Trus tees app rove names f or new buildings oy one aprague The naming of the New Field House and the Administration Building highlighted the second meeting of the BSC Board of Wednesday, on Trustees 1972. The meeting November 8, * took place in the Board's meeting room in Carver with all members Dresent. NE W WALLER A report by Mr. E. Guy Bangs, chairman of the committee for Naming of Campus Buildings, resulted in names being chosen for the new field house and administration building . Upon the recommendation of the committee, the new Administration Building will henceforth be known as Waller Hall (to maintain a familiar name after the condemned dormitory is torn down) and the Field House as the E.H. Nelson Field House in honor of a man who was a long-time orofessor at BSC. NEW APPOIN TM ENTS Mr. John Trathen , former Comptroller of Community Activities," has been appointed Assistant Director of Student Activities and the College Union. Mr. James Carlin has been appointed Comptroller in Mr. Trathen 's place. m **._ _ r t_ __ of Income and Expenditures for the College, July 1, 1972 to June 30, 1973. Mr. Martin 's report stated that State appropriation for the 1972'73 school year is $6,357,000, and that the estimated Local Augmentation is $4,861 ,654.00. The total estimated income and budget fpr the year is $12,218,654.00. PRESIDENT'S REPORT Acting President Dr. Charles H. Carlson announced that 70.1 per cent of all 1972 graduates of BSC were placed in jobs. He also announced Winter Commencement for December 21, 1972. BOARD TO UR S The Board members conducted their annual tour and inspection of the college grounds priorto the November 8 meeting. The Board commented on the excellent state Of Bloomsburg State College campus, and had no suggestions for improvement. The next meeting will be held on the third Wednesday of January. Senate holds second meeting At the second meeting of the College Senate held last Thursday night, a slate was drawn up for permanent elections to Senate Committees, and the Committees for Academic and Student Affairs gave reports. Dr. Carlson made a short address, stat ing that he sees the Mr Ritnn Unns inftoi* . former role of the Senate as still being Vice-President for Campus i nfl uenti al on campus as a body rather than Services, will hold a position as .recommending Administrator for Campus as a* policy-making body.He also Services. Dr, Craig Himes was spoke of APSCUF, the faculty appointed acting Chairman of the bargaining agent, and how it Biology Department for second related to the Senate, stressing th at we must defi ne what power semester of this school year. belongs to whom. He advised the been has Pestel Dr. Hildegard InSenate to keep in mind that the a position as assigned to policies that are Dassed must be Library. igned to the structor ass onal referred to the administrationfor ly a p ro f ess i She was f ormer im p lementation. Librarian, The slate tha t was drawn up for FINANCIAL REPORT Mr. Paul G. Martin , Business permanent elections includes the Manager for BSC, made a report Academic Affairs Committee , Student Affairs C ommi ttee , Committee for Campus Affairs and External Relations, Fac ulty Affa irs Committe e , Facilities and Finance Committee, Rules Twent y-five BSC students were C ommittee , and the Elections selected for recognition in the 1972-73 edition of Who's Who Among Students in American - Colleges and Universities. To be selected for this honor these students had to meet stiff LIBRARY HOURS competition in the following Library for the criteria : leadership ability, Thanksgi vinghours week will be as scholastic achievement , personal follows: Monday and Tues day , traits * professional promise , and Nov. 20-21, 8:00 am • 10:00 pm; potential usefulness to society. Wednesday , Nov. 22, 8:00 am The students selected are: 8:00 Thursd ay, Friday , pm; Timothy Bauman , Thomas Saturday, Nov. 23-25 , Closed; Bever idge , Mary Ellen Sunday, Nov. 36, 2:90 pm - 10:00 C avenaugh , Mark Constable , pm ; and Monday, Nov. 27, 8:00 Michael Costanzo , Richard am - 10:00 pm. Cressman , Joh n Ficek , Katherine Flanagan , Ernes t MATH CLUB Fucella , Susan Green , William The Math under the Hartford , Steven Hartman, directio n of Mr. Club Mueller Timoth y Hartman , Douglas its next meeting on will hold Thurs day, McCllntock , Rodney Morgans , Novemb er 16 at 3:30 pm in Scott Peterman , Linda Radle, Hartline , room 122. Mr. Muelle r, Kerry Ruff , Margaret Ryan, will give a talk on: A special James Sachetti , Mark Scheffey, techn ique for John Stugrin, Michael Torber t, tri gonometri cidentities . solving All are Arnold Wagner , J r ,< «nd James Weber. Who's Who Committee. REPORTS The Academic Affairs Committee is reworking on their policy of admissions to Teacher Dancers from the Joffrey II Company as they appea r in Education and the new policy for " Facade "/ a spoof by Sir Frederick Ashton, the celebrated Special Education caused by the choreog raphe r of the British Roya l Ballet / on the mores and overcrowding that now exists. ma nners , the fashions and foibles of the 1920's. It is freely adapted There was some discussion of the from the poem-seouence by Edi t h Si t well to t he score of William final exams and a resolution was Walton. passed that the six day schedule be implemented by next semester so that no student would have more th an two exams inone sifivr The Student Af fairs committee outlined their three subcommittees as 1. Public ations , 2. Student Grievances , and 3 . Student-Faculty Judiciary committee. Dr. Bresett , Senate Presiden t announced a special committee, separate from the Senat e* to advise the college president on Athletics, which will consist of three students, three facult y members , and an administrator selected by the president himself. Bresett will send letters to faculty, andCGA will take care of student selection. News Brief s V GRAD SCHOOL There will be a Graduate School Panel Discussion Thursday , November 16, 1972 at 7:00 9:00 pm in L-35, Andruss Library. F.acuity members on the panel will be Dr. Evelyn Mayer , Dr. Michael Gaynor , Mr. , Charles Jackson , and Mr. James Lauffer . Any student interested in information on grad uate school is urged to attend. Ballet to app ea r The Joffrey II Ballet Company will appear in Haas Center for the Arts on Wednesday, November 15 at 8:15 pm. This company was originally the Joffrey Ballet but have since reorganized. They now have an apprentice program that covers classical to the most modern styles. The Apprentice Program attracted not only beginners but also members of other companies and they practiced until they reached their high standard of excellence. TheJoffreyI I Ballet is a small group that is highly versatile — it can fill a stage in an opera house or perform in limited spaces . Its repertory is also versatile with works f rom the Joff rey Ballet along with ballets especially commissioned for t hem, Ticket s can be , obtained between ll:00am and 4:00 pm or by calling 389-2802. Students can receive 2 free tickets with their ID card and faculty with a Community Activities card can obtain a limited number of free tickets, also. F estival concert A Festival Concert will be presented by the Concert Choir and College Community Or chestra Sunday , November 19 at 7:00 p.m. in Haas Center. The MAGNIFICAT in D major by J.S. Bach will close the evening of orchestral music featuring the local orchestra in its first Haas appearance. Five soloists : Mar y Decker , soprano and wife of the College Choir conductor William Decker ; Harriet Couch, soprano and wife - SPSEA of the resident pianist John There will be a Student PSEA Couch; Elizabeth Youngue , meeting on Wednesday, contralto from Pittaburg ; John November 15, in Kuiter Hyer, tenor from Scran ton ; and Auditorium at 4:00. The guest Timothy Hoffman , bass and a speaker will be Dr. Aumiller , who Bloomsburg alumni , work jointly will discuss the proposed Ap- with ¦five-part chorus and a palachian Educational Ex- standard Baroque orchestra to perience. perform one of Bach' s most pop ular compositions , the MAGNIFICAT. A continuo part on the organ , characteristic of Bach's style, will be played by Lois Stugrin, and John Thyhsen will play the intricate trumpet part. William Decker will conduct the MAGNIFICAT. John Master will conduct the orchestra in the Paul Bunyan suite by Bergsraa , the Corral Nocturne fro m "Rodeo" by Copland , and the Satirical Dance from "The Bolt" by Schostakovich , John Couch' will play the first movement from uneg s nano uoncerco in A minor. j All seats are reserv ed.Ticket ! are on sale at the Haas Bon Office. All students and faculty ' mm,> .# at tain a free ticket upS4M _ _ l _ _ ^« _ ««t * m 'a • m. presentationft I m '^^fll ^ Man of God Letters By JIM SACHETTI One need not listen very hard to hear the arguments taking shape. Armed with textbooks and cocktails, the pessimists will gather in the liberal and intellectual bastions of our day, workers. gnashing their teeth and wailing, Maybe there are a few other individuals on this campus who aren 't about to be duped. Let's "He was a saint, the last bearer of a liberal standard which fairly are worried now about the not change. shook the nation which bore it. He Jewel LaBelle possibility of job s under the was the last flickering ember of a Nixon administration 's next four fire that once consumed men's years. I'm worried. I fully realize souls. Alas and alack, it has died, that the fact that I may not be Dear Editor : I was pleased to see the article doused by the dread Nixon as the able to work in the teaching profession , because of a lack of "A Logical Viewpoint" that passions of a horny dog are funds for education, is a small, acknowledged some of the doused by cold water. " And the optimists, decked out almost "meaninglessconsequence conditioning that women experience, but I'd like to comment . in their "thirty-days-ofof Nixon 's re-election . further on the degrading attitude mourning armbands, " will soon What will the maimed and crippled veterans do without toward women this college has. shed them and turn their ever so This is a typically male- slightly wide eyes to new proper medical aid? What will oriented campus, geared to the hopeless causes. They will spend this nation 's minorities do? What point, male of view, which is the "four more years" telling will the welfare victims do? What highl y ironic considering that the people that "he was the first about ALL the people Nixon vast majority the students are spark of a flame that will grow Advertisin g Manager S'lVllL p!!t Circulation Ma naoer •2lMMaresh , Jr. Dari • Phot ography Editor Photo graphers: Dale Alexand er. Tom Dryburg, Pat White, Suzl White, Sue Greet, Annette Klou , Mike Williams. «.» j «*««n Molfma n u- *" Adv isor 3 The M*O Is located at 234 Waller, or call 3W-3101. All copy must be submitted I by Wednesday 1 no later than 5:00 p.m._on Tuesdays and Sunday* for the Friday and 3 papers, respectively. The opinions volctd In the columns and feature articles of 3 the M&G may not necessarily be shared by the entire staff, but th»y are bound by 3 their duty to defend the right to voice them. 5 Fina l approva l of all con tent rests with the Editor-In-C hief . = S s 3j 3 S 1 S g B s -. S S a g S jg 3 s ¦BiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHititiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiitiiiiiitiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiititiiiiiiiiifliB ^B / l c *m 5\ Hlf?EM -L « fftfc fNT / PS YCH°LO6IC |U $ £T w/Trt »T< / . \ \ a catalog of contemporary liberal morality , just resul ts. THE MORAL DILLEMA stupidities. -The liberal backgr ound of the THE MINISTER AND THE MANAGER A PARABLE McGover n people slopped over Like most latter-day liberals , into their campaign organization . McGovern was a victim of the Once aga in, there seemed to be •preacher sy ndrome'. He tried to the attitude tha t God was on their appeal to high ideals which are side , and theref ore .things payed little more than lip service couldn't help but go right . by the great majority of Unfortunately , they didn 't. The Americans whose votes he primary crusade had been spontaneous and 'beautiful. ' But needed to cop the election. Americans make much of their when McGovern triedto bring the religious and humanitarian old pols into the campaign , he ideals, but as we all know, the found that they couldn't tolerate real American values lie not in the looseness born -of a belief in the meetinghouse, but in the marketplace. There , those high Larry O'Brien and Gary Hart ideals are conveniently forgotten were both working for the same by the combatants who daily man , but that's where the sally forth to trample the neigh- similarity ended. Their antithetical approaches to politics bors they profess to love. resulted in conflicts , poor by confronted Therefore, when planning, poor advice and missed "Love said, one candidate who opportunities. and and care for your neighbor," another who said , "To hell with Just as a fer instance, take your neighbor." it was onlv Tom Eagleton. Ah yes, Tom*^ natural that America chose the Eagleton. McGovern himself admitted that it wasn't the same latter. McGovern people were also after that. And it wasn't. In one hoping that these same fateful week, Saint George the Americans would say, "He's a flnnd foil from his hnlv seat, nlon good man. He can do the job." into the slime of American But once again , America couldn't politics. see the sense in trusting in the Why? Conflicting advice — whim of God when they already "Hang onto him George, it can had a proven executive who had only make you look good. No done the job, if not spectacularly, George , dump him, Nixon will at least sufficiently. The use him to clobber you." And bureaucratic mentality of this th ere sat poor George, his ideals good land does not require (continued on page four ) s^AC ^ tintr UCO IIW J . C'mo n-Stin k ! __ E S 3 b 5 2 § S S : George McGovern : ..Letters to ttie «dHor art an expression off the ImlvMtwl writer's opinion and do not necessaril y reflect tho views off Mm newspaper. All Mtors Editor , I am writing to express my mutt bo signed, names will bo agreement with Jim Sachetti's withheld upon request. The article "The People's Choice: ' MAO reserve the right to Nixon Again ". The article sums abrid ge, in consul tation with up a lot of the feelings of myself < the wri ter , all totters over 250 words in length. and my fellow McGovern , ^. i.1 il_ 2_ 1 . 1 . . . -. i.l_i _ _— TX__ 1 _. — uus aiuuiii uie same uuiig uyimi i? ii, Tl"**»*«rf» *d iiicico ¦ *% a Uonmr Av t i 4 i m / T ciiuiii g ) iia ppj Wainwright did with songs like "Talkin' New though , . as recognizes that "God works in York" and "Talkin' World War " wondrous ways... III." He laughs and portrays his Wainwright has a serious side reality at the same time. too . " Muse Blues " is his own Take the lead song, "Dead Skunk." In all seriousness, it's story and throughout the entire about a dead skunk, and that saga of bad times, the listener ' means that all seriousness should never gets the feeling that immediately be cast aside. The Wainwright is whining . He seems images are perfect. The singer to be saying that this is his story , gags wnen ne rons aown tne car no regrets , and that' s how it is. " Drinking Song" is the window, and says that the whole mess is TECHNICOLOR ! Of drinking song to end them all. I course the skunk is later joined won 't fill in the gaps, but __ . __ _ i_ _ _ i " _ ii_ _i ii _ __._ by a variet y of flattened beasts. And they 're all "...in the middle of the road , Stinkin ' to high heaven . " Such is the aweinspiring capacity of dead skunks, at least to those familiar with them. Wainwright Keeps his wits about the stuff , neither glorifying nor „ bad-mouthing . "T rilogy (Circa 1967)" is a good look back at the San Francisco scene with all its shodiness and grande ur. Loudon Wainwright keeps Wainwright covers a variety of himself sane when lampooning subjects , including the guitar sports and sane when being a bee smashing antics of Peter ("B Side ") . He's pleasing, funny Townsend. "Red Guitar " is a and nerve-y. Loudun Wainwright could very recapitulation of Wainwright 's own axe-busting experiences. well be the Camus of rock. He One drunk night lie casts his sees the absurdity in things and instrument into the pit , the laughs and cries appropriately . fireplace , so to speak. And when Folk music ha s got the humor his lady persuades him to pur - back and for a brief time has quit chase a new one, a junkie steals whining. ¦ I B H H a B H B |Trih T'j itT\ ' Ul ^J ^^~"N^ / \ \ H ,. V ^ttpk I H ^H ¦ II © mm m ©J^^Sl ¦m J \ H?l gT ¦ (£ l? ' V t«.« « his ¦ \ v\ 1 ' I <% \\sJ k ¦ ' I » • Hus kies win f inale by Mike Williams With fog, ra i n and mud providing the setting the Huskies defeated East Stroudsburg 20-6in the last final football game of this year. This makes the final record 5-5 for the year . Bloomsbur g moved the ball on th e gr ound wit h ease as aga in George Gruber behind the blocking of the offensive line and his backfield partner John James ^ ran for over 100 yards. George gained 138 yards on 41 attempts and accounted for all three of the Husky touchdowns. Quarterback Joe Gieger had a good day passing for 10 yards and running tor 45 more including a two point conversion. Defensively, Charlie Bender had ano th er good game , stealing two passes the first half. Courter picked off a pair and middle linebacker Dan Greenland added one more for a total of five interce ptio ns. Def ensive end Dave Pruett set up the final score with hi s block and recover y o( an ESSG punt. The Bloomsburg defense, led by the fron t four of O'Donnell , Cos , Dew ire and Pruett , limited the Warri ors to only 128 yards on the ground , while the defensive backfield allowed only 83 yards passing. to Coach Congratulations Sproule and his assistants on a fine season and wishes for continued success in future years. Tailback Jo hn James up the middle . ¦MMHUHMM POk : (Will iams Photo ) *¦» wwwwm :- '¦Pi '.Jujiwn,inww mmmmmmmmmwmw- ul iuww .^^——^—^ ww Dewire and Cox put pressure on th e ESSC punter. mm ¦ — w ^~ — — n ¦ 11 n ^mtm m ^ivmwm,, ¦¦ i «^— « (M. Williams Photo ) Palma de Mallorca and A Husk y high lump, grabbi ng a slipptry pigskin. (M. Williams Photo ) with Bob Oliver The BSC H uskies traveled to Eas t Stroudsbur g last Sat urda y, hopi ng t o end the Strouds ' thirteen year winning record. This t he Husk ies did , and more , smashing the Warriors 20-6 in the mud and rain . From the press box, the obvious concensus on the Stroudsburg side was to "bench .BSC's number 36" . Why ? George Gruber was having, with the help ing of some excellent blocking, another super day. This is not aimed at taking anything away from any other Husky, but it seemed when the Huskies needed yardage , George got it. Geor ge carried the ball fortyone times, accountin g for 138 yards and three touchdowns. He also had a pass reception of ten yards from quarterback Joe vj cigci . vuc cudv imu a hue 01- ternoon , with his 8-11 passin g and 45 yards on the ground. It' s interesting to note that Gruber had the ball for over half the Husky plays, showing that even when used as a workhorse 1 , lie can still produce. As "a so phomore last year, Gruber played behind Bob Warner and John James , picking up 63 yards on 21 carries. This year , the 6T\ 215 pound Junior plowed for 865 yards , giving him a two year total of 028 yards. Jftmei Retumi • - -¦* Tht btglnnlnp Mkt from tht Huiky oWtnt * twittr Jirry \ 'Wllket klt to qutrttttack Jot Of Igtr. _ (Wllllami Photo ) ' '' ; ' ¦ ¦ -. I ' '" ' , • " )> I - •' ' ' '- ,V t Evident the last two weeks was the return of running back John James , John played some early season defense before injurin g his ankle , and didn't play until the last tvro garne t of the season. In those two games, John showed — —^^^^^^^H^^^p wha t a fine blocker he is, as well as showing tha t he's recovered t o the form that gained 364 yards for the Huskies last year. I t was a fine year f or the Huskies , and all the team and coachin g staff should be commended. They ended up tied for second in the division with an overall 5-5 record , and only a one point loss to MiUersville kept them at .500. Thanks , Husk ies, for an ex* citing year. Barcelona 9 days and 7 nights Jan. 4th-Ja n . 13th $318 • includes all tr ansporta tion, tips & 2 San Grla Parties Any one int erested contact: Brad Campbell Box 772 Woll«r Sponsored by King 's College Spanish Club J r ^SiiQ^ M ^SSiiS^iH W^^ ^^nM Christmns crcnti ons n In Black Forest , hnndmnd e in Hnwnii from original, three-dimensional designs to delight the collector. For treasured gifts, ch oose from over 200 ^J items , ench hnnil -pninied in gny Ch ristmas colors. ^fl v ^ i' . ^* .%>., 4KjK v Our c«taloa »«nt on rKnC *T <£ J K/ \ SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNTS] Call 784-7220 *\ AND ?Sweater* Galore Jeans •Skirt* Suits Capes Ponchos Dresses — — — Shirts • • Now Open 6 Days a Week for Your Convenience. Happy ^* KNITS 53.00 witho ut it. 4 X Mon . thru Sat. 25c a P eace tarout tip and got for onl y $2.50 with ID card p Dial (215) 548-0300 & JL this Shampoo , Cut , Style is getting it for LESS!of of Thouiand t I I No Wet Head — but ^£* e ver y earthy natural look! AJ LwH ^f^ ^tL f+r % ^ used to have a han9 uP' .^ y 'hair was all strung out! Till I Jviill Ibb V LOWEST LOAN RATES *} y AVAILABLE ANYWHERE £ |2 ^^^ l^BBBBBBliBIBa^BBi ^i^BBBBBaBB ^BlBI ^HHi^BBi ^BkliBi ^k^k^k^k^k^k^k^k^k^BalBl ^BlaBBa ^B^HB^B^i^i^il^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The S.P.E.B.S.O.S.A. Barbershop Quartet harmonizing before a capacity crowd in Haas last Satur day night. (S. White Photo ) V^ r 59 E. Main St., Bloomaburg 784.2S18 Open 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. SJEACHERSand EDUCATORS 3 £ BORROW at one FOR of the LESS $ 7^ 4 THE STUDIO SHOP Sherwo od Village Old Berw ick Road Bloomsbu rg, Pa. xTl?rrC^^ >^yi7^ Scoret from the Remembrance Shop Gregg's Music HAPPj NESS I* X Stop by and take her ia relodWifea^ again surface and shine just as brightly as they did this year. I' m glad he did it. I'm glad he made the effort , poor though it was. I can 't help it , for aias , I too am a foolish and naive liberal. And I hope I shall always have the good sense to remain one. To hell with the four more years. /if A m4\**is»a Finally, McGovern displayed one more trait which seems indigenous to liberals — a defensive stance. He let himself be pushed onto the defensive side of every issue. Where once he was the peace candidate , he suddenly became the defeat candidate . Where once he supported social justice , he suddenly became the defender of busing . Where once he supported the ideal of equality, he was suddenly the welfare candida te. Where once he was the political conservative favoring state regulation of marijuana and abortion , he was suddenly the social liberal propogator of these two evils. Somehow , without changing his positions , he let the Nixon people get awa y with changing them for him. And he very seldom , if ever , fought back. At least until the end of the campaign , when his get tough rhetoric made him look more like a confused fanatic than ^^BJBl^^^^BBBi^H^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ff ij ^^^^^^^^^^^^ "^^^^^^* ^^^ An Invitation... Come see our Chr istmas Hut SPEND 10 DAYS IN MIAMI BEACH *fefi £Mt lUs | ^^ ^ this Easter at the Hotel Versailles. FLOWERS ^¦^¦r^^B^k. N^ Bttwsrv H t u l The College Union is sponsoring this trip arranged through the help of the Singer Travel Service of Hazleton. ^ ^ Itowa TIm Httl O* Eul SI. Mllk r Office ) Supp ly Co, IS ma Main Strttt Mooimbu n, Pa. HEADQUARTERS OF HALLMARK CARDS AND GIFTS Phone 7M-256T Nartzel's Music Store I •PRIVATE BEACH •HEALTH CLUB •NIGHTLY ENTERTAINMENT •TENNIS CLUB •OLYMPIC SWIMMING P10L •WATER SKIING •SURFING •PRIVATE YACHT •CHAMPAGNE PROVIDES BY THE HOTEL «PLUS THE NEW "ELECTRIC CIRCUS" CONTINUOUS ROCK MUSIC Aid Mich Mori 72 N. Iron St. Over 300 Guitars and Amplifiers For shorties and mini gowns Different weights and lengths Shop at Eudora's Cerset Shop ' 1 I. Main It,, BJoomii jurg RESERVATIONS WILL BE ACCEPTED IN THE COLLEGE UNION. Sign up now and take advantage of the Versailles: For Only * 177.50 I For further Information contact Norm Jontt In tha Collage Union Building. Price based on Quad. Occ. Incl. roundtr lp tran ipprtatlon from Bloomtburg and Hotel accommodation! for tan days. I I I I