BHeiney
Mon, 07/17/2023 - 13:14
Edited Text
Lock Haven State College

Fri., Oct. 31,1975

Popular string quartet returns
One of last season's best
received groups in the Lock
Haven Artist Series will return
on Thursday, November 6, for
a lecture-demonstration and
concert, made possible
through a grant from the Pa.
Council on the Arts.
The Concord String Quartet
of Mark Sokol on first violin,
Andrew Jennings on second
violin, John Kochanowski on
viola, and Norman Fischer on
cello will begin the day of
musical activities with a
demonstration and lecture on
string music at 11:00 a.m. in
the Sloan Center. Last year,
students found this activity to
be quite informative and
enjoyable.
The concert, beginning at
8:00 p.m. in the Sloan Theatre,
will feature selections by
Mozart,
Bartok,
and
Beethoven. Tickets may be
picked up in the pub by
showing an I.D. card.
The quartet's visit to Lock
Haven is a cooperative project
between the college music
department and the Keystone
Central School District. At
12:30 p.m., elementary string
students will be brought in

from area schools in the
district for an instructional
program by the quartet.
The Concord String Quartet
is one of the youngest of the
country's nationally-acclaimed
string quartets, with all four
members in their 20's. Their
matched set of instruments

was made especially for them
by master craftsman Sergio
Peresson of Italy. During the
morning session, they will
discuss the musical qualities of
each instrument and demonstrate how the matched set
ablends together on quartet
selections.

Six of 19 students named to
"Who's Who Among Students
in American Universities and
Colleges" for 1975-76 from
Lock Haven State have
received the honor for the
second year in a row.
They are Jan Albright of
Lancaster, Mary Ellen Brown,
Drexel Hill; Joe Euculano,
York; Gregory Jones, Elmira
Heights, N.Y.; Howard Smith,
Lock Haven; and Robert
Wright, Warrington.
Others named to "Who's
Who" for this year are Patricia
Buchanan, Marietta; Michele
Corkery, Ft. Washington;
David C. Heverly, Lock
Haven; Mary Kopp, St.
Marys; William McComas,
Narberth; JoAnn Morse,
Painted Post, N.Y.; Donna
Pasternak, Fairlawn, N.J.;
Larry Schmidt, York; Mark
Sildve, Lansdale; Elaine
Simmons, Ephrata; Yvonne
ENCORE PERFORMANCE - The Concord StrilngQuartet Smith, Brookfield Conn.;
is shown as they performed last season in Sloan. One of Brian Stoppe, Camp Hill; and
the youngest nationally acclaimed quartets, the group will Stephen Stumpo, Woodbury,
N.J.
make a repeat appearance at LHS next Thursday.
Selections to "Who's Who"
are made on the basis of
scholarship, participation and
Mylai and Vietnam, Agnew leadership in academic and
Other tapes that could be
and the news, U.S. and Latin extra curricular activities,
purchased if the money was
America, and Policy Makers citizenship, service to the
provided include Chinese,
Unmasked, among others. school, and promise of future
Japanese, Hindu, Serboaccomplishment.
These new tapes will be ready
Croatian,
Hebrew
and
for
student
use
within
the
next
Hungarian.
On tap for t^iis
few days.
Language tapes are made
weekend
The cassettes can be found
available by the Pennsylvania
TONIGHT - RHA All Night
in the audio-visual department
Consortium for International
Movies, 7:00, Price Aud.
of the library located in the
Education. This organization
SATURDAY
Preseason
basement. They may be
consists of representatives of
Wrestling Tourney, 9:00 a.m.
checked
out
of
the
library
for
a
the 13 state colleges and state
Thomas Field Hoi^se; Cross
period of one week.
university. Konick is the
Country Confei'ence
Meet,
Away; Football at Slippery
Konick stated that the
representative for Lock Haven
Rock, 1:30; Soccer vs. Frostlanguage tapes can be used by
State.
burg, 2:00 p.m., home.
"any student for his own
In addition to the selfself-instruction in these
SUNDAY - S.C.C.
Movie
instructional language tapes,
"Animal Crackers" 7:00 p.m.,
languages." These tapes,
cassette tapes just received
Ulmer Planetarium.
cont. on ipage 2
are on such varied topics as

Tapes facilffafe language se/f-/earn/ng
By TINA BROOKS

Staff Reporter
Do you want to learn to
speak Swahili? You can, now
that self-instructional "critical
language" cassette tapes are
available to help students
learn foriegn languages.
According to Dr. Marcus
Konick, Director of Academic
Services and International
Education, self-instructional
language tapes now include
Modern Greek, Polish,
Swahili, Arabic, Portuguese
and Italian. A tape instructing
English is also available for
foreign exchange students.

Students named
for inclusion in
Who's Who

P««e2

Friday, Oct. 31, 1975

EAGLE EYE

Who says you can never go
home?
caliber of football which Lock
Editor's note: The following is
one Lock Haven alumnus'
reaction to Homecoming '75.
The article was written by
John Heagney upon his first
return since his 1970 graduation, and was printed in the
Bucks County Courier Times.

It would be difficult to
imagine a place more resistant
to change than Lock Haven
State College.
More so than even the
conservative, central-Pennsylvania town in which it is
situated, my alma mater
remains virtually unaltered by
the five years since my
graduation.
When I drove thosefamiliar
200 miles northwest into the
Susquehanna River Valley last
weekend, I found nothing to
distinguish this from any other
homecoming weekend I had
spent there as a student.
Granted there were structural changes such as an alien
dormitory or two, a fine arts
building, not to mention
several new parking lots and
assorted walkways. There's
even a stone wall emblazoned
with the college's name and

date of birth adorning a

previously-naked corner of
campus.
But I'm not referring to
those types of change.
I'm talking about the stillpresent, terribly constructed
homecoming floats, the apathy
and the corpulent cheerieaders
who have been rah-rahing on
Lock Haven sidelines for more
than a century. It was all there
and all as I remembered it.
Even the weather was its usual
drizzle-threatening overcast.
I felt right at home as Lock
Haven's football team was
hammered silly by Edinboro
State.
It was like old times, with
the exception of the new
football stadium - an
unimposing, cyclone-fenced
field resting atop an even
less-imposing landfill a
quarter-mile walk from the
heart of campus.
And despite aspirations to
the contrary, the stadium is
nothing more than a cosmetic
touch, a useless trapping, h
has done nothing to bolster the
team's spirit, or to improve the

Haven alumni and students
reluctantly have come to call
their own.
But the football fiasco was
only part of this nostalgic
scenario.
For three of the four years I
attended Lock Haven, we were
shamed by the absence of
musical accompaniment on the
football field. As glorious
bands from other colleges
doubletimed across our 50yard line, we sat mutely
envious of the opposingteam's high-stepping drum
major and precision marching.
By my senior year, however.
Lock Haven was being
serenaded to defeat by a
"miniband," which was little
more than two sousaphones, a
trumpet and a bass drum.
Now, however, this problem
has been eliminated with
typical Lock Haven zeal misguided as it may be. The
miniband has been replaced
by a larger musical rabble
which - dressed only in jeans,
blue T-shirts ("The Band"
printed across the chest) and
cont. on page 3

tapes facilitate
cont. from page 1
unlike the Language Library
tapes of Spanish, French, and
German, are not used for
classes with one exception. Dr.
Peplow's class in "English as
a Second Language" uses the
English cassette tape.
The language tapes also
have a "strategic use," noted
Konick. He gave the
example of a LHS student who
is .going to Poland in an
exchange program. The selfinstructional Polish tape would
be helpful for that student to
learn the language. Konick
also stated that the English
tape is useful for the "foreign
student who needs more
instruction in the language."

Joe

DeFilippo's

Concert guide
Keith Jarrett: Nov. 1- Penn
State University
Brooklyn Bridge: Nov. 1,2Phila.
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Pure
Prairie League, Rare Earth:
Nov. 2- St. Francis College,
Corretta.

On November 4. . .
VOTE for WILLIAM M. (Bill) BROWN
for County Commissioner
The man with a program for Improvement

§
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"A commissioner must have the couraoe to makp riorkinr,o ,.,I,K„..,
regard to his political future. My decisions wil?bVteed on con i d l r r i o n o
you and what will be in the best interest fnr all th» n ^ „ r ° , 2^"i"'®'2''°".°'
» . " H : r f . l • r ! i l ^ ^ P ! ° e ' ^ . ° ' Linton County,
s l c S n ' ^ h o m r ' ° " "" " ' ' ' " " ' " ' ' " ' ° "''' "'°'"^
* ' ^ ™™'y as A paid political announcement.

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Friday, Oct. 31, 1975

page 3

EAGLE EYE

Eagle mac hine
e roll
rolls over Pitt
By GARY BRUBAKER
Staff Reporter
Led by Roger Bernecker's three-goal hat trick and
solid defensive play by the
entire Bald Eagle team, Coach
Kari Herrmann's "Big Red
Machine" rolled over a surprisingly slow University of
Pittsburgh eleven 5-0 last
Wednesday afternoon on
McCollum field.
The Bald Eagles, playing a tough, physical, and
intelligent game jiever let the
Panthers get untracked as
Kevin Crump scored the initial
goal of the contest just 13
minutes into the first period.
Taking a Mike Seigfried cross,
the Eagle halfback blasted a
beautiful shot which carromed
off the right post and into the
net for the score.
Lock Haven made it 2-0
just six minutes later as Roger
Bernecker scored on a direct
penalty kick - the Haven
booter awarded the free kick
on a tripping infraction called
against a Pitt defender inside
the penalty area.
Bernecker, perhaps the
best center forward in the
history of soccer at LHS,
scored his second goal late in
the first stanza to give the
Eagles a commanding 3-0 in
the contest. On a Dean Wilson
corner kick Mike McCartney
slammed a hard head shot
toward the goal, Bernecker
deflecting the shot with his hip
into the left corner of the net

from three yards out; McCartney garnering the assist.
Jon Conner concluded
the first half scoring for the
Bald Eagles,blocking a goal
kick by a Panther fullback and
slipping a pass to the Eagle
junior who bombed an 18 yard
shot into the left corner of
the net for the score, with
exactly 40 minutes gone in the
game.
Lock Haven's defense
which had been stingy all year
continued its fine play allowing the Panthers just two shots
the entire first half. Second
half action found much of the
same as the Panthers just

Wdhr refusas! nsiqnation hid
By FRED SCHULTZ
Staff Reporter
LHSC Head football coach
Bob Weller announced
Wednesday that he does not
intend to resign his position as
coach of the Bald Eagles.
Athletic Director Tod
Eberle, earlier this week,
asked for Weller's resignation.
His ultimatum was that Weller
either resign or be fired.
Weller has stated that he does
not intend to give up on this
season because of the circumstances. He does plan to finish
the season as coach of the Bald
Eagles and has no intentions
of quitting at the present time.
Weller's coaching record is
not quite a respectable one
although he has managed to
gain the respect of most of his

who soys you con never
cont. from page 2

sneakers - merrily pumps
dissonance into the half-time
air.
And wedged between all
this, our college president,
dressed in a western-cut black
suit, red-and-white string tie,
10-gallon hat and cowboy
boots, moseyed onto the footballfieldlike the Hoot Gibson
of Academia to announce the
homecoming queen and her
court.
"Is that guy for real?" my
wife whispered.
"That's the president of the
college," I answered as she
tried unsuccessfully to stifle a
laugh.
And after the crowning of
the homecoming queen, after

couldn't penetrate the Eagle
maze of defenders.
Lock
Haven's only score in period
two came on Bernecker's third
goal at 23:16 of the second
half. A Dean Wilson corner
kick landed among a host of
players from both teams Mike McCartney deflecting
the ball to Bernecker who
slammed a point blank shot
into the net, the Pitt goalie
never having time to react.
The Bald Eagles with
Wednesday's win over Pitt,
set a new all-time mark for
"most victories in a season by
a LHS soccer team," running
their seasonal mark to 11-1-1

the president had retreated
from the field, the band had
trudged back to the stands and
the cheerleaders continued
with their thankless job, the
fans began leaving. As the
second half started, the stands
were emptying faster than an
hourglass.
With the team behind 26-0,
we all had seen the end of the
game a hundred times before.
So it came as no surprise when
we heard the final tally was
52-0.
But if anything had been
different, if the team had won
or the band had been decked
out infinely-tailoreduniforms,
it just wouldn't have been Lock
Haven. And 1 would have been
miserable because of it.

players. Many tumors have
circulated as to who will be
Weller's replacement, but as
of yet, they are still rumors.
Further . developments on
this situation will be covered
by the Eagle Eye as they
occur.

CHARLEY LUCAS

Lucas receives
h on. mention
Lock Haven State freshman
fullback Charley Lucas has
been selected for Honorable
Mention honors on the weekly
ECAC All-star Squad for
Division III (71 Colleges).
Lucas, a 210-pound power
runner was picked for his fine
performance in Lock Haven's
tough 21-12 loss to Mansfield
State in football last Saturday.
The former Bald EagleNittany High School star
athlete rushed for 148 yards in
20 carries including a brilliant
85-yard touchdown run from
scrimmage in the third
quarter.
The frosh fullback has
gained 325 yards this season in
62 carries for a great average
per carry of 5.2 yards.

CLASSIFIEDS '

COACH BOB WELLER

I

HAUNTED HOUSE- Visit It
Oct. 29, 30, 31 or Nov. 1 at 220
East Bald Eagle St., Lock
Haven. Children: $.50, Adults:
$.75.

Addle A
^MSPK CAr. & Gin SHOP

-4r 120 E. Main Street, Lock Haven, Penna

I

Complete line of Cards,
Gifts, Artists' and
School Supplies
Hours: Mon., Thurs., Fri. 9 to 9
Wed. till noon
Tues., Sat. 9 to 5

X

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page 4

Friday, Oct. 31, 1975

EAGLE EYE
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"l/l/e realize the importance of Locli
Haven State College to the city of Lock \
Haven and to Clinton County. We feel ii
that Lock Haven State College is like a
small industry, and we want to do all
we can for the college because we (I
understand its financial relevance in
the community. That is why, during
our term in office, we stalled as long as
possible before taking over the old
Susque-View home on Susquehanna
Avenue; we wanted to allow the
[
Commonwealth more time to reach a
decision on whether or not to allocate
monies to the college for purchase of
s
those buildings for college use."

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-Carl W. Kephart and Charles L. Stevenson,
Incumbent Clinton County Commissioners

VOTE for Carl W. Kephart and Charles L. Stevenson
for County Commissioners on Tuesday^ November 4
Dormitory Residents: Vote at Vocational Building along Railroad Street in
front of McGhee Elementary School.
A Paid Political Advertisement

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