BHeiney
Wed, 07/05/2023 - 16:36
Edited Text
Dynamic Cast Performs
With Youttiful
Vitality
by Oarey C. Gadson
" J o Be Young, Gifted and
B l a c k , " was an unforgettable eveiiiiig as it was presented to a
.•^landing room only audience in
Price Auditorium on October 7.
The play, appropriately titled, is
a dramatic, forceful and sentimental "portrait of (the late) Lorraine
Hansberry,
in her own
words."
In the mosl benevolent sense
of the word " T o Be Young, Gifted and B l a c k " can be termed nothing .short of a tribute to Miss
Hansberry and everything she represented. T h i s fact, does not,
however, in any way hamper the
production but rather it reinforces
her brilliance, exuberance, illumination, and youthful vitality,
Background
/nformaf/on
Given On LHS Buildings
McCollum Field and Akeley
School were completed in 1930.
McCollum Field was named for
William McCollum and Akeley
School for A. P. Akeley.
The field i s used for physical
education c l a s s e s in soccer, hockey, track, and for student recreation.
The Akeley School, built at a
cost of $160,000 is a model school
with a special demonstration room
with amphitheatre s e a t s , a conference room adjoining each c l a s s room, and a health room.
More
modern equipment h a s been added
since its erection, and the school
today provides a training ground
for the elementary education majors
at LHS.
In 1938, a large protion of the
present campus was compd'^ted
wilh the addition of Thomas Field
House, Price Auditorium, and the
old Stevenson Library.
The fieidhouse was named
for David W. Thomas, one-time
president of the board of t r u s t e e s ;
the auditorium was named for
Philip Price, w+io contributed the
original land for the campus; and
the library for Senator George B.
Stevenson, a friend of the college
during the post-war college expansion period.
In 1949, R u s s e l l Hall, named
for Lillian Russell and the oldest
women's dormitory on the present
csmpus, was e r e c t e d .
1951 saw the erection of
Ulmer Hall in honor of l ^ v i J.
Ulmer.
Smith Hall, the oldest men's
dormitory on the present campus,
was erected in 1960. This building houses 228 men and was named
for Samuel Smith, a mathamatics
teacher who served LHS from 1927
to 1958.
Himes
Special
Education
Building was erected in 1961 and
was named for J e s s i e Scott Himes.
Woolridge Hall, second oldest
women's dormitory on the present
campus, was erected in 1964.
Raub Hall, named for Albert
N. Raub, founder and principal of
the Central State Normal School,
was erected in 1964 and serves as
the main classroom building for
the present campus.
Bentley H a l l , the student dining hall, was erected in 1967.
North Hall, named for William
R. North, former t e a c h e r of Fnglish
at LHS, was erected in 1967 on tlie
site of the first college building.
Glennon Studeni Infirmary was
erected iti 1967.
Iho Richard I . Parsons Student Community Center was occupied in Sefvtember of 1968, and
was named for tho past president
of the c o l l e g e .
The new wing of Ulmor Hall
was opened in the spring ut I9by,
while Molntiio Hall, a woman's
r e s i d e n c e hull, and the new Slevonson Library were opened in Ihe
fall of 1969.
Don't forget:CHI ALPHA meet- 'j
ing tonight at 7:30 in the PUB |j
TV room.
Children s
works, notably - " A Raisin in the
Sun," " T h e Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window," and the soon to
be produced " L e s B l a n c s , " " T o Be Young, Gifted and B l a c k "
was adapted by her producer-husband Robert Nemiroff.
"Virtually every human being is interesting. . . , " a s s e r t s
Miss Hansberry in the opening
speech delivered prior to the presentation of her award winning
production " A Raisin in the S u n . "
She goes on lo develop her point
by reminding us that if we are to
dissect the complexity, diversity
and paradox of the black experience; if we are to destroy stereotypes, banish mythes and misconceptions
misconceptions
which in Miss Hansberry's words
A compilation
of letters, have " c r e a t e d the white mentalitydiary e n t r i e s , articles, excerpts some grotesque expression of the
from Miss Hansberry's produced mirth of nature; a fancied static
vestige of the primeval past- an
eternal exotic who, unlike men
would not bleed when pricked nor
A giraffe and a man have the
revenge when wrong" . then we
same number of vertebrae in
must understand blacks in mind
their necks . . . seven.
and spirit.
These ideals are executed
by a very able and versatile c a s t .
The presentation is done in the
The odds against being dealt
manner of the playwright's life.
13 cards of the same suit are
In what is a joyous and fortunate
over 158 b i l l i o n to 1.
company achievement there is no
star. The story of birth to death
flows flawlessly from one s c e n e
to the next without any clear distinctions.
The dynamic and energetic
seven member cast ranges from
a strong, stunning and bouvant
Tina Sattin to a husky and determined Bernard Ward. Justina Davis
personifies the struggling black
matriarch trying to keep her failinu
family
together. The youthiul
Gam Stephens along with William
Suplee and Judy Jean Berns all
prove to be more than interesting
in their s c e n e s from " T h e Sign
in Sidney Brustein's Window." Of
Camille Yarborough, despite the
slight handicap of a cold, it can
be said that she was tremendous.
Performing on s t a g e , bare,
except tor a large ramp the above
c a s t proved to us that while Lorraine Hansberry has been dead
these past 5 years her spirit and
ideals live on.
Recollections
of childhood
days, school days, influential
persons and e v e n t s , and the search
for truth all add poignance and
meaning to " T o Be Young, Gifted
and B l a c k . " And as you left Price
Auditorium on October 7 you held
one certain and vital impression
" i t didn't sound nothin' like
Gone With the Wind!"
Theatre
Presents
Grants
Awarded
Dr. Mary Alice Smith, Director of Special Education at LHS,
announced that four seniors and
and two juniors have been awarded
traineeship
grants
in
special
education.
The s e n i o r s , who will each
receive a stipend of $800 plus
tuition,
are
Catherine
Dugan,
Muncy; Ruth Kehler, Renovo; Mary
Robinson, Danville; and Ellen
Sellers,
HoUidaysburg.
The
juniors, who will each receive a
$? 00 stipend,
are Mary
Beth
Gillam,
Tyrone;
and
William
Thorpe, Philadelphia.
These traineeships are financed through a grant of $11,800
awarded to the college by the
U.S. Office of Education.
The
purpose of this program of financial
a s s i s t a n c e is to recruit competent
people into the field of education
of the mentally retarded.
//(H't- you seen r/n.s .•hurcul: • .
sev I'm/ -St'cre/U)/t'.s on cuniiiu;,,
solved?
lhi.s the
SC.lRhCROW
:,•'.' lie hll n,\ .-.lenously
appeared m the cars of
•/•.•ill 'IS niv:ivii,>tisly.
Will the mystery ever he
!l,n.-n\'
Sadness diminishes'or hindders a man's powe'r of action.
Baruch Spinoza
Harriers To Face
NAIA District's Sat.
Lock Haven State cross country coach James Dolan hopes to
have h i s " c r i p p l e s " ready to go
for this Saturday's annual NAIA
District 18 meet. Over the past
two weeks anywhere from three to
five of the Eagle Harriers have
been sidelined with injuries.
Coach Dolan feels Edinboro
State, after its convincing 15-4-3
victory over Slippery Rock a team
that beat the Eagles early in the
s e a s o n , must be considered favorites for the team title.
However,
stiff
competition
should come from Slippery Rock,
a strong California State team, and
and two-time defending championLock Haven State.
n
•
J. ^ I
Individually
three
runners
I r O i n I H G n t N O n i G S ' " "^^ district stand out this year,
Edinboro's defending champ, Dave
Antagnoli; Ed Gralewski of Slippery Rock; and Lock Haven's
Steve Podgainy of Chester.
A l s o very much in contention
for the title should be Dave Mosebrook of Spring Grove. Last year
the Lock Haven State senior came
in s e c o n d , only 18 seconds beCLARION-Four of the most
hind Antagnoli.
prominent names in the nation's
Another Lock Haven runner.
wrestling circles will highlight
Nibs Gordon of State College,
the Fourth Annual Eagle Wrestling
placed ninth last year at the Erie
Clinic for Coaches at Clarion State
race and is expected to place high
College, October 30 and 3 1 , under
this Saturday.
the direction of head mat coach
L a s t week Lock Haven minus
Bob Budd and a s s i s t a n t coach
Podgajny split a double dual.
Neil Turner.
The E a g l e s topped Mansfield State
Heading the list of prominent
19-38, but lost to a good Bloomsclinicians for the two-day s e s s i o n
burg State team, 22-33. The Eaare Tom Chesbro, 1970 Rookie
gles are now 4-2 for the s e a s o n .
Coach of the Year at Oklahoma
State University, John K. Johnston, head coach at Princeton
University, 1957 NCAA champion
and three-time Eastern Collegiate
titlist, Gus De Augustino, 1953
NCAA champion and highly successful coach at North Allegheny
High School, Pittsburgh, and Fred
Fozzard, Assistant Coach at Oklahoma
State
University,
1969
World Champion and 1967 NCAA
LOCK
HAVEN-Quarterback
Champion.
Mike Packer and Split End Sam
Vaughn of the Lock Haven State
Gratified
by excellent reCollege football team have moved
sponse the last three years, Budd
up in National FootbaU Rankings
and Turner have selected a stellar
according to the weekly National
slate of seminar speakers in Joe
Hammaker, Penns Valley High Collegiate Sports Service official
football s t a t i s t i c s release for
School, George Lamprinakos, well
NCAA College-Division
teams.
known mat mentor from Mt. Lebanan High School, and Don ShoVaughn, a senior from Mt.
bert, DuBois Area High School
Union, is second in the nation in
coach.
both p a s s e s caught (30) and p a s s
yardage (433).
With an attendance expected
P a c k e r , a junior from Lock
to lop the 159 figure of last year,
the clinic has been expanded to Haven, is third in the country in
four major s e s s i o n s , covering as pass yardage (980); fifth in p a s s e s
thoroughly the various facets of completed (70). and 12th in total
Abraham Lincoln speaks
offense with 219.8 yards per game.
wrestling.
on T h e Peace Corps:
Lock Haven State is also
Registration begins at 10 a.m.
on Friday, October 30, with the ranked nationally in forward pasfirst major s e s s i o n starting at sing offense. The Bald Eagles
are 7th with an average of 263.3
1 p.m. the same day.
Information
concerning ac- yards per game.
comodations, four clinic p l a n s ,
and additional features of the twoday s e s s i o n may be obtained by
contacting Bob Budd,Coach, Tippin
Gymnasium,
Clarion,
Pa.
16214.
To correct the evils,
great and small,
which spring from
Dean C. Roush, a sophomore
want of sympathy
D u c k s s t a y afloat b e c a u s e a
arts and science major at Lock
and from positive enmity
special
gland
waterproofs
Haven State, is announcer for the
among strangers,
"College
D i a r y " show, aired
as nations or as individuals, their feathers with oilover WBPZ each Wednesday at
is one of
Some congressmen, opposed to
7:30 p.m. Sponsored by the colthe highest functions
the ABM system, want to change lege's Department of Public Reof civilization."
the name of it from the "Sen- lations, the program offers weekly
t i n e l " to the " C i v i l S e r v a n t . " news about college events, with
popular musical selections beThat way they claim, it wouldn't
tween the news s p o t s .
work and couldn't be fired.
Student organizations wishing
to present information on the program may contact Dean Roush in
North Hall or Mr. Coltrane in Baker H o u s e .
To Highlight
Wrestling Clinic
New Pool in Zimmerli
Packer an Vaughn
Move Up
National Ranking
Booters To Meet Tough Opponents
There i s no rest for the Lock
Haven State College soccer team
following a thrilling double overtime 3-2 win over St. Vincent College before a big Homecoming Day
crowd. Now the Bald Eagles meet
the strongest team in the Pennsylvania Conference, East Stroudsburg Slate at East Stroudsburg
on Saturday at 2:00 p.m.
Looking ahead to the E a s t
Stroudsburg game. Lock Haven
State head soccer coach Karl Herrmann s l a t e d : " E a s t Stroudsburg
plays as tough a schedule as any
team in the nation. They probably
have their b e s t defense in y e a r s .
It will be the toughest game on
our s c h e d u l e . I just hope we can
stay wilh t h e m . "
In winning last week the Eagles now have a fine 4-1-2 record.
Trailing St. Vincent 2-1 late
in the fourth period, veteran center forward Jim Sleicher of Waynesboro tied the game at 2-2 with his
second goal of the c o n t e s t .
In the first overtime period
sophomore whiz Galen Hess of
Greencastle scored the winning
goal al the buzzer. H e s s hit a
beautiful shot on a cross from
Keith Herman of New C a s t l e .
Sleicher and Hess continued
to lead Lock Haven in scoring.
The Waynesboro native has eight
goals and one a s s i s t . Hess has
four goals and six a s s i s t s .
LHS Student
Announces Show
Coach Responds
••>i(A>s"' *i^rtr''
»!*•
To the Editor:
To Mr. Larry Green and Mr. Al
Smith:
It has been both amusing and
frustrating for me to read the
" w o r d s of w i s d o m " and " g e m s
of t r u t h " printed under your nebulous columns- Sports Scene and
Time Out. In a year when a little
encouragement and faith could go
a long way, we find both of you
hostile and biting.
I find it interesting the way
both of you can s o quickly and
accurately expound upon a statement (taken out of context) by another person. This ability, which
you obviously p o s s e s s , to understand another person and his thinking is truly unique! Maybe the
words of John Locke in "An Essay Concerning Human Unders t a n d i n g " would be relevant to
you- Mr. Green and Mr. Smith"We should have a great many
fewer disputes in the world if
words were taken for what they
are, the signs of our ideas only,
and not for things t h e m s e l v e s . "
A little common courtesy
and decency of finding out from
the original source what was in
fact meant by a statement and its
implications, might go a long way
toward being fair and honest to
yourself, the coach, the team, the
faculty, and the student body at
Lock Haven State College.
James L. Dolan
Instructor and Coach
•1
With Youttiful
Vitality
by Oarey C. Gadson
" J o Be Young, Gifted and
B l a c k , " was an unforgettable eveiiiiig as it was presented to a
.•^landing room only audience in
Price Auditorium on October 7.
The play, appropriately titled, is
a dramatic, forceful and sentimental "portrait of (the late) Lorraine
Hansberry,
in her own
words."
In the mosl benevolent sense
of the word " T o Be Young, Gifted and B l a c k " can be termed nothing .short of a tribute to Miss
Hansberry and everything she represented. T h i s fact, does not,
however, in any way hamper the
production but rather it reinforces
her brilliance, exuberance, illumination, and youthful vitality,
Background
/nformaf/on
Given On LHS Buildings
McCollum Field and Akeley
School were completed in 1930.
McCollum Field was named for
William McCollum and Akeley
School for A. P. Akeley.
The field i s used for physical
education c l a s s e s in soccer, hockey, track, and for student recreation.
The Akeley School, built at a
cost of $160,000 is a model school
with a special demonstration room
with amphitheatre s e a t s , a conference room adjoining each c l a s s room, and a health room.
More
modern equipment h a s been added
since its erection, and the school
today provides a training ground
for the elementary education majors
at LHS.
In 1938, a large protion of the
present campus was compd'^ted
wilh the addition of Thomas Field
House, Price Auditorium, and the
old Stevenson Library.
The fieidhouse was named
for David W. Thomas, one-time
president of the board of t r u s t e e s ;
the auditorium was named for
Philip Price, w+io contributed the
original land for the campus; and
the library for Senator George B.
Stevenson, a friend of the college
during the post-war college expansion period.
In 1949, R u s s e l l Hall, named
for Lillian Russell and the oldest
women's dormitory on the present
csmpus, was e r e c t e d .
1951 saw the erection of
Ulmer Hall in honor of l ^ v i J.
Ulmer.
Smith Hall, the oldest men's
dormitory on the present campus,
was erected in 1960. This building houses 228 men and was named
for Samuel Smith, a mathamatics
teacher who served LHS from 1927
to 1958.
Himes
Special
Education
Building was erected in 1961 and
was named for J e s s i e Scott Himes.
Woolridge Hall, second oldest
women's dormitory on the present
campus, was erected in 1964.
Raub Hall, named for Albert
N. Raub, founder and principal of
the Central State Normal School,
was erected in 1964 and serves as
the main classroom building for
the present campus.
Bentley H a l l , the student dining hall, was erected in 1967.
North Hall, named for William
R. North, former t e a c h e r of Fnglish
at LHS, was erected in 1967 on tlie
site of the first college building.
Glennon Studeni Infirmary was
erected iti 1967.
Iho Richard I . Parsons Student Community Center was occupied in Sefvtember of 1968, and
was named for tho past president
of the c o l l e g e .
The new wing of Ulmor Hall
was opened in the spring ut I9by,
while Molntiio Hall, a woman's
r e s i d e n c e hull, and the new Slevonson Library were opened in Ihe
fall of 1969.
Don't forget:CHI ALPHA meet- 'j
ing tonight at 7:30 in the PUB |j
TV room.
Children s
works, notably - " A Raisin in the
Sun," " T h e Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window," and the soon to
be produced " L e s B l a n c s , " " T o Be Young, Gifted and B l a c k "
was adapted by her producer-husband Robert Nemiroff.
"Virtually every human being is interesting. . . , " a s s e r t s
Miss Hansberry in the opening
speech delivered prior to the presentation of her award winning
production " A Raisin in the S u n . "
She goes on lo develop her point
by reminding us that if we are to
dissect the complexity, diversity
and paradox of the black experience; if we are to destroy stereotypes, banish mythes and misconceptions
misconceptions
which in Miss Hansberry's words
A compilation
of letters, have " c r e a t e d the white mentalitydiary e n t r i e s , articles, excerpts some grotesque expression of the
from Miss Hansberry's produced mirth of nature; a fancied static
vestige of the primeval past- an
eternal exotic who, unlike men
would not bleed when pricked nor
A giraffe and a man have the
revenge when wrong" . then we
same number of vertebrae in
must understand blacks in mind
their necks . . . seven.
and spirit.
These ideals are executed
by a very able and versatile c a s t .
The presentation is done in the
The odds against being dealt
manner of the playwright's life.
13 cards of the same suit are
In what is a joyous and fortunate
over 158 b i l l i o n to 1.
company achievement there is no
star. The story of birth to death
flows flawlessly from one s c e n e
to the next without any clear distinctions.
The dynamic and energetic
seven member cast ranges from
a strong, stunning and bouvant
Tina Sattin to a husky and determined Bernard Ward. Justina Davis
personifies the struggling black
matriarch trying to keep her failinu
family
together. The youthiul
Gam Stephens along with William
Suplee and Judy Jean Berns all
prove to be more than interesting
in their s c e n e s from " T h e Sign
in Sidney Brustein's Window." Of
Camille Yarborough, despite the
slight handicap of a cold, it can
be said that she was tremendous.
Performing on s t a g e , bare,
except tor a large ramp the above
c a s t proved to us that while Lorraine Hansberry has been dead
these past 5 years her spirit and
ideals live on.
Recollections
of childhood
days, school days, influential
persons and e v e n t s , and the search
for truth all add poignance and
meaning to " T o Be Young, Gifted
and B l a c k . " And as you left Price
Auditorium on October 7 you held
one certain and vital impression
" i t didn't sound nothin' like
Gone With the Wind!"
Theatre
Presents
Grants
Awarded
Dr. Mary Alice Smith, Director of Special Education at LHS,
announced that four seniors and
and two juniors have been awarded
traineeship
grants
in
special
education.
The s e n i o r s , who will each
receive a stipend of $800 plus
tuition,
are
Catherine
Dugan,
Muncy; Ruth Kehler, Renovo; Mary
Robinson, Danville; and Ellen
Sellers,
HoUidaysburg.
The
juniors, who will each receive a
$? 00 stipend,
are Mary
Beth
Gillam,
Tyrone;
and
William
Thorpe, Philadelphia.
These traineeships are financed through a grant of $11,800
awarded to the college by the
U.S. Office of Education.
The
purpose of this program of financial
a s s i s t a n c e is to recruit competent
people into the field of education
of the mentally retarded.
//(H't- you seen r/n.s .•hurcul: • .
sev I'm/ -St'cre/U)/t'.s on cuniiiu;,,
solved?
lhi.s the
SC.lRhCROW
:,•'.' lie hll n,\ .-.lenously
appeared m the cars of
•/•.•ill 'IS niv:ivii,>tisly.
Will the mystery ever he
!l,n.-n\'
Sadness diminishes'or hindders a man's powe'r of action.
Baruch Spinoza
Harriers To Face
NAIA District's Sat.
Lock Haven State cross country coach James Dolan hopes to
have h i s " c r i p p l e s " ready to go
for this Saturday's annual NAIA
District 18 meet. Over the past
two weeks anywhere from three to
five of the Eagle Harriers have
been sidelined with injuries.
Coach Dolan feels Edinboro
State, after its convincing 15-4-3
victory over Slippery Rock a team
that beat the Eagles early in the
s e a s o n , must be considered favorites for the team title.
However,
stiff
competition
should come from Slippery Rock,
a strong California State team, and
and two-time defending championLock Haven State.
n
•
J. ^ I
Individually
three
runners
I r O i n I H G n t N O n i G S ' " "^^ district stand out this year,
Edinboro's defending champ, Dave
Antagnoli; Ed Gralewski of Slippery Rock; and Lock Haven's
Steve Podgainy of Chester.
A l s o very much in contention
for the title should be Dave Mosebrook of Spring Grove. Last year
the Lock Haven State senior came
in s e c o n d , only 18 seconds beCLARION-Four of the most
hind Antagnoli.
prominent names in the nation's
Another Lock Haven runner.
wrestling circles will highlight
Nibs Gordon of State College,
the Fourth Annual Eagle Wrestling
placed ninth last year at the Erie
Clinic for Coaches at Clarion State
race and is expected to place high
College, October 30 and 3 1 , under
this Saturday.
the direction of head mat coach
L a s t week Lock Haven minus
Bob Budd and a s s i s t a n t coach
Podgajny split a double dual.
Neil Turner.
The E a g l e s topped Mansfield State
Heading the list of prominent
19-38, but lost to a good Bloomsclinicians for the two-day s e s s i o n
burg State team, 22-33. The Eaare Tom Chesbro, 1970 Rookie
gles are now 4-2 for the s e a s o n .
Coach of the Year at Oklahoma
State University, John K. Johnston, head coach at Princeton
University, 1957 NCAA champion
and three-time Eastern Collegiate
titlist, Gus De Augustino, 1953
NCAA champion and highly successful coach at North Allegheny
High School, Pittsburgh, and Fred
Fozzard, Assistant Coach at Oklahoma
State
University,
1969
World Champion and 1967 NCAA
LOCK
HAVEN-Quarterback
Champion.
Mike Packer and Split End Sam
Vaughn of the Lock Haven State
Gratified
by excellent reCollege football team have moved
sponse the last three years, Budd
up in National FootbaU Rankings
and Turner have selected a stellar
according to the weekly National
slate of seminar speakers in Joe
Hammaker, Penns Valley High Collegiate Sports Service official
football s t a t i s t i c s release for
School, George Lamprinakos, well
NCAA College-Division
teams.
known mat mentor from Mt. Lebanan High School, and Don ShoVaughn, a senior from Mt.
bert, DuBois Area High School
Union, is second in the nation in
coach.
both p a s s e s caught (30) and p a s s
yardage (433).
With an attendance expected
P a c k e r , a junior from Lock
to lop the 159 figure of last year,
the clinic has been expanded to Haven, is third in the country in
four major s e s s i o n s , covering as pass yardage (980); fifth in p a s s e s
thoroughly the various facets of completed (70). and 12th in total
Abraham Lincoln speaks
offense with 219.8 yards per game.
wrestling.
on T h e Peace Corps:
Lock Haven State is also
Registration begins at 10 a.m.
on Friday, October 30, with the ranked nationally in forward pasfirst major s e s s i o n starting at sing offense. The Bald Eagles
are 7th with an average of 263.3
1 p.m. the same day.
Information
concerning ac- yards per game.
comodations, four clinic p l a n s ,
and additional features of the twoday s e s s i o n may be obtained by
contacting Bob Budd,Coach, Tippin
Gymnasium,
Clarion,
Pa.
16214.
To correct the evils,
great and small,
which spring from
Dean C. Roush, a sophomore
want of sympathy
D u c k s s t a y afloat b e c a u s e a
arts and science major at Lock
and from positive enmity
special
gland
waterproofs
Haven State, is announcer for the
among strangers,
"College
D i a r y " show, aired
as nations or as individuals, their feathers with oilover WBPZ each Wednesday at
is one of
Some congressmen, opposed to
7:30 p.m. Sponsored by the colthe highest functions
the ABM system, want to change lege's Department of Public Reof civilization."
the name of it from the "Sen- lations, the program offers weekly
t i n e l " to the " C i v i l S e r v a n t . " news about college events, with
popular musical selections beThat way they claim, it wouldn't
tween the news s p o t s .
work and couldn't be fired.
Student organizations wishing
to present information on the program may contact Dean Roush in
North Hall or Mr. Coltrane in Baker H o u s e .
To Highlight
Wrestling Clinic
New Pool in Zimmerli
Packer an Vaughn
Move Up
National Ranking
Booters To Meet Tough Opponents
There i s no rest for the Lock
Haven State College soccer team
following a thrilling double overtime 3-2 win over St. Vincent College before a big Homecoming Day
crowd. Now the Bald Eagles meet
the strongest team in the Pennsylvania Conference, East Stroudsburg Slate at East Stroudsburg
on Saturday at 2:00 p.m.
Looking ahead to the E a s t
Stroudsburg game. Lock Haven
State head soccer coach Karl Herrmann s l a t e d : " E a s t Stroudsburg
plays as tough a schedule as any
team in the nation. They probably
have their b e s t defense in y e a r s .
It will be the toughest game on
our s c h e d u l e . I just hope we can
stay wilh t h e m . "
In winning last week the Eagles now have a fine 4-1-2 record.
Trailing St. Vincent 2-1 late
in the fourth period, veteran center forward Jim Sleicher of Waynesboro tied the game at 2-2 with his
second goal of the c o n t e s t .
In the first overtime period
sophomore whiz Galen Hess of
Greencastle scored the winning
goal al the buzzer. H e s s hit a
beautiful shot on a cross from
Keith Herman of New C a s t l e .
Sleicher and Hess continued
to lead Lock Haven in scoring.
The Waynesboro native has eight
goals and one a s s i s t . Hess has
four goals and six a s s i s t s .
LHS Student
Announces Show
Coach Responds
••>i(A>s"' *i^rtr''
»!*•
To the Editor:
To Mr. Larry Green and Mr. Al
Smith:
It has been both amusing and
frustrating for me to read the
" w o r d s of w i s d o m " and " g e m s
of t r u t h " printed under your nebulous columns- Sports Scene and
Time Out. In a year when a little
encouragement and faith could go
a long way, we find both of you
hostile and biting.
I find it interesting the way
both of you can s o quickly and
accurately expound upon a statement (taken out of context) by another person. This ability, which
you obviously p o s s e s s , to understand another person and his thinking is truly unique! Maybe the
words of John Locke in "An Essay Concerning Human Unders t a n d i n g " would be relevant to
you- Mr. Green and Mr. Smith"We should have a great many
fewer disputes in the world if
words were taken for what they
are, the signs of our ideas only,
and not for things t h e m s e l v e s . "
A little common courtesy
and decency of finding out from
the original source what was in
fact meant by a statement and its
implications, might go a long way
toward being fair and honest to
yourself, the coach, the team, the
faculty, and the student body at
Lock Haven State College.
James L. Dolan
Instructor and Coach
•1
Media of