Lock Haven State College, Eae 7ol XVII No. 27 %lnesclay October 16. 1974 Senate fo c/ebafe 'Wafer War' I r I I /^ A r ••• yi^l?V ^ Dr. A. Heilman dorm tunas , and LAo pos\\\on s pea k$ to PSEA on reading by ROBIN PLATTS Staff Reporter Do you live in a dorm? Are you a member of CAS? Are you concerned wilh who will be spending your money nexl year? If you answered any of the above in the affirmative, there will be something of interest for you al tonile's S.C.C. meeting. Classified as the major item of interest, is the Senate Appropriations Committee's recommendation lo make ihe Residence Halls a fee supporting organization. That means the SCC would receive the money from die dorm vending machines and then reallocate il back to the dorms upon Iheir budget requests. Presently, the residence halls are self-support- Experience school music in workshop A Workshop on '' Music Experiences for the Elementary Schools" will be conducted at Lock Haven Slale College on Friday, Oclober 18, in the Sloan Fine Arts Center. Under the direction of Dr. Faith McNitt of the college music department the workshop is open without charge lo present and future elementary classroom teachers and lo music specialists. Dr. George D, Curfman will conduct the workshop. Dr. Curfman, professor of music educaiion at Lebanon Valley College, is recognized for his workshops and for his contributions lo continued on page 4 im. ing, meaning each dorm keeps Ihe money from the vending machines. A CAS coordinata will be elected tonite from the nominations received within the past two weeks. Also, nominations will close for the six executive committee positions. Discussion concerning the North Hall "Water War" will be undertaken tonite. The SCC questions the action taken by the Administration against the students. Rich DeBernardo staled he believed "there was a grave injustice done lo the students accused of participating in die water fight," They were denied a right lo trial and were judged and sentenced by only the administration. For more details aboul the items lo be discussed come lo tonile's SCC meeting at 7 pm in the PUB Lounge. Curtain goes up on play: Oppenheimer' " J , Robert Oppenheimer," opens in Price auditaium Thursday al 1 pm. The court room drama will run for three nights under the direction of Dr. Denys Gary, wilh assistant direcior Nilgun Dudaksizoglu. He inar Kipphardt's drama is based on the security hearings of J. Robert Oppenheimer was accused of being communistic and disloyal to his country. The all ma'e cast in- Convocaf/on Keefon By JOLENE BORGESE Staff Reporter How do homing pigeons find their way home? This and related questions will be discussed by Dr. William T. Keelon of Cornell University al die 14th Annual Science Convocation lo be held al Lock Haven Slate tommorrow, Thursday, October 17lh. Dr. Keeton's illustrated continued on page 4 eludes many familiar faces, with the addition of Nottingham foriegn exchange sludents Lawrence Evans and James Biddies. Set design is by John Gadon wilh Felice F^ocior designing costumes and make-up. Vince O'Cormor is light designer with Jan Foster as stage manager. College students may secure lickets al the PUB secretary's office with their 1,D. Admission for the general public is $2. Dr. Arthur W. Heilman. Directa of the Reading Center and Professor of Education at the Pennsylvania Slale Universily, will be speaking oa "Teaching Reading Creatively", Wednesday, Oclober 16, al 7:30 p.m. in the Sloan Auditaium, Dr. Heilman received his Ph.D. al the University of Iowa. He has also directed Reading Labaalories al the Universily of Oklahoma and Michigan Slale Universily. He has written many books concerning the leaching of reading. He co-authored "Phonics in Proper Perspective" and "Improve Your Reading Ability". He has also written "Smuggling Language inlo the Teaching of Reading" and "Principles and Practices of Teaching Reading". Dr. Heilman is iniernalionally known fa his capability as a teacher and writer in reading instruction. STUDENT SENATE MEETING tonight at 7 pm. This Is open to all students. Power failure causes play postponement KEYSTONE COOPERATIVE NETWORK NEWS By LARRY SCHMIDT Staff Reporter SLIPPERY ROCK: A power failure blacked 5 buildings in the old end of slippery Rock's campus on Saturday nighl beiween the hours of 9 lo 11:30. One of the buildings affected by the blackout was Miller Auditorium, where the play "The Importance of Being Earnest" was being performed. The production, interrupted in the second act, was postponed until Sun. night. Slippery Rock>s choir currently is raising money for their Spring trip to Switzer- , continued on page 4 page Wednesday, October 16, 1974 EAGLE EYE Today's Ediforiaf Not just another concert World News Capsule By SHARON WALBURN Staff Reporter UNSIGNED BILL RETURNED With Homecoming Weekend slowly creeping up on us the perennial questions of, "Why don't we have a better rock group scheduled; Why do we have to waste money on parades, Peter Neros and fireworks;" and "iWhy don't we have more things for students to enjoy" once again circulate. But if you were in State College last weekend you probably could answer those questions quite easily. Penn State's Homecoming consisted mostly of thousands of men and women over the age of 30 invading a "small city of young people". But these alumni were given reasons for coming back to buy buttons with "Go Penn State", blue and white hats with "Penn State" enscribed on them and blue and white shakers. And one of the reasons was not having the BE.ATLES get back together for a special performance or a concert by Seals and Crofts. By seeing people standing in awe of new buildings, looking for buildings they remember but just can't find, and running across the street to embrace each other it became evident what Homecoming really was. It wasn't a football game that was won, it wasn't a gigantic parade; it wasn't a concert by the college choir; and it certainly wasn't a rock concert. Homecoming is an atmosphere, a place and time to look at change, be it for the better or the worse. A schedule of events just provides a medium for that exchange to take place. Letter to ihe editor To the "Security Guard" c / o the Editor To you unfair beseechers named below In false disguise, security are called In cases needing not fa you to show Your face appears and makes us all appalled. In line of duly you are nol awake To open doors of Raub in mornings cold. In serving students-duty you forsake, Bul you in fun harrassmenl are loo bold. I know if you do not unlock the doors At night you need nol bother lo lock again. This gives you lime lo badger sludents more, Ahd we are enemies, the doors your friends. Bul just fa once get some mae nightly s l e e p And door unlocking try to keep. P.S. If you do find this fam in fun lo scorn, *0h curse the day security was born. Daniel Jon Keefer President Gerald F a d returned the bill to Congress that would cul off aid lo Turkey. He said thai he would not sign the bill b e cause he does nol feel il would help the Cyprus situation. NDCON ACCUSED OF LYING The Watergate cover—up trial has begun. During the second day of the trial, John Erhlichman's lawyer said that Richard Nixon deceived, misled and lied to Erhlichman. ONE S T A B B E D ; six INJURED One while student was slabbed ind six other students were i n jured during a fight that broke oul al High Park High School in Boston. Similar disruptions have occured during the lasl month when Boston started busing students in an attempt lo desegregate the schools. 50% CLEANER CAMPAIGNS Experts say that candidates this year are running cleaner campaigns than in past years. An estimated 50% of dirty politics are not being used because voters ire apprehensive of anylhing "smelling of Watergate". y p r s Igllprs letters letters letters letters To the Editor; In response to show some concern; Reread Your Sociology Why give respect where respect is not due? This is 1974 get your Stuff together Lock Haven !! This is especially for the person and their friends who thought that a false accusation would make niggers run and do as they sat !! The letter was written Ol Oct. 14, 1974 and was aimed al the entire black population on campus. A Stereotype of a Group. We were classified wrong according to what I learned in Sociology. We are nol "This Group", bul the "OUT GROUP". So from here on in gel your sociology book oul befae you classify three a four individuals as representatives of an entire group. The person begins by staling that certain studenis do not feel that they should take their trays up. This is fine. He continues by staling that he is a senior and has never seen this occifr befae. He should have tan his letter up then. I am a junior and ever since 1 have been here il has been done by black as well as while and slill continues. Where has this person been for four years on sabatacle, a are they a transfer. I wasn't aware that their was such a program or I would have been on il loo!! This person and their friends musl be so scared of the blacks thai they watch only us and can nol see anyone else of course we are the most obvious, so 1 could understand il if they couldn't see anylhing bul a boogie man in front of them!!! We are all individuals, each one acts as they want lo and if anyone does not want lo take up their tray, gel on everyone. Il is apparent thai someone eilher needs to take a refresher course in sociology if they haven't had il yet, then it is mighty late since they are a senior, and il is a general education requiremenl. We do think we're speacial and il is YOU LHSC who make us feel this way. We I re better than you because you are ignwant. Wake up!! We are sick of this !! We pay to go here just as you, and we are here to learn and it IS hard enough slaying up here now, wilhoul YOU hassling us without looking al yourselves. So befae you make accusations have them backed up, we are ' nol perfect, bul we are individuals and each continued on page 4 Wednesday, October 16, 1974 EAGLE EYE Shoofin' If wifh Shep The St. Louis Cardinals, and the New England Patriots; usually the teams everyone wanted to play are still undefeated. In previous years the two teams were more or less the doormats of the league. This year, the majority of the teams in the NFL would ralher play the Dolphins in Miami than play eilher the Cardinals or the Patriots anywhere. St. Louis beat Dallas 31-28 on Sunday to win Iheir fifth straight game. The Patriots easily knocked off Baltimore 24-0 The Dolphins continued to slip, bowing to Washington 20-17. They now trail Buffalo by one game and New England by two in the American Conference Eastern Division. In olher games of interest, the Green Bay Packers ran their record to .V-: by knocking off the Rams 17-6. Buffalo beat Baltimore 27-14, the Eagles killed the Giants 35-7, and Pittsburgh tripped Kansas Cily 34-24. My predictions came along a little better this week. I picked five oul of seven correctly. It isn'l great bul il's enough to bring my season lolal up to 7-4. I think I'll lake a shot at all 13 pro games this week and see how I do. So here goes; Atlanta over the hopeless Saints; New England won't be able to handle the improving " j u i c e " of O.J., so 1 pick Buffalo to upset the Patriots; Philadelphia will handle Dallas; Joe Namath usually has" a good game againsi the Colts, the Steelers should have very little, if any, trouble handling the Browns; Washington easily over New York; il's St. L o u i s ' turn for a day off against the Oilers; the Vikings will make Detroit their sixth straight victim; Los Angles will rebound from their loss to Green Bay and beat ^©WSiss V®«(BSIS5 e<®Wii)V ivi®W(35iy> «*(©« San Francisco; Miami is aboul due to come alive and really kill somebody it could be againsi the chiefs this week. Cincinnati invades Oakland with both teams spating 4-1 records and first place in Heir respective divisions. Look for the Beugals to go 5-1. The Packers should slill be high from their upset victory over the Rams, but they won't have to be loo high to beat the faltering Bears. All I can say aboul colleae football is that I picked Ohio State to be number one and so far they a r r . They anihilaled Wisconsin 52-7. Number two Oklahoma needed a late field goal to beat Texas 16-13 and it'll only be a matter of time unlil Ihey gel knocked off. Penn State, currently ranked 15th, could possibly move up a place or two on the basis fo a 55-0 out of Wake Forest. No. 2 Oklahoma beat Wake Forest 63-0 two Our basketball and hockey are due to begin their seasons directly. So before the baseball season is over, & before football is half started we have two more sports wilh which to saturate ours e l v e s . This i s n ' t even to mention golf and tennis which seem to go on continously and of course we can'l forget bowling The leaders in these sports should gel together and develop some sort of arrangement to try lo eliminate some of this situation. It's no wonder attendance is slacking off in most major sports. Joe paterno still opposes the using of freshmen in varsity foolball. He can'l complain loo much Ihough. One freshman, Jim Cepalo, scored two touchdowns in Saturday's game wilh Wake Forest. Another, Randy Sidler, caught pass ies covering 24 and 17 yards. Stale College High School beat previously undefeated Cedar Cliff 42-27 lost Friday night for their 36th consecutive win. Hale Irwin because the third professional on tour to win an " E y e s R i g h t " award from the Society of Visual care. He won the U.S. Open in June while wearing a pair of wire-rimmed g l a s s e s . The other winners of this award were Arnold Palmer and Tommy Aaron. LHS booters to bottle Kufztowners By GARY BRUBAKER Staff Writer Following a tough 3-1 loss at the hands of powerful East Stroudsburg, the LHS Soccer squad will do battle with anodier tough opponenl today al 3 p.m. on McCoUum Field. Kutitcwn will provide the opposition f a the Eagles as Coach Herrmann's crew goes into the match with a 5-2"l record. Kutztown, a newcomer to the Eagle's schedule this year has lost but one match this season- that being to East Stroudsburg, 4-2. The s c a e was deadlocked 2-2 after the first 45 minutes with Stroudsburg breaking it open in the second half. This Saiurday the Eagles are on the road as ihey travel lo Slippery Rock in a match which cold very well decide the Western Conference Division title. Starling time for the match is sel f a 2 p.m. page 3 Punt, pass and kick prelim.'s start Sunday Are the finer points of of football more appealing Ito you than the grind of hard contact? If this ia the case, then the pass, punt, and kick conteat may be to your liking< Sponsored by the P.CaCtE.Bi, the preliminaries for this football skills con)vill be held m the praitiie field behind Smith Hall at 3:00 p.m. Sunday, October 20. The finals will be held Sunday, October 27 at 12:00 p.m., nn the same field. Open to both sexes, there will be separate divi* sions for men and women. Contestants mnst sign>ap for the tournament at the reeepiiin desk in the PUB by 11:00 p.m. October 18. Kung Fu local chapfer organizes A Karate Club has recently been formed here at Lock Haven and it is open lo any member of the college community. Mike Bonadio, a studeni al Lock Haven is the instructor for the class. Mr. Bonadio has his Black Bell and Mr. Pete Redpath the club advisor also has a Karate belt. Together they hope to show the practical knowledge of karate rather than as a w« pon for defense or offense. By altending the meetings every Monday and Wednesday zt 7:30 p.m. in Rogers Gymnasium the karate studeni may gain the various belts. The club is S.C.C. recognized and self-supporting through a one dollar joining fee for each practice session. People, places and things H a v e a few spare minutes? Join the " J o g to Stay F i t " group. Men and women s t u d e n t s , f a c u l t y , and s t a f f are a l l w e l c o m e . Contact the f o l l o w i n g for complete i n f o r m a t i o n . Debby Loughner, ext 407, 748-8971; Galen M i l l e r , ext 4 7 1 ; Mr. P j . d e t t , Z i m m e r i i ext 264. Want to earn w h i l e you learn? An Executive Committee office w i l l p r o v i d e that opp o r t u n i t y . See your name appear on the b a l l o t of the upcoming e l e c t i o n . Apply in person or by campus m a i l to Tom R o w a n , chairman nomiYiating c o m m i t t e e . Deadline for a p p l i c a t i o n is Octover 16, 1974. page 4 powerfaihire continued from page 1 land. The choir will represent the Northeastern United Stales there in an international choir festival. CALIFORNIA: Cal. Stale reports that Bell of Pennsylvania installed telephones in all dorm residences over the summer as a service tothe Cal. students. Studenis may now make both on campus and local off-campus calls free of charge. SHIPPENSBURa. The Commonwealth Association of Studenis announced that an election will be held to determine the campus co-ordinator for CAS. The upcoming election, a departure from the appointment proceedure, is an attempt for greater democracy in the rapidly growing CAS. Shippensburg borough and security police announce they have develqjed a program to introduce persons between the ages of 14 and 18 to careers in law enforcement. > " » Attention 1975 Seniors: portraits w i l l be taken Mon., Oct. 21 and T u e s . , Oct. 22, morning and afternoon. Signup sheets i re posted outside the secretary's office 3rd floor Raub. Village of the damned featured music workshop continued from page I the Pa. "Elementary Music tonite in Ulmer Planetarium A strange thing occured one day in the pleasant v i l lage of Midwich in southern England. Suddenly, for no reason, everybody froze in whatever position Ihey were in. No gas a radiation w»s detectable. Then, just as it had fallen, the curse lifted. Other than a slight chill, the inhabitants retained nolhing of what had happened. Two months passed when the village doctor realized every woman of child—bearing age was piegnant—wilhout male assistance. ROOMATE WANTED: for Main St. apt., $40 month. For info, call 748-6954 or ext. 437, ask for Chip or Kent in rm. 314. STOLEN : Bicycle tire pump from Raleigh bike. (Registration no. 37-11136.) REWARD. Call: 748-4708 after 10 p.m. on week nights. The qui-t peacefnlness of the village reflected in the strangely pale, blond children. Unknown lo the r e s i dents, the children hold power to face evil on adults. MOM released this film in 1960, bul misguided il. The film wasn't given a Broadway sendoff and received little promotion. Starring George Sanders and Michael Gwynne, the movie unfolds one of the neatest little chillers in r e cent film histay. "Village of the Damned" will be presented at 8O0 this evening in Ulmer Planetarium. convocation continued from page 1 talk "Continuing Mysteries of Pigeon Orientation," will be presented al 12:45 in Ulmer Planetarium, open lo the public without charge. After the lecture, awards will be presented to outstanding studenis in science al the college. Famally the Science Major Mixer, the Science Convocation is a gathering of students and facully lo mainlain a high area of studentteacher contact. The convocation is intended lo have an infamal atmosphere so students and teachers may have a chance to share ideas. Classified Advertisements FOR SALE: Remember that special someone with flowers. Fresh cut roses, assorted colors less than $3 DO per dozen. Ricker Brothers, florist 24 E. Main St., Lock Haven. Wednesday, October 16, 1974 EAGLE EYE FOR SALE: Radio Shack Fall Sale Days at the Big Red Note. Stop in for a Complete Catalogue of all New Equipment. Special Purchase...8 Track Columbia tapes for 2.99 each or 4 for $10.00. Car stereo tape ployers from $49,001 Antennas and accessories on sale. A.M. pocket radio O'lly S5.95.' At^, Table Radio...$l 3.95! WalkieTalkie set...$49.95. Calculator for $54.50! Layaway now for Christmas and Save af The Big Red Note! Guide." During the summer he served on the faculty of "Encounters in the Arts" at Penn Slale. He is listed in the 1974 "International Who's Who of Musicians." There will be no fee charged for the workshop which begins al 9:00 a.m. Any person or group of people who ore i n t e r e s t e d in putting a line or short poem in the 1975 Praeco "In Memoriam" section for Bessie Bubb or R i c h B u t t e r w o r t h , piease contact T e r r i Dimpter, 512 M c E n t i r e , E x t . 422 or 4 2 3 . Learn how'to stitch in time' By BILL FRAZIER Staff Reporter Interested in farthering your sewing education? The perfect opportunity exists at the Second Annual Sewing Carnival. The Sewing Carnival consists of demonstrations by representatives from three nationally known companies presenting I pfog'Miis on easy sewing for easy living, fusing the new shape in knits, design on leather, and the newest techniques for sewing sweater knits. Sponsored by the Penn State Cooperative Extension Service, the carnival will be held at the Natior al Guard Armory at Lockport (near Lock Haven) on route 664 on Thursday, October 17. Two programs will be presented with each demonstration. lettgrs letters continued from page 2 is accountable for himself. Do nol pull anything like this weak shit of yours and expect us to take il. And by the way, why don'l you stop HALLOWEENING!!! Trick or treat! Name withheld by request THE KANE COMPANY RING DAYS October 21, 22 MONDAY - TUESDAY Time: 10 A.M. - 4 P.M. Your full name engraved free P.U.B. if you purchase your ring On either of these days! Depovt $ 10.00 C.A.S. Members - 4-5 Week Delivery $ 2.00 Discount