The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, June 11, 1987, Image 7

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    12—The Daily Collegian Thursday, June 11, 1987
Postmaster general
responds to critic
By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON, D.C. Post
master General Preston R. Tisch
is taking Federal Trade Commis
sion Chairman Daniel Oliver to
task for . criticizing the Postal
Service.
Oliver wrote Tisch on May 15,
contending that “postal service is
bad and customers are unhappy”
and urging an end to the Postal
Service’s monopoly.
Tisch responded in a letter Tues
day, telling Oliver that he “is flat
out wrong” about the quality of
service and the feelings of mail
ers.
The American public is receiv
ing better mail service than ever
before and “the glib reference to
‘unhappy customers’ is miles off
the mark,” Tisch said.
Oliver, an advocate of competi
tion in most matters, believes that
the American public would be
better off if it had a choice of ways
to get letters delivered.
Hofbrau Pizza Express
We use a combination of whole
milk mozzarella and provolone
cheeses and of course it’s
100% Real Dairy Cheese. Our
pizza is always made with thick
crust at no extra charge and it is
delivered to you in our hot oven
trucks to guarantee freshness.
After all, if we can sell a pizza
with a name like Hofbrau -it
must be great pizza. -234-9000
WELCOME BACK
MOLSON FESTIVAL
$2 75 PITCH
ALL DAY,
ALL NIGHT
ALL WEEK
Happy Hours 10 p.m.-midnight
• NEXT DAY SERVICE! • NEXT DAY SERVICE!
BICYCLE OVERHAUL!
REquUnly 19.95!
NOW $l5 95 WIT
BIKE
The laws giving the service a
monopoly on letter delivery pro
tect the agency’s income, so that it
can provide service in all areas
city and rural without huge,
government subsidies, Tisch said.
While the laws do limit the
choices of the public and business
es mailing letters, the benefits
outweigh those costs, he added.
IN TOWN!”
SH O P
321 e. beaver ave., state college, pa
814-237-5961
In areas where competition is
allowed, such as parcel post and
overnight delivery, service has
improved, Oliver said. He con
tended that “private companies
have offered consistently better
service to the American people.”
So, he wrote, the public deserves
the liberty to choose among com
petitive letter delivery services
also.
Tisch disagreed.
Several studies and polls have
found the public to be satisfied
with postal service, with between
74 percent and 86 percent of the
public holding favorable views of
his agency, the postmaster gener
al wrote.
| 16" Pizza with 1 Topping !
I" 20" Pizza with 1 Topping"™"'"" 1 ":
; 6 Cokes I
■ 16 Cuts Party Pizza ■
* J a 9.99 b Exp. June 18, 1987 "
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; the Price of a Medium
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ozen New Models From
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Spain's Socialists strong in polls
By FRANCISCO CONDE
Associated Press Writer
The nation’s 150,000 policemen \frere on alert and no
major incidents were reported.
Minoin c ■ m, . _ . Opinion surveys published last week indicated the
wimSSSEJ 5 &h7-S e go Z e T n i S ° cl f s ]f we / e - Socialists would remain Spain’s dominant political force
winning about half the seats in Wednesday’s elections for but could lose considerable support
the European Parliament, but results came in slowly They control 11 of the 13 parliaments being elected
from the votes for city governments and regional legis- Wednesday, one of the four others and 32 of Spain’s 52
latures - largest cities.
Months of labor unrest over economic policy and rising Among the first to vote Wednesday were Gonzalez, 45,
unemployment were expected to hurt Prime Minister and his wife, Carmen Romero, who cast their ballots at a
Felipe Gonzalez in the local and regional contests, but his primary school in Madrid.
Socialists were expected to remain the dominant party. Gonzalez would not respond to reporters’ questions on
With more than two-thirds of the European Parliament published polls indicating his party could lose majorities
vote counted, the prime minister’s Socialists had 39.4 in several large cities and regional parliaments,
percent and had won 28 of the 60 seats.. In the 1983 elections, the Socialists won 43 percent of the
Spain’s second-largest party, the conservative Popular v0 T te ’ .. .. ....
Alliance, had 24 percent and 17 seats, Deputy Prime Legislative elections in Andalusia, Catalonia, Galicia
Minister Alfonso Guerra told reporters at the Interior and the Basque Country are to be held over the next three
Ministry election center. years. The Socialists control-the parliament of Andalusia,
The Democratic Social Center of former Prime Min- tlie pr ' me minister’s home region,
ister Adolfo Suarez had won six seats and 9.7 percent of Recent polls indicate the largest opposition party, the
the vote. The Communist coalition United Left was conservative Popular Alliance led by new party chief
expected to win three seats and the conservative Catalo- Antonio Hernandez Mancha, could fall below the 26
nian nationalist coalition two. percent of the vote won in 1983, but would remain Spain’s
Guerra said no significant results were in from ballot- sec °nd-largest political party,
ing for 70,000 places in 8,000 municipal governments and Polls also indicated the chief beneficiary of votes lost by
779 seats in 13 of the 17 regional legislatures. both the Socialists and the conservatives would be the
The European Parliament elections were the first since cen l r ' s *- Democratic Social Center led by Suarez, 54.
Spain entered the European Economic Community Jan. In 1983, Suarez’s party got less than 2 percent of the
?, 986 .- vot e. But the party was expected to win more than 12
Government officials in Madrid and Barcelona said percent Wednesday and become a power broker in many
voter turnout appeared greater than in the last local city halls and regional parliaments,
elections in May 1983, when an estimated 30 percent of It was expected to become the third largest party
eligible voters cast ballots. overtaking the communist'United Left.
And 4 Cokes
$7.75 Exp. June .18, 1987
Served on bakery fresh rolls and garnished with chips
and dill pickles
• Philly Style
USDA Chip Steak, Onions, Sauce. American Cheese
Regular Regular Half-a-yard
'3.69 *4.99 *5.99
• California Style
USDA Chip Steak, American Cheese, lettuce, tomato,
mayonaise
Regular
‘3.69
• Coast to Coast
Combination ol Philly and California
Regular
‘5.29
Regular
•3.99
Extras
onions
mushrooms
green peppers
regular half-a-yard
Italian 3.59 ‘Wfe t
Roast Beef , 3.39 "'“Zb*)
Tuna Melt 3.89 /kB9
Ham & Cheese 3.29 / 4.69 » ’irdssings
Cheese Melt 3.29 I &79 ,' A
Meatball 3.39 S S 'Meal
Turkey 3.69 Italic. 3*9
BLT& Cheese 3.39 Greei 3.Q9,
Extras Chef 3.9fc)
Cheese .30/ { .60 samssss '•'-!*/ 3.5& j l*'
Meats .70/ j 1.20 \ j
Cheese Steaks
Regular
M. 99
Half-a-yard
’5.59_
Half-a-yard®
regular half-a-yard
.30 - .60
.30 .60
.30 .60
Grinders
222 Wefef Hamilton A K
OPEN Everyday 1 a.m. to
ifiTHE CAMPUS LOOP®
CAMPUS LOOP
Buses every 20 minutes
Weekdays 7:30 AM - 5:30 PM
Starting 7:30 AM at University Drive
and ending at 5:30 PM at University Drive
TIMETABLE
(Minutes past the hour)
1. East Halls
2. Natatorium
. 3. Shields Building
4. University Drive
5. Pollock-Shortledge
6. White Building
7. College-Heister
8. College-Alien .
9. Deike Building '
10. Rec Hall
11. Kern-Library
12. Forum Building.
13. Creamery
14. North Halls
O Bus Station replaces Stop 9on Fridays
'Timed stop
Times for other stops are approximate
Effective June 10,1987
Rick’s S
ills
rt
aV J
ifesi
Mli^S
Ib!
25 45 05
26 46 06
26 46 06
30 50 10 rotu
33 53 13
34 54 14
37 57 17 wh i mjtf
40 00 20
41 01 21
42 02 22
43 03 23
44 04 24
45 05 25
Notice: Wheelchair lift van service available for individuals requiring the use
of a wheelchair. Call 865-6561 for information and scheduling.
PM,
nder Is Just A Grinder
ick’s Place
ecialties
e State
234-3000
■—'S. Nim
A Ci
Pizzas
Medium Large
5.49 6.59
Toppings
salami
mozzarrella
beef provolone
green peppers
oms blacks olives
zucchini
medium .90 large 1.20
10 pepperoni 1.30
ood Pizzas
rreuSw
I •
fl> Mt
r^7
sports
Penn State’s Chris Chase spikes a ball during a game against East Stroudsburg
earlier this season.
NHL awards
Hextall
and Poulin
TORONTO (AP) - Wayne Gretzky
of the Edmonton Oilers won the Hart
Trophy, given to the NHL’s Most
Valuable Player, for a record eighth
consecutive time at the league’s an
nual awards ceremony last night.
Gretzky’s competition was de
fenseman Ray Bourque of the Boston
Bruins and goaltender Mike Liut of
the Hartford Whalers.
Liut also a finalist in the race for
the Vezina Trophy, given to the
league’s top goaltender, lost to Phila
delphia’s Ron Hextall, who won the
Conn Smythe Trophy as the MVP of
the Stanley Cup playoffs.
Gretzky, who has won the award in
each of his eight NHL seasons, led the
league in scoring for the seventh
consecutive time with 62 goals and
121 assists for 183 points. It marked
the sixth consecutive season he has
scored 150-or-more points.
Dave Poulin of the Flyers won the.
Selke Trophy as the NHL’s best de
fensive forward.
Poulin, who had 25 goals and 70
points in 75 games, beat center Guy
Carbonneau of the Montreal Ca
nadiens and Bobby Gould of the Capi
tals.
Gretzky also added his fifth Lester
B. Pearson Award to his list of
achievements earlier this week. The
award is for the NHL’s outstanding
player as selected by members of the
league’s player association.
Bourque, who led the Bruins in
scoring with 95 points, won the Norris
Trophy as the NHL’s top defenseman.
Bourque, the first Bruin to win the
award since Bobby Orr in 1975, beat
out Mark Howe of the Philadelphia
Flyers and Larry Murphy of the
Washington Capitals for the award.
He also won the Calder Trophy as the
NHL’s top rookie in 1980.
Hextall, a rookie, led the NHL in
minutes played, save percentage and
wins while compiling a 3.00 goals
against average.
Edmonton’s Grant Fuhr and Liut
also were finalists for the Vezina,
which was determined by a vote of
the league’s general managers.
Hextall lost out on a third award
when Los Angeles Kings’ forward
Luc Robataille won the Calder Tro
phy as the league’s top rookie. Roba
taille finished his first NHL season
with 45 goals and 84 points. He beat
out Hextall and teammate Jimmy
Carson.
Phils trade
the Hit Man
PHILADELPHIA (AP) Veteran
outfielder Mike Easier was traded
back to the New York Yankees yes
terday for two minor-league players
outfielder Keith Hughes and short
stop Shane Turner, the Philadelphia
Phillies announced.
Easier, 36, obtained in a four-play
er trade from the Yankees last De
cember, hit .282 in 33 games with the
Phillies with one home run and 10
RBI. He was on the disabled list 15
days last month with a bruised right
knee.
The trade opens a roster spot for
the Phillies, who also had acquired
second baseman Tom Barrett, now
playing in the minors, while giving up
pitchers Charles Hudson, a Yankees
starter, and Jeff Knox, who is in the
minors.
Hughes, 23, is a left-handed batter
who also can play first base. He has
been playing with the Columbus Clip
pers of the International League,
where he has been hitting .295
through 40 games. He spent 15 days
with the Yankees last month, going
hitless in four at-bats. The Phillies
assigned him to their Triple-A affil
iate in Maine.
Turner, 24, has been hitting .315
through 20 games with the Yankees’
Double-A affiliate in Albany. The
Phillies assigned him to their Double-
A affiliate in Reading.
No. 1
Penn State’s Anna Marie Vesco tries to gain possession of the ball in a game earlier this season against James Madison.
Lady laxers win national title
By DAVE SOTTILE
Collegian Sports Writer
COLLEGE PARK, Md. When
looking back at 1987, Penn State
sports fans will have a lot to be
proud of.
The school notched its first na
tional championship of the year
when the underdog football''team
completed its undefeated season
with a 14-10 win over Miami in one
of the most talked about games of
the century.
But that wasn’t enough.
While it didn’t compete for the
crown in front of an audience of
Lakers look to give Celts
knock-out punch tonight
By BILL BARNARD
AP Basketball Writer
BOSTON The Los Angeles Lakers might be facing a
tougher opponent than the Boston Celtics tonight.
“We have a cushion and as soon as you start thinking
that way, you’re going to lose,” Lakers Coach Pat Riley
said after practice yesterday. “We have to fight that
feeling of security and fight it hard.”
The Lakers lead the best-of-seven NBA championship
series 3-1 thanks to Magic Johnson’s hook shot with two
seconds remaining that beat the Celtics 107-106 Tuesday
night. Game 5 will be played in Boston tonight, but the
sixth and seventh games, if necessary, would be at the
Inglewood Forum, where the Lakers easily won the first
two games.
“We celebrated Tuesday night because we broke
through at Boston Garden,” Riley said, referring to the
Celtics’ third loss in 88 games there. “We took a second to
savor what we had done, but now we have to realize we
still haven’t won it yet.”
Spikers place third at NCAAs
By ROBERT WILLIAMS
Collegian Sports Writer
The men’s volleyball team was on a roll. The
Lions had just dominated the University of South
ern California, 15-5, in game three to take a two
games-to-one lead in their best-of-five semi-final
match of the NCAA Tournament May 1.
But Penn State’s road to a national
championship came to a screeching halt that night
in UCLA’s Pauley Pavilion. USC stormed back to
take games four and five, the match, and the
Lions’ dream of a title with a 15-12,9-15,5-15,15-12,
15-9 come-from-behind victory.
“We had taken control of the match (in the third
game),” Head Coach Tom Tait said. “I really
think we should have won it, but in the fourth ball
game we came out with a little less intensity than
we had in the previous three games and allowed
them to kind of work their way back into the flow.”
. USC never got into the flow in its Championship
over 70 million, the women’s la
crosse team garnered an NCAA
title of its own. The Lady Lions
captured the championship with a
hard-fought 7-6 win over previously
undefeated and top-ranked Temple
at the University of Maryland on
May 16.
Beth Stokes and Tami Worley
’pumped in three goals each, while
defender' Chris Vitale held Temple
All-American Gail Cummings
who entered the game with 86 goals
to just two scores.
The championship was the first
NCAA title for the Lady Lions,
however, Penn State won three
Riley said that when complacency threatens his team,
“that’s when I talk history with them. That’s when I
remind them that we won Game 1 of the finals in Boston in
1984 and got a false sense of security.
“We won Game 4 last night the way we lost the series in ,
1984,” Riley said.
The Laker players are less concerned than Riley about
a letdown.
“We were younger in ’B4 and made some mistakes after
we won here,” Johnson said. “We haven’t accomplished
what we want yet. It will help that we’ve been in this
position before.”
“I think we’re mentally tough enough to overcome
those feelings of security,” Lakers sixth man Michael
Cooper said. “I think we’ll play hard (tonight). It would
be nice to win it on the parquet floor.”
“I hope they’ll get complacent, but I’m not counting on
it,” Boston Coach K.C. Jones said. “I doubt it will be a
problem for them. If I were them, I would rather take the
title away from us on our own floor.”
Please see LAKERS, Page 18.
match with UCLA, though, as the Bruins swept the
Trojans 15-12, 15-2, 16-14, to win their 12th NCAA
title in 25 years.
Tait said that if his team had executed better in
several crucial situations in games four and five of
the semi-finals, it very easily could have been his
squad that battled UCLA for the title. '
“I think the thing that really hurt us badly in
that match,” Tait said, “was that there were a
couple of critical times in both the fourth and fifth
games when we really needed to win a critical
point or a critical sideout with some aggressive
play and we didn’t get the aggressive play we
needed.
“It certainly was within our reach and I think we
should have gone out and taken it from them, but
we didn’t. We allowed them to get back into it, and
once they got back into it, their outside hitters that
we had controlled fairly well through the match
really got hot and began to put some balls away on
the outside.”
straight United States Women’s La
crosse Association titles from 1978
to 1980.
By winning the game at Byrd
Stadium, the Lady Lions snapped a
two-year jinx, in which they were
twice knocked out of the tourney on
the Terps’ home field. In 1985
Maryland beat Penn State 12-11 in
triple overtime in the semi-finals,
and last year the Terps beat the
Lady Lions 11-10 in the
championship game.
After walking through the regular
season with a perfect 16-0 record,
including a 10-7 win at Penn State
on April 1, Temple just couldn’t get
The
to Wo.
PSU 13, Richrm
PSU 16, Princett
PSU 16, James f
PSU 14, Loyola (
PSU 12, Virginia
William & Mary
•Temple 10, PSU
PSU 20, West Cl
PSU 13, Lehigh 5
PSU 14, Delaware
PSU 21, Rutgers 2
PSU 13, Lafayette
PSU 20, Penn 4
PSU 12, New Hr
PSU 19, Yale 2
PSU 17, Bucknell
PSU 12, Maryland
PSU 14, Virginia
PSU 7, Temple 6
Collegian Photo/Crlsty Rickard
possession of the ball late in the
game, as the Lady Lions who
finished the season with a 17-2 mark
milked the clock with a slim one
goal lead.
Worley took a pass from former
high school teammate Mary Ann
Foley and beat Temple goalie Ch
rissy Muller with 15:39 left in the
game to give Penn State a seem
ingly safe 7-3 lead. However, the
Lady Owls’ Aamina Thornton re
plied in kind 34 seconds later, blow
ing a shot past Penn State
netminder Sue Sommers on a free
position to cut the lead to three.
Please see LADY LAXERS, Page 24.
The Lakers Magic Johnson knocks the ball away from Boston's Kevin McHale in
Tuesday night’s 107-106 Laker win. Los Angeles will be looking to knock the
Celtics out of the playoffs tonight at the Boston Garden.
The Daily Collegian
Thursday, June 11, 1987
Perhaps having learned a lesson about letting
up, the Lions never let Ohio State into the third
place match, sweeping the Buckeyes 15-3,15-6,15-
6. Tait said that his squad played excellent bail in
the contest, and that defensively Penn State
played better than it had in the second half of the
semi-final match.
“I was very pleased with the way we came
back,” Tait said. “Obviously the whole team was
extremely disappointed and very much down after
the semi-final loss, but we focused in the locker
room after that on the third-place match and the
first step towards winning the national
championship next year.”
And this business about a national championship,
is not just idle'talk from Tait, who led his squad to
its second-straight final four appearance and fifth
in seven years. Penn State will be without senior
outside hitter Jose Rubayo next year, but he was
the only starter the Lions lost to graduation.
Please see SPIKERS, Page 18.
T rackmen
first
at IC4As
By STACEY JACOBSON
Collegian Sports Writer
In the sport of track, individual
excellence is necessary for the team
score. But which is more important,
individual achievements or success
for the team? Fortunately for the
men’s track team, it didn’t have to be
satisfied with one or the other. It got
both an IC4A title and four All-
Americans.
The accomplishments of Penn
State’s All-Americans Steve Bal
key, Eric Carter, Ray Levitre and
Dave Masgay, proved that they are
among the best in the country in their
events. And when the Ljons captured
the IC4A title, they placed the whole
team in that elite category of cham
pions.
“The IC4A is far more important
than the NCAA (meet) because you
compete as a team. Winning the IC4A
is like in most sports winning the
national championship,” Head Coach
Harry Groves said.
This year’s victory at Viilanova’s
Jumbo Elliot Track marks Penn
State’s third IC4A Championship and
its second consecutive outdoor title
an accomplishment unmatched since
Maryland captured the title in 1980
and ’Bl.
“You don’t find many teams that
are constant repeaters,” Groves said.
The Lions nipped George Mason by
a five-point margin with a score of 68.
The rest of the places were earned by
Pitt (51), Maryland (43), Villanova
(37), Princeton (35), Manhattan (32),
James Madison (28), Boston Univer
sity (24) and St. John’s (23).
The three-day meet, which began
Friday May 21, started on a high note
for Penn State when Masgay, Barry
Walsh and Chris Green placed first,
second and fifth, respectively in the
decathlon. Masgay’s score of 7,588
qualified him for the NCAA meet and
eventually All-American status.
On Saturday, Penn State chalked
up two more first place finishes with
C. J. Hunter’s shot put throw of 57 feet
3 inches, and Carter’s 30:26.4 run in
the 10,000 meters.
Following Saturday’s victories, the
Lions would gain one more first-place
finish, but an accumulation of six
more scoring finishes helped them
edge the Partiots. The first-place was
tallied by Levitre with a 1:49.25 in the
800 meters. Levitre ran a come-from
behind race in which he sprinted from
the back of the pack in the last 150
meters. Lion Chris Mills placed sixth
in that event with 1:50.57.
Sophomore Michael Timpson
placed fourth in the 100-meters
(10.56), an event which was won in a
meet record time of 10.20 by Lee
McCrae of Pitt. Timpson injured him
self at this meet and was unable to
Please see TRACKMEN, Page 18.