$50 deposit needed for campus housing Dr. JerroJd Griff is, Vice-Pres. for Student Life is shown with recipients of Service Keys. First row (I to r): Dr. Griffis, Jacqueline Feddock, Marty Manziak, Kathy Sandy , Georgianna Cherinchak , John Choyka. Second row (I to r): James Kelly, Robert Casey, John Lines. (Morning Press Photo ) '72 Gra ds honored at A ward s Convocat ion The annual awards convocation was held Sunday in Haas Center for the Arts. Welcoming remarks to the honored graduates of January, May, and August , 1972, their parents and friends was given by John S. Mulka , Director of Student Activites. The 24 recipients of Wh o's Who in and Colleges American Universities cer tificates was acknowled ged by Robert Norton , Dean of Student Life. The 37 recipients of Academic Honor certificates was prese nted by Dr. Hobart Heller , Acting Vice President and Dean of the Faculties. Ten Service KeysDr. were p resen t ed by Vice Jerrold Griffis , President for Stude nt Life . Lif etime At hlet ic Passes were given to 16 athle t es by Dr. Stephen Bresett , Acting Chairman , Department of Health , Ph y si cal Educat i on and Athlet i cs. T h i rteen sp ec ial scholarsh ips were presente d to underclassmen by Robert Dun can , Direct or of F i nanc ial Aid. W i lliam Boo t h , Pres i dent , Board of Trus t ees , presented certif i cates of a pp rec iation t o former members of t he Board of Trustees , W i lliam A . Lank , Bernard Kelly, an d G erald B e i er s c h m i t t . T h r e e businessmen of the t own of Bloomsb urg, Robert Nearin g, Ma yor C. Martin Lutz , and G eorge Thom p son were presented certificates of appreciation by Dr , Robert J. Nossen , Pres i den t . Certificates of appreciation were awarde d by Dr. Nossen to George Stradtm an , Dr. Ral ph Herre , and Kenneth Rober t s, all facul ty members who will be retiring this year . Or. Nossen delivered th e congratulatory remarks , and the awa rds con- vocation was followed by a band concert by the Ma rron and Gold college band under the direction of Stephen Wallace. Service Keys are given for " outstanding service to 10 per cent or less of the senior class, who accumulate a minimum of 20 points for participation in various activities during their four years of college." This is the highes t award given by the college community . Those receiving this award are : Rober t A. Casey , Ge orgianha Stillwater; Cherinchak, Simpson ; J ohn R. Choyka , Clarks Summit ; Linda M. Ennis , Audubon , New Jersey ; Mary Jacqueline A. Feddock , Larksville; James A. Kelly, Levittown ; John E. Lines , Le Raysville; Martha I. Manzick , Mar-Lin; Marga ret A. Price , Carbondale; Kath y A. Sandy , Richboro. Lifetime Athletic Pa sses are given to senior athletes who have participated in a varsi ty sport for four years . Those to receive these passes are : Jame s C. Brewer , Bloomsburg ; Ja mes W. Davis, Jr., Kingston ; Rickey L. Eckert , Lititz; Jack D. Feyrer , Bethlehem ; Curt P. Hann aman , ( continued on page seven ) A new procedure regarding room reservation on campus for the 1972-73 academic year has been announced by Mr. John Zarski , Director of Housin g. This week all resident students will have received an application form and residence hall contract materials from the Housing Office. Students who ar e desiro us of reservin g a residence hall room must complete the Residence Hall Document and return it , along with a $50.00 deposit , to the Business Office before May 1, 1972. Please note that the housin g document is for the period of the entire ACADEMIC YEAR , a nd st udents will be expected to retain their housing assignment for the full period of agreement. The $50.00 deposit guarantees ' the student a room for the period designated in one of the campus residence halls and the continued occupancy of their present , housing assignment (unless the student requests a different roommate or another residence hall ). Please refer to the Residence Hall Assignment Procedure -which is included in the packet of materials. The Residence Hall Assignment card should be returned to the Resident Director of your current hall by May 1, 1972. If the student does not register for the semester indicated or fails to honor his housin g contract and assignmen t, the $50.00 advance deposit will be forfeited . Exceptions to this are : (1) Death , illness , or disabling injury of the student ; must be supported by a physician 's st a t ement , (2) entry to the militar y service , (3) marriage; receipt of proof of marriage is required , and (4) academ i c or d isc ip l i nar y suspens ion. If a st udent canno t meet any of these stipulations , bu t other val id reason s t hat he or she feels may exist for the can- Bring ALL the Boys Home By John Dempsey Sprin g and bombs are i n the air once more as we face another spring of demonstrations against th e war. I t has been cu t down , drawn back , withdrawn , etc ., etc., etc., bu t the gr isly fac t r ema i ns t hat A mer icans are still dying, Vietnamese are still dying, and we don 't seem to notice it any more . The body count has been cut down considerably, t rue , but t hat is l i ttle consolation to the families that are i nformed t hat the ir son or husband was one of the twenty or fi ft een k ill ed dur i ng the week . Sen. Mike Gravel of Alaska still rea lizes tha t the war is not over , however , and last week int roduced a bill tha t would end t he token talk of cutbacks and withdrawals and end U. S, involvemen t in the Vietnam conflict once and for all. Sponsore d by Senators Cr anston , Mondale , Hu ghes , McGovern , N elsop , Pr oxmire , Tunney , and " Stevenson , the bill called for the cessation of bombi ng In Indochina and for the with drawa l of U. S. military personnel from th e Re public of Vi etnam , Camb od ia , and La os. The b ill passed t he Senate by a large ma jor i ty and w ill now go to the House of Repr esentatives where 44 congr essman have p ledged t heir su pp or t of t he b ill . W i th the grace of G od an d enough v ot es from res p ons i ble con gressmen we ma y not have t o dra g out the placards , ci rculate t he leaflets , and once more dwell on t he obvious and undeniable fact th at no matter wha t we are t old , the war is not over. Des p ite Presi dent N i xon 's publ i c assert i ons t hat the war con ti nues to wind down , the U. S., a i r war over Indoch i na has escalated steadil y over the past several month s. The troo ps are coming home but , as Sen. Gravel p oints out , they are leaving an automated war beh ind. Computer technol ogy ari d a small num ber of troops manning aircraft and artiller y are cre ating a U. S. destr uctive presence th at may rem ain in Vietn am for years to come. Why, for Ins tance , has the U. S. Command In Saigon recently refused to give out the cellation of this docum ent, an appeal in writin g can be made to the Director of Housin g. A special housing committee ( composed of students from the C.G.A. housing . committee ) will meet to discuss these individual cases during the Fall semester. The housin g deposit is forfeited if a student withdraws from the college and - or from the residence hall before the end of the academic year. If termination of the housing document is appr oved for any rea son, the student is char ged to the end of the week in which he withdraws (plus a service char ge), SUidents will be billed in full for room and boar d approximately 60 days prior to the beginning of each semester. Failure to remit payment by the due date will result in a cancellation of room reservation , class registration and forfeiture of the $50 deposit. Following is the residence Hall Assignment Procedure and the New Residence Hall Alignment for the 1972-1973 Academic Year. This procedure will be adopted for use by men and women and will provide soph omores , juniors and seniors priority (in that order ) in obtaining their desired assignment. Please be reminded assignment that to the Coeducational Hall will be a separa te process and will not be bound by the following items. If you choose Luzerne Hall (co-ed) as your first choice; also be sure to list second and third choices in the event that you r original request cannot be accomodated . 1. Students who wish to remain in t he ir presen t ro oms may do so for next year. They will be given first preference for that room . The p resent occu pants of the room w ill have to determ ine who gets the room f or the f ollowing year if t he y plan to room with ano t her roommate. 2. The remaining students requesting residenc e hall accomodat ions will be assi gned in a number of planes fly ing m i ssions random order beginning with in the North? sophomores , juniors , and then All of this is nothing new. We 've senior s i n accordance with the heard i t bef ore , we know t he following procedures : politics behind the rational e and It Students will com p lete a is getting to be quite a bore telling p re f erence card wh i ch w ill them that they 're no t fooli ng us. enable them to choose roomIf this is the case, what can we mates , res idence hall and a do? For one thing, we can now specif ic room in that order of v ot e for t hose who are aga inst the preference. Sophomores should war. We have a power that ever y get all three of thei r choices. politician , no matter where he J uniors will most likel y get all st ands , must reckon wi th. Use three , but all seniors will not t h i s p ower. A sk cand idates poin t receive all of their choices. The blank if they are against the war , f irst choice to be eliminated will if they would support a bill such be room number , then the as the one proposed by Sen . residence hall choice , and lastly Gravel . Yes or no, not if or but . the roommate choice. It is For y our information , the unlikely, however , that an y f ollow i ng is a list of congressmen student will be denied his who have pledged their sup port to roommate preferen ce. t he G ravel bill. Look for If two- students choose to be re presentatives from your area . J ames Abourezk , Bella Abzug, Josep h Addabbo , William Anderson , Herman Badillo , Nick Begich , Jonathon Bingham , Phillip Bur ton , Hugh Carey, Shirley Chisolm , Joh n Conyers , Ronald Dellums , John Dow , ( continued on page seven) roommates that are not of tfye same class standing , the stud ent of the lower class standing forfeits his pri vilege of bein g assigned with his class and is assigned with the lower priority grouping. The College reserves the right <, ( continued on pag« *even ) Lett er s TO: The Editor Maroon and Gold (Newspaper of Bloomsburg State College ) I am very pleased to be able to ^report that Dan Skok , a former student , who was dismissed by Dean Hoch in January 1971, for "academic reasons " , from BSC, received mid-term grades at King 's College , Wilkes-Barre , giving him a 3.0 average. Dan's appeal to Pres. Nossen from Dean Hoch's dismissal was turned down last summer with the statement: "Despite very low qualification , and despite our necessaril y having to admit only a fraction of able students , we gave Mr. Skok an opportunity simply because we make every effort to cooperate with transfers from Community Colleges, Mr. Skok simply didn 't make it academically. " (Letter to Dan s attorney , from Nossen, dated Jul y 15, 1971.) It should be pointed out that Dan and I , both , feel tha t your repeated representation (most recently in an editorial , April 14) tha t the Trustees are only interested in Russ Houk and Elton v Hunsinger and not interested in approximately 20 (not "four ") "excellent professors " driven from the campus by Dr. Nossen, or not interes ted in "the students for whom the college exists" (your phrases ) is a false representation . The Trustees have shown an interest in and have encouraged reports by Dan , Sally Freeman , and dpzens of other students. They have shown an intere st and offered to testify for Max Pfimack , Joe Skeha n, Williman , Smiley , and me, just to mention a few of the 1 hope "excellent professors " terminated , one way or the other , by Dr. Nossen. Without the Trustees encouragement , along with the encoura gemen t of a few others connec ted with BSC , Dan feels that he would not ha ve had the spirit to perform as well at King 's as he has. Dan wants to finish up at Bloomsburg . The Trustees have given him hope that he may be able to do so. Has the M & G ever offered any such encouragement to Dan and the 169 oth er illegall y dismissed students? The main reason for the Trustees ' public concern for Houk and Hunsing er is that the latt er have some political "clout " in Harrisburg needed by the Trustees in order to effectively counter the proven political "clout" of Nossen with the of Governor , Department Department of , Justice Education , and the Board of State College Directors , all of whom are adamantly defendin g Nossen agains t the appeals of many "excellent professors " and students of BSC. Deake G. Porter , 36 E. Main St., Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815. Dear Sir: We wish to comment on Mr. Sachetti 's ably written editori al of April 14, 1972, in which he takes the BSC Board of Trustees to task . Are the trustees just "local politi cians? Mr. Booth , the Chairman , Mr. Croop, the Vice Chairman , and Mr. Bang s, the Secretary - Tre asurer are insurance underwr iters ; Mr. Zurick and Mrs . Nespoli operate priv a te busi nesses; Mr. Fay is a reven ue official , Dr. Weisbond , an optician , Mr. Heffner , a judge , and Mr. Fensterm acher , a newspaper editor . Have the trustees received, in fact , "Political plums?" They obtain no remuneration for their services, other than the "three and a half hour exercise in futilit y" of which Mr. Sachetti speaks . If the faculty or administr ation make a legal error , onl y the state has ultimate Editorial Staff : Editor-in-chief, ji m sachetti ; Business Manager, sue sprague ; Managing Editor , Karen Keinard ; News Editor, Frank Pizzoli; Assista nt News Editors , John Dempsey and Michael Meizinger ; Co-Feature Editors , Joe Miklo s and Terry Blass ; Sports Editor , Bob Oliver ; Art Editor, Denise Ross ; Circulation Manager , Elain e Pongrati ; Co-Copy Editors, Ellen Doyle and Nancy Van Pelt; Photography Editor, Tom Schofi eld ; Contributing Cartoonis t , John Stugrin; Advisor, Ken Hoffman . Photog raphy Staff : Mark Fouca rt, Dan Maresh, Craig Ruble, Scott Lawvere. Reporters ; Suzvann Lioouskv , Cindy Michener, Leah Skladany, Denny Guyer , Don Enz, Bob McCormick, Rose Monta yne, Paul Hoffman , Russ Davis. Office Staff : Barb Gillott , Jo yce Keefer, Ann Renn, Debby Yach ym, Ruth MacMurray. The M&G is located in room 234 Waller , Ext. 323, Box 301. Thumbs Up Letters to the editor are an] expression of the Individual ] wri t er 's opinion and do aotl necessarily reflect the views of the newspaper. All letters most be signed , names will be withheld by John Dempsey upon request. The M A G reserve You're hitching on the road, a the right to abridge, in concar passes you by, a guy leans out sultation with the writer , all the window , throws an empty UUaM m m i M i wmJi a a h i <•» U mMaM -T*£n¦ - ¦ i ¦- ifiy T1 1** ^ liabil ity — but if trustees make a similar mistake , they may be held individually liable . The difficulty at the Board meeting of March 24 , 1972 basically lies with the administration , which offered no advance agenda , and put before the trustees thick folders containing data on approximatel y fifty faculty members. When the trustees understandably manifested reluctance to act in a peremptory manner on the vital issue of continuing employment, they were pressured into approving everything as recommended by the administration . Most intelligen t rea ders of the local newspapers of March 25 will readily discern that the trustees tried to act in good faith , although they were misled by wha t seem to be the quasi-legal "opinions " of such "lawyers " as President Nossen, Mr. Aciern o, and Mr. Turner rendered at tne time. The Board , because of its economic independence and extra-institutional perspective , is probably THE ONE FAIRLY INDEPENDENT BODY ON THIS CAMPUS. Most members of the Board have taken their function and the affairs of the school to heart , and have spoken although out fearlessly, frequently condemned for their of alleged "ignorance " procedure by certain administrators and "faculty leaders. " How easy it would have been for them to pa ssively submit to being used as a rubber stamp! It is indeed paradoxical , and somewhat suspicious to us . that (continued on pago to von) SHAPPTO PRESENT VIEWON PAY TOILETS HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP ) — Gov. Shapp, a foe of pay toilets , was invited Friday to present his views to the Publi c Utility Commis sion which is investigating pay toilets at bus, rail and airline terminals. Shapp , who stopped at a Howard Johnson 's turnpike restaurant last week on his way from Philadelphia to Harrisburg, said ti was unfair to the public to have pay toilets in a restaurant that has a mono poly on the turnpike. PUC Commis sioner Louis J. Spa r vero, who ini t iat ed the pay toilet s inqui ry, invited the governor to appear at a May 2 session. beer can at you, and goes a round the block . What do you do? Perhaps yoa ve been hitchin g for hours and are still waiting for your first ride . What are you doing wron g? gone personally Having thro ugh all these experie nces and many more , I ha ve this advice for novice hitchers who would like to take up thum bing in earnes t, for whatever reason. First of all , how do you look when you take your position on the highway? Did you dra g out your Abbie Hoffman - going - to court outfit? If you did , you still have a chance of getting a ride , but you've reduced your chances considerably unless you traverse roads largely used by freaks. Don't go out and get your hair cut or anything as drastic as tha t, but you should tr y to tone it down so you don't scare those with more conservative outlooks. These people, by the way, provide more rides than you would expect. Now that you are on the highway, how should you look in respect to facial expressions? These , contrary to wha t you might think , are important. If the weather is pleasant , look casual , pleasant , eager. Smile a lot. If the weather is lousy, look like you are on the edge of death. Huddle and crouch and blow into your hands as if frostbite has claimed the last of your fingers. Sympath y is a great emotion to play with for rides. Of course , you may reall y be on the verge of death from cold and winds thus adding authe nticit y. Then again , you may run into cold-hearte d heathens who don't care if you freeze or not ; I found myself on route 81 in Moosic one night for three hours in io degree weather and ended up crawling to a gas station to call frien ds I haven 't seen since high school . On the whole , however , sympath y works u i n n i i af c Next , whom might you expect rides from ? The answer is, and I stress , ANYBODY . You name it , and it' s given me a ride : Girls , ladies , old men , construction workers , t ruc k dr ivers , drunk s, and junkies. The most reliable source is a freak , who will pick up a conservative , a radical , anybody, because most have hitch ed at one time or another and know the frustration of sta nding for hours and hours on the roa d in all sorts of other social niceties. Incases such as this , the best solution is to disapp ea r into the shadows. Discretion , it is said , is the bette r part of valor , ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ I ¦ ' scoLftt ft E 'l J t stqp>o C^ /% ^\ * l-fc uLfT ofte - srooio f ~ t f *j r \|* Sc".fToBE .|> O P I \ \ nl lm T-...> ^rl STo I>10 , ? k r and it is said with much basis in real ity. Wai t until they get bored looking for you and try again. Really, the best advice is not to hit ch a t all at night if you can avoid it. It is no longer the fun battle it can be in the dayt ime. You can find yourself in a fight for survival. If you must hitch at nigh t, try to arrange for a friend tohitch with. It helps immensel y. The females reading this might have noticed an absence of reference of their sex. This is not accidental. I think girls should not hitch. I know and have been picked up by too many deviants who drool at the opportunity of picking up some female hatcher s. You get rides quick , but you may noi end up where you want to. Also, if you think it' s tough for me to handle some drunken muscle heads , think of the pro blems vou'd have. These are a few of the basics I have learned through experiences , not always pleasant. A great deal can only be learn ed by actual experience . Hitching , as a whole , has introduced me to some of the most enjoyable people I ha ve ever met , people I wouldn 't ha ve met otherwise. You get a look at all walks of life and some of your strongest preconc eived notions about groups of people can be gratefull y shattered by one ride from a constr uction worker who is nicer to you and more understanding than your old man. Enjoy . Briefs The following courses are to be added to the selection for Fall semester , 1972 : Page 3 — Add 05-331 Recreation Education ( 3-2 ) TBA Page 12 — 52-212 Prerequisite should be 52-211 or 52-232, 52-413 should be (3-3 ) Page 13 — Note : either 60-392 or 60-394 can be substituted for 60393 Page 15 — Add : 71-432 — Language Arts for Special Classes (3-3 ) Webber . Council for Except ional Childr en is plann ing a dinner on Tuesday Apri l 25 at 6:30 P.M. at Hotel Ma gee. Dr . Bonfi eld , school psychol ogist who wor ks with exceptional children , will be the guest spea ker. His topic will be "Inno vation in Special Educ ation " . Also schedul ed for the evening is the installatio n of new officers . The dinner is open to the public at a cost of $3.65. Arrangements can be ma de t hrough Denn is M ason , Box 2638, Elwell Hall . l sr°oa< T Afvr I I <^n ¦ (fiin lr J I jJS' m l ^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^HI^I^HV^^I^HHV^^IHUHHHHHVBVHHHHHHHHHHJHHH^HIHjH^ WEDNESDAY , APRIL 19, 1972 ^^^^^ 1 I 4 ^ ^H I koat c ^^ H I O w v "6 ^H 1 l^ ' s I I I p&a T ^ T n V» BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE L i C t fo\ a v >1 K \ \I 3 A»C ^ » RhC )4£l ^H V "^*^ 001 ^1 *iOV) « I -^ ^^^^^^^HM^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ m - I/ H w \M& •» ^* '~~r ¦_ ^) til C*V """" v ofcfcN I ^»- PAGE THREE ^m Ck *V % n nj i ^/ . I ^^^^ H ^m ^^ h ^B Til l* ftp • / ^B ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^H^^^B^^^B^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Ly sistra ta CONVENTION STUFF Although plagued by com- fortunatel y had to cance l out , plications , the Simulated there will be a speech given in Democratic Convention will be Carver , at 8 p.m. held next Satur day, April 22, in Saturday morning, at 9:00 a.m. Centennial Gymnasium . the convention will be called to A shortage of delegates will order by Robert J. Blair , force a change in voting of the convention . proc edure , and speaker can- chairman The Address of Welcome will cellations have brought about a be given by Congressman Dan iel last minute search for fill-ins . J. Flood, followed by the inSometime during the week troduction of the Keynote your delegation chairman will Speaker , Senator Frank Church contact you in order to provide of Idaho. you with a copy of the proposed After the speech by Senator Platform , your Delegation Church , Felix Wisgo, Platform booklet , and your delegation pin. Chairman for the Convention will You are asked to look over the report on the Platform ComPlatform and note any changes mittee. After the report will be tha t you feel are appropriate , any the Amending and approval of new amendments must be proposed on the day of the Convention. Your delegation book contains information on the various candida tes as well as a list of caucus rooms to be used the day of the convention and a chart that shows where each delegation will be seated. Your pin is your admission to the convention and your proof of by Joe Miklo s payment for securing your box The Spotli ght Kid ...Captain lunch. Beefheart The actual conventi on ac- All hail Captain Beefheart' s tivities will begin at 3 p.m. on long-a waite d blues album ! Friday with a Seminar on the The past work of the Good "Democratic Prospects in Pa.; Captain has shown an amount of Presidential and Legislative ". rattnch tha t has indicated that Later that evening there will be a sooner or later he would boogie. da nce in the Union , with music Yup, boogie. Because this album provided by "Hannibal" . Also i s a lot closer to J ohn Lee Hooker Friday evenin g, providing a than one might imagine. replacement can be found for Don Van Sena tor Mike Gravel , who un- The potent ial ofoogie music Vliet' s voice for b a pp eared earl y in h is recordin g career. "The Big Dig" from Safe Coordina te Policy As Milk and most of Lick My Decals Off Baby showed a rough HARRISBURG , PA. (AP ) - (al beit remarkable ) cathouse Gov . Shapp, paintin g a bright pot ent ial f or blues. And left me future for Penns ylvania 's state thinking, "Man , th is Beefheart colleges, ur ged the tr ustees of the dude is awful weird " . Then came colleges Friday to push for H ot Rats. legislation intended to coordinate Zappa couldn 't have policies of the vari ous colleges . picFrank ked a vocalis t for Addressin g a seminar for "Willie the better " Beefheart Pimp. trustees of the 13-state- owned looks like a pimp—at least on the colleges and India na University, cover of this record. The music Shapp said (he measure would he did for Zappa was rough , put an end to the " waste f ul y and dirty. Now the pimp is competiti on between branch greas otlight the Sp But the ca m p u ses and commun i t y spotl i ght doesn 't Kid. take away the other ex- grease and dirt. colleges , and t rava gan ces. " N ow an y one ' as weird as The bill , n ow i n conference committee , would strengthen the Captain Beefheart shouldn ' t be powers of I he state Board or able to write blues lyrics, Genius , Edu cation in developing system- however , can 't be held dow n and wha t is derived is 1070's blues . wide p ol i ci es. , plus legislation Crazed and neurotic as this Shapp snid the gher t he Mas t er Plan f or Hi . decade is starting , the lyrics fit. Educa ti on , " w ould take us a long The Captain has taken the grease wa y down the road toward a and dirt of traditional blues and more rational and more orderly put it into context. Everything is system of shitc-supportcd higher muddled , and s i multaneousl y educa tion . " relevant to a certain mood. Record Review The Bloomsburg Players are getting ready to present "something different" on April the Platform. 27, 28, and 29 in Ha as Cente r for Next in ord er will be the Roll the Arts . ' show is call of the States , first for the Aristophanes ' The classic Greek nominations for . Preside nt , and comedy, LYSISTRATA , and the then after the lunch break , for "something different" is an balloting for th e Presiden t , entirely new and exciting concept nominations for Vice Presiden t in staging. and ballotin g for Vice President. LYSISTRATA is the classic Benediction by the Reverand tale of the first (and probabl y William Carlou gh will close out most ingenious ) "women 's lib" the Convention. movement. Using the most Later that evening there will be powerful weapon known to another dance in the Union . "woman " , the girls of Greece So goes the plans for the ban together to stop a destructive Simulated Democratic Con- war by deny ing their husbands vention. Although delegati on and lovers of sex. The results results could have been better , it provide classic comic situations. should prove to be a very inNew costuming and lighting teresting weekend techniques will combine with a number of new faces in leading roles to surprise and please the audiences . Karen Crisci one will portra y the gallant Lysistrata . Debbie Hunt will play Myrrhina and Brenda Walton will play Kalonika . Other new faces in the cast include Angle Falzone , Lisa Truehart , Deb Modus , Sandy Asko , Bill Dunkai lo, Jamie Bruce Bredbenner and Frankenfield. Phil Davis, who has appeared in many other players ' portray productions , will Myrrhina 's husband , Kinesias. Lin Naylor has the role of the magistrate. Tickets for the perfor mancesof LYSISTRATA are alread y on sale . They can be obtained at the box office in Haas between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m., by writin g the players at Box 298, or by calling 784-4660 Ext. 317. THE SPOTLIGHT KID Blues is Blues, and is mus ic f or boozin g and f or work in g hard and crying. So what we have is blues f or now. The lyr ics reflect wha t you and I f eel as blues , thus tak ing the medium a step f urther. I know it' s amb iguous , but the Ca pta i n ach ieves what i s the t rad it ional p ur p ose of blues , esca pe. The mus ic is greas y and dirt y too. The patter ns are a little str a nge , bu t somehow t hey are recognizable as boogie blues. "Click Clack ," one helluva t ra in song, and "Grow Fins" are examples of such. Each pres ents boogie mus ic in an adva nced , elec t r i f i ed f orm , w i th odd struc tural modifications. The only song that seems out of place is "A lice In Blunder land ," taMtMMMMMa^^m^mamaa ^a^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ an inst rumen tal t ha t can stand on its own, but is dread fully wrong on this album. It' s a San Fr ancisco typ e instrumental. The Ca pta in should have saved it for lat er release , for it breaks the continu ity of what is ot herw ise a fine boogie albu m. All ha il grease and dirt , all ha il Capta in Beefheart , the Spotlight K id...He 's a bluesman , somehow. Ea rth Week New awa reness seen on Earth Problems of over population Thousands of schools and communities across the Nation are expected to join hands for the third consecutive year in observing the new awareness of our conservation needs — Earth Week '72. Set for April 17-23, Earth Week has grown to symbolize the coming age of the environmental issue and it provides the opportunity to learn something about that issue. As was the case last year, the National Wildlife Federation has join ed other conservation groups in urging participation at the community level , with local and statewide groups utilizing their own resources and establishing their own priorities. The ideas are as limitless as the problems. Grass roots actions all across the country can focus new attention on air and water quality, land and resource use, transportation, technology, and urban and population growth. For the first time in history, the environmental issue will be a major part of the policial dialogue of nationwide elections. For years , it has been recognized that the underdeveloped countries (UDCs ) of Africa , Asia , and Latin America have suffered from overpopulation . It has only been quite recently that the developed countries have noticed their own critical population . growth and become concerned enough to establish birth control programs for themselves. More recent still, there has come an understanding that , although populations in UDCs are growing at a rate three times that of the. developed countries , each additional American consumes and pollutes about as much as fifty additional Indians or Arabs , by virtue of his developed civilization. When the population problem is viewed from this angle, it is not just a "problem " in the developed nations, but a crisis that , as yet, has no solution . i nougn oinii cunirui programs do exist in the United States and other developed countries, with few exceptions, they have not been able to lower their population growth rates. Essentially, it stems not from ineffective contraceptives or their inadequate distribution , but rather from lack of motivations. At present , in order to stir the American public and awaken them to the fact that it is not the small percentage of unwanted births, but the huge percentage of wanted children that will stifle our civilization , an enormous public relations campaign will have to be waged over a period of years. It will have to aim at changing the middle-class mentality and more which demand , today, at least three children per couple. If the developed nations do not reach a zero population level soon, they will be facing the same chaos as the UDCs. Overpopulation will result in overpollution and nature will take its course, leaving us with only death to face. And , like the pollution problem , it can not be handled by one country alone. Even if the U. S. reached a zero population growth rate, and the other developed nations do not , nothing is gained. Also, like the pollution problem , the campaign for lower birth rates can be conducted far more efficiently on an international scale. The citizens of an Atlantic union would ha ve to face and conquer their population crisis as individuals acting to preserve their environments and their lives. Atlantic union would also provide for a body to reassess the population control programs in the UDCs. The U. S. today presumes a great deal by offering these programs to foreign countr ies w hen it can't control its own population . And , if the Atlantic nations and all other developed nations of the world do allow their populations to surpass the critical mark , there will be no help for the UDCs or anyone else, for tha t matter. Overpopulation is a critical ma t ter , just as deadly as pollution , an d ver y muc h a pr i me cause of the pollution . Again , man h as two ch oices : move to stabilize his population , or die in a massi ve f am i ne and i n h is own waste , When sound becomes noi s e by Mike Spellman One of the major problems in our modern times is noise. Although many people don 't realize it, noise does play a significant role in our lives. Noise pollution once was confined mainly to special area s, such as the factory . Today it touches most members of our society. Some 25 percent of the U.S. population suffers measurable hearing impairment by their fifties . Hearing loss is not the only potential health problem associated with noise. Noise can cause enough emotional response to make a person feel nervous, irritable and anxious. Rest , relaxation , and peaceful sleep are interrupted to those suffering from noise. Noise is a form of persecution. Some areas of noise pollution have distinctly annoyed me on this campus. In the last four years , much construction has been done here. Jackhammers, air compressors, wrecking balls, and riveting equipment are used in these projects which bothers me especially because I know the technology to curb noise from construction equipment does exist today. Noise is not an inescapable price of progress. Please remember this when you are trying to study for your finals and can 't hear yourself think due to the noise outside from construction. With almost every new office and building are central airAccordin g to a report in the New York TIME S, rainwa t er in the northea stern U. S. has becom e " su rpr isin g ly acidic " in con tent. Sampl es from a seven-s tate area were shown to be 10 to 100 times more ex pected. acidic than Scientists link th e acidit y to certain air pollutants in the area, such as sulfur and nitro gen oxides. While there is re portedl y no immediate threat to human health from the acid rainfall , it can do considerabl e damage to manmade str uctures ^ soil and eco systems. conditioning plants which require cooling towers. These contain noisy fan and water sprays. One is located outside Bakeless next to the library. Don't ever try to have a conversation there. Properly sited barriers together with discharge and intake silencers can greatly reduce the offending sounds. Inside the offices are more machines such as computers, typewriters, and tabulators that can be slashed by sound absorbing and vibration damping materials. At the time, this is not helping the workers. Another area of noise pollution is the paper-thin walls in the new apartments off-campus for students . You can actually hear your neighbors snoring at night. And there is no mystery about constructing sound-pr oof buildings of all kinds. These are just a few areas of noise on our campus and town. The technological aspects of the problem are no longer the most urgent. What is needed is your concern for your fellow man. Wild animals can survive in zoos, but only at the cost of losing the physical and behavior they possess in their natural habitat. Similiary, human beings can survive in the polluted cage of technological civilization , but in adapting to such condition , we may sacrifice much of our own humaness. Many individuals are not always reall y concerned about the well-being of people. It seems too often we are only concerned about our own welfare. We must begin to change our attitudes and goals in life or we may be doomed to survive as something less than human. Trash — Is It reall y necessa ryT with public leaders and candidates addressing various concerns. Earth Week '72 can give state and local groups a platform of which to determine the environmental positions and actions of present leaders and candidates. In addition , global pollution concerns are especially timely this year in view of the NWF "United Nati ons for BioSurvival" international symposium to be held in conjunction with the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment in Stockholm, June 1012. Due to the grass roots emphasis on Earth Week activities, there will not be a national headquarters. Interested persons and groups should contact enand citizen vironmental organizations at the state and local level in order to make their own Earth Week plans. EPA The United States Environmental Protection Agency was established December 2, 1970, bringing together for the first time in a single agency the major environmental control problems of the Federal government. EPA is charged with mounting an integrated, coordinated attack on the environmental problems of air and water pollution , solid wastes m a n a g e m e n t , pesticides , radiation , and noise. To insure that the agency is trul y responsive to environmental needs in every part of the country , it has established a strong field organization , with regional offices located at ten major cities. The regional offices are staffed by specialists in each program area and headed by a Regional Administrator possessing broad authority to act for EPA in matters within his jurisdi ction. EPA's creation marked the end of the piecemeal approach to our nation 's environmental problems which has, so often in the past, inhibited progress or merely substituted one form of pollution for another. EPA was created to lead a broad , com preh ensi ve atta ck on pollution , an d i ts a d m i n istrat i ve organization has been designed to make this approach a reality . The new organizational structure makes it easier to identify , and to take into account , all the factors bearing on pollution and its control . It makes it possible to resolve competing or conflicting program aims. It is facilitating the development of better information on the total impact of str esses reach i ng man f rom var ious parts of t he env ironment , and makes possible more sensible choices abou t what constitutes a healthful , sat isf y i ng milieu for human life. Most important of all , perha ps, EPA gives to the American people a single , independent, i m part i a l agency to serve as their advocate for a livable env ironment. For f urt h er i n f ormat i on wr i te: United States Env ironmental Protection Agency Philadelphia , Pa. 19106 ' Ap ril 1 7-23 U. S. Department of Agriculture has reported that one acre of grass will release about 2,400 gallon s of water on day t hrough a summer eva pora t ion and * transpiration. This provides the comparable cooling effect of a 70 ton air conditioner. 39 ways you can depolute the earth 1. Don 't use colored facial tissues, paper towels, or toilet paper . The paper dissolves properly in water, but the dye lingers on. 2. If you accumulate coat hangers, don't junk them; return them to the cleaner. Boycott a cleaner who won't accept them. 3. Use containers that disintegrate readily. Glass bottles don't decompose. Bottles made of America's environment con- polyvinyl chloride (PVC) give off tinued to deteriorate, during 1S71 lethal hydrochloric acid when according to the National Wildlife . incinerated . (That's the soft Federation's third annual En- plastic many liquid household vironmental Quality Index cleansers, shampoos, and mouthpublished in National Wildlife wash come in. Don't confuse it with stiffer polystyrene plastic, Magazine. Air pollution remains the used mainly for powders.) The nation 's most serious en- Food and Drug Administration vironmental problem. National has now approved PVC for food standards required by Congress packaging, too. Don't buy it. Use — give some hope things may begin d e c o m p o s a b l e "biodegradable — pasteboard, " to improve as 1975 approaches, but the trend in air quality cardboard, or paper containers continues down. As in the past, instead. If you can't, at least reautomobiles , e l e c t r i c a l employ nondecomposable botgenerating plants and coal- tles ; don't junk them after one burning industries are the main use. 4. Don 't buy unreturnable culprits. containers. Hold aluminum - can The nation's water is still inpurchase to a minimum. If you're credibly foul but the bottom may living around New York, Denver, have been reached. The 1971 EQ Houston, or San Francisco this Index shows no decline from 1970 bring in aluminum cans levels. More and better sewage summer, (also : old treatment plants and industrial for a half-cent apiece clean-ups are given credit for TV-dinner trays, old aluminum holding the line against further lawn chairs). It's worth $200 a ton water degradation. Industry to Reynolds Aluminum. 5. At the gas station, don't let remains the largest water the attendant "top off" your gas polluter with 65 percent. Municipal sewage accounts for 20 tank ; this means waste, and percent and agriculture 15 polluting spillage. The pump should shut off automatically at percent. America continues to exploit the proper amount. (True, too, mineral resources without suf- for motorboats.) b. li you smuKe uiier -iip ficient regard for the future so don't flush them down cigarettes, the Mineral EQ Index is down They 'll ruin your the John. from 1970. Users are outrunning and clog up pumps at plumbing explorers and known reserves of the sewage treatment plant. many vital metals will not outlast inpr actically They 're the 20th century. Recycling, them in the destructible. Put though beginning to spread , garbage. saves only a small fraction of the 7. Stop smoking. nation's minerals. 8. Stop littering. Now. If you see Man's growing population and a litterer , object very politely its pollution have put additional me, sir, I think you (''Excuse stress on wildlife and the Wildlife "). something dropped Index continued its downward a home gardener , you're 9. If trend in 1971. Loss of habitat is make sure fertilizer is worked the major danger for wildlife soil — don 't hose it with chemical pollution of air , deep into the water and land a close second. off into the(a water system. key ingredient) Some 101 species are listed on the Phosphates cause lake and river alga e to endangered species list. Population concentration near prol iferate wildly. 10. Don 't buy or use DDT even the two coasts is tense, polluted if you can find it (and , uncities have pushed the EQ Living you still can). If your fortunately, Space Index down during 1971 garden has water , sun , shade, an d th e tren d appears to be , it shouldn 't reed and fertilizer headed further down. Until a pesticide at all. If you rnust sound national land use policy right insecticide. use the spray, and public transportation (If use botanicals possible, at all systems become reality the EQ from poisons extracted natural says living space problems are — nicotine sulfate, plants — like going to get worse. Due to an 87 percent harvest of rotenone, pyrethrum.) , ' 11. To reduce noise buy a allowable cut in the National heavy-duty plastic garbage can Forests last year, the Timber EQ of a metal one. instead Index is up slightly over 1970. But 12. When you see a junked car , the upward trend is shaky in the face of pressures for i ncreased report it to your local Sanitation cutt i n g an d losses f rom burn i ng an d disease. BREATH OF LIFE Soil quality, highest on the EQ An Interna t ional Pa p er Index , has slipped from 1970. Com pany pine plantatio n is a Bulldozing, over-fertilization and p art of t he com p an y 's erosion cont inue to destroy "Dynamic Forest" . Each acre soil of trees contributes enougti Amer i ca 's valuable resources. ox yg en each y ear to su pp ly Pollution still growing Information Compiled Centerfold by Karen Keinard and Bob McCormick (Photo s by Mark Foucar t) the need s of 18 people. Thus It ii estimated the com pany 's one million acres of p lanted pino trees in the South su pply the IMe-glvln g oxygen needs of 18 million people annually. Department. If they don 't care, scream till someone does. 13. If you don 't really need a car, don 't buy a car. Motor vehicles contribute a good half of this country 's air pollution. Better, walk or bicycle. Better for you, too. 14. If you have to car-commute, don't chug exhaust into the air just for yourself. Form a car pool. Four people in one car put out a quarter the carbon monoxide of four cars. 15. Better yet, take a bus to work or school. Or a train. Per passenger mile, they pollute air much less than cars. Support mass transit. 16. If you still think you need a car of your own, make sure it burns fuel efficiently (i.e., rates high in mpg). Get a low-horse power minimachine for the city, a monster only for lots of freeway driving. 17. Tetrachyl lead additives are put in gasoline to hype an engine's performance ; they can build up in your body to a lethal dose. Use lead-free gasoline — lead's not needed. (Lead , by the way, chews up metal - including new antipollution catal ytic mufflers.) 18. If bagged garbage overflows your trash cans* shake it out of the bags directly into the can , and tromp it down to compact it. Smash up non-glass liquid containers and paper boxes before throwing them away, compact things. 19. If you have a fireplace. . ..abstain. As much as possible. If you must send up smoke, burn wood, not murky cannel coal. 20. Burning leaves or garbage is already illegal in many towns. Don't do it . Dispose of it- some other way. 21. If you see any oily, sulfurous black smoke coming out of chimneys, report it to the Sanitation Dept. or Air Pollution Board . 22. There's only so much water. Don't leave it running. It has to be recycled too fast, treatment plants can't purify it properly. 23. Measure detergents carefully. If you follow manufacturer 's instructions , you'll help cut a third of all detergent water pollution. 24. Since the prime offender in detergent pollution is not suds but phosphates (which encourage algae growth) , demand to know how much phosphate is in the detergent you're buying. Write the manufacturer , newspapers, Congressmen, the FDA. Until they let you know, use an unphosphated — nondetergent — soap. (Bubble baths, you may be happy to know, do not cause detergent pollution.) 25. Never flush away what you can put in the garbage. Especially unsuspected organic doggers like cooking fat (give it to the birds ) , coffee grounds, or tea leaves (gardeners dote on them). 26. Drain oil from power lawn mowers or snowplows into a container and dispose of it; don't hose it into the sewer system. 27. Avoid disposable diapers if possible. They may clog plumbing and septic tanks. 28. If you see something wrong and you don't know whom to contact , bombard newspapers, TV and radio stations with letters. Get friends to joi n in. Media w ill help with the message if you 're .getting nowhere in normal channels. Remember : Publicity hurts polluters. 29. Help get antipollution ideas into kids heads. If you 're a teacher , a Scout leader, a camp counselor , a summer playground assistant: teach children about This mess by the rive r reminds one of the flooded conditions on cam pus everytlme It reins. Planting shrubbery would be one way to hold water back and bea utif y the schoo l too. litter , conservation , noise, .about being considerate, which is what it all comes down to. 30. If you're in . a relatively rural area , save vegetable wastes (sawdust, corn husks, cardboard , table scraps, et al.) in a compost heap, instead of throwing them out. Eventually you can spread it as fertilizer — nature's way of recycling garbage. 31. Remember: All Power Pollutes. Especially gas and electric power , which either smog up the air or dirty the rivers. So cut down on power consumption. In winter, put the furnace a few degrees lower (it's healthier) and wear a sweater. 32. Use live Christmas trees, not amputated ones, and replant them afterward. City bound? Contact your Parks Dept. 33. Protesting useless pollution? Don 't wear indestructible metal buttons that say so. 34. Fight to keep noise at a minimum between 11 P.M. and 7 A.M. Studies show that sounds which aren't loud enough to wake you can still break your dream cycle — so you awaken tired and cranky. (Sound like a lot of people you know at BSC? Be considerate of your mutual dormitory resident — lower your voice and stereos so others can sleep or study even though you may be just started to wake-up.) By the same token, be kind to neighbors. Suggest that your local radio-TV station remind listeners at 10 P.M. to turn down the volume. 35. When you shop, take a reusable tote with you as Europeans do — and don 't accept excess packaging and paper bags. j o. rairuruze siures inai specialize in unpesticided , organicall y-grown food in biodegradable containers. There's probably such a healthfood store near you. The ne plus ultra : Boston's Ecology Food Store, opened in spring, 1970, plans hand-crafted products , books, and household ecology counseling, too. (Write Boston Area Ecology Action , 925 Mass. Avenue, Cambridge, Mass. 02139. They need help.) 37. Radicalize your community . Do something memorable during Earth Week, April 17-23. 38. You as a citizen can swear out a summons and bring a noisy neighbor to court. If the problem 's bigger than that , talk to a lawyer about a class-action lawsuit. A group of people, for instance, can fi le a class-action suit against a noisy airline , or against a negligent public antipollution official. 39. Last , and most important — vitally important — if you want more th an two children , adop t them. You know all th e horror stories . They ' re true. Night mar ishly true. And th at goes for the whol e Americ an economy : unl ess we can st op fanaticall y produci ng an d consum i ng more t han we need , we won ' t have a world to stand on. Care. Who will , i f we don 't? NOTE : This article was re p rinted w i th slight m odi fi ca t i o n s fro m Mademoiselle, April 1970. More sugges tions or corrections welcomed. Write to M&G , Box 301. Please. Sti ckmen drop two The , Bloomsburg State College gol f t eam w a s handed a double loss last Friday at the hands of Kast Str oudsburg State College and Wilkes College, l3lfe ' - 5Vfe and ir > - 2 respectively. The meet was p l ay ed a t t he East Stroudsbu rg home course , Glenbr ook Country Club. Wilkes , who are unbea ten this year , uppcd its record to 4 - 0 by copping the tri- match on a 1 2 - 6 victory over the War riors. The Colonel 's Jerry Stankiewicz wa s medalist for the day with a four over par 76. BSC could manage onl y 2 points against the strong Wilkes tea m, with Rick Pasco and Bcr nie McHug h picking up the only points. A gain st the Wa rr i or s, Terry Mahcr and Bcrn ie McH ugh picke d up th e onl y BSC victorie s wi th Joe Peters picking up hal f a point . STROUDSBURG \V4 BSC4Vfe Terry Maher , BSC, def. Tom Suess , 2-1 , (89-94) Bruce Exel y, S, def. Greg Stahora , 3-0 (80-89) Audie H obbie , S, def. J oe Peters , WILKES 16 V h- Xk, (90-98 ) BSC 2 Jerry Ber kheiser , W , def. Terry Bryan DeLuca , S, def.- R ick Pasc o, 3-0, (87-90 ) Maher , 3-0 (79-89 ) Charles Bowen , S, def. Rick Jerry Stan kiewicz , W , def. Gr eg (85-100 ) Pohle , 3-0 Stahora , 3-0 (76-89 ) , def. Bo Bill Ber kheiser , W , def. Joe Bern McHugh , BSC ) (89-95 Henning, 2-1 Peters , 3-0 (91-98 ) The BSC stickmen played John Corb ett , W , def. Rick Pasco again yesterday and were hop ing 2-1 (89-90 ) lo even their record at 2-2, but the Gary Will iams , W , def. Rick results were unavailable at press Pohle , 3-0 (81-100 ) lime. Dave Davis , W , def. Bern They will also play today and McHugh , 2-1 ( &3-89) tomorrow. Husk y Tennis Squad wins Le d by undefeated Tom re turning hom e Friday. Sweitzer , D ic k G race and Tom Singles Results Leedom , t he Bloomsburg State Sweitzer , B, over Gerslin , 6-2, Co llege te nn i s t eam defea ted 6-3 King 's College of Wilkes-Barre , 6F idr yeh , K , over Hannaman , 63, yesterd ay at the Town Park 4, 6-2 courts. Mansfield , K , over Brewer , 7-5, In addition to singles victories 7-5 by Sweitzer , G race and Leedom , Greenly, B, over Deransky, 6-2, BSC's Duane Greenly bumped off 6-0 Deransky of Kings , 6-2 and 6-0. G race , B, over McKeown , 6-0, G reenl y and Swei tzer along 6-0 w it h t he team of G ra ce and Leedom , B, over Conway, 6-0, I^eedom combined to cop wins in 6-3 the doubles events . Burt Reese 's Doubles Results G reenl y-Sweitzer , B , over Hu skies are now 2-0 and travel lo Lock Haven tomorrow befor e Birslin -Fidrych , 6-3, 6-0 ( continued on page seven ) MEN'S INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL ALL STAR TEAM Eric Hough — Wood Street Line Welles — North Craig Weber — Bandits Mike Zuber — Originals Ray Consorti — Wood Street Kevin Cox — Wood Street Bob Walsh — SIC* Keith Lawson — Blackouts Alan Dakey — Cougars Lou Mimmo — Amerika The champions of the Intramural Basketball program , The Blackouts , w ill play the All Star team on Thursday night , April 20, at 7 P.M. in Centennial Gym. The All Star tea m will be coached by the coach of the runner up team , John Cox of Wood Street. Major League Baseball HOW I SEE IT By bob Oliver ' The stri ke is over , and it' s lime to play ball again. Supposedly, the players are happy, if onl y for the lime being. Besides the strike , the ma jor to p ic of the gra p efruit circuit was t he ' retirement' of V i da Blue , the American Leagues MVP and Cy Young awar d winner last year. H ow an y p layer w i th one good , or even grea t season in th e Majors can ask for $90,000 is beyond me , but in Clue 's case $60,000 doesn 't seem too absurd— for here is a man who drew I cn tho usand extr a fans lo th e park each lime he was to pit ch. Som ethin g tells me th at Blue will sit (his season out , but will be back pla y ing in the future , either due t o a change in the reserve clause or a p rivate need for $ or prestige. Anyway, m y p redicti ons for the 1972 season are : National-East Pittsburgh St. Louis New Y ork Chicago M ontrea l Associat ion said yesterday plans likel y will be finalized next week for expanding th e NCAA champion ship tour- nam ent field from 25 to 28 or 32 loams. Milwaukee N ew York C leveland Amer ican-West Change * in H)71? A committee member said it is believed I here definitely would be as many as 2fl such teams . The expansion pro bably would not become effective until 1974. The starting lime cannot be determine d for certain until advance schedules of th e vario us c expansion plans will be worked - onferen ces arc examine d . There would be no first round oul by telephone conferen ce calls am o ng the org anization ' s byes if the tournament field was basketball to urnament com- expanded to 32 learns. Each team miltec and th e executive com- selected would have lo play an additional game to qualify for mittee. The ex ecutive committ ee has advancement . Certific ation of n new postalready said it favors expansion . soason footb all bowl game bctH owever , before deciding on how champions of th e many loams will com pote , the woon co mm i lloo want s lo try lo Midoaslorn an d Southwestern Athlet ic conferences , composed determine th e numbor of quality of colloge division learns , Dec. 1 loams warranting tournament at Now Orle ans , will be recomhorlhs which would bo available mende d by I he NCAA extr a every yoar. An N C AA spokesm an said events committee , spokesman said . the Certification Needed The extra events committee , which must certify all university division postseason bowl ga mes, must recommend certification of new bowl contests which (ire sponsored by outsiders as is the case with the MideastcVn\Soulhwestern proposal. Certification of other college division postseason games is not necessary because these are part of the NCAA 's regular cham pionship events. The NCAA has awarded its 11)72 cross country chnmpionships for university division loams to Washin gt on Slate University of Piillmim , Wash., Nov . 19 . The meet will be staged al Spokane , Wash. Fl oyd H i tchchock , a student at H i tchcock wrestled eight times Bl oom sburg State C ollege , and recorde d six v ictories , a placed second in the 180.5 division in the three-day National AAU Freestyle Champi onships held recentl y in C leveland , Ohio . Joh n's Food Market Expansion of Hoop Tourney KAN SAS CI TY - (AP ) - The N n l ional C ollegiate Ath letic basketb all Boston Texas NL Champ -Houston AL Champ-Balti more 'W orld' Champ-Baltimore N CAA pl ans: M American -East Baltim ore Detroi t Minnes ota Kansas C ity California C hicago Philadelphia Nati onal -West H ouston L os Angeles San Francisco Ci ncinnati Hitchchock places 2nd in events The Husky basketball season may be over, but honors for the players aren 't. Recently , both Senior Howard Johnson and Sophomore John Willis were named in the Honorable Mention selections of the Nationa l Association of Intercollegiate Ath letics 197172 Ail-American Basketball team. The three All-American teams as well as the honorable mention teams were chosen by the NAIA Basketball Coaches Association. Johnson and Willis were previously honored when they were named to t he second tea m of the eastern division of the Pennsylvania Conference. Johnso n has completed his college basketball career while Willis has two more years of eligibi lity . Atlanta San Diego .Oakland The Huskies are in the lead as the hando ff is made . The Husky cindermen (5-2) will be at Kutzto wn today for a tri-meet with the (Maresh Photo) host and East Sstroudsbur g. W. Main & Leonard St. Open 8 a.m. to 12 midnight Daily Delicatessen Full line of grocer ies A macks » * draw and was beate n once . His only loss came t o Ja y Rober tson of Army in the finals. Robertson p laced fourth i n the world tourne y twice. H i tchc ock beat Jack Vindel of M i ch i gan State who placed three times i n the N C AA ' s, and defeated Russ Can ellari , an 11t ime National AAU champi on . His tie came against Jesse Rawls of Michiga n St. who took third in the nati onals and was juni or college nationa l champ . Floyd , who cap tured the Easter n AAU title three weeks ago where he wres tled five times and went unbea ten , had the fastes t fall in the national tourney when he floored an opponent in nine seconds. Only the Best Home Cooked Food Served behind Elwell Nightly Hamburg Hoag ies Cheeseburger Hoagies Casino Sandwic h Pierogies Corner Lunc h "That Rolling Kitchen on Wh eels ' "Come Down and see our Fabul ous Menu " 5:00 p.m. to Midnite ¦¦¦¦HHM ^HMlBMHH ^lMBM MaBlMM HBHHB HMHBMM M Say Happ y Birt h da y and Happy Annivars ury with *3^phL^t(Ui s ' FLOWER B I^V^ ^^ ^^^^^^ HAAA|^XAg|^^L^^^^ r^r^^^^^^ r^^^^^^ r^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ pv ©^W p»Mv«ry Wor ldwid e Down Th e Hill On E»»t St. The Community Act ivities Fees in the Amount of $50 for the College year 1972-73 It due in the Communi ty Activities Of fice, according to the follow ing schedule : Monda y, April 24 — All Freshm en; Tuesda y, April 25 — All Sophomores ; Wed nesda y, April 26 — All Juniors and Senior graduating in Janua ry, 1973. • This fee must be paid before the registra r will process your 1972-73 sc hedule. UN for Biosurvi val 1972 SUMMER SESSIONS PRE-REGISTRATION Whe r e : St udent Union Lobb y When : April 24 through 28 2:00 to 4:30 p.m. "United Nations For Biosurvival" , a three day symposium sponsored by the National Wildlife Federation , is scheduled for Stockholm , Sweden, June 1012, 1972, according to Thomas L. Kimball. Executive Director. Wildlife Nati onal The Federation feels strongly that , while major world environmental issues will be explored and international data gathered , no conclusions or definitive recommendati ons will emerge Mansfie ld-Conway, K , over from the plenary session because of strong parochial and political Brewer -Hannaman , 6-4, 7-5 Grac e-Leed om , B, over influences inherent in the governmental organizational Dera nsky-Pottitta , 7-5, 6-0 structure of the. United Nati ons. Gra vel ( continued from page one ) Robert Drinan , Bob Eckhard t, Don Edwards ; Donald Fraser , William Green , Gilbert Gude , Seymour Halper n, Michael Harrington , Ken Hechler , Henry Helstoski , Rober t Kastenmeier , Edward Koc h , Arthur Link , Paul McCloske y, Spark Matsuna ga , Ralp h Metcalfe, Abner Mikva ; Patsy Mink , Parren Mitchel l Robert Nix, Bertram Podell , Charles Rabgel , Thomas Rees, Riegle, Benjamin Donald Rosent hal , Edward Roybal , William Ryan , Paul Sarbanes , James Scheuer , Jerome Waldie , Charles Vanik. Tennis Communication Workshop to be held today in Haas Letters The sixth program of the Harris , and most recently, Workshop in the Communication "Cisco ," - with Katheri ne HepArts , sponsored by the Music, burn. Theatre and English DepartHe has tau ght for dance conments , will be held on Wed- ventions in New York , Boston nesday, April 19 in Haas Cent er and staged and choreo graphed for the Arts at 3:00 p.m. Univers ity for Temple The visiting artist Geral d in worksho p its , opera Teijelo, a native of New Orlean s and programs summe r has been a Broadway performer at Ambler , Pennsy lvania while for several years . His credits simulta neously doing the same include original cast par- tasks for various high schools, ticipation in among others , "The colleges and communit y theatres Music Man ," with Robert for their productions of BroadPreston , "Wildca t," with Lucille way Musicals . Ball , "Hotspot , " with Judy At his appeara nce here , Mr. Holiday, "On a Clear Day You Teijelo will discuss chore ograp hy Can See Forever ," with Barbara and the Broadway stage . The public is cordia lly invited to attend his lecture-dem onstration. (continue d from page two ) so many of the faculty and student body, long pri vatel y critical of the administr ation , should now be alligned in defense of the admin istration against the Board , which actually is trying to accom plish the salutary changes that so many in the college community ha ve long considered necessary. In realit y, the Board is a viable and essential entity, rep resenting , a substantial segment of college opinion , truly fulfilling its duties , well aware of what the administration and a few "faculty leaders " are doing — and , at this partic ular juncture in the history of Bloomsburg State College consti tuting the only mean ingful line of defense of its educational The Student Office of Sexuality (S.O.S.) is open ! We can give you integrity. ( continued from page one) abortion referra ls , V.D. inJohn B. WilJiman formation , adoption , and birth to control housin g assignments Ralph Smiley control informati on. If you want for a select group of students if a to see a doctor for any reason or if research pro ject is being you need an examination for executed in the college residence birth control pills , we'll give you halls. 3. The alignment of residence local doctor referrals. There are also professional counselors halls for the 1972-1973 academic year will be as follows: (a) available for referral. (b) The office is located in the L uzerne- C oeducati( onal, c) NorStudent Information Center El well-m en, (d ) , thumberland -female ) (third floor , room 319 Waller Minutes of the Board of (e) MontourHall. To phone , dial 784-4660 and Schuylkill-female , Trustees meetings will be made ask for extension 351. If you want female , an d (f) Columbia- available to those wishing to to come in and rap, we have a lot female . Any questions regarding this review them at the BSC Library of information in the form of Reserve Desk , according to Dr. p am p hlet s and ar ti cles t hat inf ormation should be direct ed t o Robert Nossen. might answer some of your the Housin g Office in Waller Hall , The Libra ry file will commence questions. Hours are from 7 to Room 214. with the Jan. 14,1972 minutes and 9 : 00, Sunday through Thursday. all such minute s thereafter ; h owever, such mi nut es cannot be forwarded until approval is secured by the Board . If requests ar e received for "back" copies of any minutes , the Library will notify the in only 3 mont hs — $9,000 or more to start President' s offi ce which shall College graduates and other qualified persons (male and female)—our In- forward t he req uest ed minutes t o structors (all practising lawyers) will train you to become a lawyer's assistant, t he library .The Library will then to perform paralegal services under a lawyer's direction and supervision (but retai n those mi nutes for the not as a legal secretary—in fact, you too will use the services of a legal permanent fi le at t he Reserve secretary). Attond classes days or evenings for only 3 months. Housing acDesk. commodations are available at an extra charge. Sexuality office is now open H ous ing Board of Trustees minutes now available. in Libra ry LAWY ER'S ASS 'T We will teach you practical, "how to" information and techniques on CORPORATIONS * SECURITIES REGULATION • LEGAL AND NON-LEGAL RESEARCH • DOMESTIC RELATIONS • LITIGATION AND TRIALS • MERGERS AND ACQUISITIONS • TRUSTS AND ESTATES • REAL ESTATE • PUBLIC AND PRIVATE FINANCING • and much, much more, • • • • • • • • Kampus Nook AcroM from th e Union Enter q new and exciting fl»W and btcoma Involved Do Inttraiting r*March , analysing, discussing and writing Barn a high salary starting at $9,000 or moro por year Accopt responsibility Porferm and be trtatod at a paralegal specialist Atiaxiata with lawyers and their clients Increase your knowledge and potential Become a skilled and valuable part of the growing legal industry Plain and Ham Hot fl Us, Cheat* - Pepperon i . Onion . Pint . Our own Macfe let Crtam. summer classes are N?^ J!???!!1!!?!Jff^XJ7?^ ^?!?LS51O!L?!?5T_ *!!!f*Y-_ Call or write for P R B E BOOK LIT NY (212) TR 9-7500 | PARALEGAL INSTITUTE, D.P». 13T I One Fifth Ave. , New Yor k, N.Y. 10003 j Name | AJ1 I Addr