Players V isit New Stage Irv Se.asor i Y .Firtf Show Playing the role of General Tom P owers is H owar d K earns , a senior and seconda ry English major from Shamokin. Howie , a veteran . Bloomsburg Player , has appeared most recentl y in "110 In The Shade. " Cast as Roger Spelding is Larry Gerber. Larry is a resident of Bloomsburg and a veteran of the BSC state. Iva Klingaman , a senior from Hatboro majoring in elementary education , plays the role of Ellen Spelding . BSC theater goers will remember Iva as Snookie in "110 In The Shade ." ' Conrad Mayberry Is played by Larry Grissinger , a freshman , enrolled in secondary English ' from Montoursville. A newcomer to the Bloomsburg state , Larry was active in dramatics in high school. Sh aron Ber geron , east as Reba Spelding, is a senior seconThe National Research coun- dary speech major from Hazle cil has been called upon again to ton . Sharon also appeared in advise the Nationa l Science "Picnic " and "Tro jan Women ," Foundation in the selection oi and was assistant to the direc candidates for the Foundation's tor for "Tartuffe ." Cast as an aide is Kenneth program of graduate and regular postdoctoral fellowships. Panels Hassinger . Ken , a transfer stuof outstanding scientists ap- dent from Williams port Ar ea pointed by the Research Council Community College , is a junior will evaluate applicat ions of all history and, government major candidates . Final selection will from Middlebur g and was active be made by the Foundation , with in dramatics before coming to awards to be announced on March BSC. Steve -Rubta , a Wilkes-Barre 15, 1968. . Fellowships will be awarded junior majoring in secondary for study in the mathematical , general science , plays Delton 4. physical, medical, biological , He has also taken an active engineerin g, and social sciences, part in dramatics before comincluding the history , or law. Ap- ing to the BSC sta ge. The two TV technicians are plication may be made by college seniors , graduate students work- played by Bud Walsh , and Jim Berkheiser. Jim , in his first ing toward a degree , postdoctoral students , and others with equiv- r ole at BSC is a freshma n from alent trainin g and experience . Wllkes-Bar re majoring in secAll applicants must be citizens of ondary English. Bud , a seconthe United States and will be dary educati on histor y major has judged solely on the basis of pre viously played in "110 In The Shade ", "You Can 't Take It With ability. . "Trojan Women ," "ShepApplicants for the graduate You ," » Play , " and "Tartuffe. " axds awards will be re quired to take . Mr. William Aclerno of the the Graduate Record Examinadepartment is diBSC speech tions designed to test scientific To A Small Plan rect lg n "Visit The achieve ment. and ptitude a g with his cast , and alon et " , administred by the examinations Educational Testing service , will has been putting long hours and be given on Januar y 20, 1968, much effort int o the produc tion . Rehearsals are cur rentl y underway for the Bloomsbur g Play ers ' first production of the season. "Visit , to a Small Planet ," by Gore Vidal . This show , which is to be produced on October 26-28 marks the first time a play will be presented on the stage of the new auditorium . Cast as Kre ton in this threeact comedy Is Bruce Hopkins , a junior from Dallas , Pa. , major ing in secondary education , speech and theater arts. Bruce , who is also the president of the Bloomsburg Players , has had much experience on the BSC stage. NSF Fellowship Selections Begin : ¦} Concert Choir "Pops' Concert The BSC Concert Choir "Po ps" Concert , the first student program to be pre sented in the new auditori um , will con. elude this year 's homecom ing act ivities , Sunday at 8 pm. Including popular music, Broa dway show tunes , folksongs and spirituals , the program features several soloists. A mong the songs are : "The Impossible Dream ," from the musical play Man of LaMancha. ''The Surrey With the Fringe On Top " and the theme song from Oklahoma , "Its a Grand Night For Singing, " from State Fair . "I Whistle A Happy Tune " from The Kin g And I . and the folk songs "Zion 's Walls ," and "Chin g-A-Rlng Chaw ." Selections which feature soloists include: "Y ou'll Never Walk Alone," from Carousel done by Jane Hartman; "Waters Ripple and Flow " by Tim Hoffman and Gail Bower; "Ride The Chariot ," by Beth Jones; "What Do The Simple Folks Do? " a duet from Came lot done by Shirley McHenry and Don Helwigj and "S oftly As I Leave You ," presented by Lynn Roccogran di. Directed by William K . Decker , and accompanied by Sandy Ekbxirg, this performance is the conce rt choirJs ; first this season . Fun And Games At March Gras The 1967 BSC Homecoming features Dionne Warwick , afirst rate football game , and a f ull slate of topnotch activities. This year 's Homecoming has been planned around a "Mardi Gras " theme with special emphasis on our fortieth Annual Homecoming Day on. Satur day . Tonight , Big Name Entertain ment will prese nt Dionne War wick in concert from 8:30 to 11:30 pm in Centennial Gymnasium ; The crowning of the Homecom ing Queen will also take place this evening during Miss Warwick '* concert. On Saturday , October 14, the judging of the floats will take place at the Centennial Gymna sium parking lot from 9-10 am. The judging , of off-campus housing decorations will also take place between 9-10 am. At 10:15 am the Homecoming Parade will begin at the Centennial Gymnasium parking lot. The parade will proc eed down College Hill and onto Main St. to the Town Square . From the For approximately s e v e n T own Square it will turn on to weeks, beginning Monday, Octo- Market St., down Market to 5th ber 2, the room on the ground St., from 5th St. to East St., floor formerly occupied by and from East St., to the foot the Children 's library will be of College Hill wheFe it will . used as a classroom during most disband except for the floats . of the day. During that time , liAt 2 pm the football game brar y patrons are asked not to go between Bloomsburg and West throu gh the room in entering or Che ster will begin . After the leaving the building. A. sign has I game there -will be a get-4ogeth been place d acro ss the sta irs 1 er for the Alumni ,-visitors , facleading d ownwar d f rom the t ulty, and studen ts In Husky southwest corner of the middle I Lounge between 4:30 and 5:30 ipbV>r/this sign indicates that the I pm; During this time all resi stair is closed due to the meet- l dence halls , th ? library and auings of classes. Your coopera - 1 ditorium will be open to*vist * tion in complying with the tem- ' I tors.; - v ^ ¦ '. - '¦ ¦ . ¦ ' : ' :. < ' - : . :y \: ^ ^r - '¦: '^ ¦:¦ - ¦ .' : porary rul e will be greatly ap-¦ I At 5:30 pm jrtvere jwill be va pr eciated. I cafete ria. style effrihef for Alumni '" I and visitors in the College f <~ Comi , < t j mans , I A seml-tormal dance f eatur- y , I ing Mel Wynn and the Rhythm I Aces will conclude Homecoming 1 I Day activities in Centennial Gym- Libra ry **¦¦ - v 1 College Council Receives Commons Dining Policy Il! nasium. Dr. Vann an To Publish Article [ Dr. Donald A. Vannan , assoc. [ prof essor of education , pr esently and {teach in g undergraduate Approval for vice - presidents Ten of eleven actions of coungraduate courses in elementary cil's first regular meeting have of organizations to attend council science at Bloomsbur g, anrece ived final approv al and are when the pres ident can 't be there nounced that he has signed a conwas also given. now in effect. tract with F . A. Owen Publishers The orientati on committee was for world publication ri ghts to a The only measure held in abeyance deals with the College Com- commended for its work. s c i e n c e education art icle. The The fi nal item f or app roval was article will soon appear In th mons. Council ' s discussion involved 1) the usual adjus tment the purchase of planters for the "I nstructor *1 magazine , a monthat designated centers throughout period during the early part of main lobby of the New Auditor- ly peri odical for publi c school ium. the United states and in certain the semeste r which is further teachers. foreign countrie s. by complicated increasing the i The annual stipends for Gr adpopulation to 1550, and 2) the uate Fellows are as follows: equipment for the third cafeter $2,400 for the first year level, ia line has not arrived , $2, 600 for the Intermediate level, Explained Dr. Andruss , "T he and $2,800 for the terminal level, policy governing the service of The basic annual stipend for The Department of Public In- meals in the College Commons Postdoctoral Fellows is $6, 500, struction has officially approved is based on a contract existing Dependency allowances and al- mus ic as an area at Bloomsbur g between the board of trustees lowances for tu it ion, fees, and State College. This is of special and the A.R.A. Slate r Food Serwelcome to join in the work belimited travel will also be pr o- importance to the elementary vice; th is provides for the ser The BSC Archeo logy club will ing conducted at the site on Saturvided. vice of an evenin g meal at tab- meet at 7 pm on Tuesda y, Oc- day aftern oons , 1-4 pm. majors . Further Information and appliThe music department has les dur ing a certain number ot tober 17 In room 22, Science Hall. Archeology Club members are cation materials may be obtained found a home In the new auditor - days per week. Robert R. solenberger , the club's Invited to join a field tri p of the from the Fellowshi p Office, Na- ium. Modern equipment such as "There are othe r factors in- facult y adviser , will show slides current field Archeolo gy class, tional Research Counoil , 2101 a stereo tape recor der and volved ," he continued , "which to Illustrate progress being made Constitut ion Ave., N. W., Wash- phonogra ph have been added to should be given more consider - in the excavation of BSC's In- providin g they can arran ge to leave the campus, to visit and ington, D. C. 20418. The deadline the department. In additio n a ation than seems to be justified which has now been of- hear explanations of two ver y Imdian site, for the receipt of applicationsfor Baldwin concert organ has been by a voice vote with several ficially designated by the Penn graduate fellowships Is Decem- Installe d in the main auditorium abstentions noted. " The change sylvania State Museum "36 CO* portant and productive Indian ber 8, 1967, and for regular post- and electric pianos have been in terms of the contract would #L" Flans for the rest of the year sites in the Wyoming Valley bedoctoral fellowships, December made available to the student mean that there would have to be will be discussed. The Archeo- ing excavate d by Kings College 11, 1967. re-advertisement for bids , con- logy club has official CGA ap- students directed by pr ofessor body for use, Leslie Delaney, and by memMr. miller , chairman of the currence for the equipment by proval as an extra - auricular bers of the Society for Penns ylmusic department, suggests that the band and funds for reno - activity for which , students may vania Archeolo gy. The grou p will pianos be situated throu ghout vating and re llnlng drapes In receive service points, All in- leave from Long Porch' In state tereste d are ur ged to attend this the various buildin gs and be Husky . DPI Okays Music Area WELCOME TO Vj i ' .Yt ' ¦¦ : ' l5 .' 5)" ^r . no'Mi . available for the college community, but he needs suggestions en where to put them. Anyone with suggestions Is asked to put a note In box #17 or stop to see Mr. Miller at hit new location, room . 31B,{ New Auditorium * j M n ^ BSC Archeo lo gy Club To Meet In Sc ience Hall In addition the atten dance of meeting, or else to send a note to Bob String to the Intercolle - ; Mr. Solenber ger at P, p. Box 100, giate turtle contest was approved listing their own P. O. Box and as was the "B'f Club 's fund statin g when they would be able to ra ising pr oject , " mums for oome to indoor or outdoor meetHomecoming ." ings, or partici pate In digging at ; the iBSC site. Ctyb, m»mb a *» Frida y; Octo ber ^J96 7% —— f Ed itorial. . If anything is going to revive the sagging social life at BSC, it will be the Ihtra-Fraternity Council. Already the IFC, under the direction of Bob Boose, president, has staged two highly successful events --the tug-o-war and the volleyball tournament. We 're sure Bob and the IFC will be coming up with a lot more such events in the future. The benefits from such activities are manyfold. Not only do they encourage a spirit of brotherhood IN the fraternities but also a spirit of competition AMONG the frats. At the same time, they boost the spirit of the whole college. We commend Bob, the IFC and the frats for their contributions to the college community. *** Commendations are also in line for the two athletic teams currently representing BSC. Both the football squad and the cross country team have 'been working darned hard to make Bloomsburg a competitor in both sports , and they have been very successful in their efforts * They deserve your support . .. and you can give it to them tomorrow. *** Although critics-about-campus keep harping about the inadequate size of the auditorium , the Bloomsburg Players are going to have a monumental task to fill just half of it for each performance. Player officials have set 1,000 as the goal for each of the three performances. Even with that many, however, it may seem like playing to an empty house. *** Feato rial. . For months now, BSChas been plagued by what can only be thought of as hyper-construction. There iJn 't a pi©G© of campus (with the exception of the golf course) where a person can stand and not be within fifty feet of heavy equipment, torn-up landscape, and piles of debris. This, though, is the price of expansion, which every institution of higher education in this countr y is facing. Colleges and universities must expand to meet the growing population under twenty-one, and expansion means construction, which in turn means eyesores. Bloomsburg Just isn't the sylvan, tree-shaded campus that it was f ive years ago — it is going modern, which means it is going asphalt. This concept is not particularly pi ?asant to most students, faculty or administrators, for one doesn't like to see blocks and blocks of asphalt. A little greenery is natural and needed. It is almost a must to keep any semblance of a campus — without some natural landscaping, we'd have nothing more than a steel and concrete prison. As buildings near completion- buildings like the Auditorium and South Hall — the designers are attempting to bring a little natural beauty into thtir bleak exteriors by landscaping of various sorts —by putting a little grass where the mud holes were, by smoothing out the dirt where the piles of rock and construction refuse were before. But for some reason, it just doesn't seem to stay smooth, and the grass doesn't get a chance to grow properly. Someone always has to take a short-cut that will save three steps, or they have to see how far they can broad jump off the sidewalk into the newly planted grass plots after a good rain so that their sp otters will have an easier time marking the length of jump. The plots aren 't for walking in, or for jumping in, or for wrestling in, or for throwing rocks into to watch them churn up the mud underneath* As long as the campus kids are going to play games in the grass plots the campus will look like a campus under construction -- a kindergarten campus without the garden.—Richie Benyo. $Haxoon nnb (fatit Vol XLVI Editor-ln-Chlef Frida y, October 13, 1967 No. « Oouq Hlppenstlel 784-8189 Gordon Sivel l Business Manager 784-7361 Rober t Holler Director of Publications Ext. 272 Richard Savage Consultant Ext. 205 Scot t Clarke Assistont Editor 784-7361 Richie Ben y o Feat ure Edi t or Paul Allen ports Editor S Tom James and Jim Rupert . News Editors * ' Hock Stevo Photo gra phy Editor ] , . . . Richard Hor tman Copy Edi t or James Carter Assistant Copy Editor , Sharon Avery Assi stant Copy Ed.ror . Mary Lou Covalllni Advert isin g Manager Mike Stugr ln Clrculat.on Manager Kathy Rolmard and Eileen Gulnoc Typists Edi torial Board-^D oiig Hlppenstieli Rich ie Benyo , Paul Allen, Richard Hartman, . 5>cott Uorke, J.m Rupert, Tom James , Sharon Aver y . Wayne Campbell, Jeff Ktecknor and Walter Cox Addit ional Staff , ,' , Marleno Kanabln, John Nee, Carol Grace Waznowko Bill Teltiworth , Tina Arnoldl n, Jan Pios , Jan Foux , Clark Ruch, Bat zel, Mike Stugrln, Sandy Zubowlc z , Ben Clullo , Evel yn Lulezey, Wayne Campbell. ( Staff for six th edition ) * * # The Maroon and Gold Is located In the Student Publications Center in Dillon House. News may be submitted by callin g 784*4660, Ext. 272 or by con tact ing Post Office Box 58. • • ? The Maroon and Gold Is published weekl y by the students of Bloomsburg State Colle ge, Bloomsburg, Pa., for the entire College Community. All opinion * expressed by column.s ts and feature writers , Inelud.ng |ettors-to-the «editor, are not necessarily thorn of this publication but those of the indiv iduals. By RICHIE BENYO There seems to be a utopia aspect about an underclassman's opinion of the status of a senior. Something about the very sound of the word seems to fascinate the underclassman, offeriiig to his mind visionsof gfSinSf fields and almost the Great Hereafter. He looks to his senior year as ' being a long, hard trek away, feeling at times that it will never come, but hanging on hope that someday he'll have a|l the honors and privileges of that Esteemed Office; privileges such as: car permission, no compulsory assembly programs, and apartment living. Ah, yes, senior apartment living — Freshmen often end up in houses situated downtown, approved, ot course, by the college. They generally apply, as soon as they get to the campus, for dormitory rooming should there be an opening. Why ? They can't stand the -walk up fro m downtown; they don't get along with their landlord/lady; they don't like living with the guys who happen to have been assigned to share that house with them; the hot water comes only sporadically, etc* They look with envy on seniors who are living in an Apartment instead of in a Freshman house. They envision him as holding wild parties every night, wading through an inch tide of beer and holding back the female guests from converging on his apartment in force; they see him as the night owl, skipping from restaurant to bar to who-knows-where at any hour of the night he pleases with no possible consequence; he sees the Apartment Refrigera i tor as holding a half-of-Bud and chest as holding a \ the medicine gross of aspirin for the daily hanirover. You remember the Freshman Housing downtown ? Then you 've had a preview of Senior Apartment living* I kid you not: the same thin g, to the letter , except that they spell it a littl e different and make It sound important. Freshman 1 'uses i and Senior apar tments , an d to gome extent college dormitories , are one an d the same* There are t h e same ear ly hours risin g, the same forgetting to pull out the plunger on the alarm clock , the frantic rushin g around in the mornin g, bumping into each other in th e bat hroom , gett ing books mixed up so that when you finally make it under the ropes ! for class you think you 're in th e wron g one anyway* There Is the same atmos phere as in the dor m lounge when one of those rare ocoas ions comes ab out when all of the seniors can make it to an Informal gathering In one of the apartment bedrooms to shoot the breeze , exchan ge notes on profs and their testin g meth- Apartment living, after all, is only a slice of the good life-and you just can't get enough of that these days. ods, get the low-down on student teaching fro m the fellows who took it first semester,and fill the room with cigarette, cigar and pipe smoke. It is a little more informal than the dorm, perhaps, but the name of the game is certainly the same: the trivial mixed with the serious, a bull-session when you usually learn more about school, people, courses, etc. than you do spending eight hours in the classroom. For the fortunate few who pull a senior apartment over a mile from campus, especially after living on campus for three years (even if it was Waller Hall), the dweller - in - the - mirage learns the difficulties of the commuter, and if nothing else, gains a wider view of the Bloomsburg area,-which I'm sure will become even wider once the snow begins* A senior apartment, though, is not just a feature to the people living there: it is a feature to the people living around the apartment also: it is probably hard for neighbors to comprehend the need for all of the traffic that goes on in such a dwelling — the guys running in all hours of the day, running out in suits one time, cut-offs the next, dirty jeans after that* And the image of the landlord? When the guys are all at home, if someone fro m out of town were to pass by he'd surely mistake the apartment, no matter how attractive, as a used car lot* It would be interesting to take a poll of what type of automobile a senior buys and uses during his last year. Our own apartment, when the landlord & landlady are at home, features a shiny new, powder blue Cadillac convertible, two Renaults (one cherry red & the other stormy-weather blue), a tan VW sedan, a tan 1949 Studebaker, a little red Triumph, and the Inevitable red-and-off-white VW bus, not to mention a goldand-white Plymouth. It's a cardealer 's nightmare. Actually, though, there is something of a difference in an apartment: you seem to be the next thing to a fraternity house, if you can find your "brother " home long enough to fraternize ' with them. I ~ : Who %ak 1 k % & 6 WHAT KIND OF MEN READ THE M&G? Cha rlie Bowman and Charlie Moyer , Var sltyC ross-Gountryace s , upon runn ing into each other in thei r daily workouts , somet imes ta k e t ime out to talk about th ings that are of importan ce to them. <( We often f ind oursel ves quoting the M&G ," says Charlie Moyer. " Yes," Charlie Bowman adde d, M we even quote d the mis placed outline s in your last issue — Stan and Bob and Rich in ' ; a used car lot. That was funny. " Yes. "We realize that printers are huma n , " we told the Charli es). "Meaning the M&G isn't ?" asked Bowman, . «Mea nlng, adde d Moyer , "that the '' M&G. is our favorite paper , even though It is touche d by human han ds, and your comp et itor isn't. " Catch you guys aroun d • « » Friday, October 13, 1967 . - . . . It's ¦ ¦ .. ' ? _ Page 3 —Maroon and Gold— '. ' ¦ ' ¦ A Dog's Tripp ing ... -¦ The Idle Rich ! a campus radio station? The in- -. i . : • Camp us Radio . . ' ¦ ¦ ¦ . . . . ever popped a VW clutch ? Can 't be done. We took off like a streak, took half a block to get up to 1C mph , quick - shifted to second, revved it up to 20, shifted to third, and went into the hill — detours by construction work, we finally made it to a very narrow street by the post office , which was unfortunately filled on one side with parked cars. To turn around and park in the one open space we had to take the bus up onto the sidewalks, which sent an old, under - the - weather fellow running off down the street looking for a bottle of comfort. We finally got around to parking the thing, among cheers from some youthful passerbys, who were quickly dispursed when we threatened to sigg Micro on them. Having overcome that difficulty, we proceeded down to the Village Restaurant (213 w. Fourth St.), where we made quf way te the back-most corner , feeling like slobs, being in casual - type accouterments, while the other Saturday nite customers wore suits and ties, ejtc. Having gotten there, and being in good spirits from BSC's recent victory, it wasn't long before the matronish waitress had her hands full withseven orders for burgers, club sandwiches, etc. If you're ever near Williamsport you've got to stop there, 'cause it's great: all the time you're there they serve you delicious hot sticky-buns with butter, at no additional cost — needless to say we had stickybuns as an appetizer, soup-a-lasticky-bun, hamburgers, stickybun steak, sticky-buns as the salad, and for dessert we had — yup, sticky-buns. Love 'em. After we couldn't hold another bite, feeling like we were high on the country's prosperity and off the relief-bill (one feels the reliefbill syndrone when he rides for an hour or two in a VW bus), we took to the. road, just happening to meet the band bus at a stop light on a two-lane, one-way street. Naturally that meant Drag City. We dropped the VW into low — C LANK — waited for the Christmas Tree to give us green , and thro mped onto the gas, popping the clutch. Have you . you just don 't shift into 4th going up a hill. We had left the bus a quarter of a mile behind by that time — "Weeee!" — but it began catching up on the hill. We crawled up the mountain, they crawled up behind us, we downshifted to second and pulled away from them. About ten miles later, on the level where a bus can let loose and a VW Micro-bus hits top speed of 60, we were passed, and what do we see behind us? Another Bloomsburg bus. OK, so we're sandwiched between two barrelling busses, riding in a tin can , ready for death to descend upon us,-gas fumes from the bus in front gagging us (cough, cough, weeze), smoke covering the windshield, Vic Keeler offering Benediction in the back seat and everyone singing hymns and being pious and feeling the way a sticky-bun feels when you stick it in your mouth and your teeth 3lose around it. We knew we were lever going to .iflake It back: to 31oomsburg . alive. After four niles of this we decided that we lad to do something, after having leld a conference on the second seat (the vacuum behind the first bus and the push from the back bus made it unnecessary to steer). Chuck Bowman suggested we bail out and let them carry the bus back to Bloom with them. It finally boiled down to Dave Smithers' suggestion of setting off a flare out the back window, putting on the four-way flashers, raising the white flag, and careening off the road onto the shoulder. So we proceeded to — / . . , itial cost would be about $5,000 for transmitting and receiving equipment , plus about $1,200 a semester , this including salaries , which would • make up 90 percent of the operating cost. However , it should be noted that salaries would probably be paid from state and federal workstudy progr ams. The organization of the station would be similar to already existing campus organizations, with only a -few minor differences . It would be independent of all present clubs or organizations , having a constitution , body -of membership and elected " officials of its own. The station organization would have a paid staff of workers , p lus an advisory panel consisting of a fixed number of people from the station membership and one re- . presentative from each academic department on campus. . A campus radio station will benefit you andBloomsburgState "I College. The station would be non-commercial and would be available every day-not just once a week. Support all efforts to : get an "On Campus Radio Station ." It is up to you , the student body, whether Bloomsburg moves ahead or stagnated in the field of student communications. Paul R. Williard Wed . Movies i ¦ ¦ - . • Dear Snts of BSC: Bucknell has one, Lehigh has one , and several of our sister state colleges have one , why shouldn 't Bloomsburg State have one also? One what ? A "Campus Radio Station ," that's what! Campus j radio stations are becoming part of the modern college scene , and it should be part of ours! Why should Bloomsburg have a campus radio - we have gotten along without one so farwhy do we need one now? Growth—that's why we need one. Sign s, bulletin-boards , and spot vocal announcements are rapidly becoming inadequate to meet the needs of keeping the campus informed. Both residents and non - residents would benefit. Com muters would not have to hunt through the morning din , for hastily made pesters to "see what's going on;" residents wouldn 't be frustrated by last minute cancellations or changes. | Student programs would be presented "by students for students." For example, news covering local, state , national Dear Editor: and international spheres would As a BSC student I would be presented, utilizing student like to take this opportunity to p oint of views and comments-^ , express my deep gratitude toestablishing a closer identifica- Bill Tomilsoh and the CGA Xor tion between what's happening in the fine work they have done in -•' '¦ the world and : the students of procurring the educational flicks bsc . ;" , Wednesday nights. Sport programs could be car- forOne can not help but say. that ried via. remote control f rom these inf ormative f ilms whet the - :-O:-:U; Centennial gym or the football intellectual app etite of the viewv; field. Programs of entertainment er. . one of them is Watching cer(music , etc.) and special inter- tainly a learning experience. Our est programs (debates, panel flicks certainly do surpass the discussions , cultural and edu- melodramatic soap - operas, the cational programs) would round zany westerns and the super out and balance the entire radio j credible science-fictions which schedule. \ are now plaguing our tubes. An on-campus radio station It is indeed a heart - warmcould provide jobs for students ing thought to know that a change interested in the field of com- of pace is available every Wedmunications. It would also be of nesday night in our gym . aid- to the Audio - Visual In conclusion I only wish that and Speech Departments in dem- we could expand our educational onstrating the uses of oral film schedule. communications. Congrats again , What, would be; the cost of H. U. Sky by Richie Benyo DOGS SEE THINGS IN BLACK & WHITE , as you are probably well aware, so we won't belabor that point. People(s), tho, see things in colors: you know, black-andblue, red-white-and-blue, greenyellow-red , etc. To date the OBITER has been for seeing-eye dogs: totally black . - and white. Now we all know that very few seeing - eye dogs go to college at Bloomsburg — not that they don't have a good I.Q., mind you, cause they're sure a lot more sensible at street corners than some people are. But people go to Bloomsburg, right? People see in color. This year the OBITER would like very much to be a people - yearbook by putting some color shots onto its pages. People, tho, cost more than dogs; peoples' color cost more than dogs' black - and -white. Therefore, if you want a people - type yearbook this year, buy your OBITER real soon now, so there are enough.orders to order color. OK? Ok . . . . SPEAKING OF THE OBITER: Recently some people have raised a very interesting question: "Just what does Obiter mean?" Well, according to the - Big Dictionary that our staff scholar carries around with him all the time (he never takes anyone's word for a word), Obiter means a journey (through the school year), in passing (memoirs, casually done), or incidentally (an incidental account in pictures and text of a year's accomplishments, I suppose). OK, word-hounds ? K-0 . . . A FEW WEEKENDS AGO the crosscountry team went along to the all-type s-of-exciting MansfieldBloomsburg football game in the old VW Micro-bus. Needless to say, the game was Out Of Sight, firmly establishing Rich & Stan as a top pass-receive combination in anybody 's nation. Coming back from the game we took a cut into Williamsport (Bill-town to the locals) to eat supper. After being waylaid through all sorts of ¦ I . .. Feat ure S taff ¦ ¦ . _ ! for this issue includes: Barbara Tommor Carl Nauroth Carol Batzel . Lar ry Phillips Barb Oluszak POINT OF VIE W . . . ¦ vr ' ¦¦ •' ¦ Joe Griffiths Ben Ciullo Mike Stugrin Bill Large 9*}& Etc. . . i the conversat ion of the ma- be somewhat neurotic , such conjority, the silence of the few, and f essions as "I feel old; I the bore dom of t he whole, I ob- am old. I look at a freshman and serve d a stran ge animal « the rea lize what I' ve lost with age — upperclassman. To one who has my idealism , my opt imism, my mana ged to surv ive his first looks " prove an obvious case of month on this dust - engulfed , some advanced form of neur osis, hippie-free campus, the upper- commonly called the old - age . classman is a stra nge mixture of complex. We must sympa thize coming and going (perhaps even with the upperclassman in this gone), and this his care and feed- respect . If he feels old now, how will he feel when he ' s eighty ? Ing are Indeed complex. Another t yp e of hopeless case Befor e we can att empt to arof upperclassman Is the one who regardin g r ive at some solution sa y s wit h conviction "the world stran ge phethe handlin g of this is what I want It to be and nothin g upperclassnomenon called the else," One would think that thi s basic into his man , we must delve individual would find life exy , attitu des. I, in m obser vations y tremel pleasing since he conto have noted the upperclass man ' ' ' . '* ¦ • . ' . /j iViM'Y trols his environment with his own mind , But bewa re! This individual is usuall y never happy. When asked why his world is not entirely wonderful (since he can surel y "wish" It to be that way), he will usuall y reply a nonchalant " That' s life." There are other types of upper class men , too numerous to mention. Still, their pr oblems result in a common solution to their handlin g. We must , In their confus ion , assure them that we as freshmen will soon become "one of them 1* and if that doesn't console t hem , J ust play it cool and handle with understandin g and ever-so- delicate care. — Carol Batzel $&& . GtivB ©&«»© as • " - i 9i : \,i I ?, k .iHi l, n :s <,K '.\q . '( ' '' ¦ I " "' "k'g * A ' l 'hj M : £3 .. ' >£ ttf &Jp *J ?$ iff $® if j & flWWi I ' * J LMf W ¦&" * . ¦ • / . / * « , m - m * * * * ^m~<~+» ¦» ¦ ' . . ¦ ' ' ' " •' ¦ ' ¦ n1 *» l « . # i >¦?»«— .» r* ¦>. »i » U . < W » '» m n . l •* *--»« ^H *W« . ' ' .. ,-— T-ri--^ »-» u-\ . t r n f U . ¦ ' ¦ ,- ¦ . , v* Jin.itti.nri .q. . | i | . - _y ,. in - i. i- ¦: . ;; ., i , ' . — — ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ • r. i- ^^ai^^ Bsa^^ ¦ • ¦-• ¦> ,:-: . - ;; : . ;r "^ ' -^ -•^^ ^ ¦ •-^^ S^^^ ^ Hiijiasiffi Bloo msbur g Play^ri production of A VISIT TO A SMALL PLANET Kearnes , Hopkins A study in facial expressions Kearnes , Klinga man A i) Lighring . . . an important part of any productio n. ^ v i —^pppp-p ! ¦¦ ¦^ i - n M i- ipi v i-ii- — ¦ i ¦ ——- -¦¦ - ¦ ---~——^^^^* m^^^^^^mmmm^mK^mimmBmmmmmmmmmmmmm—i^mimmm^^m^^^^^^v^^^^——^mi'*^^^*^^^^^^-^^^~^^^^^™~^~i Oarber , Ktorn«t i .u p- *¦ .. . . . m . , . , riwn»3d, 9 ,11 bn^»J3 ¦ . . , •> ¦:. ... ¦;« ,* , m. *' i i!;; ;!.^^ I October 26, 27 & 28 Dire ctor Acierno Discusses a Scene With Cast . it v Get Your Tickets Now! ! Checking the script . .. Hopkins, Klner,Acierno A Maroon And Gold Photo Feature (Photos by Dale Carmony) Behind tht Scents ... ¦""' Pa ge 6 - . West ChesterBrin g s Stron g Tea m Wept Chester is excited about the prospects for a winning season in 1967. Returning from last year 's Tan gerine Bowl Team , for Coach Bob Mitten and his staff , are 28 lettermen to form the nuc leus for the '67 team . West Chest er's defensive unit is practically intact f rom last year , and, though not large , the defensive team is talented and tou gh in every position . Coach John Furlow expects the defensive line to- be as strong as last year 's, when it gave up a grudging 43 yards per game on the ground. Returning to lead the defensive line is Little AIL. Amer ican tackle Br ian Mulhern . Other re turning lettermen at tackle are Dan Hale and Tom Rupe rt. At defensive guard for the '67 team will be returning lettermen Harvey Harr , Jay Levine, and Bob Surace . The defensive end position probably will be manned by Bill Corcoran and Mike Haines. Mike returned to the defensive team after an outstanding year of playing at offensive end. The defensive backfield , coached by Walter Buechele , has played together for three years and should be outstanding. AllState College Confer ence safety , Dennis Shank , is expected to have another good year as are hi s lett ermen teammates, half- | backs Ed Swetkowski , Fred McKonley and Len McL aughlin . At backerup is lettermanCiarkSaw hill. During the spring game , Sawhill did an outstanding job leading the defensive team . W est Chester 's offense should be strong 1 n '67. Offensive Back field coach , Dick Voder , has all but one of his lettermen return Ing, and five of the seven starting linemen are back to give them blocking supp ort. Jim Hay nie , the quarterback for the 1966 team, led West Cheste r 's of- fense last year to an average of 400 yards per game ; 213 yard s avera ge on the ground; 187 yards average in the air . Haynie is expected to operate with the same balance in '67. When Hay nie passes, no doubt, he will look for his favorite tar get, lef t end Don Wilkinson , who caught 49 passes in 1966. Other experienced receivers returnin g, who were also favorite targets last year are Dick Nye and R oger G rove, wh o caught 34 passes between them. At right ¦ Bob Tucke r and Rich Licht el combined to keep the 3 S C offensive alive in scoring a 34*19 end , Bob Tomllnsonn and Burt win over S.U. Lund had an outstandin g spring practice , and are potentially very fine receivers. R eturning to run the ball for the West Chester team are Herb Landis , Bert Nye , and Roger Grove , who rank ed in that order as rushers last year . To do the blocking for the offensive team will be an experienced offensive line head ed by All Conference guards , senRich Lichte l continued his sen- down. Tucker 's PAT attemptwas with the final score coming on ior Frank Mellor and junior sational passing , hitting Bob again good and BSC led 14-0. a thre e yd. plunge by Art Sell. Bruce Heller. Junior Dave EavTucker for three touchd owns in With 1:54 left in the half , lich- The TD was set up by a 21 yd. enson, outstanding as a left tackle leading BSC to a 34-19 victory tel again hit Tucker on a 13 yd. Lichtel to Tucker aerial . BSC last year, will be returning to over Susquehanna Universit y. scoring pass and, the missed the extra point attempt successful that position. BSC opened the scoring dr ivPAT attemp t gave the Huskie s and the game ended with the West Ch ester 's kicking game ing 99 yds. in 12 plays . The big a 21-0 lead going into the Huskie s leading 34-19. dre ssshould be as good or better gainers in the drive were catches ing r oom Despite the loss . of Stan Kuch s. The punter , than last year ' arski on the first BSC offensive Bert Nye averaged 37 yards by Bob Tucker of 55 and 36 yd, BSC opened the second half play of the game , quarterback per kick , and will prob ably do passes. Th e score came on the with a 65 yd. drive in four 36 yd. reception and Tucker Rich Lichtel continued passing the kicking again in 1967. Bert kickedthe extra point giving running plays . The big play of at a record pace. The BSC quar is an excellent klckoff man as the series was a 55 yd. sprint terback passed for 309 yds. and we ll as a good punter , and he BSC a 74) lead. On the next serie s of downs, by Art Sell setting up Denny three TD's. usuall y kicked off to the opWeir 's six yd. TD plunge . Bob Susquehanna drov e to the Husky With Kucharski out , the pres ponent 's goal line. Returning Tucker 's f ourth conversion gave sure was on Bob Tucker and again to the 1967 team , is the 29 yd. line before being stopped . BSC a healthy 28-0 lead. the All-State end was equal to leading punt returner Dennis Susquehanna th en attempted a Wi th seven minutes remaining the occasion catching 15 punt only to have it blocked Shank , and the leadin g kickoff in the third quarter S.U. scored for a total of, 291*>yds. andpasses with an alert Husky falling on three returner Dick Nye. A new ad' the midfield stripe . their first touchdown and came the ball at TD's. dition to the team who is exto life. Early in the fourth From that point Lichtel hit I n the running dep artment, Art pected to bolster West Chester 's quarter two more Susquehanna Sell 22 T uc k er on a, yd. pass and led the way with a total ch ances to be more consistent TD's closed the gap to 28-19. of. 197 yds. 14" in making the extra points and on the next play again hit the BSC then put the game out of those runsin werecarrfories. Two tall end for anothe r BSC touch touch field goal trys is soccer style of reach with a 56 yd. drive downs . kicke r Glenn Porter. Huskies Score 34-19 Win Over Susquehanna Univ. J erry Thomas Added To Phys Ed. Depr. Beta Sigma Delta Wins IFC Volle y ball To urne y Jerry R. Thomas has been appointed Assistant Professor of Health and Physical Education , according to Harve y A. Andruss , President of Bloomsbur g State College. A native of Birmingham , Alabama , Thomas received his elementary and secondar y education in the schools of that city. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree in health and physical education from Furman Universit y; his Master of Arts degree in physical educati on was , ! ^m^^^^^^^^^^ m^^m ^¦ ¦¦¦¦^¦ ¦¦ ¦¦¦^¦ ¦¦ i^H W wearned at the Universit y of Ala^^ bama in 1964. He is presently a candidate for the Doctor of Education degre e in health and physical education at the University of Alabama. For the past two years , It was Beta Sigma Delta all next with 34!records while Sigma Mr. Thomas has been chairman the way In the Intra Fraternit y Iota Omega was 1-4 and Delta of the Division of Health and Council Volleyball Tournament Pi went winless. Physical Educ ation at Jefferson held outside Husk y lounge* The *;- On hand to cheer the brother s State Junior College in Birming - winners complied a perfect 5-0 were the respective pledge classham . From 1964-65, he was a record in the Round -Robin tourn - es of the participating frats. The specialist in health and physical ament . tourne y was also well attended educat ion a' the Brookwood For Runner -up was Delta Omega by the rest of the college comest Elementar y. School , Mt . Chi with a 4-1 record . Phi Kap pa munity. Brook occasions-bask etcheers for all team , Alabama . F or a year , Ra! or Go, Does Ra! Ra! Epislon and Phi Sigma XI were prior to that time , he held the wrestlin g-are your and ball f oot b all pop into , , got immediatel y Anonymous Inte rviewe r Lichtel: No, studies. mind when ever you thin k about on the pep schedule . All this , same title at the University Place of course , re quires practice; Elementary School in Tusthat certai n species of rabbleQuestion ; When did you first Queries Rich Lichte l a cheerbut known as , It also brln ga ache s and caloosa , Alabama . bette r rousers , real ize football was your sport? Thomas lettered In vars ity foot* leader? Actuall y, t here are a few pains. Have any Bon-Gay hand y? What are the reflections and Lichtel: When I got cut fro m the Partici patin g at half-time and ball for three years at Furman philosophies of a quarterback more elements Involved; add a lot sevent h grade basketball team. of vitalit y, determ inat ion , pa- marchin g with the band in for - Universit y. He was editor of the who has thrown 17 touc hdown tience , and a little bit of soul. mation are new duties the cheer - Physical Education and Recrea - passes In four games, led his Question : Wha t has been the most exciting of Our freshma n cheerlea ders , Eva leaders will take on this year. tion Newsletter of the Alabama team to victory in all of those ; experience , . year? the State Association for Health for parade to each ^ encounters , and Is ranked among Benjamin. Jane Davis. Mar y Ann The traditional Lichtel: I believe that came when , H artman , and Kat hy Novak will home game and routine s to band the past two years and also the leading football players in at the end of the tough Mansserved as goli coach at Jeffer - the PSCAC and NAIA? This week soon ac quire such pointers from numbers will continue . field game, the bus left withson State Junior College during HomecomIn accordance with we decided to find out when we varsity squad members * out me , „ period of time. that same ders the cheerlea Interv iewed Rich Lichte l, BSC's At summer clinic under the ing festivities, Ho has also been a member annua l va ry In the partici pate will Question:. When .were you most cross between Terry Hanratty direction of Mrs . Houk, the ¦ concerne d this year ? slty cheerleaders learned a bonfire and pep meeting to add of the executive board of the and Jerr y Lewis. Lichtel: When I. found out my strai ght arm method of cheeri ng some more spirit . So, Psych Alabama College Assoication for Question: Is football your first Health Physical Education and support , Huskiest Get out and back -up quar terback had ¦ hem¦ ¦ : tau ght to them by national cham p- up, lIove ? ' ¦¦ ¦¦ Recreat ion, ¦ ¦ . ¦:¦ ¦ • I / , orit n: nr r/ rrl toed ions. New chant s, songs, and the team w;! \ W f 0 *** vF 468 . ; . / ¦/. ; ¦ i,,, © I Mi f . f r * * ' I I I f' «*• V , * * « Husk y Cheerlead ers Give Spirit Big Boost i ¦ j i ¦ ¦: . - . ¦ ;¦. "I reall y thou ght I was going to make it throu gh the season this time/' he said as we were sitting there waitin g for another class to start. But Jim Bonacci is out for the remainder of the seasonwith a back Injury . For his three years of football , Jim has only been able to make two games and both of those games were this year. The rest of the time he has been out with inju ries. Now Jim will be joined on the sidelines by Stan Kucharski , John McKlnery, and possibly Joe Gerst. Stan, who was on his way to settin g all sorts of records , got knocked out on the first offensive play of the Susquehanna game. His knee injury, a torn ligament , will keep him out for the rest of the season too. John McKinery was reporte d to be tryin g to stri p a Crusader Back of four blockers on a kickoff return and caught a foot In the helmet. His concussion was serious and it's extremely unlikely that he will be allowed to return. Then there 's Joe Gerst. Joe had a bad knee when the season began and it was questionable whether he would play at all. He too got his in the Susqueha nna game and didn 't even dress for the second half. Although the injury was probabl yno more than a strain , I doubt that Coach Houk Will deem it wise to risk a national champion wrestler in the final games of the season. - Sports Staf f Paul M. Allen ¦¦ ¦ ¦ -,^i >-,- 'Edlfbr - :< CONTRIBUTORS Bob Shultz Patti Quinn "The Brute" . ^ r - And so here we are only half way throu gh the season and four of the best Husky players are out with injuries. It really makes things tough , especially with the West Chester game promising to be the toughest of the season. Whenever such a rash of injuries occurs , it's common to attribute them to poor conditioning but in this case, it has to be plain bad luck. The types of injurie s and the personnel who suffered the m make it obvious that you can't call it any other way. — Attenti on Golfers — Golf coach Jerr y Thomas has announced thatona team meeting October 9 at will be ^held 4:00 P.M . in room 12 in Cen tennial Gym . All members of last year 's varsit y and freshmen teams as well as any of this year 's fresh men class who are Interested are urged to be at the meeting . The BSC Harr iers suffered a defeat at the hands of Susquehanna Universi ty Saturday, being downed 17 to 39, by the strate gic runnin g of j5.U.'s twin pace-setters. They bound ed to an early lead and were , .not challen ged throughout the rem'aihder of the meet. . . . . . . : Bloomsbur g placed Charlie Moyer In fourth place, and Chuck Bowman in eighth , followed by Henr y, Leidecker and Gauger. The course , whiehjbsginsat the grandstand s of the football field, * proved more of a track than anythin g else. The running, for the most part , was on level ground , being broken princi pally by a mountain half-wa y throu gh the course. S.U. had it prett y well planned. After rabb itUng several runners at the onset of the race , they outpaced BSC by a perfect example of team effort. It is the kind of a tea m effort that makes that kind of a home team ver y difficult to bea t. This week BSC travelled throu gh the rain to Lock Haven State College for a meet with the Bald Eagles, who feature the top distance runner in the State College Conference in the person of Big Bill English, individual winner of last fall' s Conference Cham pionship held at Millersville*Bill English, always a tough competitor , will surel y do his best to put the screws to BSC on LHSQ 's , u$wY 5-mile., cour se. (Their 7.2 -anile course i of last year has been abolished for a shorter , more conventiona l one fills year ). Next week, BSC is scheduled to play host to Bucknell U. There is word, however, that Bucknell will be unable to field enough men to part icipate so that the meet may have to be put of until later. If this is the case , the re Is a chance that the , Harriers will travel to Kirbe y Park in Wilkes-Barre for a re-match with the Kings-men. (News of the scheduling and reschedulin g, and of the result s of the Lock Haven meet can be found in the Tuesda y and Thursday supplements. ) SUPPORT ¦ . ..;. ii* .. : CtC ¦ '¦ ¦ li t . THE HUSKIES 1 W4d<: ' ¦ Thlt It tht form thai makti / Y ;Y ,y.y ^ .A. ; l Bob Tuek ^oWbf fi \% btit ln tht l«oou* > Pa ge 7 The S. U. Twins Did It Again t ' ' ¦¦' ¦' ¦A ' - - . : .• ¦ . •: ' . - ¦ .- • HARRIERS SHOOK LOOSE Paul Allen ; . , —Maroon and Gold— Fi^ ¦ *' •. . . ¦' . . ¦ - ' i- ^ • k • ¦ ¦ • / ' ' ¦> *¦ ¦ . "! ¦ ': ¦ • ¦ ¦ > ¦ ' ii .\ i« (i ! > ¦ - , ' ' ¦ . ¦ - , . ¦ ' • ' ¦' ¦ ' ¦ •. . ' i i ¦ ' '¦ V '' • 1 * ' i ¦ ' i i ' ¦' ' ' ' ' ¦ ¦ , i ' . ' ' . •. ¦ ¦ ' ¦ .. . • ' ¦ .' ¦ • ' , ' ' . ' ¦• . ¦ , ¦ ' ' ' ¦ . „ ' ¦ ¦• '' ¦ - > • . .• .: .¦ . ; . • . ' ¦ • ' ¦ ' , .¦ ¦ } ' ' , j Y . ' "WE 'LL MEE T YA ON THE MOUNTAI gf.** (top, 1. to r.). The "twins " of Susquehanna University /paceeach otter to an easy one-two finish over the Husk y Ha rriers last -weekend, as they churn-it up the mountain road hajLfwa y thr ough S.U.'s course. Exhibitin g the easy foririwMch #eeps him No. 2 var sity man for BSC, Chuck Bowman gets Jtiis time chalked in at the finish line. Tom Henr y, litUe-nwtn-on-the-BSC-tearn , gives his share of sweat and dete rpiinati on as he comes : throu gh. Big Jim Gau ger gives it thejtlnal sur ge around the < track , andinto the standards.(botto Di«aiarlie*'Chu g-A.-Lug" >( Moyer takes S.U.'s mountain with M6ttsij |allong strides , tryM¦ j _ ^^^^^^ ^^^^ ^^ ^ ^^ ^x ^^r Specialist " _ ^^^^^ •; ¦ \ \ ^^ ^^ , . Corner East b Fifth Sts. PRIME WESTERN BEEF—SEAFOOD SPAGHETTI LOFT CANDIES Home Cooked Foods COSMETICS SUNDRIES NOON-TIME SPECIALS and Private Parties TOBACCOS ' BETTY and BILL HASSERT \ Propr ietors Phone 7:30 AM , — 12:00 A.M. 784-3055 ]VTl ]VE R S > ¦¦ ¦ -• ROCKS Steak House Main and Iron Streets Prescription 1 « 58Oe(uxe Units ' Eppley 's Pharmacy ^ ^ 2 Wl Main "-» Stone Castle Stone Castle 784-9895 J ¦^¦H^hHMHBMnkHi ^MMh^hflB ^MH RkMMMi ^hMhaMlBMhMHlBi ^M^kflt ^HkMhi ^B^BHhMhl ^Bl^BMflMhMfeHBMBMhi ^^ MiMBaBto? NATIONAL BANK FARMERS NATIONA L OFFICE • BLOOMSBU RG, PENNA. ' I ' 1 Chicken in the I 1 Basket - - $1.09 |; Broiled Delmonko f Steak--$1.35 1 ; * ^ \ ¦' 1 for the latest in fashions in lingerie and the best known name in town in foundations and niceties. »i0f MtJmunmOp tm ** ^Hm *H >dMi I B 3 I Eudora 's Corset Shop ^^^ LShop -^ ifc ¦ . Green Stamps I Shrimp in the I I Basket • ¦ $1.29 I j 784-4117 Men , would you like a challenge? Because many of you may be entering military life in the future and since water survival will be important to you , we have designated , on an experimental basis , one selection of Aquatics 102 as Military Aquatics. This course will be patterned after the program first developed at Georgia Tech and now used by the Armed Forces of*thi s country. Major emphasis will not be on Classic stroke form , but rather on water survival and endurance under adverse conMUons. contact Mr. Turberville. i I "Corner Lunch" I I Fifth and Weir Streets 1 (One block above the - 1 Magee Carpet Mill ) Military Aquatics Offered to Men Delt a Epsilon Beta winning in two straight pulls over Theta Gamma Phi . In exibition the two girls sororities combined to out-tug Delta Pi in the record breaking time of ten seconds. j A crowd of about 200 members * of the student body watched the affair which was he ld on the terrace s between Husky Lounge and t h e womens * dormitories. ; The judges for the tug-o-war I were Dr. Warren of S.I.O. and Dr. Selders of D.O.C. i |ii!ii!W!iiiai!:;iB; •¦ ' 1 1 ' ' i 1 Coming Soon ! I Rickord Burton Elizabeth Taylor 111 "Taming of the Shrew " Watch tor It! ! ^M!rTTr^ MW^WWWWWWWWrTMF tMrl flflHHFff \ / ! HflHmirtibr^^ KBs^BBm t " ff ' 1 irtt - ' * ¦ ¦ ^^ E^E!t^ 4^^' 3c'wft^ ft ' : " < ' ?^ HB^ PBfii ^ BB!J ¦ ' It " •*• t|1* Ib^Q lJP^ ^B^BV1* ' ^BB B^^ V^B^B^V^BH^vE|'>i ^^^^ UDfl ^^ H^^ Wj EJV'^ -^ '^^ VmYCV " ^B^B^B^B^B^B^T^^^V^vfl ^^^ BWi|^k»^**^*v^L k^L^L^L^L^L^L^Bt^HL^L^Bl ¦rHBPwj " ¦' ^h 1 U^Bfe ^T^^^VWlL * & ^^ ^^4ps&^vH ' V99ttlK^! ^S ^3i^_ ^m ^^ ¦ **JS ^WWBMBfcfc ^l^^^lfe^ '' ^^^^^^^^^ H^B^^^ HHBta ^«S9>fi£i£2*-" "'<» -.* *^^^^^^^ Hk ^^ T ^' ^^^^^^^^^ I^H^^^^^^^ H^ffi^**S9^^/ * ^ ^^"i m^«ah? , ,. t^^^ b^^ b^^^ ' ^¦^¦^¦^¦^L^L^H^L^L^L^Hl afatot. " ' *•#* ' i ' ' ' - ' '* ' , , ^ Visit Our Showroom . . . ! SNEIDMAN' S JEWEL ERS I 130 East Main Street ' 1 i -"" ' " • ' ¦' ¦ ' '' ' ftmmm i^^ nHP^^^^^^ PI^^^^^^^^ 3^^^^^^ 5 . ; " • " iimHiinuHt Bloo msburg ' . . • ¦ 'uminmiM ' ! - ' L' ^ i^ •::- :^gj^ :^S>;.yU ^. .i vr .^ .r --^Marooh and Gold— ~ - Ed ucatio n Conference Prog ram Plans Annou nced Invitations have been extended to teachers and administrators from Pennsylvania and nearby states to attend the twentyfirst Annual Conference for Teachers and Administrators at BSC on Friday and Saturday, October 20,-2 1. Dr. William L. Jones, director of the Division1of Special Education at BSC, is chairman for the conference. Two general sessions will be held. At the dinner-session Friday, October 20, at 1 p.m. in the „ College Commons, Mr. James B. MacRae, dean of students and professor of education at Lincoln University, will speak on "The Child In Our Society." At the general session Saturday, October 21, at 11:15 a.m. in the new auditorium, Mr. Fred Hechinger , education editor of the New York Times, will address the conference on "Priorities For the Next Decade." Following registration and>efreshments at 4 p.m. Friday, separate addresses will be heard by two of the four education di- visions of the college.Dr. George W. Anderson, University of Pittsburgh , will speak to the Division of Business Education conferees on "Bookkeeping and Business Math" in Sutllff Hall at 5 p.m. The Speech Pathology and Audiology section of the Division of Special Education will hear Dr. Mildred F. Beri y, internationally known writer, speaker and traveller, on "Chapter IV: Edition, 1967" and "Management of Speech and Language Disorders " in Navy Hall at 5 and 6 p.m. respectively. At the same time, those attending the session on the Teaching of the Mentally Retarded will hear a panel discussion, "Day to Day Problems of the Special Education Teacher" moderated by Dr. Laura Murphy, supervisor of Special Education, Delaware County, Media, Pa. At a joint meeting Saturday, at 9 a.m. both of the above sections will hear Dr. Jane W. Kessler, professor of psychology at Western Reserve Universitytalk about "Learning Disorders in School Age Children." The Division of Elementary Education will hear a panel discussion at 6 p.m« Friday, on "Innovative Schools, at Work" in the new auditorium. Hie panel will be composed of Miss Louise Baker, teacher, Richmond, Virginia; Robert L. Fisher, supervising principal, Marshallton School District, Wilmington,Delaware; Dr. Everett A. McDonald, Jr., superintendent, Centennial Schools, Warminster, Pa. Prior to the general session on Saturday, there will be 16 Discussions - In - Depth Workshops featuring BSC and area educators, starting at 9:30 a.m. The Division of Secondary Edu cation will hold eight separate sessions as a part of its activities on Friday at 5 p.m. The eight sessions will continue on Saturday morning at 9:30 a.m. with an entirely different group of speakers and discussion leadday's acers from the previous ¦¦ ¦ ," .• tivities. Following Mr. Fred Hechinger 's main address on Saturday at 11:15 a.m., the conference will conclude with a luncheon in the College Commons. PLACEMENT OFFICE InterviewOctober 17 . . Boyertown, Pa. . .Jan. vacancy ; Bus., Sp. Ed. October 23 10:00 a.m.—Lehighton, Pa. October 25 10:00 a.m.—Langhorne, Pa Sci., Math, Eng., Elem . October 26 2:00 p.m.—Pittsburgh, Pa. . .All areas Fallsington, Pa. .. AH areas October 31 November 8 9:30 a.m.-—U.S. Army Recruiting .1.... .Any area Philadelphia November 9 2 :00 p.m.—Royersford, Pa. Elem (Jan. 68) Elem (Sept. 68) November 13 9 :00 a.m.—Westminster, Md., All areas November 14 9:00 a.m.—State Y.M.C.A. ..Any area Harrisburg, Pa. November 14 10:00 a.m.—Lansdale, Pa. ... .All areas November 18 9:00 a.m.—Federal Service Entrance Exam .Any area Noyember 29 November 30 10:00 a.m.—Department of the Army Officer Candidate Selection Team Philadelphia, Pa. Any area BOB'S BILLIARDS \v / 'M A Gift Center For . . . . M I ¦\ i? ; 57>l. Ma.n St. ¦ ¦ v i'fi ' ' . ¦ ' , \ . .. , ' I • / ; . ¦ '' " . • ; ' NESPOLI J EWELE RS Romeo 's Fun & Food Center . •1 Bloomsburg-Berwick Highway Open weekdays 1:00 — 11:00 Sunday 2:00 — 11:00 25 E. Main St., Bloom sburg fl -^ ¦ &S&MBB&>% I I wl ¦¦ •• I^>j ^ ^J v M il J 1:! ; . ^LW *' >' « ¦ ' 'r ' ¦ ; r; * <^UI vSl —^ irasftMlf iw ¦Bv,^^ «vL^H 9^bW I ^r ^^m ^ I I I S JtW .» •?• <^J mLl ¦¦¦¦'¦¦' ib^L^b^b^LW ^h^ _ m ^ ^^ m ^^W fcil 4 JW ' l^HHilii m^ 11^^ ' tfffmi HHHE EM ^H1 • ' ' ' '' j f r * Jr 0¥m&m&KMf ttto* ^L^HL^L^L^IL^L^L^L^L^L^L^HY JB^i^^L^L^^L^Eia^L^L^L&HH ^L^L^HB^L^L^HKi. • ' I **¦ fffi Qs ^flifiP 'j L. *t ^^^k. ¦ ¦ ¦ Clr ^^ BH I <; ' I I{ • * \ ' > ' * y im y ¦¦¦ fi 'Vi ' ii *' "* ¦'¦¦^¦ cuwiiiii ^ Wf "" f i VwV * ^Jjr §i ! :; ' '¦ ^.-^ ' ^j j f i *'>^' ' ¦) "'• ^ 'V't' Jk f • * ' ' " ' ' ' ' ' ' \- ¦ V $*^ ¦ ¦ ¦ > tif ^'jr HBj ' w *^IML ***w ^ ^^^^^^^^^ jj ,— 1 ' .;{¦ " '. *' . i> • ¦ 1 f . , .1 ", ' wt .;, , • vd: ri \ " ¦ l% l' BBHlHHHIiHBHMHHHH ^i^^ ¦ * ' ¦ \ ' ¦ ¦' ** ' *' ¦• v * * '^ ¦ . ' j ¦¦¦ ^Tk 5 $ v^ ^- iiM ' ' ' ;'. ' £ 1 '.Vl-->J'i -«' Jv -*- -' - ' ¦ ' ¦ . " ¦ ' ) ¦ 1 \ ! ' Pizxa , Barbeque , French Fries Cheeseburgers , Hamburg ers , Ice Crea m Treats .' ' » ; Visit ! . , ' ¦ ' * ''" '"""" \ Bto«m «but » ¦ ¦ ! ¦ . . : Christmas Cards Jh § Studio ^kop -.i : 5 . &t0 V t0 See Our , 5 ¦ . 0*4- Free j t —La^Jg?i wi ^^sc 01^ J^^ L : Nauroth. W. K. Miller put BSC Chess Team Carl them momentarily ahead with a win from Linda Hummel , but the Victo rious Ove r next four were all BSC. Bob Reed Bloomsburg Club and George Underwood took care .The BSC Chess Team opened of the Ofbriens , John and Bob; th e year 's activities recently Joe Preletz beat Payton Terwillwith a 5-1/2 - 2-1/2 victory over iger , and Ed Rhoades added a win the Bloomsburg Chess Club. Gor- over Len Kepler. The chess club also has plans,, don Clapp, who plays first board for the Rooks when in school, took including a 5-round tournament to tt&t position for the town club. begin Thursday, Oct. 19,at 3 p.m. ,Len Thomas, taking over first in the Day Men 's Lounge. One board In the absence of Clapp and round will be played each week at Ray Depew, played the ' only draw the same time and place. Any and of the match. Dave Walp defeat- ' all interested students and facultyed Jim Joline on second board, are invited to participate. Begins but Jim Terwiillger pulled the' ners are especially encouraged; , tqm club back with a win over they will have plenty of company. :| ' Buffy ' To Appear ' . ¦ , ' ' ¦ . . . ¦ __ ¦ ' _!_ . __;_ . . _ , : , . , _ _ ..,. ¦ >¦¦¦ - ¦•' - ' , ¦.¦¦•¦ . ' ' , ¦ , *- •' - V '-" . - , . ' - ¦ ¦ ;' . , 1 1 1 ' i * ,! , ¦ - ¦ • • « .v.k.-^ ' ¦ ¦ r - ¦ • i ¦ - » . . K .. ,,- ... ., 1- - - . . » . . . i . . . .. > ¦ ¦ . t., -¦- ¦ ¦ i • ' \ - ¦ " \ ' i ' \ . » S ¦ \ ..* .-,«- ^ ,., „,.. *-.*.^ -^ .,(t-.,.« «-.«., ... «••-- - y * \ ¦ , ¦ S i ¦ h \ ,. > ' ' *¦¦ » . t s '" ' " " . , | ^ , \ , \ -.- i , ¦ v > , . . . , . .' . . ¦ \ ^ ¦ \ \ \ ¦ v ^ \ ¦ v \ i \ , ^ ¦ *• ¦ •..-..-..«-...«- .-,.-. -'•• •. \ i t, \ • \ ¦¦ \ ) - .. .. > , . . ^ ) > -\ i; .. ¦( ' , '. ,^ " " , ¦ " , * \ ¦ ¦ * .. i "* . Fri day, Oetoifer- 18, 1967 . Peace Cor ps A nnou nces Expans ion At Birockp ort ! •" The Peace Corps and the State i signment. As members of the University College at Brockport j staffs of teacher training instihave announced completion of ar- ' tutions and/or consultants to secran gements to extend and ex- ondary teachers, of mathematics or sc ience, they will be importpand the unique Peace Corps/ participants in the educationant project College Degree training efforts of their development al of 1967. launched in the summer \ their two During countries. host to reaction The highly favorable this summer 's pioneer venture year sojourn they will have the sparked the decision to enlarge opportunity to earn up to twelve the program for 1963. It is the semester hours graduate credit. Peace Corps and College offirst program to make Peace Corps training and service an ficials pointed out the several integral part of curricula leading features • which make this joint to Bachelor 's and Master 's de- jI program unique including: academic credit for Peace Corps grees. Candidates will be selected training, two, fully subsidized fr om the rank of students in good summer sessions totalling thirty standing at an accredited college semester credit hours, in-depth who are completing their sopho- Peace Corps training synchromore or junior year by June, nized with the liberal arts and specialized professional prep1968. Those selected will be able to earn a B.A. or B.S. de- aration, individualized programgree and be eligible for a Peace ming, opportunity for double maCorps assignment in one aca- jors and supervised overseas demic year flanked by two sum- graduate work. mers of fully subsidized and in"This integrated program is tegrated academic courses and !| based on our two-fold conviction: Peace Corps training. They will (1) to combine the college and be expected to major in mathe- Peace Corps experiences is to make both more relevant and matics or the sciences; those who have completed their junior meaningful and the personal year prior to entrance into the product more valuable and (2) program will have the opportunity to provide much-needed skilled for a double-major. specialists — mathematics and At the end of the second sum- science teachers — as Peace mer , armed with the degree , a Corps volunteers in Latin Amerteaching license, in-depth cross ica is to make a significant concultural preparation and fluency tribution to all concerned," said in Spanish , the graduates as President Albert Warren Brown, Peace Corps volunteers ¦will be of the State University College off on their Latin American as- at Brockport, in announcing the extension of the unique partnership. Men Resi dents ' Associati on Fo rms Comm ' s. Li mits Calls The first meeting of the Men Residents' Association f or the college ( year 1967-68 was held in the Alumni Room on Thursday, September 28. Under the leadership of this year 's new off icers , including Larry Ward , president; Tom McA u liff e, vice-president ; Bernie Romanoski, secretary; and Wil - Phi Alpha Theta Holds First Meeting; Topic-Far East :-; ; '¦¦ v Mr* Andrew Wallace delivered . an address entitled, "Conversations with Asian Intellectuals," at the first meeting of Phi Alpha Theta (International Honor Society in History) on Wednesday, September 27th. His lecture was based upon his recent tour of the Far East, including such areas as Hawaii, the Philippines , Hong Kong, Taiwan , South Korea and tity» Conspicuous §igns of American culture, such as the Engl ish language, have been de-emphasized as a result. Wallace por trayed Philippine democracy as immature and still filled with, corruption , military adventurism , and strong arm methods. They also charge that the U.S. has not fulfilled its promises for they have yet to receive veterans ' benefits for the Philippinos who had fought in World War n. At the close of the meeting, Mr. Wallace invited any student who wishes to study elementary Chinese, to contact him so that arrangements for such study can be made. Jap an . Mr. Wallace painted a bleak p}"*ure of U.S. policy in the Far Ei_-.c. Nowhere was there popular '* support for this country 's involvement in Vietnam. While i I some governmen ts tacitl y main tained a neutral position on the f :; war, the intellectuals and masses were suspicious and anxious about American motives. An inr v tellectual in Hong Kong described South Vietnam as "a complete ;' ¦¦ . U.S. takeover with the support of local opportunists." j The most caustic criticis m « ' *': . concerned Korea and Taiwan. { Korea was described as "a U.S. ? ;; Satellite." The army, the fourth . i ! largest standing armed forces in the world, was paid lock , stoc k, 1 and barrel by the U.S. Taiwan , was pictured as a complete mili- ! '¦ tary dictatorship, under Chiang \ Kai-shek, with a facade of democracy, Chiang has brought neither ¦ personal freedo m nor economic ;. . development to the Taiwanese* The Phllippinos have attempted ; to rediscover their Asian iden- i ! I , v % I J I ., Ha rry Logan \ j i ! FINE JEWELRY arid REPAIRING i I'¦ l j BSC CLASS RINGS ' : ! !\ || i 150 East Main Street ; Close to the Campus ¦ ! 1 |i | GREETING CARDS 1 W. Main St., Bloomsburg | r | ^ |' >: <;. ¦ ¦' r; , ;' r 'V t>f ' v; ' T W *, ** )f ' SHUMAN'S W0R1D TRAVIL 37 IAST MAIN • BLOOMSBURO • PHONI 784-3620 FOR ALL TOUR TRAVIl ARRANGEMENTS Raiervatloni e Ticket! • Toun e Ite. ALL AIRLINM — TRAINS C HOTELS HANDLED K ?• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ^* : : .j gEEQnaEdOBaanE QEdQQQQOQ g Lee-Pat's | Men's and Boys' Clothi ng Haggar Stacks Brentwoo d Sweaters 20 E. Main St. O § | 1 | | Ph. 784-5766 | *C QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQdl 5 7 BERWICK KNITTING MILL 1 J Factory Store a Sweaters Jr. Knit Dresses A-Line Suits , Slacks & Slark Suits Men's Sport Shi rts rl *S J FV **\ Save Many Dollars on Your School Wardrobe ! Y bC "H / ff L* *H * * * * * p Stud y Outlines And Guidel ines ! Monarc h i Barrister Barnes & Noble- L " Buy Where They Are Made L " Stud ymaster Cliff Notes RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES * 2 weeks at the London Theatre s for as low as $300. Included in teur priee: , ^ Orches tra seats to ,* top London hits ^ Round-tri p air transpor tation 13 nights , hotel * >f Full breakfast each morning Transfer to and from airport ]?. | ^ i i | ........... ....... 1 . ... — — — i. I \,[ ! S; . ++++ + + + + + + + + + + + ++ + f +f *^ Londo n Show Tou r +! f. + j | § i COSMETICS !8 W. Main St. — § We w ill special order any boo k not in stock | js£ TOILET GOODS .»• .; Bloomaburg j Route 11. North Over 6000 Book Title s in Stock ! Delivery — BLOOM BOWL! I i ; . — LET'S GO BOWLING AT ! JS ' Preicriptfon - 40 West Main St. Bloomsburg, Pa. j 784-4182 Free _ . . —.. _ ^ ^_^ — .,—. _ ^m. CARD & BOOK NOOK I I \\ :; /' ' jI SUBS j _„ _ ^ Ii! HENRIE'S BERRIGAN'S ! lia m Murray, treasurer , the MRA is looking forward to a successful year. The following topics were discussed and approve d at the first committees- w e r e meeting: formed for future activities such as Homecoming, Toys for Tots , etc., and a new ten-minute phone rule was discussed and put into effect. This rule states there will be a maximum of ten minutes allowed for all calls made in the men 's dormitories. The ruling was put into effect after a survey by the Bell Telephone Co. revealed certain phones were not yielding sufficient gains because of "tie-ups " caused by men and women on campus talking on phones for extensive periods of time. Complaints were also received from parents who have had difficulties in reaching their sons and daughters on campus. Dean Elton Hunsinger , Mr. Robert Norton , and Mr. David 1i Shaffer , advisors, presided and j offered comments on the success of the MRA for the 1967-68 year. fi *j i ^ 1 ? 5f i 3f )f )f i ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ | Greetin g Cards u * )f J_ * ^ ^ W J A i ¦ ¦ ¦ ; - .(I i : : . j t '.t. -.. z. . i. i i ;¦-" . .:. a^ i - i . ,( 230 South Poplar Street BtrwJek , Pa. , .x L , '.' > . lohe block off Route 11 bohlnd Shoppi ng Center ) L* 2S M Pa ge 11 —Maroon and Gold— Fashi on Review From Edith Locke Perso nals As a special service to stu dents and faculty, the MAROON AND GOLD will print items concern ing student and faculty marria ges, engagements, obituaries of college personnel or their relatives , college affiliated social events, and other announcements of this type. Anyone wishing to submit material may do so by callin g the M & G office, ext. 272, or by depositin g it in P.O. Box 58, Waller Hall f Engaged: Joyc e Casselberry, a secondary math major from LeRaysville, Pa., \and _ Stephen Shafer , Jr., fro m LeRaysville ; Marge Welsh , a bus iness major from Croydon , and Tom McKee from Levittown , Pa. Married: JanFeimster , anarts and sc iences sp eech maj or from Ringtown, and Floyd Walte rs from Bloomsburg ; Larry Remley, an arts and sc iences English major from Bloomsburg, and Alana M atter , an arts an d sciences sociology major from Dallas. THE REP RESENTED FOR NATI ONAL. ADVERTISING BY ¦ GOLDEN RAMS! A National Educational Advertising Services " iB^ 'r A DIVISION OF READER'S DIGEST SALES * SERVICES , INC. the handf ul (f or extra color , tuck in a HANDKERCHIEF) and giant ZIPPERS. Shirts: The British influence comes on strong with muted strip es across p ale oxford. Ex- ample: deep-blue and yellow lines tracking a pale-blue oxford or yellow on pale green-edged peach . Shirts have plenty of trimming: a CUT-OF F CUF F to show a big watch , epaulets across the shoulders , plenty of POCKETS (again , think handker chief!). For an extra dash of British appeal, tuck a FOULARD SCARF in at the neckline. Dresses : As Britain influences the college girls ' shirts, so does France her dresses. Watch for French detailing like CONTRASTING C O L L A R S AND C U F F S , low TORTOISE TRIMMED BELTS. And shirt dresses pick up details that are important on sweaters and skirts: MULTI POCKETS , BIG ZIPPERS and CULOTTES. Accessories: Hardware shines everywhere '«•¦ on Goats , shoes, belts, handbags , around wrists. Look for BUCKLES , SUITCASE and GALOSH CLOSINGS , DOGLEASH CLIPS , GROMMETS and ZIPPERS on absolutely everything. These are the details that add up to collegiate fashion for Fall '67 ! M R A Jottings +4 If MILLER OFFIC E ', 18 West Main Street Bloomsbur g, Pa. supply co. : • • Hallmark : ,' • * I Pride in: I * Our Town j I Shop ARCUS' 'Tor a Pretti er You ' Cardi — Oifto t I Phone i> . 784-2561 ' I a m ^, ^m mi : .< Grill RACUSIN'S s-. «^Bar ^^ .T ii T. r »»*_ FiUmPtAI^HfBM ^BBv^h^^^ BBi I ¦flfiNvvfl^^Hflfvfl^^^^ H ' ^^^^^^^ b hl ' *3^f ^B^mM ttrt ^k^bm. ^BvhI' h^^^ 3UF l t '*5 ^^*^^^ u J Conveniently located to ,;¦ ¦' . . .. "Suit the Campus " . . •. ^JtP ^^ U :;:£;!;; i | I III By letter count, the longest microscopicsilicovolcanoc oniosis, a rare lung disease. You won't find it in Webster 's New World Dictionary, College Edition. But you will find more useful information about words than in any other desk dictionary. Take the wor d time. In addit ion t o its derivat ion and an illustration showing U.S. time zones, you'll find 48 clear defini tions of the different meanings of time and 27 idiomatic uses, such as time of one's lif e. In sum, everything you want to know about time. This dict ionary is app roved and used by more than 1000 colleges and universities. Isn't it time you owned one7 Only $5.95 for 1760 pages; $6,95 thumb-indexed. ilv sj r. ijj ljijif Welcome To All Grads Show Your Colors For The Homecoming Gamo With w At Your Bookstore THE WORLD PUBLISHIN G CO. Cleveland and New York ¦ 'Stofws I 1^^ ^ o Q ¦¦ a^HHI , gQgSHHSBSSSSSJff^^M fi 784-4406 , WORLDWIDE DELIVER Y 11' WsSSS t^mmm FLOWE R S Corne r East & Th ird Streets y TIM E word may b e pneumono ultra- fi| Mtnbw F«Ur«l Deposit loturis o* Corporaltoa q The longest wor d in the language ? j§ JB ^MIBloomsbv/rg Bcmk- §| j| §j tBBbF Columbia Trus t Bloomsburg, Pa. Waffle * • Bloomsbur g m | • Our College I I * Our Studen ts I ; The I : Texas Compliments of ! J • We take Great | illllllllllHIIIHIIIIIl HIIllUHIin illHUIIH iiinllK : Whe re Dad Took His Girl : The mmmm\\m\mwmmmmmMmmwmi i I \7 ' 36O Lexington Ave., New York, N. Y. 10Q17 f ders and sleeves, POCKETS by from Edith Raymond Locke , Executive Editor: Fashion and Beauty, of "Mademoiselle " magazine. What makes a skirt , sweater , shirt or dress str ictly "this year " is detailing — the little fashion extras that add up to important changes in the collegiate look. Skirts : Wheth er they 're mini or maxi, this year 's ski rts have detailing. Look for kilts with BUCKLE S and MAXI SAFETY PINS , culottes with a PLEAT to let them masquerade as skirts , a dirndl (gathered skirt with a waistband) with a ROLLED HEM. Sweaters: Lamb s wool and fur blend shirt-sweaters have BUTTON-DOWN COLLA RS AND CUFFS . The mini-sweate r stops just at the w aist; the maxi grows Any men who are plan ning to have overnight guests for Homecoming Weekend-should notify the Dean oi M en's office immediately so that arr angements can be made. The sympathy fund for men living on campus has£een completed and is in operation. By the date of this writing, several b ouquets of flowers andMass cards have been forwarded to the homes of members of this organization due to a death in the family or hospitallzation. ¦• Men's Residence Council will have a float in the Homecomin g • Parade. BEAT FUN AT THE FAIR — (Top) — CEC Hoagle Stand at the Bloorrisburg Fair. (Botto m) - Cort ez Hart man, Jimmy Dean , - Gary Shuey, Circle K President , and Mr. Deily, Secretar y of the Fair Board. If it zips , buckles , buttons or to 27 Inches and is BELTED just snaps, it' s stra ight from '67. below the waist. Other detai ls to That' s thw latest fashion message watch for: BUTTONS on shoul- ^ trm tn x K' ' ^^^ KKHlltl^^Bf nf dl^mUlK^^^^ Ci ^=ill] ' 1 \ ¦ . ¦ ' ¦ ; \ '¦ . • ¦ Page 12 ————————— ' ^Frida^:o4t61^»!flfffl ; '; * • — . • . . . ' ~ ' ' ' ' ¦ 1 v>.< -r ,r ' *<* * :fv Vt Johns on ' s Chan ce Addi tional Funds Req uested For St udent Center For Re-Electio n Even though recent surve ys indi cate that P res ident J ohnson's popularity rating has reached a new low, he should be very diffi. cult to defeat next year. Several forces shall be operative by November that should be beneficial to the Johnspn candidacy. Economic conditions are a bas ic determinant in any election cam paign. Since major economists predict a banner year next . year , many voters will be re luctant to change administrations. They will question , "Wh y chan ge when thin gs are so good?" While Johnson 's opponent may seize the inflation issue, the pres ident' s surtax pl an sh ould Notes of Importance - cec - The second meetin g of the Alpha Cha pter of the Council of Exceptional Children will be held Tuesday, October 17, 1967, at 7:30 p.m. in the Special Educa tion Center. . Guest speaker will be Dr. Paul Timashenka , speech superintendent of mental retard ation. All interested members, students and faculty - are invite d to attend. - visiting alum ni The Dean of Men's office has announced that they wouldilk e to extend a cor dial welcome to all the returnin g alumni. All alumni are invited to stop in the Dean of Men's office and renew acquaint. ;es. - scoutmas tersAny Eagle Scouts, who ar e intereste d in becoming assistant scoutmasters in the local area, are asked to contac t Mr. Bender in the Direc tor of Student Activities Office. -b-clubThe B-Club has announced that it will sell mums for homecoming from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. on Saturday, October 14, outside the faculty lounge in Waller Hall. The price of the mums ir i $1.25. - book review Mr. Anthon y Sylvester , BSC histor y professor , announce d tha t stu dents can buy the New York Book Review monthl y edition for $.15 instead of $.40.Any students Intereste d shoul d contact him in Science Hall or at Box 41U rlllllllinilllHIIII«IIIIUIIIIHI IIIIII!lllllllllllllll | HITTER'S OFFICE SUPPLIES leave him an " out" on thatissue. Johns on's image is also at a new low today because the Republican nominee's identity is unknown. When the Republicans nominate a candidate several citizens will viewJohnson as "t he lesser of two evils." Presently all that the public notices are J ohnson's deficiencies . Vietna m is a case in point. This is an e'xtremely complex and delicate issue. Johnson 's opposition is from both "Hawks " and "Doves. The Republican aspirant will be classified in one or the other grou p. When this is done , many voters will swing back to the Pres ident. Another point that has gone unnoticed is Johns on's political dexterity. He knows that his chances for re -election are not as bright as they were. Being a political anima l, his primar y concern is the need for his reelection. Political necessity would seem to indicate that he should name Robert F. Kenned y as his running mate. Kennedy as his Vice-Presidential candidate would be extremely beneficial to his campaign. First , Kennedy has the charismatic qualities that would bring many dissident Democrats and Independents back into the Johnson column. Since Kennedy is the focus of attention among this bloc of voters, it would effectively be eliminated. Secondly, it would add life and color to an otherwise dull convention next year . A peripheral benefit of such a move would be to solve this succession p roblem f or Democrats in 1972. As things stand today, the Democrats would be critically split betwe en Kennedy and the Hum phrey forc es. This split could cause defeat for either candidate. By naming Kenne dy as VP , it would be ackno wledged by P resident J ohnson that R obert Kennedy should be the nominee in 1972. This could entice RFK to accept the vice-presidency ' in 1968. ¦\^ H* %_0 Don 't Miss the Excitement Social Events Social events for the period from October 13, 1967 to October 18 , 1967 include : HOMECOM ING!!!!!!!!!!!! All kinds of shoo repair T fr#« fhinff » with any ihots rapafrtrf m m I m m '{ t g| Hoagies 9. i * HCiosed 1:30 to 3:00 P.M.IH P Every Day But Friday jj BARBER SHOP FREE DELIVERY ||§ | | | Regular & King M I i FOOT OF COLLEGE HILL BLOOMSBURG, PA, OIZ6 HOQ£JI0S ?•:§:•: ijSjj HI King Size Soft Drinks |;p Ph. 784-4292 fU ^ 157 W. Main Bloomsburglp ;i||| • QUALITY • October 15, 1967 -- Pops Con cert -- Concert Choir -- New Auditor ium — 8 p.m. October 18, 1967 — Movies and Dance -- Gym -- 7:30 p.m. FRESHMAN Football - Kutztown — Away — 3 p.m. " Kam pus Nook " I; The Restaurant Across From the jf ;: College | Open 7 Days a Week Se rvin g Meals Daily ' '\ ')! Wtd , until noon Nzn ^ Open til 12:30 ' a.m. f§ J October 14, 1967 .— Homecoming Parade -- .10:30 a.m. Football -;- Home — West Chester — 2 p.m. Dance — Centennial Gym — 8:30 p.m. H | II m October 13, 1967—Dlonne Warwick Concert — Cent ennial Gym — 8:30 p.m. Only $3.99 | f; : solids , herrin g bone , plaid s > I II The Most Convenient Location for Your jj '?'**!*» '» *! '!*J*!*!'!'l §¦ %Jk |K9 f 1W5 OilWl ^ i f I BSyl^ JS || Our rooms how Air-conditioning and Te/tv/t/on and ore $§§ ij| FALL WEIGHT BERMUDAS I I i' '/ mm\m\\mnmmmmmmmmwm 223 Iron Street 8 a.m. — 5 p.m. m-s CARTER'S CUT RAT E of Homecoming Weekend | .» V* V %> %M \J V ^_#'V>'*_# K^ 'i-^ 1^^N _0 "l^ H0 V» V V ' H Sam and Son Shoe Repair |Charli e's Compliments of K0 V N I I! 784-4323 In response to recent student interest in the new student center at BSC, Mr. Boyd Buckingham has announce d that the college has reque sted an additional allocation of $800,000 to be added to the initial $450,000. If approved by the General Assembly no later than January of 1968, design could begin shortl y ther eafter and the architects could complete drawings in approximately nine months . The best estimate is that construct ion will be completedpr lor to Septem ber , 1970. The center will be constructedbetw een Waller Hall and the East Hall and will place most student social activities under one roof. f to right, is Captain Albert F. Gibson, Pictured above , let U. S. Marine Corps Selection Officer of Wilkes-B arre , Pa ,, presefrtin r PLC Trainin g Certificates to Richard C. Lepley and William F. Deubler, BSC students, for havin g successfully completed the U. S. Marine Corps PL' C Junior Course conducted at Quantic o, Virginia , this past summer. Absentfro m the photogra ph is Thomas M, Easte p, who also received a . tra ining certifica te. I Built For The Students | 112 East Main Street Bloomsburg, Pa, •" - Single Rooms —• $4.00 • $5.25 ¦$5»50 - $6,00 Doubt * Rooms — $8.00 - $9.00 * $10.00 §fff 100% Wool ¦ I: 1 $|| ||f J ust right for those fall afternoon fo ot ball games and for dances I . . ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ O M B ^B^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ &^BH ^pi|^p^p^kbg|^p^^ _^^^^ n7 ¦^¦^¦^¦H|pHBB p^Hp^ip^HM ^S^I^B^H| |Ht| |^p^f I , ' I ' ¦ '- ¦ ' 8HBMBHdkHHMhHBMfefeSHMfelSHMRlHtflfeVSVHBttB ¦ '- I * " '> „ * •• ^liH|iSMMHM " ' • '¦ • ' •¦ '• ' s : ' • » ' - ' • ' ; ' ¦ '¦ • : ; •' ' -; ¦ '¦ • ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ • ' '¦ •' , . " . ' ' ¦" ^