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rtember 21, 2001

Issue 4, Volume 55

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University's Student Newspaper A/

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students to withdraw
Shawn P. Shanley
Eagle Eye Editor in Chief

VI

Law
Campus
Enforcement is currently
investigating the involvement of five Lock Haven
University students in an
incident where a small
explosive device was
thrown from a dorm room
window in Woolridge Hall
two days following the terrorist attacks in New York
and Washington D.C.
The blast caused the
evacuation of more than
200 of Woolridge's residents last Thursday afternoon as University officials reacted quickly to
apprehend the individuals
involved.
"It was a small explosion," Dick Hepner, the
Univeristy's director of
Law Enforcement and
Safety, told the Lock
Haven Express. "In light
of the recent events however, any type of explosion
or use of explosive device
no matter how small be
it a firecracker or something else, is extremely out
of order and ill advised."
According to a press
release issued earlier this

Men's soccer team
is undefeated;
ranked fifth in the

nation.
-BACK PAGE--

J% RHA sponsors birch
beer pong tournament.
-page 3-

-

The 50th archery
deer season in the
state starts
September 29.

-

week, all five students are
no longer enrolled at the
University.
As reported by the
Express Wednesday, Dr.
Linda Koch, vice president
of Student Affairs, said
that the students left campus on "voluntary departure." If a student is permitted to withdraw voluntarily, some consequences
may still be attached. This
includes the possibility of
never being able to return
to the University.
According to Dwayne

Allison, director of Student
Life, the device was
thrown out of a first-floor
window into a grassy area
between the residence hall
the
and
University's
International House on
North Fairview Street, but
there was nothing to indicate that the International
community was targeted.
"The main thing that I
want to put out," said
Allison, "is that the
University doesn't tolerate
this sort of behavior. It
doesn't match with the
group of people that are
here to learn."

-page 11-

1
nternational

tadent

Shanley/The Eagle Eye

ssociation
will be

announcing
the winner of
the raffle for
the new

stereo system
today!

An overwhelming amount ofsupport for the victims of the terrorist attacks in New York and Washington D.C. has
been expressed all around campus. Over 100 Lock Haven University students and faculty gathered in front of Price
Performing Arts Center last Friday to share thoughts and express grief with one another about last week's tragedy.
Next Tuesday. Dominick DiSalvo and the Haven Activities Council is asking students to give up one of their meals
at Bentley Dining Hall, which will be turned into donations that will be sent as aid to New York. They
will be standing outside of Bentley, as well as on the upstairs and downstairs decks, between 5 p.m. and 8 p.m. asking students to
make this small sacrifice for the victims of this tragedy.

Inaugurations of new
advisors and
other positions of the
Student
Cooperative
Council (SCC) were underway in the first meeting of
fall
the
semester
Wednesday.
SCC President Tiffany
Smith kicked off the meeting with the announcement
of a voter registration drive
to be held next week on
campus. The time and
location has yet to be
announced. Smith added
that the American Red
Cross will be collecting
donations for the victims of
the terrorist attacks on New
York City, Washington
D.C.,
and
Western
Pennsylvania.
Vice President Craig
Miller Jr., acting as
Speaker of the Senate, then
inaugurated the new SCC
senators,

-

High 72

Low 51
See weekend weather,
Page 2

Horiscopes

News

10
9
8
1-4

Outdoors

11
5-6
10

Op/Ed

Personals
Sports

a p.m.

10 o

p.m.

SCC swears in new members; elects speaker
Scott Evans
Eagle Eye StaffReporter

Classified
Comics

iruin

12-H

Parson's Union Building
Lock Haven University
Lock Haven, PA 17745
Newsroom: (570) 893-2334
Fax: (570) 893-2644
Email:

SCC Treasurer Nick
Trumbauer urged the new
senators to take into
account the body of students, or constituency they
represent, when voting on
issues. Trumbauer said it's
important to vote according to constituency to
"bridge the gap between
the SCC and the student
body."
Faculty advisors for the
SCC were sworn in unanimously at the meeting.
Berard,
Ted
Stanley
Forbes, Paula Bell, Amy
Dan
and
Paciej
McCormick comprise the
advisory board for the
2001-02 school year.
Joe Domkowski, who
served on campus as SCC
senator and President of
Woolridge Hall, was elected Speaker of the Senate
last night.
Ron Strickler was
elected recording secretary.

A member of the LHU
men's lacrosse club and
senator for two semesters,

Strickler is one of five SCC
representing
LHU at the Board of
Student Government conference this weekend in
members

Harrisburg.
The student government conference is attended by all 14 state-owned

universities and assesses
within
the system, decides which
issue is of most importance
among all 14 schools, and
then finds solutions to
resolve the issue. Such topics suggested were smoking on campus, parking,
and recycling computer
paper.
current problems

The SCC swears in a number of students during Wednesday
nights meeting.

During the open forum
portion of the meeting, the
issue of whether or not the
SCC should say the Pledge
of Allegiance or have a
moment of silence before
each meeting. The issue

was hotly contested last
year at the meetings, but no
decision was made. Smith

The next SCC meeting
is on October 3, at 7 p.m. in
the PUB Meeting Room

said that this and other
issues must be presented in
the form of a bill to be considered.

two

Page 2

ber 21, 2001

Eagle Eye

Meet the new health service staff
Campus Law
En orcement 893-22 78



Sumer Buttorff
Eagle Eye Staff
Kelly Cranmer- Medical Secretary
Kelly Cranmer, a graduate of Pennsylvania College of Technology, is the new medical secretary at Health Services. Previously employed at Clinton County Medical
Associates, Cranmer entered the medical field because she
"likes to work with and help people."
"Sometimes it's a very stressful job, but also very
rewarding at times," Cranmer said.
A resident of Lock Haven, she is a mother of two girls
and has been married for 16 years. She enjoys reading
books and doing yard work. When she is not at work she
is on the go, being a "soccer mom," attending her daughters' games. When asked to describe herself in three words, Cranmer said, " Busy.
Busy. Busy."

week
in

history

The Phi Mu
Delta
Fraternity
sponsored a
48-hour danc
in Bentley
Hall.

Sept. 22.
1987
The
International
Department of
innounced they
would publish
The Lock
Haven
International
Review, a cultural magazine,
in the summer
of 1988.

Cindy McClain- Licensed Practical Nurse
The new L.P.N is Cindy McClain. The veteran nurse has been working in the medical field for 21 years. For the largest portion of her career
she worked in a rehabilitation hospital caring for "head
trauma and ventilator" patients.
Also a resident of Lock Haven, McClain has two sons
and enjoys sports, Nascar, and the outdoors. She often
draws and makes crafts in her free time. Known by her coworkers for her good sense of humor, she describes herself
as "fun, outgoing, and caring."

Sue Moore- Registered Nurse
Sue Moore, one of Health Service's R.N.s, is a former
LHU student, who also attended Pennsylvania College of
Technology. Moore has been an employee of Lock Haven
Hospital for 17 years and has also worked in home nursing
for four years.

He has had other medical
Physical Therapy Aid and a Nuclear Medicine
Belonging to a family of health prof
influenced to study medicine. He finds working with students one of the most interesting aspects of his new job. When not at work, he finds
time to play soccer and cycle.

in Sayre.

Hosted Events
Homecoming Weekend
October 12th-14th

Comedy Show
7:00p.m. Price
Auditorium
Party 10:00 p.m.
Diamond Club
Top of Subway

Black Student Union
Reception 6 p.m. PUB

"Showtime at the
Apollo" 7:30 p.m. Price
BSU Dance 10:00 p.m.

Weekend
Weather

High 72

High 72

Low 51

Low 50

Sept. 10

Criminal mischief was reported when someone broke
intoThomlinson Center and took a fire extinguisher to
violate a football player's car. Windows were smashed
and the car was spray painted. A concession stand was
also damaged.
Sept. 13

A hit and run was reported.
Sept. 19

There was a report of disorderly conduct and harrass*
ment by
Sept. 20

Congratulations to Heather
Cherniack, Chris Wilson, Brad

Sim Basta- Licensed Physician Assistant
The new PA. at Health Services is Sim Basta. A resident of Williamsport, Pa.,
Basta, earned his master's degree from LHU and complet- p~l
ed his undergraduate work at S.U.N.Y

r

Disorderly conduct was reported and a person was
cited.

ROTC offers congratulations

Kim Wetzel- Registered Nurse
Kim Wetzel, R.N., studied at LHU and Pennsylvania
College of Technology. Before joining the team at LHU
Health Services, Wetzel worked in geriatric rehabilitation
for approximately 10 years. She also spent two years in
medical surgery.
Wetzel, the new mother of a 5-month-old baby girl,
enjoys spending time with her family and playing with her
dogs. Wetzel can be found hiking and reading in her spare

Black Student Union

Incidents of minor drinking occurred on the following
dates: September 5,7,8,9, 11, 14, 15, I 6, and 18.

Lock Haven
East Main Street Parking Lot

6:00 a.m. to noon

Home grown
Fresh produce, flowers, and pumpkins

Hoppes and Pete Sulewski for
completing
successfully
Reserve Officer Training Corps
(ROTC) summer training.
Cherniack, Wilson, and
Hoppes attended the 31 day

National Advanced Leadership
Camp (NALC) at Ft. Lewis,
Washington. NALC is a fast
paced training environment
where 3,000 cadets from around
the country gather to be tested
on their individual leadership
and tactical abilities. The cadets
who completed this training will
now use their knowledge to help
train those cadets who will be
attending next summer.

Immediately

following

NALC, Cherniack and Wilson

Cor Cadet
opted
Troop
Leadership Training (CTLT).
CTLT is three weeks of "On the
Job" training at various military
installations. Cherniack completed her three weeks at Ft.
Richardson. Alaska, as an
Ordinance Platoon Leader.
Wilson completed his three
weeks in an infantry unit at
Schofield Barracks. Hawaii.
Sulewski spent three weeks
at Airborne School at Ft.
Benning, Georgia. He earned
his wings by completing four
daytime and one night jump
from a COO aircraft.

Please join us and have fun while performing a great
community service! Volunteer your spare time a few
hours a month to children during our Friends Activities.
The Second Mile Friend Program provides elementary school children in the Keystone Central and Jersey
Shore Area School Districts with the opportunity to
interact with Lock Haven University students at eight
events throughout the school year. The young friends are
referred to the program by teachers and school counselors who feel these children could benefit from social
interaction with positive role models.
Activities include: bowling, swimming, holiday parties and picinics.
The time commitment is usually two or three hours
per event, once a month.
If you are interested in volunteering for the Friend
Program, please contact Danielle Rogers at 748-0115 or
come to our orientation meeting on Tuesday, September
25th at 6:00 p.m. in Robinson Hall of Flags.

International
news
After last week's tragic events in New York and Washington,
D.C., both the University and the International students are
steadily getting back to some sort of normality.
It has been a true test for the international community, but
all of the countries represented here in Lock Haven University
are in deepest sympathy with the United States. This has
been reflected by world leaders observing moments of silence
all around the world, for all of the U.S. at this sad time.
The international students were brought together Saturday,
September 15, to take a trip to Penn State, where they got a
chance to visit the University, the football field and got to do
some important shopping at the mall.

iber 21, 2001

Page 3

Students play pong and stay sober
Ken Taylor
The Eagle Eye

After the initial teams were
eliminated,
two
teams
remained; Kevin Boyle and Rob
Walter from Smith Hall, and
Jason Fromm and Adam Tomko
from High. Each team played a
series of two games. Winning
the first round was the team
from Smith Hall. For the second round, each team alternately eliminated the cups, one by

He focuses, throws, and
plop! These were some of the
techniques used by students during the finals of the Birch Beer
Pong Tournament held in the
Multi-Purpose Room of the
PUB Wednesday night.
Sponsored by the Residence
Hall Association, the tournament was the brainwork of Chip
Steer, executive vice president
of the RHA. Steer's primary
goal was to "promote pride
among the residence halls, to
raise awareness about alcohol
use, and to have fun."
Each cup that the players
threw the Ping-Pong ball into
was filled half way with birch
beer and on the side was a fact
about alcohol and its effects. If
the player got the ball into the
cup, the challengers had to read
what was on the side of the cup
and drink the birch beer.
The competition was fierce.
Five residence halls prepared
teams over the last two weeks to
compete in Wednesday night's
competition.
This reporter and his teammate, Chip Steer, were quickly
eliminated after the first two
rounds. As the evening wore
on, challengers were eliminated.
Finishing fifth was Dana
Laarkamp and Julie Bohn from
Campus Village.

one.

By the end of the round, one
cup remained for each team.
The team from Smith Hall took
home the grand prize. With a
record of 4-1, Kevin Boyle and
Rob Walter were quoted earlier
in the tournament as saying, "I
guarantee we will win."
The runners up, Jason

Fromm and Adam Tomko, were
both awarded mugs from historical Rohman's Pub in Shohola,
PA. The mugs were donated by
Art Becker, Woolridge Hall
President. The night's champions were given mugs with the
university logo. All participants
walked away with consolation
prizes, which included coffee
mugs, photo albums and clipboard picture frames. All consolation prizes were donated by
RHA.

Bohn was very pleased with

.

her team's performance, she
taught Laarkamp how to play.

..

-



~

W"

W'""'-

1

Graham Boyle/The Eagle Eye
learn about alcohol's negative effects

Students
while playing a game of birch beer pong.

in
TKE
KAP

rPEEANEm:
ZTA

This past Saturday, September 15, the sisters ofAlpha Sigma Tau donated their time to a
highway pick-up, cleaning& route 220, between the exits of Lock Haven and IV ill Hall.
The stretch of the highway is a mile long and filled eight trash bags. Even though it was a
"smelly" warm day, the sisters of Alpha Sigma Tau made the best of it and ha d a lot of fun.
Their next scheduled highway pick-up is in October.



.

BZ

AMr

GREEK NEWS

STA

OK
Criminal justice club kicks off the new school year
Eric Friedman
The Eagle Eye
Future activities planning
and goal setting topped the
agenda for the Criminal Justice
Student Organization's first
meeting of the semester,
Tuesday.
Among the topics of discussion were objectives for bringing various speakers to campus
such as state troopers, judges,
sheriffs and private investigators. In addition, other possible
activities for the club were discussed such as touring local
Rockview Prison, talking to
inmates about drug related problems, and participating in the
adopt-a-highway
program.
Also, the organization will host
a booth at the upcoming club
fair to be held on October 3, on
Ivy Lane.
While this is the first year
for the Criminal Justice Student
Organization, 2001 also marks

the first year for the Criminal

of close to 30 students.
The student organization is
open to all majors and membership is free. Their next meeting
will be Wednesday, October 3,
in the Thomas Field House
Annex. Anyone interested in the
club or its activities is welcome

to come.

Justice Major at Lock Haven
University.
Eric Friedman, President
and co-founder of the organization, stated that the clubs inception "would be a good addition
to the school and would compliment the new major well."
Prior to this year. Criminal
Justice was solely a concentration through the Sociology
department, however there was
such a demand that Criminal
Justice expanded to become its
own major. Students studying
criminal justice will pursue jobs
such as law enforcement, private investigation, probation
officer, FBI and CIA agents.
Among the classes which students attend are Juvenile
Delinquency, Criminology, and
Social Problems.
There has been strong supMatthew English/The Eagle Eye
port for both the Criminal
justice
LHU'S
criminal
club goes hand-in-hand
Justice Major and organization,
and even though it is only a first with the new major.
year club it boasts a membership

I LHU Bookstore I
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21, 2001

Page 4

College students worry about draft
James M. O'Neill
Knight Ridder Newspapers
PHILADELPHIA - A new
generation of Americans, raised
amid peace and plenty, now
knows fear.
More than a week after the
terrorist attacks on New York
and the Pentagon, shock has
given way to anxiety about the
future for many young adults on
college campuses.
They fear further terrorism.
They fear for friends in the
reserves who might be called
into active duty. Some Muslim
students fear for their own safety.

But many students say they
worry most about how the

United States will respond to
the terrorist attacks. They fear
that, in a fury of revenge, the
nation will lash out blindly at
the terrorists and the countries
that harbor them, failing to take
the moral high ground.
Those fears led students on
dozens ofcampuses nationwide
to organize rallies today to
express their view thatattacking
Afghanistan, or targeting
Muslims and Arabs here at
home, would be a moral disaster
for the country.
"It's natural to have strong
calls for national unity, but
there's been a rush to judgment," said Jonah Eaton, 21, a
Swarthmore College senior
organizing a rally for Thursday.
"Will we in our anger and calls
for retribution end up killing
more civilians?"
He said some talk from
America's leaders
including
Bush's
call
for
President
to
over
rum
susAfghanistan
pected terrorist Osama bin
Laden dead or alive has been

-

"scary."

-

"The terrorists have won if
our actions degrade our democratic values," said Eaton. "This
needs to be a police action, not
a military action."
Many students expressed
similar sentiments. "There are a
lot of war drums right now.

...

Reid Kanaley
Knight Ridder Newspapers

But we need to take a hard look

our foreign policy and what
would incite someone to do
such a terrible thing," said John
Silson, 23, a Haverford College
senior.
"This could be a pivotal
event in history," he said.
"Maybe it will incite a culture
of terror. But maybe it will be a
catalyst to spread peace and justice."
"I'm scared about what's to
said
Monet
come,"
Miechowski, 19, a sophomore
at Dickinson College. "Too
many people have such anger
and just want to strike back. We
can't kill more innocent people."
Some think the United
States should strike back hard.
"If they're sure it's bin Laden,
go after him. And if a country is
supporting terrorists, we should
do something," said Shqiponja
Dervishaj, 19, a Temple
University sophomore whose
family moved from Albania
three years ago.
Anthony Patterson, 21, a
student at the Community
College of Philadelphia, said he
worries that peers will target
Arab and Muslim students and
stereotype them as terrorists.
That concern has not gone
unfounded. Shereen Husain, 20,
a Temple junior, said that after
the attacks, anti-Muslim graffiti
appeared on a campus wall. She
said one Muslim student had
her hijab pulled from her head,
and someone broke the glass in
the office window of the
Muslim Student Association.
"Everyone's talking about
Americans coming together, but
instead of feeling united, I feel
targeted," said Husain, who was
born in the United States.
"Some demented people made
those attacks last week. They're
not representatives of Islam."
In a letter to students,
David
Temple
president
Adamany said "we cannot tolerate any acts ofprejudice against
any member of the Temple
community."
at

-

Porn sites taking over discarded web addresses

-

A few students worried the
war on terrorism might lead to a
new military draft, which
President Nixon ended in 1973
amid American opposition to
the Vietnam War. But most students say the draft isn't on their
minds.
Experts say it would be very
unlikely for the draft to be reinstated, for many reasons.
James Saeger, who teaches
military history at Lehigh
University, said today's conflicts call for a professional military, and that "Americans are
deluded if they think they can
pick up soldiering skills easily."
Kenneth J. Campbell, who
teaches international relations at
the University of Delaware,
said the kind of anti-terrorism
campaign discussed by the
White House isn't likely to
require many ground troops.
John Pesda, who teaches
history at Camden County
College, said it would be "political suicide" for Bush to reinstate the draft, so it won't happen.
Dillon Collins, 21, a senior
at St. Joseph's University and
student body president, said his
peers are still sorting a jumble
of emotions - resentment, anger,
a need to promote peace.
"It's hard for them to determine how they "should be feeling," he said. "And they're
looking to older people - faculty, parents, family - to ask how
they dealt with situations in the
past, like Vietnam or the Cuban
missile crisis or World War II.
This is the horrible part of
'growing up.'"

PHILADELPHIA When the
folks at Wyndmoor, Pa.-based
Irish Edition found the Web
address for their 15,000-circulation monthly cultural newspaper
taken over by a pom site, they
scrambled to find out what had
happened.
They discovered this: There
is a growing market for discarded dot-com domain names, and
online opportunists had purchased the newspaper's address
last month after Irish Edition
had inadvertently let its own
dot-com claim lapse.
In a peculiar development in
online commerce, the rush to
register an ever-dwindling supply ofcatchy domain names has
fueled a rush for expired Web
addresses.
And the demand is not likely
to abate anytime soon, even
with the coming of .info, .biz
and .shop domains.
"For a long time to come,"
there will continue to be "some
sort of cachet in having a dotcom," said Polk Wagner, a
University of Pennsylvania law
professor versed in electroniccommerce, domain-name and
intellectual-property issues.
The new registrant of
irishedition.com, using a mailing address in Russia, has put a
link on the porn site offering the
domain name for sale at a minimum bid of $550. Renewable
domain registrations generally
cost $15 to $35 a year.
"Extortioners," Tony Byrne,
publisher of Irish Edition, raged
last week. Byrne said he was
considering a lawsuit under the

-

or an appeal to the international
body that oversees domain registrations, to win back his Web
address.
Either option would cost
him at least $1,000 in legal fees,
Byrne said, but he is determined
not to deal with the current
owner. "I won't pay them one
single penny," he vowed.
Operating sometimes on the
legal and ethical edge, a new
wave of entrepreneurs is gobbling up many ofthe thousands
of dot-com names that expire

each day.
That is apparently what happened to the former Web
address for Garden State Cable,
the cable television system
acquired by Comcast Corp. in
February 2000.
In January, the lapsed gardenstatecable.com domain was
registered to a mailing address
in Armenia. Anyone attempting
to access it recently has seen a
screen offering viewers the
choice of clicking to enter an
adult Web site, or to buy the
domain for a minimum of
$550.

-

Comcast has referred the
matter to its attorneys,
spokesman Robert Smith said.
"I have learned it is not
uncommon for an individual or
company to purchase recently
expired domains and, while
offering them for sale, also
using them in barter, or for payment, as referral sites to adult
Web sites," Smith said.
Phone messages and e-mails
seeking comment from those
listed as
technical contacts for the current owners of irishedition.com
not returned.
As it turns out, a Web
address that attracts any sort of
regular traffic may have value to
the operator ofanother site, who
can simply redirect that traffic
after gaining control of the
domain name.
"You snap up a bunch of
these expired domain names,
which come cheap
and you
create this vast network of pages
that get redirected straight to
this other place. It's fairly effective," Perm's Wagner said.
Some businesses aggregate
such traffic for resale. "I bought
a million hits, on E-Bay, for
$800, which isn't too expensive," said Wayne Yeager,
site
Webmaster of the
Trafficology.com, which tests
such schemes for their effectiveness.
There is always the chance,

...

too, that the original owner will

have second thoughts about letting the domain go and will pay
to get it back.
"It's legal blackmail. It's
predatory, but it's legal," said
Ken Hirsch, a partner at a Web

site called Daily Expired
Domains.
Hirsch's year-old site one
of many now tracking lapsed
domains charges a onetime fee
of$60 for unlimited access to its
daily listings of expired .com,
.net and .org addresses automatically culled by specialized software.
"The name of the game in
the Internet is traffic," Hirsch
said. "So if you are running an
Internet-based business, you
will do virtually anything you
to direct traffic to your
can
Web site." That may include
buying any "interesting" Web
addresses that show up on the
expired lists, he said.
Hirsch, who also offers
name registration services to his
clients, said he would not hesitate to register a domain for a
client even if it appeared likely
that someone else could contest
the name as a trademark.
"We do not warrant that a
given name does not violate a
trademark. That's a legal determination. It's incumbent upon
the registrant" to deal with that
issue, Hirsch said.
expired domain
Many
names wereregistered by earlier
waves of Internet entrepreneurs
who had hoped to build Web
businesses but did not, or who
had hoped to sell the Web
addresses for profit, but could
not.
But in other cases, as with
Irish Edition, domain name
owners simply forget to renew
registrations, or they miss the
multiple renewal notices usually
sent out by domain name registration services.
"I have a customer in
California, a big corporation,
and I have a stack right here in
front of me of 30 names we're
ready to delete," said Larry
owner
of
Erlich,
DomainRegistry.com. "We've
sent them e-mail, postal invoices, we've placed two phone
calls. And they still haven't
renewed the names.
Finding adult content at its
former Web address has been
quite disruptive for Irish Edition
and the approximately 100 other
Web sites that included links to
it, said Alice Maloney, advertising manager at Irish Edition.

-

-

...

slows
New computer worm
Internet on thousands of computers
Beatrice E. Garcia
Knight Ridder Newspapers
The Internet got a new threat Tuesday as a
new worm began infecting PCs and servers

nationwide, with experts warning that it could
possibly slow the global network worse than the
"Code Red" worm did earlier in the summer.
In a press conference Tuesday, Attorney
General John Ashcroft said the program, known
as "W32-Nimda" has affected possibly tens of
thousands of computers already. It spreads via a
company's computer network or infected e-mail.
"The scanning activity thus far indicates that
this could be heavier than the July activity of
Code Red," Ashcroft said.
Code Red mobilized law enforcement agencies and private companies in an unprecedented
effort, as the Internet worm infected hundreds of
thousands of computers and threatened a meltdown of the Internet. They implored computer
users to install protective software.
All major antivirus companies now offer software to protect against Nimda.
The worm tries to break into Microsoft's
Internet Information Services software. That software was the same targeted by Code Red, and is
typically found on computers running Microsoft
Windows NT or 2000.
In an infected e-mail, the e-mail message is
usually blank but contains an attachment called
"README.EXE." Antivirus experts warn that
users shouldn't open unexpected attachments.
In a company network, once one computer
user opens the README.EXE file, the network
would slow dramatically as the worm seeks out all
the other computers on that network and then uses
its Internet connection to spread.
The program also takes control of the part of
Microsoft's IIS software that delivers Web pages,
allowing the virus to trump a request for any page
even invalid requests and instead return a page
infected with the virus.
Most home users, including those running
Windows 95, 98 or ME, can also be infected via
e-mail. The worm attaches to every entry in a
user's Microsoft Outlook address book and sends

-

-

itself out over the Internet. It also takes advantage
of computers that already have been infected with
the Code Red worm.
Paul Henry, vice president of sales at
CyberGuard in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., said Nimda
works like the Code Red worm, which initially
threw people off Tuesday morning when the virus
was first cited.
For security, Henry said all companies should
have firewalls that block any executable file that
arrives via e-mail. "There's no reason to allow
any executable file into your network," he said.
Computer security experts said the worm tries
to wriggle in through 16 known vulnerabilities in
Microsoft's IIS, including the security hole left in
some computers by the "Code Red II" worm,
which followed Code Red in August.
Code Red, by comparison, attacked through
only one hole, which could be patched by downloading a program from Microsoft's Web site.
Cnet.com reported that Nimda may also
spread through other means, including Internet
relay chat, an online chat format, and by file transfer protocol for exchanging files remotely.
The Computer Emergency Response Team
Coordination Center at Carnegie Mellon
University issued a warning Tuesday morning,
recommending that Internet sites verify the state
of security patches on all IIS servers and e-mail
client software.

Page 5

21, 2001

OP/ED
Not all muslims are
terrorists, not all
terrorists are muslims


/

Jon Ryan

of the Muslim communities who
now live in fear of the reprisals

feelings that have led to the
intimidation, and in some cases,
violent attacks on innocent
members of the Muslim community, both here in Britain and in
America.
This has to stop. The terrorists have been strongly condemned for their actions by
Muslim leaders all over the
world who rightly point out that
the taking of human life is pro-

The Eagle Eye
These are frightening times.
A skyline symbolic of the
American Dream destroyed, the
fortress of American military
might reduced to rubble, thousands of lives taken with many
more in tatters as a result of the
worst terrorist attack ever waged
on the civilized world.

In thc immediate aftermath
of this tragedy people talked of
Pearl Harbor, but this was far,
far worse. Pearl Harbor was a
military base bombed in the
midst of a world war. There was
also a tangible, identifiable
enemy in Japan. As this was a
country, war could legitimately
be waged.
Last Tuesday saw the dawn
of what the head of the Pentagon
described only a short time
before the attack as "asymmetrical warfare." In this type of war
religious extremists, due to lack
of funds and weaponry, use
unsophisticated methods to create the maximum damage to
their target. We saw the terrible
effect these methods can have
and these terrorists now become
the enemy, though lighting them
presents many problems, as they
are largely anonymous.
But as we begin to come to
terms with what has happened it
is not only our leaders who must
keep cool heads.
For some, the news that the
attacks were apparently carried
out by followers of Usarria Bin
Laden has revived anti-Muslim

they simply don't deserve.
Religious extremists are dangerous because they are irra-

tional and their views become
utterly incompatible with modern, civilized living. The number
of conflicts around the world
based on religion would seem to
suggest this but how to deal with
them? This particular group of
terrorists have shown themselves to be willing to die for
their cause, and their organization is dispersed around the
world. Therefore, killing Bin
Laden and his inner ring in military strikes will not provide an
immediate solution. It may rid
the world of an evil man, but
like-minded individuals around
the world will undoubtedly carry
on his fight.
The desire for an immediate
reply is understandable, but the
enemy needs to be understood to
be individuals who are situated
on the very extreme of a religion
whose followers are now very
afraid. The Muslim people did
not commit these dreadful acts.
Terrorists did, and this has to be

Jon Ryan
Eagle Eye Columnist
hibited in the Koran. The attacks
on the Muslim dbmmunities

here and in America are despicable as they show the exact same
intolerance that Bin Laden and
his followers show for western
ideals, alongside which many
Muslims have no problem settling their faith.
It is understandable to be
experiencing feelings of anguish
and hatred following these
heinous attacks on democracy,
but it needs to be remembered
that they were perpetrated by
fanatics who share few actual
beliefs, if any, with the members

remembered if they are to be
defeated, as division and dissent
are what they seek. Unity is
what our leaders have called for
in these difficult times, and is
what should be strive for.
Jon Ryan is a former
exchange student to Lock Haven
University, he currently attends
Universitx
Liverpool-Hope
"Liverpool
England.
College Tn



THE EAGLE EYE
ISSUE 4, VOLUME 55
LOCK HAVEN UNIVERSITY
PARSONS UNION BUILDING
LOCK HAVEN, PA 17745
PHONE: (570) 893-2334
FAX: (570) 893-2644

r

Faculty

Should I yell for help?
There are so many people yelling and crying and holding each other,
What could possibly be going on?
"NOBODY MOVE!! SHUT UP!!"
I asked the man behind me what was going on,
He pulled out a knife and told me to turn around and insisted that I did not ask another

IVews Editors

Sean Dooley
Michelle Hershey

Dr. Douglas S. Campbel



Shawn P. Shanley

Features Editors
Jessica Savrock
Erin Anderson
Matthew English

<

Photographers
Graham Boyle
P.J. Harrner

Online Editor

Stephan Baldwin

Jared Guest

PJ. Harmer

All my love."

Nick Trumbauer

Sumer Buttorff

HAVEN UNIVERSITY, IS PUBLISHEDWEEKLY1N ACCORTHE EAGLEEYE THE OFFICIALSTUDENT NEWSPAPEROFLOCK
OPINIONS, PICTURES AND LAYOUT OFTHE EAGLE EYE ARE
ARTICLES,
THE
UNIVERSITY
CALENDAR.
DANCE WITH THE
-Y OF THE STAFF AND DO NOTREFLECT THE VIEWS OF THE STUDENTS. THE FACULTY OR ADMINTHE APStr.'
LSTRATION, UNLESS SPECIFIED. THE EAGLE EYE IS FUNDED BY THE STUDENT ACTTVrrY FEE AND PRINTED BY THE



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ARE FREE OF
CLASSIFIED ADS FOLLOW THE SAME REGULATIONS. HOWEVER PERSONAL AND ANNOUNCEMENTS
CHARGE AND MUST BE SUBMITTED NO LATER THAN TUESDAY BY 3P.M,

jl

Please God, protect us and keep us all.
I took out my lipstick and scribbled on the cover of my Cosmo magazine
"I love you both and will look over you from heaven

A huge crash knocked the lipstick out of my hand

Suzanne McCombie

Heather Flicker

Scott Evans

I can hardly breathe, I feel as if I am going to throw up, I am beginning to sweat...
Somebody help me...please...
As men ran up and down the isles screaming "death to all Americans" I realized in terror
That our plane was being hijacked.
would
never
make it to see my brother and his wife
I
never
be able to hug anyone again
would
I
I was going to die
Along with all the other innocent people on the aircraft.
madness,
the men did not stop screaming "death to all Americans"
all
the
In
The only thing that encompassed my mind was
America was not going to crumble in the hands of terrorists,
But stand stronger, prouder, as a nation, a world power, a leader.
Things are starting to look meek, I heard someone say we are headed for the World Trade

Copy Editor
Jessica LaCroix

Advisor

I woke up early for the first flight
I was going to LA to visit my brother and his new wife.
We were all looking forward to spending time together,
Life has been so hectic lately
But I took this week so we could catch up on old times.
I boarded the plane; it was much larger than what I was accustomed to.
As I found my seat I was excited to see row 6 seat C, the window, I always enjoy seeing
The clouds and feeling the warmth of the sun...
Sometimes I feel as if I could touch heaven. As I sit down and hear the engine roaring I
Am reminded ofhow skeptical I truly am of flying.
But I was raised to know that you cannot live your life in fear.
The simple thought of having no reason to be scared made me smile and realize that the
Knot in my stomach was nonsense.
The plane filled up quickly, full of children, adults, teens, babies, families, it put me at
Ease to see all of the people chit chatting and laughing.
I reached down under the seat in front of me to pick up my carry-on bag.
As I shuffled through I clenched the little pink wrapped box of earrings that I had bought
For my brothers wife last week.
The cell phone, lipstick, pack of juicy fruit gum and latest issue of Cosmopolitan !. Ii.ni>Crowded the little purple bag.
louncement
over the intercom he instructed all to fasten their
As the pilot made his
Seat belts and prepare for take off.
I sat back into the vinyl seats and prepared for take off, many things ran though my head
Most importantly, how lucky I am to have such wonderful people in my life...
"NOW, NOW, NOW!!!!" What is going on?
The only thing I can hear is men's voices screaming
What is going on...what is going on...

LHUeagleye @ hotmail .com

Editors in Chief
Shawn P. Shanley
Kristin J. White

\W \ J M \W*< bdltor

LBTTEttS
NAME, SIGLETTERSTO THE EDITOR ARE WELCOME. THEY MUST BE TYPE-WRITTEN AND INCLUDE THE AUTHOR'S
LETTERS RECEIVED WITHOUTTHIS INFORMATION WILLNOT BE PRINTED, DEADNATURE ANDTELEPHONE NUM
LINE FOR SUBMISSIONS IS TUESDAY BY 3 PM. THE EDITOR RESERVES THE RIGHT TO EDIT ANY COPY

And then the only thing that became familiar to me was fire,
As we collided into the building,
that
the
red,
realized
white
and blue color of the blistering fire looked like the American
I
I hope the terrorists saw the same thing I

God Bless America now and always
One nation under God
Indivisible
With Liberty and Justice for all.

did...

By Kelley Marie Arend

Send a letter to
the Editor!!!
All letters are due no later than 3p.m. Tuesday.
Send them to supersunshinel3@gateway.net or bring
them to the Eagle Eye office in the PUB.

The SCC, unfortunately, does not follow its own rules
My name is Nicole and I was HAC standing election rules
the Assistant Coordinator for the that I personally had, the
Haven
Activities
Council Assistant Coordinator is suppose
was
(HAC). I
actively involved to take over "if a vacancy occurs
with HAC for the past three in the coordinator position
years. I have held the positions before the end of the term which
of Special Events committee shall be for one year." I brought
member and Special Events this to the attention of some of
Chairperson. I am writing this the Executive Board members.
letter because I want students to It took a few days before anyone
be aware of the incompetence of informed me that those rules are
the Student Cooperative Council in conflict with the SCC constiwho governs the entire student tution. That is when I borrowed
a copy of the constitution to find
body.
2000,1
semester
out for myself where it is in conSince fall
of
have been experiencing difficulflict.
Since I am not very familiar
ty with the SCC. It all started
with
the first time I applied for the
the constitution, I tried
not
Coordinator position. I was
numerous times to contact an
selected for the position; howevexecutive officer, however, my
another
student
was
hired
messages were never returned.
er
under the assumption that he If they did try to contact me by
would be resigning after one phone and I was not available,
semester because in the spring no one ever left a message.
In addition, according to the
he would be student teaching.
However, the topic of what SCC, Inc. Constitution, the posimight happen at the end of the tions of Coordinator and
semester was never discussed. I Assistant Coordinator must be
was then hired as Assistant approved by two thirds of the
senate. However, this was never
Coordinator.
Nearing the end of the done for the Fall 2000 and
semester after a lot of thought,
Spring 2001 semesters. I only
his
state this to show that the SCC
the coordinator submitted
letter of resignation to the SCC tends to adhere to certain aspects
Executive Officers. During this of their Constitution and neglect
time it was unclear who was other aspects by picking and
going to take his place. To my choosing whichever benefits
understanding according to the them under that circumstance.

During this time period of it was only assumed. Then we Executive elections. Once again,
confusion during the Fall 2000 talked to the Student Activities I was not informed of the
semester, applications became
Director at the time, who also change. As for the rest of the
available
for
both
the was not aware that we were only election, thanks to eye witnessCoordinator and Assistant hired for one semester. I was es, a girl was spotted handing
Coordinator positions. I was in becoming very frustrated and out little slips of paper encourupset because my questions aging students to vote for a parshock because I was not resigning and I was never informed were still unanswered. The ticular candidate near a ballot
that I was being terminated from semester soon ended and I, as box in a residence hall (breaking
the twenty-five feet distance
well as my fellow HAC memmy Assistant Coordinator position. I soon came to find out that bers, left feeling uncertain of rule) while in another resident
I was hired as the Coordinators what was going to happen in the hall, a SCC Senator was heard
personal assistant, which I was Spring 2001 semester. It was telling students to vote for a particular candidate.
not aware of and happens to be not until two weeks into the folsemester
that
interviews
I was told by one of the stuconflict
with
both
the
HAC
lowing
in
dents who witnessed the incistanding rules and the SCC, Inc. were held for both positions.
As we all know, spring is dent that she reported it to the
Constitution. The Coordinator
and Assistant Coordinator are SCC election time and I felt it Election Committee who was
not aware it was going on.
two separate positions.
The was time for a change so I decidAssistant Coordinator is not ed to run for SCC President last However, nothing was ever done
hired to be the personal assistant spring. The election process did about it. Because I did not want
of the Coordinator. The not follow the rules of the SCC to cause uproar in the SCC, I
Assistant Coordinator has his or Constitution. According to the accepted the fact that you can't
her own duties to uphold. Since SCC constitution, the students win them all, congratulated the
the Coordinator was leaving and are supposed to have three victors, wished them luck and
gave them my support.
hired under the assumption he weeks notice. However, the stuAt the very end of last
was leaving after one semester, dents were only given two
new
SCC
the Executive Officers now weeks notice. That is a violation semester the
Executive officers went through
claim I was only hired for one of the constitution.
Furthermore, during the the process of hiring new
semester.
some candidates used Executive Board members for
never
informed
that
debates
I
was
I
was only being hired for one inappropriate actions and words. the 2001-2002 academic year.
semester. I approached the To my knowledge, nothing was Once again I applied for the
Coordinator and asked him if ever done to reprimand those HAC Coordinator position. I
this was true and he told me he candidates for their actions. felt that with my experience I
was never informed that he was Once the election was over, I was fully qualified for the posionly hired for one semester found out that the Clearfield tion. I have performed above
either. Like I previously stated, branch campus voted in the and beyond the duties specified

for the HAC Coordinator position. I have dedicated myself to
HAC and I have missed certain
personal obligations and took
extra
HAC responsibilities
because I knew it was necessary
for the events to be a success.
However, because of what I
believe to be personal bias, I was
once again not selected for the
coordinator position.
To sum things up, the SCC is
a very important organization on
this campus. They are in charge
of almost all clubs and organizations and what they do and say
affects every student, faculty
and staff member whether you
know it or not. Every person
that pays the student activity fee,
has the right to be involved in,
and the right to know what is
going on with the SCC, HAC
and any other club or organization. I am personally encouraging every student to get involved
in these organizations and make
a difference on this campus.
Finally, I apologize to the
students of LHU and any other
person I might have offended by
writing this letter.
Sincerely,

Nicole Nash

America prepares for the new war but what will it be like?
Richard Parker and
Bryan Bender
Knight-Ridder Tribune
Beneath the rubble in New
York and Washington lies a terrible question: Will the most
devastating attack on America in
modern times lead to war? The
answer is increasingly yes, in a
war that will be fought abroad
and at home.
There is little disagreement
that Osama Bin Laden's AlQa'eda carried out the operation.
But this operation most assuredly enjoyed the support of a for-

Even the operational value
of the targets in New York benefits both Iraq and bin Laden,
according to sources in New
York. The World Trade Center
may have housed an office ofthe
Central Intelligence Agency,
though a more public office
exists at One Federal Plaza. And
sources have indicated in the
past that billions of dollars in
Kuwaiti gold - always a source
of frustration to Saddam's
regime - are in a vault now
buried beneath the rubble.
For other strategic and political reasons, too, Iraq will make
a handy whipping boy. The U.S.
military was poised to launch a
major air campaign just a few
months ago. Aside from this
case, Iraq has already rebuilt key
portions of its chemical production complex. These plants were
used to make chemical weapons
precursors in advance of the
Gulf War, according to the CIA.
The threshold of proof that Iraq
is an enemy of the United States
will be low.
It is unlikely that the next
war with bin Laden and Iraq and anyone else who is defined
as an enemy - will be a onesided affair, that intrudes upon
the lives of Americans only
through their television screens.
It will probably be a conflict

ing problem for the U.S. government, which must respect constitutional and civil rights, while
trying to forestall more attacks.
This is the truly dreadful discussion the Bush administration
must now have: How to mobi-:
lize a population for waragainst
an invisible enemy operating on
U.S. soil. The FBI suspects the
perpetrators of the New York
and Washington attacks may
possibly
have been living
legally in the United States for
at least a year, receiving training
and financial support from
domestic, not foreign, sources.
If SO suspects went undetected
by law enforcement how many
more are there?
Given the scope of the operation, it is reasonable to conclude that terrorist leaders are
well aware of what they are
starting. Historical data indicates a strong correlation
between American involvement
abroad and attacks against the
United States, according to the
Science
Board.
Defense
Conventional military action
prompts governments to find
unconventional, transnational
means to strike back. The opponent today is signaling to U.S.
leaders that he will not only
fight, but fight back.
American leaders, as a
result, must consider the country's ability to conduct and
absorb a conflict here at home.
The state of American defenses despite staggering military and
intelligence budgets - is not
impressive. The U.S. military
has played a smallrole in relieving the devastation of New
York, despite years of thinking
about how to play just such a
role.
"The United States is very
poorly organized to design and
implement any comprehensive
strategy to protect the homeland," the U.S. Commission on
National Security recently con-

-

-

eign government, likely Iraq's.
American bombs over Baghdad
and Kabul will probably trigger
terrorist bombs here in the
United States. In seeking
revenge, Americans should prepare to pay for it.
The most telling details
emerge in the targeted cities:
Washington and New York. The
is moving
painstakingly slowly in crafting
its next action. If this was merely the work of Osama bin
Laden's network, cruise missiles, bombs and special operations forces would already have
descended on Afghanistan.
Indeed, bin Laden's operatives appear to have left a series
of clues behind that strongly both conventional and unconsuggest the help of a state intelventional abroad, involving
ligence service, most likely that American aircraft and Special
of Iraq. Israeli intelligence has Operations Forces, who have
reportedly told its government long trained for such a mission.
that Iraq probably financed the
The targets of American
operation and may have providvengeance will react by trying
ed other support. Early indicato bring the war home to
tions indicate that the people America. Islamic militant cells
who carried out the hijackings
Al-Queda, Islamic Jihad, the
entered the country with docuDemocratic Front for the
ments good enough to avoid Liberation of Palestine
have
detection; in the past bin
long operated in the United
Laden's network has often States, primarily to raise funds.
tripped up because of faulty The details of the attack this
passports and papers.
week strongly suggest that operIn addition, the operation ational cells are in the United
displayed a high degree of States, as well. This poses a vexdeception; the electronic ears of
the National Security Agency I
were attuned to significant
FREE Small Cone
amounts of traffic in recent
months but all that traffic pointWith Oi* purehaee of any
extra value m«al.
ed to attacks abroad. This sugRedeemable at: McPoneleTe
gests that bin Laden's network
Loek Haven. Lamar enel
has access to a secure communiMeElhatUn.
B
cations network. If Air Force
Not valid wtth any other offer.
One was a target then the operaUmlt one coupon
Kjyjl
par cuetomer MrvMt
tives had command and control
Cft\\
ValU thru 12/31/01
HP
with which to threaten the president's aircraft.
I

-

-

-

I

ft-ffl
JSU*f

1

J
I

eluded. Assets for responding to
attack are scattered across more
than two dozen departments and
agencies, and all 50 states. In a
recent report, the Rand Corp.
rated intelligence, threat assessment, information sharing, coordination ofoperations and health

more important the American
and medical capabilities as unipublic - know what this war will
formly poor.
America will, and under really be like.
international law should, go to
war over the greatest massacre
of civilians in Ametieanihwtory.
But at this moment, it is unule*r
and
that America's leaders

-

September 21, 2001

Page 7

Eagle Eye

Something for everyone at the Bloomsburg Fair
David Kubarek
The Eagle Eye
Some fairs are great if you
like smelly barnyard animals
and greasy Italian sausage sandwiches. As for the Bloomsburg
Fair, however, there is something for everyone.
Historians have called the
first Bloomsburg Fair, which
began in 1855, a street carnival.
Live entertainment, great local
food and a variety of amusement
rides make this event nothing
short of a carnival.
Residence
The
Hall
Association is sponsoring a bus
trip to the Bloomsburg Fair on

Wednesday, September 26.
Students can reserve their seat
on a first come first serve basis
for a $5 charge. This does not
include a $3 entrance fee.
The fair, which runs from
Friday, Sept. 21 through
Saturday, Sept. 29, will feature
many famous bands on the
grandstand. Some of those performing are Terri Clark and Jo
Dee Messina on Sept. 22;
Michael W. Smith on Sept. 23;
Loretta Lynn and Don Williams
on Sept. 24; Dream and LFO on
Sept. 25; Lonestar and Jamie
O'Neal on Sept. 26; Brooks &
Dunn on Sept. 27; and Styx on
Sept. 28.

Other performances include
a Champion Figure 8 race on
In the past, RHA has sponSept. 22; Dave Martin's Bullride sored campus van visits to the
Mania on Sept. 23; Doug fair, however, this is the first
Danger Thrill Show on Sept. 27; time that a full size bus will be
and the "World's Largest used to accommodate growing
Demollition Derby" and the big student interest.
Resident Hall Director,
rig semi truck pulling series
finals.
Russell Jameson called the
Lock Haven students on largest fair in Pennsylvania "an
Wednesday's bus ride will be awesome event that everyone
treated to the oldest dog show in should experience."
the world, regional bands and a
Of course there will be
gigantic fireworks display.
smelly cows, greasy sandwiches
Tickets for the grandstand and all that stuff for those who
shows are not included in the $3 enjoy the down and dirty of a
entrance fee to the fair.
fair. Students interested in
Additional ticket information reserving space on the bus can
can be found on www.blooms- call Russ at X2363.

P/?oto courtesy of www.bloomsburgfair.com

LFO is just one of the many bands to be featured
on the grandstand of the Bloomsburg fair this year.
They will perform with Dream on September 25.

Many traps await college students Planning to drink this weekend?
This man's heartbreaking story may make you think twice
when they go away to school
Jeff Herring
Knight Riddei
Here are seven traps that

college students often fall into
and tips on how to avoid them.
1. Debt: Going into debt to
pay for college makes sense.
It's a good investment that will
last you a lifetime. You can pay
off those college loans after
you graduate and get a job.
Going into consumer debt,
however, to live beyond your
means and have a great time
makes no sense. If you drive
those credit cards up high
enough, you can pay on them
for many, many years after you
Solution: Save instead of
spend, even if it's just 10 bucks
a month.

2. Party life: Many colleges, including FSU, have had
the dubious honor of being
named the No. 1 party school
in the nation. The trap here is
insidious and very seductive.
Before you realize it, you can
be majoring in partying and
even living to do it. Short-term
fun, long-term failure.
Solution: Go to parties and
party if you want. Just don't
live to do it. Remember one of
the reasons you came to college in the first place - to get
the ticket or pass to the rest of
your life.
3. I'll do it later:

Procrastination is a huge and
sometimes bottomless hole,
and it's tough to crawl out. We
put things off because it feels
good in the short term, and we
really do believe we will do it
later. Then we wind up virtually killing ourselves the last
week of school. (
Solution: Take all your
assignments and move them up
one or two weeks. Do just a little bit each week. By moving
up the due dates, you get it
done ahead of schedule and
have a cushion just in case. It
works.
4. Perpetual student:
College life can be a blast. For
some, it can become so much
fun that they never want it to
end.
Solution: Get everything
'you can out of your college
experience. Then get out of
your college experience and
live the rest of your life.
5. Buckling to the competition: You'll often hear statements such as "Only one out of
10 applicants gets into that
school, or graduate school or
program." These statements
alone are the beginning of the
weeding-out process. If this is
all it takes to keep you from
pursuing your goals, perhaps
you are not ready to be there.
Solution: Don't listen.
Don't buckle to the competition. Don't give it a place in

your thoughts. Decide to pursue your dreams, do the necessary things, and be one of the
ones who get in.

6. Love relationships:
Many people, including me,
met their spouse in college. It
can be a great. At the same
time, relationships can be a real
mess. During college, most of
us are still trying to figure out
this whole relationship thing,
and this search can lead to
some unhealthy situations. If
you find that you have dropped
everything else in your life
(friends, classes, family, etc.)
for a relationship you believe
you can't do without, it's time
to come up for air and a reality
check.
Solution: Learn about relationships. Choose wisely while
making a relationship part of
your life. Don't make it your
whole life.
7. No future: In the insulated world of college, it's very
easy to forget about the future
and live as if there is none.
Meanwhile, the future is barreling down on top of you.
Solution: While you are
having one of the times of your
life, give some attention and
planning to the future. In this
way, when it gets here, and it
will arrive much quicker than
you can imagine right now, the
future will be a good place to

Ken Taylor
The Eagle Eye
"I'm going to get wasted
tonight..." "It's okay I only drink
on the weekends" "I don't drink
the hard stuff, just beer and
wine..." We all know people
who might have said "I'm going
to...It's okay...." They are the
ones that typically break out the
beer bong at parties and are usually the first ones to pass out.
Did you know last year
alone 360,000 out of 12 million
undergraduate students in our
nation's colleges died from
excessive alcohol use just
because they thought it was
okay that they weren't drinking
the "hard stuff?" This is becoming a grim and all too familiar
statistic on our college campuses and Bernie McGrenahan is
out change this statistic.
Appearing for the first time
at Lock Haven University, last
Thursday, comedian Bernie
McGrenahan used his comedy
to relay an inspiring, yet sobering message entitled "Beware of
the Binge."
After a brief comedy sketch
about college life, McGrenahan
began the story of how he
became sober. His drinking
started when he was about 13
years old. Every now and then

While in jail, McGrenahan
he would sneak into his father's
liquor cabinet and steal a bottle had time to think about what his
of beer. As he grew older his life was like at that moment and
drinking became more excessive he didn't like it. His message to
and more of a problem, until one students in attendance was to be
day he realized that he was smart at parties. He said that
drinking too much and decided alcohol was a leading factor in
the three major causes of death
to cut back.
(accidents, homicide, and suiBeing the oldest in the family, he soon realized that his cide) in males ages 16-25. 52
percent of males and 39 percent
younger brother was also partying too much and coming home of females drink excessively,
When McGrenahan according to McGrenahan, who
drunk.
approached his brother about the has met people whose lives have
partying and the drinking his been affected by the results of
brother punched him and told excessive drinking. He spoke of
him to leave him alone. Stunned a student who on his 21st birththat his brother punched him, day was with his friends and
McGrenahan went to the local took 21 shots of alcohol, passed
bar. After spending several out, and died in the bar as a
hours at the bar, McGrenahan result of alcohol poisoning.
McGrenahan hopes that his
thought that he should reconcile
with his brother. Upon returning message will not only inspire
home, McGrenahan found sevpeople to not drink, but make
eral police cars outside of his people think about what binge
house and his sister outside in drinking could do to a person's
tears.
life.
When asked what was going
If you or somebody you
on he soon learned that his know has said, "I'm going to get
brother had taken a gun from his wasted tonight..." "It's okay, I
stepfather's gun rack and shot don't drink the hard stuff..." or
himself. Months after his broth"I only drink on weekends..."
drinker's death, McGrenahan's
seek help. Beware of the binge,
ing became more excessive. At and don't become a statistic.
the age of 26, McGrenahan was
spending six months in jail for
three DUIs and failure to appear
in court.

go-

Need help? Wellness Center
will be open early next month
Lisa Schropp
The Eagle Eye
Have you ever had a problem that you could not handle
yourself and needed someone to
talk to about it? Every day there
are many young adults who are
'going through difficult experiences and need support from
Mothers in order to make it
'through them. This year three
Lock Haven students are setting
out to create a center, in which
people can get the help that they

volunteer hours or just want to
help out are always welcome to
get involved with the Wellness
Center. Meetings are held every
at 7:30
in Smith

Hall Rec Room. Students can
also call Max McGee, the coordinator, at 893-2023 for more

information.

This week at The Roxy
September 14-20

"' * ' '
li

instructions. :A conductor and engineer
rushed in and overpowered-him. As they
waited for police, they asked him
j he responded
thought he was going,
"Wherever the train takes me."

JUST TAKE ME BACK TO MY CELL

convic't

on an outdoor
into a portable toilet to <
nature. While he was sitti
picked it up with a pnei
began to haul it away. C
for a clean escape, the convict
help and was removed.

Efren Cirilo, Holly Young,
and Corry Cass are planning on
setting up a Wellness Center as

East Main Street
Lock Haven
www.roxymovies.com
Hotline: 748-ROXY

h

h

b

ly vid
Jolcne,
Wash.,
family,

'

,

.

:nsed danger, trampled hin
BEEEEP! BEEEEP! OUT OF THE WAY! whv.
d, "smashed his rifle t(
His car developed mechanical problems that and, po..
prevented it from moving forward, b ut the smithereens.
driver was aruiou* tO f «efeJtbme«First, he.j
knelt in front of a church and prayed. Then. THINK I'LL GET SOME COFFEE
he got into his car and started driving in AIEEEE! A worn. n opened the door to thi
reverse down the busiest; streets in Pekin, pantry in her apartn
Vienna
III. A policeman soon stopped him and • attacked by 100 bats. They apparently got in
charged him wilh'rWkleW driving. Thecar through an open window. The woman
:
*
was towed.
calmed down.
; '

-

Show Times:
Fri: 7. 9:30 Sat: 2, 7,9:30 Sun: 2,7 Mon-Thur: 7

'

993*

PER"*""

.

A

.need.

"part of their Health Motion at
Worksite Class with Dr. Neff.
By October, their goal is to have
the center open in Woolridge
Hall Sunday through Thursday
from 6 to 10 p.m.
The Wellness Center will be
available to assist students with
anything that is troubling them.
Drug and alcohol abuse, eating
disorders, depression, stress,
grief, rape, and physical health
are some of the issues that the
Wellness Center will be focusing on.
In order to get the Wellness
Center up and running by
October, more volunteers are
needed. Any students who need

k

-

• •'

_

has^

200 1
r

Attacks spotlight Nostradamus

Around Campus Asks:
What did you do to help the
victims of the terror attacks?

Barbara Rose
Chicago Tribune

"We can't physically
go there to help out, so
I came up with the idea
of the food drive at
Bentley."
~ Dominick DiSalvo,

versions of a cryptic and apocalyptic verse were circulating
widely last week, purporting to
be from Nostradamus' writings,
which were originally in French.
When the e-mails started
popping up in the inbox of Eric
Estabrooks, a Chicago database
he
used
programmer,
Google.com to search on
"Nostradamus" only to find that
most of the top sites were inaccessible, apparently because too
many people were trying to get
on them.
A persistent Estabrooks confirmed that the e-mailed verse he
received was identical to a verse
composed and posted on the
Web in a discussion about reason versus superstition. The
writer's intent was to debunk
Nostradamus' prophetic powers.
"Everyone, please, use a bit
of common sense before you
e-mails,"
false
forward
Estabrooks chided in his own email reply to senders.
His conclusion?
"People are looking for some

An example of a false

prediction
The Internet's vaunted
"viral" ability to spread obscure
supposedly written by
information rapidly helped to
fuel interest last week in the
mmm
H * Mm
writings of a 16th century figure
"In the City God there will be a great
whose writings some consider
Two
torn apart by
prophetic,
Michel
de
Nostredame,
known
as
chaos, while the
Nostradamus.
ranked high
the great leader will succumb.
"I donated money
on a list of the keywords typed
because I feel that it
The third big war will begin
into search engines when people
indirectly affects me,
flocked online for news after the
the big city is burning"
terrorist attacks, according to
and it's the least I can
Nostradamus 1654
ComScore
a
Networks,
do."
Chicago-based firm that moni-Brandi Jones, junior
tors Internet behavior.
It's hardly surprising that
kind of comfort and external the top 30 search keywords were
surfers searched on such words
validation in anything suggestvariations on the names of news'
as "CNN," "World Trade
ing that the attack was part of outlets, mainly broadcast.
Center" and "news"-the top
"My sorority, ZTA, is
some plan over which they have
"If you're watching TV and
three search terms during the
control,"
no
he
said.
mentions bin Laden
somebody
making cards to be
three hours after the attack,
ComScore's
and
you
meanwanted
to find out
Fulgoni,
sent to the families
to
ComScore.
according
while, said people turned to the more," Fulgoni said, "what betand volunteers in New
"Pentagon" ranked fourth.
Internet after the crash to ampliter way?"
York City."
But Nostradamus?
fy reports they were getting
His name ranked eighth,
-Angela Lizonitz,
from other media. Nearly half of
after Osama bin Laden, the
right
sophomore
terrorist leader whose followers
are suspected of orchestrating
the attack.
"Nostradamus had appeared
"I thought by donating
as a search term previously, but
even
money,
though it
there were 50 times the number
was a little bit, would
of entries for his namein search
help out a lot."
engines after the attack comChuckie Bechdel,
pared with the same period a
week earlier," said ComScore
ARIES (March 21 to April 19)
through some knotty situations. Watch out
CEO Gian Fulgoni.
After much traveling this year, you're due for distractions from well-meaning supportE-mail added heat to the
for some settled time with family and
ers that could slow things down,
Nostradamus frenzy. Various
friends. Use this period to check out situa- SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21)
tions that will soon require a lot of serious Consider spending more time contemplatdecision making.
ins the possibilities of an offer before optTAURUS (April 20 to May 20)
ing to accept or reject it. But once you
Keep that keen Bovine mind focused on
make a decision, act on it.
your financial situation as it begins to
SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December
undergo some changes. Consider your 21) You're in a very strong position this
money moves carefully. Avoid impulsive
week to tie up loose ends in as many areas
investments.
as possible. Someone close to you has
GEMINI (May 21 to June 20)
advice you might want to heed.
You'll need to adjust some of your financial
CAPRICORN (December 22 to January
now
that
plans
are
things
changing
19) Congratulations. This is the week
more
Wednesday, September 26 @ 8 p.m.
quickly than you expected. All the facts
you've been waiting for: After a period of
The Black Crowes Listen Massive Tour
you need haven't yet emerged,,so move causudden s1o and fuful starts, your plans
cin now mcfve ahead with no significant
tiously.
CANCER (June 21 to July 22)
disruptions.
Monday, October 22 @ 7p.m.
Personal and professional relationships
AQUARIUS (January 20 to February 18)
'dominate
this
to
period.
Try
keep
things
You're in an exceptionally strong position
NBA Preseason:
uncomplicated to avoid misunderstandings
this week to make decisions on many stillPhiladelphia 76ers vs. Washington Wizards
that can cause problems down the line.
unresolved matters, especially those
LEO (July 23 to August 22)
involving close personal relationships.
That elusive goal you'd been hoping to
PISCES (February 19 to March 20)
claim is still just out of reach. But someFriday, October 26 @ 6:30 p.m.
The new moon starts this week off with
thing else has come along that could prove
some positive movement in several areas. A
The Pledge of Allegiance Tour
just as desirable, if only you would take the special person becomes a partner in at least
time to check it out.
Featuring Slipknot, System of a Down, Mudvayne,
one of the major plans you'll be working
VIRGO
(August
23
to
September
22)
This
on.
Rammstein, and American Head Charge
is
a good time to get away for some much
Tickets go on sale at 6 p.m. Friday, September 21
needed rest and relaxation. You'll return BORN THIS WEEK:You work hard and gel
things done. You also inspire others to do theit
refreshed and ready to take on the workbest. You would do well heading up a major corplace challenge that awaits you.
Sunday, November 11 @ 7:30
poration.
LIBRA (September 23 to October 22)
(c)
Bob Dylan: Live and in Person
2001 King Features Synd., Inc.
Confidence grows as you work your way
Tickets are available at the Bryce Jordan Ticket Center, select Uni-Mart ticket outlets, Commonwealth Campus ticket outlets, or by calling 1-800-863-3336, or online
■»
at www.bjc.psu.edu

Nostradamus:

thunder,

of

brothers

fortress endures,

when

-

HOROSCOPES
for the week of September 25

-

Upcoming events

p\

'2i

The show must go on

.

jgj

——

Despite the events of the past two weeks, the Emmy Awards will air
early next month after being postponed due to terrorist attacks
The show will go on, but
the show won't be the same.

Delayed

by the terror

attacks on Manhattan and
Washington, the 53rd Annual

Prime-Time Emmy Awards
have been rescheduled for
broadcast on CBS from the
Shrine Auditorium in Los
Angeles on Sunday, October
7 (8-11 p.m. live ET/delayed
PT). The new date was
announced September 14 by
the
the
network
and
Academy of Television Arts
& Sciences.
After lengthy discussions,
the organizations decided not
only to delay the awards
show but to present a program different in tone and
approach than the one originally prepared. Traditionally,
the Emmys are a tribute to
the television industry; this
year, the industry will join
the nation to reaffirm the
Americans.
of
spirit
Executive Producer Don

Mischer and his production
team were working on a program to demonstrate respect
and the solidarity between

ers across America who are
dealing with the tragedy.
Further details will be
announced next week as they

the TV community and view-

become available.

WISE
CHIROPRACTIC &
REHABILITATION

CENTER

j



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748-7182

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September 21, 2001

Page 9

Eagle Eye

�Number after title denotes
position on last week's charts*
Tod 10 Pod
1. Alicia Keys

Tallin" No. 1
I. Jennifer Lopez "I'm Real"

4

Janet "Sqmeone To Call My
)ver"

No. 12

I. Blu Cantrell "Hit Em Up

Jtyle (Oops!)" No. 3
>. Eve feat. Gwen Stefani
Let Me Blow Ya Mind" No. 3
». Jagged Edge with Nelly
Where the Party At" No. 7
Usher "U Remind Me" No.

8. Staind "It's Been Awhile"
No. 12
9. Train "Drops of Jupiter"
No. 10
10. Lifehouse "Hanging By a
Moment" No. 11
Top IQ
Albums
!• Various

artists "Now
No. 1
Alicia Keys "Songs in A
inor" No. 3
NSYNC "Celebrity" No. 2
The Isley Brothers feat,
.maid Isley AKA Mr. Biggs

The New Breed
Bit

Got A Life by Terri
Hi, Kenny. Looks like
your parents' garage sale
is a success.

Uh, no thanks.
Hey, what's this?

if I don't
sell 'er, I can
take lessons.

Says

,

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some
Yup. Wanna buy
sno-domes?
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My Mom's
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me on this.

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2. Toby Keith "I'm Just Talkin
About Tonight" No. 2
3. Keith Urban "Where the
Blacktop Ends" No. 4
4. Cyndi Thomson "What I
Really Meant to Say" No. 8
5. Jo Dee Messina
"Downtime" No. 7
6. Brooks & Dunn "Only in

MHONK IF

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10. Jennifer Lopez' J.Lo" No.
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2. The Family

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1. 3000 Miles To Graceland
i. The Wedding Planner
i. Down to Earth
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I. Unbreakable
*. Recess: School's Out
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2. Chocolat
3. 3000 Miles

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"John Wilkes Booth went down in history as the man who assassinated
President Abraham Lincoln. He was well-known before that, though, as a
matinee idol. He was especiallypopular with women, from whom he receive
a hundred fan letters a week."

1. POLITICS: In which U.S. city did the
political machine called Tammany Hall com
to power?
2. PRESIDENTS: Who took office as U.S.
president in April 1789?
3. GENERAL KNOWLEDGE: Which U.S.
state's nickname is the First State?
4. MOVIES: What movie star died before
finishing the movie "Something's Got to
Give?"
5. TELEVISION: What was the name of the
character on a TV campaign said, "Give a
hoot; don't pollute"?
6. ART: What French impressionist painted
more than 300 pictures of the same lily pads?
7. HISTORY: Who declared himself
supreme head of the Church of England in
1534?
8. GEOGRAPHY: Where is the sacred
Ganges River?
9. ANIMALS: What is the largest species of
deer?
10. LITERATURE: What was the native
land of writer James Joyce?

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Test Drive-

Classifies
Spring Break 2002Travel with STS, America's
#1 Student Tour Operator to
Jamaica, Mexico,
Bahamas or Florida.
Promote trips on-campus to
earn cash and free trips.
Information/Reservations
1-800-648-4849 or

#1 Spring Break Vacations!
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Bahamas & Florida.
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meal plan.
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Now hiring Campus Reps.
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ON US!
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Earn free trips and cash.
Choose from 8 destinations.

TakeafrSfiGRE, MCAT,
LSAT, GMAT, or CPA Exam.
Tests will be given on
Saturday, September 29th
at 8:30 a.m.
Sign up in Career Services,
Akeley 114,
by Wednesday,
September 26th.

Job Choices 2002- Career
Planning; Diversity; Business;
Science, Engineering &
Technology editions are now
available in Career Services,
Akeley 114.
Copies are FREE
while supplies last.

Classifieds Wanted
Classifieds Wanted
Classifieds Wanted

'

Greatest Hits Music
7388
101 E Main 748-"*'
Sublet needed
one, single bedroom out offour
in a huge house next to campus
and Doc's. $1200 for Jan-May
plus some utilities. Call Kelly
at 748-2315
Anyone interested in joining the
LHU Modem Dance Company?
Practices are held in Rogers Gym
from 7-8 p.m. every Tuesday,

Leslie, you are the flossiest

Jana- I'm never smoking
again!! Jill

roommate!

ZLAM, Teresa
Mary Beth, Cheryl, and ClarkThank you for taking care of
me Friday night! I love you all.

Megan
Kate: Where the heck are you?
Your scary big

Personals Wanted
Personals Wanted

Personals Wanted

Personals Wanted

Personals
Scotty, Wanna get in on the
pool? Mary Beth
Crazy 8's- I'm so glad we're
back together! Hope everything
is going well so far!
ZLAM- Amy (the problem
child)

Good luck all LHU sports!
Best wishes from the AST
Sisters!
Clark, What are ya doin? I love
you, Megan

MDW- I will be here for you
today, tomorrow and foreverno matter where you are. Love,
H

Little Turtle- Keep your head
up! TLAM, Andrea
Go Greek!

WANTED
CLASSIFIEDS

and

PERSONALS

WANTED!!

Sunshine, I just
Superman

What happens when foot goes
into mouth? Heather squirms

Marc- Thank you for telling me
stuff even when things can be
tough. I appreciate that.

RRFJr- Thank you for letting
us visit you last weekend. I
hope your back feels better. Be
careful ofthose helicopter
rides.
Kelly, Thank you for talking to
me the other day and for being
such a great friend. I hope your
past weekend was fun. Hopefully I'll get to meet him next
time. Lets have some fun together this weekend. ZLAM,
Bailey

Look out Kentucky because I
am on my way. Maybe not
today but soon. I promise. PA
loves you.

410- Wood Chuck Chuck is
special only on Thursday! I
Love, Melissa
Jill, Thanks for the exciting
night on Friday. Getaway cars,
hiding in the bushes, jello
shots. You're a dork, but I still
love you. ZLAM, Bailey

Mary Beth, Just let go of him!
Love ya, Megan

Cows Rock! Yeah Kim your 1ittie £ Love, Lisa

To my £razy pledge classwe're no longer U.B's! ZLAM,
Teresa

Thanks Stephanie -Lamar
Ballard

Kristy & Nicole- Love you
guys! -Andrea

Sweethearts of Tri-Sigma;
Thanks for a great dinner and a
fun night. £ Love, The Sisters

Little Melissa, No more passing out at the bar! Love ya,
Megan

Rush AXP

|

,

T~ So glad we did this
-ZLAM L

Craig, Wanna go out on the
roof? MB

Ang, Miller, Jen, & Heather-

Adam, BIG, BIG....GUS?
Mary Beth

BJ-1 can't wait to see you
today! KML

Mary Beth- Big.Big

Clark, What are you doing?
Love you, Finn

SnuggleBear sends big bear
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SnuggleBunny.

Becky- Any new questions for
the Biomech wiz downstairs?
I Julla Kelli
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thoughts, my heart and my
prayers. I love you. Boober
Ryan, You know that you love
me! Megan

Doug, You're my favorite in
the house. Megan

Shawn Nugert- are we done at
the Bon Ton yet? I'm starving!
2 Love, Melissa

Clark 0.(my God!) eat the
stuffing and be happy!! Boone?
Naomi

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and you will find what you
want.

Let's go AET! Love- Carrie

Clark, Doug, Ryan, and BrainThe Zeta Betas missed you
guys over the summer! Love,
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Little Melissa, Happy 21st
Birthday! Love ya, Megan
Ira- Are you excited for next

Tina- Lets have a belly dance
recruitment party!! I Love,
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ZTA New Sisters, I promise it
will be worth the wait. Love,
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Rush ZZZ
Set sail with Tri Sigma

Health Science Club ExecYou're doing a great job! Keep
it up! -Andrea
Melissa, Jess, Cupo- This
weekend was a blast! Can't
wait for Clarks! I Love, KimZ.

410: When will I see you
again? Can't wait to spend time
together this weekend! But lets
not start so early! £ Love,
Megan
Cagno- Hey girl you're the
best! Thanks £ Love, Melissa

Leah & Jenny- 25 cents or a
$1? Andrea
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who signed our banner for New
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hellos.
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Jen & Miller, Shhh....use your

Angie, How was that drink?
Suz

Bring your classifieds
and personals
to the Eagle Eye
located in the PUB
by Tuesday 3 p.m.

Kerri- We have to hang out
more often! I miss you! -Your

Congrats to the sisters of AST
who had a GPA of a 3.5 or
higher last semester! LoveCarrie

NikiNicole: We miss you- we
need to get together some time!

Wednesday, and Thursday. All are Happy Birthday Angie Marie!
welcome. Bring yourknowledge of Love, your cous
jazz, tap, ballet or gymnastics and
34: Congratulations on becomput yourtalent to use!
ing legal. I can see 'em line
up.
The Interfraternity Council
coordially invites males of all
Congrats Chubb!! Love, Jenn
years to a cookout on Saturday
event
September 22nd. The
will
take place on the lawn between Naomi, I don't have to take
High Hall and McEntire Hall this I'm leaving!!! ZLAM,
and will last from 1-5 p.m. We Megan
will also play wiffle ball and
each Fraternity will speak on Have a happy and safe weekeach other's behalf. Hope to see end LHU.
you there.
Jess: Good luck as the Host of
Havenscope. I Love, Megan
Have a good

weekend
Lock Haven
University!!

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my shoulder- Kelli

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Pennsylvania hunters gear up for
50th archery season in the state

Nicholas Trumbauer
O&R Editor
I would like to take this
opportunity to introduce myself.
name
is
Nicholas
My
Trumbauer, and I am the editor
of the outdoors page. From
time to time I would like to
share with you things I find
important. So if you would do
me the pleasure of reading my
message and if you feel like you
need to respond, please write to

-



HARRISBURG
Bowhunters land" antlerless licenses have
statewide are eagerly waiting been replaced by "unsold"
for
the
of antlerless licenses. The primary
opening
Pennsylvania's 50th archery difference between the two
deer season on Saturday, Sept. license types is that the private
29. Most of them, though, problands restriction has been
ably are more interested in par- removed. A hunter can harvest
ticipating in the season than antlerless deer on public or private lands with all antlerless
pondering this primitive season's longevity.
licenses.
The Commonwealth's first
Another change bowhunters
archery season was a product of will encounter this year is that
legislation signed by Gov. John they will be sharing the woods
S. Fine. Held in 1951, the seawith more deer hunters during
son was for bucks only and had their season, which runs from
5,542 participants, 33 of whom Sept. 29 to Nov. 10. Last year,
the early flintlock antlerless
reported taking a buck. The season was expanded to either-sex deer season ran for three days
hunting in 1957, and archers concurrently with the archery
harvested 1,358 deer, including season. This year, an expanded
376 bucks.
flintlock muzzleloader antlerLast year, bowhunters had less deer season will run from
their most productive season Oct. 13-20.
ever in the Commonwealth's
In addition, a new "special
million,
about
including
forests and woodlots by harvestfirearms antlerless season" will
277,000 antlered bucks. Hunters
ing 78.522 deer. This fall's sea- run from Oct. 18-20 for resident
who seek out those areas where
son looks to be just as promisjunior and senior license holddeer are feeding and bedding
ers, persons who hold a "dising.
will increase their chances of
"Our bowhunters
took abled person permit" (to use a
a deer.
taking
38,453 bucks last year, similar vehicle) and residents who are
"Preseason
and in-season
to the previous year's archery
serving on active duty in the scouting play important roles
in
harvest," said Pennsylvania U.S. Armed Forces, as well as
any hunter's success," Alt said.
Game Commission Executive those who qualify for license
"Given our situation this year
Director Vern Ross. "But more and fee exceptions under section
with drought and forest pests,
importantly, they shot 40,069 2706. Nonresident juniors and
it's more important than ever for
antlerless deer, which helped to those 65 years of age or older
hunters to scout. Counting on
stabilize the rate of growth of also may participate in this
last year's hot spot, instead of
our deer population last year. opportunity. All hunters must
scouting, could place you in an
Bowhunters made an important have a county-specific antlerless area where deer activity has
contribution.
license, as well as a general dried up. Scouting reduces
your
"But let's not lose sight of hunting license, to participate in chances of
missing the action. I
the fact that bowhunters are either ofthe firearms seasons.
can't emphasis that enough.
afield at the finest time of the
Unlike last year, however,
"The Game Commission
year. The colorful foliage, coolbowhunters may continue to depends on the more than
er temperatures and almost hunt bucks during
300,000 bowhunters to make a
unparalleled hunting opportunioverlap with the firearms or significant contribution in the
ties are enough to spoil any of flintlock seasons.
state's overall antlerless deer
us. It's no wonder the sport is
the
Game harvest. When hunters use their
Although
more popular than ever in Commission's statewide deer
doe license in October, it
Pennsylvania on its 50th population estimate is similar to
increases the likelihood that a
anniversary. 1 have no doubt last year's, the number of deer
buck won't waste effort breedbowhunting will continue to hunters may see afield may vary ing
deer that may well be hargrow in popularity. In fact, the locally. Local distribution may
vested in a later season. It also
sport seems to be drawing an differ as a result of availability
improves the probability that the
of fall foods that have been biggest and best bucks
increasing number of women."
will do
Last year, all hunters in impacted by drought, late spring
more ofthe breeding. It's imporPennsylvania harvested just frosts and gypsy moth caterpil- tant to remember,
too, that takover half a million deer from a lar defoliation. Forest pests such ing any deer out of the populapopulation numbering about 1.5 as the hemlock woolly adelgid, tion the early archery season
in
million. The large harvest was which is devouring hemlock conserves natural foods. Filling
necessary to stabilize herd stands in eastern counties, also your antlerless license
in
growth and was spurred by may influence deer movements. October
will improve our deer
expanded seasons and increased Beech bark disease also has population's breeding ecology
hunter opportunities to take impacted beechnut crops in and help to balance our excesantlerless deer. All are part of some
sive deer population with its
initiatives designed by Dr. Gary
"In an effort to suppress the habitat.
Alt, who heads the Game impacts of gypsy moths, the
For the seventh consecutive
Deer Game Commission contracted
Commission's
year, Westmoreland County led
Management Section, to bal- with the state Department of the
state with a 2000 archery
ance the state's deer herd with Conservation and Natural buck harvest of
1,840, up from
its habitat.
Resources to spray 12,348 acres
1999.
1,760 in
Following were
"Even though more than on 17 different State Game Berks, 1,643; Allegheny, 1,343;
500,000 deer were taken by Lands across the southern and
Butler, 1,339; and York, 1,322.
hunters last year, that's what was eastern regions," said Jack
Allegheny County continued
required just to stabilize the deer Byerly, Game Commission to pace
the state in antlerless
population," Alt explained. Forestry
Division
chief. deer
harvest in 2000 with 2,077.
"This year, when reproductive "Unfortunately, we currently do
It was followed by Berks, 1,631;
success is factored into the not know of any practical Chester, 1,435; York, 1,387; and
equation, we estimate hunters method of combating hemlock
Westmoreland, 1,354.
will find 1.5 million deer in woolly adelgid or beech bark
Game
Pennsylvania
huntable areas across the state disease in a forest setting."
Commission Executive Director
Drought also has impacted Vern
again this year.
Ross today
urged
of
field
"The progressive package
corn crops south of bowhunters to take only responseasons approved by the Board Interstate 80 and in northwestof Game Commissioners for this ern counties, which may result
year will help move us closer to in cornfields being harvested
balancing our deer populations earlier for silage. Under those
with the available habitat in circumstances, local deer movements will undoubtedly change,
many counties this year."
In 2001, the regulatory stage if for no other reason than the
heading into the fall archery loss of cover provided by corndeer season opener is structured fields.
somewhat similar to 2000's, but
Agency biologists believe
there are some differences. For the statewide deer population
Instance, last year's "private currently numbers about 1.5
748-9399

J

me.

Courtesy ofPGC JoeKosack

sible shots at deer to ensure a
quick, clean kill. For most, that's
a shot 20 yards or less at a deer
broadside or quartering away.
Archers should shoot only at
deer that are in their maximum
effective shooting range
the
furthest distance from which a
hunter can consistently place
arrows in a pie pan-sized target

-

"Hunters should respect the
animals they hunt," noted Ross.
"That starts with making
responsible shooting decisions.
If you're not sure, don't shoot."
The Game Commission also
is encouraging hunters to participate in the agency's Sportsmen
Policing Our Ranks Together
(SPORT) program, now in its
25th year. SPORT encourages
hunters to hunt ethically and
responsibly, and asks them to
get involved when they witness
Game and Wildlife Code violations occurring afield.
While bowhunting is genera
safe recreation,
ally
Game
Pennsylvania
Commission Hunter-Trapper
Education Chief Keith Snyder
reminded bowhunters to keep
safety first and foremost in
mind.
"Because of some of its
unique aspects, there are many
dangers to which bowhunters
are susceptible," Snyder said.
"They scale trees with strangelooking climbing devices, hunt
with razor-sharp broadheads
and often head into remote areas
ofthe forest to patiently wait for
deer to come by.
"The potential to get hurt
while bowhunting is an everpresent threat that all archers
must watch out for from the
time they enter the woods until
they leave. Carrying arrows
tipped with extremely sharp
broadheads and climbing trees,
especially in the dark, is very
serious business. Trip or slip
and the consequences may
plague you for the rest of your
life."

This summer I was able to
fulfill a dream I have had since I
left home for school. I had a
dog for a while before I started
college but was forced to let him
go because I was not able to
keep him in the dorms. I finally
found a place to live off campus
and I found two new best
friends, Jake and Jackson.
Jake is a Yellow Lab and
Jackson is a German Short
Haired Pointer. They are wonderfully rambunctious puppies.
I plan on training them to join
me when I go field hunting. As
part ofthat training they have to
get quite used to people so they
don't run offevery time we meet
a fellow hunter in the woods.
In an effort to achieve this
familiarity I took my dogs on
our vacation trip to Delaware
Seashore State Park. Upon
arrival I checked a map which
clearly marked off areas of the
beach were I could take my
dogs. I honestly planned to
keep them only where they were
allowed to be.
During our first trip to the
beach, we walked as far down
behind the dunes as we could to
what I thought was the last
entrance and the one that was
the section open to dogs. After
traveling up the walk way and
over the dunes I discovered that
I had misjudged our position on
the map. We were actually right
on the edge ofthe "people only"
section.
"Oh well," I thought, "we
will just walk along the edge
until we get to the 'dogs
allowed' section." We made it
about half way when a life
guard came running up to us
blowing is whistle and waving
his arms.
After he told me 1 could not
have my dogs on this beach I
explained our destination and he
allowed us to continue on our
way, but not without informing
me that I should never have
them on this beach again.
As I walked away I was sud
denly angered. Why should
people get their own beach?
The ancestors of dogs have
walked the earth as long as ours
have. Is the ocean not free for
all the creatures on this planet?
How dare we!
I am sure
humans do more damage and
leave more trash on beaches
than dogs ever will. Some day
our arrogance will come around
to haunt us.
As humans, we seem to
believe that the Earth is ours to

tread over and kick off or
destroy what every might be in
our way.
I believe that we must share
this Earth with our fellow creatures. The purpose of our existence is not to rule like an
unmerciful monarch, but to live
in harmony with our fellow
creatures.

Jake and Jackson loved the
beach and did not mind one bit
that they had to share it with a
number of surf-fishermen. In
fact my dogs have never banished any creature from their
presence. If only we could learn
from them.

NEWS
Fly Fishing Club
The Fly Fishing club held
their first meeting this past
week. The club is in the
process of planning several
trips to the Erie, Pa. area to
fish for Steele Head.
The club has set dates for
annual
fall gathering at the
its
Sieg Conference Center. This
year the group will gather on
Saturday, Sept. 29 through
Sunday, Sept. 30.
The next club meeting is
tentatively schedualed for
Wednesday Sept. 26 at 1:30
p.m. in Ulmer 222. If you are
contact
interested
Dr.
on
Calebrese
the third floor of
Ulmer.

Outing Club
The Outing Club is off to
a quick start already this

year. The group took their
first camping trip to Bald
XagJe State Park. While
there, they helped with the
activities of the Heritage
Festival. It was a wonderful
overnighter and everyone ate
well.
This weekend a few
members are heading out on
another camping trip to a
place called "the rocks" just
above state college.
It
should be a great experience.
Some members will be
working on the Thunderbird
Mountain bike trail in the
Pine Creek Valley
The Outing Club holds it
meetings every Monday at 8
p.m. in Raub Hall. Everyone
is welcome to attend.

.

Public Education
Forums
The LHU Biology Club
and the Fly Fishing Club are
sponsoring a series of public
forums to be held on campus.
The talks are taking place in
the PUB meeting room two
and are open to the public.
The first of these talks,
entitled "Watersheds: How
they work and why they are
important," will be held on
Sept. 24 at 7 p.m. The next
talk, to be held on Oct. 15,
will address Non-point
source pollution and control.

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Lock Haven

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Page 1

21, 2001

Bald Eagle boxing affected by terrorists attack
Jon Parrish
Eagle Eye Columnist
Veteran LHU boxing mentor, Dr. Ken Cox and his wife

returned to Lock Haven from
Albuquerque, NM on Tuesday,
Sept. 11 at 1 a.m.
at
They
arrived
Washington
Dulles
International
Airport on
United
Flight 7190 on
Monday evening, then on to
Harrisburg IAP on United
Express, returning to Lock
Haven via auto.
Hoping to sleep in Tuesday
morning they were awakened
by telephone calls from Mrs.
Cox's family in New Mexico,
checking to see if they had a
safe arrival.
"This was the beginning
of a very hectic week," said
Dr. Cox. "In addition to my
normal collegiate boxing
responsibilities, I had three
major international level boxing projects scheduled for this
fall semester."

After returning to Lock
Haven from teaching a threeweek International Olympic
Committee (IOC) Solidarity

High Performance Boxing
Coaches
'Certification
Course' in the People's
Republic of Bangladesh in
July 2000, Dr. Cox has been
hard at work constructing an
itinerary for two of their
national coaches to improve
their coaching and training
techniques in the United
States.
Arrangements were final-

ized for national team coaches, Jayanta Majumder and Aou
Sayed Bulbul to attend the
USA Boxing (USAB) Elite
Coaches Course at the U.S.
Olympic Training Center in
Colorado Springs, CO, Sept.
25 through Sept. 30.
They are then scheduled to
come to Lock Haven for practical training sessions in the
Bald Eagle boxing facility on
campus.
Following their stay in

Lock Haven they will spend
several days in selected amateur gyms in Philadelphia and
Wildwood,
N.J.,
before
departing for Bangladesh.
Cox received the good
news from the American
embassy in Dhaka, last
Monday, that the Bangladesh
coaches were granted visa's so
they can arrive in sufficient
time to attend the course in
Colorado Springs.
Cox stated that he was fortunate to have Bald Eagle
2000 National Collegiate
Boxing Association (NCBA)
champion and LHU graduate,
2/LT David Fields available to
assist the Bangladesh coaches
while they are in Colorado
Springs.
Fields
is a member of the
All-Army
Boxing
Team and
World
Class
Athlete
Program
(WCAP) at Ft. Carson, Colo.
He is hoping to make arrangements for them to spend an
additional two days at the AllArmy camp observing training
prior to coming back to Lock
Haven.
However, on the down
side, Cox had completed final
preparations to bring the 12member Ghana National boxing team to Lock Haven and
Wildwood, N.J., respectively,
to prepare for international
AIBA competition in Buenos
Aires, Argentina in midOctober.
After completing their 12day training cycle here and in
Philadelphia, Cox was scheduled to accompany the
Ghanaians to Argentina, serving as advisory coach. Cox
had taught an IOC Solidarity
Course in Winneba, located in
West Africa, in July 1999.
With the cooperation of the
International Amateur
an

<1?t)

tantiv in

Association (AIBA), Cox
arranged for their National
Team to compete at the Black
Expo in Indianapolis, IN, prior
to the 2000 Sydney Olympic
Games.
Even while national coach,
Jarvis Kafui Nyamevor was on
a UN "peace keeping mission"
in civil war torn Sierra Leone,
this past year, Cox kept in
constant communication finalizing the logistical requirements for brining the 15 person delegation to the U.S. and
make it happen.
Last Tuesday. Dr. Cox
notified that because of the
world situation and travel
restraints, it was not feasible
for the Ghana delegation to
come to the
USA at this
time. For all
intents,
the
has
program
been scrubbed
for the immediate future.
"Hopefully,
the world situawill
tion
improve and we will be able to
accommodate
our
good
friends from West Africa in
the future," said Cox.
Another blow to Cox's
"Peace Thru Sports" mission,
is the postponement for the
third time since 1999 the IOCCoaches
Solidarity
Certification Course he was
scheduled to teach for the
Federal Republic of India due
to political and religious strife
in the Kashmir Providence.
The location of the course
was
scheduled for the
National Training Center
located near Jammu, in
Northern India near the
Pakistan border.
Religious strife between
the Muslim and Hindu communities has caused the IOC
and AIBA to terminate 10CSolidarity trips to that area.
Cox was scheduled to teach
there this coming December.
The host for the course, the

.

f*

,,

National Olympic Committee
(NOC) of India is hopeful that

Cox can teach the Elite Level
Course next year, and if necessary move the location of the
course to a safer location at
the Stadium in New Delhi.
Cox began his international crusade back in the early
70's, taking coaches and educators to the 15 Republics of
the former Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics (USSR)
under the auspices of the
Association of International
Cultural Exchange Programs
(AICEP) "Peace Thru Sports"
program, headquartered in
Montreal, Canada.
Cox made 33-trips inside
the former Soviet Union and
three trips to Havana, Cuba,
from 1974 thru 1995, to study,
lecture, conduct research and
serve as an educational leader
for AICEP.
Since 1995, Cox, an Elite
Level IV USAB Coach has
conducted
IOC-Solidarity
Boxing Coaches Certification
course in Jamaica, Ghana,
North Korea, the Bahamas,
Bangladesh, and twice to the
Fiji Islands.
"Naturally I'm disappointed with the canceling of the
Ghana and India projects, but
my disappointment is miniscule in comparison to the
thousands of innocent people
whose lives were eradicated in
the mind numbing horror and
profound insanity of the WTC,
and Somerset
Pentagon,
County bombings.
We must remember that as
members ofthe world community, we should not respond to
this tragedy
irrationally.
Cooler heads must prevail and
every possible precaution
must be seriously considered
so that no terrorist incident
like these can ever occur
again.
The fact remains, 'freedom
itself was attacked on
September 11'," said Cox.

World championships
postponed, McMann
awaits shot at title
F1LA, the international
wrestling federation, announced a
postponement of the 2001 World
Championships of Wrestling,
scheduled
for
originally
September 26-29 at Madison
Square Garden in New York City.
The announcement was made
in a letter, sent via FAX, to all
national wrestling federations and
FILA Bureau members, dated
September 15, and signed by
FILA President Milan Ercegan.
USA Wrestling formally
requested from FILA a postponement of the 2001 World
Championships ofWrestling, in a
letter sent via FAX on September
According to Ercegan's letter,
the postponement was approved
Executive
by the FILA
The reason for the postponein "respect for the families ofthe persons who died or disappeared and for security reasons
for the participants in the
Championship."
ment was

The letter indicated that "the
place and date of the
Championships will be decided at
the end of September." It also indicated that "we foresee the
Championship to be held in
October or the beginning of
November.
Prior to the postponement, a
total of 693 athletes from 82
nations confirmed with USA
Wrestling that they intended on
participating in the competition,
making it the largest World
Championships ever.
LHU's Sarah McMann was
set to compete in the competition.
McMann was to be the USA
representative in the 136.5-pound
weight class.
She earnedthe spot by pinning
Tonya Evinger of Missouri Valley
College in 4:18 at the 2001 U.S.
National Championships.
McMann wrestled for the
Sunkist Kids wrestling club at
nationals.
She also competes on the
LHU wrestling team.
new

Lady ruggers start
off with Bloomsburg
The LHU women's rugby action picked up as LHU scored
stepped on the pitch last four times.
Scorers for LHU were Jade
Saturday to compete against
Bloomsburg University, which Fatool, Gina Lavin, Amy
was their first game of the seaDaniels and Shelly Levy respecson. Although the game was just tively. Starting rookie, Vicki
a scrimmage, the outcome ofthe Hoover, also served as a great
game was a good indication to asset to the team. LHU managed
the team ofhow the rest oftheir to keep Bloomsburg from scorseason will go, winning 20-0.
ing for the rest of the game,
No one scored in the first which brought the final score to
half of the game. Both teams a shutout of 20-0.
displayed aggressive play, howIn support of America after
ever LHU took the upper hand the recent happenings, the lady
when it came to lineouts. LHU ruggers held a car wash Sunday,
pack player, Melissa Domingo, at Papa John's and donated half
won all LHU lineouts and manof their proceeds to the
aged to spoil almost every ball American Red Cross.
tossed in by Bloomsburg.
The next game is today at 8
i. at Millersville University.
team

.i....,'f

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1

21, 2001

13

Nichols earns PSAC
women's soccer honor
Becky Nichols was selected as the Pennsylvania State
Athletic
Conference's
Women's Soccer Player of the
Week for games ending
September 16.
Nichols, a junior midfielder, scored the game winner
against Eclinboro University
in double overtime, giving the
Bald Eagles the 2-1 triumph
and their first conference win
of the season. She also added

two goals and an assist in
Lock Haven's 8-1 victory over
Gannon University this past
Saturday.
Nichols, a 2000 AllAmerican, is currently among
team scoring leaders with four
goals and two assists.
The women's soccer team
is 5-1 and 1-0 in the PSAC.
Up next will be a home contest
against
Kutztown
University tomorrow at3 p.m.

Conference Player of the
Week honors for contests ending September 16.
Nuzum, a senior outside

hitter for the Bald Eagles,
sparked Lock Haven's comefrom-behind victory over conference
rival
Edinboro
University by tallying 15 kills,
14 digs, and three solo blocks.
Lock Haven fell behind
by two games before capturing the final three and its first

j

l

gaag

/ P': 1

Becky Nichols

(112).

Lauren Nuzum

Maguire was in net for the
Haven and his counterpart Bryan
Rudden posted 16 saves.
"We scored two goals and I
was pretty comfortab' in the
back. This year's team is so much
stronger. We can only stop ourselves this season. It's definitely
looking very, very good," said
Morten Brorby.

From the Eagle E e Staff

Eagle Wing
Snack Bar K|
Hours of Operation
8am-4pm Mon.- Fri.
Thank You everyone for your
participation in the Food Fair.
You can still enjoy any of our
daily menu items during regular
store hours.

H A
Haven Activites Council
is sponsoring showings of a

"KNIGHTS TALE"
on Saturday Sept. 22
at 7 and 9pm
wil} be putting on an
exhibition of basketball skill

Sept. 29th at 7pm

31
85
37
54
47
60

10
20
100
91
46
64

2-0 61
2-0 68
2-0 63
1-1 43
0-1 8
0-3 35
0-2 37

36
18
42
41
43
95
60

1-0
2-0
0-3
1-2
1-1
1-2

9
0
0
0
0
0
0

-

7 7 13 7
0 10 14 0

Bloom.

from back page

The HARLEM WIZARDS

1-0 28
0-0. 0
0-0 0
0-0 0
Cheyney 0-0 0
Millers.
0-0 0
W. Chester 0-1 0
E.Stroud.
Kutztown
Bloom.
Mansfield

W-L Pts. OP
2-0 62 20

34
24

First Quarter
BLOOM- Johnson 64 pass from
Thompson (Quigley kick), 7:03
Second Quarter
LHU- Witmer 1 run (Miller kick), 7:01
LHU-FG Miller 47, 14:08
BLOOM-Forgione 5 pass from
Thompson (Quigley kick), 14:58
Third Quarter
BLOOM- Henry 1 run (Quigley kick),

:41
LHU- Carey 83 kickoff return (Miller
kick), :58
BLOOM- Arrastene Henry 1 run
(Quigley kick failed), 6:58
LHU- Caldwell 43 pass from Witmer
(Miller kick), 11:22
Fourth Quarter
BLOOM- Johnson 34 pass from

BLOOM

23

Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total offense

Passing
Fumbles-lost

Penalties-yards

52-294
196
490
23-11-3-2
4-29
1-1
8-60

LHU

14
29-93
147
240
22-11-1-0
4-35.8
2-2

8-35

Individual Statistics
Rushing: Bloom- Arrastene Henry 30195, Marques Glaze 17-99, Chris
Thompson 3-1, Doug Werner 1-1 Team
1- (-)2. LHU-Maurice Walker 23-84,
Melvin Kirby 11-30, Marcus Burkley 11,Bill Witmer 3- (-) 1; Team I (-)21.
Passing: Blooms- Chris Thompson
11-23-2-196. LHU- Bill Witmer 10-210-149, Marcus Burkley 1-1-0- (-)2.
Receiving: Bloom- Tierell Johnson 7156, Rocco Forgione 3-28, A.
Lechthaler 1-12. LHU- John Caldwell
6-85, Marcus Burkley 3-55, David
Motrin 1-9, Derrick Shields 1- (-)2.
Attendance: 3,550

-

AFCA/USA Today Division II
Top 25 Coaches Poll
Rank, school (1st)
W-L
1. Delta St. (Miss.) (26) 1 -0
2. North Dakota St. (1) 2-0

1-0-0
Slippery Rock
West Chester

Bloomsburg
Clarion
West Chester
California
Shippensburg

California
Millersville

Bloomsburg
East Stroud.
Shippensburg

Kutztown

LHU (6-0-0)

#13 LHU 8, Gannon 1

Graham

Shots: LHU 27, Wilmington 3
Corners: LHU 13, Wilmington 1
Goalkeepers: Paul Maguire (LHU)
90 min., 0 sv, 0 ga ; Bryan Rudden
(WC) 90 min.. 16 sv, 2 ga.

#5 LHU 2, Millersville 0
@ Millersville

Scoring: Nick Apostolou (LHU)
Andrew Battersby 1:00, Graham
Boyle (LHU) David Dallas 67:00
Shots: LHU 10, Millersville 6
Corners: LHU 4, Millersville 2
Goalkeepers: Paul Maguire (LHU)
90 min., 2 sv, 0 ga ; B.J. Cradlin
(MU) 90 min., 3 sv, 2 ga.

#8 LHU 4, Millersville 0

-

Millersville

-

2 2-4
0 0-1

Scoring. Erin McKasson (LHU)
unassisted 2:03, Katie Taylor (LHU)
Erin McKasson 9:54, Taylor (LHU)
Naomi Clarke 47:15, Taylor (LHU)
McKasson 57:23.

PSAC Standings
Conference Overall

LHU
IUP
Mansfield
East Stroud.
Shipp.
Bloomsburg
Slippery Rock
Millersville
Kutztown

Shots: LHU 16, Millersville 5
Corners: LHU 12, Millersville 0
Goalkeepers: Brandie Kessler (LHU)
90 min., 5 sv, 0 ga ; Liz Agro
(MU) 80 min., 4 sv, 4 ga; Carolyn
Matisick (MU) 10 min., 1 sv, 0 ga.

-

-

NS(

11-2
0 0-0

LHU (7-0-0)
Mill. (3-2-0)

-

LHU (6-1-0)
Mill.

-

-

Shots: LHU 20, Gannon 3
Corners: LHU 6, Gannon 0
Goalkeepers: Brandie Kessler (LHU)
90 min., 3 sv, 1 ga ; Laura Clarke
(G) 90 min , 2 sv, 8 ga.

@

'

Scoring: Andrew Battersby (LHU)
Boyle 71:57, Andrew
Battersby (LHU) Nick Apostolou
72:20.

10-1
5 3-8

Scoring: Naomi Clarke (LHU)
Erin McKasson 6:27, Clarke (LHU)
unassisted 9:10, Becky Nichols
(LHU) Katie Taylor 22:20, Erin
McKasson (LHU) Becky Nichols
22:59, Brooke Rangi (LHU)
McKasson 26:09, Kristin Lysiak (G)
unassisted 39:35, Joanna Bisphan
(LHU) McKasson 50:47, Nichols
(LHU) Lyndsay Violi 51:10, Kristi
Ward (LHU) Amy Dunn 56:06.

-

7-0-0
4-1-0
3-2-0
2-3-0
3-2-0
2-1-1
3-2-0
3-4-0
2-3-0

00-0
02-2

Will

Gannon (1-2)
LHU (5-1-0)

1-0-0
1-0-0
1-0-0
1-2-0
0-0-0
0-1-0
0-1-0
0-1-0

#5 LHU 2, Wilmington 0

-

A A/Adidas NCAA

1. Northern Kentucky
2. Franklin Pierce
3. San Francisco State
3 West Florida
5. Regis University (Colo.)
6. UC-San Diego
7. Tusculum (Tenn.)
8. LHU
9. Barry University (Fla.)
10. Truman State (Mo.)
11. Incarnate Word (Texas)
12. Bloomsburg
13. Ashland (Ohio)
14. Merrimack (Mass.)
15. Longwood College (Va.)
16 Belmont Abbey (N.C.)
17. Eckerd College (Fla.)
18 Cal Poly Pomona
19. Winona State (Minn.)
20. C.W. Post (N.Y.)
21. Mercyhurst College (Pa.)
22. Sonoma State
23. Southern Connecticut
24 Central Oklahoma
25. Christian Brothers

Ship. (4-2)
LHU (5-0)

3-0-0
1-0-0
1-0-0
1-1-0
1-1-0
0- 1-0
1- 1-0
0- 3-0
1- 2-0

6-0-0
5-1-0
6-1-0
4-2-0
5-2-0
4-2-0
2-2-0
0-7-0
5-3-0

Northwood

(Mich.) 44, Tusculum (Tenn.) 37,
Northeastern St.
3l[
(Okla.)
Midwestern St. (Texas) 26, C.W. Post
(N Y.) 23, Saginaw Valley St. (Mich.)
21, New Haven (Conn.) 18, Truman St.
(Mo.) 18, American Int'l (Mass.) 18,
Mesa St. (Colo ) 17, East Stroudsburg
14, Western Washington 13, Central
Missouri 12, Western Oregon 8,
Hillsdale (Mich.) 7, Northern Colordao
7, Winona St. (Minn.) 6, Angelo St.
(Texas) 6, Augustana (S.D.) 4, Mars
Hill (N.C.) 4, Indianapolis (Ind.) 3,
Central Oklahoma 3, Fairmont St.
(WVa.) 2, Virginia Union I.

0 1-1
12-3

Scoring: Shannon Spease (LHU)
Janelle Ebaugh 4:12, Spease (LHU)
Amy Hale 46:46, Carli Bordner (SU)
unassisted 56:03, Val George (LHU)
Kellie Kulina 60:06.
Shots: LHU 21, Shippensburg 3
Corners: LHU 14, Shippensburg 11
Goalkeepers: Tara Beach (LHU) 70
min., 3 sv, 1 ga ; Kira Fisher (SU)
70 min., 18 sv, 3 ga.

-

ESU (4-2)
LHU (6-0)

0 0-0
0 1-1

Scoring: Shannon Spease (LHU)
(penalty stroke) 41:57.

Shots: LHU 24, E. Stroudsburg 1

Others receiving votes: Lynn (Fla.),
Mesa State (Colo ), Bentley (Mass.),
Saint Mary's (Texas),
Northern
Colorado, Millersville.

Corners: LHU 13,E. Stroudsburg 3
Goalkeepers: Tara Beach (LHU) 70
min., I sv. 0 ga ; Kelly Wagner (ESU)
70 min., 20 sv, 1 ga.

-

-

STX/NFHCA Division
Top 10 Coaches Poll
PSAC Standings
West

League

Overall

LHU
2-0
IUP
1-0
Edinboro
1-1
Clarion
0-1
Cal
0-1
Slippery Rock
0-1
East
Kutztown
2-0
East Stroudsburg 1 -0
Millersville
1-0
WestChester
0-1
0-1
Cheyney
Shippensburg
0-2

8-5
3-7
8-6

8-7
3-9
4-2

,

LHU 3, Edinboro 2
©Edinboro
LHU(7-5)
Edinboro

19 28 30 30 15
30 30 22 18 6

-

- 23

LHU 3, Clarion 0
Clarion

LHU(8-5)

27 18 19
30 30 30

-

#2 LHU 1, East Stroud. 0

Pts.

696
671
3. UC Davis
2-0 641
4. Valdosta St. (Ga.) (1)2-0 609
5. Nebraska-Omaha
2-0 585
6. Catawba (N.C.)
2-0 539
7. Bloomsburg (Pa.)
1-0 515
8. Tuskegee (Ala.)
2-0 472
9. IUP
1-0 450
10. Pittsburg St. (Kan.) 2-0 429
11. North Dakota
2-0 426
12. West Georgia
2-0 414
13. Chadron St. (Neb.) 2-0 330
14. Carson-Newman
1-1 322
15. Grand Valley St.
2-0 294
16. NW Missouri St.
1-1 277
17. Slippery Rock
2-0 262
18.Kutztown
2-0 201
19. Missouri Western 2-0 151
20. Presbyterian (S.C.) 1-1 129
21. Arkansas Tech
1-0 113
22. Eastern New Mexico 2-0
67
23. Central Arkansas
2-0
61
24. Winston-Salem St. 2-1
58
25. Shepherd (WVa.)
2-0 45
Others receiving votes:

Conference Overall

4-0-0
6-1-0
4-1-0

Rank, school (1st)

Team Statistics
First downs

PSAC Standings

Overall

2-1-0
2-1-0
0- 2-0
1-0-0
0-0-0
0-1-0
0-2-0
0-2-0
0-2-0

Millersville
Edinboro
Kutztown
East Stroud.

#7 Bloomsburg 34, LHU24

Men
Battersby led the Haven to and Nick Apostolou helped out on
the victory by knocking in the second assist.
both goals, in a 30 second
"The guys believe in themspan during the second half.
selves and we are playing very,
"The two came in a span of very well. We deserve our nationminutes, you know that's how al ranking. It's nice to have," said
football (soccer) goes sometimes. Head Coach Rob Eaton.
I just kept my head up to get a
The Bald Eagles dominated
goal," said Battersby.
the game as they outshot
Boyle assisted on the first goal Wilmington, 27-3.

W-L Pts. OP
Cal.
0-0 0 0
IUP
0-0 0 0
Slip. Rock 0-0 0 0
LHU
0-0 0 0
Clarion
0-0 0 0
Edinboro 0-0 0 0
0-0 0 0
Shipp.

Last Week
Shippensburg 17, Millersville 7
Bloomsburg 34, LHU 24
Ithaca 29, Mansfield 21
Clarion 27, Tiffin 14
This week
Bloomsburg at Cheyney, 1:00
Clarion at Shippensburg, 1:00
East Stroudsburg at Shepherd, 1 00
Slippery Rock at Edinboro, 1:00
Millersville at Kutztown, 1:05
Mansfield at California, 7:00
LHU at IUP, 7:00

conference win of the season
at
Edinboro's
McComb
Fieldhouse.
For the season, Nuzum
leads the team in service aces
(22) and is second on the
squad in kills (126) and digs
The Lock Haven women's
volleyball team is 7-5 overall
and 1-0 in the PSAC Western
Division.
LHU will be at home this
weekend, hosting the LHU
and
Classic
on Friday
Saturday, September 21-22.

Conference
Slippery Rock 2-0-0
2-0-0
LHU

West

Nuzum nabs volleyball
Player of the Week honors
Lauren Nuzum, a member
of the volleyball team, merited
Pennsylvania State Athletic

PSAC Standings

PSAC Standings

- 03
-

Fantasy Sports
Eagle Eye Division
Rk Manager
Season Wk 1
1567
1567
1 vagilla
1512
2 Tripp's Tigers
1512
3 Gum Chewers
969
969
0
0
4 Eagle Eye
It's not too late to sign up, log on to
and join the Eagle

Rank, school, W-L (1st)
1.Bentley College (3-0)(2)
2.LHU (3-0)(7)
3. Bloomsburg (3-1)
4.1UP(4-1)
5. Mercyhurst College (4-2)
6.Assumption College (3-0)
7. East Stroudsburg (3-1)
8.Kutztown (4-2)
9.Longwood (3-5)
Tie.Shippensburg (3-1)
The STX/NFHCA Division II
National Coaches Poll is a listing of
the top 10 teams in Division II as
voted upon by NFHCA member
coaches. The next poll will be
released on Tuesday, September 18,
2001 The STX/NFHCA Division II
National Coaches Poll has no bearing
on selection to the 2001 NCAA
Division II Championship field.

Cross Country
Men's 6k
LHU 16, Clarion 41

I. Chris Cowan, LHU 19:13, 2. Chad
Lyons. LHU 19:30, 3. Mike Trumbull,
LHU 19:38, 4. Sven Kost, LHU 19:54,
5. Ean King, CU 19:57, 6. Chad Lloyd,
LHU 20:06.

Women's 5k
Clarion 24, LHU 31
I. Jen Berner, CU 19:26, 2. Jana
Kauffman, LHU 19:34, 3. Mel
Terwillinger, CU 19:37, 4 Kalrin
Olsen, LHU 19:58, 5. Kalie Szafran,
CU 20:14, 6 Meghan Johnson, LHU
20:17

back page

SDorts

Frida

*

INSIDE
Becky

Nichols
named Player
of the Week

See page 13

Field hockey on six game win streak
Suzanne McCombie
Eagle Eye Sport Editor
The No. 2 LHU field
hockey team is well on its
way to another amazing
season, after defeating
PSAC
competitors,
Shippensburg and East
Stroudsburg, in the past
week's play, bringing its
record

to

6-0, 3-0 in

PSAC play.
The East Stroudsburg
Warriors, who entered
Wednesday's game with
momentum after defeating
Bloomsburg for the first
time in 21 years, with a
tough foght lost to the
Bald Eagles, 1-0.
"It was a big win for
us," said Head Coach Pat
Rudy. "It was a really

nected with the goal was
because the Warriors were
prepared to play the best.
"Word's out that we
have a powerful attack, so
we know every time we
play, our opponents are
playing at their best," said
Rudy.
The Bald Eagles took
the aggressiveness of their
opponents and used it to
improve their game.

saw one shot and tallied it
as a save.

The Haven was once

again led by senior forward, Shannon Spease,
who able to connect on a
penalty corner early in the

second half. Spease has
been able to score in three
out of the six games
played. She has six goals

intense game."
The Bald Eagles were
able to outshoot the
Warriors, 24-1, despite the in six games.
ESU's
goalkeeper
team's inability to capitalsaw
all the
Kelly
Wagner
on
shot
ize
opportunities.
and
in
action
the
contest
reason
One
that the Bald
Eagles had trouble con- had 20 saves in the effort.
LHU's Tara Beach only

1

Bald
The
Eagles
defeated
Shippensburg
Saturday at Charlotte
Smith Field, 3-1.
Shippensburg became
the first team to score on
the
undefeated Bald
Eagles, but couldn't contain them long enough to
be the first to defeat them.

"Whether we are challenged or not in the game,
we are trying to improve
our level of play," said

Rudy.

3

LHU
Ship

The Haven was able to
penalty cor-

execute on
ners, which

produced all

of the goals in thc contest.
Spease was again the
leader with two goals
scored, while Val George
was able to put one in as
well.
"We executed out corners really well," said
Rudy. "That was key for

us."
The Haven out shot the
Red Raiders, 21-3, with a
14-11 advantage from the

- p/ioto courtesy of
Sports Info.

Senior Val George
handles the ball in
the game against
Shippensburg.
penalty corners.
Forward Carli Brodner
tallied
Shippensburg's
only goal of the contest
off a penalty corner midway through the second
half.
The Bald Eagles will
next
host
Houghton
College today at 4 p.m.
Pierce
and
Franklin
College Sunday at 1 p.m.

- photo courtesy of Sports Info.

Senior Shannon Spease breaks through the Shippensburg
defense on Saturday. Spease scored twice for the Haven. She also
scored the only goal against East Stroudsburg Wednesday.

Men's soccer undefeated Women's soccer moves to No. 8
Jared Guest

P.J. Harmer

Eagle Eye Staff Reporter

Eagle Eye StaffReporter

The men's soccer team
shut out Millersville on
the road 2-0 yesterday to
open up conference play.
The No. 5 Bald Eagles

recorded
their

sixth

The women's soccer
moved to eighth in the

team

country

,.

shutout in SOCCer
seven games this season.
Forward
Nick
Apostolou found the back
of the net in the first
minute of play to put the

Bloomsburg

1

,

r I : 'rMrSlillr 11'lit^BL^L^L^L^BMlW
LHU
-" 'A'
p/iofo courtesy of Sports Info.
Millersville
Freshman Andrew Battersby led the
Haven in the win over Wilmington College
Saturday. He had two goals in the contest.

. . ..

.1

-

i,ti

Golden Eagle's proved to
an
be
uneven

Volleyball

match. Right off the bat,
Lock Haven proved why

lead.

Three minutes out of the
half, Taylor scored her second goal of the game off an
assist from Naomi Clarke.
Taylor then ended the scoring 10 minutes later when
she scored again off an assist

4
0

from McKasson.

LHU led in shots, 16-5.
but dominated in corner
kicks, 12-0. Brandie Kessler
scored her first career
shutout for the Bald Eagles,
stopping five.

LHU
Gannon

8
1

_

Clarke scored off an

assist from McKasson at
6:27 and never looked back
as Lock Haven rolled to the
8-1 win. McKasson had a
goal and three assists in thc
game, while Clarke had two
Clarke's second came
three minutes after her first
one when she scored unassisted for a 2-0 lead.
Taylor assisted Becky

Nichols at 22:20 and
McKasson scored just 39
second later off an assist

from Nichols.
Three minutes later.
Lock Haven lit up the score:
board
when
again
McKasson assisted Brooke

Rangi lor a 5-0 lead.
Gannon broke

the

shutout at 39:35 when
Kristin Lysiak scored.
Minutes out of the half.
Lock Haven got right back
into the scoring mode.
Joanna Bisphan scored off
an assist from McKasson.
It only took the Haven
another 25 seconds to add its
next

goal. Nichols scored off

an assist from Lyndsay Violi
at 51:10.

Kristi Ward finished up
the scoring off an assist from

Amy Dunn at 56:06.
LHU had 20 shots in thc
game to Gannon's three.
Kessler stopped three in the
net for Lock Haven.

Football drops home opener, falls to 0-3

against Shippensburg at 4
p.m. The Haven stands at
7-0 overall, 1-0 PSAC.

game for the men's soccer team as they defeated
Wilmington College, 2-0
this past Saturday.

LHU
2
Wilmington 0

The LHU tournament
was cut short, as NY Tech

could not attend.

In what was suppose

be a tournament, just
turned out to be another

to

see MEN, page 13

Spikers clobber Clarion, 3-0
Tuesday night's match

dropped

the Northeast poll with C.W.

The second goal came
in the second half off the

up between the volleyball
team and the Clarion

scoring just two minutes into
the game when she netted
one from about 18 yards out.
Taylor, off an assist from
McKasson, scored right
before the 10-minute mark
to give The Haven a 2-0

Post (N.Y.) in third.
Millersville and Slippery
Rock round out the top five.
Lock Haven tore past
Gannon 8-1 and knocked off
Millersville 4-0 to run their
record to 6-1 overall and 2-0
in the PSAC.

assist.

Brooke Wiker
The Eagle Eye

goal and a pair of assists.
McKasson led off the

from the top spot to NO. 2 in

Haven up for good.
Andrew Battersby had the

six.
The Bald Eagles continue with strong conference play this Saturday,
as they host Kutztown for
a 1 p.m. start.
They are home again
on Tuesday to go up

,
...
Womens

with a pair
Soccer
of
wins
this past week and is also
ranked first in the NCAA
Division II Northeast poll.

Men > s

foot of midfielder Graham
Boyle in the 67th minute.
David Dallas crossed
the ball over to Boyle,
who volleyed it in from
the top of the 18-yard
box.
Paul Maguire had two
saves on the afternoon.
The Haven registered 10
shots to the Marauder's

Katie Taylor scored the
hat trick to lead the Bald
Eagles to their fifth straight
win. Erin McKasson, who
has been on a tear with three
goals and eight assists in the
past five games, added a

With a score of 29-18
in the first game, Clarion
began to make a comeback
despite sloppy play into the
basketball nets. However,

and. with more outstanding
play from the Bald Eagles,
game three cruised to an
30-19 victory, making the
final score of 3-0. Tuesday

after a time out by Lock
Haven, the girls pulled
themselves together and
put away the first game
with a score of 30-26.
Game two picked up a
much quicker pace and

evening's
victory
improved their record to 85 overall and 2-0 in the
PSAC West.

Up next for the Bald
Eagles is the LHU Classic
tonight

and

tomorrow.

Gregg Tripp
Eagle Eye Sports Editor

finally showed signs of life,
scoring as many points in the
game's third quarter as they
scored in the previous two

Big plays and bad penal-

contests.

ties were the story of the
game Saturday, as the football team fell 34-24 to
defending NCAA Division
No.
II runner-up
7
Bloomsburg.
The Bald Eagle offense

After a Bill Witmer oneyard touchdown carry and a
Jon Miller extra point, the
game was tied at 7-7 with
7:59 left in the second quarter, holding the Huskies in
check through most of the

first half.
After a Bloom missed
field goal, Witmer lead a
nearly flawless two-minute
drill before being stopped on
third-down at the Bloom 29yard line.

kickoff return to paydirt, putting the Bald Eagles back in

the game.
Bloom

would

score

again, but with 3:38 left in
the third, Witmer connected
on a 43-yard pass to John
Caldwell, making the scorfc

Jon Miller then connected on a 47-yard field goal 27-24 through three.
with 52 seconds left, giving
The Bald Eagle offense
a
would
get the ball inside
the Bald Eagles 10-7 lead
and tying the school distance Bloom territory twice in the
record, previously held by fourth, having drives enfJ
Matt Mapes (twice) and with a Kirby tumble and a
turnover on downs.
Charles Traber. Miller's previos long was 38-yards vs.
Witmer had his best
game ofthe season going 10Mansfield in 1998.
The kick also marked the 21 for 149yards and the lone
first time this season that touchdown.
they have led in any game.
Defensively, the team
The lead would not last played its worst game of the
LHU
#9 IUP
for long, however, as Bloom season, allowing 490 yards
took the ensuing kickoff of total offense to the
Game info: 7 p.m. @ George P. Miller Stadium.
down the field, scoring with Huskies.
Last week: lUP's game vs. New Haven was cancelled.
two seconds left in the half,
Robert Gliemi's 12 tackOpposing players to watch: QB Brian Eyerman, led the
Indiana offense with 401 yards,
les paced the Bald Eagles,
regaining the lead at 14-10.
Is, including 243 in the air
vs. Findlay. Two-time First Team AU-PSAC selection
Bloom took only 41 secand Rob Carey contributed
Aamir Dew rushed for 139 yards
in their first game
onds to score in the third with eight tackles and the
>
LHU keys to victory: A total effort on both sides ofthe
quarter, as Arrastene Henry kickoff return.
ball. Offense must score 28 points, and the D can not
The team will trtavel to
scoring his second consecuallow more than 250 yards.
tive
touchdown.
PSAC
West foe No. 9 IUP
rushing
Eagle Eye prediction: LHU hasn't beat IUP since 1981,
the
team's
Rob
tomorrow
Carey,
night for the
and were shutout 35-0 last year. IUP 28, LHU 6.
MVP to this point, answered toughest game left on their
■jj^quickly with an 83-yard schedule.

Next up.....

they are defending champiboth Lock Haven and Game times are 4 pm and 6
ons, defeating Clarion, 3-0.
Clarion stayed neck to pm Friday and 10 am and 2
The girls not only came
neck
until
Beth pm Saturday. Look for the
out hitting hard, but they
and
Lauren
Bald Eagles to continue
Hackenberg
also showed an incredible Nuzum began to take over their explosive and confiamount of enthusiasm; neithe court for Lock Haven.
dent play throughout the
ther of which Clarion could
Hackenberg's height
compete with.
allowed her to prove why
Sophomore outside hitshe is leading the Bald
ter Kara Warnke came up
Eagles in blocks with three
big for Lock Haven with against Clarion, while I
I Saturday, Sept. 22 I Sunday, Sept. 23 ■ Monday, Sept. 24 I Tuesday, Sept. 25 I Wed., Sept. 26 I I burs. St pt. 27 I
Today
key blocks down the Nuzum's
overall talent
stretch as well as with an
showed the crowd why she
■ Field Hockey
Football
No Events
I *IUP 7 p.m. I Field Hockey
No events
acre during thc first game.
Field Hockey
was the PSAC Player of
@indiana 7 P m
■ Women's Soccer ■ @ Kumown 4 p m I
■ -Franklin Pierce pm I
Scheduled
I
'Houghton4p.ni I
Senior Shana Fessette
scheduled
the Week with nine kills ■
■ Men's Soccer
dominated the end of the and seven defensive digs.
match with continual key
'Ship 4 p.m.
Game two ended with
*i mi
° lnen s Soccer
'Kutztown
serves as well as with her
3 pm ■





I
I
of

an easy victory
30-18 H also on Saturday ■





typical 30 sets.

*

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