Vol. XIV, No. 10 LEEYE LOCK HAVIM STATI COLLICI Toes., Sept. 29,1970 RUSH BEGINS LHS Prof Criticizes Convocqtioii ^j}eaker l-ditor's note: The following article is a critique oj Dr. Paul Goodman's convocation speech written by Charles R. Kent, a member of the Lock Haven State College history department and writer for the Lock Haven Review. A moderate leftist, ncoanarchist Goodman admonishes youth, pretends lo be their leader, i n s i s t s he is one of their kind and promptly lapses into Puritanism. He would have our technological s o c i e t i e s go back to the simpler d a y s , to decentralized eras of shared responsibilily, multiple centers of decision making, reduction of of high s c h o o l s , elementary ,-.ehools and institutions of -Uer learning. How? He has no program, only a criliquel A marvelous product of the system he would purify, he unfailingly makes learned allusions to McLuhan, Mead, Marcuse, Huxley, and Orwell, the while he notes how terrible the system is that produced those men and Goodman. Three degree Goodman iii'lerslands that there can be new ethic, only a new apich to morality. Correctly surmises that youth has a U,oi«ied view of the world. Riglitly he knows that youth's solutions are as programless a s his own. Yet would he have ihem do more of whatever il is they are doing. 'Dicir activism, '••• 11.nes. is aporonriate and will ! iruit. It may, in the mture, -,.i..v the metabolic rate of technological society and create for youth their own world. Inaeed, the tenure of Ooodman's written and spoken record i-s that techn(7logical society i.s lining what it ought to do, more or l e s s ; but, that it should he done in a slower pace and wilh a shared administrative technique. He plays variations on this theme by a mixtuie of proper amounts of ternl, nice, prudence, courage and ice. Apparently the four virtues slow s o c i e t y ' s nietiiholism. Hie slower the p a c e , the moie humane, reasonable, beneficial or worthwhile the activity. Nie prawda! Original? Goodman never had an original llmught. Interesting? Oh, i e s ! VVorlliy of attention and study? Assuredly. Kor Goodman is a dedicated, professional, warm, humane sincere and unoriginal but forceful reformer. Ilo is convinced of the wisdom of his benighteil w a y s . One would expect no less of a speaker brought here as the result, no doubt, of a collective decision by a facullv committee. Library Inifiates New Systems " n i i s year the library is going lo try to be more responsive to sludenl n e e d s , " s a y s Mr. Robert Bravard, head librarian at Lock Haven S t a l e . Jack Infield, SCC President, will appoint a Studeni Librarian Commillee which will be availi 11111- fur iiyyicslions and req u e s t s , such as for books, magazines and s c i v i o e s . I'lii.'s ycui MI. Tien Chu is in charge- of audio-visual material, llie area is being completely reorganized and when finished il is lioriCLl lo provide belter t>ervice with ilu; acquisition of needed m a i e r i a l s . Once the audio-visual sec tion is e s t a b l i s h e d , the library will have a li.sliiiuig aiea of forty booths willi e a s s e l i e s . I'en of these booihs. u i l l have equipment for nidivuliial previewing filmstrijjs. I h c entire area will be wired like a niiiiature KM radio staiioii, -so all boolh.s can listen to the same material it n e e e s s a r y . llie libiary is a l s o trying i:, pii.villi- more basic research hiateiial and mare outside reaUlllg. ORE-GRADUATE RECORD E X A M I N A T I O N will be administered at Lock Haven State College on Saturday, December 12, 1970, if a minimum of WASHINGTON, D . r . - T h e National 15 candidates register with $2400 ior the first-year level; Research Council has been called the Placement Office, Bent$2600 for the intermediate level; upon again l o advise the National and $2800 for the terminal-year ley H a l l , by Monday, October Science I'oundation in the s e l e c level. The basic annual stipend 26, 1970. All candidates intion of candidates foi the I-oundafor rostdoctoral F'ellows is $6500. terested in attending a gradt i o n ' s program of graduate ami !,>c pendency allowances and alregular postdoctoral fenowship,s. ii •-ances for tuitjon, f e e s , and uate school are urged to rePanels of outstanding s c u n gister for this testing date. led travel will also be provided tisls appointed b\ the R, ,)th programs. Secure a copy of the GRE InCouncil will evaluate api,!;,, Further '"forrn tion and formation Bulletin and Regiof all candidate,-. !• ina 1 ,sclceii,in application materials may be obstration Form in the Place- will be m i l e h\ ;l,e I oiindal loii, lained from the Fellowship Office, ment Office, The Registration with award.s iniiouneed on National Research Council, 2lOl Form and fee must be returned March 15, {-• Constitution Avenue, N.W., WashPostbi. ,,„„: ,,,i,i gr i)u,i le ington, D.C. 2041«. The deadline to the Placement Office and fellow •sin,, , ,.', ill he awarded lor date for the submission of applinot the ETS, study m i,,i. inathematieal, p l n s i - ci tions for graduate fellcwships c a l , medical, biological, engi- is November 30, 1970, and for neering, and certain social sci- regulai postdoctoral felloiv iships.e n c e s , ami ii the history iind/or Dtfcember 7, 1970. Awa rd.s philosv.phi,- 111 SI; icnee . will nol be tiiaile in ei in ica I, business fielil,',, education, o nor in history or sociiil work, iioi The longest running off- for Work toward medical or law Broadway comedy-drama, " T o d e g r e e s . Applieatiun may b, ,ia ' Be Yoiang, Gifted, and B l a c k , " a women's a self-portrait by Lorraine college seniors, gadu..itc s.tiiUciii ila, J; Hall, Hans berry, will be performed a I working in a degree program, and men Ixick Haven Stat" College on individuals wishing to do postOctober 7th, al 8:15 p.m. in doctoral work. ,-Ml applicant- ii Price Auditorium. be citizens of the I'nited '•'•' lo The off-Broadway hit is and will be iiidged ,s.)iel, ing ti, making a national tour of fifty basis of ability. ere t lying liuit boifi cities. In the posldocl > >i al eie slipping otf their " T o Be Young, Gifted, and only, fl lli.\w,l!!i>.-' •'.all i !-. This rumor B l a c k " is a major statement fi^r applied ai;-: - ^.p' , at 11! according recreating the world of the in the field ot ku-. M ' lier. i . Sie-, woman, the artist and her black the metliodology ol ds. iajildmgs experience in America. s c i e n c e s or whici ll. I rack.s did addition, Miss Hansberry was a l s o research in Ihe , Ihi ; ons the brilliant author of " A Rai- s c i e n c e s , the son in the S u n " for which she doctoral (Xoi:;.: • .-.sireceived the New York Drama Critics Award for " T h e Best of awards will bt :..iUc ;u ua,, i- deticy lor the suiniuer s e s s i o n s . The cracks were caused Play of the Y e a r . " She was disciplinary a r e a s . oecause not enough space Ihe youngest American"29Persons holding a a •a-, .allowed for the expansion and the only Black dramatist, in one field and wishing i, 1, Mac lion of tiatuial irale or female, lo win this take high-level work in coveted a w a r d . area of study sup|i,.iiel •Will flic work done this " T o Be Young, Gifted, and National Scion e l-oc, -uiiuner, the building is now B l a c k , " adapted for the stage apply m Ihi,--. e. 'ii![ieliliiji;. structural ly sound. by Robert Nemiroff, is " a n Apphiaiits for the jjic-iuate understanding embrace of our awartis wm be requited to lake fellow men...intimate, rational, the Gradual!- Keeoid t'xaminac o m p a s s i o n a t e , " according to tioiis eleslgned lo ic.sl scienti- There seems to be i Harold Clurinan of The Nation. fic aptitude and aehievciiieiil. The spiead fear of "int la James Wechsler of the examinations, administered by the this i-ountry - among ihi New York Post called il "a Educational J e s t i n g Service, will have something to s e l l . chapter of history yel unfinished be given on Deeenihcr 12, l')7(l al and a reminder of where we kist designated UCTIICIS ibi oatdioul Ihe our w a y . " Don't lose your United Slab,', 1 i n c e i i a i n i ••.•',,•.< way to Price Auditorium on couiilries . Oct. 7th! J'he ..1 Slioeoi Graduate I'cllows are Fellowships To BeAwarded Way ro Hit LHS Judged Sound LHS Booters Clip Highlanders, by Chris Plyler The LHS booters went on a merry lark lo Edinboro State and shut-out the Scots 6-0, They were totally outclassed by LHS. Keith Harmon sent in the LHS first goal with less than ten minutes left in the first quarter. Galen Hess a s s i s t e d . During the second quarter LHS really took advantage of Edinboro's poor goal lending. The Eagles scored three unassisted goals made from the twenty-five yard line; Lonnie Ostrum came through for two s c o r e s , Galen Hess one. Steve Steffen a s s i s t e d Jim Sleicher with the E a g l e s fifth goal in the opening minutes of the third quarter. Sleicher made the f'nal goal in tlie fourth period wilh the a s s i s t a n c e from Galen H e s s . Vulcans Down Eagles 34-28 6-0 CALIFORNIA - 'What can 1 say axcept we lost another one, ' The team went wild with commented a disappointed Lock a total of forty-two shots at the Haven State head football coach goal compared to Edinboro's Bob Weller after watching his four. Every man on the team had team come back strong three the opportunity to play. times after trailing California Bruce Parkhill left the game State 20-0, 27-7 and .'{4-14 before during the third quarter giving dropping a 34-28 heart-breaker to LHS's other two very fine goalthe favored Vulcans on Saturday. ies the chance to play. ParkAfter a pause for thought. hill returned late in the fourth quarter lo put in an unusual ap- Coach ''/eller added, "The boys pearance on the forward line. put on a tremendous football show here today. They c a m e to Coach Karl Herrmann felt the team had fun on Saturday. play and everyone of them gave 100 percent and you can't ask ^or "We have our hands full from ;inything m o r e . " now on, however," commented Fran Cornelius, offensive line Herrmant^. coach, had words of praise for "Everyone looked great the fine play of the line. "They today. Once we started to move were remarkably improved over the ball there was no doubt athe last two games and they all bout who would w i n , " concluded looked good. There was some the coach. The next game for the Ea- great blocking by our boys gle booters will be on Wednesday today, " he said. at Lycoming College. Mike Packer, Lock Haven's brilliant quarterback and one of top small college passers in the nation, put on another amazing aerial show completing 20 of 36 passes for 309 yards and three touchdowns. Sam Vaughn once again led the receivers in snaring the Packer "bullets, " with 10 receptions for 163 yards. Speedster Wayne these years still owned Hoffman took a five and gained part." 53 yards. Tommy Allen, playing KARRAS: ' Ye'ih, t i i a t s his best game of the season, right." caught four for 86 yards. PRATO: "Didi.'t you sign Defensively, linebacker Bill something back then that made Rhodes continued his great play you obliguied to s e l l ? " with eight unassisted tackles and KARRAS: " H a , h a , h a . h 13 assists. Tim Crompton, was all a verbal thing. They'd another linebacker,^ had fight never put anything down on pa|nd 10. M e f AQCIQ' 2^-pound per. All they'd have to say on i r ^ t i m k n — • p l w ' n g his first paper is that there is something Varsity game at defensive end, wrong with 'he associations in the Lindell and they'd be slapped had five unassisted tackles and with the c.egest law suit they've six assists Dave Witcoskie, who ever s e e n . Fiankly, 1 wish they'd again played his "heart out, " put it on paper s o I could take had four and six in tackles, and two ex-LHHS gridders, Jeff this thing lo c o u r t . " Knarr and Jeff McGhee. chipped PRATO: " B u t don't you in with 5 and 6. and 3 and 8 feel you were wrong in l y i n g ? " respectively. KARRAS: " L y i n g to whom. Lock Haven stayed on the To a guy who was trying to beep me? I don't give a damn what ground in the first quarter with Pete i7ozclle s a y s . I'm not going Bob Shuey and Alex Nuzzo picking up yardage a s the Bald o welch on my friends." Eagles started to establish a Karras Reveals Defial Of Razelle far Six Years NEW YORK" Detroit Lion defensive tackle Alex Karras defied pro football commissioner Pete Rozelle for more than six y.'ars, reveals an article in SPORT magazine. Karras, who was suspended m 1963 for one year for gambling on pro football games, was ordered by Rozelle to sell his interest in the IindeU A . C , a bar which was -upposedly a hangout for utiderw ^rld characters. Hxcerpts from the SPORT a r t i c k written by Lou Prato reveal Karras' attitude toward the commis.Sioner. PRATO-'Pete Rozelle told you to sell your interest in Lindell A.C. Did you s e l l ? " KARRAS: " i i ? l l , no! I just sold my interest a fev months ago." PRATO. " Y o u mean you told them yo, sold it and all Aaron Rules NEW YORK-Atlanta Brave superstar Hank Aaron thinks Gene Mauch and Harry Walker are lousy managers; " I t burns me up a little that there's this kind of—what you call it—managerical club, whereby the owners seem to have gotten together and decided that certain men, white men, should be hired and rehired no matter what kind of failures they have been. Take guys like Gene Mauch or Harry Walker. They've both had real good teams a t one time or anotlier but have never produced a winner, and yet a s soon a s they're fired by one owner, another owner picks them up and gives them a new chance. A second chance is one thing, but third and fourth chances when you've been lousy time and again with first-rate material seems ridiculous; especially when you've got guys like Ernie (Banks) and Willie (Mays) available in the wings. "Now, a guy like Walt Alston or Gil Hodges should be rehired again and again, because each of them h a s proved that he can work well with players, that he knows the game and that he can get the most from the team. But there aren't all that many guys like that around." Aaron also views h i s own credentials a s : " I believe I would make a good m a n a g e r , " s a y s Hank, " I think I know enough about giound attack for the fii s, time this season. A fuisble midway in the first quarter set up the V«lcans' first score a s Bob Street recovered the ball on the Eagles 18 yard line Seven plays later quarterback Bob Keys hit Bob Elash over the line for three yards and at 8:31 the Vulcans led 7-0, At the start of the second quarter California started a drive, mostly on the ground, and marched 77 yards in eight minutes to score on an end sweep by Keys. Highlight of the march was the hard running of two sub backs, J i m Burns and Joe Monstrola. After the Eagles were held on the next series of downs Jeff Knarr punted 36 yards to the California 38. It took the Vulcans only five plays to hit paydirt again with the final 50 yards coming on a great pass-run play from Keys to Larry Zdilla. At this point it looked a s if California was going to have a field day with a 20-0 lead in the second quarter. But Packer and his "aerial circus " were yet to be heard from After Witcoskie returned the kickoff 15 yards to the 32 of Lock Haven, Packer hit on six straight passes, moving the ball to the California 13. Allen, with a pitchout, sped around end to put the Eagles on the scoreboard with 1:35 left in the half. Dan Guers came in to kick the first of four extra points. The soccer-style kicker has six-forsix on the season. Lock Haven seemed on the way again at the start of the third quarter but a fumble gave the Vulcans the ball on its own 4V In just five plays halfback Bob Elash rammed over from the one and the lead was back to 20 at 27-7. After the kickoff the Beagles were on the move and went 75 yards lo score on a tremendous play by Allen Taking a flat pass from Packet, the former Big Bad Managers the game and about how to get along with a whole team to produce a winner. And I'd say the same about Ernie and Willie, Unfortunately, no owner h a s had the guts up to this point to hire a black manager." ...Opinion LHS... To the Editor, Eagle Eye Dear Sirs: I presume in your rush to get into print tho news of Convocation you were not conciously overlooking the participation of the music department in the ceremonies. However, upon rereading the articles I find significant o m i s s i o n such a s faculty promotions etc May I remind the staff of the newspaper that the function of a paper is to report it as it happened. P.S. If the quality of the reporting and writing in the current editions continues to be a s poor a s it h a s been 1 STRONGLY S U e ^ E S T T H ^ Xap_PAjPER NOI ATTEMPT A DAILY EDITION. John B. McGowan Editor's note: Eagle Eye's editorial board feels that a person oj Dr. Goodman's stature certainly takes precedence over a couple of selections performed by the college choir. 33er seemed trapped behind the line of scrimmage but with a second effort he broke loose from two Vulcans and outraced the entire Vulcan team scoring ona 48-yard jaunt. California then put on a long drive but the Eagle defense stopped them on the Lock Haven seven. Five plays later another Eagle fumble set up the last score for the Vulcans. From the eight. Joe Monstrola ran up the middle and w(ith 14:14 left in the contest the viclors led 34-14. Seemingly unstoppable, the Vulcans came right back tc move to the Lock Haven 17 but Kevin Mack pounded on a fumble and on four straight pass completions the Eagles were on the scoreboard again. The TD came on a beautiful pass-run play of 43 yards from Packer to Vaughn. With eight minutes to play the Vulcans were on the movetince again after a pass interception by Don Roberts on the Lock Haven 38. Staying on the ground they reached the two-yard line where the Eagles stopped them cold. It took Packer just five pass completions, in a little over one minute, to march 98 yards with Hoffman scoring after ^ 2 1 yard pass-run play. During the drive Vaughn made three fantastic catches. With 1:48 to go the Eagles were back in the game at 34-28. On the kickoff Lock Haven attempted a short kick and just missed by two yards of having the ball in Vulcan territory again but the kick, recovered by the Eagles, had only traveled eight yards. The defense held and forced California to kick but with 29, seconds to play time ran out before the Eagles could start another drive. Now the Bald Eagles must lace the Pennsylvania Conference Western Division defending champs, the Clarion Golden E a g l e s . Clarion, undefeated this season, has scored 95 points in blasting Mansfield, 48-7, and Geneva 47-0. The contest will be Saturday a t 8 p.m. at Spring Street Stadium. WHirilSKE AMERICA BEAUPnF^L byriENRYGIBSON Because it's my country. And it's getting dirty. That's w