The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, September 28, 1982, Image 5

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    Lions
Penn State jumps 5 spots after upset win
By HERSCHEL NISSENSON
AP Sports Writer
The Pitt Panthers, who dropped from first to third
despite an unbeaten record, moved up to second place
Monday in The Associated Press college football poll, only
seven points behind No. 1 Washington.
Penn State jumped from eighth to third by virtue of its
27-24 victory over Nebraska, with the Cornhuskers falling
from second to eighth.
Three teams Boston College, Minnesota and Auburn
made the Top Twenty for the first time this season,
while Ohio State, Illinois and Michigan dropped out.
Washington received 25 of 59 first-place votes and 1,114
of a possible 1,180 points from a nationwide panel of sports
writers and sportscasters following a 37-21 triumph over
Oregon. Pitt, a 20-3 winner over Illinois, climbed from
third to second with 19 first-place ballots and 1,107 points.
, Last week, with 55 voters responding, Washington led
Nebraska 1,045 points to 1,011, with Pitt at 989.
Seven first-place votes went to Penn State, which scored
with four seconds left to nip Nebraska. The Nittany Lions
received 1,032 points.
Florida rose from fifth to fourth with one first-place vote
and 973 points after defeating Mississippi State 27-17. The
Gators swapped places with Alabama, which edged Van
derbilt 24-21 and slipped from fourth to fifth with four first
place votes and 968 points.
sports
Netmen's doubles team shines
By STEVE TOW
Collegian Sports Writer
Confidence is one quality that is essential for
success in every sport, and plenty of it was
displayed by the men's tennis doubles team of
Jeff Factor and Virgil Christian in last weekend's
Navy Invitational at Annapolis.
The pair won every round in straight sets to
advance to the finals of the "A" doubles and
defeat Bloomsburg's Marty Coyne and Dave
Superdock, 6-4, 6-3, to highlight the men's tennis
team's weekend.
Because of the lack of scholarship athletes on
his team s Penn State Coach Holmes Cathrall was
especially happy with the victory.
"Those guys deserve credit (Factor and Chris
tian)," he said, "most of the guys they beat were
on scholarships."
Lions meet Alderson-Broaddus
By JOHN SEVERANCE
Collegian Sports Writer
Coming off a 2-1 win Friday night
against Cleveland State, the men's
soccer team travels to Phillipsburg,
W Va. to take on Alderson-Broad
dus tonight.
"They are a small school with a
good soccer reputation," Penn State
Coach Walter Bahr said. "They are
like a Davis and Elkins (whom the
Lions beat 1-0 in the season opener.)
Their coach, Bob Gray, is a good
soccer man and he has imported
some foreign players. They are al
ways tough."
Aside from that little information
from Bahr, that is all anybody
knows about Alderson-Broaddus.
k;:. The Lions, ranked 18th, will have
:some problems to solve, before the
• beginning of a five-game home
.; stand which starts after their match
with Alderson-Broaddus.
"In the Cleveland State game, we
t gave their offense too much room to
- operate and our two wide defenders
were Caught out of position ," Bahr
Said. "We were lucky we didn't get
hurt. Offensively, we were over
:: playing the ball and blowing scoring
opportunities. We'll have to work on
that tomorrow."
Despite these problems, the Lions
still own an' impressive 6-2 record
• ' ith their only losses coming at the
hands of Hartwick and Southern
• Illinois, both nationally-ranked tea
: ms, in the final seconds.
Bahr believes he has finally found
• the right chemistry that he was
lacking in the beginning of the sea
son.He has moved freshman Bill
• 'Gi lmour from forward to midfield
anti he brought up midfielder Jeff
• ierhofer to forward.
• 'Right now we are doing well, we
are having no serious communica
t ion problems," Bahr said. "I'm
• just trying to get the right combina
; turn of players. Gilmour has been
, piaying really well at midfield. I
tried to make Gilmour a center-for-
ward, but it didn't work out. Maier
, hofer has been making things
happen offensively. He is a real
aggressive player and he helps us
tremendously."
After traveling to Phillipsburg to
play Division H power Alderson
,' Broaddus, the Lions play five
, straight home games in the next two
• weeks. Penn State has match-ups
with Akron, Wake Forest, Lock Ha
:: yen. East Stroudsburg, and nation
ally-ranked
poll-vault to 3rd
The advantage that the pair has is the combina
tion of Factor's righthandedness and Christian's
lefthandedness, which allows Cathrall to imple
ment his down-the-middle power strategy.
"I like it that way . . . that concentrates all of
our strength down the middle," he said.
"We were pretty intimidating," , Factor said,
"Teams have trouble putting the ball away on
us."
Christian felt it was more of confidence and
chemistry between the two that made them
successful.
"Alot of it is having confidence in the other
guy," he said, "I'm not only playing off my
opponents, I'm playing off (Factor)."
Factor —'who is also the Lions' No. 1 singles
player nearly advanced to the finals of the "A"
singles as well but was beaten by Coyne in
straight sets in the semi-final round.
Penn State's Bill Gilmour (9) has done a solid job patroling the midfield for the men's soccer team this season. Tonight,
the Lions take on Alderson•Broaddus in West Virginia.
Good ol' Gilmour owns midfield
By MICHAEL FELICI
Collegian Sports Writer
He didn't score the game-winning goal, for that
matter he didn't score at all. He couldn't even manage
an assist. But Penn State midfielder Bill Gilmour was
one of the major reasons the soccer team clipped
Cleveland State 2-1 Friday night.
The 23-year old freshman from Maryport, England,
time after time controlled the play at midfield, disrupt
ing Cleveland State's attacks while starting many Lion
rushes.
The Lions took control of the game with 10 minutes
gone in the first half, but not before the Vikings took a 1-
0 lead. Gilmour said an adjustment at midfield was the
key.
"Their No. 15 (Lester Charles) was lying back real
deep, giving them four midfielders," Gilmour said.
"That made us sort of uneasy because we play three in
the midfield.
"We started to pull a man off our forward line to give
us four and it evened it out. That's when we started to
look good."
This year could be Gilmour's only season for the
Nittany Lions. Because of an National Collegiate Ath
letic Association rule that that takes one year of
eligibilty away from a player for every year he is over
20, Gilmour's first year at Penn State could be his last.
Georgia trimmed South Carolina 34-18 and climbed from
seventh to sixth with one first-place vote and 864 points,
while Southern Methodist, a 16-13 winner over Texas
Christian, dropped from sixth to seventh with 803 points.
Nebraska was eighth with 702 points, followed by UCLA
the Bruins received the remaining first-place ballot
with 662 points and Arkansas, with 607. UCLA, No. 12 last
week, moved into the Top Ten with a 31-27 victory over
Michigan, while Arkansas edged Mississippi 14-12 and
slipped from ninth to 10th.
UCLA's surge pushed Notre Dame out of the Top Ten
despite a 28-14 triumph over Purdue. Behind.the Irish in
the Second Ten are North Carolina, Arizona State, West
Virginia, Texas, Southern California, Miami, Boston Col
lege, Minnesota and Auburn.
Last week, it was North Carolina, UCLA, Ohio State,
Arizona State, West Virginia, Miami, Texas, Southern Cal,
Illinois and Michigan.
Boston College upped its record to 2-1-0 by defeating
Navy 31-0, Minnesota (3-0) trounced Washington State 41-
11 and Auburn ( 3-0) downed Tennessee 24-14.
Meanwhile, Michigan dropped out of the Top Twenty by
blowing a 21-0 lead and losingto UCLA. Ohio State, No. 13
a week ago, disappeared by losing to Stanford 23-20.
It was Minnesota's first appearance in the rankings
since the middle of the 1977 season, while Boston College
had not appeared since early in 1976.
It seemed to be a case of the jitters that held
him back from victory. .
"I don't think Marty Coyne is that much better
than Jeff," Cathrall said, "If (Jeff didn't) make
those unforced errors, he would've been in the
match."
"I was a little too overanxious . . . that kind of
hurt me," Factor said, "I'll beat him next time
we play."
Hopefully these victories will carry over to the
spring season when the Lions will really be
tested.
"I hope we can be a more solid team," Cathrall
said, "If we play up to our potential, we'll be
respectable."
"The reason I say respectable is because we're
playing such a tough schedule."
Coach Walter Bahr gives the reasoning behind the
rule's enactment.
"A lot of schools, basically in track and hockey, were
bringing in men in their late 20s to play," he explained.
"Soccer was guilty of it somewhat and after some of
the schools were guilty of it, (the rules committee)
thought the rules would be more of an equalizer."
"Coach Bahr is trying to get one or two more years of
eligibility for me," Gilmour said. "If I can only get this
year, I want to go all the way."
Gilmour's arrival at Penn State started in Florida
where Duncan Mac Ewan
.a former Penn State
player and a friend of Gilmour's from overseas —asked
Gilmour if he wanted to go back to school and play
soccer. Another former Lion, Dan Canter, who plays
professional soccer in Fort Lauderdale, also told Gil
mour of Penn State soccer's fine tradition.
The easy adjustment for Gilmour has been on the
field. In only two months of practice, he has already
picked up the timing and insticts of his teammates.
"It's coming together," he said. "The first few
games were shaky, but since I've been moved back to
midfield, we've been playing better.
"Billy's getting better all the time," Bahr said. "He's
a good player who gives us 90 minutes of hard work."
"It's been hard (returning to school)," Gilmour said
"I've been beach bumming for the past few years.
Talks scheduled
in NFL dispute
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK (AP) With one
weekend of the National Football
League season lost and a second
on the brink, negotiators for the
owners and the striking players
yesterday scheduled another bar
gaining session.
But a breakthrough in the week
old strike seemed as far away as
ever.
The two sides announced jointly
that talks will resume at 1 p.m.
EDT Thursday in Washington,
which the players consider their
turf because the union headquar
ters is there.
In fact, the site was the only
point of agreement in the six hours
of negotiations Sunday at Hofstra
University in Hempstead, N.Y.
With a chasm between the two
sides on the basic issue a wage
scale vs. the present system ol
individual negotiations it ap
peared almost impossible that
agreement could be reached in
time for next weekend's 14 games
to be played.
Ed Garvey, executive director
of the NFL Players Association,
predicted after the session that the
owners will begin to get serious
next Monday "when they come to
realize that we're serious about a
wage scale."
A second Sunday without NFL
games would extract additional
financial cost. Unofficial esti
mates put the price tag on the first
week of the strike at close to $7O
million.
By striking Sunday, NFL play
ers lost somewhere between $8
million and $9 million in salaries.
The Management Council esti
mated that the 28 teams lost $29
West Virginia playing
at national caliber
By ALAN ROBINSON
AP Sports Writer
PITTSBURGH The unbeaten
West Virginia University football
team is now on a par with the Univer
sity of Pittsburgh and Penn State,
says Pitt Coach Foge Fazio.
But you might have trouble con
vincing Panthers quarterback Dan
Marino of that. After all, Marino has
played less than a quarter of football
against the Mountaineers the last two
seasons.
As a sophomore, an injured Marino
watched on crutches from the side
lines as reserve quarterback Rick
Trocano guided the Panthers to a 42-
14 win over the Mountaineers.
Last season, Marino didn't play a
down and the Panthers didn't com
plete a single pass, yet a Bryan
Thomas-led running attack led Pitt to
a 17-0 victory. Reserve Danny Dan
iels played the entire game at quar
terback for the only time in his career
and failed to complete one of six pass
attempts.
But this season, with both the Pan
thers and the Mountaineers 3.0, Fazio
says Pitt needs Marino when the two
teams meet Saturday in Pittsburgh.
The Daily Collegian
Tuesday, Sept. 28!
million in gate receipts and tele
vision money, though the tele
vision revenue is a point of dispute
the networks are paying their
regular fees for the first two weeks
of the strike, but owners are count
ing it as a loss because they say
they will have to pay it back next
year.
Other losers Sunday were the 14
cities where games weren't
played, an estimated $2 million
each in hotel and restaurant reve
nue; and concessionaires, who put
their losses at $2 million.
Suhd.ay's negotiations were un
like previous ones only in that they
were supposed to be at an "undis
closed site" to facilitate commu
nication without press scrutiny.
First it was disclosed that the
site was "somewhere in the New
York area" the owners' chosen
ground in the home-and-home
New York-Washington shuttle that
has characterized the talks
There was nothing different
about the talks themselves.
Jack Donlan, chief negotiator
for the Management Council,
emerged after six hours to say
that he was "hopeful" and "opti
mistic" that a plan he had pro
posed might lead to a quick
settlement. It would, he said,
guarantee the $1.6 billion the own
ers have offered the players by
creating a pool of unspent money
after five years and distributing it
to the players under a mutually
developed formula.
But Donlan's plan also con
tained a big "if" "if the players
will drop their demand for a wage
scale."
A few minutes later, representa
tives of the Players Association
emerged to say they certainly
would not.
"The Mountaineers are for real.
You can't beat Oklahoma (41-27) and
Maryland (18-17) and not be for
real," Fazio said. "West Virginia is
now on a par with Pitt and Penn
State. They really have things going
down there."
WVU hasn't beaten Pitt since 1975,
when walk-on kicker Bill McKenzie
booted a 38-yard field goal on the last
play to give the Mountaineers a 17-14
win. Pitt has beaten West Virginia
eight of the last nine games since
1973. The Mountaineers haven't won
in Pittsburgh since 1972. •
Pitt and West Virginia will be
matching unbeaten records for the
second season din a row. Both were
unbeaten a year ago in Morgantown
when the Mountaineers lost to Pitt for
the sixth season in a row.
"We're looking forward to playing
them. We've heard a lot about them,"
said Pitt defensive tackle Dave Puz
zoli, who had a 95-yard interception
return for a touchdown against Illi
nois last Saturday.
"All we've been hearing is Hostetl
er, Hostetler, Hostetler," Puzzoli
said, referring to West Virginia quar
terback Jeff Hostetler, a Penn State
transfer.
Corley leaves mark
on PKA karate world
By HAL BOCK
AP Sports Writer
Imagine Don King hustling to
hype a fight promotion, wearing
one of his handsome velvet tuxe
dos, pumping hands, pushing tick
ets, smiling that magnetic smile
and doing his man-about-town act.
Then, when all that preparation
work is done, imagine old electric
hair hopping off• to the dressing
room and changing into his trunks
and then showing up in the ring for
the main event.
That's about what Joe Corley
did a few years ago when he fought
Bill "Superfoot" Wallace for the
Professional Karate Association
middleweight championship in the
Omni at Atlanta. He was doing
double duty at the time, working to
build interest in the infant PKA
and fighting in it as well.
Now Corley, preparing for his
first full contact fight, was smart
enough to know that the unde
feated Wallace, owner of the fast
est left foot in karate three kicks
per second, they say had some
thing of an edge for the title fight.
"I needed an angle," he said. "So I
decided to psych him."
You think Muhammad Ali could
talk up a storm? Well, that routine
was kid stuff compared to Corley's
stream of consciousness. You
know those comparison games
against common opponents that
you used to play with friends to
CFL football
NEW YORK (AP) NBC's tele-
Casts of two Canadian football games
outdrew CBS' replay of last year's
Super Bowl in the nation's three larg
est cities, according to overnight
Nielsen ratings released yesterday.
But the ratings Were far lower than
the NFL normally draws.
Ratings in New York, Chicago and
Los Angelers for CBS, NBC and for
the ABC telecast of the crucial Amer
ican League East baseball game be
tween Baltimore and Milwaukee
ivere all about a third to a half of what
the NBC and CBS drew nationwide
tor NFL games on the average Sun
day last season.
The figures also indicated that a lot
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THEATRES & CASINO •
1600 N. Atherton St. 237-2444
PAC MAN - DEFENDER
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RESUME
SPECIALISTS
• IBM SELECTRICS
• VARIETY OF STYLES
• SPECIAL PAPERS
MATCHING ENVELOPES
238-COPY
Golden Key
National
Honor Society
Pictures will be taken
for the
yearbook All
members
Tues. Sept. 28, 7:40 p.m.
HUB Assembly Room
prove that your local high school
football team was better than
Notre Dame? Well, by the time
Corley was done, Wallace couldn't
be sure 'he had two normal feet,
much less a superfoot. Corley did
such a good job, in fact, that he
even convinced himself.
"I was absolutely certain that I
would win," he said. "There was
no question in my mind. I was the
most confident guy in the world,
and I think I had Wallace con
vinced, too. He was fighting for
survival."
When Corley came to the middle
of the ring for his instructions, he
finally realized he might. have
some small problem with Super
foot. "There were no butterflies,"
he said. "I was so sure I would
win, I was almost unconcerned. I
ignored what I was getting myself
into."
After a couple of more fights,
Corley decided he had taken
enough feet in the face. "I sat
down with a sheet of paper and
drew a line down the middle," he
said. "On one side, I made a list of
reasons to continue fighting. On
the other side, I made a list of
reasons to quit."
There was just one entry on the
continue side and so Corley re
treated to the safer side of the
ring, promoting full contact ka
rate and broadcasting the sport
for ESPN.
a top draw
of sets were turned off on the first
weekend of the National Football
League players strike.
The overnights are quick rating
checks done in New York, Los An
geles and Chicago. The rating consti
tutes the percentage of total sets in a
given area that are tuned to a partic
ular show. The share is that show's
percentage of sets actually turned on.
According to figures released by
NBC, the CFL game between British
Columbia and Toronto, shown from
1:30 p.m. EDT to 4:12 p.m., received
a rating of 4.2 with a 12 share in New
York; a 5.8 rating with an 18 share in
Chicago and a 6.7 rating with an 18
share in Los Angeles.
The Society of
Women Engineers
invites their members
to their
Corporate
Student
Banquet
Oct 4 at Gatsby's 6:30 pm
Tickets available at
303 Hammond Building
Cost $8:00 per student
Deadline Sept. 30
RECYCLE
scoreboard
major league baseball
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eastern Division
90 66 .577
84 71 .542 5 1 / 2
83 72 .535 6 1 / 2
81 74 .523 8 1 / 2
69 87 .442 21
62 93 .400 271/2
St. Louis
PHILLIES
Montreal
PIRATES
Chicago
New York
Western Division
85 70 .548
84 71 .542 1
84 71 .542 1
78 77 .503 7
74 81 .477 11
57 98 .388 28
Los Angeles
Atlanta
San Francisco
San Diego
Houston
Cincinnati
Sunday's Games
New York 6, PHILLIES 4
PIRATES 3, Montreal 0
San Diego 3, Atlanta 2
Chicago 6, St. Louis 1
Houston 4, Cincinnati 0
San Francisco 3, Los Angeles 2
Yesterday's Games
St. Louis at Montreal, (n)
PIRATES at New York, (n)
Chicago at PHILLIES, (n)
Cincinnati at Los Angeles, (n)
Houston at San Diego, (n)
Atlanta at San Francisco, (n)
Today's Games
St. Louis (Forsch 14.9) at Montreal (Rogers 17.8),
PIRATES (Candelaria 13.7) al New York (Lynch 3
6), (n)
Chicago (Bird 9.12) at PHILLIES (Christenson 8
10), (n)
Houston (Knepper 5-13) at San Diego (Lollar 14.9),
Cincinnati (Pastore 8-10) at Los Angeles (Welch
15.10), (n)
Atlanta (Perez 2.4) at San Francisco (Laskey 12
11), (n)
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eastern Division
W L Pct. GB
92 63 .594
90 65 .581 2
85 70 .548 7
78 76 .506 131/2
Milwaukee
Baltimore
76 78 .494 151/2
Cleveland
New York
Toronto
75 80 .484 17
72 83 .465 20
We3tem Division
89 67 .571
85 70 .548 3 1 / 2
82 73 .529 6 1 / 2
75 80 .484 13 1 / 2
66 89 .426 22 1 / 2
62 94 .397 27
58 97 .374 301/2
California
Kansas City
Chicago
Seattle '
Minnesota
Sunday's Games
Cleveland 4, Detroit 3
Boston 5, New York 2
Minnesota 2, Chicago 1
Baltimore 5, Milwaukee 2
Oakland 5, Kansas City 4
Toronto 6, Seattle 2
Texas 7, California 5
Yesterday's Games
Seattle at Chicago, 2, (t-n)
New York at Boston, (n)
Oakland at Texas, (n)
California at Kansas City, (n)
Only games scheduled
MANCHESTER
PROGRAM
Study Mass Communication
at University of Manchester,
England
Information on Penn State's Mass
Communication Study Abroad Program
Tuesday 7pm 258 Willard
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Our drivers carry less than 510 00
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Aw shucks
Penn State split end Gregg Garrity (right) looks on dejectedly as two Nebreaska players celebrate an interception to snuff
out a Lion drive. But Penn State rallied to win the game 27.24 and moved up to third in the polls this week. •
Today's Games
Minnesota (Viola 4-8 and Felton 0.13) at Toronto
(Clancy 14.14 and Gott 4.10), 2, (t-n)
Milwaukee (Medich 11-13) at Boston (Tudor 13-
10), (n)
Baltimore (McGregor 13-12) at Detroit (Petry 15-8),
(n)
New York (Howell 1.2) at Cleveland (Sutcliffe 14
6), (n)
Oakland (Conroy 1.2) at Texas (Mason 1.1), (n)
California (Witt 9-6) at Kansas City (Gura 18-11) (n)
Seattle (Moore 7.12) al Chicago (Lamp 9.8), (n)
college football
EAST
Boston College 31, Navy 0
Penn St. 27, Nebraska 24
Rutgers 10, Temple 7
W. Virginia 43, Richmond 10
SOUTH
Alabama 24, Vanderbilt 21
Auburn 24, Tennessee 14
Clemson 21, W. Carolina 10
Duke 51, Virginia 17
E. Carolina 24, Cent. Michigan 6
Florida 27, Mississippi St. 17
Florida St. 24, S. Mississippi 17
Free extra thick crust!
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on any 16" pizza. (Save
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Expires 10/2182
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North 237-1414
1104 North Atherton
South 234-5655
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.44T,
Georgia 34, S. Carolina 18
Georgia Tech 24, Memphis St. 20
Grambling St. 43, Florida A&M 21
Louisiana SI. 52, Rice 13
Louisville 28, Oklahoma St. 22
Maryland 23, N. Carolina St. 6
Miami, Fla. 25, Michigan St. 22
N. Carolina 62, Army 8
VMI 69, Cent. Florida 0
MIDWEST
Indiana 17, Syracuse 10
lowa SI. 35, Drake 10
Kansas 13, Kentucky 13, tie
Kansas St. 31, Wichita St. 7
Minnesota 41, Washington St. 11
Northwestern 31, N. Illinois 6
Notre Dame 28, Purdue 14
Pittsburgh 20, Illinois 3 .
Stanford 23, Ohio St. 20
UCLA 31, Michigan 27
Wisconsin 36, Toledo 27
SOUTHWEST
Arkansas 14, Mississippi 12
Baylor 24, Texas Tech 23
Houston 48, Lamar 3
Southern Cal 12, Oklahoma 0
Southern Meth. 16, Texas Christian 13
SW Louisiana 31, N. Teias St. 14
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The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Sept. 28, 1982-9
Texas 21, Missouri 0
Texas ABM 38, Louisiana Tech 27
SOUTHWEST
Arkansas 14, Mississippi 12
Arkansas St. 35, S. Illinois 30
Baylor 24, Texas Tech 23
Houston 48, Lamar 3
Southern Cal 12, Oklahoma 0
Southern Meth. 16, Texas Christian 13
SW Louisiana 31, N. Texas St. 14
Tennessee St. 20, Texas Southern 20, tie
Texas 21, Missouri 0
"exas A&M 38, Louisiana Tech 27
W. Texas St. 25, McNeese St. 17
Air Force 39, Brigham Young 38
Arizona St. 15, California 0
Boise St. 22, Pacific U. 15
Colorado St. 28, New Mexico St. 17
Fresno St. 25, Weber St. 9
Hawal , 17, Texas•El Paso 10
Idaho 56, Portland St. 0
lowa 17, Arizona 14 .
Montana 36, N. Arizona 35
Montana St. 17, Nevada• Reno 10
San Diego St. 26, Nev.• Las Vegas 23
San Jose St. 17, Oregon St. 13 '
Utah St. 19, Fullerton St. 0
Washington 37, Oregon 21
Wyoming 24, Colorado 10
Near Vet
l
Ikear
FAR WEST