Evalua tion, "4-1 -4 " discussed at Council A possible tuition increase and the upcoming evaluations of professors were the main subjects of discussion at Monday ni g ht 's CGA meeting. Also discussed was the "4-1-4" plan for next year 's calendar , the proposed State College Act of 1973 , and a memorial contribution in the name of Lee Aumiller , former BSC professor. Possible Tui t ion Incr eas e CGA Vice-Presj dent Doug McClintock presented College Council with information regarding the tuition increases which are part of the Governor 's proposed budget for the 1973-74 academic year. He urged students to write to their state senators and state representatives in protest of this measure. For detailed information see other article. Teacher Eval uations Teacher Evaluations will be hold next month on the following dates : March 13-19, and March 20-24. The Evaluation form has heen written and okayed by the student evaluations committee and the local representatives of APSCUF-PAHE , as reported by Bob Jacob , committee chairman. The results of the evaluation will he published in a handbook and made available to students and faculty alike. Further information will - appear in the M&G . APSCUF Representative Dr. Robert MacMurrary, Vice President of the BSC chapter of APSC UF-PAHE , delivered a short address on the problems which may arise if the "4-14" plan goes into affect as it now reads. He listed some of the problems which his group feels may harm both faculty and students, and was quoted as saying, "The 4-1-4 may result in some compromise of academic integrity ." John Koliscft fascinated a packed audience in the Haas Cente r for the Arts Tuesday night with his mind-reading , ESP, and hypnotism. (Greef Photo ) / Memorial Contribution Dr. Raymond Rost of the Education Department was present at the meeting to ask Council for a contribution of $500 to send BSC students on an exchange program to Alice Lloyd College in Kentucky. CGA decided to make the allocation in memoriam to Dr. Lee Aumiller, former BSC professor who died during Christmas vacation , since Dr. Aumiller was deeply interested in the program. Council May Lose Control of Comm u ni t y A ct ivi t ies Fees The State College Act of 1973 proposes that the State College and Universities Directors (SCUD ) will maintain all control over Pennsylvania 's state colleges and universities' Community Activities Fees. All requests for use of this money will have to be placed before the members of SCUD for consideration . Presently the act is in its third draft and is not yet ready to he voted on. Other Topics Discussed A report was made by BNE chairman Doug McClintock regarding the expenses of the recent concert with John McLaughlin and the Mahavishnu Orchestra. Expenses incurred amounted to $7,818.94. Total income from ticket sales was $4 ,663.50. This made the loss on the concert $3,156.24. Since there is still a balance of $2,975.09 in BNE's budget, it was announced that a free dance-concert will be held sometime before the end of this year. Allocations made included $78 to the Political Science Department for transportation fees for a student who is being sent to a Symposium in Frenel Lick Indiana and $90 for travel expenses for BSC students who are involved in the exchange program with Virginia State University . Kolisch deligh ts audience Bloomsburg State College experienced its second hypnotizin g mysti c on Tuesday, February 20. Joh n Kolisch , a veteran star in his field of psych ological phenomena , presented a three and n half hour show to a packed audience in Haas Au ditorium. Students , faculty and townspeople were present to witness his amazing nnwinvc Mr. Kolisch has appeared on Ihe Johnny Carson , Steve Allen nnd David Susskind shows. He lias delighted many audiences with his feats of mind-readin g, RSP and hypnotism , Fliers Interpret VlbnUions At, BSC , he opened his show with a "Good evening, ladies and gentlemen ; toni ght you will be mesmerized , hypnotized , simoni/.ed. oircumsized... ", all spoken in n heavy German ac- cent . This lype of wit and humor prevailed Ihroughout his whole performance. Ho then proceeded to pick two volunteers from the audience to aid him in the first part of his show — a t demonstration of ESP. Securely blindfolded , Kolisch interpreted the color wave vibrations emitted trom objects and identified contributions from viewers. He could read a blackboard exactly, even to the point ot duplicating Greek phrases chalked on by a student volunteer. Hypnotic Ilonxos? After a ten minute intermission , twenty-five volunteers eagerly dashed onto the stage for .the second part of Kolisch' s performance. Certa i n people later left the stage , for their powers of concentration were not high enough to allow themselves to be put under the spell. Light humor and tricks were part of the first half hour. Then Kolisch hypnotized certain volunteers to sing like Aretha Franklin , crusade for Women 's Lib, dance the Charleston , and yodel , among other acts. He also performed childhood regression hypnotism , in which a young lady became six years old and related (ales of grade school and her seventh birthday party . Kolisch took this same young lady back to her before-life , in which she relayed to the audience her experiences in the year 1432. The amazing mentalist hypn ot i zed a youn g man to stretch out on two chairs so rigidly that one of his volunteers could stand on his stomach , without support ( continued on page four ) ¦ m*-,. ' :., ¦ r^ iBMlB^^HH^BMB^BM^B^BBBl^BBBB^BwBBBMBi ^B^B^^^B^^^B^i^B^B^B^B^B^B^Bj^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^" Dr. Robert MacMu r ray, Associate Professor of Economics , emphasized diffic ulties of the "4-1-4" calendar pro posal at Monday 's College Council meeting. ( Keinard Photo ) Tuition Increase is probable A tuition increase at B.S.C. and other Pa. state colleges seems to be inevitable if the legislature passes Governor Shapp 's budget for 1973-74 which holds state appropriations at last years amount. The budget as recommended has a built in tuition increase of approximately $50 which might increase to as much as $100 without any increase in state monies. In a meeting of all the state college presidents last week which President Carlson attended , Secretary of Education John C. Pittenger indicated that in addition to reducing taxes, Shapp wants to eliminate a 104 million dollar deficit in the Public School Teachers Retirement Fund. Piltenger also stated that Shapp would only accept budget increases if the legislature could find "real dollars " to cover the cost. So, Governor Shapp is asking state colleges to economize wherever they can. For Bloomsburg State, it would of mea n $253,000 worth economizing. According to Mr. James Creasy, A ss i stant to the President , all the state colleges will go before the Senate and H ouse appropriations comm i ttees somet i me i n Marc h concerning their individual budgets . Students who wish to protest the tuition increase should write to the following people in Harr i sbur g : The Honorable Milton J. Shapp Governor of Pa. Capital Office Building; The Honorable John C. Secretar y of P i ttenger , Education of Pa.. Education Building ; The Honorable Jerome Ziegler , Commissioner of Higher Education , Education Building; The Honorable Kent .D. Shelhamer, Representative of the 109th District , Capital Office Building; The Honorable Franklin L. Kury, Senator of the 27th District , Capital Office Honorable Building; The Jeanette F. Reihman , Chairman, Education Comm of the Senate Building ; Capital Office Chairman Education Commonwealth of the House, Capital Office Building; and Mr. Arthur Sinkler Chairman of SCUD Education Building. (The zip code is 17120) N ews Briefs Lost & Found The official lost and found has been changed from the security office to the information desk in the Union . (continued on page four ) Corrections" - .. . .. . Duo to a mistake by the printer, the name ol the author was inadvertantly left off of an article In Wednesday 's M&G. Since the article was of a highly opinionated nature, we would like to make It know n at this time that the article " Maya Angotou Spoke In Carver " , w hich appeared on page 1, was written by Sue Sprague, Bdltor-ln-Chlef, Also, the Husky cagirs did tromp tho Woit Chester Rams, but it was not last Saturda y night. The headllno at the bottom of page l should have read, " Hus ky Cagers Tromp Marauders. " The Marauders are Millertville 's foam. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ¦MBMh ^mmm jh^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^ ^^^^ ^^^ ^^^ R^Hmn ^mmp[mmHHHH |^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ —— —^ — —¦ — ' — ^a M M M M m M B M H a M i ¦ / fctfc H rVR D [_ RN <3 , rvi fl TioNJ flLL ^ -KtviOvJ^X ¦ I AuJfl ftD-w ir VNM NG & ^V foS CA/ ^ w i l L ^J3£ S OmEoToR I D£S1G >Mom £R You and the Draft H I " *") ¦ ( I ©SkN ir e® were not inducted for whatever liable for a later call this year). As of this writing, it seems reason. unlikely that Congress will exFurthermore , you are in EPSG tend the induction authority (but if you had an exemption or If an exdeferment which has been it is not a guarantee). " the whole granted tension is retroactively dropped at the beginning of 73 (e.g. if you situation will change since calls dropped out in October but the will he given for inductions from Board didn 't catch up to you til .June to December of 1973. January) . Accordin g to me nesi inavailable , SSS will formation If you fit the above categories , -to draft men off the dais you are in EPSG. This means attempt that : if there is a call before the at graduation this Spring, if need Senior men reading this arend of the induction authority in be. should re-read it carefully — June of 73, you are liable to be fiticle , lo see if you are rst called up. "available", then secondly to However , men who were in consider what you want to do EPSG at the beginning of either about it if you are. 1971 or 1972 cannot be drafted Please do not contact me if you (SSS Reg. 1631.6- (b) (2) ) . are unsure of your classification . Secondly, if you sought an Chock with the source — -your exemption or deferment but did local draft board . If you desire not receive it hefore 31 Dec . 72, counseling beyond that to the exemption is retroactive and examine your options, call me at you are not liable for the draft 784-0133 or drop by the Com(RPM 631.6,6(0 ) . Also , if you m u ni t y of Th e Spi r i t, 550 E. were to be drafted in January or Second St ., on Tuesd ay or February of 73, (hose orders have Thursday mornings. been cancelled — hut you have Jay C. Rochelle been automatically re-pro"cessed Protestant Campus Minister to EPSG (which means vou are Vietnam is over as far as American involvement goes...so' we are told . This must come as a relief to many college-aged men who had awaited stiff draft calls since , as we all know , it profits a man nothing by way of deferment lo be in college in 1973. But what of the draft ? Whither SSS? As of today, February 20 . here are the details as bes*t I can discern them — after seven years of counseling midst several major overhauls of the system. 1. No draft calls are expected until March. But there is a strong possibility none will be issued at all before 30 June , the expiration date on current authority of SSS to induct men . 2. If men are drafted , the number is 5500 : all will likely come from Extended Priority (EPSG). This raises the question of where you fit. 3. You are in EPSG if you (a) were classified 1-A , 1-A-0, 1-0, or 1-H on 31 December 72; (b) turned 20 in 72 and were in First Priority but not drafted ; (c) had a lottery number that was \ m \ roar> hr>H in 7*>.Q^ or hplnw anr\ (r\ ) Recor d Revi ew CRACKER BARREL Traff ic hits agai n b y Joe Mikl os Shoot At The Fantasy Factory ... Traffic In these days of the great rock slump, it's nice to know that at least one of the old standbys is capa ble of producing an unf la wed album . I can hear it now, critics screaming tha t Tra ff ic has given us "more of the same." It has been a constant falling out point , with few realizing that more of the same isn't bad. Creedence Clearwater Revival based a lon g aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiniiiimmiimiimiim = = ~jj = = = = = — =• 2 E and outstanding career on that philosophy. What IS annoying is that Traffic will receive harsh criticism for this venture,, while their style remains complex and polished , avoiding the simplistic tendencies of most purveyors of formula-rock. Getting right down to it , Shoot Out At The Fa nta sy Fa ctory is a great record. Once again, Traffic adds a success to their unbroken chain. Technically, and otherwise, the group sticks to the same style that originated on The Low ninnuiniiuimmunmniiimiiniimnninmH THE MAROON ANDGOLD Editor-in-Chiet Susa n L. Spraauc Robert Oliver Managin g Editor KarenKeinard News Editor Barb Wanchisen Assistant News Editor Joe Miklos Feature Editor Copy Editor Valery O'Connell Cartoonist JohnStugrin Frank Ptizoli, Jim Sachetti Contributing Editors Staff: Don Em, Linda Livermoro, Mary Ellen Losho, Tim Bossard , Kathy Joseph,Mart y Weir, Bill Sipler, MikeWilliams ,Georgo Garber , Mark Mehler Elaine Pongrat i 5 Business Mana ger Ellen Doyle Office Manager Advertising Manager Frank Lorah Nancy Van Pelt Circulation Manager Dan Maresh , Jr. Photography Editor Photographers: Dale Alexander, Tom Dry burg, pat White, Suii White, Sue Creel, Alanna Berger, John Andris Ken Hoffman Advisor The M&G is located at 234 Waller , or call 389-3101. All copy must be submitted by no later than 5:00 p.m. on Tuesda ys and Sundays lor the Friday and Wednesda y zz papers , respectively. The opinions voiced in the columns and feature articles of = the M&G may not necessarily be shared by the enti re staff. = Final approval of all content rests with tho Editor-in-Chief. = S S = ~j = = =j = = = = = = = s |j= = 5 jr = 5 = = = = S§ EE ss = 5 =j = = niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiffi tBHiii inmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiMiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiim ^^ H V / -- ^¦^¦^ ¦^¦^ ¦^¦^ ¦^¦^¦^HdMMBM ^HAM ^A^^^^ I^^ HM Ad _^^ _^^ _^^ g^_^^ _|^^ _^_^^^ _~^___ ^^^ IBM MHtf ^^^^^^^ ^^M MM ^^ M^^^^^^^ V_ - |^MHM ^MMBHM j ,- £ ( 7 Q t ;£ / Main St., Catawissa Spark Of High Heel Boys. Steve Winwood , organist, is a genius. And a jack of all trades. Capa ble of playing organ, piano, guitar and bass, he underlines his ability once more. As usual, Traffic has switched rhythm sections. This time it's David Hood and Roger Hawkins, noted Memphis studio musicians. Their talent was best displayed on the first Boz Scaggs album , a classic in its own right. Jim Capaldi is again in evidence. He 's a developing vocalist with a precise sense of timing. Chris Wood and Kwaku Baah also make their presence known, rounding out the "new" Tra ffic as a musical machine of intense power and pervasive insight. The group is cohesive and marvelously strong. The title cut borrows a riff from Deep Purple's "Smoke On The Water , " but cuts it short. The resul t is a smoothness that adds to the song. It plows and rocks at the same time. But outstanding is the only word for "Roll Right ' Stones," another genre piece, similar to "Low Spark ." Each plunk of the bass and bang on the piano adds force to what could easily be a dull and uninspiring song. The lyrics are suited to the here and now , with death and Oldies Month of March Fri . & Sot . nites March 2—Corner Store Featuring Chris and the Cruisers (Rock Revival of the 50's) March 3—Jay & The Techniques ( Apple Peaches Pumpkin Pie) March 9—Haji (well-known local group) March 10—Orlons (Watusi ) (South Street) March 16 - 17 Angels (He's A Rebel) March 23 - 24 Gary U.S. Bonds (Quarter to Three ) March 30 - 31 Duvals (Bristol Stomp) For more Information about tickets and times call 356-2076 (conti nue d on page four ) - ^B /"* ^HMMH ^H^^^ AM ^flM ^^^^ AAM ^M |^ ^ ^ H ^^MMM ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ r^ t » A C w j| *¦ M^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ - ———— ^ t^^^^^ J^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^H h^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ >H 0 r l \ y 0 r l K.^—»—^—_ j> c | r" |1 V . \l . ^^ H 1 9 ^ ^^ ^^ f^t^t^t^t^t^t^t^t^t^tj Cagers upset by MSC by bob oliber The Mounties of Mansfield played the spoiler role to a "T" Wednesday night as they hustled their way to a 74-69 victory over the how co-leaders of the PA. Conference Huskies. The Huskies now must play the two toughest games on their schedule - East. Stroudsburg and Cheyney away. The Mounties used a combination of fine shooting and strong rebounding to add to the Huskies terrible outside shootj ng and bad breaks and win the game going away. In the early going, neither team could mount much of a lead. Joe Kempski played a f ine half . scoring 10 points and holding tough swing-man Lomax to six. The many times tied game remained that way until the half , when the Mounties edged to a two-point , 41-39 lead. Mo unt ies pull aw a y The Mounties spurted to a six point lead four minutes into the period , behind some hot shooting. They upped this margin to ten , 554b , two minutes later as the Huskies were getting called for many fouls. The Huskies cut that margin to six , 59-53, but then John Willis was hit with his fourth foul of the night and had to be benched , and the Huskies were out of the game with ten minutes left in the game. The Huskies did close to five, but the Mounties successfully froze-off any damage. The Huskies now must win both remaining games for the Eastern Division , PA Cbnf. Championships, a tough schedule at worse. Stroud is tomorrow night — give the team your support. Hu sk y notes : The Husky shot :$8.4 percent to the Mounties 53.4...Kempski led all scorers with 19...Willis was held to 14 points and 12 rebounds...Tabish of Mansfield, who didn 't play in the first meeting of the two teams, led the Mounties with 16 points. John Willis can't make every shot, as witnessed by this Fry block of his shot . ( Keinard Photo ) Track tonig ht Tonight the BSC trackmen will tators, so all are welcome to host another indoor track meet in attend. Starting time is 6:30. Schedule of events are starting the Nelson field house. The times : High Jump — 6:30; Pole Huskies will host Susquehanna John Willis, Gary Tyler , and Joe Kempski battle for a loose rebound. Vault; Shot Put ; 50 yd. Hurdles (Oliver Photo ) University. Lycoming College, (trials ) — 7:00; 45 yd. Dash and Bucks County Community (trials ) — 7:10; 50 yd. Dash College. The Husky cindermen should (trials) —7:15 ; Mile Run —7:30 ; he up for this meet after they 440 yd. Dash — 7:45; 880 yd. Run thrashed Gettysburg last week, — 7:55; 50 yd. Hurdles (finals) — 96-18. Tonight' s meet should 8:05; 45 yd. Dash (finals) —8:15; prove interesting as each school 50 yd. Dash (finals) — 8:25; 600 w ill provide excellent runners in yd. Run — 8:30; 8 lap relay — 8:40; 2 mile run — 8:50; 2 mile the various individual events. relay — 9:05 ; mile relay — 9:15. The meet is open to all specyear's state champ and Ron BSC. With his plans for the future by "Howie " Mehler decked a heavyweight over 100 the Huskies should once again The Bloomsburg State Huskies return to national prominence. finish up their wrestling season pounds heavier than he. Good luck to the Coach and his CONGRATULATIONS this weekend with the State squad at the states and we're Considering the handicap of Championships at Shippensburg . looking forward to next n!^H8 Action starts Friday night and lack of depth . Coach Sanders eagerly year championship (we 's hope!) must be congratulated on the ' ¦LVHaVS 'SPv^HB&ittHH continues until the finals on a^BMKui ^^ squad. results of his Dremier season at Saturday night. •¦^^^ ^ Due to the run-in with the ^fkki^L^LV^L^L^L^L^L^L^H^i^L^L^L^L^L^L^L^LV ,*«^^^^^^^ ^L^L^LVLWL^L^L^L^^H^LY^i^L^L^L^^ ^^^^ ^^L^L^L^L^L^L^H NCAA , no Huskies will be allowed to continue on to national tournaments. lie — The clear favorite appears to be • Grapple rs will be compe titiv e Finals at Shippensburg HHHHHHHHHrrT vHHa ^^ diflHKl State Outlook Although BSC has only a 7-8 record in overall dual meets we should fare well at Shippensburg. In the weaker , lower weights our grapplers shouldn 't go far. However , the middle and upper weights should be another story. Lon Edmonds at 134 will be in strong contention for the state crown. Along with Lon will be possible place winners Brian Berry at 142 and strong contender Randy Watts at 150. In the upper weights the Huskies shine. Three topnotch grapplers represent BSC. At 167 (East Stroudsburg Open Runnerup) Dan Burkholder (12-2-1 ) will he making a convincing bid for . Tom Cox (SR) . Gary Ventlml glla (LH), and Jack Spates (SR) with Craig Turnbull (Clar) ¦Dan DeMarines (Edln ) all have excellent and Tom Boudreau (Cat) capable of causing ,records. trouble. 1S8 — There is no particular standout here 126 — Artie Kahn (ESSC) looks like th e one vwhic h could resu lt in a 150-pounder mov ing to beat with Tom Hanley (Clar) having the up to take top honors. Charles Burke (Clar) best chance to pull an upset. ,is me chief bulwark to the expected invasion. 134 — In a well-balanced group, Lon Ed167 — NCAA champion Wade Schalles mon ds (BSC) has defeated all the top con- (Clar) is in the midst of a great colle giate te nders in dual competi tion oxcopt errat ic career. Dan Burkholder (BSC) and Don Jack Martin (Man). Adams .- flfjI^^^^^^^ BtghK * B.S.C. Senior Mike Armstron g is Manager at the Blo omsbur g Store of Arcus Brothers Stereo Cente rs Mike can be found at Arcus Brothers any afternoon and all day Saturday. He has been with Arcus Brothers since 1971. Come Down and talk to Mike. WT . ¦ X: Terry Lee leads the half-mile in last weeks indoor meet with Gettysburg. (Oreef Photo) | uL Bjji ^BB^^ BB|||W ^K^^ B^^^^^^^^^^^^ B^B fJJ||^^^^^Hg|fab x^| 'J miiWm t H S m^S m t S S I^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^M ^l BSIllm^B^^^^^amS^KH^^^^^KKiBB^^^^^^^^^^^ M I ^i^f ^^^^^^ ARCUS BROTHERS Ihn Mllo DYNAMIC DUO At 177 and 190 Bloomsburg 's answer to the insurmountable Caped Crusaders , "Shorty " Hitchcock and Ron Sheehan are favori tes to win it all, Showing ( heir fantastic skills Sheehan has had a superlative season with a 12-2 record and Hitchcock has complimented that by going 14-0. Within recent weeks both have been amnzing. Against Millersville . "Shortv " Dinned last OaB Main St., Bloomsburg , Pa. Seminar Series ( continued from page one) Traffic As a part of an International Seminar Series for 1972-73 , scholars and artists from Africa , the Carihbean , Latin America and Asia will be programmed for brief visits to U.S. campuses for lectures, seminars , classes, and to meet informally with students and faculty. The Series is intended as a service to both the academic community and the visiting scholars and is arranged by the Overseas Liaison Committee of the American Council destruction as the theme. Only" the strong, the roll right stones , will survive. "Uninspired" and "Tragic Magic " are also fine pieces, rockers of quality and excellence. "Evening Blue " is quiet and pretty , another formula piece this time resembling "Hidden Treasure ." If Traffic is becoming a formula band , the rock scene could use more like them. With things becoming more and more trite , Shoot Out is a tribute to what nn TTHnpatinn could and should be happening. The OLC Secretariat will It' s fine rock , or stone, as the arrange lecture programs in- case may be. dividuall y, matching insofar as And Traffic hasn 't let us down possible, the interests of the yet. lecturers with those of the host institutions. Travel expenses and honoraria will be provided by the Overseas Liaison Committee. OLC welcomes inquiries from FTD Florists institutions interested in participating in the International fro m all over Eastern Pa. Seminar Series. We're happy to host at BSC this weekend 1 or 2 Girls wan t ed large 4 bedroom apar t ment near col lege W^^O»4i»tr|r W»rM«Mc Call 784-5275 or 784-3365 Down TIm Hill On East S». Miller Office Supp ly Co. HEADQUARTERS OF HALLMARK CARDS I 72 N. Iron St. I and Amplifier s ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦.^. ^ ^ ¦ ¦ ¦^¦ ¦ ¦¦ ¦ ^ ^ ^ ^ ¦ ^ ^ ¦ ¦ ¦^ ^ BMMi ^^^ M^B^BMI ^^^^ BWBBMBB ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ John 's Food Market ¦ i^i ^ ^ Othe >- wrestlers with a good chance to be ^ among the place winners include: 118 — Dave Whare (Mil ), Joe Hill (Kotz ); 126 — Mark Honess ( S R ) , Bruce Shumaker (Edin ) ; 134 — Steve Senior (ESSC), Len Ferraro (SR), Rod Patterson (Cal); 142 — Lou Conway (LH), Jim Sykes (Ind ), Jim Bria (Ship) ; ISO — Chris Clark (Clar ), Rich Zinck (Mil ) ; 158 — Bill Carr (SR), Kevin Hayes ( BSC), Lou Demyan (Kutz) ; 167 — Randy Haught (Cal), Joe Jacquclin (Mil ), Ralph Povorotto (Edin ) ; 190 — Bob Gordon (Clar ) ; and HWT — Jim Schuster (LH) . * by Dallas R. Harris THE STUDIO SHOP every Saturday =| H O L I DA Y S Acapulco Miami 3I JAMA ICA Jjj l Bahamas Puerto Rico Europe jji Everywhere! q|Hawaii LtWCROUPPRICKt I LIMITED SPACE! Q| l"" i ryn / '^Mk- 2158791620 n^Sm *! H K i a H i lam • i^l—1 11 lfef « HRfSfiwl d^ lffr I kocV. pj P.O. Box 621 Haven , Penna . 17745 Lock or call 717-748-2813 HWT. — Although last year ' s winne r Tom Herr (Edin ) returns, the favor ite will be frcstvnan Chuck Coryea (Clar ). Veteran Frank Myers (Ship) will also challen ge. Available at We order Record Promotion Sale Fantastic Values from s ?.29 to $ 9.98 Lovecraft Unlimited 190 — Undefeated Floyd Hitchcock (BSC) has had his usual superb yea r and will be seeking his second P5CAC title. Competition will come Irom Jim Zoscheg (Mil) and George Enos (SR). 59 E. Main St., Bloomsbur g 784-2818 I Over 300 Guit ars with a Freshme n - Sophomo i ss or • Career Upp erclassm en — Beanba g Waterbed and Furniture & all Head Items Posters - Jewelry Send Shor t Resume ' to repeat. Other entries include upset-minded Ron Shechan (BSC ), a 1971 champion , and Bill Shullstall (SR ) . Collec tions! beg innin g Februar y 26, 1973 Male or Female Lovecra ft Unlimited ( continued from page thr«M* > Sheet Music ! Music! Sales Representat ives Sought ! PLEASE SEND MI MORE INFORMATION Hi ^H ¦ ""is; ¦ ^^ HjhIRw. Wi "" 1NTKR-COLLE0IATE I^B9JM1I IVVft liA .1 M^^By^al city une y n) (rrv\ -A. YAsL S!? %i J ^u3- ^J 5| HT rW ^fl >V^ ^ ^ SCW0 °L HOLIDAYS INC . 7616 ave. rHiuontHiA , pa. 19151 flWhxrJ fly^^jjci'g C0HTACT SCH001Rlp: ^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^ SeIMI^s KO If you have majored in W. Main & Leonar d St. Open 8 a.m. to 12 midnight Dail y Delicatessen Business Adm inistration Full line of groceries & snacks Data Processin g Eppley 's Pharmacy MAIN A IRON STREETS Acco untin g or Economics t he Marine Corps ca n guaran tee you a 2Va year posi tion in our supply or Data Processing fields. The star ting salary will be $8 ,674.00 wih sizable and freque nt increases. Pnt erlpHon Sptda lM •CHANEL ?GUERUIN •FABERGE •coVy Ritte r 's Office Supply 112 E. Main St. Bloomsburg, 784-4323 available in the Graduate Office for the Nath a n O . Sch a ff e r Memorial Scholarship which is awarded annually ifor advanced study in Education. Each applicant must he a teacher who is a citizen of Pa. and have a baccalaureate degree from a college recogniz ed by the State Board of Education. The scholarship amounts to$500. Candidates must app ly to the Secretary of Education before June 1. present s AND GIFTS Ptione 784-2561 •MAX FACTO* Gntri Stampi BSC Speaker Series "Programs In Child Community Mental Health" will be the? topic February 26 of an informal presentation held in Ihe Bakeless Lounge , at 2 PM. Areas covered will include: E ducational assessment and t herapy for children with learning pr oblem s , arts programs in the therapy area , and family therapy and pa rent counselling. Scholarshi p Appli cation blanks are The College Store 18 West Mai n Street, Bloomsburg, Pa. •LANVIN •PRINCE MATCHABELU •ELIZABETH ARDEN •HELENA RUBENSTEIN •DANA Tickets for The Roar of the Grees epa int - t hc Sm el of th e Crowd will go on sale in the Haas Cent er box office starting Mond ay, between 11 AM and 4 PM. I Hartzel ' s Music Store * ^^ PLOWEWS ^ ( continue d fro m page one) of any kind under his back . Finishing hi s pe r for ma nce . Kclisch warned of the dangers of fooling with psychic phenom ena . ;ind announced that ho would be av a ila ble back sta ge to answ er any questions the audience might wish to ask . Play Tickets I *33ftti£|U's to share [ Briefs ( continued fr om page two) State Outlook Hypnotist Marine Corps Representatives will be at Elwell Hall ' between the hours of 10:00 A.M.-2:00 P.M. on Feb. 26, 27, 28 & March 1