BHeiney
Wed, 07/05/2023 - 15:40
Edited Text
Experience in Black Music
With 'Cannonball' Adderly
Lock Haven had an experience
in Black Music by one of the
foremost
authorities
on the
subject,
Julian
Cannonball
Adderly was on campus two d a y s ,
explaining
and
demonstrating
how Black Music, particularly
j a z z , originated.
He explained
and demonstrated the chronological
development of Black Music before
a tuU house in each of his seminar
talks.
Mr. Adderly pointed out one of
the most improtant a s p e c t s in the
e a r l y development of Black Music
was the wandering minstrels.
These
the black s l a v e s who
when traded or sold to another
plantation woiid communicate with
the s l a v e s in an expression the
masters
didn't
-Mr. Adderly clarified the myth
about black people being the only
ones who can play j a z z .
He
stated
that anyone who h a s
m u s i c a l talent can learn to play
jazz b e c a u s e music doesn't have
color. 'Cannonball' also explained
how rock music originated from
jazz.
He then terminated each
seminar with a question—answer
period.
Mr. Adderly concluded his t w o day program with a dynamic concert.
The best way to sum up h i s program

is to mention that Mr. Adderly is
not just a great educated musician
but is also a great entertainer who

Tue. Feb. 24,1970

LEEYE

LOCK NAVEN STATE COLLECE

LHS Cymnists Now
The
gymnastics
exhibition
team of Lock Haven State College opened its s e a s o n on February 18 witli a morning performance at Bellefonte Jianior High
•ind an afternoon performance
While the women team members perform floor routines and
exercised on the uneven parallel b a r s , the men work on the
Swedish Box, the high bar, the
Daii Llby
parallel bars, the still rings,
can superbly expose people to somei^nd the swinging rings. Together
thing
beautiful.
Black
Music, ^oi^
groups perform exercise
I would at this time like to expres routines in unison,
our sincere thanks to everyone on
° " Thursday, February 26,
behalf of the Black Student Union '"^^ ''=^'" '^'^' perform at Bradand our advisors, who helped make f™'* Junior High in the morning
our program a complete s u c c e s s . ^"^^ ^ ' Bradford Senior High in
the afternoon.
Solanco High will s e e a per-

Vol. XIII No. 80

Performing

f ormance on the morning of T u e s day, March 3 , and Manheim Central the afternoon performance.
On Wednesday, March n . West
Branch Area High will be the
site of the morning performance
and Philipsburg Osceola High
the
afternoon
performance.
The s e a s o n will end on Tuesday, March 17, with performances
at Mountain View High in the
morning and Blue Ridge School
District in the afternoon.
Members of the team include
Vicki
Auker, Muncy;
Jackie
Bond, Camp Hill; Bev Corson,
Lairdsbille; Sharon Cromwell,
Harrisburg; Debbie Follett, Harrisburg; Betty Lou Hadley, Blossburg; Pat Hedges, York; Linda
Lugar, Hershey; Lynn Musheno,
Williamsport; Sandi Myers, Hugh-

esville; Mary R o s e , Williamsport;
Jeanne
Rowe, Pittsford, VtAnne Royer, State College; P a t
Seitzer,
Williamsport;
Joanne
Souder, Souderton; Marty Starr,
Hughesville; Barbara Yoos, Williamsport; and Judy Z e i t e r , Harp
risburg.
Men on the team are & i a n
Cook, Dillsburg; Gary Fogelman,
Muncy; Lester Griffin, South
Bibson; Gary Harris,
Lamar;
Mark Huttie, Allentown; Bill
Kargo, Portage; Bruce Kilhefner,
Ephrata; J o e KnipH* Olcn B u m i e .
Md.; Matt McKee, Altoona; Byron
Parker, Waasontown; Larry Shervanick, Harrisburg; Rick Seitz,
Danville; Garry Smith, Blossburg;
Pat Stock, Ebensburg; and Mike
Walsh, Lahaska.

Campus Newspapers
Feel Censorship

Pictured above is the usual tasly lood preparded by the
cafeteria. The student help is shown dishing out the wellbalanced meals and portions the students receive each
meal.

LHS Graduates
Further Ed.
Over one—third of Lock Haven
State C o l l e g e ' s graduates attend
graduate school, according to a
report recently released by C.
Herbert Larson, director of p l a c e ment at the coUege. The report is
based- on questionnaires s e n t to
the 1,285 men and women who
graduated .from the college during
the years 1962—66.
In reply to the findings of the
report. Dr. Richard T . P a r s o n s ,
president of Lock Haven State, said
' T h e survey indicates that the Lock
Haven program provides a large
number of its students with the
desire to continue their education.
Because Lock Haven h a s an e x c e l lent academic reputation, those
graduates who want to do advanced
work are able to gain admission to
some of the b e s t graduate schools
in
the
country.'
With almost fifty-five percent of
the graduates responding to the
questionnaire, 465 indicated they
had attended or we*» attending
graduate school at 117 different
colleges
and
universities.
Seventy—seven percent had taken
advanced courses in education and
twenty —one percent received the
Master's degree, fifteen percent in
educatiorv.Of the 117 schools attended, more
graduates (thirty percent) went to
Pennsylvania State University than
to
any
other
one
school.

Any
News
Ti ps:*^
call EAGLE EYE
748-5531

(ACP)
Campus publications the student senate resolved to
across the nation are feeling the fully investigate tne naper. The
si-ribbles of c e n s o r s ' red pencils editors protested that^this i n f r i n g this year. As conservative m o n e y - ed on their right to freedom of the
holders attempt to suppress u n - p r e s s .
inhibited, free—thinking editors, a
In Tempe, Arizona, the editor of
v^iriety
of
things
happen. the Arizona State University State
At Western Maryland College,
Press was fired by the board of
President Ensor refused to allow student publications for 'insorb—
the
student
newspaper,
the ination' in a dispute with two
iold Hug to print advertisements of faculty board members who c e n businesses which- sell a l c o h o l i c sored the paper. Five of the senior
beverages. From 196.3 through 1967. editors resigned in protest of the
the (^jold Hug had run such ads with action taken by a board composed
of five faculty members and three
no administrative q u a l m s .
The paper figures the president's students.
sudden decision s e t them back about The
students
claim
the
$50 an i s s u e .
Statt Press should fill-the needs
James Hammond, Fitchburg State of the student body which pays
The new a s s i s t a n t secretary of
College president (Salem, Mass.) for the paper through activity
state in Delaware is a form'fees.
The
faculty
claims
the
shut down the campus newspaper
graduate of Lock Haven State
by refusing to sign a check to cover newspaper should be a workCollege.
printing costs of an issue of The shop experience for iou'^^lis"!
Richard H. Caldwell, a gradumajors.
Cycle i( an a r t i c l e written by
ate of LHS in 1957 a s a n elemAt the Colorado School of
Black Panther Eldrige Cleaver
entary major, took office in
Mines, in Golden, Preside t
was to be printed in that i s s u e .
January 1969. PaMwell was
Orlo
Chi'de
threatened
to
As a result, editors of five M a s s active in the " P e o p l e for Peterremove the editor < f the s c h o o l ' s s o n " organization during the 1968
achusetts State College papers
newspaper, the Oredigger fas o n " carganization _ during the
got together and decided to split
printing what he regarded a s
1968 gubernatorial campaign.
the cost of printing one issue of
obscenities in the paper.
A former teacher of American
me Cycle s o the Cleaver article
The publications board quesHistory at Milford Junior High
could be run. Thy also decided
tioned his authority to remove
school Caldwell was
^sident
to run the a r t i c l e in t h e i r r e s p e c t - the editor and quickly assured
ol tne Milford Education A s s o c i a ive
campus
newspapers.
Childs that the Oredigger was
tion during 1966-67 and served,
Two editors of the Oregon State
" o u t s t a n d i n g , not o b s c e n e . "
on its Executive Board from
University Barometer resigned when
1964 until 1969.

Former G r a d
Holds High Post

Peep shot? Students re/coc during the day playing pool in the union.

Cagers Top Point Park
In Overtime, 81-77

TWO!: LHS's Ziggy Tauginas goes up for two points against
Point Park last Friday evening. The Eagles upset the Pioneers
in overtime, 81-77.

Shane Foley

Named

To All-America
Lock Haven State C o l l e g e ' s
wrestling captain, Shane p o l e y
recently was named to the mids e a s o n All-America
wrestling
team in a poll conducted by
Amateur Wrestling News.
Foley who holds the pinning
record at LHS with 31 was the
only Pennsylvania Conference
wrestler named t o one of the
three teams and the only Bald
E a g l e mentioned.
pour other
grapplers from the conference
received honorable mention.
Iowa State, currently ranked
number one in the country, headed the list with the most wrestlers mentioned. T h e Cyclones
placed four men on the first team
and two men on the second team.
Oklahoma State placed one man
on the first team and three men
on the second.
There wasn't
a team member
from the E a s t selected to the
first team and J a c k Bentz of
Lehigh w a s the only e a s t e r n e r ,
named to the second team. P e n n '
St. placed Clyde i raiitz and John
High on the third team.
FIRslTEAM
118 — John Miller, Oregon;
126 — Randy Berg, Washington; 134 - Tom Milkovlch,
Michigan State; 142 — Dan
Gable, Iowa SUte; ISO - Mike
Grant, Oklahoma; 158 — Dave
Martin, Iowa State; 167—-Jason
Smith, Iowa State, 177 — Ct. '<
Jean, Iowa State; 190 — & .f
Baum, Oklahoma State; Heav/welght -'- Jess Lewis, Oregon
SUte.
SECOND TEAM
118 — Ray SUpp, Oklahoma
'SUte; 126 - Bill Krum, Iowa
SUte; 184 — Roger Weigel, Oregon SUte; 142 — Keith Lowrance, Michigan SUte; 150 —
Carl Adams, Iowa SUte; 158
— Tim Muir, Michigan SUte;
167 — Jack Bentz, Lehigh; 177
— Gerald Winnard, Oklahoma
SUte; 190 — Jack Zindel, Michigan SUte; Heavyweight — Jerry Sherk. Oklahoma SUte.

Team

THIRD TEAM
118 — Terry Hall, Cal Poly;
126 - SHANE FOLEY, JLX)CK
HAVEN STATE; 134 - Dale
SUhl, Navy; 142 — Clyde Franz,
Penn State; IfO — Larry Owings, Washington; 158 — Kim
Snider, Oregon SUte; 167 —
Pat Karsla. J, Micnigan SUte;
177 — Ben Cooper, Southern
Illinois; 190 — John High, Penn
SUte; Heavyweight — Greg
Wojcieshowski, Toledo.
EAST MENTIONS
118 — Ted Pease. East
Stroudsburg. 126 — John Walter, Oswego SUte. 134 — Mike
Mullady, A r m y ;
Al Uyeda,
Princeton. 142 — Lloyd Keaser,
Navy. 150 — S u n Dziedzic-Slippery Rock; Arnie itiomnson,
. Bloomsburg; Dan Week, New
York Maritime. 158 — Bob
Christianson,
Navy;
Walt
Strosser, Temple; Bruce Trammel, Ohio.
167— Bob Kuhn, Pitt; Jesse
Rawls, Michigan; Bill Stauffer.
Hofstra. 177 — Vince Paolano,
Syiflcuse; Ben Welch, Navy.
190 — Mark Baretz, Temple;
Len Pettigrew, Ashland; Bob
Underwood, Southern Illinois?
Rob Rust, Syracuse; John Reid,
New York Maritime. Heavyweight — Mike Jacques, New
York Maritime; Mark Kane,
Navy; Gary Leinberger, Le-j
high; Ira Lubert, Penn SUte;
Rich S c h u m a c J ) . ^ r ,
East
Stroudsburg; Marty
Weikert,
Delaware.

The Lock Haven State College basketball squad assured
itself of its best s e a s o n in 14
years with an 81-77 overtime
conquest of Point Park Friday
evening in Thomas F i e l d House.
Led by the late game heroics
of little Louie Savani who scored ten p o i n t s in the last five
minutes of regulation and five
in the overtime period, the Bald
Eagles upset the favored visitors.
With Point Park in front 63-61
Savani made his entrance into
the contest and quickly hit a
bucket for the E a g l e s and then
went on to add eight more points
in the thrilling c o n t e s t .
Floor leader John Marzlak
set a new game record with 12
a s s i s t s and it was the first
time in many years that the cagers ended the s e a s o n with a winning record at home.
The contest was close all
the way with neither team hold
ing more than a five point lead.
Most of the way the ballgame
was either tied or one of t h e '
clubs held a one point lead.
The opening ten minutes saw
both squads throwing up shots
with netiher hitting with any con-

lak) again gave us the floor leaHership we -needed with h i s recordbrraking 12 a s s i s t s .
"Bud
Brennen and Ziggy
(Tauginas) did a real fine j o b
again on the boards for us against much taller opponents.
Bruce (Parkhill) had a great overall ball game with 23 points and
nine r e b o u n d s . "
Lock Haven
FG F A TP
Billet
5
0-3
10
Tauginas
7
5-8
19
Brennen
'2
3-3
7
Parkhill
5-6
9
23
Marzlak
1
6-6
8
Savani
2-3
4
10
Cruttenden
2
0-0
4
Gahr
0
0-0
0
McKenzie
0
0-0
0
ToUls
30 21-29
81
Point Park
FG F A TP
Anderson
9
2-2
20
0-2
Josefoski
8
16
1-1
Filer
6
13
Dudley
3
4-5
10
Long
2
1-6
5
Jenkins
I
0-0
2
Webster
1
5-9
7
2
0-0
McMullen
4
ToUls
32 12-25 77
36 34 11—(1
Lock Haven
35 35 ' —77
Point Park
Officials: C a s a l e and Piestrak.

LHS Mermen Tie Lycoming^ 47-47
The Lock Haven State swimmers won six events at Lycoming
last Wednesday, but their lack
of 'manpower allowed Lycoming
to gain a 47-47 t i e . The Eagles
could manage only four seconds
and three thirds to complete their
scoring.
Bob Hults was once again a
double winner, besting a l l others
in the 200 butterfly and the 200
breast-stroke. Hults a l s o combined with Frank Kacinko, John
McDaniels, and Warren Hammer
to win the 400 medley relay.
Larry Briggs won the one
meter- dive, Kevin Hammer won
the 100 free, and Frank Kacinko
won the 200 backstroke to comp l e t e the Eagles list of winners.
On Saturday, the Eagle mermen captured seven firsts, but
added only eight more points to
their total, losing Geneseo 57-47.
Bob Hults tied his school
record in winning the 200 butterfly. Hults a l s o was a member
of both winning relay teams.
- Kevin Hammer won the 50 and
100 freestyle e v e n t s , as well a s
being a member of the 400 free-

style relay. Larry Briggs won the
one meter diving, and John McDaniels won the 200 breast-stroke.
This meet completed the first
year of dual meet competition
for the E a g l e s . On March 5,6, and
7 five Eagles will compete in the
Penn-Ohio
championships
at
Ashland College.
Teams
competing will be
Ashland and Grove City, the favo r i t e s , California State, Carnegie-Mellon, Clarion,
Cleveland
State, Indiana, Slippejy Rock,
Westminster, Youngstown, and
our own Bald E a g l e s .
Bob Hults will enter the 100
and 200 butterfly's, Kevin Hammer
the 50 and 100 f r e e s t y l e ' s , Frank
McDaniels the 100 and 200 b r e a s t s t r o k e s , and Ed Bloxham, the
200 and 500 J r e e s t y l e s . Hults,
Hammer, Kacinko, and McDaniels
will team up for the Medley't?lay.
Meet r e s u l t s :
400 medley rea)v - 1. LHS (Ka
cinko, McDaniel.., Hults, W. Hammer)
200 free - 3 . Steve Truse
60 free - 2- K. Hammer
160 indiv. med. - 2. Kacinko, 3 .
Bloxham

1 m. dive- - 1. Briggs, 3 . Harris
200 f l y - 1.-Hults
100 free - 1.-K. Hammer
200 back - 1. Kacinko
500 free - 2- K. Hammer
200 breast - 1. Hults, 2. McDaniels
LHS placings v s . Geneseo
400 medley relay - 1. LHS (Kacinko, McDaniels, Hults, W. Hammer)
100 free - 3 . Blo.xham
200 free - .3. Truse
50 free - 1. K. Hammer. rJ. Briggs
200 indiv. med. - 3 . Kuneck
1 m. dive - 1. Briggs, 3 . Harris
? O 0 f l y - 1.-Hults
i o n free - 1. K. Hammer, 3 . W.
200 back - 3 . Kacinko
fon free - ^. Blovham
200 oreast - 1. McDaniels
400 free relay - 1. LHS (K. Hammer, Hults, Kacinko, W. Hammer)

DONT FORGETYEARBOOK
PICTURES
TONIGHT
e.e. classifieds

opinion Ihs

Here's the deal-We'll rel&ase the dean,
evacuate the administration o f f i c e s , a n d
SHANE FOLEY
3rd team All-American

si.staP'-v. After the midpoint of
the first half both squad's shooting picked up, the Eagles behind
Ziggy Tauginas and Bruce Parkhill while Ed Josefoski found
the r^nge for Point Park. The
E a g l e s held a slim 36-35 lead at
halftime.
Midway through the secondhalf the Pioneers held a 54-51
lead but the Eagles came back
to tie it at 59-59.
The lead exchanged hand a
few times but with 1:13 left in
the contest the Eagles held a
70-66 lead then almost blew the
ballgame. A quick bucket by the
Pioneers and a s t e a l knotted
the score at 70-70. The pioneers
regained the ball with 28 s e c onds but a shot slipped off the
rim of the bucket and went a s tray and then Savani tied up a
Pioneer for a jump ball and a
last mintue buzzer shot went
wide sending the game into
overtime.
Commenting on the game first
year
coach
Jim Christopher
s t a t e d , " L o u (Savani) did a fantastic job coming the bench late
in the game to not only score
• 10 big points but a l s o w a s a
tiger on defense. Johnny (Marz-

won't burn any more buildings if t h e y ' l l
have the pop machine fixed!

T o the editor:
Mr. Al Smith's latest faux
pas concerning athletics was
again devoid of fact.
It _ is
most regrettable when journalistic responsibility is used to
project biased opinion.
It is unfortunate when the
printed word .. i s not often used
to benefit student, division and
institution by aiding m . the
growth
and development
of
athletics
as
an
important
educational endeavor.
Sport has not been given the
a s s i s t *hHt it d e s e r v e s .
Sincerely,
Matthew G. Maetozo, P e . D-.
Director, Division of Health
Education and Physical Education
S.G.Jacobs
Director of Athletics
Ed. Note: As any sports minded
person shmiia know, a sports
column
IS opinionated
and
certainly
may be biased.
We
have failed to reach you if you
think that every sports
article
printed in Eagle .Eve has not
been used to benefit the student,
division and institution.

D o n X a y U c e , please contact
the
Eagle
Eye c o n c e r n i n g
your
cartoons.
748-5531
Wanted: College girl with free
time in the mornings for baby
sitting.
If
interested,
call
748-4506.
ALL INTERESTED. DIVISION MAJORS PLEASE CONTACT EAGLE
EYE AT 748 5531 -

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