BHeiney
Wed, 07/05/2023 - 19:35
Edited Text
A6LE EYE
Vol. XIV No. 31

Lock Haven State College

the Soriiita Ni M, lllP ".Appassion.ita".
I'tiday
f vetiing'.s cimrert
WlU oppn Milh ;hc Ovnture to
Ihe Haliei "Hie (leschorpto d r s
ProiTietticus,"
lir-I
pcrtoinicd
in 1801. The Festival Otchestra,

To

Be

Established

In

Memory

Prof.

Wed. November 11,1970

Beethoven Piano Recital To Open
Centennial Music Festival
Eleven separate works by
Beethoven will be presented in
the three-day Centennial Music
F e s t i v a l at Lock Haven State
College on Novenjber 11, 12, Kf,
and 14 in Price Auditorium at
8:00 p.m.
On Wednesday evening, November 11, William Ibes will present
an all-Heethoven piano
r e c i t a l , opening with the Six
Variations "Nel cor piu non mi
s e n t o " in G Major which show,
according to .Mr. Ibes, " t h e young
composer and pianist, a master
of improvisation." Then follow
the Sonata No. 8, or " P a t h e t i q u e " , and the Sonata No. 14,

Fund

stage
work " T h e Ruins of
A t h e n s " in a new Hnglish translation b\ Maigaret Nielson ofthe
college laciiUy. I h i s Icirly minute work vvill feature the nation
ally
kn Arthur
nionip.son as
guest
soloist.
Soprano .soloist will be Helen
•Ann Boyer of Lock Haven.

Of

To E'riends of Fred O.
With the untimely
vember .sili. a l the a g e
lege losl an uniistialK
a g e n u i n e i n t e r e s t in

Zimmerman:
d e a t h of Fred O. Zimmerman on Ndof t h i r t y - s e v e n , L o c k ij.iyen S t a t e C o l d e d i c a t e d and e r r e c l i \ e t e a c h e r , lie had
s l u d e n t s and w a s well liked by t h e m .

lie w a s a cociperalive and c o n g e n i a l c o l l e a g u e and friend to
many of us on the f a c u l t y .
He w a s a w i l l i n g member of various c o m m i t t e e s , an a c t i v e
s u p p o r t e r of the Lock Haven C h a p t e r o'i the A m e r i c a n A s s o c i a tion of LIniversity P r o f e s s o r s , and s e c r e t a r y of the F a c u l t y
conducted by Dr. lohn H. \K(iowan of the collem'
;(iili\,
The festival will conclude O r g a n i z a t i o n .
in the larger community a s well F r e d had the gift of c o n will then presenl Symphonv . . ' . 4, with the Concerto No. 4 for Piconsidered
liy ilir
composer
ano and Orchestra with Mr. Ibes c e r n . .Although his field w a s German and foreign l a n g u a g e
Hector Berlioz lo he so complex
at the pinao.
that it "seciiis to elude analy,\il performances are open m e l h o d o l o g v . he a c t i v e ly promoted the s t u d y oi I t a l i a n in t h e
sis."
to the public at minimal charge, public s c h o o l s and was the co-author of a s y l l a b u s for the t e a Mr. Ibes will join the orlickets
are avaliable at Ihe ching of S p a n i s h in the New York s y s t e m . He w a s a member
chestra ;iiul chorus lor the secollege bookstore, the Music of Ihe Board o( Directors of the Mill Hall K i w a n i s C l u b , and
cond liaii presentalion ot thr
Department at Price .Auditorium, he s a n g with a local m e n ' s c h o r u s .
" F a n t a s i a f.n Piano, Orchestra,
and at the door a half hoia beNo one i n d i v i d u a l knows all that he d i d , for he gave himand Choi u s . "
better known as the "Moonlight"
fore each performance.
s
e
l
f
u n s t i n t i n g l y to many worthy c a u s e s . In the tragical!;,
Local
school
children
are
On .November 14, iollovsiim
Sonata.
invited to attend the rehearsals s h o r t three y e a r s that Fred w a s a t this c o l l e g e he left a mark
the Overture to "King Strplieii."
The second half of the proon Friday and Saturday, from on many i n d i v i d u a l s , on the foreign l a n g u a g e d e p a r t m e n t , on
the orchestra and cliorus will
gram will consist of the Thirty9 lo 11:30 p.m. and 1 to 3 p.m. the c o l l e g e , and on the c o m m u n i t y .
Two Variations in C Minor and
present Beethoven's aioiunnentai
F a c u l t y and s t u d e n t s in the foreign l a n g u a g e d e p a r t m e n t
w i s h to p e r p e t u a t e F r e d ' s ipemory, and s o we a r e e s t a b l i s h i n g
a F r e d O. Z i m m e r m a n Memorial F u n d . P r o c e e d s from it will
be u s e d a s F r e d would have w a n t e d , to h e l p a d e s e r v i n g s t u d e n t of foreign l a n g u a g e .
F a c u l t y , s t u d e n t s , and the w i s h e s of F r e d ' s f a m i l y , a s
well a s the s i z e of the fund, will d e t e r m i n e the u s e t o w h i c h
it will be p u t : to reward d i s t i n g u i s h e d p e r f o r m a n c e by gradu".Addiction i n a broad s e n s e ,
a t i n g s t u d e n t s , to offer s c h o l a r s h i p a i d , or to e n c o u r a g e forby which 1 niean dence on chemicals, is one of
Will you p l e a s e make a g e n e r o u s gift in F r e d ' s memory
onr most urgent contemporary
and in the f u r t h e r a n c e of his i d e a l s ^
licalili problems.
When this
D o n a t i o n s in c a s h or by c h e c k may be made in R a u b 423
dependence is extensive enough
to he ha.iiiful and strong enough
or by mail to the Fred O. Z i m m e r m a n Memorial F u n d , c ' o .Mr.
lo be uncontrolled, il can evenLee Van H o r n , Lock H a v e n State C o l l e g e , L o c k H a v c i ; P a .
tually destroy all other interests
and activities - fanMly, business,
Si n c e r e l y y o u r s ,
s o c i a l , or ci^iiiniunity," writes
Lee Van Horn
l)r. R. Gordon Bell in the preface
of his new book Escape
from
President
.
\ddirfifni.
F r e d 0 . Z i m m e r m a n Memorial F'und
.After 24 years of experience
The h o l i d a y a t m o s p h e r e in the c a f e l e r i a l a s t week lielped
wt>rkiiu' with the problem of
to e n h a n c e its a p p e a r a n c e .
The i'ood s e r v i c e iioped lo make .tdtliclion, Di. Ik'li IS (»ptimislic.
lie s t a t e s . "By calling this book
meal
time
more
enjoyable .
I'scanr
jrcm Addiction,
I am
trying lo emphasize that Ihere is
hope for recovery and that Ihe
day.s of stigma-laden labels for
chemical dependence of what" T h e question set me on a thought patterns of the many age
ever kind are being left behind."
33,000-mile
trek across
the and ethnic groups now crying
The author is the president
nation,"
the author r e c a l l s . out to be h e a r d . " Their urgent
by Jim Shannon
of the play was tin- "aiijly .ippli- of the Donwood Institute which
"1 ended up with personal
me.ssage: time is running out
operates a 50-bed hospital for
" I didn't like it particularly.
private tape-recorded interviews fast for the establishment and
ea tion of make-up on cerlain addiction treatment, education,
It wasn't that t h r i l l i n g . "
with 1,000 persons of all a g e s , only a massive turnarouriu in
performers. Lady Bntoiii.irl w.is and research in Toronto, Canada.
This is the statement I overfrom every walk of life, repre- American priorities
probably the most noticeable.
can avert
heard from one of the college
Vhis
provocative
study
.scnting as accurately as pos- collapse and anarchy. In the
For future p l a y s , the suggestion
provides full coverage on the
students following the final per.sible 200 million Americans in schools, a consensus of opinion
of training people to de nutkc-up
effects of alcohol, a s well as a
formance of "Major Barbara"
our various ethnic groups and among
or importing s p e c i a l i s t s would
the
interviewees
inreview of the effects cif narcotics
Saturday evening. Taking the
life styles--all zeroing in on d i c a t e s , the student him-self
well be Worth looking
imo.
and other addicting drugs.
It
liberty, I would like to make
We would like to thank the
investigates the clinical and
the question. Schooling for what?" must be allowed to determine
some revelations. It seems that
c a s t , the directors, and all those
social
problems
of
addiction,
Dr. Parker started out with what and how much to learn to
the majority of the students at
involved with Ihe play for bringgiving equal attention to the
a
set
of ten basic queries, fulfill his needs as an individual
Lock Haven State College go lo
ing a note of iiiiellect to the
physical, mental, and social
focussing
on just what is wrong facing life on terms which are
these plays solely for entertaincampus. V\ithoiit liesitation we
components.
with
our
schools
at all levels, entirely his own. By the same
ment. This I feel is wrong. 1
can say tli.il "Major Barbara"
but
he
found
himself
expanding token, ihe panoramic survey
believe the only type of theatre
was a n)b well tlone.
("n'ouped into two major parts,
his investigation into such re- shows, the diverse experiments
they would appreciate is that of
ihis work first examines the
lated areas as the hippie sul> in living and learning being
a Niel Simon farce. True artists
various tacets of addiction and
culture,
student
radicalism, carried out by the young themsuch as Shaw, Shakespeare, and
follows with suggested methods
racial
and
generation
gaps, and selves — from hippie communes
Jonson who emphasize the reality
of escape from such bondage.
the
proliferation of new-life to "free u n i v e r s i t i e s " — offer
of
llie in their play.s, ure
If you write poetry,
Ihe first part,
"Addiction,"
the best models for reordering
styles.
shunned.
presents an orientation for the
schooling i n America,
prose or have your hand
reader to the clinical and social
Shaw shows in Ihis play
The book came to encompass
in the arts, we have an
problems arising from complex
pertinent views on the impact of
an idealistic approach to Sooutlet for your materia!.
addiction disorders. The second
the me'dia on the young and the
c i a l i s m asserting the lack of
The Crucible will be
|-iiirt, " I ^ s c a p e , " deals with the
abuses and potentials of techmoney a s the root of all evil.
treatment program presently used
accepting your material
nology. The author found himself
"Major Barbara" is a powerful
by the Donwood Institute.
A
delving into considerations on the
with an ironic ending: the unanytime starting today.
three-phase program, this treattraditional work ethic and its
scrupulous use of money and
Just give it to Faith
rn^'nl exleruls over a minimum
relevance to our times, and he
power defeating the spirit of
Dunmore or slide it
period of one year. Following a
was led to look into aspects of
Christianity.
fOK
del a iled d i s c u s s i o n of each of
under the door of the
the
sexual
revolution,
the
Society is the winner in Ihe
the
three
p
h
a
s
e
s
,
the
author
knowledge explosion, the history
Eagle Eye office. We
play. The struggle is lietween
makes suggestions concerning
of communes in America and the
Barbara's religious conscience
need you. Please use
the organi/.ai itiri ui community
evolution of sensitivity training
and her father's intellectuality
resources for more complete and
and encounter groups.
and
domineering
personalily.
successful treatment programs.
What
emerges arc
"the
The most notable defect

Author Finds
Hope For
Recovery

Play Not Appreciated

I_^S

Queries M a d e A b o u t
Schools — — — —

EAGLE'S
ECHO
dmj

Question:

What do you think of the faculty's
decision regarding class attendance?

taken except for the fact that the
sentence
was incorrectly
typed.
The sentence should have read,
" l i e are endeavoring to represent
This is in regard to yesas many ol the sludenl /loi/y as
terday's Letter to the Editor.
possible."
If you would care to
come into Ihe office, you will
I'.ditor's note:
see thai is Ihe way il appeared
Hy "encompassing
the stuon the Original copy.
dents'
views"
I simply
meant
Hy "delegating
some of Ihe
the vicw.s- of Ihe sludent body on
responsibility
lo other
people,"
this
campus
which may preI was saying Ihal if Ihe studenls
viously
have gone
unnoticed.
on Ihis campus feel their organThe code of .American Journalism ization or curriculum is going
IS to present all the news in an
unnoticed,
they
should
state
unbigated way - not to control
Ihcir views as such. And, if
Ihe press with any form of authey are as interested
as they
thoritarianism.
pretend, Ihey will see that they
Your second point is well
achieve
atlenlion.

Editor's

Note

FRANKLYSPEAKING

l y Phil Frank

•^'

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Well, as a student - I'm all in favor of it.
But I can just see those empty classes
the
day before vacation.
But if a prof's going to
cut your gnde
just
because of poor class
attendance,
he'll still do it; only he'll
give
it a different
name. Penny Cupp,
sophomore,
secondary social
science.

Cutting
classes only hurts the students
and since it's their education,
it should be
their decision.
If a prof wants to penalize
a student for cutting
class, there isn't anything that can be done about it. But if a student can miss class and still do the work;
all
the better.
George Bower,
sophomore,
secondary social
science.

As long as the student successfully
fulfills the requirements
of the course such as
handing papers in on time and taking
tests,
he should be permitted to exercise
his own
judgement on class attendance.
After all, he
is paying for the course. "Cookie"
Morgan,
senior, secondary
English.

I don't think it should matter one way or
the other to the prof. It should be up to the
student whether or not he can cut a class and
still pass the exams. It should definitely
not
be the prof's responsibility
to see that the
student makes up the work. Barry Wise, freshman, physical
education.

'MR- A6(\ieiN IS HERe TO see vZ)u
AB^Ur THE RXLUnON COHmOU

\<^

^

This is the way it is.
WeVe into it.

I agree with all the resolutions,
because
they finally give the student the
responsibility
he wants. It also enables the student to spend
more time on the subjects he is interested
in.
Eria Mae Kreider, sophomore, secondary
math.

I think the faculty's
garding class attendance
will really be worthless.
members will continue to
dance without regard to
Carl Frysinger,
senior,

recent decision
reis very good, but it
I think the faculty
set their own attenthe recent
decision.
physical
education.

W^anglier
Jeans
Wremember the " W " Is silent.
WITH ^fltaELANESE' V ^ R T R E I I
POLYESTER

Classified Ads
Earn fifteen dillars a week.
Hours of your choice. No
investment. Call 748-2683 for
appointment.

INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL
RAFFLE
$ 0 0 or trip for two to Florida.
Chances may be purchased from
any fraternity man for
$1.00.
Drawing, Feb. 1,1371.

SILCO STORES
LOCK HAVEN, PA.

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