BHeiney
Wed, 07/05/2023 - 16:38
Edited Text
SCC Senatorial
Candidates Announced
The following is a list of the candidates running for the
SCC Senate. The numbers represent the number of senators
each area may have.
Fraternity-1
Dave Drabot
Commuters-11
» Monica Vaccaro
George IJoyd
• Steve Bierly
Mark Spear
•• Lloyd Peters
"^ Mike Black
!• Tim Mahoney
^ Larry Foltz
* Fred Naylor
•» Tim Follz
David Little
* Erla Mae Kreider
,Mike Holler
High-3
Bill McLomas
Steve Fish
Joseph Evcalano
MCFMI ire'4
Toni Burkhart
Linda Schreiber
Michele Berold
Ann Farron
Be Iky Mazzi
North'2
Mike Bradley
Mike Odgen
Ann Reidy
Alan Anderson
Gwen Whildin
Smith-3
tvfctthew Delfert
Bob Sellers
Dave Kelley
pal Dunmire
Michael Maddox
StudenU-Facuity-staff
A series of 2 flu shots
will be given this year, There
Tryouts
for
the
play of s o c i e t y t o d a y . In t h i s her
will be no charge for students ' T h e Sign in Sidney B r u s t e i n ' s l a s t p l a y , t h e s i t u a t i o n s p r e to
ho
p r e s e n t e d s e n t e d p o r t r a y the e v e r - p r e s e n t
and a charge of $1.00 per shot W i n d o w ' ,
c l i c h e s of the A m e r i c a n way
N o v e m b e r 2 , 3 , and 4 , were
for faculty and staff.
life.
Sidney,
the
main
h e l d Monday and T u e s d a y of of
'
h a r a c t e r , is a revolutionai.
lust
week
by the d i r e c t o r .
The first shot will be
D r . D e n y s G a r y . The r e s u l t a n t w h o r e v o l t s for the s a k e of •
given Wednesday, October
cast
is
headed
by
Bernie r e v o l u t i o n . L i k e many p e o p l e ,
4th from 12 noon until 1 p.m. G i l l o t , who w i l l p o r t r a y S i d n e y
he n e v e r g e t s i n v o l v e d u n t i l
and
D
e
b
b
i
e
Klens
a
s
Iris.
j o l t e d into l e a l i l y .
at the Glennon Infirmary. AnyFeatured
in
additional
Written
by
Lorraine
one desiring the flu shots- H a n s b e r r y , w h o a l s o p e n n e d ma J or r o l e s ai e Kim C o o n a s
A l t o n , K e v i n Murphy a s W a l l y ,
in the Sun, t h e play
please sign up at the Infirmary Raisin
deals
with p r e j u d i c e
within
P a t Q u i n n a s Max, J a n e t F o s t e r
no later than Tuesday, Octo- a group of p e o p l e , s y m b o l "Jobs
for
young
people until at least October of 1973,
a s M a v i s , Howard Smith a s
are available in H u r o p e " said U . S . Corpon lions are s t i l l cutting
r ^ a v i d , C h r i s S a l i d i s as G l o r i a ,
ber 3rd.
Cast Selected for Gary's Play
Jobs Offered In Europe
Republican Ramblings
by J. Scott Landis
When Ueorge McGovern says he is going to lalk about
the economy, he will, on occasion, actually talk about the economy. You s e e , usually McGovein is too busy ranting and
raving about The War or accusing Nixon of this or that to worry about the econmoy. When he does talk about the economy,
his facts are characteristically disjointed and misrepresented.
For example, the Democratic platform, the platform unon
wjiich. McGovern is running, calls wage-price controls "amfair"
and " b u r e a u c r a t i c " and says that, if elected, the controls will
be eliminated. What the Democrats fail to mention is that these
; . results-inflation has s lowed, unemploycontrols b.p '
.;iul business is improving.
h a s s!-' '•' •
, ' s r n ' s pet i s s u e s is that the Republicans
. individual and undertaxed the corporation,
have
since Nixon's inauguration, personal income
tlui
The !
been cut by IS."* billion dollars. Hence, any overtaxes
or undertaxing is a carryover from the two previous Democratic
adminislralions—the administrations with which McGovern has
so desparately trying to identify!
Is the kind of c;edibility that we can expect McGovern to
bring to the Preisdency, sholud he be elected?
FINANCIAL
AID NOTICE:
If you are not curreiitly receiving financial aid, you may
qualify for the Ccillege Work
Study employment program.
Such awards are based upon
established need. If you need
financial assistance and would
like to work, call at the Office
of Financial Aids 301 Sullivan
Hall.
The Physical Education Club
will show films on the Olympicsj Thursday, Sepi 28 in Thomas Field House. Refreshments will be Served and all
are invited to attend.
Recreatioitai pooi facilities will be provided to the
students, faculty and administration. TFH pool will be
ATTENTION ORGANIZATIONS opened Sundays from 2 3 p.m.
The s e e s n«w policy on fht :ur faculty and staff and Iheir
sale of ticketr. i^r any student- iiijiitltes only, and from 3-5
financed event reciuires that for college students only,
the sales must be handled by ZtnvnerIi pool will be open
the SCC ticket committee.
If you are plsrinlng an event
which requires such action
you are obligated to contact
Larry Wise (ext. 283), Chairman of liie ticket committee.
Arrangements for the pre-sale
as foltows:
College Students
Monday: 7-9 p.m,
sday: 12:30-2 p.m. and
p.m.
and R o s s
P a r t i n g t o n a s the
detective.
Set d e s i g n will be d o n e
by Mr. J o h n Gordon a n d M i s s
F e l i c e P r o c t o r will d e s i g n the
costumes.
The
students
in
T e c h n i c a l Theatre and C o s t u m e
and
Make-up
classes
will
perform
the t e c h n i c a l
work.
Dr. F.X. Gordon, president of
Princeton R e s e a r c h , at University
of Southern CalifcM-nia interview
y e s t e r d a y . J u s t back from Europe
he s a i d "the 300 million people
common
market
is b o o m i n g . "
On the other hand, he s t a t e d
we foresee continued youth unemployment in t h e United S t a t e s
No Subtraction Made
By Akeley Addition
The nori-graded, open c l a s sroom approach of the Akeley
Elementary School on the Lock
Kdven Slate College campus has
received additional professional
guidance in the person of Miss
Catherine Sheridan, a graduate
of North D a k o t a ' s New School
of Behavioral Studies in Education.
Miss
Sheridan
spent
six
years t e a c h i n g in North Dakota
public s c h o o l s before
entering
the New School program. She
feels that her philosophy of education has undergone a drastic
evolution a s a result of the two
and a half y e a r s she spent in the
pi'ogram.
5ihe
hec ame
in vol ved
in
c l a s s r o o m s i t u a t i o n s which stres s e d multi-age grouping, nong r a d e n e s s , a thematic approach
to learning, indivualized instruction, and elementary s t u d e n t s as
t u t o r s . Her independent
study
projects included the development
of an ;irt program for elementary
s t u d e n t s , a s well a s compiling
a wide v a r i e t y of math g a m e s ,
p u z z l e s , and problems designed
REMINDER; All students ineluding new students must
have I.D.'s validated to be
admitted to any SCC sponsered
event. This can be done on
the ground floor of the P.U.B.
between the hours of 8 a.m.
to 1 p.m. and 2-4 p.m.
to make the learning of mathematics a stimulating and enjoyable activity for children.
At the c o n c l u s i o n of her
internship program, Miss Sheridan
felt that the a p p r o a c h used by the
New School w a s most rewarding
and s t i m u l a t i n g . I n s t e a d of repeating the s a m e grade level
curriculum, there was the challenge of new i n t e r e s t s and the
opportunity for study and involvement in a r e a s which were intere s t i n g to her, where she felt a
need for growth and enrichment.
C h a r l e s E . Silberman., author
of " C r i s i s in the C l a s s r o o m , "
has praised t h e work of the New
School, s t a t i n g in his b m k that
" o n e of the m o s t interesting
programs (in o p e n , informal education) is in North Dakota, where
elementary s c h o o l s are gradually
being
remodeled
along formal
lines."
During the 1972-73 school
year. Miss Sheridan hopes to
implement at Akeley School a
number of experiences gained in
her involvement with the New
School.
ALL
WORK-STUDY RECIPIENTS. "LETTER OF AUTHORISATION" to be presented lo their employer. If
you have not yet obtained a
position on campus, there are
job openings available-contact
the Financial Aids office.
Attention: All students must
The two college students have their 10 cards embossed
who were bitten by a dog in with their social security
and door sales will be made by
Faculty and Staff
Mill Hall on Sept. 20 should number,
Tuesday: 12:30-2 p.m.
our committee.
report to the Infirmary for
puB Basement
This decision was made to Thursday: 12;30-2 p.m.
MWF 8-11
develop a uniform code fo4 the Attention: men antJ women v<)th medical attention emmediately.
Tues. 11-3
sale of tickets for student long hair inusi wear bathing The dog has not had any
shots.
Thurs. 1-3
caps.
financed events.
Wednesday: 7-9 p.m.
Thursday: 12.30-2 p.m.
back personnel and are not planning for r e p l a c e m e n t s ,
"We have a program c a l l e d
Jobs
E u r o p e , " he
continued,
"and
guarantee
salaried jobs
in
Switzerland,
England
and
Belgium, for some 2,000 young
p e o p l e 18 to 29 years of a g e .
" a n d guarantee salaried jobs*
I n e s e are Summer, F a l l , Winter
and Spring jobs a s general help
(trainees) in h o t e l s , r e s t a u r a n t s ,
supermarkets
department s t o r e s ,
stewards and s t e w a r d e s s e s on
t r a i n s , e t c . Board and room are
u s u a l l y provided and friends can
work together if they apply together. Participants arrange their
own bargain youth or s t u d e n t
fare
transportation and depart
anytime to work 2 to 6 months or
longer."
For free information send
a stamped self-adressed b u s i n e s s
s i z e envelope to Jobs Europe
Box
44188.
Panorama
City,
California 91412.
Rush Week
Bigins Oct 1
more sorority
rush
t H LI
\vi:ek IS about to begin for the
fuli. Formal rush begins Sunday.
Oclcjber 1 at 7 p.m. with the
.r-aditional Rush tea in Bentley
Hall Lounge.
The tea opens the week
which
includes round
robins,
p a r t i e s , lols of a q u a i n t a n c e s ,
l u n c h ami c o k i e s and climaxes
Friday aftern loa with the delivery
of bids.
Monday and Tuesday nights
round :ol"r.'. will be held in
Raub Hall al 7 p.m. The Round
Robins
are
inl'oimal
sessions
where
rushees
will have
an
opportunity to meet girls from
a l l five s o c i a l sororities and
i.nJ will become aquainted w i t h
sorority life.
On Wednesday morning from
8 - 12;30 r u s h e e s will sign up
in t h e office of the A s s o c i a t e
Dean for Student Life for two
preference p a r l i e s . These parties
are a l s o going to be held in Raub
Hall.
Thursday night is the final
party where
the girls decide
which sorority, if any, they are
i n t e r e s t e d in by attending one
party.
r-'riday from 8 - 1 2
a.m.,
in the Office of .'\ssociate Deail^
for Student Life, r u s h e e s will
cards,
pveferrential bid
sign
Friday at 4 p.in. b i d s will be
delivered.
JV^s Tromp
Bucfcne// Varsity
On
Tuesday
afternoon
the
Lock
Haven
State
JV
hockey
s q u a d travelled to the Buckncl!
U n i v . C a m p u s to h a n d its v a r s i t y
s q u a d a 5-1 d e f e a t .
The
first
half
began
with
LHS's
girls c r o w d i n g the
ball,
w h i c h may h a v e b e e n the r e s u l t
of t h e f i e l d b e m g s m a l l e r
than
usual.
H o w e v e r , it d i d n ' t t a k e
the girls long t o a d i u s t tu the
small " g r a s s c o v e r e d " field, as
Barb C o l l i n s hit the goal after
IVi m i n u t e s h a d e l a p s e d . \V^^i of
Booters Face
Tough Schedule
In e i g h t d a y s
l..ock H a v e n
S t a t e College'.^ u n b e a t e n (2-0-1)
s o c c e r t e a m m u s t fac^- f o u r v e r y
tough opponents.
Y e s t e r d a y C o a c h Karl H e r rmann's
booters
traveled
to
W i U i a m s p o r t f o e a .^ p . m . pamtwith
Lycommg
College.
i^^^t
y e a r t h e neighb->i ing arch-i - ; ' •
b a t t l e d t o a 2 - 2- t i e .
Saturday
IHi
h n . s > .i
IM
Shippensburg
State
tean,.
,,.;;
year t h e E a g l e s and Red R j ' J c r b
w e r e c o - c h a m p i r . n s of t h e P e n n s y l v a n i a C o n f t r r n c e after p l a y i n g
to a double
ncrtime
scoreless
t i e in t h e c h a i i i p i n n s h i p c o n t e s t .
T h e n on O c t o h t r 3 the Bald E a g l e s
travel to Fhikidelphia to meet
Villanova
University
for
the
first
lime.
T w o d j > s later on October
5 L H S h i t s t h e r o a d a g a i n for a
3 : 3 0 1-n. game
at St. V i n c e n t
the first half play w a s e v e n l y
d i s t r i b u t e d over the entire field,
w i t h l i f i l e a c t i o n in t h e \MS c i r cle,
T h r e o m o r e goal.-? w e r e a d d e d in t h e f: bt h a l f a s f r e s h m a n
right
wiu^-,
"Rocky"
Rothrock
s c o r e d in 12 m i n u t e . s ; s o p h m o r e
right
inner, Jo Gardner
in
m i n u t e s ; a n d f r e s h m a n left i n n e r ,
P a t O g l e in 24 m i n u t e s .
The s e c o n d half play changed
h a n d s s l i g h t l y , but n o t until freshm a n J o L e i e w got h e r hand?, in
the s c o r i n g only 1 4 m i n u t e s after
the s e c o n d h^if b e g a n .
From
t h e n o n thi- B u c k n e l l s q u a d c a m e
back
5Urongly,
and
the
tiring
E a g l e d e f e n s e h a d to work h a r d
IL k e e p t h e m f r o m s c o r i n g .
Goalie
Kathy
Snovel's
job
b e c a m e m o r e a p p a r e n t i n the s e c ond half m a k i n g s e v e n s a v e s , b e fCH-e J o c e W h i t i n g f i n a l l y . = q u e e k e d
one b y .
T h i U ' s t h e w a y it s t o o d
when
the
final
'Ahistle
blew;
Lock Haven-5. Bucknell-1.
The
v i c t o r y is tor Dr. C h a r l o t t e Smith
to a d d to her a l r e a d y i m p r e s s i v e
list.
Both L H S s q u a d s have time
no4 t o i r o n o u t t h e i r t e a m p l a y ,
b e f o r e t r a v e l l i n g to S l i p p e r y R o c k
next T h u r s d a y , O c t . 5.
A fellow
should
marry a girl for her
That's like buying o
because the point job
good.
never
looks.
house
looks
Shop Jerry's In Lock Haven
for the jeans and
tops the guys
fel
and gals love.
style setter in
Lock Haven
a n d carries all
T h e second half started much
a s t h e f i r s t w i t h K u r t S m i t h of
TKE
intercepting a Bob Dagle
p a s s o n I g u a n a ' s s e c o n d s o l of
o f f e n s i v e d o w n s . A f t e r four p l a y s
T K E w a s f o r c e d it, p u n t g i v i n g
Iguana
poor f i e l d p o s i t i o n
very
close to their own end z o n e .
On
t h e f i r s t p l a y of t h e s e r i e s , T K E ' s
defense
became
progressively
tou^ei
a s the g a m e w e n t
on,
forcing quick p a s s e s .
However,
later in the half B r u c e D i v a y int e r c e p t e d a T K E p a s s and returned
it for a n I g u a n a t o u c h d o w n .
Bob
Dayle
threw c o m p l e t e to K e v i n
C u r r a n for t h e p«*t a n d a 7-2 l e a d .
^-
famous brandsHIS
^o.
Male
LC,A-25 M O O N L I G H T E R S
Chip
Snares'
tluce
touchdown p a s s e s and J a c k H a r b i s o n ' s
two i n t e r c e p t i o n s lifted L C A to
a 25-0 victory over the Mconli^ters.
Harbison returned
an
e r r a n t p a s s for L C A e a r l y i n t h e
f i r s t h a l f for a t o u c h d o w n , ' a n d
from t h e n on w e r e n e v e r t h r e a t e n ed. Snare tossed touchdown p a s s es to B i l ! H a t a l a s k i , Ray G e p h a r t
a n d E d F l a n n i n g a n for Ihe o t h e i
AXA s c o r e s .
Flanningan
also
r a c e d for a e x t r a p o i n t t o l o p t h e
victoryT K E - 8 IGUANA HOUSE
T K E w a s t e d n o t i m e in s t r i k ing b a c k after the e n s u i n g k i c k
off.
O n t h e f i r s t p l a y form s c r i i n mage Jeif Yenlch caught a long
s c o r i n g p a s s from Mike C r i t t e r .
T h e pat fiiiled. but T K E h e l d a
g-7 l e a d .
On t h e n e x t s c r i e s of
of d o w n s , Y e n t c h i n t e r c e p t e d a n
I g u a n a p a s s t o e n d any t h r e a t .
Jerry's is the
%
T h e f i r s t l i i ^ h t nf i f . l i . o n u r a !
f^lotb.''lt
action s a w
Sl^una
Pi,
L C A , a n d T K F a l l r e c n r d i n e in>ptTtant victories over opirning opp o n e n t s . Strong d e f e a s e s d o m i n a t e d in e a c h g a m e for t h e w i n n e r s ,
o v e r s h a d o w i n g v - e a k or p a « s i b l y
inexperienced offenses.
SIGMA P!-14 H I G H MALL Ird-O
D c i e n s c s p e l l e d Sigma Pi'.s
vicirry
as Gabe
Lucisano
and
R a n d y Krick l e c o r d o d key i n t e r c e p t i o n s t o t h w a r t H i g h H a l l .Ird
floor's offensive efforts.
Wayne
Traiigh snared two inlercepticins,
o n e of w h i c h h e r e t u r n e d for a
touchdown.
Traugh's
nass
to
S t e v e W a g a m a n for the- P A T g a v e
S i g m a P i a 7-0 h a l f t i m t - l e a d .
In
the s e c o n d half, Traugh
again
c o m b i n e d w , t h W r i g a m a n a n d Sif^ma
Pi led 13-0.
On t h e next p l ; i \ ,
Traugh
h i t J o h n Z e r b e lor t h e
14th p o i n t and the v i c t o r y .
College. The
Hagles
then
can
take an e i g h t d a y b r e a t h e r before
In a game d o m i n a t e d b y d e traveling
to
East
Stroudsburg
f e n s e , T K L e d g e d Iguana H o u s e
S t a t e o n O c t o b e r 13 ,
8-7.
T h e f i r s t h a l f e n d e d in a
Last week Coach Herrmann's
s c o r e l e s s tie , b o t h d e f e n s e s holdb o o t e r s h a n d e d St. F r a n c i s C o l l e g e ing t o u g h and r i s i n g to the o c i t s £w4t l o s s of t h e s e a s o n b y
c a s s i o n when c a l l e d upon.
At
a 2 - 0 s c o r e , and t h e n battled
t h e e n d of t h e f i r s t h a l f
TKE
E d i n b o r o S t a t e t o a 1-1 t i e i n p o r t r a y e d t h a t t h e n a m e of t h e
g a m e i s d e f e n s e by h o l d i n g I g u a n a
double overtime
H o u s e o n t h e g o a ! lini; a s t i m e
ran o u t .
Welcome Students!
Lee
Frats Vicforious
in intromurals
^s
Levis
JERRY'S
I appreciate
die f a c t t h a t
no
m o r e of m y f r i i n d s or e v t - n p o s s i b l y m y s e l f will hHvc t o be
k i l l e d for H r i d i c u l o u s ; c a u s e .
B u t the h o m b i i i g c o n t i n u e s . H u n d r e d s and
, ! i o u s ; i n d s of p e o p l e
a r e d y i n g a n d we .ire t o n s e l f i s h
t o e n d i t . We h a , e t o p r e s e r v e
lo
the
Editor
I • Scott
Lancti.s,
in
hi-. our h o n o r o r in \o',ir t e r n i m o l o g y
M
r.
U^ndis,
ue
m u M find
an
"Rep.ibl.can
Ran.hungs"
on
F r i d a y . e v i d e n t ; y d i d n o t e x a m i n e "ho'iofTihl.-; p e a c ^ ' . "
H o n o r a b l e tc^ w h o m '
Cert h e h i s t o r y of t h e V , e t n ! i m w a r
t a i n l y not to the Amencf.n people
closely enough.
for
an
•
'
h
u
v
i
.
v
:•,-•.••
".'
••*.
Ine
H i s c o n t e n t i o n w a s t h a t Mr.
• y tiwt
N i x o n i n h e r i t e d t h e 'Aar from his" h i s t u r i c a i t .uM •-...•.•'<•
"
i'"- t h e
two
Democratic
p r e d e s e s o r s t h e oiily Vii • . .
U . S . to d o v . . •
^•••- 'i.>^-:f-.
Presidents Johnson a n ! Kennedv.
However.
"upon
close
examination
One
finds
that
our
involvement
in
the
Vietnam
holocaust
has
a
much
mor'^
i n v o l v e d h i s t o r y t h a n Mr. L a n r ; i s
would
hope. U was
President
Eisenhower
und
not
President
Kennedy
who
sent
the
first
contingent
of
U.S.
advisors
t o V i e t n a m . It h a p p e n e d i n t h e
early 1950's while the
French
w e r e t r y i n g t :> r e s t o r e
(colonial
c o n t r o l o f V i e t n a m . D u r i n g tht-.'^e
y e a r s of the s t r u g g l e
between
t h e F r e n c h a n d t h e Vir^triftmest:
the l i n i t e d S t a t e s supp!i-*d an
e s t i m a t e d 80"^ of t h e c a s h Ihe
F r e n c h n e e d e d to fight the war.
T h e n , after the F r e n c h
suffeted
a
humiliating
defeat
at
Dien
Bien
P h u , it w a s
the
United
S t a l e s w h o r e t u s e d to s i g n the
Geneva
Accords
which
called
for a n i n t e r s i a t i o n a l l y s u p e r v i s e d
e l e c t i o n ro m a k e V i e t n a m a u n i t e d
n a t i o n u n d e r or.e l e a d e r , b e c a u s e
the man who would have
won
8 0 % oi t h e v o t e w a s a n a c c l a i m e d
c o m m u n i s t . (U*s w h a t you c a l l
fighting facism with more facism.)
All t h i s hapi>ened w h i l e E i s e n hower w a s p r e s i d e n t .
M I . l a n d i s s a y s Nixon h a s
done more than a n y other presi d e n t t o end the w a r . H a s he
r e a l l y ? D o e s the fact that men
with s l a n t e d e y e s
and darker
skins
are
getting
slaughtered
rather t h a n A m e r i c a n s make the
war any more r e s p e c t a b l e ? Sure,
certii'
the
VRI.'.,
.
•
••
''"*
tnn
In t h e
second
paragraph
o f y o u r a r t i c l e , Mr, L a n d i s , y o u
attempt to belittle the Democra•ic ticket b y referring lo Sargent
Shriver
as
"Mf.Govem's
7th
c h o i c e . " 1 l a k e c o m f o r t a m i find
it v e r y a p p r o p r i u t e t h a l M c G o v e r n ' s
7 ; h c h o i c e for th^;; m a n w h o i s a
h e a r t h f j ; r-u-av fi-om t h e t o p n o s itioii
ir,
.*ir
•;(•••'••;'',
t i m e . ' i <••-.(••'••
' ".
t h a n Mr.
••>..'-. >t> '.
i^
'1*105
,:'•', i...,i i!vc
iir'-!
choice.
Respuctf.i'i.,
C h a r l e s A. Leonard
605 H i g h St. P ' l e m i n g t o n
With
even
a
little
more
" c l o s e e x a m i n a t i o n " of t h e U . S .
relations
and
promises
to
Ho
Chi Minh during the early s t a g e
of W o r l d W a r II o n e w o u l d r e a l i z e ,
a t l e a s t a n y o n e w i t h a s e n s e of
j u s t i c e , ( A m e r i c a n s u s e d t o be
k n o w n for t h e i r s e n s e of fair p l a y
and
justice)
how
wrong
and
unjustifiable
our
involvement
IS i n V i e t n a m .
N o w , I a m n o t a r g u i n g "for
t h e v i n d i c a i i m f^f J o h n s o n a n d
K e n n e d y for t h e i r p a r t s in t h e
war. F o r I think to argue who
s t a r t e d the war is a
negative
point a n d quite r i d i c u l o u s b e c a u s e
that is no longer the i s s u e . T h e
real i s s u e now is w h o is going
to end the w a r .
And
argue until • "
•••
• • 'he
face and
~: • r'.\e
t h a t ther*
" ••"',-., in d y i n g if
• •• :':i['alki. t h e
usof
V. .
. :,. t c ' e n l U ,
IS
against the G e u c v i
Agreements
( k i n d :)f a l a u g h w l . e n y o u h e a r
Melvin L a i r d yelling about North
V i e u i a m e s e v i o l a t i o n s ) or b e i n g
b l o w n to b i t s by an a n t i - p e r s o n n e l
bomb (The pentagon sav^. "Civi l i a a s , s i c e W o r l J War If, h a v e
always b e e n legitimate
military
t-ugets)'
car w%xh sp--^ ^e^^-^
September :
A^
U
4:30 p.m. ; ,
-. jt the
Citizen's H^se Co., iJellefonteAvenue.
LOST:
Black music folder
containing 10 card pf Nancy
Wiener. If found, please return today to Russell Hatl
desk.
FOUND: 10 of Kim A. Smith
claim it In PCCEB offtce.
LOST: An American National
Government book was lost in
the cafeteria. A reward is offered for its return. Contact:
Tom Manganiello in 305 High.
TERMPAPERS
Send for vour descriptive up-to date,
128 page, mat! order catalog of 2,300
quality termpaper-i Enctose Jl.OO to
cover postage anit tiandfing.
WEALSOWitlTL
CUSfOM M/\D[ PAPERS
Termpaper Arsenal, Inc.
519 GLENROCK AVE, SUITE 203
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024
Attention
Faculty
and
(213)477-8474 • 477-5493
Staff: an activity fee is availI'.'c need a tocaf salesman'
HOUSE
FOR
RENT:
Person
able to all faculty and staff
at
$10.00 per person or to share two bedroom country Superbox Special
$15.00 per fainity. Inquire at home located In Mill Hall by
Secretary's office in the PUB. river 10 min. from College. loads of goodies, $5.00 vl>u«
$60/inonth
for only S.99 available at book
call: 748-5351
Ext. 365
store while they last,
WANTED: College students inor see John Brendel Russel #2
terested in taking part in a
Folk
Mass at St. Agnes
ERROR-FREE TYPIN6
Church. Anyone having a guiCORRECTION RIBBON
tar, please bring it along!
CONTACT: Tina Gillott, 748AT VOUR
BOOKSTORE
6006 (after 6 p.m.).
ERRORITE
EVERYTHING FOR THE COLLEGE M A N
Charge Accounts Welcome
Checks Coshed
For
,.. r. M e n
^ ^
Vol. XVI No. 7 l o c k Haven
State
College
Monday, oct. 2,1972
Affer too many LONG nights of consultation with the
Managing
Doctor, the Doctor-in-Chief
of the EAGLE EYE has
sadly h^d to shake his head in sympathy.
of approximately
With a resident staff
2 , 4 0 0 , the pathetic illness befalling
student newspaper
the LHS
still persists and the head physicians
cannot
^
foresee it holding on to life much longer.
Plainly, the Doctors in charge of the case are tired
of the endless vigil at the EE's deathbed
FRUSTRATION.
and are screaming
in
They have done all they can in the way of
transfusions but a larger staff is all that will pull the case out of
its dark
state.
If anyone cares, don't cry over the EAGLE EYE's
demise - get off your ass and hurry down to the Publications
Hospital: there may still be a chance . If no one
helps, the
Doctors will not be able to do more than is humanly
possible
and LHS will just have to settle for a sickly substitute for a
full-time , working
press.
Gloss Shatters
by Bill S t e r n e r
T h e d i e h a r d Vuicati fans who c h a l l e n g e d
the gloomy w e a t h e r w e r e to s e e a t r e m e n d o u s
offensive battle take p l a c e .
Caitfornia rec e i v e d t h e kickoff on t h e i r own thirty yard
l i n e , a n d nine p l a y s l a t e r al 11 :14 (>r the p e riod put s i x p o i n t s on the b o a r d . Clarv D e H a i n a u l t , the V u l c a n qLiarteiback, r o l l e d to
h i s right from the l - a " l c fourteen V.M\I l i n e ,
o u t r u n n i n g the LI!S i.;l,. tide; s lor ihe s c o r e .
I h S ROMPS
T h e E a g l e s r e t u r n e d the V u l c a n kick lo
t h e i r own 38 \:ird l i n e .
Ov the : irst p l a y ,
Ed McGill hit S k i p H e l e y foi 4.S y a r d s to the
C a l St. 1 7 . An o f f - s i d e s p e n a l ' s e t them b a c k
to the 2 2 , but on the next , ' . ' , , MjOiU a g a i n
w e n t to H e l e y . Sk.p broke t^'/o t a c k l e s and
d a n c e d i n t o the end z o n e t i n m o h s t c d . Doug
Williams s p l i t the uprighfs Tor i . l I S ' s s e v e n t h
point.
After the F.aglc kickoff, D e l l a i n a i i l t fumb l e d on h i s own 30 yard and Br-b S e a l r e c o v e r ed for L H S . F o l l o w i n g a loss of s i x v a r d s ,
McGill found G e i g e r open on a s c r e e n p a s s .
T h e w i n g b a c k , f o l l o w i n g f'le block of Skip
Haley r a c e d 36 y a r d s for Lock H a v e n s s e c o n d
T . D . Williams booted the extra poitit, and with
6'/2 m i n u t e s to g o , the E a g l e s led 1 4 - 7 . On
the e n s u i n g kickoff, Mel Abie c a u g h t the Vulc a n r e t u r n b a c k on his own 4 \ a r d l i n e . T h e
C a l St. o f f e n s e , v i s a b l y s h a k e n , fumbled and
a g a i n B o b r e c o v e r e d oi^. ihe 4 . On the next
s e t of p l a y s , l e s s t h a n a minute after their
l a s t s c o r e the E a g l e s f u l l b a c k . B o b K l i n e ,
r a m b l e d four y a r d s g i v i n g his team a 20-7
lead.
H o w e v e r on the n e x t set of d o w n s , D e H a i n a u l l , u s i n g the r u n n i n g and p a s s r e c e p t i o n s of h i s halfback I'ony Sargo moved the
b a l l to t h e LHS 2 2 . S e t t i n g up in the p o c k e t ,
he d r i l l e d his n e x t p a s s to h i s tight end Led
G i a l a m e s and L o c k H a v e n ' s lead w a s out to
six p o i n t s . The crowd n o i s e had b a r e l y died
before L H S ' s
lead w a s b a c k to 13 p o i n t s .
S t e v e G l a s s g a t h e r e d in the V u l c a n kickoff on
h i s own 15 and g a l l o p e d 85 yards for the s c o r e
Minutes later t h e q u a r t e r e n d e d s h o w i n g a r e m a r k a b l e total of 41 p o i n t s . T h e E a g l e s lead
was 27-14.
P A C E D SLOWED
T h e s e c o n d q u a r t e r was an e x a c t o p p o s ite of t h e f i r s t . T h e E a g l e d e f e n s e performed
magnificently.
One o u t s t a n d i n g play saw
' T a n k ' S h e r m a n and c o m p a n y t h r o w i n g the
V u l c a n s b a c k on a 4th and one yard s i t u a t i o n .
N e v e r t h e l e s s , with 2 . 5 0 remaining in the half,
D e H a i n o u l t threw a s c r e e n p a s s lo T o n y Sergo who c a r r i e d the b a l l from his irwn 42 to
the LHS 1 5 . D e H a i n a u l t a g a i n c a l l e d on Sergo, w h o a n s w e r e d by c a r r y i n g to the 4 . On
the n e x t play the V u l c a n q u a r t e r b a c k bootl e g g e d t o the end zone for the s c o r e . T h e half
California
ended
lead.
••'. ith
Lock
follows;
Smith Ha 11-7'c
P a t Dunmire
Bob S e l l e r s
Dave K e l l y
\orili
Hall.-^^'"c
Al A n d e r s o n
Mike Ogden
Hall-ir.
Vicki C o n n e r
Sue C o n s t a n t i n i
Student
Publications
Matthew Delfert
Evalyn Fisher
Elizabeth Persun
Hipji
Hdll-JTc
Joe E u c a l a n o
Rich Wagner
Steve F i s h
,:7-;i
V L L C A N S TAKE L E A ! )
The d e f e n s e s dotninated 13 m i n u l e s of
the fourth q u a r t e r . Neither t e a m could move
Ihe ball s u f f i c i e n t l y enough within e v e n a
safe field g State t h r e a t e n i n g on the L H S 5, Mel .Able
c h a s e d D e H a i n a u l t out of b o u n d s on his own
2 0 on fourth d o w n . But D e H a i n a u l t a g a i n u s i n g
Tony S e r g o . moved the b a l l to the E a g l e
s e v e n yard l i n e . T w o plays l a t e r , a s u b s t i t u t e
f u l l b a c k , D a v e K o r d i c h . s c o r e d lo give C a l ifornia a 35-33 lead with (>nly 2 ;()(, r e m a i n i n g
in the g a m e .
GLASS C A P S VICTORY
On the f o l l o w i n g kickoff .Steve G l a s s
look the b a l l on h i s own !2 yard l i n e . He
w a i t e d for liis b l o c k s lo m a t e r i a l i z e , ihen
turned on the s p e e d en route t o an 88 yard
kickoff r e t u r n , only 12 s e c o n d s after the Vulc a n s had t a k e n the l e a d . T h e crowd, who a
few s e c o n d s before had b e e n c h e e r i n g and
r e s t l e s s , now s a l s i l e n t i nd m o t i o n l e s s .
T h e y w a t c h e d as their d e s p e r a t e
otfense
s c r a m b l e d for y a r d s which never were r e c o r d e d . T h e ever improving E:agles had won
their s e c o n d s t r a i g h t gaine 3 9 - 3 5 .
Out of a p o s s i b l e 2 3 8 0 , 303 b a l l o t s were c a s t r e s u l t i n g in
12% of t h e s t u d e n t hods v o t i n g . North H a l l had the h i g h e s t perc e n t a g e of r e s i d e n t s v o t i n g with 33''( turning in b a l l o t s and
Woolridge was low w i t h 4 ' r .
T h e C o m m i t t e e , c o n s i s t i n g of .1. D o w s , Wise, Bower, Gordi.m
and J . Kircher wtU hold two run-off e l e c t i o n s , the d a t e of which
is to be a n n o u n c e d w h e r e ties r e s u l t e d . T h e s e w i l l be betv\een
Mark S p e a r and David L i i i l e for the C o m m u t e r s ; and Karen Hunt
and K a t h y Whilham for Woolridge H a l l .
Russell
a
EACiLES SCORI Q L I C k L Y
The i.IlS d e f e n s e cair.e out m :!u- third
qua.itjr and c a r r i e d the gairie lo the VuU. a n s .
On if.- t i r s l s e r i e s t-'i pUivs, tli.-> fenced a
p X'lucan 3S. McCiill ^'.asted no lime in p u t t i n g
I J I S ' s t h i r l ; , - t h i r d point on the board. Ho
h a n d e d off to B o b K l i n e , wlio behind llic
blocks of f-'rank Geiger and Chuck \ e n n i e ,
ran 38 yards for the s c o r e . T h e l-agie d e f e n s e a g a i n rose to the o c c a s s i o n , forcing
the V u l c a n s ti' punt after i h e i r next t h r e e
p l a - . s . T h e LHS offensive machim
again
looked as if it were oii the nv.ue, bul i!ie
drive s t a l l e d al the 41 of C a l i f o r n i a
State.
Jeft Knarr came in lo punt. Under a s t r o n g
C a l i f o r n i a r u s h the kick was b l o c k e d and (he
V u l c a n s look over in good field p o s i t i o n a l
their 4 ^ . F-i\e plays later with a 4th and one
foot situali'.in C a l i f o r n i a f a i l e d to c r a c k Ihe
tough E a g l e d e f e n s e .
V U L C A N S CLOSE (SAP
L H S ' s offense failed to move \hc ball and
were forced to p u n t , .leff Knarr boomed a
fifty yarder and after the r e t u r n , the V u l c a n s
took p o s i t i o n on their own 4 8 - By virtue nf a
32 yard p a s s to S e r g o and a p e r s o n a ! foul.
Ca!if(Tnia S t a t e had the b a l l first and g(>a 1
at the LHS 10 yard l i n e . T h r e e plays l a t e r .
Tony S e r g o ramrodded off t a c k l e for a tough
three yards t o c l o s e Lock H a v e n ' s lead to
33-28.
s e e Tallies Few Votes
T h e r e s u l t s are a s
Cominuters-'>'yc
Monica V a c c a r o
Steve Bierly
E r l a Mae Krieder
T i m Mahoney
Fred Naylor
Mike B l a c k
Tim Foltz
Lloyd P e t e r s
Larry F o l t z
Mike H o l t e r
Fr-alf'rwty-^2%
Marty Mack
Woolridge
Hall-4%
Marty McGregor
McEntIre
Ha 11-1 ^"o
Linda Schreiber
Ann F a r r o w
B e c k y Mazza
Toni B u r k h a r t
Haven cnjoving
Board-II.T^
Williams, Kline
Make
All-Star
Weekly
Squads
L'.iek Haven SUite College's
defensive halfliack Doug Williams
and fullback Boh Kline have been
-selected for the first ECAC Weekly AU-Star Squad for their performances in last Friday 24-22 victory over Bloomsburg State C')llege.
William;; wa.s picked for Fiist
Team honors.
Kline, Whitehall,
received Honorable Mention recognition.
.•\ 5-9, 155-pound junior Williams provided the winning margin against Bloom with a clutch
23-yard field goal in the third
quarter and booted ihtee-for-three
on extra points.
The Harrisburg native kicked
off for the Eagles and did the
punting after Jefl Knarr was injured in the third quarter. Williams
ran back punts and kickoffs vAere
on four attempts he averaged
22-yards per return.
Kline, a rugged 2l)0-pound
junioi fullback, led the Bald
Eagles great t>tfensive efforts on
the ground with 137 yards on 18
caries and scored two touchdowns
on runs of 2 and 37 yards.
Conoes Splash
Sunday, Oct 15
For HofT^ecommg
stitliiif^ of c a n o e s or foul p l a y
will he p i i n i i i t c i l ( p l a y n i c e fell;i-' .
:'. r / c s I -i the m o s t s t a l w a r t
t c i i " s 'licUiclc:
1 st - "ill.) plii.s p l a q u e
..nd - * 1 i1 ;iUis p l a q u e
3rii - ,*S nlir.s p l a q u e
! "n lor the r a c e m u s t
oil.re O c t o b e r 12
.•"i
c
i,,ii!,''.K- at t h e P u b
. c
Sutio,'
'I ' .•
.i
•i.'ijl
•- <"•
and
u
•
.111
. - .'
.Ii I ' l •
1 ,'•>
\ ! I c o m p e l :l. ;
-•<•-.
lo hit
llu- c o l a ,
wal,-'
ailj;u-rnt
cinir r>
i h f
. i ' ;:iL-d
111'. i,>:i
Street
I.i
• Mi;
•.". ! ' ;
Bri,' LC.
.
,.!n I c a i i i s
ah 1L-.
I .'J
-sk.
.Vi
•
-.ii :Mi\ q u e s t i o n s
-t"Mil.. .
;>.i\c Orabot at
I'l" Mu IK-iia h o u s e , 74S-h')23
Ix
llli
li '••
• .1; •
\ t ) 1 let-
WANTED: College students interested in taking part in a
rc;)k Mass at St. Agnes
Church. Anyone having a guitar, please bring it along!
CONTACT: Tina Gillott, 7486006 (after 6 p.m.).
Hess, Johnson Lead LHS 6-3
Rout of Lycoming Booters
CiJ if'i
1 les^
ass ist
in
pic iig
rout
o(
1,\ c o i n i n g
son
had
1 0 sliots
a 3,0-shol a i t a c k
this
year)
on
the
i)nd
Ban
ijic
1 •;
l o h n s nn e ; c l i had f ' o goals and an
| i e \ c n Slate s o c c e r team lo a 6-.3
C o l l ege
e g e ii: V\ 1 111 irnsporl on W e d n i ' s d a y . .lohn, .Alii Ic
ic 'lo.^s .ind lU'w Ifdiunian had 5 i " lead
(lufi c i l o l a l in leguiiir s e a s o n play thus far
I \ oiiimg g(ni! Ill iioich the th'rd victory a-
R u i n s l otic t i c (3-li-l )
T h e g.iiiic bcg.e.n
'•' .1 c l o u d b u r s t j u s t before
ich
.tart.
offensive p l a y e r s . T h e
Hald E a g l e s used l!o^ :
\\lien. one minute into the
ha If. .l< '.c ;',i! I.IIS on the s c o r e b o a r d .
The lead did not l a s t , hi \ c v e r . L.vcoming"s S c h a c h n e t t e d an
i m a s s i s l e d goal a! ' 7 : ( ) s . The r e s u l t i n g s l a l e m a t e was not pernianci,!, cil.ber. On a E y c o offensive d r i v e , a l l three LHS d e t e n d e r s , i n c l u d i n g g i i a b e C r a i g Davison, were pulled away from
the n e t ,
I h e K:i!! "eit by D a w s o n and rolled in (with a little
h e l p from a L.\ coming 'Mayer) for another g o a l . O c c u r r i n g a t
4 4 : 0 0 , It left the s c o r e 2-1 a t the half.
I.IIS did not remain bchitid long. The B a l d E a g l e s s c o r e d
t u o g o a l s in three iiiinutcs to regain the l e a d , which from t h e n
on., they never l cornor kick to fraulinan, wlio s e n t il in al 2 5 : 1 9 , J o h n s o n put
in a n o t h e r of his own al 2;'1;20. and F"d M u s s c r put in the final
LHS tails at 30:01). Hull; were u n a s s i s t e d , and finally left the
s c o r e Jl 6-2, until L y c o m i n g ' s Lockv, ood got one b y s u b s t i t u t e
g o a l i e Chris Haberman for t h e i r l;ist marker.
The s e c o n d half performance left Bald E a g l e c o a c h Karl
Herrmann i m p i c s s c d n r . h the play oi his c h a r g e s , d e s p i t e s o m e
s l u g g i s h first hall a c t i o n .
H e noted |iiarticularly " t h e b e t t e r
use of the forward line ihrough the use of the w i n g s , " which
made ihe difference in tiie s c o r e . Most of the e a r l i e r offensive
d r i v e s wore trying lo p'.nir ihc i-all down the middle i n s t e a d of
d r i p p i n g it down the s i d e s ,
inch is where m o s t E a g l e goals
come from. Things had been e s p e c i a l l y bad with the corner
ki-cks, on which tb.e b a l l would be kicked into a elGnd of L y c o m i n g d e f e n d e r s , wiiiiout L I ' S i l - t ' e - . ' : on the s c e n e .
Ihe
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Ocf.
Oci.
THE 1972 VARSITY SOCCER SCHEDULE
3 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
3 p.m.
l'-30 P-m3 p.m.
A
A
A
A
H
3 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
12 Noon
H
A
A
Viiianova University
3
St.
Vincent College
5
East
Stroudsburg Siafs' College
13
21 Slippery Rock Stat» College
24 YORK COLLEGE
27 M'LLERSVILLE STATE COLLEGE
MOV.
1
NOV.
4
•ndiana University of Pa.
Frostburg State College
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loads of goodies, $5.00 vlaue
for only $.99 available at book
store while they last.
HOUSE FOR RENT: Person
to share two bedroom country
home located in Mill Hall by
river
10 min. from College.
We need a local saie.sm3ri"
SGQy month
748-5351
Ext. 365
FOUND: ID ot Kim A. Smith call:
or see John Brendel Russel #2
claim it in PCCEB office.
Termpaper Arsenal, Inc.
519 GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203
LOSANGELES, CALIF. 90024
(213)477-8474 • 477-5493
'
Candidates Announced
The following is a list of the candidates running for the
SCC Senate. The numbers represent the number of senators
each area may have.
Fraternity-1
Dave Drabot
Commuters-11
» Monica Vaccaro
George IJoyd
• Steve Bierly
Mark Spear
•• Lloyd Peters
"^ Mike Black
!• Tim Mahoney
^ Larry Foltz
* Fred Naylor
•» Tim Follz
David Little
* Erla Mae Kreider
,Mike Holler
High-3
Bill McLomas
Steve Fish
Joseph Evcalano
MCFMI ire'4
Toni Burkhart
Linda Schreiber
Michele Berold
Ann Farron
Be Iky Mazzi
North'2
Mike Bradley
Mike Odgen
Ann Reidy
Alan Anderson
Gwen Whildin
Smith-3
tvfctthew Delfert
Bob Sellers
Dave Kelley
pal Dunmire
Michael Maddox
StudenU-Facuity-staff
A series of 2 flu shots
will be given this year, There
Tryouts
for
the
play of s o c i e t y t o d a y . In t h i s her
will be no charge for students ' T h e Sign in Sidney B r u s t e i n ' s l a s t p l a y , t h e s i t u a t i o n s p r e to
ho
p r e s e n t e d s e n t e d p o r t r a y the e v e r - p r e s e n t
and a charge of $1.00 per shot W i n d o w ' ,
c l i c h e s of the A m e r i c a n way
N o v e m b e r 2 , 3 , and 4 , were
for faculty and staff.
life.
Sidney,
the
main
h e l d Monday and T u e s d a y of of
'
h a r a c t e r , is a revolutionai.
lust
week
by the d i r e c t o r .
The first shot will be
D r . D e n y s G a r y . The r e s u l t a n t w h o r e v o l t s for the s a k e of •
given Wednesday, October
cast
is
headed
by
Bernie r e v o l u t i o n . L i k e many p e o p l e ,
4th from 12 noon until 1 p.m. G i l l o t , who w i l l p o r t r a y S i d n e y
he n e v e r g e t s i n v o l v e d u n t i l
and
D
e
b
b
i
e
Klens
a
s
Iris.
j o l t e d into l e a l i l y .
at the Glennon Infirmary. AnyFeatured
in
additional
Written
by
Lorraine
one desiring the flu shots- H a n s b e r r y , w h o a l s o p e n n e d ma J or r o l e s ai e Kim C o o n a s
A l t o n , K e v i n Murphy a s W a l l y ,
in the Sun, t h e play
please sign up at the Infirmary Raisin
deals
with p r e j u d i c e
within
P a t Q u i n n a s Max, J a n e t F o s t e r
no later than Tuesday, Octo- a group of p e o p l e , s y m b o l "Jobs
for
young
people until at least October of 1973,
a s M a v i s , Howard Smith a s
are available in H u r o p e " said U . S . Corpon lions are s t i l l cutting
r ^ a v i d , C h r i s S a l i d i s as G l o r i a ,
ber 3rd.
Cast Selected for Gary's Play
Jobs Offered In Europe
Republican Ramblings
by J. Scott Landis
When Ueorge McGovern says he is going to lalk about
the economy, he will, on occasion, actually talk about the economy. You s e e , usually McGovein is too busy ranting and
raving about The War or accusing Nixon of this or that to worry about the econmoy. When he does talk about the economy,
his facts are characteristically disjointed and misrepresented.
For example, the Democratic platform, the platform unon
wjiich. McGovern is running, calls wage-price controls "amfair"
and " b u r e a u c r a t i c " and says that, if elected, the controls will
be eliminated. What the Democrats fail to mention is that these
; . results-inflation has s lowed, unemploycontrols b.p '
.;iul business is improving.
h a s s!-' '•' •
, ' s r n ' s pet i s s u e s is that the Republicans
. individual and undertaxed the corporation,
have
since Nixon's inauguration, personal income
tlui
The !
been cut by IS."* billion dollars. Hence, any overtaxes
or undertaxing is a carryover from the two previous Democratic
adminislralions—the administrations with which McGovern has
so desparately trying to identify!
Is the kind of c;edibility that we can expect McGovern to
bring to the Preisdency, sholud he be elected?
FINANCIAL
AID NOTICE:
If you are not curreiitly receiving financial aid, you may
qualify for the Ccillege Work
Study employment program.
Such awards are based upon
established need. If you need
financial assistance and would
like to work, call at the Office
of Financial Aids 301 Sullivan
Hall.
The Physical Education Club
will show films on the Olympicsj Thursday, Sepi 28 in Thomas Field House. Refreshments will be Served and all
are invited to attend.
Recreatioitai pooi facilities will be provided to the
students, faculty and administration. TFH pool will be
ATTENTION ORGANIZATIONS opened Sundays from 2 3 p.m.
The s e e s n«w policy on fht :ur faculty and staff and Iheir
sale of ticketr. i^r any student- iiijiitltes only, and from 3-5
financed event reciuires that for college students only,
the sales must be handled by ZtnvnerIi pool will be open
the SCC ticket committee.
If you are plsrinlng an event
which requires such action
you are obligated to contact
Larry Wise (ext. 283), Chairman of liie ticket committee.
Arrangements for the pre-sale
as foltows:
College Students
Monday: 7-9 p.m,
sday: 12:30-2 p.m. and
p.m.
and R o s s
P a r t i n g t o n a s the
detective.
Set d e s i g n will be d o n e
by Mr. J o h n Gordon a n d M i s s
F e l i c e P r o c t o r will d e s i g n the
costumes.
The
students
in
T e c h n i c a l Theatre and C o s t u m e
and
Make-up
classes
will
perform
the t e c h n i c a l
work.
Dr. F.X. Gordon, president of
Princeton R e s e a r c h , at University
of Southern CalifcM-nia interview
y e s t e r d a y . J u s t back from Europe
he s a i d "the 300 million people
common
market
is b o o m i n g . "
On the other hand, he s t a t e d
we foresee continued youth unemployment in t h e United S t a t e s
No Subtraction Made
By Akeley Addition
The nori-graded, open c l a s sroom approach of the Akeley
Elementary School on the Lock
Kdven Slate College campus has
received additional professional
guidance in the person of Miss
Catherine Sheridan, a graduate
of North D a k o t a ' s New School
of Behavioral Studies in Education.
Miss
Sheridan
spent
six
years t e a c h i n g in North Dakota
public s c h o o l s before
entering
the New School program. She
feels that her philosophy of education has undergone a drastic
evolution a s a result of the two
and a half y e a r s she spent in the
pi'ogram.
5ihe
hec ame
in vol ved
in
c l a s s r o o m s i t u a t i o n s which stres s e d multi-age grouping, nong r a d e n e s s , a thematic approach
to learning, indivualized instruction, and elementary s t u d e n t s as
t u t o r s . Her independent
study
projects included the development
of an ;irt program for elementary
s t u d e n t s , a s well a s compiling
a wide v a r i e t y of math g a m e s ,
p u z z l e s , and problems designed
REMINDER; All students ineluding new students must
have I.D.'s validated to be
admitted to any SCC sponsered
event. This can be done on
the ground floor of the P.U.B.
between the hours of 8 a.m.
to 1 p.m. and 2-4 p.m.
to make the learning of mathematics a stimulating and enjoyable activity for children.
At the c o n c l u s i o n of her
internship program, Miss Sheridan
felt that the a p p r o a c h used by the
New School w a s most rewarding
and s t i m u l a t i n g . I n s t e a d of repeating the s a m e grade level
curriculum, there was the challenge of new i n t e r e s t s and the
opportunity for study and involvement in a r e a s which were intere s t i n g to her, where she felt a
need for growth and enrichment.
C h a r l e s E . Silberman., author
of " C r i s i s in the C l a s s r o o m , "
has praised t h e work of the New
School, s t a t i n g in his b m k that
" o n e of the m o s t interesting
programs (in o p e n , informal education) is in North Dakota, where
elementary s c h o o l s are gradually
being
remodeled
along formal
lines."
During the 1972-73 school
year. Miss Sheridan hopes to
implement at Akeley School a
number of experiences gained in
her involvement with the New
School.
ALL
WORK-STUDY RECIPIENTS. "LETTER OF AUTHORISATION" to be presented lo their employer. If
you have not yet obtained a
position on campus, there are
job openings available-contact
the Financial Aids office.
Attention: All students must
The two college students have their 10 cards embossed
who were bitten by a dog in with their social security
and door sales will be made by
Faculty and Staff
Mill Hall on Sept. 20 should number,
Tuesday: 12:30-2 p.m.
our committee.
report to the Infirmary for
puB Basement
This decision was made to Thursday: 12;30-2 p.m.
MWF 8-11
develop a uniform code fo4 the Attention: men antJ women v<)th medical attention emmediately.
Tues. 11-3
sale of tickets for student long hair inusi wear bathing The dog has not had any
shots.
Thurs. 1-3
caps.
financed events.
Wednesday: 7-9 p.m.
Thursday: 12.30-2 p.m.
back personnel and are not planning for r e p l a c e m e n t s ,
"We have a program c a l l e d
Jobs
E u r o p e , " he
continued,
"and
guarantee
salaried jobs
in
Switzerland,
England
and
Belgium, for some 2,000 young
p e o p l e 18 to 29 years of a g e .
" a n d guarantee salaried jobs*
I n e s e are Summer, F a l l , Winter
and Spring jobs a s general help
(trainees) in h o t e l s , r e s t a u r a n t s ,
supermarkets
department s t o r e s ,
stewards and s t e w a r d e s s e s on
t r a i n s , e t c . Board and room are
u s u a l l y provided and friends can
work together if they apply together. Participants arrange their
own bargain youth or s t u d e n t
fare
transportation and depart
anytime to work 2 to 6 months or
longer."
For free information send
a stamped self-adressed b u s i n e s s
s i z e envelope to Jobs Europe
Box
44188.
Panorama
City,
California 91412.
Rush Week
Bigins Oct 1
more sorority
rush
t H LI
\vi:ek IS about to begin for the
fuli. Formal rush begins Sunday.
Oclcjber 1 at 7 p.m. with the
.r-aditional Rush tea in Bentley
Hall Lounge.
The tea opens the week
which
includes round
robins,
p a r t i e s , lols of a q u a i n t a n c e s ,
l u n c h ami c o k i e s and climaxes
Friday aftern loa with the delivery
of bids.
Monday and Tuesday nights
round :ol"r.'. will be held in
Raub Hall al 7 p.m. The Round
Robins
are
inl'oimal
sessions
where
rushees
will have
an
opportunity to meet girls from
a l l five s o c i a l sororities and
i.nJ will become aquainted w i t h
sorority life.
On Wednesday morning from
8 - 12;30 r u s h e e s will sign up
in t h e office of the A s s o c i a t e
Dean for Student Life for two
preference p a r l i e s . These parties
are a l s o going to be held in Raub
Hall.
Thursday night is the final
party where
the girls decide
which sorority, if any, they are
i n t e r e s t e d in by attending one
party.
r-'riday from 8 - 1 2
a.m.,
in the Office of .'\ssociate Deail^
for Student Life, r u s h e e s will
cards,
pveferrential bid
sign
Friday at 4 p.in. b i d s will be
delivered.
JV^s Tromp
Bucfcne// Varsity
On
Tuesday
afternoon
the
Lock
Haven
State
JV
hockey
s q u a d travelled to the Buckncl!
U n i v . C a m p u s to h a n d its v a r s i t y
s q u a d a 5-1 d e f e a t .
The
first
half
began
with
LHS's
girls c r o w d i n g the
ball,
w h i c h may h a v e b e e n the r e s u l t
of t h e f i e l d b e m g s m a l l e r
than
usual.
H o w e v e r , it d i d n ' t t a k e
the girls long t o a d i u s t tu the
small " g r a s s c o v e r e d " field, as
Barb C o l l i n s hit the goal after
IVi m i n u t e s h a d e l a p s e d . \V^^i of
Booters Face
Tough Schedule
In e i g h t d a y s
l..ock H a v e n
S t a t e College'.^ u n b e a t e n (2-0-1)
s o c c e r t e a m m u s t fac^- f o u r v e r y
tough opponents.
Y e s t e r d a y C o a c h Karl H e r rmann's
booters
traveled
to
W i U i a m s p o r t f o e a .^ p . m . pamtwith
Lycommg
College.
i^^^t
y e a r t h e neighb->i ing arch-i - ; ' •
b a t t l e d t o a 2 - 2- t i e .
Saturday
IHi
h n . s > .i
IM
Shippensburg
State
tean,.
,,.;;
year t h e E a g l e s and Red R j ' J c r b
w e r e c o - c h a m p i r . n s of t h e P e n n s y l v a n i a C o n f t r r n c e after p l a y i n g
to a double
ncrtime
scoreless
t i e in t h e c h a i i i p i n n s h i p c o n t e s t .
T h e n on O c t o h t r 3 the Bald E a g l e s
travel to Fhikidelphia to meet
Villanova
University
for
the
first
lime.
T w o d j > s later on October
5 L H S h i t s t h e r o a d a g a i n for a
3 : 3 0 1-n. game
at St. V i n c e n t
the first half play w a s e v e n l y
d i s t r i b u t e d over the entire field,
w i t h l i f i l e a c t i o n in t h e \MS c i r cle,
T h r e o m o r e goal.-? w e r e a d d e d in t h e f: bt h a l f a s f r e s h m a n
right
wiu^-,
"Rocky"
Rothrock
s c o r e d in 12 m i n u t e . s ; s o p h m o r e
right
inner, Jo Gardner
in
m i n u t e s ; a n d f r e s h m a n left i n n e r ,
P a t O g l e in 24 m i n u t e s .
The s e c o n d half play changed
h a n d s s l i g h t l y , but n o t until freshm a n J o L e i e w got h e r hand?, in
the s c o r i n g only 1 4 m i n u t e s after
the s e c o n d h^if b e g a n .
From
t h e n o n thi- B u c k n e l l s q u a d c a m e
back
5Urongly,
and
the
tiring
E a g l e d e f e n s e h a d to work h a r d
IL k e e p t h e m f r o m s c o r i n g .
Goalie
Kathy
Snovel's
job
b e c a m e m o r e a p p a r e n t i n the s e c ond half m a k i n g s e v e n s a v e s , b e fCH-e J o c e W h i t i n g f i n a l l y . = q u e e k e d
one b y .
T h i U ' s t h e w a y it s t o o d
when
the
final
'Ahistle
blew;
Lock Haven-5. Bucknell-1.
The
v i c t o r y is tor Dr. C h a r l o t t e Smith
to a d d to her a l r e a d y i m p r e s s i v e
list.
Both L H S s q u a d s have time
no4 t o i r o n o u t t h e i r t e a m p l a y ,
b e f o r e t r a v e l l i n g to S l i p p e r y R o c k
next T h u r s d a y , O c t . 5.
A fellow
should
marry a girl for her
That's like buying o
because the point job
good.
never
looks.
house
looks
Shop Jerry's In Lock Haven
for the jeans and
tops the guys
fel
and gals love.
style setter in
Lock Haven
a n d carries all
T h e second half started much
a s t h e f i r s t w i t h K u r t S m i t h of
TKE
intercepting a Bob Dagle
p a s s o n I g u a n a ' s s e c o n d s o l of
o f f e n s i v e d o w n s . A f t e r four p l a y s
T K E w a s f o r c e d it, p u n t g i v i n g
Iguana
poor f i e l d p o s i t i o n
very
close to their own end z o n e .
On
t h e f i r s t p l a y of t h e s e r i e s , T K E ' s
defense
became
progressively
tou^ei
a s the g a m e w e n t
on,
forcing quick p a s s e s .
However,
later in the half B r u c e D i v a y int e r c e p t e d a T K E p a s s and returned
it for a n I g u a n a t o u c h d o w n .
Bob
Dayle
threw c o m p l e t e to K e v i n
C u r r a n for t h e p«*t a n d a 7-2 l e a d .
^-
famous brandsHIS
^o.
Male
LC,A-25 M O O N L I G H T E R S
Chip
Snares'
tluce
touchdown p a s s e s and J a c k H a r b i s o n ' s
two i n t e r c e p t i o n s lifted L C A to
a 25-0 victory over the Mconli^ters.
Harbison returned
an
e r r a n t p a s s for L C A e a r l y i n t h e
f i r s t h a l f for a t o u c h d o w n , ' a n d
from t h e n on w e r e n e v e r t h r e a t e n ed. Snare tossed touchdown p a s s es to B i l ! H a t a l a s k i , Ray G e p h a r t
a n d E d F l a n n i n g a n for Ihe o t h e i
AXA s c o r e s .
Flanningan
also
r a c e d for a e x t r a p o i n t t o l o p t h e
victoryT K E - 8 IGUANA HOUSE
T K E w a s t e d n o t i m e in s t r i k ing b a c k after the e n s u i n g k i c k
off.
O n t h e f i r s t p l a y form s c r i i n mage Jeif Yenlch caught a long
s c o r i n g p a s s from Mike C r i t t e r .
T h e pat fiiiled. but T K E h e l d a
g-7 l e a d .
On t h e n e x t s c r i e s of
of d o w n s , Y e n t c h i n t e r c e p t e d a n
I g u a n a p a s s t o e n d any t h r e a t .
Jerry's is the
%
T h e f i r s t l i i ^ h t nf i f . l i . o n u r a !
f^lotb.''lt
action s a w
Sl^una
Pi,
L C A , a n d T K F a l l r e c n r d i n e in>ptTtant victories over opirning opp o n e n t s . Strong d e f e a s e s d o m i n a t e d in e a c h g a m e for t h e w i n n e r s ,
o v e r s h a d o w i n g v - e a k or p a « s i b l y
inexperienced offenses.
SIGMA P!-14 H I G H MALL Ird-O
D c i e n s c s p e l l e d Sigma Pi'.s
vicirry
as Gabe
Lucisano
and
R a n d y Krick l e c o r d o d key i n t e r c e p t i o n s t o t h w a r t H i g h H a l l .Ird
floor's offensive efforts.
Wayne
Traiigh snared two inlercepticins,
o n e of w h i c h h e r e t u r n e d for a
touchdown.
Traugh's
nass
to
S t e v e W a g a m a n for the- P A T g a v e
S i g m a P i a 7-0 h a l f t i m t - l e a d .
In
the s e c o n d half, Traugh
again
c o m b i n e d w , t h W r i g a m a n a n d Sif^ma
Pi led 13-0.
On t h e next p l ; i \ ,
Traugh
h i t J o h n Z e r b e lor t h e
14th p o i n t and the v i c t o r y .
College. The
Hagles
then
can
take an e i g h t d a y b r e a t h e r before
In a game d o m i n a t e d b y d e traveling
to
East
Stroudsburg
f e n s e , T K L e d g e d Iguana H o u s e
S t a t e o n O c t o b e r 13 ,
8-7.
T h e f i r s t h a l f e n d e d in a
Last week Coach Herrmann's
s c o r e l e s s tie , b o t h d e f e n s e s holdb o o t e r s h a n d e d St. F r a n c i s C o l l e g e ing t o u g h and r i s i n g to the o c i t s £w4t l o s s of t h e s e a s o n b y
c a s s i o n when c a l l e d upon.
At
a 2 - 0 s c o r e , and t h e n battled
t h e e n d of t h e f i r s t h a l f
TKE
E d i n b o r o S t a t e t o a 1-1 t i e i n p o r t r a y e d t h a t t h e n a m e of t h e
g a m e i s d e f e n s e by h o l d i n g I g u a n a
double overtime
H o u s e o n t h e g o a ! lini; a s t i m e
ran o u t .
Welcome Students!
Lee
Frats Vicforious
in intromurals
^s
Levis
JERRY'S
I appreciate
die f a c t t h a t
no
m o r e of m y f r i i n d s or e v t - n p o s s i b l y m y s e l f will hHvc t o be
k i l l e d for H r i d i c u l o u s ; c a u s e .
B u t the h o m b i i i g c o n t i n u e s . H u n d r e d s and
, ! i o u s ; i n d s of p e o p l e
a r e d y i n g a n d we .ire t o n s e l f i s h
t o e n d i t . We h a , e t o p r e s e r v e
lo
the
Editor
I • Scott
Lancti.s,
in
hi-. our h o n o r o r in \o',ir t e r n i m o l o g y
M
r.
U^ndis,
ue
m u M find
an
"Rep.ibl.can
Ran.hungs"
on
F r i d a y . e v i d e n t ; y d i d n o t e x a m i n e "ho'iofTihl.-; p e a c ^ ' . "
H o n o r a b l e tc^ w h o m '
Cert h e h i s t o r y of t h e V , e t n ! i m w a r
t a i n l y not to the Amencf.n people
closely enough.
for
an
•
'
h
u
v
i
.
v
:•,-•.••
".'
••*.
Ine
H i s c o n t e n t i o n w a s t h a t Mr.
• y tiwt
N i x o n i n h e r i t e d t h e 'Aar from his" h i s t u r i c a i t .uM •-...•.•'<•
"
i'"- t h e
two
Democratic
p r e d e s e s o r s t h e oiily Vii • . .
U . S . to d o v . . •
^•••- 'i.>^-:f-.
Presidents Johnson a n ! Kennedv.
However.
"upon
close
examination
One
finds
that
our
involvement
in
the
Vietnam
holocaust
has
a
much
mor'^
i n v o l v e d h i s t o r y t h a n Mr. L a n r ; i s
would
hope. U was
President
Eisenhower
und
not
President
Kennedy
who
sent
the
first
contingent
of
U.S.
advisors
t o V i e t n a m . It h a p p e n e d i n t h e
early 1950's while the
French
w e r e t r y i n g t :> r e s t o r e
(colonial
c o n t r o l o f V i e t n a m . D u r i n g tht-.'^e
y e a r s of the s t r u g g l e
between
t h e F r e n c h a n d t h e Vir^triftmest:
the l i n i t e d S t a t e s supp!i-*d an
e s t i m a t e d 80"^ of t h e c a s h Ihe
F r e n c h n e e d e d to fight the war.
T h e n , after the F r e n c h
suffeted
a
humiliating
defeat
at
Dien
Bien
P h u , it w a s
the
United
S t a l e s w h o r e t u s e d to s i g n the
Geneva
Accords
which
called
for a n i n t e r s i a t i o n a l l y s u p e r v i s e d
e l e c t i o n ro m a k e V i e t n a m a u n i t e d
n a t i o n u n d e r or.e l e a d e r , b e c a u s e
the man who would have
won
8 0 % oi t h e v o t e w a s a n a c c l a i m e d
c o m m u n i s t . (U*s w h a t you c a l l
fighting facism with more facism.)
All t h i s hapi>ened w h i l e E i s e n hower w a s p r e s i d e n t .
M I . l a n d i s s a y s Nixon h a s
done more than a n y other presi d e n t t o end the w a r . H a s he
r e a l l y ? D o e s the fact that men
with s l a n t e d e y e s
and darker
skins
are
getting
slaughtered
rather t h a n A m e r i c a n s make the
war any more r e s p e c t a b l e ? Sure,
certii'
the
VRI.'.,
.
•
••
''"*
tnn
In t h e
second
paragraph
o f y o u r a r t i c l e , Mr, L a n d i s , y o u
attempt to belittle the Democra•ic ticket b y referring lo Sargent
Shriver
as
"Mf.Govem's
7th
c h o i c e . " 1 l a k e c o m f o r t a m i find
it v e r y a p p r o p r i u t e t h a l M c G o v e r n ' s
7 ; h c h o i c e for th^;; m a n w h o i s a
h e a r t h f j ; r-u-av fi-om t h e t o p n o s itioii
ir,
.*ir
•;(•••'••;'',
t i m e . ' i <••-.(••'••
' ".
t h a n Mr.
••>..'-. >t> '.
i^
'1*105
,:'•', i...,i i!vc
iir'-!
choice.
Respuctf.i'i.,
C h a r l e s A. Leonard
605 H i g h St. P ' l e m i n g t o n
With
even
a
little
more
" c l o s e e x a m i n a t i o n " of t h e U . S .
relations
and
promises
to
Ho
Chi Minh during the early s t a g e
of W o r l d W a r II o n e w o u l d r e a l i z e ,
a t l e a s t a n y o n e w i t h a s e n s e of
j u s t i c e , ( A m e r i c a n s u s e d t o be
k n o w n for t h e i r s e n s e of fair p l a y
and
justice)
how
wrong
and
unjustifiable
our
involvement
IS i n V i e t n a m .
N o w , I a m n o t a r g u i n g "for
t h e v i n d i c a i i m f^f J o h n s o n a n d
K e n n e d y for t h e i r p a r t s in t h e
war. F o r I think to argue who
s t a r t e d the war is a
negative
point a n d quite r i d i c u l o u s b e c a u s e
that is no longer the i s s u e . T h e
real i s s u e now is w h o is going
to end the w a r .
And
argue until • "
•••
• • 'he
face and
~: • r'.\e
t h a t ther*
" ••"',-., in d y i n g if
• •• :':i['alki. t h e
usof
V. .
. :,. t c ' e n l U ,
IS
against the G e u c v i
Agreements
( k i n d :)f a l a u g h w l . e n y o u h e a r
Melvin L a i r d yelling about North
V i e u i a m e s e v i o l a t i o n s ) or b e i n g
b l o w n to b i t s by an a n t i - p e r s o n n e l
bomb (The pentagon sav^. "Civi l i a a s , s i c e W o r l J War If, h a v e
always b e e n legitimate
military
t-ugets)'
car w%xh sp--^ ^e^^-^
September :
A^
U
4:30 p.m. ; ,
-. jt the
Citizen's H^se Co., iJellefonteAvenue.
LOST:
Black music folder
containing 10 card pf Nancy
Wiener. If found, please return today to Russell Hatl
desk.
FOUND: 10 of Kim A. Smith
claim it In PCCEB offtce.
LOST: An American National
Government book was lost in
the cafeteria. A reward is offered for its return. Contact:
Tom Manganiello in 305 High.
TERMPAPERS
Send for vour descriptive up-to date,
128 page, mat! order catalog of 2,300
quality termpaper-i Enctose Jl.OO to
cover postage anit tiandfing.
WEALSOWitlTL
CUSfOM M/\D[ PAPERS
Termpaper Arsenal, Inc.
519 GLENROCK AVE, SUITE 203
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024
Attention
Faculty
and
(213)477-8474 • 477-5493
Staff: an activity fee is availI'.'c need a tocaf salesman'
HOUSE
FOR
RENT:
Person
able to all faculty and staff
at
$10.00 per person or to share two bedroom country Superbox Special
$15.00 per fainity. Inquire at home located In Mill Hall by
Secretary's office in the PUB. river 10 min. from College. loads of goodies, $5.00 vl>u«
$60/inonth
for only S.99 available at book
call: 748-5351
Ext. 365
store while they last,
WANTED: College students inor see John Brendel Russel #2
terested in taking part in a
Folk
Mass at St. Agnes
ERROR-FREE TYPIN6
Church. Anyone having a guiCORRECTION RIBBON
tar, please bring it along!
CONTACT: Tina Gillott, 748AT VOUR
BOOKSTORE
6006 (after 6 p.m.).
ERRORITE
EVERYTHING FOR THE COLLEGE M A N
Charge Accounts Welcome
Checks Coshed
For
,.. r. M e n
^ ^
Vol. XVI No. 7 l o c k Haven
State
College
Monday, oct. 2,1972
Affer too many LONG nights of consultation with the
Managing
Doctor, the Doctor-in-Chief
of the EAGLE EYE has
sadly h^d to shake his head in sympathy.
of approximately
With a resident staff
2 , 4 0 0 , the pathetic illness befalling
student newspaper
the LHS
still persists and the head physicians
cannot
^
foresee it holding on to life much longer.
Plainly, the Doctors in charge of the case are tired
of the endless vigil at the EE's deathbed
FRUSTRATION.
and are screaming
in
They have done all they can in the way of
transfusions but a larger staff is all that will pull the case out of
its dark
state.
If anyone cares, don't cry over the EAGLE EYE's
demise - get off your ass and hurry down to the Publications
Hospital: there may still be a chance . If no one
helps, the
Doctors will not be able to do more than is humanly
possible
and LHS will just have to settle for a sickly substitute for a
full-time , working
press.
Gloss Shatters
by Bill S t e r n e r
T h e d i e h a r d Vuicati fans who c h a l l e n g e d
the gloomy w e a t h e r w e r e to s e e a t r e m e n d o u s
offensive battle take p l a c e .
Caitfornia rec e i v e d t h e kickoff on t h e i r own thirty yard
l i n e , a n d nine p l a y s l a t e r al 11 :14 (>r the p e riod put s i x p o i n t s on the b o a r d . Clarv D e H a i n a u l t , the V u l c a n qLiarteiback, r o l l e d to
h i s right from the l - a " l c fourteen V.M\I l i n e ,
o u t r u n n i n g the LI!S i.;l,. tide; s lor ihe s c o r e .
I h S ROMPS
T h e E a g l e s r e t u r n e d the V u l c a n kick lo
t h e i r own 38 \:ird l i n e .
Ov the : irst p l a y ,
Ed McGill hit S k i p H e l e y foi 4.S y a r d s to the
C a l St. 1 7 . An o f f - s i d e s p e n a l ' s e t them b a c k
to the 2 2 , but on the next , ' . ' , , MjOiU a g a i n
w e n t to H e l e y . Sk.p broke t^'/o t a c k l e s and
d a n c e d i n t o the end z o n e t i n m o h s t c d . Doug
Williams s p l i t the uprighfs Tor i . l I S ' s s e v e n t h
point.
After the F.aglc kickoff, D e l l a i n a i i l t fumb l e d on h i s own 30 yard and Br-b S e a l r e c o v e r ed for L H S . F o l l o w i n g a loss of s i x v a r d s ,
McGill found G e i g e r open on a s c r e e n p a s s .
T h e w i n g b a c k , f o l l o w i n g f'le block of Skip
Haley r a c e d 36 y a r d s for Lock H a v e n s s e c o n d
T . D . Williams booted the extra poitit, and with
6'/2 m i n u t e s to g o , the E a g l e s led 1 4 - 7 . On
the e n s u i n g kickoff, Mel Abie c a u g h t the Vulc a n r e t u r n b a c k on his own 4 \ a r d l i n e . T h e
C a l St. o f f e n s e , v i s a b l y s h a k e n , fumbled and
a g a i n B o b r e c o v e r e d oi^. ihe 4 . On the next
s e t of p l a y s , l e s s t h a n a minute after their
l a s t s c o r e the E a g l e s f u l l b a c k . B o b K l i n e ,
r a m b l e d four y a r d s g i v i n g his team a 20-7
lead.
H o w e v e r on the n e x t set of d o w n s , D e H a i n a u l l , u s i n g the r u n n i n g and p a s s r e c e p t i o n s of h i s halfback I'ony Sargo moved the
b a l l to t h e LHS 2 2 . S e t t i n g up in the p o c k e t ,
he d r i l l e d his n e x t p a s s to h i s tight end Led
G i a l a m e s and L o c k H a v e n ' s lead w a s out to
six p o i n t s . The crowd n o i s e had b a r e l y died
before L H S ' s
lead w a s b a c k to 13 p o i n t s .
S t e v e G l a s s g a t h e r e d in the V u l c a n kickoff on
h i s own 15 and g a l l o p e d 85 yards for the s c o r e
Minutes later t h e q u a r t e r e n d e d s h o w i n g a r e m a r k a b l e total of 41 p o i n t s . T h e E a g l e s lead
was 27-14.
P A C E D SLOWED
T h e s e c o n d q u a r t e r was an e x a c t o p p o s ite of t h e f i r s t . T h e E a g l e d e f e n s e performed
magnificently.
One o u t s t a n d i n g play saw
' T a n k ' S h e r m a n and c o m p a n y t h r o w i n g the
V u l c a n s b a c k on a 4th and one yard s i t u a t i o n .
N e v e r t h e l e s s , with 2 . 5 0 remaining in the half,
D e H a i n o u l t threw a s c r e e n p a s s lo T o n y Sergo who c a r r i e d the b a l l from his irwn 42 to
the LHS 1 5 . D e H a i n a u l t a g a i n c a l l e d on Sergo, w h o a n s w e r e d by c a r r y i n g to the 4 . On
the n e x t play the V u l c a n q u a r t e r b a c k bootl e g g e d t o the end zone for the s c o r e . T h e half
California
ended
lead.
••'. ith
Lock
follows;
Smith Ha 11-7'c
P a t Dunmire
Bob S e l l e r s
Dave K e l l y
\orili
Hall.-^^'"c
Al A n d e r s o n
Mike Ogden
Hall-ir.
Vicki C o n n e r
Sue C o n s t a n t i n i
Student
Publications
Matthew Delfert
Evalyn Fisher
Elizabeth Persun
Hipji
Hdll-JTc
Joe E u c a l a n o
Rich Wagner
Steve F i s h
,:7-;i
V L L C A N S TAKE L E A ! )
The d e f e n s e s dotninated 13 m i n u l e s of
the fourth q u a r t e r . Neither t e a m could move
Ihe ball s u f f i c i e n t l y enough within e v e n a
safe field g State t h r e a t e n i n g on the L H S 5, Mel .Able
c h a s e d D e H a i n a u l t out of b o u n d s on his own
2 0 on fourth d o w n . But D e H a i n a u l t a g a i n u s i n g
Tony S e r g o . moved the b a l l to the E a g l e
s e v e n yard l i n e . T w o plays l a t e r , a s u b s t i t u t e
f u l l b a c k , D a v e K o r d i c h . s c o r e d lo give C a l ifornia a 35-33 lead with (>nly 2 ;()(, r e m a i n i n g
in the g a m e .
GLASS C A P S VICTORY
On the f o l l o w i n g kickoff .Steve G l a s s
look the b a l l on h i s own !2 yard l i n e . He
w a i t e d for liis b l o c k s lo m a t e r i a l i z e , ihen
turned on the s p e e d en route t o an 88 yard
kickoff r e t u r n , only 12 s e c o n d s after the Vulc a n s had t a k e n the l e a d . T h e crowd, who a
few s e c o n d s before had b e e n c h e e r i n g and
r e s t l e s s , now s a l s i l e n t i nd m o t i o n l e s s .
T h e y w a t c h e d as their d e s p e r a t e
otfense
s c r a m b l e d for y a r d s which never were r e c o r d e d . T h e ever improving E:agles had won
their s e c o n d s t r a i g h t gaine 3 9 - 3 5 .
Out of a p o s s i b l e 2 3 8 0 , 303 b a l l o t s were c a s t r e s u l t i n g in
12% of t h e s t u d e n t hods v o t i n g . North H a l l had the h i g h e s t perc e n t a g e of r e s i d e n t s v o t i n g with 33''( turning in b a l l o t s and
Woolridge was low w i t h 4 ' r .
T h e C o m m i t t e e , c o n s i s t i n g of .1. D o w s , Wise, Bower, Gordi.m
and J . Kircher wtU hold two run-off e l e c t i o n s , the d a t e of which
is to be a n n o u n c e d w h e r e ties r e s u l t e d . T h e s e w i l l be betv\een
Mark S p e a r and David L i i i l e for the C o m m u t e r s ; and Karen Hunt
and K a t h y Whilham for Woolridge H a l l .
Russell
a
EACiLES SCORI Q L I C k L Y
The i.IlS d e f e n s e cair.e out m :!u- third
qua.itjr and c a r r i e d the gairie lo the VuU. a n s .
On if.- t i r s l s e r i e s t-'i pUivs, tli.-> fenced a
p X'lucan 3S. McCiill ^'.asted no lime in p u t t i n g
I J I S ' s t h i r l ; , - t h i r d point on the board. Ho
h a n d e d off to B o b K l i n e , wlio behind llic
blocks of f-'rank Geiger and Chuck \ e n n i e ,
ran 38 yards for the s c o r e . T h e l-agie d e f e n s e a g a i n rose to the o c c a s s i o n , forcing
the V u l c a n s ti' punt after i h e i r next t h r e e
p l a - . s . T h e LHS offensive machim
again
looked as if it were oii the nv.ue, bul i!ie
drive s t a l l e d al the 41 of C a l i f o r n i a
State.
Jeft Knarr came in lo punt. Under a s t r o n g
C a l i f o r n i a r u s h the kick was b l o c k e d and (he
V u l c a n s look over in good field p o s i t i o n a l
their 4 ^ . F-i\e plays later with a 4th and one
foot situali'.in C a l i f o r n i a f a i l e d to c r a c k Ihe
tough E a g l e d e f e n s e .
V U L C A N S CLOSE (SAP
L H S ' s offense failed to move \hc ball and
were forced to p u n t , .leff Knarr boomed a
fifty yarder and after the r e t u r n , the V u l c a n s
took p o s i t i o n on their own 4 8 - By virtue nf a
32 yard p a s s to S e r g o and a p e r s o n a ! foul.
Ca!if(Tnia S t a t e had the b a l l first and g(>a 1
at the LHS 10 yard l i n e . T h r e e plays l a t e r .
Tony S e r g o ramrodded off t a c k l e for a tough
three yards t o c l o s e Lock H a v e n ' s lead to
33-28.
s e e Tallies Few Votes
T h e r e s u l t s are a s
Cominuters-'>'yc
Monica V a c c a r o
Steve Bierly
E r l a Mae Krieder
T i m Mahoney
Fred Naylor
Mike B l a c k
Tim Foltz
Lloyd P e t e r s
Larry F o l t z
Mike H o l t e r
Fr-alf'rwty-^2%
Marty Mack
Woolridge
Hall-4%
Marty McGregor
McEntIre
Ha 11-1 ^"o
Linda Schreiber
Ann F a r r o w
B e c k y Mazza
Toni B u r k h a r t
Haven cnjoving
Board-II.T^
Williams, Kline
Make
All-Star
Weekly
Squads
L'.iek Haven SUite College's
defensive halfliack Doug Williams
and fullback Boh Kline have been
-selected for the first ECAC Weekly AU-Star Squad for their performances in last Friday 24-22 victory over Bloomsburg State C')llege.
William;; wa.s picked for Fiist
Team honors.
Kline, Whitehall,
received Honorable Mention recognition.
.•\ 5-9, 155-pound junior Williams provided the winning margin against Bloom with a clutch
23-yard field goal in the third
quarter and booted ihtee-for-three
on extra points.
The Harrisburg native kicked
off for the Eagles and did the
punting after Jefl Knarr was injured in the third quarter. Williams
ran back punts and kickoffs vAere
on four attempts he averaged
22-yards per return.
Kline, a rugged 2l)0-pound
junioi fullback, led the Bald
Eagles great t>tfensive efforts on
the ground with 137 yards on 18
caries and scored two touchdowns
on runs of 2 and 37 yards.
Conoes Splash
Sunday, Oct 15
For HofT^ecommg
stitliiif^ of c a n o e s or foul p l a y
will he p i i n i i i t c i l ( p l a y n i c e fell;i-' .
:'. r / c s I -i the m o s t s t a l w a r t
t c i i " s 'licUiclc:
1 st - "ill.) plii.s p l a q u e
..nd - * 1 i1 ;iUis p l a q u e
3rii - ,*S nlir.s p l a q u e
! "n lor the r a c e m u s t
oil.re O c t o b e r 12
.•"i
c
i,,ii!,''.K- at t h e P u b
. c
Sutio,'
'I ' .•
.i
•i.'ijl
•- <"•
and
u
•
.111
. - .'
.Ii I ' l •
1 ,'•>
\ ! I c o m p e l :l. ;
-•<•-.
lo hit
llu- c o l a ,
wal,-'
ailj;u-rnt
cinir r>
i h f
. i ' ;:iL-d
111'. i,>:i
Street
I.i
• Mi;
•.". ! ' ;
Bri,' LC.
.
,.!n I c a i i i s
ah 1L-.
I .'J
-sk.
.Vi
•
-.ii :Mi\ q u e s t i o n s
-t"Mil.. .
;>.i\c Orabot at
I'l" Mu IK-iia h o u s e , 74S-h')23
Ix
llli
li '••
• .1; •
\ t ) 1 let-
WANTED: College students interested in taking part in a
rc;)k Mass at St. Agnes
Church. Anyone having a guitar, please bring it along!
CONTACT: Tina Gillott, 7486006 (after 6 p.m.).
Hess, Johnson Lead LHS 6-3
Rout of Lycoming Booters
CiJ if'i
1 les^
ass ist
in
pic iig
rout
o(
1,\ c o i n i n g
son
had
1 0 sliots
a 3,0-shol a i t a c k
this
year)
on
the
i)nd
Ban
ijic
1 •;
l o h n s nn e ; c l i had f ' o goals and an
| i e \ c n Slate s o c c e r team lo a 6-.3
C o l l ege
e g e ii: V\ 1 111 irnsporl on W e d n i ' s d a y . .lohn, .Alii Ic
ic 'lo.^s .ind lU'w Ifdiunian had 5 i " lead
(lufi c i l o l a l in leguiiir s e a s o n play thus far
I \ oiiimg g(ni! Ill iioich the th'rd victory a-
R u i n s l otic t i c (3-li-l )
T h e g.iiiic bcg.e.n
'•' .1 c l o u d b u r s t j u s t before
ich
.tart.
offensive p l a y e r s . T h e
Hald E a g l e s used l!o^ :
\\lien. one minute into the
ha If. .l< '.c ;',i! I.IIS on the s c o r e b o a r d .
The lead did not l a s t , hi \ c v e r . L.vcoming"s S c h a c h n e t t e d an
i m a s s i s l e d goal a! ' 7 : ( ) s . The r e s u l t i n g s l a l e m a t e was not pernianci,!, cil.ber. On a E y c o offensive d r i v e , a l l three LHS d e t e n d e r s , i n c l u d i n g g i i a b e C r a i g Davison, were pulled away from
the n e t ,
I h e K:i!! "eit by D a w s o n and rolled in (with a little
h e l p from a L.\ coming 'Mayer) for another g o a l . O c c u r r i n g a t
4 4 : 0 0 , It left the s c o r e 2-1 a t the half.
I.IIS did not remain bchitid long. The B a l d E a g l e s s c o r e d
t u o g o a l s in three iiiinutcs to regain the l e a d , which from t h e n
on., they never l cornor kick to fraulinan, wlio s e n t il in al 2 5 : 1 9 , J o h n s o n put
in a n o t h e r of his own al 2;'1;20. and F"d M u s s c r put in the final
LHS tails at 30:01). Hull; were u n a s s i s t e d , and finally left the
s c o r e Jl 6-2, until L y c o m i n g ' s Lockv, ood got one b y s u b s t i t u t e
g o a l i e Chris Haberman for t h e i r l;ist marker.
The s e c o n d half performance left Bald E a g l e c o a c h Karl
Herrmann i m p i c s s c d n r . h the play oi his c h a r g e s , d e s p i t e s o m e
s l u g g i s h first hall a c t i o n .
H e noted |iiarticularly " t h e b e t t e r
use of the forward line ihrough the use of the w i n g s , " which
made ihe difference in tiie s c o r e . Most of the e a r l i e r offensive
d r i v e s wore trying lo p'.nir ihc i-all down the middle i n s t e a d of
d r i p p i n g it down the s i d e s ,
inch is where m o s t E a g l e goals
come from. Things had been e s p e c i a l l y bad with the corner
ki-cks, on which tb.e b a l l would be kicked into a elGnd of L y c o m i n g d e f e n d e r s , wiiiiout L I ' S i l - t ' e - . ' : on the s c e n e .
Ihe
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Ocf.
Oci.
THE 1972 VARSITY SOCCER SCHEDULE
3 p.m.
3:30 p.m.
3 p.m.
l'-30 P-m3 p.m.
A
A
A
A
H
3 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
12 Noon
H
A
A
Viiianova University
3
St.
Vincent College
5
East
Stroudsburg Siafs' College
13
21 Slippery Rock Stat» College
24 YORK COLLEGE
27 M'LLERSVILLE STATE COLLEGE
MOV.
1
NOV.
4
•ndiana University of Pa.
Frostburg State College
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