BHeiney
Wed, 07/05/2023 - 15:23
Edited Text
Editorial...
To Be
Read Before Voting!
The 1972 campaign for the Executive offices of the SCC
has been plagued by lack of communication^ laclc of cooperation, and general backstabbing. We feel it n e c e s s a r y to inform the s t u d e n t s of some of the occurances of the p a s t
week. T h e s e generally "dirty p o l i t i c s " t a c t i c s have been
practiced by both parties running for office and should be of
interest to students prior to the time they indicate support of
one Derson or annthcr.

Candidates' Debate Vollevs Issues
A formal debate between the
Stixlents for Students and the
Studentfi for Progressive Reform
wae held Sunday evening in Ulmet Planetarium. Charles Bromberg acted as moderator at this
' s p e r e e l y attended, but informative debate.
After the rules for debate
were established by Pi of. Bromberg, Steve F i s h presented the
first issue which concerned the
idea of forming a Committee on
Committees. Steve outlined the
functions of this Committee which
inclttde locating responsible people t o serve on other committees,

PAVE Center
To Aid Vets
PAVE

(Program

to

Ad-

vance
Veteran
Education)
is Permsylvania's "•ttrrv"* to
motivate her returning Veterans
to
pursue
post-high
school
education by taking advantage
of t h e i r Vietnam Era G.I. B i l l .
A P.AVE center h a s been
newly
established
at LHS.
Anv veteran needing a s s i s t a n c e
(G.L
Bill,
PHEAA.etc) are
JTged to contact one of the
PAVE representatives. The
office hours are 5-8:30 Monday
through Friday and 9-12 on
Saturday in Ulmer, 310. The
service is free and run by vets
for v e t s .

acting as a guide t o schedule the
meetings of other committees and
finally, supervising all committees to s e e that they are functioning properly.
Doug Dows responding to
Steve's i s s u e stated that the fallacy of a Comm.ittee on Committees is that it has no power to
supervise a particular committee.
The purpose of the Committee on
Committees is to divide the work
equally among the members of the
Senate. Admitting that the Committee on Committees is a good
idea, Doug pointed out that this
does not guarentee participation.
He feels that the Executive
Board can provide the stimulus
for student involvement through
leadership.
The next i s s u e d i s c u s s e d
was brought forth by Larry Wise,
who made a rebuttal to the Student for Progressive Reform

International
Day
Discussed

The Community-! ojiege
International Education t o m mittee Executive Board held
its first fall meeting V/ednesday,
November 8, at 4 p.m. in the
Bentley faculty dining room.
Topics d i s c u s s e d included
host families for Christmas;
implementing an Internati ..al
Day, the proceeds of whi.h will
be used for exchange scholars h i p s ; and cooperative efforts
"Marriage is g r e a t " , declared to develop further interest in
Dr. Michael Peplow when asked International Exchange programs.
h i s feelings concerning h i s recent
The Board i s comprised
marriage.
of five members from l>ock
Dr. Peplow, a s s o c i a t e pro- Haven, iind five members from
fessor of English at LHS h a s mar- the college. The chairman of
ried Mrs. Beverly Long, secretary the committee is Dr. Michael
of t h e humanities division of the W. Peplow, a s s o c i a t e ProfesEnglish department. The ceremo- sor of English a t LHS.
ny w a s performed by Dr. Howard
According to Dr. Peplow,
K. Congdon of the E n g l i s h and
Philosophy Department in his of- " w e are dedicated to two goalsencouraging community-college
fice, on Thursday, Wov. 2.
relations on projects of common
In response to the question
why a campus over a church wed- interest, and a c t i v a t i n g further
interest in international eduding Dr. Peplow replyed:
"we
wanted it on campus b e c a u s e this cation p r o g r a m s . "
Members of the Board are a s
i s where all our friends arc and
a l s o wnere we m e t " . When asKco follows: th-. M. Peplow, Dr. R.
to express her feelings on her re- Milliken, Dr. J . Dayananda, Mr.
c e n t marriage, Mrs. Peplow re- R. Lynch, and Miss S. Devling,
sponded: " w e will strive to be from the c o l l e g e , and Mrs. R .
.Akeley, Mrs. F . Mcllvaine,
happy and make living worth
Mr. T. Hinchey, Mr. B . Snare,
while."
r>r. an'^ »'-«, Peolow are go- and Mrs. F - Carothers from the
community.
ing to be residing in Mill H a l l .

Marriage is Great

quote, " L a r r y s p e a k s of experience yet he loses four hundred
tickets for one cultural event and
then packs 1,000 more people in
Bentley Hall for a concert than
it has room f o r . " Larry asked
for an apology after explaining
that the t i c k e t s had been misplaced.
Dave Draboi eiarified the
quote by s t a t i n g that the two events cited were to be viewed
independently and not one a s the
result of the other.
Drabot
s t r e s s e d that Larry " s h o u l d have
put an upward limit on the amount
of tickets sold for the James
G a n g . " Larry explained that it
was the Homecoming committee
who chose Bentley Hall and a l s o
s e t 5|he amount of tickets to be
distributed and he had no part in
the d e c i s i o n s .
"How are we going t o get
people morr. •-•"olved" was the
next issue presented by Steve
F i s h . He proposed the idea of
using organizational representation plus senatorial representation, giving the SCC more senators and taking the work out of
the hands of the Executive Board.
Doug Dows agreeing that
there is a lack of participation
s t a t e d that those students in organizations understandably devoted more time to that organization thWi the SCC. He continued
by stating that a conflict arose
during budget hearings when organizations were unhappy with
the money they had been appropriated.
Under the senatorial
system the loyalty of each Senator is to the students and not to
an organization.
The possibility of a used
book s a l e was then presented by
Dows, Sheets were handed out
which showed a possible method
of re-selling b o o k s . Steve F i s h ,
who had proposed a similar idea,
agreed that this is a service that
is needed and "if they c a n institute this then more power t o
to t h e m . "
In a response to a question
about experience the members of
the Students for Progressive Reform stated their qualifications
individually. It was a l s o pointed
out by Mr. F i s h that the SCC Constitution provided a 3 month
training period for newly elected
officers.
Both Steve Fish and Doug
Dows summarized their positions
on the i s s u e s presented.
Mr. Bromberg then opened
the debate t o the floor for a question and answer period.

Campus Birth Control Waits For State O.K.
The possibility oi Lxjck
Haven providing birth control
and related gynecological .-erv i c e s through the infirmary by
a gynecologist is pending on
a s e t of guidelines now being
laid down by the s t a t e .
Although these guidelines
s e e m to involve only technic a l i t i e s , they prevent any type
of service from being implemented on campus before they
are finisher!. The tentative date
tor tne guiuvAij

oi December and ii iney come
through on time with the cooperation of the SCC, there is
a now very real possibility of
operating a clinic in the infirmary within a few weeks afteraarr"
The cost to ttie students
will be minimal or free depending on the funds available. If
there are any students whose
needs are more immediate, a
iocai gynecologist will serve

LU privacy, and place no moral
judgment on anyone. Students
may make appointments with
him through Women's R i g h t s .
By doing this the Women's
Rights Association will share
the cost of the v i s i t . The appointments
will be arranged
from 8-10 on Wednesday evenings and may be arranged by
calling 748-.5426 or e x t . 4 2 5
( ask for representative of WRA)
each evening between 7-8 a.m.
Trarjsportation
will
be
preeided. If n e e d e d .

Apparently the real h a s s l e started weanesday evening
following the b e s t attended opc.i forum LHS h a s s e e n for a
long time. B e c a u s e it was felt that not all student questions
had been answered concerning the i s s u e s of this campaign
Steve Fish was contacted by an interested student and askeg
if he would participate in another fotum Sunday evening.
His reply was that he was going home would not be returning and would, therefore, not be available for the second
forum. How is it, then, that he and the members of his slate
could schedule a rally in High Hall for 8 p.m. Sunday evening? Sound kind of " f d s h y " ?
Vvnen questionea oy the EegU Eye ab«ut h » raf|p«l to
to meet for another d e b a t e , Figh replied that th* f « u i s held
in the PUB was " n o t h i n g but a big c u t - u p " and that he
didn't need to go through that a g a i n .
Let's stop tor a brief editorial comment a t this point.
We think this is an unfair judgement on Mr. F i s h ' s part. The
forum was run democraticly and by the rules that were stated
before its s t a r t . Several times Doug Dows was cut off in the
middle of a s e n t e n c e b e c a u s e he had exceeded s e t time
limits, (jranted Mr. Dows went a bit too far in his questioning of his opponent's s l a t e ' s c a p a b i l i t i e s , i . e . cutting down
the Student Progressive Slate candidate by c a n d i d a t e , a n
action which smelled of poor t a s t e . However, such a c t i o n s
were not indicative of the open forum as a w h o l e . The a c cusation of it being "nothing but a big c u t - u p " is a c l o s e
minded, petty evaluation that disregards the value of the
open debate.
Wednesday evening Doug Dows submitted an annotmcement of his question and answer period to be held Sunday
evening at 7 p.m. (the notice that appears in Special E d i t i o n ,
lower rignt of front page). Thursday evening while in the
process of publishing F r i d a y ' s Special Edition, the kagle
Eye was brought into the m e s s .
After learning F i s h ' s s l a t e had scheduled a rally fot
Sunday at 8, Uuws and several members of his s l a t e came w
the EE with an alternate a n n o u n c c i e n i , r e a d i n g " D u e to the
fact my opponent is afraid to debate the i s s u e s of this e l e c tion with m e , . . . . " and then gives the particulars of his
p l a t e ' s meeting which, at the time, was still scheduled for
7 p.m. After the editors explained that the front page of the
i s s u e was to remain nonpartisan and that we would not run
the announcement that had obvious accusational o v e r t o n e s ,
Dows demandea that his previous announcement be pulled
and replaced with the a l t e r n a t e . When these demands were
not met, the time of the question and answer period was
changed to 8 p.m. which would directly conflict with the
Student Progressive Reform m a l t i n g .
When asked by the EE's Editor what the justification
for this move w a s , Dows replied that he couldn't really s a y
now. he supposed that at the time he had a a e t i n i t e r e a s o n
but he couldn't t e l l us now. What kind of reasoning is that?
Later that evening an attempt was again made to get the
two slates to agree on a time for an ope* forum. When contacted by phone, Dave Drabot emphatically s t a t e d that the
the Students for Students Slate was invited to their rally and
that any and a l l their questions would be answered at that
t i m e . These are the same people who would not consent to a
second forum. It sounds strangly like the little kid who
won t play tfte game unless they will play by his r u l e s . And
everybody went through a weekend of total cnnfosion until
the two sides finally decided that
Students for aiudents
would answer questions at 7, Students Progressive Reform
would hola a rally at 8 and they would meet in Ulmer at 9
for a debate, refereed by Mr. Bromberg.
Through all this runs general unethical practices such
a s wide-spread "(planted" questions on both s i d e s at both
the forum and the d e b a t e , the outgoing SCC President serving as the ex-officio campaign manager for one of the
s l a t e s , and many unfounded and uruesearched a c c u s a t i o n s
being made.
While this campaign has fostered greater student intere s t and participation than has been seen at LHS s i n c e the
Coach Christopher affair, why dm u nave to be marked by
s u c h dirty politics?
D . B . and A . R .

'

Alumni Matmen Return

Wrestling Clinic Scheduled Here
The fourth annual United
States
Wrestling
Federation
regional wrestling clinic and
third
annual
Varsity
versus
Alumni Match wiil be held
Saturday,
November
18,
in
Thomas Field H o u s e .
AH elementary, junior and
senior high school w r e s t l e r s ,
and their c o a c h e s throughout
central
Pennsylvania
have
been invited to attend. According to Dr. Kenneth Cox,
A s s o c i a t e Professor of Health,
Physical Education and Recreation, head wrestling coach at
LHSC and director of the
c l i n i c , there are expected at
l e a s t 150 participants this year.
Registration
will
take
place in the Thomas Field
House Lobby at 8-8:30 a.m.
The registration fee is *3 per
person. All proceeds go to
t h e U.S.W.F. to promote federal
tournaments, to a s s i s t Olympic
Developmeni
Camps, tc organize international tours for
i n t e r s c h o l a s t i c wrestlers and
to finance Pennsylvania wresters to major tournaments throughout the nation, according to
Dr. Cox.
The clinic will
consist
of s e v e n lectures by recent
LHS alumni who participated
in w r e s t l i n g . Lecturers f>t the
'cTinic will include G'jrden
Dietz and Bob Roach, P.I.A.A.
o f f i c i a l s ; Don Fay, currently
head coach at Newfield L.I.,
New York, High School who
placed 3rd at 125.5 pounds in
t h e 1972 U.S. Olympic trials;
Letry
Rippey, currently asaitant coach at Shikellany High
School who placed fourth in
I t e 1971 NCAA-UD Championa h i p s ; Paul Brodmarkel, head
wrestling coach at Lindenhurst,
L . I . , New York, High School
who was 1971 Pennsylvania
State Conference Champ, and
Bynie Parker, a s s i s t a n t coach
at Slippery Rock State College
who was 1971 Pennsylvania
State Conderence Champ.
Climaxing the day's events
a t 8 p.m. .will be the Varsity
v e r s u s Alumni Match, sponsored
by the Varsity Club. Student
admission to the match is 50«.
All proceeds go to purchase

awards for male and female
letter w i n n e r s .
This clinic is only one
of twenty which go on about
the
same
time around the
country.
In
Pennsylvania,
clinics are a l s o scheduled at
the University of Pittsburg for
Western Pa. and at Franklin
and Marshall College for Eastern
Pa.

^WRESTLING

Tentative match-ups will
start at 118 with freshman,
Ben Shipman versus Sandy
I-X)ng. a finalist in the 1971
Pan American i r i a l s a t Ok'ahoma
City. Conference and Wilkes
Open winner, Jim Rupp, will
wrestle Gary Yoder of the varsity at 126 and t h e y ' l l be followed by Don Fay and Bob
Banfill at 134. Tim Rupp, a
conference
ni^ce winner and
junior P^ob Johnson will tangle
'.r. one of the two 142 pound
b o u t s . In the other, Bryan Parker, a conference champ and an
Beside *"•
T^AA
quarter finalist, w i l l
,.
- - c i n g former s t a r s
First High finished a distant
meet Lou Conway of the varsity.
'
"
^.Ciion,
fans
will
get
a
sneak
second with 51 ana Phi
. n, ,„u
Sophomore Dave Crowell
lOok at several varsity wrestlers
Delta finished third with 60.
will challange Larry Rippey at
before the December 2 opener
The first ten finishes were:
150 and Bob Nagy will go against
with l ^ h i g h . Herb J a c k , the
1. John Steele 11:39 1st High
conference place winner. J a c k
(course record) most successful coach in NAIA Hopkins at 158. Don Adams will
history while at LHS, will hit three-time conference champ,
2. Darrell Nagle 11:49 TKE
coach the Alumni. Heading the
3 . George Eise.iiiaver 11:56 TKE
Paul Brodmerkel a t 167, which
4 . Dave Ritter 12:19 Independant list of former s t a r s will be Don will be followed by either Tim
F a y , NAIA and 3 time conference Howe or George Wilhelm versus
5. Dan Cruttenden 12:20 Indep.
champ who posted a perfect 53-0 former conference winner Barry
6. Randy Laird 12:26 Phi Mu D.
7. John Jadlocki 12:28 Phi Mu D. record while at LHS. Fay played
Yontz at 190. In the heavythird in the U.S. Olympic T r i a l s weight c l a s s . Big Jim Shuster
8. Mik Crossman 12:33 I K E
this
summer . Larry
Rippey, will take on formei conference
9. Steve Tanner 13:01 1st High
former NAIA, conference and
champ. Bob Met?.. Willie Vokes,
10 Allan Valletti 13:06 1st High
Wilkes Open champ will be
a conference place winner, and
another big name. Rippey placed Adam Waltz, an NAIA champ,
fourth in the 1971 NCAA chMnp" will wrestle in the event of
ionships and he beat the chSfcp an injury.
in the East-West AH-Star match.
Students
can
purchase
tickets from Tim Davy for .50*i_
Adults will be charged $1.00.
The matches are scheduled to
begin at 8 p.m. The fourth annual USWF clinic featuring former
Lock Haven wrestlers will be
Off-campus housing desirei held the same day beginning
far two kittens. Cmtact at 8 a.m.

John Steele TcJces Fast

In Intramural
First place in last Thursd a y ' s rain soaked Intermural
Cross Country Race w a s captured by John Steele of First
Floor High with a time of
11:39 for t h e 214 mile course.
Even with Steele's first
place finish, however, First;
High could not overcome TKE's
overall balance to win the team
t i t l e . TKE won the team title
with only 4 0 points with their
men
placing
second,
third,
eighth, thirteenth and fourteenth.

Harrier

Race

ANNOUNCEMENTS
Any students interested
in creating or participating
in Library displays: drop a
note about your ideas, or
even better, drop in for a
chat. Artists, thinicers and ?
equally welcome. We are interested in whatever you are.
Am personally contemplating
a display tentatively titled
"Alternatives".
Be one,
bring one, or just come by
to help out.
Marc Thoamas

Attention all ski club
members: the meeting r e r
ularly scheduled for Tuesday
November 14, has been changed to Thursday, November
16, 7 p.m. in Zimmerii 007
Brownie sale results and a
movie are the topics of discussion. Prospective members
mau still join, but you must
be willing to learn how to sici
if you can't.

Harriers Go To Nationals
by Lloyd Peters
" I c a n ' t believe that you
can run that hard and finish that
far back. I t ' s just a sprint the
whole w a y . "
Those were the
words of Nibs Gordon minutes
after finishing the NCAA College
iDivision Cross-Country Championship r a c e , Saturday, in Weaton, Illinois.
Mike Gaige and Nibs Gordon
were the top finishers for the
Bald E a g l e s . Mike, running in
his first full cross country seas o n , finished a strong 127th with
Nibs coming in 182nd. Hal Fried
(314th), Steve Haiuish (328),
Larry Wise (331), and George
Bower (380) finished close behind each other on the rolling 50
mile course. In a race of this
n a t u r e , many times a few seconds
is the difference between ten or
fifteen p l a c e s .
Mike Slack of North Dakota
State repeated as this years individual champion, nearly breaking h i s own course record. Mike,

by Bob Engle
J u s t a s e n t h u s i a s t i c baseball fans in New York jam
Yankee Stadium for the annual
return of Yankee s t a r s like
Micky Mantle and Joe DiMaggio
s o do local fans crowd Thomas
Field House for the return of
former Bald Eagle mat s t a r s .
The third annual Varsity-Alumni
match will take place Saturday,
November 18 for the benefit of
the LHS Varsity Club. Money
goes toward the purchase of
letters and awards and is
chief source of fimds for the
th'_
organization.

Who runs three times daily in
averaging 125 miles per week,
led from the three mile mark to
win by a slim 25 yard margin.
Jeff Bradley of Millersville State
was the top finisher from Penna.,
placing 17th.
Those words of Nibs Gordon
summed up the type of race that
is typical of a national championship. The excitement from the
atmosphere it generates is difficult to explain. Watching the
500 plus runners at a distance
brings to mind army of marching
ants all fighting each other to become the leader.
The strong
manage to get to the front while
the weak drift back. There seems
to be no individually. Each one
becomes just a small part of the
surging mass. When this army
turns forward the tiny specks are
slowly focused into a collage of
individual people still fighting
for that front position. At the
end these marching ants are magically transformed into sweating,
panting runners all wondering
what actually happened during
that last thirty minules.

Social Committee Meeting Monday, November 13,
6:30 p.m. in room 212 of the
PUB.
CHAMHIUN TERMPAPERS
636 Beacon St. (fl605)
B o s t o n , M a s s . 02215
617-536-9700
Research
material
for
Termpapers, R e p o r t s , T h e s e s ,
e t c . LOWEST P R I C E S . QUICK
SERVICE.
For
information,
pleose w r i t e or c a l l .

TERMPAPERS
Send for your descriptive, up-to-date,
128-page, mail order catalog of 2,300
quality termpapers. Enclose $1.00 to
cover postage and handling.
WE ALSO WRITE
CUSTOM MADE PAPERS.

Termpaper Research
519 GLENROCK AVE, SUITE 203
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024
(213)477-8474 • 477-5493
"We need a local salesman"

YAAAAHA, FENDER, GIBSON, EPIPHONE, MARTIN. OVATION
are only a few of the top names in musicai instruments at tUt:

H A M M O N D ORGAN STUDIOS,
Good Things in Music - Right Prices - Terms Available
alias BIG RED NOTE - downtown Lock Haven.
Can you aig iti 748^71

Chuck, 748-38T0.
BICYCLE RALLY-SUNDAY,
NOVEMBER 19, 1972. Rules
Tickets are on sale fw and entry blands can be pifiktl
the LHS Alumni vs Varsity up in the PCCEB office attar
match Nov. 18 and may be Thurs*v. Nov. 9.
purchased from any of the
Lcok Haven State cheerleaComputer Science Club
ders or in the PUB office.
meeting will be held at tht
Tickets are $1.00 for adults
LHS computer center Monday,
and 50t for students. All
November 13 at 7 p.m.
proceeds wilt g/o to the VarThe meeting, to be consity Club for awards to athducted by Dave Palmer, will
letes.
consist of a demonstration
on the operation of the 360/
30. Included on this demonWANTED: 3 roommates for stration will be the extent
next semester.
Beautiful to which the computer memhouse, 5 minutes from college. bers can use the machine.
Reasonable rent. If interested
All are invited to attend.
contact Skip Haley, Chuck
If you wish, bring your own
Glass, or Lynn Rothrock, or
Porttan program (only l i call 748-3041 after 6 p.m.
brary functions available).
•••••••••••I

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