BHeiney
Thu, 06/15/2023 - 17:09
Edited Text
Lock Haven State College
Tuesday, August n
Summer Brings Surprises
Construction and Shifting Alters LHS
Cable Available to Gross Hall Residents '"''™«n' Cut
Cable TV service is
now available to the residents of Gross Hall with
payment of a small installation and service fee. This
service is part of the College's effort to offer resident students expanded education, cultural entertainment opportunities.
The Gross Hall cable
is tied into the Campus
Learning Resources System.
This affords the resident
student easier access to all
TV programming offered by
the College network. Additionally, the resident student may view commercial
programming in his or her
own room.
The installation and
service fee for Cable TV
is $5.00 per room, per semester or $10.00 for the
academic year of September
5 to May 22, 1974.
Once the installation
occurs, students who move
off campus or withdraw from
college may not request a
refund of the fee. Any student who would change
rooms during the semester
may transfer cable priveleges to the new room at no
additional cost if the new
room already has cable
service.
If, however, the
new room does not have
cable service, an additional
$5.00 per semester would
be required. Should a stih
dent desire to terminate
cable service, he imist notify the Learning Resources
Center in writing to that
effoct. In such case, however, no refund of the in>
sullaticn and servicing fee
is possible.
Students who desire
Cable TV should obtain
a "Request for Cable TV
Service Form" from the Hall
Manager in Gross Hall. The
stident should then submit
three copies of the completed
form along with a check or
money order payable to the
"Commonwealth of Pa." at
the College Revenue Office. The Revenue Office
will then forward a copy of
the request to the Learning
Resources Center and the
installation would normally
occur within five working
days.
John Sloan Fine Arts Building
Completed but Empty Until 7 4
Construction
of the
John Sloan Fine Arts Building is to be completed by
September 15. Unfortunately,
it is going to be empty.
The contractor requested
the completion date of August 9 be extended 45 days.
Although the building will
now be completed next montli
due to the lack of funds no
furnitue has been obtained.
While portions of the structure may be put into use
earlier, the entire facility
will probably not be usable
until Fall, 1974.
The Music, Art, and
Theatre Departments are
preparing the specifications
for the furnishings, and these
will be ready and waiting
when the state appropriates
the necessary money.
The building contains
a small 300 capacity theatre
which features a stage with
a hydrolically lifted front
portion. The John Sloan
complex is also equipped
with soimd absorbing practice rooms, choral and band
rehearsal rooms, art rooms,
experinental theaUe areas,
•nd
space for seminars.
Dedication of the building is not to be held until it has been put into full
Qf)eration.
Law Of^ce
Now Found
In Giennon
The Campus l^w Enfacement and Safety Division has been moved from
the delivery ramp of Bentley
Dining Hall to the Glennon
Infirirary - now known as
Glennon Hall.
The
Security
Force
has been increased, and
officers are on duty 24 hours
a day.
Any thefts or unusual
incidents should be reported
to the department at Ext.
224 or 748-2711.
All bicycles must be
registered at the Law Enforcement
Division
this
fall. The department will
also engrave radios, TVs,
and other valuable items
at no cost.
This fall the Infirmary
will be closed from 11 p.m.
to 7 a.m. If anyone becomes
ill or injured duiing these
hours, the Campus Security
Officers should be notified.
They will take the student
to the hospital at no charge.
The
Summer Interim
Committee of the SCC was
opposed to this action of
the Administration. However, the committee was assured that if a student needed to be admitted to the
Infirmary, a nurse would be
employed to attend the patient throughout the night.
Football Team
Homeless for
Another Year
The football team is to
be without a home of their
own fw another year. According to Mr. Donald Stevenson, Superintendent of
Maintenance, site problems
and high construction costs,
($500,000 - $600,000) have
forced the target date for
completion of the football
stadium to September 1,
1974.
On August 3, Harrisburg reviewed the pre-final
drawings. The General State
Authority and Pennsylvania
Depanmsnt of Education
requested the architect to
make some changes artd resubmit
the
pre-finals.
Mr. Stevenson received
the corrected drawings on
August 13 which he reviewed
OMt. on p. 4
page 2
EAOLE EYE
LMk • • ? « lUM (Mtogi. PA
Tiwadqr,
tauMfi
StudentAssociation Formed Over Summer
At a meeting held at
Edinboro State College on
August 3 and 4, the Commonwealth Association of Students (CAS) was formed.
Student representatives from
all of the 13 state colleges
and Indiana University of
Permsylvania were present.
Lock Haven's representatives were Ron Vance, (jail
Simpson, Mike Holter, and
Rich DeBernardo.
This organization represents the 80,000 students
in the Pennsylvania State
College system. CAS was
famed to work as a "united
and active voice of all students on all of the 14 state
college campuses."
Dan Bair, President of
Compass Coming
Again to LHS
The student handbook.
The Compass, has been rejin'enated. After its absence
in 1971, the publication
was put in the hands of the
Coordinator of Student Publications and the copy was
sent to piess on Thursday,
August 16.
The Compass contains
updated information on academics, athletics, the Motor
Vehicle Code, the student
government, student organizations and activities, etc.
The
traditional
pictures
have been replaced by sketches done by Liz Klens.
The SCC publication
will be ready for distribution by August 28.
Tuition Hiked
Despite Fight
Althou^ opposed by the
Lock Haven Sute Board
of Trustees, the sUte has
instituted a $50 tuition increase for state residents
and $100 for noo-residents.
The Khy Day activities
and letter-writing campaivi
held Ust year were effective in keeping the tuition fees from rising to the
proposed 9200 level. Room
and board and meal cfaarfes
will reoBin at $11.00 and
$10.00 per week respectively.
the organization noted that
the new unity has, in part,
been forced upon us by unfair decisions on the part
of the Department of Education, such as the $25 per
semester increase in tuitions at the state colleges
and university. The CAS
representatives at Edinboro
voted overwhelmingly to con-
SCUD Should
Provide Birth
Control Clinic
John M. DiPippa, representing the Commonwealth
Association of Students,
requested the State College
and University Board of Directors (SCUD) to incorporate birth control clinics
into the health services of
the state colleges and university.
DiPippa said in his
speech before SCUD on July
19 that it i s the responsibility of the state to provide health care fcr state
coiiege students. He firther
stated that he felt the state
was shirking its responsibility to the college women
by not providing the service
at the colleges.
"Two-thirds of the students at state colleges are
women," he stated. "The
state provides doctors and
trainers f a male athletic
events under the aegis of
safety. It is not reasonable
for the nearly 50,000 women
at state colleges to expect
thsir health and safety to be
adequately covered?", he
asked.
DiPippa described to
SCUD a three part birth control clinic program set up
at West Chester State in
cooperation with the college
administration and local
planned parenthood crganiza tions.
He warned SCUD not to
ignore the problem hoping
it will disappear. "We are
dealing with an essentially
different morality,** he said,
"one wliich includes a much
more liberal interpretation
of sexuality than before.*'
demn the announced increase
as "unfair and onerous."
"We state college students already pay, according
the Carnegie Commission
of Higher Education, much
too much of the cost of our
awn education," said Bair.
He referred to a report dis*
cuBsed at the Edinboro concent, on p. 4
Directory Expected irt Oct.
The Student Publications Coordinator, Debbie
Bricker, expects the Student Directory to be ready
in late October.
Local addresses will
not be available from the
Computer Center until early
October after which time
the printing and collating
will take a few weeks. The
names and addresses used
to compile the roster in the
Computer Center are gathered from the cards each
student fills out for registration.
Students
are
requested to make sure alt
information on the registration card is as complete and
accurate as possible.
If a student wishes
to have his name, address,
and telephone number included in the directory,
he must sign a release form
giving the SCC such authorization.
If anyone did not receive this form, if it was
misplaced, or for any other
reason it has not been turned
in, please stop at the secretary's office in the PUB
and fill one out. Deadline
to do this is September 14.
NOTE: Failure to fill out
and return this form will
result in omission of the
sttident's
name, address,
and telephone ntunber from
ttie
student
directory.
CAS, SCC Offer Life Insurance
Through
cooperation
of the SCC and the Commonwealth Association of
Students, a life insurance
plan is being offered to all
students. This plan is
presented as a service to
students through the United
States National Student Association.
The USNSA insi»ance
plan offers $10,000 protection for $20 per year (slightly more for studente over
24).
The
underwriter
of
the USNSA Insurance Plan
was selected by NSA on the
basis of provising the best
coverage per student dollar,
understanding the needs of
all college students, facilities to handle mass enrollmente, and the assets to
back up each policy. The
company guarantees that
coverage is both renewable
aAd noocance liable as long
as premiunB are paid. Rates
are suarenteed and cannot
be increased; restrictions
camot be added nor benef i u
reduced.
Infomatian and appli-
cation form for the insurance
plan will be sent to each
student's home address in
the near future.
Students Urged
To Further
Student Voice
The Attorney (jeneral
has ruled that students may
register and vote in the town
or city of their college.
Voter registration will be
held on campus in September for those who have not
already registered. If a
student is already registered
at home, he may exercise
his right to vote via absentee ballot.
Lock Haven Sute ColIe(B receives approximately
(Ok of its finds from appropriations made liy the sUte
legislature. If the stddenta
are to have any effect on
these appropriatkas, Ihey
must exercise the right to
vote: this is the only way
the men m Harrisburg will
hear the student voice.
•t 31. I t n
EAGLE EYE
Loek Haven SUte College, PA
P«ge 3
WeHer Expects 80 hr Drills ^TI^T"^
Robert Weller, Lock Haven State College head football coach, will greet 80 varsity candidates at the surt of
pre-season drills on Wednesday, August 22.
The large group will include 23 lenermen of which
12 were starters, eight on
offense and four defense, from
the 1972 team that posted a
4-5 record.
LHS opens the 1973 season on September IS at New
Wilmington, Pa. facing powerful Westminster College. The
mighty Titans have finished
in the Top 10 (NAIA) nationally for the past three years
and had a 7-1 record last year
including a 28-6 opener win
over LHS.
The Bald Eagles close
out the 73 campaign on Nov.
10 hosting Bridgeport University, holder of the nation's
longest undefeated streak
which now has reached 21
straight victories and two
post-se8.son bowl wins.
The Eagles should have
another good year on offense
with lettermen slated for
every position. The 72 offensive unit scored 198 points
in nine games and recorded a
toul offense of 2,746 yards
for a fine 305.1 per game.
However, it will be a
practically new defensive ttnit for LHS with only four regulars returning. Back are
Mel Abel, end; Bob Seal, tackle; Chuck Glass, halfback;
and Harry Sherman, guard.
Leading the returning offensive lettermen will be All"
American candidate halfback
Chuck Vennie. The Bald Eagle senior has been selected
for
the EC:AC Division m
season All-Star team for the
past two years.
Veruiie led the Pennsylvsnia Conference Western Division pass receivers
last ytat with 39 receptions
for S92 yaids. He rushed
for 247 ywds, a 4.5 average
and scored eight touchdowns.
The two-timi AlH^onference
performer also played plenty
of defensive ball last year
at halfback.
Senior quarterback Ed
IfcOiU will not play this year
•
due to illness.
Returning at the quarterback position will be sophomore Dave Bower who letteredvlast season as McGill's
inderstudy
passing
fa
13-for-37' and 212 yards.
Also back is last yearns
junior varsity signal-caller
Rich Morrell.
Two. freshmet% quarterbacks have been invited to
early drills - Marty Sapko
and Ernire Cavagnaro.
The other three backfield positions should be
filled by veterans. The.Bald
Eagles will have wingback
Vennie and Dan Wood, who
came on strong at the end
of last year. Bob Kline
retunis at fullback after a
great 1972 season. Kline,
a 20(Vpound senior, rushed
f a 634 yards and a 4.8 percarry average. He s c a e d 12
touchdowns which is just
one off the LHS all-time
season record.
Six veterans return in
the offensive line plus two
lettermen wide receivers,
Wayne Hoffman and Lou
Savani.
Back f a a third season
at center is Teny Mantle;
guards - Terry Szucs, John
Buckley, and
Dave Welshans; tackles - Dave Love
and Oil Brown. All but
Szucs are two-year lettermen.
Another two-year reggular
offensive
halfback
Frank Geiger has been
switched to a linebacker
position. The Eagles lost
three linebackers by graduation • Jeff Knarr, Paul
Simcoe, and Bill McNelis.
Other returning lettermen
are Mike Lang, halfback;
Jerry
Perry,
linebacker;
Wayne Johnson, defensive
tackle; Alan Anderson, defensive halfback, and Randy
Shifflet, defensive halfback
who lettered in 1971.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
HELP NEEDED! StwlMt
PiUieatlMs will be hiring students te werk parttime. Anyene interested
in applying fer weric setting cepy fer the Eagle
Eye, running the press,
IT warlung in the darl(r n n - please centact
Deh Bricker at ext. 456
by SeptenAer 12.
Copeland Heads Group of
Reluming Boater Lettermen
I^e-season soccer practive at Lock Haven State
College is slated to start
on Tuesday, August 28.
Fiftyfive varsity candidates
including eight lettermen
are expected f a early drills.
The Bald Eagle booters
of Coach Karl Herrmann
open a tough 13 game sche-
Practice Starts Sept. 1
Dolan Counting on Frosh
Pre-season practice f a
Oie Lock Haven State College cross country team will
commence on Saturday, September 1 according to head
coach Jim Dolan.
The Bald Eagle harriers uttder Coach Dolan
have produced a fine 31-9
recad over the past four
seasons including a surprising 10-3 mark last year.
Powerful Slippery Rock
Sute College furnishes the
opposition f a the season
home opener on September 15
at 2 p.m. The Rockets have
defeated LHS fa the past
four years.
By way of paduation,
the Eagles lost teee voteran runners from last season's team. Captain Steve
Harnish. Nibs Gwdon, and
Oeorge Bower were all three
,y«ar regulars and will be
The Eagle Wing win
Tha Bavta Wlna will
bt ipen (run 7:30 a.ni.
until 12 midniilit Hlis fall.
hard to replace, says Coach
Dolan.
Six lettermen return,
headed by brilliant distance
runner Mike Gaige, a twoyear senior letter winner
from Canton, (jaige finished
the 1972 campaign as the
Eagles' top rimner.
Also back are Bill
Landis, Larry Wise, t>oth
two-year
lettermen; Hal
Fried, Dennis Harman, Bob
Sellers, and Uoyd Peters
who lettered in 1971.
Returning with some
varsity experience are Matt
Delfert, Pat Dunmire, Jim
Fredericks, and Jerry Thornton.
Coach Dolan is also
counting on several incoming
freshmen rurmers to help
give the squad depth fa the
rugged 13-meet schedule.
dule on September 15 at
1 p.m. hosting an always
rugged Alumni Club. The
first intercollegiate match
is at St. Francis College on
September 19.
This year Lock Haven
will be shooting f a a fifth
straight Pennsylvania Conference Western Division
championship. Coach Herrmann in six years at the
helm has produced a regular season recad of 41
wins, 20 losses, and 12
ties. The Eagles won the
conference title in 1970 and
were cochampions in 1971.
Co-Captain Don Copeland will head the list of
eight returning lettern.-n
from the fine 1972 squad
that posted an 8-3-2 recad
and participated in the first
annual
ECAC
sectional
playoffs.
Copeland is considered
the best fullback in the 35year histay of the sport at
LHS. He has been selected
as the "Most Valuable Player" on the squad f a the
past three years. The Bald
Eagle senia has received
All-East recognition f a the
last two seasons and has
been picked fa the Pennsylvania Conference AllStar first team all diree
years.
ceou «o p. 4
page 4
EAGLE EYE
Lock Haven State College, PA
Tuesday, August 21, 1973
Student Association.
cent, from p. 2
ference in which Carnegie
Commission Chairman Clark
Kerr called for a gradual rise
over the next ten years in
public college tuitions until public college students
pay about one-third of their
educational costs. "We at
the state coljeges already
are paying about 40% of the
cost of operating the schools
- even if you count out the
funds students receive in the
form of scholarships and
grants," said Bair.
State college stirients
now pay a share of educational costs comparable to
what students pay at private colleges. "Students
at private colleges pay higher tuitions, but they get much
more for their dollars," said
Bair. "They get lower student-faculty ratios, better
course offerings and better
facilities for study and research."
That's why, Bair said,
the CAS lobbying and infamational effort which was
launched last Spring against
the proposed tuition hike
will continue. "Secretary
of Education John Pittenger
stated that 'the tuition increase itself would not be
enough to prevent cutbacks
in state college services',"
said Bair. "What we must
fight now as students is the
double penalty that potentially faces us when we return
to campus in September:
paying moie tuition f a less
services and facilities."
The organization voted
to fight f a an increase in
funds to be set aside f a the
state colleges in Senate Bill
1058 which is now in the Senate Appropriations Committee. That bill now calls fa
an additional $3.8 million to
meet some state college
costs arising from inflation
and salary raises. "We know
that there are legislatas
who are prepared to add
another $3 million to that
amount which would, accading to budget analysts,
allow the state colleges to
continue this year at the
sanoe level of operations as
last year. Anything less
than that amount and the
colleges will be cutting
back and that could mean
elimination of courses need-
the campus level from the
students to the faculty to
the administration to the
boards of trastees that they
have enough autonomy and
power f a self-determination.
The students opposed the
tuition hike; the faculty
bargaining organization opposed it; the administrations;
the board of slate college
presidents; and the board
of State College and University Directors."
"We all should have
learned a lesson and the
students, as a group, will be
waking to make sure it
doesn't
happen
again."
Bair noted that CAS
voted to mount a student
voter registration drive this
fall. "We are planning to
register every college student to vote," he said. Maybe the powers-that-be in
Harrisburg don't care about
the problems of 80,000 students, but this fight has
taught us that they do care
about 80,000 voters.
Copeland Heads..
cont. from p. 3
Other returning lettermen include. Backs-Sandy
Bush, Rich DeBernardo,
Lennie Long, Darrell Nagle;
Linemen-Dave
Chartibers,
Tom Rowan, and Mosen
Tarassoly. Long, Chambers,
Nagle, and Rowan are twoyear letter winners.
Also back with varsity
experience are Co-Captain
Bob Boles, a regular last
season until sidelined with
an injury; Lonnie Mazurie,
who lettered in 1970; Bill
Romano, Rod Antonioli, and
top goalie prospect Steve
Tanner.
Despite losing the great
1972 one-two scaing punch
of All-Conference perfamers
Galen Hess and Barry Johnson plus regulars Steve
Steffen, goalie Craig Dawson and Don Troutman,
Coach Herrmann feels the
1973 Eagle booters will be
stronger overall with much
mae depth.
The veteran LHS tnent a is also looking faward
to greeting a fine group of
incoming freshmen soccer
players, all with excellent
high school backgrounds.
ed for graduation; sardinepacked classrooms, and reductions in research and
work-study
oppatianities."
The fight against the
tuition increase, said Bair,
was a valuable one f a CAS
because it wiped away a lot
of illusions and misconceptions about the state of
student participation in the
decision-making
process
and student power. "As a
matter of fact," said Bair,
"it also served to reduce
any illusions of anyone at
Dry Run Held
Dr. Paul Stanton, Dean
of Teacher Education, has
repated that student evaluation of faculty will be
instituted this fall. A trial
run to determine the validity
of the evaluation was made
during the second summer
session.
So that the results of
this evaluation are available
to students, a tentative plan
to have this material placed
in the Library is imderway.
New Activity Fees in Effect
At a meeting on February 21, 1973, the Senate of the SCC passed
the following changes regarding
student
activity
fees. They are to be in
effect this fall.
Student teachers teaching the entire 18 weeks
in Centre, Clearfield, Clinton, Columbia, Lycoming,
Montour,
Na thumber land,
Snyder, Sullivan, or Union
Fountain Done,
Dedication Held
The fountain, designed
and sculpted by Rob Fisher,
is completed and installed.
An informal dedication followed by an outdoor picnic
was held on June 19.
The sculpture was sponsaed by the SCC, the Alumni, and the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania.
Football Team...
cont. from p. 1
with Mr. Stan Daley, Directa
of Athletics, and Dr. Matthew Maetozo, Dean of the
School of H, PE, & R. The
architect is to put some
changes on the pre-finals
and submit them to Harrisburg sometime this week.
After another review, the
GSA is expected to accept
the drawings and instruct
the architect to proceed
with the final drawings.
It is anticipated that
construction will begin early
in 1974 but there is no
guarentee that it will be
completed by September.
County will be required to
pay the full activity fee.
A student teacher teaching nine weeks in one of
these counties and nine
weeks outside will be reto pay an activity fee of
$22.50.
Those who teach the
entire
semester
outside
these counties will be required to pay an activity fee
of $15.00.
All student teachers
will be entitled to all benefits extended by payment of
the activity fee.
Student teachers are to
inform the SCC of his student teaching assignment
fa the semester if he is
entitled to the reduced cost
fa his activity fee.
Married students will
continue to pay the activity
fee. This fee will cover the
entire family, with the exception of members of that
family who are attending
LHS. Any members of the
family attending LHS will
be required to pay the entire activity fee.
Senate Office
To Be Open
This fall the senatas
of the SCC will man an office of their own on the
ground floa of the PUB,
Students with any COB*'
ments, problems, questions,
a complaints are invited
to air them to any senator
in the office. Through this
means of communicatio*
the SCC hopes to resolve
mae student problems this
year.
Tuesday, August n
Summer Brings Surprises
Construction and Shifting Alters LHS
Cable Available to Gross Hall Residents '"''™«n' Cut
Cable TV service is
now available to the residents of Gross Hall with
payment of a small installation and service fee. This
service is part of the College's effort to offer resident students expanded education, cultural entertainment opportunities.
The Gross Hall cable
is tied into the Campus
Learning Resources System.
This affords the resident
student easier access to all
TV programming offered by
the College network. Additionally, the resident student may view commercial
programming in his or her
own room.
The installation and
service fee for Cable TV
is $5.00 per room, per semester or $10.00 for the
academic year of September
5 to May 22, 1974.
Once the installation
occurs, students who move
off campus or withdraw from
college may not request a
refund of the fee. Any student who would change
rooms during the semester
may transfer cable priveleges to the new room at no
additional cost if the new
room already has cable
service.
If, however, the
new room does not have
cable service, an additional
$5.00 per semester would
be required. Should a stih
dent desire to terminate
cable service, he imist notify the Learning Resources
Center in writing to that
effoct. In such case, however, no refund of the in>
sullaticn and servicing fee
is possible.
Students who desire
Cable TV should obtain
a "Request for Cable TV
Service Form" from the Hall
Manager in Gross Hall. The
stident should then submit
three copies of the completed
form along with a check or
money order payable to the
"Commonwealth of Pa." at
the College Revenue Office. The Revenue Office
will then forward a copy of
the request to the Learning
Resources Center and the
installation would normally
occur within five working
days.
John Sloan Fine Arts Building
Completed but Empty Until 7 4
Construction
of the
John Sloan Fine Arts Building is to be completed by
September 15. Unfortunately,
it is going to be empty.
The contractor requested
the completion date of August 9 be extended 45 days.
Although the building will
now be completed next montli
due to the lack of funds no
furnitue has been obtained.
While portions of the structure may be put into use
earlier, the entire facility
will probably not be usable
until Fall, 1974.
The Music, Art, and
Theatre Departments are
preparing the specifications
for the furnishings, and these
will be ready and waiting
when the state appropriates
the necessary money.
The building contains
a small 300 capacity theatre
which features a stage with
a hydrolically lifted front
portion. The John Sloan
complex is also equipped
with soimd absorbing practice rooms, choral and band
rehearsal rooms, art rooms,
experinental theaUe areas,
•nd
space for seminars.
Dedication of the building is not to be held until it has been put into full
Qf)eration.
Law Of^ce
Now Found
In Giennon
The Campus l^w Enfacement and Safety Division has been moved from
the delivery ramp of Bentley
Dining Hall to the Glennon
Infirirary - now known as
Glennon Hall.
The
Security
Force
has been increased, and
officers are on duty 24 hours
a day.
Any thefts or unusual
incidents should be reported
to the department at Ext.
224 or 748-2711.
All bicycles must be
registered at the Law Enforcement
Division
this
fall. The department will
also engrave radios, TVs,
and other valuable items
at no cost.
This fall the Infirmary
will be closed from 11 p.m.
to 7 a.m. If anyone becomes
ill or injured duiing these
hours, the Campus Security
Officers should be notified.
They will take the student
to the hospital at no charge.
The
Summer Interim
Committee of the SCC was
opposed to this action of
the Administration. However, the committee was assured that if a student needed to be admitted to the
Infirmary, a nurse would be
employed to attend the patient throughout the night.
Football Team
Homeless for
Another Year
The football team is to
be without a home of their
own fw another year. According to Mr. Donald Stevenson, Superintendent of
Maintenance, site problems
and high construction costs,
($500,000 - $600,000) have
forced the target date for
completion of the football
stadium to September 1,
1974.
On August 3, Harrisburg reviewed the pre-final
drawings. The General State
Authority and Pennsylvania
Depanmsnt of Education
requested the architect to
make some changes artd resubmit
the
pre-finals.
Mr. Stevenson received
the corrected drawings on
August 13 which he reviewed
OMt. on p. 4
page 2
EAOLE EYE
LMk • • ? « lUM (Mtogi. PA
Tiwadqr,
tauMfi
StudentAssociation Formed Over Summer
At a meeting held at
Edinboro State College on
August 3 and 4, the Commonwealth Association of Students (CAS) was formed.
Student representatives from
all of the 13 state colleges
and Indiana University of
Permsylvania were present.
Lock Haven's representatives were Ron Vance, (jail
Simpson, Mike Holter, and
Rich DeBernardo.
This organization represents the 80,000 students
in the Pennsylvania State
College system. CAS was
famed to work as a "united
and active voice of all students on all of the 14 state
college campuses."
Dan Bair, President of
Compass Coming
Again to LHS
The student handbook.
The Compass, has been rejin'enated. After its absence
in 1971, the publication
was put in the hands of the
Coordinator of Student Publications and the copy was
sent to piess on Thursday,
August 16.
The Compass contains
updated information on academics, athletics, the Motor
Vehicle Code, the student
government, student organizations and activities, etc.
The
traditional
pictures
have been replaced by sketches done by Liz Klens.
The SCC publication
will be ready for distribution by August 28.
Tuition Hiked
Despite Fight
Althou^ opposed by the
Lock Haven Sute Board
of Trustees, the sUte has
instituted a $50 tuition increase for state residents
and $100 for noo-residents.
The Khy Day activities
and letter-writing campaivi
held Ust year were effective in keeping the tuition fees from rising to the
proposed 9200 level. Room
and board and meal cfaarfes
will reoBin at $11.00 and
$10.00 per week respectively.
the organization noted that
the new unity has, in part,
been forced upon us by unfair decisions on the part
of the Department of Education, such as the $25 per
semester increase in tuitions at the state colleges
and university. The CAS
representatives at Edinboro
voted overwhelmingly to con-
SCUD Should
Provide Birth
Control Clinic
John M. DiPippa, representing the Commonwealth
Association of Students,
requested the State College
and University Board of Directors (SCUD) to incorporate birth control clinics
into the health services of
the state colleges and university.
DiPippa said in his
speech before SCUD on July
19 that it i s the responsibility of the state to provide health care fcr state
coiiege students. He firther
stated that he felt the state
was shirking its responsibility to the college women
by not providing the service
at the colleges.
"Two-thirds of the students at state colleges are
women," he stated. "The
state provides doctors and
trainers f a male athletic
events under the aegis of
safety. It is not reasonable
for the nearly 50,000 women
at state colleges to expect
thsir health and safety to be
adequately covered?", he
asked.
DiPippa described to
SCUD a three part birth control clinic program set up
at West Chester State in
cooperation with the college
administration and local
planned parenthood crganiza tions.
He warned SCUD not to
ignore the problem hoping
it will disappear. "We are
dealing with an essentially
different morality,** he said,
"one wliich includes a much
more liberal interpretation
of sexuality than before.*'
demn the announced increase
as "unfair and onerous."
"We state college students already pay, according
the Carnegie Commission
of Higher Education, much
too much of the cost of our
awn education," said Bair.
He referred to a report dis*
cuBsed at the Edinboro concent, on p. 4
Directory Expected irt Oct.
The Student Publications Coordinator, Debbie
Bricker, expects the Student Directory to be ready
in late October.
Local addresses will
not be available from the
Computer Center until early
October after which time
the printing and collating
will take a few weeks. The
names and addresses used
to compile the roster in the
Computer Center are gathered from the cards each
student fills out for registration.
Students
are
requested to make sure alt
information on the registration card is as complete and
accurate as possible.
If a student wishes
to have his name, address,
and telephone number included in the directory,
he must sign a release form
giving the SCC such authorization.
If anyone did not receive this form, if it was
misplaced, or for any other
reason it has not been turned
in, please stop at the secretary's office in the PUB
and fill one out. Deadline
to do this is September 14.
NOTE: Failure to fill out
and return this form will
result in omission of the
sttident's
name, address,
and telephone ntunber from
ttie
student
directory.
CAS, SCC Offer Life Insurance
Through
cooperation
of the SCC and the Commonwealth Association of
Students, a life insurance
plan is being offered to all
students. This plan is
presented as a service to
students through the United
States National Student Association.
The USNSA insi»ance
plan offers $10,000 protection for $20 per year (slightly more for studente over
24).
The
underwriter
of
the USNSA Insurance Plan
was selected by NSA on the
basis of provising the best
coverage per student dollar,
understanding the needs of
all college students, facilities to handle mass enrollmente, and the assets to
back up each policy. The
company guarantees that
coverage is both renewable
aAd noocance liable as long
as premiunB are paid. Rates
are suarenteed and cannot
be increased; restrictions
camot be added nor benef i u
reduced.
Infomatian and appli-
cation form for the insurance
plan will be sent to each
student's home address in
the near future.
Students Urged
To Further
Student Voice
The Attorney (jeneral
has ruled that students may
register and vote in the town
or city of their college.
Voter registration will be
held on campus in September for those who have not
already registered. If a
student is already registered
at home, he may exercise
his right to vote via absentee ballot.
Lock Haven Sute ColIe(B receives approximately
(Ok of its finds from appropriations made liy the sUte
legislature. If the stddenta
are to have any effect on
these appropriatkas, Ihey
must exercise the right to
vote: this is the only way
the men m Harrisburg will
hear the student voice.
•t 31. I t n
EAGLE EYE
Loek Haven SUte College, PA
P«ge 3
WeHer Expects 80 hr Drills ^TI^T"^
Robert Weller, Lock Haven State College head football coach, will greet 80 varsity candidates at the surt of
pre-season drills on Wednesday, August 22.
The large group will include 23 lenermen of which
12 were starters, eight on
offense and four defense, from
the 1972 team that posted a
4-5 record.
LHS opens the 1973 season on September IS at New
Wilmington, Pa. facing powerful Westminster College. The
mighty Titans have finished
in the Top 10 (NAIA) nationally for the past three years
and had a 7-1 record last year
including a 28-6 opener win
over LHS.
The Bald Eagles close
out the 73 campaign on Nov.
10 hosting Bridgeport University, holder of the nation's
longest undefeated streak
which now has reached 21
straight victories and two
post-se8.son bowl wins.
The Eagles should have
another good year on offense
with lettermen slated for
every position. The 72 offensive unit scored 198 points
in nine games and recorded a
toul offense of 2,746 yards
for a fine 305.1 per game.
However, it will be a
practically new defensive ttnit for LHS with only four regulars returning. Back are
Mel Abel, end; Bob Seal, tackle; Chuck Glass, halfback;
and Harry Sherman, guard.
Leading the returning offensive lettermen will be All"
American candidate halfback
Chuck Vennie. The Bald Eagle senior has been selected
for
the EC:AC Division m
season All-Star team for the
past two years.
Veruiie led the Pennsylvsnia Conference Western Division pass receivers
last ytat with 39 receptions
for S92 yaids. He rushed
for 247 ywds, a 4.5 average
and scored eight touchdowns.
The two-timi AlH^onference
performer also played plenty
of defensive ball last year
at halfback.
Senior quarterback Ed
IfcOiU will not play this year
•
due to illness.
Returning at the quarterback position will be sophomore Dave Bower who letteredvlast season as McGill's
inderstudy
passing
fa
13-for-37' and 212 yards.
Also back is last yearns
junior varsity signal-caller
Rich Morrell.
Two. freshmet% quarterbacks have been invited to
early drills - Marty Sapko
and Ernire Cavagnaro.
The other three backfield positions should be
filled by veterans. The.Bald
Eagles will have wingback
Vennie and Dan Wood, who
came on strong at the end
of last year. Bob Kline
retunis at fullback after a
great 1972 season. Kline,
a 20(Vpound senior, rushed
f a 634 yards and a 4.8 percarry average. He s c a e d 12
touchdowns which is just
one off the LHS all-time
season record.
Six veterans return in
the offensive line plus two
lettermen wide receivers,
Wayne Hoffman and Lou
Savani.
Back f a a third season
at center is Teny Mantle;
guards - Terry Szucs, John
Buckley, and
Dave Welshans; tackles - Dave Love
and Oil Brown. All but
Szucs are two-year lettermen.
Another two-year reggular
offensive
halfback
Frank Geiger has been
switched to a linebacker
position. The Eagles lost
three linebackers by graduation • Jeff Knarr, Paul
Simcoe, and Bill McNelis.
Other returning lettermen
are Mike Lang, halfback;
Jerry
Perry,
linebacker;
Wayne Johnson, defensive
tackle; Alan Anderson, defensive halfback, and Randy
Shifflet, defensive halfback
who lettered in 1971.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
HELP NEEDED! StwlMt
PiUieatlMs will be hiring students te werk parttime. Anyene interested
in applying fer weric setting cepy fer the Eagle
Eye, running the press,
IT warlung in the darl(r n n - please centact
Deh Bricker at ext. 456
by SeptenAer 12.
Copeland Heads Group of
Reluming Boater Lettermen
I^e-season soccer practive at Lock Haven State
College is slated to start
on Tuesday, August 28.
Fiftyfive varsity candidates
including eight lettermen
are expected f a early drills.
The Bald Eagle booters
of Coach Karl Herrmann
open a tough 13 game sche-
Practice Starts Sept. 1
Dolan Counting on Frosh
Pre-season practice f a
Oie Lock Haven State College cross country team will
commence on Saturday, September 1 according to head
coach Jim Dolan.
The Bald Eagle harriers uttder Coach Dolan
have produced a fine 31-9
recad over the past four
seasons including a surprising 10-3 mark last year.
Powerful Slippery Rock
Sute College furnishes the
opposition f a the season
home opener on September 15
at 2 p.m. The Rockets have
defeated LHS fa the past
four years.
By way of paduation,
the Eagles lost teee voteran runners from last season's team. Captain Steve
Harnish. Nibs Gwdon, and
Oeorge Bower were all three
,y«ar regulars and will be
The Eagle Wing win
Tha Bavta Wlna will
bt ipen (run 7:30 a.ni.
until 12 midniilit Hlis fall.
hard to replace, says Coach
Dolan.
Six lettermen return,
headed by brilliant distance
runner Mike Gaige, a twoyear senior letter winner
from Canton, (jaige finished
the 1972 campaign as the
Eagles' top rimner.
Also back are Bill
Landis, Larry Wise, t>oth
two-year
lettermen; Hal
Fried, Dennis Harman, Bob
Sellers, and Uoyd Peters
who lettered in 1971.
Returning with some
varsity experience are Matt
Delfert, Pat Dunmire, Jim
Fredericks, and Jerry Thornton.
Coach Dolan is also
counting on several incoming
freshmen rurmers to help
give the squad depth fa the
rugged 13-meet schedule.
dule on September 15 at
1 p.m. hosting an always
rugged Alumni Club. The
first intercollegiate match
is at St. Francis College on
September 19.
This year Lock Haven
will be shooting f a a fifth
straight Pennsylvania Conference Western Division
championship. Coach Herrmann in six years at the
helm has produced a regular season recad of 41
wins, 20 losses, and 12
ties. The Eagles won the
conference title in 1970 and
were cochampions in 1971.
Co-Captain Don Copeland will head the list of
eight returning lettern.-n
from the fine 1972 squad
that posted an 8-3-2 recad
and participated in the first
annual
ECAC
sectional
playoffs.
Copeland is considered
the best fullback in the 35year histay of the sport at
LHS. He has been selected
as the "Most Valuable Player" on the squad f a the
past three years. The Bald
Eagle senia has received
All-East recognition f a the
last two seasons and has
been picked fa the Pennsylvania Conference AllStar first team all diree
years.
ceou «o p. 4
page 4
EAGLE EYE
Lock Haven State College, PA
Tuesday, August 21, 1973
Student Association.
cent, from p. 2
ference in which Carnegie
Commission Chairman Clark
Kerr called for a gradual rise
over the next ten years in
public college tuitions until public college students
pay about one-third of their
educational costs. "We at
the state coljeges already
are paying about 40% of the
cost of operating the schools
- even if you count out the
funds students receive in the
form of scholarships and
grants," said Bair.
State college stirients
now pay a share of educational costs comparable to
what students pay at private colleges. "Students
at private colleges pay higher tuitions, but they get much
more for their dollars," said
Bair. "They get lower student-faculty ratios, better
course offerings and better
facilities for study and research."
That's why, Bair said,
the CAS lobbying and infamational effort which was
launched last Spring against
the proposed tuition hike
will continue. "Secretary
of Education John Pittenger
stated that 'the tuition increase itself would not be
enough to prevent cutbacks
in state college services',"
said Bair. "What we must
fight now as students is the
double penalty that potentially faces us when we return
to campus in September:
paying moie tuition f a less
services and facilities."
The organization voted
to fight f a an increase in
funds to be set aside f a the
state colleges in Senate Bill
1058 which is now in the Senate Appropriations Committee. That bill now calls fa
an additional $3.8 million to
meet some state college
costs arising from inflation
and salary raises. "We know
that there are legislatas
who are prepared to add
another $3 million to that
amount which would, accading to budget analysts,
allow the state colleges to
continue this year at the
sanoe level of operations as
last year. Anything less
than that amount and the
colleges will be cutting
back and that could mean
elimination of courses need-
the campus level from the
students to the faculty to
the administration to the
boards of trastees that they
have enough autonomy and
power f a self-determination.
The students opposed the
tuition hike; the faculty
bargaining organization opposed it; the administrations;
the board of slate college
presidents; and the board
of State College and University Directors."
"We all should have
learned a lesson and the
students, as a group, will be
waking to make sure it
doesn't
happen
again."
Bair noted that CAS
voted to mount a student
voter registration drive this
fall. "We are planning to
register every college student to vote," he said. Maybe the powers-that-be in
Harrisburg don't care about
the problems of 80,000 students, but this fight has
taught us that they do care
about 80,000 voters.
Copeland Heads..
cont. from p. 3
Other returning lettermen include. Backs-Sandy
Bush, Rich DeBernardo,
Lennie Long, Darrell Nagle;
Linemen-Dave
Chartibers,
Tom Rowan, and Mosen
Tarassoly. Long, Chambers,
Nagle, and Rowan are twoyear letter winners.
Also back with varsity
experience are Co-Captain
Bob Boles, a regular last
season until sidelined with
an injury; Lonnie Mazurie,
who lettered in 1970; Bill
Romano, Rod Antonioli, and
top goalie prospect Steve
Tanner.
Despite losing the great
1972 one-two scaing punch
of All-Conference perfamers
Galen Hess and Barry Johnson plus regulars Steve
Steffen, goalie Craig Dawson and Don Troutman,
Coach Herrmann feels the
1973 Eagle booters will be
stronger overall with much
mae depth.
The veteran LHS tnent a is also looking faward
to greeting a fine group of
incoming freshmen soccer
players, all with excellent
high school backgrounds.
ed for graduation; sardinepacked classrooms, and reductions in research and
work-study
oppatianities."
The fight against the
tuition increase, said Bair,
was a valuable one f a CAS
because it wiped away a lot
of illusions and misconceptions about the state of
student participation in the
decision-making
process
and student power. "As a
matter of fact," said Bair,
"it also served to reduce
any illusions of anyone at
Dry Run Held
Dr. Paul Stanton, Dean
of Teacher Education, has
repated that student evaluation of faculty will be
instituted this fall. A trial
run to determine the validity
of the evaluation was made
during the second summer
session.
So that the results of
this evaluation are available
to students, a tentative plan
to have this material placed
in the Library is imderway.
New Activity Fees in Effect
At a meeting on February 21, 1973, the Senate of the SCC passed
the following changes regarding
student
activity
fees. They are to be in
effect this fall.
Student teachers teaching the entire 18 weeks
in Centre, Clearfield, Clinton, Columbia, Lycoming,
Montour,
Na thumber land,
Snyder, Sullivan, or Union
Fountain Done,
Dedication Held
The fountain, designed
and sculpted by Rob Fisher,
is completed and installed.
An informal dedication followed by an outdoor picnic
was held on June 19.
The sculpture was sponsaed by the SCC, the Alumni, and the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania.
Football Team...
cont. from p. 1
with Mr. Stan Daley, Directa
of Athletics, and Dr. Matthew Maetozo, Dean of the
School of H, PE, & R. The
architect is to put some
changes on the pre-finals
and submit them to Harrisburg sometime this week.
After another review, the
GSA is expected to accept
the drawings and instruct
the architect to proceed
with the final drawings.
It is anticipated that
construction will begin early
in 1974 but there is no
guarentee that it will be
completed by September.
County will be required to
pay the full activity fee.
A student teacher teaching nine weeks in one of
these counties and nine
weeks outside will be reto pay an activity fee of
$22.50.
Those who teach the
entire
semester
outside
these counties will be required to pay an activity fee
of $15.00.
All student teachers
will be entitled to all benefits extended by payment of
the activity fee.
Student teachers are to
inform the SCC of his student teaching assignment
fa the semester if he is
entitled to the reduced cost
fa his activity fee.
Married students will
continue to pay the activity
fee. This fee will cover the
entire family, with the exception of members of that
family who are attending
LHS. Any members of the
family attending LHS will
be required to pay the entire activity fee.
Senate Office
To Be Open
This fall the senatas
of the SCC will man an office of their own on the
ground floa of the PUB,
Students with any COB*'
ments, problems, questions,
a complaints are invited
to air them to any senator
in the office. Through this
means of communicatio*
the SCC hopes to resolve
mae student problems this
year.
Media of