BHeiney
Tue, 06/20/2023 - 12:39
Edited Text
W o o d r o w Wilson Fello>vship
Must Be Suspended

E A6LE EYE
Ecological Seminar Scheduled
A seminar and workshop on
Pine Creek e c o ' o g i c a l prrolems
will be held on October 20 at
Ixick Haven State's Sieg Conference Center in Lamar. County
Commissioners, borough officials,
and township supervisors in Clinton, Lycoming, Tioga, and Potter
Counties are expected to attend
because Pine Creek runs through
all four c o u n t i e s . Also attending
will be members o '
Pine Creek
Watershed Associa The purpase c» li-c workshop
is to examine soh'Mons to the
problem of water pollution. A follow-up conference scheduled for
later in the year will examine
methods of implementing the solutions through l e g i s l a l . J action.
Principle s p e a k e r s will be

Dr. Peter W. Fletcher, professor
of forestry 'at the Pennsylvania
State University, who will d i s c u s s
the " P a s t Two Years Findings
and Plans for the Future of Pine
Creek Watershed." Research reports related to Pine Creek will
be presented by the Pennsylvania
Department of Environmental Res o u r c e s , the Penn State Department of Zoology and Institute for
Research on Land and Water Res o u r c e s , Lock Hazen Stage's Department of Natural Sciences, and
Trout Unlimited.
Topics to be examined will
be chemical and bacterial pollution, aquatic plants and i n s e c t s ,
fish population.
During the afternoon s e s s i o n ,
demonstrations will be given on
the analysis of water pollution.

SCC: Comments

SCC: Innovations
As a result of a years work
the SCC constitution h a s been revised to benefit the college in
the best possible way.
The major revisions to the
SCC constitution were made to
involve the student body more
than the previous cpnstitution did.
In order to accomplish this t a s k ,
the form of representation was
changed from a council system
to a senate system. Now, representation will be according to
population of student body with
one senator per each 100 students
The former representative policy
allowed one representative per
organization.
Fraternities will be represented in the same manner as the
campus student body, as will offcampus and commuting s t u d e n t s .
Sororities will be handled as dorm
residents, but if they move offcampus they would be extended
the same rights as fraternities.
The newly revised constitution also provides for better corn-

munications between the SCC Executive Board and s t u d e n t s . In
order to help promote better relations between the two groups, a
copy of the constitution and minutes from each SCC meeting are
posted on the bulletin board outside the SCC office. The officers
have requested that the papers
remain on the board.
The fiscal policy of the SCC
and related organizations has a l s o
been up-dated by the new charter.
Now, a monthly budget is required
from all groups allocated by the
committee. This was done to h e l p
keep the SCC budgets and records
in order.
Also included in the revised
form are the provisions for the
student and faculty activity f e e s .
If any questions concerning
the constitution a r i s e , d i s c u s s i o n s
on the subject are conducted at
SCC meetings. The document is
subject to revisions until the 1st
week in November.

Eagle Eye will have a
campus society section this
year. Anyone desiring an annoucement concerning pinnings, engagements, etc. must
turn it in to the Eagle Eye
office in person.
The freshman class elections held Tuesday resulted
in a vote of 74 for John Adams
to 73 for Chuck Runnels, for
the Office of President.
A recount was held
Wednesday and Adams was
officially declared me winner
with the vote of 74 to Runnels
72. The amount of votes received by all other canidates
was unchanged.
Those elected were:
President - John Adams
V. Pres. - Ronny Palmer
Treas. - David Stroup
Sec. - Patty Klunk
Male SCC Rep. - Hans Reimann
Female SCC Rep. - CindyDowns

losing the two streams flowing
through the grounds of the Conference Center. Comparisons will
be made between the fertile Fishing Creek waters and the waters
of an infertile nearby stream flowing into Fishing Creek. The demonstrations will be under the
supervision of Dr. Robert Scherer,
professor of biology at Lock
Haven State, who directs the coll e g e ' s fresh water biology station
at the Conference Center.
The seminar and workshop is
being sponsored by the Pennsylvania Department of Education
Higher Education Act Title I Agency, in cooperation with the Division of Natural Sciences and the
Educational Development Center
of LHS.

by Karen W i t c o s k i e :

Some people never learn.
Once again LHS has been given
a perfect example of crime and
punishment.
The open houses in the men's
dorms have been cancelled for
the next two weekends because
of a supposed rash of illegal
drinking incidents. This writer
has heard that the fact is one
student was caught drinking in
his room. The response of the
administration is not only reactionary but a l s o , in my opinion, a
simple example of power politics.
Again I find myself pleased
with student response. Meetings
were held yesterday with Dean
Smalley at the request of several
student groups including one appointed by the SCC to protest the
unfair action and reach an understanding that will prevent future
incidents of this kind.

I ' is fall, for the firsl time
in more than 20 years, there will
he no Woodrow Wilson Fellowship
competition. Among college profes.sors, and those college seniors who are thinking of becoming
professors, this annual competition has become as much a part
of the fall term as football.
In announcing that the fellowship program would be temporarily suspended, H. RonaldiRouse,
National Director of the Woodrow
Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, said, " F u n d s currently
available to the Foundation for
first year graduate fellowships
are being used to support over
200 Fellows during the 1971-72
academic year. Prospects for securing new funds are uncertain.
During the coming year, trustees
and officers of the Foundation in
cooperation with representatives
of the academic world, will design
a new fellowship program taking
into account recent developments
in graduate education and in the
teaching profession, and seek
funda for this new program."
A total of 213 Woodrow Wilson
Fellows will be supported this
year at 69 graduate schools. F e l lowships are being held in reserve
for 25 others who have had to
postpone graduate study because
of military or alternative s e r v i c e .
dther foundation
programs
wil! be continued during 1971-72
and 1972-73. T h e s e include the
Dissertation
Fellowships,
the
Martin Luther King, Jr. Fellowships and the Graduate Information and Counseling Service for
Black Veterans, the Teaching and
Administration Internships, and
the National Humanities S e r i e s .
To support its programs, the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship
Foundation r e c e i v e s grants from
other foundations and contributions
from individuals, including over
2,000 former Woodrow Wilson F e l lows.
The Wilson Fellowships are
only one of a number of programs
throughout the country which have
suffered from the recent decline
in fellowship support. Rouse s a i d .
The U.S. government, which in
1967 supported nearly 11,000 fellowships for beginning graduate
students, has reduced or eliminated several programs. It will
provide only about 1,500 new fellowships for 1972-73. At the same
time many state governments have
similarly reduced the amount of

Why should students be concerned? 1 see at least two reas o n s . One is social but the other
is principle.
Closing the men's dorms for
two weeks includes Homecoming
Weekend. How many parents and
friends would enjoy carrying on
initimate conversations with their
by Darwin Zeigler:
LHS host in crowded lounges?
We have enough trouble convincing people that Lock Haven can
become an entertainment mecca
" T h e r e is only one way o u t . "
without having to say that visThis is the reply which
itors can sightsee the buildings Joseph K. r e c e i v e s from the
but only from the outside.
bailiff concerning leaving the
But more important there's a court house. However, the same
principle at stake here. Supposed- answer is applicable to J o s e p h ' s
ly civilized societies have exist- greater problem in The
Trial
ed under a legal principle that the which was presented Wednesday
punishment fits the crime. I evening by the National P l a y e r s .
wouldn't want to call LHS unIn the work, Kafka portrays
civilized, but even more than one a young man who is completely
drinking student is slightly less crushed by the bureaucracy of
than majority. Cancelling priv- modem society. It is apparent
ileges for their cntiic dorms be- there is only one way to e s c a p e
cause of the imprudence of one from this pressure, and this i s
leans to the reactionary. As one through death.
SCC representative put it, its
T h i s was brought to light
like catching one person cheating more effectively
when J o s e p h
on a test and telling the whole finally had his trial. He delivered
c l a s s they can't have r e c e s s . a very moving speech in which
There's no way this one plus one he pointed out that this oppresmakes two.
sion had plowed under everybody
from his guardian uncle to the
Lamda Chi Alpha Car Rally judge who was trying him. T h i s
was undoubtedly the high point
Sunday October 17 at 2 p.m. of
the entire evening.
Meet at lower LHS parking lot.
Unfortunately
the message
of oppression barely get through
Entrance Fee • $2.50
to the audience due to two major

support they provide, and a number
of programs financed by corporations and private foundations have
been discontinued.
As a result of rapid growth
of graduate s c h o o l s , more Ph, D.'s
have been produced this year than
can be placed. Rouse added. The
economic recession and the recent
wave of anti-academic sentiment
across the country have combined
to reduce drastically the amount
of money available for college
faculty s a l a r i e s . As a result of
these two factors the demand for
college teachers has dropped jusl
at the time when the supply is
increasing.
While the country may have
overreacted to the college teacher
shortage of a decade ago, there
is nov the danger that it will
sin!i!arly overreact to the current
problems of higher education by
discouraging outstanding students
from considering academic careers.
Rouse continued: " T o d a y ' s undergraduates who are considering
academic careers must look to the
job market of 1980. By that time
the present economic and political
climate will be h i s t o r y . "
However, young people planning for academic careers should
make flexible p l a n s . Rouse advised. It is unlikely that they can
expect to step onto the fellowship
escalator and be carried smoothly
up through the P h . D . and into an
academic post. Many may wish to
secure certification for secondary
school teaching to provide an
alternative, either temporary or
permanent, to doctoral work. The
M.A. is still the accepted preparation for teaching in most junior and
community c o l l e g e s , and students
headed for graduate school should
consider careers in this rapidly
expanding sector. T h e new Doctor
of Arts d e g r e e s , now being offered
at a number of universities,provide
another alternative to the traditional Ph. D.
" T h e officers and trustees
of the Woodrow Wilson National
Fellowship F'oundation are convinced that there is not, and never
will be, and oversupply of truly
outstanding t e a c h e r s , combining
dedication to scholarship with a
sensitivity to people and their
needs. They are determined to
find some means of continuing
to identify, encourage and a s s i s t
young people with these qualities
in preparing for careers appropriate to their talents and s o c i e t y ' s
n e e d s , " Rouse concluded.

"THE TRIAL' Draws Crowd

Agent Election
Results
The Association of Pennsylvania State College and University Faculties was elected
as the faculty bargining agent on
Wednesday. It will represent the
laculty
of
the
Pennsylvania
State Colleges in negotiations
with the Office of Administration
in Harrisburg.
The Association was challenged by three other organizations and a no representative
c h o i c e . The results of the election
were as follows:
APSCUF
55.5%
AAUP
35.4%
AFT
4.1%
No Representation
4.6%
134 LHS faculty members
voted on the issue, with a total
of 3,600 for all state c o l l e g e s .

Prizes: Trophy and $10.00

factors. The first is the auapfation by Andra Gide and Jean
Louis Barrault of the original
novel. While the Kafka
work
contained very little, if any,
humor, Gide and Barrault decided
that in order to maintain audience
interest, some lewd s c e n e s should
be included. While this made the
drama more interesting, it took
away some impetus from the main
theme.
The second major weakness
in the drama was the way in which
it was presented. In the opening
part, the actors seemed to be
speaking to the audience instead
of to each other. This situation
cleared up as the play progressed,
however.
In spite of these weaknesses
the presentation did have some
merits. The lighting and scenery
accurately reproduced the drean>
like world which is uniquely
Kafka's. By using projections
the players could move from oncscene to tne next without thok
usual change of scenery.
The near capacity audience
reacted very favorably toward the
presentation as a whole.

Time-In
by Nibs Gordon
Eagle Eye sports writer Al Smith recently slapped a tnan
in the face and then stabbed him in the back by unjustly using
this man's name to vent his own feelings toward the SCC
Faculty - Staff Activity Fee.
F . Ross Nevel is as fine a person as anyone can know.
Fie has and is doing an outstanding job as sports information
director. When the SCC and student body as a whole passed
the new activity fee. Mr. Nevel was among the first to pay it.
" A s S'.nin as ! goi the bill, I paid i t , " commented Nevel.
"It was pasced by the SCC. and it wouldn't be right not to
pay. I feci as though i'.> 'oeeii used as a scapegoat - Al Smith
never talked to 'ne about t h i i . "
Mr. Nevel is lijLhi H.s name was picked out of the air to
be used to iliustrate one person's distaste for the faculty
activity fee.
Smith's column, becuase it was printed in the Eagle Eye,
was undoubtedly accepted as being true by most readers.
Phrases such as " i t has been reported," and "informed sources
s a y " would lead one to believe that Smith knew what he was
talking about. Cusiing aside all rumors and "hypothetical
conversations," t
, icture becomes clear. Coaches Hetniiann,
Dolan, Weller, Chrisfopher, and Cox were all dragged into th;
article as though they held the activity fee in contempt. In
reality. Smith did not obtain his " r e p o r t s " and "information"
from any of these coaches. Indeed, Smith is most likely his
own source for all reports.
Basketball Coach, Jim Christopher, was probably mo>
upset. When asked about the situation, he replied, " A l Smith
hasn't talked with me for twoi years. I can't believe he actually
wrote those things. He made Mr. Nevel and all the coaches
look bad, and he just didn't tell it like it i s . "
I have to agree with Coach Christopher completely. Smith
seemingly has it in for sorii>-one on the SCC E.xecutive Board,
or for the SCC in general. Most of his allegations, with a little
light shed on them, are completely silly. Mr. Nevel, being an
important part of the Lock Haven State sports scene, is admitted
free to all sporting events. His activity fee still has advantages
in allowing his admittance to plays, concerts, and
speakers.
As far a s the statements supposedly made by the coaches
are concerned, their absurdities shine through. Every coach is
of course admitted free, with his family, to coach his own team.
Only football, basketball, and wrestling have charged admission
Knowing that, it is easy to see the ridiculousness of the
supposed statements of Coaches Herrmann and Dolan. Indeed,
cross country would lose all of its spectator appeal if adm.ission was charged.
The names of Mr. Nevel and Coaches Herrmann, Dolan,
Weller, Christopher, and Cox were used unjustly and falsely.
Perhaps Al Smith is mad at the SCC Executive Board,and
decided they needed a stab in the back. In the process he
involved six other men.
A stab in the back''
Not only that, but Smith is standing over Nevel, Herrmann,
Dolan, Weller, Christopher, Cox, the SCC Executive Board, and
the student body as a whole and twisting the knife as hard
as possible.

EDITOR-lN-CHlEF

Got any sociai events you
want to tell the campus about?
Have It televised over WLHSTV. Just call Jackie Kircher
at ext. 42J or the SCC ottice,
Linda Dicks at ext. 402, or
Cendy Welch at 748-3881 by
Wednesday evening.

Varsity

Club

Elects

Officers

The LHS Varsity Club h a s
e l e c t e d o f f i c e r s for t h e 1971-72
year.
Those
elected
were;
P r e s i d e n t - Warren Hammer
1st

Vice

President

-

Billy

Johns
2nd V i c e P r e s i d e n t - Paul
Simcoe
S e c r e t a r y - Mtl A b e l
T r e a s u r e r and S C C R e p r e s e n tative
Skip
Wolff
Warren Hammer is r e p l a c i n g l a s t
year's president, Joe Castagnola.
Named
to
the
Execuiive
Committee were: Joe C a s t a g n o l a ,
Kevin Hammer, T e n y Hildebrand,
John
McDaniels, Alex
Nuzzo,
Harry Sherman, and Tom Zimmerman.
T h e c l u b i s o p e n to all V a r sity
Letter winners
and team
m e m b e r s . T h e club is again plann i n g a w i d e r a n g e of a c t i v i t i e s
t h i s y e a r , to be c l i m a x e d with the
a n n u a l b a n q u e t - Dr. K e n C o x i s
the club advisor.

DEBBIE

Evalyn Fisher

Deb Rowxes

BUSINESS MANGER - Ken G e e s e y
ADVERTISING MANAGER — J a n i s Burenga
T E C H N I C A L COORDINATOR -

Gridders'

First 3 Games

' >'ek
, Stat
football
'''•^"•-•"••s npres;.,.r
uftei
their first iiirr
. a m e s . Hob S h u e y
l e a d s Ihe r u s i . i . i g a t t a c k with 143
y a r d s n e t with a n a v e r a g e of four
y a r d s per c a r r y . F r a n k G e i g e r t h e
o t h e r l e a d i n g ground g a i n e r h a s
il 2 . 9 a v e r a g e w i t h 77 y a r d s n e t .
L o c k i l a v e n h a s g a i n e d 2(i{) y a r d s
to t h e i r o p p o n e n t s 4(14 \ a r d s .
Shue\ and Chuck Vennie are
t i e d in s c o r i n g , h,,th h a v i n g t h r e e
TD's. Speedster
I Cmmy . M i e n ,
Geiger, and George Haley have
all s c o r e d t w o t o u c h d o w n s a p i e c e .
Allen l e a d s pass
receivers
with .3 73 y a r d s in 25 c a t c h e s .
Haley h a s s n a g g e d nine p a s s e s
for 105 y a r d s . G e i g e r , A l e x N H ' Z O ,
Vennie, and Barrv Seidel
have
c a r r i e d for 9 6 , 5 5 , 4 6 , a n d 8 y a r d s
respectively.
Mike P a c k e r i s 49 for 93 in
p a s s i n g a t t e m p t s and h a s gained
675 y a r d s t o t a l . L o c k H a v e n h a s
h e l d t h e i r o p p o n e n t s to 183 y a r d s
and a 15 - for - 55 c o m p l e t i o n r e cord.
Jeff Knarr h a s k i c k e d 14 p u n t s
for 5 0 7 y a r d s . Hill M c N e l i s h a s
k i c k e d for a t o t a l of 142 y a r d s .

^ A A A A A A A^MliA
Monthly Budget Reports for
all SCC funded organizations
are due October lotti.

Sunny Side
Last w e e k w a s a very s l o w
o n e at t h e H a v e n : not much ,>ni
of t h e ordinary h a p p e n e d . l l o \ i r v r r
an u n s u c c e s s f u l panty rani d i d
o c c u r . P e r h a p s it u a s u n s u c c e s s ful b e c a u s e none of the girls h a d
d o n e their l a u n d r y . Of c o u r s e , il
c o u l d be ihat Ihe y o u n g l a d i e s
h a v e a d o p t e d more than a no-lira
attitude'
Cons irm-turn on c a m p u s is
c o n t n i u m g and Ihe mud is .selling
d e e p e r . S p e a k i n g ol nuid, I h e r e
a r e finally h o c k e y b o u n d a r i e s on
Ihe s o c c e r - h o c k e v field - in b r lAeeii ihr p u d d l e s , that i s .
An u n u s u a l t h i n g tlid o c c u r .
I h r tooth.ill t r a m p l a y e d a s k i l l tul game on S e p t e m b e r 2.5- for Ihe
s e c o n d time! T h e most unusual
luiiipening w a s t h a t t h e s u n finally
pul in an a p p e a r a n c e . Maybe it
did "' I onie t h r o u g h for t h e
ftesu l e i U ' s r e c e p t i o n but a t l e a s t
now we know t h a t t h e s u n r e a l i z e s
that
Lock H a v e n s t i l l
exists.

Found - in front of adniinisffation building - a smal)
brown and white mixed puppy.
Owner please contact Winnie,
Barb, or Sally. Rm. 6 Woolridse. Ext. 407

BRICKER

C A R T O O N I S T — George Bierkamper
L i z Klens

For

-

EDITORS BEATS - Cathy Page
DAILIES — D e b b i e Zedreck
PRELIMINARIES - Ann Reidy
S P O R T S - Chris Plyler
COLLIMNS — Mary Thompson
P H O T O G R A P H Y - Mike B r a d l e y

LAY-OUT S T A F F ~

Statistics Good

Linda Pollock

T E C H N I C A L ADVISOR - Marian H u t t e n s t i n e
E D I T O R I A L ADVISOR - D i c k Parker
EAGLE EYE is published daily by the students of Lock
Haven State CoUege. All opinion e x p r e s s e s by columnists and
feature writers, including letters to t h t editor, are not n e c e s .sarily those of this institution or o f this publication. All
contributions should be submitted to Eagle E y e , Parson.s
Union Building, L H S C - 748-55.11

Pregnant?
N e e d Heli>?
\Ae will help any woman regardless
of race, religion, age or financial
status. We do not moralize, bui
merely help Women obtain qualified
DoctOfs (or abforlions. if this is
what they desi/e. Please do nol
delay, an early abortion is more
simple and less costly, and can be
performed on an oul palianl basis.

GARDEN
Now Thru

Tuesday

A FRA,NKOVICH PRODUCTION

Jarqueline

215 876-5800
Woman's
Medical Asslstancs

8 AM-10 PM—7 DAYS
A NON-PROFIT

ORGANIZATION

from Columbia Pictures R



For
obvious
reasons
resulting from a condition
created by a minority -- no
coats, jackets, or outer wear,
previously purchased books,
notebooks,
attache cases,
back packs, etc. wiil be
allowed in the bookstore.
It is also necessary for
us to close all charges at
3:00 each day, due to the
administrative wor (-103:1.

Media of