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Lock Haven State Gonege,

Eas
Vol XIX No. 3

Fri., Sept. 10, 1976

SCC workers to
vote next week
By KEITH VERNON
Staff Reporter
An election to detennine
whether the American Federation of State, County and
Municipal
Employees
(AFSCME) will represent tiie
seven full time employees of
the SCC, will be held on
Tuesday September 14 at
3:30pm in the Music Room of
tiie PUB. Only the seven full
time employees ofthe SCC will
vote in the election.
In order for the SCC employees to become unionized, only
four of the seven have to vote
in favor of the AFSCME.
Should the union be voted in,
the SCC will have 30 days to
appeal the decision. According
to Lorin Mock, president of the
SCC, it is impossible at this
point to tell how the election
will go.
Rumors of the possibility of
the AFSCME being brought in
started as early as February
1976. In April, of 1976 a hearing
took place to determine whether the AFSCME would be a
legitimate representative of
the SCC employees. In that
hearing Lorin Mock maintained tiiat the SCC was a
strictiy autonomous organization which received no state
funding. The union representatives however, tried to prove
that the SCC was indeed a
state organization, which
would enable them to represent the workers.
Mock, who has been opposed to the unionization of
SCC workers ftotta tiie start,
added emphatically,
"We
don't need the help of the
AFSCME." The court dedded
in favor of the union which
gave them tiie right to set up
next Tuesday's election.
The SCC provides hospital

and medical insurance for its
employees and complies with
all union benefits with the
exception of tenure. It is
interesting to note however,
that no SCC employee has ever
been fired. One tiling tiie SCC
offers its employees which the
union does not is no retirement
age. SCC workers can work as
long as they wish. Union
workers cannot. The AFSCME
is a member of the American
Federation of Latnir and the
Congress of Industrial Workers.
When asked what he
thought of the whole issue
Lorin Mock responded, "The
eventual loser m the long run
will be the students." It is
conr. on page 4

Pr. JoAnn Farr gave a lecture on female
sexuality last Wednesday. The lecture
Was sponsored by the Women's Resource
Center. Farr discussed various topics
ringing from sanitary protection to
n^asturbation.
[PHOTO BY JOHN
VJUKOVIC]

PHEAAcracks down on fund misuse
By JACK SOHNLEITNER
Staff Reporter
The Pennsylvania Higher
Education Assistance Agency
betier known as PHEAA has
decided to crack down on
student misuse of PHEAA
grants and loans according to
Bryan Van Deun, Director of
Financial Aid at Lock Haven
State.
"All students that have
PHEAA grants," said Van
Deun, "will be checked to see
if they have a car registered on
campus. If that car is not
approved by PHEAA then the
student will either have to give
up the car or the grant." To
own a car, according to
PHEAA, a student has to be
either a commuter, a student
teacher, or need a car for some
other bonafide reasOui
PHEAA also has revised
its loan program. The bank is
now required to make the
check payable to both the
student n d the college. Van

Deun says PHEAA did this
because students were using
the money for downpayment
on cars or other non-educational purposes. Because
of the PHEAA ruling tiie
college has to endorse a
PHEAA check before a student
may cash it. The college won't
endorse a check unless a
student pays his bills with it.

About half of all LHS students receive some sort of
financial aid.
Guaranteed
loans worth $87 million were
processed by PHEAA along
with grants worth $70 million
during the 1975-76 acadeihic
year. In conjunction with this,
President Ford signed into
law, on June 2, $791 million of
cont. on page 4

s e e Senate needs legislators
i-eimons are presentiy available to any student interested
in running for the position of
SCC Senator.
"hi this election all the
senate seats are up for grabs,"
stated Lorin Mock, SCC President. "We're hoping," he>
added' 'for a good turn out this
fall."
To be a Senator the qualifications are that you must be
a fiill time student in good
standing as determined by the
Vice President of Academic
Affau-s.
The composition of the

senate is determined by the
constitution which reads;
dormitories shall be represented by one senator to 100
students ... and off-campus
;tudents (i.e., - all those
students not residing in dormitories) shall be represented
according to the proportions
outiined for those residing in
dormitories.
All totaled, following the
rule of one senator to 100
students, there are 27 senators.
Petitions are available upon
cont. on page 4

Fri.,Sept. 10,1976/

page 2

EAGLE EYE

Zaharis replaces Time to get involved
Robinson a s VP SCC president
By Tina Brooks
Staff Reporter
"Lock Haven is a nice
place, both the town and the
college," commented Dr. John
L. Zahoris, newly appointed as
Vice President for Academic
Affairs to replace Dr. Gerald
R. Robinson on July 19. He
then continued, "The people
here have been great."
Dr. Zaharfe is a 1955
graduate of the University of
Oklahoma, where he also
earned his M.S. in zoology.
He received his Ph. D. in
entomolohy from Kansas State
University.
Directly before coming to
Lock Haven State, Dr. Zaharis
served as Dean of Academic
Affairs at North Adams State
College in Massachusetts.
Dr. Zaharis gave several
reasons why he decided to
leave North Adams State for
L.H.S." Pennsylvania has a lot
mor to offer than Massachusetts," stated Dr. Zaharis. He
noted that Massachusetts is
having serious financial problems.
Other reasons Dr. Zaharis

seeks cooperation

made the change to L.H.S. are
that he feels he has a better
position here, with a larger
Lorin Mock
the effect of instituting major
salary, and the school is in a
changes to better serve the
nice location.
student.
Dr. Zaharis said that he
note: Lorin Mock, president of
The real crime is when those
plans to take advantage of the ^.dltor's
ne SCC, wili be writing a weekly column
area by fishing, canoeing, and in the Eagle Eye to give students a better complaints directed to help
gardening. "I was away ft'om view of how their government works and improve something fall by the
my family for two years, so to relay his opinions on current Issues. wayside because a person with
a good idea just doesn't feel
right now I'm spending a lot of
inclined to pitch in and help
time with them,"he aoded.
make what he or she is
In addition to being a
It is fairly common around
complaining about better. In
teacher and administrator, Dr. Lock Haven or any campus for
any event, it does not take a
Zaharis has published numer- that matter to hear students
skilled eye to see that while
ous articles in professional complaining about the activimuch good constructive criticjournals, including two chapt- ties or services provided to
ism takes place on our camers for the Prentice Hall book students. These complaints
pus, the great majority of the
on "Man and Environment."
usually can be about anything
suggestion's fall by the wayHe is a member of the from the food in the cafeteria,
side. For the most part, they
American Association for the to the groups brought to
fall
by the wayside because the
Advancement of Science, the campus for a concert, and
one who espoused the idea in
American Institute of Biolog- everything in between. Bethe first place, for one reason
ical Sciences, and the Entom- lieve it or not I feel that is good
or another, chooses not to
ological Soeietv of America.
and healthy and needed on any
become involved and pursue to
Dr. Zaharis'honors include campus.
his or her satisfaction the
elude membership in Sigma
By questioning current policomplaint.
Chi National Honor Society, cies and practices to see if
Phi Sigma and Beta Beta Beta there isn't a better way to
The opportunity to get down
Biological Honor Societies, serve the students needs; you
off the soap box and get
and Gamma Sigma Delta spark discussion which can, if
involved in the process of
Honor Society.
setting up policies and proit is in the right forum, have
grams for the students of this
campus is here again. The
SCC Senate Elections to decide the group who will have
Three Stooges, Marks Bro- final say on all SCC sponsored
formances may u. the films
only good point.
thers,and Ernie Kovaks rou- policies and procedures for the
The most interesting thing
tines that were much better Student Body and campus
about Silent Movie is that it is,
the first time around. The film community is less than two
with one exception, completely
lacked all of the originality, weeks away. The choice of
without dialogue. The .sound
irreverence, and brashness of whether to implement your
track consists solely of music
earlier Brooks adventures.
suggestions to make the SCC a
and sound effects.
better
and more responsive
•••Because of this Brooks
Mel Brooks has proven
organization
or to just let your
must rely on sight gags,
before that slapstick lives, but
ideas
fade
away
is yours.
subtitles, and sound effects for
this latest attempt, a seeming
I
urge
you
to put your
his humor.
Consequently,
reincarnation of his comic
Silent Movie is full of them.
roots, leaves us wondering if complaints to work by either
Throughout the film there are
perhaps he is kicking a dead serving on the SCC Senate or
by contacting me or any
reworked fragments of old
horse.
cont. on page 4

Mel Brooks drops a silent bomb
By Chris Carsto
Staff Reporter
It looks as if the king of
. ontemporary corn is at it
again. Mel Brooks, creator of
those comic classics Blazing
Saddles and Young Frankenstein is shooting for a hat-trick
with his newfilmSilent Movie.
Silent Movie is the story
of Mel Funn (Mel Brooks), one
time Lord ofthe silent film era,
but knocked from his throne by
intemperance.
Funu tries to make a
comeback by selling the rights
to his first picture in years, a
silent movie, to a financially
distressed movie studio.
In order to insure the
success of the picture, Mr.
Funn tries to secure the
services of some of Hollywood's most famous faces.
This entails the appearances of
such big names as Bert
Reynolds > James Cann, Liza
Minelli, Anne Bancroft, and
Paul Newman. Their per-

The House of Sound
at 132'^ E. Mam St.
above WestemAuto,
wouldlike to welcome
all fre.shmen. , Any
student presenting a
valid I.D. to House
of Sound with a
handout, will receive
10%
off
first
purchase.
748-7163.

EAGLEEYE

Fri., Sept. 10,1976

Commentary

[lirsi ol

a

page 3

two part article]

Noupsels
for N.F.C. powers
'<•

By Steve Heverly
Staff Reporter

Pro Football "76" explodes on the scene this
weekend when the meaningless exhibitions are thrown out
and all teams start with no
wins and no losses.
Although all teams start
together, the power remains
where it usually is. Pittsburgh, Oakland, and Miami
are good bets for AFC divisional crowns while Dallas,
Minnesota, and Los Angeles
are favorites in the NFC
divisions.
The NFC East is most
likely where the only real
divisional race will be. Dallas
should come out on top in what
shapes up as a dogfight with
St. Louis and Washington.
The Cowboys made it to
the Super Bowl last year with a
mixture of veterans and 12
rookies. Dallas shored up its
only weak spot-running, by
picking up injury-prone Ron
Johnson of the Giants and
formerCowboyfi-ee-spirtDuane
Thomas. If the Cowboys loss
to the Steelers in the Super
Bowl did anything, it gave the
young team experience.
In St. Louis, the Cardinals
made moves to shore up a
porus defense by getting linemen Walt Patulski and Mar/in
Upshaw. Also linebacker Al
Beauchamp and safety Mike
Sensibaugh should bring the
defence respect. Look for St.
Louis to make to playoffs as a
wildcard team.
Washington spent millions to acquire Calvin Hill,
John Riggins and Jean Fugett
and still will need breaks to
make the playoffs. Dissention
rides high inside the Redskin
camp and Washington could
be fighting off the Giants for
third.
The Giants have improved
considerably and the acquisition of Larry Csonca will help.
In Philadelphia, the Eagles
have faced a tough training
camp under new coach Dick
Vermeil and should be improved.
But because of the
improvement within the conference the Eagles will have to

^

fight hard to match 1975's 4-10
record.
In the Central division
Detroit looks like the onlj' team
capableof unseating theVikings
The Lions have both Bill
Munson and Greg Landry back
fi-om injuries and will be
strong on offence.
Minnesota faces internal
problems with Gilliam lost and
Chuch Forman threatening to
play out his option. The Vikes
are getting older but should
win enough games to hold off
the Lions.
Green Bay and Chicago
have a long way until they'll be
back and won't be factors in
the race.
In the Western Division
the L.A. Rams should hardly
break a sweat coasting through
such mediocre talent as the
rest of the division has.

Members of the Women's Field Hockey
Team are seen in practice for the
upcoming season. Sliown are Denise
Gobred, Mary Fleig and Wendy Keller.
[PHOTO BY TEDD KITZMILLER]

Taylor seeks future wins
Coach Sharon Taylor's women's field hockey squad will
try to continue its winning
ways in the 1976 campaign.
Last year's impressive record

of 11-0-1 and a fifth place in
the National Tournament was
undoubtedly the best performance of any Lock Haven
women's team.
Twenty-three players from
1975 have returned and have
looked impressive since practice began on August 30.
Three positions have to be
filled due to graduation. The
departing seniors included AllAmerican halfback Ronnie
Lawson, super goalie Cathy
Sherman, and fullback Jo
Ernst.
Familiar faces from last
"ear's record breaking team
include seniors Pat Rudy and
Sue Bowers. Rudy will be
leading the attack, improving
upon last years total goals
(11). Bowers plays a hustiing
defensive game.

Booters drop scrimmage
By RANDY BEHNEY
Staff Reporter
Scrimmages are designed to
determine the strengths and
weaknesses of a team. Even
the Pittsburgh Steelers might
lose an occasional pre-season
game.
Such was the case on
Tuesday afternoon when the
i^ock Haven State soccer team
dropped a tough 2-1 decision
to the University of Scranton.
Scranton jumped into the lend
in the first half on a defensive
lapse by the LHS fullbacks.
LHS appeared to have gained
a tie to conclude the first half,
but the score by Billy Bush
was not counted because time
had already run out.
In the second half LHS
finally put one in the net that
counted. Reserve ^lineman,
George Stahl, slammed a loose
ball into the goal from 10 yards
out, tying the score at 1-1. The
second half continued without
a goal until the final play of the
game. A handball was called
on a Bald Eagle fullback inside
the penalty area, resulting in a
penalty kick. The kick was
good giving Scranton a 2-1
victory.
. „ .
After the game Coach Par-

ker stated, "We're not interested in the score at this time,
but the progress of the team. I
felt we improved over the
scrimmage with the Alumni."
Parker also commented that,
"We're still experimenting
and moving people around."
Hopefully the experimenting will pay-off on Friday night
at 7;00pm when the Bald
Eagles take on Penn State at
the Nittany Lions home field.

Classifieds
Needed ~ Electric guitarist,
drummer, brass players and
saxaphone players for the LHS
Jazz Band. Contact Ross Partington, Gross 301.
FOUND ~ Ring In men's
second floor lav in library.
Contact Gene: 748-8936.
PARTY - Sponsored by Vets
Club: Saturday, Sept. 11.
Directions to the party will be
posted in the PUB. Everyone
welcome.
WANTED ~ Subjects for experiments in hypnosis. Contact either John Brendel, Mark
Gorley or Mike Shrlver; ext.
365, or Russell Hall Room 2
WANTED - Ride to Williamsport on Wednesdays between
3-4pm. Contact John McGowan In Sloan 205 or 748-4956.
Will pay for gas.

Returning juniors include
Colleen Hacker (Lititz), Sharon
Murray (Lancaster), Deb
Nunes (Easton), Gina Graham
(Doylestown), Wendy Keller
(Cariisle). Mary Fleig (Harrisburg) is the sophomore veteran of the team.
The first action for Taylor's
team will be the annual Mt.
Pocono Invitational Tournament on September 10-11-12.
Team members selected to
play in the tournament include
Cathy Ogle, Sue Woolston,
Sharon Murray, Kim Pallestrone, Pat Rudy, Deb Nunes,
Pam Whittaker, Mary Fleig,
Wendy Keller, Sue Bowers,
Andi Hoffman, and Colleen
Hacker.

page4

EAGLEEYE
Committee. There is no experience neeessaty just the
airplanes and so forth? I do
ability to complain as well as
not want to bust the budget,
the driving urge to see the
but if we are going to bust the
SCC better serve the students
budget, I want to bust is for
needs. Through this we genAmericans, not to kill people
erate the new ideas which any
all over the world."
organization needs to keep it
running and in tune with the
needs of the constituancy it
conf. Irom page 2
serves. For your services in
member or our executive
the SCC you receive an
committee about your willingeducation in almost any curriness to serve on an SCC

pheaa cracks down on abuses
cont. from page 1
Basic Grant money assuring
for the second straight year
that Basic Grants would be
fully funded.
The House Appropriations Committee origionally
recommended reducing Basic
Grants by 30%. In an effort to
stop this reduction Rep. David
Obey (D-Wi) introduced the
Obey Amendment which called for increased spending for
the program so grants would
not have to be reduced. The
Obey amendment was adopted
into the bill and passed.
Chairman of the Appropriations Committee, Rep.
George Mahon warned the
passage of the Obey amendment would demonstrate an
action of fiscal irresponsibility
by Congress. He termed the
amendment a "budget buster."
In response to Rep. Mahon's views. Rep. Carney
(D-Oh) justified tiie added
spending by stating, "There is
no better way to spend our
money than in education for
our kids. Where are these
budget busters when we start
spending for foreign aid and

SCC president

Fes, we sell
hih overalls
ani poMtsi
painter's pants

Schwarz Store
Mon., Fri.: 7:30 a.m. to9p.m.
Tues., Wed., Thurs.: 7:30 to 5
Sat.: 7:30 to noon

10 per cent off all painter's bib
overalls and pantsl Hurry while the
supply lasts! We also have painter's
hats for $.49 each and painter T-shirts
for $1.99

Fri., Sept. 10,1976
culum you can imagine, what
it takes to run a quarter of a
mUlion dollar budget, to what
is involved in planning a
concert. This is the type of
practical experience education
that you will never get from a
classroom.

SCC senate
com. trom page i
request during working hours
in tiie SCC Executive Offece in
the lower level of the PUB.
After hours they are in an
envelope posted outside the
office.

SCC workers
cont. trom page i

quite possible that should tiie
union win the election and
begin representing the SCC
workers, the 40 dollar activity
fee at Lock Haven State
College might increase in the
near future. "If the workers
are unionized there is a
possibility of some salaries
going up," stated Mock. "We
pay comparable salaries
now," he continued, "with the
exception of one. Where will
the money to pay them come
from," asked Mock. LHS already has the highest activity
fee of any state college in
Pennsylvania.

RIPPEY'S SUPER MOVING SALE!!!
We're going to Main Street!
Sale begins September 10
1/3 off almost every item in the store
Everything is marked down!
Get what you need, while it lasts!!

Sale ends September 21st

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