Econo mics Conference April 25th Debaters Fare Well At Frostbur g The first annu al Economics Conferenc e at Bloomsbur g State College will be held Saturday, April 25 , 1970, in Haas Auditor , ium , beginnin e at 9:30 A .M . The Conference , sponsored by t h e Department of Econom ics at BSC, has as its theme "I nflation: U .S. by Mike Hokka nen The weekend of April 17-18 Bloomsburg State Colle ge sent six membe rs of its forensics team to compete at the Allegheny Individual Events Cham pionship s held annuall y on the campu s of College, at Frostburg State Frostburg , Maryland. This event is one of national pr ominence drawing schools from as far away as Long Beach California. C ompe ting in Exte mpor aneous Speaking for BSC were Senior , Karl Kramer who , in his winning way, captured sixth place , and sophomores Jane Elmer and Mike Hokkanen . In this event contest ants are required to select a top ic , then are given one hour to research it and prepare a seven minute speech . In the division of Original Oratory two seniors , Karl Kr amer and Ginny Potter did extre mely well , despite the tough competit ion . BSC' s lone contestant in Public Addr ess , Jane Elme s, did well enough to gain fourth place honors in that event. Ranking high in Oral Interpr etati on was Mar y Ellen Cavanaugh , a sophomore. Tom Serlani , the only fre shman on the tri p did well in this event also , pro mising to be a consistent winner in the future. The experience of this trip has stuck well. In the humorou s treatment of a ser ious subject , compet ition known as after dinne r speaking , Jane Elmes and Mike Hok kanen mana ged themselv es well. Outsi de of regular compet ition Bloomsburg easily managed to gain tournament -wide recognition as the school with a heart. Karl Kramer , President of the BSC forensic club and the Pres ident of the Bloomsburg Chapter of P i Ka pp a Delta , a nat ional honorar y forensics fraternity, will graduate this year termin atinghis active association with inter collegiate forensic s competition as a contestant for Bloomsburg . H is great ability and success can best be measured by the recogni tion given to him from all of those who competed against him. As the year 's competitio n is ending, Bloomsbur g is looking ahead to next year with excellent pr ospects for success in individual competi tion and debate . The club Is young yet experienc ed and versatile , with a large number of memb ers who hope to repeat as Penn sylvania State College Cha mpion for the fifth c onsecutive year . a a Dr. and Mrs. Nossen and Mr. and Mrs. William A. Lank enjoy the pre -inaug ural luncheon served inr the new William W. Scranton Commons. Inauguration Highlights Weekend of Activities President of the Bloomsbur g Area Minlsterlum. William E , Booth , Vice President of the Bloomsbur g State College Board of Trus t ees , intr oduced honored guests and read selected congratu lator y messa ges. On behalf of the Columbia County H istorical Society, Edwin Barton , Executive Secretary, rea d a tribute to Dr . Nossen . He also mentioned that an area in the not yet completed Bakeless Center for the Humanities will be set aside for the Historical Society, William A. Lank , President of the Board of Tr ustees , pre sided during the Inaugural cere monies held in Haas Auditorium , Following the acade mic procession of one hundred ninet y invited delegates represe ntin g colleges , universit ies and learned soclet ies , the Maroon and Gold Band , under the direction of Stephen C, Wallace , lead the assembly in the FREAKS , an America n-made nat ional anthem . The Reveren d mur der mystery, the fourth pre James T. Ber ger , Rector of St. sentat ion of the Literary a n d F ilm Society, will be shown this Paul 's Episcopal Churc h , gave evenin g In Carver Auditor ium the invocation . Invest iture of the new Presi at 8:30 p.m . Instea d of Hartline dent was conducted by Pennsyl 134 at 8 p.m. The change in time van ia Secreta ry of Education Da* and place is to accomodate Earth vld J . Kurtsman . Formally InDay activities in Hartline Science stalled as Presi dent of BloomsC enter . Only member s of the bur g State College , Dr . Robert J . Society may atten d the film. by dor Remsen Robert J . Nossen was inau gur ated twelfth President of Bioomsburg State College , Saturday, April 18 , 1970. P rece din g t he ceremon y , an I nau gura l Lunc heon , in honor of Dr . N ossen , was held in the William W . Scranton C ommons . Inv ited guests were serve d in the two large dining rooms . The invocation was given by the R everen d Fat her Mart in Brown , News Briefs Dr . Maxwell Primack suffer * •d complications Thursday April * 16, following the March 25th automobile accident in which he sustained a hairli ne fracture of Nossen responded with an address keyed aroun d the word H e state d t hat "tens ions " . academic commun ities cannot exist without tensions . " F ar more dan gerous would be complacency, self-satis faction , f ear of struggle of the desire for escape , " he said . Under the dir ection of William K . Decker , the Concert Choir san g "O Praise the Lor d of Heaven." Dr . Oscar E. Lanf ord, Presi dent of the State Universit y College at Fredonia , New York , spoke on the need for change in higher education . In closing he said to Dr . Nossen , "M y last and only word to you is thi s — we may need more pa rtici patory democracy but even more than that , higher education needs anticipatory admini stration. And that , I am sure , is the kind of administration that you will have at Bloomsburg ." The benediction was given by the Reverend Frank W . Ake , Pres ident of the Bloomsburg Area Community Ministries and followed by the singing of the Alma Mater and the recessional . Following the Investit ure , a re* ceptlon in honor of Pres ident and Mrs , Robert J , Nossen was held in the William W , Scranton C ommons , The Inaugural Ball , featuring Lee Vincent 's Modernalrei and the Romans , was also held in the the hip. His physician diagnosed an embolism of the lung and de* scr ibed Dr . Primack' s condition as "guarded," Dr . Primack is in Muncy Valley Hospital Scranton Commons that evening. . A line-u p of prominent speakers from the busin ess world will partic ipate in the program . Speakin g first will be Raymond MacDonald , an Econ omist with the Research Department of AFL CIO , who will speak on "Infla tion and Labor " . Followin g will be Geor ge Hagedorn , Vice-Presi . dent and Chief Econom ist for Nation al Association of Manufactur ers , Washington , D.C ., whose topic will be "Ec onomic Stabilit y; Elus ive Objective "; Dr. The Ma rk Willes , Director of Re. search , Federal Reserv e Bank of Ph iladelphia , — "Mone tary Control of Inflation in the Shor t* Long-run " ; Dr . Dorothy and Gre gg, Assistant to the Director of Public Relations , U .S. Steel Corporation in N .Y. — "The Procrustean Bed of Inflation "; and Dr . Philip Cagan , Senior Econo mist , with the Presiden t' s Council of Econ omic Advisors , Wash ington , D.C . — "Why the Battle Against Inflation is not Pain less " . The above five speakers will also participate as panelists for a pane l discussion and quest ions from t he fl oor . Dr . Robert J . N ossen , President Bloomsbur g State College, will deliver the welcoming address f or the C onf erence . Dr . Harvey A . And russ , President Emeritus of BSC, will speak at the conclusion of the luncheon to be held in the Scranton Commons . Additional information concern ing the Conference can be obtained by contactin g Dr . T . S. Salni , Chairman , Department of E conom ics, BSC H istory Conf eren ce Two outstan ding personalities , Salisbury, Pul itzer Harrison Pr ize winnin g reporter and author , and Hans J , Mor genthau , Professor of Political Science and Modern History, University of Chica go, will be the featured speakers at the third annual His tory Conference at Bloomsburg State College, Monday, April 27. The theme of the Conference la " T h e Cold War ." Salisbury whose topic will be "United States . China , Soviet Relations and "The Cold War* ' will speak at 8:00 P.M . In Haas Audito rium and Mor genthau '* address will be "Vietnam and The Cold War *' ( centtnueu «n pajft teven) iMhiHHH Jus t A Movi e ^MMHaMaBMWMiMMIMMiMHanH ^iM ^HMBMiMMHMMHMMHHMMMHaMMMH jim sachett i HEY , have you noticed t h a t lately, it' s become awful hard to find a good, scary monster movie? It seems as if Hollywood has run out of t h e m ; no more screams , no mor e thrills , no more nothin g. Doesn't that make you mad? Wouldn 't you like to go oui and see a good scar y flick? Do you like monster movies? Good , you 've come to the right place . Read on as I unveil the scr ipt for what may be , the great * est mons t er movie ever made: THE MONSTER THAT PEOPLE D THE EARTH or A FUNNY THING HAPPENE D ON THE WAY TO CHICAGO In the depths of some corpor ate laboratory in mid-America , a 90 year old lab assistan t is put tin g the finishing touches to his latest creation: "At last" , he Letter "Durin g the past s e v e r a l months I have commented on a number of occasions tha t inaug uration activities are part of an academic tradition , of more significance to , and more in recognition of , the institution than directed towar ds an individual . I am , of course, pleased and proud to hol d the office at Bloomsburg State College . At the same time I hope that the occasion will pro vide an opportunity for the College to present itself to the community, the Commonwealth , other colleges and universities , and learned or ganizations ." Dr . Nossen- Wednesday, Apr il 8, 1970, •MAROON AND GOLD . This past week being so important to the college and being photography editor of the official college newspaper , I felt that it was proper to have the college community see what was happen ing on this great event . H owever , it seems in all the plannin g for this week , a part of the college— the element of the college paper has been eliminated from the weeks events . Upon tryin g to get into the new William Scranton Commons for pictures of some of the most important events of the wee k , I found that being a photo * •grapher for the MAROON AND GOLD was not enough to enter the sacred place . To get permission to enter the Dedication Luncheon for a few pictures I had to have permission from one of the deans and at the time all of the deans hap pened to be in the new common s. I am DISAPPOINTED , to say the least , at this slight oversight which took place in the planning of Ina ugural Week . Perhaps for the next one they will allow the college community at least the right to SEE what is happenin g in this important week through pictures . Mark Fou eart Photography Editor MAROON & GOLD cackles , "I' m . done . They laughed at my gas-driven toothbrush , they laughed at my 'No deposit N o re t urn ' chewing gum wrap pers , they laughed at my conservative • driven Nixon , but they will stop laughing now ." With a cacklin g laugh of triumph , he turne d to look at his creations: Mr . and Mrs . John Fertile , the unlimited pare nts. Come morning, he sets his plan in motion . He plugs in his creations , puts them in a 196.6 Station Wagon and sends them out to work his will upon the people of the earth . Their mission: go forth ¦and populate the earth . Two hours later , they reach Chicago wher e they make their first stop. Five couples get out of the car a n d walk off into the alr eady crowded street . Then on to Cleveland where five more duplicate couples get out. Then to New York , Philadel phia , Washington , Atlanta , New Orleans , Denver , Los Angeles , San Francisco and back to Chicago where they start all >*»B«few* P lay ing Th is Week ammIm In a f ew month s, the resu lts start to pour in. The mad lab assistant is ecsta tic: "Ha Ha " , he laughs, "it' s workin g: more people, more products , more gar bage, more pollution . Less space , less resources , less clean air and water . Ha Ha , soon I will die , but I have wrou ght my revenge on the people who scorn ed me . Soon they will all die , they will kill each other off , I' ve " won, I' ve won , I'VE WON Phew . I think I'll stop there . Sometimes , when you start writ , ing a story like this , your imagination J ust carries you away. But I can't leave him win , can I? How can I end it? I have to tell the people , the real people , about this diabolical plot . They must learn that their'neighbors or even their friends might be out to get them . But how can I do it? Today is EARTH DAY. Go find out what us people , real or otherwise , are doing to our world . He hasn't won yet . NO743 MICHA EL HOCK EDITOR-IN-CHIEF News-Idl tor Himself UVCi O.&OJ -U, MAROON AND GOLD VOL. XLVIH Business Manager Managing Editor The Doctor In Spite Of ^iWM <*Or R#mi #n Bill Teltsworth Martin Kleiner Glnny Potter , Allan Maurer Co-Feature Editors Clark Ruch & Jack Hoffman Sports Editor * Mark Foueart Photo gra phy Editor Copy Staff Kay Hahn, Carol Oswald , Irene Oulyc t Linda Bnnis Circulation Manager Mr . Mlchaol Sta nley Advisor ADDIT IONAL STAFF: Ttrr y Blats , John ftu grln, Bob tehul tx, Sally Swett and, Davt Kelter, Stanlay Bunslck , Jim Saehttt ), Prank Clifford / Valma Avtry, Carol Kls hbaugh, Pat Jacobs, Sam Trapano. All opinions expressed by columnists and feature wri ters, inc luding fetters-to-the-editor , n i nor necessarily t hose of this publication but those of the Individuals. FIFTH COL UMN honeymoon it musta been , Mr. Fantastic with his ability to stretchhhh any part of his body, and the Invisible Girl with her vanishing powers , not to mention her capacity for throwing impenetratable force -fields over any part of her body, wow. And books. I grew up on ERB , from "A Princess of Mars " ri ghT thr ough the rest and on to Carson Napier of Venus . Somewhere in my fondest memories of childhood are John Carter , Barsoom , Dejah Th oris, and red eggs. (Kumquat , did th ose red eggs screw me up. Ya see , Burroughs ' Martian women gave birth to red eggs , and like any dedicated scifi fan I believed ERB , which caused muc h emba rrassment for me in my 12th-grade sex education class) Books that led up to Helnlein and Hal E llison, who wr ites "speculative fiction ," and "Dangerous Visions " and Zelazny and Delaney and Laffert jt and Splnrad. And the space music of The Byrda. And "Star Trek ," I still watch it. So ya see , I' m qualified. I mean , who else would know , or care , th at Phili p Francis Nowlan 's Buck Rogers was a Wllkes-Barre coal miner? All this may seem strange coming from a kid who puts down the Apollo shots. Realism vs. roI' ve sat throu gh practicall y mant icism , I guess. There reevery science fiction flick ever mains an artistic part of me that' s ma de, from "2001" to "Attack outr aged by three klutzes up there of the Giant Leeches," which going "Gee whiz. " W ould F lash I really sucked for; from Bus- Gordon go "Ge e whiz "? That ter Crabbe - Flash Gord on vs. really offends me. Why didn 't E mperor Min g - Charles Middle - NASA send up a writer , like ton of the p lanet M on go and D ale Mailer? Or a rock composer , A r d en and al l tha t to "Queen of like Frank Za pp a? Or , from anOuter Space ," a real gah-bore ; other an gle , equally artistic , why from George Melles 1 "A Trip to couldn 't they send up Agnew as t he M oon" with the moon facial- an Earth Day gesture ? ly wincing as the projectile lands A ll my dreams , all those childto the spectacular special effects hood f antas ies, the y 're all disof "M arooned " and its should- appearing. Twenty years ago Ray have-been -comic Iron Man , which Bradbury wrote of man getting was marvelous. And comic books , r id of his garbage in the M artian wow did I have comic books. canals. Yeah well , we alrea dy've Came along just in time for the gunked up the moon. Seems to birth of the Fantastic Four , Spld- say someth ing, that no matter ey, all those Stan Lee super- where man goes he make s a futz heroes: Spldey with his Aunt May of th ings. , almost dying every othe r month , — What have they done to the Spidey not getting dates , getting Earth , what have they done to dlcked by cigar-che wing J. Jonah our fair sister?— Jameson , Yeah. And the FF , We 're drownin g In garbage,. what fanat ical loyalty I had to Pollut ion flows down our rivers v them , loyalty far gre ater than to It poisons our air , It even crops ol super WASP Superman and up as Loyalty Week . And there 's even the whole JL A. I mean , ya a th ing called behavlorial sink , a don 't know the meanin g of dedica- condition of over-crowding which t ion unless you 've wondered what results in mass hysteri a. Ever the Thing 's thing looks like. And ride a New York subwa y? Right . bow . about the marriage of fteed . > .Pollution is everywher e, andRichards to Sue Storm ? What a there 's too many people and by Blass (Where do you come from?) (I come from out there , out in the stars) (Star s? What are stars?) (Stars— lights in the sky. You haven 't ever looked at the stars? It' s a popular thin g to do on E arth)(Ear th— what is Ear th ?) (Earth is the planet I come from . Out in the stars. On Earth lovers go out at night and look up at the moon) (Moon— what is moon?) (A smaller Earth , a satellite , a symbol of love. Back on Earth lovers look up at the moon and kiss) (Kiss— what is kiss?) (Here , 111 show you) (Hmmmm) (that , was a kiss) (Hmmmmmm mmmm) (What do you think of our old Ear th custom?) (What is it called , KISS ?) (Yes , kiss) (Kirk , do it again) — lines from "Star Trek ," every other week. Beneath it all I have the heart of a small boy. Now yer prob ably thinkin "Yeah sure , he keeps it at home In a jar ." But yer wr ong, it's more than that , I gotta confess. I' m one full-fledged grade A-l certified science fict ion nu t , always have been and always will be. There , the truth is out. You 've f oun d B lass 's second worst weakness. And you probably don't rea lize how serious it is, But it' s ser ious awrl ght . My credent - "Sla pstick " comedy is a description often and erroneously given to shows that are merely funny in a boisterous manner in which no actua l slapstick is used . THE DOCTOR IN SPITE OF HIM SELF , by Moliere , to be present ed by the Bloomsbur g Player s is a true slapstick comedy. In the old "I talian " comedy genre tha t invented Harlequin , Columbine , pantalone , Punchinel lo and others the homor was often primit ively achieved by havin g actors beat each other . Vigorous p lying of a club is still one of the major sources of children 's laughter at a Punch and Judy show, the direct descendant of the Italian comedy known as corn media del arte as was present ed last year by the Players in THE GREAT MAGICIAN . In stage plays which have sent audienc es into roars of laughter ovef a well-meanin g fellow . threatened with an annihilati onhe doesn't deserve , as with Monsieur Rober t in this show , the hilarity has often been heighten ed by the use of a slapstick . This is a contrivance consistin g of two flat sticks bound together at a handle , and open at the other end so that they act as a clapper , and make a loud ominously thacking sound when flapped slightly . In THE DOCTOR IN SPITE OF HIMSELF , Jack Martin , Sganarelle , during the course of an ar gument beats his wife. Thirsting for revenge , she figures out a tr ick that involves making him pretend he 's a doctor by which she can get him beaten in return by t wo oth er men . Both scenes are very funny, chiefly because the beatings are by means of loudly thwacking but actua lly harmless slapsticks. Moliere uses beatings in other places to heighten the satirical effect of 4>V*{ r» s% Aw\ Arlv * Moliere 's plays are bein g revived in many theatres throu ghout the world to celebrate the 300th ann iversary of his death in 1973, The Bloomsbur g Players will present THE DOCTOR IN SPITE OF HIMSELF on Apr il 23 , 24 , and 25 at 8:15 p. m . in Haas Auditorium , under the direction of William Acierno . Ticket s may be obtained by callin g 784-4660 , ext , 317 or by coming to the box office in Haas Auditor ium . The box office will be open from 10 a.m . -12 a,m, and 1 p.m . • 4 p.m. dally except Saturday and Sunday, Admission charge s are as follows: $1 .00 for adults and $ .50 f or stu d ents . someth ing has to be done and ' meanw hile the Vatican Is still full of Pope. All sorts of people are beginn in g to see, so maybe there 's hope. People from the Gr eat Lakes re gion. People from Santa Barbar a. People fro m the Ever glad es. Pre ssure is finally being exerted on Presid ent Nixon . And meanwh ile some ecologists give us ten years of clean air left. Whic h is nice , unless ya live in L.A ., whose temperature will soon be cut In half by a rever se greenhouse effect or something; the sun can 't get thro ugh. So pre ssure is being exerted by people who no longer CAN see, — We want the world and wee want it NOW i"Stop at Two" the buttons say.. W ell, that ' s nice too, cuz if anybody starts things the other way it shoufd be the U.S., we 're the superconsur nors of all ti me. Ther e are cries for ZPG , for long overdue revision of abortion laws , for a reversal ot reward for how many children ya bavo , (continued on page eight y To day is the ^B^L MM ^^ & ^Hi^bW.^^s^s^sr >^sfll ^ Br ^^S^^^ L^^^ L^fljjfiLr BSC Teac h-In Events Global Topics — Room 86 9:00 A.M. "Radioactive Waste Disposa l" Mr. Olson — U.S. Radium Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania. 10:00 A.M. "World Population Problems " Mr. Craig Hlmes & Mr. Thomas Manley BSC Biology Department Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania. 11:00 A.M . CONVOCATION — Haas Auditorium Mr. David S. Richie "P overty As A Cause of Urban Pollution " l:0J A.M. "The Quality and Quantity of the World»s Air Supply" Dr. Wilbert A. Taebel BSC Chemistry Department Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania 2:00 P.M . "Envir onmentalAwareness: The Aesthetics of Pollution " — A presentation ot Sights and Sounds — Dr. Percival R. Roberts , III Kuster Lecture Hall, Room 134 3:00 P.M. "Psychological Factors and the Destruction of Resourses" T"W Grt+i? BSC Psychology Department Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania. 4:00 P.M. "The Humanities and the Quality of Life " Dr. Thompson, Dr. Hopkins, Mr. McHale, Mr. Decker , BSC Faculty 5:15 P.M. "Burial at 5:15"-car burial 7:30 P.M. "Walden Pond : Then and Now " Mr. Harry LeFever Delaware County Community College Media , Pennsylvania Kuster Lecture Hall , Room 134 Local Topics — Room 79 9:00 A .M. "Solid Waste Disposal" Mr. Richard Kauf man-S.E.D.A. Lewisburg, Pennsylvania 10:00 A.M . "Nuc lear Power Production in Pennsylvania" Mr. Earle Mead, PP& L Allentown , Pennsylvania 11:00 A.M . CONVOCATION Haas Auditorium 1:00 P.M. "Local Air Pollution Abatement Efforts" Mr. Bill Lusher ~ Regional Air Pollution Control Engineer Williamsport , Pennsylvania 2:00 P.M. "Pollution of the Susquehanna" Mr . Warren Merrow Pennsylvania Department of Health Williamsport , Pennsylvania 3:00 P.M. "Pennsylvania 's Resource & Recreational Land Planning for the Future" Mr. George McKelvyJCUfton Rodgers and Associates Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 4:00 P.M. "Resource Planning in Columbia County " Mr. Steve Phillips Columbia County Planning Committee Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania Pollution Film Festival: Hourly from 8 to 6 P.M . in Hartline Science Center "Bulldozed America" "Who Killed Lake Erie ?" "What Goes Up?" 1. Don't use colore d facial pap er. The paper dissolve s properly in water , but the dye lingers on. 2. If you accumulate coat han gers , don't Junk them; return the m to the cleaner. Boycott a cleaner who won't accept them. 3. Use containers that disintegrate readily . Glass bottles don 't decompose . Bottle s made of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) give off lethal hydrochloric add when (That 's the soft Inc inerated. plastic many liquid household cleaners , shampoos, and mouthwashe s come in. Don't confuse it with stlffer polystyrene plastic , used mainl y for powder s.) The Food and Dru g Administration has now appro ved PVC for food packagin g, too. Don't buy It. Use decomposable - "biode gradabl e" - pasteboard , cardboard , or paper container Instead. If you can't, at least re-employ nondecomposable bottles; don't Junk them after one use. 4. Don't buy unreturnable containers ; Hold aluminum-can purohase to a minimum . If you're Burial at J: 15 The permanent bur ial of a 1964 Falcon on the BSC Locat ion — above Campus the Practice fi eld near President Nossen 's residence. Why Earth Day ? By GILBERT L. LONGWE LL Coordinator of E.A.D E n v ironmental Awareness Day is more than a ride ott the infamous band -wagon for the students at Bloomsburg State College. It is often heard that those kids on the hill can 't care about anything except themselves. But, Env ironmental Awareness Day is proof that we tiie students at BSC do care for more than ourselves. Environmental Awareness Day is designed to make an important and much n e e d e d contribution to the town as well as the country and the world. Long before "Earth Day " was a popular topic, two campus organizations saw the need for improvement of the town's environment and the reult was the "Open Citizens' meeting on Bloomsburg Area air and water pollution." From that meeting, a core of interested students was formed. These are the students who have worked long hours to make Environmental Awareness Day a meaningful contribution toward community education in the area of the environment. Wh y should there be an ADDENDA Environmental A w a r e n e s s "CAN THE GOVERNMENT CON- Day?? This is a question that m a ny people ask . It is often TROL AIR POLLUTION ?" Presented by Dr. John T .Middle- felt that the earth has an ton, Commissioner, National Air unli mited supply of every thing Pollution Control Administration that man will ever need but , Noon Scranton Commons (lunch this is not true . One example of the . li mited n ature of our not available) "THE SONG OF THE EARTH" r esources wa s poin ted out on Mr. Richard Savage ,BSC English the telev ision sh ow "Interface " , on April 11, 1970, when it was Department stated that without any nw dis1:00 P.M. Hartline 83 coveries of natural gas , t h i s country would exhau st its reserves at or before 1984. The statement that , "We hav e fourt een years so don 't worr y now ", is not based on sound judgment. If the United Sates is running low on Its supply of basic minerals, then living around New York , Denver , it is a valid conclusion that the Houston , or San Francisco this rest of the world's supply is summe r , bring In aluminum cans running low , too. But , there is for half-cent apiece (also: old more to the need for TV-dinner trays , old alum inum Environmental Awarenes s Ba y lawn chairs). It 's worth $200 a than the depletio n of the world's ton to Reynolds Aluminum. mineral r e s o u r c e s . The 5. At the gas station , don't let atmosphere «s well «s the the atten dant "top off" your gas oceans of the world are in tank; this means waste , and poldanger, too, for their capacities luting spillage . The pump should to absorb mans * filth tre being shut off automat ically at the pr op- taxed beyond their capabilities. er amount. (True , too, for motor For proof of this , this statement boata.1 should add credence: Driving 6. If you smoke filter -tip cigaan automobile 25 miles at rette s , don 't flush them down the moderate speed uses more air J ohn . They 'll ruin your plumbing then is brea thed by 7,000,000 and clog up pumps at your sewpeople In the time it took to age treatment plan t. They 're drive that distance. If man does practically lndestructable . Put not atop, adding to Mi vital them In the garbage. supplies substances tha t his 7. Stop smoking. body can not tolerate , his body 8. Stop litter ing. Now, if you will soon die from man 's own see a Utterer , object very politeactions , sort of a communi ty ly ("Excuse me , sir , I think you auJcldel dropped something "). why, we don 't have anything 0. If you're a home gardene r, to worry abut , we live "in the make sure fertiliser Is worked countr y " t This is an often uied, deep into the soll-don't hose It and J ust si often inaccurate off Into the water system. Phosstatement. The " countr y " ii not phates fa key Ingredient) cause (continued on page eight) (continue d on page the) 40 Ways You Can Depollute The Eart h t issue, paper towels , or toilet .. beginning of the rest of your life ..- ^HS^f^ifl^H M^iB^B^B^B^B^^ B^B^BlBKSvT ^B^B^PMiHiB ^BBlBnS ^BnLlB"'^^^ * '^^ rfB ^BHB ^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^I ^^^^^^^^^^^ B^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ J^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H ^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦¦l^b^b^b^b^b^b^b^bIL^b^b^b^b^^b^b^bk^b^b^b^Eb^b^b^b^b^b^b^bI^b^bV Rehearsa l for The Apoca lypse Yes Folks! Now you can be the first on your'block to experience the ecological disaster. Why wait till 1980? Don't let the future take you by surprise. Prepare now for the end of civilization. Rehearse for the apocalypse. Here are a few suggestions: Better start preparing your pallette and stomach for the fare of the 80's: Mix detergent with everything you eat and drink. There's already quite a bit but there will be a lot more in the future. Learn how to digest grass and other common plants. Start fattening your dog, cat, parakeet and guppies for the main course of the future . Develop a taste for grubs and insects— your ancestors weren't too proud to lift a rock for their dinner. Practice starving. Every night before bedtime drink a glass of industrial and organic waste on the rocks (with mixer If you prefer). Appreciating that most services and products will disappear over the next ten to twenty years, we suggest this dry run: Turn off your gas Turn off your water Turn off your telephone Turn off your heat Turn off your electricity Sit naked on the floor and repeat this Chant: PROGRESS IS OUR MOST IMPORTANT PRODUCT, PROGRESS IS OUR... And as the final crisis approaches there's no better time to start hoarding. Start buying things you'll need after the Fall on credit— after the collapse no one will bother with collecting debts. While on the subj ect: start thinking about creative new uses for money since its present function will soon end. Remember, paper— particularly tissue— will be in short supply. Think about creative new uses for other potentially obsolete things like electric can openers, televisions, brassieres, toilets, alarm clocks, automobiles, etc. Accustom yourself to human body odor. Now is the time to learn a trade for the future— practice making arrowheads and other implements out of stone. Advanced students should start experimenting with bronze. For those of you who are Investment minded, buy land , but you'd better leave enough bread to also buy a small arsenal to defend your property with. Remember Victory Gardens? Plant your Survival Garden now! Better quit smoking— rip off a tobacco ware house. Stockpile useful Items like matches, safety pins, thread and needles, prophylactics, etc. Learn how to shoot a b ow and arrow. Start preparing for the fashYou girls ions of the future. might take a hint from the heroines of monster films and start tearin g your clothing in tasteful but strate gically located tatters in ord er to create the Fay Wray look of tomorrow. Those less frevolous minded among you cultivatin g your should start body hair . (Remember a naked ape is a cold ape) You housewives had better learn how to malm and klll a vegemat ic. Finally everyone should buy a boy scout manual— or in lieu of that , buy a boy scout . So in facin g the world of tomorrow reme mber: build for the future and contem plate suicide. Because It Has To! STATEMENT BY DENIS HAYES. NATIONAL COORDINATION BEFORE THE SUBCOMMITTEE ON CONSERVATION AND NATURAL RESOURCES HOUSE GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS COMMIT- ser ious fight for a profound change in what this country is all about . They simply don't have a clue to what we mean by saving the environment. They are talkin g about emisTEE sion control devices for automo Friday, March 13th , 1970 biles; we are talking about bans Mr , Chairman: I do not plan on automobiles . They are burst to spend time this morni ng cat a- ing with pride over plans zor loguing frightening stati stics on mun icipal w a s t e treatment what we are doing to our en- plants ; we are challen ging the vironment . You know and I know eth ics of a society that , with only enou gh right now to draw one seven percent of the world 's popuconclus ion: we have to reverse lation , accounts f or more t han our course , and we have to do hal f of the world' s annual It at once . consumption of raw materials . But so far we have only pieceThis country Is robbing the meal pr ograms and insipid rhe - root of the world and future toric . I don 't think that most of generations ot the ir natural rethe politicians and businessmen sources . We have to stop. who are Jumpin g on the environ * This country consumes remental bandwa gonhave the slight- sources at an extrava gant rate est idea what they 're getting In- and gags on Its own garbage to, I don 't think they realize that There la something drastic ally. we are going to need fundament al wrong . Pollution Is only one chan ges in the values of this coun- symptom of the environmental try, I don't think they realise that ( conti nued en mo* eight ) 1 students iee this as a long and ¦" "^r . *- ¦• —j '^z^m '-'z- -< "!H zr !£%s&- r "JGT T^..- . ' - ' ¦ ¦- - *- ¦¦ ~ ^ ¦ . ..*?-»% *. . . • • It it net uncommon to find piles of garbage in or along *Columbia Count y's streams. The above photo was taken along Fishi ng Creek, which/ suppli es the Bloomsburg: Area with water. Note how well citizens obe y signs. :- Progress Is Our Most Important Product ¦ - **- _ . _. . .,„ •«a 9 Columbia Count y has an abundan ce of funk yards Imagine this appalling i pile of this is a scra p in your backyard . For many Ninth Street residents of Bloomsburg reality. According to Biology Profess* or Joseph Vaughn , over 21,000 deer we re killed by automobiles in Pennsylvania last year. Bird s , rabbits , woodchucks and other game are also killed at an amazing rate by Pennsylvani a motorists. The woodchuck in the phot o at left was killed on Route 42 near Millville. This phot o ( right ) was taken •long Ferry Road near the Bloomsburg Ai rport. T h e stream runs throug h Bloomsburg Town Park and directly into the Susquehanna River. 4 aa MAG photographer , Mark Foucart , discovered th e above funk pile on the golf course, Sloomsburg State Colle ge property . The Mllco Under garment Company, near the BSC campu s, pours fa ntastic The Mageci Carpet amounts of air polluting smoke into the atmcsphere each day. dunv ' to co^ribute to Oompany, BSC Steam Plant and open burning at the town '¦'$ * .*; ' •; ^--> r ^ V . ' ^ ^ ^ \ HEW representatives have estimated that every American create s fiv e pounds of garbage each day. This means that Bloomtburg, with a population of over ten thouasand , is responsible for an excess of two million pounds of garbage i each year. Genesis: Last Chapt er In the end , There was Earth , and it was with for m and beaut y. And mar dwelt upon the lands of the Earth , the meadows and tree s . And he said , "Let us build our dwellings in this place of beaut y." And he built cities and covered the earth with concrete and steel and the mead ows were gone and man said , "It is good ." On the second day, man looked upon the waters of the Earth , And man said , "Le t us put our wastes in the waters that the dirt will be washed away." And man did . And the water s became polluted and foul in their smell . And man sp ld , "It is good." On the third day, man looked upon the forests of the Earth and said they were beautiful . And man said , "Let us cut the timber for our homes and grind the wood for our use ." And man did . And the land s became barren and the tre es were gone. And man said , "It is good." On the fourth day, man saw that animals were in abundance and ran in the fields and played in the sun . And man said , "Let us cage the se animals for amusement and kill them for our sport ." And man did . And there were no more animals on the fac e of the Earth . And man said , "It is ; gooa ." On the fifth day, man breathed the air of the Earth . And man said, "Let us dispose of our wastes into the air for the winds shall blow them away ." And man did . And the air became filled with the smoke and the fumes could not be blown away . And the air became heavy with dust and choked and burned . And man said , "It is good." C\r\ Hid ci vtVi Hotr \/l l U»«* 0AAV»ft VtCt j r man catuhim. tVChW tlAJIlI »»*•**« self ; and seeing the many languages and tongues, he feared and hated , And man said , "L et us build great machines and destroy these lest they destroy us." And man built great machines and the Earth was filled with the rage of grea t wars . And man said , "It is good." On the seventh day, man res ted from his labors and the Earth was still , for man no longer dwelt upon the Earth . And it was good. Why Teach -In Because science f orsees the end of life on earth in 35 years if the prese nt rate of pollution cont inues , Because breathin g the air of most of our cities exposes us to lung cancer causatives equivalent to smoking one to two and a half packs of cigarette s a day, Because ever y year Americans alone discard 7 million cars , 100 million tires , 20 million tons of paper , 28 billion bottles , and 48 billion cans . Each year Amer icans spend $2.8 billion just to collect garbage and discard 165 million tons of solid waste , Because air pollution causes an estimate $13 billion a year in property damage , Because indu stries alone gush 172 million ton s of smoke and fumes into the air each year , if pr esent trends continue , air pol> lut ion Is expected to double or even quadruple within 30-40 fyiuhd Mstta Goose! Jack and Jill \wen+ up +Ke hill ^Jg4^ j fi mj To QC fe+cK a pail of vwa+ers ^Sfr rf &M*& J ^ came ebvun w+h hepaH-Ks, And Jill came down soon qf+er. Jack be nimble, Jack .be auick; Jac k,j umpcuer The t»q oil slic k. * ^ ^siT J ^\ <^§**> ^JIB lftY MEfc- '^BB&^&F* w • _# vv gw i^ Hush-a-bye,Bird y, *>^ ' On the +ree +op, *^~ ' When +he wind blows, Your brea+hinq will shop* he When + wiria dies . And dow n will come Birdy, Spring+ime and all. 40 Ways to deooll ute the eart h ( continued from pag» three ) lake and river algae to pri lifer ate wildly. 10. Don 't buy or use DDT even if you can find it (and , unfortunately , you still can) . If your garden has water , sun , shade , and fertilizer , it shouldn 't need pesticide at all . If you must spray , use the right insecti cide. (If at all possible , use botanic , als— natural poisons extrac ted from plant s— like nicotine sulfate , rotenone , pyrethrum .) 11. To reduce , noi se, buy a heavy -duty plastic garbage can instead of a metal one . Or sturdy p lastic bags , if you can afford the m . They 're odor proo f , neat , er , lighte r . 12 . Wh en you see a jun ked car , report it to your local Sanitation Depar tment. If they don 't c are , scream till someone does. 13 . If you con 't really need a car , don 't buy a car . M otor vehicles contrib ute a good half of th is country ' s air pollution . Better , walk or bicyc le . Better for you, wo. 14. If you have to car-corn mute don 't chug exhaust into the air just for yourself. F orm a car pool. F our peop le in one car p ut , out a quarter the carb on monoxide of four cars. 15. Better yet , take a bus to wor k. Or a train. Per passenger m ile , the y pollute air muc h less than cars. Support mass tra nsit. 16. If you still think you n«»d a car of your own , make sure It burns fue l efficiently (l.e u rates high in mpg). Get a lowhorse power mini machine for the become common occurences In the near future . Since last summer It has been apparent that camp uses and com* mun ities are Increasingly detery«m* » > Because pollution In our na- mined to do something about en* tion ' s water has reached the stage vlronmental problems . Ther e where some of our cit ies maj or have been symposia , r.aw couwaterways are now considered rses , and new organi zations at college and high schools across fire hazards , the country, and demonstrat ions Because approx imately 90 per and legal actio ns in many commucent of the ur ban population In nities . In September , senator the United States lives In about Gaylord Nelson proposed a nat lar ge and 6, 000 communities , ional teac h-in day . The following where air Is polluted , small, Becam e in 1948 twenty people month he and Cong ressman Paul ~ died in Donora , Pennsylvania , McCloskey suggested Aprll 82; durin g a 40-day period of severs NEA and PSEA quickly endorsed pollution , with scientists pr *V tht concept , and both are actively dietin g that sueh disas ters could pro motin g the teach-in. ¦ city , a monster only for lots of freeway drivin g. 17. Bug gasoline manufacturers to get the lead out. Tetractyl lead additives are put in gas to hype an engine 's performance: they can build up in your body to a lethal dose. Indiana Standard Oil Co. has a leadfree fuel now (Amoco); Atlantic Richfield has announced they 'll Introduce one if al l car manu fac t urer s rewor k engines to make them burn up every breath of fuel , so lead' s not needed. One Detroit leader has already promised new engines on all 197 1 models. P ester the others. (Lead , by the way, chews up metal— includin g new anti pollution catal ytic muffler s.) 18. If bagged garbage overfl ows y our tras h cans , shake it out of bags directly into the can , and trom p it down to compac t it. 19. If you have a fire place... abstain . As much as possible . If you must send up smoke , burn wood , not mur ky canne l coal. 20. Burning leaves or garbage is already illegal in many towns. Don 't do It. Dispose of It some sttYiAt * lunii 21. If you see any oily , sulfurous black smoke coming out of chimneys , re port it to the Sanitation Dept . or Air Pollu tion Board . 22. There 's only so much water. Don 't leave it running . li it h as to be recyc led too f ast , tre atment pl ants can 't purify It pr operly . 23. Measure detergents care fully. If you follow manufact urer 's instruct ions, y ou'll help cut a thir d of all detergent water pollution . 24. STnc« the prime offender in deter gent pollution is not suds but phosphate s (which encourage algae growth), deman d to know how much phosphate Is In the deter gent you're buying. Write the manufacturer , newspapers , Congressmen , the F DA. Until they let you know , use an unphosphated - nond eter gent — soap. (Bubble baths , you may be happy to know , do not cause deter gent pro blems ,) 25. Never flush away what you can put In the garba ge. Especial, ly unsuspected organic dogge r? like cooking fat (give it to the birds) , coffee grou nds, or tea leaves (gardtn trs dote on ths m ). 86. Drai n oil fro m power lawn The Issue Americans ar e becomin g ang4-y, an gry that their rivers are bein g use d as sewers , that their beaches ar e blac k and oily, and that their welands and natura l areas are being swallowed up by boracious land developers. They 're tire d of coughing and sneezing and ru bbin g their irritate d eyes and knowing that there are dangerous pesticide s in the ir bodies. April 22 will be a day of nationwide acti on , a day on which millions of stude nts and the general public will examine the facts about our environmen tal crisis , what , if anythin g, is being done about it , and what must be done . Mr»w . The task is enormou s. If the environ ment is to be pr eserved for ourselves and our children— if , indeed , life on earth is to have a future — all of us are going to have to pay a heavy economic and social price. Economic , because cleanin g up our rivers , lakes , and atmos phere will cost billions of dolla rs, an expenditure which , in the long run , we all must share . Social , because if we as a society are trul y interest ed in the "Quality " of life , we 're going to have to reexamine some basic attitudes about our values. Foremost , we must realize the necessity to curb our population growth. Also, we mu st aw ak en to the fact that more speed, more gadgets , and more affluence do not mean a better life ; rathe r , that our demand for them is leading us ra pidly down a one-way street toward environmental de- Since last summer it has been apparent that campuses and communities are increasingly demowers or snowplows into a con- termined to do something about tainer and dispose of it: don't environ mental problems . There hose it into the sewer system. have b e e n symposia , new 27. Avoid disposable diapers if courses , and new or ganizations at possible . They may clog plumb- colleges and high schools acros s ing and septic tanks . the country and demonstration s 28. If you see something wrong and legal actions In many comand you don 't know whom to con- munities. Last September , Senatact , bombard newspapers , TV tor Gay lord Nelson proposed a naand r adi o stations with letters . tional day of action , and the folGet friends to join in. Media lowing month he and Congre sswill help with the message if man Paul McCloskey suggested you 're getting nowhere in nor mal Apri l 22. channels . Remember: Publicity One final point. April 22 should hurts polluters . not be thought of as merely one 29. Protest the SST: wr ite the day set aside to think about President . Today 's Boeing 747 the environment ; rather , it should can already move more people be conside red as marking the befurther without ear -shatterin g ginning of a concerted offer to srmln hnnmo further environmental under 30. Help get anti pollution ideas standing and education . into kids ' heads. If you 're a teac he r , a Scout leader , a cam p counse lor , a summer playground ly grown food in biodegradable assistant: teach children about ^ conta iners . There 's pr obably litter , conserva ti on , noise... suc h a health -Jood store near about being considerate , which is you. The ne plus ultr a: Boston 's Ecology Food Store , opening this what it all comes down to. spring , which plan s handcrafted 31 . If you're in a relatively rura l are a , save vegetable wast es p ro ducts , books , and household (saw dust , corn husk s, cardboard , ecology counseling too. (Write ta bl e scra p s, etal ) I n a comp ost Boston Area Ecology Action , 925 heap , instead of throwing the m Mass . Avenue , Cambr idge , Mass . out. Eventually , you can spread 02139 . They need help.) 38. Radicalize your communIt as fertilizer -na ture 's way of ity . Do something memora ble on recycl ing garbage . April 22nd , the date of the First 32 . Re member: All Power Pollutes , Especially gas and elec- Nation al Environ ment Teach -in. tr ic power , which either smogup One group's given P olluter of the air or dirty the river s. So the Week awards to deserving cut down on power consumption . captains of Industry . In tr afIn winter , put the furnace a few fic jam s, other groups have handdegrees lower (it' s healthier) ed out leaflet titled "Don 't You an d wear a swerater . Feel Stupid Sitting Here? , which 33 . Use Uve Christmas tree s, -lists advantages of car pools and not amputated ones , and replant mass transit . 39 . You as a citizen car swear the m afterward . City bound ? Contact your Parks DaDt. out summons and bri ng a noisy 34. Protestin g useless pol- neighbor to court . If the problut ion ? Don 't wear indestructible lem 's bigger than that , talk to a metal buttons that say so. lawyer about a class-action law35. Fight to keep noise at a suit. A group of people for Inminimum betwe en 11 p.m. and stance , can file a class-ac tion 7 a.m. Studies show that sounds suit against a noisy airline , or which aren 't loud enou gh to wak e against a negligent public antiyou can still break your dream pollution official. cycle — so you awaken tired 40. Last , and most important and crank y. By the same token , - vital ly Impor tant— U you want be kind to neighbor s. Suggest more than two childre n , adopt that your local rad io - TV sta - them . You know all the horror tion remind listeners at 10 p.m. storltsl They're tr ue. Nlghtto turn down the volume. marlihly true . And that goes 36. When you shop, take a for the whole Americ an econoreusable tote with you as Euro -i my: unless we can stop fanatl -, peans do - and don 't accept cally producing and consuming excess packaging and paper bags . more than we netd , we won't 37. Patronize stores that spec- have a worl d to stand on. Care . lallit in unpistlcldi»d , organlc al- Wh o wm , lf w» don»t? Diamondmen Split Two Double Headers by Jack Hoffman On Apr il 15 , the Huskie batmen swept a double header from Kutz town State at home. In the first game the diamondmen collected seven run s, six hits and two errors while Kutztown had four runs on nine hits , while having four errors . Bill Houser was the winning pitcher in relief of Chris Perry . Perry pitched three innings and only gave up three runs and six hits . He had struck out one and issued three free passes . Houser pitched four innings and gave up one run on three hits and had a balk . Chris Perry was 2-2 at the bat and had 2 runs batted In . Joe Accardi was 1-3, Dennis Weir was 2-3 and Dan Dietterich was 1-2 accountin g for the Husk * ies six hits . KUTZTOWN 012 000 1—4 BSC 003 310 0— ri In the second game BSC won victor y to the tune of 7-3 . Gre g Itahora pitched the entire game and was awarded the win . Greg BSC Second in Tri -Meet Last week in a tri-meet between state champion Millersville, B.S.C . and Shippensburg SC ., the results found Millers ville on top with 100 points , B.S. C . second with 70 points and Shippensburg last with 10 points . This gives the trackers a 4-1-0 record hr\ riafo Bloom had a good day on the track as they took 5 of the 10 running events , but a bad day on the field losing all the fiel d events as well as all three of the jumping events . C oach Puhl was pleased with the team as a whole . He thou ght the runners did well , and the weight men just ran up against some extremely tough competit ion . However the coach did expre ss some disap pointment in the per formance of his jumpers . Standouts for Bloom were Mas- History ters , Eckert , Ber ger , and Davis who took fir st in the 440 yard relay; Terr y Lee who ran his all time best in the mile , winning the event in a time of 4:30 .4; Jimmy Davis who pulled first in the 100 yar d dash , Larry Strohl who also did a good time in the half mile with a 159 .8: Charlie Graham won the 440. Intermediate hurdles in a 55.6; Gre g Ber ger took the 220 , and Tim Waechter and Terry Lee came in tie for first in the mile coming across hand in hand with a time of 10:02 .6. The final win for the Huskie s was the mile relay team of Lucysyn , Ber ger , Gra ham , and Bittner . This meet cost the Huskies a lot in that Jim Davis hurt his leg in the meet and will consequently have difficult y try ing to recover for the tr i-meet this Wed nesday, Conf erence (continue d fro m pag* one) * in Haas Auditorium at 10:00 A .M . returned Salisbur y recently from a 25,000 mile J ourney to the heart of the troubled zone of the Asian continent — the Sino-Soviet Frontier . For the fourth time he visited Mon golia , the remote buffer state between t he C ommun ist giants . He has assessed the cr itical tensions between Russia and China along their frontier anc in the listenin g posts of Tokyo, Hon g Kong, Seoul , Moscow , London , and Paris. His best selling book , "T he 900 Days: The Siege of Lenin grad " was published in 1969, alon gwith "Ma rs hal Zhukov ' s Greates t Battles ," of which he edited and wrote the Intro duction and com* mentary . Two years before with the approval of the United States Department of State , Salisbury made a J ourney to North Vietnam, and his reports of that visit for the New York Times made front-page headlines . In tha t same year he visited Laos , Burma, the H imalayan-Indian border up to Mon golia and Siberia , A graduate of the University of Minnes ota , he began his jour * nalism career as editor of his college newspaper at the same t ime workin g for the St . Paul Bureau of United Press , He then joined the Chicago Bureau of the UP coverin g the tailend of the Prohibition gang wars and the tria l of Al Capone, In 1940 he was transfer red to UP' s Forei gn Desk in Washin gton ; In 1943 he managed the London Bureau , and in 1944 he head ed the UP 's Mos cow staff; He J oined the New York Times in 1949 and soon after returned to R UBBla as correspondent . Following his return to the United States in 1954, he wrote th e book "Shook ^Up Genera tion" following the New York covera ge of loca l news , ur ban trans porta t ion , and juvenile delinquency .He returned to Russia in 1959 and also accompanied the then Vicepresident Nixon on his tri p to Russia and Krushchev ' s tr ip to the United States . In addition to being a Pulitzer Prize winner he has won numer ous other awards and has author ed man y books pertaining to Rus dfl Professor Mor genthau came to the United States from Ger many in 1937 , Durin g his three decades here he has been a sharp an d constructive spokesman for the critics of Americ an military and forei gn policy decisions . He has served as Consultant to the Departm ent of Defense and as Senior Fellow of the Counc il on Forei gn Relations , As a lecturer he has addressed the Air , Ar . my, Naval and Nation al War Colleges , and has spoken before the Inter-American and NATO Defense Colleges , Dr . Mor genthau Is widely pub* llshe d . Among his most widely accla imed volumes are "Vietnam and the United States " (1965), "Poli t ics Among Nations " (4th ed . rev. 1967), and "New For * elgn Policy for the United States " In writing and on the speaker 's platfor m , Pro fessor Mor genthau has never been a man to mince wor d s. To the millions of Americans facing honest confusion or painful self'appraisal , he brin gs stimulating fresh ideas and a str ingent J ud gment , couche d In compelMn glangua ge. st ruc k out three , gave up four hits and issued five walks . The Huskies pounded Kutztown for seven runs on 11 hits and had one error . Kutztown acquirec three runs on four hits but made seven errors . Joe Accardi and Dave Smith were the big guns havin g three and two hits respectively . Mark Vivian , Tom Fleeger , D e n n y Weir , Rich Gatehell , Mike Costanzo and Greg Stahora each had hits for the victors . KUTZTOW N 012 000 0—3 210 130 0—7 BSC Dame fortune frowned upon the Huskie s on April 17 when the diamond men trav eled to Shippensbur g, dro pping » doubtehea der 9-0 and a-0. Bob Warner was handed the loss in the first game. Warner pitched 3—1-3 innin gs, gave up four runs , on three hits , walked five and struc k out 4.John Lepley relieved him for 1— 1-3 innin gs and gave up three runs on five- hits , fanned one and walked one . Phil Jordan pitched the remainin g inning and allowed two runs on two hits with one base on balls . BSC had Oruns , three hits and one err or while Shippens bur g had nine runs on nine hits with 0 errors, Dave Smith , John Choyke and Bill Derr each had hits for BSC; BSC 000 000 0—0 Shippe nsburg 100 602 0—9 In the second game Coach Boler was satisfied but disappointed commenting **we looked great and hit the ball hard but it was usually right at someone . The pitcher and the third baseman accounted for nine combined assists , which is about one-third of the team ' s total put-outs ." Dave Moharter pitched the entire game and suffered the loss. Dave gave up three runs on four base hits , issued four bases on balls and struck out three . BSC had 0 runs on four hits and one error . Shippensburg w a s somewhat equal , the runs being the deciding factor with three runs , four hits and 0 error s. All of SSC' s runs came in the third innin g wnen uwy received three walks , 1 sacrifice , a base hit and an error . Chip Smith , Dan Dietterick , Denny Weir and Mark Vivian collected hits for the Husk ies, * BSC 000 000 0—0 Shippensbur g 003 000 0—3 T omorrow , at 2:00 p.m., the Huskies will match their skills against a tenac ious Millersvil le club at home . Coach Boler would appreciate your attendance at thi s game since the moral of the team is essential.w Calcktr and BSC Chess Team co ps first place in Pa. Championships The BSC Husky Rooks , with Dr . Gilbert Selder s as their ad* visor , won a stunning chess victory over Lebanon Valley on Saturday , April 13th . BSC , the champions of the Eastern Division defeated Lebanon Valley College cham ps of the Western Division 4-1, To reach the play-off , BSC had to compete with Muhlenburg , Lehigh and F&M . The Rooks defeated Muhlenburg 4-1 and 5-0, Lehigh was their toughest oppon ent as the Rooks lost 3V2 • IV2 in the first round , but since Lehigh forfeited its second round , BSC walked away with the title . The Rooks thus earned the right to play LVC for the title of the Eastern Pennsylvania Collegiate Chess League . Earlier in the year BSC and LVC traded 3-2 scores . So the play-off should' ve been a close match . But when Dave Kistler beat Glenn Beidel on second board and Ken Drake beat Mike Dortch on first board it looked easy, but such was not the case . On fifth board Bill Schre ibu found a forced win in the Middle game to defeat nave Sheaffer . The title was still up tor grabs as both Jac k F rankso n third boar d and Dennis Plymette were fighting for their lives . They were losing when Dennis' foe , Manoocl Biran g lost a rook and Denim quickly won to sew up the mate! 3-1. Jack played his best ganu ever . Going into the end gam< he was behind 2 pawn s. Playia i slowly and carefully, he caugh up and won. BSC finished with a fine re o ord , ending, with a record of 12« 2*1. In the all-important east , the Rooks had a 5-1 recor d while in the west they owned a 6-1-1 recor d. Individually everybody had a winn ing recor d . F rom first to fifth board , Dave Kistler 10-4-1 , Ken Drake 12-3-0, Dave Sheaffer 10-4- 1, Dennis Plymette 11-3-1 and Jim Kitche n 10-1-0 (their best recor d). Jack Franks with his win is 1-0, BSC will travel to Getty sburg on Friday April 24 to compete In the 2 day state champion ship. BLOOM J BOWL Harr y Logan Fine J ewelry € AND Repairing Your J tttttUr Awy jrom Horn * Bloommuro 5 W. Main St. 1 (Amp ^Siand Kcady J YOUR DOLL AR BUYS MORE AT A I fit fashion able f\ Hrc us ' WAFFLE GRILLE MAREE'S DRESS ¦Cam * in and brow ** . M I: I EUDORA'S GOODWILL STORE I CORSET SHOP I 1S4 W. Main, tloom.burg SHOP AT GOODWILL FOR YOUR CLOTHING AND SAV E YOUR MONEY FOR OTH1R THINGS SHOP AT SHOP 11 I. Main It. tloomikor t I ¦A frtatd ly atort in I 112 W. Main • I 1 ™ M ¦ M N d M i M B -M M a a a oar/A ^a a M M ^a a M i •&"*y (co ntinue ^ fr*»"« page three ) crisis in this nation . W e are spending insanely lar ge sums on military hardware instead of eliminating hunger and poverty. We spaunder resources on moondust while people live in wretch* ed housing. And we still waste money and lives in a war we should never have entered and get out immediately. They are all a part of our basic disregard for how people live , and for the destruction of our surroundings. We have made Vietnam an ecological catastrophe . Vietnam was once capable of producing a marketable surplus of grains and rice . »Now America must feed her . We have left more than 500,000 acr j s barren. American bombs ha\ 9 pock-marked the country with mo» e than 2.5 million crater s as much as 30 feet deep. We have destroyed a quarter of the country 's mangrove forests, which shelter proteinrich fish and shellfish ; in their place grow rat-infested forests of bamboo. The destruction of the environment of Vietnam is not simply a by-product of the war . We are guilty of direct , devastating, and inexcusable assault on that nation 's ecosystem . The United States spent $73 million on defoliation in Vietnam in the last fiscal year alone. Much of the money went for the purchase and distribution of Agent Orange , a powerful herbicide containing 2 , 4, 5-T, which has been shown to produce birth defects in laboratory animais. We have dumped defoliants on Vietnam at the rate of 10,000 pounds a month, blackening in a single year 6,600 square miles • an area about the size of the. state of Connecti- —» — -^ ^^^ ^^^ ^m ^m ™» ^^ SW ^^^^ ^^^ ^mmmm ^—^w ^^^^ ^ in the countr y* do have a proble m which if not soon corrected may become uncorrectable. uDecauA* ( continued from p*fl« fbr#») immune to the problems of the city, tiie air around the world is not divided into 'city air ' and ' county air * . We in the country have the advantage of letting the winds bring us the city 's pollution without having the A r tSale There will be a "Clothesline Art Sale " at the Court House ^ Plaza, Saturday, April 25fr om 10 a.m . to 5 p.m., for the benefit of the area Day Care Center which is under the direction of Mrs. Eilfeen Sylvester . With the paintings being donated by the Art Departments, the sale is a combined effort of the Bloomsbur g Jr . • Sr . High School and the college . Still another reason for We cannot pretend to be conEnvironmental Awareness Day cerned with the environment of is the current populaton presthis or any other nation as long sure that the world is underas we continue the war in Vietgoing. And, this pressure will nam — or enter a similar war increase before it decreases. in Laos or elsewhere. But , we live in the 'country ' . and there's plenty of land to But even if the war were over fa ctories in our backyard. tomorrow, America would still live on. True, physical man is not large. And, when dealing be killing this planet . This coun- I However, the factories that we with try 's peaceful pursuits are norstatistics , the. combined do have are far from stellar weight of all human beings alive rif ying. Too often political and Works donated by the BSC Art examples of pollution free today is insignificant when business institution s seem inherDepartment are a small water compared to the effect these ently oblivious to the fact that I operation. Their practices of color entitled "Serendipity " by persons have on their sursome of us want to live in this Dr . Percival R . Roberts; Kenburning, release of open roundings . Man clearcut much country thirty years fr om now. unfiltered emissions, and failure neth Wilson 's water color , "Blue of north central Penna 's. forests Those institutions had better Mist "; a figure in pen and ink to control unpleasant odors all since there was no limit to the recognize that fact , and soon .We by by Barbara Strohman; weaving serve as examples that we ' trees , but now what is he doing don 't have much time . We canConstance Ward ; and v series of not afford to give them much sphere It would be irresponsi- with that land ? Nothing! Man ceramic nieces bv Ronald Bower. . has chosen to bread millions nine . ble for the National Security upon millions like himself and Any day now a decision will Council to approve the test In its third year , this summer, . now he must use more and more be made on just one more outthe Day Care Center is federally There should be a full and rageous activity. The Atomic En- impartial study of the environ- of these marginal lands for food supported . H owever , the availand other commodities for his ergy Commission wants to set mental effects of this — and able funds are insufficient for the survival , and still man breeds off the largest nuclear cratering every other major governmental equipment , travel, social serblast in history. If the Under- or industrial project that will afvice , two meals per day, nursing more. Living space,, is not tj he secretaries' Committee of the fect the eco-system of the councare , and instruction that is proproblem, the real problem ¦-s vided at the Center , National Security Council ap- ¦ try— BEFORE it is undertaken, proves, the STURTEVANT blast not after it is too late If we economic space, space to carrj . There will be a display of the — 170 kilotons, 8V2 times as are to make wise decisions out the activities that man needs , we powerful as the Hiroshima bomb have to know what we are doing art works in the Studio Shop until to maintain his high standard —will be detonated in Nevada to our environment The burden Saturday. All students are urged of living (in the case of the . this month or next.The test will should be on those whose donate works . If a sale is ef•to United States), improve his activinot be fully contained under- ties will affect the environment fected , the student will receive standard of living (as inLatin ground . It is designed to prohalf of the profit and the Center America) and space to produce whether by blasting, building, duce a crater as an experiment — v'U receive the other half . the things that he need to live $ prove marketing products — to ( in using bombs to underground . or food) . When thesfc things all that what they propose is ecoIt is designed to produce a crat* blasting, compete for the use of the land or marketing building birth control measures as a preer as .an experiment in using products what then not* all of these goals can to prove that — vention for starvation. bombs to build canals and har- they propose is ecologically survival will be be met. First, bors . It will send an estimated cniinri All of these reasons alone are assured, then maintenance of 17 million curies of radioactive country cause enough for Environmental Some interests in this gas and debris into the atmoAwareness Day but, when seen , will resist the idea that we must the level of living, then improveactively protect other people and ment of the level of living. But, in toto, there is no reason strong future generations , and not just there will come a day when enough not to have an Environpresent profits . But a movement there are so many mouths to mental Awareness Day. Indeed, is building in this country that feed that the other goals will there is no reason strong enough will not stand for more of the be thrown out, th en , not to make every day Environability, or the money . Sci-fi be step-by-step , reckless decisions have to long after that there mental Awareness Day. durned , the money for , say, Apol- that dumped sewage in our air and not too lo 13, could be put to better use . water got and kept us in Viet, will be no new lands to use We the students of BSC do Cripes, even the money spent on nam , ,and neglected to give all for the necessities of life, and care what happens to our making "Marooned" ... people in this country a decent man will begin to die because environmental and Bloomsburg We probably can save our- standard of living. It is a move- he could not grow on a limited part of our much very is selves. If we start now we have ment that will question the per- amount of land enoughfood for if for no Therefore environment. five , perhaps ten years. If we sonal values of every member of an almost unlimited amount of other reason than our own don 't start now , forget it. So this society, the processes of corsurvival , w e want t o see th at let's get with it , huh you poli- porate decision-making, and the mouths. Then man will realize Bloomsburg, as well as every ticians out there: yer futzing political priorities of this coun- that his agricultural technology has failed him, and he will have oth er t own in t h e countr y , does up my science fiction . If we can tr y. by then lost the only other field its part to clean up man's get things back together down IT IS A MOVE MENT THAT his technology could have saved environment before it is too late here there will be plenty of time WILL SUCCEED BECAUSE IT , him: the scientific utilization of to do anything. for Flash Gordons. HAS TO . I still want to see space flight, the real thing, beyond the solar system and beyond still. I probably won 't . But if we work it Information on a ri ght , maybe my two kids... yeah "Procedural Manual for ... warp drives ... united federation starships... Aslmovian FounStudent Organizations " dations , Dune planets... mankind hand lettere d with the free of his ancestral rock... on a wor d s "Mu lka 's Funn y bold new mission... to seek out Book" left on a table in life and new civilizations... to the Facul ty Lounge on boldly go where no man has gone or a b o u t Monda y, before I Dam mitt , I still wann a see March 16, 1970. All rethose red eggs ! plies kept confide ntial. - Fut ure dialogue from a t.v. Send to Box 30K M&G ) ser ies , popular elsewhere in the solar system?: WI'K INVITING YOU TO ^^^B B i ^i^^ s^^^'^^ /ll (Whe re do you come from?) IM FIND OUT WHY ROAD RACING ^ ^**.^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ (I come from Bar soom . Out there IS TOPS AMONG COLUGE STUOfNTS ^^^^ K^e^ JM in the stars . On Barsoo m lovers <^^^^ HbV ^^^/ AND ORAOS. SPORTS ^jAR RACING I used to go out at night and look IS COIOH, SPEED, AND EXCITEMENT. <^^^^^ Bb^bW»T1 _JP at the Earth) (Earth- what was IT'S THE ULTIMATE CHALLENGE. A ^^^^^ HL^ HfefllB Earth ?) PIZZA JOIN US FOR TWO FULL DAYS OF '^ H^^^^^^^^^ H' RACING AND SOCIALIZING AT THE b^L^L^L^B^L^L^L^L^L W Compliments SCCA NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP SMif Fift h Column (continued from page 2) for the Pope to shut up and just go on wearing the big ring. We 've got to do something, it' s either control through lower birth rate or through higher death rate. Already we have war (incredibly, Viet Nam still goes on; who does these things anyway?), practically everywhere but the U.S. has famine , and unless I'm being put on the U.S. Navy is gettin; worried about rats and plagues and such. The NAVY! Somewhere there 's hope. M aybe behavorial sink hasn 't struck yet. In Woodstock half a million used one communal toilet , so maybe endurance will overcome. (New song for Earth people, one to emphasize the toleration which will have to be exercised but soon , an oldie... "I' ve Grown Accustomed to Yer Face.") Gurk , I juest offended myself. But I couldn 't have been more offensive than that idiot Asian war , Joh nson 's curse araging still , as offensive as misplaced money -mr anri huncra mmvmmm ^^ r. ^ m WiiM My beloved science fiction , well , It 's just that , science fict ion . Right now we haven 't the mone y or the ener gy to repopulat« , to move out to the stars. It 's okay for Jame s BUsh , but r ight now It can 't be done. We j ust don 't have the time , or th e WANTED: P^AT ^PU^^^^^^ H^^ j POCONO Q\\^^Sl Charlie ' s A of Xsbe, tytniesl iRememiraMce3$- HOA6IES REA & DERICK, Inc. "St ores of Service " NESPOLI jewelers Fine Jewelry and Watc h Repair FLOWERS 784-4406 tondt d Wo rld Wide Delivery \ ^ If I. Mat) !•., UOOMMUM ¦^^•^^ B^^ i^ ^i^^ e^^ e^^ B^^ i^^ e^^ e^^ p^eB^'^ B^^ B^e^p^i^ ROAD RACES. WE'LL HAVE OVER 200 COMPETITORS DRIVING EVERYTHING FROM SPRITES TO ! \ COMAS, TWENTY-ONE CLASSES O0an 'riM2tOO p.m. CloMd 1t30 to 3i00 p.m. Every Doy lut Friday IN ALL 8:30 to 11.30 SAT. MAY 2-SUN. 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