Adderley Blows Minds their philosophy. Much of their work depends on the soloist who carries a large part of the performances. According to Adderley the "drum s o l o should be them, a t i c , therefore the melodic instruments supplement the drums." Their next number was taken from last year's album and literally means. Baby walk with me. This music was basically African in origin projecting the influence which African culture has had on the present music scene today. Major Emphasis on Jazz Major emphasis is placed on jazz. However, Adderley indicated people should go in any direction they choose. There followed a combination duet-solo, "Walk T a l l . " After this action-charged number everyone was\moving. They had s o much energy, it couldn't help carry over into the audience. The next number, "Country Preacher," was based on the philosophy of Reverand J e s s e Lewis Jackson. This idea was that of trying to make the church good enough to take care of the people instead of the prevailing philosophy of making the people good enough for the church. After a brief intermission, thev performed 'Spanish O m e l o f c o m - ' prised of four tunes. Adderley Summedup Ideas Adderley summed'up his i d e a s by stating that through jazz there is always a pulse to make it go. In this c a s e its attributed t I rhythm section. by Margie Brown Amidst an incense-filled, capacity crowded auditorium, Julian 'Cannonball' Adderley blew many minds with his jazz quintet. Both performers and audience alike seemed very much at homa. A sense of relaxation pervaded the atmoshpere a s everyone "did his own thing." L,nd on t'leasant Note The pieces ended on a pleasant note of atmosphere which held the audience in an interested state. The solo by the bass player w a s exceptionally well done. This was followed by a blending of the rest of the group. Versatility is a large part of Offer Dialogue There currently is a great deal of dialogue in the United States about the injustices inflicted upon the American Black man. So much dialogue, in fact, that most people until quite recently overlooked, ignored, or were unaware of the plight of atuther oppressed and mistreated minority group—the American Indain. Crippled by the influence of alcohol and lacking in the selfpride and dignity characteristic of today's Black man, the reservation Indian has been a forgotten segment of our affluent society. Conceding that no amount of dialogue or discussion can alleviate immediately the dire problems of the American Indian, the North Hall Council in cooperation with Dr. and Mrs. He n-y nevertheless, will PILE 'EM U P : T e n s t u d e n t s , using up their time for c o n - Worrest, present a program entitled .itructive p u r p o s e s , make a pyramid in front of the union 'The Plight of the American Indian.' Tne purpose of the building . ' ixugram is to gain an awareness of the Indian's problem. All interested students, faculty, A freshman class meeting and staff are invited to attend inid program tomorrow, at 9:30 p.m. in will be held tonight in the North HaU Lounge. DON'T FORGET- Diane Wakoski^ a voung poet from New York 'City, will give a reading in Bentley Hall Lounge, Lock Haven State CoUege, on Tuesday, February 2 4 , at 8:15 p.m. She is the author of three volumes of poetry, the best kncwn being "In the Blood Factory." published in 1968 oy DoutJieday. In an,artic'e publishea in the December 2«- 19by, edition of ine New York Times, critic Lewis Simpson evaluated the poets of the s i x t i e s . Of Miss wBKOski, he said. -'Vvakoski's poems are oatessicmls ...out SI'here is a differe^c' between ^(Wakosivi's contessions and those of other writers; she Jtakea you, j o the poe- 'self, through' the iexperience s i s •.aiKing abcut- whereas others just complain about their f e e l i n g s . " Her works have peared in anthologies and such periouicais a s "Tne iNew Yorker" and "The Village V o i c e . " She is the author of Coins and Coffins, Discrepancies and Apparitions, The Oeorge Washington Poems, and her most recent and bestknown work which i s entitled In the Blood Factvrv. Miss Wakosk' will meet with students on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday to discuss her work and poetry in general. The public i s invited to attend the reading free of charge^ and Joseph Nicholson's class s e s s i o n with the poet on Tuesday, 11:00 a.m., in Raub 306. Found on the bathroom door of 2nd floor Woolridge Physical Education Club meeting tomoirow evening in the PUB lounge. LEEYE They c l o s e d the program with "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy" and the received an encore accompanied with a standing ovation. Young Poet Wokoski to Read Ed. Note: YEARBOOK PICTURES Smith Hall Lounge at T:00 P.m. Planned activities will be discussed. Vol. Xlli No. 79 M«t Feb. 234970 LOCK N A V I M S T A T I C O L L E C E Prof to Present Land of. K h a n The land of Ghengis Khan and^ from the Russian border and 150 l e g e ' s Fine Arts Festival, i s Tamerlane will be presented miles from the Chinese border, open to the public free of charge. in an illustrated lecture by Robert Johnston supervised the excava- "It will give those who attend H. Johnston, chairman of the art tion and prepared the report on a glimpse of a part of the world department at Lock Haven State the pottery found at the s i t e . seldom s e e n by Americans. This College today,, February-23, is the land through which Marco While in Afghanistan, John8:15 pm in Raub Hall, room 106. ston a l s o studied the present- Polo travelled on his way to The lecture is entitled "Art and day potters of the Miamana re- China. It i s a l s o the land of Archaeology in Afghanistan." gion and the Nomads passing Ghengis Khan and Tamberlane," Johnston will discuss the ex- through the region from the moun- said JohnstCMi. cavation he conducted in the sum- tains in the south to the warmer The i>rofessor has also workmer of 1969 near Miamana in northern regions. He travelled ed with archaeological "teams north-western Afghanistan. The throughout the country by means studying ancient pottery in Turcave excavated was a prehis- of airplane. Land Rover, horse- key, Greece, and Iran. He is a toric shelter used by ancient lack, and on foot, crossing the me,Tiber of the Deutsche Orient peoples moving from Russia and 12.000 foot high Salong P a s s , Ciesseischaf t of Berlin, the Ajif China through the Himalayas to world's highest pass for v e h i c l e s . erican Institute of'Archaeology, T the Near East. Working five miles The lecture, part of the col- and the explorers club. Hall. HOW TO A V O I D A WARNING I. Do not wear flip flops fo or from the shower, the flip gets to some, the flop to others. ! l l ^W^m^'EiMx.'' » , 2> Line a l l drawers with foam rubber to avoid a grating noise. 3. ' Refrain from turning on overhead light, as it sounds like the shot heard round the world. 4 . Do not file nails because it sounds like you're. . . filing your nal I f . ' 5. Avoid writing after 11 o'clock^^because^it sounds like you ore running an eiectric drill. 6. When ' your room-mate drops your bed on your foot, do not scream unless your head Is securely stuffed In a pillow case or any iac»imiie> thereof. ^••••ligpiqpppHPI^^; ^Mi.i««. •! ^^B^^BH|Hb^,. jiiiiiiifc" U| H " • k" •' . . m ^ ^ 1 ^'Sn'' ^•r'j^B^i'^• ^ ^ ^ ' - " ' % ^ ' . •'» • ,v,. -«» 7. De not grit your teeth in an effort to bear the paln(see # 6). ' • • - • - • . , . • . • , . , ^ % , r , , • ^ • • 8* ' Pull a l l plugs on clocks, the tick Is worse than the tock. 9 . Refrain from sitting on^youi bed, that also goes for lying • n i t , because it sounds like the Hoboken Express Is overnead. 10« ' It has been brought to «wr attention that the constant breathing bn this floor annovs our first floor neighbors. Four girls have already be»"^*»''tedtfbr shock, they thought it was a tornado. Ther T..re, as ot this day, February 18, 1970> a l l breathing shaii hereby cease forever. Warnings will be given. Thank you for your co-operation. Noise, Inc.'^* '*Notlonal Organiiotion f o r t h e Insuronce^of Sensitive Ears. ^"^^^w^ ^^^m. Students Make Use of New Student Stevenson Library Eagles Whip Jackets, 26-77 by Walt Fitch takedowns to account tor the The Bald Eagles of LHS had bulk of his scoring. At this little trouble in upending the point, LHS seemed to be putting Yellow Jackets ot Waynesburg the match out of reach, the score 264 1 in last Saturday night's standing 16-0. wrestling match at Thomas Field The Bald Eagles o.jffered their House. first loss, ai 150 pouncfs. Gene LHS got off to a quick start in Taxis got off to a good start by the 118 pound "class' when Jim taking down the Yellow Jackets' Rupp pinned DICK Braymer, a Dick Pollock, tiut Pollock escaped, former PIAA State champ, in took dcftvn Taxis, and had him in 2:22 of the third period. LHS took a predicament in the last 50 seca 5-0 lead. onds of the first period. Pollock Don Fay, who moved up a continued to build his lead with weight class to 126 pounds, as a second period takedown and did both Foley and Rippey to predicament. Taxis came back fill in the gap left by the injured with a third oeriod. oredicament Paul Brodmerkel, controlled Barry but it was not nearly enough to Gashei for most of the third periods overcome Pollock who won ' 1 - 5 . to win 5-0. This upped the The LHS lead was now cut to score to 8-0 in favor of LHS. 16-3. At 158, Willie Vokes decisioned Shane Foley, at 134 pounds, took over where Rupp left off Tom Florian 4-2 in a second by clamping Todd Brace in 2:47 period escape and takedown and of the third period. LHS's lead a third period point awarded to him because of Florian's attempt increased to 13-0. Larry Rippey added to the LHS to stall. The Bald Eagle lead jumped back up to 16 points, • win skein by decisioning Mike 19-3. Beers 13-3. Rippey had five In the most exciting match of HE'S CHOKING ME: Bald Eagle Larry Rippey pulls on .the chin of Mike Beers enroute to an easy 13-3 decision. Rippey allowed the night, John Seeder came up with a near fall with 4 seconds left in the third period tf> decision Bob Ambrose at 167. The' scare now stood 19-6, LHS still in command. LHS's John Blackwell aid Waynesburg' s Terry Gusik seemed to have been equally Paired up at 177. Both had escapes and both wrestled defensively to draw 1-1. The score now read 21-8, Las. At 190, Jeff Knarr had a real tough opponent in Jay Payne. On three takedowns, an escape and a point on riding time. Payne dei isioned Knarr 8-3. Lock Haven now led 21-11. At ' unlimited, the Bald Eagles' Scott Brooks won on a forfeit to end the match in a 26rll LHS victory. Commenting on the match LHS head mentor Gray Simons said, "Our lighter weights looked good. Taxis had a few bad calls by the official but they got a couple bad calls too." COME ON!: LHS's Gene Tax IS tries to pull the Ige of Dick Pollock oyer in attempt to put him on his back. " G i n o " dropped an II-5 decision on a few questionable calls by the official. ily for his three points while Rippey used five takedowns, an escape an.d two points riding time to accumulate his 13 points. the Y e l l o w Jacket grappler to escape easDID YOU KNOW T H A T : President William Howard T a f t , who weighed 322 pounds at his inauguration, qot stuck in the White House bathtub and had t o hove a s p e c i a l l y constructed extra-large one i n s t a l l e d . T h e new one comf o r t a b l e held four average-size men. ^Member -- Pa William Henry Harrison died after having served only one month as President, t h e result of pneumonia brought on by d e l i v e r i n g a two-hour i n augural address i n a freezing wind. STAFF MEETING WED. OV At least one major tobacco company is so sure pot will become legal it's all ready to roll with four brands, tentatively priced at $5 per pack . . . Guardians of t h e First Amendment a r e edgy over the 1970 census. T h e headcounters a r e primed to ask a lot of snoopy questions best answered w i t h "None of your damn business." . . . Dick Gregory says we should pray for t h e continued health a n d safety of o u r president b e cause his replacement would be just the kind of guy who'd make crank calls l o the Russians on the hot line . . . Leading causes for death of persons u n d e r 35 a r e drug abuses, suicide a n d murder. . . . A n Oberlin girl told h e r hot 'n pressing date she wes a virgin a n d meant to stay one until s h e married. H e called h e r t h e vilest name in his vocabulary — a rightwing inactivist . . . Girls, like to fly and get paid for it? (No, no subsidized "trips.") The 400-passenger jumbo jets will boost t h e demand for stewardesses. TWA alone e x pects to lay on 3,000 this year . . . Maybe 'tis better to have flunked one's Wassermann than never to have loved at all . . . T h e Stones, w h o scooped u p 1,500,000 clams in their 13-city blitz of the USA, played to a chilly audience their first concert date back home in England . . . Subway Flash: Lassie Kills Chickens! . . . Peacenik events oft feature reading from t h e names of the 40,000 Americans dead in Vietnam. Shouldn't w e also be reading t h e names of at least the Vietnamese civilian casualties? . . . A t Southern Illinois University t h a t AT 6:30 •• \ 74-year-old Renaissance Man Buckminster Fuller and his class are playing t h e World Game. Aim of t h e game is to find ways of using t h e world's resources "to take care of everybody at a high standard of living without anybody profiting off or impeding anybody else." . . . Jackie O, our own Marie Antoinette, once offered this remedy for a i r pollution: Let the Air Force spray the polluted areas with Chanel No. 5 . . . The chapter on military careers in Peter Sandman's The Unabashed Career Guide consists of one sentence: "You must be kidding." . . . Trendy types are sporting sweater.shirts of Creslan acrylic fiber bearing their personal "statements." They cut their own symbol from felt or iron-on tape. The dove of peace prevails . . . Some kind of Boob of the Year Award goes t o Gov. Kirk of Florida for his r e m a r k s to newsmen covering a peaceful rock festival n e a r Palm Beach. "These kids think they can play anywhere in this state." Who besides people playing (paying) made Florida solvent? . . . Fifty-one colleges now have formal film departments that grant degrees . . . "God Is Dead."—. . . Nietzsche. "Nietzsche's alive?" — God . . . Wanna spike the flawless Queen's English you normally speak with a few Cockney expressions? Here's a starter glossary. Bosky, Bippo and swigged all mean drunk; bung ho — so long; giddy whelk —• silly girl; purko — beer; plonk—cheap red wine; sling a slobber — kiss; charvering—having sex. . . . Beam! This is the Krst dp" of the rest of your life. * * * * * * * * * . . * * * « • « * Any State Coflege Press Assn CO-EDITORS-IN-CHIEF MARIANNE WATERS, AL SMITH Assistant editor ~ Ron Jury NEWS EDITOR - Barbara Woods F E A l u K E L D I T O R — Joyce Newstein SPORTS EDITOR - Larry Green PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR - Marian Conn SECRETARY -• Peggy Reese BUSINESS MANAGER ~ Joan Worcester COPYSETTERS ~ Diana Ungvarsky, Sue Frye FACULTY ADVISOR - Joe Nicholson M A F F — Sue Meiser, Sue Minor, Judy Okonski, Dan Hite, Sue Piotroski, Michael Holderman Mary Schlegel, Sue Moyer, Nibs Gordon, Fran Yost, Chris Plyler, Don Golden, Marian Conn, Chris Kreitler, Mike Parucha, Mike Young, Jan Nader, Chris Bower, Jack Heagney, Howard Peterson, Eylene Sawyer, Pat Seitzer, Phil Flynn, Leona Lehto, Kirk Fenton. Margie Brown, Joe Scott, Marlene Zaydell, Nelle Fastman, faith Dunmore , Nancy Long EAGLE EYE is published daily by the students of Lock Haven Stale College. All opinions expressed by columnists and feature writers, including letters 10 the editor, are nol necessarily those of this institution or of this newspaper. All contributions should be submitted to Eagle Eye, Parsons Union Building, Lock Haven State, Lock Haven, Pa ~ 748-5531 EAGLE EYE Parsons Union Building ROXY THEATER News' * rirt • : lipsf *i • : * • \ call EAGLE * 748-5531 Smokey's friends don't play with matches 7—9 EYE\ • * TIME - 7:00 P.M. & 9:15 P.M.< Mulft L2S - Studtntf $1 • Children SO' U ' ' JtiJ r-TECHmcoisir ^>^ •" • *««CtM»«lk9 MJEM VltTA UttTKitUTHW CO., I W . m »lk CENIUR)rOI mSENIS PAUL N E W N A N ROBERT REDTORO KATHARINE ROSS. BUTCH CASSiDV AND THE SUNDANCE KID " " " ' ^ COIM IT H u n t I MON. THRU TUES. 748-56U6 EXTRA SPECIAL! "THE TATOOED POLICE HORSEI"