BHeiney
Wed, 07/05/2023 - 19:40
Edited Text
Lock Haven State College
Eve
Eag
Monday, September 9,1914
Vol. XVII Nt. S
Alumni Construction Alters LHS
Lorallv coUpoted mountain stone, a G.S.A contractor, an active Alumni
Association and money were
the basic ingredients. The
result was one of the most
attractive
guideposts on
any of the state college
campuses.
As the first of the
hopefully
annual Special
P r o j e r t s carried on by the
Lock Haven State Alumni
.Association, the effort has
left the campus with a new
focal point. .As Mr. James
Reeser, direrlor of admissions and alumni, stated,
"It vvas something we needed. Traveling to the other
s t a t e colleges reminded us
that there was something
they had that we didn't.
Various alumni, as well as
many college students, had
mentioned tho lack of identification of our complex o'
brick b u i l d i n g s . "
The
identifieation
marker at the corner of Fairview St, and Susquehanna
Avenue, was construrted by
the
Hiekes
Cioiistrurtion
Companv. The total r o s t of
the project, funded completely by alumni donations,
was $2,357.00. .As pointed
out by Mrs. Rose Minnie
.Akeley, past presideni of
the
alumni
association,
" T h i s project and other
functions
illustrates
the
nrtive involvement and ronrern the alunini have for
their
roUepe."
Another
Special Alumni Project is
scheduled
for |071-7.'i.
Formal dedication of
the marker took pUirc during
the nasi summers Alumni
Wpek»end ronimeinorated by
the c l a s s e s of 1924, 1919,
and 1064. Among the persons
attending
the
dedication
were [last Alunini presidents
.Mr. Hartman Herr and Mr.
Ashley
Woolridge.
The
"(-ollege s i g n " was presented on behalf of the
ilumni, by Mrs, Akeley, the
assorintioii president. P r e s i dent Franeis N, Hamblin .
arrcpleil for the rollege
ronuiuinilv.
*r*Q*|
(ioMimentiiig
on
the
riiinplelioii n( the project,
lleeser snid, " I ' m absoliitclv i|rlif,'htpd. it (the miU'kpr)
is iilioiit the hest I've s e e n , "
One nf Ihc iiihniiiistrative
spereliiries has Piilled the
sioiip Mi.irkT " t h p s h r i n e " .
Hill wlipllipr it is railed a
sionp iiiiirker, "tlip s h r i n e "
or the " r o l l e g e s i g n " , after
one luindrrd and four years,
,is an institution of service
In the students and the s t a t e ,
l.nrk lliivpii Stale ('ollege
has been identified.
'•sr'^.' • - ^ i
k ; « ^
.
.'•<>•*«
Not a tombstone to a dying system, "the shrine" is a
monument to educational progress.
Board of Trustees held meeting
3y Mike Holter
A remission of fees for
faculty dependents, resolution of the Delta Zeta discrimination c a s e , and a not
too piomising budget outlook
were
among
the
topics
discussed at the first Board
of T u r s t e e s meeting of the
1974-75 year.
After
achieving
a
quorum.
Board
President
Walter C. Jamouneau opened
the
meeting.
P
'dent
Francis Hamblin tht.i gave
his report concerning student
enrollment, the exchange program and the resignation of
C. (ieorge Rower III as
student trustee.
Regarding
enrollment
Hamblin slated "We're in
a relatively favored posit i o n . " He continued thai
everything
seems
to
be
stable except the budget.
" U n l e s s something happens
in Harrisburg we can almost
flatly say there will be no
new positions a d d e d . "
After
four days of
meeting in Harrisburg wlih
the College Board of P r e s i dents,
Hamblin
reported,
" I t is generally assumed that
the Commonwealth Univer-
sity Act of 1474 will pass
the legislature sometime in
the near f u t u r e " . This act
provides for the restructuring
of the stale college system
a s one universily, similar to
the
present
New
York
Stale higher education system. " N o group is actively
opposing il (the act) al this
lime,"
he
concluded.
A brief summary on the
7.''-74 summer school p r o
gram was given by I)r. Gerald Robiason, vice-president
for academic affairs. He
reported enrollment for both
Law Office
presents
Record
For the month of August,
security reports include the
following
incidents:
four
thefts, six criminal tresp a s s e s , three liquor violations, two disorderly cond u c t s , two vandalism c a s e s ,
one false alarm, one c a s e of
indecent e x p o s u r e , and one
resisting
arest.
Eight
investigations were conducted resulting in one arrest
for indecent exposure, and
one arrest for criminal t r e s p a s s and r e s i s t i n g a r r e s t .
Eight warnings were i s s u e d .
P*«e2
EAGLE EYE
Monday, September 9, 1974
Lock Haven State College
by Renny Miller
-tMoyt idMeiM
s e e offers sfudenf
chance for involvemenf
The ifualif- of stiuifnt i^ovfrriment at Lock Haven
will depend on the (.oru-em the students show for it.
.As of Sunday less than ten petitions were received
to have persons' names put on the ballot. The deadline
to receive these petitions is lomorro^i. They may he
picked up outside the .•xecutive committee office anytime
tiktay.
In order that the st.tdent i:overnmerit at Lock fiaven
may work adequately we will need 2> senators this year.
Four senators are needed jrom \lct-ntire; two from Russell: two from ttoolrid^e: two from tli^'h; two from Sorth:
fv«) from dross: three from Smith: and eight commuters
to represent students living
off-campus.
In order to work admirably, we wiil need many more
students to run for office than this. If the competition is
stiff, then we will know we are gettirig the best, and not
Ihe only choice.
By paying your activity fee you gained the right to
vote in Thursday's election. You can determine how it is
spent by voting into office the senator you believe has
your interests most al heart.
.•Mso, as of yesterday only one petition was returned
for the Student Publications
Board elections to be held
Thursday. This board is composed of studenis,
faculty,
and administrators whose job it is ti} hel pin the smooth
operation of the student newspaper, yearbook, and magazine.
.All ol the abi'vc positions musl he taken
seriously.
Sludents,
and students alone decide how hundreds of
thousands of dollars are going to be spent tn the ne.xt
year. The college administration does nol have a say as
lo how this money is to be spent. Therefore we need
studenis who know what they are talking aboul, and who
can coniribute to the bellerment of student life.
A window displays a
varied and proposing path
to a "new and better way
of life." Far reaching hands
pull you i.. the vacuum of
a store. Soon YOU are the
owner of an amazing new
product that does faniaslic
things. When you get home
your purchase is plugged
in, turned on, and it just
sits there staring at you.
Inmediately
snapped
back to reality, you realize
you've been stung. There
are various methods of dealing with the hostility. .A
good swift kick against the
wall helped, and temper
tantrums and abusive larn
guage is even better - but,
satisfaction is fleeting.
When finally the rationale of reality returns, certain steps must be taken
immediately. Whether you
return to the point of purchase, or plan your attack
with phone calls and letters,
follow these steps:
•Gather all purchase
information and sales slips.
Give ail information that
could identify your purchase.
•When contact is made
with the business, give them
your name, address, and
phone number.
•Don't threaten lives.
Use a sympathetic, "I know
you're busy and run a very
nice store, but. . . "
•Don't at first go directly to the top. Try to get
satisfaction from a lower
level - it's faster.
If you can't locate the
address of the company run
to the library and grab their
copy of Standard 4 Poor's
Register of Corp<»ations.
coNSU/y£
Lock Haven's Stevenson
Library does have a copy.
If a lower level (i.e.
salesperson)
innocently
refuses to gel involved, go
to the department manager.
From here proceed to bigger
things - store manager. If
this proves only a monopoly
on deception, gird your
loins for battle.
Hit the Better Business
Bureau and action lines on
television and radio. If they
can't help write to: Consumer Affairs, Executive Office
of the President, New
Executive Office Building,
Washington, DC
20506.
Upon their advice you may
obtain a lawyer for suit
filed wilh a small claims
court.
Special problems may
be sent to the following
addresses:
•General - Belter Business Bureau; Television and
Radio stations.
•Living Conditions Board of Health, local office.
•Mail - Postal Inspector, US Posl Office Department, local Of regional
office.
continued on page 4
EACLE EYE ERROR:
in the article concerning Ron
Palmw's resiznalion printed
in the Friday, September 6,
19"4 issue of the Eagle Eye,
the wTiter stated that Vlr.
Palmer's resignation "bejcomes officiallv effective al
the First student senate
meeting."
According to his resizna*
^ioQ letter. Palmer's resign*'
Ition officiallv became effectiv^
August :S, 19-4.
CONCERT : Vme in A Ufetime Offer"
tt^lo^lSt^
*\^:i'
V. 0 J""r v'
Records,
During a rather bizarre
gig in Oaxucu, while the
Blue Oyster Cult was in the
midst of "Transmaniacon
MC," Iwo (nol one, count "em)
eclipses
occuned within
minutea of each other. The
experience was so jarring lo
tha boya thai when asked
•bout their omnipreaent dark
glasses, they usually reply
".Ah... It's the light."
The Blue Oyster Cult is
con^iivsed of five leatheroid
men. Severil nutmbers of the
group were in the famed Soft
*hiie
I'nderbelly. while
others joined l\.»ces from the
short-lived Stalk Forrest
Group.
Donald
Roeser'Buck
Dharma has t*o very defitv
lie sides, bul is, r»everth
tor rockAroll, anyway), and
has been called such in the
likes of Rolling Store.
Crawdaddy, the Voice, the
Herald, et al. Donald's
Snydly Wiplash mustachio
has been known to tickle the
twine of pre-teens and subhumans inhabiting the front
rows.
Vocalist Eric (Jesse
Python) Bloom is often
referred to as The Rock King
Of The Finger Uke». aixJ
continued on page 4
Blue Oystvf Cult, plus special
guest ston Kiss and Rush will
apfaor Sun. Sept. 15, 1974
te T>)«iNas Fiald House.
EAGLE EYE
Monday, September 9, 1974
pate 3
Lock Haven Sute College
young squad
Haven Eagles led by leffermen
Fourteen lettermen are
expected to be in the starting offensive aixl ctefensive
lineups for Lock Haven
State College in tht big
1974 football opener on
September 14.
The Bald Eagles of
sixth year head coach Bob
Weller will face neighboring
Lycoming
College
at
WiUiamsport in the 5lh
annual Fez Bowl with a 2
p.m. kickoff time.
Lycoming coached by
Frank Girardi will be led by
veterans operating in the
offensive backfield, at the
end
positions and the
defensive secondary.
For the Eagles, Coach
Weller lost many outstanding starters via graduation
off the 1973 team and only
three regulars return on
offense and five on defense.
Lock Haven will be
going with a very young
varsity squad this year that
lists only five seniors with
only one on the entire
defensive unit.
Starters back on offense
are seniors All-Conference
tackle Gil Brown and Terry
Szucs at guard and the
nation's 10th ranked passer
last year junior quarterback
Dave Bower from Montoursville.
Bower attempted 168
passes, completing 91 for
931 yards and nine touchdowns. He only threw nine
interceptions all season.
Two newcomers are
Fez Bowl Is opener
•
Lock Haven State's
Bald Eagles will be the
opponent of Lycoming College in the fifth Annual Fez
Bowl football game on Saturday September Uth at 2
p.m.
Under the sponsorship
of the WiUiamsport Shrine,
it promises to be a gala day
beginning with a parade at
11 a.m.; the football game
at 2 pjn.; and winding up
with a Fez Bowl Dance at
the Lycoming Hotel at 9
p.m. with music by the
highly rated Irem Temple
Jazz Band.
Lock Haven Slate students may obtain tickets at
the Student Union for this
event at a cost of two
dollars. At the gate student
I.D. cards must be shown
along with the student
ticket. Keep the ticket stub
for this is your admission
to the dance at the Lycco>ing Hotel at 9 p.m. All
tickets sold at the gate
will cost W.OO so get your
tickets at the Student UniotL
Maps ol" th'? location of
College field in Williams-
port are on bulletin boards
around campus. Be there
and back the Bald Eagles.
Co-captain
Duties Shared
slated for the wide receiver
spots, freshman Ed Thomas
and Joe Marron, a junior.
The rest of the interior
offensive line will have
three
sophomores, Ernie
Cavagnaro al cenier, letterman Barry Johnson at tackle
and letter winner Don Miller
at guard.
Operating in the backfield with Bower at wingbacks are Dan Decker and
Jerome Conlon, both lettered in 1973, and at fullback
sophomore Gene Haupl a
200 pound power runner
from South WiUiamsport.
On defense the front
four will have at ends threeyear veteran Bob Seal and
twoyear
letter
winner
Wayne Johnson; and tackles,
226 pound sophomore letter-
^'^p'*' P'«" *'"*' ^'''"s*
AA Ll lL Yearbook
y . _ , k - . . L Staff
C . W memberj
u...
and those interested in joining
the staff. There will be on
important yearbook meeting
Sept. 9 at 7:00, Ulmer 3 1 1 .
All
those
interested
scheduling
the
FERENCE
advised
ties
The cc^captains of the
Lock Haven Stale football
team include three juniors and
a senior according to head
coach Robert Weller.
Leading the offense will
be junior quarterback Dave
Bower from Nlontoursville and
junior guard Terrv- Svucs from
Hopatcong, New Jersey. The
iefensive leaders are senior
Bob Seal from Succasunna,
New Jersey, and Denny Clark
a junior linebacker from
Danville.
Bower was the tenth
oest passer in the nation in
1973. He completed 91 oul of
168 attempts for 931 yards.
Syncs is a rugged two
year regular who stands 6'2
and weighs 210.
A starter since his
freshmen year. Seal is headed
for his fourth straight letter,
the lough 200 pounder has
played defensive tackle, end
continued on page 4
man Dan Engleman and
sophomore letter man Dan
Bender.
At the four linebacker
positions Sam Adamo, junior
Denny Clark, and two
sophomore leltermen Chip
Boone and Scott Boschetto.
The defensive secondary is all new this season
with
sophomore
Greg
Guisewlte, and freshman
Doug Posey at the halfback
positions and freshman Bill
Fortson at safety.
Greg
Day
two-year
letter winner from Gardners
will be handling the kicking
chores again this year. In
punting lasl season he
averaged 32.S yards per
kick.
CON-
CENTER
ore
to coll the A c t i v i -
Office at E x t . 217 for
Information.
of
SIEG
in
the
will
All
LHSC
1 uc-
you
A q u a (;
fins"
"" A
to
synchronized
join
our
swimming club.
General Organiiational Meeting Wed. Sept. l l t h at 7 pm
in Zimmerii Pool bolcony -Interested
beginners
experienced
welcome.
For
swimmers
further
and
ore
info,
coll .'i*ar|ie 748-9439.
scheduling
Conference
be
The
TL_
invite
handled
Center
in
the
Activities
Office not in Dr.
Milliken's
office
as
in the
post.
Attention oil persons interested
in joining the men's varsity
swimming fam contoct Coach
McCoy
in
his
office
in
Zimmerii 108.
Classified Ads
Basket of Cheer Raffle:
sponsored by the Bald
Eagle football association. Dortation • 50.25 or
5 for $1.00. Drawing •
Sept. 20. Contact any
football player.
ROOt^ATE WANTED: for
downtcmm apartment. RentUO.OO/mo. Call Sue Coi»sfonfini. 748-9346.
WANTED:
Student:, M^O
would like to earn $50-$100
a week part time. Call Greg
Ruggiers at 74^5915 any
tirrte aftef 6 P.t^.
Rooms availabl*
far anfc
co//ege students. 30 $ . Fairview St., phone; 748-2107
after 5:30 pm.
EAGLE EYE
page 4
Monday, Sepiemher 9, 1974
Lock Haven Stale College
College Trustees
c o n t . from page 1
s e s s i o n s down from that oi
the previous year. Robinson
s t a t e d , " t h e enrollment (summer) picture i.s reason for
c o n c e r n " . Board Presideni
Jamouneau interjected thai
with the current inflation
and lack of eniplnymcnl, the
enrollment niiuhl incteusc.
Dr. Robinson .iiated, bowever, that many sludonls
who bad pre-rcgiMcreil lor
the siunmer ses.sions were
unable to attend. Ihosc .students were forced to Uikc
summer
jobs
to
in.surc
sufficient funds tor IIK' coming year. Robinson recoinmended that a task toi'tc incliKimj; A P S C l ' f , students,
and iidniinislrntors he formed
!o " t a k e a hard close Kuik
al Ihc .suMiinor scbuol prograiii.s".
.\n analvM.s of ibc fiscal oullook lor tlu' school
year was provided b\ Dr.
Russell
\iniiken,
vueprcsidcnl Ut adiiiinisir.ii ion.
lie staled,''! Ii.ive a shorl
sad .storv lo P''^'* alonn".
Althougli the fiscal operations for 7-4-7.'' showed .in
increase over the 7.^74 figures, there u.is slill a reduction of t ()07,000. froni
Ihe amouni requested. Cerlain areas th.il will feel
this pinch more ihaii others
include
educalional
.iiKi
lilirary supplies, eonlr.ieled
supplies, and other supplies.
The vice-presidenl saivl thai
if supplenviual alloealions
again come Irom ibe ^ ' a t e ,
Ihe monev will be used primarily for these areas.
l^e.sidenl Hamblin leported on Ihe diserimin.ilion
c a s e involving the Delia
Z e l a Sorority and ibe Department of F.ducation. Il was
resolved by ihe National
C h a p t e r ' s Chicago lavkver
that Della Zela would cease
and desist from engaging m
any practices that could he
considered
discriminuiory.
The Department of Education
then agreed to drop the
charges against the local
chapter of the sorority.
Hamblin stated that a
letter had been received from
the Department of Education
concerning remission of fees
for faculty dependents. The
department said each indi
vidua! college was responsible for Iheir own decision
on the remission policy. Mr.
William Williams, member of
ihe hoard of trustees, reported on the study committee's
decision
concerning
this
urea.
The commiltee recommended
reieclion ol
fee
remissions In facully men>bers. .After much d i s c a s s i o n
a vole was t.iken. With four
members voling " y e s " and
one member voting " p r e s e n t "
It was neeessarv lo lable
llie
matter
unlil
Ihe
November me el ing.
Renny
eonimued from page -
•Cars A Repairs - US
Dcpl.
of
Transportuliop
hxal branch.
.All Ihe above a d d r e s s e s
may be found in ihe telephone directory.
•.Appliances
- .vlajor
Appliance Aclion Panel, 20
N. W.icker Drive, Chicago,
II. 60606.
•I'.cology
linvii onmental Control Administration, I S Depi. of llt:W, 56tX)
fishers
Lane, Rockville,
MD 21)8 .S2.
Concert
com mue ll from page 2
was Ihe most affected by
the incident al Oaxaca.
.Allan (LaVern) Lanier
bandies keyboards and rhythm
for the IKX', aixl generally
holds
things logclher. .A
scholar 'athlete
at
heart,
.Allan's greatest innuenccs
have been Baudelaire and
Hryanl (bnmietle, thai i s ) .
' The rhythm is covered
in .1 nmst macho manner by
Ihe
IViuchard
Brothers:
Albert (Prince Omega) on
drums, and Jiw on b u s s .
Albert
has
ihe
Derek
Sanderson mustache, Joe the
Mel Schaeler moves.
Since the e c l i p s e s ui
Oaxaca, Transmaniacon h a s
become the group's theme.
It their vision was somewhat
darkened by Ihe experience
so were tlieir mu-sicai concepts: the first eight songs
on Iheir debul
Columbia
album, " T h e Blue Oyster
Cull,"
deal
primordally
* will get his scholarship af* with
violence and murd'
"Transmaniacon
\.
is aNiut bikers (MC-Motorcvcle Club>.
" I ' m On The Lamb But
I Ain't No S h e e p " h a s a
well-defined
political
connotation inborn, and coricearns scandals within the
stoned halls of Columbia
University which fleeced a
number of parents and studenis during the mid-fifties.
" ( T h e n Came) The L a s t
Days
Of May"
is
the
resurrection ballad inspired
by four Stoney Brook drug
dealers who were bumped
off in Arizona Before thes
could
slash
the
loot.
"Stairway T o The S t a r s "
deals wilh Ihe milieu of hitand-run
violence,
while
"Before
The
Kiss,
A
Redcap"
is
a
tortured
story set in thr city of Babylon. I t ' s aboul Conray's Bar
in
Babylon,
New
York.
"Screams"
talks of the
ominosoid, v*hile "Slie's .As
Beautiful .As A F o o t " is an
R. Melizer special
describing the violent dangers
of fo On Flame With Rock & R o l l "
/ the Blue Oyster Cull
anthem, and although the
crowd is not required lo
stand thioughout, the b a n d ' s
logo
is usually
saluted.
The concept is broken
at this point to give the vinyl
a break. " T h e Workshop Of
The Telescope " ia a supernatural epic sung with eyes
closed, behind dark g l a s s .
The album ends on a mildly
optimistic note, as "Redeerrie d " describes the redemption of Sir R a s t u s Bear by a
song.
The theme throughout
is
clearly
osirificalion.
Lyrics were written in large
part by rock critics Sandy
Pearlman and R. Meltzer,
while the music stems from
the guts of the boys g^j
their production crew.
Seventeen
murders
occurred within twelve blocks
of the studio during the
production of the " T h e Blue
Oyster C u l t . "
Football Team
continued from
page 3
and offensive tackle for the
Bald Eagles.
Clark, who transferred
from
the Naval .Vcaiiemv,
weighs in at 20T, and stands
6-2. He started al linebacker
last year for Lock Haven.
Lock Haven is preping
for i t ' s .September 14 opener
against Lycoming in the ilh
annual Fez Bowl.
Eve
Eag
Monday, September 9,1914
Vol. XVII Nt. S
Alumni Construction Alters LHS
Lorallv coUpoted mountain stone, a G.S.A contractor, an active Alumni
Association and money were
the basic ingredients. The
result was one of the most
attractive
guideposts on
any of the state college
campuses.
As the first of the
hopefully
annual Special
P r o j e r t s carried on by the
Lock Haven State Alumni
.Association, the effort has
left the campus with a new
focal point. .As Mr. James
Reeser, direrlor of admissions and alumni, stated,
"It vvas something we needed. Traveling to the other
s t a t e colleges reminded us
that there was something
they had that we didn't.
Various alumni, as well as
many college students, had
mentioned tho lack of identification of our complex o'
brick b u i l d i n g s . "
The
identifieation
marker at the corner of Fairview St, and Susquehanna
Avenue, was construrted by
the
Hiekes
Cioiistrurtion
Companv. The total r o s t of
the project, funded completely by alumni donations,
was $2,357.00. .As pointed
out by Mrs. Rose Minnie
.Akeley, past presideni of
the
alumni
association,
" T h i s project and other
functions
illustrates
the
nrtive involvement and ronrern the alunini have for
their
roUepe."
Another
Special Alumni Project is
scheduled
for |071-7.'i.
Formal dedication of
the marker took pUirc during
the nasi summers Alumni
Wpek»end ronimeinorated by
the c l a s s e s of 1924, 1919,
and 1064. Among the persons
attending
the
dedication
were [last Alunini presidents
.Mr. Hartman Herr and Mr.
Ashley
Woolridge.
The
"(-ollege s i g n " was presented on behalf of the
ilumni, by Mrs, Akeley, the
assorintioii president. P r e s i dent Franeis N, Hamblin .
arrcpleil for the rollege
ronuiuinilv.
*r*Q*|
(ioMimentiiig
on
the
riiinplelioii n( the project,
lleeser snid, " I ' m absoliitclv i|rlif,'htpd. it (the miU'kpr)
is iilioiit the hest I've s e e n , "
One nf Ihc iiihniiiistrative
spereliiries has Piilled the
sioiip Mi.irkT " t h p s h r i n e " .
Hill wlipllipr it is railed a
sionp iiiiirker, "tlip s h r i n e "
or the " r o l l e g e s i g n " , after
one luindrrd and four years,
,is an institution of service
In the students and the s t a t e ,
l.nrk lliivpii Stale ('ollege
has been identified.
'•sr'^.' • - ^ i
k ; « ^
.
.'•<>•*«
Not a tombstone to a dying system, "the shrine" is a
monument to educational progress.
Board of Trustees held meeting
3y Mike Holter
A remission of fees for
faculty dependents, resolution of the Delta Zeta discrimination c a s e , and a not
too piomising budget outlook
were
among
the
topics
discussed at the first Board
of T u r s t e e s meeting of the
1974-75 year.
After
achieving
a
quorum.
Board
President
Walter C. Jamouneau opened
the
meeting.
P
'dent
Francis Hamblin tht.i gave
his report concerning student
enrollment, the exchange program and the resignation of
C. (ieorge Rower III as
student trustee.
Regarding
enrollment
Hamblin slated "We're in
a relatively favored posit i o n . " He continued thai
everything
seems
to
be
stable except the budget.
" U n l e s s something happens
in Harrisburg we can almost
flatly say there will be no
new positions a d d e d . "
After
four days of
meeting in Harrisburg wlih
the College Board of P r e s i dents,
Hamblin
reported,
" I t is generally assumed that
the Commonwealth Univer-
sity Act of 1474 will pass
the legislature sometime in
the near f u t u r e " . This act
provides for the restructuring
of the stale college system
a s one universily, similar to
the
present
New
York
Stale higher education system. " N o group is actively
opposing il (the act) al this
lime,"
he
concluded.
A brief summary on the
7.''-74 summer school p r o
gram was given by I)r. Gerald Robiason, vice-president
for academic affairs. He
reported enrollment for both
Law Office
presents
Record
For the month of August,
security reports include the
following
incidents:
four
thefts, six criminal tresp a s s e s , three liquor violations, two disorderly cond u c t s , two vandalism c a s e s ,
one false alarm, one c a s e of
indecent e x p o s u r e , and one
resisting
arest.
Eight
investigations were conducted resulting in one arrest
for indecent exposure, and
one arrest for criminal t r e s p a s s and r e s i s t i n g a r r e s t .
Eight warnings were i s s u e d .
P*«e2
EAGLE EYE
Monday, September 9, 1974
Lock Haven State College
by Renny Miller
-tMoyt idMeiM
s e e offers sfudenf
chance for involvemenf
The ifualif- of stiuifnt i^ovfrriment at Lock Haven
will depend on the (.oru-em the students show for it.
.As of Sunday less than ten petitions were received
to have persons' names put on the ballot. The deadline
to receive these petitions is lomorro^i. They may he
picked up outside the .•xecutive committee office anytime
tiktay.
In order that the st.tdent i:overnmerit at Lock fiaven
may work adequately we will need 2> senators this year.
Four senators are needed jrom \lct-ntire; two from Russell: two from ttoolrid^e: two from tli^'h; two from Sorth:
fv«) from dross: three from Smith: and eight commuters
to represent students living
off-campus.
In order to work admirably, we wiil need many more
students to run for office than this. If the competition is
stiff, then we will know we are gettirig the best, and not
Ihe only choice.
By paying your activity fee you gained the right to
vote in Thursday's election. You can determine how it is
spent by voting into office the senator you believe has
your interests most al heart.
.•Mso, as of yesterday only one petition was returned
for the Student Publications
Board elections to be held
Thursday. This board is composed of studenis,
faculty,
and administrators whose job it is ti} hel pin the smooth
operation of the student newspaper, yearbook, and magazine.
.All ol the abi'vc positions musl he taken
seriously.
Sludents,
and students alone decide how hundreds of
thousands of dollars are going to be spent tn the ne.xt
year. The college administration does nol have a say as
lo how this money is to be spent. Therefore we need
studenis who know what they are talking aboul, and who
can coniribute to the bellerment of student life.
A window displays a
varied and proposing path
to a "new and better way
of life." Far reaching hands
pull you i.. the vacuum of
a store. Soon YOU are the
owner of an amazing new
product that does faniaslic
things. When you get home
your purchase is plugged
in, turned on, and it just
sits there staring at you.
Inmediately
snapped
back to reality, you realize
you've been stung. There
are various methods of dealing with the hostility. .A
good swift kick against the
wall helped, and temper
tantrums and abusive larn
guage is even better - but,
satisfaction is fleeting.
When finally the rationale of reality returns, certain steps must be taken
immediately. Whether you
return to the point of purchase, or plan your attack
with phone calls and letters,
follow these steps:
•Gather all purchase
information and sales slips.
Give ail information that
could identify your purchase.
•When contact is made
with the business, give them
your name, address, and
phone number.
•Don't threaten lives.
Use a sympathetic, "I know
you're busy and run a very
nice store, but. . . "
•Don't at first go directly to the top. Try to get
satisfaction from a lower
level - it's faster.
If you can't locate the
address of the company run
to the library and grab their
copy of Standard 4 Poor's
Register of Corp<»ations.
coNSU/y£
Lock Haven's Stevenson
Library does have a copy.
If a lower level (i.e.
salesperson)
innocently
refuses to gel involved, go
to the department manager.
From here proceed to bigger
things - store manager. If
this proves only a monopoly
on deception, gird your
loins for battle.
Hit the Better Business
Bureau and action lines on
television and radio. If they
can't help write to: Consumer Affairs, Executive Office
of the President, New
Executive Office Building,
Washington, DC
20506.
Upon their advice you may
obtain a lawyer for suit
filed wilh a small claims
court.
Special problems may
be sent to the following
addresses:
•General - Belter Business Bureau; Television and
Radio stations.
•Living Conditions Board of Health, local office.
•Mail - Postal Inspector, US Posl Office Department, local Of regional
office.
continued on page 4
EACLE EYE ERROR:
in the article concerning Ron
Palmw's resiznalion printed
in the Friday, September 6,
19"4 issue of the Eagle Eye,
the wTiter stated that Vlr.
Palmer's resignation "bejcomes officiallv effective al
the First student senate
meeting."
According to his resizna*
^ioQ letter. Palmer's resign*'
Ition officiallv became effectiv^
August :S, 19-4.
CONCERT : Vme in A Ufetime Offer"
tt^lo^lSt^
*\^:i'
V. 0 J""r v'
Records,
During a rather bizarre
gig in Oaxucu, while the
Blue Oyster Cult was in the
midst of "Transmaniacon
MC," Iwo (nol one, count "em)
eclipses
occuned within
minutea of each other. The
experience was so jarring lo
tha boya thai when asked
•bout their omnipreaent dark
glasses, they usually reply
".Ah... It's the light."
The Blue Oyster Cult is
con^iivsed of five leatheroid
men. Severil nutmbers of the
group were in the famed Soft
*hiie
I'nderbelly. while
others joined l\.»ces from the
short-lived Stalk Forrest
Group.
Donald
Roeser'Buck
Dharma has t*o very defitv
lie sides, bul is, r»everth
tor rockAroll, anyway), and
has been called such in the
likes of Rolling Store.
Crawdaddy, the Voice, the
Herald, et al. Donald's
Snydly Wiplash mustachio
has been known to tickle the
twine of pre-teens and subhumans inhabiting the front
rows.
Vocalist Eric (Jesse
Python) Bloom is often
referred to as The Rock King
Of The Finger Uke». aixJ
continued on page 4
Blue Oystvf Cult, plus special
guest ston Kiss and Rush will
apfaor Sun. Sept. 15, 1974
te T>)«iNas Fiald House.
EAGLE EYE
Monday, September 9, 1974
pate 3
Lock Haven Sute College
young squad
Haven Eagles led by leffermen
Fourteen lettermen are
expected to be in the starting offensive aixl ctefensive
lineups for Lock Haven
State College in tht big
1974 football opener on
September 14.
The Bald Eagles of
sixth year head coach Bob
Weller will face neighboring
Lycoming
College
at
WiUiamsport in the 5lh
annual Fez Bowl with a 2
p.m. kickoff time.
Lycoming coached by
Frank Girardi will be led by
veterans operating in the
offensive backfield, at the
end
positions and the
defensive secondary.
For the Eagles, Coach
Weller lost many outstanding starters via graduation
off the 1973 team and only
three regulars return on
offense and five on defense.
Lock Haven will be
going with a very young
varsity squad this year that
lists only five seniors with
only one on the entire
defensive unit.
Starters back on offense
are seniors All-Conference
tackle Gil Brown and Terry
Szucs at guard and the
nation's 10th ranked passer
last year junior quarterback
Dave Bower from Montoursville.
Bower attempted 168
passes, completing 91 for
931 yards and nine touchdowns. He only threw nine
interceptions all season.
Two newcomers are
Fez Bowl Is opener
•
Lock Haven State's
Bald Eagles will be the
opponent of Lycoming College in the fifth Annual Fez
Bowl football game on Saturday September Uth at 2
p.m.
Under the sponsorship
of the WiUiamsport Shrine,
it promises to be a gala day
beginning with a parade at
11 a.m.; the football game
at 2 pjn.; and winding up
with a Fez Bowl Dance at
the Lycoming Hotel at 9
p.m. with music by the
highly rated Irem Temple
Jazz Band.
Lock Haven Slate students may obtain tickets at
the Student Union for this
event at a cost of two
dollars. At the gate student
I.D. cards must be shown
along with the student
ticket. Keep the ticket stub
for this is your admission
to the dance at the Lycco>ing Hotel at 9 p.m. All
tickets sold at the gate
will cost W.OO so get your
tickets at the Student UniotL
Maps ol" th'? location of
College field in Williams-
port are on bulletin boards
around campus. Be there
and back the Bald Eagles.
Co-captain
Duties Shared
slated for the wide receiver
spots, freshman Ed Thomas
and Joe Marron, a junior.
The rest of the interior
offensive line will have
three
sophomores, Ernie
Cavagnaro al cenier, letterman Barry Johnson at tackle
and letter winner Don Miller
at guard.
Operating in the backfield with Bower at wingbacks are Dan Decker and
Jerome Conlon, both lettered in 1973, and at fullback
sophomore Gene Haupl a
200 pound power runner
from South WiUiamsport.
On defense the front
four will have at ends threeyear veteran Bob Seal and
twoyear
letter
winner
Wayne Johnson; and tackles,
226 pound sophomore letter-
^'^p'*' P'«" *'"*' ^'''"s*
AA Ll lL Yearbook
y . _ , k - . . L Staff
C . W memberj
u...
and those interested in joining
the staff. There will be on
important yearbook meeting
Sept. 9 at 7:00, Ulmer 3 1 1 .
All
those
interested
scheduling
the
FERENCE
advised
ties
The cc^captains of the
Lock Haven Stale football
team include three juniors and
a senior according to head
coach Robert Weller.
Leading the offense will
be junior quarterback Dave
Bower from Nlontoursville and
junior guard Terrv- Svucs from
Hopatcong, New Jersey. The
iefensive leaders are senior
Bob Seal from Succasunna,
New Jersey, and Denny Clark
a junior linebacker from
Danville.
Bower was the tenth
oest passer in the nation in
1973. He completed 91 oul of
168 attempts for 931 yards.
Syncs is a rugged two
year regular who stands 6'2
and weighs 210.
A starter since his
freshmen year. Seal is headed
for his fourth straight letter,
the lough 200 pounder has
played defensive tackle, end
continued on page 4
man Dan Engleman and
sophomore letter man Dan
Bender.
At the four linebacker
positions Sam Adamo, junior
Denny Clark, and two
sophomore leltermen Chip
Boone and Scott Boschetto.
The defensive secondary is all new this season
with
sophomore
Greg
Guisewlte, and freshman
Doug Posey at the halfback
positions and freshman Bill
Fortson at safety.
Greg
Day
two-year
letter winner from Gardners
will be handling the kicking
chores again this year. In
punting lasl season he
averaged 32.S yards per
kick.
CON-
CENTER
ore
to coll the A c t i v i -
Office at E x t . 217 for
Information.
of
SIEG
in
the
will
All
LHSC
1 uc-
you
A q u a (;
fins"
"" A
to
synchronized
join
our
swimming club.
General Organiiational Meeting Wed. Sept. l l t h at 7 pm
in Zimmerii Pool bolcony -Interested
beginners
experienced
welcome.
For
swimmers
further
and
ore
info,
coll .'i*ar|ie 748-9439.
scheduling
Conference
be
The
TL_
invite
handled
Center
in
the
Activities
Office not in Dr.
Milliken's
office
as
in the
post.
Attention oil persons interested
in joining the men's varsity
swimming fam contoct Coach
McCoy
in
his
office
in
Zimmerii 108.
Classified Ads
Basket of Cheer Raffle:
sponsored by the Bald
Eagle football association. Dortation • 50.25 or
5 for $1.00. Drawing •
Sept. 20. Contact any
football player.
ROOt^ATE WANTED: for
downtcmm apartment. RentUO.OO/mo. Call Sue Coi»sfonfini. 748-9346.
WANTED:
Student:, M^O
would like to earn $50-$100
a week part time. Call Greg
Ruggiers at 74^5915 any
tirrte aftef 6 P.t^.
Rooms availabl*
far anfc
co//ege students. 30 $ . Fairview St., phone; 748-2107
after 5:30 pm.
EAGLE EYE
page 4
Monday, Sepiemher 9, 1974
Lock Haven Stale College
College Trustees
c o n t . from page 1
s e s s i o n s down from that oi
the previous year. Robinson
s t a t e d , " t h e enrollment (summer) picture i.s reason for
c o n c e r n " . Board Presideni
Jamouneau interjected thai
with the current inflation
and lack of eniplnymcnl, the
enrollment niiuhl incteusc.
Dr. Robinson .iiated, bowever, that many sludonls
who bad pre-rcgiMcreil lor
the siunmer ses.sions were
unable to attend. Ihosc .students were forced to Uikc
summer
jobs
to
in.surc
sufficient funds tor IIK' coming year. Robinson recoinmended that a task toi'tc incliKimj; A P S C l ' f , students,
and iidniinislrntors he formed
!o " t a k e a hard close Kuik
al Ihc .suMiinor scbuol prograiii.s".
.\n analvM.s of ibc fiscal oullook lor tlu' school
year was provided b\ Dr.
Russell
\iniiken,
vueprcsidcnl Ut adiiiinisir.ii ion.
lie staled,''! Ii.ive a shorl
sad .storv lo P''^'* alonn".
Althougli the fiscal operations for 7-4-7.'' showed .in
increase over the 7.^74 figures, there u.is slill a reduction of t ()07,000. froni
Ihe amouni requested. Cerlain areas th.il will feel
this pinch more ihaii others
include
educalional
.iiKi
lilirary supplies, eonlr.ieled
supplies, and other supplies.
The vice-presidenl saivl thai
if supplenviual alloealions
again come Irom ibe ^ ' a t e ,
Ihe monev will be used primarily for these areas.
l^e.sidenl Hamblin leported on Ihe diserimin.ilion
c a s e involving the Delia
Z e l a Sorority and ibe Department of F.ducation. Il was
resolved by ihe National
C h a p t e r ' s Chicago lavkver
that Della Zela would cease
and desist from engaging m
any practices that could he
considered
discriminuiory.
The Department of Education
then agreed to drop the
charges against the local
chapter of the sorority.
Hamblin stated that a
letter had been received from
the Department of Education
concerning remission of fees
for faculty dependents. The
department said each indi
vidua! college was responsible for Iheir own decision
on the remission policy. Mr.
William Williams, member of
ihe hoard of trustees, reported on the study committee's
decision
concerning
this
urea.
The commiltee recommended
reieclion ol
fee
remissions In facully men>bers. .After much d i s c a s s i o n
a vole was t.iken. With four
members voling " y e s " and
one member voting " p r e s e n t "
It was neeessarv lo lable
llie
matter
unlil
Ihe
November me el ing.
Renny
eonimued from page -
•Cars A Repairs - US
Dcpl.
of
Transportuliop
hxal branch.
.All Ihe above a d d r e s s e s
may be found in ihe telephone directory.
•.Appliances
- .vlajor
Appliance Aclion Panel, 20
N. W.icker Drive, Chicago,
II. 60606.
•I'.cology
linvii onmental Control Administration, I S Depi. of llt:W, 56tX)
fishers
Lane, Rockville,
MD 21)8 .S2.
Concert
com mue ll from page 2
was Ihe most affected by
the incident al Oaxaca.
.Allan (LaVern) Lanier
bandies keyboards and rhythm
for the IKX', aixl generally
holds
things logclher. .A
scholar 'athlete
at
heart,
.Allan's greatest innuenccs
have been Baudelaire and
Hryanl (bnmietle, thai i s ) .
' The rhythm is covered
in .1 nmst macho manner by
Ihe
IViuchard
Brothers:
Albert (Prince Omega) on
drums, and Jiw on b u s s .
Albert
has
ihe
Derek
Sanderson mustache, Joe the
Mel Schaeler moves.
Since the e c l i p s e s ui
Oaxaca, Transmaniacon h a s
become the group's theme.
It their vision was somewhat
darkened by Ihe experience
so were tlieir mu-sicai concepts: the first eight songs
on Iheir debul
Columbia
album, " T h e Blue Oyster
Cull,"
deal
primordally
* will get his scholarship af* with
violence and murd'
"Transmaniacon
\.
is aNiut bikers (MC-Motorcvcle Club>.
" I ' m On The Lamb But
I Ain't No S h e e p " h a s a
well-defined
political
connotation inborn, and coricearns scandals within the
stoned halls of Columbia
University which fleeced a
number of parents and studenis during the mid-fifties.
" ( T h e n Came) The L a s t
Days
Of May"
is
the
resurrection ballad inspired
by four Stoney Brook drug
dealers who were bumped
off in Arizona Before thes
could
slash
the
loot.
"Stairway T o The S t a r s "
deals wilh Ihe milieu of hitand-run
violence,
while
"Before
The
Kiss,
A
Redcap"
is
a
tortured
story set in thr city of Babylon. I t ' s aboul Conray's Bar
in
Babylon,
New
York.
"Screams"
talks of the
ominosoid, v*hile "Slie's .As
Beautiful .As A F o o t " is an
R. Melizer special
describing the violent dangers
of fo On Flame With Rock & R o l l "
/ the Blue Oyster Cull
anthem, and although the
crowd is not required lo
stand thioughout, the b a n d ' s
logo
is usually
saluted.
The concept is broken
at this point to give the vinyl
a break. " T h e Workshop Of
The Telescope " ia a supernatural epic sung with eyes
closed, behind dark g l a s s .
The album ends on a mildly
optimistic note, as "Redeerrie d " describes the redemption of Sir R a s t u s Bear by a
song.
The theme throughout
is
clearly
osirificalion.
Lyrics were written in large
part by rock critics Sandy
Pearlman and R. Meltzer,
while the music stems from
the guts of the boys g^j
their production crew.
Seventeen
murders
occurred within twelve blocks
of the studio during the
production of the " T h e Blue
Oyster C u l t . "
Football Team
continued from
page 3
and offensive tackle for the
Bald Eagles.
Clark, who transferred
from
the Naval .Vcaiiemv,
weighs in at 20T, and stands
6-2. He started al linebacker
last year for Lock Haven.
Lock Haven is preping
for i t ' s .September 14 opener
against Lycoming in the ilh
annual Fez Bowl.
Media of