Ramsey to speak at Banquet Dr . Ja ck Ramsey , Coach of the Philadelphia 76ers of the National Basketball Association , will be the featured speaker at the annual all college sports ' banquet at Bloomsburg State College to be held Tuesday, May 5, in the Scranton Commons at 7:00 p.m. In addition to being a promin ent coach in the NBA, Dr . Ramsey also had an outstanding record while coaching eleven seasons tor St. Jose ph s ' College of Philadelphia , posting a 234-32 win-loss record . He should pre sent an interesting message to all those in attendence at the banquet . Russ Houk , Athletic Director , would like to extend a cordial invitation to all college sports part icipants at BSC , members of the M aroon and Gold Band , Cheer learders , Maroon and Gold editors , "B" Club members , and members of the College Council to attend the banquet and hear Dr . Ram sey. Immediate ly following the banquet the coaches of the nine var sity sport s will pre sent awards to various members of their teams. Choral Presentation BSC's W omen 's Choral Ensemble an d M en's Glee Club under the direction of Richard J. Stanls law will present their annual Spring Concert on Sunday , May 3, at 8:15 p.m. in Haas Auditorium. The program will include many popular tunes , folk songs, Broadway hits , and a few noted compositions of Jeno Takacs and Bela Bartok. A unique twist has been added to this year 's prog ram; the combined choirs will pre sent a few segments of the Broadwa y show " Paint Your Wagon " comp lete with costu mes and solos. Anothe r highlight of the concert will be Howard Hanson 's "Song of Democracy ' pre sented with orchestra accompaniment. Mr. Stephen Wallace will be guest conductor . This varied repertoire should add up to an evening of delightf ul enterta inment. The public is invited to attend; there is no admission char ge. Applications are now being accepted for the followin g positions on the 1970*71 MAROON AND GOLD: Managing Editor , News Editor , F e a t u r e Editor , Sports Editor , Copy Edito r, Photogra phy Editor , Circulation Manager. Applications should state the position they are applying for and their qual ificat ions. Send applications to the Managing Editor , Maroon and Gold, Box 301. The deadline is May 6, 1970. Council Proposes Const. Change College Counci l recentl y reconsider ed the referen dum for chan ging the membershi p of CGA . This is the resu lt of a petition initiated by Frank Pizzoli. Over 100 stud ents signed the petition requesting a special meetin g to r econsid er membershi p changes . Fizzoli furt her state d "t he men Wednesday , May 13, has been and women of this college ar e selected as the day for Advanc ed res ponsible enough to evaluate Scheduling for the fall semester opinions given to them by the pre of 1970. sent administrators who exercise All students who expect to or votin g rights on CGA . S h o u l d even hope to return to Blooms- this chan ge appear in the constit burg next fall MUST register on ution I request that all adminisMay 13 . Any student who does trators who now re gular ly atten d not pr epare a schedule that day meetings of CGA will continu e (including those who expect to to do so. Many items br ought perform studen t teachin g)will not before CGA do not directly inbe permitted to enro ll until the volve the Adminis tration and direct ly involve studen ts ." sprimg semester. JoAnn Lucrezi made the folStudents are advised to schedule routine medical and dental lowing motion which was later app ointments so as not to inter- seconded by John Dasch: " the fere with their schedulin g obliga - following chan ge be mad e in Artlons on May 13. Only emergen- icle VI, Section 4, Part C, of the cies, with accepted documenta - Community Governm ents Assoct ion, can be considered as a valid iation 's const itut ion to r ead: Th e reason to be excused from ad- Dean of Students , Dean of Instruvanced schedulin g. Telephone ct ion , Dean of W omen , Dean of calls to administrative offices Men , the Director of Public Reare unnecessar y if one is 111 or lat ions , and the Director of Stuinvolved in a similar emergency , dent Activities are non-votin g but certification to one 's absence members of College Council." To clarify this point , the facmust still be provided to permit a student to schedule after May ulty member still has a vote.The 13 . administrators , however , will reTnose individuals wno must ma in as members , in an advisory work (either on or off campus) on vnyavny. The two clauses in the Conadvanced scheduling day should ma k e arran gemen ts to be excused ut itution mentionin g the Presi dent of ARM and ARW , the Day from work so they can be present at the Centennial Gymna sium at Men and Day W omen , will be retheir appointed hour or soon tained . after. Student athletes should not The proposed Lucre zi motion expect to enter the gymnasium at any other hour than the time when they are scheduled by virtue of the number of credits earned . One further obligation prior to in keeping with current trends pr e-registration Is the paym ent of in American higher education , the the Community Activitie s fee of faculty of Bloomsbur g State Colfifty dollars for next year. These lege have approved a new and fees are to be paid according to more flexible General Educat ion the following schedule : Wednes - progra m for all curricu la , acday , May 6 — All Freshmen ; cordin g to Dr . John A . Hoch , Dean Thursday , May 7— All Sopho- of I nstruct ion. The program , mores; Frid ay, May 8- All developed after a year of study by Juniors and Seniors . an ad hoc committee of the faculty When reporting to Advanced headed by Dr . Edson Drake , DiScheduling, students shoul d take rector of the Division of Liberal the following items with thenv.(l) Arts , win become effective in Community Activities fees re- September 1970. ceipt for 1970-71, (2) "Credits The new pro posalreflects less Earned " Card , (3) Maste r Class rigidity than the present pro Schedule Booklet , gram , openin g many options for ^/ tdvan ce •3 c n eau tin a ! Mmticn j b J U StuJmbl mUo not f ory ttto p ay Community Mbfy 3m ZAman Wd, Way 6 Soph., ZJhuut daif , If l ay7, J unlart &" Smlon 3d*, W The TV control room is the domain of the show's director.Seated before a battery of 6-10 television screens, each coming from a different camera, the director selects the camera which best shows the play in progress. The players frequent a bar in t h e stadium after the game. T h e tensions of the contest call for small doses of alcohol to come back to the human race. Shortly after the tour, we filed into a conference room behind the mezzanine behind homeplate. There a question and answer period between the students a n d some of the Yankee executives took place. The first to speak was Lee McPhail, Yankee General Manager . Following him came Toney Roach, the sports editor of the New York Times. Mike Burke, Yankee chairman of the board and president, and players Dave Ellis and Lindy McDaniel. Mr . Roach discussed the world of the big city newspaper and young thinking Mike Burke talked and answered questions of the relevance »of baseball in this era in Hmfi JJl b V l After the press conference , and lunch in the executive bar, we took in a 3*0 Yankee loss to Oakland. The Yankee's front office is trying to establish better re« lationships with the world outside the stadium . This conference and the meticulous planning which must have gone into it to make it a success of their new era. Competing against the Mets and Madison Square Garden, the Yanks are gaining strength off the field . If their team begins to show improvements, Yankee Stadium will again shake from multitudinous crowds such as those of the Ruth and Gehrig days. I would like to publicly thank the Yankees, Lee McPhail, Mike Burke, Robert Fishel and his staff, and the New York Times for making Saturday a success which I am sure was enjoyed by all those Involved. ^tan (cmHmi M tram page libra *) and assinlne affectations. Let your extemporaneous decantations and unpremediatedExpattaticns h*ve intelligibility without rhodomentade or thrasmonical bombast.Sedulously avoidall polysyllabical profundity, pompus prelixity and ventrilequal verbosity. Shun double enterdre and prurient jocosity , whether obscure or apparent-longorrhelc or otherwise. Yours most humbly, Stan Rakowsky ^ ; Watc h Repair 15 L Main St., alOOMUUM i ^^^^^^^^^^ r ^^^^^^^^ r ^^ r^ ^r ^^^^^^^^ r ^^ r ^^^^^^^^ ^ r ^ FETTERMANS BARBER SHOP — QUALITY — JFoot of ColUge Hill Blo oi mborg Pa. ^ Wm UuJU/l CWF *R|0N<«D F j fc I I ' > / A PENN 1W0 9 a boy and girl searching for lite ! /7 ^ i By Jack Hoffman BSC diamondmen following a one day postponal split a doubleheader with Mansfield at Bloomsburg on April 22. In the first game Greg Stahora started and pitched 6 - one-third innings leaving the game tied at 3-3,John Lepley releaved him for the final two-thirds inning and was credited with the win. Bob Dileberto started for the losers and was relieved by Steve Casterline and was given the loss. Dileberto gave up 8 hits while Casterline 2. BSC had 4 runs on 10 hits while committing 1 error . Mansfield had 3 runs , 6 hits and 1 error. For BSC Dave Smith and Tom Fleeter had 2 hits apiece. Fleeger had 2 RBI's. M ike Costanzo had 1 hit and 1 RBI. Joe Accardi, Bill Derr, Rich Gatchell, Don Deitterick and Greg Stahora each had basehits.Bloom left 10 on base while Mansfield left 9. The Huskies scored 2 in the first , one in the second and one in the seventh. Mansfield scored all of their runs in the seventh. r h e 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Mansfield EMTMANO OLQII* YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE A T A Good performances were turned in by: The 440 Relay team thaf took fourth , the 880 Relay team took 5th , Individual performances by Flcek , 5th in the shot, CaveUero , 2nd in the javelin , Andy Kusma , 4th in the high hur dles , and Tim Waechter 6th in the 3 mile run. EUDORA'S CORSET SHOP town I Repairing SHOP AT GOODWILL FOR YOUR CLOTHING Your J tmtUr Awy from Horn * 5 W. Main St. Bloom mum 1 The brothers of Phi Sigma Pi, National Honor Fraternity in Education, at the suggestion of one of their advisors, Mr. Richard Donald , recently looked into the possibility of sponsoring a "foster child" overseas. A committee was formed to gather information regarding the agencies through which this could be done and to coordinate correspon- periodically. The brothers picked India as their first selection and Korea as their second. The Fu nd's Emergency List was the third. Approximately two weeks ago, the fraternity was notified by the Christian Children's Fund that they would be sponsoring a child from India. His name is Stanli Bakaiynathan Gambram. He is from Bangalore and goes to the Seventh Day Adventist school there. He is five years old and in kindergarten. Kis favorite subj ect is "singing" and he likes to play "group games." The brothers are looking forward to the time when they will receive their first letter from Stanli. They hope that when Stanli is old enough, they will be able to bring him to college here at The Brothers of Phi Sigma Pi will be sponsoring a car wash on Saturday, May 2 in order to raise funds to support Stanli.The car wash will be held at Bloomsburg Firestone Service , located at the A & P shopping center ,between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. The cost Is $1.00 per car. The brothers say, "come down and help us help Stanli to Last month the brother 's de- a happier life." cided to work through the Christian Children's Fund Inc., of Richmond, Virginia. According to the Fund's plans, the brothers could choose the country that their child would come from and they would receive letters from PIZZA the child and progress reports | Charlie 's Eppley's Pharmacy MAIN ft IION STRUTS. Pntcrlption Spiclalltt 1 { i [ A HOAGIES ; | Open "til 12:00 pun. Closed 1<30 to 3t00 p.m. Evtry Doy But Friday ! ' f ill DIUVIIY • CHANEL • GUERLAIN • FABERGE • LANViN • PRINCE MATCHAIELLI • ELIZARETH ARDEN • HELENA RUBINSTEIN • DANA • COTY • MAX FACTO* 5 t o7 8:30 te 11t30 Regular and King Siio HQAGIBS Phont 784-4292 127 W. Main BLOOMSBURG SHUMAN'S WORLD TRAVEL * BOWL 17 RAIT MAIN ST. « RiOOMMURO • PMONR 7M-M90 For All Your Travel Arrangements © WAFFL E I GRILLE J I by Jack Hoffman BSC llnksmen, under Coach Jack Jones, beat the Kutztown College team, 11-8. T h e State ' first man Bob Snyder , lost to K-town 's number one man, Dick M ayer. Number 2 man, John Marshall , tied his man. Bob Simons and Jeff Hock both out-flogged their opponents. Steve Neumger lost in his number five position. The sixth man of the squad , Ri c h , Jurbala, won his match. This year, instead of basing won-ifps by holes won , the medalist system has been enacted. Thereby, the person with the lowest score on the front nine, the back nine and the total course wins the match. . wflMMI #ffffffpf [ bloom AND 1S4 W, Main; 4tomsbur§ > A frWnd ly ttor« i» Fine J ewelry Phi Sig Pi "Adopts " Child ¦Com * in and br owa ^ . 1I . Main ft. liMm sbur f Harr yLogan GOODWILL STORE AND fAVI YOUR MONIY POII OTHIR THINOt 10 1 the record for the 5th and final time with a jump of 45» 7% " In addition to the triple jump Andy also won the 120 yd high hurdles when he came in with a time of 15.2. Other winners for the Huskies were the 440 relay team, Charlie Gr aham in the 440 I.M. Hurdles, Jim Cavallero in the j avelin and Tim Waechter in the 2 mile run. The real highlight of the meet was the 1, 2, 3 sweep of the 440 I. M. hurdles with Graham , Herb, and Reeves all turning in outstanding times. The only other sweep was the j avelin throw with Cavellero,Barton,and Zern pulling off the 1, 2, 3, combo. This was another strong showing for the Huskies who are making a strong push for the title this year. Opens today in Berwick. Sunday, Capitol Theatre , Bloomsburg. . 0 1 1 0 0 0 3 5 2 2 In the second game BSC dropped a tough 9-5 ballgame. Dave M oharter started for the Huskies and was relieved by Bob Parry. a worlo wide picture + Dave Hagadern got the loss for M ansfield. Bloom got 5 runs on 2 hits and had 2 errors. Mansfield had 9 runs on 7 hits and posted 3 errors. Bill Derr and Dave Moharter had the only two hits for ' the Huskies. In the seventh inning 5 bases on balls and a wild pitch aided the Huskies in getting 3 runs. BSC acquired 13 bases on balls while Mansfield had 10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 r h e M ansfield 7 3 2 1 0 0 0 3 3 9 Bloomsburg 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 3 6 1 Bloomsburg 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 4 Last Wednesday the BSC track team traveled to Kutztown for a Tri-Meet with: Kutztownand East Stroudsburg. The Huskies ran well taking 5 firsts and 9 second places to come out of the meet with two more victories. T h e final score was BSC 70% , KSC 65 , and ESSC 45% . This makes the 5th and 6th victories for the trackmen and brings their record up to 6 and 1 on the way to a tremendous season. Top performances were turned in by Andy Kusma and Steve Buffalo Relays Ryznar who combinJkl to break Bloom took 9th out of 22 teams the school record in the triple j ump 5 times. Andy Kusma broke In the Buffalo Relays. ; Fine Jewel ry and »' K*p ly &! Track Team NESPOLI jewelers \ , Linesmen Club Kutztown BATMEN SPLIT Postponed Twin Bill RESERVATIONS • TICKETS • TOURS « M Airlinti / Train & Hufefi NaruJfed Applications V ETC. for Youth Par* Cards available Call U t t i H p h HOW Hr Any Infar iMMwi wi Travel , ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^