BHeiney
Wed, 07/05/2023 - 16:54
Edited Text
Lock Haven State College
Mon., Mar. 1, 1976
^ ^ ^
Iff
^ ^
LHSC hosts Breslin tomorrow
Author and columnist
Jimmy Breslin will present an
"Epic Tavern Talk" in Thomas Field House, Lock Haven
State College, on Tuesday,
March 2, at 8:00 p.m., sponsored by the S.C.C. Cultural
Affairs Committee and the
Residence Hall Association.
Breslin has been a regular
sports columnist for the now
defunct New York "Herald
Tribune," a syndicated general columnist, and author of
articles for "True," "Life,"
and "Saturday Evening Post."
His first novel, "The Gang
That
Couldn't
Shoot
Straight," was made into a
major motion picture.
Born in Queens, N.Y.,
Breslin amasses a distinctive
academic record of failing as
many as six subjects in a
single high school term, taking
five years to graduate. During
Calendars for
this semester
now available
By WENDY AKELEY
Staff Reporter
Semester calendars are
now available at the secretary's office in the PUB. They
have already been mailed to
faculty members, college staff
members, and officers of
student clubs.
"This is the earliest it's
been out," explained David
Arseneault, Coordinator of
Campus Activities. The
college picked up the cost for
the calendar from the SCC last
fall. The printing was delayed
this semester because the
administration didn't have the
calendar on its priority list and
didn't get the information
together in time, the paper
supply ran out, and the
campus groups and organizations kept changing their
his early years of police
reporting, rewriting and copyreading at the Boston
"Globe," the Scripps-Howard
syndicate, and the New York
"Journal-American," he was
best remembered for his extremely bad credit record.
It was the publication of
com. on page 4
WARMING UP FOR SPRING -- Although yesterday was
the last day in February, area tennis enthusiasts flocked
to the college's courts to take advantage of the
unseasonably warm "playing" weather. [Photo by
OLLIE SMITH.]
Vol. XVIII No. 79
Reading course
voted on and
passed Thurs.
By JULIA MCGOVERN
Staff Reporter
A continuation of the
discussion concerning Dr.
James Dayanada's proposal to
institute an elective reading
course opened the Faculty
Curriculum Committee meeting this past Thursday.
Originally titled,"Effective College Reading," but now
modified to "Effective Reading," the course is designed to
accelerate the improvement of
existing skills and the acquisition of additional skills useful
in the pursuit of a college
degree.
A lengthy discussion took
place before the Curriculum
Committee voted to accept the
course. The main arguments
centered around the amount of
conf. on page 4
More students receive tuition waivers
By JULIA MCGOVERN
Staff Reporter
Five additional tuition
waivers have been granted by
the Board of Trustees, to
foreign students attending
Lock Haven State College.
"Up until this point, the
state had agreed to grant one
tuition waiver to one foreign
student for every 500 students
enroll in the college. This
authorized us to grant five,"
reported Dr. Marcus Konick.
The state has recently given
the Board of Trustees the
power to grant additional
tuition waivers as they see
necessary. "Our Board agreed
on five more waivers, with the
program to be evaluated in a
year," continued Konick.
The Board of Trustees will
evaluate the quality of students; judging their academic
accomplishments and their
contributions to the college
and community. The Board
will also study the amount of
waivers awarded to see if an
increase or decrease is necessitated.
It has been decided by the
state that the primary reason
for chosing the students to be
granted the waivers will be
basedonneed. "Wehavebeen
considering possible contributions the students will make to
the college, academics and
need," stated Konick, when
discussing how Lock Haven
choses its waiver recipients.
An effort is made to distribute the students geographically so one country doesn't
receive a preponderence of
waivers.
The students are expected
to keep up their ac; Jemic
standards,
particip.ite in
college activities, speak to
local community groups and
schools and act as resource
personnel for the faculty. A
resource person is someone
who aids a professor in a class.
He might, for example, relate
how the government in his
country differs from the
U.S.A.'s to aid a comparative
studies class in the Political
Science department.
There is an effort to chose
students who will make great
contributions to Lock Haven
State. In the future there is a
possibility of getting a track
star from Nigeria.
"It depends on the number
of applicants, and what the
situation is," responded Konick when asked if he forsaw an
increase in foreign student
tuition waivers.
Dr. Konick added, "There is
no way we can admit a student
if he can't pay his other fees."
The tuition waiver covers only
com. on page 4
page 2
Mon. Mar. 1, 1976
EAGLE EYE
Today's Ediforial
Alone togethei
A couple of last week's campus-related incidents
were startling and left many of us shaking our heads
wondering "what's next?" Probably the best thing we
can do now is laak critically, at those incidents as what
they truly are-reflections of ourselves.
We the
mbers of this campus, are a
conglomeration ui individuals whose values may differ,
but whose flaws and sufferings are often very common.
Many of us suffer from loneliness.That's not a profound
insight, and it's obviously not only applicable to us
commune-residents. But for a lot of us, it's not a
realization at all, and that is not good.
The signs are all around us. The sororities, the
fraternities, the social circles that each one of us cleaves
to, the partying-they're all weapons in a battle against a
haunting reality of life: Humans are lonely creatures.
Aloneness can't be overcome or escaped from. It is
a verity. From what was witnessed last week, though, we
can see that it shouldn't be ignored or viewed as only a
problem for some. WE'RE ALL PLAGUED. And so it
should be that our recognition of this inborn weakness
draws us together in our efforts to cope with it.
Voltaire said that "Everyman is guilty of the good
he didn't do," and rightabout now his perception is well
taken. Many of us can claim the guilt of getting
caught-up in our private worlds and disregarding basic,
human needs such as compassion.
If we are to move in a positive direction as a result of
what we've experienced, some facades will have to be
shed. We all need to motivate ourselves to reckon with
our affiliative and interactive needs, and worry less
about how we're coming off to the audience.
We're a community, not just coincidental inhabitants of the same place. We can't isolate our beings from
one another. To live among so many people and to live
inside a shell is corrosive to the group as a whole, and
thus self-inflicted punishment. We should feel no shame
in displaying our need for one another, and more
importantly, we should not have any justified fear of
ostracism for doing so. We are human.
Civil disobedience theme of Thoreau'
"The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail" was first presented at the
Ohio State University Theatre in Columbus, Ohio on April 21,
1970. In the years that followed the play appeared in hundreds of
resident, community and collegiate houses throughout the United
States. This Thursday "Thoreau" opens here at Lock Haven State
College in Price Auditorium as a College Players production.
The players have been working steadily on this Jerome
Lawrence and Robert E. Lee script since their four night run of
"The Creation of the World and other Business" closed in
mid-January.
The show evolves around Henry David Thoreau, his brother
John. Ralph Waldo Emerson, and the people they encounter in the
setting of Concord, Massachusetts in the mid-1800's. During the
course of the production the audience comes in contact with the
first and perhaps most famous act of civil disobedience in
American history-Thoreau's refusal to pay his poll tax in 1846,
and the night he spent in jail because of it. The jail scene becomes
the framework for episodes from Thoreau's life, such as his vigil at
Walden Pond, his unhappy love affair, and his challenges as a
teacher attempting to break from the structure of the noncreative
classroom.
Jerome Lawrence was master playwright at New York
University and has been visiting professor of playwrighting at
Ohio State. Robert E. Lee is on the faculty of UCLA. Their most
well-known works include "Inherit the Wind," "Auntie Mame,"
and its musical version, "Mame."
The College Players production is under the direction of Dr.
Robert Kidder, chairman of the LHSC Department of
Speech/Theatre. The costume designs are the work of Felice
Proctor and the set designs are those of John Gordon.
The cast, crews, and other staff positions are held by many
veterans of the Players stage as well as a number of new faces.
Kim Coon, in the title role, is a senior theatre major. His brother,
John Thoreau, is played by Larry Harris, a freshman. Sophomore
Rick Kline is Ralph Waldo Emerson and psychology major. Sharon
cont. on page 4
Course to explore 'greaser' music era
ByPHILIPBURLINGAME
"I learned everything
about the fifties," says Storch,
Ex-Staff Reporter
"I'm an expert."
"The reason I'm so knowStorch has already taught
ledgable is because in 1961 1
his unique course at Penn
made the new year's resoluState and his extensive retion that I would know everysearch into the ducktail decade
thing there is to know about
makes him central Pennsylrock n' roll."
vania's undisputed big bopper
These are the words of
of rock n' roll nostalgia.
Bob Storch, Lock Haven
Attending the classes, at the
State's administrative lawver.
special bla.st from the past rate
who will be teaching a Lifeof $5.00, will allow anyone to
Long Learning course about
be free from the clutches of
the music of the nifty fifty,
"nerd-dom" and become hep
aptly entitled "Oldies But
to the real sounds of the
Goodies."
1950's.
To supplement his class
instruction, Storch plans to
play songs from his priceless
collection of original recordings by such artists as Buddy
Holly. Chuck Berry, Little
Richard, Elvis Presley and
Fats Domino, as well as early
Motown performers including
Little Stevie Wonder, Del
Shannon, and the Isley Brothers. He also plans to explore
the British origins of the
Beatles in an effort to explain
cont. on page 4
VINCENT STEWART will present
poetry,
performed
lo
Nelson
Riddle's 'Cross-Country Suite' in
Sloan
Theatre,
tomorrow
at
8:00 p.m.
Rttlem
Riegnancy?
Unwanted Pregnancy.
Medicaid Accepted.
Qualified counselors ve
available to answer your
questions.
ERIE MEDICAL CENTER
Buffalo, N.Y. 883-2213
Mon. Mar. 1,1976
page 3
£AGLE EYE
ers bounced
inboro, 70-60
By MARY FEUSNER
Women's Sports Editor
The Lady Scots of Edinboro hosted and were able to
defeat the Eaglette roundballers on Saturday afternoon at
McComb Fieldhouse.
Edinboro was first to put
points on the board. After four
and one-half minutes of play,
the teams were even up at
eight apiece. Lock Haven
added 14 more points in the
five minutes that followed, to
pull to a four point lead. Barb
Hudson and Deb Schlegel
were responsible for fine offensive play.
Lock Haven maintained
it's four point lead until 2:34
showed on the clock. At this
time, the Haven collected two
more quick field goals to pull
ahead by eight. The Haven
lead at the half was 42-35.
Hudson had hit for 16, while
Hacker added eight, and Landis and Schlegel collected six
apiece.
Edinboro was first to put
points on the board again and
they narrowed the Haven lead
lo three, but were unable to
pull ahead until seven minutes
remained to be played. At 2:19
Kozcwicz, an Edinboro point
producer, fouled out of the
game. Edinboro had had a four
point advantage at this time.
The contest ended with
Edinboro ahead by ten points
70-60. Lock Haven couldn't
take the lid off the basket as
they hit for only nine field
goals in the final playing
period.
Barb Hudson and Kathy
Landis were the Haven's leading scorers with 20 and ten
points. Edinboro's Collins,
Saver, and Moran hit for 20,19
and 11 points respectively.
Edinboro proved to be the
Haven's seventh victim in the
junior varsity contest as the
Eaglettes convincingly defeated the Ladv Scots by the score
of 83-64.
Wendy Keller and Peg
Wild played exceptionally well
for the Haven. Wendy's interceptions in first half play were
the key to the Haven's dominance. Peg ripped the cords for
a season's high of 26 points,
and also pulled down numerous rebounds.
Other players contributing to the Haven's victory
were Maureen Brady with 16
points and eight rebounds,
Sandy Kotecki with eight
rebounds and Lois Kapp with
ten points.
Tuesday morning, the
Eaglettes are on the road to
the University of Maryland in
hopes of bettering their 8-3
and 7-1 records.
Tom Burns
Bums breaks indoor shot put
record in the face of tragedy
By J IM DORAN
Staff Reporter
against Slippery Rock, Burns
beat that mark by throwing
For an athlete, tragedy has a 49.8 feet, bettering not only
his own record but shattering
way of making him jump a little
Lock Haven's all-time record
higher, run a little faster and
by
% of an inch.
throw a little harder. It makes
"It took my fathers death,"
him realize the potential that
said Burns, 'To realize my
was always there but remains
potential."
untapped.
In high school it looked as
Such is the case of Tom
though Burns would star in
Burns, a Lock Haven State
other events. While at Havershot putter. On February 9,
ing Central H.S. he was a four
Burns' father died. On Febyear letterman in swimming as
ruary 13, Burns set a new
well as track. As a sophomore
indoor shot put record at Lock
Burns placed first in the discus
Haven with a throw of a little
in his county and as a senior
over 48 feet. Last Saturday
finished first in the triple
jump. As a freshman in college
Burns placed an impressive
burg, 10-1, in the quarter- sixth in the conference in the
finals Friday evening, then triple jump. This year Burns is
pinned second-seeded Tom a top contender for the conferTeagarden of Penn State at ence title in the shot put.
7:46 of their semi-final bout.
But the goal Burns has in
Teagarden had pinned Parker
mind
is to place in the national
in just 19 seconds in the Penn
State--Lack Haven dual meet. track championships. To
Moore, the number two qualify for nafionals he must
seed at 142 pounds, defeated throw the shot a distance of 51
Bob Baily, 5-2, in the semies to feet. With three months to go.
assure himself of a trip to Burns is well on the way to
Arizona, then lost, 14-4, to realizing his goal.
Burns feels that he has not
Clarion's Don Rohn in the
finals. Rohn is currently yet reached his limits and
ranked number two in the believes that once the outdoor
nation at 142 pounds, and track season starts, he'll throw
Moore gave the Clarion wrest- the distance needed to qualify.
ler the closest match he's been "It's all psychological," said
involved in, in his last ten Burns, "Everyone hits their
best outdoors."
cont. on page 4
Lock Haven well represented at Nationals
By GARY BRUBAKER
Staff Reporter
"This was undoubtedly our
best performance since the
Eastern Regionals last year,"
remarked a very happy Coach
Ken Cox following Saturday
night's finals of the Eastern
Wrestling League qualifying
tournament.
The Bald Eagle coach had
reason to be happy as four
Lock Haven wrestlers qualified
for the NCAA Division 1
Tournament scheduled for
March 11, 12, and 13, at the
University of Arizona in Tucson.
Tom Parker, 126 pounds.
Mike Moore. 142 pounds,
George Way. 150 pounds and
heavyweight Jim Schuster
along with twenty-three other
wrestlers qualified from a field
of sixty in this, the E.W.L.'s
first year of existence.
Parker had to be Cox's
biggest surprise; the Eagle
grappler defeated Clarion's
Tom Turnbull, 7-4, in the
finals avenging an earlier loss
in the Clarion-LHS meet, in
which Turnbull had pinned the
Lock Haven sophomore.
Parker was the only
wrestler in the tournament of
wrestle three times and win all
three matches. He defeated
Eric Strathmeyer of Blooms-
page 4
Ihsc hosts
conf. Irom page 1
his book "Can't Anybody Here
Play This Game?", the saga
of the New York Mets' first
year, that led to his job as a
sports writer for the "Herald
Tribune." His second novel,
"World Without End, Amen,"
has received mixed critical
attention.
calendars
com. from page 1
activity schedules.
The college decided to
print the calendar instead of
the SCC because, as Arseneault expressed it, "If the SCC
printed it, they should have
the right to edit it." Arseneault believes that, since all
scheduling
of
campus
activities is done through him,
he should be the one to edit it.
Although the SCC is not
paying for the calendar, they
are in charge of distribution,
and a validated ID is required
to obtain a copy. Community
members can also get a
calendar by calling the secretary's office and requesting it.
more students
com. from page 1
the cost of tuition, not any
other expenses involved with
the college, or the students'
stay in the United States.
lock haven well represented
con(, from page 3
a close 6-4 decision to Pitt's
matches.
Way won a convincing 8-2 Kevin Nellis. At 134 pounds,
decision over Clarion's Dave Tim McCamley, out with a
Coleman in their semi-final heel injury, was replaced by
bout at 150 pounds, but lost a jay-vee '34 pounder Bruce
tough 9-4 decision to Penn Shaeffer. Shaeffer lost an 11-6
State's Bill Vollrath in the decision to Kaercher of Bloomfinals. Tied 0-0 in the second sburg.
At 158 pounds, Mike
period with Way on top,
Vollrath caught the Eagle DeBarbieri wrestled well but
junior in a reverse cradle for a dropped a close 6-4 to last
four point move which proved week's conference runner-up
to be the difference in the Chris Clark of Clarion, and at
167 pounds, Al Fricke lost a
match.
Schuster won his opening 17-16 affair to Pitt's George
bout, pinning Doug Spatz of O'Korn. O'Korn was the only
Pitt, just 19 seconds into the other quarter-final wrestler to
second period of their heavy- make it to the finals where he
weight bout. "Big Jim" then forfeited to Penn State's Jerry
dropped a 7-1 verdict to Villecco because of an injury.
Jerry Peterman lost to
number one seed Chuck
Coryea in the semies and lost a Pitt's Dave Graw at 177
3-1 decision to Brad Benson of pounds by a 5-3 margin, and
Penn State in the consolation Austin Shanfelter, a late
replacement for Art Baker who
finals.
However due to the couldn't make weight also lost
strength of the heavyweight by a 5-3 score to John Stas of
class, both Benson and Schus- Clarion
ter were chosen as wild card
selections. The E.W.L. is
com. from page 1
permitted to send the top two
wrestlers from each weight credit the course should be
plus seven wild card selections assigned and deciding if the
(twenty-seven in all) to the course is actually remedial in
nature.
NCAA finals.
Because of the amount of
Gary Uram, replacing
regular '18 pounder Carl Lutz work the student will be
who failed to make weight, lost required to put into the course,
the credit hours received will
be three.
reading
opening night
cont. Irom page 2
course
cont. trom page 2
their amazing success.
"We'll play a lot of basic
and popular music," says
Storch, "but also a very good
mixture of stuff they never
heard of because the group
never made it or else faded
,iway."
Registration for the class,
ilong with information about
other classes in the Life-Long
Learning Series, can be
obtained in Dr. Koniek's office
in Sullivan Hall. Instruction
begins Thursday, March 4,
and will continue every Thursday evening from 7:00 to 9:00
for eight weeks.
"You can't get the price
anywhere else, you couldn't
find the records anywhere and
you can't read this stuff in a
book," says Storch. "The
music in my course is the root
of any music you hear today
that is any good."
Hamiltoh plays the role of Waldo's wife, Lydian. The lighting
design was created by Deb Klens.
Ticket sales open today on the lower level of the PUB. They
are available free with a validated ID or at a general admission fee
of $2.50. There are 702 tickets available for March 4, 5, and 6. At
8:10 pm each evening unclaimed seats will be sold to those without
tickets.
Mon. Mar. 1,1976
burns
cont. Irom page 3
Along with track. Burns has
a great interest in auctioneering. "It's in the blood," said
Burns. Burns explained that
his great-grandfather, grandfather, and his father had all
been sellers. At the present
time Burns helps his uncle
with his aucfioneering business and hopes to attend a
school for aucfioneering to
further his training in the art.
Burns admits that the main
reason he decided to attend
college was that he wanted to
continue in sports, but during
the three and a half years he
was here he developed a keen
interest in physical education.
"1 love kids," said Burns, "I
really like teaching."
With a bright future in
physical education and auctioneering, Burns is turning
his attention to making the
nationals. In the meantime he
has already broken two of the
four shot put records and is
threatening the other two.
CLASSIFIEDS
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Complete line of Cards,
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Hours: Mon,, Thurs., Fri. 9 to 9
Wed. till noon
Tues., Sat. 9 to 5
Mon., Mar. 1, 1976
^ ^ ^
Iff
^ ^
LHSC hosts Breslin tomorrow
Author and columnist
Jimmy Breslin will present an
"Epic Tavern Talk" in Thomas Field House, Lock Haven
State College, on Tuesday,
March 2, at 8:00 p.m., sponsored by the S.C.C. Cultural
Affairs Committee and the
Residence Hall Association.
Breslin has been a regular
sports columnist for the now
defunct New York "Herald
Tribune," a syndicated general columnist, and author of
articles for "True," "Life,"
and "Saturday Evening Post."
His first novel, "The Gang
That
Couldn't
Shoot
Straight," was made into a
major motion picture.
Born in Queens, N.Y.,
Breslin amasses a distinctive
academic record of failing as
many as six subjects in a
single high school term, taking
five years to graduate. During
Calendars for
this semester
now available
By WENDY AKELEY
Staff Reporter
Semester calendars are
now available at the secretary's office in the PUB. They
have already been mailed to
faculty members, college staff
members, and officers of
student clubs.
"This is the earliest it's
been out," explained David
Arseneault, Coordinator of
Campus Activities. The
college picked up the cost for
the calendar from the SCC last
fall. The printing was delayed
this semester because the
administration didn't have the
calendar on its priority list and
didn't get the information
together in time, the paper
supply ran out, and the
campus groups and organizations kept changing their
his early years of police
reporting, rewriting and copyreading at the Boston
"Globe," the Scripps-Howard
syndicate, and the New York
"Journal-American," he was
best remembered for his extremely bad credit record.
It was the publication of
com. on page 4
WARMING UP FOR SPRING -- Although yesterday was
the last day in February, area tennis enthusiasts flocked
to the college's courts to take advantage of the
unseasonably warm "playing" weather. [Photo by
OLLIE SMITH.]
Vol. XVIII No. 79
Reading course
voted on and
passed Thurs.
By JULIA MCGOVERN
Staff Reporter
A continuation of the
discussion concerning Dr.
James Dayanada's proposal to
institute an elective reading
course opened the Faculty
Curriculum Committee meeting this past Thursday.
Originally titled,"Effective College Reading," but now
modified to "Effective Reading," the course is designed to
accelerate the improvement of
existing skills and the acquisition of additional skills useful
in the pursuit of a college
degree.
A lengthy discussion took
place before the Curriculum
Committee voted to accept the
course. The main arguments
centered around the amount of
conf. on page 4
More students receive tuition waivers
By JULIA MCGOVERN
Staff Reporter
Five additional tuition
waivers have been granted by
the Board of Trustees, to
foreign students attending
Lock Haven State College.
"Up until this point, the
state had agreed to grant one
tuition waiver to one foreign
student for every 500 students
enroll in the college. This
authorized us to grant five,"
reported Dr. Marcus Konick.
The state has recently given
the Board of Trustees the
power to grant additional
tuition waivers as they see
necessary. "Our Board agreed
on five more waivers, with the
program to be evaluated in a
year," continued Konick.
The Board of Trustees will
evaluate the quality of students; judging their academic
accomplishments and their
contributions to the college
and community. The Board
will also study the amount of
waivers awarded to see if an
increase or decrease is necessitated.
It has been decided by the
state that the primary reason
for chosing the students to be
granted the waivers will be
basedonneed. "Wehavebeen
considering possible contributions the students will make to
the college, academics and
need," stated Konick, when
discussing how Lock Haven
choses its waiver recipients.
An effort is made to distribute the students geographically so one country doesn't
receive a preponderence of
waivers.
The students are expected
to keep up their ac; Jemic
standards,
particip.ite in
college activities, speak to
local community groups and
schools and act as resource
personnel for the faculty. A
resource person is someone
who aids a professor in a class.
He might, for example, relate
how the government in his
country differs from the
U.S.A.'s to aid a comparative
studies class in the Political
Science department.
There is an effort to chose
students who will make great
contributions to Lock Haven
State. In the future there is a
possibility of getting a track
star from Nigeria.
"It depends on the number
of applicants, and what the
situation is," responded Konick when asked if he forsaw an
increase in foreign student
tuition waivers.
Dr. Konick added, "There is
no way we can admit a student
if he can't pay his other fees."
The tuition waiver covers only
com. on page 4
page 2
Mon. Mar. 1, 1976
EAGLE EYE
Today's Ediforial
Alone togethei
A couple of last week's campus-related incidents
were startling and left many of us shaking our heads
wondering "what's next?" Probably the best thing we
can do now is laak critically, at those incidents as what
they truly are-reflections of ourselves.
We the
mbers of this campus, are a
conglomeration ui individuals whose values may differ,
but whose flaws and sufferings are often very common.
Many of us suffer from loneliness.That's not a profound
insight, and it's obviously not only applicable to us
commune-residents. But for a lot of us, it's not a
realization at all, and that is not good.
The signs are all around us. The sororities, the
fraternities, the social circles that each one of us cleaves
to, the partying-they're all weapons in a battle against a
haunting reality of life: Humans are lonely creatures.
Aloneness can't be overcome or escaped from. It is
a verity. From what was witnessed last week, though, we
can see that it shouldn't be ignored or viewed as only a
problem for some. WE'RE ALL PLAGUED. And so it
should be that our recognition of this inborn weakness
draws us together in our efforts to cope with it.
Voltaire said that "Everyman is guilty of the good
he didn't do," and rightabout now his perception is well
taken. Many of us can claim the guilt of getting
caught-up in our private worlds and disregarding basic,
human needs such as compassion.
If we are to move in a positive direction as a result of
what we've experienced, some facades will have to be
shed. We all need to motivate ourselves to reckon with
our affiliative and interactive needs, and worry less
about how we're coming off to the audience.
We're a community, not just coincidental inhabitants of the same place. We can't isolate our beings from
one another. To live among so many people and to live
inside a shell is corrosive to the group as a whole, and
thus self-inflicted punishment. We should feel no shame
in displaying our need for one another, and more
importantly, we should not have any justified fear of
ostracism for doing so. We are human.
Civil disobedience theme of Thoreau'
"The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail" was first presented at the
Ohio State University Theatre in Columbus, Ohio on April 21,
1970. In the years that followed the play appeared in hundreds of
resident, community and collegiate houses throughout the United
States. This Thursday "Thoreau" opens here at Lock Haven State
College in Price Auditorium as a College Players production.
The players have been working steadily on this Jerome
Lawrence and Robert E. Lee script since their four night run of
"The Creation of the World and other Business" closed in
mid-January.
The show evolves around Henry David Thoreau, his brother
John. Ralph Waldo Emerson, and the people they encounter in the
setting of Concord, Massachusetts in the mid-1800's. During the
course of the production the audience comes in contact with the
first and perhaps most famous act of civil disobedience in
American history-Thoreau's refusal to pay his poll tax in 1846,
and the night he spent in jail because of it. The jail scene becomes
the framework for episodes from Thoreau's life, such as his vigil at
Walden Pond, his unhappy love affair, and his challenges as a
teacher attempting to break from the structure of the noncreative
classroom.
Jerome Lawrence was master playwright at New York
University and has been visiting professor of playwrighting at
Ohio State. Robert E. Lee is on the faculty of UCLA. Their most
well-known works include "Inherit the Wind," "Auntie Mame,"
and its musical version, "Mame."
The College Players production is under the direction of Dr.
Robert Kidder, chairman of the LHSC Department of
Speech/Theatre. The costume designs are the work of Felice
Proctor and the set designs are those of John Gordon.
The cast, crews, and other staff positions are held by many
veterans of the Players stage as well as a number of new faces.
Kim Coon, in the title role, is a senior theatre major. His brother,
John Thoreau, is played by Larry Harris, a freshman. Sophomore
Rick Kline is Ralph Waldo Emerson and psychology major. Sharon
cont. on page 4
Course to explore 'greaser' music era
ByPHILIPBURLINGAME
"I learned everything
about the fifties," says Storch,
Ex-Staff Reporter
"I'm an expert."
"The reason I'm so knowStorch has already taught
ledgable is because in 1961 1
his unique course at Penn
made the new year's resoluState and his extensive retion that I would know everysearch into the ducktail decade
thing there is to know about
makes him central Pennsylrock n' roll."
vania's undisputed big bopper
These are the words of
of rock n' roll nostalgia.
Bob Storch, Lock Haven
Attending the classes, at the
State's administrative lawver.
special bla.st from the past rate
who will be teaching a Lifeof $5.00, will allow anyone to
Long Learning course about
be free from the clutches of
the music of the nifty fifty,
"nerd-dom" and become hep
aptly entitled "Oldies But
to the real sounds of the
Goodies."
1950's.
To supplement his class
instruction, Storch plans to
play songs from his priceless
collection of original recordings by such artists as Buddy
Holly. Chuck Berry, Little
Richard, Elvis Presley and
Fats Domino, as well as early
Motown performers including
Little Stevie Wonder, Del
Shannon, and the Isley Brothers. He also plans to explore
the British origins of the
Beatles in an effort to explain
cont. on page 4
VINCENT STEWART will present
poetry,
performed
lo
Nelson
Riddle's 'Cross-Country Suite' in
Sloan
Theatre,
tomorrow
at
8:00 p.m.
Rttlem
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Unwanted Pregnancy.
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Mon. Mar. 1,1976
page 3
£AGLE EYE
ers bounced
inboro, 70-60
By MARY FEUSNER
Women's Sports Editor
The Lady Scots of Edinboro hosted and were able to
defeat the Eaglette roundballers on Saturday afternoon at
McComb Fieldhouse.
Edinboro was first to put
points on the board. After four
and one-half minutes of play,
the teams were even up at
eight apiece. Lock Haven
added 14 more points in the
five minutes that followed, to
pull to a four point lead. Barb
Hudson and Deb Schlegel
were responsible for fine offensive play.
Lock Haven maintained
it's four point lead until 2:34
showed on the clock. At this
time, the Haven collected two
more quick field goals to pull
ahead by eight. The Haven
lead at the half was 42-35.
Hudson had hit for 16, while
Hacker added eight, and Landis and Schlegel collected six
apiece.
Edinboro was first to put
points on the board again and
they narrowed the Haven lead
lo three, but were unable to
pull ahead until seven minutes
remained to be played. At 2:19
Kozcwicz, an Edinboro point
producer, fouled out of the
game. Edinboro had had a four
point advantage at this time.
The contest ended with
Edinboro ahead by ten points
70-60. Lock Haven couldn't
take the lid off the basket as
they hit for only nine field
goals in the final playing
period.
Barb Hudson and Kathy
Landis were the Haven's leading scorers with 20 and ten
points. Edinboro's Collins,
Saver, and Moran hit for 20,19
and 11 points respectively.
Edinboro proved to be the
Haven's seventh victim in the
junior varsity contest as the
Eaglettes convincingly defeated the Ladv Scots by the score
of 83-64.
Wendy Keller and Peg
Wild played exceptionally well
for the Haven. Wendy's interceptions in first half play were
the key to the Haven's dominance. Peg ripped the cords for
a season's high of 26 points,
and also pulled down numerous rebounds.
Other players contributing to the Haven's victory
were Maureen Brady with 16
points and eight rebounds,
Sandy Kotecki with eight
rebounds and Lois Kapp with
ten points.
Tuesday morning, the
Eaglettes are on the road to
the University of Maryland in
hopes of bettering their 8-3
and 7-1 records.
Tom Burns
Bums breaks indoor shot put
record in the face of tragedy
By J IM DORAN
Staff Reporter
against Slippery Rock, Burns
beat that mark by throwing
For an athlete, tragedy has a 49.8 feet, bettering not only
his own record but shattering
way of making him jump a little
Lock Haven's all-time record
higher, run a little faster and
by
% of an inch.
throw a little harder. It makes
"It took my fathers death,"
him realize the potential that
said Burns, 'To realize my
was always there but remains
potential."
untapped.
In high school it looked as
Such is the case of Tom
though Burns would star in
Burns, a Lock Haven State
other events. While at Havershot putter. On February 9,
ing Central H.S. he was a four
Burns' father died. On Febyear letterman in swimming as
ruary 13, Burns set a new
well as track. As a sophomore
indoor shot put record at Lock
Burns placed first in the discus
Haven with a throw of a little
in his county and as a senior
over 48 feet. Last Saturday
finished first in the triple
jump. As a freshman in college
Burns placed an impressive
burg, 10-1, in the quarter- sixth in the conference in the
finals Friday evening, then triple jump. This year Burns is
pinned second-seeded Tom a top contender for the conferTeagarden of Penn State at ence title in the shot put.
7:46 of their semi-final bout.
But the goal Burns has in
Teagarden had pinned Parker
mind
is to place in the national
in just 19 seconds in the Penn
State--Lack Haven dual meet. track championships. To
Moore, the number two qualify for nafionals he must
seed at 142 pounds, defeated throw the shot a distance of 51
Bob Baily, 5-2, in the semies to feet. With three months to go.
assure himself of a trip to Burns is well on the way to
Arizona, then lost, 14-4, to realizing his goal.
Burns feels that he has not
Clarion's Don Rohn in the
finals. Rohn is currently yet reached his limits and
ranked number two in the believes that once the outdoor
nation at 142 pounds, and track season starts, he'll throw
Moore gave the Clarion wrest- the distance needed to qualify.
ler the closest match he's been "It's all psychological," said
involved in, in his last ten Burns, "Everyone hits their
best outdoors."
cont. on page 4
Lock Haven well represented at Nationals
By GARY BRUBAKER
Staff Reporter
"This was undoubtedly our
best performance since the
Eastern Regionals last year,"
remarked a very happy Coach
Ken Cox following Saturday
night's finals of the Eastern
Wrestling League qualifying
tournament.
The Bald Eagle coach had
reason to be happy as four
Lock Haven wrestlers qualified
for the NCAA Division 1
Tournament scheduled for
March 11, 12, and 13, at the
University of Arizona in Tucson.
Tom Parker, 126 pounds.
Mike Moore. 142 pounds,
George Way. 150 pounds and
heavyweight Jim Schuster
along with twenty-three other
wrestlers qualified from a field
of sixty in this, the E.W.L.'s
first year of existence.
Parker had to be Cox's
biggest surprise; the Eagle
grappler defeated Clarion's
Tom Turnbull, 7-4, in the
finals avenging an earlier loss
in the Clarion-LHS meet, in
which Turnbull had pinned the
Lock Haven sophomore.
Parker was the only
wrestler in the tournament of
wrestle three times and win all
three matches. He defeated
Eric Strathmeyer of Blooms-
page 4
Ihsc hosts
conf. Irom page 1
his book "Can't Anybody Here
Play This Game?", the saga
of the New York Mets' first
year, that led to his job as a
sports writer for the "Herald
Tribune." His second novel,
"World Without End, Amen,"
has received mixed critical
attention.
calendars
com. from page 1
activity schedules.
The college decided to
print the calendar instead of
the SCC because, as Arseneault expressed it, "If the SCC
printed it, they should have
the right to edit it." Arseneault believes that, since all
scheduling
of
campus
activities is done through him,
he should be the one to edit it.
Although the SCC is not
paying for the calendar, they
are in charge of distribution,
and a validated ID is required
to obtain a copy. Community
members can also get a
calendar by calling the secretary's office and requesting it.
more students
com. from page 1
the cost of tuition, not any
other expenses involved with
the college, or the students'
stay in the United States.
lock haven well represented
con(, from page 3
a close 6-4 decision to Pitt's
matches.
Way won a convincing 8-2 Kevin Nellis. At 134 pounds,
decision over Clarion's Dave Tim McCamley, out with a
Coleman in their semi-final heel injury, was replaced by
bout at 150 pounds, but lost a jay-vee '34 pounder Bruce
tough 9-4 decision to Penn Shaeffer. Shaeffer lost an 11-6
State's Bill Vollrath in the decision to Kaercher of Bloomfinals. Tied 0-0 in the second sburg.
At 158 pounds, Mike
period with Way on top,
Vollrath caught the Eagle DeBarbieri wrestled well but
junior in a reverse cradle for a dropped a close 6-4 to last
four point move which proved week's conference runner-up
to be the difference in the Chris Clark of Clarion, and at
167 pounds, Al Fricke lost a
match.
Schuster won his opening 17-16 affair to Pitt's George
bout, pinning Doug Spatz of O'Korn. O'Korn was the only
Pitt, just 19 seconds into the other quarter-final wrestler to
second period of their heavy- make it to the finals where he
weight bout. "Big Jim" then forfeited to Penn State's Jerry
dropped a 7-1 verdict to Villecco because of an injury.
Jerry Peterman lost to
number one seed Chuck
Coryea in the semies and lost a Pitt's Dave Graw at 177
3-1 decision to Brad Benson of pounds by a 5-3 margin, and
Penn State in the consolation Austin Shanfelter, a late
replacement for Art Baker who
finals.
However due to the couldn't make weight also lost
strength of the heavyweight by a 5-3 score to John Stas of
class, both Benson and Schus- Clarion
ter were chosen as wild card
selections. The E.W.L. is
com. from page 1
permitted to send the top two
wrestlers from each weight credit the course should be
plus seven wild card selections assigned and deciding if the
(twenty-seven in all) to the course is actually remedial in
nature.
NCAA finals.
Because of the amount of
Gary Uram, replacing
regular '18 pounder Carl Lutz work the student will be
who failed to make weight, lost required to put into the course,
the credit hours received will
be three.
reading
opening night
cont. Irom page 2
course
cont. trom page 2
their amazing success.
"We'll play a lot of basic
and popular music," says
Storch, "but also a very good
mixture of stuff they never
heard of because the group
never made it or else faded
,iway."
Registration for the class,
ilong with information about
other classes in the Life-Long
Learning Series, can be
obtained in Dr. Koniek's office
in Sullivan Hall. Instruction
begins Thursday, March 4,
and will continue every Thursday evening from 7:00 to 9:00
for eight weeks.
"You can't get the price
anywhere else, you couldn't
find the records anywhere and
you can't read this stuff in a
book," says Storch. "The
music in my course is the root
of any music you hear today
that is any good."
Hamiltoh plays the role of Waldo's wife, Lydian. The lighting
design was created by Deb Klens.
Ticket sales open today on the lower level of the PUB. They
are available free with a validated ID or at a general admission fee
of $2.50. There are 702 tickets available for March 4, 5, and 6. At
8:10 pm each evening unclaimed seats will be sold to those without
tickets.
Mon. Mar. 1,1976
burns
cont. Irom page 3
Along with track. Burns has
a great interest in auctioneering. "It's in the blood," said
Burns. Burns explained that
his great-grandfather, grandfather, and his father had all
been sellers. At the present
time Burns helps his uncle
with his aucfioneering business and hopes to attend a
school for aucfioneering to
further his training in the art.
Burns admits that the main
reason he decided to attend
college was that he wanted to
continue in sports, but during
the three and a half years he
was here he developed a keen
interest in physical education.
"1 love kids," said Burns, "I
really like teaching."
With a bright future in
physical education and auctioneering, Burns is turning
his attention to making the
nationals. In the meantime he
has already broken two of the
four shot put records and is
threatening the other two.
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