BHeiney
Wed, 06/28/2023 - 17:27
Edited Text
Lock Haven State College

State provisionc call for steak, shrimp

Macke Co. enters low bid
By BILL MAHON
Editor-in-Chief
Last week the food service contract for next year
was awarded to the Macke
Food Service. The Macke
company will be replacing
A.R.A. Service which has
been working in Bentley
Hall for the past five years.
The quality of meals at
Lock Haven Slate College is
expected to increase nexl
year with the new food service

but that will tie the result of
an increase in the costs for
the meals. During the past
semester students payed $180
for their meals. This figure
will rise $54 to a cost of

'Beam in' fo UFO
ledure tonight
Dr. Willy Smith of
Lycoming
College
will
present a lecture on " U F O ' s
A Scientific P r o b l e m " at
7:30 p.m,
tonight,
April
28, in the theatre of the
John
Sloan F i n e
Arts
Center, Lock Haven State
College,
The lecture, sponsored
by the Society of P h y s i c s
Students, is open to the
public at no charge,
Dr, Smith will d i s c u s s
whether
"Unidentified
Flying O b j e c t s " are a
phenomenon
worthy
of
scientific study, based on
research conducted while
he was on sabbatical leave
l a s t year. Public opinion
in
Europe
considers
UFOLOGY
a respectible

$234 for the fall semester.
The average cost per meal
will then be thirty-seven
cents.
There will be a number
of changes made in the food
CONT, ON ?AGE 4

Poet Piatt
to read in
Bentley Tues.
Poet
Eugene
Robert
Piatt will read his poems
Tuesday, April 29 at 8:00
p.m. in Bentley Hall Lounge.
Brought to campus by the
English/Communications Club,
Piatt has been termed by
critics " a young American
poet whose use of jnqdern
poetic techniques is balanced
by his o>vn completely original voice."
Three collections of
Piatt's poetry - Coffee and
Solace, An Original Sin and
Tar River Poets • have been
published. The 36 year old
poet has given readings at
nunerous
colleges
and
schools, besides having his
work appear in many periodicals. Hr also
edited an
anthology of Patrick Kavanaugh's poetry and one of
poems about the Outer Banks
of North Carolina.
Born in Charleston,
South Carolina, Piatt served
in the army and graduated
from the University of S.C.
He was a law student and a
civil servant twfore going to
t e l a r d in 1969 to study at
Trinity College, Dublin.

CONT, ON PAOE 4

Equal opportunity
office sponsors
sports forums
The Pennsylvania DePHOTO FINISH-Atter a slight lead through most of the partment of Education Office
race TKE edged ahead of Phi Mu Delta for their win in of (Equal Opportunity has entered into a period of intense
Saturday's raft race included in the Greek Weekend events.
consultation and research to
Eagle Eye photographer Nick Spanos took this photo finish determine! guidelines and defrom the Jay Street Br-idge.
velooe training materials for
Directors ot Equal Opportunity in sports. The "varter
release time position at eacn
state college and university
was agreed to last fall in the
association into committees
By BOB BARRICKMAN
collective bargaining agreeinstead of one group. CurrentStaff Reporter
ment
between Association of
ly there is one coordinator
Pennsylvania State College
representing
each
local
chapThe Commonwealth Assand University Faculties and
ociation of Students (CAS) ter. There are 14 Local Chap- the Commonwealth of Pennters;
the
13
state
colleges
may adopt some changes in
sylvania.
their Constitution next year. plus Indiana State University.
The
coordinator
dissemiAs part of the Office of
This weekend. May 2 and 3,
nates
information
to
and
from
Equal
Opportunity's effort to
suggestions will be discussed
get advice on formulation of
at the CXS meeting which Itudents pertaining to the
guidelines from diverse view*
will be held at Cheney State campus. He or she makes all
the decisions and is in charge
College and perhaps a vote
points and opinions, the office
will be taken on the possible of everything. One of the bigJiaa arranged to conduct, three
gest problems is that the cochtnMS.
regional forums. The first was
ordinator ends up doing all
One change under con- the Work instead of delegatheld laat Tuesday, April 22 at
sideration is to break UD the
CONT. ON PAOE 4
CONT. OKI f>ASI 4

Weekend meeting to consider
dianges in CAS constitution

EAOLE EYE

peae 2

Mondav. Aoril 2«. 19r;

:RINO
DAY

#
«
«
«

«
*

KDR FINISHES FIRST-ln the annual Greek Olympics held
yesterday afternoon Kappa Delta Rho ran awoy with the #
contest with 42/2 points, Tau Kappa Epsilon finished
second with 31 points followed bv Phi Mu Delta scoring
18.- Alpha Sigma Tau won the sorority competition.

Letter to the editor
Dear tiditor.
Recently I was given
a preliminary application
form for the local Loyal
Order of the Moose. One of
its statements does nol
seem at all in harmony with
that enlightened philosophy
to which we all subscribe,
I call attention to it for the
benefit of any of us who
might already be members
or who might be considering
membership;
Please accept this as my
preliminary application for
membership,
I hereby
certify that I am of sound
mind and body, being a
member of the Caucasian,
white race, and not married

to one of any other race,
not a member of t'he Communist Party, have never
been convicted of a felony
and a believer in a Supremt
Being,
The sentence sturcture,
perhaps, can be quickly
corrected so as not to
offend intelligent people.
The
racial
sentiments,
however, cannot be corrected
so easily. I hope that we
not only oppose the sentiment but do everything in
our power to undermine it.
Thank you.
Sincerely,
Michael Peplow

*
«
«

d a t e Tues. April 29 *

time JO - 4
p l a c e Booksfore

deposit $vo.
JUNIORS!
Don't forget fo sign up
for a date and time
to have your
Yearbook Senior
portraits taken! Sign-^p
sheets posted outside Raub 303
all this week.

I

Mcnday. April 28, 1975

EAGLE EYE SPORTS

page 3

Diamondmen 'doing their
thing' win last 9 out of 10
By MIKE CRONE
Staff Reporter
By scoring four runs in
the bottom of the 7th inning,
the Bald Eagles of Lock
Haven State were abla to
sweep a doubleheader ftt>m
visiting Edinboro on Saturday.
The Eagles took the first
game 9-3 and then stormed
back with thei/ late barrage
to win the second game 5^4,
Those two wins make it
6 in a row for Coach Tod
Eberle's crew, and 9 out of
the last 10, The Eagles are
9-3 since returning from
Virginia and 12-8 overall.
Catcher Jeff Kashner was
the heri in game 2 for the
Haven, His one-out single to
laft scored pinch runner Jon
Jacoby from second with the
winning run.
Behind 4-1 going into the
last inning, the Eagles had
their backs to the wall. Mike
Crone atarted it off with a

triple to left, Joe Tarconish
followed with a walk. Dave
Royer th^n hit a ground ball
to short, and a hustling
Tarconish beat the throw to
second, Crone scoring on the
play. Ed Stum drew a walk
to load the bases and Steve
DeLisle followed vdth a
sacrifice fly, which scored
Tarconish and moved Royer
to third, making the score
4-3, Galen Miller then came
through with a sharp single
to right, scoring Royer, tying
the game and sending Stum to
second. At this point, Jacoby
entered the game to run for
Stum. This set the stage for
Kashner, and he delivered his
clutch hit,
Brian Winters picked up
the mound nod in relief of
starter Bob Weber, who went
4 2/3 of an inning. Winters
entered the game with two
outs in the fifth and effectively strangled the Edinboro

EAGLES PICK UP TWO MORE WINS-The LHS baseball
team furthered their standings to 9-3 since they returned
from their rood tour in Virginia over Spring Vacation. They
beat Edinboro State College twice at the Woolrich field on
Saturday afternoon.

CONT. ON PASE 4

Eagle grapplers to face
Nittany Lions next season
By W. DENNIS BERRY
Staff Reporter
The NCAA announced
that a major college wrestling
loague
has been formed
starting the 1975-76 season.
Six of the nations top mat
powers will comprise the
lli ague. N4at powers Penn State,
Pitt and Buffalo from the
EIWA and Bloomsburg State,
Clarion State and Lock Haven
State will form the "Big
Six". Each team must wrestle
all teams in the new conference starting next season,
and the top three qualifiers in
each weight class at the
league
championship will
qualify for the NCAA Championships.. This should be a
big shot-in-the-arm for LHS.
The 1976 NCAA championships
will be held at the University
of Arizona. LHSC will also
compete in the Pennsylvania
State College Conference, and
will use the Eastern Big Six
Tournament as the NCAA
qunuiier* For the first time
in LHS s illustrious mat
history, inc Bald Eagles will
entertain the Nittany Lions
ot Peiui State on the Thomas

Field House mats next February. Mat mentor Dr. Ken
Cox is excited about the new
league, and believes the Bald
Eagles will be ready to meet
the challange next season.
The Bald Eagles completed
their 32 consecutive' winning
season this past Mirch. The
future looks great.
All junior varsity and
vorsity wrestlers turn in your
wrestling equipment fo Buck
Calhoon,
TFH
Equipment
Room, within fhe next two
weeks for inventory. Equipment must be turned In for
inventory and then re-issued
as needed.

SYNCHRONIZED SWIMMING-The Lock Haven State Aquafins are shown above as they performed this past weekend
in " A Musical Nostalgia." The show will be repeated next
Sunday as part of the Parent's Weekend activities. (Photo
by NICK SPANOS)

Dance troupe to perform May 7, 8
Last semester we danced
fa fun. This semester we're
dancing again but this time
it's for atiow! Yes, with contoined forces the Advanced
Topics of Modem Dance clas5
and the Modern Dance Club,
both recently crested, will be
performing on campus Msy Sth
snd 9th It 8:00 pm. A preview
of the performance will be
shown May 7th.
The troupe, led by Celeste

Rhodes, is comprised of Nancy theme of "Alpha-bits" with
Atkinson, Cindy Beres, Bibe the dancers portraying various
Bungo, Patti Caimbella, Jean
letters of the alphabet. This
Canavan, K.C. Cardman, Deb
will bs accompanied with a
Focht, Donna Foltz, Scott
triplet study, swing study and
Gahagan, Jscqui Oilkey, Dede
cape dance performed by the
Rosenawie, Michelle Skeeby,
entire troupe.
Elaine Simmons, Josie Swisher, All faculty and studants are
Billie Wall, Beth Weaver, Paula invited to a Student Poetry
JVolfe and Ptulette Woomer.
and Fiction Reading tomorrow
The performance will inat 1:10 in Raub 309.
clude a number of solo and
duet dances done under the

page 4

Monday, April 28. 1975

EAGLE EYE

macke coi

beam in

.CONJ. FROM »>AOE I i

'service st the request of tne
SCC Food Committee and
through the guidelines set by
the state. A new six week
mcjnu scheduU was placed in
the contract ariif mky not be
deviated from. Tne new contract specifies portion sizes
and will include such dishes
as shrimp, corniah hen and
steak.
Also inclu'^.ed in the
contract is th • serving of
meat for every breakfast.
Items that were retained in
the contract include a salad
bar, unlimited seconds, and
a ham.burger and sandwich line
at lunch.
The new contract does
not include serving breakfast
on weekends but there will be
' Saturday and Sunday brunch
served from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
On weekdays brrakfsst will
be served from 7 to 9 a.m.
and continental from 9 to 10
a.m. Lunch wili be extended
from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. and
dinner will be served from
4:30 to 7 p.m.
It is expected that Macke
will stil! rely heavily on
student workers and that only
three jobs will be affected as
a result of th* food service
change. The Mack* Company
will begin serving meals on
the Lock Haven State campus
beginning
with the
first
summer session.

coNiv rnoM PAVE ti
scientiiic e:ideavor, and
many high caliber scientist
endeavor, and many high
claiber s c i e n t i s t s are now
engaged in research in that
field, according to Dr,
Smith,
During his trip abroad,
Dr, Smith became acquainted
with
many
unpubliahed
European c a s e s of UFO
sightings, mft with and
exchanged ideas with the
leading researchers in the
field in Spain and France,
Dr, Smith Earned his
Ph,D, at the University of
Michigan and is currently
acting chairman of the
newly formed Department of
Astronomy and Physics at
Lycoming
College
in
WiUiamsport

ing some to the students. The
situation shows a Uck of getting mors help from th* stt>
dents.
The advantage of such an
organization would be that no
one person woukd be required
to bs an expert in all 'ipt-'its
of th* student association. In
this case, there would bs one
person elected by th* local
chapter to control each committes.
If the new constitutiun is
adopted there will b* at least
one yearly convention. Each
chapter will be permitted to
elect one delegate for every
500 CAS members. Currently,
Lock Kaven has only one
delegate tc represent its between thre' and four hundred
members. Lock Haven hopes
to get more members in order
I

diamond men 'doing their thing'
CONT. rPOM PAOE a

bats from tha! point on.
The first game of Satui*day's doubleheader was not
as dramatic as the second,
but it was equally gratifyingi
The Eagles jumped out to a
6-0 lead in the first inning
and coasted in from there.
Lefty Steve Lebo notched
another win for the "Big Red"
in game 1, Lebo had a little
more control trouble than
isual, but still had his strike*
>ut pitch working, as he

Classified advertisements

Struck out the side twice.
Big blows in the 6 run
first for the Eagles were
triples by Royer and Stum and
doubles by Kashner and
DeLisle,
The next game for LHS
will be on Thursday at Clarion
State College,

ID get more delegates. The
House of Delegates and tlia
Board of Presidents elects
lh« CAS president.
Another change is that
of choosing a pk»sidfcnt-eleot.
The president-elect would
hold similar duties to the vice
r>resident for one year, then
become president die next.
The president-elect is chosen
by the House of Dtlegates,

eqLoi
CONV. FROM P A » e I

SUpptpry Rock, The next one is
statsd tor this Friday at BiocHn*
s W g S u t e CoUegB frtm lOiOO
a4i»4 > 4t00 p,m, in Kehr II«ioD
BUldisg'n MtiltiPiifpose B«oin
At KolBtowQ State CoUegfl will
hott the last forum Apri! 30
from 10:00 a.m, - 4:00 p,m» in
the Rohrback Library,
Plans for aech forum
include a presentation by th©
Office of Equal Opj^ortunity's
) Committee on \Equal Opportunity in Sports I followed I by a
I pre arranged
schedule of
speakers, an
open mi»
crophone" for general disculslon, and a closing summary.
If you have 'any ques»
~ti^ts I about the forums, please
call Samuel Jordan at (717)

lii'Sm^

STOP LOOKING
for a good part-time job!!

•05 1^ 0 line

THE CAMPUS STORE HAS
NEW MERCHANDISE ••
We have just received a
supply of our newly designed pennants and banners.
These make nice
gifts or souveniers.

weekend meeting to consider

ICONT. I»H0M PAOB 1

•Good Pay

"Our Friend" was written
by students
of
Akeley
campus school about Archibald P. Akeley, a former
trustee of Lock
Haven
State College, after whom
Akeley School was named.

©New Opportunities

• Career Training •Regular Promotions
• Men and Women Eligible

NEW BOOKS
Books written by members
FACULTY
of our own campus family ATTENTION
The campus store is interhave been
stocked for
ested in acquiring books
sale. They are displayed
written by you for sale to
in the paperback section.
thus campus family. If you
Titles received io date are:
wish to take advantage of
"The New Negro Renaisthis outlet for your Publicasance: An
Anthology"
tion, please call Mr. Nagy
By: Dr. Michael W. Peolow on ext. 470.
and Arthur P. Uavn
t't/^nohar Mtilgonkar'
I
By: Dr, James V. Dayanandcfl ^^^ R ^ „ ^ . furnished hous J
" O w Friend Grandpa Ake-

i'^mer

months. S/x roo#sj

/•y'* 8y.-Le/g/j Sfontof?
Nancy
Akeley,
Lauren
Clawson

ond a bath. Con»n;r f t n j
f f ' ' » < | ' ^748*2804^ 56^ f '

L-

EARN $45 KOR ONE WEEKEIMD PER MONTH, AND TRAIN FOR
A REWARDING CAREER IN THE TECHNICAL
SKILtOF YOUR CHOICE.

GETTING INVOLVED BECAUSE

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FOR MORE INFORMATION (No Obligation) CLIP AND MAIL TO:
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