BHeiney
Fri, 07/07/2023 - 13:25
Edited Text
Vol., XIII No. 96
LEEYE
LOCK HAVEN STATE COLLEGE
"nws. April IB, 1970
SCC Board of Directors
Vote to Increase Act. Fee
Last night the SCC board of
directors voted by a two-thirds
majority to amend the student
government constitution.
The amendment was in regard
to the present activity fee.
It
was proposed to r a i s e the s e m e s ter fee for all students taking
more than 12 semester hours to
$30.00 per s e m e s t e r .
T h e fee
in the summer s e s s i o n will be
raised from $5.00 per s e s s i o n
to$7.50 per s e s s i o n ,
necessary s o that allocations
would not have to be cut by
$40,000.
However, even with
the increase it will still be
necessary to cut allocations by
only $18,000.
Now the proposed amendment
will go to the student body for
their approval or rejection.
An
election committee was set up
and will conduct the voting on
Monday,
April
20, from 8 to 4
at the reception desk in the
Union and Bentley Hall.
In order for the admendment to
go into affect it must be passed
by 2 / 3 of the students
voting.
Other Dusiness consisted
of
a transfer of funds for the
debate union of $700.00.
lu
joint action with the assembly
committee
the debate
union
hopes to get Mr. Wineglass, the
attorney for the Chicago seven
as a speaker on campus.
The athletic department asked
for an additional $150.00
to
allow the track team to attend
the Buffalo Relays. They had
been
previously planning on
attending the Penn Relays but
decided on the other in an
effort
to
allow
for
more
participation.
Monroe Hurwitz, Karl Herrman,
Dean Frances Cornelius and Dr.
Paul Klens were appointed the
SCC advisors.
Jack Infield , president, a l s o
appointed
ihe other chairman
of
the standing committees.
Freshman customs co-chairman,
George
Bower
and
Kathy
Harter ;
social
co-chairman,
-lerry Hendricks
and
Nancy
Landon;
assembly
committee
co-chairman, Al Smith
and
Garey Gadson; interfaith council.
Jim Dawes community concerts.
Jimmie Maloney. calendar and
c o m p a s s , co-chairman, Loretta
DeLong
and
Rick
Lingle:
student directory, Karen Alai:
and suminer intern program cochairman Peggy Mahaffey and
Rick L i n g l e .
A l s o d i s c u s s e d at rhe meeting
was the continued abuse of the
Union.
Jack Heagney, second
vice president, set up a Union
supervisory board, made up of
those who whrk in the union.
who will take action against
those defacing or damaging the
Union. Students taught in the
act will be required to make
full restitution for the damage.
Also organizations sponsoring
a dance in the Eagle Wing will
be required to sign an agreement
to accept all responsibility for
damage done to the upper l e v e l s .
GROPE
also
presented
an
Earth Day Catalogue of the
planned activities for
\pril
2 2 .''O students can attend the
planned piogram.
There was an SCC special
meeting scheduled
for
April
29,
in the PUB.
New Interest Shown inTeacher Ed
An increased interest in teacher
education by the U.S. State
Department w a s shown by a twoday conference held in Washington, D . C , on April 9-10. Several hundred educators across the
nation received personal invitations from Secretary of State
William Rogers t o attend the
National Foreign Policy Conference
for leaders
in teacher
education.
Dr.
Francis
A.
Colabrese,
director of secondary education
at Lock Haven State College,
attended the conference, which
opened with a briefing by Under
Secretary of State Richardson.
The
educational
problems
of
each
of the
world's
lesser
developed countries werepresented
by the A s s i s t a n t Secretary of State
assigned to the country.
The United Nations has designated
1970
as
International
Education Year.
The State
Department, in coordination with
the American Association
of
Colleges for Teacher Education,
is re-examining the U.S. effort
both at home and abroad
to
train
foreign
students to be
teachers.
Dr.
Colabrese
found ' T h e
greatest
educational
need
in
lesser developed countries is at
the lower level, rather than ttie
graduate
level.
They
need
elementary and high school teach'Our efforts at educating foreign
students to be teachers has
failed in the past because many
become graduate students and do
not return to their own countries
or, if they do go back home, they
become involved in government
Extra Yearbooks Go on SALE
gflO
Today
Earth Day A|iril22
work. In either c a s e , they do not
become teachers,' said Colabrese.
'The need is for short-terrn
programs, equilavent to the old
Normal School curriculum. Schools
such as Lock Haven State could
contribute by providing a b a s i c
two to three year program in
teacher training for these foreign
students, enabling them to return
home and teach the fundamentals
,heir countries need, rather than
remaining in the U.S. as professional students,' said Colabrese.
T H E STEAM will be uippcinni: lliis S'>inda\ e v e n i n g in c o n e e r l
at 7:00 a n d >) 00 pm in P n e e A u d i t o r i u m s p o n s o r e d b\' the
s e e social committee.
Tar A w a y Places' Theme
For Spring W e e k e n d
' F a r Away Places," is Ihc theme "f one per person,
for this year's spring weekend
The events have been planned
April 17. 18. and m .
by the SCC social committee
Beginning the program Friday whose chairmen are Nancy Landon
and Je rry Hendricks,
night, '1 Love ^'ou Alice B.
________^____^__-_—
Tokelas,"
which
stars Peter
.__
. ^^•m-^-w-^ A W r
Sellers, will he shown in Price
r i > 4 S f^ F l > J /
f
Auditorium at 7 30 PM. A dance
Mjr».KJM^MJ.rM.M^M-J
sponsored by the North Hall Dorm
Council will follow in the PUB.
Saturday night the 'She Fox'
is scheduled to play at the
carnival
in Thomas F'ield House
from 8:30-1 2 :00PM.
Hourly
drawings
for record
albums will precede a midnight
drawing for a stereo tape recorder.
Tickets for these drawings will be
available at the carnival.
Drawing the weekend activities
to a close Steam will present two
concerts Sunday evening ir Price
Auditorium at 7 and 9PM. Tickets
for the concert may be obtained at
the PUB reception d e s k : a limit
LHS Bald Eagles
vs.
MSC
Mounties
doubleheader begins
at 1:00p.m.
Woolrich Field
ilii
Newest Building to Be Dedicated
by Joyce Newstein
The newest building on campus
opened September 29. 1969 and
will be dedicated April 24,
1970, at 2:00 pm.
This building is one of the nicest buildings built by any s t a t e
college in the past few y e a r s .
About 53 c l a s s e s use the building a week; it is not Raub Hall
or Ulmer Hall it i s the Stevenson Library
The library houses approximatly 190,000 volumes including
bound
periodicals,
reference
books, general reading
and
also about 850 periodicals.
There is no problem finding
help in the library because there
The library is the second
is always someone there to h e l p , largest employer
of
student
if not one of the 69 student
hel p on earnpus.
employees there is Dr. Warner,
The Stevenson Library is not
head
librarian, Mr. Berarard, only a ubrary but , it houses
technical services and cataan exibition of fine art, includlogs, Mr. Tien-hu Chu, general
ing ohe Solan collection, works
s e r v i c e s , Mrs. Huhn, children's
of Mr. William Foster (LHS art
book, curriculum, and library
professor), and The Crucifix.
s e r v i c e s . Miss Parker, acquisiThe new library is s o spacious
tions, Mr. T a y l o r , s e r i a l s and that at least, hald the student
interliljrary help, Mr. Thomas, body can use it at one time.
general s e r v i c e s , Mrs. Heisey,
The hours that the library is
reserve
room
and
general open a r e :
information about Lock Haven, 7:30 a m - 10:00 pm Monday-FriMiss 'Vogt , reader services and day.
7:45 am -- 4:00 pm Saturday
main desk.
2:00 pm ~ io:00 pm Sunday
Mr. I'homas , speaking for the
staff of the library said, "We
are very happy with our new
library
despite
its
minor
faults, such as the uncontrollable heat and the missing books
which would not be missing it
we had c l o s e d s t a c k s which
we do not want opposed to the
open s t a c k s which we now h a v e .
We hope t h e s e problems
will
be adjusted soon.
The old Stevenson library will
be used a s new offices for the
administration.
i
Time-Outby Al Smith
W o l f s Whistle
Analysis of a Freshman
by Dick Wolfsie
IN KEEPING with progressive
education many colleges around
the country are now considering
psychological testing of all applicants. While In theory this
concept seems worthy. It may
Involve more trouble than Its
worth. I take you now to the year
1984 where Harvey, a newly admitted freshmen has already gotten first and second approval; he
needs only a quick psychoanalysis
for final approval.
"Excuse me, Miss, Is this the
place where I get my free psychoanalysis?"
"Well, that depends, have you
got an activities card?'*
Alvin Toffler, author of
the forthcoming F u t u r e Shock,
says
the
Environmental
Teach-in on April 27 will
mis-fire if it fixes only on
physical phenomena like air
and water pollution. "Wildly
accelerating change itself."
he observes, "is creating a
psychic pollution that is potentially even m o r e dangerous." . . . Two's company,
three's novel, and four's a
mini-orgy . . . Before
Bennington, Vassar and Smith
started admitting boys, they
w e r e institutions of higher
yearning . . . A Miami Herald
reporter asked Billy G r a h a m
if he'd been a soldier at My
Lai would he have followed
orders to participate in the
massacre. Graham, our m a n
from God, replied: "I couldn't
comment on those points."
. . . The thing about
the topless go-go dancer, once
you've seen two you've seen
them all . . . SEAP (Students
to End American Poverty)
has sent four tons of food and
clothing to the Appalachian
town of George's Branch, Ky.
S E A P was started in 1968
by students in the greater
New York area . . . Commedienne Joan Rivers says
Jackie Onassis dreads the end
of daylight savings time. It
means an extra hour in bed
with that old man . . . " J e
T ' A i m e Moi Non P l u s , "
the French super-sizzler featuring sounds of love-making,
has
outsold any
Beatles
single in England, even "I
Wanna Hold Your Hand."
. . . Poster-potentate Peter
Max, an ex-experimenter with
drugs, says he gets his "greatest highs" from success. Yoga,
and breathing fresh air. (Living in New York, where
does he find last-named?)
. . . You can study Witchcraft
at the Universities of Alab a m a and South Carolina
and Anarchy at Franconia
(N.H.) College . . . Chalked
on the walls of a Southampton, L. I. pub:"Jackie Susann
wears jockie shorts." Underneath, "Yes, and T r u m a h
Capote dreamed h e slept last
night in his Maidenform b r a . "
. . . Forget the Greeks.
We've got a word for it.
The
English
language
has some 800,000 words. We
educated ones actively use
about 5,000. . . . Any gal who
w a n t s to have a guy eating
out of her hand should take
h i m to the movies a n d hold
t h e popcorn . . . Those sexy
Swedes! Now it's RX Sex.
Swedish doctors are urging
t h a t prostitutes be available
on a doctor's prescription.
T h e y claim sex denial or sex
w i t h the wrong p a r t n e r is
basically responsible for most
m e n t a l illnesses and personal
difficulties . . . A few things
banned in Greece, ancient
rraHiA
nf
rfomorracv;
T.onP
"What do I need an activities
card for?"
"Well, let's see. When I was
in the tenth grade I was sitting
in the back of the room and I shot
"You see, the way we work my teacher with s tuc pen right
it this year is that if you buy in the back."
a yearbook, you get a free head
"That's very interesting, young
shrinking, I mean, a free psychoanalysis. Now sit down and the man. It shows feeUngs of hosdoctor wUl be right with you." tility, tendencies toward regression, and a predisposition to
"Hello, young man, I'm Dr. r e p r e s s . "
Tank. If you'll just be patient
"Gosh, doctor, you learned all
for a few moments we'll decide that because I shot my teacher
if you have any psychologic mo- with a Bic pen?''
tovations or predispositions to'Of course not, because you
wards feelings of irrationalabil- were sitting in the back of the
ity, or anti-social behavior. In room. Now, young man, tell me
other words, we're trying to weed the name of the first girl you
out all the kooks. Now tell me, ever loved?"
have you ever done anything psy'«I can't remember her name."
chologically significant?"
"Well, what was her address?"
"I can't recall."
"Can you tell what she looked
like?"
"I don't remember that either."
"•you're not helping me very
hair, mini-skirts, modern mu- much, young man."
sic, Beckett, the Beetles, Pin"Listen, Doc, you never got
ter, the New Math, peace
me
any girls either."
movements, Dostoevsky, soci"Okay, Harvey, now that you've
ology, the Bar Association,
the International
Encyclo- completed the preliminary tests,
pedia, and the letter Z . . . it's time we got do^vn to the real
Right A Wrong (RAW) is the important questions. These are
brainchild of the brothers very personal questions andhon^
Eddie and Stuart Arrow. esty is quite important. I'll ask
RAW is working for the le- the questions and you simply
galization of pot and a mam- write down " y e s " or «^o". First,
moth peaceful smoke-in in
Washington, D. C, next July as a child did you ever tease
4. . . . With Mick Jagger in vegetables? Second, do you feel
the paternity
bag again, at home in the presence of a
what's this about a Rolling weed? Third, when you go tc
Stone gathering no Ma's'.' . . . DC Stadium do you PURPOSELY
Love Everybody (but be dis- sit behind the pole. And, lastly,
creet about it!)
do you have trouble identifying
with bar stools."
Poitical writer J;irk New"Can I get final approval now,
field has those susfjestions nf
where to go from the WashDOC?"
ington Moratorium: (1) Uiuc
"We still have a few more
1,000,000 taxpayei's-too muii.\
tests, Hr^.rvey, but after looking
to imprison-to put their ta.xi's
over your records I must admit
in escrow, (2i Support the
things don't look so good for you.
swelling rank.s of Gl dissenters
The fact that you always sit bewith marches to A r m y bases,
hind the pole at DC Stadium and
and (3) Canvas sti'ong for
the fact that you shot your teacher
Senate doves facing conservatives and for candidates opwith a bic pen, shows an abnorposing super-hawks in nexl
mal affection for long thin objects.
year's elections . . . Let's hear
In the Freudian sense this is
it for Princeton's crusty old
very bad, and I'm afraid we won't
Triangle Club . . . This year's
>^ able to admit you to this uniproduction (Call A Spade A
versity. However, I will reserve
Shovel) will have two things
judgment until tomorrow. I'm
it never had before—rock and
integration . . . Sacred cows late for the annual psychologists'
m a k e great hamburgers . . . picnic, so I have to leave."
Have all those sexy young
"U«e, that sounds really excitswingles in big cities really
Where is the picnic?"
got it made? Not according ing.
<%ame place as every year,
to many shrinks, who claim
that the Pill and sexual free- at the Washington Monument."
dom are creating real hate between the sexes. Shack-ups
are so fast and easy and
meaningless, say they, that
both sides feel cheated and *
»•
•
blame each other . . . Look up
"Ph.D." in H. L. Mencken's
A New Dictionary of Quotations and you're directed to
"See Quack." . . . Writing in
a ladies' magazine about his
c o n s c i e n t i o u s - o b j e c t o r son
Michael, Gene McCarthy says,
7'hs-.')53l
*
"By refusing to fight, Michael •
may have done more for the *
*
cause of peace than I have accomplished in all my speeches." . . . The new name for
foot-in-mouth disease is Agnew's Complaint . . . What if
they gave a war and nobody
came? people keep asking.
Well, here's Wall Street cryand
ing for bright young lawyers,
w h o are s t a y i n g a w a y i n
droves. Our able new Law
School grads seem more interested in society's p r o b l e m
areas To ask for a kiss in the
literate way, say, "Hey, honey, how about a little juztaposition of our orbicularis oris
muscles?" Peter D. Quigley of
Lakeland College copped the
$25 graffiti prize for "Drive
carefully, Dr. Barnard is waiting!"
. . . Any of you
girls dieting, here's a good ruleAt the Monument
of-thumb: If it tastes good,
soil it out . . .
* A ny
:
TSews •
lipsr
I
: c(::i EAGLE EYE I
KELLER
MUNRO
Specialists"
"Prescription
When Stew Casterline isn't throwing touchdown passes for the
Mansfield State College football team, the talented all-around
athlete is hitting or pitching the Mountaineer baseball squad to
victory.
The Pennsylvania all-conference quarterback will lead a powerful Mountie baseball team when they invade the Lock Haven
State College campus for a doubleheader this afternoon beginning
at 1pm on the Woolrich Field.
Mansfield enters th; > contests with an undefeated record of
6-0, having captured four wins on a Southern trip and clipping
York College in a doubleheader last weekend.
Mountie bats have boomed out 53 runs in the six victories
while the pitching staff has allowed the opposition only 17 runs.
In their encounter with York the pitching staff came into their
own as Bill Diliberto hurled a one-hitter enroute to a 4-2 win in
the opener and had a no-hit shutout until the final frame. Casterline brought the Mounties victory in the nightcap with a four-hit
shutout while the lumbermen hammered out ten runs.
The ace of the MSC staff is Dave Hagadorn, who ended his '69
campaign by no-hitting Penn State, but according to Mountie
Coach Barney Heaps he looked "isloppy" in a win over Norfolk
State.
Carrying the "big' bats for Mansfield have been Casterline,
who was 10 for 17 on the Southern tour including two doubles and
one home run, and freshman .loe DeSanto who is hitting close to
.800.
The gocxl quick start and 6-0 record is even a surprise to the
Mounties who usually field a power house and have a few players
drafted by the pros. Last year shortstop Mike Derr and pitcher
' R e b e l ' Collier were drafted with Collier playing in the New YorkPennsylvania League.
With their undefeated record and the hitting and pitching credentials, it appears that the Mounties are alrpost invincable.
Even with these impressive s t a t i s t i c s the Mounties are similar to the Pittsburgh Pirates of the National League in that they
usually appear to have the best or one of the best hitting teams
in the conference and the potential in the pitching department to
take all the marbles.
But like the Pirates they have developed the uncanny ability
lo finish second or third behind the league leaders.
LHS enters the encounters with a 1-1 record, the result of
splitting a doubleheader with MiUersville last weekend.
A 1-1 record seems sort of mediocre but almost any coach will
settle for a split on the road expecially since the Marauders were
a N.AIA district champion last year and had 15 lettermen returning
from that squad and they could prove to be real tough but according to LHS Coach Tod' Eberle, " T h e y appear to have some fielding problems."
Pitching still looks like the main problem for the Bald Eagles
with not enough outdoor work and throwing off a mound the chief
concern of Coach Eberle.
Co-captain Jim Sleicher went the route for the Eagles in the
first game against MiUersville but after Sleicher the staff has its
problems. Freshman Bob Lacotta looks more like a reliever than
a starter as he pitched three strong innings at MiUersville but got
bombed in the fourth.
Wes Detar had been sick and missed quite a bit of practice and
doesn't look like he is in top form yet. The bullpen presents another problem. Gary Hepfer looked good in his two-inning relief
stint at MiUersville appears to be the best in this department, but
he will be unavailable today because he has to report for a draft
physical. Hepfer was 1-1 against the Mounties last year having
lost a starting nod to Casterline, 6-2, when he committed two
errors which allowed four unearned runs and then winning a slugfest in relief, 9-6.
The two remaining hurlers on the squad also appear to have
their problems too. Freshman lefthander Rod Burrows has been
complaining of a sore pitching arm while Dave Moyer thinks he
should be labeled as probably the most hard-luck pitcher in b a s e ball since Roger Craig lost 20 in a row with the New York Mets.
Four Eagles sport batting averages over .300 with sophomore
Doug Conlon leading the contingent at .500. Freshman catcher
Tom Baker sports a .400 average while both Don Noblit and
are hitting .333.
LHS showed they do not give up easily as they battled back
numerous times in the opening doubleheader.
Casterline and Hagadorn will probably pitch for the Mounties
while Eberle is expected to counter with Sleicher and Detar. Detar was l-l against the Mounties last year, hurling a four-hit, 3-0
shutout and dropping a 6-1 decision to them. Sleicher only saw
an inning of relief duty against the Mounties.
Hagadorn has never faced the Eagles but Casterline has and
holds a 2-0 record over LHS having gained 6-2 and 6-1 decisions
last season. He finished the season with a 5-1 record and is currently 1 -0 this season.
The Eagles appear to hold a sort of jinx over Mansfield having
split last year's series, 2-2, and hold a 5-3 edge over the Mounties
in the past eight games between the conference rivals and have
the best record of any conference team against the Mounties in the
past three vears.
Editor's note: Time-Out was based on all results up to Sunday
April 12. Thus it could be possible that Mansfield has played
more than six games coming into today's encounters, but Eagle
Eye in an attempt to get up to date information couldn't get any
information at all.
LEEYE
LOCK HAVEN STATE COLLEGE
"nws. April IB, 1970
SCC Board of Directors
Vote to Increase Act. Fee
Last night the SCC board of
directors voted by a two-thirds
majority to amend the student
government constitution.
The amendment was in regard
to the present activity fee.
It
was proposed to r a i s e the s e m e s ter fee for all students taking
more than 12 semester hours to
$30.00 per s e m e s t e r .
T h e fee
in the summer s e s s i o n will be
raised from $5.00 per s e s s i o n
to$7.50 per s e s s i o n ,
necessary s o that allocations
would not have to be cut by
$40,000.
However, even with
the increase it will still be
necessary to cut allocations by
only $18,000.
Now the proposed amendment
will go to the student body for
their approval or rejection.
An
election committee was set up
and will conduct the voting on
Monday,
April
20, from 8 to 4
at the reception desk in the
Union and Bentley Hall.
In order for the admendment to
go into affect it must be passed
by 2 / 3 of the students
voting.
Other Dusiness consisted
of
a transfer of funds for the
debate union of $700.00.
lu
joint action with the assembly
committee
the debate
union
hopes to get Mr. Wineglass, the
attorney for the Chicago seven
as a speaker on campus.
The athletic department asked
for an additional $150.00
to
allow the track team to attend
the Buffalo Relays. They had
been
previously planning on
attending the Penn Relays but
decided on the other in an
effort
to
allow
for
more
participation.
Monroe Hurwitz, Karl Herrman,
Dean Frances Cornelius and Dr.
Paul Klens were appointed the
SCC advisors.
Jack Infield , president, a l s o
appointed
ihe other chairman
of
the standing committees.
Freshman customs co-chairman,
George
Bower
and
Kathy
Harter ;
social
co-chairman,
-lerry Hendricks
and
Nancy
Landon;
assembly
committee
co-chairman, Al Smith
and
Garey Gadson; interfaith council.
Jim Dawes community concerts.
Jimmie Maloney. calendar and
c o m p a s s , co-chairman, Loretta
DeLong
and
Rick
Lingle:
student directory, Karen Alai:
and suminer intern program cochairman Peggy Mahaffey and
Rick L i n g l e .
A l s o d i s c u s s e d at rhe meeting
was the continued abuse of the
Union.
Jack Heagney, second
vice president, set up a Union
supervisory board, made up of
those who whrk in the union.
who will take action against
those defacing or damaging the
Union. Students taught in the
act will be required to make
full restitution for the damage.
Also organizations sponsoring
a dance in the Eagle Wing will
be required to sign an agreement
to accept all responsibility for
damage done to the upper l e v e l s .
GROPE
also
presented
an
Earth Day Catalogue of the
planned activities for
\pril
2 2 .''O students can attend the
planned piogram.
There was an SCC special
meeting scheduled
for
April
29,
in the PUB.
New Interest Shown inTeacher Ed
An increased interest in teacher
education by the U.S. State
Department w a s shown by a twoday conference held in Washington, D . C , on April 9-10. Several hundred educators across the
nation received personal invitations from Secretary of State
William Rogers t o attend the
National Foreign Policy Conference
for leaders
in teacher
education.
Dr.
Francis
A.
Colabrese,
director of secondary education
at Lock Haven State College,
attended the conference, which
opened with a briefing by Under
Secretary of State Richardson.
The
educational
problems
of
each
of the
world's
lesser
developed countries werepresented
by the A s s i s t a n t Secretary of State
assigned to the country.
The United Nations has designated
1970
as
International
Education Year.
The State
Department, in coordination with
the American Association
of
Colleges for Teacher Education,
is re-examining the U.S. effort
both at home and abroad
to
train
foreign
students to be
teachers.
Dr.
Colabrese
found ' T h e
greatest
educational
need
in
lesser developed countries is at
the lower level, rather than ttie
graduate
level.
They
need
elementary and high school teach'Our efforts at educating foreign
students to be teachers has
failed in the past because many
become graduate students and do
not return to their own countries
or, if they do go back home, they
become involved in government
Extra Yearbooks Go on SALE
gflO
Today
Earth Day A|iril22
work. In either c a s e , they do not
become teachers,' said Colabrese.
'The need is for short-terrn
programs, equilavent to the old
Normal School curriculum. Schools
such as Lock Haven State could
contribute by providing a b a s i c
two to three year program in
teacher training for these foreign
students, enabling them to return
home and teach the fundamentals
,heir countries need, rather than
remaining in the U.S. as professional students,' said Colabrese.
T H E STEAM will be uippcinni: lliis S'>inda\ e v e n i n g in c o n e e r l
at 7:00 a n d >) 00 pm in P n e e A u d i t o r i u m s p o n s o r e d b\' the
s e e social committee.
Tar A w a y Places' Theme
For Spring W e e k e n d
' F a r Away Places," is Ihc theme "f one per person,
for this year's spring weekend
The events have been planned
April 17. 18. and m .
by the SCC social committee
Beginning the program Friday whose chairmen are Nancy Landon
and Je rry Hendricks,
night, '1 Love ^'ou Alice B.
________^____^__-_—
Tokelas,"
which
stars Peter
.__
. ^^•m-^-w-^ A W r
Sellers, will he shown in Price
r i > 4 S f^ F l > J /
f
Auditorium at 7 30 PM. A dance
Mjr».KJM^MJ.rM.M^M-J
sponsored by the North Hall Dorm
Council will follow in the PUB.
Saturday night the 'She Fox'
is scheduled to play at the
carnival
in Thomas F'ield House
from 8:30-1 2 :00PM.
Hourly
drawings
for record
albums will precede a midnight
drawing for a stereo tape recorder.
Tickets for these drawings will be
available at the carnival.
Drawing the weekend activities
to a close Steam will present two
concerts Sunday evening ir Price
Auditorium at 7 and 9PM. Tickets
for the concert may be obtained at
the PUB reception d e s k : a limit
LHS Bald Eagles
vs.
MSC
Mounties
doubleheader begins
at 1:00p.m.
Woolrich Field
ilii
Newest Building to Be Dedicated
by Joyce Newstein
The newest building on campus
opened September 29. 1969 and
will be dedicated April 24,
1970, at 2:00 pm.
This building is one of the nicest buildings built by any s t a t e
college in the past few y e a r s .
About 53 c l a s s e s use the building a week; it is not Raub Hall
or Ulmer Hall it i s the Stevenson Library
The library houses approximatly 190,000 volumes including
bound
periodicals,
reference
books, general reading
and
also about 850 periodicals.
There is no problem finding
help in the library because there
The library is the second
is always someone there to h e l p , largest employer
of
student
if not one of the 69 student
hel p on earnpus.
employees there is Dr. Warner,
The Stevenson Library is not
head
librarian, Mr. Berarard, only a ubrary but , it houses
technical services and cataan exibition of fine art, includlogs, Mr. Tien-hu Chu, general
ing ohe Solan collection, works
s e r v i c e s , Mrs. Huhn, children's
of Mr. William Foster (LHS art
book, curriculum, and library
professor), and The Crucifix.
s e r v i c e s . Miss Parker, acquisiThe new library is s o spacious
tions, Mr. T a y l o r , s e r i a l s and that at least, hald the student
interliljrary help, Mr. Thomas, body can use it at one time.
general s e r v i c e s , Mrs. Heisey,
The hours that the library is
reserve
room
and
general open a r e :
information about Lock Haven, 7:30 a m - 10:00 pm Monday-FriMiss 'Vogt , reader services and day.
7:45 am -- 4:00 pm Saturday
main desk.
2:00 pm ~ io:00 pm Sunday
Mr. I'homas , speaking for the
staff of the library said, "We
are very happy with our new
library
despite
its
minor
faults, such as the uncontrollable heat and the missing books
which would not be missing it
we had c l o s e d s t a c k s which
we do not want opposed to the
open s t a c k s which we now h a v e .
We hope t h e s e problems
will
be adjusted soon.
The old Stevenson library will
be used a s new offices for the
administration.
i
Time-Outby Al Smith
W o l f s Whistle
Analysis of a Freshman
by Dick Wolfsie
IN KEEPING with progressive
education many colleges around
the country are now considering
psychological testing of all applicants. While In theory this
concept seems worthy. It may
Involve more trouble than Its
worth. I take you now to the year
1984 where Harvey, a newly admitted freshmen has already gotten first and second approval; he
needs only a quick psychoanalysis
for final approval.
"Excuse me, Miss, Is this the
place where I get my free psychoanalysis?"
"Well, that depends, have you
got an activities card?'*
Alvin Toffler, author of
the forthcoming F u t u r e Shock,
says
the
Environmental
Teach-in on April 27 will
mis-fire if it fixes only on
physical phenomena like air
and water pollution. "Wildly
accelerating change itself."
he observes, "is creating a
psychic pollution that is potentially even m o r e dangerous." . . . Two's company,
three's novel, and four's a
mini-orgy . . . Before
Bennington, Vassar and Smith
started admitting boys, they
w e r e institutions of higher
yearning . . . A Miami Herald
reporter asked Billy G r a h a m
if he'd been a soldier at My
Lai would he have followed
orders to participate in the
massacre. Graham, our m a n
from God, replied: "I couldn't
comment on those points."
. . . The thing about
the topless go-go dancer, once
you've seen two you've seen
them all . . . SEAP (Students
to End American Poverty)
has sent four tons of food and
clothing to the Appalachian
town of George's Branch, Ky.
S E A P was started in 1968
by students in the greater
New York area . . . Commedienne Joan Rivers says
Jackie Onassis dreads the end
of daylight savings time. It
means an extra hour in bed
with that old man . . . " J e
T ' A i m e Moi Non P l u s , "
the French super-sizzler featuring sounds of love-making,
has
outsold any
Beatles
single in England, even "I
Wanna Hold Your Hand."
. . . Poster-potentate Peter
Max, an ex-experimenter with
drugs, says he gets his "greatest highs" from success. Yoga,
and breathing fresh air. (Living in New York, where
does he find last-named?)
. . . You can study Witchcraft
at the Universities of Alab a m a and South Carolina
and Anarchy at Franconia
(N.H.) College . . . Chalked
on the walls of a Southampton, L. I. pub:"Jackie Susann
wears jockie shorts." Underneath, "Yes, and T r u m a h
Capote dreamed h e slept last
night in his Maidenform b r a . "
. . . Forget the Greeks.
We've got a word for it.
The
English
language
has some 800,000 words. We
educated ones actively use
about 5,000. . . . Any gal who
w a n t s to have a guy eating
out of her hand should take
h i m to the movies a n d hold
t h e popcorn . . . Those sexy
Swedes! Now it's RX Sex.
Swedish doctors are urging
t h a t prostitutes be available
on a doctor's prescription.
T h e y claim sex denial or sex
w i t h the wrong p a r t n e r is
basically responsible for most
m e n t a l illnesses and personal
difficulties . . . A few things
banned in Greece, ancient
rraHiA
nf
rfomorracv;
T.onP
"What do I need an activities
card for?"
"Well, let's see. When I was
in the tenth grade I was sitting
in the back of the room and I shot
"You see, the way we work my teacher with s tuc pen right
it this year is that if you buy in the back."
a yearbook, you get a free head
"That's very interesting, young
shrinking, I mean, a free psychoanalysis. Now sit down and the man. It shows feeUngs of hosdoctor wUl be right with you." tility, tendencies toward regression, and a predisposition to
"Hello, young man, I'm Dr. r e p r e s s . "
Tank. If you'll just be patient
"Gosh, doctor, you learned all
for a few moments we'll decide that because I shot my teacher
if you have any psychologic mo- with a Bic pen?''
tovations or predispositions to'Of course not, because you
wards feelings of irrationalabil- were sitting in the back of the
ity, or anti-social behavior. In room. Now, young man, tell me
other words, we're trying to weed the name of the first girl you
out all the kooks. Now tell me, ever loved?"
have you ever done anything psy'«I can't remember her name."
chologically significant?"
"Well, what was her address?"
"I can't recall."
"Can you tell what she looked
like?"
"I don't remember that either."
"•you're not helping me very
hair, mini-skirts, modern mu- much, young man."
sic, Beckett, the Beetles, Pin"Listen, Doc, you never got
ter, the New Math, peace
me
any girls either."
movements, Dostoevsky, soci"Okay, Harvey, now that you've
ology, the Bar Association,
the International
Encyclo- completed the preliminary tests,
pedia, and the letter Z . . . it's time we got do^vn to the real
Right A Wrong (RAW) is the important questions. These are
brainchild of the brothers very personal questions andhon^
Eddie and Stuart Arrow. esty is quite important. I'll ask
RAW is working for the le- the questions and you simply
galization of pot and a mam- write down " y e s " or «^o". First,
moth peaceful smoke-in in
Washington, D. C, next July as a child did you ever tease
4. . . . With Mick Jagger in vegetables? Second, do you feel
the paternity
bag again, at home in the presence of a
what's this about a Rolling weed? Third, when you go tc
Stone gathering no Ma's'.' . . . DC Stadium do you PURPOSELY
Love Everybody (but be dis- sit behind the pole. And, lastly,
creet about it!)
do you have trouble identifying
with bar stools."
Poitical writer J;irk New"Can I get final approval now,
field has those susfjestions nf
where to go from the WashDOC?"
ington Moratorium: (1) Uiuc
"We still have a few more
1,000,000 taxpayei's-too muii.\
tests, Hr^.rvey, but after looking
to imprison-to put their ta.xi's
over your records I must admit
in escrow, (2i Support the
things don't look so good for you.
swelling rank.s of Gl dissenters
The fact that you always sit bewith marches to A r m y bases,
hind the pole at DC Stadium and
and (3) Canvas sti'ong for
the fact that you shot your teacher
Senate doves facing conservatives and for candidates opwith a bic pen, shows an abnorposing super-hawks in nexl
mal affection for long thin objects.
year's elections . . . Let's hear
In the Freudian sense this is
it for Princeton's crusty old
very bad, and I'm afraid we won't
Triangle Club . . . This year's
>^ able to admit you to this uniproduction (Call A Spade A
versity. However, I will reserve
Shovel) will have two things
judgment until tomorrow. I'm
it never had before—rock and
integration . . . Sacred cows late for the annual psychologists'
m a k e great hamburgers . . . picnic, so I have to leave."
Have all those sexy young
"U«e, that sounds really excitswingles in big cities really
Where is the picnic?"
got it made? Not according ing.
<%ame place as every year,
to many shrinks, who claim
that the Pill and sexual free- at the Washington Monument."
dom are creating real hate between the sexes. Shack-ups
are so fast and easy and
meaningless, say they, that
both sides feel cheated and *
»•
•
blame each other . . . Look up
"Ph.D." in H. L. Mencken's
A New Dictionary of Quotations and you're directed to
"See Quack." . . . Writing in
a ladies' magazine about his
c o n s c i e n t i o u s - o b j e c t o r son
Michael, Gene McCarthy says,
7'hs-.')53l
*
"By refusing to fight, Michael •
may have done more for the *
*
cause of peace than I have accomplished in all my speeches." . . . The new name for
foot-in-mouth disease is Agnew's Complaint . . . What if
they gave a war and nobody
came? people keep asking.
Well, here's Wall Street cryand
ing for bright young lawyers,
w h o are s t a y i n g a w a y i n
droves. Our able new Law
School grads seem more interested in society's p r o b l e m
areas To ask for a kiss in the
literate way, say, "Hey, honey, how about a little juztaposition of our orbicularis oris
muscles?" Peter D. Quigley of
Lakeland College copped the
$25 graffiti prize for "Drive
carefully, Dr. Barnard is waiting!"
. . . Any of you
girls dieting, here's a good ruleAt the Monument
of-thumb: If it tastes good,
soil it out . . .
* A ny
:
TSews •
lipsr
I
: c(::i EAGLE EYE I
KELLER
MUNRO
Specialists"
"Prescription
When Stew Casterline isn't throwing touchdown passes for the
Mansfield State College football team, the talented all-around
athlete is hitting or pitching the Mountaineer baseball squad to
victory.
The Pennsylvania all-conference quarterback will lead a powerful Mountie baseball team when they invade the Lock Haven
State College campus for a doubleheader this afternoon beginning
at 1pm on the Woolrich Field.
Mansfield enters th; > contests with an undefeated record of
6-0, having captured four wins on a Southern trip and clipping
York College in a doubleheader last weekend.
Mountie bats have boomed out 53 runs in the six victories
while the pitching staff has allowed the opposition only 17 runs.
In their encounter with York the pitching staff came into their
own as Bill Diliberto hurled a one-hitter enroute to a 4-2 win in
the opener and had a no-hit shutout until the final frame. Casterline brought the Mounties victory in the nightcap with a four-hit
shutout while the lumbermen hammered out ten runs.
The ace of the MSC staff is Dave Hagadorn, who ended his '69
campaign by no-hitting Penn State, but according to Mountie
Coach Barney Heaps he looked "isloppy" in a win over Norfolk
State.
Carrying the "big' bats for Mansfield have been Casterline,
who was 10 for 17 on the Southern tour including two doubles and
one home run, and freshman .loe DeSanto who is hitting close to
.800.
The gocxl quick start and 6-0 record is even a surprise to the
Mounties who usually field a power house and have a few players
drafted by the pros. Last year shortstop Mike Derr and pitcher
' R e b e l ' Collier were drafted with Collier playing in the New YorkPennsylvania League.
With their undefeated record and the hitting and pitching credentials, it appears that the Mounties are alrpost invincable.
Even with these impressive s t a t i s t i c s the Mounties are similar to the Pittsburgh Pirates of the National League in that they
usually appear to have the best or one of the best hitting teams
in the conference and the potential in the pitching department to
take all the marbles.
But like the Pirates they have developed the uncanny ability
lo finish second or third behind the league leaders.
LHS enters the encounters with a 1-1 record, the result of
splitting a doubleheader with MiUersville last weekend.
A 1-1 record seems sort of mediocre but almost any coach will
settle for a split on the road expecially since the Marauders were
a N.AIA district champion last year and had 15 lettermen returning
from that squad and they could prove to be real tough but according to LHS Coach Tod' Eberle, " T h e y appear to have some fielding problems."
Pitching still looks like the main problem for the Bald Eagles
with not enough outdoor work and throwing off a mound the chief
concern of Coach Eberle.
Co-captain Jim Sleicher went the route for the Eagles in the
first game against MiUersville but after Sleicher the staff has its
problems. Freshman Bob Lacotta looks more like a reliever than
a starter as he pitched three strong innings at MiUersville but got
bombed in the fourth.
Wes Detar had been sick and missed quite a bit of practice and
doesn't look like he is in top form yet. The bullpen presents another problem. Gary Hepfer looked good in his two-inning relief
stint at MiUersville appears to be the best in this department, but
he will be unavailable today because he has to report for a draft
physical. Hepfer was 1-1 against the Mounties last year having
lost a starting nod to Casterline, 6-2, when he committed two
errors which allowed four unearned runs and then winning a slugfest in relief, 9-6.
The two remaining hurlers on the squad also appear to have
their problems too. Freshman lefthander Rod Burrows has been
complaining of a sore pitching arm while Dave Moyer thinks he
should be labeled as probably the most hard-luck pitcher in b a s e ball since Roger Craig lost 20 in a row with the New York Mets.
Four Eagles sport batting averages over .300 with sophomore
Doug Conlon leading the contingent at .500. Freshman catcher
Tom Baker sports a .400 average while both Don Noblit and
are hitting .333.
LHS showed they do not give up easily as they battled back
numerous times in the opening doubleheader.
Casterline and Hagadorn will probably pitch for the Mounties
while Eberle is expected to counter with Sleicher and Detar. Detar was l-l against the Mounties last year, hurling a four-hit, 3-0
shutout and dropping a 6-1 decision to them. Sleicher only saw
an inning of relief duty against the Mounties.
Hagadorn has never faced the Eagles but Casterline has and
holds a 2-0 record over LHS having gained 6-2 and 6-1 decisions
last season. He finished the season with a 5-1 record and is currently 1 -0 this season.
The Eagles appear to hold a sort of jinx over Mansfield having
split last year's series, 2-2, and hold a 5-3 edge over the Mounties
in the past eight games between the conference rivals and have
the best record of any conference team against the Mounties in the
past three vears.
Editor's note: Time-Out was based on all results up to Sunday
April 12. Thus it could be possible that Mansfield has played
more than six games coming into today's encounters, but Eagle
Eye in an attempt to get up to date information couldn't get any
information at all.
Media of