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Nelly is coming
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Earl': Earl visits
Hooters
Page 4
Page 7
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Seven LHU grapplers headed
to NCAA Tournament
Back page
http://www.lhueagleye.com
22, 2002
Today's Weather
8, Volume 55
High-21
Low-15
~
students
at risk for
eating
disorders
Kristy Hepak
In today's society, people can never be thin
enough. The thinner you
are, the more successful
you will be.
People
are faced
with this
idea daily,
as the media, and comments from friends and
parents can cause people
to develop an eating disorder.
The Wellness Center
wanted to help students
prevent eating disorders
and body dissatisfaction,
by holding a program,
"Celebrate the Diversity of
Every Body," Wednesday
night at Price Auditorium.
On hand to speak were
three prominent women
who deal with people who
have eating disorders, or
£°
Woven
University's Student Newspaper
See weekend weather
Page 2
% "
Haven, 9a.
Deba tes prec edeMondays
ti
el
ec
on
'
Scott Evans
Candidates for the
Executive Board of the
Lock Haven University
Student
Cooperative
Council (SCC) met last
night and discussed the
issues each team plans to
address if they are elected
to the Executive Board.
On one ticket is the
group of Ronald Strickler
Jr., Michele Bennett, and
Brian Detweiler. They are
running together for the
office of SCC President,
Vice
President
and
Treasurer, respectively.
The other ticket is lead by
Nick Trumbauer running
for President, David Ney
for Vice President, and
Amanda
Olavian for
Treasurer.
One of the issues discussed by both sides was
bettering the relationship
between LHU student and
the residents of the City of
Lock Haven. Trumbauer
spoke about a possible
Student-Community Day,
which in essence would be
a big party thrown by a
Nicholas Trumbauet
Ronald L Strickler Jr
Eagle Eye Staff
�
Running for SCC
President
�
WmWw
"
: «
� Running for
SCC President
Sophomore
�
�
Junior
�
Majoring in recreation management
Majoring in
Biology and English
"I want to be on a level
with the students"
"I wish to help make the
university work together."
Michelle L. Bennett
David Ney
� Running for SCC
� Running for
SCC Vice-Preside
____
j_\
�
Junior
� Majoring in
Elementary Education
" I plan to reach out to
_P_fv
—
X
i � Junior
� Majoring in
Political Science
"I plan to accomplish
the students"
better student relations"
Bryan Detweiler
Amanda Olaviany
� Running for
SCC Treasurer
� Running for
SCC Treasurer
Senior art
student
paints PUB
mural
Brooke Wiker
The Eagle Eye
The Parsons Union
Building will be getting a
facelift in the game room
thanks to the work of senior Justin Chirico.
Chirico, a senior art
major, has been hard at
work since December on a
carved and painted wood
piece that will be on display on the back wall.
PUB
administrator
Darrick Harr, an SCC
executive, proposed the
idea of the mural to the
Fine Arts Society and got
the idea approved.
Chirico is aiming to
have the mural finished by
the end of April when Harr
will be holding a grand
opening for the piece.
"I'm doing this for the
love of creativity," said
Chirico. He noted that his
inspiration is knowing that
he is doing something that
he enjoys and that will be
on display for others to
enjoy a long time from
now.
So far, there have been
no problems with the
mural. "Everyone has
been wonderful," said
Chirico.
Harr also noted that
things were going smooth-
� Junior
partnership of students and
� Sophomore
local business owners as a
have previously dealt with
to boost the city's
� Majoring in
an eating disorder of their method
� Majoring in
and boost the
economy
own.
Sports
Administration
Elementary Education
image of the students in the
Bonnie
Colantonieyes of the residents.
Owens, a survivor of
"I will always make
"If Executive Board
anorexia believed that she
can inspire stutime for students"
was still overweight; when members
dents to use downtown
mates
will work to coordi- elected, his team will move turnout in the upcoming
"I don't want students
in high school she
businesses,
residents
and
nate
a
session to be held to attend more residence
to feel inferior about
weighed only a mere 89
business owners might approaching me with a during freshman initiation hall meetings and keep a election and future ones,
both sides expressed the
pounds.
change their view of the concern," said treasurer into the residence halls. sign-up sheet available
She has been in recovimportance of a strong
"People are going out
students," said Trumbauer. candidate Brian Detweiler. With that in place, incomwhere SCC-funded clubs turnout for the elections.
ery for 12 years now. "We
of
their
"The greatest gift our stuway to help this
and organizations can ask The Strickler team
"If I am elected, I will ing freshmen will be notireact more favorably to
camprocess
dents can give to the comcome together, and
thin and attractive people,
make a point of it that stu- fied immediately after they Executive Board members paigned at Bentley Hall,
thanks
to them, it is really
munity is to go downtown dents know about the funcarrive
at
to
LHU for the
attend meetings and notifying students of the
which make some people
and spend money."
tions of SCC," said vice school year about the funcactivities to insure that the election and the positions coming together," said
turn to eating disorders to
The issue of improving
Chirico.
presidential
candidate tions of the SCC and how SCC is doing their part to they have on campus
get that ideal weight,"
The mural is currently
relations between the SCC David Ney.
to get involved in student
participate in the many difissues.
worked on in Sloan.
being
and the students on campus
Strickler stated that if government.
ferent facets of the student
A 1997 body image
also
talked
Chirico
was
about at the elected, he and his running
noted that he is
Trumbauer said that if community.
survey showed that 62 perSee
Debate
2
Page
excited
for
the public to
debate.
As for improving voter
cent of young women
see the final piece.
between the ages of 13-19
were unhappy with their
bodies.
67 percent of
women over 30 wanted to
lose weight and 50 percent
of women surveyed said,
that they smoke in order to
"They influenced politics at the ground roots, using opinion."
help control their weight.
Michelle Hershey
in a program entitled, returned to her tribe after
Linda LaSalle, comNews
Editor
Eagle
Eye
"Celebrity and Power: studying abroad, and
munity health educator at
How Indigenous Women became a native guide for
Penn State University,
Lecturer,
Guest
Made Political History."
Dr.
the district. She achieved
focused on the images porMargaret
Werry,
explained
Werry,
a
native
of
New
fame
through her clever
trayed to society that the
how
women
came
to
Zealand,
took
power
the
audience
and her
performance
media sends out.
a period that was back to the turn of the cen- extensive knowledge. Like
during
She also touched on
dominated mainly by men, tury with the story of any
good
politician,
the topic of men and eatMakereti
a
Makereti
knew
her audiPapakuri,
ing disorders.
native of the New Zealand ence and their expectatribe Maori.
tions.
See Disorders Page 7
During this time periMakereti was always
od, the Maori tribe made sophiscated and lady-like,
kwM mm Mm*—
up only 10 percent of New often inviting the tourist to
Zealand's
population and her home for an evening of
Sporu back page
Sun" boi
6
had little real influence in poetry and music. The
2
Weather
the country. The settlers tourists found comfort in
that came to New Zealand her because in their terms
|___,______|
fm
spread disease and treated she was a "noble savage"
the Maori as a lower class. and represented their class
Parson's Union Building
Lock Haven University
The tribe believed they and social status.
didn't need to save their
Makereti was not only
Lock Haven, PA 17745'
people because they would a good performer; she was
Dawd Kubarek/ The Eagle Eye
Newsroom: (570) 893-2334
not
a
great
be
around
the
future.
also
publicist.
in
She
Fax: (570) 893-2644
Tiffany Smeal poses on the set of the University Players proThey had no development, was always on the scene
Email:
Dr Margaret Werry dis- no support and they were for any event, and was
duction 'White Liars, the first of two one-act plays directed by
cusses women h history born into a world of little always in the papers.
student Rich Smith. The plays will run tonight and Saturday,
Visit us on the web:
and hew trey became opportunity.
beginning at 8 p.m. See features for more details.
See Women Page 2
Makereti, a culturally
rioted h poiics.
educated tribe member
Guest speaker focuses on University Players open with
historical women in politics 'White Liars' and 'Black Comedy'
m%Um\mmStmm
mmmtW\
Ifo^^B
March 22,
Eagle Eye
Page 2
2002.
*
The Second Mile to hold Easter egg hunt ROTC seniors complete project at battlefiel d
LOCK HAVEN—On Sunday
March 24th, 2002, the Clinton
County chapter of The Second
Mile will sponsor a Friend
Program event for school children in the Keystone Central
and Jersey Shore Area School
districts.
students
The Program
of elementary age the opportunity to build their self-esteem
as well as an environment in
which they learn to interact
with other children and adults.
The heart of the Friend
Program is the hundreds of student volunteers from the Lock
Haven University campus,
including members of sports
teams, fraternities, sororities
and interest houses.
These volunteers spend the
afternoon befriending a Young
Friend through organized activities. For many of the College
mWm IBI
I ■■■H
I■
_mmm
— JIM
-II
mpH
■
m
■
■
MR
111 uW
I
*\
Friends, the Friend Program
offers a tremendous buffer
against homesickness.
For the Young Friends, all
of who are referred by their
LOCK HAVEN-Each spring
the seniors in Army ROTC at
Lock Haven University are
required to conduct a staff ride
as part of their course work.
A staff ride is a field trip in
which cadets travel to a historic
battlefield in order to gain lessons learned from the past, so
they can be better leaders in the
Woodward Township,
future.
por additional information,
This year the seniors went to
please call LHU students Laura Gettysburg, PA. Prior to the
Inlow at 893-3751 and/or
staff ride, the senior cadets were
Beck y Anthony at 893-3736, required to read the book "The
The Second Mile office at Killer Angels" and to write a
paper about leaders involved in
(814) 237-1719 or by contacting Mrs. Danielle Vilello- the conflict.
They were divided into
County/
Clinton
Rogers,
teams, each team picking a speSecond Mile Liaison at (570)
cific part of the battle to
748-0115
research, and then prepare a
briefing to present to the ROTC
cadre at the Gettysburg battlefield.
ence fair, story time and big
The staff ride culminated
book reading, games, dancing with a one-day trip to
and hands-on technology.
Gettysburg on March 16 to view
More than 500 children the battlefield, participate in an
from area schools and daycare interactive guided tour, and
centers visit the Festival each present their project.
year.
This year's project
Community organizations focused on the last part of the
wishing to participate in the
event should contact Mrs.
Bobbie Jo Simcox at 726-0022
and Zak Hossain at 893-2133.
For campus organizations,
contact Dr. Punnipa Hossain at
893-2167.
school guidance counselor, the
program provides a supportive,
caring role model as well as an
afternoon of fun!
The sixth of eight such
events to be held this school
year> an Easter Egg Hunt will
be held on March 24th, 2002
from 2:00 PM tH 3:30 PM at the
Park
located
River
three-day battle, Pickett's
Charge and the battle for
Cemetery Ridge.
This year's senior class,
Chris Wilson, Josh Herr,
Garcia,
Brad
Comanche
Svencer
and
Nathan
Hoppes,
Cherniack,
the
spent
Heather
last few weeks readying their
project for presentation.
Throughout the staffride the
senior cadets displayed enthusiasm while gaining a greater
respect for the many fallen sol-'
diers and leaders who were will-'
ing to pay the ultimate price for!
their country.
Upon completion of the staff'
ride, all cadets and cadre were
reminded of the values and'
effects of leadership on the bat-'
tlefield.
Campus hosts 'Caring for Community' festival
LOCK HAVEN--The Clinton effort between the community
County Children and Youth and the University.
Area agencies participate in
Festival will be held on March
Festival to provide useful
the
23 from 1:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
the
Field
House
on
information
and entertainment
in Thomas
and adolesof
Lock
Haven
to
the
children
campus
cents.
University of Pennsylvania.
The theme is, "Caring for
University student clubs,
Community-With a Child's organizations, and various academic classes participate in the
Heart."
Initiated
two Festival to apply their classnearly
decades ago by Dr. Renuka room skills to educate and
Biswas, a former member of entertain children.
the University faculty, the
Some of the featured activFestival is a collaborative ities this year include: the sci-
tes a<
issues effecting students
Debate from page 1
The Trumbauer team used
pencils with their names on
them to boost voter turnout, and
made a goal to notify 1000 LHU
students about the upcoming
election.
"Notifying the students is
our job as candidates. We have
done an excellent job this year
in campaigning, which is some-
thing all six of us can be proud
-of," said Trumbauer.
Trumbauer
talked
about
forming an SCC judicial committee to oversee the flow of
information and senate policies
both to senators and the stu-
dents.
Trumbauer said they would
act as a scaled-down version of
the United States Supreme
Court where students can
approach the committee with a
problem or concern and they
will relay it to the SCC.
He added that if it is formed,
the committee will be made of
five or six senators with at least
two years service on the SCC so
they will be able to fully interpret SCC policy and moderate
other SCC committee decisions.
Strickler said the main focus
is the student-senator relationship throughout this election
and added that the involvement
of Greeks in the SCC is greatly
appreciated and will be pushed
further.
He also expressed the need
for more minority students to
become involved in SCC.
Both teams are very eager to
serve the student population and
encourage all students to vote
for the SCC Executive Board on
March
25
to
Monday
Wednesday March 27.
Think before
you drink
1992-1994 Figures
Weather
ROTC Senior class poses in front of a cannon on
the Gettysburg Battlefield.
Feeling a little under-represented?
Remember to vote on March 25,26 and 27
in lower Bentley.
put women into politics
the ground roots, using opinWomen From Page 1
Werry said, that women of
Makereti soon became a color had a tougher struggle
household name in New with acceptance in the political
scene.
Zealand.
"In the public eye, Makereti
"They were not seen as femwas like an ambassador or a inine and they were viewed as a
diplomat," said Werry, "She was different type of lady," said
a politician."
Werry, "They had to fight to be
"Makereti and other women received as feminine."
The reason these women
during this time used ideas of
femininity to break into politics. achieved their fame and status
They used the language of was due to their gender role and
how they used their motherly
moral motherhood."
Women used popular culinstincts to make decisions.
Now, 100 years later, the
ture in the political scene. When
they became recognized by the tribe Maori makes up 25 to 30
media, and became fairly well percent of New Zealand's popuknown, they would ban together lation, and Makereti is a queen
on issues and became involved in the tribe.
The next program in the
in organizations.
"These women put issues on Women's History Month series
an agenda," said Werry. "They is "Gender and Language Play"
on March 25 at 7 p.m. in the
provided the blueprint for welfare. They influenced politics at PUB Multi-Purpose Room.
Wanna write for the
Come to our next staff meeting!
This week in history
Nearly one in four male college
students (23.6 percent) and one
in 10 female students (9.9%)
report three or more binge
drinking episodes in the previous
two weeks.
Source: Core Institute on
Alcohol and Other Drug Studies
at Southern Illinois University,
Photo courtesy ofROTC
Thursday, March 15-17, 1956: Members of
the student-run newspaper, The Eagle Nest at
Lock Haven State Teacher's College, attended
the annual Scholastic Press Association's
press meeting in New York City at Columbia
University.
Law Enforcement
-
893-2278
March 15
Minor drinking
David N. Bonda, 108 Hart Dr.
Pittsburgh PA, 15235
Disorderly conduct
Christopher Fortune. 621 N. 66 St.
Philadelphia PA, 19151
Minor drinking
Jason W. Kaler, 1871 Dixie Ln.
Altoona PA, 16602
March 16
Harassment and public drunkenness
Eric R Booser, 2962 Church Rd.
Bangor PA, 18013
Public drunkenness
Jason Crawford, 25 Spring St.
Brian W. Schuckmann, 174 Hillside Ave.
NJ, 07876
•�Information in Police Boat is publishabie by the Pennsylvania State
Open Records taw.
—
,
EE^Aifcir
Thursday, March 28th at dinner...
High-39
Low-21
High-38
Low-25
See full forcast and up to date news at:
www.LHUeagleye.com
You are cordially invited to join the Dining services for a feast fit for
a King and Queen, a Medieval Dinner.
The Dinner will be held in the Upper Deck of Bentley Hall Castle on
the twenty-eighth of March, two thousand and two.
Dinner will be served promptly between four thirty and seven thirty.
www.lhup.edu/dining
March 22, 2002
s tudents art awards program on the web
WASHINGTON-The Justice
Project has announced the
launch of its web-based arts
award program, the Artists' Call
for Justice, which is designed to
give art students a venue to
speak out on issues of social justice.
Students who are enrolled at
any post-secondary school can
participate in The Artists' Call
and submit entries in the fields
of animation, graphic design,
photography and video.
The Artists' Call is designed
to be incorporated directly into
an existing communications art
curriculum and invites art
instructors to encourage their
students to become involved in
the web-based award program.
Interested parties can register now on the Artists' Call
website: www.artcall.org/cpw
The Artists' Call for Justice
was created by The Justice
Project, a national, non-profit,
non-partisan organization, as a
way to not only advance the
cause of justice, but to involve
new voices and new insights. It
is hoped that The Artists' Call
will help engage a new generation of young people in civic
and political life.
"Art is not only a potent and
powerful medium to convey
conviction," said Bobby Muller,
chairman of The Justice Project
and co-founder of the 1997
Nobel Prize-winning global
campaign to ban landmines,
"but it also provides new perspectives to old ideas. We
believe the creative energies of
young artists in particular can
provide fresh insights to
intractable arguments.
"Student artists working in
the visual and communication
arts are creating phenomenal,
transcendent works which the
public rarely gets to see. The
Artists'Call was designed as a
model program that strengthens
career-advancing skills and
opens the door to authentic
political engagement," said Dan
Walsh, The Artists' Call program director and political arts
gram's success.
In fact, a number of arts edu
cators from around the country,
including Jeff Morin, chair of
the Department of Art and
Design at the University of
Wisconsin,
have
already
embraced The Artists' Call.
"The Artists' Call is an ideal
program for both young artists
and arts educators," said Morin.
"It is a model curricula-enrichment program that meaningfully
challenges students."
It is through instructors that
The Artists' Call is hoping students learn about this new art
awards program. Once they are
aware of The Artists' Call, students are being encouraged to
register immediately as participation is on a first-come, firstserve basis.
All qualifying artwork will
be displayed in the Artists' Call
web galleries (last year's poster
submissions can be viewed at
www.artistscall.org/gallery
Up to 400 semi-finalist
entries will be reviewed by a
jury of communication arts
activist.
experts who will select up to 36
"What young artists need is artists as finalists.
a venue to explain their work, an
Awards include an annual
audience before which they can membership in the College Art
perform. The potential to have Association (CAA) or the
one's work seen, discussed, American Institute of Graphic
reviewed, argued about, cri- Arts (AIGA), and gift certifitiqued, or even attacked is of cates for computers/software.
infinite value to a young artist," The instructors of each student
continued Walsh. "It is precisely finalist will receive a Teacher
The Artists' Call that provides Recognition Award as well as
this outlet."
gift certificates.
Walsh pointed out that
For more information, visit
involvement of communication The Artists' Call for Justice web
arts instructors is key to the pro- site at: www.artcall.org/cpw
Decreased funding effects tuition at Penn State
Renee Petrina
Daily Collegia]
Leaders of national educa-
tional
institutions
told
Pennsylvania State University
leaders last week that the university is not alone in its financial dilemmas.
At the Penn State Board of
Trustees meeting on Thursday
and Friday, Peter Magrath,
president of the National
of
State
Association
Universities and Land-Grant
Colleges, and Jay Morley, presthe
National
ident
of
Association of College and
University Business Officers,
said decreased funding from
states for public universities is
among the challenges facing
higher education.
"State and federal support, I
believe, will continue to be limited, and major 'A-list'
research universities are going
to have to be even more entre-
preneurial and rely increasingly
on private support," Magrath
told the trustees.
Morley issued what he accumulated lily pad, and by
called a "wake-up call" to the the time you wake up and realtrustees during his presentation ize that, you're surrounded by
Friday afternoon, saying forcompetition," he said.
Morley referred to what he
profit universities and other
institutions are rising as comcalled "the current crisis in facpetition. He said Penn State ulty salary" as just one of the
needs to deal with the future of many problems that public unieducation as a business.
versities face. Penn State
"Higher education has President Graham Spanier
become an industry," he said. recently said he aims to
"We do not like to hear this, but increase faculty salaries despite
it's true."
cuts in state appropriations.
NACUBO, Morley's organMorley referred to what he
ization, advocates for the finan-
cial sectors of a variety of colleges and universities, including more than 2,100 private and
public institutions.
He said the growing industry of higher education will follow the same path as any other
industry: Competition will
develop rapidly.
Morley used a lily pad analogy, saying that if lilies in a
pond double every day, on the
29th day the proverbial pond is
half full and on the 30th day it
is completely full of lilies.
"All of that becomes this
.
called "the current crisis in
faculty salary" as just one of
the many problems that public
universities face.
Penn State President
Graham Spanier recently said
he aims to increase faculty
salaries despite cuts in state
appropriations.
"What we could eventually
be faced with is a phenomenon
where undergraduate (education costs) $10,000 a year and
tuition is $12,000, but a portion
of that goes to the land-grant
mission," Spanier said.
Page 3
tate program w ves reast exam fee
Tuesday
; Mike
Hanna praised a state program
designed to give access to breast
and cervical cancer screening to
women who cannot otherwise
afford them.
The state Department of
Health administers the program
by contracting services from
hospitals and medical providers
across the Commonwealth.
Women are eligible for
mammograms, clinical breast
exams, pelvic exams and pap
smears, which are available to
those with low or moderate
incomes who are without
health-care coverage. Services
are free for eligible women,
Hanna said.
Hanna said that ideally, he
would like the legislature to find
a way to ensure this program has
continuous funding for both prevention and detection options.
In Pennsylvania, breast cancer produces more female cancer cases than any other cancer
form.
"Both of these cancer forms
are treatable and survival
increases the earlier the cancer
is detected," Hanna said.
"These screenings are incredibly important for women and I
encourage those eligible to
apply."
For more information and to
apply for the program call 1Hanna said
Centre and Clinton County residents can contact the closest
contractor,
Family Health
Council
of
Central
Pennsylvania, at 717-761-7380
for more information on obtaining services.
Colleges fail to provide services to customers
PALM BEACH GARDENS-A billion-dollar industry with
no customer service. That loses
up to 12% of its customer base
annually because of poor service but does little about it. That
puts employees' desires before
customers' needs. That believes
its customers want to be cheated. "That's the condition of
most ofAmerican higher education," said Neal Raisman,
Ph.D., author of Embrace the
Oxymoron: Customer Service
in Higher Education.
Colleges and universities
have been existing with no real
concern to the care oftheir customers - students for years,
according to Dr. Raisman.
"Many claim they do care," he
said. "After all, they have student services offices and even
create short-lived student programs. But the reality is, many
college employees still believe
the adage, "This would be a
great place to work if the students weren't here.'"
And their indifference has
caught up with them.
"Students and their parents
are paying increasing tuition
payments and getting less on
-
their investments," Dr. Raisman
said. "And in a service industry
like college, that translates into
the education itself." Longterm, poor service affects our
society, culture, economy and
future by graduating poorly
educated citizens and workers,
according to Dr. Raisman.
In the first book published
on the issue of customer service
in higher education, the former
college president investigates
how colleges and universities
treat and mistreat students - and
allowed students to become
undervalued and even overlooked.
— How a lack of customer
service affects the bottom line in lost enrollments,
transfers and low return on
investment and future donations.
— What good colleges do to
make students feel valued.
— The 12 principles of
"Good Customer Service" in
education.
The "Field of Dreams"
what can be doneabout it. In the syndrome in college marketing:
191-page book, he discusses:
"If we build it and
offer some classes, they will
— How poor customer service cheats students and can hand enroll."
them an inferior education.
What a customer service
What do students really audit is and how it can help a
want and expect from college. college understand
And why they chose one colwhat it can do to improve
lege over another (And if s not the experience and education
what most academics think.)
for students.
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Page 4
March 22, 2002
OP/ED
i
Life with Earl: Earl's adventures at Hooters
PJ Harmer
Eagle Eye Staff
So there we were, planning
and eat. It
was just Jay, The Big Easy and I.
We just figured a night away
from Lock Haven was good.
Everyone should get away from
here sometimes.
Then I got the phone call.
"Hey, P.J., watcha doin'?"
I knew Jay had probably
dished out my phone number to
Earl. I never swapped it with
him. And I think by the way I
looked at Jay, he realized who
was on the phone.
"Uh, hey Earl... nothing
really, why?"
"Well, I figgered I'd hitchhike up to Haven and hang wit'
you and tha boys."
You can obviously figure out
was
a little scared.
I
"Well, you see Earl, we were
going to be leaving actually.
Heading to State College to eat."
I didn't think Earl would
want to go, considering he usually didn't have any money.
"Hey, nice, I just got my
allowance from my mother. Can
I come?"
I didn't see the harm in it, so
I agreed. And before I knew it,
Earl was knocking on the door
with that big smile of his. And I
assure you; it is an interesting
smile to behold.
Realize this though; the only
reason I agreed to it was because
Jay had given him my phone
number. If it weren't for that, I
would have shut him right down.
says, "I go fishin' 'cause I can."
Once we got into State
College, I thought Earl was
going to lose his mind. A new
Hooters is easily noticed from
the road and Earl almost jumped
out of the car.
"WHOA! Hey guys, a
HOOTERS! Let's eat there! I
ain't never been to a Hooters
before!"
"Well, actually Earl, we were
thinking
else
something
tonight," said Jay.
"And besides, once you've
to go to State College
,
, ,,
.
c
Ii should take it out, on
Ii figured
* l
Jay. He d have to sit in the back
.
..
ww
~ ,
with Earl.
,'
"ingThe waitress was a beautiful look-
blonde, and yes, she was quite
well endowed. Earl's jaw was
comfortable on the table."
--
'
'
'
J* *
So off we went. Earl had on
his Sunday best, a pair of dirty
jeans, a flannel and a hat that
these prices," said Earl. "A feller
could go broke in here if he
came once too often. But dang,
look at all these women."
Earl's eyes were bulging
from the sockets, while his jaw
still rested on the table.
"Earl, you know if you are
drooling, women won't find that
attractive," said Jay.
"Yeah, and I think it's
against health codes too," said
The Big Easy.
Once the waitress came back
to take our orders, Earl once
again was gazing at just one
body part. I actually felt bad for
this girl; she was only doing her
job.
"Hey boys, can I take your
Jay responded with a smack
to Earl's
head that sent his prized
hat flying across the table.
"Listen you dork, if you
want to come out with us, control yourself," Jay said. "We
don't need you pitching a tent
and lifting the table with every
girl that walks by. Calm down!"
With that Earl stood up,
picked up his hat and left the
table. Not a word was said; he
just left.
"Jay, you didn't have to
smack him," said The Big Easy.
Before Jay could answer.
Earl wandered back. Now sporting a "Hooters - State College"
shirt. No hard feelings I guess.
The dinner went without any
incidents to report. Earl actually
behaved himself. He ate, actually left a tip and when we were
ready to leave, he decided now
was the time to make his move.
When our waitress came
back to give us our change, he
order?"
With that, Earl experienced
his first kick to the jewels. Down
like a ton of bricks he went. I
expected we were going to get
the same.
The girl then thanked us and
asked us to kindly remove our
friend.
"You guys aren't banned, but
please, NEVER bring this man
back."
So, we dragged Earl out,
tossed him in the back ofthe car
and headed back to Lock Haven.
About 20 minutes into the ride,
Earl finally caught his breath.
"Man oh man, that was great.
She touched me! I knew she
wanted me! Did she give you
guys her number to give me?
Come on, don't lie!"
So we gave him her number,
555-1212. I can't imagine the
look on an operators face when
Earl called and asked her if she
was the Hooters girl.
I don't know what to do with
Earl honestly. Jay keeps calling
him back and telling him how
much we like hanging out with
him. Seems like we're stuck
with Earl.
Now I know what it's like to
have a lackey.
Giving an order to a waitress
is fairly simple; well, at least to a
normal person. Not Earl.
Me, Jay and the Big Easy all
seen one Hooters girl v u ' ve my life. I can't believe this. That ordered a burger and fries and
seen them all >" said the Bi 8 chick was all over me. She was figured we'd split a bucket of
Easy
eye ..."
Hooters' famous wings. But, attacked.
"Easy Earl, no need to get a Earl on the other hand, was just
" But 1 wanna eat there! Hot
"So what are the odds I can
women> hot women and hot fresh mouth," said Jay, cutting looking at the menu.
get your number," asked Earl in
women Ma ybe 1 can 8et a num" off Earl.
"What do you recommend?" his best James Dean imitation
berortwo "
"I can't handle this. I need to
A slap to my own forehead and giving a wink. "I've seen
As soon as he b,urted that do something about it," said knew I was in for a long night.
you looking at me all night,"
ast statement out » we knew we Earl, becoming a bit flustered
"Well, as you can see, we
I think the girl wanted to die
had to eat there So we wheel «i and sweaty.
offer pretty much anything you on the spot. She just stared. Me,
int0 the P arkin 8 lot ' and saw tne
All of a sudden, Earl popped could want in a place like this," Jay and the Big Easy all buried
P.J. claims that Earl is a ficme
up and took off out the door. We answered the waitress, starting our heads in our hands.
tional character and none of
That didn>t st0P EarL
could see him outside sucking in to lose her patience. "Our burgWhen Earl got no answer, he these stories actually happened.
"Lme 's 18 made for cuttm '>" fresh air. He finally came back ers are fantastic, the wings are made move number two. And However, he does admit everyhe said
in, was confronted by a couple famous. I don't think you guys that was getting up and putting one else in the story is a real
And sure enou8h Earl cut of Hooter girls and he went nuts came here for a five-star meal." his arm around the girl.
person. The stories of Earl will
'
nght In line Soniehow
11 again, this time dashing into the
Earl still didn't budge.
on,
"Come
take
I'll
appear here every week through
you
worked and next thin8 'vou bathroom.
"Earl, do the lady a favor and somewhere fancy and we can get the end of the semester.
know we were at a table The
A couple of minutes later he order," said the Big Easy. "I am to know one another."
'
waitress was thls beaut.ful lookcame out, looking relaxed and actually hungry and would like
to get the food today."
ing° blonde, and yes, she was had a big smile on his face.
Earl
s
the
table
and
Finally Earl blurted out he
quite
jaw
well
endowed.
With
drinks
on
J
M
,
c
artists to
__tjc is
was comfortable on the table,
Earl calmed down some, we would take a burger, some fries
„,.
ca l
finally started looking at the and a soda. He was all flustered.
1 3
us at
cartoons.
,
to drink? said the
"I'll be back with your food
1
look at soon guys," said the waitress as
'
■.
We all ordered a beer of
course, but Earl couldn't speak.
His eyes were focused on one
body part.
"And you?" asked the waitress to Earl.
Still nothing.
The Big Easy got a response
as he drilled Earl with a swift
kick under the table.
"Uh, I'll have some milk,"
said Earl, still focused.
The waitress left and Earl
went nuts.
"This is the greatest day of
.
-°
' "
' '
.
T~h __a_jc
contribute political
"
VV anted-"
seeking talented
(Contact
9J5J©yaUo0.ca—
she wandered off.
m
ISSUE 8, VOLUME 55
LOCK HAVEN UNIVERSITY
PARSONS UNION BUILDING
LOCK HAVEN, PA 17745
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Dr.Dou^S.C^beH
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Op/Ed Editor
Matthew English
Shawn P. Shanley
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Grefev
Business Manat
Ryan Van Rossum
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Stephan Baldwin
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Archivist
Reporters
Jessy Garcia
Scott Evans, Jared Guest, RJ. Harmer, Sumer Buttorff, Kristin White, Kevin Car
;
Tilt EAOIE EYE, THE OFFICIAL STUDENTNEWSPAPER OF LOCK HAVEN UNIVERSITY. IS PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN ACO DANCE WITH THE UNIVERSITY CALENDAR. THE ARTICLES,OPINIONS, PICTURES AND LAYOUT OF THE EAGLE EYEARE
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CLASSIFIED ADS FOLLOW THE SAME REGULATIONS, HOWEVER PERSONAL AND ANNOUNCEMENTS ARE FREE OF
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR ARE WELCOME. THEY MUST BE TYPE-WRITTEN AND INCLUDE THE AUTHOR'S NAME, SIGNATURE AND TELEPHONE NUMBER.LETTERS RECEIVED WITHOUT THIS INFORMATION WILL NOT BE PRINTED. DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS ISTUESDAY BY JP.M. THE EDITORRESERVES THE RIGHT TO EDIT ANY COPY
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March 22, 2002
Dear Editor:
I enjoyed the panel discussion on the "War on Terrorism,"
except I found it lopsided. Since
war was being discussed, I was
surprised that we did not have a
military expert there, a rather
glaring omission, so that we
could have had all sides of an
issue fairly represented.
The latest poll shows that
91% of all Americans approve
of the "War on Terrorism," but
you would never get that impression from listening to our four
panelists. Why?
Early in the 19th century the
Barbary Pirates of North Africa
were the Muslim terrorists of
their day. They attacked peaceful American merchant ships,
killing, torturing and executing
many and enslaving many more.
No European country made a
serious effort to remove the
menace from their own backyard, so for the first time in our
nation's history American soldiers and sailors were sent overseas.
were
we
Fortunately,
extremely successful, from
whence came the line "... to the
shores of Tripoli" in the Marine
hymn. Well, history repeats
itself.
Again we have a menace in a
far off land. Again, no European
or Mid-Eastern or Central Asian
country has demonstrated either
the ability or the will to eliminate the problem. In fact, a very
strong opinion expressed by
many of our European allies and
Mid-Eastern friends after 9/11
was that we "had it coming".
I know of no American who
has ever reacted to tragedy, war
or famine in another country
with that attitude: "They had it
coming." So perhaps we should
examine the highly prejudicial
attitudes of Europeans, MidEasterners and others with a
very critical eye.
Apparently we, and we
alone, must provide the solution,
trying to cobble together as
Page 5
Eagle Eye
The 'War on Terrorism' needs an unbiased eye
many allies as we can. This is
one of the key reasons why
America acts so unilaterally at
times, with such "arrogance"
because the other countries of
the world do not act or provide
such weak-kneed half measures
that they have no hope of success.
If you sit in a room full of
Europeans and listen to their
opinions and barrage of criticisms about America, you'll
soon be overcome by a tremendous desire to apologize for
everything from McDonald's
restaurants to Army bases in
Europe. But they are trying to
have it both ways.
Their first complaint is that
we are not involved enough in
places they would like us to be
involved. Their second complaint is that we are too
involved, that we go around
sticking our nose into the business of other countries.
They don't want us exercising our power and influence,
because every time that we do it
diminishes them in the eyes of
the world and exposes their
weakness.
The cynical truth is that they
want to harness American power
for their own purposes. They
want us to intervene when they
have European problems that
they can't solve. When France
has a problem they want
America to pursue a course that
is in the French national interest.
When the British are in need,
they would like us to back up
their national interest.
They want Americans to
fight in their wars, whether it's
World War I (2 million
American soldiers ended it, a
historical fact beyond dispute),
World War II or war in Bosnia,
but they want to tell us how to
do it.
They want to dictate the
terms under which Americans
are going to fight and die. Is that
not arrogance? Then when we
have a war, asking for only a trifle of the sacrifice that we made
in their conflicts, they criticize
—
"Again we have a menace in a far-off land. Again, no
European or Mid-Eastern or central Asian Country has
demonstrated the ability or the will to eliminate the problem."
greater scale.
My opinion is that if we have
paratroopers dropping from
planes, if we have B-52's flying
sorties, if we face an enemy
armed with tanks, RPGs and
"War on Terror" as a stingermissies
to
our
if we're fightless
on
defense
them
to
spend
and complain. Is that
We had ing battles, then we're probably
instead.
action"
"police
would
have
otherwise
than they
hypocrisy?
a "police action" in Korea, and
in a war. To call'it anything else
to and allows them to divert tax
For the first time in the histothat
ended.
It
is
we
see
how
can
is a trick of symantics.
areas.
monies
into
other
ry of the world, a super power
with
a
failure
to
When in a war, it is best to
synonymous
disagree
respectfully
would
I
has emerged, the United States,
and
with
objectives
let the soldiers fight it. When
that is not bent on conquest and with Dr. Berard's interpretation achieve
stalement.
politicians or academics try to
war
has
been
imagery
of
how
the subjugation of other peoples.
characterizathe
Similarity,
wars, we always lose,
fight
First,
Bush.
President
Every other super power of used by
Pentagon whether theyare foreign, such as
and
of
the
WTC
tion
congreswas
shows
that
nor
history
the
its day whether it
"criminal" acts, ostenthe Korean War or the Vietnam
Persians, Greeks, Romans, sional acquiesence, and a perfect attacks as
pursued
by
"police
to
be
Vietnam
sibly
War, or domestic, such as the
the
of
this
is
example
Mongols, Chinese, Moghuls,
of War on Poverty or the War on
the
bounds
strains
action,"
British, Spanish, French, Turks, War.
Drugs.
It is true that President credulity.
Germans, Russians, Japanese,
have
miliCriminals
don't
"war
Let the military go to battle
used
successfully
and, yes, the Arabs and their Clinton
training
camps,
tary-commando
declaron
their
own terms and support
to
advantage,
not
imagery"
Muslim allies (who were
civilian
large
they
nor
do
we can, because they
target
1993
them
all
in
"War
on
Terror"
a
ing
defeated until 724 A.D. in
political
objecfor
our
and sisters.
populations
WTC,
are
brothers
attack
on
the
to
after
the
first
Poitiers, France) has sought
the war as
a
tives.
Let
them
spike
fight
in
get
big
and
that
he
did
subjugate
conquer other lands,
attack
on
the
WTC
The first
they see fit, and don't call it anyother peoples, and establish the polls after his missle attack
a
"criminal"
pursued
was
as
thing less than what it is.
pharmaceutical
a
Sudanese
on
colonial empires.
and
achieved
convictions.
matter
the
Monica
during
do
the
various
plant
So where
Fine. We can all see the eventual
Tom Justice
countries of the world come off Lewinsky affair.
enemy was greatly
result.
The
evidence
that
there
is
no
American
But
foreign
in criticizing
impressed by our myoptic vision
~Letters to theEditor do not
policy, particularly when they President Bush has been that calweakness.
It
merely
and
our
at
glimpse
Second,
a
so
often
been
the
wrong
culating.
in
have
reflect the opinions of the Eagle
a
further
attack
on
invited
referring
on
argues
against
history
need
reflect
only
past? (One
Eye Staff or its associates~
the tepid European response to
the rise of Nazi Germany.)
Is it perhaps their fear that
we may behave as they have? It
is true that our defense budget
exceeds that of the next nine
...
not
countries.
Thank God!
France christened its first nuclear powered
aircraft carrier last summer, and
it had to be towed back to port.
Can the Europeans depend upon
the French Navy in any crisis?
Ofcourse not.
Europeans decry our outlays
for defense, but they are the first
to call upon us to expend our
military resources. Sorties by
American planes in Bosnia far
outnumbered those from all
other countries combined.
So, ofcourse, we spend more
on our military while our allies
do not spend their fair share.
The cynical truth, again, is that
our European allies need and
depend upon American military
might. American muscle allows
DEAD or
I
DlONlH
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Gjet wvtr tickets...
Starting March 25th
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March 22, 2002
Eagle Eye
Page 6
Plays define black and white
Kristin White
Eagle Eye Staff Reporter
satirical, animated interpretation
in "Black Comedy."
The opening minutes of
"White
Liars" features a conver"White Liars" and "Black sation between a
German forComedy" opened to a full house
tuneteller,
played
by Tiffany
Wednesday evening in the Smeal,
and
the
of her onespirit
Countdown Theater in Sloan,
lover,
time
voiced
by David
exposing the truth of humans
Ferry.
through the habitual lies they tell
Smeal's German accent, couand offering a medley of philowith a classic gypsy-like
pled
sophical insights and comic
countenance, is convincing and
the audiWhile each of the one-act she successfully lulls
ence into believing that she is
plays, written by Peter Shaffer,
parleying with a supernatural
sought to reveal the consebeing rather than responding to a
quences of lies and deceit, the
system behind the curtain.
sound
structures differed dramatically,
cast seamlessly incorpoThe
presenting the audience with a
rates the internal thoughts of
revealing portrayal of human
characters, also voiced through a
nature in "White Liars" and a
speaker, to convey the psycho-
logical struggle caused by lies
and the disarmed confusion and
guiltresulting in their discovery.
Peter Sulewski and Jason
Parker play Frank and Tom, two
customers who initiate a humorous and thought-provoking
chain of revelations that takes
each character on a journey of
At the play's climax, it is difficult to distinguish the truth
from the elaborate fiction each
character has created and the
audience becomes involved,
learning as the characters do the
lies and hypocrisy entangled in
reality.
The first five minutes of
"Black Comedy" take place in
complete darkness until a power
outage illuminates the stage. In
a unique twist, the lighting system works in reverse. When the
stage lights are on, the charac-
ters are unable to see.
When an actor lights a match
or turns on a flashlight, the stage
actually darkens, yet the characters can see clearly. The unusual concept establishes the situational premise for the entire play
and acts metaphorically as a curtain concealing and revealing
the truth.
According to student director Rich Smith, the greatest challenge in presenting "Black
Comedy" was performing a
highly active play in the limited
See "Play", pg. 7
\\\m TTw SmfSt
Da we Kubarek/The Eagle Eye
Peter Sulewski plays "Frank" in "White Liars."
former student
Zimmerli's tradition to be continued
Sumer Buttorff
Eagle Eye Staff Reporter
March is nationally recognized as women's history
month. At this time, we celebrate the accomplishments of
influential women of the past
and reflect on the extraordinary
women who have been an inspiration in our lives.
In celebration of women
everywhere, the Eagle Eye will
honor the lives and achievements ofremarkable women in
LHU history by remembering
their stories.
Dr. Elizabeth Zimmerli (19041994)
She was named the "first
lady" of health and physical
education in Pennsylvania.
Also referred to as a "master
teacher," the zealous and confident Dr. Elizabeth Zimmerli
was a distinguished administralor
who demanded perfection
I
and achieved notable successes
miles ahead ofher time.
Zimmerli, for whom the
Zimmerli Gymnasium was
named, was a professor of
health and physical education at
LHU from 1946 to 1966.
During her time at LHU,
Zimmerli was the only woman
in the state of Pennsylvania to
hold the title of Director of
Physical Education in a department including both men and
women, at a time when the
departments were often separated. Also, she was the first
woman to serve as President of
the Pennsylvania State
Association for Health, Physical
Education, and Recreation
(PSAHPER), now PSAHPERD.
She was also recognized to
have "served with distinction"
as the only woman Specialist of
Health and Physical Education
in the Pennsylvania Department
of Public Instruction.
A recipient of countless
awards and honors, Zimmerli
was an apparent pioneer of her
time. When recognized by
PSAHPERin 1951, she was
referred to as "a person of outstanding personal and professional integrity" and as a
woman "who has been an
example of an inspiration to all
who have been privileged to
know her."
Zimmerli's high expectations, stern but practical policies, demanding objectives and
dedication were the fuel that
motivated her students to recog-
nize and achieve the qualities
necessary to become ideal educators.
Zimmerli's passion for
teaching future educators still
lingers in the hearts of her students today. So inspired by her
college teacher, Dr. Nan Wood,
professor of health and physical
education at LHU and ex-student of Zimmerli, dedicated the
topic of her master thesis to the
work of "Elizabeth K.
Zimmerli: A Master Teacher
and Administrator of Physical
Education at Lock Haven State
College from 1946 through
1966."
"I respected her as a person
and an educator," Wood said.
"Much of what I have done professionally I have used her as a
role model."
Other students who had
Zimmerli called her "one ofthe
best," "inspirational," "challenging," "thorough," "well-organized" and "most professional."
Another called her "rough" and
said, "She knew her stuff and
insisted that each student learn
or perish."
While Wood was a student
at LHU, she worked as a secretary for Zimmerli's secretary.
Wood recalls the mere presence
of Zimmerli in the room caused
her to become anxious. "When
she appeared, it would make me
really nervous," she said. With
schoolwork, "I never wanted to
hand in anything but the very
best," which is what was
demanded from a teacher of this
caliber.
Before her retirement in
1966, she designed the Zimmerli
Gymnasium. "She had very specific ideas about what she wanted," Wood said. The college
yearbook was dedicated in her
honor the year she retired. The
facility was completed four
years later.
After Zimmerli retired,
Wood kept in touch with
Zimmerli who resided at a retirement home in Santa Barbara
until her death in 1994.
Those who knew her remember her active lifestyle. In her
earlier years, she was often seen
pedaling to and from class on a
bicycle. She was even reported
to have ridden her bike to a professional function while wearing
a white dress and high heels.
Speed walking was another
favorite Zimmerli activity.
Specific walking routes mapped
out according to time were characteristic of her organized
Ms
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nature.
Zimmerli was a motivation
for Wood to achieve while she
was a student. Now, Zimmerli's
principles inspire Wood as an
educator. "I still remember the
three words she told us to use as
a teacher," Wood said. "They
are firm, fair and friendly. Dr.
Zimmerli always said not to
make rules unless you intend to
keep them."
Zimmerli retired from LHU
at the age of 62. Wood will
retire in 2005, at the same age.
[
KUZAttfiTH K
Photo courtesy of Praeco student yearbook
"Referred to as a "master teacher," the zealous
and confident Dr. Elizabeth Zimmerli was a distinguished administrator who demanded perfection
and achieved notable successes miles ahead of
her time."
Coincidently, when Wood
becomes chairperson of the
department in May, she will be
the first woman to serve as chair
of the health and physical education after Zimmerli.
March is Women's History Month
"An actress can only play a woman. I'm an actor,
can play anything."
Whoopi Goldberg, quoted on the Today
■
March 22-28
Upcoming events
■■■■
Monday, March 25 @ 7:45 p.m.
WWF Raw
Live telecast!
Friday, April 5 @ 7 p.m.
Dave Matthews Band
SOLD OUT!
Saturday, April 13 @ 7:30 p.m.
Kenny Chesney
with special guests Sara Evans, Phil Vassar, and Carolyn Dawn Johnson
Friday, April 19 @ 8 p.m.
Nelly and the St. Lunatics
Tickets go on sale Saturday, March 23 at 10 a.m.
East Main Street
Lock Haven
www.roxymovies.com
Hotline: 748-ROXY
I
Thursday, April 25 to Sunday, April 28
Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus
Tickets are available at the Bryce Jordan Ticket Center, select Uni-Mart ticket outlets,
Commonwealth Campus ticket outlets, or by calling 1-800-863-3336, or online at
Page 7
March 22, 2002
Nelly to perform locally
-
Photo courtesy of http://home01.wxs.nl
Nelly with special guest The St. Lunatics will be
performing at the Bryce Jordan Center on Friday,
April 19 at 8:00 p.m.
UNIVERSITY PARK, PA St.
Louis-based MC Nelly began
his hip-hop career in the early
'90's with the St. Lunatics, who
scored a regional hit in 1996
with the single "Gimme What
Ya Want." Though they tried to
get a record deal as a group, the
Lunatics decided Nelly would
have better luck as a solo artist;
soon after, he was signed by
Universal Records. His 2000
album,
debut
Country
Grammar, featured contributions from the St. Lunatics as
well as from the Teamsters, Lil'
Wayne, and
Cedric the
Entertainer. The album features
the mega-hit, "Ride Wit Me",
along with "#1", and "Country
Grammar." Most recently, Nelly
has
collaborated
with
*NSYNC's Justin Timberlake
on Nelly's new release called
Nellyville, that is scheduled to
hit the airwaves in the Spring.
Fans can expect to hear some of
the new materials as well as
their favorite hits when he performs at the Bryce Jordan
Center on Friday, April 19th.
Lighting plays a key role
Play From Page 6
space
Theater.
of
the
Countdown
The cast, however, brilliantly choreographed their movements
and timing to appear as
though the events were occurring in the dark.
The confined quarters actually enhanced the physical
humor of the conflict. Frequent
lighting transitions integrated
into the script worked well to
remind the audience of the concept and heightened the comedy.
The play involves the disastrous
culmination of a starving artist
attempting to impress his
fiancee's militant father and
entice a rich art collector by
stealing his flamboyantly gay
neighbor's furniture.
The confusion and hilarity
begin when the lights go out and
only escalate for the poor antihero when his mistress arrives,
his neighbor returns early and
the electrician is mistaken for
the art collector.
"White Liars" and "Black
Comedy" will be performed at 8
p.m. in the Countdown Theater,
Sloan 321, through March 23.
Society projects a slim image
Disorders From Page 1
People today seem to think that
women are the only ones faced
with eating disorders, when
actually one in every ten cases
of eating disorders involves a
male.
"Men are trying to bulk up
these days, where women are
trying to slim down," commented LaSalle.
Many advertisements placed
in magazines today may lie or
show
misleading
advertise-
ments, just to lure the reader into
thinking they have something
wrong with their body.
Magazines can target every
part of a person's body, from
telling them they can lose more
weight with their diet pills, or
enhance the size of their bust in
a certain amount of days. "If you
don't read the magazines you
would never know these ads
would exist.
The adv
are trying to tell the reader that they
need to purchase their product,
because a specific part of their
body isn't good enough,'
LaSalle said. A quick movie
was presented to the group
showing how computers can distort and change the images o
models in magazines.
Photos are shot three months
ahead of time, so they can have
a chance to make them look just
perfect. The cover alone of a
magazine can increase the sales
by 60 percent.
That is why so much time is
\\m
taken out to make these models
in the magazines look perfect.
Kathy Petroff, nurse manager of
health services at Penn State
University, described the different ways of approaching someone you think might be dealing
with an eating disorder.
"The main thing is that you
want to let them know that they
could be in danger, but you must
be sensitive. Stick with them as
a friend, and help them to help
themselves by making sure they
She managed to steal
the loot went to buy
re, a pizza parlor in
took oft' with a church deacon
edly had a sexual interlude in the back of a
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dreds of people in the Gujarat province of
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receive the appropriate help,"
said Petroff.
There is a support group on
campus held every other
Thursday, on the second floor of
the library. The next meeting
will be on April 4, at 7:00 p.m.
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Marc Rayman/The Eagle Eye
Mary Arden Collins sang and played guitar in the PUB lobby on Thursday,
March 21 at 7 p.m. She performed songs from her first album, as well as previewed songs from her next upcoming album. Watch for a story on her performance in next week's Eagle Eye.
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Rule "Ain't It Funny" No. 4
4. Linkin Park "In the End"
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5. No Doubt feat. Bounty
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Mil Go" No. 7
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this carrier pigeon get through?"
t. Puddle of Mudd "Come
]!lean" No. 13
10. Enrique Iglesias "Escape"
No. 21
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"Good
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Beautiful" No. 1
2. Brad Paisley "Wrapped Around"
No. 2
3. Jo Dee Messina with Tim
McGraw "Bring on the Rain" No. 4
4. Brooks & Dunn "The Long
Goodbye" No. 4
5.Tim McGraw "The Cowboy in
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7. Dixie Chicks "Some Days You
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8. Kenny Chesney "Young" No. 11
9. Chris Cagk "I Breathe In, I
Breathe Out" No. 13
10. Joe Di£Be "In Another World"
No. 10
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3. Dragonfly
4. Return to Never Land
5. Crossroads
6. Big Fat Liar
7. A Beautiful Mind
8. Hart s War
9. Super Trooper
10. Collateral Damage
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3. COMICS: What was the name of Superman's cat?
4. MUSIC: What does the musical direction "veloce"
mean?
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6. ART: Where is the Topkapi Palace Museum local-
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3. Atlantis: The Lost Empire
4. The Fast and the Furious
5. Jeepers Creepers
6. Kiss of the Dragon
7. American Pie 2 Unrated
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9. What's the Worst That
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10. Rock Star
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~ Every day, a single private company prints $137 million a day. Play money, that is — for the game Monopoly.
~ President James Garfield could write Latin with one hand and Greek with the other — simultaneously.
Carrie, Hope programming
goes better for you this
week. We should have a
Students:
Scholarship Available.
Do you plan on attendin
LHUP, Penn State (including
PA College ofTechnology),
Lycoming College, Bucknell
University or any of their
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 application for a Mary Ann Fox
scholarship. Applications are
available in the office of the
President in 202 Sullivan Hall
deadline for the return
tpplications is April 9, 2002.
Positions Available in
Career Services:
Peer Career Facilitators for the
2002-03 academic year.
Will assist students with career
exploration strategies and job
search techniques. Strong interpersonal and communication
skills required. Minimum GPA
of2.5 preferred. Must complete
training which will be held
week of August 19th. This is a
paid position based on LHU's
work study/campus employment pay scale. Complete job
description and application
available in Career Services,
Akeley 114.
Application Deadline:
Friday, April 5, 2002.
3 Bedroom Duplex, student
housing, inc. heat, garbage,
water, Near college. 748-5230
2 Bdrm., recently remodeled
1st floor apt. w/ nice yard &
patio within 1 mi. from univ.
Includes heat, w/s, garbage,
care,
lawn
appliances.
Within 1 mi. from univ.
Prefer 3 students ($230 ea.)
Call 570-748-6059
LOCK HAVEN:
1 BEDROOM, CLOSE TO COLLEGE. INCLUDES WATER,
SEWAGE, GARBAGE...
$340 PER MONTH PLUS
SECURITY DEPOSIT.
CALL 745-3565
K-Rock: Where the heck
have you been? Call me
sometime so we can go to
the bar! Love, NikiNicole
movie night sometime this
weekend! Keep up the good
work with Tri Sigma!!
Sigma Love and all of mine,
Shan
Heather: I hope you had a
wonderful spring break!
How are the wedding plans
coming along? Love,
NikiNicole
Little Secret Cookie
Monster, I miss you! We
have to hang out sometime!
TLAM and Cookie love,
Andrea
Leigh- You and I will
always be Ms. Panhellenic!
Andrea
Whoa man! We burnt that
all the way to the bottom?
Anyone who wishes to participate in the athletic training golf tournament and has
a team of 4 ready to go...
please contact Patti at 7480543.
I LOVE SUGAR!!
Mixer, Irish Accent,
Jameson, theft, Resisting
Arrest, Porcelain nap, and
Pancakes in the morning!
Happy St. Patricks Day!
Little Kristin- Hang in
there! I love you! Turtle
love, Andrea
I shot a gun!
Little Angel JanetteCongrats on receiving your
big sister!
Trisha: 1 can't wait to cause
trouble with you this weekend! -Nicole
Jill and Tina, Hope you
guys have a relaxing and
enjoyable weekend! Sigma
Love, Shan
Alpha Sigma Phi brothersThanks for a great Sat.
night! I miss hanging out
with you guys, so we have
to do it more often!
Love, Andrea
Congrats to the new members of IK on receiving
your Bigs! Keep up the
good work!
Congratulations to the new
members, including my
Little Valerie! Lots of Love!
SLAM, Katie
Angela H- Any questions?
Classifieds Wanted
Classifieds Wanted
Classifieds Wanted
Classifieds Wanted
Classifieds Wantec
Classifieds Wanted
Classifieds Wanted
Classifieds Wanted
Alpha Sigma Tau, What a
ST. Patty's day! AXP
Yes...Ang does!! haha...
TLAM, Andrea
Leigh-volleyball was great!
Let's do it again! SLAM,
Meghan
AXP-The Pot Luck was
awesome, you guys know
how to have a good time!
Love, the sisters of IK
Lora- Congrats! Have fun
over seas!! We'll miss you
next year. Love, your
Uncoordinated,
Unsophisticated, and
UnAshamed friends!
Amy -1 love you Little,
have a great weekend!
ZLAM, Bailey
Trisha- What would I do
without you? Glad that you
had a blast this weekend!
Andrea
Thanks for the breakfast
ladies. @1 Jump Street
Jamie, You're doing a great
job this semester. Keep up
the good work! Have a
relaxing weekend! Sigma
Love, Shannon
-
Jason- You sure you want to
work with me on the election box? Hahaha, just kidding. Andrea
When are we going bowling
again? Andrea
J- Thank you, thank you,
thank you for listening to
me with all my rambling.
Meghan- next time we need
to use a REAL volleyball!
SLAM, Leigh
Delti pi is the apple in my
eye. -AXP
Health Science ClubBe thinking about nominations for executive board
coming up! Andrea
Hi Donn!
Kelly and Ang - I miss you
two! We need to hang out
this weekend! ZLAM,
Bailey
AITs and AXP's play kings
like nobody knows. -AXP
VOTE STRICKLER, BENNETT AND DETWEILER
Have a great weekend LHU!
Love, Alpha Sigma Tau
Amber- I'm so glad that
you're back and having a
great time...I told you that
"the feeling" wouldn't last
long! TLAM and Fearless 4
love, Andrea
Congratulations on receiving your Bigs to the new
members of IK! Love,
AXP- Hope you appreciate
the clean floor!!
Good luck to all candidates
for SCC Executive Board!
Amy, Hope you have a great
weekend. Take it easy and
relax! You're doing a great
job in Tri Sigma!! Sigma
Love and all of mine,
Shannon
Tri Sigma, Excellent job
with the fundraiser!! Sigma
Good luck Men's Lacrosse!!
We'll be cheering for you
like last week! Love, The
Taus
Love, Shannon
Travis: Welcome to the Otter
Family
Tye-Dye Secret: I miss you!
We need to hang out! I hope
you like the poster! Love
Your secret
ACR & SK "Pot Luck
Dinner"! Great Time!
Lovely hand-crafted glasseshope you all liked them!
JellyBean and her #4
Love, Melissa
Becky and Sammy- Thanks
for everything this semester
Lucas, you will always be
as well as last semester!
Becks- don't worry about
breaking the glass. Andrea
my innocent little boy, no
matter what you may do!!
Love, Leigh
BJ, I love you with all my
heart baby. KML
Men's Lacrosse- Can't wait
until tomorrow! Love, Alpha
Sigma Tau
Imagine the ticket smut and
No more Valley Girls,
the mailman.
Hamster- HAHA! Not
again! Sorry that I didn't
scream your name across
campus on Monday...I was
sick. Andrea
Meghan and Melissa, we
shouldn't be allowed near
THAT shower anymore!
SLAM, Leigh
Marcus: Another day closer
and another day stronger. I
miss talking to you every
day. All my smiles to you
and you're in my thoughts
and prayers.
J- should we catch some
more violent and aggressive
sports? Thanks for listening
to me.
E It? A I Is
to
bflicke^lbup.ecju
before Tuesday 3 p.m.
Please label the subject
personals'.
In the PUB
2 daily soups
new breakfast items
Monday-Friday 8:00am to 4:00pm
Watch for more upcoming events!
Happy day to you TOK and
Tara-1 hope all is well and
that you two are full of
smiles. Maybe I will bump
into you soon.
your personals
Meghan
SOW OFIEEIIfi:
daily specials
good weekend!! Sigma
Carrie, Kerri, & Adrienne,
Kristy- Thanks for the
wings! I loved them!
TLAM, Andrea
Nicole- Glad that we were
able to talk about stuff
again. I miss you! Andrea
Craig Miller, Jr. -I need my
times for the boxes again!
Andrea
the super work! Have a
He built a bomb!!
410, Hope you ladies have a
great weekend! Great job
with the fundraiser this
week! Sigma Love, Shannon
Little Angel Shannon- Keep
up the great work! I love ya!
sweetie.
Kelli
Good Luck in the election
Ron, Brian and Michelle!
-Nicole N.
Congratulations new members, I love you Little
Janette! SLAM, Kelly
Kate, You're doing a great
job this semester! Keep up
Why are their sticks different sizes? That's just the
way the world works,
Love, Shannon
Kristy: It's better for my
family to rise to the top than
sink to the bottom! TLAM
Nicole
SCC Senator of the Week!
You rock., just like BON
JOVI! Sigma Love and all
of mine, Shannon
Vote Alpha Sigma Tau for
the best tattoo contest!
Beck Keep up the work
and it will all work out!!
Hi Jorge: are you very jorging today? I hope so, I need
you!!! Your baby is waiting
for you. Kisses
Kristen, Congrats for getting
recognized as last week's
Kate and Jenn-1 love you
guys! Good luck with your
tests, etc...this week! Oh, I
do have more stories about
him!! :) TLAM, Andrea
March 23rd
311
}{oob9$titok
March 24th @ 7:00 pm
March 22, 2002
Page
Six boxers claim titles at ECBA Championships
Mussachio wins fourth straight
strong third round to beat the
t
.•-1
eastern title,
Eight Bald Eagles 6 5 Ldet
Jelev earned two standing
.
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eariy in the third
eight
total advance to National Finals round counts
series of head
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The boxing team crowned
six Eastern Collegiate Boxing
Association (ECBA) champions Sunday afternoon in the
ECBA championships at the
White PE Building on the
campus of PSU.
Army and PSU also
claimed three individual titles
Boxers from eight
each.
ECBA schools including
perennial powers LHU, PSU,
and Army along with Coast
Guard Academy, Mansfield,
Shippensburg, UM-Baltimore,
and VMI qualified boxers for
the ECBA's.
The champion and runnerup in each of the 12 weight
divisions along with selected
"wild-cards" advance to the
National Collegiate Boxing
Association (NCBA) finals to
be held at the U.S. Naval
Academy, Annapolis, MD, on
April 4-6.
The Bald Eagles led the
teams with qualifiers advancing six champions, one runner-up and one and possibly
two third place wild-card
selections.
The Bald Eagles defending
185 lb. national champion,
Chuck Mussachio dropped
down to 175 lbs. and earned
his fourth consecutive eastern
title with a relatively easy 5-0
decision over Army's Tom
Sommers, last year's 175 lb.
eastern champ.
Mussachio, a clever boxer,
used his rapid fire left jab and
scored three standing eight
counts over the match but outclassed the Cadet. Mussachio
decisioned (5-0) VMI's Bill
Sinkinson in Saturday's semifinals. Mussachio's career
record improves to 26-6.
The Bald Eagles' two other
i
t~'
national champions, John
Stout, 125, and Comanche
Garcia, 139, also claimed
titles. Stout, a junior and Lock
Haven, PA, native with a 21-3
career record earned his third
consecutive eastern title with a
walk-over win. Garcia the exMarine from Bellwood, PA
dropped from his usual 147 lb.
division down to
139 and
pummeled PSU's Matt Haley,
5-0 to earn his second eastern
title.
Garcia, a senior with a 2011 career record proved to be
too strong and quick for the
Nittany Lion.
Gus Pugliese proved to be
a pleasant surprise for the
Bald Eagle coaching staff
when he won the 132 lb. title
with a hard earned 4-1 decision over Army's Fred Kim.
To reach the finals,
Pugliese edged PSU's Randy
Dalbey, 3-2, in a very close
bout in the semi-finals.
Pugliese, a junior who hails
from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,
continues to show improvement with each bout and could
be a force to reckoned with at
nationals.
The Bald Eagles star junior
college transfer, Miro Jelev,
185, from Stara Zagora,
Bulgaria, had to get off the
canvas in the first round to
outdistance Army's rugged
Duane Mantle in one of the
most exciting bouts in the
finals.
Earning his seventh victory
a
and body combinations and
pulled away to secure the
unanimous decision and title.
The Bald Eagles sixth
champion was sophomore Art
Tusil who was awarded a
walk-over win to gain the 112lb. title.
Earning the runner-up spot
at 156-pounds and a trip to the
nationals for the Bald Eagles,
was
promising freshman
Derrick McGraw from North
Philadelphia.
McGraw gave defending
national champion, PSU's
Alex Komlev all he could handle in one of the night's most
exciting bouts.
The rangy McGraw won
the first round using a solid
jab and connecting on several
straight rights.
However, the more experienced Nittany Lion who hails
from the Ukraine, came on
strong in the last two rounds to
garner a hard-earned 5-0 decision.
Two Bald Eagles garnered
third place medals along with
wild-card consideration. Lock
Haven native, Jeff Raymond,
147, and Dave Good, 165, will
know their fate late next week
when the NCBA Selection
Committee determines their
choices following the MidWest and Far-West Regional
Tournaments.
It is believed Raymond, a
Lock Haven native and senior
with 13 bouts, has an excellent
chance of receiving a wildcard selection.
PSU's national 147 lb.
champion, Nathan LaBuda in
1:51 of the second round
stopped Raymond in a competitive semi-final bout. He
came back to beat Army's
Wilson Dos Santos for 3rd
13
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the early lead with a wrist shot
through the legs of Sodano at
the 13:27 mark of the first
half.
Lock Haven finally got on
the board with 4:13 left in the
half with a goal by Steve
Campbell. Campbell picked
up a rebound in front of the
net and roofed over the shoulder of Gill.
Helsman gave Lock Haven
the lead with 1:35 remaining
after he wristed a shot over the
glove of Gill.
Zwierzyna had a chance to
give Lock Haven a 3-1 lead
before halftime, but Gill made
great glove save to rob
Zwierzyna on the breakaway.
Lock Haven put pressure
on Dare from the drop of the
puck for the second half. Gill
faced a battering of shots
before Kurt Blattner finally
managed to get one past Gill
1:38 into the half.
With a 3-1 lead, Lock
Haven fell into a defensive
mode to slow down Dare.
Jim Warner broke through
the defensive pressure and
used a wrist shot to beat
Sodano through the fivehole
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Miles Rivas, 5-0, in the semifinals and came back Sunday
to beat VMI's Sven Jensen for
third place.
In the post tournament
interview, Bald Eagle Head
coach, Dr. Ken Cox and his
assistant, Ken Cooper were
very pleased with the team's
effort and performance.
"We boxed beyond our
expectations," stated Cox,
"and I hope we continue to
remain focused and pursue the
selves back in September."
"Our
team
members
believe we have a legitimate
shot at winning not only individual titles, but also the team
title," commented Comanche
Garcia.
"The coaches have worked
long and hard with us in order
to give us the chance to challenge for national titles and
become Ail-Americans," stated team captain, Chuck
Mussachio.
"In order to challenge our
big four 'Garcia, Mussachio,
Jelev, and myself must make
goals we established for our-
the finals and get help from
place.
Good, a junior, with only
six career bouts, lost to PSU's
,
to bring Dare
within one at 3-
2.
Defensively Lock Haven
was successful at preventing
Dare
from
getting
the other team members in
order to put ourselves in position to challenge," stated
Stout.
"We're well aware that
besides USMA and PSU that
Air Force, Navy, UN-Reno
and UN-Las Vegas have strong
teams again with the luck of
the draw playing a big factor
in the outcome," remarked
Cooper.
"Finally, we must now
focus on the next two and a
halfweeks of tough conditioning and technique," concluded
Dr. Cox.
Bench Press
Competition
good
sponsored by the Interfraternity
chances until the late penalties
resulted in the game-tying
goal. For the game Lock
Haven outshot Dare 27-21.
"With a 3-2 lead playing
soft and defensively may have
hurt us," said Scott Harmon.
"We should have kept pressing."
With just two games
remaining before the playoffs
the two teams will attempt to
break the tie and capture the
third seed.
and
the
Bloomsburg
Woodpeckers (6-2) have
clinched the first and second
seeds, and first round byes.
The Predators (0-7-1) are
guaranteed the sixth seed.
Lock Haven plays the
Predators next week, and finish the season against the
Dare plays
Woodpeckers.
Bloomsburg and the Titans.
The Titans play the
Woodpeckers before their season finale against Dare.
Saturday, March 23 @ 2 p.m.
Rogers Gym
Registration begins at 1:30
p.m.
$5 entry fee due at registration
*Prizes will be awarded to 1st,
2nd and 3rd places.
For more information contact
Ryan Thayer at
rthayer@lhup.edu
corporate ladder
CHIROPRACTIC &
REHABILITATION
STUDENT RENTALS AVAILABLE
CENTER
Now leasing for Fall 2002.
One & two bedroom apartments available.
Tneatiog the Students of. LHU for
OoeR40YeaR8
Most AUInsuruioes
Most utillities included,
monthly or semester payment plans
24 hour maintenance service
and a friendly staff
A00€ptOd
Most Students
Cowed Under
Parents Insurance
Flans
Call for your personal showing today!
In the course of facing challenges like this, you'll learn how
to think on your feet. Stay cool under pressure. Take charge.
Talk to an Army ROTC rep. Vdtt'H find there's nothing like a
for getting to the top.
Mttle climbtag to hetp
ARMY ROTC
Unlike any other college coarse 70a can take.
«0Jb1
-photo courtesy of Boxing Club
after this, the
[cake]
£^BhBb
Six boxers won ECBA Titles last Week. Front Row, John Stout, 125; Art
Tasil, 112; Comanche Garcia, 139; Gus Pugliese, 132. Back Row: Chuck
Mussachio, 175 and Miro Jelev, 185. A possible total of eight Bald Eagles will
be heading to Annapolis for the NCBA National Championships on April 4-6,
as Jeff Raymond and Dave good may earn wild cards next week.
Roller hockey team picks up a point
Late penalties cost the
Lock Haven roller hockey
team a victory, but a strong
effort from goalie Kevin
by Adam
Sodano allowed the Haven to
Swarr
come away with a tie against
Dare Tuesday night in
With 1:35 of power play
Williamsport.
time, Dare had an opportunity
The point for each team
game, but the Bald
moved them into a three-way to win the
kill team held
Eagles'
penalty
tie for third with the Titans.
off Dare's pressure.
Lock Haven (3-5-1), Dare (2"We took too many stupid
3-3), and the Titans (3-4-1) all
penalties at the wrong time,"
have 7 points.
was a
The Titans fell to first said Zwierzyna. It
most
place Bloomsburg (7-1 14pts). thought agreed with by
of the Lock Haven team.
Nursing a 3-2 lead late in
After winning their last
the game, Lock Haven got
two games the loss left mixed
called for two penalties that
'feelings among the Haven.
proved costly.
We
Steve Campbell was called "It's a heartbreaker.
them, but a
should
have
beaten
for tripping with three minutes
then a loss," said
remaining. On the ensuing tie is better
power play, Dare's Stan Smith Rhett Markle. "The other
team just got a really good
fed a pass from the corner to
on their last goal."
Jim Warner. Warner had been break
Lock Haven had an opporleft alone in front of the Bald
as time
Eagle net, and he easily tunity shorthanded
chipped the pass past Sodano expired. Randy Helsman and
Fry broke in alone on
for a game-tying goal with just Josh
Dare goalie Jason Gill.
2:02 left.
pass to Fry just
Thirty seconds later, the Helsman's
as
time
expired.
Haven's Nate Zwierzyna was missed
Tim Chrisnall gave Dare
called for a roughing penalty.
at
II
Locations close to campus still available
Stop by our office:
121 W. Church St., Lock Haven
or call us at:
748-8550
L
V«b P. WIm DC
RDbertCWiMrJtC
SoottT. DuMoti DC
VfS
/jr
5 West Main St.
Look Haven
11
March 22,2002
Men's Lax wins season opener
The men's lacrosse team is
gearing up for their second
against
game
division
Shippensburg this Saturday at
2 p.m. at Jack Hubert Stadium.
The team, coming off an
11-3 victory in their first game
of the season against Juniata,
is heading into the game with
high spirits.
The offense is playing an
explosive game so far this season.
Exploding into double digits for the first time in four
years, the lacrosse team is
7* tie 0tea4e
*
7
WIker
)f
Eagle Eye Coturonwt
making quite an impression in
their division.
Offensive attack men Cory
Swartz and Tom Hammond
will be looked upon to put the
heat on the Shippensburg
defense.
At midfield, face-off man
Ron Strickler will be tough to
goalie Brian
Veteran
Buttari is also holding the
defense strong with an 80 perThe last time Shippensburg
up with Lock Haven was
in the spring of last year where
the Red Raiders posted an 8-2
win.
This Saturday's match up
is sure to be full of fast-paced,
hard-hitting action.
met
Men's rugby defeat Clarion
Eric Pfeiffer
Eagle Eye Columnist
The rugby team made the
long trip to Clarion University
Saturday to face the Golden
36-22.
winning
Eagles,
Clarion started on a quick
drive that caught the Haven on
their heels and got a quick
score, putting the score to 0-5.
The Haven answered in
traditional fashion with a
score by Randy Helsman, and
extra kick just minutes later
by Seth Keller, bringing the
score to 7-5 in favor of the
Haven.
Again in traditional Haven
play there was a score on a
penalty play by glory hound
Chuck Herling, putting the
Haven up 12-5. But the
Golden Eagles weren't done
yet, with a strong drive that
pushed the Haven back and
scored again making the extra
kick, tying the score at 12.
That acore ignited the
Haven offense and the Bald
Eagles quickly pounced onopportunity-after opportunity
with outstanding play late in
the first half another score by
Randy Helsman followed by a
breakaway score by Nick
Hoffman and an extra kick by
Roy, putting the Haven on top
24-12.
Then on another penalty
play Shaun "Rubber" Koren
flew through the Clarion
defenders for a try. Making the
score 29-12 just before the
half.
The second half didn't fair
as well for the Haven offense
but excellent play by the
defense held Clarion to only
two more scores in the half
closing the gap to 29-22. But
late into penalty time, the
Haven's Randy Helsman
scored the hat trick and
capped by the extra kick by
Seth Keller, closed the game
with a Haven victory, 36-22.
Lady ruggers remain undefeated
Lock Haven- With an
undeafeated fall season under
their belt, the women's rugby
club was ready to explode into
the new season this past
Saturday.
After finishing first in
Division II at the Eastern
Pennsylvania Rugby Union
(EPRU) Championship last
semester, the lady ruggers
have high hopes for repeating
their appearance at Nationls
from the following spring
2001.
Stepping onto the field on
Saturday, LHU was excited
for their first game but a bit
nervous due to the fact that the
last time they faced York
College was at the championships the previous semester.
The lady ruggers' confidence grew within the first ten
minutes when returning verteran Amy Daniels maneuvered her way over York's try
line to score. Fullback Vicki
Hoover followed the try with a
two-point conversion making
the score, 7-0.
Working together, LHU's
wing and pack managed to
keep most of the action near
York's try zone which gave
Daniels the opportunity to
score another try.
In an attempt to progress
"P the field, York kicked the
ball right into the arms of
LHU's winger BC who then
managed to surpass York's
defense and right into their try
zone to end the first half, 17-0.
During the second half,
Daniels scored two more times
for a personal total of 20
points. Fellow teammate
Jaime Ambrosio sprinted
aroung York's defense for a
try as her pack supported her.
Kris Stanczak's strong defensive tackling and quick offensive runs also helped lead
LHU to victory.
York scored one try within
the last ten minutes of the
game but the Haven wasn't
done racking up the points. In
the last play of the game,
rookie Alicia Garber socred
for LHU ending the game, 375.
The next match will be
tomorrow in a MARFU quarterfinal game against William
and Mary of Maryland,
Kickoff is at 12 p.m. at the
West Branch Field, across the
river. Come support the lady
ruggers in their journey to
nationals.
-
220 000 4 4 0
000 000 0 3 0
LockHaven
Lebanon Valley
-
AB
2
2
Brett Kellcy ss
Butch Rudolph 3b 2
Ernest Woods dh 1
Matt 1snor c
3
Kevin Conklincf 3
John Hanna If
3
Rich Millerrf
3
Ben Eshelman lb 1
Chris Miller ph
1
Greg Aument lb 0
Eric Barrp
Gannon (1-10) 8
Matt Brickman ss
Andy Chalot lf/p
Nick Leslie dh
Frank Moore lb
Dave Tellers pr
R H
0
2
0
0
1 2
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
10
0 0
0 0
LHU (8-13) 4
Eric Waltz 2b
P. Gnacinski ph/lb
D. Nitkiewicz rf
C. D'Agostino 3b
Brian Shaffer c
Mike Maxson 2b
Justin Lamanna cf
Frank Armeni ph/cf
Dale Daoust cf
Josh Leslie p
Heath Major p
Rich Chessario p/lf
Totals
Lebanon Valley 0
Hotchkins 2b
3
Zielkle 3b
3
Rink p/lf
Anspach If/p
Zellers rf
Schauren c
Martin ss
Worthington lb
Grieger cf
Totals
LHU
Eric Barr
IP H R ER BB SO
6.0 3 0 0 0 3
Lebanon Valley IP H R ER BB SO
LO 2 2 2 1 0
Rink
Anspach
5.0 2 2 2 4 2
-
-
Gannon
LockHaven
LHU (7-13) 9
Eric Waltz 2b
Brett Kelley ss
Butch Rudolph 3b
Ernest Woods c
Matt Isnor lb
Brian Neitz pr.
Mike Vogt dh/lf
Kevin Conklin cf/p
Brian Eberly If/rf
Rich Miller rf/cf2
Ken Janisewski p
John Hanna ph
Ryan Varga p
Chad Schell p
Andy Leakey p
TotaIs27 9 9 9
-
Win Barr. (1-1). Loss Rink
HB Rink.
Attendance: 32
501 000 3
AB
4
3
3
2
0
- III
9 9 l
2
2
3
4
2
2
0
0
0
0
28
125- TRAP MCCORMACK
(Sr., Loganton, PaTBald Eagle
Nittany)
First Round: L, 8-0 vs. Ben
VomBaur (Boise State)
133-CHRIS SPEALLER (Sr.,
Paoli, Pa7Great Valley)
First Round: W, 8-4 vs. Jason
Harless (Oregon)
141- MIKE MANEY (So.,
Clarence, PaTBald Eagle Area)
First Round: W, 3-1 vs. Brad
Byers (North Carolina)
149- #3 JAMARR BILLMAN
(Sr., Easton, PaTEaston Area)
First Round: W, 12-3 Maj. Dec.
vs. Jason Mercado (Brown)
174- ED
0
3
3
2
2
0
0
-
Win VARGA, R. (3-3). Loss Chalot
(0-2). Save None.
WP Leslie, J, SCHELL. C. HB
Leslie, J, VARGA, R.. PB Shaffer.
-
-
-
■
Campus headline news
Sports updates
Local weather forecast
■
Campus events
and much more
■
-
red right to
your inbox.
First Round: L, 4-1 vs. #10 Ty
Wilcox (Oklahoma State)
184- JOSH MILLARD (Sr., Mill
Hall, PaTBald Eagle Area)
First Round: W, 7-5 vs. #9 Pat
Popolizio (Oklahoma State)
197- AVERY ZERKLE (Sr.,
Urbana, Ohio/Graham)
Pigtail Match: W, 8-4 vs. Jason
Gore (North Carolina State)
First Round: L, 3-1 vs. Chris
Jones (Drexel)
Baseball
from back page
Conklin added two hits,
including a homerun and three
RBIs.
Trailing 8-6 entering the
bottom of the seventh, Lock
Haven rallied for three runs to
pick up the win.
The baseball team went 31 this past week, knocking off
Susquehanna and Lebanon
Valley and splitting with
Susquehanna and Lebanon
Valley and splitting with
Gannon.
Rudolph led off with his
second homer to make it an 87 game. With one out, Isnor
doubled to centerfield. Brian
Neitz pinch ran for Isnor and
advanced to third on a groundout. Conklin delivered with a
two-out two-run shot to win
Gannon.
Conklin added two hits,
including a homerun and three
the game for LHU.
Ryan Varga (3-3) picked
up the win on the mound in
LHU
9
Susquehanna 0
and Heath
Repard combined for a no-hitter as Lock Haven shutout
Susquehanna 9-0.
Varga had 12 strikeouts in
eight innings of work, while
Varga worked the ninth and
Ryan Varga
added two more.
Woods led Lock Haven
with three hits, including a
relief.
homerun. Kelley, Conklin,
Brian Eberly added two Isnor, Vogt and Rudolph all
Trailing 8-6 entering the
bottom of the seventh, Lock hits and a pair of RBIs for added two hits in the win.
Haven rallied for three runs to LHU. Waltz, Brett Kelley, and Lock Haven had IS total hits
Isnor all added hits in the win. in
pick up the win.
the game. Miller and Neitz
team
went
Isnor
also recorded eight had the other hits for LHU.
The baseball
31 this past week, knocking off putouts in the field.
RBIs.
____
Email Edition ! ff=F77
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PAWLAK (So.,
Southwestern, N.YTLakewood)
The Eagle has a reat offer for ou.
Subscribe to the
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Pepsi Arena, Albany, N.Y.
Day One Results
R H
0 0
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NCAA Division I National
Championships
| Thalatvt n—t
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_t-* back page
Frida
Snorts
*
INSIDE
Six boxers
claimed
ECBA titles.
pg-io
Elite seven wrestle for national titles
-
Lock Haven
The
wrestling team traveled to
the Pepsi Arena in Albany,
N.Y., for the 2002 NCAA
I
Division
Wrestling
Championships
lasting
from March 21-23.
Haven Wrestling
finished the regular season
with a 17-4 dual meet mark
and finished third at the
Eastern Wrestling League
tournament.
The Bald
Eagles are ranked 13th in
the latest NWCA Top-25
poll and are unranked for
the first time this year in
the InterMat rankings.
Seven Bald Eagle grapplers made the trip to
Albany for the national
tournament after earning
automatic or wild card bids
for their performance pt
the EWL tournament.
Returning champions
from the University of
Minnesota remain one of
the favorites in this year's
team race, earning top ratings in the latest NWCA
and InterMat polls entering
into championship weekend.
Other
contenders
include the University of
Iowa,
of
University
Michigan, Oklahoma State
University, University of
Oklahoma, Iowa State
University, the University
of
Pennsylvania,
University of Missouri and
West Virginia University.
Individually, there will
be 330 competitors in
action. Four
national
champions from the 2001
tournament
return
in
Stephen Abas of Fresno
State at 125 pounds, Josh
Koscheck of Edinboro at
174
RiiBWi tank
,
Lock-,,.
Cael
pounds,
Sanderson of Iowa State at
197 pounds (3-time champion at 184), and John
*
WRESTLING
W 2002 DIVISIOK I
CHAMPIONSHIPS,
Lockhart of Illinois at
A grand total of 42 of
the 2001 season's AllAmericans also return to
dual for the individual and
team crowns.
125:TRAP
LHU
senior
Trap
McCormack makes his
fourth trip to the NCAA
Tournament after finishing
second at the EWL
Championship
(injury
default).
The senior Bald Eagle
is focused on making the
most of his final trip, having to wrestle with a knee
brace after suffering tears
to his ACL and MCL in the
final EWL tourney bout.
McCormack is currently
24-4 overall and is ranked
17th in the nation in the latest InterMat poll.
The field at 125 pounds
contains
three
AllAmericans, including twotime national champion
Stephen Abas of Fresno
State.
First
McCormack's
Round Opponent: #5 Ben
Vombaur (Boise State)
133: CHRIS SPEALLER
Chris Spealler earned
his first trip to the NCAA
tourney after finishing fifth
in the EWL championship
and receiving a wild card
berth into national competition.
A relentless worker,
has
battled
Spealler
through a mid-season ankle
injury to finish 15-8 overall. This year's 133 pound
weight class contains three
returning All-Americans.
Spealler's First Round
Opponent: Jason Harless
Mike Maney (141) finished one win away from Ail-American status last year. He returns
file photo
to nationals ranked 14th, looking to improve on his 5th place finish at EWL's this year.
149: ,1aVI ARK BILLMAN
Third-seeded
Bald
Eagle JaMarr Billman
became a two-time EWL
champion by breezing
through the competition
(Oregon)
last weekend, scoring a
fall and a technical fall
141: MIKE MANEY
before securing the firstMike Maney was one
place finish after a medwin away from All- ical forfeit in the champiAmerica honors last seaonship round.
son, going 2-2 in national's
the
season,
For
action.
Billman is 32-2 and is
Following a somewhat ranked third in the nation.
disappointing fifth-place Last season, he went 5-2 at
finish in the EWL tournathe national tournament,
ment, Maney is 23-6 on the finishing fifth for his secseason and carries a nationond All-America medal
al ranking of 14th. Six of after defeating Jared
last year's top-eight finish- Lawrence of Minnesota,
ers return to the mats at 141 7-4, in the final round.
pounds.
This year, Billman
Maney's First Round earned a third-seed for the
Opponent: Brad Byers national tournament, and
(North Carolina)
joins a group of five
Rangi, Hallman named PSAC
Indoor Track Rookies of the Year
-
Lock Haven
The
men's
and
women's
indoor track and field student-athletes
Brooke
Rangi and Paul Hallman
both earned selections as
the Pennsylvania State
Athletic
Conference
(PSAC) Indoor Track and
Field Rookie of the Year
as released by the conference office today.
Haven head coach
Mark Elliston was a twotime winner, garnering
and
PSAC
Men's
Women's Coach of the
Year honors.
Rangi won two individual events at the PSAC
Indoor Track and Field
Championships, provisionally qualifying for
nationals in both events,
and took fifth in another.
She won the 55-meter
hurdles with a PSAC
indoor and school-record
time of 8.28 and the high
jump by clearing 5-5 Va.
She took fifth in the long
jump with a leap of 17-1
Va.
Rangi is also a member of the Lock Haven
women's soccer team
which won PSAC and
NCAA Northeast Region
championships during the
2001 season.
Hallman played a key
role in helping the Bald
Eagles to the gold medal
in the first-ever men's
PSAC
Indoor
He won one individual
event, placed second in
another and was part of a
Jared Guest
first- and third-place
relays. Hallman won the
800 meters in a time of
1:57.20 and was second
in the mile with a time of
The women's softball
roll as
they pushed their win
steak to 10 games, beating Mansfield 2-1 and 20, Tuesday.
Lynnette Murray and
Janet Paterson
each
recorded an RBI. Lynn
Spezio went l-for-3 as
team continued to
4:23.17.
year
as
head
Paul Hallman
men's and wdmen's teams
first-place finishes in
the
inaugural PSAC
Indoor Track and Field
The
Championships.
men's team won by 19
points with three individto
did Kristen Tome to help
combine for the Haven's
(13-3) six hits.
The
184: JOSH MILLARD
Josh Millard returns for
his second go at AllAmerica honors, having
made his first-ever trip last
season. A third-place finish
at the EWL tournament
secured his spot on the 184pound bracket at nationals.
The senior Bald Eagle
boasts his best season winsperformance, carrying a 216 overall ledger, and is
ranked 18th in the latest
national poll.
The 184-pound bracket
contains five returning AllAmericans while 2001
national champion Cael
Sanderson has moved up
one weight class and is currently the number one seed
at 197 pounds.
Millard's First Round
Opponent: #9 Pat Popolizio
197: AVERY ZERKLE
Avery Zerkle will represent the Bald Eagles at 197
pounds after finishing fifth
at EWLs and earning a wild
card bid to nationals.
This is Zerkle's second
trip to the NCAA championships after earning his
first trip last season. The
LHU senior is currently 159 overall.
Three All-Americans
return to action at 197
pounds, including last
year's 184-pound champion
Cael Sanderson of Iowa
State.
Zerkle's First Round
Opponent: Pigtail Match
vs. Jason Gore (N.C. State)
A win in the pigtail match
would pit Zerkle against
Chris Jones of Drexel in
the first round.
strike out 10, but her
team could not make it
up.
Bald
Eagles
scored in the third and
plated the winning run in
the bottom of the sixth.
Kelly Deitrick went
the distance, giving up
four hits and striking out
three.
She keeps her
record undefeated at 7-0.
Mansfield's Alison
Tagliaferri managed to
P.J. Harmer
LHU scored two runs
each of the first two
in
Eagle Eye StaffReporter
innings for the only runs
The baseball team of the game. Matt Isnor
had an RBI single in the
went 3-1 this past week,
first
and Kevin Conklin
off
knocking
the second run
brought
and
Susquehanna
he reached on
home
when
Lebanon Valley and splita fielder's choice.
ting with Gannon.
Butch
Rudolph
the
third
run
brought
Lock Haven
4
home on a bases loaded
Lebanon Valley 0
walk,
while
Ernest
Woods had a sacrifice fly
Eric Barr scattered to close the scoring out.
three hits over six innings
Rudolph led Lock
to pick up the win on the
Haven with two hits. The
mound as Lock Haven Bald Eagles had four hits
upped its record to 8-13 in the game. Isnor and
on the year with the win Rich Miller had the only
over Lebanon Valley.
ual champions and two
relay champions.
The women's team
captured first by more
than 44 points and produced five individual
champions.
Elliston has been
named PSAC men's outdoor Coach of the Year
twice, in 1999-2000, and
in 1998-99, the year the
men's team won its first
in
Another of LHU's new
faces in the national tournament, is 174-pounder
Ed Pawlak.
Pawlak earned one of
LHU's four automatic bids
after finishing third at the
EWL championship with a
2-2 rideout victory over
Cleveland State's Gerald
Harris.
The Bald Eagle sophomore enters national competition with a 13-14 overall mark. Three of 200I s
All-Americans at 174
pounds return to competition this weekend.
Pawlak's First Round
Opponent: #10 Ty Wilcox
(Oklahoma State)
Lock Haven
Mansfield
2
0
In the second game,
the Bald Eagles capitalized on Mansfield's three
errors.
Tome added an
Murray continued
to be an offensive threat.
RBI.
as she went 2-for-3 with a
run scored.
Michelle
Boone
picked up the win. She
scattered four hits over
four innings, striking out
five.
LHU looks to the
Shippensburg
Tournament
starting
today through Sunday.
They host Shippensburg
for a 2:30 p.m. start on
Monday.
Sluggers go 3 1 on the week
coach,
directed Lock Haven's
Championship
174: ED PAWLAK
(Oklahoma State)
Softball sweeps Mansfield
Eagle Eye StaffReporter
He also was a part of
the 4x800 meter relay
team which took first in a
time of 7:59.35 and the
third-place distance medley relay team (10:35.10).
Elliston, in his 13th
returning All-Americans
in the weight class.
Billman's First Round
Opponent: Jason Mercado
(Brown)
Brooke Rangi
50
Mark Elliston
years.
-
other hits for LHU, which
took advantage of five
walks.
Lock Haven 1 9
Gannon
2 8
In
two
different
games, Lock Haven split
with Gannon. The Bald
Eagles lost the opener 21, but won the nightcap
9-8.
Gannon scored one
run in the top of the seventh on a sacrifice fly to
break open a 1-1 tie and
pick up the win in the
first game. This was
Gannon's first win of the
year.
Mike Vogt led Lock
Haven with two hits.
Eric Waltz, Conklin,
Isnor and Rudolph each
added hits for the Haven.
Dan Sowash (1-3)
suffered the loss in the
game; scattering four
hits over 6 1/3 innings of
work.
In the second game,
Rudolph had two homeruns and four RBIs to
lead the Bald Eagles to
the win.
see Baseball page 10
For the women, it was
the program's first track
and field conference
Sun, March 24
Mon, March 25
Tuts, March 26
Wed., March 27
M Sat, March 23
Today
Thurs, March 28
championship, indoor or
outdoor. The veteran
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month.
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Part two of 'I
Nelly is coming
to State College
_
ifp with
Earl': Earl visits
Hooters
Page 4
Page 7
|
|
)
Seven LHU grapplers headed
to NCAA Tournament
Back page
http://www.lhueagleye.com
22, 2002
Today's Weather
8, Volume 55
High-21
Low-15
~
students
at risk for
eating
disorders
Kristy Hepak
In today's society, people can never be thin
enough. The thinner you
are, the more successful
you will be.
People
are faced
with this
idea daily,
as the media, and comments from friends and
parents can cause people
to develop an eating disorder.
The Wellness Center
wanted to help students
prevent eating disorders
and body dissatisfaction,
by holding a program,
"Celebrate the Diversity of
Every Body," Wednesday
night at Price Auditorium.
On hand to speak were
three prominent women
who deal with people who
have eating disorders, or
£°
Woven
University's Student Newspaper
See weekend weather
Page 2
% "
Haven, 9a.
Deba tes prec edeMondays
ti
el
ec
on
'
Scott Evans
Candidates for the
Executive Board of the
Lock Haven University
Student
Cooperative
Council (SCC) met last
night and discussed the
issues each team plans to
address if they are elected
to the Executive Board.
On one ticket is the
group of Ronald Strickler
Jr., Michele Bennett, and
Brian Detweiler. They are
running together for the
office of SCC President,
Vice
President
and
Treasurer, respectively.
The other ticket is lead by
Nick Trumbauer running
for President, David Ney
for Vice President, and
Amanda
Olavian for
Treasurer.
One of the issues discussed by both sides was
bettering the relationship
between LHU student and
the residents of the City of
Lock Haven. Trumbauer
spoke about a possible
Student-Community Day,
which in essence would be
a big party thrown by a
Nicholas Trumbauet
Ronald L Strickler Jr
Eagle Eye Staff
�
Running for SCC
President
�
WmWw
"
: «
� Running for
SCC President
Sophomore
�
�
Junior
�
Majoring in recreation management
Majoring in
Biology and English
"I want to be on a level
with the students"
"I wish to help make the
university work together."
Michelle L. Bennett
David Ney
� Running for SCC
� Running for
SCC Vice-Preside
____
j_\
�
Junior
� Majoring in
Elementary Education
" I plan to reach out to
_P_fv
—
X
i � Junior
� Majoring in
Political Science
"I plan to accomplish
the students"
better student relations"
Bryan Detweiler
Amanda Olaviany
� Running for
SCC Treasurer
� Running for
SCC Treasurer
Senior art
student
paints PUB
mural
Brooke Wiker
The Eagle Eye
The Parsons Union
Building will be getting a
facelift in the game room
thanks to the work of senior Justin Chirico.
Chirico, a senior art
major, has been hard at
work since December on a
carved and painted wood
piece that will be on display on the back wall.
PUB
administrator
Darrick Harr, an SCC
executive, proposed the
idea of the mural to the
Fine Arts Society and got
the idea approved.
Chirico is aiming to
have the mural finished by
the end of April when Harr
will be holding a grand
opening for the piece.
"I'm doing this for the
love of creativity," said
Chirico. He noted that his
inspiration is knowing that
he is doing something that
he enjoys and that will be
on display for others to
enjoy a long time from
now.
So far, there have been
no problems with the
mural. "Everyone has
been wonderful," said
Chirico.
Harr also noted that
things were going smooth-
� Junior
partnership of students and
� Sophomore
local business owners as a
have previously dealt with
to boost the city's
� Majoring in
an eating disorder of their method
� Majoring in
and boost the
economy
own.
Sports
Administration
Elementary Education
image of the students in the
Bonnie
Colantonieyes of the residents.
Owens, a survivor of
"I will always make
"If Executive Board
anorexia believed that she
can inspire stutime for students"
was still overweight; when members
dents to use downtown
mates
will work to coordi- elected, his team will move turnout in the upcoming
"I don't want students
in high school she
businesses,
residents
and
nate
a
session to be held to attend more residence
to feel inferior about
weighed only a mere 89
business owners might approaching me with a during freshman initiation hall meetings and keep a election and future ones,
both sides expressed the
pounds.
change their view of the concern," said treasurer into the residence halls. sign-up sheet available
She has been in recovimportance of a strong
"People are going out
students," said Trumbauer. candidate Brian Detweiler. With that in place, incomwhere SCC-funded clubs turnout for the elections.
ery for 12 years now. "We
of
their
"The greatest gift our stuway to help this
and organizations can ask The Strickler team
"If I am elected, I will ing freshmen will be notireact more favorably to
camprocess
dents can give to the comcome together, and
thin and attractive people,
make a point of it that stu- fied immediately after they Executive Board members paigned at Bentley Hall,
thanks
to them, it is really
munity is to go downtown dents know about the funcarrive
at
to
LHU for the
attend meetings and notifying students of the
which make some people
and spend money."
tions of SCC," said vice school year about the funcactivities to insure that the election and the positions coming together," said
turn to eating disorders to
The issue of improving
Chirico.
presidential
candidate tions of the SCC and how SCC is doing their part to they have on campus
get that ideal weight,"
The mural is currently
relations between the SCC David Ney.
to get involved in student
participate in the many difissues.
worked on in Sloan.
being
and the students on campus
Strickler stated that if government.
ferent facets of the student
A 1997 body image
also
talked
Chirico
was
about at the elected, he and his running
noted that he is
Trumbauer said that if community.
survey showed that 62 perSee
Debate
2
Page
excited
for
the public to
debate.
As for improving voter
cent of young women
see the final piece.
between the ages of 13-19
were unhappy with their
bodies.
67 percent of
women over 30 wanted to
lose weight and 50 percent
of women surveyed said,
that they smoke in order to
"They influenced politics at the ground roots, using opinion."
help control their weight.
Michelle Hershey
in a program entitled, returned to her tribe after
Linda LaSalle, comNews
Editor
Eagle
Eye
"Celebrity and Power: studying abroad, and
munity health educator at
How Indigenous Women became a native guide for
Penn State University,
Lecturer,
Guest
Made Political History."
Dr.
the district. She achieved
focused on the images porMargaret
Werry,
explained
Werry,
a
native
of
New
fame
through her clever
trayed to society that the
how
women
came
to
Zealand,
took
power
the
audience
and her
performance
media sends out.
a period that was back to the turn of the cen- extensive knowledge. Like
during
She also touched on
dominated mainly by men, tury with the story of any
good
politician,
the topic of men and eatMakereti
a
Makereti
knew
her audiPapakuri,
ing disorders.
native of the New Zealand ence and their expectatribe Maori.
tions.
See Disorders Page 7
During this time periMakereti was always
od, the Maori tribe made sophiscated and lady-like,
kwM mm Mm*—
up only 10 percent of New often inviting the tourist to
Zealand's
population and her home for an evening of
Sporu back page
Sun" boi
6
had little real influence in poetry and music. The
2
Weather
the country. The settlers tourists found comfort in
that came to New Zealand her because in their terms
|___,______|
fm
spread disease and treated she was a "noble savage"
the Maori as a lower class. and represented their class
Parson's Union Building
Lock Haven University
The tribe believed they and social status.
didn't need to save their
Makereti was not only
Lock Haven, PA 17745'
people because they would a good performer; she was
Dawd Kubarek/ The Eagle Eye
Newsroom: (570) 893-2334
not
a
great
be
around
the
future.
also
publicist.
in
She
Fax: (570) 893-2644
Tiffany Smeal poses on the set of the University Players proThey had no development, was always on the scene
Email:
Dr Margaret Werry dis- no support and they were for any event, and was
duction 'White Liars, the first of two one-act plays directed by
cusses women h history born into a world of little always in the papers.
student Rich Smith. The plays will run tonight and Saturday,
Visit us on the web:
and hew trey became opportunity.
beginning at 8 p.m. See features for more details.
See Women Page 2
Makereti, a culturally
rioted h poiics.
educated tribe member
Guest speaker focuses on University Players open with
historical women in politics 'White Liars' and 'Black Comedy'
m%Um\mmStmm
mmmtW\
Ifo^^B
March 22,
Eagle Eye
Page 2
2002.
*
The Second Mile to hold Easter egg hunt ROTC seniors complete project at battlefiel d
LOCK HAVEN—On Sunday
March 24th, 2002, the Clinton
County chapter of The Second
Mile will sponsor a Friend
Program event for school children in the Keystone Central
and Jersey Shore Area School
districts.
students
The Program
of elementary age the opportunity to build their self-esteem
as well as an environment in
which they learn to interact
with other children and adults.
The heart of the Friend
Program is the hundreds of student volunteers from the Lock
Haven University campus,
including members of sports
teams, fraternities, sororities
and interest houses.
These volunteers spend the
afternoon befriending a Young
Friend through organized activities. For many of the College
mWm IBI
I ■■■H
I■
_mmm
— JIM
-II
mpH
■
m
■
■
MR
111 uW
I
*\
Friends, the Friend Program
offers a tremendous buffer
against homesickness.
For the Young Friends, all
of who are referred by their
LOCK HAVEN-Each spring
the seniors in Army ROTC at
Lock Haven University are
required to conduct a staff ride
as part of their course work.
A staff ride is a field trip in
which cadets travel to a historic
battlefield in order to gain lessons learned from the past, so
they can be better leaders in the
Woodward Township,
future.
por additional information,
This year the seniors went to
please call LHU students Laura Gettysburg, PA. Prior to the
Inlow at 893-3751 and/or
staff ride, the senior cadets were
Beck y Anthony at 893-3736, required to read the book "The
The Second Mile office at Killer Angels" and to write a
paper about leaders involved in
(814) 237-1719 or by contacting Mrs. Danielle Vilello- the conflict.
They were divided into
County/
Clinton
Rogers,
teams, each team picking a speSecond Mile Liaison at (570)
cific part of the battle to
748-0115
research, and then prepare a
briefing to present to the ROTC
cadre at the Gettysburg battlefield.
ence fair, story time and big
The staff ride culminated
book reading, games, dancing with a one-day trip to
and hands-on technology.
Gettysburg on March 16 to view
More than 500 children the battlefield, participate in an
from area schools and daycare interactive guided tour, and
centers visit the Festival each present their project.
year.
This year's project
Community organizations focused on the last part of the
wishing to participate in the
event should contact Mrs.
Bobbie Jo Simcox at 726-0022
and Zak Hossain at 893-2133.
For campus organizations,
contact Dr. Punnipa Hossain at
893-2167.
school guidance counselor, the
program provides a supportive,
caring role model as well as an
afternoon of fun!
The sixth of eight such
events to be held this school
year> an Easter Egg Hunt will
be held on March 24th, 2002
from 2:00 PM tH 3:30 PM at the
Park
located
River
three-day battle, Pickett's
Charge and the battle for
Cemetery Ridge.
This year's senior class,
Chris Wilson, Josh Herr,
Garcia,
Brad
Comanche
Svencer
and
Nathan
Hoppes,
Cherniack,
the
spent
Heather
last few weeks readying their
project for presentation.
Throughout the staffride the
senior cadets displayed enthusiasm while gaining a greater
respect for the many fallen sol-'
diers and leaders who were will-'
ing to pay the ultimate price for!
their country.
Upon completion of the staff'
ride, all cadets and cadre were
reminded of the values and'
effects of leadership on the bat-'
tlefield.
Campus hosts 'Caring for Community' festival
LOCK HAVEN--The Clinton effort between the community
County Children and Youth and the University.
Area agencies participate in
Festival will be held on March
Festival to provide useful
the
23 from 1:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.
the
Field
House
on
information
and entertainment
in Thomas
and adolesof
Lock
Haven
to
the
children
campus
cents.
University of Pennsylvania.
The theme is, "Caring for
University student clubs,
Community-With a Child's organizations, and various academic classes participate in the
Heart."
Initiated
two Festival to apply their classnearly
decades ago by Dr. Renuka room skills to educate and
Biswas, a former member of entertain children.
the University faculty, the
Some of the featured activFestival is a collaborative ities this year include: the sci-
tes a<
issues effecting students
Debate from page 1
The Trumbauer team used
pencils with their names on
them to boost voter turnout, and
made a goal to notify 1000 LHU
students about the upcoming
election.
"Notifying the students is
our job as candidates. We have
done an excellent job this year
in campaigning, which is some-
thing all six of us can be proud
-of," said Trumbauer.
Trumbauer
talked
about
forming an SCC judicial committee to oversee the flow of
information and senate policies
both to senators and the stu-
dents.
Trumbauer said they would
act as a scaled-down version of
the United States Supreme
Court where students can
approach the committee with a
problem or concern and they
will relay it to the SCC.
He added that if it is formed,
the committee will be made of
five or six senators with at least
two years service on the SCC so
they will be able to fully interpret SCC policy and moderate
other SCC committee decisions.
Strickler said the main focus
is the student-senator relationship throughout this election
and added that the involvement
of Greeks in the SCC is greatly
appreciated and will be pushed
further.
He also expressed the need
for more minority students to
become involved in SCC.
Both teams are very eager to
serve the student population and
encourage all students to vote
for the SCC Executive Board on
March
25
to
Monday
Wednesday March 27.
Think before
you drink
1992-1994 Figures
Weather
ROTC Senior class poses in front of a cannon on
the Gettysburg Battlefield.
Feeling a little under-represented?
Remember to vote on March 25,26 and 27
in lower Bentley.
put women into politics
the ground roots, using opinWomen From Page 1
Werry said, that women of
Makereti soon became a color had a tougher struggle
household name in New with acceptance in the political
scene.
Zealand.
"In the public eye, Makereti
"They were not seen as femwas like an ambassador or a inine and they were viewed as a
diplomat," said Werry, "She was different type of lady," said
a politician."
Werry, "They had to fight to be
"Makereti and other women received as feminine."
The reason these women
during this time used ideas of
femininity to break into politics. achieved their fame and status
They used the language of was due to their gender role and
how they used their motherly
moral motherhood."
Women used popular culinstincts to make decisions.
Now, 100 years later, the
ture in the political scene. When
they became recognized by the tribe Maori makes up 25 to 30
media, and became fairly well percent of New Zealand's popuknown, they would ban together lation, and Makereti is a queen
on issues and became involved in the tribe.
The next program in the
in organizations.
"These women put issues on Women's History Month series
an agenda," said Werry. "They is "Gender and Language Play"
on March 25 at 7 p.m. in the
provided the blueprint for welfare. They influenced politics at PUB Multi-Purpose Room.
Wanna write for the
Come to our next staff meeting!
This week in history
Nearly one in four male college
students (23.6 percent) and one
in 10 female students (9.9%)
report three or more binge
drinking episodes in the previous
two weeks.
Source: Core Institute on
Alcohol and Other Drug Studies
at Southern Illinois University,
Photo courtesy ofROTC
Thursday, March 15-17, 1956: Members of
the student-run newspaper, The Eagle Nest at
Lock Haven State Teacher's College, attended
the annual Scholastic Press Association's
press meeting in New York City at Columbia
University.
Law Enforcement
-
893-2278
March 15
Minor drinking
David N. Bonda, 108 Hart Dr.
Pittsburgh PA, 15235
Disorderly conduct
Christopher Fortune. 621 N. 66 St.
Philadelphia PA, 19151
Minor drinking
Jason W. Kaler, 1871 Dixie Ln.
Altoona PA, 16602
March 16
Harassment and public drunkenness
Eric R Booser, 2962 Church Rd.
Bangor PA, 18013
Public drunkenness
Jason Crawford, 25 Spring St.
Brian W. Schuckmann, 174 Hillside Ave.
NJ, 07876
•�Information in Police Boat is publishabie by the Pennsylvania State
Open Records taw.
—
,
EE^Aifcir
Thursday, March 28th at dinner...
High-39
Low-21
High-38
Low-25
See full forcast and up to date news at:
www.LHUeagleye.com
You are cordially invited to join the Dining services for a feast fit for
a King and Queen, a Medieval Dinner.
The Dinner will be held in the Upper Deck of Bentley Hall Castle on
the twenty-eighth of March, two thousand and two.
Dinner will be served promptly between four thirty and seven thirty.
www.lhup.edu/dining
March 22, 2002
s tudents art awards program on the web
WASHINGTON-The Justice
Project has announced the
launch of its web-based arts
award program, the Artists' Call
for Justice, which is designed to
give art students a venue to
speak out on issues of social justice.
Students who are enrolled at
any post-secondary school can
participate in The Artists' Call
and submit entries in the fields
of animation, graphic design,
photography and video.
The Artists' Call is designed
to be incorporated directly into
an existing communications art
curriculum and invites art
instructors to encourage their
students to become involved in
the web-based award program.
Interested parties can register now on the Artists' Call
website: www.artcall.org/cpw
The Artists' Call for Justice
was created by The Justice
Project, a national, non-profit,
non-partisan organization, as a
way to not only advance the
cause of justice, but to involve
new voices and new insights. It
is hoped that The Artists' Call
will help engage a new generation of young people in civic
and political life.
"Art is not only a potent and
powerful medium to convey
conviction," said Bobby Muller,
chairman of The Justice Project
and co-founder of the 1997
Nobel Prize-winning global
campaign to ban landmines,
"but it also provides new perspectives to old ideas. We
believe the creative energies of
young artists in particular can
provide fresh insights to
intractable arguments.
"Student artists working in
the visual and communication
arts are creating phenomenal,
transcendent works which the
public rarely gets to see. The
Artists'Call was designed as a
model program that strengthens
career-advancing skills and
opens the door to authentic
political engagement," said Dan
Walsh, The Artists' Call program director and political arts
gram's success.
In fact, a number of arts edu
cators from around the country,
including Jeff Morin, chair of
the Department of Art and
Design at the University of
Wisconsin,
have
already
embraced The Artists' Call.
"The Artists' Call is an ideal
program for both young artists
and arts educators," said Morin.
"It is a model curricula-enrichment program that meaningfully
challenges students."
It is through instructors that
The Artists' Call is hoping students learn about this new art
awards program. Once they are
aware of The Artists' Call, students are being encouraged to
register immediately as participation is on a first-come, firstserve basis.
All qualifying artwork will
be displayed in the Artists' Call
web galleries (last year's poster
submissions can be viewed at
www.artistscall.org/gallery
Up to 400 semi-finalist
entries will be reviewed by a
jury of communication arts
activist.
experts who will select up to 36
"What young artists need is artists as finalists.
a venue to explain their work, an
Awards include an annual
audience before which they can membership in the College Art
perform. The potential to have Association (CAA) or the
one's work seen, discussed, American Institute of Graphic
reviewed, argued about, cri- Arts (AIGA), and gift certifitiqued, or even attacked is of cates for computers/software.
infinite value to a young artist," The instructors of each student
continued Walsh. "It is precisely finalist will receive a Teacher
The Artists' Call that provides Recognition Award as well as
this outlet."
gift certificates.
Walsh pointed out that
For more information, visit
involvement of communication The Artists' Call for Justice web
arts instructors is key to the pro- site at: www.artcall.org/cpw
Decreased funding effects tuition at Penn State
Renee Petrina
Daily Collegia]
Leaders of national educa-
tional
institutions
told
Pennsylvania State University
leaders last week that the university is not alone in its financial dilemmas.
At the Penn State Board of
Trustees meeting on Thursday
and Friday, Peter Magrath,
president of the National
of
State
Association
Universities and Land-Grant
Colleges, and Jay Morley, presthe
National
ident
of
Association of College and
University Business Officers,
said decreased funding from
states for public universities is
among the challenges facing
higher education.
"State and federal support, I
believe, will continue to be limited, and major 'A-list'
research universities are going
to have to be even more entre-
preneurial and rely increasingly
on private support," Magrath
told the trustees.
Morley issued what he accumulated lily pad, and by
called a "wake-up call" to the the time you wake up and realtrustees during his presentation ize that, you're surrounded by
Friday afternoon, saying forcompetition," he said.
Morley referred to what he
profit universities and other
institutions are rising as comcalled "the current crisis in facpetition. He said Penn State ulty salary" as just one of the
needs to deal with the future of many problems that public unieducation as a business.
versities face. Penn State
"Higher education has President Graham Spanier
become an industry," he said. recently said he aims to
"We do not like to hear this, but increase faculty salaries despite
it's true."
cuts in state appropriations.
NACUBO, Morley's organMorley referred to what he
ization, advocates for the finan-
cial sectors of a variety of colleges and universities, including more than 2,100 private and
public institutions.
He said the growing industry of higher education will follow the same path as any other
industry: Competition will
develop rapidly.
Morley used a lily pad analogy, saying that if lilies in a
pond double every day, on the
29th day the proverbial pond is
half full and on the 30th day it
is completely full of lilies.
"All of that becomes this
.
called "the current crisis in
faculty salary" as just one of
the many problems that public
universities face.
Penn State President
Graham Spanier recently said
he aims to increase faculty
salaries despite cuts in state
appropriations.
"What we could eventually
be faced with is a phenomenon
where undergraduate (education costs) $10,000 a year and
tuition is $12,000, but a portion
of that goes to the land-grant
mission," Spanier said.
Page 3
tate program w ves reast exam fee
Tuesday
; Mike
Hanna praised a state program
designed to give access to breast
and cervical cancer screening to
women who cannot otherwise
afford them.
The state Department of
Health administers the program
by contracting services from
hospitals and medical providers
across the Commonwealth.
Women are eligible for
mammograms, clinical breast
exams, pelvic exams and pap
smears, which are available to
those with low or moderate
incomes who are without
health-care coverage. Services
are free for eligible women,
Hanna said.
Hanna said that ideally, he
would like the legislature to find
a way to ensure this program has
continuous funding for both prevention and detection options.
In Pennsylvania, breast cancer produces more female cancer cases than any other cancer
form.
"Both of these cancer forms
are treatable and survival
increases the earlier the cancer
is detected," Hanna said.
"These screenings are incredibly important for women and I
encourage those eligible to
apply."
For more information and to
apply for the program call 1Hanna said
Centre and Clinton County residents can contact the closest
contractor,
Family Health
Council
of
Central
Pennsylvania, at 717-761-7380
for more information on obtaining services.
Colleges fail to provide services to customers
PALM BEACH GARDENS-A billion-dollar industry with
no customer service. That loses
up to 12% of its customer base
annually because of poor service but does little about it. That
puts employees' desires before
customers' needs. That believes
its customers want to be cheated. "That's the condition of
most ofAmerican higher education," said Neal Raisman,
Ph.D., author of Embrace the
Oxymoron: Customer Service
in Higher Education.
Colleges and universities
have been existing with no real
concern to the care oftheir customers - students for years,
according to Dr. Raisman.
"Many claim they do care," he
said. "After all, they have student services offices and even
create short-lived student programs. But the reality is, many
college employees still believe
the adage, "This would be a
great place to work if the students weren't here.'"
And their indifference has
caught up with them.
"Students and their parents
are paying increasing tuition
payments and getting less on
-
their investments," Dr. Raisman
said. "And in a service industry
like college, that translates into
the education itself." Longterm, poor service affects our
society, culture, economy and
future by graduating poorly
educated citizens and workers,
according to Dr. Raisman.
In the first book published
on the issue of customer service
in higher education, the former
college president investigates
how colleges and universities
treat and mistreat students - and
allowed students to become
undervalued and even overlooked.
— How a lack of customer
service affects the bottom line in lost enrollments,
transfers and low return on
investment and future donations.
— What good colleges do to
make students feel valued.
— The 12 principles of
"Good Customer Service" in
education.
The "Field of Dreams"
what can be doneabout it. In the syndrome in college marketing:
191-page book, he discusses:
"If we build it and
offer some classes, they will
— How poor customer service cheats students and can hand enroll."
them an inferior education.
What a customer service
What do students really audit is and how it can help a
want and expect from college. college understand
And why they chose one colwhat it can do to improve
lege over another (And if s not the experience and education
what most academics think.)
for students.
Embrace the Oxymoron:
— Why being ranked zero is
the best rating for a college, and Customer Service in Higher
how some colleges have gotten Education is available for
—
—
—
$39.95
— Why students do not
count as much as administrators, faculty and researchers at
some colleges.
— How administrators have
ARTICULATE?)
shipping/handling. To order or
for more information, call 1800-341-7874, ext. 347, or
www.lrp.com/store
access
online.
"Vj^^
imT bn
The Office of Admissioi
have a job for YOU
The LHU Office of
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wilt be accepting
applications for
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Applications are available
until April 6th in the office
of Admissions and are due
by Monday, April 8th by 4pm.
■
Page 4
March 22, 2002
OP/ED
i
Life with Earl: Earl's adventures at Hooters
PJ Harmer
Eagle Eye Staff
So there we were, planning
and eat. It
was just Jay, The Big Easy and I.
We just figured a night away
from Lock Haven was good.
Everyone should get away from
here sometimes.
Then I got the phone call.
"Hey, P.J., watcha doin'?"
I knew Jay had probably
dished out my phone number to
Earl. I never swapped it with
him. And I think by the way I
looked at Jay, he realized who
was on the phone.
"Uh, hey Earl... nothing
really, why?"
"Well, I figgered I'd hitchhike up to Haven and hang wit'
you and tha boys."
You can obviously figure out
was
a little scared.
I
"Well, you see Earl, we were
going to be leaving actually.
Heading to State College to eat."
I didn't think Earl would
want to go, considering he usually didn't have any money.
"Hey, nice, I just got my
allowance from my mother. Can
I come?"
I didn't see the harm in it, so
I agreed. And before I knew it,
Earl was knocking on the door
with that big smile of his. And I
assure you; it is an interesting
smile to behold.
Realize this though; the only
reason I agreed to it was because
Jay had given him my phone
number. If it weren't for that, I
would have shut him right down.
says, "I go fishin' 'cause I can."
Once we got into State
College, I thought Earl was
going to lose his mind. A new
Hooters is easily noticed from
the road and Earl almost jumped
out of the car.
"WHOA! Hey guys, a
HOOTERS! Let's eat there! I
ain't never been to a Hooters
before!"
"Well, actually Earl, we were
thinking
else
something
tonight," said Jay.
"And besides, once you've
to go to State College
,
, ,,
.
c
Ii should take it out, on
Ii figured
* l
Jay. He d have to sit in the back
.
..
ww
~ ,
with Earl.
,'
"ingThe waitress was a beautiful look-
blonde, and yes, she was quite
well endowed. Earl's jaw was
comfortable on the table."
--
'
'
'
J* *
So off we went. Earl had on
his Sunday best, a pair of dirty
jeans, a flannel and a hat that
these prices," said Earl. "A feller
could go broke in here if he
came once too often. But dang,
look at all these women."
Earl's eyes were bulging
from the sockets, while his jaw
still rested on the table.
"Earl, you know if you are
drooling, women won't find that
attractive," said Jay.
"Yeah, and I think it's
against health codes too," said
The Big Easy.
Once the waitress came back
to take our orders, Earl once
again was gazing at just one
body part. I actually felt bad for
this girl; she was only doing her
job.
"Hey boys, can I take your
Jay responded with a smack
to Earl's
head that sent his prized
hat flying across the table.
"Listen you dork, if you
want to come out with us, control yourself," Jay said. "We
don't need you pitching a tent
and lifting the table with every
girl that walks by. Calm down!"
With that Earl stood up,
picked up his hat and left the
table. Not a word was said; he
just left.
"Jay, you didn't have to
smack him," said The Big Easy.
Before Jay could answer.
Earl wandered back. Now sporting a "Hooters - State College"
shirt. No hard feelings I guess.
The dinner went without any
incidents to report. Earl actually
behaved himself. He ate, actually left a tip and when we were
ready to leave, he decided now
was the time to make his move.
When our waitress came
back to give us our change, he
order?"
With that, Earl experienced
his first kick to the jewels. Down
like a ton of bricks he went. I
expected we were going to get
the same.
The girl then thanked us and
asked us to kindly remove our
friend.
"You guys aren't banned, but
please, NEVER bring this man
back."
So, we dragged Earl out,
tossed him in the back ofthe car
and headed back to Lock Haven.
About 20 minutes into the ride,
Earl finally caught his breath.
"Man oh man, that was great.
She touched me! I knew she
wanted me! Did she give you
guys her number to give me?
Come on, don't lie!"
So we gave him her number,
555-1212. I can't imagine the
look on an operators face when
Earl called and asked her if she
was the Hooters girl.
I don't know what to do with
Earl honestly. Jay keeps calling
him back and telling him how
much we like hanging out with
him. Seems like we're stuck
with Earl.
Now I know what it's like to
have a lackey.
Giving an order to a waitress
is fairly simple; well, at least to a
normal person. Not Earl.
Me, Jay and the Big Easy all
seen one Hooters girl v u ' ve my life. I can't believe this. That ordered a burger and fries and
seen them all >" said the Bi 8 chick was all over me. She was figured we'd split a bucket of
Easy
eye ..."
Hooters' famous wings. But, attacked.
"Easy Earl, no need to get a Earl on the other hand, was just
" But 1 wanna eat there! Hot
"So what are the odds I can
women> hot women and hot fresh mouth," said Jay, cutting looking at the menu.
get your number," asked Earl in
women Ma ybe 1 can 8et a num" off Earl.
"What do you recommend?" his best James Dean imitation
berortwo "
"I can't handle this. I need to
A slap to my own forehead and giving a wink. "I've seen
As soon as he b,urted that do something about it," said knew I was in for a long night.
you looking at me all night,"
ast statement out » we knew we Earl, becoming a bit flustered
"Well, as you can see, we
I think the girl wanted to die
had to eat there So we wheel «i and sweaty.
offer pretty much anything you on the spot. She just stared. Me,
int0 the P arkin 8 lot ' and saw tne
All of a sudden, Earl popped could want in a place like this," Jay and the Big Easy all buried
P.J. claims that Earl is a ficme
up and took off out the door. We answered the waitress, starting our heads in our hands.
tional character and none of
That didn>t st0P EarL
could see him outside sucking in to lose her patience. "Our burgWhen Earl got no answer, he these stories actually happened.
"Lme 's 18 made for cuttm '>" fresh air. He finally came back ers are fantastic, the wings are made move number two. And However, he does admit everyhe said
in, was confronted by a couple famous. I don't think you guys that was getting up and putting one else in the story is a real
And sure enou8h Earl cut of Hooter girls and he went nuts came here for a five-star meal." his arm around the girl.
person. The stories of Earl will
'
nght In line Soniehow
11 again, this time dashing into the
Earl still didn't budge.
on,
"Come
take
I'll
appear here every week through
you
worked and next thin8 'vou bathroom.
"Earl, do the lady a favor and somewhere fancy and we can get the end of the semester.
know we were at a table The
A couple of minutes later he order," said the Big Easy. "I am to know one another."
'
waitress was thls beaut.ful lookcame out, looking relaxed and actually hungry and would like
to get the food today."
ing° blonde, and yes, she was had a big smile on his face.
Earl
s
the
table
and
Finally Earl blurted out he
quite
jaw
well
endowed.
With
drinks
on
J
M
,
c
artists to
__tjc is
was comfortable on the table,
Earl calmed down some, we would take a burger, some fries
„,.
ca l
finally started looking at the and a soda. He was all flustered.
1 3
us at
cartoons.
,
to drink? said the
"I'll be back with your food
1
look at soon guys," said the waitress as
'
■.
We all ordered a beer of
course, but Earl couldn't speak.
His eyes were focused on one
body part.
"And you?" asked the waitress to Earl.
Still nothing.
The Big Easy got a response
as he drilled Earl with a swift
kick under the table.
"Uh, I'll have some milk,"
said Earl, still focused.
The waitress left and Earl
went nuts.
"This is the greatest day of
.
-°
' "
' '
.
T~h __a_jc
contribute political
"
VV anted-"
seeking talented
(Contact
9J5J©yaUo0.ca—
she wandered off.
m
ISSUE 8, VOLUME 55
LOCK HAVEN UNIVERSITY
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March 22, 2002
Dear Editor:
I enjoyed the panel discussion on the "War on Terrorism,"
except I found it lopsided. Since
war was being discussed, I was
surprised that we did not have a
military expert there, a rather
glaring omission, so that we
could have had all sides of an
issue fairly represented.
The latest poll shows that
91% of all Americans approve
of the "War on Terrorism," but
you would never get that impression from listening to our four
panelists. Why?
Early in the 19th century the
Barbary Pirates of North Africa
were the Muslim terrorists of
their day. They attacked peaceful American merchant ships,
killing, torturing and executing
many and enslaving many more.
No European country made a
serious effort to remove the
menace from their own backyard, so for the first time in our
nation's history American soldiers and sailors were sent overseas.
were
we
Fortunately,
extremely successful, from
whence came the line "... to the
shores of Tripoli" in the Marine
hymn. Well, history repeats
itself.
Again we have a menace in a
far off land. Again, no European
or Mid-Eastern or Central Asian
country has demonstrated either
the ability or the will to eliminate the problem. In fact, a very
strong opinion expressed by
many of our European allies and
Mid-Eastern friends after 9/11
was that we "had it coming".
I know of no American who
has ever reacted to tragedy, war
or famine in another country
with that attitude: "They had it
coming." So perhaps we should
examine the highly prejudicial
attitudes of Europeans, MidEasterners and others with a
very critical eye.
Apparently we, and we
alone, must provide the solution,
trying to cobble together as
Page 5
Eagle Eye
The 'War on Terrorism' needs an unbiased eye
many allies as we can. This is
one of the key reasons why
America acts so unilaterally at
times, with such "arrogance"
because the other countries of
the world do not act or provide
such weak-kneed half measures
that they have no hope of success.
If you sit in a room full of
Europeans and listen to their
opinions and barrage of criticisms about America, you'll
soon be overcome by a tremendous desire to apologize for
everything from McDonald's
restaurants to Army bases in
Europe. But they are trying to
have it both ways.
Their first complaint is that
we are not involved enough in
places they would like us to be
involved. Their second complaint is that we are too
involved, that we go around
sticking our nose into the business of other countries.
They don't want us exercising our power and influence,
because every time that we do it
diminishes them in the eyes of
the world and exposes their
weakness.
The cynical truth is that they
want to harness American power
for their own purposes. They
want us to intervene when they
have European problems that
they can't solve. When France
has a problem they want
America to pursue a course that
is in the French national interest.
When the British are in need,
they would like us to back up
their national interest.
They want Americans to
fight in their wars, whether it's
World War I (2 million
American soldiers ended it, a
historical fact beyond dispute),
World War II or war in Bosnia,
but they want to tell us how to
do it.
They want to dictate the
terms under which Americans
are going to fight and die. Is that
not arrogance? Then when we
have a war, asking for only a trifle of the sacrifice that we made
in their conflicts, they criticize
—
"Again we have a menace in a far-off land. Again, no
European or Mid-Eastern or central Asian Country has
demonstrated the ability or the will to eliminate the problem."
greater scale.
My opinion is that if we have
paratroopers dropping from
planes, if we have B-52's flying
sorties, if we face an enemy
armed with tanks, RPGs and
"War on Terror" as a stingermissies
to
our
if we're fightless
on
defense
them
to
spend
and complain. Is that
We had ing battles, then we're probably
instead.
action"
"police
would
have
otherwise
than they
hypocrisy?
a "police action" in Korea, and
in a war. To call'it anything else
to and allows them to divert tax
For the first time in the histothat
ended.
It
is
we
see
how
can
is a trick of symantics.
areas.
monies
into
other
ry of the world, a super power
with
a
failure
to
When in a war, it is best to
synonymous
disagree
respectfully
would
I
has emerged, the United States,
and
with
objectives
let the soldiers fight it. When
that is not bent on conquest and with Dr. Berard's interpretation achieve
stalement.
politicians or academics try to
war
has
been
imagery
of
how
the subjugation of other peoples.
characterizathe
Similarity,
wars, we always lose,
fight
First,
Bush.
President
Every other super power of used by
Pentagon whether theyare foreign, such as
and
of
the
WTC
tion
congreswas
shows
that
nor
history
the
its day whether it
"criminal" acts, ostenthe Korean War or the Vietnam
Persians, Greeks, Romans, sional acquiesence, and a perfect attacks as
pursued
by
"police
to
be
Vietnam
sibly
War, or domestic, such as the
the
of
this
is
example
Mongols, Chinese, Moghuls,
of War on Poverty or the War on
the
bounds
strains
action,"
British, Spanish, French, Turks, War.
Drugs.
It is true that President credulity.
Germans, Russians, Japanese,
have
miliCriminals
don't
"war
Let the military go to battle
used
successfully
and, yes, the Arabs and their Clinton
training
camps,
tary-commando
declaron
their
own terms and support
to
advantage,
not
imagery"
Muslim allies (who were
civilian
large
they
nor
do
we can, because they
target
1993
them
all
in
"War
on
Terror"
a
ing
defeated until 724 A.D. in
political
objecfor
our
and sisters.
populations
WTC,
are
brothers
attack
on
the
to
after
the
first
Poitiers, France) has sought
the war as
a
tives.
Let
them
spike
fight
in
get
big
and
that
he
did
subjugate
conquer other lands,
attack
on
the
WTC
The first
they see fit, and don't call it anyother peoples, and establish the polls after his missle attack
a
"criminal"
pursued
was
as
thing less than what it is.
pharmaceutical
a
Sudanese
on
colonial empires.
and
achieved
convictions.
matter
the
Monica
during
do
the
various
plant
So where
Fine. We can all see the eventual
Tom Justice
countries of the world come off Lewinsky affair.
enemy was greatly
result.
The
evidence
that
there
is
no
American
But
foreign
in criticizing
impressed by our myoptic vision
~Letters to theEditor do not
policy, particularly when they President Bush has been that calweakness.
It
merely
and
our
at
glimpse
Second,
a
so
often
been
the
wrong
culating.
in
have
reflect the opinions of the Eagle
a
further
attack
on
invited
referring
on
argues
against
history
need
reflect
only
past? (One
Eye Staff or its associates~
the tepid European response to
the rise of Nazi Germany.)
Is it perhaps their fear that
we may behave as they have? It
is true that our defense budget
exceeds that of the next nine
...
not
countries.
Thank God!
France christened its first nuclear powered
aircraft carrier last summer, and
it had to be towed back to port.
Can the Europeans depend upon
the French Navy in any crisis?
Ofcourse not.
Europeans decry our outlays
for defense, but they are the first
to call upon us to expend our
military resources. Sorties by
American planes in Bosnia far
outnumbered those from all
other countries combined.
So, ofcourse, we spend more
on our military while our allies
do not spend their fair share.
The cynical truth, again, is that
our European allies need and
depend upon American military
might. American muscle allows
DEAD or
I
DlONlH
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Gjet wvtr tickets...
Starting March 25th
Check your numbers daily
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OPEN 11:00am to 3:00pm
March 22, 2002
Eagle Eye
Page 6
Plays define black and white
Kristin White
Eagle Eye Staff Reporter
satirical, animated interpretation
in "Black Comedy."
The opening minutes of
"White
Liars" features a conver"White Liars" and "Black sation between a
German forComedy" opened to a full house
tuneteller,
played
by Tiffany
Wednesday evening in the Smeal,
and
the
of her onespirit
Countdown Theater in Sloan,
lover,
time
voiced
by David
exposing the truth of humans
Ferry.
through the habitual lies they tell
Smeal's German accent, couand offering a medley of philowith a classic gypsy-like
pled
sophical insights and comic
countenance, is convincing and
the audiWhile each of the one-act she successfully lulls
ence into believing that she is
plays, written by Peter Shaffer,
parleying with a supernatural
sought to reveal the consebeing rather than responding to a
quences of lies and deceit, the
system behind the curtain.
sound
structures differed dramatically,
cast seamlessly incorpoThe
presenting the audience with a
rates the internal thoughts of
revealing portrayal of human
characters, also voiced through a
nature in "White Liars" and a
speaker, to convey the psycho-
logical struggle caused by lies
and the disarmed confusion and
guiltresulting in their discovery.
Peter Sulewski and Jason
Parker play Frank and Tom, two
customers who initiate a humorous and thought-provoking
chain of revelations that takes
each character on a journey of
At the play's climax, it is difficult to distinguish the truth
from the elaborate fiction each
character has created and the
audience becomes involved,
learning as the characters do the
lies and hypocrisy entangled in
reality.
The first five minutes of
"Black Comedy" take place in
complete darkness until a power
outage illuminates the stage. In
a unique twist, the lighting system works in reverse. When the
stage lights are on, the charac-
ters are unable to see.
When an actor lights a match
or turns on a flashlight, the stage
actually darkens, yet the characters can see clearly. The unusual concept establishes the situational premise for the entire play
and acts metaphorically as a curtain concealing and revealing
the truth.
According to student director Rich Smith, the greatest challenge in presenting "Black
Comedy" was performing a
highly active play in the limited
See "Play", pg. 7
\\\m TTw SmfSt
Da we Kubarek/The Eagle Eye
Peter Sulewski plays "Frank" in "White Liars."
former student
Zimmerli's tradition to be continued
Sumer Buttorff
Eagle Eye Staff Reporter
March is nationally recognized as women's history
month. At this time, we celebrate the accomplishments of
influential women of the past
and reflect on the extraordinary
women who have been an inspiration in our lives.
In celebration of women
everywhere, the Eagle Eye will
honor the lives and achievements ofremarkable women in
LHU history by remembering
their stories.
Dr. Elizabeth Zimmerli (19041994)
She was named the "first
lady" of health and physical
education in Pennsylvania.
Also referred to as a "master
teacher," the zealous and confident Dr. Elizabeth Zimmerli
was a distinguished administralor
who demanded perfection
I
and achieved notable successes
miles ahead ofher time.
Zimmerli, for whom the
Zimmerli Gymnasium was
named, was a professor of
health and physical education at
LHU from 1946 to 1966.
During her time at LHU,
Zimmerli was the only woman
in the state of Pennsylvania to
hold the title of Director of
Physical Education in a department including both men and
women, at a time when the
departments were often separated. Also, she was the first
woman to serve as President of
the Pennsylvania State
Association for Health, Physical
Education, and Recreation
(PSAHPER), now PSAHPERD.
She was also recognized to
have "served with distinction"
as the only woman Specialist of
Health and Physical Education
in the Pennsylvania Department
of Public Instruction.
A recipient of countless
awards and honors, Zimmerli
was an apparent pioneer of her
time. When recognized by
PSAHPERin 1951, she was
referred to as "a person of outstanding personal and professional integrity" and as a
woman "who has been an
example of an inspiration to all
who have been privileged to
know her."
Zimmerli's high expectations, stern but practical policies, demanding objectives and
dedication were the fuel that
motivated her students to recog-
nize and achieve the qualities
necessary to become ideal educators.
Zimmerli's passion for
teaching future educators still
lingers in the hearts of her students today. So inspired by her
college teacher, Dr. Nan Wood,
professor of health and physical
education at LHU and ex-student of Zimmerli, dedicated the
topic of her master thesis to the
work of "Elizabeth K.
Zimmerli: A Master Teacher
and Administrator of Physical
Education at Lock Haven State
College from 1946 through
1966."
"I respected her as a person
and an educator," Wood said.
"Much of what I have done professionally I have used her as a
role model."
Other students who had
Zimmerli called her "one ofthe
best," "inspirational," "challenging," "thorough," "well-organized" and "most professional."
Another called her "rough" and
said, "She knew her stuff and
insisted that each student learn
or perish."
While Wood was a student
at LHU, she worked as a secretary for Zimmerli's secretary.
Wood recalls the mere presence
of Zimmerli in the room caused
her to become anxious. "When
she appeared, it would make me
really nervous," she said. With
schoolwork, "I never wanted to
hand in anything but the very
best," which is what was
demanded from a teacher of this
caliber.
Before her retirement in
1966, she designed the Zimmerli
Gymnasium. "She had very specific ideas about what she wanted," Wood said. The college
yearbook was dedicated in her
honor the year she retired. The
facility was completed four
years later.
After Zimmerli retired,
Wood kept in touch with
Zimmerli who resided at a retirement home in Santa Barbara
until her death in 1994.
Those who knew her remember her active lifestyle. In her
earlier years, she was often seen
pedaling to and from class on a
bicycle. She was even reported
to have ridden her bike to a professional function while wearing
a white dress and high heels.
Speed walking was another
favorite Zimmerli activity.
Specific walking routes mapped
out according to time were characteristic of her organized
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nature.
Zimmerli was a motivation
for Wood to achieve while she
was a student. Now, Zimmerli's
principles inspire Wood as an
educator. "I still remember the
three words she told us to use as
a teacher," Wood said. "They
are firm, fair and friendly. Dr.
Zimmerli always said not to
make rules unless you intend to
keep them."
Zimmerli retired from LHU
at the age of 62. Wood will
retire in 2005, at the same age.
[
KUZAttfiTH K
Photo courtesy of Praeco student yearbook
"Referred to as a "master teacher," the zealous
and confident Dr. Elizabeth Zimmerli was a distinguished administrator who demanded perfection
and achieved notable successes miles ahead of
her time."
Coincidently, when Wood
becomes chairperson of the
department in May, she will be
the first woman to serve as chair
of the health and physical education after Zimmerli.
March is Women's History Month
"An actress can only play a woman. I'm an actor,
can play anything."
Whoopi Goldberg, quoted on the Today
■
March 22-28
Upcoming events
■■■■
Monday, March 25 @ 7:45 p.m.
WWF Raw
Live telecast!
Friday, April 5 @ 7 p.m.
Dave Matthews Band
SOLD OUT!
Saturday, April 13 @ 7:30 p.m.
Kenny Chesney
with special guests Sara Evans, Phil Vassar, and Carolyn Dawn Johnson
Friday, April 19 @ 8 p.m.
Nelly and the St. Lunatics
Tickets go on sale Saturday, March 23 at 10 a.m.
East Main Street
Lock Haven
www.roxymovies.com
Hotline: 748-ROXY
I
Thursday, April 25 to Sunday, April 28
Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus
Tickets are available at the Bryce Jordan Ticket Center, select Uni-Mart ticket outlets,
Commonwealth Campus ticket outlets, or by calling 1-800-863-3336, or online at
Page 7
March 22, 2002
Nelly to perform locally
-
Photo courtesy of http://home01.wxs.nl
Nelly with special guest The St. Lunatics will be
performing at the Bryce Jordan Center on Friday,
April 19 at 8:00 p.m.
UNIVERSITY PARK, PA St.
Louis-based MC Nelly began
his hip-hop career in the early
'90's with the St. Lunatics, who
scored a regional hit in 1996
with the single "Gimme What
Ya Want." Though they tried to
get a record deal as a group, the
Lunatics decided Nelly would
have better luck as a solo artist;
soon after, he was signed by
Universal Records. His 2000
album,
debut
Country
Grammar, featured contributions from the St. Lunatics as
well as from the Teamsters, Lil'
Wayne, and
Cedric the
Entertainer. The album features
the mega-hit, "Ride Wit Me",
along with "#1", and "Country
Grammar." Most recently, Nelly
has
collaborated
with
*NSYNC's Justin Timberlake
on Nelly's new release called
Nellyville, that is scheduled to
hit the airwaves in the Spring.
Fans can expect to hear some of
the new materials as well as
their favorite hits when he performs at the Bryce Jordan
Center on Friday, April 19th.
Lighting plays a key role
Play From Page 6
space
Theater.
of
the
Countdown
The cast, however, brilliantly choreographed their movements
and timing to appear as
though the events were occurring in the dark.
The confined quarters actually enhanced the physical
humor of the conflict. Frequent
lighting transitions integrated
into the script worked well to
remind the audience of the concept and heightened the comedy.
The play involves the disastrous
culmination of a starving artist
attempting to impress his
fiancee's militant father and
entice a rich art collector by
stealing his flamboyantly gay
neighbor's furniture.
The confusion and hilarity
begin when the lights go out and
only escalate for the poor antihero when his mistress arrives,
his neighbor returns early and
the electrician is mistaken for
the art collector.
"White Liars" and "Black
Comedy" will be performed at 8
p.m. in the Countdown Theater,
Sloan 321, through March 23.
Society projects a slim image
Disorders From Page 1
People today seem to think that
women are the only ones faced
with eating disorders, when
actually one in every ten cases
of eating disorders involves a
male.
"Men are trying to bulk up
these days, where women are
trying to slim down," commented LaSalle.
Many advertisements placed
in magazines today may lie or
show
misleading
advertise-
ments, just to lure the reader into
thinking they have something
wrong with their body.
Magazines can target every
part of a person's body, from
telling them they can lose more
weight with their diet pills, or
enhance the size of their bust in
a certain amount of days. "If you
don't read the magazines you
would never know these ads
would exist.
The adv
are trying to tell the reader that they
need to purchase their product,
because a specific part of their
body isn't good enough,'
LaSalle said. A quick movie
was presented to the group
showing how computers can distort and change the images o
models in magazines.
Photos are shot three months
ahead of time, so they can have
a chance to make them look just
perfect. The cover alone of a
magazine can increase the sales
by 60 percent.
That is why so much time is
\\m
taken out to make these models
in the magazines look perfect.
Kathy Petroff, nurse manager of
health services at Penn State
University, described the different ways of approaching someone you think might be dealing
with an eating disorder.
"The main thing is that you
want to let them know that they
could be in danger, but you must
be sensitive. Stick with them as
a friend, and help them to help
themselves by making sure they
She managed to steal
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There is a support group on
campus held every other
Thursday, on the second floor of
the library. The next meeting
will be on April 4, at 7:00 p.m.
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Mary Arden Collins sang and played guitar in the PUB lobby on Thursday,
March 21 at 7 p.m. She performed songs from her first album, as well as previewed songs from her next upcoming album. Watch for a story on her performance in next week's Eagle Eye.
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10. Enrique Iglesias "Escape"
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4. Brooks & Dunn "The Long
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4. MUSIC: What does the musical direction "veloce"
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~ Every day, a single private company prints $137 million a day. Play money, that is — for the game Monopoly.
~ President James Garfield could write Latin with one hand and Greek with the other — simultaneously.
Carrie, Hope programming
goes better for you this
week. We should have a
Students:
Scholarship Available.
Do you plan on attendin
LHUP, Penn State (including
PA College ofTechnology),
Lycoming College, Bucknell
University or any of their
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 application for a Mary Ann Fox
scholarship. Applications are
available in the office of the
President in 202 Sullivan Hall
deadline for the return
tpplications is April 9, 2002.
Positions Available in
Career Services:
Peer Career Facilitators for the
2002-03 academic year.
Will assist students with career
exploration strategies and job
search techniques. Strong interpersonal and communication
skills required. Minimum GPA
of2.5 preferred. Must complete
training which will be held
week of August 19th. This is a
paid position based on LHU's
work study/campus employment pay scale. Complete job
description and application
available in Career Services,
Akeley 114.
Application Deadline:
Friday, April 5, 2002.
3 Bedroom Duplex, student
housing, inc. heat, garbage,
water, Near college. 748-5230
2 Bdrm., recently remodeled
1st floor apt. w/ nice yard &
patio within 1 mi. from univ.
Includes heat, w/s, garbage,
care,
lawn
appliances.
Within 1 mi. from univ.
Prefer 3 students ($230 ea.)
Call 570-748-6059
LOCK HAVEN:
1 BEDROOM, CLOSE TO COLLEGE. INCLUDES WATER,
SEWAGE, GARBAGE...
$340 PER MONTH PLUS
SECURITY DEPOSIT.
CALL 745-3565
K-Rock: Where the heck
have you been? Call me
sometime so we can go to
the bar! Love, NikiNicole
movie night sometime this
weekend! Keep up the good
work with Tri Sigma!!
Sigma Love and all of mine,
Shan
Heather: I hope you had a
wonderful spring break!
How are the wedding plans
coming along? Love,
NikiNicole
Little Secret Cookie
Monster, I miss you! We
have to hang out sometime!
TLAM and Cookie love,
Andrea
Leigh- You and I will
always be Ms. Panhellenic!
Andrea
Whoa man! We burnt that
all the way to the bottom?
Anyone who wishes to participate in the athletic training golf tournament and has
a team of 4 ready to go...
please contact Patti at 7480543.
I LOVE SUGAR!!
Mixer, Irish Accent,
Jameson, theft, Resisting
Arrest, Porcelain nap, and
Pancakes in the morning!
Happy St. Patricks Day!
Little Kristin- Hang in
there! I love you! Turtle
love, Andrea
I shot a gun!
Little Angel JanetteCongrats on receiving your
big sister!
Trisha: 1 can't wait to cause
trouble with you this weekend! -Nicole
Jill and Tina, Hope you
guys have a relaxing and
enjoyable weekend! Sigma
Love, Shan
Alpha Sigma Phi brothersThanks for a great Sat.
night! I miss hanging out
with you guys, so we have
to do it more often!
Love, Andrea
Congrats to the new members of IK on receiving
your Bigs! Keep up the
good work!
Congratulations to the new
members, including my
Little Valerie! Lots of Love!
SLAM, Katie
Angela H- Any questions?
Classifieds Wanted
Classifieds Wanted
Classifieds Wanted
Classifieds Wanted
Classifieds Wantec
Classifieds Wanted
Classifieds Wanted
Classifieds Wanted
Alpha Sigma Tau, What a
ST. Patty's day! AXP
Yes...Ang does!! haha...
TLAM, Andrea
Leigh-volleyball was great!
Let's do it again! SLAM,
Meghan
AXP-The Pot Luck was
awesome, you guys know
how to have a good time!
Love, the sisters of IK
Lora- Congrats! Have fun
over seas!! We'll miss you
next year. Love, your
Uncoordinated,
Unsophisticated, and
UnAshamed friends!
Amy -1 love you Little,
have a great weekend!
ZLAM, Bailey
Trisha- What would I do
without you? Glad that you
had a blast this weekend!
Andrea
Thanks for the breakfast
ladies. @1 Jump Street
Jamie, You're doing a great
job this semester. Keep up
the good work! Have a
relaxing weekend! Sigma
Love, Shannon
-
Jason- You sure you want to
work with me on the election box? Hahaha, just kidding. Andrea
When are we going bowling
again? Andrea
J- Thank you, thank you,
thank you for listening to
me with all my rambling.
Meghan- next time we need
to use a REAL volleyball!
SLAM, Leigh
Delti pi is the apple in my
eye. -AXP
Health Science ClubBe thinking about nominations for executive board
coming up! Andrea
Hi Donn!
Kelly and Ang - I miss you
two! We need to hang out
this weekend! ZLAM,
Bailey
AITs and AXP's play kings
like nobody knows. -AXP
VOTE STRICKLER, BENNETT AND DETWEILER
Have a great weekend LHU!
Love, Alpha Sigma Tau
Amber- I'm so glad that
you're back and having a
great time...I told you that
"the feeling" wouldn't last
long! TLAM and Fearless 4
love, Andrea
Congratulations on receiving your Bigs to the new
members of IK! Love,
AXP- Hope you appreciate
the clean floor!!
Good luck to all candidates
for SCC Executive Board!
Amy, Hope you have a great
weekend. Take it easy and
relax! You're doing a great
job in Tri Sigma!! Sigma
Love and all of mine,
Shannon
Tri Sigma, Excellent job
with the fundraiser!! Sigma
Good luck Men's Lacrosse!!
We'll be cheering for you
like last week! Love, The
Taus
Love, Shannon
Travis: Welcome to the Otter
Family
Tye-Dye Secret: I miss you!
We need to hang out! I hope
you like the poster! Love
Your secret
ACR & SK "Pot Luck
Dinner"! Great Time!
Lovely hand-crafted glasseshope you all liked them!
JellyBean and her #4
Love, Melissa
Becky and Sammy- Thanks
for everything this semester
Lucas, you will always be
as well as last semester!
Becks- don't worry about
breaking the glass. Andrea
my innocent little boy, no
matter what you may do!!
Love, Leigh
BJ, I love you with all my
heart baby. KML
Men's Lacrosse- Can't wait
until tomorrow! Love, Alpha
Sigma Tau
Imagine the ticket smut and
No more Valley Girls,
the mailman.
Hamster- HAHA! Not
again! Sorry that I didn't
scream your name across
campus on Monday...I was
sick. Andrea
Meghan and Melissa, we
shouldn't be allowed near
THAT shower anymore!
SLAM, Leigh
Marcus: Another day closer
and another day stronger. I
miss talking to you every
day. All my smiles to you
and you're in my thoughts
and prayers.
J- should we catch some
more violent and aggressive
sports? Thanks for listening
to me.
E It? A I Is
to
bflicke^lbup.ecju
before Tuesday 3 p.m.
Please label the subject
personals'.
In the PUB
2 daily soups
new breakfast items
Monday-Friday 8:00am to 4:00pm
Watch for more upcoming events!
Happy day to you TOK and
Tara-1 hope all is well and
that you two are full of
smiles. Maybe I will bump
into you soon.
your personals
Meghan
SOW OFIEEIIfi:
daily specials
good weekend!! Sigma
Carrie, Kerri, & Adrienne,
Kristy- Thanks for the
wings! I loved them!
TLAM, Andrea
Nicole- Glad that we were
able to talk about stuff
again. I miss you! Andrea
Craig Miller, Jr. -I need my
times for the boxes again!
Andrea
the super work! Have a
He built a bomb!!
410, Hope you ladies have a
great weekend! Great job
with the fundraiser this
week! Sigma Love, Shannon
Little Angel Shannon- Keep
up the great work! I love ya!
sweetie.
Kelli
Good Luck in the election
Ron, Brian and Michelle!
-Nicole N.
Congratulations new members, I love you Little
Janette! SLAM, Kelly
Kate, You're doing a great
job this semester! Keep up
Why are their sticks different sizes? That's just the
way the world works,
Love, Shannon
Kristy: It's better for my
family to rise to the top than
sink to the bottom! TLAM
Nicole
SCC Senator of the Week!
You rock., just like BON
JOVI! Sigma Love and all
of mine, Shannon
Vote Alpha Sigma Tau for
the best tattoo contest!
Beck Keep up the work
and it will all work out!!
Hi Jorge: are you very jorging today? I hope so, I need
you!!! Your baby is waiting
for you. Kisses
Kristen, Congrats for getting
recognized as last week's
Kate and Jenn-1 love you
guys! Good luck with your
tests, etc...this week! Oh, I
do have more stories about
him!! :) TLAM, Andrea
March 23rd
311
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March 24th @ 7:00 pm
March 22, 2002
Page
Six boxers claim titles at ECBA Championships
Mussachio wins fourth straight
strong third round to beat the
t
.•-1
eastern title,
Eight Bald Eagles 6 5 Ldet
Jelev earned two standing
.
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eariy in the third
eight
total advance to National Finals round counts
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The boxing team crowned
six Eastern Collegiate Boxing
Association (ECBA) champions Sunday afternoon in the
ECBA championships at the
White PE Building on the
campus of PSU.
Army and PSU also
claimed three individual titles
Boxers from eight
each.
ECBA schools including
perennial powers LHU, PSU,
and Army along with Coast
Guard Academy, Mansfield,
Shippensburg, UM-Baltimore,
and VMI qualified boxers for
the ECBA's.
The champion and runnerup in each of the 12 weight
divisions along with selected
"wild-cards" advance to the
National Collegiate Boxing
Association (NCBA) finals to
be held at the U.S. Naval
Academy, Annapolis, MD, on
April 4-6.
The Bald Eagles led the
teams with qualifiers advancing six champions, one runner-up and one and possibly
two third place wild-card
selections.
The Bald Eagles defending
185 lb. national champion,
Chuck Mussachio dropped
down to 175 lbs. and earned
his fourth consecutive eastern
title with a relatively easy 5-0
decision over Army's Tom
Sommers, last year's 175 lb.
eastern champ.
Mussachio, a clever boxer,
used his rapid fire left jab and
scored three standing eight
counts over the match but outclassed the Cadet. Mussachio
decisioned (5-0) VMI's Bill
Sinkinson in Saturday's semifinals. Mussachio's career
record improves to 26-6.
The Bald Eagles' two other
i
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national champions, John
Stout, 125, and Comanche
Garcia, 139, also claimed
titles. Stout, a junior and Lock
Haven, PA, native with a 21-3
career record earned his third
consecutive eastern title with a
walk-over win. Garcia the exMarine from Bellwood, PA
dropped from his usual 147 lb.
division down to
139 and
pummeled PSU's Matt Haley,
5-0 to earn his second eastern
title.
Garcia, a senior with a 2011 career record proved to be
too strong and quick for the
Nittany Lion.
Gus Pugliese proved to be
a pleasant surprise for the
Bald Eagle coaching staff
when he won the 132 lb. title
with a hard earned 4-1 decision over Army's Fred Kim.
To reach the finals,
Pugliese edged PSU's Randy
Dalbey, 3-2, in a very close
bout in the semi-finals.
Pugliese, a junior who hails
from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,
continues to show improvement with each bout and could
be a force to reckoned with at
nationals.
The Bald Eagles star junior
college transfer, Miro Jelev,
185, from Stara Zagora,
Bulgaria, had to get off the
canvas in the first round to
outdistance Army's rugged
Duane Mantle in one of the
most exciting bouts in the
finals.
Earning his seventh victory
a
and body combinations and
pulled away to secure the
unanimous decision and title.
The Bald Eagles sixth
champion was sophomore Art
Tusil who was awarded a
walk-over win to gain the 112lb. title.
Earning the runner-up spot
at 156-pounds and a trip to the
nationals for the Bald Eagles,
was
promising freshman
Derrick McGraw from North
Philadelphia.
McGraw gave defending
national champion, PSU's
Alex Komlev all he could handle in one of the night's most
exciting bouts.
The rangy McGraw won
the first round using a solid
jab and connecting on several
straight rights.
However, the more experienced Nittany Lion who hails
from the Ukraine, came on
strong in the last two rounds to
garner a hard-earned 5-0 decision.
Two Bald Eagles garnered
third place medals along with
wild-card consideration. Lock
Haven native, Jeff Raymond,
147, and Dave Good, 165, will
know their fate late next week
when the NCBA Selection
Committee determines their
choices following the MidWest and Far-West Regional
Tournaments.
It is believed Raymond, a
Lock Haven native and senior
with 13 bouts, has an excellent
chance of receiving a wildcard selection.
PSU's national 147 lb.
champion, Nathan LaBuda in
1:51 of the second round
stopped Raymond in a competitive semi-final bout. He
came back to beat Army's
Wilson Dos Santos for 3rd
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the early lead with a wrist shot
through the legs of Sodano at
the 13:27 mark of the first
half.
Lock Haven finally got on
the board with 4:13 left in the
half with a goal by Steve
Campbell. Campbell picked
up a rebound in front of the
net and roofed over the shoulder of Gill.
Helsman gave Lock Haven
the lead with 1:35 remaining
after he wristed a shot over the
glove of Gill.
Zwierzyna had a chance to
give Lock Haven a 3-1 lead
before halftime, but Gill made
great glove save to rob
Zwierzyna on the breakaway.
Lock Haven put pressure
on Dare from the drop of the
puck for the second half. Gill
faced a battering of shots
before Kurt Blattner finally
managed to get one past Gill
1:38 into the half.
With a 3-1 lead, Lock
Haven fell into a defensive
mode to slow down Dare.
Jim Warner broke through
the defensive pressure and
used a wrist shot to beat
Sodano through the fivehole
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Miles Rivas, 5-0, in the semifinals and came back Sunday
to beat VMI's Sven Jensen for
third place.
In the post tournament
interview, Bald Eagle Head
coach, Dr. Ken Cox and his
assistant, Ken Cooper were
very pleased with the team's
effort and performance.
"We boxed beyond our
expectations," stated Cox,
"and I hope we continue to
remain focused and pursue the
selves back in September."
"Our
team
members
believe we have a legitimate
shot at winning not only individual titles, but also the team
title," commented Comanche
Garcia.
"The coaches have worked
long and hard with us in order
to give us the chance to challenge for national titles and
become Ail-Americans," stated team captain, Chuck
Mussachio.
"In order to challenge our
big four 'Garcia, Mussachio,
Jelev, and myself must make
goals we established for our-
the finals and get help from
place.
Good, a junior, with only
six career bouts, lost to PSU's
,
to bring Dare
within one at 3-
2.
Defensively Lock Haven
was successful at preventing
Dare
from
getting
the other team members in
order to put ourselves in position to challenge," stated
Stout.
"We're well aware that
besides USMA and PSU that
Air Force, Navy, UN-Reno
and UN-Las Vegas have strong
teams again with the luck of
the draw playing a big factor
in the outcome," remarked
Cooper.
"Finally, we must now
focus on the next two and a
halfweeks of tough conditioning and technique," concluded
Dr. Cox.
Bench Press
Competition
good
sponsored by the Interfraternity
chances until the late penalties
resulted in the game-tying
goal. For the game Lock
Haven outshot Dare 27-21.
"With a 3-2 lead playing
soft and defensively may have
hurt us," said Scott Harmon.
"We should have kept pressing."
With just two games
remaining before the playoffs
the two teams will attempt to
break the tie and capture the
third seed.
and
the
Bloomsburg
Woodpeckers (6-2) have
clinched the first and second
seeds, and first round byes.
The Predators (0-7-1) are
guaranteed the sixth seed.
Lock Haven plays the
Predators next week, and finish the season against the
Dare plays
Woodpeckers.
Bloomsburg and the Titans.
The Titans play the
Woodpeckers before their season finale against Dare.
Saturday, March 23 @ 2 p.m.
Rogers Gym
Registration begins at 1:30
p.m.
$5 entry fee due at registration
*Prizes will be awarded to 1st,
2nd and 3rd places.
For more information contact
Ryan Thayer at
rthayer@lhup.edu
corporate ladder
CHIROPRACTIC &
REHABILITATION
STUDENT RENTALS AVAILABLE
CENTER
Now leasing for Fall 2002.
One & two bedroom apartments available.
Tneatiog the Students of. LHU for
OoeR40YeaR8
Most AUInsuruioes
Most utillities included,
monthly or semester payment plans
24 hour maintenance service
and a friendly staff
A00€ptOd
Most Students
Cowed Under
Parents Insurance
Flans
Call for your personal showing today!
In the course of facing challenges like this, you'll learn how
to think on your feet. Stay cool under pressure. Take charge.
Talk to an Army ROTC rep. Vdtt'H find there's nothing like a
for getting to the top.
Mttle climbtag to hetp
ARMY ROTC
Unlike any other college coarse 70a can take.
«0Jb1
-photo courtesy of Boxing Club
after this, the
[cake]
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Six boxers won ECBA Titles last Week. Front Row, John Stout, 125; Art
Tasil, 112; Comanche Garcia, 139; Gus Pugliese, 132. Back Row: Chuck
Mussachio, 175 and Miro Jelev, 185. A possible total of eight Bald Eagles will
be heading to Annapolis for the NCBA National Championships on April 4-6,
as Jeff Raymond and Dave good may earn wild cards next week.
Roller hockey team picks up a point
Late penalties cost the
Lock Haven roller hockey
team a victory, but a strong
effort from goalie Kevin
by Adam
Sodano allowed the Haven to
Swarr
come away with a tie against
Dare Tuesday night in
With 1:35 of power play
Williamsport.
time, Dare had an opportunity
The point for each team
game, but the Bald
moved them into a three-way to win the
kill team held
Eagles'
penalty
tie for third with the Titans.
off Dare's pressure.
Lock Haven (3-5-1), Dare (2"We took too many stupid
3-3), and the Titans (3-4-1) all
penalties at the wrong time,"
have 7 points.
was a
The Titans fell to first said Zwierzyna. It
most
place Bloomsburg (7-1 14pts). thought agreed with by
of the Lock Haven team.
Nursing a 3-2 lead late in
After winning their last
the game, Lock Haven got
two games the loss left mixed
called for two penalties that
'feelings among the Haven.
proved costly.
We
Steve Campbell was called "It's a heartbreaker.
them, but a
should
have
beaten
for tripping with three minutes
then a loss," said
remaining. On the ensuing tie is better
power play, Dare's Stan Smith Rhett Markle. "The other
team just got a really good
fed a pass from the corner to
on their last goal."
Jim Warner. Warner had been break
Lock Haven had an opporleft alone in front of the Bald
as time
Eagle net, and he easily tunity shorthanded
chipped the pass past Sodano expired. Randy Helsman and
Fry broke in alone on
for a game-tying goal with just Josh
Dare goalie Jason Gill.
2:02 left.
pass to Fry just
Thirty seconds later, the Helsman's
as
time
expired.
Haven's Nate Zwierzyna was missed
Tim Chrisnall gave Dare
called for a roughing penalty.
at
II
Locations close to campus still available
Stop by our office:
121 W. Church St., Lock Haven
or call us at:
748-8550
L
V«b P. WIm DC
RDbertCWiMrJtC
SoottT. DuMoti DC
VfS
/jr
5 West Main St.
Look Haven
11
March 22,2002
Men's Lax wins season opener
The men's lacrosse team is
gearing up for their second
against
game
division
Shippensburg this Saturday at
2 p.m. at Jack Hubert Stadium.
The team, coming off an
11-3 victory in their first game
of the season against Juniata,
is heading into the game with
high spirits.
The offense is playing an
explosive game so far this season.
Exploding into double digits for the first time in four
years, the lacrosse team is
7* tie 0tea4e
*
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WIker
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Eagle Eye Coturonwt
making quite an impression in
their division.
Offensive attack men Cory
Swartz and Tom Hammond
will be looked upon to put the
heat on the Shippensburg
defense.
At midfield, face-off man
Ron Strickler will be tough to
goalie Brian
Veteran
Buttari is also holding the
defense strong with an 80 perThe last time Shippensburg
up with Lock Haven was
in the spring of last year where
the Red Raiders posted an 8-2
win.
This Saturday's match up
is sure to be full of fast-paced,
hard-hitting action.
met
Men's rugby defeat Clarion
Eric Pfeiffer
Eagle Eye Columnist
The rugby team made the
long trip to Clarion University
Saturday to face the Golden
36-22.
winning
Eagles,
Clarion started on a quick
drive that caught the Haven on
their heels and got a quick
score, putting the score to 0-5.
The Haven answered in
traditional fashion with a
score by Randy Helsman, and
extra kick just minutes later
by Seth Keller, bringing the
score to 7-5 in favor of the
Haven.
Again in traditional Haven
play there was a score on a
penalty play by glory hound
Chuck Herling, putting the
Haven up 12-5. But the
Golden Eagles weren't done
yet, with a strong drive that
pushed the Haven back and
scored again making the extra
kick, tying the score at 12.
That acore ignited the
Haven offense and the Bald
Eagles quickly pounced onopportunity-after opportunity
with outstanding play late in
the first half another score by
Randy Helsman followed by a
breakaway score by Nick
Hoffman and an extra kick by
Roy, putting the Haven on top
24-12.
Then on another penalty
play Shaun "Rubber" Koren
flew through the Clarion
defenders for a try. Making the
score 29-12 just before the
half.
The second half didn't fair
as well for the Haven offense
but excellent play by the
defense held Clarion to only
two more scores in the half
closing the gap to 29-22. But
late into penalty time, the
Haven's Randy Helsman
scored the hat trick and
capped by the extra kick by
Seth Keller, closed the game
with a Haven victory, 36-22.
Lady ruggers remain undefeated
Lock Haven- With an
undeafeated fall season under
their belt, the women's rugby
club was ready to explode into
the new season this past
Saturday.
After finishing first in
Division II at the Eastern
Pennsylvania Rugby Union
(EPRU) Championship last
semester, the lady ruggers
have high hopes for repeating
their appearance at Nationls
from the following spring
2001.
Stepping onto the field on
Saturday, LHU was excited
for their first game but a bit
nervous due to the fact that the
last time they faced York
College was at the championships the previous semester.
The lady ruggers' confidence grew within the first ten
minutes when returning verteran Amy Daniels maneuvered her way over York's try
line to score. Fullback Vicki
Hoover followed the try with a
two-point conversion making
the score, 7-0.
Working together, LHU's
wing and pack managed to
keep most of the action near
York's try zone which gave
Daniels the opportunity to
score another try.
In an attempt to progress
"P the field, York kicked the
ball right into the arms of
LHU's winger BC who then
managed to surpass York's
defense and right into their try
zone to end the first half, 17-0.
During the second half,
Daniels scored two more times
for a personal total of 20
points. Fellow teammate
Jaime Ambrosio sprinted
aroung York's defense for a
try as her pack supported her.
Kris Stanczak's strong defensive tackling and quick offensive runs also helped lead
LHU to victory.
York scored one try within
the last ten minutes of the
game but the Haven wasn't
done racking up the points. In
the last play of the game,
rookie Alicia Garber socred
for LHU ending the game, 375.
The next match will be
tomorrow in a MARFU quarterfinal game against William
and Mary of Maryland,
Kickoff is at 12 p.m. at the
West Branch Field, across the
river. Come support the lady
ruggers in their journey to
nationals.
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220 000 4 4 0
000 000 0 3 0
LockHaven
Lebanon Valley
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AB
2
2
Brett Kellcy ss
Butch Rudolph 3b 2
Ernest Woods dh 1
Matt 1snor c
3
Kevin Conklincf 3
John Hanna If
3
Rich Millerrf
3
Ben Eshelman lb 1
Chris Miller ph
1
Greg Aument lb 0
Eric Barrp
Gannon (1-10) 8
Matt Brickman ss
Andy Chalot lf/p
Nick Leslie dh
Frank Moore lb
Dave Tellers pr
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0
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LHU (8-13) 4
Eric Waltz 2b
P. Gnacinski ph/lb
D. Nitkiewicz rf
C. D'Agostino 3b
Brian Shaffer c
Mike Maxson 2b
Justin Lamanna cf
Frank Armeni ph/cf
Dale Daoust cf
Josh Leslie p
Heath Major p
Rich Chessario p/lf
Totals
Lebanon Valley 0
Hotchkins 2b
3
Zielkle 3b
3
Rink p/lf
Anspach If/p
Zellers rf
Schauren c
Martin ss
Worthington lb
Grieger cf
Totals
LHU
Eric Barr
IP H R ER BB SO
6.0 3 0 0 0 3
Lebanon Valley IP H R ER BB SO
LO 2 2 2 1 0
Rink
Anspach
5.0 2 2 2 4 2
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Gannon
LockHaven
LHU (7-13) 9
Eric Waltz 2b
Brett Kelley ss
Butch Rudolph 3b
Ernest Woods c
Matt Isnor lb
Brian Neitz pr.
Mike Vogt dh/lf
Kevin Conklin cf/p
Brian Eberly If/rf
Rich Miller rf/cf2
Ken Janisewski p
John Hanna ph
Ryan Varga p
Chad Schell p
Andy Leakey p
TotaIs27 9 9 9
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Win Barr. (1-1). Loss Rink
HB Rink.
Attendance: 32
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28
125- TRAP MCCORMACK
(Sr., Loganton, PaTBald Eagle
Nittany)
First Round: L, 8-0 vs. Ben
VomBaur (Boise State)
133-CHRIS SPEALLER (Sr.,
Paoli, Pa7Great Valley)
First Round: W, 8-4 vs. Jason
Harless (Oregon)
141- MIKE MANEY (So.,
Clarence, PaTBald Eagle Area)
First Round: W, 3-1 vs. Brad
Byers (North Carolina)
149- #3 JAMARR BILLMAN
(Sr., Easton, PaTEaston Area)
First Round: W, 12-3 Maj. Dec.
vs. Jason Mercado (Brown)
174- ED
0
3
3
2
2
0
0
-
Win VARGA, R. (3-3). Loss Chalot
(0-2). Save None.
WP Leslie, J, SCHELL. C. HB
Leslie, J, VARGA, R.. PB Shaffer.
-
-
-
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Campus headline news
Sports updates
Local weather forecast
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and much more
■
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your inbox.
First Round: L, 4-1 vs. #10 Ty
Wilcox (Oklahoma State)
184- JOSH MILLARD (Sr., Mill
Hall, PaTBald Eagle Area)
First Round: W, 7-5 vs. #9 Pat
Popolizio (Oklahoma State)
197- AVERY ZERKLE (Sr.,
Urbana, Ohio/Graham)
Pigtail Match: W, 8-4 vs. Jason
Gore (North Carolina State)
First Round: L, 3-1 vs. Chris
Jones (Drexel)
Baseball
from back page
Conklin added two hits,
including a homerun and three
RBIs.
Trailing 8-6 entering the
bottom of the seventh, Lock
Haven rallied for three runs to
pick up the win.
The baseball team went 31 this past week, knocking off
Susquehanna and Lebanon
Valley and splitting with
Susquehanna and Lebanon
Valley and splitting with
Gannon.
Rudolph led off with his
second homer to make it an 87 game. With one out, Isnor
doubled to centerfield. Brian
Neitz pinch ran for Isnor and
advanced to third on a groundout. Conklin delivered with a
two-out two-run shot to win
Gannon.
Conklin added two hits,
including a homerun and three
the game for LHU.
Ryan Varga (3-3) picked
up the win on the mound in
LHU
9
Susquehanna 0
and Heath
Repard combined for a no-hitter as Lock Haven shutout
Susquehanna 9-0.
Varga had 12 strikeouts in
eight innings of work, while
Varga worked the ninth and
Ryan Varga
added two more.
Woods led Lock Haven
with three hits, including a
relief.
homerun. Kelley, Conklin,
Brian Eberly added two Isnor, Vogt and Rudolph all
Trailing 8-6 entering the
bottom of the seventh, Lock hits and a pair of RBIs for added two hits in the win.
Haven rallied for three runs to LHU. Waltz, Brett Kelley, and Lock Haven had IS total hits
Isnor all added hits in the win. in
pick up the win.
the game. Miller and Neitz
team
went
Isnor
also recorded eight had the other hits for LHU.
The baseball
31 this past week, knocking off putouts in the field.
RBIs.
____
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Pepsi Arena, Albany, N.Y.
Day One Results
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NCAA Division I National
Championships
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Frida
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INSIDE
Six boxers
claimed
ECBA titles.
pg-io
Elite seven wrestle for national titles
-
Lock Haven
The
wrestling team traveled to
the Pepsi Arena in Albany,
N.Y., for the 2002 NCAA
I
Division
Wrestling
Championships
lasting
from March 21-23.
Haven Wrestling
finished the regular season
with a 17-4 dual meet mark
and finished third at the
Eastern Wrestling League
tournament.
The Bald
Eagles are ranked 13th in
the latest NWCA Top-25
poll and are unranked for
the first time this year in
the InterMat rankings.
Seven Bald Eagle grapplers made the trip to
Albany for the national
tournament after earning
automatic or wild card bids
for their performance pt
the EWL tournament.
Returning champions
from the University of
Minnesota remain one of
the favorites in this year's
team race, earning top ratings in the latest NWCA
and InterMat polls entering
into championship weekend.
Other
contenders
include the University of
Iowa,
of
University
Michigan, Oklahoma State
University, University of
Oklahoma, Iowa State
University, the University
of
Pennsylvania,
University of Missouri and
West Virginia University.
Individually, there will
be 330 competitors in
action. Four
national
champions from the 2001
tournament
return
in
Stephen Abas of Fresno
State at 125 pounds, Josh
Koscheck of Edinboro at
174
RiiBWi tank
,
Lock-,,.
Cael
pounds,
Sanderson of Iowa State at
197 pounds (3-time champion at 184), and John
*
WRESTLING
W 2002 DIVISIOK I
CHAMPIONSHIPS,
Lockhart of Illinois at
A grand total of 42 of
the 2001 season's AllAmericans also return to
dual for the individual and
team crowns.
125:TRAP
LHU
senior
Trap
McCormack makes his
fourth trip to the NCAA
Tournament after finishing
second at the EWL
Championship
(injury
default).
The senior Bald Eagle
is focused on making the
most of his final trip, having to wrestle with a knee
brace after suffering tears
to his ACL and MCL in the
final EWL tourney bout.
McCormack is currently
24-4 overall and is ranked
17th in the nation in the latest InterMat poll.
The field at 125 pounds
contains
three
AllAmericans, including twotime national champion
Stephen Abas of Fresno
State.
First
McCormack's
Round Opponent: #5 Ben
Vombaur (Boise State)
133: CHRIS SPEALLER
Chris Spealler earned
his first trip to the NCAA
tourney after finishing fifth
in the EWL championship
and receiving a wild card
berth into national competition.
A relentless worker,
has
battled
Spealler
through a mid-season ankle
injury to finish 15-8 overall. This year's 133 pound
weight class contains three
returning All-Americans.
Spealler's First Round
Opponent: Jason Harless
Mike Maney (141) finished one win away from Ail-American status last year. He returns
file photo
to nationals ranked 14th, looking to improve on his 5th place finish at EWL's this year.
149: ,1aVI ARK BILLMAN
Third-seeded
Bald
Eagle JaMarr Billman
became a two-time EWL
champion by breezing
through the competition
(Oregon)
last weekend, scoring a
fall and a technical fall
141: MIKE MANEY
before securing the firstMike Maney was one
place finish after a medwin away from All- ical forfeit in the champiAmerica honors last seaonship round.
son, going 2-2 in national's
the
season,
For
action.
Billman is 32-2 and is
Following a somewhat ranked third in the nation.
disappointing fifth-place Last season, he went 5-2 at
finish in the EWL tournathe national tournament,
ment, Maney is 23-6 on the finishing fifth for his secseason and carries a nationond All-America medal
al ranking of 14th. Six of after defeating Jared
last year's top-eight finish- Lawrence of Minnesota,
ers return to the mats at 141 7-4, in the final round.
pounds.
This year, Billman
Maney's First Round earned a third-seed for the
Opponent: Brad Byers national tournament, and
(North Carolina)
joins a group of five
Rangi, Hallman named PSAC
Indoor Track Rookies of the Year
-
Lock Haven
The
men's
and
women's
indoor track and field student-athletes
Brooke
Rangi and Paul Hallman
both earned selections as
the Pennsylvania State
Athletic
Conference
(PSAC) Indoor Track and
Field Rookie of the Year
as released by the conference office today.
Haven head coach
Mark Elliston was a twotime winner, garnering
and
PSAC
Men's
Women's Coach of the
Year honors.
Rangi won two individual events at the PSAC
Indoor Track and Field
Championships, provisionally qualifying for
nationals in both events,
and took fifth in another.
She won the 55-meter
hurdles with a PSAC
indoor and school-record
time of 8.28 and the high
jump by clearing 5-5 Va.
She took fifth in the long
jump with a leap of 17-1
Va.
Rangi is also a member of the Lock Haven
women's soccer team
which won PSAC and
NCAA Northeast Region
championships during the
2001 season.
Hallman played a key
role in helping the Bald
Eagles to the gold medal
in the first-ever men's
PSAC
Indoor
He won one individual
event, placed second in
another and was part of a
Jared Guest
first- and third-place
relays. Hallman won the
800 meters in a time of
1:57.20 and was second
in the mile with a time of
The women's softball
roll as
they pushed their win
steak to 10 games, beating Mansfield 2-1 and 20, Tuesday.
Lynnette Murray and
Janet Paterson
each
recorded an RBI. Lynn
Spezio went l-for-3 as
team continued to
4:23.17.
year
as
head
Paul Hallman
men's and wdmen's teams
first-place finishes in
the
inaugural PSAC
Indoor Track and Field
The
Championships.
men's team won by 19
points with three individto
did Kristen Tome to help
combine for the Haven's
(13-3) six hits.
The
184: JOSH MILLARD
Josh Millard returns for
his second go at AllAmerica honors, having
made his first-ever trip last
season. A third-place finish
at the EWL tournament
secured his spot on the 184pound bracket at nationals.
The senior Bald Eagle
boasts his best season winsperformance, carrying a 216 overall ledger, and is
ranked 18th in the latest
national poll.
The 184-pound bracket
contains five returning AllAmericans while 2001
national champion Cael
Sanderson has moved up
one weight class and is currently the number one seed
at 197 pounds.
Millard's First Round
Opponent: #9 Pat Popolizio
197: AVERY ZERKLE
Avery Zerkle will represent the Bald Eagles at 197
pounds after finishing fifth
at EWLs and earning a wild
card bid to nationals.
This is Zerkle's second
trip to the NCAA championships after earning his
first trip last season. The
LHU senior is currently 159 overall.
Three All-Americans
return to action at 197
pounds, including last
year's 184-pound champion
Cael Sanderson of Iowa
State.
Zerkle's First Round
Opponent: Pigtail Match
vs. Jason Gore (N.C. State)
A win in the pigtail match
would pit Zerkle against
Chris Jones of Drexel in
the first round.
strike out 10, but her
team could not make it
up.
Bald
Eagles
scored in the third and
plated the winning run in
the bottom of the sixth.
Kelly Deitrick went
the distance, giving up
four hits and striking out
three.
She keeps her
record undefeated at 7-0.
Mansfield's Alison
Tagliaferri managed to
P.J. Harmer
LHU scored two runs
each of the first two
in
Eagle Eye StaffReporter
innings for the only runs
The baseball team of the game. Matt Isnor
had an RBI single in the
went 3-1 this past week,
first
and Kevin Conklin
off
knocking
the second run
brought
and
Susquehanna
he reached on
home
when
Lebanon Valley and splita fielder's choice.
ting with Gannon.
Butch
Rudolph
the
third
run
brought
Lock Haven
4
home on a bases loaded
Lebanon Valley 0
walk,
while
Ernest
Woods had a sacrifice fly
Eric Barr scattered to close the scoring out.
three hits over six innings
Rudolph led Lock
to pick up the win on the
Haven with two hits. The
mound as Lock Haven Bald Eagles had four hits
upped its record to 8-13 in the game. Isnor and
on the year with the win Rich Miller had the only
over Lebanon Valley.
ual champions and two
relay champions.
The women's team
captured first by more
than 44 points and produced five individual
champions.
Elliston has been
named PSAC men's outdoor Coach of the Year
twice, in 1999-2000, and
in 1998-99, the year the
men's team won its first
in
Another of LHU's new
faces in the national tournament, is 174-pounder
Ed Pawlak.
Pawlak earned one of
LHU's four automatic bids
after finishing third at the
EWL championship with a
2-2 rideout victory over
Cleveland State's Gerald
Harris.
The Bald Eagle sophomore enters national competition with a 13-14 overall mark. Three of 200I s
All-Americans at 174
pounds return to competition this weekend.
Pawlak's First Round
Opponent: #10 Ty Wilcox
(Oklahoma State)
Lock Haven
Mansfield
2
0
In the second game,
the Bald Eagles capitalized on Mansfield's three
errors.
Tome added an
Murray continued
to be an offensive threat.
RBI.
as she went 2-for-3 with a
run scored.
Michelle
Boone
picked up the win. She
scattered four hits over
four innings, striking out
five.
LHU looks to the
Shippensburg
Tournament
starting
today through Sunday.
They host Shippensburg
for a 2:30 p.m. start on
Monday.
Sluggers go 3 1 on the week
coach,
directed Lock Haven's
Championship
174: ED PAWLAK
(Oklahoma State)
Softball sweeps Mansfield
Eagle Eye StaffReporter
He also was a part of
the 4x800 meter relay
team which took first in a
time of 7:59.35 and the
third-place distance medley relay team (10:35.10).
Elliston, in his 13th
returning All-Americans
in the weight class.
Billman's First Round
Opponent: Jason Mercado
(Brown)
Brooke Rangi
50
Mark Elliston
years.
-
other hits for LHU, which
took advantage of five
walks.
Lock Haven 1 9
Gannon
2 8
In
two
different
games, Lock Haven split
with Gannon. The Bald
Eagles lost the opener 21, but won the nightcap
9-8.
Gannon scored one
run in the top of the seventh on a sacrifice fly to
break open a 1-1 tie and
pick up the win in the
first game. This was
Gannon's first win of the
year.
Mike Vogt led Lock
Haven with two hits.
Eric Waltz, Conklin,
Isnor and Rudolph each
added hits for the Haven.
Dan Sowash (1-3)
suffered the loss in the
game; scattering four
hits over 6 1/3 innings of
work.
In the second game,
Rudolph had two homeruns and four RBIs to
lead the Bald Eagles to
the win.
see Baseball page 10
For the women, it was
the program's first track
and field conference
Sun, March 24
Mon, March 25
Tuts, March 26
Wed., March 27
M Sat, March 23
Today
Thurs, March 28
championship, indoor or
outdoor. The veteran
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