BHeiney
Fri, 06/30/2023 - 14:35
Edited Text
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LarcenyCharges Brought
Against Three Students
L
c h a r g e of
L oo cc kk H
H aa vv ee nn pp oo ll ii cc ee w
w ii ti hn du rr ee w
w aa cncugc
m laruu>cny T u e s d a y a g a i n s t C a r l S w a s o n , 1 9 , of L a n s e
c e n y T u e s d a y a g a i n s t C a r l S w a s o n , 1 9 , of L a n s e
P a . jSwwaassco' ini had
e e n U..W.,.—
arrested Frida
—;-—
r-a.
imu bbL.v,v..
P a . S w a s o n had
e e n a r r e s t e d .F r. i. d- aa yy ee vv ee nn ii nn gg
and
dditand cc hh aa rr gg ee dd w
w ii tt hh ll aa rr cc ee nn yy of
of hh uu bb cc aa pp ss and
and aadditii oo nn aa ll ll yy for
for aa vv ii oo ll aa tt ii oo nn of
of the
the tninor
tninor dd rr ii nn kk ii nn gg llaaw
w..
.
^
ft.
T^.o u g l1a. . s, . P
r >e^d. lWhen a r r a i.g n e d. before
M a g i• s. -t .r .a. t_e. D
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dre, Swason said he had not been involved,
Also chiri^^.l v.'.h larceny Friday evening was
Robert McBryan, 18, of White Deer, a student at
the college. McBryan was observed by city

Vol. XIII No. 35

police renic^ving
(..MICC
I.-UUVIII^ h u b c a p s rroni s e v e r a l c a r s parked i n the West Main S t r e e t c o l l e g e parking lol.
ed i n the West
•>- p l>e a d>e d. g. u i. l t y and. w a i v e d a further h e a r i n g
He
n
- .^i.-^.^i.-i -..^i
t o a p p e a r in c o u r t . He w a s r e l e a s e d from the
c o u n t y j a i l on b a i l .
T u e s d a y , T h o m a s S h e e t / , 18, of R o b e s o n i a ,

ai^,, ;, sludenl, was arrested and charged with
larceny of hubcaps. Sheetz also pleaded guilty
before Judge Peddre and was released on nominal bail.

LEEYE

LOCK HAVEN STATE COLLECE

BRICK ANO ROSE
Monday 7:30 pm
PUB
Try-outs
Experimental Theatre

LONELY CLOWN
Monday—Tuesday

Raub 308
WINNER
Lambda Chi Alpha
Raffle
Mrs. Barbara Terrill
Island Route,
LockHaven

LHS Campus
Dr.
James
Dayananda.
a s s o c i a t e professor of English,
has
organized
a benefit In
Sunday March 15, at 6:30 pm
in Bentley f i n i n g Hall. The
program is entitled "A Taste
of India*' and will feature an
Indian
dinner,
film,
music,
fashions
and dance.
There
are a limited amount of student
tidkets available at Ihc PL!B
reception
desk
for
$2.00Tickets may a s o be purchased
from members of the leterature
class.
Faculty members will
be admitted for a ticket donation.
All funds received will be used
for the World University Service,
which
is an organization that
supports needy foreign studcnt.s
in
America and works unlh
building new dormitories
and
classrooms in other countries

The music of Vivaldi, Bach,
Mozart, and others will be presented in concert by the Orchestra Sinfonia di Como at Lock
Haven State College on TuesFri. March 13,1970
day, March n , at 8:15 pm in
Price Auditorium.
The orchestra of seventeen
distinguished musicians playing
both strings and winds without
conductor is the feature attraction of the International Music
Festival held in Como, Italy,
every September. The group is
Mansfield.
The investiture of
recognized by European critics >
this colony will involve many
as "among the finest before the
national officers. These officers
public t o d a y . "
including
Harold
M. Myers,
The repertoire c o n s i s t s of
president, and Oeorge W- Spasyk,
works
written
expressly
for
executive director, will travel
chamber orchestra. Several are
from Indianapolis,
Indiana to
early
masterpieces
uncovered
preside at the ceremony and aid
by the Orchestra Sinfonia di
the LHS chapter in the ritual.
Como.
niu
previously
heard
The Lambda Chi Alpha chapter
since the lime of their comfrom LHS was chosen for the
po.sition.
honor by Iheir national headrhe Orchestra Sinfonia di
quar'ers,
lux ause
o!'
their
Como
follows in the tradition e s initial ellHits to help loUi I j a
Uihlisheii ,p. 19.';() when ,\lbert
Siiinja .ante wiili laiiibtla C'lii.
Morini inirodiieed the Virtuosi
Plans for lius joinliire began
ill Roni.i to the American public.
earl\
lasi
Seplenibei
uiien
Iiiestlas nigtil's concert is
broihe's Pan Martin .md Steve
the
seventh in the c o l l e g e ' s 1970
Kiat/er iiiade .n raniienienls with
I ine Alts l e s t i v a l s e r i e s of
liu" Man^tieid t i a l e i n i l \ to \ i s i t
cultural e v e n t s , open to the
I anilxla C !ii Alpha at I | | S .

Local Fraternity Installs
New Chapter at Mansfield
Lambda c h i Alpha at Lock
Haven State has been given the
national honor of installing a new
colony at Mansfield State Colege this Sunday.
The
installment of lambda
Chi Alpha's 182nd colony keeps
them the third largest fraternity
in the nation. The new colony
will begin plans to erect a
$50,000-00 Chapter house at
Mansfield. Manslield hopes that
this new building will add in the
action of construcling a ••frateiiiiiy

India Comes To

Orchestra A p p e a r i n g
In Concerf Tues.

row".

The Lambda Gamma chaplcr of
Lambda Chi Alpha will leave
LHS early tomorrow lo pcrlDrm
the secret , i u,a I of inslaliuig
ihe lota ({r.i Sigma fialemilv as
a new j.iimlxla Ch, eolony at

Parking
Can

Fines

Double

Edward
Mc
Closkey,
l.HS
business
manager,
leceiUly
stated that all Ihose studenls who
are parking on campus and have
received tickets should pay their
violations.
When fines arc not
paid within two weeks the price
of the ticket doubles.
Students v-^o tail to pay Iheir
lines by the end of the semester
will not be permitted to register
for the next s e s s i o n . They will
not receive their g r a d e s transcripts or graduate until all debts
are paid. All fines must be paid
in the b u s i n e s s office, and only
applies to those who have r e c e i v e d
vjolation.s on .jr before February
17th.

public
without
charge.
The
folk music concert by Alan
Lomax, cancelled because of
bad weather, is being rescheduled for presentation in the spring.
On March 18, a Community
Concert
by
violinist
Jaime
Larado is being offered to season subscribers.

Voting Results
The voting which took place
in Bentley Hall Lounge Monday
March 9 has ended with surprising r e s u l t s . After counting the
votes for
SCC members at
large it w a s found that over
250 people had received v o t e s .
The victorious candidates were
Tim Rupp,
Jim
Rupp, Tim
Crompton, Roseanne F'arry, and
Ron
Jury.
These
members
assume their position the first
meeting in April.

Tou's Plon
Convention
Representatives
from
Alpha
Sigma T a u scrorities throughout
the state will gather at Lock
Haven State College on March 13,
14,
15 for the
Third Annual
State Day Convention.
Lock
Haven's
Zeta
chapter, Cathy
Dugan president, will
host the
convention.
Following a " h o b - n o b " dance
on Friday evening in the student
union, the guests will convene
in Bentley Hall Lounge for a
reception and fashion show. A
representative from each chapter
will model the chapter's uniform.
On Saturday morning,workshops
will be conducted on various
sorority
activities,
' s u c h as
community
projects,
rushing,
and pledging.
At the luncheon
meeting, Mrs. Sara Mcllvaine,
advisor to the Zeta c a a p t e r , will
speak on "Our Role a s A l u m n a e . "
The general s e s s i o n on Saturday
afternoon will
consist of an
exchange of the ideas brought
up in the morning workshops.
Over 180 s i s t e r s and advisors
from eight colleges are expected
to attend.

P

Auction Held
P h o t o s hy J a n e t Sheridan

Show Captures
Last night in Thomas I i e l d
House before a full house, the
l.HS
g\ni
U'am made an
1 iiipri. ss i\ L' e ^liibition.
After inli odiK. ior\ remarks by
to,lell l.estei /immerman,
the
U
. N 111 leam [^ut on a maieh routine
wliieh. was lollowed In denionsiialions
of
events
by the
girls' iheii the men's gymnastic
squads.
I his
impressive

Aud

showing u a s climaxed by a
series of rolls and handsprings'
Special
tribute was paid to
Miss Dora Vandine because of
her great interest in and working
with the gym team.
The gym team, coached by Mr.
Zimmerman and Miss Vandine,
will appear next on March ]7 at
Mr. View and Blue Ridge high
schools.

Smith Hall Lounge was the
scene of intense bidding last
night as auctioner.l.eo McMullen
auctioned off fifteen
freshman
girls.
According to the rules
each slave had to be dressed in
a costume and the girls appeared
as rabbits, c a t s , flying nun, and
a s innocent children.
Prices ranged from 65 cents to
$8-00.
Servitude will begin
Saturday from noon until 6:00

SCC MOVIE
THE WRONG BOX
PRICE AUG. SUNDAY 7:30.

Wresflers Rated A Top
Contender in NAIA

UPSET:
LHS's Paul Brodmerkel rides California's Dave
' C o o k enroute to a 4-1 upset d e c i s i o n .
Brodmerkel won the
the 142-potind championship and gained revenge after losing
}-0 lo Cook in last year's championship bout.

Flick; Change of Habit; Roxv
by Jack Heagney

This
week end the Bald
Eagle wrestlers are in Superior,
Wisconsin in an attempt to improve on their third place finish
in last year's NAIA Tournament.
LHS who finished the dual-meet
season with a mediocre 7-5-1
record, is fresh off a close win
in the Pennsylvania Athletic
Conference
Tournament
is
considered to be a top contender
for the NAIA championshio.
The Bald Eagles have been
rated third throughout most of
the year in the NAIA but slipped to sixth place in the latest
poll. The University of Omaha
at Nebraska and Adams State
have been rated one and two
respectively a l l year 'n the
NAIA and according to LHS
Coach Gray Simons they will be
the teams to beat in the tourna-

ment.

Both teams have finished ahead
of Lock Haven the past two
years in the tournament with
Adams State winning the crown
both years and Omaha placing
second.
LHS is sending only five
grapplers to the tournament,
the policy being that only place
winners in the PAC tournament
are eligible to compete in the
NAIA.
The five LHS wrestlers a r e :
118-Don Fay
126-Shane Foley
134 -Larry Rippey
142—Paul Brodmerkel
Hwt-Scott Brooks
Brooks is making his first
trip to the NAIA while the other
four have all made previous
appearances.

Well, ya see there is these three Papish chicks who just hapiien
to also be nuns. Anyway these nuns chuck the ceremonial garb
and dress like nornul people and take off for the big city, which
happens to be New York, and make like nurses and social workers
because there is this free clinic on Washington St. that is hurtin'
for those kind of people. They arrive i n the s c e n e , after
they buy these really keen threads, and hear this really
groovy music coming from an upstairs window. So they go in
where this free clinic is and buzz for the doctor, only they
don't get no answer, so they try again and this time this
guy, the one that was singin' comes down and lets the
incognito nuns into the office.
They try t,o give this guy
the brush but much to their surprize, t h a t ' s right, h e ' s the
doctor.
Yup, imagine thati
H e ' s Doctor .John (Elvis
In last Wednesday night's basket- iSeveral
minutes later, Crider,
Presley) all the way from T e n n e s s e e what come to help
ball game for Ihe intramural champ-having three personal fouls , was
t he poor for free.
ionship of LHS, fourth floor North taken out of the game, greatly
Let's s e e now, oh yea, well after a few weeks and all
proved its superiority by defeating weakening the rebounding power of
they (the nuns) get to know the doc real good, especially the Cave 74-45.
the Cave. Fourth floor realized^
Instrumental
in fourth
floor's the opportunity now afforded them
Sister Michelle (Mary Tyler Morre) only doc don't know
they
victory was the excellent outside and made good use of it by reeling
are nuns cause they ain't supposed to say nothin' to no one
shooting of Wes Detar and Bill off five consecutive points making
cause they are s e c r e t agent nuns. Anyway he loves her and
Carpenter, the second half domin- the score 21-16.
she loves him and they work miracles together at this clinic. ation of the backboards by Gary Then the two teams exchanged
Like the time Doc cures this little girl that ain't never
Lininger, Bruce Mundorf, and Roger b a s k e t s , Donahue hit a foul shot
Horton, and the mobility, quickness for the C a v e , only t o have fourth
talked on account of she was what they called Autistic,
and general know-how exhibited by floor score four points on s u c c e s s which is like mentally ill. He cured this little kid in
the whole team.
ive field goals by Detar and Carpabout five hoars just by holding her in his arms saying.
Also attributing to the win was enter. Donahue h i t on two more
T love you', yea, that Doc sure is sumpin'!
gut while
the inability of the Cave to convert foul s h o t s , but fourth floor retalliatsister Michelle is diggin' Doc, Sister Barbara (Jane f^lliot)
their foul s h o t s , hitting on only ed with four more points by Detar
is makin" like one of those pinko hippies and she has a nine of 29 for a meager 31 per cent, and Carpenter, making the half-time
Fourth floor utilizing an effective score 31-21.
sitdown strike in the local grocery on account of he don't
charge fair prices.
She's the one that is where it is at fast break, got off to a quick 12-4 At the beginning of the second
lead, Denny Posteraro, Jim Dona- half. North was on fire and by the
cause she uses words like fink alot and says do your own
hue, and Gary Crider, however, then time the smoke had cleared several
thing. Then there's these b l a c k cats with sun g l a s s s s that
combined for 12 quick points to minutes later, the Cave found themselves outscored 24-8, augmenting
are tryin' hard to be militant, that stop Sister Irene (Barbara deadlock the game at 16-16.
McNair) and tell her to be Either part of the problem or
part of the s o l u t i o n " .
They treat her kinda mean, but they
don't know that s h e ' s a nun e i t e r .

Fourth Floor North

Intramural

Now comes the sad part. While all this is goin' on, the
Bishop way on the other side of town decides to pull the
trio from Washington St. and send them back where they came
from, namely the convent; but first he says they can have
this block party they been planin' in honor of San Juan
(that's St. John in Spanish) but they gotta wear their habits
and this is were Doc finds that Michelle is r e a l l y Sister
Michelle.
So it finally comes time to go and ya know
what? Sister Michelle gets a t t a c k e d , like almost raped by this
Puerto Rican dude she been giving speech l e s s o n s . Now
from my way of thinking that a i n ' t no way to a c t . Anyway
Doc breaks in and saves ole sister Michelle just from force
of habit.
Sister Irene
and sister Michelle come back after a few
months to visit Washington St. and ex-sister Barbara, what
quit the convent to become a radical at a folk mass that Doc
is singing a t . And a s the two nuns, the radical. Doc John
and the church slowly sink in the west you are left with
llic feeling that all is well in the world.

Tennis Team Starts Practice
Lock
Haven S t a t e ' s
tennis
team opened practice officially
on Monday March IQ. Coached
again this year by Karl S. Herrmai'i, the squad began to prepaie itself for the s e a s o n ahead.
«itli a field of 20 candidates for
the
six starting positions,
this y e a r ' s team looks stronger
and has more depth than last
year's squad.
Trying to get back timing and
form lost over the winter months
Coach Herrmann has had the team
working out daily from 4:00—
6:00.
He has been stressing
physical conditioning and drilling for the past week; schedul-

ling challange matches on the
weekends.
With many returnees from last
year/s varsity the outlook for
the s e a s o n looks good.
Back from the previous year
are
Jim
Augustine,
Paul
Burkheimer, 'Whitey' Marshall,
Steve Kodad, Joe Castagnola,
John Roth, and Chuck Gardner.
The great depth of the squad
should prove to be a strength
of
the team and make this
s e a s o n one of the best at LHS.
The squad should be ready for
their opening match on April
4th at Shippensburg State College.

Captures

Basketball

Title

Harriers Split Meets
Satuiday, March 7 t h , the Harriers
of J ock Haven State College traveled to Slippery Rock for a double
meet with Slippery Rock and Cleveland
State.
The Rockets, strong in the running department, were too much for
the LHS boys beating them 68-27.
LHS faired better in the second
meet whipping Cleveland 60-44.
since both meets were held indoors, the schedule of events was
sliflhtly different from an outdoor
mniet.
There were only eleven
events, including three field and
eight running events. Two school
records were broken a» LHS showed
their strength in ihe field events.
Senior Greg Kitchen bettered his
own record by one inch and took
firsl place in the high jump with a
a leap of 6 feet 4% inches. Freshman Galen Hess snapped an existing LHS record by vaulting 13
feet and taking second place in
the pole vault.
In other events Bill Kline, a
sophomore, out for the first time
t h i s year threw the shot put a disdistance of 40 f'.et lO'/z inches.
Slippery Rock controlled the running events taking first place in
all Ibut the high hurdles: won by
LHS's Byron Almoney who was
followed closely by Tom E l l i s .
Steve Podgajny placec third in
the mile and then came back to
finish second in the two mile.
Racing to a second and third
place in the 600 yard run were
Charlie Simcoe and Chris Bower.
In the 1000 yard run second and
third went to the Bald Eagle

Fay and Foley are the leading
LHS returning place winners,
both having finished third in
their individual weight c l a s s e s
last year. Rippey placed sixth
after sustaining a rib injury which
forced him to forfeit his last
two matches. Hank Hawkins, a
fourth place finisher in last
year's NAIA idd not place in the
PAC tournament and is therefore not competing in this y e a r ' s
tournament.
Although LHS is sending only
five wrestlers to t h e tournament.
Coach Simins expects the Bald
Eagles to finish among the top
three teams with four possible
champions.
Conference
schools
Bloomsburg and Clarion, who finished
eighth and tenth respectively
last year, are also expected to be
entered in the tournament.

George Bower and Kieth Rider.
Coach Dolan stated that he
thought the team is in much better
physicao condition than it w a s
Isst year at this time. The team
is now working toward the first
outdoor meet with Juniata College
on April 4 t h .

the lead to 25 p o i n t s , 54-29.
Gary Lininger,did most of the damage by controlling both boards and
recording 10 points. Detar chipped
in with 8 more to account for the
bulk of the scoring.
The Cave attempted a comeback
with P o s t e r a r o Donahue, and Geist
combining for eight straight p o i n t s ,
but the comeback attempt was soon
thwarted by Detar and Carpenter
hitting the hoops time after time
building up a seemingly insurmount^^^^^ j g a j
After a few more exchanges of
b a s k e t s , fourth floor scored 10 more
s u c c e s s i v e markers, four by Carpenter, four by Horton, and two by E d
Williams to put the game on ice
74-45.
Leading the scoring for the winners was Detar with a most impressive 26 p o i n t s , followed closely b y
Carpenter
with a credible 2 3 ;
Lininger w a s the only other man
for the winners t o hit double figures with 14.
For the C a v e , Posteraro and Donahue shared scoring honors with 12
apiece, and Crider was runner-up
by tossing in 10.
SOUL HOLE
Bob Shuey and Dwight Bletz
MUSIC, DRAMA, POETRY,
SATURDAYTRINITY 8 TO 12

GARDEN

Ybu have
24 hours
to live.
Today, that is. So what
are you doing with your
time? Are you helping
another human being
toward the dignity you
want for yourself? Are
you doing anything to
overcome the hate in
this world—with love?
These 24 hours can be
a great time to be alive.
If you live right.
Break the hate habit:
love your neighbor.

®

Utverliitng contriburpd
for llie p u b l K ^ciod

Now thru March 24

« l-HANKOVICH PRODUCTION

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