BHeiney
Mon, 06/26/2023 - 19:47
Edited Text
Somebody'
OpenTo
" N o Place to he Somebod y , " the 1970 Pulitzer Prizewinning play hy Charles Ciordone,
will he performed by the Roundabout Theatre on Monday, February
5, at 8:15 p.m. in Price Auditorium.
The play is open to the public, with admission charged.
Tickets are available at the PUB
and at the doorDescribed as a comedydrama, "No Place to be Someb o d y " has received wide acclaim
in New York, Los Angeles, Detroit, and other major c i t i e s .
The author, Charles Gordone. is
Everyone
an actor as well as a playwright.
Gordone, the first Black
playwright to win the Pulitzer
Prize, was in the original p r o
duction of " T h e B l a c k s . " He
won an award for Best Actor of
the Year off-Broadway in the allBlack production of "Of Mice
and Me n . "
He was associate producer
of the film "Nothing Bul a Man"
and casting director for another
feature film, " B l a c k Like Me."
Gordone i.s co-founder and
chairman, with Godfrey Cambridge, of the Committee for the
Employment of Negio Performers.
agle
ye
E
VQi.xv No. 42 Lock Haven
State
College
Friday, Feb. 2,1973
Arts Festival
Brings
Weekend
Of Events
Olatunji provides the beat and a member of the cast proyJiides the bounce in last night s
performance
before a full house in Price
A presentation of Black poetry and j a z z , an exhibit and lecture by two a r t i s t s , and a movie
about Martin Luther King will be
offered this weekend at Lock
Haven State College as part of
the Black Arts F^estival.
On Saturday at 2 p.m., Cynthia Griffin and Faye l ^ w i s return to the Lock Haven cwnpus
for a presentstion of " B l a c k Poetry and J a z z , " using a Readers
Theatrel approach. The absence
of prbPS is intended to help the
listeneil focus on the readings
thempe lives.
On Sunday at 2 p.m., Mr.
James McDowall and Dr. Walter
Simon will hold an exhibit of
their works and d i s c u s s "Cont r a s t iili Black Art F o r m s " ui
Bentley Hall lounge, open to the
public without charge.
Mr. McDowall is a commercial artist in Washington, D.C.
who has done magazine illustrations in addition to posters
and a d v e r t i s e m e n t s . His paintings have been exhibited in
Maryland and Washington, D.C.
Dr. Walter Simon, art professor at Bloomsburg State
College, exhibited a selection
of his paintings at last year's
Black Arts F e s t i v a l in l^ock Haven.
His work- h a s been recognized in the magazines "Negro A r t , " and " E b o n y . "
On Sunday night at 7;30 pn).
the film " K i n g : Montgomery to
Memphis" will be shown free of
charge in Price Auditorium. The
movie depicts the major events
in the life of Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr., using film of actual
events t a k e n by friends and
news photographers.
Auditorium.
Announcements
Theatre Opportunity Offered In England
A foui-week Elizabethan
theatre workshop at St. George's
I h c a t r e in London, England is
scheduled for July 14 to August
II, 1973. The course is being
sponsored by the University of
Pittsburgh's
Department
of
Speech and Theatre Arts and the
llniversity Center for International Studies.
The program, entitled the
Tyrone Guthrie l.jectures and
CONSIDER...
Communication
Vibratrons
Needed
Tlip students of Lock Haven
are in dire need of a radio station on campus.
Most .students would agree
that there are only three radio
stations of much interest to us
ill the area. They are the Lock
Haven, WiUiamsport, and State
College s t a t i o n s . We think that
perhaps the Lock Haven station
is a bit sub-par and at times it
IS difficult for students to bring
in the State College station.
Tha! leaves the William-sport station, which is fairly good at
times but has many programs of
n-i interest to s t u d e n t s .
A radio station here would
seemingly be ideal for everyone
on campus. It would provide a
form of campus communication
for > tudents and faculty alike.
W!iL.- was the last time you
nn:..'cd a meeting because you
failed to see a bulletin hanging
in some corner on campus? All
of us could experience good music continuously because the
station would be directed by stuaents for s t u d e n t s .
The disc j.ockeys would be
s t u d e n t s . They could be volunteers or perhaps a form of ex-
Iheatre Workshop, is being run
in conjunction with St. George's
Theatre and the City University,
London, England. Undergraduate
and graduate students from American or Canadian colleges or
universities are eligible to participate.
Lectures and workshop sessions will be based on the teachings of the late Sir Tyrone Guthrie, who was insliumciital in
spreading the principle of English c l a s s i c a l theatre and the
production of Shakespeare
throughout the world, was dedicated to preserving acting as an
art and serious profession.
The lectures and workshop
will include academic study,
practical
theatre
application,
visits to major Finglish c l a s s i c a l
theatre companies, and tours of
museums and art galleries. The
course will cover the study of
historical hiickground, social
coniUiions, p anti .l^c intelleclua! and spiritual influences of the Renaissance on .Shakesoeare and other
English poets and dramatists.
Well-known theatre experts
will lecture on subjects ranging
from the theatre as an art form,
the actor's task in interpreting
the text, and changing s h a p e s of
theatre and drama, to the use of
v i s u a l s , scenery, and costumes
and comparative techniques of
modern and c l a s s i c a l delivery.
C o s t , which includes tuition, room and board, and theatre
t i c k e t s , is approximately $600.
A deposit of $100 is required upon application. Deadline for applications is March 21, 1973.
For further
information,
write to Deborah Hornbake, Study
Abroad Office, University of
Pittsburgh, University Center
for International Studies, Mervis
Hall, Pittsburgh, Pa.
15213,
or call (412) 621-3500, extension
6500.
EAGLE WING
pans ion for the work-study program. Money to get us started
would probably have lo come
from our own Student Co-on Council, l o prevent our activity fees
from skyrocketing we would privbably have to cut out one big
name concert or anoiher less
important activity.
A few of us Ice! thai llic
sacrifice of such an activity
would be well worth the end res u l t . Is there any reason such
a program could not be set up?
Shrimp and
French
$1.25
Fries
There will be a
Praeco
Subscription drive today to be
lield outside the Eagle Wing
in the PUB. Either a $2
deposit or $5 full payment
will be required to reserve
your year book.
Attention ski club members: If you have not notified the officers that you are
definatly going on the trip
February 10,11 please notify them by Tuesday, February
6. Officers are Deb Hoffman,
ext. 414, Darrell Nagle and
Lonnie Mazuri at the TKE
House,
748-8983,
Chris
Schleiker and Sue Koebel,
ext. 422 or Mr. Young, Rm.
107 Zimmerii. No one will
be allowed to go on the trip
unless you have notified an
officer.
Also, brownies will be
sold before the Sunday Night
Movie, in all the dorms and
at the fraternity houses.
Come to the Used Book
Sale now in progress on the
PUB'S grohd floor, Conference Rm. 212- Books will be
collected until Thursday and
sold until Saturday. The following is the Book Sale hours;
Thursday 1-4 p.m.
6-8 p.m.
Friday 1-4 p.m.
Saturday 1-4 p.m.
Students are requested
Billiards Tournamentto make out two cards with
Prizes will be awaroed on
their names, name of the book,
Sunday night at 7 in the Pool
course it is for, and the price. Room. Bob Snyder
Bob
Boo!: and money returns can Duty and Bill Young must be
be made beginning Friday.
there!
The SCC Movie, *' A
Man Called Horse", will
be shoMn at 9:15 pm on
Sunday night following the
Black Cultural Society movie
"King Montgomery to Memphis " at 7:30 pm.
L ub r near coiiege swim pool
Sat., Jan. 27: Wallet belonging to Mike Farwell of Tampa,
Fla. Please return drivers
license, cards, eight pictures.
Contact M^s. Bottorf-l09V2 E
Main-74B-4163.
Reminoer to students to
have Shident Activity Fee
validation put on their I.D.'s
right away!
There will be an informal meeting for all students who are interested in
applying for the position of
Residence
Hall
Student
Councilor for the 1973-74
acedemic year on TuMday
February 6 at 6:30 pm in the
Woolridge Hall .Ground Floor
Lounge. Applications will
be available at that time
Cagers Drop Tough One to CSC
1973 Women's Basketball Schedule
Feb 3
Alumni
East Stroudsburg State College
UrsiDus College
Gettysburg College
Slippery Rock State College
Indiana University of Pa.
West Chester State College
Penn State University
Millersville State College
Bucknell University
Ffeb 6
Feb
Feb
Feb
Feb
Feb
Feb
Mar
Mar
9
13
17
20
24
27
2
6
1:00 P.M.
3:30 P.M.
4:00 P.M.
3:30 P.M.
1:30 P.M.
3:00 P.M.
2:00 P.M.
1:30 P.M.
6:00 P.M.
7:30 P.M.
Mar 8-9-10 Middle Atlantic Regional Tournament
Home
Away
Home
Home
Home
Away
Away
Away
Away
Away
On Wednesday night, the
LHS ba.skelball team under the
leadership of new head coach
Dick Taylor, traveled to Clarion
to face one of the powerhouses
of the Pennsylvania Conference.
Going into the game, Ihe
Clarion State College "Golden
E a g l e s " were undefeated in conference play and had only two
overall l o s s e s . Leading Clarion's nationally ranked offensive
machine was Joe Sebestyen, who
is personally r anked in field
goal percentage.
Home
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The Bald E a g l e s however,
were coming off a thrilling, last
s e c o n d upset win over a strong
Wilkes College team and upset
number two was in their minds.
T h e heavily favored Clarion
found the defensive minded Bald
E a g l e s a little tougher than they
probably expected. LHS held a
slim four point lead in the first
half and Clarion raced to a ten
point margin in the s e c o n d .
(Clarion defeated LHS here at
the Haven back in December by
62-52).
The Bald E a g l e s just
would not die though. With 34
s e c o n d s left and the score 65-61,
the Bald Eagles were still in it.
However, a missed shot and a
foul all but ended the hopes for
another upset. The final score
of the game had Clarion on top
of the Haven by 68-63.
The game was won for Clarion at the foul line. The Clarion
team went to the line 33 times
making 22 of them. This is very
unusual for this s e a s o n b e c a u s e
of the new role that limits shooting fouls. The fouls a l s o hurt
LHS in another way. Before the
game w a s over, four of the Bald
Eagle s t a r t e r s were on the bench
with five p e r s o n a l s .
For Clarion, Joe Sebestyen
led the scoring with 23 points.
For LHS, Russ Paulin had
one of the b e s t games of his ca-
reer, going 8 for 12 from the field
for 16 points and snatching 13
rebounds.
Gary Knepp a l s o
played a fine game going 4 for 5
from the field and scoring 14
points.
Rick Miller who h a s
been outstanding recently (and
has won a starting berth) chipped
in with II points. Harold McKenzie, the Bald Eagles leading rebounder and defensive ace saw
only limited action because of
a knee injury.
The Bald E a g l e s now 4-11,
face Edinboro State College on
Monday night in Thomas Field
House.
The c l a s h with Edinboro always means excitement.
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OpenTo
" N o Place to he Somebod y , " the 1970 Pulitzer Prizewinning play hy Charles Ciordone,
will he performed by the Roundabout Theatre on Monday, February
5, at 8:15 p.m. in Price Auditorium.
The play is open to the public, with admission charged.
Tickets are available at the PUB
and at the doorDescribed as a comedydrama, "No Place to be Someb o d y " has received wide acclaim
in New York, Los Angeles, Detroit, and other major c i t i e s .
The author, Charles Gordone. is
Everyone
an actor as well as a playwright.
Gordone, the first Black
playwright to win the Pulitzer
Prize, was in the original p r o
duction of " T h e B l a c k s . " He
won an award for Best Actor of
the Year off-Broadway in the allBlack production of "Of Mice
and Me n . "
He was associate producer
of the film "Nothing Bul a Man"
and casting director for another
feature film, " B l a c k Like Me."
Gordone i.s co-founder and
chairman, with Godfrey Cambridge, of the Committee for the
Employment of Negio Performers.
agle
ye
E
VQi.xv No. 42 Lock Haven
State
College
Friday, Feb. 2,1973
Arts Festival
Brings
Weekend
Of Events
Olatunji provides the beat and a member of the cast proyJiides the bounce in last night s
performance
before a full house in Price
A presentation of Black poetry and j a z z , an exhibit and lecture by two a r t i s t s , and a movie
about Martin Luther King will be
offered this weekend at Lock
Haven State College as part of
the Black Arts F^estival.
On Saturday at 2 p.m., Cynthia Griffin and Faye l ^ w i s return to the Lock Haven cwnpus
for a presentstion of " B l a c k Poetry and J a z z , " using a Readers
Theatrel approach. The absence
of prbPS is intended to help the
listeneil focus on the readings
thempe lives.
On Sunday at 2 p.m., Mr.
James McDowall and Dr. Walter
Simon will hold an exhibit of
their works and d i s c u s s "Cont r a s t iili Black Art F o r m s " ui
Bentley Hall lounge, open to the
public without charge.
Mr. McDowall is a commercial artist in Washington, D.C.
who has done magazine illustrations in addition to posters
and a d v e r t i s e m e n t s . His paintings have been exhibited in
Maryland and Washington, D.C.
Dr. Walter Simon, art professor at Bloomsburg State
College, exhibited a selection
of his paintings at last year's
Black Arts F e s t i v a l in l^ock Haven.
His work- h a s been recognized in the magazines "Negro A r t , " and " E b o n y . "
On Sunday night at 7;30 pn).
the film " K i n g : Montgomery to
Memphis" will be shown free of
charge in Price Auditorium. The
movie depicts the major events
in the life of Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr., using film of actual
events t a k e n by friends and
news photographers.
Auditorium.
Announcements
Theatre Opportunity Offered In England
A foui-week Elizabethan
theatre workshop at St. George's
I h c a t r e in London, England is
scheduled for July 14 to August
II, 1973. The course is being
sponsored by the University of
Pittsburgh's
Department
of
Speech and Theatre Arts and the
llniversity Center for International Studies.
The program, entitled the
Tyrone Guthrie l.jectures and
CONSIDER...
Communication
Vibratrons
Needed
Tlip students of Lock Haven
are in dire need of a radio station on campus.
Most .students would agree
that there are only three radio
stations of much interest to us
ill the area. They are the Lock
Haven, WiUiamsport, and State
College s t a t i o n s . We think that
perhaps the Lock Haven station
is a bit sub-par and at times it
IS difficult for students to bring
in the State College station.
Tha! leaves the William-sport station, which is fairly good at
times but has many programs of
n-i interest to s t u d e n t s .
A radio station here would
seemingly be ideal for everyone
on campus. It would provide a
form of campus communication
for > tudents and faculty alike.
W!iL.- was the last time you
nn:..'cd a meeting because you
failed to see a bulletin hanging
in some corner on campus? All
of us could experience good music continuously because the
station would be directed by stuaents for s t u d e n t s .
The disc j.ockeys would be
s t u d e n t s . They could be volunteers or perhaps a form of ex-
Iheatre Workshop, is being run
in conjunction with St. George's
Theatre and the City University,
London, England. Undergraduate
and graduate students from American or Canadian colleges or
universities are eligible to participate.
Lectures and workshop sessions will be based on the teachings of the late Sir Tyrone Guthrie, who was insliumciital in
spreading the principle of English c l a s s i c a l theatre and the
production of Shakespeare
throughout the world, was dedicated to preserving acting as an
art and serious profession.
The lectures and workshop
will include academic study,
practical
theatre
application,
visits to major Finglish c l a s s i c a l
theatre companies, and tours of
museums and art galleries. The
course will cover the study of
historical hiickground, social
coniUiions, p anti .l^c intelleclua! and spiritual influences of the Renaissance on .Shakesoeare and other
English poets and dramatists.
Well-known theatre experts
will lecture on subjects ranging
from the theatre as an art form,
the actor's task in interpreting
the text, and changing s h a p e s of
theatre and drama, to the use of
v i s u a l s , scenery, and costumes
and comparative techniques of
modern and c l a s s i c a l delivery.
C o s t , which includes tuition, room and board, and theatre
t i c k e t s , is approximately $600.
A deposit of $100 is required upon application. Deadline for applications is March 21, 1973.
For further
information,
write to Deborah Hornbake, Study
Abroad Office, University of
Pittsburgh, University Center
for International Studies, Mervis
Hall, Pittsburgh, Pa.
15213,
or call (412) 621-3500, extension
6500.
EAGLE WING
pans ion for the work-study program. Money to get us started
would probably have lo come
from our own Student Co-on Council, l o prevent our activity fees
from skyrocketing we would privbably have to cut out one big
name concert or anoiher less
important activity.
A few of us Ice! thai llic
sacrifice of such an activity
would be well worth the end res u l t . Is there any reason such
a program could not be set up?
Shrimp and
French
$1.25
Fries
There will be a
Praeco
Subscription drive today to be
lield outside the Eagle Wing
in the PUB. Either a $2
deposit or $5 full payment
will be required to reserve
your year book.
Attention ski club members: If you have not notified the officers that you are
definatly going on the trip
February 10,11 please notify them by Tuesday, February
6. Officers are Deb Hoffman,
ext. 414, Darrell Nagle and
Lonnie Mazuri at the TKE
House,
748-8983,
Chris
Schleiker and Sue Koebel,
ext. 422 or Mr. Young, Rm.
107 Zimmerii. No one will
be allowed to go on the trip
unless you have notified an
officer.
Also, brownies will be
sold before the Sunday Night
Movie, in all the dorms and
at the fraternity houses.
Come to the Used Book
Sale now in progress on the
PUB'S grohd floor, Conference Rm. 212- Books will be
collected until Thursday and
sold until Saturday. The following is the Book Sale hours;
Thursday 1-4 p.m.
6-8 p.m.
Friday 1-4 p.m.
Saturday 1-4 p.m.
Students are requested
Billiards Tournamentto make out two cards with
Prizes will be awaroed on
their names, name of the book,
Sunday night at 7 in the Pool
course it is for, and the price. Room. Bob Snyder
Bob
Boo!: and money returns can Duty and Bill Young must be
be made beginning Friday.
there!
The SCC Movie, *' A
Man Called Horse", will
be shoMn at 9:15 pm on
Sunday night following the
Black Cultural Society movie
"King Montgomery to Memphis " at 7:30 pm.
L ub r near coiiege swim pool
Sat., Jan. 27: Wallet belonging to Mike Farwell of Tampa,
Fla. Please return drivers
license, cards, eight pictures.
Contact M^s. Bottorf-l09V2 E
Main-74B-4163.
Reminoer to students to
have Shident Activity Fee
validation put on their I.D.'s
right away!
There will be an informal meeting for all students who are interested in
applying for the position of
Residence
Hall
Student
Councilor for the 1973-74
acedemic year on TuMday
February 6 at 6:30 pm in the
Woolridge Hall .Ground Floor
Lounge. Applications will
be available at that time
Cagers Drop Tough One to CSC
1973 Women's Basketball Schedule
Feb 3
Alumni
East Stroudsburg State College
UrsiDus College
Gettysburg College
Slippery Rock State College
Indiana University of Pa.
West Chester State College
Penn State University
Millersville State College
Bucknell University
Ffeb 6
Feb
Feb
Feb
Feb
Feb
Feb
Mar
Mar
9
13
17
20
24
27
2
6
1:00 P.M.
3:30 P.M.
4:00 P.M.
3:30 P.M.
1:30 P.M.
3:00 P.M.
2:00 P.M.
1:30 P.M.
6:00 P.M.
7:30 P.M.
Mar 8-9-10 Middle Atlantic Regional Tournament
Home
Away
Home
Home
Home
Away
Away
Away
Away
Away
On Wednesday night, the
LHS ba.skelball team under the
leadership of new head coach
Dick Taylor, traveled to Clarion
to face one of the powerhouses
of the Pennsylvania Conference.
Going into the game, Ihe
Clarion State College "Golden
E a g l e s " were undefeated in conference play and had only two
overall l o s s e s . Leading Clarion's nationally ranked offensive
machine was Joe Sebestyen, who
is personally r anked in field
goal percentage.
Home
TERM-PAPERS
WRITTFN HY I'ROFI SSIONAL 1)1 CJRI FI) Kl SI A R C H F R S
^n.nnn O N F H F.
GUARANTEE
FROM
* 24 Hour M.iilordcrs
* Quality Research
* Never the same p.iper Iwice
*
*
I'sed & Originals
(TYPl n in finished form
with Bihlioitraphy & Footnotes)
Lowest r;itcs
'Results' Guaranteed
FREF, DESCHII'TIVi; (A T ALOCUF
CALL roLLixrr OR WRITF
SLOO P.P.
(Thousands of Finished Papers
on every subject.)
21.5-3433112
"
LOCAL
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The Bald E a g l e s however,
were coming off a thrilling, last
s e c o n d upset win over a strong
Wilkes College team and upset
number two was in their minds.
T h e heavily favored Clarion
found the defensive minded Bald
E a g l e s a little tougher than they
probably expected. LHS held a
slim four point lead in the first
half and Clarion raced to a ten
point margin in the s e c o n d .
(Clarion defeated LHS here at
the Haven back in December by
62-52).
The Bald E a g l e s just
would not die though. With 34
s e c o n d s left and the score 65-61,
the Bald Eagles were still in it.
However, a missed shot and a
foul all but ended the hopes for
another upset. The final score
of the game had Clarion on top
of the Haven by 68-63.
The game was won for Clarion at the foul line. The Clarion
team went to the line 33 times
making 22 of them. This is very
unusual for this s e a s o n b e c a u s e
of the new role that limits shooting fouls. The fouls a l s o hurt
LHS in another way. Before the
game w a s over, four of the Bald
Eagle s t a r t e r s were on the bench
with five p e r s o n a l s .
For Clarion, Joe Sebestyen
led the scoring with 23 points.
For LHS, Russ Paulin had
one of the b e s t games of his ca-
reer, going 8 for 12 from the field
for 16 points and snatching 13
rebounds.
Gary Knepp a l s o
played a fine game going 4 for 5
from the field and scoring 14
points.
Rick Miller who h a s
been outstanding recently (and
has won a starting berth) chipped
in with II points. Harold McKenzie, the Bald Eagles leading rebounder and defensive ace saw
only limited action because of
a knee injury.
The Bald E a g l e s now 4-11,
face Edinboro State College on
Monday night in Thomas Field
House.
The c l a s h with Edinboro always means excitement.
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