Hartzell's Appeal To Sue LHS Is Rejected Mrs. Georgianna Hartzell, former bookkeeper at the Lock Haven State College bookstore, has been rejected in her latest appeal for a retrial in her civil rights suit against the college. Mrs. Hartzell is seeking reinstatement and retroactive salary since her dismissal in August,1970. Last November, U.S. Middle District Court Judge Malcolm Muir ruled in favor of the college in a controversial move. His decision was based on the results of the six-member jury answering a series of 14 yes-or-no questions. Mrs. Hartzell's attorney, Ambrose Campana, told a local newspaper last week that he plans to file another appeal. He claimed that none of the questions asked the jury dealt with the centra! issue of the case, the con>petency of Mrs. Hartzell as a bookkeeper. I i^iV 'Faci/if/es/Topic ofSympos/um "Instructional Change in Higher Education through Facilities" will be the topic at the Third Annual Symposium on media technology at Lock Haven State on March 23. Emphasis of the symposium will be on the implications of technology on the undergraduate curriculum. Featured consultants will be Mr. Richard Dober of Dober and Associates, Cambridge, Mass., an internationally known planner and designer of TUES..I3 college buildings; Dr. Jiny Daily and Dr. Patrick Penland, national authorities on information storage and retrieval systems at the Graduate School of the University of Pittsburgh. Also speaking will be Dr. Donald Johnson, director of Instructional Developement at the Pennsylvania State University, and Dr. Philip Sleeman, University of Connecticut. What's Happenin' Interviews: Aetna Life Insurance Co. Play Rehearsal "INDIANS" Price College Community Orchestra-temp, change BHL 9:30-3:30 6:00 p.m. 7-9 p.m. BHL 4:00 p.m. Raub 106 Planetarium Price 6:15-7:30 6:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. BHL 23 WED..I4 Reception»"Who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges" I Act Play Rehearsal Col lege Choir-temp, change to Dress Rehearsal-"INDIANS" Humanities Film-"Carnival in Flanders" PUB Prints By Famous Artists To Be Displayed Next Week A special one-day presentation of original lithogra)*, intaglio, serigrai:^ and woodcut prints will be held Monday March 19 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Raub Hall. The public is invited to view this unique collection of Lakeside Studio from Lakeside, Michigan and to meet their representative, David Berreth, who will be happy to answer questions both historical and technical. All works to be displayed are available for purchase. The work to be exhibited here, valued at over $100,000, contains prints by old master and modern master artists such as Albrecht Durer, Jacques Callot, Georges Rouault and Pablo Picasso. Also there will be prints by contemporary artists Leonard Baskin, Oaro Antresian, Mark tobcy, Sid Chafetz, S.W. Hayter and many others including John Beckley, Linda Plotkin and Helen Siegl from Pennsylvania. The purpose of Lakeside, Studio is two-fold. The first is to make available high quality, original prints to established and beginning collec- tors. Second they strive to fulfill a need for rapport with the working printmaker. Located on five wooded acres overlooking Lake Michigan, yet within an hour's drive of Chicago, the studio offers a fully-equipped lithograph and intaglio workshop. These facilities have been set up and operated by master printers trained at Tamarind Lithography Workshop in Los Angeles. Prints by Rudy Pozzatti, Sigmund Abeles and Misch Kohn, to name only a few at* lists, have been printed and put)lished by Lakeside; a total | of nearly 50 editions have been completed so far. The studio also offers a summer course for professional printmakers. This course is directed each year by various noted artists and professional printers. Included on the property is a 50-room hotel which was once a popular resort and now jrp' vides living quarters forly^f ing artists, educators, curators and gallery directors. The Lakeside Studio collection of over 1000 original prints tours the country each year, visiting major museums land utiiversities. page 2 FAGLE EYE Lock Haven State College, Pa. Consider . . . . One Way To Save A Town The humanities film, "Carnival in Flanders," will be shown March 14 at 7:30 p.m. in the PUB. The 1936 French film is directed by Jacques Feyder with his wife, Francoise Rosay, in the leading role. The setting is a small Flemish village where the townsmen are preparing for an annual carnival, When a batallion of Spanish soldiers appear on the scene, the townsmen are afraid that their village will be razed. The burgomaster's wife and her com- HighHaUA "Gross'HaU? by Edward Strenk "The disgusting maintenance of the facilities in the hall should be corrected," said a High Hall counselor. Much has been done by counselors in the hall to try and correct the overall problems of High Hall, but no one in the administration seems to care. Concerned students have gone to Ivt. Smalley for action but nothing has been done to correct the maintenance of the building. In the opinion of many students the janitors in High Hall don't do their jobs. " I have taken pictures of the janitors sitting, sleeping and messing around," said a student. There has not been a janitor in the hall on the weekend for some time. The most important places for cleanliness, the bathrooms, get very dirty on the weekends and become unusable. Not only are the bath rooms dirty, but the television room and stairwells are also neglected. Most of the stairwells haven't been cleaned for weeks and the televisior room is only cleaned about three times a week. "We realize that the students are somewhat at fault, but how can they be expected to care about these things when the janitors don't," said a concerned student. Most counselors also pointed out that when it snows the sidewalks leading from the building are never cleared. " I fell a number of tiities and could've got hurt," renarked a student. One counselor suggested that the maintenance department supply salt and shovels so concerned students could clear the sidewalks by themselves. There is also the problem of a large dirt hill that sUi CHANGE in Book Store closing hours: it will bo closed March 13 and 14 and resume normal oporatioi (4frch 15 at 8 am rather than 8 pm as previously