Draft CcMJnselor Speal: Tonight AGLE Vol. XIII No 39 I LOCK HAVEN STATE COLLEGE A draft counselor for the Central Committee of Conscientious Objectors, Allen Gibas will speak tonight at 7:30 in Bentley on the draft situation. Gibas, who who was was first first enmloyed enmloyed Oibas, in the p e a c e education division of the American friends service committee in Philadelphia, has conducted many draft counselor training seminars. He has a l s o spoken on the draft throughout the middle atlantic area. He plans to s p e a k on the draft a s a public issue and a l s o from personal point of view, "While the draft is supposed to protect American democracy and the humane values inherent in the in the democratic ideal, both in theory and in practice the s e l e c t ive service systeiii runs counter to these values ftnd may even endanger t h e m . " He a l s o hopes to d i s c u s s the v a r i e s personal r e s p o n s e s to the dratt and military by draft-age-men. A magna cum /aude graduate of Macalester College in St. P a u l , Minnesoti, Gibas has traveled, widely ' l ^ o u g h p u t the United States and Eyjope.He became opposed t o the draft in the spring ofr 1968 when he realized that hiaf religious values and beliefs were inconrsistent with future cooperation with the s e l e c t i v e service s y s t e m . Girls' Hockey Team Seeks Undefeated Season I % Lock Haven States women's varsity hockey team opened the s e a s o n with a 2-1 victory over Keystone. T h i s boosted the teams hope for an undefeated s e a s o n a s they trounced Bucknell University 6-0 in their next dual match. with these two wins under their belt the girls next challenged West C h e s t e r , the number one team in the E a s t and a l s o undefeated. It was a hard fought defensive game ending in a 1-1 tie and a sharing of the Eastern Division title. Since that goal scored against LH in the West Chester game. Lock Haven has shut out their opponents in four consecutive games. On homecoming the E a g l e t t e s challenged Susquehanna University and again were victorious 3-0 a s they defended their un- defeated s e a s o n . The following Clemmer (6) and captain Bertie week Dr. Charlotte Smith's team L a n d e s (2). T h i s year the junior varsity is traveled to Penn State and white a fairly young team and h a s comwashed the Nittany Lions 6-0. In a more closely contested piled a record of three w i n s , two game the E a g l e t t e s took on the t i e s and two l o s s e s dropping Warriors from E a s t Stroudsburg. games only to West Chester and In this game the Lock Haven The E a g l e t t e s close out their defense proved its worth a s it s e a s o n this Thursday at home held an oncoming Warrior line against Slippery Rock and Saturto preserve a 1-0 victory. day against the Lock Haven T h i s week LH brought home Alumni. The starters on the untheir sixth victory defeating defeated varsity team are: Elizabethtown 2-0. This was a 1. wing - Margo DeGrange moral boosting victory a s E l i z a 1. inner — Sherry Clemmer bethtown's coach was quoted a s cen. forward — Dottie Chekay s a y i n g , " T h i s is the year E-town r. inner — Mary Overington beats Lock H a v e n . " r. wing — Hazel Zettlemoyer 1. half back — Brenda Murback Thus for this s e a s o n the E a g l r. half back — Bertie Landes e t t e s have scored twenty-two r . half back — Linda Barton goals and held their opponents 1. back — Diane James to two. The scoring leaders for r. fullback — Karen Shifflet Lock Haven are Dottie Chekay goal keeper - Diane Webster (7), Mary Overington (7), Sherry Allen Gibas', draft counselor, speaks on the draft situation, tonight at 7:30 in Bentley Hall Lounge. Gibas is a counselor for the Central Committee of Conscientious Objectors. 'Pitt News' Ends Strike EE Editors.; Travel to Fla. Traveling to Miami. Florida by jet today five Eagle Eye editors will participate in the 4Sth Annual As.sociated College Pres.s Conference. The conference, which will la.st for three d a y s , will include sludent p a n e l s , d i s c u s s i o n s on college publicalions . and "how to s e s s i o n s . The Lock Haven editors w'. o are attending the convention include co-editors Marianne Waters, and Al Smith. assi'^'T ed^'or Ron Jury, assistant feat .e editor Sue Moyer; and student adviserRon Sniith. In their absence Jan Nader, a senior majoring in E n g l i s h , will serve a s acting editor-in-chief. Faith Dunmore, a sophomore elementary major and photography editor Randy McCombie will be in charge of production. • PHI MU DELTA HOLDS HALLOV/EEN PARTY T h e brothers of Phi Mu Delta l a s t Monday evening sponsored a pre-Halloween party for approximately 50 children of Project Headstart. Alpha Sigma T a u sorority co-sponsored the affair. There will be a moratorium meeting today at 1:00 in tlie PUB Music Room. All interested persons are urged to attend. CRUCIBLE WANTS YOU! Submission deadline -Mon., Nov. 3 Give material to M-. Join Weigel, Raub 303 or box in publications office in the PUB Submit: poeliy, short stories, song lyrics, music, art work,Photography etc third of four 'Grass' - Smoked, Choked, a n d l//ega/ Drugs — a pregnant word. To some people drugs mean s u b s t a n c e s obtainable at the local pharmacy to treat various i l l s . To order , the word implies a ghetto dweller shooting heroin into a vein to maintain life. But to the average college student, drugs connote marihuana, barbiturates, amphetamines, speed, or perhaps hashish. Next to alcohol, the most popular mindbender has been the resinous top and dried leaf of the Indian hemp plant, marihuana. The hemp plant, Cannabis saliva, grows wild through most of the world. To some, smoking marihuana heightens the s e n s e s . Others, when smoking for the first time, are repelled by the bitter t a s t e and hot smoke of burning marihuana. Some people may even be allergic to the drugs. According to the Commission on Narcotic Drugs of the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations, marihuana abuse is more widespread, from a geographical viewpoint, than any other " d a n g e r o u s d r u g " Widely encountered in North and South America, Africa, Southeast Asia and the Middle E a s t , it is known a s bhang or ganja in India, h a s h i s h in the Middle East, dagga in South Africa and maconha or djamba in South America. In this country, marihuana is more commonly referred to by its nicknames; g r a s s , pot, Mary J a n e , Indian hay, locoweed, mu, griffo, mohasky or giggle-smoke. Marihuana Follc-Pop-Rocic Fesfivol Accepting Entries Now All folk, pop, and rock performers are invited to enter the 1970 Intercollegiate Music F e s t i v a l . Six universities will host the regional competitions that lead to the Intercollegiate Music F e s t i v a l national championships for collegiate performers. Entries for the 1970 Intercol- There were 218 fewer Catholic schools in the nation l a s t year than in 1967. PITTSBURGH - (CPS) - T h e Pitt N e w s , on strike for two weeks, resumed publicatiori October 13 after winning d e mands of $9,000 in staff s a l a r i e s , a journalism seminar for academic credit, and over *4,000 additional c a s h for printing c o s t s . The crisis occured when the student government cut the n e w s paper budget by $17,000 more than half of the $39,000 they asked for, and merit scholarships were dropped for staff members. " I t ' s just not fun anymore when you spend 80 hours a week up here and get d i d l e y , " said sports editOT Jerry Gruebel. The $9,000 will be divided up to pay for the editors and b u s i n e s s staff tuitions a s w e l l a s for some reporters' s t o r i e s . This, the News f e e l s , will improve the the paper " q u a l i t a t i v e l y and quantitatively." Students will a l s o receive one credit each semester for working on t h e Pitt News and participating in a journalism seminar. Staff morale, how«^ver, s t i l l remains a problem. I'You really wonder who cares if the paper ever comes out a g a i n , " said editor Dave Tiernan. legiate Music F e s t i v a l s close on January 15th. Entry forms may be secured by writing; IMF, P.O. Box 1275, Leesburg, Florida, 32748. The Budweiser-sponsored event will a l s o have regional c o n t e s t s at Villanova University, the University of T e x a s , the Univer- sity of South Florida, Southern Illinois University, the University of Colorado, and U C I A Regional action in Pennsylvania occur.s on March 6 and 9 on the Villanova Campus. Regional champions will fly to the Intercollegiate Music F e s tival finals on August 6, 7, 8 may be smoked, sniffed or ingested, but the most prevalent usage is in the form of cigarettes. The cigarettes are known as reefers, joints, sticks, muggles or mooters by the u s e r s . They are often made by removing the tobacco from a nonfilter cigarette and replacing il with g r a s s . Many smoke the tobacco by means of a water pipe, which serves to dull the bite of the smoke. To be sure, pot is grown in this country, but the b e s t qiiajity comes from Mexico where it s e l l s for two dollars a kilogram. By the time the Mexican crop is smuggled a c r o s s the Rio Grande, and often adulterated with oregano in the process, the price has risen to about $275 per kilo. In Pennsylvania, depending on who's selling and where the grass may cost anywhere from $10 to $20 per ounce. There is another product of the Indian hemp p l a n t known as h a s h i s h or hash. H a s h is the collected s a p or resin of the plant and contains approximately 100 times the halluciogenic property of ordinary grass. This is because the intoxicating substance which gives marihuana its activity is found almost exclusively in the resin, and hash is sometimes pure r e s i n . One gram of hash usually s e l l s for about $20. Procuring grass or hash is simple enough; a short time a s k i n g questions around campus would usually be enough to make contact with a dealer. Some of the dealers are s t u d e n t s ; others are big-time movers sent in from New York or Florida. Due to the illegality of marihuana, organized crime has moved into the market, just as it did during Prohibition. Marihuana was not illegal in t h i s country until the 1930's, when '"ongress enacted the Marihuana lax Act which made p o s s e s s i o n of marihuana a felony u n l e s s a fifty dollar tax stamp was purchased. Hciwever, at the same time Congress ensured that the purchase of this stamp would result in prosecution, as they made the p o s s e s s i o n per s e illegal as well as subject to up to $10,000 fine and/or l i v e years imprisonment. The various s t a t e s foUowed suit, making marihuana possession a s t a t e crime as w e l l . Wolfs Whistle So Wlio Needs Protection? by Dick Wolfsie It is not often that one hears anything good about the campus police force. It i s , Li fact, more common to hear something bad. Since I never believe rum.ors unl e s s I start them, I decided to nan a t e s t of my own. (Like all those who have experienced English, I am in pursuit of truth \ L a s t Saturday night I dressed up like a girl, in l e v i s , a blue work shirt and combat boots, and hey you I w h y not join walked with my roommate over to R u s s e l l . Upon spotting the first campus guard, I jumped behind some bushes and began yelling, "Violation, Violation" (Because this isn't Berkeley I couldn't say rape). My roommate rushed to the guard and s a i d , "My girlfriend is fighting with a b u m . " The guard responded, " S o what do 1 care what happens to a b u m . " This horrid experience c a u s e s me to consider more seriously some of the other hard-to-believe stories I had heard concerning the campus police force. For example, a recent research team imcovered the fact that campus police, when properly equipped with billy-club, walkietalkie, pistol and camera, spend over half their time trying to stand up. Another student explained that police dogs had been tried, but that the police didn't come fast :^nough when the dogs called. He further explained that a questionnaire had been sent out inquiring as to the particular type of dog the police preferred, the result Do you won^ to make Lock Hoveti Stateo better school? by Carol Morgan The word "Frankenstein" depicts to the modern reader gigantic, green-skinned, grotesque monster of motion picture fame. F r a n k e n s t e i a has become the stereotype of ihe Faculty-Evaluation commitree is in need of typists. .Any faculty member who has a secretary available for typing please contact Bernie McGee l per pound 7 9 ^ per pound Winning number for free ceramic pumpkin 62294 and ( ^ ( ^ i t s 2-ir'COMB. SUB "^^45 2-i4"H>l^f SUB '^l.