UGRE to be Giv en IAJ e id m a n n to ^n e u h Dr. T. J. Weismann will address members of the Susquehann Valle y Section of the American Chemical Society and BSC student affiliates on Wednesday , February 18 , at 8:00 p.m.in Ku ster Lecture Hall. The lecture , "Recent Advances in Petroleum Explor ation Research ," is open to the public. Born in Pittsburgh , Pa ., Dr . Weismann received his BS, MS , and PhD degree s in physical chemistr y from Duquesne Universit y . He joined Gulf Research and Development Co., in 1956 and is currently Research Associate in the Ceochemistr y Section of the Exploration Division. He was a colleague of Dr. Clyde S. Noble , of the BSC Chemistry Department , at Gulf Research in the summers of 1968 and 1969. The lecture will be precede d by the film , "An Introduction to Reaction Kinetics ," beginning at 7:35 p.m. APO All Set . May 2 , has de fi n itel y been set for Alpha Phi Omega ' s fund rais ing project , Tommy James and the Shondells In Concert. Tom Blackwell , chairman , state d t h at initial steps have been taken in pre paring for the concert and the band and date has been cleared with a Pittsburgh booking agency . Blackwell stated that APO will be looking for strong supp ort from the campus community, as we ll as the local high school students , to make tha lr fund raising event successful. If all goes well , they will earn in excess of $7 ,000 a fter payingTomm yjames and the Shondells and the other expenses Involve d, The proceeds will be used as contr ibut ions to char it ies such as March of Dimes - and the Easter Seal Society and the first funds toward buildin g or securin g a house for the brotherhood* The Under graduate Record Examinations for seniors who will graduate in May 1970 will be administered March 7 , 1970 , with testin g to start at 8:00 a.m. The candidates are to repor t beginning at 7:45 a .m . The candidates enrolled for these tests on Registration day in Jan uary. Those who are taking the Field Tests in Education , Business , and En glish will report at Carver Auditorium . AH other s will report at Ha as Auditorium . Those , who are in Practice Teachin g the first hall of this semester will receive certain materials , including appointment sheets , from the Research Office . The materials describe the test battery and give examples of test items. Includ ed is a form that tells the student the location for his test , including the building and the exact seat . He should bring this sheet , his receipt of payment , and a supply of no . 2 pencils with him on the test date . Those who are in Practice Teaching, residents , and commuters will have these mater ials placed in Campus Mail , Wednesday, February 25th . These seniors are asked to look for these envelopes and to ask boxshar ers to watch out for them on their behalf . Free School A nnounce d A joint committee of 31oomsbur g townspeople , high school and college students , and college profe ssors met Thur sday evening , February 12 , to establish 1^ Free School of Bloomsburg . The meeting was an outgr owth of Philosophy C lub meeting held earlie r in the week to discuss tiie possibility . A fre e school is non-credi t, non - degree -grant ing course of study which is open to all citizens withou t cost for the pur pose of advancing learning and the exchan ge of Ideas in the commun ity . It has become a ra pidly gr owing tradition in the 1960' s, with free schools burgeoning In most major cities and college towns. The Free School of Bloomsburg will offe r five initial cour ses in a spring session beginning in M arch . The tro posed subjects are dra ma , music , wri ting , politics , and ph ilosophy . A full descripti on of these offerings will be anno unced at a late r date , together with details of time an d place . Anyone Int ereste d in more infor mation abou t the Fr ee School is invite d to call members of the comm ittee at 784* 1896 , 759-0563 , 784-0704 , 7841136. CALENDAR Wednesday, Feb. 18 Swimming Home — We»t Cheste r Basketball A way — Millersville Girl' s Basketball — Wilkes 4 p.m., Centennial Thursday, February 19 Winte r Weekend Three Dog Night , 8:30 p.m. Haas News Briefs <*U ay 111 en Three Day Men 's Scholarships will be availa ble to any commut ing student who has completed one semester . The scholarship will go towar d tutition in the fall of 1970. Appli cations and infor mation may be obtained at the financial aid office. Applicati ons must be in by Apri l 1, 1970 . \_J turnp lan Once again that subject of much vigorous (violent?) debate during the late hours by slightly-inebriated poets and critics , the Olympian , som et i mes k nown as "t he literary magazine of Bloomsburg State College ," is approach ing its deadline with a frlghten ingly small quantity of material having been submitted. This , then , Is an appeal to the poets , playrigh ts and short story writ ers of this campus as well as anyone who simply dabble s in writing now and then. Our deadline for submission of poetry , s h ort stor ies , plays (Doesn't anyone wr ite one-act play s?) and essays is March 5 , 1970. Eox 293 , Wal ler Hall. t/swc The United State s Marine Corps Officer Selection Team will be aboard the Bloomsburg State Colle ge campus tod ay and tomorrow , Februar y 18 and 19 , from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The re presentatives of the USM C will offe r informa tion and answer questions of interested students concerning the United State s Ma rine Cor ps Officer programs that are available to College Students . K^l vf l ion College Council in Special Session A petition signed by app roximately 150 stude nts pr ompted college council to meet Friday to discuss the prop osed Student Faculty Senate . Those petitio ning claimed that Council had not given the document the consideration it deserved at the regular meetin g, on Feb . 9 . A letter from D. Nossen which indicated that he was opposed to the document presented to C ouncil by Glo Wilson , was read at the beginning of the meeting . The President stated that the document prep ared by the student committee was not valid because there is a duly constituted faculty committee pre sently workin g on such a propo sal. Dr . warr en , a guest of council and chairman of the faculty committee , complained that he had not been contacted by the student committee , and stated that his committee alread y had one student representative , Ray Guydish , and was willing to listen to student opinion on the Senate at an y time . He further stated that the original name of the proposed body had been changed from "Faculty Senate " to "Senate " to avoid alienatin g student s . After a number of questions from Council members and student visitors , Jeffrey Prosseda , Council chairman , reminded the gro up that they had met to discuss the Student Faculty Senate constitution prepared by a student committee , not th e d ocumen t being pre pared by a faculty corn * mittee . Dudley Mann questioned the* validity of the motion made not to consider the document by Stan Rakowsky (at the regular meet ing.) He thought that a motion made in a negative manner was contrar y to the rules of parlimentar y proce d ure . J ean R eese st ate d that s he was c hec ki n g the proced ure in ROBERTS RULES OF ORDE R . Stan Rakowsky stated that he had made the motion because he felt that the document had been prepared by a small gro up of students and that preparation should be left up to the duly constituted faculty committee . Other Council members indicated tha t they had not und erstood the motion made by Mr. Rakowsky and thou ght that they were votin g on the document when they had actua lly voted not to consider it. No definite decision was mad e on the document since ther e were too many absentees to establish a quoru m. However , upon adv ice of Jeff Pr osseda , those present voted to reconsider the Student Fac ulty Senate at the next regu - • lar meeting . Hamlet Cance lled The February 18 showing of HAM LET has been cancele d with regre t by the BSC Lltery and Film Society. Miss Eileen Tltler of Walter Reade Corporation of New York , which has recentl y pur chased the rights to HAM LET , Laurence Ollvler 's Oscar - wining 1948 production , I nf orme d the Society by telephone that its newly acquired prints had been rejected for defects in quality and that new print s will have to be pr ocessed before the film can be released for viewing. The Reade Corporation has assured the Society that HAM LET can be re-scheduled later in the semester , when fault-free prints are secure d. The opening film of the Society 's ser ies will be DR.JEK YLL AND MR. HYDE , the famous Spencer Trac y tour -de-force , on M arch 4. Members hips are available until then by sending $ 3 for a single membershi p and $5 for a double me mbership to College Box 306. The rescheduled date for HAM LET will be announced to members of the Society later. Jj n to February 24 — Nomination s in Carver Auditorium «U 7;00 p.m. for all officers. Candidate s for president and vice-president of CGA will give brief speeches. Candidates for all offices must be nominated. March 4 and 5 — Primary Election s - 0 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Waller Hull. M arch 16 and : 17 — Final E lect ions — 9 a.tn:< to 4 p.m. in Waller Hall. Mass Humanit y : TIekttt Or lift Editorial lege council considers 1300 students to be a small group and therefore moves to "not discuss" a proposed student-faculty senate constitution . Maybe they were upset by the trouble some professor had in getting their tenure . Maybe some of the girls are upset because they were told they couldn 't have unlimited lates because the college can 't afford to buy extra keys . Maybe they are concerned because one of their reps on college council may not understand the motions he makes. M aybe they were told that ' everything was going to change this year and just discovered that it hasn 't. M aybe students are tired of being told whom not to associate with by the social deans. M aybe they are tired of being intimidated because they are suspected of using drugs. Maybe they 're wondering why a popular English prof is not teaching upper division English courses. M aybe they wonder why unsigned letters, etc., are kept in personal files while a petition signed by 1300 students is ignored. Maybe some people are won-? dering wh at the hell is going on THE FUTURE OF CONSER- tute the fifteenth largest country here. . . VATISM — by M . Stanton Evans. in the world , " he points out . May be. Writing more specifically When political begins M.L.H. (With a little help from to coincide with reality political pro- of this phenomenon , various conmy friends) phecy, the prophet must be rec - tributors to the reader , MAN koned a man worth listening to. AGAINST POVERTY , make much In 1967 M . Stanton E vans an- the same point: alyzed the political position and "...the average 'death age ' of practical future of conservatism an Indian is forty-tw o years in American politics. He predict- (thirty years for the Alaskan naed that in fewer years than most tive and about thrity one for the Many issues of this year 's partment . political writers would agree to, Arizona Indian)." M&G have suffered from an abunIn a FORUM article I did on the influence of the conservative "Almost one-half of the emdance of printing, typographical , the upcoming Democratic pri- voters would bring about the ployable American Indians are and other errors. The last two mary, peace plank came out as election of a Republican president without jobs ." issues were even more than nor - peace planT . There were sev- and a vice-president acceptable to "Among far mworkers , a remally SNAFUed. eral other errors in that art- the South . cent study discovered that underTo W . D . Eisenberg (his mid- icle. In a recent play review, Since THE FUTURE OF CON- employment run s as high as 37 dle initial was printed as "O") two lines were dropped, spots SERVATISM first appeared in percent ." author of "Kosher it wasn't , " came out as sports , and the art- 1968, the results of the elections "... More than 3 million rural we apologize, although we had icle took on a somewhat incoare classified as iladults little control over the many print- herent quality because of print - have shown that the majority of literates . '' ing errors in his article . We ing mishaps. These are only his predictions were correct . AND SO ON take this space , however, to note recent articles. I' ve been deal - The author has revised several 1950 to 1965, new . . .from " that neither the author of the ing with this kind of frustration chapters of the book and added machines and new methods ina new chapter incorporating the piece nor the editors of this pub- for two years. of the election. In the new creased farm outpu t in the United lication were responsible for the Now, there are several reasons results States by 45 percent— and remisspellings, punctuation errors for these difficulties . One , our material he discusses whether or duced farm employment by 45 and missing lines in that article . copy staff is small , and until re- not the Nixon victor y can be con - percent." Jim Sachetti, whose name has cently, our typing staff was non- sidered a victory for conserva"...during the next 15 years been misspelled by the editors existent . As far as feature mat- tism , the meaning of the Wallace the need for far m labor will deand the printers too many times eral is concerned , my co-editor movement and Spiro Agnew. He cline by another 45 percent ." to mention , we thank , for his en- and I have typed , read , counted also discusses the effect on the "In Kentucky, a modernized party of Lyndon John- coal durance . and arranged (lay-out) all the copy Democratic mining industry has been To Blass , whose articles and for our pages more than once . son 's withdrawal from the race, able to cast aside three-quarters columns never seem to appear Anyway, the problem is not McCarthy 's campaign for the of its workmen within the span quite the way they are submitted , lik e ly to get any better . Our nomination and the assassination of a decade ." we offer our condolences . copy editor Just quit , and I don 't of Robert Kennedy. And so on and so forth . Even THE FUTURE OF CONSERVA - leaving And , if it makes any of the see any crowds gather ing to apout the more well-known above mentioned gentlemen , or ply for the job . The only way TISM is one of the few books statistics on our urban slums , any unmentioned but sim ilarly in- the printing errors can be cut available that deals with the po- as well as the PE RSONAL realjured persons, feel any better , down is to read proof sheets, and litical possibilities rather than ity of that human misery, this is after two years of writing for this volunteers for that job are also the ideology of conservatism. unfacetiously an "un-American " Covering the issues, events and report paper , I must hold some kind of lacking. . It might have been , one personalities which have marked error derecord in the printing written about India or Pakfeels , Alla n Maurer the resurgence of the Republi, another conexcept istan— can party since the 1940's, the tributor notes:that more "We author is always interesting and about malnutr ition in know MAROON AND GOLD Pakistan... provocative . than In the United States; " he NbT ~29 VOL. XLVIH might as well have written "we f -^overtu know more about POVERTY . . " MICHAEL HOCK This then , is Michael HarringTHE POLITICS OF POVERTY ton 's (and others ') "Other AmeriEDITOR-IN-CHIEF by Joh n C. Donovan (Pegasus , can. " If it were in fact 'anoth Business Manager 157 pp.,$1 .95) and MAN AGAINST er nation ' (the seventh largest dor Remsen POVERTY: WORLD WAR III edit - underdeveloped country in th« Managing Editor Bill Teitsworth by Arthur 1. Blaustein and world , Donovan notes), in this ed News-Editor Martin Kleine r Roger R . Woock (Random House, condition of poverty It wokld with Co-Feature Editor * . . . Olnn f Porter , Allan tA»ur *r 457 pp., $7 .95)—- reviewed by Jan out doubt be close to revolt , if Sports Editor Clark Roc h Barry— SRS . not revolution . Though it is not Poverty is truly a lonely bat - another country (In this sense), 'Photogra phy Editors .. Jim Blrt , Mark Fouca rt tie . Copy Staff Kay Hahn , Carol Oswald , Irene Gulyei it may be approaching revolution Yet , according to one of these anyhow . Circulation Manager Linda Ennis two books—John C . Donovan's Advisor Mr . Michael Stanley In THE POLITICS OF POVclassic THE POLITICS OF POVERTY — there are at least 35 mil- ERTY , Joh n Donovan shows why ADDITIONAL STAFF: Terry Blass , John Stugn n, Bob lion Americans living under the and how LBJ 's "War on Poverty " Schulti, Salty Swetland , Dave Kelte r , Stanl ey Bunsick , current federal "poverty line :" Jim Sachetti , Susan Zalota , Frank Cliffor d , Vef ma Aver y. "Anywhere else In the world , turned Into more of a sham batthirty-four or thirty-five million tle than .a majo r campaign ; in All opinions expressed by colu mnists and future wr iters, poor people would constitute MAN AGAINST POVERT Y , the including letters-to-tht-edltor , are not necessarily tho se of an underdeveloped nation...As a editors show us what the real this publication but thos e of the indi viduals. matter of fact , a separate nation battlefield—and battle— is and of America,n popr would consti- will Continue to be, In POLITICS We all remember the time of the cheerful-apathetic students. Where are they now? Now , they are scared,depressed and not quite sure where they are at. They feel empty, aimless. They are annoyed, and sometimes , downright disgusted. Most discouraging, however, is the fact that they can't figure out why their temper ment has changed so drastically . They 're pissed off , and not sure why . Maybe it' s because there are so many reasons to choose from. Maybe they were going to sign up for Deake Porter 's Grad Course, and found that it didn 't exist . M aybe they wanted to take Jim Percey for Government during summer school and found that .Percey has been denied summer employment at BSC Maybe they have heard rumors that one professor may be fired for participating in the Moratorium , or supposed "political extremism ,1' while BSC staff members who belong to the herb Philbrick Society (a right wing group) are tolerated. M aybe they heard that one of the staff members of ARA Slaters was pressured by administrators to shave his beard . Maybe they are worried because there appears to be a gr owth of anti-Semitism on this campus. M aybe they question the validity of their student government. Maybe they are worried because one of their reps on col- Books in Review OF POVERTY , Donovan shows how very little in actual substance the 'U .S. has done about poverty HERE (glowing press releases to the contrary notwithstanding); in MAN AGAINST POVERTY , we. are shown how tremendous and universal the problem is: two-thirds of the world's population , or more. Both books show how the poor everywhere are (finally, did someone say?) beginning to realize that no one is going to get them out of poverty but themselves. Governments, from Washington to Warsaw, can't or won't . Individual citizens (though many valiantly try) can 't .National electorates in "developed, " "democratic " nations won 't . Error.. Error. . Error. . WORLD WAR III Yes, poverty is a lonely battle, if you 're poor . But it may not lon g remain so. If "progress " and technology have done nothing else in this century, they have at least let a billion poor people know that they are not alone — nor outnumbered. The subtitle of MAN AGAINST POVE RT Y is WORLD WAR: I I I it lsn 't the name of the government's latest poverty program— it's poverty 's (and people 's) opening campaign on incompetent government . Plato had a phrase for it 2500 years ago—if the people are sick , their rulers need curing. The "message " of these two books , from Donovan to Frantz Fanon , is no less direct and clear . i ¦ * __ » Mermen Win 7th, 8th, 9th, Defeat LHSC 62-40 *M>»Afr* «OT< - -* m- »^b» » Number 44 s hoots f or Field Goal . .. Husky Basketb allers Trounce MSC 83-70 Rough is the only way to describe BSC 's 83-70 victory over M ansfield last Saturda y night in Centennial Gym. The Huskies stepp ed to the charit y stri p 47 times and converte d 33 to nullify MansflekPs 29-25 advantag e in fie ld goals . Howard J ohnson and M ark Yanchek led the Husky scorers with 18 points each. They were followed closely by Bob Snyde r with 17, Paul K uhn 15 , Jim Platukls 1C , Bill Mastro pletro 3 , and Dennis Mummey with 2. Of Kuhn 's 15 points 11 came from the foul line. Weln stein led the Mountles with 24. Platukis led all rebounders with 14, followed by Weln stein with 13, and Howard Joynson with 11 . Snyder contributed lO assists to the winnin g effor t . The Huskies grabbed the lead earl y, upped it to 15 at halftime , and never led by less than 6 in the second half. During the first stanza fists f lew , bodies fell and the benches em ptied as te mpers flared on the court. But the coac hes calmed thin gs down and no fouls were asse ssed or players eject ed and the game continued with- WONDERVIEW SKI AREA weekdays 7-10 p.m. 1-10 p.m. Monday »— College Night only $1.00 per person out fu r ther incident . Although M ansfield had no proble m picking out the open man for the easy basket , the Inside under the M ansfield basket was generally blocked and most of the 29 Mansfield field goal s came from beyond 20 feet. Tonight the Huskie s travel to Millersvllle to bri ng home another win (hopefully) . It will pro bab ly be tou gh and will take another great team effort to win. The Huskies now boast a 13-6 record which must be Improved upon to make the NAIA District 19 playo ffs. B eat Millers ville YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE AT A GOODWILL STORE 154 W. Main, Bloomsburg SHOP AT GOODWILL FOR YOUR CLOTHING AND SAVE YOUR MONBY FOR OTHIR THINGS t t i f ^ ^ fl H ^f af ^ a ^ ^ m ^ ^ t ^ K t t ^ H m m m m mf i ^ M m m m m m t ^ t m >_-. t^** i ¦ Mmt ¦ ¦! !¦ ¦¦ ^»i i ii f i 1 ii ¦ «!¦ imi I ml ~iii m > .: j ..i*HffYsfjrMMIM»f>^&2UA£flraMMtfv/o9 fli 9 U TEACHERS Repairing PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY VIRGINIA 5 W. Main St. Bloombburo I Salary : $7000 -$1 1,170 On Campus Feb. 23, 1970 ¦Come in and browse Clings to Dashboar d , Refrigerator , locker , etc . Flexible can also be gilue d to most any surfac e or worn on bracelets , or nec klace s. Blue and w hite on M ^ / ^ \r ^ . EUDORA'S j