BHeiney
Wed, 06/21/2023 - 13:58
Edited Text
Vol. XXI No. 28

NEWS
BRIEFS
Premier Shahpour Bakhtiar has banned all demonstrations in Iran, warning
that marchers could be
shot. He also tightened
security on the country's
airport, which are officially
closed until Sunday.

The official Chinese
News Agency reported
some sweeping reforms
yesterday that would restore rights, jobs and
private property to former
capitalists. A group of
former businessmen were
told that seizure of their
property was "unconstitutional."
The Federal Communications Commission opened
the way for competition in
the telegraph industry
today. Competition will
now be possible against
Westem Union which had
held a monopoly on the
domestic telegraph since
1943.

Lock Haven State College

Senate Meets
By SUSAN SHELLY
A new policy for people
caught shoplifting in the
bookstore, new SCC advisors and extended Eagle
Wing hours were some of
the topics discussed at
Wednesday night's senate
meeting.
SCC President David
Lepley conducted the meeting, the second of his
administration. Lepley said
A N E W SEMESTER ~ is underway as a student receives help from Mr. Kuhn, a he will recommend that
Joseph Nagy, director of
Lock Haven State math teacher.
[Photo by M I K E BAYLOR]
the PUB, be given the
authority to prosecute
anyone caught shoplifting
in the bookstore to the
fullest extent of the law.
Shoplifters were previously
sent to Dr. Don Crews for
counseling, under a vauge,
' the late Spring. The stipend
financial need.
unwritten policy.
The Pennsylvania Legifor each student will be
Students who want to
slative Correspondents AsNew SCC advisors were
$1,200. The program is
apply for the intemships
sociation, an organization
announced. They are Dr.
open to students attending
should provide the followof state government reportJohn Zaharis, Vice PresiPennsylvania colleges and
ing information:
ers based in Harrisburg,
dent of Academic Affairs,
to Pennsylvania residents
" A resume that includes
will have a summer intern
Gregory J. Nolan, of the
who go to school out-ofinformation on all previous
program again in 1979.
Office of Development, Dr.
state.
work experience.
Michael Peplow, English
Two students, who curThe interns will have the
~A copy of your latest
professor and Dr. Bryan
rently are Juniors, will be
opportunity to work with
transcript.
Van Duen, associate Dean
picked for the 12-week proreporters from the Harris-Samples of your work
of Students. Van Duen was
gram which will hpoin in
burg bureaus of AP, UPI
(either clips or classroom
also an advisor to the
and Allentown, Harrisburg,
assignments).
former executive commitPhiladelphia and Pitts-- Three references,
tee under President Joe
burgh newspapers. The
preferably from journalism
losophy of Science, had to
Harper.
emphasis
will
be
on
reportteachers
or
employers.
be cancelled because of the
ing
state
government
news
Second Vice President
Please include the telefaculty shortage,
and acceptable stories will
Charlotte Young reported
phone numbers of your
According to Dr. Howard
be published. We are inthat she is working to
references.
Congdon, department
terested only in persons
extend the hours of the
- 300 to 500 words on
members must now submit
who
plan
to
make
journalEagle Wing snack bar on
how
you
plan
to
use
this
ina petition to President
ism a career.
weekends. She said she is
ternship. It must be typed.
Hamblin, stating why a relooking for suggestions
Students with questions
The deadline for applicaplacement for Redpath is
from students on rennoabout
the
program
can
contions
is
Feb.
28.
Entries
necessary. The case will be
vating the snack bar.
tact Tom Ferrick at 717postmarked after this date
forwarded to the Secretary
Young also said she is
787-5990.
will not be accepted. The
of the Budget in Harrislooking for LHSC students
PLCA
Scholarship
ComThe
applications
should
burg. If the case is apto
do coffeehouses on
mittee
will
pick
the
interns
be sent to:
proved, action will begin to
campus. Anyone interested
by March 15 after personal
Scholarship Committee
hire a new philosophy
should contact her in the
interviews with the finalc/o Tom Ferrick
professor.
PUB.
ists.
We
also
have
two
$500
P.O. Box 1287
Redpath reportedly left
scholarships
available
to
Jack Sohnleitner, chairHarrisburg, Pa. 17108
LHSC to accept a job at St.
finalists who can prove
person of the Social
John's University, ManhatCommittee, reminded the
tan campus.
senate of the Amityvllle
Horror Show will be on
campus in the near future,
change program.
be leaving campus for a
expected in early March.
and announced that LivingIn addition to the exsemester to attend college
Nine Polish scholars are
ston
Taylor will do a concert
change and permanent forin Lublin, Poland. Two
currently on campus. Sevin Price Auditorium on Feb.
eign student programs,
LHSC professors. Dr. John
eral of them will teach or
22. Tickets will go on sale
LHSC also provides an
McGowan and Dr. Charles
act as advisors for various
next week.
option for its student
Hayes are already in
departments.
The recently inducted
teachers to teach abroad.
Poland as part of the exTen LHSC students will
executive committee initiated the senate to its new
idea for the meetings
On Monday, Feb. 5,
mittee on governing polition. To be a Senator, one
"brainstorming." The senthere will be elections for
cies of the SCC, voting on
must represent his/her reate broke up into three
the budget, and serving on
vacancies in the college
spective area of residence,
small groups and discussed
committees which will
senate. The vacancies are:
be in good academic standideas they considered imenhance the development
ing, as defined by the Vice
(2) Woolridge, (4) McEnportant. A representative of
of college life.
President for Academic
tire, (2) Gross, (1) Smith,
each small group then
Affairs, and must have paid
and (3) Off-Campus.
Petitions can be obtained
reported the results of the
his/her activity fee.
Those desiring to be a
at the Executive Office on
"brainstorming" session.
the ground floor of the
Senator must submit a
As a Senator, your duties
Some things discussed
PUB.
petition of fifty signatures,
wiil be to recommend and
were the price of books in
three days prior to the elecadvise the Executive Com-

• H P ^^fll^^^ ^gtiKKKmKKr ^SIVRiPMiH^^B •

Intern Program Planned
By Correspondents Association

Redpath Leaves Lock Haven
By SUSAN SHELLY
Lock Haven State's already small philosophy department was decreased
further when Dr. Peter
Redpath resigned shortly
before the end of last
semester.
Remaining philosophy
professors include Mr. Jack
Silberg, Dr. John Irwin,
and Dr. Howard Congdon.
The short notice Redpath
gave of his resignation
caused scheduling problems since the courses he
was to teach were already
designated. Three courses.
Metaphysics, Contemporary Philosophy, and Phi-

Foreign Program Grows Under Konick' Direction

^y SUSAN SHELLY
Lock Haven State's foreign exchange and international education programs are continually expanding. Five new foreign
students, two from Cameroon, two from Ghana, and
one from Malaysia, are
beginning at LHSC this
semester and about 25 exchange students and professors from Poland and
Argentina will also be on
campus.
Seven students from
Argentina have already
arrived at LHSC. Approximately eight more are

Friday Jan. 26, 1979

SCC Senate Elections To Be Held Soon

the college store, the
shoplifting policy and the
situation of the LHSC
hockey club. The club is in
need of funds and the
matter will now be taken to
the finance committee at its
next meeting.
Other matters discussed
at Wednesday night's
senate meeting were the
proposed extension of
library hours, the possibility of an increase of the
price of operating the
dorms' washing machines,
student directories, the
possibility of student discounts in downtown stores
and Easter Vacation. These
subjects will be discussed
further at the next senate
meeting, set for February
6.
It should be noted that
any student, not just
senators are encouraged to
attend these meetings.
Students should also be
aware that there are senate
positions open. Anyone
interested can pick up a
petition at the SCC
Executive Office in the
PUB.

Chinese Food
Now Served
Downtown
When cafeteria food becomes unbearable, and McDonald's or Burger King is
not quite enough of a treat,
there's now a third alternative. The "Orient Chinese
Restaurant" opened last
week at 211 E. Main Street
in Lock Haven.
Prices are reasonable as
is usually the case with
most Chinese restaurants.
The menu is quite varied,
including most favorite
Chinese dishes, such as
Sweet and Sour Shrimp,
Egg Roll, and as always,
Wonton Soup.
The new restaurant is
under the same management as Verdini's Restaurant in dovtTitown Williamsport. According to the
management, business has
been fairly good.
The restaurant is open
daily except Monday, from
11 am-9 pm. Hours for
Friday and Saturday are
from 11 am-10 pm.
For those here at LHSC
who have a taste for something a little exotic to
please their palate, it
finally came to town.

Editorial
Point
By SUSAN SHELLY
I attended the SCC senate meeting Wednesday
night and was mildly impressed by the new
executive committee. It had the meeting well
organized, and although it was long, it ran
smoothly.
The committee, and particularly President David
Lepley, is determined, but idealistic. Lepley
repeatedly stressed the importance of individual's
ideas. Whether this idealism will fade as the term
progresses remains to be seen, but this executive
committee seems to be truly concerned for all
students.
Now all students must show concern for themselves and work with the executive committee that
they have elected.
Criticism given without suggestion for improvement is worthless. Instead of emply criticism about
bool< prices, cafeteria food, or nothing to do here on
weeicends, students must constructively criticize
and offer suggestions for changes. The executive
committee is the body to which suggestions should
be directed, and it has an obligation to all students
to consider those suggestions and implement them
when practical.
Take advantage of this executive committee's
idealism, enthusiasm and willingness to work.
Criticize and suggest now. If there are things you
want to see changed, and there certainly should be,
do everything you can to see that they are changed.
Make the executive committee work for you. W i t h
your help, it can accomplish a lot.

Movie Guide
Lock Haven
G a r d e n - S e x World
Roxy—Up in Smoke

7:00, 9:00
8:00
Fri.-Sun. - 7:00, 9:00

^ it ^
State College
Cinema I —Every W h i c h Way But Loose - 7:30,
9:35
Cinema II —In Praise of Older Women - 7:40, 9:40
Garden—Superman
7:15, 9:45
F l i c k - A n i m a l House - 7:30, 9:30
Movies —The Lord of the Rings - 7:15, 9:45
Screening Room —Her Expensive Taste 7:30, 8:45, 10:00
The Lock Haven State Collage
EAQLE EYE
AN INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER
The Eagle Eye is published twice weel Publications of Lock Haven State Coiiege. Our office is
located on the ground floor of the Parson's Union
Building. Phone 748-5531 or ext. 456.
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 iibelous, incoherent or too lengthy.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
MANAGING EDITOR
GRAPHICS EDITORS
NEWS EDITOR
SPORTS EDITOR
PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
ASS'T PHOTO EDITOR
ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR
COMPOSITION EDITOR
ADVISOR
GENERAL MANAGER

SUSAN SHELLY
Chris Flynn
John Patrilak
Nancy Stoy
Diane Orban
Cheryl Wagner
Mike Baylor
Cheryl Fluck
Frances Arndt
Harry Pfender
Dr. HowardK. Congdon
Martha Hastings

tax talk
By RON SAGER
This is the first of a series of articles on filing
student income tax returns. Although much of the
information applies to anyone's tax return, we will
concentrate on the specifics that apply to you as a
student.
You should have already received federal and
state income tax, and W-2 forms in the mail. Trying
to figure out what information goes where, seems
to cause the tax preparation blues. As one leading
tax authority said, "Income tax causes many
headaches because the law contains more double
talk than baseball does double p l a y s . "
However, income tax preparation wasn't always
as difficult as it is today. The Internal Revenue
Service began collections during the Civil War.
Then with the adoption of the 16th Amendment in
1913, the federal government initiated income tax
as we know it today. In its infancy, only one out of
every 271 Americans paid the tax at the rate of
1%on a net income of $50,000. As the rate of tax
steadily climbed over the years, the IRS found it
necessary to initiate withholding by the employer.
But with the increase of tax rate also came
increased complexity of income tax regulations,
most notably major tax reforms enacted in 1954,
1969, and 1976.
The " a v e r a g e " citizen does not, or cannot
compile a library of tax regulations adequate to
prepare a complete tax return. Due to the
complexity of tax regulations, many people asked
for simplification of income tax laws. The Supreme
Court of 1930 answered, " I t is the legal right of a
taxpayer to decrease the amount of his tax (or
altogether avoid tax) by whatever means the law
p e r m i t s . " Determining what the law permits
requires knowledge of current tax regulations and
p e r s e r v e r a n c e . W i t h o u t g o i n g into a i l tax
regulations, let me concentrate on those that effect
you as a student. I'll supply the possible
advantages that will decrease or eliminate the
amount of tax paid. You must supply the
perseverance needed to apply these tax regulations
to your individual tax return.

—Announcements —
Any student interested in
contributing poetry or
fiction to this year's edition
of the Crucible, please
place contributions in the
Publications Office, basement of the PUB, or call
Ext. 456, by February 14.

TEACHERS
Looking for employment in
any subject area! Teacher
Data Resources services
several thousand schools in
N.J., PA., and N.Y.—write
T.D.R., P.O. Box 2186,
Ventnor. N.J. 08406

poetry corner

Coffeehouse
Review
By SUSAN SHELLY
Two musicians, an Ovation aroustic guitar, a
synthesizer, a bass guitar, a twelve string guitar
and a kazoo provided two very enjoyable hours of
music Wednesday night in the PUB Eagle W i n g .
Bill Prentiss, a junior at Lock Haven State, and
Chuck Kesslar of Bloomsburg kept a sizable
audience entertained with music ranging from old
Dylan songs to recent hits by Billy Joel and the
Eagles.
Both Prentiss and Kesslar's voices were more
than adequate for solos, but generally, their best
numbers were the songs they sang together in two
parts. The two voices blended extremely well and
Kesslar's guitar playing was a fine accompaniment
to their harmonies.
The show was fairly well organized, although the
two had only practiced it for two weeks, according
to Prentiss. Kesslar's stage presence was good, he
appeareed relaxed and at ease. P r e n t i s s '
nervousness was apparent at times, but it rarely
affected his singing.
The synthesizer, which Prentiss played, added to
some songs, but was distracting when used with
some of the softer music. It did, however, greatly
enhance the popular song by Kansas, " D u s t in the
W i n d , " of which Prentiss did a fine rendition.
A melody of three Beatles songs, "Norweigen
W o o d , " "Rocky Racoon" (complete with kazoo
part), and " Y e s t e r d a y " was well done by the two
performers and obviously appreciated by the
audience.
The repertoire also included music by Simon and
Garfunkel, Eric Clapton, Harry Chapin, John
Denver, America and an original piece.
It was a very enjoyable performance and
considering how little practicing Prentiss and
Kesslar had done together, quite impressive.

Review
Review of the Week —
Half of J.R.R. Tolkien's trilogy is presented in
" T h e Lord of the R i n g s , " an animated feature
created by Ralph Bakshi (whose innovation brought
us the X-rated animated film " F r i t z the C a t " ) .
While the story line may be a bit confusing to those
who are not familiar with the hobbits, the movie is
nonetheless engrossing, partly because of the
enjoyable fantasy of the story, and partly because
o f t h e animated marvels wrought by Bakshi, whose
painting over of live-action sequences brings to the
film both uncanny realism and, at the same time,
mystical fantasy and imagination.

"A Moment of Beauty"

FRANKLY SPEAKING
I am alone in the wild, white wilderness
I sense being the only human in the world
All around me everything is untouched
There is but one set of footprints imprinted in the
snow
Mine.
I like this feeling
I all by myself in a world of endless beauty
A ship in the midst of a silent, sparkling sea
Silent except for the wind rustling in the trees
The land all around me is covered with a crust of
clean fallen snow
Trees are draped with veils of this whiteness and
adorned with crystal icicles
The crisp, cold wind whips through my woolen
wrappings
It chills my body somewhat
Sending a slight shiver up my spine
Strange how still the world seems
Like a picture it does not move
If only the beauty I experience here
Could be preserved forever
Like a fossil in a stone, it would truly
Be a treasure worth saving
But at least I will always have a memory of today
To share with others who never see the beauty in
simple things.
Cue Clough

A^K, m (^BSriOM. "CAM
TOM FASS H\^ MIO'T^^^
lOHlLS UAJCHINQ
PAY me
wr'

Cierpilowski Of Advisement Off ice Visits Poland
LOCK HAVEN-A visit to
the homeland of his ancestors was combined with a
productive series of discussions about Lock Haven
State College's Polish exchange program by Dr.
Gerald Cierpilowski, who
recently returned to the
U.S. after a week-long visit
with officials at Marie Curie
Sklodowska University in
Lublin, Poland.
Cierpilowski is codirector of the Academic
Advisement Center at Lock
Haven State.
The purpose of his visit
to Lublin was to clarify and
expand various aspects of
the current exchange program between LHSC and
the Polish University. The
visit was both interesting
and productive, with a
number of proposals for
new developments discussed, he said.
Cierpilowski also noted
that the trip had many
emotional aspects for him
personallyin that it was the
first time he had actually
seen the home of his
ancestors, which he had
read and studied about
extensively. His grandparents had come to the

U.S. fi-om the Lublin area.
Among the items discussed
was the exchange visit to
Lublii) during the upcoming
spring semester by Dr.
John McGowan of the
LHSC music department.
Cierpilowski met with
Adam Natanek, director of
the Lublin Philharmonic
Orchestra, which Dr. McGowan will be conducting
twice in late January.
Also discussed was a
proposal for a summer
school program for Pennsylvania teachers to study
in Poland, presented by DT.
Zbigniew Sobolewski, associate director of "Polonia
Centrum," an affiliate of
the international organization for the study of Polish
culture. In tum, an invitation was extended to
Stanislaw Leszczynski, director of the Folk Dancers
of Marie Curie University,
to visit the U.S. with his
dance group for a concert
tour of American colleges
and universities.
A proposal for an intensive study of land use in
Poland by American geography students, under the
direction of LHSC professor
Donald Green, was presented to the Institute of

Geography at Marie Curie.
According to Cierpilowski,the proposal was favorably
and enthusiastically received by the director and
the faculty of the institute.
Cierpilowski also met
with Wieslaw Skrzydlo,
rector of Marie Curie, and
vice-rector Grzegory Seidler and other administrators to work out details for
future exchanges between
the two institutions. He met
with LHSC students who
have been studying in
Poland during the fall
semester and with their
faculty advisor. Dr. Charles
Hayes of the LHSC foreign
languages department.
The students, who have
been studying
Polish
language, history, and culture, reported that the work
was interesting though demanding, with methods of
instruction sometimes differing from those used at
Lock Haven. Each student
was also responsible for
independent research projects which were coordinated by the Polish
faculty.
In addition, Cierpilowski
found that the American
students have been able to
travel to some of the

r^

JERRY'S
'more than a jean store'

WELCOME BACK
LHSC STUDENTS
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR
STOREWIDE CLEARANCE
EVERYTHING
MARKED
10%-50% off
winter coats
sweaters
ALL
knit shirts 1/2 PRICE
sport shirts
PT TIS

MANY MORE BARGAINS!
SHOP AND SAVE

Open
M-Th-Fri
till 9:00
Wed till 12:00
Tues-Sat
till 5:00

Jerry's
More Than a Jeans Store

Corner of
Church & Grove Sts.
Downtown

historic cities of Poland as
part of their studies.
Dr. Hayes, who is teaching at the Institute of English, also reported his
experiences to be rewarding. "Spending time with a
people is the only real way
to find out what is going
on." he told Cierpilowski.
Hayes reported he has
learned a great deal about
the govemment, the economic situation in Poland,
and the educational system. He also found tiiat
frequent shortages of such
items as tissue paper, coffee, tea, and meat have encouraged his appreciation
of the advantages offered
by the U.S.
Cierpilowski also met
with the Polish scholars
who will be coming to Lock
Haven for the 1979 spring
semester as part of this
year's exchange, scheduled
to arrive on January 21. He
found that all speak English
quite well and are anxious
to study, teach, and do research in the U.S. Among
the group are scholars with
doctorates in chemistry,
economics, English, and
law.
Among his other activities, while in Poland, Cierpilowski was interviewed
by a radio reporter from
Warsaw whose station
broadcasts to countries
abroad, including the U.S.,
so people of Polish descent
can hear a first-hand report
about their homeland. He

also attended a .concert at
philharmonic hall, visited
the family cottage of the
Polish-American patriot
Taddeusz Koscierszko, presented a lecture on behavior modification and
transactional analysis to a
management science class,
and visited several historic
cities.
According to Dr. Marcus
Konick, director of international education at
LHSC, the Polish exchange
program is currently very
strong and healthy, witli
many public appearances
by Polish scholars and

Polish exhibits scheduled
for the Lock Haven area in
1979.
"Our exchange program
with Poland is quite
unique. Nowhere else is
there such a large scale
exchange of academic personnel between socialist
and capitalist countries as
the one which now exists
between Lock Haven State
College and Marie Curie
Sklodowska University,"
said Konick.
Prof. Charies Kent ofthe
LHSC history department
serves as coordinator of the
program.

Classifieds
students, if your eamed
wages for 1978 were $2,950
or less you may qualify to
receive all taxes withheld.
Contact H and R Block
trained tax preparer, Ron
Sager today about your tax
refund at 748-9952 or Ext.
471 after 6pm. Special
reduced rates for LHSC
students.

COUNSELORSi ASSOCIATION OF INDEPENDENT
CAMPS seeks qualified
counselors for 90 member
camps located in N.
Eastern U.S., July and
August. Contact: Association of Independent Camps,
55 West 42nd St., New
York, N.Y. 10036 (212) 7366595.

women
s
medical center
birth
control
counseling

ConfidentiaT
Senice

free
early detection
pregnancy testing

outpatient
abortion
facility

(215)265-1880
20 minutes from Pfiiladelphia

DeKALB PIKE and BORO LINE ROAD
KING OF PRUSSIA. PA 19406

8 1^
sMnihealre/

PLRVEP5

Eagles Win Crusaders Suffer At Foul Line
By PETE BIELSKI
Witn one secona remaining on the clock and the
score Lock Haven 60 - Susquehanna 59, Crusader
forward Jeff Sacko stepped
up to the foul line, shooting
twice, with an opportunity
to win the game, when the
Ross Nevel - House of
Noise' rose to the occasion.
The Haven rooters had
Thomas Field House shaking, and an obviously
shaken Sacko missed both
shots, and the Eagles went
on to win their third game
of the season. Ken Richter
had 19 points for the highflying Eagles and Dave
Bosnik chipped in with 14.
Bosnik had early success,
as he hit five long jumpers,
the key to the Eagle 16
point, 37-26 half-time edge.
With Daimon "Spike"
Robins and Doug Legette
controlling the boards, and
all-conference guard Ken
Richter maintaining Eagle
composure, the home
squad held off a furious
second half comeback.
Terry Gilman played a good

floor game, coming up with
a couple steals, in addition
to helping Bosnik and
Richter defend the explosive guard, Rodney

3-9.
Leading 11-10 with seven
minutes into the game, the
Eagles ran off eight
straight points, on baskets

by Kichter, Legette, and
Thompson to push the lead
to nine points, 19-10. Continued hot shooting by
Richter and Bosnik pushed

Wrestlers Come Back-Beat Morgan 24-20
By TOMMY PETERMAN
The LHSC Bald Eagle
grapplers who are currently
ranked 9th in the East,
battled back fi-om a 17-6
deficit to edge Morgan
State University 24-20,
Tuesday night. Morgan is
currently ranked 10th in the
nation in NCAA-Division n
circles. The match was
hotly contested before a
good-sized
crowd
in
Nevel's House of Noise on
Tuesday evening.
The Bald Eagles currently sport a 9-7 record
with upcoming matches
against Clarion, the nation's 12th ranked NCAA
Division I team. Several
Bald Eagles were outstanding in the Morgan
State victory. Vastly improving, sophomore, Jeff
Fleishman, 134 pounds,

classifieds
1966 Delta 88 Oldsmobile 4
door 72 engine, good
condition. Parked behind
Wharton's Chiropractic Office, 62 East Church St.,
phone 748-3655.

Brooks. Brooks, coming off
games of 26 and 18 was
held to 12 points by the
Eagle trio. The victory
pulled the Eagle record to

TWO ROOMS for rent . . .
$35/wk... . Woolrich area.
769-6232. References
needed.

FACULTY
Are you the you you
want to be? If not,
there is a way. It all
begins February 23.
Watch your mailbox
for details.

who is probably the best
Bald Eagle from his feet,
defeated tough Amos
Goodlow, 16-9. Goodlow, a
two-time state champ from
Flint, Michigan, was also a
Big 10 Champ at Michigan
State prior to transferring
to Morgan State. Fleishman has now won three big
matches in a row. Dependable Dave Moyer, 142, won
a close match over Anthony
Hall, 9-8. Moyer used his
vast experience and skill to
beat the much stronger
Hall. Actually, the Bald
Eagle heavyweights won
the match for the Haven. A
big win by disqualification
by Steve Williams, 167; a
fall by Mike Nauman, 177;
and a win by default by Tim
Thompson, 190 iced the
match for the Haven. Coach
Dr. Ken Cox then elected to
use 180 pound Austin
Shanfelter at heavyweight
in place of the injured
Gregg Koontz. Shanfelter
gave up 40 pounds, but
gave a good effort in losing
by a score of 2-1 to Larry
Daniels. Nauman especially
has looked impressive since
the mid-west tour, and had
a relatively easy time in
pinning muscular Horace
Parry. Steve Williams, an
outstanding freshman and
probably the most active of
the Haven grapplers just
pushed Qeveland Atterbury to exhaustion, when
the referee disqualified the
Morgan grappler at 7:11.
Williams was leading 6-4 at
the time of disqualification.
Thompson, currently sporting a 14-2 dual meet record
was leading 4-3 when
Lamont Banks had to default because of a knee
injury. Losing matches

were Pat Lynch, 118; John
Unangst,
126;
Joey
Baranik; Doug Gallaher,
158; and Austin Shanfelter
at Heavyweight. Actually
Doug Gallaher was very
competitive in battling
NCAA-Division I "AllAmerican" Bucky Smith to
an 8-4 loss.
The Bald Eagle J.V.'s
remained undefeated and
upped their record to 4-0
with a 27-16 victory over
the Morgan J.V.'s. The
LHSC J.V.'s had also
beaten ESSC J.V.'s by a
score of 51-3 last Saturday.
Winning against Morgan
were George DeAugusting,
126; Dwight Bolin, 142;
Marlon Mosley, 150; Fred
Montgomery, 158; Don
Talerico, 167; and Joe
Speese, 177.
MATSIDE N O T E S . . . LHS
wrestles four ofthe nation's
top twenty NCAA-Division
I teams according to an AP
release out of Oklahoma
City yesterday. The Bald

Eagles have lost to 9th
ranked Cleveland State,
23-15; and 20th ranked
Auburn University, 20-18.
Important matches coming
up are Clarion, ranked 15th
and Bloomsburg ranked
18th. Temple, the winner of
the Mat-Town USA Invitational in December is now
ranked 19th. . . . Qarion is
ranked 2nd in the East
behind
Lehigh,
and
Bloomsburg is ranked 3rd.
LHSC is in the 9th spot. . . .
The Nittany Lions of PSU
are currently 0-9 and lost
last night to Bloomsburg,
41-2. This could be the year
the Haven beats the
Nittany Lions, who are
having their poorest season
in history. . . . Clarion had
earlier beaten PSU, 25-18.
Several other Bald Eagles
are still on the injured list
besides Captain Gregg
Koontz, Hwt. The others
are Kevin Brown, 118; Pat
Lynch, 118; Vince Testa,
134; and Dusty Ream, 150.

the lead to 37-21 at halftime, before having to stave
off the Susquehanna comeback effort.
Traveling to Indiana (PA)
on Wednesday night, the
Eagles fell short, dropping
their conference record to
0-4, with a tough 46-44 loss.
After trailing 12-0, the
Eagles fought back to
12-10, but never held the
lead the entire contest.
Eight first-half points by
Doug Legette and six by
Ken Richter kept the
Eagles close at half-time,
down only 26-24. But
Indiana jumped on top
quickly in the second half,
leading 40-30. Good Lock
Haven defense and poor
Indiana foul shooting (5-13
second half—6-19, .316game) yielded only six
Warrior points in the final
11:30, but the Eagles fell
short. Gutch shooting by
Robins and Legette cut the
lead to one at 45-44. After a
missed foul shot by Bill
Cashaw with 9 seconds
remaining, the Eagles had
a chance to tie it, but three
missed shots in a furious
ending, dropped the Eagle
record to 3-10. Indiana now
stands at 6-10.

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