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Rumbalski To f
Lecture O n
Poffery
Ever wonder how a lump of
clay can be transformed into a
bowl or vase?
Mr. Carl Rumbalski, a s s i s tant professor of art, will provide
the answers with a demonstration of pottery making techniques
on Monday, February 12, at 8
p.m. in Raub 106.
Rumbalski will show, step
by s t e p , how to shape a piece
of soft clay into a piece of pottery, using only h i s hands while
spinning the clay around on a
potter's wheel.
He will also
d i s c u s s other types of pottery
making methods, types of clays
u s e d , and glazing techniques.
Rubmalski studied ceramics
at the Rochester Institute of
Technology, earning h i s Master
of Fine Arts degree in 1966. He
joined the faculty of Lock Haven State in September 1972. He
t e a c h e s c o u r s e s in pottery, arts
and crafts, and sculpture.
The demonstration is part
of the Humanities Faculty L e c ture Series, open to the public
without charpp.

ragle
uye
VQI.XV NO. 46

Dr. Alvin Grove, a s s o c i a t e
dean of the College of Science,
Pennsylvania State University,
will be the moderator of the
seminar on " E c o l o g y of Flood
P l a i n s , " being held on Saturday, February
' 0 in Ulmer
Planetarium.
Panel d i s c u s s i o n members
for the seminar will be Mr.
Maurice D. Arnold, regional
'''i-ector
nortV>»-ji;t
division.

Area

Mrs. Mary J a n e Sarvey, Lock
Haven Junior High counselor,
Mr. Richard L u c a s , layman with
the First United Methodist
Church, Lock Haven, and to the
community aide with the S T E P
program in WiUiamsport.
Coordinators of the program
are Mr. Stephen Hock+»'
executive director of the .^j.comingClinton Counties Commission for
Community Action, WiUiamsport,
and Dr. C o l a b r e s e .

T h e Newman Club
M a s s on S u n d a y , F e b .
10

at 5

offered

p.m. w i l l
for

Leo

be
Mc-

Mullen.

Eagle Wing

o^u.v^lOO

Friday, Fe»- -t. 1973

of the State Buruea of Outdoor
Recreation; Dr. Orville Minney,
director of planning and research
for the State Department of
Environmental
Resources;
Mr. Ralph Abele,
executive
director of the Pennsylvania
Fish
Commision;' and C o l .
Roger T . Kepler, U.S. Army
Engineers.
Arnold's
interest
and
expertise in recreation . s o c i a l
••eform, urban design, land use
population
movements,
and
flood plan management have
evolved from a variety of experiances
in conservation over
the past twenty years through
his work in the Bureau, the
National Institute of Health,
and other assignments in the
Interior Department. He is a
nationally
recognized
expert
in flood plain
management,
Minney has been given the
responsibility to- develop an
environmetnal master plan for
the Commonwealth and for the
application of new technology
t o environmental problems. He
has written 20 technical papers
on human eeoloov environmental
control, and biomediciue,
.d
is credited with three scientific
breakthroughs. He is a member
of the Science and Technology
Committee of the Aerospace
Medical Association.
Abele
earned
national
recognition for his organization
and administration of a censer-vation program involving thous a n d s of Boy Scouts and their
leaders in the Allegany T r a i l s
Council. In 1962 he won the
William T . Hornaday Medal,
Scouting's highest conservation
award, and in 1969 was selected
as one of ten citizens in the
• nation to receive the American
Motors
conservation
Award.
E a c h panel member will
speak on various a s p e c t s of

flood
plain management, including flocxi control reservoirs,
d i k e s , and urban r e n c u a l programs.
The seminar v.i\\ begin at
9:45 a.m. with welcoming remarks by Dr. Fancis Hamblin,
college pros idem; Dr. Robert
Scherer, professor of biology;
and Mr. C . Herbert Larson, J r . ,
director of the college's Educational Developmeni Center.
Following a film on " T h e
Dam
Builders,"
the
panel
members will present their v i e w s .
The afternoon s e s s i o n will
consist of a workshop in which
workable solutions to the enviro
onmental management of flood
plains are explored.
Interested members of the
community may make reservations to attend by calling
Larsen at 748-5351, ext. 3 3 7 .

Student A r t E x h i b i t
Women's B a s k e t b a l l • U r s l n u s
" I n d i a n s " ploy r e h e a r s a l

T h e most important link between a student and a potential
employer is the resume.
The
type of information presented is
often the determining factor in
whether an initial interview will
even take place. This is particularly true now, when jobs are
s c a r c e and competition is strong.
T h i s can be especially d i s couraging to recent college-g s e n i o r s with the advantages of
their respective firms. However,
the situation has since changed.
"Companies are most s e l e c t i v e
in hiring for entry-level p o s i t i o n s ,
particularly in filling the few
v a c a n c i e s that exist in formalized management training prog r a m s , " noted David N. Klot.
Klol is President of Professional
R e s u m e s , Inc. (60 liasl 42nd
St., NYC), a firm thai s p e c i a l i z es m Ihe preparation and printing of r e s u m e s .
Klot recommends the following tips to consider when
preparing a resume: emphasize
those points that makes Ihe student " o u t s t a n d i n g " ; keep the
pr-ffSentation brief (1-page maximum for a recent graduate), and
he sure it is typographically correct and easy to read; let a
" t h i r d party" review the con-

S a t . - 10

Raub L i t t l e G a l l e r y
College

Student A r t E x h i b i t
Swimming- S l i p p e r y Rock
B a s k e t b a l l - S l i p p e r y Rock
"Indians"

Play

Rehearsal

W r e s t l i n g - U n i v e r s i t y of P i t t s b u r g
S.C.C. Dance
Sun. • 11

Student A r t E x h i b i t
" I n d i a n s " Play rehearsal
Panhellenic

Reception

Six Lock Haven State students have been selected to
take part in the spring semester
exchange program wiih Nottingham College in England. Thev
are: Beverly Buba, Kathy Johi>
son. Randy Reilly. P a i n la Moff,
Elaine Patterson, and Gretchen
Rcarick.
Students are selected by
their respective
departmental
schools on the b a s i s of s c h o l a s tic ability, ability to get along
with others, and involvement
in outside a c t i v i t i e s .
.•\n orientation gathering,
"Nottingham E v e n i n g " , gives
thi- xchange students a chance
to c .Tverse with British faculty
and .-.ludents and inquire about
Ihc way of life in the United
kingdom. The s t u d e n t s are a l s o
given
brochures
concerning
Niiuih travel abroad and vocabulary worksheets to prepare them
for language differences they
may encounter while in lingland.
The six Lock Haven State
women s e l e c t e d lor the spring
exchange will depart from Kennedy Airport for I'ngland on F e bruary 14th.
They will spend
several days engaged in various
scheduled a c i i v i t i e s prior to
commencing their studies at
Nollingham.
Anyone interested in taking
part in next y e a r ' s exchange
program is reminded to slop by
» , Uynch's office in the b a s e ment of Russell a s soon as po.ssible.

Resvmes — Points To Follow

What's Happenin'

Come to the Coffeehouse
Sunday night in North Hall
ft'om 9 - 12 (?) p.m. Coffee
will be sold for IQC and
doughnuts will cost 5(.

The Ski Club trip to New
York has been cancelled for
this weekend (Feb. 10-11).
There will be a meeting on
Tuesday, Feb. 13 at 7:30 p.m.
In Zimmerii. All members
should attend. Dates for another trip will be discussed.

State College

The SCC Social Committee presents "Airport"
Starring
Burt
Lancaster,
Dean Martin, and Jacqueline Bisset, Sunday, Feb.
18 at 6:30 and 9:00 in
Price Aud. Admission is
free with a validated I.D.
SI.00 without.

Announcements
There will be a meeting of
the Computer Science Club
at 1 p.m. in Raub 405 on
Monday, Feb. 12.

o Nottingham

Experts To Di Saturday; PSU's Grove Will
Moderate

Tutoring Program ExpanHed;
Includes More Pupils,
A tutoring program for children and teenagers in Clinton and
Lycoming Counties h a s been expanded to include more pupils
over a larger area, according to
Dr. Francis A. Colabrese, director of field experiences at
Lock Haven State.
The program was established
last year by representatives of
s c h o o l s , churches, and community agencies in the two counties,
in cooperation with Lock Haven
State.
The community groups identify youngsters in grades 4
through 12 who need a s s i s t a n c e
with their s t u d i e s . The college
provides tutors, all of whom are
students preparing to be t e a c h ers.
The majority of the tutors
come from the " F o u n d a t i o n s in
E d u c a t i o n " c o u r s e , tauglit by
Dr. Arden Holland.
According
to Dr. Holland, "We have a substantial number of qualified stud e n t s to do the tutoring. What
we now n c t i is more pupils to be
tutored."
The tutoring takes place olfcampus in church facilities and
in community a g e n c i e s such a s
the YMCA and YWCA.
Referrals from the surrounding communities are directed to
Mr. Neal Gallagher, head elementary supervisor for the Keystone Central School District,

Lock Hovon

Six to Travef

Thomas Field House
Price Auditorium
Raub Ltttle Gallery
Away
Thomas Field House
Price Auditorium
Thomas Fieldhouse
Eagle Wing
Raub Little Gallery
Price Auditorium
Bentley Hall Lounge

4 p.m.
6 p.m.

2 p.m.
3 p.m.
.1-6 p.m.
8 p.m.
10-1 p.m.
1-6 p.m.
7 p.m.

t e n t s for objectivity, and request
either s u g g e s t i o n s or improvements. Very often the " s u b j e c t i v e " approach includes unimportant d e t a i l s , plays up weak
points, or omits strong ones.

K-;^-

M^^

Intolerance'
Humanities

Is Next
Film

I h e downfall of Babylon,
Ihc crucifixion at Calvary, Protestant persecution of Catholics
in sixteenlh-century France, and
modern injustice-lhese are the
four story s e q u e n c e s interwoven
in D. W. (iriffith's silent film
masterpiece, IntaU-rancc.
Produced in 1916 and featuring Lillian Gish, Monte Blue,
Tod Browning, Erich Von Stroheim, and Constance Talmadge,
the Griffith film is famous for
intercutting four different s t o ries depicting cruelty and prejudice Ihrough the a g e s .
The Hew York limes c a l l e d
the movie " a stupendous s p e c t a c l e " and praised Griffith a s
" a real wizard of lens and
screen."
The Humanities Film Series
will present Intolerance at 6 p.m.
on Wednesday, February 14, in
Ulmer Planetarium. T h i s change
of time and location has b e e n
made to accommodate those w h o
want to attend both the film and
and the speech by Congressman
Gerald Ford.
The film can be previewed
on T u e s d a y , February 13, at 8
p.m. in Raub 306. E a c h showing
will include Chapter 8 ("Tournament of D e a t h " ) of the F l a s h
Gordon Serial, starring Buster
Crabbe.

m

Cagers Face the 'Rock' Sat.
The Lock Haven State b a s ketball team winds up two weeks
of furious action on Saturday
afternoon hosting a strong Slippery Rock State club at 3 p.m.
The E a g l e s will be seeking revenge over Slippery Rock after
dropping an 80-60 game at the
Rock on J i n . 27.
Countine Saturdav's con-

Two Schools
In the Running

t e s t the Bald Eagle cagers of
C o a c h Dick Taylor will have
played eight games in the 14
day period with six on the road.
The Eagles then have a
breathing spell with the s e a s o ^ ' c
three remaining contests spread
over a iwo-and-a-half-week period.
Lock Haven travels to Roberts Wcslpvan CnlleBp, Feb.
17; hosting Inuiana- University ot
Pa. on F e b . 24, and close out
the season at Edinboro State,
Feb. 27.

for Mat Title
T w o schools that
have
not
been considered
among
the
powers in wrestling in
the rugged Pennsylvania Conference—Edinboro and .Millersville—could be factors in the
1973 PC mat championships,
which will be held on FridaySaturday, F e b . 23-24, at Shippensburg.
In other news, the mids e a s o n rankings of the NCAA
College Division as published
in the Amateur Wrestling News
r a t e s Clarion a s No. 2 and
Slippery Rock as No. 3 behind
perennial
CD
champion
Cal
Poly SLO. East Stroudsburg
was
listed
19th and Lock
Haven 20th by the publication.
Clarion and Slippery Rock
rank third and seventh, respect i v e l y , in the most recent
Eastern
Collegiate
Wrestling
poll, trailing Penn Slate and
Buffalo.
With the 12 PC wrestling
teams coming down the home
s t r e t c h . Slippery Rock is the
only unbeaten team, sporting
a 12-0 record.

A

Dal e s
High St.,

CIT60

I.ale

A survey of art through
films is being conducted by
the Art Department of Lock
Haven State on Thursday evenings at 8 p.m. in Raub 2 1 1 ,
open to the public without
chorge.
The following films will
be shown durino February:
Feb. l5-"Anc!ent Egypt";
Feb. 22-"Athens: Golden Age
of Greece" and " T h e Acropolis of Athens."

W h y Pledge A Sorority?

vel is represented almost equally, so c l o s e friendships and
are formed with many different
age groups. A sorority girl is
not limited in her friendships and
probably forms closer ties with a
more heterogeneous group of
girls.
Scott points out that the
Greek organizatii^-^ and a c a d e mics go hand in hand. " S i n c e
they are embedded in university
culture, they are compelled or
may simply d e s i r e to stress academic achievement a s a v a l u e . "
Lock Haven Greeks actively compete for the P a n Hellenic Council Scholarship Award each year.
Most sororities have a nation-wide philantropic endeavor
in which they participate. Many
a l s o spearhead projects as helping undaiprivileged children in
the area.
Finally, sorority affiliation
follows a girl after s h e graduates
becau.se alumnae groups exist
throughout the United States.
T h u s , it is obvious that sororities can be an intergral part
of campus life. Through membership a girl can form meaningful friendships, strive for high
academic standards and participate in rewarding projects.

Flemington

night

snacks,

subs,

pi/./.a

*

748

A fetus has one that beats
25 days after conception.

• I

OPPOSE

Church

St.

• 6573

3 hamburgers,

T h e s e are general facts,
not those compiled by Lock Haven students but by an authority
on organizations. They are true
rt' every sorority here but unless
an independent t a k e s the time to
become acquainted with those
girls who makes the facts a reality, they cannot judge sororities
and their worth.

Have A Heart

sodas,

L uigi s
52'2 rear East

To the Editor:

Q u e s t i o n s A n s w e r e d By S c o t t
Spring Rush wil! begin on
Sunday and the reoccuring question has again been asked by
many Lock Haven co-eds-why
pledge a sorority"
A girl could ask any Greek
on campus and get various favorable responses but it is time
to get the broader view of an
authority. William A. Scott in
his book. Values and Organizations presents many facts which
apply to the sororities here at
Lock Haven as well as across
the nation. Scott s a y s : " T h e
principle function of campus s o rorities is the establishment and
maintenance of friendship. They
provide for students a group to
which they belong, a place where
they are fairly sure to find sympathy and understanding and to
find people who will accept and
support them under any circumstances."
It has been slated that sororities limit friendships but,
s t o p and think.
Independents
only form close ties with those
6 or 7 girls living immediately
around her in a dorm. T h e s e
girls are probably the same age
and c l a s s level.
In a sorority each c l a s s le-

F F , s m a l l pop -

Letters fo the Editor

" S t u d e n t s in Bachelor o(
.-Xrts programs ,ire required to
read in a broad range of works
over the four vear period." This
is a quote from the 71-72 LHSC
c a t a l o g . T h i s "broad range of
w o r k s " now stands at a total
of forty books. Many students
feel this requiremenl to be discriminatory and unfair.
One controversial aspect of
this assignment is that liberal
arts majors are required to read
the forty books while most students in olher majors remain
exempt. A reason for this discrimination appears lo be that
the purpose of a liberal arts education is to provide a wellrounded, broad, or general education. The value of this a s pect is slight as many students
do their forty readings in one
field of interest. If this aspect
' i s considered valid, it would
•^eem logical that it be even more
important that our future educators had this "well-rounded"
outlook.
Liberal Arts computer science majors have not been required to complete this assignment.
Most other liberal arts
majors also have a specific
field of concentration, such a s
E n g l i s h , history, or social serv i c e s , and are no longer pursuing the general education. Specialization s e e m s to be the major concern today. The students
in these liberal arts concentration have an equal amount of
work to do a s compared to other
majors, and in some c a s e s , even more. An important methixi
in learning in liberal arts courses s e e m s to be research papers;
the average liberal arts student
is assigned four lo six papers

ABORTION

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or
help call Professor Redpath - Ext. 300.

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WRITTTN HV I'ROFrsSIONAL 1)1 t;Kl I I) Kl s r \ H t l U KS

The young Lock Iiaven Stale
wrestling team are in Ihc midst
of another big week on the mats.
The Hald Eagle grapplers of
Coach Dr. Ken Cox traveled to
BloomsburgWednesdaylo face the
arch-rival Huskies and then host
the University of Pittsburgh at
Thomas Eieldhc isc on Saturday.
The Pitt Panthers will be
wrestling in the " H o u s e of
N o i s e " for the first time since
WS') when Pitt won 18-6. Last
year the series was resumed at
Pitt after a lapse of 13 yeais and
the Panthers needed wins in Ihe
final two bouts to defeat the Eag l e s , 23-16.
Saturday night bcftire an
overflow crowd of 4,000 in Ihe
fieldhouse the nation's secondranked NCAA (College Division)
team. Clarion State lopped the
Bald E a g l e s , 25-10.
Scoring impressive wins lor
Lock Haven were Captain Gary
Ventimiglia with a 25-9 victory
over Ed Williams al 150; Rob
Johnson, 6-5 winner at 134, and
Dave Wasson, sophomore from
Silver Spring.s, Md., who scored
an upset 13-5 win at 190 in his
first varsity match of the s e a s o n .
Ventimiglia now has a 14-1-1
record and Johnson is 12-6-3 on
the s e a s o n .

St.

215-EV 2 - 7 4 2 7

TERM-PAPERS

Grapplers In
Big Week Of
Mat Matches

PHILA.

101 S . 3 9 t h

Philo..

per semester, and 1 am not
speaking of three page reports.
Why should libeaal -arts majors
be forced to do extra non credi
work?
The fact that these readings
live books per s e m e s t e r , are non
credit is another point of concern. How many regular three
eredti courses require the student lo read / i \ ( ' complete liooks'
T h e s e readings consume a good
deal of lime, not considering the
additional lime spent trying to
get in contact wilh Ihe designated professor lo " c h e c k off" the
book.
Considering all the unjust
facets of this assignment, it is
not difficult lo see the merits of
disconlinuing this
antiquated
nnxle of education.
People for Collegiate Unity
Denise Heasle

215 - 343-3 U 2
TFR.MPAPER RFSFARCII INC.
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