BHeiney
Wed, 06/28/2023 - 13:58
Edited Text
Vd. XXI No. 33

WORLD
NEWS
BRIEFS
President Carter sail,
yesterday that patriotism
consists of more than flag
waving, paying taxes, and
voting. It also includes
voluntary energy conservation.
The body of an 11 year
old girl, Linda Vanderveen
was found Monday only 8V2
hours after she was
kidnapped while helping
other grade school children
cross the street in Grand
Rapids, Michigan.
the sixth-grader was the
daughter of the city's Civil
Service Director.
A Washington bound
Allegheny Airlines propjet
crashed in a snowstorm
Monday on take-off from
Benedum Airport in Qarksburg West Virginia. One
crew member, and one
passenger were killed in
the crash, all 23 other on
board the craft were
injured. Most injuries were
minor.
The Ayatollah Khomeini
has won his revolution
against Shah Mohammed
Reza Pahlavi. The next few
days will be critical for the
78 year old religious leader
who has begun the process
of forming an Islamic
Republic. He must win the
obedience of the heavily
armed rabble in the streets.

Certified CPR
Students can
Assist Others
By DUNE ORBAN
Students with their cardiopulmonary resuscitation
instructor certificates are
welcome to assist others in
obtaining their certification
and to renew their own
certification for another
year by team-teaching with
Mr. Shultz in his safety
concepts/advanced first aid
sections.
Time available for chosing are Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 1:10 or
Tuesday and Thursday at
8:00, 9:30 or 2:10.
A commitment of five (5)
class periods at the chosen
time is required. See Mr.
Shultz before Friday, Feb.
16 if interested.

Lock Haven State College

Tuesday, Feb. 13, 1979
Evaluators to
Appraise LHS

By SUSAN SHELLY
Despite the low temperature in Bentley Hall Sunday
night, members of two
accreditation teams were
warmly welcomed by faculty, administrators and students at a dinner held in
their honor.
The Middle States Association of Colleges and
Secondary Schools and the
National Council for Accreditation of Teacher
Education teams arrived at
lock Haven State on Sunday
to determine if the college
will retain its accreditation.
The procedure is repeated
every seven or eight years.
The evaluating teams will
appraise various aspects of
the college and make
recommendations for improvement. They will also
assess a self-evaluation
booklet
compiled by faculM E M B E R S of the 1979 Polish Exchange Program between Lock Haven State College and Marie
ty, administration and
Sklodowska University in Lublin, Poland, and LHSC Administrators gather in the Board Room in Sullivan. students called An InstitaHall.
tional Self-Study.
Mr. Robert Bravard,
director of library services,
who acted as chairman of
Eleven Polish scholars
Kazimierz Lobaza is a
Polish Exchange who is not
Lock Haven group are Dr.
the editing and publishing
(from the Marie Curie
specialist in the planning
located at LHSC. Dr.
John McGowan and Dr.
committee for that booklet,
Sklodowska University in
and political economy field,
Buraczynska is working
was coi^fident that LHSC
Charles Hayes. McGowan
Lublin, Poland are the repand Dr. Andrzej Balaban is
with the science departwill retain its accreditation.
and Hayes are already in
resentatives of the Polish
a professor of state law.
"It's not something we're
ment at Brown University,
Poland as part of the
Exchange program this
worried about," he stated.
Lobaza and Balaban are
Providence, Rhode Island.
exchange program.
semester at Lock Haven
Dr. John Zaharis, Vice
Approximately ten Lock
scheduled to lecture later in
The Polish Exchange
President of Academic
State College. The scholHaven State College stuthe semester on "Market
Program was organized last
Affairs was head of the
ars, most of who arrived in
dents are to study in Poland
and Planning in a Socialist
year by Dr. Marcus Konick,
steering committee which
late January, will teach or
this semester. The students
Economy", and the "Inner
Director of International
organized much of the
are scheduled to leave the
act as advisors for the
Organization of the Seym".
Education and Exchange.
evaluation procedures.
week
of
February
12,
and
various departments of the
Four members of the
Coordinator for this year's
The evaluation teams
will spend four months in
college.
Polish exchange are proPolish Exchange is LHSC
will be on campus until
Poland. Advisors for the
Dr. lemowit Pietras,
fessors of English; Wiktor
professor, Charles Kent.
Wednesday aftemoon.
professor
of
political
Gonet, Eleonora Horosz
science, is the Polish
Kiewicz, Joanna Draz
advisor for the exchange
Kiewicz-Klimaszewska,
group. Pietras is scheduled
and Joanna Durczak, all
to deliver a public lecture
have their Master of Arts
turn, make our offered
$71 per credit.
on the "Polish Political
Degrees in English. Ms.
(HARRISBURG)
- The
programs more cost effecThe new Secretary of
System" on Tuesday, FebDraz Kiewicz-KlimaszewCommonwealth Association
tive," the student lobby
Education, in a January 26
ruary 20, The lecture will
of Students (CAS) endorsed
ska will be teaching a
leader explained.
memo to all Pennsylvania
Acting Secretary of Educabe the first in a series of
course on Beginning and
The
fee
structure
state-college and university
tion,
Robert
Scanlon's
four lectures to be deliverIntermediate Polish at the
change, effective this sumpresidents, said he apdecision
to
lower
basic
ed by the Polish scholars
Williamsport Area Commer, will enable out-ofproved the fee changes
tuition
for
out-of-state
throughout the semester.
munity College. Professor
state full-time graduate
based on recommendations
graduate students and
Dr. Lech Antonowicz,
Durczak is the wife of a
students to pay $475 per
from the Board of State
reduce
summer
session
professor of international
semester tuition as opposed
Polish professor who was a
College and University
tuition for out-of-state
to the previous $890 fee.
public law, is teaching a
Presidents and Board of
member of the 1978 Polish
undergraduates attending
Out-of-state
undergraduDirectors, as well as from
Liberal Arts/Social Science
Exchange group. Durczak
Pennsylvania's 14 stateates attending summer
Commissioner of Higher
seminar on Socialist and
will present a public lecture
owned institutions.
sessions will be charged
Education Warren Ringler.
Communist Institutions.
later in the semester
"The reduction and/or
$39 oer rredit instead of
Both Antonowicz and Pietentitled " I n Search of
elimination of the fee
ras are serving as resource
America".
differential will certainly
persons in the history,
increase access to educaRepresenting the dethe lobby ot bioan Fine Arts
tion in Pennsylvania and
notice to management,
economics, and political
partments of the Sciences
Center, at 4:30pm to
will make studying in the
faculty, staff, and students:
science departments at the
are three Polish professors.
5:15pm on Thursday, FebCommonwealth more atAs
a
part
of
the
program
college.
Dr. Jerzy Niecko is a
ruary 15. The entire
tractive to out-of-state
arranged for the visit of the
Three other members of
specialist in chemical techcampus community is corstudents," said CAS ExecBoard of Directors of
the Polish exchange are
nology, and Dr. Stanislaw
dially invited to attend. We
utive Director Kathleen
Pennsylvania's state colprofessors in the economics
Halas specializes in Physhope you will find it
Downey.
leges
and
university
to
our
and political science fields
ics-spectrometry mass. Dr.
possible to join us in
campus on Thursday, Feb"Our
campuses
located
of study; Dr. Jan WasMonika Buraczynska, prohonoring the Board of
ruary 15, and Friday,
close to state border lines
zczynski is a professor of
Directors on this occasion.
fessor of microbiology, is
February 16, there will be
will benefit from increased
political economy, Mr.
the only member of the
an all-college reception in
enrollments which will, in.

Eleven Polish Scholars Presently On Campus

CAS Approves Decision

All-College Reception Set

todau*s
editorial

SOMETHING RUDE
by SUSAN SHELLY

About two weeks ago a student was stopped by a
law enforcement officer while walking on the road
behind Smith Hall, carrying a bro«vn paper bag.
The officer asked what was in the bag. The
student refused to siay and the officer persisted.
Finally, the officer told the student he would look in
the bag regardless of «vhat the student said. At this
point, the intimidated student gave the bag, which
contained turn six-packs of beer to the officer.
A week after the ihcident occurred, the law
enforcement officer was suspended from duty for
three days for his actions in this case and other
similar cases. M r . Carl Nelson, director of law
enforcement, said this was a dear case of
insubordination on the part of the officer who had
been informed it is not law enforcement's policy to
"chase bags."
W e commend Nelson for the action he took in this
case. He said he felt the officer had clearly violated
this student's rights, and we agree. Nelson said
because of this violation of rights, he had no
alternative but to punish the officer who had been
previously warned about the same thing. "Our
main interest is to protect the rights of the
students, not abuse t h e m , " Nelson said.
W e feel this case is indicative of that beliefs and
again, Nelson must be praised.
It becomes obvious with this case, that students
must again be informed of their rights. A student is
not required, in a case like the one above, to
divulge the contents of any container to a
policeman. If a law enforcement officer asks what
the contents of a container are, a student has the
guaranteed right to withhold that information.
There are cases, such as upon entering a concert
on campus ivhere an officer is justified in asking to
see the contents of a pocketbook or bag, (due to
college policy) but even if this case, ithe person
need not comply. However, that person could not
be admitted to the concert.
^,
Nelson stated, " i t is my hope Ihat none of the
officers will create, or even attempt to create a
situation where a student's rights will be violated."
It is our hope that if that situation does occur,
students will remember their rights and protect
them and themselves.

By CHRISTOPHER FLYNN
Everybody seems to be shocked by the reactions
of students interviewed in Campus Pulse last week.
Even my dear editor feels that something is wrong
with those student's attitudes. According to
modern psychology individuals are no longer wrong
they're "misguideJd."
Morality is a biinch of garbage,so lets do
whatever feels good. Steve Martin, the great
prophet of our time has shown all of us how easy it
is to be absolved from a crime. "All you have to
remember are two words: I forget." Those two
words can clear anyone of all wrong doing. " I
forgot that it was wrong to steal."
Martin may be overdoing it somewhat, but he is
basically reflecting the attitudes of our time. Young
people today as a rule are irresponsible. Now
before you start heading for your pen with all
intentions of writing me a nasty letter, stop, and
revaluate your own moral standards; your probably
not as lily white as you thought you were.

Letter
To the editor:
I missed the Thursday
Eagle Eye deadline, but
should like to comment
upon the Tuesday, February 6 Campus Pulse feature
which dealt with treatment
of bookstore theft. My
reaction to the students
who think that the matter
should be dealt with by the
college was one of resignation. The growing pains of
young Americans traditionally appears in the
desire of rights of adulthood, but not acceptance of
responsibility. Students
demand a lowered drinking
age, the vote, etc., but still
want to be protected from
the law. Many cultures
have a rite of passage that
marks the passing from

childhood to adulthood,
thereby letting the individual and the rest of society
know that he/she is adult
and therefore responsible
for behavior. Unless or
until the U.S. develops
such a rite, I suppose we
simply sigh when we read
or hear comments from
American youth facing
maturation. I read the other
comments in the feature
with dismay. One statement defended stealing as
a way to save money while
the other indicated no
recognition of stealing as
crime. I was relieved to see
that another student opposed those attitude in
Friday's paper.
Darlene Thomas
Anthropologist

Academic
For the Fall, 1978 semester
in all three schools:
169 students were placed
on probation for the first
time.
41 students were dismissed
from the colleg* for academic failure.

Some of the 41 dismissed
students may be granted a
second semester of probation as the resuh of an
appeal.

The Acropolis of Athens is the topic of this
week's art film, to be shown this Thursday at 7:30
p.m. in Sloan 146. The film focuses on the major
monuments of Creek architecture found on the
Acropolis. Admission is free, and open to the
general public.

' Livingston Taylor describes his music as "Folk
jazz style with a pinch of R & B and country. His
voice has been likened to that of his older and
better-known brother, James, although a recent
Rolling Stone review stated that Livingston's voice
was, In fact, more interesting than his brother's.
His songwrlting Is sensitive and intelligent, and,
while his music has not met with great commercial
success as yet, his albums, Including his latest
effort, "3-Way Mirror" (released last year on the
Epic label), have generally been critical successes.
According to his self-written press biography,
Taylor got his start about ten years ago when his
parents, on seeing his final high school grades,
pointed out that there were other things to life aside
from academics. His career started slowly and
discouragingly, but after a gig playing with Joni
Mitchell at Boston University, he was convinced
that he had made the right career decision. As he
states In his bio sheet, "When I saw people having
a good time enjoying themselves as I played my
music, I knew this is what I wanted to do for a long
time, regardless of whether I did well or not."
Indeed, Taylor has augmented his popularity by
his outgoing live performances. He Is renowned for
the rapport he builds with his audiences, and for
the good feelings that abound at his concerts.
On Thursday, Feb. 22, Taylor will be bringing
"good feelings" to Price Auditorium In an 8:00
p.m. concert (with Artie Traun and Pat Algers).
Tickets are available in the secretary's office at the
PUB ($4.00 for students with validated I.D.'s, $5.00
general admission).

Compus Pcipcrbock Destseiiers
1. The Women's Room, by Marilyn French. (Jove/HBJ.
$2.50.) Perspective on women's role in society: fiction.
2. My Mother, Myself, by Nancy Friday. (Dell, $2.50.) The
daughter's search for identity.

EAGLE EYE
AN INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER
The Eagle Eyo 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 connmentarles. All
contributions must be 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.

NEWS EDITOR
SPORTS EDITOR
PHOTOQRAPHY EDITOR
ASS'T PHOTO EDITOR
ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR
COMPOSITION EDITOR
ADVISOR
GENERAL MANAGER

By FRANCES ARNDT
Buster Keaton's masterpiece The General will be
the feature film in a program of silent-movie
comedy this Wednesday at 8:00 p.m. in Ulmer
Planetarium. Also on the program will be the Carlie
Chaplin short Easy Street and a film about Mack
Sennet and the Keystone Kops Preview will be
tonight at 8:00 p.m. in Raub 106.

35 students were removed
from probation.

The Lock Haven Stale College

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
MANAGINQ EDITOR
GRAPHICS EDITORS

•©e c5^rrs

SUSAN SHELLY
ChrIt Flynn
John Patrilak
Nancy Stoy
Diane Orban
Cheryl Wagner
Mike Baylor
Cheryl Fluck
Frances Arndt
Harry Pfender
Or. Howard K. Congdon
Martha Hastings

3. The Thorn Birds, by Colleen McCullough. (Avon, $2.50.)
Australian family saga: ficton.

VOO PXrx LIkB VOU'MB Al^ER
^^S(\ A PAIR OF
eA/OK s\kC£S B6R5RE.

poetry corner
WINTERAWARENESS
The leaves unveiling the
core of life,
Just' as our deep hidden
personalities are revealed
in this winterawareness
visability increases . . .
harshness brings forth kindness . . .
Headlights flickering
in the distance . . .
we see beautiful
winter trees
we see in this
winterawareness
Tony Garzione

4. Doonesbury's Greatest Hits, by G. B. Trudeau. (Holt,
$7.95.) Mid-seventies revue of cartoon strip.
5. Centennial, by James A. Michener. (Fawcett/Crest,
$2.95.) Epic story of America's legendary West: fiction.
6. The Amityvllle Horror, by Jay Anson. (Bantam, $2.50.)
True story of terror in a house possessed.
7. All Things Wise and Wonderful, by James Herriot.
^ B a n t a m . $2.75.) Continuing story of Yorkshire vet.
8. The Immigrants, by Howard Fast. (Dell, $2.75.) Italian
immigrant's rise and fall from Nob Hill: fiction
9. The Dieter's Guide to Weight Loss During Sex, by
Richard Smith. (Workman, $2.95.) Humorous take-off on
sex and diet manuals.
10. Julia Child & Company, by Julia Child. (Knopf, $8.95.)
Recipes being featured on her new TV series^
This list was compiled by r/ie Chronicle ol Higher Education from
information supplied by college stores throughout the country.
January 29, 1979.

Information On The Educational Testing Services Divulged
The next time you pick
up a well-sharpened No. 2 p
encil and begin to hurriedly
answer a standardized,
multiple-choice test, chances are that your test is one
of more than eight million
given annually by the
Educational Testing Service (ETS). You may know
ETS manufactures SATs,
LSATs, GREs and GMATs.
With these tests along, ETS
influences the educational
and career opportunities of
millions of people. But the
power of ETS does not
begin or end with those
tests. ETS markets 299
different tests. ETS tests
are used to determine
entrance to over 60
occupations including firefighters, actuaries, policemen, real estate brokers,
sailors, teachers, gynecologists, engineers, and
auto mechanics. ETS test
results are the standards of
access to some of the most
powerful professions: Foreign Service officers. New
York stockbrockers, lawyers in over 40 states, CIA
agents. Two million elementary students take ETS
tests, and ETS is even
developing ways to test
infants. ETS helps determine who will be eligible
for financial aid and how
much they will receive. The
financial information ETS
obtains on nearly two
million families is more
detailed than a mortgage
application or an IRS
return. ETS consultants
and trainees help shape
education and labor allocation policy in scores of
countries, including Singapore, Brazil, and Saudi
Arabia. And ETS has test
centers in 120 countries.
In thirty years, probably
90 million people have had
their schooling, jobs, prospects for advancement, and
beliefs in their own
potential directly shaped by
the quiet but pervasive
power of ETS.
What Is the Educational
Testing Service? How has it
centralized so much power?
Is it accountable to anyone,
or anything? Should your
opportunities be so influ-

enced by ETS' standards of
aptitude or intelligence?
Despite its massive influence, few people question ETS. Students may
want to tear up test forms
in moments of frustration,
but few of us think of
challenging the corporation
that makes the tests. We
will soon release a lengthy
report on ETS, written by
Allan Nairn, which we hope
will help people understand, and question, the
unique and unregulated
power of this corporation.
Indeed, ETS is, in
non-dollar ways, a large
corporation. It has more
customers per year then
GM and Ford combined.
Despite its non-profit status, it declares roughly a
million dollars in "nonprofits" each year. This
money is plowed back into
corporate expansion and
maintaining the ETS estate, which includes a 400
acre headquarters
in
Princeton, New Jersey, a
$250,000 home for the
president, William Turnbull, and a three million
dollar hotel/conference
center all built with student
test fees. Its revenue fi-om
test fees enables ETS to
double in size every five
years from 1948 to 1972, a
rate of growth faster than
IBM.
ETS's sales and near
monopoly power, combined
with its privileged legal
status as a non-profit
corporation, make it unprecendented in corporate
history. ETS is exempt
from federal and state
income taxes, is effectively
beyond the reach of many
anti-trust laws, and has no
stockholders. ETS escapes
the restraints governing
other corporations because
it is an "educational"
institution.
The power of ETS is
massive, as even one ETS
executive conceded. "No
matter what they try to tell
you here about how we
really don't have much
power," he said, "we know
we do. We know we're the
nations's gatekeeper."
This gatekeeper can deter-

Live in Concert

LIVINGSTON
TAYLOR
with special guest stars

Artie Traun & Pat Algers
Feb. 22
Thursday
8:00

MUSIC

Price Auditorium
$4-w/valldated ID
Secretary's office
In the PUB
$5 - General Admission

mine who enters college,
graduate and professional
schools, as well as many
occupations and professions. Is that power legitimate?
ETS defends its role as
the gatekeeper by claiming
it has developed the
"science of mental measurement," but as our
report will argue, the tests
measure nothing more than
how you answered a few
multiple-choice questions.
The correlation between
SAT scores and first-year
grades in college, for

example, is often lower
than the correlation between the test scores and
the income of the test
taker's parents. At best,
standardized tests measure
the specialized skill of
test-taking, but they do not
measure key determinants
of success such as writing
and research skill, ability
tomake coherent arguments, creativity, motivation, stamina, judgment,
experience, or ethics.
ETS not only influences
how institutions judge individuals, however; it alsp

ROY MILES recently assumed duties as food
service manager at LHSC. He was previously head
chef. [Photo by M I K E BAYLOR]

Roy Miles Becomes New Manager
By CHRISTOPHER FLYNN
There's an old face in
new clothing wandering
around Bentley Dining Hall
these days. His name is
Roy Miles and he's the new
director, but you're probably still puzzling over why
he looks at least somewhat

familiar.
Up until the end of last
semester. Miles was the
executive chef at LHS, a
position which he had held
since 1976. Miles is no new
comer to the food service
industry. Having graduated
from Penn State quite a few

at

HOY'S
Men's Shop presents
PRESIDENTS
DAY WEEKEND
Half-Price

Half-Price

All M e n ' s
Shirts
Sweaters
Sportcoats
All corduroy jeans
Winter jackets & vests

nation of grades and test
scores and they have no
recourse.
We must begin to
examine the examiners.
There is a growing
movement to reform and
restructure the testing
industry. In New York,
Ohio, Texas, and other
states, student-run Public
Interest Research Groups
(PIRGs) have introduced
"Truth in Testing" legislation in their state legislatures. This legislation
would force ETS and other
testing companies to disclose test questions and
answers, and all studies
and data on the tests; it
would also require companies to keep information on
applicants confidential.
Disclosing test answers
would enable students to
contest disputed answers,
and thus eliminate much of
the mystery surrounding
the tests. ETS has said it is
willing to release 99% of its
test date. But, Nairn says,
the bulk of this 99% is the
material provided by the
test-takers themselves name, social security number, etc. Nairn says it is
crucial to disclose that last
one percent, as it includes
ETS" extrapolations from
the information provided by
test-takers such as predictions of future academic
success.
The testing
reform
movement has other facets.
Jesse Jackson is organizing
around the issue of the ETS
National Teacher Examin)ations which have systematically eliminated qualified
black applicants
from
teaching jobs. The FTC has
apparently found, contrary
to ETS claims, that certain
kinds of prep or cram
courses can raise test
scores but the report has
been withheld at this time.
And several members of
Congress have called for an
investigation of the testing
industry.
Students now have opportunities to challenge the
test makers.
Individuals interested in
this issue, or in sponsoring
Truth in Testing legislation, can contact Ed
Hanley at our office at P.O.
Box 19312, Washington,
D.C. 20016

years ago, he has worked in
food service ever since.
Miles said that after
receiving his degree he
could have gone after a job
in the management end of
food service immediately,
but he felt that he would
gain more practical experience working in the preparation end of the field. He
feels this experience has
paid off immensely.
Right now Miles is a
recoginzable figure in the
cafeteria, he's the guy with
his arm in a sling. The
thumb on Miles' left hand
was severely damaged in a
loading accident in December.
Miles is obviously opptimistic about his job, and
hopes to recieve feedback
not only from the Food
Service Committee, but
also from individual students. Miles stated, "If it
wasn't for the student, we
Campus Employment: Student who can operate
wouldn't be here."
projector needed for apRoy Miles is a man who
proximately 4-6 hours per
enjoys what he's doing.
week to show Humanities
He's providing an importFilm Series Movies this
ant service and is very
semester. See Mrs. Peter in
much aware of that.
Raub 302
A special note; tomorrow
B ,Jason: Happy Valentine's
at lunchtime Mexican food *"*
will be the order ofthe d a y . / ^ Day. Love. S.

Announcement

Special table men's shoes & boots
Special rack men's winter suits
Values to $165 now $49.00
Special rack ftien's sportcoats
Values to $80 now $35.00
Special table men's dress & sport shirts $4.00
Special table men's sweaters $6.00
Special table men's dress pants & jeans $7.00
Open 'til 9 Mon, Thurs, Fri
Main Street
Downtown

$ 5 - A l l tickets at door

influences how individials
judge themselves. As Nairn
says, "A falst self-estimate
or image is instilled in the
mind of the individual who
receives a standardized
test score. For although the
scores are significantly
determined by social class,
he is told they are
objeetive, scientific measures of the individual."
Moreover, test takers are
subject to numerous injustices, ranging from
incorrect scoring of tests, to
late reporting of applicant
information, to secret eval-

THE
B
CHESAPEAKE O
O
James A . Michener
K
E
coming In March:
N
SfLMARHXION D
in paperback
Register for the
book of the month.

Main Street, Lock Haven

Freshmen From The Bench Sparit Eagles To Victory
By PETE BIELSKI
The play of Bob Horodyski and Terry Gilman
ignited a 40 point second
half explosion, as the Bald
Eagles whipped Slippery
Rock Saturday night 67-54
at Thomas Field House.
Combining on many back
door plavs. the frpshman

duo came off the bench and
sparked 20-9 scoring advantage over the final 7:20
of the contest. Horodyski
scored nine of his twenty
points during this span, two
buckets coming on picture
passes from Gilman. Dave
Roth also performed well,
as the Eagle bench took up
the slack, and guided the

young squad to a convincing victory.
Doug Legette, coming off
a 27 point performance at
Edinboro, had a off night,
scoring only 4 points. The
freshman from Chester had
the flu, thus, affect the
potential s t a r ' s ability.

Kenny Richter turned in
his usual fine performance,
as the all-conference sophomore guard from Hershey
scored 15 in addition to
keeping the young Eagles
poised while the game was
close.
In picking up their fifth

win in eighteen games,
Coach Brad Black was
impressed with the Eagles
team play. Commenting on
the second half. Black
said ' Bobby (Horodyski)
really sparked the team
when he came in, and did a
good job^ Dave Roth also
played well, really helping
out on the boards. Overall,

BOX SCORE—LOCK HAVEN

Wrestling News
By TOMMY PETERMAN
Five LHS wrestlers placed in the 36th annual
Pennsylvania State College
Athletic Conference Tournament this past weekend
at California State College.
Top place finishers were
junior Dave Moyer, 142,
and sophomore Doug Gallaher, 150. Also placing 4th
at 167 pounds was junior
Mike Nauman with Joe
Baranik placing Sth in the
158 pound class and Tim
Thompson earned a Sth at
190 pounds. The Haven
placed 6th in the 13 team
tournament with SO'/j
points. The nation's 14th
ranked NCAA-Division I
team, the Huskies of
Bloomsburg took top
honors followed by Clarion
State. Two Bald Eagles
reached the semi-finals,
but Gallaher lost a close
13-10 decision to Jody
McMullin ESSC, and Nauman dropped a 10-6
decision to tough Jim Vargo
of ESSC. The Bald Eagles
were shut out of the
winners' circle for the first
time in five years after
having two champs in 1978
and three champs in 1977.
Eight of the 10 men scored
wins for the Bald Eagles
with five placing for a good
team balance, but there
were no super stars to take
individual titles. LHS has
produced 116 PSCAC
champs and over 300 place
finishers. The tournament
is no longer the climax to
the wrestling season since
the inception of the NCAA
qualifying tournaments.
Winning matches but not
placing for the Bald Eagles
were John Unangst, 126;
Austin Shanfelter, 177, and
Gregg Koontz, Hwt. Lock
Haven's Mike Nauman won
the Fastest Fall Award
when he decked Daren
Keen of Kutztown in just
2:21. Nauman hit Keen
with a head lock in the consolation finals. Bill DiPaoli,
California's 118 pounder
won the OWa and had the
most falls in least aggregate time.
The Bald Eagles (10-10)
are back on the mats
Thursday night against the
Nittany Lions of Penn State
at 7:30 in Rec Hall and
close out the season their
dual meet season against
the Mountaineers of West
Virginia on Sunday at 1:30
pm in Thomas Field House.
The last weekend in February the Haven competes in
the EWL at Pitt. Dave
Moyer, 142, has the best
record at 21-5 and is ranked
Sth in the East at 134
pounds.

Eagles versus PSU battle
should be a toss-up on
Thursday evening. PSU is
on an eight match losing
streak, but is expected to
have four injured starters
back in their line-up,
including EWL champ Dan
Pfautz, 177. Hopefully the
young Bald Eagles well
balanced dual meet team
can make up for the lack of
several super stars against
the Nittany Lions...Coach
Dr. Ken Cox is anxiously
awaiting the arrival of
freshman Kenny Parsley on
the mats next season.
Parsley, a 1978 PIAA-AAA
champ had to red shirt this
season but has four big
years ahead of him, as foes
transfer John
"Red"
Campbell...Parsley has
great talent and has the
potential to duplicate "AllAmerican" Mike Moore's
great accomplishments on
the mat...Coach Cox only
has several real holes to fill
in the upcoming recruiting
war next month.

it was a good team effort."
The Eagles played Wilkes College last night-and
face Indiana at home on
Wednesday. The JV squad
lost to Slippery Rock's JV
after holding a five point
half-time lead, 80-72. Mike
Sollecito and Kris Bankovski again paced the team,
combining for 43 points.

Richter
Thompson
Beblowski
Legette
Bosnik
Horodyski
Gilman
Roth

F.G.
7
4
2
2
0
9
3
3

Ix)ck Haven 30
Slippery Rock 21

F.T.
1-4
0-0
0-ff
0-1
0-0
2-3
4-4
0-1

TOTAL
15
8
4
4
0
20
10
6

7-13
12-23

67
54

Foul Shooting Gintest
Sponsored

DAVE THOMPSON scores against Slippery Rocit in
Saturday night's g a m e . [Photo by M I K E
FAHRENBACH]

Who has the smoothest
set shot at Lock Haven
State? The Bald Eagle golf
team wants to know and is
sponsoring the third annual
foul shooting contest. Cash
prizes for winners include:
1st place-$15.00
2nd place-SlO.OO
3rd place-$5.00
For a grand total of $30.00
in prize money. The rules
*re simple. For $.50, each
contestant gets twenty
shots. The entries who sink
the most win the cash. You
can enter as often as you

wish.
The shoot-out will be
held in Zim. Gym II on
Thursday, Feb. 15~from
12:30-2:00 pm and 6 pm till
9 pm. All ties will be played
off at 9 pm. So bring your
touch along and we'll see
you there, for the Third
Annual Foul-Shot Shoot
Out.
All varsitv and junior
varsity players from both
the women's and men's
basketball teams are ineligible.

BrandeU And Mazyck Lead Gymnasts To Important Victory
By ROSELLE ROBAK
The Lock Haven State
College women's gymnastic team swept two of the
top three place winners in
each event in winning effort
during Saturday afternoon's tri-meet in Zimmerii
gymnasium. The Haven
women ammassed 90
points in the tri-meet,
whipping Ursinus with a 78
score and Edinboro's squad
finished with a 65.65.
Martha Brandell and
Rachine Mazyck led the
Bald Eagle gymnasts to one
of their finest afternoons
they have ever enjoyed on
the mats. Mazyck was a
double-winner as she captured firsts in the vaulting
and uneven parallel bars
with a 7.05 and 5.85 score
in each . Brandell was LHS'
most consistent performer
as she garnered three
second places in the meet
including vaulting, unevens, and balance beam.
Darcy Hill's performances also added substantial
points to the Haven total as
she tied for third in the
vaulting event with a 6,7,
and won the floor exercise
with a strong tumbling
routine for a 7.5 score.
The victory was especially sweet for Coach Lu
DeWette and her charges
as three members of the
team are sidelined with
injuries. Sheila Kelly,
Marianne Lester, and captain Sue Woolston are
regular performers who are
lost indefinitely due to
various ailments.

Captain Woolston spoke
for the team when after the
meet she remarked, "With
all the injuries we still
pulled through and did a
good job and enjoyed a
good meet."
Vaulting, the meet's
opening event, is one of the
Eagles strongest which
they proved by making an
almost complete sweep;
Ursinus's Carol Hess tying
Hill for third. Mazyck

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performed a Yamashita for
top-honors while teammate
Brandell showed off her
handspring vault for a
6.75--good enough for
second place.
Mazyck and Brandell
were also a one-two
combination in the uneven
parallel bars with Hess
again taking 3rd place
honors. Mazyck hit personal best on the bars with her
fine 5.85 score. The tiny
gymnast used a press ,
handstand mount and a
consistant, routine with no
stop or falls in her winning
performance.
Brandell's bar routine
was awarded a 4.85 on the
basis of difficulty, good
amplitude and a well-executed hecht dismount.
The Haven's domination
continued into the balance
beam competition where
Brandell was awarded
second and Jolene Wetherell finished third. Hess
continued to be outstanding
for Ursinus as she won the
beam competition. Wetherell's routine featured all
superior moves excluding
her aerial walkover dismount.
In the final event, floor
exercise, the Eagle gymnasts finished one-two as
Hill won the event and Sue
Moser placed second. The
wiry Hill was awarded a 7.5
and Moser a 6.75. Hill
needs one more 7.5 score to
qualify for regional competition. Edinboro's Linda
Page eeked out a third
place in floor for Edinboro's

only place winner.
Carol Hess was named
the meet's all-around gymnast with 23.15 total points
in four events. As Brandell
didn't compete in floor she
was ineligible for allaround honors for which
she is usually in the
running.
Coach DeWette had
nothing but praise for her
team now 4-2, after the
meet. "I'm pleased for the

kids, they put out 100%.
With each meet they are
improving and the schedule
is getting harder. I was
pleased with Jackie Stempel's routine on beam—she
threw her back handspring.
Darcy (Hill) did well
coming off an injury and
Martha was injured but
competed anyway."
The team's next competition is with University of
Penn on Feb. 14th.

Track Indoors At Buclmell
BY GARY SIEGEL
On Saturday the Lock
Haven State men's indoor
track team competed in an
open meet at Bucknell
University.
Top finishers for thp Bald
Eagles were sophomore
Mark Alles who placed
third in the pole vault with
a record jump of 14 feet,
which topped the old mark
of 13'6" set by Jeff Mann.
Senior Captain Stan
Burke and sophomore Andy
Herbster placed 4th and Sth
respectively in the high
jump.

Joe Leva placed third in
the shot put with a heave of
47 feet 2 inches.
Other fine performances
were turned in by sophomore Brian Adams with a
53.9 in the quarter, just .5
sees off of the school
record. Freshman Roger
Lee ran a very impressive
6.6 60 yard dash. In the 60
'yard high hurdles Daryle
Walton ran a 8:55 to make
it to the finals.
The team will next
compete at the Delaware
Invitational meet on Saturday and Sunday afternoons.

Classifieds
Private, Co-ed Camp, Poconos, seeks general &
specialty counselors. Camp
Akiba will interview on
Friday Feb. 16. Please call
Nancy at 748-8919 for an
interview time.
Don't forget! Meeting on
the Western Field Trip

Ulmer 301 Thursday 15 at
1:00 p.m.

For a better grade on your
term paper-have it typed
perfessionally, confidentially, economically. Minor
corrections. Low r a t e s .
748-3857 after 6 p.m.

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