^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^mmm—^—^— Attention all Presidents of campu s organi zations! 11 Has your group been photographed for the 1970 OBITER???? If not yo u bette r get on the ball!!! The deadline is the 15 of March; all pictures have to be taken before this date, if not your group will not be in the yearbook (agai n). So get a move on and make an appointment by leaving a note in Box 291 Waller with the time and place and we'll have a photograp her there. Dr . J . T . LaMacchi awill speak on the subject of La sers & Holo- graphy on Tuesday, Marc h 17 at 8:00 p.m . in Kuster Aud . S.P.S.- Physics Dept. Sponsor Bell Display The Society of Physics Students and the Phy sics Department at Bloomsbur g State Colleee are now displaying a variet y of , science aids and teacher oriented , materials provided by Bell Telephone Company of Pennsyl va- lAJeuuin a on C ^xnio it by Steven Dippery Many members of the college community may not expect anything new and excitin g from an art exhibit entitled "Weaving ". But the current art exhibi t in Haas Auditorium , that of Ronald Berchert' s woven forms , surrounds the viewer with the familiar materials , yarn and fabri c used in unfamiliar ways. Before br owsing through the show the viewer undoubtedly is not able to Ima gine what awaits him. According to the artist , weaving " is one of man 's oldest forms of expr ession " an d has been used mainly "to enhance man ' s appear ance and to decor ate his home for pleasure and warmth " . But he goes on to explain th at he uses woven forms to express his emotions and relate weaving to nature. In his atte mpt to express his emotions an d relate woven forms to nature , t he artist has extende d the famil i ar , yarns and fabrics , to create exciting art forms. Most viewers from the college community agree that the excitement centers aroun d a hanging three- dimensiona l piece called ••Bird Form ", which combines yarn , leat her , ceram ics and feathers into a convincing, welltitled abstract of a han ging bird . There are many other three- dimens ional pieces on display , showin g the viewer that fabric an d yarn does not need to lie (continu ed en page four ) nia . It can be seen in the showcases in the corri dor of the Kuster Lecture Hall , Hartlin e Science Center , through March 17. The display include s experi mental kits to be assemble d by the secondary student and used to investigate vario us scientific phenomena. Books and films supp lement each kit. One , entitled "From Sun to Sound ," deals with the conver sion of solar energy to sound , and contains all the equipment necessary to build a transis torized solar powered oscillat or . Anothe r , concerning speech synthesis , incorporates an experiment In electronic speech production . The Cardiac , a card board illustra tiv e aid to computation , solves sur prisingly dif*ficult proble ms and Introduces t he student to the world of computers. "Similarities in Wave Behavior " demonstrate s every aspect of wave behavior taught at the second ar y level, while the remaining experimental kit deals with cry stals andpolarized li crht wav pc The exhibit is part of an all day pr ogram of activ itiesplanned by the Bloomsburg State College Society of Physics Students for Mar ch 17 , Including the Instal lat ion of a chapter of Sigma Pi Sigma , a national physics honor soc iet y , at 3:30 p.m. A lunc heon Is scheduled for noon with guests including Dr . Marsh W . V.'hlte of The Penn sylvania State Univer sity, nat ional preside nt , and Dr . I. Welle r of Franklin and Mar shall College , regional direc tor. At 6:00 p.m., a dinner Is plan ne d for the members of the Society of Physics Students , the ir guests , and faculty at the Hotel M agee. The concluding event on the agenda will be a demonstr at ion lecture in Kuster Lecture Hall on Lasers and Holography presented by J ohn T. LaMacchi a , Ph .D ., of Bell Telephone Laborator ies at 8:00 p.m. The society of Phy sics Stud ents cordially extends an Inv itation to the public to at tend this lecture fr ee of charg e. Madrigals Present Pops Conce rt The Bloomsburg State College Madri gal Singer s will present a Pops Concert Sunday evening, March 15, at 8:15 p.m. in Haas Auditorium . The public is invit ed without charge . Each year , in addition to their many off campus programs , the Madrigal Singers present a light • concert at the college for stu dents , faculty and townspeople who enjoy music for the small vocal ensemble . This concert; under the ' direction of Mr . Will i iam Decker , chairman of the Music Department , will consist of Renaissanc e Madrigals , folk songs and music from Broadw ay. Part I of the concert includes ¦J ^cranton ^J4a ll the following Madrigals : Ce moys The new William W . Scranton de May-Janequin ; Why Weep s, . Dining Hall will be opened on a Alsa-Maorley ; I love theethrou gh 23 limited basis March Maorley; Audite Nova! -Lasso; April 18, 1970. THOSE STUDENTS PRESENTLY DINING IN THE SOUTH HALL DINING ROOM ANNEX will use^the new dining hall for their meals beginnin g March 23rd. This phasein period will give the ARA Slater personnel an opportunity to check the workin g condition of all equipment in the new dinin g hall . Bloomsburg State College was If the equipment is in workin g order , ALL STUDENTS with food present ed with one of the most service contracts will commence unusual and vivid programs of dining in the new dining hall on the Artists and Lecture Series Monday , April 20 , 1970. Once with the appearanc e on Tuesday , the new dinin g hall is in full M arch 10 of Babatunde Olatun ji operation , the present College and his dancers In Haas AudiCommons will be converted into torium. Olatunji , a scholar and folka temporary Student Union . It lorlst , has assembled an outis anticipated that the Student Union will open in time for the standing program of African folk1970 summer pre -session , J une lore . With his company of musicians , dan c ers , and s in gers , Olat 8 . 1970. unji has presented at universit (O roker ^p ea ki ies and concert halls throughout the country the dance and music There will be a joint meetin g of Africa set to constantly chang of the Economics Club and the ing patterns of rhythm . Phi Beta Lambda (Business FraOlatun ji has established the ternity ) in Hartline Science Cen - first center of African Culture ter Room B-86 on Thurs day, In the U.S. in Har lem of which March 12, 1970 at 7:30 p.m. he Is the director . The center The guest speaker will be Mr. Elmer Robinson , Stock- has developed the most original broker for Jos ephthal & Co., a member of th e New Yor k and American Stock Exchan ges. A wide scope of topics will be discussed from the establishment and dealin gs of an Investment Club to th e implications of the fiscal and monitar y policv The Phi Beta Lamb da Frat ernity and the Economics Clubs will have separate busines s meetings after Mr. Robinson speaks . Ot her intereste d students , besides members of the or ganization inv olved, are Inv it ed to atten d . News Briefs His Golden Locks Time Hath To Silver Turned -Dowland ; Flora Gave Me Fairest Flower s-Wilbye; Come Again , Sweet LoveDowland ; Amor vittorioso-Gastoldi; How merril y we live-East ; II Biance e Dolce Cigno-Arca delt ; Welcome, sweet pleasure Weelkes . Part II consists of contem por ary pieces and folk songs such as W onderous Love-Paul Chris tiansen; and Geograp hic Fugue Ernst Toch . Part III will be a costumes production of the music from FINIAN'S RAINBOW . Although this musical has always been one of Broadway 's most delightful success es , it has only been since the recent motion picture vers ion (continued on page four ) Af rican Folk Show at BSC Vhnn - P l(L 9 J (i Dudley Mann and Mike Pllla gal11 advanced to the CGA finals by capturin g a lar ge amount of the vote In last weeks primary. M ann , who led all three candida te s with 562 votes , while Pilla galli cap ture d 474 votes and Gary Blasser , who was eliminated , gained 186 votes. The final elections will be held on March 16 & 17. and comprehensive program of African-American studies. The program itself was spectacular. The performer s wear f l a m boyant Afr ican costumes that nee d no light-show to provide psychedelic eye-popper s. Olantun jl is bringing his message and the folk-music of Africa to us. Special effects Includ ed ir many shows are a dancer whe spr lals up in a tent-like costume unti l he is twe lve feet above the floor , a dazzling drum solo by Ladju Camara , and a West Afri can Challenge dance between dancers and drummers. This program will be pre sente d at 8:15 p.m. at Haas Auditori um on the campus of Bloomsburg State College . Tickets at the door. The public Is invited. | Dark of The Moon J ^Z *^*,| Letters to the Editor Dear Editor : We attended the basketball game at Williamspor t on Monday night . Upon arriving at the gym , we were confr onted by the Mansfield cheerleaders , partial band , and two busloads of students. "What happened to Bloomsbur g?!? We realize that our cheerlead ers do not attend away games during the regular season . This is understandable , after all they do cheer for both basketball and wrestling. But why can 't they cheer at a CHAMPIONSHIP eame? Of course, we cannot put the blame on the cheerleaders . It is ridiculous to hire a bus for six or eight girls , and we realize that they cannot travel on the bus with the team. It is not up to them to find transportation . But if there had been buses provided , they might have gone . That brings us to the issue of buses . Why couldn 't buses have been hired to transpor t interested students? It was surprising how many students DID attend the game, and how much they did cheer , but think of how many more students would have gone! Perhaps with the additional support of the cheerleaders and the students , the game would have been a different story. We would like to commend the team for their effor t . Sure they made w mistakes— so did Mansfield , but our guys put their hearts into the game and really tried their hardest and we 're proud of 'em! Sincerely, Diane Shollenberger Nina Eppley Mr . Lauff er Mr . McCl ure Mr . Johnson by al Ian maurer Saturday evening, pen , paper , and fiance in tow , I w ent to see DARK OF THE MOON . Our seats were not especially good , and having read the script and established notions as to possible difficulties the players would face presenting the show, I was prepared to dissect it fiendishly. Then , the enchantment began. Fir st , eerie, startling music, moody, strange lights — then, a puff of white smoke — and a graceful femine leg rises and slowly falls in the blue Smok ey mountain background. Soon , a mini-ballet , performed by a surprisingly agile Sam Zackary and three elegant witches, one dark and two fair (Amy Raber, Theresa Previti , and one unidentified) weav e an entangling spell. From this powerful start the show cut from scene to scene with movie-like quickness , utilizing a very effective , black -out fade away to end scenes . The scenes themselves were of uneven quality but the poorer ones never seemed too long and the beautiful ones (such as the ballad-like interlude when the witch boy (Sam Z .) was chopping wood seemed barely to outlast an instant . Clearly, the technical excellence of DARK OF THE MOON contributed much to its effectiveness. But there was more than technical excellence there. Mary Lou Boyle , as Barbara Allen, gave one of the finest performances I have witnessed cm a RS<~! ctno -o Her and ROMEO AND JULIET . ALICE 'S RESTAURANT AND THE REIVE RS tied for ninth place and MEDIUM COOL was number ten. The poll included 1969 movies only. MAROON AND GOLD VOL. XLVIII NO. 35 MICHAEL HOCK EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Business Manager . dor Remsen Managing Editor Bill Teitsworth Newt-Editor Martin Kleiner Co-Feature Editors Ginny Porter, Allan Maurer .. .. Sports Editor * Clark Ruch A Jack Hoffman Photograpn y Efdltor Mark Fouca rt Copy Staff Kay Hahn, Carol Oswa ld , Irene Gulyct Circulation Manager Linda Ennis Advisor Mr . Michael Stanley ADDITIONAL STAFF: Terry Bias*, John Stugrln , Bob Schultz, Sally Swetland , Dave Kel t er , Stanley Bunslck , Jim Saehett ), Frank Clifford , Velma Avery, Carol Klsh baufh, Pat Jacob *. AN opinions expressed by columnists and feature w riters, Including letters-to-the-edlt or, are not necess ar il y t hose of this publication but those of the Individuals . 1, 1CU OU1I1C difficult scenes with the honesty of her performance . The revival scene (Act II , Scene IV) which faltered — being not quite a put on and not quite real — survived because she did not seem to believe it either , giving it a distorted , night mare like quality. Sam Zackary, as John Human , failed to fully express the ambivalent , want - t o - b e - humanand- love, want • to -be- a- witchand- be-free character of the witch boy. Sam 's portrayal of the witch boy seemed to carry traces of the heavy. When he picked up the apple barrel , it was a men- Mov ie Po ll CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID, IF , LAST SUMMER , STERILE CUCKOO , PUTNEY SWOPE , voice , clear and strong, was nev er artificial . Her movements were confident and natural , excep t perhaps when special movements or stances were called for , as when she and the witch boy marriage-stepped off-stage following their betrothal . It is significant to note that Miss Boyle was the only member of the cast who used her bare feet as if she had never worn shoes . But , Miss Boyle 's perf ormance , which on those merits alone would have been good , was excellent because she caught the essential tragic quality of DARK OF THE MOON and communicated it to the audience . 1 IU lllCA 111VSA «= D11C V^OLM. (Continued on page four) A most-liked-movie poll was recently conducted among the M&G editors and staff with the following results: EASY RIDER, starring Peter Fonda and Dennise Hopper , came in first with Dustin Hoffman and Jon Voight in MIDNIGHT COW BOY struggling for second place . These were followed by BUTCH Amy Raber and Theresa Previti durin g a bewitchin g ballet scene in DARK OF THE MOON. In constant motion during their appearance on stage , the girls were nevertheless consistent ly graceful. Jim Berkheiser , foreground * and Alan Klawitter , portrayed Uncle Smelicue and Preacher Haggler. SENIORS WHY $ 91 9 iifl GBIH HsavSeiB^B^Se^H Savings Insurance In vestments mmmHu^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ LNC Corporat ion cordiall y invitet you to a symposium , today and tomorrow , at the Newman Club . Sess ions will be held at 1:30. 3:30, 7:30, A 9:00 p.m. Jim Patrick and Bill Doug las , will be look ing for you at any of the sessions. Choose the time most convenient for you and bring your questions , but above all bring yourselve. STEP OUT. P r i o r Plannin g Prevents P Poor Performance. CO acing threat . When he confronted Conjur Man, the witches, and the county 's local strong man , he confronted them on a physical level, whereas the witch boy 's words and actions imply arrogance not muscle . St ill , Sam ' s performance was good . He changed the witch boy — changed him so that part of Sam Zackary was incorporated into his character = but he made it work ; good job on a tough part. Although Sam missed some of the complexity of the witch boy, he was convincing. — In other words , my criticism of Sam is not so much of his acting, as it is of his or the director 's conception of the part . Many, many supporting actors and actresses did fine jobs in DARK OF THE MOON. Although some are forgettable , some must be mentioned. The fair witches were two of the most charmingly evil females I've ever encountered . I'd like to identif y them both , but I'm only sure of one, Amy Raber — I'd recognize her cackle anywhere . Mrs. Summey (Rebecca Ermisch) and Mrs . Allen (Shelby Treon) were convincing and well fleshed-out characterizations. Miss Metcalf (Lillie Mauldin) (conti nued on page four) , LIVE CONCERT ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ v^1 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^*^^ v ^^m^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ THE GARY BURTO N QUARTET 8:00 p.m., March 14 Davis Gym, Bucknell University Tickets $2.00 Availab le thru P.O. Box 194 Bucknel l U., Lewitburg In additio n ¦ THE FREE DESIGN b Wrestlers Finish Well Afte r Poor First Round , Thom pson Repeats at 158 The Husky wrestlers of Coach Russ Houk , came back from a near disasterous first round of wrestling to place fourth In the Pennsylvania State Conference Wrestling Championships. In their initial matches Bloomsburg lost three matches by 1 point . By winning these three , they could have placed up near the top in the final scoring. Lock Haven won the tournament with 66 points and 3 indi vidual champions. Clarion was second with 65 points , East Stroudsburg 3rd with 60, followed by BSC with 46; Slippery Rock, 45; California, 28; Shippensburg, 23; Edinboro, 14; Millersville, 11; Kutztown, 10; and Mansfield , 7. Slippery Rock was the only other school with more than one champion , as two Rockets copped titles. Five BSC wrestlers went into the consolations and finals of the tourney on Saturday night and all five came back winners. Junior John Weiss at 140 lbs. defeated Warner of Shippensburg 13-10 to place 3rd . A t 167 , freshman Dou g Grady decisioned Dan McKee of Mansfield 4-0 for a third. Also taking third place were Shorty Hitchcock with a 17-6 decision over Dan Grobe , Slippery Rock , who beat Hitchcock in the dual meet, and Tiny Hummel , who defeated Roger Berkheimer of Shippensburg 1*0. Berkheimer pinned Hum mel in the dual match, but Tiny put out a great effort to claim third . Senior Arnold Thompson was the only Husky with a first, that in the 158 lb. class . In the semifinals, Thompson defeated Esler of Slippery Rock in overtime to gain the finals. In the final PSC bout of his career , Thompson came from behind to decision Bressler of Clarion 5-4 . This win also kept Clarion from winning the championship. This was Arnold's second consecutive PAC championship. There were more good wrestlers in this tournament than in any of the past events . The teams are becoming more well-balanced which should provide more excitement for Pennsylvania wrestling fans in the future . The 1969 - 70 version of the Husky grapplers is one of the youngest teams in the existence of the school . Of the ten varsity wrestlers , 9 are under-classmen, and lf a of those are freshmen. The mats in Centennial Gym will be sizzling next year when this fine team returns to action. The coache s and playe rs of th e BSC basketball team would like to express their thank s to their fans for the fine supp ort given through the past season. Your support and enthusiasm are second to none in the Pennsylvania State Conference . Coach Earl Voss YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE AT A GOODWILL STORE Congratulations are due to the offs , set a team record of 121 basketball and wrestling teams of points, and over all used a great team effort every same to post BSC . Both had outstanding sea»their fine record . sons and should be commended The wrestlers finished with a performances. The bfor their bailers posted a fine 15-8record, 10-5 record . They defeated powentered the District 19 NAIA play- erful West Chester in the last dual meet of the season,and nearly upset the very strong East Stroudsburg. Although Arnold Thompson was the only state champion this year , there is nothing for the other wrestlers to be ashamed of. It was a fine season which many people, including this writer , thought would be rather dismal . With the addition of sa- eral skilled freshmen who not only helped this year 's team , but provide a strong base for Husky teams of the future . Good-luck to the senior s of both teams, and congratulations for a The Bloomsburg Huskiettes op- job well done . ened . their *70 season with a thrilling upset over Penn State University, 28-26. This victory marked the first time in school \Jte zyotwest history that any Bloomsburg team defeated Penn State. ^Remembrance 3s~ The team continued on this Huskiettes Record Winning Slate (continued on page four ) » in and browse . EUDORA'S CORSET SHOP Etme FLOWERS 784-4406 E. Main St. Bloomsburg friendl y store in Bondsd World Wide Delive ry town 154 W. Main, Bloomsburg 2 in a rsow f o r Cap ta in ^Atrnie SHOP AT GOODWILL FOR YOUR CLOTHING AND SAVE YOUR MONEY FOR OTHER THINGS B i B B B a i ^ ^ ^ ^ Compliments Ckamp i ,ni LP RM & DER|Wj | ei ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ¦ C K ^^^ l ^^^ I fashion able "Sto w of Service " Swi mmers yu^ ^ ^ ^ ^ I fl SHOP / rc us 111 ¦ J3> •¦• •Mm **^ I i ft k ' ^ L^^^^^^^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ l m « ^IHBB ^HVHHHHHHHBL - . { r ^ ^ Hl^pB B ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ i ¦ ¦ i^ f"** "***" " ^'*' ' * I t j m ttiljl l ( l j i it ^ Uf * •*^mKtKS* *XT- W % * ' ¦ ¦ '¦ IT ..^^ ft^Ml^B ^^^^^^^^HR ^^^^ ^ ^^ tftfli ^LA ^^ ^^ B^^^^^ m flw ^ <^^^ £^MIIj£^^^ 25SS'~^^^ l^^^ tfrii mmm jewelers Visit O u r Showr oom , . . 130 East Main Street Two Shows : 7:00 & 9:00 Central Columbia H.S. Auditorium free bus transportatio n from College Tickets - $4.00 Sold outside Husky ™ i^rf *1 ' i ..,. ¦ .. ^_.^ ±j SBE~-* ' . -' i « THE TURTLES Friday, March 13 Bloomsburg BOOK S... OVER 8,000 TITLES IN STOCK If It' s a book we have It or wt can gtt it Greeting Cards HENRIE'S Card and Book Nook 40 W. Main St. HKi^B^il^B^l^^^ KP^HJIBfl jri^^^^ l "•' * l ^^^ H^^^^ B^^ h^^ l^^ Httj ^^ H^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ BlfliMP^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ U^^^^^^ Ha^Fi^^^^^^^^ B. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ¦M^^^^^^^^K ll\ u^^^^B^^^B^^H^^^^^^^Hf^^Hi ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ M* JA'.'^H ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ K^^^^^^^^^ K ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ HR ukSu ^^^ I i^ifi^^^^ H^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ B'j " ^^ Bl^^^^ B SHl^^^ Hv^^^ Hmi::' ^ ¦^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ v ^ BH^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^v T T^^^^^^^^^^^^ 1¦ Kffn ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^ ^ F^^^^^^^^^^^^H' HBVi ^ '^i^^^^^^^^^^^^ ¦ nna^^^^^^^^^^^^^ '1 KKo DTI.tv i ' ^^ ' Bp i^^^^^^ B^^ HiBal ^^^ Br ^^^^ VUeavinq (continu ed fro m page one ) on the floor or hang before the window. Most feature earthy color s and yarns and fabrics of rustic quality in the artist' s attempt to relate them to nature. If the viewer is unable to relate to three-dimensional pieces the artist's batiks may interest hi m." Batiks are textiles with designs printed on by a wax resist method. The batik process is well represented in the show with a number of free and exciting designs. They may remind the viewer of the faded or bleached jean s that he wears to class. The batiks also show the artist's ability to draw and design, for those who are more interested in two-dimensional art forms. Perhaps the most significant piece in the show is a seemingly insignificant piece known as Rug No. 1. It just lies flat among many more interesting threedimensional and hanging pieces , but serves to contrast between the conventional use of weaving and the artist's novel approacn to the skill. The show features thirty-four other pieces, which will be on display until March 24. i f la d ritj a U (co ntinu ed fro m page one) that many people have become acquainted with the work . The show tunes performed in solo and in chorus by the Madrigal Singers will include "If this Isn 't Love ", "Look To The Rainbow ", "The Begat", and "Something Sort of Grandish" . Members of this year 's Madrigal Singers are sopranos — Velma Avery, Berwick; Gail Oakum, Mahanoy City; Mary Sue Petrole , Tresckow; altos—Wanda Green, Reading; Marsha Jupina, MeAdoo; Mary Lou Wargo, Scranton; tenors—Don Corbin, Brooklyn, Penna.; Bob Else, Mt . Car mel-, and Bruce Fehr , Nazareth. Basses are Rick Gathman,Williamsport; Carl Kishbaugh , Nescopeck, and Jim Reese, Frackville. continue on into the finals set for March 1G and 17. Accepjking the decision of the student body, I .concede the primaries to these candidates , and I would like to take this opportunity to publicly give my complete support to Mike Pillagalli , the better qualified of the two candidates in my opinion. I urge every student to get out and vote during the upcoming elections. I urge you to vote for Mike Pillagalli. Mike has an outstanding record on campus , and he has repeatedly proven to us that he can and does get results. Mike will work for the entire student body, not for personal exploitation and glorification. Pillagalli is the kind of leader BSC needs today. Whil e others may stand up and oreate a show for worthless dramatic effect , Mike is the kind of leader that will progressively and steadily be moving toward our comm on goals. Take an interest in the CGA . p olitical campaigns and check into Mike Pillagalll's record . Then , ask yourself "Do I want progress , real progress , or do I want fanfare?" If you want progress , give Pillagalli your support. "Don 't settle — select. Vote Mike Pillagalli. '' Sincerely, Gary Blasser Ba, Ba... (co nti nue fr om page two ) Optn 'til 12:00 p.m. Cloud 1,30 to 3,00 p.m. Bvry Day Bur Friday Fftll DILIVIIY 5 to 7 8:30 toll.30 Regular and King Size HQA GIBS Phone 784-4292 127 W. Main BLOOMSBURG Huskiette s €> | Harry Logan SHOP Repairing Your J twtltt Away fro m Horn * 'W. Main St. ^m ^ g^^^ m^g^gj i^M^m^g^gg^^^ • .^^^mgHH^^ I W * 112 W. Main Bloomsburo i MMmSttSWSQMMV PERFORMANCES •t f t l l l RE00RDINQ8 ft fx IJ^ ATALOW , LOW oisV yy IJlil I M n ")>J rwH TO 0H008E FROM !J-IU rJDj iiLb INOLUDINO NEW RELEASES , ¦ m :Mgi ' v«ar stereo »at: The College Sto re * —a play about student revolution "We are hemmed in on •very side by the mass ed hords of an Impote nt Eunarchy, those who have castrated themselve s and whose sole aim is t o compromise the manhood of our societ y. I know now that we must take matters into our own hands. " University Theatre Bucknell University March 6, 7, 12. 14 8:30 p.m. tickets - $1.75 and $2.00 for reservations call 524-1235 ¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ • " •:•.,<-%.r ./ ;, S" " v ,m j Write Ithaca Cottage for Summer Session Pictoral Review LOSE YOURSELF IN EDUCATION AND RECREATION OPPORTUNITIES ' LiberalArts Program Humanities Natural Science Social Science Communications Arts Physical Education Program SfMWM ON THESE OUTSTANDING VALUES STEREO © RECORDS , * « . ,,, I' CAN HAVE JVJ®fi -g U and his strug gle against the Eunuchs " GRILL E I DRESS AND "Little Macolm WAFFL E : Fine J ewelry Lambda Aipna mw sorority recently accepted eighteen girls into its sisterhood. The new sisters are Corine Dungey, Sharon Turner , Karren Winkler , Claudia Schad, Wendy Willi ams, Margie Gallagher, Linda Miller , Alice Witmer , Nancy Smutny, Pam Yablonski , Susan Green, Pat Noble , Sally Harrison , Karen Sabath , Kathi Flanagan , Jennifer M oyer, Mary Lou Rouse and Judy Yapsuga . Activities planned for the rest of the year include a Fund Raising raffle afte r Easter to collect mone,y for a Korean child. BLOOM BOWL MAREE'S Charlie ' s PIZZA A HOAGIES Misericordia , 35-27. Their .moment of glory was interrupted once by Marywood Colle ge who came into the game with an undefe ated record and handed Bloomsburg its first loss thus far this season . The girls will meet with Muhlenberg Thursday away and their final game of the season will be played against BuckneU Univer» sity at home on March 10, 4:00 had groovy movements and made all her lines work — she never lost a laugh . Alan Klawitter as the preacher weekday s 7-10 p.m. 1-1 0 p.m. College Night only $1.00 per person could have used a bit more fire and brimstone at times , but he picked up well in act two. Jim Berkheiser , as Uncle Smelicue , was sometimes hard to understand , and sometimes played the old man a little too lightly. Berkheiser , however, is one of BSC 's better character actor s . It' showed . Mr . Riehey, Mr . MeHale, Har ry Berkheiser , Fran Keller , Becky E rmisch , and all others who were in any way responsible for the sound, lights , costumes, choreography, and set deserve double applause. r\evi ew ( continued from page two) WONDERVIEW SKI AREA Monday >— Lambda Alpha Mu Dear Editor , I would like to bring to your attention the monstrous, uncall* ed for activity that went on this of the w e e k e n d . One campus fraternities is now in the midst of its spring pledging activities. During the event of this p ledging. Zeta Psi pledges were ordered to castrate a lamb. Being pledges , the students were forced to obey the orders. When such inane, anti-SPCA. and horrible things happen on (co ntinued f ro m page thnte ) this campus , then something note defeating Keyshould be done about it. Does victorious stone Job Corps , Luzerne Bloomsburg want to get a name County Community34-40 College in a as a castrator ot lambs. Today double overtime 51-47, V'ilkes the lamb , tomorrow the ? -42, Susquehanna University Animal Lovers 49 35-27, and their latest opponent eJLetlen To every BSC Student , CGA primary elections closed Thursday, March 5, 1970, resulting in M ike Pillagalli and Dudle y Mann being chosen to Our Bloomsburg '70 team consists of Betsy Lucadamo and Dora Helle gas, co-captalns: Janet Santo, Nadine Drayton, Kathy Siteleckis, Debbie Atrz,. Fr an Holgate , Mar g Boyer , Che-Che Dimmlck, Sue Mitchell, Pat Pursell, and Peg Fitchko. Miss Joanne McComb coaches the women 's team , and Is aided on the sidelines by head cheerleader "Jumping " Joan Auten. j i Health j Recreation A thletics Performing Arts Program Fine Arts ! I Film Music Radio-TV Theatre ' ! j PROGRAM FOR ALL i i 1 " i, > ' * * K s + * * +> ' * - s ** - >><* "." '- S *W- - j