Lock Haven State College Vol. XXII, No. 24 Friday, Dec. 14, 1979 Vasectomy Inspires Writer, Carl Larsen Uy Marcy Walsh willingly admits that his skills There aren't too many peo- as a cook are somewhat lax. ple who get motivated to He also did a series of radio write a book after seeing a shows with Mr. Joseph Nichvasectomy performed on a olson called "The Sow Belly lion but for Carl Larsen that Show." Larsen said the is just what he needed. shows are a satire about small Larsen is the co-author of town radio. Only A Gringo Would Die Larsen has had a series of for an Antealer, a book interesting odd jobs in his about Dr. Michael Milts and lifetime. He worked in a cirhis adventures as a New York cus for sometime where he City zoo veteranarian. said he "shoveled elephant It all started when Larsen's shit."He was a grave digger agent called and told him that at one time which he said is a the doctor that treats her real art when it comes to poodle is a very interesting squaring the corners. Larsen person and he should go and also worked as a dispatcher talk to him. Larsen said that for the teamsters for 18 years he just turned on the cassett, in New York. shut up, nooded a lot, and let Larsen has another very inMilts do the talking. After teresting job that is second to seeing the vasectomy per- his writing. When he is at formed on the lion, Larsen home he takes on the role of realized he really had a househusband. Of all the something and knew he had jobs he has had, he said he to write about it. likes this one best. He and his As well as writing fiction wife, Ms. Celeste Rhodes, a and non-fiction, Larsen teacher here at Lock Haven writes a weekly cooking col- State moved here from New umn for GRIT called "Frying York when Rhodes got her Pan Follies" although he degree and accented a teach- Football Awards story on page 4 ROSS NEVEL UNSUNG HERO A W A R D Pete Hanlon ing position. Larsen stated he has no regrets about switching roles. It gives him time to be at home and most important, it gives him the time to write. Although Larsen attended a Junior college in El Camino, California and majored in Journalism he never received a degree. He said he would have liked to have fin- ished college but he also feels that a degree is not necessary in journalism. He stated it is not what degrees you have received that's important, it's what you can put out. Larsen stated that, as a writer, he does hit his share of dry spots but it doesn't seem to keep him from finally getting the writing done. Larsen feels that this is where self confidence in oneself comes in. Larsen said there comes a time when the writer has to know that whatever " B . S . " comes out, it will be good. He feels this is also the difference between the professional and the amateur. Larsen's yearn to be a writer started during the second World War when he would go to see the old Gregory Peck movies. He always wantedto be the writer Peck portrayed, the debonair, pipe smoking individual with patches on his jacket sleeves. Although he considers himself a lot like Peck, her never smoked a pipe and doesn't have any patches, but he did become a writer and that's what is important. Last Call For Unpaid Parking FinesPARKING REGULATION CHANGES As of January 1, 1980, the parking system at Lock Haven State College will go through a major change. The first change is that the collection of ticket fines will be strictly enforced for ALL FACULTY, STAFF, STUDENTS and ADMINISTRATION. Here is an example for a $2.00 fine: $2.00 fine paid withing 72 hours to S.C.C. If not paid in 72 hours; $2.00 plus $1.00 surcharge paid within five (5) days to S.C.C. If not paid in five (5) days: $5.00 plus $26.00 costs, payable to the Magistrate. Lot No. I will be ADMINISTRA TIVE PARKING ONLV. Lots No. 2,3,4,5,10 will be FACULTY and STAFF PARKING ONLY. Lots No. 6,7 will be RESIDENT STUDENT PARKING ONLY. Lot No. 9 will be RESIDENT and VISITOR PARKING ONLY. Lot. No 8 will be COMMUTER STUDENT PARKING ONL Y. If payment is still delinquent, a warrent will be issued for the offender's arrest. He shall face payment of the fine and/or a jail sentence. THERE WILL BE NO EXCEPTIONS. The parking lots will be open to qualified personnel on a first come first serve basis. The parking has been changed in order to make it easier and more fair to persons involved. Anyone with questions should call Law Enforcement at 893-2278. All persons should be sure that they understand the new regulations. Secondly, the parking lots will be changed to faculty, staff, students and administrative parking lots. The changes are as follows: ALL STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFF and A D MINISTRATIVE perons should REGISTER THEIR CARS WITH LAW ENFORCEMENT. Swimmer Diana Nyad To Speak OUTSTANDING PENSIVE PLAYER Dan Spittal HUBERT JACK AWARD — MOST IMPROVED PLAYER Co-winners: Kelly Parshall and Steve Mayes ED MCGILL MEMORIAL AWARD Jim Dressier By Dave Martin To begin next semester's Cultural Affairs events a lecture by marathon swimmer Diana Nyad has been scheduled for Feburary 5 in Sloan Theater. Diana Nyad is one of the greatest marathon swimmers in the world. She has had numerous long distance swims. Some of these have been undertaken in such bodies of water as the Suez Canal, the North Sea, the Nile River and Lake Ontario. She is most famous, however, for her attempt to swim, in August of 1978, from Cuba to Florida in a $42,000, specially-built, shark proof cage. Although she failed to complete the entire swim, the seventy six miles she covered set a world swimming record for distance on the open-sea. And this past summer she broke that record by swimming the eight-nine miles from the Bahamas io Florida. Past lecturers presented by the Cultural Affair.s Committee include ABC news correspondent Tom Jarriel in May, 1979 and World War II journalist C. Brooks Peters this past November. This coming April, Vincent Bugliosi, author of "Heiter Skelter"and prosecuting attorney against Charles Manson, is tentatively scheduled to speak in Price Auditorium. The special citation from the Penna. House of Representatives and the Gubernatorial citation from Governor Richard Thornburgh will be presented to the LHSC fall athletic teams and coaches today al 12:30 p.m. in Price Auditorium. Page 2 Friday, Dec. 14, 1979 EAGLE EYE Don's Editorial By Diane Orban This editorial is aimed at those of you who criticize my judgement on printing the photograph concerning the Ayatollah Khomeini on the front page of the Tuesday, Dec. 11 issue of the EAGLE EYE. I realize now that this editorial should have been printed the same day as the picture, however, al the time, I overlooked the necessity. Sorry! I would first like to say that I, Diane Orban, as a person, would never have printed the picture had it not been for my responsibility as a journalist and editor of the EAGLE EYE. It took a lot of time for me to make the decision of whether or not to print that photograph and I realized at the time that some people would be offended by it, but I made the decision and that's it! I don't like the use of four letter words any more than the rest of you, however, the sign was there and I couldn't just ignore it. News is news...and if I had the decision to make over again, 1 would do the same thing. It's my job! I didn't write the words on that sign. I didn't hang the sign from the roof of Bentley Hall. I was merely trying to display the ratical behavior of some students concerning a world-wide affair. It is my job...my responsibility...to report the news. And this my friends...whether you like it or not...is news. As you might have guessed, I have received a great deal of feedback concerning the photograph. Some of it was positive, but admittedly, the majority was negative. Because of my position as Editor, I have learned to take criticism in stride. However, what bothers me is that those who criticized never bothered to think about my responsibility...or any possible reason for printing the photograph. Most of the critics just looked at the picture as a display of a four letter word and not as a newsworthy print. What's even worse is that others who criticized were those who use the word every day of their lives...and that's okay, but it's not okay for me to print it in the EAGLE EYE...a publication for students, faculty and administration. So called adults. But how adult can you really be if you aren't open minded enough to see reason behind printing the photograph? in concluding, I would just like to say that I hope all of you who were "disappointed" in me or offended by the four letter word, now understand the reasons for my decision. UJQU By Dan Way It seems that everybody is waiting to see what my response will be to the recent letter to the editor concerning my column. I hate to disappoint my faithful readers who were waiting for me to totally embarass her, but I cannot bandy words with Louise C. White, a student. You see, sweet Louise came down to "Big Dan's School of Sexual Awareness" the same day her letter appeared, and enrolled in the long course. It seems Louise was a closet admirer of mine. She explained that she really wanted a date with me, and every time she read my column her nipples got hard. She wrote that nasty letter only because she knew I couldn't date her, because of frustration. However, there are still certain other people around campus who, unlike Louise, have not been enlightened. They still think sex is dirty, not something to be laughed at. Ha Ha Ha! If you can't laugh at sex, what can you laugh at? Those people feel that my writing is obscene and indecent, that it doesn't belong in a college newspaper. A professor of mine even commented that my writing style was ruined by my crudity. He liked Chaucer instead. I wonder if he knew that in Chaucer's greatest work, The Canterbury Tales, there were such great obscenities that even I wouldn't print them. He used words a lot worse than those two vile-examples of filth I chose, penis and testes. If you are into rotten, filthy, dirty jokes, read "The Millers Tale" and "The Reves Tale", there's some great material there. Have you ever heard of Rabelaisian humor? It's named after a French Renaissance writer, Francois Rabelais, a masterful satirist. I will quote some of old Francois' material for you, it comes from The Five Books of Gargantua and Pantagruel. I have divided it into two sections, the first for the scholars who want to see my reasons for my writing, the second for all my readers who just like to read dirty words in the paper. Okay, self-righteous and pious prudes, her you go, but before we start you might like to look up codpiece for it's archaic reference: "Well Gargantua's codpiece was like that horn: forever lively, succulent, and resinous; forever flourishing pollening and fructifying; full of juice, a flower with pistils and teeming with fruit, in short (but it was never that!), a compendium of delights. May I never meet my God if it was not a brave spectacle to behold! But I reserve the right to deal with it at greater length in a book I have written upon The Dignity of Codpieces. One thing, however, I shall disclose: if it was extremely long and extraordinarily expansive, it was also fully stocked and inexhaustible within. Hence it was in no wise comparable to the hypocritical codpieces of a heap of noodles, which are crammed with only wind, to the great prejudice of the female sex." Alright perverts, while the assholes are reading the above and trying to understand it, we'll share a couple of bad words. These lines come from the first book of Gargantua and Pantagruel, the same as the above. "He would sometimes that lawbooks were like a fair robe of gold, priceless and dazzling, but edged with excrement." "...no books on earth are so rich, so beautiful, so decorative as the texts of the Roman Pandects. But their border... is lousy, foul and villainous as a hundred tubs of shit." You know, it strikes me as odd that people feel my articles don't belong in a college newspaper. Isn't it some sort of a contradiction to have Chaucer's disgusting material, or Rabelais', or some of Swifts' and even Dante's on the shelves of our library? Isn't it odd that there was a campus play entitled Lysistrata, that made a humorous account of sex, even to the point of having the male characters wearing colored artificial penises, and nobody complained? They called it a success. Isn't it strange that the art department can put on display portraits of nude women and nobody gets up in arms? They call that art. Isn't it curious that I write penis and testes and people want to castrate me? Well to all those of you who are sickened by my articles, may the wind at your back always be your own. You know, Chaucer stated in "The Millers' Prologue" and therefore, who so list it not y-here, turne over the leef and cheese another tale. Roughly translated, this means, if someone is going to say words like fart, shit, piss, ass, cock, etc., and you don't like them, turn the page schmucko. For your free copy of today's mini-lesson send $9.95 and a self addressed stamped pair of shitty underwear to: Dan's Way to Get Over in his Last Column. It's been tits, Dan Way REVIEW If you thought we were being invaded last Thursday night by Solar take-offs you're pleasingly mistaken. The Solar take-off were better known as technical difficulties at a coffee house presented by the very exciting Chris Gaul and Ralph Rumberger. Once the take-offs got off the ground, Chris and Ralph were flying high with talent and excellent entertainment. Some of the very many songs were: Love is a Rose by Neil Young featuring Chris on the mandolin harmonica and vocally. Goindown the Road by Grateful Dead. After the Gold Rush with Chris on piano. Venture a Highway by America and some very fine orginals of both Chris and Ralph. I didn't realize what talent Chris Gaul and Ralph Rumberger had lurking inside them. The crowd that attended the coffee house enjoyed the smiles and winks of the entertainers. If you didn't attend, you missed a great night. Congratulations Chris and Ralph you did a fine job. My hats' off to you. Tina Gellatt The Lock Haveii Stale Coiiege Announcements EAGLE EYE An Independent Sludenl Newspaper The EAGLE EYE is published twice weekly by Student Publications of Lock Haven State College. Our office is located on the ground floor of the Parson's Union Building. Phone 893-2334. The Editor encourages letters and commentaries. All contributions must be signed, but names will be withheld from publication on request. Letters and commentaries will be printed verbatim. The Editor reserves the right to ask contributors to edit or rewrite their material if it is considered libelous, incoherent or too lengthy. EDITOR-IN-CHIEF MANAGING EDITOR GRAPHICS EDITOR NEWS EDITOR SPORTS EDITORS PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR HUMAN RELATIONS EDITOR ADVISOR GENERAL MANAGER DIANE ORBAN Bridget Robey Sue Mayers Keilh Godshall Bob Baker Don Glass Carol Strayer Tommye Talley Clarence Washington Dr. Saundra Hybeis Kim Pettingill All off campus students may pick up their 1979-80 Student Directory from the SCC secretary, next week by presenting a validated I.D. A number of students still have unpaid accounts at the Revenue Office. In accordance with college regulations, "No student shall be enrolled, graduate, or receive transcripts until all charges for which he is responsible have been paid." These PAST DUE accounts must be taken care of immediately. Applications are now being taken for student help in the Revenue Office for the Spring Semester. Must be WorkStudy eligible. ATTENTION: Administration, Faculty, Staff and Students. Effective January 1, 1980 ALL unpaid parking tickets that are not paid in the allowed time will be processed through the local Magistrate's office for collection. Anyone who has a lock on the lockers in the bottom of the PUB, must remove them by Dec.19th. Any locks remaining will be cut off and the contents given to Law Enforcement. At the beginning of next semester the lockers will be registered on a first come, first serve basis to any off campus student. Thank you Bob Seeger? No but how about his Brother? NICK SEEGER Coffehouse-Jan.24 8-10 Eagle Wing Bob, Thanks for the talk! I needed it. I feel much better now. Diane EXTENDEND LIBRARY HOURS — Friday, Dec. 14 -7:30 am - 10:00 pm Saturday, Dec. 15, 8:00 am - 5:00 pm. The Library will otherwise continue with the regular schedule until Wednesday, Dec. 19, the final day of classes. We plan to close at S:00pm on that date. The International Folk Dance Class will present "Dances From Around the World" Sunday Dec. 16th at 2 p.m. in Zimmerii Gym 3. The Board of Governors met December 11, 1979 to review 27 applications for Fund scholarships. Six of the applicants were awarded scholarships for the spring semester, 1979-80, of $150 to $250 for a total of $1,100. Five of the six recipients were female. Their grade point averages ranged for 2.9 to 3.8 with a median of 3.6. In keeping with the intent of the Fund's purposes, the names of the individuals will not be made public. Friday, Dec. 14, 1979 Page 3 EAGLE EYE ERI Program For Outdoor Enthusiasts ANNAPOLIS, MD.Expedition Research, Inc. a new membership organization based in Annapolis, Maryland is now conducting a campaign to register adventure minded college students and professors. ERI is a placement service which matches outdoor enthusiasts to scientific and exploratory expeditions worldwide. ERI members include photograghers, sailors, scientists, mountaineers, journalists and others who love the out-ofdoors and who have a taste for adventure, research and exploration. Expeditions which have approached ERI for team members range from archaeological excabations to Himalayan mountaineering; from oceanographic surveys and cave exploration to scientific investigations on all six continents. The firm also places registrants in paying positions. Commercial trip operators , outdoor leadership schools, yacht brokers, and film makers among other have employed ERI members as guides, instructors, captains and crew, etc.. LetterTo The Editor: The Human Relations office has moved to the former Financial Aid office in Woolridge Hall. Contrary to opinion, the Human Relations office number is not 2343 but 2350, and please be patient when calling because the telephone is still in the old office. It takes Ma Bell a little time to unravel the mystries of telephones and telephone numbers. We are very happy in our new location and would like everyone to come and visit. We would also like to announce our first workshop for the year, which will be held Thursday, Feb. 7, 1980. A Sex Equity workshop involving an all-day workshop. More details will be given in the first issue; of the Eagle Eye next semester. Maritza Tason It's An Education In Itself To All Physical Education Block Members Fall 1979 "P.E. BLOCK" Here's a little poem I wrote To relieve all devastation. Anger, Gripes, Confusion, And especially Frustration. Let's drink to Lu-Lu, Russ, and Chick, Dora, Bob, and Mary Breid With tongue in cheek, and smile on face. Let's swallow all our pride Block is in the past NOW And party time is here On Saturday we'll celebrate By drinking lots of Beer At times we got real angry For wasting precious time. So let's go out and drink until We aren't worth a DIME! COMMENTARY By Keith Godshall It happens every semester. It's ironically called the "special class schedule/optional exam p e r i o d . " The key word in that bewildering phrase is optional. The exams, and the class meetings themselves, are mandatory. The special schedule is absurd, to say the least. What is it supposed to accomplish, other than to totally confuse and aggravate everyone? If the schedule is meant to prevent the possibility of a student having several exams on one day, it fails miserably. The schedule often requires students to take more than one final on a couple of days, if their regular classes meet at inopportune times. Maybe the " o p t i o n a l exam p e r i o d " is meant t o allow more time for students to take their finals, hence the two-hour time periods. The majority of finals, however, can be completed in under an hour. It's time that the administration came out of the Dark Ages, and realized that finals are regarded by most teachers, as well as students, as just one more test, not an event that requires two-hours. There are several teachers that would be happy to give their final on the last regular class day, but are prohibited by an insane rule that requires them to administer the test at the required exam period. I t ' s time that administrators understood that the " o p t i o n a l " exam period is merely a waste of time. Let the teachers and students agree on when the exam is to be given. The students are the ones that have to take the tests, not the administrators. Finals are simply tests, nothing more, nothing less. They're not something that requires a special schedule, especially the ineffective and ridiculous one that we have now. Students, either undergraduate or graduate are in demand. They are often offered the opportunity to gain field experience by working with professors; others simply welcome the chance to take a semester or two off from their studies. Currently, for example, ERI is looking for 80 college students to assist —COMMENTARY— By Beth Owens All the signs are clear-students are rushing t o finish the work they put off all semester, typewriters are being put to good use to meet term paper deadlines, and the library has been frequented by many new faces lately. The semester is nearing its end. For some students, it's the time they've been waiting for - to "get out of this place." Some are graduating, some are dropping out, some are taking a few semester's break, a n d some are just happy leaving for a vacation. For other students, Christmas break means being stuck in their boring hometowns, having to be home at a decent hour, and waiting for the next semester to begin. (It can't be all that bad though. After all,"tis the season!") Then there are those students who hate the end of the semester due to finals. We work all semester and what reward do we get at the end but even more work! It's worse yet for dormitory students who are forbidden to make any noise above a whisper-even on the weekend! As for fraternity parties, or rather the lack of them, who enjoys that? Perhaps it would be wise t o hold finals week during only the weekdays, instead of including Saturday and Sunday as test days. Another idea is to keep the library open 24 hours a day during finals-a common occurrence at other colleges. Finals week isn't exactly the end of the world, but wouldn't a few advantages for students help? women s medical center birth control counseling Franklin Streets, Annapolis, Md. 21404 or write for further information. A registration card will be issued and a full packet of information, and EMS catalog, and application forms will be sent upon registration. a Smithsonian-sponsored dig for fossil man in India during December and January. Individuals mayregister by sending $15 to Expedition Research, Inc., P.O.Box 467, Cathedral & ONE STOP RECORDS Next to Wendy's 748-7163 TOP 20 Eagles-The Long Run ALBUM $5.79 TAPE $5.98 Donna Summer-On The Radio 9.99 10.98 Styx - Cornerstone 5.79 5.98 Stevie Wonder-Journey Through The Secret Life of Plants 9.99 Bee Gees-Greatest 9.99 10.98 10.98 Led Zeppelin - In Through The Out Door 5.79 Barbara Streisand-Wet 5.98 5.79 Fleetwood Mac-Tusk 11.99 5.98 12.98 Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers Damn The Torpedoes 5.79 5.98 Commodores-Midnight Magic 5.79 5.98 Michael Jackson - Off The Wall 5.79 5.98 Herb Alpert-Rise 5.98 5.50 Kool & The Gang-Ladies Night 5.50 5.98 Confidential Service free early detection pregnancy testing outpatient abortion facility (215)265-1880 20 minutes from Philadelphia DeKALB PIKE AND BORO LINE ROAD KING OF PRUSSIA, PA 19406 Foreignor-Head Games Rufus &Chaka-Masterjam Barry Manlow-One Voice 5.79 5.79 5.79 5.98 5.98 5.98 Jefferson Starship - Freedom At Point Zero 5.79 5.38 Kenny Loggins-Keep The Fire 5.50 5.98 Dan Fogelberg-Phoenix 5.98 5.79 Supertramp - Breakfast In America 4.99 ALSO Clydes Sporting Goods Many Christmas Gifts under $10°° reasonably priced for family & friends Lots of Great Stocking Staffers! { Downhill Ski Wear Up to i^ 50% off Main St. Lock Haven 748-3344 Mon & Fri 10am-9pm Tues Thurs & Sat I0am-5pm V Closed Wed & Sun ] l^>^^^l^a••ra^r<^^rq•l>^i^^i ara afM aria ^ » t t < ^ ^ t > ^ ^ LP only $4.99 Styx - Pieces of Eight Foreignor - Double Vision Billy Joel - 52nd Street Toto Diana Ross - The Boss Free Gift Wrapping At Your Request Complete Line of Cleaning Supplies, Blank Tapes, rock Posters, Portable Radios, Portable Players, Car and Home Stereos 5.98 Page 4 Friday, Dec. 14, 1979 FAGLE EYE Eagle Grapplers Fall To Tennessee, 34-9 By Boh Baiter In wrestling action held Tuesday night in the Thomas Fieldhouse, a tough Tennessee squad defeated Neil Turners Bald Eagles by a score of 34-9. Lock Havens Mike Millward gave the homecrowd fans some early excitement as he used a double arm bar to get a pin of Randy Jenkins at 1:21 of the second period. This gave Lock Haven a 6-0 lead. In the 126 pound bout Tennessee's Mike Geistizia decisioned Lock Havens George DeAugustino by a score of 7-2 to move Tennessee to within a 6-3 score. Tennessee evened up the match at 6-6 as Holiis Frier- son decisioned Vince Testa by a score of 6-2 in the 134 pound bout. Tennessee then took the lead 9-6 in the 142 pound bout as Mark DeAugustino decisioned Lock Havens John Campbell by a score of 6-3. Campbell was wrestling the match with a sore ankle and appeared somewhat hindered. Tennessee also captured the 150 pound match as King defeated Lock Havens Ken Parsley by a score of 12-9. Parsley fought back to almost win the bout as he once trailed by a score of 10-3. In the 158 pound match Tennessee's Milton Thompson decisioned Lock Havens Joe Baranik by a score of 12-4 to give Tennessee a lead of 16-6. Lock Haven got its only other win of the night at 167 pounds as Keith Ellis decisioned Bart McKean by a score of 8-1. Ellis rode McKean throughout the en- GUNDinCH'S SUNOCO ker By Bob BakThe Elks Club of Lock Haven was the scene for the annual Lock Haven football teams after season dinner. Coach Jack Fisher welcomed the players and guests before all sat down to a spaghetti dinner. Following dinner, and recognition of special guests the following awards were made by Fisher for the 1979 season. Coach Fisher first announced the recognition for the 79 season captains as ^ chosen by the coaching staff. Ihey were defensive captain Jim Dressier, and offensive captain Dan Spittal. Coach Fisher and his staff also selected four players for their outstanding play in the championship game played at Cheney State. They selected John White as the outstanding offensive lineman of the game and Terry Mathias as the outstanding defensive lineman. Joe Speese was selected as the outstanding offensive back and Jeff Cagers Fall To Bloomsburg, 66-65 By Bob Baker The Lock Havens men's basketball team lost a thriller 66-65 in overtime to Bloomsburg in a game played Monday night at the Thomas Fieldhouse. Lock Haven trailed by as many as ten points at 29-19 with about seven minutes left in the first half. Lock Haven was able to cut the lead in half at 39-34 at the close of the first half. Lock Haven shot 12 for 26 from the floor and an amazing 10 of 11 from the foul line. At start of the second half. Bloomsburg increased their lead to 47-36. However Lock Haven turned the game around as they ran off 16 straight points to take a 52-47 I lead at the halfway point of the second half. The Bald Eagles increased their lead to 60-51 with about six minutes remaining. Bloomsburg then battled back to tie the game at 60 with 15 seconds remaining. The game then went into overtime as Lock Havens Bob Horodyski tried a long jumper with six seconds left that was short of the mark. Bloomsburg scored first during the overtime and increased it to 66-63 with 11 seconds left as Lock Havens John Beblowski hit a follow up shot with one second left to make the final 66-65. Doug LeGette led Lock Haven with 23 points. Mike Wenrich led Bloomsburg with 25 points. 121 E. MAIN ST. ST. iI LOCK HAVEN, PA. 1774Sj PHONE (717) 748-2490 748-9151 Full-Time Mechanic Gundloch's also has Snacks and Sodas second period. 1 tie three pins made the final score stand at 34-9 in favor of Tennessee. Lock Haven now stands at 3-1 on the year and will travel to Shippensburg State on Friday. Their next home match is scheduled for January 30 againsi arch rival Bloomsburg State. Coolidge as the outstanding defensive back. Two other players were noted for their play, Scott Reiner was credited with the outstanding play of the game with his pass interception early in the game and Willie Mathias was selected for the "big hit" of the game. Coach Fisher then presentd the following team awards. Chosen ^s the outstanding offensive player for the season was quarterback Dan Spittal. The outstanding defensive player went to defensive lineman Jim Dressier. The Hubert Jack Award for the most improved player went to two players this season. They were Kelly Parshall offensive lineman, and Steve Mayer, linebacker. A new award given this year was the "Ross Nevel Unsung Hero" award. This award went to Pete Hanlon, offensive lineman. The Eddy McGill Memorial Award for outstanding performance for the season went to Jim Dressier. Special recognition also went to Dan Spittal for his selection of WNEP-TV's player of the week and to Coach Jack Fisher for his selection as "Coach of the Year" within the Pennsylvania Conference. Wc invite you to hop over to the: MILLOUTLETSTORE WOOLRICH. PA. 17779 EST 1830 Bellefonte Ave. across from McDonalds Full Service Gos Station mark of the first period. Bruce Landis of Lancaster, Pa. pinned Lock Havens Austin Shanfeher in the 190 pound match and in the heavyweight division Tennessees John Bradford used about a 40 pound weight advantage to pin Lock Havens Tim Thompson at 2:48 of the Haven Gridders Hold Annual Post-Season Dinner: Outstanding Players Honored PSU Lady Lions Out Class Eagle Cagers, 82-42 Some good ballhandling and By Bob Baker The Lock Haven Women's fine rebounding enabled Basketball team went down Penn State to double the to defeat by a score of 82-42 score at 52-26 with 11:53 left at the hands of a fine Penn in the game. Penn State continued to State in a game played Tuesday in the Thomas Field- have a hot hand as they kept building the lead up to a final house. Head Coach Rose Ann score of 84-42. Neffs' team stayed close durMichelle Gilgallon led ing the first ten minutes of Lock Haven with 11 points the game as Lock Haven and Beatrice Henry chipped played tough on the defensive in seven points. boards. The Bald Eagles led For Penn State, Janet by a score of 9-6 following a Gabriel was the leading t u r n a r o u n d j u m p e r by scorer with 16 points as she Michelle Gilgallon with 12:36 hit on many outside shots. left in the half. However, Deb Christman was next with Penn State ran off a 16-6 11 points. streak led by the shooting of Lock Haven shot at a total Deb Christman and some of 19 for 51 from the floor good rebounding underneath for 37 per cent. They also the defensive boards. Many shot 4 of.. II from the free times Lock Haven would get throw line. Penn State shot only one shot on their trip up 40 for 83 from the floor for the floor. The score at the 48 "/o and hit on 2 of 6 from half read 30-16 in Penn States the foul line. favor. Lock Haven drops to 2-3 Starting the second half for the season, while Penn Penn State ran off six straight State upped its record lo 3-4 points to take a 36-16 lead. for the season. tire second period with the help of a strong inside arm bar. This helped Lock Haven draw within a score of 16-9, but Tennessee then closed out the match with three straight pins. At 177 pounds Ben Hill pinned Dan Strickler at 2:11 Christmas Jeans At HOYS i I Complete selection of | • strait Legs • Corduroys | | Come Visit Us In Our Brand New • Bibs I Factory Outlet Store! Plus...Double Green Stamps § I Open everynight till 9 p.m. and Sundays Noon till 4 p.m. S, i i Off Route 150 in WOOLRICH Free Parking • Coffee Sq; Cup We honor VISA — MASTERCHARGE Open 9am to 5pm Daily Fridays 9am to 9pm Closed Sunday