Lack of A s s e n t on A c a d e m i c A i m Peril to A m e r i c a n E d u c a t i o n The gravest current threat load is apt l o tie i.verseiy proto American higher education is portional to their di.-,i,,ictirm, and wiiose distinction i;, meathe breakdown of consensus on sured by the p o s e ^ s i o n of u academic goals, in the view of Ph.D. and the continued pubSir Eric Ashby, master of C l a r e lication of what are deemed College, Cambridge University. original contributions to knowIn an e s s a y for the Carnegi ledge." Commission on Higher Education, Sir Eric warns that the 4) Unless .some unforeseen repression of freedom of I bought factor eliminates it, " a streak is a likely result of continued of frustrated aspiration will run campus controversy over functhrough the whole system." _ Lock Haven State College Wednesday^^^April 21,1971 ^ • ~ " ' 1 I'll tions. Two-year colleges will strive " T o s a y there is no conto do para-academic work, foursensus on the goals of higher year colleges will itch to s e t education in the United States up graduate programs. And, at is understatement," he writes the pinnacle, a few world famous in .'iny l^er.son, .4ny Study institutions will be committed (McGraw-Hill Book Company, lo t h e costly obligation of pre$4.95). " T h e r e is dangerous Bruce E . Thomas, A s s i s t a n t serving their supremacy. discord," Professor ul l.ibiarv Science at But Sir Eric s a y s that Lock Hi..en State College, sufFaculty and students who higher education may not remain fured n cerebral hemorrhage the support the supremacy of on i t s present course. He s e e s morning of Friday, April 9 and reason are caught between three other p o s s i b i l i t i e s : was taken to the Lock Haven the New Left's repudiation of 1) A moratorium on expanHospital. According to knowthe moral code of liberalism and sion, by replacing the socioledgeable s o u r c e s , he was transa bigoted fundamentalist ineconomic barriers wilh barriers ferred to the Williamsport Ho.st erpretalion of the code by the of merit and motivation. If this pitai on Tuesday, April 13. MonRight, he a s s e r t s . happened, massive fund.s might day, Thomas suffered a second American universities are be put into raising the level of hemorrhage and yesterday underpeculiarly vulnerable when secondary education (coniinued went surgery. He is listed in there is no agreement as lo either al school or in community serious condition but is reported their goals, rights, and r e colleges). High schools might to be doing satisfactorily. Cards sponsibilities, having involved be the terminus of full-time may be sent to Mr. Thomas at themselves more intimately in education, " e x c e p t for those the Williamsport Hospital. serving society than their who need, or want, to go to counterparts elsewhere. Sir Eric college for some clear p u r p o s e , " Tickets to the Maxwell believes that they have assumed 2) Another outcome, favored more functions than they have by the New Left, might be a Taylor lecture are available the strength to discharge. The successful disruption of the for distributional the reception task that h a s suffered most, he system " a n d its replacement s a y s , is their prime one: the by something quite different desk in the Parsons Union teaching of undergraduat e s . He (what, nobody k n o w s ) . " Building. a l s o finds them too big for 3) A final outcome might cohesiveness and hence difficult One ticket will be given be " t o identify the dangerous t o govern effectively. features in Ihis sombre prognoto each student and faculty se.-, and to eliminate these If they keep going the way member if identification is systematically by slow evoluthey are headed, he warns, the CentMiniai Bill ffcMif» tionary change. ( T h e radicals presented showing affiliation year 2000 may find U.S. higher for the student body mafXfee forget that this is the way they learning afflicted with ••bronlowith Lock Haven State Colevolved from the a p e s . ) " purchased frem Mrs. Br«wn saurian cumbrousness and a lege. A partial moratorium on surfeit of mediocrit y . " in Raub 411. The pries of expansion along current lines Planners may be helpless General Taylor is pre_ r tickets ror our students has may come from t h e students to change the course on which sently Chairman of President K e p e O Of themselves, suggests Sir Eric. higher education is s e t in been reduced to five dollars " A growing number of students America, "tiiough it may, indeed Nixon's Foreign Relations ($5.00) a couple. This is a resent t h e postponement of probably will, be changed by Board, and was formerly 'adult responsibility, rights, and rather formal occasion, but the forces of s o c i e t y . " Should prerogatives.' They do nol wish Chairman of the Joint Chiefs il remain on its presenl course, dress is optional. Music to be initiated into a society however, he foresees these of Staff. General Taylor's wil! be provided by jack whose values they do not consequences: respect. They do nol wish to be presentation will deal with the Purcell from Pittsburgh. 1) Universal access by the given a professional training The Department of J u s t i c e realities of Vietnam and the year 2000, with an estimated This is an eleven piece band which equips them (as some unequivocally supports the enrollment of aboul 16 million United States' military role repeal put it) to be 'exploited' by of the 1950 law authoria- with a vocalist. Let's get students in some form of higher throughout the world. ing emergency detention camps. behind the committee, and industry or government." education. Assistant Attorney General One way to change this 2) One in six of these stuRobert C . Mardian said recently. support this very important pattern, he adds, would be to dents (if colleges in the year Mardian, who heads the occasion. spread out higher education 2000 are no more attractive lo Justice Department's Internal youth than they are today) atthrough the working life of Security Division, testified in tending unwillingly; and at citizens. favor of repeal of Title II of the least half of them dropping o u t . In .Any Person, •4«y Study, Internal Security Act of 1950 3) This "semi-drafted army" Sir Eric comments briefly on before House Judiciary Subof studenls will be taught by Yesterday Lock Haven Stale committee No. 3 . the entire gamut of higher about 900,000 members of a C;ollege students selected five education in the U.S. He noted that Deputy profession whose prime duly is finalists a s their choice for Spring to leach, " b u t whose teaching Queen. They a r e ; Linda Harbor^ Attorney General Richard G. Kleindienst had staled on Nancy Long, Sally R e i s s , Sally December 17, 1969, that " t h e All students and faculty inSlaterbeck, and Peggy Schrek. continuation of the Emergency Dr. Matthew G. Maetozo, Final voting will take place this terested in suggesting films Detention Acl i s extremely director of health and physical Saturday, from 12 noon to 5 p.m. offensive t o many Americans. for next year's Humanities Ballot boxes will be located in In the judgment of this Depart- education al Lock Haven Slate Bentley Hall Lounge and at the ment, the repeal of this legis- College, will take office as viceFilm Series are invited to a PVB reception desk. The winner lation will allay the fears and president of physical education meeting Wednesday, April 21, and athletics of the eastera will be crowned at the Spring In order t n improve a hit suspicions - unfounded a s they at 3:00 p.m. in Raub 322. tht' comrniinu at tons between Dance Saturday nighl in Bentley may be - of many of our citi- district Association of l l e i i : , Physical Education, and KeHall. ALL students are urged t o z e n s . " \iiri,)'.i', .groups. It seems apt:reation a t the annual convention voif for the contestent of their prnpii.iit' tliat the i\U) incetin^.s Mardian said the six camps in Philadelphia on April 23-25. choice. ,ou must nave your I . D . rjcted lu'h.u should he scheduleil for which Congress had apAttending the convention card to vote. So lh:T .iiivone v.h.) ui.shes to propriated funds were abandoned will be several hundred representt'.' :• ,,\ at t e n d . in 1957. They were located at atives from the thirteen s t a t e s \ \ . \ i , i < , . l . , \ , April 2 1 , 3 . 0 0 p.m. Marine Officer Candidate Tide Lake, California; Wicken-. which make up the district. Thank you, I u f - d , i v , .April 2 7 , VOO p . m . Arizona; Avon P a r k ,, S.C.C. S o c i a l Committee burg, Dr. Maetozo- has a l s o been Course is available to Colh o l h III I ' I m c r P l a n e t a r i u m Florida; I'lorence, Arizona; El active a s chairman of the coml l u r r u i l l h e n o f . i r m a l lege Seniors and Graduates Reno, Oklahoma; and Allen-. mittee on professional preparation a g r t K l . i otii-.'i t h a n .1 \c\\ rcinai k s wood, Pennsylvania. who possess the required and certification of athletic on L.inipii.'. tiovernancc which coaches in the men's athletic I Would like Io m a k e at t h e physical and academic qualidivision of the American A s BREAD In Concert hcginning ot tho nict-ting on fications. Candidates resociation for Health, Physical A l i n l : I . O t h c ) th.'ii t h i s , it w i l l Plus It Don't Matter To Me ceive a commission as a Education, and Recreation. he lUsI a };ciKa\il lii --i iis.'.Kin He was recently honored by Don Ellis and Friends p e r i o d ^\ifh I h c c nil in \ 1 c u t h a t Let Your Love Go 2nd Lieutenant after only 12 being elected a s an " a m b a s u i." Ill IV a l l coiiH' t o k n o . ' CLRII Saturday May S. 8:30 p.m. weeks of training. Longevity Make It With You s a d o r " of the International Olymoila't l i . ' t i . - i a n d l o U I K I C I S i.iiii! Straughn Auditorium iMorL' i u l 1\ t h e \ .ir l e t ^. .\]i<\ i. i:npic Academy,Athens, Greece for pay accrues from day of If ploxitv o f tluprohh'iii\uth by the Ephoria of the academy enrollment. Starting salaries u h i c h \\ e iiiu'.t i . o i i | o i i a i \ stin^and the Greek Olympic Committee uK- . s t u a I ' s s f u l l \ . ,\t tlu- n i c e t i i i g of up to $9,000.00 a year. for s e r v i c e s rendered in the inoil ,\piil ,:•?. ^Iiiuil.l Liciieral terest of the Olympic tnovemeni . Send $4.50 for ticke's to: Reporting dates for active III! e l . ' N I b e i n ! il 1^ . l i M i ' l o p . I Dr.Muetuzo is a contributing duty are up to one year after Student Governnenf -li.ill b e l i . i p p ' ' I " 'I'-i^ '' I ' l i i i i i e r editor to the "Journal of Health, *:e»:»;si:«s:5 iSSsWJllstt (if o n r p r i i u 1 [1,11 . a h a n u ^i iaiioi s Physical Education and Regraduation. For more inforMansfield State College t o l o i i i i n t h e LII .'^LII . . - u m . creati(>n." He also edited and ihMlw Phone Area Code 717 Mansfield, Pa. 1B.' J 33 Ii.iuei> .\. li.inibhii conlrihutei.1 to the recently pubPI e videlit 825-6811, ext. 213 (Collect). lished book on the certification of high school c o a c h e s . Vol. xrVtiov rS: Professor Takes isn't it enough to make you stop? Camps Supported Candidafes Selected Meetings Planned Maetozo Takes Office Baseball Team Begins Season With Wins Smokey Says: Diving Clinic To Be Held FOLLOW THE by David Nevel Can any college baseball team play a doubleheader with an entirely different squad in each game? And win? Lock Haven Slate can, and proved just that yesterday afternoon before an astonished crowd at Woolrich Field. Headed by an enlightened plan by coach Todd Eberle, (the plan being to start a fresh team in each game), the Bald Eagle 'diamond nine' demon— s,trated their overall strength and balance by sweeping two games from the Rockets of Slippery Rock, 6-2, and 7-3. Lock Haven Slate may possibly be the only baseball squad without a ^ econd team. The Eagles have two firsl teams, each equally a s impressive as the other. In the opening game, LHS came from behind to defeat Slippery Rock, 6-2, sparked by fine performances by lefty Rod Burrows on the mound, and Denny Rhule at the plate. Burrows gave up no earned r u n s , only six h i t s , and struck out four on his way to an impressive opening season game victory. A s he was keeping the b a s e s clear wilh his fine hurling, Denny Rhule was busy lashing out two doubles and a single in four trips to the plate, providing LHS wilh the power needed lo come from behind. Power w a s also displayed by Ray Oberheim and Burrows himself. Oberheim sent a shot into center field that flew past the centerfieldcr like a rocket. And when the dusl had cleared, Ray was standing on third base wearing a big smile common to players who smash triples in only their second times at the plate. Burrows a l s o displayed h i s talent in hitting by rapping a double and driving in two runs. The E a g l e s collected eight hits altogether, the remaining singles coming from Harry Doutt, Wayne Bacon, and Skip Wolf. But as impressive as the LHS squad was al the plate, they were just as impressive in the field. Led by cannon-arm catcher Lou Martarano, who teamed up with shortstop Harry Doutt and second-baseman Doug Conlon lo pick off the only Slippery Rock runners who attempted to s t e a l , the E a g l e s committed only one error, a throwing error that allowed the Rockets to i core one of their two runs, but nol enough to off-set the onslaught of the E a g l e s . In the second game, the story was the same. Only the names were changed, lo protect the innocent. This time Jim Sleicher w a s on the mound and Jeff Knarr, Barry Anderson, Ralph Pierotti, and Rich O.sborn were providing the power. Sleicher, using a combination of fast b a l l s , curves, and knuckle b a l l s , gave up only six h i t s , walked only one, and fanned a goodly sum of eight of eight Slippery Rock batters. In the power department, Knarr and Pierotti had triples, Anderson a double, and Osborn two s i n g l e s . Other singles were punched out by Bruce Victoriano, Barry Seidel, Bill Yoder, Sleicher, and Knarr, giving Lock Haven a total of len hits and a 7-3 secondgame win. But as in the first game, the fine defensive play of the Eagles proved to be the key to victory. Committing no errors, the LHS squad, led by fine performances by Jerry Luckovich, Bruce Victoriano, and Sleicher, completely dominated Slippery Rock, leaving the Rockets wilh only a very long bus ride home; thoroughly defeated and thoroughly astonished al a team that can send two equally impressive squads onto the filed in the same aflrmoon. field in the same afternoon. The Eagles nexl game will be against York, at York on Wednesday, April 28 at 3:30 pm. Pass-Fa// ExtencJed Contrary to rumors heard al the beginning of the semester, the pass-fail program has not been made mandatory for elementary and secondary education studenls practice teaching in the fall. Hagle Hye gained information on the action in a recent interview with Dr. Perry Brown. There was an experimental program lo begin in the fall of 1971 and continue for three years which made the pass-fail program mandatory for those students in elementary and secondary education practice teaching. The program, however, did not receive commillee approval and has been dropped. There are no future plans to this effect. There have been no plans made aboul opening the pass-fail option to s t u d e n t s ' practice teaching. The pass-fail option has been extended for students on campus. Instead of having to sign up for pass-fail on the day of registration, students can now sign up for this option during the five days of the drop-add period. D a v i s Gym, B u c k n e l l U n i . F r i . A p r i l 2 3 , 8:30 p . m . T i c k e t s at t h e d o o r , or s e n d s t a m p e d s e l f - a d d r e s s e d e n v e l o p e t o : C o n c e r t C o m m i t t e e B o x 561 > B u c k n e l l U n i v e r s i t y , L e w i s b u r g , P a . 1 7 8 3 7 . A d m i s s i o n $ 3 . 5 0 C o m i n g : May 6 - L i v i n g s t o n T a y l o r - Tom R u s h . Admission $4.00 AREFUL to cruih all amolwidcad out. PREVENT FOREST FIRES! SCC Reviews Speakers For LHS in 1972 The SCC assembly comm i t t e e has reviewed prospective speakers for nexl year and has narrowed the field to the following 14 s p e a k e r s , students are asked lo vote for their main preferences by putting a number next to the most desired speaker and listing their preferences one thru 14 inclusive. Students may also write in for any speaker who is not included on the list. Return ballots in Raub Hall lobby or the reception desk in the PUB. Heywood Hale Brown, CBS sports commentator. " A witty, literate man, Mr. Brown is in a c l a s s by himself as a sports a n a l y i s t . " Arl Buchwald. " A m e r i c a ' s funniest columnist;" carried in more than 400 papers, world wide. Topic: The Establishment is alive and well in Washington. Vine DeLoria, Jr. Author of Custer Died For Your Sins is an angry, proud Sioux Indian leader. Betty ^>eidan. Founder of the National Organization of Women. Author of The Feminine Mystique. Rev. J e s s e J a c k s o n . Curr e n t l y heads Operation Breadbasket, a regional project of the S.C.L.C. Considered a protege of the lale Dr. Martin Luther King. Peter Janssen. White House education correspondent for NETV. Former education editor of Newsweek. Sen. George McGovern. Leading opponent of the war in Southeast Asia. An announced Democratic presidential candidate. Sen. Edmund Muskie. Senalor from y a i n e . Democratic vice-presidential candidate in 1968 and a presidential contender in 1972. Ralph Nader. Leading figure in consumer protection movement. Author of Unsafe at Any Speed, Vance Packard. Social critic; best-selling author of The Status Seekers, The Hidden Persuaders, and The Sexual Wilderness. Topic; The bewildered sexes,. Sen. Charles Percy. Republican senator from Illinois. Served on Nixu.n-Agnew " K e y i s s u e s " committee. Former president and chairman of the board of Bell and Howell. Considered one of the leading young Re publicans in the s e n a t e . David Reuben, M.D. ,\ulhor of the best seller, liverything You -1/vvay.s Wanted to Know About Sex Bul Were Afraid lo /l.s*c. Sen. J ohn Tower. Texas Republican. Sen. Tower has been described as a " h a w k " for his views on t h e Vietnam war. A leading conservative. Stewart L. Udall. Former Secretary of the Interior. Author of Ihe Quiet Crisis and jy76: .\.gendu for Tomnrrow. Write-in. M iiiil Ronn .Jenkins, a Pennsylvania and Mid-.Atlantic Conference record holder, will conduct a diving clinic at tlie Zimmerli Apathy reigns. So the faGymnasium pool. Lock Haven miliar statement about the sludents State College, tonight at 7:30 p.m. of Lock Haven. Since I do not public invited. believe everything I hear and am A native of York, Mr. Jenkins just a recent transfer sludent I is a 1965 graduate of West Chester chanced lo put the statement to a State College. In 1964 he won the test Last Saturday, a cleanup of Mid-Atlantic and Pennsylvania the gulley and streams in front of Conference diving championships. High Hall was attempted. Wilh He also set several records in one previous advertisement - over meter diving events while al West 30 posters around the campus and Chester. two articles in our sludent paper I had hoped we could draw For the past tour y e a r s , he some interest. We a l s o had comhas been diving coach at Buckplete co-operation from the phynell University, where he has sical plant and a l s o from a local place two divers in the top six of concrete contractor. The plant the Mid-Atlantic Conference eacn provided us wilh four workmen, year. Last year, one of his divers four -licks, and two buzz-saws. placed firsl. The rete company sent a He has been a guest lecturer plow a.id a driver. And the sluat the Pennsylvania High School dents of Lock Haven managed to Swimming Coaches Association s t i r date only fifteen people. clinic, held al Penn Slate each "Oi.ly 15 people out of about year. Mr. Jenkins holds the position 2 , 4 0 0 . " I surmise that this is proof that apathy reigns al Lock of a s s o c i a t e director of freshman Haven. programs in the division of stuI would like to thank the dent personnel al Bucknell. 15 STUDENTS who did show u p . And would a l s o say that in the five hours these people worked, they did more lo clean up this campus than has ever been accomplished before by a group of sludents h e r e . However, because of the size of the lask and the small number of workers, we only managed to clean up half of what we sel out lo. So, the same s t u d e n l s , and plant workers loo, decided lo donate more of their time this Saturday lo finish the job. But we s t i l l need your help and will a l s o start again at 8:00 in the morning. Also, since this is National Earth Week, and a l s o Spring Weekenc- and since most of jou are planning •" ^^ here this weekend, why nol help us clean up your cam,pus. .iSBSHPv SLACKS JEANS Guy's Slacks, Girls Love