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Vol. XIX No. 62
Friday Feb. 4,1977
SCC approves
new Eagle Eye
By
JULIE
B R E N N A N they are registering. The
SCC stated that the faculty
evaluations as they are
given now do not serve this
purpose and that they are
in no way helpful to
students.
Jeff Calkins, chairperson
of the Election Committee
reported that a Senatorial
Election is scheduled for
February 7. Petitions of
person running for Senator
are due February 4 in the
Secretary's office, no later
than 3 pm.
Second Vice President
Jack
Sohnleitner
announced that there are
coffeehouses scheduled for
every weekend in February. The dates for these
coffeehouses are as follows:
February S, 12, 18, and 26.
In yet another field of
entertainment, the Cultural
Affairs Committee reported
that plans are in progress
for a Folk and Fine Arts
Festival to be held sometime next fall. The festival
would include both college
students and residents of
Lock Haven.
Chairperson of
the
The Student Cooperative
Council held its February 2
meeting in the lobby of
Gross Hall. President Mike
Hanna began the meeting
by announcing to the
Senate that Professor John
Bilski had been approved
by President Hamblin as
the new SCC Advisor. Mr.
Bilski will be replacing Mr.
Larry Lebin who had
recently resigned from the
SCC position.
The proposal to print the
Eagie Eye two days per
week was brought before
the Senate and was
approved. The Eagle Eye
will now be published on
Tuesdays and Fridays in a
tabloid form.
Another motion that wa.
approved by the Senate was
to pursue the publication of
a faculty evaluation that
would be run by the
students
instead
of
APSCUF. The reasoning
behind this wa accordine to the Senate, is
to help the students in
choosing a professor when
con't on p. 4, col. 6
THE SCC'S EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE- met with the Senate on Wednesday night in Gross HaH. [From left to
right- Sue Daum, Recording Secretary; Jack Sohnlreitner, 2nd Vice President; Jane Bolduc, 1st Vice President;
Mike Hanna, President and Rick Mather, Parliamentarian. [Photo by BRUCE RUBIN1
Social Committee lacks funds for programs
By DAWN MARGAUAGE
The Social Committee,
chaired by Sherry Cowperthwait is presently at a
standstill. When asked why
BCS will sponsor "Feelin' Good
By PAT SMITH
February promises to be
a busy and entertaining
month for all, thanks to the
Black Cultural Society.
The Black Cultural
Society is a student
organization dedicated to
Black culture. According to
the president, Felicia
Monts, membership numbers around twenty-five
students. Other officers
include: Chalise Anderson,
vice president;
Alice
7J
Woods, secretary; Julia
Smith, treasurer and parliamentarian, Larry Jones.
The week of February 6
to 12 has been designated a
Black Arts Festival. Something is scheduled for
almost
every
night.
Monday brings two events.
"Feelin' Good," a national
theatrical company will t>e
performing at 8 pm in Sloan
Aditorium. There will also
be the dedication of the
Black Cultural Center,
located under the computer
center, at 2 pm.
On Tuesday, a student
group will perform a
modern dance program at 8
pm in Sloan Auditorium.
Friday at 8 pm, in Sloan,
"The Latent Image," from
Harrisburg, will offer a jazz
con't on p. 4, col. 5
nothing is being done, she
simply replied, " W e ' r e
broke."
The Social Committee
began the fall semester
with a budget of $19,900,
but the Outlaws/Ozark
Mountain Daredevils and
Rusty Weir Concert which
was sponsored by the
committee took a large
portion of that budgetapproximately $10,000.
However, to the committee's credit, the concert
profited $4,000, one of the
few profitable concerts in
LHS history. The $4,000
was then turned over to the
SCC general fund with a
stipulation that it would be
returned to the Social
Committee in the spring.
Now the SCC has
informed the committee
that the money cannot be
taken out of the general
fund till next semesterand the committee is left
with only $4,000 to meet
expenses. Out of this
$4,000, approximately
$2500 is used for the weekly
cartoon and movie whicli
the committee plans. This
leaves about $1500 for the
Raub Hall tape heist is Ironic*
CANDEE FULLERTON
A delayed theft report
was received by the campus
police on January 26, 1977.
The library reported the
theft of a cassette recorder.
Law Enforcement's investigation revealed that on
December 16, 1976, a tape
recorder was taken from
the lounge in Raub Hall.
The machine had been
placed there by a student.
A professor had instructed
him to put it here so that his
students could come by and
listen to the recording.
Apparently this instructor
taught his lesson very well,
because when he returned
an hour later, the recorder
and cassette on "Shoplifting" had both vanished.
Mr. Carl Nelson of Law
Enforcement and Safety
con 'I on p. 4, col. 1
RHA needs more student input
F E E L I N ' G O O D - A Black musical, traces the musical
origins of the Black man's music from the 19th
century minstrel shows to today's rock/disco
explosion.
By DJAMAL MEKIDECHE RHA. "The reason for this,
is because nothing special
has been happening on
"The main goal of RHA,
campus y e t , " Ferrara
this semester, is to have
added.
more activities for the
students and spend money
Ferrara also stated that,
as wisely as we can,"
"This semester the RHA
stated Jim Ferrara, chairand the SCC are trying to
man of the RHA Executive
work more closely. Mike
Board. Ferrara, a junior
Hanna, President of SCC
from Lake Wallenpoucke,
and Jean Bolduc, Vice
Pennsylvania, announced
President, have attended
that there is a lack of
some RHA meetings."
student participation in the
Ferrara commented that
participation in the juaiciai
board system should be
improved, because if a
student is taken before the
board, he has to wait for the
entire semester to be tried.
"This puts more pressure
on the student's life style
on campus." He added,
"This system is here to
help take pressure off and
not put
ipressure on the
con't on p. 4, col. 3
committee co work with this
semester, which includes
parents weekend and
spring weekend.
The
closest
the
committee came to receiving any funds was from
SAC (Senate Appropriations Committee) who
wanted very much to help
but are also coping with a
tight budget.
Cowperthwait says that
at the present time, there is
one slight possibility of a
spring concert, if a
promoter will come in and
run the show-however this
is still being negotiated.
Having the job of
chairperson of the Social
Committee and organizing
its 20 members seems to
con'r on p. 4, col. 2
Sound minds
needed foi
SAC meeting
It is a well known fact
that athletes need strong
bodies to compete on
intercollegiate levels. But
when it comes to budget
matters, according to Joe
Harper, SCC Treasurer,
SAC (Senate Appropriations Committee) needs
athletes with sound minds.
The budget for next
year is being considered
early this spring and the '
SAC wants to get students
involved with how their
activity fee is spent.
Thursday, February 10,
1977, a brief meeting will
be conducted by SAC to
hear and air gnefs within
the Athletic Department
con't on p. 4, col. 3
page 2
todou'is
editorial
JOHNNY - What is APSCUF?
~
DADDY - It's my faculty union.
JOHNNY - Faculty union?
D A D D Y - Yes, It's a group of almost all the college
professors on campus that work for such things as
bigger salaries and health insurance for you, me
and mummy.
JOHNNY • Daddy, what is the faculty evaluation?
D A D D Y - It's a questionaire about me and the
other teachers at school.
JOHNNY - Why?
D A D D Y - It's a means for extending opportunities
for continuous professional development.
JOHNNY - Huh!
DADDY Eat your peas!
JOHNNY - Who does them?
DADDY - Students.
JOHNNY • What do the students use them for?
DADDY - They don't use them. They're not
allowed to. APSCUF won't let them. They're for us.
J O H N N Y - What do you use them for?
D A D D Y - Johnny sit up straight and finish your
dinner!
JOHNNY - But if students don't use them, why do
they fill them out?
D A D D Y - Ask your mother!
What can possibly be the coimection between Mozart and
a 100-acre farm in Nelson, New Hampshire
well, how
about the Apple Hill Chamber Players.
In the midst ofthe New England woodland lies a farm that
in appearance seems no different than any other in the area.
There's a bam, cows, chickens, sheds, and everything else
you would expect to see. At the end ofthe lane of course is a
typical old farmhouse well occupied, but that's where the
similarity ends. The occupants are not your run-of-the-mill
New England farmers. They are in fact the members of the
Apple Hill Chamber Players, an ensemble rising steadily in
popularity throughout the eastern United States.
Six years ago, Gene Rospv, a cellist from New York City,
gathered together some noted musicians, some money, and
they all headed for New Hampshire. The Apple Hill Farm,
which they created, has now become a highly acclaimed
center for students of chamber music. Each summer the
farm is flooded by promising young musicians. The students
spend their vacations indulging in the best of two worlds,
against the backdrop of rural America complete with the
aroma of fresh-made bread drifting from the farmhouse
kitchen they leam the techniques which someday could
make them famous musicians.
The Apple Hill Players, who act as faculty during the
workshops, are a highly talented group. Six of the Players
are graduates of the famed Juilliard School of Music, one is
chairman of the music department of the New England
Conservatory, and another is on the faculty of Tufts
University. Being young of heart as well as young of age
they are noted for bringing a new dimension into the works
Of such composers of chamber music as Bach and Mozart.
After the center has closed for the winter the ensemble
begins an extensive season of concert tours.
(^"^^ ^'^ i.^'^ ^\m
Today I am proud to present the first of a one-part series
of interviews with Dr. Howard K. Congdon, the much
renouned associate professor of philosophy here at LHS. Dr.
Congdon, who has been described as a maniacal madman by
one of his friends, has recently finished a book entitled "The
Pursuit of Death." No, this book is not the diary of suicidal
maniac; rather, it is a philosophical look at the subject of
death. Dr. Congdon's new book (which is out in paperback),
as well as a few controversial statements he has made
concerning such things as the immorality of college
students, moved me to interview him. The interview was a
pleasure to do and I can safely say that Howard K. Congdon
is not a maniacal madman in any sense of the word. Howie
would be the first one to tell you however, that he la a little
bit weird. (The following are excerpts from the
aforementioned interview.)
Vernon: I'm sure a vast majority of studnets will read your
book.
Congdon: Well, three or four maybe.
Vernon: And I'm sure they'd want to know your personal
belief about death.
Congdon: I've had a lot of students ask me exactly that
question and it bothers me in a way because I think it's
difficult for a student to sense that his position, with respect
to an analysis of death, is pretty much on a par with my own.
In terms of our experience with death we're both pretty
equal. I haven't experienced it and presumably he hasn't
either. So then, my opinion in one sense is pretty irrelevant.
And I find that students have a very strong tendency, when
they wrestle with a very difficult question such as an
analysis of death, to try and find the answer. They have a
tendency to try and find that answer in the authorities,
which would be considered me in this case. I really think
that's a mistake.
(Space does not permit me to present Dr. Congdon's
complex personal beliefs about death. Let me just say that
he is leaning towards the idea of an ego-death but not of a
total lack of existence. For a more in-depth answer talk to
him yourself or pick up his book).
Vemon: You have made a fantastic claim. You say that
college students are the most immoral group of people to be
found anywhere.
Congdon: I consider them to be among the most immoral
groups.
Vernon: Not the top?
Congdon: Maybe I did say the top. I think I have to make a
couple of adjustments. One is I have to retract it. (Laughs)
It's simply false - OK. I mean I have to back off from the
claim that college students are the most immoral of all the
different identifiable groups in society. The second
adjustment I want to make is that I woold stick with it to this
extent. I think that college students as a group are among
the most amoral of all groups. Now, the difference between
amoral and immoral is that an immoral person I consider to
be a person with at least a sense of morality. This is the kind
of person who will acknowledge in his honest moments that
yes this is something I shouldn't be doing, and he's
bothered. What startles me about college students is that I
find a very strong attitude on the part of a lot of college
students, that there's nothing wrong with cheating on an
exam, there's nothing wrong with ripping off the bookstore,
there's nothing wrong with taking books fi-om the library
unsigned and so on. The only hassle there is to make sure
/ou don't get caught. I've had many students who I find
have a built-in plagiarism, bad plagiarism, out and out
charlatanism you know. And the only thing that bothers
them is that they got caught and can they do now to make up
their grade. There's a kind of intellectual interest in
morality among college students but not an emotional
commitment.
Vernon: Why do you think that is?
Congdon: I don't know. I can spin a theory off the top of my
head I suppose, to the effect that, a college student may
sense for example that he's been tossed into a sea. There's
on land in sight and he swims in absolutely any direction
and they all seem to be equally valid. I think that many
students have a sense that the old prescriptions and
proscriptions no longer apply. I think that along with that
there's a certain lack of let's say a conceptual framework in
which you form your opinions. If you do find yourself in the
middle of an ocean and there's no land in sight, well in
which say will you swim? It may be that you'll swim
randomly for awhile. It may be that you'll just thrash around
in place for awhile or it may be that you'll sink and drown.
On the other hand it may occur to you to look for something
stable, let's say the sun, so at least you'll be swimming in
the same direction.
Vernon: Was there a point in you career as a philosopher
that you thought you had enough philosophical knowledge
to start smoking a pipe?
Congdon: I started smoking a pipe before I became a
philosopher.
Vernon: 1 always think that philosophers sit around and at
some point say, "OK, now I know enough to start smoking a
pipe."
Congdon: (Laughs) I'm inclined to believe that I started
smoking a pipe because the Methodist Church told me I
really shouldn't.
K-..:*I, «
— Keith Vernon
Mather hopes to link SCC and RHA
By M A R I E M C N A M A R A
Staff Reporter
Rick Mather, SCC's
iiewly appointed pariimentarian, was recently asked
what is happening with the
constitution of the SCC.
Mather commented that
right now the SCC would
like to form a new
committee that would act as
a link to the Residence Hall
Association (RHA). A
report would be given at
Letter
To the Editor,
As part of the 76-77 Artist's Series members of the Apple
Hill Chamber Players will perform in concert in Price
Auditorium. The concert will be Wednesday, February 9 at
8 o'clock. It promises to be. an enjoyable evening of music.
General admission is 2.50. Admission is free with a
validated LHS ID. All tickets will be available at the door
one hour prior to curtain.
Friday Feb. 4,1977
EAGLEEYE
Recently tne price of
dairy products has been on
the decline. Yet, in spite of
this decrease, the Eagle
Wing has opted to raise the
price of ice cream and milk.
In my opinion, the manager(s) of the Eagle Wing
are using the current
increase in other products,
such as coffee and citrus
fruit, as a screen to cover
up petty
profiteering
designed to take unfair
advantage of Student Union
patrons.
Financially Strained
Student
each meeting, acting as a
coordinate activity of the
two organizations.
There are no major
changes in the constitution
as of now, although an
amendment is now in the
process of being written. It
states that the pariimentarian's vote in the senate
should be abolished due to
the fact that he may take
sides.
"Most parlimentarians,"
said Mather, "Do not vote
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in the senate because it
isn't his job to take sides
but to be objective. He
should be sure that the
correct procedures are
used."
Mather also stated that
the SCC needs a new set of
election rules that will
cover almost anything.
Professor John Washbum
is willing to help Mather
and Jeff Caulkins establish
this new set of rules.
Mather thinks his position is an important one,
not so much as to the
decision making process,
but when attending meetings, he creates an
atmosphere of trying to
make things work.
The Lock Haven State College
Eagle Eye
AN INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER
The Eagta Eye is published twice weekly by Student
Publications of Lock Haven State Coilege. Our office is
located on the ground floor of the Parson's Union Building.
Phone 748-5531 or ext. 456.
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. Ail letters must be
signed but names wili be withheld from publication on
request. The Editor reserves the right to ask contributors to
edit or rewrite their letters if they are considered slanderous,
libelous or too lengthy.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
JULIA MCGOVERN
MANAGING EDITOR
PHILIP BURLINGAME
NEWS EDITOR
Susan Shelly
MEN'S SPORTS EDITOR
Doug Qrlete
WOMEN'S SPORTS EDITOR....:
Julio Brennan
COPY EDITOR
Kail Brenneman
PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Bruoo Rubin
COMPOSITION EDITOR
John Vukovic
ADVISOR
Dr. Saundra Hybela
GENERAL MANAGER
Evalyn F M M T
Friday Feb. 4,1977
page 3
EAGLEEYE
Huskies outswim LHS women 87-43
By A N D I H O F F M A N
Staff Repwrter'
Last Friday, during the
outside snow blizzard, the
Bloomsburg Gals snowed
the Lock Haven Women's
Swim Team by a score of
87-43. It was the first defeat
of the season. Their record
now stands at 1-1.
Nancy Crouthamel and
Joy Sundberg were the only
double winners in the meet.
Crouthamel captured firsts
in both 1 m. and 3 m. diving
events. Teammate Amy Jo
Wolford placed third in the
1 m. diving competition.
Sundberg outswam her
opponents in both backstroke events.
The first event of the
meet, the 200 Medley
Relay, was a close finish.
The Bloomsburg team just
finished ahead of the LHS
team of Sundberg, Ewell,
Schaal, and Duddy.
Mary Ann Loughlin
managed a third place in
the 200 yard freestyle
event. Bloomsburg jumped
to an early 15-1 lead.
Swimming powerhouse
Selma Bjorklund was slow
out of the blocks, but once
she hit the water, she
outdistanced all her competitors to capture first place.
In the 50 breaststroke
event, Linda Saxinger
turned in a fine personal
performance but was only
good enough for a third
place.
After a false start, Carol
Duddy finished second in
the 50 freestyle sprint
Bjorkland and teammate
Loughlin combined for
second and third place
finishes respectively in the
500 fi-eestyle event.
In the 100 yard breaststroke, Cindy Ewell managed a third place finish.
The final event of the day
was the 200 freestyle relay.
Sundberg, Loughlin, Hip,
and Duddy swam to
another second place relay
finish
behind t h e
Bloomsburg team.
On February 5, the
Women's Swim Team will
travel to Ithaca College,
New York to compete
against Comell College.
^^ir^^it^^it^^^^^
Women's Sports Schedule^
Friday, Febmaiy 4:
Womens Basketball at Millersville State College
- 3:00 pm.
Saturday, Febmaiy 5:
Womens Gymnastics vs. Frostburg State College at
Zimmerii Gym - 1:00 pm.
Womens Swimming vs. Cornell - Ithaca at Ithaca
- 2:00 pm.
Tuesday, Febmaiy 8s
Womens Basketball at Ursinus College - 3:00 pm.
Thursday, February 10:
Womens Basketball vs. Edinboro State College at
Thomas Field House - 4:00 pm.
Womens Gymnastics vs. Edinboro State College at
Zimmerii Gym - 4:00 pm.
I UP rolls over Haven gym team
Sue Woolston received a
By J U L I E
B R E N N A N 7.00 and 6.15 respectively.
third place honor with a
Freshman
Darcy
Hill
Sports Editor
score of 7.40 for Lock
placed second in the floor
Haven.
The
Lock
Haven exercises with a 7.60, and
W o m e n ' s Gymnastics
Team fell victim to the
Indiana University of Pennsylvania gymnasts Tuesday
afternoon at Indiana. When
the final results were
tallied, the score read Lock
Haven, 106.85, Indiana,
107.15, a margin of only .3
(three tenths of a point).
Saturday afternoon Roberto Duran successfully defended
"We were way behind
his lightweight crown against 22 year old Vilomar
half way through the
Fernandez by knocking out the forth ranked challenger in
m e e t , " stated Coach
the 13th round. The battle was not an easy one for Duran,
who scored his 47th KO against young Fernandez. The
DeWette, "and the girls
challenger held his own throughout the first seven rounds,
came back and really gave
but in the eighth Fernandez was hurt with a powerful right
100%of their effort; I was
hand that marked the beginning ofthe end. The 10th, 11th,
very proud of them."
and 12th rounds saw the challenger take punch after punch.
In the Vaulting competiFinally in the 13th, a thundering right to the body proved
tion , sophomore Sue
more then Fernandez could handle and he went down to the
Woolston placed second
floor for the count.
with a score of 8.10.
On the uneven parallel
Throughout the fight, Jerry Quarry, a leading contender
for the heavyweight title before his retirement a few years
bars, sophomore Sue
back, kept commenting about how good Duran looked and
Richart and freshman
how the kind of boxing that this crowd saw would never be
Martha Brandell tied for
seen in a heavyweight bout. He was right.
third place honors with a
6.35 score.
From the opening bell the two 135 pounders came out
swinging, unlike two heavyweights who would waste the
The
balance
beam
first couple of rounds feeling each other out. The
routines saw junior Barbara
lightweights tend to be more exciting, more brutal than
Spisak place second and
their heavier counterparts. Also, in Saturdays bout Duran
sophomore Kim Mann
defended his title without showboating or clowning with the
place third with scores of
crowd as was the case in previous heavyweight title
matches.
Even though lightweight fights arefiercer,the big men
held the key to big money; that was Muhammad Ali.
Bald Eagles (11-3-1). A JV
Whatever you may think of Ali he still was the single most
match against Steven's
important factor in the reincarnation of boxing. Ali was
Trade will start at 6 pm,
good, Ali was champion, and Ali was controversial. Ali
and the Varsity encounter
would tear his opponents confidence to shreads before he
begins at 8 pm. Doors will
entered the ring, and his opponents head before he lefi it.
open at 5 pm. Big match-up
of the evening will pit
Ali was good and he was loud. The combination of the two
LHS's ft-eshman, 275 lb.
made him and whoever he fought millionaires. The good
heavyweight, Gregg
fighters, the quiet ones like Duran, must still labor with
Koontz (13-6) against Pitt's
smaller purses and relative obscurity that go along with just
255 lb. Mark Stepanovich
being good. Perhaps Saturdays fight will cut boxers like
(8-2). The Bald Eagles are
Duran in on a piece of the pie.
now ranked 10th in the
East; Pitt is ranked 5th.
Campus Notes
Student series tickets for
Len Rucci, middle linebacker for the Bald Eagles, led the
S3.00 for all three sessions
team in tackles this past season with 159 in 10 games. Rucci
of the Eastern Wrestling
was also elected to be one of the captains for next years
League Championships are
squad...I caught the first act of the girl's basketball
now on sale at the performance entitled "Destruction of Juniata." The girls
Wrestling Office, Thomas
scored fifty points with fast breaks and an excellent full
Field House, and in the court press. The second act was just as good with the girls
Athletic Director's office,
breaking the century mark for the second time this season.
Zimmerii. LHS will host the
EWL on March 5th and 6th.
- -Jim Doran
All S o r t s off
iPQRTS
LHSC PINNING ARTIST- Al Fricke has chocked up an
outstanding 10-3 record and has scored 13 falls this
season.
Bloomsburg ipsets Lock Haven 23-18
By DAVE BROPHY
Bloomsburg State (9-3)
topped LHS (11-4-1), 23-18,
last evening before a large
crowd at Bloomsburg. The
Huskies (Ranked 20th in
nation) won the pivotal
match at 142 lbs. to turn
back the Bald Eagles'
chance for victory.
Veteran Bloomsburg 142
pounder, Carl Poff needed
4 time-outs to defeat Bald
Eagle freshman Greg
Geisler, 7-6. Geisler outwrestled Poff but lost the
match on a questionable
two-point near fall in the
3rd period.
Scoring wins for the Bald
Eagles were 118 pounder
Tim McCamley (15-0-1)
who
blasted
Dave
McCollum, 21-2; undefeated 158 pounder George
Way (15-0-1) who won
easily over Dan Lechner,
8-0; and the season's major
upset when 275 pound
freshman, Gregg Koontz,
scored a fall over one of the
east's top heavyweights,
Tino Dimarco, in 6:52. The
popular Koontz was leading
10-8 when he used a
'headlock' to deck the 280
pound DiMarco. Koontz
has 13 falls in posting a
14-6 record.
The nation's 18th ranked
wrestling team, the University of Pittsburgh Panthers
(9-2) invade the House of
Noise for a very important
EWL encounter with the
Senior captain JoLynn
Leitzel was injured during
the meet when she was
performing her dismount
trom the uneven parallel
bars.
The next gymnastic meet
is scheduled for February
5, against Frostburg State
College. Starting time is
1:00 pm in the Zimmerii
Gym.
Bald Eagles
lose twice
at Juniata
By JOHN SYNDER
Staff Reporter
Monday
night our
basketball team traveled to
Juniata, and both the JV
and Varsity were beaten.
The Varsity cagers lost
65-57 to a team they had
beat by 20 pts. at home. On
the Juniata home court,
their team is 7-0, and with
the addition of a 6'7"
player, their squad is in a
different ballclub.
Juniata jumped the Bald
Eagles in the first half and
took a solid 38-22 halftime
lead. Our shooting was
poor, and the defense was
weak. In the second half
our shooting remained
mediocre, but the Haven
got as close as four pts.
with six minutes in the
second half. Juniata was
17/21 at the foul line while
Lock Haven was 3/8. Our
field goal percentage was
about 33 percent. Billy
Vassalo led the scoring with
18 points.
The JV team was
smashed by Juniata 89-66,
a team it had previously
beaten. Dave Roth had IS
pts; Dan Rebilas. 10; Chris
Meyer, 10; and Fred Tross,
10. The Crane only shot
about 3/18 field goals, and
the defense played poorly,
according to coach Bradley
Black.
Friday Feb. 4,1977
FAGLEEYE
page 4
raub hall tape heist is Ironic* sound minds needed for
conf. Irom page 1
feels there is little chance of
finding
the
recorder
because of the time lapse
before the crime was
reported.
During the weekend, a
fire was reported in Smith
Hall, room number 44. Law
Enforcement
officers
reported that a candle had
caused the blaze. Total
damage was about $75.00.
People at Lock Haven
State seem to find a variety
of activities to occupy their
time, but sometimes these
j>astimes
cause more
tmuuic than they're worth.
On Monday, January 31,
1977, the campus police
apprehended a person
driving a vehicle on the
sidewalks at North Hall.
Charges of disorderly
conduct with a vehicle will
be filed against the driver
with the local magistrate.
conr. trom page 1
social
cont. from page 1
com. from page 1
have its fhistrations. However, when asked how she
liked
her
job,
she
answered, "I love it."
Anthony A.
Torsell
REAL ESTATE
AND
INSURANCE
LOCK HAVEN
concerning how funds are
spent. Grades, scheduling,
and equity between teams
are a few of the matters to
be discussed informally. All
athletes or concerned students about athletics are
invited and encouraged to
bring their griefs^ complaints, and attention, as
well as considerations, to
the meeting at 8 pm
downstairs in the South
Lounge of the PUB.
rha needs more student input
students."
Meetings are usually
held every Wednesday
evening at 6 pm in the
teachers' lounge in Bentley
cafeteria. "Anyone is
welcome to attend,"
reported Ferrara.
COFFEHOUSE
featuring
RHA officers are as
follows: Vice Chairperson,
Mary Feusner; Secretary,
Connie Raoliney; Business
Manager, Leslie Clay; and
the advisor is Nancy
Meacham.
Haven club
is planning
New York trip
•RUBYFRUIT BEGONIA" I
The Lock Haven State
Lock Havan'a first ; ^ College History, Political
Science and Economics
all-famala band I
Club is sponsoring a field
trip to New York City on
SUNDAY FEB. 6, 1977
Friday, February 18, and
9 t 0 l 1 p.r
Saturday, February 19. The
PUB South Lounge
club will attend the exhibit
of Russian costumes at the
\s.OFLENS WEARER^ Metropolitan Museum of
Art.
Save on your supplies.
The group will stay
24 Tablet Enzymatic Cleanovernight at the Barbizon
er refill package. NO VIALS
Plaza Hotel. Cost for the
$4.85. This Includes mailtrip is a minimal $13. for
transportation and $13 for
ing charges. Orders are
accomodations. A $5
mailed the same day we
deposit must be paid by
receive your check. We
Friday by those students
have a complete selection
wishing to participate in the
of hard and soft lens
field trip. Anyone intersupplies at discount prices.
ested should contact Tim
Send for free price list:
Noone, president of the
Contact Lens Supply Center
club or Mr. Bilski at
341 E. Camel back Rd.,
extension 229, as soon as
Phoenix, Arizona 85012.
possible.
new eagle eye
bcs
will
conf. from page 1
program. Throughout the
week, student art work will
be on exhibit in Sloan.
The end of February
brings two more cultural
events to campus. On
February 22, poetess/
author Nikki Giovanni is
scheduled for a speaking
engagement. Donald Bogle
of Temple University, will
be here on February 28. He
will make use of lecture and
slides in a program dealing
with the history ofthe Black
in American film.
Ed Johns Barbershop
213 East Main Street
UNISEX CUTS
Cut Iha way YOU Ilka Itl
We specialize
in longer hair
Open Monday, Tuesday, Thursday. Friday:
8 to 5:30
Wednesday: 8 to noon
Salurday: 8 to 5
The National
Theatre Company
Production...
FOR SALE "
spirited
Palomino mare for experienced rider. Asking $275.
Caii Robin at 769-6043.
PHYS. ED MAJORS - Wiil
the two P.E. majors who
rescued three men on i-80
on Jan. 28, 1977, please
Inquire at the mallroom
about a letter addressed to
them.
HEALTH FILES are
available at the Clinton
County office of the
American Cancer Society,
72 E. Church St., Lock
Haven; 748-6072. FREE/
I
•vv
^ ^ ^
Classifieds
The Ljock Haven State College SCC Cultural Affairs Committee presents
sV
conf. Irom page 1
Senate Appropriations
Committee Joe Harper
stated that there will be a
meeting
Thursday,
February 10, at 8 pm in the
PUB, for all athletes
interested in helping to
prepare the budget for the
1977-78 year.
The next SCC meeting is
scheduled for Wednesday,
February 16 at 7 pm in
High Hall.
Free with
VaUdLHSC
ID card!!!
MEN-WOMEN I Jobs on
ships! American. Foreign.
No experience required.
Excellent pay. Worldwide
travel. Summer Job or
career. Send $3.00 for
information. SEAFAX, Department K-14, Box 2049,
Port Angeles, Washington,
98362.
PHOTOGRAPHERS ~ Do
you have any photos of
which you are boastfully
proud?Want to see them in
print? Contribute them for
consideration In the 1977
Crucible, LHSC's literary
magazine. The final deadline for submission of any
written or artistic material
is
Monday,
Feb.
7.
Photographs will be accepted until Wed., Feb. 9.
Submissions may be made
to Tim Olnick, 312 High
Hall, or to Professor Larry
Lebin In 310 Raub, or at the
Student Publications office,
around fioor PUB.
DANCE ~ with "British
Leathers", Friday, Feb. 4,
Bentiey Hail Lounge, 10 to
1 a.m. Admission $.75 with
ID, $1.00 without. Sponsored by the Sigma Sigma
Sigma sorority.
GOOD
...a Biacic musical
Presented in association with the
LHSC Black Cultural Society
t
IVIONDAY, FEB. 7th
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 9th
Price Auditorium 8
We have a classic selection of
Valentine cards and gifts lor your
loved ones. Buy your Valentine, at
an extra treat, a box of our
fine selection of Russell
Main Street
Stover candles.
'-•*'' • ^ • * * ' ' f "•
Phone: 748-2805
ehant Bureau Hours
I
i;
Vol. XIX No. 62
Friday Feb. 4,1977
SCC approves
new Eagle Eye
By
JULIE
B R E N N A N they are registering. The
SCC stated that the faculty
evaluations as they are
given now do not serve this
purpose and that they are
in no way helpful to
students.
Jeff Calkins, chairperson
of the Election Committee
reported that a Senatorial
Election is scheduled for
February 7. Petitions of
person running for Senator
are due February 4 in the
Secretary's office, no later
than 3 pm.
Second Vice President
Jack
Sohnleitner
announced that there are
coffeehouses scheduled for
every weekend in February. The dates for these
coffeehouses are as follows:
February S, 12, 18, and 26.
In yet another field of
entertainment, the Cultural
Affairs Committee reported
that plans are in progress
for a Folk and Fine Arts
Festival to be held sometime next fall. The festival
would include both college
students and residents of
Lock Haven.
Chairperson of
the
The Student Cooperative
Council held its February 2
meeting in the lobby of
Gross Hall. President Mike
Hanna began the meeting
by announcing to the
Senate that Professor John
Bilski had been approved
by President Hamblin as
the new SCC Advisor. Mr.
Bilski will be replacing Mr.
Larry Lebin who had
recently resigned from the
SCC position.
The proposal to print the
Eagie Eye two days per
week was brought before
the Senate and was
approved. The Eagle Eye
will now be published on
Tuesdays and Fridays in a
tabloid form.
Another motion that wa.
approved by the Senate was
to pursue the publication of
a faculty evaluation that
would be run by the
students
instead
of
APSCUF. The reasoning
behind this wa accordine to the Senate, is
to help the students in
choosing a professor when
con't on p. 4, col. 6
THE SCC'S EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE- met with the Senate on Wednesday night in Gross HaH. [From left to
right- Sue Daum, Recording Secretary; Jack Sohnlreitner, 2nd Vice President; Jane Bolduc, 1st Vice President;
Mike Hanna, President and Rick Mather, Parliamentarian. [Photo by BRUCE RUBIN1
Social Committee lacks funds for programs
By DAWN MARGAUAGE
The Social Committee,
chaired by Sherry Cowperthwait is presently at a
standstill. When asked why
BCS will sponsor "Feelin' Good
By PAT SMITH
February promises to be
a busy and entertaining
month for all, thanks to the
Black Cultural Society.
The Black Cultural
Society is a student
organization dedicated to
Black culture. According to
the president, Felicia
Monts, membership numbers around twenty-five
students. Other officers
include: Chalise Anderson,
vice president;
Alice
7J
Woods, secretary; Julia
Smith, treasurer and parliamentarian, Larry Jones.
The week of February 6
to 12 has been designated a
Black Arts Festival. Something is scheduled for
almost
every
night.
Monday brings two events.
"Feelin' Good," a national
theatrical company will t>e
performing at 8 pm in Sloan
Aditorium. There will also
be the dedication of the
Black Cultural Center,
located under the computer
center, at 2 pm.
On Tuesday, a student
group will perform a
modern dance program at 8
pm in Sloan Auditorium.
Friday at 8 pm, in Sloan,
"The Latent Image," from
Harrisburg, will offer a jazz
con't on p. 4, col. 5
nothing is being done, she
simply replied, " W e ' r e
broke."
The Social Committee
began the fall semester
with a budget of $19,900,
but the Outlaws/Ozark
Mountain Daredevils and
Rusty Weir Concert which
was sponsored by the
committee took a large
portion of that budgetapproximately $10,000.
However, to the committee's credit, the concert
profited $4,000, one of the
few profitable concerts in
LHS history. The $4,000
was then turned over to the
SCC general fund with a
stipulation that it would be
returned to the Social
Committee in the spring.
Now the SCC has
informed the committee
that the money cannot be
taken out of the general
fund till next semesterand the committee is left
with only $4,000 to meet
expenses. Out of this
$4,000, approximately
$2500 is used for the weekly
cartoon and movie whicli
the committee plans. This
leaves about $1500 for the
Raub Hall tape heist is Ironic*
CANDEE FULLERTON
A delayed theft report
was received by the campus
police on January 26, 1977.
The library reported the
theft of a cassette recorder.
Law Enforcement's investigation revealed that on
December 16, 1976, a tape
recorder was taken from
the lounge in Raub Hall.
The machine had been
placed there by a student.
A professor had instructed
him to put it here so that his
students could come by and
listen to the recording.
Apparently this instructor
taught his lesson very well,
because when he returned
an hour later, the recorder
and cassette on "Shoplifting" had both vanished.
Mr. Carl Nelson of Law
Enforcement and Safety
con 'I on p. 4, col. 1
RHA needs more student input
F E E L I N ' G O O D - A Black musical, traces the musical
origins of the Black man's music from the 19th
century minstrel shows to today's rock/disco
explosion.
By DJAMAL MEKIDECHE RHA. "The reason for this,
is because nothing special
has been happening on
"The main goal of RHA,
campus y e t , " Ferrara
this semester, is to have
added.
more activities for the
students and spend money
Ferrara also stated that,
as wisely as we can,"
"This semester the RHA
stated Jim Ferrara, chairand the SCC are trying to
man of the RHA Executive
work more closely. Mike
Board. Ferrara, a junior
Hanna, President of SCC
from Lake Wallenpoucke,
and Jean Bolduc, Vice
Pennsylvania, announced
President, have attended
that there is a lack of
some RHA meetings."
student participation in the
Ferrara commented that
participation in the juaiciai
board system should be
improved, because if a
student is taken before the
board, he has to wait for the
entire semester to be tried.
"This puts more pressure
on the student's life style
on campus." He added,
"This system is here to
help take pressure off and
not put
ipressure on the
con't on p. 4, col. 3
committee co work with this
semester, which includes
parents weekend and
spring weekend.
The
closest
the
committee came to receiving any funds was from
SAC (Senate Appropriations Committee) who
wanted very much to help
but are also coping with a
tight budget.
Cowperthwait says that
at the present time, there is
one slight possibility of a
spring concert, if a
promoter will come in and
run the show-however this
is still being negotiated.
Having the job of
chairperson of the Social
Committee and organizing
its 20 members seems to
con'r on p. 4, col. 2
Sound minds
needed foi
SAC meeting
It is a well known fact
that athletes need strong
bodies to compete on
intercollegiate levels. But
when it comes to budget
matters, according to Joe
Harper, SCC Treasurer,
SAC (Senate Appropriations Committee) needs
athletes with sound minds.
The budget for next
year is being considered
early this spring and the '
SAC wants to get students
involved with how their
activity fee is spent.
Thursday, February 10,
1977, a brief meeting will
be conducted by SAC to
hear and air gnefs within
the Athletic Department
con't on p. 4, col. 3
page 2
todou'is
editorial
JOHNNY - What is APSCUF?
~
DADDY - It's my faculty union.
JOHNNY - Faculty union?
D A D D Y - Yes, It's a group of almost all the college
professors on campus that work for such things as
bigger salaries and health insurance for you, me
and mummy.
JOHNNY • Daddy, what is the faculty evaluation?
D A D D Y - It's a questionaire about me and the
other teachers at school.
JOHNNY - Why?
D A D D Y - It's a means for extending opportunities
for continuous professional development.
JOHNNY - Huh!
DADDY Eat your peas!
JOHNNY - Who does them?
DADDY - Students.
JOHNNY • What do the students use them for?
DADDY - They don't use them. They're not
allowed to. APSCUF won't let them. They're for us.
J O H N N Y - What do you use them for?
D A D D Y - Johnny sit up straight and finish your
dinner!
JOHNNY - But if students don't use them, why do
they fill them out?
D A D D Y - Ask your mother!
What can possibly be the coimection between Mozart and
a 100-acre farm in Nelson, New Hampshire
well, how
about the Apple Hill Chamber Players.
In the midst ofthe New England woodland lies a farm that
in appearance seems no different than any other in the area.
There's a bam, cows, chickens, sheds, and everything else
you would expect to see. At the end ofthe lane of course is a
typical old farmhouse well occupied, but that's where the
similarity ends. The occupants are not your run-of-the-mill
New England farmers. They are in fact the members of the
Apple Hill Chamber Players, an ensemble rising steadily in
popularity throughout the eastern United States.
Six years ago, Gene Rospv, a cellist from New York City,
gathered together some noted musicians, some money, and
they all headed for New Hampshire. The Apple Hill Farm,
which they created, has now become a highly acclaimed
center for students of chamber music. Each summer the
farm is flooded by promising young musicians. The students
spend their vacations indulging in the best of two worlds,
against the backdrop of rural America complete with the
aroma of fresh-made bread drifting from the farmhouse
kitchen they leam the techniques which someday could
make them famous musicians.
The Apple Hill Players, who act as faculty during the
workshops, are a highly talented group. Six of the Players
are graduates of the famed Juilliard School of Music, one is
chairman of the music department of the New England
Conservatory, and another is on the faculty of Tufts
University. Being young of heart as well as young of age
they are noted for bringing a new dimension into the works
Of such composers of chamber music as Bach and Mozart.
After the center has closed for the winter the ensemble
begins an extensive season of concert tours.
(^"^^ ^'^ i.^'^ ^\m
Today I am proud to present the first of a one-part series
of interviews with Dr. Howard K. Congdon, the much
renouned associate professor of philosophy here at LHS. Dr.
Congdon, who has been described as a maniacal madman by
one of his friends, has recently finished a book entitled "The
Pursuit of Death." No, this book is not the diary of suicidal
maniac; rather, it is a philosophical look at the subject of
death. Dr. Congdon's new book (which is out in paperback),
as well as a few controversial statements he has made
concerning such things as the immorality of college
students, moved me to interview him. The interview was a
pleasure to do and I can safely say that Howard K. Congdon
is not a maniacal madman in any sense of the word. Howie
would be the first one to tell you however, that he la a little
bit weird. (The following are excerpts from the
aforementioned interview.)
Vernon: I'm sure a vast majority of studnets will read your
book.
Congdon: Well, three or four maybe.
Vernon: And I'm sure they'd want to know your personal
belief about death.
Congdon: I've had a lot of students ask me exactly that
question and it bothers me in a way because I think it's
difficult for a student to sense that his position, with respect
to an analysis of death, is pretty much on a par with my own.
In terms of our experience with death we're both pretty
equal. I haven't experienced it and presumably he hasn't
either. So then, my opinion in one sense is pretty irrelevant.
And I find that students have a very strong tendency, when
they wrestle with a very difficult question such as an
analysis of death, to try and find the answer. They have a
tendency to try and find that answer in the authorities,
which would be considered me in this case. I really think
that's a mistake.
(Space does not permit me to present Dr. Congdon's
complex personal beliefs about death. Let me just say that
he is leaning towards the idea of an ego-death but not of a
total lack of existence. For a more in-depth answer talk to
him yourself or pick up his book).
Vemon: You have made a fantastic claim. You say that
college students are the most immoral group of people to be
found anywhere.
Congdon: I consider them to be among the most immoral
groups.
Vernon: Not the top?
Congdon: Maybe I did say the top. I think I have to make a
couple of adjustments. One is I have to retract it. (Laughs)
It's simply false - OK. I mean I have to back off from the
claim that college students are the most immoral of all the
different identifiable groups in society. The second
adjustment I want to make is that I woold stick with it to this
extent. I think that college students as a group are among
the most amoral of all groups. Now, the difference between
amoral and immoral is that an immoral person I consider to
be a person with at least a sense of morality. This is the kind
of person who will acknowledge in his honest moments that
yes this is something I shouldn't be doing, and he's
bothered. What startles me about college students is that I
find a very strong attitude on the part of a lot of college
students, that there's nothing wrong with cheating on an
exam, there's nothing wrong with ripping off the bookstore,
there's nothing wrong with taking books fi-om the library
unsigned and so on. The only hassle there is to make sure
/ou don't get caught. I've had many students who I find
have a built-in plagiarism, bad plagiarism, out and out
charlatanism you know. And the only thing that bothers
them is that they got caught and can they do now to make up
their grade. There's a kind of intellectual interest in
morality among college students but not an emotional
commitment.
Vernon: Why do you think that is?
Congdon: I don't know. I can spin a theory off the top of my
head I suppose, to the effect that, a college student may
sense for example that he's been tossed into a sea. There's
on land in sight and he swims in absolutely any direction
and they all seem to be equally valid. I think that many
students have a sense that the old prescriptions and
proscriptions no longer apply. I think that along with that
there's a certain lack of let's say a conceptual framework in
which you form your opinions. If you do find yourself in the
middle of an ocean and there's no land in sight, well in
which say will you swim? It may be that you'll swim
randomly for awhile. It may be that you'll just thrash around
in place for awhile or it may be that you'll sink and drown.
On the other hand it may occur to you to look for something
stable, let's say the sun, so at least you'll be swimming in
the same direction.
Vernon: Was there a point in you career as a philosopher
that you thought you had enough philosophical knowledge
to start smoking a pipe?
Congdon: I started smoking a pipe before I became a
philosopher.
Vernon: 1 always think that philosophers sit around and at
some point say, "OK, now I know enough to start smoking a
pipe."
Congdon: (Laughs) I'm inclined to believe that I started
smoking a pipe because the Methodist Church told me I
really shouldn't.
K-..:*I, «
— Keith Vernon
Mather hopes to link SCC and RHA
By M A R I E M C N A M A R A
Staff Reporter
Rick Mather, SCC's
iiewly appointed pariimentarian, was recently asked
what is happening with the
constitution of the SCC.
Mather commented that
right now the SCC would
like to form a new
committee that would act as
a link to the Residence Hall
Association (RHA). A
report would be given at
Letter
To the Editor,
As part of the 76-77 Artist's Series members of the Apple
Hill Chamber Players will perform in concert in Price
Auditorium. The concert will be Wednesday, February 9 at
8 o'clock. It promises to be. an enjoyable evening of music.
General admission is 2.50. Admission is free with a
validated LHS ID. All tickets will be available at the door
one hour prior to curtain.
Friday Feb. 4,1977
EAGLEEYE
Recently tne price of
dairy products has been on
the decline. Yet, in spite of
this decrease, the Eagle
Wing has opted to raise the
price of ice cream and milk.
In my opinion, the manager(s) of the Eagle Wing
are using the current
increase in other products,
such as coffee and citrus
fruit, as a screen to cover
up petty
profiteering
designed to take unfair
advantage of Student Union
patrons.
Financially Strained
Student
each meeting, acting as a
coordinate activity of the
two organizations.
There are no major
changes in the constitution
as of now, although an
amendment is now in the
process of being written. It
states that the pariimentarian's vote in the senate
should be abolished due to
the fact that he may take
sides.
"Most parlimentarians,"
said Mather, "Do not vote
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JER
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in the senate because it
isn't his job to take sides
but to be objective. He
should be sure that the
correct procedures are
used."
Mather also stated that
the SCC needs a new set of
election rules that will
cover almost anything.
Professor John Washbum
is willing to help Mather
and Jeff Caulkins establish
this new set of rules.
Mather thinks his position is an important one,
not so much as to the
decision making process,
but when attending meetings, he creates an
atmosphere of trying to
make things work.
The Lock Haven State College
Eagle Eye
AN INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER
The Eagta Eye is published twice weekly by Student
Publications of Lock Haven State Coilege. Our office is
located on the ground floor of the Parson's Union Building.
Phone 748-5531 or ext. 456.
Letters to the Editor are encouraged. Ail letters must be
signed but names wili be withheld from publication on
request. The Editor reserves the right to ask contributors to
edit or rewrite their letters if they are considered slanderous,
libelous or too lengthy.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
JULIA MCGOVERN
MANAGING EDITOR
PHILIP BURLINGAME
NEWS EDITOR
Susan Shelly
MEN'S SPORTS EDITOR
Doug Qrlete
WOMEN'S SPORTS EDITOR....:
Julio Brennan
COPY EDITOR
Kail Brenneman
PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Bruoo Rubin
COMPOSITION EDITOR
John Vukovic
ADVISOR
Dr. Saundra Hybela
GENERAL MANAGER
Evalyn F M M T
Friday Feb. 4,1977
page 3
EAGLEEYE
Huskies outswim LHS women 87-43
By A N D I H O F F M A N
Staff Repwrter'
Last Friday, during the
outside snow blizzard, the
Bloomsburg Gals snowed
the Lock Haven Women's
Swim Team by a score of
87-43. It was the first defeat
of the season. Their record
now stands at 1-1.
Nancy Crouthamel and
Joy Sundberg were the only
double winners in the meet.
Crouthamel captured firsts
in both 1 m. and 3 m. diving
events. Teammate Amy Jo
Wolford placed third in the
1 m. diving competition.
Sundberg outswam her
opponents in both backstroke events.
The first event of the
meet, the 200 Medley
Relay, was a close finish.
The Bloomsburg team just
finished ahead of the LHS
team of Sundberg, Ewell,
Schaal, and Duddy.
Mary Ann Loughlin
managed a third place in
the 200 yard freestyle
event. Bloomsburg jumped
to an early 15-1 lead.
Swimming powerhouse
Selma Bjorklund was slow
out of the blocks, but once
she hit the water, she
outdistanced all her competitors to capture first place.
In the 50 breaststroke
event, Linda Saxinger
turned in a fine personal
performance but was only
good enough for a third
place.
After a false start, Carol
Duddy finished second in
the 50 freestyle sprint
Bjorkland and teammate
Loughlin combined for
second and third place
finishes respectively in the
500 fi-eestyle event.
In the 100 yard breaststroke, Cindy Ewell managed a third place finish.
The final event of the day
was the 200 freestyle relay.
Sundberg, Loughlin, Hip,
and Duddy swam to
another second place relay
finish
behind t h e
Bloomsburg team.
On February 5, the
Women's Swim Team will
travel to Ithaca College,
New York to compete
against Comell College.
^^ir^^it^^it^^^^^
Women's Sports Schedule^
Friday, Febmaiy 4:
Womens Basketball at Millersville State College
- 3:00 pm.
Saturday, Febmaiy 5:
Womens Gymnastics vs. Frostburg State College at
Zimmerii Gym - 1:00 pm.
Womens Swimming vs. Cornell - Ithaca at Ithaca
- 2:00 pm.
Tuesday, Febmaiy 8s
Womens Basketball at Ursinus College - 3:00 pm.
Thursday, February 10:
Womens Basketball vs. Edinboro State College at
Thomas Field House - 4:00 pm.
Womens Gymnastics vs. Edinboro State College at
Zimmerii Gym - 4:00 pm.
I UP rolls over Haven gym team
Sue Woolston received a
By J U L I E
B R E N N A N 7.00 and 6.15 respectively.
third place honor with a
Freshman
Darcy
Hill
Sports Editor
score of 7.40 for Lock
placed second in the floor
Haven.
The
Lock
Haven exercises with a 7.60, and
W o m e n ' s Gymnastics
Team fell victim to the
Indiana University of Pennsylvania gymnasts Tuesday
afternoon at Indiana. When
the final results were
tallied, the score read Lock
Haven, 106.85, Indiana,
107.15, a margin of only .3
(three tenths of a point).
Saturday afternoon Roberto Duran successfully defended
"We were way behind
his lightweight crown against 22 year old Vilomar
half way through the
Fernandez by knocking out the forth ranked challenger in
m e e t , " stated Coach
the 13th round. The battle was not an easy one for Duran,
who scored his 47th KO against young Fernandez. The
DeWette, "and the girls
challenger held his own throughout the first seven rounds,
came back and really gave
but in the eighth Fernandez was hurt with a powerful right
100%of their effort; I was
hand that marked the beginning ofthe end. The 10th, 11th,
very proud of them."
and 12th rounds saw the challenger take punch after punch.
In the Vaulting competiFinally in the 13th, a thundering right to the body proved
tion , sophomore Sue
more then Fernandez could handle and he went down to the
Woolston placed second
floor for the count.
with a score of 8.10.
On the uneven parallel
Throughout the fight, Jerry Quarry, a leading contender
for the heavyweight title before his retirement a few years
bars, sophomore Sue
back, kept commenting about how good Duran looked and
Richart and freshman
how the kind of boxing that this crowd saw would never be
Martha Brandell tied for
seen in a heavyweight bout. He was right.
third place honors with a
6.35 score.
From the opening bell the two 135 pounders came out
swinging, unlike two heavyweights who would waste the
The
balance
beam
first couple of rounds feeling each other out. The
routines saw junior Barbara
lightweights tend to be more exciting, more brutal than
Spisak place second and
their heavier counterparts. Also, in Saturdays bout Duran
sophomore Kim Mann
defended his title without showboating or clowning with the
place third with scores of
crowd as was the case in previous heavyweight title
matches.
Even though lightweight fights arefiercer,the big men
held the key to big money; that was Muhammad Ali.
Bald Eagles (11-3-1). A JV
Whatever you may think of Ali he still was the single most
match against Steven's
important factor in the reincarnation of boxing. Ali was
Trade will start at 6 pm,
good, Ali was champion, and Ali was controversial. Ali
and the Varsity encounter
would tear his opponents confidence to shreads before he
begins at 8 pm. Doors will
entered the ring, and his opponents head before he lefi it.
open at 5 pm. Big match-up
of the evening will pit
Ali was good and he was loud. The combination of the two
LHS's ft-eshman, 275 lb.
made him and whoever he fought millionaires. The good
heavyweight, Gregg
fighters, the quiet ones like Duran, must still labor with
Koontz (13-6) against Pitt's
smaller purses and relative obscurity that go along with just
255 lb. Mark Stepanovich
being good. Perhaps Saturdays fight will cut boxers like
(8-2). The Bald Eagles are
Duran in on a piece of the pie.
now ranked 10th in the
East; Pitt is ranked 5th.
Campus Notes
Student series tickets for
Len Rucci, middle linebacker for the Bald Eagles, led the
S3.00 for all three sessions
team in tackles this past season with 159 in 10 games. Rucci
of the Eastern Wrestling
was also elected to be one of the captains for next years
League Championships are
squad...I caught the first act of the girl's basketball
now on sale at the performance entitled "Destruction of Juniata." The girls
Wrestling Office, Thomas
scored fifty points with fast breaks and an excellent full
Field House, and in the court press. The second act was just as good with the girls
Athletic Director's office,
breaking the century mark for the second time this season.
Zimmerii. LHS will host the
EWL on March 5th and 6th.
- -Jim Doran
All S o r t s off
iPQRTS
LHSC PINNING ARTIST- Al Fricke has chocked up an
outstanding 10-3 record and has scored 13 falls this
season.
Bloomsburg ipsets Lock Haven 23-18
By DAVE BROPHY
Bloomsburg State (9-3)
topped LHS (11-4-1), 23-18,
last evening before a large
crowd at Bloomsburg. The
Huskies (Ranked 20th in
nation) won the pivotal
match at 142 lbs. to turn
back the Bald Eagles'
chance for victory.
Veteran Bloomsburg 142
pounder, Carl Poff needed
4 time-outs to defeat Bald
Eagle freshman Greg
Geisler, 7-6. Geisler outwrestled Poff but lost the
match on a questionable
two-point near fall in the
3rd period.
Scoring wins for the Bald
Eagles were 118 pounder
Tim McCamley (15-0-1)
who
blasted
Dave
McCollum, 21-2; undefeated 158 pounder George
Way (15-0-1) who won
easily over Dan Lechner,
8-0; and the season's major
upset when 275 pound
freshman, Gregg Koontz,
scored a fall over one of the
east's top heavyweights,
Tino Dimarco, in 6:52. The
popular Koontz was leading
10-8 when he used a
'headlock' to deck the 280
pound DiMarco. Koontz
has 13 falls in posting a
14-6 record.
The nation's 18th ranked
wrestling team, the University of Pittsburgh Panthers
(9-2) invade the House of
Noise for a very important
EWL encounter with the
Senior captain JoLynn
Leitzel was injured during
the meet when she was
performing her dismount
trom the uneven parallel
bars.
The next gymnastic meet
is scheduled for February
5, against Frostburg State
College. Starting time is
1:00 pm in the Zimmerii
Gym.
Bald Eagles
lose twice
at Juniata
By JOHN SYNDER
Staff Reporter
Monday
night our
basketball team traveled to
Juniata, and both the JV
and Varsity were beaten.
The Varsity cagers lost
65-57 to a team they had
beat by 20 pts. at home. On
the Juniata home court,
their team is 7-0, and with
the addition of a 6'7"
player, their squad is in a
different ballclub.
Juniata jumped the Bald
Eagles in the first half and
took a solid 38-22 halftime
lead. Our shooting was
poor, and the defense was
weak. In the second half
our shooting remained
mediocre, but the Haven
got as close as four pts.
with six minutes in the
second half. Juniata was
17/21 at the foul line while
Lock Haven was 3/8. Our
field goal percentage was
about 33 percent. Billy
Vassalo led the scoring with
18 points.
The JV team was
smashed by Juniata 89-66,
a team it had previously
beaten. Dave Roth had IS
pts; Dan Rebilas. 10; Chris
Meyer, 10; and Fred Tross,
10. The Crane only shot
about 3/18 field goals, and
the defense played poorly,
according to coach Bradley
Black.
Friday Feb. 4,1977
FAGLEEYE
page 4
raub hall tape heist is Ironic* sound minds needed for
conf. Irom page 1
feels there is little chance of
finding
the
recorder
because of the time lapse
before the crime was
reported.
During the weekend, a
fire was reported in Smith
Hall, room number 44. Law
Enforcement
officers
reported that a candle had
caused the blaze. Total
damage was about $75.00.
People at Lock Haven
State seem to find a variety
of activities to occupy their
time, but sometimes these
j>astimes
cause more
tmuuic than they're worth.
On Monday, January 31,
1977, the campus police
apprehended a person
driving a vehicle on the
sidewalks at North Hall.
Charges of disorderly
conduct with a vehicle will
be filed against the driver
with the local magistrate.
conr. trom page 1
social
cont. from page 1
com. from page 1
have its fhistrations. However, when asked how she
liked
her
job,
she
answered, "I love it."
Anthony A.
Torsell
REAL ESTATE
AND
INSURANCE
LOCK HAVEN
concerning how funds are
spent. Grades, scheduling,
and equity between teams
are a few of the matters to
be discussed informally. All
athletes or concerned students about athletics are
invited and encouraged to
bring their griefs^ complaints, and attention, as
well as considerations, to
the meeting at 8 pm
downstairs in the South
Lounge of the PUB.
rha needs more student input
students."
Meetings are usually
held every Wednesday
evening at 6 pm in the
teachers' lounge in Bentley
cafeteria. "Anyone is
welcome to attend,"
reported Ferrara.
COFFEHOUSE
featuring
RHA officers are as
follows: Vice Chairperson,
Mary Feusner; Secretary,
Connie Raoliney; Business
Manager, Leslie Clay; and
the advisor is Nancy
Meacham.
Haven club
is planning
New York trip
•RUBYFRUIT BEGONIA" I
The Lock Haven State
Lock Havan'a first ; ^ College History, Political
Science and Economics
all-famala band I
Club is sponsoring a field
trip to New York City on
SUNDAY FEB. 6, 1977
Friday, February 18, and
9 t 0 l 1 p.r
Saturday, February 19. The
PUB South Lounge
club will attend the exhibit
of Russian costumes at the
\s.OFLENS WEARER^ Metropolitan Museum of
Art.
Save on your supplies.
The group will stay
24 Tablet Enzymatic Cleanovernight at the Barbizon
er refill package. NO VIALS
Plaza Hotel. Cost for the
$4.85. This Includes mailtrip is a minimal $13. for
transportation and $13 for
ing charges. Orders are
accomodations. A $5
mailed the same day we
deposit must be paid by
receive your check. We
Friday by those students
have a complete selection
wishing to participate in the
of hard and soft lens
field trip. Anyone intersupplies at discount prices.
ested should contact Tim
Send for free price list:
Noone, president of the
Contact Lens Supply Center
club or Mr. Bilski at
341 E. Camel back Rd.,
extension 229, as soon as
Phoenix, Arizona 85012.
possible.
new eagle eye
bcs
will
conf. from page 1
program. Throughout the
week, student art work will
be on exhibit in Sloan.
The end of February
brings two more cultural
events to campus. On
February 22, poetess/
author Nikki Giovanni is
scheduled for a speaking
engagement. Donald Bogle
of Temple University, will
be here on February 28. He
will make use of lecture and
slides in a program dealing
with the history ofthe Black
in American film.
Ed Johns Barbershop
213 East Main Street
UNISEX CUTS
Cut Iha way YOU Ilka Itl
We specialize
in longer hair
Open Monday, Tuesday, Thursday. Friday:
8 to 5:30
Wednesday: 8 to noon
Salurday: 8 to 5
The National
Theatre Company
Production...
FOR SALE "
spirited
Palomino mare for experienced rider. Asking $275.
Caii Robin at 769-6043.
PHYS. ED MAJORS - Wiil
the two P.E. majors who
rescued three men on i-80
on Jan. 28, 1977, please
Inquire at the mallroom
about a letter addressed to
them.
HEALTH FILES are
available at the Clinton
County office of the
American Cancer Society,
72 E. Church St., Lock
Haven; 748-6072. FREE/
I
•vv
^ ^ ^
Classifieds
The Ljock Haven State College SCC Cultural Affairs Committee presents
sV
conf. Irom page 1
Senate Appropriations
Committee Joe Harper
stated that there will be a
meeting
Thursday,
February 10, at 8 pm in the
PUB, for all athletes
interested in helping to
prepare the budget for the
1977-78 year.
The next SCC meeting is
scheduled for Wednesday,
February 16 at 7 pm in
High Hall.
Free with
VaUdLHSC
ID card!!!
MEN-WOMEN I Jobs on
ships! American. Foreign.
No experience required.
Excellent pay. Worldwide
travel. Summer Job or
career. Send $3.00 for
information. SEAFAX, Department K-14, Box 2049,
Port Angeles, Washington,
98362.
PHOTOGRAPHERS ~ Do
you have any photos of
which you are boastfully
proud?Want to see them in
print? Contribute them for
consideration In the 1977
Crucible, LHSC's literary
magazine. The final deadline for submission of any
written or artistic material
is
Monday,
Feb.
7.
Photographs will be accepted until Wed., Feb. 9.
Submissions may be made
to Tim Olnick, 312 High
Hall, or to Professor Larry
Lebin In 310 Raub, or at the
Student Publications office,
around fioor PUB.
DANCE ~ with "British
Leathers", Friday, Feb. 4,
Bentiey Hail Lounge, 10 to
1 a.m. Admission $.75 with
ID, $1.00 without. Sponsored by the Sigma Sigma
Sigma sorority.
GOOD
...a Biacic musical
Presented in association with the
LHSC Black Cultural Society
t
IVIONDAY, FEB. 7th
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 9th
Price Auditorium 8
We have a classic selection of
Valentine cards and gifts lor your
loved ones. Buy your Valentine, at
an extra treat, a box of our
fine selection of Russell
Main Street
Stover candles.
'-•*'' • ^ • * * ' ' f "•
Phone: 748-2805
ehant Bureau Hours
I
i;
Media of