LHS Students Are Enjoying Nottingham vtt. xv.Ho. 3 9 LOCK HAVEN STATE COLLEGE *•"•' N»V. 17, ISTI Students Earn Credit With ACTION Frost's exhibits on second floor Raub Aero Club To Organize Early this year more than 125 students exhibited an intere s t in forming an Aero Clati. After much delay and considerable effort, a meeting with several aeronautic representatives h a s been scheduled in Ulmer Planctariuin Sunday evening November 21 at 7:30 p.m. Present at the meeting will be Mr. Jim Shantz, Manager of Air Science Education for the Piper Aircraft Company; Professor Harold Wood of the Parks Air College, affiliated with St. Louis University, St. Louis, Missouri, who is a l s o the E x e c u t i v e Director of National Intercollegiate Flying Association; and the current secretary of the University Aviation Association; and Mr. Allan Stee withheld from publication on request of the writer, but all letters must be signed. Letters on any subject are welcomed. However, they musl not be libelous to any individual or group, and they must be written in good t a s t e . 6 a g t e Eye disclaims any and all responsibility for letters, boOi in copient and in topic. ACTION, the agency combining the Peach Corps, VISTA and other volunteer programs, has a new opportunity farcodlege students—the University Year for ACTION. Encompassing 31 schowls and over 1,000 s t u d e n t s , UYA places students in a poor district near their schools to wprk with the underprivileged fair a year while earning credit toward graduation. " T h e University Year for ACTION indicates a willingness on the part of the nation's institutions of higher learning to make their resources available to the poor," Blatchford said in announcing an additional 20 participating schpols in the demonstration, 16-month program recently. " A n d it is a renewal of their commitment to experiment with new modes of education. I can only be encouraged when I s e e the formation of a creative partnership between universities and their students to do something, get involved und make sure that learning takes place at the same tiirre." Blatchford explained that the UYA volunteers work in education, health, j u s t i c e , manpower and job development, housing, welfare, and economic and b u s i n e s s development. They receive a s u b s i s t e n c e allowance of about $200 per month, and must work for one full year with no outside employment permitted. Students begin their year's work next March after working out their assignments with faculty advisers at their s c h o o l s . FiDTty-two percent chosent are juniors, with seniors and sophomores making u p 21 percent each; freshmen account for 5 percent, graduate students for 11 percent. Another program in the planning stages at ACTION involves using surplus army equipment for civilian pilot projects , such as rural transportation s y s t e m s . An ACTION spokesman said the outcome of this plan will be known around the first of the year. Drugs: Wby or why not? Come to Smith Hall and find out. Thros. at 9 p.m. Fight Ceihcdt " ]^\ witha ch'eckup'; and a Check ^ AMERICAN 'IjCANCER 5 SOCIETY ATTENTION: Students, faculty, and staff who signed up for flu shots - the second inJaotiM Will be given TODAY from 12 noon until 1 p.m. at the Glennon Infirmary. The following report on the activities of the Lock Haven State students currently studying at Nottingham College in England was recently received from Bea and Perry Brown: "Our students have adjusted very well to an entirely different system from the one we have at Lock Haven. They are all enrolled in an independent study program with a British tutor, and seem to be getting a great deal out of it. Their work ranges ajiywhere from philosophy, math, history, geography, and literature to divinity and social s t u d i e s . " T h e y have also been active in the organizations and dubs here at Nottingham. Just to c i t e a few— Jerry Luckovich and Jim Furry are playing Rugby; Jim Wilkinson has given readings for the Drama Society; Kathy Bennetti and Jim Wilkinson served on a panel with the Browns for the third year students at the college and disc u s s e d life in America, with questions submitted from the audience^. "Kathy Clough and Dottie Haas have joined the Riding Club and are learning to jump. Jim Lebda and the Browns went to the BBC and taped ar. interview about the exchange program, which was aired over Radio Nottingham a few weeks ago. " A s far a s trips are concerned, you name it— we've been there. Locally, our students seem to have become familiar with every English pub in and around Nottingham. Wc all took a bus trip to York, and almost everyone h a s spent some time in London. We a l s o visited the cathedrals at Lincoln and Southwell. "Over the half term vacation in October, Peggy De Shullo, Jim Lebda, Jim Wilkinson, and Jack Hunsberger weUt to Scotland; Gloria Strubeck, Jerry Luckovich, and a Nottingham student went to Paris; Bob Eichenshr went on a camping trip to Scarborough; KathyClough and Barbara Moyer visited in the homes "of British students. Another group went with the BROWNS and a Nottingham faculty member on a tour of Southern England—Cambridge, Canterbury, Dover, Rye, Hastings, Battle Abbey, Brighton, and Oxford; plus Blenheim P a l a c e . " T h e students will begin student teaching assignments on January 3. They have all been observing and participating in the British s c h o o l s . Then they will finish up on February 15, in time to return to the U.S. on the 1 6 t h . " Eagle Wing Npv. lath serving Thiaiksgi ina Dinner Turk«y|(illing Cranberry Salad Mashed Potatoes . Lima Beans or ComlSalod Roll and Butter Mints Successful White House Conference On Youth The 1971 White House ConA Conference spokesman ference on Youth was the first said last week that this report White House Conference devoted is. well underway in the U cabto the concerns of young people. inet departments and 14 indeA 310-page report t a the pendent a g e n c i e s , and will be President includes approximatincluded in the April rejlort t o ely 550 recommendations from the d e l e g a t e s . the 1,500 delegates to last The Conference report h a s April's moiiting in Estes Parfe, also been sent to 26,000 " i n C o l . , covering subjects as widesti tutuonal leaders " - - b u s i n e s s e s , unions, churches, mass ranging as day-care centers and schools, extra-territorial exploration. media, foundations, e t c . These institutions will fill "You may not agree with out a questionanire on their all 550 recommendations of the delegates^" Stephen Hess, plans for actihg on pertinent chairman of the conference said, recommendations, and a summary " b u t their proposals are cerwill be pfcpared in time for next tainly provcKative and are well spring's report. worth d i s c u s s i o n and debate in In the eight months s i n c e classrooms and community meetApril 22, when the Conference ended, at least two recommendings." ations have taken effect, accordThe Conference was called ing to the spokesman. by the President almost two years ago in an attempt to s e p First, the President's ACTION agency, established arate the concerns of youth aged July 1, Fulfilled a Conference 14 t o 24 from those of children, wish that the Peace Corps and whose problems were aired at VISTA be merged into one volthe White House Conference o(i unteer agency. Children in Washington l a s t December. Second, the National EnThe Cpnference began work dowment for the Arts has a p . pointed youth members to its on ten a r e a s , from foreign polArt Advisory Panels at the Conicy to v a l u e s , ehtics and culference's recommendation. ture, by a s s i n g i n g adult and youth co-chairmen to oversee "Most recommendations the preparation of advisory rewere in the form of proposed ports to the d e l e g a t e s . legislation," the snokesman said. " S o , Congress h a s had n o When the Conference conchance to p a s s any laws imvened tho delegates used these plementing those ideas s i n c e reports to draft their own recomthe C o n f e r e n c e . " mendations, and resolved that Copies of the Report to the a report be submitted to them a President can be obtained for year later on the progress of *2.50 each from the Superintendimplementing their requests. ent of Documents, Government "The President directed Printing Office, Washington, all departmental secretaries and D.C. agency h e a d s t o appoint liaison officers who would coordinate a government-wide response to the Found on the sidewalk in front Conference p r o p o s a l s , " Hess of Ulnar: pair of girl's sliss«s. writes in the report's introducCMtaot.Eagle Eye office. tion. for the day I c a n s figh! • a g a i n . A m e r i c a ' s given everything I've g o t . " A l o n g - h a i r e d 2 2 - y e a r old ici ,-.• • in h i s bc^ A s i g n li' t r e a d " L o v e " bung over h i s h e a ^ " 1 •. i ?' i . or b i t t e r a t a n y b o d y . I'm j u s t d i s a b l e d . It j u s t h a p p e n e d . Nh c o u n t r y s a i d go in t h e r e and s o I d i d . I w a s brought up to b e l i e v e n o t to k i l l , but s o m e t i m e s you h a v e t o kill t o bring r i g h t . I'm h a p p y . . I'm happy t o be b a c k h e r e . 'Veah . . . When I c a m e b a c k , my b u d d y t o o k me o u t — a n d h e d i d n ' t c a r e if I w a s d i s a b l e d or not." by Rick Mitz Rehabilitation I tend t o f o r g e t . A s I s i t through c l u s s e s in s o c i o l o g y , a s I talk h u m a n i s m in my s t u d e n t - o r i e n t e J Anrld. a s I ponder What I Want T o Be When I Grow Up a l t e r ccijlege, a s I write for Ihis c o l l e g e n e w s p a p e r , I tend to forgcl tJiai not everybodv b e t w e e n the a g e s of 18 a n d 25 t o c o l l e g e . .Niuiio \ o u n g people a r e n ' t in a c a d e t n i a b e c a u s e t h e y ' v e c h o s e n other a Iternal i v c s . (Jr b e c i u i s e o t h e r a l t e r n a t i v e s . Or b e c a u s e other a l t e r t i i i t i v e s tiav >• chiiscn t h e m . MILWAUKEE, W1S( . - Atop a factory i a d e n c i l v , a t o p a high h i l l , a t o p a huge new b t i i l d i n g . He h u n d r e d s of p r o s t r a t e young b o d i e s . T h e r e l^ n o noi:.c on the t o p floor e x c e p t t h e sound of an old movie on the cotniiumily f V , the sound of an o c c a s i o n a l d o c t o r ' s d i a g n o s i s . T h e r e is no l a u g h t e r . V e r y little t a l k i n g . I t ' s not a s c e n e out of Marcus Welby. i t ' s t h e real thing. Down the h a l l in a s t a r c h e d w h i t e room l i e s a xmve yard g r a d u a t e who wili n e v e r s e e , s p e a k , h e a r , t a s t e a g a i n . V e g e t a b l e . He j u s t lies in bed and t h i n k s , lie nothing e l s e . N e a r b y , a k i j m a bed c h a t s with a g u e s , head is p r o p p e d on three p i l l o w s and he talks a n i m a t e d l y . A nurse w h e e l s a s l e e p i n g p a t i e n t to a l h e r a p \ room. He e a n ' t move anythirig b e l o w h i s n e c k . T h e y ' r e a l l y o u n g . T h e y ' r e a l l our a g e . A n d t h c \ ' r e a l l q u a d r a p l e g i c s . P a r a h z e d from t h e i r n e c k d o w n , they \va Ik w i t h their t a l k , they run with iheir e a r s , they move w i t h their e y e s . Erom t h e n e c k down i t ' s j u s i t h e n e c k d o w n . T h e i r l e g s a r e slirunken, their h a n d s iust s l i g h t l y q u i v e r . The>' may n e v e r move a g a i n . T h e y did it for their c o u n t r y . T h e y had not c h o s e n to go t o c o l l e g e . Now they h a v e few e i : o i e e s left. I v i s i t e d the M i l w a u k e e VA h o s p i t a l r e c e n t l y . 1 w a n d e r e d up and down l i a l l w a y s of the s p i n a l injury vvard and . i s k c d t h e V i e t n a m v e t e r a n s there wliai u.is impiirtant to lhe'- . 1 h.ey often t a l k e d like e l d e r h men m rest h o m e s — r e m i n i s c i n g a h o u l their war y e a r s or m o n t h s . B e c a u s e t h e y have l i t t l e e l s e t o d o . I^xcept w a i t till t h e y g e l b e t t e r . If . . . " W h a t ' s important to m e ' ' " s a i d a 2 ( i - \ e a r old v e t e r a n u h o ' d b e e n in Ihis h o s p i l a l for a y e a r and a-half. ' I h o v^ar is important to me. I t o t a l K a g r e e u i l h il. If I could g e l oul of t h i s c h a i r , I'd go back toiiicrrovv .md t a k e care of t h e m . I'm v\ a i l i n g ENNSYLVANIft-. BORROW FOR LESS T h e y t a l k a b o u t s t u d e n t p r o t e s t s . S u r p r i s i n g l y , a s pro-war a s they a r e , they feel t h a t s t u d e n t s s h o u l d p r o t e s t t h e war if t h e y ' r e a g a i n s t i t . " T h e y ' r e p r o t e s t i n g to g e t out of the w a t , " one s a i d . " T h a t ' s w h a t w e ' r e fighting for. I t ' s a free coimtry." at one of the LOWEST LOAN RATES AVAILABLE ANYWHERE TSO is the largest, exclusive credit agency •"••^n ...luania. You'll tind for teachers in Pennsylvania. You'll lind that our finance charge is generally • -»».Lr D A T E S and schools f ^";";',;',ow'er-c6s( loans ... i a l 12151548-0300 i^^^i^ 2|s( year of Service (0 Teachers Educators sachers and ana toucciiu... Ml Business Tram T^a"sac(ed .,, n„o;ress By Phone and Man ,^ TEACHERS SERVICE ORGANIZATION, INC. and TEACHERS SERVICE CONSUMER DISCOUUT COMPAt^ ,' 740 W. Nedro Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. 19120 Ticket.? for this Saturday's (Nov. 20th) wrestling match between thct Bald E a g e s and Alumni are currently on sale at theSCC ticket o<^fice in the PUB. Another capacity crowd is expected in " T h e House of N o i s e " or better known to LHS Students a s Thomas Field House. The Varsity Club is sponsoring this second annual exhibition which features some of LHS' greatest wrestlers. " N o b o d y l i k e s t o g e t k i l l e d , " a n o t h e r s a i d . " B u t burning flags is h y p o c r i t i c a l . If I s a w a n y o n e burning a f l a g , I would Ken Melchoir, NCAA chamhave to s h o o t him. A lot of m e n died for t h a t f l a g . If you c a n ' t pion, if Oying in all the way b e l i e v e in your c o u n t r y , y o u d o n ' t b e l o n g . G e t o u t . " from Oreece, where he placed " W h a t ' s important t o me n o w is that I ' d like t o go b a c k StU: in the World Games at 134 to s c h o o l , " s a i d a d a r k - h a i r e d , g o o d - l o o k i n g young v e t e r a n pounds this past week. Melchoir will arrive in Lock Haven somehunched o v e r in a w h e e l c h a i r . "Ji w a n t to work with p e o p l e , t o time on Thursday, and is exbecome a p s y c h o l o g i s t . 1 w a n t to be a b l e to c o p e . I want t o pected to spearhead the Alitmni get back into s o c i e t y . " attack. Twelve matches have " T h e w a r ' ' I n e v e r b e l i e v e d in k i l l i n g p e o p l e . I had to kill been lined-up by Varsity Club people t o s u r v i v e . I think about it a l o t . How would it feU to officials. Special feature of the eveny o u ? " And t h e n he b e g a n to c r y . T h e y a l l w a n i to " g e t b a c k into s o c i e t y . " But until t h e n , ing will be the awarding of tt|c Charles M. " C h u c k " Goldthorp they live in a s t r a n g e s o c i e t y w h i c h i s a c u r i o u s c o m b i n a t i o n Memorial Award, tar I^rry Rippey, of d a y - t o - d a y r e h a b i l i t a t i o n a c t i v i t i e s , the d i s a b l e d p e o p l e w h o LHS' Outstanding Wrestler in surround them, their m e m o r i e s , a n d their h o p e s for the f u t u r e . 1971. Goldthorp, former Varsity Club President, and mat star pasBu! w h a t t h e y d o n ' t know might hurt t h e m . " M a n y of them sed away last month, after many d o n ' t "know how s e r i o u s they are i n j u r e d , " a doctor at the years of highly successful teachh o s p i t a l s a i d . " \ ( a n y will be h e r e for y e a r s . T h e y h a v e many ing and coaching at Philipsburgc o n v e n t i o n a l d r e a m s ~ m a y b e go t o s c h o o l , g e t a j o b , g e t mar- Osceola Area High School. Goldr i e d , have c h i l d r e n . T h e y d o n ' t know, h o w e v e r , " he s a i d s i g h - thorp was coached by Herb .lack. The starting line up will b e : ing, " t h a t t h e y m o s t likely w o n ' t be a b l e to fulfill t h a t d r e a m . 134 - J o h n Mapes v s . Bynie We d o n ' t t e l l t h e m . It would b e t o o s h a t t e r i n g . " Parker, conference champ, 3rd I t ' s q u i e t . T h e y d o n ' t t a l k m u c h . T h e i r w o r l d s are b a s i - Easf c a l l y l o n e l y . When t h e y d o t a l k about t h e w a r , i t ' s in g l o w i n g 142 - Rod Tate v s . Ken p a t r i o t i c e r m s , p o s s i b l y trying to j u s t i f y their own d i s a b i l i t i e s Melchoir, NAIA and NCAA champ 142 - Tim Rupp v s . Jeff — s o t h a t it s h o u l d n ' t h a v e been for n o t h i n g . Many t a l k e a g e r l y Lorson, 2nd NAIA, conference about going b a c k to fight in V i e t n a m ~ a s if, once t h e r e , t h e y ' l l champ be whole in. 150 Don Adams v s . Biff W out t h e war t o o . A s s t u d e n t s , w i t h N e w s w e e k and Walizer, NAIA champ, connewsr. . e d g e , we often t a l k all a b o u t it a s if we know ference champ 150 - Bob Nagy v s . Geno all abou u u t t h e s e n o n - s t u d e n t s , r e s i d i n g with a life-long T a x i s ; conference place finisher l e a s e on the top floor of a M i l w a u k e e VA h o s p i t a l , d o know a l l 158 - Dave Wasson v s . Paul about the w a r . I'hey a r e the w a r . Brodmerkel; 2 time conference It c o u l d ' v e been m e . I t e n d to f o r g e t . champ 158 - Lou Conway v s . Larry Rippey; NAIA champ, conference champ, 4th NCAA 167 - Gary Ventimiglia v s . Adam Waltz; NAIA champ, conference champ 177 - Jim Roster v s . Willie V o l s e s , NAI.'\ champ, conference Model A b o r t i o n ^ champ 190- Joe Cassarra v s . Hank Program Hawkins; 4th NAIA Imiii.'di.il.'Help Wilh No Dfliiys 190 - John Blackwell vs. Barry Yontz; conference place finisher HWT - Tom Zimmerman vs. Bob Metz, conference place finisher HWT - Harry Sherman vs. Bob McDermott WiCKERSHAM WOMENS MEDICAL CENTER I.I.I i:,i',l .-"iHlh Slri'cl, N('w York .\ C O M M U N I T Y TEACHERS SERVICE Strong A lum ni Team ABORTION Sl'RVICt: AKI'TI.IATIMJ WITH A MA|OK MI-TKOPOI.ITAN HOSIMTAI. tlncriiiiilliMl s.ifnty rcicord of in-ji.itiiml and oiit-iiiiticnt nborlions by Huard-ciirfified itynccoIoHists and anesthdsioloHisls. Gcni'ral ancsllirsia is usnd for palieni comfdrl. Low cosis of aborlion procedures: PreKn.incy up to 10 wks., D & C, Sl.'in up to 14 wks., D & C, $2.'ill 14-24 wiuiks, Saline or Mechanical Induction $4011 In all cases over 10 weeks pregnancy, Wickershaiii's medical safety standards re(]uire ovcrniKht hospital sla>s. Free professional services available to abortion palienls include psychiatric counst!linj4. family planninH and birth control. No referral needed. No referral fee or contribution soliciled ever, Private. Confidential. No rod tajin. DIRECT SERVICE LINE TO MEDICAL CENTER (212) PLaza 5-6805 C a l l s AM to 8 PM Mondays through Salurdavs