McGovern to appea r for moc k con ven tion by Barb Fahey History and Government was How real is a mock con. earned at Northwestern vention? Universit y, in Evanston, 111. He Very real. facu lty at Dakota served on the When the Mock Democrat ic y an as a professor of W es l e Convention was held at BSC in Histor y. April of 1972, Geor ge McGovern His undergraduate schooling rec ieved the nomina tion for was i n t erru p te d w h en Presidential candidac y. McGovern served in the When the Democrats held E uro p ean Th eater of W ar their National Convention in Wprld War II. After during July of 1972, George M cGovern . flying 35 missions in the again received the Presidential Queen nsvrkt I n a 4l*\n 1?' •.mamwmmm&mmm **':* George McGovern New representative Party Structure and Delegate Selection which, in 1970, laid down guidelines to insure more op en an d re p r esentat i ve delegate selection procedures. His nomination for President came in 1972 at the Democratic National Convention. . Currently, M cGovern is chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs.He is next in line to' chair the Senate Agricultural and Forestr y Committee alone with chairing its subcommittee on Agricultural Credit and Electrification. He is also a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and acts as chairman for its subcommitt ee on Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs. Senator McGovern has written five books along with articles for leading magazines and journals. He also holds several honorary degrees. The Senator and his wife, Eleanor , have four daughters , one son, and three grandsons. organ i zat io n Once th e Senate , now t he A ssembl y Should CGA hire a lawyer? vices rendered. The monthl y charge is an assurance of the lawyers ava ilability. Another attorney Interv iewed didn 't want a full-time postion , but said he would go on retainer for a fee of a couple hundred dollars monthl y along with an additional $30 an hour fee for services ren dered. The $30-$4O hourly price range Includes case work , legal research and work needed to fulfill specific requests. The third lawyer interviewed said he had expressed a willingness to spend the majority of his time as student lawyer. His proposed fee was 125,000 annually . The fee would include benefits , secretar y, social security, insurance , retirement , library and all other miscellaneous expenses . Student needs are multifaceted and given any faction of people one of every five will " he was d e c o r a t e d w i t h the McGovern , who is again a Distinguished Flying Cross. Presidential hopeful , will speak at BSC on March 25 in Haas M cGovern 's political career Auditorium at 8 p.m. He will be started in 1953 when he became here by invitation of the * the South Dakota Democratic - Steering Committee for Party Executive Secretary. In ' . Bloomsburg State 's Mock 1956 and 1958 he was elected to - Democratic Convention. the H ouse of R epresentat ives, Born in Avon, South Dakota and in I960, President John F. on July 19, 1922, he is the son of Kennedy appoin ted him a Methodist clergyman , and Director of the United States was educated in the Mitchell , Food and Peace Pro gram and South Dakota Public Schools. Special Assista nt to the McGovern 's Bachelor Degree President. was awarded by Dakota He was elected to the U.S. Wesleyan University at MitSenate in 1962, 1968, and 1974. In chell, and his doctorate in 1969 he was named chairman of To protect stu den t rights by Pierce Atwater "H iring a full time lawyer by student council is not only permissible , but encouraged ," state d Assistant Attormey General Nancy Schnuer. Student Council 's Lawyer Committee has spent several weeks researching the possibility of hiring a lawyer for students. The Lawyer Committee members are Tom Mulhern and Frank Lorah , Student Life Accountant. Council is faced with questions of whether the lawyer will be full-time or on retainer , types of cases the attorne y will handle and how much council will pay for legal services . *$ The committee first interviewed a lawyer expressed interest in being hired on * reta iner. This Includes a salar y of a couple hundred dollars monthly with an additional $40 ' an hour charge for legal sor- "r>alrnta the Democrat ic Commission on need legal service at any one t ime, one of the lawyers said. According to these statistics , approximately a thousand students could need legal service. It was also mentioned that the University of Massachusetts has 20,000 students with five student attorneys. Problems which the Lawyer Committee has encountered are , ( 1) hiring an attorney from IUWU W UCICI IU BIUUCIIIO agtUMO l prev ious clients of the lawyer , ( 2) if hired on retainer , what the avallibility oi the lawyer would be, and ( 3) which cases have priorities over others . Suggested solutions to these proble ms would be, ( l) hire an out-of-town lawyer who has no affiliation with the town, (2) hire a full-time lawyer and ( 3) have a screening of cases by council before going to the lawyer. by Peggy Moran "A forum for the discussion of college matters , a framework for the maintanence of a coordinated committee system , an d an organ iza ti on to recommend college policies." As stated in it' s constitution , this is the primary function of the newly formed Bloomsburg State College Representative Assembly. Successor of the now defunct College Senate , one of the major differences between the two bodies is the structure. Whereas the Senate body amounted to about 82 members consisting of approximately 20 st uden t s, 60 faculty, an d t wo mana gers , the Assembly will be comprised of 90 to 95 people, membership being distrubuted throughout the college community in the following manner: approximately 40 students , 40 faculty, three AFSCME (Association for State College Ma intenence Empl oyees ) members , and nine managers . : AFSCME is the bargaining agent for college staff personnel and the mana gers would be represented by Vice-Presidents and Deans. uovernance The Assembly 's E xecut ive Commit tee will be composed of both elected and ex offico members. (Ex officio membership implies no power to vote.) The Executive Committee shall consist of the President of the College, three managers by his appointment , the three rank ing CGA officers , three APSCUF (Association of Pennsylvania State College and University Faculty ) officers , three AFSCME officers , the secretar y of the Assembly, two representatives elected from the assembl y at large , the six chair persons of the six standing committees , and the cha irperson of the Assembly. There will be a maximum of 23 members on this Executive Committee , The cha irpersons of the standing committees mentioned above are the chairs of the Presiden tial Planning Commission , and the following coordinating committees : Academic Affairs , General Administration , College Life , Selected Campus Services , and Human Relations. The major business of the Executive Committee is to set up the agendas of the Assembly meetings and to coordinate committee work of the standing committees , Assembly chairperson The chair person of the Assembly will be elected in quite a differentway from that of the Senate. The Executive Committee will compile a list of three nomine es for the Assembly Chair and place them before the October general meeting of the Assembly. The entire body will then elect the chairperson who will serve until the following October . The Assembly Vice-Chairperson will be elected by the Executive Committee and will chair all meetings of that committee. constituencies The approximately 40 student members of the Assembly will be elected to represent each residence hall , off-campus female residents , off-campus male residents , female commuters , male commuters , and gra duate students . The number of representatives elected by each constituency will be pr oportionate to the size of the group being represe nted and may vary from year to year . As far as faculty representation is concerned , each academic department will elect one represen tative as will the Counseling Center , and itbo Cent er for Adaderalc Development, the ' Rcademic Affairs Managers , and College Managers. Collectively the faculty will elect five representativ es on an at-large bails .* EDITORIAL Where should housing respo nsibility lie ? The housing situation at BSC is certainly less than desirable. Although attempts are being made to improve the situation it still persists. Many freshman find themselves tripled and are forced to share living quarters that are only designed to accommodate two,. Those students who reach the 59 credit stage of college education are faced with the unpleasant task of finding off-campus housing. This leads to many questions that no one person seems to be able to answer. Is it fair for freshmen and those who transfer to be so overcrowded or for upper classmen to be forced to live off campus? It is time this question is given serious consideration. Action must be taken before the problem gets drastically out of hand. The maj or cause of the overcrowding is the sharp increase in enrollment. Even with the new dorm being built the problem will not be alleviated . The housing available has not increased in proportion with the increase in enrollment. Because it is impractical to deliberately cut back in enrollment a solution must be found elsewhere. The BSC Administration and student government should take on the responsibility of providing students with the help they need to find suitable off-campus housing. This should include setting up an office for the purpose of coordinating housing efforts , seeking ways to improve existing housing and attempting to find new housing accomodation. If positive action on the part of the college is delayed, and if the offcampus housing situation is not improved, there will certainly be a drop in enrollment whether we want it or not. Barb Haga n and"Louis Hunsinger Fina l examin ation ru l es an d reg u l at i ons by RandiMatson Can a professor give a final exam as the only means for evaluation in a course? Do you have to take three finals on one day if you are scheduled thus? And can a professor give you a unit test the week before your final? NO, NO, andNO!! Do you, as a stu dent or member of the faculty of BSC, know the rules and regulations in the final examination policy? Probably not. Because finals are important ana anxiously anticipa ted Dy all, these regulations should be known for the protection of your rights. Herewith is the Final Examination Policy as passed by the College Senate on May 9, 1972. 1. Faculty shall give final exam i nat i ons , un l ess as determined by the Department, another method of evaluation is justified. 2. Faculty shall give comp re h ens i v e exam i nat i ons rather than unit tests. 3. The final examination shall not be t he only means or method of evaluation in a course. 4. Faculty shall refrain from test ing dur ing t h e l ast wee k o f classes in lieu of testing during t h e prescr ib ed exam i nat i on nAi*lA/l |SGA *UU* YTnft 4-4W>Ia dWtfkll msiI Isa U l U t IVOM DIIOU \\\M\ *J%3 given the last full week of the class unless the exam can be returned to the students prior to the final examination period. 5. Emphasis shall be on concepts and Ideas rather than on mere memorization of facts. 6. Within the first three weeks of the course, classes shall be advised just how much weight final examinations will have in determining course grades. 7. A final examination shall be worth no less than twent y .,iwj k nit Yiti 7«q !>vo«i: u/> nrinnn nnnnnnMnnnnnriiMflTnnMn^^ Not a play , but a prod uction lightness of step and a quick , by PeggyMoran accurate tap st yle. " N o t h i n g ' s a l wa y s , In the roles of Mr. and Mrs. Georgie. " Cohan were L arr y K now les and " l am. " Becky Ermish , a most This single phrase sums up delightful couple . They apthe indefatigable optimism that peared in several "fun " duets was Geor ge M. Cohan. Hi s . and both showed off a rather genius , music, and vitality decent dance style. were vibrantly portrayed by Another notable characHal Holden and the Bloomsburg ter ization was that of Agnes Players in their recent Nolan as played by Sandie production 01 ueorge xa. S . chuyler. A shy but talented As with any successful countr y girl , she comforts , musical, the quality of the coaxes and believes in Georgie, singing and danc ing is what and eventuall y becomes his makes the show work. As far as wife. She exhibited a first-class singing is concerned , I was met singing ability and perfo rmed with several pleasant surwell in such numbers as "My prises. Name isBillie." Hal Holden , as G eorge Mar ia Kozak did a good job Cohan , displayed his stage as Ethel Levy, Georgie's first versatilit y as he quickly wife. She danced well and assumed his role. His singing excelled in her solo number , was exuberant and pleasin g to "20th Century Love." hear , while his danc ing showed Gail Lynch Harris , as lana certa in bouyancy and quick dlady Madame Grimal di, is one flair that I haven 't seen in a of the finest character acton long time. His contributions I've ever seen on the Bloomwere sizable as he is a sburg stage. Demanding and professional actor recruited by assertive , she tries to claim her thA Arts finiinnil Artiftt..in. rent money from the Cohans, Residence Series. but to no avail. When the open The only other show I' ve seen palm finally reaches Georgie , Becky Owens in was "Green he is at a loss of what to do so he Grow the Lilacs " where the kisses her. Definitel y one of character she porthe funnier i scenes in the play. trayed had , to say the least , an Other notables were Jack "off key" voice. Her role as Matter , more for his role as a Josie Cohan provided her with dancer than as Walt the stage straight songs which she manager. As always , his handled nicely. It appeared dancing was impeccable that her only trouble came with especially in the "Nellie Kelly " the high notes ; instead of number , one of my favorites. raising pitch , she seemed to. Trying to win the hand of raise only volume. When it Nellie, several Keystone Kop came to dancing, she showed a types try danci ng their way into J. V««V * A l^ ._ • •• W Iff _ 4 f ,^V.a..__ u *_ ^^ w**^* «* 4 H m •• m m m r w m » » her heart. It was here t hat Matter showed off some of his finer stuff , the night that I saw the play he did nine mid-air Russian splits. On the whole, the mus ic was decent. The singing was excellent , but the band left someth ing to b e d es ired. Compiled of local High School ^^^^^^^^^^BB^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ HW ^^^^^^^^"^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^™^^^^ ^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^ v~ toicui ) vircj w^ic oiiui uaiivrcu to begin with and the members who were there were weak. One of the more memorable tunes was "My Home Town. " Sung by Holden , what made the song was the scener y . At one point in the song he alluded to the lights of Broadway and the lights went on. A very effective dev ice. Considering that for the most part the scener y was professional , it was both workable and attract ive. It was rented from a professional theater agency. Despite what I had heard before the show, the lighting was handled well ; the timing was together and accentuated the action on stage. Even though the show was choreographed by Holden , Matter , nnri TCnzjilr tmmnthino was missing. I 'm not sure if it was spirit , talent , or bounce but some of the dancers didn 't seem to know what they were doing. It seemed that the show was more of a production than a play-it was a show for show people. It was a song and dance show filled with history, music, and life. Congratulations to all for an above-par pr oduction. The libera ted man; Warre n Farre ll s peaks up Warren Parrel! speaks on Men 's Liberation Security comments on parking problems by Steve Styere sure you destroy its decal. If If you've been having parking you drive a different car to problems on the campus lately, school one day, instead of the perhaps th e following inone with the decal on it, leave a formation will be of use to you. note in the car explaining the BSC' s Security Office does situation or get a special pernot give out park ing t ickets mi t. because it has noth ing bet t er to After fined three times for $5, , do. If you get a parking ticket you're next fine will be $25. If you are either illegally parked ineligible for a car. the first fine or you don 't have the required rtanni nn vmip our Anri vnu nicn is $10, but the second is $25. After three $1 fines , your fourth ma y not be aware of certa in f i n e goes up to $10. other regulations. Mi scellaneous mov i ng All park ing areas on the violations will resu lt in a c a m p u s are c h e c k e d citation against you that throug h out each d a y by depends on what you did. Security officers , You may Secur ity gives out tem porar y have gotten away with parking parking permits for two week In a no-parking zone before , but that ' s on ly b ecause t h e per iods, and special permits are issued on occasion s such as p atroll i ng o f ficer was at present , on the da ys before somewhere else at the time. Don't count yoursel f lucky, vacat ions. You have the r ight to appeal because if you don 't obey the rules you're bound to get any park ing fi nes before the Park ing and Appeals Comcaught sooner or later . mittee. It meets the first and The parking regulations are thir d Thursday of each month. made by the Parking and Requests for hearings must be Appeals Committee ; Security filed in writing, and all parkin g enforces them . A simpl e fine of fi nes must be paid within 72 $1 goes to a person whose car is hours in order to be eligible to puriwu in a wrung men , auun us Mitnll/«f •¦mWa m fwl ii v A annual uilUCi «|/ |/« *i*t ^ uai l lj on a walkwa y. This fine inprocedure. creases to $2 if not paid within Keith Wagner , C h ief of the 72 hours. Division of Law Enforcement If you are eligible to have a would like all stude nts at BSC, car on cam pus , but park who have any problems or without a decal on it , you get a questions about parking $5 fine. If you're not eligible and regulations to come In and see park illegally , the fine is $10. A Security. They want to save you $25 fine is Issued to the parties headaches and money. So don 't involved in the illegal use of a wait unt il you get into trouble decal. For example , if you before you go to them. They loaned your deed out to a also have a booklet , "Traffic friend , you would both be fined . and Park ing Regulations at If you have two cars you must BSC," that has any other inje.tdecaLs for.both of them. And 1 formation you may need. if» ydif gefr rtd of' tt' -ca^oAaMa by Andrew Parker Doctor Warren Farrell , lecturing on Men's Liberation Thursday night in the Kehr Union, warned listeners that • Americans should prepare for dictatorship unless they learn to ac cept the personal emotional problems of their politicians. Citing the public emotional experiences of Presidential candidates George Romney and Edward Muskie and Vice Presidential candidate Thomas Eagleton, Farrell told his small group of listeners in the MultiPurpose Room that the American Press would rather hear the machismo lies of Spiro Agnew than the straightforward truth through the tears of Romney, Muskie and Eagleton. Farrell , 32, who is the author of "The Liberated Man — Beyond Masculinity: Freeing Men and Their Relationships With Women ,"said that in 1968 George Romney cried while telling a crowd that he had been brainwashed by the Pentagon about the Vietnam War. The press was skeptical about such a story and many people disbelieved him. Again in 1972, according to Farrell , Edward Muskie cried over slurs made about his wife during a public speech and a Gallup Poll proved that he had lost votes because of this emotional outbreak. Durin g the 1972 Presidential campaign when it was discovered that Vice Presidential candidate Thomas Eagleton had undergone psychiatric treatment after a nervous b rea kd own , he was forced out of the campaign. But , Farrell said , after Spiro Agnew was quoted as saying that the accusation against mm of having evaded Federal Income Tax laws "was a damned He," he was praised by a New York Times newsman for "having the guts to make such a statement - whether it was true or false." Farrell said that such statements are seeds for a dictatorship. Farrell has traveled over one hundred thousand miles and started over one hundred men's and joint ( men with women) consciousness-raising groups. He is the only male to have been elected three times to the Board of Directors of the National Organization of Women (N.O.W.) in New York City. In 1971 he founded the National Task Force on the Masculine Mystique of N.O.W. which has spread to over fifty local units and has been one of the strongest organized forces behind a growing men 's liberation movement. Dr. Farrell has conducted many studies in his search for men's liberation. Among these studies he has found that the reason why men are more emouonaiiy restrained man women might stem from their infant years. He cited this possibility from a study made by Goldberg and Lewis, which stated that male infants are less cared for than female infants. This was proven by a poll "taken of a number of mothers who said that when their male baby cries, they tend to leave it uncared for longer than a female baby. The study also found that male Infants are touched less frequently and held at a further distance than female infants. All this, says Emp loyee of the week 1» _ _ _ _ *« __ _ _. J • •» »m Farrell, leads to an emotionally restrained child by the age of thirteen months. Warren also found , in studies of masculine advertisements , that car names are directed towards the male ego. He v mentioned such names as Ford Mustang and Dodge Charger and wondered if there would be ac l arfld a marl rot fr»r fVioco pare *WA V*A% *h7W WC4 * 0 Mh * AMA O** ** »«tV» * *»%*!• if they were called The Ford Pansey or The Dodge Daisy. He also told of the early adv e r t i s i n g c a m p a i g n of Marlboro Cigarettes, when their advertisments were more feminine than today. Warren said that they were less popular then, but that when they switched to their more masculine advertisements of today, their popularity rose and drew a much larger men's market. Farrell sees the future holding protest against masculine advertisement and movements in favor of child care centers where a working man can take his children during the day and periodically watch them. He also sees new sports that stress crea tivity and cooperation instead of traditional emphasis on competition and winni ng. He sees more respon sibility for men in the area of birth control. Perhaps semen storage bags and reversible vasectomies or maybe a one-year birth control pill that men would get a certificate of proof for. In general F arre ll env i s i ons l ess repression of males by the mascu line ro le an d more cooperat ion with women, and other men , in his struggle for male liberation . Martin works th e wi res by Amanda Smith John Martin , one of the nine electr icians serving the BSC cam pus , h as been cited as "Em ployee of the Week. " Martin , 25, is a state employee who started his job at BSC in 1971. His work involves the maintenance and installat ion of electr ical equiptment on cam pus. n«iA« riiui ?«. uie bv mo semester 's evaluation are being processed on campus and will be available at the beginning of the spring 1976 semester. "The Roadside Mill,"one of many outstanding decoupage works now on display in the Union. President's Lounge on display Decoupage pictures and antique German dolls are presently on display in the President's Lounge in the Kehr Union. Both displays are owned by Mr. and Mrs. Don Hock and will be in the Union through Dec.23. Hock and his wife, Virginia, f-Via Honnnn gao tncrotViaf C40 Hrt sic a U UU bUV ' VLV 'V'VrVt ^/dgW b\J gV*Vll\-& hobby. They became interested in it when they went down South on a vacation a couple of years ago and were introduced to decoupage by a lady they met there. The Hocks use an elect r ic rouder f i r s t when decoupaging, followed by an antique glaze, an d coat af ter coat of a clear seal. They prefer this technique over others as they like the edges of the picture ground into the wood because this finish gives the Yuletide presentations Concert by Randi Mats on Friday, Dec. i2 at 8:15 the BSC choral groups will put on their annual Christmas Show in Haas Auditorium. Involved in the presentation are : The Husky Singers , the Madrigal Singers , the Concert Choir , the Women 's Choral Ensemble and T3t«ocio PnoamltlA +Ha 111V W i H O D UllUVlUwlVl Among the musical selections are "Hodle Christus est" by Palestrina , "Come Love We God ," arranged by BSC' s William K. Decker , and "Bleak • Midwinter ," a traditional carol . All these will be performed by the Concert Choir The Husky Singers will be singing some selections from the Oxford Chorals Songs arranged by Ralph Von Williams . appearance of the old decoupage. As far as the craft is concerned, you can decoupage most any picture , but the Hocks have done their children 's pictures, birth certificates, wedding pictures and wedding invitations . Decoupage is good for anything with a sentimental value, as it keeps the object for a permaneni recora. Most of the decoupage items in the Union are on sale for 12 dollars each and the number to call if you are interested is 7847849. The antique german doll display has some antique furniture and toys displayed with it. They range from the years 1860 to 1920. Mrs. Hock j i started to collect the dolls purely because of their artistic , beauty and because the German's detailing is much finer than any other. The doll costumes were designed and hand sewn by Mrs. Hock and are made from old materials and old lace. A lot of the dolls have sentimental value for her. PY»r instanr p nrw» nt the dolls belonged to an old f riend oiMr. Hock. After the lady passed away, Mr. Hock bought the doll at an auction and made a dress for it among the material from one of the lady's dresses. Mrs. Hock urged anyone who owns a doll and who is thinking of their children or grandchildren who may show a slight interest in the dolls and to pass it on. What is th is? annt *Avitti afAltr a^l^/A UAllUa kUlJ tf 1 CA-ftOAA iplt/V «f>AUV. Hospitals charge from $225-$400 and require the patient to stay at least 24 hours. Abortions may not be performed in a doctor 's office. Abortions are a medical problem and the college views them as such. No records are kept, an d no in f ormat ion is sent home to the student's parents. For further information contact the Counseling Service. The 1975-76 campus telephone director ies have been received and are in the Public Relations Office , Waller Administration Building, where they may be picked up during regular hours f or f aculty or staf f offices. Students living off campus may obtain copies at the Information Desk of the Kehr Union. Errors and requests for list of changes should be reported to the Public Relations Office promptly . by Joe O'Brien " l a m here with good news f or you which will bring j oy to all the people. This very day in David' s town your Savior was born — Christ the Lord! " Lk. 2:10-11. Keeping with our College Christmas Tradition , Cathol ic Campus Ministry will again nttan 1i/ l l A n i r t V i ¥ TUtacia In Vtaaa *TX1U1M £I1I< UI HSO ill UBHO U11C1 v Ic 1£> Get your campus directories Midnight Mass Auditorium , Saturday night , Dec. 13. Between 11:30 and 12 midnight a Christmas Pageant of Carols , Readings , and Liturgical Dance will set the mood for the celebration of the birth of our Lord. The Mass will begin with a Solemn Candlelight Procession , with Campus Catholic Chaplin , Father William M. Richards on as Celebrant. by Malen Byeriy * "Abortions are the primary alternative for college age women," Kay Camplese told a small group of students Thursday afternoon in the commuter's room at Kehr Union. Camplese, a counselor with the college's counseling service, spoke about the problem of abortions and showed slides on the step-by-step procedure in abortion clinics. The Supreme Court ruled that abortions are legal and each state is to establish their own policy regarding abortions. In Pennsylvania, a woman can have an abortion without the consent of husband or parent if she is over 18 weeks pregnant. Most abortions are done in free-standingclinics (which are not associated with hospitals) up to the eleventh week of . pregnancy. The procedure is a simple dilation and curretage of the uterus and the patient is in . the clinic for only a few hours. After the eleventh week, there is more risk to the patient and abortions are then performed in a hospital by the saline method. A salt solution is injected into the uterus causing contractions and the woman goes through actual labor. The cost of an abortion varies depeding on the circumstances. In a free- standing clinic the fee i ATTENTIONFRESHMENI Last week's "What is this?" was our first stumper : no one guessed that it was a tricky shot of a radiator in the stairwell of Navy Hall...perh aps the pizza should go to the photographer... This week' s picture should be guessab le. If you are the first to , identify it correctly, You will win your choice of either a Pizza by Capri or a Capitol Theatre movie ticket . . l' »» • M ™ *'¦ ' 'J1 '" ' * photo by Palme r )' wn ^V> » r The Fr eshman class will again be sponsoring a "Mile of Pennies " campaign. It will take place at vario us collection point s downto wn this Friday , Dec. 12, from 7 to 9 p.m. To make this a success, we will need students to collect money« The last time we collected$350.' Let 's do It again!! i i ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦9 bcq co i¦ hi ci n©ci i iriQ w o riu un n UGCIT Cniic irO t _ ______ 1 Hub . my eyes opened l ^ wide enough to see « Bradley Fowler gives the ri ght answer Beautifu l little children making great impressions on me. " by Diane Gaskins The Demonstration class for the hearing impaired located on the ground floor of Navy Hall in the Dept. of Communication Disorders was started in 1971 and is funded by the Central Susquehanna Intermediate Unit. It provides the teacher, equipment and materials, and the college provides the space and consulta tive services from the faculty. The teacher of the class is Sue Aten, who clearly displays through her warm attitude and manner that her children 's best interest is at heart/Though there are various approaches used in teaching the deaf she doesn't limit herself to any one method. She and her teacher's aide (Charlotte Samsel ) utilize whatever method proves practical for each child. The headphones decorated with , a smiling face provide Extended Low Frequency Amplification which enables the children to hear; it emphasizes lower frequencies that are outside of the speech range. The vibrators worn on the wrist provide the children with tactile stimulation. n__ f ri ,t .4 . . _ MokAnc Language serves as the greatest handicap for the deaf. When we think of the word "light" for example, we may think of the electrical light, being light in weight, or feeling dizzy or light. It is difficult for the deaf to transfer this one work into so many connotative meanings. While we so casually think figuratively, they think in a literal sense. Can you imagine yourself explaining to a deaf child the j neaning of the phrase "don't count your chicks before they hatch?" In order to combat this language barrier Mrs. Ateh, along with the aid of Mrs. Samsel, center all the subjects around the learning of language. They are taught such subjects as reading, math, language, speech, reading ( obtaining information from lip movement only) , auditory training (obtaining information through sound only ) , spelling, health, safety, social studies and science. They also receive therapy in language an hour every day from a student trainin g in speech therapy. During morning exercises Mrs. Aten askes them "what is today", "what was yesterday", what will tomorrow be", and what is the weather "? They must also tell what they do each morning, such as eating breakfast, brushing teeth, and combing hair. To many people this may seem monotonous, yet for them it places a bit of structure that is well needed in their lives. Their ages range from 5 to 11and th,e(diildren are grouped according to ability. The goal of the class is to prepare the children to be able to function in*a normal public school or vocational cunic selling. Expression through art In addition to academics th e children are i given the opportunity to express themselves crea tively in Gary Clark 's Children 's Art Class. This experience began in 1973 when Mr. Clark felt that it would be beneficial to both the children and his;students to share experiences in art. Though the course is geared toward the nor mal child his students gain enlightened learning experiences through their work with the deaf children. The art session is chan ged every week so that all his classes get a chance to work with the children . Th e ar t work ranges f rom clay, finger paint s, paper mache , paper drawings , etc. This aids his students in ways of motivat ing children and enables them to observe th e development of children in practice rat her than theory. They also learn to apply what they know about normal ch ildren t o deaf ch ildren. His class is pur pos ely uns t ructure d to serv e as a release from t heir academ ic class. Th e students work with the children on a one to one basis and a three to one basis. They observe their personalities in every medium of art work: The children get involved in the feel and texture of materials and make up stories to go along with their work. The following quote is taken from a letter presented to Mr. Clark on behalf of the hearin g impaired class: "This experience not only provided valuable instruction for the children but also provided my class with a situation in which they learne d to better communicate with people of the hear ing Craig Stover takes notice at Kelly Temp le 's excitement I Swimmin g lessons too The children also receive formal swimming instruction in Dr. Stephen Bresett' s swimmin g class. Th e class began as a means of build ing up t heir lun g ca pacit y s ince t h ese ch ildren don 't use their voice as much as the hearing child does. Dr. Bresett views the class as being part instructio nal and part recreational . In addition to instruction in swimming and water skills they also learn hdw to have fun in th e water. It also gives his students a chance to work with children on a one to one basis and develop valuable relat ionsh ip s. He sees the children not only as stude nts learning to swim but also people in whom he can enjoy growth and progress , He also enjoys seeing rela tionships build between the children and his students.learning to swim but also people in whom he build between the children and his studen t s. The demonstration class for the hearing impaired is utilized by graduate students trainin g to be teachers of the hearing impaired and undergr aduate students with 18 credit s and minorin g i n the educa t ion o f the hearing im p aired. ww that •• Vf VI Thf> f»lnssrnnm has n -ut ¦w wnv an nnnnrfnnltv fn • ¦¦rw« WM t V V ettiHanta v ¦¦w* v intorflctnri ¦VM mau v * w ^ mirrnr aV 111(4 J ha\to 1 1 M Y W lha — •¦ -w v ¦v >wwb w w> • • i aw w »* nn*» • • • • *#• *• ¦* ¦* *+ Y*r****VW»»»» W J w ^I Kelly cries an exuberating response |( ] n __ ^ I L n U | rujnrr j . ; ;n .UT[lT . TT | y .. ( | [ n |H [ „ [| )| | tl |l || WWI|.,|TII1, , , , „„„, observe the children in action. Anyone desiring information about the program and the demonstration class is encouraged to contact Dr. Gerald Power in Room 19 on the ground floor of Navy Hall . < To know , to love ' For me this cours e, under the encouragmen t and stimulatio n of Sue Aten and Charlot te Samsel , has served as a rewardin g and touchin g experience that will always linger deep With in. It gave me the opportunity to put all my feelings and know-how into pract ice rather than on paper. It taug h t me to accept failure and keep striving In spite of it. I learned to work in rea l situations and not theoretical Ideas. Reinfor cement came from small accomplishment s , children 's smiles or jus t looks of "Oh , Iget it" . And what about the children ? As is said , "to know them is to love them...and I do." . Busy pencils and fi rm expressions exhibit eager bodies ready to work • ' ¦ ' I -4 IB ¦¦ ¦¦ t \k/ * '' I "" *' " \>\iLl 11 , "*««*£ ">**« " ¦ V , * ;( - \A - • ^ \ -" %¦¦ -' ¦-- ; 5 I '~~ ' ' .^B^^^^^^^I^^^HB^II^IIIil^^^^^^^H^^^^^^^^^H^^^^H ^l "Good Tidings" from Gary Havens, David Espe, Kristv Weeks Diane Hodmd Mare MUIe? BeX n&" lS' f«5T Evelyn " kKmSS E SheuJ- Randolph , and Ruth Barton. ., J i. J . .. Scott Daysen Rand y Gathman , Pat Walsh and David Hushes. Madrigal An evenin g of fru e Chris tmas spiri t \ The three wise men came bearing gifts, and so came the Madrigal Singers last weekend, when they bore gifts of Christmas song and cheer to guests at their annual Yuletide Banquet. Held at the Scranton Com7 fc mons, the dinner was more Z than a dinner and the song was more than just song: it was an ^ |k event to warm the heart of the stingiest Christmas Scrooge. J ¦ Everything was warmto , from the seasonal decor the ^ friendly atmosphere, from the 5 ¦ mulled cider to the flaming "figgy " puddin g. ¦ The music ranged from the "* 13tn century to the 20th; h WA y)a traditional tunes contrasted |^W\ > A iv*J^wf VvuJn/Lrf well-tuned modem carols, and all were v«iri«,m» *^« by Klm CModo enthusiastically handled by the ___|^^__ -__ ^-^_^_ ^ _ -__ ^^ voices. Besides the harmony of voices, ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ M the courses of the meal were ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ M times to blend with the tasty ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | tunes being performed: ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | ^^^^^V^^H^^^^H^^^^H ^^^^^^ft^^^EV^^^E^^^^H ^^^^^ ¦Pl^^Hr ^I^^H^^^^H ^^^^^IEr tI^^H 1 #^P9^^^^H Jkv' «-Ja.S^^^^^^^H ^^^^^EZL ' —^ j ^ / Ji^^^M ^^^^^ 1 ."^gfa^ j ^^^^lM^^^^H ^^^^^^m^H ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H ¦HHHHHHHHHHHHHHH silver and candlelight, no one could mistake the presence of a Christmas celebration. But with fine food and fine song, the Madrigal Banquet became one of the warmest possible ways to be trul y enveloped by the Christmas spirit. ~^^~-throughout the room as small groups of Madrigals \^^^^ serenaded each table in turn . Here, Rebecca Thorpe, Pat Walsh and Ruth Barton sing "Green i Jf ""^^^^ */ t r ; Groweth the Holly '' for some guests ^^^ L^^ L < r -J>- " '^V .v ^rf f< — \ ^r i|i ' W A n w V A J ,^ s *~ * ^< ' ' >k .- fc * w ' ¦' The com mons was fully decorated for the ^w«f Sf Tne Yuletide spirit was evenly dispersed ' HH . guests were surprised by gastronomic Christmas treats all evening, including these flaming icecream snowballs. "Wassail , Wass ail , " and "Fruticake " were two of the most deli ghl ful numbers of the evening. The Commons took on a glow; with tables spread with red and green, real china, *\ ' j j ^ Ek i ^ ^ ^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^Hi^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^l ^yf^^^Bf 14*^^ •^yn> ^t4ttf ?&t*«y^$^^* j ^ ^ I^/JA/i^xi C%1' * 5' "^ ^^ " " -^-- \ - «¦ '" /. - N * ' ' ^^ - " '" " ^v ^ • -;¦% .,v ¦ y 'w i | *p m! \ ^5^^ " "^ rm ^^m Im fl^^^fe~_j^^^^^\ / ^^^^L'^S^^^^'^^^ ^^ I I l^^lH^H^^^^^^k ¦ /^^^^^^^F^l^f \ ^ ^Wm^. P^ M i l^MH ^^r l^K SM W ^^^B I ¦ ^»£ i0 r j tt y ^v ^ ki ^ J 9 ^ - flw ^l^^^ \^A RXz^^&SSS ^^^^^^^P : ^^H^^HL. ^^^^^^^^^^^ HT « "' % W ~ ¦ jj^r tff \V\~7 HBH ^ ^": ^ A • m "****i*il^-I ^J B't|^?' :.. • fr om The Madrigal"\ Singers ^ ^=^ ^- J If If ¦ 00000 " ' 00 m ^^ ¦ seasonal celebration ; Shelly Randolph and Randy ^•^•^ y&iJL Gathtnan gaze into the Christmas tree before of- I^fg^j ^ig *' ferln * another musical selection. ,t m M *f tC&Mtes&* ^ A^ WoynB Palmer ir^ f , y^: ^'-rU#^^ s^;^teSS5225^^ W I A £SssHx LK^iJ^^^ r Mp j-* JJ^^^vOl i / f j Jr^^mk'^Y 0^ M ^ '^^^^K^^^ BSC debaters win fi rst place trophies ' The BSC Forensic Society traveled to Towson State College, Towson, Md. this past weekend to attend the 5th Annual H . L. Mencken Tour- nament. There were eight states represented , with students and coaches from 36 colleges and universities . The local students did well by capturing four of the final round positions . Anne Otto proved to be one of the outstanding competitors at the tournament by capturing two first place trophies . She placed First in Informative Speaking out of a field of 37 contestants. Otto continued her winning ways by earning the First Place Trophy in Persuasive Speaking in a field of 47 speakers. Denise Reed placed sixth in . Original Oratory ; Regina Zoppetti won the Fifth Place Trophy in Original Oratory, and also competed in the Radio Announcing; Sue Waters finished eighth in Persuasive Speaking and competed in Imprompt u Speaking and Informative Speaking;, Jeff Hunsicker placed eleventh in Extemporaneou s Speaking and competed in Improm ptu Speaking and Persuasive Speaking ; and Regina Wild competed in Original Serious Story - Telling and Persuasive Speaking. In six tournaments this semester, BSC students have placed among the top six in individua l and team events 18 times and five of those times they captured a First Place Trophy. At the First Annual Pennsylvania State University Individual Speaking Events and Debate Tournament held at State College on Nov. 21-22, Regina Wild tied for First Place in Oral Interpretation - Poetry and placed Sixth in Persuasive Speaking; Anne Otto placed Third in Informative Speaking, Third in Persuasive Speaking , Fourth in Oral Interpretation Poetry, and Seventh in Oral InterpretationProse ; Jeff Instead of visitin g a monument th at says "George Washington slept here " , why not travel along with QUEST for five days? Not onlv sleep w here G eorge W ashi ngton slept , but follow in his ver y f ootsteps. QUEST and the BSC histor y department are off ering a rare opp ortunity to exp er ience American history where it took place . On January 2 - 7, QUEST will venture to retrace the steps that W ashi ngton and his men walked that cold Christmas eve back in 1776. The expedition will leave BSC or plan to meet at W ashington's Crossing State Park . There the group will set up camp and survey the area , attem pting to go throu gh some of the military operations. Throughout the expedition , each member ( troo p?) win get a chance for map and compass readi ng; a step that was vital to the Revolut ionary Arm y, One history can be obtai ned through the history department of BSC ; the cours e number will be 42.397. To receive credit , the participants must read a total of 120 pages gathered from five books that are on reserve in in Representatives from the local . .newspaper , The Morning Press V' and from the radio station WHLM have also been invited to participate. The theme of the symposium arises from what many feel is a growing need to bring two major educational forces in closer conjunction with each other : formal educational institutions and the communicat ions media (newspapers and magazines , radio, TV, records , and films). Impromptu Speaking ; and Sue Waters did well competing in Persuasive Speaking and Informative Speaking . About 228 undergraduates and 51 gradu ate students will receive thei r degrees at commencement exercises f or the fall semester at BSC. Exercises will take place on Sunday, Dec. 21 in Haa s Auditorium , at 2:30 p.m. ": Rev. Bernard H. Petrina , currently th e director for three Diocesan offices in Harrisbunz. will be the commencement speaker. Father Pet rina was formerly the Catholic campus minister at BSC and became a favorite figur e on campus . Father Petrina beganhis duties in Harrisburg last May as Director of the Office of Evangelization and the Office of the Perman ent Diaconate. He has also served as director for the Catholic Campus Ministry in the Diocesan since 1971. the library . The main thesis of the paper which each participant will write , must dea l with the correlation between what the books told about this historic event and wha t the person experienced on the fiveday excursion . Everyone, including facu lty members , staff and especiall y students, is invited and encouraged to participate in this event , No experience is necessary , but proper equip ment is imperative. tliC GAfTCl XVlftWV 10 $55 ( everything ) for those who just want to experience the winter out-door camping and hiking, and $88 for those who wish to acquire academic credit. Registration deadlin e is December 19. Please contact Robert Davenport , QUEST Director , for registration and further information , in the Kehr Union, first floor or call him at 389-2204. Participate in this Bicentennial event , there is nothing else like it, anywhere . Ellis named to Trustees Fr. Petrina returns for grad speech Hunsicker placed sixth in XI1C UUO t U l by Alice Faust written for a grant to help fund A day camp for reta rded this project , and money from children is being planned to the annual Bike or Hike trip will open this summer by the also be used to aid the camp. Columbia Count y Association „ The camp will accommodate citizens for Retarded 40 campers and will have a staff (C.A.R.C. ) All public school of approximately 15, plus children enrolled in a special several volunteers. Paid education pro gram in Columbia positions for qualified persons attend County will be eligible to open are for the jobs of Cam p which will run from the camp, Assistant Director , Director , June 21 to Jul y 16. , and specialists , counse l ors (Fun Camp F.U.T.U.R.E . assistant counselors. Positions and Understandin g Through of counselors and assistants United Recreationa l Exwill . hopefully be filled by periences ) was started by Kim students interested in Special J amison, president of C.A.R.C , Ed, or members of C.A.R.C. In and Eva Mekeel . A steering this way, the retarded children committee made up of BSC of Columbia County will enjoy students stud ying Special the benefits of the camp, and E d u c a t i o n is curre nstudents on the staff wUl be tly, organizin g the camp. In gaining valuable experience in order to provide tne cnuaren working with the retarded. with the normalized experience A limited number of volunof attending a "real" camp, teers will be accepted to work activities will parallel those of a at the camp. Anyone interested camp for normal children . in this project who would like The campsite is located in more information shou ld Stillwater , Pa., eft the grounds contact Marita Burian at 389of the Eastern Christian Chu rch 2288. been has Camp. A proposal A symposium , "Uniting Mass Media tor Education ," will be held in Room L 35 of Andruss Library on Tuesday, Dec. 16 at 12:30. The idea for the discussion originated in a course entitled Introduction to Mass Communications , and it will involve students in the course as well as faculty members from departments of Sociology, Speech and Theatre Arts , Educational Studies and services , ana ttngusn. QUEST to make a Bicentennial jo urney ByE dHauck CARC p lans F.U.T.U.R.E. Uniting Media for Education Super Hoogies You 'll Love Them! S\41* A * * WvJJCX *a # __ j •_ _ . m Trustees. 10% Discount to BSC Stu den ts ON ALL REPAIRS & ACCESSORIES Just Show Student I.D. For Discount MARKET STREET SUNOCO 7th & Market St. j Bloomsbur g, PA _____________ Maior & Mlnor Repa irs 24 HOUR WRE CKER SERVICE •STATE INSPECTIONS »TUNE-UPS ,nal nQA 784 5?C7 ' • BATTE RIES RICH BEL1NSKY - Propriet o r Open Daily 7 days a wee k . 8 a.m. - 12 p;m. /3B E^ I I RESEARC H PAPERS I }e«*™ mLjM r**Sh»>s THOUSANDS ON FILE # Now featurin g: Pipe of the Week & Blend of the Week 9 Savings up to 25 per cent! • Importe ^jfiar ^^^^^ _¦ nominees were men; when asked if she felt that the confirmation had anything with the women ' s movement , she replied : "I hope most of the problems before the board deal with student' s budget and curr iculum - not male vs. female. " A j unior at Bloomsburg State College, she is most concerned about the lack of proper aca d emic ad vi sement f or 784-8644 784 8644 Locat ed on the corner Leonard and Main St. Bloomsburg ; . ?v #¦ I* ma A till w C Tk/t A 4J\7 Cam *> t *% hJ ^ HClv ^ ?* [ JOHN 'S FOOD MARKET students. "This is the students ' major problem ," Ellis said, "Although they should be aware of what courses they need by reading the college catalogue." Ellis stated that Dr. McCormick is "very receptive to the needs of the students. He has told me that he and Dr. *•** •netted are in cne process or reor ganizing academic advisement ." A student f rom Delaware County, she will replace Dan Burkholder as the college's third student rep resentati ve since the ruling by Governor Shapp in 1972 requiring all state colleges to have stud ent representatives on the Board of Trustees. Ellis will join Joan Keller as the first women on the Board of byMalen Eyerly "The college is 60 per cent women, yet we have no women in administrative channels ," according to Janis Ellis, the new student representative on the BSC Board of Trustees. Ellis was interviewed by Pennsylvania Secretar y of Education John C. Pittenger and confirmed by the State Send for your up-to -date, 160-page , mail order catal og of 6,600 to pics . Enclose $1.00 to cover postage and handling. ?o COLLEG IATE RESEARCH 1720 PONTIUS AVE., SUITE 201 LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90O25 ' Ninw AddrMi 4-gaa=SSXCTi Ckv ' . - - " _ T'rr " ' : . . , " **°t§ ^ ^^ ^P y O<"tars NEW JEWELRY & POSTERS BLOOMSBURG'S LARGEST RECORD SELECTION Maitmr Char go & Bank Ammrteard now bmlng honore d I I I I ** N,» m i /ifffl mm Jiif c m i &mim* i >\d ^, _ _ ^^ _ BSC crushes Mess ia h, dro ps sizz le r to Moun ties » The BSC basket ball team opened up its home schedule Wednesday night with an 89- 59 thrashing of Messiah College. The Huskies took control of the ballgame right from the opening tip-off and were just too strong for the outmanned Mpssi ah fliih Al Williams hit the opening basket for Bloomsburg and from then on it was all downhill for Messiah. Jerry Radocha took game scoring honors and led the well-balanced attack with 29 points. Also in double figures for the Huskies were Rick Evans who had 17, Steve Bright with 13, and Al Williams who pitched in with 10. Leading scorer for Messiah was Bob Vanderhoff who had 24 points. Bloomsburg utilized a tenacious man-to-man defense which held Messiah scoreless for the first seven minutes of the game . Rick Evans and Steve Bright controlled both backboards and the Huskies opened up a 39-8 lead with six minutes to go in the half. Coach Charlie Chronister began substituting freely then and at halftime the BSC cagers held an overwhelming lead of 49-22. Messiahragged The ragged play that was typical of Messiah in the first half continued again in the second period and Bloomsburg capi tilized often. The Huskies ' def ense cause d many t urn ov ers and kept complete control of the game throughout the second half. The one bright spot for Messiah was Bob Vanderh off who continually hit jumpers over both the man-toman and 23 zone defense of Bloomsburg for his 24 points. Messiah attempted to confuse the Huskies by switching their defense from man- to-man to a 2-1-2 zone but good ball movement left the Mess iah team helpless. Bot h teams seemed to be just running out the clock midway t h rou gh the second h alf as the Huskies packed away the ir fi rst w in o f the young season , eveining their record at 1-1. Despite the 30 point victory, the Husk ies overall performance was not impress ive to the sparse crowd of about 500. Huskies lose to bounties A gainst Mansfiel d, the BSC Huskies lost a thriller on Saturday night by the score of 80-79 before a very vocal crowd in Nelson Fieldhouse. From the opening tip-off , which Bloomsburg controlled , the game had all the markings of a pressure packed conference - struggl e between the two strongest teams in the league. This classic matchup was a constant see-saw battle with strong defense by both teams. The offense of both squads was just too much , however , as Mansfield' s inside game and Bloomsburg 's outs ide shooting indicated by the final score. Taking game scoring honors and leading the way for Man sfield was 6'5" senior Reggie Cox who bucketed 23 points. Bloomsburg was paced by Al Williams who played in'spirational ball the whole way ' and wound up with 20 markers . Again B.oomsburg had a very balanced scoring attack as Rick Joseph came off the bench and exploded for 18 points with Rick Evans and Rich Yanni also hitting double figures with 14 and ten points respectively . Both teams were tight at the start and spectators could feel the electricity and intensity **^-~.m ^^ maIo J geiKu etieu *kba un itk M it-AU me iiuui . /I^Lk .a xiic Huskies took an early lead as they hit jumpers over Mansfield' s tough 1-3-1 zone defense. Bloomsburg again used their good man-to-man defense and held a slim 10-6 lead six minutes into the game. Mansfield continued to fight back , however and eventually gained a 21-21 tie with eight minutes to go in the half. The contest was very physical both under the boards and away from the ball and caused a minor shoulder injury to Rick Evans. Evans came back , however, and picked up his fourth personal foul with a minute left in the half. After holding a five point lead , Reggie Cox hit a short jumper and the Huskies went into the s locker room holdin g a 39-36 lead. Basket for basket The second half continued with much the same basket for basket action that was typical of the first half. The lead changed hand s until the 11:39 mark when Mansfiel d' s Reggie Cox hit two more short jumpers to give the visitors a 58-53 lead , their biggest of the game. At this point the crowd began urging the Huskies on but instead Mansfield widened their lead to eight points with eight minutes to go. Bloomsburg was hurt again just 24 seconds later when Jerry Radocha was forced to leave the game w ith his fif th persona l foul and the H us ki es down by ten points. But instead . of quitting, t he H us ki es char ged back as Rich Yanni hit three j umpers in a row from distance. Al Williams then made two consecut ive stea ls and hit a short jumper to make the score 79-76 Mansfield with two minutes left in the game. wnn we fans cnaming "Dee- Fense ," Will iams stole another pass and fed Rick Joseph who hit the mark and made it 79-78 with 50 seconds to go. Mansfield was now without leading scorer Cox and Ter ry Stevens , both of whom had fouled out, but still they played with the coolness displayed all game long. With 25 seconds left 6'2 " freshman Michael Ward was fouled by Yanni an d sunk what proved to be the winning point. The Huskies , still fighting , drew a foul, and Williams was sent to the line with 11 seconds left , William Williams hit on one of two foul shots but It was a case of too little too late. Although losing a tough , hard-fought game , Coach Chronister said he was quite pleased with the outstanding effort that everyone gave. After watching the play of the Huskies Saturday they are still unquestionably a team to be reckoned with in the Conference Vacation sports Basketball: Lemoyne Tourna ment - Dec. 29&30 Wrestlin g: Wilkes College Open - Dec. 26 &27 Keystone Invitatio nal - Dec. 29 University of Delaware Invitational - Jan. 3 Steve Bright goes up for a tip in. (photo by Mason ) Mermen at Penn State The BSC swimmers and divers competed in the Penn Relays at Penn State with thdivers registering a better overall performance this year than last. Competition included such schools as the University of Maryland , University of fiusDur gn, DUCKneu , uoigaie , East Carolina , Joh Hopkins , LaSalle , P enn State , Syracuse , Virginia , Villanova , West Virginia , and Edinboro State . The results are as follows: 400 yd. backstroke relay Steve Price , Gary Oberly, Dan Banner , Jim Kelly , ( 4:07.8) 12th place. 400 yd. breas tstroke rela y Kurt Moore , Mark Karan ovich, Dan Steel , Kevin Myel2th place. One meter diving Ga ry Havens and Chip Callahan , (186.4 pts.) 8th place. (An improvement of points over last vear. ) 200 yd. medley relay Dave Repetto , Dan Steel, Steve K rewson , John Willia mson ( all freshmen ) (151.0) 12th place. (Last year the Huskies finished 13th in this event. ) 400 yd. medley relay Wayne Richards , Steve P rice , Gar y Mermaids vict orious , by Jackie Jones The v i ctor y over Sun y Suny was favored in Fly , but Binghamton brought many the overa ll results were on smiles to the girls on the BSC BSC' s best side. Swim Team. The Huskiettes Scilla Elliot , after a 200 meter were well prepared for their swim was ready for another 20 fi rs t meet o f t he season ; not laps (500 meters ) and took first only did they drown their place in both events. Elliot and competitor 84-44, but quite a Mandell are freshmen and if f ew pool and team recor ds were they cont inue at t he rate t hey broken . are going, they will both prove A t th e start of the meet , BSC assets to the team. took first place in the 200 Two other poo l and team Medley Relay. This got the recor ds were broken by Carla team spi rit mov ing and from deVires and Jan Crossmore. this ooint on thev were readv Jan Crossmore stole first place in the 100 meter freestyle and for some action. Tina O'Hora pulled a first • ¦•¦'> broke the team record with a " time of 1.01.01. Carla deVires place in the 50 meter participated in the 100 IM Swim backstroke and broke the pool and placed second. She also team record with a time of broke a previous team record. 31.38. Later in the meet , Tina Mary Gardner , women 's swam the 100 meter backst roke sw im coach , was thrilled with and placed first in this event also. Tina deVires finished a the gir l's performance. When asked how she felt about the close second , with a time of 59 Aft meet , she said , " I think the Mary Jane , girls did an outstanding J ob!" In breaststroke over the In diving , Sue White took an McKeever had it all easy first in the regular one girls from Suny. She took both meter dives and mana ged to first place in the 50 and 100 secure a first place position in meter breaststr oke. She also the Optional one meter dives broke the team record with a also. She is a junior this year time of 34,33 and 1.13.42 and has been on the team for respectively . the past three years , along with Molly Mandell did a comPat Seuther. Carson Wurster mendable job and deserves placed second in the Optional recognition for placing first in butterfl y. meter dives. the 50 and 100 ' Oberl y, Keith Torak , (4:00.9) llth place. (An improvement in time and place over last year. ) - Three meter diving Gary H avens and Chip Callahan , ( 182.30) 9th place. 400 yd. butterfl y relay Steve K rewson , Bill Ewell, Dave Renettrv John Williamson ( all freshmen ) (4:10.2) 10th place. 200 yd. freest yle relay Keith Torak , Wayne Richards , Gary Oberl y, Dan Banner , (1:33.1) 9th place , (an improvemen t over last year ) 12th place . According to Husky Coach Eli McLaughlin , the Huskie team "entere d events b asically with a goal to improve indi v idual t imes and not be over ly concerned w it h w here we would finish in team standing. I feel most of them achieved that goal. One very imnortant thine from mv Doint of view is that the meet permitted me to find out which teams members c ould be aggress ive when challenge d by the best. " Coach McLau ghlin continued by stat ing that overall , he was pleased with most performances but some people need a little more work and experience before better times can be expected. He also predicted that as the season progresses , the Husk y swimming and diving team will respong quite positively. At this year 's relays defending cham ps University of Mar yland were dethroned by a tough Univers ity of Pittsburgh team which tall ied 320 pts. The Universiverslty of Maryland was second with 306 points. Third was Bucknell with 196 points , fourth , LaSalle , fi f th , E, Carol ina , and sisth , Colgate. Seven new records were set, five by Pitt , two by LaSalle. Edinboro State , according to Coach McLaughlin , looked strong and will be toug h. They are in the same confer ence as the Huskies. The Bloomsburg team will be away Thursday night against Kings College in Wilkes-Barre . ^ f V^^r^^W V W*^ V ^V ^B¦ ^B ^V W^ ¦ *^- ^m ^^ f l * » ^ —~ — ~~ ~~ — w^^v ^^ww^ ^m ^ V V ^— ~— — ^ w— -_- ^^^_ - — - ^ j ^, ^ ™ Husklos tromp Bisons - . Wrestlers four th in Buck nell Tou rnament by Don Reimold Coach Roger Sanders was disappointed with the performance of his team as only one Bloomsburg wrestler , Steve Scheib, managed to win his weight class in the Bucknell Invitational Wrestling Tournament held last Friday and Saturday. Bloomsburg was able to place fourth in the nine team tournament behind Princeton, Millersville, and Maryland, but fourth place was nn r»r»nsni p*firm tn P.nar»h Snn - ders. "We lost the tournament in the semi-finals," said Coach Sanders. "We didn't hang in there when it got tough." With these remarks the coach was referring to three key matches in which the Bloomsburg wrestlers did not respond when the pressure was on them. In the semi-finals of the 126 pound class, Dexter Derr was beating his opponent when one wrong move resulted in Derr being pinned and thus finishing third. At 142 pounds, Bill Kearcher went into an overtime period in his match but lost and finished fourth. Tony Caravella had a close match at 150 pounds but he was beaten 4-0 and ended up in fourth place. Other Bloomsburg wrestlers were Jim Davis who finished fourth at 118 pounds, Dave Costabile placed sixth at 134 pounds and Tino DeMarco finished second in the heavyweight class. Although DeMarco placed second, Coach Sanders was disappointed in his final bout as DeMarco lost to John Sef ter of Princeton by a score of 10-1. Coach Sanders was also upset about Bloomsburg 's 158, 167, and 177 Dual meet results pounders who did not pick up any team points in what Sanders called a "bad performance. " The only bright spot for the Bloomsburg team was the performance of Steve Scheib. The BSC sophomore continued his outstanding wrestling by defeating Steve Hogar of Maryland 10-0 in the finals of the 190 Dound match. "We'll be in a lot of trouble for the remainder of the season with the way our schedule is, if we don't get tough," said Sanders, who was apparently referring to such matches as Navy, Pittsburgh , Buffalo , Perm State, and Clarion. In the team standings , Princeton finished first edging Millersville 99.50-99.25 1'4. Maryland finished third with 89 points, followed by Bloomsburg, '78.50 Indiana (Pa.) , 68; Temple, 65.50 :,- West Chester, 555.251; Bucknell, <4fr.25 ; and Lycoming with 45.50 points. Besides Scheib, other individuals to win their respective weignt classes were: at 118- Bob Katz, West Chester ; 126- Greg Filipos, Maryland; 134- Tom Scotten, Bucknell ; 142- Dennis Underkoffler , Princeton ; 150- Steve Grubman , Princeton; 158- Jay Stewart , Princeton ; 167- Larry McCoy, Indiana ; 177- Dennis Fenton , Millersville ; and heavyweight John Setter , Princeton. BSCWins, 37-3 118 Jim Davis dec. Larry Means 6-3 127 Dexter Derr dec. Eric Rey lO-5 134 Dave Costabile dec by TomScotton 6-2 142 Bill Kaecher dec, Dave Desimone 10-5 150 Tony Caravella pinned Bob Brison6:16 158 Charles Carter dec. Joe , McGinley 8-7 i 167 Andy Cappelli dec. Ed Schmarick 8-7 177 Jim Homan dec, Steve Albanese 10-8 190 Steve Scheib pinned Eric Muclirnore4:40 HWT. Tino DeMarco pinned Harry Gray 6:20 Coach Sanders said, "We wrestled very well. We made a total team effort, and everyone hustled." Merme n outswim Towson by Cindy Holbein The Husky swimmers demonstrated their exceptional ability last Thursday by outscoring Towson State 79-32 in the first meet of the season held at the Nelson Fieldhouse. The team , which consists of only five upperclassmen ( three swimmers and two clivers ) is supervised by Coach Eli McLaughlin. The oDenine event, the 400 medley relay, consisting of 100 m e t e r s of b u t t e r f l y , backstroke, breaststroke, and freestyle, set the winning mood for the meet with mermen Steve Price, Curt'Moore, BillEwell and Keith Torok finishing first at the time of 3:50.27. Towson State came in second in that event and Blooms burg's* - second team took third place. The next event , the 1000 freestyle, 40 lengths or over one-half mile of continuous oneman swimmin g, was ta ken by Towsen with the time of . 11:58.15. Bloomsburg swimmer OTIS'news OTE would like to remind all male students that they will st ar t an open rush early next semester. There will be further notices posted Eachus named to IC4A All-S tar tea m by Bernie Bear On November 22, the IC4A cross-countr y meet was held at Van Cortland Park in New York City. BSC' s Steve Eachus placed 2lst and gained recognition for his efforts . There were over 200 runner s f rom all over t he E ast coast an d "Super Steve" ran a t i me of 26: 19 for the five mile course. A f ter the meet was fi n i shed , Chickie Carter attempts to pin his adversary, keep your eyes open ref. (photo by Thomas ) the coaches selected 25 runner s to be placed on the A11-IC4A team an d Steve was one of th e harriers picked for this honor. This is the first time that a runner from BSC has placed or competed in IC4A competition in cross-country . Steve completed a very successf ul season th is year and is now looking t owar d s i n door track to duplicate some of his winnin gs. TnVin finfch p H U/p ^^ j PHIL'S RACQUET CORNER f I | - .m i t ¦ t ¦ 51:38 and Gary Oberly finished at 53:13. The 200 individual medley, a combination of strokes: butterfly, backstroke, breaststroke and freestyle, gave BSC another big advantage over Towson. The Huskies grabbed the three winning positions, with Steve Price finishing first at 2:14.51, Curt Moore placing second and Dave R epetto , Because Towson did not bring their diving team to Thursday's meet, BSC divers Gary Havens and Chip Callahan, competed against each other in the one and three meter diving competition. Callahan was the top scorer in the one meter diving event with an overall score of 214.42. In the three meter diving, however , Havens first place position in that event. . Bill Ewell grabbed first place in the 200 meter butterfly with a finishing time of . 2 :12.42. Towson took second position with the time of 2:30.83, and BSC came in third in that event. Towson finished first at 2:16.23 , in the 200 meter backstroke. Steve Price and Jim KeUy, Wnskv swimmers , finished second and third in that event. Bloomsburg took a second in the 200 meter breaststroke, and in the final event, the 400 meter . free relay, Bloomsburg 's swimmers, Danner, Oberly, Richards and Ewell came in first with 3:30.38, while Towson ~ grabbed second and BSC third. The Huskies are swimming Thursday at King's College. Look f or th em at th eir next Subscribe To: NATIONAL MAT NMS For Fast, Fine Facts About NCAA Wrestling Highlights * Eight issues per year from mid-December through the NCAA Tournament. (One in December, two in January,three in February, two in March) Emphasis on the top teams and * Photos and personal features in individuals in nation. every issue. * First class main standard for all out-of-town subscribers. Published in Bethlehem , Pa. Team ratings every issue, by section, and * nationally. Individual ratings THREE conference times during the season. 1 yr. subscription: $6.00 2 yr. subscription: (11.00 Send TO: NATIONAL MAT NEW R. D. 2 Box 290 Allentown , PA 18103 v Seuttlebn cuttlebutt......Scuttlebutt Grad-level The School of Extended Programs at BSC has arranged for several graduate level courses to be offered to teachers in locations more convenient to their employment. Three-credit courses for the spring semester are scheduled at Willow Grove and Hazelton. Addition al uuormation on course offerings can be obtained by contacting the Office of Graduate Studies at BSC, ^ telephone 389-3814. Campai gnManagers needed Th e BSC S i m u l a t e d Democratic National Convention, to be held Apr. 9-10, is l o o k i n g for c a mp a i g n managers for such prospective -candidates as Sen. Edward Kennedy Gov. George Wallace, Sen. Scoop Jackson, Rep. Morris Udall , Gov. Milton Shapp, Dale Bumpers and nth prs Each campaign manager will be trying to win the support of some 1400 student and community delegates representing ' each state; those managers whose candidates win the Presidential and VicePresidential nominations will be awarded $50 and $25 respectively, or may opt to receive two semester hours of credit instead of the money. All campaign managers will be selected at least two weeks prior to the convention. Ambitious persons aspiring to the task should contact Kim Yaunches at 389-2478 or Box no. 1778. The dance marathon appears likely to become an annual event at BSC; one is scheduled again this year on Jan. 30 to Feb. 1in the Kehr Union. The theme of the marathon is "Bicentennial." Instead of the "dance till you drop" deal that was held last year, the limit is 50 hours, chosen because of the ou states in me u.o. coupies win be required to pick a state when they register, and they must depict this state in the marathon. Another added feature will be questions and answers, both written and verbal,, which test the contestant's knowledge of our country 's history. Those interested should sign up with their partner Dec. 8-23 at the Information desk in the Union, and pick up their pledge sheets. Contestants are required to have $80 in pledge money from various sponsors to be eligible for prizes. Various prizes will be given out and a total of $350 awarded. Proceeds from the marathon will go to the Columbia County United Fund. A minimum of 15 and a maximum of 125 couples may enter the contest. For more information and a complete list of rules and regulations, stop at the Information Desk | - I I 0 a'm> -10 p .m. Each Day i bpecial Cera mic § T EAC ¦ PHASE LINEAR - HARMON KARDON el Q UALITY S TEREO li I AT LOWES T PRICES I § g 5 • Stud ents Take Note: - ONE DAY DELIV ERY - FULL WARRAN TIES - QUICK FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE § HIGH FIDELITY HOUSE 5 Call Ron Adelber g 319 East Sire ei Blooms burg I I 784 - 5962 784 - 5353 5 m g a " § »¦ MARANTZ -NIKK O ¦ BOSE - DUAL , BSR V ^ aiuucuia , graduates and professors) to be responsible for contacting and sharing ideas -with individuals from the area. Benefits minus expenses would be $200 per week plus a natural lake-front environment. For interview appointment contact the Creative Living Colony care of Marc David Silverstein,. Arlene Court, Bricktown, N.J., 18723, or call 201-458-3397, Mon. 10-11 p.m., Tues.-Thurs. 9-11p.m. Main Sf. Bloomsbmg I'm Hone ysuckle Devine. I demon strate anatomical jet propulsion Now Showing ¦' ' s .^j g H^ ^ ^ a^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^BL^B^BB^'jy^K^TL ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ij ^ i ^ i ^ i ^ i ^ H ^L^L^B^B^B^L^B | Thousands of Topics Send for your up-to-date , 160page , mail order catalo g. Enclose $1.00 to cover postage and handling. ¦^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B p^ jB^BS ^H in Jim Buckle y 's new film mjm f^ ^v • ' **v RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC. 11322 10AHO AVE., # 208 LOS ANGELES , CALIF. 90025 1213) 477.8* 7* Our research papers are sold for research purposes only. § On Sale In Bakeless Basement 1 | «*£* t*9 am4>#* B^B^B^B^BKB^B^B^B^L^B r ' HB § Works of BSC Student Artists 1 § That 2.4 percent continues a stabilizing trend in growth figures of the last .decade. A major drop-off in the total rate of growth for the state college I ' mmm. . . SUBS / 2«*&Y*a^ 5** vurc iuuuig CAPIT OL THEATRE 5,962. 1 pHph THURSDAY FRIDAY 1 1 ^f^p^Hi _3.x.- _ .l.J.* ._1,« (UVIUUcUs i HARTZEL L 'S MUSIC ST ORE | *1L. % STUDENT I ^# CERAMIC I occurred in 1970. Since then , For those administrative and growth has 'been slower, but academic faculty considering steady. sabbatical leave for the years Most of the increase was in 1977-78, fall semester, or both the number of men going to the semesters, forms are now colleges, while the state available in the office of Tom number of women choosing that Davies, Chairperson of the Allroute remained stable. Campus Sabbatical Leave Committee, room 12 Ben Phi Beta business Franklin building. Deadline to All Business students who pick up the forms is 4:30 p.m. , will have 15 credits at the Jan. 16, 1976. beginning of Spring '76 semester are invited to the Phi BSC second in enrollme nt... v Beta Lambda meetin g increase : ;^ ( n a t i o nal business Enrollment figures issued"^ ) on Dec. 11, at 6:30 organization Nov. 21, 1975by the Department p.m. in the Coffeehouse. Tom of Education on the ComState Pres. from Leitzel, monwealth's 14 state-owned Williamsport, will also be colleges and university show an there. Also, there will be a overall 2.4 per cent increase speaker from PP&L and over last year. West Chester refreshments. State College's increase of 746 students is the highest. BSC is second with a 581 student increase over its last year 's enrollment. Bloomsburg 's current total enrollment is "The Best For Less " 72 N. Iron St. Bloo msburg 9 am ¦ 9 pm /WON. - SAT . Creative Living Colony If you are a person who would like to share your special talents, here is an opportunity to apply for a summer position as a learning center coordinator. The Creative Living Colony in Ellenville, N.V. is looking for increative , professional *¦# Sabbaticals? SOPHOMORES! Earn a Total of $2000 for Your Jun ior A Senior Years at BLOOMSBU RG STATE COLLEGE Of f !<•* A six week employment this summer earnin g about $500 while attendin g the Arm y ROTC rimUa Basic Summer Camp at Fort Knox , Kentucky sf if e. An opportunity to compete for an Army ROTC Scholarshi p which pays all tuition , books , PLUdS lab fees , and $100 per month Six weeks summer employment between your Junio and Senior year earning about $500 mm PLU*e. S: while attendin g The ROTC Advanced Camp at Fort Bragg, North Carolina oi f fC* The opportunit y to develop another career opti on as an officer in the Active Army or f*LUa« Army Reserves ARM Y ROTC 2-YEAR PROGRAM For Further Info rmation Call Collect MAJOR DOUG BARR (717) 524 • 1100 Deadline for Appl ication: March 1, 1976