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Wed, 06/21/2023 - 13:07
Edited Text
Lock Haven State College

Vol. XV^ No. 66

Pubs Board becomes
self-supporting
by JoAnn Morse
An agreement between
the Students Publications
Board and the Students Cooperative Council has been
approved. Essentially, this
agreement allows the SPB to
become a self-supporting organization. This enables publications to operate more
independently of the SCC.
The agR emenl which
consists of fourteen points,
was passed by the SpB at
a special meeting held Monday nighl. Ths SCC had »4;
ready approved il al their
January
23
meeting.
Included under the 14
points are provisions which

require the SCC to contract
the SPB lo publish the newspaper, yearbook and literary
magazine; and that require the
SPB to earn a certain amount
of money through advertising.
The Student Publications
Board will be the owner,
printer and publisher of the
three publications under the
agreement. Terms of this
agreement will become effec
tive
July 1,
1974.
The agreement was de;
veloped through the efforts of
a joint committee. Plans to
begin writing up of the contracts and revising constitutions
are
to
begin
immediately.

Paper shortage-costly books
By John Eshelman
This semester, as in
past, students seem to be
complaining aboul the sharp
rise in the costof books.
Well folks this semester, the
paper shortage has beennan^
ed as the culprit. With a
shortage comes a seemingly
sudden rise incost.
Mr. Joseph Nagy, Director
of Parsons Union Building is
a man confronted with book
costs. In his words, "If anyone is aware of the] rising
prices of books l a m " .
Mr. Nagy explained that
it was the policy of the bookstore to order books early and
to always "askfor paperbacks
because this makes the books
cheaper."
Mr. Nagy expressed cor>cern over the fact that no
organization had a desire to
have a used book sale. However, Mr. Nagy said that next
year the bookstore j is going
to become involved in buying
and selling used books to the
stuients. According to the

director, this will nol only
be cheaper for students,but
it will also give him some
idea of how many new books
to order.
Mr. Nagy further staled,
"Our prices haven't changed
one bit . Prices are all
establis hed by the publisher.
He added "the bookstores
mark up on books is 15 to 20%
and its always been this way
to the best of my knowledge.
Whatever little profit is made
there is turned back into 'the

Student directories
will be available at the
Publications office between 2&4, M-F beginning
V^ed., Jan. 31. Any member
of tlie coiiege community
(inc'.uding vacuity, sravf,
administration) with a
validated 'Q wV- receive
one copy tree, addltiona!
copies and copies lor the
above named persons
without validated !D's
may be purchased ^or
$1.00 pei copy.
Di^'ec^ories m-^i iie
obtained n'om Miss Clemmer, Coordinator o'
Student Publications.

CasinoRoyale
bet on the
United Fund

SCC." As Mr. Nagy explained
the profits are for the enhancement of all SCC supported
programs.
One book, Design and
Creation of jewelry, has been
dropped due to a sharp rise
in cost. This volume rose
from $7.50 to $12.50. Some
olher increases are Modern
Newspaper Editing, $8.95 to
$9.95, Organization and Administration of Physical Education $9.50 to $10.50, and
Organic Chemistry $16.95 to
$18.5Q

elected
Stoppe and Heinley
tied

Afro-American Studies program
A group of sludents &
faculty are interested in
establishing an Afro-American Studies program on
campus. The purpose of the
program will be to pilot an
Ethnic Heritage and International studies sequence.
The program is designed
to be open-structured, interdepartmental and available
to students of all discipines.
The sponsors believe
that it will help balence the

LHS
curriculum,
attract
minority sludents, as well
as professors ans staff
who specialize in Ethnic
studies.
Since 1968 Pennsylvania
schools have been mandated
to teach Ethnic studies
According to the sponsors
the proposed program should
be advantagous for teachers
who need additional ethnic
course work.

A casino Royale, benefiting the United Fund, will
take place Friday night from
10 p.m, until 2 a.m.
Sponsored by PCCEB,
the casino will have 10 games
ranging from Black Jack,
dice and poker th the roulette
wheel.
Twenty-five, one thousand dollar bills may be
purchased for a quar ter by
persons with validated ID's.
Prizes will be given for
the "big" winners along with
raffle prizes of twenty, len
and five dollars and numerous
smaller prizes.

Five new senators

Five new senators will
join LHS legislative body as
a
result of
Tuesday's
special senatorial election.
The results are as
follows; Sue Hopple, Dennis
Greenaway
and
David
Heverly off campus Senator:
Nancy
Rupcyz, McEntire
Hall Senator; Curl Spacl
North Hall Senator.
In the election for Smith
Hall Senator, a lie resulted
between Biian Stoppe and
Jim Heinley. A run-off
election will be held to
determine a v/inner.

There will be a meeting If the Computer Scleflce
Club on Wednesday, Jan. 30
19T4 at 7:00 p.m, in Raub
407. Anyone Interested in
the club is weleome t i atteni.

page 2

EAGLE EYE Lock Haven State College

Wed., Jan. 30, 1974

Dear Editor
^
.- CL i 19
"If was foolish of you, Mr. Eberle to every athletic event.

To the Editor:

Re: Reply to "Letter to
the Editor" from Charles
Eberle, Jan. 29, 1974
The basic philosophy of
the
Studeni
Cooperative
Council, Inc., of Lock Haven
Slate College is this; The
SCC is primarily a studentfunded organization. Monies
are contributed by the currently enrolled students in the
form of a mandatory activity
fee of $60 per year. This
money should be used for the
benefit of these same sludents.
Why should the students be
forced to support activities
and programs if faculty and
adminislralas or alumni gel
Tree tickets? Full-time studenis pay almost $2,000 per
year lo attend college; and
most of them have little or
no income at all. Faculty,
staff, administrators, etc.,
(all paid employees ), can
afford to pay for admission
lo events.
In answer lo your paragraph referring to the SCC's
refusal "lo give a few con>
plimentary tickets once in
awhile lo the Alumni Director
so that he could take our
local Alumni Association
officers to a 'Bald Eagle'
athletic event" we quote
from a letter sent to all
Clinton County Alumni by
W. Max Bossert, President;
"1 have a promise that all
you folks who attend this
meeting will receive a complimentary ticket to the basketball game." This letter
was mailed and received by
the alumni before the SCC
was ever contacted about
these tickets.
Our ticket policy is
drawn up and/or revised each
fiscal year. The compliiwrntary tickets for this year have
already been distributed.
You consider "asinine •
the "policy of requiring faculty and administrative personnel of our own college
lo purchase activity tickets."
In the first place, they are
not REQUIRED to pay this
fee; it's optional. And wc
would like to point oul that
there are 49 faculty, administrators, staff personnel, or
emeriti who obviously don't
consider such a policy "asinine."
These individuals

represent a record number of
faculty/staff activity card
purchasers. Such support is
greatly appreciated and is
evidence our policy is not
discouraging support of campus activilies-quite the
contrary, we're encouraging
il with this reduced-rate
activity card. The annual
faculty activity fee of $25
for the individual or $35 for
an entire family entitles the
purchaser lo the same privileges as a student-free
admission or admission al
student rates lo all athletic,
cultural, and social events,
campus store charge account,
check-cashing
services,
campus publications--to name
a few. Consider this fact,
Mr. Eberle--if a college employee paid lo attend every
SCC event, program, play
dance, game, etc., on campus,
il would cost that individual
a total of at least $90 to $100
Since you are the head
coach of baseball and are

nol involved with any tickets
or ticket sales, perhaps you
should have consulted a coach
who is familiar wilh our ticket
policy for athletics. All head
coaches, assistant coaches,
the trainer, and Mr. Nevel
received
complimentary
athletic PASSES covering
themselves and their families,
which gives them general
admission lo all athletic
events al the college. The
Athletic Director gels four
complimentary general admission tickets for each
event, game, or match. Each
athlete receives two tickets
for distribution as he desires,
Each athlete receives two
tickets per event. And that's
each athlete for both the
home AND visiting teamsvarsily and JV.
"A few lousy complimentary tickets for an infrequent
athletic event"
quickly becomes a large number of complimentary tickets

Referring to the necessity
of total support which you
mentioned monetary support
is part of the total support
and it is very definitely needed. If the Alumni of Lock
Haven Stale choose not to
support their college, it
shouldn't be pushed off as
the fault of the SCC.
Il was most foolish of
you, Mr. Eberle, lo have
written your "Letter to the
Editor" before first getting
all the facts involved in this
issue. However, in conclusion,
we would hope that all people,
including Alumni realize
they are benefiting the students directly Ihrough their
contributions al the doa
for any athletic, cultural, or
social event at Lock Haven
Slate College.
Sincerely,
SCC, Inc.
Richard DeBernardo, Pres.

Dear Edifor..."Hogwas/i"..."Blend-0-6eef"
Dear Editor;
for such a move seems to be
We are writing in rethat,'-the SCC is discouraging
sponse and addition to the
these, two groups from supletter from Mr. Charles Eberle
porting our campus activities.
(Eagle Eye, 29 Jan, 1974)
Hogwash! If the only thing
concerning the issuiijg of com- that prevents them from supplimentary tickets, a.nd the
' porting our activities is the
requiremenl for faculty and
price of a ticket, then we
administrators to pay an acwould have to assume that
tivity fee.
their interest isn't all that
We see no reason that the
great in the first place. PerSCC should refuse toissuea
haps we could attribute the
"few lousy tickets" to helppoor attendance al a number
ful alumni directors, as long
of campus activities to the
as some sort of policy is
requirement that students pay
established to control the proactivity fees. Perhaps everycedure- After altending a
one working at the Ford Motor
number of athletic events, we
Company should be given a
hardly see how a few comnew Torino as a Christmas
plimentary spectators, now
bonus, so that they will supand ther\ will prevent paying
port their industrial league
ticket holders from attending
softball team. No, Mr. Eberle
the events. However, we do
we see no reason why facbelieve the policy should be
ulty and administrators should
strictly regulated in order lo
be encouraged to support our
prevent any abuse of such a
campus activities Ihrough
policy.
free admission, while many
Our main concern is in
students, less able to pay
regards lo Mr. Eberle's uran activity fee, sho;uld be regence to do away wilh
quired to shell out thirty
requiring faculty and adminbucks
each
semester.
istrators lo purchase activity
In addition to the above
tickets. His main argument
comments concerning activity

fees, we would like lo speak
on the lopic from the point of
view of a too long silent majority. As married studenis
both attending Lock Haven
State, we are both required lo
pay separate activity fees.
This amounts to $60 a semester, and $12 Can academic
year. Anyone who is or has
ever been a married student
realizes the hardship and expense involved intryinglobe
a husband or wife, as well as
a student. After paying for a
number of bills, rent, tuition,
clothes,books and other miscellaneous items for two students , very little money is
left for uxuries; such as food.
Blend-C-Beef doesn't only
taste worse than hamburger^
but
it's
greasier.
We think il's just a little ridiculous to require two
students who are married to
piy for two, full, separate
activity fees, while married
students whose spouses are
not students, but who are out
working full time, are permitted to purchase only one
continued on page 4

Wed., Jan. 30, 1974

EAGLE EYE

Lock Haven State College

page 3

Eagle roundballers meef strong Clarion
by Bill Sterner
At 8 p.m. tonight in
Thomas
Fieldhouse,
the
Clarion Golden E a g l e s will
lock horns with the Lock
Haven roundballers in what
has developed as one of the
most
important Western
Conference games.

hitting 14 points even per
game. Dave .Ankeney rounds
out the attack. The small
man at 6-2, A n k e n e y h a s hit
on many clutch situations to
aid the Golden E a g l e s .

Both teams are locked
in a tie for fourth place in
the division with identical
3 win and 3 loss records.
However, the conference is
tighter in standings this
year than any other. Edinboro
leads the race with a 3-1
slate.

Lock Haven will have
a new look for this basketball
game. Guard Frank
Norris is back from an injury
and this time, 6-2 center
Mike Bergeron will be in
there for the E a g l e s . In the
previous 87-58 thrashing at
Clarion, these two men were
-ot present in Taylor's lineup. Warren Goodling has
risen to the number five
scorer
in the
Conference
hitting for fifteen points a
contest.

ON AGAIN, OFF AGAIN
Clarion has b e e n an on
again, off again type team so
far this year. The Golden
E a g l e s ate carrying a 12-5
overall record into the LHS
contest. One key to their
s u c c e s s is definitly in the
balanced offensive
attack.
However Coach Dick Taylor
of Lock Haven grants a great
deal of respect to their
board strength.
"They
are a strong,
physical t e a m " , the headman
admitted, " h o w e v e r , their
main attribute has to be
under those b o a r d s . "
Clarion has the s t a t i s tics to back Coach Taylor's
claim.
In six
divisional
games
this
year,
Tony
Rosetto,
a 6-8
freshman
forward leads the Pa. Western Conference in rebounds
per game. Rosetto has ripped
the boards for 69 rebounds
and an 11.5 average per
game. Teammate Lou Myers,
6-5, is second with a 10.7
per game. These two men
give the Golden Eagles
tremendous board strength.
Offensively
Clarion's
roundballers are not lacking
either. They are averaging
a second ranked 77,0 points
per game to d a t e . The two
biggest guns this season
has been Pete Belcher, a
6-5 forward and again, Lou
Myers. Belcher h a s pumped
in 14.5 points per game and
ranks sixth in the conference.
Myers is seventh and is

NEW LHS LINEUP

Coach Taylor analyze,
ed the three things that must
be done to defeat the Golden
Eagles.
"We will have to neutralize their board s t r e n g h t , "
he stated. Coach Taylor went
on to explain that the return
of Bergeron would greatly
increase the possibility of
t h i s . In the C o a c h ' s words ,
"Bergeron is a strong kid
and you need this in t h e r e . "
Point two, the Eagles
must
force
Clarion
into
taking the poor percentage
shot. As the Menotr stated,
"Our defense will have to
run well. We had a bad game
with Bloomsberg." He added,
" B u t you know, all our games
are big for us now. We came
off the Edinboro game and
hit the toughest part of our

schedule. We're playing a
game every three days and
the boys are going to get
tired."
Point three, Lock Haven
must run their defense well.
Clarion plays an extremely
aggressive man to man d e vense. This was quite evident

in their r e c e n t 70-61 victory
over Cheyney State.
The Bald Eagle head
coach summed up the probable
type of game that will be
played. "Clarion is potent ,
high scoring and powerful
t e a m , " he stated. " T h e game
should be a physical o n e . "

Eagle wrestlers grapple
with Vulcans Thursday
By Gary Brubaker
Coached by Frank Vulcano.
a former three-time LHS
conference champ, the California S t a t e College Wrestling
team will invade Thomas
Field House this Thursday
night. As they take on the
Eagle gr a filers of Coach
Kenny Cox.
The California Vulcans,
with a team record of 5-5-1
coming into their match with
with the F.agles, have wrestled
only one learn thai LHS has
met this year, the Rockets
of Slippery Rock.
California
was beaten by ""the R o c k "
40-3. while lock Haven was
handed a 24-14 setback al the
hands of the Cneen Waves.
Pacing the attack for
Coach Vulcano will he Bill
Larkin, 8-3 at 150 pounds, and
Bob Warnick 6-2-1 at 158.
The E a g l e s , now 4-4
following
last
Saturday's
tough 29-20 loss at the hands
of E a s t Stroudsburg, definately need a victory against
California to maintain the
hope of a 32nd consecutive
winning s e a s o n .

Boh Bulb. The Eagles are
ranked second in the E a s t .
The team features three
national champs in the form
of Don Rohn; Wade S c h a l l e s ,
and Bill Simpson.
The tentative s t a r t i n g
line up for the Eagles on
Thursday niglit finds a few
changes due t o s i c k n e s s and
iiiiury. Tim McCamley will
replace Rob Johnson at 126.
Due to .\rt Baker's a b s e n s e
because of i l l n e s s , Don Adams
will move up to 190, and JV
grappler .M Fricke will step
in at 1 67.
The rest of the line up
has Dave Shreek at 118, Gary
Walk, 134; George Way at 142,
and Ron McMurray will be on
the mats al 177. Rounding
out the Eagle line up will be
Jim Schuster at heavyweight.
Mat lime is set at 8 p.m.
for Thursday's encounter.

Saturday's matchup finds
the Eagles on the road as they
travel to Clarion to take on
the Golden E a g l e s of Coach

luigi's
erj' t .

748

Church

St.

6573

Jur doi'ble'or triple
burper jpecial

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28 E. Main St., Lock Haven, Pa.
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EAGLE EYE

page 4

Blend-0-Beef
continued from page 2
activity ticket ta both people.
We beleive it would be justifiable for married students
who are both attending Lock
Haven State, pay a special
fee that is somewhat less than
what two single students pay.
I n a campus where there are
no low rent facilities for married students, no reduced rale
medical insurance policy for
married sludents, no low any-

thing for married students, we
believe that the least the SCC
could do, which is suppose
to be of some benefit to students, is create alow priced
activity fee for married students, who have very little
money for even inexpensive
extracurricular activitiesThank you, from both of us.
Mr. & Mrs. Daniel J. Keefer-

• # - • # •

< ^

A W Gundlach & Sons
Four Seversfe Shoppinq
Center
Schm.dt'i, Valley Fotge, Duke, Budweise-, Michelob
ond Other Favorite Brands
Complete Shasta Line, Other Favorite Soft Drinks,
Ice end Party Snaci 125 Hogan Blvd.

Wed., Jan. 30, 1974

Lock Haven Stat e College

Attention Ali Students: Or.
announcements
Bricldey's Intirmary Hours
will be held fron! 9:30 until
There will bo a meeting U:3(l ;'M on Monday,
of the Folk Society Wednesday Tuesday, Wednesday, a«l
night at 7 P..'*. in the Pub. Friday, and from 16:36
All interested people are in- unfit 12:30 PM on Tnursvited foatteniT
day,

Tirt*1>IG ERRORS
ERROR-FREE TVPIN6

ERRORITE

AT YOUR
CAMPUS STORE

-OUT OF SIGHT!

Phone 748 4073

A CASINO ROYALE
BENTLEY LOUNGE
FRID.W,
FEBRUARY 1

Time enough
to go to a party
and then gamble
for a worthy cause
The United Fund

S P O N S O R E D BY P C C E B COMMITTEE

FROM 10:00 p.m.
TO
2:00 a.m.

Media of