BHeiney
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Edited Text
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LOCK HAVEN STATE COLLEGE
Volume 28 No. 23
Friday, May 13, 1983
Fred Leone's departure won't go unnoticed
By Marcelo Cancelli
Fred is leaving.
Just about everyone here at LHSC knows
who Fred Leone is, or at least knows
something about this son of Italian immigrants born in Avis, Pa. Fred works at
the Eagle Wing Snack Bar and one cannot
think of him without thinking of the
'PUB,' as the snack bar is known to the
students, and vice-versa. To anyone who
visits the 'PUB' Fred's unusual, unexpected
humor causes some reaction.
"I like his humor," says Juan Soaje, an
international student from Argentina. "It is
harmless and really adds to what the PUB
Well, Fred is leaving. And with him, all
of this original humor that we've all been
accustomed to. After the Student
Cooperative Council (SCC) decided to lease
the snack bar and leave it open for bids,
Fred decided not to bid for it. "I didn't like
the wording of it (the contract). I even
showed it to a lawyer and he advised me not
to take it," Fred said. "I'll just go
somewhere else and start again."
Fred, with his son Pat, leaves after working at the snack bar for more than three
years. He started there in January 1980
working "anywhere from 85 to 100 hours a
week," as he remembers it.
"I don't think the SCC is going to find
Let's hope that life in the PUB will always be as entertaining as always.
anybody with that much dedication," says
Kate Coyne, one of his student employees.
"The students are going to miss him and he
the students. We, the workers, like him a
lot," she added.
Several students who were asked about
Fred's departure agreed that there will be a
big change in the PUB after Fred is gone.
"I think the PUB will have a different
personality," said Kevin Lafferty. "Fred is
part of the campus so things will definitely
change after he's gone."
Other students mentioned changes in
food quality and prices. "The food is going
to be different that's for sure," said student
Ann Merli. Nick Stork, another student,
commented on the fact that prices will be
higher. "Besides having higher prices with
this new company, there's the fact that
Fred's part of the campus. After he's gone,
coming here will be like going to Pizza
City," Stork said. "It won't be the same."
As Soaje puts it, "I don't think they'll
ever get somebody as nice as Fred. He's
always so patient, he's always in a good
mood; and he's truly concerned about the
students. He's a friend and I don't understand wh^he has to leave. 1 think that if the
SCC had conducted a poll around the campus, Fred would remain here in spite of any
money problem there might be."
Fred's good humor is probably his best
known characteristic. He explains it by
stating his philosophy of life. "I've been
through the second World War in Europe.
I've seen all the horrors of it. I've lost my
wife and I lost the good business I had
downtown in a fire. But why should that
make me a sour old man? I respect the
students and I want them to feel at home. I
don't consider them or anybody who comes
here as customers, I consider them as
human beings, not better and not worse
than me. They're friends, good company
for meals. You got to have fun working."
SCC president John McNamara explained that there was a need for leasing the
snack bar. "Twenty-two out of twentythree senators voted for it. We were losing
SI6,(XX) with the snack bar and leasing was
the best solution," he said. "Of course
Fred is a nice guy; of course he gets along
with the students, but in business you can't
deal with personalities. You have to deal
with the facts, and those were that we were
losing money and that some change was
badly needed," added McNamara. He also
mentioned that Wayne Clickner, an inspector for the State Department of Health,
visited the campus many times and recommended the leasing of the snack bar after
deeply investigating the financial problem
with it. "We worked with Fred, but we just
can't go on in deficit." said McNamara. "1
hope he opens up his new business and does
very well. I'll sure go visit him."
Fred said he felt the SCC was ruled by
"incompetent individuals, though, not all
of them. They are people who don't have a
mind of their own, who don't ask questions
when they should be asked, and who don't
want to listen to suggestions toward solving
the problem of the deficit. They want to do
what they want to do."
There seem to be no doubts that Fred is
going to be missed, and that things might
change in certain ways. McNamara stated
that the food quality and prices will not
See 'Fred' page 4
Lawyer advises SCC to reconsider Reynold's hiring
By Mike Flanagan
Because of the recent approval to rehire
Howard Reynolds as interim PUB director,
the SCC may find itself being sued again.
SCC President John McNamara received
a letter last week from SCC lawyer Mike
Hanna, who stated that the Pennsylvania
State Attorney General's office is "extremely upset" over the prospect of rehiring Reynolds.
In the letter, Hanna advised the SCC to
withhold any decision regarding the matter
(re-hiring Reynolds) until an opinion is
received from the Attorney General's office. "I think it is ridiculous that an Attorney General's office would even consider
suing a student government," McNamara
said.
Reynolds was reinstated by the SCC on
April 20, after being dismissed from his job
as PUB director last year by the SCC. In
return, Reynolds filed suit against the
college and the student government and
received $85,000 in an out-of-court settlement. Fifty-five thousand dollars was to
come from the SCC and the other $30,000
from the state. The SCC has paid Reynolds
$25,000 thus far.
Because it was approved to reinstate
Reynolds, there stands a chance that the
s e e will not have to pay Reynolds the
$30,000 (plus lOVt interest) it owes him. If
Reynolds is hired full-time on October I, he
will not require the SCC to pay the money it
owes him. The first of October is the day
that the interim period ends. The Commonwealth, however, paid its $30,000 when
the amount of the settlement was decided,
and stands to gain nothing from the rehiring. According to McNamara, the state
feels that it also should receive some money
back if the SCC indeed hires Reynolds fulltime and does not have to pay the $30,000.
"The statement was made that some infiuential person called Harrisburg and was
making a fuss about re-hiring Howard,"
McNamara said. "I'm not sure if that
should make the SCC more determined or
what."
"It (the possible suit) doesn't make
sense. Why doesn't the state admit they
made a mistake? I don't think we ruined
our reputation by admitting we made a
mistake. It takes a bigger man to admit a
mistake than to simply fornet about i t "
McNamara believes that Reynolds was
the most qualified person who submitted a
resume for the PUB director position.
"There's no doubt he was the most
qualified person," the SCC president said,
"We are trying to correct a mistake with a
trial period, and if it works out, then we
rehire him."
If another lawsuit is brought to the SCC,
McNamara says that the students will pay.
"If another lawsuit comes through, the
students will be getting snowballed,
McNamara said.
No damages reported in dormitory fire
A small fire caused the evacuation of
Woolridge Hall late Wednesday afternoon.
According to Law Enforcement Officer
Jeffrey Johnson, the fire occured when a
trash can in the first floor room of Joy
Anderson caught fire.
Johnson said that Anderson had been
making decoupage placques, which are
made by burning the edges of paper to pro-
vide a ciccoiuuve ciige and li.vi. j..-...*^iMiig
the paper on wood. Johnson said that
Anderson put the ashes of the paper into
Ihe trash can and went to the cafeteria. The
ashes caught fire in the trash can, which was
noticed by a fioor fire marshall who called
Law Enforcement. Johnson said that he
responded to the call and called the Lock
Haven fire company, which sent several
engines, and a rescue vehicle. The fire v^as
exti::si:;3.'-.^J ui.u AnJc.soii said that there
was no damage to her room.
Johnson said that there have been no major fires at Lock Haven, only minor fires.
He said that the speed in which fire trucks
reach Ihe campus is very good. "Our
response time up here is a matter of one to
two minutes after they're (the fire engines)
dispatched," said Johnson.
2 Eagle Eye May 13, 1983^
^^t€>^n €Ae ^ I'm going to discuss the social, political and educational aspects of this institution of
higher learning. I will start with the latter.
It's 3:00 p.m. on sunny Friday afternoon in May and you're sitting in an Intro, to
Music class, wondering just why you're there. Certainly this course is not going to help
you get a job, but you need it in order to graduate. Before I go any further, I'd like to
mention that I could pick a number of classes in this regard. I'm just using Intro, to
Music as an example.
A college degree obviously aids in your ability to get a job, and because Intro, to
Music is a stepping stone to graduating, it may indirectly help you get a job. But, once
you leave LHSC, chances are it will not do you diddly-squat, on the surface anyway.
Will the course make you a better person? Well, the way I see it, only an idiot turns
down knowledge. I realize that Intro, to Music will most likely not help put bread on my
table, but I did learn that Music used to, and still does, play a major role in society.
I feel that if you simply write the course off as a waste of time, you have no business
being here. We're supposed to be here to learn, and regardless of the apparent insignificance of the course, you should want to gather information pertaining to the
given subiect matter.
. . .
Do we do that here? No, not by a long shot. What it comes down to, I feel, is this - is
LHSC simply a job training institute, or a place where we can learn to become better
people? 1 would like to answer that the latter holds true, and so would the administration and faculty, but we would be seriously mistaken.
The wheels of the world spin on politics, and here the wheels are spinning very rapidly. Which direction they are headed seems to be the question at hand here.
The confusion that surrounds the main political unit around here, the SCC, can
make you exhausted just thinking about it. I can't ever recall being hit with so many
stories, allegations, etc. from so many people, about so many people. I hear one story
about a person, and then hear the exact opposite from another about that same person.
Howard Reynolds is certainly a good example of this. Some say that he is going to be
the financial savior of the SCC, and others have nothing but unkind words for the man.
"Believe me, I'm telling the truth." Oh, brother.
There is so much mudslinging going on with the SCC that it hinders its performance
as a poHtical unit. This subject has been beaten into the ground, but all the constructive
criticism has gone for naught. The mudslinging continues.
Fred and Pat Leone, I feel, were victims of this sort of mudslinging, and I also feel
that their departure is going to sadly weaken the overall quality of the Eagle Wing Snack
Bar. Yesterday, 1 bought the daily special, which consisted of a huge plate of delicious
rigatoni, a salad and two rolls, all for the astronomical price of $1.50. Just think, you
may be getting your meals from a vending machine.
1 could go on and on, but I'd probably run out of ink. 1 just hope that the SCC can
reach its potential as a political and as a social unit at LHSC... or LHU, whatever.
Maturity is the key, and it is seriously lacking within our student government. That
doesn't include you, Brian.
I'm sorry to say that I don't have very many nice things to say about the social life
here either, but that's more our fault than anyone's. Partying is the number one source
of entertainment around here, and it probably always will be. Parties can be a lot of
fun, but sometimes a change of pace is in order. Unless you have a car, it's very difficult
to go anywhere and do things.
The intramural sports here are very will organized and a true asset to the social life
here. I believe that there were more than 50 baseball and basketball teams registered. If
you're not the athletic type, though, that doesn't do you much justice.
The Greek organizations do very well for themselves, and I guess that is why there are
so many fraternity brothers and sorority sisters here. Please don't give me this malarkey
that they always need to be around each other, and use each other as a crutch. It's simply that there are more things to do if you're Greek.
Well, if you're a GDI who's not athletically oriented and don't party, I'm sorry to say
that this institution does not have much to offer in the way of a social life.
I did not intend for this editorial to attack this institution, but I'm sure some people
will take it that way. This is simply how 1 feel. College has been the best thing that ever
happened to me, but it should be better for future students to come.
This place is not all roses, and it perturbs me when it's made out to be that way. It's
going to take a lot of work and understanding before this place can truly be a place
where people can grow and have fun at the same time. It is certainly worth striving for.
If there is one thing I can say about my time spent here-it's been real.
JOE COLLHGE
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have to.
Many seniors are ready by their last year.
This is a part of the education process— you
just get sick of it!
How prepared are we? What lessons will
we pack away in our mental suitcases?
Which ones will we carry forever?
Receiving a degree may not mean much
to some people because they were forced to
go. Some students don't appreciate it
because it's an all-expense paid education.
I paid for it. I appreciate it. The graduation march is a constant dull hum in my
head, and I want to learn the alma mater.
"Mary,your vacation upstate will be over
soon," commented my brother.
Vacation? I guess it seems that way to
some, but I hope I never have to borrow
$10,000 from a bank for a four-year vacation in Lock Haven. I can think of better
places to sunbathe.
It was a movie, a book, a screen-play.
Each different episode emphasized some
deciding factor in my life. Big decisions.
Little decisions. Most of all, a
committment— a four-year long committment that demanded more devotion than a
boyfriend! The committment maintained a
storyline, the mini-series had to end.
By Mary Kelly
I'm waiting for some kind of inspiration.
I'm waiting for the words to come to make
a last, impressionable message. As I open a
letter for a job interview from a prospective
employer, I think of the transition from
Lock Haven State College to the 'real
world.'
1 am in the midst of turmoil; 1 have to
stop being a kid, a student, and be a real
woman. Sometimes, I cherish the moment;
anticipation and anxiety envelopes me. I'm
ready, with briefcase in hand. It's difficult,
though, to box away the Nikes, the sweatshirts, the knapsacks and the memorabilia.
There are some things you can never
forget- the friends, the values you learned
and developed, the experiences that made
you the very person you are today.
Lock Haven State, with its generic education, has given graduates a hodge podge of
mini-courses ranging from the ones that
really give credit to the ones you learned in
the P.U.B., at parties, or in town.
Truly, college is a unique lifestyle that offers the good life encased in a silicone bubble, highly resistant to damage. LHSC is a
paddled, incubated home that makes some
never want to leave. But the truth is, you
^ ^ ^
ffe^/
By Brian Hunt
My college career will soon end as far as
Lock Haven State is concerned. I've put
four years into here, and the prospect of
not coming back leaves a smile on my face.
That smile is a conglomeration of many
things; I'll mention a few.
First and foremost I'm smiling from
relief. No more will 1 have to deal with the
shovels full of garbage that are constantly
being dumped on me here. No more will 1
have to spend countless hours listening to
the rantings of some .senile professor trying
to tell me what is important. And no more
will I be seen pounding coffees in the PUB
and trying to sort out some bizarre concept
that doesn't even concern me. Not me
folks, I've done my time and I'm out.
But maybe I'm being naive. Once I'm out
on my own, I'm sure that the amount of
frustration will be at least as much as I've
encountered here. There will be just as
many wasted hours and just as many worthless people to deal with. The popular
definition of college is that it prepares one
for life in the 'real' world. And though I
might argue as to how it does this, I cannot
argue that it does.
When 1 made the decision to go to college
after high school, I was excited at the prospect of intellectually intriguing conversation, involvement with the ongoing social
change, good friends and an overall
stimulating environment. It took me one
month to figure out that my idealistic view
of college was not the case at all. Instead, I
was faced with what seemed like a complete
turnaround. 1 discovered, not so willingly,
that college life just didn't meet my expectations of what it should be. The intellectually intriguing conversation was more
concerned with variations in the marijuana
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crop than it was with, say, the importance
of Proust in literature. My involvement
with the social change was, at the heaviest,
deciding what party to go to and why.
But the biggest disappointment was
classes. Instead of firing my curiosity and
imagination, too many classes merely bored
me. It did not take long to figure out that
my education was not going to come from
the classroom exclusively. Too many professors are concerned more with how much
they like you than they are wilh your
achievements in class. And too many professors simply have stopped caring. How
can they then make you care? What 1 concluded was that college life for me would be
exactly what 1 made it-no more and no
less.
Looking back, the fact that I learned
more outside the classroom doesn't bother
me. I wouldn't have it any other way. Learning is learning, and 1 cannot deny that
four years here has taught me a great deal. I
now have a degree in journalism, I've learned to appreciate the arts, and I've learned
my personal limits. What more could I have
asked for? Actually, I could ask for much
more, but the fact that 1 don't know all I
would like to know doesn't negate what I
do, in fact, know. And there is still time to
learn.
So the fact that my education did not, for
the most part, come from where I thought it
would is only a minor disillusionment. The
important part is that I have learned; 1 have
given and I have gotten. And I know that as
I cruise out of this town for the last time, a
small but significant part of Lock Haven
State is going with me. Yes, I'm smiling,
but that smile is much more than a simple
sigh of relief.
Opinions expressed on this page reflect the views of the individual writer and are not the
necessarily the opinion of the Eagle Eye. 'From the Editor's Desk' expresses opinions which affect
the College and Ihe student body and is intended to speak out on subjects viewed by the Eagle Eye
staff as controversial.
The Eagle Eye is published twice weekly by the Publications Department on the ground
floor of the Parsons Union Building. Phone (717) 893-2334.
iMay 13, 1983 Eagle Eye 3
Lacrosse team routs 'Roclc' to taice third
Junior Karen Kellerman gets into the action in a recent home game. Kellerman finished ihe season with 11 goals and 9 assists.
By MaHin Pflieger
Playing in the consolation game of the
Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference
Championships at West Chester a few
weeks ago, the LHSC women's lacrosse
team displayed the kind of form that could
have won them th? PSAC title.
The Lady Eagles executed superbly in
downing - Slippery rock, 20-6. They lost
their chance to play for the champioiiship
after a 13-6 loss to Kutztown in the first
game.
"SHppery Rock was our best game of the
season," said Rose Ann Neff. "It was a
super way to end the season."
Lock Haven finished the season 6-4
overall, and 4-1 in the Pennsylvania Conference. They outshot their opponents
280-253.
Four of the five top scorers for the Lady
Eagles are returning next year. Junior Joan
Laird led the team in scoring with 27 goals.
She had 5 assists. Senior Sandy Miller
followed with 19 goals and 14 assists.
Junior Lisa Harding had 17 goals and 3
assists, junior Mary Beth DriscoU scored 14
goals and assisted on 4, and junior Karen
Kellerman netted 11 goals and tallied 9
assists. Sophomore goalie Chris Cortelessa
registered 94 saves on the season.
Lock Haven will lose four seniors to
graduation, three of whom played varsity.
Miller, Chris Sank, and Hilliary Herron
were varsity starters this year.
The outlook for next season looks good,
according to Coach Neff. "Our junior varsity team was 4-2-1 on the year and, we have
some promising freshmen who should perform well for us next year."
Three Lady Eagles were selected to the
Pennsylvania All-Conference t e a m :
DriscoU at center position. Laird at second
home, and Herron at point.
"Hilliary (Herron) is especially deserving
since many times the defense gets overlooked because there isn't much to take
statistically. I'm very pleased with her selection," said Neff.
"Mary Beth (DriscoU) made our midfield
work this year," continued Neff, "Joan
(Laird) was our leading scorer and a
dangerous threat on attack. Hilliary was the
big stick on defense. All three are very
deserving."
Sports Column
J^I^i^2^^i^J^i^iy.J^^i^.
Kelly Canavan will be leaving Lock
i Haven wilh two field hockey champion\ ships.
By Chris Brooks
Sporls Editor
In yet another exciting year of sports at
the Haven, not every team enjoyed the
spotlight, but every member of each team
did put forth an effort in representing Lock
Haven State College.
Looking back, we remember some of the
more memorable moments of the year. On
opening day in Jack Stadium before a partisan crowd senior Barron Grantham catches an 85 yard TD pass to defeat archrival
Lycoming, 14-7.
Then, there was the LHSC - Penn State
soccer matchup - We all remember that
one. After the Bald Eagles jumped on top
2-0, the Lions battled back to win in overlime.
Ahh, but sweet revenge. The field hockey
leam, who incidentally later went on to win
a Division 11 National Championship,
defeat the Lady Lions, 3-2, in a Hickoff.
Too bad the Centre Daily Times refused to
honor the Lady Eagles' triumph.
Three Bald Eagle wrestlers capture
Eastern Wrestling League Championships
and four qualify for Nationals to highlight
the wrestling campaign. Wade Potter, Ed
Black, and Rick Petersen take EWL titles
Bobby Lynn's shoes al receiver will be tough to fill. The LHSC footbaii star leaves as
the ail-lime leading receiver.
MM
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ \
The year in sports
and Doug Buckwalter cops a second place.
The four qualifiers were the most since
1976.
In the midst of a dismal men's basketball
season, a young freshman emerges as a hero
in a memorable matchup with Clarion. Jeff
Jackman is the key in that game.
Sophomore Mike Greene is also named second leam All-Conference. On the ladies
side, a pair of twins lead the Lady Eagles to
a .500 season.
Bill Lingle, LHSC's premiere boxer at
146 lbs., places second in the nation for the
second straight year and is followed by Tim
Frymyer, Ken Cooper, and Dave
Washington to the NCAA's.
The Lady Eagle Lacrosse team, though it
failed to capture a PSAC title, did take
third by defeating Slippery Rock, 20-6 (see
above).
Well, that's it. There are many more, and
we'd like to congratulate every athlete. To
those who are graduating. Good Luck. A
special salute to these seniors who gave
some great moments in their four years at
Lock Haven: Kelly Canavan (field hockey),
Bobby Lynn (football). Bill Lingle
(boxing), and Mike Millward (wrestling).
Mike Millward leaves with 97 career wins j
for Jack Turner's Bald Eagles. He will surely be missed.
Biii Lingle leaves Ihe LHSC squared circle with back lo back NCAA runnervup.
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4 Eagle Eye May 13, 1983
320 seniors ready to turn the tassel May 21
for graduation will take place in the Field
House at 1 p.m. on Friday.
Dr. Sterns said that a student must have
passed a minimum of 128 credits, have a 2.0
grade point average, and must have fulfilled
the necessary requirements in the specific
major in order to graduate.
Sharon Mertz, a secondary education
French major, will be this year's valedictorian. Dr. Gerald Robinson, former vicepresident for Academic Affairs, will speak
on a topic related to the theme of Excellence in Education.
Dr. Blair Carbaugh and Dr. Bertha
Mayes will be Co-Marshalls for the commencement exercises. "The Marshall works
with the students for the planning and executing of graduation exercises," said Dr.
Carbaugh. He said that he is responsible for
By Holly Wililapis
Approximately 320 students will be
awarded diplomas at commencement exercises next Saturday at 10:30 a.m. at the
Hubert Jack Stadium, according to Dr.
Harvey N. Sterns, dean of Academic Administration. Dr. Sterns said that 295
students have been approved by the college
for graduation. He said that the number of
graduates is slightly higher than it had been
in the past few years. One student who
graduated in August, and 20 students who
graduated in December, will be participating in the ceremony. Twenty students
graduated last August, and 111 graduated
in December.
The ceremony has been planned for the
stadium, but if it rains, the ceremony will be
moved to the Thomas Field House. Practice
making sure students are notified about
graduation, supervising the rehearsal, line
up, and procession. Dr. Mayes is responsible for notifying the faculty concerning
commencement and organizing its procession.
"•
Dr. Carbaugh has been a graduation
Marshall for 12 years. Dr. Mayes was appointed to the position by former College
President Dr. Francis N. Hamblin last year,
but she was out of the country during last
year's commencement exercises, so Dr.
Jean Deobold took her place. Dr. Carbaugh said that the Marshall is the official
representative of the college, and is responsible for filling in at events that the college
president or members of the administration
cannot attend.
LHSC Panhellenic Council presents awards
The bloodmobile award was given to the
Sigma Kappa sorority. This year 257 pints
of blood were donated, exceeding the goal
of 250. During the fall semester of 1982 only 216 pints were donated.
By KIrsten Jorgensen
The Panhellenic Council recently gave
out awards for the highest percentage
donor in this year's bloodmobile donations,
the fall 1982 pledge class with the highest
overall cumulative average and outstanding
Greek woman award.
t
Both the Pledge Class Scholarship Award
Spring Musicale to be held Sunday
The coveted arrival of the spring season
also brings the Spring Musicale presented
annually by the Lock Haven Community
Chorus. The musicale wdll be given on Sunday afternoon, May IS, 1983, at 3 p.m., in
the auditorium of the John Sloan Fine Arts
Center on campus. There will be no admission charge.
Some of the selections to be performed
by the Chorus are Russian Picnic, by
Harvey Enders; Sound the Trumpet, by
Henry Prucell with Ona Ruth Weimer
directing; How Lovely Is Thy Dwelling
Place, (from Requiem) by Brahams; Over
the Rainbow, arranged by Roger Emerson;
Gonna Rise Up Singin', by Gilbert Martin;
Worthy Is The Lamb That iVas Slain, and
the finale. Amen Chorus from the Messiah
by Handel.
Soloists from the Chorus will be Nancy
Miller, James Hamilton, Joseph Sackey,
Richard Ramm, and Kay Bossert. Special
group presentations will be performed by
the Women of Note (Karin Van Deun,
soprano; Kay Bossert, alto; and Donna B.
Dorey, alto) and the Community Chorus
Quintet (Susan Sagmoen, soprano; Marie
Barnhurst, soprano; Christine Nestlerode,
alto; Richard Leonard, tenor; and William
Snyder, bass). Accompanists will be Ona
Ruth Weimer, Dorothy Leeson, Cyndi Erskine, and Jay Wohlfert.
The Orchestra will play for the LHSC
Commencement Ceremony on May 21, and
then present a "Pops Concert" in the comnuiiutyjn JunC;^
and the Chapter Scholarship Award were
awarded to the same recipients as last
semester. The Sigma Kappa sorority had
the Fall 1982 pledge class with the highest
•cumulative average, and Sigma Sigma
Sigma was the sorority with the highest
cumulative average.
The outstanding Greek Woman Award
1982-83 went to Penny Gardner of Sigma
Kappa, the president of the Panhellenic
Council. The award was given for promoting the Greek system. Gardner said that
she "wasn't expecting to win the award"
All of the sudden they read her name. She
felt honored to win the award. Gardner, a
senior Psychology major, will graduate in
May 1984. Four of the past five Greek
Awards have gone to the Sigma Kappa
sorority.
'Fred' from page I
chai^ge substantially. He said that Macke,
the corporation taking over the snack bar,
will not raise prices drastically and that in
some cases they'll even reduce prices. There
will still be specials, according to him, and
an even wider variety of food items next
semester. "Students shouldn't feel that
Macke is going to bring in vending
machines. The only big change will be in
appearance. The snack bar will look very
different next semester." said McNamara.
Beyond all this, the fact remains that, for
whatever causes, a unique element of what
we call Lock Haven State College is leaving.
"I take life as it is and 1 try to enjoy
myself," said Fred with his original look at
life. "I'd never come back here for
anything because I just don't go back to
places. I really enjoyed working with the
College kids, as 1 always have for more than
20 years."
Fred was commended with a placque
from the Black Cultural Society here on
campus in a gesture that, as he says, made
him "speechless for the first time in my
life" when he found out about it. And as
the students showed their appreciation for
him. he also would like to show his a p preciation for them.
"1 want to tell everyone I served since
I've been in the snack bar that it was my
pleasure to serve them. I served some of the
best people in the world here, even though 1
did serve some shakes," he said with his
usual smile.
To him the student body's message is
engraved in his placque:
"For outstanding service and dedication
to the student body at Lock Haven State
College. May God bless you."
The Black Cultural Society. '82-'83.
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EXPIRE: May 19, 1983
1
l'?2-A.-3>
Have a Nice Summer! ^'PH^
Coming Up:
Sat.-Wed.
-Finals
Good Luck!
Sat., 21st - Graduation
Congratulations!
LOCK HAVEN STATE COLLEGE
Volume 28 No. 23
Friday, May 13, 1983
Fred Leone's departure won't go unnoticed
By Marcelo Cancelli
Fred is leaving.
Just about everyone here at LHSC knows
who Fred Leone is, or at least knows
something about this son of Italian immigrants born in Avis, Pa. Fred works at
the Eagle Wing Snack Bar and one cannot
think of him without thinking of the
'PUB,' as the snack bar is known to the
students, and vice-versa. To anyone who
visits the 'PUB' Fred's unusual, unexpected
humor causes some reaction.
"I like his humor," says Juan Soaje, an
international student from Argentina. "It is
harmless and really adds to what the PUB
Well, Fred is leaving. And with him, all
of this original humor that we've all been
accustomed to. After the Student
Cooperative Council (SCC) decided to lease
the snack bar and leave it open for bids,
Fred decided not to bid for it. "I didn't like
the wording of it (the contract). I even
showed it to a lawyer and he advised me not
to take it," Fred said. "I'll just go
somewhere else and start again."
Fred, with his son Pat, leaves after working at the snack bar for more than three
years. He started there in January 1980
working "anywhere from 85 to 100 hours a
week," as he remembers it.
"I don't think the SCC is going to find
Let's hope that life in the PUB will always be as entertaining as always.
anybody with that much dedication," says
Kate Coyne, one of his student employees.
"The students are going to miss him and he
the students. We, the workers, like him a
lot," she added.
Several students who were asked about
Fred's departure agreed that there will be a
big change in the PUB after Fred is gone.
"I think the PUB will have a different
personality," said Kevin Lafferty. "Fred is
part of the campus so things will definitely
change after he's gone."
Other students mentioned changes in
food quality and prices. "The food is going
to be different that's for sure," said student
Ann Merli. Nick Stork, another student,
commented on the fact that prices will be
higher. "Besides having higher prices with
this new company, there's the fact that
Fred's part of the campus. After he's gone,
coming here will be like going to Pizza
City," Stork said. "It won't be the same."
As Soaje puts it, "I don't think they'll
ever get somebody as nice as Fred. He's
always so patient, he's always in a good
mood; and he's truly concerned about the
students. He's a friend and I don't understand wh^he has to leave. 1 think that if the
SCC had conducted a poll around the campus, Fred would remain here in spite of any
money problem there might be."
Fred's good humor is probably his best
known characteristic. He explains it by
stating his philosophy of life. "I've been
through the second World War in Europe.
I've seen all the horrors of it. I've lost my
wife and I lost the good business I had
downtown in a fire. But why should that
make me a sour old man? I respect the
students and I want them to feel at home. I
don't consider them or anybody who comes
here as customers, I consider them as
human beings, not better and not worse
than me. They're friends, good company
for meals. You got to have fun working."
SCC president John McNamara explained that there was a need for leasing the
snack bar. "Twenty-two out of twentythree senators voted for it. We were losing
SI6,(XX) with the snack bar and leasing was
the best solution," he said. "Of course
Fred is a nice guy; of course he gets along
with the students, but in business you can't
deal with personalities. You have to deal
with the facts, and those were that we were
losing money and that some change was
badly needed," added McNamara. He also
mentioned that Wayne Clickner, an inspector for the State Department of Health,
visited the campus many times and recommended the leasing of the snack bar after
deeply investigating the financial problem
with it. "We worked with Fred, but we just
can't go on in deficit." said McNamara. "1
hope he opens up his new business and does
very well. I'll sure go visit him."
Fred said he felt the SCC was ruled by
"incompetent individuals, though, not all
of them. They are people who don't have a
mind of their own, who don't ask questions
when they should be asked, and who don't
want to listen to suggestions toward solving
the problem of the deficit. They want to do
what they want to do."
There seem to be no doubts that Fred is
going to be missed, and that things might
change in certain ways. McNamara stated
that the food quality and prices will not
See 'Fred' page 4
Lawyer advises SCC to reconsider Reynold's hiring
By Mike Flanagan
Because of the recent approval to rehire
Howard Reynolds as interim PUB director,
the SCC may find itself being sued again.
SCC President John McNamara received
a letter last week from SCC lawyer Mike
Hanna, who stated that the Pennsylvania
State Attorney General's office is "extremely upset" over the prospect of rehiring Reynolds.
In the letter, Hanna advised the SCC to
withhold any decision regarding the matter
(re-hiring Reynolds) until an opinion is
received from the Attorney General's office. "I think it is ridiculous that an Attorney General's office would even consider
suing a student government," McNamara
said.
Reynolds was reinstated by the SCC on
April 20, after being dismissed from his job
as PUB director last year by the SCC. In
return, Reynolds filed suit against the
college and the student government and
received $85,000 in an out-of-court settlement. Fifty-five thousand dollars was to
come from the SCC and the other $30,000
from the state. The SCC has paid Reynolds
$25,000 thus far.
Because it was approved to reinstate
Reynolds, there stands a chance that the
s e e will not have to pay Reynolds the
$30,000 (plus lOVt interest) it owes him. If
Reynolds is hired full-time on October I, he
will not require the SCC to pay the money it
owes him. The first of October is the day
that the interim period ends. The Commonwealth, however, paid its $30,000 when
the amount of the settlement was decided,
and stands to gain nothing from the rehiring. According to McNamara, the state
feels that it also should receive some money
back if the SCC indeed hires Reynolds fulltime and does not have to pay the $30,000.
"The statement was made that some infiuential person called Harrisburg and was
making a fuss about re-hiring Howard,"
McNamara said. "I'm not sure if that
should make the SCC more determined or
what."
"It (the possible suit) doesn't make
sense. Why doesn't the state admit they
made a mistake? I don't think we ruined
our reputation by admitting we made a
mistake. It takes a bigger man to admit a
mistake than to simply fornet about i t "
McNamara believes that Reynolds was
the most qualified person who submitted a
resume for the PUB director position.
"There's no doubt he was the most
qualified person," the SCC president said,
"We are trying to correct a mistake with a
trial period, and if it works out, then we
rehire him."
If another lawsuit is brought to the SCC,
McNamara says that the students will pay.
"If another lawsuit comes through, the
students will be getting snowballed,
McNamara said.
No damages reported in dormitory fire
A small fire caused the evacuation of
Woolridge Hall late Wednesday afternoon.
According to Law Enforcement Officer
Jeffrey Johnson, the fire occured when a
trash can in the first floor room of Joy
Anderson caught fire.
Johnson said that Anderson had been
making decoupage placques, which are
made by burning the edges of paper to pro-
vide a ciccoiuuve ciige and li.vi. j..-...*^iMiig
the paper on wood. Johnson said that
Anderson put the ashes of the paper into
Ihe trash can and went to the cafeteria. The
ashes caught fire in the trash can, which was
noticed by a fioor fire marshall who called
Law Enforcement. Johnson said that he
responded to the call and called the Lock
Haven fire company, which sent several
engines, and a rescue vehicle. The fire v^as
exti::si:;3.'-.^J ui.u AnJc.soii said that there
was no damage to her room.
Johnson said that there have been no major fires at Lock Haven, only minor fires.
He said that the speed in which fire trucks
reach Ihe campus is very good. "Our
response time up here is a matter of one to
two minutes after they're (the fire engines)
dispatched," said Johnson.
2 Eagle Eye May 13, 1983^
^^t€>^n €Ae ^ I'm going to discuss the social, political and educational aspects of this institution of
higher learning. I will start with the latter.
It's 3:00 p.m. on sunny Friday afternoon in May and you're sitting in an Intro, to
Music class, wondering just why you're there. Certainly this course is not going to help
you get a job, but you need it in order to graduate. Before I go any further, I'd like to
mention that I could pick a number of classes in this regard. I'm just using Intro, to
Music as an example.
A college degree obviously aids in your ability to get a job, and because Intro, to
Music is a stepping stone to graduating, it may indirectly help you get a job. But, once
you leave LHSC, chances are it will not do you diddly-squat, on the surface anyway.
Will the course make you a better person? Well, the way I see it, only an idiot turns
down knowledge. I realize that Intro, to Music will most likely not help put bread on my
table, but I did learn that Music used to, and still does, play a major role in society.
I feel that if you simply write the course off as a waste of time, you have no business
being here. We're supposed to be here to learn, and regardless of the apparent insignificance of the course, you should want to gather information pertaining to the
given subiect matter.
. . .
Do we do that here? No, not by a long shot. What it comes down to, I feel, is this - is
LHSC simply a job training institute, or a place where we can learn to become better
people? 1 would like to answer that the latter holds true, and so would the administration and faculty, but we would be seriously mistaken.
The wheels of the world spin on politics, and here the wheels are spinning very rapidly. Which direction they are headed seems to be the question at hand here.
The confusion that surrounds the main political unit around here, the SCC, can
make you exhausted just thinking about it. I can't ever recall being hit with so many
stories, allegations, etc. from so many people, about so many people. I hear one story
about a person, and then hear the exact opposite from another about that same person.
Howard Reynolds is certainly a good example of this. Some say that he is going to be
the financial savior of the SCC, and others have nothing but unkind words for the man.
"Believe me, I'm telling the truth." Oh, brother.
There is so much mudslinging going on with the SCC that it hinders its performance
as a poHtical unit. This subject has been beaten into the ground, but all the constructive
criticism has gone for naught. The mudslinging continues.
Fred and Pat Leone, I feel, were victims of this sort of mudslinging, and I also feel
that their departure is going to sadly weaken the overall quality of the Eagle Wing Snack
Bar. Yesterday, 1 bought the daily special, which consisted of a huge plate of delicious
rigatoni, a salad and two rolls, all for the astronomical price of $1.50. Just think, you
may be getting your meals from a vending machine.
1 could go on and on, but I'd probably run out of ink. 1 just hope that the SCC can
reach its potential as a political and as a social unit at LHSC... or LHU, whatever.
Maturity is the key, and it is seriously lacking within our student government. That
doesn't include you, Brian.
I'm sorry to say that I don't have very many nice things to say about the social life
here either, but that's more our fault than anyone's. Partying is the number one source
of entertainment around here, and it probably always will be. Parties can be a lot of
fun, but sometimes a change of pace is in order. Unless you have a car, it's very difficult
to go anywhere and do things.
The intramural sports here are very will organized and a true asset to the social life
here. I believe that there were more than 50 baseball and basketball teams registered. If
you're not the athletic type, though, that doesn't do you much justice.
The Greek organizations do very well for themselves, and I guess that is why there are
so many fraternity brothers and sorority sisters here. Please don't give me this malarkey
that they always need to be around each other, and use each other as a crutch. It's simply that there are more things to do if you're Greek.
Well, if you're a GDI who's not athletically oriented and don't party, I'm sorry to say
that this institution does not have much to offer in the way of a social life.
I did not intend for this editorial to attack this institution, but I'm sure some people
will take it that way. This is simply how 1 feel. College has been the best thing that ever
happened to me, but it should be better for future students to come.
This place is not all roses, and it perturbs me when it's made out to be that way. It's
going to take a lot of work and understanding before this place can truly be a place
where people can grow and have fun at the same time. It is certainly worth striving for.
If there is one thing I can say about my time spent here-it's been real.
JOE COLLHGE
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HE MUST VVWE,T«AP^
OUR SON i s (SRHiuATih
X s n u - HAve MIMEI"
on wontQU-^'^
have to.
Many seniors are ready by their last year.
This is a part of the education process— you
just get sick of it!
How prepared are we? What lessons will
we pack away in our mental suitcases?
Which ones will we carry forever?
Receiving a degree may not mean much
to some people because they were forced to
go. Some students don't appreciate it
because it's an all-expense paid education.
I paid for it. I appreciate it. The graduation march is a constant dull hum in my
head, and I want to learn the alma mater.
"Mary,your vacation upstate will be over
soon," commented my brother.
Vacation? I guess it seems that way to
some, but I hope I never have to borrow
$10,000 from a bank for a four-year vacation in Lock Haven. I can think of better
places to sunbathe.
It was a movie, a book, a screen-play.
Each different episode emphasized some
deciding factor in my life. Big decisions.
Little decisions. Most of all, a
committment— a four-year long committment that demanded more devotion than a
boyfriend! The committment maintained a
storyline, the mini-series had to end.
By Mary Kelly
I'm waiting for some kind of inspiration.
I'm waiting for the words to come to make
a last, impressionable message. As I open a
letter for a job interview from a prospective
employer, I think of the transition from
Lock Haven State College to the 'real
world.'
1 am in the midst of turmoil; 1 have to
stop being a kid, a student, and be a real
woman. Sometimes, I cherish the moment;
anticipation and anxiety envelopes me. I'm
ready, with briefcase in hand. It's difficult,
though, to box away the Nikes, the sweatshirts, the knapsacks and the memorabilia.
There are some things you can never
forget- the friends, the values you learned
and developed, the experiences that made
you the very person you are today.
Lock Haven State, with its generic education, has given graduates a hodge podge of
mini-courses ranging from the ones that
really give credit to the ones you learned in
the P.U.B., at parties, or in town.
Truly, college is a unique lifestyle that offers the good life encased in a silicone bubble, highly resistant to damage. LHSC is a
paddled, incubated home that makes some
never want to leave. But the truth is, you
^ ^ ^
ffe^/
By Brian Hunt
My college career will soon end as far as
Lock Haven State is concerned. I've put
four years into here, and the prospect of
not coming back leaves a smile on my face.
That smile is a conglomeration of many
things; I'll mention a few.
First and foremost I'm smiling from
relief. No more will 1 have to deal with the
shovels full of garbage that are constantly
being dumped on me here. No more will 1
have to spend countless hours listening to
the rantings of some .senile professor trying
to tell me what is important. And no more
will I be seen pounding coffees in the PUB
and trying to sort out some bizarre concept
that doesn't even concern me. Not me
folks, I've done my time and I'm out.
But maybe I'm being naive. Once I'm out
on my own, I'm sure that the amount of
frustration will be at least as much as I've
encountered here. There will be just as
many wasted hours and just as many worthless people to deal with. The popular
definition of college is that it prepares one
for life in the 'real' world. And though I
might argue as to how it does this, I cannot
argue that it does.
When 1 made the decision to go to college
after high school, I was excited at the prospect of intellectually intriguing conversation, involvement with the ongoing social
change, good friends and an overall
stimulating environment. It took me one
month to figure out that my idealistic view
of college was not the case at all. Instead, I
was faced with what seemed like a complete
turnaround. 1 discovered, not so willingly,
that college life just didn't meet my expectations of what it should be. The intellectually intriguing conversation was more
concerned with variations in the marijuana
\Dt}4€€/m/n4^
crop than it was with, say, the importance
of Proust in literature. My involvement
with the social change was, at the heaviest,
deciding what party to go to and why.
But the biggest disappointment was
classes. Instead of firing my curiosity and
imagination, too many classes merely bored
me. It did not take long to figure out that
my education was not going to come from
the classroom exclusively. Too many professors are concerned more with how much
they like you than they are wilh your
achievements in class. And too many professors simply have stopped caring. How
can they then make you care? What 1 concluded was that college life for me would be
exactly what 1 made it-no more and no
less.
Looking back, the fact that I learned
more outside the classroom doesn't bother
me. I wouldn't have it any other way. Learning is learning, and 1 cannot deny that
four years here has taught me a great deal. I
now have a degree in journalism, I've learned to appreciate the arts, and I've learned
my personal limits. What more could I have
asked for? Actually, I could ask for much
more, but the fact that 1 don't know all I
would like to know doesn't negate what I
do, in fact, know. And there is still time to
learn.
So the fact that my education did not, for
the most part, come from where I thought it
would is only a minor disillusionment. The
important part is that I have learned; 1 have
given and I have gotten. And I know that as
I cruise out of this town for the last time, a
small but significant part of Lock Haven
State is going with me. Yes, I'm smiling,
but that smile is much more than a simple
sigh of relief.
Opinions expressed on this page reflect the views of the individual writer and are not the
necessarily the opinion of the Eagle Eye. 'From the Editor's Desk' expresses opinions which affect
the College and Ihe student body and is intended to speak out on subjects viewed by the Eagle Eye
staff as controversial.
The Eagle Eye is published twice weekly by the Publications Department on the ground
floor of the Parsons Union Building. Phone (717) 893-2334.
iMay 13, 1983 Eagle Eye 3
Lacrosse team routs 'Roclc' to taice third
Junior Karen Kellerman gets into the action in a recent home game. Kellerman finished ihe season with 11 goals and 9 assists.
By MaHin Pflieger
Playing in the consolation game of the
Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference
Championships at West Chester a few
weeks ago, the LHSC women's lacrosse
team displayed the kind of form that could
have won them th? PSAC title.
The Lady Eagles executed superbly in
downing - Slippery rock, 20-6. They lost
their chance to play for the champioiiship
after a 13-6 loss to Kutztown in the first
game.
"SHppery Rock was our best game of the
season," said Rose Ann Neff. "It was a
super way to end the season."
Lock Haven finished the season 6-4
overall, and 4-1 in the Pennsylvania Conference. They outshot their opponents
280-253.
Four of the five top scorers for the Lady
Eagles are returning next year. Junior Joan
Laird led the team in scoring with 27 goals.
She had 5 assists. Senior Sandy Miller
followed with 19 goals and 14 assists.
Junior Lisa Harding had 17 goals and 3
assists, junior Mary Beth DriscoU scored 14
goals and assisted on 4, and junior Karen
Kellerman netted 11 goals and tallied 9
assists. Sophomore goalie Chris Cortelessa
registered 94 saves on the season.
Lock Haven will lose four seniors to
graduation, three of whom played varsity.
Miller, Chris Sank, and Hilliary Herron
were varsity starters this year.
The outlook for next season looks good,
according to Coach Neff. "Our junior varsity team was 4-2-1 on the year and, we have
some promising freshmen who should perform well for us next year."
Three Lady Eagles were selected to the
Pennsylvania All-Conference t e a m :
DriscoU at center position. Laird at second
home, and Herron at point.
"Hilliary (Herron) is especially deserving
since many times the defense gets overlooked because there isn't much to take
statistically. I'm very pleased with her selection," said Neff.
"Mary Beth (DriscoU) made our midfield
work this year," continued Neff, "Joan
(Laird) was our leading scorer and a
dangerous threat on attack. Hilliary was the
big stick on defense. All three are very
deserving."
Sports Column
J^I^i^2^^i^J^i^iy.J^^i^.
Kelly Canavan will be leaving Lock
i Haven wilh two field hockey champion\ ships.
By Chris Brooks
Sporls Editor
In yet another exciting year of sports at
the Haven, not every team enjoyed the
spotlight, but every member of each team
did put forth an effort in representing Lock
Haven State College.
Looking back, we remember some of the
more memorable moments of the year. On
opening day in Jack Stadium before a partisan crowd senior Barron Grantham catches an 85 yard TD pass to defeat archrival
Lycoming, 14-7.
Then, there was the LHSC - Penn State
soccer matchup - We all remember that
one. After the Bald Eagles jumped on top
2-0, the Lions battled back to win in overlime.
Ahh, but sweet revenge. The field hockey
leam, who incidentally later went on to win
a Division 11 National Championship,
defeat the Lady Lions, 3-2, in a Hickoff.
Too bad the Centre Daily Times refused to
honor the Lady Eagles' triumph.
Three Bald Eagle wrestlers capture
Eastern Wrestling League Championships
and four qualify for Nationals to highlight
the wrestling campaign. Wade Potter, Ed
Black, and Rick Petersen take EWL titles
Bobby Lynn's shoes al receiver will be tough to fill. The LHSC footbaii star leaves as
the ail-lime leading receiver.
MM
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ \
The year in sports
and Doug Buckwalter cops a second place.
The four qualifiers were the most since
1976.
In the midst of a dismal men's basketball
season, a young freshman emerges as a hero
in a memorable matchup with Clarion. Jeff
Jackman is the key in that game.
Sophomore Mike Greene is also named second leam All-Conference. On the ladies
side, a pair of twins lead the Lady Eagles to
a .500 season.
Bill Lingle, LHSC's premiere boxer at
146 lbs., places second in the nation for the
second straight year and is followed by Tim
Frymyer, Ken Cooper, and Dave
Washington to the NCAA's.
The Lady Eagle Lacrosse team, though it
failed to capture a PSAC title, did take
third by defeating Slippery Rock, 20-6 (see
above).
Well, that's it. There are many more, and
we'd like to congratulate every athlete. To
those who are graduating. Good Luck. A
special salute to these seniors who gave
some great moments in their four years at
Lock Haven: Kelly Canavan (field hockey),
Bobby Lynn (football). Bill Lingle
(boxing), and Mike Millward (wrestling).
Mike Millward leaves with 97 career wins j
for Jack Turner's Bald Eagles. He will surely be missed.
Biii Lingle leaves Ihe LHSC squared circle with back lo back NCAA runnervup.
ii»iatiiii»iwioiiitoiiiiia»iitiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiitii)a«wta8st)iiwMMiii>
4 Eagle Eye May 13, 1983
320 seniors ready to turn the tassel May 21
for graduation will take place in the Field
House at 1 p.m. on Friday.
Dr. Sterns said that a student must have
passed a minimum of 128 credits, have a 2.0
grade point average, and must have fulfilled
the necessary requirements in the specific
major in order to graduate.
Sharon Mertz, a secondary education
French major, will be this year's valedictorian. Dr. Gerald Robinson, former vicepresident for Academic Affairs, will speak
on a topic related to the theme of Excellence in Education.
Dr. Blair Carbaugh and Dr. Bertha
Mayes will be Co-Marshalls for the commencement exercises. "The Marshall works
with the students for the planning and executing of graduation exercises," said Dr.
Carbaugh. He said that he is responsible for
By Holly Wililapis
Approximately 320 students will be
awarded diplomas at commencement exercises next Saturday at 10:30 a.m. at the
Hubert Jack Stadium, according to Dr.
Harvey N. Sterns, dean of Academic Administration. Dr. Sterns said that 295
students have been approved by the college
for graduation. He said that the number of
graduates is slightly higher than it had been
in the past few years. One student who
graduated in August, and 20 students who
graduated in December, will be participating in the ceremony. Twenty students
graduated last August, and 111 graduated
in December.
The ceremony has been planned for the
stadium, but if it rains, the ceremony will be
moved to the Thomas Field House. Practice
making sure students are notified about
graduation, supervising the rehearsal, line
up, and procession. Dr. Mayes is responsible for notifying the faculty concerning
commencement and organizing its procession.
"•
Dr. Carbaugh has been a graduation
Marshall for 12 years. Dr. Mayes was appointed to the position by former College
President Dr. Francis N. Hamblin last year,
but she was out of the country during last
year's commencement exercises, so Dr.
Jean Deobold took her place. Dr. Carbaugh said that the Marshall is the official
representative of the college, and is responsible for filling in at events that the college
president or members of the administration
cannot attend.
LHSC Panhellenic Council presents awards
The bloodmobile award was given to the
Sigma Kappa sorority. This year 257 pints
of blood were donated, exceeding the goal
of 250. During the fall semester of 1982 only 216 pints were donated.
By KIrsten Jorgensen
The Panhellenic Council recently gave
out awards for the highest percentage
donor in this year's bloodmobile donations,
the fall 1982 pledge class with the highest
overall cumulative average and outstanding
Greek woman award.
t
Both the Pledge Class Scholarship Award
Spring Musicale to be held Sunday
The coveted arrival of the spring season
also brings the Spring Musicale presented
annually by the Lock Haven Community
Chorus. The musicale wdll be given on Sunday afternoon, May IS, 1983, at 3 p.m., in
the auditorium of the John Sloan Fine Arts
Center on campus. There will be no admission charge.
Some of the selections to be performed
by the Chorus are Russian Picnic, by
Harvey Enders; Sound the Trumpet, by
Henry Prucell with Ona Ruth Weimer
directing; How Lovely Is Thy Dwelling
Place, (from Requiem) by Brahams; Over
the Rainbow, arranged by Roger Emerson;
Gonna Rise Up Singin', by Gilbert Martin;
Worthy Is The Lamb That iVas Slain, and
the finale. Amen Chorus from the Messiah
by Handel.
Soloists from the Chorus will be Nancy
Miller, James Hamilton, Joseph Sackey,
Richard Ramm, and Kay Bossert. Special
group presentations will be performed by
the Women of Note (Karin Van Deun,
soprano; Kay Bossert, alto; and Donna B.
Dorey, alto) and the Community Chorus
Quintet (Susan Sagmoen, soprano; Marie
Barnhurst, soprano; Christine Nestlerode,
alto; Richard Leonard, tenor; and William
Snyder, bass). Accompanists will be Ona
Ruth Weimer, Dorothy Leeson, Cyndi Erskine, and Jay Wohlfert.
The Orchestra will play for the LHSC
Commencement Ceremony on May 21, and
then present a "Pops Concert" in the comnuiiutyjn JunC;^
and the Chapter Scholarship Award were
awarded to the same recipients as last
semester. The Sigma Kappa sorority had
the Fall 1982 pledge class with the highest
•cumulative average, and Sigma Sigma
Sigma was the sorority with the highest
cumulative average.
The outstanding Greek Woman Award
1982-83 went to Penny Gardner of Sigma
Kappa, the president of the Panhellenic
Council. The award was given for promoting the Greek system. Gardner said that
she "wasn't expecting to win the award"
All of the sudden they read her name. She
felt honored to win the award. Gardner, a
senior Psychology major, will graduate in
May 1984. Four of the past five Greek
Awards have gone to the Sigma Kappa
sorority.
'Fred' from page I
chai^ge substantially. He said that Macke,
the corporation taking over the snack bar,
will not raise prices drastically and that in
some cases they'll even reduce prices. There
will still be specials, according to him, and
an even wider variety of food items next
semester. "Students shouldn't feel that
Macke is going to bring in vending
machines. The only big change will be in
appearance. The snack bar will look very
different next semester." said McNamara.
Beyond all this, the fact remains that, for
whatever causes, a unique element of what
we call Lock Haven State College is leaving.
"I take life as it is and 1 try to enjoy
myself," said Fred with his original look at
life. "I'd never come back here for
anything because I just don't go back to
places. I really enjoyed working with the
College kids, as 1 always have for more than
20 years."
Fred was commended with a placque
from the Black Cultural Society here on
campus in a gesture that, as he says, made
him "speechless for the first time in my
life" when he found out about it. And as
the students showed their appreciation for
him. he also would like to show his a p preciation for them.
"1 want to tell everyone I served since
I've been in the snack bar that it was my
pleasure to serve them. I served some of the
best people in the world here, even though 1
did serve some shakes," he said with his
usual smile.
To him the student body's message is
engraved in his placque:
"For outstanding service and dedication
to the student body at Lock Haven State
College. May God bless you."
The Black Cultural Society. '82-'83.
FOR SALE-CAR Ford Galaxy 500 Good
CondiUon 1%7 Automatic-AC- New Tires
$450.00 Call 893-3523 or 748-8608 ask for
Donna
Single Bed for SALE must sell immediately
CAll 748-8653
Good Times - Cheap Rent - live in the Igloo
this summer Call NOW-- 748-8689
Turn To
Trinity.
l u r n to Trinit) I'nited Methodist as your
church away from home. U e're at West Main
and Second - ju^t a ten niinute walk
from campus. Come worship with us each
Sunday at 10:45 A.M.
DutchHaven
Specials good only on deliveries
Large 16 in. pizza $3.75
Small stromboli $2.15
Meatball & Cheese $2.00
tax not included
Offer good until end of semester
IU-^-'LU.
Restaurant
SPECIALIZING IN STEAKS
AND SEAFOOD
FULL BAR
SERVICE
Take your date out for
dinner in our pleasant
atmosphere
Good at participating Wendy's
in: Lock Haven, Williamsport,
Danville, Lewisburg, Selinsgrove,
and Shamokin,
201 E. Bald Eagle Ave., Lock Haven g
(Corner of Grove and E. Bald Eagle)
748-7444
B Serving from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Seven days a week
Main St.
748-8027
For ONLY... $1.79
Single V4 lb. Hamburger
French Fries and Med, Drink
A new and unique dining experience
icOMPLETE
AMERICAN
MENU
Delivery lime
Monday 6:30 9.3Q
through 7:30 i n . i n
Saturday 8:30
p l u s 11:30 p . m .
Sunday 6:30, 7:30, 8:30
9:30 - Last deliver^
closed at 10:00 p.m.
«,
Not valid with any other offer.
Please present coupon when ordering.
One coupon per customer.
EXPIRE: May 19, 1983
1
Media of