BHeiney
Wed, 06/28/2023 - 13:50
Edited Text
Vol. XXI No. 3IV? ^
WORLD
NEWS
BRIEFS
After eight years of marriage, Bianca Jagger has
filed for divorce from
Rolling Stones lead singer,
^"^•^ Jagger. She's asking
a Los Angeles Court for half
ofthe 25 million dollars she
claims Jagger has eamed
since they wed.
Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini today named an elder
statesman as prime minister of his new provisional
government. He ordered
Iranians to tum out for
nationwide rallies to back
the move. Khomeini said if
Iranian troops try to stop
his provisional government, they'll be punished
according to Islamic jurisprudence.
Chinese Vice Premier
Teng Hsiao-Ping ended his
historic eight-day visit to
the United States today. He
left from Seattle for a threeday stop in Japan on his
way back to Peking.
Teng skipped a breakfast
with a group of editors and
publishers because he was
suffering from a cold and
fever. He did deliver his
scheduled farewell at the
airport and made another
critical remark about Soviet
policy.
Army News
The Military Science
Dept. at LHSC has received
spaces for interested students wishing to participate
in a five and half week
Basic Camp at Ft. Knox,
Kentucky, this summer.
The Basic Camp is designed to allow students the
opportunity to experience
Army life without obligation of military service.
Transportation to and
from Ft. Knox will be
furnished free of charge.
While attending camp,
students will each receive
approximately $450, plus
free room and board.
Completion of the Basic
Camp will qualify the
student for the ROTC
Advanced Course, although
there is no obligation to
enroll.
Further information is
available from Capt. Bob
Baggott or Sgt. Maj. Chuck
Kirby in Bentley No. 6, or
call ext. 379, on Tuesdays
and Thursdays.
Lock Haven State CoUege
Tuesday, Feb. 6, 1979
New Senators Elected
Comm. Positions Open
By SUSAN SHELLY
Ten Lock Haven State
students were elected to
the Student Cooperative
Council Senate yesterday.
Elected from off-campus
to serve as senators were
Faith Jordan, Sheryl Derr,
and Linda Del Signore.
Colin Weaver, Deven
Harbaugh, Anne Mesh and
Mike Crosby were offcampus candidates who
were not elected.
Shelly Straub, Jim Di._
„ I
Capria and Ron Sager were
"OPERATION I.D." STUDENT COORDINATORS RECEIVE CERTinCATES OF SERVICE voted onto SCC from Gross
"finnt row I to r: Pam Banmann, Patricia Abbe, and Kathy Havelka. Back row I to r: Tom Hall. Eric Browning was an
AlQerl, Rass NoU, and Mr. James Bobb, Criminal Justice Systems Planner for the Pennsyl- unelected candidate.
From North Hall, John
vania Commission on Crime and Delinqnlncy.
Eglick was chosen over
Anthony Pinizzotto and
Todd Wasser to represent
that dorm.
as a code number for the
service to Tom Alferi,
LOCK HAVEN - Last
Joe Buckley beat Jay
engraving
process.
Apstudent coordinator for
semester, an Operation
Supko
in the Smith Hall
proximately
two
hundred
North Hall, Pam Baumann,
Identification Program was
senate election race. Smith
students have employed
Woolridge Hall student coinstituted at Lock Haven
Hall had the highest
these student coordinators
ordinator, Russ Noll, High
State College. "Operation
percentage of voters of any
to engrave possessions
Hall student coordinator,
I.D." allows LHSC studorm.
ranging from stereos,»
Patricia Abbe, student codents to have their valuable
speakers, radios, and tape
ordinator for Russell Hall,
possessions engraved, and
players, to pocket calcuKathy Havelka, Gross Hall
is aimed at reducing theft
lators.
student coordinator, Diane
in the dormitories and on
Barnes, Smith Hall student
campus.
The program, sponsored
Out-of-state students will
coordinator, and Lu Ann
by the College Law
Eight LHSC students
pay less for summer
Yohn and Donna Robinsky,
Enforcement and Student
participated in the program
courses this year due to a
McEntire Hall student coLife Departments, is under
last semester and received
recommendation made to
ordinators.
the
direction
of
LHSC
certificates recognizing the Secretary of Education
Crime Prevention Officer
their service to the student
The student coordinaby the Board of State
Philip J. Burlingame, and
body. Mr. James Bubb,
tors, who will continue the
College and University
Mr.
James
Bubb,
Criminal
Criminal Justice Systems
"Operation I.D." program
Presidents, Directors and
Justice Systems Planner for
Planner for the Pennsylthroughout this semester,
the
Commissioner of Highthe Pennsylvania Comvania Commission on
are equipped with electric
er
Education.
mission on Crime and DeCrime and Delinquincy,
engravers, and use the
Beginning the first sumlinquincy.
awarded certificates of
student's driver's license
mer session of 1979, the
undergraduate out-of-state
Operation I.D. to Cut Thefts
And from Woolridge
Hall, Marie MacNamara
and Bonnie Ritter were
elected. Mary Thorson was
an unelected candidate.
SCC President David
Lepley reported there are
several
openings
on
campus-wide committees
that must be filled. One
person is needed on each of
the following committees:
Academic Recognition Assembly, Admissions and
Academic Regulations
Committee, Athletic Policy
Advisory Committee, Continuing Education and
Lifelong Learning Committee, Finance Committee,
Graduate Studies Planning
Committee and Student
Faculty Evaluation Instrument Committee. Any
student is eligible to serve
on these committees. Interested persons should
contact the SCC Executive
office by Wednesday, Feb.
7 at 6:30 pm.
Out-of-Staters Cut a Break
basic fee differential will be
eliminated at all state
colleges. This applies to
summer sessions only for
undergraduate students.
Out-of-state graduate
students will pay the same
as Pennsylvania students
for all academic sessions
beginning this summer.
This is not applicable to
Lock Haven State.
P£ Majors to Meet Tonight
By DIANE ORBAN
There will be a meeting
of the physical education
major's club tonight at 7:30
pm in the lobby of Zimmerii
Gymnasium.
At the meeting Mr. Leroy
Straley, associate professor
of professional studies at
LHSC, will be discussing
the topic of "Interdisciplinary Physical Education."
He will discuss the use of
motor activity in the
integrated development of
skills and concepts in
health and safety, language
arts, science, mathematics,
and social studies for elementary age students.
At the meeting last
Tuesday, Jan. 30, new officers were elected for the
club. The new officers are
Hank Wert, president;
Mary Kitzig and Lisa
Moser, vice-presidents;
Melanie Dobson, secretary;
Dawn Morris, treasurer;
and Glenda Phillips, public
relations representative.
The advisor for the club is
Ms. Dora Vandine:
"The main objective of
the club is to create a unity
among all health, physical
education and recreation
majors and to promote
better relations between
the people in the various
curriculums on campus,"
said Phillips.
A suggestion box has
been placed in the equipment room in Zimmerii.
Suggestions or complaints
placed in the box will be
read by a committee
selected by the P.E. majors
club and, if necessary, discussed with Dr. Maetozo.
Any kind of suggestion or
complaint concerning P.E.
professors or classes are
encouraged, said Mary
Kitzig.
All HPER majors are encouraged to join the clul.
Meetings are held every
other Tuesday.
NEW OFFICERS •• of the P.E. motors* club are, front rows Mary Kitzig, Glenda Phillips, and
Dawn Morris. Back row: Melanie Dobson, Lisa Moser and Hank Werte.
[PHOTO BY DIANE ORBAN]
tax talk
By RON SAGER
This is the second article in a series of articles on
filing student income returns.
Some of you as students are "claimed as a
dependent" by your parents on their tax return.
This gives your parents an adjustment of $750 to
their gross income; consequently a decrease of
income reduces their tax liability.
You can be claimed as a dependent by your parents
if all the following conditions are met:
1) You received over half of your support from your
parents. Support includes items such as food, a
place to live (estimated at the rent equivalent),
clothes, medical and dental care, and education. In
figuring support, use the actual cost of these items.
After 1977, capital items such as an automobile or
furniture must be included in determining total
support, if owned and used exclusively by the
dependent.
Do not include in support any amount received as
scholarships or an educational loan on which the
student is the primary obligor. The latter is
considered support furnished by the student
himself.
2) If married, you may not file a joint return with
your spouse.
3) You were a citizen or resident of the U.S., a
resident of Canada or Mexico, for that tax year.
4) You were enrolled as a full-time student at a
school during any 5 months of 1978.
*The term school includes:
-elementary, junior and senior high schools;
-colleges and universities;
-technical, trade, and mechanical schools; and
-night schools in which the student is enrolled for
the number of hours or classes that is considered
full-time attendance at a similar day school.
The term school does not include on-the-job
training courses or correspondence schoools.
If you satisfy all of the above requirements, you are
allowed to be claimed as an exemption by your
parents.
Also, you should file your own tax return even
though claimed as a dependent by another. The
return will serve as a claim for refund of the tax
withheld where the student incurs no tax liability.
Announcement
tion of Independent Camps,
COUNSELORS* ASSOCIATION OF INDEPENDENT
CAMPS seeks qualified
counselors for 90 member
camps located in N.
Eastern U.S., July and
August. Contact: Associa-
55 West 42nd St., New
Xatk,N.Y. 10036 (212) 736Physical Educatioa mi||on
meeting, Toes. 7:00, Zimmerii Loibby.
Th« lock Havm Stata Colleg*
EAQLE EYE
AN INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER
The Eagia Eya Is published twice weekly by Student
Publications of Lock Haven State College. Our office Is
located on the ground floor of the Parson's Union
Building. Phone 748-5531 or ext. 456.
The Editor encourages letters and commentaries. All
contributions must t>e signed, but names will be withheld
from publication on request. Letters and commentaries
will be printed verbatim. The Editor reserves the right to
ask contributors to edit or rewrite their material If It is
considered libelous, incoherent or too lengthy.
EOITOR-IN-CHIEF
MANAQINO EDITOR
QRAPHICS EDITORS
NEWS EDITOR
SPORTS EDITOR
PHOTOQRAPHY EDITOR
ASS'T PHOTO EDITOR
ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR
COMPOSITION EDITOR
ADVISOR
GENERAL MANAGER
SUSAN SHELLY
Chris Flynn
John Patrilak
Nancy Stoy
Diane Orban
.Cheryl Wagnar
Mike Baylor
Choryl Fluck
Frances Arndt
Harry Pfender
Dr. Howard K. Congdon
Martha Hastings
'^e c^rts
w h e n Spring arrives so does the track season.
The Lock Haven team has started it's quest for a
conference crown. The Eagles have a strong team
coming back from last year and things look very
optimistic for the Haven in one of the toughest track
conferences in the nation.
The team started practice early last week and will
be adding up those miles until the outdoor season
starts in April. Many have already started their
season by running, vaulting, and jumping In last
week's indoor meet at Bucknell. Running indoors is
probably more taxing to the athletes than outdoors
because many are out of shape, and also the pain of
pounding on a hard floor with sharp turns and little
running space. Breathing is laborious indoors due
to the uncirculated air which is heavy and dust
laden.
One's lungs hurt with every breath and feet
pound with every step, but the runners push right
to the wire even though their legs are heavy and
knotted. The runners sometimes even miss the tape
because of either the sweat in their eyes or due to
delirium of pushing oneself to the limit. I even
heard of a freshman who in his excitement of
winning, missed the whole finish line; he kept on
running around the track by-passing the finish
which was straight ahead of him.
Some of the athletes use the indoor season for a
tune-up for outdoor season, but most say they run
just for the fun which is lost in the highly
competitive outdoor season. Track, if you start with
indoors, is a season full of long hard practices
almost every day. It begins in January and lasts the
rest of the semester until possibly a week after
school ends.
Track is filled with victories and defeats which
everyone must accept. It's an individual sprart
enclosed by a team. Track is one of the sports that
puts man against man. The athlete is out there by
himself, whether on the track or in the field there is
no team to help him throw the javelin or out jump
his opponent. It's a sport where you could get the
team and individual aspect, individual vs.
individual and team vs. team. This year should
provide a few surprises to the other tougher teams,
one of which being victory. I'll be running this year
and hope that all of you who don't will be there as
spectators cheering the team on to victory.
poetry corner
By Stephen R. Hickoff
tall and short lived on a mound
their domain safe
the mound was sound
all was good
love they had
love was strong till they met bad.
in a gutter resided bad
his domain cold
his domain sad
one day he surmounted that towering hill
to spread his malice
to malign
to kill.
the forces soon met
the battle began
then suddenly bad
he turned and ran.
tall and short embraced
the love still strong
bad was void
the love lived on.
By FRANCES ARNDT
Natalie Hinderas, pianist, will be brought to the
LHSC campus this week by the combined efforts of
Cultural Affairs and Human Relations. On
Wednesdav, Feb, 7, Ms. Hinderas will be giving a
demonstration-lecture at 8:00 pm in Sloan 336
(free, and open to the public). Then, on Thursday,
Feb. 8, the pianist will be performing a concert at
8:(K) pm in Price Auditorium. Tickets will be available at the door (free with a validated ID).
This Friday (Feb. 9) at 9:00 pm, LHSC student
Jim Wortman will be performing at a coffeehouse
to be given in the Eagle Wing.
February promises to be an active month for the
LHSC band. On Feb. 21 the band will be
performing in Renovo, prior to their Feb. 23 concert
in Price Auditorium (at 8:00 pm). Highlighting this
winter concert will be a performance of Gershwin's
"Rhapsody in Blue," featuring Kate Zug on piano,
accompanied by the band (directed by Prof.
Florentino J. Caimi).
The British rock group. The Kinks, will be appearing in concert at Bloomsburg State College at
8:00 pm. Feb. 16, in Haas Center. Tickets are
available at the Kehr Union Building on the
Bloomsburg campus ($7.50 for general admission).
LETTER
To the Editor:
What is it with the people
who put out the Eagle Eye?
Do you have something
against women's sports or
what? It seems that every
season a different women's
sports team gets slighted
on the sports page.
During the fall season it
was the women's cross
country team. They had
their best season ever, yet
they never made it to the
sports page. Instead there
were six column stories
about the losing football
team, or ads on the page to
take up space.
Now, during the winter
sports season, the women's
gymnastics team is being
slighted. The team is doing
absolutely fantastically yet,
the losing wrestling and
men's basketball teams are
taking up all the space.
Which is it going to be
this spring? Women's
lacrosse, women's track or
women's softball. Why
don't you surprise us all
and print some good stories
for all the women's teams?
Writing for the women's
sports fans at LHSC, "we'd
sure appreciate some coverage on the sports page."
Name Withheld
upon Request
MfekV CO' WORKER. HB HA^
A pkp. siuce rou ONLV
Campus Pulse
Are you in favor of M r . Nagy having authority to
punish anyone caught stealing from the bookstore
to the fullest extent of the law? Should there be any
exceptions?
classifiedsTEACHERS
Looking for employment in
any subject area! Teacher
Data Resources services
several thousand schools in
N.J., PA., and N.Y.—write
T.D.R., P.O. Box 2186,
Ventnor, N.J. 08406
Fomitore for sale. See Rick
Kline 53 Bellefonte Ave.
HOY'S
FANTASTIC
SAVINGS
Barry Fuhrman - No. I
feel the consequences
should be dealt with
within the institution.
.^.
HAS
Russ Noll - No. I feel
these students are just
trying to save hardearned money. They
are not criminals and
shouldn't be tried as
such
Teri Houck - No, I feel
it should be left within
the school system.
W^
i^
THE RING
Cheryl Perilli - i think
that this is the school's
problem and the school
should deal with it.
These are Lock Haven
students
probably
s t e a l i n g t h i n g s like
athletic training tape or
a
"How
to
Play
T e n n i s " book,
not
hardened criminals
stealing luxuries.
MMMMXXX
}
^PRETTY
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February 5 (Monday) and February 6 (Tuesday)
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Live in Concert
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with special guest stars
Artie Traun & Pat Algers
Feb. 22
Ed and Lorraine Warren
will present a slide program on
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Feb. 12
-
8:00
Free
$4-w/validated ID
Secretary's office
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$5 - General Admission
Feb.13
Field trip in search of
$ 5 - A l l tickets at door
Straight Leg or Flare
Second Pair Half Price
Sweaters 30% Off
Second Sweater
Half-Price
Men's Winter Jackets
SELECT GROUP 5 0 %
Open 'til 9 M o n , Thurs, Fri
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ONE STOP
RECORDS
TOP 20
1. Blues Brothers
"Brief Case Full of Blues"
2. Rod Stewart
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3. Billy J o e l - " 5 2 n d St."
4. Neil Diamond - "You Don't
Bring M e Flowers"
5. Barbra Streisand
"GreatestHitsVol.il
6.Chic-"C'estChic"
7. Earth, Wind, Fire - "Best of
Earth, Wind, & Fire"
8. Barry Manilow
"Greatest H i t s "
9. Foreigner
"Double Vision"
10. Village People
"Crusin"
11. Eric Clapton
"Backless'
12. Toto
13. Olivia Newton John
"Totally H o t "
14. Doobie Brothers
"Minute by Minute"
15. "Grease" Soundtrack
16. Steve Martin - " A Wild
and Crazy Guy"
17. Aerosmith - "Live Bootleg"
18. Steve Miller Band
"Greatest H i t s "
19. Styx - "Pieces of Eight"
20. H e a r t - "Dogand
Butterfly"
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748-7163
Kathy "Stretch" Landis Stretches Past the 1,000 Point l\/larl(
By KATHY MURRAY
Lock Haven overcame a
41 34 halftime deficit to
defeat Millersville 79-62
Saturday afternoon. Kathy
Landis, "Stretch," led all
scorers once again but
more significantly became
the first LHSC woman to
break the 1,000 point barrier. "Stretch's" college
career total of 1,011 points
is uncontested by any other
Lock Haven player and with
nine games remaining in
regular season competition
she can only improve upon
her already prestigious accomplishment.
This
achievement will loom as a
goal for aspiring Eaglette
cagers to surpass in future
years.
The first half, characterized by Lock Haven
rushed plays and poor
percentage shots, was
completely dominated by
Millersville. Midway
through the first half Lock
Haven found themselves
down
fifteen
points.
"Stretch" headed an Eaglette offensive burst, scoring 14 points, and Lock
Haven was soon back in
contention. With one second remaining to the half
"Stretch" connected on a
turn-around jumper and
Lock Haven had its first
1.000 point scorer and a
more reasonable seven
point deficit to overcome.
Pitt Downs Eagle Grapplers
By TOMMY PETERMAN
Before a near capacity
crowd at the House of Noise
on Saturday night, the
experienced University of
Pittsburgh downed the
young Bald Eagles (10-10)
28-11. The match was an
important EWL encounter
and leaves the Bald Eagles
with two remaining dual
meets against Penn State
and West Virginia. The
Haven will be a dark house
at the PSCAC Tournament
this weekend at California
State.
LHS was ranked 7th '« .
theEast by National Mat
News prior to the match,
but will most likely drop to
9th or 10th with its loss to
Pitt. The Panthers won the
dual by winning the final
five individual matches
after trailing the Bald
Eagles 11-7 at the half-way
mark.
Immpressive winss for
the Bald Eagles were
earned by sophomore Jeff
Fleishman, 134; junior
Dave Moyer, 142; and
freshman Joey Baranik,
150. Junior 126 pounder
John Unangst scored a
tough 1-1 draw with his
high school teammate Jose
Martinez. Both did their
prep wrestling at Dr. Ken
Cox's alma mater, Bethlehem Liberty. Fleishman
used his take-down skill to
top Glenn Nacion, 14-11 in
an exciting match. Dave
Moyer was again impressive in beating Steve
Gouletas, 4-1. Moyer, a
tough rider and rapidly establishing himself as one of
the better 142 pounders in
the East, was never in
trouble in his match. Moyer
how has an impressive 17-4
record. At 150 pounds,
Altoona's Joe Baranik
clipped veteran Kim Smith,
13-7. Baranik is probably
the Haven's top frosh
prospect. The pivotal match
was at 190 pounds, where
Pitt's Lock Haven High
product Pal Connor decisioned Tim Thompson, 8-7
to put the meet out of reach
for the Bald Eagles. Another local product wrestling for Pitt was Skip Bolin
who decisioned Haven
Freshman Steve Williams,
21-7. Pitt's giant heavyweight Smokey Smocharski
(6'9". 410 pounds) suprised Gregg Koontz and
decked the Haven heavyweight in 3:33 and stunned
the 2,000 partisan fans.
After a scoreless first
period, " K o o n t z i e " got
caught on his hip in the
bottom position and Smocharski lowered his 410
pounds on Koontz scoring a
fall and locking up the
28-11 win.
The LHS J.V. team
increased their season
record to 7-1 with an easy
34-8 win over Steven's
Trade School. Winning for
the Little Baldies were Pat
Lynch, 126; Dwight Bolin,
142; Fred Montgomery,
158; Don Talerico, 167; Joe
Speese, 177; Tonnie Tiller,
190; and Rick Dean, Hwt.
Marlon Mosley, 150 had a
draw.
MAT SIDE... Pit leads
the series, winning 11 out
of the 15 times the two
eastern powers have met on
the mat. The first match
was won by LHS 24-6 in
1950. Pitt Shut out the Bald
Eagles 24-0 in 1956 and
won 8 straight until LHS
beat Pitt, 20-7 in 1973;
19-18 in 1974 and 35-15 in
1977. Pitt won 27-12 last
season...Leading the Bald
Eagles in team points is
Dave Moyer, 142, with 73
points followed by Tim
Thompson, 190, with 70
and Gregg Koontz with 65.
Moyer has the best record
(17-4)
Gregg Koontz,
the 1978 PSCAC heavyweight champ will be hard
pressed to repeat this
weekend. He'll probably be
seeded, and hopefully his
knee injury will improve....
Both Doug Gallaher, 4th in
1978 and Mike Nauman,
6th in 1978 and Sth in 1977.
have a good chance of
improving at the PSCAC's.
...Several wrestlers will be
cutting down to a lower
weight class, and it is
expected Joe Speese will
again fill in at 177 pounds.
Speese. the All-Conference
tailback and only a sophomore, has the potential to
become one of the best all
around athlete in LHS
history...the only senior on
the 40 man mat team is
dependable Austin Shanfelter, the utility 177-190
and Hwt.
Lock Haven came back
the second half hitting 50%
of their shots compared to
Millersville's 20%. Mary
Fleig, "Skeeter," put it all
together, scoring 10 of her
20 game points and
" S t r e t c h " managed to
pump in 10 more. Bea
Henry's aggressiveness
helped kindle lock Haven's
comeback surge as she
netted 10 points and pulled
down five rebounds. Donna
Greist matched Henry's rebound figure but "Stretch"
stole the show in this category, too, pulling down
nine. But outscoring the
Marauders 45-21, the second half. Lock Haven
claimed a 79-62 victory
upping their record to 5-5.
Lock Haven has encoun-
Golden Eagles Top LHS 93-57
By PETE BIELSKI
Clarion States All American forward Reggie Wells
scored 32 points and dished
off 7 assists in the Golden
Eagle's 93-57 romp over
the Bald Eagles (3-12) in a
Pa. Western conference
game. Saturday's small
crowd in Thomas Field
House saw Clarion's defense take charge, as the
Bald Eagles could only
manage 17 first half points
while giving up 46.
The 6'5" Wells scored on
a variety of shots; some
long jumpers, short jumpers, tips and drives, in
addition to coming up with
a couple of spectacular
steals that resulted in
unoppossed lay-ups. When
d o u b l e - c o v e r e d . Wells
dished-off swiftly setting
up center Curt Ebner for 18
and Al Gibson for 15, with
precision passing from the
versatile forward.
The Clarion trio worked
well early in the game, in
one four-minute span the
visitors scored fourteen
unanswered points, in
pushing a seven point lead
into a 21 point advantage
that the Eagles could never
reduce.
Clarion continues to roll,
Saturday was the club's
eighth win in a row, and are
now 13-3 overall. The Bald
Eagles were never in
Saturday's contest as the
Clarion defense pressed the
backcourt and caused 20
first half turnovers. As a
result of these turnovers,
the Golden Eagles had
good shot selection, finish-
ing the first half 19 of 28
from the field—a sizzling
68%.
Clarion, ranked in Div. II
top twenty at times this
season, ran its conference
record to 6-0 while the Bald
Eagles are struggling at
0-6. By completing the
season without additional
losses, the Clarion team
will be a host team in the
post-season tournament
play-offs.
The Lock Haven State
J.V.'s held a one point
half-time lead over Clarion's J.V. squad, but were
outscored in the final 15
minutes 39-21, while dropping the game 61-44.
Sollecito and Bankowski
combined for 37 of 44 of the
teams points.
tered one defeat to three
victories in regular season
play.
The J.V. team has been
seeing plenty of action defeating WACC 103-60
Thursday and Millersville
60-55 Saturday. Rounding
out the Eaglettes superlative scoring game versus
WACC were West-20,
Connelly-18, Brown-12,
and Lenns-10.
Marge Connelly did it all
for Lock Haven versus Millersville, scoring 16 points
and collecting 17 rebounds.
Sharon West also had a
field day with 10 points and
11 rebounds. Jan Brown
was the only other Eaglette
in double figures, scoring
11 points. The J.V. team
record is now 3-2.
Lock Haven has two of
the season's most important games coming up
with the first being today at
3:30 versus Ursinus. Then
on Saturday, the Eaglettes
face a hot-cold Edinboro
team at 2:00. Both games
will be in Thomas Field
House; your support is
greatly needed and would
be much appreciated.
Swimmers Beat Millersville, Lose to Ship
By BRIDGET ROBEY
The Lock Haven State
College Women's Swim
Team traveled to Millersville State College on Saturday for a double duel meet
against MSC and Shippensburg State College. The
Eagles beat MSC with a
score of 86-41 and lost to
SSC 76-54. Shippensburg
went on to overtake MSC
with a score of 99-22.
Selma Bjorklund qualified for state Competition
in Saturday's meet after
capturing first place in the
500 freestyle event against
both teams. Her winning
time was recorded at 5:48.
State competition is being
held at Qarion State College, later this spring.
Carole Kepler brought
home two firsts for the
Eagles after defeating both
teams in the 50 yard and
100 yard backstroke. Kepler clocked in at 30.3 in the
50, and 1:06 in the 100.
Carole Duddy also swept up
a first against MSC and
SSC in winning the 50 yard
freestyle event in 26.5.
The Eagle's 200 yard
relay team of Anne Henry,
Kepler, Bjorklund, and
Duddy once again was
awarded first place against
both schools with a winning
time of 1:47.
Other Eagle first place
finishes against MSC were
by Sue McCarthy in the 100
yard butterfly and by Mary
Bentley in the 100 yard
individual medley. Also,
Bjorklund had an additional
first place finish in the 200
yard freestyle event, Duddy
won the ICX) freestyle race,
and Henry won the 50 yard
butterfly event for the
Eagles.
Bentley placed second in
both the 50 and 100 yard
breaststroke for the Eagles.
Deb Kachel took second in
the 50 yard backstroke
while team member Kathy
Kenny came in second in
the 200 freestyle event.
Junior Jenny Hipp brought
home a second in the 50
yard butterfly for the
Eagles and Henry finished
in second place in the 500
yard freestyle event.
In the 100 individual
medley event, Judy North
placed third. Junior, Cindy
Ewell secured a third for
the Eagles in the 50 yard
breaststroke.
Diving against MSC for
the Eagles were sophomores Terre Pensyl and
Pam Bodager, and junior
Amy Jo Wolford. Pensyl
placed second in the one
meter diving and Wolford
captured third. In the three
meter diving competition,
Bodager placed second
against MSC.
Against SSC, the Eagles
had four second place finishers: Duddy in the 100
yard freestyle, Bentley in
the 100 individual medley,
Bjorklund in the 200 yard
freestyle, and Henry in the
50 yard butterfly.
DOLLABS
For Your Textbooks
9am to Spm
Wed
Pub Lounge/Upper Level
FACULTY PURCHASES BY APPOINTMENT.
Call tlie store to arrange a convenient time on
Tuesday, February 6
Bentley went on to place
third in the 50 yard
breaststroke against SSC
while fellow team member
Henry swept up a third in
the 50 yard freestyle race.
McCarthy completed her
day with a third in the 100
yard butterfly while Hipp
did the same in the 50 yard
butterfly.
Divers Pensyl and Bodager both captured third
place finishes against SSC,
Pensyl in the one meter
diving and Bodager in the
three meter competition.
Gymnastics
Team
Does Well
By GARY SIEGEL
On Saturday, the Lock
Haven State Women's
Gymnastic team scored two
very impressve wins by
defeating Albany State,
87.85-84.85 and Smith
College 87.85-79.30.
In the vaulting event
Rachine Mazyck took first
with a point total of 6.80,
Captain Sue Woolston was
second with 6.45, and third
place went to Martha
Brandell, 6.40.
Woolston was first in the
floor exercise with 6.55 and
Sue Moser also finished in
second in the balance beam
with a score of 6.25.
In the uneven parallel
bars, Brandell was third
with a 5.35. Brandell took
the top position in the
all-around competition with
a score of 23.35 points.
After the meet, a happy
head coach (Lu deWette)
said, "1 was really pleased
with our teams' performance today, they did just
super."
On Saturday, the team
now at 2-2, will play host to
Ursinus College and Edinboro State in Zimmerii Gym
at 2pm.
1
WORLD
NEWS
BRIEFS
After eight years of marriage, Bianca Jagger has
filed for divorce from
Rolling Stones lead singer,
^"^•^ Jagger. She's asking
a Los Angeles Court for half
ofthe 25 million dollars she
claims Jagger has eamed
since they wed.
Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini today named an elder
statesman as prime minister of his new provisional
government. He ordered
Iranians to tum out for
nationwide rallies to back
the move. Khomeini said if
Iranian troops try to stop
his provisional government, they'll be punished
according to Islamic jurisprudence.
Chinese Vice Premier
Teng Hsiao-Ping ended his
historic eight-day visit to
the United States today. He
left from Seattle for a threeday stop in Japan on his
way back to Peking.
Teng skipped a breakfast
with a group of editors and
publishers because he was
suffering from a cold and
fever. He did deliver his
scheduled farewell at the
airport and made another
critical remark about Soviet
policy.
Army News
The Military Science
Dept. at LHSC has received
spaces for interested students wishing to participate
in a five and half week
Basic Camp at Ft. Knox,
Kentucky, this summer.
The Basic Camp is designed to allow students the
opportunity to experience
Army life without obligation of military service.
Transportation to and
from Ft. Knox will be
furnished free of charge.
While attending camp,
students will each receive
approximately $450, plus
free room and board.
Completion of the Basic
Camp will qualify the
student for the ROTC
Advanced Course, although
there is no obligation to
enroll.
Further information is
available from Capt. Bob
Baggott or Sgt. Maj. Chuck
Kirby in Bentley No. 6, or
call ext. 379, on Tuesdays
and Thursdays.
Lock Haven State CoUege
Tuesday, Feb. 6, 1979
New Senators Elected
Comm. Positions Open
By SUSAN SHELLY
Ten Lock Haven State
students were elected to
the Student Cooperative
Council Senate yesterday.
Elected from off-campus
to serve as senators were
Faith Jordan, Sheryl Derr,
and Linda Del Signore.
Colin Weaver, Deven
Harbaugh, Anne Mesh and
Mike Crosby were offcampus candidates who
were not elected.
Shelly Straub, Jim Di._
„ I
Capria and Ron Sager were
"OPERATION I.D." STUDENT COORDINATORS RECEIVE CERTinCATES OF SERVICE voted onto SCC from Gross
"finnt row I to r: Pam Banmann, Patricia Abbe, and Kathy Havelka. Back row I to r: Tom Hall. Eric Browning was an
AlQerl, Rass NoU, and Mr. James Bobb, Criminal Justice Systems Planner for the Pennsyl- unelected candidate.
From North Hall, John
vania Commission on Crime and Delinqnlncy.
Eglick was chosen over
Anthony Pinizzotto and
Todd Wasser to represent
that dorm.
as a code number for the
service to Tom Alferi,
LOCK HAVEN - Last
Joe Buckley beat Jay
engraving
process.
Apstudent coordinator for
semester, an Operation
Supko
in the Smith Hall
proximately
two
hundred
North Hall, Pam Baumann,
Identification Program was
senate election race. Smith
students have employed
Woolridge Hall student coinstituted at Lock Haven
Hall had the highest
these student coordinators
ordinator, Russ Noll, High
State College. "Operation
percentage of voters of any
to engrave possessions
Hall student coordinator,
I.D." allows LHSC studorm.
ranging from stereos,»
Patricia Abbe, student codents to have their valuable
speakers, radios, and tape
ordinator for Russell Hall,
possessions engraved, and
players, to pocket calcuKathy Havelka, Gross Hall
is aimed at reducing theft
lators.
student coordinator, Diane
in the dormitories and on
Barnes, Smith Hall student
campus.
The program, sponsored
Out-of-state students will
coordinator, and Lu Ann
by the College Law
Eight LHSC students
pay less for summer
Yohn and Donna Robinsky,
Enforcement and Student
participated in the program
courses this year due to a
McEntire Hall student coLife Departments, is under
last semester and received
recommendation made to
ordinators.
the
direction
of
LHSC
certificates recognizing the Secretary of Education
Crime Prevention Officer
their service to the student
The student coordinaby the Board of State
Philip J. Burlingame, and
body. Mr. James Bubb,
tors, who will continue the
College and University
Mr.
James
Bubb,
Criminal
Criminal Justice Systems
"Operation I.D." program
Presidents, Directors and
Justice Systems Planner for
Planner for the Pennsylthroughout this semester,
the
Commissioner of Highthe Pennsylvania Comvania Commission on
are equipped with electric
er
Education.
mission on Crime and DeCrime and Delinquincy,
engravers, and use the
Beginning the first sumlinquincy.
awarded certificates of
student's driver's license
mer session of 1979, the
undergraduate out-of-state
Operation I.D. to Cut Thefts
And from Woolridge
Hall, Marie MacNamara
and Bonnie Ritter were
elected. Mary Thorson was
an unelected candidate.
SCC President David
Lepley reported there are
several
openings
on
campus-wide committees
that must be filled. One
person is needed on each of
the following committees:
Academic Recognition Assembly, Admissions and
Academic Regulations
Committee, Athletic Policy
Advisory Committee, Continuing Education and
Lifelong Learning Committee, Finance Committee,
Graduate Studies Planning
Committee and Student
Faculty Evaluation Instrument Committee. Any
student is eligible to serve
on these committees. Interested persons should
contact the SCC Executive
office by Wednesday, Feb.
7 at 6:30 pm.
Out-of-Staters Cut a Break
basic fee differential will be
eliminated at all state
colleges. This applies to
summer sessions only for
undergraduate students.
Out-of-state graduate
students will pay the same
as Pennsylvania students
for all academic sessions
beginning this summer.
This is not applicable to
Lock Haven State.
P£ Majors to Meet Tonight
By DIANE ORBAN
There will be a meeting
of the physical education
major's club tonight at 7:30
pm in the lobby of Zimmerii
Gymnasium.
At the meeting Mr. Leroy
Straley, associate professor
of professional studies at
LHSC, will be discussing
the topic of "Interdisciplinary Physical Education."
He will discuss the use of
motor activity in the
integrated development of
skills and concepts in
health and safety, language
arts, science, mathematics,
and social studies for elementary age students.
At the meeting last
Tuesday, Jan. 30, new officers were elected for the
club. The new officers are
Hank Wert, president;
Mary Kitzig and Lisa
Moser, vice-presidents;
Melanie Dobson, secretary;
Dawn Morris, treasurer;
and Glenda Phillips, public
relations representative.
The advisor for the club is
Ms. Dora Vandine:
"The main objective of
the club is to create a unity
among all health, physical
education and recreation
majors and to promote
better relations between
the people in the various
curriculums on campus,"
said Phillips.
A suggestion box has
been placed in the equipment room in Zimmerii.
Suggestions or complaints
placed in the box will be
read by a committee
selected by the P.E. majors
club and, if necessary, discussed with Dr. Maetozo.
Any kind of suggestion or
complaint concerning P.E.
professors or classes are
encouraged, said Mary
Kitzig.
All HPER majors are encouraged to join the clul.
Meetings are held every
other Tuesday.
NEW OFFICERS •• of the P.E. motors* club are, front rows Mary Kitzig, Glenda Phillips, and
Dawn Morris. Back row: Melanie Dobson, Lisa Moser and Hank Werte.
[PHOTO BY DIANE ORBAN]
tax talk
By RON SAGER
This is the second article in a series of articles on
filing student income returns.
Some of you as students are "claimed as a
dependent" by your parents on their tax return.
This gives your parents an adjustment of $750 to
their gross income; consequently a decrease of
income reduces their tax liability.
You can be claimed as a dependent by your parents
if all the following conditions are met:
1) You received over half of your support from your
parents. Support includes items such as food, a
place to live (estimated at the rent equivalent),
clothes, medical and dental care, and education. In
figuring support, use the actual cost of these items.
After 1977, capital items such as an automobile or
furniture must be included in determining total
support, if owned and used exclusively by the
dependent.
Do not include in support any amount received as
scholarships or an educational loan on which the
student is the primary obligor. The latter is
considered support furnished by the student
himself.
2) If married, you may not file a joint return with
your spouse.
3) You were a citizen or resident of the U.S., a
resident of Canada or Mexico, for that tax year.
4) You were enrolled as a full-time student at a
school during any 5 months of 1978.
*The term school includes:
-elementary, junior and senior high schools;
-colleges and universities;
-technical, trade, and mechanical schools; and
-night schools in which the student is enrolled for
the number of hours or classes that is considered
full-time attendance at a similar day school.
The term school does not include on-the-job
training courses or correspondence schoools.
If you satisfy all of the above requirements, you are
allowed to be claimed as an exemption by your
parents.
Also, you should file your own tax return even
though claimed as a dependent by another. The
return will serve as a claim for refund of the tax
withheld where the student incurs no tax liability.
Announcement
tion of Independent Camps,
COUNSELORS* ASSOCIATION OF INDEPENDENT
CAMPS seeks qualified
counselors for 90 member
camps located in N.
Eastern U.S., July and
August. Contact: Associa-
55 West 42nd St., New
Xatk,N.Y. 10036 (212) 736Physical Educatioa mi||on
meeting, Toes. 7:00, Zimmerii Loibby.
Th« lock Havm Stata Colleg*
EAQLE EYE
AN INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER
The Eagia Eya Is published twice weekly by Student
Publications of Lock Haven State College. Our office Is
located on the ground floor of the Parson's Union
Building. Phone 748-5531 or ext. 456.
The Editor encourages letters and commentaries. All
contributions must t>e signed, but names will be withheld
from publication on request. Letters and commentaries
will be printed verbatim. The Editor reserves the right to
ask contributors to edit or rewrite their material If It is
considered libelous, incoherent or too lengthy.
EOITOR-IN-CHIEF
MANAQINO EDITOR
QRAPHICS EDITORS
NEWS EDITOR
SPORTS EDITOR
PHOTOQRAPHY EDITOR
ASS'T PHOTO EDITOR
ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR
COMPOSITION EDITOR
ADVISOR
GENERAL MANAGER
SUSAN SHELLY
Chris Flynn
John Patrilak
Nancy Stoy
Diane Orban
.Cheryl Wagnar
Mike Baylor
Choryl Fluck
Frances Arndt
Harry Pfender
Dr. Howard K. Congdon
Martha Hastings
'^e c^rts
w h e n Spring arrives so does the track season.
The Lock Haven team has started it's quest for a
conference crown. The Eagles have a strong team
coming back from last year and things look very
optimistic for the Haven in one of the toughest track
conferences in the nation.
The team started practice early last week and will
be adding up those miles until the outdoor season
starts in April. Many have already started their
season by running, vaulting, and jumping In last
week's indoor meet at Bucknell. Running indoors is
probably more taxing to the athletes than outdoors
because many are out of shape, and also the pain of
pounding on a hard floor with sharp turns and little
running space. Breathing is laborious indoors due
to the uncirculated air which is heavy and dust
laden.
One's lungs hurt with every breath and feet
pound with every step, but the runners push right
to the wire even though their legs are heavy and
knotted. The runners sometimes even miss the tape
because of either the sweat in their eyes or due to
delirium of pushing oneself to the limit. I even
heard of a freshman who in his excitement of
winning, missed the whole finish line; he kept on
running around the track by-passing the finish
which was straight ahead of him.
Some of the athletes use the indoor season for a
tune-up for outdoor season, but most say they run
just for the fun which is lost in the highly
competitive outdoor season. Track, if you start with
indoors, is a season full of long hard practices
almost every day. It begins in January and lasts the
rest of the semester until possibly a week after
school ends.
Track is filled with victories and defeats which
everyone must accept. It's an individual sprart
enclosed by a team. Track is one of the sports that
puts man against man. The athlete is out there by
himself, whether on the track or in the field there is
no team to help him throw the javelin or out jump
his opponent. It's a sport where you could get the
team and individual aspect, individual vs.
individual and team vs. team. This year should
provide a few surprises to the other tougher teams,
one of which being victory. I'll be running this year
and hope that all of you who don't will be there as
spectators cheering the team on to victory.
poetry corner
By Stephen R. Hickoff
tall and short lived on a mound
their domain safe
the mound was sound
all was good
love they had
love was strong till they met bad.
in a gutter resided bad
his domain cold
his domain sad
one day he surmounted that towering hill
to spread his malice
to malign
to kill.
the forces soon met
the battle began
then suddenly bad
he turned and ran.
tall and short embraced
the love still strong
bad was void
the love lived on.
By FRANCES ARNDT
Natalie Hinderas, pianist, will be brought to the
LHSC campus this week by the combined efforts of
Cultural Affairs and Human Relations. On
Wednesdav, Feb, 7, Ms. Hinderas will be giving a
demonstration-lecture at 8:00 pm in Sloan 336
(free, and open to the public). Then, on Thursday,
Feb. 8, the pianist will be performing a concert at
8:(K) pm in Price Auditorium. Tickets will be available at the door (free with a validated ID).
This Friday (Feb. 9) at 9:00 pm, LHSC student
Jim Wortman will be performing at a coffeehouse
to be given in the Eagle Wing.
February promises to be an active month for the
LHSC band. On Feb. 21 the band will be
performing in Renovo, prior to their Feb. 23 concert
in Price Auditorium (at 8:00 pm). Highlighting this
winter concert will be a performance of Gershwin's
"Rhapsody in Blue," featuring Kate Zug on piano,
accompanied by the band (directed by Prof.
Florentino J. Caimi).
The British rock group. The Kinks, will be appearing in concert at Bloomsburg State College at
8:00 pm. Feb. 16, in Haas Center. Tickets are
available at the Kehr Union Building on the
Bloomsburg campus ($7.50 for general admission).
LETTER
To the Editor:
What is it with the people
who put out the Eagle Eye?
Do you have something
against women's sports or
what? It seems that every
season a different women's
sports team gets slighted
on the sports page.
During the fall season it
was the women's cross
country team. They had
their best season ever, yet
they never made it to the
sports page. Instead there
were six column stories
about the losing football
team, or ads on the page to
take up space.
Now, during the winter
sports season, the women's
gymnastics team is being
slighted. The team is doing
absolutely fantastically yet,
the losing wrestling and
men's basketball teams are
taking up all the space.
Which is it going to be
this spring? Women's
lacrosse, women's track or
women's softball. Why
don't you surprise us all
and print some good stories
for all the women's teams?
Writing for the women's
sports fans at LHSC, "we'd
sure appreciate some coverage on the sports page."
Name Withheld
upon Request
MfekV CO' WORKER. HB HA^
A pkp. siuce rou ONLV
Campus Pulse
Are you in favor of M r . Nagy having authority to
punish anyone caught stealing from the bookstore
to the fullest extent of the law? Should there be any
exceptions?
classifiedsTEACHERS
Looking for employment in
any subject area! Teacher
Data Resources services
several thousand schools in
N.J., PA., and N.Y.—write
T.D.R., P.O. Box 2186,
Ventnor, N.J. 08406
Fomitore for sale. See Rick
Kline 53 Bellefonte Ave.
HOY'S
FANTASTIC
SAVINGS
Barry Fuhrman - No. I
feel the consequences
should be dealt with
within the institution.
.^.
HAS
Russ Noll - No. I feel
these students are just
trying to save hardearned money. They
are not criminals and
shouldn't be tried as
such
Teri Houck - No, I feel
it should be left within
the school system.
W^
i^
THE RING
Cheryl Perilli - i think
that this is the school's
problem and the school
should deal with it.
These are Lock Haven
students
probably
s t e a l i n g t h i n g s like
athletic training tape or
a
"How
to
Play
T e n n i s " book,
not
hardened criminals
stealing luxuries.
MMMMXXX
}
^PRETTY
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February 5 (Monday) and February 6 (Tuesday)
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Live in Concert
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with special guest stars
Artie Traun & Pat Algers
Feb. 22
Ed and Lorraine Warren
will present a slide program on
AMITYVILLE
HORROR
Feb. 12
-
8:00
Free
$4-w/validated ID
Secretary's office
in the PUB
$5 - General Admission
Feb.13
Field trip in search of
$ 5 - A l l tickets at door
Straight Leg or Flare
Second Pair Half Price
Sweaters 30% Off
Second Sweater
Half-Price
Men's Winter Jackets
SELECT GROUP 5 0 %
Open 'til 9 M o n , Thurs, Fri
ghosts
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Downtown
ONE STOP
RECORDS
TOP 20
1. Blues Brothers
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2. Rod Stewart
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3. Billy J o e l - " 5 2 n d St."
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5. Barbra Streisand
"GreatestHitsVol.il
6.Chic-"C'estChic"
7. Earth, Wind, Fire - "Best of
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8. Barry Manilow
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9. Foreigner
"Double Vision"
10. Village People
"Crusin"
11. Eric Clapton
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12. Toto
13. Olivia Newton John
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14. Doobie Brothers
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15. "Grease" Soundtrack
16. Steve Martin - " A Wild
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17. Aerosmith - "Live Bootleg"
18. Steve Miller Band
"Greatest H i t s "
19. Styx - "Pieces of Eight"
20. H e a r t - "Dogand
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Thursday
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Kathy "Stretch" Landis Stretches Past the 1,000 Point l\/larl(
By KATHY MURRAY
Lock Haven overcame a
41 34 halftime deficit to
defeat Millersville 79-62
Saturday afternoon. Kathy
Landis, "Stretch," led all
scorers once again but
more significantly became
the first LHSC woman to
break the 1,000 point barrier. "Stretch's" college
career total of 1,011 points
is uncontested by any other
Lock Haven player and with
nine games remaining in
regular season competition
she can only improve upon
her already prestigious accomplishment.
This
achievement will loom as a
goal for aspiring Eaglette
cagers to surpass in future
years.
The first half, characterized by Lock Haven
rushed plays and poor
percentage shots, was
completely dominated by
Millersville. Midway
through the first half Lock
Haven found themselves
down
fifteen
points.
"Stretch" headed an Eaglette offensive burst, scoring 14 points, and Lock
Haven was soon back in
contention. With one second remaining to the half
"Stretch" connected on a
turn-around jumper and
Lock Haven had its first
1.000 point scorer and a
more reasonable seven
point deficit to overcome.
Pitt Downs Eagle Grapplers
By TOMMY PETERMAN
Before a near capacity
crowd at the House of Noise
on Saturday night, the
experienced University of
Pittsburgh downed the
young Bald Eagles (10-10)
28-11. The match was an
important EWL encounter
and leaves the Bald Eagles
with two remaining dual
meets against Penn State
and West Virginia. The
Haven will be a dark house
at the PSCAC Tournament
this weekend at California
State.
LHS was ranked 7th '« .
theEast by National Mat
News prior to the match,
but will most likely drop to
9th or 10th with its loss to
Pitt. The Panthers won the
dual by winning the final
five individual matches
after trailing the Bald
Eagles 11-7 at the half-way
mark.
Immpressive winss for
the Bald Eagles were
earned by sophomore Jeff
Fleishman, 134; junior
Dave Moyer, 142; and
freshman Joey Baranik,
150. Junior 126 pounder
John Unangst scored a
tough 1-1 draw with his
high school teammate Jose
Martinez. Both did their
prep wrestling at Dr. Ken
Cox's alma mater, Bethlehem Liberty. Fleishman
used his take-down skill to
top Glenn Nacion, 14-11 in
an exciting match. Dave
Moyer was again impressive in beating Steve
Gouletas, 4-1. Moyer, a
tough rider and rapidly establishing himself as one of
the better 142 pounders in
the East, was never in
trouble in his match. Moyer
how has an impressive 17-4
record. At 150 pounds,
Altoona's Joe Baranik
clipped veteran Kim Smith,
13-7. Baranik is probably
the Haven's top frosh
prospect. The pivotal match
was at 190 pounds, where
Pitt's Lock Haven High
product Pal Connor decisioned Tim Thompson, 8-7
to put the meet out of reach
for the Bald Eagles. Another local product wrestling for Pitt was Skip Bolin
who decisioned Haven
Freshman Steve Williams,
21-7. Pitt's giant heavyweight Smokey Smocharski
(6'9". 410 pounds) suprised Gregg Koontz and
decked the Haven heavyweight in 3:33 and stunned
the 2,000 partisan fans.
After a scoreless first
period, " K o o n t z i e " got
caught on his hip in the
bottom position and Smocharski lowered his 410
pounds on Koontz scoring a
fall and locking up the
28-11 win.
The LHS J.V. team
increased their season
record to 7-1 with an easy
34-8 win over Steven's
Trade School. Winning for
the Little Baldies were Pat
Lynch, 126; Dwight Bolin,
142; Fred Montgomery,
158; Don Talerico, 167; Joe
Speese, 177; Tonnie Tiller,
190; and Rick Dean, Hwt.
Marlon Mosley, 150 had a
draw.
MAT SIDE... Pit leads
the series, winning 11 out
of the 15 times the two
eastern powers have met on
the mat. The first match
was won by LHS 24-6 in
1950. Pitt Shut out the Bald
Eagles 24-0 in 1956 and
won 8 straight until LHS
beat Pitt, 20-7 in 1973;
19-18 in 1974 and 35-15 in
1977. Pitt won 27-12 last
season...Leading the Bald
Eagles in team points is
Dave Moyer, 142, with 73
points followed by Tim
Thompson, 190, with 70
and Gregg Koontz with 65.
Moyer has the best record
(17-4)
Gregg Koontz,
the 1978 PSCAC heavyweight champ will be hard
pressed to repeat this
weekend. He'll probably be
seeded, and hopefully his
knee injury will improve....
Both Doug Gallaher, 4th in
1978 and Mike Nauman,
6th in 1978 and Sth in 1977.
have a good chance of
improving at the PSCAC's.
...Several wrestlers will be
cutting down to a lower
weight class, and it is
expected Joe Speese will
again fill in at 177 pounds.
Speese. the All-Conference
tailback and only a sophomore, has the potential to
become one of the best all
around athlete in LHS
history...the only senior on
the 40 man mat team is
dependable Austin Shanfelter, the utility 177-190
and Hwt.
Lock Haven came back
the second half hitting 50%
of their shots compared to
Millersville's 20%. Mary
Fleig, "Skeeter," put it all
together, scoring 10 of her
20 game points and
" S t r e t c h " managed to
pump in 10 more. Bea
Henry's aggressiveness
helped kindle lock Haven's
comeback surge as she
netted 10 points and pulled
down five rebounds. Donna
Greist matched Henry's rebound figure but "Stretch"
stole the show in this category, too, pulling down
nine. But outscoring the
Marauders 45-21, the second half. Lock Haven
claimed a 79-62 victory
upping their record to 5-5.
Lock Haven has encoun-
Golden Eagles Top LHS 93-57
By PETE BIELSKI
Clarion States All American forward Reggie Wells
scored 32 points and dished
off 7 assists in the Golden
Eagle's 93-57 romp over
the Bald Eagles (3-12) in a
Pa. Western conference
game. Saturday's small
crowd in Thomas Field
House saw Clarion's defense take charge, as the
Bald Eagles could only
manage 17 first half points
while giving up 46.
The 6'5" Wells scored on
a variety of shots; some
long jumpers, short jumpers, tips and drives, in
addition to coming up with
a couple of spectacular
steals that resulted in
unoppossed lay-ups. When
d o u b l e - c o v e r e d . Wells
dished-off swiftly setting
up center Curt Ebner for 18
and Al Gibson for 15, with
precision passing from the
versatile forward.
The Clarion trio worked
well early in the game, in
one four-minute span the
visitors scored fourteen
unanswered points, in
pushing a seven point lead
into a 21 point advantage
that the Eagles could never
reduce.
Clarion continues to roll,
Saturday was the club's
eighth win in a row, and are
now 13-3 overall. The Bald
Eagles were never in
Saturday's contest as the
Clarion defense pressed the
backcourt and caused 20
first half turnovers. As a
result of these turnovers,
the Golden Eagles had
good shot selection, finish-
ing the first half 19 of 28
from the field—a sizzling
68%.
Clarion, ranked in Div. II
top twenty at times this
season, ran its conference
record to 6-0 while the Bald
Eagles are struggling at
0-6. By completing the
season without additional
losses, the Clarion team
will be a host team in the
post-season tournament
play-offs.
The Lock Haven State
J.V.'s held a one point
half-time lead over Clarion's J.V. squad, but were
outscored in the final 15
minutes 39-21, while dropping the game 61-44.
Sollecito and Bankowski
combined for 37 of 44 of the
teams points.
tered one defeat to three
victories in regular season
play.
The J.V. team has been
seeing plenty of action defeating WACC 103-60
Thursday and Millersville
60-55 Saturday. Rounding
out the Eaglettes superlative scoring game versus
WACC were West-20,
Connelly-18, Brown-12,
and Lenns-10.
Marge Connelly did it all
for Lock Haven versus Millersville, scoring 16 points
and collecting 17 rebounds.
Sharon West also had a
field day with 10 points and
11 rebounds. Jan Brown
was the only other Eaglette
in double figures, scoring
11 points. The J.V. team
record is now 3-2.
Lock Haven has two of
the season's most important games coming up
with the first being today at
3:30 versus Ursinus. Then
on Saturday, the Eaglettes
face a hot-cold Edinboro
team at 2:00. Both games
will be in Thomas Field
House; your support is
greatly needed and would
be much appreciated.
Swimmers Beat Millersville, Lose to Ship
By BRIDGET ROBEY
The Lock Haven State
College Women's Swim
Team traveled to Millersville State College on Saturday for a double duel meet
against MSC and Shippensburg State College. The
Eagles beat MSC with a
score of 86-41 and lost to
SSC 76-54. Shippensburg
went on to overtake MSC
with a score of 99-22.
Selma Bjorklund qualified for state Competition
in Saturday's meet after
capturing first place in the
500 freestyle event against
both teams. Her winning
time was recorded at 5:48.
State competition is being
held at Qarion State College, later this spring.
Carole Kepler brought
home two firsts for the
Eagles after defeating both
teams in the 50 yard and
100 yard backstroke. Kepler clocked in at 30.3 in the
50, and 1:06 in the 100.
Carole Duddy also swept up
a first against MSC and
SSC in winning the 50 yard
freestyle event in 26.5.
The Eagle's 200 yard
relay team of Anne Henry,
Kepler, Bjorklund, and
Duddy once again was
awarded first place against
both schools with a winning
time of 1:47.
Other Eagle first place
finishes against MSC were
by Sue McCarthy in the 100
yard butterfly and by Mary
Bentley in the 100 yard
individual medley. Also,
Bjorklund had an additional
first place finish in the 200
yard freestyle event, Duddy
won the ICX) freestyle race,
and Henry won the 50 yard
butterfly event for the
Eagles.
Bentley placed second in
both the 50 and 100 yard
breaststroke for the Eagles.
Deb Kachel took second in
the 50 yard backstroke
while team member Kathy
Kenny came in second in
the 200 freestyle event.
Junior Jenny Hipp brought
home a second in the 50
yard butterfly for the
Eagles and Henry finished
in second place in the 500
yard freestyle event.
In the 100 individual
medley event, Judy North
placed third. Junior, Cindy
Ewell secured a third for
the Eagles in the 50 yard
breaststroke.
Diving against MSC for
the Eagles were sophomores Terre Pensyl and
Pam Bodager, and junior
Amy Jo Wolford. Pensyl
placed second in the one
meter diving and Wolford
captured third. In the three
meter diving competition,
Bodager placed second
against MSC.
Against SSC, the Eagles
had four second place finishers: Duddy in the 100
yard freestyle, Bentley in
the 100 individual medley,
Bjorklund in the 200 yard
freestyle, and Henry in the
50 yard butterfly.
DOLLABS
For Your Textbooks
9am to Spm
Wed
Pub Lounge/Upper Level
FACULTY PURCHASES BY APPOINTMENT.
Call tlie store to arrange a convenient time on
Tuesday, February 6
Bentley went on to place
third in the 50 yard
breaststroke against SSC
while fellow team member
Henry swept up a third in
the 50 yard freestyle race.
McCarthy completed her
day with a third in the 100
yard butterfly while Hipp
did the same in the 50 yard
butterfly.
Divers Pensyl and Bodager both captured third
place finishes against SSC,
Pensyl in the one meter
diving and Bodager in the
three meter competition.
Gymnastics
Team
Does Well
By GARY SIEGEL
On Saturday, the Lock
Haven State Women's
Gymnastic team scored two
very impressve wins by
defeating Albany State,
87.85-84.85 and Smith
College 87.85-79.30.
In the vaulting event
Rachine Mazyck took first
with a point total of 6.80,
Captain Sue Woolston was
second with 6.45, and third
place went to Martha
Brandell, 6.40.
Woolston was first in the
floor exercise with 6.55 and
Sue Moser also finished in
second in the balance beam
with a score of 6.25.
In the uneven parallel
bars, Brandell was third
with a 5.35. Brandell took
the top position in the
all-around competition with
a score of 23.35 points.
After the meet, a happy
head coach (Lu deWette)
said, "1 was really pleased
with our teams' performance today, they did just
super."
On Saturday, the team
now at 2-2, will play host to
Ursinus College and Edinboro State in Zimmerii Gym
at 2pm.
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