Seniors - Don't Wait Look For Jobs Now ^ Student Directories Have Arrived The 1972-73 Student Directories have arrived and are taking residence in the Eagle Eye Office, ground floor PUB. Each directory contains the name, home address, and campus address of each LHS student a s of Fall 1972. Students may pick up their directory in the Eagle Eye Office beginning Wednesday from 9 AM to 12 Noon. A student I.D. will be required and only one copy per student will be distributed, since there are a limited number of copies available. It will be first come first serve. "f- March Schedule for Art Films Is Released S e l e c t i o n s for the March s u r v e y of a r t through films h a v e been a n n o u n c e d by Mr. William F o s t e r , a r t department c h a i r m a n . " G r e e k S c u l p t u r e " and " T h e Spirit of R o m e " will be s h o w n March 1. T h e s e films allow the v i e w e r to s e e the total Roman e x p e r i e n c e as it affected Western i d e a s and c u l t u r e for more than a thousand years. On March 8, " A r t of the Middle A g e s " r e c o n c i l e s t h e m y s t i c a l a p p r o a c h of m e d i e v " al t i m e s to the s c i e n t i f i c attitude of the modern Americ a n m i n d . In " C h a r t r e s Cathe d r a l , " John C a l a d a y a n a l y z e s the fusion of f a i t h , intell e c t , e n g i n e e r i n g , and a r c h i t e c t u r e found in the c a t h e dral. " T h e R e n a i s s a n c e , " offered March 1 5 , i n c l u d e s exa m p l e s of p a i n t i n g , s c u l p t u r e , and a r c h i t e c t u r e never before included in any film. P h o t o graphed e n t i r e l y in Italy and F r a n c e , the film p o r t r a y s t h e r i s e of the R e n a i s s a n c e . F i l m s about two of h i s g r e a t e s t a r t i s t s will be tory on March 2 2 . ' D a shown V i n c i " p r e s e n t s the life and work of the man who b e s t exe m p l i f i e s the spirit of the Renaissance. "Michaelangel o " offers an insight into the r e l a t i o n s h i p b e t w e e n the art i s t a n d h i s patron d u r i n g the Renaissance. " R e m b r a n t Van R y n : A S e l f - P o r t r a i t " will be shown on March 2 9 . A l l films will be s h o w n in R a u b 211 at 8 p.m. and are open to the public w i t h o u t charge. t\ survey of companies and government a g e n c i e s that expect to hire college graduates this year, indicates that now, not sometime after graduation in June, is when s e n i o r s should be starting to look for j o b s . The s u r v e y , conducted by Changing Times magazine and released February 1, shows that despite an upturn in the job market for new graduates, the day when they could wait for corporate recruiters to come to them is s t i l l j u s t a memory. R e p l i e s from more than 100 companies indicate that seniors who do get started early should find good demand for their services in most major d i c s i p l i n e s . Personnel officers responding to the survey described a wide range of jobs throughout the country. " 7 2 of the organizations have or expect to have j o b s for new engineering graduates. Tlie s p e c i a l t i e s needed include aeron a u t i c a l , chemical, civil, electrical, geological, industrial, and mechanical engineering, among others. ^ " 5 9 want b u s i n e s s and marketing majors for jobs in s a l e s , management, planning and othei areas PMD Jack Geisman comes to life at Friday evenings Bentley Hall. Could it have been the food? dinner in -48 have varied openings for accountants. -40 want s c i e n c e or mathematics majors for research, development and other technical positions. -30 have jobs for liberal arts majors in a variety of fields. -22 are looking for graduates with such miscellaneous s p e c i a l t i e s a s computer program' ming, graphic a r t s , health, communications, advertising. The closer an applicant's record and goals match the comp a n y ' s n e e d s , the more likely he or she is to get the j o b . Who is the ideal candidate? A composite picture drawn from the comments of personnel officers who participated in the survey shows a graduate with these shining c h a r a c t e r i s t i c s : - G O O D GRADES. Companies still put a premium on them. " P L E N T Y OF EXTRACURRICULAR ACTIVITIES. Participation in campus affairs demonstrates an ability t o get along with others. "WORK E X P E R I E N C E . Ideally, this means summer or part-time work in a field related to the one you want to enter. -WILLINGNESS TO RELOC A T E . Companies try to a s s i g n workers where they're needed most. An applicant who i s willing to take a position somewhere away from home is likely to stay in the running longer than someone l e s s flexible. - C L E A R JOB OBJECTIVE. Applicants who know what they want to do tend to make a better impression than those who don't. The Changing Times survey is designed to help graduates get their job hunts off the ground and includes names and addresses of companies that indicated they have openings. For a free copy of the survey, write to Changing Times Reprint Service, 1729 H Street N. W., Washington, D. C. 20006. What's Happenin' MON. - 26 Shown above is Connie Lees performing on the uneven parallel bars in gymnastic competition against /UP. Final score was 50.88-49.66 in favor "INDIANS" Play Rehearsal Art E x h i b i t - Yar C h o m i c k y - O P E N I N G L e c t u r e and d e m o n s t r a t i o n - r e f r e s h m e n t s T U E S . - 27 Yar Chomicky Art E x h i b i t Women's B a s k e t b a l l - P e n n S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y "INDIANS" Play Rehearsal Basketball - Edinboro State WED. - 28 Yar Chomicky Art E x h i b i t I n t e r v i e w s : C a e s a r R o d n e y School D i s t r i c t Union C o u n t y R e g i o n a l H.S. D i s t . C a r e e r Seminar: " D i f f e r e n t A s p e c t s of L a w " R i c h a r d Saxton, A t t o r n e y at L a w "INDIANS" Play Rehearsal H u m a n i t i e s Film - " T h e S e v e n t h S e a l " of LHS. JQI} Interview 6:00 p.m. 8:00 p.m. Raub Little Galle;ry Away 1:30 p.m. Price 6:00 p.m. Eagle P.ye will accept Let t e r s to the Editor only if they Away 8:00 p.m. contain at least one signature Raub Little Gallery by the writer or writers. Names BHL 9:00-12 noon will be withheld from publicaBHL 9:00-4:00 tion on request of the writer, Leffer Policy Planetarium Price PUB Eagle Wing 4:00 p.m. 7:30p.m. 7:30 p.m. but all letters must be signed. Letters on any subject are welcomed. However, they must ^ o t be libelous to any indiviUual or group, and they must be Written in good t a s t e . ' Eagle Eye disclaims any' and all r e s p o n s i b i l i t y for let-, « e r s , both in c o n t e n t and topic. Schedules ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^'V'^'tF'^^^^^' All i n t e r v i e w s will be h e l d in B e n t l e y H a l l Lounge u n l e s s o t h e r w i s e i n d i c a t e d . You m u s t be r e g i s t e r e d w i t h the P l a c e m e n t Office in order to s i g n up for a n i n t e r v i e w . P l e a s e s i g n up in P l a c e m e n t Office e x c e p t for Military O p p o r t u n i t i e s . D e a d l i n e for s i g n u p is two d a y s before i n t e r v i e w d a t e . Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar- EDUCATION 28 - U n i o n County R e g i o n a l High S c h o o l D i s t . # 1 , Springf i e l d , NJ A b i n g t o n H e i g h t s S c h o o l D i s t r i c t , C l a r k s Summit, PA - C a r r o l l C o u n t y B o a r d of E d u c a t i o n , W e s t m i n s t e r , MD - Harford C o u n t y Board of E d u c a t i o n , B e l Air, MD B a l t i m o r e C o u n t y B o a r d of E d u c a t i o n , T o w n s o n , MD 15 - West C h e s t e r Area S c h o o l D i s t r i c t , West C h e s 21 - Seaford School D i s t r i c t , Seaford, D E Feb. Feb. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. OTHER 20 - E q u i t a b l e Life A s s u r a n c e C o . , P A 2 6 , 2 7 , 28 - U. S. N a v a l R e c r u i t m e n t 5 - Modern Woodsmen of A m e r i c a I n s u r a n c e , P A 7 - P e n n a . S t a t e C i v i l S e r v i c e C o m m i s s i o n , PA 13 - A e t n a Life I n s u r a n c e C o . , H a r r i s b u r g , PA 1 9 , 2 0 - P e a c e C o r p / V i s t a - P h i l a d e l p h i a , PA 23 - C o l l e g e Life I n s u r a n c e C o . , S t a t e C o l l e g e , P A Feb. Price Raub 106 M BASKETBALL Announcemenfs The SCC Social Committee will meet Tuesday February 27 at 1:30 in the Small Conference room of the PUB. There will be a PCU meeting on Monday, Feb. 26 at 7:00 pm in the PUB Small Conference Room. Sen/or John Marzlak, captain of the 1972-73 tagte cuyers, is shown above in his last game for LHS. The Eagles won the contest against lUP , 49-47, in Saturday Night's action. Grapplers Place Sth in Pa.Wrestling Toi^rney • Eichenlaub and Johnson Capture Conference Titles by Robert Singer After the smoke had cleared away from Heiges . ieidhouse at Shippensburg State College o... Saturday night, everyone was left with a few s u r p r i s e s . Ups e t s had occurred right and left, in both the team and itiuividual scoring. Clarion had ended up on top to n o o n e ' s s u r p r i s e , with HOVi points and four c h a m p i o n s . The n e a r e s t competitor was Slippery Rock with 91 and three chamfv i o n s . The s c h o o l whom nobody figured on was Millersville with 70Vi. T h e Marauders ripaned np in the w r e s t l e b a c k s , and eventually edged Bloomsburg with 69'/2 and one champion. Lock Haven w a s Sth with 57 and 2 winners, California with 4 1 , Shippensburg 4 0 , Edinboro with 37, Indiana ' w i t h 2 0 , Kutztown 13, Mansfield 10, E a s t Stroudsburg, winner two years a g o , with 8. Of the six returning champions, two managed to defend their t i t l e s s u c c e s s f u l l y . Of the others one was a runnerup, another came in 6th, one did not place, and another w a s unable to compete due to a previous injury. And of the thirteen returning placewinners, four dropped in standing, three advanced, four did not place at all and two stayed where they were. There was at l e a s t one upset in almost every weight c l a s s . Brian Kuntz at 118 was one of Lock Haven's placewinners, ending up in 4th. In the winner's bracket he edged Dave Whare of Miflersville 9-8,'ajiO' ran into Craig Turnbull of Clarion and lost 9-1. In the consolations he defeated California's Carlos Bryant 4-3 met Whare again in a rematch and lost 12-4. J a c k Spates of Sliopery Rock eventually won. The Bald' E a g l e s crowned two champions, one of which was Rob Johnson at 126. In the fi'-'st match he knocked on Mark Hone s s of Slippery Rock 8-1, then George Fidmik of Kutztown 12-7, who ha d previously upset E a s t Stroudsburg's Art Kahn, 3rd last year wim a r a n . in tne tmai ne faced Tom Haney of Clarion, who placed 4th at 118 last year. The match was close most of the way although Johnson was always in the lead. Things remained tense until most of the way through the third period, when referee George Custer called Hanley for grabbing Johnson's headgear, taking the edge off the match and giving Johnson a 5-3 victory. backs was defeated by Len Ferraro of Slippery Rock when he was called for stalling in the last period, the difference in a 5-4 verdict. He did not p l a c e . Mike Hffrtolino. called up to replace Gary Ventimiglia at 142, did a good job considering his e x p e r i e n c e . He started out by handing Jim Sykes of I n d a n a a 12-6 d e c i s i o n , then was pinned at 3:52 by Robbie Waller of Slippery Rock, who eventually went on to become champion. In the consolations he dropped a 12-2 affair to Bill Larkin of California, and then wrestled Sykes a g a i n t o the same result 12-5. He pTaced 5th. Don Eichenlaub became the other Lock Haven champion at 150, with a little h e l p from his friends. Top-seeded Bill Luck • enbaugh of E a s t Stroudsburg injured his "rm in the s econd NEED A JOB? STARTING SALARY: Lou Conway did not make an outstanding showing at 134. He edged Rich Einsporn of Indiana 3-2 on riding time, then lost 5-3 to Rod Patterson of California and in the wrestle- $10,296.91 AFTER 3 YEARS: $15,417.31 • mmmi BENEFITS: Free medical and dental care for y o u . Free medical care for dependents. 30 days paid vacation per year. $15,000. life insurance policy. for 3 dollars per month. World travel. And many more INFORMATION Pregnancy tatt availabia on request. A n Abortion can I M arranged within 24 hours and you can return home the same day you leavel CALL COLLECT; 215 - 735-8100 A Non-Profit OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Organization round and defaulted the r e s t of the w a y . Secondseeded Dan DeMarines, runner up last year to Gary Ventimiglia, .w.aa upset first by Chris Clark (Clarion) in the first roimd,"and' then by Millersville's Rick Zinck in the second round of the consolat i o n s . This left the field Wide open- for Eichenlaub, who proceeded to chew up his four opponents with two pins (one over Clark) and 8-6 and 6-4 d e c i s i o n , which were not a s close a s the scores indicate, to take the c l a s s without a great denl r.f Hifficulty. The big question at 158 was what happened to Gary Ventimiglia. His first match he won 19-15. He nearly was d e c k e d in the first period of his match with Mansfield's Frank Rice and spent the r e s t of the bout fighting back with RETIREMENT: 24 HOURS $761.00 per month for life after 20 years ADVANCEMENT: Al's Amerlcon ^ Unlimited, depending upon your performance. POSITION: 748-6350 AMERICAN iBellefonte & Commerce pilot or flight officer EMPLOYER; U. S. Navy Rood Service - Minor Repairs - Tune-ups - Brakes - Exhaust Contact- L t . Prose On: 26, 27 and 28 F e b . Place: Bently Hall Lounge From: 9:30 to 4.00 Syktems - State Inspection (what e l s e ? ) takedowns and e s c a p e s . In h i s next match he was tied up by Millersville's Mike F e n t o n ' s legs and lost 6-0. Fenton went on to become runner u p . Then Kevin Hays of Bloomsburg pinned him at 5:44, and Larry McCoy of Indiana worked double arm bars for two periods to take a 13-4 r e s u l t . Ventimiglia ended up 6th. 1 he 167 c l a s s didn't go much b e t t e r . Don Adams lost a 4-2 heartbreaker to Randy Haught of C a l i f o r n i a , then was pinned by Mark S a s s a n i of Mansfield in the w r e s t l e b a c k s . Sassani later lost and Adams was not able tr> nlace. George Wilhelm w a s prot>ably not destined to get very far. After defeating Don Toy of Indiana 7-5 he ran into Bill Simpson and bounced off, losing 10-2. He then won a match from Mike Stambaugh of E a s t Stroudsburg the hard way in overtime 1-1, 3-3,and a unanimous referee's decision. Eric Guyll of Millersville edged him 3-2, and lost an overtime battle, t h i s time to Carl Messina of Slippery Rock, 1-1, 7 - 1 . Wilhelm placed 6th. Dave Wasson at 190 had the worst breakr, of the bunch. His first match was against defending champion and second seeded Jim Z o s c h g of Millersville. He lost 12-6. Normally, however, this would be a break, because he would have an opportunity in ihe w r e s t l e b a c k s . But that didn't happen. Zoschg was subsequently pinned by Bob Gordon of Clarion, who went on to be 2nd to Floyd " S h o r t y " Hitchcock of Bloomsburg. Heavyweight Jim Schuster pinned Buz Enos of Mansfield at 3:49. T h e n he was pinned by Chuck Coryea of Clarion, the eventual winner at 5:47. In the wrestlebacks he pinned Tom Jenkins of Slippery Rock at 2:46. And he might have pinned Frank Myers of Shippensburg, if his knee hadn't given him trouble in the middle of the match, resulting in a 5-1 loss and 4th place. So now what's left? Later this week Cox and seven wrestlers will go to BrooKings, S.D. for the NCAA-CoHege Division Tourmanent. If someone qualifies there they will go to Washington for the University Division Championships. f UP TO SNUFF? Oppose Abortion ' / h e n self-consciousness, instead of being caused by o living, human being, begins to cause a living, human being, there is something wrong with human reason. See Professor Redpoth, U205. Blow it legal with An Old F r i e n d ! Treat your head to the e l e c t r i c rush of Sniff i n g Snuff. To deny your senses the e c s t a c y of Dean Swift's 18 a r o m a t i c k e d Snuffing tob a c c o s is a fate w o r s e than r e m a i n i n g a v i r g i n . Send your buck for three introductory t i n s to Dean Swift L t d . , PO Box 2009, Son Francisco, Cal. 94126 MILLER'S GIFT SHOP The shop with a gift every occasion for Dealers in Fostoria Glass 933 B e l l e f o n t e A v e . 748-5663 TERMPAPERS Send for your descriptive, up<'to-date, 128-page, mail order catalog of 2,300 quality termpapers. Enclose $1.00 to cover postage and handling. WE ALSO WRITE CUSTOM MADE PAPERS. CHAMPION TERMPAPERi 636 Beacon St. (fl605) B o s t o n , M a s s . 02215 617-536-9700 Research material for' T e r m p a p e r s , R e p o r t s , Theses, i I e t c . LOWEST P R I C E S . Q U I C X i i SERVICE.For infprmatioi- Termpaper Research 519 GLENROCK AVE, SUITE 203 LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024 (213) 477-8474 • 477-5491 "We need a Iqcal salesman" * •• I L uigi s 52'/2 rear East Church 3 hamburgers, F F , s m a l l pop - $1.05 TERM-PAPERS GUAfiANJTEJ ^f) 000 ON FILE ^ 24 Mour Mailorders • (^ality Research FROM twice •-..'fiesnUs' Guarai JCREE DESCRIPTIVE CATALV. CALLO^LCECI OK WRITE \ \ - 8*5 r-t 343-3412 TERMPAPtK KtStARCH INC. P. O. Box 252 Varrington, Pa. J 8976 . ^^ March 1st in Lock /y WRITTFN BY PROFESSIONAL DEGREED RESEARCHERS • -|KV?1? the samr St. 748 - 6 5 7 3 §1^00 O^' pp Used & Originals ( Y Y P I ' D inTfinished form with Bibliography & Footnotes) {Thousands of Finished Papers rin every subject.) * " LOCAL * SAl'JMEN * NEEDED , (Write c/o Miss Jones) * * * « Coming from the Midwest to Lock haven -The finest In Arts and CraftsWaterbeds - L u x u r i o u s Soft Beanbog F u r n i t u r e A large assortment of P o s t e r s , C o n d l e s , and Burners New Items w i l l be a r r i v i n g d o i l y - S i l v e r , Leather, Macrame * A L S O - Special Ride and Information Board Open Ihursday & Friday: 1 p.m. - 9 p.m. Saturday: V a.m. - V p.m. 126 B e l l e f o n t e A v e . - next to fhe M o b i l e Stop in - "Put a little love in your life at Station Lovecraft!"