Hun gry walk begins Saturday The Walk for the Hungry and Flood Victims begins at the Town Park Sunday, November 5, immediately at 12:30 p.m. Sgt. Curtis Kahl , State Police and Chief of the Bloomsburg police, Pat Haggerty, have approved of the planned route 'of the Walk; they also have promised the same gracious and courteous and helpful service from the men who will be with the Walkers. Mr. Richard Baker again providing first aid assistance. Men equipped with , necessary emergency first aid items will follow the Walkers throughout the route. Cinr>a One of B.S.C. 's student flood victims , Connie Beard receive s her sta te scholarship check fro m Governor Shapp. Pictured above, left to right are: Robert L. Duncan , Director of Financia l Aid at B.S.C, Kenneth R. Reeher, Executive Director , PHEAA ; Governor Shapp , Gary D. Smith, Director, Scholarship Division ; Connie F. Beard , junior in Elementary Education ; and Thomas R. Fabian , Deputy Director for Planning. 300 pa rents to visit B.S.C. Approximatel y 300 parents of BSC students will attend this year's Parents' Weekend to be held this Saturday and Sunday, October 4 and 5. The program will include an "open house" of all campus buildings, a f ree football game (BSC vs Kutztown State) , dinners, and a dance Saturday night. Activities "for the weekend will begin Saturday morning with registration for the parents between 10:30 and 12:30 in the residence halls, or in the college union for parents of commuter students. Here they will receive free tickets for the football game and Sunday dinner , and maps of the campus. Classroom and Administrative building will be open until noon for parents' inspection . After the football game, parents are encouraged to visit with their sons and daughters in the residence halls. Then at 5:30, a buffet dinner will be available in Scranton Commons, along with the music of a folk duo called "The Friends. " Later that night more music and fund will be provided by the "Originals" at an "Oldies but Goodies Dance" to which everyone is invited. Refreshments will also be served. Ending the weekend will be a free dinner to be served in the Commons, this time to piano music. BSC President Carlson and CGA President Dan Burkholder will make short addresses, and parents will have the opportunity to meet them as well as var ious a dministr at ive staff members. Rost sp eaks to SPSEA There will be a genera l meeting of all students inse rving as terested in the colleg e volunteers wi th therapy service physical Thursda y, November 2, 1972 at 7 p.m. Room 128 of the New Fieldhouse. N ews Briefs GIVE BLOOD Would you like to give a little of yourself this week ? Everyone at least 18 years of age will have an opportunity to do so by donating a pint of blood to the American Red Cross Bloodmobile. The Bloodmobile will be in the Centennial Gym this Thursday November 2, from 9:45 a.m. to 3:45 p.m. Lambda Alpha Mu , Alpha Phi Omega , and Omega Tau Epsilon w ill be present t o assist the volun teers and the donors. All w ill be w ork in g t o hel p reach t he goal of 400 pints which is urgently needed this year. Will you be there? HOAGIES TAU BETA SIGMA , Honorar y Bund Sorority, w ill hold a hoa gie professionals , since this is the sale November 1. Hoagies can be only way the limited job market ordered from an y member of the ma y be beat. sorori ty and are priced at f i ft y Educa tion is America 's biggest cen ts each. Bu y a hoagie and business observed Dr. Rost and support the band . added that one out of every four people in the Unite d Sta tes is a HELP McGOVERN teach er. He str essed the imThe McGovern Head quarters portanc e of und erstanding the t heory of teach ing for all in Bloomsbur g still needs people prospect ive teach ers and to canvass and make phone calls by Marty Wenhold "Studen t In volveme nt in Educa tion " was the topic chosen by Dr . Ray Rost of the BSC Educ ation Department when he spoke to a gathe ring of SPSEA mem b ers. The meet i n g was held Thursd ay, October 26at 4 p.m. in Kuster Auditorium . Dr. Rost em phasize d involvement and commitm en t now , for all future teach ers and cited the cam pus SPSEA organization suggested that as a good starting ground . He. start to develop student s should now, a person al ur ged studen ts to get the most oi what Ib offered to them and to ( continued on page eight) strive to become true attain vnnth ant\ aHnlfQ join hands and use their fee to propel them to a goal — the goal is to give help to the hungry in this world and also to help those who were crippled by the flood. Thus, half the proceeds of the Walk will be given to the hungry and half to the flood victims. Anyone can join the Walk. Anyone can be a sponsor. Walkers secure for yourself pay will who sponsors you an amount of money for each mile you walk. Get as many as you can. One boy has some 46 sponsors and over $200 promised. Last year the college cross country team, running the course twice, gave to the project almost three hundredflollars. The sponsor sheets may be picked up at the information booth in the Student Union Building. It might be noted that all the money received will be given to what has been indicated. The Walk will end at St. Matthew Lutheran Church where all Walkers will come to the Social Room in the basement to enjoy some cookies and drink hot chocolate. Women of the community may help to supply cookies since more than 400 walkers are expected. Bring them to St. Matthew Church any time or the day of the Walk. The hot chocolate is being prepared by the Food Service at BSC. Tremendous thanks to everyone who is cooDeratine in this Second Annual Walk. The route of the Walk : Leave Town Park and proceed west along the rrver road crossing the wooden bridge into Rupert. A right turn at the stop sign after crossing the bridge brings us out onto Route 42. Swing down onto Route 11 and then race around the ramp leading to Buckhorn. Crossing route 80 we turn leftgoing into the village of Buckhorn ; at the crossroad junction in the village turn right and come back on the main highway. Turn right on 42 leading us back to town. Turn right at First Street and then left at Market to the Church. HAPPY WALKING!!!!! V.S. C. excha nge begins to move The cooperative association between Virginia Stat e College Petersburg, Va. and B.S.C. is slowly beginning to move. Following the visit of a threedelega t ion from member Vir ginia , it was decided that the first exchan ges would be with Res i dence Deans and Counselin g personnel. The next possibility would be a musical exchan ge in w hi ch a grou p from B.S. C . would perform atV.S.C. (Last spring, the Vir ginia State Colleae Band »¦¦ ^V V >^V *W ^ ^v ^PV • • MM 4 ¦ •¦ " -w w ^^ mm ^v ^^^- w v v ^* pl a y ed h ere as a part of Black Weekend. ) As of this date , it is sti ll unknown from where the ma j or source of f und ing w ill come for this program. Both governmen t a i d and p r i va t e f oundat i on funds are being looked into . As a resul t of the last visit , it was agreed that the following before Nov. 7. If you are in- activities and responsibilities will . also be worked on by personnel at terested then call 784-9641. the two institutions : 1. The ( continued on page eight) development of an exchan ge in Cooperative Education , 2. An invitation to the President of V.S.C. to speak at Bloornsburg State ' s May commencement , 3. T he ac ti vat ion of an energe ti c public relations campaign to provid e in-depth information for the student body, faculty, and administration of the existing plans for the B.S.C. - V.S.C. relationship, 4 . A n exchan ge of personn el in Special Education and Commun i ca ti on Di sorders , 5. An eychnncre nf nil nuhlioitv n oti ces concern i n g t he rela ti onsh ip bet ween t he t wo colleges, 6 . A regular exchange of v isiti ng professors from t he t wo institution s as well as an exchange of cultural presen ta ti ons , and 7. The forwarding of all int ernal communications relative to the association to the E.O.P. office, c-o Dr. Stronn, Dates for the implementation of these projects will be dlicussed by appropri ate persons on both campuses and decided on jointly. Lett e rs Letters to the editor are an •xprttsion of the individual writer 's opinion and do not necessarily reflect the views Iam writing to compliment the of the newspaper. All letters must de signed , names will be "M fc G" for the cover age in the withheld upon request. The Wed ., Oct. 25 issue of both photo , ' MAG reserve the right to and pro se and to add a commentary regarding a caption ¦ abridge, in consultation with the writer, all letters over 250 under an otherwise excellent words in length . photo . On page 9, top photos , six athletes who distinguished fused act of defiance against themselves as undergraduates by authority, authority in this case earnin g a letter in a SDort for four represent ed by an internationall y years were honored during the acclaimed artist who was half-tim e festivities at the exhibiting at BSC only because Homecoming game . she is an alumna and a descenShouldn' t at least the "stars" dent of the pioneers who names and the sport the athlete established the parent school in excelled in be mentioned in the 1839? cap tion as well as the NOW more Whatever the motive , the ri pfamous Bob Tucker ??? off makes no sense. The pages of I must admit these young men signatures in the Guest Book can are unknown to the current crop be of no value to anyon e but the of undergraduates since they artist herself . So why not tear out performe d between 1965 and 1968, these pages and convey them to but isn' t that more of a reason to the Art Department? Keep the at least list their names in the M book itself for recording your & G caption??? Obtaining four scores . You might just have the letters in a varsity sport requires oYiI y leather-boun d score book on both a uniq ue dedication and the cam pus ! ability not possessed by the And that , at least, would make AVERAGE athlete. some sense! The six young men of the class W.MASON ANCKER of 1968 were the HONORED HUSBAND OF RUTH HUT- Movie Review Evil and Mo rality by Tim Bossard NIGHT GALLERY and GHOST STORY and countless of those horr endous made-for-TV movies that all deal with supern atural .to pics. THE OTHER is different from these in that it attempts to take itself seriously by being a I' m not anti-Bob Tucker . On the contrar y, Iam proud of Bob's illustrious record with the N.Y. Giants professional footb all team and I consider him a personal friend since he was a biology maj or as an undergraduate of BSC and a student in three courses I taught at tha t time. Donald D. Rabb C hairman, Dept. of Biology P.S. I' m not angry , but Ido feel better after pointing out this unint ended slighting of unusual and deserving athJe tes . It was heartening to read J ohn Stugrin 's p iece "O f Sculp ture and C retins " in the October 18 issue. Heartening because I suspect that his is a lone voice crying out against vandalism and thievery in a wilderness of permissiveness and apathy. I , too, am disgusted by the antics of sculpture vandals and ^^r ^ r ^^r ^^r ^^r ^^r ^^r ^^r ^^r over his mind. Most of the film deals w i th his losing battle to overcome the power of darkness that is within himself. He seeks Record Review There 's no biz like .. Iwrite this letter in behalf of the largest and greatest organization on campus. I don 't believe anyone realizes that the thieves . A vandal bro ke the leg off of one of Ruth Hutton Ancker 's terra cotta sculptures during her recent exhibition in the Haas Center. And a thief names of each of us engraved on ripped off her Gues t Book. As a rip-off , stealing a book it. It would just be nice if we knew from a table in an unguarded we were app reciated and that gallery is no great ac- we 're not devoting all of our time complishment. It does not offer for nothing . If only the word much of a challenge to the "thanks " were used it would ingenuity or resourcef ulness . A 5- please us greatly . We are a proud year old could do it with im- organization , we work hard and we are a dedicated group of punity. What puzzles me is why this volunteers who enjoy greatly particular ri p-off was made. Was what we do. We just want to know it simply a compulsion to steal? where we stand. Stephen C. Kirchner Or was this some sort of a con- ¦ ¦ | |S>\ ¦ No%£(XoV5 \ ¦ not *£ *£. L-v. ¦ \ HE'6 OUT ¦ W*iN W^ \ ^ = Editor-in-Chief Susan L. Sprague iiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii H^^ H^^^^^ / blues , 5 S s Managing Editor '. Rob ert Oliver s News Manager Karen Kelnard s Feature Editor Joseph Miklos - Cartoonist j Ohn Stugrln = Cont ributing Editors Frank PItizoII. Jim Sachettl as staH: Don Em, Joanne Linn, Lind a Uvermore, Valery O'Connell, Jan lne s Watki ns, Tony Stank Hewicz, Tom Bossard, Barb Wanchlson, Kathy Joseph. - Business Manager Elaine Pongrat i s Office Manager Ellen Doyle s Advertising Manager prank Lorah s Circulation Manager Nancy Van Pelt = Chief Photographer Dan Maresh, Jr. = Photog ra phers : Dale Alexander, Tom Dryburg, Pat White, Suiy White, Sue s Creef, Kay Boyles, Annette K loss, Mike Williams. 5 Advisor Ken Hoffman s The M8.G Is located at 234 Walle r, or call 3W 3I01. Al l cwv must be submltted bv = no later than 5:00 p.m. on Tuesdays andSundays. The opinions voiced In the = columns and feature articles of the M&G may not necessari ly be shared by the 55 entire statt, but they are bound by their duty to defend the right to voice them. Davies began to write wistful stuff , and good stuff , composed I I the «|A^yi \ The second album is the perfect cap. Live performance of a rock n' rol l crooner, mocker y, jive and stage persona . There are per- THE MAROON AND GOLD = = The Kinks started out as a bunch of street punks and made oFfloen. \ dream. B 5 broke... ¦ a whimsical and pleasant example of Ray Davies' wish fulfillment , a trad music hall ttiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimi IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHt ¦ ¦ ¦ > ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ > ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ •¦ ¦ ¦ >• «¦¦¦ ••• ¦¦¦¦ «• ¦•¦•• ¦¦¦ •¦«¦ ¦(¦¦¦ » • ¦¦¦ •¦ ( ¦ ¦uin ¦¦ ¦ !¦ if igiiggi Km gin jug ^g HF" ivci y cliiu remained rockers. So, they areall In Showbiz . And this album follows as a vital link in the chain that started with Something Else. Not a song loses the show biz sheen . And for all the commercialized come on, not a song whim pers or cries . The concept is formances of the best of recent Kinks songs, " Lola, " "Top of the The concept spans everything, Pops ," " Alcohol" and "Brainfrom t he superstar trip and pop washed. " There are corny bar politics to the way down in the (contin ued on page thr ee ) English work ing class. And while they may not regain t heir former popularity, t hey make good music of a sort that is slowly disa ppearing. And the ofF f *~*\ biz. on. ft^\ * «M«, j / rot /A^ > A The studio album of this set is much better than the somewhat flawed Muswell Hillbillies . It has a binding element, also known as show biz, for a the me and reinforces it several ways. Each song deals with the what and wherefore of some aspect of show by Joe Miklos Everybody 's In Show Biz...The Kinks World' s biggest small time band has struck again. Or at least they continue to produce good g-pj -———.- .—— p^g- fyp 'f /j > A damned. This is a fallacious OF '42 ) his direction of juvenile view : can not the most confirmed actors . Here, a preadolescent unbeliever have an awareness of pair of twins named Chris and the effect of evil on the mind? Robert Udvarnoky give solid Murder is evil in any in- performances . The photography ter p retat i on, but there is a is by the great Robert Surtees , distinct ion betwe en evil as sin and it is he who conveys (as and evil as inhumanity which the Hitchcock does in his films) the film fails to make . sense of evil lurking benea th Whatever its shortcomings , cheerful everyday settings. from his mind an embodiment of evil that slowly begins to take ^r organization is the M&G Band . The reason for this is, that they are never heard of , but we are heard from . There seems to be a generalconcensus that the. band has little importan ce. When the champagne starts to flow the band is alway s last i n li ne, even though t hey're consist ently up fron t leading the pack in work . -After a while it begins to hurt when a grou p t ries so hard t o make themse l ves known and p eopl e shun you. It has been said , " The freshmen are t he only ones with any school spirit. Or any spirit at all. " Reall y, in the past and present , ever y one knows the Maroon and Gold Band expresses its spirit more than anyone. If we would not cheer at foo t ball games , there w ould be no cheering at all. Ididn't see the entire freshmen class at the pep rall y. Fine ! I' m not asking for a gold plaque to be put up with the moved by the plight of the MOCKINGBIRD and SUMMER religious allegory . The stor y concerns a lonely boy who plays a type of thought projection " game" with himself and other people. He conjures up cunh riocor\ro rho manKnn n( tUaiw ^^r redem ptio n in religious faith , though, THE OTHER places fails to find it, finally kills his itself several light years above grandmother, who is drawn at most of the " spooky " enlength as a sort of guardian tertainment we've been shown lately. Where TV provides us angel. For a film of blata ntly religiou s with entertainment this film content to be successful it must seriously attempts subterranean rely on the power with which it explorati ons of the nature of can represent evil. The evil of the man. This quality is admirable in child's mind is contrasted with any film , regardless of the his striving for re ligious success with which it is handled. Robert Mulligan, the director , devQtion , thus limiting the to a religious evil relies mainly upon his screenconnotati ons of assumes write r and photo gra pher to inter preta tion. The film the the part of convey his points. His forte is religiosity on will be (as it was in TO KILL A viewer and hopes he THE OTHER is the latest development in what might becalled the ROSEMARY'S BABY syndrome. The success of RO SEMARY p rom p ted the revival of the horror film as a popular genre, as well as the creation of TV shows such as guests of the COLLEGE and as TON ANCKER names in the "M & G" . i iiiiMiiiiiiMiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiini iiiiiiiiiiiiii /^T\ /TS\ / r^i J05T / •*" OF \ fienu* *'* w «^ THt HU|)5 ft 1 7 \ C\CftDE ft . — iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Hgjg^g^g Bg^gig^H Hg^g^g Hg^g^gig^glg^g^g^g Bg^g^g^g^g^g^ggggg ^i^l^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ glg BHJHHIHHBj^HHUg^g HOrt0rT£f U>OS\ fl >nS£gts *.t* \ TouT e j °** \ | <« J V HJ5 \ >^t ] t ,tfM rI * **' ^VMbL ^ * 2 5 5 = 32 S 25 = s= = S5 = = S •"• = = = S i ^^^^^^^^ H I ¦ ¦ ¦ H I I PRESIDENTIAL FORUM Issu es and Not Rhe toric And the sign says. ,. ; ' 1 1 By Frank Pizzoli Instead of ripping the sign J was walking down the street down, I entered the trailer to tell last Saturday afternoon just two elderly grandmotherly types minding my own affair when I inside , one of whom was actually noticed a sign on the trailer sitting in a chair knitting , that , outside Hotel Magee. You know , "there 's a lot of profit in killing the one plastered with Re-Elect babies. " the Presiden t material , This sign, Then , purely by ehsnce , printed with red and blue crayons honestly , by chance , an M&G on white cardboard (yeeccchh ), photographer comes strolling by boastfully proclaimed: NIXON with a camera . He proceeded to HAS WON THE WAR. take a picture of the sign. This Anything but heartwarming. In must have been too much for the fact , the sign was to my mind elderly Nixon provocatures. They dow n right disgusting. Afte r came outside and removed the holding down my breakf ast, the sign. next impulse I had was to rip the I' m not a religious person but maddening thing down. But this this was one time I felt like would only get me into hassles saying "thank god" or somebody and besides I'm a college student that these two had the sense to which is one step above or below ¦remove the sign. nigger in this town dependin g on How could anybody after years how much they really want your of our government calling money. Vietnam a "conflict-incursion- battle " jump on a cheap chance for victor y and proclaim that Nixon has won the WAR , after Nixon himself hid behind the phrase of "this conflict." I guess the same kind of person who could justify the sign could also justify Richard Nixon when he employed a dependably mediocre lan guage in his speeches in the last four years. And I guess that the same kind of person who digs the sign can swallow whole the Watergate incident and the ITT affair. But actuall y, Mr. Nixon with all his empty moralism and alleged ( continued on page eight) Bra vo! Bravo , Dr. Gunt her and Rich Stillman! I personally have many reservations ab out Richard Nixon and think this is another "pick - the -least - of - two - evils" I would like to make some consistency in saying killing of elections , but a free country can comments concerni ng the views civilians might be justified in afford to live with Nixon's evils recently expressed by Professor World War II and not in Vietnam for another four years a lot better Gunther concerning the killing of ( or the reverse ) . than it can afford to live with The serious issue for the non- McGovern 's. civilians in World War II and in Vietnam (Maroon and Gold pacifist (which includes I I just hope tha t Nixon's supOctober 25). Dr. Gunther says: assume , the President , Senator porters will get out and vote on "One may logically praise McGovern and Dr. Gunther ) is election day instead of sitting population bombing in both one of proportionali ty. Is the back and thinkin g tha t Nixon's a conflicts , or condemn it in both , suffering prod uced by our par- cinch to win , with or without their (including the votes . He could be in danger but not extol one and decry the ticipation maiming and killing of civilians , because of such over-confidence , other . " In the first place no-one, in- the creation of refug ees and the and if Nixon 's i n dan ger of losi ng cluding Senator McGovern , immense destr uction of the land ) this election , this whole country President Nixon , and I assume justified by a rational appr aisal is in grave dan ger . D r. G un t her , has "extolled" of our ends. In my judgment the -Sally Freeman killing of civilians. Dr. Gunther 's a nswer is no, the suff er ing we suggestion to the contrary is not have i nt roduce d has long si nce only false and somewhat vicious , outweighed any possible benefits but irrel evant to the seri ous f rom our presence in Vi et nam. moral issues involved . The killing Thus our "pop ulat ion " bombing (continued from page two) of innocents is always un- in Vietnam is not only unb and s t andards l i ke "Mr. fortunate , f rom wh ich it does not for tunate but unj ustified. Wonderful" (wonderfully brief ) , It is also a fallacy to raise (as automatically follow that it is ( continued on page eight) and "Baby Face. " never justified . There is no inThis live stuff compa res in no way with the stuff on the Live Kinks album. The feel is different , not as much mad rock fla sh is present. Bu t t he rec ord is just as good becau se it reflects one-man folk festival the Kinks as they are now . How the Kinks managed to surv i ve .change and come out on top is a good example of the evolution of a band. The Mike Cotton Sound provides a norn Dacw up ior some live cuts that is nicely off-key , Bloomsbur g students $1.00, Adults $2.00 n icely out of t une and nicel y corny . Ah yes ! Show Biz at its fjekets on $b\b af S.I), on Nov. 9 from 7-8 P.M., best-worst. Ethel Merman would be pleased with everything exor call 374-1251 for reservations cep t f or that fact that the Kinks performer of grea t vocal and Iny is a you ng "Coone are too realistic to see just the Logic or Not So far in this campai gn, the Democra ts on our cam pus have distinguished themselves by their charac te r assas sina ti ons an d personal lampoons. They have tended to hedge the real issues and have attacked individuals instead. As far as I am concerned , however , they have not detracted one iota of credence from the President' s platform . These , then , are the issues. These are why I am voting for the President , and these are why you should. First , let me point out , that since the passage of the BurkWadsworth Bill in 1940, we have had a continuous peace timearau. Nixon, nowever , is trying to end this. Already he has reducedconscription by over 80 per cent. He has red uced draft eligibility from seven years to one and has lowered the age of draft board members from 30 to 18. The President is pushing for an all-volunteer army, so that only those who truly desire to go have to serve. The President also realizes that one of the major problems facing America 's .youth today is drug abuse. "He is spending six times more for rehabilitation and five times more for drug education -than ever before ". Nixon has also won agreements from France , Paraguay, and Turkey in an effort to end international drug traffic. The key objective of all I thi s is t o checkma te dru g abuse , not to pun ish those who are alread y addicted. Nixon , too , played an instrumental role in getting the 18 year old vote. As early as 1970, (he President signed legislation granting us the right to vote in all federal electi ons. This, in no small pai t, led to the passage ' of the 26th Amendment. ' As for other issues, President Nixon is trying to correc t what has been call ed the "perverted priorities in American politics". He has reduced defense spending from 45 per cent of the national budget to 32 per cent. The President "has increased funding «««fe A 4^ an ^^ «%« ¦•VA^^ OAmM iui eiivu uiiiueiiuii VAK ¦ K M M a «*Af% I iiiipi uvcuieiit t JhVM 4feVfeW by over 500 per cent" . He has increased Social Security benefits for the nations elderl y by one-third. And in an effort to aid America's veteran, Nixon has raised the .G. I. Bill educational benefits by over 25 per cent. Sure , there are problems in America , and there have been f or a long time . President Nixon, however , is doing something about them. Petty rhetoric in itself aids no one - action andlegisiation do, and that is what Nixon has given us. Look at the facts with your brain and not your heart , then you, too, wil l be voting to reelect the President on November 7. -Rich Stillman ¦ (m I lim SCWftft S: I I Sign uf fofc ^ou* IEARBook I I fORTR ft\T ft ffOINT M ENT I Record Review I AT 231 wAUE R HA LL. NOV . I I I MICHAEL COONEY 8:00 P.M. THURSDAY , NOV. 9 Susquehanna Universit y Chapel Audi torium • * strumenta l accom plishment , toppedoff by a delightful stage I presence w hich engulfs the audience In his own belief and I en joymen t of his material. " — NIGHT LIFE, Los Angeles I k * !v ,\ , v iv N'!v\> \ \ ' v\\ . ', \ ', \ \ , , ¦, ¦; , . \ ' -, , t V i W i V i Y Vi . ." . . . I V^ ' •* ." » • . ¦" f. 1 t % m_ sheen. Ever y bod y 's In Show Biz. Ever y bod y's A Star. But isn 't it true? ¦ ' ' ¦ ' i j ij < < i\< . < ,' * < ' < ' , , i . ' ' i \ \ • < • ' < .' > I E ft 3 f»R£ OpEtf . Do I f / I ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ H^MMMMHMMM ^MHj ^H W MMMMIMMIi ^MMMMiMiMMM ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Susquehanna Universit y Ente rtainment Associ ation presents Kenny Jim LOGGINS ~ MESSINA Openin g act - Casey Kell y 8:30 P.M. SATURDAY , NOVEMBER 11 S.I). Chapel Auditoriu m, Selinsgr ove Tickwts $3.75 advance , $4.50 at the door Advanct tickets on sal* of th « Bloormbur g Colla r Union Informa tion Peek, throu gh Nov. 9 ff iW&Mw. -:, ,- . , . ^i^^^ High School Invasion A demonstration of a blood pressu re measu ring machine ^^ ¦i^iHWili ^i^i^BHHI ^BH^HHH ^HBHHi ^HMMHHB ^HBMHHiBH ^^^^ HBH ^B^^^ HI ^^ B^^ Something in her eye? No, only the correct microscopic sli des. A demonstra tion table in Hartline Science Center. way to view Dr. Rabb, chairman of the Biology department , as he welcomes visiting students. An invasion of "little people" came to BSC during the week of October 21 through October 28. The confused , bewildered faces noticed roaming the campus those days consisted of numerous high school students, arriving to participate in either the high School Forensic Clinic, the Journalism Institute, or the Biology Workshop. The first influx of newcomers began early Saturday morning, October 21, when approximately one hundred students and their forensic coaches from five surrounding area high schools, arrived to register for the Third Annual High School Forensic Clinic. After refreshments of coffee and doughnuts, a welcome address was offered by Mr. Harry Strine , and opening remarks were delivered in Kuster Auditorium by Doctor Melville Hopkins, Chairman of the Speech Department. At 9:30 the debate began, on the topic "Financing Public Education by the Federal Government". Teams from the Shikpliamv Area Hieh School defended either the affirmative or negative side. After the debate, comments on forensic procedures were discussed by college debate coaches. The students and their coaches went for lunch at Scranton Commons, returning for individual lecture sessions offered by members of the Speech Department. Topics included "Oral Interpretation of Prose and Poetry", "Extemporaneous and Impromptu Speaking", and "Original Oratory, After-Dinner Speaking". Alpha Phi Gamma , the honorary j ournalism fraternity, and the English Department, sponsored the second invasion of high school students. Beginning on Friday morning, October 27, approximately 150 eager amateur journalists and their advisors from over twenty high schools arrived to register for the Third Annual Journalism Institute. A series of workshop seminars were offered to participants throughout Friday and Saturday , concerning news-gathering methods, photography techniques, editorial effectiveness, feature writing theory , printing and layout technology, and sports - reporting procedures. Rap sessions for informal comments by the high school students were intermixed with these discussions, and conducted by student editors of various college publications. A banquet was offered to the participants of the conference on Friday evening, at Scranton Commons. John Bendick, a prominent member of the WBRE-TV news staff in Wilkes-Barre , spoie on the loss of the personal touch in publications, sprinkling his talk with anecdotes concerning news-reporting during the June flood. Dormitory rooms u ere provided for those students who wished to stay overnight Friday evening. I luncheon in the Commons f inalizedthe weekend, whose purpose was to aid 197 -73 high school publications. The last inflow of pre-college students was sponsored by the Biology Department. Under the direction of Mr. Jphn Fletcher, Assistant Professor of this department, the Fourth Annual Biology Workshop was held on Saturday , uctober 28. Tnisgatnenng ot over 150 nignscnooi students, irom as rar away as Abington , Pennsylvania, was completely student - oraganized, A Steering Committee planned all lab session topics , vith Ellen Gingelow and Kathy Kirk as co-chairladies. Help from a long list ¦; f student chairmen and fa culty advisors aided the preparations. Registration began early Saturday ni )rning in Haas audioriurn , with a . welcoming speech stating the purpose o the workshop — to orient visiting students wi th the biology programs offend at Bloomsburg. Students then attended their first lab session, choosing fr< m Botany, Embyology, Invertebra t e Zoology, Microbiology, Ecology, Genetirs, Animal Biology, and VertebratePhysiology. A lunch in the Commons, followed by a tour of the campus and dormitories, introduced the visitors to BSC life. Their second choice of lab session topic was offered in the afternoon , in either Hartline Science Center or Sutliff . Many comments were made by the visiting high school students. Most were favorable, concerning the atmosphere and location of BSC's cam pus , and the variety of programs of study offered by the college. Requests for admission forms were filled and perhaps the 1973-74 fall semester will welcome again a few of the new faces that appeared on campus this past week . John Bendick, member of the news staff of WBRE-TV in Wilkes-Barre, speaking at the Journalism Ba nquet. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Elaine Pong raft, secretary of Alpha Phi Gamma , preparing name cards for the incoming jo urnalists . Mr. Kenneth Hoffman , directo r of BSC' s student publica ti ons. B^^^^b^BQ^Bg^^^^MMAM^^^^ H^^H^A^HM Students from Shikellamy High School presenting th eir side of the debate . Is Alpha Phi Gamma pledge Frank Lora h nervous as he introduces a guest spea ker at the Journalism Institute? — ~ — -— ~ ~ — ^b . -^ A. ^^ .^ a . _& a . a . ~& a . a . a . . & , a . . a .a . A .. . ^h . . ^ MMMpVvVVVVVVVVVMVVVVVV ^V^V^V^V^P^V^V^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sister Rosina Me Lane as she speaks at the Journalism Inst itu te . *¦ -*- -^ — ~ — ~ — — —- ¦ V^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ r ^^^ ^V Centerfold by Valery O 'Co nnell Alpha Phi Gamma president Sue Spra g ue as she leads off the s t udent edi t ors ' rap session. 1 d0monitr Congratulations on a good game! Junior quarterback Joe Geiger , The Wolves again put on a Lancaster, took the snap, dashed sustained drive in the third 'iniiiii iiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini IIIIMIimilltlltlllllimillllmilllliiiiiiiliiimmmi ¦ Illllllllllllalllllllaiiiillllllllllllllllllllllilllllll I I H B ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ H ^B I I I ^^ m PHOTOS BY DAN MARESH I Husky back Ken Vancas sli thers through the mud at Cheyney . I Joe Geige r fires a bomb ove r the outstretched arms of a Cheyney defender. jm Husky quarterback Joe Geiger, who fired the game-winning two point conversion to his tight end , shown firing upfield '¦ '¦ A Husky running for daylight . ..• . Dir ty Mike Devereux, (bo tto m of pack ) actuall y digging George Gruber and Ken Vancas block . yardag e*. . as . . . . » • V/i .* • . m \ \ A , v .\ \ ,\ \ N \ \ . \ I \, i , . , , , , , , v , for , ¦ Mike Devereux ()J ) tries to find an opening thr ough the tough Chayney defa me. •- " • " ¦ ' ' • • ' " " • < ¦ ¦ ¦• ¦- v. v.v.v. '. • , - r r r r r - . ;¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ . • ' ¦ ¦ . .. ¦ . . , . ,.,,.. . .., ., . v* ., - , . lVV ., ., .,. . , I ,, ¦ IH Huskiet tes defea t Keystone , 4-1 Keystone Junior College has seen what a great Hockey Team BSC really has. Last Thursday the Huskiettes battled their way to a 4-1 victory. Our goals were scored by Linda McCorkal , Paulette Haley, and Carole Balden. Linda McCorka l movin g in to score a goal. I New Co-ed Acrobati cs At the start of the game Keystone seemed to be settin g the pace. But , after some strategic substitutions , the line and backfield both were strengthened and made the game their own. Connie Gerenser played goalie for the second half of the game. Even tho ' that was the first game she's played , she did a tremendous job of preventing possible goals. One of our players , Cathy Constable , has a slight contusion from being hit in the head with a hockeystick. Hopefully she will be well enough to help represent BSC's Huskiettes this weekend in the Penn State Hockey Tour nament. by Dan Maresh Miss Jackie Adams , new Phys Ed instructor , is in the proces s of organizing the Bloomsb ur g Acrobatic Tea m (BATS). The BATS, a co-ed squad , hope to perform at local schools and put on gymnastic exhibitions at BSC. At the presen t time they meet informall y Wednesdays from 7-9 PM in Centennial Gym. In the nea r future the team plans to become a recognized club with hopes of going varsity next year. Routines will be done on the tr ampoline , parallel Dars , uneven parallel bars , balance beam, rings , floor and the horse. It should be pointed out that the new gym complex has gymna stic equipment valued at thirty thousand dollars. Cher yl Hoffman , a former member of the Parketts (a National competition gymnastic Carolyn and Carole Balden wo rk togethe r to score another one. group ) , is a member of the BATS. She has traveled as far as California to compete . Anyone interes ted in gymnastics should contact Miss Jackie Adams at her office in Saturday it rained , but it the score 20-39. Centennial Gym or come to inThe flat 5.7 mile course proved tramural Gymna stics Wed- seemed to be idea l weather for nesdays 7-9 PM at Centennial the Husky Harriers as they to be fast for all the B.S.C. ru nsloshed and slipped their way to a ners despite the wet conditions. Gym. win over Susquehanna UniverOther scorers for Bloomsburg sity . Coach Noble was forced to were Bart Grimm 4th , Mike conjure up an alternate cross- Hippie 5th , Bob Quairoli 8th, Dale coun try course due to the mudd y, Alexander 9th , and Rick treacherous conditions of the Eckersley 10th. Tuesday the Husky Har riers regular route. will travel to Cheyney for their The Harriers , led by Terry Lee final dual meet. Then on Frida y and Larry Horowitz who placed 1- will drive to Edinboro to prepare 2, literally ran past the opposition for the state cross-countr y meet to ra ck up their first victory by on Saturday. Harriers win 1st Linda Ruoss , Paulette Haley , Carole Balden try to elude goalie. I I ***¦ ¦ **** » jaBM^^v ^-V' S frra^iBWiin ^^ ....——. ,___ „„„„.__„_ Keystone player charge s in to score only goal. ^ ^ ^ Go) a mate? (or a date) Undulate!!! Kuss Waterbeds p g ^g — ^l^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ m^ ^ ^ g p g ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ l Compliments of the Bloom BowlB 261 W. Main St. 784-4016 M-T-W Ev , or by Appt ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ^¦ ¦¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ^ — The fondest rememberances from '^ipttyUs | ^\^ R.OWBHB Gregg's Music V^^MIirar v WwMwU t Dew* n« HOI On Eart ft. Sherw ood Village Old Berwick Road Bloomsbur g, Pa. Open 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. %> Mon . thru Sat. 25C a Peace Summer K!tcbe& >SL 232 W. Third St. "* —The Great Paperback Recycle-15c each —Handcrafta, Gifts —Dried Grasses , Flowers *aJ * Open Thurs., Fri. & Sat. I I I 1 I INCENSE BURNERS New pottery-metal-stone owls-mushrooms-snails (for the slower ones) THE STUDIO SHOP 59 E. Main St., Bloomsburg 784-2818 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ SALE ! I ^ —¦ —^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ All Bates Twin Spreads Now V2 Price HOUSE OF FABRICS Market Square I The Maroon and Gold Band , continues to develop its two-fold program ofpresenting educational opportunities to its student participants and timely public appearances for the general public of the Bloomsburg area. Complementing the seventy man marching unit , is field director Miss Viki York, a Junior Special Education major from Carlisle. The concert unit utilizes the instrumentalists of the marching unit but a dds needed personnel for a more complete symphonic instrumentation . The unit begins rehearsals in mid-Novernber culminating its season with Spring appearances both on and off-campus. The eighty-piece Concert Band anticipates its best season this year in terms of overall performance ability and effective, educational , and in- teresting repertoire. Director of the College Band is Stephen C. Wallace, a native of Huntingdon , Pa., and graduate of Mansfield State College and the University of Michigan. Wallace' joined the faculty of the Music Department in the fallof 1967, and has improvedthe calibre and potential of the program. Noteworthy innovations are the formation of two small ensembles, the Brass Sextet and , new this year, the . Woodwind Quintet — both units designed to offer additional challenge and opportunity of involvement with special repertoire. Kappa Kappa Psi andTa u Beta Sigma , national men and women's band fraternity - sorority respectively, have been recently initiated and are responding to the development of service to the band , its program , the Music Department, and the college as a whole. Logic or Not ? ( continued from page three ) the Nixon administration and Dr. Gunther raise) the spectre of Vietcong atrocities— if their aim is to suggest that those who condemn American policies automatically support all acts of the other side. To focus on the immorality of American actions is not to praise the North Vietnamese or Vietcong. To suggest Burychka , for Fun In Fashions Miller Office Supp ly Co. 5 1.80 per Hour Appl y In Perso n mini gowns Different weights and length s Shop at Eudora ' s Corset Shop 1 E. Main St., Bloom sburg PART-TIME JOBS There are jobs available to students on a part-time basis with local businesses throughout the Bloomsburg area . If interested contact Mr. Duncan , Financial Aid office , or Mr. Thomas A. ART & CRAFT AUCTION There will be a public auction Davies, Placement Office. of art and craft items on Sunday, November 5, at 2:00 p.m. at the Democratic Headquarters, 150 ( continued from page one) W. Main Street. Works by Martin, Bonham , Hoch , Lamed, reference library and also a card Rhodes, Roberts, Simon , Savage, catalogue of teaching Smith , Wilson, and many others experiencessystem and research items. will be included in the sale. The importance of first-hand Anyone wishing to donate an art item should call Mrs. Florence knowledge and direct on-the-job Thompson , who is in charge of experience was encouraged. arrangements at 784-2203. All A general session was held sale items may be seen at the prior to Dr. Rost's presentation. S u n d a y , The meeting was part of the Head q uarters November 5, 1 - 2 p.m. Everyone SPSEA observance of National Education Week, October 22 - 28. is welcome. Rost spea ks ¦^St r ~ - - "t_8l_; k ^^H^^^^^^^^^^^^H a^Ht ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ £. R *'*< u> t* "^' tL Ml " ^V&tfif I H_^^^^^ | Jf ^h^m^mmf£ " 3P«!^O '^^ ^Ht ^T*j ^ff;4i ^HE* ^^ l _^ft^^^ A^^__ _, J ^^Hr TT^ w» r ^H ^ ^ ^ ^ H^H r ^2i^^^ **^_^_^_^_^_^_^_l K£^_^-^-^_i \\_ 3^^^^^^^^^^^ I *^^tok * J m^^^^^/ ^^^^^^^^^^^ S^^^^ 2SB^^ r/k(L. Christmas creim'ons a la Black Forest , handmade in Hawaii from orig inal, t hree-dimensional designs to deli ght the ' collector. For treasured gifts , choose from over 200 items, each hand- painted in gay Christmas colors. ^D CARROLL 'S mUURKHl / / I ¦ WANTED -—^ZT^ TRA VEL REP. \ >_»1T # "Our catalog senton request - $1.00 deposit refundable " 48 HOURS OF ORDERS AIRMAIL ED WITHIN RECEIPT . ^* >, A. ALEXANDER Co. wp ) ^^ TA ¦ ¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦ ¦ ¦ 98 Riverside Drive , New York , N.Y. ¦ ^¦ ¦¦ ^¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ^¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ i ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^M^^^™^^^^^^^^™^^^^^^^^B_ff^^BM___B^_^ff^g^W^™W^W^M^M^M^M^M^M^M^M^_^_^_M_^M^M^M^M^M^M^M^M^M^_ ! Part-Time Work 8-10 hrs. per week Work in a paper test lab. Must be available Wednesday 8 - 12. $2.25 per hour. Data Com. Supply Co. 9th & Oak St., Berwi ck, 759- 1281 I National Travel Co. needs a rep. I on your campus to tell trips to Europe • Ski Area • Islands • High Commissions • Free Trips • All promotional materials and training provided. For informa ti on: NBme Address Stat e _____ School ___________ Send to: National Student Travel Services 2025 Walnut Street \ \ Philadelph ia, Pa. 19103 / _X \ (215) 661-2939 _¦_¦_¦_¦¦_¦ _¦_ !_¦_¦_¦¦_ ¦_¦¦_¦_ FACTORY OUTLET STORE KNITS C£Q AND G IFT S Phone 784.2561 Hartzel' s Music Store 72 N. Iron St. Over 300 Guitars and Amplifiers _ _ _B_aBI •Sweater * Galore •Capet — Ponch os ^_^_ a_^-_ a^^MaHH^^M^BM^MH^H^HaaHMM ^ Part-tim e Jobs Availabl e •Skirts — Jeans •Suits — Dresaes - Shirts \ SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNTS ] BERWICK KNITTING MILLS 8:30 P.M. to 1 A.M. Monday thru Sunday M.90 per Hour CAMOLT S KSHUMHT ABSENTEE BALLOT? Those members of the college community who are voting by absentee ballot in the upcoming election are reminded that the ballots must be postmarked no later than Friday, Nov . 3. 1 P.M. Monday thru Friday and HEADQUARTERS OF HALLMARK CARDS Apply In Person Part-time Jobs Available For shorties 18 West Main Street, Bloomsbur g, Pi. i *> ( continued from page one) PLACEMENT INFO R MA TION Thomas Davies , Placement Director will again speak to Arts and Science majors concerning the utilization of the Placement Services today, November 1, 1972 at 2 p.m. in L-35 Andruss Library. All Arts and Science graduates of Dec. 72 and May and Aug. 73 who have not registered with the placement services are urged to attend. 11 A.M. to Janice Corazza , Diane De Francesca Ann Ferregno, Chris Geis , Kathy Klemick , Debbie Kriebel , Sue Nelson , Nancy Peterson Roseann Rodeno , Debbie Roth Kathy Siburkis , Becky Stang Judy Scott , and Linda Wheelan They will be installed Thursday November 2. Presently the Tri-Sigmas are selling Cherrydale Farms ' Chocolate candy bars as a fundraising project for the semester The girls also sponsored a Halloween Party on Monday nigh t for the children of Bloomsburg . According to the October 18 issue , the M&G implied , in its article "Students to rate faculty " , that the teacher 's APSCUF-PAHE , union , facul ty a demanded ti on of all Pennsylvania evalua State Col leges. In fact , the of PennComm onwealth sylvania i tself asks for such an observation . A PSCUF-PAHE facult y that stipula tes membe rs of each departmen t conduc t an evaluation of their peers , rather than have a state official become involved. A little part y, with third knowled ge of a specific departmen t , cannot correctl y pass judgeme nt of faculty members. Dick Brook Philosophy Dept . The sisters of SIGMA SIGMA SIGMA inducted 15 pledges into their sisterhood on Thursday October 19. The new sisters are Debbie (continued from page three ) involvement carries over into the ideals of democracy , the injustices and inequalities of his "Washington " wherein he and his men find satisfaction in their search for vainglory. And then Mr. Nixon presents us with his disgusting naivete by pretending not to understand our rejection of his jingoistic nationalism and provincial loyalties. Yes, I'm mad. I'm mad that Richard Nixon can sell people right here in Bloomsburg on his practice of a rootless pragnatism and dull their senses. And even madder that he has fooled them into believeing the war is over when it is not—yet. otherwise indicates either an ignorance or willful abuse of elementary logic. After all , would we say that because Nixon sided against India in her recent war with Pakistan, that he therefore supported the butchery and rape of civilians committe d by Pakistani soldiers. Tri^Sigma News Briefs Sign Ma roon & Gold Band I 230 So. Popla r St., Berwick ( On* Block Off Rt e. 11 — Behind Shopping Center 9-9 Thurs. 4Fri Hours 9-6 Daily 4c Sat. I I I I An Invitation... SPEND 10 DAYS IN MIAMI BEACH this Easter at the Hotel Versailles. The College Union is sponsoring this trip arranged throu gh the help of the Singer Travel Service of Hazleton. RESERVATIONS WILL BE ACCEPTED ON NOV. 1f 2 & 3 IN THE COLLEGE UNION. Sign up now and take advantage of the Versailles: •PRIVATE BEACH •HEALTH CLUB •NIGHTLY ENTERTAINMENT •TENNIS CLUB •OLYMPIC SWIMMING POOL •WATER SKIING •SURFING •PRIVATE YACHT •CHAMPAGNE PROVIDED BY THE HOTEL •PLUS THE NEW "ELECTRIC CIRCUS" CONTINUOUS ROCK MUSIC •DISNEY WORLD EXCURSIONS AT REDUCED RATES AND MUCH MORE. FOR ONLY $ 177.50 Price based on Quad. Occ. Incl. roundtrip transporta tion from Bloomsburg and Hotel accommodations for ten days. t