BHeiney
Wed, 07/05/2023 - 15:45
Edited Text
Head Start Begins
Third Year at LH
by Susie Meiser
Any Lock Haven student interested in working with children
should investigate the head start
program, now beginning its third
year in the Lock Haven area
elementary s c h o o l s . Head start,
a government sponsored program,
was instituted to provide school
experience for children of prekindergarten a g e . It is located
in the Penn School in Lock
Haven, and in the Orviston and
Flemington elementt.ry s c h o o l s ,
and involves 80 children from
Orviston, Monument, BlanchardLockport, Woolrich, C a s t e n e a ,
and the city of Lock Haven.
Various student groups have
participated in the head start
program on a v.oluntary b a s i s .
As a community service project,
brothers of Phi Mu Delta Fraternity a c t e d a s teacher aides in
the c l a s s r o o m s , and pledges of
the fraternity constructed and
installed s h e l v e s and cleaned up

the school grounds. Members of
an early childhood education
c l a s s have observed and partici
pated in head start, and several
interested students have volun
teered their s e r v i c e s to the program. Also, during the 1968-69
school year, the German club
was very active in a s s i s t i n g the
t e a c h e r s of head s t a r t , and
various other groups gave holiday
parties for the children.
T h i s year, head start is planning several projects in which
students could become involved.
A book drive is presently underway — students who wish t o may
contribite used children's books
to the program. A l s o , the preparation of any materials used
in teaching would be useful to
the program. Anyone interested
in participating in or contributing
to t h e head start program should
contact Mrs. John McGowan at
748-4956

WUS Aids Many Countries
Representative Visits Campus
Olga
Vorloou, a
traveling
representative of the World University Service, visited the campus yesterday to s p e a k to students and administration members concerning aid from the
s t u d e n t s for the organization.
WUS is an international organization with members from fiftytwo countries, and is centered in
Geneva.
An apolitical group,
WUS offers help to any country
provided it is a s s u r e d that it
will not be subjected to governmental control.
Funds come
completely from student contributions and the receiving country
must pledge itself to equally
match thi^ .. nount a l l o c a t e d .
Approximately
10-12% of the
funds contributed go to the support of the administrative branch
of the organization.
The purpose of WUS is to promote higher education on the
college and university level in
underdeveloped countries.
Proj e c t s are financed in thirty-two
countries in Latin America, Asia
and Africa. The four main proj e c t a r e a s are lodging and living,
student health, educational a c tivities and facilities (equipment)

and individual and emergency
aid
(direct scholarships and
natural d i s a s t e r s ) . The projects
can extend to the surrounding
communities a s well a s the
specific u n i v e r s i t i e s .
This is
the only organization currently
a i d i n g the Biafran s t u d e n t s .
T h e committee representing the
U.S. c o n s i s t s of twenty member.s.
All committees must be made ujof 50% plus 1 student members.
The students can be on the
committee for a period of three
y e a r s . They are chosen by the
board of directors after having
their names submitted to New
York by the traveling representative. Graduate students are a l s o
eligible.
The U S - h a s been
divided into four regions
the
Western centered in San Franc i s c o , the Midwestern in Chicago
the Southern in Atlanta and th;
Middle Atlantic and New Englani
in Philadelphia. National heaC
quarters are in New York City.
The WUS will celebrate its
50th anniversary in 1970- It h a s
operated in the U.S. s i n c e the
late 3 0 ' s . The contributors have
the right to stipulate to which
project their money is applied.



Vol XII, No 25

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AGLE EYE
LOCK HAVEN STATE COLLEGE

Peace March OK'd
By Police for Oct 15
City police yesterday gave official approval for the LHS
Vietnam moratorium coordinating committee to hold a peace
march next Wednesday evening in downtown Lock Haven.
The march will form at the cannon in Canal Park near the
county court house and proceed to the wartmonument downtown.
From there it will move to
Trinity
United
Methodist
Church
for an interdenominational
churth
s e r v i c e . according to Ron Smith, chairman of the Student Cooperative
Council committoe.
PolictChief
Domcr
G.
Orndorf
approved
the peace
march yesterday morning. He
indiciilcd that a polu c motorcycle escort will he provided
to accompany the marchers,
which
will
include
college
sludents
and
facullv,
and
members ol the local coiniiiunil\ . Smith -^.n.!
CHlor Ciuard I'luiined

A color guard will lead the
march, the committee reported.
This will be followed by a
black-draped coffin, symbolic
of the American men killed
in
Vietnam since
the war
be ga n.
The peace march will begin
at
6 pm Wednesday. Smith
pointed out.
The
student
ci>mmittee is
also planning several activities to be held on the college
campus
throi'ghoul Ihe day.
I'he
e\acl
nature of these
acl i\ ll K>
miiie^l.

-nil
undeterL cMtiniittee
said.

Fri., Oct. 10,1969

Tickets for the homecoming
concerts, Sunday Oct. 19 at
1:30-4 pm, starring Littie
Anthony & the Imperials
are now being sold at the
PUB reception desl(. Student admission-$2.00. Genera) pubiic-$2.50
although the tentative .schedule
calls for several speakers to
address the students.
Matter of Conscience
President Richard T. Parsons
yesterdiiy issued a statement
concerning
the
moratorium
and the committee's
request
Ihat
classes
be
cancelled
next V\ednesday. In the statement, he said
••The
Constitution
of our
country
makes possible the
peaceful assembly of citizens
to protest.
Whether
or not
members of our student body
or faculty wi.sh to ioi n in such
ciintinued on page 2 i-olumn 5

Construction
true tion CContinues on the New Male Dorm Below McEntire Hall

EE Reporter Describes Impression of Drug Situation in Philly
by J o e S c o t t
Editor's note: Familiar with the
Philadelphia
area, Mr. Scott has
described
his impression of the
drug situation in certain parts of
the city.
Eagle f^ye would welcome other viewpoints and ideas
from students
who are familiar
with various parts of the state ot
country.
Please submit
articles
to the Publications Office in the
PUB or call 748-5531 for information.
The Art Museum in Philadelphia used to be a beautiful
place for young people in love
to go after dark. There
many
fountains, shrubbery and lands c a p i n g abound, and there's
an old wooden gazebo for romantic mocinlit kissing. The park
guards even left you alone.
A small slice of beauty out of
the reality of the city.
The
Art Museum
is now
patrolled by police cars and the
two-man teams are armed with
tear gas and billy c l u b s . The
tree-lined
walks
echo
with
resounding
voices;
BS/\.
Harley-Davidson...Honda.
The
fountains are ringed with bellbottomed teenyboppers, muttering obcenities to passers-by.
"Shock treatment", they call
it. Most are high on grass or
acid, and dive into the bushes

when
the patrol drives by.
They
resent their
intrusion,
their authority, their a d u l t n e s s .
They look for a way to rebel
even more. The gazebo isn't a
nice
place
to go anymore.
Some local poet h a s etched
"Skrew y o u " into the railing.

Ball is Rolling
For these kids, the ball h a s
started rolling. But it is not only
the city-dwelling part of our
generation that appears to be
downgrading the image of youth.
The explosion which occurred
in the early s i x t i e s — the drugs,
the sexual freedom, the resentment of authority. — h a s now
spread fallout to the suburbs.
In Philly, Police Commissioner Rizzo recently stripped his
a c t i v e detective force to almost
nothing, put these men into
uniforms, and strongly emphasized the need for a better law
enfjrcuig
team. No more sneak
a t t a c k s on grass parties in
Rittenhouse Square'.' Are the
police becoming lenient with
the kids'.' No, I think the move
was
made tci i n c r ; a s e the
mobility of the big city police
department so as to better cover
the suburbs. It seems that the
a c c e s s i b i l i t y of illegal vegetables
and mind
expanding
confections is far greater now

in the outlying districts of
large metropolitan a r e a s . The
procurers ot such giiodies have
learned the real market for their
wares is in suburbia. The kids
there have the money.
"Don't Be R i d i c u l o u s "
If you approached a suburbar
mother of a teenaged girl and
asked if s h e suspected her
daughter of smoking marihuana,
you would probably get an answer like, " D o n ' t be ridiculous...
where would s h e get a thing like
t h a t ? " The s a d fact i s , s h e can
get a thing like that, as easily
as she can get liquor.
The
candyman is ever present in the
suburbs; some of them own
homes,drive six-cylinder Chevys,
and don't let their hair grow
long. The traffic in drugs h a s '
moved to the suburbs along with
the traffic j a m s . Some exclusive
areas of suburban New York are
so thoroughly covered with pushers that an unsuspecting teenager may be severely "reprimanded" for buying from the
wrong s a l e s m a n . These s a l e s men are present at parties (sometimes welcome
gatecrashers),
large shopping malls, .•chool
d a n c e s , and anywhi-re leenagers
congregate — even cluircli youth
groups.

The danger of using hallucinogenic drugs and marihuana is
not inherent in the drug itself.
This h a s been medically proven.
LSD and marihuana are not
physiologically
habit-forming.
But what is frightening is the
fact that connections can be
made by very young people to
buy these commodities, and to
the curious teenager, addiction
to hard drugs is j u s t a few dollars away.
The s: jarch for a
bigger and better high is neverending with these children, and
the pushers know this. This is
how they make their living.
The
teenagers worry little
about being caught by the police
(a conservative guess is one in
thirty is ever busted) or even
their parents. Mom and Dad are
apathetic
in their
attitudes
toward their children, and seem
to accept well enough the excuse that their little girl is just
doing her thing. (Why, I remember. Mother, when I was a teenager, 1 had my own hip flask
filled with Rye.
We weren't
trying to be bad — it was just
our way of raising a little h e l l . )

.Speed Kills
Narcotics are bad.
kills.
Habit-forming

Speed
drugs

breed lawlessness of the worst
possible kind - d i s r e s p e c t for
other's rights. Through the use
of marihuana and LSD, the teenager is given a credit card for
the u s e of drugs that will bring
about h i s own self-destruction,
and he will probably bring others
down with him. What's the harm
in a little p o f It isn't the use
of it, i t ' s the buying of i t . Who?
Where? The economic slogan of
the s t r e e t s h a s changed from " I
can gel it for you w h o l e s a l e " to
' T can get it for you.'"

Repeating History
In a medieval history c l a s s at
at San Jose State College, a
young man w a s called upon to
give the year of the signing of
the Peace of Westphalia, which
ended the Thirty Years War.
After a wait of several s e c o n d s ,
the student came up with a timid
"1648?"
" T h a t is c o r r e c t , "
replied the professor. " B u t just
before you answered 1 distinctly
heard that date whispered a loud."
" 1 s u p p o s e , s i r , " retorted the
unabashed student, " t h a t it was
just another instance of history
repeating itself."
Reader's
Digest

Harriers Close
Home Season
With Tri-Meet
The Bald Eagle cross country team will host Bloomsburg
and Mansfield today at 4:00, in
their final home dual meet of
the s e a s o n , and final meet before the district 18 NAIA showdown.
Captain Keith Rider will be
competing in the final home dual
meet of his four year career.
Rider has been hobbled by an injury, but has been improving
this week in practice s e s s i o n s ,
and will be ready for the meet.
Also competing for the first
time in weeks will be Harry
Smeltz, who was slowed by an
Achilles
tendon injury.
The
rest of the squad, co-captain
Steve Podgajny, Dave Mosebrook, Em Borowski, Nibs Gordon, George Bower, Carl Klingaman,
Charlie
Dressel,
Bob
Wagner, and Tom Phillips, will
compete, the only exception
being Steve Harnish, stopped by
a foot injury.
The performances of the Bald
Eagles in this meet will be a
determining factor in the s e l e c tion of runners to compete in
the district meet, held in Erie,
Oct. 18. One of the top team competing at Erie will be Slippery
Rock State, the only team to defeat the Bald Eagles s o far this

LHS Head FootbaU Coach Robert Weller Puts College Gridders Through Rough Week of Practice Before

Gridders Travel to Ship, in Hope
Of Returning to Winning Ways
The Bald Eagles of Lock Haven State will be trying to even
their record this week when they
run up against the Red R a i d e r s
of Shippensbttrg State tomorrow
afternoon in a contest at Shippensburg.
The Red Raiders will be going
into the game with an 0-3 record.
Their defeats have been at the
hands of Mansfield S t a t e , 28-12,
Indiana University, 21-7, and
Slippery Rock, 34-31. The Bald
Eagles will be coming off a 21-7
defeat by the Clarion State Golden Eagles and are 1-2 on the
season.
Some of the key players that

will be playing for the Red Raiders are senior defensive back,
who led team in interceptions in
'68...should be looking for allconference honors. Bill Lemans k i ; senior guard, one of the top.
lineman for the past three years,
should win post-season honors,
Al Bowman; junior end, led State
College Conference in p a s s receiving in ' 6 8 . one of the best
recievers in SCC football his
tory, all-conference
potential.
Bob Bobiak, senior defense back
and senior guard, Charles Bolash
third year as starter at right
guard...one of the best blockers
of the line.

The Red R a i d e r s will avenge
about 215 pounds per man in the
offensive line and about 205
pounds up front on defense.
Eagle
Coach
Bob
Weller
doesn't
plan
to make any
changes
in his
line-up with
the exception of Dave Witcoskie who was injured last
week. Witcoskie hasn't practiced
all
week
and
might
not
start.
Weller
indicated
that defensive back Joe Mack
will s e e some action tomorrow. Mack had injured some
ligaments
in
the
opening
game of the s e a s o n .
Weller and his
have

T o m o r r o w ' s Meet with .Shippensburg State C o l l e g e

SOUL HOLE

%

o
COFFEE HOUSE
Entertainer:
"Tux" Saupp
Basement Trinty United

03

Methodist Church

o

W. Main & Second Sts.

G-A-R-D-E-N
O c t . 10 thru 14
Walt D i s n e y ' s

"RASCAL"

St. Vincent Hosts Booters Tomorrow
The Bald Eagle s o c c e r team
travels to Latrobe on Saturday
to face St. Vincent College.
Coach
Herrmann's
probable
starting
line-up
puts
Don
Trautman, Don Fay, Jim Sleicher, and John Garmon or Mile
Minchof on the forward line.
Tom D e F r a n c e s c o , J a c k Infield, and Steve Steffen will
be
halfbacks
and
fullbacks
will be George Magliaro, Tom
RUis, and Curt Wolf. Bruce
Parkhill will tend the goal.
The booters have spent this
week
experimenting
with a
different svstem to use when

Ali
organizations
who
have entered placements
iii the homecoming contest
are to buy their own mat| erials and submit the receipts or bills to the bookstore no later than Nov. 1.
Oniy $15. ot the biiis Vniii
be paid. No organization
may charge materials to
the social committee.

"HANG YOUR HAT ON
THE WIND"

they are on the defense- Coach
Herrmann wants to develope
something new to throw at the
opponents once in a while.
" O n e man on the line drops
back to help on defense and
goes forward again while we
are on the offense. We will
u s e this technique along with
our regular set up. The team
has been pushing themselves
hard to iron out the bugs that
showed up against Shippensburg last week. We had a bad
game and the boys knew it
but
we're ready
to bounce
back and w i n . "
St. Vincent has a smaller
field
than normal so more
goals are scored on their field.
Coach
Herrmann
anticiaptes
a lot of scoring, "1 hope we

make the most ol t h e m . " St.
Vincent must have a good scoring attack because they are
getting goals and they have
a couple of tall, strong players
that can kick a goal from thirty
yards out."

"sub

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LH.S.C.

Peace March...
a protest under the provisions
as stated above is a matter
to be resolved solely by each
person's c o n s c i e n c e . "
No-Cut System
Eat.,er this week, the president
discussed
with
Eagle
Eye the c o l l e g e ' s policy on
c l a s s attendance and the cancelling of c l a s s e s .
Lock Haven State, he pointed
out, is operated on an unlimited cut system. This means
that a student is free to miss
a s many c l a s s e s as he w i s h e s ;
c l a s s .attendance is not compulsary and no penalities for
non-attendance are permitted.
The administration takes a
similar stand concerning the
cancelling of individual c l a s s es by faculty members. Teachers may dismiss a c l a s s , adjourn it to another time, or
cancel
it without answering
to
the
administration.
Dr.
Parsons s a i d .

LTOWS

To

U n f o r g e t t a b l e tale of a
boy — a y e l l o w hound dog —
a ring-tailed rapscallion
w h o ' l l s t e a l your h e a r t away
and f r a c t u r e your funny bone
Plus Disney Featureette

changed some things in the
line
with
blocking
assignm e n t s . They feel the E a g l e s
have to improve their inside
running game and if this improves,
the
outside running
part will handle itself.
Commenting
on
tomorrow's
contest
Weller
stated,
"We
are impressed that Shipensburg hasn't won a game. They
moved the ball well on Indiana
(Pa.) all afternoon and
Indiana
is
supposedly
the
number
two
small
college
team in the n a t i o n . "
According
to
the
Dunkel
ratings the Bald Eagles are
a three pot nt underdog.

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