-^ iS L/BRAf^Y 'B/G & BEAUTIFUL' "It's big and beautiful." This was the typical reaction of tnany LHS students as the new Stevenson Library opened its doors for the first time yesterday. Although the library is not yet in full operation,' students are now permitted to check out their own books. The first floor of the new facility contains the card catalog, reading area, reference and reserve sections, and the main checkout desk. Also located on the main floor are display cases, a turnstilei,and some books. The second floor contains books in the B through L sections; M through V books are on the third floor. The children library is located on the ground floor. Each floor is equipped with study desks. If a student is working in a particular research area and wishes to examine a hook in the library before checking it out, he can sit at the study desk located in the area rather than in the aisle or downstairs, library officials explained. Bruce Thomas, one of the librarians, said that the seating space at the individual desks is three times larger than it was in the old library. Thomas also pointed out that the library staff is planning to have the facility in full operation by Friday. The elevator is not yet functioning, he said, and the card catalog is still being completed. The librarian said that he will give a personal tour to anyone who is interested in seeing the new library facilities. T w o L i b r a r i a n s E y e Over the New S t u d y D e s k s a s the Library G e t s Under O p e r a t i o n If : y^LE EYE Vol Xlli, No 18 LOCK HAVEN STATE COLLEGE No Niore Sales Tax In Student Snack Bar One of the " b i t c h e s " concerning t h e Eagle Wing has been remedied. LHS students will no longer be required to pay s a l e s tax on the food they purchase in the college snack bar. Mrs. Georgianna Hartzell, bookkeeper for the Student Co-operative Council, became concerned when s h e discovered that Williamsport Community C o l l e g e ' s snack b a r , which is operated by Servomation (the same company that operates LHS's s n a c k bar), is not subject to Permsylvania ptate s a l e s tax. Vfrs. Hartzell, therefore, wrote a letter to Harry G. Banzhoff, chief of the legal division of the bureau of taxes for education, department of revenue, coinmonwealth of Pennsylvania. Banzhoff informed her that " t h e sale of food from a snack bar located on a school campus for the ibenifit of the students and school personnel is not subject to Pennsylvania sales t a x . " Mrs. Hartzell then informed Servomation of Banzhoff's d e cision, and the s n a c k bar operators subsequently stopped charging s a l e s t a x . Student Involved in Accident; Fails to Stop at Scene A 26 year-old woman from C a s t a n e a and her five children were injured Saturday night in a $2000 hit-run accident involving a Lock Haven student. According to The Express, Mrs. Marjorie H. Guerriero is undergoing treatment a t the Lock Haven Hospital for wrist, h i p , and left shoulder injuries and facial c u t s . Her condition is listed as good. Local police said that the C a s t a n e a woman w a s driving north on N. Vesper St. A car driven by Michael L. McLaughlin who was traveling east on E . Bald Eagle St. apparently went through a s t o p sign and crashed into the front of the Guerriero c a r . The Express report further s t a t e s that Mrs. Guerriero was partly thrown from her car and dragged for some distance before the car came to rest. The McLaughlin car continued e a s t on Bald Eagle St. and then crashed into a parked car owned by Paul E . McCloskey of Monument. There was $250 damage to his vehicle and the car was pushed 54 feet by the impact. Police stated that the McLaughlin vehicle then continued e a s t , failing t o return to the accident s c e n e . While officers were getting ready t o issue a warrant for McLaughlin's arrest, (a witness had taken h i s license number) he and h i s father came forth to report the accident. McLaughlin will be charged with failure to s t o p at the s c e n e of an accident and failure to stop at a s t o p sign. He was arraigned before Alderman Donohay and posted $200 bail for appearance at a hearing. Damage a l s o included $350 to the Guerriero and $1400 to the McLaughlin auto. Dorm Elections Held Today Dormitory councils for each women's r e s i d e n c e hall will be elected in the respective dormitories from 8:00 am to 6:30 prn today. The selection of a council for each dormitory is a new innovation for the women's residence hall a s s o c i a t i o n . Susan Sobers, president of the a s s o c i a t i o n , stated that although she is d i s appointed in Woolridge Hall's apathy, s h e feels that the new system is a good idea. " T h i s w a y , " s h e said, " w e will have a better connection with the student body and each dorm can plan its own activities without interference from another dorm." Meeting of Advertising and Circulation staff of Eagle Eye in PUB at 7:30 pm. All interested students are invited to attend. Tues., Sept. 30,1969 VOTE FOR 1969 HOMECOMING Q U E E N Today / Bentley Hall 10 am to 6 pm T h e f o U o w i n g LHS c o e d s a r e e l i g i b l e for ttie 1 9 6 9 t i t l e : Jackie Case Linda Fulesday Jean Hessler Ann L a m b e r t Sylvia Nickey Cathy Pelc B e v e r l y Shull Susan Sullivan no write-ins accepted T H I S LHS S t u d e n t B r o w s e s in S t a c k s of New S t e v e n s o n L i b r a r y W O R L D O F O U R S Gov't to Seek Student Advice, Says Report T h e U n i t e d S t a t e s office of e d u c a t i o n is p r e p a r i n g t o give s t u d e n t s a larger v o i c e in s h a p i n g f e d e r a l e d u c a t i o n a l p o l i c i e s vvhich d i r e c t l y a f f e c t c a m p u s a f f a i r s , a c c o r d i n g t o a r e c e n t r e p o r t by the I n t e r n a t i o n a l H e r a l d T r i b u n e . Several high-ranking officia l s of the a g e n c y h a v e i n d i cated t h a t t h e y would t a k e s t e p s in a n effort t o riEet some of the demands recently 1 he student congress at the placed before them for student University of Houston is s t i l l involvement in all activitie s dead-locked in the controversy of the office's educational proover publication of the UH studgraniB , the report continued. ent handb ook. The Cougar P a w , held up b e The s t u d e n t s ' demands were c a u s e the Student Association composed during a two-day meetpresident said he lelt that its ing in Washington, D C , last content is " n o t representative May. The meeting had been of the student body," may be sponsored by the office of educataken to the student court by tion, which had invited 15 studthe other summer s e n a t o r s , who ent l e a d e r s . have taken the position that the The specific proposals subpresident h a s made himself a mitted by the students included: self-appointed censor for the 1— e s t a b l i s h m e n t of a permanent student publication. student advisory council to r e The president's reply was that port directly to the commissioner he was "following administraof education. This council would tive policy e s t a b l i s h e d two monitor the extent to which studyears ago in that no one perents are being involved in the son should decide on content agency's d e c i s i o n s , would offer matters." advice on major issues in higher * * * * • education, and would propose Handbook Halted: Nof Representative' legislation; 2 — students should make up one-half of the voting member ship of all advisory committees and task forces that determine policies for programs affecting higher education; 3 — students should be represented in the review of all prosals for projects and programs in highe r education; 4 ~ preference in funding proposals by colleges should be given to student-supported projects. • « * * * NSA: It's Just About Finished* " T h e r e are a lot of people connected with NSA (National Student Association) who think i t ' s just about finished spiritu s U y , " said James M. Graham, NSA vice president for campus affairs, following the 22nd annual conference held recently. The association appeared to verify Graham's coinments made at a congress s e s s i o n . Throughout the meeting, a minority tried to disrupt the proc e e d i n g s , a walkout of about 20 student delegates took p l a c e , dozens of paper air planes sailed through the air, and a small group chanted obs c e n i t i e s in imison. " T h e plenary s e s s i o n was nothing more than an exen i s e in parliamentary procedure," said one delegate referring to the dozens of interruptions for " p o i n t s of o r d e r " and " p o i n t s of personal p r i v i l e g e " which s t a l l e d the s e s s i o n . The congress was " a good example of how inaction can split NSA a p a r t , " said another student delegate. * * * * * Britii) Get New Form of Protest T h e administration at Birmingham University in England has been thrown into confusion by a new form of student protest — instead of boycotting exams, the students have been taking too many papers. fhe idea is to make a " c o n structive p r o t e s t " and to " h i g h light the absurdities of the s y s tem". Students have been walking into exatns for which they have not studied and are not officially registered. In some c a s e s , they have answerei^ the set questions; in others, they have p e s e n t e d answers to questions they made up t h e m s e l v e s . RESULT: no inconvenience for fellow s t u d e n t s , but much more trouble for administration bureaucrats who had t o sort out the genuine from the fake papers. Rushing Attack Leads Vulcans to 2 5 - 0 Romp Infield Leads LHS Over Highlanders _Led by tri-captain Jack Infield's three-goal "hat-trick," the Lock Haven booters remained undefeated as they overpowered a game, but hapless Edinboro eleven by a 5-0 score on Saturday, Sept. 27 at McCollum Field. The talented junior from State College opened the scoring at 11:42 of the first period when he drove in a sizzling shot from over twenty yards out from his center-halfback position. Infield hit again on an almost identical shot at 1:06 of the second period to up the score to Lock Haven 2, Edinboro 0. Right wing Mike Minchoff scored unassisted as the big blond from Paradise, Pa. placed a perfect corner kick off an Edinboro fullback to put the home team into a commanding 3-0 lead at halftime. That man Infield was at it again as he rammed in his third goal of the day on a penalty kick at 21:52 of the third quarter after an Edinljoro defenseman was detected trying to dribble the ball with his hands rather than his feet. Senior inside Joe Knight tallied the final score of the afternoon at 11:15 of the fourth quarter. "The Man From Glad" (Knight) caught the by now thoroughly shell-shocked Edinboro goalie out of position and Please contact all'members of your organization as to the importance of being present on time for the group picture. All pictures will be taken in the lobby (lower level) of the Parsons Union Building. The PRAECO staff requests your cooperation in the matter of dress (suits, tie, etc). Sorority and fraternity members are asked to wear their group's jackets. '^UESDAY. SEPTEMBER 30 6:30 6:37 6:44 6:51 6:58 7:05 7:12 slipped in one of his patented "tricky" shots. Coach Herrmann unveiled a new "secret weapon" in moving All-American goalie Bruce Parkhill into the forward line late in the game whereupon the " B i g Jumper" from State College promptly blew two set-ups! So much for that secret weapon! The statistics supported how completely the Bald Eagles dominated the game in that they took 39 shots against only 3 for the Highlanders and 10 comer kicks to 1. Commenting on the game Herrmarm stated, "We were certainly pleased to have a s much fun as we did in this game but we're still concerned about the lack of scoring punch in our foreward line. The absence of Galen H e s s , John Garman and more recently the high-scoring tricaptain Jim Sleicher, due to injuries, has considerably slowed the fire-power of the front line. Without them we will definitely have our hands full this week with games against Lycoming at home Wednesday and away against Shippensburg Saturday." other threat at the Vulcan Sixyard line. An interference call on LHS led to the first California score and a second period fumble led to the next The Vulcans took to the next. The Vulcans took advantage of a third period interception for their third score and an LHS penalty led way to the Vulcans final tally. Quarterback Bob Keyes scored two of the Vulcans' touchdowns and ruiming backs John Sauritch and Bob Elash had one apiece. The Vulcans constantly pounded the middle of the LHS line for short gains and repeatedly ground out first downs. Saur itch and Elash combined for 197 yards while Keyes was rolling out for 50 additional yards. Commenting on the loss Coach Weller stated, "I think the conditions and their s i z e really hurt us. We just couldn't get untracked. Our quarterbacks couldn't p a s s , they just threw the b a l l . " "Defensively we're not doing the job y e t , " Weller added, "and we're not giving our quar- Sat., Sept. 27, at McCollum Field LHS 5 Edinboro SC 0 7:19 7:26 7:33 7:40 7:47 7:54 8:01 8:08 8:15 8:22 8:29 8:36 8:43 Executive Board, SCC 8:50 Board of Directors, SCC 8:57 Debate Union 9:04 Social Science — IRC 9:11 Association for Childhood 9:18 Education 9:25 P.S.E.A. - N.E.A. 9:32 Council for Exceptional Ctiildren On the campus of a western college, students organized c l a s s e s in civil-rights demonstrations. Veteran protest-marchers, wearing signs that explained their various functions, stood before the seated uninitiated. One picket line of "pros" wore placards emblazoned with the word DEMONSTRATORS. Another group of pickets, portraying the lie-in school of protest, was labeled FLOOR MODELS. Reader's Digest Defending conference champion, California State, belted a punchless Bald Eagle squad 250 in a drizzling rain Saturday evening at Srping Street Stadium. Unable to mount a serious passing game and only an adequate rushing game the Eagles looked like a different ball club than the one that defeated Bloomsburg in their opener. The Vulcans rushed for 216 yards against a poor LHS defense and scored all five of their touchdowns on the ground. While the Vulcans were running through the Eagles, LHS couldn't mount a rushing game against California's huge defensive forward wall and had their quarterbacks harassed all night. LHS coach. Bob Weller stated, "We were in the hole most of the time. It was the same thing as last week—mistakes. We just don't recover from mistakes." These mistakes cost the Eagles two possible touchdowns. LHS fumbled on the Vulcan 14 yard line to stop their first drive and a pass interference stopped an- Newman Club Kappa Delta Pi Math Club English Club Alpha Psi Omega German Club French Club Women's Dorm Counselors Women's Dorm Council Men's Residence Hall Counselors Smith Hall Council North Hall Council W.A.R.A. Varsity Club YM - YWCA Cheerleaders Majorettes Eagle Eye Pi Delta Epsilon Freshman Customs Sorry about that! Sylvia Nickey, a candidate for homecoming queen, is 19 years old—not 29 as was misstatedyesterday. W.C. Fields and Mae West in MY LITTLE CHICKADEE Tuesday, Sept. 30, at 1:30 pm in Raub 309. htarriersWin 4'Way Meet The jjald Eagle thin clads picked up three victories on Saturday at Geneva College, boosting their record to 3 and 1. The victories came at the expense of Waynesburg by a 21-37 score, Geneva by 18-42, and St. Vincent's by 18-41. Waynesburg also defeated Geneva anH StVincent's, while (Jeneva's only victory came in a battle with St. Vincent's. Placings by the LHS runners against Waynesburg, Geneva, St. Vincent's,and their overall placetnents were as follows: Dave Mosebrook, first in all; Steve Paogajny, second in all; Em Borowski, fifth, fourth, fourth, and seventh; Nibs Gordon, sixth, tifth, fifth, eighth; Carl Klingamai\ seventh, sixth, sixth, ninth; Steve Harnish, eighth, seventh, eighth, eleventh; George Bower, thirteenth, eleventh, eleventh, twenty-first; Keith Rider, fifteenth, thirteenth, twelfth, twenty-fourth; Bob Wagner, ninteenth, fifteenth, sixteenth, thirty-second. Mose brook's time for the hilly 4.1 mile co, rse was 21:20, only 14 seconds over the course record. The first six LHS runners finished within two minutes of each other. Commenting on the race. Coach Jim Dolan said: "I was very pleased with the improvement shown in our team. Dave Mosebrook and Steve Podgajny performed as expected, very well. E.M. Borowski, Ni^bs Gordon, and especially Carl Klingamen and Steve Harnish improved immensely over last week. With the return of Harry Smelte next week and another week of training, we should show more improvement." The harriers next encounter will be at 2:00 next Saturday, at home, against California State. 1. 2. 3. 3. 5. 6. 7. 8. Dave Mosebrpok, LH 21:20 Steve Podgajny, LH 21:42 B. Cutler, W' '21.55 M. Prentipe, G......22:03 M. Brunner, W 32:10 J. Betchero, SV 22:14 Mike Borowsk, LH 22:15 Normal Gordon, LH . •.. . , . . • . . 22:23 9. Cad KtingJfcian,-'lil 23:10 10. K. Kabutka, 8V v'.... 23:14 fl. St^W^arrtish, LH .23:21 Other'LHSC: 21. George Bowet',. 2?:32; 24. Keith' R 1 d er, 25:99; Jkub. Wagner, 26:48, terbacks a chance at a l l . " Commenting on the Clarion game coming up Saturday afternoon Weller stated, "Now, the question is whether or not we're capable of getting back up again "they have Clarion to f a c e . " Optimistically, Weller added, "We'll be back." California fi 7 6 (HS5 Loclc Haven 0 0 • 6^ 0 C—Sauritch 2 nin (kick failed) C—Keys 1 Run (Bisnic kick). C—Keys 5 run (run failed). C—Elash 2 run (run failed). STATISTICS C LH Offensive Plays 73 57 First Downs 12 8 Rushing 9 3 Passing 2 3 Penalties 1 2 Yards Rushing fSi 103, Yards Lost Rushing 38 68 Net Yards Rushing .. 216 35 Yards Passing 33 68 Total Offense . . . . . . . 259 103 Passes 4-7 7-13 Passes Had Intercepted 1 2 Fumbles-Lost 2-0 2-2 Penalties-Yards 7-69 «-52 Funic - Average .6-38.8 7-30.7 RUSHING California St. C YGYLNYAvg Sauritch .... 21 77 9 71 3.7 Ray 8 64 0 64 8.0 Elash . . . . . . 12 56 0 56 4,7 Keys 15 50 28 28 1.5 Monstrolo .... 2 5 0 5 2.& Podbesek .. 2 5 10 -8 -4.0 Lock Haven St. Allen 10 46 8 38 S.8 Elby 9 27 0 27 S.O Rhule 11 27 17 5 0.5 Shuey 1 3 0 3 3.0 Knarr 1 3 0 0 S.O Packer .. . 6 2 432-41 -6.8 PASSING California St. A C I Y Pet Keys 3 2 0 23 68.7 Podbesek . . . 4 2 1 10 500 Lock Haven jSt. Packer ', 8 5 1 46 62.5 Rhule 5 2 1 W, 40.0 RECEIVING California St. R Y Avg Zdilla 1 16 16.0 Carlock . . ; . . . 1 15 15.0 Sauritch 1 8 8.0 Monstrola 1 6 6.0 Lock Haven St. Vaughn 2 22 11,0, Hoffman 2 30 J5!0 Smith 1 9 9.0 Allen 2 7 3.5 Our Specialty Roast Beef Served Hot CAMPUS CASINO %TON£ HOUSE PIZZA Pizza — ISC a slice ^ steaks meatba^^* subs Will deliver orders over $5 Rt. 220 Hogan Blvd. 748-3277