BHeiney
Fri, 06/30/2023 - 15:06
Edited Text
Lock Haven State College,

Eag
TliPS May
M a v 11,
11 1976
1Q7R
Tues.

^^"^

Vol XVIII No. 108

Film competition open to students
College students into film
or videotape production can
focus their artistic efforts on
the Third National Collegiate
Film and Video competition
sponsored by the National
Trust for Historic Preservation. "Exploring Our Historic
Environment" will be the
theme of the competition with
entries due in Washington,
D.C. August 1, 1976.
Competition is open to
graduate and undergraduate
students enrolled in accredited
colleges, universities and
occupational schools in the
United States. Individual students or groups are eligible
and first-place winners in each
of four categories with more
than four entries will receive
$1,000 prizes.
Categories are as follows:
Preservation and restoration in
process or completed, includ-

ing traditional building crafts.
Preservation and people:
social, environmental and economic issues.
Rehabilitation and city planning that demonstrates concern
for preservation or older structures or areas.
Historic site archaeology, historic horticulture or other
subjects that aid in interpretation of a site or building.
Winning entries in last
year's competition depicted
the restoration of a ship by a
skilled craftsman, explored
New York City's Central Park
as a historic and natural
resource, and documented the
heyday and eventual demise of
the famous Broadwater Hotel
in Helena, Montana.
Films may be 16mm or
Super-8mm with optical or
magnetic tracks if sound is
used; video tape may be
submitted in V2 or y4-inch
cassettes. All entries must be
less than 15 minutes in length.

Graduation set for May 22
On May 22 the Board of
Trustees will hold what Dr.
Francis Hamblin called "the
most impressive Trustees
meeting of the year."
At this meeting recommendations for faculty tenure,
faculty promotions and new
employment ,vill be discussed.
In addition to regular reports,
a major report will be given by
Lorin Mock, Student Cooperative Council President, on the
SCC.
After the Trustees meeting a luncheon will be held
with people involved in commencement.
Commencement will then
begin at 2:00 p.m. Dr. Hamblin, Mock, and William
Leavey, President of APSCUF
will each give a short address.
Dr. Hamblin announced
that there will be no
commencement speaker this

year as previously arranged to
allow enough time for each
graduate to come across the
stage and receive his diploma.
Students who graduated
last August and December are
also invited to attend the
commencement ceremonies.
Ceremonies will be held
in Thomas Fieldhouse this
year but sometime in the next
few years Dr. Hamblin stated,
"We would like to have it held
at the new athletic field."
Dr. Hamblin also reported
that Lock Haven State will be
hosting a State College Planning Commission Conference
on May 25, 26, and 27. Each
state college will have six
representatives present.
"We will have full representation from students, faculty and administrators from each
of the state colleges," commented Dr. Hamblin.

A faculty member must sponsor each entry.
Additional information
and entry forms may be
obtained by writing the Audiovisual Office, National Trust
for Historic Preservation, 740748 Jackson Place, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20006.
The National Trust was
chartered by the United States
Congress in 1949 to facilitate
public participation in the
preservation of structures,
sites, objects and districts that
are important historically and
cont. on page t

Talent show
featured
songsters
The Lock Haven State
College Talent Show sponsored by Gross Hall was held
Friday night at 8:00 in Sloan
Auditorium.
First place in the show
was taken by Natalie Preston
who sang two songs including
the hit "Loving You," which
was originally done by Minnie
Ripperton.
Second place was taken
by Hope McLane who also
performed well. She sang two
songs and joined Eric and
Mark Sundberg in a trio for,
"Leaving on a Jet Plane."
Third place went to Benny
Shoemaker who performed an
array of songs and got the
audience involved with some
real hand-clapping, footstomping music.
The judges at the show all
agreed that the contestants
were talented, and the voting
was close. One judge said,
"The performers all were good
enough to get first place."
The show concluded with
a play written and produced by
Rich Walsh, "The Honeymooners." The play was based
on the TV series and ended an
enjoyable evening.

Goals set for
minority increase
improved living.
An increase in the minority population and improvements in campus living are
some of the general aoals of
the Human Relations Planning
Committee, said Terrell Jones.
Chairperson ofthe Committee.
The committee was started la.st fall and has approximately four people representing the student body, faculty,
staff and administration.
The committee was formed to develop a Human
Relations Action Plan for Lock
Haven State College.
"The Plan," said Jones,
"deals with a general goal of
providing an atmosphere of
non-discrimination to all present and future populations of
minority, faculty, students and
staff."
Although the committee
has made progress Jones feels
that there is a long road ahead.
"We didn't get nearly as
far as I wanted to," said
Jones.
Jones said that an area
focussed on by the Committee
which definitely has improved
is mmority recruitment. He
added that a minority recruitment team has been formed
composed of interested minority students. These students
write letters and visit schools
in order to increase the
present minority enrollment at
Lock Haven.
In the minority recruitment area, a college sponsored
bus trip brought Pittsburgh
minority students here where
they were given the opportunity to visit and ask questions
about Lock Haven.
Although a heavy emphasis was placed on improving
campus living condifions by
funding workshops for the
students, the Committee has
also set out to improve Lock
cont. on page 4

Tues. May 11, 1976
EAGLE EYE

page 2

Letters to the Editor
Sense of community present tiere
To the Editor:
When assessing the value
of a LHSC education, it is not
enough to weigh the value of
one's diploma, the strength of
one's memories, the increase
in skills and proficiencies, and
the social contacts and obligations developed over four
years of life on campus. There
is one thing that a small, light
society like LHSC can offer
that larger colleges and universities can not - a sense of
community.
An impulse generating
pressure of effecting change at
any one point of the community is transmitted throughout
the whole community. The
community acts as one and
responds in human terms. 1
have seen this happen twice
this year. First, in the case of
Lorna Armstrong, 1 was proud
of the reaction of the LHSC
community and was encouraged by the sense of oneness I
felt with the community as I

Platitudes

are

To the Editor:
The Friday, May 7, edition of the Eagle Eye carried a
letter to the editor written in
response to my own poor but
sincere letter May 3. I was at
first elated to think that
someone would take the time
to comment on my thoughts. I
am always eager to discover
the errors in my thinking.
Alas! My hopes were quickly
dashed into fragments of
disappointment. The writer,
Ms. Liz Bennett, failed to
provide me with so much as a
single counter argument or the
refutation of a single point.
'vVhat I found in her letter were
a lot of negative remarks, none
of which really made much
sense. She accused me of
indulging in platitudes, but on
rereading my letter I couldn't
find a single one. 1 doubt that
Ms. Bennett knows how to
identify a platitude. Her own
letter, in fact, seemed to me to
be one extended platitude, a
simple-minded concatenation
of cliches, name-calling,
Agnewisms, mixed meta-

expressed my own reactions.
My second experience
was one of particular personal
anguish. The loss of my wife is
a fact 1 must learn to live with but the reaction of the entire
LHSC community has been a
source of great comfort and
inspiration in this readjustment period. I am especially
cognizant of the depth of
feeling and understanding expressed by all factions of the
LHSC community: students,
secretaries,
administrators,
staff and my faculty colleagues. 1 wish to extend my
sincerest thanks to all those
who responded in my time of
need.
Sense of community is a
definite, if intangible, asset
experienced by all who are
part of LHSC. This is an
extremely important thing for
those in the community such
as I who have suffered, and
have been comforted.
Mark Seeber

not

plausible

phors, and sophormoric journalese. For reasons beyond my
ken, my letter aroused the
personal ire of Ms. Bennett; 1
can onlv guess the reasons.
It is desheartening to find
people who fail to distinguish
publicizing one's serious opinions and reasonings from
sitting on one's ass while
"spouting ivory-tower idylls"
(whatever that's supposed to
mean!) 1 need not comment on
the nonsense that we ought
never to soeak out on racism
and then it will go away. Ms.
Bennett fails to recognize that
before we will ever get the
"action, action, and more
action" which she demands,
the racial climate will have to
change. The politics of confrontation have not yet
succeeded in doing that. And
neither have those persons
who have been programmed to
call every white person who
speaks out against racism a
"lollipop liberal" or the like.
Ms. Bennett would do well to
examine her own naivete in
supposing that we can simply
conl. on page 4

Joe

DeFilippo's

concert guide
AND E T C .
Johnn7 Winter — May 20 - Hershey Arena, Pa.; May 21
Spectrum - Phila., Pa.
Gary Steward/Charlie Pride — May 21 - Johnstown, Pa.; May 23
Hershey, Pa.
Santana — May 21 - Phila., Pa.
Cancelled/Phoebe Snow — May 21 - Tower Theater, Phila., Pa.
Nektar/Status Quo — May 23 - Tower Theater - Phila., Pa.
Harry Chapin — May 24 - Raninbow Gardens - Erie, Pa.
David Liebman — May 25-29 - Pittsburgh, Pa.
Rare Earth/Buddy Miles/Bootsy's Rubber Band — May 29 •
Spectrum - Phila., Pa.
Freddie Fender — May 28 - Chambersburg, Pa.
Savoy Brown — May 28-29 - Main Point - Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Slade/UFO — June 4 - Tower Theater - Phila., Pa.
Peter Frampton/Gary Wright/and others
Kennedy Stadium - Phila., Pa.

June 12 - John F.

"Takin to the Streets" — Doobie Brothers.
This is sure not the Doobie Brothers of old. They have seemed
to run out of material and music. In this LP all the songs wnrf
alike. There are no good guitar riffs, and the singing is
monotonous. I think Bachman Turner Overdrive caught that
sickness after their third LP. It's too bad the Doobie Brothers
caught it. Maybe the president will come up with a shot for that.
Let's hope its soon because if there is no antidote then this could
very will be the last of the Doobie Brothers.
The album tends to be jazzy at times and then very mild.
There are five hornblowers utilized in just about every song on this
LP and everybody knows that horns just don't make it in a rock and
roll band. There are no outstanding songs on this LP but of course
we know that A.M. radio will pick one out. For once they are going
to have trouble because all the songs on this album are bumble
gummy. 1 bet if you put this album into your mouth, you could
chew it. But before you do check with Guinesse's World Book of
Records.
There are two songs which caught my attention. I could
swallow "Takin to the Streets" which isn't a bad blues number but
the other song, "Rio" caught my attention for another reason. It
sounded like the bland band, BTO. You know, those bore-ass
Canadians that think they are on top.
Oh, by the way the presence of Maria Muldaur is also heard on
"Rio."
Will someone please tell me where? I played and played it,
and for her sake maybe its better she wasn't heard. Oh my God,
I'm listening to "Rio" one more time and I heard her, that's right
Maria Muldaur. She said four words but that's all right, I didn't
understand them anyway.
1 rate it a D—."
Let's not leave on a sour note. Everybody have a good summer and
enjoy.

Tues. May 11, 1976

page 3

EAGLE EYE

Shindler, Morell completetenniscareen
By AL VALLETTA
Men's Sports Editor
The 1976 Lock Haven
men's tennis team set a record
for most wins by any tennis
team as they posted an
outstanding 8-3 season record.
Two netmen that contributed
to this season's success were
seniors Craig Shindler and
Rich Morell.
Shindler broke into the
starting lineup his freshman
year, playing at the number 2
singles posifion, after a three
year high school career at
West York.
Since then Craig has
played varsity tennis at the
number 3 position in his
sophomore year, number 4
singles in his junior year, and
this past season Craig started
at the number 5 singles
position.
When asked why he had
slipped from being number 2
down to number 5 Craig
replied that he had definitely
improved 200% but couldn't
keep up with the team's
improvement. This can be
seen by the continued improvement of the team's winloss record over the past four
seasons. According to Craig,
"After the first two years of
tough losses it was good to
have two winning seasons in a
row."
Known to his teammates
as "Mr. All-American Boy"

and "Shins," Craig plays with
an almost flawless form that
looks like the tennis instructor's manual to correct feet
and body position.
Almost opposite to
Craig's perfect form, is
Morrell's hustling style of play
and acrobatics at the net which
has earned him the nickname
"The Wall." Rich's theory to
the game is to "try to do my
best on every point."
Rich has also improved
immensely since his freshman
year. He said, "As a freshman
I could't even step on the court
with Craig." But now when
they play he usually wins half
of the time.
According to Rich, he and
Craig are "really good friends
off the court but hate each
other's guts on the court."
Craig of course wins the
matches when it comes time to
figure out who is to play at the
five and six single positions
but Rich takes "the important
matches," when they are
playing for a pitcher of beer.
Craig still owes one to Morrell.
This season went well for
both Craig and Rich as they
posted 8-3 and 9-2 singles
records, respectively. Craig
teamed up with John Hubert
at the number 2 doubles
position for a 9-2 doubles
record while Rich who had
several doubles partners recorded a 7-4 mark.
This year's team was well
balanced as any one could beat
anyone on a given day. As
both Rich and Craig stated,
"The number 6 or number 5
man could beat the number 1
man".
The team began the season with a lot of confidence in
doing well this year and
everyone really put out. It paid
off as they were extremely
successful.

RICH MORELL

When asked about the
losses to Bloomsburg, East
Stroudsburg and Slippery
Rock, both Craig and Rich that
the losses to the Rock and
Stroudsburg were "Disappointing because we felt we
had a good chance of beating
them."
Remembering back to
what was the best part of the

season. Rich replied that
"Conferences are always a
good time." That was true for
Rich this year as he reached
the semi-finals in the tough
competition before losing to a
man from East Stroudsburg.
Although Craig didn't
fare as well this year he had
reached the semi-finals in his
sophomore year and again in
his junior year.
Throughout their tennis
careers they've been practicing hard to improve and play
the best they could, but when
asked if there was anything
else that helped them along
the way, they replied that
Coach Herrmann was "always
there for motivation" and that
he was a "hell of a good guy
and coach".

CRAIG SHINDLER

Finally, when asked if
playing tennis for the team
helped with the women like
the big name tennis stars such
as Bjorn Born or Jimmy
Connors both replied emphatically thay "it doesn't hurt!"

Rippeij's

COFFEEHOUSE
Friday,
May 14 Pat Setzer with Claire
Matsik will play folk, jazz,
blues and classical guitar
music from 9p.m. to 1a.m.
Steak and eggs, $1.35.

212 N. Grove Sf.

G\GAH-\[Q SAll\
This Week! May 10-15
Everything Marked Down
At Least 25%

f

This includes T-Shirts in
Various Styles & Colors,
logging I'r Tennis Shoes
Tennis Rackets. Balls, lite
H'restling liquipnient
Cym Bags — 'Tote Bags
Bill hats '- .•ithletic socks

— Hooded
Sweatshirts:
Reg SX. y.i - Low as S.5. 75
-'.Spring Jackets
H'ereSt.lO0&SIV.95
Now: $8.25 & SI2.95

We do:
press on screens
lettering

Regular Merchant Bureau Hours

Wptapi*

»»ffi|l(.*,-jyH>i'

Tues. May 11, 1976

page 4

EAGLE EYE

goals set for minority
cont. Irom page 1

Haven's academic programs.
The Committee is searching to
sec if changes can be made to
make the programs more
attractive to students.

particular subject matter the
course would be started provided there is a faculty member qualified to teach the
course.

An area that is being
•ror
explored is a way in which
students can compose academic programs. The way this
would operate is if enough
students show interest in
vfp>!!!mttm<'A.mi"mmmm
USED BOOK BUY
Students, professors: Put your excess books into circulation! Sell them on May 17 and 18 in
the PUB upper lounge
STORE INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE
Leisure reading books: hardcover and paperbacks - 10% off list price
STORE SALE
G Y M BAGS: T W O SIZES

M e d i u m , $4.50
Large, $5.50

irwin

film
cont. Irom page 2
culturally to the nation.
With headquarters in
Washington,
D.C,
and
regional offices in Boston,
Chicago. Oklahoma City and
San Francisco, the Nafional
Trust has more than 100.000
members.

cont. Irom page 1

get better housing and better
employment for blacks without
ever attacking the problem or
racism. She has much to learn!
John Irwin

CLASSIFIEDS
YEARBOOKS - Will be on
sale in Bentley Cafeteria 11-1
today.
FOR SALE - 25-inch color
T.V. in excellent condition;
Polaroid Square Shooter and
Land Camera; GE Steam and
Dry Iron. Call 726-6341.
FOR SALE-1973 CL-350
Honda, 5,000 miles, extras.
Contact Steve Guthrie, ext 443
or 748-9950.
WANTED: someone to share a
house and exp'^nses for summer mths only - call 748-2697.

Part-time emWANTED ployees for Student Pu.blications, Fall 1976. Typists, photographers, printers needed.
No experience necessary; we
will train.
Steady hours,
$1.87/hour wage.
Contact
Evalyn Fisher, Publications
Office, ground floor PUB, ext.
456.

MEET

biQ red nite

FOR SALE: 1963 Plymuth
Valient in good running condition -$150. Call 748-2697.
ROOMS FOR RENT~For summer. Contact Bob Tayne, ext.
437
Help Wanted - Early childhood
or elementary majors for day
care substitutes. 962-2379.
Denise DeGeorge, Pioneer
Day Care Center

^

MUSIC STORE

RADIO SHACK
STEREO CENTER
MUSICAL INST.
TAPES, POSTERS
TICKETRON
ACCESSORIES & MUSIC
NEXT TO THE POST OFF
Lock Haven & Wiiliaimipwt

Anthony

Ed John^s Barbershop
Open 8:30 to 5:00

Torsell

everday except Wednesdays
Wednesday: 8:30-noon

The Barbershop

BEAL ESTATE

with the awning
on IVIaIn street
(213 !•:. Main St.)

INSURANCE
We specialize
in 'longer' hoir
Lock Haven, Pennsylvania
mF

Cut the way you like it!

J

Media of