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The EAGLE EYE
VOL.
II — N o . 15
Thursday, January 31, 1963
STATE COLLEGE, LOCK HAVEN, PA.
Asked to Comply
70 Students Receive B,A, Groups
With Praeco Deadline
Degrees on January 20
Seventy students received bachelor degrees at the Jan. 20 commencement in
Price Auditorium.
Dr. Robert T. Oliver, chairman of the Department of Speech at The Pennsylvania State University, gave the commencement address. The degrees were
conferred by Dr. Richard T. Parsons, president of the college, to the seniors who
were presented by Dr. Gerald R. Robinson, dean of instruction.
Rev. Paul H. Kleffel, pastor of First Evangelical United Brethren Church,
gave the invocation and benediction and the Scripture reading. Robert Hinkelman, supervising teacher at The Akeley school, presided at the organ, and a
quartet from the College Choir
sang Brahms' "My Horn Shall
Weight a Willow Bough" and
Franz' "Dedication."
William Ames, a member of
the graduating class, offered
"Improvisation"
b y Charles
Williams on the piano.
Receiving cum laude (3.3 3.7 averages) degrees were Barbara M. Cleaver, Mary J. Williams, Judith P. Ertel, Theresa
M. Marano and James F. Funk.
Other graduates were Mary
Jane Berry, Sonia E. Hoberman,
Barbara D. Johnson, Ronald F.
Laird, Margaret A. Romeo,
Donna R. Weaver, Judith L.
Zell, June N . McCaleb, Roland
E. Weaver, Howard S. Smith,
Francis E. Welch, Richard N .
Saxton, Sheldon E. Saxton, Donald W. Vannauker, Gary L.
Heyd, Joyce S. Karichner, Ronald E. Fluke.
Rodney L. Hoover, John R.
Chiesa, Vivian R. Johnson,
Gladys L. Smith, Barbara M.
Cleaver, Donald R. Evans, Curtis P. Moore, Richard H. Hutchings, Rolland E. Shultz, Linda
Lee Daggett, William F. Ames,
Thomas L. Gingrich, John M.
Epperly.
Dee F. Bennett, Harry R. Murphy, Doris J. McCloskey, Joel
E. Dysart, Patricia G. Kring,
Ronald H. Meekins, Jerome S.
Roberts, Carl J. Tokarsky, M.
Carroll Grady, Charles H. Stambaugh, Richard J. Barich, Jacque
E. Erb, Mitchell H. Arseniu, Ray
R. Baker, Leon R. Miller, Dennis
G. Zook.
Garry A. Dearborn, James C.
Stover, John S. Brouse, Merrill
E. Fisher, Thomas H. Whitehouse, Mary Fetsko, Joseph N .
Marzo, Graham A. Nadal, Patricia E. McDonald, Lynne A.
Nadal, Frederick H. O'Connor,
Ronald G. Lilley, Thomas G.
Welsh, Ronald D. Distler, Helen
L. Mahaffey, Andrea R. Salvatori, Sharon E. Miller, Bradley
H. Oechler, Robert W. Hammer.
The morning of graduation a
breakfast was held at The Dutch
Inn, Mill Hall.
Peace Corps Exams
Examinations for the Peace
Corps will be given March 9 in
the Williamsport Post Office or
at any other listed center.
Thoroughbreds
Every thoroughbred horse in
the world today traces its ancestry to one of three British
sires: the stalions Darley Arabian, Byerly Turk and Godolphin Barba.
Disabled Veterans Can Get
Rehabilitation Training
The 1963 P r a e c o staff is
rapidly working toward its final
deadline for a spring distribution.
Irene J. Hash, editor-in-chief
of the '63 book, announced that
Wednesday is the last day for
pictures to be taken of organizations and committees. She requested that any groups that
have not been photographed
prior to this week and have not
been scheduled for next week
should notify her or one of her
staff members today.
Group Pictures
Smith Hall Lounge
Tues., 7 p.m., IRC
Wed., 8 p.m., SCC
Veterans who incurred a peacetime disability as a
result of service in the armed forces during the periods
July 26, 1947, to June 26, 1950, and Feb. 1, 1955, to Miss Hash also said that any
the p r e s e n t can now get vocational rehabilitation groups who have had informal
training. The provision is made
possible by the enactment of
PL 87-815.
If you are receiving compensation from the government because of a disability incurred
during either of these periods,
you may apply for vocational
rehabilitation by obtaining VA
Form 22-1900 at your nearest
VA office and sending it to the
Veterans Administration at 128
North Broad Street, Philadelphia 2.
Applicants will be provided
vocational counseling to ascertain what training they may
need to overcome any handicapping effects to their disabilities,
and to assist them in making a
choice of a future occupation.
The VA will pay for books
and tuition and a subsistence allowance during the period of
training which may be needed
for this purpose. Training will
not be provided under this Act
for veterans whose disabilities
are rated at less than 30 percent
unless they show clearly that the
disability causes a pronounced
employment handicap.
^Antigone' Cast
Selections Made
A tentative cast has been selected by Director Jack Handley for the College Players' winter production, "Antigone," to
be presented Feb. 21-22 in Price
Auditorium.
The cast includes Monte Shepler, Chorus; Joan Burroughs,
Antigone;. K a r e n Richardson,
Nurse; Nancy Smith, Ismene;
Jack Crowley, Haemon; Art
Emery, Creon; Chic Hamlin,
First Guard; Alan Dassenberger,
Second Guard; Harry Sisak,
Third Guard; Dick Balantine,
Page; Karen McMichael, Eurydice. The Messenger still has
not been chosen.
Dr. Handley asked that if the
above persons accept their parts,
they should stop in his office to
obtain a script this week. He
thanked those who tried out for
Antigone and invited all to return for tryouts for the spring
production.
El Ed Prof Joins
Akeley Staff
Paul W. Myers of Bristol begins his duties as assistant professor of elementary education
and supervising teacher in the
Akeley Campus School this semester. He replaces Mrs. Sue McKnight who resigned in the Fall.
Myers, a native of Williamsport, received a master of edu
cation degree at Rutgers University in 1959. He has taught
for six years in the Bristol, New
ton, Fallingston area.
Dr. Bernstein
Co-Authors
History Book
Dr. Paul Bernstein, chairman
of the social science department,
is the co-author with Prof. Robert W. Green of the department
of history at The Pennsylvania
State University of a new book.
History of Civilization: Since
1648.
The book, which was published last month by Littlefield,
Adams & Company, Patterson,
N.J., is the second of a two-volume set. The first, published in
1960, was entitled History of
Civilization: To 1648.
The new volume covers the
period from 1648 to the present
and greatly stresses Africa and
Asia as well as the European
countries. The book is divided
into 16 chapters, beginning with
"Western Europe in the 17th
and 18 th Centuries" and concluding with "The Under-developed Areas." Coverage includes data on events since 1945
in such problems as the European Common Market, the Marshall Plan, the threat of Communism, the Congo problem,
and the Cuban crisis.
Dr. Bernstein is now engaged
in a study in Franco-German
history in the 19th century entitled "The Paris-Biarritz Talks
of 1865." This new study is the
outgrowth of work previously
action pictures taken of their
activities and who wish to have raphers are especially needed, but
these pictures considered for use there is much typing, copy and
on their page in the yearbook layout work to be done.
should bring the negatives to the
Serving on Miss Hash's staff
publications office. High Hall, are Carolyn Strouble, associate
this week. Coverage of some editor in charge of copy; Diane
organizations will be less than of Carter, associate editor in charge
others because of a lack of good of layout; Karen Hogue, Chrisaction pictures, she said.
tie Lyons, Judy Ferrari, layout
This semester the entire staff assistants; Mary Lou Gorton, Joe
will meet in work sessions every O s m a n , Jake L a b a n , Chris
Tuesday night, beginning at 7 Dwyer, photographers; Peggy
Pegge Piper
p.m. Students interested in join- Conklin, typist.
ing the staff are encouraged to serves as business manager, asattend Tuesday's session in the sisted by Frances Markel, Rita
pubhcations o f f i c e .
Photog- Glasl and Ann Murray.
Shakespearian Play
To Be Given Here
By Canadian Theatre
"Twelfth Night" by William
Shakespeare will be presented by
the Canadian Players Foundation at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, in
Price Auditorium as the first
assembly program of the spring
semester.
The Canadian national touring theatre will be directed by
Tony van Bridge; the set will
be designed by Brian Jackson.
In "Twelfth Night" Shakespeare
treats the subject less farcically
and with perhaps greater feeling
than his "Comedy of Errors."
Viola, having taken on the dress
of a man to get herself into the
Court of the Duke of lUyria,
with whom she falls in love, becomes confused with her own
Deadline for
EAGLE EYE
Copy
WEDNESDAY
done in 1959 on a grant under
the auspices of the American
Philosophical Society of Philadelphia.
twin brother whom she had
thought dead.
Round this central point of
fun and pathos, Shakespeare
skillfully weaves two or three
hilarious sub-plots but as in so
many of his comedies we are
not let off entirely free, for as
we recognize the cruelty towards Shylock in "The Merchant of Venice," we are made
to see here the cruelty that arises
with regard to the character of
Malvohio steward to Olivia,
with whom the Duke is in love.
Shakespeare seems quite often to
tell us that while we all enjoy
fun and a good laugh, it too
often is at someone else's expense.
Admission for students is free.
WANTED
— U RGEN T —
The Eagle Eye stafF is desirous of contacting someone who lives in the Williamsport area who has a
class Thursday morning to
pick -up Eagle Eye publication from printer and deliver to the College.
Thursday, J a n u a r y 3 1 , 1963
Page 2
So We Say . . .
Worry or Work
A talk, a plan and freedom to work are imp o r t a n t t o s u c c e s s in c o l l e g e . It is i m p o r t a n t f o r
u s , a s s t u d e n t s of h i g h e r e d u c a t i o n , t o r e a l i z e
that t h o s e w h o succeed in life f o l l o w a well-laid
plan of activity.
During t h e e l e m e n t a r y and high school
years, l e a r n e r s are u s u a l l y h e l p e d by their
t e a c h e r s t o o r g a n i z e their study time. But, w h e n
these s a m e learners go to college and are expected t o plan their o w n study time, t h e y m a y
find it difficult t o p l a n t h e i r s t u d y a c t i v i t i e s a d e q u a t e l y if t h e i r f r e e d o m is t h e r e b y i n t e r f e r e d
writh. T h e r e s u l t is t h a t m a n y o f t h e s e s t u d e n t s
e x p e r i e n c e low^ g r a d e s o r a c t u a l f a i l u r e .
T h e learners should make an inventory of
his time and p l a n his d a i l y work so that h e will
succeed not only during his college career but
thereafter.
If t h e w o r k for e a c h d a y a n d t h e
t i m e f o r d o i n g it a r e p l a n n e d , g r e a t e r e n j o y m e n t
and efficiency will result.
T h e b u d g e t i n g one's work h a s a tonic effect
s o m e w h a t l i k e t h e b u d g e t i n g of o n e ' s m o n e y . T h e
i n d i v i d u a l know^s w h a t h e c a n d o a n d s e t s a b o u t
to use his energies a c c o r d i n g l y .
A s long as
e n o u g h t i m e h a s been set aside to c o m p l e t e t h e
s t u d y i n g a c t i v i t y , it is p o s s i b l e t o p a r t i c i p a t e in
and e n j o y some extra-curricular activities.
W i t h t h e s t a r t of a ne-w s e m e s t e r , e v e r y o n e
w h o finds it n e c e s s a r y s h o u l d m a k e a r e s o l u t i o n
t o c o n c e n t r a t e h i s e n e r g i e s o n t h e t a s k at h a n d
and not t o worry about t h e n e x t one until the
t i m e f o r p a r t i c i p a t i o n in it a r r i v e s .
U This You?
a t t e m p t t o complete it. By now
i t is at least 1:30 a.m. and you
are very tired and you say to
yourself, "gosh, I wish t h e
teachers here would let u p on
some of their assignments." You
A week slips by and you are
complete the assignment in a
still telling yourself, " o h well,
h u r r y and go t o bed. Are you
I'll get it d o n e ; I have a week
a procrastinator?
until it is d u e . " You set a time
Budgeting of y o u r time is one
in your mind when you are going t o get this assignment done. of t h e most i m p o r t a n t facets of
I t is due M o n d a y and today is y o u r college education. If you
Thursday. I will do it Saturday are sensible and m a t u r e , you will
d o your assignments efficiently
afternoon.
and not let t h e m go u n t i l the
Saturday afternoon comes and
last minute. You can rid youryour i n t r a m u r a l volleyball team
self of t h e feeling t h a t , "this is
has t o play off a m a t c h in the
d u e tomorrow so I have t o do
afternoon and you have a date
it t o n i g h t . "
t h a t night. O r , something else
comes up and you say t o yourself, "gosh, I was going t o do
t h a t assignment today, b u t it '62 Grad to Study
isn't due until Monday. I'll do Law in Washington
it Sunday n i g h t .
John A . Lewis, a 1962 g r a d u Sunday after church you eat ate of L H S C , has been accepted
lunch and decide to w a t c h Syra- for graduate study in t h e Law
cuse play t h e Celtics.
Before School of the American Univeryou know it 12 p . m . Sunday is sity in Washington, D . C.
here, and the assignment is due
Lewis, w h o received his d e at 8 a.m. Monday. You finally
force yourself, only because it is gree in elementary education,
due t o m o r r o w , t o sit d o w n and was active in student activities,
h a v i n g served as president of t h e
S t u d e n t Co-operative Council
and as co-captain of the varsity
football team.
Monday y o u are given an assignment d u e in t w o weeks.
You say t o yourself, "well, I
have t w o weeks u n t i l i t is due so
I w o n ' t sweat i t n o w . "
(Skain
Started
M a t t h e w Vassar was a brewer
of Poughkeepsie, N . Y., w h o
about 100 years ago founded
Vassar College, America's first
privately-endowed college for
women. Vassar girls still sing
these words:
" A n d so you see, for old V . C .
O u r love shall never fail.
Full well w e k n o w
T h a t all we o w e
T o M a t t h e w Vassar's ale!"
VM Ob± iimwc'
/ejf\
"One o f the hardest s e c r e t a
for a man to keep i s h i s o p i n ion o / himtielf.'*
ECONOMICS!
LITTLE MANjON CAMPUS
O n e of t h e most pressing
needs today is t o c o u n t e r a c t
economic
illiteracy.
Surveys
have shown t h a t there is an appalling lack of knowledge about
our free enterprise system — especially a m o n g o u r y o u t h .
A new feature of t h e Industrial Press Service is a questionanswer column dealing with
economic principles.
Periodically, T h e Eagle Eye will carry
this column to help further acquaint our readers w i t h economics.
Q. W h a t is the Gross
National Product?
A. It represents t h e total value
of goods and services in a
given year.
Q. Is it important?
A. T h e G N P is very i m p o r t a n t
because it tells us whether
o u r economy is m o v i n g a
head or standing still o r g o ing b a c k w a r d .
Q. How does it d o that?
"AT wgA^T fi6'« MY \HfeiucraM
gcpUAu.-— w e ; ? e
P0T« OH FtZO^ATIOhi,''
Book Company Opens Letter
Contest to College Students
A. By measuring t h e increase or
decline from one year t o
the next. If, for example,
A prize contest open only t o
the G N P for 1963 is $581
billion, while that for 1962 college students has been anwas $570 billion, t h e n o u r nounced by Grove Press.
rate of g r o w t h would be 2
G r o v e will award $100 for
per cent.
the best letter of application by
K i t t e n , heroine of Robert C o Q. W h a t is the actual rate of ver's current best-seller. O n e
growth?
H u n d r e d Dollar MisunderstandA. Over recent years it has been ing, for admission to a mythical
2.5 per cent. T h e historic southern university.
average of 4 p e r cent.
O n e H u n d r e d Dollar Misunderstanding is a novel about
the misadventures of J. S., a
white college sophomore, and
Kitten, a young and beautiful
N e g r o prostitute.
Eluke OeH Grad
Assistantship
Entries must be no more than
100 words in length and must
be w r i t t e n in Kitty's own style
— of which a sample (taken
from t h e book) is given below:
"Course, he d u m , ain he fault,
I spose. Maybe he jes born d u m .
H e will begin his duties in Maybe he jes born Whitefolks
September
1963, instructing
physical education classes while
p u r s u i n g a master of science de- Review by Dr. Deer
gree.
T h e assistantship g r a n t
offers a stipend plus waiver of all Printed in Book
A n excerpt from a review b y
fees.
Accompanying
Fluke
t o D r . Irving Deer appears as the
Maryland will be his wife. cover of a new drama book p u b D o n n a , and their t w o children: lished b y the Cambridge University Press. T h e book is T h e
Ronnie and T e r r i .
D a r k Comedy ( T h e DevelopWhile at Lock H a v e n State, m e n t of Modern Comic T r a Fluke was a m e m b e r of Kappa gedy) b y J. L. Styan. D r . Deer's
Delta Pi, education honorary review was one of t w o Amerifraternity; a sports reporter for can reviews included among a
T h e Eagle Eye, a founder of t h e group of five quoted from such
local colony of Lambda C h i Al- well-known English and French
pha, and a m e m b e r of the Stu- journals as the Times Educadent Co-operative Council, Var- tional Supplement and the Mersity Club, football team ( t w o - cure de France.
year varsity c e n t e r ) and t r a c k
and field team.
Ronald Fluke, a J a n u a r y
graduate in health and physical
education from Altoona, has a c cepted a g r a d u a t e assistantship
in .physical education at the U n i versity of Maryland.
G O O D DEFENSE
" H o w m a n y students are enrolled in the u n i v e r s i t y ? " asked
the old grad, w i t h deceptive p o liteness.
" E i g h t t h o u s a n d , " replied the
coach.
" T h e n is it too m u c h to ask
t o have t w o of t h e m in f r o n t of
the ball carrier?" snapped the
alumnus.
d u m , so he kin lissen t ' t h a t b i g word tee vee preachin, an so's
he kin dig t h a t shottin and
fightin an ack mean an maybe
even kill somebody h u m a n , b u t
not so's he kin do nothin m u c h
else, like talk sweet an play
nice."
T h e 100 runners-up in t h e
contest will receive a full year's
subscription t o t h e b i - m o n t h l y
magazine. Evergreen Review.
Entries will be judged by a
board appointed by the p u b lisher, and all entries will become t h e property of t h e p u b lisher. Entries should be s u b mitted t o K i t t e n Contest Editor,
Grove Press, Inc., 64 University
Place, N e w York 3 , N e w York.
They m u s t be postmarked n o
later than March 3 1 .
M; Neipbors
"Well, w h a t do I l i k e ? "
THE EAGLE EYE
Lock Haven State College
Lock Haven, Pa.
PRESS
Published weekly by Students during t h e regular school
year e x c e p t d u r m g holidays and e x a m i n a t i o n s .
Chrii Dwyer, editor
Bob Stroble, tportt
editor
Thursday, January 31, 1963
Page 3
Abroad' Provide
Varied School Programs 'Classrooms
Summer Study in 6 Countries
Offered in Britain, Austria
Eleven groups, each containing 20-30 selected American
An opportunity to combine vacation abroad with six weeks at a European college students, will form semsummer school is available to qualified American students through the Institute of inars in various European cities
International Education. Applications for study at three British universities and next summer to study the lantwo Austrian schools during July and August 1963 are now being accepted by HE. guages, culture and civilization
The three British programs offer a choice of subjects and periods which of these countries during a ninemay be studies at the appropriate university concerned. S h a k e s p e a r e and week stay.
Elizabethan drama will be offered at Stratford-upon-Avon by the University of Designed for the serious student who does not plan to see all
Birmingham; the history, literaof Europe in a short summer.
ture and arts of 17th century Vienna will hold a special sum
Classrooms Abroad tries to give
England will be the course at mer session at its St. Wolfgang
him a more profound experience
the University of Oxford; a campus, on Lake St. Wolgang,
through a summer of living in
study of British history, philoso- Stroble, Austria. Courses availone of the following cities: Berphy and literature from 1688 to able to students will include law
lin, Munich or Tubingen in Ger18 32 will be presented at the and political science, liberal arts,
many; Vienna in Austria; BeUniversity of E d i n b u r g h in and the German language. Stu
sancon, Grenoble or Pau in
Scotland.
dents may also participate in the
The world's largest absorption France; Neuchatel in SwitzerCourses for all three sessions skiing, sailing and other outdoor
are designed for graduate stu- sports for which the area is fam tube for spectrographic research land; Madrid or Santander in
dents and teachers but under- ous — and all of which will be is being built at The Pennsyl- Spain; and Florence in Italy.
graduates who have completed available to them at very moderGraded classes in small secvania State University to study,
at least two years of university ate fees.
tions of six to 10 students, each
indirectly, the atmosphere of the under the supervision of Ameriwork may apply. The British
The University of Vienna planets.
Summer Schools fee of $2 54
can and native professors, will
deal with the reading of classicovers full tuition, room and program is open to students who
have completed at least two
The instruments will extend cal and modern texts, the daily
board.
years of college. The fee for
A high point of the two Aus- the full six weeks, including 150 feet through three subter- press, contemporary problems,
trian summer sessions will be tuition, maintenance, tours, ex- ranean rooms of the chemistry- conversation and composition,
the opportunity for students to cursions, and Music Festival at- physics building on the campus. pronunciation and grammar.
attend the famed Salzburg Mu- tendance, is $3 3 5, with an op- It is being built through funds
Students also will hear lecsic Festival ,including one opera, tional four-day trip to Vienna supplied by the National Science tures on history and literature
one concert and Hofmannsthal's costing $3 5.
and meet with outstanding perFoundation.
drama "Everyman."
sonalities. They will have full
Travel arrangements to and
At the S a l z b u r g Summer from Europe are the responsiA discovery made by Dr. auditing privileges at the uniSchool, at Salzburg-Klessheim, bility of the student. A limited David H. Rank, research profes- versity in each of the selected
towns and cities and will particiAustria, emphasis will be placed number of full or partial scholaron German language study. At- ships are availabe to both the sor of physics, and his associates pate in all academic and social
tendance at one of the several British and Austrian summer led to the special grant by the activities with German, Austrian, French, Swiss, Spansh and
German language courses is schools, but in no case do they N.S.F.
Italian students.
mandatory. Other courses in cover transportation costs.
Heretofore, it was thought
art, music, economics and poliMembers of Classrooms AApplications for admission that molecular hydrogen lying broad will live with private famtics will be taught in English.
Besides the opportunity to at- and for scholarships may be ob- outside the earth's atmosphere ilies in each city, eat many of
tend the music festival, a variety tained from the Counseling Di- would be very difficult to detect. their meals with their hosts and
of conducted tours of Salzburg vision, Institute of International
share the activities of their sons
and the vicinity will be avail- Education, 800 Second Avenue, However, recent experiments in- and daughters. They will have
dicate
that
molecular
hydrogen
able to students.
New York 17, N . Y. Completed
ample opportunities to meet
British Summer School scholar- can be identified readily through young people from student, reThe fee for the entire pro- ship applications must be regram, including room, board ceived before March 1, and ad- observation of the fundamental ligious, and political organizations.
Regular attendance at
and tuition, as well as festival mission a p p l i c a t i o n s before of its quadropole spectrum.
theatres, concerts and movies as
tickets, is $245.
Applicants March 30. Scholarship applicaThe new instrument will be well as visits to museums, libmust be between the ages of 18
tions for the Austrian schools five times larger and many times raries, factories, youth organizaand 40 and must have completed
must be returned by March 1,
tions, and other points of interat least one year of college work.
and admission applications by more powerful than the existing est are included in the program.
The historic University of May 1.
equipment.
Each group will follow its
Largest Tube
To Be Built At
Penn State
seven-week stay in a city or
town with an optional two-week
tour of German, French, Spanish or Italian areas. Since most
programs end in mid-August,
participants have a chance to
remain in Europe for private
travel after the program.
Dr. Frank D. Hirschbach,
director of Classrooms Abroad,
said: "We have found through
many years of experience that it
is quite possible, even if you
don't know a word of the language, to learn more than a
year's worth of college German,
French or Italian in the course
of a summer," provided that we
get serious and mature students
who are willing to mix business
with pleasure."
Dr. Hirschbach, who also
h e a d s the German-language
groups, teaches at the University
of Minnesota. The French and
Spanish groups will be directed
by John K. Simon and Robert
E. Kelsey, members of the Romance Languages Department at
Yale. The Italian group will be
led by Charles Affron of Brandeis University.
Classrooms Abroad, now in
its seventh year, has grown from
11 students in 1956 to an anticipated 300 in 1963. Its former students represent some 200
American colleges.
Full information can be obtained by writing to Classrooms
Abroad, Box 4171, University
Station, Minneapolis 14, Minn.
T. Albright Elected
To Head Math Club
Terry L. Albright, freshman
in math from Warrior Mark,
was unanimously elected president of the Math Club for 1963.
Also elected were Gary Bowes,
vice president; Joyce Cook, secretary; Gary Bitner, treasurer;
George Taylor, SCC representative.
PENNSHIRE
Be "Label" ConsciousI
McGregor
• Stetson
• Nunn-Bush
• Alligator
• Jayson
• Worsted-Tex
• Middishade
• Woolrich
• Hanes
• Jerks
^oy'
110 E. Main Street
CLOTHES
Prepare for Student
Teaching
—•—
Suits — Sport Coats
Zip-Lined Raincoats
$18-$23-$28
—•—
Orion & Wool
Slacks
$7.50
REELY
HURTS/
come visit
millbrook art
gallery
HEADQUARTERS
for
•
Susan Van Heusen
Ladies Shirts
•
Plymouth Raincoats
•
Woolrich Sportswear
•
College-Style Blazers
FINAL WEEK OF SALE
Bmr
eVRYTHlMG-
29WAKeD
•
ffi
'Prescription Specialists'
At the Monument
ES
Formal Wear Rental
We Appreciate LHSC
We Welcome You to Another
Fine Lock Haven Institution
LOCK HAVEN
w
Thursday, January 31, 1963
Page 4
Named H M
2 Rule Changes Made InDuttry
Football Poll
In Co-ed Basketball
Two new rules have been added to the women's
basketball game this year. One called the "roving
player" permits two players — one from each side of
the court — to cross the center line. Previously,
guards had to stay on one side of this line and forwards on the other. One guard and one forward will
be designated to be this roving player for the game.
When one team gets the ball, the roving guard
crosses the line and joins the three forwards, thus becoming a forward. At the same |
DENNIS DUrTRY
Dennis Duttry, senior in phy
sical eductaion from Curwens
ville, was selected for honorable
It seems that for the first time in many years the Bald
mention in the Williamson 1962 Eagles w i l l be the underdog when they meet the Huskies on
Little All-American Balanced the mats in Bloomsburg on Feb. 2 3 . This past Tuesday there
Cagemen Face
Indiana In
Poll.
Another rule change involves
Duttry's selection was based
the fouling of a guard. Preupon his performance as senior
viously, when a guard was Away Tilt
time, the opposite team's roving
forward also crosses the line and
becomes a guard.
fouled, the ball was brought to
by
the other side of the court for
Skip Fennell
a forward to take the shot. (In
With C o a c h Stan Daley's
.women's basketball, only for- hard-court five having lost their
wards can shoot). The new rule past four garnes, we hope the
permits the roving guard to take future of the team will brighten
this shot.
with the beginning of this new
Lock Haven State's basketball semester. (This does not take
team, in preparing for its opener in the Edinboro game of last
next week, at first found it diffi- | Saturday since the paper was go
cult to incorporate the new rov- "^g to press).
During last semester, the basing player rule since most of the
players have been playing the keteers posted a 1-7 record, with
sport for several years on the their lone win coming over
Two of their
balanced court system. How- Juniata 69-66.
ever, one of the lettermen said losses were quite close, however
that once the players are more — 68-63 defeat to Juniata and
familiar in playing according to a 60-59 thriller to California
these changes, the team has a State who scored the climatic
good chance for an undefeated basket as the buzzer sounded.
Soph Bob Mills and Juniors
season.
About 40 women turned out Jay Garner and Wayne Short
for early practices. With all pace the squad in scoring while
but three of last year's team Mills, Garner and Soph Gary
back and with several promising Myers lead in rebounding.
Tomorrow at Indiana, the
prospects in the freshman class,
Bald Eagles meet a fairly good
this prediction may hold true.
Indians team and look toward
their first win of the spring semester. Monday the team travels
Miller to Captain to Mansfield.
1 9 6 3 Grid Team
Richard Miller, junior in physical education from Tyrone, has
been
elected
captain of the
1963 Bald Eagle
grid team.
Miller was the
team's
leading
ground
gainer
this past season
RICHARD MILLER in his first season as a starter at halfback. In
eight games he accounted for
more than 900 yards and averaged almost 40 yards per kick
as the team's punter.
This next week will be a busy one for all three of LHSC's
varsity squads. The basketball team meets a formidable Indiana
team here tomorrow night; Saturday afternoon coach Hacker's
tankmen will travel to Bloomsburg for a tough splash with the
Huskies; Saturday evening finds coach Ridenour's grapplers returning to the mats in Thomas Field House to face Rochester.
After the weekend they all take to the road. Coach Daley's basketeers not only have to face one of the top small college teams
Monday night, but also Mansfield's enthusiastic student body.
Tuesday the swimmers and wrestlers will be competing at East
Stroudsburg.
co-captain and end on the Bald
Eagle football team.
Previously he had achieved
conference and state-wide recognition. The Pennsylvania State
College A t h l e t i c Conference
named him to the second team
of the Conference All-Stars, and
the Associated Press awarded
him an honorable mention on its
All-State squad.
w a s a battle of the unbeatens as Bloom tangled w i t h Lycoming a t the nearby college. Our paper w e n t to press before
the results of this match were k n o w n , but it w a s expected
to be closer than the match on Feb. 2 3 . M a n y of the sports
enthusiasts East of here feel that either of these teams could
d o w n our Bald Eagles. Both of these teams are coached by
Lock Haven grads. Bill Garson, Bloom's outstanding heavyweight a n d our former high school teammate, boasts that
there is not a team around they could not beat. W e have
seen the Huskies on several occasions a n d w e must admit
that they have w h a t it takes a n d w i l l be tough to match.
However, do not sell the Bald Eagles short. Coach Ridenour
is doing an outstanding job and his squad is improving
rapidly. O n that eventful d a y in February, anything is liable
to happen.
Co-eds Host Bloom
In Opener Tomorrow
Since we are now student teaching down Williamsport way,
we are a little out of contact with the campus. For that reason
we will be giving up our sports editing job. We may write a
column occasionally, but the bulk of the work will be done by
The women's basketball team the capable sports staff we leave behind.
will take on Bloomsburg State SHORT SHOTS —
College tomorrow afternoon in
Dick Miller will captain LHSC's gridders next season . . .
Thomas Fieldhouse to open its
1963 season.
Varsity action Russ Houck recently rated Syracuse as the top wrestling
will take place following the power a t that time . . . California SC has introduced volleyball as a n inter-collegiate sport . . . Indiana's intercollegiate
jayvee game at 4:15.
The starting lineup was not rifle team is the defending WPCRL champions . . . O f the four
available at press time, but with longest games in the conference's basketball history, LH has
most of last year's lettermen re- played in three of them. They all went for three over-times.
One of them racked up the highest single game score on
turning, prospects look up for
record — Cheyney 138 to LH's 128 in 1955 . . . Joe lacone,
a good season.
West Chester's Little All American, has accepted a n offer to
Schedule
play for the Philadelphia Eagles . . . W e hate to say it, but
Feb. 13—Sf. Francis—7 p.m.
it looks like our prediction for the basketball team is fast
Feb. 1 9 — B l o o m s b u r g — A w a y becoming a reality.
Feb. 23—Shippensburg—
Away
Feb. 2 6 — G e t t y s b u r g ^ - 4 p.m.
Before You Get Bogged Down
March 2 — M i s e r i c o r d i a —
1:30 p.m.
Bowl a Few Games
March 5 — E - f o w n — 3 p.m.
al the
March 7 — P e n n S t a t e — A w a y
Slim
—
FLEMINGTON
O p e n bowling Friday,
Saturday and Sunday
MID-WINTER
Grapplers Host
Rochester Saturday
8:00 p.m.
Mjf Neiptors
_jr•-1*00 ODwIV___,^^
llHOMESisl ViSlTORsia]
II '°*ft* '^"* '^^J.
"He's our darh horse—"
There are many reasons for
the absence of U. S. players from
bigtime hockey but it was Muzz
Patrick, the New York Rangers
coach, who put the principal
cause in proper perspective. He
says that while hockey is played
in the U. S. by some 600,000
youngsters, there is not the intensity of competition among
the players here that prevails in
Canada. Hence, he says they
cannot properly develop into
top-flight puck wielders.
"The unfortunate fact is that
instead of developing players we
are only developing fans," says
Patrick. As to U. S. college
players, Patrick says that they,
too, do not have the competitive
drive to acquire the tremendously greater skill required of big
league puckmen. He says that
college boys spend "too much
time stdying" which is a com-
plaint that many parents would
love to have said of their offspring.
With four of the six hockey
teams based in the U. S. (New
York, Detroit, Boston, Chicago) , it's really a shame that
we don't have a single native
United States player in the National Hockey League today.
—«—
Will Army's eleven ever go
"bowling?" The West Pointers
have never played in a post-season bowl game. A Navy team
tied the U. of Washington 1414 in the second Rose Bowl
game (1924). In 195 5 the Middies shut out Ole Miss 21-0 in
the Sugar Bowl. And three yars
later, it was Navy 20, Rice 7
in the Cotton Bowl. In 1959
an inspired Air Force played
TCU to a scoreless tic in New
Orleans.
Save 2 5 % to 5 0 %
Sweaters - Slacks - Sport Coats - Loden Coats
Jackets - Sport Shirts - Vests
All-Weather Coats - Socks - Ties
The Store for Young Men
Directly
Opposite the first
National BattJt.
i
VOL.
II — N o . 15
Thursday, January 31, 1963
STATE COLLEGE, LOCK HAVEN, PA.
Asked to Comply
70 Students Receive B,A, Groups
With Praeco Deadline
Degrees on January 20
Seventy students received bachelor degrees at the Jan. 20 commencement in
Price Auditorium.
Dr. Robert T. Oliver, chairman of the Department of Speech at The Pennsylvania State University, gave the commencement address. The degrees were
conferred by Dr. Richard T. Parsons, president of the college, to the seniors who
were presented by Dr. Gerald R. Robinson, dean of instruction.
Rev. Paul H. Kleffel, pastor of First Evangelical United Brethren Church,
gave the invocation and benediction and the Scripture reading. Robert Hinkelman, supervising teacher at The Akeley school, presided at the organ, and a
quartet from the College Choir
sang Brahms' "My Horn Shall
Weight a Willow Bough" and
Franz' "Dedication."
William Ames, a member of
the graduating class, offered
"Improvisation"
b y Charles
Williams on the piano.
Receiving cum laude (3.3 3.7 averages) degrees were Barbara M. Cleaver, Mary J. Williams, Judith P. Ertel, Theresa
M. Marano and James F. Funk.
Other graduates were Mary
Jane Berry, Sonia E. Hoberman,
Barbara D. Johnson, Ronald F.
Laird, Margaret A. Romeo,
Donna R. Weaver, Judith L.
Zell, June N . McCaleb, Roland
E. Weaver, Howard S. Smith,
Francis E. Welch, Richard N .
Saxton, Sheldon E. Saxton, Donald W. Vannauker, Gary L.
Heyd, Joyce S. Karichner, Ronald E. Fluke.
Rodney L. Hoover, John R.
Chiesa, Vivian R. Johnson,
Gladys L. Smith, Barbara M.
Cleaver, Donald R. Evans, Curtis P. Moore, Richard H. Hutchings, Rolland E. Shultz, Linda
Lee Daggett, William F. Ames,
Thomas L. Gingrich, John M.
Epperly.
Dee F. Bennett, Harry R. Murphy, Doris J. McCloskey, Joel
E. Dysart, Patricia G. Kring,
Ronald H. Meekins, Jerome S.
Roberts, Carl J. Tokarsky, M.
Carroll Grady, Charles H. Stambaugh, Richard J. Barich, Jacque
E. Erb, Mitchell H. Arseniu, Ray
R. Baker, Leon R. Miller, Dennis
G. Zook.
Garry A. Dearborn, James C.
Stover, John S. Brouse, Merrill
E. Fisher, Thomas H. Whitehouse, Mary Fetsko, Joseph N .
Marzo, Graham A. Nadal, Patricia E. McDonald, Lynne A.
Nadal, Frederick H. O'Connor,
Ronald G. Lilley, Thomas G.
Welsh, Ronald D. Distler, Helen
L. Mahaffey, Andrea R. Salvatori, Sharon E. Miller, Bradley
H. Oechler, Robert W. Hammer.
The morning of graduation a
breakfast was held at The Dutch
Inn, Mill Hall.
Peace Corps Exams
Examinations for the Peace
Corps will be given March 9 in
the Williamsport Post Office or
at any other listed center.
Thoroughbreds
Every thoroughbred horse in
the world today traces its ancestry to one of three British
sires: the stalions Darley Arabian, Byerly Turk and Godolphin Barba.
Disabled Veterans Can Get
Rehabilitation Training
The 1963 P r a e c o staff is
rapidly working toward its final
deadline for a spring distribution.
Irene J. Hash, editor-in-chief
of the '63 book, announced that
Wednesday is the last day for
pictures to be taken of organizations and committees. She requested that any groups that
have not been photographed
prior to this week and have not
been scheduled for next week
should notify her or one of her
staff members today.
Group Pictures
Smith Hall Lounge
Tues., 7 p.m., IRC
Wed., 8 p.m., SCC
Veterans who incurred a peacetime disability as a
result of service in the armed forces during the periods
July 26, 1947, to June 26, 1950, and Feb. 1, 1955, to Miss Hash also said that any
the p r e s e n t can now get vocational rehabilitation groups who have had informal
training. The provision is made
possible by the enactment of
PL 87-815.
If you are receiving compensation from the government because of a disability incurred
during either of these periods,
you may apply for vocational
rehabilitation by obtaining VA
Form 22-1900 at your nearest
VA office and sending it to the
Veterans Administration at 128
North Broad Street, Philadelphia 2.
Applicants will be provided
vocational counseling to ascertain what training they may
need to overcome any handicapping effects to their disabilities,
and to assist them in making a
choice of a future occupation.
The VA will pay for books
and tuition and a subsistence allowance during the period of
training which may be needed
for this purpose. Training will
not be provided under this Act
for veterans whose disabilities
are rated at less than 30 percent
unless they show clearly that the
disability causes a pronounced
employment handicap.
^Antigone' Cast
Selections Made
A tentative cast has been selected by Director Jack Handley for the College Players' winter production, "Antigone," to
be presented Feb. 21-22 in Price
Auditorium.
The cast includes Monte Shepler, Chorus; Joan Burroughs,
Antigone;. K a r e n Richardson,
Nurse; Nancy Smith, Ismene;
Jack Crowley, Haemon; Art
Emery, Creon; Chic Hamlin,
First Guard; Alan Dassenberger,
Second Guard; Harry Sisak,
Third Guard; Dick Balantine,
Page; Karen McMichael, Eurydice. The Messenger still has
not been chosen.
Dr. Handley asked that if the
above persons accept their parts,
they should stop in his office to
obtain a script this week. He
thanked those who tried out for
Antigone and invited all to return for tryouts for the spring
production.
El Ed Prof Joins
Akeley Staff
Paul W. Myers of Bristol begins his duties as assistant professor of elementary education
and supervising teacher in the
Akeley Campus School this semester. He replaces Mrs. Sue McKnight who resigned in the Fall.
Myers, a native of Williamsport, received a master of edu
cation degree at Rutgers University in 1959. He has taught
for six years in the Bristol, New
ton, Fallingston area.
Dr. Bernstein
Co-Authors
History Book
Dr. Paul Bernstein, chairman
of the social science department,
is the co-author with Prof. Robert W. Green of the department
of history at The Pennsylvania
State University of a new book.
History of Civilization: Since
1648.
The book, which was published last month by Littlefield,
Adams & Company, Patterson,
N.J., is the second of a two-volume set. The first, published in
1960, was entitled History of
Civilization: To 1648.
The new volume covers the
period from 1648 to the present
and greatly stresses Africa and
Asia as well as the European
countries. The book is divided
into 16 chapters, beginning with
"Western Europe in the 17th
and 18 th Centuries" and concluding with "The Under-developed Areas." Coverage includes data on events since 1945
in such problems as the European Common Market, the Marshall Plan, the threat of Communism, the Congo problem,
and the Cuban crisis.
Dr. Bernstein is now engaged
in a study in Franco-German
history in the 19th century entitled "The Paris-Biarritz Talks
of 1865." This new study is the
outgrowth of work previously
action pictures taken of their
activities and who wish to have raphers are especially needed, but
these pictures considered for use there is much typing, copy and
on their page in the yearbook layout work to be done.
should bring the negatives to the
Serving on Miss Hash's staff
publications office. High Hall, are Carolyn Strouble, associate
this week. Coverage of some editor in charge of copy; Diane
organizations will be less than of Carter, associate editor in charge
others because of a lack of good of layout; Karen Hogue, Chrisaction pictures, she said.
tie Lyons, Judy Ferrari, layout
This semester the entire staff assistants; Mary Lou Gorton, Joe
will meet in work sessions every O s m a n , Jake L a b a n , Chris
Tuesday night, beginning at 7 Dwyer, photographers; Peggy
Pegge Piper
p.m. Students interested in join- Conklin, typist.
ing the staff are encouraged to serves as business manager, asattend Tuesday's session in the sisted by Frances Markel, Rita
pubhcations o f f i c e .
Photog- Glasl and Ann Murray.
Shakespearian Play
To Be Given Here
By Canadian Theatre
"Twelfth Night" by William
Shakespeare will be presented by
the Canadian Players Foundation at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, in
Price Auditorium as the first
assembly program of the spring
semester.
The Canadian national touring theatre will be directed by
Tony van Bridge; the set will
be designed by Brian Jackson.
In "Twelfth Night" Shakespeare
treats the subject less farcically
and with perhaps greater feeling
than his "Comedy of Errors."
Viola, having taken on the dress
of a man to get herself into the
Court of the Duke of lUyria,
with whom she falls in love, becomes confused with her own
Deadline for
EAGLE EYE
Copy
WEDNESDAY
done in 1959 on a grant under
the auspices of the American
Philosophical Society of Philadelphia.
twin brother whom she had
thought dead.
Round this central point of
fun and pathos, Shakespeare
skillfully weaves two or three
hilarious sub-plots but as in so
many of his comedies we are
not let off entirely free, for as
we recognize the cruelty towards Shylock in "The Merchant of Venice," we are made
to see here the cruelty that arises
with regard to the character of
Malvohio steward to Olivia,
with whom the Duke is in love.
Shakespeare seems quite often to
tell us that while we all enjoy
fun and a good laugh, it too
often is at someone else's expense.
Admission for students is free.
WANTED
— U RGEN T —
The Eagle Eye stafF is desirous of contacting someone who lives in the Williamsport area who has a
class Thursday morning to
pick -up Eagle Eye publication from printer and deliver to the College.
Thursday, J a n u a r y 3 1 , 1963
Page 2
So We Say . . .
Worry or Work
A talk, a plan and freedom to work are imp o r t a n t t o s u c c e s s in c o l l e g e . It is i m p o r t a n t f o r
u s , a s s t u d e n t s of h i g h e r e d u c a t i o n , t o r e a l i z e
that t h o s e w h o succeed in life f o l l o w a well-laid
plan of activity.
During t h e e l e m e n t a r y and high school
years, l e a r n e r s are u s u a l l y h e l p e d by their
t e a c h e r s t o o r g a n i z e their study time. But, w h e n
these s a m e learners go to college and are expected t o plan their o w n study time, t h e y m a y
find it difficult t o p l a n t h e i r s t u d y a c t i v i t i e s a d e q u a t e l y if t h e i r f r e e d o m is t h e r e b y i n t e r f e r e d
writh. T h e r e s u l t is t h a t m a n y o f t h e s e s t u d e n t s
e x p e r i e n c e low^ g r a d e s o r a c t u a l f a i l u r e .
T h e learners should make an inventory of
his time and p l a n his d a i l y work so that h e will
succeed not only during his college career but
thereafter.
If t h e w o r k for e a c h d a y a n d t h e
t i m e f o r d o i n g it a r e p l a n n e d , g r e a t e r e n j o y m e n t
and efficiency will result.
T h e b u d g e t i n g one's work h a s a tonic effect
s o m e w h a t l i k e t h e b u d g e t i n g of o n e ' s m o n e y . T h e
i n d i v i d u a l know^s w h a t h e c a n d o a n d s e t s a b o u t
to use his energies a c c o r d i n g l y .
A s long as
e n o u g h t i m e h a s been set aside to c o m p l e t e t h e
s t u d y i n g a c t i v i t y , it is p o s s i b l e t o p a r t i c i p a t e in
and e n j o y some extra-curricular activities.
W i t h t h e s t a r t of a ne-w s e m e s t e r , e v e r y o n e
w h o finds it n e c e s s a r y s h o u l d m a k e a r e s o l u t i o n
t o c o n c e n t r a t e h i s e n e r g i e s o n t h e t a s k at h a n d
and not t o worry about t h e n e x t one until the
t i m e f o r p a r t i c i p a t i o n in it a r r i v e s .
U This You?
a t t e m p t t o complete it. By now
i t is at least 1:30 a.m. and you
are very tired and you say to
yourself, "gosh, I wish t h e
teachers here would let u p on
some of their assignments." You
A week slips by and you are
complete the assignment in a
still telling yourself, " o h well,
h u r r y and go t o bed. Are you
I'll get it d o n e ; I have a week
a procrastinator?
until it is d u e . " You set a time
Budgeting of y o u r time is one
in your mind when you are going t o get this assignment done. of t h e most i m p o r t a n t facets of
I t is due M o n d a y and today is y o u r college education. If you
Thursday. I will do it Saturday are sensible and m a t u r e , you will
d o your assignments efficiently
afternoon.
and not let t h e m go u n t i l the
Saturday afternoon comes and
last minute. You can rid youryour i n t r a m u r a l volleyball team
self of t h e feeling t h a t , "this is
has t o play off a m a t c h in the
d u e tomorrow so I have t o do
afternoon and you have a date
it t o n i g h t . "
t h a t night. O r , something else
comes up and you say t o yourself, "gosh, I was going t o do
t h a t assignment today, b u t it '62 Grad to Study
isn't due until Monday. I'll do Law in Washington
it Sunday n i g h t .
John A . Lewis, a 1962 g r a d u Sunday after church you eat ate of L H S C , has been accepted
lunch and decide to w a t c h Syra- for graduate study in t h e Law
cuse play t h e Celtics.
Before School of the American Univeryou know it 12 p . m . Sunday is sity in Washington, D . C.
here, and the assignment is due
Lewis, w h o received his d e at 8 a.m. Monday. You finally
force yourself, only because it is gree in elementary education,
due t o m o r r o w , t o sit d o w n and was active in student activities,
h a v i n g served as president of t h e
S t u d e n t Co-operative Council
and as co-captain of the varsity
football team.
Monday y o u are given an assignment d u e in t w o weeks.
You say t o yourself, "well, I
have t w o weeks u n t i l i t is due so
I w o n ' t sweat i t n o w . "
(Skain
Started
M a t t h e w Vassar was a brewer
of Poughkeepsie, N . Y., w h o
about 100 years ago founded
Vassar College, America's first
privately-endowed college for
women. Vassar girls still sing
these words:
" A n d so you see, for old V . C .
O u r love shall never fail.
Full well w e k n o w
T h a t all we o w e
T o M a t t h e w Vassar's ale!"
VM Ob± iimwc'
/ejf\
"One o f the hardest s e c r e t a
for a man to keep i s h i s o p i n ion o / himtielf.'*
ECONOMICS!
LITTLE MANjON CAMPUS
O n e of t h e most pressing
needs today is t o c o u n t e r a c t
economic
illiteracy.
Surveys
have shown t h a t there is an appalling lack of knowledge about
our free enterprise system — especially a m o n g o u r y o u t h .
A new feature of t h e Industrial Press Service is a questionanswer column dealing with
economic principles.
Periodically, T h e Eagle Eye will carry
this column to help further acquaint our readers w i t h economics.
Q. W h a t is the Gross
National Product?
A. It represents t h e total value
of goods and services in a
given year.
Q. Is it important?
A. T h e G N P is very i m p o r t a n t
because it tells us whether
o u r economy is m o v i n g a
head or standing still o r g o ing b a c k w a r d .
Q. How does it d o that?
"AT wgA^T fi6'« MY \HfeiucraM
gcpUAu.-— w e ; ? e
P0T« OH FtZO^ATIOhi,''
Book Company Opens Letter
Contest to College Students
A. By measuring t h e increase or
decline from one year t o
the next. If, for example,
A prize contest open only t o
the G N P for 1963 is $581
billion, while that for 1962 college students has been anwas $570 billion, t h e n o u r nounced by Grove Press.
rate of g r o w t h would be 2
G r o v e will award $100 for
per cent.
the best letter of application by
K i t t e n , heroine of Robert C o Q. W h a t is the actual rate of ver's current best-seller. O n e
growth?
H u n d r e d Dollar MisunderstandA. Over recent years it has been ing, for admission to a mythical
2.5 per cent. T h e historic southern university.
average of 4 p e r cent.
O n e H u n d r e d Dollar Misunderstanding is a novel about
the misadventures of J. S., a
white college sophomore, and
Kitten, a young and beautiful
N e g r o prostitute.
Eluke OeH Grad
Assistantship
Entries must be no more than
100 words in length and must
be w r i t t e n in Kitty's own style
— of which a sample (taken
from t h e book) is given below:
"Course, he d u m , ain he fault,
I spose. Maybe he jes born d u m .
H e will begin his duties in Maybe he jes born Whitefolks
September
1963, instructing
physical education classes while
p u r s u i n g a master of science de- Review by Dr. Deer
gree.
T h e assistantship g r a n t
offers a stipend plus waiver of all Printed in Book
A n excerpt from a review b y
fees.
Accompanying
Fluke
t o D r . Irving Deer appears as the
Maryland will be his wife. cover of a new drama book p u b D o n n a , and their t w o children: lished b y the Cambridge University Press. T h e book is T h e
Ronnie and T e r r i .
D a r k Comedy ( T h e DevelopWhile at Lock H a v e n State, m e n t of Modern Comic T r a Fluke was a m e m b e r of Kappa gedy) b y J. L. Styan. D r . Deer's
Delta Pi, education honorary review was one of t w o Amerifraternity; a sports reporter for can reviews included among a
T h e Eagle Eye, a founder of t h e group of five quoted from such
local colony of Lambda C h i Al- well-known English and French
pha, and a m e m b e r of the Stu- journals as the Times Educadent Co-operative Council, Var- tional Supplement and the Mersity Club, football team ( t w o - cure de France.
year varsity c e n t e r ) and t r a c k
and field team.
Ronald Fluke, a J a n u a r y
graduate in health and physical
education from Altoona, has a c cepted a g r a d u a t e assistantship
in .physical education at the U n i versity of Maryland.
G O O D DEFENSE
" H o w m a n y students are enrolled in the u n i v e r s i t y ? " asked
the old grad, w i t h deceptive p o liteness.
" E i g h t t h o u s a n d , " replied the
coach.
" T h e n is it too m u c h to ask
t o have t w o of t h e m in f r o n t of
the ball carrier?" snapped the
alumnus.
d u m , so he kin lissen t ' t h a t b i g word tee vee preachin, an so's
he kin dig t h a t shottin and
fightin an ack mean an maybe
even kill somebody h u m a n , b u t
not so's he kin do nothin m u c h
else, like talk sweet an play
nice."
T h e 100 runners-up in t h e
contest will receive a full year's
subscription t o t h e b i - m o n t h l y
magazine. Evergreen Review.
Entries will be judged by a
board appointed by the p u b lisher, and all entries will become t h e property of t h e p u b lisher. Entries should be s u b mitted t o K i t t e n Contest Editor,
Grove Press, Inc., 64 University
Place, N e w York 3 , N e w York.
They m u s t be postmarked n o
later than March 3 1 .
M; Neipbors
"Well, w h a t do I l i k e ? "
THE EAGLE EYE
Lock Haven State College
Lock Haven, Pa.
PRESS
Published weekly by Students during t h e regular school
year e x c e p t d u r m g holidays and e x a m i n a t i o n s .
Chrii Dwyer, editor
Bob Stroble, tportt
editor
Thursday, January 31, 1963
Page 3
Abroad' Provide
Varied School Programs 'Classrooms
Summer Study in 6 Countries
Offered in Britain, Austria
Eleven groups, each containing 20-30 selected American
An opportunity to combine vacation abroad with six weeks at a European college students, will form semsummer school is available to qualified American students through the Institute of inars in various European cities
International Education. Applications for study at three British universities and next summer to study the lantwo Austrian schools during July and August 1963 are now being accepted by HE. guages, culture and civilization
The three British programs offer a choice of subjects and periods which of these countries during a ninemay be studies at the appropriate university concerned. S h a k e s p e a r e and week stay.
Elizabethan drama will be offered at Stratford-upon-Avon by the University of Designed for the serious student who does not plan to see all
Birmingham; the history, literaof Europe in a short summer.
ture and arts of 17th century Vienna will hold a special sum
Classrooms Abroad tries to give
England will be the course at mer session at its St. Wolfgang
him a more profound experience
the University of Oxford; a campus, on Lake St. Wolgang,
through a summer of living in
study of British history, philoso- Stroble, Austria. Courses availone of the following cities: Berphy and literature from 1688 to able to students will include law
lin, Munich or Tubingen in Ger18 32 will be presented at the and political science, liberal arts,
many; Vienna in Austria; BeUniversity of E d i n b u r g h in and the German language. Stu
sancon, Grenoble or Pau in
Scotland.
dents may also participate in the
The world's largest absorption France; Neuchatel in SwitzerCourses for all three sessions skiing, sailing and other outdoor
are designed for graduate stu- sports for which the area is fam tube for spectrographic research land; Madrid or Santander in
dents and teachers but under- ous — and all of which will be is being built at The Pennsyl- Spain; and Florence in Italy.
graduates who have completed available to them at very moderGraded classes in small secvania State University to study,
at least two years of university ate fees.
tions of six to 10 students, each
indirectly, the atmosphere of the under the supervision of Ameriwork may apply. The British
The University of Vienna planets.
Summer Schools fee of $2 54
can and native professors, will
deal with the reading of classicovers full tuition, room and program is open to students who
have completed at least two
The instruments will extend cal and modern texts, the daily
board.
years of college. The fee for
A high point of the two Aus- the full six weeks, including 150 feet through three subter- press, contemporary problems,
trian summer sessions will be tuition, maintenance, tours, ex- ranean rooms of the chemistry- conversation and composition,
the opportunity for students to cursions, and Music Festival at- physics building on the campus. pronunciation and grammar.
attend the famed Salzburg Mu- tendance, is $3 3 5, with an op- It is being built through funds
Students also will hear lecsic Festival ,including one opera, tional four-day trip to Vienna supplied by the National Science tures on history and literature
one concert and Hofmannsthal's costing $3 5.
and meet with outstanding perFoundation.
drama "Everyman."
sonalities. They will have full
Travel arrangements to and
At the S a l z b u r g Summer from Europe are the responsiA discovery made by Dr. auditing privileges at the uniSchool, at Salzburg-Klessheim, bility of the student. A limited David H. Rank, research profes- versity in each of the selected
towns and cities and will particiAustria, emphasis will be placed number of full or partial scholaron German language study. At- ships are availabe to both the sor of physics, and his associates pate in all academic and social
tendance at one of the several British and Austrian summer led to the special grant by the activities with German, Austrian, French, Swiss, Spansh and
German language courses is schools, but in no case do they N.S.F.
Italian students.
mandatory. Other courses in cover transportation costs.
Heretofore, it was thought
art, music, economics and poliMembers of Classrooms AApplications for admission that molecular hydrogen lying broad will live with private famtics will be taught in English.
Besides the opportunity to at- and for scholarships may be ob- outside the earth's atmosphere ilies in each city, eat many of
tend the music festival, a variety tained from the Counseling Di- would be very difficult to detect. their meals with their hosts and
of conducted tours of Salzburg vision, Institute of International
share the activities of their sons
and the vicinity will be avail- Education, 800 Second Avenue, However, recent experiments in- and daughters. They will have
dicate
that
molecular
hydrogen
able to students.
New York 17, N . Y. Completed
ample opportunities to meet
British Summer School scholar- can be identified readily through young people from student, reThe fee for the entire pro- ship applications must be regram, including room, board ceived before March 1, and ad- observation of the fundamental ligious, and political organizations.
Regular attendance at
and tuition, as well as festival mission a p p l i c a t i o n s before of its quadropole spectrum.
theatres, concerts and movies as
tickets, is $245.
Applicants March 30. Scholarship applicaThe new instrument will be well as visits to museums, libmust be between the ages of 18
tions for the Austrian schools five times larger and many times raries, factories, youth organizaand 40 and must have completed
must be returned by March 1,
tions, and other points of interat least one year of college work.
and admission applications by more powerful than the existing est are included in the program.
The historic University of May 1.
equipment.
Each group will follow its
Largest Tube
To Be Built At
Penn State
seven-week stay in a city or
town with an optional two-week
tour of German, French, Spanish or Italian areas. Since most
programs end in mid-August,
participants have a chance to
remain in Europe for private
travel after the program.
Dr. Frank D. Hirschbach,
director of Classrooms Abroad,
said: "We have found through
many years of experience that it
is quite possible, even if you
don't know a word of the language, to learn more than a
year's worth of college German,
French or Italian in the course
of a summer," provided that we
get serious and mature students
who are willing to mix business
with pleasure."
Dr. Hirschbach, who also
h e a d s the German-language
groups, teaches at the University
of Minnesota. The French and
Spanish groups will be directed
by John K. Simon and Robert
E. Kelsey, members of the Romance Languages Department at
Yale. The Italian group will be
led by Charles Affron of Brandeis University.
Classrooms Abroad, now in
its seventh year, has grown from
11 students in 1956 to an anticipated 300 in 1963. Its former students represent some 200
American colleges.
Full information can be obtained by writing to Classrooms
Abroad, Box 4171, University
Station, Minneapolis 14, Minn.
T. Albright Elected
To Head Math Club
Terry L. Albright, freshman
in math from Warrior Mark,
was unanimously elected president of the Math Club for 1963.
Also elected were Gary Bowes,
vice president; Joyce Cook, secretary; Gary Bitner, treasurer;
George Taylor, SCC representative.
PENNSHIRE
Be "Label" ConsciousI
McGregor
• Stetson
• Nunn-Bush
• Alligator
• Jayson
• Worsted-Tex
• Middishade
• Woolrich
• Hanes
• Jerks
^oy'
110 E. Main Street
CLOTHES
Prepare for Student
Teaching
—•—
Suits — Sport Coats
Zip-Lined Raincoats
$18-$23-$28
—•—
Orion & Wool
Slacks
$7.50
REELY
HURTS/
come visit
millbrook art
gallery
HEADQUARTERS
for
•
Susan Van Heusen
Ladies Shirts
•
Plymouth Raincoats
•
Woolrich Sportswear
•
College-Style Blazers
FINAL WEEK OF SALE
Bmr
eVRYTHlMG-
29WAKeD
•
ffi
'Prescription Specialists'
At the Monument
ES
Formal Wear Rental
We Appreciate LHSC
We Welcome You to Another
Fine Lock Haven Institution
LOCK HAVEN
w
Thursday, January 31, 1963
Page 4
Named H M
2 Rule Changes Made InDuttry
Football Poll
In Co-ed Basketball
Two new rules have been added to the women's
basketball game this year. One called the "roving
player" permits two players — one from each side of
the court — to cross the center line. Previously,
guards had to stay on one side of this line and forwards on the other. One guard and one forward will
be designated to be this roving player for the game.
When one team gets the ball, the roving guard
crosses the line and joins the three forwards, thus becoming a forward. At the same |
DENNIS DUrTRY
Dennis Duttry, senior in phy
sical eductaion from Curwens
ville, was selected for honorable
It seems that for the first time in many years the Bald
mention in the Williamson 1962 Eagles w i l l be the underdog when they meet the Huskies on
Little All-American Balanced the mats in Bloomsburg on Feb. 2 3 . This past Tuesday there
Cagemen Face
Indiana In
Poll.
Another rule change involves
Duttry's selection was based
the fouling of a guard. Preupon his performance as senior
viously, when a guard was Away Tilt
time, the opposite team's roving
forward also crosses the line and
becomes a guard.
fouled, the ball was brought to
by
the other side of the court for
Skip Fennell
a forward to take the shot. (In
With C o a c h Stan Daley's
.women's basketball, only for- hard-court five having lost their
wards can shoot). The new rule past four garnes, we hope the
permits the roving guard to take future of the team will brighten
this shot.
with the beginning of this new
Lock Haven State's basketball semester. (This does not take
team, in preparing for its opener in the Edinboro game of last
next week, at first found it diffi- | Saturday since the paper was go
cult to incorporate the new rov- "^g to press).
During last semester, the basing player rule since most of the
players have been playing the keteers posted a 1-7 record, with
sport for several years on the their lone win coming over
Two of their
balanced court system. How- Juniata 69-66.
ever, one of the lettermen said losses were quite close, however
that once the players are more — 68-63 defeat to Juniata and
familiar in playing according to a 60-59 thriller to California
these changes, the team has a State who scored the climatic
good chance for an undefeated basket as the buzzer sounded.
Soph Bob Mills and Juniors
season.
About 40 women turned out Jay Garner and Wayne Short
for early practices. With all pace the squad in scoring while
but three of last year's team Mills, Garner and Soph Gary
back and with several promising Myers lead in rebounding.
Tomorrow at Indiana, the
prospects in the freshman class,
Bald Eagles meet a fairly good
this prediction may hold true.
Indians team and look toward
their first win of the spring semester. Monday the team travels
Miller to Captain to Mansfield.
1 9 6 3 Grid Team
Richard Miller, junior in physical education from Tyrone, has
been
elected
captain of the
1963 Bald Eagle
grid team.
Miller was the
team's
leading
ground
gainer
this past season
RICHARD MILLER in his first season as a starter at halfback. In
eight games he accounted for
more than 900 yards and averaged almost 40 yards per kick
as the team's punter.
This next week will be a busy one for all three of LHSC's
varsity squads. The basketball team meets a formidable Indiana
team here tomorrow night; Saturday afternoon coach Hacker's
tankmen will travel to Bloomsburg for a tough splash with the
Huskies; Saturday evening finds coach Ridenour's grapplers returning to the mats in Thomas Field House to face Rochester.
After the weekend they all take to the road. Coach Daley's basketeers not only have to face one of the top small college teams
Monday night, but also Mansfield's enthusiastic student body.
Tuesday the swimmers and wrestlers will be competing at East
Stroudsburg.
co-captain and end on the Bald
Eagle football team.
Previously he had achieved
conference and state-wide recognition. The Pennsylvania State
College A t h l e t i c Conference
named him to the second team
of the Conference All-Stars, and
the Associated Press awarded
him an honorable mention on its
All-State squad.
w a s a battle of the unbeatens as Bloom tangled w i t h Lycoming a t the nearby college. Our paper w e n t to press before
the results of this match were k n o w n , but it w a s expected
to be closer than the match on Feb. 2 3 . M a n y of the sports
enthusiasts East of here feel that either of these teams could
d o w n our Bald Eagles. Both of these teams are coached by
Lock Haven grads. Bill Garson, Bloom's outstanding heavyweight a n d our former high school teammate, boasts that
there is not a team around they could not beat. W e have
seen the Huskies on several occasions a n d w e must admit
that they have w h a t it takes a n d w i l l be tough to match.
However, do not sell the Bald Eagles short. Coach Ridenour
is doing an outstanding job and his squad is improving
rapidly. O n that eventful d a y in February, anything is liable
to happen.
Co-eds Host Bloom
In Opener Tomorrow
Since we are now student teaching down Williamsport way,
we are a little out of contact with the campus. For that reason
we will be giving up our sports editing job. We may write a
column occasionally, but the bulk of the work will be done by
The women's basketball team the capable sports staff we leave behind.
will take on Bloomsburg State SHORT SHOTS —
College tomorrow afternoon in
Dick Miller will captain LHSC's gridders next season . . .
Thomas Fieldhouse to open its
1963 season.
Varsity action Russ Houck recently rated Syracuse as the top wrestling
will take place following the power a t that time . . . California SC has introduced volleyball as a n inter-collegiate sport . . . Indiana's intercollegiate
jayvee game at 4:15.
The starting lineup was not rifle team is the defending WPCRL champions . . . O f the four
available at press time, but with longest games in the conference's basketball history, LH has
most of last year's lettermen re- played in three of them. They all went for three over-times.
One of them racked up the highest single game score on
turning, prospects look up for
record — Cheyney 138 to LH's 128 in 1955 . . . Joe lacone,
a good season.
West Chester's Little All American, has accepted a n offer to
Schedule
play for the Philadelphia Eagles . . . W e hate to say it, but
Feb. 13—Sf. Francis—7 p.m.
it looks like our prediction for the basketball team is fast
Feb. 1 9 — B l o o m s b u r g — A w a y becoming a reality.
Feb. 23—Shippensburg—
Away
Feb. 2 6 — G e t t y s b u r g ^ - 4 p.m.
Before You Get Bogged Down
March 2 — M i s e r i c o r d i a —
1:30 p.m.
Bowl a Few Games
March 5 — E - f o w n — 3 p.m.
al the
March 7 — P e n n S t a t e — A w a y
Slim
—
FLEMINGTON
O p e n bowling Friday,
Saturday and Sunday
MID-WINTER
Grapplers Host
Rochester Saturday
8:00 p.m.
Mjf Neiptors
_jr•-1*00 ODwIV___,^^
llHOMESisl ViSlTORsia]
II '°*ft* '^"* '^^J.
"He's our darh horse—"
There are many reasons for
the absence of U. S. players from
bigtime hockey but it was Muzz
Patrick, the New York Rangers
coach, who put the principal
cause in proper perspective. He
says that while hockey is played
in the U. S. by some 600,000
youngsters, there is not the intensity of competition among
the players here that prevails in
Canada. Hence, he says they
cannot properly develop into
top-flight puck wielders.
"The unfortunate fact is that
instead of developing players we
are only developing fans," says
Patrick. As to U. S. college
players, Patrick says that they,
too, do not have the competitive
drive to acquire the tremendously greater skill required of big
league puckmen. He says that
college boys spend "too much
time stdying" which is a com-
plaint that many parents would
love to have said of their offspring.
With four of the six hockey
teams based in the U. S. (New
York, Detroit, Boston, Chicago) , it's really a shame that
we don't have a single native
United States player in the National Hockey League today.
—«—
Will Army's eleven ever go
"bowling?" The West Pointers
have never played in a post-season bowl game. A Navy team
tied the U. of Washington 1414 in the second Rose Bowl
game (1924). In 195 5 the Middies shut out Ole Miss 21-0 in
the Sugar Bowl. And three yars
later, it was Navy 20, Rice 7
in the Cotton Bowl. In 1959
an inspired Air Force played
TCU to a scoreless tic in New
Orleans.
Save 2 5 % to 5 0 %
Sweaters - Slacks - Sport Coats - Loden Coats
Jackets - Sport Shirts - Vests
All-Weather Coats - Socks - Ties
The Store for Young Men
Directly
Opposite the first
National BattJt.
i
Media of