dries one hour later on inside or outside floors. executed their game plan. Working from a four corner set, they moved the ball slowly and deliberately and waited for openings inside Maryland's swarming defense. Midfielders Karl Herzer and Ed Recco (who with Sibson led Penn State with two goals each) snuck in for a couple goals and with 2:30 left in the half, the Lions cut Maryland's lead to 9- 5. The defense, which concentrated on getting back quicker and cutting off the Terrapins fast breaks held the op position to just one goal through some 13 minutes of play, but Maryland popped in two quick goals before halftime to go up 11-5. In the third quarter, Maryland showed why it has national championship potential by dominating both ends of the field. On defense, the Terrapins denied the Lions the penetration they enjoyed in the previous quarter. The defensivemen, while clearing the ball flawlessly to the midfielders, often keyed fast breaks by LUCITE' Exterior or Interior Enamel Interior with Teflon • e, washes easily Exterior is fade-resistant. Both dry to a tough, lasting finish. ute 322 E.) & Branch Road The Daily Collegian Monday, May 7, 1971--- merchandise! That's the way to give the high cost of painting the Brush-Off. *DuPont° service mark TE H nanl6l LUC Exterior iqua , LUCITE• geriorOle 1111110 1111 , ,11 ..,...5..,.....,:.,„,„ ~,..,..,,,.,.. _ V THE ANTI-INFLATION DEPARTMENT STORE DESIGNED TO SAVE YOU MONEY EVERY DAY WITHOUT EVER RUNNING A SALE heading upfield themselves. This often left the Penn State goalies helpless in one-on-one situations. "They really blitzed us in the thins quarter," Thiel said, "and we couldn't catch them. They shut down our at (Penn State scored just one goal) adjusted to everything we did defense "Maryland' has a Fin:at bunch' athletes; they can do pr - ,tty much anything they want to do." And what they apparently wanted to do was put the game out of reach. At tackmen Bob Boniello and Terry Kimbal, who led Maryland with five goals each, saw to that as the Terrapins stormed the Lions' net for eight goals to Penn State's one. "Maryland is just loaded with talent," Thiel said, "and we couldn't stop them. They don't go one on one much, but keep the ball moving with sharp passes which they rarely drop. And when they shoot, they stick 'em." mk0i.....e.. 7 .. , ..L ....-- __ . _ ... .. . , tack and
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