^ ^ ^ ¦ ^ "Come . my friends , it 's not too lat e to seek a n ewer wor ld. " —Alfred Lord Tennyson ^^ CGA Meets Dr. Charles H . Carlson , Actin g Presiden t , op ened the fir st meetin g of this year 's College Council last Monda y night . Discussed at the meeting was allocatio n policy, election resu lts , Big Name Entertainment , and the Searc h and Screeni ng Committee 's report to pick a new president . Carlson Spoke was p laced on two years ' probation . Carlson said that in the re port some things were documented ; for example , there were grade changes and compensation and - or aid to athletes. Also, all segments of the college did not assist the observer in his j work . Another objection was that j pre-college athletes were allowed to work out with the athl etes . Dr. Dr . Carls on informed CGA that Par lsnn statfari tho s>n11o0P miisf rpsnnnri to the •*~r *^» ^ m *- v » m *^v»v ^ #«B that v*«*f* w aithmiffh »*• w m m - y m+mmmm I these facts were documented , other points in the repo rt may be false . These possibly doubtful points will be sent back for personal consideration and he ' screenin g committee to talk with feels that by late October we « students and facult y about BSC 's. ( BSC ) will get some inkling o f ] accreditati on . Dr. Hobart Heller how the NCAA feels . There may is in char ge of the re port to be be a possibility of a reduced sent to the committee from BSC. sentence. Dr . Carlson stated that he had In closing, Dr . Carlson said he traced BSC membershi p in the pledged his support for CGA, that NCAA back to 1955, when we they shouldn't wor ry about the agreed to live up to all the rules past but should worry about the I set down . He went on to state that future. Dan Burkholder , presiding over the first Dr. Charles Carlson , Acting Preside nt, as he Review of Budget meeting off Colle ge Council for this year, held last last October the NCAA sent an addresses College Council last Monday. investigator to our campus andI1 The budget for Community Monday. (Oliver Photo ) fOliver Photo ) upon the evidence compiled BSC Activities for the 1972-73 year was reviewed , along with a stressing Search and Screen ing of the necessity to hold strictly to Th e Search an d Screen ing allocation policy. That policy stands that all requests for Committee , which appointed Dr. allocations must be submitted in Carlson interim president for this writing to Michael Meizinger , year , has been and will be acapplication s until Undergradua te courses may be the student to the Office of the studen ts wishing to pursue a Treasurer of CGA , at least two cepting December 15 for position of e S chool o f th scheduled for Spring Semester curr i culum i n Registrar . weeks prior to being placed on president . Tom Beveridge , one of now and Friday, ud i es ma y so St betwee n p la i ned 1973 P ro f essi onal P erha ps it should be ex the agenda . This year voting will t he studen t s on the commit tee, " Undergraduate "Area of Study October 27. tha t the "Area of Study" includes indicate on their be done on need and knowledge , stated that over seventy-five cur rently still carried in students who are cards , but they are the School , Area of Certification not on personality . a pp licat i ons have been the sent in. using enrolled will schedule , and Curr iculum. There are three Arts & Sciences unt il formal V acancies on Council States Accreditation Board by November 15 of this year . Three members of the Middle Sta tes will be sent as a Middle Inf o on Spring Scheduling same procedure as used last spring . This means that full-time students will receive a list of Course Offerings for Spring Semester 1973 throug h the campus mail. Part -time students should receive their materia ls at their home address. Ma jor res ponsibility for follow i ng p ro p er scheduling procedures rests with each studen t. This includes following the instruct ions on the Course Listings : maki ng sure that they meet with their advisor , completing the Official Course Selection Form which the advisor will then forward to the Registrar by Friday , October 27. Pa rticular attention should be paid to meeting prerequisites of certain courses. In addition to the Course Listings , each student will receive two copies of an "Area of Study" card . Although simple to complete , this is an Important , step in the implementation of a coordinated advisement system . These cards will indicate the area of study in which you are presently enrolled accordin g to college records. If the "Area of Study " cards are correct as printed , students will then sign their name and leave both cards with their advisors. Should a chan ge or correction be necessary, indica te such in space provided on the cards ; the Depar tment Copy will remain with the Advisor along with the Official Course Selection Form i and the Registr ar'!Goby will be carried immediatel y by under graduate schools : Arts & Sciences, Profess ional Stud ies an d Business (in Business Education ). Certification Areas in the School of P ro fessional Studies include Commun icat ion nUANiliiNa UlBUl uci s, T\amIa1 vcuiai UmffflAntai ujr £*vi*j 0 » , a pplicat ion is made to said school , probabl y durin g the second semester of the i r sophomore year , and accepted. I t should be noted that some curr icula re q u ire a certa in Elementar y Educat ion, Medical sequence of courses that stiouid Technolo gy , Public School be started as earl y as the second Nursin g, Secondar y Educa t ion semester of the freshmen year. Educati on. Students are encoura ged to seek and Special Curr iculum refers to a ma jor , proper advice in this regard. Students experiencin g difarea of emphasis or area of specializati on within one of the ficulty with advisement should contact their Department above. C hairmen or C urricu lum All freshmen who entered Willia m Jones , Coordinator. Dr. B.S.C. on or after September 1971 Acade mic AdCoordinator of who did not enroll in the School of (Undergraduate ) is visement Business have automa tically Waller also available in room 128 been enrol led in the School of Ar ts & Sciences. Anv of these Hall , telephone 389-2119. Exchan ge Pro gram Planned Virginia Sta te College representatives , Mrs. Colon and Mr. McCants will be visiting the B. S. C. campus on October 10, 11, & 12 to discuss a cooperative exchange program between the two colleges. Mrs. Colon is currently the Director of Women 's Activities and Mr. McCants is the Dean of Students. The program has been in the works since November of 1971 when B. S. C. applied for a grant from the Department of Health Education , & Welfare for expenses. The four-tiere d program suggested in the application is as follows: First Tier—an exchange of two (2) professional staff members from each camp us per semester ; Second Tier — this phase wHl place a Virginia State College graduate extern counselor , preferably black , in a situation at Bloomsburg State College , which will provide for , maximum int eraction with ' students , staff , faculty, and the community ; Third Tier—this phas ewill involve an exchange of three ( 3) undergraduate students from each college per semester. These students coming to Bloomsburg State College will make a significant impact on the total college community. Con(contin ued on page four ) New Business Rod Morgans , Chairman of Elections , stated that there are Dou g Mc Cl i ntock made a still vacancies on Council for the mo ti on to instruct the Registrar Day Women Representati ve,and t o send student grades only t o the three commuter represen- tatives. Executive Council seatsat-large were filled by the election of Ron Sheehan and John Ficek. Rod Morgans was appointed Historian and Tom Beveridge Parliamentarian. Big Name Entertainment Doug Mc Clintock , Chairman of BNE, stated that thin gs were students and not tn narenta except upon student req uest. Voting was all in favor except for fi ve absen tions. Mc Clintock also moved that complimentar y passes to BNE be at the discretion of BNE committee. He stated that he wanted to improve relation s with the community, and that man y state moving as scheduled for the and local officials would be October 20 concert featuring the receiving them. This will be done J. Geils Band and Malo. He went on an R.S.V.P. basis , in order to on to state that all seats would be make all t ickets possible to general admission , with the first students. President Dan Burkholder said 300 purchasers being allowed parking privile ges at the New that committees to update the Gym. McClintock stated "We 're constitution and revise election going to bring you the best proc edures were being formed at this time. concert BSC ever had. " NEW S BRIEFS REGISTE R! Tuesday October 10 is the last TRANSPORTA TION NEEDED ! day to register to vote in the Novemb er 1 election. The A new non-graded elementary Bloomsburg Court House will be school in Conyngh am is seeking open from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. help arr anging transportation for three stu dents from Wilkes- Barre . Mrs. Allen Dick would ap IMAGES OF CONCE RN pred ate a call at 788-3313 There will be a reception (collect) from any commuter s Tuesday , October 10, 7:80-10:00 who travel from WIlkes-Barre via p.m. in Haas Gallery for students Routes 81 and 80. and faculty . Zen Child Their bellies bloated, their legs badly bowed, the two little boys made a pathetic ; sight as they > slumped frog-like and lethargic on their haunches throughout the examination at Children 's Hospita l in San Francisco. One was 2V2 , the other 1V2 ; neither could walk or crawl ; the older child had a vocabulary of two words and weighed 16 pounds , the younger just managed to tip the scales at 11 pounds ; their hair rc p anri was on/4 tv. ^.. , — — rnn -— ¦—«» w v uia ^ B Hrittla **ri f t b l > « V « y U I I U U lVJ were extremely cranky. Horrified , pediatrician Dr . Josette Mondanaro and her colleagues made bone development tests of * the children In these tests the 2V2year-old showed a bone age of six months, and the 1V2 -year-old registered three months. Diagnosis showed that both little boys were suffering from severe cases of rickets and scurvy - and that they had been living for months on the Zen macrobiotic diet of their hippi e parents. Zen macrobiotics , a concept of spiritual and physical enrichment through a diet based ultimately on brown rice, is the brainchild of the late George Ohsawa, a Japanese-born , Parisbased philosopher who died six years ago. The diet has come under heavy attack from doctors and nutritionists and has caused at least one death plus an untold number of cases of scurvy, rickets, anemia and other forms of advanced malnutrition. Now pediaticians are becoming concerned over growing evidence that the risks posed by the hippie generation to their children - with more serious results. balanced mix of meats , vegetables and fruits , to-f-7, an "ideal" diet consisting entirely of grains and drastically limited intake of liquids and salt. In the case of Mondanaro 's two small boy patients, the parents had switched to Zen macrobiotics as a way of kicking the drug habit , and were raising their sons largely on rice, soy products, seaweed and Chinese cabbage. "As they became older ," says Mondanaro , "the children became fussy eaters so their diet became even more' restricted." Ironically 'enough , the parents brought their youngsters to Mondanaro not because they were concerned about the state of their health - but to show the doctor how well the Zen macrobiotic diet worked . Concerned friends had tricked the parents into visiting the clinic with their children by telling them tha t Mondanaro was "interested in Zen macrobiotics. " The results of such a diet when consumed regularly by a child can be frightening, though the number of children harmed in this fashion is probably quite low. Students and Faculty!!!!!! Submit to the Olympian Box 293 Waller Hall Deadlin e Novemb e r 22, 1972 Tennis Courts "We are men and women who have suffered and endured much and not only because of our abject poverty but because we have been kept poor. The color of our skin , the languages of our cultural and native origins, the lack of formal education , the exclusion from the democratic process, the numbers of our slain in recent wars-all the.se burdens generation after generation have sought to demoralize us, to break our human spirit. But God knows we are not agricultural impliments or rented slaves . We are men ." —Cesar Chavez is Cesar Chavez referring to the demoralization and degradation which migrant farm workers experience. Migrant farm workers are people who travel to different parts of the country , picking crops when they are ready for harvesting. There are migrants in the area right now. They came from Florida , Virginia , Mississippi, Georgia, and Maryland about the second week of August. In the next two weeks they will almost all have left , working their way down South. The crops they pick here are tomatoes , beans and potatoes. Sometimes you can iee black people in the fields surrounding the area but few people know who they are and what their life is like. by Nancy V a n Pel t "Why aren 't the new tennis courts completed?" "But they are completed." "Then why can 't we play on them .?" ". . .ahh. . ." The construction on the tennis courts is finished. The reason students cannot play on them is because one small , necessary piece of equipment is missing. It is a cap with a pulley welded to it that sits on top of the posts to keep the nets in place. The construction company that built the courts was suDDOsed to deliver these caps. However, they were unable to supply them when the courts were being built. Now they say they 're in the mail , but the mail service has been ridiculousl y slow since then. Where are those caps? k This delay is causing a lot of incon venience. Four courts have nets but they are held up in a makeshift fashion. Also, over a hundred students a day who are taking tennis this semester are torced to play on only four courts. They really aren 't getting the You could never see migrant (co ntinued on page four ) camps from a main road . As a a 1 The parents refused ta *» v m \j y 72 M. Iron St. Over 300 Guitars and Amplifiers 784-4323 John 's Food Market ill Vv K7 * ^^ • v* • • ^^ f Hartzel's Music Store Office Suppl y 112 E. Main Sf. Bloom sbur g , LEAD SINGER Equipment ^^ Potter y by Ron Bower Denim Series W. Main A Leonar d St. Open 8 a.m. to 12 midnight Daily Delicatessen Full line of groceries A snacks •Bulletin Boards • Looseleaf Binder •Address Book •Desk Access ories THE STUDIO SHOP 59 E. Main St., Bloomtburg 784-2818 Eppley 's Pharmacy Friday Specials Delicious Shrimp or Vz Ib. Filet of Fish , _ . . In a Basket with tartar sauce .9:00-11:00 9:00 - 12:00 4:30 - 12:00 11:00-11:00 Watch tor oyr Specials every day ! •LANVIN •PRINCI MATCHAKLU •EUZABETHAROBN •HELENA RUBENSTEIN •DANA •COTY »MAX FACTOR Ormtri Jtampt But the masters of the fates of these neglected people will not listen to Cesar Chavez and his demands for a better way of life. To effectively change conditions and force the growers to listen to the farmworkers there is the necessity for a boycott on lettuce . The gra pe strikers used such methods in the middle sixties. Lettuce harves ters have followed (Uaim uicii 1^iA*i icau. Cn#tti uuvi i ?i a Krhimntf wj >-" ii ic 10 necessary if farmworke rs are to win the simp le righ t of negotiating with their employees. It is essential to the farmworker 's success. The farmworkers need your support ! There will be a meeting concernin g the Lettuce Boycott on October 10 at 8:00 P.M. in Auditorium . The Carver speakers will be from the Philadelp hia Boycott Office. Tennis (continued from page two) greatest benefit from their class because they must share courts. The students who play tennis for leisure are inconvenienced as well. They aren't very happy about hikin g to the town park courts when we have our own on campus. So that' s the story. If you're a tennis fan who can't play, now you know why . And you're not a one. . 1971 Volkswagen Station Wagon 7 Passenger Good Condi tion-4 Now Tires Best Offer Accepted Call 764-3720 HE ADQUARTERS OF HALLMARK CARDS Jo bs Are Available. . . ! For FREE information on studen t assistance and placemen t pro gram send Dollar Special Ever y Weeken d envelope to the National Placemen t Registry, 1001 East Idaho St., Kalispell, MT 59901 AND GIFTS Phone 784-2561 self-addressed STAMPED - NO GIMMIC KS - "^ftt itJU's I^Sw '"UJWBRB *J ^^^H«*ry WmMwI * Dm* Tfc. Hill On latf It. /b iTSf •PABERGE Across from fhe Union Hours: AAon. - fhurs Frtday Saturday : Sunday 18 Wist Main Sbwt , Bloomsbinj, Pa. •CHANEL •GUERLAIN Kampus Nook giuwcia. Miller Office Suppl y Co. PretcripHon Specialist 8:00 P.M. ¦if ¦ r~> ¦¦¦n irBi " ! ¦ or Write: Boi 63 Btoonuburf P* MAIN ft IRON STREET S wit h French Frta, Pickled Cabbcg* arv l BrenW ft Suti er Plotters till LEARN TO FLY with the Parlor . City Flying Club Call: 389-2814 or 784-8571 The migrant workers have suffered a great deal in the "land of opportunity ". Cesar Chavez is trying ver y hard to brin g justice to migrant farmworkers , by campai gning for more than ten years. To get decent housing, decent wages, and equal opportunities , he has diligently tried negotiati on with the lettuce ffj ^ irTl / °\ N. y ^JVL ^ Compliments of the Bloom Bowl FRESH DONUTS EVERY DAY "Yumteei Varieties" *¦***« Dally Nawspavers Weekdays 7 a.m. . 9 p.m. S(rt ' * Sun. 9 am • 9 pm THE DONUT MAM