BHeiney
Thu, 07/06/2023 - 17:49
Edited Text
Dance Tour Performs
rile l')70 Dance four Groiip ol
Hon-ingion College, Vermont, will
perforai in Price -Alulit(T iuni,
Lock Haven Slate College, on
Sunday, February 15, at 8:13 PM
The program will begin wilh a
lecture—demonstration, followed
by
three
numbers
entitled
" L i k e a Balloon Around the Sun,"
' ,t Piece of the Wind," and
"• Cravedrawing'-. "
The dance company is managed
completely by the eleven students
who perform the d a n c e s . Since
no faculty member accompanies
the group, each student must be
prepared to adapt to unexpected
circumstances affecting performances.
Bennington College is noted for
its non—traditional approach to
dance, an approach which a t t -
racted such noted d a n c e r s as
Martha Graham and Ooris lliimphrcv
to Ihe c o l l e g e ' s Sumner .School of
Dance. The faculty helps the
student'; to develop Iheir own
attitudes toM^arcIs pcrlorniinj! and
choreography rather than imposing
techniques or a particular s t y l e .
Bennington was founded in l')32
and has been -'iending out lour
groups biennially since l94-'iThis year's touru-jil extend as far
south as Virginia and as far
west as Wisconsin.
Sunday's
peiiormance
i^
the second major event of t h e l 97()j
Fine Arts F e s t i v a l , being con
ducted during February and March
at Lock Haven State C o l l e g , .
On February 19, the Festival will
feature ' ' C a n n o n b a l l " .Adderly,
jazz musician.
AGLEE
Voi. XIII No. 75
LOCK H A V E N STATE
COLLEGE
Fri. Feb. 13, 1970 <
valentine weekend
fri.- dance- roger's- 9pm.
sat.- wrestling- 8pm. dance- rg- 10 pm.
sun.- movies- 2pm.- pub
dance troupe- price- 8pm.
SAINT VALENTINE'S DAY IS WHAT?!
Senalor Hugh Scoll
Senator Scott
In Lock Haven
iby L E L
Want to prophesy your ro
mantic future? Inherent psychic ability is not required.
Instead, one needs bay l e a v e s ,
eggs, and clay (perhaps these
ingredients are the secret elements of Jeanne Dixon's
s u c c e s s ? ) . The most appropriate time to test the validity of this formula is tonightSt. Valentine's Eve.
According to seventeenth
century custom, LHS coeds
should be able to foretell the
identity of their future husbands if they follow a few simple s t e p s . E a t a hard boiled
egg tonight. Before going to
sleep, pin five bay leaves to
the pillow; one in each corner
and one in the center, (bay
leaf scented hair is an o c
cupational hazard t h a t , must
be accepted). Those who oJ>serve this procedure will have
their future mates revealed
during their dreams-or nightmares, depending who is r e vealed. The following day,
Valentine's Day, the coed can
begin convincing the revealed
victim that he is fated for her.
e names ot their dancing
partners pinned to their sleeves and the couples later
ilentines a s having been; |.exchanged
elaborate
gifts
martyred on February 14 by |(imagine such a scene in the
being beheaded. Wonder how
Don't fret! There's an altern- they feel having their death I P U B ! ) . Gradually people began to merely exchange valative method. Write all your dates celebrated?
entine
cards and sentimental
boyfriends'
, ,.
^ names on, indivi- ,
Originally, a romantic fes- gifts. The custom of valendual bits of paper and roll each ji^^l ^^^ celebrated on the
tine cards became popular in
name in a piece of clay (LHS
15th in honor of Juno, the god- the United States during the
mud should suffice). Drop the
dess of women and marriage,
Civil Wat.
clay into water. The first
and Pan, the god of nature.
The times certainly are
scrap of paper to rise to the
However, after the spread of
"
a
changing." Tomorrow most
surface will contain the name
Christianity, churchmen atcoeds will be lucky if they reof your true valentine.
tempted to give Christian
ceive a contemporary card
So why is tomorrow named meaning to the pagan festival.
telling them what a funny lookSaint Valentine's Day if it Thus, Pope Gelasius changed
ing valentine they'd be-hardly
is associated with romance the Lupercalia festival to St.
comparable to previous gifts
and affection? No, Cuoid's Va len tineas p a y on the 14th
of precious jewels. Inflation
real name wasn't Saint Val- during the fifth century. Obeven strikes sweetheart day!
Time to revert to bay leavesentine and his birthday wasn't viously, the conversion wasn't
the fourteenth of Februar^. completely
successful...how
they're still affordable (if only
The customs connected with many religious valentine cards
the cafeteria would serve an
«ntire egg in their s a l a d s inthe day have no relationship do you receive?
to the life of a saint. ActualDuring the original Luper- jstead of three slices)! Pleasant dreams!..;
ly, Roman history lists two St. calia festivities, men wore
I
T h e style of President Nixon
is low key in approach " a presidency of nersLiasion."
That's
the assessment t)f ».^enate Minority Leader Hugli Scott, speaker Thurs. afternoon at a s p e c i a l
joint s e s s i o n of the Lock Haven
Kiwanis,
Lion.s
and
Rotary.
Scott concluded a one-day s t a y
in Lock Ha"en with his talk, then
left for Scranton.
T h e Republican Sen.it(T, who
will be seeking a third six-year
term this year, told his F'allon
H o t e l audience that the P r e s i dent had discovered a way to get
action from Congress...by ' s i c i n g
the people' on the renresentat i v e s . Scott ;ited Nixon's public appeal on tel^^yis iori in vetoing the recent health, education,
and welfare bill.
He said the current s e s s i o n of
Congress is off to the best start
in history, and if the record is
maintained, the performance of
the 88th Congress until President
Lyndon
Johnson
may
be
exceeded.
Scott said the P r e s i d e n t is
developing a style different from
his most recent p r e d e c e s s o r s ,
through a broad appeal to middle
c l a s s Americans.
Speaking to 500 Republicans
at the Clinton County Republican
Dinner in Bentley Hall Wednesday night, Scott criticized the
Deimocrats for " e i g h t years of
fiscal
irresponsibility,
ine t t i c i e m spendino and inefficient
government."
He a l s o commented that " t h e Republicans
have taken the fead ' " 'he battle
to control ijiflatiqn/' ^ .
The senator a l s o visited (he
Field House at the coUege for
a short time.
^
DID
YOU
KNOW
THAT:
Portland, Oregon, was named
by flipping a coin because
in 1845 its founders, Francis
Pettygrove of Portiond, Maine,
and Amos Lovejoy of Boston,
Massachusetts, could not agree on a name. Pettygrove
won.
D a l l a s , Texas h o , more millionaires among its residents
than any other American c i t y .
Grapplers
You thought Woodstock was
t h e v i u r a t i n g end? Dig this.
P l a n n e d for n e x t Easter is
the " G r a n d a d d y Rock." The
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum is t h e site. But the concert of 10 top n a m e bands will
be broadcast simultaneously
in 50 other cities on gigantic
20'x30' c l o s e d c i r c u i t T V
screens in outdoor areas . . .
The nation's best-selling button? You guessed it. I A m An
Effete Snob for Peace . . . Any
guy getting static about the
stuff on his head or face can
use this quote from J o e Nam a t h : " T h e Only Perfect Man
w h o ever lived h a d a beard
and long hair and didn't wear
shoes a n d slept in barns and
didn't hold a regular job and
never p u t on a tie." . . .
There's a sweetheart at Iowa
State w h o calls her boyfriend
Cyclamate because he woos
her with phony sweet t a l k . . .
College film buffs from coast
to coast are giving r a v e reviews to "The Kinetic Art,"
a three-program series of 26
films distributed by Universal
Education and Visual Arts,
Division Universal Studio . . .
C h a l k m a r k s on t h e Brooklyn
Bridge:"Raul is a great lover."
Signed, Maria. "P.S. Jose's
even g r e a t e r . " Underneath,
"P.P.S. Maria is a blabbermouth." Signed, Raul and Jose
. . . How do you measure up
on t h e media meter? A poll
of the 14-21 age group discloses a w e e k d a y average of
113 minutes spent watching
TV, 140 minutes listening to
t h e radio, 23 minutes reading
magazines, 23 minutes reading n e w s p a p e r s . . . Two new
rock clubs in London a r e called the F r e a k e a s y and t h e Sup e r f r e a k . . . See and Ski. A
n e w tanning lotion? Nope. It's
t h e name of the world's first
nudist c a m p ski resort. It
opens this w i n t e r in Naked
City, Ind., about 60 miles
from Chicago . . . Meet 17-year
-old Roger J. Stone Jr. of Katonah, N.Y. Roger's running
in 1970 for governor of New
York on t h e I n d e p e n d e n t
P a r t y ticket and is already
pumping p a w s all over the
state. " W e ' r e serious about
this campaign," say his managers. "We w a n t to show t h a t
young people do have civic
p r i d e and a keen interest in
w h a t happens to the country
w e will i n h e r i t . " . . . Comic
J a c k i e K a n n o n says the thing
about having Teddy Kennedy
as president if w e ever were
attacked by t h e Russians, he'd
w a i t nine h o u r s before letting
us in on t h e good news . . .
Could t h e fuzz be turning hum a n ? In Detroit police now
h a v e their p r o w l cars lettered
"Protectors of L i b e r t y " and
some Chicago cops are drafting Christmas cards showing
an officer w i t h "Fuzz" on his
n a m e p l a t e and a hippie holding a bouquet of flowers. The
t w o are smiling and have
their a r m s a r o u n d each other's
shoulders . . . In merrie England the boys are buying
mini-skirts to w e a r as shirts.
Up in Sheffield, t h e steel center, bonnie lasses have revived a feudal custom—the wearing of chastity belts. Wonder
if the girls are decent about
passing out keys . . . "You
n a m e the d r u g and I've taken
it," quoth Donovan. "But I
gave them all up. Why? Because t h e y ' r e an insult to your
nervous system. You cannot
create while on drugs."
Entertain Huskies
Tomorrow Night in 'Big' Match
The Lock Haven State College
wrestling team h a s not used its
starting lineup since an opening
loss to Lehigh. And it appears
that they will once again enter
the mats without a couple of
their starting grapplers when
they face arch rival Bloomsburg
tomorrow night in Thomas Field
House at 8:00 p.m.
LHS enters the match with a
4-5-1 record and might be, without the services of 118-pounder
Donnie F a y , who is still nursing
a h y p e r - t e n s i o n of the elbow,
and heavyweight Scott Brooks
who h a s been battling a c a s e of
the flu.
If both grapplers are unable to
compete tomorrow night their
places will be filled by Jim
Rupp and Jeff Knarr.
The H u s k i e s , third place finishers in the conference last s e a s o n ,
enter
the match with a 10-3
record on the year and are hoping to end a four match losing
streak at the hands of the E a g l e s
The last time the Huskees d e feated LHS- was Bald E a g l e
Coach Gray sjmons' first s e a s o n
as head mentor.
The
Huskies
who ranked
fifth in the NALA pre-season
poll and have eight lettermen
LHS Coach Gray Simons is
returning from last
season's
anticipating a close match and
11-3-1 squad, are led by d e has stated that he feels each
fending conference
champions team could very easily win five
Arnie Thompson and Jim McCue. bouts T h e Bald Eagle mentor
Thompson sports an l l - l dual r e - a l s o said that the availability
cord this s e a s o n while McCue
of F a y won't be known until
has dropped two while winning
this afternoon.
s e v e n . Another top Huskie is
T h e probable matchups a r e :
Wayne Smyth, who was a third 118-Mike Shull (6-4) vs Don F a y
place finisher at the conference
(7-0)
or Jim Rupp (1-5)
tournament
last
season and
126—Larry
Sones (1-7-2) vs
sports a 4-0 record thus far Shane Foley (5-1-1)
this season-"
134—Wayne Smythe (4-0) vs Larry
Both squads have faced four
Rippey (9-0-1)
cotnmon opponents and each has gone
2-2 against these
Brodmerkel (7-3)
opponents. ""*~
150—Russ Scheuren (7-2-1) or
Bloomsburg has dropped d e Rand Minnier (1-2) vs Gene Taxis
cisions
to Ohio
University
(4-6)
(32-5) and Clarion(23-9) while
158—Arnie Thompson fll-1) vs
the Bald Eagles have also dropWillie Vokes (2-7)
ped decisions to these s c h o o l s ;
1 6 7 - L e s t e r WaUace (3-2) or
LHS lost 18-12 to Ohio UnivDotig Grady (3-1) vs Bill Rhodes
ersity and 21-11 toClarion^
(2-4-1)
177-'Floyd Hitchock (8-2) or
The Huskies have defeated
Oswego, 27-11 while the E a g l e s Milton Andrews (2-3) vs Joe
eked out a 19-15 decision against C a s s e r a (0-1) or Jim Batesky
(1-6)
Oswego by capturing the l a s t
1 9 0 - R o n Sheehan (8-1-2) vs
two bouts.
Both schools have
Hank Hawkins (5-3-2)
a l s o thumped Shippensbiu-g, the
H w t - J i m McCue (7-2) or Bob
Huskies clipping the R a i d e r s ,
Hummel (1-U) vs Scott Brooks
25-8 while i_HS whipped the
(5-3-2) or Jeff Knarr (0-0)
Raiders, 3 0 - 5 .
attention!
Don T a y u c e , plea.se c o n t a c t
the
Eagle
Eye concerning
your
cartoons.
748-5531
James Bond
is back! \
i^
THANKS,
FOLKS.
JUST NIPPED: LHS's
Gino' Taxis was
n i p p e d , 3 - 2 , l a s t F r i d a y a g a i n s t C l a r i o n by
Mark D y m o n d . Dymond g a i n e d h i s w i n n i n g
p o i n t w h e n T a x i s w a s c a l l e d for l o c k i n g
h a n d s . T h e E a g l e s suffered their fifth s e t b a c k of t h e s e a s o n by d r o p p i n g a 21-11 e n counter.
Model for 'Get Back' is Regression
ALBERT R. BROCCOLI 3«d HARRY SALTZMAN
..isenl ii^N FLEMING'S
"ON HER MAJESTY'S
SECRET SERVICE"
FOR BEING CAREFUL
^Member -- Pa
State Corioge
Press Assn
CO-EDITORS-IN-CHIEF
MARIANNE WATERS, AL SMITH
Assistant editor — Ron Jury
NEWS E D I T O R ~ B a r b a r a Woods
F E A T U R E EDITOR - Joyce Newstein
S P O R T S E D I T O R - Larry G r e e n
P H O T O G R A P H Y E D I T O R - Marian C o n n
SECRETARY - Peggy Reese
B U S I N E S S MANAGER - J o a n W o r c e s t e r
C O P Y S E T T E R S - D i a n a Ungvarsky, Sue Frye
F A C U L T Y ADVISOR - J o e N i c h o l s o i ^
S T U D E N T ADVISOR - R o n Smith
s l A r K — Sue Meiser, Sue Minor, Juoy Okonski, Dan Hite, Sue
Piotroski, Michael Holderman Mary Schlegel, Sue Moyer, Nibs
Gordon, Fran Yost, Chris Plyl*r, Don Golden, Marian Conn, Chris
Kreitler, Mike Parucha, Mike Young, Jan Nader, Chris Bower,
Jack Heagney, Howard Peterson, Eylene Sawyer, Pat Seitzer,
Phil Flynn, Leona Lehto, Kirk Fenton, Margie Crown, Joe Scott,
Madene Zaydell, Nelle Fastman, Faith Dunmore , Nancy Long
EAGLE EYE is published daily by the students of Lock Haven State
College. All opinions expressed by colutnnists and feature writers, including letters to the editor, are not necessarily those of this institution
or of this newspaper. All contributions should be submitted to Eagle Eye,
Parsons. Union Building, Lock Haven State, Lock Haven. Pa — 748-5531
by Michael J a c k s o n
"GET
BACK."
Beatles'
(CPS) — (Regression: the reversal to a pattern of behavior
more appropriate to, or characteristic of, an earlier stage of
development.)
" C o n c e p t : Music, Philosophy
and P o l i t i c s " magazine describes the B e a t l e s ' " G e t B a c k " a s
"a model of s i m p l i c i t y , " and
that it i s , for the dominant theme
of t h i s , the B e a t l e s ' newest s e t ,
is one of regression.
The s e t c o n s i s t s of an album,
a studio-session photo book and
an accompanying film of the
recording s e s s i o n , a l l slated to
be released in a package deal
this December.
The album itself contains 11 c u t s , all recorded live in the new Apple studios
at 3 Seville Blvd., London. The
cover photo shows the B e a t l e s
posed on the steps of EMI
s t u d i o s , exactly a s they appeared on the cover of their first
album, " P l e a s e P l e a s e M e , "
in 1963.
In this album there is no background orchestration, n o e l e c uonic^ effects, n o Eastern influence and even no overdubbing.
Only the B e a t l e s and keyboard
man Billy Preston are involved.
Arrangement Very Loose
All of the cuts were composed
•ind arranged before the B e a t l e s
went to tho studio, s o the result
is very l o o s e ; looser, in fact,
tnan " T h e B e a t l e s . " Listening
to this album is like Ijeing in
the control room of Apple's
studio during a rehearsal. Nothing h a s been edited out or
dubbed in, and many times the
Beatles stop in the middle of
one song and go on to the next.
On occasion John Lennon may
be heard d i s c u s s i n g the merits
of each song with producer
George Martin, and the many
breaks during and in between
songs are filled with mini jams
and warm-up s e s s i o n s ; the format of the album is not unlike a
Kafka
stream-of-consciousness
novel.
The first cut, " O n e after 9 0 9 , "
was
composed
by
LennonMcCartney in 1959 when the
group was still known as the
Quarrymen.
The lyrics and
deceptively simple rhythm of
this song are not unlike " T a k e
Out Some Insurance on Me
Baby,"
another
10-year-old
work,
but the guitar work,
around which everything e l s e
centers,
is definitely
post"Abby R o a d , " giving the song a
ubiquitous
retrogress ion-proaction dichotomy.
i n e title song, " G e t B a c k , "
summarizes their feelings about
their foU'wers; McCartney tells
Jo-Jo ( i . e . John Lennon) to " g e t
back to where you once b e longed."
All Four Are^^Lonersr
" J o - J o was a man who thought
he was a loner, but he was another
m a n , " reaffirms
the
B e a t l e s ' decision to a s s e r t their
individuality.
Jo-Jo w a s , in
fact, reputed to be a loner, and
now this label is applicable to
all four.
The theme of leaving their
world of prominence that they
have occupied for the last six
years and going " h o m e " appears
again and again. In Harrison's
" F o r You B l u e , " and LennonMcCartney's " T w o of Us on Our
Way H o m e , " the disenchantment
with living a world-known ideal
appears.
The last segment of the recording is a " G e t B a c k " mini-encore,
and is extremely discontinuous
with the r e s t of the recording.
Its tone is one of sarcastic
laughter and derision, but the
guitar work is not retrogressive,
rainer is a hard and modem,
similar
to
Jimi
Hendrix's
"Voodoo C h i l d , " (slight return).
Is the derision for u s , for
themselves?
Presentation is Revolutionary
There is something absolutely
revolutionary about this album,
outside of its new foimat. This
is its presentation; it is no
longer the Beatles Uiat are performing, it is four individuals
communicating to themselves.
This is what they've been leading up to for tht; p-dst six years —
they are now alone with themselves.
There are only two possibilities
for their future.
They can remain where they a r e , and not
produce any more material, or
they can start over again, travelling their musical road away
from " h o m e . "
Editors' note:
Michael
Jackson
is managing editor of the Ethos,
student paper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
rile l')70 Dance four Groiip ol
Hon-ingion College, Vermont, will
perforai in Price -Alulit(T iuni,
Lock Haven Slate College, on
Sunday, February 15, at 8:13 PM
The program will begin wilh a
lecture—demonstration, followed
by
three
numbers
entitled
" L i k e a Balloon Around the Sun,"
' ,t Piece of the Wind," and
"• Cravedrawing'-. "
The dance company is managed
completely by the eleven students
who perform the d a n c e s . Since
no faculty member accompanies
the group, each student must be
prepared to adapt to unexpected
circumstances affecting performances.
Bennington College is noted for
its non—traditional approach to
dance, an approach which a t t -
racted such noted d a n c e r s as
Martha Graham and Ooris lliimphrcv
to Ihe c o l l e g e ' s Sumner .School of
Dance. The faculty helps the
student'; to develop Iheir own
attitudes toM^arcIs pcrlorniinj! and
choreography rather than imposing
techniques or a particular s t y l e .
Bennington was founded in l')32
and has been -'iending out lour
groups biennially since l94-'iThis year's touru-jil extend as far
south as Virginia and as far
west as Wisconsin.
Sunday's
peiiormance
i^
the second major event of t h e l 97()j
Fine Arts F e s t i v a l , being con
ducted during February and March
at Lock Haven State C o l l e g , .
On February 19, the Festival will
feature ' ' C a n n o n b a l l " .Adderly,
jazz musician.
AGLEE
Voi. XIII No. 75
LOCK H A V E N STATE
COLLEGE
Fri. Feb. 13, 1970 <
valentine weekend
fri.- dance- roger's- 9pm.
sat.- wrestling- 8pm. dance- rg- 10 pm.
sun.- movies- 2pm.- pub
dance troupe- price- 8pm.
SAINT VALENTINE'S DAY IS WHAT?!
Senalor Hugh Scoll
Senator Scott
In Lock Haven
iby L E L
Want to prophesy your ro
mantic future? Inherent psychic ability is not required.
Instead, one needs bay l e a v e s ,
eggs, and clay (perhaps these
ingredients are the secret elements of Jeanne Dixon's
s u c c e s s ? ) . The most appropriate time to test the validity of this formula is tonightSt. Valentine's Eve.
According to seventeenth
century custom, LHS coeds
should be able to foretell the
identity of their future husbands if they follow a few simple s t e p s . E a t a hard boiled
egg tonight. Before going to
sleep, pin five bay leaves to
the pillow; one in each corner
and one in the center, (bay
leaf scented hair is an o c
cupational hazard t h a t , must
be accepted). Those who oJ>serve this procedure will have
their future mates revealed
during their dreams-or nightmares, depending who is r e vealed. The following day,
Valentine's Day, the coed can
begin convincing the revealed
victim that he is fated for her.
e names ot their dancing
partners pinned to their sleeves and the couples later
ilentines a s having been; |.exchanged
elaborate
gifts
martyred on February 14 by |(imagine such a scene in the
being beheaded. Wonder how
Don't fret! There's an altern- they feel having their death I P U B ! ) . Gradually people began to merely exchange valative method. Write all your dates celebrated?
entine
cards and sentimental
boyfriends'
, ,.
^ names on, indivi- ,
Originally, a romantic fes- gifts. The custom of valendual bits of paper and roll each ji^^l ^^^ celebrated on the
tine cards became popular in
name in a piece of clay (LHS
15th in honor of Juno, the god- the United States during the
mud should suffice). Drop the
dess of women and marriage,
Civil Wat.
clay into water. The first
and Pan, the god of nature.
The times certainly are
scrap of paper to rise to the
However, after the spread of
"
a
changing." Tomorrow most
surface will contain the name
Christianity, churchmen atcoeds will be lucky if they reof your true valentine.
tempted to give Christian
ceive a contemporary card
So why is tomorrow named meaning to the pagan festival.
telling them what a funny lookSaint Valentine's Day if it Thus, Pope Gelasius changed
ing valentine they'd be-hardly
is associated with romance the Lupercalia festival to St.
comparable to previous gifts
and affection? No, Cuoid's Va len tineas p a y on the 14th
of precious jewels. Inflation
real name wasn't Saint Val- during the fifth century. Obeven strikes sweetheart day!
Time to revert to bay leavesentine and his birthday wasn't viously, the conversion wasn't
the fourteenth of Februar^. completely
successful...how
they're still affordable (if only
The customs connected with many religious valentine cards
the cafeteria would serve an
«ntire egg in their s a l a d s inthe day have no relationship do you receive?
to the life of a saint. ActualDuring the original Luper- jstead of three slices)! Pleasant dreams!..;
ly, Roman history lists two St. calia festivities, men wore
I
T h e style of President Nixon
is low key in approach " a presidency of nersLiasion."
That's
the assessment t)f ».^enate Minority Leader Hugli Scott, speaker Thurs. afternoon at a s p e c i a l
joint s e s s i o n of the Lock Haven
Kiwanis,
Lion.s
and
Rotary.
Scott concluded a one-day s t a y
in Lock Ha"en with his talk, then
left for Scranton.
T h e Republican Sen.it(T, who
will be seeking a third six-year
term this year, told his F'allon
H o t e l audience that the P r e s i dent had discovered a way to get
action from Congress...by ' s i c i n g
the people' on the renresentat i v e s . Scott ;ited Nixon's public appeal on tel^^yis iori in vetoing the recent health, education,
and welfare bill.
He said the current s e s s i o n of
Congress is off to the best start
in history, and if the record is
maintained, the performance of
the 88th Congress until President
Lyndon
Johnson
may
be
exceeded.
Scott said the P r e s i d e n t is
developing a style different from
his most recent p r e d e c e s s o r s ,
through a broad appeal to middle
c l a s s Americans.
Speaking to 500 Republicans
at the Clinton County Republican
Dinner in Bentley Hall Wednesday night, Scott criticized the
Deimocrats for " e i g h t years of
fiscal
irresponsibility,
ine t t i c i e m spendino and inefficient
government."
He a l s o commented that " t h e Republicans
have taken the fead ' " 'he battle
to control ijiflatiqn/' ^ .
The senator a l s o visited (he
Field House at the coUege for
a short time.
^
DID
YOU
KNOW
THAT:
Portland, Oregon, was named
by flipping a coin because
in 1845 its founders, Francis
Pettygrove of Portiond, Maine,
and Amos Lovejoy of Boston,
Massachusetts, could not agree on a name. Pettygrove
won.
D a l l a s , Texas h o , more millionaires among its residents
than any other American c i t y .
Grapplers
You thought Woodstock was
t h e v i u r a t i n g end? Dig this.
P l a n n e d for n e x t Easter is
the " G r a n d a d d y Rock." The
Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum is t h e site. But the concert of 10 top n a m e bands will
be broadcast simultaneously
in 50 other cities on gigantic
20'x30' c l o s e d c i r c u i t T V
screens in outdoor areas . . .
The nation's best-selling button? You guessed it. I A m An
Effete Snob for Peace . . . Any
guy getting static about the
stuff on his head or face can
use this quote from J o e Nam a t h : " T h e Only Perfect Man
w h o ever lived h a d a beard
and long hair and didn't wear
shoes a n d slept in barns and
didn't hold a regular job and
never p u t on a tie." . . .
There's a sweetheart at Iowa
State w h o calls her boyfriend
Cyclamate because he woos
her with phony sweet t a l k . . .
College film buffs from coast
to coast are giving r a v e reviews to "The Kinetic Art,"
a three-program series of 26
films distributed by Universal
Education and Visual Arts,
Division Universal Studio . . .
C h a l k m a r k s on t h e Brooklyn
Bridge:"Raul is a great lover."
Signed, Maria. "P.S. Jose's
even g r e a t e r . " Underneath,
"P.P.S. Maria is a blabbermouth." Signed, Raul and Jose
. . . How do you measure up
on t h e media meter? A poll
of the 14-21 age group discloses a w e e k d a y average of
113 minutes spent watching
TV, 140 minutes listening to
t h e radio, 23 minutes reading
magazines, 23 minutes reading n e w s p a p e r s . . . Two new
rock clubs in London a r e called the F r e a k e a s y and t h e Sup e r f r e a k . . . See and Ski. A
n e w tanning lotion? Nope. It's
t h e name of the world's first
nudist c a m p ski resort. It
opens this w i n t e r in Naked
City, Ind., about 60 miles
from Chicago . . . Meet 17-year
-old Roger J. Stone Jr. of Katonah, N.Y. Roger's running
in 1970 for governor of New
York on t h e I n d e p e n d e n t
P a r t y ticket and is already
pumping p a w s all over the
state. " W e ' r e serious about
this campaign," say his managers. "We w a n t to show t h a t
young people do have civic
p r i d e and a keen interest in
w h a t happens to the country
w e will i n h e r i t . " . . . Comic
J a c k i e K a n n o n says the thing
about having Teddy Kennedy
as president if w e ever were
attacked by t h e Russians, he'd
w a i t nine h o u r s before letting
us in on t h e good news . . .
Could t h e fuzz be turning hum a n ? In Detroit police now
h a v e their p r o w l cars lettered
"Protectors of L i b e r t y " and
some Chicago cops are drafting Christmas cards showing
an officer w i t h "Fuzz" on his
n a m e p l a t e and a hippie holding a bouquet of flowers. The
t w o are smiling and have
their a r m s a r o u n d each other's
shoulders . . . In merrie England the boys are buying
mini-skirts to w e a r as shirts.
Up in Sheffield, t h e steel center, bonnie lasses have revived a feudal custom—the wearing of chastity belts. Wonder
if the girls are decent about
passing out keys . . . "You
n a m e the d r u g and I've taken
it," quoth Donovan. "But I
gave them all up. Why? Because t h e y ' r e an insult to your
nervous system. You cannot
create while on drugs."
Entertain Huskies
Tomorrow Night in 'Big' Match
The Lock Haven State College
wrestling team h a s not used its
starting lineup since an opening
loss to Lehigh. And it appears
that they will once again enter
the mats without a couple of
their starting grapplers when
they face arch rival Bloomsburg
tomorrow night in Thomas Field
House at 8:00 p.m.
LHS enters the match with a
4-5-1 record and might be, without the services of 118-pounder
Donnie F a y , who is still nursing
a h y p e r - t e n s i o n of the elbow,
and heavyweight Scott Brooks
who h a s been battling a c a s e of
the flu.
If both grapplers are unable to
compete tomorrow night their
places will be filled by Jim
Rupp and Jeff Knarr.
The H u s k i e s , third place finishers in the conference last s e a s o n ,
enter
the match with a 10-3
record on the year and are hoping to end a four match losing
streak at the hands of the E a g l e s
The last time the Huskees d e feated LHS- was Bald E a g l e
Coach Gray sjmons' first s e a s o n
as head mentor.
The
Huskies
who ranked
fifth in the NALA pre-season
poll and have eight lettermen
LHS Coach Gray Simons is
returning from last
season's
anticipating a close match and
11-3-1 squad, are led by d e has stated that he feels each
fending conference
champions team could very easily win five
Arnie Thompson and Jim McCue. bouts T h e Bald Eagle mentor
Thompson sports an l l - l dual r e - a l s o said that the availability
cord this s e a s o n while McCue
of F a y won't be known until
has dropped two while winning
this afternoon.
s e v e n . Another top Huskie is
T h e probable matchups a r e :
Wayne Smyth, who was a third 118-Mike Shull (6-4) vs Don F a y
place finisher at the conference
(7-0)
or Jim Rupp (1-5)
tournament
last
season and
126—Larry
Sones (1-7-2) vs
sports a 4-0 record thus far Shane Foley (5-1-1)
this season-"
134—Wayne Smythe (4-0) vs Larry
Both squads have faced four
Rippey (9-0-1)
cotnmon opponents and each has gone
2-2 against these
Brodmerkel (7-3)
opponents. ""*~
150—Russ Scheuren (7-2-1) or
Bloomsburg has dropped d e Rand Minnier (1-2) vs Gene Taxis
cisions
to Ohio
University
(4-6)
(32-5) and Clarion(23-9) while
158—Arnie Thompson fll-1) vs
the Bald Eagles have also dropWillie Vokes (2-7)
ped decisions to these s c h o o l s ;
1 6 7 - L e s t e r WaUace (3-2) or
LHS lost 18-12 to Ohio UnivDotig Grady (3-1) vs Bill Rhodes
ersity and 21-11 toClarion^
(2-4-1)
177-'Floyd Hitchock (8-2) or
The Huskies have defeated
Oswego, 27-11 while the E a g l e s Milton Andrews (2-3) vs Joe
eked out a 19-15 decision against C a s s e r a (0-1) or Jim Batesky
(1-6)
Oswego by capturing the l a s t
1 9 0 - R o n Sheehan (8-1-2) vs
two bouts.
Both schools have
Hank Hawkins (5-3-2)
a l s o thumped Shippensbiu-g, the
H w t - J i m McCue (7-2) or Bob
Huskies clipping the R a i d e r s ,
Hummel (1-U) vs Scott Brooks
25-8 while i_HS whipped the
(5-3-2) or Jeff Knarr (0-0)
Raiders, 3 0 - 5 .
attention!
Don T a y u c e , plea.se c o n t a c t
the
Eagle
Eye concerning
your
cartoons.
748-5531
James Bond
is back! \
i^
THANKS,
FOLKS.
JUST NIPPED: LHS's
Gino' Taxis was
n i p p e d , 3 - 2 , l a s t F r i d a y a g a i n s t C l a r i o n by
Mark D y m o n d . Dymond g a i n e d h i s w i n n i n g
p o i n t w h e n T a x i s w a s c a l l e d for l o c k i n g
h a n d s . T h e E a g l e s suffered their fifth s e t b a c k of t h e s e a s o n by d r o p p i n g a 21-11 e n counter.
Model for 'Get Back' is Regression
ALBERT R. BROCCOLI 3«d HARRY SALTZMAN
..isenl ii^N FLEMING'S
"ON HER MAJESTY'S
SECRET SERVICE"
FOR BEING CAREFUL
^Member -- Pa
State Corioge
Press Assn
CO-EDITORS-IN-CHIEF
MARIANNE WATERS, AL SMITH
Assistant editor — Ron Jury
NEWS E D I T O R ~ B a r b a r a Woods
F E A T U R E EDITOR - Joyce Newstein
S P O R T S E D I T O R - Larry G r e e n
P H O T O G R A P H Y E D I T O R - Marian C o n n
SECRETARY - Peggy Reese
B U S I N E S S MANAGER - J o a n W o r c e s t e r
C O P Y S E T T E R S - D i a n a Ungvarsky, Sue Frye
F A C U L T Y ADVISOR - J o e N i c h o l s o i ^
S T U D E N T ADVISOR - R o n Smith
s l A r K — Sue Meiser, Sue Minor, Juoy Okonski, Dan Hite, Sue
Piotroski, Michael Holderman Mary Schlegel, Sue Moyer, Nibs
Gordon, Fran Yost, Chris Plyl*r, Don Golden, Marian Conn, Chris
Kreitler, Mike Parucha, Mike Young, Jan Nader, Chris Bower,
Jack Heagney, Howard Peterson, Eylene Sawyer, Pat Seitzer,
Phil Flynn, Leona Lehto, Kirk Fenton, Margie Crown, Joe Scott,
Madene Zaydell, Nelle Fastman, Faith Dunmore , Nancy Long
EAGLE EYE is published daily by the students of Lock Haven State
College. All opinions expressed by colutnnists and feature writers, including letters to the editor, are not necessarily those of this institution
or of this newspaper. All contributions should be submitted to Eagle Eye,
Parsons. Union Building, Lock Haven State, Lock Haven. Pa — 748-5531
by Michael J a c k s o n
"GET
BACK."
Beatles'
(CPS) — (Regression: the reversal to a pattern of behavior
more appropriate to, or characteristic of, an earlier stage of
development.)
" C o n c e p t : Music, Philosophy
and P o l i t i c s " magazine describes the B e a t l e s ' " G e t B a c k " a s
"a model of s i m p l i c i t y , " and
that it i s , for the dominant theme
of t h i s , the B e a t l e s ' newest s e t ,
is one of regression.
The s e t c o n s i s t s of an album,
a studio-session photo book and
an accompanying film of the
recording s e s s i o n , a l l slated to
be released in a package deal
this December.
The album itself contains 11 c u t s , all recorded live in the new Apple studios
at 3 Seville Blvd., London. The
cover photo shows the B e a t l e s
posed on the steps of EMI
s t u d i o s , exactly a s they appeared on the cover of their first
album, " P l e a s e P l e a s e M e , "
in 1963.
In this album there is no background orchestration, n o e l e c uonic^ effects, n o Eastern influence and even no overdubbing.
Only the B e a t l e s and keyboard
man Billy Preston are involved.
Arrangement Very Loose
All of the cuts were composed
•ind arranged before the B e a t l e s
went to tho studio, s o the result
is very l o o s e ; looser, in fact,
tnan " T h e B e a t l e s . " Listening
to this album is like Ijeing in
the control room of Apple's
studio during a rehearsal. Nothing h a s been edited out or
dubbed in, and many times the
Beatles stop in the middle of
one song and go on to the next.
On occasion John Lennon may
be heard d i s c u s s i n g the merits
of each song with producer
George Martin, and the many
breaks during and in between
songs are filled with mini jams
and warm-up s e s s i o n s ; the format of the album is not unlike a
Kafka
stream-of-consciousness
novel.
The first cut, " O n e after 9 0 9 , "
was
composed
by
LennonMcCartney in 1959 when the
group was still known as the
Quarrymen.
The lyrics and
deceptively simple rhythm of
this song are not unlike " T a k e
Out Some Insurance on Me
Baby,"
another
10-year-old
work,
but the guitar work,
around which everything e l s e
centers,
is definitely
post"Abby R o a d , " giving the song a
ubiquitous
retrogress ion-proaction dichotomy.
i n e title song, " G e t B a c k , "
summarizes their feelings about
their foU'wers; McCartney tells
Jo-Jo ( i . e . John Lennon) to " g e t
back to where you once b e longed."
All Four Are^^Lonersr
" J o - J o was a man who thought
he was a loner, but he was another
m a n , " reaffirms
the
B e a t l e s ' decision to a s s e r t their
individuality.
Jo-Jo w a s , in
fact, reputed to be a loner, and
now this label is applicable to
all four.
The theme of leaving their
world of prominence that they
have occupied for the last six
years and going " h o m e " appears
again and again. In Harrison's
" F o r You B l u e , " and LennonMcCartney's " T w o of Us on Our
Way H o m e , " the disenchantment
with living a world-known ideal
appears.
The last segment of the recording is a " G e t B a c k " mini-encore,
and is extremely discontinuous
with the r e s t of the recording.
Its tone is one of sarcastic
laughter and derision, but the
guitar work is not retrogressive,
rainer is a hard and modem,
similar
to
Jimi
Hendrix's
"Voodoo C h i l d , " (slight return).
Is the derision for u s , for
themselves?
Presentation is Revolutionary
There is something absolutely
revolutionary about this album,
outside of its new foimat. This
is its presentation; it is no
longer the Beatles Uiat are performing, it is four individuals
communicating to themselves.
This is what they've been leading up to for tht; p-dst six years —
they are now alone with themselves.
There are only two possibilities
for their future.
They can remain where they a r e , and not
produce any more material, or
they can start over again, travelling their musical road away
from " h o m e . "
Editors' note:
Michael
Jackson
is managing editor of the Ethos,
student paper of the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Media of