Lock Haven State College Eve Wednesday Nov. 1 7 , 1 9 7 6 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ V oVol. l . ) (XIX No. 43 Housing project in infancy stage the Greek Housing concept. By JACK SOHNLEITNER After the dinner represenStaff Reporter "We are now beginning the tative of the Edward Black initial stages of forming a Associate of Harrisburg gave a Greek Housing Corporation. A preliminary presentation on joint committee was establish- the archetectual design of the ed by the Panhellenic Council proposed building. Thisfirmis and the Interfraternity Coun- the same one that devised the cil, The purpose is to promote master plan for the whole and begin work on the Greek outlay of Lock Haven State When Lomison was queshousing complex" said Robert "Chester" Lomison the chair- tioned about whether this project would become a reality person of the committee. he replied, "This meeting was The Greek Housing Complex is an attempt by the just the initial thing. Everything is still in its infancy fraternities and sororities on campus to build a structure to stage. We hope this project will be a reality within a few house everyone. They plan to years build this structure on the college land adjacent to the .lewish Cemetery. This past Monday President Continumg its search for the Fr.nncis Hamblin of Lock "Natural Man," Playgirl Haven State College assisted Magazine is now interviewing by Vice-President Russell male students, ages 18-40. as Milliken hosted dinner for contestants in the magazine's thirty-six civic, banking, comfirst annual Natural Man muntiy, fraternity, and sororContest, announced Marin ity leaders. The discussion at Scott Milam, editor-in-chief of the dinner centered mainly on Playgirl. The first-prize winner GEORGE STRUNK, SHARON HAMILTON AND KEN SHOWMAN " are portrayed practicing for the play " A n Enemy of the People" to be shown in Price this Thursday, Friday and Saturday. [Photo by KAIL BRENNEMAN.! Playgirl Magazine seeks natural man nk movies divulged wiyone for a flick? That's right, the SCC sponsors Sunday night movies in Ulmer Planetarium, and admission is free with students ID. There are two showings, one at 7 pm and another at 9 pm. Dealing mainly with the Swank Motion Pictures, Inc., the SCC picks the films at random. The cost of each film is approximately $250. The next movie, C^ol Hand Lulie, stars Paul Newman, George Kennedy and .Io Van Fleet, It is set in the deep south and centers on a harshly disciplined chain gang and the prisoner Luke, who must defy any system which seeks to limit his personal freedom. Newman's portrayal of Luke won him an Acaaemy Awara nomination for Best Actor, and co-star George Kennedy won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. The following week its Clint Eastwood as detective Harry Callahan in Dirty Harry. Hot tempered and carrying a chip on his shoulder, Harry is underpaid and over-worked, he fights crime by the rules...his rules. Next is a W.C. Fields festival, featuring Yon Can't Cheat An HonestMan. Never Give Sucker An Even Break, My Little Chickadee, and The Bank Dick. The four films are some of Field's classics, who is thought by many to be one of the funniest men will receive $20,000 in cash and an all-expense-paid vacation for two in Mexico's exciting new resort, Cabo San Lucas. All told, there will be $100,000 in cash and prizes given away when the contest concludes next fall. Students interested in competing in the Natural Man Contest should submit five or more color photos (Polaroids are fine), including a full face close-up and a full figure frontal nude to: Contest Editor, Playgirl Magazine, 1801 Century Park East. Suite 2300. Los Angeles, California, No deadline is scl at 90067. present for submissions. From these entries, contest fianalists will be chosen and photographed by a Playgirl photographer at a mutually acceptable location. The pictures will appear in the Centerfold, Discovery or Horoscope sections of Playgirl Magazine during the next year. The additional modeling fees lor these features arc $2,0D0. $1,000 and $1,000, respectively, payable as a scholarship or in cash, upon publication of the photographs. Aquafins show set for weekend The Aquafins swim club will take you on a tour of International Adventure at 8:00 p.m. on November 18, 19, and 20 at Zimmerii Pool. The swim show, which is an annual event, is under the direction of Ms. Nan Wood, an instructor in Basic Physical Education. The women themselves selected the music and costumes and created the choreography for the numbers. Spain, Germany, Russia, and France are just some of the countries included This year's officers are: President, Karen Lonsberry; Vice President, Carol Harr; Secretary-Treasurer, Trina Harman, and Historian-Recorder, Bernadetle Talbot. The thirty-four members have put much work into the show. Admission is $1.00 or free with a validated I.D. card in the secretary's office, lower level of the PUB. P^ge2 Commentary: Security is confusing its priorities By KEITH VERNON and By SUE SHELLY The PATRICK, BARRETT, HULIK EXPEDITION [LAW ENFORCEMENT] At approximately 1:15 Sunday morning. Campus police officers Patrick, Barrett and student auxiliary officer Walt Hulik were standing idly together in front of Thomas Fieldhouse apparently very unconcerned about the college they were supposed to be patrolling. Their little chat was interrupted when they observed Jack Sohnleitner, Beverly Hofman and two friends walking peacefully across the lawn between the fieldhouse and the soccer field, headed towards the other side of campus. Hofman was carrying a package under her arm. None of the students were creating any kind of disturbance. None of the students were acting in a way that could be considered the least bit suspicious. In spite of all this, student auxiliary officer Walt Hulik, felt it was his duty to request that the four students approach him and his fellow officers. Feigning friendliness Hulik called out to Jack, an acquaintance of his, "Hey Jack, come here." While Hulik was speaking with Jack, officer Patrick approached Hofman and requested that she show him the contents of her package. He intimidated her to the point that she felt compelled to show him the contents. Well, the officers found what they were undoubtedly looking for. Inside the bag was an unopened six-pack of beer, which they immediately confiscated. Hofman's name was called in to campus police headquarters. It doesn't matter that the beer belonged to Sohnleitner, who is over 21 years of age, and that Hofman was merely carrying it so that Jack could warm his hands in his pockets. It doesn't even matter that the students were heading off-campus with the beer. That isn't the issue. They were violating state law and campus Wednesday Nov. 17, 1976 EAGLE EYE regulafions. That is undeniable. There can be no question thay they were legally in the wrong. However, I believe the real issue lies elsewhere. At the time of this incident, officers Patrick, Barrett and student auxiliary officer Walt Hulik were the only ones on duty. Why were all three men standing around talking at one corner of the campus? Considering the recent rash of sexual assualts on Lock Haven State women, why weren't these three officers patrolling the campus and protecting the students? The assailant or assailants were never apprehended, yet these three security officers were acting as if the attacks never took place. Women of LHS, don't you feel safe knowing that while this deviant is running around loose. Law Enforcement officers are spending their fime talking among themselves in a distant corner of campus? I believe this incident is evidence that Law Enforcement has a warped sense of priority concerning criminal acts. Is it more important for them to channel their energy toward enforcing campus regulations on alcohol, or to actively attempt to deter further sexual assaults and/or apprehend the person or persons responsible for these acts? Sure, the job of any law enforcement agency is to uphold the law but it seems to me that the violation of certain laws are more serious than the violafion of others. It is also my belief that, for whatever reasons. Law Enforcement is taking advantage of the fact that most students are ignorant of their rights. Officer Patrick's persistent requests to examine the contents of Hofman's package constituted, in my opinion, unfair intimidation, of such a nature that she was slightly afraid of the consequences had she not complied with the officer's wishes. Two days after the incident Hofman stated, "The officer got very impatient when I kept asking him why he wanted to look in the bag. I was afraid that if 1 didn't show him what cont. on page 4 Joe DeFilippo's concert guide AND ETC. Keith Berger — Nov. 22-23 Elvin Bishop — Nov. 19 at atBellerman, Pa. War Memorial, Stan Kenton — Nov. 27 at Syracuse, N.Y. Newcastle, Pa. Nov. 20 — War Memorial ShlreUes — Nov. 29—Dec. 3 —Rochester, N.Y. at Phila., Pa. Nov. 21 — Arena — Conack David Liebman — Nov. 21 at Long Island Community College, S'yiiners — Nov. 21 at Phila., Pa. McKeesport, Pa. Upstarts For the last couple of months there's been a variety of high energy music radiating throughout the halls of High. Many mistaken people think it is a stereo. Believe it or not, that surge of high energy power is a band consisting of Lock Haven students. They are Frank Leister on guitar (rhythm and lead) and back up vocals, TerryReickert on drums, Jim Harris on bass and back up vocals, and Ted Andlaeur as lead vocalist. Frank has been playing guitar forfiveyears and owns a Sunburst Fender Stratocaster and an acoustic and another electric for backup guitars. Terry has been playing the drums for thirteen years and his outfit consists of a double bass Rogers set. Jim has been playing bass for six years and owns a Fender Precision Bass. Frank, Terry and Jim have been in former groups with Frank already being in three other. These guys love to jam and jam they do well. Their routine numbers consist of Bowie, Hendrix, Steve Miller, Wild Cherry, Rolling Stones, Bad Company, Eric Clapton, Doobie Brothers, Free, and Frampton. Now if you've got nothing to do tomorrow night (Thursday the 18) or want a break from your studies, or start the weekend off, or to check up on some talent at LHS, then stop over in the lobby of High Hall. These guys are playing from 9:00 - 11:00. Come to dance, watch or have a good time. The dance-concert is free and no validated I.D. is needed. So nothing is holding you back. These guys want to do coffeehouses, dances, and playing in the dorms. Hey, I'll see you there. NOTICE: Any student receiving financial aid should stop in at the financial aids office in Woolridge Hall BEFORE Thanksgiving. EDITORS NOTE: We would like to apologize along witti the College Players tor the erroneous use of Anne Aycock's name In the column Opening Night. Anne is not involved in the play, An Enemy of the People. PART-TIME CHRISTMAS HELP WANTED! Soy^r Men's and Boy's Shop 121 East Main Street Lock Haven, Pa. APPLY IN PERSON AT ABOVE ADDRESS Wednesday Nov. 17,1976 EAGLEEYE page 3 letter ^letter "^letter ^letter "^letter ^letter "^lette Tradition is defended by Archway supporter To the Editor: I recently received a copy of the Eagle Eye of Monday, October 18, 1976. 1 was very glad to have news of the Homecoming events, as it was the first Homecoming I've missed since my graduation in 1973. I've made it a point to return for as many functions as possible, as 1 believe the college experience goes on long after graduation. With that thought in mind, I was very disappointed to read a column by David Heverly, entitled "Nothing But The Truth," on the subject of the restoration of the Sullivan Hall Archway. The Archway project was a tremendous undertaking by the Alumni Association, a group that donates its' time, efforts, and monies to Lock Haven State College for the continual improvement of the total college experience. Keep in mind that these funds were solicited as a special project, and in no way infringed upon any existing funds or contributions for other projects. I believe the project is a fine example of the good feelings many Alumni have for Lock Haven State College - in this one way. Alumni can give something back to the school that has given them so much. The Alumni are not trying to fossilize the past, but are providing a representation of the enormous amount of change that has occurred at the Haven in the recent past. To state that the Alumni perhaps never learned the "real" purposes and goals of education is an insulting slap in the face. These same Alumni worked and fought for changes as undergraduates in curriculum, administration, and social aspects of college, just as you are now doing, or should be doing. These same Alumni reached into their pockets for extra funds for a project in addition to the funds they already provide for Alumni Association and Friends of Lock Haven projects. Every penny contributed by Alumni and friends of the college should be appreciated as being generously donated for a number of projects - scholarships, student life, cultural affairs, etc. To complain that Archway funds could have been used for repairs to Akeley School, or for athletic or academic scholarships is foolish. Seek the proper sources of those funds - PHEAA, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania budget allocation, other Alumni and Friends of Lock Haven funds. To criticize the Alumni for "fossilizing the past" is absurd. The Alumni have given a gift to a school that helped develop them into ever-changing, ever-improving human beings. The Archway is a visual symbol of an active Alumni Association that has long been active in many invisable ways. Mr. Heverly closes by stating, "What we are supposed to be building here is not a building or an Archway. What we really should be trying to build is a better society and a brighter future." That statement is very true and very appropriate. The Alumni of Lock Haven do their part in building that bright future - building the Archway symbolizes caring for a part of their past, and a part of your future. The Archway does not symbolize an old, stagnated cont. on page 4 Solution: Salvation Armn To the Editor: This letter is to those few JACKET THIEVES who keep stealing other peoples jackets at fraternity parties. 1 think it's ridiculous that a person has to worry all night about whether or not he or she has been marked to haye their jacKct stolen by the mysterious JACKET THIEVES. If these people are in such desperate need of a jacket, why don't they go down to the Salvation Army and choose from hundreds of free jackets. I would also like to ask that who ever swiped my dark-blue goose down jacket from TKE to please return it. If you cont. on page 4 Publishing of faculty evaluations questioned To the Editor: I am responding to the Eagle Eye's article "Faculty Evaluations Should be Published." As a faculty member, I feel elated when students speak out on such issues. Such expressions convey the identification and concern with the education experience. Socrates is reputed to have said, "Righteous indignation properly expressed is the highest form of human communication." I must, however, on one hand take issue with the conclusions reached by the writer of this valued article, and on the other support the reservation of APSCUF regarding the publicizing of the results of student evaluations of faculty members. I am writing this letter because of my own convictions and not because I have been requested to do so by APSCUF. My position opposing the publicizing of students evaluations of designated faculty members is based on the principle of privileged communications. This principle means to me that if the well-being of a human organization is to be maintained discretion must be utilized in the disclosure of information. It implies concretely that designated messages and different types of communications should be disseminated in prescribed ways but that not all can be made known through unrestricted forms of disclosure. For example, professional policy for faculty members prevents the posting of student semester grades on a professor's office door in the avoidance of the invasion of privacy, but the transcripts of grades are kept in a student's folder on file with that individuals advisor. Jimmy Carter revealed in an interview with Play Boy his sexual fantasies with certain women, but their names, addresses and phone numbers were not published. Nixon's plumbers illegally broke into a psychiatrist's office in an effort to obtain information from a cont. on page 4 GET A FREE T-SHIRT! WEEKLY DRAWINGS! JOIN OUR MERCHANDISE CLUB TODAY! Rippey Sporting Goods 108 East Main Street Lock Haven, Pa. Ask for further details MUST PRESENT THIS COUPON [Expires November 27] Coupon Discount (10% off any item) Rippey's Sporting Goods 108 East Main Street Lock Haven J page 4 Wednesday Nov. 17,1976 EAGLE EYE publishing of faculty evaluations is questioned com. from pages client's file, but such information can be made known by a psychiatrist with the written permission of his patient if such disclosure does not violate the latter's interests. 1 disagree with the argument that ther is no use in students' engaging in faculty evaluation if the results arc not published. We are lead to b'^lieve that publicity in and of ii,'If is a panacea but this i!,ifn is not borne out by experience. For example, the F,amily Welfare Plan proposed In the Nixon administration - :.s publicized extensively but ficvcr implemented. Students evaluations have a creditable I'unction in serving as a siimulent to improved college teaching and as a contribution to objective evaluation of faculty. The argument that the publicizing of the results of student's evaluations would provide data helpful to students in the selection of courses and instructors is extremely weak. First of all, only certain classes of faculty are evaluated by students each semester. Secondly, more cifective ways can be developed for such a purpose. For example, a committee of Social Work majors will be on duty for consultation to students during pre-registration on November 20, 1976. While agreeing with the policy, 1 take issue with the outworn clique that student evaluations should not be publicized because they are only an index to a professor's popularity. If an evaluation instrument is as valid and reliable as the one just imployed by students appears to be, the data derived on a teacher's strengths and limitations serves as a useful function in raising the quality of education. It also serves to protect students' rights as consumers of higher educaSincerely, Robert Feldman Social Work tradition is defended by cont. from page 3 educational process, as Mr. Heverly states. It symbolizes an appreciation of the past, and a concern for the future - don't allow that meaning to be obscured. Don't allow it to become, as Mr. Heverly stated, "a tomb for the unknown and the long forgotten." Were it not for the efforts of the Alumni during their undergraduate days, Lock Haven State College would have died of stagnation long before the old Archway was ever torn down. In this one way, the Alumni are reaffirming a life-long committment to the college. Do not allow their, efforts to become a tomb for the unknown and the long forgotten. The Alumni will continue to contribute to their various funds, or many purposes, to impiove your total college experience. They are not reliving the past, but are working, as all of you are, toward building a better society and a brighter future. Sincerely, Norman W. Gordon Class of 1973 Classifieds Why not the best? Explosive Slate, Vote FIREWOOD - Any length: $25 per load. Call 753-3544 after 5 p.m, or contact Sharon Allison, Russell 10. Delta Zeta-Sigma Kappa Rocka-thon 48 hours of continuous rocking, Nov, 19 6 pm until Nov, 21 6 pm. Help us fight cancer, "5r solution: cont. from page 3 return it 1 will ask no questions, but if I see you wearing it I'm going to ask a lot of questions. Ex-Jacket Wearer John Killian 748-5833 commentary conf, from page 2 was in the bag they would make me," Did Officer Patrick answer you when you asked him why he wanted to look in the bag? "NO. He just kept telling nie to show him what 1 had." It is clear that the impatience in Officer Patrick's tone made Miss Hofman afraid of what the officer might have done had she refused to let him inspect the package. This would seem to indicate that Officer Patrick intimidated her to the point of fear. What right on earth did this officer have to frighten, through persistent questioning, a woman who was in no way whatsoever disturbing the peace as she strolled across campus with her friends? The answer is none. There is no way that Hofman could have been forced to show the contents of her package since she was not visibly doing anything that could be interperted as grounds for arrest. Therefore had any of the officers attempted to physically force Hofman to open her package, they would have been conducting an unconsitutional search. Be aware of your rights dammit. Don't let any police oH'icei- intimidate you into doing something you don't have to do. No police officer can legally search you unless he places you under arrest. If a police officer does place you under arrest, make sure he has a damn good reason. It seems, unfortunately enough, that only when students are aware of their rights anil start exercising those rights, only then will Law Enforcement officials respect those rights. SPECIAL YEARBOOK -Meeting tonight (Wednesday) at 6 pm in the Publications Office: to work on the Senior Section. Please come and help!