16 I WEDNESDAY, March 16, 2005 's. Rot ki liirtois Nevada Alabama ---~..~ Boston Colin Pennsylvania 13 Afmna Tom Gannam/Associated press Brian McCrea (left) and Earl Elliott place school names on a six-story, 72-by-48-foot NCAA men's basketball tournament bracket in St. Louis, the host city for the 2005 Final Four. The world's largest bracket will be updated after each round. Vegas, fans ready for tourney By Tim Dahlberg ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER LAS VEGAS Hours before the first game of the NCAA tournament tips off tomorrow, every seat will be taken in the Mandalay Bay sports book and peo ple will be lining up at the betting win dows with fistfuls of cash. Those lucky enough to grab a table won't leave until the night's final game is over or their bankroll runs out. The hotel is all booked up, too, but if a room did become available it would run $599 a night. , Up and down the glittering Las Vegas Strip, the story is the same. Hotels will be packed and so will the sports books, where many fans will spend the entire weekend watching and betting the games. But betting on the NCAA tournament is one thing that doesn't stay in Vegas. In dorm rooms, offices and homes across the country, people can make a few clicks of the mouse and bet up to $lO,OOO or so on their favorite team. And one out of every 10 Americans will carefully fill out their brackets, throw $2O or so in the office or bar pool Kappa Kappa Gamma Alumnae and Friends of Peg Riley Proudly announce The Annual Peg Riley Loyalty Award to recognize an outstanding student who has completed four semesters of undergraduate study, achieved a positive academic record and demonstrated loyalty to the University. Further information and applications for this $lOOO award are now available. Deadline for applications and supporting material is Noon, Wednesday, March 30, 2005 at the Office of Fraternity & Sorority Life (863-8065) 209 HUB-Robeson Center You've got the skills, now mold them into a new career. You've got the skills we're looking for. You're organized, know how to take initiative, and work well with people. This is your chance to take those skills and use them in a new way. When you join American Express as a financial advisor, you'll get all the training and support you need to make your transition as easy as possible. Plus, you'll have control over how you start your career with us and expand your practice. If you're ready to see ho y i i -OM bike you, whflO" • working in an place where your rewards will match your efforts, visit us at: americanexpress.com/advisorcareers or contact: Equal Employment Opportunity Employer TTY: 1-800-766-2979 American Express Financial Advisors Inc. Member NASD. American Eipress Company is separate from American Express Financial Advisors Inc. and is not a broker-dealer. /' Q II - 004 •.. eric • • xpress •• • cial Cozpor • tio • . • ; •11 I. • Division Men's B a 2065 Nem Uicono Round and hope they can claim bragging rights and make a little money at the same time on what happens between now and April 4. As much as the NCAA hates it and hate it, it does the madness this March extends far beyond the basket ball court. Millions will reach into their wallets to back their teams and, for the first time, some say it's possible more money will be bet on this year's tourna ment than the Super Bowl. Though fig ures are hard to come by because much of the money is bet privately, one internet betting site estimated a stag gering $3.5 billion about the same as the gross national product of Mozam bique will be bet on the 63 games that will crown a college basketball champion. "There's a lot of people who will be betting every single one of these games," said Stuart Doyle, wagering director at the Internet gambling site BetWWTS.com. "People on the East Coast will set at their dining room table bet ting from 11 in the morning until 1 the next morning, then do the same thing again the next day." American Express Financial Advisors Inc. Suite 100, Four Tower Bridge 200 Barr Harbor Drive West Conshohocken, PA 19428 marie.y.meyers@aexp.com FAX: 610-825-8913 Though this city's sports books are SPORTS t •knecii SemiNNals t:t blirry;, St. Louis April 2 the most visual epicenter of NCAA bet ting, the $BO-90 million that bookmakers estimate they'll take in on the tourna ment won't come near what is wagered with Internet sports books. Though most of the pools are small and done mostly for fun and bragging rights, the NCAA staunchly opposes them just as it does any other form of betting on col lege sports. "The point we're making is, if you're putting money at risk whether it's a dollar or $lO,OOO it's a violation," said Bill Sawn, the NCAA's director of gam bling activities. "No one thinks a dollar pool is going to have an impact on the integrity of a game, but our kids get so many mixed messages we don't want to send any more." Las Vegas sports books will likely total less than $lOO million, but the first week of the tournament has grown into one of the biggest events of the year on the Strip. "It's become one of our biggest week ends of the year," spokesman Gordon Absher said. -"If a room did become available it would be $599 a night and there's a line of people waiting to pay that." St. tails mil 4 Make the most important inves you can make - An investment Interview Suit Package 0100% Worsted Wool Suit, 04 Price $365-$385 *Cotton Blend Dress Shirt, 04 Price $55 •Pure Silk Tie 04 Price $35 •FREE Fapert Alterations included. Special Package Price $299 1 1 ,7 Downtown State College • 814.237.8900 Logan Valley Mall • Altoona • 814.942.1164 Purve ors of Style WE 010. -_ . .. PENN STATEti. Redskins pursuing ex-PSU DE Brown Washington has shown interest in signing Courtney Brown, the No. 1 pick in 2000, who was released by Cleveland. By Joseph White ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER WASHINGTON Joe Gibbs wasted no time before starting a pursuit of for mer No. 1 overall draft pick Courtney Brown. Within hours after Browns' release by the Cleveland Browns, the Washing ton Redskins coach flew to Cleveland with defensive line coach Greg Blache and had dinner with Brown and Brown's wife Monday night, an official within the league told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. The official said Brown was expect ed to visit Redskins Park later this week. Brown, the first overall choice in the 2000 draft, was cut by Cleveland because he would not renegotiate his contract He would have been due a $2.5 mil lion roster bonus yesterday. Browns general manager Phil Sav age said he still hoped the team could re-sign the oft-injured defensive end. But Brown quickly drew interest from other teams, including the Red skins. Washington is in need of a pass rushing end, having relied heavily on Williams remembers boos, will skip next By Steven Wine ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER MIAMI Four years later, Serena Williams says the memory of being jeered at Indian Wells, Calif., remains vivid, which is why she's skipping the tournament this week Instead she's home in Palm Beach Gardens, working on her fashion busi ness and preparing to seek her fourth consecutive Key Biscayne title at the Nasdaq-100 Open, which begins March 23. Serena and her sister Venus last played at Indian Wells in 2001. They were supposed to meet each other in the semifinal that year, but Venus pulled out with knee tendonitis, prompting speculation she ducked the mat& The crowd booed the family, includ ing Serena as she won the final. "If anyone could be in my shoes, to THE DAILY COLLEGIAN linebackers and cornerbacks for many of their larks last season. Brown was also a . teammate at Penn State wi th Redskins linebacker LaVar Arrington, the No. 2 overall pick in 2000. If Washington acquires Brown, the team will have the top three picks from that draft: Brown, Arrington and tackle Chris Samuels. But Brown also represents a gamble because he hasn't played a full season since his rook ie year. He has missed 33 games with injuries over the past four seasons, including the final 14 games last year after tearing a ligament in his foot. Brown's other injuries have included a torn knee ligament, a high ankle sprain, knee cartilage damage and a ruptured right biceps tendon. Only as a rookie did he appear in all 16 games, and he has just 17 career sacks over five seasons. NYC could host Super Bowl NFL owners could vote next week on whether to play the 2010 Super Bowl in New York at a new stadium built for the Jets on the West Side of Manhattan. The vote would come at the NFL meetings in Hawaii. rff•m=l be 19 years old and have a whole crowd jeer I can't explain that feeling," Williams said yesterday during a WTA Tour conference call. "I've never felt like that before in my career, and I hope never to feel like that again. "I enjoy going places where people enjoy seeing me play. That was one place where apparently a lot of people didn't want to see me play" Williams said Indian Wells has a great field Lindsay Davenport and Maria Sharapova were among those winning Monday to reach the quarter finals and she wishes the tourna ment well. But she has no plans to return. "It would be really hard for me to walk back on that court and be out there," she said. "I'm not upset about it. I'm not bitter about it. "I'm home. I'm having a relaxing time. I love it."