Lock Haven State College Eve Tuesday, Sept. 16,1975 ^ * ^ V o l . }XVIII, No. 10 Administration to submit request for more housing By LARRY SCHMIDT News Editor eral State Authority at a cost of $60,000, have already been oont. on page 4 When Lock Haven prepares next year's budget, college administrators are going to submit a request to Harrisburg for funding the construction of a new dormitory. The proposal for the new Students from all curricudormitory is based not so lums are invited to take part in much on an expected increase a Big Brother - Big Sister in enrollment, but rather on an program now being organized. assumed deficiency in the Operating in conjunction with ability of the community to the local Head Start - Follow provide students with private Through progams. Student housing. Plans for the new volunteers will be working dormitory may take the form of with children on a one-to-one either a single structure con- basis. structed on the hill located The program's initial ornear the water tower, or ganizational meeting is schedmultiple units built at a later uled for Thursday, September date when the campus ex- 18, at 7:30 p.m. in Raub 205. Experienced as well as new pands. In addition to the dorm volunteers are urged to attend, proposal, college administra- as the program will be distors on Friday also announced cussed in detail at this time. Set up so that children in that the college is awaiting the arrival of additional bleacher the program will not be let seating, pavement of Hubert down by a negligent volunteer, Jack Stadium grounds, and the students are asked to visit with creation of a short film depict- their child about once a week ing Lock Haven State College. and to attend monthly group meetings. Twelve hundred additional Any prospective volunteers seats will be provided upon delivery of telescopic, roUaway who cannot attend Thursday's bleachers for Hubert Jack meeting should contact PamStadium. The portable bleach- ela Fuller at 430 Gross Hall, ers, funded through the Gen- ext. 474 or 748-9963. Big brother, sister program forming here COUNTING THE VOTES - - Melinda Smale, Cathie Shandler and Kathy McCargo work hard to compile the results of the S.C.C. and S.P.B. elections held yesterday in Bentley Lounge. [Photo by JOHN VUKOVIC] Senate^ SPB fate sealed Yesterday's election culminated at 7:00 p.m., with ballot counting comprising the remainder of the evening for Election Committee Chairperson Melinda Smale and her helpers. Final results were made available at 10:00 p.m., when the following students were announced as having won seats on the S.C.C. Senate or Student Publications Board: 'We Care' sponsors essay confesf Lock Haven State Students have an opportunity to show Clinton county thay care by entering an essay contest sponsored as part of the current "We Care" program. Conducted on various elementary, high school and college levels, the contest offers prizes of U.S. Savings Bonds in amounts of $100., $50., and $25 for each group. Participants on the college level will be required to compose an essay of 500 words entitled "How I Can Achieve Real Excellence." The entry should be legibly written or typed, double spaced, on plain bond paper. Name, age, address and telephone number must be included on the upper righ-hand corner of each page. Entries should be submitted by mail in a 9x12 manila folder to Care Essay Contest, The Express, 9 West Main Street, Lock Haven. Submissions should be postmarked no later than midnight, October 1. College entries will be judged by a three member panel from the English-Philosophy Department. Winning essays and runner-up essays for each level will be printed in The Express, with winners announced on Clinton County Day October 8. GROSS HALL (27 percent voted) Robert Wagner Susan Gaumer HIGH HALL (42 percent voted) Manny Mwengela Glenn Miller Robin Shimer McENTIRE HALL (30 percent voted) Merry Hopkins Cheryl Smilek Lisa Davis Gail Ruby Cindy Smith NORTH HALL (18 percent voted) Cathy Grimes Sherry Cowperthwait Wendy Hollien RUSSELL HALL (25 percent voted) Lori Eisley page 2 Tuesday, Sept. 16, 1975 EAGLE EYE Former social committee chairman ^ LcttSr tO ProblemsdriveHughesto resign ji^g editor changes in the near future. It's day." a matter of priorities. Most One of the solutions to the students probably don't realS.C.C.'s problems, according One year ago, when Steve ize it, but only a minute to Hughes, would be to install Hughes took over as chairman portion of their activity fee more personnel. "There of the S.C.C. Social Committee goes into the social events on should be a co-chairman to at LHS, he could not have campus. My budget was only handle coffee-houses, and sepforeseen the insurmountable $32,000, and then it was cut arate committees to deal with problems that eventually back from there. They've sort films and concerts," said would lead to his resignation of left the social committee to Hughes. fi-om the post. "I knew it was a shift for themselves." Does Hughes think the lot of work, and I was willing to Aside from being a member social committee will be rework," said Hughes, "but of the student senate, Hughes vamped? "I seriously doubt there's just so much you can cont. on page 4 that there'll be any beneficial do with such a tight budget." Money is the obvious key to many of Lock Haven's headaches, but is it the only one that plagues the social committee? According to Hughes, no. "It's the major problem, but there are others, " he explained. "I mean I had a projector assistant and an assistant to help with scheduling and showing films, but the dances, coffee-houses, concerts, homecoming and spring weekend were all in my hands. That's a lot of work. A hundred dollars a semester doesn't make it worthwhile." Although Hughes was responsible for the acquisition of Rare Earth last year, he wasn't at all pleased, "I started planning that in January and it TOO MANY PROBLEMS • • Former S.C.C. Social didn't go until April, and even Committee Chairman Steve Hughes gave up his position on a group like that, we ended but still plans to work as a S.C.C. senator. [Photo by up in the hole. Could you JOHNYUREK] imagine if we had gotten Foghat or Quenn or Springsteen?" Hughes will be running in By FRED SCHULTZ selor programs which serve the upcoming S.C.C. senate Staff Reporter "disadvantaged" students elections, but he has no desire and work in conjunction with In an interview with Mr. to go back to the social the Bureau of Vocational Recommittee. Originally appoint- Carl Kleckley, the Project habilitation. The Special ServDirector for Special Services ed in the DeBernardo adminisices program is a federally on campus, many facts were tration, Hughes was kept on funded program, while the Act by Joe Euculano, the acting discussed concerning the Act 101 program is funded by the 101 and Special Services Tutpresident of the S.C.C. "The state of Pennsylvania. Proor/Counselor programs. overwhelming responsibility of gram Director for Act 101 is the job forced me to quit. I'm Kleckley, who served as a Mr. Robert Lane, who has a very interested in understandCorrectional Counselor with ing different lifestyles, and the the South Carolina Departpart time Center Coordinator lifestyle of the rock star is one ment of Corrections before and a staflf of Tutor/CounselI've fantasized about. I had the coming to Lock Haven, receivors as does Mr. Kleckley. Both opportunity to deal with them ed his B.A. in Polifical Science programs fall under the direc(rock stars), but at a very from Georgia Southern and his tion of the Student Assistance indirect level. I was the one Mastersfi-omthe University of office. who had to get in touch with South Carolina. An applicant for Tutor/ agents, and arrange transporExplaining the difference Counselor must meet the tation and call the lighting between Special Services and requirements of the Special companies and handle advertiAct 101 and the purposes of Services program and Act 101 sing. It's a job that requires at both programs, Klecldey statbefore they become part of the least two hours of work a ed that both are Tutor/Counstaff. Candidates must have By JOHN O'DOHERTY Staff Reporter To The Editor: Letter to those concerned: I can definitely understand, with the college having so much extra money, how they can afford to be so negligent in running of the new football field. After being preached to for three full years, about negligent teachers and school districts so forth and so on. The Physical Education and Administration of Lock Haven State accepted the condition of our new field and on inexcusable attitude towards the older fans and young players. My first concern was for the few older fans who probably won't be back after trying to climb Mount Olmpus. I could be mistaken but I didn't see any type of shuttle bus system to get people to and fi-om the game. My second concern was for the player who is going to get hurt some day on the sidelines and not on the field. Two open jump pits and two concrete putting blocks within five yards of the field and uncovered, someone is asking for trouble and we know who that is gentlemen of the hierarchy. My last concern is removed from the conditions of the field and the way some things were run and yet it does have something to do with the way cont. on page 4 Kleckley discusses tutoring program had the courses in which they plan to tutor, and must carry an averall 2.5 cumulative average with a 3.0 average in their major course of study. They are also required to obtain two faculty recommendations. If the applicant qualifies, he cont. on page 4 A meeting for the S.C.C. Cultural Affairs Committee has been scheduled for TODAY, September 16 in Raub 407 at 1:00 p.m. This meeting has been called to choose speakers for this year's lecture series. Everyone is welcome to attend. Tuesday, Sept. 16, 1975 Weightlifting Chappell takes second at Reading Sophomore Jon Chappell lifted his way to a second place trophy this past weekend at the Reading, Pa., Open page 3 EAGLE EYE Weightlifting Contest. Competing in the 114 lb. class, Jon made two of three aftempts in the snatch, sue- Professor^s dream trip finally becomes reality Back on May 31, a group of natural phenomena in which 13 students and one professor they exist. The "class" from Lock Haven State College travelled across the southern all piled into two student portion of Minnesota to South government vans and left on a Dakota, Wyoming, and Idaho, trip that would carry them to through Oregon to Washingthe Pacific Ocean, cover over ton and stopped at the Pacific 8,000 miles, and take 33 days Ocean. On the return trip, the to complete. students came back across the This western field trip was states bordering Canada, the realization of a dream drove to the Lake Huron-Lake which Professor Ted Enger of Superior area, and then dropthe Geosciences Dept. has had ped back down to Pennfor many years. In the sylvania. summer of 1971, he began In addition to sleeping at serious planning for a cross- national park lodgings, the country trip, to be taken for students also stayed overnight college credits, by making a in various colleges across the 13,500 mile round trip journey country through arrangements through the Western U.S. and made in advance by Prof. Canada. He and his family Enger. spent 63 days in the field, While the course was decamping out and travelling signed primarily to be a study back and forth across the U.S. of the relationship between and Canada to determine the geography and culture, stubest locations to serve as dents also found themselves examples for the educational involved in the study of ideas he wished to present. differing types of self-governProf. Enger, from his own ment, of social history as previous years of travel, knew expressed by the differing that there were many different attitudes encountered during sub-cultures across the U.S., their travels and of the history and the cultural differences of our country's Western could often be traced to the development. differences in soil, climate, Of interest geographrain fall, etc. For example, the ically, the students could see farms in the Great Plains are for themselves how the climate much larger in area than those of an area would be determinin the East because the lack of ed by the natural environment, rain requires more land to how for example climate zones grow the same amount of food. could be recognized from This thinning out of the cloud formations, and how population in the Great Plains people earn a living according creates a different cultural to the natural resources availenvironment from the more able in an area. densely populated Eastern Some students also learnstates. Likewise in the desert ed, much to their disccomfort, states, where water is scarce, that at higher elevations the one finds different attitudes air is clearer and it is easier to towards natural resources than become sunburned. is found elsewhere. The course in "Natural and Cultural Environments of the In 1972, Prof. Enger made Northwestern U.S.A." was another planning trip, this time through the Mid-West worth six college credits, but after the trip was over the and the Northwestern states. In 1974, he explored the students all agreed that what Hudson Bay and Great Lakes they had learned through theri own experience in the field area. By the spring of 1975, he was worth far more than six was ready to launch his field credits. On Wednesday, October trip, designed for college 29, Prof. Enger and several of students to experience firsthand the relationship between the students will discuss their cont. on page 4 cultural environments and the ceeding with 130 and 145 lbs. In the clean and jerk, he lifted 185 lbs., barely missing the jerk with 190, for a total of 330 lbs. His best lifts in competition last spring were a 130 snatch and 175 clean and jerk. According to his coach, Bob Coltrane, present plans for Jon include competition in the Philadelphia Open in January and then the Junior National Championships to be held in York in the spring. Coltrane, of the LHS Dept. of Public Relations, served as head referee for the evening session (181 lb. class through Superheavyweight) at the Reading Meet. SUBMISSION POUCY: Qubs, organizations, etc. wishirig to submit releases to the Eagle Eye are urged to do so. However, submissions must be legibly written on every other line or typed, double spaced; they must include the writer's name and campus address so that information can be verified if necessary. Announcements printed on a space available basis only. All material should be submitted to Student Publications, P.U.B. ground floor. Booters face Bloom today in away contest By GARY BRUBAKER Staff Reporter Coming off a big 1-1 tie against powerful Penn State University, the Bald Eagle booters travel to Bloomsburg today for a 3 p.m. encounter in the Huskie's '75 season opener. The men of Coach Karl Herrmann, still a little bruised from the very physical game on State's Jeffrey field last Friday night, will be going against a young inexperienced Bloomsburg soccer team facing its first taste of varsity competition in over 20 years. Last year the Lock Haven jayvees defeated the Bloomsburg varsity 3-1, Bloomsburg using last year as a "getting started" period for their soccer program. This season Bloomsburg is facing competition on a "varsity against varsity" basis, and are also competing in the togh Pennsylvania Conference for the first time in two decades. Huskie Head Coach Dr. Louis Mingrone plans to blend a group of 26 returning veterans with 27 freshman candidates into a representative unit. Among this group of talented freshman is Dave Stock, an All-State high school player that Eagle Coach Kari Herrmann attempted to recruit at LHS. Since Bloomsburg was closer to his hometown that LHS, Stock chose the former. Commenting on today's game. Coach Herrmann cited three areas in which the Eagles needed added improvement looking back on last Friday's game. "We have to score more goals," Herrmann stated, "We have to talk to each other out there on the field - let each other know what's going on; who to pass the ball to, and who to cover on defense. We've also got to push more people up in a strike position when we have control of the ball." "Our biggest problem on Tuesday is tiiat we might be a little flat following last week's game with Penn State, "Herrmann continued. "But I think our boys know what they're going to be up against this season, and will hopefully be up for every game on our schedule." "It's Bloom's opening game, and you know what it would mean for them to beat us," the Eagle head mentor added. The starting Eagle lineup for the Bloomsburg - Lock Haven game will have Billy Bush and Mike Seigfried at wings, with "Mr. Hustle," Roger Bernecker, at center forward. Jon Conner, who scored Lock Haven's goal against Penn State, Kevin Crump, and Bob Wright will be at the cont. on page 4 page 4 Tuesday, Sept. 16,1975 EAGLE EYE Part-time students predictedothertoresponsibilities increase P,'^^^'* must Part-time Joe and Jane College no longer need to feel like oddballs on campus. In fact, part-fime attendance may be the coming way of life in higher education. The Pennsylvania Department of Education reports that a bigger proportion of future student bodies will be part-timers if current trends continue. By 1984, says Roger Hummel of the PDE's Division of Educational Statistics, onethird of the students at Pennsylvania's colleges and universities will be part-timers. The percentage rose from 28.5 in 1972 to 30.0 last year, and a further 3 per cent jump is forecast by 1984. Joseph Bruno, PDE community colleges coordinator, says almost half of the student body at those "close to home" institutions now are parttimers. "The main reason," he adds, "is that there are more young persons in the 25-40 age bracket who need to increase their job skills. They are enrolling in the community colleges and these days many kleckley cont. from page 2 or she will be paid $1.70 per hour, and work a maximusm of fifteen hours a week. The Act 101 and Special Services appropriations are for the purpose of paying the Tutor/ Counselors and the professional staff of the program. Both programs consider the disadvantaged students and their specific circumstances. According to Kleckley, "By disadvantaged students, we mean students who are primarily financially disadvantaged. "Applicants to be tutored must meet eligibility requirements of th program. Faculty recommendation, high school transcripts, and SAT scores are checked and evaluated for the purpose of determining whether the student is really in need of a tutor. Kleckley noted, "We would like to be able to serve all student on campus who have problems. Unfortunately we cannot." Students interested in the program, either in serving as tutors or being tutored, should contact Mrs. Marilou Hiy or Mrs. Wendy Gardiner in Smith G-1. can't afford to go to school full time." Virginia Barcus, PDE coordinator for open learning, agreed that many colleges are finding that their average student "is no longer an adolescent nor even a ftll-time student. The over-25-year-old is usually a part-time student because family, work and come first. "A phenomenon of the past decade," she continued, "has been that many working people have had to go back to school just to keep up with their field. Some have been displaced in the job market and had to return to college to learn another way to make a living." senate, spb fate sealed cont. from page 1 Sue Johnson Elizabeth Montanya SMITH HALL (9 percent voted) Mike Crosby Richard Anderson Paul Benkert WOOLRIDGE HALL (27 percent voted) Roseann Brunetti Mary Kopp Sue Harter OFF-CAMPUS problems drive conf. from page 2' is the sage of the Sigma Pi fraternity. "I got an extension (until January) to fix up the house, and eliminate hazards, and improve fire exits. The feds are all over me." He also works for a beer distributor in town, and carries 14 credit hours - " a light load.'' His free time is rather obviously scant. "I did the best I could," Steve said, "but there's only so much you can accomplish with limited funds. I don't know who'll head that committee this year, but whoever it is, they have my sympathy." (12 percent voted) David C. Heverly Jo Ann Morse Andy Kyle Lewis Wertley Joseph Nawrocki Lorin Mock Steve Hughes STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BOARD David C. Heveriy Lewis Wertley Donna Pasternak letter cont. from page 2 it is run. The crowd being very respectable except for one A hole. Female, in a group of Sigma Pi brothers making them look really bad. It's ashame that such immaturity is tolerated between peers. This female, A hole, decided that her empty liquor bottle was a burden and made a missile of it. Lucky no one was hurt. This person will probably get a big kick out of this and if you do your a sicker individual than anyone else. I respectfully sign my name to this letter, incase someone feels I've been unjust. Guy Fueshko CLASSIFIEDS FOUND: A Greek medallion at the Overall campus voting per- tennis courts. See room 58 Smith. centage: approx. 22 percent, Phi Mu Delta Dance Marathon Sept. 19, 20,21. Register in Bentley Hall Lounge or at the cont. from page 1 Phi Mu Delta House.748ordered. 9383. administration Sometime in the near tuture the college expects to produce a six or seven minute film made from cuttings of the "We Care" Clinton County movie. It is hoped that the film will be produced through the public relations area of Bell Telephone and can be shown at high school nights and other promotional activities. FOR SALE: 8-track stereo tapes for $3.50 at Campus Casino. Top hits offered. WANTED TO BUY: Old jewelry, class rings, wedding bands, comic books. Drop a card to Herman McDaniel, 602 St. Boniface St., Williamsport. 323-9671. On campus daily. Strawberry Fields booters cont. from page 3 halfback spots. Al Rice, Sandy Bush, Mike McCartney, and Mark Sildve will handle the fullback duties with Steve Tanner, who played a fantastic game on Friday, in the goal. Freshmen Dean Wilson, Larry Jones, and Angelo Zalalas, and Eagle returnees Tom Fitzwater, Leo Barrett, Abe Stauffer and Randy May will be the substitutes making the trip to Bloom on the 18 man roster allotted visiting teams by the NCAA on away contests. experiences during this field trip, beginning at 8:00 p.m. in Ulmer Planetarium. The public is invited to attend at no charge. Health Foods 437 Bellefonte Ave. New shipment recently arrived! Hours:'^ SUon., Fri., 11 to 9^ Tues., Wed., Sat. 11 to 6, Thurs., Walnut Acres Erewhon's Celestial Seasons Teas