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Wed, 07/05/2023 - 16:01
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HAC brings in
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Pa 9 e 8
Annika Bently

available for Health
Science majors

Wrestlers defeat PSU
Saturday night

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Page 3

Today's Weather

Friday, March 1, 2002

http://www.lhueagleye.com

Issue 6, Volume 55
(pT

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See weekend weather
Page 2

University's Student Newspaper mmf
Hock "Haven, 9a.

Forum
to target
alcohol

Mayor Vilello encourages students
to participate in the political process

Kristin White
Eagle Eye Staff Reporter

Scott Evans

schools within the state

Eagle Eye

system.

Students spend more
money on alcohol than soft
drinks, tea, milk, juice,
coffee and books combined.

In light of the universal
prevalence of alcohol in
communities, a public
forum will be held at 6:30
p.m. March 26 at Central
Mountain Middle School
East, allowing students
and community members
to

discuss the students'

beverage of choice.
Participants will watch
a video introducing the
issue and three approaches
before dividing into small
groups for discussion.
The first proposal calls
for stricter enforcement of

substance abuse laws and
punishments. Alcoholism
is addressed specifically as
a public health issue in the
second approach, focusing
on medical treatment of
the disease, and the third
resolution call for vehicles
of social change, examin-

the glamorization of

ing

alcohol abuse in culture.
The program is sponsored by the LHU Honors

Central School District
and the Center for Civic
Life, a new campus organization promoting the project Public
Voice in

Pennsylvania.
"[This forum] is the

beginning of an effort to
organize local forums
across the state," said Dr.
James Knauer, Director of

the Center for Civic Life.
Eventually the local
discussion groups will
unite for a statewide forum
to bring attention to proposed solutions and means
of enacting them.

eds
is

II
10 Sports backpage
6
6 Staff box
4-5 Weather
2

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:

Staff

Lock
Haven City
Mayor Rick Vilello visited
Lock Haven University
Student
Cooperative
Council (SCC) Wednesday
to speak about the impact
school populations can
have on election results.
SCC President Tiffany
Smith announced that LHU
will host the April Board of
Student

Government

Presidents (BSGP) conference.
The BSGP

is comprised of student government presidents and execuboard
members
tive
throughout the 14 stateowned universities.

Smith also asked senawrite to their local
representatives

tors to
state

regarding the importance
of attending state universities.
The upcoming election
for Pennsylvania governor
will have an affect on the

funding received from the
state to students and the

There are 96,000 students attending the 14
state-owned universities.
Mayor Vilello dropped
in on the meeting to follow-up on an October visit
he made to SCC discussing
student voting for city,
state, and national elec-

tions.

Vilello reminded senathat in the past
November election, two
LHU students won elections for city offices.
Patrick Johnson was elected as Lock Haven City
Treasurer and Jim Manser
was elected to city council.
tors

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Vilello said that the stu-

dent population in any college town can affect local
elections.

"If all 96,000 students
attending state schools
voted the way they thought
would help students out the
their candidate
most,
would win," Vilello said.

See SCC Page 2

Marc Rayman/The Eagle Eye

Mayor Rick Vilello tells the Student Cooperative Council senators to run for local
and state government seats at Wednesday's SCC meeting.

Two students come
Crew installs new features to
close to Atlanta trip in
meet rec center's April opening ' Quarters' tournament
P.J.
Harmer
Eagle Eye StaffReporter

Sumer Buttorff

game, the team with the

Eagle Eye Staff Reporter
Two Lock Haven students nearly won a free trip
to Atlanta to play quarters.

Crews are now adding
the finishing touches to the
Student Recreation Center
in preparation for the project's April opening.
Approaching completion, the Center is "in its
last phase of construction,"
Recreation Director, Chris
McGary said. "All's going
well and on schedule," he
added.
At this stage, things are
finally coming together.
The rock-climbing wall
was
last
completed

Wednesday. Crews are
now painting the interior,
laying the floor and working on the roof.
The racquetball courts
are next on the list as is the
installation of fitness
equipment. Machines are
expected to be delivered
and assembled on or before
the first of April.
After a year of construction, Pathline Quality
Assurance Inspector, Larry
Lingenfelter said the group
"fully intends to have the
interior finished for its
intended purposes by
March 18."
Although the interior
will be completed in midMarch, the opening will be
held until April when all
the particulars will be
ironed out.
"I am taking that time
to get everything ready,"

A popular party

advance.
If one team is lucky
enough to make it out of
local qualifying, they then
advance to regional action.
most

game,

The

winner

of the
regional tournament gets
an all expense paid trip to
Atlanta to compete in the

ESPN and Bud Light
teamed up to bring fans of
bars a quarters tournament
called "Quarter Bouncers." finals.
The winners of that
Steve Campbell and
Dan Refi fell in the finals tournament take home
$5,000, while the runnerof the Regional tournament, six quarters shy of up squad receives $2,000.
the trip. They had set the ESPN's Trey Wingo hosts
area tournament record in the finals.
Campbell and Refi
the semis.
Set up as a basketball joined up as late entrants in
court, the table has two the local tournament, held
hoops in the middle. Teams at Uncle Albert's.
"I woke up laughing
of two compete against one
another to advance to the after we won it here," said
Campbell.
next round.
They have four 45-secSee Quarters Page 2
ond periods to get as many
quarters as they can into
the hoop. At the end of the

EmSsp

Am

Sumer Buttorff/The Eagle Eye

An indoor track, rock-climbing station and indoor tennis courts
are just a few of the features being added to the new rec-center.
McGary said.
Next on the agenda is
to seek qualified student
employees to staff the

applications, which will be
available to students in the
P.U.B. business office on
the Monday following
spring break.
Center facilities include
McGary will begin hiring after reviewing the a 4200 square foot full fit-

ness area complete with
strength resistance and cardiovascular equipment.

See Center Page 2

mm

HP 1r*

PA)oto

'
courtesy of Steve Cambell

Steve Cambell and Dan Refrfell with their
eyes on the game at the 'Quarters' tournament.

Page 2

March 1, 2002

Eagle Eye

ents near y topp
Students are reminded
to have responsible ' Quarters' tournament
From Quarters Page 1
spring breaks
Washington, DC-As the
time approaches for spring

or standards of the country they
are visiting.

Refi noted that the two
weren't even going to originally

Besides drugs, alcohol can
also get citizens in trouble
abroad. Students have been
anticipated trip abroad.
Most will have a safe and arrested for being intoxicated in
enjoyable adventure, but for public areas, for underage
some, the trip will become a drinking and for drunk driving.
Some young Americans go
nightmare. Drugs, alcohol and
abroad
assuming that local
disorderly behavior cause a
authorities
will overlook such
number ofruined vacations.
conduct.
Each year, more than 2,500
Many believe that they are
American citizens are arrested
immune
from prosecution in
abroad—about half on narcotics
countries
because they
foreign
charges, including possession of
are
American
citizens.
very small amounts of illegal
The truth is that Americans
substances. A drug that may be
are
expected to obey all of the
legal in one country may not be
laws
of the country they visit,
legal in a neighboring nation.
and
those
who break the laws
Some young people are vicsometimes
face severe penaltimized because they may be
ties,
including
prison sentences.
unaware of the laws, customs,

play together. Refi was at Uncle
Albert's that night and got
Campbell to play as a team.
"It was a fluke [that] I had
Steve as a partner," said Refi.
After winning the local tournament, the two advanced to the
Regional tournament, held at
the Sports Cafe in State College.
A crowd, numbering in the double-digits, followed the two as
their cheering section and sup-

Senator of the week

From SCC Page 1

breaks, many college students
are getting ready for that much-

by Scott Evans

Betsy Henry is this week's
SCC Senator of the Week.
Henry is a senior majoring in
English at LHU.
Outside of SCC,
Henry is
involved in the
LHU Outing
Club and the Fly
Fishing Club.
This semester is
Henry's second
served on SCC.
Henry said she
joined SCC
because she didn't want to be

someone who
talks about change on campus,
but doesn't do anything about
it.

Henry feels very strongly
about students becoming more
involved in campus govern-

"I feel it's
important
because SCC is
more than the
student council
in high school.
Our decisions
and activities
can affect thousands of students.
Henry plans for
the future are to
become an editor
and to write her own works
while living on a ranch in
Montana.

SCC addresses university
funded 'lifeless' organizations
The meeting concluded with
Speaker of the Senate Jason
Fitzgerald reading off names of
SCC funded organizations
whom haven't shown signs of
life in recent semesters.
The clubs are, The Student
Environmental
Action
Coalition, The Meteorology
Club, the Ski Club, The Chess

tors and

From Center Page 1
There is also a 30-foot-high
climbing wall to hold 7 persons,
a dance and exercise room, 3
racquetball courts, a four-lane
running track, and 3 multi-purpose gym spaces.
Gym space may be used for
basketball, tennis, or badminton. Accessories including
balls and racquets will be avail-

able for students to borrow.
"I think the building is rather
deceiving from the outside. You
walk through the doors and the
building's interior is just amazing," McGary said. "Everything
from the color schemes to the
layout have been part of a well
thought process."
By late summer, McGary
hopes to see the Center's outside space finished so students
can take advantage of the nice
weather by playing frisbee or
The parking area and outdoor landscaping are also

expected to be completed later
Photo by Marc Rayman

Nick Trumbauer and Craig Miller Jr. look on as
Mayor Vilello speaks.

brought to you by

j|AT&T
Sunday

history
February 27,

1988
Saturday, Feb. 27,
1988: The Liquor
Control Board (LCB)
cited 87 people for
underage drinking
when the state police
raided the Sigma Pi
fraternity house at
504 West Church
Street.

March 2,
1990
The Student
Cooperative Council
discussed the
possibility of placing
condom machines in
the residence halls.

March 9,
1984

Low-23

organizations to contact the
SCC office to insure that the
organization isn't dropped from
SCC funding. These organizations will have until April 3,
2002 to contact the SCC office.

Rec center may open
as early as April 1

throwing football.

week in

The estimated cost of all
alcohol-related problems is
$148 billion annually,
representing $1.09 in
societal costs for each
drink Americans consume.

High-37

Club, Club Edone, Destination
Psi Phi, The Weightlifting Club,
Resource
The
Women's
Coalition, and Science Teachers
for America's Future.
Fitzgerald is asking that any
student with ties to any of these

The 30 foot climbing wall is just one of the many
features that will be available for students.

this season.
Everyone involved in the
planning and creation of the
Center is happy with the
progress so far and awaiting the

"Quandel, the subcontrac-

In 1997, 32 million
Americans engaged in
binge drinking, and 11
million were
heavy drinkers.

Saturday

They scored 48 and 57 in

ment.

Think before
you drink

VV©3th©r

ported them to the end.

their first two games, both wins.
In the semifinals, they put up a
tournament record of 78, winning by 15.
"Getting there was a cool
ride," said Campbell. "For me, I
just played. I was in a zone. I
didn't count while I played."
However, the quarters didn't
bounce as the two would have
hoped in the finals as Campbell
and Refi fell in the finals 76-70.
Even though they didn't win,
both said it was a fun experience. .
"It was a good time," said
Campbell. "We had a lot of
good friends come with us. It
was a good twist for tournament
style play."

High-32
Low-19

See fullforcast and up to date news at:
www.LHUeagleye. com

The student
Cooperative Council
booked at time consumer activist, Ralph
Nader to speak at
Price Performance

Pathline have done a
great job with the facility and I
think that I am more anxious
than anyone to get in," McGary
said.
Dr. Linda Koch, Vice
President of Student Affairs and
member of the Recreation
Center Committee, said a lot of
hard work and precise planning
has "resulted in a very active

and inviting Center for students
to begin and maintain theircommitment to fitness."
The Center will tentatively
be open 6 a.m. to 11 p.m. on
Monday through Thursday. The
hours may change depending un
student interest.
Next fall, a new recreation
fee of approximately $100, will
be added to tuition costs to
cover Center expenses.
A
formal-grand-opening
ceremony will be held in late
April to celebrate the project's
More information about
Center hours, policies and
upcoming events can be found
on the Student Recreation
Center website, which can be
the
accessed
through
site
at
University's
www.lhup.edu/rec_center.

Applications for student
employment at the Center can
also be obtained via this site.

Page 3

March 1, 2002

Professor chosen for 2001
teacher of the year award
the supervision of student teachBallat,
C.
associate professor in ers and the development of curthe Department of Health and riculum resource materials for
Physical Education at Lock the department. He is also the
Haven
of advisor for the fencing club.
University
He currently serves on the
as
Pennsylvania, was selected
Education Lesson Plan
Physical
Pennsylvania's 2001 Physical
Review
Board
for PE Central, a
Education Teacher of the Year.
know
nationally
website which
award
was
The
presented to
recommends
lesson
plans for
State
him by the Pennsylvania
junior
middle
and
school
high
Health,
Association for
Physical
Education, Recreation & Dance physical education.
He also serves on the manu(PSAHPERD) at a Pennsylvania
review board for
script
lunchState Convention awards
"Research
for
Quarterly
Seven
eon held at
Springs
Exercise
and
The
and
"Sport
Mountain Resort.

LOCK HAVEN-Dr. Paul

PSAHPERD

presents

its

Teacher of the Year Award
annually to a professor who has
extraordinary
demonstrated
commitment and dedication to
the profession and who has had
an extremely positive influence

Journal of Physical Education,
Recreation & Dance."
Originally from Pottsville,
Dr. Ballat has taught at the sec-

ondary and collegiate level for
the past 22 years.
He has been a professor of
Health and Physical Education
at the University since 1997. He
has also taught at Mississippi
Women,
for
University
Kutztown University, Eastern
College and Minersville Area
School District.
Dr. Ballat received his
Bachelor's degree in Health and
Physical Education from The
Pennsylvania State University;
his Master's degree, also in
Health and Physical Education,
from West Chester University;
and his Ph.D. in Kinesiology
from Temple University.

on young people.
"He is very concerned about
the students. He brings creativity to his classes. His experience in teaching in public
schools will give the students
practical information for when

they go out (into the field of
teaching)," said Dr. Bradley
Black,
chairman for the
University Department of

Health and Physical Education,
of his colleague Dr. Ballat.
Open to all Pennsylvania
Health and Physical Education
professors, the PSAHPERD
Teacher of the Year Award was
presented to Dr. Ballat for his
service at the University and for
his teaching effectiveness at the
collegiate level.
"I am honored to have
received the award," said Ballat.
In addition to the acknowledgment of his own work, Dr.
Ballat sees the award as a great
opportunity to also recognize
the other outstanding faculty at
the University.
In addition to teaching
Health and Physical Education,
Dr. Ballat is involved in i number of other activities at the
University He is involved in

Photo courtesy of public relations

Hample stresses the importance of
higher education to the state Senate
HARRISBURG--

Seeking

support for the Pennsylvania
State System of Higher

Education's 2002-03 appropriations request, Chancellor Judy
G. Hample told members of the
Committee that investments in
higher education are key to
stimulating economic growth
and development in the
"For Pennsylvania to remain
competitive in attracting more
high technology industries and
businesses, it will be essential
that an educated workforce be
available," said Hample in her
first appearance before the committee.
"In addition, higher education gives citizens the opportunity to reshape and reorient their
careers, thereby increasing the
probability that talented workers

will remain in Pennsylvania and
contribute to the state's social
and economic well-being."
Hample is the 2002-03 Chancellor of the State
While acknowledging the
System of Higher Education.
difficult economic times facing
the state, Hample urged the
increase els of tuition and fees that are
committee to work with amount represents an
the
for
manageable
$24.9 million, or 5.5 percent,
Governor Mark Schweiker to of
citizens,
over the current year's appropriCommonwealth's
increase funding for the 14
many of its economiincluding
ation.
state-owned universities next
cally disadvantaged students:
The state appropriation covyear.
half
of
the
said Hample.
ers
less
than
slightly
The governor's proposed
A sufficient level of state
funds
needed
for
university
budget would reduce funding to
is essential to the
the State System by 3 percent in operations. Student tuition and funding
System's ability to continue to
fees provide most of the rest.
2002-03.
current
offer to students a high quality,
undergraduate
The
"In submitting his budget,
of $4,016 is affordable education, the chanresident
tuition
rate
we understand that the governor
all cellor said.
was faced with difficult choices the lowest charged among
universiHample will testify tomorand
four-year
colleges
and limited resources, but a 3
before
the
House
row
ties
Pennsylvania.
in
percent reduction will clearly
Committee,
have been Appropriations
The
universities
have serious negative consea variety of cost-savwhich also is conducting a
quences on our students, their engaged in
series
of hearings as the General
campuses
efforts
on
their
ing
in
families and our institutions,"
to
Assembly
begins work on next
order
restrain
their
annual
Hample said.
state
year's
budget.
budget
growth.
The System is seeking a
"Our
universities
have
state appropriation of $477.7
million next year to help fund achieved significant operational
efficiencies and improved prothe operations of the stateowned
universities.
That ductivity while maintaining lev-

Ballet was recently selected for a teacher of the
year award for his service to the University.
ft
-i

"
* *

*
ft
«it i ii

Campus Village Apartment Contracts

AVAILABLE for FALL and SPRING
"First come, first serve basis"
Sign-up: 308 Sullivan Hall
8:30am to 3:30pm
The following priority will be assigned to each day. You MUST pay your
deposit to the Bursar's office in Russell HAH before this date.

March 18
March 19
March 20
March 21

March 22
March 25

Current resident of Campus Village
On Campus Students
(earned 81+ credits as of January 1, 2002)
On Campus Students
(earned 64+ credits as of Januaryl, 2002)
On Campus Students
(earned 48+ credits as of January 1, 2002)
All other current on campus students
Off campus students that want to

Apartment Selection
*You may choose a specific apartment if you have a roommate, sign
up for a single (limited #), or wish to be assigned with a future
international exchange student.
'Students who are NOT offered a Campus Village Apartment
contract (due to not enough space, etc.) will be encouraged to
follow the traditional campus housing sign-up process that begins on
April 3&4. The University's Residency Requirement will still be in
effect.
*An apartment will be assigned when both roommates show proof of
$100 deposit payment AND have both signed contracts. A room
mate with a higher number of earned credits may pull in a student
with lesser earned credit hours.
*The Dept. of Student Life reserves the right to consolidate or move
a student depending on unforeseen problems.
What you need to do:
(before priority date) a $100
1. Prepay
housing deposit in the Bursar's Office.
2. Bring your receipt to Sullivan 308 on corresponding date
3. Pick an apartment from the ones available.
4. Sign a Campus Village Apartment contract
It is the responsibility of each student to follow the above procedures to be
eligible for a Campus Village Apartment.

for more information contact:
sing Office
308 Sullivan Hall

893-2317

You are invited
to a TIAA-CREF
One-on-One
Financial
Counseling Session.
Get the personalized financial
guidance you need to help you
reach your financial goals,
as well as protect your assets
against inflation and taxes.
For over 80 years, TIAA-CREF
has been managing retirement
portfolios for the world's
sharpest minds. Sign up today.

Date:

Thursday, 3.28.2002

Friday, 3.29.2002

-

Time:
9:00 am 4:00 pm
Place:
PUB Meeting Room #3
Who should attend:

Faculty and

Staff

RSVP: To schedule an appointment, please sign up online at

If you are unable to sign up
online, please call Jacqueline
Pugh at 1.800.842.2010.

I TIAA I

IcrefI

Managing money for people
with other things to think about?

*'

1

j

)

March 1, 2002

Page 4

Nothing's free, not even on the internet
Knight Ridder Newspapers
Free Internet access is fast
disappearing. Once-free Napster
is cranking up a fee-based service. Bluemountain.com, a popular Web site for sending free email greeting "cards," is soliciting subscriptions for up to
$19.95 a year.
Is the online free-for-all really over?
Yes and no. Some freebies,
such as Net access, seem to be
on the verge of extinction. But
many Web services for cheapskates, such as free Web e-mail,
free news and free software, will
stick around for the foreseeable
future, industry experts and site
operators said.
"It's very difficult to charge
for content when an equivalent,
or close enough, is available for
free and is just a click away,"
said Dan O'Brien, e-commerce
analyst at Forrester Research
Inc.
O'Brien said paid-subscription music services Pressplay,
MusicNet and the revived
Napster are unlikely to put a
dent in the operations of free,
easy-to-use Napster clones such
as Morpheus and Kazaa. For
such services, where much of
the trade is in pirated recordings, "the total traffic is higher
than it was at Napster's
peak," he said.
On another front, "I don't
know anybody who's charging"
for Web-based e-mail, O'Brien
said. Free e-mail from Yahoo
Inc. and Microsoft Corp.'s
Hotmail - each claiming tens of
millions of users - charge for
service upgrades such as extra
storage space and custom
addresses, but have no plans to
bill for basic service.
"The standard (e-mail service) is free, and will continue to
be free," Yahoo spokeswoman
Mary Osako promised.

according to Web audience
tracker Jupiter Media Metrix.
Meanwhile, traffic at the allfree Yahoo Greetings site
jumped from 3.7 million visitors
to 9.1 million, and that site has
no plan to charge customers,
Yahoo said.
Reference, periodical and
news sources such as the Wall
Street Journal have charged

In electronic greetings,
American Greetings Corp. in
December began limiting the
selection of free greetings at its
AmericanGreetings.com and
Egreetings.com Web sites.
Since charges for unlimited
use of the sites began, "traffic
has declined slightly," said
David D. Poplar, spokesman for

users.
But a bust in online advertising made the service a financial
drain on ailing Kmart, which
filed for bankruptcy last month.
Early last year, the free service

Knight Ridder Newspapers

PHILADELPHIA -Colleges
usually act more like tortoises
than hares when it comes to
changing curricula. It can take a
year or more to approve a professor's proposal for a new
course.

But many colleges resembled roadrunners after Sept. 11,
scrambling to make courses on
terrorism, Islam and related subjects available for the spring
semester.

Professors also spent winter
break tearing apart existing syllabi to make them relevant to the
post-September landscape. And
departments added extra sections of courses that once struggled to attract students.
A week after the terrorist
attacks, Ursinus College biology professor Robert Dawley
started gathering data on bioterrorism. Then the anthrax scare
hit. Dawley suggested to colleague Anthony Lobo that they
offer a new course on bioterrorism.
"My initial reason was a gutlevel patriotism," Dawley said.
"... What could I do to help?
"I hope the students get an
idea of the complex challenge of
planning against bioterrorism,"
Dawley said. He also said he
hoped the course might spark
students to devote their careers
to the issue.
Like Dawley, professors
everywhere are responding to
surging student interest in topics
that might have been hard to
find on course lists last year.
At
the University of

Stephen Gale's course on terrorism doubled to 30 slots. At
Camden County College, professor Gene Evans now has two
sections of his terrorism course.
And St. Joseph's University,
which dropped one section of
"Intro to Islam" last semester
for lack of interest, has both sec-

back from unlimited usage
to 10 hours per month per subscriber, a move that chopped the
list of free subscribers to
800,000.
Then,
September,
in
Bluelight.com abandoned free
usage. It now has 200,UUU customers who pay $8.95 a month
for unlimited Internet access.
"It was the same model as
broadcast television. Once the
advertisers went away, there
was no way to support it,"
Bluelight.com spokesman Dave
Karraker said. "That's why you
saw the death of free Internet
service."
cut

...

College curr

on a computer monitor. Sixweek subscriptions cost $26.80,
Times spokesman Toby Usnik
said.
The paper has no plan to
begin charging for its standard
Web version, Usnik said.
Unlimited free Internet
access,
once offered by
NetZero, Juno, Bluelight.com
and others, was "one of the first
victims of the advertising recession," O'Brien said. "That business model never really made a
lot of sense."
NetZero and Juno, owned
jointly since September by
United Online Inc., cut out
unlimited free access about a
year ago and have steadily
trimmed the amount of time a
user can stay online. NetZero
still offers 10 hours per month
of free access, but for more than
that, the monthly charge is
$9.95.
Kmart
Corp.'s
offering
Bluelight.com began
advertising-supported
free,
Internet access in 1999. By the
end of 2000, it had 6 million

m

American Greetings. "It s just

an attempt to become more profitable. But we still have plenty
of free cards and a couple of free

sites."
From

November

to

December, traffic at American

Greeting sites fell by 2.6 million
unique visitors, and a comparable drop took place at
Microsoft's MSN Greetings site,
which also began requiring a
subscription for unlimited use,

tf

I

from the outset, and others are

considering or implementing
paid subscriptions - but free is
still the norm.
The New York Times has
never charged for content at its
Web site,
since November, the Times has
sold 3,300 subscriptions to an
"electronic edition" that lets
customers download the daily
paper in a format that replicates
the printed version for viewing

urn
this term.
Princeton
University's
Woodrow Wilson School has
three new courses related to
Sept. 11. Visiting lecturer
Jonathan Marks, a British barrister, will teach "Lawful
Responses to Terrorism After
Sept. 11: A Human Rights
Perspective."
After reviewing international law, Marks expects students
to research whether America's
treatment of captured Taliban
prisoners has been acceptable
under international law and
whether the law would allow for
continued American military
activity in the war on terrorism.
"Faculty told me that
Princeton students are quite
inward-looking when it comes
to political issues, so I structured the course to make them
more outward-looking," Marks
said.
About 100 students slumped
in the tiered seats of a Drexel
University lecture hall the other
day as biology professor
Charles Haas explained that a
mere kilogram of anthrax
released during a 1979 accident
at a Soviet Union weapons facility caused dozens of anthrax
cases.
Haas is offering a bioterrorism course for the first time. He
eviscerated one myth for the
students, saying it would not
take a truckload of anthrax to
effectively contaminate a reservoir serving 50,000 people. A
quarter-pound would do.
Describing how someone
might spread the spores, Haas
sounded more like the head of a
cooking class: "A wet slurry
would be fine. And it would be

nice to minimize clumping."
Graduate student Russ
Green, 47, who works at the
Three Mile Island nuclear plant,
took the course to learn which
organisms could pose a terrorist
threat for the facility.
"I've gotten a sense of
relief," Green said. "It's just a

few organisms, and even these

have real disadvantages."
Instead of inventing new
courses, some professors made
existing courses more relevant
after the terrorist scares.
St. Joseph's English professor Owen Gilman added a
required text for his course
called "Texts and Contexts"
Daniel Defoe's "A Journal of
the Plague Year."
Defoe's novel describes a
plague that swept through
London in the 1660s.
"It's a superior story, looking at how people reacted,"
Gilman said. "Given the uncertainty that students lived
through last fall, there's a lot of
comparability."
Gilman expects that students
will get a better perspective on
their experience when they consider how the London plague
killed thousands, and survivors
fell behind burying the dead,
while the anthrax scare killed a
handful and still heightened
American anxiety.
Like Gilman, Alan Tarr, a
Rutgers-Camden
professor,
updated a constitutional law
course to examine President
Bush's executive order making
military tribunals available to
try those captured in the terror-

-

ism war.
Students will study how
President Abraham Lincoln suspended habeas corpus during
the Civil War, and how, after the
war, the Supreme Court called
his action
contrast, a later Supreme Court

ruling upheld President Franklin
D. Roosevelt's use of a military
tribunal to try German saboteurs
during World War II.
"Students will analyze the
implications of these cases for
Bush's order," Tarr said. "This
is an opportunity for them to
realize that our Constitution has
real-life significance."

The long awaited 3G is
faster for a higher price
Knight Ridder Newspapers
Check your e-mail, surf the
Web and send digital pictures
all on your mobile phone.

-

That is the promise of
"3G," third-generation wireless
networks that can transfer data
faster than a traditional 56-kilobytedial-up modem.
The industry has been
buzzing about 3G for a decade
but the new technology has been
unveiled only recently in the
United States.
Service providers Verizon
Wireless and AT&T Wireless
are touting the new technology
and its capabilities even though
it's only available in some markets. Carriers such as Cingular
Wireless and Sprint PCS have
spent billions of dollars on
upgrading their networks in
preparation for 3G.
"What 3G gives us is the
ability to serve more customers
and the speed to provide mobile
said Cindy
applications,"
Patterson, Verizon's president
for the Central Texas region.
But will consumers dial into
the new service and the extra
cost carriers will charge to get
information such as movie times
on their cell phones?
Analysts say consumers will
eventually sign up for data services but those with high expectations will initially be disappointed with 3G's launch this
year. While the 3G networks
will be faster than a dial-up
modem, they are on the low end
of the speed range possible for
3G networks. Speeds will
increase as new versions of 3G
are released over the next few
years.

"Customers are expecting
advanced data services at high
speed connections today and
very soon, but we're not going
to have that today," said Jeff
Kagan, an independent telecom-

munications analyst. "3G is
going to be real and important
and it is going to be big. Just not
yet."
3G gets its moniker from
being the latest evolution of
wireless technology. First generation, or 1G, was analog cellular service and second generation, or 2G, was digital cellular
service.
While Verizon and Sprint
PCS have announced the implementation of 3G technology,
AT&T Wireless, VoiceStream,
Nextel and Cingular Wireless
have opted to upgrade their networks only to what is being
called 2G technology offering
speeds faster than digital systems but not as fast as 3G net-

-

works.
For example, a 2G network
has wireless data speeds of
about 60 to 70 kilobytes per sec-

ond, which are slightly faster
than a dial-up modem. On the
other hand, 3G will have speeds
around 384 kilobytes per second, which is about as fast as a
digital subscriber line (DSL) or
cable modem.
"Arguably, 3G is faster than
many consumers can get
through their dial-up Internet
service at home," said David
McCarley, executive director of
Verizon's network in the Texas
region.
But once the networks are
turned on, consumers will need
a new phone to use the
advanced data services.
"You have to have three

important things in place, in
order for 3G to provide real
value to the consumers," said
LeAnn Priebe, regional president for Cingular Wireless central region. "You have to have
the network, but you also have
to have the devices with the
capability to offer the services
that can take advantage of the
speeds."

Asiait-American journalist speaks out
against racism and racial profiling
profiling does not improve
national security," Zia said. "It's
a
with her wealth of knowledge,
sloppy — if you're just looking
a
lifetime of experience and
one type of person, you're
for
Zia
healthy humor, Helen
to miss others."
going
inspired and motivated students
kicked off last
APAHW
to
in a speech Wednesday night
challenge those in American week and featured a performMargaret Cho
society who are suspicious, dis- ance by comedian
Saturday.
on
trustful or outright hateful
On Tuesday night, students
toward members of minorities.
a candlelight vigil on
held
Zia, an Asian-American
The aim of the
journalist, author and political College Green.
was to
and lesbian, gay, bisexual and vigil, which Ziaattended, Zia
crimes,
a
topic
transgender activist, addressed discuss hate
has
researched
extensively.
about 100 students in College
"We could really equate hate
Hall at the University of
said.
Pennsylvania. Her lecture was crimes to terrorism," she
"That
kind
fundaof ideology is
part of Asian Pacific American
mentalism, an American kind of
Heritage Week.
Zia discussed the controverZia cited several examples
sial policy of racial profiling,
committed
saying it is ineffective and a of hate crimes
minorities
members
of
against
constraint on people's liberty.
the
challenge
the
U.S.
and
in
She added that current U.S. govcommunities
face
in fightthat
ernment policies unfairly target
intolerance.
ing
Middle East and South Asian
"We know bigotry has no
people in much the same way
boundaries, which is why
real
that former President Franklin
got to work on continuing
we've
Delano Roosevelt's government
to
bridges to cross boundbuild
treated Japanese Americans dursaid.
aries,"
Zia
ing World War II.
our homeland secuhope
"I
"The general consensus of
something about
rity
force
does
those experts who deal with
terrorism,"
she added.
domestic
national security... is that racial
Zia claimed the United

States as a whole has not yet
accepted all minorities as

American. She claimed that
people never immediately
accepted that she was just an
American from New Jersey.
"They always say, 'Where
are your people from?' Then I
say China," Zia said.
On the other hand, "When
you ask, where are your people
from, they say in a kind of huff,
my people are from America
as if you can never be truly
American."
Zia explained that every
individual has a number of identities, which can lead to friction
within a community.
"I know that my race, my
gender, my sexual orientation,
can be items of demonization,"
she said. "An entire group of
people can be labeled as bad, as
less than American."
Zia said even different
minorities could be intolerant,
citing examples of attacks on
Arabs and South Asians after
Sept. 11 by African Americans
and East Asians.
She also said that being an
Asian lesbian leaves her open
for two avenues ofabuse, sometimes even from fellow Asians.



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March 1, 2002

Page 6

OP/ED
Every month is the right month to fight racism
David Kubarek
Eagle Eye News Editor
I was taking pictures at the

Black Student Union's dinner
and awards ceremony last week.
Professor Broomer spoke, and
did one hell of a job at it. I
remember her pounding her fists
against the side of the podium to
enhance her points in a way that
would not be encouraged in any
public speaking 'class'.
"Discover ten historical
black figures that you are not
already familiar with," she says
probably knowing that I can
only site a few that I learned at
my middle class white kid
school when I was pissed off at
the world. She followed with a
piece by Fredrick Douglas, a
man that would tear with joy if
he saw this campus today.
It's March and I have missed

when I hear that one of ing August Kreis, who's in
the largest white supremacist charge of information and propgroups in America has moved aganda, (that's really his title)
less than two hours from this talk about exactly what he stood
University, I'm taken a back. for in a radio documentary. The
Why so close to us? There's no unemployed carpenter also
taught his six-year-old to hate
fuel for them here.
The cult moved into Potter blacks and Jews and just about
just anyone else her father was afraid
Pennsylvania
County
months after they lost a six and of.
"A good Jew is a dead Jew,"
one a half million-dollar lawsuit
n't), that

my mark and I'm sorry for that.
It's taken me weeks to lay down
this poorly-written six column
attempt at praise.
And in the town I grew up a
few kids dropped out just weeks
after enrolling into college.
"Too many n-s there," they
said. And it's a good thing they
left; college wasn't for them
anyway.
I don't mean to imply that
college campuses across the
planet are racist free, or that this
campus is racist free, but I can
say, with confidence, that the
majority of students at this campus sneer at the fascist thought
of being better than anyone else
because of race.
And sometimes I'm so overwhelmed by students of
European decent, Japanese
decent, American Indian decent,
African decent, etc., etc, just
hanging out together like it doesn't matter, (and really, it does-

hissing "-I can say, with confi-

deriCe, that the majority
her 0 f students at this camand
children in
.
Idaho
pus sneer at the racist
IiTmmher thought of being better

;

.

eC i te

:

black
a
mother

han
can y as

turned, the

phone to
Six-

mymQ

because fo race."


A r ya n
complex—
into a center against racism. Beautiful!
I had the misfortune of hear-

m^

';

the radio
journalist
turns the

°ld!Ti n me

Aryan
nation looks to religion for support. Oh, and Adolf Hitler, who

broke just about every one of the
in a murderous attempt for power before
swallowing cyanide and then
taking a bullet just to be sure he
would never really have to pay
for what he did. Maybe he took
his own advice and killed another black haired Jew. (And also
breaking another commandment
in the process. Hitler's propaganda partner in crime, Joseph
Goebbles did the same for himself, his wife and his six children
just a few days prior.)
When Tony Brown spoke at
the University a few years ago
he told students that he never
confronted racists because he
was not a psychologist. "I don't
deal with crazy people," said
Brown. "I don't deal with people with inferiority complexes."
I couldn't agree more.
Mr. Kreis cannot function in
a diverse society. I pity him.
But I'm even more sorry for his

daughter, who is too young to
shake the stigma and may
become permanently infected.
Thank your parents, or grandparents, or their parents for ending the racist stigma. And pray
for those who have not.

Standing at a podium in
Birmingham, Alabama protestors still soaked from the spraying of fire hoses, Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. told a crowd
about a fire that still burns when
wet. Mrs. Broomer encouraged
me to know more of this.
I raise a glass to Mrs.
Broomer. To Dr. King, and to all
the students at this university
that fight racism by removing
themselves from all of the racistpredispositions of the past. To
all that fight racism by ignoring
race, I raise a glass. And to the
daughter of Mr. Kreis who has
been served a great injustice, I
say, "forgive him, for he knows
not what he does."

Who is the one true God, any guesses?
amazing to note some of the passages of prophecy such as Isaiah
7:14, "Behold, a virgin shall
conceive and bear a son" or
Isaiah 9:6, "Unto us a child is
born, unto us a Son is given, and

take a look at a book in the bible,
Isaiah, which was written 700
In today's world we have to years before Jesus was born. It
avoid an attitude that persecutes is on of several books in the
someone for their differing bible that has numerous prophecies about the birth, life and resbeliefs, or denies them their religious freedom. But this is very urrection of Jesus.
The idea that translations tatdifferent from an attitude of tolerance and relativism that tered the prophecies of Isaiah
believes that all points of view was obliterated in 1947 when the
are equally valid. Ultimately, original version of Isaiah and
the question is whether or not we several other biblical books
believe in absolute truth. Is were found in Israel (The Dead
there an absolute truth or is truth Sea Scrolls).
Several copies of Isaiah were
relative to the person?
found and were identicale with
As we look at all religious writings no other book has each other. Since we know that
the prophetical and historical the prophecies in this book canaccuracy as the bible. Is bible not be tattered because we have
prophecy really reliable? Let's the originals to compare to, it is
Dear Editor,

the government will be upon his
shoulder."
It is amazing to know that
700 years before Jesus was even
born, Isaiah knew the government would want to kill him.
Isaiah 53:5 predicts the death of
Jesus almost perfectly when it
says: "He was wounded and
crushed for our sins. He was
beaten that we may have peace,
He was whipped and we were
healed." No other book on earth
has the divine prophecy that the

Because of this "one names
that saves us," this leaves no

LOCK HAVEN UNIVERSITY
PARSONS UNION BUILDING
LOCK HAVEN, PA 17745

(Preen

Copy Editor
Jessica LaCroix

1
� t

r>
4

Advisor
Dr. Douglas S. Campbell
Faculty

Michelle Hershey
David Kubarek

Students

Features Editors
Jessica Savrock
Lindsay Johnson

Op/Ed Editpr
Matthew English

Shawn P. Shanley

Suzanne McCombie
Gregg Tripp

Heather Flicker
Photographers
Marc Rayman
P.J. Harmer
Online Editor
Stephan Baldwin

faith in the "one name" that
saves us. His name is Jesus.
I encourage people who want
to learn more about the truth of
God to attend a Christian ministry on campus. New Life is
one campus ministry that gives
an informal and fun way to learn
more about God. New Life
meets in the MPR Room in the
Pub on Tuesday nights at 8:00
p.m. for any who may be interested. God Bless LHU; may the
ant.
God,
to
then whole campus come to know
If all roads lead
to
live absolute truth.
Christians have nothing
Jesus
Christ
for and their faith in
Bryan Patton
is in vain. After the September
11 tragedy and the realization of
how short life really is, it is
-Letters to the Editor are
essential that we all put our pri- the opinions of the author and
orliies straight and become right jQ not re flect the opinions of
with our creator.
the Eagle Eye staff or it's assoThis only comes through ciates~

room for Allah or any other
name. While there may be an
initial shock to this outrageous
claim, it should not be dismissed
simply because there are so
many other religions and religious ideas. While there are
many from which to choose,
they differ radically from each
other, and choosing where to
place your spiritual trust is neither-narrow minded nor intoler-

Qo for

PJER

Editors in Chief
Shawn P. Shanley
Sean Dooley

This absolute proclamation
marks the Christian faith.
In the book of Acts, we reac
the apostle Peter proclaiming
that salvation is found in no one
else, "For there is no other name
under heaven given to men by
which we must be saved" (Acts
4:10).

THE EAGLE EYE
\w^m^^

bible does, not one.
If the bible is as true as it
proves, then we all have something to think about when it
comes to life. Jesus said, "I am
the Way, the Truth, and the Life.
No one comes to the Father,
(John
except through me!"
14:6).
In this scripture it is not a
way, a truth, or a life, but the
absolute way, truth and life.

..

.

Win a $50 deposit Mo
your PSECU account!
"£et the £reen" when yow log on to

Reporters

psecw@hoMie®.

Jessy Garcia

Scott Evans, Jared Guest, P.J. Harmer, Sumer Buttorff, Kristin White, Kevin
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Page 7

Eagle Eye

March 1, 2002

It's snot the way it's
supposed to be
By Dave Barry
Knight Ridder

"So basically the Winter Olympics
degenerated into a great big

-

SALT LAKE CITY The
mood was cranky here in the
waning moments of the 2002
winter games:
-RUSSIA threatened to walk
out of the Olympics if it was not
gold
immediately awarded
medals in women's figure skating, the Nordic combined alpine
snowshoe and two events to be
named later.
-KOREA threatened to walk
out of the Olympics if it did not
get whatever Russia got.
-LITHUANIA threatened to
walk out of the Olympics if
whoever stole its lucky towel
did not return it.
-PORTUGAL actually did
walk out of the Olympics, but
nobody noticed, so Portugal
sulked back into town and spent
the rest of the Games holed up in
its hotel room watching dirty
movies.
So basically the Winter
Olympics degenerated into a
great big international snit. This
is what inevitably happens when
you gather people from many
different nations and force them
to sit together for hours in
crowded buses, listening to each
other's ongoing efforts to expel
mucus clots.
I don't want to get too

international snit"
explicit, but the dry, cold atmospheric conditions here tend to
result in nasal formations the
size of Yorkshire terriers.
Some nations were so angry
that they threatened not only to
leave these Olympics, but also
to boycott the 2004 Summer
Games, scheduled to be held in
Greece.
As you can imagine, this
caused great consternation in

Dave Barry
Greece, which issued the fol"The
statement:
lowing

Olympics are coming HERE?"
Put the immediate issue was
not whether Greece will be
ready to host the 2004 games
(no). The immediate issue was
how to make the snitting nations

Olympic movement
simply cannot allow the
Russians to become estranged,
because Russia is a vital part of
the world sports community, in
the sense of having nuclear missiles.
And the Russians were
REALLY hacked off, for a
bunch ofreasons. First, they lost
the Cold War. THEN they were
forced to share the gold medal
for pairs figure skating with
Canada. THEN one of the top
Russian cross-country skiers
was disqualified because, in the
words of Olympic drug-testing
officials, "her urine sample burst
into flames."
But the last straw came
Thursday night, when Russia's
top woman figure skater, the
veteran Irina Slutskaya, lost the
gold medal to an American,
Sarah Hughes, who is maybe 11
years old and who passed the
time, while waiting for her
scores to appear, playing with
her Olympics Barbie.
The Russians protested the
women's result, but to no avail.
The International Olympic
The

~4&

e are seeking students who would be interested
awing editorial cartoons for the OP/ED section
tie Eagle Eye, anyone interested can contact me
iaggy_19333@ yahoo.com.
judges, who pointed out, correctly that the letters in "Irina
Slutskaya" can be rearranged to
spell "Russian Yak Tail." This is
a mandatory two-tenths deduction.
The situation was finally
resolved Friday when, after a
lengthy meeting with IOC officials, the Russians agreed to

Quote of the Week:"The United States would

very much like to get our hands on Omar
Sheikh." -ARI FLEISCHER, White House
spokesman, on the chief suspect in the Daniel
Pearl case.
drop their gold-medal demands
and remain in the Games.
In return for this act of
sportsmanship, they will get

East Germany back,
thing came out fine. Speaking of
which, I need to blow my nose.

Pearl was killed because he was an American
Mark Bowden
Knight Ridder
So Danny Pearl is dead.
His killers offered various
rationales for the murder of the

Wall Street Journal reporter.

First they said he was a CIA
agent, then acknowledged that

he wasn't. Then they claimed he
was actually an Israeli spy. Right
a Mossad agent who was born
in Princeton, attended Stanford
University, and was then
assigned to work undercover at
the Berkshire Eagle newspaper
for
in western
five years. For what? To keep an

-

on the

" courses and hik-

ing trails?
Pearl was killed because he
was an American. His execu-

tioners probably took additional
pleasure in the fact that he was
Jewish. Pearl was lured into
their hands because, as a
reporter, he knew there are two
sides to every story, and he
wanted to tell theirs. He wanted

a better understanding of why a

small group of Pakistani
Muslims would conspire to plant
four ounces of a powerful explosive in the soles of would-be suicide bomber Richard Reid's
shoes and send him off to blow
up an American Airlines flight
between Paris and Miami.
It was a good story, an
every reporter. Primarily, there is
curiosity. Every good reporter is
driven by a desire to make sense
of the world, to find out for himself or herself exactly what is

happening and why.
We learn through experience
that what everyone thinks is true
often is not. So you regard all
second- and third-hand information with suspicion and seek out
firsthand material with dogged

pacifist theory, and a noble
undertaking. It is not done only
by journalists. It is also the work
of diplomats, foreign aid workers, missionaries and even
police, spies and soldiers. The
truth is as valuable to warriors as
peacemakers. So Danny Pearl's
motives were in the best tradition of civilized society.
By all accounts, he was not a
danger junkie. He was pursuing
a good story from a hotel room
in Karachi, a southern Pakistani
port city that is not exactly a war
zone. He arranged to meet a
source at a restaurant. He probably knew that the people he was
meeting were dangerous, but the
meeting was in a public place,
and no doubt his contacts
seemed friendly and helpful on

the phone.
He would have gone to the
intensity.
meeting,
one
of
the
and the one after it,
my
experience,
In
probably convinced that everysurest signs of the truth is the
element of surprise. Things are one sees the value in telling their
story, that everyone wants to be
almost never what we think.
understood. So he placed his
Searching out the truth, seeking out both sides of a conflict, trust not just in the people he
can be important work. Many was meeting, but in the inherent
conflicts in the world are value of the work he was trying
grounded in misunderstanding to do.
His captors had their own
and irrational distrust, and many,
be
most,
not
can
resolved
idea
of how to tell their story.
by
if
They kidnapped him and distribbetter communication.
This is a guiding principle of uted pictures of him with a gun

Celica—
The Inside Story
On the outside, it's easy to see that Celica is race-track
inspired. But the real excitement is on the inside...under the
hood. Take the Celica GT-S...Toyota worked with Yamaha to
build a 180 HP engine redlined at 7800 RPM...equipped it
with Variable Valve Timing with intelligence...a computer
that constantly monitors and retunes your engine for maximum performance...a cam with two sets of lobes to provide
two ranges of valve lift and duration for more usable horsepower. There's direct ignition for greater reliability...
iridium-tipped spark plugs for reduced maintenance...a

stainless steel exhaust manifold...a water-cooled oil cooler.
And mated with Toyota's 4-speed electronically-controlled
automatic "Sportshift", you get transmission shift switches
on the steering wheel...just like Formula 1 race cars. Sweet.

www.gettoyota.com
because now your Toyota dealer has a special college graduate
financing program available thru Toyota Financial Services
that offers a lot of great advantages.
So if you're within 4 months of graduation... or if you graduated
within the past two years...See your Toyota dealer for details.

head. They made impossible demands of the U.S. government, then slaughtered him.
Cruelty and murder weren't
enough for them. They chose to
make a spectacle of the execution, videotaping it and sending
it out into the world. The horrific videotape is their answer to
the hope that dialogue and mutual understanding can resolve all
human differences.
They can't. Those who tried
to blow up American Airlines
Flight 63 and who killed Danny
Pearl are implacable enemies of
the United States and the
Western world. They marked
Pearl as a spy because their
world view doesn't allow for a
person like him, a Jew prospering in a secular society by pursuing his own talent and curiosity.
Why seek the truth when it is
already known? When all has
been revealed? Why care what
an enemy thinks or says?
Some journalists do seek out
war zones - in part for the excitement, in part out of ambition,
and in part because pictures and
stories from such places are rare
particularly
and in demand
so
American
major
many
since
TV
networks
newspapers and
correforeign
cut
back
on
have
spondents.
Most journalists, even war
reporters, are not like that. 1 am
not, and everything I have heard
about Pearl convinces me that he
to his

-

wasn't, either.
I have never been a full-time
foreign correspondent, as he
was, but I know what it is like to
follow a story to a dangerous
place. To someone who doesn't
do it for a living, risking your
life to tell a better story sounds
like a foolish thing. But it rarely
involves a knowing plunge into
great risk. It involves following
a trail that gradually leads in that
direction, knowing that you will
back away if circumstances get
too risky, but not wanting to
abandon the thread out of timidity or cowardice. Because those
of us who write stories love our
work, and believe in its importance, we tend to go farther
down that road than most people
would. At heart, it means placing your trust in the basic decen-

cy of other human beings.
Most people possess that
decency. The murder of Danny
Pearl reminds us that some
don't.

March 1, 2002

Eagle Eye

Page 8

IF
Where do you get your tunes from?
mp3

Aimster),

Lindsay Johnson
Eagle Eye Features Editor

Shockwave, and iMesh.

Many young people,
especially college students, who
are usually financially stressed
to being with, do not want to
spend the money that is necessary to keep up with the latest

The Eagle Eye staff
sample of students wh
they use to download mi
then we checked out the

:d a

site
and
and

in our survey was Audiogalaxy.
This program works by each
user creating an ID and password, which delivers free access

file must also be connected to
the Audiogalaxy server. Each
user determines which files
he/she shares.

to the website and its
amounts of shared audio files. It

While downloading, the user
can track the progress of each

vast

loaded files are saved, to be
resumed from the exact place
they stopped downloading the
next time you connect. A downside to this program is that
downloads are limited to

Next in line of popularity in

The Results

our survey was Napster. This is a
fee-based, members only program, also based on user sharing. However, with this program, the artist or label deter-

Audiogalaxy

Napster

75%

20%

Internet should understand the

effort this takes, however, to set
up the program necessary to
download the songs, search for
the music one is looking for, and
wait patiently for the bytes to

programs include Audiogalaxy,
Napster. Morphius, Kazza,
Madster (formerly known as

iMesh

5%
downs of e h response. If you
weren't ask« to be a part of our
survey, you can visit our website

(http://wwv /.LHU.eagleye.com)
and put in y our response,
The mo st popular response

is based on a user-sharing system, meaning that only files
already held by users are available to other users, and in order
to download a specific file, a
user who already possesses that

download through what the
company calls the "satellite."
Files are downloaded in MP3
format.
A positive feature of this
program is that partially down-

Am

mm

iS

has his/her satellite set up.
However, more than 10 files can
be set up to be downloaded and
the satellite will process the files

mm

The Lock Haven University

Johnson

Eagle Eye Features Editor

]

WW'wjk

1

between two and 10 files at
time, depending on how the

mines the availability of copyrighted files because Napster
pays them to make their songs
available to the Napster downloading community, thus giving
them the power to make rules
concerning their files.
The least popular response in
our survey was iMesh. This program shares a lot of characteristics with Audiogalaxy. It is also,
a free, user sharing program
where each user determines
which music files he/she shares.
However, one positive attribute of iMesh that sets it apart
from the rest is that you can
download more than just music
with this program - also available for downloading are such
selections as photos, home made
videos, homework, and any
other files that are in accordance
with the iMesh legal notice.

Black History Celebration
full of song and dance
Lindsay

I
I

sionally, these setbacks can be

avoided by changing file names
to something recognizable but
different than the copyrighted
name.

musical trends.
Many college students also
find it much easier to sit in their
dorm rooms and collect all the
music they could ever want or
need than to get out to the stores
and buy it. For the people who
fit these
there is
the wonderful world of downloading music off the Internet.
Anyone who has ever
tried to download music off the

add up to kilobytes and kilobytes
to add up to complete songs.
These people should also appreciate the fact that the program
you use to download music can
ci I her make or break your downloading experience.
There are many programs, available at the click of
the mouse, which can be used to
download music. Some of these

order
in
the
selected.
Copyrighted songs are restricted
from downloading, but occa-

mm

**' "*"*!**'*•'»«■!

The first annual Black
History Month Celebration,
hosted by The Sophisticated
Ladies of LHU and the Social
Equity Office, provided an
evening of singing, dancing,
and celebrating the history of
African Americans.
Sophisticated Ladies president Sherwonda Boardley said
she organized the event "to create unity among everybody, not
just African Americans. I wanted everybody to come together
to celebrate Black History
Month."
Boardley opened the celebration by asking for 30 seconds
of silence to remember the people who struggled for the rights
that African Americans have
today. She also shared some
background information about
Black History Month.
After a prayer led by Izana
Haile, the audience was invited
to join in singing the Black
Hope
National
Anthem.
Mitchell read her untitled poem
about African American pride.

circle, where

Gospel Choir performed two of the audience, including Alan
gospel selections: "You saved Anderson, Director of Social
me" and "Jesus still on the main Equity and Assistant to the
line." Molly McClearahan and President of LHU, came up to
Shavone Houston performed a the front of the room and danced
duet of "His Eye Is On The a tribal dance with the company
Sparrow." Select members of dancers.
Anderson made the closing
the Gospel Choir performed the
final selection, "Amazing remarks for the ceremony, and
Grace."
everyone was invited to enjoy
The Sophisticated Ladies refreshments provided by the
presented a collection of select Sophisticated Ladies.
Each audience member was
African American leaders. This
collection included Frederick given a black, green and red ribDouglass,
Medgar Evers, bon to symbolize black leaders
Garrett,
Barbara yesterday, today and tomorrow.
Morgan
Jorden, Martin Luther King Jr., They were asked to wear the
Thurgood Marshall, James ribbons on Thursday as a
Meredith, Rosa Parks, Colin reminder to others who hadn't
been present at the celebration.
Powell and Carter Woodson.
The Sophisticated Ladies
Special guest for the
evening was the Nommo was founded in Spring 1999 as a
Performing Arts Company of group whose members would
welcome and work to advance
Penn State University. The company combines dance, theater racial and ethnic equality and
and music to create a performco-existence.
ance of African tribal dances,
Founding members are
native
Sherwonda
Boardley, Carmen
set to tribal beats with
Figueroa, Coran Freeland,
instruments.
After several of these lively Selena Johnson and Brandy
tribal dances, the dancers invitWilliams.
ed the audience to join in on
what they called a community

I mm\\\\m
mm

Dave Kubarek/The Eagle Eye ;

night in
Purpose Room at 8 p.m. She played and sang songs such as "Twilight" on
her guitar and piano, accompanied by a small band.

Page 9

March 1, 2002

Big names in the news

wc^^{^mmnm
IF I MAY
A Texas
chological disorder that causes him to fly
into an uncontrollable rage whenever he
hears certain words, among them,
"Wisconsin, "Snickers" and "Mars."
He thought s girlfriend was about to say
"New Jjersey,'' so he shot her. He was convicted of" aggravated assault.

J

YOU'RE CHILLY, DARLING, I CAN
TELL
Ten couples got married Valentine's Day in
an outdoor ceremony at Runaway Bay on
Jamaica's north coast. They were all nude.

Hi
he
sprung for six cars, three Rolex watches, a
$500,000 ring and a mansion in Las Vegas,
His attorney said the young man's "moral
compass broke when he was a teen." He
mm
got five years in prison,
WK
jm

SO THAT'S WHY I WAS FEELING
SICK!
A man flew from Angola to Portugal where
authorities discovered that he had more
than 1,300 uncut diamonds in his irttestines. He was taken to a hospital where the
gems, wrapped in plastic, were removed.

fcbfc^jflf

:

■> ■

GOT
An inmate, imprisoned for a 1999 rape in
Illinois, agreed to a DNA test to win his
freedom and clear his good name.
However, not only did the test link him to
the crime of which he was convicted, but it
also implicated him in a previously
unsolved rape.
amm

.

'
NOW,

FUNNY
EH,
KLAUS?
A man in the working-class town of
Wedding, Germany was evicted from his
apartment because he laughed too much
and too loudly.



WORKING VERY CLOSELY ON HIS
DEFENSE
A lawyer defending a Miami city commissioner on a voter fraud
id charge was having
sex with his client's wife at the same time
he was representing him
The woman had come to the lawyer's apartment on behalf of her husband to discuss
jury selection, and one thing led to another. She is now pregnant with the lawyer's
child, and her hubby is in jail.
A federal magistrate recommended that the
husband's conviction u
of the hanky-panky issue


Thlfyel^Dorwil^'

FOR ONCE, HE'S BEING HONEST
A Pennsylvania prison inmate, who is
doing time for robbing a gas station, married the mother of his two children in the
basement of the courthouse.
Responding to a question on the marriage
license application, he listed his occupation as "criminal."

whose stupidity has
tary removal from the gene pool, features a
poacher named Marino Malerba.
While on an illegal hunt in Spain, he spied
a wild stag on an overhangJng rock above
him and immediately
on him, killing him instantly

YOU MEAN THIS IS WRONG?
A 24-year-old investment adviser stole $50
million from his clients and then went on
the most lavish and audacious
spending sprees ever known, buying oil
wells, a helicopter and a $1.2 million

Mike Pingree is a columnist'far the. Boston
Herald. Read a second "Looking Glass
column' on the Internet at www.pir
greeslookingglass.com.

Bk

work will be published this fall
in a book that promises a
glimpse into the mind of the late
avatar of grunge music. Some
fans, though, are decrying the
A THRILLER ENDING
deal as one more attempt to use
Will he or won't he? Afterall the famously private Cobain's
the talk - even lawsuits - over remaining work for profit.
Michael Jackson's planned
James Barber, manager for
appearances on the Grammys Cobain's widow, Courtney
and the rival American Music Love, said the terms of the deal
Awards, a Grammys spokesman
with Riverhead Books could not
says the Gloved One won't be be disclosed, but he described
performing on that show tonight the contents ofthe 23 journals as
after all.
lists of
"really cool stuff"
Did Jackson turn down the Cobain's favorite records, letters
National Academy of Recording from when he was trying to get a
Arts and Sciences' Grammy record deal, drawings of stage
invitation? Or was he never arrangements and letters to fans.
invited? Academy spokesman Other reports say the journals
Ron Roecker said he did not also include some not-so-cool
know.
Jackson's managers stuff, meaning references to
weren't talking.
Cobain's heroin addiction and
While Jack-O may be out of depression.
the biz of music award shows,
he apparently is into movies. He CAMEO BY THE BOSS
has invested big bucks Bruce Springsteen will make
between $15 million and $20
a rare cameo in an untitled
million
in Montreal-based romantic drama set to start
Entertainment shooting this summer in his
Worldwide
MDP
Inc. to kick-start his foray into native New Jersey. The film folmoviemaking, according to lows a young man and woman
Variety. And we do mean kickwho meet just as they are about
start. He last appeared on the silto commit suicide. (Did we say
ver screen as the Scarecrow to romantic?) The 52-year-old
Diana Ross' Dorothy in the 1978 rocker will portray a radio DJ
bomb "The Wiz."
who has conversations with the
woman, to be played by Julia
DEAR DIARY
Stiles.
Nirvana lead singer Kurt
Cobain's musings about his LANDING GOLD, THEN

By Lini Kadaba
Knight Ridder
Newspapers

-

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Get ready for the supermarketing of Sarah Hughes. Her
amazing performance landed
her on the Olympics podium
with a gold medal - and put her
on boxes of Wheaties. The figure skater will grace the orange
box next month.
ELVIS SIGHTING
Are you ready for Elvis
Presley Ranch? Just in case
Graceland isn't enough for Elvis
fans, developer J.D. Stacy wants
to build a boffo resort on the
spot where the King and
Priscilla Presley spent their honeymoon. The proposed $500
million development is on land
that Elvis once owned in

Memphis, known as the Circle
G Ranch. The resort, in typical
Elvis excess, would include golf
courses, shops, entertainment
and replicas of the honeymoon
cottage. Love me tender.

METAL MOUTH

Brace yourself: Tom Cruise
thinks his grin needs improvement enough to wear braces on

-

his upper teeth. Publicist Pat
Kingsley says the 39-year-old
actor got wired a week ago after
taking one of his kids to the
orthodontist and discovering
that his own choppers were out
of alignment. But fear not. "He'll
take them off for movies,"
Kingsley allowed.

I

I T""**«»

March 1-7

Upcoming events
Friday, March 1 @ 8 p.m.
Marvin Hamlisch and Orchestra
Monday, March 4 @ 7 p.m.

BLACK HAWK DOWN

Harlem Globetrotters
Monday, March 25 @ 7:45 p.m.
WWF Raw

2 p.m. Sat. & Sun. only

Live telecast!

Friday, April 5 @ 7p.m.
Dave Matthews Band
SOLD OUT!
Tickets are available at the Bryce Jordan Ticket Center, select Uni-Mart ticket outlets,
tonwealth Campus ticket outlets, or by calling 1-800-863-3336, or online at www.bjc.psu.edu

Show Times:
Fri: 7, 930 Sat: 2, 7, 9:30 Sun: 2, 7 Mon-Thur: 7
I :
East Main Street
Lock Haven
www.roxymovies.con
Hotline: 748-ROXY

In the PUB
March 17th @ 5:30pm
1 ,'

h

JU

£.2gle Wfog %mck "tlsv
Wishes yon § hsppy §r %sh

Geek's
March 17th @ 7&9pm
March 18th @ 8:00pm

Watch for more upcoming events!

Al Iways
4. Creed "My Sacrifice" No. 5
5- Linkin Park "In the End"
No. 7
Pink "Get the Party Started"

4

D.

Alicia Keys "A Woman's
Vorth" No. 8
8. The Calling "Wherever You
Will Go" No. 9

Got A Life by TerriDavis
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By day. she's the [

Pft£"~ Vl I
3

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tata
dressed to the nines
end reody to kick
some corporate butt.

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into her alter e9 o.
donning her "uglies"
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The New Breed

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herself from her

h„

9. No Doubt feat. Bounty
Killer "Hey Baby" No. 10
10. Jennifer Lopez feat. Ja

Rule "Ain't It Funny" No 12
Top 10 Albums
Alan Jackson
Drive" No. 12.

Creed
"Weathered" No. 2
3. Linkin Park "[Hybrid
Theory |" No. 3
4. Ludacris "Word of Mouf'
No. 5

SIP?


.

7 women don't seeM Y perhaps \
S.

5. Nickelback "Silver Side
Up" No. 4

Ja Rule "Pain Is Love" No.

TA TAKE TA ME.'
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see you as

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50 AH0 GAMPS.'

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r . Nas "Stillmatic" No. 7

f. Usher "8701" No. 8
i. Pink "Mlssundaztood" No.
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10. Soundtrack "O Brother,
Where Art Thou?" No. 11

-*] J-



IN OTHER
YOO LIKE N
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SETTLE DOWN WITH IN

SOMEONE V.,.HOME->
cooked

#3 t° cake
rf5*s FOR VCU

ALS

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Little did Dorothy and the others realize
that if the scarecrow had a brain,
he'd be dangerous.

LIKE LIVIN'HEUE \

:- 2QOZ Gfflq

DW1I6

by

Fert

Top 10 Hot
Country Singles

'

"Good Morning

Beautiful" No. 1

Z. GeorgeStrait "Run" No. 3
\ Brad Paisley "Wrapped
\round"No. 4
I. Alan Jackson "Where Were
Vou (When the World Stopped
lrning)" No. 2
Brooks & Dunn "The Long
loodbye" No. 8
Jo Dee Messina with Ton
IcGraw "Bring on the Rain" No.

The Spats
1

OP COURSE NOT

HAVE YoO BEEN CUPPINfr
yoor Toenails, au. over
the

Honey...

carpet a6ain?

.

by Jeff Pickering
...J'm CUPPING THEM

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the bmp of my to^i»

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Tim McGraw "The Cowboy in
rfe" No. 10
GarthBrooks "Wrapped Up in
ju" No. 6
Aaron Ilppin "Where the Stars
id Stripes and the Eagles Fly" No.
10. Martina McBride "Blessed"
No. 12

"Can we read the little engine that could,
but wouldn't because it's not his job?"

Out on a Limb

Top 10 Movies

*

I. Black Hawk

Down
2. Snow Dogs
3. The Count of Monte Crisi
A Walk to Remember
A Beautiful Mind
i. The Mothman Prophecies
'. The Lord of the Rings:
I In- Fellowship of the Ring

—m

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1.1 Am Sam

9. Rung Pow: Enter The Fist
10. Slackers
y

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CITY NAMES VTrftTCTTWTiTBlTV
CONTAINING
MAZE.
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7

\ Top 10DVD Sales

\\. American Pie

/
ji-

-

( Widescreen
unrated)

-

2. American Pie

POUSQYELEERGOMK

3. The Fast and the Furious
4. American Pie 2 (Pan &
Scan -R)
5. American Pie 2

I E I T FDB ZXGWNNWO

8. Tron: 20th Anniversary
Collector's Edition
9. Pearl Harbor
10. Shrek
Top 10 Video
Rentals
1. American Pie
2(R)

2. The Fast and the Furious
3. Jeepers Creepers
4. The Glass House
5. American Pie 2 (Unrated)
6. What's the Worst That
Could Happen?
7. The Princess Diaries
8. Rush Hour 2
9. The Score
10. Moulin Rouge

HENR Y BOLT INOFF

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TASIQRNAPOMHHBU

1. GEOGRAPHY: What river does the
Brooklyn Bridge span?
2. LANGUAGE: What is the Latin prefix for
•fire"?
RELIGION: The Thirty-Nine Articles of
1563 help complete the
of what
church?
LITERATURE: Who is the narrator in
»loby Dick"?
5. ENTERTAINERS: Which singer's theme
song was "Everybody Loves Somebody"?
6. ASTRONOMY: What is the largest planet
in our solar system?
7. HISTORY: When did the War of 1812 end?
8. PRESIDENTS: Who was the first U.S. president to die while in office?
9. ANIMAL KINGDOM: What is a komondor?
10. MYTHOLOGY: What are naiads?

.

by

URWTRPMKIFDBYWU

2 (Pan & Scan -unrated)

6. Buffy the Vampire Slayer
Season One
7. Jeepers Creepers

rlvla Quiz

Find at (east six differences In details between panels
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(c) 2001 King Features Synd., Inc

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forward, backward, up, down and diagonally.
Perptorwi
Decatur
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Batavta
Wtieaang
San Antonio
Whitehorss
Baton Rouga Herat
Trumbull
Moscow
Cracow
©2002 King Fumrei, Inc.

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~ President George Washington grew marijuana at Mount Vernon.
~ If you are like the average American, you will eat more than 26 pounds of cheese this year.

Classifieds

—,

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
Parsons Union building from 10
AM until 2 PM.
...^«i,.pimv,ivn.,.i,^ vl

Personals]
Jason, thanks for doing the
dishes and taking out the
trash.
We're sending a kid to camp!

Becky—You did a great job
this semester! I'm proud that
you're my sister!!!! TLAM,
Kate
Sarah, Adam, & Jason:
Tomorrow we'll be on our way
to the Bahamas!! MaryBeth
C-Note, Pimp them windows
tinted. OK! Holla!
Much respect, Raul B.

Janeen...! miss hanging
with you. Love ya! Love, your
little
out

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
available in the office of the
President in 202 Sullivan Hall
D eadline for the return
is April 9, 2002.

Melissa: what is that you're
drinking? Hemlock? I heard
Cheryl likes it!! HAHA!
Little Angel Melissa, you are
doing a fabulous job as
VPNME! Keep it up!
LISK, Your Guardian Angel
Leigh
the air! It tastes

Can you
good, Don't it?
-Bradley
taste

Zetas, have a great spring

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.

.

Positions Available in

break!
Adrienne—You're still my
favorite sister. Am I yours?
Still, I'm glad that you're one
of my friends! TLAM, Kate

Recall.Recall!!! Air Perfect
was called back! That's right
called back! He is tarnished.
My game is like 10x2!!! Air J
Dabs Flight unleashed"April"
20, 2002

Career Services:
Peer Career Facilitators for the Meet the Greeks with Sigma
2002-03 academic year.
Kappa and Alpha Chi Rho.
Will assist students with career
exploration strategies and job "It's not who you are that holds
search techniques. Strong interyou back, it's who you think
personal and communication you're not."-unknown
skills required. Minimum GPA
of 2.5 preferred. MiisJ complete To my sisters- thanks for the
training which will be held support; i really appreciate it.
week of August 19th. This is a you girls are all great! zlam,
paid position based on LHU's Teresa
work study/campus employment pay scale. Complete job Chubb stains...Happy 21st
description and application ZLAM, ZTA
available in Career Services,
Akeley 114.
Kristy & Kristen- I am so glad
Application Deadline:
that you two are in my life! I
Friday, April 5, 2002.
don't know what I would without you two.
TLAM, Kate
College Housing
Close to Campus
Phone Judy after 4 p.m.

748-6336

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CALL 745-3565

HAPPY SPRING BREAK

LHU!
Attention Seniors: The spring
2002 bar crawl is in the works!
Tentative Date: Saturday May
4th! Love the sisters of ZTA
& ZEE

ZTA- have a great spring break
ZLAM, Sarah W.
Kristen & Sara- Have a good
Spring Break! Kate

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W. Walnut & Second Ave, Lock Haven PA

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Please call (570) 726-4433 or 753-3108 for more
information

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Thanks to all those who made
me realize what true friends
are...you know who you are.
I'm the best!

410 girls: you girls are great!
Good job with the ice cream
social. It was a blast! Sigma
love, Amy ps. Kim, I hope you
did well on your test!
Katie, Congrats on your
engagement! I love you pledge
sis! Leigh

i.vvill

Stud ents:
Scholarship Available.

_—_

Ang H, Ang W-1 miss seeing
you guys on campus!! Have a
great Spring Break!
TLAM, Kate

Who is Moneyshot?
What is Moneyshot?
Why is Moneyshot?
Where is Moneyshot?
When is Moneyshot?

My favorite soldier- A day

closer and a day stronger.
Jenn- This semester has gone
by quickly! I have had the time
of my life!! We need to go on
more road trips like we've had
this semester! Hershey, here we
come!! You make a great
Panhell president! Your
KAP boys: thanks for the ride!

NAT

Skukedaddy, Weakest Eva.

Crussader: Follow your heart
and know that I will be there
for you all the way. Love, wif
Cheryl, Carrie, & Leah: You
girls are lifesavers. I owe you
one! ZLAM, Lauren
Thank you to those who donat-

Kel- What the hell is the mentality of those we live with???
Clinton Co., Your name should
be Tyrone. Weeks.
o.c.

-

Kristy, Teach me American
dance! SLAM, Leigh

ed money at Wal-Mart on
Friday and Saturday.

Tina and Jill: movie nite was a
blast. We should do it more
often.. SLAM, Amy

To the sisters of Sigma KappaHave a great spring break!

John B. You Know He! Bottom
ofthe Net!

He he, i got it!

Little Marie: Hope you are
feeling better! ZLAM, Jenn

Kristen-1 hope that you're
feeling better! Kate

The captain is the bottom for

February
Johnny B., Get in line now.
Air Perfect Retro 2 available in
stores March 3rd! Buy yourself
a game, since you don't have
one. -streets
I'm a Luigi, number 1!

AXP helps kids go to summer
j camp
Heather.
When are we going
to play Catch Phrase? Love ya!
Keep in touch!
Love, Toaster, p.s. Sorry about
the shift.
Crow is still flying high!
Swizzlebacher, put that can of
back!

tuna

LHU- Have a good spring
break! Have fun in the sun and
get burnt!!!

Angela, happy birthday,
Sweetheart! ZLAM, Bailey
One down, One to go. And
you know what I'm talking
about. -Bradley
Kate, Shannon, and Carrie:
Great job at the concert!! you.,
guys rock!! Sigma love, Amy

hey hac's mac and cheese girl,
lets hang out again, cheese'nmac guy
My favorite Sigma-We need to
go to PSU. We need to go
shopping and scan the guys!

While we're there, maybe we
can have another manhunt!
Your favorite AET

Chubb: have a great time in
the Bahamas. If you change
your mind about packing me in
your suitcases, let me know!
Lauren

campbellshoup, Your b-ball
game needs much improvement. Right now you're building houses. I'm floatin'!! bstyles

Have a great spring break girls!
ZLAM, Allie

Trisha & Melissa- You guys
are doing a great job this
semester! Keep it up!! TLAM,

Little Cheryl & Andy: Can't
wait for 20 hours in a car!
Love Jessica

Kate

haul us around next time.
ZLAM, Nat
Sisters: Thanks for the bunny.
My streak is ruined! ZLAM,
Lauren

Have a fantastic Spring Break
AET!!

Lauren

Good Luck Rach. and Kris, on
midterms! -Ang

J-dubs is talking backboard.
Bstyles is talking front
board, where it counts, chea!
To My Favorite AST—I just

wanted to say hi!!! There is no
other person I rather go to the
infirmary with. Next time, I'll
take you there!!! SLAM, Your
Favorite Sigma
Jamie: Wal-mart is a college
girl's best friend!!! Sigma love,
Amy

the captain had a "hard" attack,
twice
JaneenBean- Watch out for the
ticket pimp and his street corner hussies.

Little Jess & Cheryl: Have a
great time in New Orleans!
Love Jenn

Jill and Steph: thanks for the
birthday present! you guys
know me good! ZLAM, Bailey
NikiNicole: Hey chik, How are
you??
Hello Kristin White-- How the
heck are you??
Happy belated Birthday
Rachel!!! Sorry I could not celebrate with you on Sunday.
Love, your cous
Toaster- Don't worry about the

shift. We'll play Catch Phrase
after break. I promise! Have a
happy break and smile big!!

Go Crow!
Kevin, you will be missed.
-Lamar
Karolyn- Have you found your
way? Have a good Spring
Break! TLAM, Kate
"Nobody ever died of laughter"- Max Beerbohm
Andrea, PANHELL!!!!!!!!!!!
Leigh
Michelle- you are doing great!
Keep your chin up! ZLAM,
your heart sister
Waving my hand in front ofmy
face, feeling the
breeze. -Lucas
Andrea- We need to hang out
before you graduate in May! I
hope that you get the job of
your dreams! Panhell ROCKS!
TLAM, Kate
Marcus- Thank you for the late
night phone calls and smiles.

Molasses.. lips.. .bad jokes...
smiles and laughter...good
times with you Tator Tot.

aven

Nicole—Which famous people
did you meet now? I'll have to
see the pictures when you get
back! TLAM, Kate
Amber- I'm glad that you came
back to LHU this semester! I
missed you while you were in
Spain. We need to go out some
time! TLAM, Kate
Happy and safe spring break to
you all!!
Little Dragon Secret- I'm going
to miss you when you graduate! We need to have a girls'
night out at PSU! I hope that
we can do this while you're
still here! J TLAM, Big
Dragon Secret
Do YOU have...
The BALLS to BOWL?
Take the Bowling Challenge
Monday March 18 at
9:15 p.m. at Clinton Lanes
$5.00 = 2 games and shoe
rental, teams of 5,
register by March 12
with Steve at 893-3904. Prizes
for everyone. Sponsored by Phi
Sigma Pi

ivers

students, faculty and staff:
|~"Jave

a

great and memorable

spring break.
We will see you back here soon
and remember that you can
email your personals from now until

AET AET AET AET !!!!!!!!
Kevin and Pete: Thanks for all
ofyour help with my cat. I
don't know what i would have
done without you! Lauren

Happy 21st Birthday, Chubb!
ZLAM, Lauren

boy!

Mr. Kiwi- Have a good day
because someone is thinking of
you. Love Ms. Pineapple

Mary Beth, Adam, Jason, and

Amy, no more walking it's too
cold, we'll make the KAP boys

Little Natalie: Have fun in
Spring Break- wherever you
end up going! ZLAM, Big

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1,

Page

Mussachio wins at PSU, Garcia upset at Reno
Two of Lock
Haven
University's big guns split in
feature bouts this past weekend
nearly 3,000 miles apart.
Chuck Mussachio, 185, the
defending National (NCBA)
Champion moved up to 195 lbs.
and won an unanimous 5-0 decision over Army's Duane Mantle
Saturday night in one of the two
featured bouts at the PSU
Collegiate Boxing Invitational
in the White PE Building Main
Gym.
Mussachio, who upped his
career record to 24-6 used a stiff
left jab and superior hand speed
to defeat the rugged 6'6" Cadet.
In the other featured bout,
defending national 156 lb.
champion, Alex Komlev, PSU,
won a hard earned 5-0 decision
over the Bald Eagles promising
freshman, Derrick McGraw.
McGraw won the first
round, but the experience and
ring savvy of Komlev, a senior,
began paying dividends midway through the second and
third rounds to pull away from
McGraw in an exciting bout.
McGraw kept in the contest
with a good left jab and scored
on several effective head shots
but Komlev, as was expected,

If

-^mmmmmmmmmmn^mfxmvMIMMlMS-. J Jm

decisions over Ebrahimi in both
the '2000 national semi-finals
and again at the New York
Athletic Club Invitational in
Nov. 2000.
This time around, however,
Ebrahimi evaded Garcia's thundering over-hand rights to win a
narrow 59-58 score on all five
judges scorecards.
Garcia, a senior, now sports a
career 19-11 record.
Junior Miro Jelev, 195, was
awarded a walk-over win over
B11 1
Gaidi Faraj, Univ. of Calif.
Berkely.
more Kossi Abudra, 165, who
It was an unexpected walklost a 5-0 decision to PSU's Jim over much to the disappointment
of Jelev whose career record
Neely in a good match.
Both McGraw and Abudra improves to 6-2.
continue to improve with each
The third Bald Eagle boxer,
encounter.
All-American Osahon OmoOsagie, 119, suffered an RSC in Boxing standouts, Miro
0:55 of the third round to last weekend. Jelev won
Garcia falls at Nevada
112 lb. champ Penn State.
Lawrence Tarn, UN-R.
with several crushing right and
to assistant coach,
According
hooks, staggering Omoleft
The Bald Eagles Comanche
traveled to Osagie forcing the referee to stop
who
Ken
Cooper,
Garcia, 147, moved up to 156 to
Reno with the threesome, Omo- the bout in 0:55 ofthe third round.
tackle UN-Reno's Ail-American
won both the first two
"Osahon just plain ran out of
Shaw Ebrahimi in the featured Osagie
his superirounds
handily
using
stated Cooper. "Perhaps the
gas,"
bout at the Nevada Invitational
or foot and hand speed.
had something to do
altitude
high
held in the Eldorado Hotel and
However, Tarn came right with it and he wasted too much
Casino Convention Center in
after Omo-Osagie at the start of needless energy in the early
Reno, NV, last Saturday night.
the final round and connected rounds staying away from Tarn's
Garcia had earned earlier

proved to be a tough opponent.
"The experience Derrick
gained in a bout of this magnitude is unmeasurable", commented head coach, Dr. Ken
Cox.
The Bald Eagles third boxer
on the 12 bout card was sopho-

'- '-

III IIIIIMJjTIWBlty

'

-

ll

-pftofo courtesy of Cheryl Miller

Jelev (L) and Chuck Mussachio, claimed victories
a walk-over bout in Reno, while Mussachio won at

Glovers in preparation for the
Collegiate Boxing
Association Championships to
round."
Five boxers will journey to be held at PSU on March 15 and
West Point, NY to compete in 16.
The winner and runner-up
the Army Collegiate Invitational
this Saturday night and five boxfrom this qualifying tournament
to
the
NCBA
ers will travel down to the advances
Altoona Boxing Club to spar Championship finals at the
with the Western PA Golden USNA from April 4 - 6.
However he
power punches.
neverreally got started in the third

Eastern

Family, friends remember Roller hockey avenges loss
Penn State pole vaulter
Three second-half goals

"We were pretty competitive with each other," Eric
said. "We'd make a lot of jokes
with each other and a lot of
PARK,
UNIVERSITY
on the side. I loved havbets
Pa. Clicking the first link on
him on the team."
ing
Kevin Dare's Web page opens
That bond between brothup the Penn State sports inforextended back to their
ers
mation homepage.
Eric remembers being
youth.
Now that site is topped
a fight with a large boy who
in
with a memorial to Dare, a 19pinned him to the ground
year-old sophomore member had Kevin, the
when
younger of
of the Penn State track and
the children, jumped in to
field team who died Saturday
the brawl.
in a pole vaulting accident at break up
Eric's girlfriend and a
indoor
the
Ten

Jeff Frantz

-

Big
Championships in Minnesota.
Sunday's portion of the
competition was canceled as
the Penn State team began to
come to terms with the loss of
a friend and a teammate.
Perhaps the athlete most
affected was Eric Dare,
Kevin's older brother, who is a
member of the track and football teams.
"He was my best friend,"
Eric said. "He's the type of
person who was always there
for you if you needed him."
Eric said his brother was
the reason why he came out
for track his sophomore season after a year off from
throwing the javelin. And it
was Kevin who pushed him,
along with their fellow teammates.

close friend of Kevin, Katie
Martin, a 2000 Penn State
alum, called the brothers
"each other's right hand" and
said Kevin was very close
with both his parents.
This kind of devotion to
his family extended to the one
thing Kevin only spoke of in
his dream
closed quarters
for the future.
"He always had a goal in
the back of his mind that he
only shared with his family,"
his brother said. "He wanted
to make it to the Olympics as a



pole vaulter."
Kevin's teammates think
he could have succeeded. Matt
Moyer, another javelin thrower, called Kevin the hardest
worker both at track practice
and at his schoolwork. Eric

said his brother was always
around to encourage his teammates, staying until the end of
Friday night meets cheering
the others on when he had to
jump first thing Saturday
morning, pushing for the goal
of winning a Big Ten title as a
team.

One thing that has stuck

in the minds of his friends
was Kevin's personality, both
as fun loving and caring.
Moyer said Kevin was always
a person to talk to. Bob

out

Baumbach, his coach at State
College Area High School,
said he was always polite.
"Kevin was the kind of
person who had the spirit for
life," Martin said. "He was

always the first person to
crack a joke."
That personality endeared

him to his native State College
community. Since Saturday, a
constant stream of mourners
has filled the Dare house, consoling the family Kevin cherished and telling stories of a
young life lost.
"I miss him so much," his
brother said. "I just ask people
to keep him and our family in
their prayers."
A memorial scholarship
has been established in
Kevin's honor.

Don't forget about the
"The Shamrock Shuffle"
held on St. Patrick's Day
beginning at Roger's gy.

I

For more info contact jhartle@lhup.edu

lifted the roller hockey team to
a 4-2 victory over the Titans
Tuesday night in Williamsport.
Lock Haven (2-4, 4pts)
avenged an earlier loss to the
Titans (2-3-1, 5pts).
LHU's
captain Steve
Campbell scored one goal and
had two assists to lead the way
for the Bald Eagles.
In net, goalie Kevin
Sodano made 37 saves on 39
shots. "We played a good
game," said Sodano. "We
played like a team."
The Haven fell behind
early when Kurt Blattner's
slashing penalty put them
down a man for two minutes.

The Titans set up their power
play and scored 1:03 into the
advantage.
Nate Phlegar fed a crossrink pass to Clark Smith for a
slap shot. Sodano made the

first save, but a wide open
Jared Breining tipped in the
rebound for a 1-0 Titans lead.
Nate Zwierzyna had a onetimer blocked by Titans goalie,
Justin Beish. But off the ensuing faceoff, Zwierzyna fired a
shot from his knees that went
between Beish's legs to tie the

game at one. "I got the puck
off the faceoff. I fell to the

_____

ground, turned around and
shot it, and it went in," said
Zwierzyna.
The Titans would strike
again on the power play before

by Adam
Swarr
the half was over. After Randy

Helsman was whistled for
interference, Brock Antolick
fired a 25-foot slap shot past
Sodano for a 2-1 Titans edge.
In addition to having a 2-1
lead, the Titans played a better
first half outshooting Lock
Haven, 19-10. But the second
half belonged to the Bald

"We didn't play as well as
we have the past two weeks.
We had some problems in the
first half," said defenseman
"But we
figured out what was wrong,
overcame it, and won."
Just over three minutes into
the second half, Josh Fry took
a rebound from a Helsman's

slap shot and roofed over a
sprawling Beish to even the
score at two apiece.
later,
Four
minutes
Campbell launched the game
winner over the left pad of
Beish for Lock Haven's first
lead of the game, 3-2.
The Titans fought desperately for the final 15 minutes
to even the score, but the Lock
Haven defense shut down the
Titan's offense. In an attempt
to tie the game, the Titans
pulled Beish in favor of an
extra attacker for the final 1:20
of the game.
Helsman scored an empty
net goal with 15 seconds left to
seal the victory 4-2 for Lock
Haven.
With four points, Lock
Haven is fifth in its division.
The Titans, who have five
points, are directly above the
Bald Eagles in fourth. Both
teams
have four games
remaining before the playoffs
start.

The team is off next week,
and returns to action Tuesday
March 12, at 8 p.m. against
Bloomsburg (6-0). In their
previous meeting, Bloomsburg
defeated Lock Haven, 4-1.

Men's Lax set for spring season
Anyone who has been to
Zimmerli Gymnasium trying
to get an open gym lately
knows the feeling of frustration when they are unable to
get an open gym because of

intramural games and teams
practicing.
The men's lacrosse team
has been one of those teams,
and according to the players,
the practice is paying off.
Practices began back in
January, and the men have
spent their time working on
stick skills, conditioning and
scrimmaging.
The entire team appears to
be showing progress and is
working towards fundamental-

ly sound playing.

"The rookies are showing a
lot of progress. I believe we
will have a strong season,"

7* t6e 0u*4c

J*f$J

By Brooke
Wiker

Cory Swartz, president of the
club said.
The season officially
begins on Saturday, March 16,
at 2 p.m. at the Intramural
Swartz encourages
field.
lacrosse fans and students to
come out and support the

"We play with enthusiasm,
and our spirit is pretty high
this year," said Charlie Flood,

senior.
"Our aggressive play is fun
and we have truly
come around as a team."
As the season nears,
Swartz and Flood, as well as
to watch,

the rest of the team, look forward to a winning season.
They encourage students to
visit the men's lacrosse webat
site
http://phoenix.lhup.edu/-lax
to show support for the team
as well as for information on
upcoming games as well as
statistics.

after this, the

I

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»

13

March 1, 2002

Maney earns PSAC
Wrestler of the Week honor
Mike Maney, a sophomore
wrestler, was selected as the

Pennsylvania State Athletic
Conference (PSAC) Wrestler of
the Week for all events ending
February 24.

Maney, nationally ranked
no. 13 at 141 pounds, went 2-0
for the week with a pin and a
technical fall. Maney clinched a
team win for Lock Haven by
pinning Penn State's no. 14
ranked Scott Moore in the last
bout of the night.
Lock Haven led by four
points prior to Maney's match.
Earlier in the week Maney

scored a 20-4 second period
technical
fall
against
Bloomsburg's Adam Castner.
The 39-3 win over Bloomsburg
put LHU's Eastern Wrestling
League regular season record at
6-1.
Up next for the Bald Eagles
(17-4, 6-1 EWL) is the EWL
Championships, which LHU
will host from March 9-10.
Qualifying wrestlers will
advance on to the NCAA
Division 1 National Wrestling
Championships in Albany, NY,
from March 21-23.

League

final period. Doc Vecchio
picked up a big win for PSU at
174 when he slipped past Ed
Pawlak 8-5.
Josh Millard got the lead
back for LHU at 184. Leading
just 2-0 after the first period,
Millard chose down. Right off
the bat, Millard was awarded a
point when PSU's Curt
Thompson was nailed for
locking hands. A reversal and
a takedown in the period gave
Millard a 7-1 lead after two.
Millard cruised to the 11-4
win and LHU took a 10-9 lead
in the match.
Avery Zerkle held off Ryan
Cummins 4-2 at 197 for a 139 lead, but Pat Cummins
scored a third period pin at
over
Tim
heavyweight

wrestlers.
LaValle suffered a 7-3 setback to Nate Wachter after a
wild third period. The match
was tied 2-2 going into the
final period, but Wachter
scored a pair of takedowns
and an escape to claim the
win.
The Haven got right back
into the swing of it when
JaMarr Billman, who bumped
up to 157, took the mat against
his former school. For the second straight year. Billman
claimed a pintail victory
against PSU. Billman, leading Boetsch to give PSU the 15-13
6-3 at the time, took Jason lead.
Woodall to his back and
The match went back into
the lighter weights and Trap
picked up the pin at 2:17.
Penn State's shuffling of its McCormack, one of five senlineup was in hopes of picking iors wrestling their last dual
match at LHU, beat Adam
up much needed points in the
Smith
6-2 at 125 to give LHU
middle and upper weights. At
knocked
16-15
lead. That led into the
165. James Woodall
a
LHU's
Charlie
Brennenian
wild
off
finishes at 122 and l4l.
Millard, Billman, Spealler
14-10 in a wild match that saw

Pittsburgh

7-0
6-1
5-2
4-3

Clarion
Cleveland St.
Virginia Tech
Bloom

2-5
1-6
0-7

West Virginia
LHU
Edinboro

Mike Maney

and Zerkle also finished their
dual meet career with wins for
LHU.
"Those five seniors, to go
out winning against Penn

State in a packed house is
incredible," said Poff. "I'm
very proud of them."
The match was held in
front of a capacity crowd and
they were loud all night.
"Whenever you have a
match like that in your gym,
it's positive for the community, university and our program," said Poff. "So many
positive things happened that
night. It's not every year
you're going to be able to beat
a Penn State. When you have
the chance, you have to do it."
Penn State leads the headto-head series 23-4.
"It's a healthy rivalry."

Poff said. "Big school against
small school. I just appreciate
that they have kept us on the
schedule all these years."
The win gave Lock Haven
a final dual record of 17-4.
Next up for the Bald Eagles is
the_EWL, Tournament, held at
the Thomas Field House on
March 9-10.

3-4

Overall
League

12-2
17-4
10-4
12-6
6-11
5-8
5-10
1-13

*1UP
�California
�Edinboro
�Clarion
LHU
Shipp.
Slipp. Rock

,

Boxing
Eldorado, Reno, Nev.
Feature Bout
Shaw Ebrahimi (UNR) dec.
Comanche Garcia (LHU), 5-0.
Undercard
125 Lawrence Tarn (UN-R) RSC-3
Osahon Omo-Osagie (LHU) 0:55.

-

-

Nittany Lion Invitational

Penn St.

.

Feature Bout
156
Alex Komlev (PSU) dec.
Derrick McGraw (LHU), M>
185 Chuck Mussachio (LHU) dec
Duane Mantle (Army), 5-0.
Undercard
1*5
'fJeeTV "(PSU) iic KbssV
Abudra (LHU), 5-0.

-

22-5
18-9
15-11
8- 18
9- 17
7-19

•California

League
10-2

•Shipp
•Slipp. Rock
•Clarion
Edinboro
IUP
LHU

2-10

18-9
17-10
17-9
14-13
9-16

6-19

E. Stroud
Kutztown

4-20

1-11

'clinched playoff birth
IUP 62. Clarion

Bloomsburg 60, West C
California 82, Edinb
Cheyney 77, Millersvi

54
70
75 /ot
iter

•Millersville
•Bloom
•Kutztown
•West Chester
Mansfield
E. Stroud
Cheyney

111

8-4
8-4
8-4
3-9
3-9
1-11

�clinched playoff birth
PSAC Qua
California 64,
Shippensburg 96, S
Millersville 67,
West Chester 93,1

Edinboro 77,

Edinboro 81,
E'Boro (18-8, 9-3
1-3 0-0 2,
Tate 5-13 4-5 14,
1 1-4 3-4 6,
Stritzinger 6-11 1-1 13,
i2-5 0-0 4,
Gartrell 4-6 3-3 14, Dit
son 0-1 0-0
Dominick9-15 5-7 28,1
0.
LHU (8-17,4-7 PSAC-W)
Ruff 0-1 0-00, Bailey 5-11 6-7 16, Hanna
3-60-09, Holtzer 4-9 2-5 10,Zujovic 8-17
4-4 23, Yetter 1-1 1-13, Christiano 0-2 00 0. Rieben 0-10-0 0, Saunders3-4 3-4 9,
Chancey 0-4 0-00.
Half-time score- Edinboro 37, LHU 22.
Three-pooint field goals- Dominick 5,
Gartrell 3, Zujovic 3, Hanna 3, Grabill
Fouled out- none.
Rebounds- LHU 26, Edinboro 44 (Tate
13). Assists- LHU 13, Edinboro 10. Total
fouls-LHU 18, Edinboro 19.

.

Overall

20-7
15-12
12-15
12-14
12-14
8-17

East

*West Chester

149- Nate Wachter (PSU) dec. James
LaValle (LHU)
7-3 (0-3); 157JaMarr Billman (LHU) wbf Jason
Woodall (PSU), 2:17 (6-3); 165James Woodall (PSU) dec. Charlie
Brenneman (LHU), 14-10(6-6); 174Doc Vecchio (PSU) dec. Ed Pawlak
(LHU), 8-5 (6-9); 184- #13 Josh
Millard (LHU) maj. dec. Curt
Thompson (PSU), 12-4 (10-9); 197#16 Avery Zerkle (LHU) dec Ryan
Cummins (PSU), 4-2 (13-9); HWTPat Cummins (PSU) wbf Tim Boetsch
(LHU) , 6:08 (13-15); 125- #19 Trap
McCormack (LHU) dec. Justin Kast
(PSU), 7-2 (16-15); 133- Chris
Spealler (LHU) dec. Marat Tomaev
(PSU), 8-6 ot (18*-14**); 141- #13
Mike Maney (LHU) wbf #14 Scott
Moore (PSU), 2:27 (24-14).
•Team point deducted from LHU for
unsportsmanlike conduct.
**Team point deducted from PSU for
unsportsmanlike conduct.

-

23-4

9-3
9-3
9-3
7-5
4-8
3-9
III

East

LHU 24, PSU 14

156

PSAC Standings

PSAC Standings

EWL Standings

from back page
11 total points come in the

Women's Basketball

Wrestling

PSU

The match started at 149,
but Penn State had won the
initial toss, so Lock Haven
had to send a wrestler out first.
Poff opted to send James
LaValle to the mat, which sent
PSU into a series of bumping

"^Scoreboard
20- 7
21- 6
18-9
18-9
10-16
7-18
4-22

Rock 84
vn51
burg 85

U70

Edinboro (12-14,4-8 P
Zitner8-12 3-5 19,'
7-140-2 17,
6-22 1-2 18,
Thompson 2-8 2-2 7,
0-1 0-0 0,
Johnson 2-4 0-0 6,
Stevens 0-0 0-0 0, Petruska 1-3 2-2 4,
Crawl 1-4 4-7 6, Morton 0-10-0 0.
LHU (8-17,2-10 PSAC-W)
Charles 2-9 4-4 8, Daniels 5-14 4-6 14,
Young 2-3 0-0 4, Crowl 2-8 4-4 8,
Ballintine 1-3 0-1 3. Price 1-3 0-0 2,
Schimelfenig 3-6 2-4 8, Picarsic 2-9 1-25,
Lasher 5-5 4-4 14, Rieben 1-3 0-0 2.
Szekeres 1-10-0 2..
Half-time score- Edinboro 43, LHU 32.
Three-point field goals- Henson 5,
Wiggins 3, Johnson 2, Thopmson,
Ballintine Fouled out- Daniels.
Rebounds- LHU 55 (Charles 11),
Assists- LHU 14
Edinboro 32.
(Schimelfenig 7), Edinboro 13. Total
Fouls- LHU 20, Edinboro 22.

Track and Field

-

Men's Team Results

I. LHU 124
2 Shippensburg 105
3 Millersville 75
Stroudsburg 62
, °
5
Rock 60
6 Kutztown 52

;

7 West Chester 37

8. Mansfield 8
9. IUP 4.

Women's Team Results
1. LHU 113
2. Shippensburg 69
3. Kutztown 60.5
4. IUP 59.5
5. Millersville 53
6. Slippery Rock 52
7. East Stroudsburg 48
8. Edinboro 35

8. West Chester 35

Un/0"e,ag

Just one sunburn can more than double your risk of skin cancer. So il you're going to be outside, be sun smart. Wear SPF
15 sunscreen and reapply often Fa more integration call 1 -877-PA-HEALTH or visit our website at www.healtfi.state.pa.us.

For Your Health. For Your Community.

INSIDE

Soffits

Maney

named
Wrestler of
the Week
See page 13

Track teams claim PSAC titles
Suzanne McCombie
Eagle Eye Sports Editor
The men and women's
indoor track and field teams
made
their way
T&F
into history by becoming the inauguPSAC
ral
Indoor
Champions last weekend at
Lehigh University.
The teams earned the
titles after dominating the
meet from the beginning
and garnering ten titles and
eight different PSAC champions.
"It was pretty amazing,"
said Head Coach Mark
Elliston. "From start to fin-

ish, we controlled the meet.

Both teams just dominat-

I ,

Championships Women's
Field MVP, as of a result of
the victories in the jumps.
Freshman Brooke Rangi
proved herself vital to the
team after being crowned
champion of the 55-meter
hurdles (8.28) and the high
closing the first day of comjump (5'5-3/4"). She also
petition with 13-point lead claimed the fifth spot in the
on Shippensburg, who was long jump (17' 1-1/4").
Rounding out the vicin the second position.
The domination contintors on the women's team
ued through to the end of was sophomore Jennifer
the meet giving the women Farrow, claiming the top
a claim on the title by a 44spot, as well as setting a
point margin over the rest of new school record, in the
the field.
400-meter run, finishing in
Junior Sandy Ritz led 57.77 seconds. Farrow also
the way by becoming the finished in the runner-up
PSAC champion in both the position in the 200-meters
long jump (18' 1-1/2") and (26.06) and fifth in the 55the triple jump (37' -1/2"). meters (7.53).
She was named PSAC
The women were also

ed."
The women showed up
with a strong contingent of
athletes who were ready to
claim the program's first
ever PSAC championship,
in- or outdoor.
They took control early,

T$F

.

i.

■WBSJ
■■mi
of T&F office
-pftofo
courtesy

The women's track team celebrates after capturing the program's first PSAC Championship last weekend at Lehigh.

backed by several other performances. Erica Aagre finished second to Ritz in the
long jump (17'7-1/2") and
to Rangi in the 55-meter
hurdles (8.38).

Jocelyn Held finished in
a tie for second in the pole
vault, clearing 10'11-3/4",
setting a new school record,
while teammate Darla Neff
finished in the fifth spot,

clearing 10'5-3/4".
Jana Kauffman
reset

also
her school record in

the mile, finishing fifth with
the time of 5:15.11.
The trio of Melissa
Miller, Mindy Cressley and
Jennifer Hostler earned
some points in the throwing
events, together claiming
three spots in the weight
throw and one in the shot
put.
Miller finished third in
the weight with a heave of
44'2-l/2". Hostler posted a
sixth place finish with a

-photo courtesy of T&F office

The men's track team celebrates after being named PSAC
Champions last weekend at Lehigh.

22.61.
Webster also played a
vital role in the crowning of
the relay teams. The 1600meter relay team, consisting
of Webster,
Brandon
39'8" effort. Cressley fin- Shiposh, Jacob Merrill and
ished fourth in the weight
Matt Stinson claimed the
event (43'4-l/2")
and title running a time of
claimed the sixth spot in the 3:25.75.
shot put with a throw of 37'
Webster, Sven Kost,
1".
Joe Wiegner and Paul
The men claimed three Hallman took the first
individual titles, as well as spot in the 3200-meter
two relay victories.
relay, finishing in 7:59.35.
Leading the way were
Hallman, like Webster,
Joe Webster and Paul
also had a pair of 1-2 finHallman. Webster claimed ishes, but in the mid-disvictory in the 400-meters tance races. He claimed
with a time of 49.70. He
his victory in the 800also finished second in the meters with the time of
200-meters in a school
1:57.20 and finished secrecord-breaking time of
ond in the mile run in

4:23.17. He also took part
in the fifth place finish of
the DMR.
Gary Fisher jumped to
a surprising first place finish in the long jump. His
leap of 23'10-1/2 was
good enough for the win
as well as provisionally
qualified him for the
NCAA tournament.
"Fisher had a tremendous long jump. He really
shocked everyone, includsaid
ing
himself,"

Elliston.
Chris Cowan put in
another key performance
for the Bald Eagles, finishing second in the 3000meter (8:44.93) and 5000meter (15:21.37) runs, as

well as grabbing third in

the mile (4:23.62).
The men finished with
a 19-point lead on the runof
team
ner-up
University.
Shippensburg
This is the first PSAC title
for the men since the 1999
outdoor season.
"We had some great
said
performances,"
Elliston.
"It was a very exciting
two days. The team was
really there for each other.
They cheered each other
on, knowing that it was a
team effort not individual.
They all won as a team.

It was a tremendous
job by the coaching staff.
Everyone had their groups
ready to go. It was a total
team effort."

Women finish Wrestlers take down PSU
with road loss
P.J. Harmer

Eagle Eye StaffReporter

Chris Spealler's win at
133 sparked a Lock Haven

Kevin Carver
Eagle Eye Staff Reporter
The women's basketball team traveled to
Edinboro

Saturday
after

Women's
Bball

noon

looking to end the season
on a bright spot, but the
Fighting Scots handed

them a 77-70 defeat.
The Bald Eagles (8-17)
finished the season with
two PSAC West wins, two
more than last year.
Edinboro got off to a
quick start from 3-point

land nailing eight of 12
bombs in the first half of
play, building a big double-digit lead. The Haven
slowly chipped away at the
deficit, but still found
themselves down 43-32 at
halftime.
But just like every

game this year, the Bald
Eagles showed no signs of
packing it in.
Amy Daniels
and
freshman Julie Lasher led
the charge in the second
half. Lasher shot a perfect
5-5 from the floor and 4-4
from the charity stripe.
Both players finished with
six
14 points
and
rebounds.
With huge second-half
efforts from guards Nicole
Schimelfenig and Cyndi
Crowl and forward Anita
Charles,
LHU
cut
Edinboro's lead to three
points. But that's as close
as they would get.
As the floor leader,
Schimelfenig finished with
eight points and seven
assists while Charles
pulled down a game-high
11 boards to go along with
her eight points.
Crowl also finished the
with
campaign
eight

points.

"We always felt that
the second half was our
half," said junior forward
"We
Amanda Jones.
always cut into their lead,
but if we could have eliminated that lead in the first
half, we would have won a
lot more games."

The Haven destroyed
the Scots on the glass, finishing with a 55-32
rebounding margin and
pulling down a seasonhigh 18 offensive caroms.
The bench played a key
role here, almost out
rebounding the entire
Fighting Scot team, 32-30,
as Lasher, Alicia Price,
and
Melissa Picarsic
pulled down key rebounds.
Now the Haven will
look to build for next year,
and they will use the two
PSAC wins as a huge stepping stone.

Men drop final game
Jared Guest
Eagle Eye StaffReporter
The men's basketball
closed out the season
losing to Edinboro 81-70
this past Saturday. The
Haven failed
team

to
qualify
the
for
PSAC post-

Men's

Bball
""a"

season, after losing their

last four conference games
to finish at 8-18(4-8 PSAC

West).

Vladimir
Zujovic
scored 23 points and dished
George
out six assists.
Bailey added 16 points and
had four blocks.
Kris
Holtzer finished the game
with 10 points.

Edinboro's Kenny Tate
recorded his fifth straight
double double with 14
points and 13 rebounds.
Brandon Dominick lead the
game with 28 points, shooting five for seven from
behind the three point arc.
The Haven played
catch-up for the entire
game. The halftime score
was 37-22.
Edinboro
maintained a comfortable
lead throughout the game.
The Scots' biggest lead was
60-39 with 9:16 left in the
game.

LHU got out rebounded
44-26 and shot 43 percent
from the field.
For the season, the Bald
Eagles were 2-11 on the
road and 6-6 at home.

Holtzer, the Bald Eagle
who saw the most court
time with 34.9 minutes per
game, finishes averaging
15.2 ppg. Zujovic, who
started all 26 games, averaged 14.6 ppg.
Bailey finishes the season averaging 3.95 blocks
per game with 79 on the
season, a new Bald Eagle
record.

I

I

H

Today

@FortMyers
Tournament

,

comeback and the Bald
Eagles
held on
for their

Wrestling

second straight win over
rival Penn State, 24-14, at
the Thomas Field House on
Saturday.
Heading into the 133pound match, The Haven
held a slim 16-15 lead.
With two matches left, it
was far from decided.
Spealler stepped up to the
plate and didn't flinch.
Facing Marat Tomaev,
Spealler fell behind 4-2
after the opening period.
Tomaev used a pair of
takedowns to hold onto the
lead. Tomaev chose bottom
in the second, picked up an
escape point, but was then
nailed for stalling, making
it 5-3 after two periods.
Then it got wild.

.

.—-

@^^mes

i

■■jL





■———'''''^
'—-photo courtesy of Bob McCool
Chris Spealler's win over PSU's Marat Tomaev brought the
Bald Eagles to life in their second straight victory of the Nittany
Lion's 24-14 last weekend at Thomas Field House.

-~—-——

again got to Tomaev and Chris," said Poff. "He has
took him down as the been a total team player
packed Thomas Field since being here. He's
House went nuts. The unselfish, a leader by
Spealler chose down
final of the match was 8-6 example and a role model.
and exploded out for the
and that gave Lock Haven His work ethic is incredione point escape just two
an 18-14 lead. That could ble."
seconds into the final
The match wasn't
have been 19-15, but both
period.
were hit for a team clinched at that point
staffs
one,
Trailing
by
though. Standing in the
during the match.
Spealler was looking to point
"Unbelievable, just for way of the team final was
shoot and with 29 seconds
personally to be in a match between two
left in the match, finally him
that situation and wrestle ranked wrestlers at 141.
got Tomaev and took him
Maney
his heart out," said Carl LHU's
Mike
down for the two points Poff,
(No. 13) and PSU's Scott
The
Haven's
head
and a 6-5 lead.
"Him being the Moore (No. 14).
However,
Spealler coach.
match against
pivotal
Leading 2-1 at the
was hit for stalling with
Penn State is the type of time, Maney went for a
two ticks left on the clock
match he'll remember his takedown. Moore blocked
to send the match into
career by."
it and went to his back
overtime.
anyone that trying to roll through.
there's
"If
With 19 seconds left
deserves to be a hero, its However, he didn't roll
in overtime, Snealler
t^^mmamm
FirWMMPWJVPWWIH ruut quick

and the ref slapped the
maty signaling the pin for
Maney at 2:27. Maney at

that point seemed to have
control and was trying to
get the two for the takf£

down.
Ironically, it was nearly identical to how Maney
lost to Chad Caros of
Edinboro earlier in the
month.
"For Mike to recover
from his Edinboro match
and win nearly the same
way is great," said Poff.
"Moore is a dangerous
wrestler, but Mike seemed
to be in control of things."

see PSU page 13

*

I Saturday, March 2H

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Sunday, March 3



Monday, March 4



Scheduled

II

Scheduled

I
I

Tuesday, March 5 ■

LLongwood4p

I

I

Wed., March 6

I

Thurs, March 7

Scheduled

II

©Limestone 4 p.m.

B

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Media of