Morgenthau - Salisbury Lead Speakers List For Histo ry Conf. Fr/ orp mthau ^alidburu Harrison Salisbury, Pulitzer Hans J. Morgenthau , professor Prize winning reporter , author , of P olitical Science and Modern History at the University of Chi- one of the Assistant Managing cago will deliver the key mornin g E ditors of the New York Times address at BloomsburgState Col- and an expert on Russian -Chinese lege on April 27 to the Third An- relations , will be at Bloomsburg nual History Conferenc e, the State College on April 27 to speak on "United States , China , Soviet theme of which is the Cold War. The title of Dr. Mor genthau ' sad- Relations and the Cold War " as dress will be "Vietnam and the a featured speaker to the Third Gold Wai* »» Annual History Conference the theme of which is "The Cold Professor Morgentha u came to War " . the United State s from Germany In June 1969 , Mr . Salisbury rein 1937. Durin g his three decades here he has been a shar p and con- turned from a 25 ,000 mile journey structive spokesm an for and crit - to the heart of the troubled ic of American military and for- zone on the Asian continent • the eign policy decisions. He has ser- Sino-Soviet Frontier . For the ved as Consultan t to the Depart - fourth time he visited Mongolia , ment of Defense and as Senior the remote buffer state between Fellow of the Council on Foreign the Communist giant s. He has asRelations. As a lecturer he had sessed the critical tensions beaddressed the Air , Army , Naval tween Russia and China along and National War Colleges , and their frontier and in the listen * has spoken before the Inter - ing posts of Tokyo , Hong Kong, American and Nato Defense Col- Seoul, Moscow, London and Paris . His dispatches from the leges. Dr . M orgentha u is widely pub- area pinpointed the mountin gdanlished. Among his most widely gers on new war on the Asian continent , and by the year 's end acclaimed volume s are "Vietnam and the United State s" (1965), he had drawn together his exper ?'Politics Among Nations *' (4th iences into a single perspective ed. rev. 1967), and "New F oreign which he published in "W ar BePolicy for the Unit ed States " tween Russia and China ," 1969 also saw the publication (1969). In writing and on the speaker 's of Mr . Salisbury 's best selling book , "The 900 Days: The Siege platform Professor Morgenthau has never been a man to mince of Lenin grad" and "Marshal Zhu wor ds. To the millions of Amer - kov 's Greates t Battles " , which icans facing honest confusion or Mr . Salisbur y edited and wrote the introducti on and comment ary . painful self-app raisal , he brings Two years befor e Harrison stimulatin g fresh ideas and a str ingent judgment , couched in com- Salisbury with the approval of the U .S. Department of Stat e pelling language. made a journey to North Viet, nam , and his report of that visit for the New York Times made fr ont-page headlines , and result - uarM ZJeacn - ^rn High point of Environmen tal Awareness Week' s "Ear th Day Teach -In " at Bloomsbur g State College will be Wednesday, April s 22, when a series of sessions with topics of environmental concern will be conducted through * out the day and evenin g. The public is Inv ite d to at t en d an y or all of the events of the day. The program at the college is under the direction of various student committees workin g with members of the faculty as advisors . Environmental A w a r eness Week can best be celebrated as an opportunity of the Individual . The individual must realize that he is the basic unit of stren gth . In an effort to bring attention and act ion to our living world , affected by the misused powers of man , various groups have be* (continued on page eight ; Students Back Casey %f gun movements toward Impro ving th e environment . M ovements in environm enta l concern span an d overla p various Internati onal, national , state , and local levels. E nvironmen ta l A v a r eness Milton Shapp, one ot t he six Democratic candidates for governor , rece ived a set-back over the weeken d as t h e P enns ylvan ia State Association of Student Governments convent ion overwhelmingly endorsed his chief opponent Auditor General Robert P . Casey. Both Casey and Shapp addressed t h e convent ion , attended by officers of BSC' s student government as well as those of the other state colleges. Casey told the convention that if he Is elected governor the Commonwealth' s 14 state col le ges will "no longer be the orphan s of our educ ational system, " He also stat ed that "the only feasible way of making the state solvent" was throu gh enactment of a personal Income tax " coupled with meaningful tax reform . " Touchin g on a variety of subject s that involve state college (co ntinued on page eight) (continu ed on page eight ) All applications for the position of editor-in-chief of any of the campus publications mutt be in by Friday, April 17th. News Briefs Science C~onf . Dr . Michael Herbert and Mr. Craig Himes of the Bloomsburg State College biology department atte nded the annual meeting of the Penns ylvania Academ y of Science at Juniata College , Huntingdon , Pa . While at the meeting they pre sente d papers concerning the results of investigations of the chemical and biological aspects of water quality. One of the bodies of water studied was the Susquehanna River. BSC grad uate students who participated in the limnological and microbiological research projects are James Steber , Thomas Marnell and Richard Rimple . tKickman f 'ubti&kmd THE NEW RAMBLE R , the official journal of the Johnson Society of London , has accepted "The Political Sermons of Johnson and Swift" by Dr. Jordan Richman , English Department of BSC , for publication in its Jan uar y, 1971 issue. While Jon athan Swift as Dean of St. Patrick s Cathedral in Dublin wrote sermons as part of his profession , Samual Johnson gnost wro te his sermons for other ministers. The posth umous pub lication of these sermons established his authorship . Dr . Rlchman 's article is primarily a compari son of those sermon s by Swift and Johnson which deal with thr ee political topics of their time: the execution of Char les I . the dan gers of bearing false witness in the body politic , and the destru ction of the Ide al of br otherly love through political strife . Dr . Richm an is collecting materia l for a future book on the subj ect of religious literat ure in the eighteenth century . An Injunction was served on Dr. Robert J. Nossen, President of BSC, Thursd ey, which en |olned t he college f r o m suspendin g Dudley M«nn. ..Mann filed a com plain t in the U. 8. Middle Distr ict Court In Lewlsbur g, alleging violatio n of his Constitutional rights, Including "due process. " As a result of the co m* lalnt Judge Frederick V. R oMmer Issued the Injunction In orde r fhat a hearin g may be held Monday, April 20, In the U. 5. District Cou rt In Lewltbur g Colle ge officials will have no statemen t to make unti l they "have had an o pprt unlt y to »fody the court order. " They will probably seek assis tance from the State At* toicioy OeneraU Nossen Signs PHEAA Agreement (b) Each Institution of higher As a result of recent legislaeducation shall immediate ly fur tion enacted by the Pennsylvania nish to the Agency, the name and General Assembly, amendin g the address of any student who is a Pennsyllaw which affects the resident of the Commonwealth of Higher Education Assistvania Penn sylvania who is expelleu, ence Agency, Dr. Robert J. Nosdismissed or denied enrollment Bloomsbur g President of sen , State College , signed an agree - for the reasons set forth in clause (2) (of subsection (a) of thi s secment with the PHE AA on March tion) or of whom the institution 13, 1970 which affe cts the conof higher educati on has knowledge tinued eligibility of students attendin g the college. that he has been convicted of ofIn a letter from Kenneth R. fense as set forth in clauses (1) and (3) (of subsection (a) of this Reeher , Executive Director of PHEAA to Dr. Nossen (pr ecedin g section). (c) Nothing in this section shall the signing of the agreement by an extract from the be construed to limit the free Dr . Nossen), dom of any student to verbal esamendments enacte d specifies pre ssion of individual views or that The Agency may deny all opinions. forms of financial assistance to (d) Any institution of higher any student : 1 . Who is convicted by any learning which refuses to execute court of record of a crimi nal of- an agreement with the Agency to comply with subsection (b) of thi s fense which was committed after section shall be denied the status the effective date of this act which , under the laws of the Uni- of an approved institution under the provisions oi this act.*1 ted States or Pa., would constitute Mr . Reeher also requested that a misdemeanor involving moral the college begin providing the tur pitude or a felony ; or 2. Who has been expelled, dis- Agency with the name and address of students as required by submissed , or denied enrollment by any app roved institution of high- parag ra ph (b) of the quoted legiser learnin g for refusal to obey, lation . The effective date of the after the effective date of this legislation was October 29 , 1969 . A decision as to eligibility of such act , a lawful regulation or order of any institution of higher learnstudents for loans or scholarship ing, which refusal , in the opinassistance will be made upon ion of the institution , contributed comp letion of the Agency evaluato a disru ption of the activities , tion of each individual case. administration classes of such The pro vision for denying an institution : or institution appro val to participat e 3 . Who has been convicte d in in eithe r the PHEAA Scholarship any court ot record of any ofor Loan Guarant y Progr am will fense committed in the course of be effective from the 1970-7 1 acdisturbing , interfering with or ademic year . Scholar ship awards pr eventing , or in an atte mpt to or loan guaranties or any re newdisturb , Inte rfere with or pre vent al thereof will not be issued to the orde r ly conduc t of the activapplicant s for the 1970-7 1 acad ities , administration or classes emic year unless the institution of an Institution of higher educat h ey pl an to at ten d h as execute d tion . the attached agreement . Poll Indicates Loca ls Uninformed By Louis T . Nay A public opinion poll conduct * ed in Bloomsbur g, Pennsylvania last March has revealed significant information about the attU tu des of the American electorate towar d the government' s policies in Southeast Asia . Accordin g to the survey, only about half of the voters interviewed und er * stan d the natur e of President Nixon 's "Vietnamiza tion " policy, and fewer than one fourth of them could tell , within 100 ,* 000, the number of American troo ps in Vietnam , The poll also showed that less than a third of those questioned approve of further United States . military commitment in Laos , Bloomsbur g, Pennsylvania is a typical smal l town of the kind generally thought to be Presi . dent Nixon's greatest source of stren gth . The population of Bloomsbur g is about 10,000 , w ith a mixed agricultural and Indus * trial econom y. Voter registration ft predominantly Republican and the region regularly sends conservat ive members to both the state and national legislatures , 3 per cent of all voters registered in' Bloomsbur g wer e interv iewed on a single Saturday by volunteer colleee students , The sam ple was controlled according to sex , age, geographical location , and political party , In or der to Insure that the results woul d be typical of the entire com * ntiinftw Here are the quest ions asked and the results: 1, Do you support President Nixon 's Vietnam policy? ANSWERS: Yes,..63 per cent No 22 per cent - DON'T KNOW - ... (continue d on page eight ) Judas Maccabaeus Editori al 'In these days of trouble , -weeks of trouble. . .we all have a friend who tells us, *you don*t have it so bad, look at that guy' and you look at that guy , and he's got it worse than you. . ."•#¦ About 150 student leaderswent to the Pennsylvania State Association of Student Governments Convention last week with their own tr oubles: Professor J.Smith at Indiana University , after re. ceiving one of the highestratings in a student evaluation or professors, had not granted tenure for such reasons as 'moving furniture in his class room'; Michael Kay had been fired at West Chespolitical activities; ter for Bloomsburg had just witnessed the suspension of a student with q uestionable use of due process. M ost of the schools complained of antiquated judicial systems, lack of money, and student govern ments given the minimum of respect and power, and the maximum of derision. All fourteen schools had their own troubles but no one knew h ow bad things really were . In an unprecedented action , the Board of Presidents of PSASC p roposed "7 Days of Disappointment ," to last from April 18th to April 25th. The resolution sponsored by BSC 's Jeffery Prosseda, states : I would like to move that PSASG dedicate April 1S-25 as "1 Days of Disappointment" dedicated to the abolishment of "Student Ignorance", Faculty indifference in the college community and "Administrative pacification." It should be noted that this action does not belittle, in any manner , the actual progress that each of our colleges has made in the past month, however,- it does emphasize the lack of cooperation of students — faculty — and administration. The red-arm bands protest the students who satisfy themselves with mediocracy, with knowing half-truths and who do not recognize the stability, validity and pow er of our government associations; against faculty who disregard their responsibilityas an integral part of the acade mic college community and who substitute the manufacture of molded and stero-typed college graduates in place of involved , dynamic, and educated graduates; lastly , this week will protest the common administration policy of keeping the students "happy ** by throwing them tid-bits of authority and responsibility in an effort to supplement the often emaciated morale of the students , and those administrators ( continued on page eight ) Letters to the Edito r To Potential Committee Members: I would like to make a reply to Gary Blasser 's letter concerning Disappointment Week . Gary suggests that showing the administration that we are disappointed in our school is not the right way , but that all people disappointed should sign up for committees and make changes within the machine. I am on the CGA Ad Hoc Committee on the Joint Statement on Student Rights and Freedoms and am totally disillusioned. At the recent meetings a system for amending the Joint Statement was written up while the administr ation will not even follow the alread y stated rights! The Dining Room Committee might hav e been "where its happening" but my committee is totally irrelevant to righ ts and academic freedom. I am disapj>omt«"i w;»i my committee and rr.y stz/yj.. I am going to resign frorr. tte c>rr.mittee as soon as I fix»i '-nr. w:i'_ to resign to and a& y oc* i»-i*t i-f.« to 1r«ss ass czii fill r.v yjfj ^ x ' .. b-'j '. it? iir -Ji 1970 Voi 197? Dear Editor: I am Writing this letter to j > quire about the supposedly bril liant n.ove by the adnu tistraux. and board of trustees oo&cerrune commencement for August, 1S?O graduates. If what I hear is correct, why can't there be a com mencement for August graduates , I hear we must in all actuality wait until January, 1971, to have commencement. I think this is very ki nd of the board of trustees to invite us back in 1971 to graduate fr om 1970.1 and quite a few other 1970 graduates are quite infuriated we cannot graduate with commencement ceremonies. Half of us don 't even know where we will be January, 197 1. We worked quite dili gently for four years, and paid quite a bit of money lor our education, so why can't we graduate, get our PERMANE NT iipioirA not a temporary certificate , and have comrriencerrient wher. we are supposed to? After all we paid for this service . ] personally am quite angry sluc repressed 1 cannot have 'j 'j mmeii'j eiuem il August, I fc.n. liiuEiifeci ii. J une and must vtr. " month* tt iiave commencement . It it t disgrace lor a col.*£* v. be b'. inconsiderate , after i-.. : an. fc i?*? : grac not a IS*71 prfcauai*. what goad are our v -ifctE rings vitt liTj on them , mfcvt* sue boar d cat change their cat'-* v, i?7 ] . I think ii we cannot ufcvt cj ir-iiieiicemtnt id August, ttit ifcfcsi trie coiieg* can do 16 it*, ue iav* it May . 1&70, and a*: ue corti * back this summer ioz J'U2 2 or C creditB. Johii bernaojiJ , August VeTj grit*? Cfaar l« H ughes ( continued en poo*t) MAROO N AND COLD VOL. XLVIII NO 41 MICHAEL HOCK EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Business Manager dor Kwimn Managing Editor Bill Tohwort h Nows-Editor Marti n Kleiner Ce-Featurt Editors .. Ginny Patter, Allan Maur»r Sport s Editors .. Clark Roch A Jack Hoffman Photo gra phy Editor Mark Fovcart Copy Staff Kay Hahn, Carol Oswald , Irono Golyci Circulation Manager Linda Innis Advisor Mr . Michaol Stanley ADDITIONAL STA FF : Tar ry Ma ss, John Stvgrin, Bob Schul tt, Sally Swttland , Dava KeHer , Stanley Bunslck , Jim Sachott), Frank Clifford , Velma Avery, Carol Kit hbaufh, Pat Jacobs. Air opinion * oxprouo d by columnist *and foatur o writers, including fotfors -to-fho eace. JUDAS MACCABAEUS was first performed at the Theatre Royal in Concert Grande April 1, 1747. During Handel's lifetime the oratorio was performed 55 times . MACCABAEUS ranks next to MESSIAH in the popularity of Handel's many oratorios.Some of the famous choruses and arias in the work are Halleluja h, Amen!, Hail, the Conquering Hero Comes, Sound an Alarm, Father of Heaven , and Hail , Hail Judea Happy Land . MACCABAEUS is full of stiring music that retains its power 223 years after its first performance. Its music is particularly appealing to young people-and has quickly become one of the Concert Choir 's favorite works . merry-go-round. They start off as puppets and turn into real men. A shell bursts , the men are killed and all that's left on the screen is a broken toy merry-go-round going 'round and 'round and .... Cut to the theatre at the far end of the pier . Inside, Maggie Smith Is telling the eager boys In the audience that "I Can Make a Man Out of You ", At the end of the song, sho promises a kiss to every boy that enlists . Eager boys rim up to the stage, Maggie and her chorus girls disappear, and the boys find themselves Hnad up in full uniform next to a troop train, Sound crazy? Not roally . Ever see the promises on those recruiting posters in your local post office? Think a- In the middle of the pier is an ornate, ivory white ballroom , complete with balcony and walls that seem to fade into the mist of another world, WE're in that ballroom now with the heads of state from all the major countries In Europe , At the moment , they are having their picture taken . The photographer hands Archduko Ferdinand of Austria a red poppy and he falls dead . The n , while four soldiers roll up a run map of Europe , the English Prlmo Mln> ister apologizes to the head ofthci German Army telling him that there will be a war betweon tliu lw.il> II Cut to a sick-train arrivin g two countries and ho Hlncoruly the hopes "It will be of nhort A director plus Hollywood astronauts Crenna, Franciscus and Hackman were able to do what few , if any film makers had done before them — see and hear the real astronauts Frank Borman, William Anders , and Jim Lovell as they went through their duties in space, thus providing an accurate blueprint of what they themselves later would do before the cameras. Lee Grant , Nancy Kovack and M ariette Bartley are co-starred. The terro r and beauty of outer space back ground the drama and tensi on of Marooned, which tolls of three U. S. "?•"onauts stranded in space while Mission Cont rol works fran tically to rescue them. The cast inclu des Gregory Peck, Richard Croma , David Jansson , Gene Hackman and Jam es Franclscu s, Lee Grant , Nancy Kovack and Marlette Hartley co-star. ¦ ¦«k A XI ^XBt uuau uii. es, spent weeks at both Cape Kennedy and Houston. Scriptwriter Mayo Simon spent hours listening to space program workers ' dialogue, the idiomatic speech so peculiar to this "group of people . He also watched their reactions to crisis , observed their relationship to each other , and came away impressed , and perhaps awed, by the people, from the astronauts to the ground crews to the wives of the per- Xett.r * (continued on page two) nl *n 6 Jrnnuma nity ZJo f f l an n To the Editor of the Maroon and Gold: In light of Editor in Chief Hock' s art icle in the Forum on Friday, March 20th , defending Dean Hunslnger and Dean Norton from my charges of violatin g the Jt , Statement , I would like to direct the following questions to Dean Hunsin ger. 1, Why was it necessar y for Hoc k to write your defense? Can 't you let the facts defend you , or did you , lacking facts , feel the need to stren gthen your defense by clothin g It in M ike 's authority ? 2. Did you know that you apparently violated the Jt , State ment again (page 10, 11) by question ing Hock' s "approval of con* tent " and by compromising his Independence as editor of what' s supposed to be a "student " publication and not an administrative or gan (Jt , Statement , pg, 11)? 3V Did you know that Pres , Nossen has labelled as "uneth ic- al" , faculty members who " use" students and dictate letters to them ? CThere is no evidence that Dr . Primack or I or any other faculty member have dictated any letters , but Mike has stated that the major content of his article was a paraphrase of your remar ks.) 4, Is it true that in 1968 you signed a petition calling for the investigation and suspension of faculty member s who supposedly dictated what Lyle Slack wrote in the Gadfly? (What they actual , ly told Slack was to tone down his attacks on various administrators . 5. If my char ges against you are false or misleadin g, why not pr ove them so with a signed arti cle In the M&G Instead of brin ging me before Dean Hoch on a ser ies of non-specific char ges such as "Falsification of facts to both students and facult y "? What fact s? 8, Did you know that if you could prove me false in even one par ticular , I am pre pare d to mak e a public apology and retraction , and that if you could show me as being wro ng In the majority of cases I would withdraw from any fur ther involvement with non» academic student affairs? 7, If you really are following proper procedures as Hock' s ar ticle claims , why are the Executive Council , Dean Norton , and the Men 's Judiciar y contin uing, apparently , to violate the Jt . Statement , the 5th amendment , and the 14th amendment in the Cand y Bar Case and in Dudley 's case? Why do you continue to allow a Student Facult y Judiciary to exist on which there are four administrators in violation of the $t . Statem ent , (pg. 20)? 8, Don't you believe, as a good Christian , that the Candy Bar Kid s and Dudley have been punish * ed sufficiently for their alleged transgressions? Aren 't $1,000 lawyer fees and the anxiety about havin g an arrest record for a felony for the rest of their lives enough , without also disrupt ing their education with double ana triple Judicial pro ceedings on campus and frightenin gthem with possible suspensions ? 9, Did you know I agree with yon on one thing at least? That the vast > majority of students , faculty , and pr obably administr ators don 't care about possible inhumanities and possible violations of school law . And that the (continued on page seven ; Judas Maccabaeus Edit orial "In these days of trouble, weeks of trouble. . .we all have a friend who tells us, 'you don 't have it so bad, look at that guy' and you look at that guy , and he's got It worse than you. . ."*" About 150 student leaders went to the Pennsylvania State Association of Student Governments Convention last week with their own troubles: Professor J.Smith at Indiana University, after receiving one of the highest ratings In a student evaluation or professors, had not granted tenure for such reasons as 'moving furniture in his class room '; Michael Kay had been fixed at West Chesp olitical activities; ter for Bloomsburg had just witnessed the suspension of a student with questionable use of due process. Most of the schools complained of antiquated judicial systems , lack of money , and student governments given the minimum of respect and power, and the maxliuuui ui uensiun . All fourteen schools had their own troubles but no one knew how bad things really were. In an unprecedented action , the Board of Presidents of PSASG proposed "7 Days of Disappointment ," to last from April 18th to April 25th. The resolution sponsored by BSC's Jeffery Prosseda, states: I would like to move that PSASG dedicate April 18-25 as "7 Days of Disappointment" dedicated to the abolishment of •?Student Ignorance", Faculty indifference in the college community and "Administrative pacification." It should be noted that this action does not belittle , in any manner , the actualprogress that each of our colleges has made in the past month , however ,- it does emphasize the lack of cooperation of students — faculty — and administration. The red-arm bands protest the students who satisfy themselves with mediocracy, with knowing half-truths and who do not recognize the stability, validity and power of our government associations; against faculty who disregard their responsibility as an integral part of the academic college community and who substitute the manufacture of molded and stero-typed college graduates In place of involved , dynamic , and educated graduates; lastly , this week will protest the common administration policy of keeping the students "happy " by throwing them tid-bits of authority and responsibility in an effort to supplement the often emaciated morale of the students, and those administrators .. (continued on page eight) "Wi ll it come to th is?" Letters to the Editor * Potential Committee Mem- graduates . If what I hear is correct, To bers: I would Uke to make a reply to Gary Blasser's letter concerning Disappointment Week. Gary suggests that showing the administration that we are disappointed in our school is not the right way , but that all people disappointed should sign up for committees and make changes within the machine. I am on the CGA Ad Hoc Committee on the Joint Statement on Student Rights and Freedoms and am totally disillusioned. At the recent meetings a system for amending the Joint Statement was written up while the administration will not even follow the already stated rights! The Dining Room Committe e might have been "where its happening" but my committee is totally irrelevant to rights and academic freedom. I am disappointed with my committee and my school. I am going to resign from the committee as soon as I find out who to resign to and anyone who likes to kias ass can fill my position. BobStratton 1970 f l ta 1971 Dear Editor: I am writin g this letter to inquire about the supposedly bril liant n.ove by the ad ministration and board of trustees concernin g commencement for August , 1970 NO 41 Movie Review Wayne view you 've been fed all these year s but the maddening truth? Well then I' ve got a mov ie ivi yuu . Ever since World War II , Holly- wood has turne d out a num ber of MICHAEL HOCK EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Business Mana ger By Fred O. Seibel Courtesy Richmond Times-Dispatch why can 't there be a commencement for August graduates, I hear we must in all actuality wait until»January, 1971, to nave commencement, I think this is Ok Wkat ^4 very kind of the board of trustees to invite us back in 1971 to gradJIM SACHETTI uate fr om 1970.1and quite a few other 19*70 graduates are quite "HE Y YOU, Y' ever been to a infuriated we cannot graduate war?" with commencement ceremonies. "NO? Well come on man, we're Half of us don 't even know where goin ' to one now." we will be January, 1971. We "Whaddaya mean , you don 't worked quite diligently for four know what a war is?" years, and paid quite a bit of "Oh, I s e e OK , , explain: money for our education , so why Ya see boy, most lemme of the countries can't we graduate, get our PER- on this here earth are run by old MANENT diploma not a tempor- men who spent so much time getary certificate, and have com- ting where they are today that mencement when we are supposed most of them have for gotten what to? After all we paid for this like to live . Now every once it's service, I personally am quite in a while, these here old men angry and depressed I cannot get together and that may* have commencement in August, be the economy decide saggin s ' just a ' I am finished in June and must bit or maybe they figure that some wait 7 months to have commence- other group of old men is gettin ment . It is a disgrace for a col- a bit pushy. So all the old men' lege to be so inconsiderate , after get together and throw a war and all I am a 1970 grad not a 1971 invite all us young men to come graduate . What good are our kill the young men from some class rings with 1970 on them , and other country. But come on boy, maybe the board can change their ve done talkin '. You'll I' date to 1971. I think if we cannot like war a enough lot better when we get have commencement in August, there ," the least the college can do is Perha ps, but no let us have it May, 1970, and mor eMadness? or less t han th e madness let us come back this summer that is war itself Care to hear . for our 3 or 6 credits . more? Could your mind stand John Bernadyn, assaulted being by conversations August 1970 grad? like the one you 've J ust read ? Charles Hughes Want to see what a war is? Not (continued on page 3) that glorified , Joh n 'Oscar ' MAROON AND GOLD VOL. XLVIII dor Remsen Managing Editor Bill Teitsworth News-Edi tor Martin Kleiner Co-Feature Editors . . . . Ginny Potter , Allan Maurer Sports Editor * Clark Ruch A Jack Hoffm an Photo gra phy Editor Mark Foucart Copy Staff Kay Hahn , Carol Oswald , Irene Oulyet Circulation Manager Linda Ennis Advisor ... Mr . Michael Stanley ADDITIONAL STAFF: Terry Blast , John Stugrln , Bob Schul ti , Sall y Swetland , Dave Keller , Stanle y Bunslclc, Jim Saehett ), Frank Clifford , Velma Avcry, Carol Klihbaugh, Pat Jacobs. Air opinions expresse d by columnists and feature writer s, includin g lotters-to-thc -edltor , »f not necessarily thos e of this publicatio n but those of the Indivi duals. The Bloomsburg State College Concert Choir will present Handel's dramatic oratorio JUDAS MACCABAEUS Sunday evening April 19 at 7:00 p.m . This is the last of the events in the week of activ ities honoring the inauguration of the college 's new presi- ' dent Dr . Robert J. Nossen A professional orchestra will accompany the choir and soloists will be Mary Decker— soprano, Beth Powlus— mezzo-soprano , Richard Stainislaw—tenor , Ti mothy Hoffman— bass, and Lois Stur gion— harpsichord. The story concerns the trials of the people of Israel during the years 166-161 B.C . As the oratorio opens , the Israelites are lamenting the death of their leader , Mattathias, Their pray, ers for a new leader are answered as Judas Maccabaeus , son of Mattathias Is persuaded to lead them in battle. This relatively simple skirmish the Isrealites rejoice and celebrate. The victory is short-lived, however , when a messenger brings news that the King of Syria is sending a mighty army to destroy the Temple , The people purge the Temple where the invaders have performed pagan rites and vow to worship God alone. The Israelites then celebrate the Feast of Lights in the recovered sanctuary. A messenger rushes in with the news that Judas has won the battle. Shortly thereafter Judas enters and orders prayers and honors for the dead . The Senate has signed a treaty guaranteeing the freedom and independence of Judaea. The oratorio ends with a paean in honor of peace. JUDAS MACCABAEUS was first performed at the Theatre Royal in Concert Grande April 1, 1747 , During Handel's lifetime the oratorio was performed 55 times . MACCABAEUS ranks next to MESSIAH in the popularity of Handel's many oratorios .Some of the famous choruses and arias in the work are Hallelujah, Amen I, Hail, the Conquering Hero Comes, Sound an Alarm, Father of Heaven, and Hail, Hail Judea Happy Land. MACCABAEUS is full of stiring music that retains its power 223 years after its first performance. Its music is particularly appealing to young people and has quickly become one of the Concert Choir 's favorite works . ant i-war movies but their messa ges have too often been burled beneath their plot s and battle scenes . But now, England , a country that' s seen mor e th an its . shar e of madness , has sent us what has to be the most str ikingly effective anti-war movie ever mad e , "Oh Wha t a Lovely War ." UNREAL "Oh What a Lovely War " is not war as you ' ve grown accustomed to see in g it . It' s not ba ttles and gutsy speeches and more battles woven aroun d some singular plot . Instea d , it' s an unrea l pre sentat ion of a war that was pai nfully real . To put it simply, war is pure , unadulterated madness and th is movie is the most frighten ing portrait of that madness ever put on film . Jo».l9 U'ar "Oh What a Lovely War " has some of the best English actors and actresses of our time in a most unreal setting. Vanessa Redgrave , Sir Laurence Olivier, Maggie Smith, Susannah York, Dick Bogards, John Mills and a host of others look like nameless faces at some mad carnival, Richard Attenborough, in his debut as a director , has taken these individual performances and put them into somethin g larger that whirls before your eyes like a merry-go-round gone mad, THE PIE R At a seaside resort inEngland, a pier j uts out into the English Channel, Over the entrance to the pier , a thousand lights spell out its name: WORLD WAR ONE . A poster on the ticket booth proclaims: GAMES BATTLE S AND A FEW JOKES In the middle of the pier is an ornat e, ivor y white ballroom , complete with balcony and walls that seem to fade into the mist of another world . WE' re in that ball room now with the heads of state fro m all the maj or countries in Europe , At the moment , they are having their picture taken . The photo grapher hands Archduke Ferdi nand of Austria a red poppy and he falls dead . Then , while four soldiers roll up a rug map of Europe , the English Prime Minister ap ologizes to t h e head of the German Army telling him that there will be a war between the two countr ies and he sincerely hopes "it will bo of short dur ation " . The Germa n leader acknowled ges the apology and expresses his regret while the phot ographer confides in us that World War One has just begun Sound different ? That ' s only the beginning . C ut to the beach outs ide where crowds of elated English men , women and children are crowding up to the ticket booth where they pay with their name and are ad mitted to World War One , inside , a french fry stand selling its prod uct wrap ped in a newspaper with tne ominous headline : BE LGIUM OVER RUN . Next to it , a puppet show featur ing the Fre nch Army on a merry- go-round . They start off as puppets and turn into real men . A shell bursts , the men are killed and all that 's left on the screen is a br oken toy merry- go-roun d going 'round and 'round and .... Cut to the theatre at the far end of the pier . Inside , Ma ggie Smith is tellin g the eager boys in the audience that "I Can Mak e a Man Out of You " . At the end of the song, she pr omises a kiss to every boy that enlists . Eager boys run up to the stage, Mag gie and her chorus girls disappear , and the boys find themselves lined up in full unifor m next to a troo p train . Sound craz y? Not re ally. Ever see the promises on thos e recruiting posters in your local post office? Think aUVIUV 1b , Cut to a sick-train arrivin g back in England , probabl y the most terrifying scene in the movie, A half dead , wounded soldier is being carried fro m the train . His lieuten ant stops the litter bearers and leans over the stre tcher: "Don 't worry boy, we 'll soon have you back at the fr ont " . The soldier smiles . It' s Christ mas now , 1915. Rich Industriali st , Dick Bogarde , and his girlf riend , Susanannah York ^ are at a gala party in the pier 's ballroom : Bogarde: "Out of respect for our boys at the fr ont , this Christmas I rofused to drink any of my (continued on page 3) "Maroo ned" in Space itor? Can someone who believes in PEACE be called atr aitor? Can (conti nued from page two ) someone be dammed for refusing to serve those men who danced German 'wine, beneath that Scoreboard? Think One way to become an expert York: "Why darling, I think about it. in a subj ect is to make an honest German wine, It's 1917 now, A youn g officer and truly realistic motion picture York: "Why darling, I think climbs into the general 's obser- on that subj ect. It's the hard way, that's a lovely gesture." When vation tower above the pier: but the end result can be pretty I saw that , I couldn 't h e l p Officer: "This is not war sir satisfying not only to the moviebut think of all those "silent A- it is slaughter . When will it makers but to their audiences. merleans " who run around with end?" Such a film is "M arooned." those obscene bumper stickers General: "In the end , they will Five years in the making "Marand those flag decals (don't get have 5000 men and we will have ooned" is now playing at the Capme wrong, I think the flag is a 10,000 men Then we win ." itol Theatre . lovely gesture too) on their cars Think about.that. Story of three astronauts stranand are so proud of it . Patriot, Finally, there is one soldier ded in space, due to a malfuncism comes easy to those w h o left . He is following a bright red tion on their spacecraft , "M ardon't have to pay for it . Think ribbon that stretches out from his ooned" is also concerned with the about it. trench and into the mist . It leads desperate efforts of Mission ConIt's New Years now, 1916. In him to a staircase which he de- trol to effect a rescue while the the pier 's ballroom, generals, cends to find himself in the pier 's world watches. ambassadors and their wives are ballroom . In the middle of the "Marooned** is based on the dancing and sipping champagne room , four diplomats are seated novel by Martin Caidin, one of beneath a grotesque Scoreboard around a table, silently sienine America 's most distinguished which proclaims that 1,500,000 documents. Now the soldier be* writers on aviation and aeroallied men have died during the gins to run and he emerges from space. The authenticity ot the previous year 's fighting. Do you the mist in a field in which his film might almost be assured if suppose , just suppose , that some* little girl sits with her mother . the book itself had served as the where in this country today, there As he stands behind them , the script. exists such a Scoreboard? little girl asks: "Mommy, what Out of the pre-photography preSANITY did my daddy do in the war ." He paration of "Marooned" came an Now just about this time, I be* smiles, walks away and sits down unusual by-product. The memgin to wonder if there is any hope on the grass with several other bers of the team making the picfor the world or my sanity. Then soldiers. Then, they 're gone, and ture became among the best inI look and there is Vanessa Red. all that's left are white crosses . formed laymen in the country on grave, standing on a box and tell* As the camera ascends into the the United States space program. ing a crowd about the ierrible sky, there is only a little girl Associate producer Frank Capthings taking place across the walking among endless rows of ra , Jr., for instance, spent the Channel: "The sons of Europe crosses . better part of two years working are being crucified upon the barbThat closing shot is a most un- with engineers and scientists at ed-wire of France." A ray of forgettable ending to an unfor- Cape Kennedy, the Houston Space hope. Surely the crowd will re- gettable movie. Perhaps if it Center and the design and manualize. Surely they must have were shown every year to every facturing companies in Californseen that Scoreboard and the person, in every land all across ia learning about such technical wounded and dead. Surely they the face of the earth , then per - components as design , thrust , believe her . But then someone haps there would come a day when aerodynamics , budgets, space yells: "Pacifists is traitors." people would never think of say- equipment , weightlessness, etc. As she is being swept away by the ing, "Pacifists is traitors." Production designer L y 1 e crowd, I wonder: What is a tra- Think about it . Wheeler , as part of his immense to make sets look and ^b^b^b^b^b^b^bj ^b m 1 assignment m ^^^ m ^^ mm ^mb^b^b^b^bjj ^mm represent certain space complex- r flovie r\ eview I A Way To Go I by ALLAN M AURER O. K., it's inauguration week , lotsa academic tradition a n d stuff like that behind it...so even if my liberal friends hang me in effigy and two weeks from now I have to swallow every issue of the M&G that carries this article whole some good things have happened this year and now is as good a time as any to talk about .... fhom Academic reforms, inovations , *N so forth look promising...big, much needed curriculum liberalization , a pass-fail system , limited but helpful nonetheless; and the chance that the limitations may be trimmed exists...I think . Dr. Nossen has , up to now , kept his promise to meet with students whenever possible and has given hours of his time to the M&G , the Gadfly editors , and odd and sundry students who wished to talk with him as well as many student and mixed audience groups on camniifi. Also, insofar as the M&G is concerned Dr . Nossen has let his v iews be k nown to us , but has never commanded or di rected us to pr int or not print anything. ^ _JJ_ _ „ Women 's hours have been liberalized , again on a trial basis, .but again with the suggestion of coming permanence. Camp us parking has come a long, long, way. Off campus housing has, at least for seniors, come even further than campus parking. Churnings and gurgles and all sorts of sounds associated with change can be heard in many campus'nooks and crannys. Editors of campus publications received renumeration for their work.,.small b n ^ once again, promising. Promise is a good word when one discusses BSC...promise and potential. Plenty of both here. Of course that is a highly subjectlve evaluation...BSC has been good to me. Good to me gradewise, letting-me-in-ln-the-first •place, giving me money, oppor tunity, even something of an education. St il , as much as I like BSC , its greenness, its sometimes quaintness, sometimes austerity, sometimes cleanness , I will like it all the more if it fulfills its promise and its p otential. And it does have a way to go. .,. „ . .. .i. . v. .. *•- "Now may be they 'll be moved to do somethin g about tenter p ollution } " i es, spent weeks at both Cape Kennedy and Houston. Scriptwriter Mayo Simon spent hours listening to space program workers ' dialogue , the idiomatic speech so peculiar to this 'group of people. He also watched their reactions to crisis, observed their relationship to each other , and came away impressed , and perhaps awed, by the people, from the astronauts to the ground crews to the wives of the personnel. Producer M. J. Frankovich and director John Sturges, and their production team also spent many days in Florida and Texas getting the "f eel»» of the subj ect they were so intent on making into a dramatic film. "M arooned" was filmed, not only in Hollywood , but at C a p e Kennedy and Houston. Wherever possible, within the confines of 'what was practical , the "Marooned" team filmed at actual locations called for in the script. While this increased the drama of the film , it also created certain problems for ace cinematographer Daniel Fapp . Lighting and off-camera noises became difficulties to overcome. Getting a camera in and out of the way of actual working personnel at Cape Kennedy for instance, was a must and was handled smoothly by Fapp and his crew. A lot of things can and did happen during production of a big picture like "Marooned" which started shooting in midJJovember , 1968, and continued to midApril , 1969. M ost important to Messrs. Frankovich and Sturges was,perhaps, the exploratorv shot of Gregory Peck stars as chief of tho U. S. Manned Space Progra m and Marietta Hartley costars as the wife of one of tho three astronauts who are "M arooned " in outer space. Ap ol o 8, when the producer za A director plus Hollywood astronauts Crenna , Franciscus and Hackman were able to do what few , if any film makers had done before them — see and hear the real astronauts Frank Borman, William Anders, and Jim Lovell as they went through their duties in space , thus providing an accurate blueprint of what they themselves later would do before the cameras. Lee Grant, Nancy Kovack and M ariette Bartley are co-starred. The terro r and beauty off outer spaco background th« drama and tens ion off Marooned , which tolls off throe U. S. ••tronauts stranded In spaco while Miss ion Control works frantically to r««cu« thorn. Tho east inc ludts Grtgory Ptck , Richard Crenna, David Janss en, Gono Hackman and James Franeiseus , Loo Grant , Nancy Kovack and Mariet ta Hartley co-st ar. JLttitrd (contin ued on pago two ) ///#n 6 Jtn humanit y ZJo i f l an n To the Edit or of the Maroon and Gold: In light of Editor in Chief Hock' s art icle in the Forum on Friday , March 20th , defending Dean Hunsinger and Dean Norton from my char ges of violating the Jt , Statement, I would like to direct the following questions to Dean Hunsinger , 1. Why was it necessary for H ock to write your defense? Can 't you let the facts defend you , or did you , lacking facts , feel the need to strengthen your defense by clothin g It in Mike 's author ity? 2, Did you know that you apparently violated the Jt . State ment again (page 10 , 11) by ques tioning Hock' s "approval of con* tent " and by compromisin g his independence as editor of what' s supposed to be a "student " publication and not an administrati ve organ (Jt , Statement , pg, 11)? ; 3; Did you know that Pres , Nosson has labelled as "unethlc - al" , faculty members who " use" 7, If you really are following students and dictate letters to proper procedures as Hock 's ar them ? (There is no evidence that ticle claims , why are the ExecuDr . Primack or 1 or any other tive Council , Dean Norton , and faculty member have dictated any the Men 's Judi ciar y continuing , letters , but Mike has stated that apparently, to violate the Jt , the major content of his article Statement , the 5th amendment , was a paraphrase of your re- and the 14th amendment in the Candy Bar Case and in Dudley 's mark s.) 4. Is it true that In 1968 you case? Why do you continue to alsigned a petition calling for the low a Student Faculty Judiciary investigation and suspension of to exist on which there are four faculty members who supposedly administrators In violation of the dictated what Lyle Slack wrote St . Statement , (pg. 20)? in the Gadfly? (What they actual 8, Don't you believe, as a good ly told Slack was to tone down his Christian , that the Candy Bar attacks on various administraKids and Dudley have been punish tors ed sufficiently for their alleged 5, If my char ges against you trans gressions ? Aren 't $1,000 are false or misleadin g, why not lawyer fees and the anxiet y about pr ove them so with a signed arti - havin g an arrest record for a cle in the M&G Instead of brin g- felony for the rest of their lives ing me before Dean Hoch on a enough, without also disru pting ser ies of non-specific charges their education with double ana such as "Falsification of facts to triple J udicial proceedin gs on both students and facult y "? What campus and frightening them with possible suspensions ? facts? 9, Did you know I agree with 6, Did you know tnat li you could pr ove me false in even one par- you on one thing at least? That ticular , I am prep ared to make the vast > majority of stude nts , a public apology and retraction , faculty, and probably administr aand that if you could show me as t ors d on 't care about possible being wrong in the majority of inhumanities and possible viola* cases I would with draw from any tlons of school law . And that the further Involvement with nonacademic student affairs? (continued on page itvtn j ¦ Thata T«u Omtga performed "The Jet Seng" from West Side Story and walked off with first prize in the Greek Sing last Sunday. ^^ ^^ B9**"^^^BaaT .^gtf ^aV .^b)1bb1b\1bW Baa I g I Itff ™lA ^^a* * ^k ^H I ^^ B^sSBa ^gZ^^ ^^SB^ Hsa^ Ba^ssilSAW I v SIO, who won first in the fraternit y com petit ion, sing "Leaving on a Jet Plane" while Dave Mohartat participate s in some startling activities on the bed. Olympics day, held on th e hockey field , was made up of traditional (and some not so tradi tional) tra ck and fi eld events . ^^^^^^ ^^^ ^^H^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H^^^Aaa^^^AHAMavaBBBVaaSja BaBflBflBflBSSfel ^Bi^OI^KflHaBBBBBSAflaB ^ Jim McCu* of Delta Omega Chi put* •wa y tons of pie to win hit fraternity a spot In the thre e way ti t for first place In the pie eatin g contest Monday. The other winners were Iota Ptl and PI Iptllon Chi. Beginn ing the fourth annual Gr eek Week, H ¦ seven fraternitie s and five sororiti es step* ¦ ped to the Haas Auditorium stage Sunda y ¦ night to compete in a Greek Sing. ¦ The sororit y to win first place was Theta ¦ P Tau Omega , presenting "The Jet Song" ¦ from the West Side Story and "She Ain't ¦ Heavy, She ' s My Sister " , Theta Gamm a ¦ Phi placed second In the competition , ¦ In the fraternity competition , Sigma Iota ¦ Omega placed first with the "SIO Song" ¦ and "Leaving On A Jet Plane ", SIO was ¦ followed by Beta Sigma Delta In second ¦ place . ¦ ¦ The following night In Husky Loun ge, the ¦ fraternities competed in a pie eating con* ¦ test . After the stuffing was over , PI Epsilon ¦ Chi , Zeta Psl , and Delta Omega Chi wer e ¦ tied in first place . ¦ On the mud dy terraces in front of West Hall , the sororities and fraternities met in a physical endurance test disguised as a Tug-Of-War . Out lastin g all other sorori ties were the girls of Tau Sigma Pi , while the DOC-men placed first in the fraternity competition , Thursday night found the Greeks In Centennlal Gymnasium in an "open court" compet ition where there was runnin g,walk * Ing, tricycle ridi ng and clothes exchan ge races . Saturd ay afternoon , Olympics Day, began as all Olympics do with a torch carr y, Events for the day began on the hockey field and concluded at the Moose Home. Award spre sented at the dinn er that evenIng were Greek Woman of the Year -Ann Rusna k , Greek Man of the Year .Jim MeCabe, and ISC Scholarshi p-Ann Rusnak , Dr . Wa rren was also award ed a "Father of Fr aternit ies Award ". I H H ¦ ¦ H ¦ H H H H ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ H ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ^^^^^^^mg^^m^m^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ BKt^^^^m^m^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ M ^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^HWBBBBBBUBUBHHBBBBl ^HB^^^^BB^^^HBBI^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Chi Sigma Rho, took secon dIn the chariot race through the efforts of Ann Boytr and Joyce Borl and* as horses anrf Jan Franci s as a very app rehensiv epassenger . Cinderme n Win Two Straight Defeat Mansfie ld, Cheyney BSC wrestling coach Russell Houk can go on for hours talking about the highest attributes of his 1969-70 team captain, A r n o l d Thompson, Arnie is considered by Houk to be one of the best •wrestlers he has coached, Arnold graduated from Wash, ington High School, Washington , New Jersey, in 1966, I n high school he participated in football and wrestling. He earned 6 varsity letters in these sports. He also played catcher on the base* ball team . After talking with his coach. Houk persuaded Thompson to come to BSC. In his sophomore year Arnold posted a 7-5-1 record but did not place in the Pennsylvania championship tournament. Last season, his junior year, he fought to a 12-2- 1record and captured first place in the state tourney. Healso won the 150 1b. class at the Wilkes tournament as well as placing 4th in the NAIA. This year Arnold wrestled to a sterling 25-4 season, repeated in the state's only this year at 158 and placed third in the NAIA. After his graduation next January, Arnold hopes to teach and coach . He also hopes to keep wrestling competitively but that would depend on his job and his ability to keep his weight down during the off-season . His hom etown is hoping to hire him to coach , Of the 57 matches he wrestled to compile his three year record of 44-11-2, his best match was last year in the state finals when after forging a 15-5 lead he pinned his opponent to win the title. The match he best remembers was in the finals of the 1970 PS AC tournament . Down 4-2 , he took his opponent down to knot the score at 4-4. He rode for most of the rest of the match to win 6-5, W h e n Qu estioned on his thoughts about the race problem , Art ^d commented , "Athletes at BS^ are equal on the field , erorybody loves them , but off the field this is not always so." He says that the attitude of other students towards blacks stvould chan ge. They should accept the m for what they are as a person ra ther than jus t look at their skin and pronounce ju dg ement , Ar nold thinks that If this attitude does not change trouble could sprout . A rno ld went on to say t hat all athletes should be treated a little differently at Bloomsburg, "T think they should be able to eat to gether ," he said , "When you get done pra cticin g you don 't feel like waitin g for a meal . Ath letes should have a bigger voice and get involved in CGA , Alsohe said , Summer Baseball Anyone interest ed in playing base ball this summer In an organized men's lea gue , should be at the Catawls sa American Leg. Ion home Sunday April 10 , 1970, There will be team meeting and a practi ce will be held . Anyone who has never signed a major league contrac t is eligible , and aver y one will be given a f a i r chance to play . "Athletes travel the most and they can pick up the school's image.*' Arnold is a great wrestler .His loss can't help but hurt the team . The M&G sports staff 'would like to congratulate him on his great career and wish him good luck for the future . Women Win Champio nship This Saturday was the first home meet for the *Husky Track Team. After avlctory over Cheyney the Huskies were optimistic for their meet against Mansfield. Central Columbia 's track was anything but in good shape for a track meet. The track was the wrong size, the cinders were , packed loosely and the track re. sembles the beach after the first couple of events were run. There was a high wind and It was cold , consequently the times were poor on Saturday. The Huskies beat Mansfield by taking 15 of 17 first places and rolling up a score of 113 to 32. The only record breaking performance of the day came from John Ficek who broke the BSC record in the shot put with a throw of 46'9'\ This broke a record by J. Bonham which had stood since 1941. The old record was 46>6V9 »» Other good performanceswere turned in by Charlie Graham The faculty women copped the in the 440 yd, I .H . and as catch women 's intramural volleyball up man in the mile relay. Gary championship in the recent tour- Melhorn put in a banner perforney. There were four leagues mance when he beat Jim Cavelwith the winners of the league lero in the j avelin. Tim Waechplaying a double elimination tour- ter and Terry Lee continued to nament for the overall champion- take 1st place in the 2 mile run , and mile run respectively . ship . This is the second win in a row The members of the second place team who copped the hon- for the trackmen who hope to have ors for the first in league are: a tremendous season this year. Maggie Ennis, Captain; Sharon Their next meet is against KutzTurner; Sue Turner; Coline Dum- town, S.C. on Monday,ofbeating epy; Cathy Beinbich; Janet Kup- them could be the si^n great piness; Florence Nestavich; Ca- things to come for the cindermen rol Burns; Lori Robinson; and thi s season. 440 yard: 1. Masters, Eckert , Ki m Miller. Burger , Davis-b, 46.0 Shot Put : 1. John Ficek-B 2.M alcolm Flemming-B 3. Jim Cavallero-B, 46*9" a new BSC record. Mile Run: 1. Terry Lee-B 2.Tim Waechter-B Walls-M , 451.5 Delta Omego Chi recently spon- 120 H.H.: 1. Andy Kusma-B 2 . sored an annual power lifting, Raymond-M 3. Doug Marrow-B, tournament wh.«ch was taken to be 17.5 an outstanding success. A con- 440 yard : 1. Bruce Bittner-B 2. testant vies to lift the greatest Chan Favano-M 3. Graham-B, total weight from three separate 54.6 Pole Vault : 1. Tie-Rich Brand lifts. and Dale Muchler-B 3. Bevan -M , The outstanding lifter was Tony 10'6»» Grigor , a member of the Penn 100 yard Run : l .Davls-B 2 .BergState Barbell Club. Grigor won er-B 3. Moody-M, 10.3 the 198 lb. championship with a Broad Jump : 1. Boyce-M 2. Contotal weight of 1430 lbs. He dead stable-B 3. Eckert-B , 20»ll 3/4lf lifted 620 to compile the greatest Triple Jump : Boyce-M 2. RyznerB 3 . Eckert-B , 43' total of the tourney. 2 mile run: 1. Tim WaechterBSC's own John Oster won the B 2. Walls-M 3. Dewing-B, 242 lb. class with a combined 10:31.0 total of 1410 lbs. 1 mile Relay: 1. Lucysyn, Bittner, Graham , Davis-B, 344,9 The class winners were: Discus: 1. Keimer-B 2, Ficek-B 123 - Fred Glass, Surf BreakFlemming^B 3. , H2UV2 " ers Club, 885 lbs. 132 — Fred Lenny, No. Pocono Weight Lifting Club , 1000 lbs. 148 - Walt Pawlowski, West m Hazleton , unattached , 1085 lbs. 165 — Dave Santlch , Duryea , Scranton , Y.M.C.A., 1185 lbs. 181 - Bob Lacey, Wilk es-Bar^/ ¦r iaay Contact re , Wilkes College , 1345 lbs. 198 — Tony Grigor , Penn St. Jkt ^Kiny.... Barbell Club , 1430 lbs. 242 - John Oster , BSC , 1410 (j im Com#y lbs. Super Heavyweight — Al Treaster , Penn St. Barbell Club, 1425 lbs. Dr . Gilbert Selders Is the advisor of DOC and Joseph Bot. Uglier 1 was the tournament chairman. Pow er ^4u J Satlivan J4Jl\ P art, MAREE'S DRESS NESPOLI j jewelers 1 SHOP Fine Jewelr y and Wafc h Repair IS I. AUta St., liOOMUUM ii^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^ ; 1 112 W. Main The BSC cindermen opened their season last Wednesday by defeating Cheyney S.C; 97 to 48. The Huskies took 1st in 10 of 17 events to bring home an easy victory in their first meet . Standouts for Bloom were John Ficek who cam e within a foot of breaking the BSC shot put record , Andy Kusma who tied the school record in the 120 yd . high hurdles in a time of 15.2 and Jim Davis who clocked the 100 yd . in 9.8 just 1-10 of a second off the school record . Other high scorers in the meet werev Terry Lee with 1st in the mile and 2nd in the' V2 mile and Tim Waechter with first in the 2 mile and 2nd in the mile . Coach Puhl was happy with the team 's first meet since some of the key men on the team being freshmen in their first varsity meet, the Coach was pleased to see such outstanding perforYY\ f *T \ n CkC fc^ Jl m 1•*»•1v ^# a A summary of the meet showed Bloom with 10 first 13seconds and 10 thirds — a romp in anybody's book. The Huskies next meet was Saturday at Central Columbia track against Mansfield State College. 440 yard relay: Masters, Eckert , Berger , Davis (B) 44 .1 Shot Put: 1. John Ficek (B'I 2 . Shields (B) 3. Walls (C) 45 foot, 9 inch . Mile Run: 1. Terry Lee (B,' 2 . Tim Waechter (B; 3. Jerry Stonge (B) 4:35.2 120 Yard High Hurdle: 1. Weiborn-C 2. Kusma-B 3. J. Reeves- B, 15.1 440 Yard Run: 1. Jenkins-C 2. Bruce Bittner-B 3. Brewington -C 52.4 Pole Vault: 1. Rich Brand-B 2. Thomas-C 3. Mar k Yanchek -B , 11 feet , 6 inches 100 yard Run: 1. Jim Davis-B 2 . Greg Berger-B 3. Carter-C, Q ft * Broad Jump: 1 Carter-C 2 . . Comins-B 3. Plumly-B, 21 feet, 10% inches 880 Yard Run: 1. Jenkins-C 2, Terry Lee-B 3. Larry Strohl -B, 2:03.0 High Jump: 1. Skief-C 2. Lacock-B 3. Carter-C , 6 feet , 2 inches 440 Inter . Hurdle: 1. Charlie Graham-B 2. Welborn-C 3.John Reeves-B, 57.8 Javelin: 1. Jim Cavallero-B 2. Gary Melhorn-B 3. ShotwellB, 189 feet, 4 inches 22 yard Run: 1. Jim Davis-B 2. Greg Berger»B 3, Rich Eckert-B, 21.8 Triple Jump: 1. Carter-C 2. Kusma-B 3. Ryznar-B, 43 feet, 2V2 inches 2 Mile Run: 1. Tim Waechter-B 2. Rod Dewing-B 3. Dave Keltesj e, 10:11 Mile Relay: Cheyney, 3:35 Discus: 1. Fleming-B 2. Purnell-C 3. Flcek-B, 120 f eet . Student Angler Discusses Stockinet Enter: Trout by Butch Bunsick as most of us who enjoy the sport of fishing realize, next Saturday the 18th, is the beginning of the trout season here in Pennsylvania . With a little bit of luck we might have ideal opening day conditions . That of course depends on the weather from now until next week . Because of the heavy rains recently, streams in our immediate area are unusually high but are dropping fairly fast . Observations I have made up north indicate that the streams are near normal in that area . Because initial stockings of trout were made previous to the rains, in all probability the high and faster water caused many of the hatchery bred fish to be carried downstream.This may sound terrible to those who enjoy standing with a hundred other people in a well-stocked hole. But to those of us who like a little peace and quiet this spreadin g out of trout is perfect. Baits which will probably take the most fish will be fairly com mon to most of us . Worms , salmon eggs , minnows, and of course assorted hardware such as spinners and spoons will be the ticket Eppley's Pharmacy for a limit on the first day. Just make sure the bait is kept down and slow moving for in this time of year the fish don 't like to move more than they have to. Fly fishing will produce also. But because the water is cold and the amount of people fishing, the art of fly fishing will be hindered . However, as the streams begin to thin out of anglers , then the probability of fishing flies will become possible. Nymphs and wet flies of dark patterns will be the best bet . Various streams, however, require different patterns and it is the anglers job to choose the correct U1 1C . The best stre ams in the area would be Fishing Creek , Roaring Creek , Penns Creek and Pine Creek . The starti ng time is 8 a.m . and the limit In streams is 8 trout over 6 Inches , and in lakes the limit is 6 trout over 6 inches . BOO KS... OVER fi.OQO TITLES IN STOCK If It't • book we hav e It or we can got It Gmfth if Cards HENRIE S MAIN t IION STRUTS Pf icrlption Sptc/o//sf • CHANEL • GUERLAIN • FABEROE • LANVIN • PRINCE MATCHABEltl • ELIZABETH AROEN • HELENA RUBENSTEIN • DANA • COTY Card and Book Nook 40 W. Main St. \ r • MAX FACTOR Ortwi Stom ps 1 ^ FETT ERMANS *N BARBER SHO P — QUALITY — .Foot of ColUgo Hill Bloomt burg P§. . Is Tomor row Fading? FACTS AND PREDICTI ONS: present world population , 3.5 billion...3.7 babies born every second...world population in 30 years, 6 billion...140 billion tons of carbon monoxide released every day in New York City... property damage from air pollution in this country estimated at $13billlon a year...700,000 ,000 pounds of pe sticides used each year...black Californians, in one study have twice as much DDT in their bodies as whites...500 million pounds of solid waste pouring into U. S. waterways each day...by one estimate 40C acres of California are paved each day. DDT content in the milk oi nursing mothers has been found to be .10 to .30 parts per million, 2 to 6 times the amount allowed in commercial sale s of milk. In Septe mber 1969, dead birds began to wash up on the beaches of England and Scotland. Chemi- cals became suspect for their death . Signs of pesticide poisoning were detected in nearly half oi the farm children examined recently in Tulare County, Calif. There is a possibility that DDT and other chlorinated hydrocarbons may have contributed significantly in killing off the natural enemies of the Crown of Thorns Starfish , thus resulting in a starfish population explosion. Thus far the starfish have destroyed 100 square miles of the Great Barrier Reef , attacked ten U. S. Pacific Trust Territory islands, and have begun eating one Hawaiian Island. Scientists are worSmog from Los Angeles is killing nearly a million trees'located approximately 60 miles away in a national forest. Apparently the trees are choking to death on smog. Nerve gas is to be shipped I^^^ HM ^M ^^ nM ^HMBIM ^M ^HHHIMaaHIIMMi ^MM ^^ HMMI Bridge Team Completes from Okinawa to Oregon despite vigorous obj ections from Oregonians. The nerve gas is being removed following a well-publicized , spillage in which 24 American soldiers were injured. Oregon's governor has called for detoxification of the Okinawa nerve gas, but the Defense Dept. has announced that it has no intention of destroying the gas. Arsenic has been found in some household laundry detergents. In Lawrence, Kansas, as much as 59,000 parts per bilr lion of arsenic have been discovered in some laundry and presoaks. In the Lawarence sewage system and .the Kansas River, arsenic levels varied from 2 to 10 parts per billion. The average concentration of arsenic in drinking water is limited by the U. S. Public Health Service to 10 parts per billion. One of the hazards associated with arsenic in laundry soaps is the possibility of contamination through residues on clothing or from contact while using the soap product. Arsenic ' may be absorbed into the body through unbroken skin. The metaliscumulative, meaning that most of the absorbed arsenic stays in the body. Last weekend, the BSC Bridge Team went to Johns Hopkins University f o r their annual intercollegiate Bridge tournament. BSC's team consits of two pairs . Team Captain Lee Erdman and club president Joe Gribbon, and Dean Frear and John Chilmoriick, BSC team ol four on their first; outing compiled a 3-3 record against a strong field of 12teams finishing in a tie for fourth overall . The first round of the afternoon session began with the BSC quartet dropping their opening match against Johns Hopkins.Undetered by our initial loss we battled a ff / ann (conti nued fr om page three ) strong Harvard U . team to a 46* 41 I .M .P. victory. The two big swings ot that match came when Lee Erdman & Joe Gribbon inflicted a 1700 point penalty on their H .U. pair is part score. The afternoon session ended with BSC loosing a close match to Pitt Universit y. Trailing at the half BSC came back and trounced Navy. We lost our fifth round match to Swarthmore . Our sixth and final round was against Bucknell U. Trailing the fiejd at this point we needed a victory to even hope of plac ing. The Bucknell team was strong, two of their team members iiad won the open pairs match or Friday night, we knew them all well from local dupli* cate competition.The match turned out to be very close until the twenty-sixth board. Trailing by four I.M.P.'s the pair of Frear and Chilmonick bid and made a close vulnerable game while Erdman and Gribbon set B .U . in a part-score. This gave few of us who do care are wasting our breathes. Student and Faculty committees can spend months and even years working on school laws like the Jt . Statement or Continuous Employment Policy, (continued on page eight) but the fact that those laws are never^implemented doesn 't seem to bother those who have worked aU is app ointed so hard to bring them into existence. Dear Editor: Since this is the time of disappointment , we would like tc D . G. Porter express our disappointment ir the student body. It is surprising the number oi students who are uncooperative to the extent that you sit in the readers — artists, museum di- booths or in the middle of Husk} rectors, fellow critics , collect- while we girls clean for dances ors and interested laymen. Mr. which are provided for the stuHudson is also currently engag- dent body. We are happy to knov ed in teaching seminar courses that we are evidently through? in art at the Corcoran Gallery of to be the servants of his filfc body of students. We try to give Art in Washington , D.C. Born in Birmingham, England , you students activities to enjoj Andrew Hudson graduated in Eng- but we are not in this office tc lish Literature at Oxford Univer- further our muscular develop sity, and afterwards studied art ment! If we cannot getproper coope ¦at the Slade School of Fine Art in London. In 1961 he went to ation from the males on this cam study art and music at the Univer- pus , dances will be held to £ sity of Saskatchewan under a minimum. The budget is low ye graduate scholarship in the hum- we are trying to give you at leasi anities. (continued on page eight) Landscape Painting Andrew Hudson, noted lecturer, art critic and artist, was on the Bloomsburg State College campus , yesterday, in connection with the Landscape Painters in Pennsylvania exhibition that will hang in Haas Gallery during the month of April. Mr. Hudson spoke informally to students in the afternoon and presented a talk in the evening on Landscape Painting. Mr. Hudson , who is frequently a contributor to the Art International and Artforum, and former art critic to The Washington Post, has been hailed as one of the finest young critics in the English-speaking world. A practicing artist as well as a writter, his creative and discerning insights into works of art and trenchant commentary on t h e contemporary art scene have won praise from a wide variety of ^j-WWmjWmh ¦Come in and browse • < EUDORA'S CORSET SHOP C,oack mDtnstorff Views Sp ring CAe boniest Bait Pract ic * M d -Stna lyxei 1 f. Main St. Bloom sburg A friendl y store in j i t n u m k r a nS/sce LJian a& ^ror ^»** k«vW>(*1>W < "'* Wri te Ithaca College for SummerSessionPictoral Review LOSE YOURSELF IN EDUCATION AND RECREATI ON OPPORTUNITIES il *xt g rati s Jta m. BLOOM BOWL © WAFFLE GRILLE ] i C harlie 's FLOWERS 784-4406 Bondid Wo rld Wid « D«liv«r y Optn 'til 12.00 p.m. CloMd 1:30 to 3i00 p.m. Evtry Day But Friday ^ GOODWILL STORE 154 W Main, Bloonuburg SHOP AT GOODWILL FOR YOUR CLOTHING AND SAVI YOUR MONIY FOR OTHIR THINGS Harry Logan ^ FRII DILIVIRY 5 to 7 Fine J ewelry 8i30 to Ut30 Regula r and King SIm HQAGIIS AND Repa iring Phont 784-4292 Your J twilir Awy from Horn * 127 W. Main 5 W. Main St. J Bloommuro Humanities Natural Science SocialScience Communications Arts Physical Educa tion Program PI2ZA A HOAGIES N. YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE AT A Libera l Ar ts Program BLOOMSBURG Health Recreation ! ' A thletics Performing Ar t s Program FineAr ts Film Music Radio-TV Theatre PROGRAMFOR ALL Awar ds Presented P itt (continued fro m page one) cent, ...215. Inperyour opinion , which of the More than one hundred awards were presented to BSC students for their contribution s to the college , at the awards dav convocation last Sunday. Recipients of Who 's Who certificates, service keys , life-time athletic passes, scholarship awards, and academic honors received recognition from Dean Hunsinger , Russel Houk , Directof of Athletics , Robert Duncan , following statements best describes President Nixon 's Vietnam policy? A . The United States will withdraw all its troops from Viet, nam by the end of 1972, B. The United States will with, draw all its combat troops from Vietnam by the end of 1972. C . The United States will with, draw its combat tyoops from Caj eu Vietnam as South Vietnamese troops take over the fighting, (continue d from page one) D. The United States will withdraw its troops from Vietnam students Casey reiterated his oponly when it achieves comp lete position to the continued appointvictory. ment of "political hacks " to the E . Don't Know state college boards of trustees. ANSWERS: A 8 per cent — He urged enactment of legislaB 10 per cent — C 52 per tion establishing "a more noncent — D... 13 per cent — «E partisan method of selecting 17 per cent . trustees." QJote No. 1: "C" is the cor. Casey also indicated support rect answer) for legislation which w o u l d (Note No. 2: Among those who "tighten the reins on the purseresponded affirmatively to the strings " on allocations to the bigfirst question , i.e., Nixon 's sup. ger colleges and universities unporters, 64 per cent gave C as lil a "more realistic look at their their answer, while 36 per cent budgets" can be taken. chose one of the wrong Furthermore , Casey pledged answers.) that if elected, he would use his 3. In your opinion , which of the influence to assure " a more following is closest to the num- meaningful student Involvement ber of United States troops pre- in the internal government of sently in Vietnam? each college and university." A . 50,000 — B. 150,000 — C. 250 ,000 — D . 350 ,000 — E .450 ,000 — F. 550,000 — G. Don't prove of further United States military commitment in Laos? Know. ANSWERS: APPROVE 29 per ANSWERS: A 2 per cent — B 3 per cent — C 10 per cent cent - DISAPPROVE 54 per — D...13 per cent — E...22 per cent — NO OPINION 17 per cent — F...9 per cent — G... cent . 41 per cent. 5. Do you approve or disap(foote No. 1: "E" is the cor- prove of peaceful demonstrarect answer) tions? (Note No. 2: Among the PresANSWERS: APPROVE ... 69 per ident's supporters, 24 per cent cent - DISAPPROVE...25 per answered correctly.) cent — NO OPINION ...6 per cent. 4, Do you approve or disap6. Would you participa£e in a peaceful demonstration if you agreed with its purpose? Cd itorial ANSWERS: YES ... 37 per cent — NO ... 29 per cent — NO OP(continu ed from page two ) INION 34 per cent . who give a psuedo-fulfillmentof Perhaps the most significant the essential educational needs by result of the poll is the informaquantitative means as opposed to tion that only 22 per cent of the qualitative needs of our students. voters surveyed knew approxi". . .but what about the last guy ? mately how many troops the U .S . The last guy has nobody worse has in Vietnam Most of those . than him. The last guy has it so who gave a wron g answer be. bad that he doesn 't have a lieved that there are hundreds street to lay down in so a truck of thousands fewer troops in Viet* can run over him. "** the case. actually nam than is The Pennsylvania State College seems to indicate that voters system just might be the last guy. This are not aware of the extent to But we 've got it together — all which the United States is in* we have to do is carry on! volved In Vietnam . Also interest#"Arlo Guthrie — "The Pause ing is the fact that , although of Mr. Ciau s". 63 per cent of the Bloomsburg electorate support President Nix. on 's "Vietnam ization " policy, less than two thirds of his supporters know what that policy ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... N ' Lee- Pat's MEN'S and BOYS' - CLOTHING HAGGAR SLACKS LEVIS McGregor sport wear VAN HEUSEN a nd MANHATTAN SHIRTS BRENTWOOD SWEATERS I oLiiterA (continued from page seven) one dance and one movie to the end of the year (SIC). But if we must continue to wipe off tables; move table s and chairs; sweep the filth on the floor which you leave behind; and plead for help, even these few activities will be cut down. It is up to you now . When you see girls cleaning Husky for YOU, be gentlemen , offer to help. Sincerely, Lee Harris Paula Galonski Co-chairman Social Recreation Committee Lartk (conti nued from page em) W eek , designated to be celebrated ed in publication of "Behind the Lines • Hanoi" and "Orbit of China ", for in that same year Mr . Salisbury visited Laos, Bur. ma, and the Himalayan-Indian border up to Mongolia and Sioeria . One of the top journalists of our time, Salisbury, who was born in Minneapolis in 1908 and attended the University of Minnesota, began his career in journ alism as editcr of his college . newspaper at the same time work* ing for the St. Paul Bureau of the United Press . When he graduated from the University, he joined the Chicago Bureau of the UP covering the tail-end of the Prohibition gang wars and trial of Al Capone . In 1940 he was transferred to the UP' s Foreign Desk in Washington and in 1943 became the London Bureau managing directing coverage of the war in Europe. In 1944 he headed the UP's Moscow staff ; returned to the U .S. as foreign news editor and covered the birth of the United Nations. He joined the New York Times in 1949 and soon after returned to Russia as correspondent - a post he held for He returned to the United States in 1954, when he was barred by the Russians because they obje cted to his articles; and during the period in New York he covered local news and wrote on urban transportation, juvenile delin« quency, etc. His book, "The Shook-up Generation " was the re* suit of this. When the ban to visit Russia was lifted temporarily, Salisbury returned to Russia in 1959 * and also¦ ¦ v apanied the then Vice T. ¦ - ¦' - .... Nixon on his visit to Russia and Krushchev 's trip to the United States . Mr . Salisbury is the recipient of many awards in addition to the Pulitzer Prize. He was awarded the George Folk Memorial Award in Journalism and the Sigma Delta Chi Award. In addition to the books mentioned he is also the author of "Moscow Journal", "Russia ", "American in Rus« sia", "To Moscow and Beyond", "A New Russia " and a novel "The Northern Palmyra Affair ". of Service " CAMPUS CLEANERS At Your Service launder ed *Sanitone Dry Cleanin g I * "' Repairi ng and Alterat ions on Premitet I We Aim To Please I U£ ^7 Join the Sports Staff a AFGHAN HOUNDS Quality AKC Pups ' ^^ k_^^^ l^^^ B^^^^^^ BII^BIMBIIi a^BI^BBBB ^BHaaalHOTaBBHVBIMV MOVER Pharmacy j { Your Prescri ption Druggist I ROBERT G. SHIVE,HP. I Free Prescription Delivery I TOILET GOODS COSMETICS I I RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES I GREETING CARDS I Applica t ions for Youth Fare Cards availabl e 1 West Main St. Phont i 784-4388 1 I Call U$t Stop fit NOW fmr Any Int imation on Travll BLQOMSBURG, PA. j YOUR Haircut by mt Appointment M Tuiidays M 784-7854 124 E. Main St. H Hnn blVAVll Phone: 864-3489 ^ ^L VK (continue d from page seven) us a twelve point swing. B.U . scored only three more I .M.P.'s and gave BSC a winning margin of five . (This victory gave us enough wins for a fourth . One less point and we would have had what is called a winning draw, giving us 2V2 victory points instead of the three we got , and would have knocked us down to sixth or seventh place.) The team feels confident that with more experience they will do better. They are now preparing for a tournament here at Bloomsburg in a few weeks and hope to finish high in the compe- up and '200 All Ai rlines / Trains & Hotels Handled V SDrid y t Zseam Find blend Of English and American lines [I rc us ' Compliments of "Stores *ShirU professionally He also cited loyalty to this community , the commonwealth , and this country, stating that we should keep what we owe to all of them in mind this week. Dr. Nossen honored Dr. Harvey A . Andruss, former B S C Pres., who was awarded a "President Emeritus Certificate," by Willaim Lank , President of the Board of Trustees. Nossen stated that Dr. Andruss probably did not accomplish all that he would have liked to; that none of us ever quite fulfill our dreams, but the "dream itsell is worthwhile and these dreams are what we build on." William Lank, and Dr. Andruss also spoke and Mr. Mulka, Director of Student Activities, introduced the speakers. (continued from page one) SHUMAN'S WORLD TRAVEL REA & DERICK , Inc. MMnei 7M-S74* vmir cftif " J ^alidour y as the First National Environmental Teach-in, is being presented to encourage the establishment of a deep sense of sharing with the rest of the world . Sharing begins with individuals comprising our groups, communities , nations, and our one living world . According to Gil Longwell, stufie dent chairman of the BSC Teachin, and Dan Tearpock, student difashion able rector of publicity, "The strength of power is based on indiviSHOP f| duals. Become a stronger indiAT vidual by being informed . The Environmental Awareness programs to be conducted to BSC are an opportunity to observe and communicate. You, the indiic vidual , are invited to share in •w » In general , the survey seems to the activities at BSC with your indicate that a majority of the vot- fellow men . Be informed!" ers in a typical small American town support , at present, the Administration 's Vietnam policy, but that this support is based, in many cases , on ignorance of 37 IAIT MAIN 3T. • BlOOMUUtG • PHONf 784-3630 the government's states policy, and in most cases , on inaccurate For All Your Travel Arrangements knowledge, of the extent of our commitment . RESERVATIONS • TICKETS • TOURS « ETC. Formal Wear Rental Service 520 E. Main St. Director of Financial Aid, and Dean Hoch. Dr. Robert Nossen , to be inaugurated as BSC's 12th President this week, made congratulatory remarks. He also declared that "this is loyalty week ," stating that the students of BSC "carry its mark and if you have nopride in it , you can have no pride In A highligh t of the festlvitlM of Inaugura l Week will be • jo int conc ert by Dr. Frank Pullano and Dr. Robert Marvel, to be given in Haas Auditorium , Friday evening, Apr i l 17, at 8:15 p.m. Dr. Pullano , a baritone , will be accompanied at the piano by Dr. Marvel , who will also p/esent a solor pr ogram. Tickets for the event are availab le to the pub lic and may be reserved by calling or writing M. J. McHale , Chairman, Artists and Lecture Series , Bloo m sburg State College. There is no charge and tickets w ill be available at the door. Faculty may pick up their tickets in C6A office and students and staff may pick up their tickets in the Office of the Dean of Students . - BI88ET FRITS Barber*Skep Open Dally •:01A.M. 'til l:*P.M. lat. 8»» a.m. tllltW p.ni.