MAN plans referral on birth control by Nancy VanPelt Right now on campus the MAN Club , Man 's Adaption to Nature , is organizing a student information and counciling referral service on contraception and abortion as a result of a random cam pus survey conducted last semester . In its initial stages , the service will be wor king in cooperation with the already established Student Information Center. Some of the plans and intentions of the program are to answer questi ons and provide a counciling referral service to students who wan t information or help. It is an organizatio n set up for the studen ts by the students. Counciling is to be supplied by outs ide professional people in the pro per fields who are willing to volunteer the ir t ime . Also the progra m hopes to be able to give referrals to local doctors who will give g i rls the necessa ry examinations for birth control pills. Another aim of the program is to try and change the attitude toward unmarried girls inquiring about birth control pills. The whole idea originated as a class proje ct in a course offered by the Sociology Depa rtment called Pers onality in Culture and Society. Students devised a questionnaire on birth control attitudes to be distribu ted at random to students on campus. The general conclus ion was tha t college students want and need birth control on campus . A small group of enthusias tic students from the class felt that students shouldn ' t remain in the dark about birth contr ol and abor tion and bega n work on a solid plan to help stude nts who felt they needed information . Their first aim is high: to staff BSC 's health clinic with doctors to give girl s examinations to Commission team to visit BSC Three representatives of the Commission on Higher Education of the Middle States Association will visit BSC March 23 and 24 to examine thedetails of an interim repo rt filed by this college last month. dr. Claude Puffer, chair man of the com mission ; J. Osborn Fuller, president of Fairleigh Dickins on University ; and President James K. CMsen, president of William Paterson State College will concern them selves with matters pertinent to the welfare, functioning, and effectiveness of BSC. The interim report filed by the co llege relates to certain recommendations made by a visiting team from the Commission early in 1969. obtain birth control pills . Penn- sylvania law says that state school property is not to be used to distribute birth control pills or any other method of contraception . Their next move toward reiteration was to join forc es with MAN. MAN 'S basic function is to su pply personnel for the service and provide a means for expansion . The Student Inform ation Center is a " how to " program with its pur pose being to advise and refer students who have an y problems relevant to camp us life. It is located in room 319 Waller Hall , extension 351 . ¦ -— - ¦^m h ¦ ¦ ¦ m ^*^ ¦ Forensics conclude tourney ST UD Y A BSTRACT _^-^ _*_^_ it " . £ ,^-t ^^^^ The study was completed by a pp roximatel y the same number of men and women the ma jority of whom completed their freshman y ear and rated their owp sexual att itudes as "somewhat liberal " (46 percent ). 73 percent of those polled said that " anyone " should have ac- FORENSIC SOCIETY by Carl Hyden The BSC Forensic Society concluded a successful debate tournament on Saturday, February 5, 1972 with a banquet at the Hotel Magee. This tournamen t was the second annual James J. O'Toole Mem orial Debate Tournament. As Tom Seriani , the Head of Tabulations , announc ed t he results , Karen Higgens , the Student Tournament Director and Erich Fr ohman the Novice Debate Coach handed out the thirteen Trop hies to the outstanding individual debators , the outstanding novice and varsity teams , and t h e swee p st akes award to the top team. The w i nner s were a s follows : First speaker - novice — L. Olszewski - Scranton U. Second speaker • novice — A. Jenkins - Clarion Third speaker - novice — E. Creps - Bethany College First speaker - varsity — Jan Keffler - Slippery Rock Second speaker - varsity — Lou Dav is. - Lehigh Third speaker - varsity — E. Harris - PW tahur a First novice team — Scran ton U. cess to contraceptive devices and that the legal cond i t i on for abort ion should be " upon demand by a women " . A strong majority claimed tha t the y would like to see the cam pus infirmary dispense birth control information ( 98 percent ) , and also tha t a doctor be affiliated with the campus infirmary to handle prescriptions for the pill and other birth control devices ( 90 percent ). 56 percent sta ted tha t they would prefer to use the birth control pill as a method of contraception and 67 per cent felt that the campus infi rmary should be permitted to dispense birth control pills and ot her devices. Conventi on number s increase sharp ly The St eer i ng Committ ee for the Si mulated Democrat ic Nat ional Conventi on ann ounced that the number of sta t e delega ti ons sold has increased sharpl y. Delegations from outside B.S.C. now include Mar ywood College and two states sold to Susquehanna U n i v e r s i t y . Response from B.S.C. 's sororities has been excellent with Theta Tau O mega , Tau Sigma P i, Sigma Sigma Sigma , and Delta Epsilon Beta alre ady signed up. The only fra ternity involved thus far is Phi Sigma Xi. Non-college grou ps include the Citizens for Chisholm Committee of Rochester , New York , the Lower Kensington Environment al Center of Philadel phia and the Columbia Montour Vocation al Technical High School. Independen t delegations , like the one formed by the Studen t Information Center (SIC) , include many B.S.C. students and men t . Keynote speaker for the convent ion is Sen. Frank Church of Idaho and Sen. Harold Hughes will also speak during the Histor y Conference in conj unction with the convention. A host of films and p latform comm it tee meetin gs are planned immediatel y before the convention date . "Pops second novice leam — i\. | /~N /BU T £U*E»A A^T HE \ «) |te$ V'^A~«EK-.SJ II Vr ^%ToN ( -»* ¦ V. \*J A ***** M *» \ **° T° ' \ y ~.Z 7 ~ s I goesTs AEGoibai I. y I > I f ™ \*T\ | (-—3 ^ - ^^ S ¦ c \ fesFkl W j fly v fliLJft m ^ I ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ '^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^HeifcwB^^^ WMBMMBMBBi ^PH^^BBBMfc^M^'^^^ Lupto wski sets assist record Willis , J ohnson score 219 Huskies roll on by bob Oliver The Husky basketball squad rolled over the Rams of West Chester Saturday night before a capacity, but quiet crowd, 87-72. Rams transportation problems delayed the opening tapoff until 8 :30, which perhaps accounts for the sluggishness of the fans, most of whom had been crammed in the gym since 6:00. The Huskies started out fast, leading 13-4 four and a half minutes into the game, which was marked with fine individual efforts. Among these was Howard Johnson , who finished with 21 points, finding Art Luptowski all alone beneath the basket for two, then Art stole the bil l , passed behind the back to Paul Kuhn for two more. Both John Willis and Dennis Mealy were grabbing rebounds quickly, clearing the ball out and downcourt. Art Luptowski played another superb'game, despite the fact he had injured his ankle. He scored player as "the best all-around 19 points, had 13 steals to his street-ball player I' ve ever credit, and notably broke the BSC played against." His name is record for assists with his total of Bert Powell, and combined with 18. other additions should make Miilersville a tough game. At the half , the Huskies owned Freshman a comfortable thirteen point lead Since West Chester disconwith the score at 44-31. . tinued its freshman program, the The Huskies owned the boards baby Huskies scheduled a game offensively and defensively as the with the Goldey Beacom Junior second half started. Johnson tapped in a few , while Willis hit College Varsity. This was a from fifteen feet and below the mistake considering GBJC had basket as the Husky lead grew, beaten the Penn frosh, the last however the game never did group recruited by Dick Hunter. break wide open , despite the After GBJC had scored, Husky comfortable lead held by the coach Bert Reese had his team stall , and so they did for 13 Husky squad. Scoring was balanced with four minutes — without a shot until players in double figures. Besides Joe Woods hit a 22 footer. The half ended with the score 7Johnson and Luptowski, Willis and Kuhn held double figures 3 in favor of G.B.; the Huskies going l-i for the half and G.B. 3-5. with 21 and 12 respectively. In the second half the Huskies Tonight the Huskies return to PC action at Miilersville. This* is were looking for a good shot. a team with a few new eligible They dropped behind 15-6, but players, one praised by a Husky tied at 19, when G.B. jumped ahead by 7, then sputed to a 52-40 final. Mike Ognoski led the losers with 16 points. Varsity Scoring Kuhn Willis Johnson Luptowski This dive r is off and Swim ming , PHOTO BY MARESH I FUN IN THE SUN I Easter Fiesta ¦ACAPULCO MARCH 25-APRIL 1 I HOLIDAY INN I HOTEL MARIS IFREEPORT the Huskies held the Yorkers scoreless for four minutes, to ice the game. The final score was 69- The Huskies added another victory to their home skein and overall record ( 14-3) , by defeating York College- handily Monday nite, 69-49. The Huskies started out slowly, but keeping close to the smaller Spartan squad. The Husky five shot 13-30 — vs — York's 13-23 in the first half. Yorks biggest man was 6'4", and this was the reason the Huskies could go so much to John Willis, who had 14 first half points. 49. The Huskies can be heard on WHLM Thursday afternoon at 5:20 on the Sports Show. In the opener, the Freshmen added their eighth victory vs. one loss by. romping over the smallspartans, 99-78. Gary Tyler led Husky scorers with 21 points. Varsity Scoring NAME G F PTS. W illi s 6 5 17 Johnson 7 1 15 Luptowski 3 1 7 Kuhn 4 4 12 Mealy 3 2 8 Consorti 1 1 3 Choyka 1 1 3 Dare 10 2 HUSKIES BREAK OPEN GAME The second half was close for the first couple minutes, but soon the Husky height advantage began to pay off , and the Huskies spurted to a 10 point lead, with 6 minutes left. Shortly afterwards, aenwanz I 1^^^ I I PHILADELPHIA DEPARTURES For Further Information & Reservations contact: R.T.A . 140 Montgo mery Av «nu* Bala Cynwy d , P«nna., 19004 (215) MO 7-7410 Trovl Arro ng«m»nt« by RotonbMh Delega te To The Sim ulated Demo cratic Convention I Eppley 's Pharmacy FLOWER S v* MAIN t IRON STREETS Prescri ption Specialist to tax ft s«rvlc« I I Trovl Agoncy J I Home of the Dagwood I DICK'S MARKET 8 West Main Street ^^^ ^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^BBBHHH BI z 0 RBO Be A «ry WorldwkU ^P^Wp*Hv Down The Hil l On East St. MARCH 25-APRIL 2 0 0 Dave look ing at record ti me, PHOTO BY MARESH (contlniMd on o *f four ) m^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ REEF HOTEL $299 doubles I«Prlc#» iub|«ct formance in the 500 and 1000 yard events. He improves with each meet and is in contention with the best in the state championships. My first concern is to have him do better than his best time to date for the big battle with the Rams of West Chester Wednesday. The California meet also had a number of important ha ppenings. Dave Gibas set a team record of 2:13.1 in the 200 yard individual medley . This is the seventh consecutive meet in which Dave has broken or tied records. This was the fourth straight meet in which Jack Feyrer has gone stroke for stroke with the competition in the 500 and 1000 freestyle. Jack was touched out in the 1000 freestyle; but he triump hed in the 500 yard freestyle. He won because he sprinted the last four pool lengths for the much needed first place. As Jack was swimming the 500 free , the California team was down by fourteen points but determined to give the Huskies a fight. He picked up six points in the 200 yard breast stroke. This determination came to nought because of the fine diving per- "^iEtttU's $ 179 quads 5 1 55 quads l u Hamilton I Say Happy Birthday and Happy Anniversary with MARCH 26-APRIL 2 IHOLIDAY INN I SHALIMAR [HAWAII $229 quads $219 quads 20 4 215 011 10 2 00 0 Over York Too!!! Tankm en: Nin e in a Row by Dan Maresh The Husky Tankmen are definitely in the swing of things. They have won three meets in four days. First they defeated Lock Haven 89-23. Friday night t hey took Slippery Rock 76-37. Saturday afternoon they humbled California 65-48. The Husky record is now nine wins and two losses. There were two records set at The Slippery Rock meet. Dave Gibas set a new pool record in the 50 yard free style. His time was 21.8 seconds. This time equals Dave's national record. There was also a new BSC record set in the one meter optional diving by Eric Cureton . Eric was startled by a shout during one of his earlier dives. Fortunately, though , Eric was able to pull himself together and win the event. In cases where the diver is startled by a loud noise or unusual sound the diver may ask the referee to take the dive over according to the rule book. But all I could hear Eric say was, "I wish she didn 't do that." Coach McLaughlin said Jack Feyrer is nearing peak per- 10 2 Mealey Consorti Choyka Dare Schwartz Hamilton G F Pts 6 0 12 8 5 21 9 3 21 7 5 19 •CHANEL •OUERLAIN i j •FABERCE «LANVIN •PRINCE MATCHAKUJ •EUZABETH ARDEN •HELENA RUBENSTEIN «DANA •COTY •MAX FACTOR wfVMV XPM90M News Briefs Against the Wall ( continued from page two) right on swinging. Does he ever... Despite scenes like those on page 5 of "The Amazing SpiderMan " No. 4, wherein Parker's mask gets torn and he immediately envisions himself caught by villianous publisher J. Jonah Jameson and the police, thereby forcing Spidey 's beloved Aunt May into a life of poverty selling shoe laces for 20 cents apiece, the new comic caught on with history-making swiftness. No wonder...Spidey had the best costume ever seen on a superhero, still does. He had a slanky sense of wise-cracking humor. He had girl problems, he had acne—he was a very human superhero. Mighty Marvel marched on. Lee even went so far as to proclaim the 60's "t«he Marvel Age of Comics." He was right. Marvel sold copies, made kids literally forget about Superman and stupid old Lois Lane and Lana Lang, made them foresake Batman and Robin and all the other D.C. folks...who could take those stuffed shirts seriously when Thor, Iron-Man , Ant-Man , Dr. Strange, Dr. Doom, the Incredible Hulk , and all the rest were on the loose? Who could resist such new old characters as Sub-Mariner and Captain America , revived by Marvel from the war 's Timel y publications? Who would still read D.C. without getting bo*red?...Durned few kids, that's who. So it went...the 60's WERE Marvel's Age. And then came the 70s. "Green Lantern ," a DC mag destined to go out of business, took on a new editorial policy out of desperation, a policy striving for social "relevance." Along came an artist named Neal Adams, a writer named Denny O'Neil , and a script entitled "No Evil Shall Escape My Sight. " The scene—the ghetto. Green Lantern , who has roamed the universe in the employ of its blueskinned Gaurdians , flies by and sees a fight starting. Lantern tears into the wrong man , a man who is merely defending his livelihood against a slum landlord . Soon , the following dialogue ensues... ABSENCE Students who are absent from campus for reasons of illness or death in the immediate family or a personal emergency, should notify the Office of the Registrar, who in turn will see that the respective professors are notified . JUNIOR CLASS The Junior Class will hold a meeting for all class members Tues. Feb. 22, in Carver Hall at 8 p.m. Class activities for this semester will be discussed. METHODIST YOUTH The United Methodist Youth of the Bloomsburg Area is sponsoring the presentation of "Dust and Ashes". This contemporary folk group expresses God's work in the world through a folk music festival form. Tom Page and Jim Moore, the "Dust and Ashes" of this duo, w ill perform in concert at St. Matthew 's Lutheran Church , W. Market Street, on February 17, at 7:30 p.m. Black man , old , bent, tired : "I been reading about you, how you work for the BLUE skins, and how on a planet someplace you helped out the ORANGE skins. Only there's skins you never bothered with...the BLACK skins ! I want to know...HOW COME? Answer me that , Mr. Green Lantern!" Green Lanthern , turning away, head down: "I...can 't..." The dialogue reproduced here was the beginning. The same issue saw Green Lantern , wi th the help of his more-in-town superhero friend Green Arrow, become sociall y mofe aware. It was , nostalgia fans , Green Arrow who made that speech at the start of this article. It was Green Arrow who turned Green Lant ern's head so far around that the two would soon set off crosscountry , looking for America... And comics would never be the same... (end of part one—to be concluded in a future issue) Harrisburg Conspiracy Case WHO ARE THE HARRISBURG EIGHT? Three of them are Roman Catholic priests ; one is a nun who teaches Art history. The youngest of the Eight is a former Eagle Scout , the son of a college president. Still another is a gentle , lucid Pakistani scholar , an authority on Third World nationalism. Finally, a couple: a former pries t , son of a Congressman ; a former nun , a Fulbright scholar in French. Their names : Eqbal Ahmad , Father Phillip Berrigan , Ted Glick , Sister Elizabeth McAlister, Father Neil McLaughlin , Anthony and Mary Scoblick , Father Joseph Wenderoth. Eight people who hate war. WHAT IS THE ISSUE? The department of Justice has invested thousands of agent man hours in this case. It has coerced dozens of witnesses, made free and brazen use of wire tapping ; manipulated a docil grand j ury Swimming (co ntinued fro m page three) for a period of five full months. All this labor produced an enormously comp lex , subtle fashioned indictment — most of which is malicious nonsense. The Harrisburg Eight are not as the government charges, conspirators or bombers or kidnappers. They are indeed resistors; some of them have gone past deploring the war to the point of direct action against its tools. But it is1 not because they interferred with the draft that our government is staging this massive , costly show trial against them. It is because these eight men and women appeal powerfully to the roots of America n conscience. The issue, then is conscience versus power. WHO'S WINNING? Nobody knows who'll win in court — but the real verdict won't come from the jur y anyway. The government's goal is to use the fear of jail as a club against the peace movement. The government loses if the actual result of the trial is a widening of the community if conscience , a deepening of the spirit of resistance. If vou want to know more, if you 'd like to help the defendants with the heavy ex penses of the trial , write or call : THE HARRISBURG DEFENSE COMMITTEE in Harrisburg, 1004 N. 3rd., Harrisburg, Pa. 17101, (717) 2333072. formance of Eric Dureton and formances to come out on top. The momentum developed in the Steve Coleman. Since the opening of the season last nine meets will be put to the Coach McLaughlin has been test. It will help but the greatest keeping a careful record of his aid to the Husky will come from Alma Mater West Chester State the full house of BSC fans. Coach College. According to Coach McLaughlin knows and has SPINET McLaughlin , "Th e Rams are witnessed what good spectator OLE PIANO C O N S strong, but not out of our reach. I enthusiasm can do for the team. urchased by small ma y be p anticipate they will be really If you want to help, be sure you monthl y pay ments, see It keyed up. I am hoping we will be arr ive extra early — or you may local ly , write Cortland riding a little high r. " The Rams, not be able to get a seat or see the Music Co., P.O. Box 35, a perennial strong house meet. Cortlan d , Ohio 44410. swimming team , h ave not forgotten the 1968 meet in which NEED A RESUME PREPARED? BSC triumphed. The 1971 meet should be interesting and Hm it doiM corre ctly and professionally. WWII incraasa your advanta|t war other |ob thrilling to say the least. applicants as m dwelop your uniqua sellln i points. Prompt, accunti sinrlca. Copies naatry typawrittui. »i,,t interview mil Coach McLaughlin feels that the team will have to perform C. K. FOX ASSOCIATES Coll 823-5873 better than their best past per' (Not an Emplo yment Agency ) FETTERMANS BARBER SHOP — QUALITY— Foot of Colle ge Hill Bloorotbur g, Po. On Lmllyi TV -STEREO SERVICE 232 Ini SI. 714-2274 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ -*Pr *f0 **t*malStPtlaAtd j U / m QIHL •2J-I49t 2t2 SOUTH FRANKLIN WIIKIMA RRI, PINNA. STRUT e Uttvt Some Of Our Services • ftOMMNM e Term Papon e Ufa/ Documents e Sfeno fraofty e BIUfag$ • Mailin g! "x a, oific . . . . a a *£,*tP m. *i° Hil U» 4 Delivery - Orders Over 123,00 ENVIRONMENT The committee for Environmental Policy on Campus will meet Thursday night at 7.00 p .m . in room 66 Hartline . Everyone is welcome to attend — this will be the last chance to join the organization . ECOLOGY Interested in ecology? Hear Edward Callahan , Allied Chemical's top environmentalist speak on "Ecologies : Chemistry's Role in Pollution Control. " TONITE at 8:00 p.m. in Kuster Auditorium . Refreshments will be served. OMISSIONS, OMISSIONS A number of photo and story credits were inadvertently omittedfrom last Friday 's paper. Our humble apologies to all those who suffered the indignation of seeing their work go unrewarded and unnoticed. Dan Maresh took the unusual swimming picture that appeared on page 3. Tom Schofield took the page 1picture of Dr. Lincoln.The ubiquitous Frank Pizzoli wrote the M&G biography entitled "It's the Bloomin' News". Facul ty, Yearbo ok Foren sics Pictures Are (continu ed from page one) included President and Mrs. Nossen ; Dr. Hobart Heller, VicePresident for Academic Affairs ; Dr. Melville Hopkins, Chairman of the Speech Department ; and Mrs. James J. O'Toole, widow of the late Director of Forensics. Being Taken This Afternoon Waller 355. Casey reports {con tinued from page one) (College president, said Casey's icharges lacked factual details ,and were based primarily on the \opinions of an auditing depart] ment staff member. Gammell said Casey's con,clusions hinged on one interpretation of the law stating ,that each college and university ,shall have the power to bank and Juse grants as directed by the grantor . . He said any questions of !illegality should be placed before 'the state attorney generals office, 'and that questions of opinion •should be submitted to the state Department of Education . CLA R ION RECOMM ENDATIONS The Clarion audit recommended that: 1—$70,818 be "returned immediately" for deposit by Clarion 1 State College in approved banks. 2—The return of $13,903 to the Clarion State College Students Association that had been diverted into Foundation accounts. 3—An additional $13,952 be returned to the school for use as special funds. 4—A $1,500 grant to the school from the Price-Waterhouse Co. should be used for administrative purposes. The audit also called for the foundation and college officials to agree to pay the state a rental fee for office space the foundation uses on state-owned property. Kampus Nook BOOKS... OVER 8,000 AcroM from the Union Plain and Ham Hoagles, Cheese • Pepperoni - Onion Pine . Our ow n Ma«s> Ice Cream. TII lcS IN STOCK i If If s a book we have It or we can gat It Take Out Orders—Deliver y to Dorms, Frets, .Sororit ies. Mai 7tt4eil Hours : Men. . Thure , 1:00H.OfJ Friday r:W-12:M fej urdey 4t*-13:QI •umtey ll:« »11:« Giwertfc j Rf Cards ) HENRIES Card and Book Nook 40 W. Mai n St. ^ ¦^ — — — B^ — M ^— THE STUDIO SHOP 59 E. Main St. The cozy - Browiy - Friendl y shop for all your needs personal gift decorati ng framin g U—l-MMMB EMR -RRRRRRRRRaR RRRRRRRMHR IMa-M ^—. ? Que Pasa ? 225 Center Str eet (Across fro m th e Colum bia Theatre ) India print dr«ss«s...Hur ach«t, unlwx ... Mexican ptaiant blo HMR...purt«R...b «ltR... mola.. .and torn * rally great ANTIQUI JIWIUIY open 12-7, Fri . 10-9