BHeiney
Fri, 06/30/2023 - 16:38
Edited Text
i*J^
LHS Students To
Appear in Court
Four LHS students allegedly
involved in a s e r i e s of SCC
bookstore robberies appeared
before
Alderman
Samuel S.
Walker Wednesday and were
ordered to court.
Charged with burglary, larceny,
and receiving stolen goods,
Raymond F . Z a l e , 18, represented by Allan W. Lugg, entered no
plea.
Appearing on charges of receiving stolen goods, Robert
Bannister, Gary Sheruda, and
J a c o b Villella were a l s o represented by Mr. Lugg and entered
no plea.
At the requestof attorney Lugg,
charges of receiving stolen goods
against Louis Martarano were
dropped due to lack of sufficient
evidence. Trooper Daniel S. Wilt
criminal investigator, of the
Pennsylvania
State
Police
served a s prosecutor and concurred with Mr. Lugg's request.
All four were r e l e a s e d under
nominal bail and will appear
before the next term of Clinton
County court .
Monroe
Hurwitz,
bookstore
manager, testified that a rough
inventory revealed that three
c l a s s rings, three j a c k e t s , a
beer mug, and records were
missing
after
an
attempted
entry on August 4 .
A c c e s s to the bookstore had
been gained by pushing out the
false ceiling of an adjacent hall
and crawling through the ceiling
framework and dropping down
inside the bookstore.
Fellowships To Be Offered
In Education an Urban Affairs
Inquiries about the Danforth
Graduate F e l l o w s h i p s , to be
•awarded in March, 1970, are to
be submitted before Wednesday,
October 1, 1969.
Interested
students
should contact the
local campus r e p r e s e n t a t i v e , C .
Herbert L a r s o n , J r . , director of
Events Planned
The P h y s i c a l Education Majors
club will hold its first social
event at Camp Hate-to-Leave-It
this Simday. The meeting will
be in the form of a picnic from
2:00 to 6:00 pm. There will be
opportunities for student-faculty
interaction through which the
club hopes to promote better
imderstanding and cooperation
within the p h y s i c a l education
department.
placement, Bentley Hall.
The F e l l o w s h i p s , offered by
the Danforth Foundation of St.
L o u i s , Missouri, are open to
men and women who are seniors
or recent g r a d u a t e s of accredited
colleges in the United S t a t e s ,
who have s e r i o u s interest in
college teaching a s a career,
and who plan t o study for a
Ph.D. in a field common to the
undergraduate c o l l e g e .
Applicants may be s i n g l e or married,
must be l e s s than thirty years
of age at the time of application,
and may not have undertaken
any graduate or
professional
study beyond the b a c c a l a u r e a t e .
Danforth Graduate Fellows are
eligible for four y e a r s of financ i a l a s s i s t a n c e , with a maximum
armual living stipend of $2400
for single F e l l o w s and $2950
for married F e l l o w s , plus tuition
and f e e s .
Dependency allowa n c e s are a v a i l a b l e . Financial
need is not a condition for consideration.
There is a l s o a program planned for Sunday, September 30 a t
7:00 pm in Bentley Lounge which
The Danforth Foundation, crewill feature s p e a k e r s d i s c u s s i n g
the purposes and functions of the ated by the late Mr. and Mrs.
Men's Athletic A s s o c i a t i o n , the William H. Danforth in 1927, is
Women's Athletic Association, a philanthropy concerned priand the Women's Athletic and marily with people and v a l u e s .
Recreation A s s o c i a t i o n . Follow- Over the years the work of the
while
oriented
ing the program there will be an Foundation,
these
concerns,
has
important
meeting
affecting toward
taken varied forms depending
local membership.
changing
circumstances
The club is not only open to upon
PE majors but to anyone who and the presence of promising
for
constructive
enjoys participation in physical opportunities
action. Presently the Foundation
activity, whether this interest be
in a t h l e t i c s , coaching, or re- focuses in two major a r e a s , education and urban affairs.
creation.
"HHmE WERE YOU . . .
Son: Dad, remember that legend
of ' L o c k e d Haven' you told me
about before 1 left for college?
Well, in my sociology c l a s s
we've been studying groups of
people of the ' 6 0 s . The students of Locked Haven have
been the topic of several lectures and d i s c u s s i o n s . Would you
like me to tell you what I've
learned?
Father: Certainly son, I have a
great interest in that institution
which stifled my education.
Son: I questioned in our l a s t
c o n v e r s a t i o n whether LHS students allowed tradition to rise
from the dead. From what I've
heaid, tradition merely took a
N e w Library
Opens Soon
Dr.
Gilmore
Warner,
head
librarian
at
LHS,
announced
that the new library will be
open for limited student a c c e s s early next week. Students
can now obtain their own books
from the s t a c k s until 4:30 pm.
The
library will close early
b e c a u s e of the limited staff.
Dr. Warner a l s o s t a t e d that
full
scale
operation
is
not
immediately
possible
because
the
card
catalogue
is
still
located in the old library building, and the new furniture has
not yet been moved in.
The
only
books
remaining
in the old library are T-Z and
those
in
the
reference
and
reserve
rooms.
Dr.
Warner
stated that it is n e c e s s a r y to
move books ourselves because
of Governor Shaffer's austerity
bill which deprived us of funds
for a professional moving company.
However, the
situation
was
beneficial
in that paid
student
help
was
employed.
Who Did It?; This was the marker found in front of
Wednesday night.
Russell Hall
few days off. (No one more deserved a vacation, though. Aftera l l , tradition had quite a reputation to uphold and had been functioning effectivlely for a straight
28 y e a r s . ) Within a week after
the 'Bitch-In' tragic s i g n s of tradition sneaking around the campus were appearing.
Father: Such a s what, s o n ?
Son: Are you sure you can bear
to hear it?
Father: I'll try!
Son: Traditions next move w a s to
paralyze the s t u d e n t ' s feet. An
open forum concerning the s u c c e s s i o n to the throne a t o p the
mountain was conducted Thursday evening. A grand total of
eleven students gathered in the
auditorium! (Mavbe if free hot
dogs were being offered, the attendence would have equaled
that of the ' B i t c h - I n . ' )
Father: Are ouy trying to tell me
that the students weren't concerned with the incoming president?
Son: Eleven representing the
student body? Imply what you
like Dad. I think the implication is quite obvious, though.
Father: I wish the health officials had known about tradit i o n ' s plague—perhaps they could
have innoculated the students
a g a i n s t it!
Place EE
500
eep those
Bitch Forms
in boxes in^
bitches
FORMS
RETURNED
Raub
and\^^'^'''^
the PUB
Loc/c Haven To Host
Meeting In Tech,
Media s p c i a l i s t s from Penns y l v a n i a ' s 14 s t a t e c o l l e g e s ,
plus Penn State, Temple, P i t t ,
and the University of Pennt.^ 1v a n i a , will convene a t Lock
Haven State College today. The
purp e of the meeting is to
d i s c u s a and examine the use of
media technology as an aid to
classroom instruction.
The meeting is being called by
the Higher Education Division
of the Pennsylvania Learning
R e s o u r c e s A s s o c i a t i o n , which
is composed of media d i r e c t o r s ,
librarians, and television s p e cialists
from
Pennsylvania's
colleges and i m i v e r s i t i e s . The
group meets five times a year
and is meeting at Lock Haven
State for the first time.
Lock
Haven was chosen because of
its successful demonstration of
how a small college with limited
financial resources can e s t a blish an effective program in
instructional technology
The
group will examine Lock Haven's
program in d e t a i l .
Mr. Arthur Reardon, Director
of Learning Resources at Lock
Haven State, will be the h o s t ,
and Dr. V. A. Champa, MiUersville State College, will serve
a s chairman.
Booters Roll over Frankies
On Wed., Sept. 2 4 , the Lock
Haven State soccer team rolled
over an o u t c l a s s e d St. F r a n c i s
squad by a 4 - 1 score on the
F r a n k i e s own field.
E a g l e right wing Mike Minchoff started off the scoring with
only two minutes gone in the
game by drilling in a hard shot
from about fifteen yards out
after being s e t up by right ins i d e Don F a y . J u s t five minutes later center forward Steve
Steffen rammed in a head ball
after Hernan Gonzales crossed
from the left wing.
The Bald Eagle booters continued to dominate the second
quarter but were unable to c a s h
in on any additional s c o r e s .
Lock H a v e n ' s goalie, All-American candidate Bruce Parkhill
performed flawlessly in the goal.
The men from Lock Haven pers i s t e d in controling the game in
the third quarter but numerous
s h o t s just mis sed their mark and
the score remained at 2-0.
T h e Frankies managed their
only marker at 5:00 of the fourth
quarter
when
Larry
Petrick
scored on a fine shot of fifteen
yards from the right wing.
The home team's jubilation
was short-lived when only two
minutes
later Lock
Haven's
"Mr. C o o l , " Don F a y scored
u n a s s i s t e d after dribbling s e v eral opposing fullbacks and the
goalie dizzy and popping in the
back-breaking goal to up the
score to Lock Haven 3 , St.
Francis 1.
The icing on the cake w a s
applied
when Mike
Minchoff
scored his second goal of t h e
day with 6'/2 minutes remaining
when he caught the goalie out
of position being s e t up by a
p a s s from left halfback Tom D e Francesko.
Commenting on the game Herrmann s t a t e d , "We generally
were well satisfied with the
r e s u l t s . We played our type of
game; hard, fast, and unrelenting
pressure.
Our fullback line of
Curt Wolf, Tom E l l i s
and
George Magliaro were outstanding.
Halfbacks Tom DeFranc e s k o , Steve Steffen, Jack Infield, Steve Moyer, Ken Wolf and
Nick Francaloncia continually
broke up St. F r a n c i s formations
before they could get organized
with their daring and spirited
play."
Herrmann a l s o added, "Goalie
Parkhill completed the demoralization-of the F r a n k i e s by heaving stupendous p a s s e s 60 yards
upfield to his waiting linemen
after the rare o c c a s i o n s when
St. Francis managed to get a
shot off."
Herrmann a l s o had praise for
Don Fay and s t a t e d , " F a y
dazzled the frustrated St. Francis
defenders and directed an aggressive
if somewhat erratic
Bald Eagle forward l i n e . "
" T h i s was an important win
for us in that it has given us
momentum to go into Saturday's
game against Edinboro and the
following
Wednesday
against
Lycoming; a l s o at h o m e , " stated
Herrmann.
Ih
o p /n/on
To the edi tor:
Attention: To the Dean, To
the Greeks, or to whom it may
concern
It sounds a s though you have
a bit of a problem. S i s t e r s . But
remember, t h a t ' s your problem
and not mine!
I'm
not j u s t talking about
this fall rush; I'm d e a l i n g with
rush parties in general. Whether
you can find a room large enough
d o e s not concern me. This is
the
Dean's
headache
since
s h e is the one who determines
where you will be located. But
she h a s no right to stick you
in a lounge used predominantly
by
independents.
Futhermore,
she h a s no right to do it without
givi ng prior notice to the dorm
council who then in turn should
present the issue to all concerned.
T o plant a notice on one door,
a few moments before activi t i e s begin, is most s u s p i c i o u s .
To s t a t e that the rush activi t i e s will occupy the building
for two nights (as w a s posted
by the Dean of Women) is even
more
suspicious
since
there
are scheduled parties for Thursday night. Why did s h e s o carefully omit this when it was
announced
that
the
lounges
would
be used only Monday
and T u e s d a y ? To the best of
my limited knowledge this does
not include Thursday.
Don't
waste
your time d e fending
your
argument
with
percentages.
They
were
irrevelent. F i r s t , if you combine
both figures they do not represent half the total number
of
dorm o c c u p a n t s . You do
not comprise a majority. Second,
many students
belong to organizations
and live in the
dorm. Does this mean that we
should conduct ACE or SCC
meetings
in Woolridge? Don't
be absurd. You haven't j u s t i fied your reasoning.
As for " t h e farce connected
with
the other facilities
of
this c a m p u s , " may I humbly
offer a few s u g g e s t i o n s . Why
not try Price Auditorium? It
has been used by s o r o r i t i e s .
Why not try the pool area in the
field h o u s e ? It h a s been u s e d
by a sorority before. What's
wrong with the large conference
room and the lounges in the
union? They are used by the
SCC and although your group
is much louder, I think it would
accommodate you.
Finally may I offer the s u g gestion I think is most pertinent. Why not try to get your
own h o u s e s ? You had them once
imtil someone thought it b e s t
for us a l l to study and s i n g
together.
If you are not sure who to
consult with this problem try
e. e. classifieds
LOST KEYS - Two key.s in a gold
key ring. ContacI Susan Bard, 128
Rus.sell Hall.
LOST — Suede jacket with glas.ses
and I.D. in pocket. Please return
to Wendy Dodson Room 335 McEntire.
LOST - Green AST jacket. Please
return to Louise Krause 3rd floor
McEntire.
HOME FOR SALE
Inquire 320 W. Fourth St. or Phone
748-8602
starting with the Dean of Women.
I know she is very busy-anyone
will tell you that. But try to
make an appointment with her.
If, after a half hour, you are
approached
by a housemother
and secretary, telling you that
your
appointment
has
been
cancelled,
keep plugging-make
a fuss in the proper office.
Perhaps if you're lucky like
I w a s , the Dean will come out
from wherever s h e may b e . She
might say that it was all a big
misunderstanding, and that she
would never cancel an appointment.
shows poor planning and lack
of consideration for the majority
of dorm o c c u p a n t s . If they cannot
find an appropriate place for
you to meet, maybe you shouldn't
meet a t a l l .
AQUA CAPERS
Sunday at 8 pm
Field House Pool
Admission 100
Sponsored by
Lambda Chi Alpha
G-A-R-D-E-N
Editor's
note:
Anti-Anti
E.
We
will
consider
printing
your letter if you would
sign
it.
Sept. 26th thru 3 0 t h
"Libertine"
L.H.S.C. STUDENTS
"The Libertine''
c o m e s a c r o s s i n c r e d i b l y with
wry humor a n d t a s t e . "
harper's bazaar
ONLY. . . .
PAIR
°*
PANTY
FREE
"The
EAGLE EYE CLASSIFIED
Libertine"
LYOWS
DEIi
"SUE"
2
LOCATIONS
444 Bellfnt. Ave. 748-8944
300 E. Main 748-8976
SPECmL... FRUSftf.OHH
GMT
BEEF
BURGeR
$r\BLlVHU'
SUbS.'
Lft«.^E VA-Or
hfso^ *\M*m
HOSE
WHEN YOU OPEN
YOUR
last two minutes against LHS
last year.
LHS will go with the same
offensive
unit
that
started
against Bloomsburg and will
use the same defensive unit with
the exception of Dave Witkowski who is replacing J o e
Mack. Mack tore some knee ligaments in last w e e k ' s opener.
E a g l e head coach Bob Weller
commenting on the Vulcans s t a ted, " T h e y are a big ball c l u b .
We expect them to throw the ball
quite a b i t . " He a l s o added,
"We are expecting better p a s s
coverage
by
our
defensive
backs."
Coach Herrmann's Booters
To Meet Edinboro State
Respectfully,
Janet Urbanelli
itarring
Catherine Spaak
Jean-Louis Trintignani
A
The Bald Eagle gridders will
play host to defending conference
champion,
California
State tomorrow evening a t Spring
Street Stadium.
The Vulcans enter the contest
with an 0-1 record having suffer ed an opening game loss to
Dennis on,
18-7,
while
the
E a g l e s enter the game one up
on the win side with an exciting
28-25 victory over Bloomsburg
l a s t weekend.
Gone from the Vulcan champions h i p team is NAIA p a s s i n g leader , Jeff Petruci. which leaves
a huge gap to fill in the Vulcan
offen.ue. Petruci led California
to a close 20-26 victory in the
to watch to s e e who I can play,
Bald Eagle booters will meet
to s e e who is feeling b e t t e r . "
Edinboro State College
this
Edinboro is relatively new t o
Try to understand that these Saturday on McCollum Field.
things do happen when one is Coach Karl Herrmann will send
soccer a s they started on an
dealing with s o many students. in his usual line up with the
abbreviated schedule last year.
Coach Herrmann is not expecting
You may be asked to keep the p o s s i b l e exception of J a c k Ina highly skilled team but a big
whole
incident quiet, and I field, who is s t i l l
suffering
and rough one.
would if I thought that it would from
pulled
ligaments, and
There will not be a junior
be best for all concerned. But Galen H e s s . Galen received an
1 think it is vital to p a s s help- injury in last Saturday's game
varsitv gane on Saturday but
ful
information
on
to you. against
the entire team will be in u n i Frostburg.
Coach
Just because 19% of Woolridge Herrmann s t a t e d . " I just have
lorm.
is Greek does not mean that it
should be e s t a b l i s h e d a s the
sorority
headquarters.
This
ADVERTISE
LOST Green plaid Woolrich
jacket in PUB Saturday night. If
found
please
call
Jim Allen,
748-2041.
To
Gridders Entertain
Vulcans Tomorrow
SMART
SHOP
CHARGE ACCOUNT
i s c i v i l i z e d a n d b o l d with
1
c h a r a c t e r s e n g a g e d in b i z a r r e
practices."
N.Y. P o s t
BfiRBER M?
•
NEXT TO
LYONS
DEN
3
LHS Students To
Appear in Court
Four LHS students allegedly
involved in a s e r i e s of SCC
bookstore robberies appeared
before
Alderman
Samuel S.
Walker Wednesday and were
ordered to court.
Charged with burglary, larceny,
and receiving stolen goods,
Raymond F . Z a l e , 18, represented by Allan W. Lugg, entered no
plea.
Appearing on charges of receiving stolen goods, Robert
Bannister, Gary Sheruda, and
J a c o b Villella were a l s o represented by Mr. Lugg and entered
no plea.
At the requestof attorney Lugg,
charges of receiving stolen goods
against Louis Martarano were
dropped due to lack of sufficient
evidence. Trooper Daniel S. Wilt
criminal investigator, of the
Pennsylvania
State
Police
served a s prosecutor and concurred with Mr. Lugg's request.
All four were r e l e a s e d under
nominal bail and will appear
before the next term of Clinton
County court .
Monroe
Hurwitz,
bookstore
manager, testified that a rough
inventory revealed that three
c l a s s rings, three j a c k e t s , a
beer mug, and records were
missing
after
an
attempted
entry on August 4 .
A c c e s s to the bookstore had
been gained by pushing out the
false ceiling of an adjacent hall
and crawling through the ceiling
framework and dropping down
inside the bookstore.
Fellowships To Be Offered
In Education an Urban Affairs
Inquiries about the Danforth
Graduate F e l l o w s h i p s , to be
•awarded in March, 1970, are to
be submitted before Wednesday,
October 1, 1969.
Interested
students
should contact the
local campus r e p r e s e n t a t i v e , C .
Herbert L a r s o n , J r . , director of
Events Planned
The P h y s i c a l Education Majors
club will hold its first social
event at Camp Hate-to-Leave-It
this Simday. The meeting will
be in the form of a picnic from
2:00 to 6:00 pm. There will be
opportunities for student-faculty
interaction through which the
club hopes to promote better
imderstanding and cooperation
within the p h y s i c a l education
department.
placement, Bentley Hall.
The F e l l o w s h i p s , offered by
the Danforth Foundation of St.
L o u i s , Missouri, are open to
men and women who are seniors
or recent g r a d u a t e s of accredited
colleges in the United S t a t e s ,
who have s e r i o u s interest in
college teaching a s a career,
and who plan t o study for a
Ph.D. in a field common to the
undergraduate c o l l e g e .
Applicants may be s i n g l e or married,
must be l e s s than thirty years
of age at the time of application,
and may not have undertaken
any graduate or
professional
study beyond the b a c c a l a u r e a t e .
Danforth Graduate Fellows are
eligible for four y e a r s of financ i a l a s s i s t a n c e , with a maximum
armual living stipend of $2400
for single F e l l o w s and $2950
for married F e l l o w s , plus tuition
and f e e s .
Dependency allowa n c e s are a v a i l a b l e . Financial
need is not a condition for consideration.
There is a l s o a program planned for Sunday, September 30 a t
7:00 pm in Bentley Lounge which
The Danforth Foundation, crewill feature s p e a k e r s d i s c u s s i n g
the purposes and functions of the ated by the late Mr. and Mrs.
Men's Athletic A s s o c i a t i o n , the William H. Danforth in 1927, is
Women's Athletic Association, a philanthropy concerned priand the Women's Athletic and marily with people and v a l u e s .
Recreation A s s o c i a t i o n . Follow- Over the years the work of the
while
oriented
ing the program there will be an Foundation,
these
concerns,
has
important
meeting
affecting toward
taken varied forms depending
local membership.
changing
circumstances
The club is not only open to upon
PE majors but to anyone who and the presence of promising
for
constructive
enjoys participation in physical opportunities
action. Presently the Foundation
activity, whether this interest be
in a t h l e t i c s , coaching, or re- focuses in two major a r e a s , education and urban affairs.
creation.
"HHmE WERE YOU . . .
Son: Dad, remember that legend
of ' L o c k e d Haven' you told me
about before 1 left for college?
Well, in my sociology c l a s s
we've been studying groups of
people of the ' 6 0 s . The students of Locked Haven have
been the topic of several lectures and d i s c u s s i o n s . Would you
like me to tell you what I've
learned?
Father: Certainly son, I have a
great interest in that institution
which stifled my education.
Son: I questioned in our l a s t
c o n v e r s a t i o n whether LHS students allowed tradition to rise
from the dead. From what I've
heaid, tradition merely took a
N e w Library
Opens Soon
Dr.
Gilmore
Warner,
head
librarian
at
LHS,
announced
that the new library will be
open for limited student a c c e s s early next week. Students
can now obtain their own books
from the s t a c k s until 4:30 pm.
The
library will close early
b e c a u s e of the limited staff.
Dr. Warner a l s o s t a t e d that
full
scale
operation
is
not
immediately
possible
because
the
card
catalogue
is
still
located in the old library building, and the new furniture has
not yet been moved in.
The
only
books
remaining
in the old library are T-Z and
those
in
the
reference
and
reserve
rooms.
Dr.
Warner
stated that it is n e c e s s a r y to
move books ourselves because
of Governor Shaffer's austerity
bill which deprived us of funds
for a professional moving company.
However, the
situation
was
beneficial
in that paid
student
help
was
employed.
Who Did It?; This was the marker found in front of
Wednesday night.
Russell Hall
few days off. (No one more deserved a vacation, though. Aftera l l , tradition had quite a reputation to uphold and had been functioning effectivlely for a straight
28 y e a r s . ) Within a week after
the 'Bitch-In' tragic s i g n s of tradition sneaking around the campus were appearing.
Father: Such a s what, s o n ?
Son: Are you sure you can bear
to hear it?
Father: I'll try!
Son: Traditions next move w a s to
paralyze the s t u d e n t ' s feet. An
open forum concerning the s u c c e s s i o n to the throne a t o p the
mountain was conducted Thursday evening. A grand total of
eleven students gathered in the
auditorium! (Mavbe if free hot
dogs were being offered, the attendence would have equaled
that of the ' B i t c h - I n . ' )
Father: Are ouy trying to tell me
that the students weren't concerned with the incoming president?
Son: Eleven representing the
student body? Imply what you
like Dad. I think the implication is quite obvious, though.
Father: I wish the health officials had known about tradit i o n ' s plague—perhaps they could
have innoculated the students
a g a i n s t it!
Place EE
500
eep those
Bitch Forms
in boxes in^
bitches
FORMS
RETURNED
Raub
and\^^'^'''^
the PUB
Loc/c Haven To Host
Meeting In Tech,
Media s p c i a l i s t s from Penns y l v a n i a ' s 14 s t a t e c o l l e g e s ,
plus Penn State, Temple, P i t t ,
and the University of Pennt.^ 1v a n i a , will convene a t Lock
Haven State College today. The
purp e of the meeting is to
d i s c u s a and examine the use of
media technology as an aid to
classroom instruction.
The meeting is being called by
the Higher Education Division
of the Pennsylvania Learning
R e s o u r c e s A s s o c i a t i o n , which
is composed of media d i r e c t o r s ,
librarians, and television s p e cialists
from
Pennsylvania's
colleges and i m i v e r s i t i e s . The
group meets five times a year
and is meeting at Lock Haven
State for the first time.
Lock
Haven was chosen because of
its successful demonstration of
how a small college with limited
financial resources can e s t a blish an effective program in
instructional technology
The
group will examine Lock Haven's
program in d e t a i l .
Mr. Arthur Reardon, Director
of Learning Resources at Lock
Haven State, will be the h o s t ,
and Dr. V. A. Champa, MiUersville State College, will serve
a s chairman.
Booters Roll over Frankies
On Wed., Sept. 2 4 , the Lock
Haven State soccer team rolled
over an o u t c l a s s e d St. F r a n c i s
squad by a 4 - 1 score on the
F r a n k i e s own field.
E a g l e right wing Mike Minchoff started off the scoring with
only two minutes gone in the
game by drilling in a hard shot
from about fifteen yards out
after being s e t up by right ins i d e Don F a y . J u s t five minutes later center forward Steve
Steffen rammed in a head ball
after Hernan Gonzales crossed
from the left wing.
The Bald Eagle booters continued to dominate the second
quarter but were unable to c a s h
in on any additional s c o r e s .
Lock H a v e n ' s goalie, All-American candidate Bruce Parkhill
performed flawlessly in the goal.
The men from Lock Haven pers i s t e d in controling the game in
the third quarter but numerous
s h o t s just mis sed their mark and
the score remained at 2-0.
T h e Frankies managed their
only marker at 5:00 of the fourth
quarter
when
Larry
Petrick
scored on a fine shot of fifteen
yards from the right wing.
The home team's jubilation
was short-lived when only two
minutes
later Lock
Haven's
"Mr. C o o l , " Don F a y scored
u n a s s i s t e d after dribbling s e v eral opposing fullbacks and the
goalie dizzy and popping in the
back-breaking goal to up the
score to Lock Haven 3 , St.
Francis 1.
The icing on the cake w a s
applied
when Mike
Minchoff
scored his second goal of t h e
day with 6'/2 minutes remaining
when he caught the goalie out
of position being s e t up by a
p a s s from left halfback Tom D e Francesko.
Commenting on the game Herrmann s t a t e d , "We generally
were well satisfied with the
r e s u l t s . We played our type of
game; hard, fast, and unrelenting
pressure.
Our fullback line of
Curt Wolf, Tom E l l i s
and
George Magliaro were outstanding.
Halfbacks Tom DeFranc e s k o , Steve Steffen, Jack Infield, Steve Moyer, Ken Wolf and
Nick Francaloncia continually
broke up St. F r a n c i s formations
before they could get organized
with their daring and spirited
play."
Herrmann a l s o added, "Goalie
Parkhill completed the demoralization-of the F r a n k i e s by heaving stupendous p a s s e s 60 yards
upfield to his waiting linemen
after the rare o c c a s i o n s when
St. Francis managed to get a
shot off."
Herrmann a l s o had praise for
Don Fay and s t a t e d , " F a y
dazzled the frustrated St. Francis
defenders and directed an aggressive
if somewhat erratic
Bald Eagle forward l i n e . "
" T h i s was an important win
for us in that it has given us
momentum to go into Saturday's
game against Edinboro and the
following
Wednesday
against
Lycoming; a l s o at h o m e , " stated
Herrmann.
Ih
o p /n/on
To the edi tor:
Attention: To the Dean, To
the Greeks, or to whom it may
concern
It sounds a s though you have
a bit of a problem. S i s t e r s . But
remember, t h a t ' s your problem
and not mine!
I'm
not j u s t talking about
this fall rush; I'm d e a l i n g with
rush parties in general. Whether
you can find a room large enough
d o e s not concern me. This is
the
Dean's
headache
since
s h e is the one who determines
where you will be located. But
she h a s no right to stick you
in a lounge used predominantly
by
independents.
Futhermore,
she h a s no right to do it without
givi ng prior notice to the dorm
council who then in turn should
present the issue to all concerned.
T o plant a notice on one door,
a few moments before activi t i e s begin, is most s u s p i c i o u s .
To s t a t e that the rush activi t i e s will occupy the building
for two nights (as w a s posted
by the Dean of Women) is even
more
suspicious
since
there
are scheduled parties for Thursday night. Why did s h e s o carefully omit this when it was
announced
that
the
lounges
would
be used only Monday
and T u e s d a y ? To the best of
my limited knowledge this does
not include Thursday.
Don't
waste
your time d e fending
your
argument
with
percentages.
They
were
irrevelent. F i r s t , if you combine
both figures they do not represent half the total number
of
dorm o c c u p a n t s . You do
not comprise a majority. Second,
many students
belong to organizations
and live in the
dorm. Does this mean that we
should conduct ACE or SCC
meetings
in Woolridge? Don't
be absurd. You haven't j u s t i fied your reasoning.
As for " t h e farce connected
with
the other facilities
of
this c a m p u s , " may I humbly
offer a few s u g g e s t i o n s . Why
not try Price Auditorium? It
has been used by s o r o r i t i e s .
Why not try the pool area in the
field h o u s e ? It h a s been u s e d
by a sorority before. What's
wrong with the large conference
room and the lounges in the
union? They are used by the
SCC and although your group
is much louder, I think it would
accommodate you.
Finally may I offer the s u g gestion I think is most pertinent. Why not try to get your
own h o u s e s ? You had them once
imtil someone thought it b e s t
for us a l l to study and s i n g
together.
If you are not sure who to
consult with this problem try
e. e. classifieds
LOST KEYS - Two key.s in a gold
key ring. ContacI Susan Bard, 128
Rus.sell Hall.
LOST — Suede jacket with glas.ses
and I.D. in pocket. Please return
to Wendy Dodson Room 335 McEntire.
LOST - Green AST jacket. Please
return to Louise Krause 3rd floor
McEntire.
HOME FOR SALE
Inquire 320 W. Fourth St. or Phone
748-8602
starting with the Dean of Women.
I know she is very busy-anyone
will tell you that. But try to
make an appointment with her.
If, after a half hour, you are
approached
by a housemother
and secretary, telling you that
your
appointment
has
been
cancelled,
keep plugging-make
a fuss in the proper office.
Perhaps if you're lucky like
I w a s , the Dean will come out
from wherever s h e may b e . She
might say that it was all a big
misunderstanding, and that she
would never cancel an appointment.
shows poor planning and lack
of consideration for the majority
of dorm o c c u p a n t s . If they cannot
find an appropriate place for
you to meet, maybe you shouldn't
meet a t a l l .
AQUA CAPERS
Sunday at 8 pm
Field House Pool
Admission 100
Sponsored by
Lambda Chi Alpha
G-A-R-D-E-N
Editor's
note:
Anti-Anti
E.
We
will
consider
printing
your letter if you would
sign
it.
Sept. 26th thru 3 0 t h
"Libertine"
L.H.S.C. STUDENTS
"The Libertine''
c o m e s a c r o s s i n c r e d i b l y with
wry humor a n d t a s t e . "
harper's bazaar
ONLY. . . .
PAIR
°*
PANTY
FREE
"The
EAGLE EYE CLASSIFIED
Libertine"
LYOWS
DEIi
"SUE"
2
LOCATIONS
444 Bellfnt. Ave. 748-8944
300 E. Main 748-8976
SPECmL... FRUSftf.OHH
GMT
BEEF
BURGeR
$r\BLlVHU'
SUbS.'
Lft«.^E VA-Or
hfso^ *\M*m
HOSE
WHEN YOU OPEN
YOUR
last two minutes against LHS
last year.
LHS will go with the same
offensive
unit
that
started
against Bloomsburg and will
use the same defensive unit with
the exception of Dave Witkowski who is replacing J o e
Mack. Mack tore some knee ligaments in last w e e k ' s opener.
E a g l e head coach Bob Weller
commenting on the Vulcans s t a ted, " T h e y are a big ball c l u b .
We expect them to throw the ball
quite a b i t . " He a l s o added,
"We are expecting better p a s s
coverage
by
our
defensive
backs."
Coach Herrmann's Booters
To Meet Edinboro State
Respectfully,
Janet Urbanelli
itarring
Catherine Spaak
Jean-Louis Trintignani
A
The Bald Eagle gridders will
play host to defending conference
champion,
California
State tomorrow evening a t Spring
Street Stadium.
The Vulcans enter the contest
with an 0-1 record having suffer ed an opening game loss to
Dennis on,
18-7,
while
the
E a g l e s enter the game one up
on the win side with an exciting
28-25 victory over Bloomsburg
l a s t weekend.
Gone from the Vulcan champions h i p team is NAIA p a s s i n g leader , Jeff Petruci. which leaves
a huge gap to fill in the Vulcan
offen.ue. Petruci led California
to a close 20-26 victory in the
to watch to s e e who I can play,
Bald Eagle booters will meet
to s e e who is feeling b e t t e r . "
Edinboro State College
this
Edinboro is relatively new t o
Try to understand that these Saturday on McCollum Field.
things do happen when one is Coach Karl Herrmann will send
soccer a s they started on an
dealing with s o many students. in his usual line up with the
abbreviated schedule last year.
Coach Herrmann is not expecting
You may be asked to keep the p o s s i b l e exception of J a c k Ina highly skilled team but a big
whole
incident quiet, and I field, who is s t i l l
suffering
and rough one.
would if I thought that it would from
pulled
ligaments, and
There will not be a junior
be best for all concerned. But Galen H e s s . Galen received an
1 think it is vital to p a s s help- injury in last Saturday's game
varsitv gane on Saturday but
ful
information
on
to you. against
the entire team will be in u n i Frostburg.
Coach
Just because 19% of Woolridge Herrmann s t a t e d . " I just have
lorm.
is Greek does not mean that it
should be e s t a b l i s h e d a s the
sorority
headquarters.
This
ADVERTISE
LOST Green plaid Woolrich
jacket in PUB Saturday night. If
found
please
call
Jim Allen,
748-2041.
To
Gridders Entertain
Vulcans Tomorrow
SMART
SHOP
CHARGE ACCOUNT
i s c i v i l i z e d a n d b o l d with
1
c h a r a c t e r s e n g a g e d in b i z a r r e
practices."
N.Y. P o s t
BfiRBER M?
•
NEXT TO
LYONS
DEN
3
Media of