BHeiney
Fri, 06/30/2023 - 14:19
Edited Text
Lock Haven State College

Vol. XVI No. 19

Production Nears Opening
"Philadelphia Here I
Come," a play by Brian
Friel, will be presented by
the Lock Haven State College
Players on Oct. 15, 16, and
17 at 8:00 p.m. in Price Auditaium.
The play deals with
Gareth
O'Donnell's
last
night at home in Ireland
before he flies to Philadelphia
to live with his aunt and
uncle. Gareth's personality

Uncle Sam
Wonts You
Attention Women! If
you are undecided about your
future plans after graduation,
then the Armed Forces is
just the thing for you.
Every year women graduate without the promise or
expectation of a satisfying
job, The armed forces offer
excitement
opportunities
for travel, chances of meeting new people, plus tremendous
opportunities
for
advancement.
While this type of life
is not for everyone, why not
give it a chance. Come to
AWS's State Days and hear
the representatives firom the
four major branches of the
service. First Lt. Sherry L,
Smith, Air Force; Ensign
Dorothy Ann Prose, U.S.
Navy and Second Lt. Ann
Marie Slabic, U.S. Army along
with a Marine representative
will speak at the convention
on Saturday morning of the
convention weekend, October
26 - 28.

is presented by two separate
characters, both of whom are
on stage at the same time.
His outward public character
is played by Charley Charette
while his inward private
thoughts are presented by
Brian Stoppe. Only the audience hears the comments of
the private character.
The
play
explores
Gareth's reasons for leaving
home. The conflicts of his
life are presented seriously
and realistically, but with
humorous undertones.
Gareth's father, with
whom he is unable to communicate, is played by
Mardecai Lipshutz. Kathy,
the girlfriend who married

someone else, is played by
Helayne MacArthur.
Others in the cast are
Deb Klens, as Madge the
housekeeper, Gary Mazzu
and Cindy Probst as the
uncle and aunt from Philadelphia, Bernie Gillot as
the parish priest, Ben Aptaker
as Kathy's father, Stephen
Culp as the schoolteacher,
and Kim Koon play Gareth's
boyhood friends.
Tickets will be available
at the PUB secretary's office
from Tuesday October 9.
There is no char ge for
students with validated ID
cards.
Non-students must
pay $2.00 admission fee.
Tickets will also be available
at the door.

The closing date for the
group insurance program
for LHS students is Oct. 15,
1973. Any student who
desires to subscribe to
this program should contact
th Aid,301 Sullivan Hall, for
futher information and an
application. IT'S A REAL
DEAL.
Homecoming tickets for
Peter Nero, Todd Rundgren
and the Harlem Globetrotters are available in
the Secretary's office in
the Student Union.

It's A Lot Of Money Any Way You Slice If
College Sports are allocated money each year
from the budget of the Student
Co-operative Council. This
year they recieved a little
over
sixty-five
thousand
dollars, or 28.75% of the
total budget. The allocations
broke down with men's sports
receiving 59.79%, women's
sports 9.63% and co-ed or
administration 29.00%. An
allocation of 1.58%for Lacrosse hangs in the balance
until its future is decided
at a later date.

1. Men
Football
Wrestling
Mens Basketball
Soccer
Baseball
Men's Tennis
Cross Counuy
Men's Intramurals

18.36%
11.09%
9.39%
6.69%
4.27%
i.62%
1,35%
.15%
• 59.79%

2. Co-ed or Administration
Athletic Administration
Athletic Training
Gymnastics
Swimming
Golf

12.67%
7.34%
3.83%
3.78%
1-38%
29.00%

3. Women
Hocky
Women's Basketball
Women's Tennis
Cheerleaders
WARA

3.78%
3.46%
1.33%
.66%
.40%

page 2

EAOLE EYE

Lock Haven State College

Tuesday, Oct. 8, 19^73

There will be a Leadership Workshop on Sunday,
HumanUies Film Series Will Present Comedy
October 14, 1973 from
The wind knocks over a 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. at
apparent effort at all, Emile
A Nous la Liberte is the
valise filled with 1,000 franc the Seig Conference Cenbends his bars and makes his
"^first comedy in this year's
notes- the money ^ ouis had
way to the street. As he looks
Humanities Film Series. It
planned to take with him. The ter. The workshop is open
up at the window where the
is a fine 1932 satire of the
dignitaries
suddenly lose all to club and organization
singing is coming from, the
mechanized world, and even
dignity and chase after the
voice suddenly slows downmore pertinent in this day of
money in a ballet-like sequence officers and some a d revealing that it is a phonojob-enrichment programs.
that is set to music.
visors. For further inforgraph. Emilc has fallen in
Much of the film's humor
love with a machine!
In the end, we see Louis mation,
contact the
is derived from improbable
and Emile- penniless and free
Despite
this, Emile's
Activities
Office, Smith
combinations of film and music
at last. They walk down the
rapture persists.
He finds
employment at the same factory road in a very Chaplinesque
The film's director, Rene
Hall, or call ext. 217.
Clair, has elevated the soundtrack to be an integral part of
the film- not just background
music. (One of today's directors who utilizes this technique
is Stanley Kubrick. His later
films, such as Dr. Stran^>elove
and A Clockwork Orange, abound with the comic use of
music.)
Early in the film, Clair
establishes
the fact that
freedom is something that is
only paid lip service in
today's technocracy. The film
begins in what appears to be
a toy factory. The camera
dollies back to reveal that
it is actually a prison. The
title theme, which concerns
frdedom, is sung in a slow
mechanical tempo, by the
inmates.
In the next sequence, one
of the inmates, Louis, is being helped in an escape
attemp by Emile, his cellmate.
In the escape, ^ouis steals
a bicycle. He then finds himself involved in a bicycle
race, which is supposed to by
fun. However, the race is
portrayed as a grim and dismal
chore. The cyclists are constantly taunted by a group of
motorists singing the Liberty
theme.
Once free, Louis begins
to build his own kind of prison.
It is a prison where human
beings are slaves to machines
ones supposed to ease .he
burdens of people.
Louis' first step in creating his prison is the dubious
acquisition of a phonograph
shop. Filled with delusions of
granduer, Louis builds himself
up to be the owner of a phonograph factory strongly reminiscent of the prison he has
escaped from. The workers
are regimented in the same
manner as the inmates were.
They are also singing the same
Liberty theme.
Meanwhile, back at the
pen, we find Emile looking
longingly at a girl he thinks
is singing sweetly. With no

where the girl works- Louis'
factory. There, in his lovelorn
state, he manages to screw
up the operation of the entire
plant.
Emile is sent to Louis'
office. Louis pretending not
to recognize him at first, tries
to buy Emile's silence. Looking hurt, Emile grabs Louis'
wrist so hard, in fact, that
blood begins to drop on the
desk. Louis then realizes that
Emile wouldn't betray him.
Later, Louis is discovered
by a gang of Blackmailers.
Fearing exposure, he decides
to run- but not until after his
new factory is dedicated.
At the dedication, Louis'
virtues are extolled by no less
a personage than the President
of France.
During another
blowhard's speech, nature
responds with big gusts of
wind.
Attention: Students, Faculty
and Staff. There will be a
series of flu injections given
this year. The first will be
given Wednesday, Oct. 17
from 12 noon until 1 p.m. at
the Glennon Infirmary. Anyene who desires the injections, please sign up at the
Infirmary
no later than
Tuesday, Oct. 16. There
will be no charge for students
The price for Faculty and
Staff will be $1.00 for each
injection.

Male or female room mate
needed to fill three man
apartment. Good location,
five minutes from campus.
Nice
clean apartmentprivacy guaranteed. (Could
possibly
squeeze
two
people in if so desired.)
Any combination! Phone
748-7881 after dinner or
phone ARENA during the
day-7485313 and inquire
about apartment.

ending.
The entire idea fca- a
satire on our mechanized
society wad so good that
Chaplin ripped it off four years
later in his film. Modern Times.
(Chaplin steals only the very
best.)
The film can be seen
tonight at 7:30 in Raub 408
or on Wednesday at 8 p.m. in
the Ulmer Planetarium,

There will be an APO
pledge ritual at 7:30 p.m.
in the PUB conference
room on Thurs., Oct. 1 1 .
Members please plan to
attend and dress accordingly.

HOMECOMING PREVIEW
Row, Row, Row, Row, Row, Row, Row, Ro.
"Row, row, row your boat
gently down the stream.
Merrily, merrily, merrily, life
is but a dream."
Gently and merrily won't
exactly be the words to
describe
the canoe race
scheduled for Sunday, October
21, but there will be rowing
and lots of hard work when the
competition starts.
The first part of the race,
which starts at noon en Sun .
day, will begin approximately
five miles upstream from the
Riverside Parking Lot and
end at the lot itself. Competetors will include a team
from the college and a team
from the WiUiamsport Boating
Club. The winner of the race
will be awarded a plaque and
this year it is hoped that the
LHS team will win the plaque
as the WiUiamsport Club has
had it for the past two years.
Following the 5 mile
canoe race there will be the

Luigi's
52y2 rear E. Church St.
748 " 6573
Try our double or triple
burgeripecioj

sprint canoe race at the Riverside parking lot and ending at
the Jay Street Bridge. Competetors for this event must
be a two person team. The
SCC canoes are available for
this event without charge and
are also available free for
practice. The canoes are there
on a first come first serve
basis. Any students interested
in practicing should go to the
PCEEB office in the bottom of
the PUB to sign up to use a
canoe. The winners of this
race will be awarded a trophy.
At this time only a few
students have signed up to
race, so how about some of
you liberated women and some
of you strong, husky frat guys
getting a team together and
row your way merrily down
the good old Susqueharma.

M

•v#
Todd Rundgren might just
become one of the great
popular artists of the 7 0 ' s ,
He certainly possesses the
ability, the will and the
magic of i t . "
- Patrick Snyder-Scumpy,
CRAWDADDY, May 14, 1972

EAGLE EYE

Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1973

Lock Haven State College

page 3

LH Hits One Past Slippery Rock
by Louise Wilson
The women's varsity
hockey team remained undefeated winning their contest with Slippery Rock last
Friday by the impressive
score of 6 goals to 1,
Lock Haven's offense
attack began almost immediately when Jackie Crowell
scored the first goal before
30 seconds passed on the
clock. Then midway in the
first half, Freshman Pat
Rudy pushed the ball past
the goalie to score and gave
the Haven a 2-0 lead. But
Slippery Rock closed the gap
with seven minutes left in
the half and the score stood
at 2-1
The start of the second
half showed much better
playing by the Haven. Midway, Kelly Cromer broke the
game open scoring two goals,
one being a fantastic reverse
stick shot. The offensive
drive continued with Pat
Rudy adding another goal

and her teammate " J a k e "
also scoring again, this
time in the last 30 seconds.
JV BATTLES BUT LOSES
In the junior varsity
game it seemed as though a
score would never result.
Both teams battled each
other with Lock Haven dominating the number of shots
at the goal. But Slippery
Rock scored late in the
second half to take a 1-0
victory.
Coach Sharon Taylor
felt that the varsity team
had a slow start in the first
half due to not playing any
games for two weeks. She
was impressed with the
improved play during the
second half but feels more
hard and sharp practicing
must be done before meeting
West Chester next Thursday.

Any person commuting
to WiUiamsport the first
nine weeks of spring semester, '74, please contact
Sally Tome, High Hall,
rm. 327.
Tliere will be an organizational meeting of All
Sociology - Anthropology
majors Thurs. Oct 11, in
Raub 307 at 1:00 p.m.

All students interested
in participating in the
exchange program with the
Nottingham College of
Education in September
1974 should make application now at the Office of
International Education,
Himes 106. Freshmen and
sophmores are especially
encouraged to apply.

Looking At The Scoreboard
With Your Mahon On The Bench

Anthony

by Bill Mahon
INTRAMURAL FOOTBALL
AMERICAN L E A G U E : (Standings) AS OF OCT. 3.
A
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
B
1.
2.
3.
4.

• DIVISION
5th Floor North
Lamba Chi
Trimmers
Out House
1st Floor Gross
- DIVISION
Sigma Pi
2end Floor North
Moon Lighters
T.K.E.

5. 3rd Floor Gross

1-0
1-0
1-1
0-1
0-1

2-0
2-0
0-1
Ol
OO

NATIONAL LEAGUE (Standings) AS OF OCT. 3.
C
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

- DIVISION
Phi Mu Delta
Beach house
1st Floor High
VETS
3rd Floor North

2-0
1-0
1-1
0-1
Ol

D
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

- DIVISION
K.D.R.
Iguana House
2end Floor House
Off-Campus
4th Floor North

INTRAMURAL
CUMULATED

2-0
1"0
1-1
01
02

POINTS AC-

1. Out House
2. Trimmers
3. 5th Floor North
4. 1st Floor Gross
5. Lamba Chi Alpha
6. Beach House
7. 3rd Floor North
8. Phi Mu Delta
9. VETS
10. 1st Floor High
11. Moon Lighters
12. 2end Floor North
13. 3rd Floor Gross
14. Sigma Pi
15. T.K.E.
16. Iguana House
17. 4th Floor North
18. 2end Floor High
19. Kappa Delta Rho
20. Off Campus

1
4
3
1
3
3
1
6
1
1
1
5
0
6
1
3
2
3
6
1

Torsell
^-L ^ « D b . ~ ^

AJbAJb

MSXAIM

&

INSURANCE

Lock Haven, Pennsylvania

4

page 4

Lock Haven State College
The Eagles in their
games prior to Millersville
usually dominated control
of the ball. Therefore Boles
and the rest of the Eagle
Fullbacks did not have to
For the next 20 minutes
play quite as hard as they
Millersville was all over the
did against Millersville.
Eagle's end of the field
The Eagles will have
pummel ing shots at Steve
to play equally tough this
Tanner. Tanner did a beautiWedensday when they face
ful job of preventing MillersGrove City away at 2:00 p.m.
ville from tying the contest
If the Eagles win this enThe
Eagles
needed
counter they will tie the allsomething to spark them back
time Eagle mark of victories
into playing their game.
in a season by an Eagle
That spark came in the form
Booter team.
of "Mr. Dependable" Don
Grove
City - Beware.
Copeland. At 36:23 Copeland
EAGLE EYE

Booters Beat Best Team Yet
by Gary Brubaker
"Now we know as a
team and as individuals what
it's like to be under prei*
s u r e . " These were the words
of Eagle booter coach Karl
Herrm.ann following Saturday's 3-1 victory over a
tough and aggresive Millersville squad.
"This was a typical
Millersville - LHS game,"
Herrmann added, "It was a
quick aggressive game bee'auise Millersville has a
quick aggressive team which
matched our style of play."
Though able to match
the Eagles' style of play
Millersville was unable lo
match the score as the Eagle
defense once again stopped
numerous Millersville threats
throughout the game.
Both teams came out
running with neither able to
score until almost 20 minutes
were gone in the first half.
At 19:34 into the period Bill
Bush scored on a ]0 yard
right-footed kick from the
right side. Don Copeland got
the assist Ou the goal and
LHS led 1-0.
Despite
botii teims
playing aggressively at both
ends of the field, the remainder of the first half was
scoreless and Lock Haven
led 1-0 at halftime.
The second half began
as the first with aggressive
playing and a hard running
game for both teams.
At 14:21 Bill Bush
scored his second goal on an
assist from Dave CTiambers
and it looked iike lilS was
going to do to Millersville
what they had done to everyone so far this seasoi:;
destroy them in the second
lulf.
But Millersville wasn't
like anyone else LHS has
faced so far and at 15:37
Mike Doerr scored on a 6
yard shot from the right
corner on an assist by Greg
Oichan and Millersville was
ecstatic.
They had not only scored
the first goal by anyone
agair^t the LHS team this
year (excluding a penalty
goal by St. Francis) but had
broken Steve Tanner's mark
of not having given up a
goal on 6 games and 3 ^exhibition
encounters this
season.

scored on an indirect free
kick from 16 yards out from
the left side and the Eagles
outplayed Millersville the
rest of the contest. Final
score LHS 3 Millersville 1.
Final statistics showed
that Lock Haven blasted
24 shots at the Millersville
goal with Millersville countering with 16. This has been
the closest margin between
LHS and another team thus
far this season.
This was a contest in
which both goalies kept his
respective team in the game.
Both Steve Tanner and the
Millersville goalie made
some unbelievable saves from leaping catches to diving
snags and blocks.
Coach Herrmann remarked, "This game should help
us. It showed us we have
some weaknesses and that
we have • to work on these
weaknesses.
We played a good team the best we've seen. We had
to play a good game to beat
them. We got a few breaks
but we deserved to win it in
the end."
Herrmann added, "Bob
Wright kept us in the game.
Whenever we let down he
pulled us up again. I think
Bob Weaver had an excellent
game today, the best game
of his career. Don Copeland
played an outstanding game
but then you get to expect
that from a player of his
calibre. Eyetyane did a good
job today but these players
deserve a special recognition for today's victory."
One main reason for the
defensive prowess of the
l^f
J'
Co-captian Bob
Boles. Not used to having so
much pressure on the goal as
they did Saturday by MiUersvill
Boles played very tough
under pressure.

There will be an important
PRAECO meeting on Monday evening, Oct. 15, in
Raub 306 at 7 p.m. Our
representative from Bradbury / Keller will be here
to discuss layout. New
members are welcome to
attend.
There will be a meeting
of the LHS Chapter of the
Council for Exceptional
Children (CEC) on Tuesday, Oct. 9, 1973 at 7:30
p.m. Things to be discussed are: (1) Committees
for the Halloween Party,
and (2) Pennsylvania
State CEC Convention.
All active members and
new students interested
in Special Education are
urged to attend. The
meeting will be held in
R307.

Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1973

J Vs To Use
Hubert Jack
Stadium
The Lock Haven State
College junior varsity football team will play a three
game schedule this season
according to Stan Daley,
LHSC Athletic Director.
The Bald Eagle JVs will
be coached by student assistants Ed McOill (offense),
Mike Shenkle and Mike
Colligan (defense).
Two games will be
played at the new Hubert
Jack Stadium. The opener
with Susquehanna University
was yesterday at 3:30 p.m.
The other home contest
is Monday, (3ct. 29 at 3:30 pm
with Juniata College.
Lock Haven will travel
to WiUiamsport on Monday,
Oct. 22 to face the Lycoming
College junior varsity at 3 pm,

Tickets for Todd Rundgren
and The Electric Light
Orchestra will be on sale
at the Senators Desk in the
PUB daily during Senators'
Hours beginning Oct. 8 .
An important wrestling
team meeting to issue
equipment for the start
of the practice sessions
will be held on Thursday,
Oct. 11,1973 at 4:15 p.m.
Practice begins on Monday,
Oct. 15,1973 at 4:15 p.m.
All candidates should
attend the Oct. l l t h meeting to receive clearance
permits.

A W Gundlach & Sons
roar Sirerafi Shopping
CeBter
Schmidt's, Valley Forge, Duke, Budweiser,
and Other ^avorite Brands

Michelob

Complete Shasta Line, Other Favorite Soft Drinks,
Ice and Party Snatks
125 Hogan Blvd.

Phone 748 • 4073

Media of