BHeiney
Thu, 06/15/2023 - 13:30
Edited Text
tHS Freshman
Hurt In Snow
EAGLE W I N G
Ed Dennis, a Social Welfare major at Lock Haven State,
was injured while sledding last
night at approximately 12 midnight.
The freshman football player was attempting to climb the
hill below Smith Hall when he
slipped in the snow and threw
out his right knee.
John Hope, present at the
time of the accident, summoned
h e l p . The Hope Hose Company
arrived within ten minutes and
the injured Dennis was removed
to the hospital.
Swiss Steak
Mashed Potatoes
$1.00
World Moving in 'New Directions', Foresees Ford
An extremely
informative
speech
was
presented
last
night by Representative Gerald
Ford. His topic " N e w
Directions in the 7 0 ' s " was
informally
presented
to the
audience.
A
question-answer
period followed.
Ford quickly summarized
his topic with " I believe that in
many, many r e s p e c t s , politically,
economically,
diplomatically, the United States
and the world at large are moving in new d i r e c t i o n s . "
He began his list of subj e c t s with a personal view ot
Congress and the a s s o c i a t i o n
with the public. "Most polls
recently taken show that Congress and the House of Repres e n t a t i v e s are not highly re«^^pected with the public at l a r g e . "
He attributes this attitude to
unrecorded campaign expenditures and conflict of interest^.
by the Congressmen and Senat o r s . The presently
enacted
solution is the "Committee on
E t h i c s " ; a group consisting of
six Republicans and six Democrats,
who
annually
check
statements
regarding
these
ar _,5. In addition, t h e election
law of 1972 requires full disclosure in a regular b a s i s of
of election and off year s p e n d ing. It - i - " puts limits - n imaiso
mediate, but not total expenditures. In Ford's opinion, the
House and Senate now have a
good reporting law.
Continuing, Ford stated that
senority is no longer a prerequisite for nomination of committee chairman. The present
procedure is the majority party
now picks the Chairman, and t h e
minority party picks the ranking
members of the minority party.
The Committee on Committees
reccomcnds to the Congress caucus the individual's name for
chairman and ranking member,
he does not run against anyone,
and the balloting is s e c r e t . Ford
believes that this is a good
workable s y s t e m .
Another new direction is
that of the Congressional and
Executive b r a n c h e s . The three
areas of conflict are as follows:
(1) the majority party challanges
the right of the President to not
spend funds that Congress has
appropriated. (2) the right of the
Chief Executive to use " E x e c u tive P r i v i l e g e " to eliminate his
close advisers from testifying
before C o n g r e s s i o n a l Committ e e s . (3) the authority of the
Commander-in-Chief
to commit
military personnel to conflitt
without declaration of war by
Congress.
Concerning the first area
Campus Problem Experienced
Editors Note:
The following was written by concerned
LHS student
who has
experienced first-hand a prohlem which
is becoming increasingly
widespread on campus.
She stared straight ahead,
her pupils dialated until there
was no remaining color, her complexion drawn white. There was
nothing we could do except
stand motionless beside her; a
reassurance that nothing would
frighten her. The reason for our
motionlessness was the " t r a i l s "
that our bodies made; a linked
slow motion movement that frightens anyone on a trip. She reminded me of someone r i s e n
from the dead. She had no movement or color for about two hours
and then the panic began.
She pointed and screamed
at me, one of her c l o s e s t friends
that she no longer recognized.
She told us exactly what s h e
saw but she spoke in a manner
that was not her own. F i r s t , my
face melted a s though it were
melting wax and she writh;d and
screamed to s e e my features run
together until my head was one
blob of flesh. Then her clothes
got up out of her closet and ran
a w a y . It seems so comic to me
now that she could envision such
a thing but at that moment she
became frantic that her clothes
could do something like that to
her and now s h e would have to
find other clothes that would be
her friends and not run away from
her when she needed them s o .
Colors came alive to her but her
s p e e c h under this influence hindered her explanation of what
she s a w . This continued for s e ven hours. It waF her first t a t
of LSD and it •--c far beyonu
what she coulc
• -le. This is
third person I've seen this happen to and one of those three
persons is dead resulting from an
overdose.
A serious campus
problem? Hardly, it is a serious
campus catastrophe.
I know many people at this
college and out of all my acq u a i n t a n c e s , I know of four people that have never used drugs
of some s o r t . I've been exposed
to every possible drug; some directly and many indirectly. I've
s e e n personalities transfor-ned
into unrecognizable i d e n t i t i e s .
I can only question " w h y ? " .
As a freshman, I condoned
any usage of drugs.
I, a l s o ,
participated myself.
As a junior, I can only condemn drug
u s a g e . I've s e e n its results and
I've felt its effects. There are
young students that have never
been exposed to drugs and are
suddenly faced with the decision
of experimenting with them. The
peer influence at college is very
strong and the choice is usually
to use or merely try whatever is
offered.
I'd offer a solution but experts have been trying everything
and obviously nothing has wcirked
as of yet. These are not campus
accidents and cannot be ignored.
There have been far too many
c a s e s of overdosed students
rushed to the hospital to be overlooked.
It's a present and
public problem but one without
solution.
I've been exposed,
I've been a part, and I've been
influenced.
I'm not speaking
from rumor or heresay but experience.
If the school or public
officials cannot control this social influence, who do they expect to do it?
The students
themselves?
of conflict. Ford stated that
there are lawsuits hy s t a t e s and
bills before Congress designed
to force the President to spend
impounded monies. Although a
change to the present law has
been attempted by the House,
it still remains that " T h e President may spend, 'X' number of
d o l l a r s . " Ford believes that
the changes proposed by the
House will never become law.
Of the second area of conflict, Ford said, " I honestly believe that a President, whether
it's Kennedy, Johnson, or Nixon,
does have to have the right to
d i s c u s s intimately with his closest a d v i s e r s , the pros and cons
of a position that the President
takes without having those discussiims brought before Congressional C o m m i t t e e s . "
The last of these three conflicts highlighted at this stage
is a result of past incidents,
involving previous Presidents,
and the long standing conflict
in Vietnam. Ford stated that the
most vocal proponent for legisolation limiting the power of
the Commander-in-Chief is Senator J a v e t t s . Ford presented
J a v e t t s ' legislation as follows:
" t h a t a President as Commanderin-Chief could commit U.S. military personal to a military conflict, but within thirty days after
that
initial
committment
he
would have to report to the Con-
gress and Congress would either
have to approve by a declaration
of war or disapprove by refusing
to a c t , and if Congress refused
to act then the U.S. military personal would have to be withdrawn."
Ford then centered his disc u s s i o n of Foreign Policy around
the decision of President Nixon
to open the door to China. Ford's
initial reaction to this occassion
was one of surprise but after
his trip to China in 1972, his
emotions were a mixture of fascination and fright. He was fascinated because he saw a very
industrialized civilization; dedicated and highly disciplined.
Their natural industry, under
tight leadership, is now a unified nation. He was frightened
because a nation consisting of
800 million people and growing
at a rate of two New York cities
a year could, under irresponsible
leadership , be a real threat to
the Globe. Ford believes that
the combined actions of President Nixon and the Chinese
l e a d e r s to talk now may prevent
future conflict.
Hitting
domestic
policy.
Ford expressed his personal beliefs concerning the military. He
s t a t e d that " I happen to think
an all volunteer military organization is the right a p p r o a c h . "
In his opinion, a volunteer military would be more competant,
better trained, and more ready to
do what the Commander-in-Chief
w a n t s . He feels that this will be
accomplished by the ending of
the war in Vietnam, the doubled
pay for active duty provided by
C o n g r e s s , and the total manpower cutback in the military
from 3,600,000 to 2,300,000.
Moving strictly to the area
of Domestic Policy, Ford pres e n t e d a broad generalization,
which is indicative of what is
happening in this country today.
He stated that four years ago
military expenditures were 43%
and domestic programs were 32%
of the total budget. In the present fiscal year these s t a t i s t i c s
were almost reversed with defense receiving 30% and domestic programs receiving 47% of
the total budget. Ford personally
believes " t h a t the trend will
grow as we find that we can negotiate for arms linitations with
the Soviet Union, renegotiate
with our allies in N.\TO for us
to withdraw troops and for them
to assume greater burden which
will permit us to allocate more
or our resources for domestic
precedents and national security
purposes."
In the concluding question
and answer periixi. Ford covered
various topics ranging from the
energy c r i s i s to the dollar devaluation. Two topics he covered
that are particularily interesting
t o college students are the educational allocations in the future and his views on amnesty.
On education, he f e e l s that the
P r e s i d e n t ' s proposed budget provides expansion in total dollars
for higher education. The Presid e n t ' s recommendation is to put
more emphasis on student aid and
less on the i n s t i t u t i o n s . There
is money included for loan guara n t e e s , grants, and the like.
Concerning the amnesty i s s u e ,
he stated that "1 do not believe
that we should grant amnesty to
deserters or those who do not
shoulder their responsibility...
2,500,000 Americans , at one
time or another, served in Vietnam under the law. 46,000 risk
their lives. Now we have to relate their service to the lack of
service on the part of those who
deserted...and if 1 have to make
a c h o i c e , my choice is for those
who stood up and carried out
their r e s p o n s i b i l i t y . "
Ford's
speech obvious 1
illustrated both his vast knowledge and background of political i s s u e s . The evening proved
to be extremely informative for
all that attended.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The SCC Social Committee will present "Airport"
starring Burt Lancaster, Dean
!V,artin and Jacqueline Bisset, Sunday r-eb. 18 at 6:30
and 9:00 in Price Aud. admission is free with a validated I.D. $1.00 without.
Any student on work study looking for a job should
obtain an application in the
PUB Office before February
19. Students able to work between 10 am-l pm are especially needed. Applications v.ili
be chosen on a first come
first £ .ve basis.
All student I.D. cards
must be embossed with your
student number. You can get
this done in the Library Audio-Visual Department, Ground
Floor, ^^o^day thru Friday
from !:30 to 4:30 p.r. After
March 15, you will not be able
to charge out library books
unless your card is embossed.
ALPHA PHI OMEGA Brothers
and Pledges: Very important
meeting Thursday night, FeD.
15 in EAGLE wiNG at 7:30
p.m. sharp.
Attire: sports
coat and tie.
Phi Mil Delta 'isnce scheduled for this Sat. night has
been cancelled.
For Sale: Sherwood 7I00A
Receiver, 50 Watts RMS, Best
Offer, Phone 748-8614.
For Sale-one year old Electra
solid state AM/FM/FMstereo
radio and eight track tape
player. Walnut cabinet I8V2
X 10 X 4'/2 stereo headphone
jack, separate balance, bass,
and treble controls, matched
walnut speakers SVi x 15 x 5V2
$70. Contact Jim Kutta, I M A
house 748-6931
Bogles Sink the Ship, 27 18; Assured A
Lock H a v e n s ' wrestlirig team
set an all-time record when tncy
a s s u r e d themsp^lves of a thirtieth
straight winning s e a s o n by aowning Shippensburg 27-18. Dr. Ken
Co"'•= E a g l e s are now 8-5 on the
s e a s o n , winning 5 of their last
6 matches.
In the 118 bout, Brian Kuntz
compiled on 8-3 lead on Steve
Longnecker of Shippensburg before recording a pin at ;06 of the
second period. The pin gave the
E a g l e s a 6-0 lead. Kuntz is now
8-6 on the s e a s o n including his
tournament r e s u l t s .
\;aking his first varsity debut at 126, John Brodmerkel
dropped a tough 7-2 decision to
Dave Mertz, of Shippensburg.
Brodmerkel led 2-0 at the end of
the first period, but the agile
Mertz added five second period
points on a reversal and a near
fall.
Mertz added two more in
the third period to cap the decision and bring the match score
to 6-3 in favor of the E a l g e s .
At 134, Rob Johnson recorded his 13th victory of the year m
in scoring a decision over Bob
Bean, 6-2. Johnson led 2-1 at
the end of the first period on a
takedown. He then clinched the
match with a three point second
period, giving Lock Haven a
9-3 match lead.
The Eagles
were never to be threatened for
the rest of the evening.
In the 142 bout, Jim Bria of
Shippensburg took a narrow 4-3
decision from Lou Conway by
racking up three points in the
second period. This brought the
match score to 9-6, the c l o s e s t
the Ship, came for the rest of the
meet.
At 150, Senior Gary Ventimiglia wrestling his last home
match for the Bald E a g l e s , compiled a remarkable 25-8 lead on
BUY YOUR
CLASS
RING
NOW.
Greg Querry, before the Shippensburg grappler was disqualified,
being given his fourth stalling
warning by the referee. Ventimiglia won his 17th match of the
year to only one loss and also
gave Lock Haven a 15-6 lead.
In the 158 c l a s s , Don Eichenlaub won his sixth match of
the year over Dave He Iter of
Shippensburg. Eichenlaub took
a 2-0 lead on a takedown at the
end of the first period. At 2:36
of the second period Eichenlaub
gave LHS 21-6 lead when he registered a pin.
At 167, Ed Novosel brought
the match score to 21-12, after
leading by 4-2, he pinned Don
Adams at 2:36 of the second period.
LHS's George Wilhelm recorded his fifth victory of the
vear at 177 with an e a s v 12-5 decision over Bruce Bertz. Wilhelm led 4-0 at thfc end of the
>a pin a t 1:38 of the second period bringing the final score to
27-18.
Dr. Ken Cox's grapplers
meet the California State Vulcans on February 16, and wind
first period by a take down and
a nearfall. In the second period.
Wilhelm was awarded a stalling
point and recorded an e s c a p e to
Bertz's escape and takedown,
to lead 6-3. Wilhelm then compiled a 5 point third period, and
with riding time took the 12-5
win.
With Lock Haven leading
24-12, Bob Nagy clinched the
win with a 11-2 victory over Burt
Walsh. Nagy took a 2-0 lead at
the end of the first period with a
takedown. In the second f)eriod,
Nagy increased his lead to 5-0
with a nearfall. He then piled
up six points in the third period
to win his bout and clinch the
match.
In the heavy weight match,
Wayne Johnson of LHS, making
his first varsity appearance in
a dual meet, and Frank Myers
battled at 0-0 before Myers took
Johnson down. He then recorded
In
Women's
B a s k e t b a l l trouble h o l d i n g o n t o p a s s e
action
T u e s d a y , L o c k H a v e n ' s and s i n k i n g long s h o t s .
hoopsters
took
two
games
L o c k H a v e n ' s g i r l s poli s h e d off the game w i t h s o m e
away
from
the
Gettysburg
but, solidly
good
B u l l e t s in T h o m a s F i e l d h o u s e . a c c i d e n t a l
T h e V a r s i t y E a g l e t t e s took t e a m w o r k .
an e a r l y lead in their game
It .,eemeu m a t a l l t h e
placing
the h a l f - t i m e
s c o r e v a r s i t y p l a y e r s had a good
at 4 2 - 2 0 .
day on c o u r t T u e s d a y :
Ann
B u r n s , Lori D u t h , Barb Merwin,
Second-half
action
inB e t t y Miller, Sue W a r c h o l a ,
cluded
some
good
outside
all s h o n e at T h o m a s F i e l d s h o t s from R o s e Neff, and
h o u s e ; p o u r i n g a final 77 p o i n t s
some a c c u r a t e i n s i d e
shots
i n t o the s c o r e b o a r d . G e t t y s from Kelly C r o m e r .
burg t a l l i e d 4 1 .
Beth
Miller
added
two
Lock
Haven's
junior
difficult
p o i n t s later in the
half in a f a n t a s t i c r e b o u n d - v a r s i t y had a s l o w first half,
playing mostly s e e - s a w basover-the-shoulder
toss.
k e t b a l l to r e a c h a t r a i l i n g half
R o s e iNeff and Barb C o l l i n s
time s c o r e of 2 5 - 2 2 .
p l o t t e d their u s u a l e x c e l l e n t
Gail
Valentine
added
d e f e n s e , with R o s e c o n t r i b u t most
total
points, 13,
ing a l e a d i n g number of p o i n t s : the
with some fine s h o t s .
2 0.
The J.V. E a g l e t t e s deGettysburg's
defense
fense
and r e b o u n d s
perked
was
timid,
although
their
up for s e c o n d half
action,
offensive
drive
was
good; r a l l y i n g them to a 4 point
G-burg's
rebounders
were lead of 36-32 by the end of
o v e r s h a d o w e d by L H S ' s Beth
the third q u a r t e r .
Miller, P a t O g l e , J o a n Van
L o c k H a v e n ' s g i r l s reAllen, however.
mained
in front to c a p t u r e
G - b u r g ' s g i r l s had some a 47-35 v i c t o r y .
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The Lancer
up the dual meet s e a s o n on February 17 at Waynesburg C o l l e g e .
The Pennsylvania
Conference
meet then convenes from February 23-24.
Girh Take Two from G-hurg
TEACHERS ANO EDUCATORS IN PENNSYLVANIA:
1^
Wirining Season
215 - 343-3412
TPRMPXPFR RESFARCH I \ C
P. O. Box :5 2
VVjrrip:to-i. Pi. IS-^'f
iTh ^•.:-.>-.:< of FiniiheJ PjDers
MILLER'S GIFT SHOP
The
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shop with a gift
e\ery
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933 Bellefonte Ave.
748-5663
Hurt In Snow
EAGLE W I N G
Ed Dennis, a Social Welfare major at Lock Haven State,
was injured while sledding last
night at approximately 12 midnight.
The freshman football player was attempting to climb the
hill below Smith Hall when he
slipped in the snow and threw
out his right knee.
John Hope, present at the
time of the accident, summoned
h e l p . The Hope Hose Company
arrived within ten minutes and
the injured Dennis was removed
to the hospital.
Swiss Steak
Mashed Potatoes
$1.00
World Moving in 'New Directions', Foresees Ford
An extremely
informative
speech
was
presented
last
night by Representative Gerald
Ford. His topic " N e w
Directions in the 7 0 ' s " was
informally
presented
to the
audience.
A
question-answer
period followed.
Ford quickly summarized
his topic with " I believe that in
many, many r e s p e c t s , politically,
economically,
diplomatically, the United States
and the world at large are moving in new d i r e c t i o n s . "
He began his list of subj e c t s with a personal view ot
Congress and the a s s o c i a t i o n
with the public. "Most polls
recently taken show that Congress and the House of Repres e n t a t i v e s are not highly re«^^pected with the public at l a r g e . "
He attributes this attitude to
unrecorded campaign expenditures and conflict of interest^.
by the Congressmen and Senat o r s . The presently
enacted
solution is the "Committee on
E t h i c s " ; a group consisting of
six Republicans and six Democrats,
who
annually
check
statements
regarding
these
ar _,5. In addition, t h e election
law of 1972 requires full disclosure in a regular b a s i s of
of election and off year s p e n d ing. It - i - " puts limits - n imaiso
mediate, but not total expenditures. In Ford's opinion, the
House and Senate now have a
good reporting law.
Continuing, Ford stated that
senority is no longer a prerequisite for nomination of committee chairman. The present
procedure is the majority party
now picks the Chairman, and t h e
minority party picks the ranking
members of the minority party.
The Committee on Committees
reccomcnds to the Congress caucus the individual's name for
chairman and ranking member,
he does not run against anyone,
and the balloting is s e c r e t . Ford
believes that this is a good
workable s y s t e m .
Another new direction is
that of the Congressional and
Executive b r a n c h e s . The three
areas of conflict are as follows:
(1) the majority party challanges
the right of the President to not
spend funds that Congress has
appropriated. (2) the right of the
Chief Executive to use " E x e c u tive P r i v i l e g e " to eliminate his
close advisers from testifying
before C o n g r e s s i o n a l Committ e e s . (3) the authority of the
Commander-in-Chief
to commit
military personnel to conflitt
without declaration of war by
Congress.
Concerning the first area
Campus Problem Experienced
Editors Note:
The following was written by concerned
LHS student
who has
experienced first-hand a prohlem which
is becoming increasingly
widespread on campus.
She stared straight ahead,
her pupils dialated until there
was no remaining color, her complexion drawn white. There was
nothing we could do except
stand motionless beside her; a
reassurance that nothing would
frighten her. The reason for our
motionlessness was the " t r a i l s "
that our bodies made; a linked
slow motion movement that frightens anyone on a trip. She reminded me of someone r i s e n
from the dead. She had no movement or color for about two hours
and then the panic began.
She pointed and screamed
at me, one of her c l o s e s t friends
that she no longer recognized.
She told us exactly what s h e
saw but she spoke in a manner
that was not her own. F i r s t , my
face melted a s though it were
melting wax and she writh;d and
screamed to s e e my features run
together until my head was one
blob of flesh. Then her clothes
got up out of her closet and ran
a w a y . It seems so comic to me
now that she could envision such
a thing but at that moment she
became frantic that her clothes
could do something like that to
her and now s h e would have to
find other clothes that would be
her friends and not run away from
her when she needed them s o .
Colors came alive to her but her
s p e e c h under this influence hindered her explanation of what
she s a w . This continued for s e ven hours. It waF her first t a t
of LSD and it •--c far beyonu
what she coulc
• -le. This is
third person I've seen this happen to and one of those three
persons is dead resulting from an
overdose.
A serious campus
problem? Hardly, it is a serious
campus catastrophe.
I know many people at this
college and out of all my acq u a i n t a n c e s , I know of four people that have never used drugs
of some s o r t . I've been exposed
to every possible drug; some directly and many indirectly. I've
s e e n personalities transfor-ned
into unrecognizable i d e n t i t i e s .
I can only question " w h y ? " .
As a freshman, I condoned
any usage of drugs.
I, a l s o ,
participated myself.
As a junior, I can only condemn drug
u s a g e . I've s e e n its results and
I've felt its effects. There are
young students that have never
been exposed to drugs and are
suddenly faced with the decision
of experimenting with them. The
peer influence at college is very
strong and the choice is usually
to use or merely try whatever is
offered.
I'd offer a solution but experts have been trying everything
and obviously nothing has wcirked
as of yet. These are not campus
accidents and cannot be ignored.
There have been far too many
c a s e s of overdosed students
rushed to the hospital to be overlooked.
It's a present and
public problem but one without
solution.
I've been exposed,
I've been a part, and I've been
influenced.
I'm not speaking
from rumor or heresay but experience.
If the school or public
officials cannot control this social influence, who do they expect to do it?
The students
themselves?
of conflict. Ford stated that
there are lawsuits hy s t a t e s and
bills before Congress designed
to force the President to spend
impounded monies. Although a
change to the present law has
been attempted by the House,
it still remains that " T h e President may spend, 'X' number of
d o l l a r s . " Ford believes that
the changes proposed by the
House will never become law.
Of the second area of conflict, Ford said, " I honestly believe that a President, whether
it's Kennedy, Johnson, or Nixon,
does have to have the right to
d i s c u s s intimately with his closest a d v i s e r s , the pros and cons
of a position that the President
takes without having those discussiims brought before Congressional C o m m i t t e e s . "
The last of these three conflicts highlighted at this stage
is a result of past incidents,
involving previous Presidents,
and the long standing conflict
in Vietnam. Ford stated that the
most vocal proponent for legisolation limiting the power of
the Commander-in-Chief is Senator J a v e t t s . Ford presented
J a v e t t s ' legislation as follows:
" t h a t a President as Commanderin-Chief could commit U.S. military personal to a military conflict, but within thirty days after
that
initial
committment
he
would have to report to the Con-
gress and Congress would either
have to approve by a declaration
of war or disapprove by refusing
to a c t , and if Congress refused
to act then the U.S. military personal would have to be withdrawn."
Ford then centered his disc u s s i o n of Foreign Policy around
the decision of President Nixon
to open the door to China. Ford's
initial reaction to this occassion
was one of surprise but after
his trip to China in 1972, his
emotions were a mixture of fascination and fright. He was fascinated because he saw a very
industrialized civilization; dedicated and highly disciplined.
Their natural industry, under
tight leadership, is now a unified nation. He was frightened
because a nation consisting of
800 million people and growing
at a rate of two New York cities
a year could, under irresponsible
leadership , be a real threat to
the Globe. Ford believes that
the combined actions of President Nixon and the Chinese
l e a d e r s to talk now may prevent
future conflict.
Hitting
domestic
policy.
Ford expressed his personal beliefs concerning the military. He
s t a t e d that " I happen to think
an all volunteer military organization is the right a p p r o a c h . "
In his opinion, a volunteer military would be more competant,
better trained, and more ready to
do what the Commander-in-Chief
w a n t s . He feels that this will be
accomplished by the ending of
the war in Vietnam, the doubled
pay for active duty provided by
C o n g r e s s , and the total manpower cutback in the military
from 3,600,000 to 2,300,000.
Moving strictly to the area
of Domestic Policy, Ford pres e n t e d a broad generalization,
which is indicative of what is
happening in this country today.
He stated that four years ago
military expenditures were 43%
and domestic programs were 32%
of the total budget. In the present fiscal year these s t a t i s t i c s
were almost reversed with defense receiving 30% and domestic programs receiving 47% of
the total budget. Ford personally
believes " t h a t the trend will
grow as we find that we can negotiate for arms linitations with
the Soviet Union, renegotiate
with our allies in N.\TO for us
to withdraw troops and for them
to assume greater burden which
will permit us to allocate more
or our resources for domestic
precedents and national security
purposes."
In the concluding question
and answer periixi. Ford covered
various topics ranging from the
energy c r i s i s to the dollar devaluation. Two topics he covered
that are particularily interesting
t o college students are the educational allocations in the future and his views on amnesty.
On education, he f e e l s that the
P r e s i d e n t ' s proposed budget provides expansion in total dollars
for higher education. The Presid e n t ' s recommendation is to put
more emphasis on student aid and
less on the i n s t i t u t i o n s . There
is money included for loan guara n t e e s , grants, and the like.
Concerning the amnesty i s s u e ,
he stated that "1 do not believe
that we should grant amnesty to
deserters or those who do not
shoulder their responsibility...
2,500,000 Americans , at one
time or another, served in Vietnam under the law. 46,000 risk
their lives. Now we have to relate their service to the lack of
service on the part of those who
deserted...and if 1 have to make
a c h o i c e , my choice is for those
who stood up and carried out
their r e s p o n s i b i l i t y . "
Ford's
speech obvious 1
illustrated both his vast knowledge and background of political i s s u e s . The evening proved
to be extremely informative for
all that attended.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The SCC Social Committee will present "Airport"
starring Burt Lancaster, Dean
!V,artin and Jacqueline Bisset, Sunday r-eb. 18 at 6:30
and 9:00 in Price Aud. admission is free with a validated I.D. $1.00 without.
Any student on work study looking for a job should
obtain an application in the
PUB Office before February
19. Students able to work between 10 am-l pm are especially needed. Applications v.ili
be chosen on a first come
first £ .ve basis.
All student I.D. cards
must be embossed with your
student number. You can get
this done in the Library Audio-Visual Department, Ground
Floor, ^^o^day thru Friday
from !:30 to 4:30 p.r. After
March 15, you will not be able
to charge out library books
unless your card is embossed.
ALPHA PHI OMEGA Brothers
and Pledges: Very important
meeting Thursday night, FeD.
15 in EAGLE wiNG at 7:30
p.m. sharp.
Attire: sports
coat and tie.
Phi Mil Delta 'isnce scheduled for this Sat. night has
been cancelled.
For Sale: Sherwood 7I00A
Receiver, 50 Watts RMS, Best
Offer, Phone 748-8614.
For Sale-one year old Electra
solid state AM/FM/FMstereo
radio and eight track tape
player. Walnut cabinet I8V2
X 10 X 4'/2 stereo headphone
jack, separate balance, bass,
and treble controls, matched
walnut speakers SVi x 15 x 5V2
$70. Contact Jim Kutta, I M A
house 748-6931
Bogles Sink the Ship, 27 18; Assured A
Lock H a v e n s ' wrestlirig team
set an all-time record when tncy
a s s u r e d themsp^lves of a thirtieth
straight winning s e a s o n by aowning Shippensburg 27-18. Dr. Ken
Co"'•= E a g l e s are now 8-5 on the
s e a s o n , winning 5 of their last
6 matches.
In the 118 bout, Brian Kuntz
compiled on 8-3 lead on Steve
Longnecker of Shippensburg before recording a pin at ;06 of the
second period. The pin gave the
E a g l e s a 6-0 lead. Kuntz is now
8-6 on the s e a s o n including his
tournament r e s u l t s .
\;aking his first varsity debut at 126, John Brodmerkel
dropped a tough 7-2 decision to
Dave Mertz, of Shippensburg.
Brodmerkel led 2-0 at the end of
the first period, but the agile
Mertz added five second period
points on a reversal and a near
fall.
Mertz added two more in
the third period to cap the decision and bring the match score
to 6-3 in favor of the E a l g e s .
At 134, Rob Johnson recorded his 13th victory of the year m
in scoring a decision over Bob
Bean, 6-2. Johnson led 2-1 at
the end of the first period on a
takedown. He then clinched the
match with a three point second
period, giving Lock Haven a
9-3 match lead.
The Eagles
were never to be threatened for
the rest of the evening.
In the 142 bout, Jim Bria of
Shippensburg took a narrow 4-3
decision from Lou Conway by
racking up three points in the
second period. This brought the
match score to 9-6, the c l o s e s t
the Ship, came for the rest of the
meet.
At 150, Senior Gary Ventimiglia wrestling his last home
match for the Bald E a g l e s , compiled a remarkable 25-8 lead on
BUY YOUR
CLASS
RING
NOW.
Greg Querry, before the Shippensburg grappler was disqualified,
being given his fourth stalling
warning by the referee. Ventimiglia won his 17th match of the
year to only one loss and also
gave Lock Haven a 15-6 lead.
In the 158 c l a s s , Don Eichenlaub won his sixth match of
the year over Dave He Iter of
Shippensburg. Eichenlaub took
a 2-0 lead on a takedown at the
end of the first period. At 2:36
of the second period Eichenlaub
gave LHS 21-6 lead when he registered a pin.
At 167, Ed Novosel brought
the match score to 21-12, after
leading by 4-2, he pinned Don
Adams at 2:36 of the second period.
LHS's George Wilhelm recorded his fifth victory of the
vear at 177 with an e a s v 12-5 decision over Bruce Bertz. Wilhelm led 4-0 at thfc end of the
>a pin a t 1:38 of the second period bringing the final score to
27-18.
Dr. Ken Cox's grapplers
meet the California State Vulcans on February 16, and wind
first period by a take down and
a nearfall. In the second period.
Wilhelm was awarded a stalling
point and recorded an e s c a p e to
Bertz's escape and takedown,
to lead 6-3. Wilhelm then compiled a 5 point third period, and
with riding time took the 12-5
win.
With Lock Haven leading
24-12, Bob Nagy clinched the
win with a 11-2 victory over Burt
Walsh. Nagy took a 2-0 lead at
the end of the first period with a
takedown. In the second f)eriod,
Nagy increased his lead to 5-0
with a nearfall. He then piled
up six points in the third period
to win his bout and clinch the
match.
In the heavy weight match,
Wayne Johnson of LHS, making
his first varsity appearance in
a dual meet, and Frank Myers
battled at 0-0 before Myers took
Johnson down. He then recorded
In
Women's
B a s k e t b a l l trouble h o l d i n g o n t o p a s s e
action
T u e s d a y , L o c k H a v e n ' s and s i n k i n g long s h o t s .
hoopsters
took
two
games
L o c k H a v e n ' s g i r l s poli s h e d off the game w i t h s o m e
away
from
the
Gettysburg
but, solidly
good
B u l l e t s in T h o m a s F i e l d h o u s e . a c c i d e n t a l
T h e V a r s i t y E a g l e t t e s took t e a m w o r k .
an e a r l y lead in their game
It .,eemeu m a t a l l t h e
placing
the h a l f - t i m e
s c o r e v a r s i t y p l a y e r s had a good
at 4 2 - 2 0 .
day on c o u r t T u e s d a y :
Ann
B u r n s , Lori D u t h , Barb Merwin,
Second-half
action
inB e t t y Miller, Sue W a r c h o l a ,
cluded
some
good
outside
all s h o n e at T h o m a s F i e l d s h o t s from R o s e Neff, and
h o u s e ; p o u r i n g a final 77 p o i n t s
some a c c u r a t e i n s i d e
shots
i n t o the s c o r e b o a r d . G e t t y s from Kelly C r o m e r .
burg t a l l i e d 4 1 .
Beth
Miller
added
two
Lock
Haven's
junior
difficult
p o i n t s later in the
half in a f a n t a s t i c r e b o u n d - v a r s i t y had a s l o w first half,
playing mostly s e e - s a w basover-the-shoulder
toss.
k e t b a l l to r e a c h a t r a i l i n g half
R o s e iNeff and Barb C o l l i n s
time s c o r e of 2 5 - 2 2 .
p l o t t e d their u s u a l e x c e l l e n t
Gail
Valentine
added
d e f e n s e , with R o s e c o n t r i b u t most
total
points, 13,
ing a l e a d i n g number of p o i n t s : the
with some fine s h o t s .
2 0.
The J.V. E a g l e t t e s deGettysburg's
defense
fense
and r e b o u n d s
perked
was
timid,
although
their
up for s e c o n d half
action,
offensive
drive
was
good; r a l l y i n g them to a 4 point
G-burg's
rebounders
were lead of 36-32 by the end of
o v e r s h a d o w e d by L H S ' s Beth
the third q u a r t e r .
Miller, P a t O g l e , J o a n Van
L o c k H a v e n ' s g i r l s reAllen, however.
mained
in front to c a p t u r e
G - b u r g ' s g i r l s had some a 47-35 v i c t o r y .
yourselves by saving money on costly
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The Lancer
up the dual meet s e a s o n on February 17 at Waynesburg C o l l e g e .
The Pennsylvania
Conference
meet then convenes from February 23-24.
Girh Take Two from G-hurg
TEACHERS ANO EDUCATORS IN PENNSYLVANIA:
1^
Wirining Season
215 - 343-3412
TPRMPXPFR RESFARCH I \ C
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MILLER'S GIFT SHOP
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LOCAL
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e\ery
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