BHeiney
Mon, 06/26/2023 - 12:57
Edited Text
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Republican Ramblings
by
As of the Democratic Convention in July, one of the i.s'.ucs
on the Democratic Platform was
one which would grant amnesty to
those who, "for reasons uf cons c i e n c e " , resisted the draft. Apart from the ambiguous vvorcii.ig
of the above excerpt (rca.'ons ,.!
conscience? appropriate 'nasis''),
there a r e a number of items to consider as regards amnesty.
First, draft evaders are criminals. They have violated the
Selective Service Act. Whether
or not the law is fair is a nui.
point. The fact is that draft evaders are criminals and, a s s u c h ,
should be punished. Rapists and
murderers aren't given amnesty,
why should it be given to draft
registers?
Suppose the North had refused
Abarham Lincoln's call for men.
The United States might never
have profited from the genius of
such men as Martin Luther King
Jr., Ralph Buche, and Booker i .
Washington. Or suppose that the
people of this nation had not acknowledged Franklin U. Roose-

J. Scott Landis
velt's call for troops.
Most of
Europe, and perhaps even the
United States, would now be undi-r
German or Japanese control.
Or suppose George McGovern
wns elected President and the
I "lied States got iiivoivcd in a
Jr. McGovern would then have
three choices: a)surri nde; ; hlhopc
for enough volunteers to carry us
through; c)Draft men for the Armed
Services. If he were to choose
c j , and some young men, for "reasons of c o n s c i e n c e " , decided to
evade me draft, McGovern would
surely be obligated to put these
nvil in jail.
Finally, is it fair that these
draft evaders be welcomed the
same as men who may have lost
life, limb, or freedom in the service of their country? Are we to
greet the coward and the hero in
the same manner? And lastly, is
the man who left his country as a
criminal at.d who comes back in
one piece t o be given the same
amount of freedom a s a man who
left his country as a soldier and
who returns minus an arm or leg?

Lock Havisn State Collage

Vol. XVI

.Monday, Oct. 9, 1972

JAMES GANG

Publications N o w Consolidated
Student funded publications
of Lock Haven State will be coordinated under the newly founded
Student Publications Bc<.irtl (SPB).
The SPB will operate under the
S.C.C., and its purpose will be to
serve as publisher and to establish
guidelines for the operation of
student publications.
The board will establish a
chain of command to coordinate
the efforts of all student publications more efficiently and set up a
general policy concerning publications. Other duties oTthe SPB

include the appointment of editors-in-chief of various publicalitu}, the handling of any disputes
concerning student publications,
and the approval of, and, or aiding
in the establishment of any future
S.C.C. publications.
The board is to be composed
of five student members and four
faculty members, and will begin
operations within one to two weeks.
Meetings will he held twice each
semester and are open to all
interested persons.

Choral Workshop
Concert Scheduled
Two area high school choirs
will join with the Lock Haven
State College Choir on Thursday,
October 12, for a day long choral
workshop concluding with an
evening concert in Price Auditorium.
The Bald Eagle Nittany High
School Blazer Choir, directed by
Ms. Cherie Warren, will participate
in the workshop with the College
Singers and the 106 voice College
Choir, directed by Mr. Gary Renzelman of the college music de-

partinent.
The 225 singers will begin
rehearsals a t 9 a.m. The workshop will conclude with a public
concert at 7:30 p.m. in Price .\uditorium.
Piano accompanists tor the
workshop are Starr , \ l l i s o n , Jersey
Shore High student; Carol Long,
exchange student from Nottingham
College; Marva Cole, Lock Haven
State student; and Mrs. Mary Renzelman of the college music department.

James G a n g Concert Promises Excellence
••We
love plasing.
llicrc
isn'l aiivlhing i-lsc ue'i.1 Viani to
liL' tloiiig. and thal's v\liy «i-"rc
lu-ro."
rbat's
.lanii", l ' o \ , k'lulrr
of ".hsiiio'^ Gaiif;, " i;:\itit; one
feasor' win his group i-. .uu- ,>l
Ihc harclcsi working haiKis aroiiiul
today. lliL'ir adoration for music
and Ihi'ir skill in pi-i I'orming it
gLiarunleos thai Ihcy ^^ i 11 be nni:
ot I.lIS's more fast inaling lloiiKcoiiiing groups.
Bused in Cleveland, Ohiu,
the " G a n g " :is a colUctivc unil
first spread their na iuc and reputation throughout five iicighhoiiiig
s t a t e s . Since then their fame has
spreatl thnioghout the 11.S. and
Europe. The result of this lanx
has been capacily houses al such
notable auditoriums as Carnegie

Hall in N.Y. and the Lyceum v o c a l s ; Don Troiano, lead guitar
Tlu-alre in England. However, and v o c a l s , and Roy Kenner, lead
diligence and drive is only one
v o c a l s . All the Gang members
side of the J a m e ' Gang's strength.
share the workload evenly but
ihc flip side of the James Jim, being somewhat of a founding
(ianp IS their meticulous approach father, takes the lead us spokesto recording. This care is reflect; "lan ang general organizer.
ed and generated within their
As a collective phenomenon,
music. T.'icir last four albums the James Gang is a powerful
•'Ycr .Alhuni", " T h e James Gang musical
exper iance
that h a s
Rides .Again''. " T l i i r d s " , and amassed a vast following. They
" J a m e s Gang Live at Carnegie rely a s much on the warmth of
Hull" have all been successful ahe a u d i a n c e ' s response a s they
chait albums. In fact " T h e James rely on the warmth of playing,
(.iang Rules .Again" has been When both are there, t h e result
eertitied
RI.AA gold proving is uninhibited pleasure for both
again that they have the talent the audiance und t h e performers.
that s e l l s .
It i.s appreciation the James
Ihe
tour
musicians
who Cjang's audiances have shown
comprise the James Ciang arc Jim by making the band as s u c c e s s f u l
h'
drums
p i a n o . and v o c a l s ; us ihey are today.
Don
Peters
guitar and

Nominations tor the homecom-

ANNOUNCEMENTS

ing court will be Monday, Oct.
9 in Bentley Hall and the PUB.
Election of the queen will be

ALL SECONDARY EDUCATION
MAJORS who are interested in
qualifying also for the increas-

Thurs., Oct. 12.

ing number of employment op-

Tickets can be obtained for the

Any pledge classes wishing to

two upcoming cultural commit-

help with the Homecoming Con-

candidates are

tee's

Ballet on

cert, please contact the sociai

report to TFH wrestling area

Matthews, Assistant Professor

procedures and Oct. g, 1972 and "The Propoopportunities available to col- sition" on Oct. 10, 1972, in
lege graduates as Air Force the Secretary's office in the

committee. They will be paid

on Monday, Oct. 16 at 4 p.ui.

of Special Education, on Tues-

for their services.

for the first practice session.

day, October 10, at I p.m. in

Practice

will

Himes 111.

daily

preparation

A special Air Force Selection
Tern

will visit LHS in Bent-

ley Hall on Oct. 11 at l o until

events,

the

3 to explain

PUB.

Officers.
Interested

students

are

Valid ID'S must be pre-

Student with typing ability desires typing job under campus

sented.

employment program. If inter-

urged to contact members of
this team to learn "first hand"

ested

how they can find themselves

502 North Hall, Ext. 442.

on the Air Force Team as pilots,

navigators

or

executive positions.

m other

NEED WORK?: Jobs available
to any student having some experience

In electronics

or a

contact;

Varsity and JV Vifrestling

faculty

tickets

at

to

4 p.m.
for

members

will

receive

Rigni now the Air Force nenuine interef^t in the TV mehas positions open to both men dia. 15 hrs week avanaaie in them in campus mail, it ynu
and women who are willing to the TV lab-must be vvork-s.uu). have not received them by Monday, please caii at Ext. 256.
expand their horizons.
See Leo Ritter, Raub 107.

should meet with Mr. Peter R.

the

--/iih Le-

Tickets for the Boston Ballet
Company performance, sched-

high University.

uled for Monday, Oct. 9, 8:15

Tonia Smith,

who have elected to purchase
season

be

December 2 opener

LIBRARY

LIP? Do you have

in Price Auditorium, are now

or

available to students, faculty,

library

and staff with valid ID cards

and its staff? See our new bul-

in the PUB. Due to the limited

'iny
Those

in

requested

portunities in special education

questions,

complaints

problems,

about

the

.etin board. First floor. Just

seating in the auditorium, we

around the corner from the ele-

must ask that you have tickets

vator, by the Reference Office.

in order that we miy guarantee

No names are required.

seats.

Soccermen Claim 4-3
Victory Over Villanova
by Robert Singer
Shortly after the soccer game
with Villanova University, trainer
Jim Puryear asked coach Karl T.
Herrmann, " I s that a gray hair I
see on your head, c o a c h ? " Replied the mentor; "Which o n e ? "
Lock Haven had just taken
away almost certain victory ir
•Villanova, a come-from-behii,;:
4-3 affair which was won in the
second overtime period. Herrmann
didn't just have gray hairs; his
knees were s h a k i n g after the Bald
Eagles had wiped out a 3-1 deficit in the last two minutes.
The game started out well
enough, but turned bad later.
Ball control over most of the field
was rotten, and balls were being
stolen right and left by both teams.
While Lock Haven should have had
three goals nearly in the first
half, by the end LHS was behind
1-0.
Things did not stay that way
however.
They got worse. At
10:25 Villanova got another goal,
and 35 seconds later a third, and
their opponents had yet to get on
the scoreboard.
It happened, however, at
18:25 when Galen Hess sent Barry
Johnson a pass which Johnson
got by the goalie with little trouble
(there was practically nobody else
around). At 43:20, there was a
flurry of action at the net, out of
which Johnson and Don Trautman
managed another goal._ T h i s , however made the score 3-2, and the
Villanova fans were counting
down the seconds to victory.
They never finished the count.
During another flurry of action at
the Villanova goal, a Wildcat
defender put his hand on the ball
with 30 seconds left, giving the
Bald Eagles a penalty kick and
a chance to tie up the score.
While the referees were s e t t i n g
up the shot, time ran out.
(In
soccer the clocks stop only for
goals, referee's time out (injuries),
and natural d i s a s t e r s , such as the
field caving iri.) Hovever, Don
Copeland, still allowed to take the
shot, got it through and the game
was into overtime.

Len Long and Johnson combined for the goal which made the
difference at 3:25 of the second
overtime period.
While the game ended theatrically enough (a comeback such
as that is pracFically unheard of
m soccer), the rest of the game
was nothing spectacular. A s s i s tant coach Michael Parker said it
was " d i s a p p o i n t i n g . "
He later
added that there was " n o controlthe game broke down because of
t h i s . " He thought that the basics
were nonexistent and "there was
no consistency in their (both
teams') p l a y . " Coach Herrmann
had similar thoughts on the skills
shown on the field.
And while
both considered it " r e m a r k a b l e "
that the Bald Eagles got back in
the game, both a l s o conceded that
Villanova " l e t us back i n . "
The game, however, was not
only raunchy in the play, but disorderly in other a s p e c t s as well.
The game itself was filled with injuries that occurred during the
contest. And Tom Rowan, Galen
H e s s , and Steve Steffen all had
ankle, knee, and thigh injuries
respectively before coming into
the game.
Rod Antagnoli, who
normally plays fullback, was up
in the front line, filling in for
the various pajts of the cripplied
offensive corps.
Other players
were out of place a l s o . Mosen
" M o o s e " Tarrasally gave the
team quite a lift at midfield in his
first varsity appearance.
That was that game. Meanwhile Herrmann is hoping he can
field 22 pairs of legs when the
team meets St. Vincents on Thursday, away, a t 3:30 p.m. He also
hopes that he can get 22 pairs
back without having a few of them
bleeding, broken, mangled, e t c . ,
St. Vincents fans being the way
they are.

One summer morning, two
Altei a •relVc'.li.ng dip m the upon them, they docked ay the
able bodied students rented out
Susquehanna' t ii..' uxi norning, nearest island where they spent
an SCC c a n o e , the No. 4. Had
the pair had the goix, ,or,i.iie to the night.
the canoe known what it was
rekrcate
the miss.ng from the
When morning came they were
in for, it may have suddenly
night before. Ihey then set out jolted from their slumber by a
developed a hole in its bottom,
agaii;
vitiii ini'de it a.s loud eackling sound.
Looking
for behind this ordinary action
far a -, W , • '
.••toprx'.i to io to t h e sky. Chopper and
stood an unusual motive. Men
sl,x:k i;p
I'rank viewed an enormous flock
and canoe were to travel through
•> o r A G N E S
t't geese, "hundreds of t h e m . "
rough rapids, swift currents, and
Their dici -1I lie Oi.' the trip fiyuig overhead. The pair later
tricky shoals of the mighty river,
the Susquehanna, for 4 ' : day.s consi-.: •'* ;>iaitilv t canned goods. discovered that they were campand approximately 35 hours of Orange jui. o iim' liouoy was a ing on State Game Lands which
nopuliir .'iiiik i"i tl.^ \* IcMind it existed for the purpose of propaddling
lime.
Destination'.'
to ti;ive them eiii.- ;v and It A'a.s viding these geese with wild
Harrisburg.
r i c e . The g e e s e s s t o p t o feed here
Ed 'Chopper' Myers of IJIS also tasty.
In .inter U
pass the time during their journey over the U.S.
and Frank Pokorney of Kansas
(laiidling
The two men then resumed
the two men
State University set out on the while
journey at 10 a.m., being the counted rioatiiii; barrels reusable their trip which continued someable-bodied men they a r e , with for docks along the way of which what uneventfully,
until
they
a launching from Lock Haven's they eo' iilvil '»8. Thev found reached the Clarksbury Bridge.
it interestiii;.^ t.> see llie fl,'>od There, the canoe struck an
dam .
debris .^lil! remaining on the
invisable shoal and c a p s i z e d .
WATER T A K E N ON
river and it.s banks. Upright lawn Some gear was lost in that e p i s o d e .
Upon reaching Jersey Shore
chair .salting liudisturb'd in the
after eight hours of vigorous
midd'e
of
nowhere,
partially
paddling, the crew of No. 4 fell
sii!iniergoJ ho'o.-e trailers, and There the canoe struck an inthat a bit of spirits were in order.
pieces ol' turiiiture still clinging visable shoal and c a p s i z e d . Some
Consequently, the pair left Jersey
to trees were a common sight gear was lost in that e p i s o d e .
Shore with a large bottle of vin.
BOY S C O U T S ?
from a canoe traveling on the
Perhaps it was the relentless hot
Near ing their g o a l , the crew
sun taking its toll that led to the Susquehanna^ ^^
of the No 4 met up with a troop
A REAL RUSH'
rapid consumption of this liquid
of Virginian Boy Scouts on a
repast. The reason shall never
By Friday they had rea bed canoeing trip from Sunbury to
be known. However, shortly after- as far as Lewisbury. The crew Harrisburg and followed
them
ward
aa mysterious
mysterious and quite of No. 4 encountered Sunbury on the rest of the way. As circumunexpected shifting of the load Sunday, which posted problems stance would have it, t h e fleet
occured within the c a n o e , and for them due to the two dams c o n s i s t i n g of clean-cut looking
tioy
scouts
followed
by the
heavy water was taken on. Later located there. The s i t u a t u o n
the
remo'
'crusty,
filthy,
unshaven and
reports from the shore which necessiiated
sunburned' crew of No. 4 entered
stated that the two men fell out ail gear from the can>
the great city at the precise
of their canoe are strictly heresay. utmost skill in shooting
Following this unfeirtimate turn the troughs. This accomtilished time of its annual water show.
of events, which resulted in the without too much h a s s l e . Chopper With a crowd of people watching
misplacing of a camera end an and Frank were then confronted from the banks, the water show
article of clothing, Frank and by rapids and s h o a l s , whose announcer boomed from his micChopper paddled to shore. The frequency increase with a south- rophone, " L e t ' s have a fine hand
ward direction. 'The rapids are for this outstanding group of
e x p e r i e n c e led them to this
philosophy: If one is inclined a real rush' according to Chopper, young p e o p l e . " This statement
to imbide in s p i r i t s , one should t Z . ^ \ n T . ' ^ a r X : : ; : : understandably brought peals of
wine is best
heed this caution
from
the
spectators
in tiie canoe. were the best part of the trip, laughter
left for hours not
who had just seen the dirty duo

FORIEGN CAMPFIRE
SPOTTED
What Mother Nature giveth
Father Time taketh away.

Harriers Collect Week-long
Total Of Two Wins,
One Loss
The LHS cross-country team
ran its record to 6-2 this week
with two wins and a loss in two
away meets.
On Wednesday, in Huntingdon, Pa., the Bald E a g l e s ran
over
Juniata 16-42 but were
beaten by a powerful and confident
Indiana
University
of
Pa. 2 0 4 2 .
Mike Gaige, again running
first for LHS, had to settle for
a second place finish to Indiana's
Bill
Hampton. Mike improved
2:14 over his performance last
year
on the Juniata c o u r s e .
Steve
Harnish
and
Nibs
Gordon finished 6th and 12th
respectivly, as Indiana showed
its great depth. Also running
well for the Bald Eagles were Hal
Fried, Larry Wise and Bill Landis.
LHS head coach Jim Dolan
was impressed with the Indiana
team. He s a i d , "Indiana has to be

Canoe Crew Of The 'No. 4 '
H a v e 'Worthwhile Experience'

The land on which they had
settled for the night was inhabited
by seven trailers. The crew was
offered food by the residents and
the use of a near-by lot, which
belonged to friends of theirs who
had not yet arrived. But, with
all t h i s luck, the night was not
to be theirs, l^ocal law enforcement officers spotted, the light
of their campfire and, knowing
the owners of the property were
not there, decided to investigate.
Everything was straightened out
eventually though, and the night

Around
the area
of the paddle by.
Millersbury was another challenge
Upon reaching their destinato No. 4 for the river becomes ' ' o n , the crew docked No. 4 and
quite shallow in this s p o t . Choppet*i"^aded for the house and showers
s t a t e d that they were most grate- °f ^ friend.
full to the operator of the MillersI" the way of advice for
burg Ferry, who allowed the future canoeists with their sights
canoeists to hitch a ride on the ^et on Harrisburg, Chopper had
tail end of his ferry, thus en- * i s to s a y :
abliug them to travel through
" T h e trip is not for everyone,
the deepest water.
^"d if you are concerned with
GEESE GALORE
' ' " i ^ . '''^ "ot f" VO"- A l s o , t h e
Chopper and Frank paddled '''P ^^ould be made with more
longer than usual Saturday and * a n one person,
Summing
up his
feelings
with niglit closing in rapidly
about the trip, Chopper statedj^
" I t was quite a worthwhile learning e x p e r i a n c e . "

considered the favorite in t h e
Conference Meet this year beAttention Faculty and
cause of their great depth and ended peacefully.
their recent victory over EdinStaff: an activity fee is availboro.
able to all faculty and staff
In Saturday's meet the Bald
Loc/c
Hover,
Sfofe
Co//egea»
510-00
per
petSOn Ot
Eagle harriers ran past a rapidly
improving
Bloomsburg
State wrestlers in 28 Pennsy/vort/o $15.00 per family. Inquire at
23-36 in Bloomsburg.
Conference Tourr^aments hove Secretary's offlce in the PUB.
Mike Gaige, reminding many
won
100 individual
titles.
observers of last year's AilState
ranks
a
American Steve Podganjny, ran Bloomsburg
to a 21 second victory over Terry distant second with 40.
Lee of t h e Huskies. Mike shattered the 5.1 mile course by 39
, loads of goodies, $5.00 vlaue
seconds on a windy, muddy day
By the time we learn to
with a 27:43 clocking. Steve watch our step , we're not I for only $.99 available at beok
Harnish and Nibs Gordon finished stepping out very m u c h .
store while they last.
3rd and 4th close behind L e e .
The Saturday Lock H i v e n ' s
ERROR-FREE
distance men travel to Loretta,
An optomist is one who
Pa. for a meet with Saint Francis
believes that we live in the
College.
best of all possible times; the
O »
pessimist is one who fears
this is true.

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