DMZ ALL-SPORT WlNNERS—(standing I. to r.) Hank Creasey, Jim Kihm, Stretch Gregovitch, Jeff Seaton, (kneeling), Joe Rice, Al Hooper, Chuck Stefanick, and Brian Newman. Points are not cumulative, so all teams are eligible for the Winter Term Intermural All-Sport Competition. FALL TERM INTRAMURAL TOTAL PARTICIPANTS AND PARTICIPATIONS Men’s Flag Football Participants Participations Number of Games Played Women’s Flag Football Participants Participations Number of Games Played Cross Country-Men Participants Participations Number of Meets Women’s Walk-A-Mile Participants Participations Men’s Walk-A-Mile Participants Participations Number of Meets Men’s Horseshoes Participants Participations Number of Games Women’s Horseshoes Participants Participations Number of Games Women’s Bowling Participants Participations Number of Games Men’s Bowling Participants Participations Number of Games Women’s Volleyball Participants Participations Number of Games Men’s Volleyball Participants Participations Number of Games Things To Do Next Week MONDAY: Intramural Registration for table tennis in the Athletic Building. TUESDAY: Intramural Mixed Bowling at 9:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY: Intramural Mixed Bowling at 9:30 p.m., Intramural table tennis at the Athletic Building, and Intramural Registration for shuffleboard. THURSDAY: Women’s basketball (away) with Polyclinic Hospital at 5:30 p.m. Co-ed Volleyball Participants Participations Number of Games 172 942 64 TOTAL PARTICIPANTS FOR FALL TERM-337 TOTAL PARTICIPATION FOR FALL TERM-2162 29% OF TOTAL CAPITOL CAMPUS POPULATION PARTICIPATED IN INTRAMURALS G.E. Em 1970 Grad David P. Jones, a 1970 electrical engineering graduate from Pennsylvania State University (Capitol Campus), Middletown, Pennsylvania, has accepted a field engineering position with General Electric’s Installation and Service Engineering Department (I&SE). 19 47 18 8 15 7 Jones will attend I&SE’s Field Engineering Development Center in Schenectady, primary site for development of new I&SE engineers, to pursue on-the-job and classroom instruction in electrical and electronic field engineering. Headquartered in Schenectady, N.Y., I&SE has a team of more than 2,200 field service engineers in more than 85 cities in the United States. The department offers the technical assistance for installation, adjustment, testing, start-up and a full range of management, planning and engineering services on GE mechanical, nuclear, electrical and electronic equipment, as supplied to defense, industry and electric utility customers. A native of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Jones is the son of Mrs. Ann Jones of 1314 Westfield Street, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. 19 264 21 41 703 21 69 58 11 He is a member of lEEE ZtE SKATtA/Q Alar student CENTER THE CAPITOLIST Ski Anyone? by Skip Lewis Come the Winter term, the Ski Club becomes one of the most formidible organizations on campus, taking its Children of the Snow out into a Winter Wonderland. Headed this year by two experienced executives and skiers, President Roger Maury and Vice President Caddi Labar, the Ski Club plans to overshadow last year’s attempt by scheduling a ski weekend for the end of February and by giving lessons to novices. In an interview with both Roger and Caddi, I was given the following information: meetings will either be held on a Monday or a Tuesday of each week; the first and third weeks of each month will be devoted to business and movies while the second and fourth weeks of each month will be devoted to ski instruction and movies. The Ski Club offers its members many benefits. For a two-dollar membership fee, students may enjoy group rates at Ski Roundtop, the skiing facility most frequented by the Ski Club. In dollars and cents this means that a member pays anywhere from $4.50 to $B.OO depending on whether a member must rent his or her equipment and whether that person wants ski lessons. These are low prices as any ski enthusiast will tell you. The Ski Club skies regularly on Wednesdays between 1 p.m. and 10 p.m., with car pools leaving late enough for you engineers who enjoy this exciting Winter activity. So if skiing is your bag, JOIN. The Ski Club may be the first step to what could become an enjoyable carryover sport for you. MALE <2 female WfltigS&i instructor/ SfITUROAyS‘33OIoS& (Continued from Page l ) was doing was using “coy, worn out phrases,” Terry stated. “The whole situation is childish, he yelled out.” He feels Steve Wesley, who has taken over Patty’s job temporarily until the two can be evaluated and one chosen for the Spring semester, should have refused this job as treasurer. A very interesting statement Terry made was that the senate is on an ego trip. “The members of the senate,” Terry blurted out, “do not have guts enough to stand up for what is right and just, and if they think that what is being done is right and just, let them have their damn organization.” “The senate’s a front for their own goddamn personal interests and egos.” “Everyone on the senate is on an ego trip, that’s why I got out.” Decide for yourself. CAPITOL CAMPUS - MIDDLETOWN, PA Spats Eitors Chaise Di-Stele FoethaD Teaa Penn State University and Edinboro State College dominated the PCPA All-State Football Team picked by the state’s collegiate sports editors in a poll conducted by the Pennsylvania Collegiate Press Association. All-American Jack Ham of the Nittany Lions was named Player-of-the-Year and Bill McDonald of the Fighting Scots was selected Coach-of-the-Year. Penn State had five offensive players and two defensive players on the team and Edinboro had two offensive players and three defensive players on the team. Villanova (4) and Pitt (2) also had more than one player on the team. Ham, 6-3 212-pound linebacker from Johnstown, led the Nittany Lions to a 7-3 record thanks to five straight wins the second half of the season OFFENSE Name & Team Class Ht. Mike Slant, Villanova Jr. 6-3 Greg Edmonds, Penn State Sr. 6-3 Tom Komanda, Clarion St. Sr. 6-0 Vic Surma, Penn State Sr. 6-4 Bob Holubs, Penn State Sr. 6-4 Paul Kurkell, Edinboro St. Jr. 5-9 Warren Koegel, Penn State Sr. 6-4 Joe Sanford, Edinboro St. Jr. 5-11 Lydell Mitchell, Penn State Sr. 5-11 Dennis Ferris, Pitt Sr. 6-1 Larry Monsilovich, Indiana Jr. 5-9 Eliot Berry, Pennsylvania Sr. 5-11 QB RB RB RB DEFENSE E Steve Hamm, Edinboro St. Sr. 6-1 E Ron Milchak, Waynesburg Sr. 6-0 T Ebby Hollins, Edinboro St. Sr. 6-1 T Lloyd Weston, Pitt Sr. 6-1 Jack Hamm, Penn State John Bablnecz, Villanova Bob Basile, Slippery Rock Pat Hurley, Villanova □ ino Folino, Villanova Danny Crechan, Edinboro Mike Smith, Penn State LB LB LB LB Player of the year: Jack Hamm, Penn State Coach of the year: Bill McDonald, Edinboro State Rick Terza Al Bowman Sam Vaughon Pete Luciano Jack Kasper Dave Connelly Marty Pavel ic Paul Chekot Paul Zangrilli Neil Gordon Don Dietz Roland Sparrow Pancho Micir Jim Romaniszyn Rich Weaver QB RB RB RB RB RB Joe Belasco Tony Esposito Al Raines Tom Rockwell Rick Stevenson Bill Brannan Dick Smith Bob Calloway Joe Carroll George Nicholson Tom Rogish Bob Allen Joe Sass Ron Corcetti Lynn Ferguson Basic Seamanship Offered On January 21 at 8:00 to 10:00 p.m. (Thursday evenings) a FREE course (Book cost $3.00) in Basic Seamanship will be offered by the United States Coast Guard Auxiliary Flotilla 53 of Harrisburg. The course is open to all Capitol Campus students, faculty, staff, and their guests. The course will be instructed by competent instructors and will be comprehensive in nature. Some of the topics included in the lecture/movie series will be an introduction to pleasure boating, maneuvering, marlinspike seamanship, aids to navigation, charts and compass reading, rules of the road to boating, legal responsibilities, safe motorboat operation, nautical terms, boat nomenclature and recommended condition and equipment standards. McDonald, 4-4-1 in 1969 in his first season at Edinboro, led the Fighting Scots to an 8-0 regular season mark and .a victory in the Pennsylvania State College Conference playoff. Ebby Hollins of Edinboro was the top vote-getter in the poll with Ham and offensive end Mike Siani of Villanove tied for the runnerup spot. Hollins, 6-1 200-pound defensive tackle from Aliquippa, made up for lack of size with his quickness and strength. He was credited with 161 stops in 10 games. Pitt’s Dennis Ferris and Indiana’s Larry Monsilovich gives the backfield plenty of scoring power. Ferris gained 595 yards rushing and 506 on pass receiving good for 54 points while Monsilovich gained 937 yards rushing and 221 on pass receiving good for 90 points. FIRST TEAM 6-3 6-2 5- 6- 5-9 5-10 5-10 SECOND TEAM OFFENSE Team Clarion State Shlppensburg State Lock Haven State Pennsylvania Villanova Indiana West Chester State Edinboro State Villanova Indiana Shlppensburg State Clarion State Pennsylvania Edinboro PMC Villanova Pitt Edinboro State Edinboro State West Chester State DEFENSE Villanova Clarion State California State West Chester State Lehigh Indiana Waynesburg Edinboro State Clarion State Drexel Certificates of completion will be awarded. This course will be informative and pertinent. Audio visual aids will be used to stimulate the presentation. Please attend. Room E-264 will be used. Meeting dates are: Jan. 14, Jan. 21, Jan. 28, Feb. 4, Feb. 11, Feb. 18, Feb. 25, Mar. 4, and Mar. 11 END. (Continued from Page \ ) The others are the Division of Humanities, Social Sciences, and Education, and the Division of Administration, Business, and Regional Planning. He and his wife, the former Mary Kelley, are the parents of two daughters. Hometown Staten Island, N.V. Richmond, Va. Braddock Mt. Lebanon Closter, N.J. Erie Clascow, N.Y. Conneaut, Ohio Salem, N.J. Pittsburgh Butler New York, N.Y. Williamsport Hastings Aliquippa Pittsburgh Johnstown Pittsburgh Belle Vernon Wilmington, Del Pittsburgh Bethel Park Annville