BHeiney
Thu, 07/06/2023 - 18:57
Edited Text
X

POISON X

"Where the crystal Susquehanna shimmers in the s u n . . . "
begins LockHaven State College's Alma Mater. Unfortunately,
the Susquehanna no longer shimmers because of pollution both
in the water and along the river banks.
Who allowed this to happen? We did. Citizens of Lock
Haven, Renovo, Jersey Shore, and numerous other cities and
towns along the Susquehanna who, through the y e a r s , were
not aware of the developing problem of pollution or preferred
to l e t the next generation take care of the problem.
Mining, one of Pennsylvania's leading industries in the
past, contributed mine acid to the stream which killed the fish
and polluted the river even more. Today few fish are found in
the Susqueharma, and those that have survived and adapted
themselves to the polluted water are unfit to eat. Lack of
fishing has resulted in the loss of revenue for cities and towns
along the river.
We can no longer continue to hand the problem over to the
next generation. The next generation has come and gone, and
and the problem still e x i s t s . Citizens of Lock Haven should
organize a committee to look into the problem and find out
what action h*s been taken by other towns along the river.
It may already be too late to restore the Susquehanna River to
what it once w a s , but it is not too late to begin the job of
ending ftirther pollution and cleaning up the once shimmering
r>"»r.

The disbursement of state tax funds is unfair to the s t a t e o ned c o l l e g e s . Right now, the fourteen state colleges with
over 57,000 students receive less public funds combined than
does one state-related institution, Pennsylvania State University with 43,000 students.
The state colleges are preparing over half of the teachers
to whom you, as parents, will entrust your children's education.
But PSU, with yotir tax d o l l a r s , , is preparing business executives and professionals who will require you to pay top dollar
for their s e r v i c e s .
It is not held accountable for its expenditures of state
money, while the fourteen state-owned colleges are strictly
managed and accountable for all expenditures.
Originally, state-owned colleges were established to instire quality educators for Pennsylvania at a minimum cost to
the student. As late as 1967 tuition was $250 pet year. However there have been two consecutive $100 i n c r e a s e s , with
another due this January.
A Pennsylvania State College
student is paying over $300 more per year than the national
average in tuition. Is this in keeping with the s t a t e ' s original
commitment? We think not!
Therefore, we call for two courses of action. First, a
larger portion of the s t a t e ' s income must be set aside for
education. Pennsylvania ranks 44th in percapita expenditures
in colleges and universities. We feel this is shameful for a
state wh 1 is otherwise one o f t h e most progressive. Second,
the statw government's responsibility to its constituents demands a reapportionment of public funds which would result in
larger revenues for those fourteen colleges owned and operatedby the state and its c i t i z e n s .
You can guarantee a good education for Pennsylvania's
children if you support the state c o l l e g e s ' need for fairer
disbursement of public funds.
Only then will the State of
Pennsylvania live up to its educational responsibility to the
citizen.

Print Project Amerika, which is s ^.in to be a national
collegiate magazine '//ill be d i s t r i b u t e d wit.*-; F r i d a y ' s Eagle
Eye. P / P Amerika is a s*udent magazine, published, e d i t e d ,
and w r i t t e n by students. It w i l ! be given out at ?C0 other
schools across the nation to a* least 500,000 stu:'''n"s and
and Eagle Eye agreed to GIVE it to the LHS stud^nis. rHo.-.'ever, they w i l l only send us enough copies for one-'cwr-n o*
the student enrollment, so there w i l l be a limi'ed n\j--:.er of
copies.

Trilogy Presented Next Week
The Humanities Film Series,
in its attempt to bring the most
outstanding international films
to campas, will present a trilogy
by the celebrated French films
directoi Jean-Lue. Godard on Dec.
15, 16, and 17 in Price Auditorium at 7:30 p . m.
The three films are Weekend,
Masculiiiue—Feminine
and
The
Riflemen.
Godard achieved international fame with his first feature
film Breathless,
which he made
in 1959 after several years writing for the influential French
critical joumal, Cahiers du Cinema.
Since then, he has firmly
established h i s reputation with
over 15 feature-length films a s
well a s several short subjects.
Richard Roud h a s described
Godai d as "not only the greatest director working in the
cinema today. . . but also one
of the most important artists
of our t i m e . " There is certainly
no doubt that he has influenced
a whole generation of filmmakers, as well a s many young
writers such as Donald Barthelme.
Godard's
films
describe
the world of the outsider - the
student
Masculine—Feminine,
the revolutionary Weekend, the
young hoodlum Breathless,
the
disillusioned warrior The Riflemen.
His films,
reflecting
today's society, are often fragmented, paradoxical, and selfcontradictory,
full of abrupt

alternations ar»d abstract elements. His characters will frequently wink at the camera, address tho audience or quote
a famous author, illustrating
Godard's approach to fiction
and truth: "Beauty and truth
have two poles: documentary
and fiction. . .My starting point
i s the documentary to which
I try to give the truth of fiction."
Through this maze of contraand paradox, then, he tries
to comment on the qualities
of modern life and the role of
the a r t i s t in society; "there i s
a constant s w i n g , " s a y s Roud,
" b e t w e e n narrative and comment
in his film'' •

Lucienne De Wette

Faculty

Spotlight
Lucienne
DeWette,
from
Tenafly, New J e r s e y , has taught
at Lock Haven State College two
years.
After graduating from
Montclaire State College in New
Jersey with a B.A. she attended
Teachers
College,
Columbia
University and obtained an M.A.
in 1964. Before coming to LHS
she taught on the high .school
level in Hillside, New Jersey for
ten y e a r s .
While in college Miss De
Wette received two academic
s c h o l a r s h i p s . She is currently a
member of two national honor
societies^; Kappa Delta Pi and a
physical education society. For
enjoyment, she r e a d s , swims,
knits and makes r u g s .
Miss DeWette teaches gymn a s t i c s , modern d a n c e , fundamentals of teaching ph);sioal
education, camp pour>eeling,i and
bowling and speedball. In her
opinion, it is of the utmost importance to be oreative and
experimental in teaching.
As coach of the girls' gymn a s t i c team. Miss De Wette s a i d ,
" T h e y are a fine group of boys
and girls.
I expect top performance from t h e m . "
Miss De Wette s e e s a definite need for additional staff in
the Physical Education Department. She would like to have
more elective c o u r s e s but, a s she
s a i d , "ff we don't have the
staff, we just c a n ' t do i t . "

The Interfaith Council of
Lock Haven State College
will present a Christmas
program December 16, at 8:30
p.m. The Council has spent
over a month planning what
very well may be a first for
Lock Haven.
Dr. Congdon
will be the speaker at a
"Christmas Celebration" in
Ulmer Planetarium.

Window Painting Contest:
Basic theme - Christmas
season
Completion date - 12:00
noon, Wednesday, December 16
Person to contact - Mr.
Noel, Assistant Manager
of Bentley Hall
Cash prizes - total $50
- first prize: $25
- second prize: $15
- third prize: $10

Organizational meeting tor
future Ski Club at LHS December 15 - 7:00 p.m. Smith
Hall Lounge.

S a n t a and Head S t a r t c h i l d r e n a t a C h r i s t m a s party s p o n s o r e d
by Z e t a T a u A l p h a s o r o r i t y a n d P h i Mu D e l t a f r a t e r n i t y h e l d
l a s t e v e n i n g in the Phi Mu D e l t a h o u s e .

TYPING
L a s t minute paper,s got you in a b i n d ? Are you c a u g h t up
in the C h r i s t a m s r u s h ? T u r n t o the D e l t a E p s i l o n t y p i n g s e r v i c e . We type a l l t y p e s of piipers of a l l l e n g t h s . We e v e n s u p ply the p a p e r or d i t t o - m a s t e r s you n e e d .
C a s h in on our H o l i d a y S p e c i a l R a t e s :
25 10« extra for c a r b o n s
lOf extra for proofing
60f per p a g e - D i t t o - m a s t e r s
P a p e r s five p a g e s in length s h o u l d be turned in at l e a s t
one day in a d v a n c e . T h o s e p a p e r s over five p a g e s - two to
t h r e e d a y s in a d v a n c e . All p a p e r s c a n be tunicHJ in a t the
Eagle Eye office in the P U B .

EAGLES SHELLACK SALUKIS, 26-6
Fay last year, followed his impresby Al Smith
sive win against Lehigh with a treLock Haven State College's Don
mendous 6-5 upset over Dell Rhodes
Adams donned a Maxwell Smart uniat 118 pounds Rhodes had placed in
form Wednesday evening and played
the NCAA tourney at 115 pounds while
around like Smart does on his weekly
at Colorado before joining the service.
TV show for more than four and a half
Rupp used a first period takedown
minutes, then played the role of hero
and headed into the final period
by pinning Southern Illinois' Pete
knotted at two apiece with Rhodes
Engels and gave LHS the lift they
after the Saluki 118 pounder gained
needed enroute to a 26-6 rout of the
^ an escape in the first and second
Salukis.
periods. Rupp used a reversal and a
Adams, a freshman who had been
takedown in the final period to ice
pinned in the first period against Lehis
bout and put the momentum in the
high, looked unimpressive as Engels
E a g l e s ' favor.
seemed to handle him with ease
through the first period and most of
Fay Wins Again
the second. He then appeared to work
Donnie Fay still wrestlinc un a
himself into a predicament where he
weight class used a takedown and
would again see the lights as he did
escape to clip Ken Oerdee 3-1 at 126
against Lehigh, but like Maxwell
putting LHS in front, 6-0.
Smart, came up with a highly improThe Salukis put their firsl point
bable move and used a reverse cradle
on the board at 134 pounds when .lim
to deck Engles in 4:56.
Cook handled Bernie Parker, 7-4.
Cook came out strong in the first
Even after his victory Adams
period and took a 4-2 lead and then
still appeared to be playing the role
appeared
to settle back and wait for
of Smart as he went to leap in the
the final two periods to end.
arms of his coach, he slipped and fell
Larry Rippey upped the LHS
flat on his back.
margin to 9-3 with a lopsided 20-8
Pin Gives Lift
Adams' pin gave the Eagles a decision over Vince Testone at 142
much needed lift in the heavier pounds. Rippey outclassed the Saluki by taking him down at will and
weights and it was so effective that
then leaving him escape to get anothe following three Bald Eagles all
pr(xluced winning decisions, handing ther takedown.
SIU Received Blow at 158
the Salukis a shellacking almost no
The Salukis received a blow at
one expected.
It seemed to be a night for the 158 pounds when LHS's man in the
clutch, Paul Brodmerkel, clipped their
" l e s n o t a b l e s " for LHS.
Jim Rupp, understudy to Donnie top wrestler, Rich Casey, 4-2. sending

the

Bald Eagles into a 12-6 lead.
Then came Adams's antics and
his spark ignited a fire as LHS swept
the final three weights, leaving SIU
coach Linn Long in a daze.
After
getting pinned
againsi
Lehigh, LHS's Hank Hawkins regained
some of his lost prestige by nipping
Don Stumpf, 5-4, at 177 pounds. He
used a first period takedown and an
escape in the second period building
a 3-1 lead and then looked sluggish
in the final period, but hung on for
his 5-4 decis ion.
Knarr and Hawkins Win
Jeff Knarr followed Hawkins with
almost the same style of wrestling at
190 pounds as he built a 6-1 lead
after two periods, then wrestled sloppily in the final period for an 8-5
victory.
Eagle heavyweight Tom Zimmerman added to the LHS rout, easily
handling Mark Samuels. 10-2. " Z i m m y "
used three takedowns, an e s c a p e , a
penally point and riding time enroute
to his victory.
LHS mat mentor Dr. Ken Cox
said, "It surprised me that we were
this hot. I figured that it would probably wind up 17-15 u s . "
•Couldn't Believe i f
Cox's suspicions of victory grew
after Rupp's upset in the first bout.
" I had a smell of victory when Rupp
beat Rhodes. When he beat Rhodes
we had an inkling that we were gonna
be in there. I jusl couldn't believe
it."

Co.N hatl words nf praise for a
tew of his grappk-rs bul v\as surprised
also With Brodmerkel and Adams,
"BrcKimerkel had a fantastic upset.
Casey is a big-iimo 158 pounder and a
front-line wrcsllcr. Ik- is their capr
tain and tiieir kes man. Brodmerkel's
win shocked thcni."
Cox pointed out that both Hawkins and Knarr wrestled the si me
lime of matches.
"They wrestled
well but then had a letdown and
looked slopp\ al the e n d . "
MAT MEMO—Southern Illinois coach
Linn Long wis so slunned that he
sat staring at the ceiling for almost
20 minutes after the match...Long
and his grapplers held a practice
session after mosl n( the fans had
cleared out of Thomas Field H o u s e . . .
The Salukis have a big quadangular
this weekend at Lehigh University
with ihe Engineers, East Stroudsburg,
and Wilkes College...The Salukis
were coming off of a big win in the
Illinois Invitational tournament where
they had three individual champions
and two riinnersup...Wednesday evening's victory marked the first time
LHS mentor Ken Cox had beaten Long
in three encounters. Long had won
the two previous meetings, once while
at Colorado and the other at Southern
Illinois while Cox was at St. Cloud...
The Eagles have another barnburner
Saturday evening in Thomas Field
House againsi Oswego State University, a team which defeated Clarion
last weekend, 1 7-1 6.

Match Set for Lock H a v e n
Pennsylvania, long one of
the hot-beds of amateurwrestling,
will have its mettle tested on
the professional level Dec. 19,
a s a team of Pennsylvania
All-Stars hosts a formidable contingent of AU-Americans in Lock
Haven.
Some of the greatest
wrestlers of the past decade
will represent both teams, names
such a s :
* Gray Simons, Lock Haven's
three-time
NCAA
champion,
twice NCAA Outstanding Wrestler and member of two Olympic
teams;
* Greg Ruth, a native of Bethlehem, Pa., who transferred from
Lehigh lo Oklahoma Univ., where
he was twice NCAA champion;
» Doug Blubaugh, an NCAA
champion from Oklahoma St. and
the last American wrestler to
win an Olympic Gold Medal;
* Dave Auble, twice NCAA
champion and NCAA Outstanding
Wrestler from Cornell, place
winner in the Tokyo Olympics.
The National Wrestling Confederation, an organization promoting legitimate, collegiatestyle professional wrestling, is
presenting the meel to inaugurate
its 1970-71 s e a s o n . Other events
to follow will include: Competition in the first Professional
Wrestling League in history,
beginning Jan. 9 in central Pa.;
Oklahoma All-Stars v s . AU-Americans in Oklahoma City. Jan. 30:
Virginia AU-Stars v s . .Mi-Americans in Norfolk, Jan. 24; as well
as meets being planned for Feliruary in Iowa, Ohio, and N.Y.
Wrestlers in NWC matches,
all of whom are past amateur

champions and the majority of
whom are now c o a c h e s , will become profes.sionals in the fullest
sense as they put skill and reputations on the line for pay.
The NWC expect.s that fans will
be happy to pay reasonable ticket prices to keep the best and
most exciting wrestlers active
on the mats. Too often the best
have gone directly from competition to coaching, thus falling
inactive during those years when
virtually all athletes, however
fine a s amateurs, improve and
reach athletic maturity on the
professional level.
The NWC, whose president,
Andy Fitch, was himself an
NCAA champion and Olympic
team member, will provide the
financial and competitive incentive for wrestlers to stay
active and reach full potential.
At the same time, there wili he
more and better wrestling for the
ever-growing number of fans.
Finally, as in other sports,
a thriving professional level of
wrestling will stimulate and
strengthen other levels of the
sport:
school, college, international and Olympic.
The lull line-up for the
Pennsylvania AU-Slars v.s. the
AU-Americans meel:
135-Mark
PIVHN-Pcnn St., 3rd
place NCAA, finalist in the 1968
Olympic final trial.s.
Bob FEHRS - Michigan, 3time NCA,\ runner-up. 3-tinie Big
Ten champion. Winner and OU,
1970
NWC
Championship.s.
140-Bob LARSON - t.ock Haven

EVERYTHING

St.. N A I A place winner.
Wilke.s place w i n n e r .

PSCC

Dave A U B L E - C o r n e l l , twice
NCAA champion, NCAA OW. Pan'
Am Gold Medal, 4th place Tokyo
Olympics.
145-Gray SIMONS - Loek Haven
St, 3-time NCA.A champion, twicNCAA OW, member two U.S.
Olympic teams.
BobGUZZO - E . Stroudsburg.
NAlA':hampion, PSCC champion.
Wilkes champion.
ISS-A.iam WALTZ - Lock Haven
St. NAIA champion, PSCC and
Wilkes place winner.
Gobel KLINE
Maryland.
NCAA champion 1969, Wilkes
champion,
East-West
winner.
165-Greg RUTH-Oklahoma Uni v..
twice NC.'\.A champion, twice
NAAU and Big 8 champion. Pan
Am Gold Medal, U.S. Olympic
team.
1970 NWC champion.
Doug BLUBAUGH- Oklahoma
St. Olympic Gold Medal, Pan Am
Gold Medal, NCAA champion,
NAAU champion.

Jim Rupp upsets Big 8 cfiomp

175-Ron P I F E R - Penn St., NCAA
runner-up and third" place winner.
EIWA champion.
Joe WIl-NDl. - Wilkes, twice
Nat'l College champion, NCAA
place winner, Wilkes champion.

For sale: 2 black, male,
French Poodles - 5 weeks
old - $50 apiece.

185-Jerry SWOPE - Lock Haven
St. 4-lime NAIA champion, 3-time
NCAA place winner, 3-time PSCC
and
twice Wilkes champion.
Hob RUST - Syracuse, NCAA
runner-up
1970.
L:ast-Wcsi
winner.
1970 NWC champion.

FREE: 3 Tri-color Collie/
German Shephard puppies 3 months old.
See Ruth S'ukel in Eagle
Wing Snack Bar.

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