16—The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Feb. 8, 1984 .. St. J oe's upsets. DePaul, 58- 4 5 , Breakers talks with Dupree' OK'd By RALPH BERNSTEIN off 13 unanswered points to pull away nine points. In the second half, De- • AP Sports Writer to a 40-23 lead. Paul made but seven field goals on 33 By AUSTIN WILSON Jim Byrne, a USFL spokesman, said the league, is AP Sports Writer DePaul, 17-1, went 6:18 without a attempts. • • still watching court cases in Los Angeles and Chicago PHILADELPHIA Tony Costner field goal during the Hawks' surge, St. Joseph's, which upset an unde- ' where there are challenges to . USFL_ and NFL rules NEW ORLEANS 2 -- The New Orleans Breakers of the , against signing prospects with college eligibility re- .., scored 18 points and Bob Lojewski 13 shooting 0-7 from the field. feated DePaul in National Collegiate United States Football League have received league maining. In the Los Angeles case, a judge has issued a as St. Joseph's, with the help of 13 The closest the Blue Demons got Athletic Association tournament play permission to talk to two-time college dropout Marcus • preliminary ruling holding .that the rules violate anti consecutive points early in the second after that was 46-37 with 3:29 remain- during the 1980-81 season, earned its Dupree, the team disclosed yesterday. half, stunned second 7 ranked and pre- ing in the game. 15th victory against four • losses and • • trust laws. But Randy Vataha, the Breakers' president, said the , viously unbeaten DePaul 58-45 last St. Joseph's then boosted its lead to 10th in the last 11 games. It was the USFL said Dupree must initiate contact and there was Byrne said that if the courts eventually hold that the night in a college basketball game. 50-37 and never led by less than 11 for fifth straight victory for the Hawks. DePaul, which trailed 27-21 at half- the remainder of the game. DePaul led early, 10-2, as St. Jo- no immediate word from Dupree or his advisers on pro rules against. signing prospects are invalid, the whether he was interested. • USFL will have to consider whether it wants to appeal. time, scored the first basket of the Kenny Patterson and Tyrone Cor- seph's had trouble penetrating the • Dupree, a running back with outstanding pro poten- That would put the league in the position of asking the second half. But St. Joseph's then ran bin were high for DePaul, each with Blue Demons' man-to-man defense. tial, dropped out of Southern Mississippi last week, court to uphold a 'rule that forbids it to sign Dupree, a three months after he left the University of Oklahoma. player with enough name value to be a potential box- Hawks cruise past Nets, 109-102 •He cited a need to make money to support his family and also said . he was frustrated by an National Colle- . office ' draw. "That' is certainly one, of our options," Byrne agreed. ' giate Athletic Association ruling that would not allowDupree's options, on the other hand, have been ATLANTA (AP) Dominique Wilkins scored 24 points Johnson added 20. 'Sampson scored 21 for Houston and him to play football at Southern Mississippi until the limited. and Glenn Rivers added 20 as the Atlanta Hawks broke Leavell added 18. fall of 1985. • - • - • After dropping out of Southern Mississippi, he said he open a close game late in the third quarter and defeated It was 1,270 th NBA game for the Rockets' Elvin Hayes, The USFL has banned its teams from signing under- had not ruled out playing for some small non-schol- the New Jersey Nets 109-102 in a NBA game last night. tying him with ex-Boston star John Havlicek for most graduates since last year, when the New Jersey Gener- • arship college where he'd be eligible next year. And he Atlanta took the lead for good 70-68 on a Johnny Davis games played in league history. als signed Herschel Walker after 'his junior year at could probably be eligible for ' the . 1985 season at • jump shot with three minutes left in the third period. The ' ' Georgia and set off an outcry among college coaches. Southern Mississippi if he should change his mind, re- Hawks led 78-72 at the end of the quarter. • lO6 And the NFL said it would abide by its rules, under enroll in time and get his grades up to par. Lakers • The Hawks took a 91-79 lead five minutes into the fourth which Dupree would not be eligible for the draft until However, Jamie McCloskey of the National Colle quarter, before the Nets scored six straignt points to cut Pacers 105 1987. giate Athletic Association's enforcement division, said . that lead to 91-85 with 5:30 left to play. But then Atlanta Vataha said yesterday that the USFL had set down Dupree runs the risk of eliininating that possibility by INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Kareem Abdul-Jabbar scored ' overstepping NCAA guidelines during any discussions went on to build a 107-94 margin, ' outscoring the Nets 16-9. strict guidelines for any approach to Dupree • by the Albert Kingadded 18, including 14 in the fourth quarter, 33 points last night, including 12 in the fourth quarter and Breakers. New Orleans got permission to talk to with professional teams. e winninghook and he scored 12 of New Jersey's last 14 points. BuckDupree from New Jersey, which has his USFL rights. the hk shot with 30 seconds remaining, lifting McCloskey said, for example, that Dupree could loSe , Williams and Darryl Dawkins each had 17. ,• • the Los Angeles Lakers to a 106-105 NBA victory over the "We sit down and we say, 'Look, where are you? Do his eligibility if he let a professional team pay his Indiana Pacers. expenses to and from a meeting. "If he did it at his own you want to play in the USFL? What; ere the parame- • Jabbar, devastating Indiana with his unstoppable hook ' shot, got 17 of his points after the Pacers took a 15-point ters? Do you want to play in New Orleani?'" Vataha expense, we're not concerned," he said. Bullets 95 , said, adding that he would not talk'contractterms, contractlerms, —at Rockets 92 . . . lead midway through the third period. least for a while. Or, if the team should make an offer.and Dupree or A 19-7 spurt by the Lakers helped them close Indiana's Fairley should . make a counter-offer, that could be , LANDOVER, Md. (AP) Jeff Ruland scored 25 points lead to seven points, 84-77, going into the fourth quarter. A ' Vataha said he had not talked with Dupree or • considered a negotiating session that would make him ' and pulled down a career -high 24 rebounds to lead the pair . of free throws by James Worthy gave Los Angeles a Kenneth Fairley of Hattiesburg, Miss., who, has been ineligible for any further college football, McClOSkey Washington Bullets to a 95-92 NBA victory over the 90-89 lead with 7:47 remaining, and the Lakers opened a acting as a spokesman for Dupree. said. . . . . Houston Rockets last night. 104-99 advantage on another hook by Jabbar five minutes Fairley was not available yesterday at any one of • • . ' After Houston's Ralph Sampson had given Houston a 92- later. five telephone numbers for his home and businesses in A player is ineligible if he employs an agent, McClos- . 89 lead on a dunk with 1:45 to play, the Bullets' Ricky • Hattiesburg, and Dupree's grandparents in Philadel- key said. 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II exch. arts How well ',your E.T. eit RON SKLAR Collegian Staff Writer •"Guess What's Coming To Dinner: The Extraterrestrial Etiquette Guide," Scott Fivelson, Bantam Books, $3.95 -E.T. may have gone home, but extraterrestrials are still very much with us. Just check any video arcade or the front page of the "National Enquirer." In this age of the novelty book, where any national obsession. from V,alley Girls to Preppies is fair game, humorist Scott Fivelson has jumped on the bandwagon. "Guess What's doming To Dinner: The Extraterres trial Etiquette Guide" is here. The only problem is, now that it's•here, what do we do with it? This humor book is definitely gift giving material for a pre 7 pubescent niece or nephew, but college-age earthlings may find this etiquette guide in bad taste: a dry, bland taste. do you know etiquette? The do's and-don't's instruct us on how to greet the next E.T. from the moment he/she/it first arrives on Earth. "If an extraterrestrial does not speak English, play charades," Fivelson tells. us: Also, we are in structed never to tell an alien he's looking blue. With the' current glut of novelty books, there's bound to be a few clunkers. Fivelson puts our minds to rest, literally. Girls, if your alien boyfriend wants to go all the way, that's called a real "close encounter." And always remember that an alien's twenty-fifth wedding anniversary gift is uranium, not silver. Funny stuff. With the current glut of. novelty books, there's bound to be a few clunkers. People of Earth, if you are expect ing an alien to land on your front lawn, indulge in some Reeses Pieces instead of this book. 'Angel' makes hooking look too nice to be true •:, l'' By RON SKLAR Collegian Staff Writer Meet Molly Stewart. She's an honors student. She wears pigtails. She's a teacher's pet and an all-around good kid. She even eats yogurt for lunch. After school, with a few careful brushes of rouge and the tightest short-shorts she can wiggle herself into, Molly struts down ,to Hollywood Boulevard and turns tricks. Just call her Angel of the evening. "Angel" is a new film about the ever-popular subject, of teenage prostitution. Here are all the hookers with the hearts of gold that you've ever seen in a Hollywood movie, along with the most motley crew a big city could ever turn out. You will marvel at the scum of the earth that parades across this film, especially because they are all portrayed as lovable. We have prostitutes, bag ladies, dumb jocks, bookish nerds, transexuals, lesbi ans, hardened cops (all with hearts of gold) and one lunatic murderer who disguises himself as a Hare Krishna (sorry, no heart of gold). What's wrong here is that these people are not portrayed as people at all. Instead, they are just The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Feb. 8, 1984 caricatures, cartoons that say exactly what their stereotyped images expect them to say. Dick Shawn plays a transexual who is a mother-father-friend to our poor little Angel. He has funny lines and he walks around in dresses and heels, and that's it. Angel, played by newcomer Donna Wilkes, is that typical innocent who had to turn to the streets to support herself. She looks good in red, and she "don't take no crap" from her johns, and that's it. Did I mention that she had a heart of gold? . „Unfortunately, "Angel" is nothing more than a dirtied-up version of a TV action series like "T.J. Hooker" (no pun intended). If you like lots of knifing and shooting and bloodied, screaming chicks, then "Angel" is right up your dark alley. Otherwise the story missed its chance to be insightful and important. Had Angel/Molly's feelings and intentions been ex plored, "Angel" would have really been something to see. All we ever find out is that Angel had been abandoned as a child and had to turn to the streets. The rest is all bang-bang, slash-slash. Will the big bad hooker-killer kill Angel too? If you want to part with four dollars, you'll find out.
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