BHeiney
Tue, 06/27/2023 - 19:12
Edited Text
Science Inst. Held
A summer institute in earth
s c i e n c e for 30 secondary s c i e n c e
t e a c h e r s will be held June 29
through Aug. 7 at MiUersville
State College.
Those s e l e c t e d will receive a
stipend and will pay no tuition.
Room and board will be charged
those requesting campus housing.
This program, supported by the
National
Science
Foundation,
will be planned around two subject areas—sedimentology and
coastal oceanography. An oceanography p h a s e concentrating on
nearshore
environment and a
geology phase focusing on the
studv of sedimentary p r o c e s s e s
will be conducted concurrently
with each paralleling and complementing the other. Six graduate credits will be awarded
upon completion of the c o u r s e .
Instructors Selected
Instructors for the program will
be Dr. William Jordan, professor
of geology, and Dr. Donald Davis,

a s s i s t a n t professor of oceanography. Both classroom studies and
field work will be reqiured in
both academic p h a s e s .
The institute is designed for
secondary school teacher.s of
s c i e n c e who have had some
backgrou'd in the subject matter.
Preferences in selection will be
given to those teachers who have
successfully completed course
work in physical and historical
geology and a course in oceanography, have a working knowledge of mathematics and are
teaching earth science in a departmentalized,
instructional
program.
Application Requests
R e q u e s t s for application forms
should be addressed to William
B. Mcllwaine, Director, Earth
Science Institute, MiUersville
State College, MiUersville, Pa.
17551.
Primary
consideration
will be given to applications received by F e b . 15.

Ak. . Boys Learn
Twenty b o y s , ages 8 to 13, at
Lock Haven State
College's
Akeley School are spending their
afternoons learning one of the
s k i l l s Lock Haven is famous for—
wrestling.
The boys are being taught the
fundamentals of wrestling for an
hour T u e s . and Thurs. afternoons
by John Ber nardo, a student
teacher and a member of the LHS
wrestling team. Bernardo, who
plans to teach and coach after
graduation, s a y s that teaching
these y o i ^ g s t e r s i s the best
preparation he knows of for his
future work.
Harry Keeler is director of
the Akeley athletic program. "We
try to keep it fun s o that they
l e a m the fundamentals of this
great sport, but we don't plan to
compete against other s c h o o l s , "
said Keeler.
The boys are grouped into seven
weight c l a s s e s 'from 50 to 100
pounds. Dieting is not allowed.
The boys must wrestle in whateve; group they fall into. If they
gain weight, they must move up

Wreastling

to the next group.
The program i s strictly voluntary, and practice time is after
regular school h o u r s . Keeler anticipates the program will run for
several more w e e k s , coinciding
with the collegiate wrestling
schedule.

DID YOU KNOW T H A T :
Americans earned a t o t a l
of 667,592 college and university degrees during 196465.
The t r a d i t i o n of academic
dress ( i . e . bachelor's, maste r ' s , and doctor's gowns]
dates bock to 14th-century
Europe.
College f r a t e r n i t i e s began
in America in the lote 18th
century.
The
oldest
Greek-letter
American fraternity is Phi
Beta Kappa. It was founded
in 1776 at the College of
William and Mary in Williamsburg, V i r g i n i a .

ATTENTION CLASS OF ' 7 1 !
Senior p i c t u r e s for t h e c e n t e n n i a l e d i t i o n of t h e
Praeco
must be taken during the week
of F e b . 2 3 . T h e r e w i l l b e n o
m a k e - u p period in O c t . a s in
p a s t y e a r s . Sign up s h e e t s
have
b e e n p l a c e d on the
b u l l e t i n board o u t s i d e R a u b
4 1 1 . All students planning to
g r a d u a t e s o m e t i m e in 1971
a r e a s k e d to p l e a s e s i g n u p
for one of t h e s c h e d u l e d t i m e s .
All m a l e s m u s t w e a r a s u i t
j a c k e t , s h i r t and t i e . T u r t l e
n e c k s h i r t s are not a c c e p t a b l e .
A l l n e w f a c u l t y m e m b e r s are
a l s o urged to h a v e t h e i r p i c t u r e s t a k e n during t h e w e e k
of F e b . 2 3 .
T h e r e is no c h a r g e for t h i s
service.
Pictures
will
be
t a k e n in t h e m u s i c room of t h e
"Collecting folk songs is more
P U B , lower l e v e l .
than a vocation or avocation to
me—it's a way of l i f e , " s a y s Alan
Lomax, who will open the concert
series of the Lock Haven State
College Fine Arts F e s t i v a l on
Tuesday, F e b . 10. Lomax will
d i s c u s s his collecting activities
and sing some of his favorite
songs in Price Auditorium at 8:15
p m.
Lomax has recorded ov ;r 100
albums which, taken together survey the folk music s t y l e s of half
the world. He has also compiled
12 books on folk so: g s , including
"Mister Jelley R o U " which he
wrote on Guggenheim F e l l o w s h i p .
His Pengiun Book of American
folk songs appeared in the spring
of 1960, and that fall, Doubleday
published his singing history of
the USA, " T h e Saga of American
Folk S o n g . "
WHAT? ME WORRY?
In addition to his present p o s ition a s director of artistic events

To Open Festival

Music Festival Underway
For the third year Budweiser is
leading the way in the Intercollegiate
Music
Festival's
national search for collegiate
talent.
More than 1300 entries
are processed by the festival
each year with audition tapes
used to select finalists for six
regional competitions.
A record number of people will
view the 1970 Intercollegiate
Music
Festival
as
college
m u s i c ' s top pop and folk groups
go after national championships.
Audiences a t the Budweisersponsored event will be treated
to the most intense competition
ever waged for national t i t l e s .
More than 1300 entries have been
received from students throughout the nation. Thiip
^. tops
1969's record crop
.
1,121
entries.
68* Champs

HARD AT WORK: Student (Nancy Elbell hard at work at the
reception desk in the PUB.

Featured

The 1968 Intercollegiate Music
F e s t i v a l national champions, the
Burgundy Street Singers from
Kansas State University, have
been utilized in several television
commercials for
Budweiser, and the company h a s
produced both a feature film and
record album with highlights of
the 1969 Intercollegiate Music
F e s t i v a l ' s national finals.
Collegiate
performers
have
until January 15 to enter the
1970 Intercollegiate Music F e s tival.
On that date judging
panels begin reviewing taped
entries from a c r o s s the United
States to s e l e c t finalists for the
event's six regional competitions.

Budweiser plays host to the
regional winners a t the 1970
Intercollegiate Music Festival on
August 13-15. F i n a l i s t s will be
flown to Southern Illinois University's Edwardsville campus
to compete for national championships. Top professional talent
will join the collegiate performers for college music's biggest
show.
The first regional competition
will be at the University of South
Florida
Intercollegiate
Music
F e s t i v a l in Tampa on February
27-28.
Ehtry Forms
Entry forms and rules and
regulations for the Budweisersponsored event may be secured
by writing IMF, P.O. Box 1275,
Leesburg,
Florida,
32748.
Entry forms must be returned to
the festival along with a tenmirtute audition tape, by midJanuary.
The competition at Tampa will
followed by the Villanova University
Intercollegiate
Music
F e s t i v a l on March 6-7 at Villanova, Pennsylvania; the University of Colorado Intercollegiate
Music Festival on Marcn 27-28
in Boulder; the UCLA Intercollegiate Music F e s t i v a l on April
3-4 in Los Angeles; the T e x a s
Intercollegiate Music
Festival
on April 10-11 in Austin; and the
April 18-19 Southern Illinois
University Intercollegiate Music
F e s t i v a l at Edwardsville.

for the Sterling Forest Folk Song
F e s t i v a l Foundation in New"York.
Lomax is now wor'^ing on a prcp
ject
for
the
Rockefeller
Foundation mapping the folk song
families of the world.
From 1933 to 1942, he was engaged with his father in building
the Archive of American Folk
Song for the Library of Congress.
He added some 10,000 recorded
songs to the collection, making
it the largest of its kind in the
world.
With the collaboration of the
major European museums, Lomax
launched his definitive "World
Library of Folk and Primitive
M u s i c , " the first 17 albums of
which have been published by
Columbia Records. His pers: ;ial
collections form the b a s i s of
national archives in Scotland,
England, and Italy.
I.omax's concert is open to
the public at no charge.

Joseph Batatta, Pam Hockenberry and Andy Kesselak
have been elected as editors
of the 1971 Centennial yearbook. The election took place
at a meeting on Feb. 3 when
the Praeco staff organized for
the Centennial edition of the
yearbook. Work will begin
during the next few weeks.

Latin Am,
Tour Now Tent
This summer Dr. Oeorge Mottet,
a professor at Lock Haven State
College, and 15 students will
make a tour of Latin America. Details of the trip are not yet finalized.
Tentatively the excursion will
leave for their Latin American
tour at t h e ' b e g i n n i n g of second
s e s s i o n summer school, mid July,
They hope to spend a few days
in Columbia, Ecuador,
Peru,
Chile, Uruguay. Ktost of their time
however, will be spent in Argentina and Brazil. The present cost
of the trip is $700 and may hopefully be reduced to approximately $400.
There is still an opportunity to
register for this tour. Any interested p e r s o n s should contact Dr.
Mottet in Ulmer Hall.
Diseases of the heart and
c i r c u l a t o r y system were the
greatest
single
cause
of
death among American* in
1965.

Clarion
Clarion used i t s strength in the
middle weights and its balance
in the lower weights to w'-'3,the
Bald Eagle grapplers, . i - U ,
Friday evening sending LHS
under the .5 00 mark for thp
season with a record of 4-5-1
Clarion opened with a 5-0
decision at 118-pounds by Ross
Donahue
over
Jim
Rupp
Donahue used a first perir-.l takedown, a third period escape and
two points riding time to send the
Golden Eagles into a 3-0 lead •
Bill Murdock upped the lead to
8-0 when he came through with the
upset of the evening by pinning
LHS captain Shane Foley in 2:01
of the third period.
Foley had taken a 3-2 lead into
the third period and then escaped
putting him in favor 4-.i. Murdock
then took the LHS giappier down
and when attempting a granby roll
Murdock caught Folev with a
double arm bar anH inflicted Foley
with his first dual meet loss since
his freshman year at LHS.
Larry Rippey put the Bald E a g l e s
on the scoreboard in the next bout
when he easily handled Barry

LHS

Drops
Barton, 17-4Rippey oi.. every
thing but pin Barton and registered four takedowns, a reversal, a
near fall, a predicament and two
points riding time in route to his
victory.
LHS came within two points
after the next bout at 8-6 when
Paul Brodmerkel squeezed by
Don Kinsely, 3 - 1 , at 142-pounds.
Brodmerkel used a first period
takedown and a third period
escape to clinch the bout.
Clarion stretched their lead to
20-6 after capturing the next four
bouts and clinched the match.
At 150-pounds LHS's Gene Taxis lost a heartbreaker to Mark Dymond, 3-2, on a penalty point for
interlocking h a n d s . T a x i s used
two e s c a p e s , one each in the last
two periods for his points while
Dymond scored all his t a l l i e s in
the final period on the penalty
point and a r e v e r s a l .
LHS was completely outclassed
in the next bout when L e s B r e s s ler handled Willy V o k e s , 10-3.
Bressler used three takedowns,
a reversal and two points riding
time while Vokes registered two
e s c a p e s and a penalty point.

All- Stars

The Lock Haven All-Stars captured the first three bouts last
Thursday evening , but the Area
Champions came back to win six
of the next seven including two
pins to whip LHS, 27-12
Former NCAA champion Ken
Melchoir opened the scoring for
LHS with a 10-6 decision over
Wally Clark at 1 1 8 - p o u n d s . Melchoir used an escape and a takedown in the final minute to clinch
his bout.
Bob Larson put the All-Stars in
front 6-0 when he registered a
9-7 wir over former NCAA champ
Wayne Boyd of Temple. Larson
used a takedown in the final three
used a takedown in the final
three seconds to nip Boyd in the
upset of the evening.
The 134-pound bout was the one
that almost evervone came to s e e
and it leatureu Gray simons, former three-time NCA.\ champion,
against three-time runnerup, Bpb
Fehrs.
Simons used a takedown with
three seconds left to secure a
5-2 win and put the AU-Stars in
fron;, 9-0.
Ed Peery, former NCAA Champ
at Pitt and present coach at Navy,
put the champs first points on the
boards when he e a s i l y handled
Jeff Lorson 9-2 at 142-pounds.
Peery used two takedowns,a near
fall and two points riding time
en route to his victory.
The AU-Stars captured the next

bout when Joe G e r s t , former
Bloomsburg star, nipped Vince
F i t z , 5-4, on a takedwwn with 16
seconds remaining. After this
bout it was all the Area Champas they swept the final five bouts
Gooel Kline, NCAA Champ from
Maryland decisioned Adam Waltz.
8-4, to bring the Champs within
six at 12-6. Ron Pifer followed
with a pin at 167-pounds pulling
the Champs to within one al t i ll.
Jack Klingaman had taken a
quick 5-0 lead over Pifer in their
bout on a takedown and a neat
fall but Pifer came backA'ith an
e s c a p e , a takedown and a predicament to knot the score at 5-5
at the end of the first periixl.
Seventeen seconds into the s e c ond period, Pifer wrapped Klinga
aman up and clamped him.
Bob Ahrens of Navy continued
the champs comeback when he
nipped Jim Blacksmith 4-2 at 177
pounds. Bob Funk foUowed with
a fall over Elmer Phillips which
clinched the match for the Champs.
Tom Vargo added the Champs
final points when he gained a
takedown over Bob McDermott in
the final 11 seconds making the
final scene, 22-12.
Cliampion$22, LH 12
118 — Ken Melchoir, Lock
Haven, dec. Wally Clark. 10-6.
126 — Bob Larson, Lock
Haven, dec. Wayne Boyd. 9-7.

Eagles
The Golden Eagles went in
front 17-6 when Santo Ricotta
clipped Bill R h o d e s , 6-2, at 167pounds. Ricotta held a slim 3-2
edge going into the third period
but gained a final period escape
and two points riding time for the
win
Clarion clinched the match in
the 177-pound c l a s s when Henry
Shaffer whipped freshman J oe
C a s s e r a , 9-0. Shaffer used two
takedowns, two penalty points,
an escape and two points riding
time to clip the LHS freshman
who was wresting in his first
match.
Even though the match w a s
now out of r e a c h , LHS did get
some satisfaction in the next
bout when Hank Hawkins used
three third period points to nip
previously undefeated Jack Riegel. 3 - 1 .
Riegel had taken a 1-0 lead in
the second period with an escape
but Hawkins quickly knotted the
score in the third period with an
escape*. Hawkins then recorded
a takedown and after Riegel e s caped both grapplers battled eaeh

22-11
other off to the period's end giving Hawkins his 3-2 upset.
In the heavyweight bout LHS's
Scott Brooks and Gary Holsopple
each recorded an escape and
battled each other on their feet
for a 1-1 draw f a k i n g the final
match serre, 2 2 1 1 .
Commenting on his team's loss
LHS Coach Gray Simons s t a t e d ,
"We were pretty well ' u p ' tonight,
then Mike got decked and that
reall court u s . We had planned
on winning that, and thought we
could win at 150. The little things
hurt u s , like T a x i s locking h a n d s .
That really put the pressure on him
to ride."
" P a u l did an excellent j o b , "
praised Simons. " K i n s e l y is a
tough wrestler and Hawkins did
a good job too.

ated
134 — Gray Simons, Lock
Haven, dec. Bob Fehrs, 5-2.
142 E d Peery,
Area
Champions, dec Jeff Lorson, 9-2.
150 — Joe Gerst. Lock Haven,
dec. Vince Fitz, 5 4
158 Gobel Kline. Area
Champions, dec. Adam Waltz. 84.
167 Ron Pifer,
Area
Champions,
pinned
Jack
Klingaman, 2:17.
177 — Bob Ahrens, Area
Champions.
dec.
Jim
Blacksmith. 4-2
!90 — Bob Funk,
Area
Champions,
pinned
Elmer
Phillips, 5:07
Hvy - Tom Vargo, Area
Champions.
dec.
Bob
McDermott. 6-4,
Official: Charley Condo

Sir Walter R a l e i g h is c r e d i t ed w i t h i n t r o d u c l n 9 the pract i c e of smoking to Europe
H i s last w i s h b e f o r e going t j
t h e s c a f f o l d in 1 6 1 8 w a s to
smoke a pipe
T h e f i r s t known brain surgery in t h e world is a c c r e d i t ed to two H i n d u surgeons who
o p e r a t e d on the s k u l l of a
H i n d u king in 9 2 7 A D .
The
surgeons used the drug Samoh i n i as an a n e s t h e t i c .
The
r e s u l t s of the o p e r a t i o n are
unknown.

e.e. classifieds
WANTED IMMEDIATELY: Competent
.student to handle a once-a-week
movie column for EE. Free admission.
Contact M. Waters or A. Smith ft
748-5531.

James Bond BOT
is back! [

EASY WIN: L H S ' s l.arr> Ripi'.ev works on Gary B a r t o n d u r i n g
their 134-pound b o u t .
Rippey easily handled the Clarion
g r a p p l e r . 1 7 - 4 . but the e a g l e s did n o t have s u c h an e a s y time
a s they d r o p p e d a 22-11 d e c i s i o n .

LHS Eagles Pull Win
The LHS basketball team of
James Christopher ran to an 88-79
victory over Clarion State College Tuesday night at Thomas
Field Hou.se. A crowd of 1,500
people watched the E a g l e s win
their second straight game and
bring their s e a s o n record to four
wins and six l o s s e s .
LHS was paced by Bruce Parkh i l l ' s .1! points and Cliff Billet's
29. The E a g l e s also had a strong
night off the boards as Ziggy
Tauginas and Bud Brenna. combined for 31 rebounds.
Clarion got off to a fast start
and led by a 5-2 margin after the
first two and a half minutes.
Captain Bruce Parkhill then tied
the game at 9-9 with a fine three
point play.
The game was tied three times
unlil Clarion opened up a four
point lead of 21-17 at the 11:54
left mark. However, Cliff Billet
took over for LHS and scored ten
straight points to give the Eagles
a 27-21 lead with eight minutes

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TAKE OUT SERVICE

|j^

ALBERT R. BROCCOLI - HARRY SALTZMAN'
p,«.M IAN FLEMING'S

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"ONHERMAJESTH
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left in the first half.
During the remainder of the first
half, the Eagles led by a s much
as eleven points. The half ended
with the score 46-37 in favor of
LHS.
The second half belonged to the
E a g l e s . LHS extended their lead
to 53-38 on b a s k e t s by Parkhill
and Billet. Clarion fought back
and cut the lead to 57-46 with
fourteen minutes left.
However, the E a g l e s were not
to be denied. The combination of
Marzlak, Parkhill, Tauginas, and
Billet ran the score to 70-50 with
ten minutes left in the game.
The remainder of the game was
played by the r e s e r v e s for LHS.
The final score was 88-79 in
favor of the E a g l e s .
" T h i s was a big win for the
team. The boys worked hard and
wanted this w;n very badly. We
are very glad to have won this
game for )
game for L H S , " commented Coach
Christopher.

CAMPUS CASINO

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Steak Sub
Tuna F i s h Sub
Meat Ball Sub
Ham & Cheese Sub
Cosmo Sub
Canadian I h c o n Sub
Baked Ham Sub
Turkey Sub

BABY! DO i i-OOK LIKE i M A — N A K C ? BV THE WAY-

Clarion 22, LHSC 11
118 — Ross Donahue VC dec.
Jim Rupp, 3-0, (0-3)
126 - Bill Murdock (C) pinned Shane Foley 7:01. (0-8)
134 — Larry Rippey (LH I dec.
Gary Barton, 17-4, (3-8)
142 - Paul Brodmerkel (LH)
dec Don Knisely, 3-1. (6-8)
150 - Mark Dymond GeneTaxis. 3-2. (6-11)
158 — Les Bressler (C) dec.
Willie Vokes, 10-3. (6-14)
167 - Santo Ricotta (C) dec.
Bill Rhodes. 6-2. (6-17)
177 - Henry Shaffer (C) dec.
Joe Cassera, 8-0. (6-20)
190 - Hank Hawk s (LH)
dec. Jack Riegel, . ' , (9-20)
Hvy - Scott Brooks (LH) and
Gary Holsopple drew, 1-1. (11-22)
Official: Joe Solomon.

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