16—The Daily Collegian Wednesday, April 15,,1987 Trackmen enjoy sun, wins at weekend competition By STACEY JACOBSON Collegian Sports Writer The two sunny days that the men's track team spent this weekend at the Dogwood Relays in Knoxville, Tenn. weren't exactly a vacation, although the squad did come home with some souvenirs. No, the Lions didn't return with snapshots, postcards or tee-shirts, but instead they got several top-place finishes against some of the best competition in the nation. "It was our first big outdoor meet and anything you win is really good," tri-captain Chris Green said. Fortunately though, the Lions didn't have to settle for just anything, as they compiled a first place, three second place and two third place finishes. On the first day, they captured their only first in 4 x 800- meter relay. It was the third consecutive time Penn State has claimed that honor at the Dogwoods and according to Head Coach Harry Groves, his team leads the nation in that event. ~ The team of Steve Balkey, Mark Anderson, Chris Mills and Ray Levitre sped to a 7:19.71 finish followed by Indiana at 7:20.75. "I was the first runner and when I handed off we were barely in first," Balkey said. "Ray got it in second and hung on and out-kicked him in the last couple of meters." The Lions' next spot in the winner's bracket was a 57.99 second place finish in the 4 x 110 shuttle hurdle relay. Green, Mark Saunders, Sam Harris and Michael Timpson manned the ,team that was surpassed only by Pitt (56.18). Still, losing to the Panthers is no disgrace. "Pitt is extremely good in this event and even in getting beat we still ran a good time," Groves said. Also on the first day, Lion C. J. Hunter registered a fourth place finish in the shot-put. Events at the Dogwoods came in two categories: an Lady golfers take fourth place at warm weekend invitational By ADAM T. GUSDORFF Collegian Sports Writer The weather was finally kind to the women's golf team. Temperatures were in the mid-70s and the wind was hardly a factor as the Lady Lions finished fourth in a 10-team field at the Seahawk/Azalea Invitational in Wilmington, N.C., last weekend. The squad, who was playing the course for the first time, got off to a slow start during the first round on Friday, shooting a 331. But it got a feel for the course and came on strong the second and third days, shooting 325 and 322, respectively. "The girls played well, improving each day," Head Coach Mary Kenne dy said. "They had fun, and are beginning to feel as though they can win. They are approaching (the) next tournament with better self-confi- :,FOR ~ i : RE NT ATTRACTIVELY Furnished, one bedroom, w/kitchenette, private. Includes:. utilities, microwave, laundry, cable, parking, walk to PSU. Summer w/fall option. $175 summer. Quiet home w/two. Female student. 238-7587 FALL/SPRING FOR males, swim ming pool, 3 blocks to campus, meals, furnished doubles. 234- 3291. FURNISHED ROOMS WITH cooking. Available summer and fall. Close to campus. 355.0230. GRAD PROF. 3 bdrm near cam pus. Own room includes heat /AC, cable. Year lease $250 month 238-4815. GREAT! OWN ROOM in town house beginning Fall Semester extras! 238-5140 after 6pm, fe males. SMALL EFF. APT. (furnished), Boalsburg area, $250.00 & utili ties. Available June 1. 466-7207, after 3:30 pm. VISITING FAMILY OF 5 would like to rent furnished home June through August. Responsible, references. Paul 913.841-4144 or 1634 Rhode Island, Lawrence, Kansas 66044. 1 BEDROOM HOUSE (Boalsburg Area) 325.00 & utilities. Available June 1. 466-7207 after_3:3o pm. SUBLET AAAAA SUMMER SUBLET, 3 bedroom Ranch, 1 block from campus. Carport, basement, A/C. Free heat and cable. Rent neg. 8111, 237.8106. Dan, 238.7548. AAAAA SUPER BARGAIN; free utilities, own room in house, large yard, 2 blks. from campus, available May 15. Only $300.00 for entire summer. (negotiable); Cyndy, 238-5947. Reduced Rental Rates June 1-Aug 15 From $lB9 Efficiency, One And Two Bedroom Super Pool! briorwood 787 Stratford Dr 238-7134 dence." The tournament was won by host University of North Carolina-Wil mington. Longwood College placed second, and William & Mary, which will host the squad's next tourna ment, finished third. "There's no difference between the top three teams and us," Kennedy said. "We've beaten all three before. We just got off to a slow start this weekend." The Lady Lions were paced by Jody Harpster, who shot a 236 en route to placing seventh overall in individual competition, 12 strokes behind the winning 224 turned in by UNC-W's Paige Cribb. For Penn State, Harpster was followed by Valerie Krick (246), Erin Borowicz (248), and Susan Highducheck (252). "I'm very proud of her," Kennedy said of Harpster. "She played excel- COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIED ADS AAA AMBASSADOR APT. sum mer sublet 1.3 •people, A/C, mi crowave, more! Price negotiable Call 234.1203. AAAA SUMMER SUBLET fur nished efficiency 1 block to cam pus, 1.2 people, $B9 each, air Call Now! 231-3907. ABOVE SKI STATEION: Summer sublet three females for two bed room apartment. Price negotia ble. Call 237.4856. A GROOVY HOUSE w/your own bdrm. Cheap! 3 blocks • campus free utilities/steak dinner 234- 3709. A LARGE COMFORTABLE 2 Br. summer sublet for 2-3 females. 2 blocks from campus, parking available. Rent negotiable. 238- 7384. A LARGE ONE bedroom summer sublet 2 blocks to campus utill- SUMMER SUBLET! GREAT Deal! SUMMER SUBLET, ALL utilities. ties, cable Included $l5O nego- one or two people call Emery Pool, bus pass, parking. tiable call 237-1358. 238-6251. $llO/month. Mark, 238-8098. invitational, which featured mostly college athletes, and an open division. In the open 200-meter dash, Timpson placed second and qualified for the NCAA meet with a time of 20.56. Timpson crossed the tape a split second behind Albert' Robinson of the Indiana Track Club. "Those two guys will probably be No. 1 and 2 in the nation," Groves said. "Michael ran an exceptional race, (Robinson) came on hard to nip him at the end. The difference in the finishes was a blink of an eye." - Timpson's wasn't the only second place finish of the day, as the 4 x 1,500-meter relay team of Tom Gough, Doug Walter, Dave McMillan and Eric -Carter also snagged a runner-up position. They finished in 15:37.60 behind Indiana, which ran 15:34.41. Later in the meet, Penn State placed third in the distance medley with a 9:41.51. Chris Mills ran the 1,200- meter leg, Dave Masgay and Levitre the 800-meter legs, and Balkey ran the 1,600-meters. "The race was run at the time of day when the temperature is high and although it wasn't that fast time wise, it was a competitive race," Groves said. The final relay, the sprint medley relay, gave the Lions a third place to add to their collection. The team of Barney Barromeo, Shaun King, Joel Coleman and Levitre ran this final race. "Since it was the final race the guys were beginning to slow, the wear of the meet was catching up to them," Groves said. Also on Sauturday, in the steeplechase, Brian Laird hurdled to a seventh place finish for the Lions. Overall, tri-captain Levitre was pleased with his team's performance. "Everyone is running really well and it's still early," he said. "They're all pretty much on top of it." Penn State will host the Nittany Lion Relays this weekend. lently. She is a very hard worker and a dedicated student-athlete. She con sistently finishes in the top three on the team." Harpster gave the course and the weather rave reviews. "The fairways were wide and dry," she said, "so there was a lot of bouncing. The greens were in excel lent condition. "The weather was great," the soph omore added. "It was sunny all three days. At Duke last weekend, it was freezing, and the weather was a real factor. We were out there in tur tlenecks and hats. It was a little windy (in Wilmington) and we had to plan our shots around the wind on some holes." Harpster said the team has the ability to do well this coming week end at the William and Mary Invita tional in Williamsburg, Va. ALEXANDER COURT SUMMER SUMMER SUBLET PENN TOW sublet: $125.00/month per per- ERS EFFICIENCY all utilities, son. Single or double occupancy. A/C, completely furnished, two 237-1819. persons $lOO Each. Call 237-0846 AVAILABLE MAY THRU August, own room in 4 bedroom condo, SUMMER SUBLET UP to 6 fe hot tub, cable, microwave. Bus males needed for large Universi route. $l5O/month. Call 863.0517 ty .Gateway apartment. Rent or 237-9320. negotiable, 237-6337. SUMMER SUBLET - ONE male needed. Own room. Rent nego tiable, includes all utilities! Call Rick 238-9437. SUMMER SUBLET CEDAR BROOK 1-2 people $7OO entire summer(sl2o/mo.) all utilities and A/C incl. 867-2064 or 231- 8842. SUMMER SUBLETS: 1,2, 3 bed- SUMMER SUBLET, OWN Room, room apartments for as low as Close to campus, reasonable. $195 per month. 1 mile from Call Joyce M-W-F 1:30.5:30 237- campus. Call 238-3153 leave mes -6429 otherwise 237-0674. sage if no answer. Evenings SUMMER SUBLET TWO bed room house, kitchen, living room and bath. Free parking at the door. $225.00 per month. House Is right below Nittany Lion Inn on campus. Call Dave at 237-5297 after 0 pm. Anytime on week ends. Regular rent is $450.00 per month. Reds' talent leads to fast start By TOM SALADINO AP Sports Writer ATLANTA Dave Parker looks at his Cincinnati teammates and sees a lot of young talent fighting for a spot on the field "which is a great problem to have." Those battles have propelled the Reds to a fast start and early talk of a division championship. "We've got guys here sitting on the bench who could be starting somewhere else," Parker said. "But hopefully, we'll keep them here and win the West." The Reds have won six of their first seven games, including last night's 6-3 victory over the Atlanta Braves. The quick start is in contrast to a year ago, when Cincinnati opened with a 5-16 record and ended 10 games shy of Western Division champion Houston. "We lost the title last year with the bad start," Parker said, "so we wanted to get off to a good start this year." And the Reds have, keyed by the hitting of youngsters such as center fielder Eric Davis, left fielders Kal Daniels and Tracy Jones, shortstops Barry Larkin and Kurt Stillwell, and the timely hitting of veterans Parker, Buddy Bell, Bo Diaz, Terry Francona and Dave Concep cion. Davis, the Reds' fleet center fielder, raised his average Monday from .440 to .447 with three hits and the game winning RBI. "Tracy got three hits and Kal has five extra-base hits in his first five games," Manager Pete Rose said. "Terry and Davey have been doing a good job, and Larkin was hitting until he got hurt and Stillwell replaced him and got two hits," Rose said. "Bell has also been hitting well and Diaz is close to leading the league in RBIs." "They're tough and they're deep," said Atlanta Man ager Chuck Tanner, shaking his head in admiration. "But it took them about five years. We're going through that process right now. We've got some good ones in Triple-A and Double-A. It won't be long until we've got them just like the Reds do now." Rose thinks the Reds are ready to challenge for the National League title. "We're a lot more grown up this year. We were ready in spring training," he said. "We were 14-3 in our last 17 spring games and we're not doing anything different now." scoreboard .•. .•_ .••• ~• . ••. major league baseball NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division St. Louis New York Chicago PIRATES PHILLIES Montreal West Division. W L 6 1 5 1 6 2 4 2 3 5 1 6 Houston Cincinnati San Francisco Atlanta Los Angeles San Diego Monday's Games St. Louts 8, PIRATES 4 SUMMER SUBLET, 2 females, 1 3 BEDROOM APT., downtown, EXCELLENT SUMMER SUBLET CHEAP SUBLET GURANTEED bedroom, Beaver Hill. Price ne- $l2O, 3-5 people, 6 / 1 /87 to 8 / 1 5/87 one block from campus. Down- GOOD LOCATION! On East Col gotiable. Call collect, evenings, partially furnished, Laura 234- town, newly remodeled. One or lege for 1/2 persons. Rent neg0(412)793-9217. (412)793-9217. Laura. 9833 WOW! two females. Price negotiable. tiable. Call 231.1434 anytime! 231.8868. Ask for Heather. SUMMER SUBLET WITH Fall op- E. COLLEGE MALE roommate. GRAD! PROF APT. available May tion. Own room in nice house on AVAILABLE SUMMER SUBLET, Rent negotiable. Excellent loca- 18, Fall option. 1 BR, 5 blocks to lion across from Old Main. 234- Easterly Pkwy, $lOO/month. 1 block from campus. Large 3 campus. Includes heat, hot wa- Available June 1. Call Joe 865- bedroom house, furnished, pri- 4660, ter, parking. Very quiet. Call 1150,238-1707. vate lawn, laundry facility, FABULOUS SUMMER SUBLET! B. 238-0883 days. SUMMER SUBLET OWN bed- $l3O/month. Females only. 237-7 835. Own room in furnished town GREAT FOR SUMMER! Private room in nice house, May-August. pool, 5 minutes to campus, Price negotiable. negotiable. Ron or Julie BRIARWOOD 2-BEDROOM 6pm,females. nished singles/doubles. Parking 234-3213. APARTMENT spacious, free FEMALE NEEDED TO share one kitchen use, coed floors at Fr , a- SUMMER SUBLET -FEMALES for parking, HBO/MAX option, rent bedroom apartment at Parkway ternity. 234-3291 after 4. nice 3 bdrm house with yard. 1- negotiable. Fall option. Call 231- Plaza. Air conditioning, pool, uti GREAT SUMMER SUBLET 85.00. 1/2 blocks to campus. Call 238- 8235. lities included. Rent negotiable. Female to share large apt. A/C, 4967 for Info. BRIARWOOD SUBLET. EFFI- Call Karen 237-4164. 'able, microwau. •3 o- --- • cable, microwave, 2 blocks from SUMMER SUBLET. HOUSE, 2 CIENCY for one or two. Spa- FEMALE SUMMER SUBLET: fall campus. 234-9675. blocks/campus. One male, own cious, free pool and parking. option. Sr/Grad, non smoker. GREAT SUMMER SUBLET: The room, furnished. $125/month. Frequent bus routes. Rent nego- Own room in 2 bedroom Parkway Lofts large, one bedroom, corn -862-1916, 862-6900 tiable. Plaza. Pool. Available now. pletely furnished, air-condition- TWO NON—SMOKING females CLOSE TO CAMPUS, SUMMER $l6O/month call 466-7791. ing, dishwasher, free parking and to summer sublet in Beaver Hill. SUBLET/fall option. Large one- LARGE EFFICIENCY FOR 1 or 2 optional bus pass. All utilities $lOO/month includes utilities. bedroom, free parking, $285/mo. people. One block from campus, included. Rent very negotiable. Available May 10. Call 238-5966. 238-0341 anytime. rent negotiable 231-0135. Call 231-0835. Chicago 5, PHILLIES 2 Cincinnati 7, Atlanta 2 San Francisco 13, San Diego 6 Los Angeles 4, Houston 2 'tomorrow's Games PIRATES at Chicago, 2:20 p.m. New York at PHILLIES, 7:35 p.m. Montreal at St. Louis, 1:35 p.m. Los Angeles at San Diego, 4:05 p.m L Pct. 2 .667 2 .600 3 .500 4 .333 5 .167 Milwaukee Baltimore Detroit Pct. .857 .833 .750 .667 .375 .143 New York Boston Cleveland California Minnesota Cincinati Reds manager Pete Rose has had a lot to smile about recently, as his Reds are off to a strong start in the National League West. Daniels and Francona play against right-handed pitch ers; Jones and Concepcion watch. Larken plays regular ly, while Stillwell sits. And keeping the bench warm are youngsters Lloyd McClendon and Paul O'Neill. "It doesn't matter to me who plays as long as we win. Whether it's Kal or Tracy, Stillwell or Larkin, Davey or Terry," Rose said. "Everyone is starting to accept their role. I'm not playing favorites. I'm playing to win ball games. Some guys may not like it, but that's OK as long as they perform on the field," he said. It has worked for the first iveek of the season AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct. GB 7 0 1.000 5 2 .714 2 4 2 .667 2 1 / 2 4 3 .571 3 3 3 .500 3 1 / 2 3 4 .429 4 1 6 .143 6 West Division W L Pct. 5 2 .714 5 2 .714 3 3 .500 2 4 .333 2 5 .286 2 5 .286 1 6 .143 Kansas City Chicago Oakland Seattle Texas • Monday's Games New York 11, Cleveland 3 Texas at Boston, ppd., rain Milwaukee 6, Baltimore 3 Oakland 6, Minnesota 3 California 5, Seattle 3, 10 Innings Yesterday's Games Boston 4, Texas Cleveland at New York (late) Milwaukee at Baltimore (late) Chicago at Toronto (late) Detroit at Kansas City (late) Minnesota at Oakland (late) California at Seattle (late) Toddy's Games Texas (Hough 0-1) at Boston (Hurst 1.0),1:05 p.m. Lady taxers Continued from Page 11. region to be invited to the NCAAs," Scheetz explained. "Since they (La fayette) only had one loss heading into this game, they might have moved ahead of us." Currently Penn State is second in the region, trailing undefeated and top-ranked Temple. So maybe they weren't looking ahead to the fourth-ranked Terps, but why the slow start? "They kept switching the positions Bigotry Continued from Page 11 managers, general managers, or owners in baseball. Campanis said that blacks lacked certain qualities for those jobs and made good money in other positions. Those comments cost Campanis his job. Los Angeles Manager Tommy La sorda defended Campanis in the press the following day. "There was no malice intended," Lasorda said. "He said something very wrong, but didn't realize the consequences." However, New York Mets Manager Davey Johnson and Montreal Gener- Mets beat Phils, Expos finally win By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA Mookie Wilson singled in Len Dykstra for the first of two ninth-inning runs as the New York Mets defeated the Philadelphia Phillies 7-5 last night. With the score tied at 5-5 in the ninth, Dykstra batted for Rafael Santana and drew a leadoff walk off loser Steve Bedrosian, 1-1. Dykstra stole sec ond and scored on Wilson's liner to right field. Wilson went to third as his hit was misplayed by Ron Roenicke and scored when Juan Samuel threw wildly to home on Wally Backman's ground ball. Ron Darling, 1-0, who escaped from a two-on, no out situation in the bottom of the eighth, allowed 11 hits in eight innings for the victory. Jesse Orosco pitched the ninth for his third save. The Mets scored two unearned runs in the first inning, the fifth straight game in which the Phil lies' opposition had scored in the opening inning. After two outs, Keith Hernandez struck out but reached first when the ball got away from catcher Lance Parrish. Gary Carter singled Hernandez to third and both runners scored on Strawberry's double to left-center. The Mets made it 3-0 in the fourth on Darling's fielder's choice grounder, but the Phillies made it 3-1 in the fourth when Mike Schmidt walked, went to third on a Mike Easler single and scored while Parrish was hitting into a double play. The Phillies scored four runs in the fifth on Von Hayes' two-run double and a two-run homer by SUBLET ..:.,.....-,•..-. [:,... i ............. :: :-•: . ~....-,.:....u .A.f..r............-....:-...,:..,‘.,..:..... large bedroom in 2-bdr. Parkway Plaza apt. All utilities, cable, NEWLY FURNISHED, CAR-, pool. $175/month. Negotiable, PETED 2 bedroom apt. available 237 ' 3738. for summer sublet. Great lon. lion, mid towri. Rent negotiable. Call 234-8878. O'BRIAN PLACE— SUMMER fully furnished, 10 or 12 month sublet two bedroom/ two bath lease available. Rent $750/mo. rooms. Must see! Five females Call 234-2025. $95/month each. Call 238-1085. OBRIAN PLACE, SUMMER sub- Studio apartment Includes all let. 2-3 girls to share bedroom in utilities: AC, cable, balcony. 239- 2-bedroom apartment. Dishwash- 4743. er, microwave, air-condition Price negotiable. 237-8551. efficiency for 2. $5OO for summer. PARKWAY PLAZA SUBLET quiet Call 234-6087 evenings, week. furnished studio apartment avail- ends. able May 1. Adjoining rec room, Furnished one bedroom apart like having living room with mi- ment available Fall 'B7 in Beaver crowave, rent includes swim club Terrace. Phone Continental Real membership, A/C, and all Wilk Estate Management, 238-1598 or ties. Close to shopping, schools, stop by office at 132 Sowers St bus route, and downtown. Alice: (Ambassador Building.) 238.3432 9-5 regarding 111 A. SUBLET: CEDARBROOK • FE PROF/GRAD SUBLET one MALES; one bdrm.; furnished; bedroom unfurnished apartment, balcony; air-conditioned. Rent walking distance to campus. negotiable- 1/2 May free. Start $325/month. June's rent/electric May 11-Aug 17. Ask for Sandy or free. Judy, 865.0984, 234.9644, Melinda 237-1677. 234-2252. Available 6/I.SOUTH- SUBLET: PERFECT ONE bed- GATE TOWNHOUSE SUMMER room apartment close to cam sublet own room. Furnished, pus, all utilities included except washer, dryer, dishwasher. Price electric. Rent negotiable, must negotiable. Call Michele 237- see. For more information, call 5661. 231.8307 evenings. - - SUBLET: BEAUTIFUL BEAVER Summer Sublet Alexander Court Hill apartment, $3OO for summer, 2-Bdrm air-conditioning, dish non-smoking female. Call Tanya washer, 1-block from campus at 237-7691. Call 862-0715. SUBLET FEMALE SHARE 1/2 of 1 bedroom. Furnished, quiet, E.College, May 11 • August 17. $175/month. 237-8980. of their players around," Scheetz said. "Our players didn't know who to take and that confused the defense." While it might have been a little confused in the opening 25 minutes, Penn State played a more typical Lady Lion-game in the second half, out-scoring the Leopards 6-3. Worley got things started with a goal just 47 seconds into the half before Lisa Kiziuk scored Lafayette's first goal of the second stanza. al Manager Murray Cook made simi lar statements to those uttered by Campanis and they didn't lose their jobs. Johnson told CNN that he believes most black superstars don't want to manage. Cook went a step further in Thursday's USA Today. "Things come so naturally to so many of those fine black athletes they don't learn all the rudiments of the game," Cook said. Baseball has made Al Campanis a scapegoat for its own shortcomings. Of the 26 teams in baseball, not one currently employs a black manager. COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIED ADS FEMALE SUMMER SUBLET FOR RENT: LARGE, 2 • bedroom, 1 1/2 bath apartment in Hetzel Plaza, 500 E. College Ave. beauti- FREE MAY RENT. Downtown FREE POOL, MORE: furnithed Mike Schmidt, the 498th of his career. The Mets tied it in the sixth on a two-run homer by Howard Johnson, who hit his first of the season. Expos 9, Cardinals 4 ST. LOUIS Jeff Reed drove home four runs with a bases-loaded double and a single, leading the Montreal Expos to their first victory of the season, a 9-4 decision over the St. Louis Cardinals. Expos right-hander Jay Tibbs, 1-1, took a three hit shutout into the ninth inning, but Tommy Herr had a two-run double and Jack Clark an RBI single for the Cardinals before Bob McClure got the last three outs. McClure surrendered a sacrifice fly to Jim Lindeman. The Expos, who have yet to play at home, got their first victory in six games with a 10-hit attack against Greg Mathews, 0-1, and three St. Louis relievers. Joe Galarraga's single and Tim Wallach's sacri fice fly knocked in runs in the second, and Reed's single produced his fourth RBI for a 7-0 lead in the fifth. Wallach had a two-run single in the sixth, giving him three RBI for the game. Yankees 10, Indians 6 NEW YORK Joel Skinner hit a grand slam off Cleveland reliever Steve Carlton that broke a fifth inning tie and gave the New York Yankees a 10-6 victory, the Indians' fifth straight loss. With two outs in the fifth and the score 3-3, Carlton walked Dave Winfield and Mike Pagliaru- ROOMMATES 2 bedroom, 1 1/2 bathroom apart .. • ment for 5 people in Hetzel Plaza ROOMMATE NEEDED to share 2 for 87-88. $155/mo. Call 862-2566. bedroom apt. May to August, own 'room, walking distance, PSU, $lBO plus utilities. Male or female. 238.2667 FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED. TO SHARE 1/5 LARGE 2 BED ROOM APARTMENT. PENN TOWER. CALL ALISON. 231- 4886. ONE• NON—SMOKING ROO MATE needed. Three blocks from campus, $155/mo. Tlka 234-7328. Angela 862-6174 leave message. ROOMS FOR RENT: New Room ing House - female - 512 E. Col lege Ave. Across from South ROOMATE WANTED TO share Halls" Summer Sublets preferred two bedroom apartment, Penn Tower Call Eric or Chris 862- _ 237-9450, 231.0195, 237-6932. 5739. ROOMS FOR RENT AT 210 W. ONE ROOMMATE WANTED to College Ave. $l5O/month includ e share one bedroom at Beaver Hills all utilities. 12 month lease with 2 other females. Utilities only, stating August. Common included balcony facing Beaver bath, no kitchen privledges, 234- Ave. For more infor. call 234- 6004, 4161 ROOMS FOR RENT. Summer /Fall spacious home two blocks 2 FEMALE ROOMMATES from campus. 234-8479. NEEDED for fall and spring, 2/5 people, large 2 bedroom, Beaver 2 BLOCKS FROM campus. Dou Terrace, parking available ble rooms. $155 per person, in $175/mo. utilities included. Call cludes all utilities. No pets Sue 231.3961. • Starting Fall. 238.4537, 238-6013 GOOD FRIDAY WORSHIP . I APRIL 17 4,,, v ( --.,.: i .. i,, Part I: . Noon "Father, forgive them" lli e peb The Penn State Catholic Center i h r: e Part II: 12:25 "Today you shall be with me in paradise" ' Orr The Episcopal Ministry at Penn State • 12:50 1 .. , Part III: "Woman, behold your Son...man, behold your mother" The United Black Fellowship . r? pi r ill'. l'le \ Part IV: 1:15 "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken 'i me?" i " United Ministry at Penn State : t... . ) 1/ Part V: 1:40 "I thirst" The University Lutheran Parish Part VI: 2:05 "It's finished" i l The United Ministry at Penn State A Part VII: 2:30 "Father, into thy hands I commend my • A • 4 1 spirit" The University Lutheran Parish SERVICE OF HYMNS, PRAYER, AND MEDITATIONS OF THE SEVEN WORDS OF CHRIST. WORSHIPPERS ARE INVITED TO COME WHEN THEY CAN AND LEAVE WHEN THEY MUST. SPONSORED BY THE ABOVE CAMPUS MIN ISTRIES IN COOPERATION WITH THE OFFICE OF RELIGIOUS AFFAIRS AT PENN STATE. . Noon to 3p.m. EISENHOWER CHAPEL Leading 8-6 at that point, Veal, Becky Vaughan and Stokes scored three straight Penn State goals, mak ing it an 11-6 contest with just over 10 minutes to play. Jenny Smith did complete a four goal game for the hosts with a pair of scores in the final seven minutes, but Worley completed her hat trick and Veal scored her third with one second left in the game to make five the final margin of victory for the Lady Lions, There is not a black general man ager, nor a black team president. The commissioner's office employs no blacks in positions of importance. In fact, of all the front office jobs in baseball, less than two percent are filled by blacks. "We have not seen the kinds of systematic changes that are needed before what (Jackie) did is truely appreciated," Rachel Robinson, Jackie's widow, said on NBC's "To day" program Monday morning. Baseball is not alone in not giving blacks what they deserve. Football is 55 percent black on the field, but the head coaching jobs are lilly-white. ROOMMATES NEEDED TO share ROOMS TO BUY: COUPLE seeks 3-4 bed- EXCLUSIVE AREA. CLOSE to room house in quiet residential campus. Call now for low sum- neighborhood, easy walk to cam mer rates. 238-5837 or 234-1230. pus. Call (203)523-4438 evenings. $250 FOR THE entire summer at , - AGA Fraternity. Own room, full I the Classified Information kitchen, call Jon 237-3181. TO daily Collegian Mail-In Form ADVERTISE • Policy Ads must be prepaid ON Charies cannot be made after the first insertion Cas.h refunds will only be given for ads cancelled by 1 p.m. the day before the first insertion. Only credit THIS vouchers will be given after this time. The Daily Collegian will only be responsible for one day's incorrect insertion. Please come to room 126 Carnegie Building immediately if there is an error in your ad. PAGE The Daily Collegian will not knowingly cause to be printed or published any notice or advertisement relating to employment or membership indicating any preference, limitation, specification or descrimination based - SEE upon race, color, sexual orientation, religious creed, ancestry, age, sex, national orgin or non-job related • handicap or disability. YOUR • Prepaid Order Form Ads Just MAIL in the classified order form with the correct payment and your ad will appear when requested. COLLEGIAN We must receive the ad the morning before publication. No PERSONAL ads accepted by mail. AD • Deadlines • REP , classified -1 p.m. one business day before publication cancellation -1 p.m. one business day before publication • TODAY! renewal - no later than 1 p.m. the last day the ad is to appear in the paper. Classified Mail Order Form 111 Name Phone # . Address (phone number published only if included below) Please print your ad one word per box: ' . • ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID AND MUST FOLLOW COLLEGIAN POLICY Date ad begins Make checks payable to: Total days in paper Collegian Inc. Amount paid 126 Carnegie Building Classification Dept. C University Park, PA 16802 NUMBER OF DAYS 11 OF WORDS DAY 1 DAY 2 DAY 3 DAY 4 DAY 5 CONSECUTIVE DAY ' 1.15 2.35 4.30 5.80 6.95 8.10 1.15 16.20 3.00 5.30 7.15 8.65 10.15 1.50 21.25 3.65 6.30 8.50 10.35 12.20 1.85 26.-30 4.30 7.30 9.85 12.05 14.25 2.20 31.35 4.95 8.30 11.20 13.75 16.30 2.55 Classifications apartments found (free) rooms attention help wanted roommates audio houses sublet automotive lost typing for rent parties wanted for sale rides/riders wanted to rent LADY LION NOTES: Penn State leads the all-time series with the Leopards, 3-0 . . . despite her five point performance yesterday, Veal is in danger of losing her hold on the team scoring leadership. Worley's six points give her 42 on the year (30 goals, 12 assists), just five behind Veal's 49 (27 goals, 22 assists) . . . Sommers registered 10 saves in the game while Hespe had eight between the pipes for Lafayette . Basketball is not much better; 75 percent of its players are black, yet just four of the 23 teams have a black head coach. In 1947, the black man was given a chance to play ball in the major leagues and he succeeded. 1987 is the time for a black person to get a chance in the front office. There is no reason why he or she can't succeed there as well. Mike Machi is a sophomore major ing in broadcast journalism and a sports columnist for The Daily Colle gian. His column appears every Wednesday. lo doubled. Carlton, 0-1, then intentionally walked Willie Randolph and fell behind Skinner 2-and-0. Cleveland Manager Pat Corrales visited the mound and Skinner, just 2-for-16 this season, hit the next pitch far over the left-field fence for his first career grand slam and his first homer of the year. Cecilio Guante, who relieved starter Bob Tewksbury in the fourth inning, won . his first decision, allowing one run in three and two-thirds innings. Tewksbury started in place of Tommy John, who had a stomach virus Royals 10, Tigers 1 KANSAS CITY, Mo. Bo Jackson hit a grand slam and a three-run home run, giving the 1985 Reisman Trophy winner a team record-tying sev en RBI and powering Kansas City past the Detroit Tigers 10-1. Jackson, who won the left-field job despite playing only 53 minor league games last year, also had two singles and raised his average to .500. In seven games this season, the 24-year-old rookie has 14 hits, three home' runs, two doubles and a league-leading 13 RBI. Right-hander Mark Gubicza, breaking an 0-7 April jinx, squared his record at 1-1 with a five hitter, snapping the Tigers' four-game winning streak. Kevin Seitzer, the Royals' rookie first baseman whose own hot start has been overshadowed by Jackson, hit a triple and two singles and raised his average to .481, -13 for 27:- -.- WANTED DOES YOUR SORORITY, fraterni ty, club or organization need money? Call Penn State Sub Shop 234.4782. NHL Continued from Page 11 for a 2-1 Flyers' lead. Tocchet scored the final goal into an open net with 26 seconds left. The Flyers took a 1-0 lead at 2:02 of the second on Tocchet's first goal. Tocchet skated in and shot off Froese's left pad. Derrick Smith poked the rebound across the crease and Tocchet, who skated around the net, put it by Froese into the right corner. But New York tied it 1-1 at 9:46 with the help of two Flyers' mistak es. An errant Philadelphia pass got by Brad Marsh at center ice. The puck rolled toward the Flyers' goal and Hextall came out to clear it. But the goalie muffed. Pierre Larouche picked up the puck, skated into the right circle and scored into an open net before Hextall could retreat. The Rangers lost defenseman Curt Giles late in the period when he was sandwiched on the boards between Scott Mellanby and Peter Zezel. Giles was sent to a nearby hospital with a possible dislocation of the left elbow. Islanders 4, Capitals 2 LANDOVER, Md. Greg Gilbert scored the tie-breaking goal at 14:13 of the second period as the New York Islanders blew a two-goal lead and then defeated the Washington. Capitals 4-2 to stay alive in the NHL playoffs. The Caps lead the best-of-7 Pat rick Division semifinals 3-2 as the action resumes on New York's home ice tomorrow night. Gilbert scored off a pass from behind the net from Randy Wood. He put the puck past Pete Peeters, who was making the first start after splitting the first two games of the series. The Islanders, outshot 42-24, added an insurance goal at 17:49 of the third period when Patrick Flat ley deflected a shot by Rich Kromm, following a rebound of a shot by Gord Dineen. Kelly Hrudey, who has started every game for the Islanders in this series, was cred ited with 39 saves. The Islanders, who added de fenseman Denis Potvin to an injury list that already included Mike Bos sy and Brent Sutter, took a 2-0 lead on goals by Brad Lauer and Pat LaFontaine 20 seconds apart early in the first period. Lauer scored on a backhander screened by Alan Kerr at 5:06, and The Daily Collegian Wednesday, April 15, 1987 LaFontaine scored from the top of the right circle. After failing to score on its first 29 power plays in the series, Washing ton finally took advantage of the extra man on a goal by Greg Adams at 5:25 of the second period. Two seconds after failing to score with an extra man advantage for 4:50, Kevin Hatcher scored at the 10:58 mark to forge a 2-2 tie. Nordiques 7, Whalers 5 HARTFORD, Conn. John Ogrodnick scored his third goal of the game with 1:07 remaining and Mike Eagles added an empty-net score with 41 seconds left to lift the Quebec Nordiques to a 7-5 victory over Hartford and a 3-2 advantage over the Whalers in an NHL Adams Division first-round playoff series. Despite being outshot 43-24 by Hartford, the Nordiques had five power-play goals. Ex-Whaler Risto Siltanen added five assists for the Nordiques, who return home foi Game 6 tomorrow night. Ogrodnick has five goals through the first five games. The teams broke an NHL record for most penalties in a Stanley Cup playoff series when Dale Hunter of the Nordiques received a double minor for high sticking at 11:43 of the first period. It was the 168th infraction of the series, topping the mark set last season in the Camp bell Conference championship by the Calgary Flames and St. Louis Blues. Maple Leafs 2, Blues 1 ST. LOUIS Mike Allison scored at 11:24 of the third period to snap a tie and lead the Toronto Maple Leafs to a 2-1 victory over the St. Louis Blues, giving them a 3-2 lead in their , best-of-seven Norris Division semifinal series. The series resumes with Game 6 Thursday night in Toronto. Ken Wregget was outstanding in goal for the Maple Leafs, stopping 33 of 34 shots, including several from point-blank range. With the score tied at 1-1, Allison put the Leafs ahead when he broke free from a pileup behind the St. Louis net, skated out in front of Millen and moved to his backhand before flipping the puck into the net on the short side. Toronto had tied it 13 seconds into the third period when Mark Os borne gained control of the puck just inside the St. Louis blue line and lofted a weak shot that floated over Millen's right shoulder and into the net.