12—The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Dec. 16,1981 scoreboard NFL American Conference Eastern Division W .L...T 10 4 1 10 5 0 9 S 1 2 13 0 1 14 0 y-Miami y-Buffalo N.Y. Jets New Englnd Baltimore Central Division x-Cinclnnati STEELE RS Houston Cleveland 11 4 0 8 7 0 6 9 0 5 10 0 Western Division Denver San Diego Kansas City Oakland Seattle 10 5 0 9 6 0 8 7 0 7 8 0 5 10 0 National Conference Eastern Division x-Da)las y-EAGLES N.Y. Giants St. Louis Washington 12 3 0 9 6 0 8 7 0 7 8 0 7 8 0 Central Division Detroit Green Bay Tampa Bay Minnesota Chicago 8 7 0 8 7 0 8 7 0 7 8 0 5 10 0 Western Division x-Sn Fmcsc Atlanta 12 3 0 336 7 8 0 398 6 9 0 296 4 11 0 'l9O Los Angeles New Orlens x-clinched division title, y-qualified for playoffs. Saturday’s Games New York Jets 14, Cleveland 13 >^C»n^S Bauer's Original Bavarian Mints Chacalate mint meltauiays 5 az. package regularly $ 2.95 save .45 NOUI *2.50 128 West College Avenue Next to Ye Olde College Diner Detroit 45, Minnesota 7 Sunday’s Games Washington 38, Baltimore 14 Buffalo 19, New England 10 Cincinnati 17, STEELE RSIO Green Bay 35, New Orleans 7 . . New York Giants 20, St. Louis 10 San Diego 24, Tampa Bay 23 Miami 17, Kansas City 7 Chicago 23, Oakland 6 San Francisco 28, Houston 6 Dallas 21, EAGLES 10 Denver 23, Seattle 13 Monday's Game Los Angeles 21, Atlanta 16 Saturday, December 19 Dallas at New York Giants, 12:30 p.m. Buffalo at Miami, 4 p.m. Sunday, December 20 Denver at Chicago, 1 p.m. Green Bay at New York Jets, 1 p.m. Kansas City at Minnesota, 1 p.m. St. Louis at EAGLES, 1 p.m. Tampa Bay at Detroit, l p.m. New England at Baltimore, 2 p.m. San Francisco at New Orleans, 2 p.m. Cincinnati at Atlanta, 4 p.m. Cleveland at Seattle, 4 p.m. PITTSBURGH at Houston, 4 p.m. Washington at Los Angeles, 4 p.m. Monday, December 21 Oakland at San Diego, 9 p.m. PF..PA. .Pet. 329 269 .700 305 280 .667 327 284 .633 301 347 .133 236 512 .067 276 .733 276 .533 335 .400 333 .333 391 336 260 255 297 254 .667 455 380 .600 333 284 .533 263 320 .467 280 367 .333 264 .800 221 .600 247 .533 370 .467 342 .467 302 .533 333 .533 251 .533 359 .467 300 .333 College basketball 233 .800 325 .467 321 .400 357 .267 Last night's College Basketball Scores By The Associated Press EAST Harvard 77, New Hampshire 73 John Jay 77, Baruch 58 Juniata 63, Susquehanna 56 Long Island U. 90, Pace 74 Manhattan 68, St. Francis, N.Y. 59 Kevin Dremel Glenn Kidder Randy Hughes Jon Rounds TONIGHT at the -r — Happy Hour Prices Till 10:30 Nightly! THE PHYRST BOTTLE SHOP HAS YOUR BRAND AT A PLEASING PRICE! Massachusetts 82, Bentley 68 N.Hampehire Coll. 91, Cent.Connectlcut M, OT Old Westbury 63, CCNY 58 St. Thomas Aquinas 83, Bloomfield 48 SE Massachusetts 83, Boston St. 82 S.Maine 82, Nasson S 3 Vermont 74, Dartmouth 65 West Virginia 113, Wls.-Superior 54 Wm. Paterson 71, Jersey City St. 68 SOUTH Alabama St. 85, Livingston 76 Allegheny at Bridgewater, Va., ccd. Auburn-Mont. 97, LaGrange 76 Carson-Newman 88, Union, Ky. 74 Cent. Florida 68, Florida Int'l 67 AP Top 20 The Top Twenty teams in The Associated Press college basketball poll, with first-place votes In paren theses, season's record and total points. Points based on 20-19-18-17-16-15-1413-12-11-10-90-7-6-5-4S-2-1: North Carolina (42) Kentucky (8) Louisville (5) Wichita St. (1) Virginia (1) DePaul Minnesota 9. Arkansas (1) ' 10. San Francisco 11. Missouri 12. Tulsa 13. Indiana 14. Alabama 15. SW Louisiana 16. Ala.-Birmingham 17. UCLA 18. Villanova 19. Georgetown, DC 20. Oregon St. * £ 1 The Kappa Crush % j Is BACK! I « £ *u.,« £ Company: :rr. PENN STATE Seminar MARKETING Series CLUB presents: 1981-1982 Armstrong World Industries “A Night at the Interview” interview skills discussed and demonstrated by Mr. Bo Mcßee Wed., Dec. 16 > . • 7:30 PM ; ____________—— HOB Assembly Room | 2?eace | Fouts, Chris or miss final SAN DIEGO (AP) - San Diego Charg ers' quarterback Dan Fouts and two Oakland players must pay union dues to the'National Football League Players Association or be suspended from the final game of the season, the players’ union announced yesterday. Under provisions of the 1977 bargain ing agreement reached between the NFLPA and NFL owners, both teams have been ordered to suspend the three players Fouts, Ted Hendricks and Chris Bahr and bar them from future games until the dues are paid. Fouts, who owes $l,lOO in back dues, was unavailable for comment. The Raiders and Chargers meet in the NFL's final game of the season next Monday night in San Diego. The Charg ers, with a victory, could claim a playoff . berth if AFC West leader Denver loses to Chicago. 4*o 1,137 4-0 1,077 40 1,017 50 983 Gene Klein, owner of the Chargers, called the ultimatum “a vindictive... vicious grandstand play” by NFLPA executive director Ed Garvey. He said Fouts “wants to play and we want him to play.” Dick Bertelson, an NFLPA attorney, said the action was taken on behalf of the 1,550 members of the players union. “It is a provision of our collective Bahr must pay game of the season sports briefs bargaining agreement that’s been con sistently enforced the last five seasons,” Bertelson said. Holmes-Cooney fight NEW 1?ORK (AP) - Details of the Larry Holmes-Gerry Cooney World Box ing Council heavyweight title bout, set for Monday March 15 at Las Vegas, Nev., will be disclosed at a news conference here today. Both Holmes and Cooney are unde feated, and Holmes has held the WBC cfown since June 9, 1978 when he out pointed Ken Norton in 15 rounds. Another Ali comeback? LOS ANGELES (AP) - Former heavyweight boxing champion Muham mad Ali, who announced he was going back into retirement following his loss to Trevor Berbick in the Bahamas last Friday night, indicated yetserday that he o««» Ho '”r SIVV^^V- % nS a t ti» e utin6 ft 1 MMNh ■■ might fight again. In an interview with Jim Hill of KNXT TV, the Los Angeles CBS affiliate, Ali, almost 40, said he hadn’t made a final decision on retiring and indicated that there were two highly-rated contenders he might fight in the future. Schmidt 2nd at lift Bill Schmidt earned second-place hon ors in the 198-pound class at Power Day V, in Glassboro, N.J., on Dec. 5. Schmidt,- the state collegiate record holder in the press, benched 375 pounds more than twice his bodyweight of 182. Andretti to appeal'soo' INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Mario An dretti may appeal USAC’s restoration of Bobby Unser as the winner of this year’s controversial Indianapolis 500-mile race. Andretti, originally declared the win ner because of a penalty assessed to Unser the day after the race, was later '• dropped to second after Unser appealed. But the Automobile Competition Com mittee for the United States Has granted Andretti a preliminary hearing Jan. 15 on an appeal of the USAC ruling. dues Fame follows Finn no matter what the sport But what happens when you’ve reached all your aspirations? What hap pens wheh you’ve pocketed every shining star in your world? Candace Finn faced those questions after completing her collegiate field hockey career. Her an swer was to bury her field hockey stick and move on to other worlds and other aspirations. She could'have stayed with field hock ey by making the national team. She could have played with that group for three years. She could have devoted many hours and many dollars to the sport. She wasn’t ready for that. Candace Finn took her pocketful of stars home and decided to call it a career. “It’s been more than I ever expected,” she says. “That’s a big part of my deci sion. A lot of people keep going on and they only end up going downhill. I’m satisfied with the way things have gone. There are still a lot of opportunities out there.” To Candace Finn, those opportunities will come in the world of lacrosse and the world of advertising. She will play la crosse this spring and try to regain the national championship Maryland swiped out of the Lady Lions’ own backyard last year. She will hopefully play on a nation al team that will travel to England next fall for a World Series of lacrosse. Then, when there are no more stars to shoot for in lacrosse, she will begin an advertising career. She would like to work in Califor- * ELLEN. * * Congratulations to the new * IT Greek Week Chairman! We’re It * sure that “superwoman” will * * do a super job. * * Love, * *u.i M The Alpha Gams % * # Allegheny Women's Center • abortions • free pregnancy and related counseling Mon-Fri 9-5 Sat 10-4 Call collect 412-362-2920 nia, where her disposition fits the cli mate: sunnyside up. Candace Finn’s aqua eyes glisten whenever she lights up her smile, which happens to be very often. When you see her smile on the playing field, you know she loves the games, she loves the sports. “I’ve always said that when it becomes a job, that’s when I quit,'* she says. “I always had fun with it.” Behind all the smiles is a rugged com petitor. At 5-8, 135 pounds, she isn’t intimidated. When opponents have re sorted to unsportsmanlike defensive methods to try to stop her such as poking her with their sticks or holding her kilt she has been known to dis creetly crack their sticks in half or step on a foot. They know what she has accomplished. “I would say there are some people that don’t like me,” she says.. “When I get mad I’m motivated just to try to beat my opponent. Then I can laugh at them burn them and score a goal.” That’s the unusual part of Candace Finn, the athlete. She’s a smiling angel one minute, a demon the next. She has an ability that coaches constantly warn their teams that they can’t do: to turn on the competitive switch at any time. Her mental and physical abilities are so great thatshe doesn’t need the intense training that other athletes need. She is carefree at practices and she never has worked out in the off-season. ★ ★ I SHALL RETURN! If you’re hungry as the whole Fifth Army, march out toToftrees’ Thursday Evening Buffet. Capture the custom-caryed Prime Rib, wade Into gourmet entrees that vary each week, like Sole Florentine, or rich Rack of Lamb, or savory Veal Picata. Conquer, like Caesar, the fields of salad. Advance through lines of vegetables, over mountains of fresh fruit and hot crusty breads. Our chef will never call retreat... and it won’t take the Pentagon to pay for it. Just $12.50, for as long . as you can counter-attack. iToftrees country club end lodge one country club lane, toftrees 237-4877 BAO-ROBBINS ICE (MM Going Home Special December 17,18,19 Buy your single cone with pennies and get it 1 for 45 pennies 358 East College Avenue She is a natural athlete who can exhibit power, speed and grace at the same time. To those that don’t know her, Candace Finn can come across as lazy and not dedicated. She knows that. She knew going into the past field hockey season that’s what they were saying. Afterall, she hadn’t gone to a field hotkey camp for the past two summers. Camp is a Mecca where all players with any devo tion at all must make the pilgramage to, but last year she skipped out for a world tour with the U.S. lacrosse squad and the year before she worked on a tan in Florida. “I worked hard to make the All-Ameri ca team,” she says. “I had something to prove to myself and to the members of the field hockey organization. After two years of not going to camp, it was great to do that and win nationals.” Candace Finn first picked up a field hockey stick at the age of 9 in a fourth grade physical education class. It was not an immediate love affair. “It was OK,” she says. “I wasn’t thrilled about bending over all the time.” She didn’t start to learn the finer points of both field hockey and lacrosse until her senior year at Penncrest High School. Before that she had gotten by on speed and athletic ability. She played basketball, too, and averaged 18 points per game. All three teams won league titles. Gillian Rattray offered her a full ENGINEERS Gulf Oil Corporation, a major energy company, has job openings for all types of graduating engineers who are interested in building a career in crude oil and gas producing operations.. Duties include drilling, equipment installation and maintenance, subsurface reservoir studies, economic evaluation of producing properties, well stimulation and reconditioning, and enhanced oil recovery operations. ? Training career' ga§ producing arid drilling operations. Positions are located in Gulf Coast, Mid-Continent, Rocky Mountain, and West Coast areas: Excellent employee benefits. If you have interviewed with a Gulf Recruiter or have sent us a resume, thank you very much. If you have not, please send your resume and transcript to: scholarship in lacrosse without ever see ing her play. She took the offer, thereby disappointing Maryland and Delaware, and said she’d play field hockey, too. After a fabulous four-year career at Penn State, she will no longer have field hockey in her autumns. It’s been a long time since that fourth grade gym class. “I know I’ll miss it,” she says. “I would also miss starting a career, though. I thought maybe I could try it and I could always quit later, but that’s kind of dumb. You have to make a decision and stay with it.” Gillian Rattray looked at Candy Finn. She had coached her in both field hockey and lacrosse at Penn State. She knew better than anyone else how brilliant both careers had been for Candy. She also knew that one of them may have just ended. “Candy,” she said, “do it for you.” “I’ve had fun,” Candy said. “There’s really nothing else for me to want from it. Nothing to strive for.” Her aspirations had been reached. Her life outside of field hockey awaited her. The plane cruised on. Transcending time zones. Pushing time on. Tom Verducci is an llth-term journa lism major and a sports writer for The Daily Collegian. His column appears on Wednesdays. J. R. Ligon, Jr. GULF OIL EXPLORATION & PRODUCTION COMPANY P.O. Box 1166 Pittsburgh, PA 15230 An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F GOH Departures Philly Dec. 18 12:30 p.m. 5:30 p.m. All buses will return January 3,1982 at 7:00 p.m. Buses will begin loading in front of the HUB approx. 15 min. before departure time and will stop at parking lot 80 approx. 5 after scheduled departure time Stops Philly King of Prussia Mall (Wanamakers) Reading Terminal Prices Philly One Way $14.75 Roundtrip $28.50 yy Tickets will go on sale at the HUB Desk, yjra 9am-3pm, December 11th / IJuK and the 14th-18th MC ON A USG BUS! Dec. 19 12:30 p.m. CFA fight with NCAA is long from completed By DOUG TUCKER AP Sports Writer KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - The College Football Association has lost its battle with the NCAA, but not its war. The war will'go on. It is more a conflict of ideologies than acronyms. The announcement Monday that the CFA had failed to deliver enough schools to have its own television contract with NBC did nothing to change that. Neither did it disturb the economic and technological forces that lie at the heart of the struggle. They still are bearing down on the future of collegiate athletics like runaway lo comotives. There still is inflation. For exam ple, the cost of equipping a football player has risen about 15 percent per year the past five years, according to estimates, with no relief in sight. “And just as inflation arrived, so did women’s athletics, and a brand new set of expenses,” noted an offi cial. There also are significant, continuing travel, recruiting and scholarship costs. But just as the financial crunch threatens to turn into a crisis, there VA CA TION HOURS PATTEE LIBRARY Friday, December 18-7:45 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. Saturday, December 19 - 7:45 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Sunday, December 20 - CLOSED Monday - Wednesday, December 21 - 23 - 7:45 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Thursday, December 24 - Monday, December 28 - CLOSED Tuesday, December 29 - Thursday, December 31-7:45 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Friday, January 1 and Saturday, January 2 - CLOSED BRANCH LIBRARIES ' Friday, December 18-7:45 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. , Saturday, December 19 - 7:45 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Sunday, December 20 - CLOSED Monday - Wednesday, December 21-23 - 7:45 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Thursday, December 24 - Saturday, January 2 - CLOSED POLLOCK LIBRARY Saturday, December 19 - Saturday, January 2 - CLOSED Pitts. Dec. 18 Dec. 19 1:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m. Pittsburgh David Weis Miracle Mile Heinz Hall Pittsburgh One Way $12.25 Roundtrip $23.75 The. Daily Collegian Wednesday, Dec. 16,1981—^1: appears on the not-too-distant horizon a source of new riches cable and. subscription television. And here is where the NCAA’s philosophy of “a • family of intercollegiate athletics” ■■ runs afoul of many of its most af-" fluent cousins. The viewers and cable companies who will be willing to pay millions for college football entertainment are interested only v in a small percentage of the NCAA’s 753 members. If the CFA’s attempt at getting a separate network package beginning next year with NBC had been suc cessful, this would have paved the way for even greater autonomy when the television goose begins laying those golden eggs. The reason the CFA failed to take control of television rights may not have been the fear of NCAA probation or expulsion as much as the fear of a breakdown in centralized control of television rights. Under the NCAA plan, Purdue, for example, does not have to worry about its colossal neighbor Notre Dame coming into town every Saturday on a cable hook up. NYC Dec. 18 5:00 p.m. NYC Rocka Entr NYC P NYC One Wi $29.00 Dec. 19 : : 12:00 p.m'l
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