BHeiney
Fri, 06/30/2023 - 16:36
Edited Text
#3b

Youth Group
Shafer

Gov.'Coming for Students^
Plans of Day Finalized
"Gov. Shafer is definitely coming here for the
students," said Mike McLaughUn, president of the
Student Cooperative Counci I concerning Governor
Raymond P. Shafer's v i s i t to Lock Haven State
this afternoon.
McLaughlin pointed out that the Pennsylvania
chief executive has announced his plans to make
the trip to LHS primarily s o that he can ne et with
students and not with the college administration.
The foUoiwing itinerary was finalized yesterday
by Jay Haskell, one of the governor's secretaries:
11:15 am — Gov. Shafer and his party will arrive
at the Lock Haven airport. McLaughlin and Michele
Taddeo, SCC recording secretary, will greet him and
will ride back to campus in Shafer's car.
11:30 am— The governor will arrive at President
Richard T . Parsons' office on campus.
11:30 - nootl — Shafer will meet privately with
Dr. Parsons anaseveral area trustees in his office.
noon - 12:45 pm — The governor will have lunch
in Bentley Hall; seated with him will be the SCC
executive board.
12:45 - 1:15 pm — Gov. Shafer will hold a press
conference for E|igle E y e , The Lock Haven Express,
and WBPZ-fadio in conference room 212 in the union.
1:15 - 1:45 pm — The governor will make a brief
tour of the campus. He will be escorted by McLaughlin; James Cramptcn, SCC first vice president; Mike
Martin, second vice president; Tim Eck, treasurer;
Miss Taddeo; Susan Sullivan, corresponding secretary; Marianne Waters and Al Smith, Eagle Eye coeditors; and Rom Smith, E E student adviser.
McLaughlin said yesterday that the governor's
tour will begin in the union and will proceed to
Ulmer, the new library, Thomas Field House, Akeley
Lab School, Raub Hall, North Hall, McEntire Hall,

Price Auditorium, perhaps Smith and Woolridge Halls,
and will end at Bentley Hall. The governor may
a l s o view some new construction, McLaughlin said.
1:45 - 2:45 pm — A general s e s s i o n , open to all
members of the student body, will be held in Bentley
Hall Lounge. McLaughlin will serve as master of
ceremonies and will introduce the governor. Shafer
will make an address at this time to the students.
2:45 - 3:30 pm — The governor will participate in
a closed seminar Yn _Raub-l06. The seminar, which
will be taped for future playback, will be moderated
by Dr. Werner Barth, chairman of social s c i e n c e s .
Dr. Barth last evening said that the seminar was
originally to be for social science majors only.
However, he said, the plans now call for about 35
students (some chosen by McLaughlin and others
named by him) and several social science faculty
and SCC advisers, to n e e t in a question-answer
s e s s i o n with the governor.
The topic of the seminar will be "The Role of
Lock Haven State College as a State Institution
and the Present (Shafer) Administration's Endeavors
to Improve Education in PennsylvaniaJ )
Dr. Barth said the seminar was originally intended
to d i s c u s s topics in political science and state,
national, and international policies.
Approximately 3:30 pm — The governor will leave
Lock Haven.

Student Folk Mass
Sunday 6 pm
Immaculate

Politico! Biography

Conception

School

Everybody Welcome!!

lO-Point

Gov. Shafer's special youth
commission, appointed shcrtly
after he took office in 1966, last
sutnmer developed a 10-point
program which it presented to the
governor. The program includes
the following points:
1. All laws, customs, and practices shoold be changed so that
a person reaches full legal age
at 18;
2. The general assembly should
petition Congress to affect an
overhaul of the Selective Service System;
3 . Youth should be placed on
policy and advisery committees
on both the state and local
levels;
4 . Basic changes should be
made throughout the educational
establishment, including but not
limited to an expansion of preschool programs; the modemizaof the teaching of reading s k i l l s ;
the extension of guidance to
include students in the lower
grades, the non-academic students, and students with emotional and behaviorial problems; the
utilization of regional approaches
to integration; the addition of
black history and black culture
into the school's curriculums; the
review of texts to insure the
validity for students; the expansion and upgrading of vocational
education; and the inclusion of
family life education at all
levels of the educational system.
5.
More activities should be
available in the area of recreation; occupational leisure time
should a l s o be considered.
6. The state should request Congress to reexamine the pros and
cons of the use of non-addictive
drugs;
7. The most productive and affluent nation in the history of the
world must commit itself to the
provision of decent housing, sufficient incomes, tneaningful employment, adequate health service,_and equality under the law;

Offers
Plan

Ciiiv. Raymond P. Shafer
8. The war in Vietnam should be
ended as soon as pos sible;
9. Efforts and headways should
be made to eliminate racial inequality;
IQ. The relevance of religious
instructions should be increased.
The governor gave a recent
speech in which he referred
specifically to s i x of the points
in the commission's report.
"I shall appoint, and very soon,
young people to policy and advisery committees," he said.
Shafer also vowed to continue to
push for lowering the voting age
and to continue his efforts to effect better housing and the other
subjects in point seven of the
report.
Educational improvements ( e s pecially in the college system),
elimination of racial problems,
and assistance to President
Nixon to achieve an early and
respectable end to the Vietnam
war were also subjects the governor promised to press for.

Shafer 'Still Very
Much Alive Polifically'
"If there i s one thing Ray
Shafer has an bundance of, it's
courage," said one of the state
political leaders last year when
the Pennsylvania governor committed his administration to
modernize the commonwealth's
100-year-old constitution.
-'He's making his first big
fight for good government on an
i s s u e that is full of political
problems for him. It's against
our advice and if h e / l o s e s , he's
politically dead in this s t a t e . "
^ i n >...M«r is still very much
alive
politically; and Penn•ylvania has the modem constitution it n e e d s .
In 1947, he was elected district attorney of Crawford County
on both tickets, a feat he repeated in 1951. Seven years
l a s r , he w a s elected to the
state senate, representing Mercer
and Crawford Counties.
Shafer was elected Lieutenant governor of the cotnmonwealth
in 1962, and two years later he
served as acting chairman of the
state delegation to the 1964
Republican National Convention
in San Francisco.
In November, 1966, he was
elected governor of Pennsylvania
marking the first time in the commonwealth's history that a lieutenant governor successfully ran
for the highest office.
Today, according to a Harrisburg spokesman. Governor Shafer
has accomplished almost 90 per
cent of his campaign pledges,
in addition to other major programs
which he found needed upon office.
As a result, Pennsylvania has:
—A new constitution
-•-Judicial reform
• ~ T h e first legislative code of

ethics in the state's history;
—An expanded industrial development program that is producing
an average of 4,000 new jobs a
month, and a record low unemployment rate;
—The broadest civil right legislative package in the modern
history of the commonwealth;
—^A transportation development
program geared to high speed,
modern concepts;
—Consumer protection and insurance refortns that are leading
the nation;
—A ten-year environmental conservation plan that is anchored
by a voter approved $500 million
fund to eliminate mining blight,
air, land, and water pollution;
—The first tax incentive program
in the nation to entice business
and industry into the ghetto with
programs
to
help solve urban
programs to help solve urban

Booters Entertain Rockets Tomorrow

Coach Karl Herrmann is expecting a "good, tough game"
tomwrow as LHS booters face
problems. It's called the Penn- Slippery Rock State College on
sylvania Neighborhood Assistance McCollum Field. The varsity
game will be predeeded by a
Program;
—Governor's branch office in junior varsity game. The probable
varsity line-up has Galen H e s s ,
ghetto neighborhoods to give the
disadvantaged citizens immediate Jim Sleicher, Mike Minchoff,
or Don Fay, and John Garmon
contact with government, e s p e c as forwards; Steve Steffen, Tom
ially to get information about
DeFrancesco, and Jack Infield
where they can get help. Some
as halfbacks. Fullbacks will be
25,000 citizens have been helped
George Magliaro, Tom E l l i s , and
s o far.
Curt Wolf. Bruce Parkhill will
Named Phi Beta Kappa
tend the goal.
Gov. Shafer was born in 1917
We're slow starters," 'claims
in New Castle. A graduate of
Coach Herrmarm. "I still feel
Meadville public schools, he
we can beat anyone if we could
holds a degree from Allegheny
play good hard soccer for four
College (where as a political
periods. " ^ start slow then get
s c i e n c e major he made Phi Beta
stronger as the game progresKappa, won nine varsity letters
s e s . " Coach Herrmann has been
in basketbaU, s o c c e r , and track,
putting the team through five
extra minutes of warmup with
was class president each year,
defensive players instead of the
and was the student body presiusual
kicking
and dribbling
dent in his senior year.)

drills. He hopes this will help
them get off to a faster start.
Slippery Rock always provides strong competition. The
game is always played hard,
tough,
and
clean. "Slippery
Rock has a well conditioned,
team with players much the same
as ours. They play hard and
and
want
to win
and want to win but they're
very clean. They are a good
rivalry; we like _to play them,"
said Coach Herrmann. "They
have a good coach. He likes to
win but keeps it c l e a n , "
Slippery Rock and LHS are
trying to make NAIA playoffs
again this year. Both teams are
very much in contention for the
honor of playing. This game
could mean quite a lot on who
goes to the playoffs. Out of
twenty-five teams in District
Six, our district, four teams are
chosen to play in NAIA playoffs

and the winner goes to nationals.
District Six chanpions DavisElkins College won the national
championship last year.
The undefeated junior varsity
team faces a team much like
the varsity team. Coach Herrmann
anticipates much the same type
of game. The probable starting
line-up is Bill Lingle, Keith
Harmon, John Carpenter, and
Jerry Zeisloff
as
forwards.
Halfbacks will be Mike Burkhart,
John Mingos, and Dan Cruttenden. Jeff Cultrighter, Ziggy Tauginas, and Lee Westenberger will
be fullbacks and Don Taylor or
Craig Dawson will tend the goal.
Many of the junior varsity players
will
see
action
will s e e action through substitution.
"Both the junior varsity and
varsity games will be typical
Lock
Haven-Slippery
Rock
games," stated Coach Herrmann,

''**«gi."*^i

S!"

•—T

-Out
L«st ^ e e t the Tearless pfbgnosticator came up with his
weakest showing of the season, missing on three of eight predictions. The 5-3 record last week brought the season record
to 2 3 - ^ an#5? .7^7 pet.
The bi#?,upset last week was Mansfield's stunning 36-9
victory^.over East Stroudsburg leaving them tied with West
Chester''for ihe top spot in the East. The Mounties overcame
a 9-0 deficit to roll over the Warriors before a large homecoming crowrf,at E!ast Stroudsburg.
Shippensburg, winless in four previous encounters, pulled
the other cttjor upset when they tripped California, 34-21.
Clarion ^ a s dropped from the ranks of the unbeaten,absorbing a SS-H.'lacing at the hands of Indiana University of,Pa.
This weekend finds the Bald Eagles idle after an exciting
come from bo(i(ind victory over Edinboro, 41-33. LHS will be
in action next:i»veek when they travel to Slippery Rock.
In hopes of reaching the .800 pet. mark we will now proceed to pick this week's winner.
CLARION over California ~ The Vulcans have internal problems and have lost three in a row. After last week's lacing
to Indiana the Golden Eagles will take out their frustrations
on the Vulcans.
SHIPPENSBURG over Edinboro - a tossup. The Raiders get
the edge after last week's win over California. The Scots
have too many key players injured, but could come through if
tailback Al Rains can effectively run the sweep.
INDIANA over Slippery Rock — Last week's lacing of Clarion
proves the Big Indians are one of the top small college teams
in the nation. The Rockets shouldn't provide too much opposition unless the Indians are down after last week.
MANSFIELD over Brockport — The Mounties have won five in
a row and might have attained the momentup to carry them
into the conference championship game. Quarterback ' Stu
Casterline should have afield day in preparing for next week's
showdown with West Chester.
BLOOMSBURG over Cheyney — The Huskies won their first
game last week and should easily capture number two tomorrow .
The Wolves are winless and their defense is too vulnerable.
WEST CHESTER over Kutztown ~ Should be a tune-up for the
Rams in preparation for next week's showdown with Mansfield
for the division title. The Bears threw a scare into East
Stroudsburg before losing in the final minute and could catch
the Rams looking ahead to Mansfield.
EAST STROUDSBURG over MiUersville - The Warriors get
back on the winning Uack against the winless Marauders.
After their stunning upset to Mansfield last week the Warriors
are up for a slaughter.
#

*

«



*

*

*

*

*

Last weekend's homecoming game reminded me of t,
Exhibitions the early New York Mets put on. The only diiference is that LHS won the game whereas the Mets almost
ailvf/ays lost.
"We njay not go undefeated, but we're going to surprise a
few people," an early season statement by head mentor Bob
Waller could be changed to, "we're going to excite a few
people."
The game was so unpredictable that even a few people
cheered and not everyone left at halftime when the Eagles
were down 27-6. Some people became so excited when the
Eagles went ahead in the fourth quarter that they even got out
of their seats and jumped up and down while cheering.
Met fans used to go crazy even when their team was being
clojibered and playing the sloppiest baseball ever seen. LHS
fani can also be compared to the Met fans, they sit and watch
the game as if they were watching a dull game of gin rummy
and the only time they jump to their feet is to beat the halftime
rush to the concession stand.
This season marks the first time in four years that the
Eagles can finish .500 or better. Ther is one home game remaining s o fans when you go to the game, remember to act
•as if you are going to a funeral.

e.e. classifieds

LOST: White umbrella with cleat
polka dots.
Please return to M.
Waters, Room 244 Woolridge.

LOST: Child Psychology book —
Growth Trends and Psychological
Development by Thompson. Left in
Raub 322. If found please contact
Sue Minor, 220 Russell Hall.

LOST: A 1969 high school class
ring. Blue stone with N.E. Bradford
emblem. Initials D.S.M. Call Mike
Young 748-5987.

LOST:
Child Psychology book —
Thompson. See Kirk Fenton, Room
19, Smith Hall.

RIDE WANTED: to Harrisbg or Lane,
area for this Fri. Contact M. Waters
at 748-6976. 8905, or 5531

ROXY

Tonight thru Oct. 28

Un d e r n e w
mana gemen t

"A Remarkable Film
...One That No Adult
Can Afford to Miss"..
Judith Crist
"It's The Best Picture
About Young People I've
Ever Seen" ..ABC-TV
"Beautiful Film Must Be
Considered Among The Best
Of The Year".....
Wm. Wolf«.Cue Magazine

Intramural
Scene Busy
The fall intramural scene was
busy l a s t week on the LHS
campus.
The action included
r e s u l t s in the basketball tournament. F a c u l t y T e n n i s Tournament, and the gold Individual
Tournament.
The ties in the
American and National Football
leagues were a l s o broken.
The Open Basketball Tournament was won by Beach House
in a 64-41 victory over North
H a l l . Al Ruginis was high for
the winners with 28 p o i n t s ,
while Lean Drecker tossed in
14 points for the loosers. The
Beach House c o n s i s t s of: Tom
Baker,
Kevin
McNamara, Al
Flickburgh, Chris Horn, John
Poldiak, Bill Erickson, John
Marzlak, and Al Ruginis.
The F a c u l t y Tennis Tournament w a s won by the team of
Don Markley and Ed McCloskey.
They defeated Karl Herrmann
and Bob Chu 6-3, 7-5, 6-3.
The first golf tournament was
held at LHS this year. The tournament w a s won by T K E ' s Jim
Black who shot an 88. Gary
Kotecki finished second with an
91 and T K E ' s Scott McLean was
third with a 9 8 .
The intramural football leagues
e a c h have an undefeated team
after last w e e k ' s action. In the
American League Phi Mu Delta
took over first place and h a s a
perfect 3-0.O record. L i k e w i s e ,
T K E , in the National League
a l s o moved into first place and
own a perfect 3-0-0 record.
Intramiiral
sports
director
Donald Keener h a s a l s o announced that there will be an intramural track meet.
This meet
will be held on October 2 8 .

.Our Specialty
Roast Beef
Served Hot

CAMPUS CASINO
SOUL

HOLE

Eht er t ai nment evei y
Saturday evening

G-A-R-D-E-N
"THE LAST SUMMER"

Action during early season
intramiua 1 football season.

8-12

TJ-tnity thi ted Nfethodiat Church
\fein Street

3 JICADEMY AWARDS!
BEST ACTRESS KATHARINE HEPBURN

748-5606

P6T6RCnOOL6i
»COLOR

1H6UONINWINT6RI

7:00 &9!30

To L.H.S.a STUDENTS
A

FREE

PAIR

of

PANTY

HOSE

WHEN YOU OPEN YOUR

SMART SHOP
CHARGE ACCOUNT

jy^s Travel to B/oom
T h e LHS JV football team
travels t o Bloomsburg this afterni on for a three o'clock encounter with the Huskie J V ' s . T h e
Bald E a a l e s will be going into
the game with and 0-1-1 record.
L a s t week they tied Mansfield
7-7. Their defeat w a s at the
hands of Susquehanna by a score
of 4 8 - 1 9 .
JV Coach Smalley commented
on the Susquehanna game by saying that the score w a s no indication of the type of game that the
boys played. He said that the offense was able to move the ball
and several times in the game
they were stopped within the
opponent's ten yard l i n e , " T h e
basic trouble was with our defens i v e s e c o n d a r y . " Commenting on
the Mansfield game. Coach Smal-

LHS Travels
To MiUersville
The
Bale
Eagle
harriers
travel to MiUersville, Saturday,
in quest of their 8th victory of
the s e a s o n .
mmThe MiUersville squad,
last
years conference champoin
in
t r a c k , features three top notch
rimners in the persons of Bob
Brown, Bob Shank, and Bob
Girvin. MiUersville ranks second
only t o West Chester in the E a s t ern half of the conference.
Running for Lock Haven will
be co-caption Steve Podgajny,
Dave Mosebrook, Mike Borows k i , Nibs Gordon, Harry Smeltz,
Steve H a r n i s h , George Bower, and
p o s s i b l y Bob Wagner. Freshman
Carl Klingaman will again miss
the r a c e b e c a u s e of i l l n e s s .
Captain Keith Rider is suffering
from fallen arches and may be
out for the remainder of the s e a son.
The 5 mile r a c e , which s t a r t s
at 2 pm should be one of the
toughest encounters the harriers
have had all s e a s o n .

ley s a i d that we outplayed them.
" F i v e or six times we were
inside their 15 but we were just
unable to get the ball into the
end z o n e . "
Some of the flayers that have
been doing great work for the J V ' s
are: Bob Butz, quarterback frc)m
Nazareth, P a . , an extremely good
leader, s e t s up plays excently.
Bob Shuey, halfback, showed
great potential in the game with
Mansfield, Ed Dwyer, offensive
tight end and defensive end,
Paul Simco, free s a f e t y , cons i s t e n t player on team, Doog
Conlon, defensive halfback, Brian
J o n e s , offensive c e n t e r . Skip
Haley, split end, gives 100 per
cent effort, h a s caught a couple
or
circus
c a t c h e s , and Frank
C o s t a n z o , defensive linebacker,
hard nose player.
Coach Smalley went on to
say that one of the main purposes
of the JV team is t o a s s i s t or help
the varsity to prepare for an upcoming game, and by doing this
we run the risque of not getting
ready for our own g a m e s , and he
further added that since Lock
Haven h a s an enrollment of less
than 1400 men, freshman are a l lowed t o play on the varsity team
and t h i s hurts by taking the potentially good freshman players
away from the JV team.
Smalley finally
commented
by saying " T h e spirit of the team
is high and they have an excellent a t t i t u d e . I am proud t o a s s o c i a t e with the guys because of
their great a t t i t u d e . "
In the New Mexico Lobo, student
newspaper of the University of
New Mexico, there appeared this
classified advertisement: "Student h a s decided s k i i n g too
dangerous. Selling entire outfit:
boots, s k i s , bindings, p o l e s .
Best offer a c c e p t e d .
Money
needed for sky-diving k i t . "
Reader's
Digest

EYE
Vol. XIII

Fri., Oct. 24,1969

No 36

PENN COLLEGIATE CHORAL ASSOCIATION
Presents the

ANNUAL

FESTIVAL

at LOCK HAVEN STATE

N o v l , 2,
Oct 30, 31
Simulation Weekends
A special program, a series of
simulation weekends, designed
for coUege seniors interested in
careers in professional management will be sponsored by the
American Management Association. The program will be held
at the Management Center at
Saranac Lake, New York, from
November until May during the
1969-70 academic year.
Thirty-two students will be
accepted for each program. Each
group will be composed of two
seniors from each of 16 colleges
and universities in the Northeast.
The special program is a portion of the AMA Management
internship program. TheSimuiation Weekends will ccnisist ot
lectures,
group
discussions,
simulations,
and
interaction

with professional managers and
the present MIP interns.
Students must provide their
own transportation to and from
Saranac Lake, but AMA will
provide complete accomadations
at no cost to the students.
Seniors who have majored in
any academic discipline may
apply. For a program discription
and application blank, write:
Director, Simulation Weekends,
AMA
Management
Center,
Saranac
Lake,
New
York,
12983.

Hockey
Intramurals
Hockey intramurals ended on
October 22 with the sophomores
and juniors playing to a 0-0
deadlock. In the preliminary
c l a s s games, the sophomores defeated the freshmen 1-0, and the
juniors beat the fighting seniors
in a hard-fought 5-0 game.
The juniors seemed to be in
control of the game, as they had
numerous chances to score on
corners. The sophomores' defense held tight, and with only
minutes left in the game the
sophomores' offense missed a
shot at the goal by inches. Because of the tie, the points for
the game will be divided between
the sophomores and the jimiors
in the compiling of points for the
plaques awarded at the end of
the year.
Beware of
patient man.

the
John

fury

of

a

Dryden

Open Hearing Set
On Bookstore
An open hearing i s s c h e d u l e d for N o v . 13 to r e v i e w an inv e s t i g a t i o n of bookstore p r a c t i c e s , a c c o r d i n g to Mike McLaughlin, president of the Student Cooperative C o u n c i l .
McLaughlin said that the hearing w a s s c h e d u l e d by LHS
President Richard T. Parsons following a report by a student
fact-finding committee w h i c h c o n c l u d e d that Monroe Hurwitz,
bookstore manager, had mismanaged the student-funded books t o r e . T h e report charging him with unethical p r a c t i c e s and
p o s s i b l e v i o l a t i o n of the law.
The hearing w i l l be held at 10 am in Ulmer Auditorium,
McLaughlin s a i d .
Three p e r s o n s w i l l weigh the e v i d e n c e p r e s e n t e d at the
hearing and w i l l submit a written recommendation to Dr. Pars o n s and the LHS board of t r u s t e e s for a c t i o n on the matter.
The hearing committee w i l l c o n s i s t of one s t u d e n t appointed
by S C C , one student named by Dr. John H. B o n e , LHS dean of
student a f f a i r s , in behalf of the administration, and one p e r s o n
(student, f a c u l t y , or administrator) c h o s e n by Hurwitz, McLaughlin s a i d .
The SCC president pointed
appointee w i l l be e l e c t e d at
meeting. Hurwitz, attending a
concerning the b o o k s t o r e , w a s
representative.

out that the s t u d e n t government
tomorrow e v e n i n g ' s SCC board
meeting with s e v e r a l s t u d e n t s
u n a v a i l a b l e for comment on h i s

Dr. B o n e y e s t e r d a y s a i d that he had not y e t b e e n notified
by Dr. P a r s o n s that the dean of student affairs s h o u l d name a
representative to the c o m m i t t e e , although he s a i d he would
do s o if he i s a s k e d .
McLaughlin noted that l e g a l c o u n s e l will be provided the
student committee if n e c e s s a r y . Hurwitz may a l s o have
c o u n s e l p r e s e n t at the hearing, McLaughlin s a i d .

attention
Attention all students, applications
are being taken foi waiters and
waitresses for Sunday, served meals.
Contact the hostess at Bentley Hall.

PHYS E D BUILDING: T h i s i s an a r t i s t ' s
interpretation of how Lock H a v e n S t a t e ' s new
p h y s i c a l e d u c a t i o n building w i l l look upon

completion.
The building w h i c h i s being
erected on Susquehanna Avenue i s s c h e d u l e d
for completion around 1 9 7 1 .

College Presidents Appeal for Viet. Step-up

HALLOWEEN
H e a d l e s s h o r s e m e n , p u m p k i n s , g o b l i n s and
w i t c h e s w i l l all be in e v i d e n c e this w e e k e n d as H a l l o w e e n
approaches.

College P r e s s Service
WASHINGTON - (CPS) - The
presidents of some 75 private
c o l l e g e s and universities have
appealed for a "step-up timetable
for withdrawal from Vietnam."
The appeal came in the form of
a joint statement issued by the
presidents, speaking as "indivi-

duals who work with young men;
and women."
Their statement
concluded, "We urge upon the
President of the United States
and upon Congress a stepped-up
timetable for withdrawal froni
Vietnam. We believe this to be
in our country's highest interest,
at home and abroad."

"The accumulated costs of the
Vietnam war are not in men and
material alone. There are costs
too in the effects on young
people's
hopes and beliefs.
Like ourselves, the vast majority of the students with whom
we work still_want to believe in
a just, honest, and sensitive
America.
But our military engagement in Vietnam now stands
as a denial of so much that is
best in our society...An end to
the war will not solve our proof it. Up to one-half of college
blems on or off campus. It will
students belong to either a fraterhov.ever permit us to work more
nity or sorority, while a great
effectively in EV., port of more
majority have interests in music,
peaceful priorities."
poetry, art, and philosophy.
Motivations for using inarihuana
The stateme'' was mailed to
are many and sometimes complex,
President Nixon ...id Congressto be sure, there is use simply
ional leaders OctobT 11. The
for 'kicks.' But for some indivi- statement did not specify a time
duals marihuana use may a l s o be limit on withdrawal, but called
symbolic of their separation from for a "stepped-up timetable."
parental or authoritarian control.'
Among those signing were the
For many, use is dey to belong-] presidents of Brandeis, Oberlin,
ing to a special group. For those Columbia,
Cornell,
Antioch,
who are emotionally unstable, the Swarthmore, Princeton, Tufts,
drug may seem to provide what- New York University, Boston
ever it takes to cope with college College, University of Chicago,
pressures. And a l s o it is the Amherst, Drexel Institute of
1969 version of the forbidden
Technology,
MIT,
Focdham,
fruit in the Garden of Eden.
Villanova, and Vassar.

Drugs: Overplayed and Overcondemned
first of four
Drugs, like s e x , have been
overplayed and overcondemned.
They have become forbidden
fruits, and forbidden fruits are
always tempting. Movies, magaz i n e s , and newspapers have by
condemning them and constantly
writing about them, made them
sound s o exciting and so appealing. Everyone wants to try them.
At present the most popular illicit drug encountered on the campus is marihuana. It is a l s o the
drug about which most misinformation e x i s t s .
People who are not informed
ustially associate the smoking of

marihuana with people who have
long hair and sit around in dimly
lit rooms and p a s s a marihuana
cigarette, or 'joint,' around a
circle. This is as far from the
truth as the misbelief that connects marihuana smoking and
the use of heroin.
Here, as in any other place •
around the country, the people
who smoke marihuana cannot be
determined by means of appearance, social background, mental
stability or other misused classification. The fact is that s o many
people are using this drug that if
any attempt of classification
would be made, then it would
have to be said that marihuana
users would be clean cut, con-

servative, 'All-American' types.
Marihuana is smoked in a variety
of ways and is smoked in places
ranging from behind the field
house to sitting in a car in front
of President Parson's house.
Most of the potheads come from
a
conservative,
middle-class
family background. Almost all
are brought up in one of the organized religions, but there is a
feeling that the best way to approach religion is on an individual and personal basis. Only a
very small percentage of parents
know that their offspring smoke
marihuana. And these parents
are more concerned with the penalties involved with the use of
the drug than the actual smoking

Harriers Capture 8th Win
By Downing MiUersville
A fine team effort by the Bald
E a g l e s of Lock Haven State offset a superb individual effort on
the part of M i l l e r s v i l l e ' s Bob
Brown a s the LHS harriers picked up their eighth win by a 23-32
score Saturday in MiUersville.
The E a g l e s ' Dave Mosebrook
and Steve P o d e a i n v ran neck and
neck with Brown for 2'7 miles,
but Brown's superiority on the
hills allowed him to take ever the
lead. Mosebrook and Podgajny
dinsihed in the s e c o n d and third
s p o t s . Brown broke the course
record by 19 s e c o n d s and Mosebrook and Podgajny a l s o ran
faster than anyone had before on
the hilly 4.7 mile c o u r s e .
Mike Borowski jumped out right
behind the front three runners,
and held that position through
the race finishing fourth for LHS
Nibs Gcrdan w a s the next fin-

isher for the Bald Eagles placing
fifth.
A ninth place finish by Harry
Smeltz iced Ihe cake for LHS.
Running on badly blistered feet.
Smeltz held his position throughout the r a c e .
The E a g l e s were without the
s e r v i c e s of injured captain Keith
Rider and Carl Klingatnan, stoj)ped by s i c k n e s s .
C o a c h Jim Dolan was e n t h u s i a s t i c about his team's pcrfwmance. In commenting, he s a i d :
" G r e a t meet! T h i s was our toughe s t dual meet of the s e a s o n and
our men really came through. At
the one and two mile marks our
team w a s behind, but then Nibs
moved up into fifth place and
that put u s in front to s t a y .
MiUersville h a s a strong team
and will b e a definite contender
fctf the conference t i t l e . "

" D a v e and Steve looked great
today a s they usually d o . Mike
looked better today than ever —
moving out fast and holding his
position. With two more weeks
of training we will be ready for
s t a t e s . It will be a real c o n t e s t ! "
The Eagle harriers next meet is
Saturday, at Juniata C o l l e g e .
rhe results:
1.
Bob Brown
M 24:45
2.
Dave Mosebrook LH 24:59
3.
Steve Podgajny LH 25:03
4.
Mike Borowski
LH 25:58
5.
Nibs Gordon
LH 26:09
6. Bob Girvin
M 26:18
7.(tie) Bob Shank
M 26:28

Mark Maurer
9. Harry Smeltz
10. Mike Bowers
Other LH
13. Steve Harnish
15. George Bower

M

26:28

LH 27:11
M 27:21
28:01
28:46

HEAD: Jim Sleicher (above) uses his head in directing the ball to one of his teammates, while in the left picture LHS goalie Bruce Parkhill blocks a Slippery Rock shot
during Saturday afternoon's action. The Eagles jumped out to
a 3-0 halftime lead and then hung on to nip the Rockets 3-2
bringing their season record to 6-2-1.
USINCJ HIS

Open Letter to Sophomores
Sophomores! Show your interest;
share your ideas and give your
support at the sophomore c l a s s
meeting, which a s P r e s i d e n t Joe
Castagnola announced, will be
held on Wednesday night, 8:30 pm
in North HaU lounge. Vice-president Tom Olson s t a t e d that the

LHS goalie Bruce Parkhill blocks a Slippery Rock shot during action Saturday afternoon

New Beatles' Album ' A b b e y Lane' Dissected
By Kingfish McMichael
College Press Service
(CPS) - What the hell do you
say about the B e a t l e s at this
date? Every new r e l e a s e , single
or album, is d i s s e c t e d , inspected, sometimes rejected, usually
accepted, but never neglected.
Not being one to ignore tradition
( u n l e s s I feel like it), what
follows
is
an
introductory
mystery tour of their new album.
Abbey Road, the title of which
is taken from the street in
London's
St.
John's
Woods
where
the
E M.I
recording
studios are located. T h i s has
been the birthplace of almost
every song the group has ever
done since " L o v e Me D o , "
their very first s i n g l e .

"Extremely Biased"
Before we begin, let me s a y
that I have b e e n extremely b i a s ed in favor of the B e a t l e s through
six years of the b e s t music this
side of Alber H a l l , s o don't
expect anything like a unilateral
Richard Goldstein rejection on
the grounds that I c a n ' t s e e the
forest for the t r e e s . The L P
contains 16 songs of varying
length, 13 of which are written
by Lennon and McCartney, s o
we'll all be racking our brains
trying to come up with interpretations a t least until Decemr
ber, when their next album will
be out.
I couldn't care l e s s
that there's a lot to dig for
here, because without trying too
hard, there's a lot to dig:

"Come Together"
•'Come T o g e t h e r " — Simg by
John, this s t a r t s out as a t a k e off on Chuck Berry's " Y o u C a n ' t
Catch M e , " but you soon realize
there's more t o it than just that.
The lyrics are "Highway 6 1 "
vintage and are open to much
interpretation, but we know what
h e ' s saying j u s t from the t i t l e ,
don't we brothers and s i s t e r s ?
" S o m e t h i n g " — Written and
sung by George Harrison. T h i s
is the A-side of the single taken
from the album with "Come

L

T o g e t h e r " as the flip. Generally recognized a s George's b e s t
song to d a t e , i t ' s a love opus
which sounds similar to " B l u e
J a y Way" but with good atmospheric guitar and some phasing
(sounds like a marble rolling
through a pipe.)

Rinky-Tink Tale
" M a x w e l l ' s Silver Hammer" —
H e r e ' s one you can play with for
awhile.
A rinkv-tink innocent
sounding tale sung by Paul ii.
his good-time " H o n e y P i e " —
"When I'm 6 4 " voice, but i t ' s
all a n elaborately constructed
ironic setting for some real downhome v i o l e n c e .
You s e e , the
hammer " c a m e down on his head
. . . made sure he w a s d e a d . "
Love the way that one syllaWe
words like " J o a n " and ' s c e n e "
become
" Jo-ho-hohoan"
and
" s c e - h e - h e - h e n e " in the style
of the late Buddy Holly.
" O h ! D a r l i n g " — Paul sings
of true love in a straight 1950's
rock progress ion s o reminiscent
of " I n the Still of the N i g h t "
and " E a r t h A n g e l . " '^i.here are
campy, rave-up sections using
some of the same words and
intensity as " D o n ' t Let Me
Down."
" O c t o p u s ' s Garden" — Ringo
sings of a place he'd like to go
(in his yellow submarine?) where
" w e ' l l be so happy. . .no one to
tell us what to d o . " The lyrics
are rather medicore bi.t i t ' s s u c h
an optimistic song witu beautiful
Lennon-McCartney harmony that
up-and-coming composer Richard
Starkey may be forgiven.

Long Monotonous Song
"••TWni.nt You (She's s o H e a v y ) "
—A very long, monotonous song
with not too many words sung by
John.
I t ' s this album's "Why
Don't We Do It in the R o a d " but
i t ' s four or five times a s long
a s " R o a d " and t h a t ' s too b a d .
You might not hate this but then
again you won't walk around
humming i t .
"Here
Comes
the
Sun,"

George's other contribution is a
which h a s Paul singing to a
d e l i c a t e tune with great crashing
beautiful melody that will quickcymbals and a 12-string guitar
ly become a favorite. P o s s i b l y
riff right out of " B a d g e " by
the most gorgeous piece of music
Cream on which George played.
in the album is " G o l d e n Slum" B e c a u s e " — Entire song is
b e r s , " a string thing with Paul
sung in close harmony, which is
singing like he did on " Y e s t e r something they haven't done in
d a y . " Wish that was longer.
a long time. If you're a Beatle
"Carry That Weight"
freak this will remind you of
" Y e s It I s " from " B e a t l e s V I . "
" C a r r y that Weight" is just a
" Y o u Never Give Me Your
bridge between " S l u m b e r s " and
Money"
— Typically
tender
a reprise of " Y o u Never Give
McCartney
ballad,
but
that
'Me
Your Money" and between
changes at the bridge to Honky
"Money"
and " T h e E n d . "
Tonk piano, accompanying P a u l ' s
"
W
e
i
g
h
t
"
is
only one line re" L a d y Madonna" voice.
After
peated and you can picture the
the bridge it becomes another
melody with the line " 1 , 2, 3, 4 , Roman legions marching into
5, 6, 7, all good children go t o the s u n s e t with it playing in
the background. At l a s t we're at
H e a v e n . " Weird.
" T h e E n d " with Paul singing
" A n d in the end, the love you
Side Two Is Medley
take is equal to the love you
1 ne rest of side two i s a mcdly m a k e . " Never thought about it
of seven songs that seem to have
that way before, but t h e r e ' s a
no cohesive theme, but most of
lot to think about on " A b b e y
the parts of the whole stand up_' R o a d " if you're s o inclined.
very well on their individual
Enjoy the s i g h t s along the way;
merits. " S u n K i n g " s t a r t s it off
getting there is half the fun.
in a gentle, romantic mood with
soft harmony dominated by John.
There is much concern these
A nice touch is a chorus sung
days about bad spelling by the
in Spanish and/or Italian.
younger generation.
For in" M e a n Mr. Mustard" is Lennon stance, a certain coUege senior
at h i s best, singing of a c h e a p , may well be a most bewildered
mean, dirty old man and h i s young man. Finding that he had
s i s t e r Pam who we learn i s left h i s dungarees a t home, he
" P o l y t h e n e P a m . " T h i s shcsrt wrote:
" D e a r Mother, Please
p a s s a g e has got to be a tribute send me my g e n e s . "
She ret o The WHO, what with chorded plied: " D e a r Son, If you don't
guitar lifted out of " T o m m y . " have them by now, there i s noNext
comes " S h e Came In thing I can do about i t . "
Through the Bathroom Window" Reader's Digest

Weaver & Probst

purpose of the meeting will be
the creation of a ne»i organized
sophomore c l a s s that emphasizes
more student participation.
The main idea that wilt be
presented i s the organization of
executive, s o c i a l , fiscal and
election committees. These committees will be designed to
promote more student interest
and participation.
However, this and many other
ideas will remain intangible and
unattainable dreams without your
co-operation and concern. Everyo n e ' s help and participation are
needed.
I t ' s e a s y to be indifferent^
unconcerned
and
completely
detached from w h a t ' s going on
about you. But i s n ' t this being
overly self-centered and selfish?
If you think it i s , bag that indifferent attitude! Get involved!
Care a lot! Give more than_ a
damn! Give of yourself! Everyone
come to the meeting and help
improve YOUR c l a s s !

jEagi e Eye featwe sta^ iMMtiBg today at 1:00 in the PIfB.
Harvard's legendary " C o p e y "
was asked to give an imaginary
answer to a hypothetical q u e s tion. He replied promptly, " N o t
much."
"WeU, t h e n , " he w a s
challenged, "What was the question?"
With equal alacrity.
Professor
Charles
Townsend
replied, "How much do professors k n o w ? " Reader's
Digest

.Our Specialty
Roast B**l
S«rv«
CAMPUS CASINO

SrOWf HOUSE

PIZZA
Pizza —
15« a slice
Tues.

nite

Pizza—10
spe 'al
a

slice

Your Preferred Men's S t o r e ^
Tuesday, Oct. 28, 196S

"^^V

^

^

2 0 % Storewide Discount
6:30-10:00 OBly

Will deliver orders over $5
Rt. 220 Hogan Blvd.
748-3277

Media of