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Edited Text
Lock Haven State College

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Friday, Sept. 24,1976

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Vol XIX No. 13

Senate approves new officers LH.S. lawyer
The new Senate
"
of- the

Student Cooperative Council
met last Wednesday night in
the PUB for the first time of
the 1976-77 academic year.
Following an hour long
orientation meeting the Senate
convened at 7 pm and quickly
approved the appointments of
two new officers for the SCC's
executive committee.
Joe Harper was sworn in
to replace Glenn Miller as
treasurer and Sue Gaumer's
vacated corresponding secretary job was filled by Cindy
Werts.
Both executive
committee vacancies resulted
from resignations.
Reports from the SCC's
eight standing committees
were received by the freshmen
Senate beginning with approval of recent executive
committee minutes. Several of
the new senators quickly
assumed active roles
as
student representatives taking
every opportunity to ask
questions to the chairmen of
the standing committees.
President Lorin Mock
made several appointments to
many ofthe SCC's resignation
battered committees. Major
changes were made in the
election committee, the athletic advisory committee and
the curriculum committee.
An announcement was
made by Mock that the SCC
second vice-president will take
a more responsible role in
operating the PUB in the
future.
Mock explained that
presentiy no student on the
executive committee or on the
Senate is truly knowledgable
about the acutal operations of
the bookstore or the Eagle
Wing. Consequently, student
input and evaluation is severly
limited.
It is hoped that
current SCC second vice-president Rob Shimer will be able
to work more closely with Mr.

Nagy, Director of the PUB,
and the entire PUB staff to
more effectively serve student
needs.

Mock added the fact that
no real changes are being
made since,' constitutionally
cont. on page 4

QiSCUSSeS

n e W

gripe group
By KEITH VERNON
Staff Reporter

A grievance committee is
in the process of being formed
here at Lock Haven State
College. The committee will
be convened by Robert Storch
the Lock Haven State administration's lawyer. The committee will deal with complaints
about sex and racial discrimination.
According to Storch the
committee doesn't have any
form yet. "The whole thing is
really in a state of flux," said
Storch. "The committee will
hopefully serve as a channel to
I President Hamblin."
Storch is asking for any
student suggestions or ideas
OFFICERS APPROVED - The SCC approved the. about the committee.
"I
appointment of Joe Harper as Treasurer and Cindy
would really like students to be
involved in it," Storch said.
Werts as Corresponding Secretary at last Wednesday's
When asked if he would accept
Senate Meeting. SCC President Lorin Mock is shown
chairmanship ofthe committee
administering the oath of office.
[Photo by
com. on page 4
JOHN VUKOVIC]

Cultural Affairs sponsors symposium
By K I M PETTINCILL
Staff Reporter
The Cultural Affairs Committee will be sponsoring a
symposium set up by Dr.
Clemmer of the history
department. The symposium
deals with Religion in American Life. There will be
representatives from three
major denominations present
to speak.
Addressing the symposium
on Judaism and American life
will be Rabbi Balfour Brickner,
Director of Inter-religious
Affairs, Union of American
Hebrew Congregation, New
York City. Representing Catholicism will be Father Andrew
Greeley, Director of The
Center for Study of American
Pluralism, University of Chi-

cago. There will be two
representatives for the Protestant diety. Dr. Dean Kelley,
Executive for Civil and
Religious Liberties, National
Council of Churches of Christ
in America, New York City,
who will discuss "main line"
Protestantism, and Dr. Richard Mouw, Professor of
Philosophy, Calvin College,
Grand Rapids, Michigan, who
will talk on Evangelical
Protestantism.
The symposium is set up for
Tuesday, November 16. There
are four sessions, two in the
morning and two in the
afternoon, all to be held in
Sloan Fine Arts Building.
Following the last afternoon
session there will be a coffee
hour which will provide an

excellent opportunity for free
discussion with any of the four
men.
Then that evening at 8pm a
round table discussion will be
held with each of the speakers
having a forty-five minute
discussion period followed by
a fifteen to twenty minute
question and answer period.
The Cultural Affairs Committee would also like to
acquaint the student body with
the agenda for the Artist
Series which will be getting
under way soon. First on the
roster will be an appearance
by the Freiburg Soloists,
October 8. This European
musical group plays a 'barouque style music involving
cont. on page 4

Fri. Sept. 24,1976

EAGLEEYE

I #

The SCC
and You

Letter to the Editor
Schmidt praised tor column

By Lorin Mock

To the Editor:
I'd like to applaud staff
reporter Larry Schmidt (What
to think about College in
1976", September 7) on his
focus of attention on a very
serious issue in our time. And
his main point deserves
emphasis and amplification.
He spoke of the wrong-headed
direction of public attitude
toward higher education generally in seeing colleges as
becoming obsolete because
they don't prepare people
specifically for the job market.
His point was that education
should be looked upon as an
end rather than a means.
Another way of putting the
point might be to say that
people should be looked upon
as ends rather means. A
college student-a person-has

Did you ever hear of a Presidential Cabinet meeting? Well, if you
did, you probably immediately associate it with the federal
government, and the Cabinc •, ofthe President ofthe United States.
If you answered in this way you are correct but we of the SCC are
about to get our own version of a presidential cabinet meeting.
The idea for an SCC Presidential Cabinet Meeting was
brainstormed last year by the members of the executive committee.
It orginated out of the fact that there was no real means for
committees to report to the Executive Committee and the Senate
outside of Senate meetings. We feel there should be the time for the
people who are responsible for the actual work of the committees to
get together and discuss problems and accomplishments of their
respective areas. The cabinet is to serve a twofold purpose. First it
is a means of reporting to the Executive Committee and the
Chairperson of the Senate so they will better understand what is
taking place in the committees of the SCC. Secondly it will serve as
a means of communication so they may air problems which by
collective thought may be solved or somehow corrected.
This body will meet every other Wednesdays in off weeks of the
Senate Meetings. Those in attendance at the meetings will be the
Chairpersons of the Standing Committes of the SCC as well as the
Chairperson of the Senate Caucus and Chairpersons of any ad hoc
committees which the Senate finds necessary to create and the
Executive Committee. These meetings will be open for all who wish
to watch the proceedings and also those who wish to take part in
active discussions.
The schedule of the Presidents Cabinet meetings are as follows:
September 29
October 13
October 27
November 10
November 24
December 8
All meetings will begin at 7:00 in the South Lounge of the PUB. I
hope by this inovation we will be able to morefi^eelycommunicate
between committees ofthe SCC. That by establishing a medium for
this we will be able to function more smoothly and better serve the
students needs.

a capacity to develop his (her)
intellect, to discover the vast
resources of our human
artistic, literary, historical,
scientific, mathematical-in
short, cultural-heritage. In so
doing he gains perspectives on
his own life and, on the world
in general that would be
impossible without that education. In short, college is for the
person-maybe not for eveiy
person, but surely the
serious-mind and literate
person can hardly help but
benefit from those four years.
Since we do have to eat and
pay the mortgage, the trick
will always be to find a way to
turn one's college education to
one's career advantage.
John Irwin
English and Philosophy Dept.

Chase welcomed to LHS
By SUE SHELLY
Staff Reporter

Lock Haven State College
recently welcomed Professor
John H. Chase to hs Social
Work Department. Chase
came from Princeton, N.J. at
the beginning of the second
summer session of this year.
He teaches Human Behavior
and Social Environment, and a
new elective entitied Modalities of Social Work Therapy.
Orginially from Lockport,
N.Y., Chase has a B.A. in
Experimental Psychology from
New York State University, an
M.S.W. in Social Work from
Rutgers, a Masters of Divinity
from Princeton Theological
Seminary, and is presentiy at
the dissertation stage of his
P.H.D. in Social Work at
Rutgers and Princeton.
Mr. Chase has done
research in the field of death
and dying and has delivered
lectures on the subject
throughout New Jersey. Chase
has also conducted research in
terminally ill wards. He's been
involved in such programs as
Project Read, Global and
Domestic Hunger, and Improvements in Transportation
Systems for the Elderly and
Handicapped.
When asked to comment on

the Social Work program at
LHSC, Chase describ^^d it as
"a unique program t»;at will
offer leadership in i). field
with emphasis on ruu-l and
non-urban practice." Concerning the presently chtaging
Social Work program,*"Professor Chase says he feelithat
the new program will "e^ablish new relationships betw'-en
the college, the community,
and this region."
Applications for Distinguished
faculty Awards must be submitted by October 1, 1976.
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All Back To School Needs:
Composition books
Folders
Art Supplies
16-month calendars
Blotters
Posters
Memo Boards
Pens and Pencils
Calculators

^.^

M«in Street
Lock Havsi., "aPhone: 7J3-2806
Merchant Bureau Hu:."^"

t?WS

page 3

EAGLEEYE

Fri. Sept. 24,1976

Eaglettes extend record Commentary on
with victory overE-town By STEVE HEVERLY PRO BALL
By MARY FEUSNER
Women's Sports Editor
Sharon Taylor's Varsity
Eaglettes made it 19 in a row
in season play with their 8-0
shutout over Elizabethtown on
Wednesday afternoon. The
Eaglettes offense managed a
commendable 40 shots on goal
while the defense allowed only
1 shot on goal by the
Elizabethtown attack.
The penetration time accumulated by Lock Haven was
11:09, while E-town was
within 25 yards only 1:14.
Senior captain Pat Rudy
opened the scoring attack with
a goal at 4:30. Her goal was a
result of a rush on a penalty
corner. Teammate Sue Bowers
scored her first of four goals
only 30 seconds after Rudy's.
Sue's goal was a direct shot
from a hand stopped ball on a
penalty corner. Bowers and
Hoffman combined on another
penalty corner when 19
minutes had elapsed.
The fourth Haven goal came
from the stick of Kim "Kilt"
Pallestrone who led the rush to
the cage.
Before the 33 minute half
ended, C. Ogle, with an assist
by S. Murray, slammed the
ball into the right side of the
cage.
The first half ended with the
Eaglettes holding a commanding 5-0 lead. First half play
was characterized by the fine
stickwork of Rudy and W.
Keller.
The Haven opened the
second half of play with a few
changes in their offensive line.
C. Ogle and K. Pallestrone
were replaced by veterans Sue
Woolston and Gina Graham. It
only took Graham 2 minutes to
score her first goal of the
season. She was assisted by S.
Murray who crossed the ball
from the right side.
Sue Bowers was creditted
with the seventh Haven goal,
19 minutes into the second
half. The E-town defense
actually scored it as they failed
in their attempts to stop the
"Bowers drive".
With only 1 minute of pla:
remaining, Sue Bowers slam
med the ball by the
Elizabethtfvn goalie, onlv

after it was hand stopped by
Andi Hoffman. The contest
ended with the final score of
8-0.
For Elizabethtown, it was
their first loss of the season.
Previously, they had beaten
Wilson College 11-0.
The Eaglette junior varsity
tallied 13 goals in SO minutes
of playing time, to go on to
shutout their Elizabethtown
opponents, 13-0.
Maureen Carey took the
scoring honors with 4 goals in
the second half. Sharon
Grissinger scored three times
in the second period.
Junior Joni Geist scored
twice from the left side in the
first half. Joni's hopes to score
more were dampened by an
injury midway through the
first half. Freshman Diane
Minshall proved her aggressiveness as she managed to
score a goal in each half.
Teammates E. Piersdh and
Sue Sadler contributed 1 goal
apiece to the winning cause.
The next field hockey action
will be tommorrow at 1pm.
The varsity contest will be held
on Lawrence field.

After a bad start last week
(8 right 6 wrong) I couragously
charge into my second week of
picks.
The two big games this
week both come out of Texas.
Baltimore Colts will invade
Dallas for a tussle with the
Cowboys and the Oakland
Raiders arrive from the other
coast to visit the Oilers in the
Astrodome.
Baltimore 21 Dallas 20.
Just a hunch here. The odds
make the Cowboys a 6 point
favorite but 1 think Bert Jones
can erase those odds and lead
the Colts to a close win.
Houston 14 Oakland 10
The Oilers have shown a
strong defense like last year
and also, like last year, no
offense. Oakland has shown
both offense and defense that
are strong. This could be a
toss-up but the game is in
Houston and they say that the
home field is worth 3 points.
Miami 38 NY Jets 6
Miami was sick after
losing to New England but the
Jets are a good cure for any
team. Jet coach Lou Holtz is
likely to join the Jets President

Phil Iselin in the hospital after
this one.
Cinncinnatti 29 Green Bay
10
Cinncinnatti needs this
game after losing by one point
to the Colts. Green Bay
doesn't have the horses to
keep this game close for more
than a half.
Los Angeles 24 NY Giants 14
Last week the Eagles ran
right through the Giants and
running is LA's main game,
.'^'ew York won't see the ball
ivich in this one as the Rams
wi.l run to the win.
Buffalo 28 Tampa Bay 7
Its time Tampa Bay
scoiiid their first points so I'll
be g merous and give them 7.
Bufalo is off to an 0-2 start
and t lis is the best chance to
start winning.
Minni sota 20 Detroit 10
Bjtween these two rivals
this is the years first game. It
just (!• esn't seem the same in
that p^ essure inflated stadium.
Whtiever happened to good
hard football in the out of
doors and on grass. The black
cont. on page 4

Hockey strives for winning season
By DOUG GRIETZ
Staff Reporter
The Lock Haven State
College Hockey Club, still in
its developing phase, skates
into its third year this fall
under the direction of Mr. Carl
Nelson. The team will strive
for their first winning season.
Organized primarily
through student interest, the
hockey club, with Jeff Koen,
as President, hopes to attract
approximately twenty-five
members.
Despite the fact the club is
plaqued with a lack of funding
and is forced to play its home
games at The Penn State
University hockey rink, the
club has met with fair success
more formidable opponents
such as Slippery Rock, Indiana
U. of Pennsylvania, and Penn
State.
Practice time, has been
inimal ' last two seasons
ue tr .n absence of a rink in
the immediate area. The
future looks brighter, how-

ever, as a portable plastic ice
rink designed for the tops of
either the tennis courts or the
basketball courts in Thomas
Field House is being proposed. Money to finance the
operation will hopefully be
raised with the cooperation of
Dr. Russell Milliken, vice-president of administration, who
seems to favor the potential
money making propor:.ion.
This particular ice rink without

tiie building has a projectec
cost of $25,000.
In time, with extensiv
interest in the organizatioi
and a successful season, th(
hockey rink should become i
reality. Mr. Nelson, als<
Director of Law Enforcement
urges all interested students t
contact him at his office, Roor
102, in the Law Enforcemen
section adjacent to thi
infirmary.

r«C are tfdil
hih oriTilb
J J

Jackets, too!

warz S\ore
n o Bellefonte Ave.
Lock Haven
Phone 748-2163

EAGLE EYE

page 4

Ihs lawyer

VfeUlikelosay
widooiiieback.
Withabaraain. pro ball
com. Irom page 1

Order one of
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Welcome back to school. And welcome back to
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You know our big 100% beef burger With lettuce.
Tomatoes. Onions. Pickles. Catsup and mayonnaise.
All piled on a toasted sesame seed bun.
And get this: Bring along this coupon, and we'll
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Fri. Sept. 24,1976

senate
cont. from page 1

Storch replied, "not necessarily. I don't even know what
my role should be." Storch is
instructing any students who
are interested in being part of
the committee to get in touch
with either S.C.C. President
Lorin Mock or himself.

the second vice-president is
responsible for operations of
PUB already.
Before adjourning the
meeting Mock reminded all
Senators to review the
constitutional revisions and
discuss them with their
constituencies before the
October 19 referendum.

com. Irom page 3
and blue division just isn't the
same. Unfortunatiy for the
Lions, the only pressure in this
stadium will be the roof.
San Francisco 27 Seatie 24
San Francisco's defense
hasn't proved they can stop
anybody, but Seatie has given
up 61 points in 2 games. It
should be a high scoring affair
with Plunketts arm being the
difference.
Cleveland 23 Denver 21
Cleveland had the folks in
Pittsburgh worried at halftime, leading 14-0. Then they
fell afart in the second-half,
losing 31-14. Denver took
apart the Jets so-called
defense for 46 points but
Cleveland actually has a
defense.
St Louis 23 San Diego 17
This will be a battle of two
undefeated teams with good
offenses. St Louis experience
will prevail in a suprisingly
good game.

Chicago 17 Atianta 14
Chicago's defense has
matured into on the the better
defenses in the league, but the
offense needs more time.
They'll have enough time in
this game.
Kansas City 24 New Orleans
17
Kansas City showed a lot of
character coming back from a
17-0 half-time deficit to make a
close game of it, Monday
against Oakland. New Orleans
is about two years away from
being a fine team.
Washington 21 Philadelphia
14
Philadelphia reaped the
dividends of Dick Vermiels
tough training camp by
dominating the NY Giants, last
Sunday. Washington blames
the Eagles for keeping them
out of last years playoffs. The
Eagles won both games last
year. On of Monday nights
best games, believe it or not!

cultural affairs sponsors
cont. Irom page 1

classical instruments such as
the flute, woodwinds, oboe
and harpsicord. Next in the
line of the Artist Series will be
the Ragtime Years, October
30, a comedy musical with
music similar to that found in
the motion picture The Sting.
Then on November 22, Leon
Bates will appear on the Lock
Haven State Campus. Mr.
Bates has performed at
Carnegie Hall and The
Philharmonic. With the spring
comes a crazy group of young
people who live together on a
farm they bought themselves
in New Hampshire. They are
known as The Hill Chamber
Players.
Admission to programs in
the Artist Series is free to
students with a validated LHS
ID, and also to faculty
members. Non-students may
puchase season tickets for

$10.00. High school students
may obtain tickets for $3.00
and those wishing to attend
certain shows may pay $2.50
or $3.50 per ticket depending
on the presentation. Brochures
will soon be made available to
all those interested.

Classifieds
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY —
Female to share apt. w/3
others. Call for details
748-3081.
STOP and THINK - Jim Wolf
for General Assembley.
History, Political Science, and
Economics Major. Gome to the
first organizational meeting of the
History Glub, Sept. 29 1976;
Wednesday at 7:30 in Raub 205.
NEWMAN a U B MEETING
Mass will be In Ulmer Planet,
at 4:30 pm Sat. 25,1976.
Everybody Weloome.

Media of