The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, May 15, 1981, Image 5

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    the
daily •
collegian
.:i.. axers knocked .out of AlAWji•tle fight,
By JEFF SCHULER
Daily Collegian Sports Writer
For the first 12 minutes of their quarterfinal
game against Maryland in the AIAW lacrosse
tournament yesterday, the Lady Lions looked like
the machine that had compiled an 11-1 regular
season record and was ranked first in the nation.
They jumped out to a 4-0 lead and seemingly had a
spot reserved in today's semifinals.
But the Lady Terps, who had only made the
'ournament because of an AIAW technicality and
were playing without their leading scorer,
bounced back to tie the score by halftime and then
rode an air-tight defense to a stunning 12-8 upset
of .top-seeded Penn State.
Maryland now advances to the semifinals
against Harvard,- an 11-4 winner over James
Madison in another quarterfinal game yesterday.
The Lady Lions drop into the consolation bracket
and take on the Dutchesses at 9:30 this morning at
Jeffrey Field.
"I thought we had a very good warmup and
were raring to go," Penn State coach Gillian
Rattray said. "That 4-0 up made us look really
good. But I don't think it was a letdown; they sort
of crept up on us and nibbled' way, and suddenly
we were level pegging. Then in the second
half. . ."
Maryland coach Sue Tyler was forced to juggle
her lineup when Judy Dougherty, the leading
scorer in Maryland history with 143 goals, was
injured against Ursinus at the Mid-Atlantic re
gionals. It took a while for the Lady Terps to
reconstruct their offense, but it paid dividends.
yesterday.
"We made a lot of changes in the attack,"
Tyler said. "We had to do a complete rearrange
ment the last week or so. It kind of hurt us in
regionals, but we played in a tournament last
week which helped us tremendously."
"I knew (Penn State was) up for us, and I knew
they always are. But I think that they felt, 'We
beat them 10-15,' and we lost two games at
regionals to both Ursinus and Temple, who they
had beaten. So I think inside they really felt,
'They're not as strong as we had thought they
were,' the first time they played us."
The way Penn State opened the game, it looked
like no Maryland changes would help. Candy Finn
got the Lady Lions started when she scored just 15
seconds into the game and then made it 2-0 at 3:43
with her 65th goal of the year. Goals by Lynn
Thompson (4:45) and Laurie Gray (11:13) made it
4-0, and it seemed the rout was on.
"I thought we looked like a million dollars
when we were 4-0 up," Rattrair,said.."lt Yooked.as
though it would be a runaway."
But Maryland -and Sandy, Liniihanin partic-.
ular stopped the tide by scoring the next four
goals to tie the score. Lanahan started the bar
rage just 19 seconds after Gray's goal to get the
Terps on the board and. then scored 20 .seconds
later to cut the lead to 4-2. It was after Lanahan's
Lady Lion
By LAURIE JACOBS
Daily Collegian Sports Writer
The women's lacrosse team's 12-8 loss to Maryland yester
day was a disappointment to the team as a whole, but to the
seven seniors on the team, it was twice as disappointing.
For seniors Theresa Arena, Michele Fielder, Robyn Gansn
er, Alisa Logan, Lynn Thompson, Sandy Ticknor and Carolyn
Wilde, there can be no "We'll get 'em next year."
"I have tried not to think about it," Ticknor said. "I'm sorry
it happened this year. As a senior, we felt a lot of pressure to
pull through in the tight spots.
"But it was a good four years, and I'm glad that I came to
this school. And I'm proud to play for Penn State. It would have
been good to go out with another championship, but I'm not
down on our team at all I think we have a very'good team."
On top of the loss and the fact that they won't be returning
next year, there are several other aspects that not being able to
clinch the championship will make the ending of the season
hard to take for the senior Lady Lions.
• This will be the first time these seniors HAVEN'T won a
national championship in their four-year careers at Penn State.
Celtics run away with NBA championship
By ALEX SACHARE
AP Sports Writer
HOUSTON (AP) The Boston Celtics, with
Larry Bird finally breaking out of his scoring
slump, won their 14th NBA championship by defeat
ing the Houston Rockets 102-91 last night.
Bird, Boston's brilliant second-year forward who
averaged just 13 points in the first five games of the
series, scored 27 as the Celtics won the best-of-seven
playoff finals four games to two.
Boston made 13 of 18 field goal attempts in the
second quarter and matched that torrid shooting in
the third period, outscoring Houston 57-43 in the two
middle periods. _ _
And when Robert Parish scored the opening
basket of the fourth quarter, Boston had its biggest
Lead of the game at 84-67.
The Rockets, the Cinderella team of the NBA
playoffs, refused to buckle under to the storied
Celtics.
They held Boston scoreless for nearly five min
utes and reeled off 12 points to pull to within 84-79
with 5:32 to play.
Parish ended the drought by hitting a turnaround
juniper, but two free throws by Bill Willoughby and
a driving basket by Tom Henderson pulled Houston
to .vithin three points at 86-83 with 4:26 left.
At that crucial juncture, Bird asserted himself
with a baseline jumper followed by an 18-footer to
be;(1 Boston's lead back up to seven points.
Houston was twice able to reduce the margin to
thi•V points again, but a three-point basket by Bird
from the left corner gave Boston a 95-89 advantage
wit,' 1:36 left and ended the Rockets' hopes.
Four free throws by Cedric Maxwell and three
by Chris Ford in the final 1:19 assured the victory.
Maxwell wound up with 19 points for the Celtics
and Parish scored 18.
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Penn State's Laurie Gray scored three goals yesterday at Jeffrey the quarterfinals of the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics
Field in the top-seeded Lady Lions' 12-8 upset loss to Maryland in Women national lacrosse championships.
senior brought the ball from behind the Penn "I thought they were double and triple-team-
State cage and put it past Lady Lion goalie Alisa ing (Finn) very much on the edge of the zone,"
Logan at the 24:58 mark, giving Maryland a Rattray said. "But I knew what she was trying to
halftime tie. do. She was trying to take (Maryland's) Laurie
"That was a key goal for us," Lanahan said. LeMire out of the defense. She tried to act as a
"It gave us some momentum going into the decoy at midfield so that the attack wings could
second half." , come down with the hall more ands° that Laurie '.
, .
Maryland, fought back to tie the score on goals - - • , -„
, , • ' •‘' • ' • would riot be able to ` t up in tthe)zone ot - - , M -•t-. -
by Sally Schofield (from Lanahan) and'Sharon Finn startedethe secomVhall'..b3;•7itritig at' ' ~..i, ;7 1 •
,
Watson. Grayfiaie the Lady Lions the lead ` when. 27:57, but it would be the last time,,in the . game "However,Aclidracome off too well, hecause
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she scored her second goal at 19:16 off a Thomp- Penn State's leading scorer would be involved in a the attacks were playing very defensivly and
son assist, and it appeared the Lady Lions would scoring play. This was partially due to her own dropped back. When we did get the ball, we didn't
be happy to take a slim one-goal lead into the design and partially due to Maryland's air-tight always get the quick connections through mid
halftime break. zone defense, the first time all season the Lady field. We tried to run the ball through midfield,
But Lanahan had other ideas. The Maryland Terps wavered from their usual man-to-man. which gave their zone time to set up; you know,
second goal that Tyler thought Maryland began to
relax.
"They (the Maryland team) always start out
kind of tight against Penn State," Tyler said,
"and they were choking the first 13 minutes or so
when (Penn State) scored right away.
seniors miss out on 4th championship
• This will also be the first time these Lady Lions have
been beaten by more than one goal. In 1978 they went 11-0-1 and
in 1979 they went undefeated. In 1980 they lost to. Maryland, 7-6,
and their only loss of the 1981 regular season was to Ursinus, 11-
10.
• They lost to long-time nemesis, Maryland. Maryland
and Penn State have had a stiff rivalry since their first meeting
in 1973. The Lady Lions' series record with Maryland is 6-3-1.
• Maryland accounted for Penn State's .only loss in 1980,
but that was in the regular season. The Lady Lions redeemed
their loss by beating Maryland 3-1 to win last year's national
championship.
• If it wasn't for Penn State earning the top seed in the
tournament, Maryland would not even be in it. The Terps
received the final berth that was reserved for the host team.
• This was the first loss EVER at University Park for the
seniors.
Ticknor said losing to Maryland, even though the two teams
are rivals, was not a crushing blow. She said if any team
deserved it the Terps did.
"They're a good team," she said. "If we had to lose, I'm
Robert Reid led the Rockets with 27 points and
Moses Malone finished with 23 —but they managed
just five points apiece in the second half.
Calvin Murphy, the Rockets' explosive reserve
guard, did not play because of a shoulder separation
suffered in Game 5.
Maxwell, who led the Celtics with 17.7 points per
game in the finals, was voted the Most Valuable
Player of this series by a panel of newsmen.
He will receive a gold watch and a $5,000 schol
arship will be awarded in his name to•the college of
his choice.
Parish scored 10 quick points for the Celtics but
picked up his third personal foul after just 8:44 of
the opening period.
Reserves Rick Robey and M.L. Carr scored six
points apiece in the second quarter to help Boston to
a 53-47 halftime lead.
The Celtics shot 56 percent from the field in the'
first half to 41 percent for Houston.
Bird led Boston with 12 first-half points and Nate
Archibald had nine assists while Reid scored 18 for
Houston and Malone had 16 points and 10 rebounds
in the half.
Malone was held to just two points in the third
period and nobody else on the Rockets could pick up
the slack as Boston outscored them 29-20.
A pair of baskets by Bird started a 10-2 spurt that
gave Boston an 82-67 lead going into the final period
and the Celtics were able to hang on for the victory.
The 14 Celtics championships are double what
any other team has won in the NBA's 35-year
history.
The Minneapolis-Los Angeles Lakers are next
with seven titles.
r s
glad they were the team we lost to. We do have a rivalry with
them, but they played a good game of lacrosse. They were not
overly rough and played a clean game.
• "It's a shame, though, that we had to play them in the first
game, when last year we both played for the championship in
the finals."
Fielder, Lady Lion third man, said yesterday's game was
not the game she knows Penn State is capable of playing.
"We know inside we're the No.l team," she said. "We just
had a bad day. The season play showed how good a team we
are. Last year (when the Lady Lions were 11-1-2 and national
champs) we just got by every game. This year the margin was
a lot wider."
The Lady Lion seniors have a lot to be proud of, as each has
built up an impressive Penn State career.
•
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Boston center Rick Robey hauls in a rebound as the Celtics clinched the National Basketball Association
title with a 102-91 victory over the Houston Rockets last night in Houston.
Arena, who plays center, has been a starter since the first
round of the 1978 United States Women's Lacrosse Association
national championship, when she replaced injured Chris Lar
son at third home and scored two goals. She has a season record
of three goals and one assist.
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against the zone, before they set up, you've got to
try to pass the ball quickly."
Lanahan tied the score at 32:24, but Gray.
scored her third of the game just 28 seconds later
to give the Lady Lions a 7-6 lead. That would bq
the final Lady Lion goal until the final minute,
when Thompson scored. But by then goals by
Lanahan, Schofield, Jackie Williams, Tracie
can and Schofield again had given the Lady Terps
an 11-8 lead.
That's the thing they did that we didn't do."
Tyler said that teamwork as the key to
Maryland's success and also said she thought the
Lady Terps snuck up on Penn State a little.
"I think the key to it all is that we really did
play more as a team this time," Tyler said. "The
last time, a bunch of individuals went out there
and tried to. beat Penn State, and a bunch of
individuals can't play lacrosse.
"We had three key players we like to key in on.
and that was Lynn, Candy and Laurie Gray. When
they had the ball on the outside, their passes were
to be pressured. We left some of the other players
absolutely free, which fortunately they didn't pick
up on. There were two players that had no one on,
but they had not been threats throughout the
season.
Rattray said she saw what Maryland's defense
was doing and told her team at halftime. But she
also thought the Lady Lion offense was being too
one-dimensional.
"I picked up on (Maryland's defensive tactics)
they didn't pick up 'on it," Rattray said. "We:
talked about it at haftime, but I guess it fell or,
deaf ears. We were focusing straight ahead in-:
stead of looking for the free players; we were:
looking for the first option instead of looking for!
the alternates."
Rattray also said she believed her team was
ready for any changes the Lady Terps were to
make.
"I don't think they did anything we didn't
expect," she said. "They had the same personnel,
out there that I would have expected them to have,
out. I just think they really clicked as a team, and
they really came back.
"We're still Penn State proud, and it's tough to; ,'
lose, but we have to be gracious. And we have to ;
admit Maryland played a super gathe against us:,
We still have two games to go, and we have to
show them what Penn State lacrosse is all about.:.
It was just one of those days; what can you say?",):
The Lady Lions must get up early again this;,:. ,
morning for their game against James Madison,
team they beat 18-8 back in their first game of the:
year:Finn said Penn State can appoach the game::
in two ways.
"We can either come out and be really down.:
from today's loss," she said, "or we On come oil',
and feel sorry for the team we're playing. Person
ally, I feel sorry for the team (James Madison)
who has to play us."
Fielder earned a staring position her sophomore year and
has a season record of three goals and one assist.
Goalkeeper Logan, recorded two shutouts (East Strouds
burg and Lock Haven) and a school record 176 saves last
season, her first as a starter. She made a career-high 22 saves •
in this year's Temple game and had 17 saves in last year's '
national championship against Maryland. This year she has 133
saves in 13 games.
Ticknor is a four-year starter at point but began her career
at center. She scored seven goals her freshman year.
Thompson, a four-year starter who plays first home, hag
racked up several school records and ranks fourth on Penn
State's all-time scoring list with 102 goals and 53 assists.
Thompson expressed her pleasure at being a Lady Lion, and
added that her season, as well as the rest of the team's, is not
over yet.
• "Personally, I feel proud," she said. "You can't take away
three titles and the great team we had this year. We should
come out strong the next two games we're not the kind of
team to sit just sit back on our laurels."
UPI wlrephoto
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Center fielder Bill North of the the Oakland A's 9-5 last night at Yankee Stadium.
.." San Francisco Giants was entitled to a mistake after being the With the game tied 5-5, Barry Foote opened the eighth with a
r '• .' hero in three victories over the last seven days. single off reliever Jeff Jones, 2-1. Pinch-runner Larry Mil-
Friday May 15 O. ) ,
' But when North dropped Larry Bowa's fly ball for an error bourne beat the throw to second on Bucky Dent's sacrifice and
)'-.- it, the eighth inning last night, it proved costly. The Philadel- a bunt single by Willie Randolph, who had three hits, loaded the
phia Phillies scored two unearned runs on the bobble to take a - bases.
1 lead and went on to post a 3-1 victory. Bobby Murcer, who hit a two-run homer in the first inning,
Mike Schmidt opened the eighth with a single and went to tapped . .
into a force at the plate before Winfield came through
with his sacrifice fly and Jackson slammed his fifth home run
second on Manny Trillo's, one-out single. With two out, Bowa .
lofted a wind-blown fly to right-center. North ran to his left and of the season into the right field bleachers.
The four-run burst made a winner of Rich Gossage, 1-0, the
reached up to make the catch, only to have the ball carom off
his glove. third New York pitcher, after Oakland bounced from behind to
Both runners scored, erasing a 1-0 deficit and deciding a tie the game with three runs in the seventh.
•
pitching duel between winner Dick Ruthven, 5-1, and loser Vida Orioles 10, Blue Jays 0
Blue, 3-3. Mike Flanagan hurled a five-hitter in shutting out Toronto
' "The wind definitely was a factor," North said. "I was there for the second time in two weeks and Wayne Krenchicki led a
and it (the ball) just took off. It's tough to make that kind of 17-hit attack by driving in three runs last night as Baltimore
catch when there's a light sky. I just missed it." trounced the Blue Jays in Toronto.
Manager Frank Robinson of the Giants said, "It was like It also was Baltimore's second shutout in as many , nights
tilting to catch a butterfly." against Toronto, coming on the heels of Scott McGregor's
The Giants lost for only the second time in seven games,three-hitter Wednesday night.
while the Phillies snapped a three-game losing streak. Red Sox 9, Twins 7
Ruthven and Blue were locked in a scoreless duel until the Dave Schmidt's first major league home run, a leadoff shot
Giants broke through with a run in the seventh. in the 11th inning, helped Boston beat Minnesota in Bloominton,
Darrell Evans led off with a single and moved to second on Minn., yesterday after they blew a 6-0 lead.
Larry Herndon's sacrifice. After Joe Morgan was walked Schmidt's homer, a 375-foot shot into the left field seats, was
intentionally, Milt May singled for a 1-0 lead. the fourth homer in Boston's 15-hit attack and came off reliever
Ruthven, who raised his record to 14-4 lifetime against the Don Cooper, 0-2. Bill Campbell, 1-0, was the winner in relief,
Giants, was replaced by Tug McGraw after issuing a leadoff pitching two scoreless 'innings.
walk in the bottom of th e ninth. McGraw earned his third save. The Red Sox, winning for the seventh time in their last eight
Padres 10, Mets 6 games, added another run on walks to Carl Yastrzemski and
Broderick Perkins continued his major league-leading bat - Jim Rice plus Tony Perez's single, his fourth RBI
ting pace with a pair of hits yesterday, including a tie-breaking
double that drove in the first of five eighth-inning runs as the
Padres beat New York in San Diego. It was their fourth
consecutive victory
Stars fall to
Isles again
UNIONDALE, N.Y.. (AP) The
Minnesota North Stars lacked a
knockout punch last night in their 6-3
loss to the New York Islanders in
Game 2 of the Stanley Cup finals.
The North Stars fought back from
a 3-1 deficit to tie the game 3-3 but
then wilted in the final 12 minutes
when the Islanders scored three
times.
"After throwing our best at them,
we slowed down," said Brad Palm
er, who scored Minnesota's second
goal at 9:15 of the second period to
cut New York's margin to 3-2. "We
should have kept coming. When you
get one, you should go for two."
Minnesota played considerably
better than in the first game, taking
a 1-0 lead early in the first period
when rookie Dino Ciccarelli scored
his 13th goal of the playoffs.
But the advantage was short-lived
as New York stormed back with
three straight goals, the first at 4:33
by Mike Bossy.
"The Islanders aren't going to let
you have things your own way just
becLoise you decide you want to
couti•ol the tempo," Minnesota's
Bobby Smith said. "They tightened
up and really forced the game in our
end."
"We looked much more like our
selves," North Stars coach Glen
Sonmor said.
' Giant bobble gives Phils win
a four-run California second inning and Geoff Zahn pitched a
Perkins, batting .417 and riding a 13-game hitting streak, five-hitter, leading the Angels over the slumping Milwaukee
stroked his double to left field off reliever Pete Falcone, 1-1, to Brewers last night in Milwaukee.
score Gene Richards, who singled and was sacrificed to second. Don Baylor added a solo home run for the Angels, who have
won five games in a row and six of their last seven. The
Dave Winfield drove in the tie-breaking run with a sacrifice The Brewers averted what would have been their sixth
fly in the eighth inning and Reggie Jackson walloped an shutout of the season when Don Money hit his second homer of
insurance three-run homer as the New York Yankees defeated the season in the sixth off Zahn. 5-3.
HI WAY
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Yankees 9, A's 5
PIZZA
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Serving Pepsi• Cola 1099
Angels 9, Brewers 1
Butch Hobson lined a bases-loaded misplayed triple to spark
Brewers lost for the seventh time in their last eight games
237-0374
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NITTANY MALL ,
Dartmouth downs netgals again
The women's tennis team would be
having a great EAIAW tournament
except for one minor problem Dart
mouth.
For the second time in as many
days, Dartmouth was able to outlast
the Lady Lions, beating them 5-4 at
Yale yesterday in the final day of
regional team competition.
"Dartmouth is a good team," Penn
State N 0.3 doubles player Liz Camp
bell said. "They caught us off guard."
The final team standings placed
Princeton first, followed by Yale,
Dartmouth, Penn State, Syracuse and
Rutgers.
Lady golfers end season at Ohio State
•By TONY SMITH •
Daily Collegian Sports Writer
The women's golf team is in Columbus, Ohio, today through
Sunday for the Lady Buckeye Invitational the last collegiate
tournament of the season and perhaps the last taste of Lady
Lion golf ever for Penn State coach Annette Thompson.
Thompson said she informed her players at the beginning of
Spring Term she would be leaving Penn State at the end of the
season because of professional interests in Florida.
A victory at Columbus would cap off a very successful
season and would greatly increase the women's chances of
reaching nationals. In other words, Thompson might not have
to, pack her suitcases too soon.
The task, however, will not be an easy one. In fact,
Thompson described the Lady Buckeye Invitational as the most
difficult tournament of the season.
"There will be three schools from Florida there, one from
Georgia and one from Oklahoma," she said. "Oklahoma and
the Florida teams are always tough, and Georgia is the
defending national champion."
Penn State also has to go up against the home team. In
recent years, the Lady Buckeyes have only lost one round of
Friday May 15
8:00 pm
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The Lady Lions started the day off
well, winning their first three singles
and doubles matches against Syra
cuse. At the end of the long match,
Penn State carried away a 6-4 victory.
"They played well, and we played
well," Royer said, "but we were able
to win the big points. That was the
4i This Friday:
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IP Es
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.082 Benefit Party I
I Featuring the Hipsters I
,11;30 p.m. Friday, May 15
m il 833 West College Ave. $1.50 Admission
IBenefit of F.O.C.A.L. (Friends of Central American Liberty)
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"It was a fatigue match," Lady
Lion coach Candy Royer said. "We
had played a lot of good, hard tennis
earlier, and Dartmouth had played an
easier match against Rutgers."
Penn State's No.l singles player,
Carol Daniels, said the team was
having a hard time adjusting to the
slow surface at Yale. •
golf to a Northern team last.weekend, when the Lady Lions
squeaked past them out by three strokes in the first round of the
Bowling Green Invitational, 319-322. Ohio State, nevertheless,
ended up winning the tournament by eight strokes.
"In the latest national rankings, Ohio State is ranked 16th,"
Thompson said. "It will be very hard to beat them, especially
on their own course."
Which brings up another challenge the Lady Lions must face
the course itself. Thompson described it as the best colle
giate golf course in the United States.
"The course is extremely difficult," Thompson said. "On
Monday they will be using the course as a qualifier for the U.S.
Open, which will make the conditions that much tougher."
Thompson said if the Lady Lions concentrate on their own
games and don't worry about the other teams, they should have
a strong showing this weekend, although the chances of getting
to nationals are rather slim.
"Our team average right now is 316," Thompson said. "In
order to make it to nationals we have to have about a 314
average, which means we will have to get our scores down to
around 310 or 311 this weekend, which will be extremely
difficult to do on the Ohio State course."
at the Brewery
Saturday:
W. C. Billhick Band
1.1 4 Hear Ye!
Hear Ye!
e We
College fit Ina
• PENN STATE CONTINENTAL Large
Glass of OUR OWN Citrus Juice, 2 slices of
OUR OWN Sourdough Bread Toasted or
Regular Toast, Butter & Jelly (OUR OWN
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• TRUE CONTINENTAL OUR OWN
Croissant or Brioche, Butter, Jam, Jelly or
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Apple Slices (OUR OWN Honey Butter on
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• FIRST PERIOD RUSH Two Eggs, Fried
or Scrambled, Home Fries and Two Slices
of Toast, Butter & Jelly (OUR OWN Honey
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• TWO BY TWO Two Eggs, Fried or
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• SECOND PERIOD FEAST Two Eggs,
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ALSO FEATURING BROWN-BAG-LUNCH-TO-GO only $1.95
Open 24 Hours 126 W. College Ave.
•. • ~
The Daily Collegian Friday, May 15, 1981-9
difference."
The Lady Lions will begin individu
al competition at 9 a.m. today. Every
one on the team will be playing, with
Daniels and Cherie Dow seeded third
and seventh, respectively, in singles,
and the teams of Daniels-Anne Beas
ley and Sue Whiteside-Dow seeded
second and third, respectively, in the
doubles competition.
"They should be up for the individu
al competition," Royer said, "be
cause they know it's the last chance
they have to be represented in nation
als."
We accommodate the
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T. 4 4.
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urs Dawn tit Dusk, 7 days a week. Fee
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one 234-1300 for reservations.
Breakfast Specials
Served 7 Days a Week
from 6 a.m. to 11 a.m.
—by Dean Longo