l&—The Daily Collegian Friday, Oct. 9, 1981 Women When a team is on top, people are hungry to take that luxury away. And that is what women's volleyball coach Russ Rose doesn't want•to happen tonight and tomorrow at the Princeton International Invitational. The Lady Li-. ons are the big honchd.s . in the East, and Rose hopes to hold on to.that honor there. sports briefs "Personally, I think we are going to win," Rose said. "But winning is not based on what I say, but how the girls play. "If the girls think they are going to walk through the tournament, well, I tend to differ. Everyone gets up for Penn State we are the team to beat." The 15-team tournament will feature two teams from Canada McMaster and Queens Universities and Florida International, in addition to the predomi nantly Eastern lineup of teams including Georgetown, Temple and Rutgers. The Lady Lions will start working toward tomorrow night's•"championship finals by battling Hofstra and Delaware lit 6 and 9 tonight, respectively. Penn State will then go against Queens at 10:30 .tomorrow morning and Maryland at 1:30 :tomorrow afternoon before entering the playoffs at 4:30 p.m. Even though they are playing teams of lesser caliber compared to last week end's matches with Southwest Missouri, tklahoma and Nebraska, Rose-said the lady Lions cannot take things too lightly. .~: "We still have to go in there with the same attitude as we did last weekend," Rose said. "We have to go in and play los t fre e de Vol etil 65 5 A2l Fke2iS F... F3eavec 1 ept-00.. V t oW s% A.:30-2%00 0030 fvSOll. Jawbone Coffeehouse 415 E. Foster Ave. Homecoming Special Fri., Oct. 9: 9 & 10:30 p.m. Doug Anderson Sat., Oct. 10:9 & 10:30 p.m. Reuben Sairs Open mikes between & after all shows 7-Coffee, Teas, Snacks, "Jawburgers" available Welcome! All shows are free! hard. You never know what might hap pen if we don't play well. "And you don't look for excuses you either play well or you don't. It's that simple. We could easily go in there and destroy teams. I hope we do." —by Pete Waldron The ice hockey team opens its exhibi tion season 7:30 Sunday evening at the Hersheypark Arena against the Hershey Junior leers. But the Lions learned yesterday they will be without the services of junior center Glen DeStefano for an undeter mined amount of time. Doctors confirm ed that DeStefano tore a ligament in his right knee in a collision during practice last Tuesday and will be out 6-8 weeks plus a rehabilitation period. Chances are DeStefano won't see ac tion again this season. • Replacing DeStefano will be junior Wayne Powers, who played junior varsi ty last year. According to tri-captain Joe Battista, first-year coach John Shellington is read ying the team for the season. "Coach Shellington's done a good job," Battista said. "He's drilled us into the ice, so we should be in better shape than most teams." Penn State's other captains are senior Randy Fardelmann and sophomore Brad Rush. Battista is optimistic about the team's chances Sunday. "There's a good feeling in the locker room," he said. "The team has more potential than ever it's just a matter of putting it together by game time." Next weekend the team hosts the Ju nior Penguins for two games, and on Oct. ye a tn ° `,oared o ove noS pa t e . m 19 8 , spikers Icers start exhibitions You Mean Kinko's Reproduces Faster Than Us? • i b,7/ kinko's copies 256 E. Beaver Ave 238• COPY • Music's "Force-of-One" J.B. Experience this most unusual country rock guitarist at the THE 77841 BRICKHOUSE ffet -.231 TAVERN 10 p.m. Friday & Saturday(ill 2 a.m Haim) flours Dail) 4-7 p.m. \%e serve 'III 2:00 a.m. Located on Humes Alley between Allen & Pugh St. 237-6910 primed for invite 23 and 24, the Junior Flyers come •to town. Lady Lion tennis The women's tennis team is in Wash ington, D.C., this•weekend for the Tennis Life Tournament. The Lady Lions, who will be led by Carol Daniels and Linda Learmonth in singles, should battle William & Mary for the tourney crown. The Indians snatched second place from Penn State last week at the Eastern Intercollegiate tourna ment, as Penn State finished third and Princeton won. Other Lady Lions playing singles this weekend are Sue Whiteside and Bessie Paragas, while the doubles teams will be Liz Campbell-Susan Dißiase and Donna Dißenzo-Zenia Matkiwsky. Lion baseball The baseball team, rained out of its final home game of the season Wedne sday, returns to action Sunday. The Lions will take the field at Lock Haven for a 1:00 p.m. double-header. Lady bOoters on road The nen's soccer team, 3-3-0, will travel to i4ew York this weekend to play St. John Fisher tomorrow and Rochester on Sunday. Rochester is ranked sixth in this week's Mid-Atlantic Women's Intercolle giate Soccer Association poll, while St. John Fisher: is not ranked in the top 10. Penn State is fourth in the same poll, falling from second after its losses to No.l Cortland and N0.2-ranked Hartwick last weekend. Lax alumni return Imagine what a football alumni game Congratulations Alpha Phi for 109 years of sisterhood! Love, Phi Mu would be like Can you picture guys like Franco Har ris, John Cappelletti and-Jack Hain turning to go against the ebrierit den of Nittany Lions? Well, this homecoming weekend will not feature an alumni football game, as great as it sounds. But there will be an alumni game. The men's lacrosse team will meet a group of former Penn State stars at 11 a.m. Sunday at Pollock Field. "It's a chance for the alumni to come back and play competitive lacrosse again," Penn State coach Glenn Thiel said. "Neither side will be playing like it's for the national championship. But it's always a respectable game." Some of the big names in men's la crosse will be returning for the contest names like Richie Caravella, Keith Mc- Guire and Jack Berry, • who were to men's lacrosse what Clark, Millen and Fusina were to Penn State football in the mid-70s. Also playing on the alumni'side will be Paul Sullivan, John Farrell and Kevin Curran, who were part of last year's 9-2 team which finished 12th in the nation. The current Lions will be led by co captains Billy Turri, Joe Guterding and Ken Panzer. For the Lions, the game will serve as a tuneup for the Penn State Invitational tournament next week. "The tournament is what we've been gearing for," Thiel said. "It will give us a chance to see what we've really got." —by Keith Grolier IM cross country race A women's intramural cross country race will be held at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 17. Entries for the race will be accepted in Room 4 of the IM Building on Monday through Wednesday.. Mon-Thur. 8:30 to 8:00 sherr god 67 Old the9inder. atly torn flurry ,ogy make, nffee 6fi'oQ . 'e( - CotrrllyTavetf7 d special ,o/ace - gesody and Wegiplay, ge friddy 4 -1 - 1/ M/77 f il eco Otinder . country Tavern 815 Cricklewood Drive in Toftrees 237.1048 in o•s CO les FILM DEVELOPING 12 exp $2.59 20 exp $3.89 24 exp $4.49 36 exp $6.69 256 E. Beaver Ave. (Across from Penn Towers) #236•COPY Fri 8:30 to 6:00 Sat. 10:00 to 6:00 TBka . ...Sob:heis7B: . over thit'd4,'anko.d TOas By HERSCHEL NISSENSON AP 'Sports Writer , • There aren't many teams in =the country that could lose five fumbles against Southern California and still take the No.l-ranked Trojans to the final two seconds before losing. Or lose the football five more times against nationally-ranked lowa State and still come away with a tie. Not only did Oklahoma do that, but the 1-1-1, 10th-ranked Sooners are 3- point favorites over the 3-0-0, third ranked Texas Longhorns for tomor row's nationally-televised Red River Rumble. The series began in 1900 but has been played in Dallas since 1929. , Of Division I-A football teams, Oklahoma ranks last in turnover margin. The Sooners have turned over the ball 14 times while forcing only two turnovers. Last year's clash, a 20-13 triumph for Texas, produced 14 giveaways,. eight by Oklahoma, six by the Long horns. So from the same corner that gave you Northwestern (0) over lowa (64) last week, the pick is. . .oklahoma 20-10. The second Upset Special, howev er, Yale over Navy, did come through, and the week's score was 49 right, 14 wrong and a tie for a .778 percentage. For the season, it's 218- 79-2—.734. Against the spread, the score was 110 • 126 • 35mm 18-14—.563, making it 70-67—.511 for the year. . Arizona at Southern California (favored by 21): Marcus Allen, who set two national rushing records last week, goes after his fifth consec utive 200-yard game. . :Southern Cal 41-14. Boston College at Penn State (202): It's homecoming in. the Nit tany Valley, and the old grads will like what they see... Penn State 31- 7. Pitt (6 1 / 2 ) at West Virginia: The two • best quarterbacks in the East (Pitt's Dan Marino, the Mountain eers' Oliver. Luck) square off in this brawl between undefeated neigh bors. Marino suffered a mild shoul der strain last week aria is listed as questionable. . .Pitt 27-17. Wake Forest at North Carolina (20 1 / 2 ): The Tar Heels must do it without Kelvin Bryant, perhaps for the rest of the season. . .North Caro lina 27-14. Michigan (18) at Michigan State: Bo Schembechler didn't like the Indiana game (38-17) because there was too much offense. The Wolver ines are "still not playing defense the way I want it to • be," he said. •Until now,'that is. . .Michigan 35-3. Southern Mississippi at Alabama (no line): 'Bama ended Southern's unbeaten dreams last year 42-7. Even with the loss of injured quar terback Ken Coley, history will re peat. . .Alabama 24-10. - .•.;•;•;• , 4 . 'l>. • Sun. 1:00 to 5:00 Carter homers Expos over Phils MONTREAL (AP) Gary Carter's two-run homer in the third inning triggered the Montreal Expos to a 3-1 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies last night and gave them a 2-0 lead in their best-of-five series for the NL East Division title. The teams left this chilly city after the game for Philadelphia, where the defending World Series cham pions will send right-hander Larry Christenson against Ray Burris today in an effort to prevent elimination. Right-hander Bill Gullickson blanked the Phillies on three hits through the first seven innings and was credited with the victory, although he needed help the last two innings from reliever Jeff Reardon. Trailing 3-0, the Phillies rallied with two outs in the eighth. Lonnie Smith, who has at least one hit in 25 straight Harriers travel to Paul Short Invitations By TONY SMITH Daily Collegian Sports Writer Despite the men's cross country tea m's relatively easy victory last week at the Penn State Open, coach Harry Groves sees some stiffer tests in the future. One of those tests might be taken at 11 a.m. tomorrow, when the Lions compete in the Paul Short Invitational at Bethle hem, Pa. It is a test the Lions are expected to pass, if one judges by rankings alone. The Lions are ranked eighth in the coun try by Harrier Magazine. Consequently (barring the acceptance of late entries by other teams), they are the highest-ranked team in tomorrow's race, since the only other rated team participating will be Villanova (20th). Groves, however, suggested that one should not overrate the accuracy of the rating system at the beginning of the season. "You can't get carried away with the rankings this time of year," Groves said. "They're so damn iffy. You can't really tell how good anybody is, with the excep tion of teams like UTEP (University of Texas at El Paso, the defending national champions)." Groves explained that at the beginning of the season, and at two-week intervals the rest of the way, Harrier Magazine prints its top 20 collegiate cross country teams. The voting at the beginning of the season is rather speculative and based on the results at last year's nationals. Still, the Lions are coming off of an The Sisters of Al pha Gamma Delta fire Proud to Announce Our Fall Pledges Arlene Campoh Trocy Long Arleen Hilton Stephan Steinback Rhonda Johnson Beth Wilkinson U• 154 Welcome to Our Circle of Friendship P.S.U. Hort Club Homecoming Corsage Sale To order call 863-2536 (8 -5) Attention: Fraternities & Sororities Large Orders Delivered Carnations $1.25 Mums $1.75 Boutonieres $.75 U. 176 games, doubled into center field and came home on .a single by Pete Rose. Bake Mcßride, who had snapped an 0-for-20 slump with a first-inning single, then doubled into the right field corner, with Smith stopping at third. At that point, Montreal manager Jim Fanning brought in Reardon, who intentionally walked Mike Schmidt to load the bases. Reardon, who had allowed four earned runs in his last 35 2-3 innings, worked a 3-2 count on Gary Matthews and then retired the outfielder on a foul pop behind first base MILWAUKEE (AP) Lou Piniella lined a fourth to Warren Cromartie to end the inning. inning homer and Reggie Jackson added a two-run blast The Expos took a 1-0 lead on an unearned run off in the ninth, leading New York to a 3-0 victory over the Phillies starter Dick Ruthven in the second, to the Milwaukee Brewers yesterday as the Yankees took a 2-0 delight of a crowd of 45,896 who turned out on a night in lead in the American League East Division which the temperature dropped into the upper 30s. championship series. impressive showing last Saturday. Their team score was 40 points, as compared to 133 for the , second-place team (Greater Rochester Track Club). Lions Alan Scharsu, Jeff Adkins, Dwight Stephens and Gary Black all placed in the top 10. Fairleigh Dickinson, a team expected to give the Lions trouble, tied for a distant third (154). Fairleigh Dickinson will also be competing at Bethlehem. Another easy victory tomorrow, per haps? Groves implied that a win for the Lions was possible but that an easy win was unlikely, largely due to the presence Lady Lions meet rival Maryland at invite By CLINT LOPER Daily Collegian Sports Writer While the majority of the Penn State student body is drinking, mingling with alumni, wreaking havoc on Beaver Stadium and generally enjoying tomorrow's Homecoming festivities, the women's cross country team will be in Bethlehem for its third stop on a four-city tour. The team's travels have taken it to such exotic places as College Park, Md., and Charlottesville, Va. In eight days, the Lady Lions will be appearing at Bucknell. And tomorrow the Lady Lions have a starring role - in the Paul Short Invitational at Lehigh. Archrival Maryland will be among Penn State's seven opponents and should provide the Lady Lions with their best competition. Penn State edged the Terrapins two weeks ago, but in that meet, Maryland,-was without its best runner, Jean Whiston. Bad news for Penn State: Whiston's probably back. "We'll have our hands full with Maryland," Penn State coach Gary Schwartz said. of the Villanova Wildcats "I think Villanova will be a surprise to a lot of teams out there," Groves said. "They really don't have any heavy upf ront runners, but they have a group of high-quality runners who possess the capability of scoring in bunches." Among those runners include Ross Donoghue and Kevin Dillon. Groves said Donoghue and Dillon are probably the two top runners for the Wildcats, al though he put more emphasis on team depth than on individual stars. Dime Pepsi! - 9 5 4 • • , •_::. , r 1. Ruthven lasted only four innings, giving up three hits and three runs, two of them earned. He was relieved by Warren Brusstar, Sparky Lyle and Tug McGraw, who kept the Expos in check the rest of the way. The Phillies have now lost seven straight games at Montreal. Yanks 3, Brewers 0 The only other team that could make life tough for the Lady Lions tomorrow is Rutgers. As a team, it's not that great, but it does have one runner, Nancy Seeger, who's very good. Seeger finished second at the Lady Lion Invitational earlier this year, defeating all Penn State runners by at least 10 seconds. Schwartz is looking to strengthen his lineup. "The four people that we have in two through five, we need to move them closer to Heather (Carmichael), and solidify six and seven," he said. Right now there are four or five runners shifting in and out of the six and seven positions. Carmichael, Patty Murnane, Heidi Gerken, Sue Miley and Doreen Startare form a fairly consistent top five when they're healthy, but spots six and seven are up for grabs. "Somebody needs to establish themselves," Schwartz said The freshmen have picked up the slack, though. Gerken and Miley, both in their first year, have been in Penn State's top four in all three meets and were the fastest Lady Lions at Maryland. Order any size pizza and get a 16 oz. Pepsi for a DIME. N 101.11).4)10'f e'lll‘, Limit 4 per pizza. Limited time offer. Fast, Free Delivery 421 E. Beaver 234.5655 So what will the Lions' team strategy be? "Our goal is to match up well with the other teams," Groves said. "We like to make sure that our fifth man is ahead of their fifth man, and our sixth man is ahead of their sixth man. "Of course, when our fifth man finishes ahead of their second guy, that's even better." Looking at things from an individual perspective, Groves said that it could be a race between Scharsu and Jim 0' Connell of Syracuse for first place. e°•,) . ;l/;•';.?f ;----,,. *, TED ,?,..; Tradition is our mission! I • • o g DE *********************** 3 ( ( Bill, Jenny, Jodi, Joe, Sue, : * * What else can I say but . . . * * "AWESOME!" 4( * 4( * Happy Homecoming! * * 4( Love * * R• 287 Kid * ********************** Unser ruled winner of 'Bl Indy 500 INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Bobby Unser illegally passed cars during a yellow caution period in last May's Indianapolis 500, but he was de clared the winner over Mario An dretti yesterday after a special U.S. Auto Club appeal panel ruled a one lap penalty was improperly as sessed after the race. The penalty against Unser "should have been called during the race. If any other conclusion were reached, the officiating of an event such as this would be nothing short of chaotic," panel chairman Edwin Render wrote in a 23-page opinion released at USAC headquarters. Unser beat Andretti across the finish line by eight seconds, but the penalty cost Unser one lap and dropped him to second place when the official standings were posted the day after the May 24 race. Unser protested the USAC deci Let's have our own Stadium Highlights! Love, A The 2. I 9s The Sub Sensation • 315 S. Allen St. (next to Atrium) Hours: 10:00a.m.-1:00a.m., weekends until 2:00a.m Delivery 11:00a.m.-2:00p.m. 237-7331 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS Students of All Majors and Fields Invited Come to our meetings to hear about our MBA and PhD Programs and to ask any questions about the curriculum, admission, financial aid, and career opportunities available in the following fields of management: Finance Economics Marketing Accounting General Management Monday, October 12 Contact Career Development & Placement Center for sign ups The Daily Collegian Friday, Oct. 9, 1981-1 sion, and the three-member panel conducted hearings on the appeal during June and July. Unser, elk hunting in northern New Mexico when the panel's ruling was announced, told his car owner, Roger Penske, that he was "ex tremely happy to become the sixth three-time winner of the world's greatest race. This has been a goal for me since I began competing at Indianapolis in 1963." Andretti, at his office in Nazareth, Pa., said the reversal was "stun ning" and that he was "just too sick to even think about it." Andretti, who won the Indy race in 1969, said, "I'll never be able to swallow this. It's totally unjust, it really is." Render, a University of Louisville law professor, and former USAC President Reynold MacDonald signed the majority opinion . M.B.A. Health Administration Public and Non Profit Human Resources Management Science Policy