BHeiney
Mon, 07/24/2023 - 17:06
Edited Text
I
State Press Conference
Scheduled By Eagle Eye
Lock Haven State College
will host thirteen other Pennsylvania State Colleges in the
Pennsylvania
State
College
Press Association fall Conference on November 13, 14, and
15, according to Ron Jury, managing editor of the Eagle E y e .
Each state college wi'l send
representatives
from
their
school press to participate in
the P.S.C.P.A. Conference.
Activities will begin Friday, November 13, with a tour
of the campus. T h i s will be followed by a general s e s s i o n in
the union lounge in which Dr.
Gerald Robinson, Dean of Academic Affairs, will welcome the
representatives on behalf of the
college.
Other speakers will
include Max Ballard and Al
Smith, president and vice-president of P.S.C.P.A.
The afternoon will consist
of a series of workshops on
newspaper techniques and newspaper e t h i c s . It will begin at 3
pm with three
simultaneous
groups on lay-out, communications, and writing lively Copy.
T h e s e will be conducted by Ron
Smith and Ken Loss of Grit Publishing Company, and Richard
Becker of Bell Telephone.
From 4:15 to 5:15 another
group of workshops will begin
Dr. Donald Smith, of the Penn
State University journalism d e partment, will conduct u discussion on journalistic
law.
Both Mendelsohn Hoxle, public
relations director at Williamsport Community ColK-uc. and
Raymond Shafer. news editor ol
The E x p r e s s , will participatLin a discussion ar. student press
and community relations. I here
will a l s o be a W(«-kshop on eareer opportunities in journalism
conducted by Miss Judith Rife,
editor of the Centre-Democrat.
Friday evening there will
be a banquet in Bentley Hall
Vol. XIV No. 32
ground floor of the library. It
will be located on the carpeted
area next to the children's
library.
The winners of the Sigma
Kappa 50-50- Club Raffle are:
Kathleen ReBar
$20.00
Ed Flanagan
$10.00
Jean Rowe
$5.00
The pledges would like to
thank everyone for their cooperation in making this project a success.
There will be a meeting of
all students interested in
working on the CEC Convention Committee tonight
Thursday Nov. 12 at 6:30
in Himes i l l .
r^onvention Committee
Thurs. November 12,1970
which will feature Miss Rebecca
Gross, retired editor of The Express and member ot the Pennsylvania News Publications .-X.^socia'ion, as speaker.
The highlight of Saturday's
activities w 11 be a tour (^f a local press in full run. T h i s will
be followed by a run through of
the Eagle Eye offset prixluetion.
That evening the delegates will participate in a pcol
party.
The PSCPA conference will
conclude on Sunday with a busin e s s s e s s i o n and a banquet.
William Williams, news editor
of The Clearfield Progress, will
speak on community
service
journalism.
Sludents may attend any
workshop they wish by checking
in at the r e c e p t i o n i s t s desk in
the PUB.
IBM Touring Prints
On Exhibition In PUB
G l o b e Destroyed
On W a y
To Library
The new globe for the Stevenson Library, due to arrive
last week, was destroyed on its
way to Lock Haven in an accident which killed the driver of
the delivery truck.
Robert
Bravard, acting
director of the library stated
Wednesday that the globe, purchased from the Rand-McNally
Company for twelve thousand
dollars, was insured and is now
back at the company being rebuilt, h is expected to be six
to eight months before the globe
is sent to the school again.
The globe and its base together measure seven feet eleven inches, with the globe itself measuring six feet three
inches. The b a s e , which is motorized, revolves at the rate
of one-third revolution per minute.
When sent to the school
the globe will be placed on the
Lock Haven State College
New Reading List To
Broaden Students Views
Dr. Paul Klens, Dean of the
School of Arts and Science, with
the aid of the faculty, has compiled a new reading list of books
and authors, representative of
many fields of knowledge, to
encourage students to examine
many ideas of the pasl and present.
Each Arts and Science student is expected to read forty
different books outside of course
work. Because the new list has
been extensively broadened to
embrace
many
contemporary
works including those of black
writers and oriental authors, the
student is urged to read works
independently of c l a s s assignments. However, a student may
elect to credit up to 25% (10 of
the 40) of the works used in
c l a s s e s and seminars. Even so,
the student must still take the
individual examination to determine satisfactory knowledge
of the work.
A major problem involved
reading selections concerns how
the word " w o r k " should be interpreted.
Accordingly,
[)r.
Klens recently advised faeull>
examiners that, " a poem or
single short story does
nol
satisfy the requirement; however,
a collection of poems, such as
Whitman's Leaves of G r a s s , or
an epic poem, such as John
Brown's Body, will fulfill the
requirements."
Dr. Klens emphasized that
reading forty books will not
necessarily make one an educated person, bul some ideas
and insights may be discovered.
which otherwise would not. He
reiterated, " I t is my hope that
each student will approach this
assignment in the spirit with
which it was conceived; a s an
opportunity to broaden his education and thus, his outlook on
the world in which he l i \ e s . One
of the characteristics o' a truly
educated person is that he is
well r e a d , not only m his area
ot specialization but in many
broad fields of knowledge-"
Interfraternity
Council Raffle
Choice of $600 cash, or a
$600 Scholarship, or a
Trip for two to Miami or
Daytona, Florida over
Easter Vacation.
Donation: $1.00 ticket
Tickets may be purchased from
any Fraternity man.
I he art of printmaking is
Ihe siibjec! of a louring exhibition now being shown in the
student
union. The collection
IS on l-aii Irom the Department
ol Arls :.nd Sciences of Intcrii'iiioii.i;
Hiisiness
Machines
('oiporai iiin.
(' illed "'diaw, cut, s c r a t c h ,
etch. . . .I'l int."' suggests creative trcliniciues used by printmaker.s. Ihe exhibition includes
5U oiigmal
American
prints
dating lioiii ihe early 19th century to :'i^ inesent. All major
grapiiic media is represented.
Nearly halt the prints in
the
shovk
are
contemporary
works. Ihev include "Image of
a C i t y , " a serigraph by Norio
Azuma; " P o m e g r a n a t e , " a woodcut by Antonio Krasconi; " T h e
R a b b i t , " a lithograph by Rico
Lebrun; "In Memoriam," a cellocut by Boris Margo; "Walt
Whitman," an etching by Charles
Wells; and " L i o n , " a work in
mixed media by Misch Kohn.
E.arlier prints include works
by James A. McNeil Whistler,
Childe Hassam, George Bellows.
William Morris Hunt and Tliomas
Moran. There is a l s o an original
engraved wood block by Alexander
Anderson
(1775-1870),
" t h e father of American wood
engraving,".
Oval-shaped
and
measuring a mere 2'/2 by 3^/4 inc h e s , it is a delicately carved
depiction of sailing b o a t s .
The exhibition is one of
nine
touring arts shows and
five touring science shows that
IBM lends to museums, colleges,
libraries and other nonprofil institutions throughout the country.
A panel that explains various printmaking processes accompanies the prints. The exhibition will continue until the
end of the month.
Time-Outby Al SmitK
In t h e p a s t and e s . i e c i a l l y t h i s s e a s o n , the l o o t b a l l prog r a m here at L o e k H a v e n Slate h a s come under fire from this
c o l u m n . Many t i m e s we have pondered over the s i t u a t i o n and
w h i l e some p e o p l e think that LIIS wiil e v e n t u a l l y r e g a i n the
p r e s t i g e it b u i l t under former c o a c h Herb J a c k , we f e e l that
t h e f o o t b a l l program h a s been going dovinhil! for the p a s l feu
y e a r s and there is no bright outlook for the future.
LHS h a s had five c o n s e c u t i v e l o s i n g s e a s o n . 9 , p r o d u c i n g
o n l y 11 w i n s and 30 l o s s e s .
Under C o a c h J a c k the E a g l e s e x p e r i e n c e d many fine and
s u c c e s s f u l s e a s o n s , but h i s final three s e a s o n s and B o b Well e r ' s first two s e a s o n s a s head mentor were filled with main
h i n d e r a n c e s which y i e l d e d losing and d i s a p i n i i n t i n g s e a s o n s .
In the four years w e ' v e b e e n at LHS we have a l w a y s
h e a r d that it is a p h y s . e d . s c h o o l . Well we ll-iink i t ' s time
the p h y s i c a l e d u c a t i o n c u r r i c u l u m and the c o l l e g e a d m i n i s t r a tion d e c i d e s if t h e y want LHS known as a p h \ s . e d . schtiol
and d e d i c a t e s i t s e l f to a d e c e n t i n t e r c o l l e g i a l e a t h l e t i c program.
T o come up to par with the other s t a t e c o l l e g e s . LHS
m u s t improve v a s t l y in many c a t a g o r i e s . Other s c h o o l s a c c e p t more m a l e s t u d e n t s a l l o w i n g more c h a n c e for a g r e a t e r
number of f o o t b a l l p l a y e r s b e i n g a c c e p t e d . T h e other s c h o o l s
are m u c h more liberal in their a d m i s s i o n s t a n d a r d s than L H S .
a l l o w i n g for more p l a y e r s being a c c e p t e d . We are not s a y i n g
t h a t the a d m i s s i o n s office s h o u l d d r a s t i c a l l y lower L H S ' s
s t a n d a r d s , but they s h o u l d allow s o m e o n e who h a s b e e n in
many e.xtra-curricular a c t i v i t i e s at l e a s t a c h a n c e lo prove
himself.
It h a s b e e n c l a i m e d b\- most of the c o a c h e s here at l.HS
t h a t most if not a l l of the o t h e r s t a t e ci^lleges somehow get
a r o u n d the rule of not offering a t h l e t i c s c h o l a r s h i p s . We tot a l l y d i s a g r e e with t h i s c o n c e p t i o n ol offering a n y a t h l e t e
m o n e y to come to a s c h o o l j u s t to p l a \ a t h l e t i c s , but this d o e s
put a h i n d e r a n c e on LHS if other s t a t e s c h o o l s are offering
scholarships illegalh-.
A n o t h e r ^ iluation which is h u r t i n g LHS is the poor f a c i !
i t i e s on our c a m p u s compared to the s u p e r i o r f a c i l u i e s o(
o t h e r s c h o o l s . J u s t t h i s y e a r a new p h y s i c a l e d u c a t i o n i.uiid
ing w a s o p e n e d , but it h a s proved to be t o t a l l y w o r t h l e s s to
the a t h l e t i c program b e c a u s e of the w i s h e s of an 80 s e a r old
w o m a n , who in our opinion w a s not the p h y s i c a l e d u c a t o r m a n \
p e o p l e t h i n k she w a s .
I t ' s a c r y i n g s h a m e t o h a v e a b u i l d i n g w i l h t h r e e g \ n i s in
it a n d not h a v e the b a s k e t b a l l team a l l a v e d to p r a c t i c e in it
or h a v e a w r e s t l i n g room in it. Along the same line oi f a c i l
i t i e s , many s c h o o l s d o not have only one r p a c t i c e field on
w h i c h both t h e v a r s i t y and freshmen t e a m s p r a c t i c e on like LHS
does.
While m a n y s c h o o l s h a v e their own football field to play
o n , LHS s t i l l h a s to u s e the local high s c h o o l s t a d i u m . It h a s
b e e n c o n j e c t u r e d t h a t the new s t a d i u m u n d e r ^ u s t r u c t i o n
w o u l d be r e a d y for next s e a s o n , but b e c a u s e of d i f f i c u l t i e s
w i t h the s o d , LHS may have t o wait a n o t h e r v e a r for their
s t a d i u m . E v e n if LHS d o e s have its s t a d i u m r e a d y for the
n e x t s e a s o n , t h e r e s t i l l h a s n ' t b e e n a n \ money a p p r o p r i a t e d
for s e a t s .
All t h e s e f a c t o r s c o n t r i b u t e t o the problem a n d make rec r u i t m e n t p e r t i c u l a r l y difficult and turn a good football p l a \ e r
a w a y from LHS and over t o one of t h e i r o p p o n e n t s . Some p e o
pie t h i n k t h a t next s e a s o n looks bright with aboul 25 lettermen
r e t u r n i n g a n d a l m o s t the e n t i r e o f f e n s i v e unit b a c k , but t h e s e
p e o p l e fail t o r e a l i z e t h a t most of the other t e a m s !ia\ e m a n \
p l a y e r s r e t u r n i n g and good looking playeas coming up from
good f r e s h m e n t e a m s . While LHS may improve, their o p p o n e n t s
will be i m p r o v i n g at r great l a c e . LHS may win more than one
g a m e next y e a r , but if injuries s t r i k e the way t h e y did t h i s
year t h e r e is not the n e e d e d d e p t h to c o m p e n s a t e for t h e m .
T h e r e is room for much n e e d e d improvement in the LHS
f o o t b a l l a n d a t h l e t e program and the time for a c t i o n is n o w .
T h a t i s , u n l e s s the c o l l e g e a d m i n s t r a t i o n w i s h e s to s e e the
program go completely downhill.
Classified Ads
100 per line.
They get results.
Notice:
There will be a general
meeting for all Varsity Club
members
and prospective
members at 7:30 p.m., Monday
Nov. 16, 1970; in the TFH Very important meeting! This
meeting is compulsory in
order to receive an award.
X'>^
fi^i
"?
LHS Boasts Champs
by Chris Plyler
Neither the cold weather
nor a rough muddy field could
st.ip Ihe Hald l-agles from routing .Slijipfry Rock 3-0 on Tuesday to win the Pennsylvania
Athletic
Conference
Wpslern
Division Championship for the
third straight year.
I>ie team played an excellent first half, rhe halfbacks
and
line passed particularly
well and set up the wings nicely.
There was some very fine shooting e s p e c i a l l y during the first
half.
.Ml the scoring came during
the first
half. Jim Sleicher
scored the first l.HS .joint on the
first nuarler on a penalty kick.
In the second period Galen
Hess began one of ins many
downfield drives out manuverin'j
several Rockets to send the bal!
in from the wing to Steve Steifen. Steffen. in turn, a s s i s t e d
Ricky Dontnoyer in scoring the
goal.
Later in the second quarter
freshman
halfback Lonnie
Oslruni assisted Hess for the
third and fina! •- -•nt.
In Ihe second'lalf the play
slowed di>wn as the leam became
more conservative. .\t time the
bogged down in midficId hy not
using
the
wings, r!,,- also
liLing back on occasion.
The Ragles did put a foiirlh
ball iiilf) the net early in i)ie
final period on H e s s ' hard shot
from the sideline but the team
was called for offsides taking
away the point.
" T h e key to the game was
Ihc halfbacks, this is the way
it s been all yeai. They always
keep the ball bottled up and keep
the pressure on. All six did a
magnificent job t o d a y , " commented Coach Karl T. Herrmann.
He added, "Don Copeland
had an excellently good game,
and Bruce Parkhill was flawless.
This was one of George MagliaroVs best games, and H e s s ,
well, he had another outstanding
duK ."
4^ / ?'^
5.^
Al
^
C
^
^
o
t^"
^-.v
-%.
T h e S a b b a t h w a s made for
m a n , and not for the S a b b a t h .
The team tied a record
they've set the past two years
in all time wins. They also have
seven shutouts this season vind
have allowed the opponent an
average of less than one goal
per game.
This year the Eagles have
averaged as many corner kicks
per game as they have allowed
shots at the goal. ITiis reflects
the great defensive ability of
Ihe team.
On Saturday Lock Haven
will play for the Conference
Championship at either Shippensburg or MiUersville. These two
teams play each other today for
the Eastern Division t i t l e . East
Slroudshurt; withdrew form competition after loosing to MiUersville last week putting them in a
three-way tie for the s p a c e .
The Ragles tied both MUlersville and Shippensburg 0-0
during the regular reason.
T h e ink of t h e scholar Is more
s a c r e d than the
b l o o d of
Mohammed
G-A-R-D-E-N
Now thru Nov.17
POPULAR PRICES!;
DIRECT FROM ITS S E N S A T I O N A L
R E S E R V E D SEAT E N G A G E M E N T
(:.S(CHT/M;\LI)HX
.IU rATlON'
Mark, 2:27
R E P R E S E N T E D FOR NATIONAL. ADVERTISINO BY
National Educational Advertising Services
To Ihc r.diior:
.Although lun;U- I'vr's article
on the "Major Haibara" prod u i l i o n w a s essentially .^ilthough
minutely)
favorable,
perhaps
il similarly evidenced a definite
uneducated verbosity on the part
of the author. If the newspaper
considers itself s o mfallable
Ihal it must display a necessity
to include minute criticisms tjf a
produclif;n. and exclude any
favorable comments, perhaps it
should
consequently
consider
its source.
1 am definitely impressed
by the author's seeming exclusion from Ihe ranks of the onappreciative. Theater on ih;^
.aiiipus I.s in its formative and
progressive stage, ll is a matter
of education. 1 hope that the
hi' and its stall" will shortly
lollow suit.
Carol Gudson
G r e a t i n t e l l e c t s ore
skeptical.
lBORTIO\ (](» \SELI.\(J, l\FI)R\IITI().\
il\i) llEFERRiL SERVICES
A b o r t i o n s tip t o 2 4 w e e k s of p r e u n a i i c y ;ire
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r e s i d e n c y r e s t r i c t i o n s at c o o p e r a t i n g iiospitais
a n d clinics. O n l y tiie c o n s e n t of the p a t i e n t
a n d the pert'orniini; p h y s i c i a n is recjtiired.
If yoti tliink yoti are p r e g n a n t , c o n s u l t y o t i r
d o c t o r . D o n ' t d e l a y , l-arly a b o r t i o n s are
s i m p l e r ;md safer,
[f yoti n e e d inforiviation or pr(ifessional assistance, including iinmediate registration into
available h o s p i t a l s and clinics, t e l e p h o n e :
THE .IBORTIOA II\F()R\IITIO.\ km\,
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8 A.M. TO 10 P.M.
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Fredrich N i e t z s c h e
EVERYTHING
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the
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MAN
State Press Conference
Scheduled By Eagle Eye
Lock Haven State College
will host thirteen other Pennsylvania State Colleges in the
Pennsylvania
State
College
Press Association fall Conference on November 13, 14, and
15, according to Ron Jury, managing editor of the Eagle E y e .
Each state college wi'l send
representatives
from
their
school press to participate in
the P.S.C.P.A. Conference.
Activities will begin Friday, November 13, with a tour
of the campus. T h i s will be followed by a general s e s s i o n in
the union lounge in which Dr.
Gerald Robinson, Dean of Academic Affairs, will welcome the
representatives on behalf of the
college.
Other speakers will
include Max Ballard and Al
Smith, president and vice-president of P.S.C.P.A.
The afternoon will consist
of a series of workshops on
newspaper techniques and newspaper e t h i c s . It will begin at 3
pm with three
simultaneous
groups on lay-out, communications, and writing lively Copy.
T h e s e will be conducted by Ron
Smith and Ken Loss of Grit Publishing Company, and Richard
Becker of Bell Telephone.
From 4:15 to 5:15 another
group of workshops will begin
Dr. Donald Smith, of the Penn
State University journalism d e partment, will conduct u discussion on journalistic
law.
Both Mendelsohn Hoxle, public
relations director at Williamsport Community ColK-uc. and
Raymond Shafer. news editor ol
The E x p r e s s , will participatLin a discussion ar. student press
and community relations. I here
will a l s o be a W(«-kshop on eareer opportunities in journalism
conducted by Miss Judith Rife,
editor of the Centre-Democrat.
Friday evening there will
be a banquet in Bentley Hall
Vol. XIV No. 32
ground floor of the library. It
will be located on the carpeted
area next to the children's
library.
The winners of the Sigma
Kappa 50-50- Club Raffle are:
Kathleen ReBar
$20.00
Ed Flanagan
$10.00
Jean Rowe
$5.00
The pledges would like to
thank everyone for their cooperation in making this project a success.
There will be a meeting of
all students interested in
working on the CEC Convention Committee tonight
Thursday Nov. 12 at 6:30
in Himes i l l .
r^onvention Committee
Thurs. November 12,1970
which will feature Miss Rebecca
Gross, retired editor of The Express and member ot the Pennsylvania News Publications .-X.^socia'ion, as speaker.
The highlight of Saturday's
activities w 11 be a tour (^f a local press in full run. T h i s will
be followed by a run through of
the Eagle Eye offset prixluetion.
That evening the delegates will participate in a pcol
party.
The PSCPA conference will
conclude on Sunday with a busin e s s s e s s i o n and a banquet.
William Williams, news editor
of The Clearfield Progress, will
speak on community
service
journalism.
Sludents may attend any
workshop they wish by checking
in at the r e c e p t i o n i s t s desk in
the PUB.
IBM Touring Prints
On Exhibition In PUB
G l o b e Destroyed
On W a y
To Library
The new globe for the Stevenson Library, due to arrive
last week, was destroyed on its
way to Lock Haven in an accident which killed the driver of
the delivery truck.
Robert
Bravard, acting
director of the library stated
Wednesday that the globe, purchased from the Rand-McNally
Company for twelve thousand
dollars, was insured and is now
back at the company being rebuilt, h is expected to be six
to eight months before the globe
is sent to the school again.
The globe and its base together measure seven feet eleven inches, with the globe itself measuring six feet three
inches. The b a s e , which is motorized, revolves at the rate
of one-third revolution per minute.
When sent to the school
the globe will be placed on the
Lock Haven State College
New Reading List To
Broaden Students Views
Dr. Paul Klens, Dean of the
School of Arts and Science, with
the aid of the faculty, has compiled a new reading list of books
and authors, representative of
many fields of knowledge, to
encourage students to examine
many ideas of the pasl and present.
Each Arts and Science student is expected to read forty
different books outside of course
work. Because the new list has
been extensively broadened to
embrace
many
contemporary
works including those of black
writers and oriental authors, the
student is urged to read works
independently of c l a s s assignments. However, a student may
elect to credit up to 25% (10 of
the 40) of the works used in
c l a s s e s and seminars. Even so,
the student must still take the
individual examination to determine satisfactory knowledge
of the work.
A major problem involved
reading selections concerns how
the word " w o r k " should be interpreted.
Accordingly,
[)r.
Klens recently advised faeull>
examiners that, " a poem or
single short story does
nol
satisfy the requirement; however,
a collection of poems, such as
Whitman's Leaves of G r a s s , or
an epic poem, such as John
Brown's Body, will fulfill the
requirements."
Dr. Klens emphasized that
reading forty books will not
necessarily make one an educated person, bul some ideas
and insights may be discovered.
which otherwise would not. He
reiterated, " I t is my hope that
each student will approach this
assignment in the spirit with
which it was conceived; a s an
opportunity to broaden his education and thus, his outlook on
the world in which he l i \ e s . One
of the characteristics o' a truly
educated person is that he is
well r e a d , not only m his area
ot specialization but in many
broad fields of knowledge-"
Interfraternity
Council Raffle
Choice of $600 cash, or a
$600 Scholarship, or a
Trip for two to Miami or
Daytona, Florida over
Easter Vacation.
Donation: $1.00 ticket
Tickets may be purchased from
any Fraternity man.
I he art of printmaking is
Ihe siibjec! of a louring exhibition now being shown in the
student
union. The collection
IS on l-aii Irom the Department
ol Arls :.nd Sciences of Intcrii'iiioii.i;
Hiisiness
Machines
('oiporai iiin.
(' illed "'diaw, cut, s c r a t c h ,
etch. . . .I'l int."' suggests creative trcliniciues used by printmaker.s. Ihe exhibition includes
5U oiigmal
American
prints
dating lioiii ihe early 19th century to :'i^ inesent. All major
grapiiic media is represented.
Nearly halt the prints in
the
shovk
are
contemporary
works. Ihev include "Image of
a C i t y , " a serigraph by Norio
Azuma; " P o m e g r a n a t e , " a woodcut by Antonio Krasconi; " T h e
R a b b i t , " a lithograph by Rico
Lebrun; "In Memoriam," a cellocut by Boris Margo; "Walt
Whitman," an etching by Charles
Wells; and " L i o n , " a work in
mixed media by Misch Kohn.
E.arlier prints include works
by James A. McNeil Whistler,
Childe Hassam, George Bellows.
William Morris Hunt and Tliomas
Moran. There is a l s o an original
engraved wood block by Alexander
Anderson
(1775-1870),
" t h e father of American wood
engraving,".
Oval-shaped
and
measuring a mere 2'/2 by 3^/4 inc h e s , it is a delicately carved
depiction of sailing b o a t s .
The exhibition is one of
nine
touring arts shows and
five touring science shows that
IBM lends to museums, colleges,
libraries and other nonprofil institutions throughout the country.
A panel that explains various printmaking processes accompanies the prints. The exhibition will continue until the
end of the month.
Time-Outby Al SmitK
In t h e p a s t and e s . i e c i a l l y t h i s s e a s o n , the l o o t b a l l prog r a m here at L o e k H a v e n Slate h a s come under fire from this
c o l u m n . Many t i m e s we have pondered over the s i t u a t i o n and
w h i l e some p e o p l e think that LIIS wiil e v e n t u a l l y r e g a i n the
p r e s t i g e it b u i l t under former c o a c h Herb J a c k , we f e e l that
t h e f o o t b a l l program h a s been going dovinhil! for the p a s l feu
y e a r s and there is no bright outlook for the future.
LHS h a s had five c o n s e c u t i v e l o s i n g s e a s o n . 9 , p r o d u c i n g
o n l y 11 w i n s and 30 l o s s e s .
Under C o a c h J a c k the E a g l e s e x p e r i e n c e d many fine and
s u c c e s s f u l s e a s o n s , but h i s final three s e a s o n s and B o b Well e r ' s first two s e a s o n s a s head mentor were filled with main
h i n d e r a n c e s which y i e l d e d losing and d i s a p i n i i n t i n g s e a s o n s .
In the four years w e ' v e b e e n at LHS we have a l w a y s
h e a r d that it is a p h y s . e d . s c h o o l . Well we ll-iink i t ' s time
the p h y s i c a l e d u c a t i o n c u r r i c u l u m and the c o l l e g e a d m i n i s t r a tion d e c i d e s if t h e y want LHS known as a p h \ s . e d . schtiol
and d e d i c a t e s i t s e l f to a d e c e n t i n t e r c o l l e g i a l e a t h l e t i c program.
T o come up to par with the other s t a t e c o l l e g e s . LHS
m u s t improve v a s t l y in many c a t a g o r i e s . Other s c h o o l s a c c e p t more m a l e s t u d e n t s a l l o w i n g more c h a n c e for a g r e a t e r
number of f o o t b a l l p l a y e r s b e i n g a c c e p t e d . T h e other s c h o o l s
are m u c h more liberal in their a d m i s s i o n s t a n d a r d s than L H S .
a l l o w i n g for more p l a y e r s being a c c e p t e d . We are not s a y i n g
t h a t the a d m i s s i o n s office s h o u l d d r a s t i c a l l y lower L H S ' s
s t a n d a r d s , but they s h o u l d allow s o m e o n e who h a s b e e n in
many e.xtra-curricular a c t i v i t i e s at l e a s t a c h a n c e lo prove
himself.
It h a s b e e n c l a i m e d b\- most of the c o a c h e s here at l.HS
t h a t most if not a l l of the o t h e r s t a t e ci^lleges somehow get
a r o u n d the rule of not offering a t h l e t i c s c h o l a r s h i p s . We tot a l l y d i s a g r e e with t h i s c o n c e p t i o n ol offering a n y a t h l e t e
m o n e y to come to a s c h o o l j u s t to p l a \ a t h l e t i c s , but this d o e s
put a h i n d e r a n c e on LHS if other s t a t e s c h o o l s are offering
scholarships illegalh-.
A n o t h e r ^ iluation which is h u r t i n g LHS is the poor f a c i !
i t i e s on our c a m p u s compared to the s u p e r i o r f a c i l u i e s o(
o t h e r s c h o o l s . J u s t t h i s y e a r a new p h y s i c a l e d u c a t i o n i.uiid
ing w a s o p e n e d , but it h a s proved to be t o t a l l y w o r t h l e s s to
the a t h l e t i c program b e c a u s e of the w i s h e s of an 80 s e a r old
w o m a n , who in our opinion w a s not the p h y s i c a l e d u c a t o r m a n \
p e o p l e t h i n k she w a s .
I t ' s a c r y i n g s h a m e t o h a v e a b u i l d i n g w i l h t h r e e g \ n i s in
it a n d not h a v e the b a s k e t b a l l team a l l a v e d to p r a c t i c e in it
or h a v e a w r e s t l i n g room in it. Along the same line oi f a c i l
i t i e s , many s c h o o l s d o not have only one r p a c t i c e field on
w h i c h both t h e v a r s i t y and freshmen t e a m s p r a c t i c e on like LHS
does.
While m a n y s c h o o l s h a v e their own football field to play
o n , LHS s t i l l h a s to u s e the local high s c h o o l s t a d i u m . It h a s
b e e n c o n j e c t u r e d t h a t the new s t a d i u m u n d e r ^ u s t r u c t i o n
w o u l d be r e a d y for next s e a s o n , but b e c a u s e of d i f f i c u l t i e s
w i t h the s o d , LHS may have t o wait a n o t h e r v e a r for their
s t a d i u m . E v e n if LHS d o e s have its s t a d i u m r e a d y for the
n e x t s e a s o n , t h e r e s t i l l h a s n ' t b e e n a n \ money a p p r o p r i a t e d
for s e a t s .
All t h e s e f a c t o r s c o n t r i b u t e t o the problem a n d make rec r u i t m e n t p e r t i c u l a r l y difficult and turn a good football p l a \ e r
a w a y from LHS and over t o one of t h e i r o p p o n e n t s . Some p e o
pie t h i n k t h a t next s e a s o n looks bright with aboul 25 lettermen
r e t u r n i n g a n d a l m o s t the e n t i r e o f f e n s i v e unit b a c k , but t h e s e
p e o p l e fail t o r e a l i z e t h a t most of the other t e a m s !ia\ e m a n \
p l a y e r s r e t u r n i n g and good looking playeas coming up from
good f r e s h m e n t e a m s . While LHS may improve, their o p p o n e n t s
will be i m p r o v i n g at r great l a c e . LHS may win more than one
g a m e next y e a r , but if injuries s t r i k e the way t h e y did t h i s
year t h e r e is not the n e e d e d d e p t h to c o m p e n s a t e for t h e m .
T h e r e is room for much n e e d e d improvement in the LHS
f o o t b a l l a n d a t h l e t e program and the time for a c t i o n is n o w .
T h a t i s , u n l e s s the c o l l e g e a d m i n s t r a t i o n w i s h e s to s e e the
program go completely downhill.
Classified Ads
100 per line.
They get results.
Notice:
There will be a general
meeting for all Varsity Club
members
and prospective
members at 7:30 p.m., Monday
Nov. 16, 1970; in the TFH Very important meeting! This
meeting is compulsory in
order to receive an award.
X'>^
fi^i
"?
LHS Boasts Champs
by Chris Plyler
Neither the cold weather
nor a rough muddy field could
st.ip Ihe Hald l-agles from routing .Slijipfry Rock 3-0 on Tuesday to win the Pennsylvania
Athletic
Conference
Wpslern
Division Championship for the
third straight year.
I>ie team played an excellent first half, rhe halfbacks
and
line passed particularly
well and set up the wings nicely.
There was some very fine shooting e s p e c i a l l y during the first
half.
.Ml the scoring came during
the first
half. Jim Sleicher
scored the first l.HS .joint on the
first nuarler on a penalty kick.
In the second period Galen
Hess began one of ins many
downfield drives out manuverin'j
several Rockets to send the bal!
in from the wing to Steve Steifen. Steffen. in turn, a s s i s t e d
Ricky Dontnoyer in scoring the
goal.
Later in the second quarter
freshman
halfback Lonnie
Oslruni assisted Hess for the
third and fina! •- -•nt.
In Ihe second'lalf the play
slowed di>wn as the leam became
more conservative. .\t time the
bogged down in midficId hy not
using
the
wings, r!,,- also
liLing back on occasion.
The Ragles did put a foiirlh
ball iiilf) the net early in i)ie
final period on H e s s ' hard shot
from the sideline but the team
was called for offsides taking
away the point.
" T h e key to the game was
Ihc halfbacks, this is the way
it s been all yeai. They always
keep the ball bottled up and keep
the pressure on. All six did a
magnificent job t o d a y , " commented Coach Karl T. Herrmann.
He added, "Don Copeland
had an excellently good game,
and Bruce Parkhill was flawless.
This was one of George MagliaroVs best games, and H e s s ,
well, he had another outstanding
duK ."
4^ / ?'^
5.^
Al
^
C
^
^
o
t^"
^-.v
-%.
T h e S a b b a t h w a s made for
m a n , and not for the S a b b a t h .
The team tied a record
they've set the past two years
in all time wins. They also have
seven shutouts this season vind
have allowed the opponent an
average of less than one goal
per game.
This year the Eagles have
averaged as many corner kicks
per game as they have allowed
shots at the goal. ITiis reflects
the great defensive ability of
Ihe team.
On Saturday Lock Haven
will play for the Conference
Championship at either Shippensburg or MiUersville. These two
teams play each other today for
the Eastern Division t i t l e . East
Slroudshurt; withdrew form competition after loosing to MiUersville last week putting them in a
three-way tie for the s p a c e .
The Ragles tied both MUlersville and Shippensburg 0-0
during the regular reason.
T h e ink of t h e scholar Is more
s a c r e d than the
b l o o d of
Mohammed
G-A-R-D-E-N
Now thru Nov.17
POPULAR PRICES!;
DIRECT FROM ITS S E N S A T I O N A L
R E S E R V E D SEAT E N G A G E M E N T
(:.S(CHT/M;\LI)HX
.IU rATlON'
Mark, 2:27
R E P R E S E N T E D FOR NATIONAL. ADVERTISINO BY
National Educational Advertising Services
To Ihc r.diior:
.Although lun;U- I'vr's article
on the "Major Haibara" prod u i l i o n w a s essentially .^ilthough
minutely)
favorable,
perhaps
il similarly evidenced a definite
uneducated verbosity on the part
of the author. If the newspaper
considers itself s o mfallable
Ihal it must display a necessity
to include minute criticisms tjf a
produclif;n. and exclude any
favorable comments, perhaps it
should
consequently
consider
its source.
1 am definitely impressed
by the author's seeming exclusion from Ihe ranks of the onappreciative. Theater on ih;^
.aiiipus I.s in its formative and
progressive stage, ll is a matter
of education. 1 hope that the
hi' and its stall" will shortly
lollow suit.
Carol Gudson
G r e a t i n t e l l e c t s ore
skeptical.
lBORTIO\ (](» \SELI.\(J, l\FI)R\IITI().\
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