[4—The Daily Collegian Friday. Oct. 4, 1985 Lady linksters set for Yale Invite By KELLY LANKAU Collegian Sports Writer When the women’s golf team travels to New Haven, Conn., for the Yale Invitational this weekend, it will be seeking revenge on the 'team that beat it by less than 10 strokes in the ECAC Open last weekend in Basye, Va. Head Coach Mary Kennedy said her team will be better prepared for this tournament, however, be cause many of the 13 teams in volved in the event competed in last week’s tournament. Penn State finished second to Longwood College last week but the two teams will face each other again in the 36-hole tournament on Saturday and Sunday. “We have a good opportunity to win here,” Kennedy said. “We’ll be facing some of the same competi tion as last week so we should do well.” “We have a chance because we beat Longwood last week on the second day (of play),” freshman Linksters drop from tourney New England this time of year is tions. Instead, the Lions will get re beautiful. With the leaves turning and ady for the Atlantic the maple syrup being harvested, it Championships. reminds one of a Norman Rockwell Head Coach Mary Kennedy said the painting or the back of October’s team will participate in a 52-round Reader’s Digest. So anyone would qualifying match this weekend, right iump at the chance to visit the area, here at Penn State, right? Wrong. Lions Dave Lreese > Terry Hertzog, The men’s golf team, scheduled to and John Kingora, who were the top play in Amherst, Mass., at the Toski three finishers in the teams last Intercollegiate Golf Tournament this tournament, are exempt fromi the weekend, has cancelled its reserva- qualifying rounds. MarK r 17 Advertisement fP^S mi;n ,vnvi:.\ fcV\sinn" BenefilingHTie Howard J. Barnharf ( Memorial Fund, of Hie American Cancer Society WHEN: (IT. M NFD : 2S7-5118 iih;ii \i)Vi:mi hi Kirsten Stone said. “We have a pretty good shot to win if we go in there and play well.” Stone, juniors Lisa Dine, Erin Borowicz and Sue Highduchcck and sophmores Susan Dutilly and Valerie Krick will all compete in the tournament. Only Dine and Dutilly have played at Yale before. Kennedy said the Friday prac tice round will be very important to the team’s performance. “The key to Yale is to have a good practice round,” Kennedy said. “They’ll have to learn how the greens are rolling. It’s a very strategic course, a shotmaker’s course.” Dine said Yale has the toughest course she has played. Because of the number of blind shots, the play ers have to know where they’re hitting the ball, she added. The large greens can be a problem for those unfamiliar with the course, Dine said. “If we can get the feel of the greens, things will fall into place,” she said. ihiiuwv.il ium:s SURVIVAL <; 11l I |/l , i|JL , \j I® ' L i Sign HUB Ups Basement Sept. 30 Oct. 4 for information and reservations: P.O. Box 10068 State College, PA 16805-0068 “Friday practice rounds give you a feel for the course," Stone said. “You learn what kind of clubs to use and you get adjusted.” Stone said she worked on her short game in preparation for this tournament and she feels more confident with her putting and chipping. Senior Kiki Tamin played at Yale last year but will not be competing this weekend because of academic committments, Kennedy said. “It wasn’t that she didn't qualify, but she will forgo this tourna ment,” Kennedy said. “It would have been good to have her, but academics come first and she wants to be able to play in the next three tournaments.” Dine said the team feels confi dent with the players that will be at Yale this year because everyone has been hitting well in practice this week. "It’s good to have a choice of who goes and still have confidence,” Dine said. KKf KKT KKf KKr KKr KKf KK T KKf KKr KKf 5*5 S The Sisters of Kappa Kappa Gamma KKr KKr KKr KKr KKr KKr KKr KKr KKr KKr All You Care To Eat! ★ Scrambled Eggs ★ Sausage ★ Ham ★Bacon ★Home Fries ★ Corned Beef Hash ★Hash Browns ★ Creamed Chipped Beef ★Danish ★ Sticky Buns ★Fresh Fruits ★ Juices & Beverage MAQ All this for 0n1y... Westerly Parkway Plaza State College Netmen prepared to battle in Va. By MIKE HOOVER Collegian Sports Writer As the men’s tennis team travels to Harrisonburg, Va., this weekend, the scenario remains the same fierce opposition among old collegiate ri vals West Virginia and Virginia Com monwealth will be joining host James Madison as the Lions strive to put away all three troublesome compet itors.. , . "We can expect some real good tight matches,” Head Coach Holmes Cathrall said. “The team will have no easy time but this is the type of competition I like to get into. It gives us a chance to test the team.” After fighting a nip-and-tuck strug gle with the Mountaineers at the Navy Invitational, the squad will once again prepare to engage in bat tle. .... The Penn State-West Virginia ri valry can be characterized by two teams with similiar talents meeting to see who can develope the best playing strategy and emerge the vic tor on a given day. proudly announce their' newest initiate Betsy Sills The Survival Game: A New Grown-Up Way To Play tsy^s.'asß^SßSsst*»■ or cess i«. «** o' —-> S^bouVlTyafd^a, identifying colored armband of the other side pauses to rethink hts a,rate®, careful aim, and %° j”“ s SSTSi'iSSfiStolS 1!!? ffILTKS'sKS Xs foES Sffihag. .Ml. tryingto foil the opposition's eflorts to do the sante. Field ledges nron.to, splattered players and enforce the ironclad rule of wearing fl 3iced to the Game is to participate in the AXE Survival Game, sponsored by MpSgS»he d^ basement; for* more the fraternity' at b S wlf fy' it ScreatedbTa’bunchoTLnds to settle a long-running argument: Would survival! • • “ * eamB '- rm "°" dori "° abou ' mv abl% “ ,ead ,or SSSSSSSsr^M in my teenaged days. cturiont We’ll see how different, as I report on my high adventure in J h ® Su f vi '' a ’ So, I’m not too different from the average Joe or Jane S tu “ a ™- ... b ■ h source a veritable textbook on how to win the Game Game, which I will suit up for sometime soon I w ifprobLwy be a list of What Not To Do. Anyway, look for them in ;“pe“TwirsEr^^^ “West Virginia always gives us Weis Market Plaza E. Bishop St. Bellefonte Penn State this season in invitational play. . , , Penn State is drilling particularly hard at practice this week after the dismal performance by the doubles squad at the invitational last week end. The Lions are also trying to better prepare for the heat of the South. “I feel once the team pulls together we can do it,” No. 2 singles player Lee Sponaugle said. Lion player Bill Dollard is coming into his own lately on the team. Dol t rouble "No 5 singles player Adam lard played well as a last minute Stag slid -iLy Sre elwaye e automate ter | Verebey hat weekend tough match.. But the team is psyched Hus weekeni l,D< ellard «d» assist tte after this weekend’s performance, squad at the No. 3 doubles spot wun U!a nrp PPddV ** SCOtt GrCDC. , James Madison and Virginia Com- “I have been playing 8 ® e monwealth are two teams that could Dollard said, is easy to pi y pose complications for the Lions as doubles with. He s more experienced well Last season, the squad lost a and keeps me calm. . , see-saw 5-4 battle to each school. This weekend, freshman standout “Team for team we are playing a Darby Meadowcroft , f rarv affasssy'- ““ Wesfvirginia has stronger top who stood in the way of a Division B seeded singles players than the Lions Championship at Annapolis. Mead and a balanced*^doubles team as was owcroft lost a three-set heartbreaker evident in their two meetings with to Fry last weekend. ‘The team will have no easy time but this is the type of competition I like to get into.’ Holmes Cathrall, head coach ST. PAUL’S UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 250 East College Avenue Sunday Worship - 9:15 & i0:45 a.m. Young Adults Class - 10:30 a.m. Sunday, October 6, i WORLD COMMUNION SUNDAY A FRESH ROLL EVERY TIME. We Bake Our Own Rolls For Lunch, For Dinner, And For A Late Night Snack. 3 Times A Day, 7 Days A Week! | "free j ! SS2! • NOT VAUDwItI-J ANY OTHER COUPON ON J j y °B" mibba’s Sub J I free Ufa iMM* ! j fries , I or • NCTT VALIDWITH/VNY OTHER COUPON ON J | 18" Bubba’s Sub . 'applicable sales tax | ca 1 1237-7314 a FREE ° pen: 11 a, ™‘ for Lunch JdJ min. DELIVERY fr, 2 -S. 1 By Tom Flynne Advertisement Lady spikers try to control own destiny By CHRISTINE BORN Collegian Sports Writer If the womens’s volleyball team learned a lesson from the last two tournaments, it’s that it has to be responsible for its own success. After losses to Rhode Island and Illinois State, Head Coach Russ Rose said Penn State needs to control its own game, rather than worry about the other team’s. The Lady Lions lost games to both teams when they fell flat and lost control after building early leads “We have the ability to control our own destiny,” Rose said, "and if we do that and play well, we can win.” In preparing for this weekend's home matchs against Atlantic 10 foe George Washington and cross-state rival Pittsburgh, Penn State has been working on control in the form of mental toughness. “They need to improve their men tal attitude as an entire group,” Rose said. The teamwork scenerio also works in a more concrete way. The Lady Lions must continue to communicate among themselves if they want to win. “Even when someone gets down, they have to keep that communica tion going at all times,” Assistant Coach Lori Barberich said. “They have to learn to play as a team and not as individuals.” Penn State is taking ah 11-2 record into the weekend with a positive atti tude that it can beat both teams. The George Washington match is a con Johnson, others deny po By JOHN MOSSMAN AP Sports Writer DENVER Former Dallas Cowboys wide re ceiver Butch Johnson and three of his ex-team mates have denied any involvement in an alleged scheme to shave points in exchange for cocaine, as outlined in an FBI agent’s memo. Our Type is Your Type Experience the latest in "high tech" computerized typesetting with COMMTYPE Commercial Printing's own integrated system. We will keyboard from your manuscript, or process TELECOMMUNICATED copy transmitted by telephone from your word processor and modem ... and turned around to you in just hours not days. Choose from 100 authentic Mergenthaler "Superfont" type faces directly on-line in our system. Be assured of quality repros, produced by the most experienced typesetting staff in Central Pennsylvania. Pasteup and other graphic art and design services are also available coMivmnpE ference game and Rose puts more importance on that game than Satur day’s match with Pitt. The Lady Colonels bring a 9-5 record to Rec Hall. “Beating conference teams is our ticket to the national championships,” Rose said “and I’m more concerned about our streak of six consecutive nationals than I am of beating Pitt.” The Lady Lions are also playing at home for the first time in two weeks, after playing seven matches in two tournaments on the road. “We play well at home,” senior Marcia Leap said, “and its always nice to play before a home crowd.” Penn State has done well at home matches this year. The Lady Lions have compiled a 6-0 record on the floors of Rec Hall and have only lost one game here, to Louisiana State University, while winning 18 games. Both match losses have come from road trips, where Penn State has lost eight out of 17 games. To continue their consistent record, the Lady Lions have also been work ing on some fundamental skills. Team captain Lisa Chidester said Penn State needed improvement on its serving game after the past two tournaments and that was the prima ry focus of practice all week. “We’ve been working on serving to different areas of the court,” she said, “and we need to concentrate on serving this weekend if we want to win. We have to learn to serve tough all the time and not give the other team so many easy serves to score on.” Johnson said yesterday he had “never come close to doing anything like that.” A Miami newspaper reported Wednesday that the FBI and the NFL were investigating three year-old allegations that five current or former Dallas players fixed games in return for cocaine. The players were identified by a Dallas newspaper found only at: Penn State’s Lisa Leap (9) attempts to spike the ball past two Louisianna State defenders during a game earlier this season at Rec Hall. Even though the Pitt game is not a conference game, it will still generate the excitement that always goes along with Penn State-Pitt athletic events. The Lady Panthers are 16-3 on the season and the Penn State-Pitt matchup always seems to be close regardless of the two team’s records. While most team members think of beating Pitt for in-state bragging nt shaving accusations ARTISTS SERIES MC/VISA CALL TICKET INFORMATION: PSU Student $6, 4 nr*r\ r\nrt? Nonstudent SB, 6 Tickets available at Eisenhower 863-0250 Auditorium box office weekdays, 9-4. Center for the Performing ArtsfThe Pennsylvania State University cOMING E V E N T S STEPHEN HOUGH • OCT. 17 Stephen Hough Bpm Schwab ON YOUR TOES* OCT. 20 On Your Toes 3 & Bpm Eisenhower WESTMINSTER CHOIR* OCT. 24 Westminster Cathedral Choir Bpm Eisenhower rights, one Lady Lion has a more personal feeling toward the match. Judy McDonough’s step-sister plays for Pitt and McDonough is looking forward to this weekend. “She’s five days older than me,” the back row specialist said. “But when we get out there on the court, I forget she’s my sister and just play against the team.” as Johnson, Danny White, Tony Hill, Tony Dorsett and Ron Springs The allegations surfaced in a report by former FBI agent Daniel Mitrione, but they were ignored by the FBI because officials felt the information was too vague. Mitrione has since pleaded guilty in Miami to federal charges of bribery, conspiracy and possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. ! IT i I ONLY 1 : TAKES 1 I 5 1 | MINUTES 1 I Seniors- j | have i j your I I picture ! } taken by I | La Vie j j ’B6. j ! Don’t be j i left out } j of your I j yearbook! \ j DEADLINE j j for all j j Colleges is j | October 11 j • Lo Vic'B6-focusing on you • The Daily Collegian Friday, Oct. 4, 1985—15
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