BHeiney
Wed, 07/05/2023 - 18:30
Edited Text
Lock Haven State Ceiege
Eag
Tuesday Nov. 16,1976
Eye
^ ^ V o l . )XIX No. 42
^ ^ ^
Special Ed. dept.
must be modified
By K I M PETTINGELL
Staff Reporter
THE WRO -- is sponsoring a w o m e n ' s art show in Sloan
Gallery throughout this week. All contributions were
submitted from women. On Wednesday, at 7 pm, there
will be a "Feminist Reading" in Sloan Theatre open to
all who wish to attend. [Photo by KAIL BRENNEMAN].
The Special Education department at Lock Haven State
College will have a different
program starting in August
1977. Exactly what the new
program will be has not been
decided.
Wednesday night, at a
special meeting of APSCUF
faculty. Dr. Mary Alice Smith,
Chairman of the Special
Education department, explained the problem. According to her, Harrisburg has
ordered LHS to change the
requirements of a special ed.
SSC to present sociological plays
By MARY NOLAN
Staff Reporter
The Social Service Club
will present from the "Plays
for Living S e r i e s , " Ring
Around The Family and The
Quiet Cries at 7 pm in Raub
106, on November 18, 1976.
Ring Around The Family
focuses on the part that family
life education can play in
helping family members meet
daily crises more effectively.
Quiet Cries highlights the
advances in suicidology regarding the clues that the
suicidal individual projects
and how suicide can be
prevented. This is an innovative program since many social
work students will be enacting
the roles in the plays. Also
because the plays involve
audience participation.
Much interest has been
expressed in this unique
program dealing with the
contemporary problems social
workers are concerned with.
Dr. Feldman, who has been
credited with being an expert
in group dynamic techniques
to enhance communication in
social work education, is in
charge of the program. All
students are encouraged and
welcome to come without
charge.
The Social Service Club is a
relatively new organization on
campus, and in many respects
it is still in the experimental
stage. The main goal of the
club is to unite the 160 or so
Social Work majors on
cont. on page 4
Karate Club is booming
By CHRIS LEONARD
The Karate Club, possibly
one of the fastest growing
clubs at Lock Haven State, has
grown from 14 to 76 members
in only three years of existence. Twenty members are
women and practice fighting
against both men and women.
The club was founded by
Mike Bonadio in 1974 for the
purpose
of
teaching
Tai-Kwan-Do, "the art of
hand
and
foot"
and
self-defense.
Meetings are held on
Monday and Wednesday
evenings from 7:30—9:00 pm
in Roger's Gymnasium.
Several black belts are the instructors. The instructors include Fred DeStolfo, a second
degree
black
belt
in
Tai-Kwan-Do, John Tomaselli,
a first degree black belt in
Jui-jltsu, and Abe Humina, a
first degree black belt in Kung
Fu.
The instructors first stress
cont. on page 4
major. Currently, a special ed
major at LHS is required to
take courses dealing with the
mentally retarded as well as
courses in elementary education. It is a dual certificate
program. Harrisburg has
ordered LHS to adopt a
comprehensive program.
Beginning in August. 1977,
a special ed. major at LHS will
be required to take courses in
five areas of special education
instead of only one as the
current program dictates. The
five areas that special ed.
majors will be required to take
courses in are: learning
disabilities, brain damage,
physically handicapped, emotionally disturbed and mental
retardation.
According to Dr. Smith, the
new requirements for special
ed. majors, will make it
extremely difficult for a
student to complete a dual
certificate program in four
years. A student would
probably need another year to
meet the requirements. "The
dual certificate program may
therefore become impractical," stated Dr. Smith. "Not
cont. on page 4
Poet to recite his. works Thurs.
The innovative poetry of
Russell Edson comes to the
campus of Lock Haven State
College this week via Russell
Edson himself.
Last month, Edson, added
a sixth book to his list of
publications entitled " T h e
Intuitive Journey and Other
Works". The book appears
under the Harper and Row
catalogue and has been well
recieved in the United States.
"Russell Edson Reads
From His Own Work" will
appear in the Ulmer Planetarium, Thursday, November
18th at 8 pm. The reading is
sponsored by the
LHS
Department of English/Philosophy and is under the
coordination of Professor
Joseph Nicholson.
Edson uses the form of a
Prose Poem.
About it he
writes, "...the Prose Poem
seems the least specified as
literature. This is why it is so
useful to me. I am freed from
the selfconscious notion that
I'm doing a poem now, or I'm
doing a short-story now: but
literature, swell; if it be
painfing, swell, again; and if it
be only a shopping list for
groceries. That's okay too."
paee 7
Today's Editorial
Tuesday Nov. 16,1976
EAGLE EYE
WE hold these truAs...
Yesterday's EAGLE EYE contained a version of the events
surrounding the SCC's Executive Committee eleclloi as told by
EAGLE EYE columnist David C. Heverly. Heverly claimed that
the reader was given "the full story" simply because he wrote his
"facts" under the auspices of his admitted support for Jayne
Bolduc.
.Most of what Heverly reported Infers that the press and/or
government is being manipulated. He didn't mention any
decisions that I have made as Parliamentarian that have given the
EAGLE EYE special treatment. He also didn't point out any
biased articles that I've written as News Editor of the EAGLE
EYE. He couldn't if he had wanted to!
Heverly knows that I'm not doing anything "Illegal or unethical." He admitted it In his column. Why did he INFER that I am
acting unethically?
He claimed that I wrote an article about the election Monday
night. I did not write It. He again inferred on Tuesday night that
the EAGLE EYE was purposely inaccurate In reporting that a new
election was due. The EAGLE EYE was entirely ACCURATE. On
Tuesday night Jeff Caulkins, Election Committee Chairperson,
Lorin IVIock, SCC President and myself decided that a new election
would be called. We had the authority and we made the decision.
It wasn't until Wednesday afternoon that another election was
questioned. On Wednesday afternoon It was Heverly himself who
claimed that he had found a viable loophole In the Constitution.
Because Heverly advocated that Jayne Bolduc was exempt from
nominee requirements there was a chance that another election
wouldn't be necessary. The SENATE made the final decisions on
Wednesday night.
Heverly knew the EAGLE EYE article was accurate. Why did
he INFER that It wasn't?
Last semester David Heverly and I were appointed co-chairpersons of the SCC Constitutional Revisions Committee. In his
column Heveriy asks why I didn't change the academic good
standing requirement.
Heverly knew that it wasnt because of some devious reason
that the provision remains. Why does he try to INFER something
contrary?
Heverly claims that it took me "months" to declare members
of the Senate ineligible to seree. He knows that the revisions that
gave me that power weren't passed until Oct. 23 — over a month
AFTER the Senate election.
He tries to INFER something sinister when he states
matter-of-factly that I found Jayne Bolduc Ineligible In only one
day. He "forgets" the I COULDN'T have done It sooner because
she ran a write-in campaign on the day of the election.
Beyond his distortions and inaccuracies Heverly seems to advocate seperation of press and government at this college. He
contradicts himself by stating that at a school this size the idea is
not leasable. Not too long ago Heverly served simultaneously on
the Senate and on the Student Publlcatons Board. He may very
well have lost his bid for SCC First Vice President In last year's election because people criticized the fact ihat he was on the Senate
Appropriations Committee and was chairman of ihe Student Publications Board. Heverly was a member of SAC when the SCC
bought the play that he produced.
Heverly's anger last year rivaled the bitterness that he Is expressing this year. Why does he insist that he advocates
SCC/EAGLE EYE seperation when he has historically been Ihe
worst "offender"?
Not all truths are self-evident.
-Philip J. Burlingame
It has taken me a long time to decide whether I should write
some sort of rebuttal to Mr. Heverly's column. Though I believe
the column to tw very Irrational, I feel I musl respond because Mr.
Heveriy may have left the student body with assumptions and
conclusions! that will be based entirely upon Mr. Heverly's
half-truths. The column seems to Imply that I have not been able
to objectively distinguish my roles of Managing Editor and Senate
Caucus Leader. The column contains no factual evidence to
support the Implications made, nor has anyone else beeri able to
present such arguments. I feel Mr. Heverly's points are too shallow to defend. However, If members of the student bady wish to
question me about my role on either or both organizations, please
feel free to stop by the Publications or SCC offices, or talk to your
Senators and I will be happy to answer them. —joAnn Morse
Letters to the Editor
Free class schedules requested
Dear Editor:
It is once again time to go
out and pay 25 cents for a class
schedule at your bookstore.
Although I may stand to be
corrected most colleges send
these to the students as a
service to both themselves and
to the students, (ex. lUP
PSU)
To me it seems evident that
if one was sent to each student
less problems would occur at
registration. However, there
are some supplied at strategic
points on campus, outside of
Raub, the Library and in
Sloan.
The answer that I'll receive
is that here is not enough
money to perform such a
service. However, there is
enough money to send out a
student directory that is left in
the bottom of the PUB to be
picked up. This directory has
been known to be one
semester and at one time a
whole year late. When this
happens it is a total waste of
money, for which could of
been used to perform other
services.
How about cutting out the
campus calendar which is
published twice a year. The
need for this is nill, for the
same information is available
in 3 other forms. 1) The Eagle
Eye 2) The Daily Bulletin and
3) All over campus in the form
of the monthly campus
calendar (sent out by the
activities office) in the form of
colored stationary available in
at least the library and
downstairs in the PUB.
Another service is the Eagle
Wing which has coffee
cont. on page 4
[SIC] makes Heverly even sicker
To the Editor;
I must apologize for
consistently misspelling Jayne
Bolduc's name thrcaghout my
column as B-U-L-D-0-C. However, I think that you judge me
too harshly on my spelling of
the word "fall". According to
my copy of The Random House
College Dictionary my spelling
of fall with a lower case f is
correct. It may not be
traditional, but when have 1
ever been traditional?
Since we are paying so much
attention to accuracy, I am
forced to point out a few errors
on your part. You misused the
notation (sic) numerous times.
You used it to indicate errors
of omission on my part. To
indicate that, you should have
inserted the missing words
parenthetically.
1 find your use of the ' [sic]
rather amusing in my fact
number eight. The item you
find incorrect is an exact quote
from the Eagle Eye.
I must confess that I am
an atrocious typist and that on
occasion I even misspell a
work out of my own ignorance.
I know that I must be an
embarrassment to the high
standards set by the Eagle
Eye. It's just that in my rush
to meet deadlines, 1 go counter
to prevailing Eagle Eye policy
and put substance before form
as a priority.
Why did I turn in copy
with these stupid mistakes?
cont. on page 4
SPECIAL
KANE COMPANY
RING D A Y
Wednesday, Nov. 17
10a.m. t o 3 p . m .
Outside Bookstore in PUB
The $59.
9.00 college ring «-^ is back!
^^(
IfpSfSBS
Tuesday Nov. 16,1976
OLNICK
on Sports
Two winners of baseball awards have been named for the past
baseball season, Cy Young award winners Randy Jones ofthe San
Diego Padres and the National League, and Jim Palmer of the
Baltimore Orioles and the American League. I can't disagree with
the merits of either one of the winners, and think that both should
have won, although I have to wonder about the relative ease both
pitchers won with. Detroit's marvelous rookie Mark (The Bird)
Fidrych deserved more votes, although the fact he was a rookie
weighed heavily against him, but the fact he won 19 games with an
injury-riddled club is a feat deserving of more support.
California's Frank Tanana deserved more votes, as well as
Boston's Luis Tiant and Oakland's Vida Blue for nearly
singlehandedly carrying each of their respective pitching staffs. In
the National League, Los Angeles' Don Sutton, Houston's Ken
Forsch, Cincinnatti's Rawly Eastwick, Atianta's Phil Niekro, and
the Mets' Jerry Koosman should have received more votes than
they did, and my opinion is that Jones received a lot of support
from those who felt he should have won the award over the Mets'
Tom Seaver last year, and thought about that when they voted this
year, although anyone who could win 22 games with San Diego
deserves some kind of award. Every runner-up feels he should
have gotten more votes in any kind of award competition, and
that's normal, and maybe even helpful, as it stimulates the
runner-up to an even better performance the next year in hopes he
may win next time.
Several other awards will be coming up for consideration
soon, and I'd like to give some personal opinions on the best
candidates for the awards. For Rookies ofthe Year, 1 eould have to
pick relief pitcher Butch Metzger of the San Diego Padres to take
the National League award, and in the American League, nobody
can compare to pitcher Mark Fidrych of the Detroit Tigers.
Metzger may get some competition from Cincinnatti pitcher Pat
Zachry, and maybe even some from San Francisco outfielder Larry
Herndon, but he should win out in the end.
For Most Valuable Player, I would have to give catcher
Thurman Munson ofthe Yankees the nod in the American League,
and second baseman Joe Morgan of the Cincinnati Reds, last
year's winner, in the National League. Munson's chief
competition will come from teammates Mickey Rivers and Chris
Chambliss, Kansas City's George Brett and Hal McRae, and
Detroit's Rusty Staub, but Munson had the best all-round year of
any of them, and should win by a large margin. In the National
League, Morgan will have a tough battle with teammates George
Foster and Pete Rose, Atianta's Willie Montanez, Philadelphia's
Garry Maddox, Greg Luzinski, and Mike Schmidt, the Mets' Dave
Kingman, Chicago's Rick Monday and Bill Madlock, Houston's
Bob Watson, and Pittsburgh's Bill Robinson, with Foster probably
giving him the most competition. The odds are against a repeat
winner, but Morgan had a better year this year than last year
when he took the award, and is generally regarded as the best
player in the game. Foster's late-season slump will cost min the
award, as Morgan will edge out Foster and Luzinski to win it
again.
For Manager ofthe Year, Kansas City's Whitey Herzog is the
hands-down winner in the American League, while Houston's Bill
Virdon and Philadelphia's Danny Ozark will do battle in the
National League, with Ozark taking it.
Classifieds
POOL CLUB MEETING-Tuesday night, 7:30 pm. Everyone
welcome: PUB Pool Room.
FIREWOOD ~ Any length:
$25 per load. Call 753-3544
after 5 p.m. or contact Sharon
Allison, Russell 10.
page 3
EAGLE EYE
Why not the best?
Vote
Explosive Slate.
Delta Zeta-Sigma Kappa Rocka-thon 48 hours of continuous
rocking. Nov. 19 6 pm until
Nov. 21 6 pm. Help us fight
cancer.
Hockey squad returns
with third place victory
By M A R Y FEUSNER
Women's Sports Editor
The women's field hockey
squad returned to the Lock
Haven campus with 3-1 record
and third place honors in the
Regionals Tournament which
was staged at Glassboro State
College, New Jersey.
By
placing in the Regionals
competition, the Eaglettes
gained a 5th place berth in the
USFHA/AIAW National Collegiate Field Hockey Championships. Penna. teams who
will also be competing in
nationals include defending
champions West Chester and
Ursinus.
The following is a
summary of this weekend's
hockey action.
Thursday morning at 11
am the Eaglettes opened
tournament play against Lehigh. They were originally
scheduled to play Kutztown
who bowed out of the
competition due to an ineligible player.
Lehigh managed only 1
goal on a breakaway rush
through the Haven's strong
defense. Lock Haven's goals
were credited to S. Bowers
who had 2 on penalty corner
shots, C. Hacker, G.Graham,
K. Pallestrone, and C. Ogle.
At the same time Lock
Haven was defeating Lehigh,
E. Stroudsburg squeezed by
Princeton 2-1 to be the next
Lock Haven opponent.
The second period goal of
the Haven's Wendy Keller
was responsible for the
elimination of East Stroudsburg from the Mid-Atiantic
championships.
Her goal
broke the 1-1 tie which was the
result of first period play.
Cathy Ogle scored the first
Haven goal at 18:00. After
this extremely physical contest
the second of the day, the
Haven advanced into the
^emi-finals against Ursinus on
Friday afternoon.
First half play in the
Ursinus contest ended with a
1-0 score favoring Lock Haven.
C. Hacker was credited with
the goal. Ursinus managed 2
goals in the second period
while Lock Haven tallied only
one more. The second period
goal came from power hitter
Sue Bowers on a hand stopped
penalty corner. The game
ended in a 2-2 deadlock, but
Ursinus was declared the
victor because they accumulated more penetration time.
Ursinus them moved on to
meet West Chester for first
and second places while Lock
Haven faced the University of
Delaware who was defeated by
W. Chester 3-1.
Saturday's 2-0 win over
Delaware assured Lock Haven
a fifth place seed in the
Nationals.
The Delaware
game was characterized by
mid-field play. Haven goals
were scored by C. Hacker and
K. Pallestrone.
Next Tuesday the Eaglettes will travel to the Valley
Forge Military Academy to
ready themselves for Nationals
play which begins on Wednesday the Haven's first opponent
will be Central Missouri. Sixteen college teams from the
US will be trying for the
Nationals titie.
PART-TIME
CHRISTMAS HELP WANTED!
Soys
Men's and Boy's Shop
121 East Main Street
Lock Haven, Pa.
APPLY IN PERSON AT ABOVE ADDRESS
EAGLE E ^ i
I^tge*:
special ed. dept. must
conf. trom page 2
too many students would
enroll in our special ed.
program knowing it would take
them more four years to
graduate. It's very possible
that the dual certificate will
have to be dropped."
Ll. Smith insisted, however, that nothing is definite
yet. "There is still the
possibility of having a four
year dual certificate program," she explained. "This
thing is really in a state of
flux."
"The dual certificate program does have it's value,"
she further stated. "When
you're dealing with exceptional children it's nice to
know what normal children are
like."
Dr. Smith says that u should
be a while before the problem
of the special education
program at LHS is solved.
free class schedules requested
com. Irom page 2
available at a very reasonable
.15 a cup. But this is where the
service stops for the other
prices are comparable to those
in most restaurants. Some
service to the students.,
Where does our activity fees
go? Well none other than
services to the students. You
get for your money to gO' to
home football games, wrestling matches, basketball
games, movies (that at times
have appeared on television ex. Brian's Song - 3 times)
and one doll.ir off twice a year
for concerts. I may have
missed some but many
activities and services are also
so open that the public can
walk in on our activity fees.
These are some of the areas
which the new administration
should look into for the
upcoming year.
Very disgrunted.
Timothy M. Howe
PS. I'm still waiting for the
justification of my summer's
activity fee.
karate club
cont. from page 1
technique and basic formations to perfection, then the
building of speed and power.
"Karate Club gives students a sense of discipline and
self-confidence as well as
conditioning the body," said
david Burns, club president.
Members are able to advance
in ranks by being tested by the
black belts in terminology and
skill.
Various members ofthe club
compete in competitions also,
where they can learn to appreciate and watch other styles
as well as compete in
Tal-Kwan-Do.
SSC to present sociological plays
cont. from page 1
campus. The plays being
presented are just one of the
several projects under way to
promote interest in the Social
Work majors. Other things the
club is involved in, are having
speakers come to LHS and to
organize trips to listen to
speakers.
Social Service Club meetings are held on an informal
basis and all Social Work
majors are highly encouraged
to join and get involved.
The Social Service Club will
be selling coffee and cookies to
ease the frustration of
registration on November 20.
|the College Players production
AN ENEMY OF
THE PEOPLE
a drama by Henrik Ibsen
NOV. 18-20
Tuesday Nov. 16i, lv76
[sic] makes heverly even sicker
com. from page 2
Well, my copy, as well as the
copy of most others, is
usually spotted with these
little mistakes. The Editor-inChief usually finds and
corrects these mistakes, as is
her job. I trusted, that despite
the nature of my column, the
Editor-in-Chief was a big
enough person and professional enough Editor to correct
these mistakes before they
went in. I now discover that
my trust was misplaced and
that the Editor-in-Chief of the
Eagle Eye is really a very petty
person.
However, 1 must compliment the Eagle Eye staff on
their accuracy in this matter.
It is the first time this
semester that my column went
in intact.
In every prior
instance, words were misspelled that 1 didn't misspell,
incorrect verb tenses were
used that I didn't use and
entire paragraphs were simply
"lost".
Well, now that all this
petty backbiting is disposed
of, 1 would like to point out
that not one of my premises
was assailed as being mistaken. I am presentiy waiting
for an intelligent and relevant
reply to my column. 1 have yet
to see one.
Your Obedient (but "Typo")
prone Servant
David C. Heverly
EDITORS NOTE: I will not
lower myself by answering
Mr. Heverly's childish and
erroneous allegations regarding my handling of the SCC
Executive Committee election
and its aftermath, or editorial
policies.
But I wiil clarify for the
STUDENT body my reasons
for using the expression
"[sic]" throughout Heverly's
column, NOTHING BUT THE
TRUTH. As a policy, I do not
edit columns. If the columnist
requests me to do so, or if I
check with the author, I do.
Hevely did not ask me, and I
did noi ask to edit his column
this week. I left the column
intact, without cutting or
changing a word.
I used te expression "[sic]"
to show I knew the errors were
in the orlgional copy and that
they were NOT typographical
mistakes on the part of the
EAGLE EYE staff. I feel if I
had not acknowledged these
errors, they might have led
people to believe they were
made purposely to show
Heverly to be a fool.
^••****
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Eag
Tuesday Nov. 16,1976
Eye
^ ^ V o l . )XIX No. 42
^ ^ ^
Special Ed. dept.
must be modified
By K I M PETTINGELL
Staff Reporter
THE WRO -- is sponsoring a w o m e n ' s art show in Sloan
Gallery throughout this week. All contributions were
submitted from women. On Wednesday, at 7 pm, there
will be a "Feminist Reading" in Sloan Theatre open to
all who wish to attend. [Photo by KAIL BRENNEMAN].
The Special Education department at Lock Haven State
College will have a different
program starting in August
1977. Exactly what the new
program will be has not been
decided.
Wednesday night, at a
special meeting of APSCUF
faculty. Dr. Mary Alice Smith,
Chairman of the Special
Education department, explained the problem. According to her, Harrisburg has
ordered LHS to change the
requirements of a special ed.
SSC to present sociological plays
By MARY NOLAN
Staff Reporter
The Social Service Club
will present from the "Plays
for Living S e r i e s , " Ring
Around The Family and The
Quiet Cries at 7 pm in Raub
106, on November 18, 1976.
Ring Around The Family
focuses on the part that family
life education can play in
helping family members meet
daily crises more effectively.
Quiet Cries highlights the
advances in suicidology regarding the clues that the
suicidal individual projects
and how suicide can be
prevented. This is an innovative program since many social
work students will be enacting
the roles in the plays. Also
because the plays involve
audience participation.
Much interest has been
expressed in this unique
program dealing with the
contemporary problems social
workers are concerned with.
Dr. Feldman, who has been
credited with being an expert
in group dynamic techniques
to enhance communication in
social work education, is in
charge of the program. All
students are encouraged and
welcome to come without
charge.
The Social Service Club is a
relatively new organization on
campus, and in many respects
it is still in the experimental
stage. The main goal of the
club is to unite the 160 or so
Social Work majors on
cont. on page 4
Karate Club is booming
By CHRIS LEONARD
The Karate Club, possibly
one of the fastest growing
clubs at Lock Haven State, has
grown from 14 to 76 members
in only three years of existence. Twenty members are
women and practice fighting
against both men and women.
The club was founded by
Mike Bonadio in 1974 for the
purpose
of
teaching
Tai-Kwan-Do, "the art of
hand
and
foot"
and
self-defense.
Meetings are held on
Monday and Wednesday
evenings from 7:30—9:00 pm
in Roger's Gymnasium.
Several black belts are the instructors. The instructors include Fred DeStolfo, a second
degree
black
belt
in
Tai-Kwan-Do, John Tomaselli,
a first degree black belt in
Jui-jltsu, and Abe Humina, a
first degree black belt in Kung
Fu.
The instructors first stress
cont. on page 4
major. Currently, a special ed
major at LHS is required to
take courses dealing with the
mentally retarded as well as
courses in elementary education. It is a dual certificate
program. Harrisburg has
ordered LHS to adopt a
comprehensive program.
Beginning in August. 1977,
a special ed. major at LHS will
be required to take courses in
five areas of special education
instead of only one as the
current program dictates. The
five areas that special ed.
majors will be required to take
courses in are: learning
disabilities, brain damage,
physically handicapped, emotionally disturbed and mental
retardation.
According to Dr. Smith, the
new requirements for special
ed. majors, will make it
extremely difficult for a
student to complete a dual
certificate program in four
years. A student would
probably need another year to
meet the requirements. "The
dual certificate program may
therefore become impractical," stated Dr. Smith. "Not
cont. on page 4
Poet to recite his. works Thurs.
The innovative poetry of
Russell Edson comes to the
campus of Lock Haven State
College this week via Russell
Edson himself.
Last month, Edson, added
a sixth book to his list of
publications entitled " T h e
Intuitive Journey and Other
Works". The book appears
under the Harper and Row
catalogue and has been well
recieved in the United States.
"Russell Edson Reads
From His Own Work" will
appear in the Ulmer Planetarium, Thursday, November
18th at 8 pm. The reading is
sponsored by the
LHS
Department of English/Philosophy and is under the
coordination of Professor
Joseph Nicholson.
Edson uses the form of a
Prose Poem.
About it he
writes, "...the Prose Poem
seems the least specified as
literature. This is why it is so
useful to me. I am freed from
the selfconscious notion that
I'm doing a poem now, or I'm
doing a short-story now: but
literature, swell; if it be
painfing, swell, again; and if it
be only a shopping list for
groceries. That's okay too."
paee 7
Today's Editorial
Tuesday Nov. 16,1976
EAGLE EYE
WE hold these truAs...
Yesterday's EAGLE EYE contained a version of the events
surrounding the SCC's Executive Committee eleclloi as told by
EAGLE EYE columnist David C. Heverly. Heverly claimed that
the reader was given "the full story" simply because he wrote his
"facts" under the auspices of his admitted support for Jayne
Bolduc.
.Most of what Heverly reported Infers that the press and/or
government is being manipulated. He didn't mention any
decisions that I have made as Parliamentarian that have given the
EAGLE EYE special treatment. He also didn't point out any
biased articles that I've written as News Editor of the EAGLE
EYE. He couldn't if he had wanted to!
Heverly knows that I'm not doing anything "Illegal or unethical." He admitted it In his column. Why did he INFER that I am
acting unethically?
He claimed that I wrote an article about the election Monday
night. I did not write It. He again inferred on Tuesday night that
the EAGLE EYE was purposely inaccurate In reporting that a new
election was due. The EAGLE EYE was entirely ACCURATE. On
Tuesday night Jeff Caulkins, Election Committee Chairperson,
Lorin IVIock, SCC President and myself decided that a new election
would be called. We had the authority and we made the decision.
It wasn't until Wednesday afternoon that another election was
questioned. On Wednesday afternoon It was Heverly himself who
claimed that he had found a viable loophole In the Constitution.
Because Heverly advocated that Jayne Bolduc was exempt from
nominee requirements there was a chance that another election
wouldn't be necessary. The SENATE made the final decisions on
Wednesday night.
Heverly knew the EAGLE EYE article was accurate. Why did
he INFER that It wasn't?
Last semester David Heverly and I were appointed co-chairpersons of the SCC Constitutional Revisions Committee. In his
column Heveriy asks why I didn't change the academic good
standing requirement.
Heverly knew that it wasnt because of some devious reason
that the provision remains. Why does he try to INFER something
contrary?
Heverly claims that it took me "months" to declare members
of the Senate ineligible to seree. He knows that the revisions that
gave me that power weren't passed until Oct. 23 — over a month
AFTER the Senate election.
He tries to INFER something sinister when he states
matter-of-factly that I found Jayne Bolduc Ineligible In only one
day. He "forgets" the I COULDN'T have done It sooner because
she ran a write-in campaign on the day of the election.
Beyond his distortions and inaccuracies Heverly seems to advocate seperation of press and government at this college. He
contradicts himself by stating that at a school this size the idea is
not leasable. Not too long ago Heverly served simultaneously on
the Senate and on the Student Publlcatons Board. He may very
well have lost his bid for SCC First Vice President In last year's election because people criticized the fact ihat he was on the Senate
Appropriations Committee and was chairman of ihe Student Publications Board. Heverly was a member of SAC when the SCC
bought the play that he produced.
Heverly's anger last year rivaled the bitterness that he Is expressing this year. Why does he insist that he advocates
SCC/EAGLE EYE seperation when he has historically been Ihe
worst "offender"?
Not all truths are self-evident.
-Philip J. Burlingame
It has taken me a long time to decide whether I should write
some sort of rebuttal to Mr. Heverly's column. Though I believe
the column to tw very Irrational, I feel I musl respond because Mr.
Heveriy may have left the student body with assumptions and
conclusions! that will be based entirely upon Mr. Heverly's
half-truths. The column seems to Imply that I have not been able
to objectively distinguish my roles of Managing Editor and Senate
Caucus Leader. The column contains no factual evidence to
support the Implications made, nor has anyone else beeri able to
present such arguments. I feel Mr. Heverly's points are too shallow to defend. However, If members of the student bady wish to
question me about my role on either or both organizations, please
feel free to stop by the Publications or SCC offices, or talk to your
Senators and I will be happy to answer them. —joAnn Morse
Letters to the Editor
Free class schedules requested
Dear Editor:
It is once again time to go
out and pay 25 cents for a class
schedule at your bookstore.
Although I may stand to be
corrected most colleges send
these to the students as a
service to both themselves and
to the students, (ex. lUP
PSU)
To me it seems evident that
if one was sent to each student
less problems would occur at
registration. However, there
are some supplied at strategic
points on campus, outside of
Raub, the Library and in
Sloan.
The answer that I'll receive
is that here is not enough
money to perform such a
service. However, there is
enough money to send out a
student directory that is left in
the bottom of the PUB to be
picked up. This directory has
been known to be one
semester and at one time a
whole year late. When this
happens it is a total waste of
money, for which could of
been used to perform other
services.
How about cutting out the
campus calendar which is
published twice a year. The
need for this is nill, for the
same information is available
in 3 other forms. 1) The Eagle
Eye 2) The Daily Bulletin and
3) All over campus in the form
of the monthly campus
calendar (sent out by the
activities office) in the form of
colored stationary available in
at least the library and
downstairs in the PUB.
Another service is the Eagle
Wing which has coffee
cont. on page 4
[SIC] makes Heverly even sicker
To the Editor;
I must apologize for
consistently misspelling Jayne
Bolduc's name thrcaghout my
column as B-U-L-D-0-C. However, I think that you judge me
too harshly on my spelling of
the word "fall". According to
my copy of The Random House
College Dictionary my spelling
of fall with a lower case f is
correct. It may not be
traditional, but when have 1
ever been traditional?
Since we are paying so much
attention to accuracy, I am
forced to point out a few errors
on your part. You misused the
notation (sic) numerous times.
You used it to indicate errors
of omission on my part. To
indicate that, you should have
inserted the missing words
parenthetically.
1 find your use of the ' [sic]
rather amusing in my fact
number eight. The item you
find incorrect is an exact quote
from the Eagle Eye.
I must confess that I am
an atrocious typist and that on
occasion I even misspell a
work out of my own ignorance.
I know that I must be an
embarrassment to the high
standards set by the Eagle
Eye. It's just that in my rush
to meet deadlines, 1 go counter
to prevailing Eagle Eye policy
and put substance before form
as a priority.
Why did I turn in copy
with these stupid mistakes?
cont. on page 4
SPECIAL
KANE COMPANY
RING D A Y
Wednesday, Nov. 17
10a.m. t o 3 p . m .
Outside Bookstore in PUB
The $59.
9.00 college ring «-^ is back!
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IfpSfSBS
Tuesday Nov. 16,1976
OLNICK
on Sports
Two winners of baseball awards have been named for the past
baseball season, Cy Young award winners Randy Jones ofthe San
Diego Padres and the National League, and Jim Palmer of the
Baltimore Orioles and the American League. I can't disagree with
the merits of either one of the winners, and think that both should
have won, although I have to wonder about the relative ease both
pitchers won with. Detroit's marvelous rookie Mark (The Bird)
Fidrych deserved more votes, although the fact he was a rookie
weighed heavily against him, but the fact he won 19 games with an
injury-riddled club is a feat deserving of more support.
California's Frank Tanana deserved more votes, as well as
Boston's Luis Tiant and Oakland's Vida Blue for nearly
singlehandedly carrying each of their respective pitching staffs. In
the National League, Los Angeles' Don Sutton, Houston's Ken
Forsch, Cincinnatti's Rawly Eastwick, Atianta's Phil Niekro, and
the Mets' Jerry Koosman should have received more votes than
they did, and my opinion is that Jones received a lot of support
from those who felt he should have won the award over the Mets'
Tom Seaver last year, and thought about that when they voted this
year, although anyone who could win 22 games with San Diego
deserves some kind of award. Every runner-up feels he should
have gotten more votes in any kind of award competition, and
that's normal, and maybe even helpful, as it stimulates the
runner-up to an even better performance the next year in hopes he
may win next time.
Several other awards will be coming up for consideration
soon, and I'd like to give some personal opinions on the best
candidates for the awards. For Rookies ofthe Year, 1 eould have to
pick relief pitcher Butch Metzger of the San Diego Padres to take
the National League award, and in the American League, nobody
can compare to pitcher Mark Fidrych of the Detroit Tigers.
Metzger may get some competition from Cincinnatti pitcher Pat
Zachry, and maybe even some from San Francisco outfielder Larry
Herndon, but he should win out in the end.
For Most Valuable Player, I would have to give catcher
Thurman Munson ofthe Yankees the nod in the American League,
and second baseman Joe Morgan of the Cincinnati Reds, last
year's winner, in the National League. Munson's chief
competition will come from teammates Mickey Rivers and Chris
Chambliss, Kansas City's George Brett and Hal McRae, and
Detroit's Rusty Staub, but Munson had the best all-round year of
any of them, and should win by a large margin. In the National
League, Morgan will have a tough battle with teammates George
Foster and Pete Rose, Atianta's Willie Montanez, Philadelphia's
Garry Maddox, Greg Luzinski, and Mike Schmidt, the Mets' Dave
Kingman, Chicago's Rick Monday and Bill Madlock, Houston's
Bob Watson, and Pittsburgh's Bill Robinson, with Foster probably
giving him the most competition. The odds are against a repeat
winner, but Morgan had a better year this year than last year
when he took the award, and is generally regarded as the best
player in the game. Foster's late-season slump will cost min the
award, as Morgan will edge out Foster and Luzinski to win it
again.
For Manager ofthe Year, Kansas City's Whitey Herzog is the
hands-down winner in the American League, while Houston's Bill
Virdon and Philadelphia's Danny Ozark will do battle in the
National League, with Ozark taking it.
Classifieds
POOL CLUB MEETING-Tuesday night, 7:30 pm. Everyone
welcome: PUB Pool Room.
FIREWOOD ~ Any length:
$25 per load. Call 753-3544
after 5 p.m. or contact Sharon
Allison, Russell 10.
page 3
EAGLE EYE
Why not the best?
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Delta Zeta-Sigma Kappa Rocka-thon 48 hours of continuous
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Nov. 21 6 pm. Help us fight
cancer.
Hockey squad returns
with third place victory
By M A R Y FEUSNER
Women's Sports Editor
The women's field hockey
squad returned to the Lock
Haven campus with 3-1 record
and third place honors in the
Regionals Tournament which
was staged at Glassboro State
College, New Jersey.
By
placing in the Regionals
competition, the Eaglettes
gained a 5th place berth in the
USFHA/AIAW National Collegiate Field Hockey Championships. Penna. teams who
will also be competing in
nationals include defending
champions West Chester and
Ursinus.
The following is a
summary of this weekend's
hockey action.
Thursday morning at 11
am the Eaglettes opened
tournament play against Lehigh. They were originally
scheduled to play Kutztown
who bowed out of the
competition due to an ineligible player.
Lehigh managed only 1
goal on a breakaway rush
through the Haven's strong
defense. Lock Haven's goals
were credited to S. Bowers
who had 2 on penalty corner
shots, C. Hacker, G.Graham,
K. Pallestrone, and C. Ogle.
At the same time Lock
Haven was defeating Lehigh,
E. Stroudsburg squeezed by
Princeton 2-1 to be the next
Lock Haven opponent.
The second period goal of
the Haven's Wendy Keller
was responsible for the
elimination of East Stroudsburg from the Mid-Atiantic
championships.
Her goal
broke the 1-1 tie which was the
result of first period play.
Cathy Ogle scored the first
Haven goal at 18:00. After
this extremely physical contest
the second of the day, the
Haven advanced into the
^emi-finals against Ursinus on
Friday afternoon.
First half play in the
Ursinus contest ended with a
1-0 score favoring Lock Haven.
C. Hacker was credited with
the goal. Ursinus managed 2
goals in the second period
while Lock Haven tallied only
one more. The second period
goal came from power hitter
Sue Bowers on a hand stopped
penalty corner. The game
ended in a 2-2 deadlock, but
Ursinus was declared the
victor because they accumulated more penetration time.
Ursinus them moved on to
meet West Chester for first
and second places while Lock
Haven faced the University of
Delaware who was defeated by
W. Chester 3-1.
Saturday's 2-0 win over
Delaware assured Lock Haven
a fifth place seed in the
Nationals.
The Delaware
game was characterized by
mid-field play. Haven goals
were scored by C. Hacker and
K. Pallestrone.
Next Tuesday the Eaglettes will travel to the Valley
Forge Military Academy to
ready themselves for Nationals
play which begins on Wednesday the Haven's first opponent
will be Central Missouri. Sixteen college teams from the
US will be trying for the
Nationals titie.
PART-TIME
CHRISTMAS HELP WANTED!
Soys
Men's and Boy's Shop
121 East Main Street
Lock Haven, Pa.
APPLY IN PERSON AT ABOVE ADDRESS
EAGLE E ^ i
I^tge*:
special ed. dept. must
conf. trom page 2
too many students would
enroll in our special ed.
program knowing it would take
them more four years to
graduate. It's very possible
that the dual certificate will
have to be dropped."
Ll. Smith insisted, however, that nothing is definite
yet. "There is still the
possibility of having a four
year dual certificate program," she explained. "This
thing is really in a state of
flux."
"The dual certificate program does have it's value,"
she further stated. "When
you're dealing with exceptional children it's nice to
know what normal children are
like."
Dr. Smith says that u should
be a while before the problem
of the special education
program at LHS is solved.
free class schedules requested
com. Irom page 2
available at a very reasonable
.15 a cup. But this is where the
service stops for the other
prices are comparable to those
in most restaurants. Some
service to the students.,
Where does our activity fees
go? Well none other than
services to the students. You
get for your money to gO' to
home football games, wrestling matches, basketball
games, movies (that at times
have appeared on television ex. Brian's Song - 3 times)
and one doll.ir off twice a year
for concerts. I may have
missed some but many
activities and services are also
so open that the public can
walk in on our activity fees.
These are some of the areas
which the new administration
should look into for the
upcoming year.
Very disgrunted.
Timothy M. Howe
PS. I'm still waiting for the
justification of my summer's
activity fee.
karate club
cont. from page 1
technique and basic formations to perfection, then the
building of speed and power.
"Karate Club gives students a sense of discipline and
self-confidence as well as
conditioning the body," said
david Burns, club president.
Members are able to advance
in ranks by being tested by the
black belts in terminology and
skill.
Various members ofthe club
compete in competitions also,
where they can learn to appreciate and watch other styles
as well as compete in
Tal-Kwan-Do.
SSC to present sociological plays
cont. from page 1
campus. The plays being
presented are just one of the
several projects under way to
promote interest in the Social
Work majors. Other things the
club is involved in, are having
speakers come to LHS and to
organize trips to listen to
speakers.
Social Service Club meetings are held on an informal
basis and all Social Work
majors are highly encouraged
to join and get involved.
The Social Service Club will
be selling coffee and cookies to
ease the frustration of
registration on November 20.
|the College Players production
AN ENEMY OF
THE PEOPLE
a drama by Henrik Ibsen
NOV. 18-20
Tuesday Nov. 16i, lv76
[sic] makes heverly even sicker
com. from page 2
Well, my copy, as well as the
copy of most others, is
usually spotted with these
little mistakes. The Editor-inChief usually finds and
corrects these mistakes, as is
her job. I trusted, that despite
the nature of my column, the
Editor-in-Chief was a big
enough person and professional enough Editor to correct
these mistakes before they
went in. I now discover that
my trust was misplaced and
that the Editor-in-Chief of the
Eagle Eye is really a very petty
person.
However, 1 must compliment the Eagle Eye staff on
their accuracy in this matter.
It is the first time this
semester that my column went
in intact.
In every prior
instance, words were misspelled that 1 didn't misspell,
incorrect verb tenses were
used that I didn't use and
entire paragraphs were simply
"lost".
Well, now that all this
petty backbiting is disposed
of, 1 would like to point out
that not one of my premises
was assailed as being mistaken. I am presentiy waiting
for an intelligent and relevant
reply to my column. 1 have yet
to see one.
Your Obedient (but "Typo")
prone Servant
David C. Heverly
EDITORS NOTE: I will not
lower myself by answering
Mr. Heverly's childish and
erroneous allegations regarding my handling of the SCC
Executive Committee election
and its aftermath, or editorial
policies.
But I wiil clarify for the
STUDENT body my reasons
for using the expression
"[sic]" throughout Heverly's
column, NOTHING BUT THE
TRUTH. As a policy, I do not
edit columns. If the columnist
requests me to do so, or if I
check with the author, I do.
Hevely did not ask me, and I
did noi ask to edit his column
this week. I left the column
intact, without cutting or
changing a word.
I used te expression "[sic]"
to show I knew the errors were
in the orlgional copy and that
they were NOT typographical
mistakes on the part of the
EAGLE EYE staff. I feel if I
had not acknowledged these
errors, they might have led
people to believe they were
made purposely to show
Heverly to be a fool.
^••****
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