14 —The Daily Collegian Friday, Dee. 5,198 G HAZE Continued Irom Page 1 activities at that university. Despite an official ban, such practices often occur on that campus, the Newsweek article said. Another hazing scandal surfaced in February, when a fraternity pledge was locked in a room and pelted with raw eggs, 800 dozen of them, for 72 hours straight, according to the Newsweek article. During the 1960 s and 19705, when civil rights and the Vietnam War were major preoccupations on cam pus, hazing largely subsided because of a decline in fraternity mem bership. A fraternity at Syracuse University was suspended for 18 months after the pledges were doused with oven cleaner. At Texas A&M, three students ad mitted they forced freshman Bruce Goodrich to take ,part in hours of calisthenics during a cadet-style hazing that caused his death from heat exhaustion. Yet, after having spoken at 300 universities nationwide during the past seven years, .including Penn State three years ago, and at 35 national fraternity conferences, Ste vens said "greeks care about hazing, but, just a few instances bring a blemish to the entire fraternity world." University Interfraternity Council President Pat Conway said the hazing cases brought out in the media are isolated incidents and are' not representative of the hazing prac tices at all fraternities. Though a few cases of hazing do exist at the University, hazing is not a problem, Conway said. Donald Suit, director of the Office of Conduct Standards, said his office has reviewed two or three cases in volving hazing practices during the past 15 years. He added that University students are reluctant to report such prac tices. Until recently, Stevens said, her efforts to publicize hazing casualities have forced university officials to realize that “these rituals are more than a case of ‘boyS will be boys.’ ” “During the past seven years, with the great response I have been get ting from people, I think it looks very encouraging, ” Stevens said. “And without a (hazing) law on the books an entire fraternity could not be charged.” No legislation can be a powerful deterrent, Stevens said, but an anti hazing law does make those account able for their actions. ' Stevens said she has reviewed sta tistics indicating that 98 percent of the hazing resulting in death in recent years involved the use of alcohol. In 1983, at the University of Maryland, Gate and Key, a honorary society of fraternity leaders, was banned from campus because of a hazing incident that caused internal bleeding in a new member. The fraternity members were charged with pressuring the new member to drink a pitcher of beer, causing him to vomit and to tear his esophagus. Many of the universities’ IFCs and Panhellenic Councils, including those at Penn State, have come out in support of state anti-hazing legis lation. Legislation will bring the dangers of hazing to the surface, Stevens said, but “in some cases fraternities cling to this outdated tradition and will go further underground." New Jersey has a two-level law that calls for a maximum six-month jail term and a $l,OOO fine for hazing when no bodily harm is sustained, and up to 18 months in jail and a $7,500 fine for a case where there is serious injury. Casual Dining Specialties Include: tuccini with Calamari *7.95 lia E Fieno inicotti Al Forno 5 6.50 inelloni ilia Florentine laghetti ,lla Carbonara with Salad & Garlic Bread Gamer St., State College, Pa. NOTICE FALL SEMESTER 1987 HOUSING AND FOOD SERVICE CONTRACTS STUDENTS CURRENTLY RESIDING IN UNIVERSITY PARK RESIDENCE HALLS Students presently residing in the Residence Halls will receive their Fall Semester 1987 Housing and Food Service Contract Offer Preference Cards and related information in their mailboxes when they return for Spring Semester 1987. Residents are also reminded to bring $lOO.OO back to campus when they return to the University Park Campus in January 1987, for submission with their Contract Offer Preference Card to the Bursar starting THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1987. NO CONTRACT OFFER SUBMISSIONS WILL BE ACCEPTED PRIOR TO THIS DATE. ALL OTHER STUDENTS Fall Semester 1987 Housing and Food Service Contract Offer Preference Cards with related information will be available at the Assignment Office for Campus Residences, 101 Shields Building for University Park students residing off campus. 0. FIESTA BOWL WHY PAY HOTEL PRICES WHEN APARTMENTS ARE MORE ECONOMICAL?! 'Alisa Bracken Full Kitchen complete w/cookware Director of Marketing Heated Pool & Spa P.O. Box 9191 15 minutes to Fiesta Bowl Scottsdale, AZ 85257 (602) 947-9216 1 Bedroom $59.00/night • Studio $39.00/nlght • 7 night minimum EISENHOWER CHAPEL FRIZZEL ROOM For In Christ All the Fullness of the Deity Lives in Bodily Form Colossians 2:9 Friday 7 p.m. Last Chi Alpha of the Semester... Grad Banquet 12/12 (Qj© STATE COLLEGE ASSEMBLY OF GOD 2643 w * Allege Ave. WORSHIP SERVICES 9:OOAm & 11:00 AM BUS SERVICE TO CAMPUS CHI ALPHA CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP 238*1690 sports Lady spikers brand Cowgirls By MARK S. McWHIRTER Collegian Sports Writer The No. 13 women’s volleyball team branded the Wyoming Cowgirls at Rec Hall last night in four games to advance to the Mid-East Regionals of the NCAA Championship Tourna ment. The 38-4 Lady Lions will travel to Lincoln, Nebraska on Thursday, providing the heavily-favored Lady Cornhuskers defeat Pittsburgh to morrow. ' Head Coach Russ Rose said Ne braska has caused problems for Penn State teams in recent years in post season play and that he will work together with his team to drum up a game plan for next week. “I’m going to have the players decide what they feel was lacking and that is what we’re going to ap proach,” Rose said. “I have my own opinion, but they are the one’s play ing the game. I’m just kind of watch ing like everyone else.’ ’ In the first game of last night’s match, Penn State jumped out to an early 8-3 lead, but things stalled somehow and Wyoming quickly tied the score with five straight points. Co captain Vida Kernich said the exter nal factors of the game had an effect on her team’s play. i ;-j “I think that because it was the first round of the playoffs and that we were expected to win since we were at home, we got a little bit tight,” Kernich said. “Once we settled down, although we didn’t play as well as we could have, we won, so now we’re in the playoffs.” The Cowgirls then took the lead, reeling off four more points. But Samantha Johns came into serve for the Lady Lions at 8-12 and brought them back to within two with an ace and. another point. A kill by Heidi Pilecki and a lift by Wyoming quickly evened up the score. Two hitting errors by Penn State allowed Wyom ing to win the first game, 15-13. Following the early loss, Rose as sembled his team in the middle of the court and said something that must have appealed to his players because they breezed to a 15-2 win in the second game. “He just said that it was in our hands,” Kernich said of Rose’s pep talk. “It was the way we were play ing, not anything that they were doing.” Hitting errors on the Cowgirls’ side of the net were abundant in the sec ond game and the Lady Lions took advantage of them. In fact, the Cow girls hit with a surprisingly low team Conlan, Testaverde By HERSCHEL NISSENSON AP Football Writer The nation’s top runner and No. 1 passer Temple tailback Paul Palmer and Miami of Florida quar terback Vinny Testaverde were named yesterday to the Associated Press All-American football team for 1986. Miami and Oklahoma each put three players on the elite squad while Auburn and Ohio State had two each. Testaverde was joined by team mates Jerome Brown, a defensive tackle, and free safety Bennie Blades, who led the nation with 10 interceptions. Testaverde, who is expected to win the Heisman Trophy on Saturday, led Miami to a No. 1 ranking in the AP poll for the last 10 weeks by complet ing 175 of 276 passes for 2,557 yards and a nation-leading 26 touchdowns in 10 games. His completion percentage was 63.4 and he led the country in passing efficiency. Oklahoma, the team Miami dis placed as No. 1 after beating the Sooners 28-16 on Sept. 27, is rep resented by inside linebacker Brian Bosworth, tight end Keith Jackson and offensive guard Mark Hutson, all juniors. Bosworth is one of five repeaters and nine juniors on the first team. The other repeaters are offensive guard Jeff Bregel of Southern Califor nia, defensive backs Thomas Everett of Baylor and Mark Moore of Oklaho ma State and punter Barry Helton of Colorado. The other juniors besides Blades, Helton and the Oklahoma trio are wide receivers Tim Brown of Notre Dame and Cris Carter of Ohio State, defensive tackle A 1 Noga of Hawaii and inside linebacker Chris Spielman of Ohio State. The rest of the All-America team consists of offensive tackles Harris Barton of North Carolina and Danny Villa of Arizona State, center Ben Tamburello and running back Brent Fullwood of Auburn, placekicker Jeff Jaeger of Washington, outside line backers Cornelius Bennett of Ala bama and Shane Conlan of Penn State,, nose guard Danny Noonan of Nebraska and defensive back Rod Woodson of Purdue. The team was selected by the AP’s regional sports editors, along with the college football editor and the sports hitting efficiency of a miserable .038 on the night. Co-captain Ellen Hensler said there was no change in game strategy between games Penn State just settled down and capitalized on Wyoming’s errors. “We didn’t really change our game plan, but I think we all had on the back of our minds that we could play better and that we were going to win," Hensler said. “It really was just something that was on our side of the net, and we didn’t change anything,” Kernich added. “We just tried to pull together and said, ‘Come on.’ We could tell we were better than them.” In game two, the Lady Lions came out strong and assumed a 6-1 early lead. Penn State was then charged with four hits on its side, an infraction that gave the Cowgirls a second point. From then on in, it was all Penn State as each member contributed to the winning effort. Freshman Bessie Ramirez ac counted for several kills and solo blocks for the Lady Lions en route to the lopsided win. Outside hitter Heidi Pilecki also contributed on offense with key plays down the stretch. Samantha Johns slammed the door with an ace to end it. From then on, the Lady Lions never looked back. Lisa Ferguson was the starting server for game three. Ferguson’s deceptive serves forced the Cowgirls to make poor passes, stalling Wyom ing’s offensive attack. With Penn State up 7-4, Johns and Judy McDonough came in on defense and remained on the court until the Lady Lions were up 9-6. Outside hitter Lisa Leap returned to the court, serv ing an ace and adding a kill to make it 11-6. Penn State then gave up a point on a lift but then swept the next four points to preserve the 15-7 victory. Game four saw the Lady Lions dominate from start to finish. Pilecki came into her own on offense in game four as she ended up with a dozen kills on the night. Middle hitter Izetta Phillips and Kernich were instrumen tal on defense throughout the night with 15 digs each. Defensive star Denise Navoney was also a key for Penn State in the backcourt with a nine-dig effort on the evening. Although Penn State did win in four games, Rose was not satisfied with the overall play of his team, and he expressed the need for improvement in the week ahead. “The only thing I liked about the entire match was the result,” he said. “I don’t think we played well. I don’t editor, from all-conference and all sectional lists. Three 1985 first-teamers failed to repeat. Michigan State tailback Lo renzo White and LSU linebacker Mi chael Brooks were hampered by injuries while Texas A&M linebacker Johnny Holland made the third team. Temple’s Palmer led the nation with 1,866 rushing yards, an average of 169.6 yards a game and 5.4 per carry. He added 110 reception yards and 657 on kickoff returns to finish No. 1 in all-purpose running, as well, with an average of 239.36 a game. Fullwood, who played behind 1985 Heisman winner Bo Jackson until this year, led the nation with 8.3 yards per carry and also paced the Southeast ern Conference with 126.4 yards a game, good for fourth place national ly. Brown, who did everything Notre Dame asked of him, is one of the country’s most dangerous perform ers. Lining up at wide receiver and running back, he finished third in all purpose running with 176.09 yards a game. Carter is considered the finest re ceiver in Ohio State history. He set school records by catching 65 passes for 1,066 yards and 11 touchdowns this season. Tight end Jackson caught just 14 passes Oklahoma threw only 88 but he averaged a school record 28.8 yards per reception and five of them went for touchdowns. Up front, Barton graded out a win ner in every game and North Caroli na Coach Dick Crum calls him the best offensive lineman he has ever had. He switched from tackle to cen ter against Maryland after practicing at that position for only one day. Southern Cal’s Bregel moved from weakside to strongside guard this year to take advantage of his run blocking abilities. He became the first USC offensive lineman since World War II to start every game for four consecutive years. Hutson’s blocking was a key to Oklahoma averaging 404.7 yards a game on the ground, almost 100 yards ahead of runnerup Nebraska. Villa, the other tackle opposite Barton, was one reason Arizona State won its first Pacific-10 championship and a berth in the Rose Bowl. ■ Tamburello has been Auburn’s starting center for four years. Coach Pat Dye called his rating of 96 per- Penn State’s Lisa Leap smashes a shot past a Wyoming opponent in first round NCAA volleyball tournament action last night at Rec Hall. The Lady Lions lost the first game, but rebounded to subdue the Cowgirls, 3-1. think the players that we need to play well came ready to play.” Rose also touched on the fact that his team hasn’t performed at its peak at home during the year. “I don’t think we were ready to play,” Rose said. “I’d rather be on the road. When you’re on the road you’re in control. You can tell every body this is what we’re doing and this is when we’re doing it and there’s nothing else happening.” Next week at the Mid-East Region als, the Lady Lions will have their hands full with Nebraska (assuming the Lady Cornhuskers win tomor , Palmer earn AP All-American status Nittany Lion All-Americans In addition to first team All- America linebacker Shane Con lan, the Nittany Lions placed 13 other players among the All- American ranks. On the second team, Penn State is represented by offensive tackle Chris Conlin and defensive tackle Tim Johnson. Among the honorable men tions, the Lions field an impres sive crew: tight end Brian Siverling, offensive guard Dan Morgan, center Keith Radecic, quarterback John Shaffer, run ning back D.J. Dozier, placekick er Massimo Manca, defensive end Don Graham, nose guard Mike Russo, defensive back Duf fy Cobbs and punter John Bruno. cent against Tennessee “the best grade I’ve ever seen by a center.” Washington’s Jaeger made 17 of 21 field goals this season and set an NCAA career record of 80 three-point ers in 99 attempts. Penn State’s Conlan was the lead ing tackier on the nation’s third best unit in stopping the rush. He also led the Nittany Lions in tackles for a loss. Bosworth, who has another year of eligibility but could elect to turn pro, had a team-leading 136 tackles. Ohio State’s Spielman led the Big Ten with 194 tackles and is one of the five finalists for the second annual Butkus Award. Alabama’s Bennett runs a 4.4 forty and Coach Ray Perkins, who used to coach the New York Giants, calls him “the Lawrence Taylor of college foot ball.” Hawaii’s Noga is the least known of the 24 first-team All-Americans and at 6-1,239 is somewhat undersized for a defensive tackle. But he had a superb season with one game left he has set school records with 28 tackles for minus yardage and 16 sacks and captured Defensive Player of the Year honors in the Western Athletic Conference by a vote of the league’s head coaches. Noonan is the best defensive line man in Nebraska history, according to Coach Tom Osborne. row). If they beat Nebraska, there is a chance they will again meet West ern Michigan a team that beat the Lady Lions 3-1 over the Thanksgiving holiday weekend. The pairings in the tournament seem to favor the Northwest Region, and it appears’that the winner of that bracket will likely play for the championship. With West Coast pow ers San Diego State, San Jose State and University of the Pacific three teams that jockeyed for No. 1 all season long the Northwest is defi nitely where the action of collegiate women’s volleyball is. * Vt^^; Vv-» V'fv, ■>%.> . 1 ■i v ->'-•. -> **,"j * £• '' *.p**\’i 3 "~ ■ - - -s**■ -• •>••"*'• —SB^—' 4 4 ” <fV ' ' ' , ’% U ~* J t?« Penn State linebacker Shane Conlan, left, blitzed his way past opposing linemen on his way to All-American status this season. The senior from Frewsburg, N.Y. is joined by 13 of his teammates on the Associated Press’ annual roster. In addition, three Penn State opponents who have been or will be all too-familiarwith Conlan’s ability made first team status on offense. They are, from top, Miami quarterback and Maxwell Award winner Vinny Testaverde, Notre Dame’s multi talented wide receiver Tim Brown and Temple running back and Heisman Trophy candidate Paul Palmer. Cagers' woes continue against Rhode Island By MARK BRENNAN Collegian Sports Writer Any good driver will tell you that the faster you go, the more fuel you use. That may explain why the men’s basketball team ran out of gas in the second half of a 75-63 loss to Rhode Island last night in Kingston. After trailing by as many as 19 points in the first half, the Lions (2-1) put on a furious rally after intermis sion to take a two-point lead, 52-50, with 7:50 left in the game. But the lead was short lived, as the needle hit empty just over a minute later when the Rams (3-0) took the lead for good. Although the Lions seemed to be driving at 100 mph during the comeback, Head Coach Bruce Park hill was hesitant to’say that his team “ran out of gas.” “It kind of looked that way, it happened with about seven minutes to go in the game, and that is along period of time,” Parkhill said. “There were a lot of swings in this game. It kind of looked that way because we had a lot of let downs that enabled them to re-take the lead.” Regardless of how fast Penn State (2-1) was going during the comeback, the deciding factor in the game was the Lions’ inability to get the motor started. Rhode Island controlled the open ing tap and on the strength of some hot shooting by guard Tom Garrick and full court man-to-man press, the Rams jumped out to 19-4 lead midway through the first period. The Lions were plagued by six turnovers during the spurt, with the only Penn State points coming on a three-point play by Tony Ward and a free-throw by Brian Allen. Senior guard Paul Murphy came off of the bench with nine minutes left in the half and gave the Lions’ motor the jump-start it needed. Although the motor took a while to turnover, with the Rams extending the lead to 19 points with 7:15 left in the half, Penn State slowly began to pick up speed. Murphy scored 11 points in the stretch leading up to halftime as the Lions picked away and went into the locker room trailing by 12, 35-23. Parkhill said without Murphy’s play in the half, the Lions could have been out of the game a lot earlier. In the half, Penn State’s starting five of Ward and Allen at the guards, Jim Newcomer at center, and Tom Hov asse and Ed Fogell filling the forward The Daily Collegian Friday, Dec. 5, 1986 spots, only managed a combined four points. “I thought Murphy did a really nice job,” Parkhill said. “He’s been around. Brian (Allen) got a little rattled ... tonight, and fortunately Murph showed a lot of poise. It was a nice lift for us to have Murph coming off the bench.” The Lions also started off slow in the second half, falling behind by 17 early, but Ward sent the team into overdrive and in the next six minutes Penn State drew within five, 46-41, with 13 minutes remaining. Ward had 12 points in the streak, which saw the Lions outscore the Rams 15-6. Penn State then switched on the afterburners, and behind the strong inside play of Hovasse and reserve center Mike Peapos, the Li ons knotted the score at 50 with 8:40 left in the game. Ward took a rebound on the next Rhode Island possesion and went coast-to-coast, nailing a jumper to give the Lions their first lead of the game, 52-50, with 7:50 to go. Parkhill said defense and good in side shooting were the keys to the second-half run. “We played a little bit better de fensively,” Parkhill said. “We gained our composure a little bit more offen sively, getting the ball inside a little bit more.” The teams exchanged baskets, giv ing Penn State a 54-52 lead, but two free throws by Carlton "Silk” Owens tied the game. The Penn State engine that had begun to run so smoothly began to sputter and when a Bonzie Colson follow gave the Rams a 56-54 lead, the Lions motor all but stalled. A three-point goal by Owens put Rhode Island up by five and the Rams never looked back. Rhode Island built the lead back up to eight with just over two minutes to go. in the game and the Lions, depite using a four-guard combination for pressing and three-point field goal shooting, could not muster a comeback. -4| # Tony Ward :r v * •*
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