Baron Does it Ag ain By Marty Wenhold A dramatic student regression to a past life in earl y Pennsylvania frontier days was the highlight of hypnotist Edwin Baron's presentation in Haas Auditorium , Wednesday , October 31 at 8:30 p.m. Baron successfully took back a volunteer to an earlier existence in Snydei* County, Pa. At the moment of contact , John Schaefer (the past life) was escaping from attacking Indians. Regressed ten years further to age fourteen , young John recalled the deaths of his Edwin L. Baron , Master Hypnotist, performed before a BSC parents and ' brother at the hands of the Susquehannock audience for the second Halloween in a row. (Photo by T. Lea hy) Indians. Advanced in time to the last day of his life, Schaefer , at age 52, recounted his injur y and death at the Battle of Gettysburg. Shot in the leg and bayonetted by Rebel troops , Artist Gerald Marks will be Bakless Faculty Lounge (please his last memory was of visiting the BSC campus as an note change from earlier anmingling American and Conartist-in-residence on nouncement ). federate flags . Mr. Marks is a graduate of . November 8th , 9th, and 16th, When awakened and sponsored by the Arts Council of City College of New York and of questioned on any knowledge BSC. His silk screen prints will Columbia University . He aJohn Shaefer , t he stu d en t teaches at the Cooper Union and be on exhibit ih Bakeless volunteer replied tha t Schaefer Faculty Lounge throughout this Tthe New School for Social had been his great-great-great period. Research in New York City . His uncle. Mr. Marks will discuss the work has been widely exhibited Other volunteers were role of the printmaker and thro ugh Associated American hypotized and tested with dem o nstra te screen i ng Artists Gallery, including the lighted matches on their palms. processes , including photo U.S. Pa vilion at the Osaka U nd er B aron 's control , the techniques , in BSC' s printWorld' s Fair and the Brooklyn st uden ts stammere d, lau ghed , mak ing workshoD . Room 2. Old Museum . He is the director of cried and made-up before Science Hall , on Thursday, " Nov. his own printing studio and has ima ginar y mirr ors. A contest 8 from 1:00 to 4:00 ; Friday, pr inted t he works of no table for the best-looking amon g the Nov. 9 from 1:00 to 4:00 P.M <; artists including Lichtenstein , nearl y led to a fist fight group Friday, Nov. 16 from 10:00 A.M. Fran kenth a ler , I nd iana , K atz sta ge _ o n to 1:00 P.M. An informal talk on and Mar isol. H is recent text on Two partic ipants were inpr i n t mak ing is scheduled for Silk Screening is under contrac t duced to be spade men and even Nov. 16 at 3:00 P.M. in the to M acm illan and will soon be spoke a lan guage tagged as released . Want to Learn Silk Screen Printin g Items of Interest Class Ring Day There will be a class ring day on Monda y, N ovember 12, from 9:00 to 4:00 in the lounge at the College Store , with delivery pr ior to Chr istmas. necessar y. The deadline for applicat ion for partic ipation in th is program is November 15, 1973. For further information , please contact Dr. H.M . Afshar , Cooperative and Ex perimental Pro grams , ext. 2522. International Students Ther d will be a short , meeting for all international Obiter Pictures Seminar y Sampler To all organizations havin g A "Semina ry Sampler " will pictures taken for 1974 Obiter. be offered to prospective Lancaster students at To encourage an interesting and Theological Seminar y on Nov. 8 varied Organization section in this year 's Obiter ,the staff has and 9. The program has been decided to have a picture ' planned to give pros pective contest as in past years . The students an idea of what best pictur e will be judged by theological educa tion at LanSeminar y is like and, caster the Obite rstaff. Jud ging win be opportunit y to meet and talk based on the originality and creativit y of your picture. The > with stude nts , facult y and prize will not be monetar y. It t administra tors. Registration for the two-day event is still will be a special page in the Qbiiej r devoted to your open for anyone interested in organization wit h Honorable possibly enrolling at the Mention . seminar y. Arran gements to attend can be made by conElectric Engravers tactin g the Rev. Lyman G. Electric engravers tff e Farrar , Vice President for available at the Securit y Development , Lancaster , period of 24 hours Theological Seminary, LanOffice for a of a BSC , Pa , 17603 — telephone caster presentation upon on be used can 717-393-0654. studen t ID. They students tonight at 7:00 in the Blue Conference Room of Kehr Union. Internshi p Pro gram Applications are now being accepted for the State College and Universit y Inter nship Program in H&»..isburg. At least two students for the spring semester of 1973-74 and the same number for the fall of 1074-75 are expected to be assigned. The applicant should be a junior or senior student in good standin g and possess emotional and intellectual maturi ty to work effectively in cooperative situations. Students who have exhibited initiative and ima gination should be given prefere nce, Depart * mental recommendation , ' * , 'V 1 ! ' . ' .* • t ools, bic y cles, .cameras , sport gear or other personal items for engraving y our name , initials or address. Contact Mr. Keith Wagner , Chief , Departmen t of Law Enforce ment in the Securit y O ffice, Waller Hall. * .' , 1 ** records. "Smoke ho more" and i, Martian . One acted as an in"keduce through Listening ," ter preter for Baron who then which he asserts may be sucasked questions of the two "astronauts. " . cessfully used in the home. Smokers wno wished to quit The hypnotists noted that , "no were offered vario us bra nds of person can be hypnotized cigarett es. Under Baron 's against his will and some people hypn otic suggestion , each not at all." He also added that successive puff appar ently pain may be eliminated and grew increasingly more acrid intricate surgery performed and bitt er. Baron claimed the hypnotic while under association between digarett es suggestion. and bad flavor would contin ue and , if sincere , the two smokers Baron is associated with the would eventually br eak the Hypnotism Institute of Chicago. habit. Sponsored by the Special Baron follows a similar Event s Committe e of the Union , method of maintaining weight Baro n was paying his second control. He has two 12 inch Hallow een visit to Bloomsburg. BSC Forensics Host Mad Hatter drawing three topics, choosing By Vickie Mears one and hav ing a half an hour to The Mad Hatter , forensics write on it. Oral interpretation tournament was held in had a time limit of 10 mmuies . Bakeless Center for the Arts and consisted of one prose last Friday and Satur day. BSC reading and one poetry reading hosted the event for thirteen by different authors based on a colleges including Perm State , central theme . Princeton and Mansfield. The Sweepstakes prize went The t ournamen t is an exto East State who is Michigan tension of the speech program first in the nation in individual and gives the students exevents. Second place went to per ience in a more real ist ic Pr incet on and third t o Niagara settin g of competition. To make Univers ity . the judging as fair as possible , The only BSC student to place all con testants were given a i n the fi nals was K ar en Walters number and a letter in place of w i th an honorab le ment ion. the ir college's name. Professor Richard D. F ive di f ferent categories Alder f er , Director of Forens ics were involved. Per suas ive at BSC, said , "B SC entered sp eak ing required or iginal speeches with the pur pose t o ' people without much experi ence...we are buildin g this stimulate the audience in a time year . Of all the state colleges in limit of ten minutes. Imthe Commonwealth of Pennp rom p tu speeches required that s ylvania , BSC has been the the contestant draw three topics champ for 6 years. The fact that out of a hat , choose one of the we are competing with these topics and then take seven colleges and universities shows minute s to read , organize and ' that we are developing a speak on the topic. Exre p utation. " tem poran eous speech involved Janet Whltf , a BSC itudtnt , at in* partici pated In last wttktml 's Mad H.tfr Tourn am.nl sponsor * by MC. | ¦ ' ' fcr ||rt) ¦< I , Lett ers to th e Edi to r I Dear Ed it or , for although faculty salaries are At the recent student-faculty higher , so is our ener gy use in meeting on the budget crunch , I lighting a physical plant some suggested tha t Pr esident Mc10 to 15 times lar ger than the Cormick have every other average high school. By lightb ulb removed on campus lightbulbs , we retrenching (or replace d by one of lower might be able to save two or wattage ) as a public relations during positions three faculty gestur e to dramatize the - difficulties and our financial seriousness of our financial then gain that many by consituation . I also thought it would tinuing the pro gram once they be something he could do to help ' are over. meet the energy crisis. Now I discusses also The article have learned that such a move ways to reduce the energy drain could actually save enough (and operatin g costs) of new money to prevent the retrenbuildings . It should be required chment of some of our new reading for those responsible young faculty members. the . design of Che approvin g for Miss Debbie Noble called my new girls dorm and any other attention to an article in the new construction which may be October '73 edition of the " on the boards. "Smithsonian " entitled , "The O. J. Lar mi, Ph.D. Arcniiecturai Energy Drain. It reports a study done by a Dear Editor : Californian architect named In the matter of the state Ezra Ehrenkrantz , who "tallied colleges' present financial up some numbers and figured problems and possible out that a saving in energy for solutions , the chief problem the averag e California high seems to be convincin g the state school of one watt per square legislators that there exists a foot was equiv alent to a " very serious financial problem teacher 's annual salary. The with the state college system public,' he says, 'is not aware of which requires their immediate how many teachers are burned attention. I did not attend the up annually with the flick of a meeting in Haas , so I have to switch. ' " rel y on newspapers and friends Ehrenkrantz , of course, was . . for information. I honestly fed talking about energy use in high that some of the suggestions schools and high school offered for getting the teachers salaries but what he legislators ' attention , like 100 says is clearly applicable to us, per cent class attendance for I one day, are rather ridicu lous. Wha t do the state politicians care whether or not we attend class? . • May I suggest that the most effective method for getting through to Harrisburg would be to boycott the state college athletic program. Tha t' s righ t — no one plays any more spor ts. Football , basketball , wrestl ing, baseball , etc . — all the players resign. If this were to happen at (please turn to page four ) Lambda Al pha Mu will Sale, feature a Pierogie beginning Mond ay, November 10. And y Sweigart and Cindy Landis hope to make' lots of dough. (Pic by P. White ) Career Informa tion Center By Mary Ellen Lesho Are you worried about a job after graduation? Have , an interest in forestry, but don 't know the first thing about it or who to ask? Well, search no more . The Career Information Center is now open and waiting to serve you. The Career Information Center , headed by Mr. Thomas Dayies and his student assistant , Sherry Krieider , is located on t he second floor of the Ben Franklin Building. Operating in conjunction with John Scrimgeour and the Counseling Center and the Acquisition Department ot Andsuss Library, its purpose is threefold . First , the 'Center is available to provide career information to students . who express an interest in a particular field. Secondly, students will be aided in placemen t in jobs upon grad uation and thirdly they may obtain information concerning graduat e schools. The Center has its own library, chock f ull of valuable information . This includes names of all the top companies in the United States , their for hirin g, requirements vacancies , and if interviews are scheduled on campus , the dates a and times of these business interviews. It includes _ information on governmen t positions wheth er state , federal and overseas. The library also has books on various fields of i n terest , everythin g from "How to Prepare Resu mes " to "Women and Their Careers ." The cen ter can also help t hose in the field of education . It has listings of every school district in the United States , including secondary, elemen t ar y and special education institutions . It caters to students interested in trans f err i ng and has en t rance t ests and re q u i rements of var ious schools on fi le. The Center has reciprocal career centers all over the country that can hel p a st uden t after he t rans fers. It can also hel p a st uden t ga in informat ion on •scholarsh ips, fellowships and gran ts. So if the future looks pret ty dim , sto p stumblin g in t he dark ! Help is only a hop , ski p and a jum p away at the Career Information Center. Pay them a visit ; you won 't be sorr y . Nkombol feil By Eric Yamoah What a weekend I experienced Parents ' Weekend. It started last Frida y at about 10:30 p.m. and ended on Monday morning at about 9:00. It was in a completely different world. My parents couldn 't come up for Paren ts ' Weekend (all the way from Africa ) and so I decided to do something exciting, for thou ghts about not having my parents around as the other students did make me feel homesick and depressed. After the movie "Fists of Fury " on Friday night , I decided to take a stroll under the beautiful starry skies. I remember going by the front of North Hall and walkin g towards . Luzerne (the wing which faces Navy Hall ). All of a sudden I was in the middle of a minijungle. I imagined that I saw a hut built of old dirt y brown lumber in front of me. This house had a roof of colorful leaves. I stood there for a moment trying to recall r~Y\ 1973 fal l iss ue of [\ \ the Oly mpian Deadli ne: >> AJ|Y^-4 Nove mber 9 al l l aRw Inclu d es I egg\Q poetry , short / gggay__stories / drawings l.^Bnn an<* Pni>*°9raPnsDrop off at \\j lr ; VsSjjjSftnOl yrnpian box Union in or yT^^^WKehr fo/off ice on 2nd floor. J5^j [_ aa '' " ¦ ^^•BW^BF OHV^BV vn^^u^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ~ OV^BBV Kf ^^^^^^^^^ f lB/BKK^^K^^^^^^ K^KKKB^^KK^^^ K^K^KttlKKt^^^ KB/UKKt ^^^^^ Kt/f ^^^^ f^ ^^^f ^^ ^ ^^^^ ^ > ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ -- —— ^^~ ^^ m « ¦ ¦ vjbm» bbjbbbjbjbvjp bjbjbbj ajjaaajaaapji m m m m ^ m m mvjbbjbv m THE MAROON AND 60LD NEWS ¦ « ¦¦ •¦ ¦ » »^™» w^m <^^v j j BBBbBBBJBjBbjBV BBBBlBBj•¦^¦W^P^BIS ^BHP^B^BBBBSBSf * JBvBjBt BigBBBJBBB^BBBJSSSSBBBViSSBVBBI^BP^^ P ^V^W ^^^^ P ^P^PM PVPBVPM ^PM P^^^ V PBBBBBpBBBBV ^BPHSV OBBBOT BM BBBBBSWBBBBBBSr^BBBBBP BBBBBBfBKBBB BBBBLBBJ BMBJBj vBBp1b ^*J (please turn to page four ) Marsh Gas By Duane Long A fleet of Cobra helicopters was dispatched from La Guardia Air Force Base in New Jersey to surround the area of wa t er where t he sauc er lande d . At this point , news releases by var ious government agenc ies were prov ided : NASA : "The vehicle which crashed was definitely a Tiros VII weather satellite. " NO RAD: "The device which has landed here is a section of a Nike-X ICBM ; we are attempting to disarm. " U. S. NAVY: "According to the Navy Chief of Staff , the accident which occurred here is the result of a malfunction during a Poseidon missle test. " U. S. WEATHER BUREAU : "The cause of this inciden t hasbeen determined to be a high velocity meteorite ." These conflicting report s as to the origin of the crisis kept the news media in chaos while the Pictured here is Sherr y Krieid er, st udent asuUt ant at the Career military conducted it inInformation Center, sorting out career files. ( Photo by D. WeHer) vestigation . _ ¦¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦ mmm tmattmtmIHi ¦ ^H. ^mm ^_ ^b ¦¦ Eight Cobr as hovered in position , their gun crews ready . Using infrared video equipment , a picture of the saucer ¦ B The M«O Is located on tho Top floor , Kehr was obtained. It was imbedded ' Union Buildin g, tel. no. MM101. All copy I in the mud I, Bob Oliver nearly 200 feet * mutt b« submitted by no l«t«r than 4i00 5 ¦dlto.ln.etiM I ¦"•vmw £ZVr. .. for tht | , Sundayi Tuesda ys and benea th the surface . The hull vj mms Hip »**mll P»" •« I»—r5 r -3=r ^ rW *Y •"«Tho Wednes day P«Pars. In the | measured 90 feet in diameter. ' ifSports 5JBdltor «Ji£? MlfiK ' ¦ opinions volctd retpeeflvtl y . I ^. *^ *JS ecHum w and feature articles of tht MtO I A •• •' ¦ Sm JiiK. I "2dSf 1" -Wir From the ghostly phosphor : 'iM fDrMM "••* B0f "«»•¦'••/ b« •"•»••* "V "•• ! '"" t Senior ESSlViXL luJJ^Si ¦ Advisor , two humanoid shapes 1 ^ 2 tntira stall I screen ¦ ¦• 1-:; >»»»with « « ' •? eo"t«"«» I :; ¦*«*¦' • tgffiSffi mVlSS "" "»' could be seen laboring outside vj .v.v;?rr •: << !!? ; • .; "T Mlh?TJ * the ¦dltor-lri-Chlor. • |J«!!WM W§".§ g !r?••••• ' •:? I OeorgeOarber 5 E Advertising Manager the hull. The craft was subNaney Van Pelt Letters should bo Itglbl t — prafaraMy I jected to high energy gamma ¦Ci rculation Manager l~Ntwt Menaa.tr..... , '. t. Barba ra Wen chiton typed — and received by the MAO no later i radiation , repeated depth Mr. K. Moffman than « pm on Tuesday and Thursda y I IDirector of Publications , ¦acuit y Advisor I ¦¦ohAtoara ohe rti Alanna Berger, Dan Maresh. Jr.. Debbie Schneider, Barb Herbert , Sutl evenings to be eligible for printin g. They ¦ char ging and constant 00mm should not be longer than aoo words, and 5 White , Paul Blxler , Becky Jones , Tom Leahy. Ron Troy, Matt Tydor, Donna Waller cannon fire from the vulcan IOeneral StaH Marty Wondhold, Robert W. Oagllone , Duano Long, Tom Korti, Dabble must be accom panied by the writers name I ¦ gatlln g guns aboard the Bull , O»rm»nf Oermeyer, Kim McNally, Anthony Creamer, Brlc Yamoah , Lorn * and phone number , although names will be | hovering helicopters . . , Sandra Mlllard , Sue Stlger, Sandy Rlsner, Dale Myers, Craig withheld on request. • Richey , Scott Zahm Me.0 retains the right to edit letter * ¦ iWinters , Linda Llvarmore , Barb Wanehlttn, Mark Haai, Mary fllltn Lesho, Bath Olbbie , The when necessar y. ¦ I p.ggy Mor«n, Ami Ingram, Sue Williams The two beings at the bottom of the lake fell silent. The alien , ship rose up from the mire of ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ whether durin g Orientation per iod we were told anythin g about "this hou se. I knew defi nit ely tha t I had not gone beyond the soccer field or tennis courts. When I finally decided to walk away, I saw a seven foot tal l hum an sk elet on emerge from the inside and sit down on a wooden box at the entrance . H e beckoned me t o draw nearer and , adventurous as I am , I walked towards him. I could hear th e clat t er of bones a s he stood ud to shake hands. " it was very 'dark inside and I could hear different voices singing a popu lar Ghanaian song "Akwaaba " ( Welcome) . I sat on a bed with three other st uden ts wh o had arr ived bef ore me. They began to laugh and I joined them even though I didn 't know what they were laughing about. Afterall , la ug h ter is contagious. Even after they stopped , I continued to laugh. It was like a disease but helped r el ieve m y t ens i ons an d homesickness. - When we finally decided to leave ' because the other jealous and unfriendly skeletons who lived next door were shouting at us to keep it down) my "skeleton friend led the way. Shaking hands goodbye he invited us back next Friday night and for us to bring some friends. I wish I could. This trip of my imagination would probably help many of my friends who always say that they need some relaxation from college tensions. Later a friend told me tha t he the lake glowing brilliantly . It sur faced and hovered over 20 feet above the water . The Cobra 's ma chine cannon raked the saucer 's hull , stripping great chunks of metal off its torn surf ace. The glow increased as the f ir ing continued. Suddenl y it became apparent to the gun crews tha t their firing was causing t he increase in rad iation . By the t ime t he cease fi re order came throu gh , it was too la t e. Wit hin seconds a ft er the sh oot ing had stopp ed , the alien sp acecr a ft ex p loded i n a tr emendous blast of th ermonuclear energ y. The lake and t he entire terra in for a rad ius of 20 miles was totally des t ro yed. The report issued to the press was as f ollows : At ten o'clock this morning, a special team of missle experts failed to disarm a malfunctioning Thor ICBM , resulting in its deton ation. The missle was accident ally launched from its silo at the Tulsa Oklahoma NORAD base. Phan tom jets were dispat ched to Intercept the missle, but failed. The Presiden t has ordered a complete overhaul of all defensive and offensive missle systems. Further details will be pr ov ided at the news con f erence this after noon . Moral : "There ar e more thing s in hea ven and earth than are dreamt philosophy . 11 Shakespe are of — in our ' William Young drivers ar e still involved in tra ffic accidents in numbers far dispropor tionate to their ratio to licensed drivers as a whole, reports The Travelers ! Insuranc e Companies , In 1972 almost 20,000 drivers under 25 ' were killed in, auto accidents. Huskies go bear hunti ng , 3 inte rce pt ions , 2 fumbles BSC do wn s Ku tzto wn , 14- 7 By Bill Sipler The Huski es def ense went bear hunting Saturday at Kutztown and came away with three interceptions , 2 fum bles and blocked 1 field goal to lead the grippers to a 14-7 victory over the Golden Bear s of Kutztown State College . The Huskies jump ed off to an early lead wh en George Grub er went one yard for a touchdo wn. Bob DeCarolis adde d the extra point to give the Huskies a 7-0 jead. Kutztown tied the .score when Kevin Bonner went in from one yard out for the td. Gary Bisondi added .the extra point to tie a 7-7. The Huskies played a tough defense in the first half. Tom Jacobs picked off his first pass of the season to stop one Kutztown drive in the first half. Husk ies 1Oth ' Charl ey Bender also grabb ed a Dass late in the second quarter. Second Half Action The Huskies took the lead in the thir d quarter when Joe Geiger went 10 yards on the run. . DeCarolis 's 15th extra point in a row made the score 14-7 where it stood until the end of the garii e. The touchdown was set up by Lee Stancil' s second interception of the year. Mike Oblas and Eugene Rejent blocked a Golden Bear field goal attempt in the third quart er and later Rejent blew in from his defensive and position to flatten Kutztown quarterback Mike Dehar for two . losses which forced Kutztown to give up the ball on downs late in the same. Rap-up The Huskies now have an even 4-4 record with this win. Lee Stancil was the leading defensive point man with 10 tackles , one interception and one blocked pass. Offensively the Huskies were led by Geor ge Gruber , who carried the ball 21 times for 63 yar ds and 1 td. Joe Geiger had 57 yards on 20 carries , John James 42 yards on 9 tries and . Mik e Devereux 14 carries for 46 yar ds to round out the Huskies major rush ers. " The Huskies have 99 yar d rushing and had 1 pass completion Jor 6 more yards. Line Welles punted 3 times for a 51.3 yard average before he was injured late in the first half. Welles had one punt of 64 yards for his long punt of the day. Gary Zelinski replaced Welles and punted 47 times for a 32:5 yar d avera ge. Zelinski's longest punt carried 35 yards. The Huskies won on defense as they forced 5 Kutztow n turnove rs while committin g none. They got the big play from the defense when they needed them. Line Welles being attended to during the game. Welles was injured as he pursue d a Kutztow n runner in thefirsthalf. { Photo by B. Oliver ) . Hocke y team t ies for 3rd Hopefully the Huskies can carry this win into Saturday 's game with East Stroudsburg. A win on Saturday will give the Huskies a winning season. By Bill Sipler The Huskiettes traveled to S.F.H.A. field hockey tournamen t over the weekend. At Susq ueh anna the H ock iettes placed third in a tie' with Bucknell with a 2-3-1 record. The women defeated both Wilkes College and Bucknell University by scores of 1-0. The team had lost to these two schools earlier in the year and this gave them added pleasure in the victories. The two season scores were a 7-0 trouncing by the Bucknell team and a 2-1 squeaker to Wilkes. The Huskiettes three losses were to Penn State , Susquehanna , and tournament winner Lock Haven . Penn State finished in second Dlace. The iwomen also tied a powerf ul By Bill Sipler The Harr iers conclude d their season at the Pennsylvania Confere nce Cross Coun try Cham pionships that wer e held at Millersville on Saturda y. The Husk ies finished tenth in a field of thir teen. The meet w«o won by Edinboro with a total of 40 points. Millersville ran second and East Stroudsburg captured third place honors on what was termed a beautiful day for running. Jeff Bradley, of Millersville , was the firs t runner to cross the tap . Edinboro had five of the first 14 places to give them the victory . SAY IT THE NATURAL WAY WITH Mike Devereux mov es outside on a run du ring the Kutxtown Game. Devereux gained 46 yards rushin g as the Husk ies broke a four game los ing strea k by beatin g the Golden Bears 14-7. (Photo by B. Oliver For the Huskies , the first f inisher was Ed Pascoe. P ascoe finished 35th in the meet. Also runn ing were Je f f Brandt (54th) , Bart Grimm ( 55th ) , Rich Durbano (59th) and - Bill Dvonch (60th) . Brandt reinjured his leg when he fell dur ing the five mile race. MORGAN'S YARN AND CRAFT SHOP 251 West 5th St. Blooms burg Season Rap-L/p Huskies enjoyed a reasonabl y good season . Coach Noble was mildl y pleased w ith the results as the team faced a t ough schedule. The teams to p six or seven We have: Crewel String Art Needlepoint Beaded Fruit Instruction Books Oodles of Buttons The runners will be returni ng next \t9Mtk sy I ^fcll - FLONA/ERS 1 WORLD WIDE DELIVERY JJ^ QQQQQQBB ^ QgJBflk Supplies for : Rugs Macrame ' Knitting Bead-Work Crocheting Candle-Making CLASS OF 75 Hours : Mon. t hru Sat. 10:30 - 5:00 Closed all day Wedne sday Sto p In and Browso year. Brandt and Durban o are both promisin g freshmen and long with the other three runners are retur ning next y ear. Also Jim O'Brien will be back . O' Brien was inj ured and could not compete at the championships . Coach Noble feels tha t "this CRACKER BARREL ^ was the best group of freshmen I ever coached. " They will give ¦ ^^V^MHflPV iV ^ M r* =§ ' PRESENTS _pg m ^ Y ^fr ^^^ B^l^^ lB Josten 's Factory Representative will be In the College Store on Monday, Nov. 12th fro m 9 a.m. til 4 p.m. to assist you In the selection of your visu al diplom a. ' ^53 the Huskies a strong center that they can build around . , ^H^^c^B f ^^^^^ fc^r^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ h : Plus all the Pizza you can eat - $3.00 -j | Ihurs. - Country & Western """ TEia Fri. ft Sat. - HAII JZ3 L* Send (or your up-to-date,160-page, mall order catalog. Enclose $1.00 to cover postage (delivery time is 1 to 2 days). RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC. 11941 WILSHIRE BLVD. SUITE #2 LOS ANGELES,CALIF. 90025 (213) 477-8474 or 477-5493 Our nmreh material It told for rimrc h aiilitanca only. - THE OFFICIAL - il " Wed. Kite - All the Draft Beer you can Drink -J Thousands of Topics $2.75 per page Catawlssa , Pp. r* JZZZir "^35 356-2076 Bloomsbur g State College Class Ring . $5.00 Deposit ¦ i '¦ I - " •] ' " . ¦¦ ¦ . . ,- . ,. . . . ¦ ¦ . . ¦ ¦ . ¦ ¦ ' . . • ¦ ¦ ¦ . ¦ Center Courity Club team , to round out the weekend. Three girls made the trials for Susquehanna All Star Team . Kath y Lauchner , Kathy Constable and Barb Jones were the three Huskiettes honore d by the election. The team is looking forward to next year. They suffered from the slow start that they got this year and ar e looking forward to rectifying the next season. They feel that they showed well late in the season and that it took them until the tournament to really get ready . The team is young and will only lose t wo s t ar t ers to gradu ation. If all goes well the w omen w il be ready next year and hopefull y w ill improve on this year 's record. 5 Weak Delivery ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^(^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^BH^^^^^^^^^^^^^H^P^B^W^^Hm^B^^^M^MMBB^H^^^H^^BBM^^^mUMHBB^I^U Nkombodzi ( Letters to the Edito r Commu ter News letter from page two) had seen a poster like my hut in By Joe Doria sundaes.The social w ill be held a mini-jungle with a human October 24 at a regular On, in the Coffeehouse of Kehr . (from page two ) skeleton sitting at the gate meeting the officers of the Day Union. Please bring your ticket all 14 Pennsylvania stater . Mens and Day Womens ll somewhere in Luzerne Ha. which may be obtained from colleges, I can assure you that Strangel y enough, the owner of adopte d a your mailbox . If you didn 't Association 's Harrisburg would have to take the poster has an "Osibisa " receive a ticket feel free to schedule for the months of notice. This would be one way , album which he plays of ten contact any of the officers. November and December. The and possibly the only way, to get following is a copy of part of ( "Osibisa " is a London-based Wprjnesiia y, Nov. _ 1.4r-Open the alumni to put pressure on ': that schedule. Ghanaian rock group ). I wonder ' Billiards—For your enjoyment Harrisburg . In fact , it would . Mjaadax , where I can buy one to show it to lay .5—The • between the hours of 10:00 and proba bly get some national Mr.JSkel eton . on my next trip. Commuters Association will 1:00, in the Games Room of recognition for our problem . y morn i ng I t hou g ht OnMonda present "The Reivers " , Union, there will be Kehr I was late for the bus to the Should any one doubt t he starring Steve McQueen, and special half-price rat es in effect Fi eldhouse.So I ran all the way Sharon F arrell in a comedy wisdom of what I say, I suggest f or an y commuter who wishes up there thr ough the drenchin g about a young farm boy's that he find out what hap pened to play billiards . The rate will ra in and strong winds only to journey to the "big city ". The in May 1971 when four BSC Six tables be 45 cents an hour.. find that Iwas an hour too athletic coaches resigned en movie will be shown at 1:00 and so please are being reserved earl y. My clock failed to move again at 3:00. masse . That - caused the take advanta ge of this offer. an hour back when it was Since these daytime movies greatest public arousal which I MIXOLOGY DEMONSTRAgot up at 5:30 supposed to. So I are becoming increasin gly have seen in the 20+ years I :TION — On Oct. 24, two instead of 6:30. At any rate I'm popula r they will be continued have lived in Bloomsburg. I mixology demonstrations were not mad because there's always ' admit that I am not an athlete for the rest of the semester. held in the Coffeehou se of Kehr Wednesday «_ .. Nojl. .i—Ice next year whenTilget that hour and that I do care very little for Union, one at 11:00 and another Cream Social—Between the of sleep! college sports but I do feel that at 1:00. The demonstratios n hours of 11:00 and 2:00 the To conclude , I'd like to thank . what I offer may be the only were given by Mike Ortell , Commuters Association will Ms. Angela Williams and her way to get some action out of mixologist, and Secretary of the sponsor an ice cream "parry " friends for their nice letter in Harrisburg. DMCA . Attendan ce was about for commuters. Come on down the October 26 issue of the M&G . 70 persons and enthusiasm was Sincerely, and get together with other I' m glad many students enjoy great. Although fake 'booze' David L. Klees commuters and make your own . my column. I hope to continue writing as long as I remain at Bloomsbur g State College. was used, thiswas not known to everyone and many were the horrified looks of anguis h when 'good dri nks' were th rown awa y. Interest was main ly centered on the cost of liquor , and what kinds of liquor are best for a particular drin k. A mong the more f ami liar drinks mixed by Mike were t he 'Harv ey Walbanger ', the 'Bloody Mary ', and the 'Slow Gin Fizz'. Hats off to Mike for a fine performan ce. The Sisters of Delta Epsilon Beta would like to announce tfieir new sisters , members of the eleventh pled ge class. They, are Denise Yodis, Pledge class president ; Linda Appel ; Kare n Carpenter; Demarest ; Jan Debbie Fetterman , Chris Geary; Sue Miklaszexicz ; and Cindy Moyer. We will honor our new sisters at our annual black and white formal to be held on Nov. 10 at the Sheraton Inn, BBBBl __¦__ ¦ __ Danville. mmm H^B ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦¦T M ra B BaflH Mna M i H MM i Ha i H i * ¦ ¦ ¦HH ^MI HH H ^ ¦ m ^BM * ^¦ MW H^H ¦ ^¦ W^M ^BHI ^HH ^ ¦ RESEARCH AIDS Free Catalog - Thousands of research aids listed - Each available with footnotes and bibliography - Lowest prices are GUARANTEED For a FREE copy of our latest 80-page mailorde r catalog , send 50 ce nts (to cover postage and handling) to ' Naf I Resea rch Bank 420 N. Palm Dr., Bev. Hills, Cal. 90210 You must include your zip code. TELEPHONE: (213) 271-5439 ^^ ¦raSfSHt 2^H9^H! < ^ Bf l^R^R^R^R^i raSWX ^ HSR^ H R^ BhHHmb Wmm?! ^rTwto za&^ ¦ ^TzK |M J 'M-JHf U |^J^ HS& P |W W ;W; BS| ^^^^^^^ Sp Jh ^^suk ^^^ ^^^ SE^i uC I^I "? ' . ' .B ' • •' ' ^^^ E jk StifSBSSidr. hL^^^^^ E^3]iB5QM ^r^^^^^ RiflBtfHCfi69B&t ^_ *^ r^I Classi fieds MARKET ST. SUNOCO SERV ICE CENTER Fun In; Fashio ns 7th and Market Sis, Proprietor Rick Belinskv 784-8644 Hartzel' s Music Store MilWr Office , Supp ly Co. for 72 N. Iron St. Over 300 Guitars and Amplifiers CHI SIGMA RHO Candy Sale Nov . 5 -9 in the Union Cream Peanut Butter Bars $1.00 per box. Assorted Chocolates $1.25 per box. Come to the Union or see any sister. II Wr ' M»» »i* ¦«*¦» *HEADQUARTERS OF HALLMARK CARDS AND GIFTS Phone 7*4-25*1 319 East Street Philadelphia Cheese Steak Special $.95 - including tax ¦ m¦ ^ I Tau Beta Sipa Pie Sale Oct. 30 ~ Nov , 15 $1.75 for 10" pie (Mrs. Smith 's pies ) Contact any TBE member ¦ to order. ¦ ELBY'S FAMILY RESTAURANT j I 784-3864 11|£ CELLAR 784"3864 ¦ ¦ W ^M W^m BHi I ¦ I I I | 1-80 and Lightstree t Road Part-Time or full time Employment Waitresses , Short-order Cooks , Dishwashers , and Cashiers j I J Please apply in person Ask for Mr. Fields, Manager I I Wed. - Thurs. - Fri., Nov . 7, 8, 9 NEW DELIVERY TIMES 7 - 9 - 10:30 p.m. o-o' *ffflS^v :^ Call 784-3864 IS THIS YOUR JUNIOR YEAR IN COLLEGE? • NEED NEW GLASSES? * NEED A SPARE PAIR? * DO YOUR GLASSES SLIP? We con supp ly you with new eyeglasse s, accurately ground , to your doctor 's prescri ption , or we can copy your present glasses for an inex pensive spare pair. Would you like a guaranteed fob waiting for you upon graduation with a starting salary between $9,090.00 and $9,783.00 a year? One which will give you invaluable managerial and leadership experience? We can give you a 10 week trial period this summer which will earn you more than $1,010. If your present glass es are slipping, bring them in and we will gladly adj ust them to a perfect fit ,— ai no cost. We will also clea n them — free of charge — in our new ultra-sonic rins e bath. WHAT 'S THE GIMMICK? - NONE! FLAG OPTICAL,INC. Accept or reject the Job at time of graduation. (Commitments as small as 2Va years for those who accept with provisions for attractive career opportunities.) For additional information / visit the Marine Corps Officer Selection Team at Elwe11 Hall between the hours of 10:00 A.M. - 2:00 P.M. on • November 12, 13, 14 & 15. , I • v £o i . I I I 221 Center St., Blooms burg (Opposite the Columbia Theatre ) Phone : 784-9665 Hours : Mon., Tu.es. & Fri. 9 to 9 Wed., Thurs. & Sat. 9 to 5 10% Discount with Student I.D.