Eagle Eye Tuesday, April 7,1981 Vol. XXV No, 11 Lock Ha veil State College No Lease in Dorm Policy By MARY KELLY LHSC's Residence Hall Housing Policy does not contain a legal contract in the form of a lease, according to Assistant Dean of Student Life, Ronald Bossert. Students are not required to sign a formal lease that states that they are occupying a said dormitory room or what services will be provided by the college when the actual fee is paid. Students, instead, are required to pay a $25 nonrefundable deposit in order to receive a housing assignmerTt. The deposit is credited to the following semester's account. Bossert said that not having a legal contract enables a student to have more flexibility in either moving in or out of the dbrmitories. Students are required to sign an inventory check sheet which Slates the condition of the room upon moving in. If the student is not pleased with the condition of the room, he/she may make a request to either the hall manager or counselor to have it repaired by maintenance. The inventory check sheet is the only document which requires signatures. Residence Mall Association's Mike Yeuse said that he would like to see a legal contract. "Good points are in having a definite place to live, but the bad points would be in wanting lo leave and not being able to get out of it. Students would have more rights, though, and would have a longer lime period to move if they should be thrown out." Bossert said that the present agreement is much easier because a legal contract "would lose flexibility with individual students on our small campus." A student can be terminated from the housing agreement at any time for violation of provisions included in the agreement. "We could make that [termination of agreement] on the spot if we chose to do so," said Bossert. In the agreement it states that a student with less than 96 credits is required to live in dormitory housing. However, in many cases, this policy is not enforced and freshmen and sophomores are able to seek off-campus housing. The onl> provisions that the Residence Hall Agreement generally states for students is an assigned room and food service. Other conveniences concerning students vary from dormitory to dormitory. The agreement also states that a college official reserves the right to enter and inspect any student room. Bossert says, "It's not done in practice." Usually, in the interest of the individuals or the institution, such as fire, a Law Enforcement official and a Hall Manager will enter the room. Maintenance repairs are sometimes done when a student is not present and a repairman will enter only for repairs. The bottom floor of Russell Hall will be converted into temporary housing this summer for next fall. Seventeen rooms will be converted for incommg student. Special interest housing is now being considered. The University of Delaware has such a housing policy. The Spanish House, The French House, and the German House at U.of D. are special interest houses that are rented to students through the same dormitory procedures. A counselor resides in the house with the students. "We would like to see student interest in special interest housing. We are very open to '.hat," said Bossert. Atlanta drive: Brothers of Kappa Sigma Phi raise money for Atlanta Fraternity Helps Atlanta By JEFF FLEISHMAN Editor in Chief In an effort to show its concern toward the continuing crisis of murdered and missing children in Atlanta, the brothers of Kappa Sigma of 260 dollars will t>e sent to Phi fraternity on campus held Atlanta to financially support a fund raising drive this past some of the programs inweekend. itiated by the mothers of the The proceeds from the city, according to KSP presidrive which are now in excess dent Glenn Chester. The mothers in Atlanta are trying to combat the crisis by setting up these programs, or activities in order to protect of the PA. State College and cies. Currently, Pennsylvmiia the children. One such step is University (PSCU) system at is the only state remaining, the recreational program the off-campus, state-wide whose state-owned institu- which has a mother present at tions of hjgher education are all times throughout the level. As the present biU now subject to the jurisdiction of playgrounds in Atlanta, so reads, the proposed state the state's department of the children can play freely. university system would education. This change is an effort to become independent of the PA. Department of Educa-- streamline the system's ad"// was a good effort tion, which administers the ministration and reduce coston everyone's part." PSCU system in conjunction ly overregulation and with the office of Budget and bureaucratic e x p e n s e s . Administration, the Depart- Greater responsibility and Chester said that this ment of General Services, autonomy would be transfer- financial support of the pro(con't on pg. 3) and other related state agengrams was triggered by the SCLC (Southern Christian Leadership Conference). He also said that the NAACP chapter of Penn. State footage is unseasonable for invasion certainly wouldn't University furnished the make any improvements in the cold weather Poland curfraternity with the buttons the situation there—it would rently has. and ribbons that were sold in Dakowski said, "We never only make things worse. memory of the 22 dead "Tanks cannot make peothought about intervention children in Atlanta. before we came here (to the ple work." Kedzierska addChester said that they are states)." He added that it is ed, quoting a saying which is expecting more money from only now, with the fact that popular in Poland. Law Enforcement and the he is separated from his famiAnother reason the Soviets ly, that he worries about a will think twice is because administration before the possible Soviet takeover. they aren't sure where the funds are sent to the southern state. As for the actual possibility loyalties of the Polish army All in all Chester felt the lie. In other words, the Polish of Soviet intervention, none of the Poles believe it will army might side with the peo- drive was a success saying happen. "We cannot imagine ple and not the government, that it was a "good effort on what they could do if they which is what Dakowski said everyone's part from the students to the SKP brothers crossed the b o r d e r s . " they would do. Dakowski said. WoAnother bleak aspect por- and from Law Enforcement to the administration." jciechowski pointedout thatan State Colleges to Become University? By ERIC BROWNING Recently, legislation was introduced in the Pennsylvania State Senate that would convert the 14 separate state owned colleges and universities into a new state-wide university system. Under this proposed bill. Lock Haven State College would be renamed "Lock Haven University of Pennsylvania of the State System of Higher Education." The proposed legislation. Senate Bill 506, was introduced by Senator Joseph Loeper of Drexel Hill. The bill was co-sponsored by senate members of both political parties. Earlier the bill was introduced and killed in the appropriations committee. However, the changes in the state college's names is only a tip of the iceburg. In its entirety, SB 506 will almost completely re-structure the operation and management Polish Visitors Not Worried About USSR By PAM YOBLONSKI yews Editor Reports of the crisis in Poland have been growing in intensity and drama this week, with the supposed nearness of a Soviet invasion seeming more and more probable. But there are some Poles who aren't as worried about this as you would think, and four of them are here on campus. Aleksandra Kedzierska. an English literature professor; Andrzej Dakowski, and English professor; Wlodzimierz Piatkowski, a medical sociology professor; and Krzysztof Wojciechowski, a geo-science professor, are all here at Lock Haven on the Polish exchange program. All four of them said they think the media exagerates about the situation in Pc>iand. According to Dakowski, the Poli.sh papers don't present the situation as being as serious as the American papers do, and he said that letters from home have indicated that nothing has changed much since he came here in January. One example of this is the Warsaw Pact maneuvers, which have been gaining at- tention because of an unexplained increase in their activhies. According to the Poles, they view this as just another routine threat from the Soviet Union, as they said the reported food shortages of last month were. According to them, the Soviet government likes to threaten. They even said that the films which recently have been shown on Polish television, supposedly as evidence of preparation to an invasion, are from last summer. This is noticeable because the greenery which is seen in the crisis. Tuesday, April 7,1981, page 2 EDITORIAL By JEFF FLEISHMAN Editor in Chief We can hear it already on Friday April 10, ...five, four, ...three, .. two, ...one....blast off! As the engines thrust out * fiery force of power and the craft rises to a sphere ignorant to most of us, we'll stand back and say, "Wow, that's great isn't it?" The media will flock and the Soviet Union will wish they had done it instead of invading some Godforsaken country. In an instant the rocket will be in a state of silence, free from the frustration and confusion of this planet, and off for an exploration, the likes of which man has never seen. When we look back down from the sky we'll once again see the gross complexions of mother earth. The starving children in the world don't care about rockets. Reagan's budget ax will fall again, and another social program will feel the cold sharp edge of reality; but still the spacecraft, the symbol of scientific power, will zoom closer to its destination. As the television set echos in the tenement buildings that surround the cities of America, poor minds will wonder why all that money was shot into space instead of being directed to a more logical course on earth. "Progress." the NASA officials will say. "Progress, " as another victim dies on some dirty street. Well America you may have progress in the universe, but you haven't showed us a damn thing here on good old earth. We're still plagued with crime, starvation, a declining morality, abortion, and a host of other topics that may one day infect the Progress of your universe. It seems as if the United States is fiying instead of running from her problems. All the advocates of our spacecraft society will say I haven't progressed with the times; I should accept this type of technological advancement and be proud of it. To them I answer impossible; the day that a rocket can justify o human life is the day that it's time to look for that great thunder in the sky, and that massive bolt of lightning to come thrashing down from a place higher than that of our rockets. If you can call it progress, then I guess there is no hope for the demented sores of our society. Society should come before space, and space should come after the smile of a child with a full stomach and a warm place to lay his head at night. I agree, we shouldn 't be totally against the space exploration phase of our society, however, we should put it in its proper perspective. Before we pollute the universe isn't it only fair to clean up the earthly sphere? ,^^AGGG!!. TtM Lock Havan St««« coii«ga EAQLE EYE An Indapandant Sludant Nawapapar The Eegle Eye is publlahad twice weaKly (Tuesday and Friday) by , he Madia Council of Lock Havan State College. The Publications Oftlce Is located on the ground floor of the Parson Union Building. Phone (717) 893-2334. The Editorial Staff encourages letters and commentaries. All contributions must ba signed, but names will be withheld from publication upon request. The Editor reserves the right to ask contrlbutore to edit or rewrite their material If It Is considered libelous, Incoherent or too lengthy. The Editorial Staff meats eveiy Tuesday at 1 p.m. Article assignmenta will ba given at thaf time. Press deadlines are 12 noon Mondays and Thursdays. EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Jett Fleletimen MANAQINQ EDITOR Ellen Heem QRAPHICS EDITORS QENERAL MANAGER. FACULTY ADVISOR... NEWS EDITOR SPORTS EDITORS.... PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR . STAFF WRITER ... Mary Kelly . Dr. Seuttdre Hybele Pam Yoblomkt Bob Beker Marty Myers i Evan Petee Uerty Myere Commentary Prejudice. By NOSMO KING Much of my four years of education here hasn't come from classrooms. The other day a white student slipped some jazz into a friend's recorder. Evidently he thought there were no blacks around. I overheard him say, "Now we'll really make him sound like a nigger. It didn't sound as if there were hatred in the statement. Instead there was a belittling, lowering element involved. In jest, he was putting his friend down — reducing him to the level of a black man. Few things are more frustrating than seeing this mentality still existing among some whites. Racial prejudice will never be overcome in this society by torching cities, by stopping the rallies of the Ku Klux Klan, by holding up Dr. King and President Kennedy as examples to admire. The solution must be reached from within. Each individual must resolve this conflict for himself so that peace will pervade our future and our children will live withcfut fearing each other. Peace will only begin from within. 1 ^ ^ &€M^a4e d By JONATHAN BRAVARD The Eagle Eye's General Manager, Mary Kelly, just told me that everyone hates my column, and that neither she nor anyone she knows, understands why the paper prints my column. She said that after reading my column people throw the paper away. That bothers me You see most people I know open the paper to page two and read my column and Jeff Fleishman's Editorial. If what Ms. Kelly savs is true, that means that all her friends Commentary CUT) Control and Capital Punishment By LOIS BLUMENTHAL It is my opinion that if people can't play with their toys in the right way they shouldn't be allowed to have them at all. I guess that many people will say that I'm crazy when I say that no guns should be allowed to the American public. There is no reason that we should need them. Some say that guns are essential to the protection of our homes and our families. Hopefully the potential robbers and murderers won't have guns either. It has been Commentary By GLENN CHESTER In two days Kappa Sigma Phi raised $263 in a cause designated to help the 1 mothers of the 22 dead children in Atlanta. We couldn't have done this without the help of the Lock Haven State student body and the others who helped. We'd like to thank Mr. Robert D. Lynch, our advisor, the ROTC Office, and Campus Law Enforcement. We'd also like to thank a couple of students, namely, Todd Hvamon, Nelva North Hall is having a DanceA-Thon to benefit the American Cancer Society from April 10 at 6:00pm - A p r i l 11 at 7 : 0 0 p m . Residents of North Hall are invited to participate and all others are welcome to stop by and support the dancers. Contests will be held and prizes will be given. Stop by and bring your wallet. "COME TO THE MOUNTAINS" -Top summer co-ed camp in Poconos June 26-August 22. Waterfront (WSI), Drama, Photo and Film Making, Canoeing, Cross Country, Sailing, Bike Leader, Nature and Hiking, Water Ski, Athletics. Good Salary. Call Pine Forest Camp (215) 224-2100 or write llOA Benson East, Jenkintown, PA. 19046. shown that home guns are used more often to shoot friends accidentally or in a moment of angry frenzy. Guns should only be owned by the government and stored in a fool-proof safe to be used in case of war. Unfortunately, Ronald Reagan and the United States Government would probably never see the logic in my idea. In this commentary I would also like to ask someone to explain to me the good of capital punishment. I believe that states such as C a l i f o r n i a which allow capital punishment have as high a murder rate as when they had no capital punishment. I quote Jeff Fleishman, "We are given life from a source more powerful than ourselves, and who is man to decide when another should die by pulling the trigger on a gun?" Well Jeff, who is man to decide that another should die by pulling the release switch on the gallows? And who is it that will dare to say to the corpse "I'm sorry. The jury goofed."? Thanl If you gave a donation, wear your button or ribbon, and we of Kappa Sigma Phi are sure the mothers will appreciate your compassion. Thanks for your support. Glenn Chester President, Kappa Sigma Phi ^&4€X44fi^ are missing everything on the front page and everything written on pages three and four. That means these people are missing the fine writers that are on pages other than page two. Just think, Ms. Kelly's friends, you people are missing the fine writing of people like Pam Yoblonski and Marty Myers. These people also miss the sports reporting of Bob Baker. I guess I have to apologize to those people because it is because of my column that nobody reads what they have to say. So let me do it publicly. I'm sorry Pam, Marty, and Bob if you want I will stop writing my column. Tell you what I'm going to do, I'm going to have a contest. The title of this contest is the "Write a Better Column Than Jonathan Bravard Contest." The winner of this contest will get to have his or her own column in the Kagle Eye.The winner's column will, of course, replace mine. This contest is open to anyone and everyone who works for or goes to Lock Haven State College. Entries must be postmarked by April 13, 1981. After we recieve all the entries a blue ribbon panel consistins of mvself. Jeff Fleishman, Pam Yoblonski, and Mary Kelly, ot course, will decide which entry IS the best. The winner's column will appear in April I7th's Eagle Eye. So all you amateur Jack Andersons and Drew Pearsons who have just been waiting for an excuse., oops, reason to write for the Eagle Eye here is your big chance. Just address those entries to the "Write a Better Column Than Jonathan Bravard Contest" in care of the Eagle Eye, Publications Office, PUB. Good luck and start writing those columns todav. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Spring is here and with it come many activities planned by RHA for an enjoyable week. Spring week is from April 17th to the 25th. I'he following activities are planned: Friday, April 17: Coffeehouse Day Ice Cream Social Price Patio Price Patio 12 to 7pm 6 to 7pm Sunday, April 19: Scavenger Hunt Campus 2pm Monday, April 20: Ultimate Frisbee Tug-of- War Rolle.'sk ating F.H. Field McEntire Field Skateland 2 to 5pm 2 to 5pm 9 to 11:30pm Tuesday, April 21: Pool Events Softba.'l Tourney Ca.sino Night Z Pool Soccer Field Bentley 2 to 6pm 2 to 6pm 7 to 12pm Thursday, April 23: Dress-Up Day Campus AU Day Saturday, April 25: Supersiais Talent Show Runathon Soccer Field Sloan TBA 1 to 6pm 8 to 10pm TBA The Superstars event will consist of the following: egg toss, obstacle course, and human wheelbarrel race. Sign-ups for all activities are due by April 13th. B.T.A!!! * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * page 3 Bucic O'RIley -New SID at LHSC By MARY KELLY Staff Writer When you hear the name Buck O'Riley, you think of leprechauns or movie stars. At LHSC, though. Buck O'Riley is the new Sports Information Director. He got his name "in utero" when friends of his mother asked if "he was bucking yet." C Riley has traveled and worked in a number of places, but his most memorable were tho.se working for the Associated Press in Los Angelos. That's where he met stars like Cary Grant, Jonathan Winters, Danny Kaye, and Milton Beri, who are all big baseball fans. C Riley even met Raquel Welch when she was in her nrime. Only a few months after O'Riley started working for the AP, the famous and troublesome Watts riots started. These riots, mainly in a 48 mile radius of the Los Angelos area, were the first and largest black riots during the civil rights movement in the sixties. O'Riley and other young reporters were to cover the riots. Since the riot was comparable to open warfare, he :says that coverage was 5 difficult because the only source was the police, not the rioters. It was impossible to get interviews from the threatening rioters. Buck escaped his assignment without harm, and after the news cooled in there on sports, the very first Suoer r(s SPRING IS HERE AT Newly Arrived Tennis Wear JANTZEN lust In Time for Spring "c 121 £ Main St. Lock Haven •• iilitppunruiill (F:-' ; A i j h A N ' f u T,'^ v r • ', M l t-i; f \ J , : r M , O f I O. k R\ H,u t)64 ,C Ia n d ' i s(). . r I Cik Saturday May 23 GRAD PARTY and SMORGASBOARD Starts immediately after commencement For Convenience of Seniors Families, and Friends. Make Reservations Early 748-9793 Bowl in January of 1%7, Since he was the youngest member of the AP team, he had the chance to cover only the loser's dressmg room., "I always got the guys throwing football helmets into the lockers," says O'Riley with an ear to ear smile. "I never did have the pleasure of meeting Vince Lombard!." O'Riley later came back to Lock Haven to help his family run the Lock Haven Express. His family had owned the paper for years. He became editor, and for five years, he said he had a "constant bombardment of complaints." Finally, he and his family sold the Express. O'Riley couldn't see himself as editor for the rest of his life. "Writing sports is a lot of fun and a low pressure situation," says O'Riley who enjoys his job as sports Information Director. "It's easier to write sports, tell the truth, and get alonit with people." University System (con't red to the local college administrations and trustees. College presidents would be granted full fiscal and complement control over their respective campuses, thus enabling them to become more flexible and cost effective, particularly in the area of purchasing. For example, it was recently discovered that PDEderived financial mandates cost the Slippery Rock State Colleg an additional $40,000 in purchasing coal for the campus's heating plant. Administrative control and governance at the statewide level would be transferred to an independent Board of Governors. The Board of Governors will be a 20 member board empowered to establish board fiscal, personal, and educational policies under which the new university system would operate. The Board's duties would extend to the hiring of college presidents, fixing tuition, and room board rates, and the development of a comprehensive state budget. The Board would consist of the Governor, the Pennsylvania Secretary of Education, and four members of the General Assembly, representing each poUtical par- Working Woman Speaks By CHERYL ARDNER Women who plan to enter the work force and women already in the ranks of the employed will be able to participate in a discussion program entitled "Women-How to Succeed in Your Career." The program will be presented tonight in the Sloan Theatre at 7:30 pm, sponsored by LHSC's Student Life and Career Development Offices. Guest speaker Peggy Raynock, assistant to the director of compliance of the PA. Human Relations Commission in Harrisburg, will discuss how women can adapt their skills, education, and experience to fit today's job market. She will be supported by a panel of four women with differing career areas and experience: Wendy Akeley, Kathryn Hayfield Frye, and Ruth Kerstetter, LHSC alumni; and Martha Riegal, a Penn State graduate. The program is open to all area residents at no charge. from pg. 1) ty from both chambers. The 14 members-at-large, appointed by the Governor and (con't from pg. 1) confirmed by the Senate, will trayed by the media is the Polish government doesn't include: five members of the e c o n o m i c s i t u a t i o n of operate openly, so they don't current Board of State Col- Poland. Even though the really know how it functions, lege and University directors Poles admit that it is a combut they all feel that the (which will be replaced by the plicated matter, they said that Soviet influence isn't that Board of Governors); three it has been taken out of congreat. "We know it's so," student representatives, text. Wojciechowski said, selected from the 14 student "because we live there." One example is the rationgovernment presidents; and Kedzierska said that three members from the ing of food, which is being put into effect in Poland, and Poland has the greatest trustees of the state colleges. is seen as being a signal of freedom within the Soviet If this bill is passed, this bloc countries. Piatkowski food shortages. will be the first time stated that the Polish Church students will have a direct role The Poles here feel that it is has much freedom, and that in formulating decisions and a good idea. They explained the agriculture is governed by policy on the state level. that whenever shortages are private enterprise. The Board of Governor's t>eing reported or threatened, Another point made by would also hire a chancellor, the first reaction of the peoWojciechowski is that if who would .serve as the chief ple is to buy as much as they Poland had been governed so executive officer of the can. "PoMsh people have en- strictly and completely as university system. The , dured many crises and they' normally believed, events like chancellor would be respon- have learned how to survive that of the strikes could never sible for the general, day-tothen," Wojciechowski said. have hapi>ened. day administration of the One of the ways of survival, Dakowski stressed though, system and serve as the he said, is to hoard food in that much of their belief that system's chief representation case of future hardships. the invasion won't happen arid advocate before the ' The rationing, therefore, could also be partly wishful General Assembly to obtain will prevent the buying up of thinking. They naturally adequate funding. The all the food, and insure that don't want one to happen. chancellor would also there is some for everybody. They said they really don't evaluate college presidents, Another myth which has believe any intervention will The new university system come into being is that occur, to which Kedzierska would assume all other rights Poland is ruled directly by added, "this is the answer, and responsibilities of the Russia, that it is merely an exwe hope." current PSCU system, retension of the Soviet governmaining a preferred apment-in effect, a pupp>et. propriations status in the The Poles deny that. KedGovernor's Budget request. zierska admitted that the ^ i - y a ^>^i^^i^^i^»a^^^^^i^^>^^» "fa •^i«»ia "fa •><>•« The great Hollywood musical "Singiii' in the Rain," with Gene Kelly, Donald O'Conner and Debbie Reynolds, will be shown Tuesday at 8 *AII college students eligible PM in Raub 106 and Wednes*A brother-sister camp d a y at 8 PM in Ulmer Planetarium. Come sing * Prime location on beautiful along with Gene. Polish Visitors BEA CAMP COUNSELOR private lake In the Pocono Mts. of Penna. *AII water, land, cultural and social activities. * Eight week season. Room and board plus salary related to skills and experience *A fun experience CAMP SWAGO-CAMP SWATONAH 1410 East 24th St. Brooklyn N.Y. 11210 WRITE FOR APPLICATION Movie... page 4 Notionol Honors For Show By BOB BAKER Sports Editor Jesse Shaw placed second in the National Collegiate Boxing Association Championships held at the University of Nevada in Reno. The placing enabled Shaw to become Lock Haven's second boxer to earn All-American honors. Last year Jim McNaUy earned the coveted honors by placing third at 147 pounds. Shaw, competing at 180 pounds, lost to Larry Steuck of the U.S. Air Force GolPerS UUin "ri-Mcct: Lock Haven-Chris Hetz shot ' a three over par 76 and teammate Glenn Smeraglio was one stroke back with a 77 as the Lock Haven State College golfers broke the 4(X) plateau with a 397 in capturing a triangular meet here Friday afternoon on the Clinton Country Club course. The Bald Eagle linksmen of second-year head coach Jeff Rupert defeated East Stroudsburg by 12 strokes, the Warriors finishing with a 409. Kutztown finished last with a 422. « In addition to Hetz and Smeraglio. the other three Eagle players figuring in the team scoring were Darryl Orris with an 81, Bob Sautner, also with an 81, and Jan Felker with an 82. Hetz shot an even par 37 over the front nine, while Smeraglio had a one over par 37 on the back nine. Two other Eagles played the course, but weren't involved in the team scoring. Ken Diltz shot an 83, while Dave Russell carded a 99. Academy in the finals. Winning in the semi-finals with a decision over Albert Sandel, the freshman from Chester, nearly came home with a title. However, he lost a close 3-2 decision. Ladies Lose Meet BY MARTY MYERS Sports Editor The women's track team opened their season Saturday with a hard fought 64-58 loss to the Lady Vulcans of California State. The meet went down to the final event, the mile relay, but it was California State winning that event and the meet with a fine time of 4:24.71. Despite the team's loss, Coaches Peter Fox and George Settle were both pleased with the women's performance, feeling that it was a goodall-around effort for the first meet of the season. Settle said,"The women's team is a very young one with 14 freshmen and one only one senior, and we still have a lot of hard work in front of us." Despite the fact that Lock Haven has only one senior, it was that senior that kept the Bald Eagles in the meet. All-American Vickie Smith took first places in the 880 yard run with a time of 2:32, in the mile(5:24.2), and in the javelin with a toss of 124 feet, two inches. In addition. Smith also finished second in the two mile run. Coach Settle said,"She probably could have won that too, but she was a little tired from the 880 and the mile." The Bald Eagles also grabbed first places in four other events. Runners Romp Col St By MARTY MYERS Sports Editor The Lock Haven men's track team opened their season with a 103-41 thrashing of California State Saturday afternoon at Hub Jack Stadium. The Bald Eagles captured 13 of 17 first places en route to their victory. Greg O'Connell and Tom O'Neill were both double winners for Lock Haven. O'Connell took the 120 high hurdles and the 440 intermediate hurdles with times of 13.08 and 55.29 respectively. O'Neill took the long Booillng Team Completes Tour £ S„'. 'SS VV" triple By FRANK PICCIOTO The Lock Haven Bowling team recently competed in the fourth annual AMF Intercollegiate Tournament held in Wallington, New Jersey. The team finished 34th out of 51 teams. Things got off to a rough start for Lock Haven as they totalled 2,151 in the first round of competition In a singles play, team captain, Frank Picciotto placed 12th out of 215 bowlers by averaging a fine 220 for three games. John Muto finished 115yh and Jim Kulaga was 125th. Picciotto put the team together by advertizing that bowlers were needed for a tournament. The team consists of Gregg Rottet, who carries a 173 average, Jim Kulaga, a solid 183 bowler, and Muto and Piccioto, both averaging near 200, round out the team. Lock Haven's McNally was scheduled to compete at 147 pounds as a wild card entrant. Due to a complicated ranking system he was pulled from the competition at the very last moment. jump with 43 feet ten inches. Head coach Pete Fox said, "In general we are very pleased. It was an overall good effort, however, we look for more help from our freshmen as the season progresses." Other Lock Haven thinclads enjoying good performances included Greg Eckert with a first place finish in the shotput, and a personal best of 46 feet five inches. Willie Rivera smoked up the track with a time of 22.2 in the 220 yard dash, while Barron Grantham finished second in the high jump, skying six feet six inches. Other individual winners for the Bald Eagles were Jim Gamble in the 440 (:50.18), Bob Walker in the 880 (1:59.8), Mark Alles in the pole vault (13 feet), and Reese Flurie in the discus(125-9l^). The Bald Eagles dominated the relays, with Rivera, Grantham, Jim Ligons, and Gamble winning the 440 in a time of :43.67. Gamble, Walker, Ligons,and Todd Hyman combined to win the mile relay in a time of 33:23.92. Lock Haven's Jesse Shaw recently earned All-American honors in boxing. Shaw took second place in the NCBA Championships this past weekend. Boseboll Teom Drops Doubleheoder At Col. St.; Bombs Bucknell 19-2 tack was carried by Ed Tarconish, Ernie Vaz, Scott Day, The Lock Haven men's Chriss Wilt, and Jeff baseball team traveled a long Reinoehl. Wortman started on the road to California State in hopes of continuing their hot mound and was roughed up hitting. However, their bats for seven hits and seven runs cooled off and it was a long in two innings. Pat Guerriero road back as they dropped and Wayne Hawksworth pitboth ends of a twin-bill by ched in relief for Lock Haven. scores of 12-4 and 9-4. The Bald Eagles jumped to In the opener third baseman Doug Schilling had a quick 4-0 lead in the second two hits for the Bald Eagles. game following Wortman's Bill Wortman and Glen Fultz two-run double and a RBI each knocked in two runs as single by Day. This was all that was to be they both had one hit. The rest of the Haven hitting at- as the Bald Eagles mustered By BOB BAKER Sports Editor women% medical center birth oontrol counteiing rf«ir/j?^~-'l Confldentiel Senriee free aariy detection pregnancy testing outpatient abortion facility (215)265-1880 20 mlnutee from Ptiiledelptile DaKALB PIKE and BOROUGH LINE ROAD KING OF PRUSSIA, PA 19406 only three hits the rest of the day, while California racked out 13 hits and scored nine runs. Day gave up seven runs in two and two-thirds innings and was charged with the loss. Dave Stanko finished up for the Bald Eagles. In action yesterday, Lock Haven defeated Bucknell 19-2. Hawksworth pitched a fine seven innings to gain the win. Ray Billotte went five for six with four RBI's. Tomorrow