BHeiney
Fri, 06/30/2023 - 17:05
Edited Text
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M M I Tickets
Easter Party
GDI's
Mud
V o l u m e 10
N o . 10
LOCK
National Actors
Stage Greek Play
A Greek comedy, Jgrit^n over
2,000 years ago, was presented to a Lock Haven State
College audience at 8:30 pm on
Wednesday, March 29 in Price
Auditorium. The National Hayers Touring Company's performance of,.;;yiie Birds" by
Aristophanes was the last of the
Fine Arts F ^ y y a l series of 12
events. There was no admission
costs fQj^LHSC students. "The
Birds" was also open to the general public free of charge.
The version of Aristophanes'
classic comedy Msed by the National Players was the "clarified
text", edited b y Walter Kerr,
which presented the original comedy in modern, sensible English.
In preparing the stage version of "The Birds", Kerr assembled all available translations and transformed the Unes
into their fundamental meanings, leaving jokes and comedy
which are understandable to the
20th Century audience, but still
having the flavor of ancient
Poet Vbits
LHSC Campus
An American contemporary
poet will present a reading of his
own works and meet with the college students on Thursday,
March 30.
William Meredith will present
his poems to an audience of college students, faculty and the general public at 7:30 pm in Bentley Hall Lounge. The program is
free of charge.
Mr. Meredith wUl meet in
closed session with Mr. Edward
Hills' Creative Writing and Advanced Composition classes to
hold a discussion with the students. He wUl also discuss his
poems for Mr. Frank Vaughn's
Modern Poetry class on Friday
morning.
A 1940 graduate of Princeton
University, William Meredith
wrote his first poems, "Love
Letters From an Impossible
Land", in 1944. He has had three
other collections published —
"Ships and Other Figures",
"The Open Sea", and "Wreck
ofthe Thresher".
Mr. Meredith is presently a
teacher of writing at Connecticut College; fornnerly he was a
member of the English Department at the University of Hawaii.
Greece in them. From this process, Kerr presents neither anew
play nor a free adaptation; it is
rather a "clarified text" of Aristophanes' original play, "The
Birds".
The National Players Touring Company is a non-profit
theatrical corporation which operated under the University Players. They were founded through
the Speech and Drama Department of Catholic University,
Washington, D. C , thus creating a common background leading to their one outstanding
trademark — teamwork.
This will be the National Players' fourth appearance in this
campus. Dr. Louis Pitchford,
profesqpc Af social sciences at
LHSC, was the faculty member
who, working with the Festival
committee, sponsored the National Players at Lock Haven
State. 1967 marks the 18th consecutive year of appearances for
the National Players Touring
Company.
Six
HAVEN
STATE COLLEGE
Singers
Participate
In Festival
The Pennsylvania College
Choir Festival, a three-day affair, wUl be held at Bloomsburg
State College, March 30 through
April 1. There will be 22 participating colleges, Lock Haven
State included. Non-state schools
such as Temple University, Westminster College, and Seton Hill
College will also take part inthe
festival. Gregg Smith of Ithaca
College, New York, will be the
guest conductor.
Each college is limited to selecting six students to represent
them. Representing LHSC will
be Becky Jones, Judy Saul, Mary
Lou Thornton, Martha McCracken, William Yantz, and
Dennis Gillum.
The uniqueness of the festival
is that the selective choir will be
doing a type of program that
could not be accomplished by
small college choirs. The program will be centered around
double choir music, or eight-part
music, rather than the four-part
music which is done in small
colleges.
Music will be sung in German
aside from Latin. The program
will also be centered around music from practically all historical
periods. The major work will be
"Monteverdi Vespers" (publication of 1610). Also music by Churl
Ives will be presented.
Installation of officers for the
1967-68 academic year of the
Student Cooperative Council will
be held next Wednesday, April 5,
in Bentley Hall Lounge at 7:15
pm. All interested persons are
urged to attend.
M a r c h 3 1 , 1967
NAIA Wrestling
TournamentPage 6, 7, & 8
Of This Issue
Student Wrecks
4'DaY-Old SCC Car
The 4-day-old Student Cooperative Council station wagon
was demolished in a two-car accident at 3:30 pm on Saturday,
March 18, during the NALA
Wrestling Tournament. The driver of the Lock Haven State College car was slightly injured.
LHSC, Bloom Debaters Tie
The vehicle, driven by C. Raymond Huff, a sophomore at
Lock Haven State, was being
used as a "Courtesy Car" for the
wrestlers in the tournament. It
was a 1967 Rambler "Ambassador" station wagon with only
400 miles on it. The car, which
had been delivered to Lock Haven State the Tuesday evening
before the accident, was damaged to the amount of $2,700.
Police reported that Huff apparently had been driving down
Sarras alley behind the Clinton
County Court House on East
Water Street when a dog darted
out in front of him. Swerving to
the right to miss the animal, Huff
hit a telephone pole and, veering
off the pole, smashed into a n old
garage of triple-thickness brick
walls, damaging a 1966 Plymouth sedan parked inside,
which was owned by Ann V. Kyler. The accident resulted in $300
in damages to the garage, owned
by James T. Smith, a Lock Haven lawyer, besides the costs to
the SCC wagon, and $15 to the
Kyler car.
Rich Castle, newly-elected
president of the Student Cooperative Council, owner of the car,
on whom the responsibility of
either replacing or repairing the
demolished car wUl rest, commented that ". . .the main thing,
nobody got hurt and it looks like
we wUl have to replace it."
Huff was unavailable for
comment because of the Spring
vacation.
Don't Forget
Spring weekend wUl be AprU
14, 15, and 16. Tickets for the
Association concert are on sale
now at the bookstore. The cost
is $1.50 for LHSC students a n d
$2.00 for aU others.
IN THIS ISSUE!
The Lock Haven State Debate
Team lost a close contest to
Bloomsburg State on March 14,
at 7:00 pm. The topic being discussed was "Resolved: T h a t
Pennsylvania Should Lower Its
Legal Drinking Age to 18."
The affirmative team consisted of Greg Santoro and Bon-
nie McKernan lost to the Bloomsburg debaters. Mary Lou Wenrich and Richard Thompson, the
speakers for the negative, were
successful in defeating their opponents. Barb Minso acted a s mistress of ceremonies for the
affu-mative team.
Each speaker had the oppor-
tunity to give two speeches. First
was an eight-minute constructive
speech, which was later followed
by a flve-minute rebuttal. The
judge for the affirmative was Dr.
Klens and for the negative was
Dr. Robinson.
Shown above is Bonnie McKernan.
Sewerese Bugs
2
Lingle's Logic
3
Meal Tickets and Mud . . . . 4
Letters
4
NAIA Wrestling Tournament
5. 6,7
Sports Crossword Puzzle . .7
Easter Party
8
Coming Up!
AprU 2—SCC Movie
"When Comedy Was
King"
AprU 2—Sigma Kappa Spring
Event
AprU 6—Band Concert
AprU 7 - E E E Weekend
AprU 7—Next Eagle Eye
SINGER
fA8ei(iff(UU
This Weefc Only!
DUCK CLOTH
Prints and
• Solids.
All Cotton.
36" wide.
6 9 t ya
Reg. 89?
Bugs Damage
Eagle Eye Office
Grinnell College
Awarded Grant
Grinnell, la. - (I. P.) - GrinneU College has been awarded a
$400,000 grant by the Alfred P.
Sloan Foundadon. One of 20
A regiment of South Sewerese
private, four-year arts and scibugs led by Stale Mouth Dolittle
ence colleges in the nation sharinflicted heavy damage on the
ing a $7.5-minion Sloan CoUege
Eagle Eye office today, and
Science Program grant, GrinneU
wounded several of the staff
wUl receive $80,000 a year for a
members.
five - year period beginning in
A spokesman for the Eagle
1967.
Eye told news reporters this
The funds wUl be channeled
morning that the South Sewerinto
several areas of GrinneU's
ese had apparenUy infUtrated
science program with the objecthe offlce from the unionized zone
tive of continuing the upgrading
just south ofthe Slo-peegym traU
of the over-all program.
on the first floor of Sullivan Hall.
"The Uberal arts colleges,
The South Sewerest extensively
which traditionally have been the
damaged the Eagle Eye C-raundergraduate training ground
tions in an effort to starve out the
for many high school science
staff, thereby eliciting their surteachers and for a significant
render. A South Sewerese spokespercentage of future scientists,
man claimed that the editor's cofhave been in danger recently of
fee was poisoned and that the
faUing behind in the competition
Business manager's Coke was
with large universities, governbombed by malaria particles.
ment, and industry for top-flight
This war wUl not be won un- faculty and students," he noted
less it is escalated!
Each of the 20 participating
coUeges wUl pursue its own individual program of upgrading
science education. Among the
uses to which the college wUl put
its Foundation funds: provision
of more frequent research leaves
fo enable faculty to "stay alive"
professionally; use of postdoctoral fellows to enable it to enrich, and to have the experience
of teaching in, the liberal arts
environment; and curriculum revision and development of new
courses.
Precise limitations as to the
use of the Sloan funds have not
yet been received. "However, our
application was broadly based,
covering a number of academic
areas and projects designed to
improve what is afready a very
fine program of science instruction," James O. Avison, GrinneU's director of development,
said.
The key sections of our proposal to the foundation were the
concept of student involvement
with faculty in actual research
undertakings, the establishmentof a research study fund for support of summer research projects and faculty summer study
programs, and the acceleration
of instructional budgets."
You'll go far
in The
Peace Corps.
Latin America,
Africa, Asia, etc.
The Peace Corps
Washington, D.C. 20525
n Please send me information,
n Please send me an application.
Name
Address.
City
State.
Krieger Conducts Art Study
Concerned about the dependency of students on teacher
guidance for everything and the
consequent effect of the development of their creative potential,
Dr. Myrrl Krieger, associate professor of art at Lock Haven State
KL?.
$16.00 to $40.00
Soft stars on
a white sky
Suggestive of a cool summer's eve . . . or a walk
in the shade. A suit that
strikes a romantic mood,
with its "starred" printed
effect. . . the jacket and
" A " skirt beautifully
fashioned by the hand of
Seaton Hall. In 100%
rayon.
_fc-;n5-
.Zip Code.
Published as a public service in cooperation
with The Advertising Council and the
International Newspaper Advertising Executivi
PR2Fession:
SlDOESir
Priced From
.
^-.%::'-'
itLl^
J^K*.
L
"FIRCT OFF - I A A TI?/IWT10H;AI.I5T. "
College, last year undertook a
study on the correlation of students' abUity to organize thefr
leisure and work hours, a n d thefr
creative growth.
This is an appropriate study
to be undertaken by an art department because the abUity to
organize has been termed a creative characteristic by research,
and the fostering of the indedent thinking and behavior is a
major goal in art and art education.
Each of three insfructors in the
art department had a confrol
group and an experimental
group. The confrol groups were
taught in the traditional manner.
Due dates were given for aU assignments and tests were announced in advance. The experimental groups were given a written activity perspectus with no
assigned due dates, and tests
were unannounced.
The flndings were three pronged:
1. The experimental condition
did not restrict the students' creativity. Insfructors m a y give assignments with no due dates without fear of students doing inferior work.
2. The big jump in creativity
scores in some of theclasses point
to the conclusion that wiUi some
teachers, structured conditions
do not necessarUy promote students' creative growth.
3. In classes where the experimental scores showed a gain,
structured conditions favor a
creative climate and may provide challenge and 8|tipnulation.
I
mn
by FRED LINGLE
Compus Humor
0u
Senator Carl Curtis of Nebraska has introduced a biU in
the Senate which could have
great effect on all future elections.
Curtis' bill is one which would
regulate the television industry in
reporting election results.
The television industry, like
most others, is a competitive one.
This competitiveness can be seen
in thefr great reliance upon the
television ratings. This competitiveness can be seen in their strife
to present better news programs
to the public. Finally, this competitiveness can be seen in thefr
coverage of election results on
the night of the balloting.
Nevertheless, the national election night coverage is a sham.
The emphasis of the networks is
on speed and not on responsibUity. Among the networks, the criteria for determining the best coverage seems to be on the one who
can call which results fastest.
A typical election night coverage session may go like this: at
7:00 the networks begin thefr
coverage; by 7:15 they make
their nation-wide predictions; by
7:30 they begin electing candidates according to thefr vote
analysis; by 9:00 they announce
that the race in which they formerly elected one person is now
too close to call; by 10:30 they
announce that the other person
has now been elected in the race;
by sign-off time the viewer is uncertain who has been elected. He
wUl have to consult his newspaper the foUowing day to discover who really has won the
Such television frresponsibUity also has its serious effects. In
1960 when vote analysis had
hardly begun a n d stUl had a few
bugs in it, it was able to elect
John Kennedy very early in the
evening; however, the late President could have lost the election
had an insignificant numljer of
voters in key states voted for
Richard Nixon instead. Vote
analysis was wrong in many
areas.
By the 1966 elections, the perfected vote analysis system predicted that the GOP would gain 5
governorships (got 8), 2 Senate
seats (got 3), and25 House seats
(got 47) at most. The networks
were wrong in races from Florida to Alaska. One network was
able to caU a total of 8 key
races wrong.
All this emphasized that the
vote analysis system is not a perfected one. StUl, the networks
seem at ease in calling the races
wrong even before the polls are
closed.
For example, In 1960 the vote
analysis system stated that John
Kennedy had won California before the polls there were closed.
Whether this affected the minds of
the people there who had yet to
vote, we don't know. Yet,thefact
is that Nixon, and not Kennedy,
had won California.
In 1962, 1964, and finaUy in
1966, the networks continued to
caU races in our western states
before the poUs there were closed.
Although the effect of such reporting on the voters is unknown, one might assume that
there is some, especiaUy in the
close races.
Senator Curtis's bUl is one
which would regulate the television election night coverage so
that the networks could not call
a race before all the polls in the
nation are closed. This would
merely postpone the election
night comedy for a few hours in
the interest of the American public. After all, are election night
entertainers like Huntley, Brinkley, Cronkite, and Smith more
important than fafr elections?
Nowadays colleges are emphasizing education. One university has become so strict It won't
allow a basketball player his
letter unless he can tell which
one it is.
At the University of Michigan,
some students rebelled against
the rebellers by starting their
own group, SPASM — the Society for the Prevention of Asinine Student Movements.
The dean of women at a small Texas college received an
urgent call late one evening Informing her of trouble on the
campus. Whele speeding toward
the scene, she was pulled over
by a highway patrolman. As the
officer approached her car, she
leaned out the window and yelled, "You can't stop me —I'm on my way to a panty raid!"
A college friend and I were
hitch-hiking our way to town,
but for some reason no one
seemed inclined to give us a
lift. I suggested joldngly that
maybe the reason was that people didn't Uke our long hair. With
this, my friend picked up a piece
of cardboard ^ o m the side of
the road and hastily scrawled
on it in big letters: GOING TOTHE BARBER'S.
RIDE.
A Georgia State professor was
surprised when he called a male
student In his Corporation Finance class and a female voice
responded. The part-time student, an Insurance salesman, had
sent his secretary to take notes.
Overheard on campus, one coed to another, describing her date
"He was like a big neutron all mass and no charge!"
LUBELLE'S
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ot
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EAGLE EYE
USED AUTO PARTS
The Eagle Eye wUl hold a
used auto parts auction this
evening at 7:30 pm in Su208, featuring special equipment for 1967 Rambler "Ambassador" stationwagons. All
interested parties are invited to
attend. Limit — 2 to a customer.
TAPERED
TO A
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Trim men, beware! Don't be
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pattern and color. Then, try on a
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FRED J. EISEMANN
Diamond Jewelers
Since 1926
E. Main St. — Lock Haven
The holiday self-indulgence is over,
and the time has come for
something bracing. Firm. Industrious.
The classic gentleman's shirt,
sizes 8 to 16. The brief fly-fronted
skirt, sizes 6 to 16. Both
polyester and cotton. The shirt in
solids, the skirt in glen plaids
of True Blue, Buttercup, Clover Pink,
Fresh Green, Peach Fuzz, Iris.
SKIRTS $11
SHIRTS
$6
Letters To The Editor
Sports Fan Prophesies
MEMBER
Editor-ln-chlef STEVE SENTE
Managing Editor—RONSMITH
Faculty Advisors
Miss Marian Huttenstine
Mr. Willard Lankford
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
News Editor
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Assistant Sports
Secretary
Advertising Managers
Circulation Manager
Business Manager
Photographers
Jan Dader
Jackie Enlow
John Passell
Cherilyn Holder
,....,
...Carole Taylor
Franki Moody, Paul Wilson
Helen DeGregory
Robert Remick
,
Ken Edwards, Steve Tweed
STAFF THIS WEEK
Kathy Mendolia, Paulette Banks, Jackie Bonner, Eileen Lagosky,
Cindy Rebon Karen RemUgner, Steve Miller, Fred Ungle and
Cindy Ueby.
THE EAGLE EYE Is published twenty-seven times during the school year
by students of Lock Haven State College, Lock Haven, Pa. AU opinions
expressed
by columnists and feature writers Including Letters4o4heEditor and not necessarily those of this publication but those of the Individual. Contributions and criticisms may be submitted to: Editor, Box 296,
LHSC and are welcome from all readers. This publication is a member of
the Associated Collegiate Press, and is student financed.
EDITORIAL:
Eagle Eye Discusses
Meal Ticket Problem
"I'm not only protecting m y
business, but the rights of the
students who have paid for their
meals, too. It isn't fair to any
student to allow this lending meal
tickets to g o on." " . . . such action as lending a meal ticket is
unfair to other students who are
using their own cards . . . Each
student, and only that student
who has paid for his meals, is
entitled to all 21 meals served
during any one week."
The above statements b y
James V. Williams, manager of
the campus food service, the Servomation - Mathias Company,
are quoted from recent issues of
the "Eagle Eye." They contain
what has been said to be official statement of policy of the
fellow students' tights. How absurd can one get!!!
tickets by one student to another.
It can be assumed from this implication that it is illegal to loan,
rent or sell a previously paid-for
meal ticket to another person because this action will endanger
the rights and privileges of the
other students of Lock Haven
State College. Mr. Williams
would have us believe that if a
student is going home for a weekend and lends his meal ticket to
his roomate's sister, he is directly endangering his friends' and
fellow students' rights. How absurd can one get!!!
To quote a recent letter to the
editor published in the March 11
issue of the "Eagle Eye": " . . .
the meal ticket means to me that I
have paid the correct fee for the
semester's meals. It's a strange
business that sells its product and
then holds the right to say what
th^se who have bought that product can do with i t " This statement, more than any other,
seems to express the ideas of this
writer, this publication, m a n y
faculty members, and in fact a
vast majority of the student
b o d y . The Servomation-Mathias
Company is supposedly represented o n this campus to cater
to the students of LHSC. Yet
they choose to discount the desires of the students. Where is
their "company policy" now?
L E N D I N G RESTRICTION
NOT I N CONTRACT
It has been stated by authorities ( a n d we wish to be corrected
if we are in error o n this point)
that nowhere in the company's
contract with Lock Haven State
is there mention of a restriction
o n the lending of meal tickets. Is
this just another example of con-
venient after-thought to be found
o n our campus?
There are two plausible reasons for this resfriction placed
o n the students by the Servomation-Mathias Company — one,
that the students themselves h a v e
expressed disapproval over the
system of lending meal tickets;
and two, that the Servomation Mathias Company never actually intended to serve each and every resident student of Lock Haven State for 21 meals each week.
The first of these "theories" is
absolutely wrong — in fact, most
students are in favor of ( a n d a r e
practicing) a system of loaning
meal tickets to friends. However,
the second of these proposals,
that the college food service never
intended to serve 21 meals a week
to each resident student, is by far
the more likely and, if one knew
the whole truth, probably the
most correct one.
N E V E R P L A N N E D TO SERVE
21 MEALS TO ALL
STUDENTS
It is basically sound business
for a c o m p a n y like Servomation
-Mathias to assume that only
about 2 / 3 of the maximum number of meals would be served.
Figuring this way, they can offer
lower prices to the students ( a s suming, of course, that they are
not "pocketingtheextra"). However, the crux of the matter lies
in the fact that the ServomationMathias Company insists this is
not the case. Mr. Williams, manager for this company, constantly maintains that the lending of previously purchased
meal tickets to someone who has
not paid will result in the deprivation of food for someone who
has paid. How can this be, unless meals are figured for only a
fraction ofthe student body, since
we all know that not everyone
eats each and every meal. The
number of meals would be the
same, regardless of who eats
them, unless not everyone is expected to eat all 21 meals each
"^^ ' IF S T U D E N T S EAT
21 MEALS - CHAOS
We wonder what would happen
if just for one week, the entire
number of resident students of
Lock Haven State would show
up at the dining hall for each
meal. We maintain that, unless
notified well in advance, the Serv o m a t i o n - Mathias Company
would not have *he sufficient
amount of food to serve all the
students — this situation directly
Pirates' Victory
Deeu- Steve Miller,
I've been having a rather
hard time trying to figure out if
you are related to Gene Mauch
or were born in Connie Mack
Stadium and therefore are a diehard Philadelphia Phillies fan.
I am, of course, referring to
your picking of the Philadelphia
team as the National League in
last week's "Eagle Eye" and
your reasons for doing so.
I must admit that I have been
Non-Greeks Question Hours
Denr Editor:
Is it right for one girl to come
into the dorm at 1:40 (Greek
Weekend) and be pleasantly
greeted b y her temporary housemother, while anotiier girl comes
in at 1:45, and is met at the door
and asked "Where were you,
Susie?" Obviously she was out
and was all right.
Why shouldn't she have a
two o'clock for Greek Weekend
even though she didn't attend the
Greek Ball? She was out with a
Greek. Isn't that g o o d e n o u g h ?
What about those girls that didn't
come in at all? Is that what this
girl should have done? To ask
the question is to answer it.
Why should this girl be campused for one week by dorm
council for a misdemeanor of
special h o u r s for the women of
this c a m p u s ? I feel women students should be treated equally
a n d special hours, when given
out, should be given to all.
G. D. I.
Dear Editor,
I would like to see a statement
in the "Eagle Eye" from the
Dean of Women concerning the
girls' hours for the past Greek
Weekend.
1 would like to know why
some girls, sorority sisters and
girls who date Greeks, are considered special and are allowed
to remain out an hour later than
other girls.
Does this mean that in order
to receive special privileges a gfrl
should be in a sorority or should
be dating a fraternity man?
If this is so, the saying, "money talks," is true. N o t all girls
can afford to be in a sorority nor
can they all date fraternity men.
The number of men o n this campus is limited, let alone fraternity men.
What are the GDI's supposed
to do? Why should a g u y take out
• a GDI when he can g o with a
sorority girl and stay out with
her an hour later?
If special privileges are g o i n g
to be handed out, when are the
GDI's h a v i n g 2:00's and the
Greeks h a v i n g l:00's? This is the
only fair thing to d o now. But
will it be done?
Ima Independent
caused by the obvious "fact" that
they do not expect all the students
to eat every meal, nor do they
have enough food o n hand for
this event.
To quote our recent letter writer, "It's a strange business
that sells its product and then
holds the right to say what those
who have bought that product
can do with it."
RON SMITH,
Managing Editor
a Pittsburgh Pirate fan ever since
I was old enough to climb one of
the trees outside Forbes Field,
and a m therefore biased, but how
can one in a supposed sportsminded column be so naive?
Granted Philadelphia has as
good a pitching team as there is
in baseball (with the exception
of Cleveland) but the Pirates are
not that bad now that they have
Dennis Ribant (11-10 last year
with the Mets) and the veteran
Juan Pizzaro. Bob Veale had a
bad year last year but with
Woody Fryman, Tommie Sisk,
and Pete Mikkelsen, the Hrates
are not that bad.
Your next point was that with
Bill White, Cookie Rojas, Richie
EDITORIAL:
Spring Is Sprung
And The Mud Runs
Spring has once again blessed
us with its relreshing presence.
The warm, spring days make
one want to open his windows
and inhale the wonderful, invigorating exhaust fumes of a passing diesel truck, or the tantalizing
aroma of the garbage truck
parked out front; they make y o u
want to g o outside and take a
walk around our campus.
Ah, the beauty of a walk
around our campus—watching
the birds build their nests, looking for new green shoots popping
up from thesoil, and just hearing
all of the sounds of spring are
only a few ofthe m a n y things one
can do on his walk around our
nice, MUDDY campus. Mud is
fine for mud turtles, mud hens
and wasps who use mud to build
their nests, but when students g o
stomping through our muddy
campus, they tear out aU of the
baby grass that has just come
up. Oh, horrid, wretched, unmerciful murderers, have y o u no
couth? Killing baby g r a s s is
immoral and not nice.
Not only is the baby grass
killed, but the top soil is defaced
and mutilated. After a week of
brutal stomping, killing, mutilating, and defacing, our campus
is a ghastly mess. There is only
one thing that is not a ghastly
mess: the sidewalks, which are
immaculate. Why dirty up our
immaculate
sidewalks
when
there is such nice gooey mud to
walk through? Crummy, muddy
shoes don't matter at all as long
as our immaculate sidewalks retain their immaculate appearance.
If someone held an annual
spring contest to see who had the
dirtiest, messiest front lawn, the
LHSC campus would win first
prize quite handUy. If someone
held a n annual spring contest to
the Collegs Man's
BARBER SHOP
26 Bellefonte Av. 748-2787
see who had the cleanest sidewalks on March 21, LHSC would
win an indisputable first place
every year. It is indeed a pity
that these contests are not held—
LHSC could win so m a n y prizes
for its b o o b y prize case.
Unfortunately, shoes are not
the only things that get muddy
when our unsanitary students
plot through the mud. If the mud
would not cling so tenaciously
to the soles of our students' shoes,
the situation would not be s o
bad, but since it does, the situation is most dire.
When the student whose shoes
are caked with mud enters a
building o n the campus, the mud
ceases to cling to his shoes. It
falls off and leaves a trail of mud
behind him.
All this mud that is fracked into
the buUdings gives them a
squalid appearance. It g e t s
ground into the carpets, smeared
on the tile, and caked o n the
stairs. The custodians are probably least appreciative of. all the
mud. They have enough difficulty cleaning up the normal accumulation of dirt, without having to be hindered by the mud
that is tracked in b y L H S C students. When they have to clean
up globs of mud, they have to
use more cleaning agents. More
mud, more cleaning agents,
more money, more taxes, and
more complaining is the vicious
cycle here.
Since the students wUl not use
the sidewalks, the maintenance
crew will have to put up fences
around the campus lawns as
they did last year and the year
before, and almost every year
since the sidewalks were installed.
It appears that LHSC is destined to make annual purchases
of grass seed, fences, lestoil and
brooms.
LUIGI'S
offers the BEST in
•
Subs
•
• Canadian Bacon
Bar-B-Q's
•
Capr io's
Allen, e t c the Phils probably
have the best hitters in baseball.
I guess the Pirates are weak
there too, with Matty Alow
(where did he finis last year?),
Manny Mota (same question),
Roberto Clemente (M.V.P.), Willie Stargell (a very weak hitter,
right?). The addition of Maury
Wills (a fair hitter and stealer),
Donn Clendenon, etc. If I recall,
although the Phillies, according
to certain Phillie fans, h a v e the
best hitting team around, the Pirates didn't do too bad last year
with the team batting a meager
. 2 7 9 and h a v i n g , only four batters in the top ten.
Defensively, I admit, the Pi(Continued on Page Eight)
Hot Dogs
•
. . .
•
Hamburgers
French Fries
•
Pizza
Sold In the Dorms Every Tuesday
and
Thursday
Luigi's Sub Sliop
Bellefonte Avenue — Lock Haven
LHSC Reigns As NAIA Chomp,
Melchoir Triumphs At 115
By Steve Miller
Lock Haven edged Adams
State 80-69 in total team points
to capture the team title. The
Bald Eagles of Coach Gray Simons sent five men into the finals
compared to 3 from Adams
State.
MELCHIOR ONLY L. H.
CHAMPION
Ken Melchior won his first
NAIA crown as he dominated
Rick Engh through the first period and pinned him in 2:17
of the second period. Melchior
looked impressive throughout
the tournament as he either shut
out or pinned every opponent he
wrestled.
FOLEY TAKES 3RD—
KILLION PLACES 6TH
Shane Foley lost a tough semifinal match to 4-time Jim
Hazewinkel, 6 - 4, but came
through in the consolation finals to capture 3rd. In the afternoon of the consolation Foley
decisioned Mike Hernandez of
Adams State 11-O. In the consolation final, in the most thrilling consolation bout of the evening, Foley decisioned Rick Kelvlngton of Moorehead, 4-3.
DENNIS KILLION, A MILD
SURPRISE TO THE BALD EAGLE fans, came out of nowhere
and took 6th in the 137-pound
division. Killion advanced to the
semi-finals where he was defeated 7-3 by Mike Garside of Wisconsin Superior. Killion then lost
6-5 to Don McCoUin of Clarion,
then lost a 6-2 decision to Tom
Sprigler of Black HUl to fall
into the 6th place finish.
LORSON TAKES 2ND PLACE
Jeff Lorson, unscored on
throughout the tourney, was finally scored on and defeated in
the finals of the 130 pound class
5-2 by Mike Stanley of Adams
State 5-2. Lorson couldn't quite
wrestle his usual strong match
and was never really in this
one.
KLINGAMAN LOSES TO
GERST IN 152 BATTLE
Jack Klingaman gave it all
he had and barely missed upsetting Joe Gerst of Bloomsburg.
Gerst immediately took Klinga-
man down and Klingaman
escaped after a few seconds on
the bottom. Gerst held on to this
one point lead and killed all
Klingaman's hopes with a final
period escape. This was one of
matches of the evening.
BLACKSMITH LOSES
HEARTBREAKER AT 160
a
t
Crossword Puzzle
i
*
s
ACROSS
LHSC Flunks NCAA's
By Steve MUler
Lock Haven fans were disappointed at the finish of the Bald
Eagles in the NCAA tourney, but
Have any news tips?
Coil the Eagle Eye
748-5531
Passell's Puzzler of the Wbek
1. What professional baseball
pitcher had the most shut-outs
in a season? How many?
2. Who won the masters golf
tourney in 1966?
next year looks bright.
Ken Melchofr, John Smith, and
Jeff Lorson were our only
chances of entering the consolations, but the men who defeated
them were defeated, thus eliminating the Bald Eagle grapplers.
The highest any NAIA champion finished was second. Carolla of Adams State was pinned by
Curley Culp of Arizona State in
:51 seconds of the unlimited finals.
Next year wUl g^ve all the Bald
Eagles except Jeff Lorson another crack at the title. John
Smith and Jeff Lorson each lost
close decisions and a break or
two could have given the Bald
Eagles a couple of finishers.
DOWN
Steve - — , Pirate pitcher
Tackles, centers, guards, and
ends
3. Powell, Oakland pass
catcher
Symbol for element
Gray
, 3 time NCAA
wrestling champ
Used to shorten a dress
Title of ownership
Not new
Jack
, former Bald Eagle
grappler
14, Three minus two
15. Molecular action
18. Girls name
19. Ron
, Cub thlrdbaseman
21. Name
22. What teams try to gain
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Passell's Puzzle Answers
25. Also
27.
ball, Illegal pitch
28. Too small (abbr.)
29. Hit with rocks
30. - — Roberts, former pitching
great
34.
Starr, Green Bay quarterback
35.
Iron
36. Wager
37. Charged particle
38. — - Hunt, new Dodger
39. See 14 down
41. College Degree (abbr.)
m'
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I
Answers
1. Grover Cleveland Alexander,
(16), hi 1916.
2. Jack Nicklaus
Compliments
of
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• Bald Eagle wrest1. Jim -ler
Tech coach
10. Italian money
11. Spanish adjective
12. Small Insect
13. Heavyweight champion
16. Wind direction
17. By one's self
20. Tidy
23, French article
24. Day of week abbr.
26. Asian country
31. Negative
32. What girls do to their hair
33.
Graham, Red Skin coach
35. Not sorry
36. Red ~ — , German war ace
37. Golf club
38. Suffix
41. Daniel
42. What hitters have done
43. - — In Boston
Jim Blacksmith was forced into
overtime with Rollin Schinunel of
East Oregon. Schimmel escaped
immediately in the first overtime period. Blacksmith couldn't
escape from Schimmel and had
to be satisfied with a 1-0 overtime loss and 2nd place finish.
JOHN SMITH LOSES TO
DEFENDING 167-POUND
CHAMP
John Smith grabbed an early
lead and led throughout, but
on an escajje maneuver was pinned in 2:26 of the third period.
Smith had a 3-pointlead and was
trying to escap>e from Lamoin
Merkly of Central Washington
when the fall occurred. Markley
shared the outstanding wrestler
award with Jim Blacksmith's
conqueror, Rollin Schimmel.
Th^ important thing is that
Lock Haven won the tourney.
A good team effort accomplished
this and brought the Bald Eagles their second straight NAIA
tide.
(1st Row L to R) 115—Ken
Melchior (LHSC); 123 — Jim
Hazewinkel (S.C); 130-Mike
Stanley (Adams); 137—Rick
Stuyvesant (Moorehead); 145—
Dennis Warren (Central Washington); 152 — J o e G e r s t
(Bloom);
(2nd Row) 160—Rollin Schimmel (East Ore.); 167—Lamoin
Merkely (Cent. Wash.); 177—
Mike Mosier (Moorehead); 191
— Mike Rybak (S.C); Unl. —
_Nick Carollo (Adams).
L \L
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* •
ti
"Prescription
Specialists"
L S
L E
B S
MUNRO
r
At th* Monumant
1967 NAIA
Tourney
Placers
11 •>
KiiM-KKN MKI.CHfdU, J.HSt
Serimd" Rjck Kni-'h. Uemidji Si„le
Third —Arthur Smioni, Atliinis .Sink
I'tmrth —Dick '^^t•s^lt.T. Wi^t'ctnsin Siipfrli
I Hlh- K.iynioMd Day. C'Uirinn Slacc
Sixth — CurltH' Aii'xandiT, t :nivfrsit\
(ItlHiha
123
Kiisl-Jiin Hu/t'winkk-. St. Cluud St.ilu
.Si'tnnci-lialpti Adamson, WaviicsburK
Ihird-SHA.VK FOLKY. LMSC
Foarth —Ritk Kcivingum, ^t(^o^llelld Suite
I-'ifth—Miki- Hfriiaiuk'/. Adiirrm Stale
Sixth — Amtn.nv Li'DMiirdo. Wisconsin Superior
I.to
I-irst —.Miko Stanlev. Adunis State
S t t o n d - . I K F F I.OHSON. I.HSC
Third—t'titil Ausliii. Wisttmsin Whitewater
Fuurtli- Hill {;ermann, Moorhead State
Fifth —(iene XaK>. Waynebbiir^
Sixth —Tom Thompson, Wisconsin Sui>erior
137
Kirsi-Rick Stuyvesant. Moorhead Stale
Si'cond-Mike (iarside, Wisconsin Superior
Third—Don Mct'oUim, Clarion State
Fourth—Tom Sprigler. Black Hill** State
Fifth—hmmv Whitmer. .'\ppalachian
Sixth~l>KNNlS KILI.ION. LHSC
145
pi'rst—Pennis Warren, (.'enlral Washinnlon
Second " Hoy WushinKton, I'niversity of
Omahu
Third — -lini Chapman. West WashiiiKlo'i
StiitP
Fourth—Mike Fitzgerald. Moorhead State
Fifth—I.eo Kinbellu. Minot State
Sixth—HoOerl TeaKardt-n, Clarion Slate
Mtmrn K
152
First—Joe Gerst, BloonisbuiK
Second-.lACK KLINGAMAN, LHSC
Third—Merle SovereiKn, Winona
Fourth —Carl Olson, St. Cloud State
Fifth—vXJan .Johnson, Central W'ashinKlon
Sixth —Steve Larson, Beniidji State
160
P'irst—Kolhn -Schimmel, East Oregon
S e i o n d - J I M BLACKSMITH, LHSC
Third—Jim Tanniehill, Winona
Fourth—Tom Karpency, Wayne.sburg
Fifth- Tom Oil, .Sloul Stale
Sixth—Mike Ross, Wisconsin Superior
167
First—Lamoin Merkley, Central WashinKlun
S e c o n d ^ I O H N T R K N T SMITH, LHSC
Third—Ray Wicks. Winona
F o u r t h - D o n Apodaca, Adams Slate
Fifth-Jim Grieco. Montclair Slate
Sixth — Fares Washington, Lincoln Univezslty
177
Firsi—Mike Mosier, Moorhead Stale
Second—Tom Kusleika, Adams Slate
Third—I.*onard f'helan, Kast tJregon
F o u r t h - R u d y Ross, Mldlai\d Lutheran
Fifth-Paul Reedy, Graceland
Sixth—Steve Melchior, Dakota Wesleyan
191
First—Mike Rybak, SI Cloud Slate
Second—Peter Middleton, Mornln^iltie
Third—DoUas Delay, Central Washington
Fourth—Ron Hamplon. Adums Stale
Fifth-Jeff Rosen. Montclair
Sixth—Jim Henderson, Moorhead
Unlimited
First—Nick CaroUo. Adams Stale
^^iTd-Steve Schmidt, Wisconsin River Fall.
F o u r t h - J o e KighetU. WaynMburg
p S u i - J o h n Zwolinski, Winoo.
| 2 S ^ C « V M . d d o K . We«ern IUlr«l.
SPORTLITE
Eastern wrestling suffered a
serious setback at last week's
NCAA Tournament. The only
two Eastern wrestlers to enter the
finals at Kent State, Ohio, were
Mike Caruso of Lehigh and Tom
Schlendorf of Syracuse. These
two both won national championstiips, but two out of twentytwo finalists is a poor representation . . .
The only two Eastern teams in
the top ten were Lehigh and
Navy, again showing a n obvious weakness in Eastern wrestling. This lack of strength may
be overcome in the next couple of
years, however, since Penn State
and Lock Haven State have
young teams and much potential power . . .
The entries are rolling in for
Steve Miller's "BasebaU Prognostication Contest." GJet yours
in as soon as possible. The deadline date is April 10. The entries
will be printed iiTthe subsequent
weeks because of a lack of space,
but all entries must be in the
hands of "Ttie Eagle Eye" sports
Baseball
Prognostleaflon
Contest
staff on or before the above date
I spoke to ev&ybody's choice
for the "most colorful coach" of
the NAIA tourney, Ken Cox, two
weekends ago. Mr. Cox coaches
St.. Cloud, Minnesota, and the
great Jim Hazewinkel, (4 time
NALA champ). At St. Qoud last
year, on the days of the NAIA
tourney, said Mr. Cox, the students were on vacation, and completely free to attend all sessions
of the large tourney. Not only
this, but the administration also
left the St. Cloud students out
at 2:00 pm on the day of the
Moorhead State match which
was to be held that same evening
at 7:00 pm. The St. Cloud mentor said that the enthusiasm generated by the students was overwhelming. I suppose there could
be a connection between the generosity of the St. Cloud administrator and the enthusiasm . . .
Jack Klingaman, runnerup at
152, picks up on the leg of
Robert Elliot. Klingaman is riding his Wilmington opponent en
route to a 13-4 decisioa
Ken Melchior, 115 lb. champ works over Ken Flure of Wisconsin U. at River Falls in his quarter-flnal victory.
Mr. Cox generated a little of
his own enthusiasm at Thomas
Field House during the NAIA
tourney in mid-March.
The two outstanding wrestlers of the 1967 NAIA Tournament.
On the left, Lamoin Merkley of Central Washington State, and
on the right Rollin Schimmel of Eastern Oregon College.
Jim Hazewinkel and his proud
father following Jim's 4th NAIA
championship.
Larry Tolomay
National
American
1. Pittsburgh
Baltimore
2. San Francisco Detroit
3. Atlanta
Minnesota
4. Los Angeles
Cleveland
5. Philadelphia
California
6. St. Louis
Chicago
7. Cincinnati
Washington
8. Houston
New York
9. Chicago
Kansas City
10. New York
Boston
I
Gary L.
National
1. Pittsburgh
2. Atlanta
3. Cincinnati
4. San Francisco
5. Hiiladelphia
6. Los Angeles
7. St. Louis
8. Houston
9. Chicago
10. New York
Ward
National
1. Philadelphia
2. Pittsburgh
3. Atlanta
4. San Francisco
5. Cincinnati
6. Los Angeles
7. Houston
8. New York
9. St. Louis
10. Chicago
Youngs
American
Detroit
Baltimore
California
Minnesota
Cleveland
Washington
New York
Chicago
Boston
Kansas City
Coach Gray Simons with his "Coach of the Year" bowl in
right hand and the team championship placque in his left.
Yorks
American
Baltimore
Detroit
Cleveland
Minnesota
Chicago
California
Washington
Kansas City
Boston
New York
Tickets are on sale now at
the bookstore for the Association concert. Spring Weekend wUl
be AprU 14, 15, and 16, this
year.
QUESTION OF THE WEEK
"Where did 300 wrestlers disappear to at the dance held by
KVP after the NAL\ semi-finals
on Friday, March 17?
Editors note—students are invited to send their "Question of the
Week" to the Eagle Eye office,
box 296 Sullivan HalL Entries
must be in a week iiefore the date
of publication.
Jeff Lorson of
LHSC and
M i k e Stanley
tie up in the
130-lb. fmal.
Stanley w o n
the match 5-2
as he was the
first opponent
to score on
Lorson in the
tourney.
E a g l e 3rd
place winner
at 123, Shane
Foley muscles
M oorhead's
State's R i c k
Kelvlngton, in
John T r e n t
Snuth tackles
Morningside's
Dermis Ciuristiansea In this
f i r s t round
match the Eagle grappler
piimed his opp o n e nt in
2:50. Dennis
KUlion (133)
has his Fort
Hays oppone n t , Robert
Johnson, in a
bad way. Killion pulled off
one of the big
upsets of the
tourney when
h e pinned
Johnson, last
yearis NAIA
runner - up in
4:03. Killion
went on to
take 6th place.
a thrilling
match. Foley
won the consolation final,
7-6.
J
s
—-
German Club Formed
3 Officers Elected
cussion, Mrs. Nielson played a
record of "Deutsche Schlagers,"
German hit songs.
The club is designed as a
learning and a fun experience.
It will enable the members to
practice some basic German conversation and to learn more
about German culture. There will
be the fun of playing German
games and singing German folk
songs. A Kaffee-Klatsch, an informal gathering with refreshments, in AprU and a picnic in
May have been suggested as future complements torgularclub
meetings. The members of the
German club are enthusiastic
about the organization and hope
to make it a success.
An organizational meeting of
the new German club initiated on
campus by Mrs. Margaret Nielson was held on Monday evening, February 27 in Raub 422.
The first order of business was
the election of officers. By floor
nomination and majority vote,
the following students were
elected: President—Michael Deckman, Vice President—Martha
Farabaugh, Secretary - Treasurer — Teresa Bowes.
The members of the club then
discussed a constitution and
name for the club and'the question of dues. It was decided that
meetings would be held tentatively the 2nd Monday of each
month. During the informal dis-
Easter Party Held For Coeds:
3 Girls Win Vunny Contest'
An Easter Party for all girls
living on campus was sponsored
by the Women's Dorm Council
after the girls' hours in the Old
Cafeteria on Wednesday, March
'^' Under the direction of Ellen
Baker, mistress of ceremonies,
entertainment was provided by
various groups of girls. These
girls performed some skits and
sang a number of songs.
The highlight of the evening
was a bunny contest, the first to
be held at an LHSC Easter Party.
Each wing of the three dorms
was asked to select a girl representative and dress her as a
bunny.
A panel of judges, which included the Dean of Women,
housemothers, and students, selected the winners. Three bunnies, Gerry Ogdal, Sue Snyder,
and Yuko Nishida tied for first
place and were awarded bunny
lollipops.
Each girl was given a ticket
when she entered the cafeteria
and prizes were raffled off. Refreshments cinsisting of soda,
cookies, and candy were also
served.
•ROXY-
Theatre
Lock Haven
Now Playing—Continuing
tiirougli Tiiursday, April 6
A WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS!
L
METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER PRESENTS
AGARUOPONTl PRODUCTION
DAVID LEAN'S FILM
i
OF BORIS PASTERNAKS
DOCTOR
ZHilAGO
The '67 Easter Bunny for LHSC is Sue Snyder (center). With
her are the two runners-up—Gerry Oydal (1.) and Yuko Nishida.
IN PANAVISION* AND METROCOLOR
neSERVEO SEATS N O W AT BOX-OFlFICE OR BV M A I L
The story of Zhivogo — a man torn between his love for his wife and the tender
and passionate Lara . . . told against the
flaming background of revolution?
• SHOWING TIME •
One Show Each Evening
Doers Open: 7:30
Feature at 8 p.m.
Mat. S a t . - 1:30
Mat. Sun. — 2 p.m.
ADMISSION PRICES
FOR THIS SHOW
Adults $1.00
Children $.35
Letters
( Continued from Page Four )
rates are poor. Jim Pagliaroni is
one of the worst fielders in baseball. Donn Clendenon couldn't
hold Dick Stuart's glove. BUI
Mazeroski is the worst second
baseman in baseball. Gene Alley
makes poor plays and along
with Maz have the worst double
play combination ever, and
Maury Wills sounds out this 10
cent infield.
In the outfield, probably Akeley School could field a better
one. Clemente, Stargell, and
Alow (with that scrub Manny
Mota barging in occasionally)
definitely can't hold a thing on
Philadelphia's squad.
Now really!
One final note, Jimmy the
Greek in Las Vegas says the
Bucks will win and gives 9-5
odds. If I were you I'd get some
money together. You'd be rich
by October!
How does that grab you,
Sportsfan?
Ray Huff
LOCK HAVEN
TRAVEL SERVICE
•
JERRY'S
ALL FISHING TACKLE IN STOCK!
Boots - Rods - Reels by South Bend
Baft - Salmon Eggs - 1000's of Lures
•
Airline Reservations
•
Ticketing
SPECIAL STUDENT
RATES
i
2 0 9 E. M a i n Street
Phone 748-6711
*Art of Him'
To Be Topic
Of Producer
Mr. Robert Edmonds, an outstanding producer of films, will
be on the Lock Haven State
Campus April U. He will present
a program on the art of film appreciaUon and film production at
1:00 pm in Raub 106. Dr. Marcus Konick worked with Mr. Edmonds on film production in
Harrisburg.
Mr. Edmonds will discuss the
characteristics of good films as
well as specific techniques of the
unusual,
experimental, and
avant/garde films. He will be
talking to several English classes
and consulting with various representatives of the Humanities
Department to make plans for
.outstanding entertainment films
to be presented on campus next
year.
STATE BANK OF AVIS
Main OfFice
Hshing Licenses in Stock
—Drive-in window
—Free parking in rear
ALL FISHING TACKLE UP TO 50% DISCOUNT
Ball Gloves
8.98 to 9.98
— O n Route 2 2 0 in Avis, Pa.
Woodward Branch
Two Drive-in windows
Tennis Rackets
5.95
by
to
Spalding, Penna.
19.95
Tennis Balls
Tennis Presses
OPEN ALL DAY WEDNESDAY
JERRY'S
can
1.85
98t
—Free a n d easy parking
Both OfFer
•
N O SERVICE CHARGE O N CHECKS
•
PERSONALIZED PRINTED CHECKS
•
CONVENIENT HOURS
No Minimum Balance Required
— F R E E
i
M M I Tickets
Easter Party
GDI's
Mud
V o l u m e 10
N o . 10
LOCK
National Actors
Stage Greek Play
A Greek comedy, Jgrit^n over
2,000 years ago, was presented to a Lock Haven State
College audience at 8:30 pm on
Wednesday, March 29 in Price
Auditorium. The National Hayers Touring Company's performance of,.;;yiie Birds" by
Aristophanes was the last of the
Fine Arts F ^ y y a l series of 12
events. There was no admission
costs fQj^LHSC students. "The
Birds" was also open to the general public free of charge.
The version of Aristophanes'
classic comedy Msed by the National Players was the "clarified
text", edited b y Walter Kerr,
which presented the original comedy in modern, sensible English.
In preparing the stage version of "The Birds", Kerr assembled all available translations and transformed the Unes
into their fundamental meanings, leaving jokes and comedy
which are understandable to the
20th Century audience, but still
having the flavor of ancient
Poet Vbits
LHSC Campus
An American contemporary
poet will present a reading of his
own works and meet with the college students on Thursday,
March 30.
William Meredith will present
his poems to an audience of college students, faculty and the general public at 7:30 pm in Bentley Hall Lounge. The program is
free of charge.
Mr. Meredith wUl meet in
closed session with Mr. Edward
Hills' Creative Writing and Advanced Composition classes to
hold a discussion with the students. He wUl also discuss his
poems for Mr. Frank Vaughn's
Modern Poetry class on Friday
morning.
A 1940 graduate of Princeton
University, William Meredith
wrote his first poems, "Love
Letters From an Impossible
Land", in 1944. He has had three
other collections published —
"Ships and Other Figures",
"The Open Sea", and "Wreck
ofthe Thresher".
Mr. Meredith is presently a
teacher of writing at Connecticut College; fornnerly he was a
member of the English Department at the University of Hawaii.
Greece in them. From this process, Kerr presents neither anew
play nor a free adaptation; it is
rather a "clarified text" of Aristophanes' original play, "The
Birds".
The National Players Touring Company is a non-profit
theatrical corporation which operated under the University Players. They were founded through
the Speech and Drama Department of Catholic University,
Washington, D. C , thus creating a common background leading to their one outstanding
trademark — teamwork.
This will be the National Players' fourth appearance in this
campus. Dr. Louis Pitchford,
profesqpc Af social sciences at
LHSC, was the faculty member
who, working with the Festival
committee, sponsored the National Players at Lock Haven
State. 1967 marks the 18th consecutive year of appearances for
the National Players Touring
Company.
Six
HAVEN
STATE COLLEGE
Singers
Participate
In Festival
The Pennsylvania College
Choir Festival, a three-day affair, wUl be held at Bloomsburg
State College, March 30 through
April 1. There will be 22 participating colleges, Lock Haven
State included. Non-state schools
such as Temple University, Westminster College, and Seton Hill
College will also take part inthe
festival. Gregg Smith of Ithaca
College, New York, will be the
guest conductor.
Each college is limited to selecting six students to represent
them. Representing LHSC will
be Becky Jones, Judy Saul, Mary
Lou Thornton, Martha McCracken, William Yantz, and
Dennis Gillum.
The uniqueness of the festival
is that the selective choir will be
doing a type of program that
could not be accomplished by
small college choirs. The program will be centered around
double choir music, or eight-part
music, rather than the four-part
music which is done in small
colleges.
Music will be sung in German
aside from Latin. The program
will also be centered around music from practically all historical
periods. The major work will be
"Monteverdi Vespers" (publication of 1610). Also music by Churl
Ives will be presented.
Installation of officers for the
1967-68 academic year of the
Student Cooperative Council will
be held next Wednesday, April 5,
in Bentley Hall Lounge at 7:15
pm. All interested persons are
urged to attend.
M a r c h 3 1 , 1967
NAIA Wrestling
TournamentPage 6, 7, & 8
Of This Issue
Student Wrecks
4'DaY-Old SCC Car
The 4-day-old Student Cooperative Council station wagon
was demolished in a two-car accident at 3:30 pm on Saturday,
March 18, during the NALA
Wrestling Tournament. The driver of the Lock Haven State College car was slightly injured.
LHSC, Bloom Debaters Tie
The vehicle, driven by C. Raymond Huff, a sophomore at
Lock Haven State, was being
used as a "Courtesy Car" for the
wrestlers in the tournament. It
was a 1967 Rambler "Ambassador" station wagon with only
400 miles on it. The car, which
had been delivered to Lock Haven State the Tuesday evening
before the accident, was damaged to the amount of $2,700.
Police reported that Huff apparently had been driving down
Sarras alley behind the Clinton
County Court House on East
Water Street when a dog darted
out in front of him. Swerving to
the right to miss the animal, Huff
hit a telephone pole and, veering
off the pole, smashed into a n old
garage of triple-thickness brick
walls, damaging a 1966 Plymouth sedan parked inside,
which was owned by Ann V. Kyler. The accident resulted in $300
in damages to the garage, owned
by James T. Smith, a Lock Haven lawyer, besides the costs to
the SCC wagon, and $15 to the
Kyler car.
Rich Castle, newly-elected
president of the Student Cooperative Council, owner of the car,
on whom the responsibility of
either replacing or repairing the
demolished car wUl rest, commented that ". . .the main thing,
nobody got hurt and it looks like
we wUl have to replace it."
Huff was unavailable for
comment because of the Spring
vacation.
Don't Forget
Spring weekend wUl be AprU
14, 15, and 16. Tickets for the
Association concert are on sale
now at the bookstore. The cost
is $1.50 for LHSC students a n d
$2.00 for aU others.
IN THIS ISSUE!
The Lock Haven State Debate
Team lost a close contest to
Bloomsburg State on March 14,
at 7:00 pm. The topic being discussed was "Resolved: T h a t
Pennsylvania Should Lower Its
Legal Drinking Age to 18."
The affirmative team consisted of Greg Santoro and Bon-
nie McKernan lost to the Bloomsburg debaters. Mary Lou Wenrich and Richard Thompson, the
speakers for the negative, were
successful in defeating their opponents. Barb Minso acted a s mistress of ceremonies for the
affu-mative team.
Each speaker had the oppor-
tunity to give two speeches. First
was an eight-minute constructive
speech, which was later followed
by a flve-minute rebuttal. The
judge for the affirmative was Dr.
Klens and for the negative was
Dr. Robinson.
Shown above is Bonnie McKernan.
Sewerese Bugs
2
Lingle's Logic
3
Meal Tickets and Mud . . . . 4
Letters
4
NAIA Wrestling Tournament
5. 6,7
Sports Crossword Puzzle . .7
Easter Party
8
Coming Up!
AprU 2—SCC Movie
"When Comedy Was
King"
AprU 2—Sigma Kappa Spring
Event
AprU 6—Band Concert
AprU 7 - E E E Weekend
AprU 7—Next Eagle Eye
SINGER
fA8ei(iff(UU
This Weefc Only!
DUCK CLOTH
Prints and
• Solids.
All Cotton.
36" wide.
6 9 t ya
Reg. 89?
Bugs Damage
Eagle Eye Office
Grinnell College
Awarded Grant
Grinnell, la. - (I. P.) - GrinneU College has been awarded a
$400,000 grant by the Alfred P.
Sloan Foundadon. One of 20
A regiment of South Sewerese
private, four-year arts and scibugs led by Stale Mouth Dolittle
ence colleges in the nation sharinflicted heavy damage on the
ing a $7.5-minion Sloan CoUege
Eagle Eye office today, and
Science Program grant, GrinneU
wounded several of the staff
wUl receive $80,000 a year for a
members.
five - year period beginning in
A spokesman for the Eagle
1967.
Eye told news reporters this
The funds wUl be channeled
morning that the South Sewerinto
several areas of GrinneU's
ese had apparenUy infUtrated
science program with the objecthe offlce from the unionized zone
tive of continuing the upgrading
just south ofthe Slo-peegym traU
of the over-all program.
on the first floor of Sullivan Hall.
"The Uberal arts colleges,
The South Sewerest extensively
which traditionally have been the
damaged the Eagle Eye C-raundergraduate training ground
tions in an effort to starve out the
for many high school science
staff, thereby eliciting their surteachers and for a significant
render. A South Sewerese spokespercentage of future scientists,
man claimed that the editor's cofhave been in danger recently of
fee was poisoned and that the
faUing behind in the competition
Business manager's Coke was
with large universities, governbombed by malaria particles.
ment, and industry for top-flight
This war wUl not be won un- faculty and students," he noted
less it is escalated!
Each of the 20 participating
coUeges wUl pursue its own individual program of upgrading
science education. Among the
uses to which the college wUl put
its Foundation funds: provision
of more frequent research leaves
fo enable faculty to "stay alive"
professionally; use of postdoctoral fellows to enable it to enrich, and to have the experience
of teaching in, the liberal arts
environment; and curriculum revision and development of new
courses.
Precise limitations as to the
use of the Sloan funds have not
yet been received. "However, our
application was broadly based,
covering a number of academic
areas and projects designed to
improve what is afready a very
fine program of science instruction," James O. Avison, GrinneU's director of development,
said.
The key sections of our proposal to the foundation were the
concept of student involvement
with faculty in actual research
undertakings, the establishmentof a research study fund for support of summer research projects and faculty summer study
programs, and the acceleration
of instructional budgets."
You'll go far
in The
Peace Corps.
Latin America,
Africa, Asia, etc.
The Peace Corps
Washington, D.C. 20525
n Please send me information,
n Please send me an application.
Name
Address.
City
State.
Krieger Conducts Art Study
Concerned about the dependency of students on teacher
guidance for everything and the
consequent effect of the development of their creative potential,
Dr. Myrrl Krieger, associate professor of art at Lock Haven State
KL?.
$16.00 to $40.00
Soft stars on
a white sky
Suggestive of a cool summer's eve . . . or a walk
in the shade. A suit that
strikes a romantic mood,
with its "starred" printed
effect. . . the jacket and
" A " skirt beautifully
fashioned by the hand of
Seaton Hall. In 100%
rayon.
_fc-;n5-
.Zip Code.
Published as a public service in cooperation
with The Advertising Council and the
International Newspaper Advertising Executivi
PR2Fession:
SlDOESir
Priced From
.
^-.%::'-'
itLl^
J^K*.
L
"FIRCT OFF - I A A TI?/IWT10H;AI.I5T. "
College, last year undertook a
study on the correlation of students' abUity to organize thefr
leisure and work hours, a n d thefr
creative growth.
This is an appropriate study
to be undertaken by an art department because the abUity to
organize has been termed a creative characteristic by research,
and the fostering of the indedent thinking and behavior is a
major goal in art and art education.
Each of three insfructors in the
art department had a confrol
group and an experimental
group. The confrol groups were
taught in the traditional manner.
Due dates were given for aU assignments and tests were announced in advance. The experimental groups were given a written activity perspectus with no
assigned due dates, and tests
were unannounced.
The flndings were three pronged:
1. The experimental condition
did not restrict the students' creativity. Insfructors m a y give assignments with no due dates without fear of students doing inferior work.
2. The big jump in creativity
scores in some of theclasses point
to the conclusion that wiUi some
teachers, structured conditions
do not necessarUy promote students' creative growth.
3. In classes where the experimental scores showed a gain,
structured conditions favor a
creative climate and may provide challenge and 8|tipnulation.
I
mn
by FRED LINGLE
Compus Humor
0u
Senator Carl Curtis of Nebraska has introduced a biU in
the Senate which could have
great effect on all future elections.
Curtis' bill is one which would
regulate the television industry in
reporting election results.
The television industry, like
most others, is a competitive one.
This competitiveness can be seen
in thefr great reliance upon the
television ratings. This competitiveness can be seen in their strife
to present better news programs
to the public. Finally, this competitiveness can be seen in thefr
coverage of election results on
the night of the balloting.
Nevertheless, the national election night coverage is a sham.
The emphasis of the networks is
on speed and not on responsibUity. Among the networks, the criteria for determining the best coverage seems to be on the one who
can call which results fastest.
A typical election night coverage session may go like this: at
7:00 the networks begin thefr
coverage; by 7:15 they make
their nation-wide predictions; by
7:30 they begin electing candidates according to thefr vote
analysis; by 9:00 they announce
that the race in which they formerly elected one person is now
too close to call; by 10:30 they
announce that the other person
has now been elected in the race;
by sign-off time the viewer is uncertain who has been elected. He
wUl have to consult his newspaper the foUowing day to discover who really has won the
Such television frresponsibUity also has its serious effects. In
1960 when vote analysis had
hardly begun a n d stUl had a few
bugs in it, it was able to elect
John Kennedy very early in the
evening; however, the late President could have lost the election
had an insignificant numljer of
voters in key states voted for
Richard Nixon instead. Vote
analysis was wrong in many
areas.
By the 1966 elections, the perfected vote analysis system predicted that the GOP would gain 5
governorships (got 8), 2 Senate
seats (got 3), and25 House seats
(got 47) at most. The networks
were wrong in races from Florida to Alaska. One network was
able to caU a total of 8 key
races wrong.
All this emphasized that the
vote analysis system is not a perfected one. StUl, the networks
seem at ease in calling the races
wrong even before the polls are
closed.
For example, In 1960 the vote
analysis system stated that John
Kennedy had won California before the polls there were closed.
Whether this affected the minds of
the people there who had yet to
vote, we don't know. Yet,thefact
is that Nixon, and not Kennedy,
had won California.
In 1962, 1964, and finaUy in
1966, the networks continued to
caU races in our western states
before the poUs there were closed.
Although the effect of such reporting on the voters is unknown, one might assume that
there is some, especiaUy in the
close races.
Senator Curtis's bUl is one
which would regulate the television election night coverage so
that the networks could not call
a race before all the polls in the
nation are closed. This would
merely postpone the election
night comedy for a few hours in
the interest of the American public. After all, are election night
entertainers like Huntley, Brinkley, Cronkite, and Smith more
important than fafr elections?
Nowadays colleges are emphasizing education. One university has become so strict It won't
allow a basketball player his
letter unless he can tell which
one it is.
At the University of Michigan,
some students rebelled against
the rebellers by starting their
own group, SPASM — the Society for the Prevention of Asinine Student Movements.
The dean of women at a small Texas college received an
urgent call late one evening Informing her of trouble on the
campus. Whele speeding toward
the scene, she was pulled over
by a highway patrolman. As the
officer approached her car, she
leaned out the window and yelled, "You can't stop me —I'm on my way to a panty raid!"
A college friend and I were
hitch-hiking our way to town,
but for some reason no one
seemed inclined to give us a
lift. I suggested joldngly that
maybe the reason was that people didn't Uke our long hair. With
this, my friend picked up a piece
of cardboard ^ o m the side of
the road and hastily scrawled
on it in big letters: GOING TOTHE BARBER'S.
RIDE.
A Georgia State professor was
surprised when he called a male
student In his Corporation Finance class and a female voice
responded. The part-time student, an Insurance salesman, had
sent his secretary to take notes.
Overheard on campus, one coed to another, describing her date
"He was like a big neutron all mass and no charge!"
LUBELLE'S
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ot
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EAGLE EYE
USED AUTO PARTS
The Eagle Eye wUl hold a
used auto parts auction this
evening at 7:30 pm in Su208, featuring special equipment for 1967 Rambler "Ambassador" stationwagons. All
interested parties are invited to
attend. Limit — 2 to a customer.
TAPERED
TO A
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It's Spring
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DIAMONDS
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Trim men, beware! Don't be
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Look for your favorite fabric,
pattern and color. Then, try on a
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Priced From $100.00
FRED J. EISEMANN
Diamond Jewelers
Since 1926
E. Main St. — Lock Haven
The holiday self-indulgence is over,
and the time has come for
something bracing. Firm. Industrious.
The classic gentleman's shirt,
sizes 8 to 16. The brief fly-fronted
skirt, sizes 6 to 16. Both
polyester and cotton. The shirt in
solids, the skirt in glen plaids
of True Blue, Buttercup, Clover Pink,
Fresh Green, Peach Fuzz, Iris.
SKIRTS $11
SHIRTS
$6
Letters To The Editor
Sports Fan Prophesies
MEMBER
Editor-ln-chlef STEVE SENTE
Managing Editor—RONSMITH
Faculty Advisors
Miss Marian Huttenstine
Mr. Willard Lankford
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
News Editor
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
Assistant Sports
Secretary
Advertising Managers
Circulation Manager
Business Manager
Photographers
Jan Dader
Jackie Enlow
John Passell
Cherilyn Holder
,....,
...Carole Taylor
Franki Moody, Paul Wilson
Helen DeGregory
Robert Remick
,
Ken Edwards, Steve Tweed
STAFF THIS WEEK
Kathy Mendolia, Paulette Banks, Jackie Bonner, Eileen Lagosky,
Cindy Rebon Karen RemUgner, Steve Miller, Fred Ungle and
Cindy Ueby.
THE EAGLE EYE Is published twenty-seven times during the school year
by students of Lock Haven State College, Lock Haven, Pa. AU opinions
expressed
by columnists and feature writers Including Letters4o4heEditor and not necessarily those of this publication but those of the Individual. Contributions and criticisms may be submitted to: Editor, Box 296,
LHSC and are welcome from all readers. This publication is a member of
the Associated Collegiate Press, and is student financed.
EDITORIAL:
Eagle Eye Discusses
Meal Ticket Problem
"I'm not only protecting m y
business, but the rights of the
students who have paid for their
meals, too. It isn't fair to any
student to allow this lending meal
tickets to g o on." " . . . such action as lending a meal ticket is
unfair to other students who are
using their own cards . . . Each
student, and only that student
who has paid for his meals, is
entitled to all 21 meals served
during any one week."
The above statements b y
James V. Williams, manager of
the campus food service, the Servomation - Mathias Company,
are quoted from recent issues of
the "Eagle Eye." They contain
what has been said to be official statement of policy of the
fellow students' tights. How absurd can one get!!!
tickets by one student to another.
It can be assumed from this implication that it is illegal to loan,
rent or sell a previously paid-for
meal ticket to another person because this action will endanger
the rights and privileges of the
other students of Lock Haven
State College. Mr. Williams
would have us believe that if a
student is going home for a weekend and lends his meal ticket to
his roomate's sister, he is directly endangering his friends' and
fellow students' rights. How absurd can one get!!!
To quote a recent letter to the
editor published in the March 11
issue of the "Eagle Eye": " . . .
the meal ticket means to me that I
have paid the correct fee for the
semester's meals. It's a strange
business that sells its product and
then holds the right to say what
th^se who have bought that product can do with i t " This statement, more than any other,
seems to express the ideas of this
writer, this publication, m a n y
faculty members, and in fact a
vast majority of the student
b o d y . The Servomation-Mathias
Company is supposedly represented o n this campus to cater
to the students of LHSC. Yet
they choose to discount the desires of the students. Where is
their "company policy" now?
L E N D I N G RESTRICTION
NOT I N CONTRACT
It has been stated by authorities ( a n d we wish to be corrected
if we are in error o n this point)
that nowhere in the company's
contract with Lock Haven State
is there mention of a restriction
o n the lending of meal tickets. Is
this just another example of con-
venient after-thought to be found
o n our campus?
There are two plausible reasons for this resfriction placed
o n the students by the Servomation-Mathias Company — one,
that the students themselves h a v e
expressed disapproval over the
system of lending meal tickets;
and two, that the Servomation Mathias Company never actually intended to serve each and every resident student of Lock Haven State for 21 meals each week.
The first of these "theories" is
absolutely wrong — in fact, most
students are in favor of ( a n d a r e
practicing) a system of loaning
meal tickets to friends. However,
the second of these proposals,
that the college food service never
intended to serve 21 meals a week
to each resident student, is by far
the more likely and, if one knew
the whole truth, probably the
most correct one.
N E V E R P L A N N E D TO SERVE
21 MEALS TO ALL
STUDENTS
It is basically sound business
for a c o m p a n y like Servomation
-Mathias to assume that only
about 2 / 3 of the maximum number of meals would be served.
Figuring this way, they can offer
lower prices to the students ( a s suming, of course, that they are
not "pocketingtheextra"). However, the crux of the matter lies
in the fact that the ServomationMathias Company insists this is
not the case. Mr. Williams, manager for this company, constantly maintains that the lending of previously purchased
meal tickets to someone who has
not paid will result in the deprivation of food for someone who
has paid. How can this be, unless meals are figured for only a
fraction ofthe student body, since
we all know that not everyone
eats each and every meal. The
number of meals would be the
same, regardless of who eats
them, unless not everyone is expected to eat all 21 meals each
"^^ ' IF S T U D E N T S EAT
21 MEALS - CHAOS
We wonder what would happen
if just for one week, the entire
number of resident students of
Lock Haven State would show
up at the dining hall for each
meal. We maintain that, unless
notified well in advance, the Serv o m a t i o n - Mathias Company
would not have *he sufficient
amount of food to serve all the
students — this situation directly
Pirates' Victory
Deeu- Steve Miller,
I've been having a rather
hard time trying to figure out if
you are related to Gene Mauch
or were born in Connie Mack
Stadium and therefore are a diehard Philadelphia Phillies fan.
I am, of course, referring to
your picking of the Philadelphia
team as the National League in
last week's "Eagle Eye" and
your reasons for doing so.
I must admit that I have been
Non-Greeks Question Hours
Denr Editor:
Is it right for one girl to come
into the dorm at 1:40 (Greek
Weekend) and be pleasantly
greeted b y her temporary housemother, while anotiier girl comes
in at 1:45, and is met at the door
and asked "Where were you,
Susie?" Obviously she was out
and was all right.
Why shouldn't she have a
two o'clock for Greek Weekend
even though she didn't attend the
Greek Ball? She was out with a
Greek. Isn't that g o o d e n o u g h ?
What about those girls that didn't
come in at all? Is that what this
girl should have done? To ask
the question is to answer it.
Why should this girl be campused for one week by dorm
council for a misdemeanor of
special h o u r s for the women of
this c a m p u s ? I feel women students should be treated equally
a n d special hours, when given
out, should be given to all.
G. D. I.
Dear Editor,
I would like to see a statement
in the "Eagle Eye" from the
Dean of Women concerning the
girls' hours for the past Greek
Weekend.
1 would like to know why
some girls, sorority sisters and
girls who date Greeks, are considered special and are allowed
to remain out an hour later than
other girls.
Does this mean that in order
to receive special privileges a gfrl
should be in a sorority or should
be dating a fraternity man?
If this is so, the saying, "money talks," is true. N o t all girls
can afford to be in a sorority nor
can they all date fraternity men.
The number of men o n this campus is limited, let alone fraternity men.
What are the GDI's supposed
to do? Why should a g u y take out
• a GDI when he can g o with a
sorority girl and stay out with
her an hour later?
If special privileges are g o i n g
to be handed out, when are the
GDI's h a v i n g 2:00's and the
Greeks h a v i n g l:00's? This is the
only fair thing to d o now. But
will it be done?
Ima Independent
caused by the obvious "fact" that
they do not expect all the students
to eat every meal, nor do they
have enough food o n hand for
this event.
To quote our recent letter writer, "It's a strange business
that sells its product and then
holds the right to say what those
who have bought that product
can do with it."
RON SMITH,
Managing Editor
a Pittsburgh Pirate fan ever since
I was old enough to climb one of
the trees outside Forbes Field,
and a m therefore biased, but how
can one in a supposed sportsminded column be so naive?
Granted Philadelphia has as
good a pitching team as there is
in baseball (with the exception
of Cleveland) but the Pirates are
not that bad now that they have
Dennis Ribant (11-10 last year
with the Mets) and the veteran
Juan Pizzaro. Bob Veale had a
bad year last year but with
Woody Fryman, Tommie Sisk,
and Pete Mikkelsen, the Hrates
are not that bad.
Your next point was that with
Bill White, Cookie Rojas, Richie
EDITORIAL:
Spring Is Sprung
And The Mud Runs
Spring has once again blessed
us with its relreshing presence.
The warm, spring days make
one want to open his windows
and inhale the wonderful, invigorating exhaust fumes of a passing diesel truck, or the tantalizing
aroma of the garbage truck
parked out front; they make y o u
want to g o outside and take a
walk around our campus.
Ah, the beauty of a walk
around our campus—watching
the birds build their nests, looking for new green shoots popping
up from thesoil, and just hearing
all of the sounds of spring are
only a few ofthe m a n y things one
can do on his walk around our
nice, MUDDY campus. Mud is
fine for mud turtles, mud hens
and wasps who use mud to build
their nests, but when students g o
stomping through our muddy
campus, they tear out aU of the
baby grass that has just come
up. Oh, horrid, wretched, unmerciful murderers, have y o u no
couth? Killing baby g r a s s is
immoral and not nice.
Not only is the baby grass
killed, but the top soil is defaced
and mutilated. After a week of
brutal stomping, killing, mutilating, and defacing, our campus
is a ghastly mess. There is only
one thing that is not a ghastly
mess: the sidewalks, which are
immaculate. Why dirty up our
immaculate
sidewalks
when
there is such nice gooey mud to
walk through? Crummy, muddy
shoes don't matter at all as long
as our immaculate sidewalks retain their immaculate appearance.
If someone held an annual
spring contest to see who had the
dirtiest, messiest front lawn, the
LHSC campus would win first
prize quite handUy. If someone
held a n annual spring contest to
the Collegs Man's
BARBER SHOP
26 Bellefonte Av. 748-2787
see who had the cleanest sidewalks on March 21, LHSC would
win an indisputable first place
every year. It is indeed a pity
that these contests are not held—
LHSC could win so m a n y prizes
for its b o o b y prize case.
Unfortunately, shoes are not
the only things that get muddy
when our unsanitary students
plot through the mud. If the mud
would not cling so tenaciously
to the soles of our students' shoes,
the situation would not be s o
bad, but since it does, the situation is most dire.
When the student whose shoes
are caked with mud enters a
building o n the campus, the mud
ceases to cling to his shoes. It
falls off and leaves a trail of mud
behind him.
All this mud that is fracked into
the buUdings gives them a
squalid appearance. It g e t s
ground into the carpets, smeared
on the tile, and caked o n the
stairs. The custodians are probably least appreciative of. all the
mud. They have enough difficulty cleaning up the normal accumulation of dirt, without having to be hindered by the mud
that is tracked in b y L H S C students. When they have to clean
up globs of mud, they have to
use more cleaning agents. More
mud, more cleaning agents,
more money, more taxes, and
more complaining is the vicious
cycle here.
Since the students wUl not use
the sidewalks, the maintenance
crew will have to put up fences
around the campus lawns as
they did last year and the year
before, and almost every year
since the sidewalks were installed.
It appears that LHSC is destined to make annual purchases
of grass seed, fences, lestoil and
brooms.
LUIGI'S
offers the BEST in
•
Subs
•
• Canadian Bacon
Bar-B-Q's
•
Capr io's
Allen, e t c the Phils probably
have the best hitters in baseball.
I guess the Pirates are weak
there too, with Matty Alow
(where did he finis last year?),
Manny Mota (same question),
Roberto Clemente (M.V.P.), Willie Stargell (a very weak hitter,
right?). The addition of Maury
Wills (a fair hitter and stealer),
Donn Clendenon, etc. If I recall,
although the Phillies, according
to certain Phillie fans, h a v e the
best hitting team around, the Pirates didn't do too bad last year
with the team batting a meager
. 2 7 9 and h a v i n g , only four batters in the top ten.
Defensively, I admit, the Pi(Continued on Page Eight)
Hot Dogs
•
. . .
•
Hamburgers
French Fries
•
Pizza
Sold In the Dorms Every Tuesday
and
Thursday
Luigi's Sub Sliop
Bellefonte Avenue — Lock Haven
LHSC Reigns As NAIA Chomp,
Melchoir Triumphs At 115
By Steve Miller
Lock Haven edged Adams
State 80-69 in total team points
to capture the team title. The
Bald Eagles of Coach Gray Simons sent five men into the finals
compared to 3 from Adams
State.
MELCHIOR ONLY L. H.
CHAMPION
Ken Melchior won his first
NAIA crown as he dominated
Rick Engh through the first period and pinned him in 2:17
of the second period. Melchior
looked impressive throughout
the tournament as he either shut
out or pinned every opponent he
wrestled.
FOLEY TAKES 3RD—
KILLION PLACES 6TH
Shane Foley lost a tough semifinal match to 4-time Jim
Hazewinkel, 6 - 4, but came
through in the consolation finals to capture 3rd. In the afternoon of the consolation Foley
decisioned Mike Hernandez of
Adams State 11-O. In the consolation final, in the most thrilling consolation bout of the evening, Foley decisioned Rick Kelvlngton of Moorehead, 4-3.
DENNIS KILLION, A MILD
SURPRISE TO THE BALD EAGLE fans, came out of nowhere
and took 6th in the 137-pound
division. Killion advanced to the
semi-finals where he was defeated 7-3 by Mike Garside of Wisconsin Superior. Killion then lost
6-5 to Don McCoUin of Clarion,
then lost a 6-2 decision to Tom
Sprigler of Black HUl to fall
into the 6th place finish.
LORSON TAKES 2ND PLACE
Jeff Lorson, unscored on
throughout the tourney, was finally scored on and defeated in
the finals of the 130 pound class
5-2 by Mike Stanley of Adams
State 5-2. Lorson couldn't quite
wrestle his usual strong match
and was never really in this
one.
KLINGAMAN LOSES TO
GERST IN 152 BATTLE
Jack Klingaman gave it all
he had and barely missed upsetting Joe Gerst of Bloomsburg.
Gerst immediately took Klinga-
man down and Klingaman
escaped after a few seconds on
the bottom. Gerst held on to this
one point lead and killed all
Klingaman's hopes with a final
period escape. This was one of
matches of the evening.
BLACKSMITH LOSES
HEARTBREAKER AT 160
a
t
Crossword Puzzle
i
*
s
ACROSS
LHSC Flunks NCAA's
By Steve MUler
Lock Haven fans were disappointed at the finish of the Bald
Eagles in the NCAA tourney, but
Have any news tips?
Coil the Eagle Eye
748-5531
Passell's Puzzler of the Wbek
1. What professional baseball
pitcher had the most shut-outs
in a season? How many?
2. Who won the masters golf
tourney in 1966?
next year looks bright.
Ken Melchofr, John Smith, and
Jeff Lorson were our only
chances of entering the consolations, but the men who defeated
them were defeated, thus eliminating the Bald Eagle grapplers.
The highest any NAIA champion finished was second. Carolla of Adams State was pinned by
Curley Culp of Arizona State in
:51 seconds of the unlimited finals.
Next year wUl g^ve all the Bald
Eagles except Jeff Lorson another crack at the title. John
Smith and Jeff Lorson each lost
close decisions and a break or
two could have given the Bald
Eagles a couple of finishers.
DOWN
Steve - — , Pirate pitcher
Tackles, centers, guards, and
ends
3. Powell, Oakland pass
catcher
Symbol for element
Gray
, 3 time NCAA
wrestling champ
Used to shorten a dress
Title of ownership
Not new
Jack
, former Bald Eagle
grappler
14, Three minus two
15. Molecular action
18. Girls name
19. Ron
, Cub thlrdbaseman
21. Name
22. What teams try to gain
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Passell's Puzzle Answers
25. Also
27.
ball, Illegal pitch
28. Too small (abbr.)
29. Hit with rocks
30. - — Roberts, former pitching
great
34.
Starr, Green Bay quarterback
35.
Iron
36. Wager
37. Charged particle
38. — - Hunt, new Dodger
39. See 14 down
41. College Degree (abbr.)
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Answers
1. Grover Cleveland Alexander,
(16), hi 1916.
2. Jack Nicklaus
Compliments
of
KELLER
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• Bald Eagle wrest1. Jim -ler
Tech coach
10. Italian money
11. Spanish adjective
12. Small Insect
13. Heavyweight champion
16. Wind direction
17. By one's self
20. Tidy
23, French article
24. Day of week abbr.
26. Asian country
31. Negative
32. What girls do to their hair
33.
Graham, Red Skin coach
35. Not sorry
36. Red ~ — , German war ace
37. Golf club
38. Suffix
41. Daniel
42. What hitters have done
43. - — In Boston
Jim Blacksmith was forced into
overtime with Rollin Schinunel of
East Oregon. Schimmel escaped
immediately in the first overtime period. Blacksmith couldn't
escape from Schimmel and had
to be satisfied with a 1-0 overtime loss and 2nd place finish.
JOHN SMITH LOSES TO
DEFENDING 167-POUND
CHAMP
John Smith grabbed an early
lead and led throughout, but
on an escajje maneuver was pinned in 2:26 of the third period.
Smith had a 3-pointlead and was
trying to escap>e from Lamoin
Merkly of Central Washington
when the fall occurred. Markley
shared the outstanding wrestler
award with Jim Blacksmith's
conqueror, Rollin Schimmel.
Th^ important thing is that
Lock Haven won the tourney.
A good team effort accomplished
this and brought the Bald Eagles their second straight NAIA
tide.
(1st Row L to R) 115—Ken
Melchior (LHSC); 123 — Jim
Hazewinkel (S.C); 130-Mike
Stanley (Adams); 137—Rick
Stuyvesant (Moorehead); 145—
Dennis Warren (Central Washington); 152 — J o e G e r s t
(Bloom);
(2nd Row) 160—Rollin Schimmel (East Ore.); 167—Lamoin
Merkely (Cent. Wash.); 177—
Mike Mosier (Moorehead); 191
— Mike Rybak (S.C); Unl. —
_Nick Carollo (Adams).
L \L
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* •
ti
"Prescription
Specialists"
L S
L E
B S
MUNRO
r
At th* Monumant
1967 NAIA
Tourney
Placers
11 •>
KiiM-KKN MKI.CHfdU, J.HSt
Serimd" Rjck Kni-'h. Uemidji Si„le
Third —Arthur Smioni, Atliinis .Sink
I'tmrth —Dick '^^t•s^lt.T. Wi^t'ctnsin Siipfrli
I Hlh- K.iynioMd Day. C'Uirinn Slacc
Sixth — CurltH' Aii'xandiT, t :nivfrsit\
(ItlHiha
123
Kiisl-Jiin Hu/t'winkk-. St. Cluud St.ilu
.Si'tnnci-lialpti Adamson, WaviicsburK
Ihird-SHA.VK FOLKY. LMSC
Foarth —Ritk Kcivingum, ^t(^o^llelld Suite
I-'ifth—Miki- Hfriiaiuk'/. Adiirrm Stale
Sixth — Amtn.nv Li'DMiirdo. Wisconsin Superior
I.to
I-irst —.Miko Stanlev. Adunis State
S t t o n d - . I K F F I.OHSON. I.HSC
Third—t'titil Ausliii. Wisttmsin Whitewater
Fuurtli- Hill {;ermann, Moorhead State
Fifth —(iene XaK>. Waynebbiir^
Sixth —Tom Thompson, Wisconsin Sui>erior
137
Kirsi-Rick Stuyvesant. Moorhead Stale
Si'cond-Mike (iarside, Wisconsin Superior
Third—Don Mct'oUim, Clarion State
Fourth—Tom Sprigler. Black Hill** State
Fifth—hmmv Whitmer. .'\ppalachian
Sixth~l>KNNlS KILI.ION. LHSC
145
pi'rst—Pennis Warren, (.'enlral Washinnlon
Second " Hoy WushinKton, I'niversity of
Omahu
Third — -lini Chapman. West WashiiiKlo'i
StiitP
Fourth—Mike Fitzgerald. Moorhead State
Fifth—I.eo Kinbellu. Minot State
Sixth—HoOerl TeaKardt-n, Clarion Slate
Mtmrn K
152
First—Joe Gerst, BloonisbuiK
Second-.lACK KLINGAMAN, LHSC
Third—Merle SovereiKn, Winona
Fourth —Carl Olson, St. Cloud State
Fifth—vXJan .Johnson, Central W'ashinKlon
Sixth —Steve Larson, Beniidji State
160
P'irst—Kolhn -Schimmel, East Oregon
S e i o n d - J I M BLACKSMITH, LHSC
Third—Jim Tanniehill, Winona
Fourth—Tom Karpency, Wayne.sburg
Fifth- Tom Oil, .Sloul Stale
Sixth—Mike Ross, Wisconsin Superior
167
First—Lamoin Merkley, Central WashinKlun
S e c o n d ^ I O H N T R K N T SMITH, LHSC
Third—Ray Wicks. Winona
F o u r t h - D o n Apodaca, Adams Slate
Fifth-Jim Grieco. Montclair Slate
Sixth — Fares Washington, Lincoln Univezslty
177
Firsi—Mike Mosier, Moorhead Stale
Second—Tom Kusleika, Adams Slate
Third—I.*onard f'helan, Kast tJregon
F o u r t h - R u d y Ross, Mldlai\d Lutheran
Fifth-Paul Reedy, Graceland
Sixth—Steve Melchior, Dakota Wesleyan
191
First—Mike Rybak, SI Cloud Slate
Second—Peter Middleton, Mornln^iltie
Third—DoUas Delay, Central Washington
Fourth—Ron Hamplon. Adums Stale
Fifth-Jeff Rosen. Montclair
Sixth—Jim Henderson, Moorhead
Unlimited
First—Nick CaroUo. Adams Stale
^^iTd-Steve Schmidt, Wisconsin River Fall.
F o u r t h - J o e KighetU. WaynMburg
p S u i - J o h n Zwolinski, Winoo.
| 2 S ^ C « V M . d d o K . We«ern IUlr«l.
SPORTLITE
Eastern wrestling suffered a
serious setback at last week's
NCAA Tournament. The only
two Eastern wrestlers to enter the
finals at Kent State, Ohio, were
Mike Caruso of Lehigh and Tom
Schlendorf of Syracuse. These
two both won national championstiips, but two out of twentytwo finalists is a poor representation . . .
The only two Eastern teams in
the top ten were Lehigh and
Navy, again showing a n obvious weakness in Eastern wrestling. This lack of strength may
be overcome in the next couple of
years, however, since Penn State
and Lock Haven State have
young teams and much potential power . . .
The entries are rolling in for
Steve Miller's "BasebaU Prognostication Contest." GJet yours
in as soon as possible. The deadline date is April 10. The entries
will be printed iiTthe subsequent
weeks because of a lack of space,
but all entries must be in the
hands of "Ttie Eagle Eye" sports
Baseball
Prognostleaflon
Contest
staff on or before the above date
I spoke to ev&ybody's choice
for the "most colorful coach" of
the NAIA tourney, Ken Cox, two
weekends ago. Mr. Cox coaches
St.. Cloud, Minnesota, and the
great Jim Hazewinkel, (4 time
NALA champ). At St. Qoud last
year, on the days of the NAIA
tourney, said Mr. Cox, the students were on vacation, and completely free to attend all sessions
of the large tourney. Not only
this, but the administration also
left the St. Cloud students out
at 2:00 pm on the day of the
Moorhead State match which
was to be held that same evening
at 7:00 pm. The St. Cloud mentor said that the enthusiasm generated by the students was overwhelming. I suppose there could
be a connection between the generosity of the St. Cloud administrator and the enthusiasm . . .
Jack Klingaman, runnerup at
152, picks up on the leg of
Robert Elliot. Klingaman is riding his Wilmington opponent en
route to a 13-4 decisioa
Ken Melchior, 115 lb. champ works over Ken Flure of Wisconsin U. at River Falls in his quarter-flnal victory.
Mr. Cox generated a little of
his own enthusiasm at Thomas
Field House during the NAIA
tourney in mid-March.
The two outstanding wrestlers of the 1967 NAIA Tournament.
On the left, Lamoin Merkley of Central Washington State, and
on the right Rollin Schimmel of Eastern Oregon College.
Jim Hazewinkel and his proud
father following Jim's 4th NAIA
championship.
Larry Tolomay
National
American
1. Pittsburgh
Baltimore
2. San Francisco Detroit
3. Atlanta
Minnesota
4. Los Angeles
Cleveland
5. Philadelphia
California
6. St. Louis
Chicago
7. Cincinnati
Washington
8. Houston
New York
9. Chicago
Kansas City
10. New York
Boston
I
Gary L.
National
1. Pittsburgh
2. Atlanta
3. Cincinnati
4. San Francisco
5. Hiiladelphia
6. Los Angeles
7. St. Louis
8. Houston
9. Chicago
10. New York
Ward
National
1. Philadelphia
2. Pittsburgh
3. Atlanta
4. San Francisco
5. Cincinnati
6. Los Angeles
7. Houston
8. New York
9. St. Louis
10. Chicago
Youngs
American
Detroit
Baltimore
California
Minnesota
Cleveland
Washington
New York
Chicago
Boston
Kansas City
Coach Gray Simons with his "Coach of the Year" bowl in
right hand and the team championship placque in his left.
Yorks
American
Baltimore
Detroit
Cleveland
Minnesota
Chicago
California
Washington
Kansas City
Boston
New York
Tickets are on sale now at
the bookstore for the Association concert. Spring Weekend wUl
be AprU 14, 15, and 16, this
year.
QUESTION OF THE WEEK
"Where did 300 wrestlers disappear to at the dance held by
KVP after the NAL\ semi-finals
on Friday, March 17?
Editors note—students are invited to send their "Question of the
Week" to the Eagle Eye office,
box 296 Sullivan HalL Entries
must be in a week iiefore the date
of publication.
Jeff Lorson of
LHSC and
M i k e Stanley
tie up in the
130-lb. fmal.
Stanley w o n
the match 5-2
as he was the
first opponent
to score on
Lorson in the
tourney.
E a g l e 3rd
place winner
at 123, Shane
Foley muscles
M oorhead's
State's R i c k
Kelvlngton, in
John T r e n t
Snuth tackles
Morningside's
Dermis Ciuristiansea In this
f i r s t round
match the Eagle grappler
piimed his opp o n e nt in
2:50. Dennis
KUlion (133)
has his Fort
Hays oppone n t , Robert
Johnson, in a
bad way. Killion pulled off
one of the big
upsets of the
tourney when
h e pinned
Johnson, last
yearis NAIA
runner - up in
4:03. Killion
went on to
take 6th place.
a thrilling
match. Foley
won the consolation final,
7-6.
J
s
—-
German Club Formed
3 Officers Elected
cussion, Mrs. Nielson played a
record of "Deutsche Schlagers,"
German hit songs.
The club is designed as a
learning and a fun experience.
It will enable the members to
practice some basic German conversation and to learn more
about German culture. There will
be the fun of playing German
games and singing German folk
songs. A Kaffee-Klatsch, an informal gathering with refreshments, in AprU and a picnic in
May have been suggested as future complements torgularclub
meetings. The members of the
German club are enthusiastic
about the organization and hope
to make it a success.
An organizational meeting of
the new German club initiated on
campus by Mrs. Margaret Nielson was held on Monday evening, February 27 in Raub 422.
The first order of business was
the election of officers. By floor
nomination and majority vote,
the following students were
elected: President—Michael Deckman, Vice President—Martha
Farabaugh, Secretary - Treasurer — Teresa Bowes.
The members of the club then
discussed a constitution and
name for the club and'the question of dues. It was decided that
meetings would be held tentatively the 2nd Monday of each
month. During the informal dis-
Easter Party Held For Coeds:
3 Girls Win Vunny Contest'
An Easter Party for all girls
living on campus was sponsored
by the Women's Dorm Council
after the girls' hours in the Old
Cafeteria on Wednesday, March
'^' Under the direction of Ellen
Baker, mistress of ceremonies,
entertainment was provided by
various groups of girls. These
girls performed some skits and
sang a number of songs.
The highlight of the evening
was a bunny contest, the first to
be held at an LHSC Easter Party.
Each wing of the three dorms
was asked to select a girl representative and dress her as a
bunny.
A panel of judges, which included the Dean of Women,
housemothers, and students, selected the winners. Three bunnies, Gerry Ogdal, Sue Snyder,
and Yuko Nishida tied for first
place and were awarded bunny
lollipops.
Each girl was given a ticket
when she entered the cafeteria
and prizes were raffled off. Refreshments cinsisting of soda,
cookies, and candy were also
served.
•ROXY-
Theatre
Lock Haven
Now Playing—Continuing
tiirougli Tiiursday, April 6
A WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS!
L
METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER PRESENTS
AGARUOPONTl PRODUCTION
DAVID LEAN'S FILM
i
OF BORIS PASTERNAKS
DOCTOR
ZHilAGO
The '67 Easter Bunny for LHSC is Sue Snyder (center). With
her are the two runners-up—Gerry Oydal (1.) and Yuko Nishida.
IN PANAVISION* AND METROCOLOR
neSERVEO SEATS N O W AT BOX-OFlFICE OR BV M A I L
The story of Zhivogo — a man torn between his love for his wife and the tender
and passionate Lara . . . told against the
flaming background of revolution?
• SHOWING TIME •
One Show Each Evening
Doers Open: 7:30
Feature at 8 p.m.
Mat. S a t . - 1:30
Mat. Sun. — 2 p.m.
ADMISSION PRICES
FOR THIS SHOW
Adults $1.00
Children $.35
Letters
( Continued from Page Four )
rates are poor. Jim Pagliaroni is
one of the worst fielders in baseball. Donn Clendenon couldn't
hold Dick Stuart's glove. BUI
Mazeroski is the worst second
baseman in baseball. Gene Alley
makes poor plays and along
with Maz have the worst double
play combination ever, and
Maury Wills sounds out this 10
cent infield.
In the outfield, probably Akeley School could field a better
one. Clemente, Stargell, and
Alow (with that scrub Manny
Mota barging in occasionally)
definitely can't hold a thing on
Philadelphia's squad.
Now really!
One final note, Jimmy the
Greek in Las Vegas says the
Bucks will win and gives 9-5
odds. If I were you I'd get some
money together. You'd be rich
by October!
How does that grab you,
Sportsfan?
Ray Huff
LOCK HAVEN
TRAVEL SERVICE
•
JERRY'S
ALL FISHING TACKLE IN STOCK!
Boots - Rods - Reels by South Bend
Baft - Salmon Eggs - 1000's of Lures
•
Airline Reservations
•
Ticketing
SPECIAL STUDENT
RATES
i
2 0 9 E. M a i n Street
Phone 748-6711
*Art of Him'
To Be Topic
Of Producer
Mr. Robert Edmonds, an outstanding producer of films, will
be on the Lock Haven State
Campus April U. He will present
a program on the art of film appreciaUon and film production at
1:00 pm in Raub 106. Dr. Marcus Konick worked with Mr. Edmonds on film production in
Harrisburg.
Mr. Edmonds will discuss the
characteristics of good films as
well as specific techniques of the
unusual,
experimental, and
avant/garde films. He will be
talking to several English classes
and consulting with various representatives of the Humanities
Department to make plans for
.outstanding entertainment films
to be presented on campus next
year.
STATE BANK OF AVIS
Main OfFice
Hshing Licenses in Stock
—Drive-in window
—Free parking in rear
ALL FISHING TACKLE UP TO 50% DISCOUNT
Ball Gloves
8.98 to 9.98
— O n Route 2 2 0 in Avis, Pa.
Woodward Branch
Two Drive-in windows
Tennis Rackets
5.95
by
to
Spalding, Penna.
19.95
Tennis Balls
Tennis Presses
OPEN ALL DAY WEDNESDAY
JERRY'S
can
1.85
98t
—Free a n d easy parking
Both OfFer
•
N O SERVICE CHARGE O N CHECKS
•
PERSONALIZED PRINTED CHECKS
•
CONVENIENT HOURS
No Minimum Balance Required
— F R E E
i
Media of