congratulations national soccer champions

Transcription

congratulations national soccer champions
CONGRATULATIONS
N A T I O N A L SOCCER CHAMPIONS
Lock Haven State College
Vol. XXI No 21
Tuesday, Nov. 28,1978
Soccer Team Wins Second NCAA Championship
By BOBI HEGARTY
Lock Haven State College's soccer team has
become the first team ever
to win two consecutive
NCAA Division III titles.
LHSC has become the top
small college soccer team in
the nation. In beating
Cortland, 1-0, Friday and
Washington University of
St. Louis, 3-0, Saturday.
Friday's game, played at
Babson College, Wellesley,
Mass., recorded the 14th
rtraight win for LHSC
upping the Eagles' record
to 17-2. The game's only
goal was scored by junior
Scott Cardin, unassisted, at
40:08, off a shot that
bounced from Cortland's
goalie's chest to be scored
from two yards out.
Parker commented on
the freshmen who played in
the game, "One of our
problems early in the
game—was starting four
freshmen
today
who
seemed nervous for a
while." Mike Parker said
that Bobby (the LHSC
goalkeeper) was tested
several times and came
through every time. Another freshman,
John
Crowley, came off the
bench in the first half at
mid-field and seemed to
calm the team down.
According to Parker, the
Eagle's back found were as
solid as ever, with Billy
Hibbs, Phil Fowler, Bert
Gottbrecht, Rob Galbraith
plus sophomore Jack Predix off the bench.
LHSC's toughest competition was Tim Robinson
who played for LHSC last
year. He was Cortland's top
scorer at center forward
position and was held in
check all aftemoon.
Cortland led shots on
goal with 21 to 10 for the
winning Eagles. Mike
Bobby had 14 saves for
LHSC. Cortland's goalie
registering five saves.
This set up Lock Haven
for Saturday's 3-0 win over
Washington.
Lock Havenn's first goal
came at 8:17. Jones
assisted Tim Gargan who
struck the ball low and hard
in the net from 16 yards
out.
The second goal at 36:16
came following a long cross
by Phil Fowler to Scott
Cardin running dver the
ball and taking all the
defensive players with him
leaving Gargan all alone to
drill it in from seven yards
out.
The final goal came with
six minutes left in the game
by Zaialas on an assist from
John Appezzato. Zaialas
dribbled into the goal area
as the goalie came out of
the net and the senior
!i A 7 ! A K : C
Ji_n I i U ! ' O
J6GED
co-captain drilled it past
him to made the final score
3-0.
Lock Haven dominated
the game's stats—21 to 5 in
shots, 4-2 in comer kicks,
7-1 (Rob Wilde) in goalkeeper saves.
The champions now have
a three year record of
38-10-2 and 26 wins out of
the last 28 games played.
Parker's comments on
the game: "We got the
early goal that we felt we
needed and . . . from that
moment on we certainly
dominated play."
The LHSC 'riumph was
the 15th straight for the
Eagles, a final season make
of 18-2 and the tenth shutout this year, all three are
new alltime records for
Lock Haven State soccer.
Commended were Cardin, J o n e s , Gottbrecht,
Fowler, Crowley, and
Wilde, "we must have two
of the best goal-keepers in
the country right here at
Lock Haven."
Lock Haven will have
nine regulars back next
year plus 1977 freshman
star forward, Dan Taber,
who led LHSC in scoring
with 11 goals, 5 assists, last
year.
This year freshman Tim
Gargan of Neptune, New
Jersey, led the 1978 Na-
tional Champions in scoring
with 12 goals, V assists,
followed by Trevor Adair,
also a freshman, from Belfast, Ireland, with 9 goals, 8
assists. Senior co-captain
Larry Jones had 8 goals, 9
assists; junior Scott Cardin
had 6 goals;
senior
co-captain Angelo Zaialas
chipped in with 5 goals and
sophomore Jan Felker had
four.
During yesterday's pep
rally. Coach Parker summed it up by saying7
"LHSC is a soccer powerhouse." Parker commended Larry Jones as the best
captain Lock Haven has
ever had. The team was
honored by Charies Eberle.
Director of Athletics, who
said the victory has " p u t
Lock Haven State College
on the map." Lock Haven
mayor William Eismennsaid "the soccer team has
brought honor to the city."
Board of Trustees member and WBPZ's general
manager Harris Lipez will
present a plaque with all
the names of the players
plus individual plaques for
the seniors.
Coach Parker promises
stiff competition from Lock
Haven in the coming years
because of our young team.
"We'll keep doing the best
we can for Lock Haven
soccer."
IT
-•*«.,
LOCK H A V E N STATE'S -- soccer team was
honored yesterday afternoon in Thomas Field
House for its second consecutive NCAA Division I I I
championship.
lOCC Cancels Lock Haven For Canadian Tour
COACH PARKER ~ prepares to speak at Tuesday's rally to honor the soccer team.
[Photo by M I K E BAYLOR]
By SUSAN SHELLY
lOCC, the musical group
that was scheduled to
perform in Thomas Field
House on December 1, then
changed to December 4,
has cancelled the engagement completely.
The group rescheduled
Lock Haven State's concert
from December 1—December 4 so it could appear on
the television show Saturday Night Live. It has since
cancelled both engagements in order to do a
concert tour in Canada.
Social Committee chairman Jack Sohnleitner, who
organized the concert, said
he was dissapointed about
the cancellation, but "there
was nothing we could d o . "
Anyone who purchased a
ticket can obtain a refund in
the PUB.'s secretary office.
Eagle Eye
page 2
EDITORIAL
SECTION
by SUSAN SHELLY
There has t)een a lot of talk concerning
mari'=Utory class attendance lately.
Visions of summer camp always come to m i n d
when that phrase is used. Can you imagine waking
up at 7am every day to reveille, having someone
pound at your door to make sure you don't
oversleep, and being escorted to classes by
counselors? Mandatory class attendance...
Yes, it is one way to fill up a classroom. But I
must question whether it is beneficial to fill up a
class with people who don't want to be there. It
seems that it could only lessen the overall quality of
the class, something which must be avoided. I
would much rather attend a class with a few
interested students than one which is filled by
uninterested students who have to be there and
resent every minute of it.
Sitting in a class does not necessarily correlate
with learning, which should be the purpose of
college.
Responsibility cannot be forced on students, it
must be learned. Those who do not learn
responsibility will learn the results of it soon
enough - failing grades, wasted money, academic
probation, etc. But forcing students to attend
classes will not breed this responsibility.
R-ofessors' energies should be focused toward
students who are interested and willing and
wanting to learn, not toward filling up their classes.
OPENING NIGHT
By FRANCES ARNDT
W i t h Christmas vacation soon to be upon us,
some of us may find an excess of leisure time on our
hands. Vy/hat to dd? Well, why not try a movie or
two? W i t h the holiday season impending, movies
are being released in droves. For those of us who
have been wallowing in books (or elsewhere) so far
this semester, here is a short guide to some of the
recently released films which you might find
playing in the old hometown theatre (to be
supplemented periodically):
" M A G I C " - f r o m a book by William Goldman, this
is the tale of a ventriloquist of a schizophrenic
nature who is controlled by his dummy—with
murderous results. Reviews on this one have been
mixed, w i t h the major complaint being that the plot
could stand some embellishing. Nonetheless, there
are some scary moments and some excellent
performances by Anthony Hopkins and AnnMargret.
"GIRL F R I E N D S " - excellent reviews all around
for this study of two close friends and the changes
each undergoes when they come to a parting of
lifestyles. One marries and one sets out to become a
photographer. The actresses give a sensitive
portrayal of the situation, with special credit given
to Melanie Mayron.
" M I D N I G H T EXPRESS" - This is the story of a
young American's ordeal in a Turkish prison
following a drug arrest, and his harrowing escape.
/MA&lMED... m AllBRaiC
New Policy
The Eagle Eye has instituted several new policies
and will adhere to them beginning immediately.
No commentary, letter to the editor, or news
story will be accepted without the writer's name on
it. W e will withhold names upon request for letters
and commentaries, all news articles will be by-lined
unless it is a press release or there is a problem
with spacing.
Identification of the authors of letters and
commentaries will be a matter of public record. Any
individual wishing to know the author's identity can
find out by personally
contacting
the
Editor-in-Chief. The Editor can, however, withhold
the name if he/she feels it would be personally
damaging to the author to have it revealed.
All letters and commentaries will be printed as
they are received. The Eagle Eye staff assumes no
responsibility for spelling or grammatical errors. If
material submitted is too lengthy, considered
libelous, or incoherent, the contributor will be
asked to re-write it.
The Lock Haven State College
EAQLE EYE
AN INDEPENDENT STUOENT NEWSPAPER
The Eagle Eye Is published twice weekly by Student
Publications of Lock Haven State College. Our office Is
located on the ground floor of the Parson's Union
Building. Phone 748-5531 or ext. 456.
The Editor encourages letters and commentaries. All
contributions must be signed, but names will be withheld
from publication on request. Letters and commentaries
will be printed verbatim. The Editor reserves the right to
ask contributors to edit or rewrite their material If It Is
considered llt)elous. Incoherent or too lengthy.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
MANAQINO EDITOR
QRAPHICS EDITORS
NEWS EDITOR
SPORTS EDITOR
PHOTOQRAPHY EDITOR
ASS'T PHOTO EDITOR
ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR
COMPOSITION EDITOR
ADVISOR
QENERAL MANAQER
SUSAN SHELLY
ChrIa Flynn
John Patrilak
Nancy Stoy
Diane Orban
Cheryl Wagner
Mike Baylor
Cheryl Fluck
Frances Arndt
Harry Pfender
Dr. Howard K. Congdon
Martha Hastings
FRANKLY SPEAKING ... .by phil frank
Announcements
i^itititititi^ititit
The deadline for submitting play proposals for
the spring semester has
been extended until Dec. 1.
Please submit all proposals
to Dr. Deny Gary in Sloan
204 by the date. Proposals
should include a plot
summary, and an estimated
cost of staging.
Attention students. A new Constitution is being
presented in which you will make any desired
changes at the first regular Senate meeting in
December. All students are cordially invited.
Voting on the new Constitution will take place
December 12, 1978, from 11:30 A . M . to 1 30 P M
and 4:30 P.M. to 6:30 P.M., in Bentley and the
PUB. Your cooperation will be appreciated in the
establishment of his new Constitution for the SCC.
L
•4
Martha—See,
bered.
1 remem--John
The movie is liberally adapted from the true story of
Billy Hayes, who has written a book (same title)
about his experiences. The movie is characterized
as being unusually violent, and reviews, while
mixed, are predominantly bad.
"PARADISE A L L E Y " - Sylvester Stallone brings
us yet another variation on his
"Rocky"
theme—only this t i m e , it's a b i g , dumb wrestler
instead of a big, dumb boxer. This f i l m , which is
the story of three brothers t r y i n g to make it in
Hell's Kitchen in the mid-1940's, has been called
erratic and flat in its plot, yet many have found it
charming, nonetheless.
"WATERSHIP D O W N " - This is the animated
adaptation of Richard Adams' fascinating tale of
rabbits struggling against human and animal odds,
to establish a new warren. On all counts, this is a
first-rate f i l m , geared towards adults as well as
children.
This week, the Humanities Film Series w i l l be
presenting " H i r o s h i m a , M o n A m o u r , " a film
directed and produced by Alain Resnais. The
movie, which depicts the powerful but fleeting love
affair of two people, a Frenchwoman and a
Japanese man, who seek love as a means of erasing
the scars they carry from their experiences in
W W I I , has been called a landmark in the history of
film.
The movie will be shown Tuesday at 8:00 p.m. in
Raub 106, and Wednesday at 8:00 p.m. in Ulmer
Planetarium.
Letters To The Editor
Ms. Shelly,
At times I wonder how
someone with your mental
capacity can be satisfied
with the miniscule labors of
Editor in Chief of the Eagle
Eye. It is quite obvious that
you are on a very different
mental plane than the rest
of the students in this
college and I find it hard to
believe that the fruits of
your labor go so unrewarded. How can you stand
it?
Your knack of clear
thinking was especially
apparant in the editorial
written by yourself in Vol.
XXI No. 20 dated Fri. Nov.
17, 1978 ofthe Eagle Eye.
Maybe you will recall this
monument t o common
sense. You asked at one
point if incidents like a
cafeteria employee slipping
on food and falling ate
humorous. Well, I must tell
you. until you wrote about
it 1 did see little humor^BuL
now, due to your extremely
mcisive reporting, I do see
the humor and am quite
thankful to you for it.
I am so glad that you
stopped printing letters
provided without names. 1
mean we all know that the
ideas of what is written are
not the issue, but the name
must be known, at least by
you and your staff. This is a
paramount in the structure
of the society we live in.
So, Ms. Shelly, keep up
the good work because you
are worth every bit of the
$500 you are receiving for
services rendered.
Very Sincerely Yours,
Gregory C. McCracken
Room 202 Smith
EDITORS NOTE: yoa, Mr.
McCracken, appear to be
on a "very similar mental
plane" as most students
here. We welcome your
contribntlons to the Eagle
Eye.
ALSO: My salary for "services rendered" Is $600,
not $500.
* • • • **
Dear Ms. Shelly,
Your column on 11/17/78
was most welcome. Let's
crack down on the food
launchers and the people
who find amusement in
opening fire doors. Let's
dismember the food throwjrs, they won't be able to
throw without arms. Let's
amputate the legs of those
who walk through fire
doors, maybe they'll enjoy
wheeling their way
through. When college
students begin showing the
rowdy characteristics of
humans it's time to get
tough. When an adorable
elderly employee with the
grace of a ballerina and the
balance of Rudoloh Nureyer (sic) falls on food,
enough is enough
Sure there are those who
say the consistancy of the
food (General Motors tests
air bags by driving cars into
piles of deserts at 55MPH,
and Jacques Cousteau has
marveled at the variety of
barnacles on the roast beef)
lends itself better to
throwing than eating, but
that, of course, is hardly
the issue here.
Ms. Shelly, please continue your saint-like escapades and maybe we can
stop those headed for the
Punk Hall of Fame from
ruining our beautiful cafeteria, and denying the
noble ones among us to
enjoy the delicious entrees
in the atmosphere we
deserve. Keep up the
crusade.
Sincerely,
Mark Lieberman 202 Smith
page 3
Eagle Eye
Science Management Major Now Offered At LHS
By MIKE SHILLING
A major in Management
Science is now being
offered at Lock Haven State
College designed to serve
the academic needs of
students desiring careers in
business.
The degree eamed in the
Management Science program is a Bachelor of
Science degree. One hundred and twenty-eight
semester hours are required for graduation. Sixty
of these hours are general
education requirements
while the remaining sixtyeight hours are courses
selected within the major.
The academic structure of
the program includes required core courses that are
designed to introduce the
student to the managerial
process. This is followed by
intermediate level study in
Administration, Economics
and Finance, and Mathematics/Computer Science.
The major is completed
with study at the senior
level within a group of
major electives designed to
meet the student's professional objectives. Graduates of this program are
also fully prepared to do
graduate work in Business
Administration.
The program in Management Science was developed in two years and was
opened to majors the 1978
fall semester. Market research and admissions here
at Lock Haven revealed that
a business oriented program is highly desirable
among entering students
Food Service Is Not Leaving LH
By JEFF FLEICHMAN
Rumors have been floating around campus about
the firing of the food
service at Lock Haven State
College because of student
disatisfaction. Frank Mulhum, director of the food
service, explains that these
rumors are completely false
and that the food service
will remain at the college.
Mulhurn and his staff
have been under constant
critcism this semester
about the food served in the
caferteria. He explains that
in his type of job "you just
can't please all of the
people all of the time."
Mulhurn himself is pleased
with the students here at
Lock Haven. He feels the
students are "mature and
level headed", however if
they have complaints, they
should come directly to him
where significant action can
be taken, rather than
complain to one another.
One major problem mulhurn has come in contact
with has been the box lunch
policy. Student-teachers in
the past were allowed to
prepare their own lunch.
Mulhurn found this led to
havoc because the food
service was losing a substantial amount of money.
Poster Design Contest
The Commonwealth Association of Students, the
student lobby for Pennsylvania's fourteen state campuses, wants to tap the
artistic talent of its people!
CAS, representing almost 80,000 state college
students as their vdice in
Harrisburg, is sponsoring a
poster design contest. The
winning poster will be silkscreened and distributed
throughout the state college system and the
winning artist will receive a
cash award of $25.
Entering the contest is
easy I Any student attending the colleges comprising
the Pennsylvania state
college and university
system can submit his/her
design. All entries must be
drawn on a 17 by 22 inch
white poster board using
black ink. While color may
not be used on the submitted entry, the artist may
indicate (on a separate
sheet of paper) areas where
he/she wants specific color to be used and include
his/her name, campus
address and phone number.
The words "Commonwealth Association of Students" or "CAS" must be
visible on the poster and
the sketch must follow the
theme of "CAS - YOUR
VOICE IN HARRISBURG
WORKING TO KEEP
TUITION COSTS LOW
AND THE EDUCATIONAL
QUALITY HIGH."
All entries must be submitted to lodal campus CAS
offices by December 15,
1978. Individual CAS chapters will select their best
entry and will submit this
selection to the CAS main
office in Harrisburg. The
CAS statewide public relations committee will
judge the best of the 14
campus entries at its
January conference. The
winner will receive his/her
cash award after the
selection has been made
and will receive statewide
recognition. All entries will
become the property of the
Commonwealth Association
of Students.
New President
[Harrlsbnrg]-George Badame, three-year CAS
coordinator at E. Stroudsburg State, is the new
statewide president of the
Commonwealth Association
of Students, the student
advocacy in Harrisbury
representing the 80,000
students of the Pennsylvania state college and
university system.
Elected by the CAS
legislative body at its
November conference, Badame won by a 3-1 margin
over former President Art
Crandle of Mansfield.
The new president will
serve as leader of the
student lobby until the
expiration of his term in
May. Elected to serve with
Badame on the CAS
Executive Board were: Jeff
Hunsicker (Bloomburg) as
Vice-President; Chris Leavey (Slippery Rock) as
Secretary and Donna Fischer (Bloomsburg) as Treasurer.
The recently elected
president sees CAS as the
strongest best-funded stu,dent lobby in the country,
with definite direction.
Mulhurn has now devised a
new system in which the
students can order a day
ahead of time the lunch
they wish to receive.
Mulhurn feels the students
are "not as happy as
before", but at least it's a
compromise.
Peace Program
Grindstone Island, in Big
Rideau Lake, Canada, 55
km north of Kingston, Ont.
(125 mi. north of Syracuse,
NY), is the setting for the
two 1979 sessions of the
Grindstone School for the
Peace Research, Education
and Action. The June
School runs from June
16-29, and the August
School, from Aug. 7-20.
The June School will deal
with the Middle East,
Alternative Lifestyles, Native Peoples' Struggles,
and International Economics and Imperialism. The
August School will consider
Nuclear Power, Southern
Africa, Sex Roles, and
Disarmament. Cost is S250
per participant for tuition,
room and board.
Write C. T. Stieren,
the Grindstone School for
Peace, P.O. Box 571, Stn.
P, Toronto, Ont. CANADA
M5S 2T1 for applications
and information.
GARDEN
STARTS WED.
7:00 and 9:00
Returning for the last time
and many undeclared majors.
There aire now fifteen
students enrolled in the
Management Scionce program. Many of these
students were undeclared
majors that have an interest
in business but there was
no program offered.
There has been no new
faculty hired to teach,
courses in Management
Science. Instead, the faculty has been strengthened over a two year span
to teach the new program's
courses. When the program
was being developed, col-
lege officials were hiring
faculty then that had the
capability of teaching courses in Management Science
and also able to teach
courses in other programs.
Literature on the Management Science program
is available at the Dean of
Arts and Sciences ofiBce.
AAUW To Offer$500 Scholarship
The Lock Haven Branch
of the American Association of University Women
is offering a $500 scholarship for the spring term to
women who are residents of
Clinton County and juniors
or seniors at Lock Haven
State College. This is the
eighth year that the
scholarship has been offered.
Application forms are
available at the main
Physical Education Office,
Zimmerii Gymnasium. To
be considered for the
spring 1979 term, applications must be submitted
by December 15, 1978 by
mail to Dr. Victoria J.
Romeo, AAUW Fellowship
Chairperson, 200 South
Jones Street, Lock Haven,
Penn. 17745.
The scholarship selections will be made by the
expensesT
fellowship committee of the
Money for the Fellowship
Lock Haven Branch AAUW Program of the Lock Haven
and applicants will be AAUW Branch is raised by
notified of the Committee' .annual sale of used books,
decision by December records, plants and crafts
31,1978. The scholarships and other fund raising
will be administered by the projects including a 1979
college for spring term calendar sale.
New Course
By BOB CONWEIX
A new course will be
offered by the Biology
department next semester
called "Microbiology and
Man." This course is for
non-Biology majors who
wish to leam more about
the effects microorganisms
have upon the health of
humans. The course is a
non-laboratory course that
will meet on Tuesday and
Thursday mornings from
9:30 until 10:20am in Ulmer
319.
The course will be taught
by Dr. Paul Klens of the
Biological Sciences Department. Dr. Klens has had
more than 35 years
experience in Microbiolical
research in government
industry as well as teaching. The course is an
elective course that is worth
3 elective credits.
DRAUCKER'S
130 E. Main St.
CHRISTMAS GIFTS
FOR ALL
• Ice Skates
• Roller Skates
• Lectra Socks
K.C. Strip Jean
• Knives
• Smokers Snpplles
• Billiard Cnea
• Knapsacks
• Hanting &
Fishing Supplies
• Complete Arcade &
Billard Room
A jean styled to accent any wardrobe. Scoop
front pockets with a stylish strip down the legs
and back pockets. In 100% Cotton Indigo
dyed deniax with red-orange contrast stitching.
page4
Eagle Eye
George Settle
Placed 149th
In Nationals
By MARK A. AMWAY
Junior George Settle
placed 149th at the Sixth
Annual NCAA Division III
Chanipionships at Augustana Cdllege in Rock Island,
Illinois last Saturday.
Settle covered the five
mile course in 26:06 to
finish 2:12 behind Dan
Henderson of Wheaton
College. Henderson ran the
fairly, flat course in 23:54.
Coach Jim Dolan said Settle
ran a good hard race.
Settle, who is accustomed to running the hilly and
more challenging courses
of the Eastern United
States, was at a disadvantage on the flats of Dlinois.
North Central College of
Ulinois won the team title in
a record low score of 60
points.
THE LOCK H A V E N -- State Coiiege Soccer Team beat Wa?
igton University of
St. Louis, 3-0, on Saturday. The win gave LHSC the distin<
n of being the first
team to ever win the NCAA Division lil title two years in row.
[Photo i)y CHERYL FLUCK]
LHS Drops To Bloom
By PETE BIELSKI
The Lock Haven State
varsity basketball squad
opened their season Saturday night at Bloomsburg
State with a valiant
comeback effort, but fell
short, and dropped the
game 67-53.
With 4:13 to play, the
heavily favored Huskies
held a slender one point
lead 51-50. But Eagle
shooting cooled off after
cutting 10 point lead to one.
Last year Bloom blasted the
Bald Eagles, at Thomas
Field House, 70-39.
Commenting after the
game Coach Black said,
"Kenny Richter was our
'Most Efficent Eagle', his
performance pleased us,
especially since he had
been hampered throughout the pre-season with an
injury. John Beblowski did
a good job on the boards for
us, also," Black added.
The game started slowly.
as the teams were tied 6-6
after eight minutes. A last
minute spurt gave the
home squad a 28-23
half-time edge.
Bloom went up by ten
points
twice
midway
through the second half,
before the Haven started its
comeback effort. Sophomore guard Ken Richter led
all scorers with 19, and
John Beblowski added 10
points and 7 rebounds.
Balanced scoring by the
Huskies doomed the Eagles
as Bucher, Thomas, Bardsley, Tillman and McCann
totaled 54 points between
them. Thompson added 7
points for the Eagles, while
Nolan had eight.
Lock Haven travels to
Williamsport to play Lycoming, another out-ofconference battle, on Wednesday night.
Bloom also won the JV
game, 75-68. Mike Sollecito
had 17 for the Bald Eagles.
Wrestling Double Header Against George Mason Opens Season
By JERRY PETERMAN
The young LHS grappling Bald-Eagles officially
open the 1978-79 wrestling
season tomorrow (Wed.)
night in a super doubleheader against George
Mason University at 7:00
pm and Southeastern Conference power. Auburn
University at 9:00 pm.
George Mason had a 11-7
record last season, but lost
35-7 to the Bald Eagles
down at Fairfax, Virginia.
George Mason is expected
to be a highly improved
team this season. The Bald
Eagles have beaten George
Maon 3 out of 3 times on
the mats.
The second opponent.
Auburn University is coming off of a 6-4-2 record and
a strong third place finish
in the Southeastern Conference. Coached by former
NCAA champ, Tom Milkovich, the War Hawk of
Alabama have six retuming
conference champions and
place-finishers in its lineup. This will be the first
confrontation ever between
Auburn and LHS. The Bald
Eagles did however wrestle
at the 1971 NCAA Division
I Championships at Auburn, when Larry Rippey,
134, placed fourth and the
Bald Eagles placed 14th in
the team standings. Rippey
defeated Milkovich, then
wrestling for Michigan
State in the semi-finals.
Undertaking by far, the
school's toughest schedule
ever, the Bald Eagles will
be hard pressed to improve
on last years 14-6 record.
After a series of elimination
matches climaxed by last
Saturday's final elimination
matches before 500 fans at
the Thomas Field House,
Dr. Ken Cox announced the
following line-up for the
Auburn match:
118"Kevin Brown, Fr.
McGuffy High School, a
3-time PIAA-AA placefinisher.
126"John Unangst, Jr.
Bethlehem Liberty, two
year JV wrestler and 1-0
last season on varsity.
134"Dave Moyer, Jr.,
wil son H.S., who posted a
15-13 mark last season.
142-Jeff lacovelli, Fr.,
Ithaca, N.Y., placed 3rd in
N.Y. States.
150--Doug G a l l a h e r ,
Soph., Clearfield, Pa., 4th
place finisher in PSCAC
with a 12-10 record.
158"Steve Williams, Fr.,
Clearfield, Pa., a regional
champ.
167-Mike Nauman, Jr.,
Elizabethtown, Pa., two
year letterman and twice
5th place in the PSCAC
with a 15-12 record last
year.
177-Austin Shanfelter,
Sr., Hershey, Pa., a two
year letterwinner with a
11-9-1 record in 1976.
Injured last season.
190-Tim Thompson, Jr.,
Vienna, Va., A two year
letterwinner with a career
14-26-1 record.
HWT-Gregg Koontz, Jr.
Captain, Bedford, Pa., won
the Pa. Conference heavyweight championships last
year while posting an
overall record of 26-7. The
The BOOK END
BESTSELLERS IN
HARDBACKS AND
PAPERBACKS
CHILDREN'S B O O K S
CARDS
^
AND CRAFTS
108 E. MAIN- 748-6427
Q
%
Off
290 pounder has career
totals of 45-17-1 with 34
pins. His 17 pins each year
has tied the all-time LHS
one season record. Koontz
is LHS's best prospect for
'All-American honors.
Dr. cox has also announced that several line-up
changes might be made for
the GMU match, allowing
the starters a chance to get
a much needed rest for
Auburn.
Craig Kelskey and Dusty
Ream have been nursing
injuries for the past month.
Both had expected to start,
but must now round into
shape fast if they are to
earn their positions ba9k
from promising freshman
Kevin Brown, and Jeff
lacovelli.
Eagle head mentor. Dr.
Ken Cox is starting his 9th
campaign at the helm and
has produced a fine overall
record of 90-39-1. His
career coaching record
including high school and
college has now reached
214-83-7. Since coming to
the 'Haven', Cox has also
produced 14 Pa. Confer-
Women's Hockey Wins Champ.
By CHERYL GONNELU
In women's intramural
field hockey, the Happy
Hackers defeated the Super
Scoops 2-1 in a competitive
game to win this year's
field hockey championship.
The Super Scoops played a
tough game scoring the
first goal by Sherry Miller
and the assist by Diane
Bradley. That didn't stop
the Happy Hackers attach
firom scoring the remaining
two goals by Pam Fletcher
and Shirlee Porter.
The field hockey teams
finished their season as
follows: The Happy Hackers 4-0, Lambda chi Alpha
3-1, Super Scoops 3-1, and
the Haven Who 0-4.
"ence champions, 3 Eastern
(EWL) champs in 3 years
and one Olympic team
alternate. Last season's
NCAA A l l - A m e r i c a n ,
Michael Moore, a 2-time
Eastern and Pa. conference
champ with a career record
of 83-20-2 will serve as
assistant coach this season,
primarily responsible for
the JV team.
Lock Haven will be
seeking a record-breaking
36th straight winning season this year the longest
current win streak in the
nation.
jfyou liavetogoto Hell...
go,foi'a rtasoq
CLASSFIEDS
PART TIME HELP wanted
in local men's store. Must
work over Christmas vacation. Write P.O. Box 626,
Lock Haven, PA 17745.
Include phone number.
HELP WANTED: Early
Childhood Educator to work
with infants and toddlers.
Minimum requirements are
15 credits in Child Development or related fields,
and one year professional
experience with children.
Beech Creek location. Send
resume and references by
Dec. 18 to:
Child Development Council
of Centre County
113 N. Allegheny St. # 16
Bellefonte, PA 16823
ATTENTION: Students under 26 years of age who
received the first flu
injection Oct. 25, 1978"The
second flu injection will be
given at the Infirmary
Wed., Nov. 29, 1978 ft-om
12 noon until 1 pm.
STARRING GEORGINA SPELVIN
r*'
'J
Wed. and Thurs., 7:00 and 9:00
Price Auditorium
$1.00 Admission
Donated to United Way
***Devir makes 'Last Tango in Paris'
look like a minuet a t
a Boston Sockdilba Party!
M A N ITS A DOOZEY.DEVIL' RAISES HELL!
Bob Saimoggi/GROUP VV Nfrwo/iK