BHeiney
Fri, 06/30/2023 - 16:44
Edited Text
Lock Haven State Coiiege
Tliesday, Apr, 10, 197)
Social Committee Putting Final Touches
On Spring Weekend; 4 Days Planned
by Carol Segars
With final plans now
underway, the SCC Social
Committee is putting the finishing touches on this years
schedule for Spring Weekend,
The cavalcade of activities
will begin April 27, and continue through to April 30.
Spring Weekend will open
with an improvisational theatn
workshop presented by "the
Proposition" in Bentley Hall
Lounge at 4 p.m. At 8 p,m.
"the Proposition"' an improvisational theatre group from
Boston, will perform in Price
Auditorium. TTiis group was
enormously popular with LHS
students last year, and it was
perhaps this popularity that
spawned their invitation to return to the campus this year,
Friday's activities will
conclude with a Fab Fifties
iance in Rogers Gym. Featured will be Dick Smart and the
American Grandstand, a takeoff of the old American Bandstand show. Another band, the
Attraction Company will also
appear at the dance.
Saturday will swing into
action with a host of events.
Since Freshman Orientation
is scheduled to coincide witn
the weekend, many new faces
may seem minglinR amone fam
iliar ones. Games, which include a scavengar hunt and a
soap-bdk derby, are planned
for the afternoon.
Probably the most' impaant event of any Spring, W i e t
end is the concert atltMtion.
This vear the ISoci«l CSAAIMK
tee has lined up ttveo artiot*
to peiicnn oaturday i n n i n g .
UvingJiitqr lavlor. brother of
3ium»imy\oi, is one of the
entertainers toJtppeat. Also
bille4 is John fl[H»e||» Dart
and Merkwood. The controvert
sial movie Joe will be shown
after the concert.
Ride-a-bike for the Re
tarded, sponsored by Alpha
Phi Omega, is the first Sunday activity scheduled to begin at 12 noon. Teams from
WiUiamsport Area Community
College and Lycoming College along with LHS will
compete in a canoe race at
2 p,m.
Spring Weekend's final
event will be a concert on the
lawn beside Rogers Gvm. This
concert will feature: John
Roberts and Tony Barrand,
Ben Cranberry, Bob Doyle,
Hank
Imhop,
Graveyard
Sciffle Band, and Steve
Davey and Dad.
Eagle Wmq
mm
Tuesday, April IG: |
Hot Meat Loaf Sondwf^P
Moshtd Potato**'
$1.15
A
Wednesday, April fibt
Spaghetti
Garlic Bre<^
v&
$1.15
F\\m Described As Honest V/esfern
"Ride the High Country" will be presented by
the humanities film series
on April 11 at 8:00 p.m. in
Ulmer Planetarium.
Joel McCrea, a former
Western Marshal made obsolete by civilization, teams
up with another ex-lawman,
Randolph Scott and a sassy.
fist-fast,
trigger-quick kid,
Ronald Starr. The trio is
hired by a group of bankers
in the town of Hornitos to
pick up and transport gold
along lonely trails from a
new strike in the High Sierras at a place called Coarse
Gold. The trio quickly becomes a quartet when they
are joined by a naive but
personable
girl, Mariette
Hartley, who decides to
swap the whip-hand threat^
of her religious zealot fatl*^
a list of allocations to various for
the ring-finger promifl^^
they appear in the 1973-74 pro- of a beau up at Coarse Gon|
see Proposed Allocations
The following is
organizations as
posed SCC budget. Any Questions or comments on
these allocations will be discussed at the special
SCC Senate meeting tonight at 7 pm in the PUB
Lounee.
Athletics
Band
Choir
College Players
Cultural Affairs
Contingency Fund
Debate Union
Executive Committee
Folk Society
P.C.C.E,B.
Publications
Social Committee
Ticket Committee
$65,208.24
4,000.00
1,750.00
2,900.00
: 26,000.00
9,416.76
1,750.00
6,800.00
700.00
9,000.00.
29,430.00
27,000.00
-200.00
Total AUocatipn^l MlRSS'O^^
!m^
Coarse Gold is a squaiiu
camp with its only building
being a brothel. Mariette
Hartley's beau is not squalid
but his three brothers are,
and they expect to share
coinmunal marital [privileges.
When the terrified bride
departs on her wedding
night to rejoin the trio, the
real struggle begins. Scott
and Starr have intended all
along to eitnor,^weet-talk
or piatoV-sUeMM McCrea
out of the' vniHi^tmi the
good-guy b«d-gm;,|i^ggle
intensifies.
The story.,
Peckinpah's tasteful
tion, is shot near California's Mammoth Lakes^ and
the film owes
beauty to natuji
High Country'*
honesty of
I and Ihei
EACLE EVE
page :
Lock Haven St at e Ool 1 ege,
•nies., i ^ r i l
ft.
10, 1973
Iran Student Comes to
LHS to Beat the Draft
oy Al Munz
Mohsen T a t a s s o l y ,
a
freshman from Iran, is studying at LHS this year to further his education. Mohsen
is from Shiraz, Iran and is a
physics major here but hopes
t o t r a n s f e r e to a larger school
that
has an engineering
course next se"iestex.
Moshen came to study
here in the U.S. because
when boys turn 19 in Iran
they must join the army.
They are excused from joining if they are studying abroad, but after they are done
studying they must then
serve for two years in the
army. He will, however, receive a higher rank because
he h a s studied abroad.
Moshen has two brothers
snd three s i s t e r s . He is the
second oldest in bis family.
He learned to speak English
in his high school and then
took a cc urse over the summer in Wsshington, D.C. to
help him with his English.
He also knows Arabic which
is the language of his religion.
Moshen found studying
hard at first but now he
understands
the language
better and finds the courses
e a s i e r . He says that " L o c k
Haven is easier than the
colleges in Iran and that the
colleges in Iran are very
hard to get i n t o . " He likes
it here at Lock Haven but
says " t h e r e is nothing to
d o . " Moshen plans to stay
here in the U.S. for five
years but a s of now he does
not know where else he will
be studying.
Abov^ Loorie
"Please,
Bailey.
Laskey and Jill
Below is a scene from "One Egg",
directed
and Kim Koon,
WARA Planning
Big Weekend
For IHS Women
For details on how to oba safe,
enact
by Joe Nicely, with Helayne MacArthur, Nancy Wiener,
Qs on Abortions?
tain
Esterline
No Flo'Mers" which was directed by Judy
legal, low
-ost abortion in Penna.
CONTACT
Pregnancy
Counseling
Service
Vial toll free
1.800-327-4320
A Non-Profit Organizationi
KDR Weekend Is A Success
•>y Uonna Gerhardt
The successful KDR
Spring Weekend took place
March 23.
The many KDR brother^
oledges, and their dates who
ittended began the weekend
with a party at the fraternity
house on Friday night.
1
North Eastern Trading Co.
Complete selection pf paperbacks,
magazines, & Rust Craft cards
Saturday night included
a formal dinner at t h e S h e r adon Hotel in WiUiamsport,
followed by a party there
from 9 Saturday until 5 Sunday, one of the main highlights of the party was a serenade by the brothers to the
KDR fraternity sweetheart,
Mrs. June Baker.
According to the brothers, all who participated
enjoyed themselves at the
exciting weekend f e s t i v i t i e s .
Luigi's
52!2 reor East Church St
748- 6573
31 Bellefonte Ave. 748.39S)
•
3 hambufBers, FF, smalt pop
$1UI9
by Mari an Maskul ak
The Lffi Wbman's Athl e t i c and Recreation Ass o c i a t i o n i s sponsoring
a weekend for a! I women
at Sieg Cbnf erence Cent e r , According t o Alice
Stivanelli,
WARA p r e s i dent, t h i s event, t o be
held on y>pr i 1 28 and 29,
w i l be the f i r s t of i t s
ki nd.
Plans for the weekend
include indoor ganes and
a sing-along for Saturday and outdoor
games,
such
as badni nt on and
vol 1 eybal 1 f or
Sunday,
Haw ver, everyone will be
free to select their own
activities
and M s s Sti
vanel 1 i assures that all
equi pnent wi 11 be suppl i ec
for
whatever
activities
the girl s choose.
The cost i s $1.00, and
transportation
will
be
provided. Signs are posted
in Zinmerli and
ftntley
where anyone i n t e r e s t e d
may sign up. /ipnl
24
i s the deadline for signing up.
Tues., i^ril 10, 1973
EAOLE EYE
Lock Haven State Ool lege. Pa.
page 3
Spoflight: Anderson's Attitudes Reflect Teammates'
by Ray Oberheim
The
Eagl es'
si i ckfi el ding junior
second
baseman, Barry Anderson,
enters t h i s season ( h i s
t h i r d as an Eagle, f i r s t
as a regular) with an
outlook identical to nnst
of hi s t eamiBtes.
The fact that he and
so nBny of h i s fellow
players are agreed in
their goals and a t t i t u d e s
shows just how many "team
p l a y e r s " Lack Ibven really possesses.
Barry
enphatically
s t r e s s e s the itiportance
of putting past f a i l u r e s
and disappointments out
of t he ni nd and 1 ooki ng
Herrmann's Young
Netters Shutout
St. Francis Club
A young Lock Haven
State Cbl lege tennis team
shutout
a veteran St.
ftancis Cbl I ege club, 9-0
ft i day afternoon on the
UB courts. I t was the
season opener
for
the
Bal d Eagl es.
Foil owing Lock Haven's
highly
iiipressive
win
head coach Karl Herrmann
said: "Ken Qbson looked
very sharp after a slow
s t a r t in the f i r s t set.
I was r e a l l y pleased with
freshman O a i g Shindler
in h i s f i r s t
varsity
tiBtch. He inproves every
day,
"Scott
Kaercher was
r e a l l y sharp today in
both singles and doubles
pi ay, Tom Bawen pi ayed a
fine and steady game; he
trakes very few mistakes.
" I t was probably the
best
tennis I've ever
seen Bill Lentz play.
Chip Snare i s learning
fast;
with
experience
he'll be tough to b e a t , "
The Bal d Eagl es ar e
in the process of three
tough opponents in three
lays and all on the road.
Lock Haven traveled t o
floomsburg State on Nfcnday; to Wlliansport today to face arch-rival
Lyconi ng
Co! 1 ege,
and
then a t r i p t o Indiana
Uii versify
of
Pennsylvania on Itednesday.
o p t i m i s t i c a l l y toward the
f ut ur e.
"I can't single out
any one past success or
failure that stands out
because, to me, past events
are meaningless.
I t ' s the future that r e a l ly counts," he s t a t e d .
"Therefore, nothing that
has ever happened t o ire
in baseball i s d i s t i n guishable as being 'ny
greatest
disappointment
or t h r i l l , ' b u t I will say
t h i s for sure: I ' l l be
truly
disappointed
if
we don't beat Mansfield
t h i s year. Wfe could lose
al 1 our games and beat
only Nfensfield and I'd
get a c e r t a i n s a t i s f a c t i o n
out of i t because of what
they've previously done
to u s . "
Barry comes from Tyrone and leans toward
R t t s b u r g h as a f a v o r i t e
tearn primarily because
t hei r games ar e pr i mar i 1 y
broadcast in the Tyrone
area.
K s f avor i t e pi ayer,
then, i s P i r a t e great
H I ! Mazer oski. This i s
p a r t l y because he's a
second basetian, l i k e Barry, and p a r t l y becuase
he br ought a wor 1 d chant
pionship to
Pittsburgh
in 1960 with a draimtic
ninth inning homer un a-
gainst the Yankees,
Barry, who gener aLL;'
says l i t t l e , 1 e t t i n g hi s
playing performance speak
for hiTO, gives his personal outlook for t h i s
coning season:
" I ' d like to see cveryon have a good time,
while having a hand in
contributing to a championship
per for nance."
Barry's a t t i t u d e and
outlook i s c h a r a c t e r i s t i c of the Eagles as a
teairi They have one major
goal in nind; that of
winning the conference
chanpi onshi p; and one or
Cont, on p. 4
Grappler Awards Announced
The Lock Haven State
College wrestling team awards for the 1972-73 season have been announced
by head coach Dr. Ken Cox
following voting by the entire squad.
Senior Gary Ventimiglia received the A. I^hr
Eckert "Inspirational Wrestler" award and the Charles
Goldthorp
"Outstanding
Wrestler" award. Ventimiglia, co-captain of the '72 73 team compiled an overall record of 18-7-1 an(J won
the 150-pound C.W. Post
Holiday Tournament championship.
Jim Schuster, freshman
heavyweight, also won two
awards. He was selected
for the Alumni "Outstanding
Freshman Wrestler" award
and took the "Fastest F a l l "
honor with a 1:38 pin during
the season.The frosh heavyweight had a fine first year
on the varsity with a record
of 16-10-2 and placed fifth
at the National NCAA (College Division) Tournament.
Don Adams, junior, received the Dennis Killion
"Most Improved Wrestler"
award, Adams produced a
14-8-1 overall mark for the
'72-73 season including a
great 11-3-1 dual meet revord.
Elected co-captains for
the 1973-74 season were
Adams and 150-pound Pennsvlvania Conference Champion, Junior Don Eichenlaub.
Coach Cox also listed
the 1972-73 letter winners:
Adams(second); Bob Banfill,
soohm.ore; co-captain Lou
Conway, sophmore(Second);
Eichenlaub; junior, Brian
Kuntz; Rob Johnson, 126pound conference champion;
Bob Nanv. soDhmore(second);
Schuster; Ventimiglia; Ueorge
Wilhelm, sophmore; and senior Gary Yoder,
A total of 37 LHS wrestlers participated in one tf
more varsity and junior varsity meets during the '72-73
season.
Sluggers Warm Up For Opener
by Ray Oberheim
Following a Saturday
mar ning game-condi t ioned
scrinmage, the UE baseba! 1 team put in i t s
final heavy preparatiot
for the season opener at
Mi 11 ersvi 11 e.
Teams, under the d i rection of
CO-captains
Skip
Wal fe and Barry
Seidel , col 1 ided in a
nine-inning
intra-squad
game Wiich attenpted to
s i n u l a t e an actual gane.
Ibpefully, i t better prepared the squad for a
Mi 11 er svi 11 e t eam t hat '11
have s i x games under i t s
be! t by TUesday,
Wblfe's Warriors won
the scriiTTiBge, 5-2, over
Barry's Bonisers, with the
hi 11 er s showi ng wel 1 on
both squads, i^ 1 seven
Eagle pitchers saw duty,
generally
per for ning
well, except for a few
too many walks. In a controlled
scriiniBge
on
ftiday, the pitchers were
nor e doni nant.
Cbach Eber 1 e l i s t s as
s tentative
starting
neup:
Wayne Bacon (centerfield)
Skip Wbir (1st base)
Ray Olierheim ( r i g h t field)
Tom Matisak ( s h o r t stop)
Nike Qone (3rd base)
Rich Osborn or Paul
TUrchetta ( l e f t f i e l d )
Barry Seidel (catcher)
Barry Aider son (2nd
base)
9, Jeff Yentsch and B'ian
Winters (pitchers)
Oppose Abortion
When self-conscioutn«ss,
instead of being caused
I9y 0 living, human being,
begins to cause o living,
human being, there is
iomething wrong wjth'hu*
man reoson.
$ee Professor
11205.
^«^
•to
l U e s . . April 10. 1973
B^OLE Ere
page 4
l ^ k " • ' • • *•*• C*"'"** ' • •
Drug Abuse Films Are Resfricfed For Inaccuracies
As nany as eight-five
percent of all the hundreds
of drug-abuse information
films available today maybe
doing more harm than good,
according to the latest evaluation by the National Coordination Council on Drug
Education (NCCDE),
rtosT
and
Items
this
Rye
PUB.
office
been
may be .submitted to
column in the Eagle
office,
ground floor
Please notify this
when Ihe item has
claimed if recovered.
Will the person who
"borrowed" the black
folding umbrella from the
coat room in Bentley
please return it to Bill
McComas room 224 High.
Lost: mue Marriage andi
Family book, and green
notebook. If found piease
contact Chris pellegrino
129 High Hall, Ext. 443.
Blue sweat jacket with a
lood was picked up by
nislake in the women's
locker room in Zimnerli
gym on Wednesday, April
4. The person who has it,
please return it to Lori
Dutt, Rm. 101 Russell
Hall, Ext.401.
The report, the third
yearly evaluation of information on drug use commonly
used in schools, said that
the exceedingly inaccuratf
and confusing portrayal ot
drug use characterized in
most films reflects the confusion, hysteria and misconceptions that characterize
the majority of existing drug
abuse information and education programs.
Of the 220 films screened by NCCDE and reviewed
last month in the report,
Drug Abuse Films, only
sixteen percent were believed to be scientifically
and conceptually acceptable. Another
fifty-three
percent of the films, which
dated hack to 1965, were
placed in a restricted category.The report urged that
the use of restricted films be
confined to skilled drug edL^cation professionals.
Among the films placea
on the restricted list were
"The Mad Chemist," "The
Hippie Temptation," and
"Drugs; Facts Everyone
Needs to Know," "Marijuana: The Great Escape,"
a professionally produced
film intended fcr "junior high
school audience, was found
almost totally unacceptable because of its conveyance of false impressions.
The report criticized the
film for generalizations about
the effects of marijuana
smoking.
The reviewing panels,
selected from among people
with professional knowledgabout drugs and behavior,
Anderson . .
jailed thirty-one percent of
the films totally unacceptable. It was suggested by
the panel that these films
could only be of value by
serving film makers and
educatas with examples of
"what not to do,"
Cont. from p. 3
two
secondary
goals,
which are beating Mansf i e l d and then Shippensburg.
If
the out 1ook and
team a t t i t u d e nean anything, they should spell
good things for the Eagles t h i s year for the
Eagles have plenty of
both.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Ihere v i l l be a
special neeting of the
Senate to discuss the
1913-74 budget today
in the RJB Lounge at
7 p.m
There will be a meeting
of the Cultural Affairs
Conmittee on Ihursday,
/kiril 12at 1 m. in M*Vaughn's Office to decide next year's lecture
series.
ALPHA PHI OMEGA Brothers, Sisters, and Pledges: There will be an emergency meeting of the
Fraternity,
Thursday,
April 12, 1973 at 7:30 pm
in Raub 223. Brothers,
Sisters, BE THERE!!!
A PCU Steering Committee meeting will take
place Wed. at 1 p.m. in
Dave Arsenault's officeSmith Hall.
Applications for the
Soap Box Derby on April
28, may be picked up in
the PCCEB office in the
PUB. They must be returned by next Friday,
the 13th.
WRA will continue to
schedule
appointments
with a gynecologist at
lower student fees. Call
Denise Heusel, ext. 425
or 748-2572.
ABORT/ON
Free Plocement
Free Preg. Test
N.Y.C, Medicaid Accepted
SteinI furniture fashion center>
monument place, lock haven, pa.
748-2504
complete line of
CALL
595-4220
Controlled Parenthood
Suite 55
200W.72nd^St.
N.Y.C. N.Y.
Safe; Low-cost
Confidential
PANASONIC'
radio, *y, hi-jfi, i|uodlra«#|i«l
J
rofit Organization
•I
•
I
I
H
Mfl
Tliesday, Apr, 10, 197)
Social Committee Putting Final Touches
On Spring Weekend; 4 Days Planned
by Carol Segars
With final plans now
underway, the SCC Social
Committee is putting the finishing touches on this years
schedule for Spring Weekend,
The cavalcade of activities
will begin April 27, and continue through to April 30.
Spring Weekend will open
with an improvisational theatn
workshop presented by "the
Proposition" in Bentley Hall
Lounge at 4 p.m. At 8 p,m.
"the Proposition"' an improvisational theatre group from
Boston, will perform in Price
Auditorium. TTiis group was
enormously popular with LHS
students last year, and it was
perhaps this popularity that
spawned their invitation to return to the campus this year,
Friday's activities will
conclude with a Fab Fifties
iance in Rogers Gym. Featured will be Dick Smart and the
American Grandstand, a takeoff of the old American Bandstand show. Another band, the
Attraction Company will also
appear at the dance.
Saturday will swing into
action with a host of events.
Since Freshman Orientation
is scheduled to coincide witn
the weekend, many new faces
may seem minglinR amone fam
iliar ones. Games, which include a scavengar hunt and a
soap-bdk derby, are planned
for the afternoon.
Probably the most' impaant event of any Spring, W i e t
end is the concert atltMtion.
This vear the ISoci«l CSAAIMK
tee has lined up ttveo artiot*
to peiicnn oaturday i n n i n g .
UvingJiitqr lavlor. brother of
3ium»imy\oi, is one of the
entertainers toJtppeat. Also
bille4 is John fl[H»e||» Dart
and Merkwood. The controvert
sial movie Joe will be shown
after the concert.
Ride-a-bike for the Re
tarded, sponsored by Alpha
Phi Omega, is the first Sunday activity scheduled to begin at 12 noon. Teams from
WiUiamsport Area Community
College and Lycoming College along with LHS will
compete in a canoe race at
2 p,m.
Spring Weekend's final
event will be a concert on the
lawn beside Rogers Gvm. This
concert will feature: John
Roberts and Tony Barrand,
Ben Cranberry, Bob Doyle,
Hank
Imhop,
Graveyard
Sciffle Band, and Steve
Davey and Dad.
Eagle Wmq
mm
Tuesday, April IG: |
Hot Meat Loaf Sondwf^P
Moshtd Potato**'
$1.15
A
Wednesday, April fibt
Spaghetti
Garlic Bre<^
v&
$1.15
F\\m Described As Honest V/esfern
"Ride the High Country" will be presented by
the humanities film series
on April 11 at 8:00 p.m. in
Ulmer Planetarium.
Joel McCrea, a former
Western Marshal made obsolete by civilization, teams
up with another ex-lawman,
Randolph Scott and a sassy.
fist-fast,
trigger-quick kid,
Ronald Starr. The trio is
hired by a group of bankers
in the town of Hornitos to
pick up and transport gold
along lonely trails from a
new strike in the High Sierras at a place called Coarse
Gold. The trio quickly becomes a quartet when they
are joined by a naive but
personable
girl, Mariette
Hartley, who decides to
swap the whip-hand threat^
of her religious zealot fatl*^
a list of allocations to various for
the ring-finger promifl^^
they appear in the 1973-74 pro- of a beau up at Coarse Gon|
see Proposed Allocations
The following is
organizations as
posed SCC budget. Any Questions or comments on
these allocations will be discussed at the special
SCC Senate meeting tonight at 7 pm in the PUB
Lounee.
Athletics
Band
Choir
College Players
Cultural Affairs
Contingency Fund
Debate Union
Executive Committee
Folk Society
P.C.C.E,B.
Publications
Social Committee
Ticket Committee
$65,208.24
4,000.00
1,750.00
2,900.00
: 26,000.00
9,416.76
1,750.00
6,800.00
700.00
9,000.00.
29,430.00
27,000.00
-200.00
Total AUocatipn^l MlRSS'O^^
!m^
Coarse Gold is a squaiiu
camp with its only building
being a brothel. Mariette
Hartley's beau is not squalid
but his three brothers are,
and they expect to share
coinmunal marital [privileges.
When the terrified bride
departs on her wedding
night to rejoin the trio, the
real struggle begins. Scott
and Starr have intended all
along to eitnor,^weet-talk
or piatoV-sUeMM McCrea
out of the' vniHi^tmi the
good-guy b«d-gm;,|i^ggle
intensifies.
The story.,
Peckinpah's tasteful
tion, is shot near California's Mammoth Lakes^ and
the film owes
beauty to natuji
High Country'*
honesty of
I and Ihei
EACLE EVE
page :
Lock Haven St at e Ool 1 ege,
•nies., i ^ r i l
ft.
10, 1973
Iran Student Comes to
LHS to Beat the Draft
oy Al Munz
Mohsen T a t a s s o l y ,
a
freshman from Iran, is studying at LHS this year to further his education. Mohsen
is from Shiraz, Iran and is a
physics major here but hopes
t o t r a n s f e r e to a larger school
that
has an engineering
course next se"iestex.
Moshen came to study
here in the U.S. because
when boys turn 19 in Iran
they must join the army.
They are excused from joining if they are studying abroad, but after they are done
studying they must then
serve for two years in the
army. He will, however, receive a higher rank because
he h a s studied abroad.
Moshen has two brothers
snd three s i s t e r s . He is the
second oldest in bis family.
He learned to speak English
in his high school and then
took a cc urse over the summer in Wsshington, D.C. to
help him with his English.
He also knows Arabic which
is the language of his religion.
Moshen found studying
hard at first but now he
understands
the language
better and finds the courses
e a s i e r . He says that " L o c k
Haven is easier than the
colleges in Iran and that the
colleges in Iran are very
hard to get i n t o . " He likes
it here at Lock Haven but
says " t h e r e is nothing to
d o . " Moshen plans to stay
here in the U.S. for five
years but a s of now he does
not know where else he will
be studying.
Abov^ Loorie
"Please,
Bailey.
Laskey and Jill
Below is a scene from "One Egg",
directed
and Kim Koon,
WARA Planning
Big Weekend
For IHS Women
For details on how to oba safe,
enact
by Joe Nicely, with Helayne MacArthur, Nancy Wiener,
Qs on Abortions?
tain
Esterline
No Flo'Mers" which was directed by Judy
legal, low
-ost abortion in Penna.
CONTACT
Pregnancy
Counseling
Service
Vial toll free
1.800-327-4320
A Non-Profit Organizationi
KDR Weekend Is A Success
•>y Uonna Gerhardt
The successful KDR
Spring Weekend took place
March 23.
The many KDR brother^
oledges, and their dates who
ittended began the weekend
with a party at the fraternity
house on Friday night.
1
North Eastern Trading Co.
Complete selection pf paperbacks,
magazines, & Rust Craft cards
Saturday night included
a formal dinner at t h e S h e r adon Hotel in WiUiamsport,
followed by a party there
from 9 Saturday until 5 Sunday, one of the main highlights of the party was a serenade by the brothers to the
KDR fraternity sweetheart,
Mrs. June Baker.
According to the brothers, all who participated
enjoyed themselves at the
exciting weekend f e s t i v i t i e s .
Luigi's
52!2 reor East Church St
748- 6573
31 Bellefonte Ave. 748.39S)
•
3 hambufBers, FF, smalt pop
$1UI9
by Mari an Maskul ak
The Lffi Wbman's Athl e t i c and Recreation Ass o c i a t i o n i s sponsoring
a weekend for a! I women
at Sieg Cbnf erence Cent e r , According t o Alice
Stivanelli,
WARA p r e s i dent, t h i s event, t o be
held on y>pr i 1 28 and 29,
w i l be the f i r s t of i t s
ki nd.
Plans for the weekend
include indoor ganes and
a sing-along for Saturday and outdoor
games,
such
as badni nt on and
vol 1 eybal 1 f or
Sunday,
Haw ver, everyone will be
free to select their own
activities
and M s s Sti
vanel 1 i assures that all
equi pnent wi 11 be suppl i ec
for
whatever
activities
the girl s choose.
The cost i s $1.00, and
transportation
will
be
provided. Signs are posted
in Zinmerli and
ftntley
where anyone i n t e r e s t e d
may sign up. /ipnl
24
i s the deadline for signing up.
Tues., i^ril 10, 1973
EAOLE EYE
Lock Haven State Ool lege. Pa.
page 3
Spoflight: Anderson's Attitudes Reflect Teammates'
by Ray Oberheim
The
Eagl es'
si i ckfi el ding junior
second
baseman, Barry Anderson,
enters t h i s season ( h i s
t h i r d as an Eagle, f i r s t
as a regular) with an
outlook identical to nnst
of hi s t eamiBtes.
The fact that he and
so nBny of h i s fellow
players are agreed in
their goals and a t t i t u d e s
shows just how many "team
p l a y e r s " Lack Ibven really possesses.
Barry
enphatically
s t r e s s e s the itiportance
of putting past f a i l u r e s
and disappointments out
of t he ni nd and 1 ooki ng
Herrmann's Young
Netters Shutout
St. Francis Club
A young Lock Haven
State Cbl lege tennis team
shutout
a veteran St.
ftancis Cbl I ege club, 9-0
ft i day afternoon on the
UB courts. I t was the
season opener
for
the
Bal d Eagl es.
Foil owing Lock Haven's
highly
iiipressive
win
head coach Karl Herrmann
said: "Ken Qbson looked
very sharp after a slow
s t a r t in the f i r s t set.
I was r e a l l y pleased with
freshman O a i g Shindler
in h i s f i r s t
varsity
tiBtch. He inproves every
day,
"Scott
Kaercher was
r e a l l y sharp today in
both singles and doubles
pi ay, Tom Bawen pi ayed a
fine and steady game; he
trakes very few mistakes.
" I t was probably the
best
tennis I've ever
seen Bill Lentz play.
Chip Snare i s learning
fast;
with
experience
he'll be tough to b e a t , "
The Bal d Eagl es ar e
in the process of three
tough opponents in three
lays and all on the road.
Lock Haven traveled t o
floomsburg State on Nfcnday; to Wlliansport today to face arch-rival
Lyconi ng
Co! 1 ege,
and
then a t r i p t o Indiana
Uii versify
of
Pennsylvania on Itednesday.
o p t i m i s t i c a l l y toward the
f ut ur e.
"I can't single out
any one past success or
failure that stands out
because, to me, past events
are meaningless.
I t ' s the future that r e a l ly counts," he s t a t e d .
"Therefore, nothing that
has ever happened t o ire
in baseball i s d i s t i n guishable as being 'ny
greatest
disappointment
or t h r i l l , ' b u t I will say
t h i s for sure: I ' l l be
truly
disappointed
if
we don't beat Mansfield
t h i s year. Wfe could lose
al 1 our games and beat
only Nfensfield and I'd
get a c e r t a i n s a t i s f a c t i o n
out of i t because of what
they've previously done
to u s . "
Barry comes from Tyrone and leans toward
R t t s b u r g h as a f a v o r i t e
tearn primarily because
t hei r games ar e pr i mar i 1 y
broadcast in the Tyrone
area.
K s f avor i t e pi ayer,
then, i s P i r a t e great
H I ! Mazer oski. This i s
p a r t l y because he's a
second basetian, l i k e Barry, and p a r t l y becuase
he br ought a wor 1 d chant
pionship to
Pittsburgh
in 1960 with a draimtic
ninth inning homer un a-
gainst the Yankees,
Barry, who gener aLL;'
says l i t t l e , 1 e t t i n g hi s
playing performance speak
for hiTO, gives his personal outlook for t h i s
coning season:
" I ' d like to see cveryon have a good time,
while having a hand in
contributing to a championship
per for nance."
Barry's a t t i t u d e and
outlook i s c h a r a c t e r i s t i c of the Eagles as a
teairi They have one major
goal in nind; that of
winning the conference
chanpi onshi p; and one or
Cont, on p. 4
Grappler Awards Announced
The Lock Haven State
College wrestling team awards for the 1972-73 season have been announced
by head coach Dr. Ken Cox
following voting by the entire squad.
Senior Gary Ventimiglia received the A. I^hr
Eckert "Inspirational Wrestler" award and the Charles
Goldthorp
"Outstanding
Wrestler" award. Ventimiglia, co-captain of the '72 73 team compiled an overall record of 18-7-1 an(J won
the 150-pound C.W. Post
Holiday Tournament championship.
Jim Schuster, freshman
heavyweight, also won two
awards. He was selected
for the Alumni "Outstanding
Freshman Wrestler" award
and took the "Fastest F a l l "
honor with a 1:38 pin during
the season.The frosh heavyweight had a fine first year
on the varsity with a record
of 16-10-2 and placed fifth
at the National NCAA (College Division) Tournament.
Don Adams, junior, received the Dennis Killion
"Most Improved Wrestler"
award, Adams produced a
14-8-1 overall mark for the
'72-73 season including a
great 11-3-1 dual meet revord.
Elected co-captains for
the 1973-74 season were
Adams and 150-pound Pennsvlvania Conference Champion, Junior Don Eichenlaub.
Coach Cox also listed
the 1972-73 letter winners:
Adams(second); Bob Banfill,
soohm.ore; co-captain Lou
Conway, sophmore(Second);
Eichenlaub; junior, Brian
Kuntz; Rob Johnson, 126pound conference champion;
Bob Nanv. soDhmore(second);
Schuster; Ventimiglia; Ueorge
Wilhelm, sophmore; and senior Gary Yoder,
A total of 37 LHS wrestlers participated in one tf
more varsity and junior varsity meets during the '72-73
season.
Sluggers Warm Up For Opener
by Ray Oberheim
Following a Saturday
mar ning game-condi t ioned
scrinmage, the UE baseba! 1 team put in i t s
final heavy preparatiot
for the season opener at
Mi 11 ersvi 11 e.
Teams, under the d i rection of
CO-captains
Skip
Wal fe and Barry
Seidel , col 1 ided in a
nine-inning
intra-squad
game Wiich attenpted to
s i n u l a t e an actual gane.
Ibpefully, i t better prepared the squad for a
Mi 11 er svi 11 e t eam t hat '11
have s i x games under i t s
be! t by TUesday,
Wblfe's Warriors won
the scriiTTiBge, 5-2, over
Barry's Bonisers, with the
hi 11 er s showi ng wel 1 on
both squads, i^ 1 seven
Eagle pitchers saw duty,
generally
per for ning
well, except for a few
too many walks. In a controlled
scriiniBge
on
ftiday, the pitchers were
nor e doni nant.
Cbach Eber 1 e l i s t s as
s tentative
starting
neup:
Wayne Bacon (centerfield)
Skip Wbir (1st base)
Ray Olierheim ( r i g h t field)
Tom Matisak ( s h o r t stop)
Nike Qone (3rd base)
Rich Osborn or Paul
TUrchetta ( l e f t f i e l d )
Barry Seidel (catcher)
Barry Aider son (2nd
base)
9, Jeff Yentsch and B'ian
Winters (pitchers)
Oppose Abortion
When self-conscioutn«ss,
instead of being caused
I9y 0 living, human being,
begins to cause o living,
human being, there is
iomething wrong wjth'hu*
man reoson.
$ee Professor
11205.
^«^
•to
l U e s . . April 10. 1973
B^OLE Ere
page 4
l ^ k " • ' • • *•*• C*"'"** ' • •
Drug Abuse Films Are Resfricfed For Inaccuracies
As nany as eight-five
percent of all the hundreds
of drug-abuse information
films available today maybe
doing more harm than good,
according to the latest evaluation by the National Coordination Council on Drug
Education (NCCDE),
rtosT
and
Items
this
Rye
PUB.
office
been
may be .submitted to
column in the Eagle
office,
ground floor
Please notify this
when Ihe item has
claimed if recovered.
Will the person who
"borrowed" the black
folding umbrella from the
coat room in Bentley
please return it to Bill
McComas room 224 High.
Lost: mue Marriage andi
Family book, and green
notebook. If found piease
contact Chris pellegrino
129 High Hall, Ext. 443.
Blue sweat jacket with a
lood was picked up by
nislake in the women's
locker room in Zimnerli
gym on Wednesday, April
4. The person who has it,
please return it to Lori
Dutt, Rm. 101 Russell
Hall, Ext.401.
The report, the third
yearly evaluation of information on drug use commonly
used in schools, said that
the exceedingly inaccuratf
and confusing portrayal ot
drug use characterized in
most films reflects the confusion, hysteria and misconceptions that characterize
the majority of existing drug
abuse information and education programs.
Of the 220 films screened by NCCDE and reviewed
last month in the report,
Drug Abuse Films, only
sixteen percent were believed to be scientifically
and conceptually acceptable. Another
fifty-three
percent of the films, which
dated hack to 1965, were
placed in a restricted category.The report urged that
the use of restricted films be
confined to skilled drug edL^cation professionals.
Among the films placea
on the restricted list were
"The Mad Chemist," "The
Hippie Temptation," and
"Drugs; Facts Everyone
Needs to Know," "Marijuana: The Great Escape,"
a professionally produced
film intended fcr "junior high
school audience, was found
almost totally unacceptable because of its conveyance of false impressions.
The report criticized the
film for generalizations about
the effects of marijuana
smoking.
The reviewing panels,
selected from among people
with professional knowledgabout drugs and behavior,
Anderson . .
jailed thirty-one percent of
the films totally unacceptable. It was suggested by
the panel that these films
could only be of value by
serving film makers and
educatas with examples of
"what not to do,"
Cont. from p. 3
two
secondary
goals,
which are beating Mansf i e l d and then Shippensburg.
If
the out 1ook and
team a t t i t u d e nean anything, they should spell
good things for the Eagles t h i s year for the
Eagles have plenty of
both.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Ihere v i l l be a
special neeting of the
Senate to discuss the
1913-74 budget today
in the RJB Lounge at
7 p.m
There will be a meeting
of the Cultural Affairs
Conmittee on Ihursday,
/kiril 12at 1 m. in M*Vaughn's Office to decide next year's lecture
series.
ALPHA PHI OMEGA Brothers, Sisters, and Pledges: There will be an emergency meeting of the
Fraternity,
Thursday,
April 12, 1973 at 7:30 pm
in Raub 223. Brothers,
Sisters, BE THERE!!!
A PCU Steering Committee meeting will take
place Wed. at 1 p.m. in
Dave Arsenault's officeSmith Hall.
Applications for the
Soap Box Derby on April
28, may be picked up in
the PCCEB office in the
PUB. They must be returned by next Friday,
the 13th.
WRA will continue to
schedule
appointments
with a gynecologist at
lower student fees. Call
Denise Heusel, ext. 425
or 748-2572.
ABORT/ON
Free Plocement
Free Preg. Test
N.Y.C, Medicaid Accepted
SteinI furniture fashion center>
monument place, lock haven, pa.
748-2504
complete line of
CALL
595-4220
Controlled Parenthood
Suite 55
200W.72nd^St.
N.Y.C. N.Y.
Safe; Low-cost
Confidential
PANASONIC'
radio, *y, hi-jfi, i|uodlra«#|i«l
J
rofit Organization
•I
•
I
I
H
Mfl
Media of