Praeco Offers Poetry THE PRAECO is sponsoring a contest for the best poem written about the discoveries encountered during c o l l e g e . The winning poem will appear in the 1973 PRAECO presently scheduled to appear May 15. E a c h poem should convey the human r e l a t i o n s h i p s , social problems and new ideas a student laces which is in college the theme of this year's PRAECO- Entries should be submitted to Kathy Osborn or Ginny Schuyler before November 1st. The style of the 1973 PRAECO is centered around the Mondrien effect. Mondrien was a 20th century painter who used r e c t a n g l e s , lines and bright colors in his design. The yearbook staff, for example i.-; trvinii to scatter colored Award pictures throughout the entire hook rather than have them all in the front. Members of the y e a r ' s PRAECO staff include Kathy Osborn and Ginny Schuyler, e d i t o r s ; Cathi Crook.s and Barb Peterson, a s s i s tant editors; Bill Glass and Ellen HiUyer, b u s i n e s s managers; Rick Wolfe and Fran Costolnick, advertising editors; Ellen Gutshall, Ron MaNahen and Sue Rosenberry, layout editors; Cheryl Krause, Sue Minor and Betsy Persum, copy editors; D a v e Kelly and Rick French, photographs. Other Staff members include Kiithy Doebler, Janis Hamberger, Pallie Barharice. Marge Borsheimer. Renny Miller. Jan Albright. Beth Korsythe. and Tom Hrwin. Republican Ramblings and business has improved. Also, Personal income taxes have been drastically reduced; by c o n t r a s t , In response to my Democratic corporate income taxes have gone This leads one to wonder: counterpart's many requests for u p . information (''What has Nixon done Where are McGovern's tax loopabout t h i s ? " , "What has Nixon h o l e s ? done about t h a t ? " , e t c . ) , this is CIVIL RIGHTS-The percentage a partial list of the achievements of all blacks in all-black Southern of the Nixon administration. s c h o o l s has dropped sharply during VIETN.AM-All ground troops and the Nixon administration. Unlike most air and naval uni's have been his opponent, Mr. Nixon's stand withdrawn from Vietnam. The war on busing is clear—he opposes it. by Robert Singer been heard here before. DavidNo doubt, The v o i c e , however, was a- is just about over. Something happened at Lock ovsky is an electronic composer, nother matter. She has a powerful. there wil! be some people who will He has a l s o pushed plans for inHaven State College that has ne- and calls upon the artist to product voice, but did not use it h e r e . It say that the recent cease-fire creasing Negro imployment in conver happened before, and probably an incredible variety of s o u n d s . was well-rounded, but not full. news is nothing more than com- struction; he has enlarged federal programs for developing Blackwill never happen again. Five Finkel explained that he had dis- She could have blasted the audipaign propaganda. These are the owned b u s i n e s s e s ; and he has exmusicians invaded the place, and cussed the interpretation before ence out of the Lounge, except people who are more interested in panded the number of Blacks in Ihrough the use of open rehearsals with Davidovsky, who said that for the fact that the s t o r e did* not s e e i n g George McGovern elected government. and musical rap s e s s i o n s , drew he wanted him " t o make n o i s e , " call for it and the a c o u s t i c s , President that they are in seeing WELFARE-Time and a g a i n , the enough student interest to perform in any way practical. So Finkel which she complained about. " E v peace in Vietnam. President has attempted to instifor a " p a c k e d " Bentley Hall went at it, as ing col legno (wood erything s o a k s up the s o u n d " " t h e FOREIGN AFFAIRS-President tute needed welfare reforms. Time Lounge last T h u r s d a y night. of the bow on the strings), notes ceiling, the w a l l s " " i t even goes So what's so great about open played on the other (lower) side into the cracks in the floor," she Nixon has made trade and cultural and again he has failed, b e c a u s e exchange agreements with Red the Democrat-dominated Congress rehearsals? Nothing, except for of the bridge, and tapping the s a i d . But her voice was s t i l l the fact that when the performers bridge and the mute placed there heard—at least four rows b a c k . China and the Soviet Union, two vetoed these reforms. The present nations with whom we had previ- welfare s y s t e m is the fault, not of are all within the 22-27 age range^ during the course of the composiThe next piece on the program ously been h o s t i l e . In addition, P r e s e d e n t Nixon, but of Congress students can identify with them tion, to produce the various noises and the sounds they are making. called for. The idea of the work was Mendelssohn's Rondo Capric- a nuclear arms limitation treaty and of the previous a d m i n i s t r a t i o r » 8 . The last time artists came in here is to have each " i n s t r u m e n t " im- cioso. Op. 14, but the next things has been signed by the United All of the above-mentioned and played open r e h e a r s a l s , the itate the other, and in parts, this played were Couperin harpsichord States and the Soviet U n i o n - a big facts are available to anyone p i e c e s . The switch was made, s o s t e p towards world peace! response was s p a r s e , mainly be- may have come out. whose research extends beyond However, cause of the age differences in- the majority of the piece did not said Willis, who was to perform, ECONOMY-While what my counter- campaign literature. The responbecause the piano " w a s not in part s a y s about the economy may s i b l e voter will take an extra volved, and also because the re- reflect this thought. good r e p a i r . " That was a polite be true, it is not the whole story. hearsals were not held in Bentley, minute for research and he will The next work was actually way of saying that the s u s t a i n i n g where the vast majority of the stuWhat he neglects to mention is find that the R E A L action party, written for the combination em- pedal, basic to every piano was dents pass tlirough d a i l y . bodied by the quartet. Elliot not working. It is incredible that that, s i n c e the advent of wage- the REAL people's party, the price controls, the rate of inflation R E A L peace party is the RepubHowever, the sounds weren't Carter's Sonata was another conneither the music department, nor has slowed, unemployment is down. meaningless, and culminated in a temporary work again taking adlican party. the maintenance department, nor concert last T h u r s d a y night. Da- vantage of specific sounds that the administration could come up vid Barg, his wife Badiene, Steve can be made with various instruwith an instrument decent enough Berklehammer, Chris Finkel, and ments. There was tongue-rolling for the performance here. But Andrew Willis combined their ta- in the flute part, and Willis made that's the way it g o e s . And while lents on flute, soprano, oboe, a variety of noises on the harpsithe Couperin works were played 'cello, and harpsichord to produce chord to add to the effects. An The Open Classroom well enough, they did not make SENIORS: Dr. Donald A. Webb, an interesting performance of mu- interesting point to be made here Conference at AkIey Elementry an adequate substitute for the Dean of Admissions, Methodist sic ranging from early Baroque to is that the program did not give a Mendelssohn, which had attracted Theological School, previously scheduled School, Ohio recent contemporary. totally accurate description of the a few people to the program in its The four . instrumentalists piece ran. The first movement own right. Wesleyan University, Delaware, for Saturday, Oct. 28 has been form a group called the Philadel- was marked " R i s o l u t o , " but this postponed until Saturday, The final number was Mo- Ohio, will be in the Bentley phia Chamber Solosils, and their lasted for all of nine measures and May 12, 1973. Hall Lounge on Nov. 2, 1972, zart's FAntasia for a Mechanical most dil'ficull task is probably the rest of the section definitely finding music lo play for their par- was not that. The same applied Clock, which was a l s o written at 4:15 to interview students ticular instrumental combination. to the middle movement " L e n t o . " for this combination, and which There will be an Election They opwned Ihc concert with the The final Allegro was indeed an also used the piano. (They took interested in Graduate TheoCommittee meeting Thursday, their chances and made it do.) Telcnvinn I'm S^nciia m F. minor. Allegro. The quartet responded logical Education. Sign up at And since a trio normally com- creditably to the musical demands The music here was d i f f i c u l t and the Office of Career Services November 2, at 1 pm in the PUB the result was excellent, but Moprises ihrcc instruments (in this made of them by the piece. conference room. zart doesn't seem to have done for group sessions. caso, tlute, oboe, and 'cello), a Miss Magaziner made her ap>- well in imitating a mechanical fouiih part was improvised so the pearance to open the second half, clock, unless of course his clocks harpsichord could get in on the Attention Food Service Comsinging three a n a s by various ba- were different, in t h i s , one of his Notice: There will be an imporact a l s o . It was a gotxl move. roque composers, P a i s i e l l o , Scar- last wtirks. The music still had tant meeting of all students mitte: There will be a meeting Willis used the musical effects of latti, and Bach. The first two to be watched, however, because the instrument's note-sounding with IA'. Pronesti in the dining were love songs, the translations It was played in such a manner persuing a career in medicine structure to add to the composition. iif which undoubtedly provided a thai It could slip away from the on Tuesday, October 31 at 1pm hall Tuesday, Oct. 31 at 1:15. Another change in the standard measurable amount of appeal to listener if his concentration technique was F'inkel's pizzicato in Ulmer 311. the audience. lapsed. using the right thumb (normally the Attention: The Church of The third was out of Bach's right index finger is used). He .\ final note about this group 187th Cantata. The interpretations Tickets for the college players Jesus Christ of Latter-Day explained difference was noticein these were quite interesting. IS the background of its members. production will be available Saints, (Mormons) will be havable, however, is another question. There was facial as well as musi- The wind players both study with The piece was typical Telemann. cal perforniance a faci wliich Miss the principal players in the Phila- Friday, October 27 in the PUB ing a display in Rogers Gym But what was not typical Magaziner noted as necessary delphia Orchestra. Finkel is un- Secretary's office. Tickets for Nov. 2 and 3. It will consist was the next selection. Finkel afterwards. .\ nasal sound niu.'-t der the tutelage of O l a n d o Cole, combined with a tape recording to be produced, especiails in the liigh among Philadelphia's 'cel- the Margaret Mead Lecture to of information concerning the prixluce Mario Davidovsky's Scarlatti, svhich involves old men l i s t s , and Willis currently works be given will be available be- beginnings of the church and Synctiriniisni i-.1 for ' c e l l o and tape, Mieczyslaw Horszowski, girlwatching on some street cor- wilh the likes of which have never some of the beliefs. Curtis Institute's Mozart expert. ginning Nov. I. ner. by J. Scott Landis Chamber Soloists Offer Unique Performance Here Announcements Booters Tie M a n s f i e l d 3-3 by Robert Singer LHS managed to score four goals but ended up with a tie on Friday a s the booters fought Millersville State C\)llege to a 3-3 deadlock. How did that happen? Well., it amounts to the fact that on the Marauders' first goal, their direct free kick bounced off fullback Len Long and went into the net. Technically, the goal is attributed to Long. This was in the first half, when both teams were making attempts to get things together and not doing particularly well. The passing was nearly a d i s a s t e r and the defense was not sharp either. Goalie Craig Dawson, who normally plays a fairly steady game, let a couple balls go by which nearly ended up as goals. For the most part, however, it was the long ball that was hampering the game. Very often a hefty boot would come from the middle of the LHS side of the field, only to land amidst a bunch of Millersville players and be returned. Also, several good opportunities were missed by both teams, in that half. The second half was better played as both teams seemed to be on top of the game more. During a flurry of action around lent field position on the LHS 47. ing, he snuck up the middle the net, the Bald Eagles got on the scoreboard ^ ^ e n Steve However one thing did change for the s c o r e . Steffen sent a pass to Barry Johnson, who got it by the g o a l i e . Moving from his own 3 5 , Mcand drastically for the better A little less than four minutes later, Johnson again scored Gill attempted a pass tp Frank for the E a g l e s . The defense threw the Mounties back, holdingthem Geiger which fell incomplete, but when Galen Hess gave him a beautiful shot, which he e a s i l y to a -2 yards in three p l a y s . The the official spotted interference. netted. Eagle offense still looking slug- This gave LHS new life at the 4 5 . Thus the team's morale shot up at that point, now carrygish, was forced to punt. The Kline hauled in the next pass ing a 2-1 lead, and cries of " t h e y ' r e d y i n ' ! " filtered out from defense, on the other hand, con- with 52 s e c o n d s left and went the s i d e l i n e s . Indeed, Millersville was tiring out, but there was tinued in its hard changing w a y s . to his own 4 9 . On third down On fourth and 16 situation, the McGill took the s n a p from center one p r o b l e n - s o was LHS. Both teams had run the other off the entire front line burst through and and rolled to his left, dodging a field. A defensive lapse lead to a Marauder goal. From then on tackled the Mountie punter on his strong pursuit from Mansfield. He the game was rather evenly played. own 12. Two plays later, Kline stopped and screened back to the Another flurry of action at Millersville's goal kept the plowed over from the two for LHS left to Chuck Vennie, whom, with ball batted around for at least a minute. Nobody keeps a ball second touchdown. The third four blockers in front of him, ran quarter ended with the Mounties down the field for the winning there that lon^ and doesn't score, and indeed, LHS did, when touchdown. Tom Rowan passed it to (who e l s e ? ) Barry Johnson. Barry then enjoying a 24-12 lead. With only 41 seconds remain- accomplished his second hat tricjf of the week, and it looked EAGLES CLOSE THE G A P With the start of the fourth ing, Mansfield tried every desper- like the game would be Lock H a v e n ' s . It was simply a matter of quarter, the Eagles defense did ate play they knew, but to no hanging onto the lead, slim though it w a s , for a lousy five not let u p . They forced a fumble , a v a i l . With 20 seconds left, Steve minutes. and Bill McNelis recovered on the Glass intercepted a "throw a w a y " Miller pass t o end any threat from But it was not simple. An offensive drive by MSC culminMountie 3 1 . Two plays later, McGill hit Tommy Allen at the the Mounties. ated in a goal at 41:35 which went right by Dawson into the Mansfield 16. Vennie ripped to This week, the Bald Eagles top corner of the net. End of lead. And three minutes later, the five, and two plays later. Bob meet powerful Slippery Rock. end of half. Nothing of significance happened in the two five Kline scored his third touchdown The kickoff is a t 1:30 in Spring minute overtimes that followed, other than the fact that Millersof the d a y . McGill passed to Street Stadium. ville blew a pair of corner kicks (they had three the entire Allen in the corner of the endzone for two points, and suddenly, the game) and still didn't score. E a g l e s had pulled to within four Coach Karl T. Herrmann was disappointed with the r e s u l t . points; 24-20. So was his team. (All soccer players hate t i e s . They'd rather The defense again forced a lose first.) Later he s a i d , "We should have won the way we Mountie punt, and the E a g l e s played." took over at their own 30- On the Write today for our FREE catfirst play, McGill took the ball, Indeed, LHS had outplayed their opponents, at least a c alogue of professionally refaded to a p a s s , and lofted one cording to the statistics—shots fell 23-9 to the Bald E a g l e s , searched term papers. t o the racing Chuck Vennie for a and the same for corner k i c k s , 9-3. Herrmann commented that We also prepare custom re70 yard pass and run combination. searched papers. " t h e first two goals were mental m i s t a k e s . " And he still praisThe Eagles led for the first time M I N U T E RESEARCH ed Hess and J(jhnson, for their " g o o d jobs on d e f e n s e . " in the game. 26-24. However, the 470 Commonwealth A v e . Mounties were not to be shot Boston, Moss. 02215 down s o e a s i l y . Using brilliant (617) 266-1214 passing and running combined. Rich Miller moved his team t o the "We need a local salesman." LHS one, where with 1:28 remain- Gridders M a k e Second-half Comeback , D o w n MSC 3 2 - 3 0 by Bill Sterner In a dazzling display of offensive power, the Bald Eagles outscored Mansfield 26 points to 6 in the second half to rally for for a 32-30 triumph. MANSFIELD DOMINATES FIRST HALF To the small crowd that challenged the cold temperatures and drizzling r a i n s , the first half seemed to remind them of the Edinboro romp the week before. The quarter started with rays of hope when, on Mansfield's punt of the game. Bob Seale, burst through the line and blocked the kick. After three plays, however, the E a g l e s ' offense only managed the Mountie 20 yard line. On fourth down. Bill McNeliss' field goal attempt trickled wide. Moving from their own 20, the Moimtie offense came a l i v e . Using the running skills of McDonald and Z o s c h g , Rich Miller moved his team to the Lock Haven 48 yard line. On the next play, the third member of the Mountie backfield, Joe Cober ripped off the left side of the line and raced t h e distance for the first s c o r e . Three minutes later, however, the Eagles were on the board. Ed McGill, moving from the Mansfield 25, hit Chuck Vennie down to the 15. On the next play, Frank Geiger bulled off a possible tackle and raced to the 1 yard line. Two plays later, Kline went in for the LHS score. McNelis's point was missed, and the score still held in Mansfield's favor 7-6. PLAGUED BY INTERCEPTIONS After an exchange of punts, McGill again began to move the LHS offense. From his own 47 yard line, he hit Bob Kline racing across the field for a gain of 12 putting them on the Mountie 4 1 . However, on the next play, that familiar d i s a s t e r struck. John Plunkett picked off a McGill sideline pass and rambled down the field 44 yards before McGill himself bumped him out of bounds on the LHS 4. Three plays later, the Mansfield offense scored. The E a g l e s now on the offense, McGill was again intercepted at his own 3 3 . Using the quick snap from center to throw off the LHS defense. Miller moved his Mounties to the 18 yard line. He capped the drive himself by rolling out for the touchdown at 8;49 of the second quarter. The extra point put the score at 21-6, Mansfield. The fired up Mansfield defense choked off the running game and forced Dave Bower, who had replaced McGill, into quick p a s s e s . On Mansfield's next drive, they moved from their own 41 to the LHS 2 3 , where Joe Glenowski booted a field goal, putting the game fatrher out of reach for the Bald K a g l e s . The first half clock ran out, with Mansfield ahead, 24-6. SECOND HALF ACTION The LHS offense seemed the same the second half a s yet another pass ended up in enemy hands. Jerry Tierney's interception gave the Mounties excel- TERMPAPERS Jerry's Candyland Specials 25tli Anniversary Sale Sat., N o v . n The Persuasions - $2 Everything in the store not priced lower - 10% o f f Fri., N o v . 17 The Rock Opera Tommy - $3 Here a r e a few s u p e r b a r g a i n s : Sat., Dec. 2 Crazy Horse- $3 Fri., J a n . 26 Paul Winter Consort - $2 M a n s f i e l d State College Rts. 15 & 6 Tickets a v a i l a b l e a t t h e d o o r 1 J a c k e t Rack - $14.88 v a l u e s to $ 5 0 1 J a c k e t Rack - $ 8 . 8 8 v a l u e s to $ 2 0 Shirts - l o n g s l e e v e $1.99 All name brands on sale including Golden Vee VVoo/rich Campus Levi Lee Come in and sign up for 2-$IOO Gift Certificates. Obligation to Buy. To be given away at end of ERRORITE AT Y O U R BOOKSTORE Jerry's No sale.