Hie Darkness Before The Resurrection— 1968111 . • : ' ' * We Are The Stuff That Dreams Are Made On Gone but not forgotten Conflict & CoiiseHSiis R. I. P. Starting Out In '68 South is North & 'ere the twain shall meet. Only you can prevent forest fires. You'll never guess what flew into my window. Homo of tho Gladfl y 1 Richard Nixon? t BLOOM "Tnko a hint — I' m gettin g dUguitod." — J. Griffith .-^ 't ^A LETTERS... When you add up the ten chunks of money you get $10,230. Obviously it's impossible for you Dear Editor: sheet, the Gladfly, prints some low and your friends to ever get the In regard to the editorial in the cut material, often it adds at least full action i.e. 10 times $10,230 or May 18 issue of the Maroon and a little humor to an otherwise dis- $102,300. For you to get that much 20,460 people would have to buy Gold concerning the Orientation mal scene. Then there's the PSC Literary and sell (except the last 10,230 Committee, we feel a few stateand Film Society. This organiza- who just buy) which is twice the ments should be clarified. First of all, there seems to be tion seems to be little more than at. population of Bloomsburg. No, the some question concerning the pur- clearing house for Grade Z smut selling stops long before that when pose of the Orientation Committee. films such as "Nude Restaurant" there is no one left in town who already bought the letter Our purpose is to familiarize in- (the bill incidently for which all hasn't coming freshmen with all aspects of us are paying because of the once. However, if the chains on of life at Bloomsburg State College, generosity of Shultz who has sing- which your name is listed from go, you can make a not to harass "frosh." After attend- ly allotted funds for this debacle. ) one to seven ,270 and if five of your total of $1 Why do those in charge allow such ing various workshops previous to friends are turning over their gains the start of Orientation, we feel despicable and repressive specta- to you that's $6,350. Also, if you cles? that the members we have chosen can start the game a couple of What is all this degeneration and will be able to adequately and eftimes a year, or go up and down fectively carry out the duties of the discontent coming to? I came here the valley starting them in several because I liked the institution and committee. Also, we have already other gullible towns you should be what it stood for and I believe that planned to have a special session able to make the $10,000 the letter with freshmen commuters to deal if my discontent would become that talks about very easily. great, then I should terminate my specifically with their problems ' How can people lower down the and/or questions. This has been association with this institution for when there is no chance they can one which better suits my purdone in the past. make anything (the whole state of poses. This is how I feel and how Of all those students who signed Penn. would have to be buying) I believe others should feel. they If up for the committee, 34% were and when there is a very good chosen. Of the 218 students who don't like the way things are here, chance that if the game has gone then they should leave! I also beapplied for committee membership, on for even a little while they lieve that those espouse who so 16 of those were commuters. Of won't be able to sell? How can the residents who signed up, 32% the philosophy of doom and change they be so- immoral as to sell the for the change sake of should be were chosen; of the commuters letter to two of their friends who who signed up, 31% were selected. prepared for the ramifications chains be so gullible as to buy How can we, as co-chairmen, pro- therefrom. I like the way things are either going to be stuck with portion the residents to the com- are now, respect those who are it or will have to stick four of their muters when only a small group of responsible for maintaining what is friends? The answer of course, is commuters showed any interest at right, and resent those who want that we adults carry a lot of the to change things for me. Though all? child in us including the baby we We are confident that with full I doubt it greatly at this point , I once were. The child in us wants co-operation of all persons involved would hope that next year's CGA something for nothing the same in the coming Orientation Commit- would be the stalwart that would way we got something for nothing tee, we will meet the needs of all set us on the right path . we were kids. (We had to D. Michael Brauner when freshmen. then or we would have died.) The As a fa miliar quote goes, "Reachild is also very immoral when it son without passion is sterile , but To the Editor: comes to getting what it needs to passion without reason is hysteriA chain letter has been running survive. If you can develop the cal." through the town for several weeks habit of seeing the child every time Co-Chairmen of now and I thou ght as an Economics you confront an adult, that is all Orientation Committee teacher, I owed it to the people of the skill you need to become a sucBloomsburg to explain how some cessful "con man." Mike Pillagalli and of them, at least, could make much Carol Grimm Student activists, interestingly more from chain letters than they enough, seem to have made the are making now. Dear Editor: same discovery of truth as the conFirst Rule: Never buy a letter. fidence man. The students have beAs a freshman here at BSC I've spent the past year attempting to The only way to make much is to come aware that the adults who acquaint myself with the policies be one of the originators, one of having been, giving them orders all and governing principles of the the first sellers. these years are nothing more than This is how to go about it. Get immoral children themselves. If by college and finally to assimilate myself into the realms of the aca- together with 9 friends. If possi- non-violent protest the students demic community. My first impres- ble , try to get as many of them could get us to face up to our resions of the school were given to from your own family, in-laws, girl- sponsibilities and laziness, they me by then President Reinhold frie nds, etc. When they start re- might do us a lot of good. Violent Shultz. His pessimistic declarations ceiving money maybe they will protest a la S.D.S. is j ust as emothat hot day in September started turn it over to you. tional and childish an action as me wondering what I could possiDraw up 10 letters with your ten any we commit. bly be in for. When I later saw him names on them . Your name will be Back to chain letters. What in action on CGA, I found his over- first on one of the letters, second about the "law" preventing you all behavior to be obnoxious , not on an othe r, third on another, and from making your $10,000/year? at all befitting the supposed pedes- so o n . Distribute to each friend Well , the law says that chain lettal upon which the President of and yourself the letter on which ters are a form of lottery (which CGA should be held. He lost the his name appears tenth. Ask them they are not , since people down office a good deal of respect and to make as many copies as they the chains have a 0 chance of winthe prospects for regaininK lost \hink they can sell with a $5 money ning and those who start the letstature do not look good for the order on each letter made out to ters have a 100% chance of winimmediate future . tho person on the top of the list. ning) and they are therefore illeThen I saw that publication of You and your friends start selling. gal. But after talking with a local the left - wing pseudo - intellectual Try to start the letters off in a fac- law officer, I don't think you'll ever liberals on campus, the Gadfly, and tory (particularly where there are have to worry about prosecution. I became more distraught and dis- a lot of dumb , gullible women) or Instead of offering me any help in mayed at the state of affairs. To a dormitory, or a large office. If stopping further spread of the letanalyze this sheet, one would feel you can sell to someone in author- ter or in protecting students from that we here at BSC are suspended ity in the factory or dormitory you being talked into buying them, he in the innermost dungeons of hell can count on him or her using his seemed to relish the thought that from which escape is all but im- authority and wide acquaintainship some "bushy-haired" radical stupossible. The so-called editor of to push the letter through many dents and faculty like "Percy," who work them up, might be stuck with this publication and those who sub- ha nds. "They would have it comin. letters. money rolling Now the starts acquaint mit to it, would do well to themselves with the writers of op- Your name moves up to the top of ing to them," (Unfortunately for timism and veer away from tho the list along ten separate chains. the local law man it hasn't been n ihilis t ic Nietz che an philosophy If you and your friends have only the "radicals ," students or faculty which is so arrogantly abundant sold two copies each , the chains de- who have been dumb enough to fall within the confines of this publica- liver to you money in the following •^•^^ tion. Perhaps at times that other wa y! $10, $20, $40, $80... $5, $120. Wed.. May 21. 1969 " M A ROON & GOLD EUGENE LESCAVAGE Butlniu Managtr JOSEPH GRIFFITHS Bditor-in-Chhl Manag ing Editor Ntvi Editors Cop/ Editor Spot It Editors ftaturt Idiion Photography Editor M DIfctor AaVtrl/«in o Manag.r Circulation Managtr ; .^ . . . S .^ ' Acfvuor RICHARD AV Ac GE,u Vol. XLVH. No. 48 DAVE MILLER BILL TEITSWORTH, MICHAEL HOCK TOM FUNK CLARK RUCH, VIC KEELER ALLAN MAUSER , MIKE STUGRIN MIKE O'DAY dor REMSEN NANCY STEPANOWICZ ROBERT GADINSKI Additional Stall , REPORTERS. Mart in Kl«inor ?am Von *PP' v PHOTOGRAPHY. ^ Aiif WIror nkVMt Um)o S(,n|, »JJ ' JX £0T T . ADVERTISING. TYPISTSi Prliellla Clark oinny Potttr Harris Wolf * Su|On Seh#nek 5u|on 2o)ftto JOHN DENNEN, Faculty flui/n *j i Consultant Th* MAROON & GOLD It located on th* itcond floor of WolUr Hall. N*wi may be submitted by call ing 784-4660, Ex*. 323, or by contacting Ih* paptr through Box 391. Tht MAROON & GOLD , a mtrnbtr of tht Pennsylvania Star* Cotltgt Prtii Aiioelatlon , Is pubttihtd ai rt*ar bi-WMkty at ponlbt * by, for and through th* f**i of the itudtnti of Dloomiburg Slat* Colltg *, Bloomiburg, Ptnmylvanlo , All oplnlom •xprtiiad by colurnniilt and f»otui * wrltari , including lelt»n-to-!h«-»dltor , or* not n*c*uarily thoi * of Ihil publication but the»* of tht Individual!. OUiUalJUqk t . .. Adcm'* Apple Seriousand not-so-seriousAwards To BUI Sander's for Awe, and Humility. To Ron Schulz for perseverance, determination, guts, and failure. To Anita Donovan for her Joan of Arc spirt. To James Percy for having all his buttons. To Dr. Skehan for his valiant battle against conglomerates. To P.R. Roberts for being a poet , a painter, and a defender of the Arts. To Brian Mcleran for promoting the poetry of high school students in the '69 Olympian. To Tim Shannon, who is worth more gold than anyone else on campus. To Karl Kramer for his excellent imitation of Tim Shannon. To Michael J. McHale for bringing a little class to Bloomsburg. To Harvey A. Andruss for lasting 30 years. To Harvey A. Andruss for quitting after 30 years, and not quoting Dickens' line, "It is a far better thing I do, than ever I have done before." To Elton Hunsinger, for being a good coach. To Charlas Dumplesnurch, for being totally unknown to anybody. To Robert A. Haller, for not hiding his limp as he carried his cross. To Stan Rakowsky for running for office after office, in the face of demoralizing defeats. To Stan Rakowsky for being M&G's funniest columnist. To Anthony Sylvester, for the Black American Conference. To Jeff Prosseda, for service above and beyond the call of duty to a roommate. To Glo Wilson , for gaining more Committee appointments than anyone in the world. To Chuck Blankenship, for infiltrating The Veterans into CGA, The Day Men , and Husky Lounge. To Mr. Murphy, for driving rats In-, sane. To John Detrichson, for his cultivated air of sophisticated superiority. To Joe Griffiths, for surviving. To Dave Bollen , for caring enough to have demands. To Mr. Mulka, for looking like a cantaloup. To Officer Stout, for getting his picture printed in the M&G and subsequently being fired. To Officer Ruckle, for his swift apprehension of Officer Stout following the printing of his picture in the M&G. for th o chain lette rs , but rothor the "well dressed , polite kids " that the law man likes and the older facu lty who are hi s friends .) I suppose you can 't blame tho people downtown for believin g the false rumor that thoro are a lot of radicals on campus, Since there wasn 't the slightest fact ual report in tho town pap or of what went on at the Washington Birthday for 600, all the/ have to go on is rumor. The local law man was so uncooper ative , I hod to call a lawyer before I could find out that chain letters were in fact illegal. I can also report to those of you who are thinking of ori ginating a letter the comfort ing news that if you wont to run the letter throu gh tho (Contlnutd on pog i 3) To Judy Knapp for not spitting on two notorious feature editors. To Amy Raber for playing a lead role like a character part And succeeding. To Boyd Buckingham for the unbelieveable feat of reading each issue of the M&G cover to cover. To Cinde Rogers for talking faster than the speed of sound. To Kathy Kahili for charismatic leadership and mandatory meetings of the ARW. To Mr. Mulka for being the most successful elementary geography major in his graduating class. To Mr. Aceirno, for having a successful play without extensive publicity help from the M&G. To the editor of the Gladfly, for the worst jokes in the history of language. To Mary Ann Hartman for her hard work on the M&G , also for her attendance record which never began and never ended. To Erich Frohman, for being articulate despite his accent. To the sunbathers of South Hall, for greatly improving the scenery between the Commons and Ben Franklin, and clap, clap. To Dean Tolan, for being a goodlooking Dean of Women and for helping to bridge the generation gap. Officer Stout— discharged to the l»BB Gr aduates , for being the 1969 graduates. ' To The Liter ary and Film Society, for showin g "The Nude Restaurant " and not bein g raided. To Martin Glldea , for bein g the epitome of moderation , while espousing not-so-moderato ideas. To Ron Schulz , for not lettin g cynicism get the bost of his wit. To Jam es Percy, for keeping a picture of Lyle Slack on his office wall. One final award must go to those who were not afraid to get involved and who cared enough to help make the M&G a worthwhile venture. So long until September. ' f . M All Over ! Husky Sports Reviell 1 itiiT in ,._ . in _i ; ; : . . - . i - ~ •-• - tt^™^^"""*" — *->, Dulaney: Mr. Scorer '^H^^PVHBV^^^^^B^^^^^HV^WW^^^BW^*^' v #VWWW The Hoopmen n^M^MMMWWW^^^WMMWWW^^^^^4W^HMV^WB ¦ «^H^W *MWWV^U S^VHHmmv^P^B^^P^^B«v«M^'*-*— ¦¦ ¦ ¦¦ ' Varsity Record: Won 12 Lost 10 Head Coach: EARL VOSS TENNIS Season Record: Won Lost Head Coach: BURT ON REESE WH^VH^HV^^^^H^W^^^M^^^IflH^VflHHi^HmBH^^HHB^^^^MIB^^S^^HIBV^^HH^^^^IHHMI^^^^HI^BMPOvflHBv^^^^vii^K^^V^^H^^^^W^^QvQ^m^Wvv^^^^^^^^^^BS^^^^^v^^^v Griddeis Hustleto Fail Season Varsity Record: Won 3 Lost- 4 Tied 1 Head Coach: JERRY DENSTORFF BASEBALL Season Record: Won 6 Lost 3 Tied 1 Head Coach: CLARK BOLER CROSS COUNTRY Season Record: Won 3 Lost 5 Head Coach: CLYDE NOBLE Wrestlers Better Than Ever Last Season Varsity Record: Won 12 Lost 3 Head Coach: RUSSELL E. HOUK LETTERS... (Continued f rom page 2) Varsity Record: Won 4 Lost 3 H ead Coa ch: RONALD PUHL Dalane y foi 2 of 44 pts. against LHSC Remember the 1968-69 basketball season ? Snyder 's last second shot against K-town and the come from behind victor y over Millersville. college dormitories and through the faculty (the best places in town ) you can probably get away with it A letter has been running around the college for several weeks and I have not seen it effectively stopped. Over a week ago I wrote an a d min ist rat or about a letter-selling campaign I heard was taking place in Elwell Hall. I haven 't even rece ived an acknowledgement. I asked h im to t ake measures to brin g about the restitution of money to those students who were stuck with letters because t here was no one left in the dorm to whom the y could sell. If every student who has bought a letter would contact the person whose name is on the top of the letter (and to whom he has sent a $5 money order ) and re quest a return of $5, the n the ori ginators and p romoters of the letter would lose whatever gains the y had made and would therefore be unlikely to try to exploit the student body again. Simply telling a few people to quit selling any more letters is not going to prevent a recurrence , since the promoters have gotten to keep their winnings. If we don 't act soon before the semester is over it will be difficult (although not impossible) to work out restitution next year. Deake G. Porter M&G' s Top Athletes 1968 - 69 GOLF Varsi ty Record: Won 11 Lost 1 Head Coach: JERRY THOMAS ^MjP Varsity Record: Won 9 Lost 2 Tied 1 Head Coach: ELI McLAUGHUN Dr. Harvey A. Andruss, who will\ ,need for a Dean of a School of Arts retire this fall after 30 years as; and Sciences, a Dean of a School President of Bloomsburg State Col- of Educat ion , a Dean of a School lege, and Mrs. Andruss were hon- of Business, a Dean of a G ra duate ored during the annual spring ban- School, and a Dean at the head of quet held by the Faculty Associa- such other curriculur divisions as they are approved In the expandtion in the College Commons. An illuminated scroll and a color ing curriculums. television set were presented to Dr. "Earlier faculty recruitment, inAndruss by ^Dr. Edson Drake, out- dependent of the delays incident to going President of the Faculty As'- the passage of the budget is necsociation. Mrs. Andruss received an essary. At the present time, the facengraved silver tray. In presenting ulty numbers 250. Of the present the scroll, Dr. Drake stated that "it faculty, 160 have been at BSC less was virtually impossible to ade- than five years; ten percent have quately acknowledge Dr. Andruss's not met the legal experience recontribution to the well being of quirements, and are therefore apBloomsburg State College through- pointed on a temporary basis. If out his many years of service." Dr. the institution is to improve, the Drake concluded , "Bloomsburg quality and number of faculty is State College can never forget the most important consideration what you did here." Mrs. Andruss in this area. was congratulated for her contribu"The fees paid by the studen's tion and tremendous assistance to Dr. Andruss throughout his tenure. should be collected in a fairly definite ratio in relation to State apThe scroll presented to Dr. An- propriations. Thus, if the student druss, contains the following in- pays one dollar, the State should scription: "With his vision and pur- adopt a policy that it would approsuit of excellence as guides, Dr. priate three dollars, four dollars, • Harvey A. Andruss has served or five dollars, exclusive of all fees Bloomsburg State College as Presi- paid for board , laundry, and other dent during three decades of un- services. precedented growth: from teachers "Attention to the development of college to state college, with the atthese colleges as multi-purpose intendant expansion in curricular and degree offerings; from a few stitutions or universities, the planbuildings to an «ever-increasing ning and development of a second campus complex; and from a fac- campus, the administratiive reorulty numbered in dozens to one of ganization , the improvement of fac250. As testimony of its apprecia- ulty, and the adoption of a basis of tion for his 30 years of leadership, financial support will make the" the faculty of BSC presents this tri- 1970-1980 decade a memorable one." bute to its retiring President." Dr. Andruss continued by indiIn response, President Andruss cating that he and Mrs. Andruss recalled his almost four decades at were grateful to the community of Bloomsburg State College, and tried to view the decade ahead. Bloomsburg, to the householders "Pennsylvania for many years," he who accommodate students in their stated , "has viewed the private or homes, to the businessmen, to the parochial colleges and universities Board of Trustees—particularly to with greater favor than its public its Presidents of the last thirty institutions. This grows out of the years: Peg. S. Hemingway, Esq., early aj ttitude that the public Judge Wm. Kreisher , Mr. Fred schools were for "paupers ," or Diehl , and Mr. William A. Lank those who could not pay the higher for their consistent support of detuition charges of private schools. veloping college policies. Tributes were also paid to the Since the normal schools were an extension of «¦¦•"- BarberShop • Quality l ' '*""7"" ¦ '" "" ' Young Repub. On May 15 the Young Republicans held their last meeting of the year and set the stage for moving forward next year. Elections for next year's office rs were held and results are as follows: John Bilder , formerly treasurer, -President ; Phyllis Block and Allen Neyhard re-elected to the respective off ices of Vice-president and Corresponding Secretary; Noreen Tatusko-Recording Secretary; and Gary Yetter- Treasurer. President-elect Bilder announced that he had been working on a budget for next year and would be prepared to report on it at the first meeting of the year. The organization is also hoping to provide services to the community and to supply speaker for the college community. ¦¦ ¦¦ I 1 Becker Motor Co. VOLKSWAGEN 1 «««««« *#»»# *** »»»**»»»»**»*»*«¦< j Miller Offic e Supp ly Co. 18 W. Main St. BLOOMSBURG ,PA. RU . 1 1/ 1 5 SiUNSOROVE , PBNNA. 743-1314 William J. Sproule, a native ol Lansford, Pennsylvania, has been named Assistant Professor of Health and Physical Education and Assistant Football Coach at Bloomsburg State College, according to Dr. Harvey A. Andruss, President. Under Head Coach Jerry Denstorff , Sproule will serve as offensive line coach, replacing Cecil Turberville, wh o w ill d evote more time to his duties as head trainer and freshman line coach. Sproule received his elementary education in Lansford, Pennsylvania and attended Coaldale High School. He then attended Valley Forge Military Academy for a year prior to matriculating at Syracuse University, wh ere h e received his Bachelor of Arts degree in Physical Education. He did graduate work at the State University of New York at Cortland, New York University, and Ithaca College before receiving his Master of Science degree in Physical Education at Brooklyn College, Brooklyn , N.Y. Sproule, who will join the faculty at B.S.C, this summer, is currently employed by the Waterville Central School District No. 1, Waterville, N.Y. as a coach and as Boy's Physical Education and Driver Education teacher; he has held this position for the past three years. Prior to that time he was at Smithtown Central District No. 1, Smithtown, K.Y. where he was a physical education teacher and coach. From May, 1981 to August, 1962, he was with the U.S. Army at Fort Dix, New Jersey and Fort Benning, Georgia as a 2nd Lieutenant and Commanding Officer of a Battalion" " " THE STUDIO SHOP |_ rt MOYER Pharmacy . - —-— - Sat.-Sun., 7-8 Jun. .. Closed Mon., 9 Jun. .. OPEN 7:50 a.m.-10:00 p.m. - - - - ¦ - ¦- , ¦ ' | •», Specialis t • aiANEi • GUEILAIN • MBEKGE • • • • • • • IANV1N PRINCE MATCHA8EUI ELIZABETH ARDEN ¦ HELENA RU8ENSTEIN DANA COTY MAX FACTOR Qt—m I tam pi Charlie ' s FLOWERS 784-4406 Bonded World Wide Delivery Phono 784-4292 Your J eweler Away fro m Home Si*uij-L'Lrvj\n. rjt nri i _i _nji j i ri iTjn_i i _rT_riji _n_ri-OjM*ir>fk ^i/ • • t *^m *Fmi *wim *r+m « • « « » « 9 -> U- J'-nr i f - J / n r j _i J- j- j- jruf-onurunj - J J- rij" . 1 r r n .1 ^ 1 W*st Main St. Phont: 784-4388 I Fri.-Sun., 30 May-1 Jun. .. Closed _ WAFFLE GRILLE TOILET GOODS COSMETICS RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES GREETING CARDS !> W. Main St. Mon.-Thurs., 26-29 May .. OPEN 8:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. __ ....; © Fr— Prescription Del/very ' Library hours between terms: " BLOOM BOWL Your Prescription Druggis t ROBERT G. SHIVE ,R.P. ¦ Size infantry unit. At WatervUle Central Hi«b Schob Tlie had been head football, track and baee»>all coach. At Smithtown Central High School , he was assistant varsit y football , wrestling and baseball coach. At Fort Dix, N.J. with the U.S. Army , he was game captain and Director of the Post Football Clinic. He played his college football with the 1959 National Champion team at Syracuse under the Coach of the Year, Floyd "Ben" Schwartzwalder. That year, Syracuse played In the Orange Bowl and the following year, Sproule again played with the Orange in the Cotton bowl. In addition to football, he participated in a number of sports at the Valley ' Forge Military Academy and Coaldale High School. While attending Syracuse, Sproule wa s on th e Dean's List for six semesters and was named "Outstanding Senior" in the Department of Athletics and Physical Education Teacher Training Division. Phone 784-6560 59 E. MAIN ft ' " " Pl^ §f @W§ C^STIH Frames &Prints Si *- HPE Prof. anflilr ila I Fri. 9 a.m.-9 p.m. / Closed Wed. 486 W. MAIN ST. • ¦ ¦-¦¦in 'i ' —¦'¦¦-— The final meeting of the year of Phi Sigma Pi Honor Fraternity,was held Wednesday, May 14, in the Alumni Room. After calling the meetin g to order, President Frank Yartz opened the floor to nominations for the officers for next year, and elections were held. The results were: Robert Adamshlck, Presid ent ; James R eese, Vice-President; Eugene Wolfgang, Secretary; Howard Fraley, Treasurer; and Joseph Roinick, Historian. Dr. Afshar and Mr. Donald will be the faculty advisors. After the regular business meeting, both former and new officers met with the faculty advisors to discuss plans for next y ear 's activities. Sot . j BLOOMSBURG ,PA. ^msm ^ Phi Sigma Pi "" President Harvey A. Andruss Honored By Faculty Associ ation Open 'HI 12.00 p.m. Closed 1130 to 3iOO p.m. Every Day But Friday PREI DELIVERY 5 to 7 8.30 to 11*30 Regular and King Sin HOAGIBS 127 W. Main BLOOMSBURG WMWWMWWMWWWMMtaMMM ^KMMt a ^^^^^^^^ -.