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Mon, 02/26/2024 - 18:27
Edited Text
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Business Educators Meet Saturday
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may Day Festivities May 11;
iNikki Scheno Chosen Oueen
IB Miss Nlkkl Scheno, a senior from Berwick has been elected to reign
Wrcr the May Day Festivities, on Wednesday, May 11, 1960. "The Ballet"
l» the theme of this year 's program which will take place at 1:00 p.m.
ton the terraces between Science Hall and Husky Lounge. Mrs. Dorothy
iff Evans is acting as chairman for the festivities.
1
1The Maroon and Gold Band will
Resent a concert prior to the openM g exercises. Included in the pro||ssional are flower girls and a
|jh)wn bearer from the Benj amm
Jfranklin Laboratory School, an
Honor Court composed of Junior
Iwomen, and eight senior sirls chos1n to serve in the Queens Court.
% enior Court
j| Sandy Clark e , Kathy Durkin ,
'|[ [ary Ellen Dushanko , Lydia Gobbi,
;H>anne Moyer, Raydell Radzai, SalReifenstahl , and Henrietta Smith
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v|Jre the eight women acting as the
Queen 's attendants.
Following the procession , Miss
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Mikki Scheno will be crowned by
|oe Zapach , President oC the Com|
lunity Government Association.
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[ueen's Entertainment
-il The girls' gym classes from the
Miss Nikki Scheno
|follege and the children from the
Haboratory School will provide enTonight Phi Sigma Pi will
j fertainment for the Queen and her
"guests following the crowning exer- sponsor the "Turnabout" dance
in Husky Lounge. Between the
hours
of 8 and 11 p.m. the full
THE BALLET
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sound
of renowned big bands
| Excerpts by Tchaikovski
Sugar Plum Fairies — Alexandra and noted recording artists will
be heard through the media of
Galli & Kindergarten girls —
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and stereophonic
high-fidelity
"Danse de la Fee Dragee"—Nut|
with
an
absolute minisound,
cracker
|
Dance of the Little Swans— "Sw an mum of rock and roll,1
WHLM is covering the dance,
I Lake "— Kindergarten boys
Candy Canes — Grade 2 — "Over- and there is the possibility of a
current recording star 's person¦C ture Miniature "— Nutcracker
al appearance.
Toy Soldiers — Grade 3 — "M arch"
— Nutcracker
Tickets to the "Turnabout "
Russian Dance — Grade 4— "D a nse are 50c per couple and may be
R u sse "—- Nutcracker
obtained from any member of
It alian Dance — Grade 5 - "Taren- Phi Sigma Pi.
: tella "— Swan Lake
Chinese Dance and Dragon—Grade
Dance Group — "D a nse do les
I 6—"Danse Chinois "—Nutcrack 'r
Mirlitons "— Nutcracker
Schottische — College — "HumorVocal
Numbers — Harmonettes —
eske " — Swan Lake
|
"None but the Lonely Heart"
Arabian Dance — College—"Danse
You Maidens"
"Come
Arabe
"— Nutcracker
;
Onegin "
"Eugene
#lower Waltz — College —"Waltz
of the Flowers"— Nutcracker
Maypole — Grades 3-4-5-G-College
|
|
|Daiice of the Toy Flutes — Modern Recessional — Queen and Court.
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fudy Goss to Represent College
I&s Laurel Princess in Poconos
Miss Judy Goss was crowned as
Bloomsburg 's Laurel Princess by
Junior Class President , Joe Thompson, at the Junior Prom , held last
Friday night. She will represent
BSC in a contest held in the Poconos in June for the title of State
Laurel Queen.
"The Enchanted Sea," the theme
for the dance, gave dancers the impression of their being under water.
A 20-foot "ghost ship " placed at the
rear of the gym set the mood accordingly. The blue-green lighting,
as well as an array of starfish , octupi , clams, shells, and other hand-'
prepared signs of sea-life, mounted
on fish net , added a misty atmosphere to the scene. The Esquires
from Mansfield provided music for
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Miss Judy Goss
In charge of the various committees for the dance were Joyce Morgan, decorations; Eileen Wolscheslsky and Rita Bottcon , programs;
Noreen Van Tuyle, t ickets; Barrio
Iveson , invitations ; and Bornadine
Search and Paula Schell, refreshments.
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SOCIAL CALENDAR
May 4 — Record Dance
May 5 — Commuters Banquet
May 7 — Record Dance
May 9 — College Council Banquet
May 11— May Day
May Day Dance
May 12 — Sigma Alpha Eta Banq.
May 14 — Spl ash Party
May 18 — Record Dance
May 20 — Jam Session
May 21 — Picnic, Knoebels Grov e
May 25 — Senior Honor Assembly
Record Dance
May 26 — Second semester ends at
close of classes.
Senior Ball
May 28 — Alumni Day
May 29 — Baccalaureate
Commencement
College Installs
Gates to Honor
Oscar Bakeless
Two wrought-iron gates have
been installed by the college, and
placed at the entrances to Fountain Court , in honor of Professor
Oscar Hugh Eakeless who distinguished himself as an educator at
this college for 30 years. Professor
Bakeless first cam e to Bloomsb urg
in 1890, but resigned after three
years to become principal of Carlisle Industrial School for Indians,
where he remained for nine years.
In 1902 the Bakeless family returned to Bloomsburg and remained
here until 1929 when Professor
Bakeless retired.
Professor Bakeless taught "Theory and Pr actice of Teaching " and
was librarian in 1903 and 1904. Before his retirement he taugh t "Introduction to Reading " and "History and Principles of Education."
He was admired by the students
who affectionately called him "Daddy Bakeless." For many years the
local chapter of PSEA ( FTA ) was
called the "Oscar Hugh Bakeless
Chapter of Future Teachers of America. "
Eminent Son
Dr. John Bakeless, son of the
professor, also brought distinction
to Bloomsburg. He is nationally
known as an author, jour nalist,
scholar, educator, and lecturer. In
the autumn of 1959 Dr. John Bake-
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Division of Business Education
To Celebrate 30th Anniversary
The Thirtieth Anniversary Celebration of the founding of the Division
of Business Education at B'loomsburg State College will be culminated
in a full day of activities on April 30, 1960. At this time, Bloomsburg's
Business Education Division will serve as hosts to nearly four hundred
teachers attending the Eastern Division Conference of the Pennsylvania
Business Educators Association.
Registration
Registration will begin in CenNoted Folk Singer
tennial Gymnasium at 8:30 a.m.
and will be followed by a General
Campus
Visits BSC
Session from 9:30-10:30 a.m. Four
sectional meetings will begin in
Sutliff Hall at 11:00 a.m.
William Rineer, Central Dauphin
High School, is serving as Program
Chairman for the Conference.
The Conference will end with a
luncheon meeting in the College
Commons at 12:45 p.m., with John
M. Aichele, of Milton Hershey High
School, and First Vice-President of
the PBEA presiding. The featured
speaker will be Dr. C. Brainerd
Metheny, Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Company, Pittsburgh.
At Open House and an Anniversary Banquet will be held in the
afternoon and evening in celebration of Bloomsburg's Thirtieth AnPaul Arnold
niversary of the founding of BusiTuesday, April 26, Bloomsburg ness Education.
students had the opportunity of Division 30 Years Old
hearing one of the outstanding folk
The Commercial Teaching Trainsingers in America today. Mr. Paul
Arnold is not only a leading bari- ing Curriculum, now the Division of
Business Education, was begun at
tone , but also a lecturer , composerarranger, actor , writer, and r adio Bloomsburg in 1930 by Dr. Harvey
and television producer. His mas- A. Andruss. Since that time, and
terful interpretive ability, combin- up to August 1959, the Division has
ed with his skillful use of the guitar, graduated 1275 Business Education
brought a new dimension to the Teachers.
In celebration of this important
realm of folk music.
event , Open House will be held at
Mr. Arnold's arrangements of Sutliff Hall from 4:00 p.m. to 6:00
folk songs have been performed by p.m. This will provide an opportunmany of the world's leading singers, ity for returning alumni to visit the
and he is the only folk singer who new quarters of the Business Dehas had his own starring show on partment.
both NBC and CBS television networks. His audiences have ranged ur . ra ui <_». seiDy speaker
The Anniversary Banquet will be
from backwoods mountain people
to the President of the United held at the College Commons at
St a tes , and he explored the inter- 6:30 p.m., Dr. Thomas B. Martin
esting field of folk music in a presiding. Speaker for this banquet
unique way for the BSC audience. will be Dr. Paul O. Selby, Dean,
State Teachers College, Kirksville,
less revisited Bloomsburg and lec- Missouri and former head of the
Department of Business Education
tured at the college.
of
the same college. His topic will
Bakeless Loan Fund
be "Keep Your Foot in the Door."
After the death of Professor Os- Dr. Selby is noted for the founding
car Hugh Bakeless, his daughter of Pi O mega Pi , National Honorary
presented the college with $2,500 in Business Education Professional
memory of her father. The money Fraternity (Alph a Delta Chapter
was used to start the Bakeless Loan on our campus) and as a past presiFund for students.
dent of the National Association for
This brief history of the Bakeless Business Teacher Education. He is
family has been written to acquaint also listed in "Leaders in Educathe recent generations of students tion."
with the name Bakeless which is
inscribed on the new gates.
From the Office of. ..
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Heller , Downey, Girton Chosen
To Edit Publications Next Year
The Publications Committee has
recently announced the editors and
business managers for the 1960-61
college publications.
Frank Heller was named editor
of the Olympian, the college literary magazine and Wanda Kline will
act as business manager. Dr. Russell is the ndvisor of the Olympian .
Mary Frances Downey will head
the staff of the Obiter, the college
yearbook. This year she is serving
as assistant editor of this publication. Nancy Wurster has been selected to serve as assistant editor,
and Richard Dennen as business
manager, The advisor to the Obiter
is Dr. DeVoe.
The staff of the BSC student
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handbook, the Pilot, will be headed
by Jeff Girton , with Bob Johnstone
as assistant editor. The associate
editors of the Pilot who will revise
and bring up to date certain sections of the handbook are William
Martin , Janet Williams, Ted Oakey
ami Sylvia Marcheski. No major revisions are planned, but additions
such as the Chess and Golf clubs
will be included. George Stradtman ,
Dean of Men, is the advisor to the
Pilot.
The editors and business managers were recommended by the advisors to the publications and approved by the Publications Committee and Dr. Andruss respectively.
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Dean of Instruction —
In answer to questions concerning Advanced Registration, for the
fall semester, Dean of Instruction,
John A. Hoch, stated that there will
be no deferment of preliminary fees
for any student who is planning to
return in September. May 1, 2, and
3 are the dates set aside for Advanced Registration. Students are
asked to report on those days to
Centennial Gymnasium from 9:00
a.m. to 12:00 noon, and from 1:30
p.m. to 4 :00 p.m. Checks for $25.00
toward the basic fee must be made
payable to the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania, and checks for the
$20.00 activities fee to Community
Activities.
The master schedule for the fall
semester will be available during
the first week of May. Students
who have completed the advanced
( Continued on page 4)
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Growing Pains
Look around. It's as inevitable as a chemical equation : More students plus more money yield better facilities and an impersonal touch.
We would be foolish to predict that in five to ten years Bloomsburg
will be a miniature Penn State or a well-organized education factory,
but there are signs that BSC is advancing in the direction of big school
attitudes and policies.
Never can we expect BSG to adopt the numbered student policy
present on some of the largest campuses in the country, but we can
expect the impersonality to become more evident. This is no fault of
the administration , the faculty, or the students. It is a natura l result
of rapid expansion and increasing enrollment.
The student-faculty relationship necessarily weakens with jumps in
enrollment. A college teacher cannot be expected to continue his former testing and grading procedures when the number in his classes
suddenly doubles. An adjustment must be made. Objectively soon
replaces subjectivity in grading; blue books are less frequent , and
short answer tests seem to offer the only solution. Witness the increasing use of electrographic pencils for machine scored tests. Growing
numbers of tests in subject areas from health to accounting are administered to large numbers in Carver. Nearly every day Hardhearted
Hannah, the IBM machine, cooly grinds out another set of test papers
to be recorded and interpreted by the teacher.
As BSC becomes larger, many areas formerl y not under definite
policies will have to be provided with written regulations. Note the
rash of policies produced by CGA committees in recent months. Already key points have become the prime consideration in decisions
concerning awards to outstanding seniors, and it is probable that scholarships and grants will soon be given according to stricter written
guides.
Socially, the expanding student population has had its effect. Most
students now band together in smaller and more specialized groups
than previously. Class and school spirit eventually sags, and interest in
student government declines. It becomes increasingly difficult to know
a sizeable portion of the student body. We can expect in future years
that CGA candidates will be forced to form political parties in order
to receive school-wide recognition.
The few items mentioned in this column are not particularly large
or alarming. They are a part of the shift from small school to large
school attitudes. We can anticipate many more gradual changes, some
of them pleasant, some of them no. These are BSC's growing pains.
Ambiti ous to Teach?
Approximately 90% of Bloomsburg College graduates usually go
into teaching. They will be interested in the following comments which
some of them may not have seen in a New York City newspaper on
Thursday, February 11, 1960.
Hal Boyle's regular column syndicated from New York for that date
carried the following :
"Remarks that teachers get tired of hearing — or over-hearing :
" 'Those that can, do; those that can't teach.'
" 'What are you teachers always crabbing about? After all, you get
the whole summer off.'
" 'She looks like a teacher.'
" 'I hear the reason she never got married was that she had an unhappy love affair.'
" 'Surely you must be mistaken. My son wouldn 't have said a thing
• like that to anyone — even a teacher.'
" 'The job pays $2,500 and, of course, you'll coach the dramatics
club, sponsor the school paper, chaperone the Friday night dances,
take tickets at the football game, and . . .'
" 'What does she know about children ? She doesn't have any of
her own.'
" 'Naturally, your private life is your own, Miss Blatz, but this is
a small town and we've never had a woman teacher who smoked in
public'
" 'Frankly, the opportunity for advancement is limited, but you 11
have the satisfaction of molding young minds.'
" 'Keep me after class if you want. But you better know one thing—
my uncle's on the school board.'
" 'Now what is all this nonsense my wife tells me about you thinking
my son ought to spend another year in the first grade?'
" 'Oh, Miss Blatz wouldn't care for a cocktail. Get her a nice glass
of fruit punch.'
" 'I don't understand it. Herbert never had any trouble with any
other teachers.'
" 'Maybe you did say We were going to have a test today, but I
couldn't hear you in the back row.'
" 'It's all the board can aff ord to pay you, Miss Bla t z, but we don 't
fe el it looks right for you to be working extra as a cashier in the dime
store on Saturdays.'
" 'It must be a real satisfaction to have a sense of dedication — and
not be worrying all the time about material things.'
" 'Ask her for a date if you want to, Joe, but if y ou don't behave
she'll probably make you st and in the corn er, like she does the kids.'
" 'What in the world do you teachers do with all your spare time?' "
MAROON and GOLD
SANDRA MOOR E — Editor
JOB RADO — Photograph *
HARRY COLE — Auod ara Editor
TBD
OAKBY — Photogr apher
ROBERT STBINHART — AdvrtMng Mgr.
MARIANNE SHUTOVICH—f •atur * Ed. CARL STANISTSKY — Spor/i Editor
TOM OLATSKY — SporH f dlfor
MARIE STANBLL — Art Editor
DR.
CECIL C. SBRONSY — Advlior
RICHARD LLOYD — Circulation Mgr.
DICK DBNNBN — Builntu Manager
Editorial Board
Mary Francti Downty, Judy Btaum ont , Bob Johmtont , Clalrt Hummtr
The World Outside
by WARREN OZMANSKI
Do your friends know you read
this column ? Now! quick, while no
one is looking let your orbs drop
out and roll over the print.
There 's a trap door in the rear of
the library and curiosity tempted
me the other day to look down into
it. When I peered in I saw two mice
playing on the floor. The baby
mouse looked up and saw a bloodhungry bat leering at him. "Ooooh
Mommy," he cried, "Look, an
angel!"
Ponder Over This!
Did you ever wonder what would
happen in the fatal final quarter
hour of BSC history ?
In the first minute of the final
quarter hour all the students stop
smiling and saying hello to each
other on the way to Science Hall.
In the second minute of the final
quarter hour all the commuters buy
tickets for a dance in the Husky
Lounge.
In the third minute of the final
qu arter hour an election is held to
pick the ugliest girl in school.
In the fourth minute of the final
quarter hour a 99% plurality vote
is reached for the first time in
school history.
In the fifth minute of the final
quarter hour the CGA calls an
emergency meeting in order to discuss whether or not it is profitable
to have more social activities on
campus.
In the sixth minute of the final
quarter hour the elevator man stops
drinking water from the fountain
on the fourth floor of Waller Hall.
In the seventh minute of the final
quarter hour all parking fines will
have to be paid or there will be immediate expulsion from school.
In the eighth minute of the final
quarter hour the minutes of the
CGA meeting are posted—But wait,
there is only a blank sheet of paper.
In the ninth minute of the final
quarter hour Dr. Fike gives everyone in Practicum an "A" .
In the tenth minute of the final
quarter hour excuse slips are found
to be unnecessary.
In the eleventh minute of the
final quarter hour an efficient system for getting marks out on time
is found.
In the twelfth minute of the final
quarter hour Joe Vannucci invites
all of his relatives to the Commons
for a chicken dinner.
In the thirteenth minute of the
final quarter all the girls in the
school come charging into the
lounge wearing bermuda shorts.
In the fourteenth minute of the
final quarter hour the Senior Class
is praised for all it has done for
BSC.
In the fifteenth minute of the
final quarter hdur complete control
of the school is turned over to the
CGA so they can leave with posterity the ideal government.
Tfco Helrw^ i-7l. il |r bj f\«
Ric h in Drama .' &f
"Lock it, Maria." This quiet command of Catherine Sloper's climaxed the dramatic impact which carried The Heiress through to an unexpected yet inevitable conclusion.
Within the space of two and a half
hours, Catherine had grown from a
timid, weak-willed daughter into an
independent young woman capable
of making her own decisions without the aid of anyone else. The audience watched her cower before her
stern, hard-principled father in the
first act and then exchange positions with him in the final act as
her fortune-hunting suitor taught
her some valuable lessons about life
and the ways of love.
Ann Tooey did an unforgettable
j ob in the role of Catherine, and
her complete mastery of the character made the audience acutely
aware of her situation. Dr. Sloper
was given a. sensitive portrayal by
Elmer Mowery, and his complete
failure as a father was brought out
in his broken reply to his daughter,
"So you 've found a tongue at last,
Catherine — was it only to mock
mo?"
It has been said that "nothing
ever happens in a Henry James
novel ," and the pacing of the show
in a few scenes made this seem almost true. However, there was the
necessary comic relief in the person of Mrs. Penniman, the widowed
au nt , which helped carry the play
along. Carol Mazza's mincing stop
and secretive, romantic notions will
long be remembered by all who
watched her flutter on stage in her
nightcap and bathrobe to act as
r'fl thorino
'o " ria+iiT *al nnnfi/iQ y i+n
>>
Morris Townsend, played by
Br uce Van Heu sen , exemplified the
typi ca l , good-looking suitor who
played upon the emotions of a naive
young girl but reckoned his power
greater than it actually was. The
full impact of his self-assurance revealed itself in the final statement
of Act 1: "Go to Europe, Catherine,
go to Europe with your father."
The play, under the direction of
Miss Mary Homrighous and Robert
Steinruck , was an excellent contribution to the college theater season.
It#commuters
by NIKKI and ROBIN
oiuuinsuui g s municipal uunu
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concert eminating from the third
floor of North Hall. Next week's
guest conductor — Beau Bernstein.
We hope the maintenance crew
have less trouble with the care of
one tennis court. Remember when
they tried to flood them for ice
skating. We are the only college
with convertible tennis courts.
We would like to comment on the
new Bakeless Gateway. No com-
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There are times when we would
love being Hedda Hopper.
We enj oyed "Around the World
in 168 Slid es" presented last week.
JoAnn Foust recommends, for a
graduation present, the four complete volumes of Tobias Smollett.
And j ust where did Herman Melville read the source for Benito
Cereno?
If we say something nice about
you, Mr. Edwards , will you find us
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Speaking of discrimination—how
come Slater Cater only packs sandwiches for the boarding students
for the trip to the UN ? Rumor has
it that a few day women plan to
release some ants in Slater 's sandwiches and sell theirs for nominal
fees.
"Orchids of the Week" to the
baseball team and the golf team for
the fine way they played against
Mansfield and Lycoming. We should
especially like to congratulate Jack
Masich for his low score of 76 in the
golf match.
"B" Club is sponsoring a Water
Carnival on the courtyard of Waller Hall. Now that ManTan is out
the Sun Cult has disappeared.
The people who planned to see
"Under Milk Wood" the second
night request that it be presented
again.
The Commuters would like to extend a get well wish to Lois Carpe n ter . Guess Virginia was too
much for you , Lois!
We would like to close with this
tho u ght: "If spring is here, can Advanced Registration be far behind?"
3 Spri ng Haiku on a Theme by Shiki
A long forgotten thing:
a pot where now a flower blooms -¦•this clay of spring !
Masaoka Shiki (1890 )
Strange disturbance :
across the dark and monstrous night
an insignificant cricket call.
The spring was not made for you ,
uncomfortable snowbird.
Fly away !
First flower —
Within your triumphant blossoming
my life finds meaning.
— Dave Laubach
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AN IRDIAN RESERVATION AFTtf
A STRONC UHNO
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Ray Eliot Addresses Athletes
At Annual All-Sports Banquet
Ray EHot, Head Football Coach
at the University of Illinois for the
past 18 years, was the featured
speaker at the Third Annual AllSports Banquet at BSC Thursday,
April 21. The program of activities,
honoring all athletic teams of the
college , both men and women, was
held In the College Commons.
As Head Football Coach at Illinois from 1942 through 1959, Eliot
posted an overall record of 83-7311, won or shared three Big Ten
Titles, and produced decisive victories in the two Rose Bowl games
in whi ch , his teams appeared. Earlier , while serving as one of Bob
Zuppke's line coaches, he also served as head hockey coach and assistant baseball coach .
Elio t 's experiences, as a college
student and athlete, have been a
source of inspiration to many young
men and women. Fighting handicaps such as poor eyesight and the
fact that he was self-supporting, he
managed to maintain a good scholastic record while playing three
years of varsity football and baseb all . In 1931, his last season as an
Illinois gridder , Eliot was named by
Ohio St ate players as the best
guard they had faced all year.
As an Illinois football and baseball player, a small-college coach,
a line assistant to Zuppke, and head
coach at his alma mater, Eliot has
stuck firmly to his dedicated assignment in life, "a builder of fine
men."
On January 1, 1&60, after 28 years
of service at Illinois, he retired
from active coaching to become Assistant ^Di rector of Athletics.
Mr. Eliot's stirring address was
interspersed with incidents from
his past experiences. He said that it
is helpful to have strong, fast, intelligent athletes but add the desire
necessary and then, and only then,
will you have a great team.
At the conclusion of the banquet, the athletes were given their
awards by their respective coaches.
MEET ALL YOUR FRIENDS
at the
WAFFLE GRILL
Photo Service , Inc.
36 E. Main St.
Bloomsburg, Penna.
Finest Photo Finish in g
COLUMBIAN
RESTAURANT
Mansfi eld Blast ed;
Huski es Tak e Two
BSC continued its winning ways
on the diamond last Wednesday by
sweeping both ends of a doubleheader from the visiting Mansfield
nine. The Huskies piled up lopsided
scores of 13-3 and 17-4, to make
their record 4-1 for' the season.
Their only loss so far this season
has been to Shippensburg SC.
The Blairmen held a 12-2 edge at
t he end of th ree inn ing s in th e fir st
game, before WaH Blair c/eared bis
bench. Pete Periales went the distance for the winners, giving up 5
hits and 4 runs. Big guns for the
locals were Bill Gentile and Frank
Fisk , who each contri bu ted two hits
to the cause. Winning pitchers Pete
Perialis also helped the attack with
a booming triple.
In the second ramr; vGr.n hv ?Jt*i n
Keszkowski, Bloomsburg collected
11 runs in the first inning ami led
15-4 at the start of the fourth.
Leading the a t t ack were Bob Rohm,
Tom Stover , and Ed Blackbu rn who
each contributed a home run . Bob
Rohm also had a double and a
single which gave him 3 for 3 with
5 runs batted in. Other notables
were Joe Rishkofski , who had 3 hits
which were good for 3 RBI's and Ed
Blackburn who also chipped in with
3 RBI' s.
B-Club In
Action
On Saturday, April 23, the "B"
Club played host to Wilkes, Lock
Haven, and Mansfield colleges in a
sports day competition. The sports
in which the schools competed were
softball, swimming, and badminton.
The girls began arriving around
n oon, and after all the schools were
assem bled , a buffet-style lunch was
served. Following the meal, Glori a
Glahn welcomed the guesis and introduced the hostesses for each
individual event — softball , Laura
McVey ; swimming, Nancy Wurster , and badminton , Judy Beaumont. The participants w ere invited to look over the campus until
the games began at 1:30 p.m.
The Bloomsburg girl s captured a
first place in both softball and
swimming. One of the primary purposes of the Sports Day is to meet
new friends and exchange ideas,
and on this count the "B" club activity scored high . Let's hope there
can be more of these recreational
competitions in the future .
2 West Main Street
BLOOMS BUR G, PA.
Meal Tickets $5.50 for $4.75
ALVO
ELECTRONICS
DISTRIBUT ORS , INC.
The Ski Slope
Cindermen Grab
Win Over Millers
Overcoming an 8 point deficit in
the last four events, the Husky
thin-dads nabbed their second victory by downing Millersville 71 a/5
to 59 2/5 on the Mads track.
Appearing on a "track" for the
first time this spring, the cindermen were paced by work-horses
Roy Peffer and Terry "Lung" Engletnen, with 16 and 15 points respectively. Peffer garnered top
spot in the low hurdles f;nd broad
j ump and second in the 120 high
hurdles and 100 yard dash. Englemen , undefeated distance ace,
scooped *up first place in the \%
mile and two mile events. John
Taylor grabbed first and second in
fhe light and low hurdles respectiv ely with Pa i n t er win n ing th e
440 dash with a determined stretch
drive. Huttemen chucked the spear
for a first place and Scott and Carl
Stanitski tied for top honors m the
hi gh jump. Th e Sh ellymen 's mile
r^Iay quartet of Stevenson, Jones,
Cole and Painter ran away from the
pack in grabbing the laurels to end
the meet.
by Tom GladSK I and Carl StanltSKI
have
wammmmmmmmmmmm
gince the beginning of the maj -
the Yankee
league Husky
season,Lounge
^^fl^^^^^^^R or
rooters
in
^HHSH ^^ H expressed quite boisteriously
^^ HHHflHH
that the Yanks
opinionback
¦^HHK jg Hal their
penwill bounce
with a
^HHShH ^H
top
They
couldn't and
winner.
flBHgpjBp|H nant
now
the
Sox
the White
Sox
year
last
that
have added
flH9w R ^H
wU
/BmBj
^^
^•^¦wHlll ^l^B
Stanitski
Banquet Speaker
Sievers, Score and Freese we'll ^^^^ ¦^¦¦^¦^M
have to stick with Chicago to ,
Gladsky •
repeat.
In choosing Ray Eliot as the speaker, the Athletic Council procured
one of the most inspiring speakers we've heard in a ^ong, long time. LIr.
Eliot had the audience on the verge of combat many times during his
after-dinner talk. With his ability to stir up desire, he could probably
have been a winning coach without knowing anything about football.
After dropping two contests to Lock Haven, Husky diamondmen
were given another setback as they approached the College Commons
for their well-deserved evening meal. They were refused admittance to
the dining hall because they were late, even though it was then only a
few minutes past six. Although there was a banquet scheduled for that
evening, in all fairness, the team should have been fed. Even though
Slater's Caters had an obligation to meet with the banquet, it seems to
us that their first primary obligation should be the catering to the stuMonday, at Mt. Olympus, the dent body. The team could have been fed in the kitchen part of the
BSC nine suffered their first twin Commons where there are accommodations which can be used for such
loss of the season. The victors were an occasion.
Lock Haven , 1959 State College
Conference Champs. The Huskies, North Hall Rocks
up to this double-header, had a 4-1
Rock and Roll has come to North Hall. The boys from the dorm have
record and had just hung up two been entertaining students passing to class with a blaring radio, vocal
impressive victories over Mansfield accompaniment, foot stomping and other assorted noises. We heard
State College.
one visiting Mansfield baseball player remark, "That's one swinging
Lock.Haven started things off in frat house." We'll get this campus jumping yet.
the first game with 4 runs in the
Former member of the Husky nine, Jerry Oravitz has been more than
first inning off of starter Stosk holding his own at Tigertown, Florida. The curly-haired infielder is being
Kiszwoski and were never headed given stiff competition by some slick fielding South Americans. Jerry
thereafter. However, Bloom did is reported to have batted about .290 in spring-training and is expected
rally in the last inning and nearly to be assigned to a class C minor league team in the Tiger chain.
pulled the game out. This rally was
sparked by Phil Tockuff's triple Softball League
with two men on base. It wasn't
A good time is being had by all those participating in the men's intraenough though , and the score end- mural softball league now underway at Mt. Olympus. Approximately
ed Lock Haven 8, Bloomsburg 7. one hundred young men are participating in the zaniest, craziest, laughOld dependable , Bob Rohm, again a-minute ball games ever seen on campus. Most of the contests are
made his presence felt with a triple funnier than the Three Stooges comedies. Drop around and see for yourand a single and Bill Gentile, local self.
shortstop, sparked in the field with
The Huskies missed Flip Houser during last Monday's Lock Haven
his fine glove-work.
doubleheader. Coach Blair could have used the lanky fiirst basemen's
The Blairmen had a 3-0 lead early bat as the Huskies dropped two. Flip has the measles. Cheer up "Flipin the second game, but Lock Hav- per," wh o knows, half of the college may join you shortly.
en constantly pecked away. Bill
Eberz started this game but was re- "On the Beach"
lieved early by Bill Ker.tzell. The
After playing a few sets of tennis on the BSC courts, we 're convinced
local cause was helped by Joe Rish- that they were used in filming "On the Beach." All prospective particikofski's home r, but the final score
pants in the net game should add one dust mask to their list of tennis
read Lock Haven 8, Bloomsburg 4. equipment before venturing to the Mount.
""^Good-by e for now, dear reader — must rush to watch Wayne MorrisDon't make people know you; let
sey set the volleyball world on fire.
them.
LockH'venDowns
BSC in Twin Bill
Fetterman 's Barber
Shop
ROCKS
STEAK HOUSE
"WE PLEASE THE MOST CRITICAL"
Corner East & Fifth Sit.
At the fool of College Hill
Specializing in
PRIME WESTERN BEEF — SEAFOOD
SPAGHETTI
Private Parties
LAUNDROMAT
TYPEWRITER TRANSCRIPTION
MIMEOGRAPHING
BETTY and BILL HASSERT
Proprietors
WASH — DRY
Quick and Accurate Work
..Dial ST 4-9895..
CENTRA L LY LOCAT ED
Duplicating Service
of
For your Convenience
243 E. 4th St.
Near East & 4th St.
HHHHBH
^^ HM^^^^ H
*HB||||§| ^^ H
^|hEhh |HH
¦HffiHR9|H
^K^pIIhH
fHBXp Pi|il|^H
^K^mS&m^Bk
-^HHflgl^flB
Edwin M. Barton
(BSNS 1907)
353 College Hill
ST 4-2039
ARGUS'
"FOR A PRETTIER YOU"
BLOOMSBURG ,PENNA.
The undergrad, the old grad,
the young business man,discerning gentlemen in all walks
of life chose LEHR'S for their
clothing.
LEHR'S
"famous for quoliJy"
11 E. Main St.
Bloomsburg, Pa.
EPPLEY'S DRUG STORE
Main and Iron Streets
BLOOMSBURG , PENNA.
HI-FI AMPLIFIERS
(kit form)
2-WAY RADIOS
ELECTRONIC COMPONENTS
301 West Main
ST 4-2470
KECK'S LINEN
SHOP
SCHOOL SUPPLIES
BLOOMSBURG, PA.
RITTER'S
Your Jeweler Away from Home
RjL A T ERJ
gg ^ OOO IIDVI
CI
MANAOIMIN T ^SSSB
The Place to Purchase
All Y o v r
HARRY LOGAN
S W. Main St., Bloomiburg
FINE JEWELRY ? REPAIRING
GEISTWITE STUDIOS
Ph otographs
124 W. Main St.
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Phone ST 4-1892
LETTERMAN'S BAKE RY INC.
LEIBY'S RESTAURANT
"Baker s of fhe Alaifer Loaf"
featuring
GOOD, HOME COOKED MEALS
Bl oomsburg, Pa.
BELO W THE SQUARE
ROYAL TYPEWRITERS and
SCHOOL SUPPLIES
Miller Office Supply
Racuj i n's
FAMOUS BRAND
CLOTHING FOR MEN
r'
College Donates Pilot , Olymp ian Editors
To Hospital Fund
On April 14, Dr. Andruss gave
final approval to the recent pro posal by college council that the
student body of BSC donate a sum
of money to the Bloomsburg Hospital Building Fund.
The donation is expected to be
between sixteen and seventeen hundred dollars; a dollar for each student enrolled at BSC in September,
1960. The money will be taken from
the profits of the Husky Lounge
made during the 1959-19G0 term.
Other donations have been made
to the hospital by BSC in previous
years. Two years ago the student
body donated a thousand dollars to
the hospital's Ambulance Fund;
and in March of 1955 the students,
faculty, and Board of Trustees each
contributed two hundred dollars to
help refurnish a room in the
Bloomsburg Hospital. The money
helped to buy new furniture, drapes,
and paint and to provide for general repairs in the room.
The donation of money to Bloomsburg Hospital from time to time by
BSC is becoming tradition which
the college would like to continue.
Alpha Chapter Selects
Cribbs As BSC Delegate
Pictured above are Frank Heller and Jeffrey Girton, newly appointed
editors of the Olympian and the Pilot.
Council Formulates
New Stereo Policy
College Council has recently formulated a stereo-policy which has
been approved by President Andruss. According to the policy, the
stereo set may be used ior any of
the regular Wednesday night record dances; any weekend dances,
and those dances sponsored by the
Social Recreation Committee.
Certain hours of the day have
been set aside for generaJ listening
and Mr. Horace Williams, manager
of the Husky Lounge, has been ap( Continued from page 1)
pointed to have control over the
registration requirements will be volume. According to Joseph Zafree to contact the directors of Sec- pach, CGA President, the type of
ondary and Elementary Education music to be played will not be that
for their class schedules. Schedule of the rock-and-roll variety. Hours
conferences must be made by ap- for general listening are as follows :
pointment with Dr. Fike and Mr. Mon.-Fri. 10:30 a.m. to noon
Johnson.
2:30 p.m. to dinner
Mon.-Thurs. 7:30 p.m. to 10:00
aummer session
' 7:30 p.m. to 11:00
Advanced Registration for the Fri.
2:00 p.m. to 4:30
summer session has indicated a Sun.
6:30 p.m. to 10:00
record-breaking attendance. More
than 300 Bloomsburg students have The stereo will also Do used for
enrolled for one or more sessions. special student or faculty meetings
Replies received from teachers-in- and entertainment for groups, orservice, and reservations from stu- - ganizations, or visitors to campus.
dents attending other colleges will Receptacles will be installed in orprobably increase the total in at- der to move the speakers to achieve
the desired effect for either dances
or concert listening.
Proposed Curricula Revision
The stereo is to be operated by
The Academic Council has com- the Social Recreation Chairman or
pleted its review of the proposed Co-chairman, any persons appointnew curricula in business education ed by the Social Recreation Counand special education. A meeting cil , or the CGA president or vicewas held during this week to re- president.
view the proposals made for elementary education. After the curricula has been approved by the
Moyer Pharmacy
faculty, the President of the college, and the Board of State College
Corner Center and Main
Presidents , the proposal will be efBloomsburg, Pa.
fective for all students entering the
«
college in September 1960.
Admissions and Placement Office
The Admissions and Placement
Office is completing the final phases
JOHNNY'S DINER
of its work for this year. There are
still a few openings for perspective
New Berwick Road
men students, but the quota for
women has already been filled. One
Nexr to Humme/ ' s Motel
more qualifying examination will
be held this month.
FROM THE OFFICE
OF . .
Phone ST 4-9892
Luck : Accomplishment through
the use of skill.
SPECIAL
• STEAKWICHES
'
BERWICK , PA.
SMORGASBORD
A SK FOR SPECIAL
STUDENT RATE
Same Day Service
HOAGIES
CONFAIR'S BEVERAGE CO.
f
t
A plan has been proposed by College Council for the purpose of decentralizing the Social and Recreation Committee.
This plan will enable eacn campus organization to sponsor one
weekend activity during the year.
The choice of the activity is to be
lef t to the discretion of each organization.
The purposes of the proposed
change are : to include more students in the planning ot activities
on campus; to create a variety of
activities; and to schedule appropriate activities at the time they
are needed.
The committee will plan the activity with the sponsoring organization. The Social and Recreation
Committee will finance the activity
from its budget; any amount which
is in. excess will be paid by the organization.
Advisors oi the organizctions will
act as sponsors for the activities,
and they will also arrange for
chaperones if needed.
TV POLICY NOT APPROVED
The policy concerning the use of
the television set has not, as yet,
been approved and plans are now
being formulated as to its use and
location. Until the new plan is sanctioned, the television set will remain in its present location on the
upper deck of Husky Lounge. The
authority for purchasing additional
television sets for the Men 's Dormitory, Day Women's Lounge, and
the Men 's Lounge have been referred to th eir respective governing bodies.
Banquet
The Day Women's Association
will hold its annual banquet
Thursday, May 5, at 7:00 p.m. in
the College Commons. Guests of
honor include all Senior Day
Women. The Governing Board
for 1960-61 will be announced at
the dinner. Carol Coolbaugh is
acting as Social Chairman in
charge of all preparations.
It takes approximately 3000
bolts to hold a car together. But it.
only takes one nut. to scatter them
all over the road.
DEISROTH'S
DEPARTMENT STORE
ON THE SQUARE IN
BLOOMSBURG
BILL HESS'S
TA VERN
BART PURSEL'S
Where You Get BSTC
SWEAT SHIR T S
(no minim um charge)
FINEST • FAIREST • FASTEST
BLOOMSBURG, PA,
4
o
Hotel Magee
CLEANERS
Eait Street
O
$2.50 DINNER
SPICK and SPAN
SPOT LUNCH
"The administration expects every student who is receiving financial assistance from the college to
reduce his expenditures for nonessentials to a minimum. Although
it is not easy to enumerate expenses which fall into the nonessential
category, there is one expense, the
operation of an automobile at college, which the Student Aid Committee does believe should not be
incurred by recipients of financial
aid.
"Therefore, unless special permission is received, students having
aid will jeopardize renewal to their
aid for the next semester if they
maintain an automobile during the
academic year."
There are 150 College Scholarships and 125 grant-in-aid holders
in the student body. Of these, only
a small percentage is violating the
rule. Certain legitimate excuses are
a llo w ed , but specific permission
must be received.
Each Sunda y, 11130 - 2:30
In Our 2nd Floor Lounge
"All you can eat" — $ 1.00
HARTER'S
hiloc "
The population of the Town of
Bloomsburg, as reflected in the
1960 census, will be increased over
that of 1950 by the number of college students living in town and in
the college dormitories. The population of 10,000 in 1950 would probably not have been reached had the
students in the college dormitories
not been counted. It is expected
that in 1960 the total population of
the town will be increased by at
least 900; this number represents
the 500 students on campus and at
least 400 in the town of Bloomsburg.
The total population figures for
any community are the basis of information for industries who are
seeking to locate in the community,
and are also of concern to parents
who are expecting to send their
children to a college located in the
community itself.
Although population statistics do
not present a complete picture,
they are indicative of the life, vitality , and growth of the community
itself. Therefore, the possibility of
a student population in Bloomsburg
of 4,000 in 1980 will probably mean
that at least 2 ,500 of this number
will reside in the dormitories or in
the town of Bloomsburg, itself.
Tues. thru Friday every week
11 :30-1:30
COOKED TO ORDER
with Bread , Butter , and Salad
I
Schenectady, N.Y. (I.P.) — "No recipient of a Union College scholarship or a grant-in-aid may drive a
car on campus." This new college
policy , according to Calvin Schmidt,
director of Student Aid, lias been a
result of observations by Union 's
Administration that in granting
financial aid, the college seeks to
"subsidize education, not automo-
College Students
Enhance Census
$1.25 LUNCHEON
ITALIAN STYLE SPA GHETT I
A ND MEAT BALLS
% ir^flBBBPwM
tBI r\ ^Bw ^B^^
Intercolle giate Pres s
The Alpha Chapter of the
Council for Exceptional "Children appointed Carolyn Cribbs to
represent Bloomsburg at the
National Assembly for the Council of Exceptional Children.
This council meeting was held in
Los Angeles, California , from
April 19th to th e 23rd. The delegate had the privilege of casting
one vote by mail which represented the Bloomsburg chapter.
Betty Brooker was chosen as the
alternate delegate.
ALL YOU CAN EAT
Every Thursday from 11:30 a.m.
to midnight
Beautify
Your Home
with
MAGEE Carpets
and Rugs
THE MAGEE
CARPET COMPANY
Decentralization of Social Ree; l i
Committee Proposed by Council
I
Exclusive Sanitone
Dry Cleaning
AL'S MEN'S SHOP
Formerly Campus Cleaners
BLOOMSBURG
and
POPLIN JACKE T S
Make Tracks
To WASH a nd SHOP
Self Service Laundr y
Next lo Ihe A 8, P
and All Your Sport Clothing
120 W. Main St.
BLOOMSBURG, PA.
SNEIDMAN ' S JEWELR Y STORE
¦*
•
^a ^^ nH ¦
¦
II ¦ £
^*" ——
Business Educators Meet Saturday
"
«^*
fJaBr
may Day Festivities May 11;
iNikki Scheno Chosen Oueen
IB Miss Nlkkl Scheno, a senior from Berwick has been elected to reign
Wrcr the May Day Festivities, on Wednesday, May 11, 1960. "The Ballet"
l» the theme of this year 's program which will take place at 1:00 p.m.
ton the terraces between Science Hall and Husky Lounge. Mrs. Dorothy
iff Evans is acting as chairman for the festivities.
1
1The Maroon and Gold Band will
Resent a concert prior to the openM g exercises. Included in the pro||ssional are flower girls and a
|jh)wn bearer from the Benj amm
Jfranklin Laboratory School, an
Honor Court composed of Junior
Iwomen, and eight senior sirls chos1n to serve in the Queens Court.
% enior Court
j| Sandy Clark e , Kathy Durkin ,
'|[ [ary Ellen Dushanko , Lydia Gobbi,
;H>anne Moyer, Raydell Radzai, SalReifenstahl , and Henrietta Smith
^
v|Jre the eight women acting as the
Queen 's attendants.
Following the procession , Miss
|
Mikki Scheno will be crowned by
|oe Zapach , President oC the Com|
lunity Government Association.
¦
|
[ueen's Entertainment
-il The girls' gym classes from the
Miss Nikki Scheno
|follege and the children from the
Haboratory School will provide enTonight Phi Sigma Pi will
j fertainment for the Queen and her
"guests following the crowning exer- sponsor the "Turnabout" dance
in Husky Lounge. Between the
hours
of 8 and 11 p.m. the full
THE BALLET
§
sound
of renowned big bands
| Excerpts by Tchaikovski
Sugar Plum Fairies — Alexandra and noted recording artists will
be heard through the media of
Galli & Kindergarten girls —
|
and stereophonic
high-fidelity
"Danse de la Fee Dragee"—Nut|
with
an
absolute minisound,
cracker
|
Dance of the Little Swans— "Sw an mum of rock and roll,1
WHLM is covering the dance,
I Lake "— Kindergarten boys
Candy Canes — Grade 2 — "Over- and there is the possibility of a
current recording star 's person¦C ture Miniature "— Nutcracker
al appearance.
Toy Soldiers — Grade 3 — "M arch"
— Nutcracker
Tickets to the "Turnabout "
Russian Dance — Grade 4— "D a nse are 50c per couple and may be
R u sse "—- Nutcracker
obtained from any member of
It alian Dance — Grade 5 - "Taren- Phi Sigma Pi.
: tella "— Swan Lake
Chinese Dance and Dragon—Grade
Dance Group — "D a nse do les
I 6—"Danse Chinois "—Nutcrack 'r
Mirlitons "— Nutcracker
Schottische — College — "HumorVocal
Numbers — Harmonettes —
eske " — Swan Lake
|
"None but the Lonely Heart"
Arabian Dance — College—"Danse
You Maidens"
"Come
Arabe
"— Nutcracker
;
Onegin "
"Eugene
#lower Waltz — College —"Waltz
of the Flowers"— Nutcracker
Maypole — Grades 3-4-5-G-College
|
|
|Daiice of the Toy Flutes — Modern Recessional — Queen and Court.
:*
fudy Goss to Represent College
I&s Laurel Princess in Poconos
Miss Judy Goss was crowned as
Bloomsburg 's Laurel Princess by
Junior Class President , Joe Thompson, at the Junior Prom , held last
Friday night. She will represent
BSC in a contest held in the Poconos in June for the title of State
Laurel Queen.
"The Enchanted Sea," the theme
for the dance, gave dancers the impression of their being under water.
A 20-foot "ghost ship " placed at the
rear of the gym set the mood accordingly. The blue-green lighting,
as well as an array of starfish , octupi , clams, shells, and other hand-'
prepared signs of sea-life, mounted
on fish net , added a misty atmosphere to the scene. The Esquires
from Mansfield provided music for
., W. ,I..
+U«
nit ; CWJ . U U .
Miss Judy Goss
In charge of the various committees for the dance were Joyce Morgan, decorations; Eileen Wolscheslsky and Rita Bottcon , programs;
Noreen Van Tuyle, t ickets; Barrio
Iveson , invitations ; and Bornadine
Search and Paula Schell, refreshments.
•
""^ "
^r
r
^m
E8i
•^FSraifc
SOCIAL CALENDAR
May 4 — Record Dance
May 5 — Commuters Banquet
May 7 — Record Dance
May 9 — College Council Banquet
May 11— May Day
May Day Dance
May 12 — Sigma Alpha Eta Banq.
May 14 — Spl ash Party
May 18 — Record Dance
May 20 — Jam Session
May 21 — Picnic, Knoebels Grov e
May 25 — Senior Honor Assembly
Record Dance
May 26 — Second semester ends at
close of classes.
Senior Ball
May 28 — Alumni Day
May 29 — Baccalaureate
Commencement
College Installs
Gates to Honor
Oscar Bakeless
Two wrought-iron gates have
been installed by the college, and
placed at the entrances to Fountain Court , in honor of Professor
Oscar Hugh Eakeless who distinguished himself as an educator at
this college for 30 years. Professor
Bakeless first cam e to Bloomsb urg
in 1890, but resigned after three
years to become principal of Carlisle Industrial School for Indians,
where he remained for nine years.
In 1902 the Bakeless family returned to Bloomsburg and remained
here until 1929 when Professor
Bakeless retired.
Professor Bakeless taught "Theory and Pr actice of Teaching " and
was librarian in 1903 and 1904. Before his retirement he taugh t "Introduction to Reading " and "History and Principles of Education."
He was admired by the students
who affectionately called him "Daddy Bakeless." For many years the
local chapter of PSEA ( FTA ) was
called the "Oscar Hugh Bakeless
Chapter of Future Teachers of America. "
Eminent Son
Dr. John Bakeless, son of the
professor, also brought distinction
to Bloomsburg. He is nationally
known as an author, jour nalist,
scholar, educator, and lecturer. In
the autumn of 1959 Dr. John Bake-
-
^M^^^^ M^^^—
Division of Business Education
To Celebrate 30th Anniversary
The Thirtieth Anniversary Celebration of the founding of the Division
of Business Education at B'loomsburg State College will be culminated
in a full day of activities on April 30, 1960. At this time, Bloomsburg's
Business Education Division will serve as hosts to nearly four hundred
teachers attending the Eastern Division Conference of the Pennsylvania
Business Educators Association.
Registration
Registration will begin in CenNoted Folk Singer
tennial Gymnasium at 8:30 a.m.
and will be followed by a General
Campus
Visits BSC
Session from 9:30-10:30 a.m. Four
sectional meetings will begin in
Sutliff Hall at 11:00 a.m.
William Rineer, Central Dauphin
High School, is serving as Program
Chairman for the Conference.
The Conference will end with a
luncheon meeting in the College
Commons at 12:45 p.m., with John
M. Aichele, of Milton Hershey High
School, and First Vice-President of
the PBEA presiding. The featured
speaker will be Dr. C. Brainerd
Metheny, Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Company, Pittsburgh.
At Open House and an Anniversary Banquet will be held in the
afternoon and evening in celebration of Bloomsburg's Thirtieth AnPaul Arnold
niversary of the founding of BusiTuesday, April 26, Bloomsburg ness Education.
students had the opportunity of Division 30 Years Old
hearing one of the outstanding folk
The Commercial Teaching Trainsingers in America today. Mr. Paul
Arnold is not only a leading bari- ing Curriculum, now the Division of
Business Education, was begun at
tone , but also a lecturer , composerarranger, actor , writer, and r adio Bloomsburg in 1930 by Dr. Harvey
and television producer. His mas- A. Andruss. Since that time, and
terful interpretive ability, combin- up to August 1959, the Division has
ed with his skillful use of the guitar, graduated 1275 Business Education
brought a new dimension to the Teachers.
In celebration of this important
realm of folk music.
event , Open House will be held at
Mr. Arnold's arrangements of Sutliff Hall from 4:00 p.m. to 6:00
folk songs have been performed by p.m. This will provide an opportunmany of the world's leading singers, ity for returning alumni to visit the
and he is the only folk singer who new quarters of the Business Dehas had his own starring show on partment.
both NBC and CBS television networks. His audiences have ranged ur . ra ui <_». seiDy speaker
The Anniversary Banquet will be
from backwoods mountain people
to the President of the United held at the College Commons at
St a tes , and he explored the inter- 6:30 p.m., Dr. Thomas B. Martin
esting field of folk music in a presiding. Speaker for this banquet
unique way for the BSC audience. will be Dr. Paul O. Selby, Dean,
State Teachers College, Kirksville,
less revisited Bloomsburg and lec- Missouri and former head of the
Department of Business Education
tured at the college.
of
the same college. His topic will
Bakeless Loan Fund
be "Keep Your Foot in the Door."
After the death of Professor Os- Dr. Selby is noted for the founding
car Hugh Bakeless, his daughter of Pi O mega Pi , National Honorary
presented the college with $2,500 in Business Education Professional
memory of her father. The money Fraternity (Alph a Delta Chapter
was used to start the Bakeless Loan on our campus) and as a past presiFund for students.
dent of the National Association for
This brief history of the Bakeless Business Teacher Education. He is
family has been written to acquaint also listed in "Leaders in Educathe recent generations of students tion."
with the name Bakeless which is
inscribed on the new gates.
From the Office of. ..
w-v
Heller , Downey, Girton Chosen
To Edit Publications Next Year
The Publications Committee has
recently announced the editors and
business managers for the 1960-61
college publications.
Frank Heller was named editor
of the Olympian, the college literary magazine and Wanda Kline will
act as business manager. Dr. Russell is the ndvisor of the Olympian .
Mary Frances Downey will head
the staff of the Obiter, the college
yearbook. This year she is serving
as assistant editor of this publication. Nancy Wurster has been selected to serve as assistant editor,
and Richard Dennen as business
manager, The advisor to the Obiter
is Dr. DeVoe.
The staff of the BSC student
_^^^ _^^^^^^^^^^^^^
handbook, the Pilot, will be headed
by Jeff Girton , with Bob Johnstone
as assistant editor. The associate
editors of the Pilot who will revise
and bring up to date certain sections of the handbook are William
Martin , Janet Williams, Ted Oakey
ami Sylvia Marcheski. No major revisions are planned, but additions
such as the Chess and Golf clubs
will be included. George Stradtman ,
Dean of Men, is the advisor to the
Pilot.
The editors and business managers were recommended by the advisors to the publications and approved by the Publications Committee and Dr. Andruss respectively.
"W*
1 ^v
r>« _ 1*
r* *
_ _ _ _ « _ _ _.
Dean of Instruction —
In answer to questions concerning Advanced Registration, for the
fall semester, Dean of Instruction,
John A. Hoch, stated that there will
be no deferment of preliminary fees
for any student who is planning to
return in September. May 1, 2, and
3 are the dates set aside for Advanced Registration. Students are
asked to report on those days to
Centennial Gymnasium from 9:00
a.m. to 12:00 noon, and from 1:30
p.m. to 4 :00 p.m. Checks for $25.00
toward the basic fee must be made
payable to the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania, and checks for the
$20.00 activities fee to Community
Activities.
The master schedule for the fall
semester will be available during
the first week of May. Students
who have completed the advanced
( Continued on page 4)
*
Growing Pains
Look around. It's as inevitable as a chemical equation : More students plus more money yield better facilities and an impersonal touch.
We would be foolish to predict that in five to ten years Bloomsburg
will be a miniature Penn State or a well-organized education factory,
but there are signs that BSC is advancing in the direction of big school
attitudes and policies.
Never can we expect BSG to adopt the numbered student policy
present on some of the largest campuses in the country, but we can
expect the impersonality to become more evident. This is no fault of
the administration , the faculty, or the students. It is a natura l result
of rapid expansion and increasing enrollment.
The student-faculty relationship necessarily weakens with jumps in
enrollment. A college teacher cannot be expected to continue his former testing and grading procedures when the number in his classes
suddenly doubles. An adjustment must be made. Objectively soon
replaces subjectivity in grading; blue books are less frequent , and
short answer tests seem to offer the only solution. Witness the increasing use of electrographic pencils for machine scored tests. Growing
numbers of tests in subject areas from health to accounting are administered to large numbers in Carver. Nearly every day Hardhearted
Hannah, the IBM machine, cooly grinds out another set of test papers
to be recorded and interpreted by the teacher.
As BSC becomes larger, many areas formerl y not under definite
policies will have to be provided with written regulations. Note the
rash of policies produced by CGA committees in recent months. Already key points have become the prime consideration in decisions
concerning awards to outstanding seniors, and it is probable that scholarships and grants will soon be given according to stricter written
guides.
Socially, the expanding student population has had its effect. Most
students now band together in smaller and more specialized groups
than previously. Class and school spirit eventually sags, and interest in
student government declines. It becomes increasingly difficult to know
a sizeable portion of the student body. We can expect in future years
that CGA candidates will be forced to form political parties in order
to receive school-wide recognition.
The few items mentioned in this column are not particularly large
or alarming. They are a part of the shift from small school to large
school attitudes. We can anticipate many more gradual changes, some
of them pleasant, some of them no. These are BSC's growing pains.
Ambiti ous to Teach?
Approximately 90% of Bloomsburg College graduates usually go
into teaching. They will be interested in the following comments which
some of them may not have seen in a New York City newspaper on
Thursday, February 11, 1960.
Hal Boyle's regular column syndicated from New York for that date
carried the following :
"Remarks that teachers get tired of hearing — or over-hearing :
" 'Those that can, do; those that can't teach.'
" 'What are you teachers always crabbing about? After all, you get
the whole summer off.'
" 'She looks like a teacher.'
" 'I hear the reason she never got married was that she had an unhappy love affair.'
" 'Surely you must be mistaken. My son wouldn 't have said a thing
• like that to anyone — even a teacher.'
" 'The job pays $2,500 and, of course, you'll coach the dramatics
club, sponsor the school paper, chaperone the Friday night dances,
take tickets at the football game, and . . .'
" 'What does she know about children ? She doesn't have any of
her own.'
" 'Naturally, your private life is your own, Miss Blatz, but this is
a small town and we've never had a woman teacher who smoked in
public'
" 'Frankly, the opportunity for advancement is limited, but you 11
have the satisfaction of molding young minds.'
" 'Keep me after class if you want. But you better know one thing—
my uncle's on the school board.'
" 'Now what is all this nonsense my wife tells me about you thinking
my son ought to spend another year in the first grade?'
" 'Oh, Miss Blatz wouldn't care for a cocktail. Get her a nice glass
of fruit punch.'
" 'I don't understand it. Herbert never had any trouble with any
other teachers.'
" 'Maybe you did say We were going to have a test today, but I
couldn't hear you in the back row.'
" 'It's all the board can aff ord to pay you, Miss Bla t z, but we don 't
fe el it looks right for you to be working extra as a cashier in the dime
store on Saturdays.'
" 'It must be a real satisfaction to have a sense of dedication — and
not be worrying all the time about material things.'
" 'Ask her for a date if you want to, Joe, but if y ou don't behave
she'll probably make you st and in the corn er, like she does the kids.'
" 'What in the world do you teachers do with all your spare time?' "
MAROON and GOLD
SANDRA MOOR E — Editor
JOB RADO — Photograph *
HARRY COLE — Auod ara Editor
TBD
OAKBY — Photogr apher
ROBERT STBINHART — AdvrtMng Mgr.
MARIANNE SHUTOVICH—f •atur * Ed. CARL STANISTSKY — Spor/i Editor
TOM OLATSKY — SporH f dlfor
MARIE STANBLL — Art Editor
DR.
CECIL C. SBRONSY — Advlior
RICHARD LLOYD — Circulation Mgr.
DICK DBNNBN — Builntu Manager
Editorial Board
Mary Francti Downty, Judy Btaum ont , Bob Johmtont , Clalrt Hummtr
The World Outside
by WARREN OZMANSKI
Do your friends know you read
this column ? Now! quick, while no
one is looking let your orbs drop
out and roll over the print.
There 's a trap door in the rear of
the library and curiosity tempted
me the other day to look down into
it. When I peered in I saw two mice
playing on the floor. The baby
mouse looked up and saw a bloodhungry bat leering at him. "Ooooh
Mommy," he cried, "Look, an
angel!"
Ponder Over This!
Did you ever wonder what would
happen in the fatal final quarter
hour of BSC history ?
In the first minute of the final
quarter hour all the students stop
smiling and saying hello to each
other on the way to Science Hall.
In the second minute of the final
quarter hour all the commuters buy
tickets for a dance in the Husky
Lounge.
In the third minute of the final
qu arter hour an election is held to
pick the ugliest girl in school.
In the fourth minute of the final
quarter hour a 99% plurality vote
is reached for the first time in
school history.
In the fifth minute of the final
quarter hour the CGA calls an
emergency meeting in order to discuss whether or not it is profitable
to have more social activities on
campus.
In the sixth minute of the final
quarter hour the elevator man stops
drinking water from the fountain
on the fourth floor of Waller Hall.
In the seventh minute of the final
quarter hour all parking fines will
have to be paid or there will be immediate expulsion from school.
In the eighth minute of the final
quarter hour the minutes of the
CGA meeting are posted—But wait,
there is only a blank sheet of paper.
In the ninth minute of the final
quarter hour Dr. Fike gives everyone in Practicum an "A" .
In the tenth minute of the final
quarter hour excuse slips are found
to be unnecessary.
In the eleventh minute of the
final quarter hour an efficient system for getting marks out on time
is found.
In the twelfth minute of the final
quarter hour Joe Vannucci invites
all of his relatives to the Commons
for a chicken dinner.
In the thirteenth minute of the
final quarter all the girls in the
school come charging into the
lounge wearing bermuda shorts.
In the fourteenth minute of the
final quarter hour the Senior Class
is praised for all it has done for
BSC.
In the fifteenth minute of the
final quarter hdur complete control
of the school is turned over to the
CGA so they can leave with posterity the ideal government.
Tfco Helrw^ i-7l. il |r bj f\«
Ric h in Drama .' &f
"Lock it, Maria." This quiet command of Catherine Sloper's climaxed the dramatic impact which carried The Heiress through to an unexpected yet inevitable conclusion.
Within the space of two and a half
hours, Catherine had grown from a
timid, weak-willed daughter into an
independent young woman capable
of making her own decisions without the aid of anyone else. The audience watched her cower before her
stern, hard-principled father in the
first act and then exchange positions with him in the final act as
her fortune-hunting suitor taught
her some valuable lessons about life
and the ways of love.
Ann Tooey did an unforgettable
j ob in the role of Catherine, and
her complete mastery of the character made the audience acutely
aware of her situation. Dr. Sloper
was given a. sensitive portrayal by
Elmer Mowery, and his complete
failure as a father was brought out
in his broken reply to his daughter,
"So you 've found a tongue at last,
Catherine — was it only to mock
mo?"
It has been said that "nothing
ever happens in a Henry James
novel ," and the pacing of the show
in a few scenes made this seem almost true. However, there was the
necessary comic relief in the person of Mrs. Penniman, the widowed
au nt , which helped carry the play
along. Carol Mazza's mincing stop
and secretive, romantic notions will
long be remembered by all who
watched her flutter on stage in her
nightcap and bathrobe to act as
r'fl thorino
'o " ria+iiT *al nnnfi/iQ y i+n
>>
Morris Townsend, played by
Br uce Van Heu sen , exemplified the
typi ca l , good-looking suitor who
played upon the emotions of a naive
young girl but reckoned his power
greater than it actually was. The
full impact of his self-assurance revealed itself in the final statement
of Act 1: "Go to Europe, Catherine,
go to Europe with your father."
The play, under the direction of
Miss Mary Homrighous and Robert
Steinruck , was an excellent contribution to the college theater season.
It#commuters
by NIKKI and ROBIN
oiuuinsuui g s municipal uunu
Y?) 1 ^& a — ¦ jtalfc a « *a i a f ^
¦ - - h a aa f
^ 2 *a ^ 1
1
a
*^ ka ^3
concert eminating from the third
floor of North Hall. Next week's
guest conductor — Beau Bernstein.
We hope the maintenance crew
have less trouble with the care of
one tennis court. Remember when
they tried to flood them for ice
skating. We are the only college
with convertible tennis courts.
We would like to comment on the
new Bakeless Gateway. No com-
bTt
*
1
1
{
\
|
1
£
There are times when we would
love being Hedda Hopper.
We enj oyed "Around the World
in 168 Slid es" presented last week.
JoAnn Foust recommends, for a
graduation present, the four complete volumes of Tobias Smollett.
And j ust where did Herman Melville read the source for Benito
Cereno?
If we say something nice about
you, Mr. Edwards , will you find us
_ 4_V«
o
a. juu ;
Speaking of discrimination—how
come Slater Cater only packs sandwiches for the boarding students
for the trip to the UN ? Rumor has
it that a few day women plan to
release some ants in Slater 's sandwiches and sell theirs for nominal
fees.
"Orchids of the Week" to the
baseball team and the golf team for
the fine way they played against
Mansfield and Lycoming. We should
especially like to congratulate Jack
Masich for his low score of 76 in the
golf match.
"B" Club is sponsoring a Water
Carnival on the courtyard of Waller Hall. Now that ManTan is out
the Sun Cult has disappeared.
The people who planned to see
"Under Milk Wood" the second
night request that it be presented
again.
The Commuters would like to extend a get well wish to Lois Carpe n ter . Guess Virginia was too
much for you , Lois!
We would like to close with this
tho u ght: "If spring is here, can Advanced Registration be far behind?"
3 Spri ng Haiku on a Theme by Shiki
A long forgotten thing:
a pot where now a flower blooms -¦•this clay of spring !
Masaoka Shiki (1890 )
Strange disturbance :
across the dark and monstrous night
an insignificant cricket call.
The spring was not made for you ,
uncomfortable snowbird.
Fly away !
First flower —
Within your triumphant blossoming
my life finds meaning.
— Dave Laubach
y
¦¦
WW OAY
$>
i£
AN IRDIAN RESERVATION AFTtf
A STRONC UHNO
^]
>
Ray Eliot Addresses Athletes
At Annual All-Sports Banquet
Ray EHot, Head Football Coach
at the University of Illinois for the
past 18 years, was the featured
speaker at the Third Annual AllSports Banquet at BSC Thursday,
April 21. The program of activities,
honoring all athletic teams of the
college , both men and women, was
held In the College Commons.
As Head Football Coach at Illinois from 1942 through 1959, Eliot
posted an overall record of 83-7311, won or shared three Big Ten
Titles, and produced decisive victories in the two Rose Bowl games
in whi ch , his teams appeared. Earlier , while serving as one of Bob
Zuppke's line coaches, he also served as head hockey coach and assistant baseball coach .
Elio t 's experiences, as a college
student and athlete, have been a
source of inspiration to many young
men and women. Fighting handicaps such as poor eyesight and the
fact that he was self-supporting, he
managed to maintain a good scholastic record while playing three
years of varsity football and baseb all . In 1931, his last season as an
Illinois gridder , Eliot was named by
Ohio St ate players as the best
guard they had faced all year.
As an Illinois football and baseball player, a small-college coach,
a line assistant to Zuppke, and head
coach at his alma mater, Eliot has
stuck firmly to his dedicated assignment in life, "a builder of fine
men."
On January 1, 1&60, after 28 years
of service at Illinois, he retired
from active coaching to become Assistant ^Di rector of Athletics.
Mr. Eliot's stirring address was
interspersed with incidents from
his past experiences. He said that it
is helpful to have strong, fast, intelligent athletes but add the desire
necessary and then, and only then,
will you have a great team.
At the conclusion of the banquet, the athletes were given their
awards by their respective coaches.
MEET ALL YOUR FRIENDS
at the
WAFFLE GRILL
Photo Service , Inc.
36 E. Main St.
Bloomsburg, Penna.
Finest Photo Finish in g
COLUMBIAN
RESTAURANT
Mansfi eld Blast ed;
Huski es Tak e Two
BSC continued its winning ways
on the diamond last Wednesday by
sweeping both ends of a doubleheader from the visiting Mansfield
nine. The Huskies piled up lopsided
scores of 13-3 and 17-4, to make
their record 4-1 for' the season.
Their only loss so far this season
has been to Shippensburg SC.
The Blairmen held a 12-2 edge at
t he end of th ree inn ing s in th e fir st
game, before WaH Blair c/eared bis
bench. Pete Periales went the distance for the winners, giving up 5
hits and 4 runs. Big guns for the
locals were Bill Gentile and Frank
Fisk , who each contri bu ted two hits
to the cause. Winning pitchers Pete
Perialis also helped the attack with
a booming triple.
In the second ramr; vGr.n hv ?Jt*i n
Keszkowski, Bloomsburg collected
11 runs in the first inning ami led
15-4 at the start of the fourth.
Leading the a t t ack were Bob Rohm,
Tom Stover , and Ed Blackbu rn who
each contributed a home run . Bob
Rohm also had a double and a
single which gave him 3 for 3 with
5 runs batted in. Other notables
were Joe Rishkofski , who had 3 hits
which were good for 3 RBI's and Ed
Blackburn who also chipped in with
3 RBI' s.
B-Club In
Action
On Saturday, April 23, the "B"
Club played host to Wilkes, Lock
Haven, and Mansfield colleges in a
sports day competition. The sports
in which the schools competed were
softball, swimming, and badminton.
The girls began arriving around
n oon, and after all the schools were
assem bled , a buffet-style lunch was
served. Following the meal, Glori a
Glahn welcomed the guesis and introduced the hostesses for each
individual event — softball , Laura
McVey ; swimming, Nancy Wurster , and badminton , Judy Beaumont. The participants w ere invited to look over the campus until
the games began at 1:30 p.m.
The Bloomsburg girl s captured a
first place in both softball and
swimming. One of the primary purposes of the Sports Day is to meet
new friends and exchange ideas,
and on this count the "B" club activity scored high . Let's hope there
can be more of these recreational
competitions in the future .
2 West Main Street
BLOOMS BUR G, PA.
Meal Tickets $5.50 for $4.75
ALVO
ELECTRONICS
DISTRIBUT ORS , INC.
The Ski Slope
Cindermen Grab
Win Over Millers
Overcoming an 8 point deficit in
the last four events, the Husky
thin-dads nabbed their second victory by downing Millersville 71 a/5
to 59 2/5 on the Mads track.
Appearing on a "track" for the
first time this spring, the cindermen were paced by work-horses
Roy Peffer and Terry "Lung" Engletnen, with 16 and 15 points respectively. Peffer garnered top
spot in the low hurdles f;nd broad
j ump and second in the 120 high
hurdles and 100 yard dash. Englemen , undefeated distance ace,
scooped *up first place in the \%
mile and two mile events. John
Taylor grabbed first and second in
fhe light and low hurdles respectiv ely with Pa i n t er win n ing th e
440 dash with a determined stretch
drive. Huttemen chucked the spear
for a first place and Scott and Carl
Stanitski tied for top honors m the
hi gh jump. Th e Sh ellymen 's mile
r^Iay quartet of Stevenson, Jones,
Cole and Painter ran away from the
pack in grabbing the laurels to end
the meet.
by Tom GladSK I and Carl StanltSKI
have
wammmmmmmmmmmm
gince the beginning of the maj -
the Yankee
league Husky
season,Lounge
^^fl^^^^^^^R or
rooters
in
^HHSH ^^ H expressed quite boisteriously
^^ HHHflHH
that the Yanks
opinionback
¦^HHK jg Hal their
penwill bounce
with a
^HHShH ^H
top
They
couldn't and
winner.
flBHgpjBp|H nant
now
the
Sox
the White
Sox
year
last
that
have added
flH9w R ^H
wU
/BmBj
^^
^•^¦wHlll ^l^B
Stanitski
Banquet Speaker
Sievers, Score and Freese we'll ^^^^ ¦^¦¦^¦^M
have to stick with Chicago to ,
Gladsky •
repeat.
In choosing Ray Eliot as the speaker, the Athletic Council procured
one of the most inspiring speakers we've heard in a ^ong, long time. LIr.
Eliot had the audience on the verge of combat many times during his
after-dinner talk. With his ability to stir up desire, he could probably
have been a winning coach without knowing anything about football.
After dropping two contests to Lock Haven, Husky diamondmen
were given another setback as they approached the College Commons
for their well-deserved evening meal. They were refused admittance to
the dining hall because they were late, even though it was then only a
few minutes past six. Although there was a banquet scheduled for that
evening, in all fairness, the team should have been fed. Even though
Slater's Caters had an obligation to meet with the banquet, it seems to
us that their first primary obligation should be the catering to the stuMonday, at Mt. Olympus, the dent body. The team could have been fed in the kitchen part of the
BSC nine suffered their first twin Commons where there are accommodations which can be used for such
loss of the season. The victors were an occasion.
Lock Haven , 1959 State College
Conference Champs. The Huskies, North Hall Rocks
up to this double-header, had a 4-1
Rock and Roll has come to North Hall. The boys from the dorm have
record and had just hung up two been entertaining students passing to class with a blaring radio, vocal
impressive victories over Mansfield accompaniment, foot stomping and other assorted noises. We heard
State College.
one visiting Mansfield baseball player remark, "That's one swinging
Lock.Haven started things off in frat house." We'll get this campus jumping yet.
the first game with 4 runs in the
Former member of the Husky nine, Jerry Oravitz has been more than
first inning off of starter Stosk holding his own at Tigertown, Florida. The curly-haired infielder is being
Kiszwoski and were never headed given stiff competition by some slick fielding South Americans. Jerry
thereafter. However, Bloom did is reported to have batted about .290 in spring-training and is expected
rally in the last inning and nearly to be assigned to a class C minor league team in the Tiger chain.
pulled the game out. This rally was
sparked by Phil Tockuff's triple Softball League
with two men on base. It wasn't
A good time is being had by all those participating in the men's intraenough though , and the score end- mural softball league now underway at Mt. Olympus. Approximately
ed Lock Haven 8, Bloomsburg 7. one hundred young men are participating in the zaniest, craziest, laughOld dependable , Bob Rohm, again a-minute ball games ever seen on campus. Most of the contests are
made his presence felt with a triple funnier than the Three Stooges comedies. Drop around and see for yourand a single and Bill Gentile, local self.
shortstop, sparked in the field with
The Huskies missed Flip Houser during last Monday's Lock Haven
his fine glove-work.
doubleheader. Coach Blair could have used the lanky fiirst basemen's
The Blairmen had a 3-0 lead early bat as the Huskies dropped two. Flip has the measles. Cheer up "Flipin the second game, but Lock Hav- per," wh o knows, half of the college may join you shortly.
en constantly pecked away. Bill
Eberz started this game but was re- "On the Beach"
lieved early by Bill Ker.tzell. The
After playing a few sets of tennis on the BSC courts, we 're convinced
local cause was helped by Joe Rish- that they were used in filming "On the Beach." All prospective particikofski's home r, but the final score
pants in the net game should add one dust mask to their list of tennis
read Lock Haven 8, Bloomsburg 4. equipment before venturing to the Mount.
""^Good-by e for now, dear reader — must rush to watch Wayne MorrisDon't make people know you; let
sey set the volleyball world on fire.
them.
LockH'venDowns
BSC in Twin Bill
Fetterman 's Barber
Shop
ROCKS
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ARGUS'
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BLOOMSBURG ,PENNA.
The undergrad, the old grad,
the young business man,discerning gentlemen in all walks
of life chose LEHR'S for their
clothing.
LEHR'S
"famous for quoliJy"
11 E. Main St.
Bloomsburg, Pa.
EPPLEY'S DRUG STORE
Main and Iron Streets
BLOOMSBURG , PENNA.
HI-FI AMPLIFIERS
(kit form)
2-WAY RADIOS
ELECTRONIC COMPONENTS
301 West Main
ST 4-2470
KECK'S LINEN
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RITTER'S
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The Place to Purchase
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S W. Main St., Bloomiburg
FINE JEWELRY ? REPAIRING
GEISTWITE STUDIOS
Ph otographs
124 W. Main St.
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Phone ST 4-1892
LETTERMAN'S BAKE RY INC.
LEIBY'S RESTAURANT
"Baker s of fhe Alaifer Loaf"
featuring
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Bl oomsburg, Pa.
BELO W THE SQUARE
ROYAL TYPEWRITERS and
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Miller Office Supply
Racuj i n's
FAMOUS BRAND
CLOTHING FOR MEN
r'
College Donates Pilot , Olymp ian Editors
To Hospital Fund
On April 14, Dr. Andruss gave
final approval to the recent pro posal by college council that the
student body of BSC donate a sum
of money to the Bloomsburg Hospital Building Fund.
The donation is expected to be
between sixteen and seventeen hundred dollars; a dollar for each student enrolled at BSC in September,
1960. The money will be taken from
the profits of the Husky Lounge
made during the 1959-19G0 term.
Other donations have been made
to the hospital by BSC in previous
years. Two years ago the student
body donated a thousand dollars to
the hospital's Ambulance Fund;
and in March of 1955 the students,
faculty, and Board of Trustees each
contributed two hundred dollars to
help refurnish a room in the
Bloomsburg Hospital. The money
helped to buy new furniture, drapes,
and paint and to provide for general repairs in the room.
The donation of money to Bloomsburg Hospital from time to time by
BSC is becoming tradition which
the college would like to continue.
Alpha Chapter Selects
Cribbs As BSC Delegate
Pictured above are Frank Heller and Jeffrey Girton, newly appointed
editors of the Olympian and the Pilot.
Council Formulates
New Stereo Policy
College Council has recently formulated a stereo-policy which has
been approved by President Andruss. According to the policy, the
stereo set may be used ior any of
the regular Wednesday night record dances; any weekend dances,
and those dances sponsored by the
Social Recreation Committee.
Certain hours of the day have
been set aside for generaJ listening
and Mr. Horace Williams, manager
of the Husky Lounge, has been ap( Continued from page 1)
pointed to have control over the
registration requirements will be volume. According to Joseph Zafree to contact the directors of Sec- pach, CGA President, the type of
ondary and Elementary Education music to be played will not be that
for their class schedules. Schedule of the rock-and-roll variety. Hours
conferences must be made by ap- for general listening are as follows :
pointment with Dr. Fike and Mr. Mon.-Fri. 10:30 a.m. to noon
Johnson.
2:30 p.m. to dinner
Mon.-Thurs. 7:30 p.m. to 10:00
aummer session
' 7:30 p.m. to 11:00
Advanced Registration for the Fri.
2:00 p.m. to 4:30
summer session has indicated a Sun.
6:30 p.m. to 10:00
record-breaking attendance. More
than 300 Bloomsburg students have The stereo will also Do used for
enrolled for one or more sessions. special student or faculty meetings
Replies received from teachers-in- and entertainment for groups, orservice, and reservations from stu- - ganizations, or visitors to campus.
dents attending other colleges will Receptacles will be installed in orprobably increase the total in at- der to move the speakers to achieve
the desired effect for either dances
or concert listening.
Proposed Curricula Revision
The stereo is to be operated by
The Academic Council has com- the Social Recreation Chairman or
pleted its review of the proposed Co-chairman, any persons appointnew curricula in business education ed by the Social Recreation Counand special education. A meeting cil , or the CGA president or vicewas held during this week to re- president.
view the proposals made for elementary education. After the curricula has been approved by the
Moyer Pharmacy
faculty, the President of the college, and the Board of State College
Corner Center and Main
Presidents , the proposal will be efBloomsburg, Pa.
fective for all students entering the
«
college in September 1960.
Admissions and Placement Office
The Admissions and Placement
Office is completing the final phases
JOHNNY'S DINER
of its work for this year. There are
still a few openings for perspective
New Berwick Road
men students, but the quota for
women has already been filled. One
Nexr to Humme/ ' s Motel
more qualifying examination will
be held this month.
FROM THE OFFICE
OF . .
Phone ST 4-9892
Luck : Accomplishment through
the use of skill.
SPECIAL
• STEAKWICHES
'
BERWICK , PA.
SMORGASBORD
A SK FOR SPECIAL
STUDENT RATE
Same Day Service
HOAGIES
CONFAIR'S BEVERAGE CO.
f
t
A plan has been proposed by College Council for the purpose of decentralizing the Social and Recreation Committee.
This plan will enable eacn campus organization to sponsor one
weekend activity during the year.
The choice of the activity is to be
lef t to the discretion of each organization.
The purposes of the proposed
change are : to include more students in the planning ot activities
on campus; to create a variety of
activities; and to schedule appropriate activities at the time they
are needed.
The committee will plan the activity with the sponsoring organization. The Social and Recreation
Committee will finance the activity
from its budget; any amount which
is in. excess will be paid by the organization.
Advisors oi the organizctions will
act as sponsors for the activities,
and they will also arrange for
chaperones if needed.
TV POLICY NOT APPROVED
The policy concerning the use of
the television set has not, as yet,
been approved and plans are now
being formulated as to its use and
location. Until the new plan is sanctioned, the television set will remain in its present location on the
upper deck of Husky Lounge. The
authority for purchasing additional
television sets for the Men 's Dormitory, Day Women's Lounge, and
the Men 's Lounge have been referred to th eir respective governing bodies.
Banquet
The Day Women's Association
will hold its annual banquet
Thursday, May 5, at 7:00 p.m. in
the College Commons. Guests of
honor include all Senior Day
Women. The Governing Board
for 1960-61 will be announced at
the dinner. Carol Coolbaugh is
acting as Social Chairman in
charge of all preparations.
It takes approximately 3000
bolts to hold a car together. But it.
only takes one nut. to scatter them
all over the road.
DEISROTH'S
DEPARTMENT STORE
ON THE SQUARE IN
BLOOMSBURG
BILL HESS'S
TA VERN
BART PURSEL'S
Where You Get BSTC
SWEAT SHIR T S
(no minim um charge)
FINEST • FAIREST • FASTEST
BLOOMSBURG, PA,
4
o
Hotel Magee
CLEANERS
Eait Street
O
$2.50 DINNER
SPICK and SPAN
SPOT LUNCH
"The administration expects every student who is receiving financial assistance from the college to
reduce his expenditures for nonessentials to a minimum. Although
it is not easy to enumerate expenses which fall into the nonessential
category, there is one expense, the
operation of an automobile at college, which the Student Aid Committee does believe should not be
incurred by recipients of financial
aid.
"Therefore, unless special permission is received, students having
aid will jeopardize renewal to their
aid for the next semester if they
maintain an automobile during the
academic year."
There are 150 College Scholarships and 125 grant-in-aid holders
in the student body. Of these, only
a small percentage is violating the
rule. Certain legitimate excuses are
a llo w ed , but specific permission
must be received.
Each Sunda y, 11130 - 2:30
In Our 2nd Floor Lounge
"All you can eat" — $ 1.00
HARTER'S
hiloc "
The population of the Town of
Bloomsburg, as reflected in the
1960 census, will be increased over
that of 1950 by the number of college students living in town and in
the college dormitories. The population of 10,000 in 1950 would probably not have been reached had the
students in the college dormitories
not been counted. It is expected
that in 1960 the total population of
the town will be increased by at
least 900; this number represents
the 500 students on campus and at
least 400 in the town of Bloomsburg.
The total population figures for
any community are the basis of information for industries who are
seeking to locate in the community,
and are also of concern to parents
who are expecting to send their
children to a college located in the
community itself.
Although population statistics do
not present a complete picture,
they are indicative of the life, vitality , and growth of the community
itself. Therefore, the possibility of
a student population in Bloomsburg
of 4,000 in 1980 will probably mean
that at least 2 ,500 of this number
will reside in the dormitories or in
the town of Bloomsburg, itself.
Tues. thru Friday every week
11 :30-1:30
COOKED TO ORDER
with Bread , Butter , and Salad
I
Schenectady, N.Y. (I.P.) — "No recipient of a Union College scholarship or a grant-in-aid may drive a
car on campus." This new college
policy , according to Calvin Schmidt,
director of Student Aid, lias been a
result of observations by Union 's
Administration that in granting
financial aid, the college seeks to
"subsidize education, not automo-
College Students
Enhance Census
$1.25 LUNCHEON
ITALIAN STYLE SPA GHETT I
A ND MEAT BALLS
% ir^flBBBPwM
tBI r\ ^Bw ^B^^
Intercolle giate Pres s
The Alpha Chapter of the
Council for Exceptional "Children appointed Carolyn Cribbs to
represent Bloomsburg at the
National Assembly for the Council of Exceptional Children.
This council meeting was held in
Los Angeles, California , from
April 19th to th e 23rd. The delegate had the privilege of casting
one vote by mail which represented the Bloomsburg chapter.
Betty Brooker was chosen as the
alternate delegate.
ALL YOU CAN EAT
Every Thursday from 11:30 a.m.
to midnight
Beautify
Your Home
with
MAGEE Carpets
and Rugs
THE MAGEE
CARPET COMPANY
Decentralization of Social Ree; l i
Committee Proposed by Council
I
Exclusive Sanitone
Dry Cleaning
AL'S MEN'S SHOP
Formerly Campus Cleaners
BLOOMSBURG
and
POPLIN JACKE T S
Make Tracks
To WASH a nd SHOP
Self Service Laundr y
Next lo Ihe A 8, P
and All Your Sport Clothing
120 W. Main St.
BLOOMSBURG, PA.
SNEIDMAN ' S JEWELR Y STORE
Media of