BHeiney
Thu, 06/22/2023 - 19:41
Edited Text
M^A.

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Power Dev. Moratorium Sought
Washington,
D.C. — A
coalition
of
environmental
organizations
and
American
Indians have asked for a moratorium on all Federal actum
related lo electric power developments they fear will d e v a s t a t e
the heart of the s c e n i c southwestern United States.
The
Native
American
Rights
Fund,
Environmental
Defense
Fund and National
Wildlife Federation told Interior
Secretary
Rogers
Morton
a
mammoth system of coal-fired
power p l a n t s , strip mines, high
voltage tran.smission lines and
related developments seriously
threaten the fabled Four Corners
area of Colorado, Utah, New
Mexico and Arizona.
The
firsl plant of the
system
h a s been
operating
since 1964 at a site on the
Navajo Indian Reservation near
Mesa Verde National Park. II
emits more particulate matter
daily than New York City and
Los Angeles combined. Four
more plants are under construction and another in final planning
s t a g e s . Smoke from the firsl
plant alone has covered up to
10,000 square miles and was
the only man-made object visible
in a 1966 photograph taken from
Gemini 12 at an altitude of
170 miles. When all s i x plants
are in operation they will daily
emil an estimated 200 tons of
fly a s h , 1,365 tons of sulphur
oxides, and 1,000 tons of nitrogen oxides. The groups conlend
these
emissions
will
blanket the Four C o m e r s area
with smog potentially hazardous
to human health and the fragile
desert ecology.
They contend too thai the
plants' tremendous demands for
cooling water from the already
saline surface walers of the
Colorado River Basin could
have serious impact on resident
Indians, damage agriculture in
the fertile Imperial Valley and
aggravate exislion water squabbles between the U.S. and
Mexico.
According to N.ARF, more
than half of all American Indians living on reservations will
be subjected to the air pollution
and strip mining operations
threaten to despoil areas of
unique religious
significance
lo the Navajo and Hopi.
More than 16 million Americans visited the six National

Tickets to the Maxwell
Taylor lecture are available
for distribution at the reception
desk in the Parsons Union
Building.
One ticket will be given
to each student and faculty
member if identification is
presented showing affiliation
with Lock Haven State College.
General Taylor is presently Chairman of President
Nixon's Foreign Relations
Board, and was formerly
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff. General Taylor's
presentation will deal with the
realities of Vietnam and the
United States' military role
throughout the world.

Parks, three National Recreation
Areas and twenty-eight National
Monuments subject to air pollution from the power plants.
Tourism ranks second or third
in each of the four s t a t e econtv
mies.
Involved Federal agencies
have filed estimates of potential
environmental impact for individual pieces of the total
project. However analysis from
the three organizations claim
all are woefully inadequate and
completely ignore the National
Environmental Policy Acl m a n date for a report on the c u m u lative environmental impact of
the whole system.
A spokesman for the groups
said the requested moratorium
would give the Federal government time lo do the required
environmental
studies
which
will be vital to the utilities if
they are lo fulfill promises to
minimize
the
environmental
impact of the Four Corners
development.
The powerful U.S. Senate
Interior and Insular Affairs Committee called the Four Corners
situation " a c l a s s i c example
of the clash of divergent n e e d s "
and scheduled field hearings
for May 24, 25, 26 in Albuquerque and parmington. New Mexico
and Salt Lake Cily.

[Earth Week
{April 18-24
•"res.

R i c h a r d M. Nixnn

iwiiriiiiaii

A6LE EYE
Vol. XrV No. /8 .

Lock Maven Stiite College

Tom Jones
At

Hershey

Hershey, P a . - Tom Jones, the
""q year old Welsh singing superstar lias tieen s e l for an inperson C(mcert appearance at
Hershey Stadium Friday night,
June 18, at 8:30 p.m. Rain date
for the event is Monday, June
21, at the same hour.
The Tom Jones Show s t a r s
Tom J o n e s , musical director
Johnny Spence, Pat Henry, the
Blossoms, and the Jeff Sturgens
Universe and will be produced
"in-the-round", with the stage
and 30-piece orchestra placed
in the center of the football
field. Over 17,000 s e a t s , including permanent and bleacher,
will be available for the event,
plus 3,000 ' ' g r a s s sitting room'
general
admission
localion.s.
Tom
Jones
was named
"Entertainer of the Year" hy
the Friar's Club, the elite and
exclusive group of American
show business
personalities,
probably the most outstanding
accolade of J o n e s ' career to
date, an incredible achievement
for the singer, who began singing for h i s living little more
than five years ago.

Environment New Topic
For Foreign Affairs

A bus will be leaving for
Washington,
D.C. Saturday
morning at 6 a.m. and will be
returning late that night. The
pUrpOSC Of thlS frlp IS tO glVO

students an opportunity to participate in the student Mobilization March that day. There
will be a charge of $2.00 for
each student going.

Tuition Rises
To Be Discussed
A t Conference
Deciding what efforts can
be employed to avert further
tuition r i s e s and budget cuts by
the legislature will be a high
priority topic at the 33rd annual
Conference of the Pennsylvania
State Association of Studeni
Governments, April 22-24, at
Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
More
than
130 studeni
governn'cnl members from the 13
stale-owned
colleges
and
Indana University will assemble
at lUP for the three-day fonference opening this morning
with a welcoming address by
Dr. William W. Hassler, Indiana
president.
Delegates b the conference,
lo be chaired by ' new PSASG
president J . Robert McLaughlin
of West Chester State College,
will dLscuss and resolve certain i s s u e s important to all
state c o l l e g e s . Agenda items
will include not only on-campus
i s s u e s but also the difficulties
in communicating the urgent
needs of the s t a t e colleges to
the Pennsylvania public and
legislature.
Helping l o alleviate some
of the communications problems
will be Samuel
F . Furgiuele,
l U P ' s director of public relations and president of the
Alumni Council of the Association of State College Organizations (ASCO), the counterpart
to the PSASG on the faculty
administration level. He will
address
tomorrow's
general
assembly of d e l e g a t e s on ASCO
reorganization.

WASmNGTON (WCNS)-- Foreign and standards; developmenl of
policy suggests security, di- environmental guidelines; complomacy and power. But in his prehensive international action
state of the world address of programs; development of training
Feb. 25, President Nixon moved and education programs.
policy"
for the
beyond this level to consider .\n "oceans
"an increasing range of problems 1970s, Nixon continued, will
wfiich are central to our national include his proposals of last
spring on the rights to natural
well-being.
Pollution.
The
Oceans. resources in the s e a b e d s to the
Population Control. Crime and depth of 200 meters and a
Narcotics.
Natural
Disaster. twelve-mile limit lo territorial
waters off a nation's c o a s t .
These issues formed the
L'S initiative in this field
basis for his approach to " g l o bal challenges—the new dimen- at the UN last fall, he s a i d , was
widely welcomed " a s a s l e p
sion in foreign affairs."
to.vard
oiganizing
necessary
The
environment,
Nixon
international n e g o t i a t i o n s , " and
told Congress, is now being
has led lo the call for an interaccorded a special place at
national conference in 1973.
international roundtables. The
In combatting the narcotics
United Nations, he said, is
preparing for the 1972 Stockholm problem, Nixon said the US h a s
Conference on the Human En- asked the UN " l o develop a
plan for the provision of new
vironment; the UN Economic
opportunities
for
Commission for
Europe, the economic
Organization
for
Economic poppy t'jowers. and the education
and 1. ehabi Iitation of a d d i c t s . "
Cooperation and Developqjent,
NATO's Committee on the ChalThe President also reported
lenges of Modern so'.^i'^ty/ an"
that progress has been made on
the Inler-Oovernmental Maritime the hijacking problem with the
Con -ultative Organizaiion—they
signing of a new treaty at The
are all addressing the problems
Hague at the end of 1970.
of pollution of the s e a , land and
Disaster
relief,
another
air.
international problem addressed
the President.
deserves
NATO discussed oil s p i l l s by
"development of a more rational ,
at a conference last year. European nations will hold a con- approach by the world communtiy.'
Finally,
the
President
ference in Prague on tiieir conlooked forward in his global
cerns. And the growing number
review to a greater degree of
of bilateral d i s c u s s i o n s belweei,
international exchange of scienthe US and other countries is
tific and technological know-how.
producing a new awareness of
We should " v i e w our preeminence
the " c o s t l y measures needed
as an a.sset to he invested in
to protect the environment."
building effective partnerships
Cost notwithstanding, the
with other nations to create a
President mapped out seven
world pattern of open s h a r i n g "
ureas of future discussion tm
the ecology i s s u e for inleriialion- of knowledge.
In ending his 235-page
al conferences: identification of
pollutants; estabi islimcrit of iv« repi.rt to Congress, President
Nixon urged the American people
world monitoring network to keep
to forge " a partnership of purpose
track
of pollution
dangers;
For all nations we visualexchange of experience and
ize a partnership that will make
knowledge;
establishment
of
this planet a better place to live.
air and water quality criteria

Another speaker will b e
Tony Scoblick, a defendant
the " " B e r n g a n " c a s e currently
being heard in Harrisburg. He
will deliver his talk I o the conference at 8 p.m. this evening.
In addition to the scheduled
speakers, the conference agenda
will include the forming ot
committee and d i s c u s various
to deal with .such
sion groups
, racial affairs, j uareas assv stems
and
legal
di c i a I
s t u d e n t ' s role
the
awareness
and the
in campus affairs,
college curriculum.

Thursday, April 22,1971

Manufacturer
Aids Students
In Job Hunt
V • the job market this
summer c.\pecled to be at an
all-time low for student employment. GoldTec, Inc., a fire
exti: Huisher manufacturer based
in Chicago, Illinois 60646, has
di vised a college studeni, summer,
self-employment program.
Mr. Richard D. Marmor,
Marketing Vice P r e s i d e n t , said
" w e have geared the concept of
the student program lo be of a
self-help
nature,
enabling
students lo create jobs thems e l v e s , " he explained that the
progarm was geared lo aggressive
young men and women who would
like the experience of selfemployment,
further
staling
" e v e n approaching this on a
part-lime b a s i s , a student could
earn $10-$ 15 or more per d a y . "
On the question, of motivation, Mr. Marmor said, " C e r tainly, our country is in business to make profits, but there
is no reason why we can't
benefit others while we're doing
it. After a l l , the summer-em ployed student i s after profits loo. . .
there's an added bonus for the
sludent as well, in that he will
be valuable on a year-around
b a s i s thereafter."
The company is making
applications
and
information
available by mail from i t ' s main
office: G o l d T e c , I n c . , 4001 W.
Devon Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60646, and in most college
placement offices.

see
Officers
Installed
L a s t night's SCC meeling
was highlighted by the installation of the new Executive
Board officers. Those taking
office were: President, Gary
Worthington; I s t V . P . , Steve
Podgajny; 2nd V . P . , Ron Jury;
Recording
Secretary,
Cathy
Zeinicki; Corresponding Secretary, Nancy Landon; T r e a surer, George Bower; and Parliamentarian, Owen Conaghan.
President Worthington asked
the Board to take back to their
respective groups the rain of
encouraging sludenis to participate in several meetings nexl
Thursday wilh members of ASCO.
Representation will -be here
at that time to d i s c u s s any
problems at LHS wilh s t u d e n l s .
In other b u s i n e s s , Worthington expressed his desire for
any ideas or suggeslions to be
brought to the Execuiive Committee for ils consideration.
A motion was passed to
transfer the remaining funds of
the SS-IRC lo help pay the c o s t
of a bus to Washington, D.C.
Saturday.
'
In addition, funds from the
Union Cotrfmittee will be transferred t y finance the remainder
of t h e / t r i p. The 38 passenger
b u s / w i l l leave LHS at 6 a.m.
arid will return late Saturday
night. There will he a charge of
$2.00 from each studeni going
lo help pay the over-all cost.

Honor Society
Being Formed

Women Netters

A new type of honor society.
open to s t u d e n t s studying all
d i s c i p l i n e s , is being organized.
Formerly, e a c h honor society
was only open lo students engaged in a specific area of study
or interest.
Phi Kappa Phi, initiated
by Dr. Paul F . Klens in 1967,
has selected members for the
fall.
Dr. A. H. Crosby expressed
hope that the local chapter will
become a national chapter as
soon as possible.
According to its Constitution, PKP i s , ".An honor society
dedicated to the unity and
democracy of education and is
open to honor students from all
department of American univers i t i e s . Its prime objective is
to emphasize scholarship and
character in thought of college
sludents."
Criteria for membership in
PKP will be that all juniors
musl be in the lop 5% of their
c l a s s and seniors must be in
the top 12'/2%. The total from
each class cannot exceed 10%
of those eligible for graduation.
The seven original members
of PKP at Lock Haven Stale
are: Don W. Crews, Alan II.
Crosby, Francis N. Hamblin,
Paul F . Klens, Margaret Mercer,
David Salstrom, and Bruce E .
Thomas.
Alan H. Crosby is serving
as president while Charles G.
Klingman is the newly-elected
vice-president and Bruce E.
Thomas is secretary-treasurer.
Student members of Phi
Kappa Phi are: Denice Asp,
Melinda Barnhart, George G.
Bierkamper,
Gunhild
Chuber,
Kathleen Clough, Marcia K.
Conway, Deborah Ann
Eck,
Marilyn Gardner, Joan Y. Getz,
Gary B . H a r r i s , Charles G.
Klingman, James J.
Lebda,
Kathleen E. N i c o l e l t i , Elizabeth
Peltingill, J e s s i c a E. Snyder,
Mary L. Strouse, Gloria Strubeck,
David A. Witmer, and Darwin
C. Zeigler.

On Monday, April 26, at
8 p.m. in the PUB music room
the Agape Fellowship will have
an informal program on the religious trend in rock music
today. Some of the songs to be
discussed
are
"He
Ain't
Heavy," "My Sweet Lord,"
"Jesus Christ-Superstar," "Put
Your Hand Where It Counts,"
and others. Everyone is invited.

Lose To PSU
"We
were
simply
outpsyched,"
commented Coach
Barbara Berry after her women's
tennis team lost 5-2 to Penn
Slate University Tuesday. "We
are very s t r o n g and we carry
the strength all tlirough. 1 feel
the match was close and could
have gone either way, but Penn
Stale is a tough team, certainly the best we'll play this
season."
This
was
the
opening
match for the women netters.
Last year's 4-1 record was the
best in the history of the college.
With
seven
returning
letter winners. Coach Berry is
hopeful for at least as good a
record this year. Left on the
schedule are Gettysburg College, Mansfield State, Bucknell
University, all at home, and
Susquehanna
University
at
Susquehanna. Lost from last
year are MiUersville State and
Slippery Rock State who went
to a fall schedule.
Scores
in
the
singles
matches were: I . Missy Niebel
(PS) over Alice Rutkowski (LH)
6-1, 6-3; 2. Debbi Holland (PS)
over Sue Heckendorn (LH) 6-1,
6-2; 3. Joan Wohlgemugh (PS)
over Pat Brunner (LH) 6-3, 6-2;
4. Mary Overington (LH) over
.Adnenne Hendricks (PS) 6-4,
6-3; and Mary Lou Rodger (PS)
over Pat Shearer (LH) 6-4,
6-4. Doubles matches; 1. Carol
Rebuck and Diane McMillen
(LH) over Candy Roger and J udy
Zoble (PS) 6-1, 6-2; Tanya
Romaniee and Sandy Turner
(PS) over Gail Engelking and
Pat Sammons (LH) 5-7, 6-1 6-3The lady netters will meet
Gettysburg College on .April 27
al 3 p.m. on the college courts.

Ecology
Clean U p

Here's your last chance lo
help clean up your campus! On
Saturday the 24th we will again
attempt to finish cleaning the
stream and gulley in front of
High Hall. All equipment, including buzz-saws, trucks, and
drivers, will be t h e r e to help
haul the debris away. Last
week we only finished half the
job, so why not help us finish
it and make our campus something nice tl look at? Meeting
time will again be at 8:00 a.m.
in front of the GSA ( t h a t ' s the
l i t t l e white building in front of
t h e stream). So please make
plans lo be there and help us
;lean YOUR CAMPUS!

Help us save
man.
« « i i l >!»»««

e

**!;!>;!;!

PARTICIPATE IN EARTH WEEK
April 18 - 24

EVERYTHING
chacka caahed
ebarsa accomta

Nixon

Netters Win

Proposes
Clean Up
WASHINGTON, DC (WCNS>.The
nation's
fouled
waters
stand
second only to air among those
segments of the environment the
Nixon administration is determined
to clean up.
"We have the technology
now to deal with most forms of
water
pollution,"'
President
Nixon told Congress in his February
environmental
message.
"We must make sure that it is
used."
The most dramatic examples
of water pollution are the 10,000plus oil spills that occurred last
year. Under the Water Quality
Improvement Act of 1970, signed
by the President on April 3, 1970 ,
oil spills caused by v e s s e l s and
oil spills can now cost a polluter
op to $14 million for spills caused
by v e s s e l s and $8 million for
those coming from onshore or
offshore facilities.
Water pollution is also caused
by inadequate sewage treatment
p ' a n t s , especially those locaied
on inland waterways and l a k e s .
The first step toward remedying
this kind of pollution was a
record appropriation in 1969 of
$800 million for more construction
of sewage p l a n t s . This y e a r ' s
$1 billion construction budget
ends
this
five-year
program.
A new sewage-plant construction program is up for consideration by Congress this year.
The Administration wants $12
billion spent over the nexl three
years (50% federal money), as
well as an Environmental Financing Authority to help finance
municipal bonds for plant construction. Industries would pay a
users fee to cover whatever it
costs to process their w a s t e s .
To control
dumping
into
rivers and lakes, the Administration
rejuvenated
the
1899
Refuse Dumping Act in December.
Industries must now obtain permits
from the
Environmental
F>rotection Agency (EPA) certifying that their effluents meet
stale and federal water quality
s t a n d a r d s . The P r e s i d e n t ' s 1971
program calls for revised standards and an eventual $30 million
worth of grants to slate water
offices for expansion of their
programs.
Another
aspect
of water
pollution under scrutiny by the
Nixon administration is ocean
dumping.
"Our national policy should
be to ban unregulated ocean
dumping of all w a s t e s , " President
Nixon told c o n g r e s s in his F'ebruary message, " a n d to place
strict limits on ocean disposal
of harmful m a t e r i a l s , "
Working from a Council on
Environmental
Quality
(CEO)
report he ordered last year, the
President
asked
Congress
to
require permits before dumping
any materials into the oceans
and lakes, and to seek internattional accord on banning dumping
on the high s e a s .
Finally, lo dramatize his
concern for the well-being of the
nation's waters, the President
permanentaly halted construclion
on the C:ross-Florida Barge Canal
in January after 30 y e a r s ' work.
"We must assure that in the
future," he said, " w e take not
only full but also timely account
of the environmental impact ol
such p r o j e c t s " s o that instead of
merely halliug the damage, we
prevent i t . "

FOR

THE

The
Lock
Haven
Stale
College men's tennis leam put
their s e a s o n record at 2-1
Monday
when they
defeated
Slippery Rock State College
5-4 in a very ctose match.
Joe Castagnola, who is imdefeated in single matches, has
been the backbone of the men's
team thus far this season .
Freshman Scott Karcher also
contributed to the victory with a
singles win.
Coach
Herrmann
isn't
making any predictions; however,
if the team lives up to ils pot e n t i a l , it would achieve tlie
best win-loss record in the
school history.
Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m.
the team is scheduled to play at
MiUersville State College. LHS
will be looking for ils firsl win
against this usually strong conference leam.
The E a g l e s only loss was a
7-2 decision lo Mansfield State.

Basketball
Clinic Here
Robert Davies, former star
of the N. B.A. Rochester Royals
will conduct a basketball clinic
in Thomas F'ield House at
7:30 p.m. lonight.
A native of Harrisburg,
Davies began his court career
at John Harris High. Ir Ids
junior 'nd senior years al Seton
Hall University he was named
All-American.
During his ten years wilh
the Rochester Royals, he was
named All-Star Pro seven times,
and captained the Royals far
four s e a s o n s . He had earned the
title of the l e a g u e ' s mosl valuable player during his second
season.
According to " S p o r t " magazine, he ranks as the sixth
greatest basketball player of
the first half-century.
In 1968, he was inducted
into the Pennsylvania All Sports
Hall of Fame. Recently, he was
elected to the Basketball Hall
of Fame and lo the N.B.A.
Silver Anniversary Team.
As head coach of the
1946-47 Seton Hall' basketball
team, he compiled a record of
24 wins and only three loses.
Prior to accepting his present
position as a staff member of
the Converse Rubber Company,
New York, he served as head
coach of basketball, s o c c e r ,
and golf al Gettysburg College.
•>/V\^,'^^

1^
I

y

• IDil m I
To the editor:
We are in the final week
before the massive demonstrations in Washington and San
Francisco for immediate withdrawal from all Southeast Asia
now. The demonstrations have
gathered the largest sponsorship
of any action in the history of
the movement
to end U.S.
involvement. From Senators to
trade unionists, we can expect
the turnout on the 24th to be
impressive and powerful .
However, it is the students
who have been the real backbone of the struggle for p e a c e .
It is the massive participation
of students in demonstrations
like April 24th that give them
oomph and s i z e . And , it is
demonstrations like the 24th,
that express the deepest wishes
of America's students for an
immediate end to the war.
In this final week, we call
on you as leaders of students
and as editors to push something
e l s e aside this week in order to
include the enclosed ad for the
24th. It is an ad signed by
active duty GI's in Vietnam
asking us t o march for them on
the 24th to show that they want
to come home now. It can he Ip
in the final push to maximize
the size and impact of the
demonstration.
Also find enclosed an id
announcing the Nati oia^ Moratorium Against the War and in
Commemoration of Kent and
Jackson States for May 5 . This
national moratorium on " b u s iness as u s u a l " has been called
by a broad spectrum of organizations in the student movement,
from the National Student As sociation to the College Young
Democrats. As
sponsors of
these actions, we would like to
urge you to include this ad in
the week following the 24th, It
is our feeling that the t r e mendous antiwar energy generated by the April 24th actions
will cry out for further actions
to allow expression
•" our
outrage at the continuation of
the war and in memory of our
brothers
and
sisters
killed
last year. We are confident
that in local a r e a s , significant
rallies,
marches
and
other
actions will be planned.
We hope that you will
agree with us on the importance
of these actions this spring .If
they are truly massive and
powerful, they can take us a
giant step closer to the end of
the war.
Hope you join us in Washington or San Francisco on
the 24th.
Yours for peace now,
Debby Bustin
National Coordinator,
Sludent Mobilization Committee

just below Hanna Park

V \ Beer,
\J

Sandwiches,
& Pirzo

Dick

Wyland,

Barry Holtzclaw,
President,
United States Student Press
Association

proprietor

Bring all the GFs Home IVow
End the liar \m\

March in Washinglon
and San Franeiseo April 24

COLLEGE MAN

f94K T^Ctndda^
^

Mali StTMi

i

Media of