BHeiney
Fri, 06/30/2023 - 17:03
Edited Text
Editorial
WAKE UP!
WAKE UP LOCK HAVEN STATE!
You as students and future taxpayers should be interested in knowing that unless you do something NOW, tfce tuition will again be raised next semester.
Another fact you may be interested in knowing is that
Pennsylvjnia State University with the enrollracn,t of 35,000
undergraduates receives one and a half times as much monef
as all 14 state colleges combined, which have an enroUment
of 57,635. The Department of Health, Education and Welfare
has put the average tuition or fee at S329 in the northeastern
section ofthe countrywhile LHS's fee now is $650.
If you want to do something about the increase in tuition
join the march to Harrisburg on October 15.
THE PENNSYLVANIA STUDENT Association Student
Government is working to gain a lobby in Harrisburg asstroac
as Penn State's. With a strong lobby it is hoped that t h e P M » *
sylvania
representatives will take heed to our requests.
The PSASG has been working for two years in conjunction with the Association State College Organization. ASCC
is a group from all 14 state coUeges composed of faculty and
administration.
EACH STATE COLLEGE HAS a student chairman front
PSASG to represent the group on a local level. Gary Worthington, chairman at LHS, explained thet thus far there are
12 of the 14 colleges participating in the march.
Activities for the day will include such speakers as
Donald Kaufman, from the Pennsylvania Department of Education, Charles Keller from the Communication Service Cetiter, several representatives from the c o l l e g e s ' student governments, and hopefully both Milton Shapp and Raymond Jroderick, gubernatorial candidates in the fall e l e c t i o n s .
THE MAIN GOAL IS to achieve top priority of the commonwealth educational fund.
Worthington listed other objectives as improvement of
existing faculty and substantial expansion of them; increase
in faculty salaries and fringe benefits, increases in non-institutional salaries and benefits; and to increase the amount
of state coUege scholarships to meet needs and demands of
rising c o s t s .
Cafeteria Food Service Improve With ARA
New Faculty Added To LHS
S e v e r a l of the new faculty
members who h a v e j o i n e d Jhe
staff
this
year
include;
att. Carney- «• —-"-^-Rff^ : '
Dartmouth C i u e ; Hanover,
N.H.,
earned
his
master's
J e g r e e in S p a n i s h a t m e Univ e r s i t y of C i n c i n n a t i and h a s
d o n e a d d i t i o n a l g r a d u a t e work
a t the U n i v e r s i t y of I l l i n o i s .
H< h a s been on the faculty of
iMinois State U n i v e r s i t y s i n c e
W 6 5 . P r e v i o u s l y he s e r v e d a s
t h a i r m a n of foreign l a n g u a g e s
for the F i n n e y t o w n high s c h o o l ,
Ohio.
Mr. Congdon
is a 1963
g r a d u a t e of S y r a c u s e U n i v e r s i t y
and e a r n e d h i s b a c h e l o r degree
in t h e o l o g i c a l s t u d i e s a t Wes)ev T h e o l o ^ i c a J Seminary in
196b.
He s e r v e d a s a method i s t m i n i s t e r in Maryland for
three y e a r s .
While working
t o w a r d s h i s m a s t e r ' s d e g r e e at
Purdue
University,
awarded
in J a n u a r y 1 9 7 0 , he w a s a
graduate instructor.
He h a s
been
t e a c h i n g full time at
Purdue
this p a s t
semester.
Arthur Gray, who w i l l t e a c h
i h e m i s t r y , is p r e s e n t l y comp l e t i n g work on h i s P h . D a t
Ohio
University.
He w a s
awarded his bachelor's degree
by Montclair State C o l l e g e in
1965.
Dr.
Matz.
a native
of
Pennsylvania, earned h i s B . S .
ai I t h a c a C o l l e g e in 1 9 3 8 ,
h i s M.S. at the U n i v e r s i t y of
P e n n s y l v a n i a in 1 9 4 8 , and h i s
d o c t o r a t e in s o c i o l o g y a t Ohio
S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y in 1 9 5 7 . He
h a s b e e n chairman of the S o c i o logy D e p a r t m e n t a t Albright
Collage
in
Reading,
Pa.,
since 1958.
A new addition t o t n e math
h parlment
at
Lock
Haven
State is Mrs. C o n s t a n c e Semalek.
At p r e s e n t s h e is r e p l a c i n g
l o s e p h TSfemas w h o h a s t a k e n
1 leave of a b s e n c e t o further
ijij e d u c a t i o n .
She r e c e i v e d her B a c h e l o r
and M a s t ; r deRrees a t the S t a t e
U n i v e r s i t y of I o w a .
In a d d i t i o n , s h e h a s done
work beyond her M a s t e r s at
Penn
State.
Mrs. Semanek
t a u g h t at M a n k a t o S t a t e C o l l e g e ,
Mankato, Minnesota.
Presently,
she
instructs
^ t h 1 for math majore and Int r o d u c t i o n to math for e l e m e n tary majors.
Miss D a r l e n e K. T h o m a s ,
a new member of the s o c i a l
s c i e n c e d e p a r t m e n t , is t e a c h i n g
anthropology.
A n a t i v e of C o l o r a d o , s h e
is a g r a d u a t e of t h e U n i v e r s i t y
of C o l o r a d o and h o l d s a B . A . in
a d i s t r i b u t e d major.
With t h i s
major, there is no one major
field of s t u d y .
In 1 9 6 6 , M i s s
Thomas received
a M.S. in
s o c i a l s c i e n c e from t h e U n i v e r s i t y of C o l o r a d o .
After c o m p l e t i n g work on
her
masters.
Miss
Thomas
worked as an a s s i s t a n t i n s t r u c tor for 2Vz y e a r s a n d a s an
i n s t r u c t o r of a n t h r o p o l o g y for
one
semester
in
Colorado,
Prior t o coming t o L H S ,
Mias
Thomas
spent
seven
months in the C a n a d i a n A r c t i c
studying the cultural changes
of the E s k i m o s and t h e effect
of a g o v e r n m e n t a l ]^resence on
these changes.
R i c h a r d D i l l m a n , t h e new
h e a d of t h e C o t a l o e u e D e p a r t ment a t t h e Stevwnson L i b r a r y ,
i s a g r a d u a t e of I n d i a n a Sta te
University, Duquesne
Univers i t y , and t h e U n i v e r s i t y of P i t tsburgh,
where
he
received
h i s M.H.S.
He h a s t a u g h t in public
s c h o o l s a n d s i n c e h i s gradua t i o n from the U n i v e r s i t y of
P i t t s b u r g h he h a s worked a s
Librarian a t the branch campus
of P e n n s y l v a n i a S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y at D u B o i s ,
S i n c e 1968
he h a s worked a s c a t a l o g u e
L i b r a r i a n a t Sliopcry K o c k , P a .
Miss Mays c o m e s t o L o c k
Haven
from
Paterson
State
C o l l e g e in Wayne, N . J . She
w a s p r e v i o u s l y a f a c u l t y member at the U n i v e r s i t y of Vermont,
Burlington.
A 1959
g r a d u a t e of the U n i v e r s i t y of
Worthington and his group need help in preparing for and
carrying out the trip to Harrisburg.
Transportation committees, parade marshals from the
student body and communication committees to make posters,
signs and contact the news media are all needed. To effect
a successful march to Harrisburg, Worthington needs 100%
help from the student body.
New H a m p s h i r e , s h e e a r n e d
her m a s t e r ' s d e g r e e at B o s t o n
U n i v e r s i t y in 1 9 6 2 .
Or. MargarL-l Mercer w a s
g r a d u a t e d Ircnn R e n o v o High
Anyone interested in helping please contact Gary WorthSchool
in 1925 and e a r n e d
ington at 748-5036 or any ofthe SCC cfficers.
her b a c h e l o r ' s , m a s t e r ' s , a n d
ISN'T IT ABOUT TIME THAT YOU, THE STUDENT
d o c t o r ' s d e g r e e s at P e n n s y l vania State University.
From BODY, BECOME INVOLVED IN SOMETHING THAT CON1946 t o 1947 s h e w a s on t h e
CERNS YOU?
faculty of Lock H a v e n S t a t e .
M.a
She w a s then a p p o i n t e d C h i e f
P s y c h o l o g i s t of the V e t e r a n s
H o s p i t a l in C o a t e s v i l l e , P a .
From 1952 t o 1957 s h e s e r v e d
as
Director
of T r a i n i n g in
Clinical
Psychology
at S t .
E l i z a b e t h s H o s p i t a l , Washingt o n , D . C . She r e t u r n s to L o c k
Sound business
practices
e l s e . Clinton County now has
H a v e n after t h i r t e e n y e a r s a s are needed in H s r i s b u r g to get
15
to
20% unemployment,
D i r e c t o r of the Program for Pennsylvania back on an even
highest in the nation.
R e s e a r c h in C l i n i c a l P s y c h o - financial keel. This statement
With the Piper Aircraft Comlogy at the N a t i o n a l C e n t e r was made by Milton Shapp, Demopany shut-down of s e v e n weeks
for Mental H e a l t h S e r v i c e s , cratic gubernatorial candidate
ago, the 2,000 former employees
Washington, D . C .
in November when he made a
don't know when they will be
M i c h a e l P e p l o w h a s b e e n whistle-stop campaign speech
back to work, although they do
on
the English
D e p a r t m e n t to an audience of some 500
expect to re-open.
f a c u l t y a t t h e U n i v e r s i t y of people in Lock Haven yesterday.
By cutting out the waste
W i s c o n s i n s i n c e 1 9 6 7 . He i s
The Democratic candidate
A r i z o n a continued by saying that the and inefficiency in government
a 1962 g r a d u a t e of
e a r n e d Republican administration has bureaucracies, Shapp h a s pledged
State
U n i v e r s i t y and
and h i s jreated a " m e s s " in the nation to help Lock Haven.
both h i s M.A., in 1 9 6 4 ,
Ph.D.,
in 1 9 6 6 . at T e x a s and in the s t a t e , leading the
Barry more, watching a
Christian University.
county down what he called J tense football game, was disthe
"road
to
Hooverism."
tracted by the man next to him,
Speaking from the back
VARSITY
CLUB MEETING:,
who bragged, "When I was in
platform
of
a
passenger
car,
There will be a Vorsltv Club
college I helped Harvard beat
Shapp said it is time to replace Yale three times in s u c c e s Meet Ina on Tues day ^ptember 23
the
politicians
in
Harrisburg
at 8;00 o.m. in the I f H . All
sion."
with sound business p r a c t i c e s .
farmer officers, letter winners,
" T h a t s o ? " snapped BarryIn addition, s t a t e s e r v i c e s have
and )>rospectiv« inembers are
more.
"Which team were you
deteriorated
in
the
l
a
s
t
four
encouraged to jttend.
y e a r s , while taxes have gone playing o n ? "
up one billion dollars.
Shapp
attacked
RepubWill the following students
lican policies by saying that
please see Mrs. Zakem In the
Readers Theatre tryouts in
although tight money and high
3ookstore business office as
Raub 306 Monday Sept. 21 and
interest
rates
have
helped
the
soon as possible.
Tuesday Sept. 22 at 7:00 p.m.
banks, they have hurt everybody
(or Albee's THE AMERICAN
Ricky L. Dunmoyer
DREAM.
Rustin L. Holmes
Elections wili be held Sept.
Characters
Susan A. Wright
Mommy
24 in Bentley H a l l and the
Thomos R. Breech
Daddv
PUB for the nominations of
Grandma
candidates
for
Homecoming.
REMINDER
Bookstore hour
The American Dream
All sophomores, juniors, and
7:45 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Mrs. Barker
Monday thru Friday
seniors are eligible to vote.
!( you want to try out and
8:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon
cannot moke the oliove, see Dr.
Polling places will be open
Saturdays
Kidder.
(rom 9:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m.
Candidate
Pledges
Help
Huskies Maul Eagles
25-7
i^-AlSiNith
^ SlowMtNirg State CoUsge
^tiimt Uick Haven State reeling
to i ^ second straight defeat
FriiW eWenihg, 25-7, in a cootest which could be described
as "Maul the Bald Eagle" and
"Kill the Quarterback".
The Huekies did "(haul"
Uie Bald Eagle as they co»istantly used off tackle snd end
riMiB, battering the LHS defense
behind the bruising running of
Bob Warner, Paul Shrimcovsky,
and speedster Bob Firestine.
Bloom did almost " k i l l "
the quarterback as lJi!i signal
caller Mike IVicker l u ^ lo be
helped from the field iif the third
quarter, and remained on the
sidelines for the rest of the game
In LHS Backfield
linebacker J(4m Cox and
def.-siaive lineman Ted Schmittel
•wesfi in the tH5t bavKtield s o
often, Uiat »t times it appeared
they would get the snap before
Packer did.
LHS received a "big" break
M the onening kickoff when
""
Slienkle iecovered Paul
S»tirimcovsKy's fumoie on the 32
yard line, but it was the E a g l e s '
aalf noiiicnt of glory until the
final 27 seconds of the contest
when they hit the scoreboard.
After Shenkle's fumble recovery and LiiS's first drive
stalled, the Huskies settled
jown to a tmiising rushing attack
with the LHS defense bending,
but refusing to let Bloom into
the endzone.
Warner Lesds Attack
Warner, a big fullback from
the I.ehigh Valley- long noted
for the tough players it produces
and Firestine constantly hit the
line for four, five, and six yard
gains.
Each time though, the LHS
defense rose to the occasion
and halted Bloom's drives, but
couldn't keep the Huskies off
the scoreboard as Neil Oberholtzer booted 40 and 42 yard field
goals, giving &$C a 6-0 advanat the end of the first half.
Warner set up both field
goals, the first'with a 53 yard
scamper from the Bloorn 16 yard
une to the i J l S 31 yard line.
Game A l l B u t Over
LHS dug in attd Ctocrh^lUer split
Two minutes later, the game
the uorighu from 4 0 yards with
was all but over when Johh Da1:06 reipaining in the first quarvis intercepted a Packer pest
ter.
«
on the Huskie 25 yard line and
Oberholtzer added his s e outran everycme 75 yards intc
cond field goal with 13:18 left
the endzone. With the PAT the
in the half. Warner s e t it up with
Huskies were out oi reach ai
a third down, screen pass which
19-0.
covered 23 yards from the HusLHS had driven 50 y i t d s
kie 43 yard line to the LHS 34.
with Packer finally getting some
LHS Threat Killed
protection and easily hitting
The Eagles threatene'' late
l i s receivers imtil Davis" theft.
in the quarter, out the Huskies
Tlie Eagles started another
killed the IMS drive on the 10
drive from their own 20 yard line»
yard line when Galen Troup inlut were quickly halted on the
tercepted a Packer pass after
)loom 31 when Cox recovered
it was tipped about four times.
•acker's fumble, after he and
The second half began with
ichmittel almost bent Packer
^ t h squads using aggressive
like a pretzel
defensive play and exchanging
a couple of punts.
Bloom finally hit paydirt
with 5:47 left in the quarter when
quarterback Mike Devereux skirLHS's injury plagued s o c ted his right end, racing 45 yards
into the endzone leaving Eagle cer team l o s t a tough 3-0 match
defenders falling like flies. The on Saturday at FrostbiHg ColPAT was no good and the Hus- l e g e .
C o a c h Karl T . Herrmann
kies held a 12-0 lead.
commeuicv ;hat he hasn't had
m e same group on the field t o
play a game yet becai»*jt ot
"
Shippensburg-Rodger E . Goodling, head b a s k e t b a l l c o a c h at
William Penn High School in
Harrisburg
since
1964,
has
been named to the top b a s k e t ball coaching p o s i t i o n at Shippensburg State C o l l e g e , it was
announced by C o l l e g e P r e s i dent
Gilmore
B . Seavers.
Goodling last year guided
the T i g e r s to a District III
(PIAA) t i t l e .
His teams have
won the Central P e n n League
for
the
past
two
seasons.
Goodling s u c c e e d s
Keith
I . H e s s , w h o had coached the
Raiders since 1 9 6 1 .
Dr. Thomas C r i s t , director
of a t h l e t i c s at Shippensburg,
said that "We are delighted to
have Rodger Goodling as Shippensburg's
new
basketball
pensburg's
new
basketball
coach.
His c o a c h i n g s t y l e is
just what the doctor ordered."
Goodling
will
join
thp
Shippensburg
staff
November
I as a s s i s t a n t pwjfessor of
health and p h y s i c a l e d u c a t i o n .
"Of the many applicants
we had for the p o s i t i o n , we feel
give the R o c k e t s a veiy hard that Rodger is the person most
likely to d e v e l o p a s u c c e s s f u l
earned victory.
basketball
program
at ShipCommenting on the m e e t .
pensburg,"
Dr.
Crist
said.
Coach Jim Dolan offered t h i s : "He is taking over a difficult
"Slippery Rock has a w e l ! c o n - s i t u a t i o n .
Three of the five
ditioned,
disciplined
t e a m . starters are not returning from
T h e y turned out to be as tough a team which posted a 3-20
as e x p e c t e d . Our s q u a d , parti- recr»rd.
Goodling
i s a graduate
cularly Podgajny,
Mosebrook,
Gordon, and Bower ran tremen- (1954) of William Penn High
He attended
dous r a c e s .
Several freshmen School of York.
a l s o ran wel! in their first c o l - what was then the York Junior
C o l l e g e and, in 1 9 5 9 , r e c e i v e d
lege e x p e r i e n c e . With the score
a B . S . degree from Lock Haven
as c l o s e as it wa s , 1 feel we State C o l l e g e .
In 1 9 6 5 , he
will -definitely be contenders r e c e i v e d an M.Ed, degree from
for the District and Confer- Temple U n i v e r s i t y .
ence titl-"!."
Rockefs Snap Streak
Saturday's > e s u l t s
FOLLOW SMOKEY'S RULES
1. Ed Gralewski (SL) 23:22
2. Steve Podgajny (LH) 23:52
3 . Dave Mosebrook (I.H) 24:23
4 . N i b s Gordon (LH) 24:56
5 . Dave Ortman (SL) 25:08
6 . Joe Spehar (SR) 25:15
7. Randy Deemer (SR) 25:16
8. John Teakel (SR) 25:29
9 . Jim Renckly (SR) 25:30
10. Em Borowski (LH) 25:37
both
men
played
outtanding g a m e s .
'
The junior varsity team,,
however, ran Frostburg j-v'e'
iff the field with a 9-1 s c o r e .
The team p l a y e d t o per~
e c t i o n ; h u s t l i n g and p a s s i n i
beautifully.
Bill Lingle s c o r e d three
s i g g o a l s and a s s i s t s ^ with two
O " S a t u r d a y the t e a m s i m Tly could not move the b a l l . o t h e r s .
Rick Donmoyer, B o b WeaOn the w h o l e , performance by
the team w a s flat with the ex- vnr. and Ken Ha^m had t w o
Donuiuyer a s ception of Steve Steffin and g o a l s a p e i c e .
s i s t e d in two and Weaver with
Jack Infield
one.
Anyone interested in writing
Sporu (soccer, women's field
hockey, features) please contact
Larry fteen in the publications
office or phone 726-4026 or 74»»
5531.
JERRY'S
Lee
Fostbocks
are a big tavurite wilti smart mothers |
shopping tor their bo« and teenage
sons. The distlnctile Fastbacti'
styling combines with (il^'latsst new E
colors and patterns laso^ii'on fabrics
of 50% polyester and 50% cotton.
Look for the one and o(My autlietitic,,
fastback" - made by Ue.
THE H. 0. LEE COMPLY, INC.
Bo« 440. Sbawnee Missios. K t ' - a i U 2 t l
Other LHS:
13.
14.
18.
20.
22.
23.
George Bower
25:25
Carl Klingaman
26:54
Bill Sowich 27:44
Charlie Mather
28:00
Lloyd Peters
28:56
Larry Wise
30:10
tIM*
Packer w*« helped frtm te
Held and fireahman repU«MiMU
Ed McOitl couldn't move i f t i a S ^
gle offense until the (il^il iSeyi.
Bloom upped its
to 25-0^with LOSLJ
the "aane: n^en JofeM.
plunged oveft from the ol
sub quarterback. T o n
shire, engineered a 39 y a ^ *rive.
Hugh Jones s e t up Omf^mi]
with an interception for th* ftiskies,
LHS nnally gqt (jn Jfit igfwtm
board when Jeff McOee recovered
a fumble on die Hidlkie M j t i
line. On the next play MB<3(U
hit Skip Haley in the coraer of
endzone and Dan Ouer'a PAT
s e t the [final s c t f e at 2S-7«
Injuries Hold Back Team
NewCoach at Ship
the
Lock
Haven
State
c r o s s country team had it's
10-meel winning streak snapped
en Saturday by defending conference
champions,
Slippery
Roc».
Ihs
RocKCts scored
27
gles 3 1 , so c l o s e a
l a t by reversing two
IIHI Cb could have made the
:.i.i;:!
k Haven.
I- w s k i of Slippery
eventual winner set
>.g pace from the very
t.
»
For two miles he
v..
.cly accompanied
jy
Ihc Liagles' Steve Podgajny an-*
])., c Mosebrook and his teamHandy D e e m e r .
Gralew^.v. ..lazed on breaking the old
c o u r s e record by 25 s e c o n d s .
Podgajny and Mosebrook held
s e c o n d and third while Deemer
faltered
badly
to seventh.
Close
behind the E a g l e
.as
Nibs Oordon, who
it fourth giving the race
the appearance of an E a g l e
victory.
The
Rockets,
however,
i)la^ ed five more men before
the E a g l e s Em Borowski placed
lOiii, and another two before
( i i . i j t e Bower sompleted the
s c o r i n g in ]3th p l a c e ,
i he overall balance of the
Slippery R o c k team offset the
(ut,i
th e e E a g l e runners to
Fkcker Helped P r e a
BE sure to
drown all fires.
JERRYS
WAKE UP!
WAKE UP LOCK HAVEN STATE!
You as students and future taxpayers should be interested in knowing that unless you do something NOW, tfce tuition will again be raised next semester.
Another fact you may be interested in knowing is that
Pennsylvjnia State University with the enrollracn,t of 35,000
undergraduates receives one and a half times as much monef
as all 14 state colleges combined, which have an enroUment
of 57,635. The Department of Health, Education and Welfare
has put the average tuition or fee at S329 in the northeastern
section ofthe countrywhile LHS's fee now is $650.
If you want to do something about the increase in tuition
join the march to Harrisburg on October 15.
THE PENNSYLVANIA STUDENT Association Student
Government is working to gain a lobby in Harrisburg asstroac
as Penn State's. With a strong lobby it is hoped that t h e P M » *
sylvania
representatives will take heed to our requests.
The PSASG has been working for two years in conjunction with the Association State College Organization. ASCC
is a group from all 14 state coUeges composed of faculty and
administration.
EACH STATE COLLEGE HAS a student chairman front
PSASG to represent the group on a local level. Gary Worthington, chairman at LHS, explained thet thus far there are
12 of the 14 colleges participating in the march.
Activities for the day will include such speakers as
Donald Kaufman, from the Pennsylvania Department of Education, Charles Keller from the Communication Service Cetiter, several representatives from the c o l l e g e s ' student governments, and hopefully both Milton Shapp and Raymond Jroderick, gubernatorial candidates in the fall e l e c t i o n s .
THE MAIN GOAL IS to achieve top priority of the commonwealth educational fund.
Worthington listed other objectives as improvement of
existing faculty and substantial expansion of them; increase
in faculty salaries and fringe benefits, increases in non-institutional salaries and benefits; and to increase the amount
of state coUege scholarships to meet needs and demands of
rising c o s t s .
Cafeteria Food Service Improve With ARA
New Faculty Added To LHS
S e v e r a l of the new faculty
members who h a v e j o i n e d Jhe
staff
this
year
include;
att. Carney- «• —-"-^-Rff^ : '
Dartmouth C i u e ; Hanover,
N.H.,
earned
his
master's
J e g r e e in S p a n i s h a t m e Univ e r s i t y of C i n c i n n a t i and h a s
d o n e a d d i t i o n a l g r a d u a t e work
a t the U n i v e r s i t y of I l l i n o i s .
H< h a s been on the faculty of
iMinois State U n i v e r s i t y s i n c e
W 6 5 . P r e v i o u s l y he s e r v e d a s
t h a i r m a n of foreign l a n g u a g e s
for the F i n n e y t o w n high s c h o o l ,
Ohio.
Mr. Congdon
is a 1963
g r a d u a t e of S y r a c u s e U n i v e r s i t y
and e a r n e d h i s b a c h e l o r degree
in t h e o l o g i c a l s t u d i e s a t Wes)ev T h e o l o ^ i c a J Seminary in
196b.
He s e r v e d a s a method i s t m i n i s t e r in Maryland for
three y e a r s .
While working
t o w a r d s h i s m a s t e r ' s d e g r e e at
Purdue
University,
awarded
in J a n u a r y 1 9 7 0 , he w a s a
graduate instructor.
He h a s
been
t e a c h i n g full time at
Purdue
this p a s t
semester.
Arthur Gray, who w i l l t e a c h
i h e m i s t r y , is p r e s e n t l y comp l e t i n g work on h i s P h . D a t
Ohio
University.
He w a s
awarded his bachelor's degree
by Montclair State C o l l e g e in
1965.
Dr.
Matz.
a native
of
Pennsylvania, earned h i s B . S .
ai I t h a c a C o l l e g e in 1 9 3 8 ,
h i s M.S. at the U n i v e r s i t y of
P e n n s y l v a n i a in 1 9 4 8 , and h i s
d o c t o r a t e in s o c i o l o g y a t Ohio
S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y in 1 9 5 7 . He
h a s b e e n chairman of the S o c i o logy D e p a r t m e n t a t Albright
Collage
in
Reading,
Pa.,
since 1958.
A new addition t o t n e math
h parlment
at
Lock
Haven
State is Mrs. C o n s t a n c e Semalek.
At p r e s e n t s h e is r e p l a c i n g
l o s e p h TSfemas w h o h a s t a k e n
1 leave of a b s e n c e t o further
ijij e d u c a t i o n .
She r e c e i v e d her B a c h e l o r
and M a s t ; r deRrees a t the S t a t e
U n i v e r s i t y of I o w a .
In a d d i t i o n , s h e h a s done
work beyond her M a s t e r s at
Penn
State.
Mrs. Semanek
t a u g h t at M a n k a t o S t a t e C o l l e g e ,
Mankato, Minnesota.
Presently,
she
instructs
^ t h 1 for math majore and Int r o d u c t i o n to math for e l e m e n tary majors.
Miss D a r l e n e K. T h o m a s ,
a new member of the s o c i a l
s c i e n c e d e p a r t m e n t , is t e a c h i n g
anthropology.
A n a t i v e of C o l o r a d o , s h e
is a g r a d u a t e of t h e U n i v e r s i t y
of C o l o r a d o and h o l d s a B . A . in
a d i s t r i b u t e d major.
With t h i s
major, there is no one major
field of s t u d y .
In 1 9 6 6 , M i s s
Thomas received
a M.S. in
s o c i a l s c i e n c e from t h e U n i v e r s i t y of C o l o r a d o .
After c o m p l e t i n g work on
her
masters.
Miss
Thomas
worked as an a s s i s t a n t i n s t r u c tor for 2Vz y e a r s a n d a s an
i n s t r u c t o r of a n t h r o p o l o g y for
one
semester
in
Colorado,
Prior t o coming t o L H S ,
Mias
Thomas
spent
seven
months in the C a n a d i a n A r c t i c
studying the cultural changes
of the E s k i m o s and t h e effect
of a g o v e r n m e n t a l ]^resence on
these changes.
R i c h a r d D i l l m a n , t h e new
h e a d of t h e C o t a l o e u e D e p a r t ment a t t h e Stevwnson L i b r a r y ,
i s a g r a d u a t e of I n d i a n a Sta te
University, Duquesne
Univers i t y , and t h e U n i v e r s i t y of P i t tsburgh,
where
he
received
h i s M.H.S.
He h a s t a u g h t in public
s c h o o l s a n d s i n c e h i s gradua t i o n from the U n i v e r s i t y of
P i t t s b u r g h he h a s worked a s
Librarian a t the branch campus
of P e n n s y l v a n i a S t a t e U n i v e r s i t y at D u B o i s ,
S i n c e 1968
he h a s worked a s c a t a l o g u e
L i b r a r i a n a t Sliopcry K o c k , P a .
Miss Mays c o m e s t o L o c k
Haven
from
Paterson
State
C o l l e g e in Wayne, N . J . She
w a s p r e v i o u s l y a f a c u l t y member at the U n i v e r s i t y of Vermont,
Burlington.
A 1959
g r a d u a t e of the U n i v e r s i t y of
Worthington and his group need help in preparing for and
carrying out the trip to Harrisburg.
Transportation committees, parade marshals from the
student body and communication committees to make posters,
signs and contact the news media are all needed. To effect
a successful march to Harrisburg, Worthington needs 100%
help from the student body.
New H a m p s h i r e , s h e e a r n e d
her m a s t e r ' s d e g r e e at B o s t o n
U n i v e r s i t y in 1 9 6 2 .
Or. MargarL-l Mercer w a s
g r a d u a t e d Ircnn R e n o v o High
Anyone interested in helping please contact Gary WorthSchool
in 1925 and e a r n e d
ington at 748-5036 or any ofthe SCC cfficers.
her b a c h e l o r ' s , m a s t e r ' s , a n d
ISN'T IT ABOUT TIME THAT YOU, THE STUDENT
d o c t o r ' s d e g r e e s at P e n n s y l vania State University.
From BODY, BECOME INVOLVED IN SOMETHING THAT CON1946 t o 1947 s h e w a s on t h e
CERNS YOU?
faculty of Lock H a v e n S t a t e .
M.a
She w a s then a p p o i n t e d C h i e f
P s y c h o l o g i s t of the V e t e r a n s
H o s p i t a l in C o a t e s v i l l e , P a .
From 1952 t o 1957 s h e s e r v e d
as
Director
of T r a i n i n g in
Clinical
Psychology
at S t .
E l i z a b e t h s H o s p i t a l , Washingt o n , D . C . She r e t u r n s to L o c k
Sound business
practices
e l s e . Clinton County now has
H a v e n after t h i r t e e n y e a r s a s are needed in H s r i s b u r g to get
15
to
20% unemployment,
D i r e c t o r of the Program for Pennsylvania back on an even
highest in the nation.
R e s e a r c h in C l i n i c a l P s y c h o - financial keel. This statement
With the Piper Aircraft Comlogy at the N a t i o n a l C e n t e r was made by Milton Shapp, Demopany shut-down of s e v e n weeks
for Mental H e a l t h S e r v i c e s , cratic gubernatorial candidate
ago, the 2,000 former employees
Washington, D . C .
in November when he made a
don't know when they will be
M i c h a e l P e p l o w h a s b e e n whistle-stop campaign speech
back to work, although they do
on
the English
D e p a r t m e n t to an audience of some 500
expect to re-open.
f a c u l t y a t t h e U n i v e r s i t y of people in Lock Haven yesterday.
By cutting out the waste
W i s c o n s i n s i n c e 1 9 6 7 . He i s
The Democratic candidate
A r i z o n a continued by saying that the and inefficiency in government
a 1962 g r a d u a t e of
e a r n e d Republican administration has bureaucracies, Shapp h a s pledged
State
U n i v e r s i t y and
and h i s jreated a " m e s s " in the nation to help Lock Haven.
both h i s M.A., in 1 9 6 4 ,
Ph.D.,
in 1 9 6 6 . at T e x a s and in the s t a t e , leading the
Barry more, watching a
Christian University.
county down what he called J tense football game, was disthe
"road
to
Hooverism."
tracted by the man next to him,
Speaking from the back
VARSITY
CLUB MEETING:,
who bragged, "When I was in
platform
of
a
passenger
car,
There will be a Vorsltv Club
college I helped Harvard beat
Shapp said it is time to replace Yale three times in s u c c e s Meet Ina on Tues day ^ptember 23
the
politicians
in
Harrisburg
at 8;00 o.m. in the I f H . All
sion."
with sound business p r a c t i c e s .
farmer officers, letter winners,
" T h a t s o ? " snapped BarryIn addition, s t a t e s e r v i c e s have
and )>rospectiv« inembers are
more.
"Which team were you
deteriorated
in
the
l
a
s
t
four
encouraged to jttend.
y e a r s , while taxes have gone playing o n ? "
up one billion dollars.
Shapp
attacked
RepubWill the following students
lican policies by saying that
please see Mrs. Zakem In the
Readers Theatre tryouts in
although tight money and high
3ookstore business office as
Raub 306 Monday Sept. 21 and
interest
rates
have
helped
the
soon as possible.
Tuesday Sept. 22 at 7:00 p.m.
banks, they have hurt everybody
(or Albee's THE AMERICAN
Ricky L. Dunmoyer
DREAM.
Rustin L. Holmes
Elections wili be held Sept.
Characters
Susan A. Wright
Mommy
24 in Bentley H a l l and the
Thomos R. Breech
Daddv
PUB for the nominations of
Grandma
candidates
for
Homecoming.
REMINDER
Bookstore hour
The American Dream
All sophomores, juniors, and
7:45 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Mrs. Barker
Monday thru Friday
seniors are eligible to vote.
!( you want to try out and
8:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon
cannot moke the oliove, see Dr.
Polling places will be open
Saturdays
Kidder.
(rom 9:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m.
Candidate
Pledges
Help
Huskies Maul Eagles
25-7
i^-AlSiNith
^ SlowMtNirg State CoUsge
^tiimt Uick Haven State reeling
to i ^ second straight defeat
FriiW eWenihg, 25-7, in a cootest which could be described
as "Maul the Bald Eagle" and
"Kill the Quarterback".
The Huekies did "(haul"
Uie Bald Eagle as they co»istantly used off tackle snd end
riMiB, battering the LHS defense
behind the bruising running of
Bob Warner, Paul Shrimcovsky,
and speedster Bob Firestine.
Bloom did almost " k i l l "
the quarterback as lJi!i signal
caller Mike IVicker l u ^ lo be
helped from the field iif the third
quarter, and remained on the
sidelines for the rest of the game
In LHS Backfield
linebacker J(4m Cox and
def.-siaive lineman Ted Schmittel
•wesfi in the tH5t bavKtield s o
often, Uiat »t times it appeared
they would get the snap before
Packer did.
LHS received a "big" break
M the onening kickoff when
""
Slienkle iecovered Paul
S»tirimcovsKy's fumoie on the 32
yard line, but it was the E a g l e s '
aalf noiiicnt of glory until the
final 27 seconds of the contest
when they hit the scoreboard.
After Shenkle's fumble recovery and LiiS's first drive
stalled, the Huskies settled
jown to a tmiising rushing attack
with the LHS defense bending,
but refusing to let Bloom into
the endzone.
Warner Lesds Attack
Warner, a big fullback from
the I.ehigh Valley- long noted
for the tough players it produces
and Firestine constantly hit the
line for four, five, and six yard
gains.
Each time though, the LHS
defense rose to the occasion
and halted Bloom's drives, but
couldn't keep the Huskies off
the scoreboard as Neil Oberholtzer booted 40 and 42 yard field
goals, giving &$C a 6-0 advanat the end of the first half.
Warner set up both field
goals, the first'with a 53 yard
scamper from the Bloorn 16 yard
une to the i J l S 31 yard line.
Game A l l B u t Over
LHS dug in attd Ctocrh^lUer split
Two minutes later, the game
the uorighu from 4 0 yards with
was all but over when Johh Da1:06 reipaining in the first quarvis intercepted a Packer pest
ter.
«
on the Huskie 25 yard line and
Oberholtzer added his s e outran everycme 75 yards intc
cond field goal with 13:18 left
the endzone. With the PAT the
in the half. Warner s e t it up with
Huskies were out oi reach ai
a third down, screen pass which
19-0.
covered 23 yards from the HusLHS had driven 50 y i t d s
kie 43 yard line to the LHS 34.
with Packer finally getting some
LHS Threat Killed
protection and easily hitting
The Eagles threatene'' late
l i s receivers imtil Davis" theft.
in the quarter, out the Huskies
Tlie Eagles started another
killed the IMS drive on the 10
drive from their own 20 yard line»
yard line when Galen Troup inlut were quickly halted on the
tercepted a Packer pass after
)loom 31 when Cox recovered
it was tipped about four times.
•acker's fumble, after he and
The second half began with
ichmittel almost bent Packer
^ t h squads using aggressive
like a pretzel
defensive play and exchanging
a couple of punts.
Bloom finally hit paydirt
with 5:47 left in the quarter when
quarterback Mike Devereux skirLHS's injury plagued s o c ted his right end, racing 45 yards
into the endzone leaving Eagle cer team l o s t a tough 3-0 match
defenders falling like flies. The on Saturday at FrostbiHg ColPAT was no good and the Hus- l e g e .
C o a c h Karl T . Herrmann
kies held a 12-0 lead.
commeuicv ;hat he hasn't had
m e same group on the field t o
play a game yet becai»*jt ot
"
Shippensburg-Rodger E . Goodling, head b a s k e t b a l l c o a c h at
William Penn High School in
Harrisburg
since
1964,
has
been named to the top b a s k e t ball coaching p o s i t i o n at Shippensburg State C o l l e g e , it was
announced by C o l l e g e P r e s i dent
Gilmore
B . Seavers.
Goodling last year guided
the T i g e r s to a District III
(PIAA) t i t l e .
His teams have
won the Central P e n n League
for
the
past
two
seasons.
Goodling s u c c e e d s
Keith
I . H e s s , w h o had coached the
Raiders since 1 9 6 1 .
Dr. Thomas C r i s t , director
of a t h l e t i c s at Shippensburg,
said that "We are delighted to
have Rodger Goodling as Shippensburg's
new
basketball
pensburg's
new
basketball
coach.
His c o a c h i n g s t y l e is
just what the doctor ordered."
Goodling
will
join
thp
Shippensburg
staff
November
I as a s s i s t a n t pwjfessor of
health and p h y s i c a l e d u c a t i o n .
"Of the many applicants
we had for the p o s i t i o n , we feel
give the R o c k e t s a veiy hard that Rodger is the person most
likely to d e v e l o p a s u c c e s s f u l
earned victory.
basketball
program
at ShipCommenting on the m e e t .
pensburg,"
Dr.
Crist
said.
Coach Jim Dolan offered t h i s : "He is taking over a difficult
"Slippery Rock has a w e l ! c o n - s i t u a t i o n .
Three of the five
ditioned,
disciplined
t e a m . starters are not returning from
T h e y turned out to be as tough a team which posted a 3-20
as e x p e c t e d . Our s q u a d , parti- recr»rd.
Goodling
i s a graduate
cularly Podgajny,
Mosebrook,
Gordon, and Bower ran tremen- (1954) of William Penn High
He attended
dous r a c e s .
Several freshmen School of York.
a l s o ran wel! in their first c o l - what was then the York Junior
C o l l e g e and, in 1 9 5 9 , r e c e i v e d
lege e x p e r i e n c e . With the score
a B . S . degree from Lock Haven
as c l o s e as it wa s , 1 feel we State C o l l e g e .
In 1 9 6 5 , he
will -definitely be contenders r e c e i v e d an M.Ed, degree from
for the District and Confer- Temple U n i v e r s i t y .
ence titl-"!."
Rockefs Snap Streak
Saturday's > e s u l t s
FOLLOW SMOKEY'S RULES
1. Ed Gralewski (SL) 23:22
2. Steve Podgajny (LH) 23:52
3 . Dave Mosebrook (I.H) 24:23
4 . N i b s Gordon (LH) 24:56
5 . Dave Ortman (SL) 25:08
6 . Joe Spehar (SR) 25:15
7. Randy Deemer (SR) 25:16
8. John Teakel (SR) 25:29
9 . Jim Renckly (SR) 25:30
10. Em Borowski (LH) 25:37
both
men
played
outtanding g a m e s .
'
The junior varsity team,,
however, ran Frostburg j-v'e'
iff the field with a 9-1 s c o r e .
The team p l a y e d t o per~
e c t i o n ; h u s t l i n g and p a s s i n i
beautifully.
Bill Lingle s c o r e d three
s i g g o a l s and a s s i s t s ^ with two
O " S a t u r d a y the t e a m s i m Tly could not move the b a l l . o t h e r s .
Rick Donmoyer, B o b WeaOn the w h o l e , performance by
the team w a s flat with the ex- vnr. and Ken Ha^m had t w o
Donuiuyer a s ception of Steve Steffin and g o a l s a p e i c e .
s i s t e d in two and Weaver with
Jack Infield
one.
Anyone interested in writing
Sporu (soccer, women's field
hockey, features) please contact
Larry fteen in the publications
office or phone 726-4026 or 74»»
5531.
JERRY'S
Lee
Fostbocks
are a big tavurite wilti smart mothers |
shopping tor their bo« and teenage
sons. The distlnctile Fastbacti'
styling combines with (il^'latsst new E
colors and patterns laso^ii'on fabrics
of 50% polyester and 50% cotton.
Look for the one and o(My autlietitic,,
fastback" - made by Ue.
THE H. 0. LEE COMPLY, INC.
Bo« 440. Sbawnee Missios. K t ' - a i U 2 t l
Other LHS:
13.
14.
18.
20.
22.
23.
George Bower
25:25
Carl Klingaman
26:54
Bill Sowich 27:44
Charlie Mather
28:00
Lloyd Peters
28:56
Larry Wise
30:10
tIM*
Packer w*« helped frtm te
Held and fireahman repU«MiMU
Ed McOitl couldn't move i f t i a S ^
gle offense until the (il^il iSeyi.
Bloom upped its
to 25-0^with LOSLJ
the "aane: n^en JofeM.
plunged oveft from the ol
sub quarterback. T o n
shire, engineered a 39 y a ^ *rive.
Hugh Jones s e t up Omf^mi]
with an interception for th* ftiskies,
LHS nnally gqt (jn Jfit igfwtm
board when Jeff McOee recovered
a fumble on die Hidlkie M j t i
line. On the next play MB<3(U
hit Skip Haley in the coraer of
endzone and Dan Ouer'a PAT
s e t the [final s c t f e at 2S-7«
Injuries Hold Back Team
NewCoach at Ship
the
Lock
Haven
State
c r o s s country team had it's
10-meel winning streak snapped
en Saturday by defending conference
champions,
Slippery
Roc».
Ihs
RocKCts scored
27
gles 3 1 , so c l o s e a
l a t by reversing two
IIHI Cb could have made the
:.i.i;:!
k Haven.
I- w s k i of Slippery
eventual winner set
>.g pace from the very
t.
»
For two miles he
v..
.cly accompanied
jy
Ihc Liagles' Steve Podgajny an-*
])., c Mosebrook and his teamHandy D e e m e r .
Gralew^.v. ..lazed on breaking the old
c o u r s e record by 25 s e c o n d s .
Podgajny and Mosebrook held
s e c o n d and third while Deemer
faltered
badly
to seventh.
Close
behind the E a g l e
.as
Nibs Oordon, who
it fourth giving the race
the appearance of an E a g l e
victory.
The
Rockets,
however,
i)la^ ed five more men before
the E a g l e s Em Borowski placed
lOiii, and another two before
( i i . i j t e Bower sompleted the
s c o r i n g in ]3th p l a c e ,
i he overall balance of the
Slippery R o c k team offset the
(ut,i
th e e E a g l e runners to
Fkcker Helped P r e a
BE sure to
drown all fires.
JERRYS
Media of