^^ ¦^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ¦^^^^^^ ¦^s^B j^^ r ¦^V • *^H ^B i* I *!^Lx^^ Bs^^^ HH ^^^^^^^ h^^^^^^ n^^^^ l ^¦^¦^^^ ¦^^^^^^ Hf^VJI ¦ 9Sp *V ft ^K^^^ s^^MflHlP i^^^^^^^^^^^^^ B ^^^^^^^^^ H ¦HK qii|iQ£9H A symbol of progress in this frozen season, (photo by Burkett) BSCSailors take ^^_^_ ^^^ the high seas 1X2X1X^0 ^xC^to by Steve Styers Does the thought of a limitless blue horizon make you uneasy about your continuous land-bound life? Do waves that roll and never stop rolling stir you with some subtle emotion, some feeling of adventure? Is water your true element? Or would you love to see if it is, but don't kno member passes it , he can participate in the outside activities. The course is quite interesting. I is taught by Paul Griffiths. Lectures, fi lms, slides and sailing boat models are used to give enlightening and educational instruction in the theoretical and practical aspects of sailing. It is hoped that guest speakers will be present too, from time to time, to talk about the lure of cruising, day-to-day living on a boat and other topics. During a recent meeting, two members showed interest in taking all the Coast Guard Auxiliary courses needed to become an instructor who's qualified to teach sailing. If this comes about, the Sailing Club will then have its own teaching and testing capacities and no longer have to depend on outside sources. At the present, the club has no beats of its own. Several members do though and they have made their boats available tothe club for use when the weather is better suited for sailing. Also, a gentleman at Harvey's Lake has offered the club the use, in the spring, of his fifteen beats at no cost. For their free use, the members will only have to instruct people in the boats in the ways of sailing and sailing safetv. Any student is eligible for membership, as long as t h ey are not on social pro bat ion an d have attained a 2.0 cumulative average. The club is also open to the faculty. And naturally, males and females are encouraged to join. The club stresses boat ing safety. That is the whole point of the course and test. Bach person must learn an d know t h e r igorous sport an d act ivit y required to sail. Several members already have had extens ive exper ience an d been in class assoc iat ion races w it h boats up to a size of nineteen teet. me current president, John Haupt , lived on a sailboat for ninety days, when he and some f r ien ds cru ised down to the Bahamas. John says that sailing is his biggest hobby. He 's been sailing for over ten For the other members, the main objective is at least to have them experience being on a sailboat. Long range hopes an d plans , if things go well, include raising funds to obtain a fleet of boats, twelve to . fourteen feet in size, in which t he members cou ld h ave Eventually, regular races , the y also hope to compete i ¦ ( against other schools. The club meets once a week, on Tuesday evenings, in the Blue Room of Kehr Union. Anyone interested in joining should contact John Haupt at 389-2317. And for those who care enough : It's been said that sailing is one of the closest sports that there is to an art form. In the curvature of the light , in the shape of the sails, in the real beauty and joy of it, one almost becomes hypnotised. If this is what you want, what you yearn for the Sailing Club is the place to begin. And then you can sail on, sail on, sailor. Biology dept. institutes new nursing program Members of Bloomsburg's Department of Nursing are quite anxious these days as they await final approval on a proposal to the State Board Examiners in Harrisburg. The proposal will open the gate for a certified nursing program here at the college which will be open to 50 high school students, in-coming freshmen and anyone wo wants to switch majors , as well as male students. Mrs. Flynn, head of the department , said the faculty feels confident and that "things look good" although it is still up in the air. Students will be notified when approval comes through. Mrs. Flynn also expressed a desire to spread the word that the department has moved. It is now located on Lightstreet Road across the street from Old Science Hall. She said it is a place that students can identif y with. There is a conference room located in the building where case material can be discussed. The department also has its first faculty member in Ms. Alice Herman who just joined as Assistant professor. She is a nurse's midwife. Mrs. Flynn also remarked that students have been very helpful in making the transition and will even design the caps and uniforms for the program. Since the department has just moved, much work still has to be done however , it should be ready to go when the approval comes through. An open house is plannedin the near future. Need money ? BSC scholarship provides funds The Financial Aid Office at BSC has just released information pertaining to the Bloomsburg State College Scholarships for the 1975-76 academic year. A BSC Scholarship is "gift" aid which is based on cumulative average and extracurricular activities. Funds for t h ese awa r ds are prov ided by various organizations on cam pus , an d num bers an d amounts of awar ds var y eac h year . Hovever, approximately 12 scholarships of $100 to $400 Deadline to apply is March 15, 1975, and application forms are available in the Financial Aid Office, Room 19, Benjamin Franklin Building. The application consists of a blue card to which students should attach a listing of the activities in which they are involved. After March 15, the Financial Aid Subcommittee meets to rev iew the qualification s of all applicants. Cumulat i ve averages , activities, and financial need are considered (although financial need is not first priority in this etti'ii arc usually uvunauic. scholarship pr ogram.) . All un dergra duate stu dents wh o were enrol led at BSC . Specific requirements set by the contributing organizations during the fall semester of 1974 are also considered. and who will be enrolled at BSC The decision of the Financial Aid during the 1975-76 academic Subcommittee is final. year may apply. The awards Winners are notified by the are based on fall 1974 Financial Aid Office in early averages at BSC cumulative April. Initial notification is by during the 1975-76 academic vear. Don 't forget-Frederick Storaskaj national < authority on rape and assault will speak on the prevention of rape and assault, on Tuesday, February 18 in the multipurpose room in the Union . All students are urged to attend. J^ ^A^¦Vl^u>J ^^»vv^nAA/UvnJ ^JTJ ^m^rl-^L^l i-i n n n r a ^ jftlA «h au^fe Ma 1A llai *¦ 4fe ftW ¦^fe *& s a m X I phone with a written letter of award soon after . Applicants who are not notified regarding an award by mid-April may assume t h ey were not select ed for an award. Students not selected should keep in mind that approximately 12 students out of over 100 applicants are selected. Interested students, t here f ore , should expect very Iroon PAmnflfittAn nw wA* vuiiiuvvivtvii • The winners are given public reco gn it ion when the ir awar ds are announce d at t he Annua l Awards Convocation which is held at BSC in April. Checks may then be secured in the Financial Aid Office within a week or two following the Awards Convocation. Anyone with additional questions concerning the BSC Scholarships are directed to call 389-3908 or drop by the Financial Aid Office in Ben * Franklin. BILL PEAR C E AT HAAS | Bill Pearce will present a religious concert in Haas Auditorium, ; Friday, February 14, at 8:00 p.m. Pearce is an accomplished trombonist and baritone soloist. The pr og ram i8 being sponsored by the Central Pen nsylvania Campus Life organization .^C, students are welcome and iiiVited. : rJ?$j} ^{^ . Page Two EDITORIAL BSC TAKING A STEP BACKWA RD? How would you like to arrive at BSC in the fall knowing that you wouldn 't end first semester until January 20? That after Christmas vacation you would face a brief week of classes and then exams would follow right after that? Impossible , you say. Well, don 't hold your breath. The proposed calendar for the academic year beginning September 1976 has this very idea in mind. After considering fifteen different calendar models , Dr. Pickett , Vice-Presldent of Academic Affairs , has chosen to present this calendar idea to the President because , as he states , " I real ly believe that this calendar makes the best academic good sense ." The Question is. "To whom?" The plan may appear very feasible on paper. Surely lengthening the semester by two weeks has its advan tages , but if the semester MUST be lengthened , why not have us register earlier in the fall? As the proposed calendar stands , we won 't register until September 13. Dr . Pickett pointed out to me that students have never complained . about a two-week vacation or "lame duck period" that comes in the spring , so why would a two-week Christmas break be any different ? In spring , after the break , there is over a month before exams start and a studen t can enjoy the vacation and come back ready to pick up where he or she left off. But if you go home over Christmas knowing that you face exams when you come back , the vacation cannot be very relaxing at all , to say the least. Supposedly this calendar will alleviate pressures with graduate students and summer students. It is not clear to me how this calenda r can help when spring semester won 't let out until May 29-which is later than the way the calendar has been for the past three years. Try it-you 'U like it ? A great deal of student disa pproval is anticipated by Dr . Pickett yet he feels that once the students give the calendar a chance they will like it. I couldn 't disagree more. Just three short years ago the calendar was ver y similar to what is proposed for '76 and the st udents fought for a change . They wanted exams over before Christmas in order to enjoy their vacation , and their fight was successful as BSC progressed to give the students what they asked for . Now we're headed for a step backwards. After all , this college is here for us. The students. Since it is ex- pected that students will not favor this change , I cannot understand how this calendar can be enter tained by the Administration at all. They are working for US - if we weren 't here , the y wouldn 't be here either . They should be working for OUR convenience and thusly our preferences ahould carry a lot more weight...especiall y in this type of 1 _ . .,, policy-making. i .. B *^ Barb Wanchisen | Mullen M&lHtoft Mg^M^^^ EflfCT ^R ^ m^M^£^^A\Amm m m m mmmmmwwm^m ^mWmWmWk^m\ m 9 ^^^ £9 ^MMMA£ ^ ^^ i I ^ ^ ^ ^ Thinking Aloud ..this column is, in part , in reply to the first letter to the editor. It is also in reply to other verbal and written comments recieved. Unfortunatel y, I must take advanta ge of this issue 's column to come to my own defense . It seems that I' ve been taken in the wron g light. I' m real ly not surpris ed at all. But the matter has come up and I suppose that I'd better set a few more thin gs straight. In the last few weeks , I've Uaapi cn kiart I +n a Kit nf IV %|WIIW %m •*¦ ¦ w> UCCM 3UW|CV criticis m. Some of it con structive , and some of it not so constr uctive But cr iti c is m, be it positive or negative , is feedback...and it should be noted caref u lly a s to its , message. From the feedback I' ve received, I mu st say that the message that I' ve gott en is t hat I' m a bit misinterpreted. Not only by t he peopl e who tak e a dim view of my scribblin gs, but also b y t he people w ho support me. First of all , I' m by no means I'm not a " muckraker " . digging up nasty little topics, nor am I taking up issues of poor virtue as muckrakers do. I don't feel that I' m stirri ng up offers eview American R I ! cream of literature crop Hey, literati , are you out there ? No, he' s not the guy with the candelabrum on the piano-I' m looking for the " learned persons " , or anyb ody who wants to read good stuff. Too often the main emphasis of English department education is on those oldle-but-goodles classics that are kept high on library shelves , rarely dusted except by spider feet. There ' s a lot of "just out" literature that will appeal to anyone Itching to read what the scribes are saying about the epoch we live in. A great source of new reading is a " paperback magazine " put out by Bantam. The American Review/ now being published once a year , offers the crea m of the latest American crop of writers and poets. The latest Issue (February ) is the twentysecond since the publications conception. "Gloomy Gut " Dick Nixon of the Chicago Bears The highlight of the AR-22 tt an a maz in g novella abou t a legendary quart erback whose behaviora l patterns bear a remar kablef resemblance to Richar d Nixon . ("W hat Ever Happ»nwl fo Gloom y Gus of the i i I ' n •»¦¦# . ..*• ¦• Chicago Bears? " , Robert Coover. ) The satire Is set in the 1930's, amid a grou p of radica l artists and agitators who take "Gloomy Gus " Into their circle at Whittier College. Slowly , "Gus " emerges as a satirica l evocation of another Whittier man who applied to politics this relentless will to reorganize . "Gus " , like Nixon, is eventually destroyed when his rehearsed responses fail him In a critical situation. Throuoh his life. " Gus " averages a touchdown every nine minutes, and scores just as well with the Homecomin g Queen, the pom-pon girls and The tow n librarian. "Gus " can do nothing , however , without programming himself to overcome handicaps in his thought process, and often gets , his signals crossed. " One, of the few great stories about teaching " Another relevant con tribut ion to American Review 32 depicts an English profess or who lost his tasta for teaching and tries to regain It. ("Wash Far Away, " John Berrym an.) Review editor Solotaroff rated . it " one of th e few g reat stories » about teacjh fnp." ) | The pro f In ques t ion of his Me / i— - ¦•-:. - • .Z— JL O-JU seems totally lost whil e wading through blat ant repetiti on. Berryman is exceptionally good when ¦ describing the frustrations of teachers tryi ng to rediscover what they ' re to teach their stud ents. ( Perhaps some of BSC' s ¦ time tired teachers coul d gather a litt le strength from this " close-to ¦ home " story. ) Stoned dolphins, de-brained dogs and the Cuban Army ¦ Other fiction Includes a harrowing narr ative about a brain experiment on dogs, a freaked-out lady talk ing to the dolphins at Marin eland and a¦ major league baseball sta r who ¦ puts Fidel Castro on the pit r ¦ cher 's mound. These and assorted other goodies of worth are printed in American Review .by young writers of the¦ ¦ U.S. All of which means a¦ dif¦ anthology; some of ferent sort of the con tributors are college some college students , professors-all are people who ' ve grown , up with the country as we know It now. It' s this kind of attitude and understandin g that makes the A mer ican Revi ew serie s wor t h a w hile of readin g to con -¦ l temporary) "MeVatl. " I ' .. 7j ' H ; . * i L.. f any new controversies ,I'm only bringing to light a few age-old problems that still apply. The subjects about which I write are not of my ow n fabrication. On the contrar y, these subjec ts are on the lips and minds of most of the students around the countr y. The problem of cut policies and boring lectures is far from one of my perso nal gripes . It is an issue that resou nds across many a dinin g hall and union . My goal , in as much as my column is concerne d, is not to stir people up or to bring people to hasty conclus ions. I simply want to brin g these suppertabie topics to light through the print media so that people can think about them openly, and perhaps have a comon ground on which to discuss them. Ac fnr -the lark AnHorcrtn comment In the aforementioned letter , well , I'm nowhere near the calibe r of journalist that he is. Also , I' m not even in his league. Anderson is a columnist who bases his col um n s on i nvestigative reporting dealin g with issues that are, for the most part, con.t to d. 8 NKOMBODZI (Ed. note. Eric Yamoah , a foreign student from Ghana , Africa , studying at BSC, writes about his homela nd and imparts some interesting information to readers concerning the cultere of his country. ) t Upon reaching adolescence in Ghana there are no special rites for boys but puberty rites among girls are known as " Bara "rites among my tribe , the Akan . An expression which literall y means the "Rara state has stricken a girl" is a common euphemism for the passing of the first menses . A girl in this state is dressed in her best clothes andadorned with many gold ornaments ; she sits an ith village atreet with her mother and other clanswomen in attendance to receive gifts and congratulations form her friends . Later in the evening certain rites are performed in the presence of the women of the girl' s clan only ; the y include ceremonial washing and feeding with prayers to the ancestors for her fertility. For five days after thi s, the girl is known as a "barafo ", that is a person in the "bara " state , and is unclean. At the end of this time she dresses up again in her best clothes and goes around the village thanking all those who have attended the ceremon y. The men usually say this is not the main reason and that the girls do this to " exhibit " themselves to bachelors , telling them , in fact , that ¦ they are ready for marriage . • .• ». Generally a girl does not change her name upon reaching puberty , but from that date children call her " Ena " ( mother , woman. ) "If she cont. to p. 3 > $y ¦ I 1 I I TOE CAMPU ^O^O mm sm KB BE ¦ Edltoi In Chief Production Manager Business Mana ger Barb Wanchisen Mark D. Mullen Dave Cof(man W f|§ WM ¦H mM ¦ ¦ ¦I ¦ M Bl ¦ ¦J News Editor Asst. News Editor Feature Editor Sports Editor Coordinating Editor Photo Editor Copy Editor Contributing Editor rt00.?i?t ?^ Advertising Manag er Peggy Moran Steve Styen Valery O'Conneli BlllSlpler KlmMcNally Randy Mason Kathy Joseph Dan Maresh Ben Alter Cr aig winters f^j Wr « I ¦ Circulation Managers Vickie Mears ¦J Kathl Barrett H|Mr. Ken Hoif man, Director of Public Relations and Publication * It the Advltor I wS Hj Em H HB H H H | H SB H Staff: Linda Gruskiewlcz, Eric Yamoah, Reolna Rellly, Ed Hauck, Jce Iffl ¦ Sylvester , Dale Myers , Connie Boone, Karen stor k, Anne Marl* H •am novyd. Sandra Mlllord , Cathy Holliday, Patty Dlckerson , Cindy Metigtr , Diane H ¦ Gasklns , Duane Long. BB JIm Burk«tt , DennU Coyle , Davo Slade. Debbli Germain , H Ptl? 1o ,ardS'a«V 9 Jo . Wllll ¦ , Al Pagllalun ga. ra ¦B The Campus Voice is a publication or the Maroon and Gold. It U distributed on H ¦J campus by ALPHA PHI OMEGA, National Service Fraternity, as a service ¦ H pro tect for the 197475 year ,H MM The Campus Voice Is the official student publication of Bloomsburg State ¦ ¦ College and Is printed on a weekly during the academic year except during ¦ ¦ vacations and final exam week. ' . H| , The Campus Voice is a member of the Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers H ^m ¦ Association under the name of the Maroon and Gold Newt. M ¦ The Campus Voice offices are locate d on the second floor or the Kehr Union , The tm m. Phone number it 3B9-J10\. All copy and advertising sho uld betubmltted by 6pm on SB M| Sunday night s for thursday 't edition. News releases must be typed, double H H spaced , and with a 40 chara cter line. H Is governe d by the Editori al Board, with final responsibility H MM .forThe Campus 1voice ¦ •',' I**'"'* reilln o w llh ln » Editor -in-C hief, as stattd In the Joint Statement ¦ H on Right s, freedoms , and Responsi bilities ot Students o( Bloomtbur g State H ¦ MM College. . ¦ ' H ' The Campus Voice reserves the right to edit all (tttert and copy submitted, A H n maximum or 400 words will be placed on all letter s to the editor, with an ¦ ¦ Iallowance for special exceptions. All lett ers to the Editor muit be signed and have ¦ '•£P*,on » numbe,r "" ) address attached. Names will be withheld upon request , ¦ H H * NOTE: The opinions voiced In thecol umnt , featur *artlcl«tand edliorlalior the ¦ ¦ Campus Voice are not necessarily shared by the enti re ttaff. M I 1 I I I I % . ¦ ¦ ' A ca ll f rom the wilds to BSC art students Art students and nature lovers looking for an enjoyable six credit summer course may now enroll for Painting and Drawing this summer , as BSC's art department goes to Maine July 7 to August 155. Using Moosehead Lake (855 miles from the Canadian border ) as a base camp, participants in the program will stash their paints and easels at inexpensive rooms at the Squaw Mountain Ski Lodge.- . "Blueberries , and pine bark may be used for a limited pallet ," state advance press releases from the Department of Art , but the nearby town of Greenville offers a "little more in the line of tube oils." The larger town of Bangor is 5555 miles away . The wilderness artists who participate in the summer course are urged to pack warm clothes and heavy hiking shoes. A rustic studio area has been appropriately converted from a chicken house and other * outdoor sites and located along the lake shore , in the woods and in the wilds of tYie mountains. ¦ »• • i-:v y_i&xxrwHU-xif WHwtt —^y^^ pt ^j ^ny ^p^,^ ^';, -j ^, -1-j enmmHft Jtj. 'mim w—i>Bmwwwicw»wwow« mw Claire Cintalla of the "Jive Turkeys team , returns a voily in the Vollyball tournament pf Luzer ne Hall last Sunda y. The "HighbaUers " won the tournament ,(photo by Germaine ) Lette rs to the edit or Ander son is to be a feature of BSC Muckr aking :? our new Voice, I would hope Dear Editor: In his January 29 column, "Thinking Allowed" , Mark Mullen writes of the students ' responsibility to keep teachers "in line" ; presumably students are welcome to exercise this responsibility through their college newspaper . If muckraking a la Jack that the best of Ander son will be emulated. Thorough investigative rep orting is necessar y to prevent the circulation of unsubstantiated remarks . Sincerely , William J.Frost (Editor 's note : Please refer to "Thi nkin g Allow ed" on page 2.) NKOMBO DZI continued trom p. 3 is not already betro thed she is expected to become so after the "Bara "ceremon y . Not ver y long ago sexua l int ercours e w it h a young girl before the performance of her " Bara " rit e was punishable by death or ex puls ion f orm t he clan of both partners : it was an offe nce form w h ich t he who le commun it y might suff er , and it is still very severel y punished if discovere d . There are some restr ict ions and taboos on menstrua ting women. They may not cook their husband' s or any adult a There are some restr ictions and taboos on menstruating women . They may not cook their husband 's or any adult male 's food. They may cook for t heir owm sex of for children , but may not themselves eat food cooked for any man. Long , long ago , an "unclean " woman entering the ancestral stool house would have been killed instantl y. Also, women in this state must not cross the threshold of any man 's house and even toda y ever y "bush " village has a special hut where women go and live during their period. The wives of certain ,craftsmen , such as weavers , aay not even speak directly to their husbands when in this state , but must do so through a spokesman , usually a yound child. For most fetish and voodoomen , contact with them by a woman in this state is the deadliest taboo. EjyUuufl UUflSiiiB H . ™ ¦»• ¦ Additional information is available from Ken Wilson in the art departm ent or at the Office of Extended Studies , Dear Editor : We would like to clear the recent statement about the lighting crew for the Rare Earth concert which appeared in the Winter Weekend issue of the C.V. The lightin g crew did the best job they could possibly have done considerin g the fact that Rare Earth' s lighting man did not get on campus unti l 7:00 the night of the concert . Many people probably saw members of the lighting crew running up and down the isles looking confused , but we were not confused , just in a hurr y so that the concert might start on time. ns lur ui c uuuiMiig w. me house lights , being switched off and on, that had nothin g to do with the lighting crew . There is a house light switch in the back of Haas which someone kept leaning on. Besides , how could we possibly keep beat to a group like that? Thank you for th e opportuni ty to clear up th is matter .Please , next time ,-get t he facts stra ight bef ore you print something. It can hurt more than it can ent ertain. Blink ingly, ..... The — - Liizhtina Crew ^^ The price tag for this Thoreau-style packa ge in Pain ting and Drawing runs at $31 per semester hour in state and $46 for out-of-state registrants. ^^ Dear Lightin g Crew : I kind of figured that the circumstances at the Winter Weekend concert were beyond your control since you norma lly do a terrific job at your functions. But I did want to comment on the effects that Rare Earth' s light men gave; hopefull y, someone will give them a copy of my article so they can see how disappointed we at BSC were in their perform ance. Valer yO'C onnell Dear Ms. O'Co nnell : In reference to your article (Some Words on the Concert ), I would be the first to agree with you in saying it was a real "ripoff" . For a group who had four gold albums , their , performance was less than prof essional , as witnessed f cy your colleague Mark Muiien. I welcome your suggestion of checking tour schedules ; in fact this is done by past , present and future BNE committees. It is their duty and obligation to get the best gro up ava ila ble , and t his has been done in all cases. The comm ittee , however , can only book the group ; they canno t perform for them . Maybe it was the fact that it was the ir ninth concert in as many nights and t heir last before going home to L.A. But whatever the reason , I w ill cont inue to strive to get the best available and hope that these "SUPERSTARS" live up to their billino. Very truly yours , Bob DeCarolis , BNE Committee Dea r Bob : Thanks for your answer to my comments. Maybe you 'd want a few extra copies of the Campus Voice to send to Rare Earth to point Bloomsburg 's discontent out to them. Townspeople speak Dear Editor : There is an old story about children who lived near a precipice . There were those who wanted to erect a fence to keep children from going over. Others wanted to' put an ambulance down below to gather up the -pieces, Those who advocate premarital sex say, "Here is an umbrella to use as you jump over ". The "Umbrella " would be all kinds of contraceptives . And there is an ambulance down below - free treatment for V .D . at our hos pit al or you can get an abortion to kill your unborn ch ild . Those of us whos do not advocate pre-marital sex advise helpi ng young people t o get int erested in cons tructive and helpful act ivit ies sublimatin g the se dr ive unt il your future life partner comes along. Then both of you can take the sage path of marriage t o the flower garden of life. The sex drive is not like hunger for food. It is so ethin g that can be controlled , sublimated by activit y and thinking along other and higher lines, As a pupil in public schools 1 remember fine maiden teachers who helped , their pupils find the best in continued to d * Take YOur pick Work-study available to Psych maj ors Beginning this summer and extending through the Fall and Spring semesters of next year , there will be several opportunities for students to earn college credits while working at various community humanservice agencies. Students with at least twelve completed semester hours in psychology may apply for several placement positions. Among those availabl e_ t_are : _ _1 m w . _ _ ¦ a. A r* i\. L.ocai *"* acnooi sysiems/t paying job for two semesters and one summer , involves testing, counseling and other supervised wxperiences . Communit y helping agencies Family Mental Health Clinic , Columbia Count y Youth Service Bureau , Home-Health Services , Department of Public Assistance , Child Welfare , Easter Seal , Columbia Day About sixteen Care , ets. positions are available ; all provide pay and credit. I n st it u tions for the M ent a lly III Danville State Hospital has a program involving testin g, thera py and individual counseling. The hospital provides free housing and some food service. White Deer Run involves programs whith the Drug addict ed and alcoholic patient , which pay small stipends . Wiley House has a with full-time program emotionally disturbed children in the Bethlehem Institutions for the Mentally Retarded Selinsgrove State School , White Haven State School ; each have rehabilitation programs with the multiply handicap ped . Community Homes for the Mentally Retarded Provide live-in supervisory experience with a group of mentally retarded adults. Room and board Schuylkill County MHMR involves a variety of community programs , Aging Geisinger Medical Center Placement involves inpatient and outpatient psychiatry, psychology and community mental health . Lebanon County MH-MR A communit y variety of placem ents , such as Sheltered Workshops , Social Services , Cerebral Palsy , are available. All provide nominal pay. Must be a Lebanon County resident. Vetera n's State Internship Places students in veteran Action Center and involves counseling and public relations. GI Bill available; veterans only. Services , Adult Probation , Child Services , Day Care , etc. All placements pay stipend; ^MHMtab. -^^ ¦¦^^ <^MHB ^> .^MHBte. -^a^^^ m. ^^ n^^^ students must be Schuylkill County residents. Police departments Program involves desk , research patrol , liason work; available in Bloomsburg and Schu ylkill County. College positions Limited —mmr— ' w number of placem ents are available with the College Counselin g Center and as teachin g assistants with the Department ol Psychology. Students who are interested in one or more of these — - ¦HBT "" *^^ ——»"w, ,,. . • " .¦nil >•! ^^m^mm . .. . programs should contact either Mrs. LOng in room 31, Old Science or Pro fessor BAird in room 26, Old Science. All placements are equal opaction portunity-affirmative employers. 4 ~ • • A sign of the times a Bloomsburg State College, (photo by Burk itt) i\ ^ ¦^ ¦ ^ *am -^^ aa ^^^^ J ack Anderson by Jack Anderson with Joe Spear Secretary of State Henry Kissinger ' s remark abou t hypothetical America n military intervention again st • « the oil states. 1 Vice Admiral Frederick I Turner , the Sixth Fleet comf man der , added to the furor by saying the Navy didn 't want to invade any oil sheikd om but was "prepared" to do so. ( Now, American diploma ts are trying to calm the storm . T hey are t elling Arab leaders that Kissinger 's vi ews hav e • a been m i srepresent ed by t he I press. Kissinger himsel f has ¦ publicly disavowed his own ™ st at emen t . W e can reveal , however , what t he Secret ary of State told associates during a WASIAVtt OA/IMA ^ / i t n A I I O oIam I a He said President Ford would 1 not stand by while the Western I world was destro yed by an oil ? squeeze. If oil should be used as a weapon to destro y the free world' s econom y, K issinger said , it would be just as serious • a threat as a Soviet military move against the West. The response of the United States , he added , would be the same. ( Kissinger also said he didn 't A. think the Soviets1 would go to I war with the United States over f the Middle East , as long as the * . United States was defending |l~ -the-WeitHi -lt vltal taterartr. "*— Of course , Kissinger stressed that the oil crisis can be solved without war. And in the secret policy councils , he has vigorously opposed the idea of military intervention. Meanwhile , Kissinger has been scheming secretly with the Shah of Iran to fir\d a solution to the Midd le East mess. The two men have develnned a warm personal rela tionship. Kissinger has persua ded the Shah that another Middle East war woul d i ncrease A ra b dependency upon the Soviets and , therefore, strengthen Soviet inf luence in the Mi d dle East. This would be a threat , Ki ssinger warned t o Iran 's position. The Shah ha s secre t l y agreed , there fore, to supply Israel with t he oil she would lose by giving up the captured Egyp ti an oil fi elds. The, Shah is aiso wining to join me uniiea States in guaranteeing Israel' s surv ival. This is signficant , _ 1 1111. _ _ * _ J _ I 4 I_ _ * * _ t 4 _ _1 because Iran is emerging as a military power in the Middle i Egypt 's President Sadat has both Kissinger and the Shah , meanwhile , that Israel must give up more than the oil fields. Ther fj nuiBt . also be withT drawUs « f/oinfftn»ti00^to Heights on the Syrian front and i could never accept a deal that didn 't also include his Arab brothers. Kissinger is now bringing pressure on the Israelis to come to terms with the Arabs before it is too late. Ford' s Faultfinders : Congress , the pr ess and the public have been ripping apart President Ford' s econ omic proposals. But some of the President' s own appointees have gi ven h i m t he roughest going-over . At a recent Saturday White House meeting, the President , h is energy czar F rank Zarb and his econom ic adv i sor W illiam Seidman were rafted over the coals by the Citi zens Act ion Comm i ttee , a group Ford set up under his "Whin Inflation Now " program. A f ter Seidman and Z arb briefed t he group, Ford strolled in , expecting simpl y to pass a few minutes in friendly banter. But the citizens committee unloaded on him. They char ged that the Seidman and Zarb presentation were too one-sided , and they com plained that the Administration was takin g too hard a line aga inst gas rationing. One member said the committee was useless and ough t to be disbande d. . > i , . Ford , according to \hpw present , calmlv tam ped down his pipe and listened. After the fireworks , the committee voted on two proposals. One was a resoluti on t o a sk b usiness to hold the line on prices ; the other was to creat e a "victory garde n " on the White House lawn as an exam ple for t he nat ion. The vegetable garden measur e p assed , but the price resoluti on was scut tled by a re presentative from the U.S. Cham ber of Commerce. D.E.A. Dope : The Drug E n f orcement Adm in i stration , the nation 's top anti-narcotics unit , has b een v irtuall y paralyzed by an internal power DEA. Some influent ial lawmakers have told us privat ely that they hope to abo lish the ant i These narc otics agency. DEA as an the legislators see that has expensive operat ion yielded only marginal resu lts. Iron Orders : When it comes to wage-price controls , some businessmen get a little carried awa y . Take , for instance , the case of Robert E. Lauter bach , the president of Wh eelingPittsburgh Steel. T«% A ll a « mam avi I1 cvvub tvinmn liivaiiv tf \ i . Lee Efl gert •'¦ • .. . * . .... • j v . v t 'i j t d H f.nr •i ii au/.W'.tf-ytj *v ir *y \\>tj 'rl ' * ».( ¦ I Alan Murph y offers a TAJAMALU WHO OWNS A FOREST: vehement portra yal of the not or ious J a panese bandit Taj amalu in ton ight 's Rashomon. ^^m\^^^^^^ m ^^m ^^ m ^^^^ K ^^m ^^^ L^^^^ B^L ^^K^&^^^ ^^^^^ "PLEASE - COME WITH ME AND BE MY WOMAN!" Tajamalu (Alan Murphy ) falls to his kn ees plead ing f or the favor of the woman he has j ust "ra ped. " (Rosem ar y Miscavage ) Her husb and (Jack Matter ) can do nothing tied to a bamboo root. ^Eff ^I ^H ^¦^^^ ¦^H ^^M ^^m^^M Play photography by Debbie Germain ^H^^^B I'K ^^^^ m^^B^K f ^m ^m ^K m ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^M ^^^^^ K ^H^^H^H ^^K^^^^ K^^K^^K fl^^^^^^^ V "TOZMl " by Kathy Joseph A knocking begins , then slowly builds and builds to high intensity . A figure in a black kimono shouts , " Tozai! " Thus begins " Ra shomon " with the Japanese tradition that starts th e show . This tradition is just one of man y unique aspects which can be seen tonight , tomorrow and Saturda y night at 8:15 in Keh r Union . Mr. Hitoshi Sato of BSC 's theatre department directs , and he knows what he is doing with the show. The battle scenes are like ballet , the sets and costumes are oriental in styles , and the atmosphere is totally Eastern . The story centers around a Samura i (pronounced "Samulai ") warrior (Jack Matter ) , his dishon ored wife ( Rosem ary Miskava ge) and the rapist , played by Alan Murphy of the Spanish Department. The action occurs in Kyoto , Japan about 1000 years ago . After the rape of the wife and murder of the husband , the case is taken to police court , where the audience hears three different versions of what happened. The rapist claims to have killed the Samurai in a duel , but the wife said she killed her husband In passion becaus e of his resentment toward her for her shame.Finally , in a chilling scene , a medium (Bernadette Haas ) contacts the Samurai' s spirit , who tells a completely different story. All three points of view are poignantly perf ormed and it won 't be unusual for the audience member to empathize to the point of anger nnri nit.v . ' HtAKEME AWAY!: " The "dishonored wife," ( Rosemaren y Miscava ge ,) is carried happily away from her husband (Jaok J.Matten )i in Jtbe -arn ^g,orfJii8 leg dary Tajam alu (Alan Mur phy,). The clincher takes place when an uninvolved bystander , a woodcutter played by Scott Lavere , tells what really happened. Supporting thespians are Bill Ide as the wigmaker , Don Bechtel as the Buddist priest , Wynne Weisman as the Samurai' s mother-in-law and Kevin Nee as the deputy . The play was originally a story written by Ry unsuke Akutagawa and was ada pted for the theatre bv Fay and Michael Kani n. It rah on Broadway for 187 perfo rmances . Of it Time said that it "Thrums with barbaric violence , yet unfolds with the stylized gravity of ballet. " See "Rashom on " Thursday, Frida y or Saturday night at 8:15. in Kehr Union for an unequalled stage experie nce of haunting reality . illllfi^B^Hi IlB^B^B^k' ^f* ~?7BlfPlB ^B^B^Br^ IhMb^b^b^bT fl^^ K4s3f§ > ^ ''tSt ^bh^^ IbIbWbWbWbWbWbWbY^ sh^I^^ B&wwbWbWbWbWbWbWV^ ^ —TK ^"^S 'LiBjw^^m IIb^ bB ^C ^~ ^ jfett ^BWBWB ^BWI ^BWBT £HH222 ^^^^ E^^^^^^^^^^^ H^^H^^^^^^^^^^ B v J B § »^hH^JjI^I^ ' * ~ ,8ji§ ^h ttr Hi^^ J^^^^ v yM^^B IK ¦ iiJKK ^fr ^^^^ ^ ^ ^ ^J ^^ ^ ** ^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ -^K ^^^^ I ^^^ H ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ i ' iSsseJ ' ^—! —^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^^ 0f4^3H ^B^BB9IHfl ^H ^H^H ^H^Bft ^^^ HIWi[H ^H ^H^H ^HVH3 ^HVHWK ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ SHB^B^B^^ BB^D^K^K^BiB^BHB^H^B^BM^BaB ^ffiSI^BH^SHHHlHHBfHlBB ^haaKlB ^BH ^^^^^ H&a_^9^B^^^^ B|j ^^^ H^|H^^^^ _^H^^^^^^ _^^ BS^^£^^bii| ^ ¦¦ ^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ " " ^^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ¦'¦ ''^ '' ¦ "• . AT THE GATE OF RASH OMON : Don Bechtel ponders his worthine ss as a pri est of Buddha. The H onorable Bloomsbur gPl ayers p resen tJap anese p lay ^m^^^^ U ' ^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ M w y ^ _^ ^ •¦ « E==jJ m ^M^k. ^^ ^. f rj ^ f ^ ^ *^B^ - ^^^^ 5S ¦^mJSSSSS^SS^S^—^^t '" mi = HWBW «^" ^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^««» ^^^^^ ^^^^^«^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ f ^»«««» ^«w«^«»^«»^«^^ «««^^ ««««««««««««««««« ^«^ VB^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ¦ ^k ^^^ l ^^^ k S HMS\ ^ _ - ' 1¦ ' 3r\ i ^^^ "^^ i^^^^^ . gj ^ ^ ^ ^ . . J ^^ S ^¦v^9ftwf ^^Bftw ^^^^t B ¦ ^BHBv ¦ ¦ ^fc ^^^ 5!!! ^^ !S^^^^ S^^ S!^£!hhS2m5 mmmm" ^ ^ ^—«3^r \ * %\\^ ^^ & AVV ¦^S I ^H J ^J S^^^ ?^^^ ?!2^2^^ S!! ^!^^^ 2!!!!SSES!! t\ .^> u ^lr^^L. ' '' ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^ b^bWht " "^4 ^«^««^«^HiB ^« ™M^«^^^^^ ^«^«^«^^ ^^ ¦" ^ '' • . bWc ^l ^fl^r k J wt tmJ ^SitBr^ ^^^OSM J r 5SSSSmSmSSSSSSSSSSSSSShsS *SZiiSmSSSbS£SShSSS£S ^ SHi iff BBliiii i i ^^n ^'* * ^z^^ ssl ^^ flfil ^^ ^^^ ^ _~ ^BWBWBWBHBWBWBWBWB p^Af *vv /\^p^* H { ¦¦ ^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦^¦ ^¦ E ^¦ ^k ^¦^¦^¦^¦^B .^¦ wB|HBl ^^ B^H^EffHB ^H ^MBM» ^^ H^B^^ nBB ^^ BBBl^^ PB ^MIIBlilWHWBBB ^Bl^Blfaifl»MM * 8 mi j i lJ *\ ^ ^^ bH ^ mJ . L -. re "' ? d '1in *tUt a 0]? the .TSrr £le Jack Matter helplesfily watches his wife stru ggle with Tajamalu the , , ; , J i?° ^^ SJ ^J ^JI ^l . r T % OPl f ^T (Alan Murph y) str uggles to releas e ^iis sword from a tree the midst.Qf,a,di|el.|[ (On» DUhe five bandit , ^. th e 8 '^ ^ ^ ^ ^ Mutes (who hang around portra ying,nothin g) iact« eoihdd ithd si'ortd hT;.B < ( , m - i,) ¦ • ' ' . ¦ > , , . I Diplomacy Game un derway The Department of Political Science has begun an exciting new game, called Diplomacy, shich could become the latest fad on campus. The object of the game, shich is posted in Luzerne Hall, is to take the part of one of several European nations and guide them through diplomatic maneuvers similar to that of World War I. According to game coordinator Gary Krill, these diplomatic maneuvers "must ultimately culminate in a situation similar to World War I." This game of international politics has no element of chance. It is currently being aggressively played by Ken Peress (Germany) , Steve Falken (Austria-Hungary ) , Greg Thomas ( Russia) , Vince Carter (Turkey , Diane Guff rovich and Jeff Feist ( Italy) , Dennis Frazier (France) , and Charles Gross (England). The game formally began Monday, February 3, inevitably by concession and alliance among player-nations. Both the triple alliance and the triple entente were formed "out of necessity ,and physical proximity," as one player was heard to say. At present , the nations are torn between promoting their own cause and endorsing a "collective front" cause. This means, in other words, that there are eight demi-imperialists guiding the seven nations. By the time you read this, another "game" will have begun, sending seven (or more ) people on their way to international domination-or destruction and absorption. If you are interested in more information , qontact Gary Krill, Luzerne Hall Room 121, 389-3221. He is especially interested in participants who plan to be at Bloomsburg during the summer session Letters to the editor continued irom y - * education and life. Their fine characters were appreciated and respected by pupils and parents. As a fellow teacher I can say the same for many maiden teachers I have known. Those who advocate premarital sex will tell you all "old maids" are cranks, frustrated , etc., etc. This is an insult to my wife, to my three daughters, and many, many more women who were or are still "old maids." Don 't be brainwashed. There have been plenty of statistics these last five years on the grea t increase of V.D., illegitimate births, suicides and crime. All since this "permissive" morality has been advocated in this last generation. You cannot stop all immoral acts by law, but neither dare we legalize and aid immorality . Many eaucaiors ana parents in the last two generations have been trying to follow a famous Dr. Spock's idea of not saying "no " or "don't" to children . Recently he recanted his theory as h e h as now seen t he r esults increases greatly in disobedience and broken homes. 1 No matter what religion, or lack of religion, there is planted a light within man , by the One who created us, that will finally bring conviction on those whose god is SELF. By one who made it through many "uneducated" years, but tried to live straight ; married at 39; at 82 now, I hope your married life will be as happy, fruitful and satisfying at least as oufs. Mr. and Mrs. William Euson Eric's fanclub Dear Editor : The articles by M. Mullen and K. McNally are very interesting, but have they replaced "NKOMBODZI" written by E. Yamoah? "Variety is the spice of life" so why don't we have a little taste of oth er cultures as w e did last year? Is Eric still interested in writing? Sincerely yours, A. Harris (Ed. note: Because of this request we will continue to run NKOMBODZI this semester, as often as Eric is able to write. Feminists at BSC A panel of feminists will be at BSC to discuss women in the work ing world in hope of prepar ing and encoura ging women on th is cam pus before the y hit the job market. "The Workin g W oman " will be presented on Tuesda y, February 18 at 8:00 pm in L35 in the library. This progra m, presented by the Ass ociati on of Universit y Women will be open to all who w ish to attend. Apanel of five will discuss all as pects of the working woman 's life. Some of these aspect s will inculde re-entry and entry workin g dilemm as , employer atti tudes , job marke t and perspective , part-time employment , child car facilities and , , , programs for infants and under- ' school »ge children , successful^ combinin g J erking W ' mo t hering and many ot her aspects. The panel consists of Peggy Isaacson , Assistant Director of Placemen t, BSC ; Susan Reed , Deputy Superintendent of Trea t men t at the Sate Correc t ional Institution for Women at Muncy; Dr. Connie Schick , Ex perimental Social Psychologist BSC ; Connie Thorne , full-time (re-entry ) student , divorcee and parent ; and Hilkka Brucksch , Day Care Home Coordinator , Columbia County Day Care Center. In addition to the panel discussion , pam phlets and other literature pertinent to women will be on dis play for your perusal. • I if yoif *have ¦any questions , contact Kay Camplese in the Counseling Center . Disaster is currentl y made into million dollar themes • by Bill Ba hr movie grossed over $165 million, making it one of the greatest financial successes ever . In fact , a sequel in planned featuring the original survivors of the capsized oceanliner trapped in a train by an avalanche en route home. Despite the current recessionary trends many industries are facing, the motion picture industry is recovering from months of disastrous deficit. The culprit, disaster, which economically forced the closing of numerous theaters, is being generated into millions of dollars through disaster movie themes. Even if the economic crisis that was gripping Hollywood may not have been as perilous as the predicaments faced by the mortals in a simulated Irwin Allen disaster , both appear to require solutions form an omnipotent entity for a successful recovery. Shattering earthquakes along with inundating floods (Esr. thquake ) , man-eating sharks (Jawa) , breath-taking fires (The Towering inferno) , spectacular plane accidents (Airport 1975) and gigantic waves (The Poseidon Adventure) highlight the disaster genre. They are produced by many camera and special-effects wizards who create realistic scenes that make the audience shake in their seats. Poseidon Ushers waves of disasters It all started with "The Poseidon Adventure" based on the novel by Paul Galhco. The After this success, motion pictures experience a rebirth by providing patrons with a form of entertainment offering psychological benefits. They presented the immortality of man and provide a relatifely of form inexpensive amusement. Recent disaster flicks "Airport 1975", inspired by both the movie and book Airpor t, features , a private plane whose piolt has a heart attack ramming into a 747 jet during a landing descent in Salt Lake Ditycontinued the disaster flick trend. With the pilot sucked out of the craft and the co-pilot blinded , the lowering of courageous Charlton Heston into the pilot's seat is required to save the day. "The Towering lnierno , tne next successful disaster flick , is based on Martin Stern's "The Tower" and Frank Robinson's "The Glass Inferno." These two best-sellers provide the basis for a fire in the world's .. _ _ continued from p.2 unrecognized by a majority of his readers. Am I doing that? C ertainly not. I am an echo, a mirro r if you will , of the student rhetoric. Anything that I pri nt in my column is common knowledge to most students. I' m not any one or going after " " m sim ply atan ything. I' tempting to air the views of the students fo r their satisfaction and affirmation , and offering a link of communication that the f aculty and administration can V * ti I t ._ irony ' After all , this paper is trying to be the voice of the campus. Furthermore , if what you read here is, in your opinion , so much hor se-ma nure, then investigate it and find out. All you need do is ask around and listen to what people have to say. That is what I do. But no matter what you do, or how you react, don't deny yourse lf the rec ognition that there may be t ruth in what I write. And remember that sometimes the t ruth hurts. b/Jh>m4b ma Quvaiu ay« *\f vii Those Individuals who ob|ect to the views put across in this column are probably the ind ividuals to whom it a pp l y s most. If the members of the campus other than the student bod y are not Interested in the critical op inions of the students , then the goal of this institution (quality education ) Is never to be fulfilled. In any event, those who choose to are criticize ¦ Realistic themes burn with Thinki ng Allowed I 4f*L# A 4* i l l iai\« t u n _ On-site tallest skyscraper . locations at San Francisco's Regency Hyatt Hotel and The Bank of America mall, along with 20th Century studio props, are combined with various photographic techniques to produce the film 's spectacular setting. welcome me and my work. An all staff cast, comprised of Paul Newman , Steve McQueen , Faye Dunaway, Robert Jones , Jennifer Wagner , O.J.Simpson and Richard Chamberlain , are threatened with cremation on the 136th floor by raging flames. All through the night rooms explode , elevators fail, lifelines break, ladders become finite gadgets of metal and helicopters dangle to reach the entrapped. Though the film realistically illustrates the need for improved fire codes in contemporary high-rises, it fails to accurately explain the erratic nature of fire and firefighting techniques. In the movie combustible cleaning materials in a janitor 's closet were ignited by faulty viring causing . the blaze ; in actuality elec- . tricla switching equipment is not placed in such locations. Also, fire does not usually apread into the central cor of buildings, and gas lines are never placed in fire stairs as in "Inferno". A million gallons of water at the top of the building which finally extinguished the flames is ulikely since most high-rises can only support less than half that weight. Yet , "The Towering Inferno" cinematically offers viewers a refreshing break from the daily rout ine by prov idi ng moments of gripping suspense. ( Nest wee k a loo k at an upcom ing disaster flick , "Earthquake.) Y^ U'JJ £giL,}3 3& V/3JI sts 3)33 i STAT E B U RE A U, OF= E M P U D YM E N T » ' 'PT pfmf ^n/mGuPML Gmmwmmwmmmmssm-m' rwss/r/ I U M SPECIALEFFECTS ARE STAGGERING? | """' I "WRY REALISTIC!IT SHAKES YOU UP!" m i'JF * ; ^^H^^ l ^^E^S If ^J f In W3 .;.;! to Criticism is one of the greatest aids to my purpose. It I'm to be effective In getting across the viewpoints that I feel are in agreement with the students and at times with an y other members of the colle ge communit y, then I must be sen- sitive to the form of feedback offered to me, i.e. ; criticism And another thing ; If you don 't like wha t you read here, it ma y do you well to do something about it. Or, If you feel that { haven 't quite put it right, then write It yourself and . send.lt Into our letters column. starrin g '^ w I ^B k IW ^^ nL ^v & aT V B ^ i _J I \' ^H H nM / 1 is JERRI FORD _ > i. 'M . '" ^TBBHniiill Wy ^^SIlSESSS&r III tht If " 1Hording t* ihiwn In HI '$ now II :*: "' mul 'ri ;§ > |-dl»f r1|.. BUM ABMIHiB i ni"»' °o.ti lo'l .<" in i THE COUNCIL Of ECONOMIC ni»8 \ Ji $<&**^ I and ^^ ^ 7.500 ,000 UNEMPLOYED WORKERS I to ifdfring AU10 INDUSTRIES -MULTlHATtONAl CONGLOMERATES - FOOD MONOPO LIES I» w] 1 M Oil CARTEL WMr lMPiAUSIIl ECONOMICS Mimk, HIM) f AMI and tht IMMION S i u« utss I ¦ ¦¦«•: ¦> ¦ , ,; ¦ *4Mm' ffllfol ;*;W;W^ U : .' it n i. ' >r. i i. fc » > • ' - t ¦ .:..: • .: / /xV , , .1 . . ..,,,„, 1.1 "'' »./" i ; ¦¦ 1 I'.' . ' .' .' ' ,,$¦ v v' v ', : . '.' 1 Out of the Running Caqers lose tw o in Row East Stro udsburg 62-60 by Dale Myers The woes of BSC' s basketball team continued after the loss dropped a 62-60 heartbreaker to East Stroudsburg last Saturday at Nelson Field House. The contest , along with the close score , featured what appeared to be a free-for-all under the boards . Numerous shoving matches occured with miraculously only one small altercation between BSC' s Mike Ognosky and Stroud 's Mike Reilly , who scored 25 points and grabbed a truck load of rebounds . In the first half it lo In the first half it looked as if East Stroudsburg m ight win by alot more than two points, as they sprinted to a quick 10-0 lead. When Ognosky 's jumper f inally put the Huskies on the Scoreboard at 15:04, it was answered by a Reilly bucket to make it 12-2. The Huskies then scored seven straight points featuring O gnosky 's shooting to pull within 12-9, only to have ESSC eru pt to outscore the Huskies 13-3 to open up a 25-12 lead with 10 :00 to play in the half. At this poin t Rich Yanni came off the bench for BSC and hit two straight jumpers to make the score 25-16. However , Reilly went into his act as he bulldozed underneath for eight points to the Huskies two to give the Warriors a 33-18 lead. ESSC maintained a 13 point margin until 2:17 when Rick Joseph hit two jumpers and a pair of fouls along with Al Williams' follow to cut the East Stroudsburg lead to 35-30 at the end of the half. The second half start saw bsc pull to within three at 39-36, but the Warriors hit two straight buckets to lead 43-36. The Huskies then turned Al Williams loose and he hit for By Dale Myers two jumpers and a tip in to make it 43-42. With Stroud in front 49-46, BSC finall y felt they After two striaght conference wins and some revived hopes for a championship, the BSC cagers traveled to Mansfield needed the lead and Joseph with Gar y Tyler connected to put Bloom ahead for the first time , 50-49 with 7:39 to play in the game . The Warriors then countered , outscoring BSC 7-2 to take a 56- only to meet a tough group of Mounties ad drop an 85-70 decision . The contest was nip and tuck until midway through the second half when Mansfield 52 lead with 5:00 to play . With 4:14 remaining the Huskies again came back with six unanswered points to lead 58-56 at 3:04. East Stroudsbur g retal i ated with three free throws and a jumper to lead 6158 with 1:02 left in the game. Joseph 's push shot pulled the Husk ies to within 61-60, but Ray Wohl hit the first of a one attempt to make it 62-60 at :37. BSC then brought the ball downcourt with :29 to pla y and Ognosky missed an attempt to tie it. Stroud ' s Pat Tarrant pulled away from the Huskies with good shooting from the floor . The Mounties also put out the f ire under Jerr y Radocha holding to just 10 points which was 12 under his per game average . First Half In the first half Mansfield 's concentration on Radocha Bright s tap and a Radocha jumper at 13:30. the teams put it away for good on a length was immediately fouled . He as BSC tried to find the open shot , the clock was against them and Joseph had to force a shot at the buzzer , which missed and Stroud had won 62-60. Along with earning their nickname of the Warriors , East Stroudsburg held Jerry Radocha to just six points. For all practical purposes they also put BSC out of the conference race as the Huskies now have a 55-5 league record. to be un- s corner shot put BSC on top at the outset . However , Mansfield came back to tie and eventually open up a 12-8 lead only to have . BSC pull even at 12-12 on Steve The Warriors then tried to missed the one and one with Steve Bright rebounding and the Huskies called time out with a chance to tie. However , proved successful as the rest of the Huskies picked up the slack . M i k e O g n o s k y grabbed the rebound and was tri ple teamed but called time out before the Huskies could force a j um p ball . of the court pass to Dave Moyer. Moyer missed but was f ouled by J oseph and fa iled to convert on either free throw a t tempt . Af ter the second miss Reilly cleare d the boards and Mansfield 85-70 then played evenly over the next 10 minutes. Al Williams tries a jumper against Stroud (above ). (Below) Jerr y Radocha pulls down a rebound in the Hus kies heartbreaking loss to the Warriors ; (photos by Mason ) With the huskies on top 26-24, the Mounties came alive and bucketed eight unanswered points to assume a 32-26 lead with 3 :24 to play in the half . Not to be denied , the Huskies came righ t back on two jum- pers by Al Williams and one by Ognosky to make it 32-30 at the end of the half. Second Ha If Move At the beginning of second half the Huskies Mansfield 's lead to one then moved ahdad on the cut and an Ognosky bucket basket 37-36. The Mounties retaliated to outscore Bloom 8-2 to lead 44-39 but Ognosky and Rick Joseph both connected to cut the lead to one at 4 4-43 with 14:00 to play . The ensuing four minutes prove d to be disasterous f or BSC. After Husky forward All Williams was hit with a technical foul Mansfield reeled off n ine success ive points to lead 53-43at 11:00. After this the Huskies could get no closer. Mans fi eld cont inue d to shoot well while BSC went cold and the Mounties obtained their largest lead 70-55 with 3:24 to play. The Huskies then began to connect but Mansfield s fine shooting continued' as * they held on for the victory. wrap up O ne bright spot for the Huskies was the performance of Ognosk y who turned in another solid game , scoring 10 points . The less was fourth in the conference and their season record dropped to 11- 7. ¦ ¦f_ _ _ it. D Timmy, 1 Rich Yanni shoots over a Stroud defender. The Huskies travel to Cheyney this weekend , ( photo by Mason ) r • •' ¦ • *• l '¦ ; ' II H Come home! Lassie Q D promises not to bite your ankles,JJ . : 1] an yWi ^ii^^ ^tUaxr. 'Bj Grapplers Down Lock Haven by Craig wint ers Pins by Chicky Car ter and Steve Scheib paced the Husky grapplers to a 26-16 triumph over the Bald Eagles of Lock Haven at the Field House last Thursday. The impressive win against powerful Lock Haven boosted the Huskies record to nine wins , three losses and one IK. The match had seesawed early in the match before the pins by Cartter and Scheib broke the match wide open. Tom Fink at 118 staked the Huskies to a quick 4-0 lead as he dominated Carl Lutz gaining several near falls before settlin g for a 15-4 superi or decision . The score remained close in the lower weight classes as Carl Poff dropped a 13-4 decision to Tom Parker Qn/I TtotrA D^onrif Kq++1a/4 fsi o 1_ «ail*JL M^ VL TV - U& OUUV 1hS*kWUV'\* *V ** * 1 stalemate with the Bald Eagles' Jim McCauley. Lock Haven then gained their only lead of the night as former PIAA champion Gary Walk edged valiant freshman Jon McCloskey at 142. Co-captain Randy Watts regained the lead for good as he outmuscled Lock Haven captain Dave Crowell 85. • Chicky then electrified the partisans as he recordedhis third consecutive dual meet pin. Carter took his man down with surprising ease early in the first period and kept Lock H aven 's Gary Way on his back until he finally gained the fall with :26 remaining in the first period. Dan Burkholder continued the rall y by dominating his 167 lb match and coasted to an 11-5 decision. Fresh? nan Steve Scheib then clinched the maatch with a second period pin over Ron McMurry. Scheib completel y overpowered his foe and stunned McMurr y with a vicious first period slam to the mat. Scheib continued to dominate in the second period and gegistered a lightning quick pin with :53 remaining. Two escapes , one by Matt Tydor and the other by Lock Haven 's Art Baker , were die only scorin g as the grapplers struggled to a 1-1 tie at 190. The Huskies then chose to : 'J. .»£*S«KS!»:& forfeit the heavyweight event and this brought the final tally to 26-16. The grapplers plan to face a tough week this week as they travel to Millersville Tuesda y and face tough East Stroudsburg at Nelson Field House on Saturday. 1 H ousing cut 9» 8To correct and clarify .a 1Statement in a recent Voice 1article concerning on and off ¦ campus students : 8 Any resident student who has ¦earned more than 59 credit ¦hours at the completion of the If all, (1974) semester will not be i {permitt ed to reside on campus i ¦during the 1975-76 academic i Syear. ¦Director of Housing will, upon ¦re quest , place the names of ¦students excluded by this policy Son the September residence hall Iwaitn g list for possible conssideration at Ma^£MMMAMM|8nBMgB later date.^&Afi£ftKM 838&S83^B ..... ^¦M^^^ M^MM^^^^^^^ Chicky Carter puts his opponent to the mat as the Huskies downed Lock Haven , (photos by Williard ) QgpWiS^BMSJ ^S^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^^Bl S^S^^B " T^mUK-i^ - .' ^^ Kj TT^T^^^ H by Bill Sipler Rand y Watte locks up with his opponent during the Lock Haven matc h . The Huskies host Stroudsburg this weekend , (photo by Williard ) BHrjjjjj Si The BSC mermaids hoited Lycomlng and Mansfield last week, (photo by Slade) • The BSC wrestling squad is moving down the road to the Pa. Conference Wrestling Championships in strong fashion as the date of the cham pionships draws closer . On the other hand , the cagers of BSC suffered two losses last week that basically eliminated them from conference pla yoffs. . For t he cagers , this year has to be one of the ma jor disa ppointmen ts they have suffered in recent years. Cheyney, one of the perrenial tltlists in the conference , was weaker than last year and it looked like the Huski es had an excellent shot at repeating the feat of last year in gettin g into the conference Dlavoffs. Misfortune dogged the team earl y as they lost Rich Evans to a knee injury early in the season and suffered a heartbreaking double overtime loss to Mansfield before the bre ak. This , coupled with two two point losses to Shippensburg and East Stroudsburg, put the Husk ies in a most unfavorable position from , which they couldn 't recover despite an outstanding jobag ainst Millersville. The second loss to Mansfi eld sealed the team 's fate and the two point loss to Stroudsburg was just bitter icing to cover a disapp ointing year. The other two major men's sports , swimming and wrestling have shots at the conference champi onships arid both teams hope to excell in several areas . For the swimmers , who host the championships , hopes are high for repeat performan ces by Stu Marvin and Rick Kozicki in their specialties. The swimmers also have hopes that team captain Paul Richards will be able to compete in these events and give the Huskies additional depth . The wrestlers are going through what has the makings of a fine season. The team has impr oved very much as the younger wre stlers have come through for Coach Sanders . The gra pplers are also getting strong performances from their veterans to help spark them towards a strong showing at the Championships. The nice thin g about the conference championships for the swimmers is that the Husky fans will be able to see the competiti on at the Nelson Field house. For many swimming fans this could be the height of thei r spectator 's year as they can see this competition live for the first time in the short • history of the Nelson Fieldhouse , ¦""" »«" ¦•« a • > ^a a a a m a B B a a a B a m a a _ , _ _ , Track team Downs Penn State by Ed Hauck Bloomsburg indoor track team participated in its third meet this past Friday and came out a winner over Penn State 's "B" team by a score of 59 - 50. Mr. Ron Puhl , head coach and Mr. Phillip Krause , Asst. coach , were quite pleased with the performances put forth by the team , even though a few B' sburg members were missing . BSC swept three events during the course of the evening; 50 yd. dash (E. Dorm , 5.4, M. Locust , B. Staton ) , High Jump (S. Kita 6'0" , B. Staton , D. Shoemaker ) and Shot Put , Penn State had no participa nts for this event , (T. Simpson , 43'4' \ Cddrin , MacBain ). Other winners for the Huskies were Dietrick in the Triple Jump with a bound of 42'6,3-4 " , Skip Niles in the 880 yard run (2:02.25 ) with Tracy Mollica from Penn State and Bill Dvonch of BSC, respectfully for second and third places. In the 8 Lap Relay , (320 yds. each) Ed Hauck , Eric Koetteritz , Emory Dorm and Mike Locust combined for a winnin g time of 2 :26.1. renn state won tne miie relay (3:34.5) and swept the 2 mile (9:10.6). Baker of PSU won the Pole Vault with a 13'6" . The 50 yard high hurdles was taken by Giotto of PSU (6.7) with Ed Hauck (BSC) in second. PSU also won the 440 and 600 yd. runs ', but BSC placed second and third in both , Morris and McNamee for the 440 and Twardzik and Patterson in the 600. In the mile run , there was a royal screw up. In the Nelson Field House , it is 11 laps to the mile, but somehow, the person who was dictating the laps fouled up and gave the runners an extra lap. In all actualit y, the milers ran a mile plus 160 yards , which added to their times . Two PSU trackm en ran 1 and 2 with a time of 4:52.2 and Rob Wintersteen and Jim O'Brien capped third and fourth for BSC. The Huskies next meet is Friday, February 14 at 6:30 in Nelson Field House with Bucknell and Lock Haven. Mr Puhl has appreciated the support the school has given the track team and he encourages more students and faculty members to attend. The women travel to Lock Haven next week, (phot o by Perisano ) mermen at Oneota ^M ^^ The BSC mermen saw their record drop to 8-5 last weekend as they lost on a bid to upset Oneota 61-52. The Huskies ended their dual meet season against Edinboro this week. The Huskies couldn 't pull out a win in the distance medley relay which had the unsettling effect of throwing BSC plans for the meet in array . The Huskies were able to stay close up until the one meter diving however. The tankmen had two double winners in Rich Kozicki and Stu Marvin. Marvin took both the 50 and 100 yard freestyle events while Kozicki was polishing off the opposition in the 200 and 500 freestyle events. Jim Balchunas and Bill Ewell Emor y Dorm breaks the tape ahead of two opponents as the Huskies downed Penn State . Photos bv Covie ) • also posted wins for the Huskies. Ewell took the 200 yard butterfly event while Balchunas won the 200 yard individual medley. The husky freestyle relay team also won featuring Balchunas , Keith Torok , Tim Sopko and team captain Paul Richards. Larry Kitson , John Clayton , Gary Havens , Doug Thran , and Pete Campagna alsohad a hand in the scoring as the Huskies roun ded up th ree seconds and six third place finishes. The Huskies will host def ending sta te conferemce cham pi on Clar ion , runner-u p Edinboro and t he res t of the participating state colleges next weekend when it host t he sta te championship tournement on Febuary 20,21, and 22. i ¦ ¦ • * P.Se Twelve ThUrS A^^ sb ^b^bA I I ^g4 A ^^ ¦^¦^a^a^a^SM dsi^^ a^h^ ^^^^^ ^^^^^ OmjQ nOMf tOr IMbh CRbVOIJ, B^C^ab_ Bl^ I , do« $240 to oowr ntum poet* I ESSAYJtR VICES I I I I i Marfc«t Sts. 7*Md aj i. 4 i t a^ftM ^L Pooper, 7M^44 I love you, don't ever forget * ^ LkM Mg^B^B^B^BIaB^kBB^BlaB ^^ Bt)^MBMkBtt J ^^ kMk ^ wit * rWBrCVf mpienlV IJiWjF. YOU'VEREAD ABOUT HER... TALKEDABOUT HER... HOW SEE HER! 72 N. Iron St. Over 300 Guitars and AmpBf on shampoo I [PR / ECISION CUT fT Sm Our Rue Selection of SWEATERS at ARCUS MtLI.tR OFFICE SUPPLY CO. »- - It ifAai M^Lbft —P M I I| J | • V WVV1 HUM *V«f M W^^bUNkKhw ^^ UI ™%m j ^^ B^^^^^ K" i^H Wl WMW^E ^ff lS^^nKm.' 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ONLY EC. % $4.UO 1 "S ^^ ^^ ^ N ^ $5.00 ^*^^ Y » HIADQUARTItSOF HALLMARK CARDS ANO OIPTS Hiow 714-aVH J', ^^ g^HKlk B^B^B^B^sl^ J^s^HHH^»»<:^B^HkF!T^k.*'' --pgjg gjpg fl BjpgajgppgfgfHBr"" /^ save *1^M> *>SS } ^ Hmiel' s Musk St ore ]^HB fla ^ b aa^MM^ ^i^k ^M^k^^^ b j ^^^ ^^^ m^^^^^^^^^^^^^ A bus will be provided from BSC; sign up at the Information Desk in Kehr Union by February 19. BLOOMSBURG DANVILLE HIGH WAY O uf r e e m cmrr&kmM /i Campus kepretenUtive Required AM^ h ^^ n* tfto ^ b ^ftai The Hershey Bears will take to the ice against the Richmond Robins' at the Hershey Arena on March 5, 1975. HAIRPO R T Love # Doody _ S lOffOntO t OHCeM!l9# CaMttOS iSMaftl ^g^gVeMaM ^(^ga^^»» ^^H^srtT