BHeiney
Wed, 07/05/2023 - 14:41
Edited Text
Black Students Sit
In on Lit. Class
E ^E
Vol. XIII No. 82
EYE
LOCK NAViN STATE COLLECE
Mon. March 9,1970
LHS Recognized
Lx>ck Haven
State
College
was awarded special recognition
for its student teacher program
.- by the American Association
of CoUeges for Teacher Education at the annual convention
^ in Chicago on F e b . 26- Miss
Lydia Gross, director of elementary education,
accepted the
certificate
of recognition on
behalf of the the college.
LHS was given recognition for
its program in which student
teachers are prepared through
a unified, one-semester program
of concentrated teaching experiences and techniques, j h e r e is
a
minimum of conventiinal
instruction.
Emphasis ' s on
laboratory experience."?, microteaching, remedial tutoring of
disadvantaged youth and
enrichment a c t i v i t i e s .
T h e purpose of the AACTE
Distinguist>ed
Achievement
Awards program, now in its
sixth year, is to identify
and
honor
programs
in
higher
education
which
are
making
outstanding contributior^s to the
improvement of teacher education.
Particiti.li'
in the 1970
award comp t-tioi .nvolvea over
150 member institutions throughout the United S t a t e s . Membership
in the a s s o c i a t i o n
is
held by nearly 850 coUeges
and universities that maint.'in
programs of teacher preparation.
To Present Plays
The Private Ear and The Public
Eye will be the spring p l a y s
presented in Price Auditorium
by the College Players on May
7, 8, and 9.
Dr. Denys Gary, who will
direct the 2 one-act plays
written by Peter Shafer, stated
that the plays cound only be
classified
a s " m o d e r n " with
each one having unusual impact. He feels that each play
is
designed
to
demonstrate
excellent interpretative drama.
Miss Maizie Wiel is servintj
a s technical director while Mrs.
Hazel Ferguson w i l l act as
costumer.
COLLEGE STUDENT T O SUE P A P E R : Carol Morgan, Lock Haven
English major, affectionately know as " C o o k i e " will most probably
be suing the Eagle Eye when this picture carries out in today's issue
She is busy studying in Ris sell Hall.
^RTfll^
MIIXER''
WHAT ?
The nuipber of "problem
drinkers" in the U.S. is rising
ot o greater speed than the
total population.
Council Meets
Contestants
The Women'.s Dorm Council
held a meeting Thursday, F e b
19 at
1:00 Pm in Woolridge
Lounge for the eighteen contestants
entering
the
Miss
Lock Haven State Scholarship
Pageant. Under the direction of
Becky Morgan and Jeri Umberger,
chairwomen,
each
girl
was
photographed
and interviewed.
These photos will be used for
pigeanl
programs
and
the
PRAECO: they will a l s o be
s e n t to each e n t r a n t ' s home town
newspaper.
The pageant w\il be held in
Price
Auditorium,
April
4.
7 30 pm where each contestanv
will be judged in evening gown
and talent competition following
a personality and poise interview held the morning of the
pageant.
Contestants represent a wide
range of s t u d e n t s , from freshmen
to s e n i o r s . T h e s e girls will try
for the $200 scholarship fund
and other prizes
donated by
local merchants, yy^^ winner of
the pageant will go directly
to
the Miss
Pennsylvania
pageant
as
Lock
Haven's
college representative,„ and if
she wins there. Miss America
will loom as a possible title.
A number of black students
sat in on a black literature
seminar
composed mostly of
white students on Friday February 20. The c l a s s conducted
by Vincent Stewart on the third
floor of the college library, is a
study of minori ty American black
w r i t e r s . The visiting black students discussed with the other
students how black literature
can be made more meaningful and
the problems encountered when
studied by white s t u d e n t s . The
d i s c u s s i o n was a result of Wedn e s d a y ' s c l a s s at which time
Stewart posed a question concerning the nature of black literature.
During the c l a s s conducted on
February 18» one of the two
black students in the cJaS5
questioned
the white students*
sincerity of trying to understand
black people and their w r i t i n g s .
The resulting discussion raised
numerous questions concerning
the validity of the course and
succeeded in upsetting a number
of white s t u d e n t s . At the following class meeting on February
20. numerous black stuoents
cpme because they were interestby what had l a k e n . p l a c e on the
preceeding Wednesday.
Friday's d i s c u s s i o n covered
things ranging " from white inexperience with black literature
to what makes black writing
black.
The fact that white
people will never fully understand the black and his writings
was brought out by s e v e r a l black
students.
The impact of the
situation caused many white students to re-examine their reasons
for studying black literature.
Pr©fs Write Manua
Concerned over the lack of
knowledge about pollution and
the population explosion, three
members of the biology department
at
Lock
Haven State
College have authored a laboratory marual for use in basic
biology courses.
Published
this
month
by
Kendall-Hunt of Dubuque, Iowa,
"Happenings in Biology" was
written by professors
Robert
Scherer, Paul Schwalbe, and
Kenneth Settiemyer. The manual
was designed specifically for
use a t Lock Haven State but is
available to other schools as
a standard lab manual.
The exercises consist of two
types—structured,
traditional
exercises
and
experimental,
open-ended e x e r c i s e s .
In onethird of the exercises the procedure is carefully explained,
step
by s t e p , such as how
to use a microscope.
The remaining experimental exercises
tell the student how to begin,
provide only a minimum of
directions, and allow the student
to draw his own c o n c l u s i o n s .
All
exercises
were
tested
under classroom conditions a t
Lock Haven before being incorpi
orated into the manual.
Emphasis is on ccology(man's
relation to his
environment)
and genetics(the study of inherited characteristics), information which the authors consider
the most useful to non-science
majors in better understanding
'A VIEW
^JfOjff
the problems of pollution and
growth.
"Since we feel that education
is a process separate and distinct from training, it is our
hope that these e x e r c i s e s will
stimulate
continuing
selfeducation by the student in an
attempt to better understand and
improve the world in which we
live and the role ma n musl
play if mankind is to s u r v i v e , "
state the authors in their preface.
Narcotics Drama
To Be Presented
A drama about narcotics wiH
be presented at Lock naven
State College today and Thursday, at 7:30 pm in the Eagle
Wing of the Parsons
Student
Union. Written by John Carlino,
" T h e Brick arxi the R o s e ' is
a Readers Theatre production
under the direction
of
Dr.
Robert Kidder.
The play is concerned with
young Tommy DeSanto's struggle
for existence in a targe, frightening city.
Tommy encounters
Freddy the p o x , the friei-dly
dope pusher , who entangles him
with narcotics to the point of
no return.
Appearing in the production
will be
oajy
Gadson, Bill
A n a s t a s i a , Alice Ulmer, Hugh
MrNelis, Geoffrey J o n e s , Pat
Hegeman,
Lynn
Miner,
Joe
Levandoski, Ed Meyer, and Jim
Crampton.
The play is open to the
public free of charge.
T^ ^Jt/n
GS.
players
college
directed by
Dr. Denys G a r y
WEEK-END DRAMA: At left,
Italian immigrant, takes out
Corbone (Bob Maloney). In
bone confronts Rudolpho
Ivurco, (joe Scott)
his wrath as Eddie
the center. Car(Jaciv Heagney)
a s Beatrice (Nelle F a s t m a n ) pleads with her
w i t h b a n d to l e a v e R u d o l n h o a lone. At r i g h t ,
a f r u s t r a t e and b e r s e r k Corbone d r a w s t h e
knife (which he is e v e n t u a l l y k i l l e a w i t h )
on his a s s a i l a n t . C a t h e r i n e ( C a r o l P e t e r s o n )
c r i e s on .
Arthur M i l l e r ' s p r o d u c t i o n « c . ,
pres e n t e d T h u r s . , F r i . , and S a t . n i g h t s by the
CoUege P l a y e r s .
LHS Nips Clarion for Title/ 6 6 - 6 5
Fay, Foley, Brodmerkel
Capture Championships
Slippery Rock State College has never won a Pennsylvania
Conference wrestling championship but thev played the role
of the spoiler Saturday evening and gave Lock Haven its
second consecutive team title and its 15th during the 27 year
histjry of the meet.
The hero of the evening for
LHS fans was freshman George
Enos, che Rockets 190-poander
who uf)set first s e d e d Jack
Riegel of Clarion 3-1 to clinch
the tournament for the Bald
Eagles
by
a single
point,
66 for LHS and 65 for Clarion.
Both LHS and Ciarion had
five men going into the finals
and the Golden Eagles held a
62-57 lead in the team standings
and about the only chance LHS
had for the title was mathematical.
But evervone seemed to forget
about Slippery Rock as the:'
upset
two Clarion
grapplers
giving the title to the Bald Eagles.
Enos a 5-2 victim to Riegel
earlier in the s e a s o n came up
with the effort of the evening
when he revenged that loss with
a 3-1 -upset giving the team
title to .^W:i.
The Rockets freshman grappler
fought Riegel off for the first
period and then took a 3-u 'ead
after two periods with an escape
anu a takedown.
After a long delay for a nose
bleed by Riegel Enos continued
to battle the Clarion grappler
in the third period and the only
point R i e g e l salvaged was an
e s c a p e in the fintl period.
LHS quickly caught Clarion
and overtook the Golden E a g l e s
63-62 after the first two bouts
of the finals
Donnie Fay e a s i l y defended
the ' t i t l e he won a year ago
with
an
8-2 decision over
Larry Harrington of Edinboro
at l l g - p o u n d s .
F a y used a
first period takedown and a
reversal and a takedown in the
final period along with
two
points riding time while Harington registered two e s c a p e s .
Shane Foley put the E a g l e s
into the lead 63-62 with a
" r e v e n g e " d e c i s i o n over Dale
Murdock of c l a r i o n
6-3. Murdock had pinned Foley during
a dual match earlier in the year
but the Bald Eagle captain
was never behind this time as
he used two r e v e r s a l s and two
points ridjne time enroute to his
victory, ine win was a big one
for the E a g l e s at the time as il
knocked out one of the five
Clarion f i n a l i s t s .
One of the many upsets of the
evening followed
>n the 134pound
class
when
Warren
Z a t e z a l o of California decisioned
LHS's Larry Rippey, ^ 5 .
It
was the first loss of the s e a s o n
for Rippey who showed some
effects of an automobile accident that occurred earleir in
the week.
Z a t e z a l o used two third period
takedowns and an escape i.>upset the Bald Eagle grappler.
Defending champion Dave Cook
of California a l s o bit the dust
in the 142-pound c l a s s when
Bald Eagle Paul Brodmerkel
revenged a 3 - 0 ' l o s s from last
y e a r ' s finals and registcied
a 4-1 verdict leaving the Eagles
s t i l l with a shot at the team
title.
Brodmerkel used an escape and
a takedown in the second
period along with a point time
advantage to ice his victory.
Slippery Hock who had three
men in the finals captured their
first
invividual
champion
in
tournament history vhen Stan
Dz.edic threw Uan Rossi of
E a s t stroudsburg all
over the
mat enroute to an easy
8-1
verdict.
Dziedic used two
takedowns, a reversal and two
points time a d v a n t a g e .
Clarion headed into the final
five bouts with four finalists
and only down by tour points
and things couldn't have looked
brighter f o r ' h e Go den Hagles.
Defending champ Arnie Thompson of Bloomsbui
erased one
of the four remaining Golden
E a g l e s with
a thrilling
6-5
decision over Les Bressler at
158-pounds.
Thompson had been trailing
4-2 going into the final period
but used an escape and a takedown to tie the match and
clinched it on a point riding
time.
Clarion
suffered
another
setback
at
167-pounds w h t n
highly
touted Santo Ricotta
suffered a close 5-4 decision
to Bill Shellborn of Slippery
Rock.
The Rocket surprised
everyone inclusing Riccota as
le went right in and took the
Clarion star to the mat.
Ricotta
took a 3-2 lead
in the second period in an es-
Shane Enroute to Victory
c a p e and a t a k e d o w n but escaped
in
the f i n a l
upriod to
c l i n c h the victory e v e n though
Ricotta
received
a
penalty
point.
T h e Golden E a g l e s
captured
t h e i r oniy i n d i v i d u a l c h a m p i o n
a s H e n r y Shaffer c a m e from a
2-0 deficit to clip A l a n Detweiler
of l i a s t S t r o u d s b u r g , 8-4 s e n d i n g
t h e G o l d e n ' i a g l e s t o o n l y one
p o i n t LHS in the t e a m s c o r i n g
leaving the heroics up to Enos
in t h e 190 pound b o u t .
In t h e f i n a l b o u t of t h e e v e n i n g
o n e thiit E S S C f a n s h a d lont,
awaited
for,
which featured
Rich
Schumacher
and
LHS's
S c o t t ,;r(i->k.s.
B o t h b o y s had
m e t e a r l i e r in a d u a l m a t c h and
o a t t l e d t o a 1-1 l i - ' . S c h u m a c h e r
d i d lot h a v e a,', much t r c u b . e
with Brooks
t h i s t i m e a s (-•;
d e c k e d t h e H a g l e g r a p p l e r in
3 59.
c o m m e n t i n g on
his
team's
seconu
place
finish
Clarion
Coach
Bob
Bubb s a i d , "We
did a g o o d j o b .
It w a s t o u g h
t o h a v e five men in the f i n a l s
a n d h a v e t w o of t h e m l o s e by a
p o i n t . II w a s v e r y f r u s t r a t i n g t o
l a s e a l t h o u g h we did a c c o m p l i s h
m a n y thing.s d u r i n g t h e s e a s o n by
b e a t i n g West C h e s t e r , B l o o m s burg
and Lock H a v e n .
I^ock
H a v e n s h o w e d i t s m a t u r i t y and
t h e i r front four did a g r e a t j o b . "
MAT M E M O - l e a d ing the
LHS
cheering
the
entire
"'ecKend
w e r e Tom L o s c h , Steve Bedford, Joe C a s s e r a , Cruig T a x i s ,
Larry
Shervanick,
Karen
Final Team Standings
Hwerzinshi,
Trice
O'Brien,
P « m Mock a n d J o h n R i p o l i . . . LHS
66
Bynie
p a r ker w h o
had
gone Clarion
65
in
replace
of
Larry
Rippey
60
ESSC
w a s a r o t h e r of
the
cheering
46
B l o o m s b u r g ;., ^
l e a d e r s . . . t n e r e w a s a l s o a b i g S l i p p e r y R o c j ^ -. ;
45
b a n d of T K E ' s a t t h e f i n a l s
28
California • s
Saturday
evening.
.
. S l i p p o r V S h i p p e n s b u r g if V,
23
R o c k s h o w e d t h e b i g g e s t ju.^ip E d i n b o r o
• 14
in the t e a m s t a n d i n g s h a v i n g
11
MiUersville
s c o r e d 45 p o i n t s t h i s
year
Kutztown
t o only three
l a s t . . .only
Mansfield
'« '.M
11 of t h e 13 c o n f e r e n c e m e m b e r s
Finals
competed
in
the
tourney.
llS-Fky ILH) dec. Harrington. 8-3.
126-Poley (LH) dec. Murdock. 8-3.
Cheyney doesn't have wrestling
134-Zatezalo (Ca) dec. Rippey (LH), 9-9.
a n d W e s t C h e s t e r p a s s e d it u p
143-Brodinerkel (LH) dec. Cook (Ca).
for the MAC t o u r n e y . . . e i g h t of
4-1.
190-Dzledzic (SR) dec. KossI (ESI. 8-)..
the
11 h e a d
coaches
were
158-Thompson (B) dec. Bressler (CD,
former L H S g r a d u a t e s . . . T h e
6-S.
to c o n g r a d u l a t e
117-Schellborn (SR) dec. Ricotta (Cl),
first p e r s o n
5-4.
G
e
o
r
g
e
E
n
o
s
a
n
d
the Rockets
177-ShalTer (CD dec. Detwller (ESi,8-4.
LHS
Coach
Fred Powell was
ISO-Enos (SR) dec. Relgel (Cl), 3-1.
G
r
a
y
S
i
m
o
n
s
a
l
o
n
g
Hwt.-Schumacher
(S8) pinned Brooke
h e a d mentor
(LH), 3:59.
B
a
l
d
with the
r e s t of t h e
Scmi-Flnals
Powell
Eagle squad members.
lU-Fay (LH) dec. Donahue ici), 14-4
Harrington (Ed) dec. Pease (E8i, 7-6.
w a s a former . ICAA c h a m p i o n a t
13e-Pcley (LHI dec. B. Carman (Sh)
L H S . • . P o w j l l r e c e i v e d many
10-4: Murdock (Cl) dec. Chilmonik (ES>
t h a n k s from a i u s n t L H S f a n s . . .
1-0, In overtime.
R u s s Houk c o u c h a t Bloom a l s o
134-Rlppey (LH) plnneil Matter (ES), '
min.;
Zatezalo (Ca) dec. Smythe (B), 3-0
received
thanks
for
the
win
142-Brodmerkel (LH) won by default
Arnie T h o m p s o n r e c o r l e d over
over Huber (ES); Cook (Ca) dec. Weiss
Les Bressler.
H o u k ' s quote to
(B), 5-3.
UO-Dzledzic (SR) pinned March (Edi,
o n e fan w a s t h a t a f t e r B l o o m s 6:30; Rossi (ES) dec. Taxis (LHI 1-7.
b u r g he n a t u r a l l y w a s c h e e r i n g
168-Bressler (Cl) dec: Vokes (LH), IC-S,
for L H S - . . H o u k a l s o a l s o c a m e
Thompson (B) dec. Epler (ES), 10-1 In
overtime.
u p witn this q u i p . ' ' LHS s h o u l d
167-Ricotta (CD dec. McKee ,.VIa), 7-0;
s h o u l d give h i m a c h a n c e a g a i n
Schellborn (SR) dec. Greening (ES). 11-6.
since he hasn't won anything
177-Detwller (ES) dec. Hawkins sUfi.
for
five
years.".
.
.Quote
6-3; Shaffer (Cl) dec. ColBnberger (Ml,
8-2.
overheard after the tourney " I
190-Enos (SR) dec. Devore (ES), 7-1;
liked the k e l l e y g r e e n uniforms
Reigel (Cl) dec. Llebel (Ed), 9-4.
thaf-lippery Rock w o r e . "
Hwt -Shumacher (ES) dec Piper (Ca).
7-1, Brooks (LH) dec Hummel iBi. 9-4.
Photos
by John
Ripoli
Coach Receives Trophy
Coach
and LHS Champions
In on Lit. Class
E ^E
Vol. XIII No. 82
EYE
LOCK NAViN STATE COLLECE
Mon. March 9,1970
LHS Recognized
Lx>ck Haven
State
College
was awarded special recognition
for its student teacher program
.- by the American Association
of CoUeges for Teacher Education at the annual convention
^ in Chicago on F e b . 26- Miss
Lydia Gross, director of elementary education,
accepted the
certificate
of recognition on
behalf of the the college.
LHS was given recognition for
its program in which student
teachers are prepared through
a unified, one-semester program
of concentrated teaching experiences and techniques, j h e r e is
a
minimum of conventiinal
instruction.
Emphasis ' s on
laboratory experience."?, microteaching, remedial tutoring of
disadvantaged youth and
enrichment a c t i v i t i e s .
T h e purpose of the AACTE
Distinguist>ed
Achievement
Awards program, now in its
sixth year, is to identify
and
honor
programs
in
higher
education
which
are
making
outstanding contributior^s to the
improvement of teacher education.
Particiti.li'
in the 1970
award comp t-tioi .nvolvea over
150 member institutions throughout the United S t a t e s . Membership
in the a s s o c i a t i o n
is
held by nearly 850 coUeges
and universities that maint.'in
programs of teacher preparation.
To Present Plays
The Private Ear and The Public
Eye will be the spring p l a y s
presented in Price Auditorium
by the College Players on May
7, 8, and 9.
Dr. Denys Gary, who will
direct the 2 one-act plays
written by Peter Shafer, stated
that the plays cound only be
classified
a s " m o d e r n " with
each one having unusual impact. He feels that each play
is
designed
to
demonstrate
excellent interpretative drama.
Miss Maizie Wiel is servintj
a s technical director while Mrs.
Hazel Ferguson w i l l act as
costumer.
COLLEGE STUDENT T O SUE P A P E R : Carol Morgan, Lock Haven
English major, affectionately know as " C o o k i e " will most probably
be suing the Eagle Eye when this picture carries out in today's issue
She is busy studying in Ris sell Hall.
^RTfll^
MIIXER''
WHAT ?
The nuipber of "problem
drinkers" in the U.S. is rising
ot o greater speed than the
total population.
Council Meets
Contestants
The Women'.s Dorm Council
held a meeting Thursday, F e b
19 at
1:00 Pm in Woolridge
Lounge for the eighteen contestants
entering
the
Miss
Lock Haven State Scholarship
Pageant. Under the direction of
Becky Morgan and Jeri Umberger,
chairwomen,
each
girl
was
photographed
and interviewed.
These photos will be used for
pigeanl
programs
and
the
PRAECO: they will a l s o be
s e n t to each e n t r a n t ' s home town
newspaper.
The pageant w\il be held in
Price
Auditorium,
April
4.
7 30 pm where each contestanv
will be judged in evening gown
and talent competition following
a personality and poise interview held the morning of the
pageant.
Contestants represent a wide
range of s t u d e n t s , from freshmen
to s e n i o r s . T h e s e girls will try
for the $200 scholarship fund
and other prizes
donated by
local merchants, yy^^ winner of
the pageant will go directly
to
the Miss
Pennsylvania
pageant
as
Lock
Haven's
college representative,„ and if
she wins there. Miss America
will loom as a possible title.
A number of black students
sat in on a black literature
seminar
composed mostly of
white students on Friday February 20. The c l a s s conducted
by Vincent Stewart on the third
floor of the college library, is a
study of minori ty American black
w r i t e r s . The visiting black students discussed with the other
students how black literature
can be made more meaningful and
the problems encountered when
studied by white s t u d e n t s . The
d i s c u s s i o n was a result of Wedn e s d a y ' s c l a s s at which time
Stewart posed a question concerning the nature of black literature.
During the c l a s s conducted on
February 18» one of the two
black students in the cJaS5
questioned
the white students*
sincerity of trying to understand
black people and their w r i t i n g s .
The resulting discussion raised
numerous questions concerning
the validity of the course and
succeeded in upsetting a number
of white s t u d e n t s . At the following class meeting on February
20. numerous black stuoents
cpme because they were interestby what had l a k e n . p l a c e on the
preceeding Wednesday.
Friday's d i s c u s s i o n covered
things ranging " from white inexperience with black literature
to what makes black writing
black.
The fact that white
people will never fully understand the black and his writings
was brought out by s e v e r a l black
students.
The impact of the
situation caused many white students to re-examine their reasons
for studying black literature.
Pr©fs Write Manua
Concerned over the lack of
knowledge about pollution and
the population explosion, three
members of the biology department
at
Lock
Haven State
College have authored a laboratory marual for use in basic
biology courses.
Published
this
month
by
Kendall-Hunt of Dubuque, Iowa,
"Happenings in Biology" was
written by professors
Robert
Scherer, Paul Schwalbe, and
Kenneth Settiemyer. The manual
was designed specifically for
use a t Lock Haven State but is
available to other schools as
a standard lab manual.
The exercises consist of two
types—structured,
traditional
exercises
and
experimental,
open-ended e x e r c i s e s .
In onethird of the exercises the procedure is carefully explained,
step
by s t e p , such as how
to use a microscope.
The remaining experimental exercises
tell the student how to begin,
provide only a minimum of
directions, and allow the student
to draw his own c o n c l u s i o n s .
All
exercises
were
tested
under classroom conditions a t
Lock Haven before being incorpi
orated into the manual.
Emphasis is on ccology(man's
relation to his
environment)
and genetics(the study of inherited characteristics), information which the authors consider
the most useful to non-science
majors in better understanding
'A VIEW
^JfOjff
the problems of pollution and
growth.
"Since we feel that education
is a process separate and distinct from training, it is our
hope that these e x e r c i s e s will
stimulate
continuing
selfeducation by the student in an
attempt to better understand and
improve the world in which we
live and the role ma n musl
play if mankind is to s u r v i v e , "
state the authors in their preface.
Narcotics Drama
To Be Presented
A drama about narcotics wiH
be presented at Lock naven
State College today and Thursday, at 7:30 pm in the Eagle
Wing of the Parsons
Student
Union. Written by John Carlino,
" T h e Brick arxi the R o s e ' is
a Readers Theatre production
under the direction
of
Dr.
Robert Kidder.
The play is concerned with
young Tommy DeSanto's struggle
for existence in a targe, frightening city.
Tommy encounters
Freddy the p o x , the friei-dly
dope pusher , who entangles him
with narcotics to the point of
no return.
Appearing in the production
will be
oajy
Gadson, Bill
A n a s t a s i a , Alice Ulmer, Hugh
MrNelis, Geoffrey J o n e s , Pat
Hegeman,
Lynn
Miner,
Joe
Levandoski, Ed Meyer, and Jim
Crampton.
The play is open to the
public free of charge.
T^ ^Jt/n
GS.
players
college
directed by
Dr. Denys G a r y
WEEK-END DRAMA: At left,
Italian immigrant, takes out
Corbone (Bob Maloney). In
bone confronts Rudolpho
Ivurco, (joe Scott)
his wrath as Eddie
the center. Car(Jaciv Heagney)
a s Beatrice (Nelle F a s t m a n ) pleads with her
w i t h b a n d to l e a v e R u d o l n h o a lone. At r i g h t ,
a f r u s t r a t e and b e r s e r k Corbone d r a w s t h e
knife (which he is e v e n t u a l l y k i l l e a w i t h )
on his a s s a i l a n t . C a t h e r i n e ( C a r o l P e t e r s o n )
c r i e s on .
Arthur M i l l e r ' s p r o d u c t i o n « c . ,
pres e n t e d T h u r s . , F r i . , and S a t . n i g h t s by the
CoUege P l a y e r s .
LHS Nips Clarion for Title/ 6 6 - 6 5
Fay, Foley, Brodmerkel
Capture Championships
Slippery Rock State College has never won a Pennsylvania
Conference wrestling championship but thev played the role
of the spoiler Saturday evening and gave Lock Haven its
second consecutive team title and its 15th during the 27 year
histjry of the meet.
The hero of the evening for
LHS fans was freshman George
Enos, che Rockets 190-poander
who uf)set first s e d e d Jack
Riegel of Clarion 3-1 to clinch
the tournament for the Bald
Eagles
by
a single
point,
66 for LHS and 65 for Clarion.
Both LHS and Ciarion had
five men going into the finals
and the Golden Eagles held a
62-57 lead in the team standings
and about the only chance LHS
had for the title was mathematical.
But evervone seemed to forget
about Slippery Rock as the:'
upset
two Clarion
grapplers
giving the title to the Bald Eagles.
Enos a 5-2 victim to Riegel
earlier in the s e a s o n came up
with the effort of the evening
when he revenged that loss with
a 3-1 -upset giving the team
title to .^W:i.
The Rockets freshman grappler
fought Riegel off for the first
period and then took a 3-u 'ead
after two periods with an escape
anu a takedown.
After a long delay for a nose
bleed by Riegel Enos continued
to battle the Clarion grappler
in the third period and the only
point R i e g e l salvaged was an
e s c a p e in the fintl period.
LHS quickly caught Clarion
and overtook the Golden E a g l e s
63-62 after the first two bouts
of the finals
Donnie Fay e a s i l y defended
the ' t i t l e he won a year ago
with
an
8-2 decision over
Larry Harrington of Edinboro
at l l g - p o u n d s .
F a y used a
first period takedown and a
reversal and a takedown in the
final period along with
two
points riding time while Harington registered two e s c a p e s .
Shane Foley put the E a g l e s
into the lead 63-62 with a
" r e v e n g e " d e c i s i o n over Dale
Murdock of c l a r i o n
6-3. Murdock had pinned Foley during
a dual match earlier in the year
but the Bald Eagle captain
was never behind this time as
he used two r e v e r s a l s and two
points ridjne time enroute to his
victory, ine win was a big one
for the E a g l e s at the time as il
knocked out one of the five
Clarion f i n a l i s t s .
One of the many upsets of the
evening followed
>n the 134pound
class
when
Warren
Z a t e z a l o of California decisioned
LHS's Larry Rippey, ^ 5 .
It
was the first loss of the s e a s o n
for Rippey who showed some
effects of an automobile accident that occurred earleir in
the week.
Z a t e z a l o used two third period
takedowns and an escape i.>upset the Bald Eagle grappler.
Defending champion Dave Cook
of California a l s o bit the dust
in the 142-pound c l a s s when
Bald Eagle Paul Brodmerkel
revenged a 3 - 0 ' l o s s from last
y e a r ' s finals and registcied
a 4-1 verdict leaving the Eagles
s t i l l with a shot at the team
title.
Brodmerkel used an escape and
a takedown in the second
period along with a point time
advantage to ice his victory.
Slippery Hock who had three
men in the finals captured their
first
invividual
champion
in
tournament history vhen Stan
Dz.edic threw Uan Rossi of
E a s t stroudsburg all
over the
mat enroute to an easy
8-1
verdict.
Dziedic used two
takedowns, a reversal and two
points time a d v a n t a g e .
Clarion headed into the final
five bouts with four finalists
and only down by tour points
and things couldn't have looked
brighter f o r ' h e Go den Hagles.
Defending champ Arnie Thompson of Bloomsbui
erased one
of the four remaining Golden
E a g l e s with
a thrilling
6-5
decision over Les Bressler at
158-pounds.
Thompson had been trailing
4-2 going into the final period
but used an escape and a takedown to tie the match and
clinched it on a point riding
time.
Clarion
suffered
another
setback
at
167-pounds w h t n
highly
touted Santo Ricotta
suffered a close 5-4 decision
to Bill Shellborn of Slippery
Rock.
The Rocket surprised
everyone inclusing Riccota as
le went right in and took the
Clarion star to the mat.
Ricotta
took a 3-2 lead
in the second period in an es-
Shane Enroute to Victory
c a p e and a t a k e d o w n but escaped
in
the f i n a l
upriod to
c l i n c h the victory e v e n though
Ricotta
received
a
penalty
point.
T h e Golden E a g l e s
captured
t h e i r oniy i n d i v i d u a l c h a m p i o n
a s H e n r y Shaffer c a m e from a
2-0 deficit to clip A l a n Detweiler
of l i a s t S t r o u d s b u r g , 8-4 s e n d i n g
t h e G o l d e n ' i a g l e s t o o n l y one
p o i n t LHS in the t e a m s c o r i n g
leaving the heroics up to Enos
in t h e 190 pound b o u t .
In t h e f i n a l b o u t of t h e e v e n i n g
o n e thiit E S S C f a n s h a d lont,
awaited
for,
which featured
Rich
Schumacher
and
LHS's
S c o t t ,;r(i->k.s.
B o t h b o y s had
m e t e a r l i e r in a d u a l m a t c h and
o a t t l e d t o a 1-1 l i - ' . S c h u m a c h e r
d i d lot h a v e a,', much t r c u b . e
with Brooks
t h i s t i m e a s (-•;
d e c k e d t h e H a g l e g r a p p l e r in
3 59.
c o m m e n t i n g on
his
team's
seconu
place
finish
Clarion
Coach
Bob
Bubb s a i d , "We
did a g o o d j o b .
It w a s t o u g h
t o h a v e five men in the f i n a l s
a n d h a v e t w o of t h e m l o s e by a
p o i n t . II w a s v e r y f r u s t r a t i n g t o
l a s e a l t h o u g h we did a c c o m p l i s h
m a n y thing.s d u r i n g t h e s e a s o n by
b e a t i n g West C h e s t e r , B l o o m s burg
and Lock H a v e n .
I^ock
H a v e n s h o w e d i t s m a t u r i t y and
t h e i r front four did a g r e a t j o b . "
MAT M E M O - l e a d ing the
LHS
cheering
the
entire
"'ecKend
w e r e Tom L o s c h , Steve Bedford, Joe C a s s e r a , Cruig T a x i s ,
Larry
Shervanick,
Karen
Final Team Standings
Hwerzinshi,
Trice
O'Brien,
P « m Mock a n d J o h n R i p o l i . . . LHS
66
Bynie
p a r ker w h o
had
gone Clarion
65
in
replace
of
Larry
Rippey
60
ESSC
w a s a r o t h e r of
the
cheering
46
B l o o m s b u r g ;., ^
l e a d e r s . . . t n e r e w a s a l s o a b i g S l i p p e r y R o c j ^ -. ;
45
b a n d of T K E ' s a t t h e f i n a l s
28
California • s
Saturday
evening.
.
. S l i p p o r V S h i p p e n s b u r g if V,
23
R o c k s h o w e d t h e b i g g e s t ju.^ip E d i n b o r o
• 14
in the t e a m s t a n d i n g s h a v i n g
11
MiUersville
s c o r e d 45 p o i n t s t h i s
year
Kutztown
t o only three
l a s t . . .only
Mansfield
'« '.M
11 of t h e 13 c o n f e r e n c e m e m b e r s
Finals
competed
in
the
tourney.
llS-Fky ILH) dec. Harrington. 8-3.
126-Poley (LH) dec. Murdock. 8-3.
Cheyney doesn't have wrestling
134-Zatezalo (Ca) dec. Rippey (LH), 9-9.
a n d W e s t C h e s t e r p a s s e d it u p
143-Brodinerkel (LH) dec. Cook (Ca).
for the MAC t o u r n e y . . . e i g h t of
4-1.
190-Dzledzic (SR) dec. KossI (ESI. 8-)..
the
11 h e a d
coaches
were
158-Thompson (B) dec. Bressler (CD,
former L H S g r a d u a t e s . . . T h e
6-S.
to c o n g r a d u l a t e
117-Schellborn (SR) dec. Ricotta (Cl),
first p e r s o n
5-4.
G
e
o
r
g
e
E
n
o
s
a
n
d
the Rockets
177-ShalTer (CD dec. Detwller (ESi,8-4.
LHS
Coach
Fred Powell was
ISO-Enos (SR) dec. Relgel (Cl), 3-1.
G
r
a
y
S
i
m
o
n
s
a
l
o
n
g
Hwt.-Schumacher
(S8) pinned Brooke
h e a d mentor
(LH), 3:59.
B
a
l
d
with the
r e s t of t h e
Scmi-Flnals
Powell
Eagle squad members.
lU-Fay (LH) dec. Donahue ici), 14-4
Harrington (Ed) dec. Pease (E8i, 7-6.
w a s a former . ICAA c h a m p i o n a t
13e-Pcley (LHI dec. B. Carman (Sh)
L H S . • . P o w j l l r e c e i v e d many
10-4: Murdock (Cl) dec. Chilmonik (ES>
t h a n k s from a i u s n t L H S f a n s . . .
1-0, In overtime.
R u s s Houk c o u c h a t Bloom a l s o
134-Rlppey (LH) plnneil Matter (ES), '
min.;
Zatezalo (Ca) dec. Smythe (B), 3-0
received
thanks
for
the
win
142-Brodmerkel (LH) won by default
Arnie T h o m p s o n r e c o r l e d over
over Huber (ES); Cook (Ca) dec. Weiss
Les Bressler.
H o u k ' s quote to
(B), 5-3.
UO-Dzledzic (SR) pinned March (Edi,
o n e fan w a s t h a t a f t e r B l o o m s 6:30; Rossi (ES) dec. Taxis (LHI 1-7.
b u r g he n a t u r a l l y w a s c h e e r i n g
168-Bressler (Cl) dec: Vokes (LH), IC-S,
for L H S - . . H o u k a l s o a l s o c a m e
Thompson (B) dec. Epler (ES), 10-1 In
overtime.
u p witn this q u i p . ' ' LHS s h o u l d
167-Ricotta (CD dec. McKee ,.VIa), 7-0;
s h o u l d give h i m a c h a n c e a g a i n
Schellborn (SR) dec. Greening (ES). 11-6.
since he hasn't won anything
177-Detwller (ES) dec. Hawkins sUfi.
for
five
years.".
.
.Quote
6-3; Shaffer (Cl) dec. ColBnberger (Ml,
8-2.
overheard after the tourney " I
190-Enos (SR) dec. Devore (ES), 7-1;
liked the k e l l e y g r e e n uniforms
Reigel (Cl) dec. Llebel (Ed), 9-4.
thaf-lippery Rock w o r e . "
Hwt -Shumacher (ES) dec Piper (Ca).
7-1, Brooks (LH) dec Hummel iBi. 9-4.
Photos
by John
Ripoli
Coach Receives Trophy
Coach
and LHS Champions
Media of