BHeiney
Mon, 07/17/2023 - 12:37
Edited Text
Vol XIII, No 27

LEEYE

LOCK HAVIM STATE COLLEGE

Tues., Oct. 14,1969

Nationwide Participation
Set For V.N. Moratorium
By Rick F i t c h
College P r e s s Service (CPS)
WASHINGTON: With Oct. 15 less
than a week away, the nationwide
moratorium against the Vietnam
war planned for that date
promises t o be the single largest
anti-Vietnam War protest to d a t e .

will not be penalized for not attending c l a s s e s .
About 250 faculty members at
the University of Minnesota have
signed a document calling for a
c e s s a t i o n of " b u s i n e s s a s usual''
on campus tomorrow. Students
plan to march to the Federal Office Building in downtown Minneapolis in the morning and stage
a rally at the s t a t e capitol at
night.

At schools across the country
student organizers have scheduled moratorium day marches,
r a l l i e s , t e a c h - i n s , and c l a s s
boycotts, sometimes with administration and faculty support.

Scottish-Irish Music
Highlights Gaelic Program
By Loretta DeLong
Strains of authentic ScottishIrish music, merriment, and sadn e s s were exceptionally well-delivered in a crowded Price Auditorium last evening by Glann
Ga fl, a Gaelic musical troupe.
The entire program w a s interspersed with d a n c e s and s o n g s .
After a slow s t a r t , the program
really began to move with a dance
called " S c o t t i s h Country D a n c e . "
Attired in highland plaids and
t a r t a n s , the high-stepping dancers
added a beat all their own to the
lilting tones of the bagpipes.
T h e n , in a tribute to Ireland,
Frank P a t t e r s o n , a tenor, sang
" R o i s i n Dubb (Little Dark Rose)
to the accompaniment of her- enly
sounding harps and a soft puiiio.

see to Meet
Tonight in PUB
The board of directors of the
LHS Student Cooperative Council
will meet this evening instead of
tomorrow evening, according to
Mike McLaughlin, SCC president.
McLaughlin said the meeting
had been re-scheduled because
of the Vietnam moratorium observance a c t i v i t i e s tomorrow evening.
By changing the meeting time,
it was pointed out, SCC directors
and members of the executive
board of the council will be free
to participate in the peace and
anti-war events downtown.
The meeting will be held in the
regular place — the north lobby in
the student union at 7:30 pm, McLaughlin pointed out.
The SCC president also reminded
council directors t o bring a copy
of th** " C o m p a s s " with them to
the .iieeting.

Fifteen-year-old Brian O'Connor
and h i s 16-year-old twin s i s t e r s ,
Breda and Anne, drew great applause and cheers from the audience when they danced 'Hornpipe.
One of the highlights of the performance, sponsored by the a s sembly committee, occurred when
several members of the troupe
sang stirring toe-tapping ballads
of Ireland.
Also on the program was " T r i bute t o Robert B u r n s " which included such songs a s " Y e Banks
and B r a e s , " "Comin' Thro' the
R y e , " and "My Love is Like a
Red. Red R o s e . "
Other segments of the musical
program were devoted to Bonnie
Prince Charlie and to the Golden
Years of Percy French.

The board of trustees at Newark State College in New Jersey
have agreed to suspend all
c l a s s e s s o students and faculty
"may observe a day of solemn
commemoration for those who havt
lost their lives in the Vietnam
conflict." Poetry r e c i t a l s , guerilla theater performances, and a
reading of the names of New Jersey men killed in Vietnam are
planned.
Rutgers President Mason G r c s s ,
who also s e r v e s a s a director of
the American Council on Education, has said no c l a s s e s will be
held moratorium day; he will conduct a d i s c u s s i o n with students
on the Vietnam War.
At Cornell CoUege, ;„ Mount
Vernon, Iowa, a private liberal
arts school with an enrollment of
about 1,000, the president announced participation in the moratorium would be a matter of " i n dividual c h o i c e . " C l a s s e s will
be held, he said, but a student

Students at the University of
Maryland plan workshops on " U S
Imperialism Around the World,"
militarism in the university and
in the country, and the effects of
the war on the nation during three
days of moratorium activity beginning y e s t e r d a y .
The moratorium at the University of Colorado plans to have
students c a n v a s s the community
and boycott all s t o r e s . The British anti-war film " T h e War G a m e "
will be shown. Students at the
University of Oregon are asking
shops to close all day, and townpeople are being asked to fly
their flags at half mast.
The University of North Carolina will regard any disruption of
c l a s s e s a s a violation of school
policies and faculty members will
be allowed to participate in the
moratorium a c t i v i t i e s on their
own time " s o long as participation does not conflict with the
performance of validly assigned
duties."
And Chancelor Glenn Dumke of

the California State College S y s tem has issued an executive order, apparently aimed at the moratorium, that dismissal of c l a s s e s at any of California's 19 s t a t e
schools in support of s o c i a l or
political c a u s e s is " a violation
of professional e t h i c s . "
University
of New Mexico
students have obtained approval
from the regents and president to
hold a " d a y of d i s c u s s i o n "
Oct. 15. Though c l a s s e s have
not
been
cancelled
faculty
members are being asked to
devote part of their classroom
time to debate on the war.
The University of Pennsylvani a ' s Plenum or general meeting
of students voted overwhelmingly
to support a boycott of c l a s s e s ;
only 30 of the approximately
1,000 attending d i s s e n t e d . The
administration refused to s u s pend c l a s s e s but will allow
faculty members to c a l l off
c l a s s e s and students
to miss
them " a s
their
consciences
dictate."
More than 1,000 students at
Lehigh
University, a
men's
school in Bethlehem, P a . , have
signed a petition calling on the
administration to cancel
all
Oct. 15 c l a s s e s . The student
government requested proiesscrs
not to schedule examinations
that day and allocated $100 to
the local moratorium organizers.
The board of trustees at Newark
State College in New J e r s e y

Smith on TV for Moraforium
Appearing on educational television station WPSX last evening,
Ron Smith, chairman of the Vietnam moratorium committee at LHS
explained the events scheduled for tomorrow's peace and anti-war
observance here and d i s c u s s e d the movement to end the war.
The program, entitled " N O W , " featured Smith as a member of a
four-man panel d i s c u s s i o n involving the possible positive and negative effects of the moratorium. Sponsored by Penn S t a t e ' s division
of National Educational Television (NET), the d i s c u s s i o n was broadcast at 10:30 pm last night. It will be shown again tonight at 7:30 pm.
John Balaban, who h a s served with a medical evacuation group in
South Vietnam, d i s c u s s e d the events scheduled at the PSU campus.
He is a member of the English department there and is a s s i s t i n g the
moratorium committee in arranging for speakers.
A history teacher a t Tyrone Area High School and a s t a t e director
of the American Independent Party, panelist Larry Mundis said he
disagreed with the idea of a moratorium. He s a i d he favored e s c a l a t ing the war to win an American military victory.
Tom Goss, an ex-marine who served ll'/2 months in Vietnam — 7'/2
of t h e s e in actual combat, earning for himself a medal of bravery —
claimed that " s t u d e n t and hippy demcmstrations" including violence
only s e r v e to demoralize the men fighting < Vietnam.
When Smith pointed out that this moratorium involved not only college and university students but Americans from all walks of life,
Goss conceded that if the moratorium affects the men at a l l , it will
probably help t o boost their morale.
The d i s c u s s i o n a l s o concerned the motives behind the moratorium.

anthony and imperials

student'$2

HOMECOMING-OCT 19
ffciirefs on sale today

at reception desk in pub

SMITH H A L L S W E E T H E A R T :
Valerie Copenhaver, a freshman l i b e r a l a r t s s o c i a l s c i e n c e major from Mt. U n i o n , P a . , h a s
b e e n e l e c t e d Smith Hall s w e e t h e a r t . She w a s c h o s e n from a
group of four c a n d i d a t e s who were i n t r o d u c e d to the S m i t h
Hall men on O c t o b e r 6 .
The other three candidates were
Kathy P a r s o n , B a r b B o y e r a n d S h e r r y H a r t l e .
Susan F r y e ,
t last year's sweetheart was also present.
Miss C o p e n h a v e r
i \ ;11 r e p r e s e n t Smith H a l l in t h e h o m e c o m i n g a c t i v i t i e s .

/Mansfield QB Leads
Conference Statistics
stu Casterline is one reason Mansfield is still in contention for
the E a s t e r n Division championship of the Pennsylvania Conference.
The senior quarterback leads the 13-member conference in
rushing, p a s s i n g , scoring and total offense (not including this
w e e k e n d ' s games). He even has a 50-yard punt to his credit.
" C a s t e r l i n e is a natural leader and a natural a t h l e t e , " s a y s his
coach Bernie Sabol. " H e ' s a little small (at 5-11) to make it in the
pros a s a quarterback but I'm writing to some guys I know with the
idea of getting him a tryout a s a defensive man. He can run the
40 in full dress in 4.9 or 4 . 8 . And h e ' s q u i c k . "
Riding on the unerring wing of their co-captain, the Mountaineers
have won their last three games and match West Chester with a
perfect 2-0 mark in the E a s t e r n Division.
Casterline was only the third best passer in the conference a s a
junior when he hit on 4 5 . 2 percent of his throws. But with more
experience and a flock of good receivers he is now hitting at a
56.6 clip.
" H e puts it right there nine out of ten t i m e s , " said Sabol. " H e ' s
right up there with Dukett and the rest of them."
Casterline is not only up with Billy Dukett, h e ' s slightly ahead
of them defending pass champ from East Stroudsburg in yardage--605 to 597. Stu is way a h e a d in total offense — 819 to 626.
As a runner, the rollout artist holds a 214 to 209 edge on defending rush champ Phil Anthony of Kutztown. And his 36 points on six
touchdowns is double what anybody else h a s in the league.
Stu's favorite target h a s been tight end Paul Gates who leads the
conference with 18 c a t c h e s . But the haul is well spread out between
Don Ottavianni ( U c a t c h e s ) , RayHipp (11) and Tom Ellsworth (12).
Bald E a g l e s who are among the top ten in individual s t a t i s t i c s
are Denny Rhule and Mike Packer in total offense. Rhule is rated
fourth and Packer is ninth.
Both quarterbacks are a l s o among the leaders in forward p a s s i n g
with Packer rated fifth and Rhule seventh.
Split end Sam Vaughn is fourth in pass receiving * i ' h H receptions good for 174 yards and two touchdowns.
Freshman punter Jeff Knarr is tenth in punting with a 32.7
average on 11 punts with the longest boot going 40 yards.

T O T A L OFFENSE
Rushing
Passing
G. A t l . Yds. Att. Comp. Yds
1. C a s t e r l i n e , Man,
42 214 83
47 • 605
2. Dukett, E . S.
20
29 91
45 597
3. R o s s , S. R.
35
59 61
28 325
4. Rhule, L. H.
3 0 36
33 15 266
5. Kopaez, Bl.
6
15 37
18 283
6. Dilts, W. C .
3 -19 35
19 283
7. Schneider, Bl.
7
22 32
13 208
8. Anthony, K.
5 0 209
9. Packer, L.H.
21 -38 35
19
220
10. Hipp, Man.
59 180

1. Gates, Man.
2. Horvath, E . S.
3. Ellsworth, Man.
4. Vaughn, L. H.
5. Dunkelberger, W. C.
6. Hipp, Man.
7. Ottavianni, Man.
8. Stout, W. C .
9. Bierlein, E . S.
10. Warner, Bl.

18
16
12
11
11
11
11
9
9
8

G.
1. Casterline, Man.
2. Anthony, D.
3. Hipp, Man.
4. Borst, Mil.
5. R e e s , W. C.
6. Raines, E .
7. Wynings, W . C .
8. Skrimcovsky, Bl.
9. Wagner, S. R.
10. Lester, E . S.
No.
1. Roberts, C a l .
6
2. Lieberher, K. 16
3. Baustein, S.
5
4. Stucke.t, S. R 14
5. Klinger, Man. 14
6. Garganes, Mil. 14
7. Kutz, E .
4
8. Young, W. C.
9
9. Stellfox, Bl.
9
10. Knarr, L. H. 11

Totals
Play
Plays Yds. Ave.
125 819 6.55
111 626 5.64
96 384 4.00
63 302 4.79
43 299 6.95
38 262 6.89
39 230 5.90
50 209 4.18
59 182 3.08
59 180 3.05

FORWARD PASSING
A t t . Comp. Yds. %Comp.
83
47
605
56.6
91
45
597
49.4
61
28
325
45.9
35
19
283
54.3
35
19
220
54.3
37
18
283
48.6
33
15
266
45.4
32
13
208
40.6
19
9
134
47.3
21
9
97
42.9
PASS RECEIVING
G.
No.
Yards

TDs

Int. TDs
5
4
5
3
2
4
3
0
1
1
2
4
1
1
2
4
2
1
0
3
PATs

185
205
88
174
167
163
161
197
162
128

RUSHING
No.
Net
Rushes
Yards
42
214
50
209
59
180
35
173
33
161
24
159
30
103
43
100
31
93
15
92

Co-captain Jim Sleicher once
again leads the LHS Bald Eagle
booters in scoring according to,
s t a t i s t i c s released yesterday by
head coach Karl T. Herrmann.
Sleicher who s e t all kinds of
scoring records last s e a s o n
a s a sophomore with 17 goals
started the season slowly but
with his two goals against St.
Vincent took over the team leadership with five. He also has
one a s s i s t to his credit.
Right behind Sleicher are Don
Fay and Mick Minchoff with four
goals a piece. Fay noted for his
outstanding
wrestling
ability
also has four a s s i s t s to his
credit while Minchoff has one.
Co-captain Jack Infiisld follows
these two in scoring with three
goa Is.
Of the E a g l e s ' five victories
three have come as shutouts
showing that All-American goalie
Bruce parkill is again in top
form. Parkill who has been having tendon trouble in his left
foot scored his third shutout on
Saturday against St. Vincent.
The E a g l e s have outscored
their opponents 21-7 in seven

Prof Speaks
On Russian Tour

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

G.
1. Casterline, Man. 3
2. Dukett, E . S.
2
3. R o s s , S. R.
2
4. Dilts, W. C.
2
5. Packer, L.H.
3
6. Kopaez, Bl.
2
7. Rhule, L.H.
3
8. Schneider, Bl.
2
9. Masterson, E .
1
10. Lennox, Mil.
2

Tri-Captains Lead Eagle
Soccer Team in Statistics

PATS
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

A small but interested group
attended an informal
lecture
presented by John B i l s k i , a s s o
ciate professor of history, and
four of the students that accompanied him on a sixteen day tour
of Russia from Aug. 21 to Sept. 7.
DanSheets narrated many s l i d e s
of the sights they saw while in
the Soviet Union. Following the
s l i d e s Bilski, Dan S h e e t s , Kay
Martin, Bob Rose and Ann Heckel
answered the questions of the
group.
Through their answers
a picture of the life and customs
of the Russian people was presented.
When asked what was the most
worthwhile aspect of his trip.
Bob Rose said that he felt it
was the opportunity he had to
meet the R u s s i a n s t u d e n t s . Mr.
Bilski was most impressed with
the seemingly poor management
of the country and the reluctance
of the Russian people to work.
A Georgia State professor was
surprised when he called on a
male student in his Corporation
Finance c l a s s and a female
voice responded. The part-time
student, an insurance s a l e s m a n ,
had sent his secretary to take
n o t e s . Reader's
Digest

TDs
6
2
1
2
3
2
0
1
0
0

PUNTING
T o t a l Yards Ave. Longest Punt
261
43.5
59
653
40.8
54
201
40.2
56
546
39.0
58
536
38.3
45
532
38.0
68
151
37.9
51
339
37.7
335
37.2
53
360
32.7
40

Lock
Haven
State
Statistics
After
7

Soccer
Games

4
2
4
5
3
1
2

Total Shots On Goal
LHS
201
Oppon.
73
Average Shots/Game
LHS
28.7
Oppon.
10.4
Total Corner Kicks
LHS
48
Oppon.
18

Won
Lost
Tie
LHSC
LHSC
LHSC
LHSC
LHSC
LHSC
LHSC

Average Goals/Game
LHS
3.00
Oppon.
1.00

Alumni
Frostburg
St. Francis
Edinboro
Lycoming
Shippensburg
St. Vincent

1
2
1
0
0
3
0

Score By Periods
LHS
Oppon.
Total Games
LHS
21
Oppon.
7

EAGLE EYE CLASSIFIED
LOST: A Spalding Tennis Racket,
in the Rest Room on Ist floor Ulmer.
Please return to Mick McMillan
Room 93 Smith Hall. Reward.
WANTED; Responsible dogsitter
(pre-med, pre-vet, or early childhood
ed. major preferred) for whelping matron and neurotic (spoiled) male.
Various hours. Downtown Lock Haven. Sitters must be wiUing to honor
and respect the personality and soul
of their charges. 748-5621

Average Corner Kicks/Game
LHS
6.86
Oppon.
2.57

Lock
Haven
State
Name
Goals
Sleicher
5
Fay
4
Minchoff
4
Infield
3
Knight
1
Garman
1
Hess
1
Steffen
1
Lingle
1
DeFrancesco
0
Gonzales
0
Trautinan
0
Carpenter
0

The first forty years of life
give us the text, the next
thirty supply the commentary
on it.
Arthur

Schopenhauer

Happy birthday to Janet Sealer

Tonight at 7:00 pm in
Bentlejr Lounge the Physical
Education Majors Club will
sponsor a program on "Sensitivity Training in Education." The speaker will be
Or. Bruce Noble, director of
human energy research laboratory at the University of
Pittsburgh.
Contributions
will also be made liy Pitt
under-graduate students who
actually participated in the
sensitivity training program.
Everyone is invited and
welcome to attend.

Tonight
Walt Disney's
"RASCAL"
and Disney's

"HANG YOUR HAT
ON THE WIND"
Oct. 15 thru 21

"SLAVES"
Stephen Boyd

Dione Warwick

Ossie Davis
The tamings — the d e s i r e s - the furies
Of the

Old South

'CAMPUS CASINO

Volunteers in Service

STONE HOUSE

to Ameica

PIZZA
Pizza —
15


^
Tues.

nite

Pizza-IOC

special
a

steaks

Scoring
Assists
1
4
1
0
2
1
0
1
0
2
1
1
1

VISTA

Our Specialty
Roast Beef
Served Hot

Ave.
Gain
5.1
4.2
3.0
4.9
4.8
6.6
3.4
2.3
3.0
6.1

c o n t e s t s averaging three goals
per game while allowing the
opposition an average of only
one goal per game.
The booters sport a 5-1-1 record and get their big t e s t
Friday
afternoon
when they
entertain tough East Stroudsburg
State.

ON CAMPUS
Wednenesday

slice
meatballs

subs
Will deliver orders over $5

Rt. 220 Hogan Blvd.
748-3277

and
Thursday
PARSON'S STUDENT
COMMUNITY CENTER

Media of