BHeiney
Wed, 06/28/2023 - 13:55
Edited Text
SCC Executive Board Speaks on Environmental Symposium
We are in the midst of an environmental crisis thot could be terminal
within the century, and we haven't as
individuals, and institution,
or a
nation
directed
ourselves
toward
understanding It or attempting to find
a solution. This is the major problem
confronting us today. And the tragedy
is that most of us don't know this
ecological crisis exists.
Some of us are aware of water
pollution, or air pollution, or population pollution, or thermal pollution,
and we might know why they exist
individually. But we don't understand
how inter-related they are or how they
exist as a total problem. If we do
understand this, we are knowingly
setting up the world for mass if not
total genocide. If we continue to allow
the problem, we ore indeed a sick
society and should be destroyed as
you would a mad dog.
A source to our problem might be

the manner we accumulate and disseminate knowledge. If we look at the
Renaissance when men wanted to
know as much as he could about his
environment and look at ourselves
within our disciplines we might find a
key. At the end of the Renaissance,
the arts and sciences began to divide,
and more knowledge within each
discipline brought more splits within
that discipline. It is understood that
without this discipline thinking (not
to be confused with disciplined thinking) we couldn't have acquired the
vast amount of knowledge we have
today. However, a major by-product of
this process is the discipline man.
This individual doesn't understand
what happens outside his discipline
area or knowledge base whether he is
0
professor,
corporate
executive,
congressman, truck driver, or president. Then, with this limited view of
the total world that most of us have.

we can't expect to understand the
total problem. If we can't understand
the problem, then the solution is certainly beyond us with our present
thought process.
This thought process, or basis of
education, is being attacked by many
students today. This attack takes
many forms but most center around a
request for a more relevant education,
one in which they might concern
themselves primarily with this existing problem and its solution. This
institution as almost all others, be
they educational, business, or governmental, is incapable of finding solutions OS they exist because of this
discipline framework. We must then
search with all our energies for a way
to make this school relevant to 1970.
Relevance to the total world and the
total world problem is what is needed.
We

the

S.C.C.

executive

don't have a solution to this predicament. We do have a plan, however, to
focus the attention of the members of
our society, L.H.S.C. The plan is o
simple one: to have town meetings
where all present can be heard, where
the discussion would focus on where
we are and why and what the problems
are. When we get as a society reasonably aware of the problems on a total
basis then, and only then con we
discuss directions toward solution.
Finally, in short, all of us on this
board and probably all of us at this
institution are products of this system.
To understand the problems that
exist because of the system, we must
get outside it and look at ourselves
and our system in a new way. We feel
this must be done now if we are to
continue to exist as a species in the
future.
The SCC executive board

board

Debaters Place 9th
The LHS novice debaters under
' the supervision of Mrs. H a z e l
Ferguson placed ninth in team
standings with a 5-5 at the 24th
annual
Vermont
Invitational
Tournament. The tournament was
held on November 2 I s t and 22nd
at the University of Vermont in
Burlington.
Debating the national topic:
Resolved that the federal government should grant annually a
specific percentage of the federal
income tax to the s t a t e s .
The
affirmative team of Ed Flanagar
and Jim Lebda accumulated a 3
win — 2 loss record defeating
New Hampshire A, the College
Militate Royal of Canada, and
Union College, and losing to the
University of Massachusetts and
Dartmouth B .
The negative team c o n s i s t i n g of
Gordy Klingman and Chip Devenger finished with a 2 win — 3
loss record defeating New York
University A and St. Lawerence
College and losing to Brockport
C o l l e g e , the University of Vermont A. and Fitenburg State .

The objective of this tournament was to increase knowledge
of the debate topic and to perfect
debating techniaue and ^ t v l e -

Four Get Awards
T h e Friends of Lock Haven
State College, the alumni-sponsored foundation established for
the benefit of the college in
1967, announced today the recipients of four s c h o l a r s h i p s .
The recipients are Timothy L.
Crompton, a junior from Mechanicsburg; J a n e t I. Markley, a senior
from Reading; Anna Jean Timko,
a senior from Weatherly; and
Doyle E . Yeager, a senior from
Danville. Miss Markley is majoring
in elementary
education.
Crompton,
Miss
Timko,
and
Yeager are majoring in health and
physical education.
Foimdation
scholarships
are
awarded on the b a s i s of high
s c h o l a s t i c achievement and good
c i t i z e n s h i p records.
Prosperity is a great teacher;
adversity is a greater.

Vol. XIII N0.S7

LEEYE

LOCK NAVIH STATE COLLiGE

Fri, Dec. 5,1969

Parking Committee No Longer Will Be Paid
The parking committee, the
mas concert in Price Auditorium,
only SCC committee which reand on December 16, Julian Bond
c e i v e s a fee, will no longer rewill speak on " T h e New Coaliceive payment for i t s s e r v i c e s .
tion."
The board of directors at WedRon Smith, chairman of STOP
(Student Organization for P e a c e ) ,
nesday n i g h t ' s SCC meeting
d e c i d e d that it is inequitable to announced that Dr. Wesley Bagby,
pay one committee and not others. professor of history at West VirPatty F e l i x , co-chairman of ginia University, will speak on
"Why We Should Get Out of Vietthe s o c i a l committee, announced
that the New Colony Six will n a m " and Dr. and Mrs. James
appear in concert December 7 Dayananda will speak on "What
at 7 and 9 pm. On December 14 Asians Say About the War in
the choir will present its Christ- A s i a . "

Suggestions were also made
for a student directory, a union
board, a cultural affairs committee, and a committee to inv e s t i g a t e how LHS can become
a member of IVho's IVho.
The sailing club requested
$1000 for two sunfish sail b o a t s ,
and STOP requested $300 for
monthly programs.
The executive board issued
a statement for the symposium
on
environmental
conditions,
(see related article on this page)
and plans for the community
festival are in progress.

'Lock Haven Rev.'
Published Yearly

Still Time to Get Tickets for New Colony Six' Concerts
T h e r e ' s s t i l l time to pick
up tickets for Sunday's Christmas
concert featuring the New Colony Six, a Chicago based recording group." The group will
present two performances, one
at 7 pm and one at 9 om in Price
Auditorium. The concert i s spon-

sored by the s o c i a l committee
of the Student Cooperative Counc i l . Tickets are free to students
presenting their ID cards a t the
reception d e s k in the PUB. Staff,
faculty, and guest tickets will
be sold a t $1.50 e a c h . Tickets
sold at the door will be priced

at $1.60.
The New Colony Six, currently
engaged in a nationwide concert tour, have produced several
hit songs and have appeared
on various t e l e v i s i o n s h o w s .
Despite the fact that t h e New
Colony Six is a relativefy new

group, their "outstanding perf o r m a n c e s " have won them several a w a r d s , and they have been
rated one of the top ten recording groups in the nation by other
top performers.

The Lock Haven Review is a
learned journal, published a n nually at Lock Haven State
College,
and
distributed
to
various college and university
libraries.
The journal, which
w a s founded in 1959, is presently
edited by Jack Silberg, a s s o c i a t e professor of English.
He
assumed h i s position in 1964Research articles in the field
of the humanities and s o c i a l
s c i e n c e s comprise, in most part,
the whol^ of jthe journal. Among
those authors whose articles are
published m the l^ock
Haven
Review
gj-e scholars from not
only Lock Haven State, but a l s o
from numerous other colleges
and universities throughout the
country.
Because the Review is indexed
by several standard bibliograp h i e s , its articles receive wide
notice and circulation.
Silberg
receives
inquiries
concerning
Review articles from all over the
country and occasionally from
European scholars. _
The policy of the Review
is
that of publishing works restricted to research articles and
critical a s s a y s . There is some
indication that the policy will
be changed in the future. Creative works, such a s original
poems and short s t o r i e s , may, in
the future, be publi.shed a l s o .
Changes in the polir;- of the
journal and the selection of a
new editor are now being d i s cussed.
Members of the editorial board
of the journal are:
Janice M.
Bosworth, Robert H. Johnston,
Charles R. Kent, Russell C.
Nelson, Lee Van Horn, Franklin
H. Vaughn, Hugh Williamson
and Raymond E . Whitney.

Gropplers Travel to Lehigh for Showdown
A showdown between two of
the E a s t ' s wrestling powers
will take place tomorrow night
in Grace Hall.
C o a c h Gray Simons s e n d s his
Bald E a g l e grapplers onto the
mats against perennial powerful
Lehigh tomorrow night at 7:30
pm.
The match marks the first
time the two national powers
will face each other in a dual
meet.
T o p T e a m s in E a s t
LHS finished second in the
E a s t l a s t s e a s o n right in front
of Lehigh and this match should
prove who is the number two
team behind Navy.
Lehigh will have two freshmen
in their starting lineup and will
be without three letteimen in the
opener.
Lehigh Coach Gerry Leeiiian
is
understandably
concerned
about his teams debut tomorrow
night.
"We'll be a lot tougher in a
few
weeks,"
Leeman
says.

" R i g h t now we are trying to
keep a stiff practice schedule
despite a variety of s p r a i n s ,
bruises and even some i l l n e s s . "
" Y o u take 'em as they come,
though, in this game, and Lock
Haven comes here Saturday. No
one h a s to tell us they'll be
sky-high. They have an excellent coach in Gray Simons and
formidable personnel right through
their l i n e u p . "
The E a g l e s will have eight
returning
lettermen
in
their
starting lineup with letterman
Willy Vokes sitting out the
match b e c a u s e of injuries suffered in an automobile accident.
LHS will be led by its " t r e mendous t h r e e " (Don F a y , Shane
Foley and Larry Rippey) while
the Engineers top wrestlers are
co-captain Jack Bentz and Dave
Waters.
B e n t z A n d Waters
Bentz,
a
two-time
EIWA
( E a s t e r n IntercoUegiat Wrestling A s s o c i a t i o n ) champ at 167,
has an 18-1 dual meet mark over

Simons s t a t e d , "If we don't
win our share down there (the
lower weights), they're going to
be tough to beat. We have to
do real well in the first four or
five w e i g h t s . "
Caruso added, "If we win two
out of the first four matches
we'll be all right, but if they
(LHS) win three or up we're in
for t r o u b l e . "
According to Caruso the key
bout of the meet will be at
126 lbs. which pits Waters
against Foley.
" R i g h t now I
think Waters is the best wrestler
on the t e a m , " stated Caruso.

two varsity s e a s o n s .
He will
co-captain the Engineers along
with Rich Meyer who lost his
final trial bout to Waters at
126 l b s .
Waters was on the sophomore
All-American team last winter
following
impressive
performances in the EIWA and NCAA
tournaments. He finished fourth
a I the NCAA tourney.
LHS's 'Tremendous Three'
Both Fay and Foley finished
third in the NAIA tournament
last year for the E a g l e s while
Rippey had to default b e c a u s e
of an injury. Rippey was considered as one of the top sophomores in the nation last year.
The match has been rated
" e v e n " by Lehigh's a s s i s t a n t
coach Mike Caruso with the
Eagles having their strength in
the lower weights while the
Engineers have their strength
in the upper w e i g h t s .
Both Simons and C a r u s o agree
that a lot of the key matches
will be in the lower weights.

Match R a t e d E v e n
When questioned about a favorite for the meet Coach Simons
said, " I t ' s hard to judge.
I
think it will be real c l o s e . I t ' s
a tough meet to open w i t h . "
On the same question Caruso
added, " A n y other year I would
have to favor Lehigh, but this
year I would have to rate it
even because of Lock Haven's
strength in the lower weights.

It is hard to s a y who would be
favored because it is the opener
for both t e a m s . "
Caruso also added, " I think
that it is a match that will make
or break both teams' s e a s o n ,
especially L e h i g h ' s . "
The following is a tentative
starting lineup for both s q u a d s .
118-Don Fay (LHS) vs Randy
Biggs
126-Shane Foley (LHS) vs Dave
Waters
134—Larry Rippey (LHS) vs
David Icenhower
142—Paul Brodmerkel (LHS) vs
Jay Leeman
150~Craig Sholl (LHS) vs Herb
Campbell
158—Gene Taxis or Mark Kuntz
(LHS) vs Greg Karabin
167~Bill Rhodes (LHS) vs Steve
Shields
177~Jim Batesky or John Conneley (LHS) vs Jack Bentz
190-Hank Hawkins (LHS) vs Al
Nicusanti
Hwt-Scott
Brooks (LHS) vs
Gary Leinberger

Landis Named fo U.S.
Field Hockey
Squad

One

of

LHS's

top

three

grapplers,

Rippey, during last s e a s o n ' s a c t i o n .

Larry
Rippey

w a s one of t h e n a t i o n ' s top s o p h o m o r e s l a s t

year.

LHS travels

morrow e v e n i n g
1969-70

wrestling

Cagers Open Season
With Edinboro Stote
The LHS cagers of new head
coach James Christopher open
their 1969-70 season Saturday
night against Edinboro State.
T h e " n e w l o o k " Eagles will be
trying to start the s e a s o n off on
the right foot with a win over
strong Edinboro.
, The probable starting line-up
will be John Marlak and Ed Wright
at the guards; Sammy Vaughn and
Cliff
Billit at forwards; and
Ziggy Tauginas at center. However, Christopher stated, " W e ' l l
probably have a set five to start
the game, but with a running s y s tem if we are to have any s u c c e s s
it will have to be from our bench
and everyone will be seeing
action."
The Bald E a g l e s have won four
of five pre-season games and
have looked good at times. "We
are making a lot of mistakes but
that is t o be expected with a new
coach
and
new
system.

ROXY THEATER

Christopher, a former coach at
Edinboro, would
like
nothing
better than a victory over his
former s c h o o l .
The team will be weakened
somewhat by injuries.
Randy
Lindsey is s t i l l bothered by an
early knee injury, he will s e e
some action according to Christopher.
Co-captain Bruce Parkhill w i l l s e e limitedaction b e c a u s e
of an ankle injury.
" I t ' s going to be difficult for us
to have a winning s e a s o n . Anything can happen and t h a t ' s what
makes sports s o g r e a t , " Christopher concluded.
The s e e Movie Cat
Bullou
will be shown in Price Auditorium, Sunday D e c . 14, 2:00 pm
instead of 7:30 pm as scheduled
on the calendar.

SOUL

University
of

tothe

season.

/y\EEJ||sJG

W e d . at 6:30pm

EAGLE
EYE

LHS M e n t i o n e d
In N a t i o n a l M a g .
L o ; k Hiven State College
has been mi^ntionsd in this
w e e k ' s issue of Sports
Illustrated. The Bald EaRle foatball
team was mentioned in SCOilECARD in reference to their s e a son finale with Waynesburg. The
magazine stated:
" T h e penalized quarterback
was John Huntey of Waynesburg College in Pennsylvania.
Waynesburg College wiS l e a d n g
Lock Haven State College 14-3
in the rain w-.th two minutes remaining and Huntey needed a good
grip on the b a l l . He had j u s t
muddied his hands and also the
towel at his w a i s t in diving i'or
a loose ball. His eyes lit upon
the only clean places on the
field—the
officials'
uniforms.
C a s u a l l y , without asking, Huntey availed himself of the trousers of a startled field judge. In
a twinkling the affronted dignitary paced off 15 yards against
Waynesburg for unsportsman like
''induct."

Our Specialty
Roast Beef
Served Hot

CAMPUS CASINO

Methodist Church

G-A-R-D-E-N

W. Main & Second Sts.

e.e. classifieds
To Whom it May Concern: (Steve M.)
Your one and two line phrases
appearing in this column of the last
two issuer of Eagle Eye serve as an
excellent • example of your literary
talent. Since you are a mature Senior
applying for graduate work, I suggest that you send a copy to the
institution of your choice as an
example of a creation which you
were able to have published.

THE
ITiUJANJOB

way up and they want to give
her the best possible competition.
T h i s summer the U.S. squad
will probably play against teams
from other countries that are
touring the United States.

HOLE

f o i Basement Trinty United
Q

to L e h i g h

for the o p e n i n g m e e t

Bertie L a n d i s , center forward
for the Lock Haven field hockey
team, was named to the United
States field hockey squad as a
result of her play during the
National tournament, held in
Ann Arbor, Michigan during the
Thanksgiving v a c a t i o n .
Miss Landis culminated a fine
s e a s o n by being named to the
Central Penn I team, the MidE a s t I team, and the U.S. squad
for the second consecutive year.
Six other E a g l e t t s competed in
the National tournament, which
is an honor in itself but were
not named to the U.S. squad.
Playing their final collegiate
games were Margo DeGrange, a
Mid-East 1 team member, Dottie
Chekay, a l s o on Mid-East I,
Linda Barton, and Diane J a m e s ,
both members of Mid-East III.
Diane Webster, a member of
Mid-East 1, and a U.S. squad
member last year, and Karen
Shifflet, a Mid-East II member
also competed and will be back
next year to lead the E a g l e t t s .
Commenting on the tournament.
Coach Dr. Charlotte Smith said:
" I t was good experience for the
girls, they had the best competition a v a i l a b l e .
Only through
playing high level teams will
they be able to improve."
Dr. Smith added that a girl is
selected to the U.S. squad if
the selection committee feels
she is a promising player on the

Advice is seldom welceme
and those who wont it most
like it i h e least.
Phillip Dormer Stanhope

JKROME H E I X M A N J O H N SCHLESINGEB
PBODUCriON

• 1 • --=-1 I l k ;

HOFFIVIAIM
JON
VOIGHT

1®^
Now Thru Dec. 9.

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