12—The Daily Collegian Thursday, Sept. 12, 1985 Stickwomen face thorny problem By TODD SHERMAN Collegian Sports Writer Although Coach Gillian Rattray called today’s game with Lock Haven “The War of the Roses,” she said the battle is more like a friendly rivalry. The field hockey team travels to Lock Haven for a 3 p.m. game that reminds Rattray of an old war be tween two adjacent counties in her native England. “The House of Yorkshire and the House of Lancashire had a local war called the ‘war of the roses’,” Rat tray said. “Yorkshire wore a white rose and Lancashire wore a red rose and they had some tough battles between them. Lock Haven is like that because they are so close and we have some good games with them.” Lock Haven iS one of the seven schools on Penn State’s schedule from the NCAA’s Mideast region. The rivalry between the two schools started in 1964 and The Bald Eagles, with a record of 13-6-1 are one of only three schools with a winning record against the Lady Lions. In 1984, Rat tray’s squad walked off the field with a hard-fought 1-0 overtime win and this year the two teams tied in the Lady Lion Invitational preseason tournament. Junior Mary McCarthy remem bered last year’s contest as being “a very tough and physical game." Rattray said that although Lock Haven lost a few key people last year they are still a hard team to beat. “They are a tough opponent,” Rat tray said. “We saw them in pre-sea son and they picked up the slack caused by those lost starters very well. They are a strong team and a hard-hitting team. They have excel (i g'owmn Bad of Stale College TV Supply 238-6021 HCORH 232 S. Allen EXPERIENCED PIZZA MAKER 1 'fit#'**'*' PIZZA Special fl Large Pizza for only l 5 4.50 £ Call 238-3112 < E 418 Clay Lane Free Delivery gj DRIVERS WANTED DRIVERS DRIVERS WANTED Q LU H Make an Investment in your Future with the Penn State Marketing Association First Organizational Meeting SPEAKER: PETER D. BENNETT, professor and chairman of marketing Thursday, September 12 8:00 p.m. HUB Ballroom PSMA Awareness Day Committee Sign-ups Monday, September 16 10 a.m.-2 p.m. HUB FISHBOWL ' Rl3O rnKTS VrM , * e • to keep you y y ||||| collegian OEJMA L 9 • Oil the kail! Penn State’s Heather Ferrell (left) fires a shot on goal In the Lady Lions’ win over Toledo last week at Lady Lion Field. The field hockey team will travel to Lock Haven at 3 p.m. today, to battle the Bald Eagles. lent drives they penetrate upfield very well. Lock Haven has a very, very high standard of field hockey and they are always up for us. We have to play our best to be right in there with them.” Penn State is 2-1 and Lock Haven is 1-0 coming off a 3-1 victory over Toledo. The Lady Lions defeated To ledo 2-0 last week. ■ “We know they have scoring poten tial,” Rattray said. “In the Toledo game three different people scored, so that shows that we cannot concen trate on stopping one person.”' Because of injuries the Lady Lions have had to shuffle personel on the /SSAT-PSAT SAT-ACT-GMT Hgreisahat GRE 810-TOEFL GREPSTOI-PCXr DkT-ICff-MT OUTMBI-2-3 B nGUSXGFMS Hcm-nciemhi SPEEDREJUBG-NC 444 E College Ave. #320 IfiiPflilM 238-1423 BHrilin Write a letter to a friend! f NUMBER ONE ; IN TEST PREPARATION CLASSES FORMING NOW AT Register at Stanley Kaplan for MCAT & DAT review for the Spring Exams. a Exams dates: 4/19/86 EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD. forward line. Senior forward and last The Lady Lions have gone two year's scoring leader Alix Hughes is weeks without a break, including out with a leg pull and is questionable seven shortened games in the pre for today’s game. Sophomore Heath- season tournament, three regular er Farrell, who scored three goals in season games (two in North Caroli the Lady Lion Invitational, is out with na), and practices. Rattray said her a pulled hamstring. McCarthy said, team is tired but ready, however, that the forward line is “We did have a good practice last starting to come together. night and our offense is really moving “We had just started to click on than it has moved so far as a „„„„„„ . . . ... „ unit, despite the fact that we still offense in the tournament, but then jj ave some iniuries ” she said “The we lost two of our forwards,” McCar- . T thy said. “We are just starting to get g r . ls are t d . aad we r need a day off ’ that back with the new people that . b f we ar ? looklng , f , orward 10 an are playing. They are doing a good intense hockey game ' job and every day in practice you can The hockey team’s next game is see improvement.” Sundat at home against Ohio State. Attention Chem E's!!! incoming AIChE activities: Procter 0 Gamble Sept. 11, 8:00 PM Triangle Fraternity General Meeting & Resume Seminar Sept. 12, 6:30 PM, 158 Willard Dow Chemical Co. Presentation Sept. 17 8:00 PM, Triangle Fraternity I ■ < m 39 to According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the need for paralegals is about to double. Now is the time to become a part of this dynamic profession... and there is no finer train ing available than at Philadelphia's acclaimed Institute for Paralegal Training. After just four months of intensive study, we will find in the city of y /our choice. We are so Confident of th<? marketability of our graduates that we offer a unique tuition refund plan. To learn how you can add market value to your college degree, return the coupon or call toll free: 1-800-222-IPLT. We’ll be on campus 11/4 & 11/5 Contact your placement office to arrange for an individual interview or group presentation. Housing (llld Vlail this coupon to: RPSuj 'Financial Aid J Institute for Paralegal Training available ■ 1926 Arch Street avauuuit | Philadelphia, PA 19103 I THE INSTITUTE Please send a copy of vour catalogue. I FOR PARALEGAL j Kami: | TRMNING i Adda'S! Approved by the j c,l> American Bar . Colk ' Be Association Phonc " l»f ulSfJd > New York in frenzy over Yankees, Mets NEW YORK (AP) The Big everything, this is a first. Apple, which has seen just about “This is the first time I can everything baseball has to offer, is remember that two New York offering something new to the teams have battled for a pennant grand old game a quadruple (in both leagues) on the same day serving of pennant contenders. in the city,” said baseball histori- Two pennant hopefuls are play- an Joe Reichler, who covered ing two other pennant hopefuls. baseball in New York when the Today, the New York Mets play city had three major league tea visiting St. Louis Cardinals. To- ms. night, the New York Yankees play If Brooklyn Dodgers and the visiting Toronto Blue Jays. n cw York Giants were in a pen- Going into last night’s play, the nan t racei it was against each Mets led the Cardinals by one other in the National League. And, game in the National League East, as ft e j c hler pointed out, “In the the Yankees trailed Toronto by 1 >503 ;t never happened because games in the American League there was a balanced schedule and East. the Giants and Dodgers were al- Visions of the first World Series wa y S home at the same time when between two New York teams the Yankees were on the road.” since 1956 a Subway Series have New Yorkers in a near-fren- The 1920 s and 1930 s were the era Z y_ of the Subway Series, when the The Mets and Yankees have Giants and Yankees played in the never simultaneously battled for World Series. In the ’4os and 'sos it their division leads. The closest was the Dodgers and Yankees they ever came was in 1970, the except for 1951, when Bobby "''year after the Mets had won the Thomson’s home run for the Gi- World Series and the Yankees had ants beat the Dodgers in a Nation finished in the second division for al League playoff, the fifth year in a row. In that 1970 j n the Yankees and Dodg season, the Mets came in third, six ers p] a yed and Don Larsen pitched games behind Pittsburgh; the a perfect game for the Yankees, Yanks came in second but a whopping 15 games back of Balti more. Rarely have they been home on time the Dodgers played them, it the same day and never have was 1963. But by then the Giants they managed a trifecta like this and Dodgers had left New York, both home, both contending and Ebbets Field was a housing pro both playing contenders. For New ject and the Polo Grounds housed York, which has seen just about the laughable Mets. « « I PREMED STUDENTS 1 g ——« I Verne M. Willaman 1 8 8 | College of Science Alumni Fellow . | | and I g President of | | Ortho Pharmaceutical Division 8 | of Johnson and Johnson | | will speak on 8 1 ADVANCES IN HEALTH CARE jf I Thursday, September 12, 1 8 8:30 PM, 101 Althouse § 8 * « ass £C£ J3s*«ss3 sees ass £«*« Cloud Nine The Pavilion Theatre October 4,5, 8-12, 15-19 Hamlet The Playhouse November 15, 16, 19-23 The Adding Machine The Playhouse February 14, 15, 18-22 Another Part of the Forest The Pavilion Theatre April 11, 12, 15-19, 22-26 The next time the Giants played the Yanks, it was 1962. The next Order today before prices go up and SAVE 20%! ‘ Call the Subscriber Hotline (814) 865-1884! Parker testifies By ALAN ROBINSON AP Sports Writer PITTSBURGH Dave Parker said yesterday that the man who was his primary source for cocaine became so well known among the Pittsburgh Pirates and other major league players that “he was selling (drugs) directly and frequently in front” of Three Rivers Stadium after games. The Cincinnati Reds outfielder said Shelby Greer, a former Pittsburgh resident, gained “unhassled” ac cess to the Pirates locker room because of their friendship and sometimes traveled with the team on road trips at Parker’s request. Parker said he some times arranged Greer’s travel with the Pirates’ travel ing secretary. “I introduced him (Greer) to the whole team, actual ly,” Parker said. “For a while he came into the clubhouse unhassled until they changed the rules.” Parker also told the FBI that Greer visited a Pitts burgh hotel room in 1981 and furnished cocaine to Parker, former Pirates outfielder Lee Lacy and to Derrel Thomas, Steve Howe and Dusty Baker, then of the Los Angeles Dodgers, according to documents entered as evidence. Greer, 29, now of Philadelphia, was indicted by a federal grand jury in May on 10 counts he distributed cocaine in Pittsburgh. His case has yet to come to trial. In the early stages of their relationship, Parker said Greer “was introduced to me as being in the oil and gas business, in drilling. Later we became pretty good friends and I learned that wasn’t exactly what he did." “Shelby Greer was one of my sources,” Parker said. “Was he your primary source?" asked defense counsel Adam 0. Renfroe Jr. “You could say that,” Parker replied. Parker, testifying in the U.S. District Court trial of another man accused of dealing drugs to major league players, said he began snorting cocaine during the Pirates’ 1979 world championship season. Parker said that the defendant, Curtis Strong, 38, of Philadelphia, also became so well known among his former teammates that he was invited to the Pirates’ 1981 New Year’s Eve party at the home of former team captain Bill Madlock. “Curtis was pretty well known to have cocaine. Most of the Pittsburgh Pirates know him. He was friends in drug trial with a lot of guys in baseball,” Parker said. He said he didn't know who invited Strong to the party, although Parker, Parker’s brother, James, and Madlock all knew the Philadelphia caterer. In his first courtroom admission of drug use, Parker said that he bought cocaine from Strong and used it with him in Pittsburgh and in Philadelphia. Parker testified that Strong also sold the drug to former Pirates teammates Lee Lacy, Dale Berra, John Milner Scurry. Thetwo-time National League batting champion said he stopped using cocaine after four years because it was hurting his performance and interfering with his personal life and because friends who used it “were out of control.” “My game was more important to me than cocaine,” Parker said. He said he first met Strong in a Pittsburgh hotel room in 1980 with Baker and Thomas also present. He did not say if the four men used cocaine then. Renfroe, Strong’s attorney, spent considerable time peppering Parker with questions about his relationship with Greer. Renfroe tried to discredit Parker’s testimony by pointing out that the outfielder first told a federal grand jury that Strong was in the Pittsburgh hotel room with Thomas and Baker, then told the FBI that it was Greer who was in the room. Parker explained that because the Dodgers and other National League teams play in other league cities at least twice a year, he probably was referring to two different hotel meetings in two different sea sons. Several times, Parker became noticeably agitated at the confrontational nature of Renfroe’s questioning. Parker also testified that Strong first sold him cocaine in Pittsburgh in 1981 in the presence of Califor nia Angels pitcher A 1 Holland, then with the San Francisco Giants. Holland has been identified as a friend of Strong and has been linked by others to cocaine use. It was Holland who reportedly convinced the Phillies this season to hire Strong as their clubhouse caterer. Strong was. asked to quit after five games by the Phillies management. Parker was the sixth major leaguer to implicate Strong. Nicklaus ready for Milwaukee By JEFF MAYERS AP Sports Writer MILWAUKEE The young turks may be taking over the PGA Tour, but Jack Nicklaus still is the draw. Ask the organizers of the Greater Milwaukee Open, who are overjoyed to have Nicklaus in a tournament field minus Ryder Cup competitors, including defending GMO champion Mark O’Meara and local favorite and U.S. Open champion Andy North. “It’s a real shot in the arm” and should boost gate receipts, said GMO spokesman John Aboya. The 18th annual GMO was sched uled to begin today at Tuckaway Country Club in nearby Franklin. The $300,000 four-day golf event will go 72 holes on the par 36-36, 7,010-yard layout, a hilly course with big greens. Notable players in the announced field were: George Burns, coming off a win last week in the Bank of Boston Classic; Roger Maltbie, who’s among the top 10 moneywinners on the tour; two-time 1985 tour winner Joey Sinde lar; and tour regular Andy Bean. Jack Nicklaus 11, the 23-year-old son of the “Golden Bear,” also will compete in the PGA Tour stop, a father-son event organizers say never has occurred. “If I’m playing ahead of him, I’ll probably be looking over my shoulder to see how he’s doing,” the elder Nicklaus said of his sometime caddy. “It won’t be any problem.” “I’m not approaching it any differ ently than any other tournament,” the younger Nicklaus said. But he admitted he was excited, both be cause he was playing in the same tournament as his father for the first time and because it was his second Professional Golfers’ Association Tour event. Young Nicklaus, an amateur, made DAILY SPECIALS H —PONDEROSA- Welcome Back Six Pack At Ponderosa, a six-pack of savings goes a long way. Come with your roommates, dorm floor, fraternity or sorority. One coupon covers them all. .S*Am Parlu S' Any Party Size! S v X Any Party Size! / Chopped Steak \ /l!3 lb. Boss’s Burger " v / FREE Beverage with \ / Value Meals \ / \d French Fries - - purchase of the World s \ / 2for $ 6.99 I | Includes the World's Biggest. Best Salad Butlet I Hot Spot- (ali-you-can-eat). baked potato. Car \ used with other discounts. Tax not met. / % participating steakhouses. p Valid until 1026 SS. IssPOKDERDSff V** Any Party Size! / Chopped Steak 7 Value Meals f 2 for 5 6.99 I Includes the World's Biggest. Best Salad Butlet- wit \ HotSpot'* (aii*you*can-eatl. Baked potato Cannot t 1 used with other discounts Tax not met At - A participating steakhouses £« Valid unU!IO?6BS. Ik 'DNDERQ; 11985 Ponderosa. Inc. Jackie Nlcklaus, son of golfing great Jack Nlcklaua, toes off during a tournament earlier this year In Michigan. The younger Nlcklaus will be competing against his father for the first time this weekend at the Greater Milwaukee Open In Wisconsin. his first appearance this summer in The 45-year-old Nicklaus played in the Quad Cities Open but missed the the tournament as an amateur in 1961 cut. when it was played at North Hills This also is the first year the elder Country Club. He finished three Nicklaus has competed at the Great- strokes behind winner Bruce Cramp er Milwaukee Open as a professional, ton. Penn State Sub Shuns THIRSTY THURSDAY 1 free 32 oz. Drink with an 18" Sub Offer expires 9/12/85 Offer good ShSSS with this ad. rjClittfrilH 1630 S. Atherton St. • Coca-Cola.” “Coke.” and the dynamic nbbon device are registered trademarks of The Coca-Cola Company. Chopped Steak is U.S.D.A. inspected 100% chopped beef 'PONDEBOSAr"^ The Daily Collegian Thursday, Sept. 12,1985 —13 AP LaMiphoto \ I r I
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers