Continued from Page 13. led for the first time in the game, 49-47. The Dukes wouldn't trail the rest of the game. The throng of Lady Lions fans tried to exhort the team on with thunderous chants of "Let's go Lions" but it was to no avail. James Madison was in complete control of the game when Michealson scored on a layup and led 62-54 with 7:05 left. But Garner nailed a 3-pointer and the crowd erupted. The Lady Lions were making a run and they appeared to find their old form. Two more Garner points with 3:39 left tied the game at 67 This all led to a bizarre ending. Trailing 73-71, after Garner had scored on another layup, Penn State had one final chance. With 18 seconds left, the Lady Lions got the rebound and made their way up court as all the fans were now standing. Garner attempted to penetrate then brought the ball back Frustration Continued from Page 13 ty's layup underneath the basket, but that was as close as the team would come. "We knew James Madison could come back they kept going two points at a time," Portland said. "I know from experience that wear ing a favorite's role can weigh heavy," Dukes coach Sheila Moorman said. "I Cagers Continued from Page 13 After Carl Thomas hit a pair of free throws and Dave Degitz scored one from the line, EMU put it away. Follow ing a timeout, Charles Thomas inbounded the ball to brother Carl. Penn State, in a frenzied effort to pressure the pass, let Roger Lewis alone underneath for a backbreaking layup with 21 sec onds left. The Lions pulled to within two, but a Neely free throw iced the game with 10 ticks of the clock showing. Lion guard Freddie Barnes missed a 3-pointer but Penn State regained the ball when Carl Thomas traveled with the rebound. With one second left, Freddie Barnes hurled another trey from the right side that caromed off the rim as time expired. Penn State shot only 2-of-7 from the floor in the overtime. The Lions, almost perfect from 3-point territory early, EMU Continued from Page 13 Charles twin brother Carl Thomas on the next trip. He hit both free throws to once again push the lead to three with :54 left. The next trip down the floor, Penn State center Dave Degitz got the ball under the basket for a wide open layup, but the ball was blocked by Boykin who 11A4) • lIAC. • nAc• • rine. • HAsz • IIA4) • 11AO •line. • rine. • rine. • nne• • lino . e The Brothers of Pi Lambda Phi would like z > = to congratulate our newest e Little Sister Initiates: Madison Babcock Janet Lewandoski Christine Russell Sarah Barrier Tara Loyle Valerie Shay 4 , Kierstie Bowers Kathy Mezger Alison Smith z Marla Gibson Nikki Parry Tricia Swartz t Jennifer Gutshali Samilja Proper Marianne Trojan , Kim Kerlin Missy Reid Erika Wagner z Wendy Whitcavage,t • 0103 • 11ACI • 11A41) • FRO • 11A40 • 11A01) • 11A(1) • 11A(10 • lIAO • IIA01) • 11A0 • lIA4O • 11A4114 out beyond the 3-point line and shot it. However, Michealsen was right in Garner's face and blocked the shot. "It was just a matter of putting my hand in her face and keeping my feet moving," Michealsen said. As the ball fell to the floor and the final second ticked off the clock, there was silence except for the cheers of the James Madison fans and players. "The girls knew what play to run. I don't feel as if they knew there were 19 seconds on the game clock, which was a mental mistake. They had the play and they panicked. The timeout was something we could have used but they had the play," Portland said. They jumped and danced on the same floor that the Penn State players had just stood on in disbelief. "I looked up at the clock and I should have went right to the play but I tried penetrating and I pulled it back out and when I looked up again there was four seconds left," Garner said. do think that when we got back into the game Penn State started to measure themselves and it's a difficult way to play." Right now, the thoughts of a p 9-2 record, the No. 1 ranking and the Atlan tic 10 regular-season and tournament titles are a distant memory. The loss is the foremost thing on the team's mind. With the expectations placed on the were 1-of6 in the second half and over time. Penn State had a chance to pull it out in regulation. With the score tied at 58, Monroe Brown turned in a defensive gem, stepping into the passing lane and picking off a pass with 36 seconds left. Brown was fouled but missed the front end of a one-and-one. Forward Deßon Hayes snared the rebound and passed the ball to Freddie Barnes. EMU pressured Barnes in front of the Lion bench and forced a turnover. With six second left, EMU rushed the ball up court and Charles Thomas hurled a 30-foot toss which hit the back board as regulation ended. The squads traded blows for most of the contest as the lead never exceeded five. The teams orchestrated effective half-court offenses in the first half, uti lizing pristine ball control and capital izing on opportunistic chances inside. fouled the Lions' center in the process. Degitz nailed 1-of-2 free throws to make it 68-66 with with :43 left. Then came the backbreaking play for the Lions. After EMU called a timeout with 32 seconds left, Charles Thomas was having a tough time finding an open man on the inbounds play. Just before a five-second violation, he hit Carl team and within the team itself the defeat was devastating. Yet perhaps Portland put it best afterward what the game meant for her team. "If you don't dream the big dreams, if you don't talk about going to the Final Four, if you don't look at the trophy or talk to the best, you have no clue what the best is," Portland said. "We don't do this to just be an OK team ." The Lions, on the strength 5-4-6 shooting from 3-point range, took a 33- 29 lead at intermission. Freddie Barnes led the way with nine points, hitting all three of his 3-point attempts in the half. With Kennedy and Hallas plagued with foul trouble throughout the second half, forward James Barnes asserted himself inside, scoring 10 of his 12 points in the half. Equally as dominating offen sively in the paint was Kennedy. "We thought long and hard about how to guard him and we came to the con clusion that he'd get his points," Coach Bruce Parkhill said. "We conceeded that he'd get 20 so it was in our best interest not to let the other guys get offensive." Penn State, which committed only one turnover in the first half, coughed the ball up five times in the second. The man-to-man EMU defense also stifled the Lions' ability to penetrate. Thomas who found a wide open Lewis for a layup to make it 70-66. Lewis' bucket proved to be the decid ing points. "There were a lot of key moments in the game," Freddie Barnes said. "It really came down to stopping them. If we could've done that we could have made a run." WEEKLY MEETINGS LIST The following is a list of Student Organization Budget Committee sponsored groups which are having an organizational meeting this week Organization Name Date Time ADVERTISING CLUB 3/21 6:00 ALLIANCE CHRISTIAN FELLOW 3/20 7:00 ALLIANCE FOR ANIMAL RIGHTS 3/19 7:30 ALPHA EPSILON DELTA-PREMED 3/21 7:00 ALPHA EPSILON RHO 3/20 7:30 AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL 3/21 7:00 ANTHROPOLOGY CLUB 3/19 7:00 ARCHERY CLUB 3/18 7:30 3/21 7:30 3/18 7:00 3/18 8:00 3/18 7:30 3/22 8:00 3/21 7:00 3/24 7:00 3/24 6:00 3/18 7:00 3/19 7:00 3/20 8:00 3/24 1:00 3/21 7:00 3/22 7:00 3/20 7:30 3/21 7:30 3/22 7:00 3/19 7:00 3/21 9:00 3/19 7:00 3/20 7:00 3/19 7:30 3/19 6:00 3/20 7:00 3/19 8:00 3/21 8:00 3/24 8:00 3/18 6:30 3/20 7:00 3/21 8:00 3/18 7:00 3/20 7:00 3/18 7:00 3/18 7:00 3/20 7:00 3/18 5:30 3/20 5:30 3/19 9:00 3/21 9:00 3/21 6:30 3/18 7:00 3/20 7:00 3/19 7:00 3/19 8:30 3/21 8:30 3/22 7:00 ASSOC OF BLACK JOURNALISTS ASSOC OF COLLEGIATE ENTRE ASTRONOMY CLUB BADMINTON CLUB BALLROOM DANCE CLUB BASEBALL CARD CLUB BUSINESS STUDENT COUNCIL BYZANTINE CATH STU MINISTY CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST CARIBBEAN STUDENT ASSOC CHESS CLUB CHI ALPHA CHRIST FELLOW CIRCLE K COLLEGE DEMOCRATS COL HELP AID RES MISSIONS COLLOQUY ECO-ACTION ECO-ACTION -EARTH DAY ENVIR RESOURCE MNGT CLUB FENCING CLUB FORENSIC COUNCIL HORTICULTURE CLUB HOTEL, RESTAURANT SOCIETY INDOOR WINTER GUARD INTERVARSITY CHRIST FELLOW JUDO CLUB JUGGLING CLUB JUNG SIM DO MARTIAL ARTS KAPPA PHI CHRIST SER SOR KOREAN KARATE CLUB MANAGEMENT CLUB MARTIAL ARTS GROUP MODEL RAILROAD CLUB NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR REFORM OF MARIJUANA LAWS NIT LION RACQUETBALL CLUB ORGAN FOR TOWN INDEPEN STU ORTHODOX CHRIST FELLOW PARIVARTAN PENN STATE KARATE CLUB PRO•CHOICE RETURNING ADULTS STU ORGAN SCIENCE FICTION SOCIETY SCIENCE STUDENT COUNCIL SIGMA lOTA EPSILON SIGN LANGUAGE ORGANIZATION SOUTH HALLS COUNCIL STUDENT FIRST STEP STU FOUNDATION PERFORM ART STU ORGAN BUDGET COMMITTEE STUDENT SKATING CLUB STUDENT UNION BOARD STUDENT WRESTLING CLUB STUDENTS FOR LIFE USG-LEGAL AFFIARS USG-POL AND INT AFFAIRS USG-SUPREME COURT USG-WOMEN'S CONCERNS VETERANS ORGANIZATION WEST HALL RESIDENCE ASSOC WRITERS CLUB REMEMBER, THIS LIST APPEARS ONLY ON MONDAYS. Interested in having your organization appear in the Weekly Meetings List? 3/18 8:00 3/19 8:30 3/21 5:30 3/24 5:30 3/18 6:30 3/21 7:30 3/18 6:00 3/19 7:30 3/21 7:30 3/21 8:00 3/19 2:30 3/19 7:00 3/20 6:30 3/20 7:00 3/18 7:00 3/20 8:00 3/21 8:00 3/21 7:30 3/19 7:00 3/18 9:00 3/24 11:45am 3/19 7:30 3/18 6:30 3/18 8:00 3/19-22 3/20 5:30 3/20 6:00 3/21 7:00 3/24 7:00 3/21 7:00 3/20 8:00 3/21 7:00 3/21 7:00 Stop by Room 211 or 215 HUB for details Place 165 WILLARD EISEN CHAPEL 105 WILLARD 111 WART 167 WILLARD GENERAL 220 WILLARD GENERAL HUB ASSEMBLY RM FILM FESTIVAL REC HALL-ARCHERY RANGE•OPEN SHOOT REC HALL-ARCHERY RANGE-OPEN SHOOT POLLOCK CULTURAL LOUNGE•MEETING 367 WILLARD GENERAL 109 OSMOND MEETING 6th FLOOR DAVEY OPEN HOUSE 126 WHITE BLDG REGULAR PLAY 126 WHITE BLDG REGULAR PLAY 133 WHITE WEEKLY MEETING 105 WILLARD COMMITTEE 305 HUB GENERAL EISEN CHAPEL-PRESANCTIFIED LITURGY EISEN CHAPEL DIVINE LITURGY FRIZZEL RM-EISEN CHAP-PRIME TIME P ROBESON C C CARIB EXP PLAN HUB GROUND FLOOR-MEETING (NEAR FAST BREAK)-MEETING 111 BOUCKE WORSHIP/FELLOWSHIP 320-322 HUB GENERAL 267 WILLARD GENERAL 206 AG-ENGIN BLDG-GENERAL 227 HUB GENERAL 323 HUB GENERAL 323 HUB EARTH DAY 202 FERGUSON MEETING 33 WHITE BLDG BEGINNER'S NITE 33 WHITE BLDG PRACTICE 33 WHITE BLDG PRACTICE 309 SPARKS GENERAL 123 HEADHOUSE #1 131 S HENDERSON COMM MEETING 133 WHITE BLDG GENERAL 133 WHITE BLDG GENERAL EISEN CHAPEL JAMES PART 3 REC HALL-WRESTLING RM-PRACTICE REC HALL-WRESTLING RM-PRACTICE 3B WHITE MEETING ROBESON C C MEETING 133 WHITE PRACTICE 133 WHITE PRACTICE WESLEY FOUNDATION-GENERAL 106 WHITE WORKOUT 106 WHITE WORKOUT 108 HENDERSON MEETING IM BLDG-MAT RM WORKOUT IM BLDG-MAT RM WORKOUT S-5 HUB GENERAL 71 WILLARD IM BUILDING IM BUILDING IM BUILDING 307 HUB EISEN CHAP-PRESANTIFIED LITURGY 315 WILLARD 106 WHITE WORKOUT 106 WHITE WORKOUT 251 WILLARD WEEKLY MEETING 322 HUB MEETING 103 OSMOND DISCUSSION 158 WILLARD GENERAL 113 SACKETT WEEKLY MEETING 207 CHAMBERS GENERAL HOYT HL STUDY LG-GENERAL 363 WILLARD GENERAL 317 HUB GENERAL 227 HUB BUSINESS MEETING ICE RINK WORKOUT ICE RINK WORKOUT 307 HUB GENERAL 142 REC HALL GENERAL 314 WILLARD HUMAN LIFE AWARENESS WEEK OFFICE ROUNDTABLE 323 HUB STAFF 225 HUB WEEKLY MEETING 227 HUB GENERAL 120 BOUCKE MEETING 249 S PUGH ST MEETING THOMPSON LOUNGE GENERAL 201 E E WEST WRITERS WORKSHOP Event SPEAKER PRAYER&PRAISE VEGETARIANISM WEEKLY MEETING CLUB TIME CLUB TIME CLUB TIME
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