BHeiney
Wed, 07/05/2023 - 12:42
Edited Text
LEEYE

Vol. Xill NO. 103

LOCK HAVEN STATE COLLECE

Riday May i, 1970

Wineglass

To Speak

Tues.

Leonard
Weinglass,
junior
defense attorney in the Chicago
Conspiracy Trial, will speak
in Ulmer Planetarium on the
Lock
Haven
State
College
campus
Tuesday, May 5, at
8:15 pm.
Weinglass himself faces 14
counts of contempt of court
from the trial, with a possible
sentence of 20 months and 16
days in prison.
Weinglass, once a captain
in the United States Air Force,
is presently maintaining an office
in Newark, New J e r s e y .

A graduate of George Wash- made several trips 10 V i e t ington
University
(Phi
Ueta Nam; Kenneth Uibson, c a n d i d Kappa) and Yale Law School,
ate for mayor: The Free People
he represents such v/ell-known the
YIPPIE
organisation at
peoffle as Tom Hayden, one Rutgers
University;
Thomas
of the founders of Students for Trantino, convicted of murdera
Democratic
Sticiety; Jerr>' ing two policemen; Leroy .tones
Rubin, organizer of the 1967 a black organizer at Rutgers;
march on the Pentagon, author and other similar c l i e n t s .
of the book Do It and ci>-foundWeinglass
lias
traveled
er
of
the YIPPIES; Abbie
Hoffman, Rubin's a s s o c i a t e c o - throughout the woild and visitEurope,
Iceland,
Brazil,
founder of the YIPPIES and ed
author of the book
Rcvolutmn and Israel. In May 1968 he
visited Cuba as a guest of
For
The
Hell
nf it Dave
DeUinger. a pacifist opposed tn the government.
the LI.S. Asian war and who has
The program is s ponsctred
by the LHS debate union in
co-operation with the asscmbU
conimiltce. ,\ limited amount
of tickets
are available al
ihi- rcceptuin desk in the PL B
on a firsl conic, firsl ..crvc
basis .

Nevel Nam«cl Ass't PR and SI Director
!•;• Ross N c c l .Ir.
«cll
khoAii • - p o r l s w r i u u . has been
luinu'd
.issisUMit
ilueciiir
of
pubhc r c h i i i o t i s and sporls in
lorm.iliori
dm-ilor
lor
l-nk
lluv en s t a i ' College.
I'he
^ijipoinlnienl H ; I S ,ii;noi:nerd b\
P i t ' s i d f i i l Kiellard
1. Palsons
\Vt^diiesi.la\
atternoon
Ne\el
g.iuied nal

LHS Students In Accident ;/'
Two LHS s t u d e n t s and a
city youth received treatment
at the Lock Haven Hospital
following
a $5,500 accident
in Lock Haven yesterday afternoon.
Cars driven by Harry Smelt/,
a 21-year-old junior Iroin Spring
Grove, and Diane Brandt, ih,
of Sunset P i n e s , collided at
West Main-Third Street intersection.
The
Brandt auto, a 1970
station wagon, was nearly demolished. Damage to Smeltz'

Lock

sporls ear was estimated at
$1,200Smelt/.
and
a
passcngei
ill his car. 20->car-old William
Serafin of Charlton and a LHS
studeni, both were treated for
laceration and contusions of
Ihe knees, and abrasions of
Ihe forehead A passenger in
Ihe
Brandt
car,
13-year-old
John Brandt, was treated for
laceration of Ihe arm and released.
The
mishap occurred
3:10 Pir; Thursday

The Haven
Students Take To
The Sun and Fun

> m i i l i o n Ul

>i ih.
d 1^
u ilh the vSilhamsport (,,,/,
w ill
start
on fus new
u^b Mon.
Ma > s,
||,. lias a l s o \erilten
numerous a r i n l e s
for
\arMHis
natioiKiUx e i r i ' u l a l e t l iiuiga/nu's
Since he l i i s i starlet! lollow
uig I .IIS a t l l l e l u s at Ihe .1 ge ol
ten \ e \ e l has iei.ei\e(.l various
awalLls
and
ganu'd
national
rec<^gniiion
foi
his
writing
He r e c e i v e d merit s p o r l s w r i t i n g
awards 111 I 9 6 0 and 196li and
received a commend i t i o n from
the N.MA coaches m 1966 ior his
49 page a r t i c l e c o n c e r n i n g Ihe
-porlsH n

NAIA wresiling touri aniCT't when
llie lournaliienl u a s lele a' l.HS.
\ot;-d for his howling and
•.'.resiling arliclos, Nevel was
\ oleil Itie outstanding wrestling
u liter in the eounlry by the
|i);U'.-).l

ll re s l / l l J C

\r"VV\S.

in

1967.

Comnienting on his appoint,
ment Nevel s t a t e d , " i grew up m
the field house and it was my
second home.
I'm very happy
about the job and will make
every effort I can to put Lock
Haven
State on the m a p . "

Students Vote On Activity Fee
Sludents Will again vote on a
pioposed increased activity fee
Mondav May 4.
Ihe proposal s t a t e s :
All
studenls (except those taking
extension courses, and regular
sludents taking less Ihiui 12
semester hours of st udy) sha 11
pa\ lo Ihe Studeni Cooperative
Council an iiciivities fee in
accordance with the following
s c he d u! e
Regulai
sessions
$30 f'er
seme ste

Suminer
s e s s it.)n

;ssions-

$7.50 per

A second vote will take place
on
Monday
concerning
the
activity fee increase with the
studeni body voting and a twothirds majority needed to pass
the proposed amendment. Balloting will take place in Bentley
Hall and the PUB from 8 am
to 7 pm.
The reasons given by the
executive board for the additional funds were:
increased
costs in the areas of ransportation, meals and
lodging;
centennial celebrati.on beginning
in 1970; and limited amount of
available funds.

Bald Eagles Move Above

.500

For First Time This Season
The 'old man' of the Lock
Haven State College baseball
t e a m ' s pitching staff put the
Eagles
over the
.500 mark
yesterday atternoon as he hurled
them pasl visiting Vork College,
7-4.
Wes Detar had given up 14 earned runs in three previous innings
pitched before ye.sierday's encounter when he went Ihe full
nine innings lifting the LHS
s e a s o n record to 5-4.
Of the four runs he allowed
three were unearned while he
allowed '^nlv six h i t s , struckout
six and walked two.
York opened the scoring in the
opening frame with Iwo r u n s .
Bob ismith reached first on an
error and Dave Conway followed
with a single.
Both runners
advanced on a sacrifice bunt
and scored on Mike Reachard's
single before Detar could get the
side out.
LHS came back in their half
of the inning with two unearned
runs as York committed three
errors.
Denny Rhule singled.
Randy Igou was safe on an
error, Don Noblit singled and
Rhule and Igou scored as Ray

Oberheim
and Doug
Conlon
were safe on errors.
file l.agles took the lead in
the second on another unearned
run when Louie Martarano walked
and was sacrificed lo second by
Detai.
Martarano came home
when Ihe York Ihird baseman
bobbed Igou's ground ball.
York lied the score in the
lop of the third frame when
Smith reached firsl on Rhule's
e Tor and was sacrificed lo
second.
Kirk Berger followed
with a single before Detar retired Ihe s i d e .
LHS went ahead lo stav in the
fourth when Igou singled and
came home on Noblit's triple.
Noblit then scored when Oberheim s i n g l e s lo center.
The F-lagles added insurance
runs in the fifth and sixth.
In Ihe fifth Mike Haeon singled
and moved lo second on a sacrifice. He later scored on an infield popup when the infield pop
fly rule was in effect hut the
first didn't catch the ball. The
second baseman picked up the
loose ball and threw wildly to
second in an attempt to cut
down Detar who had been moving

on the fly.
The unearned run in the sixth
came in when Oberhiem was hit
by a pitch and went to third on
Conlon's
single.
Oberheim
scored when in an attempt to
nab Conlon going to second on the
throw to third, the York second
baseman failed to handle the
throw.
In the meantime Detar had
pitched five consecutive scoreless innings in a row until the
ninth when York nicked him for
another unearned run.
After pinch hitter Ray Gerhart
forced Bill Price at second,
Mike Geingerich singled to left
and when the ball got away from
leftfielder Jim Donahoe, Gerhart
came all the way from first to
score on a close play al the
plate.
The E a g l e s ' next encounter is
tomorrow afternoon at Shippen.sburg where the Red Raiders
will host LHS in a doubleheader
starting at 1:00.
York. . . 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1—4 6 6
LHS . . . 2 1 0 2 1 1 0 0 X—7 9 4
Olsen Wagner (7) and May; Detar
and Martarano, Baker (3)
W-Delar

Flick:

Master at Muffs

To say that Woody Allen's
TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN
borders on the absurd would
be a gross injustice. Allen's
newest
endeavor
is
totally
absurd and exceptionally funny. . \ l l e n ' s genius is evident
as writer of the screenplay. ,
director and star.
The story is based on the
life of one Virgil Well and his
misadventures
in
the
world
of crime, lust and lunacy. The
film is handled like a. "White
P a p e r " documentary on Virgil
Well, a criminal on the run with
h i s wife Louise and Iheir baby.
The script literally drips with
sarcasm and a totally ridiculous
dialogue-just
the
touch
thai
makes
it enjoyable
cinema.
From the early s t a g e s ot
Virgil's short lifetime, he is
the target of every kind of inj u s t i c e that could possibly be
sustained by one human being.
In a lelevision interview with
his second grade teacher she
recounted how on one particular
occasion, Virgil has stolen a
pen from her desk and she, not

\\Tshing lo cause the s'tiulli unp.eeessarN' embarrassiiient. said
Ihat all would close their e \ c s
and tire person who had lilehed
the pen could return it. She
slated that although he did return the pen, Viigil also took
Ihis opjiortunitv to give ever\
girl in the c l a s s a Ieel.
h'urther inlervicws included
his parents who, betaiise nl
Iheir guilt and shame at having
such an offspring, wore tiroucho
\Uirx-t\pe disguises consisting
ot' g l a s s e s , taise nose, and
niustaehe.
Included
in these
eneoantcrs with his parents is
also i p e o! llie most overstated
pokes at religum that I have
ever seen on the s c i e e n .
When asked what kind of a
bov
\'irgil was
his
mother
slated that he was basically
a good boy and slie was promptly
contradicted by his father. The
father stated thai Virgil was
an Atheist and despite repeated
attempts by him to beat religion
into Virgil, Ihe boy just refused
to come into the flock.
As far as the acting in the

L-Olsen

:Roxy

film goes, il is nothing short
of horrid, bul one does not seem
to mind Ihat because \ ou keep
laughing so much of the time.
The photography and music
score accent the film with some
of Ihe most beautiful love s c e n e s ,
but even in these touching moments
.Mien's
sardonic
wit
comes shining througlr like Ihe
time when he and Louise are
making love and he gets a
tremendous cramp in his big
toe or the sequence when she
is cooking breakfast and he
being
obviously
excited
by
Louise's beauty, grabs her and
proceeds to unbutton her nightgown only to find that his fingers are more of a hinderance
than an a s s e t . He finally gives
up.
While in prison he attempts
a break with a bar of soap
fashioned into a pistol, but as
always his scheme is foiled.
His entire life is one big botch.
The reason one can so easily
identify with the insane people
and
ridiculous
incidents
in
this film is that the people
that Allen is satirizing actually
exist.
TAKE THE MONEY AND
RUN is a message to all the
Virgil Wells of the world: crime
pays.
The song " D i x i e " was actually written by a Northerner
who had no intention of writing a rallying song for the
jouth and the C i v i l War. It
was written in New York by
an Ohio comedian, Dan Emmett, for the minstrel stage.

^^UStil'.telt*.

II
I t
iur
111 li 1 lai ,s
M a j Cit'i J a m e s S u t h e r l a n d ,
boss m a n at Ft. K n o x , w e n t
a r o u n d t h e p o s t for m o n t h s
e x c h a n g i n g t h e old C h u r c h i l l
V - f o r - v i c t o i y sign w i t h his
b e a m i n g troops. Then someo n e t o l d h i m i l ' s also t h e n e w
p e a c e sign. P . S . B e t c n a t h e
G e n e r a ! d r o p p e d Ihat s a l u t e
l i k e a lit l i i e e r a c k e r . . . N o w
t h i s IS tlie k i n d of r o s o a r c h
w e all dig. At t h e U n i v e r s i t y
of W i s c o n s i n
students
are
k i s s i n g u p a cytifjne. For
science's s a k e — t o l e a r n m o r e
a b o u t t h e t r a n s m i s s i o n of t h e
c o m m o n cold . . . Wood.y
Allen says he's writing a
p o r n o g i ' a p h i c iii.'eel m b r a i l l e .
You get >(iiii' jollies \)y r u b b m g t h e d i r l v piirts . . . If
you're iiiakmg the L a u d e r d a l e
spring s c e n e , \ on m u s t h a v e
a patl I'eservcii in a d v a n c e —
11(1 ...ackini; mil on t h e b e a e h .
Ynii col, L;ct Viiur " h i g h s "
t h e r e via a kite-flying contest.
W i n i i i T gel.; t r i p lo Expei 70
in ():-aka . . . Tlu" D a v e l''r\-e
a l b u m i I'ih kti'a ! IS tlie f u n n i e s t
political satire sinei' V a u y h n
.Me.-idcr did J F K c'v Co. H e r e
.Xi.M'ii's Ihe line. M im icrv's
suij.'i'li a m i t h e w i t iiex'er
i|tnl.~ . . . Oil'- ••lialaiii-ed
b u d ; ' t" s h o w s ; : ..ii
Siiii

. uuii 1 y(j aiDuiid t a l k i n g a b o u t
o t h e r p e o p l e . . . In B r u c e
{Scuiba Duba) J . F r i e d m a n ' s
n e w p l a y , G o d is a P u e r t o
Rican janitor w h o does card
t r i c k s . . . If y o u l i k e t o h e a r
s c i e n c e fiction, t u n e in o n t h e
daily w e a t h e r reports . . .
More schools should
copy
Yale a n d CCNY by publishing s t u d e n t r a t i n g s of t h e
t e a c h i n g stall'. It h e l p s fellow
students avoid the hacks and
should hike t h e g e n e r a l level
of t e a c h i n g . . . . T h e late
A d l a l S t e v e n s o n on Richard
N i x o n : " H e is th.e k i n d of
polilicitin
w im w o u l d
cut
d o w n ;i rcLlwdod t r e e , t h e n
mount the slump and make a
s p e e c h for c o n s e r v t i t i o n . " . . .
Tlie P a u l N e w m a n s h a v e b e e n
m a k i n g noises a b o u t m o v i n g
t o E n g l a n d b e c a u s e " t h e r e is
a cnit.i.m k i n d of i n s a n i t y
pre\-ail inu i u ' i e . " . . . N e w
maga/.iiM' nn t h e sttu'.ds' S u per Stars. E n t i l e M a r c h issue
is a p h o t o - a n d - l c x t s a l u t e to
t h e Rolling S t o n e s , y i e l d i n g
niiicho fresli m a t e r i a l o n t h e
Stones.
(Feb.'s
subj'jct —
J n h m i y C a s h . ) . . . N o w listen
to this b u m p e r s t i c k e r ; S u p port Your Local P o l i c e — R i o t
in A n o t h e r City. . . . T h o s e
btthj ill"
Willi
I
: • !i
i :;iis- maxi-coats
are hiding more
s d r - ' ^'
in (ist t h a n a In! nl m.'!',- IOL'S. S h o p V i l a ! (•!
'
. A n k(;ei)L'i s (-(.implam. lliey al.so
Italian lover b o y put a t l n i k w i a p a r o u n d t o n s of h o i s t e d
(in tojo (if t h e ! . ( , i ! i i n ; ; T o w e r inercharidi.;e . . . T \ ' is nol a
\'i()lence-iiating
ill I ' i s a . " l i
' !li(' i i i c l i - b a b ; - s i t t e r .
iial K m . "
i,i
ned.
"it \-iaiiig ( l a r e n t s — w h o ' v e h a d
s h n u l d i i a \ i ' t h e t i m e . ' . . . il Up to Here w i t h all t h e
'
••^Ty h , ^ ' - • • '- ' '. • - ' - ' i d mv h.lnnd.
Mid d r e k — a r e
linrr-,'
re- i>;ecpiii
don Eye shut
m a r k s a en .1 .ici Cl In 1 n e n e w w h i l e I iiei I
<\v: s p r o u t s a r e
L u i s B u n u e l film, "w il' i i n i l l y \X'i'tical . .
le n e w h o l - h o t
lead nin to t i n s absui'd b c l u a ciisi-(,ti-ie(jue
.\i-,s J I irk is
ill ( l e d . " . . . Sa>' t h i s id;' t n e H i p p o p o t a m u s , . . L o v e
egoiiKiiiiac
at least
tlie\' is tlic p r e f e r r e d a n t i - f r e e z e .

The Soul Hole
FAGLE EYE CLASSF'EO .

Entertainment By
Beth Forsythe
Friday May 1
Open 8-12 pnii

Room.s foi .'^ix matt? students, fall
semester.
Coffey Residence, 229
N'lrth Fairview Street. Phone 74g2705.

fcracking M ^

WOOOYIIUNS

"TAKE
THE MONEY

comedy"* ^

W

-JUDITH CRIST,
TODAY SHOW

ROXY

THEATRE

THE FUN PLACE TO SHOP FOR THE ENTIRE FAMIIV

\

BobQCard

Special

Special

S—NEWY0RKFILMCRITIC5
S
^
- N A T I O N A L S O C I E T Y OF F I L M C R I T I C S ST

Popular

Popular

Alburrts

Albums
Judo
in

Thomas

tomorrow

Field

Students

House

admitted

at 1:30 pm
Free

TONITE 7 & 9:30

,748-5606

r^^WfooKvoytK

•"N
Now thru May 1^

/ T R I P L E AWARD WINNER

By A.Ot^AI=|US

Ted^Alice
A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION
FOR COLUMBIA RtLEASE

Reg

NATALIEWOOD/ROBERTCULP ^ O ^ ,
BOB & CAROL & TED & ALICE
ELLIOTT GOULD/ DYAN CAN NON

Reg

4.98
Q^jy

2.99

5.9(

Now Only 3 . 5 7

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED REPLACEMENT OR MONEY REFUNDED-

Media of