BHeiney
Fri, 07/07/2023 - 14:59
Edited Text
Vol. XXIV N o : ^
Lock Haven State College
SCC Handles Big MoneySi Million A Year
By PAM YOBLONSKI
Nem Editor
One miUion dollars passes
through the hands of the
SCC throughout the year.
According to Don Beaver,
Treasurer of the SCC. this is
students' money.
The
amount includes total sales
from the bookstore and Eagle
Wing Snack Bar, plus the
revenues from the activity
fee.
This figure could be
misleading, though.
It
doesn't mean the SCC has
one mUlion doUars to spend.
This figttre represents the
amount of money the SCC
handles throughout the year
for day-to-day transactions.
These transactions include
allocations of money to smaU
clubs and committees, and
money brought in from
athletic
events,
the
bookstore, and snack bar.
The finance committee.
headed by Beaver, consists of
four members. Beaver said
their job is to "allocate the
revenues." They prepare a
budget for the SCC, and this
budget is then voted on by
the senate. The students on
the finance committee aren't
required
to
have
a
background in money
management, even though
such a large sum of money is
involved. There is an accountant and a financial advisor
to help the committee.
The SCC's anticipated income is $300,380.00 .Seventypercent of this is from activity fees. Other sources, such
as the bookstore and snack
bar, run on a break-even
basis. The profit from the
bookstore is used to remove it
from ite 40,000 doUar debt, a
goal which has been reached.
Beaver said that he doesn't
foresee a substantial increase
in book prices; the mark-up
won't be as much because the
bookstore won't owe as
much.
The SCC funds athletics,
organizations, buys books
for the bookstore, suppUes
for the snack bar, and more.
Their total allocations, according to the budget, are
$300,380.00. This doesn't include books and snack bar
expenses, however.
The SCC money is collected and channeled back to
the students in the form of
concerts and activities. It is
this constant bringing-in and
paying-out procedure which
brings the amount up to one
milUon dollars.
Beaver said the SCC is in a
financiaUy good position,
saying thatthe "SCC is on its
feet again.'' They broke even
this year, but according to
Beaver, they couldn't withstand a large biU. He said,
"We stiU need a stronger
financial ground."
Vending Revenues DoubleStrengthens SCC's Budget
ByDAWNMELE
The total revenue from all
washers, dryers and vending
machines on campus has
doubled since last year, -according to PUB Director
Howard Reynolds. This
money provides a substantial
amount of finances for the
SCC.
Before this year. Lock
Haven Laundry Service had
provided the washing
machines and dryers for the
campus. Even though equipment and servicing were
poor, LHSC continued to do
business with Lock Haven
Laundry Service for about
20-25 years.
Howard Reynolds, Director of the Student Union,
said that until Gerald Getz
came into office as the SCC
President, the laundry problem had been ignored. In an
effort to improve this problem a closer look was taken
at the overall situation. Lock
Haven Laundry Service had
been complaining about their
10-15 year old vandaUzed
washers and dryers, even
though $300.00 per month
was taken out before commission, to cover vandaUsm
and service on the machines.
Students were complaining
that they could not get their
clothes cleaned and dried in
the decrepit machines and
LH Laundry Service didn't
supply efficient maintenance
for the upkeep of these
machines. The decision to accept private bids for supplying and servicing LHSC laundry equipment had been long
awaited.
Gerald Getz, SCC President, said that the quality and
the amount of service offered
was the basis for deciding
which laundry service received
the bid.
The new service, Amsden
Laundry, instaUed all new
washers and dryers on campus, doubUng the number of
old ones. They provide 24
hour servicing for the
machines and do not require
a surcharge each month to
cover vandalism.
The vending machines on
campus didn't pose as much
of a problem as the laundry
equipment, but service and
maintenance for these
machines were improved
also.
LHSC had employed two
vending machine companies
to serve the c a m p u s ;
Rosamilia Vending Co. and
Macke Vending Co. shared
this responsibiUty.
LHSC accepted a bid from
the Rosamilia Co., over the
Macke Co., to take over service and maintenance of all
the machines on campus.
They would provide better
service with a shorter four
year contract than Macke
Companies poorer service
and seven year contract. The
Rosamilia Company also
purchased new machine
specially equipped for
handicapped students«
Tuesday, October 21, 1980
Library Has Fuii Staff
BY PAM SHANEBROOK
A student census shows
that Stevenson Library is
busier during weekdays than
on nights or weekends. According to Robert Bravard,
Director of the Library, the
flow of students during the
nights and weekends would
not justify a need for more
Ubrary employees.
A student census is conducted every night by the
Ubrary staff. This is performed to see if the use of the
library has increased or if it
needs to expand its services.
Mr. Bravard stated that he
observes "spotty patterns of
library u s a g e . " Bruce
Thomas, head of Reader Service, and Bravard both
agreed the heaviest nighte are
Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. The library's seating
capacity is 1,000 with a
recorded number of 80 accounted for up tiU 9:30 in one
night.
Mr. Bravard feels "The
real islue is not whether the
Ubrary is efficientiy staffed, it
is behind the question...are
students utiUzing it to its
fuUest capacity?" There are
major staff service points
throughout the library. Those
points include periodicals,
reserve room, reference and
main desk which are
thoroughly staffed at night
between 7:30 and 10:00 when
the Ubrary is in most use. The
Ubrary has become more of a
study hall. Bravard explained,"Since the dorms have
failed to enforce quiet hours,
studente tend to use the
library for s t u d y i n g . "
Thomas added, "However
it's frustrating to the utiUzation of the staff services. For
example if 300 students are
using the Ubrary, maybe four
require reference service."
The Ubrary is open 79.5
hours per week. Stevenson
Library has 71 student
employees and eight regular
personnel staff. Mr. Thomas
explained, "We are stuck not
with a problem of understaffing, but with schedules.
Studente are Umited to six or
eight hours with 15 hours at
the most; that is why we have
a high number employed. To
maintain a schedule we must
work around that Umitation
plus their class schedules."
Bravard added, "They must
also pay attention to the CBA
rule aUowing staff to work
only 35 hours per week under
their union contract." He felt
despite the Umitations of
both students and staff the
library is provided with
enough staff to operate all
service points efficiently. At
the minimun there wiU be
eight student assistante and
one adult staff present to
operate the Ubrary without
confusion.
The main desk has the
largest utiUzation flow than
any other service point.
Thomas and Bravard both
felt that circulation flow has
decreased greatly over the
years. They explained this is a
national decline displayed
throughout aU state coUeges.
Lock Haven has kept its circulation fiow stable for the
last three years. The reason
behind decreased circulation
is studente are finding it convenient to use materials
within the buUding along
with the fact more studente
are using the Ubrary as their
study and homework bases.
Mr. T h o m a s usually
notices, "Around mid-terms
and exam periods the census
average wiU be high every
night. After that we find it
'sinks/' The Ubrary rotates
around a cycle with peaks
that grow and faU according
to the academic calendar of
studente." Mr. Bravard felt,
"There wiU always be someone wanting to use the
library no matter how it is
staffed or scheduled. The importat thing is that we are
adequately staffed to meet
student utilization."
Alarms Don't Alarm Students
By KIM GLASS
Students faiUng to respond
to fire alarms was the main
problem in two dormitory
fires last week.
Tim Susick, director of
North Hall, reported that the
cause of the fire in North was
a faulty washing machine.
According to a counselor in
the dormitory, it took idmost
45 minutes for the students to
clear the building.
When a sizeable number of
residents failed to respond to
the fire alarm, a second alarm
was set off, A room to room
check was then conducted by
Law Enforcement. Five
students were cited for violations of fire alarm regulations. Because some students
failed to respond to the fire
alarms and evacuate the
building, other residents were
left standing in the cold,
some
wearing
only
bathrobes.
A trash can fire occurred in
Smith Hall at 4 am Tuesday
and was quickly put out according to Don Pearman, the
Hall Director.
Ironically, Smith Hall had
held two fire drills Monday
evening. During the first drill
it took the residents approximately fifteen minutes to
evacuate the building which
Pearman feels is entirely too
long. He reported a better
evacuation time during the
second fire drill.
Several Hall Directors and
Richard Hepner, Director of
Law Enforcement and Safe-
ty, noted one problem is that
the students do not take the
fire driUs seriously. They
report that some studente fail
to reaUze that the fire alarms
may be real rather than a driU
or a prank.
Pearman and Deborah
Knorr, Director of Gross
Hall, both feel that the fire
alarms should be louder and
more consistent.
Fireman and school officials wish to remind LHSC
students that the fire driUs
and fire regulations are essential to the safety of all
students at Lock Haven. Had
these been serious fires, college officials fear that this
type of behavior towards fire
regulations could result in
tragedy.
>
Tuesday, October 21, 1980 page 2
Editoria I
^itiiti^^i^i(iil^^^i^^^SB€4^Ce^ ^
By JEFF FLEISHMAN
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
It seems that Lock Haven State College has two
preachers on campus, except they work in the
classroom instead of the chapel. The two I speak of
teach sociology from a Christian point of view. That's
fine if you're a Christian, but a large portion of the
population happen to be atheists. These teachers are
aiso able to financially support their beliefs since some
of the books that are used in their classes are written
by them.
The issue that concerns the Eagle Eye is not Christianity but rather the violation of the laws of "separation of church and state." The book Sociology; A
Reader In Christian Perspectives, and Love and Sex,
Are Not Enough are filled with religious overtones.
Phases like "I set forth in this book a Christian
perspective on dating, courtship, and mate selection",
or "I would like to add that what I have to say will be
evaluated in the iiglit of the Bible and Christian principles, " weaved through-out the books.
Thesi and other phrases clearly illustrate that these
books are certainly written from a Christian stand
point. Is that stand point violating state schooi
teaching ethics? A nd if so, why is it being tolerated at a
state college? The Eagle Eye suggests a careful analysis
to be taken on these books and that a decision be
reached as to whether they violate a students'
academic freedom.
We aiso would like to note that we are not attacking
these men or their beliefs, but rather the methods they
are using in teaching their courses. A person beliefs
should be respected. The Eagle Eye respects their
beliefs, however, we are curious as to whether teaching
standands are being violated.
Commentary
By LOU
ALBERSE
Congratulations should go out to Gerald Getz and
his SCC staff on their preparation for Friday's Molly
Hatchet concert.
It seems the paper, at times, overlooks the positive
aspects of the Getz administration, while searching for
those news-shattering faults.
I have not been here long enough to critique their
entire tenure in office, but their handling of the concert seems impeccable.
Molly Hatchet is a big time band that played before
3,(X)0 people here last Friday. The crowd was at least
7,000 people smaller than any other on its 30 stop tour.
The SCC brought in a generator to supply power.
Electricians were hired. Student security was abundant. An ambulance and fire truck were available in
case of an emergency. State police were on stand by.
_ ..
. ^ ..
Radio announcements were made to discourage
anyone from coming without a ticket. The doors were
opened earlier to prevent a mad rush. The list goes
on...
The Lock Haven Stat* CMi«ga
EAQtM EYB
An liMtopendent Student Newspaper
The Eagle Eye Is published twice weeKly (Tuesday and Friday) by
The Media Council of Lock Haven State College. The Publications
Office Is located on the ground floor ot the Parson Union Building.
Phone (717) 893-2334.
The Editorial Staff encourages letters and commentaries. All contributions must be signed, but names will be withheld from publication upon request. The Editor reserves the right to ask contributors
to edit or rewrite their material If It Is considered libelous. Incoherent
or too langthy.
^
^ . ,
The Editorial Staff meets every Tuesday at 1 p.m. Article
assignments will be given at that time. Press deadlines are 12 noon
Mondays and Thursdays.
EDITOIUNXSHIEF
J e " Flelehmen
MANAQINQ EDITOR
EllenHeam
QRAPHICS EDITORS
Merlenne Zakem
Mary Kelly
QENERAL MANAQER
FACULTY ADVISOR
NEWS EDITOR
SPORTSEDITORS
PHOTOQRAPHY EDtrOR
STAFFWRITER
KlmPetUngltt
Or. Saundra Hybele
P^-i yobloiaki
Bob Baker
StepAen Leehy
Olenn Cheeter
Merty Myere
To the Editor, Eagle Eye,
1 am commenting on the
article which appeared in the
Eagle Eye, October 3, 1980
wherein graduating seniors
rate various courses as to the
best or worst. The author
compared two major courses
in P.E. which have smaU
numbers of studente enroUed
with general education
courses open to aU students
regardless of major. This is
not a fair comparison. There
are many majors in other
discipUnes who might find
O&A a pretty duU and/or impractical course.
What is practical? How
can anyone, particularly
students who have had Uttle
or no experience in the real
world make judgments on
this? It's amazing how im-
Dear Editor,
We would Uke to bring
your attention to an incident
which happened this past
weekend. The International
Club set a dance date-Oct
llth. The president spoke to
Debbie Suder of the SCC to
make arrangements concerning sound equipment. It was
understood that the SCC
would provide and set the
equipment up for the dance,
and a written statement was
noted on a calendar. On the
night of the dance, no equipment was recieved; no one
came to set it up. The security
guards could not allow us to
have the equipment. They
knew a' dance was to take
place that night, but they had
not received any pdpers
which gave authorized permission that the equipment
could be removed from
storage. Law enforcement
made many attempts to get
hold of the officers responsible for dance equipment, and
we appreciate these efforte.
The International Club
feels that the SCC is guilty of
a breach of contracts. If the
^QQ cannot provide and
transport equipment, it can at
least give us the necessary
written statement.^ which
obUgation too. Going to class
should not be the same as
watching the TV screen ~ a
completely passive situation.
Mental involvement, concentration and participation wUI
allow a Uttle learning to occur. The easiest place to study
is in class.
Since none of us can say
what wiU be useful in the
future, make everything important within the context of
the classroom. Oiily time wiU
tall what is useful to you.
Someday you may take up art
as a hobby so that that art
course you are now taking,
and don't Uke, may be very
useful. The same could be
said for many other courses
you are currently taking.
Why a college degree? To
help you earn a better Uving,
but this is only a smaU part of
practical courses taken during college are perceived as
practical sonie five, ten or fifteen years later.
There are many reasons
why a course may be good or
bad. My opituon is that content is the least vaUd reason
for judging a course good or
bad. The important aspects
of a course are how the professor presente the material,
his/her enthusiasm for the
subject or lack thereof and
his/her abiUty to relate the
subject to the real world. The
last may be the most difficult
to do but this does not
necessarily make the subject
of Uttle value. Being made to
think may be justification for
the course.
Education is a two-way
street. The student has an
Soe^fe^ €o €Ae
St/t^t^
aUow us to do so ourselves.
Apparently, the SCC has
never transported their equipment for previous dances this
semester. The president was
never informed of these situations. Instead, he was assured
that the equipment would arrive at the dance without any
efforts on his side. We are
writing this in the hope that
this type of incident wiU not
occur to us, nor to any. other
club, in the future. The SCC
must remember that it is here
to be of service to students
whenever they require its
help.
After debating with the
security guards, it was finally
decided that personal equip-,
ment of students should be
used in order for the dance to
continue.
Members of the
International
Club
OOlV'
^A/C ^€lU^t>t *^^***'^*^^^*
the picture. CoUege graduates
are supposed to be
reasonably well rounded in
their knowledge of the world
by the time they are
graduated. This involves
knowledge of the past and
present. You can't prepare
for the future if you don't
know about the past I
Being educated means too
that the person has learned
good language usage including writing and speaking.
AU of us should Usten to each
other speak. All of us should
critically analyze our own
writing, then we can decide if
we are as good as we think we
are.
If you refuse to learn for
whatever reason, no one can
teach you anything.
• .Paul F. Klens
Editorial
By ELLEN HEARN
MANAGING
EDITOR
Students are always complaining that there's
nothing to do. on campus but when they have the
chance to do something about it they do nothing!
There is no one on the Social Committee because
no one signed up for it. This committee runs
Homecoming, concerts (Molly Hatchet), movies, and
social events on campus. No one wants to work on
these events so no one should complain if they don't
turn out well.
No one wanted to work on the Homecoming Committee so Bob BuUet, V.P. of the SCC had to ask people to be on it. Then Bob had to organize most of the
Homecoming Festivities by himself. And people ask
why things for Homecoming were confused. There
was only one person running the whole thing. He needed help. He couldn't provide entertainment for
everyone for the whole weekend by himself. If you
want something done on this campus you have to help
out and Take Initiative! College is a time for studying,
but it's also a time to learn to organize yourself and
learn how to get things done.
You can sit back all tnrough college. Studying hard
all week and partying hard on the weekends ,and what
have you proved? Only that you can get through college. Millions of kids get throush college every yearspoon-fed and coddled ~ having everything done for
them. You have your meals cooked at the caf., a
warm room to sleep in, and even your lives governed
by the SCC. Now do you want your entertainment
provided for you too? Plan your own entertainment
but don't complain if no one plans it for you.
^i^fj4n/n^Hi/n4>e^9n/e^n/t^^'^
Starting November 1,
1980,any student wishing to
withdraw from coUege will
report to the Academic Advisement Center where
he/she wiU be interviewed
and given a Withdrawal
Form. This new form requires
only four signatures as compared to ten signatures on the
old form.
CHESS ENTHUSIASTSThe Chess Club is presently
interested in forming a chess
team to participate in intercollegiate competition.
Meetings are held every
Thurs. evening from 7:30 to
11 in Ulmer 102. All students
are invited to attend
regardless of skill.
WANTED: Baby-sitter for
two girls ages 2 and 4. In
COLLEGE
NIGHT Lock Haven area. Call
SKATING PARTY.Magic 748-3600.
River Skate Land. 9-11:30,
Tuesday, Oct. 21. Admis- Jerry's 33rd Anniversary Sale
Continues
sion:$1.00 each, 2 for $1.50
or a group of 7 for $5.00r- Don' t miss it... Downtown
Skate rental is .$50.
Lock Haven
Did You Know?
Under Section 5505 of the
Pennsylvania Crimes Code,
PUBLIC DRUNKENNESS.
A person is guilty of a summary offense if he appears in
any pubUc place manifestly
under the influence of
alcohol to the degree that he
may endanger himself or
other persons or property, or
annoy persons in his vicinity.
Violation of this constitutes a
fine of $25.00 and $10.00
costs.
TMVIA
Quiz
By MARTY MYERS
This week's trivia quiz is
World Series Trivia as promised.
16 "Subway Series" have
been played. That is, both
teams involved were from the
same city. However, out of
these 16 all were played in only 3 cities. Name them.
Answers must be submitted
to the box in the Snack Bar
by noon Thursday.
Tuesday, October 21,1980 page 3
Homecoming
BY RICK BAKER
The traditional type of
homecoming where old alumni gather in a bar after the big
football game is slowly fading
away.
"It seems more and more
are returning as members of
an organized group," said
Alumni Director Nadine
Stukel. This year Jim Dolan
hosted a reuiuon for approximately 100 cross-country
runners, and Max Bossert
handled affairs for Lock
Haven's 1945 footbaU team,
the first team to play footbaU
foUowing Worid War II.
Fraternities and sororities, as
usual welcomed alumni aU
weekend said Mrs. Stukel.
"The people who return as
part of groups all know each
other and they have a common bond which ties them
together," explanined Mrs.
Stukel, "and for the most
part they tend to stay in their
groups."
Dance
Winners
Announced
By MOIRA
MCCARTY
Do you remeinber the
Dance Marathori? WeU, if
you don't, it was the 48 hour
event during which twenty o"so couples put themselves
through sheer torture for
charity and fun.
The marathon was sponsored by the brothers of Phi
Mu Delta Fraternity, and was
in it's sixth successful year
here at LHSC. The chairman
for this year's event was
Brian McLaughlin, who was
also last year's co-chairman.
The organizations that
were to benefit from the
marathon are the Red Cross,
the Infant Development Project, and the Jeffrey Scott
Dubois Foundation. These
charities .wUl spUt $5300,
which is the current amount
raised, and there is stiU
money coming in.
This year, in first place,
was Tracee Kulp and her
partner Chris Stavino. They
raised $675 and wiU receive
$500 as prize money.
In second place were Zeta
Tau Alpha sisters Bess Ann
Wiley and Sue Heth, who wiU
receive $350.
In third place were Tom
Ulmer and Becky Laver.
They get $200. In fourth
place were Don Guiswite and
Karen Fascarella, who will
get $125. Alpha Sigma Tau
sisters Robin Rutter and Amy
Joe Hendrix captured fifth
and wiU receive $75.
It is interesting to note that
only $32 seperated the first
and second place winners,
and 63' between the second
and third placers. Phi Mu
Delta is planning to continue
sponsoring the marathon and
hopes becomes a tradition at
the college.
Reunites
In the past older alumni
have been the most active
members in any activity, but
Mrs Stukel and her staff are
trying to spread interest into
the younger alumni. "We're
trying to open up activities
that will appeal to all
graduates of Lock Haven,"
said Mrs. Stukel.
The Une-up for Homecoming 1980 was an indication of
what she meant. Friday aftern o o n the soccer t e a m
defeated the University of the
District of Coulumbia, and
Friday night Molly Hatchet
rocked the Haven.
Saturday morning the
Homecoming parade started
at 11:00, with the football
game against Shippensburg,
and women's cross country
meet against George Mason
University at 2:00p.m.
At halftime of the football
game, Brian Royer and Karen
Eaches
were
named
H o m e c o m i n g king a n d
queen.
Mrs. Stukel spent most of
her time meeting with Alumni
Chapter Representatives.
Graduates
Workshops and meetings
were held to update the
representatives on the progress of the college, new prog r a m s , a n d o t h e r improvements that have been
made.
This was done so that when
the alumni return home,
they'U have a better idea of
what's going on at Lock
Haven.
Cousteau To Lecture Here
By DA VE MARTIN
Jean-Michel Cousteau, one
of the world's foremost
oceanographers and son of
the famed Jacques Cousteau,
wiU lecture here at Lock
Haven State S a t u r d a y ,
November 1 at 8 pm. The lecture, sponsored by the
Cultural Affairs Committee,
will be held in P r i c e
Auditorium.
Formally educated in the
study of architecture, JeanMichel Cousteau, along with
his father, directed the conversion of the former ocean
liner Queen Mary into the
w o r l d ' s largest m a r i n e
museum, "The Living Sea,"
in Long Beach, CaUfornia.
In the 1960's Cousteau
joined his father during
numerous ocean expeditions
on the vessel Calypso, which
were filmed and later aired on
the television series "The
Undersea World of Jacques
Cousteau."
Cousteau is presentiy VicePresident of Communications and a member of the
board of directors of The
Cousteau Society,
an
organization of over 170,000
members.
Cousteau's lecture here is
an infrequent weekendscheduled event of educational/cultural
interest. By
arranging this engagement
for a weekend, the Cultural
Affairs Committee is attempting to help reverse the trend
of weekends lacking in major
student-enriching opportunities. It hopes that more
campus organizations will
begin scheduling a greater
number of weekend events.
The titie of Cousteau's lecture is "Underwater Jungle
Law" and wiU include the
film "Sharks - Some Truth."
The lecture can be attended
free of charge.
RHA Plans
Activities
By KELL Y MCBRIDE
The Residence Hall
Association^ also better
Icnown to many LHSC
students as the RHA, recently
held Executive Board elections and has gotten the
1980-81 activities underway.
Under the leadership of
Ms. Deb Knorr, hall director
of Gross Hall, the new offlcers for the 1980-81 year
a r e : Daryl
Rosidivito
(chairperson), Mike Youse
(vice-chairperson), Kelly
McBride (secretary), and
Karen Culligan (Business
Manager).
The RHA is composed of
all presidents and vice-
presidents of the seven
dorms, a business manager,
ahd an advisor. Besides the
many programs now being
sponsored in each dorm is a
campus-wide ping pong tournament in which the first, second, and third place winners
from each dorm wiU meet in a
battle for the title of the best
ping pong player on campus.
This is tentatively scheduled
for October 20, 1980 in Zimmerli gymnasium.
The RHA holds its regular
business meetings every Monday at 8:00 pm in the RHA
office, first floor McEntire.
Meetings are open to the
public.
LHSC
Hears Platforms
By PAM YOBLONSKI
Jimmy Carter, Ronald
Reagan, and John Anderson
are not the only candidates
mnning for president. Four
other, lesser known parties
are also sponsoring candidates. These are the Libertarian, Consumer, SociaUst,
and Communist parties. AU
seven
parties
were
represented at the presidential campaign forum, which
was s p o n s o r e d by the
History, PoUtical Science,
and Economics Club in
Bentley Lounge Tuesday.
The Eagle Eye asked each
representative, "Why do you
think your party's candidate
should win?"
Dave White spoke on
behalf of the Democratic
Party. He said President
Carter has the perception to
realize problems and to make
the decisions; Carter knows
there are " n o quick, easy
answers." He stated another
plus is that Carter has a
realistic view of the world
situation and what has to be
done. He looks at the problems from the cultural
point-of-view, and he is concerned about other people,
not only the United States.
White said the other parties
don't
do
this.
The
Democratic candidates are
President Carter and VicePresident Mondale. The
Democratic platform focuses
on increased defense spen-
ding, conservation, passage
of ERA, legal abortions, and
business tax cuts.
Steve Reeves, an Independent, credited his party by
saying that the Independente
see things reaUstically, they
"assess society as it is." Their
platform opposes the draft,
wants a 50-cent-a-gaUon tax
increase on gas, favors tax
cuts, ERA, and legal abortions. The Independent candidates are John Anderson
and Patrick Lucey.
The Libertarian Party was
represented
by
Bob
Orzechowski, the Libertarian
Party Area Coordinator.
This party's candidate for
president is Ed Clark. In
answer to the Eagle Eye's
question,
Orzechowski
repUed that his party beUeves
people should be allowed to
do what they want, as long as
no one else is hurt. He said
his party is consistent; they
beUeve in civil Uberties and a
Umited government.
Frank Kinces was the Communist Party's representative. He is that party's candidate for the U.S. Senate
from Pennsylvania. Kinces
answered the question saying
the Communist platform "is
a people's platform; it
answers the immediate needs
of the country." This platform caUs for a six-hour
workday, Puerto Rican independence, a labor reform
biU, and outlawing of the
KKK and Nazi party. The
Communist Party's candidates are Gus HaU for
president, and Angela Davis
for vice-president.
Tori E)unn spoke on behalf
of the SociaUst Workers Party. She is currently mnning
for P e n n s y l v a n i a S t a t e
Treasurer. She said her
party's candidate should win
because the party "represents
working people; we beUeve in
decisioiu made by the majority." This party's platform is
against nuclear power, and
for nationaUzation of the
energy industry.
The
presidential candidate is Andrew PuUey, and the vicepresidential candidate is
Matilde Zimmermann.
Gregg
Cunningham,
speaker for the RepubUcan
Party, and Lakshman Yapa,
speaker for the Consumer
Party, could not be reached
after the forum for questioning.
AU seven representatives
had time to speak about their
party's platforms, and questions were asked afterward.
Mr. George MarshaU, VicePresident of Administration,
introduced the guests.
°"" 33rd
ANNIVERSARY^!!
•"^P
i«>
SAVE
ON
CLOTHING
FOR
.^^
K
I
1 I p. MEN &
\ V y
WOMEN
CONTINUES
^
WITH THESE SAVINGS
j&v >^.
'^§S
'•^/r.
St^:i^^^
' ^ OFF ^'<9/f'^s
V-
STOREWIDE
USE OUR EASY
LAY-A-WAY and SAVE ON
CHRISTMAS GIFT BUYING!
more than a lian stori"
^
' H U H C H & G f l O v E
C P E N
T U
M &
f
T H & S
V\,ED
Til
STS
Tu
Til
12
frat parking
4 *
i.
iTuesday, October 21,1980 page 4
Molly Hatchet and Nantucket Bands
Roll The Haven With SouthernMollyRock
Hatchet's roadies
By BRIAN HUNT
Rock and roU spilled out of
the column of speakers on
either side Of the stage at a
volume that was slight compared to what would come
later. The floor Ughts were on
but the sticky-sweet stench of
smoke was already in the air.
High schoolers and college
students alike were sUpping
their brand new Molly Hatchet T-shirts on. Three
thousands blank faces stared,
waiting.
Then it happened. The
lights went out and a
thunderclap of guitar stormed through the speakers. The
sound poured down onto the
fans. The heavy metal barrage of sound, color and
power that was Nantucket
possessed the stage. The
crowd clapped, screamed and
danced. Someone near the
front shoved cotton in his
ears whUe the kid beside him
shouted, "LOUDER." The
vocalist belted out his lyrics
and pranced around the
stage. The bassist ducked and
stomped his way through the
Ught show whUe the lead
guitarist grinned and jumped
up and down. The rhythm
guitarist, cliul in a knee
length trench coat, trudged
and shoved his Gibson
through distorted riff after
jjower chord.
Molly Hatchet guitarist concentrates on the
chords.
The heavy metal assault
continued. Nantucket plowed
through tunes from their
previous two albums as weU
as their new one, "It's a Long
Way to the Top." The
vocaUst proposed a toast to
Photo by Evan Petee
Lock Haven and gulped his
bottle of Jack Daniels. The
band roared on for an encore
before leaving the stage. And
this was just the warm up
band.
The floor Ughts came on as
swarmed the stage to ready
for the main attraction.
AC/DC screeched from
the speakers at half the
volume Nantucket played.
The fans passed more joints
and drank from their flasks.
Everyone was waiting for the
boys from Jacksonville,
Florida. The roadies finished
their work a Molly Hatchet
banner above the drum was
all you could see.
One guitar chord later it
began. MoUy Hatchet, the
southern boogie band, was
here. The three guitars of
Dave Hlubeck, Duane
Roland and Steve HoUand
slashed their way into the
heads of everyone present.
Jimmy Farrar, who replaced
Ronnie Van Zant clone, Danpy Joe Brown on throat,
chugged his way through the
vocals and wielded his mike
stand Uke a knight would his
axe. The Hatchet sliced their
way through the metaUic
mash that is their claim to
fame. Any problems the band
has with originality they
cover up with a raw energy
that just won't stop.
After three encores, MoUy
Hatchet was gone. "Lock
Haven State will never be the
same," said Farrar after slurping up some Jack Daniels.
He just might be right.
Photo by Evan Petee
MoUy Hatchet's lead .singer belts lyrics.
Tliomas Field House
Fun-Sweat to Music
By HARRY CRAMER
It Started Friday morning
at flve o'clock and when it
was done Thomas Fieldhouse
had been transformed from
the house of sweat into a
workable concert haU. The
soccer team arrived flrst setting up the stage and laying
down the giant ground sheet,
designed to protect the hardwood floor from the ravages
BY
CHRIS
GAUL band.
people out there in Lock"
of stomping feet, broken
After Nantucket's electriThey handed me a beer and Haven." said lead guitarist
glass and smoldering objects.
BY CHRIS GAUL
fying performance I walked told me to help myself to the Tommy Redd. "They made
At 7:50 p.m. over three The road crew arrived around
back to their make-shift table of food. They were all us feel great."
thousand excited fans stood 10 o'clock in a large nondressing r o o m . Steve stiU excited from the show. I
I asked Pee Wee Watson,
waiting for Molly Hatchet descript commercial-type
HoUbrook, road manager, asked them if they had a good bass player, what the difand Nantucket to rock the bus. Following them was the
greeted me at the door and time. They aU shook their ference was between playing
roof off Thomas Fieldhouse. large 18-wheel truck carrying
took me inside to meet the heads yes. "They're good at the Spectrum and playing
After
a short delay Nantucket Molly Hatchet's gear. The
at Lock Haven. He said,
truck backed up behind .the
took the stage.
"Only the size." Then he adNantucket played songs Fieldhouse and the road crew
ded, "We play equaUy as
from their first two albums, started unloading speakers
hard no matter where we
Nantucket, Your Face or with a forklift. They piled the
are."
Mine and also from their speakers on each side of the
Nantucket plays 220 dates
latest aalbum release Long stage five wide and three high
a year. The band arrived in
forming walls 25 feet high
Way To Tite Top.
Williamsport on Thursday
and
30 feet wide. Huge flags,
Larry
Uzzel,
lead
singer,
and
and checked into the HoUday
Kenny Soule, drummer, ex- bearing surrealistic paintings
Inn. A few hours after the
hibited their talents with a of mystical times, were unconcert the band was back on
bongo drum and drum duet furled to cover the speakers.
the road. This time they were
There were close to a hunthat had everyones foot gogoing on a five hour road trip
to West Virginia. When 1 ask- ing. Larry Uzzel also played dred people purposely milUng
around and setting up gear.
trumpet and harmonica.
ed Pee Wee what it was Uke
were
sipping
being on the road all the time
The screaming lead guitar Some
he replied, "We love it."
of Tommy Redd rang Heinekens,some were chainthroughout
Thomas smoking cigarettes but
MoUy Hatchet and NanFieldhouse while rh'ythm everyone seemed to be busy.
tucket go way back together.
• Around three o'clock the
guitarist Mark Downing danc
At one time Molly Hatchet
"Molly Hatchet" band and
ed around the stage.
used to warm up Nantucket.
Immediately after Nan- the sound people started
I asked Tommy Redd what he
tucket finished, the roadies testing the equipment. By
thought of MoUy Hatchet.
dismantled the stage. Frisbees four o'clock they were done
"They're just great. We've
flew in the air and the party- and Nantucket took the
known each other for many
ing continued below during stage. An hour later Nanyears, "replied Redd.
tucket was finished and all
the half hour intermission.
Nantucket has been on
Then the triple lead guitars there was left to do was wait
tour now for several months.
of Molly Hatchet sliced for the show to begin.
Photo by Evan Petee They've played with SuperLines started forming
through the dense smoke and
Nantucket's lead singer-Molly Hatchet onc6l'^^-^°X.J^^''']'^'
^^
the sweltering heat to give the around five o'clock, and by
. °
'
,
many other big names. The
rowdy crowd over an hour of six o'clock the lines reached
warmed
up for Nantucket,
but now the snoeband had a great time here at
around the corner past Himes
loud rock-n-roll.
is on the other foot
'he Haven and they hope to
Hall and into ZimmerU parkCont. on page 5
return some day.
An Interview With Nantucket
The Songs,
The Bands,
The Crowds
ing lot. The crowd was in
good spirits and there was
much evidence of partying.
At six-thirty the doors to
Thomas Fieldhouse were
opened and the ticket-takers
started letting people in slowly. Every coat was frisked
and every bag was opened. It
took a while, and the Une
never got smaller, but the
Fieldhouse slowly became a
giant mass of sweaty humanity.
When Nantucket took the
stage at eight o'clock the
smoke was so thick it burned
your eyes and when they
, started to play the noise was
so loud it hurt your ears.
Nantucket played hard, loud,
clear driving rock and roll for
over an hour. The crowd loved it.
•
Then came Molly Hatchet.
They turned up the sound until you couldn't think and the
lyrics became a distorted
hodgepodge of non-sensical
mutterings. The security
force in front of the band put
cotton in their ears and
several hundred people decided to find someplace quieter
to go. "Hatchet" played two
hard-driving sets and three
, encores. It was loud and it
was crazy and people were
screaming and dancing on
each others feet and then it
was over.
In ten minutes Thomas
fieldhouse was empty, except
for the road crew and the soccer players who had to break
down the equipment. The
next day the only evidence of
the concert was the hundreds
of empty beer bottles and
cigarette butts scattered on
the floor. An hour later these
too were gone and Thomas
Fieldhouse was once again
the house of sweat.
Tuesday, October 21,1980 page 5
Homecoming
Happenings
Nantucket's sounds blasted the
last Friday night.
Fieldhouse
Cont. from page 4
S o n g s , B a n d s ^Crowds
The music makers of Mollv
Hatchet.
A Roadie's Work
Is Never Done...
wasn't for a roadie a road
tour would be nothing but a
figment of your imagination.
A roadie. What's a roadie? They're up before the sun
Many people stereotype them and watch the moon come
as dirty, beer drinking, long and go. They work with jamhaired hippies that crawl out med fingers, stubbed toes and
from under speakers and aching backs. They take a lot
clean the stage for immortal of shit and give a lot more
bands that play deep into the back.
While the band is blowing
night.
They come in before the away the audience, the
band and leave hours after. roadies are huddled in back
Like pack rats, their Hfe con- stage dressing rooms, trucks
sists of setting up, breaking or buses relaxing, weU knowdown and carting it onto the ing that in two hours and fifnext concert hall. It's a life teen minutes its all got to
that offers Uttle financial come back down. Circles
satisfaction. These nomads form under eyes, T-shirts are
of the music world love their peeled off and fingers are
business, they love the music, mended because Act II begins
they love the excitement and when the performance is
most of .all they love the over.
"Gimme a sound check,
adventure.
They are people who live in and up with the lights. Watch
Levis and T-shirts. They that amp. Hook up these
sweat day and night. Many cables. We need more stage.
times their only refreshment Tone down the volume. Grab
is the spray of a cool mist that that case. More lights. It's
comes from popped beer gettin late. Where's my beer?
tabs. The roadie is a We're done Let's e a t . "
The stage, is set, the hall is
dedicated individual who
loves to be around music. filled and the bands ready.
They're professionals in their Soon it will all be over, all exown right. Just think, if it cept for the roadie, because a
roadie's work is never done.
RoW and Roll on Friday night
BY JEFF FLEISHMAN
Editor-in-Chief
Queen
Big game on Saturday afternoon
7:30-8:30pm. Thursday's
previously announced program has been canceled du^
to unavoidable problems.
Refreshments will be served.
Lost leather " D " shape key
chain. Lost Friday night in
Thomas Field House.
If
found call 893-3685. Reward.
On Thurs. Oct. 24tfa there
will be a coffeehouse. Ralph
Rumburger & Chris Gaul will
be performing in the Eagle
Wing from 8:30-10:30.
Beatin
The Odds.
The
Rambler.a ballad written by
the lead singer Jinuny Fanar
and Dave Hlubek, was one of
them. They also played the title track from their latest
release Beatin The Odds.
For most of us Friday night
was a night we'll never
forget. After all, it isn't every
night you get to see a big
name band Uke MoUy Hatchet or Nantucket at "the
Haven.
King And
tj4n4^€>u4t4>e^§n^/n€^
AttentionrAII concerned
students who would like to
know how to: prevent tuition
hikes; defend s t u d e n t s '
rights; and work as a progressive force are strongly
urged to attend the CAS
Orientation Program, sponsored by the Commonwealth
Association of Students
(CAS), the state lobby
association. The Program
will be held in Price Aud. on
Wed.,
Oct.22
from
During the show they
played songs from their first
Epic release, Molly Hatchet
including the explosive songs
Bounty Hunter and Gator
Country. MoUy Hatchet also
played almost every track
from the Flirtin
With
Disaster album with such
classics as Whiskey Man and
the title track Flirtin With
Disaster.
The band also played songs
from their latest release
Stands are full at Hub
Lock Haven
State's
homecoming queen and king
for 1980 are Karen Eaches
and Brian Royer.
K a r e n E a c h e s is a
s o p h o m o r e representing
Sigma Kappa. She is a Health
and Physical Education major, and is a member of the
women's basketball team.
When asked how she felt
about being nominated, she
said, "1 am very honored and
Photo by Glenn Chester
surprised to be a part of the
homecoming court."
jack Stadium
Photo by Glenn Chester
Brian Royer is a member of
Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. He is a senior majoring in
Health, Physical Education'
and Recreation, with a concentration in Recreation. He
is president of Lambda Chi
Alpha, a member of the Interfraternity Council, and is
active in the intramural program. When asked of his
reaction to being nominated,
he said, "I feel pleased that I
have that many friends who
would vote for me."
r
Tuesday, October 21,1980 page 6
Soccer Team Remoins UndeFeoted
Saturday afternoon the
soccer team defeated the
alumni squad 4-2, on the
strength of Scott Cardin's
three second half goals.
Tom Kretch scored the first
goal for the Bald Eagles when
he took a pass from Robby
Gould and drilled it past the
alumni goaUe.
The alumni came right
back however and scored on
a shot by Bert Gottbrecht,
now a student assistant. The
score remained tied and the
teams entered the lockertoom
at one all.
In the second half Cardin
scored three goals to give the
Bald Eagles a comfortable
4-1 lead. The alumni got one
back on a goal by 1977
graduate Tom Rowan but
that's aU and the score stood
at 4-2.
Eagle coach Mike Parker
said,"This was the first alumni game we had that wasn't
taken too seriously."
On Wednesday afternoon
the Eagles return to action
against Scranton at 3 pm on
McCollum Field.
Alumni battle it out with the soccer
team during Saturday's match.
r
^
By RICK BAKER
Friday afternoon the Bald
Eagles defeated University of
District of Columbia 1-0 to
raise their season's record to
10-0. The game was a defensive struggle throughout and
Lock Haven didn't nail down
the victim untU late in the se-
fboto by Evan Petee
cond half when Jon Felker
tapped home a shot right in
front of the goal. The score
came off on a fine cross from
Trevor Adair in the corner.
The Bald Eagles kept up the
defensive pressure, and
emerged with a victory.
Alumni Cdges CC Teom 26-31
By PHIL BURGE
It was a sweet homecoming
for the Alumni Cross Country team, led by Rick Blood,
as they edged out the Lock
Haven Men's team 26-31 on
Saturday. Blood captured
first in the five mile race running 24:41, taking 41 seconds
off the course record and 31
seconds in front of the second place runner. Grabbing
second was another alumni,
Steve Podgajny, who was a
two time Ml American in
cross countrv while at Lock
Haven. The Haven's team
was led by Mark Amway,
who grabbed third place in
25:29, only 13 seconds behind
Podgajny who ran 25:16.
Taking fourth for the varsity
team
was
Tim
McNicholas in 26:02. Coach
Dolan grabbed fifth for the
alumni in 26:17, followed by
Norm Gordon, alumni, in
26:32. Phil Burge was next
for the varsity in seventh in
26:42; foUowed by Al Buck,
eighth in 26:51; Frank
Passaniti, Bob Walker, and
Smith Sets Cross Country
LOCK HAVEN
The George Mason University women cross country
team edged Lock Haven
State, 26-29 here Saturday
afternoon with the meet
finishing inside Hubert Jack
Pete Digiralomo tying for
ninth in 27:21. Next for the
Haven was Don Henise in
12th ; Rod Beck in thirteenth; John Cope in 16th;
Scott Metro in 17th; John
Fantasky in 24th and Chris
Theodore in 26th.
The Lock Haven State
Wrestling team also ran with
their first runner, Kevin
Kepler, grabbing 23rd.
The team will now travel to
Buffalo, NY Friday to run in
the Canasius Invitational.
Course Record
Stadium as part of the big
Homecoming Day sports
festivities.
For the Lady Eagles super
distance runner Vickie Smith
it was another recordbreaking performance.
The senior Clearfield
native came in first in time of
19:04 topping her previous
record time of 19:06.
The loss gave Coach Leroy
Straley runners a final regular
season reqprd of 4-5.
Field Hocltev Teom Butts Roms
PHILADELPHIAFor the first time since
1966 the Lock H a v e n
women's field hockey team
defeated West Chester 1-0
Sunday at FrankUn Field.
The win marked Coach
Sharon Taylor's first triumph
over the Rams in seven years
as head coach.
Commenting after the big
win on Sunday Coach Taylor
said,
"West
Chester
dominated the first half but
what kept us even was the
super performance of goalkeeper Karen Kirmeyer who
had several ' outstanding
saves.
"We came out more aggressively in the second half
and started to dominate the
game and scored the only
goal to w i n . T h e y ( W e s t
<?S
Chester) were just coming off
a 1-0 win Friday over nationally-ranked Delaware on
the same Franklin J<'ield
Astro-turf."
Asked about the team's
play on artificial turf Taylor
said, "We seem to play pretty
weU on Astro-turf. 1 was hoping one of the schools with
Astro-turf would bid for
regionals, but none have."
The only score of the contest came at 23:56 of the second half on a penalty corner
with Roxie Gustitis making a
hand stop and Jane Shaw
drilUng home the goal.
Coach Taylor felt it was a
complete team victory, but
did have special words of
praise for Kirmeyer, Shaw,
Gustitis, and Sandy Miller,
who led the second half
surge.
West Chester led in shots
9-7 and penalty corners 7-1 in
the first half, but the Bald
Eagles came back to control
the second, leading 11-4 in
shots and 6-1 in corners.
Lock Haven, now 9-3-2 on
the season, goes back into action this afternoon at Ithica
CoUege. This weekend the
Bald Eagles wUI defend their
PSCAC championship at
Shippensburg.
The three other teams
selected to play in the tourney
are Bloomsburg, MillersviUe,
and host Shippensburg.
This season the Bald Eagles
have tied Bloomsburg,0-0,
and MiUersville 1-1. Shippensburg is the defending
Division III AIAW National
champions.
ON€ STOP R€CORDS
SflV€ ON
* Cassette Cose
Holds 24 Topes
* 8-Trock Cose
''The Minute
We Saw It We Knew''
" W e shopped 1rom store to store - we just
couldn't f irid the rings we liked - until we saw the
perfect set at Eisemann's."
"They had so many beautiful styles it was easy
to find rings we liked - and by comparison - the
most reasonable prices."
" W e are happy with our purchases - you will be
too - Stop in Today*'
$4.99
* 20 N€UJ POST6RS
$ 3 . 0 0 each
* PUB LIGHT
* BLACK UGHT
* STROB6 UGHTS
$27.95
*CfiNVRS UUflLL€TS
* CRRD HOLD€R
LnDI€S CLUTCH
$4.50
$12.50
Diamond Jeweler for 3 Generations
Lock Haven
$17.95
$17.95
$9.50
E. Main St.
$3.99
209 Bellefonte Rve.
Lock Hoven
748-7163
Tuesday, October 21, 1980 page?
Cori's Corner: Tlie Plovoffs, Tlie Issues, the
When they finaUy did say
so how can you argue the percent of the time they're
By CARL BROSNAN
move? The move was made, correct. I didn't hear too
WeU it's World Series time something it was Palmer, beagain. You can teU because ing the pitcher he is, com- and the rest is history. To my many complaints when the
disappointment, and other third base umpire caUed Gary
all you're hearing around menting that it was a 98 mph
Yankee fans around the Woods out for leaving too
campus now is "they're a bet- fastbaU. Why not give credit
country, next year finaUy early in the sixth iniung of the
ter team,"" I think they'U to Brett. He's a 390 hitter. I
win in six," and of course don't care how fast the came for the Royals, and 4th game.
they're in the World Series.
"how much you wantta pitch was, Brett stiU had to
One question I would Uke
bet?" But let's forget about hit it, and hit it he did.
As for the National League to know, did,Lonnie Smith
Another
thing
that
the series for now. Let's go
playoffs, what can I say? It play for the 1962 Mets? His
back a week or so and talk bothered me, I don't know
was the most unbeUevable, play in the 4th inning of 4th
about the playoffs, because it why, I should be used t9 it, is eventful, sloppy, record set- game was horrendous. I've
IS a year, when the playoffs George Steinbrenner's ting and exciting playoff never seen anything so bad
were, to say the least, bizarre. mouth. WiU he ever shut it?
series I've ever seen. Besides and funny in my Ufe. His
Being a Yankee fan for all
First I would Uke to com- these years, 1 know Georgie game 1, I was afraid to leave judgement on Enos CabeU's
ment on the American boy. When it comes to plugg- the television set, not wanting fly ball was pathetic, my two
League Playoffs. Everyone ing up a hole in his team or to miss what would happen little sisters could have caught
knows the Royals swept the improving it for the better, he next. And as it turned out, that ball. And if that wasn't
Yankees in 3 straight. A feat does it. There is nobody bet- just about everything hap- bad enough, the next play he
that, I don't think anyone ex- ter. But after he does that pened.
unleashes a throw to the plate
pected. The play itself, except why can't he just sit back,
I don't know where to tiiat went aU of five feet.
for a couple of plays at the ke6p his mouth shut, and let
start. At times I thought I A new Guiness World
plate (2nd game, Randolph the team play ball. They have was watching a little league Record. The funny thing
thrown out.) wasn't too ex- enough pressure out there,
team, I've never seen about it is that he retrieved
citing. At times I found without having to put up with anything so sloppy in my Ufe, the ball and recorded an out.
myself falUng asleep.
I asked myself "these two 1 hope Steinbrenner didn't
him, but he always has to get
It was a playoff where the into the act. He wiU pro- teams are fighting for the see that play because he'll
big names,
Jackson, bably fire the 3rd base pennant?" then it took a have his outfielders practicGossage, Brett (only 3 hits), coach, Mike Ferraro. I don't complete turn around and it ing that play next spring
and Wilson (no steals), didn't think he should. 1 would have was as though every play training.
play up to their expectations. made the same play, in trying would decide the Worid
As bad as Lonnie Smith
When Brett finally did, the to score Randolph in game 2. Series. They were playing was on defense, Mike
their
hearts
out.
I
would
just
ball skyrocketed. The sur- Randolph is the fastest player
Schmidt was even worse on
prise in the series was Frank on the team, and they weren't shake my head in amazement offense. He didn't hit a lick
White. He was named MVP, scoring that many runs.(2 a at all the plays being made. in the playoffs. That's why I
I've also never seen so many question Astro's manager BiU
and rightly so. Here's a game). At the time, Jackson
player who is known for his wasn't hitting, and it had to players left on base. And Virdom's move in the fifth
speed and fielding, (I feel he's be 2 perfect throws to get Lord knows how many strike game when he replaced Joe
the best second baseman in 'iiim. So what happens, the outs there were with a man Sambito, a clutch reliever,
baseball for fielding), but Royals, to their credit, make on second, third,or the bases with a right handed pitcher.
reaUy wins the MVP with his the perfect relay and Jackson loaded.
Sambito only pitched to one
bat. He batted .545 in the compUcatedmatters by leading
I guess the big issue of that batter. 1 feel he could have
playoffs and was the Royals off the next inning with a hit. playoff was the umpiring. It's handled Schmidt, and stayed
clutch man.
Sorry Mike. I would have hard to say anything about in the game. 1 feel Virdonr
Speaking of clutch, there made the same play that you the umpires because let's face wasted one of his best players
wasn't too much of that did. Hope the unemployment it.they are human too. Peo- that game.
either. For most of the checks aren|t late. As for ple forget that sometimes Some individual perfor
playoff, when either team Steinbrenners remarks about they can miss one, which they mances reaUy impressed me
had a chance to bust the firing Howser, that is totally did in the eighth inning of the during the playoff. To be
game open, nobody got that asinine. A rookie manager 4th game, when the replay honest, my knowledge of the
key hit. True, the pitching for wins 103 games and gets showed that Jeff Leonard did players in the N.L. is weak,
both sides was good, but it fired. No way.
trap Trillo's Uner to right, but one player reaUy woke me
wasn't exceptional.
The ump blew the caU. Then up and that was Terry Puhl.
There
was
only
1
move
by
What reaUy bugged me
I question. Why take there were loud complaints His effort throughout was
about the playoff was the Howser
Tommy
out in game 3. on the supposed triple play tremendous. 1 know the
ABC broadcasting crew. To Xhere areJohn
2 outs, nobody on turned into a double play. M V P goes to the winning
me it was a let down. Here's when WiUie
gets a The replay doesn't reaUy team, and taking nothing
BiUy Martin and Jim Palmer bloop double Wilson
to
right.
Why show whether or not Houston away from Manny Trillo,
in the booth together, so I ex- take him out? I know
pitcher Ruble, caught Mad- ^ho had a fine playoff, but
pected sparks to fly sooner Gossage, probably the f
dox's soft Uner, so how could njy vote would have gone to
or later. Forget it. All we get
everyone swear he trappd the puhi, winning team or not.
in the A.L. is in ti
is how BiUy loves everbody reUever
buUpen, but you have U.L. baU? You couldn't teU. The My hat goes off to Tug Mc
and everybody loves BiUy. Washington
and plate umpire blew the play Qraw. He was another player
Come on. A guy with BiUy's John could getuphimnext
out,
and when he signaled no catch, y,^^^^ a great pereformance. 1
personaUty, somebody must he had aUeady gotten Brett
without reaUy seeing the play, thought for sure his arm was
hate him, maybe even a Uttle out twice that game. Brett which he admitted to later, going to fall off, but he kept
disUke somewhere. Another himself said afterwards "I At least he adnutted though, coming back. And finally
thing that made me gag was was delighted to see Gossage, He didn't try to hide. Um- Pete Rose. I admire Rose as a
the way Martin and Palmer 1 didn't want to face John pires and conU-oversial caUs player. He's a hustler. He's
complimented each other, again."
But Uke I said, he are part of the game, so don't the PhilUes spark plug. He
and their respected teams, had already
won 103 games cry about it. They are human gets them going and gets
throughout the whole series.
and make misUkes but 99 results, but sometimes he can
According to Palmer, Martin
and Oakland are great at
everything and according to
Martin,
Palmer
and
Baltimore are just as great. If
they were so great we should
have been watching Oakland
and Baltimore instead of
K.C. and N.Y. I feU Uke I
1 urn to Trinity United Methodist as your
was watching a soap opera inchurch
away from home. We're at West Main
stead of a baseball game. Did
and Second - just a ten minute walk
you hear them when Brett hit
the homer in game 3? Of
from campus. Come worship with us each
course not, because they
Sunday at 10:45 A.M.
weren't saying anything.
There was more silence in the
booth than in the stands.
Ployers, the Voices
make a real ass of himself. I
don't know where he got the
idea of spiking the baU at the
end of an iiming but I think
it's a lot of crap. Rose is a
geat player and everybody
knows he's out there, so
why puU that stuff. Come on
Pete, do what you have been
doing for years and let your
bat do your talking. Leave
the spiking for the NFL.
The fans were another item
of discussion. The PhUlie
fans are, to say the least,
tough. They get down on
their players very quickly. I
couln't beUeve the way they
booed Greg Luzinski before
Game 1, but when he hit the
home run the cheers were so
loud, 'The BuU" could have
probably won the position of
mayor. Give the guy a break.
He's put some good years in
PhUadelphia. The Houston
fans were beyond beUef. The
first time they got started in
game 3 1 thought it was a Fri-
day night and I was at a giant
pep raUy on the Notre Dame
campus. I loved it. I guess the
fans were both supporting
their teams, but sometimes,
their methods are questionable.
Howard was Howard.
Once again he proved he
doesn't know a whole lot
about baseball. He seemed
more interested in second
guessing everyone, and if
things worked out his way he
let you know, and know it,
and know it. I won't say
more about Howard because
it's probably already been
written or said.
Funniest
Play-Lonnie
Smith, who else?
Most Unusual Occurence-An
inside the park home run by
Graig Nettles? Half this campus is faster than him.
Bravest Performance-Joe
Morgan
Best Pitching-Joe Niekro's
performance in game 3.
MEN and WOMEN
ONLY $8.00
'PERMSI
Start at$15.00
No Appointment
OPEN 8-8 SAT. 8-3
I Turn To
Trinity.
I
CLINTON PLAZA-STORE 3
120 E. WALNUT ST. LOCK HAVEN
748-9979
I
.*t
Tuesday, October 21, 1980 page 8
Ship. Red Raiders Pass by Bold Cogles 20-16
By BOB BAKER
Shippensburg State's Tim
Ebersole hit Angelo McCall
with a three-yard scoring pass
with 45 seconds remaining in
the game to give the Red
Raiders a 20-16 win over
Lock Haven. Only seconds
earlier Ebersole hit Kevin
Fields with a 35-yard pass
play moving Shippensburg to
the Lock Haven three.'
On a third and thirty-three
play Ebersole got behind the
Bald Eagle secondary and
hauled in the long pass.
Shippensburg got on the
scoreboard first as Jeff
Auker connected on a
27-yard field goal with 2:42
left in the first quarter. Ship-
pensburg was aided with a 21
yard punt return as they got
to start their drive at the Lock
Haven 15.
The Bald Eagles got their
first score of the day early in
the second quarter. Scott
Reiner picked off a Bob Potts
pass and returned it to the
Shippensburg 20.
Ben Pavalko hit Joe Speese
with an eight-yard pass and
Speese ran for sue yards putting the Bald Eagles on the
six-yard Une. Speese got the
caU again as he foUowed an
excellent block by Willy
Mathias around the right end
for the touchdown.
Danny Young's extra point
made it 7-3, Lock Haven,
with 11:59 to go in the halt.
Lock Haven came right
back as they executed a
perfect onside kick. Doug
SchiUing recovered the baU at
the Shippensburg 41.
Pavalko then hit Jeff
Bailey with a 16-yard pass
and also completed passes to
Speese and BUI SementelU,
advancing Lock Haven to the
19. Speese, who finished the
game with 161 yards on 28
carries, rushed to the 13.
The drive staUed here and
Young was caUed in to kick a
28-yard field goal. His successful attempt gave Lock
Haven a 10-3 lead and set a
new Lock Haven career
record of seven field goals
Judo Club Kichs Into Action
By GLENN M. CHESTER
Are you bored? Do you
feel that you need more skiUs
in self defense? WeU maybe
judo is just what you're looking for.
Judo is a sport in the
American culture and is
defined as gentie learning: ju
• gentle, do - leanung.
The club is sponsored by
Dr. Ken Cox and the instructor is Mike Parucha. Mr. Paruclta-judo instructor
Photo by Glenn Chester
Parucha is a weU experienced promising situation.
isn't practiced very much exand discipUned instructor. He
Mr. Parucha has been stu- cept in Japan.
isn't payed for his participa- dying this curious art of self Judo can be fun for those
tion, and says "I just do It tor defense for 12 years. He has a who just want to leam or
the enjoyment."
y^pj^ ^^^^ j„ J^^Q^ karate, those who want to compete.
Mr. Parucha feeis that the and ju jitso - the black beU Mr. Parucha would enjoy
women of LHSC should being the highest honor at-teaching the skUls he has
become more involved so tainable.
mastered to any who wish to
they wiU have a self defense Karate is a very lethal art, leam. The club meets every
technique which may come in but judo isn't. Ju Jitso is a Tuesday and Thursday in
Field
handy when put in a com-iethal form of judo but it 'Thomas
"*•
"'-'-' House.
"
Shippensburg was able to
come right back and tie the
score as Ebersole hit Dave
Friese with a 21-yard scoring
pass. Friese leaped high in the
end zone between two Bald
Eagles to haul in the fingertip
grab.
Auker added the extra
point to tie the game at 10-10
with 4:39 to go in the first
half.
The first half ended with
Shippensburg holding 13-10
halftime lead as Auker connected on a 26 yard field goal
with:15togo.
Lock Haven continued to
control the Une of scrimmage
in the third quarter as the offensive Une of Chuck Terek,
Kelly Parshall, Rob McCauley, Don AmorieUo and
Bruno DiMartile gave the
Lock Haven mnning backs
mnnmg room.
Starting at their own 46,
the Bald Eagles moved
54 yards in 10 plays for the
score. The big play of the
drive was a fourth and one
play when Speese broke
through for 22 yards, setting
up Coach Jack Fisher's Bald
Eagles at the Shipensburg
one. Speese got the
touchdown on a one yard
plunge to give Lock Haven a
16-13 lead. The extra point
was no good as the snap was
fumbled.
This was the way the score
stayed untU the final minute
of the game.
The Bald Eagle offense,
which did things much to
their Uking most of the day,
staUed in the fourth quarter
as they were unable to get a
first down throughout the en-
tire quarter.
Pavalko went down with
an ankle injury early in the
quarter and Fisher commented that this made Lock
Haven more cautious in their
play selection. Pavalko did
return later in the quarter,
but the offense was unable to
mount any momentum.
PUNTS, PASSES, and
KICKS: Speese now has mshed for 580 yards this season
to lead the Bald Eagles offense. He is averaging 97
yards a game, and has a 4.8
yards per attempt.
Pavalko hit on 7 of 17
passes for 43 yards.
BaUey had 2 catches for 28
yards, and Speese hauled in 3
catches for 16 yards.
Tony Garzione and Dave
ZieUnskie also had interceptions.
UJomen's Tennis Team Competes
In Conference Chompionships
By STEPHEN LEAHY
While the Royals and
• Phillies were battling in
championship play over the
Homecoming Weekend, so
was the Lock Haven State
women's tennis team. The
tennis team traveled to
Bloomsburg on Friday and
Saturday for the Pennsylvania Conference Champoinship.
The Bald Eagle netters
went in to Bloomsburg with
confidence as they had,
posted a 6-3 record in the
Pennsylvania conference this
season. But the team did not
fare so weU, as they finished
in the middle of the fifteen
state coUeges.
Some standout performers
for the Lock Haven squad
were fourth seeded Denise
Lebert, number two singles,
as she reached the semi-finals
and gamely fought the
number one seed Jane Kaufman of Bloomsburg, but lost
7-5, 6-1.
Gail Overdorf, seeded second in number five singles,
lost to top-seeded Terri
Kazunas
of
East
WOOL TWEEDS
By CANT
Karen Cann and Lori Emich, concentrating at number one doubles.
Stroudsburg, 6-2. 6-2.
Karen Cann, the number
one single^ for Lock Haven,
rallied to win her first round
match, 1-6, 6-4, 6-2, but lost
to the second seeded player in
the next match.
Cann and Lori Emich, the
number one doubles team for
Lock Haven, seeded 3rd, lost
to the top-seeded MillersviUe
pair, 6-1, 6-2.
In number two doubles,
third seeded Denise Lebert
and Sharon Starzan lost to
the top seeded Clarion duo
6-0, 3-6, 6-3.
Slippery rock won the
overall championship.
Presenting a suit that will never go out
of fashion. Fine wool tweed tailored
with meticulous care by Cant. The suit
that says "Fall 1980" in a strong, but
soft-spoken way. Wear it with just the
right accessories and know that you
can't be dressed better. Find it at...
Main St.
Lock Haven
Lock Haven State College
SCC Handles Big MoneySi Million A Year
By PAM YOBLONSKI
Nem Editor
One miUion dollars passes
through the hands of the
SCC throughout the year.
According to Don Beaver,
Treasurer of the SCC. this is
students' money.
The
amount includes total sales
from the bookstore and Eagle
Wing Snack Bar, plus the
revenues from the activity
fee.
This figure could be
misleading, though.
It
doesn't mean the SCC has
one mUlion doUars to spend.
This figttre represents the
amount of money the SCC
handles throughout the year
for day-to-day transactions.
These transactions include
allocations of money to smaU
clubs and committees, and
money brought in from
athletic
events,
the
bookstore, and snack bar.
The finance committee.
headed by Beaver, consists of
four members. Beaver said
their job is to "allocate the
revenues." They prepare a
budget for the SCC, and this
budget is then voted on by
the senate. The students on
the finance committee aren't
required
to
have
a
background in money
management, even though
such a large sum of money is
involved. There is an accountant and a financial advisor
to help the committee.
The SCC's anticipated income is $300,380.00 .Seventypercent of this is from activity fees. Other sources, such
as the bookstore and snack
bar, run on a break-even
basis. The profit from the
bookstore is used to remove it
from ite 40,000 doUar debt, a
goal which has been reached.
Beaver said that he doesn't
foresee a substantial increase
in book prices; the mark-up
won't be as much because the
bookstore won't owe as
much.
The SCC funds athletics,
organizations, buys books
for the bookstore, suppUes
for the snack bar, and more.
Their total allocations, according to the budget, are
$300,380.00. This doesn't include books and snack bar
expenses, however.
The SCC money is collected and channeled back to
the students in the form of
concerts and activities. It is
this constant bringing-in and
paying-out procedure which
brings the amount up to one
milUon dollars.
Beaver said the SCC is in a
financiaUy good position,
saying thatthe "SCC is on its
feet again.'' They broke even
this year, but according to
Beaver, they couldn't withstand a large biU. He said,
"We stiU need a stronger
financial ground."
Vending Revenues DoubleStrengthens SCC's Budget
ByDAWNMELE
The total revenue from all
washers, dryers and vending
machines on campus has
doubled since last year, -according to PUB Director
Howard Reynolds. This
money provides a substantial
amount of finances for the
SCC.
Before this year. Lock
Haven Laundry Service had
provided the washing
machines and dryers for the
campus. Even though equipment and servicing were
poor, LHSC continued to do
business with Lock Haven
Laundry Service for about
20-25 years.
Howard Reynolds, Director of the Student Union,
said that until Gerald Getz
came into office as the SCC
President, the laundry problem had been ignored. In an
effort to improve this problem a closer look was taken
at the overall situation. Lock
Haven Laundry Service had
been complaining about their
10-15 year old vandaUzed
washers and dryers, even
though $300.00 per month
was taken out before commission, to cover vandaUsm
and service on the machines.
Students were complaining
that they could not get their
clothes cleaned and dried in
the decrepit machines and
LH Laundry Service didn't
supply efficient maintenance
for the upkeep of these
machines. The decision to accept private bids for supplying and servicing LHSC laundry equipment had been long
awaited.
Gerald Getz, SCC President, said that the quality and
the amount of service offered
was the basis for deciding
which laundry service received
the bid.
The new service, Amsden
Laundry, instaUed all new
washers and dryers on campus, doubUng the number of
old ones. They provide 24
hour servicing for the
machines and do not require
a surcharge each month to
cover vandalism.
The vending machines on
campus didn't pose as much
of a problem as the laundry
equipment, but service and
maintenance for these
machines were improved
also.
LHSC had employed two
vending machine companies
to serve the c a m p u s ;
Rosamilia Vending Co. and
Macke Vending Co. shared
this responsibiUty.
LHSC accepted a bid from
the Rosamilia Co., over the
Macke Co., to take over service and maintenance of all
the machines on campus.
They would provide better
service with a shorter four
year contract than Macke
Companies poorer service
and seven year contract. The
Rosamilia Company also
purchased new machine
specially equipped for
handicapped students«
Tuesday, October 21, 1980
Library Has Fuii Staff
BY PAM SHANEBROOK
A student census shows
that Stevenson Library is
busier during weekdays than
on nights or weekends. According to Robert Bravard,
Director of the Library, the
flow of students during the
nights and weekends would
not justify a need for more
Ubrary employees.
A student census is conducted every night by the
Ubrary staff. This is performed to see if the use of the
library has increased or if it
needs to expand its services.
Mr. Bravard stated that he
observes "spotty patterns of
library u s a g e . " Bruce
Thomas, head of Reader Service, and Bravard both
agreed the heaviest nighte are
Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. The library's seating
capacity is 1,000 with a
recorded number of 80 accounted for up tiU 9:30 in one
night.
Mr. Bravard feels "The
real islue is not whether the
Ubrary is efficientiy staffed, it
is behind the question...are
students utiUzing it to its
fuUest capacity?" There are
major staff service points
throughout the library. Those
points include periodicals,
reserve room, reference and
main desk which are
thoroughly staffed at night
between 7:30 and 10:00 when
the Ubrary is in most use. The
Ubrary has become more of a
study hall. Bravard explained,"Since the dorms have
failed to enforce quiet hours,
studente tend to use the
library for s t u d y i n g . "
Thomas added, "However
it's frustrating to the utiUzation of the staff services. For
example if 300 students are
using the Ubrary, maybe four
require reference service."
The Ubrary is open 79.5
hours per week. Stevenson
Library has 71 student
employees and eight regular
personnel staff. Mr. Thomas
explained, "We are stuck not
with a problem of understaffing, but with schedules.
Studente are Umited to six or
eight hours with 15 hours at
the most; that is why we have
a high number employed. To
maintain a schedule we must
work around that Umitation
plus their class schedules."
Bravard added, "They must
also pay attention to the CBA
rule aUowing staff to work
only 35 hours per week under
their union contract." He felt
despite the Umitations of
both students and staff the
library is provided with
enough staff to operate all
service points efficiently. At
the minimun there wiU be
eight student assistante and
one adult staff present to
operate the Ubrary without
confusion.
The main desk has the
largest utiUzation flow than
any other service point.
Thomas and Bravard both
felt that circulation flow has
decreased greatly over the
years. They explained this is a
national decline displayed
throughout aU state coUeges.
Lock Haven has kept its circulation fiow stable for the
last three years. The reason
behind decreased circulation
is studente are finding it convenient to use materials
within the buUding along
with the fact more studente
are using the Ubrary as their
study and homework bases.
Mr. T h o m a s usually
notices, "Around mid-terms
and exam periods the census
average wiU be high every
night. After that we find it
'sinks/' The Ubrary rotates
around a cycle with peaks
that grow and faU according
to the academic calendar of
studente." Mr. Bravard felt,
"There wiU always be someone wanting to use the
library no matter how it is
staffed or scheduled. The importat thing is that we are
adequately staffed to meet
student utilization."
Alarms Don't Alarm Students
By KIM GLASS
Students faiUng to respond
to fire alarms was the main
problem in two dormitory
fires last week.
Tim Susick, director of
North Hall, reported that the
cause of the fire in North was
a faulty washing machine.
According to a counselor in
the dormitory, it took idmost
45 minutes for the students to
clear the building.
When a sizeable number of
residents failed to respond to
the fire alarm, a second alarm
was set off, A room to room
check was then conducted by
Law Enforcement. Five
students were cited for violations of fire alarm regulations. Because some students
failed to respond to the fire
alarms and evacuate the
building, other residents were
left standing in the cold,
some
wearing
only
bathrobes.
A trash can fire occurred in
Smith Hall at 4 am Tuesday
and was quickly put out according to Don Pearman, the
Hall Director.
Ironically, Smith Hall had
held two fire drills Monday
evening. During the first drill
it took the residents approximately fifteen minutes to
evacuate the building which
Pearman feels is entirely too
long. He reported a better
evacuation time during the
second fire drill.
Several Hall Directors and
Richard Hepner, Director of
Law Enforcement and Safe-
ty, noted one problem is that
the students do not take the
fire driUs seriously. They
report that some studente fail
to reaUze that the fire alarms
may be real rather than a driU
or a prank.
Pearman and Deborah
Knorr, Director of Gross
Hall, both feel that the fire
alarms should be louder and
more consistent.
Fireman and school officials wish to remind LHSC
students that the fire driUs
and fire regulations are essential to the safety of all
students at Lock Haven. Had
these been serious fires, college officials fear that this
type of behavior towards fire
regulations could result in
tragedy.
>
Tuesday, October 21, 1980 page 2
Editoria I
^itiiti^^i^i(iil^^^i^^^SB€4^Ce^ ^
By JEFF FLEISHMAN
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
It seems that Lock Haven State College has two
preachers on campus, except they work in the
classroom instead of the chapel. The two I speak of
teach sociology from a Christian point of view. That's
fine if you're a Christian, but a large portion of the
population happen to be atheists. These teachers are
aiso able to financially support their beliefs since some
of the books that are used in their classes are written
by them.
The issue that concerns the Eagle Eye is not Christianity but rather the violation of the laws of "separation of church and state." The book Sociology; A
Reader In Christian Perspectives, and Love and Sex,
Are Not Enough are filled with religious overtones.
Phases like "I set forth in this book a Christian
perspective on dating, courtship, and mate selection",
or "I would like to add that what I have to say will be
evaluated in the iiglit of the Bible and Christian principles, " weaved through-out the books.
Thesi and other phrases clearly illustrate that these
books are certainly written from a Christian stand
point. Is that stand point violating state schooi
teaching ethics? A nd if so, why is it being tolerated at a
state college? The Eagle Eye suggests a careful analysis
to be taken on these books and that a decision be
reached as to whether they violate a students'
academic freedom.
We aiso would like to note that we are not attacking
these men or their beliefs, but rather the methods they
are using in teaching their courses. A person beliefs
should be respected. The Eagle Eye respects their
beliefs, however, we are curious as to whether teaching
standands are being violated.
Commentary
By LOU
ALBERSE
Congratulations should go out to Gerald Getz and
his SCC staff on their preparation for Friday's Molly
Hatchet concert.
It seems the paper, at times, overlooks the positive
aspects of the Getz administration, while searching for
those news-shattering faults.
I have not been here long enough to critique their
entire tenure in office, but their handling of the concert seems impeccable.
Molly Hatchet is a big time band that played before
3,(X)0 people here last Friday. The crowd was at least
7,000 people smaller than any other on its 30 stop tour.
The SCC brought in a generator to supply power.
Electricians were hired. Student security was abundant. An ambulance and fire truck were available in
case of an emergency. State police were on stand by.
_ ..
. ^ ..
Radio announcements were made to discourage
anyone from coming without a ticket. The doors were
opened earlier to prevent a mad rush. The list goes
on...
The Lock Haven Stat* CMi«ga
EAQtM EYB
An liMtopendent Student Newspaper
The Eagle Eye Is published twice weeKly (Tuesday and Friday) by
The Media Council of Lock Haven State College. The Publications
Office Is located on the ground floor ot the Parson Union Building.
Phone (717) 893-2334.
The Editorial Staff encourages letters and commentaries. All contributions must be signed, but names will be withheld from publication upon request. The Editor reserves the right to ask contributors
to edit or rewrite their material If It Is considered libelous. Incoherent
or too langthy.
^
^ . ,
The Editorial Staff meets every Tuesday at 1 p.m. Article
assignments will be given at that time. Press deadlines are 12 noon
Mondays and Thursdays.
EDITOIUNXSHIEF
J e " Flelehmen
MANAQINQ EDITOR
EllenHeam
QRAPHICS EDITORS
Merlenne Zakem
Mary Kelly
QENERAL MANAQER
FACULTY ADVISOR
NEWS EDITOR
SPORTSEDITORS
PHOTOQRAPHY EDtrOR
STAFFWRITER
KlmPetUngltt
Or. Saundra Hybele
P^-i yobloiaki
Bob Baker
StepAen Leehy
Olenn Cheeter
Merty Myere
To the Editor, Eagle Eye,
1 am commenting on the
article which appeared in the
Eagle Eye, October 3, 1980
wherein graduating seniors
rate various courses as to the
best or worst. The author
compared two major courses
in P.E. which have smaU
numbers of studente enroUed
with general education
courses open to aU students
regardless of major. This is
not a fair comparison. There
are many majors in other
discipUnes who might find
O&A a pretty duU and/or impractical course.
What is practical? How
can anyone, particularly
students who have had Uttle
or no experience in the real
world make judgments on
this? It's amazing how im-
Dear Editor,
We would Uke to bring
your attention to an incident
which happened this past
weekend. The International
Club set a dance date-Oct
llth. The president spoke to
Debbie Suder of the SCC to
make arrangements concerning sound equipment. It was
understood that the SCC
would provide and set the
equipment up for the dance,
and a written statement was
noted on a calendar. On the
night of the dance, no equipment was recieved; no one
came to set it up. The security
guards could not allow us to
have the equipment. They
knew a' dance was to take
place that night, but they had
not received any pdpers
which gave authorized permission that the equipment
could be removed from
storage. Law enforcement
made many attempts to get
hold of the officers responsible for dance equipment, and
we appreciate these efforte.
The International Club
feels that the SCC is guilty of
a breach of contracts. If the
^QQ cannot provide and
transport equipment, it can at
least give us the necessary
written statement.^ which
obUgation too. Going to class
should not be the same as
watching the TV screen ~ a
completely passive situation.
Mental involvement, concentration and participation wUI
allow a Uttle learning to occur. The easiest place to study
is in class.
Since none of us can say
what wiU be useful in the
future, make everything important within the context of
the classroom. Oiily time wiU
tall what is useful to you.
Someday you may take up art
as a hobby so that that art
course you are now taking,
and don't Uke, may be very
useful. The same could be
said for many other courses
you are currently taking.
Why a college degree? To
help you earn a better Uving,
but this is only a smaU part of
practical courses taken during college are perceived as
practical sonie five, ten or fifteen years later.
There are many reasons
why a course may be good or
bad. My opituon is that content is the least vaUd reason
for judging a course good or
bad. The important aspects
of a course are how the professor presente the material,
his/her enthusiasm for the
subject or lack thereof and
his/her abiUty to relate the
subject to the real world. The
last may be the most difficult
to do but this does not
necessarily make the subject
of Uttle value. Being made to
think may be justification for
the course.
Education is a two-way
street. The student has an
Soe^fe^ €o €Ae
St/t^t^
aUow us to do so ourselves.
Apparently, the SCC has
never transported their equipment for previous dances this
semester. The president was
never informed of these situations. Instead, he was assured
that the equipment would arrive at the dance without any
efforts on his side. We are
writing this in the hope that
this type of incident wiU not
occur to us, nor to any. other
club, in the future. The SCC
must remember that it is here
to be of service to students
whenever they require its
help.
After debating with the
security guards, it was finally
decided that personal equip-,
ment of students should be
used in order for the dance to
continue.
Members of the
International
Club
OOlV'
^A/C ^€lU^t>t *^^***'^*^^^*
the picture. CoUege graduates
are supposed to be
reasonably well rounded in
their knowledge of the world
by the time they are
graduated. This involves
knowledge of the past and
present. You can't prepare
for the future if you don't
know about the past I
Being educated means too
that the person has learned
good language usage including writing and speaking.
AU of us should Usten to each
other speak. All of us should
critically analyze our own
writing, then we can decide if
we are as good as we think we
are.
If you refuse to learn for
whatever reason, no one can
teach you anything.
• .Paul F. Klens
Editorial
By ELLEN HEARN
MANAGING
EDITOR
Students are always complaining that there's
nothing to do. on campus but when they have the
chance to do something about it they do nothing!
There is no one on the Social Committee because
no one signed up for it. This committee runs
Homecoming, concerts (Molly Hatchet), movies, and
social events on campus. No one wants to work on
these events so no one should complain if they don't
turn out well.
No one wanted to work on the Homecoming Committee so Bob BuUet, V.P. of the SCC had to ask people to be on it. Then Bob had to organize most of the
Homecoming Festivities by himself. And people ask
why things for Homecoming were confused. There
was only one person running the whole thing. He needed help. He couldn't provide entertainment for
everyone for the whole weekend by himself. If you
want something done on this campus you have to help
out and Take Initiative! College is a time for studying,
but it's also a time to learn to organize yourself and
learn how to get things done.
You can sit back all tnrough college. Studying hard
all week and partying hard on the weekends ,and what
have you proved? Only that you can get through college. Millions of kids get throush college every yearspoon-fed and coddled ~ having everything done for
them. You have your meals cooked at the caf., a
warm room to sleep in, and even your lives governed
by the SCC. Now do you want your entertainment
provided for you too? Plan your own entertainment
but don't complain if no one plans it for you.
^i^fj4n/n^Hi/n4>e^9n/e^n/t^^'^
Starting November 1,
1980,any student wishing to
withdraw from coUege will
report to the Academic Advisement Center where
he/she wiU be interviewed
and given a Withdrawal
Form. This new form requires
only four signatures as compared to ten signatures on the
old form.
CHESS ENTHUSIASTSThe Chess Club is presently
interested in forming a chess
team to participate in intercollegiate competition.
Meetings are held every
Thurs. evening from 7:30 to
11 in Ulmer 102. All students
are invited to attend
regardless of skill.
WANTED: Baby-sitter for
two girls ages 2 and 4. In
COLLEGE
NIGHT Lock Haven area. Call
SKATING PARTY.Magic 748-3600.
River Skate Land. 9-11:30,
Tuesday, Oct. 21. Admis- Jerry's 33rd Anniversary Sale
Continues
sion:$1.00 each, 2 for $1.50
or a group of 7 for $5.00r- Don' t miss it... Downtown
Skate rental is .$50.
Lock Haven
Did You Know?
Under Section 5505 of the
Pennsylvania Crimes Code,
PUBLIC DRUNKENNESS.
A person is guilty of a summary offense if he appears in
any pubUc place manifestly
under the influence of
alcohol to the degree that he
may endanger himself or
other persons or property, or
annoy persons in his vicinity.
Violation of this constitutes a
fine of $25.00 and $10.00
costs.
TMVIA
Quiz
By MARTY MYERS
This week's trivia quiz is
World Series Trivia as promised.
16 "Subway Series" have
been played. That is, both
teams involved were from the
same city. However, out of
these 16 all were played in only 3 cities. Name them.
Answers must be submitted
to the box in the Snack Bar
by noon Thursday.
Tuesday, October 21,1980 page 3
Homecoming
BY RICK BAKER
The traditional type of
homecoming where old alumni gather in a bar after the big
football game is slowly fading
away.
"It seems more and more
are returning as members of
an organized group," said
Alumni Director Nadine
Stukel. This year Jim Dolan
hosted a reuiuon for approximately 100 cross-country
runners, and Max Bossert
handled affairs for Lock
Haven's 1945 footbaU team,
the first team to play footbaU
foUowing Worid War II.
Fraternities and sororities, as
usual welcomed alumni aU
weekend said Mrs. Stukel.
"The people who return as
part of groups all know each
other and they have a common bond which ties them
together," explanined Mrs.
Stukel, "and for the most
part they tend to stay in their
groups."
Dance
Winners
Announced
By MOIRA
MCCARTY
Do you remeinber the
Dance Marathori? WeU, if
you don't, it was the 48 hour
event during which twenty o"so couples put themselves
through sheer torture for
charity and fun.
The marathon was sponsored by the brothers of Phi
Mu Delta Fraternity, and was
in it's sixth successful year
here at LHSC. The chairman
for this year's event was
Brian McLaughlin, who was
also last year's co-chairman.
The organizations that
were to benefit from the
marathon are the Red Cross,
the Infant Development Project, and the Jeffrey Scott
Dubois Foundation. These
charities .wUl spUt $5300,
which is the current amount
raised, and there is stiU
money coming in.
This year, in first place,
was Tracee Kulp and her
partner Chris Stavino. They
raised $675 and wiU receive
$500 as prize money.
In second place were Zeta
Tau Alpha sisters Bess Ann
Wiley and Sue Heth, who wiU
receive $350.
In third place were Tom
Ulmer and Becky Laver.
They get $200. In fourth
place were Don Guiswite and
Karen Fascarella, who will
get $125. Alpha Sigma Tau
sisters Robin Rutter and Amy
Joe Hendrix captured fifth
and wiU receive $75.
It is interesting to note that
only $32 seperated the first
and second place winners,
and 63' between the second
and third placers. Phi Mu
Delta is planning to continue
sponsoring the marathon and
hopes becomes a tradition at
the college.
Reunites
In the past older alumni
have been the most active
members in any activity, but
Mrs Stukel and her staff are
trying to spread interest into
the younger alumni. "We're
trying to open up activities
that will appeal to all
graduates of Lock Haven,"
said Mrs. Stukel.
The Une-up for Homecoming 1980 was an indication of
what she meant. Friday aftern o o n the soccer t e a m
defeated the University of the
District of Coulumbia, and
Friday night Molly Hatchet
rocked the Haven.
Saturday morning the
Homecoming parade started
at 11:00, with the football
game against Shippensburg,
and women's cross country
meet against George Mason
University at 2:00p.m.
At halftime of the football
game, Brian Royer and Karen
Eaches
were
named
H o m e c o m i n g king a n d
queen.
Mrs. Stukel spent most of
her time meeting with Alumni
Chapter Representatives.
Graduates
Workshops and meetings
were held to update the
representatives on the progress of the college, new prog r a m s , a n d o t h e r improvements that have been
made.
This was done so that when
the alumni return home,
they'U have a better idea of
what's going on at Lock
Haven.
Cousteau To Lecture Here
By DA VE MARTIN
Jean-Michel Cousteau, one
of the world's foremost
oceanographers and son of
the famed Jacques Cousteau,
wiU lecture here at Lock
Haven State S a t u r d a y ,
November 1 at 8 pm. The lecture, sponsored by the
Cultural Affairs Committee,
will be held in P r i c e
Auditorium.
Formally educated in the
study of architecture, JeanMichel Cousteau, along with
his father, directed the conversion of the former ocean
liner Queen Mary into the
w o r l d ' s largest m a r i n e
museum, "The Living Sea,"
in Long Beach, CaUfornia.
In the 1960's Cousteau
joined his father during
numerous ocean expeditions
on the vessel Calypso, which
were filmed and later aired on
the television series "The
Undersea World of Jacques
Cousteau."
Cousteau is presentiy VicePresident of Communications and a member of the
board of directors of The
Cousteau Society,
an
organization of over 170,000
members.
Cousteau's lecture here is
an infrequent weekendscheduled event of educational/cultural
interest. By
arranging this engagement
for a weekend, the Cultural
Affairs Committee is attempting to help reverse the trend
of weekends lacking in major
student-enriching opportunities. It hopes that more
campus organizations will
begin scheduling a greater
number of weekend events.
The titie of Cousteau's lecture is "Underwater Jungle
Law" and wiU include the
film "Sharks - Some Truth."
The lecture can be attended
free of charge.
RHA Plans
Activities
By KELL Y MCBRIDE
The Residence Hall
Association^ also better
Icnown to many LHSC
students as the RHA, recently
held Executive Board elections and has gotten the
1980-81 activities underway.
Under the leadership of
Ms. Deb Knorr, hall director
of Gross Hall, the new offlcers for the 1980-81 year
a r e : Daryl
Rosidivito
(chairperson), Mike Youse
(vice-chairperson), Kelly
McBride (secretary), and
Karen Culligan (Business
Manager).
The RHA is composed of
all presidents and vice-
presidents of the seven
dorms, a business manager,
ahd an advisor. Besides the
many programs now being
sponsored in each dorm is a
campus-wide ping pong tournament in which the first, second, and third place winners
from each dorm wiU meet in a
battle for the title of the best
ping pong player on campus.
This is tentatively scheduled
for October 20, 1980 in Zimmerli gymnasium.
The RHA holds its regular
business meetings every Monday at 8:00 pm in the RHA
office, first floor McEntire.
Meetings are open to the
public.
LHSC
Hears Platforms
By PAM YOBLONSKI
Jimmy Carter, Ronald
Reagan, and John Anderson
are not the only candidates
mnning for president. Four
other, lesser known parties
are also sponsoring candidates. These are the Libertarian, Consumer, SociaUst,
and Communist parties. AU
seven
parties
were
represented at the presidential campaign forum, which
was s p o n s o r e d by the
History, PoUtical Science,
and Economics Club in
Bentley Lounge Tuesday.
The Eagle Eye asked each
representative, "Why do you
think your party's candidate
should win?"
Dave White spoke on
behalf of the Democratic
Party. He said President
Carter has the perception to
realize problems and to make
the decisions; Carter knows
there are " n o quick, easy
answers." He stated another
plus is that Carter has a
realistic view of the world
situation and what has to be
done. He looks at the problems from the cultural
point-of-view, and he is concerned about other people,
not only the United States.
White said the other parties
don't
do
this.
The
Democratic candidates are
President Carter and VicePresident Mondale. The
Democratic platform focuses
on increased defense spen-
ding, conservation, passage
of ERA, legal abortions, and
business tax cuts.
Steve Reeves, an Independent, credited his party by
saying that the Independente
see things reaUstically, they
"assess society as it is." Their
platform opposes the draft,
wants a 50-cent-a-gaUon tax
increase on gas, favors tax
cuts, ERA, and legal abortions. The Independent candidates are John Anderson
and Patrick Lucey.
The Libertarian Party was
represented
by
Bob
Orzechowski, the Libertarian
Party Area Coordinator.
This party's candidate for
president is Ed Clark. In
answer to the Eagle Eye's
question,
Orzechowski
repUed that his party beUeves
people should be allowed to
do what they want, as long as
no one else is hurt. He said
his party is consistent; they
beUeve in civil Uberties and a
Umited government.
Frank Kinces was the Communist Party's representative. He is that party's candidate for the U.S. Senate
from Pennsylvania. Kinces
answered the question saying
the Communist platform "is
a people's platform; it
answers the immediate needs
of the country." This platform caUs for a six-hour
workday, Puerto Rican independence, a labor reform
biU, and outlawing of the
KKK and Nazi party. The
Communist Party's candidates are Gus HaU for
president, and Angela Davis
for vice-president.
Tori E)unn spoke on behalf
of the SociaUst Workers Party. She is currently mnning
for P e n n s y l v a n i a S t a t e
Treasurer. She said her
party's candidate should win
because the party "represents
working people; we beUeve in
decisioiu made by the majority." This party's platform is
against nuclear power, and
for nationaUzation of the
energy industry.
The
presidential candidate is Andrew PuUey, and the vicepresidential candidate is
Matilde Zimmermann.
Gregg
Cunningham,
speaker for the RepubUcan
Party, and Lakshman Yapa,
speaker for the Consumer
Party, could not be reached
after the forum for questioning.
AU seven representatives
had time to speak about their
party's platforms, and questions were asked afterward.
Mr. George MarshaU, VicePresident of Administration,
introduced the guests.
°"" 33rd
ANNIVERSARY^!!
•"^P
i«>
SAVE
ON
CLOTHING
FOR
.^^
K
I
1 I p. MEN &
\ V y
WOMEN
CONTINUES
^
WITH THESE SAVINGS
j&v >^.
'^§S
'•^/r.
St^:i^^^
' ^ OFF ^'<9/f'^s
V-
STOREWIDE
USE OUR EASY
LAY-A-WAY and SAVE ON
CHRISTMAS GIFT BUYING!
more than a lian stori"
^
' H U H C H & G f l O v E
C P E N
T U
M &
f
T H & S
V\,ED
Til
STS
Tu
Til
12
frat parking
4 *
i.
iTuesday, October 21,1980 page 4
Molly Hatchet and Nantucket Bands
Roll The Haven With SouthernMollyRock
Hatchet's roadies
By BRIAN HUNT
Rock and roU spilled out of
the column of speakers on
either side Of the stage at a
volume that was slight compared to what would come
later. The floor Ughts were on
but the sticky-sweet stench of
smoke was already in the air.
High schoolers and college
students alike were sUpping
their brand new Molly Hatchet T-shirts on. Three
thousands blank faces stared,
waiting.
Then it happened. The
lights went out and a
thunderclap of guitar stormed through the speakers. The
sound poured down onto the
fans. The heavy metal barrage of sound, color and
power that was Nantucket
possessed the stage. The
crowd clapped, screamed and
danced. Someone near the
front shoved cotton in his
ears whUe the kid beside him
shouted, "LOUDER." The
vocalist belted out his lyrics
and pranced around the
stage. The bassist ducked and
stomped his way through the
Ught show whUe the lead
guitarist grinned and jumped
up and down. The rhythm
guitarist, cliul in a knee
length trench coat, trudged
and shoved his Gibson
through distorted riff after
jjower chord.
Molly Hatchet guitarist concentrates on the
chords.
The heavy metal assault
continued. Nantucket plowed
through tunes from their
previous two albums as weU
as their new one, "It's a Long
Way to the Top." The
vocaUst proposed a toast to
Photo by Evan Petee
Lock Haven and gulped his
bottle of Jack Daniels. The
band roared on for an encore
before leaving the stage. And
this was just the warm up
band.
The floor Ughts came on as
swarmed the stage to ready
for the main attraction.
AC/DC screeched from
the speakers at half the
volume Nantucket played.
The fans passed more joints
and drank from their flasks.
Everyone was waiting for the
boys from Jacksonville,
Florida. The roadies finished
their work a Molly Hatchet
banner above the drum was
all you could see.
One guitar chord later it
began. MoUy Hatchet, the
southern boogie band, was
here. The three guitars of
Dave Hlubeck, Duane
Roland and Steve HoUand
slashed their way into the
heads of everyone present.
Jimmy Farrar, who replaced
Ronnie Van Zant clone, Danpy Joe Brown on throat,
chugged his way through the
vocals and wielded his mike
stand Uke a knight would his
axe. The Hatchet sliced their
way through the metaUic
mash that is their claim to
fame. Any problems the band
has with originality they
cover up with a raw energy
that just won't stop.
After three encores, MoUy
Hatchet was gone. "Lock
Haven State will never be the
same," said Farrar after slurping up some Jack Daniels.
He just might be right.
Photo by Evan Petee
MoUy Hatchet's lead .singer belts lyrics.
Tliomas Field House
Fun-Sweat to Music
By HARRY CRAMER
It Started Friday morning
at flve o'clock and when it
was done Thomas Fieldhouse
had been transformed from
the house of sweat into a
workable concert haU. The
soccer team arrived flrst setting up the stage and laying
down the giant ground sheet,
designed to protect the hardwood floor from the ravages
BY
CHRIS
GAUL band.
people out there in Lock"
of stomping feet, broken
After Nantucket's electriThey handed me a beer and Haven." said lead guitarist
glass and smoldering objects.
BY CHRIS GAUL
fying performance I walked told me to help myself to the Tommy Redd. "They made
At 7:50 p.m. over three The road crew arrived around
back to their make-shift table of food. They were all us feel great."
thousand excited fans stood 10 o'clock in a large nondressing r o o m . Steve stiU excited from the show. I
I asked Pee Wee Watson,
waiting for Molly Hatchet descript commercial-type
HoUbrook, road manager, asked them if they had a good bass player, what the difand Nantucket to rock the bus. Following them was the
greeted me at the door and time. They aU shook their ference was between playing
roof off Thomas Fieldhouse. large 18-wheel truck carrying
took me inside to meet the heads yes. "They're good at the Spectrum and playing
After
a short delay Nantucket Molly Hatchet's gear. The
at Lock Haven. He said,
truck backed up behind .the
took the stage.
"Only the size." Then he adNantucket played songs Fieldhouse and the road crew
ded, "We play equaUy as
from their first two albums, started unloading speakers
hard no matter where we
Nantucket, Your Face or with a forklift. They piled the
are."
Mine and also from their speakers on each side of the
Nantucket plays 220 dates
latest aalbum release Long stage five wide and three high
a year. The band arrived in
forming walls 25 feet high
Way To Tite Top.
Williamsport on Thursday
and
30 feet wide. Huge flags,
Larry
Uzzel,
lead
singer,
and
and checked into the HoUday
Kenny Soule, drummer, ex- bearing surrealistic paintings
Inn. A few hours after the
hibited their talents with a of mystical times, were unconcert the band was back on
bongo drum and drum duet furled to cover the speakers.
the road. This time they were
There were close to a hunthat had everyones foot gogoing on a five hour road trip
to West Virginia. When 1 ask- ing. Larry Uzzel also played dred people purposely milUng
around and setting up gear.
trumpet and harmonica.
ed Pee Wee what it was Uke
were
sipping
being on the road all the time
The screaming lead guitar Some
he replied, "We love it."
of Tommy Redd rang Heinekens,some were chainthroughout
Thomas smoking cigarettes but
MoUy Hatchet and NanFieldhouse while rh'ythm everyone seemed to be busy.
tucket go way back together.
• Around three o'clock the
guitarist Mark Downing danc
At one time Molly Hatchet
"Molly Hatchet" band and
ed around the stage.
used to warm up Nantucket.
Immediately after Nan- the sound people started
I asked Tommy Redd what he
tucket finished, the roadies testing the equipment. By
thought of MoUy Hatchet.
dismantled the stage. Frisbees four o'clock they were done
"They're just great. We've
flew in the air and the party- and Nantucket took the
known each other for many
ing continued below during stage. An hour later Nanyears, "replied Redd.
tucket was finished and all
the half hour intermission.
Nantucket has been on
Then the triple lead guitars there was left to do was wait
tour now for several months.
of Molly Hatchet sliced for the show to begin.
Photo by Evan Petee They've played with SuperLines started forming
through the dense smoke and
Nantucket's lead singer-Molly Hatchet onc6l'^^-^°X.J^^''']'^'
^^
the sweltering heat to give the around five o'clock, and by
. °
'
,
many other big names. The
rowdy crowd over an hour of six o'clock the lines reached
warmed
up for Nantucket,
but now the snoeband had a great time here at
around the corner past Himes
loud rock-n-roll.
is on the other foot
'he Haven and they hope to
Hall and into ZimmerU parkCont. on page 5
return some day.
An Interview With Nantucket
The Songs,
The Bands,
The Crowds
ing lot. The crowd was in
good spirits and there was
much evidence of partying.
At six-thirty the doors to
Thomas Fieldhouse were
opened and the ticket-takers
started letting people in slowly. Every coat was frisked
and every bag was opened. It
took a while, and the Une
never got smaller, but the
Fieldhouse slowly became a
giant mass of sweaty humanity.
When Nantucket took the
stage at eight o'clock the
smoke was so thick it burned
your eyes and when they
, started to play the noise was
so loud it hurt your ears.
Nantucket played hard, loud,
clear driving rock and roll for
over an hour. The crowd loved it.
•
Then came Molly Hatchet.
They turned up the sound until you couldn't think and the
lyrics became a distorted
hodgepodge of non-sensical
mutterings. The security
force in front of the band put
cotton in their ears and
several hundred people decided to find someplace quieter
to go. "Hatchet" played two
hard-driving sets and three
, encores. It was loud and it
was crazy and people were
screaming and dancing on
each others feet and then it
was over.
In ten minutes Thomas
fieldhouse was empty, except
for the road crew and the soccer players who had to break
down the equipment. The
next day the only evidence of
the concert was the hundreds
of empty beer bottles and
cigarette butts scattered on
the floor. An hour later these
too were gone and Thomas
Fieldhouse was once again
the house of sweat.
Tuesday, October 21,1980 page 5
Homecoming
Happenings
Nantucket's sounds blasted the
last Friday night.
Fieldhouse
Cont. from page 4
S o n g s , B a n d s ^Crowds
The music makers of Mollv
Hatchet.
A Roadie's Work
Is Never Done...
wasn't for a roadie a road
tour would be nothing but a
figment of your imagination.
A roadie. What's a roadie? They're up before the sun
Many people stereotype them and watch the moon come
as dirty, beer drinking, long and go. They work with jamhaired hippies that crawl out med fingers, stubbed toes and
from under speakers and aching backs. They take a lot
clean the stage for immortal of shit and give a lot more
bands that play deep into the back.
While the band is blowing
night.
They come in before the away the audience, the
band and leave hours after. roadies are huddled in back
Like pack rats, their Hfe con- stage dressing rooms, trucks
sists of setting up, breaking or buses relaxing, weU knowdown and carting it onto the ing that in two hours and fifnext concert hall. It's a life teen minutes its all got to
that offers Uttle financial come back down. Circles
satisfaction. These nomads form under eyes, T-shirts are
of the music world love their peeled off and fingers are
business, they love the music, mended because Act II begins
they love the excitement and when the performance is
most of .all they love the over.
"Gimme a sound check,
adventure.
They are people who live in and up with the lights. Watch
Levis and T-shirts. They that amp. Hook up these
sweat day and night. Many cables. We need more stage.
times their only refreshment Tone down the volume. Grab
is the spray of a cool mist that that case. More lights. It's
comes from popped beer gettin late. Where's my beer?
tabs. The roadie is a We're done Let's e a t . "
The stage, is set, the hall is
dedicated individual who
loves to be around music. filled and the bands ready.
They're professionals in their Soon it will all be over, all exown right. Just think, if it cept for the roadie, because a
roadie's work is never done.
RoW and Roll on Friday night
BY JEFF FLEISHMAN
Editor-in-Chief
Queen
Big game on Saturday afternoon
7:30-8:30pm. Thursday's
previously announced program has been canceled du^
to unavoidable problems.
Refreshments will be served.
Lost leather " D " shape key
chain. Lost Friday night in
Thomas Field House.
If
found call 893-3685. Reward.
On Thurs. Oct. 24tfa there
will be a coffeehouse. Ralph
Rumburger & Chris Gaul will
be performing in the Eagle
Wing from 8:30-10:30.
Beatin
The Odds.
The
Rambler.a ballad written by
the lead singer Jinuny Fanar
and Dave Hlubek, was one of
them. They also played the title track from their latest
release Beatin The Odds.
For most of us Friday night
was a night we'll never
forget. After all, it isn't every
night you get to see a big
name band Uke MoUy Hatchet or Nantucket at "the
Haven.
King And
tj4n4^€>u4t4>e^§n^/n€^
AttentionrAII concerned
students who would like to
know how to: prevent tuition
hikes; defend s t u d e n t s '
rights; and work as a progressive force are strongly
urged to attend the CAS
Orientation Program, sponsored by the Commonwealth
Association of Students
(CAS), the state lobby
association. The Program
will be held in Price Aud. on
Wed.,
Oct.22
from
During the show they
played songs from their first
Epic release, Molly Hatchet
including the explosive songs
Bounty Hunter and Gator
Country. MoUy Hatchet also
played almost every track
from the Flirtin
With
Disaster album with such
classics as Whiskey Man and
the title track Flirtin With
Disaster.
The band also played songs
from their latest release
Stands are full at Hub
Lock Haven
State's
homecoming queen and king
for 1980 are Karen Eaches
and Brian Royer.
K a r e n E a c h e s is a
s o p h o m o r e representing
Sigma Kappa. She is a Health
and Physical Education major, and is a member of the
women's basketball team.
When asked how she felt
about being nominated, she
said, "1 am very honored and
Photo by Glenn Chester
surprised to be a part of the
homecoming court."
jack Stadium
Photo by Glenn Chester
Brian Royer is a member of
Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. He is a senior majoring in
Health, Physical Education'
and Recreation, with a concentration in Recreation. He
is president of Lambda Chi
Alpha, a member of the Interfraternity Council, and is
active in the intramural program. When asked of his
reaction to being nominated,
he said, "I feel pleased that I
have that many friends who
would vote for me."
r
Tuesday, October 21,1980 page 6
Soccer Team Remoins UndeFeoted
Saturday afternoon the
soccer team defeated the
alumni squad 4-2, on the
strength of Scott Cardin's
three second half goals.
Tom Kretch scored the first
goal for the Bald Eagles when
he took a pass from Robby
Gould and drilled it past the
alumni goaUe.
The alumni came right
back however and scored on
a shot by Bert Gottbrecht,
now a student assistant. The
score remained tied and the
teams entered the lockertoom
at one all.
In the second half Cardin
scored three goals to give the
Bald Eagles a comfortable
4-1 lead. The alumni got one
back on a goal by 1977
graduate Tom Rowan but
that's aU and the score stood
at 4-2.
Eagle coach Mike Parker
said,"This was the first alumni game we had that wasn't
taken too seriously."
On Wednesday afternoon
the Eagles return to action
against Scranton at 3 pm on
McCollum Field.
Alumni battle it out with the soccer
team during Saturday's match.
r
^
By RICK BAKER
Friday afternoon the Bald
Eagles defeated University of
District of Columbia 1-0 to
raise their season's record to
10-0. The game was a defensive struggle throughout and
Lock Haven didn't nail down
the victim untU late in the se-
fboto by Evan Petee
cond half when Jon Felker
tapped home a shot right in
front of the goal. The score
came off on a fine cross from
Trevor Adair in the corner.
The Bald Eagles kept up the
defensive pressure, and
emerged with a victory.
Alumni Cdges CC Teom 26-31
By PHIL BURGE
It was a sweet homecoming
for the Alumni Cross Country team, led by Rick Blood,
as they edged out the Lock
Haven Men's team 26-31 on
Saturday. Blood captured
first in the five mile race running 24:41, taking 41 seconds
off the course record and 31
seconds in front of the second place runner. Grabbing
second was another alumni,
Steve Podgajny, who was a
two time Ml American in
cross countrv while at Lock
Haven. The Haven's team
was led by Mark Amway,
who grabbed third place in
25:29, only 13 seconds behind
Podgajny who ran 25:16.
Taking fourth for the varsity
team
was
Tim
McNicholas in 26:02. Coach
Dolan grabbed fifth for the
alumni in 26:17, followed by
Norm Gordon, alumni, in
26:32. Phil Burge was next
for the varsity in seventh in
26:42; foUowed by Al Buck,
eighth in 26:51; Frank
Passaniti, Bob Walker, and
Smith Sets Cross Country
LOCK HAVEN
The George Mason University women cross country
team edged Lock Haven
State, 26-29 here Saturday
afternoon with the meet
finishing inside Hubert Jack
Pete Digiralomo tying for
ninth in 27:21. Next for the
Haven was Don Henise in
12th ; Rod Beck in thirteenth; John Cope in 16th;
Scott Metro in 17th; John
Fantasky in 24th and Chris
Theodore in 26th.
The Lock Haven State
Wrestling team also ran with
their first runner, Kevin
Kepler, grabbing 23rd.
The team will now travel to
Buffalo, NY Friday to run in
the Canasius Invitational.
Course Record
Stadium as part of the big
Homecoming Day sports
festivities.
For the Lady Eagles super
distance runner Vickie Smith
it was another recordbreaking performance.
The senior Clearfield
native came in first in time of
19:04 topping her previous
record time of 19:06.
The loss gave Coach Leroy
Straley runners a final regular
season reqprd of 4-5.
Field Hocltev Teom Butts Roms
PHILADELPHIAFor the first time since
1966 the Lock H a v e n
women's field hockey team
defeated West Chester 1-0
Sunday at FrankUn Field.
The win marked Coach
Sharon Taylor's first triumph
over the Rams in seven years
as head coach.
Commenting after the big
win on Sunday Coach Taylor
said,
"West
Chester
dominated the first half but
what kept us even was the
super performance of goalkeeper Karen Kirmeyer who
had several ' outstanding
saves.
"We came out more aggressively in the second half
and started to dominate the
game and scored the only
goal to w i n . T h e y ( W e s t
<?S
Chester) were just coming off
a 1-0 win Friday over nationally-ranked Delaware on
the same Franklin J<'ield
Astro-turf."
Asked about the team's
play on artificial turf Taylor
said, "We seem to play pretty
weU on Astro-turf. 1 was hoping one of the schools with
Astro-turf would bid for
regionals, but none have."
The only score of the contest came at 23:56 of the second half on a penalty corner
with Roxie Gustitis making a
hand stop and Jane Shaw
drilUng home the goal.
Coach Taylor felt it was a
complete team victory, but
did have special words of
praise for Kirmeyer, Shaw,
Gustitis, and Sandy Miller,
who led the second half
surge.
West Chester led in shots
9-7 and penalty corners 7-1 in
the first half, but the Bald
Eagles came back to control
the second, leading 11-4 in
shots and 6-1 in corners.
Lock Haven, now 9-3-2 on
the season, goes back into action this afternoon at Ithica
CoUege. This weekend the
Bald Eagles wUI defend their
PSCAC championship at
Shippensburg.
The three other teams
selected to play in the tourney
are Bloomsburg, MillersviUe,
and host Shippensburg.
This season the Bald Eagles
have tied Bloomsburg,0-0,
and MiUersville 1-1. Shippensburg is the defending
Division III AIAW National
champions.
ON€ STOP R€CORDS
SflV€ ON
* Cassette Cose
Holds 24 Topes
* 8-Trock Cose
''The Minute
We Saw It We Knew''
" W e shopped 1rom store to store - we just
couldn't f irid the rings we liked - until we saw the
perfect set at Eisemann's."
"They had so many beautiful styles it was easy
to find rings we liked - and by comparison - the
most reasonable prices."
" W e are happy with our purchases - you will be
too - Stop in Today*'
$4.99
* 20 N€UJ POST6RS
$ 3 . 0 0 each
* PUB LIGHT
* BLACK UGHT
* STROB6 UGHTS
$27.95
*CfiNVRS UUflLL€TS
* CRRD HOLD€R
LnDI€S CLUTCH
$4.50
$12.50
Diamond Jeweler for 3 Generations
Lock Haven
$17.95
$17.95
$9.50
E. Main St.
$3.99
209 Bellefonte Rve.
Lock Hoven
748-7163
Tuesday, October 21, 1980 page?
Cori's Corner: Tlie Plovoffs, Tlie Issues, the
When they finaUy did say
so how can you argue the percent of the time they're
By CARL BROSNAN
move? The move was made, correct. I didn't hear too
WeU it's World Series time something it was Palmer, beagain. You can teU because ing the pitcher he is, com- and the rest is history. To my many complaints when the
disappointment, and other third base umpire caUed Gary
all you're hearing around menting that it was a 98 mph
Yankee fans around the Woods out for leaving too
campus now is "they're a bet- fastbaU. Why not give credit
country, next year finaUy early in the sixth iniung of the
ter team,"" I think they'U to Brett. He's a 390 hitter. I
win in six," and of course don't care how fast the came for the Royals, and 4th game.
they're in the World Series.
"how much you wantta pitch was, Brett stiU had to
One question I would Uke
bet?" But let's forget about hit it, and hit it he did.
As for the National League to know, did,Lonnie Smith
Another
thing
that
the series for now. Let's go
playoffs, what can I say? It play for the 1962 Mets? His
back a week or so and talk bothered me, I don't know
was the most unbeUevable, play in the 4th inning of 4th
about the playoffs, because it why, I should be used t9 it, is eventful, sloppy, record set- game was horrendous. I've
IS a year, when the playoffs George Steinbrenner's ting and exciting playoff never seen anything so bad
were, to say the least, bizarre. mouth. WiU he ever shut it?
series I've ever seen. Besides and funny in my Ufe. His
Being a Yankee fan for all
First I would Uke to com- these years, 1 know Georgie game 1, I was afraid to leave judgement on Enos CabeU's
ment on the American boy. When it comes to plugg- the television set, not wanting fly ball was pathetic, my two
League Playoffs. Everyone ing up a hole in his team or to miss what would happen little sisters could have caught
knows the Royals swept the improving it for the better, he next. And as it turned out, that ball. And if that wasn't
Yankees in 3 straight. A feat does it. There is nobody bet- just about everything hap- bad enough, the next play he
that, I don't think anyone ex- ter. But after he does that pened.
unleashes a throw to the plate
pected. The play itself, except why can't he just sit back,
I don't know where to tiiat went aU of five feet.
for a couple of plays at the ke6p his mouth shut, and let
start. At times I thought I A new Guiness World
plate (2nd game, Randolph the team play ball. They have was watching a little league Record. The funny thing
thrown out.) wasn't too ex- enough pressure out there,
team, I've never seen about it is that he retrieved
citing. At times I found without having to put up with anything so sloppy in my Ufe, the ball and recorded an out.
myself falUng asleep.
I asked myself "these two 1 hope Steinbrenner didn't
him, but he always has to get
It was a playoff where the into the act. He wiU pro- teams are fighting for the see that play because he'll
big names,
Jackson, bably fire the 3rd base pennant?" then it took a have his outfielders practicGossage, Brett (only 3 hits), coach, Mike Ferraro. I don't complete turn around and it ing that play next spring
and Wilson (no steals), didn't think he should. 1 would have was as though every play training.
play up to their expectations. made the same play, in trying would decide the Worid
As bad as Lonnie Smith
When Brett finally did, the to score Randolph in game 2. Series. They were playing was on defense, Mike
their
hearts
out.
I
would
just
ball skyrocketed. The sur- Randolph is the fastest player
Schmidt was even worse on
prise in the series was Frank on the team, and they weren't shake my head in amazement offense. He didn't hit a lick
White. He was named MVP, scoring that many runs.(2 a at all the plays being made. in the playoffs. That's why I
I've also never seen so many question Astro's manager BiU
and rightly so. Here's a game). At the time, Jackson
player who is known for his wasn't hitting, and it had to players left on base. And Virdom's move in the fifth
speed and fielding, (I feel he's be 2 perfect throws to get Lord knows how many strike game when he replaced Joe
the best second baseman in 'iiim. So what happens, the outs there were with a man Sambito, a clutch reliever,
baseball for fielding), but Royals, to their credit, make on second, third,or the bases with a right handed pitcher.
reaUy wins the MVP with his the perfect relay and Jackson loaded.
Sambito only pitched to one
bat. He batted .545 in the compUcatedmatters by leading
I guess the big issue of that batter. 1 feel he could have
playoffs and was the Royals off the next inning with a hit. playoff was the umpiring. It's handled Schmidt, and stayed
clutch man.
Sorry Mike. I would have hard to say anything about in the game. 1 feel Virdonr
Speaking of clutch, there made the same play that you the umpires because let's face wasted one of his best players
wasn't too much of that did. Hope the unemployment it.they are human too. Peo- that game.
either. For most of the checks aren|t late. As for ple forget that sometimes Some individual perfor
playoff, when either team Steinbrenners remarks about they can miss one, which they mances reaUy impressed me
had a chance to bust the firing Howser, that is totally did in the eighth inning of the during the playoff. To be
game open, nobody got that asinine. A rookie manager 4th game, when the replay honest, my knowledge of the
key hit. True, the pitching for wins 103 games and gets showed that Jeff Leonard did players in the N.L. is weak,
both sides was good, but it fired. No way.
trap Trillo's Uner to right, but one player reaUy woke me
wasn't exceptional.
The ump blew the caU. Then up and that was Terry Puhl.
There
was
only
1
move
by
What reaUy bugged me
I question. Why take there were loud complaints His effort throughout was
about the playoff was the Howser
Tommy
out in game 3. on the supposed triple play tremendous. 1 know the
ABC broadcasting crew. To Xhere areJohn
2 outs, nobody on turned into a double play. M V P goes to the winning
me it was a let down. Here's when WiUie
gets a The replay doesn't reaUy team, and taking nothing
BiUy Martin and Jim Palmer bloop double Wilson
to
right.
Why show whether or not Houston away from Manny Trillo,
in the booth together, so I ex- take him out? I know
pitcher Ruble, caught Mad- ^ho had a fine playoff, but
pected sparks to fly sooner Gossage, probably the f
dox's soft Uner, so how could njy vote would have gone to
or later. Forget it. All we get
everyone swear he trappd the puhi, winning team or not.
in the A.L. is in ti
is how BiUy loves everbody reUever
buUpen, but you have U.L. baU? You couldn't teU. The My hat goes off to Tug Mc
and everybody loves BiUy. Washington
and plate umpire blew the play Qraw. He was another player
Come on. A guy with BiUy's John could getuphimnext
out,
and when he signaled no catch, y,^^^^ a great pereformance. 1
personaUty, somebody must he had aUeady gotten Brett
without reaUy seeing the play, thought for sure his arm was
hate him, maybe even a Uttle out twice that game. Brett which he admitted to later, going to fall off, but he kept
disUke somewhere. Another himself said afterwards "I At least he adnutted though, coming back. And finally
thing that made me gag was was delighted to see Gossage, He didn't try to hide. Um- Pete Rose. I admire Rose as a
the way Martin and Palmer 1 didn't want to face John pires and conU-oversial caUs player. He's a hustler. He's
complimented each other, again."
But Uke I said, he are part of the game, so don't the PhilUes spark plug. He
and their respected teams, had already
won 103 games cry about it. They are human gets them going and gets
throughout the whole series.
and make misUkes but 99 results, but sometimes he can
According to Palmer, Martin
and Oakland are great at
everything and according to
Martin,
Palmer
and
Baltimore are just as great. If
they were so great we should
have been watching Oakland
and Baltimore instead of
K.C. and N.Y. I feU Uke I
1 urn to Trinity United Methodist as your
was watching a soap opera inchurch
away from home. We're at West Main
stead of a baseball game. Did
and Second - just a ten minute walk
you hear them when Brett hit
the homer in game 3? Of
from campus. Come worship with us each
course not, because they
Sunday at 10:45 A.M.
weren't saying anything.
There was more silence in the
booth than in the stands.
Ployers, the Voices
make a real ass of himself. I
don't know where he got the
idea of spiking the baU at the
end of an iiming but I think
it's a lot of crap. Rose is a
geat player and everybody
knows he's out there, so
why puU that stuff. Come on
Pete, do what you have been
doing for years and let your
bat do your talking. Leave
the spiking for the NFL.
The fans were another item
of discussion. The PhUlie
fans are, to say the least,
tough. They get down on
their players very quickly. I
couln't beUeve the way they
booed Greg Luzinski before
Game 1, but when he hit the
home run the cheers were so
loud, 'The BuU" could have
probably won the position of
mayor. Give the guy a break.
He's put some good years in
PhUadelphia. The Houston
fans were beyond beUef. The
first time they got started in
game 3 1 thought it was a Fri-
day night and I was at a giant
pep raUy on the Notre Dame
campus. I loved it. I guess the
fans were both supporting
their teams, but sometimes,
their methods are questionable.
Howard was Howard.
Once again he proved he
doesn't know a whole lot
about baseball. He seemed
more interested in second
guessing everyone, and if
things worked out his way he
let you know, and know it,
and know it. I won't say
more about Howard because
it's probably already been
written or said.
Funniest
Play-Lonnie
Smith, who else?
Most Unusual Occurence-An
inside the park home run by
Graig Nettles? Half this campus is faster than him.
Bravest Performance-Joe
Morgan
Best Pitching-Joe Niekro's
performance in game 3.
MEN and WOMEN
ONLY $8.00
'PERMSI
Start at$15.00
No Appointment
OPEN 8-8 SAT. 8-3
I Turn To
Trinity.
I
CLINTON PLAZA-STORE 3
120 E. WALNUT ST. LOCK HAVEN
748-9979
I
.*t
Tuesday, October 21, 1980 page 8
Ship. Red Raiders Pass by Bold Cogles 20-16
By BOB BAKER
Shippensburg State's Tim
Ebersole hit Angelo McCall
with a three-yard scoring pass
with 45 seconds remaining in
the game to give the Red
Raiders a 20-16 win over
Lock Haven. Only seconds
earlier Ebersole hit Kevin
Fields with a 35-yard pass
play moving Shippensburg to
the Lock Haven three.'
On a third and thirty-three
play Ebersole got behind the
Bald Eagle secondary and
hauled in the long pass.
Shippensburg got on the
scoreboard first as Jeff
Auker connected on a
27-yard field goal with 2:42
left in the first quarter. Ship-
pensburg was aided with a 21
yard punt return as they got
to start their drive at the Lock
Haven 15.
The Bald Eagles got their
first score of the day early in
the second quarter. Scott
Reiner picked off a Bob Potts
pass and returned it to the
Shippensburg 20.
Ben Pavalko hit Joe Speese
with an eight-yard pass and
Speese ran for sue yards putting the Bald Eagles on the
six-yard Une. Speese got the
caU again as he foUowed an
excellent block by Willy
Mathias around the right end
for the touchdown.
Danny Young's extra point
made it 7-3, Lock Haven,
with 11:59 to go in the halt.
Lock Haven came right
back as they executed a
perfect onside kick. Doug
SchiUing recovered the baU at
the Shippensburg 41.
Pavalko then hit Jeff
Bailey with a 16-yard pass
and also completed passes to
Speese and BUI SementelU,
advancing Lock Haven to the
19. Speese, who finished the
game with 161 yards on 28
carries, rushed to the 13.
The drive staUed here and
Young was caUed in to kick a
28-yard field goal. His successful attempt gave Lock
Haven a 10-3 lead and set a
new Lock Haven career
record of seven field goals
Judo Club Kichs Into Action
By GLENN M. CHESTER
Are you bored? Do you
feel that you need more skiUs
in self defense? WeU maybe
judo is just what you're looking for.
Judo is a sport in the
American culture and is
defined as gentie learning: ju
• gentle, do - leanung.
The club is sponsored by
Dr. Ken Cox and the instructor is Mike Parucha. Mr. Paruclta-judo instructor
Photo by Glenn Chester
Parucha is a weU experienced promising situation.
isn't practiced very much exand discipUned instructor. He
Mr. Parucha has been stu- cept in Japan.
isn't payed for his participa- dying this curious art of self Judo can be fun for those
tion, and says "I just do It tor defense for 12 years. He has a who just want to leam or
the enjoyment."
y^pj^ ^^^^ j„ J^^Q^ karate, those who want to compete.
Mr. Parucha feeis that the and ju jitso - the black beU Mr. Parucha would enjoy
women of LHSC should being the highest honor at-teaching the skUls he has
become more involved so tainable.
mastered to any who wish to
they wiU have a self defense Karate is a very lethal art, leam. The club meets every
technique which may come in but judo isn't. Ju Jitso is a Tuesday and Thursday in
Field
handy when put in a com-iethal form of judo but it 'Thomas
"*•
"'-'-' House.
"
Shippensburg was able to
come right back and tie the
score as Ebersole hit Dave
Friese with a 21-yard scoring
pass. Friese leaped high in the
end zone between two Bald
Eagles to haul in the fingertip
grab.
Auker added the extra
point to tie the game at 10-10
with 4:39 to go in the first
half.
The first half ended with
Shippensburg holding 13-10
halftime lead as Auker connected on a 26 yard field goal
with:15togo.
Lock Haven continued to
control the Une of scrimmage
in the third quarter as the offensive Une of Chuck Terek,
Kelly Parshall, Rob McCauley, Don AmorieUo and
Bruno DiMartile gave the
Lock Haven mnning backs
mnnmg room.
Starting at their own 46,
the Bald Eagles moved
54 yards in 10 plays for the
score. The big play of the
drive was a fourth and one
play when Speese broke
through for 22 yards, setting
up Coach Jack Fisher's Bald
Eagles at the Shipensburg
one. Speese got the
touchdown on a one yard
plunge to give Lock Haven a
16-13 lead. The extra point
was no good as the snap was
fumbled.
This was the way the score
stayed untU the final minute
of the game.
The Bald Eagle offense,
which did things much to
their Uking most of the day,
staUed in the fourth quarter
as they were unable to get a
first down throughout the en-
tire quarter.
Pavalko went down with
an ankle injury early in the
quarter and Fisher commented that this made Lock
Haven more cautious in their
play selection. Pavalko did
return later in the quarter,
but the offense was unable to
mount any momentum.
PUNTS, PASSES, and
KICKS: Speese now has mshed for 580 yards this season
to lead the Bald Eagles offense. He is averaging 97
yards a game, and has a 4.8
yards per attempt.
Pavalko hit on 7 of 17
passes for 43 yards.
BaUey had 2 catches for 28
yards, and Speese hauled in 3
catches for 16 yards.
Tony Garzione and Dave
ZieUnskie also had interceptions.
UJomen's Tennis Team Competes
In Conference Chompionships
By STEPHEN LEAHY
While the Royals and
• Phillies were battling in
championship play over the
Homecoming Weekend, so
was the Lock Haven State
women's tennis team. The
tennis team traveled to
Bloomsburg on Friday and
Saturday for the Pennsylvania Conference Champoinship.
The Bald Eagle netters
went in to Bloomsburg with
confidence as they had,
posted a 6-3 record in the
Pennsylvania conference this
season. But the team did not
fare so weU, as they finished
in the middle of the fifteen
state coUeges.
Some standout performers
for the Lock Haven squad
were fourth seeded Denise
Lebert, number two singles,
as she reached the semi-finals
and gamely fought the
number one seed Jane Kaufman of Bloomsburg, but lost
7-5, 6-1.
Gail Overdorf, seeded second in number five singles,
lost to top-seeded Terri
Kazunas
of
East
WOOL TWEEDS
By CANT
Karen Cann and Lori Emich, concentrating at number one doubles.
Stroudsburg, 6-2. 6-2.
Karen Cann, the number
one single^ for Lock Haven,
rallied to win her first round
match, 1-6, 6-4, 6-2, but lost
to the second seeded player in
the next match.
Cann and Lori Emich, the
number one doubles team for
Lock Haven, seeded 3rd, lost
to the top-seeded MillersviUe
pair, 6-1, 6-2.
In number two doubles,
third seeded Denise Lebert
and Sharon Starzan lost to
the top seeded Clarion duo
6-0, 3-6, 6-3.
Slippery rock won the
overall championship.
Presenting a suit that will never go out
of fashion. Fine wool tweed tailored
with meticulous care by Cant. The suit
that says "Fall 1980" in a strong, but
soft-spoken way. Wear it with just the
right accessories and know that you
can't be dressed better. Find it at...
Main St.
Lock Haven
Media of