BHeiney
Wed, 06/28/2023 - 12:30
Edited Text
'Transformation' Painting is Work of William Foster
Standing five feet high and 12
feet long, the " T r a n s f o r m a t i o n "
painting now hanging in Bentley
Hall IS the work of Williatn
F o s t e r , a s s i s t a n t professor of
art at Lock Haven S t a t e .
A combination of two and three
dimensional art, the "Transform a t i o n " was started in June and
finished in September. The artwork was a s p e c i a l project that
the school had been interested
in and Foster w a s given a grant
to complete the work.
F o s t e r himself h a s been doing
transformations s i n c e 1965, but
this one now in Bentley Hall, is
the largest that h e ' s ever made.
Constructed of wood and masonite paneling and put together with
over 500 s c r e w s , the "Transform a t i o n " demands " p a r t i c i p a t i o n
and concentration on the part of
the v i e w e r , " stated F o s t e r . The
work, which must be viewed from
A student directory w i l l be
published for the spring '70
semester, if we have your
cooperation.
The
directory
will list the student's name,
home address, and either dorm
floor or off campus phone
number. It is important that
all
students who live off
campus (this includes commuters,
student
teachers,
apartment dwellers or anyone
who does not live in a dorm
or fraternity house) fill out
the form below.
If you wish your telephone
number tooppear •" tlie spring
'70 LHS student directory,
please put down your full
telephone number and name
and turn into the reception
desk at the PUB. If you have
no phone write no phone in
the spoce for phone number.
NAME-
( p l e a s e print)
PHONE If you do not want your
address and phone number in
the student directory, mark
box below and sign name.
Q D O NOT P U B L I S H
several different angles to get
tne total effect, can be visually
played with.
Acting as a kind of artist in
r e s i d e n c e , Foster explained the
"Transformation"
to
various
c l a s s e s which came to s e e it.
Dave Shuey, a junior at Lock
Have State acted in an apprent i c e s h i p c a p a c i t y , helping with
the mechanics of the artwork.
F o s t e r , who obtained h i s BS in
art education from Kutztown State
College in 1954, received his
MFA from Columbia University
the next year. He taught art at
Ciovernor Mifflin Joint Jr. High
School for three years anu has
been an a s s i s t a n t profTssor of
art at LHS for nine y e a r s . He has
been represented in art exhibitions throughout the s t a t e of
Pennsylvania and is a l s o represented
in
collections
at
Columbia
U.,
various
state
c o l l e e e s , and in private collec-
|
tions in the eastern United States.
A formal acceptance ceremony
for the artwork is planned, but
no date has yet been s e t for this
ceremony.
The man who hid behind a
woman's skirt used to be called
a coward; today he is a magician.
Parkhill N a m e d All-East
Bruce Parkhill, outstanding goalie on the LHS soccer
squad for the past two s e a s o n s , was selected as the
first team goalie on the All-East team for the second
consecutive year. Parkhill easily outdistanced the
second team goalie by a 2-1 margin in the balloting.
The team was announced yesterday.
E AGLE EYE
Vol. XIII No. 63
LOCK HAVEN STATE COLLEGE
Bookstore Audit Ended
J u l i a n B o n d , o member of the
G e o r g i a H o u s e of R e p r e s e n t a t i v e s , w i l l d i s c u s s " T h e New
C o a l i t i o n " at 8:15 pm t h i s
e v e n i n g in P r i c e A u d i t o r i u m .
Bond h e l p e d e s t a b l i s h S N C C ;
he is a l s o a member of the
executive
board of N A A C P .
T i c k e t s a r e a v a i l a b l e a t the
r e c e p t i o n d e s k in the u n i o n .
Three auditors from the state
department of education have
completed a review of the SCC
bookstore a c c o u n t s .
The findings of the audit were
reportedly inconclusive b e c a u s e
of the overall accuracy of the
bookstore records.
The auditors, affiliated wilh
the P D E ' s controller's office,
were on campus last week a s a
result of a discrepancy found between the bookstore's charge
s a l e s as recorded daily and the
daily charge payments.
This audit was not the one
called for in a special committee
recommendation
on
bookstore
operations made earlier this semester,
noted Walt McCallum.
McCallum headed the student
committee which alleged mismanagement of the bookstore
This discrepancy has arisen
s i n c e the SCC b u s i n e s s operations committee first made a
report of its findings Oct. 1.
The disc.epancy was first
noticed by Mrs. Margie Bangson,
the bookstore clerk who maintains the a c c o u n t s , McCallum
said.
He added that she reported her fingind to Mrs. Georgie
Hartzel, SCC bookkepper.
After both women checked the
records
thoroughly
and
still
found no bookkeepping mistake,
they notified Edward McCloskey,
b u s i n e s s manager for the college.
McCloskev notified
Harrisburg officials immediately, McC
Callum said. Three experts on
bookstore operations were then
a s s i g n e d to examine the LHS
-WRESTLING
Ohio
University, 18
Lock Haven, 12
See tomorrow's issue for details
Visitor to Lock Haven Tells Impressions From
previous series, we are printing
this article which was
written
in response
to Paul
Hendricks'
series on Russia.
Holderman is
a senior enrolled in the liberal
arts social sciences
psychology
curriculum.
The satiric
opinions
and conclusions
expressed
here
"•"
Holderman's.
Michael Holderman
:t,r's Note:
This is the first
,'i il one-part series written by
Micnaci Hohicrtnun.
Since Eagle
I'y,- wrlcuines
any reactions
lo
Tues, Dec. 16,1969
Solid gold Cadillac from F a s c i s t villa to Lock Haven. Delay in
A v i s ; arrived in Lock Haven, too
late to help.
1. People in Lock Haven make
fun of clothes their fellowmen
are wearing.
2. Store window—Si Ico's 9') a string of beads and a blouse;
here women were certainly not
d r e s s e d in accordance with the
women in Saks and their diction
left something to be desired.
3.
People here are dressed in
typically
American
fashions—
quite nicely tailored blue j e a n s ,
penny loafers and no s o x , defin-
etly high c l a s s kids. After a l l ,
clothes are the main criteria for
judging whether a person is nice
or not.
4. College buildings are of all
the same basic style and color;
some houses with in the city are
shacks—not to mention the outskirts.
5. No grass to mow—just mud.
"We need it to throw at our
neighbors a b r o a d . "
6.
Streets are not wide and
everyone has a car.
7. Everyone has American chewing gum and chews it s o everyone else knows they've got it.
8.
People seem to have no
.spirit; they just go along with
the government.
9. People in the canneries work
1 2 hours a day and have one day
off.
10. Light bulbs are of both clear
and frosted g l a s s .
A true engineering miracle and quite indicative of nothing.
11.
Sightseeing tour:
most
interesting—downtown
section
looks like a slum and is overrun
with litter in the s t r e e t s .
12. Average person has a large
house—doctors are quite wealthy
at expense of their p a t i e n t s .
13.
Economic achievement —
fountain by sub shop with horrendous
colored
lights
and
beautiful bubbles. No exhibits.
14.
Lost wallet on campus—no
one bothered returning it.
15.
Coke machines vending
cancerous drinks.
16. All squares are named after
a good working American or a
hero.
17. Sewage is dumped into the
Susquehanna.
18. Good refrigeration.
19. Dinner with Doctor Parsons
in Faculty dining
room—dirty
Silverwar.j—can't say what you
want because h e ' s the president.
20.
Bugs in rooms.
Plaster
ripped off the wall—a low income
accounts.
T h e auditors, headed by David
White, began their study last
Monday
Having made a full report to
Harrisburg yesterday, the auditors will send their statements
to the college as soon a s p o s s i ble. The controller's office will
decide if a further audit will
be n e c e s s a r y .
Speaking for the SCC b u s i n e s s
operations committee, McCallum
said the group is formulating a
plan to prevent similar situations
in the future.
He said the committee, which
reportedly already has a plan,
will present its report to the SCC
directors tomoirow evening.
T h e Student O r g a n i z a t i o n for
P e a c e ( S T O P I ) w i l l meet t o day at 1 pm in the P U B m u s i c
room.
T h e group w i l l e l e c t
new o f f i c e r s for next s e m e s ter.
P l a n s for the
spring
term w i l l a l s o be d i s c u s s e d .
Cadillac
development—what progress our
comrades are making.
2 1 . Americans stare at you a l l
of the time and compliment
meanly.
22. Saw a boy get into his car
to drive to a store one block
away. What a bummer.
23. J.P.'s—production tine weddings in Reno and divorces too.
24. No Russian ideas noticable
here?
The American tourist:
Loud,
rude, uncultured. Flaunts money,
c l o t h e s , and ignorance. Americans busy condemning people
who don't agree with them. The
American tourist is certainly a
hazard to the American ideal of
itself—the rest of the world will
find out how ignorant some of us
really are—oh, well, we've got
the money and the bomb, they've
got to like u s . I wonder why
Russia would want to stop us
from v i s i t i n g their country.
Beshore Named
LHS's outstanding linebacker,
Ron Beshore, was named to the
second defensive team for the
s e c o n d consecutive year.
Beshore was the only LHS
player named on the first and
s e c o n d teams. He was recently
named to the District 18 NAL\
defensive team.
Football
champion
West
Chester with eight s e l e c t i o n s
dominates
the C o a c h e s ' AllPennsylvania Conference team
announced last week, but Mansfield State produced the coach
and back of the year.
Bernie
Sabol, who rescued
Mansfield's
football
program
after s e v e r a l losing s e a s o n s in
a row, received six of a possible
12 votes as Coach of the Year.
And his quarterback, Stu Casterline, who led the conference in
total
offense
and
passing,
edged Edinboro sophomore AI
Raines a s back of the year,
4 votes to 3 .
Sabol, a guard at Penn State
where he played in three bowls
from 1960 through 1962, came
to Mansfield from
Allegheny
College where he was line coach
four
years.
Buoyed
by the
brilliant
quarterbacking
of
Casterline who hit on 53.9 percent
of his p a s s e s (16 for T D ' s ) and
churned up 1832 yards in eight
league
games,
Mansfield
produced a 6-3 record this season Sabol's first at the helm,
turning around a 2-7 record from
1968.
Under Sabol's guidance the
Mountaineers were in the running
for the Eastern Division title of
the conference late in the season after dumping E a s t Stroudsburg for the first time in 32
years.
West Chester State coach Bob
Mitten directed the Rams to a
perfect 5-0 record in the Eastern
Division and a victory over
Clarion for the conference title
fo Conference
and drew three voles for coach
of the year.
No lineman of tlie year could
be determined a s 13 linemen
drew one vote each.
The voting for quarterback on
the first team was c l o s e . Casterline drew six votex. E a s t Stroudsburg's Billy Dukett who broke
Ron B e s h o r e
Cagers Play Host
all of his s c h o o l ' s records drew
four, and Clarion's Bob Erdlejac
received three v o t e s .
The top vote-getter on the first
team was Edinboro's Al R a i n e s .
The elusive halfback who ran
away with the league's rushing
crown with 641 yards, drew seven
votes. Raines is the only sophomore on the offensive team.
West Chester halfback
Paul
Dunkelberger, who broke open
the E a s t Stroudsburg and Clarion
games, got five votes for the
other halfback slot. Bob Dinan
won the fullback s l o t . The E a s t
Stroudsburg back is the only
repeater from last year's team
along
with
teammate
Hank
Kearns, a t a c k l e . Dinan won a
spot a s a defensive back last
year.
Shippensburg's Al Bowman, who won the league p a s s
catching crown a second year,
made it at end along with Clarion's Rick Terza.
Ten of the
13 schools are represented on
the first offensive and defensive
teams.
•Member - Pa
State College
Press Assn
hill did an outstanding job of
clearing
the boards for the
E a g l e s in their last contest.
In speaking of tonight's contest
Christopher
stated,
"If
we're going to be in the running
for the conference title, we're
going to have lo beat them
here."
He also added that he feels
his team has looked better each
time they have gone out on the
court
" T h e crowd has been
fantastic.
The students are
fantastic and I can't give them
enough credit for the way they
have been helping u s , " he s a i d .
Christopher figures California
is stronger than Edinboro and is
the strongest team overall in the
conference.
" T h e y ' r e a great
basketball team; they're wellcoached; and they're well-conditioned."
Second Win
The LHS Junior Varsity team
ran their s e a s o n record to 2-1 as
they downed the Renova YMCA
by a score of 79-64 Saturday
night .
Dan Cruttenden was high for
the Bald Eagles with 24 p o i n t s .
Other LHS players who scored in
double figures were Tom Gahr
with 18 points, Neil Bixler with
12 points and John Henry with
10 p o i n t s .
LHS led all the way building up
leads of 47-29 and 59-33.
The Lock Haven State College
swimming team will compete in
actual intercollegiate competition
for the first time in y e a r s .
The E a g l e s have competed in
exhibition matches for the p a s t
few y e a r s . This year, LHS swimmers have 13 m e e t s , including
the conference chmpionships at
West Chester.
Back from last y e a r ' s squad are
six
lettermen,
including
Bob
Hults, a senior butterfly s p e c i a l ist, Frank Kacinko, junior backstroker, Ed Bloxham, junior backstroker
and freestylist,
Steve
Harris, junior diver, Kevin Hammer, sophomore freestylist, and
Bill Rooney, a sophomore freestylist.
Completing the small squad are
freshmen John McDaniels, Warren
Hammer,
Larry
Briggs,
Ken
Wengert, and Don Blood, along
with juniors Steve Trusz and injured Fred Lechien,
The swimmers have been working out since the beginning of
October, being joined by Coach
Harold Hacker at the end of football s e a s o n .
When asked about
this year's team Coach Hacker
AGLE EYE
NEWS EDITOR ~ Barbara Woods
FEATURE EDITOR - Joyce Newstein
SPORTS EDITOR - Larry Green
PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR - Marian Conn
SECRETARY ~ Peggy Reese
BUSINESS MANAGER ~ Joan Worcester
COPYSETTERS - D i a n a Ungvarsky, Sue Frye
FACULTY ADVISOR ~ Joe Nicholson
STUDENT ADVISOR - Ron Smith
PRE-HOLIDAY SPECML
DECI7
PIZ2/\
8 " PIZZA
EAGLE EYE is published daily by the students of Lock Haven State
College. All opinions expressed by columnists and feature writers, including letters to the editor, are not necessarily those of this institution
or of this newspaper. All contributions should be submitted to Eagle Eye,
Parsons Union Building, Lock Haven State, Lock Haven, Pa — 748-5531
lip
I
• — — 1 — I — w — p a l
said: "We lack depth and experience simply because we don',
have enough guys. We will have
a rough time winning a meet this
year, bul we are definitely better
off than last year.
The presence of s i x lettermen
and a good group of freshmen
should make the Eagle showing
much more r e s p e c t a b l e .
Saturday's probable line-up:
400 yd. medley relay:
Kacinko,
McDaniels, Hults, K. Hammer or
Rooney
1000 yd. freestyle — Trusz
200 yd. freestyle — Rooney or W.
Hammer
50 yd. freestyle — K. Hammer.
Briggs
200 yd. individual medley — McD a n i e l s , Kacinko or Bloxham
Diving — Harris, Briggs, Wengert
200 yd. butterfly - Hults
100 yd. freestyle — K. Hammer,
Rooney
200 yd. backstroke — Kacinko,
Trusz
500 yd. freestyle — W. Hammer,
Blood or Hultz
200 yd. breaststroke — McDaniels,
Bloxham
400 ya. freestyle—undecided
LHS Bald Eagles
vs.
CSC
Vulcans
varsity game begins
at 8:15 pm
Our Specialty
Hoasi Beef
Served Hot
CAMPUS CASINO
•a
STONE HmE
fizz A
I'izza —
ISC a s l i c e
STAFF — jue Meiser, Sue Minor, Judy Okonski, Dan Hite, Sue
Piotroski, Christy Richards, Mary Schlegel, Sue Moyer, Nibs
Gordon, Fran Vost, Chris Plyler, Don Golden, Marian Conn, Chris
Kreitler, Mike Parucha, Mike Young, Jan Nader, Chris Bower,
Jack Heagney, Howard Peterson, Eylene Sawyer, Pat Seitzer,
Phil Flynn, Leona Lehto, Kirk Fenton, Margie Brown, Joe Scott,
Marlene Zaydell, Nelle Fastman, Faith Dunmore , Nancy Long
• • » ! • ! mil
L E A D I N G S C O R E R : L H S ' s Ed Wright g o e s up for two p o i n t s
d u r i n g a c t i o n a g a i n s t York C o l l e g e .
Wright i s t h e t e a m ' s
l e a d i n g s c o r e r with 75 p o i n t s for an a v e r a g e of 2 5 . 0
Swimmers In Actual
Competition This Year
JV's Capture
CO-bDITORS-IN-CHIEF
M A R I A N N E WATERS, A L SMITH
Assistant editor — Ron Jury
, — — 1 1 ^ 1 ^ J
ALL-PENNSYLVANIA CONFER.
FOOTBALL TEAM
FIRST TEAM
OFFENSE
P o s . Name
College
E Al Bowman
Ship.
E Rick Terza
Clar.
T Tom Komenda
Clar.
T Henry Kearns
E . S.
G Bruce Heller
w. C.
G Ken .\chuff
W. C.
C Don Ehrman
W. C.
QB Stu Casterline
Mans,
HB Al Raines
Ed.
HB Paul Dunkelberger W. C.
F B Bob Dinan
E . S.
DEFENSE
E Ralph Batty
Mil.
E James Torkar
Clar.
E George Barton
Kutz.
T Frank Petrone
W. C.
T Mike Zimmerman
Kutz.
G Bruce Krasley
Kutz.
G Joe Carroll
W. C.
L B Carl Gersback
W. C.
L B Mike Bamhart
Bloom.
HB Jim Klinger
Mans.
HB Joe Stezzi
w. C.
S Terry Hammons
Cal.
BASKETBALL
tonisht
To Vulcans Tonight
The Bald Eagle cagers will try
to make it three in a row tonight
when they entertain a rough and
experienced squad from California State.
The Vulcans come to Thomas
F i e l d House with a 3-1 record
having lost only to nationaUy
ranked Indiana University (Pa.),
98-96 in double overtime.
LHS carries a two game winning streak into the contest and
have beaten the Vulcans at home
the past two s e a s o n s .
CaUfornia was a 72-71 victum of the
E a g l e s when they last came to
LHS.
With the same unit back from
l a s t s e a s o n which registered
a 12-8 record the Vulcans boast
both experience and depth and
Eagle Coach Jim Christopher
a s the strongest team in the
Western Division.
All-conference performers Ray
(jreene and Mike Florianni head
the Vulcan attack along with
6 ' 5 " center. Jack Taylor.
Tonight's game is all importa n t for both teams b e c a u s e defending
division
champion,
E d i n b o r o dropped a 72-71 decis i o n to Clarion this p a s t weekend leaving the race for the
division title wide open.
LHS will start Ziggy Tauginas
at l e n t e r , Bruce Parkhill and
Sam Vaughn at the forward spots
and Ed Wright, Dave Henderson,
or
John Marzlak at guards.
Wright is the team's leading
scorer having pumped in 75
points for a 25.0 average. Park-
Team
^
steaks
meatballs
^ubs
3<9
5<5
Will deliver oiders over t 5
Rt. 220 Hogan Blva.
748-3277
*'
i
Standing five feet high and 12
feet long, the " T r a n s f o r m a t i o n "
painting now hanging in Bentley
Hall IS the work of Williatn
F o s t e r , a s s i s t a n t professor of
art at Lock Haven S t a t e .
A combination of two and three
dimensional art, the "Transform a t i o n " was started in June and
finished in September. The artwork was a s p e c i a l project that
the school had been interested
in and Foster w a s given a grant
to complete the work.
F o s t e r himself h a s been doing
transformations s i n c e 1965, but
this one now in Bentley Hall, is
the largest that h e ' s ever made.
Constructed of wood and masonite paneling and put together with
over 500 s c r e w s , the "Transform a t i o n " demands " p a r t i c i p a t i o n
and concentration on the part of
the v i e w e r , " stated F o s t e r . The
work, which must be viewed from
A student directory w i l l be
published for the spring '70
semester, if we have your
cooperation.
The
directory
will list the student's name,
home address, and either dorm
floor or off campus phone
number. It is important that
all
students who live off
campus (this includes commuters,
student
teachers,
apartment dwellers or anyone
who does not live in a dorm
or fraternity house) fill out
the form below.
If you wish your telephone
number tooppear •" tlie spring
'70 LHS student directory,
please put down your full
telephone number and name
and turn into the reception
desk at the PUB. If you have
no phone write no phone in
the spoce for phone number.
NAME-
( p l e a s e print)
PHONE If you do not want your
address and phone number in
the student directory, mark
box below and sign name.
Q D O NOT P U B L I S H
several different angles to get
tne total effect, can be visually
played with.
Acting as a kind of artist in
r e s i d e n c e , Foster explained the
"Transformation"
to
various
c l a s s e s which came to s e e it.
Dave Shuey, a junior at Lock
Have State acted in an apprent i c e s h i p c a p a c i t y , helping with
the mechanics of the artwork.
F o s t e r , who obtained h i s BS in
art education from Kutztown State
College in 1954, received his
MFA from Columbia University
the next year. He taught art at
Ciovernor Mifflin Joint Jr. High
School for three years anu has
been an a s s i s t a n t profTssor of
art at LHS for nine y e a r s . He has
been represented in art exhibitions throughout the s t a t e of
Pennsylvania and is a l s o represented
in
collections
at
Columbia
U.,
various
state
c o l l e e e s , and in private collec-
|
tions in the eastern United States.
A formal acceptance ceremony
for the artwork is planned, but
no date has yet been s e t for this
ceremony.
The man who hid behind a
woman's skirt used to be called
a coward; today he is a magician.
Parkhill N a m e d All-East
Bruce Parkhill, outstanding goalie on the LHS soccer
squad for the past two s e a s o n s , was selected as the
first team goalie on the All-East team for the second
consecutive year. Parkhill easily outdistanced the
second team goalie by a 2-1 margin in the balloting.
The team was announced yesterday.
E AGLE EYE
Vol. XIII No. 63
LOCK HAVEN STATE COLLEGE
Bookstore Audit Ended
J u l i a n B o n d , o member of the
G e o r g i a H o u s e of R e p r e s e n t a t i v e s , w i l l d i s c u s s " T h e New
C o a l i t i o n " at 8:15 pm t h i s
e v e n i n g in P r i c e A u d i t o r i u m .
Bond h e l p e d e s t a b l i s h S N C C ;
he is a l s o a member of the
executive
board of N A A C P .
T i c k e t s a r e a v a i l a b l e a t the
r e c e p t i o n d e s k in the u n i o n .
Three auditors from the state
department of education have
completed a review of the SCC
bookstore a c c o u n t s .
The findings of the audit were
reportedly inconclusive b e c a u s e
of the overall accuracy of the
bookstore records.
The auditors, affiliated wilh
the P D E ' s controller's office,
were on campus last week a s a
result of a discrepancy found between the bookstore's charge
s a l e s as recorded daily and the
daily charge payments.
This audit was not the one
called for in a special committee
recommendation
on
bookstore
operations made earlier this semester,
noted Walt McCallum.
McCallum headed the student
committee which alleged mismanagement of the bookstore
This discrepancy has arisen
s i n c e the SCC b u s i n e s s operations committee first made a
report of its findings Oct. 1.
The disc.epancy was first
noticed by Mrs. Margie Bangson,
the bookstore clerk who maintains the a c c o u n t s , McCallum
said.
He added that she reported her fingind to Mrs. Georgie
Hartzel, SCC bookkepper.
After both women checked the
records
thoroughly
and
still
found no bookkeepping mistake,
they notified Edward McCloskey,
b u s i n e s s manager for the college.
McCloskev notified
Harrisburg officials immediately, McC
Callum said. Three experts on
bookstore operations were then
a s s i g n e d to examine the LHS
-WRESTLING
Ohio
University, 18
Lock Haven, 12
See tomorrow's issue for details
Visitor to Lock Haven Tells Impressions From
previous series, we are printing
this article which was
written
in response
to Paul
Hendricks'
series on Russia.
Holderman is
a senior enrolled in the liberal
arts social sciences
psychology
curriculum.
The satiric
opinions
and conclusions
expressed
here
"•"
Holderman's.
Michael Holderman
:t,r's Note:
This is the first
,'i il one-part series written by
Micnaci Hohicrtnun.
Since Eagle
I'y,- wrlcuines
any reactions
lo
Tues, Dec. 16,1969
Solid gold Cadillac from F a s c i s t villa to Lock Haven. Delay in
A v i s ; arrived in Lock Haven, too
late to help.
1. People in Lock Haven make
fun of clothes their fellowmen
are wearing.
2. Store window—Si Ico's 9') a string of beads and a blouse;
here women were certainly not
d r e s s e d in accordance with the
women in Saks and their diction
left something to be desired.
3.
People here are dressed in
typically
American
fashions—
quite nicely tailored blue j e a n s ,
penny loafers and no s o x , defin-
etly high c l a s s kids. After a l l ,
clothes are the main criteria for
judging whether a person is nice
or not.
4. College buildings are of all
the same basic style and color;
some houses with in the city are
shacks—not to mention the outskirts.
5. No grass to mow—just mud.
"We need it to throw at our
neighbors a b r o a d . "
6.
Streets are not wide and
everyone has a car.
7. Everyone has American chewing gum and chews it s o everyone else knows they've got it.
8.
People seem to have no
.spirit; they just go along with
the government.
9. People in the canneries work
1 2 hours a day and have one day
off.
10. Light bulbs are of both clear
and frosted g l a s s .
A true engineering miracle and quite indicative of nothing.
11.
Sightseeing tour:
most
interesting—downtown
section
looks like a slum and is overrun
with litter in the s t r e e t s .
12. Average person has a large
house—doctors are quite wealthy
at expense of their p a t i e n t s .
13.
Economic achievement —
fountain by sub shop with horrendous
colored
lights
and
beautiful bubbles. No exhibits.
14.
Lost wallet on campus—no
one bothered returning it.
15.
Coke machines vending
cancerous drinks.
16. All squares are named after
a good working American or a
hero.
17. Sewage is dumped into the
Susquehanna.
18. Good refrigeration.
19. Dinner with Doctor Parsons
in Faculty dining
room—dirty
Silverwar.j—can't say what you
want because h e ' s the president.
20.
Bugs in rooms.
Plaster
ripped off the wall—a low income
accounts.
T h e auditors, headed by David
White, began their study last
Monday
Having made a full report to
Harrisburg yesterday, the auditors will send their statements
to the college as soon a s p o s s i ble. The controller's office will
decide if a further audit will
be n e c e s s a r y .
Speaking for the SCC b u s i n e s s
operations committee, McCallum
said the group is formulating a
plan to prevent similar situations
in the future.
He said the committee, which
reportedly already has a plan,
will present its report to the SCC
directors tomoirow evening.
T h e Student O r g a n i z a t i o n for
P e a c e ( S T O P I ) w i l l meet t o day at 1 pm in the P U B m u s i c
room.
T h e group w i l l e l e c t
new o f f i c e r s for next s e m e s ter.
P l a n s for the
spring
term w i l l a l s o be d i s c u s s e d .
Cadillac
development—what progress our
comrades are making.
2 1 . Americans stare at you a l l
of the time and compliment
meanly.
22. Saw a boy get into his car
to drive to a store one block
away. What a bummer.
23. J.P.'s—production tine weddings in Reno and divorces too.
24. No Russian ideas noticable
here?
The American tourist:
Loud,
rude, uncultured. Flaunts money,
c l o t h e s , and ignorance. Americans busy condemning people
who don't agree with them. The
American tourist is certainly a
hazard to the American ideal of
itself—the rest of the world will
find out how ignorant some of us
really are—oh, well, we've got
the money and the bomb, they've
got to like u s . I wonder why
Russia would want to stop us
from v i s i t i n g their country.
Beshore Named
LHS's outstanding linebacker,
Ron Beshore, was named to the
second defensive team for the
s e c o n d consecutive year.
Beshore was the only LHS
player named on the first and
s e c o n d teams. He was recently
named to the District 18 NAL\
defensive team.
Football
champion
West
Chester with eight s e l e c t i o n s
dominates
the C o a c h e s ' AllPennsylvania Conference team
announced last week, but Mansfield State produced the coach
and back of the year.
Bernie
Sabol, who rescued
Mansfield's
football
program
after s e v e r a l losing s e a s o n s in
a row, received six of a possible
12 votes as Coach of the Year.
And his quarterback, Stu Casterline, who led the conference in
total
offense
and
passing,
edged Edinboro sophomore AI
Raines a s back of the year,
4 votes to 3 .
Sabol, a guard at Penn State
where he played in three bowls
from 1960 through 1962, came
to Mansfield from
Allegheny
College where he was line coach
four
years.
Buoyed
by the
brilliant
quarterbacking
of
Casterline who hit on 53.9 percent
of his p a s s e s (16 for T D ' s ) and
churned up 1832 yards in eight
league
games,
Mansfield
produced a 6-3 record this season Sabol's first at the helm,
turning around a 2-7 record from
1968.
Under Sabol's guidance the
Mountaineers were in the running
for the Eastern Division title of
the conference late in the season after dumping E a s t Stroudsburg for the first time in 32
years.
West Chester State coach Bob
Mitten directed the Rams to a
perfect 5-0 record in the Eastern
Division and a victory over
Clarion for the conference title
fo Conference
and drew three voles for coach
of the year.
No lineman of tlie year could
be determined a s 13 linemen
drew one vote each.
The voting for quarterback on
the first team was c l o s e . Casterline drew six votex. E a s t Stroudsburg's Billy Dukett who broke
Ron B e s h o r e
Cagers Play Host
all of his s c h o o l ' s records drew
four, and Clarion's Bob Erdlejac
received three v o t e s .
The top vote-getter on the first
team was Edinboro's Al R a i n e s .
The elusive halfback who ran
away with the league's rushing
crown with 641 yards, drew seven
votes. Raines is the only sophomore on the offensive team.
West Chester halfback
Paul
Dunkelberger, who broke open
the E a s t Stroudsburg and Clarion
games, got five votes for the
other halfback slot. Bob Dinan
won the fullback s l o t . The E a s t
Stroudsburg back is the only
repeater from last year's team
along
with
teammate
Hank
Kearns, a t a c k l e . Dinan won a
spot a s a defensive back last
year.
Shippensburg's Al Bowman, who won the league p a s s
catching crown a second year,
made it at end along with Clarion's Rick Terza.
Ten of the
13 schools are represented on
the first offensive and defensive
teams.
•Member - Pa
State College
Press Assn
hill did an outstanding job of
clearing
the boards for the
E a g l e s in their last contest.
In speaking of tonight's contest
Christopher
stated,
"If
we're going to be in the running
for the conference title, we're
going to have lo beat them
here."
He also added that he feels
his team has looked better each
time they have gone out on the
court
" T h e crowd has been
fantastic.
The students are
fantastic and I can't give them
enough credit for the way they
have been helping u s , " he s a i d .
Christopher figures California
is stronger than Edinboro and is
the strongest team overall in the
conference.
" T h e y ' r e a great
basketball team; they're wellcoached; and they're well-conditioned."
Second Win
The LHS Junior Varsity team
ran their s e a s o n record to 2-1 as
they downed the Renova YMCA
by a score of 79-64 Saturday
night .
Dan Cruttenden was high for
the Bald Eagles with 24 p o i n t s .
Other LHS players who scored in
double figures were Tom Gahr
with 18 points, Neil Bixler with
12 points and John Henry with
10 p o i n t s .
LHS led all the way building up
leads of 47-29 and 59-33.
The Lock Haven State College
swimming team will compete in
actual intercollegiate competition
for the first time in y e a r s .
The E a g l e s have competed in
exhibition matches for the p a s t
few y e a r s . This year, LHS swimmers have 13 m e e t s , including
the conference chmpionships at
West Chester.
Back from last y e a r ' s squad are
six
lettermen,
including
Bob
Hults, a senior butterfly s p e c i a l ist, Frank Kacinko, junior backstroker, Ed Bloxham, junior backstroker
and freestylist,
Steve
Harris, junior diver, Kevin Hammer, sophomore freestylist, and
Bill Rooney, a sophomore freestylist.
Completing the small squad are
freshmen John McDaniels, Warren
Hammer,
Larry
Briggs,
Ken
Wengert, and Don Blood, along
with juniors Steve Trusz and injured Fred Lechien,
The swimmers have been working out since the beginning of
October, being joined by Coach
Harold Hacker at the end of football s e a s o n .
When asked about
this year's team Coach Hacker
AGLE EYE
NEWS EDITOR ~ Barbara Woods
FEATURE EDITOR - Joyce Newstein
SPORTS EDITOR - Larry Green
PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR - Marian Conn
SECRETARY ~ Peggy Reese
BUSINESS MANAGER ~ Joan Worcester
COPYSETTERS - D i a n a Ungvarsky, Sue Frye
FACULTY ADVISOR ~ Joe Nicholson
STUDENT ADVISOR - Ron Smith
PRE-HOLIDAY SPECML
DECI7
PIZ2/\
8 " PIZZA
EAGLE EYE is published daily by the students of Lock Haven State
College. All opinions expressed by columnists and feature writers, including letters to the editor, are not necessarily those of this institution
or of this newspaper. All contributions should be submitted to Eagle Eye,
Parsons Union Building, Lock Haven State, Lock Haven, Pa — 748-5531
lip
I
• — — 1 — I — w — p a l
said: "We lack depth and experience simply because we don',
have enough guys. We will have
a rough time winning a meet this
year, bul we are definitely better
off than last year.
The presence of s i x lettermen
and a good group of freshmen
should make the Eagle showing
much more r e s p e c t a b l e .
Saturday's probable line-up:
400 yd. medley relay:
Kacinko,
McDaniels, Hults, K. Hammer or
Rooney
1000 yd. freestyle — Trusz
200 yd. freestyle — Rooney or W.
Hammer
50 yd. freestyle — K. Hammer.
Briggs
200 yd. individual medley — McD a n i e l s , Kacinko or Bloxham
Diving — Harris, Briggs, Wengert
200 yd. butterfly - Hults
100 yd. freestyle — K. Hammer,
Rooney
200 yd. backstroke — Kacinko,
Trusz
500 yd. freestyle — W. Hammer,
Blood or Hultz
200 yd. breaststroke — McDaniels,
Bloxham
400 ya. freestyle—undecided
LHS Bald Eagles
vs.
CSC
Vulcans
varsity game begins
at 8:15 pm
Our Specialty
Hoasi Beef
Served Hot
CAMPUS CASINO
•a
STONE HmE
fizz A
I'izza —
ISC a s l i c e
STAFF — jue Meiser, Sue Minor, Judy Okonski, Dan Hite, Sue
Piotroski, Christy Richards, Mary Schlegel, Sue Moyer, Nibs
Gordon, Fran Vost, Chris Plyler, Don Golden, Marian Conn, Chris
Kreitler, Mike Parucha, Mike Young, Jan Nader, Chris Bower,
Jack Heagney, Howard Peterson, Eylene Sawyer, Pat Seitzer,
Phil Flynn, Leona Lehto, Kirk Fenton, Margie Brown, Joe Scott,
Marlene Zaydell, Nelle Fastman, Faith Dunmore , Nancy Long
• • » ! • ! mil
L E A D I N G S C O R E R : L H S ' s Ed Wright g o e s up for two p o i n t s
d u r i n g a c t i o n a g a i n s t York C o l l e g e .
Wright i s t h e t e a m ' s
l e a d i n g s c o r e r with 75 p o i n t s for an a v e r a g e of 2 5 . 0
Swimmers In Actual
Competition This Year
JV's Capture
CO-bDITORS-IN-CHIEF
M A R I A N N E WATERS, A L SMITH
Assistant editor — Ron Jury
, — — 1 1 ^ 1 ^ J
ALL-PENNSYLVANIA CONFER.
FOOTBALL TEAM
FIRST TEAM
OFFENSE
P o s . Name
College
E Al Bowman
Ship.
E Rick Terza
Clar.
T Tom Komenda
Clar.
T Henry Kearns
E . S.
G Bruce Heller
w. C.
G Ken .\chuff
W. C.
C Don Ehrman
W. C.
QB Stu Casterline
Mans,
HB Al Raines
Ed.
HB Paul Dunkelberger W. C.
F B Bob Dinan
E . S.
DEFENSE
E Ralph Batty
Mil.
E James Torkar
Clar.
E George Barton
Kutz.
T Frank Petrone
W. C.
T Mike Zimmerman
Kutz.
G Bruce Krasley
Kutz.
G Joe Carroll
W. C.
L B Carl Gersback
W. C.
L B Mike Bamhart
Bloom.
HB Jim Klinger
Mans.
HB Joe Stezzi
w. C.
S Terry Hammons
Cal.
BASKETBALL
tonisht
To Vulcans Tonight
The Bald Eagle cagers will try
to make it three in a row tonight
when they entertain a rough and
experienced squad from California State.
The Vulcans come to Thomas
F i e l d House with a 3-1 record
having lost only to nationaUy
ranked Indiana University (Pa.),
98-96 in double overtime.
LHS carries a two game winning streak into the contest and
have beaten the Vulcans at home
the past two s e a s o n s .
CaUfornia was a 72-71 victum of the
E a g l e s when they last came to
LHS.
With the same unit back from
l a s t s e a s o n which registered
a 12-8 record the Vulcans boast
both experience and depth and
Eagle Coach Jim Christopher
a s the strongest team in the
Western Division.
All-conference performers Ray
(jreene and Mike Florianni head
the Vulcan attack along with
6 ' 5 " center. Jack Taylor.
Tonight's game is all importa n t for both teams b e c a u s e defending
division
champion,
E d i n b o r o dropped a 72-71 decis i o n to Clarion this p a s t weekend leaving the race for the
division title wide open.
LHS will start Ziggy Tauginas
at l e n t e r , Bruce Parkhill and
Sam Vaughn at the forward spots
and Ed Wright, Dave Henderson,
or
John Marzlak at guards.
Wright is the team's leading
scorer having pumped in 75
points for a 25.0 average. Park-
Team
^
steaks
meatballs
^ubs
3<9
5<5
Will deliver oiders over t 5
Rt. 220 Hogan Blva.
748-3277
*'
i
Media of