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Fri, 06/30/2023 - 18:27
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"Lumpy Hair" is not like
any other radio show you
hear.
Page 7
Wrestlers host Penn
State tomorrow night
available for Health
Science majors
Back page
Page 3
ruary 22, 2002
http://www
Today's Weather
5, Volume 55
5
'
r
High-36
Low-23
See weekend weather
Page 2
on
hike may
be in the
future
Kristin White
Eagle Eye Staff Reporter
new minimum
cumulative GPA, the
progress of new buildings
and the possibility of a
tuition increase were
the
addressed
at
President's spring open
meeting held Tuesday
afternoon in the Sloan
Auditorium.
President Craig Dean
Willis discussed the budgfor
etary
picture
Pennsylvania, noting a recommendation by the
Governor for a three percent decrease in funding
for the State System of
Higher Education. The
A
suggested cut could lead to
an increase in tuition at the
state
schools.
The
Governor will meet with
the
legislature
and
announce a final budget by
June, which will influence
the Board of Governors'
decision to maintain or
raise the cost of tuition.
"That would have been
easier to swallow if [the
Governor] had not given a
four percent increase to
community colleges," said
Willis, encouraging the
audience to contact the
legislature. "We can live
with a three percent cut in
Lock Haven, but we can't
do that indefinitely."
Willis also remarked
on the new minimum
cumulative GPA, which
will be raised from 1.7 to
2.0 beginning with the
2002 summer term. In
addition to the new standard, mid-year suspensions will no longer take
place. As before, GPA
standards will be applied
subjectively with individual cases to be determined
by the dean of the appropriate school.
"The goal is to make
sure students understand
the message that they need
a 2.0 to graduate, and if
they start in deficit it's difficult to bring it up," said
Willis.
See Willis Page 2
:iassifieds
Tomics
Movies
Opinions
9
8
6
4-5
9
back page
Staff boa
4
Weather.
2
Personals
Sports
Parson's Union Building
Lock Haven University
Lock Haven, PA 17745
Newsroom: (570) 893-2334
Fax: (570) 893-2644
Email:
Visit us on the web:
U celebrates black history month
Sumer ButtorfF
Eagle Eye Staff Rer.
Although
February
activities are devoted to
black history, the Black
Student Union sees every
day as an opportunity to
educate themselves and
others about the past.
"We want to be more
active in educating others
about our history," Brandi
Jones, BSU member, said.
For this reason, the
Sophisticated Ladies will
present a program in honor
of black history month on
February 27 at 5 p.m. in the
P.U.B. multipurpose room.
Through readings and
live entertainment, the program will educate about
black history.
Sherwonda Boardley,
the
president
of
Sophisticated
Ladies,
expects the event to
include a performance by
the Nomo dancers of Penn
State.
The show will be complemented by poetry readings, crowd participation
and small workshops. The
LHU Gospel Choir will
also participate in the cele-
bration.
Boardley
encourages
everyone to attend. We
have these events to "bring
everybody together to
salute our black leaders,"
she said. "This is to bring
unity with everyone, not
just minorities."
In an effort to continue
the spirit of black history
month throughout the year,
the BSU is considering
hosting a multicultural film
followed by an open forum
to discuss the screening.
Potential
movies
include Remember the
Titans, Men of Honor,
Rosewood, Malcolm X,
and Bamboozled.
BSU Secretary, Desiree
White, sees February as an
opportunity to educate
those outside of her race
about black history.
"The reason we have
hate, she said, is because of
ignorance. I want to educate those who don't know
about the past."
But, the essence of
black history month is to
celebrate what can be
found all year through in
the soul of a BSU member.
"Black history month is
a celebration of the richness ofmy culture," White,
said. "The past may have
some negativity, but I look
at the beauty. I see the
richness."
The BSU also celebrated the month with an academic awards ceremony
and dinner.
Professor
Ramona Broomer spoke at
the event that honored the
achievements of minority
students.
*
I
mm
WmWm
B
WJ
Daw'd Kubarek/ The Eagle Eye
Professor Broomer speaks to students at Thursday's awards
ceremony.
SCC conducts budget meeting Big brothers and sisters needed
Scott Evans
Sean Dooley
Eagle Eye Staff
The
Lock
Haven
University
Student
Council
Cooperative
(SCC) held the first budget
meeting of the spring
semester.
The meeting was conducted by SCC treasurer
Nick Trumbauer and dis-
cussed the budgets all LHU
clubs and organizations are
required to submit.
Packets were distured
to all recognized organiza-
tions, containing an equipinventory list, a list of
budget codes and a sample
ment
A questionnaire was
also included in the materials in order for the budget
committee to see how the
club is progressing.
See Budget Page 2
Michelle Hershey/ The Eagle Eye
Nick Trumbauer addresses University
clubs and organizations on budgeting.
Students donate spring vacations
Kanchan Mahara
The Eagle Eye
To help build housing
for low-income people, a
community service group
consisting of 51 students
and staff are leaving for the
Habitat for Humanity 2002
project in Russell county,
Ala. on March 2.
"Every year the LHU
students, in coordination
with AmeriCorps, organize
the program," said Anne
Marie Turnage, director of
community service at
LHU. She added that volunteer students from across
the country participate in
the project each year during breaks.
The team will be
involved in constructing
homes for the entire spring
break and will return on
March 10.
AmeriCorps is one of
the programs LHU comHumanity, the American
munity service is actively Red Cross, Universities
involved in. It is a federal and many more local and
program that engages more national organizations.
than 40,000 Americans in
After their term of servintensive volunteer service ice, AmeriCorps members
year.
each
Most receive educational awards
AmeriCorps members are to help pay for college
selected by and serve with expenses,
projects
like
but do not generally have
needs and most of
special
Eagle Eye Editor in Chief
the time are not so chalBig Brothers
Big lenging that a regular perSisters of Clinton County son couldn't handle them.
Some, not all, have disabilare looking for new recruitities. "As long as somements from the LHU camwants to have some
body
pus.
fun,
we
have a kid that
In this program, men
said.
works,"
she
and women over 18 years
Mantzoros
also
mentioned
of age volunteer to spend
time with children between that volunteers do not need
to have a car in order to be
six and 16 years old.
There is no set time that eligible for the program,
but some type of transmust be given to the chilportation is very helpful.
dren each week. The volThe little brothers and
unteers can work the time
are all from Clinton
sisters
they allot the children
and mostly from
County
around their own schedthe
Lock
Haven area.
ules.
involved in
Everyone
The program is meant
the
program
gets together
to create one on one friendonce
a
month
for some sort
ships between the child and
of
Some
of their
activity.
the volunteer.
past
activities
have
group
Volunteers should be
been
camping,
ice
fishing,
committed and caring
skating
and
hiking.
adults, who can provide the
Some volunteers meet
child with someone to conwith their little at a
up
fide in, be a role model for
group
activity and then
the little brothers and sisdecide
whether or not it
ters and should just give
would
be
a good match.
them overall support and
guidance in what is going Otherwise, the workers
pick matches that they
on in the child's life.
Contrary to popular think would be suitable.
At a pre-match meeting,
belief, the kids in the proinformation is shared with
to
gram,
according
Program
Coordinator the volunteer about the
Marsha Mantzoros, are child, and he/she can then
decide if the match would
often from caring and lovwork. There are still chiling families.
They are usually from
families with parents that
cannot give them the time
the children deserve. "It's
not that the families don't
care," Mantzoros said.
Photo Courtesy of www.lhup.edu
AmericaCorps volunteers take time out
for a group photo.
"They do care, which is
why they put (their children) in this program. It's
like a puppy trying to grow
up in a box."
The littles come from
all kinds of families. Some
are from single-parent
families and some are from
two-parent families.
Mantzoros said that the
little brothers and sisters
often do poorly in school
f
•
tEn> Hk
dren on the waiting list.
All big brothers and
sisters must go through a
screening process including Childline and criminal
checks, favorable references, sex abuse prevention information, an inoffice orientation and interview, as well as a home
visit. If unfavorable information is found, the volunteer can be turned down.
Big brothers and sisters
must have monthly contact
with their littles as well as
the parents and volunteer
for the first year to ensure
contact is being made.
There is currently a
lack of men involved with
the program. Mantzoros
said that about three quarters of the volunteers are
female.
Men are always
paired with boys in the program.
Women can be
paired with boys or girls.
Mantzoros and LHU
graduate Lauren Bechtel
were at Bentley yesterday
encouraging individuals to
For those who
would like to work with
Big Brothers Big Sisters,
sign up.
but missed the signups yesterday, it's not too late.
Call (570) 893-4100 for
more information on the
program.
Pit
Prtoro courtesy of Big Brothers/ Big Sisters
Student Chad Wolf donates his time to
the Big Brothers/ Big Sisters organization.
Page 2
Eagle Eye
February 22, 2002
Area businesses get lift SCC extended budget Willis discusses plans for
a minimum GPA and
HAVEN—In
deadlines for clubs
LOCK
response to the serious challenges facing the survival and
growth of small businesses in
Clinton
Lycoming
and
Counties, the Pennsylvania
Small Business Development
Centers (SBDC) are proposing
an expanded package of business management assistance
services.
The SBDC provides services in Clinton and Lycoming
Counties.
The services package proposed will provide targeted,
high-quality consulting, training, and information to small
firms struggling with the recession, to dislocated workers
interested in becoming entrepreneurs, to firms developing new
technologies, and to small companies looking for opportunities
to grow and expand.
The projected impact of the
expanded service delivery will
be hundreds of new businesses
established and new jobs created in Clinton and Lycoming
Counties.
For the University to be
able to provide these services,
the
Pennsylvania
Small
Business Development Centers
have requested an investment of
$8.4
million
from
the
Pennsylvania
General
Assembly in the 2002-2003
state budget.
Of that amount, $1 million
will be dedicated for providing
Economic
Recession
and
Disaster Recovery Assistance to
over 1,000 firms to help them
develop adjustment strategies to
successfully weather the economic slowdown.
Another 25,000 small companies and prospective entrepreneurs will be helped through
training programs and no-cost
confidential consulting.
FPEEANEOX
Next Tuesday, Feb. 26, is Sigma Pi's founders
day. Sigma Pi was founded in 1897 at
Vincennes University, a two year college in
The brothers of Alpha Chi Rho will be outside
Wal-mart on Friday and Sunday from 10 a.m.
to 10 p.m. to collect money for the Salvation
Trumbauer believes that this
is the first time that clubs were
ever asked to fill out a questionnaire of this kind. By reporting
the organizations' finiancial and
membership standing, it will
allow the committee to allocate
the proper funds.
The deadline for club budgets is Friday, March
15.
Trumbauer said the deadline has
been extended this semester so
club executives can ask questions and thoroughly plan out
their budgets.
The budgets will then be
reviewed by the SCC budgeting
committee and will be made
available to clubs by April 8.
Hearings will then be conducted
to discuss club budgets starting
April 9.
Trumbauer is asking all club
organizers to plan out the activities and outing they plan to participate in first, not the dollar
amount that SCC will provide
each club.
This week in history
Feb. 21,1864
The brothers of Lambda Sigma Upsilon will
hold an interest meeting on Feb. 25 at 7 p.m. in
the pub to look into starting a latino fraternity
on campus
GREEK NEWS
William Gaines was convicted of
murder in the first degree for murlering his brother, Robert Gaines on
July 13, 1863. Gaines, a Clinton
bounty Resident, shot and killed his
rother through a kitchen window as
he ate dinner. Gaines escaped jail
once before being convicted and
later hanged.
can apply
for criminal justice
internships and job
opportunities for the
Ocean City
Beach Patrol.
Applications will be
available 1 p.m.
Wednesday in
Raub 425
a
"Hands-on"
Hlxc It o Prearam
Held locally
Starts
February 22nd
State College Inn
F«r inf and
•
brochure
SSiS -J-.tifjir,
Hope Enterprises, Inc. can provide you with the
opportunity to offset college expenses while
gaining valuable experience in human services,
special education or any other related field.
At least 1 percent of all
drivers at any time are
legally drunk.
We have part-time positions in our residential
homes in Lock Haven, supervising individualss
with developmental disabilities.
COMPLETE PAID TRAINING IS PROVIDED
Complete an on-line application at our web-site
or FAX resume or letter of interest
326-1258
On weekend nights that
rate rises to 3 percent.
or visit us at
136 Catawissa Ave.
Approximately 1.4 million
drivers were arrested in
1998 for DUI.
WALNUT STREET CHURCH OF CHRIST
in Police Beat is publishable by the Pennsylvania State
Open Records Law.
Weather
I
mJk.
High-35
Low-21
High-36
Low-23
See fullforcast and up to date news at:
www.LHUeagleye. com
Willis from page 1
Willis also broke down the
enrollment numbers at Lock
acknowledging the
of
growth on future
impact
development and management.
"The good news is there are
too many students," he said.
"The bad news is there are too
many students."
Haven,
4,000 students are currently
enrolled at the university. New
student enrollment was down
two percent and continuing students were up six percent. In
term.
ATTENTION Colleae Men and Women
Think before
you drink
Center, which is expected to
addition, housing occupancy is
at 100 percent for the spring
Army.
The brothers of Kappa Delta Rho assisted in
relocating the Central Mountain High School
Library last week.
possible tuition increases
Williamsport
The rising numbers at Lock
Haven and an increase in high
school graduates, projected to
peak in 2008, will necessitate
housing expansion.
"As the number of high
school graduates increases, college
enrollment
increases,"
explained Willis, emphasizing
the need to focus on future
trends.
In preparation, administrators arc in the preliminary stages
of looking for private contractors to build new housing.
In order to avoid additional
student fees for the building of
new residence halls the university is seeking a third party to
build and maintain housing,
similar to Campus Village
before it was purchased by the
university.
Construction is on schedule
for the Student Recreation
open April I. Students have
paid and will continue to pay
$99 a semester over a period of
several years to finance the
planning and building of the
center. For a fee, faculty, staff
and community members will
also have access to the facilities,
although it may become necessary to limit non-student membership if it inhibits student use.
Proposed figures for the center are: $30 for one month; $125
for a semester; $230 for an academic year and $300 for 12
months. The money collected
from fees will go to the SCC.
The
also
president
announced that Rogers Gym
will be out of service for the
2003 year due to a construction
project to restore and refurbish
the building. In the plans the
first floor will continue to be
used as a multipurpose facility
and the elevated track will be
rebuilt.
In other building projects,
the Keystone
VocationalTechnical Building is slated lo
become a health science building to be used by the health,
physical education and athletic
training
programs.
Administrators are in the
process of selecting an architect
to adapt the building to its
intended use. Willis anticipates
the building will be ready for
use by September 2003.
Willis also mentioned the
relocation of the Deans'
offices to the lower level of the
library for student convenience.
recent
Senator o/ the week
:
:
f\ 2
-X-
George Sigle has been
selected as this week's SCC
Senator of the
week. Sigle is
from
junior
i>a
Strasburg.
and majors
mm.
Sigle has served
on SCC since the
Fall semester.
Outside
SCC, Sigle
President of the
Sigma Pi fraternity and the
Intra-Fraternity Council.
Sigle said his reason for
joining SCC was to encourage
other greeks to do the same.
by Scott Evans
5s
"Greeks overall take on
more of a leadership role than
the average student, and is
expected in each
Greek organiza-
J|
tion
1
-
Sun: Worship 9:30 sun., classes -10:45. Eve. -6:00p.m. Wed: 7.00 p m
Please call (570) 726-4433 or 753-3108 for more
www.kcnet.org/~maw 1 /
HTD REAL ESTATE RENTALS INC.
208 R H
H S TREET
po
92 7
LOCK HAVEN PA 17745
b5x
DON'T BE LEFT OUT...
Off Campus Housing is going FAST.
We have clean and affordable housing
One and two bedroom units still available
Most utilities included
Pets permitted with pet fee
Our house is your home!
p at
t
all
i
W. Walnut & Second Ave, Lock Haven PA
S
that
members take
part in the leadership community," said Sigle.
After graduating in the
Spring of 2003,
Sigle plans to
move to a large city and work
at a television station.
DFRRTF r>AV
570-748.4227
Page
Former professor donates scholarship fund
LOCK HAVEN Mr and
Mrs. Karl Herrmann recently
endowed their second scholar-
ship at Lock Haven University
of Pennsylvania.
The Lynne
and Karl
Herrmann Health Science with a 71-29-15 record.
Scholarship will benefit a
After retiring in 1997,
who
has Herrmann
his
deserving student
continued
demonstrated academic excelinvolvement with the University
lence in health science at the through volunteerism.
University.
He currently serves as the
The Herrmanns' first scholChair of the Emeriti Division on
arship was endowed to support the Steering Committee for the
the University's soccer program. University Foundation's capital
It rewards an outstanding stucampaign. He led the fundraisdent athlete who has demoning efforts during the emeriti
strated potential to make a sig- phase of the campaign, surpassnificant contribution to the socing the goal of $200,000.
cer team.
Touching Tomorrow Today,
Both scholarships are in supis a five-year capital campaign
port of the University's capital to raise more than $10 million in
campaign. Touching Tomorrow support of University programs
Today.
and activities.
Administered through the
" It's wonderful to have
emeriti volunteers who give Lock
University
Haven
their time, as well as being gen- Foundation, the campaign is in
erous with their resources, to its third year.
the University. The Herrmanns'
To date, more than $6.5 milcontinued support to the capital lion has been raised through the
campaign are greatly appreciatgenerous support of alumni, faced," said Dr. Craig Dean Willis, ulty, staff, corporations and
friends of the University.
University president.
A member ofthe University
faculty for over 30 years, Mr.
Herrmann served as a professor
of Health Science.
As head men's soccer coach,
he led the Bald Eagles to conference and national prominence
PA?ofo Courtesty ofPublic Relations Office
Lynne and Karl Herrmann recently donated a
scholarship fund to the University.
Student Recreation Center [SRC] Logo Contest
1
Students! This is your chance. Design a logo to be used for the soon to be opened Student
Recreation Center. If your logo is chosen it will become the official logo of the BRAND NEW
Recreation Center.
a mix between Tori Amos and
Ani Difranco with her underground genre of music.
Described as deep and movat
8:00 p.m. in
February 28th
ing
with the combination of
Parsons
Union
the
Building
bass, violin, cello,
acoustic
on
Multipurpose Room located
and
piano,
Bentley's voice, the
the campus of Lock Haven
is one you won't
performance
University of Pennsylvania.
want
to
miss.
is
free
The performance
and
Bentley will be available to
open to the public.Bentley, who
sign
autographs immediately
her
started recording
own music
at the age of 17, has been called following the performance.
Bentley, the rising musician,
will perform on Thutsday,
Symphonic band plans large selection
LOCK
HAVEN-'The
University, will be the guest
and conductor.
Drummer"
Ragtime
Other arrangements for the
"Shenandoah" are two of the
pieces that will be featured at concert include "Horizon
the Symphonic Band Concert on Overature" by Peter Bays,
Vincent
by
February 28th at 8:00 in Price "Pageant"
Persichetti, and "Military
Performance Center.
by
Osterling.
Performance
of "The March"
Ragtime Drummer" will feature "Shenandoah" was written by
Conductor John R. Schmidt, Frank Tichelli and "The
Assistant Professor of Music at Ragtime Drummer" was written
Lock Haven University, with a by Bill Cahn.
The concert is free and open
snare drum solo. Dr. Ned C.
to
the
public.
Deihl, from Pennsylvania State
St. Patrick 4 Vttp 5X
Starts at 9:00am
-
Registration:
If recieved by March 1 st
$12.00
After March 1st
$15.00
Make checks payable to "JSPASS"
3. The logo must contain no more than THREE (3) colors.
4. The logo contest will conclude at 5 p.m. Wednesday, February 27. All logos must be entered
into the Director's office of the Student Recreation Center (PUB 106 downstairs) before that
time for full consideration. The winning logo will be displayed in the next issue of the Eagle
Eye.
5. All logos must contain, the artist name or ID number and local phone number. Logos that are
entered without this information will be disqualified from the competition.
6. The Director of the Student Recreation Center and the Executive Council of the SCC, Inc.
will have the final determination of the winner.
-
RC
LOCK HAVEN—Annika
Saturday, March 16, 2002
So What are the rules?
1. The logo must contain the following letters S, R & C (and only these letters)
2. The logo must be appropriate for use in a professional setting and for professional
Submit Logo to: Chris McGary,
Director of the Student Recrea
Center
106 Parsons Union Building
Underground musician to play
T-shirts and CASH prizes
n
Contact #: on campus— 2125
off campus- 893-2125
I
Call (570) 748-6855
for more information & an application
RESPONSIBILITIES:
RESPONSIBILITIES:
1. Tutors Summer Development students in assigned subject area.
1. Live in the residence hall for 5 weeks during summer program.
2. Abide by University and program policies.
2. Abide by University and program policies.
Meet individually with Summer Development students on a
weekly basis and complete student contact forms.
3. Meet individually with Summer Development students on a
weekly basis and complete student contact forms.
Participate in program activities.
4. Participate in program activities.
Serve as a supportive role model, counselor and resource
person to Summer Development students.
5. Serve as a supportive role model, counselor and resource
person to Summer Development students.
Attend weekly
6. Organize social programs for Summer Development students.
Attend Summer Development Mandatory Study Session.
7. Attend Summer Development Mandatory Study Session.
A good candidate for the TC position possesses:
Positive Attitude
Willingness to give of themselves
Good listening skills
A good candidate for the TC position possesses:
Positive Attitude
Willingness to give of themselves
Good listening skills
Leadership experience
Respectful of others
Excellent people skills
Excel in the subject area they tutor (A or B)
Leadership experience
Respectful of others
Excellent people skills
Excel in the subject area they tutor (A or B)
By March 25, 2002
Letters of interest should be forwarded:
Provost's Office
210 Sullivan HAH
By March 25, 2002
Letters of interest should be forwarded:
Provost's Office
210 Sullivan HAH
}
Page 4
February 22, 2002
OP/ED
How to get rid of that spare tire
not all that contributes to the
freshman 15. B&D Tanning
want to have their ads upside
down, so stop telling me that my
If you're perfectly healthy
Sean Dooley
Eagle Eye Editor in
and carrying nothing but your
book bag, the only way you
should be taking the elevator is
if you're going to the fifth or
Look down at the ground.
Can you see it or did your pot-
"B&D Tanning
want to have
their ads upside
down, so stop
telling me that
my staff screwed
sixth floor. Otherwise, walk.
Now I know everyone is saying that if I'm so critical of people who ride the elevator, I
should never ride it, even to the
sixth floor. But people who take
the ride to go to the fifth floor do
not bother me. Reason being,
your legs do start to get a little
tired around the fourth floor.
And for this reason, people who
ride the elevator to the fourth
floor bother me, but not as
much; it's only a big deal if I'm
in a hurry. People who ride it to
belly get in the way ?
I have an idea that may be
considered extreme by some, on
how to get rid of that extra
weight: WALK TO THE SECOND, THIRD AND FOURTH
FLOOR!
It seems like every time I
take the elevator to the sixth
floor in Robinson Hall, that I am
delayed by some lazy idiot who
is taking it to floor three and as a
result, I'm late for class.
If you're on crutches, in a
wheelchair or are carrying some
insane amount of books, then
you should take the elevator to
the second, third or fourth tloor.
just by saying "screw the
'vator," and putting one foot in
front of the other to go a short
distance. I'm not saying that's
all you have to do, but it's a start.
Not eating McDonald's and running may help you, too.
I do take the elevator. To the
fifth and sixth floors. And if you
wanted to know, I did gain the
freshman 15 my first year here,
so I can only imagine how much
I would have gained if I was like
that short girl who I see taking
the elevator to the third floor
every day in Robinson. I probably would have gained closer to
25 pounds.
Also, why do people demand
to take the elevator down? Even
when I am on the sixth floor, I
walk down to the first. Going
down is less strenuous, I actually get down faster walking than I
up"
staff screwed that up. Lack of
the second and third flat out
working out also adds to your
development of the body you
always dreaded. That body can
be partially avoided, however,
annoy me.
Contrary to popular belief,
greasy Bentley food and beer is
do on the elevator and I guarantee there isn't a person on this
campus who couldn't handle
walking from floor six to floor
one on a daily basis.
My advisor in the journalism
Dr.
department,
Douglas
Campbell is a bit more ambitious than I am when it comes to
being anti-elevator. He is years
my elder and he refuses to take
anything but the stairs. As a
result, he is in better shape than
99% of the students at Lock
because I'll bet he could outlast
you in a marathon run, also. By
making this minor adjustment of
taking the elevator out of your
life, maybe you could start getting in shape, too.
So remember, you when see
an upside down ad in the Eagle
Eye, it was on purpose, so stop
harassing me about it, or at least
harass me but kiss my
first
and before you complain about
how you can't lose weight, ask
yourself one question first: "how
...
"...Dr. Douglas Campbell is a bit
more ambitous...he is in better shape
than 99% of the students..."
Haven University. He is in betshape than yours truly, and I
don't really mind admitting it,
ter
many times have I taken the elevator to
the third floor?"
Let's not wave the flag in the
whole world's face
E.R. Shipp
New York Daily News
o
%
-
■
THE EAGLE EYE
LOCK HAVEN
LOCK HAVEN UNIVERSITY
PARSONS UNION BUILDING
LOCK HAVEN, PA 17745
PHONE: (570) 893-2334
FAX: (570) 893-2644
LHUeagley e® hotmail ,c om
Editors in Chief
Shawn P. Shanley
Dr. Douglas S. Campbell
a\\\\\\\\\
Copy Editor
Jessica LaCroix
Marc Rayman
RJ. Harmer
Stephan Baldwin
he told The Daily Telegraph.
"Has there ever been a big, powerful country that is as patriotic
as America? And patriotic in the
tinniest way, with so much flagwaving? You'd really think we
were some poor little republic
,
„, itf one„ „„„
„
and
that
person lost his
-
'
»
*
b mounting flags, too.
Durm g lhc °Pening cerem
of ,he Winter Olympics, it
reall y struck me that the
" U S A USA! " ™h-rahing
had hlt a new " and uncomfort-
«-
'
-
ging about yourself.
The tussle over the display
of the tattered flag from Ground
Zero bordered on tastelessness,
too. For a while, it was touch
and go, with a sizable contingent
of superpatriots demanding that
the American athletes march in
with the wounded banner as a
!
symbol of American defiance
and resilience.
able level. After Police Officer
Fortunately, the matter was
Daniel Rodriguez's
now
familiar
resolved when the International
6
and almost de rigueur - rendiOlympic Committee permitted
an honor guard of police, firefighters and U.S. Olympians to
Fraternity. Sororitv. Clubs. Student Groups
$1,000- $2,000 this semester with the easy solemnly carry the flag into the
CVrnpusfundraiser.com three hour fundraising event. Does not stadium during what turned out
tifftHvei credit card applications. Fundraising dates are filling to be a moving ceremony that
-fcfckly, so call today! Contact at (888) 923-3238 or visit
was, in the end, bigger than
America. After all, the world
was wounded Sept. 11.
Indeed, other parts of the
world were probably saying to
themselves that day that the
United States was entering the
horrid world of war and terrorAVAILABLE
ism that they'd long been a part
of.
Now leasing for Fall 2002.
Television coverage of the
One & two bedroom apartments available.
Olympics seems to focus more
.
.
•-
-
STUDENT RENTALS
Michelle Hershey
Lindsay Johnson
Most utilities included,
monthly or semester payment plans
24 hour maintenance service
and a friendly staff
Sports Editors
Suzanne McCombie
Gregg Tripp
Call for your personal showing today!
Locations close to campas still available
Stop by our office:
121 W. Church St., Lock Haven
or call us at:
748-8550
Shawn P. Shanley
Heather Flicker
..
tion of "God Bless America,"
pop singer R. Kelly sang about
Americans being "the greatest."
That was very, well, impolite
to the athletes, fans and dignitaries from around the world not to mention the billions
watching on television across
the globe kind of like inviting
guests over for dinner and
spending the entire time brag-
■
Tracy Jackson
Jamie Melchionne
thing would crumble. America
is the real religion in this countr^'
t0 be g°in g
We do
I fully understand Norman
Mailer's pique with his fellow
Americans especially since the overboard 1 do believe mat
,n
Winter Olympics opened in Salt some P eoP le P laces like Lon S
are trying to outdo their
Island
Lake City
Mailer, in a series of inter- nei ghbors for dramatic disP lays
,he
views that ran in British newspa- of fla 8 And others ' es P ecial"
immigrants from those parts
ly
pers earlier this month,
•
of
the world forever etched in
expressed his exasperation with
our P syches as bast,ons of ter"
what's passing for patriotism in
rorism are feeli "g n°«-so-subtle
post-Sept. 11 America.
"America has an almost Pressure 10 demonstrate their
a eg iance to me United States
obscene infatuation with itself,"
..
ISSUE 5, VOLUME 55
-
religion for one hour, the whole
Ryan Van Rossum
Archivist
Jessy Garcia
Scott Evans, Jared Guest, P.J. Harmer, Sumer Buttorff, Ken Taylor, Kristin
Kevin Carver
we throw all kinds of
[obstacles] at you.
tuition isn't one of them.
THE EAGLEEYE. THE OFFICIAL STUDENTNEWSPAPER OF LOCK HAVEN UNIVERSITY; IS
DANCE WITH THE UNIVERSITY CALENDAR THE ARTICLES, OPINIONS, PICTURES AND LAYOUT OFTHE EAGLE EYE ARE
THE RESPONSIBILITY OFTHE STAFF AND DO NOT REFLECT THE VIEWS OF THE STUDENTS, THE FACULTY OR ADMINISTRATION. UNLESS SPECIFIED. THE EAGLE EYE IS FUNDED BY THE STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE AND PRINTED BY THE
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CHARGE AND MUST BE SUBMITTED NO I.ATER THAN TUESDAY BY 1P.M
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LETTERSTO THE EDITOR ARE WELCOME THEY MUST BE TYPE-WRITTEN AND INCLUDE THE AUTHOR'S NAME SIGNATURE AND TELEPHONE NUMBER. LETTERS RECEIVED WITHOUT THIS INFORMATION WILL NOTBE PRINTED. DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS ISTUESDAY BY 3P.M. THE EDITOR RESERVES THE RIGHTTO EDIT ANY COPY.
Sure, we'll have you climbing walls. But if you qualify for a
2- or 3-year scholarship, tuition's one obstacle you won't have
to worry about. Talk to an Army ROTC rep. And get a leg up
on your future.
ARMY ROTC
Unlike any other college course you can take.
-
on American athletes whether
they finish in the running or not
-
than it does on winning ath-
letes from other countries.
Fundamentally, however,
this is American boosterism in
overdrive. I'm less interested in
tallies that emphasize which
nation is ahead in the medals
count. I'm much more interested
"I'm much less interesed
in tallies that empahsize
which nation is ahead."
-
in individual accomplishment
nationality be damned!
On some college campuses,
there is a kind of counterpatriotism underway, with students
protesting the war effort in
Afghanistan and the possible
abuse of the rights of Taliban
and Al Qaeda soldiers taken into
custody by the U.S. Some superpatriots criticize their dissent as
dishonorable.
But again, as Mailer told The
Guardian: "My feeling is that
you're patriotic about America
if you're obsessed with America
because it's a democracy and its
obligation is to improve all the
time, not to stop and take bows
and smell its armpits and say,
'Ambrosia!'"
Good on you, Norm!
February 22, 2002
Page 5
Eagle Eye
That'll be $25 just for reading this column
,
,
Dave Barry
Knight Ridder
Not that this has reduced the
crowds. The main street of Park
City is jammed day and night
with thousands of people walking around in high-quality ski
attire, as if at any moment
they're going to hit the slopes. In
fact, though, nobody here is skiing. The major participatory
PARK CITY, Utah - This
quaint ski-resort village in the
heart of the Olympic action has
gone out ofits way to make you,
the visitor, feel right at home,
assuming that your home
charges you $25 to park. You
sports are:
can also buy pizza from a side1. Trying to find a restaurant
walk stand here for $5 a slice,
that
might possibly have a table
and a bottle of genuine water for
available
before August.
$4. The going price for air is $3
into cell phones
Shouting
2.
per breath.
in
an
effort
to
locate
friends who
I'm kidding, of course. Air is
are
also
wandering
in the dense
only $1.50 per breath. But I'm
not kidding when I say that the crowd ("... OK, YOU GO PAST
main Olympic event here SEVEN STORES SELLING
appears to be the Retail QUAINT YET EXPENSIVE
Merchants' 50 Kilometer Price LITTLE GIFTS, AND THEN
NINE JEWELRY STORES,
AND THEN SIX MORE
QUAINT LITTLE EXPENSIVE GIFT STORES AND
THEN LOOK
YOUR
FOR
FOURTH
REAL-ESTATE
ON
OFFICE
LEFT,
THE
AND YOU'LL
SEE ME. I'M
WEARING SKI
ATTIRE.")
3. Stopping
every now and
Dave
then in the middle of the street and shouting,
"Whooo!" to indicate how much
festive Olympic-style fun you
are having.
4. Standing in line to buy
hats.
This last activity is the big
one. The public here at the
Olympics has gone INSANE for
I the beret-style
hats worn by the
T
.S. Olympic
in the
team
e
n
i n g
p
lar? For the simple reason that
they make you look really sharp,,
provided that(a) you are a member of the U.S. Olympic team,
and (b) you are at the Opening
Ceremony. If you're a member
of the general public, just walking around, this hat makes you
eremony. look like a cross between
and
Alka-Seltzer
Speedy
People are waitMonica Lewinsky. Even if
in line, outdoors,
for you're a man.
for
But everybody is buying the
upward
hours
berets
like crazy anyway,
just
three
well, because everyinto
because
to
a
get
Barry
store where they body ELSE is buying them.
can buy these hats for $19.95 People proudly wear their berets
apiece. Out on the street, the hats everywhere here, including, I
are going for as much as $100, bet, in the shower. When they
which is nearly twice what you leave Utah, they'll wear them
home, where, at some point,
have to pay here for a hot dog.
so
they'll see themselves in the
are
these
hats
popuWhy
...
mirror. Then they'll take off
their berets and never wear them
again, except maybe on
Halloween.
But that's what the Winter
Olympics are all about: temporary insanity. Here in the
Bubble
of
Olympic
Derangement, we truly believe
that Utah is the focus of the
world's attention, and that it
actually matters who won the
bronze in the two-man bobsled
It's an exciting feeling,
and I wish there was some way I
could share it with you.
Wait! I know! I'll sell you
my hat.
event.
My generation is not apathetic
Adonal Foyle
The weekend before last,
while some of my NBA colleagues traveled to Philadelphia
for the All-Star game, I spent
two days talking, debating and
planning with a group of more
than 70 college students about a
new national organization I
summer,
founded
last
Democracy Matters. The organization helps give young people a
voice in the growing movement
to reform the financing of our
political system by linking campaign-finance reform efforts in
students' communities.
This event was our first
chance
to
together.
get
Democracy Matters student
organizers traveled from as far
away as Texas, Idaho and North
Carolina to come to Colgate
University, my alma mater, in
Hamilton, N.Y. They defy the
stereotype that today's college
students are apathetic and uncaring.
>sni)rico
in
Students engaged in serious
debates about the kind of financing that would be fair and would
help give every American an
equal chance to be heard. The
disagreements that emerged
were not just tolerated but
respectfully seen as sources of
insight and fresh thinking. For
anyone concerned about student
apathy, the weekend's intense
discussions and planning would
have provided an effective antidote.
They have the desire to
speak out loud and clear on
important issues. Ofcourse they
are critical of, and even disillusioned with, the current system
of financing elections as are
many of us. And why shouldn't
they be?
The revelation of political
quid pro quos associated with
the Enron scandal is only the
most recent example. When
elected officials become beholden to special interests that make
large financial contributions to
-
their election efforts, it is obvious reform is needed. The
upshot is that elected officials
and candidates accord differences in "access" based on the
level of contributions donated.
Politicians today spend huge
amounts of their time raising
money and are too often concerned more about not alienating
their donors than about representing and serving their constituents.
It's no surprise, then, that
many students turn away from
political involvement. But I
believe they will lead the charge
to change.
Now that the Shays-Meehan
bill has received initial approval
in the House, I predict students
will lead the push for more comprehensive reform - where all
Americans can have a fair and
equal chance to make their voices heard.
of the Week: "We were shocked at how difficult it is to givi
money responsibly"-Neil Devroy, on efforts by the National
■intion of Home Builders to help victims of Sept. 11.
!
slda
qntbnurrj'
OPEN Saturday, February 23rd
11:00am to 3:00pm
Spring "Break Specials
in the bookstore
Buy a Russell sweatshirt,
Get a FREE Russell t-shirt
Starting Wednesday, February 27th March 1st
-
Senior Salute flay
Get your caps, gowns, tassels
and order your personalized invitations!
Then enjoy some refreshments!
Wednesday, March 13th & Thursday, March 14th
9:00am to 6:00pm
Page 6
Eagle Eye
"Lumpy Hair"
Sean Dooley
Eagle Eye Editor in Chief
Most radio shows prepare
for what is in store on any given
day. Most radio shows have a
standard rundown for what is
going on every show. Most
radio shows have a set playlist
with a few requests ready to go
each time they air. J-Rod and
Jack-O's program "Lumpy
Hair," formerly known as "Dead
WLHU
Air,"
on
heard
from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday nights,
however, is not most radio
shows.
Hackettstown, New Jersey
native J-Rod chooses what song
he is going to play next by grabbing a handful of CD's, shuffling them around, selecting one
and blurting out a random track
number to play. J-Rod's labels
his music selection as your typical "college" music and rarely
lets his heart get in the way of
what he is playing. Instead, he
leaves his playlist up to grabbing
CD's from WLHU's plethora of
February 22, 2002
— not your average radio show
get a few shout-outs in. "I want
say hi to my best friend,
Bobby Banana, and my brother.
in the
to
News
Matt Bocian," said Jack-O.
J-Rod scoffs when asked to
describe the typical "Lumpy
Hair" fan, and says that the typical fan is "anyone who can click
on the webpage and pull up the
webcast." Pretty much anyone
on the LHU campus with a computer and speakers that work can
get into this show.
Though he keeps his show to
mostly a spontaneous comedy
act, J-Rod also read news and
weather at the top of the hour on
his 2-hour WLHU segment.
J-Rod chooses to do his own
meteorology, making his forecasts unique and far different
from anything you'll hear on the
Weather Channel and trusts his
sun dial as the best teller of time,
rather than a clock, like most of
IT'S A MATCH
Nick Lachey of 98 Degrees and
his longtime steady, pop singer
Jessica Simpson, are officially
engaged, a publicist confirmed.
During a joint interview on
CBS's "Early Show" two years
ago, Lachey said, "The first
time I ever heard her sing, I got
chills.
I told the guys
to marry that girl
going
'I'm
one day.'" He says he has
remained faithful to his 21year-old fiancee. She has proclaimed that she's holding onto
her virginity until she gets married. No wedding date has been
...
us.
J-Rod enjoys being part of
WLHU to the extreme. "It's the
only radio station you can listen
to through a water bottle," he
Wise Chiropractic and
Rehabilitation Cei
748-7462
AAAACH DU LEIB ER, Zl
M
GOOT
The city of Cologne will clamp
down on men caught
ughl "shamelessly relieving themselves" in public at the upcoming
German carnival season which is noted for
heavy consumption of alcoholic drink.
It is also noted for "wild urination" on the part of men. and local residents have grown tired of it. Offenders will
be fined,
DOORBELL
A 22-year-old fugitive from justice
called the cops in Ticonderoga, N.Y.\ from
his hideout in Georgia to taunt them and
brag that they would never catch him, Au
contraire.
After he hung up, the police used
the Caller ID system to track his whereabouts and then asked the Auburn, Ga.,
authorities to go get him;
Then, the idiot called back, a sectime.
While he was on the phone, the
Georgia
when
,
.
°a
U SURE WE RE AL N
Jm
5 West Miifl Stmt
(A(rwfri»Siifc»iy)
FEEL A DRAFT?
Mel Gibson is trying to set the
record straight about whether
his father moved his family
from Peekskill, N.Y, to
Australia so his sons could
dodge the Vietnam draft.
"That's not totally true," said
Gibson, whose new movie,
"We Were Soldiers," depicts an
early battle in that war.
In a New York Daily News
interview, he said his father "is
a sane man who fought for this
country during World War II.
Maybe because of that, my
father was never a fan of war."
But Gibson, who was 12 when
they moved, said: "My father
had hurt himself (on the job)
and we had friends and family
in Australia who could make it
easier for us to live while he
recovered." He adds, "You
could still be drafted in
Australia."
DON'T CALL ME NOW!
Federal fraud fighters say Miss
Cleo's psychic hotline should
have seen it coming: a lawsuit
accusing the service of rampant
deception.
The two companies in Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., are behind the
telephone psychic reading service that, on television and the
Internet, promises insights into
love and money with a free
psychic reading, but when consumers call a toll-free number
they are directed to a 1 -900
number charging $4.99 per
wm
OOOF, UGH, THIS IS HEAVY, GRUNT
broke into the Moose
Alaska, in the wee
Sway on bicycles. They didn't get;far.
"
Chu Mei-feng. 35.
minor
Taiwanese politician, was secretly filmed
I in
having sex with a married
Hidden
pinhole cameras were
man.
gedly installed by her estranged
the former mayor of Hsinchu.
The scandal exploded when a gossip magazine gave away videodiscs of the
encounter inside each copy.
Now, several of the principals are
charged with undermining public morality,
and the woman in question has embarked
on a campaign to restore her tarnished
image.
8
HEY, I'M THE VICTIM HERB,- OFFI-
Correction from last week: Tickets for the 311 concert featuring special guest Hoobastank are free foi
students with LHU ID, and $15 each for the public.
CER!
A 21-year-old man picked up a
hitchhiker in Ohio w o pro p y
him of $200.
Now short of money, the driver
made up hisloss later by robbing two other
people.
boyfriend.
■
GOOD DOG, ATTA BOY, WHAT'S
THIS?
A dog playing fetch near a
Pennsylvania apartment building ran into
the bushes and came back with a wallet
MORE
WAYS
ONE
instead
of the ball.
THAN
LEGLESS IN
no
acted
legs
as a
The wallet had been dropped by i
A man with
two
lookout as
of his friends tried to bur- peeping'torn who had been looking into a
glarize a house in Easington Colliery, lady's first-floor living room before taking
England, The homeowner scared them off off when she called the cops. He has been
and sa w the two carrying him as they iled arrested,
the scene
NOT
In his defense, he told the court I'LL SHOW YOU WHO'S
he was talked into participating in the CRAZY!
denied admittance to a mental
caper after he had drunk 16 pints of beer.
health clinic in Izola, Slovenia, a man
RETURN TO ME, MY LOVE, KA- drove his car through the facility's glass
door and proceeded 30 yards down a corriFLASH!
A Texas woman paid a folk healer dor and back to the reception desk to
~ to perform a ceremony designed to win emphasize his need for psychiatric care.
He was taken to a mental hospital.
February 15-21
MOTH MAN
PROPHSCIM
9:30 Fri. and Sat. only
\
I
..
» r-m
No late show
Show Times:
Fri: 7, 9:30 Sat: 2,7,9:30 Sun: 2,7 Mon-Thur: 7
and an onion and
concoction flared
..
set.
jokes.
F/7e pftoto
J-Rod omits sports from his
music.
top of the hour coverage, J-Rod (left) and Jack-O host "Lumpy Hair" on WLHU Tuesdays from 7-9
Jack-O,
Co-host
of
because
he feels that he should p.m. You can tune in to hear the duo playing their two hours worth of "college"
Springfield (just like The
to covering in the top music
leave
that
by clicking on http://www.lhup.edu/radio.
Simpsons) gives away clumps of
sets forth for his two other
he
his hair at 8:30 p.m. each show
passions, on of which is the
to the 50th caller.
So every Tuesday night from
sports broadcasting club. J-Rod
"Me and Jacko talk about can be heard doing color com7 to 9 p.m., take a little break
what we've done lately," J-Rod menting for many Bald Eagles from your studies (after all, we
said, "he always has something home basketball games on all need it), and get an afro (or
to say."
Channel 10. You can also read mullet) with "Lumpy Hair," and
Though his English is not J-Rod's sports columns for the your two hilarious co-hosts,
Listen from 1 p.m. to 3 a.m. Sunday through
exactly up to par, Jack-O stumJ-Rod and Jack-O.
Friday.
Eagle Eye every Friday.
bles through the bigger words to
LxOVE7°
Names
Mike Pingree is a
Boston
column on the Internet at www.pin-
East Main Street
Lock Haven
www.roxymovies.com
Hotline: 748-ROXY
F.
Page 7
22, 2002
NBC buys time with another year of 'Friends'
off hitter and "ER" as its closer, better figure out how to halt its
we'd have already high-tailed it glorious losing streak, or else.
for CBS.
So far, no show has proved
With "ER" still popular but that it can replace, or even folThe most jarring number for
clearly aging, and "Will & low, "Friends." This season, the
me about the "Friends" re-up
still funny but hardly the series is averaging close to 25
isn't the $22 million each cast Grace"
ratings killer that "Friends" is, million viewers a week and at
member will pocket, or the milNBC couldn't let its best sitcom this rate, will trounce "ER" by
lions more they'll earn from havwalk away, particularly after it more than 2 million viewers.
ing a piece of syndication revhas become something of a
Of course, NBC has been
enue.
comeback
kid
before. In the early '90s,
creatively
and
here
in
It's one. As in one more year.
the
ratings.
Cosby Show" and
"The
Entertainment
NBC
While SI million per 22"Cheers"
were aging, and then
President Jeff Zucker says he's
head Warren
minute
which
entertainment
episode,
is
virtualecstatic about the deal, which
work,
a
week's
Littlefield
found
a show called
ly
seems
mindwill set his network back $7 milanother called
to us average wage"Seinfeld"
and
boggling
lion per episode, more than any
earners, 1 don't think the actors "Friends" and later capped it off
other series including his prized
were all that swayed by the with the medical series "ER."
"ER" ($13 million for a full
(He would later also insert
hour). That's because after bump in salary. They were
$750,000
down
"Frasier" on Thursdays, which
already
pulling
crunching the numbers, Zucker
an
would eventually be moved to
episode.
knows and his bosses know
a year with jump start another night.)
The
idea
of
doing
buying time is priceless.
the full knowledge that this realZucker said over the summer
After a long streak offinding
end, no matter the ratthat the way to stay in the ratings
is
the
ly
and developing smart and imagings or the buzz, was probably game as a network is to launch
inative comedies, and positiontwo strong shows each year.
ing them on its stronghold of enough to get them back.
But now comes the fun part, Overall, NBC has kept pace with
Thursday night, NBC has found
or at least the interesting part. that strategy: "The West Wing"
itself stuck in creative quickWednesdays,
sand. If it hadn't been for We know "Friends" won't be and "Ed" on
so NBC had "Providence" on Fridays and
in
2003-04,
around
"Friends" being the night's lead-
Ken Parish Perkins
Knight Kidder Newspapers
-
-
Photo courtesy of Friends Cafe
Friends till the end. Cast members of the show agreed to do the show for
one more year. But is the end near? NBC producers have been busy looking for another program to fill the top-rated show's 8:00 Thursday night spot.
"Law & Order" clones scattered
throughout the week.
But those are all dramas, and
they're all on other nights. The
comedy "Inside Schwartz"
tanked big time. "Scrubs" is a
modest hit. "Just Shoot Me" is
waning.
We'd all like to know if anything good is in the comedy
pipeline.
So would NBC.
Does moving off mean moving on...with your life?
The pros and cons ofrenting your own apartment
Jessica Savrock
Eagle Eye Features Editor
Face it.
After about one
semester, you're probably sick
of living in a closet-sized dorm
room, sharing a bathroom with a
dozen or so other people, and
eating Bentley food for every
meal. Every student faces the
tough question: to move off
campus or to live in the dorms
for another year.
Living off campus definitely
has its advantages. Perhaps the
biggest is the opportunity to
have your own bedroom. Sure,
your current roommate could be
the coolest person in the world
(or, unfortunately for you, the
complete opposite), but even the
best of friends can become enemies after sharing such close
quarters for a long time. Your
own bedroom will provide the
privacy you need, and you'll be
able to sleep in peace without
other peoples' annoying alarm
clocks, computers, radios, etc.
waking you up.
Another big advantage is
being able to cook your own
meals. Somehow, even all-you-
upstairs Bentley can get
old after a while. But having
your own stove, full-sized
refrigerator, and microwave can
leave endless meal possibilities
at your fingertips. While buying
groceries can be quite expensive, remember to stock up on
things that are cheap and will
keep, such as macaroni and
can-eat
At least in your
own apartment,
you can keep
the shower
growth-free.
cheese, ramen noodles, and
soup. And you can surely cook
meals in the convenience of your
apartment for less than Bentley
charges you for a hamburger.
A clean bathroom with hot
showers is always a plus. The
fact that you don't have to share
it with who-knows-how-manyother people is enough to cause
you to shower without dollarstore shower shoes on your feet.
In the dorms, there was always
some kind of unknown plant life
growing around the drain. At
least in your own apartment, you
can keep the shower growthfree. (This is a major commitment, trust me. You won't know
how much you'll miss the custo-
dians cleaning the bathroom for
you!)
With every advantage comes
a disadvantage. When making
the choice to move off campus,
you have an overwhelming variety of landlords to choose from.
Make sure that you rent from
someone who seems fair, and
read over your lease THOROUGHLY before signing it.
You may even want to take it
home to mom and dad before
signing.
There are some fair landlords
in this town, but some others'
main goal is to take advantage of
college students. The SCC provides a website with a forum to
post a message about your current landlord situation, and read
through others' experiences.
You
at
can
visit
it
httpt/Zphowtix.lhup.edu/landlordbook.html.
Most likely, your lease won't
cover cable, telephone, or electric, things which you never
thought twice of in the dorms.
You'll have to pay connection
fees and send your monthly bills
on time, or you may literally
find yourself in the dark. Also,
you'll soon find that showering
three times a day or leaving your
computer on all day while in
that). While the apartments are
North Fairview Street, only one bedroom (yes, you'll
Finding time to keep your chances are you'll be driving to still have to share), they come
house or apartment clean is not class, and that means playing provided with beds, dressers,
an easy task. While in the ring around the parking lot every tables, desks, stoves and refrigerators. Each apartment also has
dorms, all you had to do was day looking for a spot. Unless
pick up the mound of clothes off you have an 8:00 class, you can a living room, bathroom, a walkthe floor and throw them in the forget parking in either the PUB in closet in the bedroom, and a
dirty laundry, wipe a dust rag or Zimmerli lots. Plus, you'll kitchen. However, space is limhave to fork over the $5 at the ited to mostly upper classmen
over your desk, and rent a vacuand international students, but if
um to sweep up the month-old beginning ofthe semester to purcrumbs off the floor. In an apartchase a parking permit.
you're interested in moving in
ment, you'll have to clean the
If you don't feel ready to you should talk to your resident
shower and toilets, mop the move off campus just yet, or you director about any openings for
floors, BUY a vacuum cleaner, like the convenience of being next semester.
Moving off campus is not an
and empty your own trash. able to walk to class every day,
easy decision. If you feel like
Custodians gain a whole new Campus Village may be the stepyou're ready for the big move,
respect from students after they ping stone that you're looking
move out of the dorms.
for. Apartments at Campus talk to your parents, and start
Village provide an on-your-own looking early! The best apartLiving in the dorms is convenient to get to class on time. type atmosphere while still ments usually fill up six months
All you have to do is roll out of being under regulation of the in advance.
bed and go. But unless you're University (parents will go for
class will send your electric bill
lucky enough to get an apart-
sky-high.
ment on
Nyman's Subs & Bar-B-Q's
We serve
Luigi's Original Recipes
14 Bellefonte Ave. Lock Haven 748-7195
Open Mon Thurs 10:30am to 8:00pm
Fri & Sat 10:30am to 9:00pm
Sunday 11:00am to 7:00pm
FREE delivery 4:00pm to close EXCEPT Friday
Friday FREE delivery ALL DAY
Sunday Special: All LHU students recieve 10% off
on purchaseof $10.00 or more
-
Upcoming events
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Tuesday, February 26 @ 8 p.m.
Neil Diamond
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Friday, March 1 @ 8 p.m.
Marvin Hamlisch and Orchestra
Monday, March 4 @ 7p.m.
Harlem Globetrotters
Monday, March 25 @ 7:45 p.m.
WWF Raw
Friday, April 5 @ 7p.m.
Dave Matthews Band
SOLD OUT!
Tickets are available at the Bryce Jordan Ticket Center, select Uni-Mart ticket outlets,
Commonwealth Campus ticket outlets, or by calling 1-800-863-3336, or online at www.bjc.psu.edu
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position on last week's charts*
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1. Usher "U Got
It Bad" No. 1
2. Nickelback "How You
Remind Me"No. 2
3. Ja Rule feat. Ashanti
"Always On Time" No. 5
4. Pink "Get the Party Started"
The New Breed
Got A Life
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No. 4
Creed "My Sacrifice" No. 6
Shakira "Whenever,
herever" No. 7
Linkin Park "In the End"
*o. 11
I. Alicia Keys "A Woman's
Vorth" No. 8
9. The Calling "Wherever You
Will Go" No. 9
10. No Doubt feat. Bounty
by JerriDavis
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the skin and make stuff,
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Classifieds
——
"SPRING BREAK"
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Group organizers travel free!
Space is limited! Hurry up
and Book now!
1-800-234-7007
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SPRING BREAK 2002
LOCK HAVEN STUDENTS:
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AND TRAVEL FREE!!!
STUDENT TRAVEL SERVICES
Positions Available in
Career Services:
Peer Career Facilitators for the
2002-03 academic year.
Will assist students with career
exploration strategies and job
search techniques. Strong interpersonal and communication
skills required. Minimum GPA
of 2.5 preferred. Must complete
training which will be held
week of August 19th. This is a
paid position based on LHU's
work study/campus employment pay scale. Complete job
description and application
available in Career Services,
Akeley 114.
Application Deadline:
Friday, April 5, 2002.
JACKET FOUND MANY
MONTHS AGO IN WRITING
CENTER, RAUB 409:
A nice winter jacket was left
last year in the Writing Center.
Owner can claim by calling
Carolyn Perry @ 893-2171 or
e-mailing cperry@lhup.edu and
describing the jacket. Or, stop
by Raub 409.
Personals
i
i
Oh Gerber- Not again.
AMAZING SUMMER
at premier PA coed children's
overnight camp. Energetic,
enthusiastic men & women
wanted for all sports, activities,
| swim, and general. Good
Salary. Great Experience. Paid
Internship available. Contact
Camp Office at 610-941-0128
or visit our web site,
.. .. ..
... .. .......... ...
to fill out an application or to
schedule on-campus interview
for March 19. 2002 at the
■
V
■■.
Parsons Union building from 10
AM until 2 PM.
McQueen
Adam: 1 more week and
we'll be in the Bahamas!
Love, Mary Beth
410, You guys are awesome!
Have a great weekend.
Sigma love Shannon
Bradley keep up the good
work. Lamar
Bailey, I love living with
you too! ZLAM, AB Lauren
Students:
Scholarship Available.
Good God... Miller and the
Stanimal are psychotic.
Do you plan on attendin
LHUP, Penn State (including
PA College ofTechnology),
Lycoming College, Bucknell
University or any oftheir
branch campuses for the
Academic year 2002-2003?
Are you a graduate of a
Clinton or Lycoming county
high school in Pa? If so, you
ire eligible to submit an appli
cation for a Mary Ann Fox
scholarship. Applications are
To the New Members of
Alpha Sigma Tau,
Congratulations! Welcome
to the sisterhood! Tau love,
The Sisters of AIT
available in the office of the
President in 202 Sullivan Hall
De adline for the return
is April 9, 2002.
College Housing
Close to Campus
Phone Judy after 4 p.m.
748-6336
Leslie: Hang in there,
pledge pal. I love you!
ZLAM, Amy
Ira Eugene I love you!
SnuggleBear- only one
round of checkers??! Wow,
a new record. "The best
$10." Love, SnuggleBunny
Megan Renee: Welcome
back home- many smiles
and know that we all love
you.
Big Mary Beth: You have
been great. Thanks for your
support. ZLAM, Little Sarah
Janeen, Tiff and Kempton:
Thank you for joining us for
AXP is finding me in me
Crazy 8's-1 miss you! Love
Amy
Ang H.- Good luck with
everything. Hang in there.
Tau love, Kerri
Catch Phrase. Thank you for
the laughs- it was a lot of
fun. Heather and Marc
ZTA: Spring Break is
Coming soon. Have fun
wherever you go! ZLAM,
Lauren
Hey Crow keep your head
up. We gonna make it...
Level IPs How are we doing
so far? Kelli
You guys know who you
are. I love ya.. Remember
we are men. Jigga
The struggle within... -Lucas
Craig: Hopefully we did
well on that test. Ha Ha!
Mary Beth
AB Megan: YEAH!
Because I'm pretty! ZLAM,
AL Amy
Like a bridge over troubled
water... Lucas
Little Natalie: I thought I
told you no more snowboarding accidents! If you
need anything, call me. I
love ya! ZLAM, Big Lauren
Shannon, Pretty Bird, Pretty
Bird! Sigma love, Carrie
Amber, Nice to have you
back. Tau love, Kerri
Help AXP and the Salvation
Army send a kid to camp.
Friday 22 and 24, At
Wal_mart
est time with fun memories.
Be careful with the cool
whip! Love, Ms. Pineapple
Carrie, Hey man! I was
lonesome all weekend long.
You weren't there for me to
push around! Hope you had
a great week! Pretty Bird!
ZLAM Shannon
Elementary Block- Hang in
there everyone! Spring
Break is soon here!!
Where's Britney!!
Congratulations to all my
AET and Sig Kap— Good
"Mixer" -AXP
girls: Becky. Amy, Julie,
Danielle, Michelle and Niki.
ZLAM, Mary Beth
MDW: Those were supergreat strawberries. Yummy!
The grapes were fun too.
/etas: I have the best sisters anyone could ask for. I
love you all!! Lauren
AL Jill and Steph: NYC this
weekend! I can't wait!
ZLAM, Lauren
"A" Team- You did great!
Let's keep it up- Bradley
Scranton 883-DATE. It
works man... Johnnie
McDougal
Becky, Great job on recruitment! You Rock! Tau love,
Mills
Sports do not build character. They reveal it.~ John
Wooden
Jamie, You are doing a great
job with education! Keep it
up! Sigma love, Carrie
Denny Strouse- Thank you
for all of your help! We
Love You Sweetheart! Love
the Sisters of Alpha Sigma
Tau.
Karolyn, Brandy, Jenn,
Kate, Ang W.- Keep smiling. Have a wonderful
week! Tau love, Kerri Mills
-Bradley
In the PUB
Leslie: I miss you little. We
have to hang out soon.
ZLAM, Big Sarah
You There! YOU! Go that
way. This group Home!
Some good regulating.
Sarao
awesome ladies. Tau love,
Kerri
Chubb: Don't you love when
they let us loose? COME
PICK ME UP!! ZLAM,
Bri, Jen and Miller, I miss
you guys, we need to hang
out more often!!!! The
FAMILY forever!!!! love,
"Draw a crazy picture,
Write a nutty poem,
Sing a mumble-gumble
song,
Whistle through your comb.
Do a loony-goony dance
'Cross the kitchen floor,
Put something sillv in the
world
That ain't been there before."
Tator Tot- Happy ten months
with four months to go!
Smile knowing that you are
in my thoughts always. I
love you. Snowflake
Hello JaneenBean- Thank
you for the smiles and we
hope you had a great birthday. The Wicke's
Jill and Tina, You guys are
the bestest love pets! Sigma
love, Shannon
Happy birthday to who ever
has a birthday today!! The
Eagle Eye staff loves you.
NikiNicole: Happy day to
you chick- How are you and
how is everything going?
Many smiles.
Happy 22nd Birthday Tina!
ZLAM, Amy
Ashley- Hope you had a
great birthday! Happy days
and best wishes. What is
with the blue cows??
-Shel Silverstein
Tiff: Are you having anymore crazy dreams with professors and their cars??
Thanks for the invite KDR,
"I drink heavily" The
Heard it was fun -AXP
Stanimal
Little Dolphin, Keep smil>ing. I'm here if you need
Amy: HA POOP! Have fun
in Florida!
me! Tau love, Your Big
Marc- Thank you for going
with me to see sis. I love
you.
BJ, Thank you for a wonderful weekend and the
gifts! I love you. Kelli
Off to PSACs we go,
Hurry-up! Get in Shape!
Kristen and Amy, You are
the best kids! Sigma Love,
Mom
Lauren
A carpeted wall...an unstable toilet...no phone...Bucktail Lodge...a long underwear greeting...a barrel of
laughs. Elephant shoes.
To my Si 8ma love Pets >
know what 1 would
1
do without you! Thanks for
everything. ZLAM Jill
"Would be nice"... Lamar
Trisha and Melissa- Hang in
there girls. We have four
spent with you is the great-
Goober- You are the cuddliest. Thanks for the face to
face fun debates and the
tickles. Love always, Boober
Adrienne, Carrie and
Andrea- Thanks for an awesome Valentine's Day. My
Sisters Rock! We need to
hang out more often! Tau
love, Kerri
Ronald Jr- Did you have
enough peperonni?? Did you
say that you were going to
sleep with it and kick Joy
out? You crazy wanker.
"B Nasty" you a dumby
duh... Josh miller
Kristy- You are doing Great!
Make sure you take authority! If you need anything use
your resources! Tau love,
Kerri (Mills)
Everything goes better with
letters. -Lucas
Secret tye Dye- Hope all is
going well! Call me so we
can go out. Tye Dye Love,
Kerri
Please email your personals to
hflicker@lhup.edu
before Tuesday 3 p.m.
Q
NOW OFFERING:
2 soups everyday
jffoftib $ entity
Daily Specials
February 28, 2002
Watch for more upcoming events!
22, 2002
Page 10
Boxing team shines at home show
Last Saturday night the box-
ing team proved why they are
considered one of the top collejiiate boxing programs in the
nation.
The Bald Eagle open division boxers won nine of eleven
bouts on the evening's 13-bout
main card and one of three in the
preliminary nine-bout novice
division card in the afternoon.
Everyone agreed, the 23rd edition of the LHU Collegiate
Boxing Invitational was a huge
success in every way.
Over 2,400 fans were treated
to action packed bouts and the
Haven's own John Stout, 125,
as
the
was
selected
"Outstanding Boxer" by the referee's and judges. Lock Haven
University President, Dr. Craig
Dean Willis presented Stout
with the Mike Romanesky trophy at the conclusion of the 13
bout Main Card.
Stout, the national 125 lb.
champ, moved up to 139 lbs.
and earned a convincing 5-0
decision over Navy's tough veteran Mike Reel. The cagey
southpaw scored with effective
combinations to both the head
and body of the Navy boxer
throughout all three rounds.
He just boxed a beautiful
and strategic bout", commented
head coach Dr. Ken Cox.
Stout's career record now stands
at 20-3 and pound for pound has
developed into one of the elite in
college boxing.
In the evenings' featured
bout, the Haven's defending
national 185-lb. champ, Chuck
Mussachio, scored an impressive 4-1 decision over Navy's
175 lb. national champion, Ben
Zuber. This is the second week
in a row that Mussachio, the
senior team captain has upended
a national champ. Two weeks
ago, the crafty Bald Eagle
scored a stunning 4-1 decision
upset over previously undefeated Dustin Brown, the 195 lb.
national champion from Air
round to make it an exciting
bout, much to the delight of the
Haven fans. Mussachio career
record now stands at 23-6.
Mussachio is aiming at a
second national title after two
silver medals his freshman and
Parrish
sophomore years. From all indications Saturday night, he is
well on his way to joining the
select group who have won two
national titles, stated associate
coach Ken Cooper.
The Bald Eagle's third
national champion, Comanche
Garcia, 147, was equally
impressive in scoring a 5-0
shutout over Navy's Rick Weil.
A senior and ex-Marine,
Garcia slipped Weil's best
punches and countered with
strong over hand rights and
caught Weil with several effective right upper cuts.
Garcia was the aggressor all
three rounds. He stunned Weil
with a powerful overhand right
in the final ten seconds and the
bell saved Weil who was out on
his feet. Gracia improved his
career record to 19-10. Garcia
was a 2000 147 lb. national
champ and earned a bronze
medal in 2001.
Garcia continues to improve
with each competition and he
has a good chance to win another title, commented Dr. Cox.
Osahon Omo-Osagie, 125,
decisioned Army's Fred Kim, 50 for the second time in the past
two years. Osahon is a clever
sophomore from the Bronx via
Nigeria and had too much hand
and foot speed for the game
cadet. Omo-Osagie had a strong
second round and coasted in the
third to win handily.
Omo-Osagie continues to
Force at the Mandalay Bay
improve .with each outing and
H6tel in Las Vegas.
improve his career record to 4-3.
Zuber-Mussachio
started He'll drop down to his best
where he left off with Brown weight at 119 lbs. for the ECBA
and just plain 'out-boxed' the regional next month.
Gus Pugliese, 139, had his
tough Midshipman. Mussachio
easily won the first two rounds, hands full against PSU's Randy
but the aggressive Zuber did Dalbey. Pugliese, a native of
come on strong in the third Brazil, boxed beautifully the
first two rounds and had to hang
on in the third round to win the
hotly contested battle, 3-2.
Pugliese who is especially popular with the Hispanic community, boxed perhaps his best bout
as a Bald Eagle pugilist.
Pugliese, a notorious slow finisher, held on and stayed out of
serious trouble the third round to
edge the Nittany Lion, 3-2.
Freshman, Derrick McGraw,
165, who hails from North
Philadelphia, jabbed his way to
a hard earned 5-0 decision over
VMI's Jon Pax.
The rangy McGraw wisely
boxed from the outside and
scored consistently with rapid
fire left jabs and several punishing straight rights to defeat the
game Keydet. McGraw who
trains at Joe Frasier's North
Philly gym during vacations
brought smiles to the faces of
Bald Eagle coaches Cox and
Cooper.
LHU's Bulgarian connection, Miro Jelev, 190, got off to
a slow start against Army's 6'5"
Bobby Greet, but turned on the
after burners and stopped Greer
at 1:19 of the third. Jelev began
scoring with combinations midway through the second round
forcing referee Gary Rosato to
award Jelev two standing eight
counts late in the second round.
At the start of the final
round, the Cadet got nailed by
several hard right hooks and was
hurt when Referee Rosato called
a halt to the bout with 0:41 seconds remaining in the bout. The
student
junior
exchange
increased his collegiate record
to 5-2. NCBA champ Ben Zuber
of Navy and 195-lb. NCBA
champ, Dustin Brown of Air
Force last semester. Miro is one
of our hardest workers in the
gym stated Cox. We expect
"Miro to become one of the
great collegiate boxers," stated
Dr. Cox.
The Haven's two top female
boxers were both impressive in
winning their bouts over the
Shippensburg Red Raider rivals.
Senior Katrina Eady, 112,
stood toe to toe with Shipp's
Lindsay Hodgekins and traded
punches the entire third round to
win a close 4-1 decision. Eady,
from Philadelphia, has six bouts
under her belt and boxed per-
-p/iofo courtesy of Cheryl Miller
John Stout (L) sets up Navy's Mike Reel at the Bald Eagle home show last Saturday. Stout
was named the Outstanding Boxer at the event.
haps her best against the tough
Hodgekins.
"I'm really happy she had a
chance to win her final bout,"
stated a happy Dr. Cox.
"Katrina has been one of the
main stays in our gym the past
four years continued Cox."
Christina Munski, 125,
returned to the ring wars after a
two-year hiatus. Munski won
the 2000 national title and
advanced to the 2000 USAB
quarter finals and was ranked as
high as 4th at 119 lbs. in USAB
in 2000.
However, after spending a
year studying in Spain and taking a break from boxing, the talented Moosic, PA native has
returned to the gym with
renewed vigor.
Munski, boxing before
friends and family, has seemed
to return to her old form. She
used superior hand speed and
head movement to decision a
tough Danielle Paulovich from
Shippensburg.
Munski showed consistency
from start to finish against the
Red Raider. Munski's career
record is now 7-5 against the
toughest possible competition
mostly at 125 lbs.
Two Bald Eagles suffered
defeats on the Main Card. Art
Tusil moved up from 112 lbs. to
battle Army's Ray Ramos. The
taller Ramos won a 5-0 decision
using his left jab to keep the
hustling Tusil at the end of his
punches.
Also, Jeff Raymond, 156,
dropped a 5-0 decision to Navy's
,Tyra Johnson. Raymond, a senior Lock Haven native, with ten
bouts, struggled in the third
round after an impressive first
stanza.
However, Raymond
seemed to tire in the third round
and kept missing with wild
punches in desperation.
Four Haven boxers compet-
ed on the under card on
Saturday afternoon.
Podwojoski scored a 3-0 decision over Mansfield's Aaron
Assab. However, David Good,
175, Kossi Adubra, 165, and
Mike Persing, 185, all lost decisions. Good lost a 2-1 split deci-
sion to Mansfield's Jeremy Enck
while teammate Kossi Adubra,
165, from Togo was decisioned
2-0 by Navy veteran boxer,
Kevin O'Donnell. Kossi, in only
his third career bout, gave a
good account of himself.
Freshman 185 pound Mike
Persing was decisioned 3-0 by
VMI's Brad Davis in a fast
paced novice bout.
Without a doubt, the 23rd
edition of the annual LHU
Invitational was judged a huge
success, featuring some excellent boxing, with a high degree
of energy and enthusiasm displayed by the Haven boxers.
The boxers also fed off of the
electricity generated from the
enthusiastic
and
supportive
crowd.
Tonight, three Bald Eagle
boxers will compete in the Reno
Classic at the Eldorado Hotel in
Nevada. Traveling to Reno with
assistant coach, Ken Cooper, are
119;
Osahon Omo-Osagie,
Comanche Garcia, 147; and
Miro Jelev, 195. Omo-Osagie
battles 2-time 112 lb. National
champ, Lawrence Tarn UNReno while Garcia has a repeat
bout against UN-Reno AllJelev moves up from 195 lbs.
heavyweight,
Gaidi Faraj, U Calit.-Berkeley.
The 10-bout classic will be televised locally on the West Coast.
Tomorrow evening, four
Bald Eagle boxers are scheduled
to battle tough
to compete in the Nittany Lion
Invitational at the White Gym on
the campus of PSU. Scheduled
to box are Jeff Raymond, 156,
versus
Brian
Kelly.
Shippensburg; Kossi Abudra,
165, versus Jim Neely, PSU;
Derrick McGraw, 165 versus
Swen Jenson, VMI, and Chuck
Mussachio, 185, versus Duane
Mantle, Army in one of the featurcd bouts.
The Bald Eagle pugilists continue their preparation for the
upcoming ECBA qualifying tourand NCBA championships to be hosted by the U.S.
Naval Academy from April 4-6th.
nament
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"
11
February 22, 2002
Scoreboard^
Hallman, Ritz Earn PSAC
Athlete of the Week Honor
Paul Hallman and Sandy
Ritz of the indoor track and
team,
field
earned
Pennsylvania State AthleticConference (PSAC) men's and
women's Track and Field
Athlete of the Week honors for
events ending February 17.
Paul Hallman
Hallman, a freshman middle-distance runner, won the
mile at Saturday's Deneault
Invitational hosted by Cornell
University in a time of 4:18.22.
He went on to take third in
the 500 meters with a time of
1:07.36 and anchored the 4 x
800 meter relay team to victory with a split of 1:58.5.
The team's overall time, the
third fastest in school history,
was a PSAC leading 8:01.90.
Rit/. a junior jumper and
Sandy Ritz
sprinter, took third place in the
long jump at the Denault jump with a mark of 36'3-l/2.
The teams will next comInvitational with an NCAA
Provisional Qualifying mark pete at the PSAC Indoor Track
and Field Championships,
of 18'4-l/2".
Kutztown
by
The mark currently puts hosted
at
Lehigh
her atop the PSAC standings University
tomorrow
and
by more than nine inches. She University
also placed sixth in the triple Sunday.
Roller Hockey team falls
Adam Swarr
Eagle Eye Columnist
A strong effort from the roller
hockey team was not enough as it
fell to the Woodpeckers 5-2
Tuesday night in Williamsport.
Lock Haven (I-4) held the
Woodpeckers (5-0) to their lowest
goal total of the season.
Bald Eagle goalie Kevin
Sodano made 21 saves on 26
shots. Offensively Lock Haven
managed 16 shots.
Former Lock Haven captain
Pete Rodgers had three goals for
the Woodpeckers. "We played
really well against a better team,"
said Rhett Markle.
The Wcxidpcckers got an early
lead with a goal from Steve
McCulley just live minutes into
the game. Another Woodpeckers
goal increased their lead to 2-0
midway through the first half.
Lock Haven took advantage
of its lone power play, just three
minutes before halftime.
Steve Campbell's shot was
Rodgers' three-second half
goals put the game out of reach,
but Lock Haven continually pressured the league's top team.
Nate Zwierzyna blasted a 25foot slap shot to the back of the net
for the Eagles only second half
goal.
"It was a tough game after our
first victory," said Zwierzyna.
"We had a lot of confidence after
last week. Even though we lost,
maybe we can carry some confidence into next week."
partially saved, but Josh Fry
Hipped the rebound over the
goalie for Lock Haven's first goal.
"We seem to have finally
found the chemistry," said Fry.
"We've played well against the
good teams."
Randy Helsman had a chance
to tic the score before halftime, but
his breakaway attempt was
stopped just 15 seconds before the
Next Tuesday is a rematch
against the Titans (2-3). The
Titans won the earlier meeting 4-
half expired.
l,
With a 1-4 record Lock Haven
stands in 5th place in the 6-team
division.
The Shamrock Shuffle
5K run/walk, presented by the Physician Assistant Program, 9
a.m., March 16 in front of Rogers
The cost is $12 before March 1, and $15 after
or by
Registration forms can be found at
e-maii at jhartle@ihup.edu
Wrestling
Men's Basketball
Women's Basketball
PSAC Standings
PSAC Standings
EWL Standings
League
West Virginia
LHU
Edinboro
5-0
Pittsburgh
4-2
2-3
Cleveland St.
•California
*IUP
Virginia Tech
2-4
1-6
Bloom
0-7
Clarion
Overall
10-2
12-5
5-6
5-11
5-10
1-13
•Edinboro
•Clarion
LHU
Shipp.
Slipp. Rock
League
9-2
8-3
8-3
7-5
4-7
2-9
1-10
Overall
21-4
21-4
17-8
14-10
•California
•Shipp.
•Slipp. Rock
•Clarion
IUP
Edinboro
8-17
8-17
7-18
LHU
9-2
9-2
�Millersville
�West Chester
Edinboro at Pitt
Saturday
Penn St. at LHU
West Virginia at Cleveland St.
Sunday
West Virginia at Edinboro
4-7
E. Stroud
Kutztown
1-11
16-9
17-8
16-8
13-12
9-15
5-19
4-20
'clinched playoff birth
Boxing
23rd Annual Bald Eagle
112- Katrina Eady (LHU) dec.
Lindsay Hodgekins (Shipp), 4-1; 119•Christina Munski (LHU) dec.
Danielle Paulovich (Shipp), 5-0.
Featured Bout
185- 'Chuck Mussacio (LHU) dec
•Ben Zuber (Navy), 4-1.
•denotes National Champion
Outstanding Boxer
John Stout, 139, LHU
Team Results
LHU (9-2). Army (1-3), Mansfield
(0-1), Navy (2-3), Penn St. (0-1),
Shippensburg (0-2). Virginia Military
Institute (1-1).
18-5
18-6
13-10
11-12
11-12
11-12
8-14
•Bloom
•West Chester
•Kutztown
10-1
8-3
7-4
7-4
E. Stroud
Cheyney
1-10
NCAA Division II East Region
21-3
1. Glenville State
22-2
2. West Liberty State
3. Bloomsburg
4. Shippensburg
5. California
6. Millersville
17-7
7. Shepherd
17-7
8. Belmont Abbey
9 Pfeiffer
17-7
10 Lees-McRae
NCAA Division II East Region
21-3
20-4
18-5
2. Belmont Abbey
3. West Virginia Wesleyan
4. California
5. IUP
6. Queens (North Carolina) 17-7
7. Charleston (West Virginia)20-5
16-7
9. West Chester
10. Edinboro
IUP 80, LHU 68
IUP 78, LHU 77-OT
IUP (21-4, 8-3 PSAC-W)
Piper 6-13 2-2 16, Olaffson 1-6 5-6
7, Mims 8-15 2-3 18, Layton 0-6 3-4
3, Faulkner 6-12 0-0 12, Whalen 1-3
1-2 4, Holmes 6-9 2-3 15, Davila 1-6
1-2 3.
LHU (8-17, 4-7 PSAC-W)
Ruff 3-7 2-5 8, Bailey 10-21 6-7 26,
Hanna 1 -4 0-1 2, Holtzer 8-123-421,
Zujovic 5-13 2-3 13, Yetter 1-5 3-4 5,
Christiano 0-0 0-0 0, Rieben 0-1 0-0
0, Saunders 1-2 0-0 2.
Half-time score- IUP 33, LHU 25.
Three-pooint field goals- Piper 2,
Holtzer 2, Zujovic, Whalen, Holmes.
Fouled out- Piper, Olafsson, Mims.
Rebounds- LHU 32 (Bailey 7), IUP
53 (Mims 15)
Assists- LHU 16
(Zujovic 7), IUP 12 (Layton 7). Total
fouls- LHU 16, IUP 28.
.
4-2
•clinched playoff birth
Saturday
West Chester at Bloomsburg
Clarion at Pitt Johnstown
Lock Haven at Edinboro
California at IUP
Millersville at Mansfield
Cheyney al Kutztown
Shippensburg at Slippery Rock
Saturday
West Chester at Bloomsburg
Cheyney at Kutztown
California at IUP
New Haven vs. Clarion
Lock Haven at Edinboro
Millersville at Mansfield
Shippensburg at Slippery Rock
1. Salem International
119- Ray Ramos (Army) dec. Art
Tusil (LHU), 5-0; 125- Osahon OmoOsagie (LHU) dec. Fred Kim (Army),
5-0; 139- *John Stout (LHU) dec.
Mike Reel (Navy), 5-0; 139- Gus
Pugliese (LHU) dec. Randy Dalbey
(PSU), 3-2; 147- *Comanche Garcia
(LHU) dec. Rick Weil (Navy), 5-0;
156- Tyra Johnson (Navy) dec. Jeff
Raymond (LHU), 5-0; 165- Derrick
McGraw (LHU) dec. Jon Pax (VMI),
5-0, 175- Amir Shireef (Navy) dec.
Tom Sommers (Army), 4-1; 195Miro Jelev (LHU) RSC-3 Bobby
Greer (Army), 1:19; HWT- Clifford
Cook (VMI) dec. Jason Ficken
(Mansfield), 5-0.
Overall
East
East
Friday
League
9-2
8-3
7-4
6-6
4-7
3-8
2-9
IUP (12-13, 4-7 PSAC-W)
McMahon 2-4 4-4 8, Martin 2-4 00 4, Zdesar 1-1 5-17 7, Negrelli 9-14
8-13 27, Karas 4-13 2-4 !0, Behne 46 5-6 13, Conner 2-6 3-4 9, Smith 0-0
0-0 0, Ratligen 0-1 2-2 2.
LHU (8-16, 2-9 PSAC-W)
Charles 2-7 1-3 5, Daniels 5-17 1218 22, Young 1-6 5-8 7, Crowl 5-19
0-0 13, Ballintine 2-4 0-0 4, Price 00 0-0 0, Schimelfenig 6-12 0-0 12,
Picarsic 0-2 2-2 2, Lasher 0- 0-0 0,
Rieben 0-7 3-4 3.
Half-time score- IUP 46, LHU 27.
Three-point field goals- Crowl 3,
Conner 2, Negrelli. Fouled outMartin, Zdesar, Young.
Rebounds- LHU 39 (Charles 11),
IUP 42..
Assists- LHU 11
(Schimelfenig 6), IUP 14. Total
Fouls- LHU 26, IUP 26.
Campus Village Apartment Contracts
AVAILABLE for FALL and SPRING
"First come, first serve basis"
Sign-up:
308 Sullivan Hall
8:30am to 3:30pm
March 18
Current resident of Campas Village
March 19
On Campas Students (81+ credits)
March 20
On Campas Students (64+ credits)
March 21
On Campas Students (48+ credits)
MArch 22
All other current on campas students
March 25
Off campas students that want to
move back on
What you need to do:
Prepay (before priority date) a $100
housing deposit in the Bursar's Office.
2. Bring your receipt to Sullivan 308
3. Pick an apartment from ones available.
4. Sign a Campas Village Apartment contract
for more information contact:
Student Life/Housing Office
308 Sullivan Hall
893-2317
INSIDE
Boxers hold
their own at
home show.
See page 10
Wrestlers ready to host PSU tomorrow
P.J. Harmer
them," said Head Coach
Eagle Eye Staff
Carl Poff. "They were
The wrestling team
will try and make it two
straight over Penn State
when the Nittany Lions
competi Wrestling
tive with
Ohio State than we were.
Their record is no indication.
"I think it's going to
be a great match. The
competition is going to be
super for the fans. It's a
great opportunity whenever we have the chance
to compete with a Penn
State team."
travel to Thomas Field
House tomorrow night for
a 7 p.m. start.
The Haven knocked
off their interstate rivals
last season 24-9. That win
was only the third time
that LHU picked up the
win against Penn State in
16 career meetings. The
other two came in backto-back seasons, in 1995
and 1996.
Although PSU is just
6-10 on the year and 3-4
in the Big 10, this will be
more
Poff said that on
paper, he figured that the
match could be a 5-5
split. He sees the key
bouts coming at 141, 157
and 197. Between the two
there
teams,
are
six
no walk in the park for wrestlers ranked in the
Lock Haven. The Nittany last poll conducted by the
Lions have been strong in Amateur Wrestling News.
"It's the kind of match
their past two meets,
you want to be involved
falling to Ohio State 2013 and knocking off in," Poff said. "I hope the
students come out and
nationally
Michigan State, 17-16. support the event. It's a
Not only that, Penn State great, healthy rivalry."
Below is a weight-byhas already done some
damage in the Field weight preview of the
match, with probable
House this season, winning the Mat-Town tournament in November.
125 Taking the mat
"We lost to Michigan
State and they beat for Lock Haven will be
-
Trap McCormack (19-3).
McCormack could have
already claimed his third
straight 20-win season in
matched
Thursday's
against Bucknell and
Bloomsburg. McCormack
will square off with Penn
State's Adam Smith, who
is 15-9. Last season,
McCormack
defeated
Justin Kast, who is 11-12
this year.
133 Chris Spealler,
back from an injury will
the Haven.
represent
is
10-6
currently
Spealler
on the season. Marat
Tomaev (17-7) will likely
get the not for the Nittany
Lions, but No. 11 Josh
Moore (32-4) also competes at 133 for PSU. In
last years match up,
Tomaev beat senior Scott
Bair 3-1.
141- One of the marquee matches of the night
will feature No. 10 Scott
Moore (27-9) of PSU and
No. 12 Mike Maney (194) of LHU.
The two were set to
meet in the finals of the
Mat-Town
USA
Tournament, but Maney
had to forfeit due to an
injury. Last season as a
freshman, Maney beat
t
nationally-ranked Nate
Parker in overtime.
149
JaMarr Billman (26-2)
will face his former team
for the second straight
season. Billman will
square off against Nate
Wachter (19-10). In last
years match, Billman
pinned Wachter in 4:13.
157 In one of Poffs
key match-ups, Jason
Gilligan (9-10) will represent LHU when he
faces James Woodall (68). Last season, Gilligan
beat PSU's Aaron Wright.
165 Look for either
Charlie Brenneman (910) or Chris Haines (16-
-
-
-
-
.
9) to represent Lock
Haven and face off with
No. 10 Doc Vecchio (2610) In last years dual,
Vecchio fell 6-2 to Brian
Olenek, who graduated
last year.
courtesy of Sports Information
174 Ed Pawlak (9JaMarr
decking
Billman
celebrates
after
PSU's Nate Wachter
12) will represent the
Bald Eagles, while Todd last year, as the Bald Eagles will look to repeat last year's 24-9 perBrennan (12-20) will take formance.
the mat for the Nittany (6-11). In last years face one of two PSU
HWT Tim Boetsch
Lions. Pawlak lost last match, Millard beat wrestlers. Pete Mielnik (4-13) will likely get the
season to Cliff Wonsettler nationally ranked Jeff (16-9) or Ryan Cummins nod for the Haven, while
7-5.
(9-8) will take the mat for Pat Cummins (8-7) will
Knupp 6-2.
184- Josh Millard,
197 In the final of the Nittany Lions. Zerkle see action for Penn State.
currently No. 18 and 16-5, Poff's key match-ups, defeated Dave Keckard Neither of these wrestlers
will face Curt Thompson Avery Zerkle (11-6) will 11-6 last year.
was in action in last years
-
■
-
Men lose to IUP in overtime Women drop final
home game to IUP
Jared Guest
Eagle Eye Staff
The run for the PSAC
postseason ended earlier in
Kevin Carver
the week for the men's basketball team, but by watching Wednesday night's contest against IUP (21-4, 8-3),
the Haven have not packed it
in. The Bald Eagles (8-17,
4-7) were edged in overtime
78-77 by No. 21 IUP in
Thomas Field House.
George Bailey poured in
a game high of 26 points and
added four blocks, giving
him 74 blocks on the season.
Bailey leads Men's
Division 11 in
Eagle Eye Staff 1
Despite the electric
of
the
atmosphere
women's
basketball
team's final home game,
HbIbIbIbIbIbbRsIM
Bball
and Chris Ruff had eight
points and five assists.
The Indian's Dennis
Mimshad a double double of
(18 points and 15 boards)
before fouling out in overtime. Teammate Leon Piper
scored 16, with 12 coming in
the first half.
Keenan
Holmes, member of last season's PSAC West First Team
In the first meeting of the
season between these two
teams, IUP came away with
a 31-point victory. IUP
entered the game, having lost
their last two ofthree games
to PSAC West playoff bound
teams. This is their 10th
straight season of making the
PSAC postseason.
IUP held a slight margin
at halftime 33-25. They then
went on to establish a 21point lead with 8:55 left in
the game.
The Haven's next possession was a made three
pointer by Zujovic, starting a
24-6 run to close the game
out. Bailey scored nine during this run and tied the
game at 64 after completing
a three-point play.
He then would respond
on the other side of the ball
as he blocked a Holmes
jumper, sending the game
into overtime.
LHU jumped out to a
quick 67-64 lead after Ruff
completed a three-point
points and four assists
with
Sara
along
McKinney's 17 points
and
nine
rebounds,
California improved to 82 in PSAC play.
game-high 11 rebounds.
Despite
pin-point
shooting from Cyndi
the Haven fell to Indiana
Crowl
and
Melissa
LHU
35
University, 80-68.
Picarsic,
the
Haven
was
CalU
74
Led by point guard
overmatched
one
of
by
Jacquie Negrelli's 27
the best teams in their
Lock Haven took one
points and six assists,
IUP built a 46-27 halfon the chin Saturday division. Both players
time lead.
afternoon. The Vulcans finished with 10 points
The Bald Eagles (8of California dominated each.
The Haven's final
16, 2-9) fought back in the Bald Eagles in every
the second half behind aspect of the game, and game of the season will
come
tomorrow
at
Amy Daniels's 22 points, came away with the vicEdinboro
University.
19 coming after the tory, 74-35.
Led by point guard Lock Haven came out on
break.
18 top in the teams' first
Cyndi Crowl chipped Jenni Morrison's
meeting, 68-66.
averaging 3.94 per game.
Kris Holtzer followed
with 21, going two of three
from behind the arc.
Vladimir Zujovic put in 13
added 15.
in with 13 points and five
rebounds while Nicole
Schimelfenig dished out
six assists to go along
with her 12 points. Anita
Charles pulled down a
- P.J. Harmer/ The Eagle Eye
George Bailey, the nation's leader in blocked shots, goes up for
F
a dunk, as the team dropped a heart-breaking game to IUP.
play. The Indians tied the
game at 70-70 with 2:59
remaining in overtime.
Sean Whalen would then hit
a wide-open three, giving
IUP the commanding lead,
73-70.
A Holtzer bucket got
the Haven back to within in
one, but Holmes got a layup to fall, making it a 77-74
IUP lead with 15 seconds
left.
The Haven had a chance
to tie the game, but turned
the ball over. LHU got the
ball back after IUP made
one of two free throws, but
it was a two possession
game with a few ticks left
on the clock. Holtzer hit a
running three-pointer to
beat the buzzer, but the
Haven upset fell one short.
CalU
the field.
Cal (20-4, 8-2) ran
■
I
LHU
64
second half.
Ishmieal
Kamara had the hot hand as
he put in a game high 26
points. Tom Frederick and
David Jack each put in 12.
The Bald Eagles travel
to Edinboro tomorrow for
their last game of the season. LHU looks to win five
conferences games, something they have not done
since the '95-96 season.
California, IUP, Edinboro
and Clarion all have
secured the spots for the
PSAC West postseason.
almost identical games
from George Bailey and
Vladimir Zujovic. Zujovic
scored 19 points and
Bailey added 18, along
Kris
with six blocks.
well
scored
eight,
Holtzer
below his average of 15.4.
LHU shot 41 percent from
@Eidorado Hotel
I
Reno. Nev. 7 p.m. II
BoxinglSat.)
I
11 l|
I
awav with the game in the
80
The Haven dropped on
the road to the PSAC West
leading California, 80-64,
last Saturday. LHU got
I
a
WBB ® Eb r 3
°
-
pm
°
mbb E'boro 5
II
I
Scheduled
-
P.J. Harmer/The Eagle Eye
Cyndi Crowl (32) drives in against IUP on Wednesday, Crowl
chipped in 13 points for the Bald Eagles.
I
■
I
Scheduled
I3
1
Scheduled
I
I
■
Scheduled
I
■
I
I
■
I
"Lumpy Hair" is not like
any other radio show you
hear.
Page 7
Wrestlers host Penn
State tomorrow night
available for Health
Science majors
Back page
Page 3
ruary 22, 2002
http://www
Today's Weather
5, Volume 55
5
'
r
High-36
Low-23
See weekend weather
Page 2
on
hike may
be in the
future
Kristin White
Eagle Eye Staff Reporter
new minimum
cumulative GPA, the
progress of new buildings
and the possibility of a
tuition increase were
the
addressed
at
President's spring open
meeting held Tuesday
afternoon in the Sloan
Auditorium.
President Craig Dean
Willis discussed the budgfor
etary
picture
Pennsylvania, noting a recommendation by the
Governor for a three percent decrease in funding
for the State System of
Higher Education. The
A
suggested cut could lead to
an increase in tuition at the
state
schools.
The
Governor will meet with
the
legislature
and
announce a final budget by
June, which will influence
the Board of Governors'
decision to maintain or
raise the cost of tuition.
"That would have been
easier to swallow if [the
Governor] had not given a
four percent increase to
community colleges," said
Willis, encouraging the
audience to contact the
legislature. "We can live
with a three percent cut in
Lock Haven, but we can't
do that indefinitely."
Willis also remarked
on the new minimum
cumulative GPA, which
will be raised from 1.7 to
2.0 beginning with the
2002 summer term. In
addition to the new standard, mid-year suspensions will no longer take
place. As before, GPA
standards will be applied
subjectively with individual cases to be determined
by the dean of the appropriate school.
"The goal is to make
sure students understand
the message that they need
a 2.0 to graduate, and if
they start in deficit it's difficult to bring it up," said
Willis.
See Willis Page 2
:iassifieds
Tomics
Movies
Opinions
9
8
6
4-5
9
back page
Staff boa
4
Weather.
2
Personals
Sports
Parson's Union Building
Lock Haven University
Lock Haven, PA 17745
Newsroom: (570) 893-2334
Fax: (570) 893-2644
Email:
Visit us on the web:
U celebrates black history month
Sumer ButtorfF
Eagle Eye Staff Rer.
Although
February
activities are devoted to
black history, the Black
Student Union sees every
day as an opportunity to
educate themselves and
others about the past.
"We want to be more
active in educating others
about our history," Brandi
Jones, BSU member, said.
For this reason, the
Sophisticated Ladies will
present a program in honor
of black history month on
February 27 at 5 p.m. in the
P.U.B. multipurpose room.
Through readings and
live entertainment, the program will educate about
black history.
Sherwonda Boardley,
the
president
of
Sophisticated
Ladies,
expects the event to
include a performance by
the Nomo dancers of Penn
State.
The show will be complemented by poetry readings, crowd participation
and small workshops. The
LHU Gospel Choir will
also participate in the cele-
bration.
Boardley
encourages
everyone to attend. We
have these events to "bring
everybody together to
salute our black leaders,"
she said. "This is to bring
unity with everyone, not
just minorities."
In an effort to continue
the spirit of black history
month throughout the year,
the BSU is considering
hosting a multicultural film
followed by an open forum
to discuss the screening.
Potential
movies
include Remember the
Titans, Men of Honor,
Rosewood, Malcolm X,
and Bamboozled.
BSU Secretary, Desiree
White, sees February as an
opportunity to educate
those outside of her race
about black history.
"The reason we have
hate, she said, is because of
ignorance. I want to educate those who don't know
about the past."
But, the essence of
black history month is to
celebrate what can be
found all year through in
the soul of a BSU member.
"Black history month is
a celebration of the richness ofmy culture," White,
said. "The past may have
some negativity, but I look
at the beauty. I see the
richness."
The BSU also celebrated the month with an academic awards ceremony
and dinner.
Professor
Ramona Broomer spoke at
the event that honored the
achievements of minority
students.
*
I
mm
WmWm
B
WJ
Daw'd Kubarek/ The Eagle Eye
Professor Broomer speaks to students at Thursday's awards
ceremony.
SCC conducts budget meeting Big brothers and sisters needed
Scott Evans
Sean Dooley
Eagle Eye Staff
The
Lock
Haven
University
Student
Council
Cooperative
(SCC) held the first budget
meeting of the spring
semester.
The meeting was conducted by SCC treasurer
Nick Trumbauer and dis-
cussed the budgets all LHU
clubs and organizations are
required to submit.
Packets were distured
to all recognized organiza-
tions, containing an equipinventory list, a list of
budget codes and a sample
ment
A questionnaire was
also included in the materials in order for the budget
committee to see how the
club is progressing.
See Budget Page 2
Michelle Hershey/ The Eagle Eye
Nick Trumbauer addresses University
clubs and organizations on budgeting.
Students donate spring vacations
Kanchan Mahara
The Eagle Eye
To help build housing
for low-income people, a
community service group
consisting of 51 students
and staff are leaving for the
Habitat for Humanity 2002
project in Russell county,
Ala. on March 2.
"Every year the LHU
students, in coordination
with AmeriCorps, organize
the program," said Anne
Marie Turnage, director of
community service at
LHU. She added that volunteer students from across
the country participate in
the project each year during breaks.
The team will be
involved in constructing
homes for the entire spring
break and will return on
March 10.
AmeriCorps is one of
the programs LHU comHumanity, the American
munity service is actively Red Cross, Universities
involved in. It is a federal and many more local and
program that engages more national organizations.
than 40,000 Americans in
After their term of servintensive volunteer service ice, AmeriCorps members
year.
each
Most receive educational awards
AmeriCorps members are to help pay for college
selected by and serve with expenses,
projects
like
but do not generally have
needs and most of
special
Eagle Eye Editor in Chief
the time are not so chalBig Brothers
Big lenging that a regular perSisters of Clinton County son couldn't handle them.
Some, not all, have disabilare looking for new recruitities. "As long as somements from the LHU camwants to have some
body
pus.
fun,
we
have a kid that
In this program, men
said.
works,"
she
and women over 18 years
Mantzoros
also
mentioned
of age volunteer to spend
time with children between that volunteers do not need
to have a car in order to be
six and 16 years old.
There is no set time that eligible for the program,
but some type of transmust be given to the chilportation is very helpful.
dren each week. The volThe little brothers and
unteers can work the time
are all from Clinton
sisters
they allot the children
and mostly from
County
around their own schedthe
Lock
Haven area.
ules.
involved in
Everyone
The program is meant
the
program
gets together
to create one on one friendonce
a
month
for some sort
ships between the child and
of
Some
of their
activity.
the volunteer.
past
activities
have
group
Volunteers should be
been
camping,
ice
fishing,
committed and caring
skating
and
hiking.
adults, who can provide the
Some volunteers meet
child with someone to conwith their little at a
up
fide in, be a role model for
group
activity and then
the little brothers and sisdecide
whether or not it
ters and should just give
would
be
a good match.
them overall support and
guidance in what is going Otherwise, the workers
pick matches that they
on in the child's life.
Contrary to popular think would be suitable.
At a pre-match meeting,
belief, the kids in the proinformation is shared with
to
gram,
according
Program
Coordinator the volunteer about the
Marsha Mantzoros, are child, and he/she can then
decide if the match would
often from caring and lovwork. There are still chiling families.
They are usually from
families with parents that
cannot give them the time
the children deserve. "It's
not that the families don't
care," Mantzoros said.
Photo Courtesy of www.lhup.edu
AmericaCorps volunteers take time out
for a group photo.
"They do care, which is
why they put (their children) in this program. It's
like a puppy trying to grow
up in a box."
The littles come from
all kinds of families. Some
are from single-parent
families and some are from
two-parent families.
Mantzoros said that the
little brothers and sisters
often do poorly in school
f
•
tEn> Hk
dren on the waiting list.
All big brothers and
sisters must go through a
screening process including Childline and criminal
checks, favorable references, sex abuse prevention information, an inoffice orientation and interview, as well as a home
visit. If unfavorable information is found, the volunteer can be turned down.
Big brothers and sisters
must have monthly contact
with their littles as well as
the parents and volunteer
for the first year to ensure
contact is being made.
There is currently a
lack of men involved with
the program. Mantzoros
said that about three quarters of the volunteers are
female.
Men are always
paired with boys in the program.
Women can be
paired with boys or girls.
Mantzoros and LHU
graduate Lauren Bechtel
were at Bentley yesterday
encouraging individuals to
For those who
would like to work with
Big Brothers Big Sisters,
sign up.
but missed the signups yesterday, it's not too late.
Call (570) 893-4100 for
more information on the
program.
Pit
Prtoro courtesy of Big Brothers/ Big Sisters
Student Chad Wolf donates his time to
the Big Brothers/ Big Sisters organization.
Page 2
Eagle Eye
February 22, 2002
Area businesses get lift SCC extended budget Willis discusses plans for
a minimum GPA and
HAVEN—In
deadlines for clubs
LOCK
response to the serious challenges facing the survival and
growth of small businesses in
Clinton
Lycoming
and
Counties, the Pennsylvania
Small Business Development
Centers (SBDC) are proposing
an expanded package of business management assistance
services.
The SBDC provides services in Clinton and Lycoming
Counties.
The services package proposed will provide targeted,
high-quality consulting, training, and information to small
firms struggling with the recession, to dislocated workers
interested in becoming entrepreneurs, to firms developing new
technologies, and to small companies looking for opportunities
to grow and expand.
The projected impact of the
expanded service delivery will
be hundreds of new businesses
established and new jobs created in Clinton and Lycoming
Counties.
For the University to be
able to provide these services,
the
Pennsylvania
Small
Business Development Centers
have requested an investment of
$8.4
million
from
the
Pennsylvania
General
Assembly in the 2002-2003
state budget.
Of that amount, $1 million
will be dedicated for providing
Economic
Recession
and
Disaster Recovery Assistance to
over 1,000 firms to help them
develop adjustment strategies to
successfully weather the economic slowdown.
Another 25,000 small companies and prospective entrepreneurs will be helped through
training programs and no-cost
confidential consulting.
FPEEANEOX
Next Tuesday, Feb. 26, is Sigma Pi's founders
day. Sigma Pi was founded in 1897 at
Vincennes University, a two year college in
The brothers of Alpha Chi Rho will be outside
Wal-mart on Friday and Sunday from 10 a.m.
to 10 p.m. to collect money for the Salvation
Trumbauer believes that this
is the first time that clubs were
ever asked to fill out a questionnaire of this kind. By reporting
the organizations' finiancial and
membership standing, it will
allow the committee to allocate
the proper funds.
The deadline for club budgets is Friday, March
15.
Trumbauer said the deadline has
been extended this semester so
club executives can ask questions and thoroughly plan out
their budgets.
The budgets will then be
reviewed by the SCC budgeting
committee and will be made
available to clubs by April 8.
Hearings will then be conducted
to discuss club budgets starting
April 9.
Trumbauer is asking all club
organizers to plan out the activities and outing they plan to participate in first, not the dollar
amount that SCC will provide
each club.
This week in history
Feb. 21,1864
The brothers of Lambda Sigma Upsilon will
hold an interest meeting on Feb. 25 at 7 p.m. in
the pub to look into starting a latino fraternity
on campus
GREEK NEWS
William Gaines was convicted of
murder in the first degree for murlering his brother, Robert Gaines on
July 13, 1863. Gaines, a Clinton
bounty Resident, shot and killed his
rother through a kitchen window as
he ate dinner. Gaines escaped jail
once before being convicted and
later hanged.
can apply
for criminal justice
internships and job
opportunities for the
Ocean City
Beach Patrol.
Applications will be
available 1 p.m.
Wednesday in
Raub 425
a
"Hands-on"
Hlxc It o Prearam
Held locally
Starts
February 22nd
State College Inn
F«r inf and
•
brochure
SSiS -J-.tifjir,
Hope Enterprises, Inc. can provide you with the
opportunity to offset college expenses while
gaining valuable experience in human services,
special education or any other related field.
At least 1 percent of all
drivers at any time are
legally drunk.
We have part-time positions in our residential
homes in Lock Haven, supervising individualss
with developmental disabilities.
COMPLETE PAID TRAINING IS PROVIDED
Complete an on-line application at our web-site
or FAX resume or letter of interest
326-1258
On weekend nights that
rate rises to 3 percent.
or visit us at
136 Catawissa Ave.
Approximately 1.4 million
drivers were arrested in
1998 for DUI.
WALNUT STREET CHURCH OF CHRIST
in Police Beat is publishable by the Pennsylvania State
Open Records Law.
Weather
I
mJk.
High-35
Low-21
High-36
Low-23
See fullforcast and up to date news at:
www.LHUeagleye. com
Willis from page 1
Willis also broke down the
enrollment numbers at Lock
acknowledging the
of
growth on future
impact
development and management.
"The good news is there are
too many students," he said.
"The bad news is there are too
many students."
Haven,
4,000 students are currently
enrolled at the university. New
student enrollment was down
two percent and continuing students were up six percent. In
term.
ATTENTION Colleae Men and Women
Think before
you drink
Center, which is expected to
addition, housing occupancy is
at 100 percent for the spring
Army.
The brothers of Kappa Delta Rho assisted in
relocating the Central Mountain High School
Library last week.
possible tuition increases
Williamsport
The rising numbers at Lock
Haven and an increase in high
school graduates, projected to
peak in 2008, will necessitate
housing expansion.
"As the number of high
school graduates increases, college
enrollment
increases,"
explained Willis, emphasizing
the need to focus on future
trends.
In preparation, administrators arc in the preliminary stages
of looking for private contractors to build new housing.
In order to avoid additional
student fees for the building of
new residence halls the university is seeking a third party to
build and maintain housing,
similar to Campus Village
before it was purchased by the
university.
Construction is on schedule
for the Student Recreation
open April I. Students have
paid and will continue to pay
$99 a semester over a period of
several years to finance the
planning and building of the
center. For a fee, faculty, staff
and community members will
also have access to the facilities,
although it may become necessary to limit non-student membership if it inhibits student use.
Proposed figures for the center are: $30 for one month; $125
for a semester; $230 for an academic year and $300 for 12
months. The money collected
from fees will go to the SCC.
The
also
president
announced that Rogers Gym
will be out of service for the
2003 year due to a construction
project to restore and refurbish
the building. In the plans the
first floor will continue to be
used as a multipurpose facility
and the elevated track will be
rebuilt.
In other building projects,
the Keystone
VocationalTechnical Building is slated lo
become a health science building to be used by the health,
physical education and athletic
training
programs.
Administrators are in the
process of selecting an architect
to adapt the building to its
intended use. Willis anticipates
the building will be ready for
use by September 2003.
Willis also mentioned the
relocation of the Deans'
offices to the lower level of the
library for student convenience.
recent
Senator o/ the week
:
:
f\ 2
-X-
George Sigle has been
selected as this week's SCC
Senator of the
week. Sigle is
from
junior
i>a
Strasburg.
and majors
mm.
Sigle has served
on SCC since the
Fall semester.
Outside
SCC, Sigle
President of the
Sigma Pi fraternity and the
Intra-Fraternity Council.
Sigle said his reason for
joining SCC was to encourage
other greeks to do the same.
by Scott Evans
5s
"Greeks overall take on
more of a leadership role than
the average student, and is
expected in each
Greek organiza-
J|
tion
1
-
Sun: Worship 9:30 sun., classes -10:45. Eve. -6:00p.m. Wed: 7.00 p m
Please call (570) 726-4433 or 753-3108 for more
www.kcnet.org/~maw 1 /
HTD REAL ESTATE RENTALS INC.
208 R H
H S TREET
po
92 7
LOCK HAVEN PA 17745
b5x
DON'T BE LEFT OUT...
Off Campus Housing is going FAST.
We have clean and affordable housing
One and two bedroom units still available
Most utilities included
Pets permitted with pet fee
Our house is your home!
p at
t
all
i
W. Walnut & Second Ave, Lock Haven PA
S
that
members take
part in the leadership community," said Sigle.
After graduating in the
Spring of 2003,
Sigle plans to
move to a large city and work
at a television station.
DFRRTF r>AV
570-748.4227
Page
Former professor donates scholarship fund
LOCK HAVEN Mr and
Mrs. Karl Herrmann recently
endowed their second scholar-
ship at Lock Haven University
of Pennsylvania.
The Lynne
and Karl
Herrmann Health Science with a 71-29-15 record.
Scholarship will benefit a
After retiring in 1997,
who
has Herrmann
his
deserving student
continued
demonstrated academic excelinvolvement with the University
lence in health science at the through volunteerism.
University.
He currently serves as the
The Herrmanns' first scholChair of the Emeriti Division on
arship was endowed to support the Steering Committee for the
the University's soccer program. University Foundation's capital
It rewards an outstanding stucampaign. He led the fundraisdent athlete who has demoning efforts during the emeriti
strated potential to make a sig- phase of the campaign, surpassnificant contribution to the socing the goal of $200,000.
cer team.
Touching Tomorrow Today,
Both scholarships are in supis a five-year capital campaign
port of the University's capital to raise more than $10 million in
campaign. Touching Tomorrow support of University programs
Today.
and activities.
Administered through the
" It's wonderful to have
emeriti volunteers who give Lock
University
Haven
their time, as well as being gen- Foundation, the campaign is in
erous with their resources, to its third year.
the University. The Herrmanns'
To date, more than $6.5 milcontinued support to the capital lion has been raised through the
campaign are greatly appreciatgenerous support of alumni, faced," said Dr. Craig Dean Willis, ulty, staff, corporations and
friends of the University.
University president.
A member ofthe University
faculty for over 30 years, Mr.
Herrmann served as a professor
of Health Science.
As head men's soccer coach,
he led the Bald Eagles to conference and national prominence
PA?ofo Courtesty ofPublic Relations Office
Lynne and Karl Herrmann recently donated a
scholarship fund to the University.
Student Recreation Center [SRC] Logo Contest
1
Students! This is your chance. Design a logo to be used for the soon to be opened Student
Recreation Center. If your logo is chosen it will become the official logo of the BRAND NEW
Recreation Center.
a mix between Tori Amos and
Ani Difranco with her underground genre of music.
Described as deep and movat
8:00 p.m. in
February 28th
ing
with the combination of
Parsons
Union
the
Building
bass, violin, cello,
acoustic
on
Multipurpose Room located
and
piano,
Bentley's voice, the
the campus of Lock Haven
is one you won't
performance
University of Pennsylvania.
want
to
miss.
is
free
The performance
and
Bentley will be available to
open to the public.Bentley, who
sign
autographs immediately
her
started recording
own music
at the age of 17, has been called following the performance.
Bentley, the rising musician,
will perform on Thutsday,
Symphonic band plans large selection
LOCK
HAVEN-'The
University, will be the guest
and conductor.
Drummer"
Ragtime
Other arrangements for the
"Shenandoah" are two of the
pieces that will be featured at concert include "Horizon
the Symphonic Band Concert on Overature" by Peter Bays,
Vincent
by
February 28th at 8:00 in Price "Pageant"
Persichetti, and "Military
Performance Center.
by
Osterling.
Performance
of "The March"
Ragtime Drummer" will feature "Shenandoah" was written by
Conductor John R. Schmidt, Frank Tichelli and "The
Assistant Professor of Music at Ragtime Drummer" was written
Lock Haven University, with a by Bill Cahn.
The concert is free and open
snare drum solo. Dr. Ned C.
to
the
public.
Deihl, from Pennsylvania State
St. Patrick 4 Vttp 5X
Starts at 9:00am
-
Registration:
If recieved by March 1 st
$12.00
After March 1st
$15.00
Make checks payable to "JSPASS"
3. The logo must contain no more than THREE (3) colors.
4. The logo contest will conclude at 5 p.m. Wednesday, February 27. All logos must be entered
into the Director's office of the Student Recreation Center (PUB 106 downstairs) before that
time for full consideration. The winning logo will be displayed in the next issue of the Eagle
Eye.
5. All logos must contain, the artist name or ID number and local phone number. Logos that are
entered without this information will be disqualified from the competition.
6. The Director of the Student Recreation Center and the Executive Council of the SCC, Inc.
will have the final determination of the winner.
-
RC
LOCK HAVEN—Annika
Saturday, March 16, 2002
So What are the rules?
1. The logo must contain the following letters S, R & C (and only these letters)
2. The logo must be appropriate for use in a professional setting and for professional
Submit Logo to: Chris McGary,
Director of the Student Recrea
Center
106 Parsons Union Building
Underground musician to play
T-shirts and CASH prizes
n
Contact #: on campus— 2125
off campus- 893-2125
I
Call (570) 748-6855
for more information & an application
RESPONSIBILITIES:
RESPONSIBILITIES:
1. Tutors Summer Development students in assigned subject area.
1. Live in the residence hall for 5 weeks during summer program.
2. Abide by University and program policies.
2. Abide by University and program policies.
Meet individually with Summer Development students on a
weekly basis and complete student contact forms.
3. Meet individually with Summer Development students on a
weekly basis and complete student contact forms.
Participate in program activities.
4. Participate in program activities.
Serve as a supportive role model, counselor and resource
person to Summer Development students.
5. Serve as a supportive role model, counselor and resource
person to Summer Development students.
Attend weekly
6. Organize social programs for Summer Development students.
Attend Summer Development Mandatory Study Session.
7. Attend Summer Development Mandatory Study Session.
A good candidate for the TC position possesses:
Positive Attitude
Willingness to give of themselves
Good listening skills
A good candidate for the TC position possesses:
Positive Attitude
Willingness to give of themselves
Good listening skills
Leadership experience
Respectful of others
Excellent people skills
Excel in the subject area they tutor (A or B)
Leadership experience
Respectful of others
Excellent people skills
Excel in the subject area they tutor (A or B)
By March 25, 2002
Letters of interest should be forwarded:
Provost's Office
210 Sullivan HAH
By March 25, 2002
Letters of interest should be forwarded:
Provost's Office
210 Sullivan HAH
}
Page 4
February 22, 2002
OP/ED
How to get rid of that spare tire
not all that contributes to the
freshman 15. B&D Tanning
want to have their ads upside
down, so stop telling me that my
If you're perfectly healthy
Sean Dooley
Eagle Eye Editor in
and carrying nothing but your
book bag, the only way you
should be taking the elevator is
if you're going to the fifth or
Look down at the ground.
Can you see it or did your pot-
"B&D Tanning
want to have
their ads upside
down, so stop
telling me that
my staff screwed
sixth floor. Otherwise, walk.
Now I know everyone is saying that if I'm so critical of people who ride the elevator, I
should never ride it, even to the
sixth floor. But people who take
the ride to go to the fifth floor do
not bother me. Reason being,
your legs do start to get a little
tired around the fourth floor.
And for this reason, people who
ride the elevator to the fourth
floor bother me, but not as
much; it's only a big deal if I'm
in a hurry. People who ride it to
belly get in the way ?
I have an idea that may be
considered extreme by some, on
how to get rid of that extra
weight: WALK TO THE SECOND, THIRD AND FOURTH
FLOOR!
It seems like every time I
take the elevator to the sixth
floor in Robinson Hall, that I am
delayed by some lazy idiot who
is taking it to floor three and as a
result, I'm late for class.
If you're on crutches, in a
wheelchair or are carrying some
insane amount of books, then
you should take the elevator to
the second, third or fourth tloor.
just by saying "screw the
'vator," and putting one foot in
front of the other to go a short
distance. I'm not saying that's
all you have to do, but it's a start.
Not eating McDonald's and running may help you, too.
I do take the elevator. To the
fifth and sixth floors. And if you
wanted to know, I did gain the
freshman 15 my first year here,
so I can only imagine how much
I would have gained if I was like
that short girl who I see taking
the elevator to the third floor
every day in Robinson. I probably would have gained closer to
25 pounds.
Also, why do people demand
to take the elevator down? Even
when I am on the sixth floor, I
walk down to the first. Going
down is less strenuous, I actually get down faster walking than I
up"
staff screwed that up. Lack of
the second and third flat out
working out also adds to your
development of the body you
always dreaded. That body can
be partially avoided, however,
annoy me.
Contrary to popular belief,
greasy Bentley food and beer is
do on the elevator and I guarantee there isn't a person on this
campus who couldn't handle
walking from floor six to floor
one on a daily basis.
My advisor in the journalism
Dr.
department,
Douglas
Campbell is a bit more ambitious than I am when it comes to
being anti-elevator. He is years
my elder and he refuses to take
anything but the stairs. As a
result, he is in better shape than
99% of the students at Lock
because I'll bet he could outlast
you in a marathon run, also. By
making this minor adjustment of
taking the elevator out of your
life, maybe you could start getting in shape, too.
So remember, you when see
an upside down ad in the Eagle
Eye, it was on purpose, so stop
harassing me about it, or at least
harass me but kiss my
first
and before you complain about
how you can't lose weight, ask
yourself one question first: "how
...
"...Dr. Douglas Campbell is a bit
more ambitous...he is in better shape
than 99% of the students..."
Haven University. He is in betshape than yours truly, and I
don't really mind admitting it,
ter
many times have I taken the elevator to
the third floor?"
Let's not wave the flag in the
whole world's face
E.R. Shipp
New York Daily News
o
%
-
■
THE EAGLE EYE
LOCK HAVEN
LOCK HAVEN UNIVERSITY
PARSONS UNION BUILDING
LOCK HAVEN, PA 17745
PHONE: (570) 893-2334
FAX: (570) 893-2644
LHUeagley e® hotmail ,c om
Editors in Chief
Shawn P. Shanley
Dr. Douglas S. Campbell
a\\\\\\\\\
Copy Editor
Jessica LaCroix
Marc Rayman
RJ. Harmer
Stephan Baldwin
he told The Daily Telegraph.
"Has there ever been a big, powerful country that is as patriotic
as America? And patriotic in the
tinniest way, with so much flagwaving? You'd really think we
were some poor little republic
,
„, itf one„ „„„
„
and
that
person lost his
-
'
»
*
b mounting flags, too.
Durm g lhc °Pening cerem
of ,he Winter Olympics, it
reall y struck me that the
" U S A USA! " ™h-rahing
had hlt a new " and uncomfort-
«-
'
-
ging about yourself.
The tussle over the display
of the tattered flag from Ground
Zero bordered on tastelessness,
too. For a while, it was touch
and go, with a sizable contingent
of superpatriots demanding that
the American athletes march in
with the wounded banner as a
!
symbol of American defiance
and resilience.
able level. After Police Officer
Fortunately, the matter was
Daniel Rodriguez's
now
familiar
resolved when the International
6
and almost de rigueur - rendiOlympic Committee permitted
an honor guard of police, firefighters and U.S. Olympians to
Fraternity. Sororitv. Clubs. Student Groups
$1,000- $2,000 this semester with the easy solemnly carry the flag into the
CVrnpusfundraiser.com three hour fundraising event. Does not stadium during what turned out
tifftHvei credit card applications. Fundraising dates are filling to be a moving ceremony that
-fcfckly, so call today! Contact at (888) 923-3238 or visit
was, in the end, bigger than
America. After all, the world
was wounded Sept. 11.
Indeed, other parts of the
world were probably saying to
themselves that day that the
United States was entering the
horrid world of war and terrorAVAILABLE
ism that they'd long been a part
of.
Now leasing for Fall 2002.
Television coverage of the
One & two bedroom apartments available.
Olympics seems to focus more
.
.
•-
-
STUDENT RENTALS
Michelle Hershey
Lindsay Johnson
Most utilities included,
monthly or semester payment plans
24 hour maintenance service
and a friendly staff
Sports Editors
Suzanne McCombie
Gregg Tripp
Call for your personal showing today!
Locations close to campas still available
Stop by our office:
121 W. Church St., Lock Haven
or call us at:
748-8550
Shawn P. Shanley
Heather Flicker
..
tion of "God Bless America,"
pop singer R. Kelly sang about
Americans being "the greatest."
That was very, well, impolite
to the athletes, fans and dignitaries from around the world not to mention the billions
watching on television across
the globe kind of like inviting
guests over for dinner and
spending the entire time brag-
■
Tracy Jackson
Jamie Melchionne
thing would crumble. America
is the real religion in this countr^'
t0 be g°in g
We do
I fully understand Norman
Mailer's pique with his fellow
Americans especially since the overboard 1 do believe mat
,n
Winter Olympics opened in Salt some P eoP le P laces like Lon S
are trying to outdo their
Island
Lake City
Mailer, in a series of inter- nei ghbors for dramatic disP lays
,he
views that ran in British newspa- of fla 8 And others ' es P ecial"
immigrants from those parts
ly
pers earlier this month,
•
of
the world forever etched in
expressed his exasperation with
our P syches as bast,ons of ter"
what's passing for patriotism in
rorism are feeli "g n°«-so-subtle
post-Sept. 11 America.
"America has an almost Pressure 10 demonstrate their
a eg iance to me United States
obscene infatuation with itself,"
..
ISSUE 5, VOLUME 55
-
religion for one hour, the whole
Ryan Van Rossum
Archivist
Jessy Garcia
Scott Evans, Jared Guest, P.J. Harmer, Sumer Buttorff, Ken Taylor, Kristin
Kevin Carver
we throw all kinds of
[obstacles] at you.
tuition isn't one of them.
THE EAGLEEYE. THE OFFICIAL STUDENTNEWSPAPER OF LOCK HAVEN UNIVERSITY; IS
DANCE WITH THE UNIVERSITY CALENDAR THE ARTICLES, OPINIONS, PICTURES AND LAYOUT OFTHE EAGLE EYE ARE
THE RESPONSIBILITY OFTHE STAFF AND DO NOT REFLECT THE VIEWS OF THE STUDENTS, THE FACULTY OR ADMINISTRATION. UNLESS SPECIFIED. THE EAGLE EYE IS FUNDED BY THE STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE AND PRINTED BY THE
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CHARGE AND MUST BE SUBMITTED NO I.ATER THAN TUESDAY BY 1P.M
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LETTERSTO THE EDITOR ARE WELCOME THEY MUST BE TYPE-WRITTEN AND INCLUDE THE AUTHOR'S NAME SIGNATURE AND TELEPHONE NUMBER. LETTERS RECEIVED WITHOUT THIS INFORMATION WILL NOTBE PRINTED. DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS ISTUESDAY BY 3P.M. THE EDITOR RESERVES THE RIGHTTO EDIT ANY COPY.
Sure, we'll have you climbing walls. But if you qualify for a
2- or 3-year scholarship, tuition's one obstacle you won't have
to worry about. Talk to an Army ROTC rep. And get a leg up
on your future.
ARMY ROTC
Unlike any other college course you can take.
-
on American athletes whether
they finish in the running or not
-
than it does on winning ath-
letes from other countries.
Fundamentally, however,
this is American boosterism in
overdrive. I'm less interested in
tallies that emphasize which
nation is ahead in the medals
count. I'm much more interested
"I'm much less interesed
in tallies that empahsize
which nation is ahead."
-
in individual accomplishment
nationality be damned!
On some college campuses,
there is a kind of counterpatriotism underway, with students
protesting the war effort in
Afghanistan and the possible
abuse of the rights of Taliban
and Al Qaeda soldiers taken into
custody by the U.S. Some superpatriots criticize their dissent as
dishonorable.
But again, as Mailer told The
Guardian: "My feeling is that
you're patriotic about America
if you're obsessed with America
because it's a democracy and its
obligation is to improve all the
time, not to stop and take bows
and smell its armpits and say,
'Ambrosia!'"
Good on you, Norm!
February 22, 2002
Page 5
Eagle Eye
That'll be $25 just for reading this column
,
,
Dave Barry
Knight Ridder
Not that this has reduced the
crowds. The main street of Park
City is jammed day and night
with thousands of people walking around in high-quality ski
attire, as if at any moment
they're going to hit the slopes. In
fact, though, nobody here is skiing. The major participatory
PARK CITY, Utah - This
quaint ski-resort village in the
heart of the Olympic action has
gone out ofits way to make you,
the visitor, feel right at home,
assuming that your home
charges you $25 to park. You
sports are:
can also buy pizza from a side1. Trying to find a restaurant
walk stand here for $5 a slice,
that
might possibly have a table
and a bottle of genuine water for
available
before August.
$4. The going price for air is $3
into cell phones
Shouting
2.
per breath.
in
an
effort
to
locate
friends who
I'm kidding, of course. Air is
are
also
wandering
in the dense
only $1.50 per breath. But I'm
not kidding when I say that the crowd ("... OK, YOU GO PAST
main Olympic event here SEVEN STORES SELLING
appears to be the Retail QUAINT YET EXPENSIVE
Merchants' 50 Kilometer Price LITTLE GIFTS, AND THEN
NINE JEWELRY STORES,
AND THEN SIX MORE
QUAINT LITTLE EXPENSIVE GIFT STORES AND
THEN LOOK
YOUR
FOR
FOURTH
REAL-ESTATE
ON
OFFICE
LEFT,
THE
AND YOU'LL
SEE ME. I'M
WEARING SKI
ATTIRE.")
3. Stopping
every now and
Dave
then in the middle of the street and shouting,
"Whooo!" to indicate how much
festive Olympic-style fun you
are having.
4. Standing in line to buy
hats.
This last activity is the big
one. The public here at the
Olympics has gone INSANE for
I the beret-style
hats worn by the
T
.S. Olympic
in the
team
e
n
i n g
p
lar? For the simple reason that
they make you look really sharp,,
provided that(a) you are a member of the U.S. Olympic team,
and (b) you are at the Opening
Ceremony. If you're a member
of the general public, just walking around, this hat makes you
eremony. look like a cross between
and
Alka-Seltzer
Speedy
People are waitMonica Lewinsky. Even if
in line, outdoors,
for you're a man.
for
But everybody is buying the
upward
hours
berets
like crazy anyway,
just
three
well, because everyinto
because
to
a
get
Barry
store where they body ELSE is buying them.
can buy these hats for $19.95 People proudly wear their berets
apiece. Out on the street, the hats everywhere here, including, I
are going for as much as $100, bet, in the shower. When they
which is nearly twice what you leave Utah, they'll wear them
home, where, at some point,
have to pay here for a hot dog.
so
they'll see themselves in the
are
these
hats
popuWhy
...
mirror. Then they'll take off
their berets and never wear them
again, except maybe on
Halloween.
But that's what the Winter
Olympics are all about: temporary insanity. Here in the
Bubble
of
Olympic
Derangement, we truly believe
that Utah is the focus of the
world's attention, and that it
actually matters who won the
bronze in the two-man bobsled
It's an exciting feeling,
and I wish there was some way I
could share it with you.
Wait! I know! I'll sell you
my hat.
event.
My generation is not apathetic
Adonal Foyle
The weekend before last,
while some of my NBA colleagues traveled to Philadelphia
for the All-Star game, I spent
two days talking, debating and
planning with a group of more
than 70 college students about a
new national organization I
summer,
founded
last
Democracy Matters. The organization helps give young people a
voice in the growing movement
to reform the financing of our
political system by linking campaign-finance reform efforts in
students' communities.
This event was our first
chance
to
together.
get
Democracy Matters student
organizers traveled from as far
away as Texas, Idaho and North
Carolina to come to Colgate
University, my alma mater, in
Hamilton, N.Y. They defy the
stereotype that today's college
students are apathetic and uncaring.
>sni)rico
in
Students engaged in serious
debates about the kind of financing that would be fair and would
help give every American an
equal chance to be heard. The
disagreements that emerged
were not just tolerated but
respectfully seen as sources of
insight and fresh thinking. For
anyone concerned about student
apathy, the weekend's intense
discussions and planning would
have provided an effective antidote.
They have the desire to
speak out loud and clear on
important issues. Ofcourse they
are critical of, and even disillusioned with, the current system
of financing elections as are
many of us. And why shouldn't
they be?
The revelation of political
quid pro quos associated with
the Enron scandal is only the
most recent example. When
elected officials become beholden to special interests that make
large financial contributions to
-
their election efforts, it is obvious reform is needed. The
upshot is that elected officials
and candidates accord differences in "access" based on the
level of contributions donated.
Politicians today spend huge
amounts of their time raising
money and are too often concerned more about not alienating
their donors than about representing and serving their constituents.
It's no surprise, then, that
many students turn away from
political involvement. But I
believe they will lead the charge
to change.
Now that the Shays-Meehan
bill has received initial approval
in the House, I predict students
will lead the push for more comprehensive reform - where all
Americans can have a fair and
equal chance to make their voices heard.
of the Week: "We were shocked at how difficult it is to givi
money responsibly"-Neil Devroy, on efforts by the National
■intion of Home Builders to help victims of Sept. 11.
!
slda
qntbnurrj'
OPEN Saturday, February 23rd
11:00am to 3:00pm
Spring "Break Specials
in the bookstore
Buy a Russell sweatshirt,
Get a FREE Russell t-shirt
Starting Wednesday, February 27th March 1st
-
Senior Salute flay
Get your caps, gowns, tassels
and order your personalized invitations!
Then enjoy some refreshments!
Wednesday, March 13th & Thursday, March 14th
9:00am to 6:00pm
Page 6
Eagle Eye
"Lumpy Hair"
Sean Dooley
Eagle Eye Editor in Chief
Most radio shows prepare
for what is in store on any given
day. Most radio shows have a
standard rundown for what is
going on every show. Most
radio shows have a set playlist
with a few requests ready to go
each time they air. J-Rod and
Jack-O's program "Lumpy
Hair," formerly known as "Dead
WLHU
Air,"
on
heard
from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday nights,
however, is not most radio
shows.
Hackettstown, New Jersey
native J-Rod chooses what song
he is going to play next by grabbing a handful of CD's, shuffling them around, selecting one
and blurting out a random track
number to play. J-Rod's labels
his music selection as your typical "college" music and rarely
lets his heart get in the way of
what he is playing. Instead, he
leaves his playlist up to grabbing
CD's from WLHU's plethora of
February 22, 2002
— not your average radio show
get a few shout-outs in. "I want
say hi to my best friend,
Bobby Banana, and my brother.
in the
to
News
Matt Bocian," said Jack-O.
J-Rod scoffs when asked to
describe the typical "Lumpy
Hair" fan, and says that the typical fan is "anyone who can click
on the webpage and pull up the
webcast." Pretty much anyone
on the LHU campus with a computer and speakers that work can
get into this show.
Though he keeps his show to
mostly a spontaneous comedy
act, J-Rod also read news and
weather at the top of the hour on
his 2-hour WLHU segment.
J-Rod chooses to do his own
meteorology, making his forecasts unique and far different
from anything you'll hear on the
Weather Channel and trusts his
sun dial as the best teller of time,
rather than a clock, like most of
IT'S A MATCH
Nick Lachey of 98 Degrees and
his longtime steady, pop singer
Jessica Simpson, are officially
engaged, a publicist confirmed.
During a joint interview on
CBS's "Early Show" two years
ago, Lachey said, "The first
time I ever heard her sing, I got
chills.
I told the guys
to marry that girl
going
'I'm
one day.'" He says he has
remained faithful to his 21year-old fiancee. She has proclaimed that she's holding onto
her virginity until she gets married. No wedding date has been
...
us.
J-Rod enjoys being part of
WLHU to the extreme. "It's the
only radio station you can listen
to through a water bottle," he
Wise Chiropractic and
Rehabilitation Cei
748-7462
AAAACH DU LEIB ER, Zl
M
GOOT
The city of Cologne will clamp
down on men caught
ughl "shamelessly relieving themselves" in public at the upcoming
German carnival season which is noted for
heavy consumption of alcoholic drink.
It is also noted for "wild urination" on the part of men. and local residents have grown tired of it. Offenders will
be fined,
DOORBELL
A 22-year-old fugitive from justice
called the cops in Ticonderoga, N.Y.\ from
his hideout in Georgia to taunt them and
brag that they would never catch him, Au
contraire.
After he hung up, the police used
the Caller ID system to track his whereabouts and then asked the Auburn, Ga.,
authorities to go get him;
Then, the idiot called back, a sectime.
While he was on the phone, the
Georgia
when
,
.
°a
U SURE WE RE AL N
Jm
5 West Miifl Stmt
(A(rwfri»Siifc»iy)
FEEL A DRAFT?
Mel Gibson is trying to set the
record straight about whether
his father moved his family
from Peekskill, N.Y, to
Australia so his sons could
dodge the Vietnam draft.
"That's not totally true," said
Gibson, whose new movie,
"We Were Soldiers," depicts an
early battle in that war.
In a New York Daily News
interview, he said his father "is
a sane man who fought for this
country during World War II.
Maybe because of that, my
father was never a fan of war."
But Gibson, who was 12 when
they moved, said: "My father
had hurt himself (on the job)
and we had friends and family
in Australia who could make it
easier for us to live while he
recovered." He adds, "You
could still be drafted in
Australia."
DON'T CALL ME NOW!
Federal fraud fighters say Miss
Cleo's psychic hotline should
have seen it coming: a lawsuit
accusing the service of rampant
deception.
The two companies in Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., are behind the
telephone psychic reading service that, on television and the
Internet, promises insights into
love and money with a free
psychic reading, but when consumers call a toll-free number
they are directed to a 1 -900
number charging $4.99 per
wm
OOOF, UGH, THIS IS HEAVY, GRUNT
broke into the Moose
Alaska, in the wee
Sway on bicycles. They didn't get;far.
"
Chu Mei-feng. 35.
minor
Taiwanese politician, was secretly filmed
I in
having sex with a married
Hidden
pinhole cameras were
man.
gedly installed by her estranged
the former mayor of Hsinchu.
The scandal exploded when a gossip magazine gave away videodiscs of the
encounter inside each copy.
Now, several of the principals are
charged with undermining public morality,
and the woman in question has embarked
on a campaign to restore her tarnished
image.
8
HEY, I'M THE VICTIM HERB,- OFFI-
Correction from last week: Tickets for the 311 concert featuring special guest Hoobastank are free foi
students with LHU ID, and $15 each for the public.
CER!
A 21-year-old man picked up a
hitchhiker in Ohio w o pro p y
him of $200.
Now short of money, the driver
made up hisloss later by robbing two other
people.
boyfriend.
■
GOOD DOG, ATTA BOY, WHAT'S
THIS?
A dog playing fetch near a
Pennsylvania apartment building ran into
the bushes and came back with a wallet
MORE
WAYS
ONE
instead
of the ball.
THAN
LEGLESS IN
no
acted
legs
as a
The wallet had been dropped by i
A man with
two
lookout as
of his friends tried to bur- peeping'torn who had been looking into a
glarize a house in Easington Colliery, lady's first-floor living room before taking
England, The homeowner scared them off off when she called the cops. He has been
and sa w the two carrying him as they iled arrested,
the scene
NOT
In his defense, he told the court I'LL SHOW YOU WHO'S
he was talked into participating in the CRAZY!
denied admittance to a mental
caper after he had drunk 16 pints of beer.
health clinic in Izola, Slovenia, a man
RETURN TO ME, MY LOVE, KA- drove his car through the facility's glass
door and proceeded 30 yards down a corriFLASH!
A Texas woman paid a folk healer dor and back to the reception desk to
~ to perform a ceremony designed to win emphasize his need for psychiatric care.
He was taken to a mental hospital.
February 15-21
MOTH MAN
PROPHSCIM
9:30 Fri. and Sat. only
\
I
..
» r-m
No late show
Show Times:
Fri: 7, 9:30 Sat: 2,7,9:30 Sun: 2,7 Mon-Thur: 7
and an onion and
concoction flared
..
set.
jokes.
F/7e pftoto
J-Rod omits sports from his
music.
top of the hour coverage, J-Rod (left) and Jack-O host "Lumpy Hair" on WLHU Tuesdays from 7-9
Jack-O,
Co-host
of
because
he feels that he should p.m. You can tune in to hear the duo playing their two hours worth of "college"
Springfield (just like The
to covering in the top music
leave
that
by clicking on http://www.lhup.edu/radio.
Simpsons) gives away clumps of
sets forth for his two other
he
his hair at 8:30 p.m. each show
passions, on of which is the
to the 50th caller.
So every Tuesday night from
sports broadcasting club. J-Rod
"Me and Jacko talk about can be heard doing color com7 to 9 p.m., take a little break
what we've done lately," J-Rod menting for many Bald Eagles from your studies (after all, we
said, "he always has something home basketball games on all need it), and get an afro (or
to say."
Channel 10. You can also read mullet) with "Lumpy Hair," and
Though his English is not J-Rod's sports columns for the your two hilarious co-hosts,
Listen from 1 p.m. to 3 a.m. Sunday through
exactly up to par, Jack-O stumJ-Rod and Jack-O.
Friday.
Eagle Eye every Friday.
bles through the bigger words to
LxOVE7°
Names
Mike Pingree is a
Boston
column on the Internet at www.pin-
East Main Street
Lock Haven
www.roxymovies.com
Hotline: 748-ROXY
F.
Page 7
22, 2002
NBC buys time with another year of 'Friends'
off hitter and "ER" as its closer, better figure out how to halt its
we'd have already high-tailed it glorious losing streak, or else.
for CBS.
So far, no show has proved
With "ER" still popular but that it can replace, or even folThe most jarring number for
clearly aging, and "Will & low, "Friends." This season, the
me about the "Friends" re-up
still funny but hardly the series is averaging close to 25
isn't the $22 million each cast Grace"
ratings killer that "Friends" is, million viewers a week and at
member will pocket, or the milNBC couldn't let its best sitcom this rate, will trounce "ER" by
lions more they'll earn from havwalk away, particularly after it more than 2 million viewers.
ing a piece of syndication revhas become something of a
Of course, NBC has been
enue.
comeback
kid
before. In the early '90s,
creatively
and
here
in
It's one. As in one more year.
the
ratings.
Cosby Show" and
"The
Entertainment
NBC
While SI million per 22"Cheers"
were aging, and then
President Jeff Zucker says he's
head Warren
minute
which
entertainment
episode,
is
virtualecstatic about the deal, which
work,
a
week's
Littlefield
found
a show called
ly
seems
mindwill set his network back $7 milanother called
to us average wage"Seinfeld"
and
boggling
lion per episode, more than any
earners, 1 don't think the actors "Friends" and later capped it off
other series including his prized
were all that swayed by the with the medical series "ER."
"ER" ($13 million for a full
(He would later also insert
hour). That's because after bump in salary. They were
$750,000
down
"Frasier" on Thursdays, which
already
pulling
crunching the numbers, Zucker
an
would eventually be moved to
episode.
knows and his bosses know
a year with jump start another night.)
The
idea
of
doing
buying time is priceless.
the full knowledge that this realZucker said over the summer
After a long streak offinding
end, no matter the ratthat the way to stay in the ratings
is
the
ly
and developing smart and imagings or the buzz, was probably game as a network is to launch
inative comedies, and positiontwo strong shows each year.
ing them on its stronghold of enough to get them back.
But now comes the fun part, Overall, NBC has kept pace with
Thursday night, NBC has found
or at least the interesting part. that strategy: "The West Wing"
itself stuck in creative quickWednesdays,
sand. If it hadn't been for We know "Friends" won't be and "Ed" on
so NBC had "Providence" on Fridays and
in
2003-04,
around
"Friends" being the night's lead-
Ken Parish Perkins
Knight Kidder Newspapers
-
-
Photo courtesy of Friends Cafe
Friends till the end. Cast members of the show agreed to do the show for
one more year. But is the end near? NBC producers have been busy looking for another program to fill the top-rated show's 8:00 Thursday night spot.
"Law & Order" clones scattered
throughout the week.
But those are all dramas, and
they're all on other nights. The
comedy "Inside Schwartz"
tanked big time. "Scrubs" is a
modest hit. "Just Shoot Me" is
waning.
We'd all like to know if anything good is in the comedy
pipeline.
So would NBC.
Does moving off mean moving on...with your life?
The pros and cons ofrenting your own apartment
Jessica Savrock
Eagle Eye Features Editor
Face it.
After about one
semester, you're probably sick
of living in a closet-sized dorm
room, sharing a bathroom with a
dozen or so other people, and
eating Bentley food for every
meal. Every student faces the
tough question: to move off
campus or to live in the dorms
for another year.
Living off campus definitely
has its advantages. Perhaps the
biggest is the opportunity to
have your own bedroom. Sure,
your current roommate could be
the coolest person in the world
(or, unfortunately for you, the
complete opposite), but even the
best of friends can become enemies after sharing such close
quarters for a long time. Your
own bedroom will provide the
privacy you need, and you'll be
able to sleep in peace without
other peoples' annoying alarm
clocks, computers, radios, etc.
waking you up.
Another big advantage is
being able to cook your own
meals. Somehow, even all-you-
upstairs Bentley can get
old after a while. But having
your own stove, full-sized
refrigerator, and microwave can
leave endless meal possibilities
at your fingertips. While buying
groceries can be quite expensive, remember to stock up on
things that are cheap and will
keep, such as macaroni and
can-eat
At least in your
own apartment,
you can keep
the shower
growth-free.
cheese, ramen noodles, and
soup. And you can surely cook
meals in the convenience of your
apartment for less than Bentley
charges you for a hamburger.
A clean bathroom with hot
showers is always a plus. The
fact that you don't have to share
it with who-knows-how-manyother people is enough to cause
you to shower without dollarstore shower shoes on your feet.
In the dorms, there was always
some kind of unknown plant life
growing around the drain. At
least in your own apartment, you
can keep the shower growthfree. (This is a major commitment, trust me. You won't know
how much you'll miss the custo-
dians cleaning the bathroom for
you!)
With every advantage comes
a disadvantage. When making
the choice to move off campus,
you have an overwhelming variety of landlords to choose from.
Make sure that you rent from
someone who seems fair, and
read over your lease THOROUGHLY before signing it.
You may even want to take it
home to mom and dad before
signing.
There are some fair landlords
in this town, but some others'
main goal is to take advantage of
college students. The SCC provides a website with a forum to
post a message about your current landlord situation, and read
through others' experiences.
You
at
can
visit
it
httpt/Zphowtix.lhup.edu/landlordbook.html.
Most likely, your lease won't
cover cable, telephone, or electric, things which you never
thought twice of in the dorms.
You'll have to pay connection
fees and send your monthly bills
on time, or you may literally
find yourself in the dark. Also,
you'll soon find that showering
three times a day or leaving your
computer on all day while in
that). While the apartments are
North Fairview Street, only one bedroom (yes, you'll
Finding time to keep your chances are you'll be driving to still have to share), they come
house or apartment clean is not class, and that means playing provided with beds, dressers,
an easy task. While in the ring around the parking lot every tables, desks, stoves and refrigerators. Each apartment also has
dorms, all you had to do was day looking for a spot. Unless
pick up the mound of clothes off you have an 8:00 class, you can a living room, bathroom, a walkthe floor and throw them in the forget parking in either the PUB in closet in the bedroom, and a
dirty laundry, wipe a dust rag or Zimmerli lots. Plus, you'll kitchen. However, space is limhave to fork over the $5 at the ited to mostly upper classmen
over your desk, and rent a vacuand international students, but if
um to sweep up the month-old beginning ofthe semester to purcrumbs off the floor. In an apartchase a parking permit.
you're interested in moving in
ment, you'll have to clean the
If you don't feel ready to you should talk to your resident
shower and toilets, mop the move off campus just yet, or you director about any openings for
floors, BUY a vacuum cleaner, like the convenience of being next semester.
Moving off campus is not an
and empty your own trash. able to walk to class every day,
easy decision. If you feel like
Custodians gain a whole new Campus Village may be the stepyou're ready for the big move,
respect from students after they ping stone that you're looking
move out of the dorms.
for. Apartments at Campus talk to your parents, and start
Village provide an on-your-own looking early! The best apartLiving in the dorms is convenient to get to class on time. type atmosphere while still ments usually fill up six months
All you have to do is roll out of being under regulation of the in advance.
bed and go. But unless you're University (parents will go for
class will send your electric bill
lucky enough to get an apart-
sky-high.
ment on
Nyman's Subs & Bar-B-Q's
We serve
Luigi's Original Recipes
14 Bellefonte Ave. Lock Haven 748-7195
Open Mon Thurs 10:30am to 8:00pm
Fri & Sat 10:30am to 9:00pm
Sunday 11:00am to 7:00pm
FREE delivery 4:00pm to close EXCEPT Friday
Friday FREE delivery ALL DAY
Sunday Special: All LHU students recieve 10% off
on purchaseof $10.00 or more
-
Upcoming events
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Tuesday, February 26 @ 8 p.m.
Neil Diamond
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Friday, March 1 @ 8 p.m.
Marvin Hamlisch and Orchestra
Monday, March 4 @ 7p.m.
Harlem Globetrotters
Monday, March 25 @ 7:45 p.m.
WWF Raw
Friday, April 5 @ 7p.m.
Dave Matthews Band
SOLD OUT!
Tickets are available at the Bryce Jordan Ticket Center, select Uni-Mart ticket outlets,
Commonwealth Campus ticket outlets, or by calling 1-800-863-3336, or online at www.bjc.psu.edu
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position on last week's charts*
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1. Usher "U Got
It Bad" No. 1
2. Nickelback "How You
Remind Me"No. 2
3. Ja Rule feat. Ashanti
"Always On Time" No. 5
4. Pink "Get the Party Started"
The New Breed
Got A Life
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Creed "My Sacrifice" No. 6
Shakira "Whenever,
herever" No. 7
Linkin Park "In the End"
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I. Alicia Keys "A Woman's
Vorth" No. 8
9. The Calling "Wherever You
Will Go" No. 9
10. No Doubt feat. Bounty
by JerriDavis
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the skin and make stuff,
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Classifieds
——
"SPRING BREAK"
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Group organizers travel free!
Space is limited! Hurry up
and Book now!
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LOCK HAVEN STUDENTS:
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AND TRAVEL FREE!!!
STUDENT TRAVEL SERVICES
Positions Available in
Career Services:
Peer Career Facilitators for the
2002-03 academic year.
Will assist students with career
exploration strategies and job
search techniques. Strong interpersonal and communication
skills required. Minimum GPA
of 2.5 preferred. Must complete
training which will be held
week of August 19th. This is a
paid position based on LHU's
work study/campus employment pay scale. Complete job
description and application
available in Career Services,
Akeley 114.
Application Deadline:
Friday, April 5, 2002.
JACKET FOUND MANY
MONTHS AGO IN WRITING
CENTER, RAUB 409:
A nice winter jacket was left
last year in the Writing Center.
Owner can claim by calling
Carolyn Perry @ 893-2171 or
e-mailing cperry@lhup.edu and
describing the jacket. Or, stop
by Raub 409.
Personals
i
i
Oh Gerber- Not again.
AMAZING SUMMER
at premier PA coed children's
overnight camp. Energetic,
enthusiastic men & women
wanted for all sports, activities,
| swim, and general. Good
Salary. Great Experience. Paid
Internship available. Contact
Camp Office at 610-941-0128
or visit our web site,
.. .. ..
... .. .......... ...
to fill out an application or to
schedule on-campus interview
for March 19. 2002 at the
■
V
■■.
Parsons Union building from 10
AM until 2 PM.
McQueen
Adam: 1 more week and
we'll be in the Bahamas!
Love, Mary Beth
410, You guys are awesome!
Have a great weekend.
Sigma love Shannon
Bradley keep up the good
work. Lamar
Bailey, I love living with
you too! ZLAM, AB Lauren
Students:
Scholarship Available.
Good God... Miller and the
Stanimal are psychotic.
Do you plan on attendin
LHUP, Penn State (including
PA College ofTechnology),
Lycoming College, Bucknell
University or any oftheir
branch campuses for the
Academic year 2002-2003?
Are you a graduate of a
Clinton or Lycoming county
high school in Pa? If so, you
ire eligible to submit an appli
cation for a Mary Ann Fox
scholarship. Applications are
To the New Members of
Alpha Sigma Tau,
Congratulations! Welcome
to the sisterhood! Tau love,
The Sisters of AIT
available in the office of the
President in 202 Sullivan Hall
De adline for the return
is April 9, 2002.
College Housing
Close to Campus
Phone Judy after 4 p.m.
748-6336
Leslie: Hang in there,
pledge pal. I love you!
ZLAM, Amy
Ira Eugene I love you!
SnuggleBear- only one
round of checkers??! Wow,
a new record. "The best
$10." Love, SnuggleBunny
Megan Renee: Welcome
back home- many smiles
and know that we all love
you.
Big Mary Beth: You have
been great. Thanks for your
support. ZLAM, Little Sarah
Janeen, Tiff and Kempton:
Thank you for joining us for
AXP is finding me in me
Crazy 8's-1 miss you! Love
Amy
Ang H.- Good luck with
everything. Hang in there.
Tau love, Kerri
Catch Phrase. Thank you for
the laughs- it was a lot of
fun. Heather and Marc
ZTA: Spring Break is
Coming soon. Have fun
wherever you go! ZLAM,
Lauren
Hey Crow keep your head
up. We gonna make it...
Level IPs How are we doing
so far? Kelli
You guys know who you
are. I love ya.. Remember
we are men. Jigga
The struggle within... -Lucas
Craig: Hopefully we did
well on that test. Ha Ha!
Mary Beth
AB Megan: YEAH!
Because I'm pretty! ZLAM,
AL Amy
Like a bridge over troubled
water... Lucas
Little Natalie: I thought I
told you no more snowboarding accidents! If you
need anything, call me. I
love ya! ZLAM, Big Lauren
Shannon, Pretty Bird, Pretty
Bird! Sigma love, Carrie
Amber, Nice to have you
back. Tau love, Kerri
Help AXP and the Salvation
Army send a kid to camp.
Friday 22 and 24, At
Wal_mart
est time with fun memories.
Be careful with the cool
whip! Love, Ms. Pineapple
Carrie, Hey man! I was
lonesome all weekend long.
You weren't there for me to
push around! Hope you had
a great week! Pretty Bird!
ZLAM Shannon
Elementary Block- Hang in
there everyone! Spring
Break is soon here!!
Where's Britney!!
Congratulations to all my
AET and Sig Kap— Good
"Mixer" -AXP
girls: Becky. Amy, Julie,
Danielle, Michelle and Niki.
ZLAM, Mary Beth
MDW: Those were supergreat strawberries. Yummy!
The grapes were fun too.
/etas: I have the best sisters anyone could ask for. I
love you all!! Lauren
AL Jill and Steph: NYC this
weekend! I can't wait!
ZLAM, Lauren
"A" Team- You did great!
Let's keep it up- Bradley
Scranton 883-DATE. It
works man... Johnnie
McDougal
Becky, Great job on recruitment! You Rock! Tau love,
Mills
Sports do not build character. They reveal it.~ John
Wooden
Jamie, You are doing a great
job with education! Keep it
up! Sigma love, Carrie
Denny Strouse- Thank you
for all of your help! We
Love You Sweetheart! Love
the Sisters of Alpha Sigma
Tau.
Karolyn, Brandy, Jenn,
Kate, Ang W.- Keep smiling. Have a wonderful
week! Tau love, Kerri Mills
-Bradley
In the PUB
Leslie: I miss you little. We
have to hang out soon.
ZLAM, Big Sarah
You There! YOU! Go that
way. This group Home!
Some good regulating.
Sarao
awesome ladies. Tau love,
Kerri
Chubb: Don't you love when
they let us loose? COME
PICK ME UP!! ZLAM,
Bri, Jen and Miller, I miss
you guys, we need to hang
out more often!!!! The
FAMILY forever!!!! love,
"Draw a crazy picture,
Write a nutty poem,
Sing a mumble-gumble
song,
Whistle through your comb.
Do a loony-goony dance
'Cross the kitchen floor,
Put something sillv in the
world
That ain't been there before."
Tator Tot- Happy ten months
with four months to go!
Smile knowing that you are
in my thoughts always. I
love you. Snowflake
Hello JaneenBean- Thank
you for the smiles and we
hope you had a great birthday. The Wicke's
Jill and Tina, You guys are
the bestest love pets! Sigma
love, Shannon
Happy birthday to who ever
has a birthday today!! The
Eagle Eye staff loves you.
NikiNicole: Happy day to
you chick- How are you and
how is everything going?
Many smiles.
Happy 22nd Birthday Tina!
ZLAM, Amy
Ashley- Hope you had a
great birthday! Happy days
and best wishes. What is
with the blue cows??
-Shel Silverstein
Tiff: Are you having anymore crazy dreams with professors and their cars??
Thanks for the invite KDR,
"I drink heavily" The
Heard it was fun -AXP
Stanimal
Little Dolphin, Keep smil>ing. I'm here if you need
Amy: HA POOP! Have fun
in Florida!
me! Tau love, Your Big
Marc- Thank you for going
with me to see sis. I love
you.
BJ, Thank you for a wonderful weekend and the
gifts! I love you. Kelli
Off to PSACs we go,
Hurry-up! Get in Shape!
Kristen and Amy, You are
the best kids! Sigma Love,
Mom
Lauren
A carpeted wall...an unstable toilet...no phone...Bucktail Lodge...a long underwear greeting...a barrel of
laughs. Elephant shoes.
To my Si 8ma love Pets >
know what 1 would
1
do without you! Thanks for
everything. ZLAM Jill
"Would be nice"... Lamar
Trisha and Melissa- Hang in
there girls. We have four
spent with you is the great-
Goober- You are the cuddliest. Thanks for the face to
face fun debates and the
tickles. Love always, Boober
Adrienne, Carrie and
Andrea- Thanks for an awesome Valentine's Day. My
Sisters Rock! We need to
hang out more often! Tau
love, Kerri
Ronald Jr- Did you have
enough peperonni?? Did you
say that you were going to
sleep with it and kick Joy
out? You crazy wanker.
"B Nasty" you a dumby
duh... Josh miller
Kristy- You are doing Great!
Make sure you take authority! If you need anything use
your resources! Tau love,
Kerri (Mills)
Everything goes better with
letters. -Lucas
Secret tye Dye- Hope all is
going well! Call me so we
can go out. Tye Dye Love,
Kerri
Please email your personals to
hflicker@lhup.edu
before Tuesday 3 p.m.
Q
NOW OFFERING:
2 soups everyday
jffoftib $ entity
Daily Specials
February 28, 2002
Watch for more upcoming events!
22, 2002
Page 10
Boxing team shines at home show
Last Saturday night the box-
ing team proved why they are
considered one of the top collejiiate boxing programs in the
nation.
The Bald Eagle open division boxers won nine of eleven
bouts on the evening's 13-bout
main card and one of three in the
preliminary nine-bout novice
division card in the afternoon.
Everyone agreed, the 23rd edition of the LHU Collegiate
Boxing Invitational was a huge
success in every way.
Over 2,400 fans were treated
to action packed bouts and the
Haven's own John Stout, 125,
as
the
was
selected
"Outstanding Boxer" by the referee's and judges. Lock Haven
University President, Dr. Craig
Dean Willis presented Stout
with the Mike Romanesky trophy at the conclusion of the 13
bout Main Card.
Stout, the national 125 lb.
champ, moved up to 139 lbs.
and earned a convincing 5-0
decision over Navy's tough veteran Mike Reel. The cagey
southpaw scored with effective
combinations to both the head
and body of the Navy boxer
throughout all three rounds.
He just boxed a beautiful
and strategic bout", commented
head coach Dr. Ken Cox.
Stout's career record now stands
at 20-3 and pound for pound has
developed into one of the elite in
college boxing.
In the evenings' featured
bout, the Haven's defending
national 185-lb. champ, Chuck
Mussachio, scored an impressive 4-1 decision over Navy's
175 lb. national champion, Ben
Zuber. This is the second week
in a row that Mussachio, the
senior team captain has upended
a national champ. Two weeks
ago, the crafty Bald Eagle
scored a stunning 4-1 decision
upset over previously undefeated Dustin Brown, the 195 lb.
national champion from Air
round to make it an exciting
bout, much to the delight of the
Haven fans. Mussachio career
record now stands at 23-6.
Mussachio is aiming at a
second national title after two
silver medals his freshman and
Parrish
sophomore years. From all indications Saturday night, he is
well on his way to joining the
select group who have won two
national titles, stated associate
coach Ken Cooper.
The Bald Eagle's third
national champion, Comanche
Garcia, 147, was equally
impressive in scoring a 5-0
shutout over Navy's Rick Weil.
A senior and ex-Marine,
Garcia slipped Weil's best
punches and countered with
strong over hand rights and
caught Weil with several effective right upper cuts.
Garcia was the aggressor all
three rounds. He stunned Weil
with a powerful overhand right
in the final ten seconds and the
bell saved Weil who was out on
his feet. Gracia improved his
career record to 19-10. Garcia
was a 2000 147 lb. national
champ and earned a bronze
medal in 2001.
Garcia continues to improve
with each competition and he
has a good chance to win another title, commented Dr. Cox.
Osahon Omo-Osagie, 125,
decisioned Army's Fred Kim, 50 for the second time in the past
two years. Osahon is a clever
sophomore from the Bronx via
Nigeria and had too much hand
and foot speed for the game
cadet. Omo-Osagie had a strong
second round and coasted in the
third to win handily.
Omo-Osagie continues to
Force at the Mandalay Bay
improve .with each outing and
H6tel in Las Vegas.
improve his career record to 4-3.
Zuber-Mussachio
started He'll drop down to his best
where he left off with Brown weight at 119 lbs. for the ECBA
and just plain 'out-boxed' the regional next month.
Gus Pugliese, 139, had his
tough Midshipman. Mussachio
easily won the first two rounds, hands full against PSU's Randy
but the aggressive Zuber did Dalbey. Pugliese, a native of
come on strong in the third Brazil, boxed beautifully the
first two rounds and had to hang
on in the third round to win the
hotly contested battle, 3-2.
Pugliese who is especially popular with the Hispanic community, boxed perhaps his best bout
as a Bald Eagle pugilist.
Pugliese, a notorious slow finisher, held on and stayed out of
serious trouble the third round to
edge the Nittany Lion, 3-2.
Freshman, Derrick McGraw,
165, who hails from North
Philadelphia, jabbed his way to
a hard earned 5-0 decision over
VMI's Jon Pax.
The rangy McGraw wisely
boxed from the outside and
scored consistently with rapid
fire left jabs and several punishing straight rights to defeat the
game Keydet. McGraw who
trains at Joe Frasier's North
Philly gym during vacations
brought smiles to the faces of
Bald Eagle coaches Cox and
Cooper.
LHU's Bulgarian connection, Miro Jelev, 190, got off to
a slow start against Army's 6'5"
Bobby Greet, but turned on the
after burners and stopped Greer
at 1:19 of the third. Jelev began
scoring with combinations midway through the second round
forcing referee Gary Rosato to
award Jelev two standing eight
counts late in the second round.
At the start of the final
round, the Cadet got nailed by
several hard right hooks and was
hurt when Referee Rosato called
a halt to the bout with 0:41 seconds remaining in the bout. The
student
junior
exchange
increased his collegiate record
to 5-2. NCBA champ Ben Zuber
of Navy and 195-lb. NCBA
champ, Dustin Brown of Air
Force last semester. Miro is one
of our hardest workers in the
gym stated Cox. We expect
"Miro to become one of the
great collegiate boxers," stated
Dr. Cox.
The Haven's two top female
boxers were both impressive in
winning their bouts over the
Shippensburg Red Raider rivals.
Senior Katrina Eady, 112,
stood toe to toe with Shipp's
Lindsay Hodgekins and traded
punches the entire third round to
win a close 4-1 decision. Eady,
from Philadelphia, has six bouts
under her belt and boxed per-
-p/iofo courtesy of Cheryl Miller
John Stout (L) sets up Navy's Mike Reel at the Bald Eagle home show last Saturday. Stout
was named the Outstanding Boxer at the event.
haps her best against the tough
Hodgekins.
"I'm really happy she had a
chance to win her final bout,"
stated a happy Dr. Cox.
"Katrina has been one of the
main stays in our gym the past
four years continued Cox."
Christina Munski, 125,
returned to the ring wars after a
two-year hiatus. Munski won
the 2000 national title and
advanced to the 2000 USAB
quarter finals and was ranked as
high as 4th at 119 lbs. in USAB
in 2000.
However, after spending a
year studying in Spain and taking a break from boxing, the talented Moosic, PA native has
returned to the gym with
renewed vigor.
Munski, boxing before
friends and family, has seemed
to return to her old form. She
used superior hand speed and
head movement to decision a
tough Danielle Paulovich from
Shippensburg.
Munski showed consistency
from start to finish against the
Red Raider. Munski's career
record is now 7-5 against the
toughest possible competition
mostly at 125 lbs.
Two Bald Eagles suffered
defeats on the Main Card. Art
Tusil moved up from 112 lbs. to
battle Army's Ray Ramos. The
taller Ramos won a 5-0 decision
using his left jab to keep the
hustling Tusil at the end of his
punches.
Also, Jeff Raymond, 156,
dropped a 5-0 decision to Navy's
,Tyra Johnson. Raymond, a senior Lock Haven native, with ten
bouts, struggled in the third
round after an impressive first
stanza.
However, Raymond
seemed to tire in the third round
and kept missing with wild
punches in desperation.
Four Haven boxers compet-
ed on the under card on
Saturday afternoon.
Podwojoski scored a 3-0 decision over Mansfield's Aaron
Assab. However, David Good,
175, Kossi Adubra, 165, and
Mike Persing, 185, all lost decisions. Good lost a 2-1 split deci-
sion to Mansfield's Jeremy Enck
while teammate Kossi Adubra,
165, from Togo was decisioned
2-0 by Navy veteran boxer,
Kevin O'Donnell. Kossi, in only
his third career bout, gave a
good account of himself.
Freshman 185 pound Mike
Persing was decisioned 3-0 by
VMI's Brad Davis in a fast
paced novice bout.
Without a doubt, the 23rd
edition of the annual LHU
Invitational was judged a huge
success, featuring some excellent boxing, with a high degree
of energy and enthusiasm displayed by the Haven boxers.
The boxers also fed off of the
electricity generated from the
enthusiastic
and
supportive
crowd.
Tonight, three Bald Eagle
boxers will compete in the Reno
Classic at the Eldorado Hotel in
Nevada. Traveling to Reno with
assistant coach, Ken Cooper, are
119;
Osahon Omo-Osagie,
Comanche Garcia, 147; and
Miro Jelev, 195. Omo-Osagie
battles 2-time 112 lb. National
champ, Lawrence Tarn UNReno while Garcia has a repeat
bout against UN-Reno AllJelev moves up from 195 lbs.
heavyweight,
Gaidi Faraj, U Calit.-Berkeley.
The 10-bout classic will be televised locally on the West Coast.
Tomorrow evening, four
Bald Eagle boxers are scheduled
to battle tough
to compete in the Nittany Lion
Invitational at the White Gym on
the campus of PSU. Scheduled
to box are Jeff Raymond, 156,
versus
Brian
Kelly.
Shippensburg; Kossi Abudra,
165, versus Jim Neely, PSU;
Derrick McGraw, 165 versus
Swen Jenson, VMI, and Chuck
Mussachio, 185, versus Duane
Mantle, Army in one of the featurcd bouts.
The Bald Eagle pugilists continue their preparation for the
upcoming ECBA qualifying tourand NCBA championships to be hosted by the U.S.
Naval Academy from April 4-6th.
nament
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"
11
February 22, 2002
Scoreboard^
Hallman, Ritz Earn PSAC
Athlete of the Week Honor
Paul Hallman and Sandy
Ritz of the indoor track and
team,
field
earned
Pennsylvania State AthleticConference (PSAC) men's and
women's Track and Field
Athlete of the Week honors for
events ending February 17.
Paul Hallman
Hallman, a freshman middle-distance runner, won the
mile at Saturday's Deneault
Invitational hosted by Cornell
University in a time of 4:18.22.
He went on to take third in
the 500 meters with a time of
1:07.36 and anchored the 4 x
800 meter relay team to victory with a split of 1:58.5.
The team's overall time, the
third fastest in school history,
was a PSAC leading 8:01.90.
Rit/. a junior jumper and
Sandy Ritz
sprinter, took third place in the
long jump at the Denault jump with a mark of 36'3-l/2.
The teams will next comInvitational with an NCAA
Provisional Qualifying mark pete at the PSAC Indoor Track
and Field Championships,
of 18'4-l/2".
Kutztown
by
The mark currently puts hosted
at
Lehigh
her atop the PSAC standings University
tomorrow
and
by more than nine inches. She University
also placed sixth in the triple Sunday.
Roller Hockey team falls
Adam Swarr
Eagle Eye Columnist
A strong effort from the roller
hockey team was not enough as it
fell to the Woodpeckers 5-2
Tuesday night in Williamsport.
Lock Haven (I-4) held the
Woodpeckers (5-0) to their lowest
goal total of the season.
Bald Eagle goalie Kevin
Sodano made 21 saves on 26
shots. Offensively Lock Haven
managed 16 shots.
Former Lock Haven captain
Pete Rodgers had three goals for
the Woodpeckers. "We played
really well against a better team,"
said Rhett Markle.
The Wcxidpcckers got an early
lead with a goal from Steve
McCulley just live minutes into
the game. Another Woodpeckers
goal increased their lead to 2-0
midway through the first half.
Lock Haven took advantage
of its lone power play, just three
minutes before halftime.
Steve Campbell's shot was
Rodgers' three-second half
goals put the game out of reach,
but Lock Haven continually pressured the league's top team.
Nate Zwierzyna blasted a 25foot slap shot to the back of the net
for the Eagles only second half
goal.
"It was a tough game after our
first victory," said Zwierzyna.
"We had a lot of confidence after
last week. Even though we lost,
maybe we can carry some confidence into next week."
partially saved, but Josh Fry
Hipped the rebound over the
goalie for Lock Haven's first goal.
"We seem to have finally
found the chemistry," said Fry.
"We've played well against the
good teams."
Randy Helsman had a chance
to tic the score before halftime, but
his breakaway attempt was
stopped just 15 seconds before the
Next Tuesday is a rematch
against the Titans (2-3). The
Titans won the earlier meeting 4-
half expired.
l,
With a 1-4 record Lock Haven
stands in 5th place in the 6-team
division.
The Shamrock Shuffle
5K run/walk, presented by the Physician Assistant Program, 9
a.m., March 16 in front of Rogers
The cost is $12 before March 1, and $15 after
or by
Registration forms can be found at
e-maii at jhartle@ihup.edu
Wrestling
Men's Basketball
Women's Basketball
PSAC Standings
PSAC Standings
EWL Standings
League
West Virginia
LHU
Edinboro
5-0
Pittsburgh
4-2
2-3
Cleveland St.
•California
*IUP
Virginia Tech
2-4
1-6
Bloom
0-7
Clarion
Overall
10-2
12-5
5-6
5-11
5-10
1-13
•Edinboro
•Clarion
LHU
Shipp.
Slipp. Rock
League
9-2
8-3
8-3
7-5
4-7
2-9
1-10
Overall
21-4
21-4
17-8
14-10
•California
•Shipp.
•Slipp. Rock
•Clarion
IUP
Edinboro
8-17
8-17
7-18
LHU
9-2
9-2
�Millersville
�West Chester
Edinboro at Pitt
Saturday
Penn St. at LHU
West Virginia at Cleveland St.
Sunday
West Virginia at Edinboro
4-7
E. Stroud
Kutztown
1-11
16-9
17-8
16-8
13-12
9-15
5-19
4-20
'clinched playoff birth
Boxing
23rd Annual Bald Eagle
112- Katrina Eady (LHU) dec.
Lindsay Hodgekins (Shipp), 4-1; 119•Christina Munski (LHU) dec.
Danielle Paulovich (Shipp), 5-0.
Featured Bout
185- 'Chuck Mussacio (LHU) dec
•Ben Zuber (Navy), 4-1.
•denotes National Champion
Outstanding Boxer
John Stout, 139, LHU
Team Results
LHU (9-2). Army (1-3), Mansfield
(0-1), Navy (2-3), Penn St. (0-1),
Shippensburg (0-2). Virginia Military
Institute (1-1).
18-5
18-6
13-10
11-12
11-12
11-12
8-14
•Bloom
•West Chester
•Kutztown
10-1
8-3
7-4
7-4
E. Stroud
Cheyney
1-10
NCAA Division II East Region
21-3
1. Glenville State
22-2
2. West Liberty State
3. Bloomsburg
4. Shippensburg
5. California
6. Millersville
17-7
7. Shepherd
17-7
8. Belmont Abbey
9 Pfeiffer
17-7
10 Lees-McRae
NCAA Division II East Region
21-3
20-4
18-5
2. Belmont Abbey
3. West Virginia Wesleyan
4. California
5. IUP
6. Queens (North Carolina) 17-7
7. Charleston (West Virginia)20-5
16-7
9. West Chester
10. Edinboro
IUP 80, LHU 68
IUP 78, LHU 77-OT
IUP (21-4, 8-3 PSAC-W)
Piper 6-13 2-2 16, Olaffson 1-6 5-6
7, Mims 8-15 2-3 18, Layton 0-6 3-4
3, Faulkner 6-12 0-0 12, Whalen 1-3
1-2 4, Holmes 6-9 2-3 15, Davila 1-6
1-2 3.
LHU (8-17, 4-7 PSAC-W)
Ruff 3-7 2-5 8, Bailey 10-21 6-7 26,
Hanna 1 -4 0-1 2, Holtzer 8-123-421,
Zujovic 5-13 2-3 13, Yetter 1-5 3-4 5,
Christiano 0-0 0-0 0, Rieben 0-1 0-0
0, Saunders 1-2 0-0 2.
Half-time score- IUP 33, LHU 25.
Three-pooint field goals- Piper 2,
Holtzer 2, Zujovic, Whalen, Holmes.
Fouled out- Piper, Olafsson, Mims.
Rebounds- LHU 32 (Bailey 7), IUP
53 (Mims 15)
Assists- LHU 16
(Zujovic 7), IUP 12 (Layton 7). Total
fouls- LHU 16, IUP 28.
.
4-2
•clinched playoff birth
Saturday
West Chester at Bloomsburg
Clarion at Pitt Johnstown
Lock Haven at Edinboro
California at IUP
Millersville at Mansfield
Cheyney al Kutztown
Shippensburg at Slippery Rock
Saturday
West Chester at Bloomsburg
Cheyney at Kutztown
California at IUP
New Haven vs. Clarion
Lock Haven at Edinboro
Millersville at Mansfield
Shippensburg at Slippery Rock
1. Salem International
119- Ray Ramos (Army) dec. Art
Tusil (LHU), 5-0; 125- Osahon OmoOsagie (LHU) dec. Fred Kim (Army),
5-0; 139- *John Stout (LHU) dec.
Mike Reel (Navy), 5-0; 139- Gus
Pugliese (LHU) dec. Randy Dalbey
(PSU), 3-2; 147- *Comanche Garcia
(LHU) dec. Rick Weil (Navy), 5-0;
156- Tyra Johnson (Navy) dec. Jeff
Raymond (LHU), 5-0; 165- Derrick
McGraw (LHU) dec. Jon Pax (VMI),
5-0, 175- Amir Shireef (Navy) dec.
Tom Sommers (Army), 4-1; 195Miro Jelev (LHU) RSC-3 Bobby
Greer (Army), 1:19; HWT- Clifford
Cook (VMI) dec. Jason Ficken
(Mansfield), 5-0.
Overall
East
East
Friday
League
9-2
8-3
7-4
6-6
4-7
3-8
2-9
IUP (12-13, 4-7 PSAC-W)
McMahon 2-4 4-4 8, Martin 2-4 00 4, Zdesar 1-1 5-17 7, Negrelli 9-14
8-13 27, Karas 4-13 2-4 !0, Behne 46 5-6 13, Conner 2-6 3-4 9, Smith 0-0
0-0 0, Ratligen 0-1 2-2 2.
LHU (8-16, 2-9 PSAC-W)
Charles 2-7 1-3 5, Daniels 5-17 1218 22, Young 1-6 5-8 7, Crowl 5-19
0-0 13, Ballintine 2-4 0-0 4, Price 00 0-0 0, Schimelfenig 6-12 0-0 12,
Picarsic 0-2 2-2 2, Lasher 0- 0-0 0,
Rieben 0-7 3-4 3.
Half-time score- IUP 46, LHU 27.
Three-point field goals- Crowl 3,
Conner 2, Negrelli. Fouled outMartin, Zdesar, Young.
Rebounds- LHU 39 (Charles 11),
IUP 42..
Assists- LHU 11
(Schimelfenig 6), IUP 14. Total
Fouls- LHU 26, IUP 26.
Campus Village Apartment Contracts
AVAILABLE for FALL and SPRING
"First come, first serve basis"
Sign-up:
308 Sullivan Hall
8:30am to 3:30pm
March 18
Current resident of Campas Village
March 19
On Campas Students (81+ credits)
March 20
On Campas Students (64+ credits)
March 21
On Campas Students (48+ credits)
MArch 22
All other current on campas students
March 25
Off campas students that want to
move back on
What you need to do:
Prepay (before priority date) a $100
housing deposit in the Bursar's Office.
2. Bring your receipt to Sullivan 308
3. Pick an apartment from ones available.
4. Sign a Campas Village Apartment contract
for more information contact:
Student Life/Housing Office
308 Sullivan Hall
893-2317
INSIDE
Boxers hold
their own at
home show.
See page 10
Wrestlers ready to host PSU tomorrow
P.J. Harmer
them," said Head Coach
Eagle Eye Staff
Carl Poff. "They were
The wrestling team
will try and make it two
straight over Penn State
when the Nittany Lions
competi Wrestling
tive with
Ohio State than we were.
Their record is no indication.
"I think it's going to
be a great match. The
competition is going to be
super for the fans. It's a
great opportunity whenever we have the chance
to compete with a Penn
State team."
travel to Thomas Field
House tomorrow night for
a 7 p.m. start.
The Haven knocked
off their interstate rivals
last season 24-9. That win
was only the third time
that LHU picked up the
win against Penn State in
16 career meetings. The
other two came in backto-back seasons, in 1995
and 1996.
Although PSU is just
6-10 on the year and 3-4
in the Big 10, this will be
more
Poff said that on
paper, he figured that the
match could be a 5-5
split. He sees the key
bouts coming at 141, 157
and 197. Between the two
there
teams,
are
six
no walk in the park for wrestlers ranked in the
Lock Haven. The Nittany last poll conducted by the
Lions have been strong in Amateur Wrestling News.
"It's the kind of match
their past two meets,
you want to be involved
falling to Ohio State 2013 and knocking off in," Poff said. "I hope the
students come out and
nationally
Michigan State, 17-16. support the event. It's a
Not only that, Penn State great, healthy rivalry."
Below is a weight-byhas already done some
damage in the Field weight preview of the
match, with probable
House this season, winning the Mat-Town tournament in November.
125 Taking the mat
"We lost to Michigan
State and they beat for Lock Haven will be
-
Trap McCormack (19-3).
McCormack could have
already claimed his third
straight 20-win season in
matched
Thursday's
against Bucknell and
Bloomsburg. McCormack
will square off with Penn
State's Adam Smith, who
is 15-9. Last season,
McCormack
defeated
Justin Kast, who is 11-12
this year.
133 Chris Spealler,
back from an injury will
the Haven.
represent
is
10-6
currently
Spealler
on the season. Marat
Tomaev (17-7) will likely
get the not for the Nittany
Lions, but No. 11 Josh
Moore (32-4) also competes at 133 for PSU. In
last years match up,
Tomaev beat senior Scott
Bair 3-1.
141- One of the marquee matches of the night
will feature No. 10 Scott
Moore (27-9) of PSU and
No. 12 Mike Maney (194) of LHU.
The two were set to
meet in the finals of the
Mat-Town
USA
Tournament, but Maney
had to forfeit due to an
injury. Last season as a
freshman, Maney beat
t
nationally-ranked Nate
Parker in overtime.
149
JaMarr Billman (26-2)
will face his former team
for the second straight
season. Billman will
square off against Nate
Wachter (19-10). In last
years match, Billman
pinned Wachter in 4:13.
157 In one of Poffs
key match-ups, Jason
Gilligan (9-10) will represent LHU when he
faces James Woodall (68). Last season, Gilligan
beat PSU's Aaron Wright.
165 Look for either
Charlie Brenneman (910) or Chris Haines (16-
-
-
-
-
.
9) to represent Lock
Haven and face off with
No. 10 Doc Vecchio (2610) In last years dual,
Vecchio fell 6-2 to Brian
Olenek, who graduated
last year.
courtesy of Sports Information
174 Ed Pawlak (9JaMarr
decking
Billman
celebrates
after
PSU's Nate Wachter
12) will represent the
Bald Eagles, while Todd last year, as the Bald Eagles will look to repeat last year's 24-9 perBrennan (12-20) will take formance.
the mat for the Nittany (6-11). In last years face one of two PSU
HWT Tim Boetsch
Lions. Pawlak lost last match, Millard beat wrestlers. Pete Mielnik (4-13) will likely get the
season to Cliff Wonsettler nationally ranked Jeff (16-9) or Ryan Cummins nod for the Haven, while
7-5.
(9-8) will take the mat for Pat Cummins (8-7) will
Knupp 6-2.
184- Josh Millard,
197 In the final of the Nittany Lions. Zerkle see action for Penn State.
currently No. 18 and 16-5, Poff's key match-ups, defeated Dave Keckard Neither of these wrestlers
will face Curt Thompson Avery Zerkle (11-6) will 11-6 last year.
was in action in last years
-
■
-
Men lose to IUP in overtime Women drop final
home game to IUP
Jared Guest
Eagle Eye Staff
The run for the PSAC
postseason ended earlier in
Kevin Carver
the week for the men's basketball team, but by watching Wednesday night's contest against IUP (21-4, 8-3),
the Haven have not packed it
in. The Bald Eagles (8-17,
4-7) were edged in overtime
78-77 by No. 21 IUP in
Thomas Field House.
George Bailey poured in
a game high of 26 points and
added four blocks, giving
him 74 blocks on the season.
Bailey leads Men's
Division 11 in
Eagle Eye Staff 1
Despite the electric
of
the
atmosphere
women's
basketball
team's final home game,
HbIbIbIbIbIbbRsIM
Bball
and Chris Ruff had eight
points and five assists.
The Indian's Dennis
Mimshad a double double of
(18 points and 15 boards)
before fouling out in overtime. Teammate Leon Piper
scored 16, with 12 coming in
the first half.
Keenan
Holmes, member of last season's PSAC West First Team
In the first meeting of the
season between these two
teams, IUP came away with
a 31-point victory. IUP
entered the game, having lost
their last two ofthree games
to PSAC West playoff bound
teams. This is their 10th
straight season of making the
PSAC postseason.
IUP held a slight margin
at halftime 33-25. They then
went on to establish a 21point lead with 8:55 left in
the game.
The Haven's next possession was a made three
pointer by Zujovic, starting a
24-6 run to close the game
out. Bailey scored nine during this run and tied the
game at 64 after completing
a three-point play.
He then would respond
on the other side of the ball
as he blocked a Holmes
jumper, sending the game
into overtime.
LHU jumped out to a
quick 67-64 lead after Ruff
completed a three-point
points and four assists
with
Sara
along
McKinney's 17 points
and
nine
rebounds,
California improved to 82 in PSAC play.
game-high 11 rebounds.
Despite
pin-point
shooting from Cyndi
the Haven fell to Indiana
Crowl
and
Melissa
LHU
35
University, 80-68.
Picarsic,
the
Haven
was
CalU
74
Led by point guard
overmatched
one
of
by
Jacquie Negrelli's 27
the best teams in their
Lock Haven took one
points and six assists,
IUP built a 46-27 halfon the chin Saturday division. Both players
time lead.
afternoon. The Vulcans finished with 10 points
The Bald Eagles (8of California dominated each.
The Haven's final
16, 2-9) fought back in the Bald Eagles in every
the second half behind aspect of the game, and game of the season will
come
tomorrow
at
Amy Daniels's 22 points, came away with the vicEdinboro
University.
19 coming after the tory, 74-35.
Led by point guard Lock Haven came out on
break.
18 top in the teams' first
Cyndi Crowl chipped Jenni Morrison's
meeting, 68-66.
averaging 3.94 per game.
Kris Holtzer followed
with 21, going two of three
from behind the arc.
Vladimir Zujovic put in 13
added 15.
in with 13 points and five
rebounds while Nicole
Schimelfenig dished out
six assists to go along
with her 12 points. Anita
Charles pulled down a
- P.J. Harmer/ The Eagle Eye
George Bailey, the nation's leader in blocked shots, goes up for
F
a dunk, as the team dropped a heart-breaking game to IUP.
play. The Indians tied the
game at 70-70 with 2:59
remaining in overtime.
Sean Whalen would then hit
a wide-open three, giving
IUP the commanding lead,
73-70.
A Holtzer bucket got
the Haven back to within in
one, but Holmes got a layup to fall, making it a 77-74
IUP lead with 15 seconds
left.
The Haven had a chance
to tie the game, but turned
the ball over. LHU got the
ball back after IUP made
one of two free throws, but
it was a two possession
game with a few ticks left
on the clock. Holtzer hit a
running three-pointer to
beat the buzzer, but the
Haven upset fell one short.
CalU
the field.
Cal (20-4, 8-2) ran
■
I
LHU
64
second half.
Ishmieal
Kamara had the hot hand as
he put in a game high 26
points. Tom Frederick and
David Jack each put in 12.
The Bald Eagles travel
to Edinboro tomorrow for
their last game of the season. LHU looks to win five
conferences games, something they have not done
since the '95-96 season.
California, IUP, Edinboro
and Clarion all have
secured the spots for the
PSAC West postseason.
almost identical games
from George Bailey and
Vladimir Zujovic. Zujovic
scored 19 points and
Bailey added 18, along
Kris
with six blocks.
well
scored
eight,
Holtzer
below his average of 15.4.
LHU shot 41 percent from
@Eidorado Hotel
I
Reno. Nev. 7 p.m. II
BoxinglSat.)
I
11 l|
I
awav with the game in the
80
The Haven dropped on
the road to the PSAC West
leading California, 80-64,
last Saturday. LHU got
I
a
WBB ® Eb r 3
°
-
pm
°
mbb E'boro 5
II
I
Scheduled
-
P.J. Harmer/The Eagle Eye
Cyndi Crowl (32) drives in against IUP on Wednesday, Crowl
chipped in 13 points for the Bald Eagles.
I
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1
Scheduled
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Media of