BHeiney
Thu, 06/22/2023 - 19:24
Edited Text
E ASLE EYE
Vol. XIII No. 104
LOCK HAVEM STATE COLLEGI
Tuesday May 5 1970
•-Li. JHIiJ!!"
•^>
|
:^T^
'The Defense Never Rests'
Topic of Weinglass Speech
•
Students Vote YES
On Act. Fee Hike
The student body of Lock
Haven State College voted yes
overwhelmingly
yesterday
in
adopting a proposed amendment
to
the
Student
Cooperative
Council constitution which will
increase the activity
fee
at LHS.
A two-thirds majority of those
voting was needed to p a s s the
proposal and over 80 percent
of those voting c a s t
their
ballot in favor of the proposal.
In the balloting 864 students
voted for the proposed increase
of $5 per semesiei and $2.50 per
per summer s e s s i o n while T J J
voted
against
the
proposed
amendment. A majorityif 716 was
needed to pass the proposal out
of the 1075 students casting
ballots.
The
1075
voters
voters constitutes about 45 per
cent of the LHS student body
in comparison to the 25 per
cent who voted down the proposal
two weeks ago.
The S C C board of directors had
passed the Proposal jag, week
42-4 leaving the final question
up to the student body. The
measui'e will now go before
the amendment will go into effect.
Almost
all
organizations'
budgets had been cut previous to
the revote and now a review of
budget hearings will gains take
place.
Before the proposal
was passed the SCC executive
board stated that they would have
to cut $40,000 out of the budget
and even with the e r c r e a s e d fee
they will still have to cut
$18,000 from original
budget
requests.
Brown represents
state colleges
Dr. Perry Brown, professor
of education at Lock Haven
State College, has been elected
state college representative on
the executive committee of the
Pennsylvania Association for
Student Teaching.
Dr, Brown will be the official
representative of the 14 state
colleges including Indiana University in all matters pertaining to teacher education and
student teaching. His term of
office will be for four years.
"iThe Defense Never R e s t s , "
will be the topic of the speech
presented by Leonard Weinglass,
junior defense attorney in the
Chicago
Conspiracy
Trial,
tonight at 8:15 in the Ulmer
PlanetEirium.
Recently in a speech given at
Syracuse University, Weinglass
s t a t e d that he was " i m p r e s s e d
by the depth, scope and invoivment of so many people to
change the insensitive underpinnings of the conditions we
live."
During a period of his s p e e c h
when
laughter
evoked
the
attorney said, " T h i s is one of
the first times I've heard laughing
without fear of r e p r e s s i o n , "
a s he told his audeince, " t h e
Chicago Seven were sentenced
29 days for laughing."
He went on to explain the
controversial " R a p Brown l a w , "
which prohibits the crossing of
s t a t e lines with intent lo incite
a riot. It a l s o d e f i n e s * ' f i ^ j " as
an assemblage of three persons
who threaten a fourth person.
The young attorney went on to
relate that the original Chicago
Eight were indicated the same
day that this law took effect.
Weinglass also outlined the
problems and intriciacies of the
j u d i c i a l system when it a c t s as
repressively
as
possible
in
setting up a c a s e .
He said
that they had set up the most
expensive defens'- ever in a
criminal trial.
The lawyer went on to say that
many stories were deliberately
slanted in spite of the way the
newspaper reoorters sent them"
in.
•Weinglass
condemned
the
trial as ''the grossest injustice
in recent American h i s t o r y , "
and said the plea for a new
trial is partially based on posttrial statements of chief prosecuting attcrney Foran.
He
also related of the frustrated
effcrts of Bobby Seal e to defend
himself from the charge of conspiring with seven men he did
not know.
In concluding he expressed his
desire that the truth and full
information reach the people of
America on all i s s u e s and hoped
that the trial partially enabled
that to come about.
Weinglass himself faces 14
counts of contempt of court from
the
trial, with a possible
sentence of 20 months and 16
days in prison.
A graduate of George Washington
University (Phi Beta Kappa)
and Yale Law School, he was
a captain in the United States
Air F o r c e , judge advocate genKeflavik, Iceland.
Presently he maintains his
own office for the practice
of law in the city of Newark,
New J e r s e y , and represeinting
the following
clients:
Tom
Hayden, one of the founders of
Students
for
a
Democratic
Society; Jerry Rubin, irgaiizer
of the 1967 maich on the P e n t a gon, author of the book Do It and
co-founder
of
the
YIPPIES;
Abbie Hoffman, Ruliin's associate
co-founder of the YIPPIES and
author of tho book
fii^volution
I-or r/'i." Hell of It; David DeUinger, a pacifis'. opposed lo the
U.S. ;\sian war and who has
made
several
trips to Viet
Nam; Kenneth Gibson, candidate
for mayor. The
People
(YIPPIE
"rganiz lu -1 :• Rutgers t.'tiivi'i.'ily. . x.^. "'"'omas
f ri .. (Jrring
Trantino
.>.
:
two pol ! . .'l;l.':..
P'^esented
In the p.isi he 1
J ohn
the foI!i>wing >'. •
el mincer
Butenko,
Rutgers
in the
convicted of ospioi •;
longest spy li lai .ii .sir.;rn:.jn
history; Lekoi Jom.s,
E ick
Organization of SUn' - r ' s -iiLuijers;
Plainfield r>*.)uL . •••.:
.. ere
the
targets
o!
unconstitutional seiive.:
National
Ou i ' l
a' '
police — this ' : w;
for monetar
formal wr''' '
. •
Governor
;
Jersey; t i t
1 ; ! ' nix
House; and 'li^
black coiTiinenit;
enjoin
the
"0:1
Newark
police
der;'rtn.
following
the 1967
Newark
rebellion.
Weinglass has traveled throughout
the
world
and
visited
Cuba a guest, of the government.
The program is sponsored by
the
LHS
debate union
'"
cooperation with the assemble
committee. All 260 tickets that
were available have been taken
and only those students with
tickets will be allowed to hear
the s p e e c h .
Grant For
LHS Student
LOCK HAVEN-Steve Harris,
a junior majoring in biology
at Lock Haven State College,
will conduct research on " T h e
Effect of Effluents on Marine
Phyto
Plankton
and
Bottom
CoiTimunities" for the Virginia
Institute of Marine Science at
Gloucester
Point, Va., from
June through August, 1970. The
project is being sponsored under
the National Science Foundation
Financed
Undergraduate
Research
Participation
Program.
In notifying Mr. Harris of
his a c c e p t a n c e , Robert S. Bailey,
Project Director, s t a t e d , " Y o u
have '-een selected into this
program because of you' inparent
ability to do researc!
; your
expressed interest in
-oming
a research s c i e n t i s t . "
Mr. 1, "ris will be as.'" .v;d
to wor,< Willi a re;,'..; 1 - > w » C I l airea Jy
tist wno 1 s a proi;
; the
in progress, .i.-.-^istit,
r e s e a . c h ..nd i.-iir^^'
'•'•• t h e
sciei;i..>t
;.
, problei;> .
ill a.so o^ issigned
as
a of "-esearch to invest'
his I. . ri.
<.I,.>.I',T1 Science pounda' des ;. stipend of $60
I
' ;'^', considered not a s
•ll ' i^"' as jKiyinent to enable
"
nt to work and study
' ' • s u c c e s s a s a scienprogram s e e k s to enoi"^ ; participants to special;e in some phase of marine
science at the graduate level.
dSFfll
.
.
"•••.*>-•'
. fnjf^
Students Study in The Sun in Front of Old Library
Eagles Record Stunning Upset
by ' N i b s ' Gordon
"What a tremendous team effort!"
T h e s e words of Coach
Jim Dolan sum up Saturday's victory over Slippery Rock by the
Lock Haven State track team.
The powerful Rockets came out
on the short end of an 80-65
score.
Things looked dark for the
Eagles when the 440 relay team
dropped the baton. At the time
of the mishap the Eagles were
running stride for stride with the
R o c k e t s . The SRSC team won
e a s i l y after the baton hit the
ground.
Race Of T h e Year
As the results of the field events began to come in, the race
of the year started on the track.
Four of the top milers in the conference, Ed Grabewski and Randy
Deemer of Slippery Rock and
Steve Podgajny and Dave Mosebrook of LHS took off at the crack
of the gun.
All jockied for position for 2%
l a p s , then Grabewski and Podgajny started to burn. Grabewski
took a two-yard lead and held it
until ten yards from the finish.
In an amazing display of sheer
courage, Podgajny made up the
two-yard difference and won by
i n c h e s . Both runners were timed
in 4:22 . 2 .
From that point on ' T h e Rock'
was done.
Podgajny's unbelievable win seemed to psyche
the E a g l e s tremendously.
The LHS field men outscored
the Rockets 32-31 completing
seemingly impossible t a s k s .
McNelis Leads Field Events
Bill McNelis led the field men
by winning the triple jump, placing second in the discus and tak-
mile relay.
Someone fcrgot to
ing thirds in the high jump and
long jump. Don Taylor high jump- tell Chris Bower, Carl Klingaman,
Charlie
Simcoe,
and
Mike
ed 6 ' 2 " , his best ever, for
Soyka, b e c a u s e fhe
foursome
second place. Bill Kline took
second in the shot put with a
psssed the baton to a victorious
best throw of 4 5 ' , Galen Hess
3:30.4. a s e a s o n ' s best for the
took second in the pole vault
E a g l e s . T h e five points picked
a t 1 2 ' 6 " , and Bruce Parkhill and
up here by LHS finalized the
Vic Campagna finished 1-3 in
score at 80-65.
the javelin.
An
amazed
and
delighted
Campagna and Taylor placed
Coach Dolan commented that
second and third in the triple
" E v e n though my
coaching
^^fc;^ .'..I'.^
jump, completing a sweep of that
experience is limited to two
event and pulli.ig the E a g l e s to years, I have never witnessed
a three point lead with two
the team spirit that our men
events to go, the two-mile and
displayed today. When our 440
the mile relay.
relay ream dropped the baton
Individual Standouts
I thought that might s e t the
Along with Podgajny, Parkhill,
tone for the afternoon, but our
and McNelis, other Eagle winners
men came back determined tn w i n "
were Tom Ellis in the high
TRACK
hurdles and intermediate hurdles
440 relay — 1. Slippery Rock
with excellent times of 15.6 and
(Williams, Yourchinson, Kalysz,
58.3, Charlie Simcoe with a
Papagna), 2, Lock Haven. T44.3..
50.5 4 4 0 , ty'"8 his stadium
PHOTO FINISH: Baid Eagle Steve Podgajny lunges a c r o s s
Mile — 1. Podgajny ILH), 2.
record and George Bower with a
the
finish line j u s t a h e a d of E d G r a l e w s k i of S l i p p e r y R o c k
Garlewski (SRi. T4:22.2 (New
personal b .st 1:59 in the 880.
field record).
to c a p t u r e t h e mile in S a t u r d a y a f t e r n o o n ' s a c t i o n a t M c C o l l u m
In the two mile run, Podgajny
120 H.H. — 1. Ellis (LH), 2.
F i e l d . Both r u n n e r s w e r e c l o c k e d a t 4:22-2 s e t t i n g a n e w
and Mosebrook allowed the
Almoney (LH), 3. Rumbaugh
field r e c o r d .
Podgajny's heroics started the E a g l e s to a n
Rockets to take the pace for
(SR).T-15.5.
80-65 v i c t o r y .
three l a p s , then ran away from
440 — 1. Simcoe, 2. Kalisz
them finishing 1-2,
Podjajny
(SR), 3. C. Bower (SR). T-50.5
completing a fantastic double
(Tied field record).
2. Mosebrook (LH), 3. Gralewski
(SR), 2. Taylor (LH), 3. McNelis
victory.
"Pogo's"
two-mile
100 — 1. Williams (SR), 2.
(SR).T-9;39.0.
(LH). H-6-6 (new field record).
time 9:39 is the best of the
Hoffman (LH) 3. Ruper (SR). TMile relay — 1. Lock Haven
Javelin — 1. Parkhill (LH), 2.
year n the conference. Mose10,1.
(C. Bower, Klingaman, Simcoe,
Graham (LH), 3. Campagna
brook ran 9:44, h i s best ever,
880 — 1. G. Bower (LHl, 2.
Soyka), 2. Slippery Rock. T(LH).D-196-9.
and third best in the conference.
Borello (SR), 3. Santeufemeo
3:30.4.
Triple jump — 1. McNelis
The Eagle s clinched the meet
(SR).T.-1:59.7.
FIELD
(LH), 2. Campagna (LH), 3.
victory, and led by 10 points
440 LH. - 1. Ellis (LHi, 2.
Shot put — 1. Kent (SR), 2.
Taylor (LH).D-43.6.
going into the final event, the
Bradley (SR), 3. Walters (SR).
Kline (LH), 3. Saunders (SR). D
mile relay.
Pole vault - 1. Smith (SR), 2.
•T-22.8.
46-'/4.
Mile Relay Unbelievable
Hess (LH), 3. Ostlund (SR). H220 — 1. Williams (SR). 2.
Long jump — 1. Long (SR), 2.
Lock Haven had to have at
134 (new field record).
Simcoe (LH), 3. Kalisz (SR). THess (LH), 3. McNelis (LH). Dleast s i x - point lead going into
Discus — 1. Kent (SR), 2.
"22.8.
this race because -'the Rock''
21--V4.
McNelis (LH), 3. Sneberger
Two mile — 1. Podgajny (LH),
was too tough to beat in the
High jump — 1. Rumbaugh
(SR).D-129-3.
LHS Sweeps Twinbill
by Al Smith
SHIPPENSBURG-Led
by the
strong pitching of Gary Hepfer
and Jim Sleicher along with timely clutch hitting, the Lock Haven
State College baseball team
swept both ends of a doubleheadfrom Shippensburg Saturday, 3-0
and 6-1 upping their s e a s o n record to 7-4 while winning six of
their last seven encounters.
So fine were the two pitching
performances that the Red Raiders* only run was unearned and
each hurler tossed a four-hitter.
Threatened In Second
The Raiders threatened in the
second inning of the opener when
Kline led off with a double and
advanced to third on a passed
ball.
He was then picked off
third on an alert defensive play
by LHS catcher, 'Gentle Ben'
John Caione.
Caione had lost the ball for an
instant and Kline thinking there
was a passed ball started for home
when Caione discovered he had
been sitting on it, picked up the
and fired to third nabbing Kline
in a rundown.
LHS took a 2-0 lead in the fifth
when Hepfer doubled and with
two out, scored on Randy Igou's
s i n g l e . Igou then stole second
and scored on Denny Rhule's
single.
The E a g l e s added an insurance
run in their half of the seventh on
consecutive singles by Jim Donahoe and Igou followed by Rhule's
double.
Shippensburg threatened in the
seventh when they loaded the
b a s e s on two walks and a single
with two out but Hepfer came out
of the jam by getting Polm to hit
into a fielder's choice to end the
ballgame.
LHS Jumps On Raider Ace
LHS jumped on the ace of the
Red Raider staff in the opening
frame of the second encounter
when Igou started the inning off
w/itVi « tr i n l e .
From Red Raiders
After Rhule struckout, Don Noblit singled in Igou and went to
third on a single by Ray Oberheim. Noblit then scored on a
passed b a l l . Wayne Bacon followed with a single and brother Mike
cleared the bases with a booming
triple to right that carried close
to 375 feet. Bacon then s t o r e d
on an infield groundout by Doug
Conlon.
The Hagles added their final
run in the third on a single by
Oberheim and an error on the
Raider rightfielder, allowing him
to advance to second.
Mike
Bacon then collected his third
ing when Smarringlon tripled tn
leads in most of the pitching catI P H R BB SO
right center and scored when egories having yielded the fewest
Hepfer (W)
7 4 0 3 5
Conlon's relay throw to third hit
hits(7), the fewest r u n s ( l ) , the Pol (L)
7 11 3 0 5
the runner and bounded into the
fewest earned runs(O), the fewest
stands with only one out. But
walks(4), the best era(O.OO), the
SECOND GAME
after that Sleicher got Deppen to best record(2-0) and the best winpop out and Sipe on a strikeout ning pcrcentage(l.OOO). . .Jim
Lock Haven 5 0 1 0 0 0 (K-6 ID
giving the Eagles their fifth win Sleicher leads in innings pitched
Ship'burg
0 0 0 0 0 0 1—1 4
in six road contests.
with 18 and strikeouts with 10. . .
DIAMOND D I T T O - T h e E a g l e s
In total team s t a t i s t i c s ,
the
3B — Iqou, M. Bacon, Smarhave already bettered last
s e a - E a g l e s sport a team batting aver- ringlon.
age of .280 while their opponents
s o n ' s record of 4-9 and they still
I P H R BB SO
sport a .224 average. LHS has
have six games remaining. . .Don
Sleicher
(W)
7 4 12 5
outscored the opposition 60-48
Noblit continues to lead LHS in
McKee (L)
1 - 3 5 5 0 1
hitting with a .371 average. and outhit them 92-73. T h e LHS
June
6 2-3 5 1 0 2
pitching staff sports an era of
'Nbbbi' slipped 36 points in the
contests dropping from .407. . , 3.90 while the opposition has a
In the l a s t five games Denny 5.22 average. . .LHS will be back
rbi of the contest when he singled
Men, In general, are but
in action today when they travel
Rhule h a s hit an amazing .556 to
to right.
great children.
to
Bloomsburg
for
a
doubleheader
raise
h
i
s
average
from
.167
to
Sharp After Suspension
Napoleon I
.333. He a l s o leads the club in with the H u s k i e s . The E a g l e s
Sleicher who had been suspendinnings played and base hits with split an earlier twin bill with the
ed for five games, looked real
14. . .Randy Igou is the only H u s k i e s , dropping the opener, All
sharp and was in trouble only
men love
themselves.
other regular hitting over .300, 10-9 and capturing the nightcap
twice during the contest.
Plootus
8-3.
sporting a ,352 average. He has
With two out in the second the
scored the most runs(12) and is
Raiders registered back to back
FIRST GAME
I In new scrern splendor... I
tied with Rhule for the most innsingles but Sleicher came through
Lock
Haven
0 0 0 0 2 0 1—3 11
The m<>sl nia^nificenl
|
by getting the next man to ground- ings played. Igou a l s o has the
pieliire ever!
|
0 0 0 0 0 0 0—0 4
distinction of committing the most Ship'burg
out.
2 B - R h u l e , Hepfer.
errors(8). . .Ray Oberheim has the
DAVID 0 SELZNICKS VA-,A..I I M.iniius |
The only other jam he worked
3B-Rhule.
most rbis with 10. . .Gary Hepfer
himself into was in the final inn-
CLASS OF 1970
DON'T BE CAUGHT SHORT
J-^v^l
AFTER GRADUATION!
?IZZA
Pizza —
FOR FINANCIAL STRENGTH
pV
LET ME HELP
steaks
11
MY IDEAS ARE WITHIN YOUR
''
BUDGET
f^f>
1 i
STONE HOim
15C a s l i c e
meatballs
subs
-
STEF=^EOPHONIC SOUND
M[ TROCOLOR -An MGM Re-release l
c?^77/7>^
NFOi
CONTACT
ROBERT RAMSEY '69
^
-'^
C^
™
748-3739
BANKERS LIFE NEBRASKA
1
\ iMivN Li;i(;ii
w ^
LKSLIi: IIOWAKI)
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•Will deliver otders ever «S
Rt.
220 Hogan Brvtf.
748-3277
ROXY
Men. - T u e . only
One Show Each Eve.
F E A T U R E 7:30 pm
Vol. XIII No. 104
LOCK HAVEM STATE COLLEGI
Tuesday May 5 1970
•-Li. JHIiJ!!"
•^>
|
:^T^
'The Defense Never Rests'
Topic of Weinglass Speech
•
Students Vote YES
On Act. Fee Hike
The student body of Lock
Haven State College voted yes
overwhelmingly
yesterday
in
adopting a proposed amendment
to
the
Student
Cooperative
Council constitution which will
increase the activity
fee
at LHS.
A two-thirds majority of those
voting was needed to p a s s the
proposal and over 80 percent
of those voting c a s t
their
ballot in favor of the proposal.
In the balloting 864 students
voted for the proposed increase
of $5 per semesiei and $2.50 per
per summer s e s s i o n while T J J
voted
against
the
proposed
amendment. A majorityif 716 was
needed to pass the proposal out
of the 1075 students casting
ballots.
The
1075
voters
voters constitutes about 45 per
cent of the LHS student body
in comparison to the 25 per
cent who voted down the proposal
two weeks ago.
The S C C board of directors had
passed the Proposal jag, week
42-4 leaving the final question
up to the student body. The
measui'e will now go before
the amendment will go into effect.
Almost
all
organizations'
budgets had been cut previous to
the revote and now a review of
budget hearings will gains take
place.
Before the proposal
was passed the SCC executive
board stated that they would have
to cut $40,000 out of the budget
and even with the e r c r e a s e d fee
they will still have to cut
$18,000 from original
budget
requests.
Brown represents
state colleges
Dr. Perry Brown, professor
of education at Lock Haven
State College, has been elected
state college representative on
the executive committee of the
Pennsylvania Association for
Student Teaching.
Dr, Brown will be the official
representative of the 14 state
colleges including Indiana University in all matters pertaining to teacher education and
student teaching. His term of
office will be for four years.
"iThe Defense Never R e s t s , "
will be the topic of the speech
presented by Leonard Weinglass,
junior defense attorney in the
Chicago
Conspiracy
Trial,
tonight at 8:15 in the Ulmer
PlanetEirium.
Recently in a speech given at
Syracuse University, Weinglass
s t a t e d that he was " i m p r e s s e d
by the depth, scope and invoivment of so many people to
change the insensitive underpinnings of the conditions we
live."
During a period of his s p e e c h
when
laughter
evoked
the
attorney said, " T h i s is one of
the first times I've heard laughing
without fear of r e p r e s s i o n , "
a s he told his audeince, " t h e
Chicago Seven were sentenced
29 days for laughing."
He went on to explain the
controversial " R a p Brown l a w , "
which prohibits the crossing of
s t a t e lines with intent lo incite
a riot. It a l s o d e f i n e s * ' f i ^ j " as
an assemblage of three persons
who threaten a fourth person.
The young attorney went on to
relate that the original Chicago
Eight were indicated the same
day that this law took effect.
Weinglass also outlined the
problems and intriciacies of the
j u d i c i a l system when it a c t s as
repressively
as
possible
in
setting up a c a s e .
He said
that they had set up the most
expensive defens'- ever in a
criminal trial.
The lawyer went on to say that
many stories were deliberately
slanted in spite of the way the
newspaper reoorters sent them"
in.
•Weinglass
condemned
the
trial as ''the grossest injustice
in recent American h i s t o r y , "
and said the plea for a new
trial is partially based on posttrial statements of chief prosecuting attcrney Foran.
He
also related of the frustrated
effcrts of Bobby Seal e to defend
himself from the charge of conspiring with seven men he did
not know.
In concluding he expressed his
desire that the truth and full
information reach the people of
America on all i s s u e s and hoped
that the trial partially enabled
that to come about.
Weinglass himself faces 14
counts of contempt of court from
the
trial, with a possible
sentence of 20 months and 16
days in prison.
A graduate of George Washington
University (Phi Beta Kappa)
and Yale Law School, he was
a captain in the United States
Air F o r c e , judge advocate genKeflavik, Iceland.
Presently he maintains his
own office for the practice
of law in the city of Newark,
New J e r s e y , and represeinting
the following
clients:
Tom
Hayden, one of the founders of
Students
for
a
Democratic
Society; Jerry Rubin, irgaiizer
of the 1967 maich on the P e n t a gon, author of the book Do It and
co-founder
of
the
YIPPIES;
Abbie Hoffman, Ruliin's associate
co-founder of the YIPPIES and
author of tho book
fii^volution
I-or r/'i." Hell of It; David DeUinger, a pacifis'. opposed lo the
U.S. ;\sian war and who has
made
several
trips to Viet
Nam; Kenneth Gibson, candidate
for mayor. The
People
(YIPPIE
"rganiz lu -1 :• Rutgers t.'tiivi'i.'ily. . x.^. "'"'omas
f ri .. (Jrring
Trantino
.>.
:
two pol ! . .'l;l.':..
P'^esented
In the p.isi he 1
J ohn
the foI!i>wing >'. •
el mincer
Butenko,
Rutgers
in the
convicted of ospioi •;
longest spy li lai .ii .sir.;rn:.jn
history; Lekoi Jom.s,
E ick
Organization of SUn' - r ' s -iiLuijers;
Plainfield r>*.)uL . •••.:
.. ere
the
targets
o!
unconstitutional seiive.:
National
Ou i ' l
a' '
police — this ' : w;
for monetar
formal wr''' '
. •
Governor
;
Jersey; t i t
1 ; ! ' nix
House; and 'li^
black coiTiinenit;
enjoin
the
"0:1
Newark
police
der;'rtn.
following
the 1967
Newark
rebellion.
Weinglass has traveled throughout
the
world
and
visited
Cuba a guest, of the government.
The program is sponsored by
the
LHS
debate union
'"
cooperation with the assemble
committee. All 260 tickets that
were available have been taken
and only those students with
tickets will be allowed to hear
the s p e e c h .
Grant For
LHS Student
LOCK HAVEN-Steve Harris,
a junior majoring in biology
at Lock Haven State College,
will conduct research on " T h e
Effect of Effluents on Marine
Phyto
Plankton
and
Bottom
CoiTimunities" for the Virginia
Institute of Marine Science at
Gloucester
Point, Va., from
June through August, 1970. The
project is being sponsored under
the National Science Foundation
Financed
Undergraduate
Research
Participation
Program.
In notifying Mr. Harris of
his a c c e p t a n c e , Robert S. Bailey,
Project Director, s t a t e d , " Y o u
have '-een selected into this
program because of you' inparent
ability to do researc!
; your
expressed interest in
-oming
a research s c i e n t i s t . "
Mr. 1, "ris will be as.'" .v;d
to wor,< Willi a re;,'..; 1 - > w » C I l airea Jy
tist wno 1 s a proi;
; the
in progress, .i.-.-^istit,
r e s e a . c h ..nd i.-iir^^'
'•'•• t h e
sciei;i..>t
;.
, problei;> .
ill a.so o^ issigned
as
a of "-esearch to invest'
his I. . ri.
<.I,.>.I',T1 Science pounda' des ;. stipend of $60
I
' ;'^', considered not a s
•ll ' i^"' as jKiyinent to enable
"
nt to work and study
' ' • s u c c e s s a s a scienprogram s e e k s to enoi"^ ; participants to special;e in some phase of marine
science at the graduate level.
dSFfll
.
.
"•••.*>-•'
. fnjf^
Students Study in The Sun in Front of Old Library
Eagles Record Stunning Upset
by ' N i b s ' Gordon
"What a tremendous team effort!"
T h e s e words of Coach
Jim Dolan sum up Saturday's victory over Slippery Rock by the
Lock Haven State track team.
The powerful Rockets came out
on the short end of an 80-65
score.
Things looked dark for the
Eagles when the 440 relay team
dropped the baton. At the time
of the mishap the Eagles were
running stride for stride with the
R o c k e t s . The SRSC team won
e a s i l y after the baton hit the
ground.
Race Of T h e Year
As the results of the field events began to come in, the race
of the year started on the track.
Four of the top milers in the conference, Ed Grabewski and Randy
Deemer of Slippery Rock and
Steve Podgajny and Dave Mosebrook of LHS took off at the crack
of the gun.
All jockied for position for 2%
l a p s , then Grabewski and Podgajny started to burn. Grabewski
took a two-yard lead and held it
until ten yards from the finish.
In an amazing display of sheer
courage, Podgajny made up the
two-yard difference and won by
i n c h e s . Both runners were timed
in 4:22 . 2 .
From that point on ' T h e Rock'
was done.
Podgajny's unbelievable win seemed to psyche
the E a g l e s tremendously.
The LHS field men outscored
the Rockets 32-31 completing
seemingly impossible t a s k s .
McNelis Leads Field Events
Bill McNelis led the field men
by winning the triple jump, placing second in the discus and tak-
mile relay.
Someone fcrgot to
ing thirds in the high jump and
long jump. Don Taylor high jump- tell Chris Bower, Carl Klingaman,
Charlie
Simcoe,
and
Mike
ed 6 ' 2 " , his best ever, for
Soyka, b e c a u s e fhe
foursome
second place. Bill Kline took
second in the shot put with a
psssed the baton to a victorious
best throw of 4 5 ' , Galen Hess
3:30.4. a s e a s o n ' s best for the
took second in the pole vault
E a g l e s . T h e five points picked
a t 1 2 ' 6 " , and Bruce Parkhill and
up here by LHS finalized the
Vic Campagna finished 1-3 in
score at 80-65.
the javelin.
An
amazed
and
delighted
Campagna and Taylor placed
Coach Dolan commented that
second and third in the triple
" E v e n though my
coaching
^^fc;^ .'..I'.^
jump, completing a sweep of that
experience is limited to two
event and pulli.ig the E a g l e s to years, I have never witnessed
a three point lead with two
the team spirit that our men
events to go, the two-mile and
displayed today. When our 440
the mile relay.
relay ream dropped the baton
Individual Standouts
I thought that might s e t the
Along with Podgajny, Parkhill,
tone for the afternoon, but our
and McNelis, other Eagle winners
men came back determined tn w i n "
were Tom Ellis in the high
TRACK
hurdles and intermediate hurdles
440 relay — 1. Slippery Rock
with excellent times of 15.6 and
(Williams, Yourchinson, Kalysz,
58.3, Charlie Simcoe with a
Papagna), 2, Lock Haven. T44.3..
50.5 4 4 0 , ty'"8 his stadium
PHOTO FINISH: Baid Eagle Steve Podgajny lunges a c r o s s
Mile — 1. Podgajny ILH), 2.
record and George Bower with a
the
finish line j u s t a h e a d of E d G r a l e w s k i of S l i p p e r y R o c k
Garlewski (SRi. T4:22.2 (New
personal b .st 1:59 in the 880.
field record).
to c a p t u r e t h e mile in S a t u r d a y a f t e r n o o n ' s a c t i o n a t M c C o l l u m
In the two mile run, Podgajny
120 H.H. — 1. Ellis (LH), 2.
F i e l d . Both r u n n e r s w e r e c l o c k e d a t 4:22-2 s e t t i n g a n e w
and Mosebrook allowed the
Almoney (LH), 3. Rumbaugh
field r e c o r d .
Podgajny's heroics started the E a g l e s to a n
Rockets to take the pace for
(SR).T-15.5.
80-65 v i c t o r y .
three l a p s , then ran away from
440 — 1. Simcoe, 2. Kalisz
them finishing 1-2,
Podjajny
(SR), 3. C. Bower (SR). T-50.5
completing a fantastic double
(Tied field record).
2. Mosebrook (LH), 3. Gralewski
(SR), 2. Taylor (LH), 3. McNelis
victory.
"Pogo's"
two-mile
100 — 1. Williams (SR), 2.
(SR).T-9;39.0.
(LH). H-6-6 (new field record).
time 9:39 is the best of the
Hoffman (LH) 3. Ruper (SR). TMile relay — 1. Lock Haven
Javelin — 1. Parkhill (LH), 2.
year n the conference. Mose10,1.
(C. Bower, Klingaman, Simcoe,
Graham (LH), 3. Campagna
brook ran 9:44, h i s best ever,
880 — 1. G. Bower (LHl, 2.
Soyka), 2. Slippery Rock. T(LH).D-196-9.
and third best in the conference.
Borello (SR), 3. Santeufemeo
3:30.4.
Triple jump — 1. McNelis
The Eagle s clinched the meet
(SR).T.-1:59.7.
FIELD
(LH), 2. Campagna (LH), 3.
victory, and led by 10 points
440 LH. - 1. Ellis (LHi, 2.
Shot put — 1. Kent (SR), 2.
Taylor (LH).D-43.6.
going into the final event, the
Bradley (SR), 3. Walters (SR).
Kline (LH), 3. Saunders (SR). D
mile relay.
Pole vault - 1. Smith (SR), 2.
•T-22.8.
46-'/4.
Mile Relay Unbelievable
Hess (LH), 3. Ostlund (SR). H220 — 1. Williams (SR). 2.
Long jump — 1. Long (SR), 2.
Lock Haven had to have at
134 (new field record).
Simcoe (LH), 3. Kalisz (SR). THess (LH), 3. McNelis (LH). Dleast s i x - point lead going into
Discus — 1. Kent (SR), 2.
"22.8.
this race because -'the Rock''
21--V4.
McNelis (LH), 3. Sneberger
Two mile — 1. Podgajny (LH),
was too tough to beat in the
High jump — 1. Rumbaugh
(SR).D-129-3.
LHS Sweeps Twinbill
by Al Smith
SHIPPENSBURG-Led
by the
strong pitching of Gary Hepfer
and Jim Sleicher along with timely clutch hitting, the Lock Haven
State College baseball team
swept both ends of a doubleheadfrom Shippensburg Saturday, 3-0
and 6-1 upping their s e a s o n record to 7-4 while winning six of
their last seven encounters.
So fine were the two pitching
performances that the Red Raiders* only run was unearned and
each hurler tossed a four-hitter.
Threatened In Second
The Raiders threatened in the
second inning of the opener when
Kline led off with a double and
advanced to third on a passed
ball.
He was then picked off
third on an alert defensive play
by LHS catcher, 'Gentle Ben'
John Caione.
Caione had lost the ball for an
instant and Kline thinking there
was a passed ball started for home
when Caione discovered he had
been sitting on it, picked up the
and fired to third nabbing Kline
in a rundown.
LHS took a 2-0 lead in the fifth
when Hepfer doubled and with
two out, scored on Randy Igou's
s i n g l e . Igou then stole second
and scored on Denny Rhule's
single.
The E a g l e s added an insurance
run in their half of the seventh on
consecutive singles by Jim Donahoe and Igou followed by Rhule's
double.
Shippensburg threatened in the
seventh when they loaded the
b a s e s on two walks and a single
with two out but Hepfer came out
of the jam by getting Polm to hit
into a fielder's choice to end the
ballgame.
LHS Jumps On Raider Ace
LHS jumped on the ace of the
Red Raider staff in the opening
frame of the second encounter
when Igou started the inning off
w/itVi « tr i n l e .
From Red Raiders
After Rhule struckout, Don Noblit singled in Igou and went to
third on a single by Ray Oberheim. Noblit then scored on a
passed b a l l . Wayne Bacon followed with a single and brother Mike
cleared the bases with a booming
triple to right that carried close
to 375 feet. Bacon then s t o r e d
on an infield groundout by Doug
Conlon.
The Hagles added their final
run in the third on a single by
Oberheim and an error on the
Raider rightfielder, allowing him
to advance to second.
Mike
Bacon then collected his third
ing when Smarringlon tripled tn
leads in most of the pitching catI P H R BB SO
right center and scored when egories having yielded the fewest
Hepfer (W)
7 4 0 3 5
Conlon's relay throw to third hit
hits(7), the fewest r u n s ( l ) , the Pol (L)
7 11 3 0 5
the runner and bounded into the
fewest earned runs(O), the fewest
stands with only one out. But
walks(4), the best era(O.OO), the
SECOND GAME
after that Sleicher got Deppen to best record(2-0) and the best winpop out and Sipe on a strikeout ning pcrcentage(l.OOO). . .Jim
Lock Haven 5 0 1 0 0 0 (K-6 ID
giving the Eagles their fifth win Sleicher leads in innings pitched
Ship'burg
0 0 0 0 0 0 1—1 4
in six road contests.
with 18 and strikeouts with 10. . .
DIAMOND D I T T O - T h e E a g l e s
In total team s t a t i s t i c s ,
the
3B — Iqou, M. Bacon, Smarhave already bettered last
s e a - E a g l e s sport a team batting aver- ringlon.
age of .280 while their opponents
s o n ' s record of 4-9 and they still
I P H R BB SO
sport a .224 average. LHS has
have six games remaining. . .Don
Sleicher
(W)
7 4 12 5
outscored the opposition 60-48
Noblit continues to lead LHS in
McKee (L)
1 - 3 5 5 0 1
hitting with a .371 average. and outhit them 92-73. T h e LHS
June
6 2-3 5 1 0 2
pitching staff sports an era of
'Nbbbi' slipped 36 points in the
contests dropping from .407. . , 3.90 while the opposition has a
In the l a s t five games Denny 5.22 average. . .LHS will be back
rbi of the contest when he singled
Men, In general, are but
in action today when they travel
Rhule h a s hit an amazing .556 to
to right.
great children.
to
Bloomsburg
for
a
doubleheader
raise
h
i
s
average
from
.167
to
Sharp After Suspension
Napoleon I
.333. He a l s o leads the club in with the H u s k i e s . The E a g l e s
Sleicher who had been suspendinnings played and base hits with split an earlier twin bill with the
ed for five games, looked real
14. . .Randy Igou is the only H u s k i e s , dropping the opener, All
sharp and was in trouble only
men love
themselves.
other regular hitting over .300, 10-9 and capturing the nightcap
twice during the contest.
Plootus
8-3.
sporting a ,352 average. He has
With two out in the second the
scored the most runs(12) and is
Raiders registered back to back
FIRST GAME
I In new scrern splendor... I
tied with Rhule for the most innsingles but Sleicher came through
Lock
Haven
0 0 0 0 2 0 1—3 11
The m<>sl nia^nificenl
|
by getting the next man to ground- ings played. Igou a l s o has the
pieliire ever!
|
0 0 0 0 0 0 0—0 4
distinction of committing the most Ship'burg
out.
2 B - R h u l e , Hepfer.
errors(8). . .Ray Oberheim has the
DAVID 0 SELZNICKS VA-,A..I I M.iniius |
The only other jam he worked
3B-Rhule.
most rbis with 10. . .Gary Hepfer
himself into was in the final inn-
CLASS OF 1970
DON'T BE CAUGHT SHORT
J-^v^l
AFTER GRADUATION!
?IZZA
Pizza —
FOR FINANCIAL STRENGTH
pV
LET ME HELP
steaks
11
MY IDEAS ARE WITHIN YOUR
''
BUDGET
f^f>
1 i
STONE HOim
15C a s l i c e
meatballs
subs
-
STEF=^EOPHONIC SOUND
M[ TROCOLOR -An MGM Re-release l
c?^77/7>^
NFOi
CONTACT
ROBERT RAMSEY '69
^
-'^
C^
™
748-3739
BANKERS LIFE NEBRASKA
1
\ iMivN Li;i(;ii
w ^
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