Lock Haven State College SPB hires new Coordinator of Student Publications Who rules the Eagle Eye, Praco, Compass, and Crucible? Who's the boss of the student publications ? Well, students and faculty members were thrown together to make big decisions, serve as ' publisher of all student publications and establish guidlines for the operation of all these publications. These nine people compose the Student Publications Board, The Student Publications Board consists of five students. Four of them represent the student body: Jan Albright, Matt Delfort, John Eshelman, and Bill Glass. The remaining student, Lary Wise, represents the SCC. The four faculty members on the board are Bea Brown, representing the Communications faculty, Mark Thomas and Charles Kent representing the faculty Committee on Committees, and Dave Arseneault, representing the administration. The first major decision these people had to make concerned the hiring of a Coordinator of Student Publications. The duties of the coordinator are to budget and allocate funds for' the student publications, to submit all monthly summary budget reports to the SCC, and to coordinate the purchasing, advertising, and all aspects of publishing fcr all student publications. This person serves as a bumper between the administration and the students working on publications. 'Chaos is a word that well describes the job. The board screened 24 applications for the job. From these they chose four people to come to Lock Haven to be interviewed. After the interviews were over the board met to chose one candidate. Ms Ntonlen Clemmer will be replacing Deb Bricker who is moving on. Globetrotters Homecoming Surprise FLASH • To Mr. and Mrs^ America and all the ships at Isea - THE WORLD FAMOUS HARLEM GLOBE TROTTERS will appear in Thomas Field House on Sunday, October 21, at 2:00 pm. Due to this late addition to the Homecoming Weekend, the Bike Rally has been cancelled. The Canoe Race will be held but at 12:00 Noon, Tickets for the Globe Trotters' performance will be $2.50 with a validated ID and $3.50 at the door with a validated ID. Non-student tickets in advance will be $3.50 and at the door $4.50. Children's rate will be the same as students'. Senate Opens Nominations For 1974 Executive Committee Action to make the Student Publicaticiw Board a standing committee of the Student Co-operative Council was started Wednesday evening at the second SCC meeting of the semester. One hundred signatures are needed before anything can be done officially. Along with the SPB amendment is another to make the Food Service Committee a standing Committee also. Members of the nominating committee were approved. They are Tim Foltz chairman. Bruce Teufel, and Denise Kutta. Nominations were opened for the 1974 Executive Committee. The nominations will remain open until the next SCC meeting. The campus radio station may get off the ground next •emester. Studies of regutations and needed equipment are being made, and if the state doesn't hold up funds, the radio station will be more than a dream. In the area of cultural affairs, it was announced that Nick Krevitsky's stitchery exhibit is now on display in second floor Raub. Mr. Krevitsky will be on campus the 17 or 18 of Oct. There will be workshops during the day and a reception following. Doug Dows, SCC president, presented a letter stating that the Student Union Fee of $10 paid with tuition cannot by dropped legally. ' There is a bill now under way that may abolish the fee, but nothing can be done by the colleges until this bill is passed. Any person living ttff' camiHis wlio wishes to verify his address and telephone number for the Student Directory should contact Miss Clemmer, Coordinator of Student Publications at Ext. 456, Eagie Eye Office, NO LATER than Fri., October 5. Ms. get Intramural Rules Organization and rules was the topic of discussion at the Women's Intramural j Sports Council meeting held Monday night, Oct. 1. Dorm representatives and officers of the council were at the Thomas Field house to establish a point system for all intramural games in order to get the fall sports schedule started. It was decided that two points will be given for a win with losses receiving no points. It was also agreed that honorary patches will be awarded to the teams achieving the most game points. Hockey is the intramural sport scheduled for the fall and each hockey team must have a total of 9 players to qualify for competition. If this requirement is not met, the matches will not count. It was also announced that touch football will not be included in the sports program this fall. page 2 EAGLE EYE Fri., Oct. 5, 1973 Lock Haven State College Dear Editor... I Tend To Become Annoyed.. To the Editors It has never been my custom' 'o go to breakfast every day, but there are several occassions when I'll make it a point to get there, particularly if I expect a busy day or if I failed to make it to bed the night before. As it happens, 1 take a 25 minute walk downtown to work three mornings a week and this was a day I had breakfast to start mt on my way. The cafeteria hours are posted on the bulletin board in our wing and breakfast reads 7:00 - 8:15. so at 8:10 1 entered the "house of food" to find 3 out of 4 possible doors to the 'dispatch room' closed, so... as I mentioned; having my heart (and stomach) set on breakfast... entered through the one opened one. There wasn't much action in there so I hesitated ever so slightly, there were two 'dispatch ladies' there who walked around pretending' not to notice me, probably hoping I'd give up after 2 or 3 inquiries into the possibilty of getting some eggs (soft boiled that day) so I could eat and get on my way. When I speak to people and they just walk away from me, I tend to become annoyed. As I was reaching the peak of my aggravation, someone wandered in trom the back rooms, also after breakfast. She became the recipient for a few more questions (which weren't quite as polite as the first few), but told me the lines close officially at 8:00 and continental begins at 8:15. As she started to slip away, I realized I was only fooling myself if I expected any action in my favor from the kind ladies, so I reached around inside of the glass protector and helped myself. As I sat in the dining area, an indignant 'dispatch lady' walked decidedly over to me making it clear that I must not do a thing like that again. I offered to let her take her old eggs back with her but, appearing to have expected such a remark from an irrate student, she simply ignored me, returning to her Kitchen Kingdom without another word. 1 finished my breakfast and left for work wondering why the cafeteria staff does not take advantage of breakfast - hungry students who happen to stumble in after 8:00 by allowing them to finish the excess of breakfasts prepared for the 7:00 to 8:00 eaters. Sounds logical to me. Joy Shaffer Dear Editor .... /'// Present The Facts Dear Editor: I do not care to argue the emotional accusation of a recent critic of the Lock Haven State College men's intramural program. Instead I will merely present the facts for those interested. 1. Ihere was a meeting for represenatives of any organization wishing to be represented in the 1973-74 men's intramural program on Monday, Sept. 17. This was announced in the Hagle Eye and by posters in the Zimmerii Building and residence halls. 2. At this meeting, those representatives pr.;sent were given the starting dates for touch football, tennis (singles and doubles), vollyball, cross country, and three-man basketball competition. They were also given deadlines for submitting team rosters for touch football and tennis. The intramural council was also elected at this meeting. 3. This same information, along with an explination of types of competition, eligibility rules, nd the point scoring system was sent to a representative of each residence hall floor, frater- nity and independent origanization represented at the meeting. 4. Counselors and residence hall floors which did not submit rosters were contacted to see if they wished to be represented by an intramural team and the deadline for submitting of rosters was extended to allow them to participate, 5. As a result of the above, 360 men are participating on twenty intramural touch football teams and forty men on intramural tennis teams. 6. Paddleball and handball intramurals will not start until the second semester. 7. There was NO sign-up sheet for men's intramural tennis on the bulletin board in the second floor of the hallway of the Zimmerii Gymnasium. 8. There is a bulletin board for men's intramurals. It is located on the second floor of the Zimmerii Building outside of room 109. On it are posted the tennis tournament schedules (singles and doubles) on poster size paper. 9. Also posted on this bulletin board are the materials mentioned in numbers two and three above. 10. All announcements relative to men's intramurals have been and will continue to be posted on the men's intramural bulletin board, in addition to being publicized through other means. 11. There was a reporter from the Eagle Eye present at the organizational meeting mentioned in number one above, 12. My office hours are posted on the door of my office in the Zimmerii Building (No. 109) for those who want to see me about intramurals. In sumary, information about the men's intramural program is available to those who have a sincere desire to obtain it. Women This Is For You "Women After Graduation" is the theme for the 1973 Regional Convention of the Intercolelgiate Associati tion of Women Students to be he Id at LHS. Ms. Nancy Van Vuuren, author of The Subversion of Women as Practiced by Churches, Witch Hunters, and Other Sexists, will open the 3 day convention on Friday evening October 26. On Saturday morning there will be several discussion groups with a representative from each of the four major armed forces. A discussion on Health Education will also be conducted at this time. Saturday night, Ms. Car en Blazey, a consultant on affirmative action in employment and educational programs will speak. Most meetings will be open to all students, with the exception of the Business meetings on Saturday afternoon and the banquet on Saturday night. The banquet will be open to all who wish to attend for a fee of $4.10. It promises to be a very interesting and busy convention, so plan now to at tend as many meetings as you can. For the best in service... Smififeu's UjfCO corner of Bellefonte Yours very truly, Bradley Black Director of Men's Intramurals ommerce Luigi's 52^2 reor E. Church St. 748 • 6573 Try our double or triple burger special KELLY and SPRINGFIELD 'sCKKKbidD TIRES Fri., Oct. 5, 1973 EAGLE EYE page 3 Lock Haven State College Golden and Bald Eagles Battle Over Pigskin Gaige Continues as 'Leader of the Pack' Haven Harriers Find Tough Weekend by Lloyd Peters Despite two individual wins by star distance runner Mike Gaige, the Lock Haven State College cross-country team dropped its final two home dual meets last week. On Saturday the sur prisingly strong Vulcans of California State ran past the Bald Eagles by a close 2632 score. Wednesday, Indiana University of Pennsylvania put on the best team effort ever witnessed in Lock Haven by defeating the Bald Eagles 20-43 . Senior captain Mike Gaige ended his home meet cross-country career with two fine races. Gaige simply outclassed the field in both races winning by forty and sixty-nine seconds. His time of 25:22 in the Indiana meet ranked him as the third fastest runner ever on the Bald Eagle course. In losing both meets LHS's record dropped lo 1-4, the most losses in one season in many years. With the excepticn of Gaige, however, all of the Bald Eagles top runners are underclassmen who have shown continuous improvement since the season started. "I'm unhappy that we lost the meets, but I'm pleased with our runners' progress," stated LHS head coach Jim Dolan. "Everyone has been bringing their times down and Gaige has been simply fantastic," he said. Returning to the LHS lineup in the Indiana ineet after a week and a half injury was junior Eric Burkert. Burkert recorded his fastest time ever on the home course and moved up to fourth man on the team. Also running outstanding races was Bill "Dutch" Landis who ran third against California and ninth against Indiana. This Saturday the harrier squad travels to Mansfield for a double dual meet with Edinboro State and Mansfield State. The race will start before halftime of the Mounties homecoming football game. The 5.8 mile course will represent the longest and toughest course the Bald Eagles will compete on this season. Men and their places and times: LHS vs Califo-nia 1. Mike Gaige 3. Bill Landis 6. Ed Fraass 10. Dennis Harr 13. DeanWal" 15. Bob S' 16. Ma* jrt 25:55 26:57 28:10 28:24 29:28 30:23 31:26 LHS vs Indiana 1. Mike Gaige 9, Bill Landis 12. Ed Fraass 15. Eric Burkert 16. Dennis Harmon 17. Dean Walize 18. Bob Sellers 25:22 27:10 27:31 28:03 28:45 28:58 30:02 After scoring a big upset victory over previously undefeated California State by 25-14 the Lock Haven State football team will furnish the opposition this Saturday at 2:30 p.m. for Clarion State College's Homecoming Day game. Coach Bob Weller's Bald Eagle gridders will be seeking to break a long Clarion jinx over Lock Haven. The Golden Eagles have beaten the Bald Eagles for the past 12 seasons. Lock Haven's last victory came in 1960. Last year's game was a high scoring contest. Behind 27-7 late in the third quar ter Lock Haven quickly came back to trail by only two points, 27-25, with five minutes to play. But another Clar ion score put the final at 34-25. Lock Haven will enter the Pennsylvania Conference Western Division contest with a 1-2 record but l-O in in division play. Clarion fresh from a 34-24 win over Delaware State has a 2-1 record. The Golden Eagles have a fine passer in quarterback John Harlacher and his favorite target end- Tom West. For Clarion, fullback Jim Fulton has rushed for over 100 yards in the first three games. Sophomore quarterback Dave Bower led Lock Haven to its tremendous win over California State. The Eagle signal-caller went 14"for-24 in the airlanes for 154 yards and three touchdowns. The top pass receivers were Lou Savani with five receptions for 44 yards. Another wide receiver, Wayne Hoffman, snagged four of Bower's passes for 54 yards and a touchdown. Senior halfback Mike Lang had a brilliant game gaining 71 yards rushing, caught three passes for 40 yards, and scored two touch downs. Defensively the Balcl Eagles had another fine game. Mel Abel, linebacker, intercepted two passes and led the team in tackles with 15. Another standout linebacker, Frank Geiger recorded 14 tackles. This year the game should prove to be no leds "Citing. Tlie Bald Eagles offense is pitted against one of the better defenses in the Pennsylvania Conference, while their defense collides with the number one offense in the western division. Clarion is 0-0 in division play. Tlie kickoff IS slated for 2:30 p.m. JV Eagfeffes Crush Susquehanna by Louise Wilson Despite the slick muddy field and occassional showers the JVWomens Hockey Team defeated the Susquehana University team by the score of 8-0. The eaglettes played a very impressive game. The offense started to click within the first 15 seconds of the game when center forward Barb Collins scored the first goal. Pat Maser,' left inner, led the offensive scoring in the mud with 3 goals for the 'Haven' and was followed by freshman wing Heidi Weber scoring 2 goals. Tina Heubner and Gail Simpson each added one more goal to the overwhelming victory. Coach Sharon Taylor thought the team played very well and was very pleased with the tremendous offensive effort. She also commented that the next game against Slippery Rock should prove to be alot tougher, but that both teams should be ready and able to wrm. The Slippery Rock game will be played this friday October 5 at 3:30 'p.m. on Lawrence Field. page 4 EAGLE EYE Lock Haven State College greek grounds - Busy Bush Week If you are new to this oampus, either as a freshTiBn or a transfer you've probably seen a lot of unusual activity among the Greeks here. The past week was probably our most important and busiest week. It was what is called "Rush Week". During this week, the five sororities on campus held informal parties each night in order to meet potential pledges. Any girl interested in pledging a sorority attends these parties in order to meet the different groups. A final party is held at the end of the week when the girls decide which sorority they want to pledge. This semester Zeta Tau Alpha had a very successful Rush Week and selected twelve pledges for the coming semester. We sre proud to announce our fall pledge class: Kathy Barclay, York, Pa.; Paula Jo Blanchfield, Clearfield, Pa.; Judy Cook, Palmerton, Pa.; Karen "KC" Cardman, Canisteo, N.Y.; Cathy Gibson, Malvern, Pa.; Linda Hefflefinger, Carlisle, Pa.; Jamie Detchner, Bradford, Pa.; Cindy Libby, Lewistown, Pa.; Bars ha Peterson, Trafford, Pa.; Susan Ragan, Norristown.Pa.; Nancy Rupezyk, Sugar Grove, Pa.; Yvonne Snyder, Cogan Station, Pa. We would like to congratulate our fellow sororities on their pledge classes. Also, a word of thanks to is given to the brothers of Tau Kappa Epsilon fcr the use of their house for our final party. Zeta Tau Alpha is the fourth largest sorority in the nation. Nationally, we have over 65,000 members. Our local campus chapter, Zeta Nu, has a total membership of 40 girls. There are 12 ZTA chapters in colleges and universities in Pennsylvania. WARM YOUR COCKLES with Dtan Swift fancy Sniffing Snuf. Send name •tc. for free samples. Deon Swift Ltd., Box 2009, Son Francisco, CA 94U6 This semester is proving to be a particularly good one for ZTA. Along with our twelve pledges, Zetas are very happy to have two sisters nominated to Homecoming Court. They are Karen Benton, TKE Sweetheart, and Patti Dengler, KDR Sweetheart. Good lUck, girls! We are also happy to announce that we have two new advisors, Mrs. Cathv Adams (formerly Miss Cathy Sheridan-teacher at Akeley School) and Miss Penny Klingler. The sisters and pledges are looking forward to working with both of them this year. Although sorority activities play a big part in each sister's life, several of our sisters find time to participate in other campus activities. Among them are Barbara Weiss, Co-editor of the Eagle Eye; jotting down the minutes for SCC meetings is recording secretary, Linda Schreiber and contributing to the spirit of our Eagle teams are cheerleaders Judy Lane and Teresa Frey. Our activities for the fall will include inuking a float for the Homecoming parade, having bake sales, organizing a service project and especially preparing our pledges for sisterhood. So, if you are a freshman, transfer or upperclassman, and are interested in sorority life, keep your eyes open this semester and look at the five sororities on campus. Spring Rush will be held in February. 'Fnndies' ot Miy student may use the POUND: Math Book. I sold this duplicating macbiM u w book in the beginning of available in the Senate Office in the downstairs the year to a chic. S^e lost the book and it was of the PUB, providing they returned to me because my supply their own paper. name was in it and hers is not. Contact Rick Fultz 748-6240. Bower and Abel named fo Afl-Sfar Squad For his outstanding performance in Lock Haven State College upset 25"! 4 victay over California State last Saturday, Sophomore Quarterback Dave Bower of Montoursville has been selected as one of two players picked as most outstanding on this week's ECAC Division HI All-Star First Team. Bower attempted 24 passes and completed 14 for 154 yards and three touchdowns. Also picked for the ECAC All-star Squad this week for his great defensive play in the big win was senior linebacker Mel Abel of Stroudsburg. Abel, who led a fine defensive effort by the entire defense unit, intercepted two passes and topped the Eagles with I5 tackles. The Division III AllStar squad is chosen from players at 87 small colleges and universities in the New England and Middle Atlantic states. Boofers On Super Sfreolc It was sweet revenge for the Lock Haven State soccer team on Saturday when the Bald Eagles remained undefeated with a 3-0 victory over Shippensburg State. Last season the Red Raiders had beaten Lock Haven on the Eagles home field, 4-2. Coach Karl Herrmann's booters picked up another win ear Her in the week topping arch-rival Lycoming College, 4-0. The Bald Eagles took a 4-0 record into a Tuesday home game with Villanova University. They again A W Gundlach & Sons fogr SirMfi Skoppinq CiBtiT Schmidt's, Valley Forge, Duke, Budweiser, Miche/ob and Other Favorite Brands Complete Shasta Line, Other Favorite Soft Drinks, Ice and Party Snotks 125 Hogan Blvd. Fri., Oct. 5. IS Phone 748 • 4073 ^erged victorious, swamping their challengers 5-0. Then on Saturaay U)Ck Haven travels to Millersville State to face another Pennsylvania Conference opponent In the four games the Eagles have scored 20 goals while holding the opposition to only one, a penalty kick late in the game by St. Francis College after Lock Haven was leading, 8-0. The Eagles sophomore goalie, Steve Tanner has yet to be scored on this season including four exhibition games and four regular contests. Don Copeland, AllAmerican candidate continues his amazing offensive and defensive play for Lock Haven. Last week Copeland scored five goals in the two games for a season total of eight. Also scoring for LHSC were Bob Weaver against Lycoming, and Tom Rowan in the Shippensburg game. Coach Herrmann gave special praise in the two wins for the excellent wing play of Dave Chambers and Rowan.