Bald Eagle-Nittany High School

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Bald Eagle-Nittany High School
Address
200 Ben Avenue
Mill Hall, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania, 17751
USA
Information
School district Keystone Central School District
Principal Norman Palovcsik (1995-1996)
Enrollment

858 (1995-1996)

Grade 7 145 (1995-1996)
Grade 8 157 (1995-1996)
Grade 9 124 (1995-1996)
Grade 10 141 (1995-1996)
Grade 11 154 (1995-1996)
Grade 12 137 (1995-1996)
Faculty 60
School type public high school
Grades 7-12
Mascot Panther
School Colour(s) Black, White, and Silver
Opened 1955
Closed 1999
Merged with Sugar Valley High School, Lock Haven High School
to form Central Mountain High School

Bald Eagle-Nittany High School was a public high school in Mill Hall, Pennsylvania. The building has since been renovated and is now Central Mountain Middle School.

Contents

[edit] Overview

Bald Eagle-Nittany High School first opened its doors for the 1955-56 school year. Its name stems from the area where its students lived; from both valleys of Mount Nittany and Bald Eagle Mountain. The student body came from Mill Hall, Beech Creek, Pennsylvania, Lamar Township, Pennsylvania, Porter Township, Pennsylvania, and Bald Eagle Township, Pennsylvania. Because of its small town atmosphere it was recognized as a close knit group of staff and students who recognized themselves as "Bennies". In 1999, after already being joined by the majority of the Sugar Valley High School students, Bald Eagle-Nittany merged with Lock Haven High School and the three schools formed Central Mountain High School.[1] After the merger, many in the community were distraught with the fact that events such as the homecoming celebration mentioned above would be lost, along with the outstanding rivalries between these schools. Central Mountain students now recognize their own traditions and are building their own legacy, but the legacy of the old Panthers, Bobcats, and Indians should never be forgotten.

[edit] Athletics

The pride as a Bennie to achieve greatness on the gridiron, diamond, court, or wrestling mat was often paramount; the school band may have been the most dominating of all for its own rich history of championship competition. The athletics program's success started from the top and trickled down to the individual athletes. The athletic department provided the teams with more than could be asked for on a small school budget, and the various fund raiser contributions from the numerous athletic clubs was another way that the community and school worked together to establish a long tradition of pride and success.

[edit] Wrestling

The Bald Eagle-Nittany wrestling program was very successful. Regardless of the opponent, the seats were often filled when the Panther wrestling team took the mat. The Panther grapplers turned out a record of 450-221-11 over the school's forty-three years earning a .670 win percentage.

From the earliest annals of the program there has been success. Coach George Custer coached seven wrestlers to twelve District 6 individual titles, three wrestlers to four state titles and also had two runners-up. Coach Custer was inducted into the Pennsylvania Wrestling Association Coaches Hall of Fame in 1973.

After Coach Custer, Coach Charles "Biff" Walizer headed the program for the next 25 years, amassing a 294-155-6 mark and ten District 6 titles, winning six straight to close out his career. Along with the team titles, Coach Walizer coached thirty-two individual champions to fifty-two total titles at the District 6 tournament. He also shared coaching success at the state level coaching four individual champions to eight titles with six runners-up. Coach Walizer was inducted into the Pennsylvania Wrestling Association Coaches Hall of Fame in 2003.

Along with these two outstanding coaches, the following associates of the Bald Eagle-Nittany wrestling program have also been inducted into the Pennsylvania Wrestling Association Coaches Hall of Fame: Terry Williams - 1991 (wrestler), Norm Polovcsik - 1999 (Editor), and Frank Eisenhower - 2004 (Wrestler).

The teams and individual wrestlers excelled at every level of competition. Bald Eagle-Nittany wrestling was the cream of the crop in District 6 earning twelve tournament titles and three duals titles. The Panthers also placed seventy-five wrestlers on top of the podium as champions, which is still the high mark among AA schools in the district to this day. The program also boasts eight members in the District 6 hall of fame; George Custer (inducted 1990), Terry Williams (1992), Frank Eisenhower (1998), Charles "Biff" Walizer (2000), Barry Daniels (2003), Scott Bair (2006), Trap McCormick (2006), and Biff Walizer (2006).

While wrestling at the regional level the program secured twenty-six champions, several of them earned honors as Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association state wrestling champions. Bald Eagle-Nittany wrestling state champions and runners-up are:

             Champions                         Runners-up
    Frank Eisenhower 145 lbs. 1959     Karl Galbraith 165 lbs. 1963
    Frank Eisenhower 154 lbs. 1960     Barry Daniels  127 lbs. 1966
    Adam Waltz       138 lbs. 1962     Mark Williams  119 lbs. 1975
    Barry Daniels    133 lbs. 1967     Mark Williams  126 lbs. 1976
    Dusty Ream       138 lbs. 1974     Terry Williams 155 lbs. 1979
    Terry Williams   155 lbs. 1977     Casey Koch     119 lbs. 1987
    Terry Williams   155 lbs. 1978     Casey Koch     125 lbs. 1989
    Terry Williams   155 lbs. 1980     Shan Rippey    135 lbs. 1991
    Biff Walizer     125 lbs. 1992     Shawn Weaver   189 lbs. 1997
    Biff Walizer     125 lbs. 1993
    Scott Bair       119 lbs. 1995
    Scott Bair       125 lbs. 1996
   *Trap McCormick   112 lbs. 1997
   +Andy Hull        160 lbs. 1999 
* Also won titles in 1995 and 1996 while wrestling for the Sugar Valley Indians at 103 lbs.
+ Last wrestling match in a Bald Eagle-Nittany singlet.

[edit] Noted alumni

  • Gregory M. Strouse (class of 1988), workers’ compensation attorney, highly ranked by Pennsylvania Super Lawyer Magazine and Law and Politics[2]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links