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BSC Homecomin g 1969
Our American Heritage
The Homecoming Committee
decided on the theme , "Our
Amer ican Heritage , " for our
Homecoming Weekend.
The
theme conveys the time period
from the landing of the Pilgrims
at Plymouth Rock to the landin g
of the Astronauts on the Moon .
As a result , the Homecoming
Committee requests that student organizations , classes , fraternities , and sororities , who enter floats in the Homecoming
Parade or who decorate off-campus houses , depict significant
events in the history of the United States .
REGISTRATION OF FLOATS :
AH groups enter ing floats in
the Homecoming Parade or decora ting off-campus houses must
register their entr y theme s in
the Office of the Director of
Student Activities no later than
5 p. m. on Wednesday, O ctober
1, 1969. If two organizations
enter similar themes , the organization who submits its theme
first will take precedence over
the other . Consequently, it is
essential for student groups to
enter their themes as soon as
possible . A written description shoul d accompany an organization' s th eme.
DIMENSION OF .FLOATS :
Floats must not exceed the following dimensions: 14 feet in
height , 8 feet in width , and 50.
feet in length.
F LOAT AWARDS INCLUDE:
1st place — $75.00
2nd place — $50.00
3rd place - $25. 00
4th place — 7th place —$15. 00
PRE LIMI NARY JUD GING
OF FLOATS:
9:00 — 10:00 a.m. — Centennial Pa rkin g Lot .
OFF-CA MPUS JUD GING
OFF-CA MPUS
DECOR ATION OF FLOATS:
1st place - $25.00
2nd place - $15. 00
3rd place - $10.00
JUDGING OF OFFCAMPU S HOUSE S:
8:00 — 9:00 a.m.
The 1969-70 college year has
brought to BSC a new wave of inexperienced students and experienced teac hers . We would like
to, at this time , acquaint you with
some
of the new yet more exPRESENTATION OF AWARDS
people on campus.
per
ienced
A representa tive from each orthe
facult y.
Namely
ganization sponsorin g a float or
an off-campus house decoration
Dr . J. D. Bryden , Jr., Pro should be delegated to accept an
f
essor
of Speec h C orrection and
award which will be presented by
Coordinat
or of Speech and Hearthe Homecomin g Queen durin g
Service
s, rece ived his eleing
half-time of the West-Chestery
education
in several
mentar
Bloomsbur g football game.
public
schools
and
Penns
ylvania
All floats except the first thre e
the
education
from
secondary
his
winners must di smantle after Geor ge Washington High School
,
the parade in the Centennial ParkH
e
was
Virginia.
Alexandria
,
ing Lot. Garba ge trucks will
award ed his Bachelor of Arts
be available .
degree , Department of PhilosoNOMINREQUIREMENTS FOR
phy, from the College of Willating homecomin g queen
iam and Mar y in Virginia . Both
CANDIDATES
1. Any campus organizati on, his Master of Education and his
club, class , sororit y, or fratern- Doctor of Philoso phy degrees in
ity may nominate a H omecoming speech pathology and audiolo gy
were earned at the University
Queen Candidate .
2. Nominations for Homecom- of Virginia. He has taken additing Queen Candidates must be re- ional graduate study at the Geoceived in the Office of the Direc- rge Washin gton University .
tor of Student Activities no later
than 5:00 p. m. on Wednesda y,
Pick up untold books for
October 1, 1969.
money from Vets book ex3. Any grou p who enters a canchongo In 2S2 Waller .
didate must pay a $3.00 nomination fee. The money will be
used to purchase the flowers
which will be worn by the five
finalists and the Freshman Class
Sweetheart at the Union Gap Concert and for all the candidates
on Homecoming Day.
4. Primary elections for the
top ten finalists will take place
on October 6 and 7 outside of
Husk y lounge . Fi nal elections
will occur on October 8 and 9 .
5. F ive finalists will be announce d at the Pep Rally on
Thurs day, October 9 .
6. All or ganizati ons who nominate candidates for Homecom ing Queen , must pr ovide convert ible cars for their candidates. Signs must be attached
to your car signifying the name
of your candidate and the name
of your organization .
7. Candidates must be enrolled in the Sophomor e , Junior ,
or Senior Classes . They must
possess at least a 2 .0 cumulative ratin g and cannot be on
disciplinary or social probation .
1968 — Linda Zearfoss being
Welcome to
Fresh m en
On Wednesday
the College
Young Republicans kicked off
the fall semester by welcoming
20 freshmen into the organiza tion.
The meeting was opened by
President Bilde r , who explain ed the pur pose of the organiza t ion , its goals , and Its hopeful accomplishments . A fund -raising
project was discuss ed for the fall
and the pro spect of having a
homecom ing float. On Saturday,
September 20 , the Young Repub licans decorated for the C ounty
picnic which was held at the Magee Trans portation Museau. The
main speaker at the picnic was
state senator Hawbaker from
Mercersburg, in addi tion to the
Republican state chlarman , John
Jordan. The club will also help
the Republican women with their
stand at the fair .
It was also decided that the
club should become involved in
social work around the commun ity and that the organization discuss campus, federal , and local
The following students were issues in an attem pt to establish
electe d to serve as C .G.A. rep- a specific policy.
resent atives;
Also in attendance at the meetOff-campus • Sandy Horoscha k ing were the other officers ;Phyl Joe Accardi
lis Block , Vice-president; AUen
Carol Grimm
Neyhard , Corresponding secreCommuter « Carol Yoder
tar y; Noreen Tatusko. Recording
Al Ponoe
Secretar y; Gar y Yetter, Treas Gerald Osborne
urer; Mr. Charles Jackson , AdElweli •
Bru ce Leauby
visor and a number of upperBob Stratton
classmen. Anyone desiring to
North •
Dudley Mann
join please dro p a card with your
South •
Bev Boston
name and box number on It to:
East SandyDelophalne Noreen Tatusko. in South Hall .
West .
Chris Brumbach
WATCH FOR 60-POWERl
CGA Elect
crowned at "Sam A Daw " Concer t
The New Pe ople
TO SUPERVISE STUDENT
TEACHERS
Glenn A. Good , Assistan t Superintendent of the Shikellamy
School District at Sunbur y since
1965 has been appointed Associate Professor of Education and
will be responsible for the supervision of student teachers in
the Central Penns ylvania Area .
Mr. Good received his educa tionin the schools of M ontandon,
Penna. He earned his Bachelor
of Science degree in educ ation ^
at Bucknell Universit y in 1949 and
the Master of Science degree in
1955. In addition to majo ring in
educational administration , he is
also certified as a guidance counselor. He has continued his grad uate studies at the P ennsylvania
State University and expects to
complete require ments for the *
Doctor of Education in December , 1969 .
JONES TO REPLACE
GOLF COACH
Dr . Jack A. Jones , a member
of the faculty of the University
of Rhode Island , was appointed
Associate Professor of Phy sical
Educ ation. In addition to h 1 s
teaching responsibilities, Dr .
Jones will coach golf during the
1969-70 college year , replacing
Jerry Thomas who will be on a
leave of absence working on his
doctoral prog ram .
. He was awarded his Bachelor
of Science degree from Livingston State College in Alabama
and his Master of Arts degree
from the University of Alabama .
He earned his Doctor . of P hysic
al Education degree from Indiana
University ! Bloomington , India na.
Kenneth Whitne y was named
Associate Professor at BSC
with the duty of supe rvising stu dent teachers in the Phila delphia
area.
Mr . Whitney' s Bac helor of Science degree In education with
majors In mathematics and social
studies was receive d from Man sfield State College . He w a s
awar ded his Master of Science
degree In educat ion with a major in administration from the
University of Pennsylvania and
has completed additional graduate stud y toward s his Doctor
of Educat ion degree at that institution.
Eugene D. Shershen , a re cent
gradu ate of BSC , has been named Instruc tor of Psychology, His
BA degree was received from
BSC in Jan uary 1967, Foljowlg g
his grad uation he was'^associated
with Xavicr Univers ity, Clncln nat it Ohio, where he was a grad .
uate assistant In the Department
of Psychology,
CUM LAUDE FROM BRANDEI S
Dr . Ma xwell Prlmack , a native of New York City, has been .
appointed to the position of Associate Profe ssor of Philo sophy
at BSC. He graduated cum lauae
from Brandel s University where
he earne d a Buchelor of Arts
t
Pv?f£T FRCfo fcV
¦
The Bock SJi.lf . V.W
not lf s—Z7lnm
Nixon oh how well h# can wUck
it out.
Us , a quarterl y, l§ beyond a
doubt the best quarte rly pape rback mag around . If you're a
writer , you'll love It ; you see ali'
these under ground writers , supposedly the best (Goldstein' s
stand ards? ), and y ou'll come out
saying "Cr lpes, I can do better
If you want to blame it on some- than that!" If you'r e an average
thing, brand LSD. N ot that U s read er , forget it ." Us Is for
was writt en under LSD (thou gh new left people who wish to feel
maybe some of it was), but that
without acid we 'd never have had superior , and they'll be J ustified.
SGT . PE P PE R . Without Sgt. Us rais es no questions , otters
Pep per Richie Goldstein would no politics , says little , and keeps *
never have got a name for him- fallin g to produce anything to con*
self . By knock ing, in fact hatin g vlnce us that "we are the people
the -album , Goldstein got the our parents warned us about ."
name, the sway, the hub ris to ta ke Only the most aged and ultra on the publication of Us, a paper- conserva tive adult would be scar *
back magazine" which he edits , ed by Us . Natch , the mag was
selecting from the newest , if banned from Woolworth ' s, which
not the best , youn gwritersh e can is at least something.
B
¦
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One thin g, befor e i wrl tean oth *
er word. It' s pronounc ed Bloss.
Than k you. Us is a publicati on
of the new bree d of wr iter , under
30 and a self»proclalm ed hip collegiate or dropped-ou tcollegiate
hip type. No, not we is * *>uL
lication , or we ar e , but US is. BU'
don't blam e It on us.
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FEATURETTE
Conformity is not always bad.
Many of us have had the thought
"he' s conforming more by trying
to be different Ulan I am by being
myself ."
To our mind , it is much worse
to be afraid of being different ,
than to conform by being different. It is even worse to be
afraid of someone or somethin g,
or some idea because he oxIt
is different , doesn't fit the established mold , or doesn't conf orm to one's one way of thinking.
AGGRESSION)to Ardrey (AFRI CAN GENESE Xo Desmond Morris CTHE NAKED APE> vary.,
but all point out that fear is a
primary Ingredient in the for mula of human aggression and
aggressive feelings. All ofwhich
nay suggest tiat those toajft
he-men and all-American wonder
boys that boast loudlyof what they
would do to any black man who
might venture^pn ~their lawn , the
same strong gents whocry "coward " at Vietnam war protesters ,
and the all-so-brave politicians
who bay vociferously over the
way North Korea , Cuba , and all
those other nast y countries push
the U. S. around when we could
wipe them out with a single blowwell , chances are all these tou gh
guys are motivated by fear.
All of
Shaw
by Allen Maurer
George Bernar d Shaw is one
of the ver y few men that 1 have
ever idolized . No one could possibly agree -with all that Shaw
thought and said, but neith er
can anyone help but admire the
way he said his th oughts.
find. Obviously his search went
as far as his lending an ear to
Sgt. Pepper .
Not that Us is had, it isn 't .
There are some rea lly good
points . For instance:
James Kunen on the Apollo 8
shot . Who else but Kunen would
have the perception to notice that
the Cape Kenned y men ' s room has
star • of - David • shaped urinals?
K unen's prose is so delicate it
simply tinkles.
"Obit , " an unusua l semteiutoBiting sarcasm , cynical hu- biography by Sally Grimes , a gal
mor , an abrasive tongue , and a who is breaking new ground .
potent
command of the English
Recent books on anthropology
language
all failed to disguise
"Ex pecting to Fly: Advertisehave searched f or an answer
' love of life and his deep ments for the Living Theatre ,"
Shaws
to one of man 's oldest questions:
feeling for man . It' s likely that by Michael Thomas , who hates
wUat causes aggression , war,
Shaw , faced with this statement , Jefferson Airplane but loves the
murder , violence amon g men?
would
have reacted with some- Beach Boys. Sur prisingly , he
The opinions, from Lorenz (ON
thing like "Lov e man? Not I likes the Living Theatre . He 's
sir , I sympathize with him. One forgiven.
could not do else, considering
the pitiful state of his affairs ."
Michael Lyden 's tribute to
Shaw often played the clown. Charley Starkwe ather , a poor
He wore the mask of satire while man' s James Dean w ho escaped
wearing
the robes of philosophy . the pressures of the bobby socks
privac
y.
After
But
we
did
have
DEAR EDITOR:
Even
as
he flaunt ed his ability days by killing a few people.
up
the
are
a
our
meal
we
cleaned
I have a true story to tell you
to
make
any man feel small ,in
which
we
ate
and
carried
our
about what our dinner was like
h
e
worke
d
t o make small men
empty
dish
and
glass
back
to
the
tonight in the Commons.
"Nanc y & Sluggo , " the one of
All
of
this is rather gross
big.
Fi rst of all, our grou p did not washroom voluntari ly.
four
antimuths which put me on
You might ask what we did to simplification. One cannot com- the floor , by Steve Katz , guitarget to sit w ith the other students;
we kad tee privilege of sitting in deserve such a treatment. The press GMB Intoa few paragraphs , ist for Blood, Sweat, & Tears.
a secluded back room. We were crime that was committed was and its 's doubtful whether one can.
not served by the smiling wait - one of great c onsequence . My. get anywhere near his full per
"Spread" a frighteningl y huevening per resses, but were forced to serve self and another me mber of the sonalit y in a full
mor
less portfolio by artist Roourselves f rom the p ots an d group were wearing "obj ection- formance as Mr. Fletcher (repor - bert Crumb ; who' s one of the
pans in the midst of the kitchen. able slacks " which were in bad ted elsewhere in this issue) will best around . He draws island In our back room, which was not taste for the occasion. The pants attem pt to do. But with Shaw , faces and tongue • stomachs .
quite a ban quet hall , we were in question were non-patched every little bit is wholely worth- Christ nailed to a telephone pole,
confronted with the job of find- jeans and a pair of Navy bell- while.
and does a punk sadistic strip
ing a place to sit and eat amongst bottoms. If they are good enough
called Neato Kennoand finds time
all of the trash and old news- for the Navy, I would suspec t that
to include a guide to the capture
paper s that were spread out all ARA Slater would accept them as re quested to wear a J acket and of Innocent teeny -bops. Love it !
tie to Wednesday evening meals
over the room. Of course we decent clothing also.
in the PI LOT , page 35 , it says and to noon meals on Sunday."
did not get any dessert , or for
"Dwight David , The Once and
that matter any coffee or tea. and I quote, "Male students are That is what It says, so why Future Eisenhower " , by Craig
. should the whole group be "e*. Karpel , easily the funniest piece
00880** from oar meal when Sla- In the book, la an Insight into the
ter' s pvppets(enforctag non-e&. illustrious personality of the
MAROON AND GOLD
latent rules) were the ones at first Waspian concep t of the "All~
~"
fault ? Two of the girls could not America n boy." The second Was NO. 4
VOL. XLVIH
eat because they had an Import - pain boy-wonder Isn 't mentio nant phone call that they would have ed , but no less sickening: Glen
Mlcheel Hock
missed if they had to go through Campbell .
¦dltor-ln-Chiel
all of this delay and wait also.
These girls missed their meal
So much for the high points ; the
der Remson
Busi ness Manager
which
they
were
forced
to
pay
for
Test
is trite . The much -heraldMenaglng I
d
i t or
Bill Teft swerfh
In advance , due to Slater 's own ed poetry by Jim Mor rison , opMart in Kleiner
News f dHor
Ignorance and injustice .
ens no new doors . "Cemetery
Co-Featurt fditors
Ginny Potter
It Is a pretty shitty set up Hil
l ," by The Fuss' Ed Sanders ,
Allen Maurer
when you do not get a meal you tails to dig into the right kind of
pay for because an out-dated meal grave poetical matters . Jon LanClerk Ruch
Sports Miter
merchant does not like the way dau 's piece on Brandels is meanBid
Jim
Photography iditor
your
clothes go together .
ingless , becau se It doesn 't conKathy Roarty
Copy Idlter
Aa orgaoicattoo such as ARA cern most people . Wor se yet ,
Pem Van Ipps
Circulation Manager
Slater should have to abide by there ' s Rich ard Meltse r 's "TomAdvisor
Mr. Michael Stan ley
the rules of the dress code just my • Pisses • And You • Know
like everyone else on this cam- It"; page after page of boxing
ADDITIONAL STAFF: Dave Drucker, Jacquie Paddock ,
pus. They do not and should not records, If you want to doggedTerr y Blats, Leonard House, Mary Canave n, Barbara
have the power to make students ly listen to Paul Williams , foun .
Memor y, Janice, Orlowsk y, Janice Schlndeler , Reger
go hungry because their
own der of "Crawdaddy ", as heilowclothes
values
do
not
coincide
Savage, Stan Bwnslck , Dave Keller , Disrate Crane, VeJma
ly and surely finds Nirvana at
with the students they are licens- Medocino , okay. And lf ,.but
Aver y, John ftu grln.
.u
ed to service. Discrimination on enough alre ady .
All opinion *expressed by columnists and fsature writers,
clothes is unjustifiable in today 's
society, so I wish Slater would
Includin g letters-to-tite editor, ere not necesserli y those- of
The one line which make i it
either waice-upor get out .
worth the buck , for me, is an
this ftubllcrtien but the ** of the Individuals.
Richard Bradwell
honest-tcgosh quote by Richard
cJLetter
to the C^ditor
Why Us fails I don't know.
Maybe it'll get better . Most of
its contributors are good , but
not that good . The exception is
K unen, who is excellent . Any
would -be writer will have to
contend with him; curse you , Mrs .
K unen, for bringing forth this
child , and may the fleas of 10,000 camels infest the crotch of
your firstborn. It has flashe s
of brilliance , but notall that man.
y. Oh , well, blame it on Goldstein. Goldstein includes an applicable quote by McLuhan , "Art
is anything you can get away
with ." Maybe that' s what Goldstein is trying to pull ; maybe he
wants to see how much waste he
can pass off . In that respe ct Us
iisn't bad at all . What can one
J expect from an editor who panned Sgt . Pepper?
Second
Issue
Ready
Bantam 's above-ground quar terly Is back! US 2 will hit the
newsstan ds and bookstores October 1, offering a new samplin g
of writing and art by under-30
creators .
The second US Incl udes ex*
cer pts fro nt two novels (one due
to be published later this year
by Harper & Row) ; major ar .
tid es on "The New Fifties ,"
Dylan , Robert Mitchum , Timothy
Leary , and the astrology phen omenon; cartoo ns by Victor Moscoso; poetry by Tom Clark; and
a special suppleme nt called
"The Movement ," containin g six
essays on various pha ses ot It
— army resistance , women 's
liberatio n, school cri ses , and
black ra dicalism,
Called the "Back to School Is-
sue , " US 2 is symbolised by a
Bantam cover serenely focusing
on seven young students , all ar *
mod . (Qne of whom might even
be of elementary school age since
one US 2 contributor is only 12
J oin
The
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BSC Stude nt 's Family
Owns Mona Lisa
Bramwall Fletcher portraying George Barnard Shaw.
Mr. Fletcher 's on«-man sh ows hav* bs«n favorably compered with Hal Holbrook' s similar prasantation off Mark
Tw ain.
A^ re sen tin og.
*
^nau/
dsern ara hasJ someth
ing to say to the youth
On October 8, Branw ell Fletcher will present his nationally
accla ime d ' 'BERNA RD SHAW ' at
Haas Auditorium , 8:15 p.m.
Br amwel l Flet cher , star of
theatr e, television and motion
pictures (he has 32 Broad way
plays to his credi t, Includin g
the f inal 200 performances starrin g opposite Ju lie Andrews and
Sally Ann Howes In MY FAIR
LADY) has been showing up as
Shaw on college and universit y
sta ges all over the countr y (over
126 of them ). After his ingeniously devised and sta ged dramati c portrait of Slaw was a
smash hit in New York and Dub*
lln, Fletcher felt that more America ns - particu larly youn g
people — should havea chance to
meet Mr. Shaw. Bram well Fletcher was privileged to know him
personall y, and he Is the first
man author ised by the Shaw Es.
tate to impersonate the great
playwright . He had access to all
of Shaw's unpublished writin gs,
including letters - however per .
tl. 'Sha w's viewi are very
soif
pertinent toda y," aayi Fletcher.
"He 's very uo-to-datt — really
of today . The college students
especially appreci ate his remarks on educat ion. He instruc ts
them 'not to let your schoolin g
inter fere with your education!'
MEETIN G SHAW
"My > real education began/'
Fletcher continues , "when I met
Bernard Shaw. I was just a
J uvenile in the theatre and was
present at Shaw ' s house in Ayot
St., Lawrence , in England , and
saw Shaw ente rtain his guests
for over two hours with stories
of his early life , his struggles ,
his development and his philosophy. Though then in his late
seventies , Shaw was active and
agile as a young man and seemed utterly tireless. The memor y
of that day has remained with
me and I have tried to recapture
it , these many years later , with
this performance ."
Fletcher 's "Bernard Shaw"
was ranked by New York critics
with Holbrook's recreation of
Mark Twain. Fletch er fills the
sta ge with life, thou gh he uses a
minimum of props and setting ,
Shaw's nativ e Dublin oritlei call*
ed the performance "astonish*
F rance 's Louvre may not have Benjamiu Franklin , then Ameri - ed. His disappearance is one of
the original da Vinci Mona Lisa can Minister to France , who histor y's great puzzles . There
hanging in its gallery . A paint - wrote to Vernon 's distraught fath - are many guesses about what
ing known as "the Vernon Mona er in 1792 that the now 32-year- ha ppened to him — that he died of
Lisa/ ' owned by the family of a old William Henry '...is a good ne glect- or by poison, or that
BSC sophomore , Shelly Par- P erson , a genteel Address , his he was smuggled out of France
then , may be the result of a C onversat ion is Sensible and in an elaborate escape plot.
da Vinci's fi rst attem pt to paint Agreeable , mixed with a good deal
Son of Heir
the celebrated lady.
of Observatio n. He has in short
In 1797 Vernon went to great
The presen t owners are Agnes all the Qualities. ,,"
paiDs to establish lengthy cor Vernon Slagle (Sbelly 's grand One Among Many
respondence with a mistress by
mother ) of C hatham , N.J. , Dor Early during his stay in France who he had a year -old daughter .
othy Vernon Landis of Bedford , Vernon started collecting paint - Although he had met this woman
N.Y., Roger E. Vernon of New ings and was given others by only a year before the birth of
York , t he Estate of the late wealthy
French
noblemen the child , he wrote to her again
William Ward Vernon of Taos , friends. When finally he return- of their eight
-year -old "son and
New Mexico, and Patricia Ver - ed to his native Newport he took of his plans to tak e the" boy
non Anderson of Sher man Oaks. with him his collection of 52 paint - back to America . A letter In
.
Cal.
ings and the catalogue listing Vernons * possession today, disProminent Colonial Ancestor
them. The catalogue , in his own closes that he had booked pas Shelly 's colonial ancestor ,WiU hand and still in the Verno n.fam- sages for himself and '?son" on
liartf Vernon , was a prom inent ily's p ossession, casuall y lists a ship leaving for America
A
citizen of Newpor t, Rhode Island . paintings by van Dyck , Rem- letter in reply appro ves the *plan
In 1778, soon after William Hen- brandt , Murillo , Raphael , and but states she will remain in
r y Vernon 's gra duat ion from Franz Hals , amon g others . In France with their daugh
ter.
Princeton at the age of 18, his re gard to their authenticity he
That same year Vernon return father sent him to France. The wrote : "I have made out a cat- ed to Newport. There is no evielder William Vernon , Presi - alogue of the paintings , and sub- dence that he took his "son
"
dent of the Continental Navy joined the names of the artists with him.
But a year later
.
Board througho ut the Revolution , when I could do it with certain -" he was dunned by a Philadelphia
was a friend of many of the great ty, but in case of doubt £- have shipping agent for his passage
men of the day, including Jeff er- attac hed no conj ectural idea of money . The
invoice , also in the
son , Adams , Lafayette , Franklin , my own to a picture ."
Vernons ' possession, carr ied a
and Washingt on. His house in
The Nun
significant item ; a charge for
Newport — now a museum—se rAt his home in Newport Ver - trans portation by ship from
ved toward the end of the Rev- non ' s most pr ized p ossession F rance to A mer ica of Vernon 's
olutionary War as headq uarters was a painting listed in the cat - "servent" and Vernon s "pupil.
'
"
f or Genera l R ochambeau, where alogue as "T he nun a finished
When Vernon 's family raethim
Washington and his staff joined piece by Leonardo de Vincy" , in Newport he was accompanied
him for a week in March , 1781. ''(sic). He did not marry and " by neither "servent " nor "pupVernon — Friend of Louis XVI became increasingly retiring. il.
" One guess is that the "puWilliam Henr y sailed under Until his death he lived with his pil"
and "servent " disembar the partronage of John Adams family, which he had so long ne- ked earlier in Boston.
and took with him "letters to glected. He hung the Mon a Lisa
* Possible Smokescreen
Benjamin Fr anklin , who had re- in his bedroom , and according to
In short Vernon 's correspon ceived favors at the hand of his family legend , nightly prayed to dence with, his former
mistress
grandf ather.*' These letters re- her. When asked about the paint , about their "son may have been
"
sulted in his introduc tion to the ing he always said that it was nothing more than an elaborate
French Court of Louis XVI. The of great value and that Marie smokescreen to mislead French
gay court lite so fascinated the Antoinette had given it to him. Government authorities (undoub young American that it interfer- Beyond that he would say noth - tedly reading his mail as a sused greatly with his father 's pur- ing.
pected Royalist) about the real
pose in sending his son to France ,
Vernon was a man of honor , Identi fy of the boy returning with
which was to learn the customs and there is no reason to doubt him to the U. S.
of the country bo as to develop his word that Marie Antoinette
For his services Mar ie Ana mercant ile business with his had given him the painting . But toinette , before being, imprision father in Newport . Within a few interested historians in Europe ed and fearfully guessing what
years he was on Intimate terms and the U. S. have come up with the, future might hold for her son
with Loui s XVI and he soon be- some highly fanciful speculations might easily have handed Vernon,
came a favorite of Marie An* about why the beautiful but luck- the Mona Lisa. There would
toinette. He even dressed as a less Queen should have given be nothing remarkable in this .
courtier — a habi t which nearly him so valuable a canva s. One For centur ies French monarchs
cost him his life. During the stor y is that he received it as had prodigally given their favRe ign of Ter ror he was drag - a reward for saving the life orite jewels estates
,
, works of
ged to a lamppost by the mob of her son , the Dauphin of France art
and
money
for
services
far
,
to be han ged and was rescu ed and heir to the throne . This is less exacting than tho se
presuat the last minute by a French a fantast ic suggestion , but is
citizen who recogniz ed him as supported by some impressive mably performed by Vernon,
Vernon vs Louvre
an Americ an.
facts .
What
relation
, if any , is there
Nineteen years passed before- Imprisoned la the Bastille after between the Louvre
Mona Lisa
Willia m Henry returned to New- the Revolution , Mar ie Antoinette
and
the
Vernon
Mona
Lisa? The
p ort , despite imploring letters followed her husband , Louis XVI ,
ipal theory , gaining slow
princ
from his father , all of which he to the guillotin e in 1793 . At I recognition as scientific evidence
ignored . But regardless of his her death the eight-year -old Daupleasures at th e Court , he was phin remained in the Bastille. mounts , is that Leonardo painted
talented and able . He traveled Three years later he disappear - (continued on page seven )
in Rus sia as a keen observer
and was at the signing of the
peace treaty between the infant U. S. and Britain. He left
a stron g impression on shrewd
ing" and "uncanny!" and New
Yor k joined in with "scintilla *
tlngl" (ABCTV 's Allan Jef *
ferys),
adroit"
"remarkably
CThe New York Times), "fresh
and stimulatin g" (New York Her *
aid Tribune) , and from Whitne y
Bolton , Dean of New York Critics
Circle , in The Mornl ag Tele*
graph : " ...the best of all such
perfor mances I I can think of
no more delightful evenin g."
SHAW SPEAKS
Bernar d Shaw said of himself:
"I am regarded as general con*
sultant to mankind on questions
of sex, religion , music , drama ,
procre ation , education , politi cs,
war , criminal human stupidity,
the destiny of man , and ever
America n baseball. " Bnunweil
Fletcher manages to explore
Shaw' s views on most of thesi
•ubjecjfci while giving his audience an entertainin g, provoca tive and moving theatrical experienc e
Special Development Section:
BHaWBMM
in enroll ment
Increases
and the expansion of curri
culum offerin gs at BSC con ti nues to crea t e a need for
more b u ild in gs and rela t ed
on cam pus. In
faciliti es
response to these needs , the
Com monwealth of Pennsylvan i a a n d the G eneral State
Authorit y have eleven project s in various sta ges of design or construction . The total cost of construction is approximatel y $12,500,000.
are alFour structures
read y scheduled for complet ion in 1970. They are a nine
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stor y women's dormito ry, a
classroom buildin g, a dinin g
and maintehall-k itchen ,
nanc e build ing-gara ge. Three
other major projects, a student union , field house, and
Athlet ic stad ium, will be
completed in the next few
years. In order to acquaint
the students with the most
important aspects of these
projects , Boyd P. Buckin gham , Direct or of Development has provided the M&G
with the informat ion and photos which make up this special development section .
Bakeless Center
opens in May
Student Center in Final
Plannin g Stages,Const ruct io n
Begins in the Sprin g
Final plans f o r a student center are expected before the end
of 1969 with construction begin. nlng in the spring of 1970. The
three story building will be located in the terraced area now
occupied by Husky Lounge. "Husky" will be torn down to facilitate this project .
The student center , which is
totally air conditioned , will house
many of the campus facilities
now located in several buildin gs.
The estimated cost of construction is $1,250 ,000 , 000.
The college store and student
bank , now located in Wa ller Hall ,
i
—-——
will be located on the ground
floor of the center . A formal
lounge, TV room, four bowling
alleys, lockers for commuters
and offices will also be on this
floor .
Husky Lounge will be replaced by a large snack bar to be
located on the first floor . Thi s
snackbar will be supplemented
by partitioned "multi purpose
rooms " which can be opened into
one large room for dances or
closed into smaller meeting
rooms . A stage for dances is
also available in this area . In
——<———»——»
The Bakeless Center for the
Humanities, now under construction in the area between the Library and Haas Auditorium , wil
house 36 seminar and class room ,
offices for 66 faculty member s,
a faculty lounge, and a large star*
age area .
In addition to being a very
functional building, it will be
one of the most impressive structures on the campus.
The three story completely airconditioned 'building, has been
built in two wings , divided by a
glass stairwell which covers the
full height of the structure.
The wing toward the library will
(conti nued on page eight)
addition , the infirmary, the office of the Director of Student
Activities and the Center Manager , and typing rooms will be
located on this floor .
A Recreation room will occupy
a major portion of the top floor .
Pool tables, ping pong , shuffle
board, etc . will be available in
this area. It will also be the location of a listening room to be
equipped with stereo phonographs
ind tape players. The remainder of the floor will house offices for the various publications , CGA , IFC , ISC, ARM ,
ARW , and the Day Men 's and Women ' s Associations, and confer*
ence rooms which will be available to all these organizations.
Bakeless Hall Will House
36 Classrooms and 66 Offices
4
im—«WlM*Mf ^''*li11 a
I • V imim**1HiM
iIiimmi
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.
Upper Campus Site of
Football & Basebal l fields
Student s , faculty , var sity ath letes and sports fans are eager ly awaiting completion of the
new athletic stadium on the upper camp us. The are a Is to
Include a football field, circled
by a regulation 8iz* track , and
a baseball diamond , Final plans
for the Stadium were delivered
to the Gener al State Authorit y
on Sept 23. A completion date
has not been announced.
The stands , which seat approx imately 3900 , will contain consesslons , locker rooms , equipment
stora ge areas , offices for coaches and officials, and four iavatorlos .
Te mporary bleachers will be
erected on the opposite side of
the field which can be reversed
to serve the baseball field.
An Artiito Conception of Bakelet* Hall
12 mill ion dollars in new projects at BSC
New Field House
Replaces Centennia l
The first structure to be built
on the upper campus will be the
new Field house . The money for
the building was made avail able
in 1966, however , the original
bids exceeded the 1 million 875
th ousand dollar allocatio n by 560
dollars . Bids will be re-ope ned
next month and completion is expected to be in July, 1971.
Centennial Gymnasium can no
longer handle the number of spectators that attend husky sports
events . The gymnasium in the
new f i e l d house will contai n
seating space for 3500 or more .
The seating is arran ged in 2600
perm anent seats and room for
bleachers at the ends of the
court which should serve an additional 3000. The lar ge gymnasium also includes an inside
track , surfaced with "Tarten " ,
a rubber material which is resistent to puncture , burns , etc.
Two smaller gyms will be
located at each end of the large
gym. They will be equipped for "
tenn is , volleyball , etc.
An Oly mpic size swimmingpool
will also be located in the building. Seating for 300-500 will be
available for swim meets.
Locker room facilities will be
supplied for men, womenand separate
facilities for visiting
teams.
The remainder of the building ;
will be comprised of a weight
room , wrestling room , therapy
room and offices . Two handball
courts will also be available .
Maintenance
Garage
A combination maintenance
building-garage which is to be
completed in April , 1970 , will
provide offices , wor king areas ,
and storage space for the growing number of personnel who
-must maintain the campus for usedurifi f the entire year. The build ing is being constructed on the
site of the former Heiss property
facing Light Street Road .
Included in the plans is a fully
equipped vehicle maintenance garag e. The total cost of the pro ject is 275 thousand dollars .
Nine Story Women 's Residence
To Open Doors Next August
Most of the steel has been
erected for a nine story residence hall to house 400 women ,
four reside nt advisors , and a
member of the student personnel
staff .
Lounges , study rooms ,
laundry rooms , and stora ge areas
are a part of the residence hall
which is expected to open its
doors next August .
The buildin g is planned for 50
women per floor , with a lounge
The M&G Thanks
B. F. B. For His
Time & Cooperation
on ever y other floor and a unit
study room on floors alternating
those with lounges .
The ground floor will contain
lounges , lobbies , mailboxes and
offices. An apar tment , compr ised of two rooms , will be provid ed for one member of the student personnel staff .
The estimated cost of the building is $1, 800 , 000 , 000 with out
furniture .
The furniture will
cost an additional 150 thousand
dollars .
Parking
A multilevel parking area in
the vicinity of Pen n and Second
Streets will feature a new con *
cept for parking cars at BSC.
Its purpose is to provide a maximum number of spaces on a
minimum amount of site space .
It was also felt th at a parking
gar age , carefully
designed to
blend with existing terrain , will
be mor e attr active than the us*
ual amesited parking areas .
¦ . . .-..: ..*>. < ^-:' ,^ . !-lfr;rf-3aft it
'
The Women's Residence Will
Be A Home For 400 Coeds
f-WM-EVMrt' tw ^ tv ^ f » u
Dinin g Hall-K itchen Nears
Com pletion
mm
used for special events. Each
dining room Is equipped with two
serv ice ar eas and two dish return are as , which will speed up
serv ing.
A smalle r dining room has
been provided for faculty, it
will seat 40. This room can also
be used for special events such
as banque ts or meetings ,
The new facilities are designed to handle the proj ected 2400
resident studen ts and 600 to 800
off campus studen ts . Its cost
is 1 million . 645 thousand dollars , minus the equtpmont.
¦
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..
Thf N«w Ffcld Will Be Th« First Building On The Upper Ctop!^ ^
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A dining hau -kltchen , facing
East Second Street , is expected
to be read y for use in January ,
1970.
The dining areas are
complete ly alr -condltloned and
will seat 1 ,000 students and feed'
2,000 at each meal. This additional dinin g space Is needed
because the pre sent College Commons , built In 1956 to serve 720
stu dents , Is now handlin g more
than 1,700.
It U comprised of two main
dining room s with a kitchen in
between. Theie two rooms can
be divided Into four rooms to be
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M & G Pred ictio ns
The Gallopi ng Ghost.
est
Chester
W
A Man Called Red Grange
mm
The Galloping Ghost or The
Wh eaton I ceman , both of these
handles -were tagged on Illinois
halfback Red Grange. Grange
scored 31 touchd owns, averaged ,
176 yards running and 213 run ning and passi ng every game
from 1923-25. His only football
failure was In the pros where an
injured knee kept him from having a great career.
SUPER PRE P STAR
Red 's mother di ed when he was
five , after which his father moved his family from Forksvlfie ,
Penna. to Wheaton , Illinois. It
was there that Grange blossomed and flourished as a super athlete. He played f-x>tbal l, basketball , b aseball, and partici pated
in track. Of these he liked base ball best. In three years for
Wheaton he had s c o r e d 75
touchdowns and kicked 83 convers ions. Then the college recruiters began to kick down the
Grange frontdoor to prove their
c ollege was .the best. It w a s
while running track that Illinois
coach Bob Zuppke convinced him
that his college was the best.
Grange considered himself too
small for football at the college
level. But when his fraternity
brothers chan ged his mind , Illinois had one of the best all
around halfbacks in college tooU
ball histor y.
^--w
fn £
first
^
—w
Over Strouds
With eight out of nine last week
for 89 per cent , I started thin gs
out pretty good for the 1969
season. The BSOLock Hav en
Coaches
Corner
game was the only turnabout in
my picks. The Ea gles turned
In an upset as they intercepted
their way over a physically and
stat istica lly better Huskle team .
The big game in Penns ylvani a
this week is the West Chester
at East Str oudsburg contest. This
is the game most people agree
that will decide the kingpin of
the eastern division of the Penn sylvania C onference. After last
week' s defeat at the hands of
Montclalr , I pick West Chester
in a close, tough game , similar
Startin g this week In the M&G , to last year's 21-14 Stroud vicis a new column to discus s foot- tor y.
ball with the BSC football coaching staff. We will discuss the
Now go down to your local bookpast games and the game coming ie , pro cure your weekly football
up that par ticular weekend .
card , and place your bets on the
following
winners:
Last week 23SC lost a tough
game to Lock Haven 28-25. This
Predictions
week another tough game is ex*
BSC
over
Mansfield — The
pected against the Man sfield
Huskies
are
going
to climb all
Mountaineers. The Mountaineers
over
th
e
M
ounta
i
ne
e
rs
.
are led by Stu Casterline , a
quarterback whom many considWyoming over Air Forc e —
er to be the finest player in the Cowboys to corral the Falcons
eastern division of the. Penns yl- in a close one.
Alabama over Southern MissiI vania Conference. BSC Coach
Jerry Denstorff compared Cas- ssippi — Crimson Tide rolls to
terline 's arm to a m issle. "H e their second strai ght victory .
can throw off balance , on the
Arkansas over Tulsa — The
run, while being hit , "Denstorff Razorbacks hope to repeat as
Grange of course was a senstarte d." Anyway he wants to Southwest Conference cham ps.
" throw he can let loose. "He
sation. A s a soph omore he led
Florida State over Miami —
the team to an undefeated seacontinued /* 65-70 yards In the The rampaging Seminoles turn
son, scored 12 touchd owns, ran
air on target.
"Besides be- the Hurricanes into a slight
for 1260 yards and was first In
ing a great passer he is one of breeze .
the Big Ten scoring. But M ichthe best runners in the league.
Georgia over Clemson — The
igan also had a spotless record with the same notion. But the brushed it off as a pre ss agents H e is an excellent scrambler Bulldogs are aimin g for another
and Illino is had only a share of opening kickoff proved who was gimmick . Hardl y.
and has been compared to F ran undefeated year .
to win that day. Grange began
the championshi p.
Georgia Tech over Baylor —
Grange never received any Tarkenton of the New York
N ext year, Illinois was waiting an unforgettable performance. money to attend Illinois , and had Giants . "Ano ther thing that The Ramblin g Wre ck runs over
for reven ge on Michigan. In the He ran the opening kickoff back to work for $37.50 a week In the makes him great ." said Dens- the Bears.
third game of the season M ichigan 95 yards , turned an end for 56 summer at an ice house . T h e tor ff, "is his tremendous forti Harvard over Holy Cross —
pulled into Illinois new stadium yard s for a touchdown , romped wor k was great to keep his arms tude and his never quitting at- The Crimson are going to smash
67 yards on another end run — and legs in sha pe. In fact after titude . " With all these adjec- ever ybody to get revenge on Yale.
all within the space of 12 minutes. college, he received $100,000 for tives directed at the same man
Indiana over California — The
A total of 303 yards by one man a barnstorming trip and still it should make for a tremendous Hoosiers smell Roses in the West
Cameo Ring
in 12 minutes.
coast oreezes .
wor ked summers at the ice house . game on Saturday .
Beige Backgro und
FAM E ON ICE
Michigan State over Southern
Only he now drove to work in a
From that day on Grange was $5500 Linc oln Phaeton.
kest In araa of Librar y
As for preparatio ns for this Methodist — The SMU Mustangs
a nat ional hero. A picture of him
Grange played very little In week 's game, Coach Denstorff aren 't as good as pre season pr eREWARD
wor king on an icetruck appeared pro football. He spent one sea- and his staff are trying to im- dictions . Spartans by a big mar Take to Securit y
in newspapers nationwide. And son with the Bears for 50 per prove upon the mental mistakes gin.
the Wheato n Iceman doubtlessl y cent of the gate and later organ - that were made last -week . tr We
Notre Dame over Purdue —
i. ized a league of his own which had too many mental error s and Two in a row , Irish .
when a team scores th ree cheap
Ohio state over Texas Chris merged with the NFL.
touchdowns like Lock Haven did tian — The Super-Buckeyes are
His agent took him to Holly- last week. " Denstorff continued , going to maul the Frogs
.
wood to star In a movie. But ac- " you have to hustle to get them
Pennsylvania
over
Bucknel
l—
cording to Gran ge it was the worst back."
The
Quakes
have
their
best
experience of his life. In 1935
"We haven 't changed anyt hing, chance ever to win the Ivy title .
he went on to solid success In he continued ." We have adjust Penn State over Color ado —
insurance , television and radio. ed the defense to stop Caster- Nlttan y Valley is still ringing
But bis everlastin g claim to fame line and our offense to work a* with last year 's win to be reis football , where he performed gain st their defense ." Denstorff peated this season . ,
as probably the greatest halfback
Southern California
oven
( continued en page ttv tn)
of all time.
Northwestern — no O. J . for Tro- .
jan power , but Lots of go left:
for a winner .
Syracuse over Kansas — The
Orange men will pluck the Jay hawks .
^^^ ^^^^^^^^ ^^ ^^ ^^ _^A
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Texas over Texas Tech —
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lookout! Longhorna stampeding .
U.C . L .A, over Wisconsin —
The Brui ns are stron g enough to
Ichallen ge U. S, c, for their
I
The bank you can grow with.
The Wheato n Iceman
I
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Need f inancialadvice ?
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crown .
Bloomsburg, Pa.
over Connecticut — Ells
I areYalelooking
for more than a
Member Federal Deposit Insuranc e Corporation
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Ap plica tion! for Youth Par* Card* ivallablt
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Oklahoma over Pittsburgh —
Every year the same thing: N .D.
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Mono Lisa
** - AMNMNMHHMHMMMMHBMM
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
m
(continued front page Hir«t ;
two Mona Lisas at dlfter «nt
times. The Vernon may have
beau the first version and the
Louvre Lisa the second .
As evidence that the Vernon
Lisa was the first version , experts point out that she looks
younger than her siste r In Pari s.
The face is sltmmor , the back ground is different. The Vornon
f ace I s sof ter , not so cynical .
The mouth is fulle r , mor<3 tender In the Ver non painting . The
eyes in the two portraits are set
at a slightly different angle .
H owover , the probl em facing
resear chers Into the history of
a paintin g is to make theories
fit the facts — in this case the
known facts of the circumstances
un der whi ch Leonar d o camo t o
paint Mona Usa. The facts fit
the theor y quite well.
'
Why Two?
Lisa (M ona is merely the euph onious contrac ti on of M adonna ,
or plain Mrs.) was about 22 and
married to Francesco del Giocondo when Leonardo started her
portrait in Florence in 1501. It
Leonardo
is wf.'ll-knowri that
worke d slowly on his paintings ,
and in May of 1502 , one year
after he had started.Lisa 's por trait , he suddenly left Florence
to act as chief military engineer
to Cesare Borgia , the great Renaissance general .
He returned to F lorenc e in
1503. According to some reports , he took up an unfinished
portrait some ti me afte r that
and finished it in 1506 . There is
strong evidence that the por trait
was of Mona Lisa. But which
Mo.ia Lisa ? Ttio old por tr ai t
or a new portrait? Did he start
to finish the portrai t known as the
Vern on Lisa , or did he , finding
Lisa three or four years older ,
slightly fatter , with some of her
youthful bloom worn off, start
another version — the one now
han ging in the Louvre?
If Leonardo did paint two versions of La Glocondo, which Lisa
did he sell to the King of France ?
And how did the other version
get to France? For several hundred years schola rs have believed in two vers i ons of the Lisa
and recent evidenc e ind icates
that two Giocond os did make
their way to Franc e, at the same
time . Francis I was a patron
to Leonardo. Researchers into
the Vernon-G iocondo histor y
NELLY'S
BARBER SHOP
Terry and Dave
open Mon-Sa t 8-5:30
Closed Wed.
E. Ma in St.,
Bloomsbur g
Cut the way you Want
tnink it most Ukely that if Leonar - 1506. This is furt her confirmed
do sold one Usa to the King , he by microscopic examination of
might have given the other with the surface of the painting, the
It , especially as the King is syste m of cra quelures (cracks)
known to have valued the painting being unmistakable of Chat per highly.
iod.
Painting s Auctioned
William Henry Vernon died in
Sinistra Mano
Newport in 1833 , when his estate descended to his nephew.
"This painting both visually ,
Two years later the family put by the X-ra ys, by infra -red rays ,
his collection of paintings up at and microscopically is seen to
auc tion , w ith Instr uc t ions to a be unfinished in places. The face
friend to buy in the Leonardo and hands being finely brought
f or t hem . This was done , w ith up to a finish of great beauty
the Result that the painting has and delicacy. The bru sh strokes
never left the Vernon family. are sinistra mano throughout the
painting. (NOTE : the words sinFor the fir st 136 years of istra
mano are important and
Lisa 's resid ence In the U. S. she
actually
mean more than left*
remained quietly in the Vernon handed
for
which the Italian word
,
family , unseen by the public , al- is mancino . Leonardo was leftmost unknown to the art world . handed , but in a very freakish
Then in 1933 the painting was sent manner . Left-handed he wrote ,
to the Fogg Art Museum , Harvard sculpted , painted or drew from
University , for a careful clea- the right side to the left. In writ ,
ning. At that time technicians ing, using his left hand , he star at F ogg took X-ra ys which , they ted from the right hand of the
reported , prove d the anc ient can- page and worked to the left , revas to be definitely of the period versing the character s as he
whe n Leonardo was known to went so that his writing can only
have painted the Mona Lisa. The be read with the aid of a mircanvas was reline d , restretched ror .)
and carefully clean ed to bring out
its or iginal color s.
•'The clear-cut brush work in
this
painting bars attribution to
Authentically Determined
any
followers
or pupils of LeoIn 1948 Dr . Thomas MacOugh try Judson , for many years Cur - nardo , the study of the X-ray shareveal Leonard o's
ator of the Cigognar a Collec- dowgraphs
technique
in
painting , which diftion of the Vatican , returned
fers
completely
from that of
to this country and heard of the
his
so-called
school
. They all
p aintin g. Durin g his long Vatic an
drew
the
outline
of
a face or
curatorship, Judson made Leohand
with
a
fir
m
brush
and fillnardo his princi pal hobb y and
ed
in
the
for
m
flatly.
stud y. Working with Ital y 's bri llLeonardo -expert , Adlofo
iant
"Leonardo in contrast never
Venturi , Judson has painstaking did
so; he softly mode led the highly catalogued many of Leonardo 's
lights
on the feature s or back of
lesser-known works and publish a
hand
without outline ."
monogra
ph
on
possible
ed a
secondar y versions of Leonardo 's
On Exhibit
p aintin gs. He went to Dartmouth
1
950
In
accepting the fact that
.
,
College , where Lisa hung in the
the
painting
was too valuable
home of the late Dr. Ambrose W .
to
be
hung
in
a
private residenc e ,
Vernon , then professor of bi- the Vernon family
their
ogra phy. He lived with the paint , Mon a Lisa in the placed
vault
of a
ing for several days , studied it ,
F
ifth
Avenue
bank
in
New
York
took it out into the sunlight and City .
Later she was moved to
exam ined it microsco pically, his the vault
of the Summit Trust
excitement growing as each pr e- Compan y in
Jersey where
liminar y test and examination she remained New
until
confirmed his first suspicion. was made to exhibittheherdecision
to the
He then persuaded the Vernons ! publi c for the first time in
her
!
to allow him to put the painting ; more than four and a half cenlaborator y
rigorous
through
tur ies of existence at the Otis
tests. F ollowing are excer pts Art Institute in Southern Califrom his report .
fornia.
"1 have carefull y examined this
paintin g in oil, upon canvas 29^
inche s high by 23% inches wide ,
represent ing Mona Lisa.
"The exam ination by X-ra ys,
done at Fogg Art Museum of
Harvard in 1933 shows this painting to be on canvas with pigments
in oil, both being of the first few
years of the fifteen hundreds , in
my estimat ion not being later than
NEEDED
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275-4750
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ehaek or monay ordar (no C.O.o. 't) In
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I
and Edinboro Fighting Scots are
in rebuilding years and can't be
count ed on for muc h this year .
Shippensburg lost seven all-star
seniors through graduation , but
retained the league 's leadingpass
re ceiver , Al Bowman, to stir up
some act ion. The Scots of first *
year coach Bill McDonald are
going throu gh a sweeping pro*
gram of changes. They will depend largely upon a big grou t
of talented sophomore s and juniors .
If Clarion and West Chester
(the predi cted eastern division
champion) meet for the league
crown , West Chester will be out
to regain the crown they lost last
year to East Stroudsburg .
Epple/s
Pharmacy
CLARK,
Distr ict YMCA Executive
for appointmen t
784-2104
Positions In U. 8. and
Overcoat
went on, "If we can get the same
tremen dous physical effort we
got against Lock Haven, we can
win. Nobody loafed, nobody quit ,''
he finished.
I then asked Coach Denstorff
if the team had a mental letdown after the game.' He said
"when they work that hard before a game, and come out on
the short end , there' s bound to
be a letdown. "We can either
be a bunch of disappointed boys
an d coac hes," he continued , "or
we can tr y to be men, take in
anot her notch on our belts and
give it a fighting effort .''
I' m sure BSC will bounce back
this week at Ma nsfield and I hope
the team feels the same way.
Dark Room AttUtant
59 E. Main St.
. . . for your personal needs in
gift* and home decor.
$1.50
LUNCHEON
TUESDAY thro FRIDAY
Evsry Wcak —11.30-1.30
Without all-conference quarterback Jeff Petrucci and 13 other
seniors , California's chances to
repeat as western , conf erence
cham p aren 't too pr omising.
Clarion , with Bob Erdeljac , second leadin g passer in the Pennsylvania Con ference to East
Stroudsbur g's Bill Dukett , hope
to push the California Vulcans
out of the number 1 spot . The
Golden Ea gles did graduate 10
seniors; but two top rus hers .
Bob Oberdorf and Mike Gulnta.
along with junior pass receiver
Rick Terza , return to bolster
the attack.
VULCANS 2ND
The California Vulcans without
Jeff Petrucci is like egg.fooyung, no egg, no young, just foo.
Petrucci ran and passed for 1,590«yards last season and put on
a one-man show in the 28 • 28
conference championship game
with Stroud .
Returning are all-conference
guards E mil Litwin and Larry
Randall , second-team halfback
Ron Urban , and the league' s top
punter , Don Roberts (40,5.)
Ja y Wagner , Slippery Rock ,
school record-holder for one season ground gaining (910-yards ),
will be back to pace the Rocket
attack . Wagner also scoured 54
points . Tailback Frank ' Bain.es
and quarterbacks John Ross and
Tom Bell also return .
Lock Have n is flaying its first
year under new head coach Bot
Weller .. Junior quarterback Denny Rhule , freshman halfback Greg
Allen , second-team all -confer ence linebacker Ron Beshore , and
halfback Jim Smith should improve the Bald Eagles .
The Ship and Edinboro Hurting
The Shippensburg Red Raiders
now int erviewing for posi *
Horn in Youth Work Business ,
and
Education ,
Physical
Counselin g.
Call
L WILLIAM
(continued from page six)
Roundu p
"I
YMCA
" This painting in my opinion
is by the hand of Leonardo da
Vinci.
r°~— ' THE STUDIO SHOP
I
I
J
Coaches
Wester n
Conference
Tka mrld' t lirni t itllln i
^mffl/
¦taffar yaf no rarnr than a.
^•t ^
past of IWR.INIV Mi wllh 1000 Fin ttipt ul
gggSi MggF*
E^ aMfe**" 1
umwSm&f TmmSS,m mti
Bi ^ iaiBIHaHnHiMHBBnBaBaaaaaaaaHaaB
Ne w P eople
(continued
^ BMaBBaHnBi
BSC Sports Broadcasts
On WHLM
fr o m page om)
degree in intellectual history. He
was awarded his Doctor of Philosophy degree In 1962 from The FOOTBALL
WRESTLING
Johns Hopkins University where Sept. 20 L. Haven Away 8 p.m Jan. 17
Clarion Home 6 pm
he received the Phi Beta Kappa
27 Mansfield Away 2:30 pm
27 Kutztown Away 8 pm
award.
Oct. 3 Adelphi U Home 8 pm
30 California Home 8 pm
John B. Williman, from Jersey
City, New Jersey, was named
Associate Professor of History.
Mr. "Williman received his BS
degree from the College of Charleston , South Carolina and his
Master of Arts degree from the
University of Alabama. He is
currently a candidate for t h e
Doctor' of Philosophy degree at
St. Louis University ,which he expects to receive in February,
1970.
R oy D. Pointer , an Assistant
Professor of Chemistry at the
start of the 1969-70 college year,
was born in Ottawa, Kansas.
Pointer received his Bachelor of
Science degree in Chemistry
from the University of Kansas
and his M aster of Science degree in the same field from the
University of Michigan. He ex.
pects to be awarded his Ph. D.
in organic chemistry from the
University of Michigan in Dec- ember of this year.
11 W. Chester Home 2 pm
18 Millersville Away 2 pm
25 Cheyney Away 2 pm
Nov. 1
Kutztown Away 2 pm
8 E. Stroudsburg Home 1:30 pm
BASKETBALL
Dec.
3 Cheyney Home 8 pm
6 E. Stroudsburg Away 8:15 pm
10 Mansfield Away 8:00 pm
16 Shippens'rg Home 8:00 pm
18 Millersville Home 8 pm
Jan. 9 Kutztown Home 8 pm
17 Clarion Home 8 pm
21 W.Chester Away 8 pm
Feb. 4 Shippenburg Away 8 pm
7 Cheyney Away 8 pm
12 E. Stroudsburg Home 8 pm
14 Mansfield Home 8 pm
18 Millersville Away 8 pm
21 Kutztown Away 8 pm
25 W. Chester Home 8 pm
contain 3 semina r rooms and 22
a
^
Welcom e . . . .
Tenn is?
Studentsfand Faculty
The area extending east of
Dillon House to the new maintenance building will become the
site of eighteen all-weather tennis courts, a baseball diamond,
Compliments .
of
REA ft DERIGK , Inc.
"Stores of Service "
rom
CAMPUS CLEANERS
124 Main St.
Bloomsburg
• Shirts Laundere d To Perfection
SANITONE DRY CLEANING
"We Aim To Please You"
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18 West Main Street
BLOQMSBURG, PA.
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HALLMAR K CARDS
GIFTS
Repairing
Your J eweler Away from Home
5 W. Main St. Bloomsburo
^
Phon *
\
784-2561
J
liJili;!ln[!!ill:311jllJl:!::!lm!ll1LllljiJ
Jet. of Route 11 and Interstate 80 / Exit 36
OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT FRI. & SAT.
Sundays & Daily— 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Space age wrencn ^HH
Su ppose you 're up in space and you need to tighten
a nut on the outside of your space vehicle,
We l l . . . it you use an ordinary power wrench , you
know what happens! You spin around. Not the nut.
But with this new space wrench, the nut turns—not
you!
'
Neat?
bet,
got
all
kinds
of fascinating equipYou
And we've
ment designed specially for way out there, And lots for
We Invite You To Dine With 'Us
Every day and Sundays Too
UNI TED STATES
*SE
,. ,. «, ¦..... PLEASE PRINT
c?!.LL0C
major gWKT
Q^PVftTfi PMfi
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career interee^
HOME AODRtSS
STAT E
CITY
CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS
CHOPS, BEEF-BURGERS
SANDWICHES & SALADS
PAUl DIETER , Prop.
way down here,too.
If you're a science or engineering graduate and
you 're looking for a good place for your talents, be an
officer ,a leader , on the Aerospace Team. The U.S. Air
Force is the largest scientific and research organization of the space age.
You'll be right where the breakthroughs are... breakthroughs such as better ways to tighten a nut. Pretty exciting if you're looking for a new twist.
AIR FORCE,Box A,Dept.SCP 99, Randolph Air Force Base,Texas 78148
?"*' •' r
We Cater To Everyone and Serve Only Choice
Phone 784-7837
Dean Hoch has assigned3 of the
rooms on the top floor to the art
dept. These rooms ar e equipped
with sky lights . The second floor
will be the foreign language depar tment , with language labs, etc.
The use of the other rooms will
be designated later by DeanHoch.
Occupation and use of the $l,«
400,000,000 buildin g is expected
to begin in May, 1970.
^MMMai
Miller Offi ce
AND
THE
(continued from page four)
«mL
Fine J ewelry
.
Bakelessm
*
Center
-:
will sery» - ,iwf1i»:|»!B!Slir^S«#W ¦
and will also house mechanical
rooms and a ator .
an d electri cal
;
'
a ge area. . • \ ' ^ : . v V " " ", ' '
WAFFLE
GRILLE
Harr y Logan
^
and a footba ll-soccerfield. Thiff
area is to be used by health and
physical educat ion classes and
for recreation activities. Preliminar y plans for these facO.
ities and for a new road and
parking area have been completed by the project engineer. The
completion date has not been determined.
SWIMMING
offices for facult y and faculty secThe 11th century Lingaraja
Dec. 6 Tem ple Home 1:30 pm retaries on each floor . The lar Feb. 13 Slipper y R. Home 7 pm ger wing, near the auditorium , Temple is India 's lar gest shrine.
16 West Chester Home 3 pm
M
M
^
€>
^ FETTERMANS ^
BARBER SHOP
— QUALITY —
Foot of College Hill
Bfoo msb urg Pa.
31 Waynesbur g Home 8 pm
Feb. 5 MUl' ville Away 8:30 pm
6 Shippensbur g Home 8 pm
14 L. Haven Away 8 pro
21 E Stroudsbur g Away 8 pm
28 W. Chester Away 3 pm.
BLOOM
BOWL
Lawrence L. Verdekal recent*
ly began tits new duties as Instructor of Business Educ ation. Born
in Carlisle , Penna. Verdekal
earned his Bachelor of Science
degree in Business Administration from Lycoming College and
is currently working on his Master's in Business Administration , with a major in accounting
and finance at the University of
Scranton.
^P
tmmmmmmm mmmm ^mmmmmmmmmmmamm m ^
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^ iiMHa
Han
Zi p
I UNOER»TANI*rHERe IS NO OBLIGATION.
' '
•
'
I
'
¦
i^^^ £!^^ EIiCM ^^^^^ Hj^^^ M^^ I^M7*Q^^ Hfi^ZV
^^^sv
o2%*Xj Kroon& IroIJJ.
BSC Homecomin g 1969
Our American Heritage
The Homecoming Committee
decided on the theme , "Our
Amer ican Heritage , " for our
Homecoming Weekend.
The
theme conveys the time period
from the landing of the Pilgrims
at Plymouth Rock to the landin g
of the Astronauts on the Moon .
As a result , the Homecoming
Committee requests that student organizations , classes , fraternities , and sororities , who enter floats in the Homecoming
Parade or who decorate off-campus houses , depict significant
events in the history of the United States .
REGISTRATION OF FLOATS :
AH groups enter ing floats in
the Homecoming Parade or decora ting off-campus houses must
register their entr y theme s in
the Office of the Director of
Student Activities no later than
5 p. m. on Wednesday, O ctober
1, 1969. If two organizations
enter similar themes , the organization who submits its theme
first will take precedence over
the other . Consequently, it is
essential for student groups to
enter their themes as soon as
possible . A written description shoul d accompany an organization' s th eme.
DIMENSION OF .FLOATS :
Floats must not exceed the following dimensions: 14 feet in
height , 8 feet in width , and 50.
feet in length.
F LOAT AWARDS INCLUDE:
1st place — $75.00
2nd place — $50.00
3rd place - $25. 00
4th place — 7th place —$15. 00
PRE LIMI NARY JUD GING
OF FLOATS:
9:00 — 10:00 a.m. — Centennial Pa rkin g Lot .
OFF-CA MPUS JUD GING
OFF-CA MPUS
DECOR ATION OF FLOATS:
1st place - $25.00
2nd place - $15. 00
3rd place - $10.00
JUDGING OF OFFCAMPU S HOUSE S:
8:00 — 9:00 a.m.
The 1969-70 college year has
brought to BSC a new wave of inexperienced students and experienced teac hers . We would like
to, at this time , acquaint you with
some
of the new yet more exPRESENTATION OF AWARDS
people on campus.
per
ienced
A representa tive from each orthe
facult y.
Namely
ganization sponsorin g a float or
an off-campus house decoration
Dr . J. D. Bryden , Jr., Pro should be delegated to accept an
f
essor
of Speec h C orrection and
award which will be presented by
Coordinat
or of Speech and Hearthe Homecomin g Queen durin g
Service
s, rece ived his eleing
half-time of the West-Chestery
education
in several
mentar
Bloomsbur g football game.
public
schools
and
Penns
ylvania
All floats except the first thre e
the
education
from
secondary
his
winners must di smantle after Geor ge Washington High School
,
the parade in the Centennial ParkH
e
was
Virginia.
Alexandria
,
ing Lot. Garba ge trucks will
award ed his Bachelor of Arts
be available .
degree , Department of PhilosoNOMINREQUIREMENTS FOR
phy, from the College of Willating homecomin g queen
iam and Mar y in Virginia . Both
CANDIDATES
1. Any campus organizati on, his Master of Education and his
club, class , sororit y, or fratern- Doctor of Philoso phy degrees in
ity may nominate a H omecoming speech pathology and audiolo gy
were earned at the University
Queen Candidate .
2. Nominations for Homecom- of Virginia. He has taken additing Queen Candidates must be re- ional graduate study at the Geoceived in the Office of the Direc- rge Washin gton University .
tor of Student Activities no later
than 5:00 p. m. on Wednesda y,
Pick up untold books for
October 1, 1969.
money from Vets book ex3. Any grou p who enters a canchongo In 2S2 Waller .
didate must pay a $3.00 nomination fee. The money will be
used to purchase the flowers
which will be worn by the five
finalists and the Freshman Class
Sweetheart at the Union Gap Concert and for all the candidates
on Homecoming Day.
4. Primary elections for the
top ten finalists will take place
on October 6 and 7 outside of
Husk y lounge . Fi nal elections
will occur on October 8 and 9 .
5. F ive finalists will be announce d at the Pep Rally on
Thurs day, October 9 .
6. All or ganizati ons who nominate candidates for Homecom ing Queen , must pr ovide convert ible cars for their candidates. Signs must be attached
to your car signifying the name
of your candidate and the name
of your organization .
7. Candidates must be enrolled in the Sophomor e , Junior ,
or Senior Classes . They must
possess at least a 2 .0 cumulative ratin g and cannot be on
disciplinary or social probation .
1968 — Linda Zearfoss being
Welcome to
Fresh m en
On Wednesday
the College
Young Republicans kicked off
the fall semester by welcoming
20 freshmen into the organiza tion.
The meeting was opened by
President Bilde r , who explain ed the pur pose of the organiza t ion , its goals , and Its hopeful accomplishments . A fund -raising
project was discuss ed for the fall
and the pro spect of having a
homecom ing float. On Saturday,
September 20 , the Young Repub licans decorated for the C ounty
picnic which was held at the Magee Trans portation Museau. The
main speaker at the picnic was
state senator Hawbaker from
Mercersburg, in addi tion to the
Republican state chlarman , John
Jordan. The club will also help
the Republican women with their
stand at the fair .
It was also decided that the
club should become involved in
social work around the commun ity and that the organization discuss campus, federal , and local
The following students were issues in an attem pt to establish
electe d to serve as C .G.A. rep- a specific policy.
resent atives;
Also in attendance at the meetOff-campus • Sandy Horoscha k ing were the other officers ;Phyl Joe Accardi
lis Block , Vice-president; AUen
Carol Grimm
Neyhard , Corresponding secreCommuter « Carol Yoder
tar y; Noreen Tatusko. Recording
Al Ponoe
Secretar y; Gar y Yetter, Treas Gerald Osborne
urer; Mr. Charles Jackson , AdElweli •
Bru ce Leauby
visor and a number of upperBob Stratton
classmen. Anyone desiring to
North •
Dudley Mann
join please dro p a card with your
South •
Bev Boston
name and box number on It to:
East SandyDelophalne Noreen Tatusko. in South Hall .
West .
Chris Brumbach
WATCH FOR 60-POWERl
CGA Elect
crowned at "Sam A Daw " Concer t
The New Pe ople
TO SUPERVISE STUDENT
TEACHERS
Glenn A. Good , Assistan t Superintendent of the Shikellamy
School District at Sunbur y since
1965 has been appointed Associate Professor of Education and
will be responsible for the supervision of student teachers in
the Central Penns ylvania Area .
Mr. Good received his educa tionin the schools of M ontandon,
Penna. He earned his Bachelor
of Science degree in educ ation ^
at Bucknell Universit y in 1949 and
the Master of Science degree in
1955. In addition to majo ring in
educational administration , he is
also certified as a guidance counselor. He has continued his grad uate studies at the P ennsylvania
State University and expects to
complete require ments for the *
Doctor of Education in December , 1969 .
JONES TO REPLACE
GOLF COACH
Dr . Jack A. Jones , a member
of the faculty of the University
of Rhode Island , was appointed
Associate Professor of Phy sical
Educ ation. In addition to h 1 s
teaching responsibilities, Dr .
Jones will coach golf during the
1969-70 college year , replacing
Jerry Thomas who will be on a
leave of absence working on his
doctoral prog ram .
. He was awarded his Bachelor
of Science degree from Livingston State College in Alabama
and his Master of Arts degree
from the University of Alabama .
He earned his Doctor . of P hysic
al Education degree from Indiana
University ! Bloomington , India na.
Kenneth Whitne y was named
Associate Professor at BSC
with the duty of supe rvising stu dent teachers in the Phila delphia
area.
Mr . Whitney' s Bac helor of Science degree In education with
majors In mathematics and social
studies was receive d from Man sfield State College . He w a s
awar ded his Master of Science
degree In educat ion with a major in administration from the
University of Pennsylvania and
has completed additional graduate stud y toward s his Doctor
of Educat ion degree at that institution.
Eugene D. Shershen , a re cent
gradu ate of BSC , has been named Instruc tor of Psychology, His
BA degree was received from
BSC in Jan uary 1967, Foljowlg g
his grad uation he was'^associated
with Xavicr Univers ity, Clncln nat it Ohio, where he was a grad .
uate assistant In the Department
of Psychology,
CUM LAUDE FROM BRANDEI S
Dr . Ma xwell Prlmack , a native of New York City, has been .
appointed to the position of Associate Profe ssor of Philo sophy
at BSC. He graduated cum lauae
from Brandel s University where
he earne d a Buchelor of Arts
t
Pv?f£T FRCfo fcV
¦
The Bock SJi.lf . V.W
not lf s—Z7lnm
Nixon oh how well h# can wUck
it out.
Us , a quarterl y, l§ beyond a
doubt the best quarte rly pape rback mag around . If you're a
writer , you'll love It ; you see ali'
these under ground writers , supposedly the best (Goldstein' s
stand ards? ), and y ou'll come out
saying "Cr lpes, I can do better
If you want to blame it on some- than that!" If you'r e an average
thing, brand LSD. N ot that U s read er , forget it ." Us Is for
was writt en under LSD (thou gh new left people who wish to feel
maybe some of it was), but that
without acid we 'd never have had superior , and they'll be J ustified.
SGT . PE P PE R . Without Sgt. Us rais es no questions , otters
Pep per Richie Goldstein would no politics , says little , and keeps *
never have got a name for him- fallin g to produce anything to con*
self . By knock ing, in fact hatin g vlnce us that "we are the people
the -album , Goldstein got the our parents warned us about ."
name, the sway, the hub ris to ta ke Only the most aged and ultra on the publication of Us, a paper- conserva tive adult would be scar *
back magazine" which he edits , ed by Us . Natch , the mag was
selecting from the newest , if banned from Woolworth ' s, which
not the best , youn gwritersh e can is at least something.
B
¦
¦
One thin g, befor e i wrl tean oth *
er word. It' s pronounc ed Bloss.
Than k you. Us is a publicati on
of the new bree d of wr iter , under
30 and a self»proclalm ed hip collegiate or dropped-ou tcollegiate
hip type. No, not we is * *>uL
lication , or we ar e , but US is. BU'
don't blam e It on us.
—
¦—
'
'
i ^— ^iw«_i_ ^_ !¦
_^^^^ MIBHBBBBBBBBBBaaBBBBBBBBI BaBBaaHaBBBBBaHBBBaBBBBBaBBBBBBaBaaBaBBaaaaaBai
FEATURETTE
Conformity is not always bad.
Many of us have had the thought
"he' s conforming more by trying
to be different Ulan I am by being
myself ."
To our mind , it is much worse
to be afraid of being different ,
than to conform by being different. It is even worse to be
afraid of someone or somethin g,
or some idea because he oxIt
is different , doesn't fit the established mold , or doesn't conf orm to one's one way of thinking.
AGGRESSION)to Ardrey (AFRI CAN GENESE Xo Desmond Morris CTHE NAKED APE> vary.,
but all point out that fear is a
primary Ingredient in the for mula of human aggression and
aggressive feelings. All ofwhich
nay suggest tiat those toajft
he-men and all-American wonder
boys that boast loudlyof what they
would do to any black man who
might venture^pn ~their lawn , the
same strong gents whocry "coward " at Vietnam war protesters ,
and the all-so-brave politicians
who bay vociferously over the
way North Korea , Cuba , and all
those other nast y countries push
the U. S. around when we could
wipe them out with a single blowwell , chances are all these tou gh
guys are motivated by fear.
All of
Shaw
by Allen Maurer
George Bernar d Shaw is one
of the ver y few men that 1 have
ever idolized . No one could possibly agree -with all that Shaw
thought and said, but neith er
can anyone help but admire the
way he said his th oughts.
find. Obviously his search went
as far as his lending an ear to
Sgt. Pepper .
Not that Us is had, it isn 't .
There are some rea lly good
points . For instance:
James Kunen on the Apollo 8
shot . Who else but Kunen would
have the perception to notice that
the Cape Kenned y men ' s room has
star • of - David • shaped urinals?
K unen's prose is so delicate it
simply tinkles.
"Obit , " an unusua l semteiutoBiting sarcasm , cynical hu- biography by Sally Grimes , a gal
mor , an abrasive tongue , and a who is breaking new ground .
potent
command of the English
Recent books on anthropology
language
all failed to disguise
"Ex pecting to Fly: Advertisehave searched f or an answer
' love of life and his deep ments for the Living Theatre ,"
Shaws
to one of man 's oldest questions:
feeling for man . It' s likely that by Michael Thomas , who hates
wUat causes aggression , war,
Shaw , faced with this statement , Jefferson Airplane but loves the
murder , violence amon g men?
would
have reacted with some- Beach Boys. Sur prisingly , he
The opinions, from Lorenz (ON
thing like "Lov e man? Not I likes the Living Theatre . He 's
sir , I sympathize with him. One forgiven.
could not do else, considering
the pitiful state of his affairs ."
Michael Lyden 's tribute to
Shaw often played the clown. Charley Starkwe ather , a poor
He wore the mask of satire while man' s James Dean w ho escaped
wearing
the robes of philosophy . the pressures of the bobby socks
privac
y.
After
But
we
did
have
DEAR EDITOR:
Even
as
he flaunt ed his ability days by killing a few people.
up
the
are
a
our
meal
we
cleaned
I have a true story to tell you
to
make
any man feel small ,in
which
we
ate
and
carried
our
about what our dinner was like
h
e
worke
d
t o make small men
empty
dish
and
glass
back
to
the
tonight in the Commons.
"Nanc y & Sluggo , " the one of
All
of
this is rather gross
big.
Fi rst of all, our grou p did not washroom voluntari ly.
four
antimuths which put me on
You might ask what we did to simplification. One cannot com- the floor , by Steve Katz , guitarget to sit w ith the other students;
we kad tee privilege of sitting in deserve such a treatment. The press GMB Intoa few paragraphs , ist for Blood, Sweat, & Tears.
a secluded back room. We were crime that was committed was and its 's doubtful whether one can.
not served by the smiling wait - one of great c onsequence . My. get anywhere near his full per
"Spread" a frighteningl y huevening per resses, but were forced to serve self and another me mber of the sonalit y in a full
mor
less portfolio by artist Roourselves f rom the p ots an d group were wearing "obj ection- formance as Mr. Fletcher (repor - bert Crumb ; who' s one of the
pans in the midst of the kitchen. able slacks " which were in bad ted elsewhere in this issue) will best around . He draws island In our back room, which was not taste for the occasion. The pants attem pt to do. But with Shaw , faces and tongue • stomachs .
quite a ban quet hall , we were in question were non-patched every little bit is wholely worth- Christ nailed to a telephone pole,
confronted with the job of find- jeans and a pair of Navy bell- while.
and does a punk sadistic strip
ing a place to sit and eat amongst bottoms. If they are good enough
called Neato Kennoand finds time
all of the trash and old news- for the Navy, I would suspec t that
to include a guide to the capture
paper s that were spread out all ARA Slater would accept them as re quested to wear a J acket and of Innocent teeny -bops. Love it !
tie to Wednesday evening meals
over the room. Of course we decent clothing also.
in the PI LOT , page 35 , it says and to noon meals on Sunday."
did not get any dessert , or for
"Dwight David , The Once and
that matter any coffee or tea. and I quote, "Male students are That is what It says, so why Future Eisenhower " , by Craig
. should the whole group be "e*. Karpel , easily the funniest piece
00880** from oar meal when Sla- In the book, la an Insight into the
ter' s pvppets(enforctag non-e&. illustrious personality of the
MAROON AND GOLD
latent rules) were the ones at first Waspian concep t of the "All~
~"
fault ? Two of the girls could not America n boy." The second Was NO. 4
VOL. XLVIH
eat because they had an Import - pain boy-wonder Isn 't mentio nant phone call that they would have ed , but no less sickening: Glen
Mlcheel Hock
missed if they had to go through Campbell .
¦dltor-ln-Chiel
all of this delay and wait also.
These girls missed their meal
So much for the high points ; the
der Remson
Busi ness Manager
which
they
were
forced
to
pay
for
Test
is trite . The much -heraldMenaglng I
d
i t or
Bill Teft swerfh
In advance , due to Slater 's own ed poetry by Jim Mor rison , opMart in Kleiner
News f dHor
Ignorance and injustice .
ens no new doors . "Cemetery
Co-Featurt fditors
Ginny Potter
It Is a pretty shitty set up Hil
l ," by The Fuss' Ed Sanders ,
Allen Maurer
when you do not get a meal you tails to dig into the right kind of
pay for because an out-dated meal grave poetical matters . Jon LanClerk Ruch
Sports Miter
merchant does not like the way dau 's piece on Brandels is meanBid
Jim
Photography iditor
your
clothes go together .
ingless , becau se It doesn 't conKathy Roarty
Copy Idlter
Aa orgaoicattoo such as ARA cern most people . Wor se yet ,
Pem Van Ipps
Circulation Manager
Slater should have to abide by there ' s Rich ard Meltse r 's "TomAdvisor
Mr. Michael Stan ley
the rules of the dress code just my • Pisses • And You • Know
like everyone else on this cam- It"; page after page of boxing
ADDITIONAL STAFF: Dave Drucker, Jacquie Paddock ,
pus. They do not and should not records, If you want to doggedTerr y Blats, Leonard House, Mary Canave n, Barbara
have the power to make students ly listen to Paul Williams , foun .
Memor y, Janice, Orlowsk y, Janice Schlndeler , Reger
go hungry because their
own der of "Crawdaddy ", as heilowclothes
values
do
not
coincide
Savage, Stan Bwnslck , Dave Keller , Disrate Crane, VeJma
ly and surely finds Nirvana at
with the students they are licens- Medocino , okay. And lf ,.but
Aver y, John ftu grln.
.u
ed to service. Discrimination on enough alre ady .
All opinion *expressed by columnists and fsature writers,
clothes is unjustifiable in today 's
society, so I wish Slater would
Includin g letters-to-tite editor, ere not necesserli y those- of
The one line which make i it
either waice-upor get out .
worth the buck , for me, is an
this ftubllcrtien but the ** of the Individuals.
Richard Bradwell
honest-tcgosh quote by Richard
cJLetter
to the C^ditor
Why Us fails I don't know.
Maybe it'll get better . Most of
its contributors are good , but
not that good . The exception is
K unen, who is excellent . Any
would -be writer will have to
contend with him; curse you , Mrs .
K unen, for bringing forth this
child , and may the fleas of 10,000 camels infest the crotch of
your firstborn. It has flashe s
of brilliance , but notall that man.
y. Oh , well, blame it on Goldstein. Goldstein includes an applicable quote by McLuhan , "Art
is anything you can get away
with ." Maybe that' s what Goldstein is trying to pull ; maybe he
wants to see how much waste he
can pass off . In that respe ct Us
iisn't bad at all . What can one
J expect from an editor who panned Sgt . Pepper?
Second
Issue
Ready
Bantam 's above-ground quar terly Is back! US 2 will hit the
newsstan ds and bookstores October 1, offering a new samplin g
of writing and art by under-30
creators .
The second US Incl udes ex*
cer pts fro nt two novels (one due
to be published later this year
by Harper & Row) ; major ar .
tid es on "The New Fifties ,"
Dylan , Robert Mitchum , Timothy
Leary , and the astrology phen omenon; cartoo ns by Victor Moscoso; poetry by Tom Clark; and
a special suppleme nt called
"The Movement ," containin g six
essays on various pha ses ot It
— army resistance , women 's
liberatio n, school cri ses , and
black ra dicalism,
Called the "Back to School Is-
sue , " US 2 is symbolised by a
Bantam cover serenely focusing
on seven young students , all ar *
mod . (Qne of whom might even
be of elementary school age since
one US 2 contributor is only 12
J oin
The
M &G
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BSC Stude nt 's Family
Owns Mona Lisa
Bramwall Fletcher portraying George Barnard Shaw.
Mr. Fletcher 's on«-man sh ows hav* bs«n favorably compered with Hal Holbrook' s similar prasantation off Mark
Tw ain.
A^ re sen tin og.
*
^nau/
dsern ara hasJ someth
ing to say to the youth
On October 8, Branw ell Fletcher will present his nationally
accla ime d ' 'BERNA RD SHAW ' at
Haas Auditorium , 8:15 p.m.
Br amwel l Flet cher , star of
theatr e, television and motion
pictures (he has 32 Broad way
plays to his credi t, Includin g
the f inal 200 performances starrin g opposite Ju lie Andrews and
Sally Ann Howes In MY FAIR
LADY) has been showing up as
Shaw on college and universit y
sta ges all over the countr y (over
126 of them ). After his ingeniously devised and sta ged dramati c portrait of Slaw was a
smash hit in New York and Dub*
lln, Fletcher felt that more America ns - particu larly youn g
people — should havea chance to
meet Mr. Shaw. Bram well Fletcher was privileged to know him
personall y, and he Is the first
man author ised by the Shaw Es.
tate to impersonate the great
playwright . He had access to all
of Shaw's unpublished writin gs,
including letters - however per .
tl. 'Sha w's viewi are very
soif
pertinent toda y," aayi Fletcher.
"He 's very uo-to-datt — really
of today . The college students
especially appreci ate his remarks on educat ion. He instruc ts
them 'not to let your schoolin g
inter fere with your education!'
MEETIN G SHAW
"My > real education began/'
Fletcher continues , "when I met
Bernard Shaw. I was just a
J uvenile in the theatre and was
present at Shaw ' s house in Ayot
St., Lawrence , in England , and
saw Shaw ente rtain his guests
for over two hours with stories
of his early life , his struggles ,
his development and his philosophy. Though then in his late
seventies , Shaw was active and
agile as a young man and seemed utterly tireless. The memor y
of that day has remained with
me and I have tried to recapture
it , these many years later , with
this performance ."
Fletcher 's "Bernard Shaw"
was ranked by New York critics
with Holbrook's recreation of
Mark Twain. Fletch er fills the
sta ge with life, thou gh he uses a
minimum of props and setting ,
Shaw's nativ e Dublin oritlei call*
ed the performance "astonish*
F rance 's Louvre may not have Benjamiu Franklin , then Ameri - ed. His disappearance is one of
the original da Vinci Mona Lisa can Minister to France , who histor y's great puzzles . There
hanging in its gallery . A paint - wrote to Vernon 's distraught fath - are many guesses about what
ing known as "the Vernon Mona er in 1792 that the now 32-year- ha ppened to him — that he died of
Lisa/ ' owned by the family of a old William Henry '...is a good ne glect- or by poison, or that
BSC sophomore , Shelly Par- P erson , a genteel Address , his he was smuggled out of France
then , may be the result of a C onversat ion is Sensible and in an elaborate escape plot.
da Vinci's fi rst attem pt to paint Agreeable , mixed with a good deal
Son of Heir
the celebrated lady.
of Observatio n. He has in short
In 1797 Vernon went to great
The presen t owners are Agnes all the Qualities. ,,"
paiDs to establish lengthy cor Vernon Slagle (Sbelly 's grand One Among Many
respondence with a mistress by
mother ) of C hatham , N.J. , Dor Early during his stay in France who he had a year -old daughter .
othy Vernon Landis of Bedford , Vernon started collecting paint - Although he had met this woman
N.Y., Roger E. Vernon of New ings and was given others by only a year before the birth of
York , t he Estate of the late wealthy
French
noblemen the child , he wrote to her again
William Ward Vernon of Taos , friends. When finally he return- of their eight
-year -old "son and
New Mexico, and Patricia Ver - ed to his native Newport he took of his plans to tak e the" boy
non Anderson of Sher man Oaks. with him his collection of 52 paint - back to America . A letter In
.
Cal.
ings and the catalogue listing Vernons * possession today, disProminent Colonial Ancestor
them. The catalogue , in his own closes that he had booked pas Shelly 's colonial ancestor ,WiU hand and still in the Verno n.fam- sages for himself and '?son" on
liartf Vernon , was a prom inent ily's p ossession, casuall y lists a ship leaving for America
A
citizen of Newpor t, Rhode Island . paintings by van Dyck , Rem- letter in reply appro ves the *plan
In 1778, soon after William Hen- brandt , Murillo , Raphael , and but states she will remain in
r y Vernon 's gra duat ion from Franz Hals , amon g others . In France with their daugh
ter.
Princeton at the age of 18, his re gard to their authenticity he
That same year Vernon return father sent him to France. The wrote : "I have made out a cat- ed to Newport. There is no evielder William Vernon , Presi - alogue of the paintings , and sub- dence that he took his "son
"
dent of the Continental Navy joined the names of the artists with him.
But a year later
.
Board througho ut the Revolution , when I could do it with certain -" he was dunned by a Philadelphia
was a friend of many of the great ty, but in case of doubt £- have shipping agent for his passage
men of the day, including Jeff er- attac hed no conj ectural idea of money . The
invoice , also in the
son , Adams , Lafayette , Franklin , my own to a picture ."
Vernons ' possession, carr ied a
and Washingt on. His house in
The Nun
significant item ; a charge for
Newport — now a museum—se rAt his home in Newport Ver - trans portation by ship from
ved toward the end of the Rev- non ' s most pr ized p ossession F rance to A mer ica of Vernon 's
olutionary War as headq uarters was a painting listed in the cat - "servent" and Vernon s "pupil.
'
"
f or Genera l R ochambeau, where alogue as "T he nun a finished
When Vernon 's family raethim
Washington and his staff joined piece by Leonardo de Vincy" , in Newport he was accompanied
him for a week in March , 1781. ''(sic). He did not marry and " by neither "servent " nor "pupVernon — Friend of Louis XVI became increasingly retiring. il.
" One guess is that the "puWilliam Henr y sailed under Until his death he lived with his pil"
and "servent " disembar the partronage of John Adams family, which he had so long ne- ked earlier in Boston.
and took with him "letters to glected. He hung the Mon a Lisa
* Possible Smokescreen
Benjamin Fr anklin , who had re- in his bedroom , and according to
In short Vernon 's correspon ceived favors at the hand of his family legend , nightly prayed to dence with, his former
mistress
grandf ather.*' These letters re- her. When asked about the paint , about their "son may have been
"
sulted in his introduc tion to the ing he always said that it was nothing more than an elaborate
French Court of Louis XVI. The of great value and that Marie smokescreen to mislead French
gay court lite so fascinated the Antoinette had given it to him. Government authorities (undoub young American that it interfer- Beyond that he would say noth - tedly reading his mail as a sused greatly with his father 's pur- ing.
pected Royalist) about the real
pose in sending his son to France ,
Vernon was a man of honor , Identi fy of the boy returning with
which was to learn the customs and there is no reason to doubt him to the U. S.
of the country bo as to develop his word that Marie Antoinette
For his services Mar ie Ana mercant ile business with his had given him the painting . But toinette , before being, imprision father in Newport . Within a few interested historians in Europe ed and fearfully guessing what
years he was on Intimate terms and the U. S. have come up with the, future might hold for her son
with Loui s XVI and he soon be- some highly fanciful speculations might easily have handed Vernon,
came a favorite of Marie An* about why the beautiful but luck- the Mona Lisa. There would
toinette. He even dressed as a less Queen should have given be nothing remarkable in this .
courtier — a habi t which nearly him so valuable a canva s. One For centur ies French monarchs
cost him his life. During the stor y is that he received it as had prodigally given their favRe ign of Ter ror he was drag - a reward for saving the life orite jewels estates
,
, works of
ged to a lamppost by the mob of her son , the Dauphin of France art
and
money
for
services
far
,
to be han ged and was rescu ed and heir to the throne . This is less exacting than tho se
presuat the last minute by a French a fantast ic suggestion , but is
citizen who recogniz ed him as supported by some impressive mably performed by Vernon,
Vernon vs Louvre
an Americ an.
facts .
What
relation
, if any , is there
Nineteen years passed before- Imprisoned la the Bastille after between the Louvre
Mona Lisa
Willia m Henry returned to New- the Revolution , Mar ie Antoinette
and
the
Vernon
Mona
Lisa? The
p ort , despite imploring letters followed her husband , Louis XVI ,
ipal theory , gaining slow
princ
from his father , all of which he to the guillotin e in 1793 . At I recognition as scientific evidence
ignored . But regardless of his her death the eight-year -old Daupleasures at th e Court , he was phin remained in the Bastille. mounts , is that Leonardo painted
talented and able . He traveled Three years later he disappear - (continued on page seven )
in Rus sia as a keen observer
and was at the signing of the
peace treaty between the infant U. S. and Britain. He left
a stron g impression on shrewd
ing" and "uncanny!" and New
Yor k joined in with "scintilla *
tlngl" (ABCTV 's Allan Jef *
ferys),
adroit"
"remarkably
CThe New York Times), "fresh
and stimulatin g" (New York Her *
aid Tribune) , and from Whitne y
Bolton , Dean of New York Critics
Circle , in The Mornl ag Tele*
graph : " ...the best of all such
perfor mances I I can think of
no more delightful evenin g."
SHAW SPEAKS
Bernar d Shaw said of himself:
"I am regarded as general con*
sultant to mankind on questions
of sex, religion , music , drama ,
procre ation , education , politi cs,
war , criminal human stupidity,
the destiny of man , and ever
America n baseball. " Bnunweil
Fletcher manages to explore
Shaw' s views on most of thesi
•ubjecjfci while giving his audience an entertainin g, provoca tive and moving theatrical experienc e
Special Development Section:
BHaWBMM
in enroll ment
Increases
and the expansion of curri
culum offerin gs at BSC con ti nues to crea t e a need for
more b u ild in gs and rela t ed
on cam pus. In
faciliti es
response to these needs , the
Com monwealth of Pennsylvan i a a n d the G eneral State
Authorit y have eleven project s in various sta ges of design or construction . The total cost of construction is approximatel y $12,500,000.
are alFour structures
read y scheduled for complet ion in 1970. They are a nine
^
H
HM
MH
M
M
B
M
M
«
M
M
M
a
M
H
M
i
^
Ma
<
stor y women's dormito ry, a
classroom buildin g, a dinin g
and maintehall-k itchen ,
nanc e build ing-gara ge. Three
other major projects, a student union , field house, and
Athlet ic stad ium, will be
completed in the next few
years. In order to acquaint
the students with the most
important aspects of these
projects , Boyd P. Buckin gham , Direct or of Development has provided the M&G
with the informat ion and photos which make up this special development section .
Bakeless Center
opens in May
Student Center in Final
Plannin g Stages,Const ruct io n
Begins in the Sprin g
Final plans f o r a student center are expected before the end
of 1969 with construction begin. nlng in the spring of 1970. The
three story building will be located in the terraced area now
occupied by Husky Lounge. "Husky" will be torn down to facilitate this project .
The student center , which is
totally air conditioned , will house
many of the campus facilities
now located in several buildin gs.
The estimated cost of construction is $1,250 ,000 , 000.
The college store and student
bank , now located in Wa ller Hall ,
i
—-——
will be located on the ground
floor of the center . A formal
lounge, TV room, four bowling
alleys, lockers for commuters
and offices will also be on this
floor .
Husky Lounge will be replaced by a large snack bar to be
located on the first floor . Thi s
snackbar will be supplemented
by partitioned "multi purpose
rooms " which can be opened into
one large room for dances or
closed into smaller meeting
rooms . A stage for dances is
also available in this area . In
——<———»——»
The Bakeless Center for the
Humanities, now under construction in the area between the Library and Haas Auditorium , wil
house 36 seminar and class room ,
offices for 66 faculty member s,
a faculty lounge, and a large star*
age area .
In addition to being a very
functional building, it will be
one of the most impressive structures on the campus.
The three story completely airconditioned 'building, has been
built in two wings , divided by a
glass stairwell which covers the
full height of the structure.
The wing toward the library will
(conti nued on page eight)
addition , the infirmary, the office of the Director of Student
Activities and the Center Manager , and typing rooms will be
located on this floor .
A Recreation room will occupy
a major portion of the top floor .
Pool tables, ping pong , shuffle
board, etc . will be available in
this area. It will also be the location of a listening room to be
equipped with stereo phonographs
ind tape players. The remainder of the floor will house offices for the various publications , CGA , IFC , ISC, ARM ,
ARW , and the Day Men 's and Women ' s Associations, and confer*
ence rooms which will be available to all these organizations.
Bakeless Hall Will House
36 Classrooms and 66 Offices
4
im—«WlM*Mf ^''*li11 a
I • V imim**1HiM
iIiimmi
ii
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.,—.
.
Upper Campus Site of
Football & Basebal l fields
Student s , faculty , var sity ath letes and sports fans are eager ly awaiting completion of the
new athletic stadium on the upper camp us. The are a Is to
Include a football field, circled
by a regulation 8iz* track , and
a baseball diamond , Final plans
for the Stadium were delivered
to the Gener al State Authorit y
on Sept 23. A completion date
has not been announced.
The stands , which seat approx imately 3900 , will contain consesslons , locker rooms , equipment
stora ge areas , offices for coaches and officials, and four iavatorlos .
Te mporary bleachers will be
erected on the opposite side of
the field which can be reversed
to serve the baseball field.
An Artiito Conception of Bakelet* Hall
12 mill ion dollars in new projects at BSC
New Field House
Replaces Centennia l
The first structure to be built
on the upper campus will be the
new Field house . The money for
the building was made avail able
in 1966, however , the original
bids exceeded the 1 million 875
th ousand dollar allocatio n by 560
dollars . Bids will be re-ope ned
next month and completion is expected to be in July, 1971.
Centennial Gymnasium can no
longer handle the number of spectators that attend husky sports
events . The gymnasium in the
new f i e l d house will contai n
seating space for 3500 or more .
The seating is arran ged in 2600
perm anent seats and room for
bleachers at the ends of the
court which should serve an additional 3000. The lar ge gymnasium also includes an inside
track , surfaced with "Tarten " ,
a rubber material which is resistent to puncture , burns , etc.
Two smaller gyms will be
located at each end of the large
gym. They will be equipped for "
tenn is , volleyball , etc.
An Oly mpic size swimmingpool
will also be located in the building. Seating for 300-500 will be
available for swim meets.
Locker room facilities will be
supplied for men, womenand separate
facilities for visiting
teams.
The remainder of the building ;
will be comprised of a weight
room , wrestling room , therapy
room and offices . Two handball
courts will also be available .
Maintenance
Garage
A combination maintenance
building-garage which is to be
completed in April , 1970 , will
provide offices , wor king areas ,
and storage space for the growing number of personnel who
-must maintain the campus for usedurifi f the entire year. The build ing is being constructed on the
site of the former Heiss property
facing Light Street Road .
Included in the plans is a fully
equipped vehicle maintenance garag e. The total cost of the pro ject is 275 thousand dollars .
Nine Story Women 's Residence
To Open Doors Next August
Most of the steel has been
erected for a nine story residence hall to house 400 women ,
four reside nt advisors , and a
member of the student personnel
staff .
Lounges , study rooms ,
laundry rooms , and stora ge areas
are a part of the residence hall
which is expected to open its
doors next August .
The buildin g is planned for 50
women per floor , with a lounge
The M&G Thanks
B. F. B. For His
Time & Cooperation
on ever y other floor and a unit
study room on floors alternating
those with lounges .
The ground floor will contain
lounges , lobbies , mailboxes and
offices. An apar tment , compr ised of two rooms , will be provid ed for one member of the student personnel staff .
The estimated cost of the building is $1, 800 , 000 , 000 with out
furniture .
The furniture will
cost an additional 150 thousand
dollars .
Parking
A multilevel parking area in
the vicinity of Pen n and Second
Streets will feature a new con *
cept for parking cars at BSC.
Its purpose is to provide a maximum number of spaces on a
minimum amount of site space .
It was also felt th at a parking
gar age , carefully
designed to
blend with existing terrain , will
be mor e attr active than the us*
ual amesited parking areas .
¦ . . .-..: ..*>. < ^-:' ,^ . !-lfr;rf-3aft it
'
The Women's Residence Will
Be A Home For 400 Coeds
f-WM-EVMrt' tw ^ tv ^ f » u
Dinin g Hall-K itchen Nears
Com pletion
mm
used for special events. Each
dining room Is equipped with two
serv ice ar eas and two dish return are as , which will speed up
serv ing.
A smalle r dining room has
been provided for faculty, it
will seat 40. This room can also
be used for special events such
as banque ts or meetings ,
The new facilities are designed to handle the proj ected 2400
resident studen ts and 600 to 800
off campus studen ts . Its cost
is 1 million . 645 thousand dollars , minus the equtpmont.
¦
.
..
Thf N«w Ffcld Will Be Th« First Building On The Upper Ctop!^ ^
¦ *
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A dining hau -kltchen , facing
East Second Street , is expected
to be read y for use in January ,
1970.
The dining areas are
complete ly alr -condltloned and
will seat 1 ,000 students and feed'
2,000 at each meal. This additional dinin g space Is needed
because the pre sent College Commons , built In 1956 to serve 720
stu dents , Is now handlin g more
than 1,700.
It U comprised of two main
dining room s with a kitchen in
between. Theie two rooms can
be divided Into four rooms to be
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M & G Pred ictio ns
The Gallopi ng Ghost.
est
Chester
W
A Man Called Red Grange
mm
The Galloping Ghost or The
Wh eaton I ceman , both of these
handles -were tagged on Illinois
halfback Red Grange. Grange
scored 31 touchd owns, averaged ,
176 yards running and 213 run ning and passi ng every game
from 1923-25. His only football
failure was In the pros where an
injured knee kept him from having a great career.
SUPER PRE P STAR
Red 's mother di ed when he was
five , after which his father moved his family from Forksvlfie ,
Penna. to Wheaton , Illinois. It
was there that Grange blossomed and flourished as a super athlete. He played f-x>tbal l, basketball , b aseball, and partici pated
in track. Of these he liked base ball best. In three years for
Wheaton he had s c o r e d 75
touchdowns and kicked 83 convers ions. Then the college recruiters began to kick down the
Grange frontdoor to prove their
c ollege was .the best. It w a s
while running track that Illinois
coach Bob Zuppke convinced him
that his college was the best.
Grange considered himself too
small for football at the college
level. But when his fraternity
brothers chan ged his mind , Illinois had one of the best all
around halfbacks in college tooU
ball histor y.
^--w
fn £
first
^
—w
Over Strouds
With eight out of nine last week
for 89 per cent , I started thin gs
out pretty good for the 1969
season. The BSOLock Hav en
Coaches
Corner
game was the only turnabout in
my picks. The Ea gles turned
In an upset as they intercepted
their way over a physically and
stat istica lly better Huskle team .
The big game in Penns ylvani a
this week is the West Chester
at East Str oudsburg contest. This
is the game most people agree
that will decide the kingpin of
the eastern division of the Penn sylvania C onference. After last
week' s defeat at the hands of
Montclalr , I pick West Chester
in a close, tough game , similar
Startin g this week In the M&G , to last year's 21-14 Stroud vicis a new column to discus s foot- tor y.
ball with the BSC football coaching staff. We will discuss the
Now go down to your local bookpast games and the game coming ie , pro cure your weekly football
up that par ticular weekend .
card , and place your bets on the
following
winners:
Last week 23SC lost a tough
game to Lock Haven 28-25. This
Predictions
week another tough game is ex*
BSC
over
Mansfield — The
pected against the Man sfield
Huskies
are
going
to climb all
Mountaineers. The Mountaineers
over
th
e
M
ounta
i
ne
e
rs
.
are led by Stu Casterline , a
quarterback whom many considWyoming over Air Forc e —
er to be the finest player in the Cowboys to corral the Falcons
eastern division of the. Penns yl- in a close one.
Alabama over Southern MissiI vania Conference. BSC Coach
Jerry Denstorff compared Cas- ssippi — Crimson Tide rolls to
terline 's arm to a m issle. "H e their second strai ght victory .
can throw off balance , on the
Arkansas over Tulsa — The
run, while being hit , "Denstorff Razorbacks hope to repeat as
Grange of course was a senstarte d." Anyway he wants to Southwest Conference cham ps.
" throw he can let loose. "He
sation. A s a soph omore he led
Florida State over Miami —
the team to an undefeated seacontinued /* 65-70 yards In the The rampaging Seminoles turn
son, scored 12 touchd owns, ran
air on target.
"Besides be- the Hurricanes into a slight
for 1260 yards and was first In
ing a great passer he is one of breeze .
the Big Ten scoring. But M ichthe best runners in the league.
Georgia over Clemson — The
igan also had a spotless record with the same notion. But the brushed it off as a pre ss agents H e is an excellent scrambler Bulldogs are aimin g for another
and Illino is had only a share of opening kickoff proved who was gimmick . Hardl y.
and has been compared to F ran undefeated year .
to win that day. Grange began
the championshi p.
Georgia Tech over Baylor —
Grange never received any Tarkenton of the New York
N ext year, Illinois was waiting an unforgettable performance. money to attend Illinois , and had Giants . "Ano ther thing that The Ramblin g Wre ck runs over
for reven ge on Michigan. In the He ran the opening kickoff back to work for $37.50 a week In the makes him great ." said Dens- the Bears.
third game of the season M ichigan 95 yards , turned an end for 56 summer at an ice house . T h e tor ff, "is his tremendous forti Harvard over Holy Cross —
pulled into Illinois new stadium yard s for a touchdown , romped wor k was great to keep his arms tude and his never quitting at- The Crimson are going to smash
67 yards on another end run — and legs in sha pe. In fact after titude . " With all these adjec- ever ybody to get revenge on Yale.
all within the space of 12 minutes. college, he received $100,000 for tives directed at the same man
Indiana over California — The
A total of 303 yards by one man a barnstorming trip and still it should make for a tremendous Hoosiers smell Roses in the West
Cameo Ring
in 12 minutes.
coast oreezes .
wor ked summers at the ice house . game on Saturday .
Beige Backgro und
FAM E ON ICE
Michigan State over Southern
Only he now drove to work in a
From that day on Grange was $5500 Linc oln Phaeton.
kest In araa of Librar y
As for preparatio ns for this Methodist — The SMU Mustangs
a nat ional hero. A picture of him
Grange played very little In week 's game, Coach Denstorff aren 't as good as pre season pr eREWARD
wor king on an icetruck appeared pro football. He spent one sea- and his staff are trying to im- dictions . Spartans by a big mar Take to Securit y
in newspapers nationwide. And son with the Bears for 50 per prove upon the mental mistakes gin.
the Wheato n Iceman doubtlessl y cent of the gate and later organ - that were made last -week . tr We
Notre Dame over Purdue —
i. ized a league of his own which had too many mental error s and Two in a row , Irish .
when a team scores th ree cheap
Ohio state over Texas Chris merged with the NFL.
touchdowns like Lock Haven did tian — The Super-Buckeyes are
His agent took him to Holly- last week. " Denstorff continued , going to maul the Frogs
.
wood to star In a movie. But ac- " you have to hustle to get them
Pennsylvania
over
Bucknel
l—
cording to Gran ge it was the worst back."
The
Quakes
have
their
best
experience of his life. In 1935
"We haven 't changed anyt hing, chance ever to win the Ivy title .
he went on to solid success In he continued ." We have adjust Penn State over Color ado —
insurance , television and radio. ed the defense to stop Caster- Nlttan y Valley is still ringing
But bis everlastin g claim to fame line and our offense to work a* with last year 's win to be reis football , where he performed gain st their defense ." Denstorff peated this season . ,
as probably the greatest halfback
Southern California
oven
( continued en page ttv tn)
of all time.
Northwestern — no O. J . for Tro- .
jan power , but Lots of go left:
for a winner .
Syracuse over Kansas — The
Orange men will pluck the Jay hawks .
^^^ ^^^^^^^^ ^^ ^^ ^^ _^A
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Texas over Texas Tech —
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lookout! Longhorna stampeding .
U.C . L .A, over Wisconsin —
The Brui ns are stron g enough to
Ichallen ge U. S, c, for their
I
The bank you can grow with.
The Wheato n Iceman
I
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Need f inancialadvice ?
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over Connecticut — Ells
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Mono Lisa
** - AMNMNMHHMHMMMMHBMM
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
m
(continued front page Hir«t ;
two Mona Lisas at dlfter «nt
times. The Vernon may have
beau the first version and the
Louvre Lisa the second .
As evidence that the Vernon
Lisa was the first version , experts point out that she looks
younger than her siste r In Pari s.
The face is sltmmor , the back ground is different. The Vornon
f ace I s sof ter , not so cynical .
The mouth is fulle r , mor<3 tender In the Ver non painting . The
eyes in the two portraits are set
at a slightly different angle .
H owover , the probl em facing
resear chers Into the history of
a paintin g is to make theories
fit the facts — in this case the
known facts of the circumstances
un der whi ch Leonar d o camo t o
paint Mona Usa. The facts fit
the theor y quite well.
'
Why Two?
Lisa (M ona is merely the euph onious contrac ti on of M adonna ,
or plain Mrs.) was about 22 and
married to Francesco del Giocondo when Leonardo started her
portrait in Florence in 1501. It
Leonardo
is wf.'ll-knowri that
worke d slowly on his paintings ,
and in May of 1502 , one year
after he had started.Lisa 's por trait , he suddenly left Florence
to act as chief military engineer
to Cesare Borgia , the great Renaissance general .
He returned to F lorenc e in
1503. According to some reports , he took up an unfinished
portrait some ti me afte r that
and finished it in 1506 . There is
strong evidence that the por trait
was of Mona Lisa. But which
Mo.ia Lisa ? Ttio old por tr ai t
or a new portrait? Did he start
to finish the portrai t known as the
Vern on Lisa , or did he , finding
Lisa three or four years older ,
slightly fatter , with some of her
youthful bloom worn off, start
another version — the one now
han ging in the Louvre?
If Leonardo did paint two versions of La Glocondo, which Lisa
did he sell to the King of France ?
And how did the other version
get to France? For several hundred years schola rs have believed in two vers i ons of the Lisa
and recent evidenc e ind icates
that two Giocond os did make
their way to Franc e, at the same
time . Francis I was a patron
to Leonardo. Researchers into
the Vernon-G iocondo histor y
NELLY'S
BARBER SHOP
Terry and Dave
open Mon-Sa t 8-5:30
Closed Wed.
E. Ma in St.,
Bloomsbur g
Cut the way you Want
tnink it most Ukely that if Leonar - 1506. This is furt her confirmed
do sold one Usa to the King , he by microscopic examination of
might have given the other with the surface of the painting, the
It , especially as the King is syste m of cra quelures (cracks)
known to have valued the painting being unmistakable of Chat per highly.
iod.
Painting s Auctioned
William Henry Vernon died in
Sinistra Mano
Newport in 1833 , when his estate descended to his nephew.
"This painting both visually ,
Two years later the family put by the X-ra ys, by infra -red rays ,
his collection of paintings up at and microscopically is seen to
auc tion , w ith Instr uc t ions to a be unfinished in places. The face
friend to buy in the Leonardo and hands being finely brought
f or t hem . This was done , w ith up to a finish of great beauty
the Result that the painting has and delicacy. The bru sh strokes
never left the Vernon family. are sinistra mano throughout the
painting. (NOTE : the words sinFor the fir st 136 years of istra
mano are important and
Lisa 's resid ence In the U. S. she
actually
mean more than left*
remained quietly in the Vernon handed
for
which the Italian word
,
family , unseen by the public , al- is mancino . Leonardo was leftmost unknown to the art world . handed , but in a very freakish
Then in 1933 the painting was sent manner . Left-handed he wrote ,
to the Fogg Art Museum , Harvard sculpted , painted or drew from
University , for a careful clea- the right side to the left. In writ ,
ning. At that time technicians ing, using his left hand , he star at F ogg took X-ra ys which , they ted from the right hand of the
reported , prove d the anc ient can- page and worked to the left , revas to be definitely of the period versing the character s as he
whe n Leonardo was known to went so that his writing can only
have painted the Mona Lisa. The be read with the aid of a mircanvas was reline d , restretched ror .)
and carefully clean ed to bring out
its or iginal color s.
•'The clear-cut brush work in
this
painting bars attribution to
Authentically Determined
any
followers
or pupils of LeoIn 1948 Dr . Thomas MacOugh try Judson , for many years Cur - nardo , the study of the X-ray shareveal Leonard o's
ator of the Cigognar a Collec- dowgraphs
technique
in
painting , which diftion of the Vatican , returned
fers
completely
from that of
to this country and heard of the
his
so-called
school
. They all
p aintin g. Durin g his long Vatic an
drew
the
outline
of
a face or
curatorship, Judson made Leohand
with
a
fir
m
brush
and fillnardo his princi pal hobb y and
ed
in
the
for
m
flatly.
stud y. Working with Ital y 's bri llLeonardo -expert , Adlofo
iant
"Leonardo in contrast never
Venturi , Judson has painstaking did
so; he softly mode led the highly catalogued many of Leonardo 's
lights
on the feature s or back of
lesser-known works and publish a
hand
without outline ."
monogra
ph
on
possible
ed a
secondar y versions of Leonardo 's
On Exhibit
p aintin gs. He went to Dartmouth
1
950
In
accepting the fact that
.
,
College , where Lisa hung in the
the
painting
was too valuable
home of the late Dr. Ambrose W .
to
be
hung
in
a
private residenc e ,
Vernon , then professor of bi- the Vernon family
their
ogra phy. He lived with the paint , Mon a Lisa in the placed
vault
of a
ing for several days , studied it ,
F
ifth
Avenue
bank
in
New
York
took it out into the sunlight and City .
Later she was moved to
exam ined it microsco pically, his the vault
of the Summit Trust
excitement growing as each pr e- Compan y in
Jersey where
liminar y test and examination she remained New
until
confirmed his first suspicion. was made to exhibittheherdecision
to the
He then persuaded the Vernons ! publi c for the first time in
her
!
to allow him to put the painting ; more than four and a half cenlaborator y
rigorous
through
tur ies of existence at the Otis
tests. F ollowing are excer pts Art Institute in Southern Califrom his report .
fornia.
"1 have carefull y examined this
paintin g in oil, upon canvas 29^
inche s high by 23% inches wide ,
represent ing Mona Lisa.
"The exam ination by X-ra ys,
done at Fogg Art Museum of
Harvard in 1933 shows this painting to be on canvas with pigments
in oil, both being of the first few
years of the fifteen hundreds , in
my estimat ion not being later than
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Bloomsburg
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Woodtida . N. Y. 11377. endow cash .
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M»jWHiunt of |2.oo for aach blow-up;
$4.00 for Wow-up and framt at shown .
Add talaa tan whara appll .»We. Original
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I
and Edinboro Fighting Scots are
in rebuilding years and can't be
count ed on for muc h this year .
Shippensburg lost seven all-star
seniors through graduation , but
retained the league 's leadingpass
re ceiver , Al Bowman, to stir up
some act ion. The Scots of first *
year coach Bill McDonald are
going throu gh a sweeping pro*
gram of changes. They will depend largely upon a big grou t
of talented sophomore s and juniors .
If Clarion and West Chester
(the predi cted eastern division
champion) meet for the league
crown , West Chester will be out
to regain the crown they lost last
year to East Stroudsburg .
Epple/s
Pharmacy
CLARK,
Distr ict YMCA Executive
for appointmen t
784-2104
Positions In U. 8. and
Overcoat
went on, "If we can get the same
tremen dous physical effort we
got against Lock Haven, we can
win. Nobody loafed, nobody quit ,''
he finished.
I then asked Coach Denstorff
if the team had a mental letdown after the game.' He said
"when they work that hard before a game, and come out on
the short end , there' s bound to
be a letdown. "We can either
be a bunch of disappointed boys
an d coac hes," he continued , "or
we can tr y to be men, take in
anot her notch on our belts and
give it a fighting effort .''
I' m sure BSC will bounce back
this week at Ma nsfield and I hope
the team feels the same way.
Dark Room AttUtant
59 E. Main St.
. . . for your personal needs in
gift* and home decor.
$1.50
LUNCHEON
TUESDAY thro FRIDAY
Evsry Wcak —11.30-1.30
Without all-conference quarterback Jeff Petrucci and 13 other
seniors , California's chances to
repeat as western , conf erence
cham p aren 't too pr omising.
Clarion , with Bob Erdeljac , second leadin g passer in the Pennsylvania Con ference to East
Stroudsbur g's Bill Dukett , hope
to push the California Vulcans
out of the number 1 spot . The
Golden Ea gles did graduate 10
seniors; but two top rus hers .
Bob Oberdorf and Mike Gulnta.
along with junior pass receiver
Rick Terza , return to bolster
the attack.
VULCANS 2ND
The California Vulcans without
Jeff Petrucci is like egg.fooyung, no egg, no young, just foo.
Petrucci ran and passed for 1,590«yards last season and put on
a one-man show in the 28 • 28
conference championship game
with Stroud .
Returning are all-conference
guards E mil Litwin and Larry
Randall , second-team halfback
Ron Urban , and the league' s top
punter , Don Roberts (40,5.)
Ja y Wagner , Slippery Rock ,
school record-holder for one season ground gaining (910-yards ),
will be back to pace the Rocket
attack . Wagner also scoured 54
points . Tailback Frank ' Bain.es
and quarterbacks John Ross and
Tom Bell also return .
Lock Have n is flaying its first
year under new head coach Bot
Weller .. Junior quarterback Denny Rhule , freshman halfback Greg
Allen , second-team all -confer ence linebacker Ron Beshore , and
halfback Jim Smith should improve the Bald Eagles .
The Ship and Edinboro Hurting
The Shippensburg Red Raiders
now int erviewing for posi *
Horn in Youth Work Business ,
and
Education ,
Physical
Counselin g.
Call
L WILLIAM
(continued from page six)
Roundu p
"I
YMCA
" This painting in my opinion
is by the hand of Leonardo da
Vinci.
r°~— ' THE STUDIO SHOP
I
I
J
Coaches
Wester n
Conference
Tka mrld' t lirni t itllln i
^mffl/
¦taffar yaf no rarnr than a.
^•t ^
past of IWR.INIV Mi wllh 1000 Fin ttipt ul
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Bi ^ iaiBIHaHnHiMHBBnBaBaaaaaaaaHaaB
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(continued
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BSC Sports Broadcasts
On WHLM
fr o m page om)
degree in intellectual history. He
was awarded his Doctor of Philosophy degree In 1962 from The FOOTBALL
WRESTLING
Johns Hopkins University where Sept. 20 L. Haven Away 8 p.m Jan. 17
Clarion Home 6 pm
he received the Phi Beta Kappa
27 Mansfield Away 2:30 pm
27 Kutztown Away 8 pm
award.
Oct. 3 Adelphi U Home 8 pm
30 California Home 8 pm
John B. Williman, from Jersey
City, New Jersey, was named
Associate Professor of History.
Mr. "Williman received his BS
degree from the College of Charleston , South Carolina and his
Master of Arts degree from the
University of Alabama. He is
currently a candidate for t h e
Doctor' of Philosophy degree at
St. Louis University ,which he expects to receive in February,
1970.
R oy D. Pointer , an Assistant
Professor of Chemistry at the
start of the 1969-70 college year,
was born in Ottawa, Kansas.
Pointer received his Bachelor of
Science degree in Chemistry
from the University of Kansas
and his M aster of Science degree in the same field from the
University of Michigan. He ex.
pects to be awarded his Ph. D.
in organic chemistry from the
University of Michigan in Dec- ember of this year.
11 W. Chester Home 2 pm
18 Millersville Away 2 pm
25 Cheyney Away 2 pm
Nov. 1
Kutztown Away 2 pm
8 E. Stroudsburg Home 1:30 pm
BASKETBALL
Dec.
3 Cheyney Home 8 pm
6 E. Stroudsburg Away 8:15 pm
10 Mansfield Away 8:00 pm
16 Shippens'rg Home 8:00 pm
18 Millersville Home 8 pm
Jan. 9 Kutztown Home 8 pm
17 Clarion Home 8 pm
21 W.Chester Away 8 pm
Feb. 4 Shippenburg Away 8 pm
7 Cheyney Away 8 pm
12 E. Stroudsburg Home 8 pm
14 Mansfield Home 8 pm
18 Millersville Away 8 pm
21 Kutztown Away 8 pm
25 W. Chester Home 8 pm
contain 3 semina r rooms and 22
a
^
Welcom e . . . .
Tenn is?
Studentsfand Faculty
The area extending east of
Dillon House to the new maintenance building will become the
site of eighteen all-weather tennis courts, a baseball diamond,
Compliments .
of
REA ft DERIGK , Inc.
"Stores of Service "
rom
CAMPUS CLEANERS
124 Main St.
Bloomsburg
• Shirts Laundere d To Perfection
SANITONE DRY CLEANING
"We Aim To Please You"
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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^^K
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* ^& ¦\ * *^.
^
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Supply Co.
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18 West Main Street
BLOQMSBURG, PA.
-^^uM^^MMMWOfiSSESM^^^ U^UHMh ^UHH ^B^^ h^HiLj^flBk^UH^
HALLMAR K CARDS
GIFTS
Repairing
Your J eweler Away from Home
5 W. Main St. Bloomsburo
^
Phon *
\
784-2561
J
liJili;!ln[!!ill:311jllJl:!::!lm!ll1LllljiJ
Jet. of Route 11 and Interstate 80 / Exit 36
OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT FRI. & SAT.
Sundays & Daily— 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Space age wrencn ^HH
Su ppose you 're up in space and you need to tighten
a nut on the outside of your space vehicle,
We l l . . . it you use an ordinary power wrench , you
know what happens! You spin around. Not the nut.
But with this new space wrench, the nut turns—not
you!
'
Neat?
bet,
got
all
kinds
of fascinating equipYou
And we've
ment designed specially for way out there, And lots for
We Invite You To Dine With 'Us
Every day and Sundays Too
UNI TED STATES
*SE
,. ,. «, ¦..... PLEASE PRINT
c?!.LL0C
major gWKT
Q^PVftTfi PMfi
i
career interee^
HOME AODRtSS
STAT E
CITY
CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS
CHOPS, BEEF-BURGERS
SANDWICHES & SALADS
PAUl DIETER , Prop.
way down here,too.
If you're a science or engineering graduate and
you 're looking for a good place for your talents, be an
officer ,a leader , on the Aerospace Team. The U.S. Air
Force is the largest scientific and research organization of the space age.
You'll be right where the breakthroughs are... breakthroughs such as better ways to tighten a nut. Pretty exciting if you're looking for a new twist.
AIR FORCE,Box A,Dept.SCP 99, Randolph Air Force Base,Texas 78148
?"*' •' r
We Cater To Everyone and Serve Only Choice
Phone 784-7837
Dean Hoch has assigned3 of the
rooms on the top floor to the art
dept. These rooms ar e equipped
with sky lights . The second floor
will be the foreign language depar tment , with language labs, etc.
The use of the other rooms will
be designated later by DeanHoch.
Occupation and use of the $l,«
400,000,000 buildin g is expected
to begin in May, 1970.
^MMMai
Miller Offi ce
AND
THE
(continued from page four)
«mL
Fine J ewelry
.
Bakelessm
*
Center
-:
will sery» - ,iwf1i»:|»!B!Slir^S«#W ¦
and will also house mechanical
rooms and a ator .
an d electri cal
;
'
a ge area. . • \ ' ^ : . v V " " ", ' '
WAFFLE
GRILLE
Harr y Logan
^
and a footba ll-soccerfield. Thiff
area is to be used by health and
physical educat ion classes and
for recreation activities. Preliminar y plans for these facO.
ities and for a new road and
parking area have been completed by the project engineer. The
completion date has not been determined.
SWIMMING
offices for facult y and faculty secThe 11th century Lingaraja
Dec. 6 Tem ple Home 1:30 pm retaries on each floor . The lar Feb. 13 Slipper y R. Home 7 pm ger wing, near the auditorium , Temple is India 's lar gest shrine.
16 West Chester Home 3 pm
M
M
^
€>
^ FETTERMANS ^
BARBER SHOP
— QUALITY —
Foot of College Hill
Bfoo msb urg Pa.
31 Waynesbur g Home 8 pm
Feb. 5 MUl' ville Away 8:30 pm
6 Shippensbur g Home 8 pm
14 L. Haven Away 8 pro
21 E Stroudsbur g Away 8 pm
28 W. Chester Away 3 pm.
BLOOM
BOWL
Lawrence L. Verdekal recent*
ly began tits new duties as Instructor of Business Educ ation. Born
in Carlisle , Penna. Verdekal
earned his Bachelor of Science
degree in Business Administration from Lycoming College and
is currently working on his Master's in Business Administration , with a major in accounting
and finance at the University of
Scranton.
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I UNOER»TANI*rHERe IS NO OBLIGATION.
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