a. ] Knott BSC Students to Take ^Sf! ¦ NOT » ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ^ ^ " ^ ¦*» ^B^— -^^H^* - ^^— " On Wedn esday, November 12, the En glish Department is brin ging to t he campus an important young poet — Bill Knott (19401966). Among t he events t sessions . Part in Moratorium in D.C. Forty or more Bloomsburg students will travel by bus to Washington. ..D.C . to attend the Mora torium this month . The bus trip, organized by Bill Sanders and T om Brennan , will leave early Friday and return late Saturday . Many BSC students and faculty will also travel by car . The "March Against Death " organized by the New Mobe is calling the American people tc Washington , D.C . to demonstrate for life and for immediate and unconditional withdrawal from Vietnam At 8:30 p. m . the English The fall offensive of the New department will honor Mr. Knott Mobe incorporates a variety of at an informal reception in the anti-war activities taking place Newman Center on Iron street. all over the U.S. It will culmiMrs. Margaret Lauer and Mrs . nate w ith the mass ing of w hat is Anita Donovan , who will be co- expected to be many thousands hostess es for the reception , have of people in the capital city for made the arrangement for Mr . the March Against Death , which will terminate on November 15 Knott 's visit . Interested students , faculty and with a mass march and rall y administrators are invited to (which may be the largest antiatten d any or all of these events. war ra lly this country has ever seen). ( continue d en page eight ) March A gainst Death At 6:00 p.m. November 13, the first of 50 state delegates totaling 43 , 000 • 45 ,000 persons , will begin walking from Arlin gton National Cemetery in a solemn single-file proces sion past the White Hous e to the steps of the Capitol . There will be at least as many people in each state delegation as the number of slaughtered G.I .s from that state; there will be additional name signs. people representing the cities and To balance all these positive towns of Vietnam that have been factors , some of the negat ive destro yed. The marchers will all comments were that 69 per cent be wearing placards with the of the fro sh were uncomfort able name of either a dead G . I . or a (?) with committee me mbers and Vietnamese city or town , and as 63 per cent found the meetings he passes the White House, each too long and the infor mation was per son will call out the name on re petitious . Most significant in his placar d . the poll findings is that the Class The Mar ch Against Death will of '73 approves of the traditio nal conclude 36 hours later with a name signs and dinks , and the memoria l servic e at the Capitol results of the general question * steps on the morning of Noveming — the high interest in dr ugs ber 15 , preceding the mass and cheatin g on campus . We as* march and rally . The placards sume that the frosh did feel prop * deposited on the Capitol steps erly initiated into campus life will later be taken by re present and that they learne d from orien * ative parents of the dead G.I .s, tatlon week . anti-war veterans and G.I . groups , clergy and C ongressmen to the White House as part of the mass marc h and rally. Organizing The Project The principal resources lend* ing stren gth to the March Against Death are organizations which have sponsored readings of the nam es of the war dead in various parts of the countr y. A Quaker Action Group , Amer ican Friends Service Committee , Sane W ar Resisters League, W omen Strike for Peace , W omen's International League for Peace and Freedom , Fellowship of Recon- dilat ion, t he R esistance , Resist } Clergy and Laymen Concerned About Vietnam , and others , com* bined with newer groups such as the Vietnam Moratorium , veterans and G.I . groups , the next of kin of G .I .s who have been killed in Vietnam , and ot hers that will join in. The students part icipating from BSC will now have a chance to move with the people from all over the country and exprecs themselves in a nonviole nt man ner . Frosh Say Yes to Orientat ion - ^ ^mr /¦v ^*».*i.ii. mwmmM.r-ww.+.-iam:- *-r? **ammmmmmm3m Durin g freshmen orientation this year a poll was conducted by the Director of Student Ac* tivities , John S. Mulka , to see what the fr eshmen thou ght of orientati on . Questions ran ged from problems in group discussion to the orientati on committee and orien* tatlon program in general . When aske d what hypothetical cases they were interested in talkin g about , the overwhelmin g ma jority of 83 per cent replied to cheatin g and drug use on camp * us; while 68 per cent wer e in* tereste d In campus unrest . In some of the other group discussion questions It was dlscov* ered that only 49 per cent of the freshm en rea d the text CAMPUS VALUES, while 02 per cent recommende d it for next year 's tf n m h In questions abou t the orlenta * tlon committee itself , 85 per cent of the freshmen did find the com* mitt ee members helpful; while only 11 per cent said they were undul y harassed or ridiculed. . And finally , in general ques* tioni about orienta tion , 96 per cent of the freshmen recommend * ed that next year's frosh wear dinks durin g orientation week , while 88 /*r cent stated that they should alt o be require d to wear Attentio n Seniors All Seniors who have not yet paid class dues must pay them, Mak e checks payable to The Senior Class. AU people graduatin g in Jan uar y, M ay, or August 1970i U graduatin g In January, the dues are $2.00; If graduatin g in May or August, the dues are $7.00, P*y to Donna Har per, treasur er . Box 290. They must be paid before Thanks givingvacation be- gins - by November 24, 1969, If not paid * the January diplomas will be withheld and May and August grads will not be ak lowed to regi ster . The next faeult y meetin g, scheduled for November 11, will be held at 4iOO p.m. In* tteatf of SiM p.m. e* tta feel In the lait Pacuity tulltln. 1 Tutoring Program Kappa Delta Pi is in the process of getting its ' second an* nual tutorial progra m underway . This year the pro gram is going to Include members from the Newman Association and Student PSEA, as well as others who may be Interested , Each tutor win be matche d with ui elementary student who has < been recommended by his teach * er. It will then be the responsi * bility of the tutor to call the teach *
' ' - ., - 4l&m ^ ^ v^ ^j t,::^, : :: M :: ¦ : : ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦^ ¦ [: < < mm$, 'W^- ' w^ I ; "We can be together , ah you swers: "Point that thin g someme, we should be together "Whatfla g?" and where else." Balin: all outlaws in the eyes We are "Four. Cassad y: " Bassist Jack And then there 's the inside of of America the double-lea f cover , a beauti ful in order to survive , we steal , lie for ge fred hide and deal full-color spread . * Included In issue numbe r 1 \We ar e obscene lawless hideof "Volunteers ," a rather in- ous dan gerous dirty violent teresting tab loid with the foil- and youn g." Now before Stan writes the owing goodies: "How to Tell MilM&G a long; tirade about how Yourself from Richa rd Jerry Garcia by this group that Blass thinks is house Nixon, " Dead: an Airdamn good is a bunch of so Gratefu l of the plane credo , "Ever ything We Do anarchists , let's go on a way: Either Makes Noise or Stinks; " "We are for ces of. chaos and a mari juana plant labeled "Moth- anarch y er" ; a cart oon starrin g Neil Ever ything they say we are we Arm stron g and his sidekick are "Buzz , " and featu ring Roger Wil- And we ar e ver y proud-of ourko; a household tip ("squeeze selves... a dead mole over your head" ); Up against the wall, up against more aims at "The Prez "; Want the wa ll fred" (sung mothe r Ads; and an editorial by Tommy ««fr ed") Smothers which reads "The~ "Tear down the walls, tear down of — — has — and — others. the walls..." Portable •• were •• without •• Suffice it to say that 5:50 of the or — •• would - •• if the - - above is enoughto make MC5 look had been - tract or ." Pretty good like revolutionar yMonkees .Hell , fnr a rwiA.nacw is sue. MC5 ARE revolutionar y MonIraae NOW , THE MUSIC "Good Sheperd " is a trad itionNow, to the music itself. For the first time the Airplane has al . It is prett y, almost like recruited outside help, particu- a hymn. What Jefferson Airplane lar ly Nicky Hopkins on piano is doing with it I dunn o, but it (Hopkins , now with the Grou p of sounds good . Jorma Kaukonen , ex-Yardbird Je ff Beck, proved one of rock's finest guitarists , himself quite a studio musician has himself a heyday with it . with the Stones on "Satanic Ma- Such gentleness from a guy with jesties " and "Beggars Ban- a degree in sociology! quet "). And this is their best THE F ARM album since "After Bathing at The third track is, so help me, Baxter 's, " which I sometimes countri fied. (Like I said, the Airthink is the best album ever plane ain't too worried anymore done by an American rock grou p. about carryin g the psychbanner .) Unlike "Crown of Creation " or A year or so ago I would have the live "Bless Its Pointed Little hated this track just because of Head ," this one has no -weak the countr y. Not now. I love spots . It even opens with a ban g. this one, "The Farm ," from its: The Airplane ended their last corn y lyric s to the pedal steel studio album with "The House at guitar work by J err y Garci a. Pooneil Corners ,'' a bleak chronSide 1 closes with Slick's "Hey icle of nuclear wlpeout. So they Frederick ." FREDerick? These open "Volunteers " with Kant * people who argue over who's betner' s "We Can Be Together ," ter , Slick or Jo plln, don't seem which may be to them the only to realize how different the two way to prevent that holocaust. are. Jo plin is Instant sex, blues, Before I copy down the lyrics , and all female . (jSee how diflet me explain one thin g. The ferent they are? ) Grade's alguys who printed the lyric sheet ways kicking the eternal lovebit , copped out and wrote "fred" always bitchin g about mechanical at crucial points , "fred " being men: not "fred" but another equally "Either go away or go all the terrible word which means way in intercourse. Not that "fred you " Look at what you hold means "intercourse you" (sorry, Come back down on a spear of Lenny) . I better get down these silence lyrics , before Mr . Stanley goes When it flies You go on throu gh int o car diac arr est: You come on throu gh." Forty-seven points or no 47 points, it excites me. Then she decides to ask her heroine some questions, like: "How old will you have to be before you stop believing That those tyes will look down on you thai way forever?'' "Frederick" goes out psych, with Hopkinschopping awayand getting a little redu ndant altar ' sight minutei and Jorma going [ into somethin g which reminds me of "ReJo yce." (Jorraa la w by allan maurer of my major interests , and in What were your thou ghts about mis area too, I seemed to have ' college before you had your first the luck of the Irish . That is, I contact with "higher education?" met Mr. Martin Gildea . Like many other s, I saw four Mr. Gildea Is a liberal who will years of college as "pro babl y argue a conservative point of view better than digging ditches" if you are a liberal . I never had (which I did for a year and a Mr . Gildea for a class, but somehalf before gracing BSC with how I thin k he should have gotten may presence , N' let me tell some of my tuition money. * you, almost anything is better MIND 'BOGGLED" than digging ditcihes or using a Then , in quick succession , I ja ckhammer , ' specially If it met Mr. Anth onySylvester , Mr . weighs 85 pounds and you only James Percey, and Mr s. Anita weigh 140). Donovan . My poor congenitally But, also like many others , I Republican mind was boogied expected college to be four more (don't ask. It's a word I just coinyears of drud gery , desolation , ed—fr om boo—and — boggled). and failin g determination . It You know, Its a hell of a thing would, be inappropri ate to say v to admit that you learned somethat 1 was disappointed. thing from someone's button colBesides discoverin g that'a love lection (Percey 's collection of of reading keeps your head above political campaign buttons , and water here , rather than pushin g it you don't know about them you it under , as it often does in high should find out about them. ) school , I found an environment alAnother early acquaintan ce most entirely different from was- Dr . Hans Karl Gunther . And what I had expected . Mr . James Mur phy. Later I mat ENTHUSIASM STIMUL ATES DT. P. E . Roberts, and Mr . First I met Mr . Richard Sav- Deake Porter . age. To say he stimulated my These gentlemen , and the imagination , both in and out of aforementioned Messrs . Perce y, class, is an understatement. Mr . Savage brought literature to life for me. His enthusiasm for poetry, Blake , Keats , Yeats; for the great ninetheenth century Russians , Puskin, Dostoyevsky, and others; for drama , and Arthur Miller, was highlyconta gious , and 1 succumbed to it. Mr. Savage 's enthusiasm does not die with the last minute of a class period . He carried it with him, and it is difficult to talk to him without learnin g something of literature , poetr y, or good writing . English is my major area of concentration , but politics is one also caught somewhere doing the guitar from 'Saturday After noon," but he' s forgiven for "Good Sheperd ." "If you want to go to heaven , over on the oth er shore, stay out of the way of the blood-stained bandit , oh good sheperd , feed my sheep..."Sorry , got carried away .I fell for ' 'Shepherd" the first time I heard it. Side 2 opens rather softly with J orma' s "Turn My Life Down." ' to coma: The A clue tp what s Hammond organ is done by Steven stills, who is joined on the next cut by Dave Crosb y. WOODEN SHIPS "Wooden Ships" Is a delight . If you haven't hea rd it already on the Crosby, Stills ft Nash album stop reading and run out and \>uy the Crosb y, Stills A Naah altoim alread y. Play it about (Continued frem pasjp •) Masterpiece is Spoof Sylvester , Gildea, Savage, and Madame Donovan are of very differe nt politicalaUignment ,eeV ucational methodology, etc., tat the y an htve one thing in common. They do not teach on a period to period basis . They do not leave tttJr tie *with Socrates at the classroom door. They don' t treat student s as if they wsre a lower species, fit to bs trained and conditioned in*cast. Because several of the ab ovti mentioned faculty members are) In what ont might call "t eaute• limbo " I' m lure somsone wUJ accuse me of attempting to» defend them, or someiucnbullshit . BejUav* me, i cannot conceiv« of any group of facult y mtmfatr * racra ibis to defend itself ta ut thi om I'vt mMcnad. GOOD TEA. '¦ . . '¦ x: * . ' . '. . . ' i, ¦ ¦ •¦ , ' ' . ¦' ' ' '¦ ' ¦ ¦ r, . * • '•¦ ¦ ¦ : ' " . ¦¦¦ ¦ > k K + * $ * ' ' . of or BSC Yeech! Special Retrospediv ei^Wn rABlighted History PAGE FOUR ^' MAROON A GOLD FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1969 t ^^ ' ^^^^^^^^^^ . . , MAROON A GOLD " ' , ~~T PAGE FIVE - I lMPjj .T1» PMWnnnw TiiTl mn Tin itt m if ift :.«K* r:**^*w^j ™i*«BBHBHBr««««Bii« p»^~^^ ~' 1' ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Fair Wood-Nymp hs amongst the greenery . Class of '33 conta ins such notable s as Fatty Arbuckto , Cochise . and King Kong. I Science I Fiasco. Barn or by obiter dictum Waller 's Long ago when passenger pigeons still flew the skies , as was their wont , a wood elf by the Quenya name of C.P. Waller was brutally ousted by a rambling gang of whiskey rebel s . Thus compelled to vacate the beauti ful but mundane premisses of his hitherto famed institution for flying fairies , the elf-king fled to the little known hamlet of Fern ville. There , in the one thousan d eight hundre d thirty -ninth year anno domini (or about the time of the chimpanzee rebellion In Black Nihilist Africa) , he established the Bloomsburg Prothonatar y Insti tute for the demotion of the extraordinary and blighted twigs of subterrani an , antideluvial , nonterrestr ial pollywogs and heteros exual , hairless, Tierra Del Feuggian Can talou pes. This failed miserably . Waller was then compelled by local sod-busters to construct an enormous barn on a hill of Devonian rock. However , Instead of erect ing the usual barn , he carved out of rock , an edif ice too beautiful to serve as lodging for in which to place ducks , chickens , oran gatan gs, Stanleys and other vile smelling animals . Finally comma In around or about 1866 domlnl 's annum comma a stone troll comma Henr y C arver comma beheld the magnificlent bui lding carved by I The Royal Elvish Troubadours of Lord Rufus Karverhall of Worchestershire . \17 ft 11A M I I MWI Water Faerie s playeth In yen pool of Great Wonders. 4% 4**M* kma VUlllllia •¦• ^ hMf\ WVIJfc AMAillil A) Mf/USMlfr comma purcha sed It for a can of tri pe and sixteen Moxle bottle caps and aptly named It the Big Barn parenth esis later named Carver Hall after the Infamous Br itish Field Marshall Sir Sebastian Jam es George Quincy Lor d Rufu s Karverhall comma who disting uished himself slightly in ar ound or abou t 1304 by manhandl ing Queen Frieda IV's Schleswig Holsteinc ow close p arenthes is perio d C arver , wasting much time , was slow in establishing his now unknown normal school for abnormal Penn ey lvanlans wishing to study the non-existant lltera ture of the Pitc alrn , Seychelles , and Damanaky Islands. It was at this , time that Carver began his contro versial hobby of seducing furry little tree climbing animals . Carver built Waller Hall to acoomod ate the students expanding bodltsj but. the removal of the susafrus Mid #110- ' , alyptus trees to facilitate the construction enraged the rabid tree squirrels who had expected better tr eatm ent f rom someone who was getting his jollies from their sexual favors — hence they burned the building to the ground. Thereafter , Carver rebuilt Waller adding Neotling (name d f or the voluptuous queen of the squirrels) to pacify his smallish friends. Then in 1903 (or about the same time that Pancho Villa freed himself from the captivity of a Buddist Penguin Resort to begin his famous ride) the Imperial Commonwealt h and Sovereign State of Pennsylvani a by writ of emminant domine sent a deranged force of howling syphili tic senior citizens to occupy the institution and convert it Int o a state normal school. Waller was crucified dead and buried and replaced by Dr . Charles H. Fisher (a noted vetraner ian from Flushln gMead ows where he was attem pting to Invent an antigravity toi let for Stanley Kubrick *s grandfather). During his tenure , the school expanded offering such appealing course s as quince berr y hor ticul ture , humming 101 , and nuclear fus ion 391. Unfortunate ly, Fisher came to an unt imely end (he wasn 't wear ing his Tlmex) drowning while testing his antigravit y comode in the cata combs of Wai i_ u wr , An auditorium engineer from the small town of Gunther , Pomeralnia , Francis B. Haas , was name d Fisher 's successor . It was dur ing, the period of Haas that by decree of the governor , School became the Normal Doomsbur g State Teachers College. During Haas * reign, the college tra ined many state teachers (for some reason or another) and installed cement sidewalks for the first time In its history, On a bright sunny day In 1939 while strollin g up the facade of Noetling Hall , Haas was attacked by a band of wood ^elves and hung from the toes 't il dead. FBH was re placed by H.A, Andruss who carried the college through the Second World War and the great egg plant quake of 1930 that destro yed old North Hall, Dr. Andruss ' most noted contributions to the campus Included the Installation of chrome ratings in fron *. of Carver and , buildings of var ying worth ^'^ ' ^^ ^^^^^^•^^^^^ ¦^¦^¦^¦^¦¦¦ •^ ¦"•¦¦'¦¦i^Bss i WMH Telling thrice told tales of Elves , Dragons , and Stanl eys of blight. v I Planning battle against yon Wood-Elves in Ye Halle ofe Ye Grande Olde Boo kes. Ye Navae Bade Squade ofe Ye Mastore Waller. I ^^^^^^ throughout. After eons of noble service , Dr . Andrus s abldlcated amid mass walling of the woodelves who were his friend s. On his last day , Dr . Andr uss was viewed walking across the water of the Atlantic Ocean on his way to Africa never to be seen again (I.E. Africa). Andru ss was succeeded by Dr. Robert Nossen , first In war , first in peace first In the hear ts of his countrymen. „ Here endth for the present the tale of the history of Dootrisburg as told to the staff of the Maroon and Gold In ye year of 1969 AD or something «ls« by X'Tarlan of Axtxon . ^^^ ^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ BBKUBUKBBJ ^BKKI^EKRK^^BBI ^K^^KRBE ^B^EKB^BH ^^^^^ BB^^^^^^^^^^^^^ • Yon sesilense ofe ye stueye ofe yon leisonet Ine yen Halle ofe yen sqoirrelet eft Carver. Ernie Nevers Stanfo rd 's Heralded No. 1 Receives Centennial Salute Reprinted from THE SPORTIN G NEWS , Nov. 1, 1969 ; What other athlete hart the distinction of competing against jBabe Ruth , Lou Gehrig , Ty Cobb , iTris Speaker , Harry Heilmann and Eddie Collins in baseball , and against the * likes of Red Grange , Bronko Nagurskl , Jim Thorpe , Geor ge Tr afton, and Link Lyman on the autumnal grid ? His famed jersey , No. 1, is the j only one ever retired at Stanford . It is encased under glass today in the school's athletic museum, honoring him as its greatest of all times . j¦ More than 40 years ago he became a legend. Sur ely, Ern ie Nevers mer its an ode an d a isalute on the occasion of college football's centenn ial. The big blond came from a sports era of almost mythlogical men "whose feats in the arena have not since been approached . The sportsrwrlters sang their paea ns of pur ple prose about Red Grange , Babe Ruth , Jael ? Demp* sey , Jim Thorpe , Bobby Jones , Bill Tilden *and Nevers. A consen sus All-Amerlcan at Stanford in 1924 and 1925 , he has been name d on most all •time , Ail-American squads and "was among the first to be admitted to the College Football Hall of Fame in New Brunswick , N .J ., and also to its pro counter part , the NFL' s shrine in Canton , Ohio . Pop Warner , his Stanford coach , often said that Ernie -was the greatest all-round athlete he , ever coached, not excluding Jim Thorpe of Carlisle . In Seperate Class Stanford had many great fullbacks . Nevers was in one class and all the others in some other cate gory. They included Bobby Gra yson , Norm Standlee , Biff Hoffman , Her b Fleishhacker , Chuck Smalling, Jack Patrick , Bob Mat hi as, Bill P aulman , Bill Simkins , Lloyd Merrlman , Em*ery Mitchell , Stan Anderson, Bob Meyers , Skip Christ , and Bill Tarr . Nevers did not become the best known name in Stanford athletic hist ory merely by chance . Born \' ^ Pat' s -. > i ^ 9i»r$ «id tow CLOTHING HAGGAft SLACKS LEVIS ' McGre gor spomwear VANHEUSCNond r MANHAtTAN i . SHlttS . BRENTYVOOD SWEATKS I 'Format Wet*#«**Service \ v • 520 1. *•*» SI. Me• m* >M*me * ¦ ¦ ¦ • . ,., { . '¦ J first few stride s, was an excel* in Willow River , Minn., June 11, lent passer and punter , a punish1903, he played high school footing biocker and a ferocious lineball in Superior , Wis., severa l backer . seasons but moved to California Don Liebendorfer , Stanford with his parents and was grad publici st for over 40 years , calls uated from Santa Rosa High, near Ernie "the greatest linebacker I San Francisco . have ever seen." There , are many ta les about I n Nevers ' college days , a star bow he landed at Stanford , some often had to go the full 60 minof them apocryphal , but there utes which Ernie did on num, was a tremen dous tug between erous occasions. He performed to get Californ ia Stanford and punting and his ball-carrying, Some of the antics virtualhim . passing duties in nearly every ly amounted to kidna pping . game , and more often than not His benefactor was a Santa excelled his opponents stati sRosa attorney, Finlaw Gear y , tically in each department . who helped him throu gh school BEST GAMES IN 1925 with loans . Whe n Ernie turned Ern ie says the three college pr6 , he paid back in full Geary, the universit y and fraternity • games he best remembers were played in 1925 — against Calihouse from whiefcy he had borfornia , USC and Notre Dame , . roweu , y the latter in the Pasadena Rose his Stanford teamBig Dog, Bowl. That wasperha psthe Blood mates called him. He was tru ly a dreana athlete . Off the field he Giant' s greatest college per f ormanc e. He played the entire reminded you of a big, friendly, game on two injured ankles — docile Newfound landdog. But put fractures which had barel yhealhim hi any athletic uniform and ed. you had a driving, re lentless competitor who swept aside all that Until the Notr e Dame game, he stood in his way. had played only three minutes of No punishm ent was too great the season . His left ankle had been for him to inflict on himself in broken in a practice scrim * behalf of his team. He was unmage during September . In Noselfish , self-confident , yet ex- vember , the next.to-last game of treme ly modest . He dealt and ab- the re gular season , against Mon * sorbed some terrific blows, but tana , he went into the lineup for was never guilty of dirty play . the first time . Three minutes la. He waged many ground- gaining ter , he was carried off the field , duels 'With George Wilson , the his right ankle broken. Universit y of Wa shington star . Wh en Stan f or d was chosen to The only one inwhichErnie came play in the Rose Bowl, Nevers out second best was November 1, -walked through plays in practice 1925 , In Seattle . Wilson and El- on crutc hes. When the cast was mer Tesreau , who backed the taken off the second broken ankle , line , ganged up on Ernie and al- he had had only four days of acmost tore his head off. It was a tive pract ice. muddy day and the field was He lined up against Notre Dame rrTOOclAfffi with his legs taped up to his W ash ington knew Nevers knees. Bone specialists in San wasn 't going to pass in that Francisco had been unable to fas* quagmire , so the Huskies met hion braces accordin g to the spec* Ernie at the line of scrimma ge ifications of Coach Warner , so with the heels of their hands to Pop fixed the braces himself , his head. Big Er nie didn't take Warner taped rubber inner a backward step but Stanford tubes to Nevers ' heels and fas* lost , 13*0, and this knocked the tened them tightly to the backs Indians out of the Rose Bowl . of his knees. They served as SO-SO IN FROSH YEAR artif icial tendons, Nevers ' start in football was Warner figured Ernie would far from auspicious. Used at end last about ten minutes but he and halfback his frosh year , he played the entire game , 60 min* wasn't impressive , but Warner ut es of ripping, inspired football . moved him to fullback when he At game 's end the crowd gave thejoined the varsity and he was an 21-year-old star a thu nderin g ovaimmediate sensation. In many tion. He had lost 15 pounds in res pects he was the perfect foot- that game . ball player . ERNIE BUSY PERF ORME R He bad power , was a great line in Warner' s wlngback forma * plunger , hit his full speed in the tioft , Nevers carrie d the ball on WELLY'S BARBER SHOP Terr y apd Dave . open Mon-Sat 8-5:30 Closed Wed. E. M.ia St., . Blooirofciir g Crt ttie wy yew Want \ ¦ Sp ecialiston College Loan * " , ¦ ' ¦ MOVER Pharmacy , Your Prei crfptfoit Drugg ht ' robot o. shive,(irf ^ ^^ ^ ^ f r m P rtcrlpllo n Dt/tory H ictrryLogm 1 TOIUT GOODS COSMETICS RUSSELLSTOVER CANDIES GREETINGCARDS 1 Wett Main St. Fine J ewelry l(PUnited Perm Bank AND Repa iring The bank you can grow With. Member Federal Deposit Imunrke Corperatien ¦¦ ' I ¦ • •hon «i 7*MJii WOOMIiUI G,PA. Your J iwtUr Awayfrom Hom t 5 W, Main 8t. Bloo^ibum I . l5; ¦ : ." . • ¦' J IN . ' have done on two good legs — or even one?" In this game , Stan ford won the statistical battle , but Notre Dame got more points . Nevers thinks Stanford could have won but for a. bad break . The late Walter Eckersa ll was head linesman. He threw up his hands signalling a Stanford touchdown but the referee, Ed Thorpe, overrule d Eckersall and put the ball on the one-inch line where Notre Dame took over on downs. "If we had made that touch down, the score could have been 20-17 and by being only three points behind, we would not have had to gamble so much on passing, " Nevers maintains to thi s day. Nevers calls Warner his great ( conti nued on pa ge seven) Condemn Drugs The potential dangers of andro . genic.anabolic steroids have been str essed and their use by athletes condemn ed by the NCAA' s Com * mittee on the Competit ive Safe guards and Medical Aspects of Sports . The warnin g resulted from the Committee 's feeling that various lay publications have mlsre pre . sented the true status of these dru gs and have confused athletes and the general public on their proper use . The Committee stresses that in the young, healthy malt athlete the dru gs do not benefit performance, and there are severa l good reasons why they should not be>»ed. The first reason cited It the lack of documented studies . 0*0. Tl, IMt PMMi 7M4T1I , Moomtburg, P* NCAA TanUt ir * Date ^^T ^ v ^^ nearl y every play . The fullback did all the spinning in the Warner system and Ernie had to do it on two bad ankles. Stand ard was beaten , 27-10 , but Nevers was named the game's outstanding figure . As the late Maxwell Stiles wrote in his Rose Bowl book: "Nobody ever saw a greater per formance from a man who perhaps shouldn't have been on the field in the first place . Never s carried the ball 34 times through the Notre Dame line , a recor d in those days for times car ried . Individuall y he made almost as much yarda ge as the entire winning South Bend team . "On defense he made about four out of every five tackles and interce pted a pass to start his team on the way to a third period TD. What would Nevers Wondervww Ski Ana Openin g f I Ernie Nevers of Stanford U ^r Secondly, those that have been made show no Increa se in stren gth , only in weight. In one study , the only control group which did gain in strength was the one assi gned extr a hard work in a weight room , with re . peatedly Increase d work loads . It was determined that most of the weight gain shown was due to greater fluid retention than normal , and the Committee re. ports there is no way this can increase stren gth. Third , in cases where the ster. olds have been used medical com* plications have occurred , includ . ing cases of prostatlc hypertro * phy, liver damage , and testicular atro phy. * BLOOM | BOW*. I € WAFFL E GRIL LE Compliment! of Mk t DERIOK, toe "•tore s of lervlee" ,pv -t* ¦ ¦• ¦ ¦ Intram ural fr ois co ufltf y (2-u f^ >% * * " !» & — i- ^— t-S I ^. ^ ^ 2 r ' r ,4t/% / / •ti^F ft rj ^ _ Ji I v H « t* Last week the upsets cut my USC over Washington State * ¦ correct predicti ons down sub- Trojans to drive t he Cougars stantia lly, 15 of 20, with 85 of back North . 110 for 77 per cent overall. Oklahoma over Missouri-U pMississippi pulled the upset set of the week . Sooner power of the week by /downin g LSU 26- skins the Tigers . 23. Auburn came up with another Mississippi over Chattanoogafine performance by trouncing Moccasins to get stepped pre viously undefeated Florida 38- on by the Rebels . 12. The outlook is better this week , Alabama over Loulsana State so away we go with the top twenty — Crimson Tide hands Tigers for November 8 . second straight loss. Ohio State over Wisconsin Geor gia over Florida—The buckeyes plow to another overBulldo gs snuff out last hopes of whelming victory . Gators for SEC Cham pionship . Texas over Baylor — LongStanford over Washin gton—Inhorns gore the Bears. ' dians skin the Huskies. Tennes see over South Caro Aubu rn over Mississippi-State line — Volunteers have Game- — Dog fight with Auburn Bulldogs cocks for Saturday dinner. to win. UCLA over Oregon — Bruins Kansas State over Oklahoma to chew up the Ducks. State—Wil dcats smash the CowNotre Dame over Pittsburgh boys. — Irish swamp the Panthers in west i*nesi er over Ljeauu nyne points . — Golden Rams to butt the Bears . Arkansas over Texas Tech-The Waynesburg over Lock Haven Red Raiders haven't got enough — Bald Eagles get shot down. to stop the Hogs. East Stroudsbu rg over BSC— Penn State over Maryland — Warriors have too much for inT erps are too s low mov ing to sto p jured Huskies . powerful Nittany Lions. Wilkes over PMC—Wilkes second victory in another long win. streak. Yale over Penn-Eli crush the ¦flounderin g Quakers . Harriers Move To Championshi ps (continued from page six ) * : MAREE'S j. DRESS i SHOP 18 Wait Main Street BLOOMSBURG, PA, V ^^^ f I I J ule v W Ffft ST I I rfl Th The course to be rw h described in the mop above. The Men's tntramvra t Cross Country Moot will fee Wedno Htey, November 12, of 4:30 pan. Al l entries must be at Centennial Gymnasium by 4:15 p.m. Each team may ente r a maximu m of five runn ers . "Throughout the weekwepr ac-* ticed with footballs blown up ex* \ tra tight , which made them hard to pass and kick . In those days beat them handily this day. They found they couldn 't pa ss or kick well ." j t e m t m k r a{Js~ nct ^\ BARBER SHOP I — QUALITY — I FETTERMANS I J HE VER S ER NIE STA H FO R P VM l - Z S -S TO&Rltf THE" i M|W|| i i i |ii |pi ii||| i || i | n ii |>i *>IIM n I | i || i | i |ni 1 u II l mil ikiH 111iii I \\fcii"Hill iii •"ilNil'lM illilliliMiHillnih llillwl Jet. «f Reefe n md Mtetaia ^H _ EUDORA'S OCRSET SHOP 1 I. Main ft, Bloomtburg Matt *¦ OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT FRI. & SAT. Sundays & Daily — 1 1 a.m. to 10 p.m. FLOWERS 784-4406 Duchess Warner Deena |i || i i " «ll "Jl I Jllld " mlHI "' II " W i 'III ll 1l Ull "* I Mi ^'B WMiilll iilimillhiiHiH S«o our lingarlo freir jjj hiMBHriflHMM IMttriBMIflHfllKMHEiiHHt| o^ -**- J»oot of Celltgt Hill 1. I lloon nbur g Pi, ' th ere was no ru le on how much pr essure a ball could have . We IcOME uTnROWS E 112 W. Main 784-2561, M n 1T J 1L - _ -, T«E -^ ^ We Invite You To Dine With " Us Eve ry day and $undays Too Bea*«Wfrii WMeDtJlm y Supply Co. Phont - v I 4 HAUMAMC CAIDS GIFTS I* * Fullback Salute d est boss , bot h as a coach and The harriers are now 10-2-0 as a person . and today are running in the state championships at LockHav"He had the rare quality of en. Th e two losses came against instillin g great confidence in his Millersville in a fluke win in style of football and in his meththe harriers opener. The secon d od of teachin g and , most of all, was in the Tri-Meet with Lock the confidence players had in him Haven . The team coach Dr . Clyde as a person , E rnie said . "I " Noble , has predicted the defeat know Pop per sonally helped some of Millersv ille and the upset of players financially out of his Lock Haven in the championships . own pocket . The Hus kies have shown a 100 "Wh en we played California in per cent impro vement since their first meet and should have a shot 1925 and beat them for the first at the cham pionship this year . t ime In about 20 years, Pop Fres hman Terr y Lee has con- knew Cal might do a lot of passsistentl y showed that he is the* ing. The game was being playbest runner on the team by tak - ed at Stanfor d so It wa s up to us ing first place 7 times and hold- to furnish the game bal l. ing the course record at BSC and Shippensburg. Terry 's back up man, Tim Waechter , has also shown that he is a tou gh adversary in that he has taken first place in one meet and numerous second places. And to them the runnin gpower of Paul Pettetler , Bob Bentzln ger and Larry Strohl and you have a cham pionshi p caliber team . Milkr Office u te .r j ¦*• ' 7 We Cater To Ever y on * and Sw Only Choke CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS CHOPS, BEEF-BURGERS SANDWICHES & SALADS Phon e 784-7837 PAUL DIETER, Prpp. PAGE EIGHT * ' • irom pag« i.) to atta in tr ue equality and that reforms must be enacted toward that end . The demand is not limited to stude nt life but refers to all area s - of society. The move towar d refor ms has resulted in a long-term study by a commutes representing the Social Democratic Party and labor unions . The committee has offered uniq ue pro posals. Many were approved by the Social Democratic Party congress in Stockholm on October 4 . In its section on Swedish education the ^committee says that the reason some stud ents do not perfor m as well as others is not so much because of less intelligence but because of an inferior social backgro und . Students of parents with a lesser education will get less support in their school-wor k than those of parents who themsel ves know the benefits of a higher education . Thus , student s get an UNEQU AL motivation from the environment outsid e school . A solution offered calls for a compulsory preparatory school two years before grammar school . Here , as well as in grammar and high school the ' teacher can help overcome the restraints arising from socially, emotionally or intellectually deficient home environment . And, says Sweden 's new Prime Min« ister Olof Palme , there is a need for more male pre -school teachers enabling childre n to have EQUAL contact with men and women as they grow up. MEASURE ACHIEVEMENT Prime Minister Palme asks for a refor m of the grading system. Grades will be abolish ed in some classes. While the effects , functions and forms of grading are being re-evaluated , the committee says that grades and individual competition should be replaced by observing the developmen t of each student . The Committee 's suggestion would afford less privileged students an equal chance to succeed in school . Althou gh the teacher must use penetrating and individualized methods on the -weaker students , the goal is more group work and co-operation between students. It is believed that group work would offer the student an oppor tunity to experiment with different roles and hence discover his own capa bilities. Further , it will lay the groun dwor k for school democracy with which both Swedish high schools and univer ^MMH ^^ HHMMMMMMH ^. COLLEY BARBER SHOP Mon. ) Tues. I o _, 9 o. m. - 6 p.m. r Thu rs. > j Fri. 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Clos ed Wedn esday reasonably price d 48e W. MAIN ST ^MMMMM ^MMMBMBMM sities are experimenting .In these (continued from page three ) ' endeavors students have the right to parti cipate in creating the cur - as long as it'll take foir you to ricula. Any problems concern - know it' sbeauty in simplicity (one ing the entire school would be * playing will be enough) and then dealt with by a committee in- come back to "Volunt eers ." At cluding stude nt representatives . first I tho ught Crosby and Stills Th e teac h er ' s role , says t he could never jam with the Air re port , would be to guide and in- plane and sound right . Then I spire with increased reliance on thought back to the Dick Cavett de mocratic methods . There Show, the week after Woodstock , should be mor e questioning and the show where the * Air plane discussions , especially on sub- slippe d in a few motherfreds jects concerning the relation - over the publicly owned airwaves. ships between young and old , The 6:00 jam works nicely, and parent , and child , man and wom- everyone involved has a good an . The traditional roles of the time . (So when , when , does the sexes must not be taught in Crosby, Stills , Nash , & Youngal school . Boys as well as girls , bum come out ? Have merc y, Atlor example , shoul d learn domes- lantic Records! tic work . Also, the school should *'Eskimo Blue Day" is another teac h international equality by Slick freak show , with Our Gir l giving inter national perspectives the piano this time . It' s six; on to the courses . English should minutes plus and has some sort be taught to all from the first of deep philoso phical comment Krhnol v parc no doubt: OLD AND YOUNG COMPETE "Redwoods talk to me Equality is also concerned with Say it plainly brid ging the generation gap in Say it plainly education . A tremendous in The human name doesn 't mean i . crease in Swedish higher edu .to a tree . * shit cation brings young people to the labor market with more schoolDrummer Spence Dryden is a ing than most older wor kers . In 1950, 10 percent of youth went on substantial playe r , and he ain 't to advanced learning . In 1969 as bad songwriter either . "A the figure reached 50 percent . Song for All Seasons " is his contribution , and it makes me The new influx places the older nostalgic for the old Byrds ' worker in a position of not beYou Want to be a Rock and "So ing able to compete . To bridge Roll Star " Fancy the lyrics . the gener ation gap in educatio n the committee proposes an adult education program with studie s ciety, " says one of the largest financ ed partially by the emconservative dailies . ployers . These plans are strong ly endorsed by Pri me Minister It is argued that the equality ' Palme . program would add heavy costs i ne propos als suggest • that to Sweden 's national bud get inthere should be no distincti on cluding hikes in already genbetween sch ool an d wor k . In- erous welfare expenses . (Under stead , they call for continuous in- present provisions school up to terchange between studies and college is not only free , but practical work thr oughout a per - students are served free hot son' s life to increa se contact lunches , and get free health and and under standing between dental care until they are 16. groups in society now isolated Their parents get an annual alfrom each other . Further stud , lowance of $145 for each child . ies will be shortened since those College is tuition-free with only who re turn from wor k will have minor fees and ever y stu dent is more specific goals and gre at- eligible for government loans er motivation . Five years of to cover living expenses — over practical experience should qual - $800 per semester . Very favify for university studies. (At orable terms require only par present you must have a Swedi sh tial repayment over most of a \ high school degree equivalent to Kfa.Mma •£>4>^7 wA*#S^ 7 q M two year s at college to enter a universit y.) The Swedish taxes are already PARTIAL AGREEMENT the highest in the world , and , The comm ittee , under the says the opposition , "if the taxes chairmanship of Mrs . Alva Myr - are ra ised st ill more , one will dal , was appointed jointly by the stop the most eff ect ive dr ive in Social Democratic Party and the our welfare deve lopment , that Swedish Confederation of Trade is, the desire to "work ." Unions. It also has suggested reforms concernin g taxation , labThe committee answers , "The or market , h ous in g env ironment , tax reform (more taxes for higher family legislation , welfare pol- income groups and less for the icy, equality before the law , in- lower Incom e groups) will be a dustr ial democrac y , and equalit y test of the will of the peopl e to in the international per spective . contri bute to increased equal While the opposition agrees ity. " with some of the equality ref orms , it doesn 't see eye to eye all the way. "Ndw Sweden has the world championshi p in equalit y. But with so much equal - I ALL YOU ity there will be nothing but unl* n-n I formit y and stagnation in so* I LUNCHEON Charlie 's ^ Eppley's Pharmacy PIZZA & HOAGIES MAIN i IRON STRUTS Prescrfpf/on Spec/of/sf • CHANEL • OUHIAIN • FA8ER0E • LANVIN • PRINCE MATCHAIELU • EllZARETH ARDEN • HIIENA RUIENSTEIf^ • DANA • COTY • MAX FACTOR Aa«M| ¦ ftfAflBflfee ) VrWPI ••Vflf JPV and to a light country tun e yet: "While your reco rds line the shelves You'r e fighting amonst yourselves That' s a hell of a lot of dues for you to pay... Well I thought you had it made but you ain 't even paid For the things that you' ve bought since the acid test... I hear your manager skipped town with all your pay And your lead singer 's bulge, turns the censors grey." < I i Knot t ( continued VOLUNTEERS Hey, remember Marty Balin? Sure, wasn 't he the guy who start ed thf* Airplane? C ould be , why isn't there something by him on the album? Well , Balin does seem to have lost contro l of his own band , but he does make an appearance , It only lasts like two minutes , but it' s the best song on the whole disc. It ' s called "Volunteers , " and is prob ably named afte r the album of the same name . It' s the perfect chant for you to sing the next time Daley 's shock troops are macing you or you just get plain frus trated with the way things are . The chorus is "Got a revolution , got to revo luti on." The rest goes like this , very fast like it may be too late : THANKSGIVING! WHEEEE AT THE NEW DANVILLE SUB SHOP 326 Mil: St., Danville "Look what' s happening out in the streets Hey I' m danc in g d own the streets Ain't it amazing all the people I meet One generatio n got old One generat ion got sou l This generation got no destination to hold pick up the cry Hey now it' s t ime f or you an d me C ome on now we ' re marc hing to the sea Who will take it from you We will and who are we We are volunteers of America , volunteers of America .,." ¦k in ^ ^ L L n ^A U i Great Tasting SUBS AND DELICIOUS PIZZA (Baked The Way You Like It) OPEN SUNDAY - 5 P.M. TO 12 P.M. PHONE 275-9906 ^t^ K i ^a THE STUDIO SHOP 59 E. Mai n St. . . . for your per eonal needs in I*ftu and home decor. CAN EAT km HOLIDAY 1UFFIT EACH SUNDAY 11.30.2:30 Children — S1.M NES POLI I jewelers I ; I I I 1 Fine Jewelr y and I I Wafc h Repair IHOTEL MAGEE Bloomtburg, Pal Dick Benefleld, Manager ^^ RBBJMft^^ Kj|f^^^ |^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^ Open 'H1 12:00 p.m. Closed 1:30 fo 3iOO p.m. Every Day But Friday Regula r and King Slie HOAOIIS uM^^^ te^|^HS^|A^SV e^a^^ s^B^a^a^ Bj^Br B^^ a^s^^^^ a^SjRisjs ^^ ajiBj BiRpPa ^a^^ s^B j ^^^^^^ _ Mo* n AT 1 H' r ' c u s ' " Phone 784*4292 127 W. Main BLOOMSBURG 4a ' | _ ^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ , U R. Main St., RtOOMUURQ m CAMPUS CLEANERS Be fashionable I | f I I MRRRMMRRRMMRRHMMRRRMte SBMI ^a^BMl ^i^Kci^^^ fto^^^ fetk ^^^ Bl — ON OUR 2nd FLOOR — | from page one ) Mr. Knott is the author of THE NAOMI POE MS : COR PSE AND BEANS , publish ed under his BEANS, published under his pseudonym of Saint Geraud (19401966). Copies of this book are available at the college bookstore . In the foreword, Paul Carroll has written: "At their best , Saint Geraud' s lyrics of sleep, death , desire testify that condition which poets , saints , children and lovers have alwaysknown : To be without love ever y day and every night is to know what it must feel like to be dead. " John Logan has comment ed: "Th ese poems give asylum to the orphan in each oi us. " Then comes " Meadowlands , " the traditional Rooshan or something melody. It lasts a minu te and a second , and Slick plajs it on organ . Weird . In the bac kground , inaudible , is a speech . Headphones and adjustin g your stero won 't wor k , I tried. Could it be some of Utt s subliminal brainwashing? Can Grac e Slick be wiping out our cerebral cortexes? Who cares anyway? I TUESDAY thru FRIDAY ¦ Every Week —11.30-1.30 I ¦ riles * the/ loW p&&asophy, but necessity made the Air plane change. "Volunteers " is rock at its best: a fusion of beat, lyrics, and politics . Dylan would be proud . Don't ask me, please , if that last line means the song is dedicated to the Doors . I don't know. ^""" Tmoroasb? ^^ ¦ Sot. j MHB I Record .Review "WKK Liberal's Dreamland tcon rinuw ^ ^^Mjj ' MAROON *GOU> 124 E. Main St. At Your Service "Shirts professionally laundered *'Sanitone Dry Cleaning ^Repairing and Alteration * on Premise* We Aim To Pleise