BHeiney
Wed, 07/05/2023 - 13:17
Edited Text
Little Anthony
and the
Imperials
Vol X i l l , No 19
LOCK HAVEN STATE COLLEGE
:ach Woman's Hall
Elects Own Officers
Tne newly elected LHS women wtio nave ueen cnosen as
officers for the individual residence halls will assume their
duties next week.
The officers for Woolridge Hall include Ruth Carlson, president; Eva Muffley, vice president; Rosemarie Dino, secretary;
and Marilee Scott, activities
chairman.
Russell Hall's officers include Beth Alberano, president;
Kathy Betmetti, vice president;
Sue Payne, s e c r e t a r y ; and activities chairman Gretchen Rearick.
The new officers for McEntire
Hall are J a n e R o s s e l l , president;
Judy Dobbs, vice president; Patty Prostak, secretary; and Valerie Copenhaver, activities chairman.
Selecting a council for e a c h
individual dormitory is a new
concept this year at LHS.
E a c h governmental group will
work under the general direction
of the Women's Residence Hall
A s s o c i a t i o n and will be responsible for the social programming
of the various dormitories on
campus, according to r e c e n t
reports.
The president of the individual
councils must be u p p e r c l a s s women with at least a 2.0 cumulative average.
The president
is r e s p o n s i b l e for conducting all
of the c o u n c i l ' s meetings and
for supervising the a c t i v i t i e s of
the council.
The vice president must a l s o
be an upperclassman with the
same cumulative average as the
minimum for the president. She
is charged with recording infractions of the dormitory rules.
T h e secretary may be a freshman coed. She is supposed to
keep the minutes of all council
meetings and residence hall meetings.
T h e activities chairman may
a l s o be an underclassman. She
is responsible for programming
all of the s o c i a l activities and
for working with the treasurer and
wing representatives in purchasing equipment for the residence
hall.
The purpose of this new system
is reportedly to better coordinate
residence h a l l activities and to
make the LHS coeds residing on
campus a part of their government instead of being mere observers
LHS students who are candidates for law schools throughout
the United States may take their
admission t e s t s , which will be
given at more than 250 national
c e n t e r s , on November 8, 1969,
February 14, 1970, April 11, 1970,
and July 25, 1970.
The educational testing s e r v i c e ,
which administers the t e s t , advises interested persons to make
separate application to each law
school of their choice to ascertain whether the law school
admission
test
is
required.
Those planning to enter law
school next fall are urged to take
either the November or February
test.
The morning s e s s i o n of the
test measures the ability to u s e
language and to think logically,
and the afternoon t e s t measures
writing ability and general background,
A registration form and a
Bullitin of Information
may be
obtained from Law School Admission T e s t , Box 944, Educational Testing Service, Princeton, N . J . 08540. Registration
forms must reach ETS at least
three weeks before the t e s t i n g
date.
Further information may be
secured at the office of placement and career
information
which is located in Bentley Hall.
Losers of Grandeur Chosen Homecoming Theme
Losers of Grandeur has been chosen
for the 1969 Homecoming theme. All
placements will be built around the idea
of an all time loser, be it Ciiarlie Brown
or Custer. The weekend events start
at a pep rally on October 16 and the pace
picks up on Friday night with the movie
"The War Wagon" at 7:30 in Price Audtorium and various fraternity nouse parties. At 10:30 Saturday, October-lS judgement of the placements will begin. The
football game against Edinboro and the
A l l Eagle Eye ' B i t c h Forms' must be returned
to the publications office in the student union
no later than 3 pm this afternoon. A d d i t i o n a l
forms are available for LHS students who have
not yet f i l l e d them out but who s t i l l wish to
do so. A report of the return;;, which at this
time number more than 600, w i l l be Included
in tomorrow's Issue of the student newspaper.
Local AAUP Approves Motion
Concerning Student Press Rights
Freedom and responsibility of the student press
was one of the topics at a r e c e n t meeting of the
LHS chapter of the American A s s o c i a t i o n of University Professors.
The local AAUP l a s t week approved a motion to
"affirm its committment to the principles regarding
student p u b l i c a t i o n s " which are contained in a twoyear-old statement on rights and freedoms among
college and university s t u d e n t s .
"Student publications and the student press are
a valuable aid in establishing and maintaining an
atmosphere of free and responsible discussion and
of i n t e l l e c t u a l exploration on the c a m p u s , " the
statement read.
" T h e y are a means of bringing student concerns
to the attention of the faculty and the institutional
authorities and of formulating student opinion on
various i s s u e s on the campus and in the world at
large."
The ' p r i n c i p l e s ' referred to include three main
points:
l ~ t h a t the student press should be free of censor-
ship and advance approval of copy and that its editors and managers should be free to develop their
own editorial policies and news coverage;
2~that editors and managers of student publications
should be protected from arbitrary s u s p e n s i o n and
removal because of student, faculty, administrative, or public disapproval of editorial policy or
content;
3~that all college-published and -financed student
publications should explicitly s t a t e that the opinions contained within the publication are not n e c e r
sarily those of the college or of the student body.
The statement continued:
" . . . t h e editorial freedom of student editors and
managers entails corollary responsibilities to be
governed by the cannons of responsible journalism,
such as the avoidance of libel, indecency, undocumented a l l e g a t i o n s , attacks on personal integrity,
and the techniques of harassment and i n n u e n d o . "
The statement drafted by the local AAUP warned
that " a n y violation of these principles will be viewed by the local chapter a s c a u s e for immediate response."
announcement and crowning of the Homecoming Queen will be the highlight of
the afternoon. Saturday night a semiformal dance will be held in Thomas
Fieidhouse from 9-12.
The Homecoming Concert on Sunday
will'feature Little Anthony and the Imperials at 1:30 and 4:00 shows in Price
Auditorium. Tickets will be available
at the PUB reception desk on October
6, 1969 for $2.00 for LHSC students and
$2.50 for the general public.
Sailing Club
Under the advisorship of Mr.
John Bilski the first Lock Haven
State Sailing Club has gotten off
the ground.
Last Tuesday's
meeting included the elections of
officers. Roger Allen was voted
SCC
representative;
Sherry
Hartle, treasurer; John Woolridge,
vice president; and Bill Thorpe
a s president.
The club is currently working
on a constitution and recognition
by the student government. Sailing excursions are plarmed every
Saturday for October.
The purpose of the organization
is to popularize sailing and to
teach those interested in the
sport. The club has a current
membership of 21 s t u d e n t s , and
is open to anyu.ie. Experience
in sailing is not required.
At the end of a college art c l a s s ,
my you--' instructor was returning a w o r i . n ' s skeleton, used as
an anatomical model, to a storeroom. As he walked down the
hall, carefully holding " h e r , "
he met a girl who fixed him and
the skeleton with a curious s t a r e .
He
shrugged
apologetically.
" W e l l , " he said, " y o u know how
it is with these blind d a t e s . "
Reader's
Digesti
A series of flu shots at $2 a
shot will be given at the Glennon Infirmary. The first shot
will be given Wednesday, October 8 from 12 noon until 1pm.
Anyone desiring the shots
must sign up at the infirmary
no later than Friday, October
3rd. All studenfs, faculty, and
staff are eligible.
Girls' Hockey
Girl's
hockey
intramurals
began last week with over 100
girls participating.
There are
s e v e n teams; 3 in League A and
4 in League B. A champion will
be decided on the point s y s t e m .
F i v e points will be awarded to
a team for a win, 3 points for a
t i e , and none for a l o s s . Total
points at the end of the s e a s o n
will decide the champs.
High scorer in last week's
games was Bonnie Statler, a
sophomore, who plays on team 3
in League B . She scored 4 goals
in one game and 2 goals in another.
T h e schedule of g^mes and the
team standings are posted on
the bulletin boards in Bentley
HaU.
Hockey intramurals are
sponsored
by the
Women's
Athletic and Recreation A s s o c iation.
Ih
o p / n Io n
is partially financed by taxes
find it n e c e s s a r y to " b i t c h . "
His argument is a familiar
one. Students should not be s o
ungrateful as to protest the conditions of the world in which
they find themselves. He would
prefer that they "express their
gratitude.
Gratitude that they live in
a country b a s e d on the rights
of life, liberty, and the pursun
of h a p p i n e s s , a country which
asks t h e s e very students to be
willing to die in Viet Nam to
sustain a government which denies t h o s e rights to its own people.
Gratitude that they must live
in a s o c i e t y that s t i l l makes
a murderer of "^ach
citizen
every time a capital s e n t e n c e
is carried out.
Gratitude that they are the
inheritors of a system that requires that the ethnic minority
and the poor resort to violence
before they can obtain their
own rights to life, liberty, and
the pursuit of h a p p i n e s s .
Gratitude that their society
i s motivated by violence and
competition rather than by love
and cooperation.
Gratitude that they are asked
simply to accept the values of
their parents rather than to discover sound b a s e s for building
their own s e t s of v a l u e s .
I, for one, would find such
gratitude to be the rankest ingratitude. For the best testament to a s o c i e t y built on the
concept of the freedom and dignity of the individual is a willingness constantly to rc-exumine the society in the light of
that b a s i c concept.
1 feel a profound optimism
when I s e e students engageil
in that re-examination, a s wero
those s t u d e n t s at hist Friday s
" B i t c h - I n . " The price of Iheir
freedom, and mine, is eternal
vigilance, and I am gratefui
that they are not aslcL'p iU iluir
posts.
To the editor:
After reading the letter to the
editor the other night in the Lock
Haven E x p r e s s , regarding Dr.
P a r s o n s ' relationship with the
s t u d e n t s throughout the y e a r s , I
couldn't agree more. I have been
here twelve years a s Business
Manager and prior to that time as
a s t u d e n t . In all the time I have
been here and in talking with
those with longer s e r v i c e , we a l l
agree that with Dr. Parsons it
was always the s t u d e n t s ' welfare
which was uppermost in his mind.
I don't believe there is a college in the State whose President
is more sympathetic with student
c a u s e s . We were the first State
College in which the Student
Government had so much power
to run their own affairs.
I and all other staff members I
have talked with feel that it is
ironic and sad that a man who
has always been on the student's
side must be subjected to the
most vicious attacks in print
from students who s c a r c e l y know
him.
It seems to me that if more
people, both faculty and students,
would listen with open minds
and honestly try to understand
both s i d e s instead of following
the lead of dissidents in other
institutions of higher learning,
we would all be better off.
Believe me, I know Dr. Parsons*
feelings about the s t u d e n t s . His
whole life has been devoted to
helping them. Would he change
now, a short time before retirement? Quit crucifying him! If
there are problems, and there
always will b e , in any organization, bring them to the President
in a mature and intelligent way.
His door is always open to youi
I would like to see Lock Haven
State College stand out as a
model of student, faculty and
administration, cooperating in
solving the problems of the day.
Let us be the leaders of the
times, not just followers.
Edward F. McCloskey
Business Manager
Vincnl
To the editor:
I was much disturbed by
Bitcher l a x p a y e r ' s letter in the
Express of Monday, September
22. Bitcher Taxpayer is upset
that students whose education
EAGLE EYE CLASSIFIED
LOST: Maroon CPO jacket in R.nub
Hall. Contact Tim Rupp, Rm. 306
North Hall.
were inconvenienced by a slight
delay in the schedule, was there
any evidence of rudeness or impatience. On the contrary, our
students were so well-mannered
and s o cooperative that even our
photographers commented on the
fine spirit here at LHSC.
I
personally wish to thank all
s t u d e n t s , faculty members, and
especially the PREACO staff
for a job well done.
Beatrice Brown
Adviser
To the editor".
I wish to take this opportunity
to thank our .students for the
splendid way in which they conducted themselves during the
two days on which yearbook
pictures were taken. On September 29 and again on September
30, the PRAECO staff had professional photographers on campus to take undergraduate pictures, senior make-up s h o t s , and
organization groupings.
At no
time, even though some groups
Our Specialty
Roast Beef
Served Hot
CAMPUS CASINO
G-A-R-D-E-N
Sept. 2 9 - 3 0
"THE LIBERTINE"
HOY'S
F i r s t runPhila.
RAND RE-OPENING
Thursday
Williamsport
Bloomsburg
Oct. 1 thru 7
Oct. 2nd
"YES"
Over $1,000.00 in doorprises
n
T e r r i t o r i a l Break
"Now I've seen Every ing.
—Beverly Hills
Coiier
F R E E .S&H G R E g l l .STAMP*;
Rbe up on your heels, super sports! It*s time
to put your prettied-up perfs and sleek
hardware trims on with fashion's long vests
and trim cut pants. It*s an action scene, all
the way!
Q^^^
AsseeainSEVENTEl^N
I
Sliwiirl
Editor's
note:
This li-rtcr h\Vincent Stewart first appean-d ir,
THE EXPRESS.
We are repmu
ing this letter with Stewart s
permission.
SANDWICH HUT
600 WEST MAIN
ANNOUNCES
S-P-E-C-l-A-L
THURSDAY
OCT. 2
2-12" PIZZAS
for $1.85
2-8" PIZZAS
for $.99
TRY OUR JUMBO SANDWICHES,
SUBS AND COSMOS TOO
For
To
L.H.S.C. STUDENTS
For
ONLY. . . .
A
FREE
PAIR
of
PANTY
HOSE
WHEN YOU OPEN
YOUR SMART SHOP
Choose From Xationully
Famous Brand
S/utes
Women
* Shicca of California
* Connie
*
Jacqueline
* Lady Bostoniun
* \uturalizers
* U.S.
Keds
Men
* Bostonian
* Freeman
* Pedwin
^
* Bates Floater
*
Hush-Puppies
* Acme Dingo Boots
* RcdWmg Hunting
Boots
* Converse
Shcakers
The Shoe
Store
Convenient
CHARGE ACCOUNT
in Lock
Haven
Shopping
for Campus-Approved
Hours:
(Open Monday,
^
Family Shoe; Si
Store
Main St., Lock Haven
Footwear
Thursday,
Friday
Nights
to 9 pm)
and the
Imperials
Vol X i l l , No 19
LOCK HAVEN STATE COLLEGE
:ach Woman's Hall
Elects Own Officers
Tne newly elected LHS women wtio nave ueen cnosen as
officers for the individual residence halls will assume their
duties next week.
The officers for Woolridge Hall include Ruth Carlson, president; Eva Muffley, vice president; Rosemarie Dino, secretary;
and Marilee Scott, activities
chairman.
Russell Hall's officers include Beth Alberano, president;
Kathy Betmetti, vice president;
Sue Payne, s e c r e t a r y ; and activities chairman Gretchen Rearick.
The new officers for McEntire
Hall are J a n e R o s s e l l , president;
Judy Dobbs, vice president; Patty Prostak, secretary; and Valerie Copenhaver, activities chairman.
Selecting a council for e a c h
individual dormitory is a new
concept this year at LHS.
E a c h governmental group will
work under the general direction
of the Women's Residence Hall
A s s o c i a t i o n and will be responsible for the social programming
of the various dormitories on
campus, according to r e c e n t
reports.
The president of the individual
councils must be u p p e r c l a s s women with at least a 2.0 cumulative average.
The president
is r e s p o n s i b l e for conducting all
of the c o u n c i l ' s meetings and
for supervising the a c t i v i t i e s of
the council.
The vice president must a l s o
be an upperclassman with the
same cumulative average as the
minimum for the president. She
is charged with recording infractions of the dormitory rules.
T h e secretary may be a freshman coed. She is supposed to
keep the minutes of all council
meetings and residence hall meetings.
T h e activities chairman may
a l s o be an underclassman. She
is responsible for programming
all of the s o c i a l activities and
for working with the treasurer and
wing representatives in purchasing equipment for the residence
hall.
The purpose of this new system
is reportedly to better coordinate
residence h a l l activities and to
make the LHS coeds residing on
campus a part of their government instead of being mere observers
LHS students who are candidates for law schools throughout
the United States may take their
admission t e s t s , which will be
given at more than 250 national
c e n t e r s , on November 8, 1969,
February 14, 1970, April 11, 1970,
and July 25, 1970.
The educational testing s e r v i c e ,
which administers the t e s t , advises interested persons to make
separate application to each law
school of their choice to ascertain whether the law school
admission
test
is
required.
Those planning to enter law
school next fall are urged to take
either the November or February
test.
The morning s e s s i o n of the
test measures the ability to u s e
language and to think logically,
and the afternoon t e s t measures
writing ability and general background,
A registration form and a
Bullitin of Information
may be
obtained from Law School Admission T e s t , Box 944, Educational Testing Service, Princeton, N . J . 08540. Registration
forms must reach ETS at least
three weeks before the t e s t i n g
date.
Further information may be
secured at the office of placement and career
information
which is located in Bentley Hall.
Losers of Grandeur Chosen Homecoming Theme
Losers of Grandeur has been chosen
for the 1969 Homecoming theme. All
placements will be built around the idea
of an all time loser, be it Ciiarlie Brown
or Custer. The weekend events start
at a pep rally on October 16 and the pace
picks up on Friday night with the movie
"The War Wagon" at 7:30 in Price Audtorium and various fraternity nouse parties. At 10:30 Saturday, October-lS judgement of the placements will begin. The
football game against Edinboro and the
A l l Eagle Eye ' B i t c h Forms' must be returned
to the publications office in the student union
no later than 3 pm this afternoon. A d d i t i o n a l
forms are available for LHS students who have
not yet f i l l e d them out but who s t i l l wish to
do so. A report of the return;;, which at this
time number more than 600, w i l l be Included
in tomorrow's Issue of the student newspaper.
Local AAUP Approves Motion
Concerning Student Press Rights
Freedom and responsibility of the student press
was one of the topics at a r e c e n t meeting of the
LHS chapter of the American A s s o c i a t i o n of University Professors.
The local AAUP l a s t week approved a motion to
"affirm its committment to the principles regarding
student p u b l i c a t i o n s " which are contained in a twoyear-old statement on rights and freedoms among
college and university s t u d e n t s .
"Student publications and the student press are
a valuable aid in establishing and maintaining an
atmosphere of free and responsible discussion and
of i n t e l l e c t u a l exploration on the c a m p u s , " the
statement read.
" T h e y are a means of bringing student concerns
to the attention of the faculty and the institutional
authorities and of formulating student opinion on
various i s s u e s on the campus and in the world at
large."
The ' p r i n c i p l e s ' referred to include three main
points:
l ~ t h a t the student press should be free of censor-
ship and advance approval of copy and that its editors and managers should be free to develop their
own editorial policies and news coverage;
2~that editors and managers of student publications
should be protected from arbitrary s u s p e n s i o n and
removal because of student, faculty, administrative, or public disapproval of editorial policy or
content;
3~that all college-published and -financed student
publications should explicitly s t a t e that the opinions contained within the publication are not n e c e r
sarily those of the college or of the student body.
The statement continued:
" . . . t h e editorial freedom of student editors and
managers entails corollary responsibilities to be
governed by the cannons of responsible journalism,
such as the avoidance of libel, indecency, undocumented a l l e g a t i o n s , attacks on personal integrity,
and the techniques of harassment and i n n u e n d o . "
The statement drafted by the local AAUP warned
that " a n y violation of these principles will be viewed by the local chapter a s c a u s e for immediate response."
announcement and crowning of the Homecoming Queen will be the highlight of
the afternoon. Saturday night a semiformal dance will be held in Thomas
Fieidhouse from 9-12.
The Homecoming Concert on Sunday
will'feature Little Anthony and the Imperials at 1:30 and 4:00 shows in Price
Auditorium. Tickets will be available
at the PUB reception desk on October
6, 1969 for $2.00 for LHSC students and
$2.50 for the general public.
Sailing Club
Under the advisorship of Mr.
John Bilski the first Lock Haven
State Sailing Club has gotten off
the ground.
Last Tuesday's
meeting included the elections of
officers. Roger Allen was voted
SCC
representative;
Sherry
Hartle, treasurer; John Woolridge,
vice president; and Bill Thorpe
a s president.
The club is currently working
on a constitution and recognition
by the student government. Sailing excursions are plarmed every
Saturday for October.
The purpose of the organization
is to popularize sailing and to
teach those interested in the
sport. The club has a current
membership of 21 s t u d e n t s , and
is open to anyu.ie. Experience
in sailing is not required.
At the end of a college art c l a s s ,
my you--' instructor was returning a w o r i . n ' s skeleton, used as
an anatomical model, to a storeroom. As he walked down the
hall, carefully holding " h e r , "
he met a girl who fixed him and
the skeleton with a curious s t a r e .
He
shrugged
apologetically.
" W e l l , " he said, " y o u know how
it is with these blind d a t e s . "
Reader's
Digesti
A series of flu shots at $2 a
shot will be given at the Glennon Infirmary. The first shot
will be given Wednesday, October 8 from 12 noon until 1pm.
Anyone desiring the shots
must sign up at the infirmary
no later than Friday, October
3rd. All studenfs, faculty, and
staff are eligible.
Girls' Hockey
Girl's
hockey
intramurals
began last week with over 100
girls participating.
There are
s e v e n teams; 3 in League A and
4 in League B. A champion will
be decided on the point s y s t e m .
F i v e points will be awarded to
a team for a win, 3 points for a
t i e , and none for a l o s s . Total
points at the end of the s e a s o n
will decide the champs.
High scorer in last week's
games was Bonnie Statler, a
sophomore, who plays on team 3
in League B . She scored 4 goals
in one game and 2 goals in another.
T h e schedule of g^mes and the
team standings are posted on
the bulletin boards in Bentley
HaU.
Hockey intramurals are
sponsored
by the
Women's
Athletic and Recreation A s s o c iation.
Ih
o p / n Io n
is partially financed by taxes
find it n e c e s s a r y to " b i t c h . "
His argument is a familiar
one. Students should not be s o
ungrateful as to protest the conditions of the world in which
they find themselves. He would
prefer that they "express their
gratitude.
Gratitude that they live in
a country b a s e d on the rights
of life, liberty, and the pursun
of h a p p i n e s s , a country which
asks t h e s e very students to be
willing to die in Viet Nam to
sustain a government which denies t h o s e rights to its own people.
Gratitude that they must live
in a s o c i e t y that s t i l l makes
a murderer of "^ach
citizen
every time a capital s e n t e n c e
is carried out.
Gratitude that they are the
inheritors of a system that requires that the ethnic minority
and the poor resort to violence
before they can obtain their
own rights to life, liberty, and
the pursuit of h a p p i n e s s .
Gratitude that their society
i s motivated by violence and
competition rather than by love
and cooperation.
Gratitude that they are asked
simply to accept the values of
their parents rather than to discover sound b a s e s for building
their own s e t s of v a l u e s .
I, for one, would find such
gratitude to be the rankest ingratitude. For the best testament to a s o c i e t y built on the
concept of the freedom and dignity of the individual is a willingness constantly to rc-exumine the society in the light of
that b a s i c concept.
1 feel a profound optimism
when I s e e students engageil
in that re-examination, a s wero
those s t u d e n t s at hist Friday s
" B i t c h - I n . " The price of Iheir
freedom, and mine, is eternal
vigilance, and I am gratefui
that they are not aslcL'p iU iluir
posts.
To the editor:
After reading the letter to the
editor the other night in the Lock
Haven E x p r e s s , regarding Dr.
P a r s o n s ' relationship with the
s t u d e n t s throughout the y e a r s , I
couldn't agree more. I have been
here twelve years a s Business
Manager and prior to that time as
a s t u d e n t . In all the time I have
been here and in talking with
those with longer s e r v i c e , we a l l
agree that with Dr. Parsons it
was always the s t u d e n t s ' welfare
which was uppermost in his mind.
I don't believe there is a college in the State whose President
is more sympathetic with student
c a u s e s . We were the first State
College in which the Student
Government had so much power
to run their own affairs.
I and all other staff members I
have talked with feel that it is
ironic and sad that a man who
has always been on the student's
side must be subjected to the
most vicious attacks in print
from students who s c a r c e l y know
him.
It seems to me that if more
people, both faculty and students,
would listen with open minds
and honestly try to understand
both s i d e s instead of following
the lead of dissidents in other
institutions of higher learning,
we would all be better off.
Believe me, I know Dr. Parsons*
feelings about the s t u d e n t s . His
whole life has been devoted to
helping them. Would he change
now, a short time before retirement? Quit crucifying him! If
there are problems, and there
always will b e , in any organization, bring them to the President
in a mature and intelligent way.
His door is always open to youi
I would like to see Lock Haven
State College stand out as a
model of student, faculty and
administration, cooperating in
solving the problems of the day.
Let us be the leaders of the
times, not just followers.
Edward F. McCloskey
Business Manager
Vincnl
To the editor:
I was much disturbed by
Bitcher l a x p a y e r ' s letter in the
Express of Monday, September
22. Bitcher Taxpayer is upset
that students whose education
EAGLE EYE CLASSIFIED
LOST: Maroon CPO jacket in R.nub
Hall. Contact Tim Rupp, Rm. 306
North Hall.
were inconvenienced by a slight
delay in the schedule, was there
any evidence of rudeness or impatience. On the contrary, our
students were so well-mannered
and s o cooperative that even our
photographers commented on the
fine spirit here at LHSC.
I
personally wish to thank all
s t u d e n t s , faculty members, and
especially the PREACO staff
for a job well done.
Beatrice Brown
Adviser
To the editor".
I wish to take this opportunity
to thank our .students for the
splendid way in which they conducted themselves during the
two days on which yearbook
pictures were taken. On September 29 and again on September
30, the PRAECO staff had professional photographers on campus to take undergraduate pictures, senior make-up s h o t s , and
organization groupings.
At no
time, even though some groups
Our Specialty
Roast Beef
Served Hot
CAMPUS CASINO
G-A-R-D-E-N
Sept. 2 9 - 3 0
"THE LIBERTINE"
HOY'S
F i r s t runPhila.
RAND RE-OPENING
Thursday
Williamsport
Bloomsburg
Oct. 1 thru 7
Oct. 2nd
"YES"
Over $1,000.00 in doorprises
n
T e r r i t o r i a l Break
"Now I've seen Every ing.
—Beverly Hills
Coiier
F R E E .S&H G R E g l l .STAMP*;
Rbe up on your heels, super sports! It*s time
to put your prettied-up perfs and sleek
hardware trims on with fashion's long vests
and trim cut pants. It*s an action scene, all
the way!
Q^^^
AsseeainSEVENTEl^N
I
Sliwiirl
Editor's
note:
This li-rtcr h\Vincent Stewart first appean-d ir,
THE EXPRESS.
We are repmu
ing this letter with Stewart s
permission.
SANDWICH HUT
600 WEST MAIN
ANNOUNCES
S-P-E-C-l-A-L
THURSDAY
OCT. 2
2-12" PIZZAS
for $1.85
2-8" PIZZAS
for $.99
TRY OUR JUMBO SANDWICHES,
SUBS AND COSMOS TOO
For
To
L.H.S.C. STUDENTS
For
ONLY. . . .
A
FREE
PAIR
of
PANTY
HOSE
WHEN YOU OPEN
YOUR SMART SHOP
Choose From Xationully
Famous Brand
S/utes
Women
* Shicca of California
* Connie
*
Jacqueline
* Lady Bostoniun
* \uturalizers
* U.S.
Keds
Men
* Bostonian
* Freeman
* Pedwin
^
* Bates Floater
*
Hush-Puppies
* Acme Dingo Boots
* RcdWmg Hunting
Boots
* Converse
Shcakers
The Shoe
Store
Convenient
CHARGE ACCOUNT
in Lock
Haven
Shopping
for Campus-Approved
Hours:
(Open Monday,
^
Family Shoe; Si
Store
Main St., Lock Haven
Footwear
Thursday,
Friday
Nights
to 9 pm)
Media of