BHeiney
Wed, 06/28/2023 - 13:02
Edited Text
Noted Mathematician Offers j
Lectures a n d Conferences
Dr, H e r b e r t Wilf, prof e s s o r of m a t h e m a t i c s a t t h e
U n i v e r s i t y of P e n n s y l v a n i a ,
is visiting the Lock Haven State
campus. He will be concluding
a series of public lectures and
conferences with students today.
Dr. Wilf will d i s c u s s " T h e
Monte Carlo Method" at 1 p.m.
today. Dr. Wilf will be available
for conferences with students
in Raub 402 today from 9 to
11:30 a.m. and from 2 to 4 p.m.
His lecture will take place in
Ulmer Planetarium.
Dr. Wilf earned h i s P h . D .
in mathematics at Columbia
University and taught at the
University of Illinois before
coming to the University of
Pennsylvanir
Hi=
inri.istrial
experience includes positions
with United Nuclear CorporationFairchild Engine Division, and
IBM.

purpose of the tour is to strenghten and stimulate programs in
mathematics and computer science in colleges and univers i t i e s , provide department staff
members and students with an
opportunity for personal contact
with distinguished mathematicians, and to aid in motivating
able students to consider careers in mathematics and computer s c i e n c e .

VQI.XV

NO.

45 Lock

Pres. of CEC
On Thursday, February 1,
Council for Exceptional Children
held its first meeting of the
Spring Semester in Himes 111.
Officers for the coming year
were elected a s follows:
President-Stephanie Barzona
Vice President-Clever Daihl
Secretary-Amy Vonada
Treasurer-Jean Anne Farina
S.C.C. Representative-Jean Bonales
This year it is hoped that
the Northcentral Pennsylvania
Regional Special Olympics meet
will be held at Lock Haven State
College on the first or second
Saturday in May. CEC has d e cided to develop a training program for the Special Olympics
for mentally retarded children
in the a r e a . This will be d i s c u s s e d further at the next meeting on F e b . 13 that will be held
a t I p.m. in Himes HI. Anyone
interested in joining CEC or
wishing to become involved in
the Special Olympics Program
should plan to attend this meeting.

Ploy Mixes Emotions
by Gary Brubaker
Monday,
February
5 in
Price Auditorium, the Black Cultural Affairs Committee presented the Pulitzer Prize-winning play " N o Place to be
Somebcxly",
a "Black-black
comedy" written by Charles
Gordone.
Performing the play were
members of " O n the A i s l e ,
Inc.",
and Springer/Warner
Productions,
a
black-white
troupe from New York.
Taken from the original
Broadway adaptation of Gordone
who won the Pulitzer Prize for
Drama in 1970, " N o Place to
A
lecture on "Birth
Control Methods" wiil be
given by Ms. Judy Starr tonight at 7 p.m. in Woolridge
Hall Lounge.
Ms. Starr is with the
Bellefonte Family Planning
Center.
The lecture is open to
all without charge.

ANNOUNCEMENTS
mere wiii oe a meeting

Today

is

the last day to

of the Activity Fee Committee

complete

on Thursday Feb. 8 at I p.m.

the RADIO STATION. Show

in the PUB conference room.

your preference!

There will be a meeting of
the

Computer Science

Club

at 7 p.m. in Raub 405 on
Monday, Feb. 12.

questionalres

on

There will be a meeting of
all persons Interested In the
technicals
radio

aspects

station

of

tomorrow

the
at

4 p.m. in Ru>3c!! 21.
The

Women's

Rigii-s

Association Is a newly chartered

organization

SCC.

of

the

Because of the acti-

vities

they will be underta-

An

Important

committee

election

meeting will

be

hied today at 1 p.m. in the
SCC office.

king In addition to those they
have piclced up on, they need
additional members. Anyone,
seriously interested in joining

the

organization,

and

female,

is

male

encouarged

to attend a meeting Thursday,
Feb.

8 in*Bentley

Lounge

Stafe

College

Thursday, Feb. 8, 1973

Here^s the Dope on Drugs

He has written four textbooks and over 40 research
papers.
Dr. Wilf's visit is part of
a nationwide lecture tour being
sponsored by the Mathematical
Association of America. T h e

Barzona Elected

Haven

The Ski

Club trip to New

York has been cancelled for
this weekend (Feb. 10-11).
There will be a meeting on
Tuesday, Feb. 13 at 7:30 p.m.
In Zimmerii.

All

mer-'iers

after the Birth Control Lec-

should attend. Dates

ture at Woolridge.

nother r^" will be dL- j^sed.

a-

be Somebody" mixed drama with
humor in such a way a s to play
ping-pong wilh the a u d i e n c e ' s *
emotions throughout the play.
The action took place in
West
Greenwich Village ,in
New York, anytime during the
past 15 y e a r s , centering around
Johnny Williams. Williams is
the proprietor of Johnny's Bar
and used anyone he could to
get ahead in a "white dominat e d " society.
The play was well c a s t
with each one of the actors
doing an excellent job in their
respective r o l e s .
Credit is a l s o due to Garland Thompson, director; John
Anthony, producer; and Tony
Limoli, lighting, for their excellent job in bringing the play
to life with their cool handling
of their j o b s .

Olatunji Stresses
Music In Interview
"Do you have lions in
your backyard in N i g e r i a ' ' " When
he came to the United States
in 1950, Olatunji bought a drum.
He answered the previous questions by imitating the stalking
sounds of male and female lions
on the drum. From this type of
question emerged Olatunji and
his "Drums of P a s s i o n " .
Of the drums, Olatunji sys>
"Rhythm is the soul ot l i f e . "
Music is a universal language,
and dance tells a significant
story about the culture of a people. Olatunji is using music and
dance to emlighteii people and
arouse curiosity about diflerent
cultures
" A people without culture IS like a tree without a
root "
Olatunji was a cheerleader
will lo attending Morehead College
111 Atlanta, Genraia. He still
coiilmues cheerleading through
music. Ilo is sole supporter
of a school for Music and Dance
in llailom. Throujih h i s music
;ind school Olatunji is uying to
destro\ myths about his homoland. Olatunji uses the music
and folklore of Africa of old
a-, a foundation Wit his present
music and dance. "Modoiii tolklore in prcsent-da\ Africa i-^
US authentic as the lore ol old;
b,.ili are a real oAprossion of the
h i c ol thai country lived in
different times of its h i s t o r y . "

l.h (harbiliirales)
Sleeping pills have long been used
as a suicide medium, even before they were generally
used for getting stoned. Death is usually caused by
respiratory depression or c e n t r a l nervous system colIpase, similar to narcotics. Barbiturate withdrawal is
often more diffictilt than withdrawal from heroin. (The
probability of grand mal s e i z u r e s occurring during withdrawal is much higher with downers.)
2.h (Seconals).
Clinically known as secolxirhitul
sodium, a short-acting member of the barbiturate family.
J . a (orange sunshine).
A brand of street a c i d .
4.C (s/iootmg crystal).
Crystal (a powdered form of
speed) is a stimulant capable of rapidly deteriorating
the b(xiy when injected for an extended length of time.
5.a (catnip).
It looks and smells like marijuana, but
doesn't get anyone the least bit high. It is often used
to cut g r a s s , along with oregano, and (in extreme shorta g e s ) , anything green.
6.C' (harhiturates).
Among the most common c a u s e s of
death in the U.S. is accidental overdose by mixing
downers and alcohol.
7.5 (amphetamine).
This is one clinical name (orSpeed,
which is often found in s u s t a i n e d - r e l e a s e diet and pep
pills.
8.a (toluene)-the
substance in glue which c a u s e s the
greatest damage. Virtually all vapors of this nature can
cause damage to brain functions with a relatively short
period of u s e . The deadly category of vapors includes
mainly household aerosol products, glue, and petroleum-based products ( s h e l l a c , Ether, g a s o l i n e , carbon
tetrachloride, etc.)
9.C (gasoline).
This acts in the same way as would
other petroleum s u b s t a n c e s . Orally, with the exception
of extremely volatile c h e m i c a l s , the body usually has
a chance to reject poisons by the naturally built-in
safeguard called vomiting.
But whenever anything
poisonous is injected into the vein, the user b y p a s s e s
all the natural forms of r e j e c t i o n .
10. a (hallucinogenic
derivative
of nutmeg).
Clinical MDA, if it were a v a i l a b l e , would have hallucinogenic properties much like other p s y c h e d e l i c s .
However, much of the MDA going around on the street
lately is very unpredictable, with an unusually high
rate of bummers occurring due to a frequent misrepresentation and/'or impurities.
11. c (mushrcxim). Psilocybin is the active ingrediant
of the stopharia c u b e n s i s , a l s o known a s the magic
mushroom. It is grown mi inly on the Western Hemisphere, in Mexico, sometinies for religious-meditative
purposes.
12. b (animal tranquilizers).
Most people who think
they've had THC have actually had tranquilizers normally used foi horses and other large a n i m a l s . Actual
tetrahydrocannabinol is rare, its synthes i z i n g a costly
process, and it is generally manufactured exclusively
for government t e s t s .
13. h (dysentary).
Both hepititis and subacute endocarditis can occur from using a dirty n e e d l e . Hepititis is the most common d i s e a s e , and the most easily
noticeable.

'Robin Hood' as presented by the English

Students

Scots Scoop Eagles 7 8 - 6 8
by Skip Haley
T h e taunted Bald Eagle defense took a slight dip Monday
night, a s the " F i g h t i n g S c o t s "
of Edinboro handed the hard luck
E a g l e s a 78-68 defeat.
The first half was a defensive battle in which the E a g l e s
felt right at home. The scoring
was c l o s e and with five minutes
left in the half, LHS led :0-17.
The defense continued, but the
Scots pulled within one, 25-24.
With just a few seconds
left, Edinboro pulled away with
a four point play. A bucket w a s
scored, followed hy a LHS four,
and the teams went into the locker room with Edinboro leading
28-25.
After intermission, Edinboro
came out smoking, and after five
minutes, built up an 11 point
lead, 40-29. The Eagles were
not ready to take thp i-nunt vet
though. With the outside shooting of Warren Goodling, and the

BUYTOUR

CLASS

RING
NOW.

insiae shooting of Russ Paulin,
LHS pulled within five, 48-45.
With six minutes left in the cont e s t , the margin narrowed oven
more to three, 58-55. The game
stayed close until the final t^vo
minutes, when Edinboro finally
put the game on ice.
For the Eagles, Warren
Goodling tallied 20 points. Russ
Paulin, continuing his fine play
added 17 points and si.\ big rebounds.
Tony Modiousky had
ten points and also had six rebounds.

K « • Letters •

For the \isi tors, Stauffer
was the leader with 20 points.
The loss put the Bald Eaglo.s record of 5-12 for iho season, while it vaulted the oncoming Scots to V-8.
The next game will be another home game at Thomas
Field House. It wiil be an aflornoon game against Slippery
Rock.
The game Wednesday with
.luniata was cancelled when the
school closed down with a flu
epidemic.

Tntramural Basketball Begins
first

floor High.
In the B division, the teams
are; third floor North, Phi Mu
Delta, Trimmers, Beachhouse,
Iquana, Vets Club, second floor
High, and Outhouse.
Both divisions are tough
and to pick a favorite would be
almost impossible.
The games will be played on
T u e s d a y s and Thursdays at 6:30
and 8 p.m. In addition to t h i s ,
two teams will play prior to the
varsity basketball game Saturday and the one on F e b . 2 4 .
The program is under the
leadership of Mr. Don Keener,
with a student co-ordinator. The
games will be officiated by students in the officiating c l a s s e s .

by Skip Haley
The mens' Intramural B a s ketball League will be underway
tonight. This season promises
to be one of many exciting
games.
A captain's meeting was
held on Tuesday at which representatives met to form the
divisions and decide on different eligibility rules.
After all the discussion on
who could play for who, (which
took up the majority of the meeting) the divisions were set up
into two-eight team d i v i s i o n s .
In the A division, the teams are
T K E , second floor North, third
floor High, Off-Campus, Faculty,
Moonlighters, Sigma P i , and

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The Lancer
Just because y o u ' r e not a
Senior yet doesn't mean you
can't be wearing your class
ring. C o m e in today and look
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W e ' r e class ring headquarters.

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To the Editor;
How nice it w a s 1 • se;'
4 x 4 inch artii.le (includirig the
title) on the upcoming concert
at Bucknell and the 13 drug quiz
questions that took up all of
4 X l2'/i! 'nches on the front page
of your February 6 Eagle E y e .
Needless to say, those exciting
abortion information and three
different term paper ads once
again made quite a display. It
seriously saddens me that you
couldn't include in one of the many newspapers since the beginning of the semester one small
paragraph in memory of one Leo
McMullen. For those of you who
don't know, Leo, a very close
friend of many people at Lock
Haven, was killed over semester
break in a car accident.
Thank you, dear Editor, for
your time and s p a c e .
Sincerely,
J a c k i e Kircher

Qs on Abortions?
For details on how to obtain o safe, legal, low cost
abortion in Pennsylvania

CONTACT

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Counseling
Service

Dial toll free
1-800-327- 4320
A Non-Profit Organization
ion

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WRITTFN BY PROFESSIONAL DEGRFFD R\ JilARCUFKS

O R WRITF.

My suggestion to the students of North Hall is that they
forget you and "going through the
s y s t e m " and live in this co-ed
dorm in the way the name itrh
plies—that i s , 24-hour intervisitation. You s e e , if the students

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CALL COLLECT -

July 12, 1972; " P o l i c y changes
that represent the wishes of the
r e s i d e n t s and that are financially and practically feasible, will
be implemented a s soon a s poss i b l e . " There are no financial
or practical barriers to overcome
in implementing 24-hour dorms.
It is a simple matter to operate
North Hall a s it is now with the
only alteration being intervisitation of men and women. Also
stated in the memorandum is one
of the functions of the Hall Coodinating Committee; " t o initiate and carry out proposals
for policy c h a n g e s . " Apparently, even your own methods don't
suit you a s you have decided
that 24-hour open dorms are not
possible this academic year
(no adequate reason given).

really want this as they s a y they
do, you can't stop them. So get
off your cloud.
Carol Rissmiller
Resident of North Hall

Termpaper Research

Dial (302) 798-6861

MAILMAN'S
JEWELERS

All Open Letter to the
"Student Life Staff"
Dear Staff Members:
My suggestion to you is that
you change your title to something more appropriate to the
way you have been conducting
your j o b s . "Student L i f e " implies that it is your job to serve
the students on this campus. It
is more than obvious that you
intend only to control student
life, not make it more pleasant
and enriching.
For four months the stuients
in North Hall have been trying
patiently to move according to
your plans in the direction of a
really co-ed co-ed dorm. This
has meant setting up a government and a judicial board and
voting on proposed open dorm
policy changes (not once but
t w i c e ) . Both times the surveys
resulted on overwhelming majorit i e s in favor of 24-hour open
dorms every day of the week.
According to the memorandum
from Dean Nicholson and the
Co-ed Hall Committee dated

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