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Tue, 03/05/2024 - 15:27
Edited Text
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Puckett Parade Dance
1
Highlights Annual
Homecomin g
"Oar American Heri tage "will
be the theme of the 42nd Annual
H omecoming
activities at
Bloomsburg State College on October 10-12. "Plans are well
-under way to pro vide one of th e
best Homecomi ng celebra tions
in_ the history of the college,"*
stated Boyd F . Bucking ham,
Chairman for the festivities.
Activities for the weekend will
get under way with a student pep
rall y on the terraces between
Walle r Hall and East Hall on
Thursda y evening, October ^; at
8 p. m. Hie following evening ,
Fr iday, October 10, the Big Name
Entertainment Committee of the
CGA will present "Gary Puckett and The Union Gap** in concert in Haas Auditorium at 8:30
p. m. During the intermission ,
the Homecomin g Queen will be
crowned and a plaque presented
to the fraternit y that has the
highest academic average for the
second semester of the 1968-69
college year.
Activities for a full day of
events will get under way on Saturda y with the judging of offcampus housing decorations and
the judging of parade floats in
Cente nnial Gymnastim Parkin g
Lot from 8 to 10a. m. The Home.,
coming Parade will leave the
^^
JHLB alHLl
CA LENDA R
Wednesday, Oct. S
Open Forum — Husk y Lounge
7.30 p.m.
Movie — Wal k Don't Run
Carver 8:30 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 9
Pep Rally — Terracas—7 p.m.
Dance — The Plaque
Centennial Gym—8-1 1 p.m.
parking lot at 10:15 and pro ceed
down Second and M ain str eets to
Market , south on Mar ket to Fif th ,
east on Fifth to East , nort h on
East to Town H all , up College
Hill and Second Street to the
Centennial parking lot.
Friday, Oct. 10
Big Nam* Entertainment
Cary Puckett & The Union Gap
Haas Aud. — 8:30 p.m.
Party Time 12 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 11
Parade — Centennial Parking
Lot — 10:15 a.m.
Football — BSC vs. W. Chaster
Town Athletic Park — 2 p.m.
Dance — Lee Vincenf t
Medernaires
Husky Lounge 8:30 to 11:30 p.m.
Dance — The Exact Change —
An overflow crowd is expected
at the Bloomsburg Athletic Park
at 2 p. m. to see the Huskies
in act ion against be R ams of
West Chester. During the half time act ivities, tbe winningfloats
College Commons—9 to U pm.
and off-campus housing decora tion winners will be announ ced.
Sunday, Oct. 12
Also, at that time, lifetime athle tic pass recipients of five years Qpen House — In all campus
ago, 1964, will be recogniz ed.
residents halls 2-5 p.m.
Russ Houk, Direc tor of Athletics , Pops Concert — Concert Choir
will present a plaque to the BSC
In Haas Aud.—8:15 p.m.
player judged to be the most
outstanding perform er , after the
game.
A cafeteria dinner for alumni
and visitors will follow in the
College Commons starting at 5:30
"What are your gripes, ideas
p. m. Two semi-formal dance s
or
suggestions for improving the
will be held at separate locations
fr
iendly
DUM P ON THE HUMP? "
in the evening. Beginning at
Let
CGA
hear
your ideas
8:30 , THE EXACT CHANGE will
the right
and
channel
them
In
be playing in the College Comdirection
for
action.
mons while the LEE VINCENT
Come to the OPEN FORUM toM ODERNAIRES furnish music
night
at 7:30 p.m, in Husky
for faculty and less recent grad Lounge.
uates in the Husk y Lounge.
P.O.'ed?
Dean Hoch Announces
Undergrad Record Exams
On November 1# 1969, begin ning at 8:00 a.ra. In Carver Hall ,
the Under graduate Record Exam inations for January graduating '
seniors will be administered. One
hundre d twenty one seniors are
re gistered lot these tests and ten
others have taken them earlier.
The tests will be administered
by the staff of the Research and
Evaluation Office, accor ding to
Dr. Merritt W. Sanders , direc tor of that office.
A letter from Dean A. Hoch
was sent to the seniors last
spring reminding them that the
results of the Under graduate Record Examinations are required
at this college.This is the third
year of th e use of the test bat Editor 's Note: This totHr
was received by Jeff Prosseda. President of Hie CGA.
October 1, 1W9
President
Board of Presidents
Pennsylvania State
Associat ion of Student
Governmen ts
Dear Pres ident :
October 14, 1969 Is a vary
Importan t day for you and
your constitu ents! Upon refrom Comcommen dation
Incorpotion
Services
munica
' rat«d, our public relat ions
consul tants, I have autho r!*them to schedule meetIed
ings between the Board of
Pr esident s and Influent ial
members of t he House and
Senate for that day. A meeting with the Governor Is also bein g planned for the afternoo n. This will bo our
chanc e to voice the sent iment
of our student bodies and
thus, cont inue tn our effor t t o
fulfil l the ob ligation we Incurred at the time of our
elect ion .
Tenta tivel y, I »nt plann ing
that wo moot In Carl isle at
the lmbers Motel for consultation with Communic ations
Servi ces Inc. on Monda y, Oetobor 13, at 8 p.m. and then
put In a full day In Harrisbur g on Tuesd ay, Octo ber 14.
I have asked Comm unications Services Inc. to Inform
the legislators that all fourwould be
teen Presidents
Ipresent for I am confiden t
that yo u w ill all welcom e the
op portunity to represent you r
studen ts In thess most Important meetin gs,
I res pectfully request that
you send me an Immedi ate
PRISIDPNTO receptio n attracte d students,
facul ty, and Adminis trator *. Pin* weathar,
food things to tat, and, many smiling faces
contributed to Its complete success.
I *
reply concernin g y«ur avalla *
blll ty for this date.
Since rely yours ,
J.
Bracken turn s
.
aaaaa
aaaaTsaaaaSsHBi
ter y. Eligible seniors completed
enrollment for the U.G.R.E. dur ing registration , September 8 and .
9. The next test date is March
21, 1970, for those students who
will graduate in May .
Seme students have inquired at
the Research Office , at the Grad uate Office , and In the Offices of
the Dean of Instruction about the.
Graduate Record Examination s
which are required by many grad uate schools. The Research Office in Ben Franklin 12 has information and will assist stud ents
who have been asked to submit
national program G.R.E. scores
as part of the app licationto grad uate school. That office is also
pr epar ed to assist those who need
such batteries as the National
Teachers Examination s, Law
School tests , and the Modern
Language Tests .
' i
H
Operation
Inte rcept
¦BSf
From the people who bro ught
you nerve gas, the moon flight
and ABM , we now have Opera tion Interce pt.
Operation Intercept is the Nix.
on
Administration 's
James
Bondlan title for an all-out air ,
land and sea assault It Is mount ing to reduce the traffic of mari juana and other drugs between
Mexico and the U.S. Its weapons
are hardly less Impressive than
those wielded by the fictitious
Gold finger or Dr. No of 007
fame .
The operation 's arsenal includes Ger man Shepherd dogs
trained to react to the scent of
(cont inued on page four)
Teach-in
J . W . Fulbrl ght: "We're not
bugging out . We're liquid ating a
tra gic mistake ,"
Charles Goodell ; "The as*
sumption under which the militar y is now operating will pr ob«
ably keep us fighting for year s,"
Eu gene McCarthy: "It' s almost
as thou gh we were back in 1966,"
Mike Mansfield: "If the spirit
is there , the details should not be
,
,
ilhard to overcome. "
Fred Harris : "It's time to takt .•£,&&
the gloves off on Vietnam, 1 '
/ ' ^ifM
Frank Church? "I*«sidtW N^>;;'i
on ¦••mi to b« slippln s tet ^ thA ^J
•am* tra p tnat ensnared Lynd ^Wl
' „ PL 311
John son." •
These men support th» •nd:fl |()#M
the war and aren 't afraid to i$W»
«
mit it. Octobtr iff it yJS ¦
^BSassssisa clunca , Support tU t«ach ^, Hc ^|g|
^—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Draft
Adjustments
Fall Short
i
Reply to Dr. Gunther
I must flatly reject the label
of "Communist" which Dr. H ans
Gunrher would like to pin on me
and others simply because we disagree with him on Vietnam . I
refer specifically to his rather
ugly smear concerning those interested in using October 15 to
re-examine American policy in
Southeast Asia: "Your proposed
October 15 demonstration is the
equivalent of the
American
Th orez demonstra tions against
anti-Communist forces." One
would have hoped that McCarthyism might have taught American
academics something about bizarre accusa tions and wild innuendo. Such smear-tactics obscure the real issues and mak e
impossible the calm, reasona bl e
discussion called for by Dr . Gunther .
We would be indeed naive if we
accepted whatever "C ommunist
radio stations " and "Communist
litera ture " have to say about
American dissent as represen ting actual Communist perce ption
of the American people. Propaganda should never , never be
confused with genuine , hard intelligence. Just because North
March
for Peace
The Student Mobilisation Com.
mittee of Dickinson College is organizing a "March For Peace "
again st the United States Army
War College in Carlisle on the
afternoon of Wednesday, Octo ber 15. The march will be held
in conjunction with the National
Vietnam Moratorium.
Outside of the Pen tagon, the
Army War College in Carli sle
houses the largest concentration
of military brass (senior officers) involved in the strategic
planni ng of war. Carlisle 'sposition in the top ten strategic nuclear attac k targets gives some
indication of the War College 's
importance.
The Dickinson SMC has stated
the effectiveness of this march
will be directly proportional to
the number of people who come
to Carlisle to participate. Car lisle is located at exit sixteen
on the Pennsylvania Turnpike .
Bus serv ice Is readily available
from any point in Pennsylvania .
For those who must stay over night , housing will be provided;
however , partici pants are urged
to bring sleeping bags, On arri val, marcher s will check in at the
Dickinson College Holland Union
Building before one p. m. For
furthe r
information , contact
SMC , box 769, Dickinson College, Carlisl e, Pa . 17013, or
phone 717-243-4011 and ask for
a member of the SMC Steering
Committee .
Vietnam would like to persuade
us — as Dr . Gunther is persua ded — * that there is an analogy
between French dissent (preced ing military humiliation at Dien
Bien Phu) and American dissent
(precedi ng what?), we need not
believe that the Northvietn amese
Eds. note — The following are
actually see such an analo gy in
the
remarks of Senator George
fact. North Vietnam has learnt ,
M
c
G
overn , D-South Dakota , In
by bitter experie nce, the differthe
U.S. Senate on Friday,
ence between French and AmeriSepte
mber
26, 1969.
can fire- power and air support .
Mr . President , notwithstanding
the fanfare of the past few days,
The question is not what North
the Nixon Administration 's adVietnam belives — or pretends
justments in the military draft
to believe — about American
will allow the survival of one of
dissent. The quest ion is whether
this country 's most obvious deor not that dissent is justified
and should be voiced. Clearly , nials of individual liberty .
Last Friday (Sept . 26) the
Dr. Gunther does not think so:
President
announced what ap "We are fighting a profoundly
peared
to
be
a reduction of 50,mora l, justified , and human000
in
draft
calls
for 1969. It Is
itarian war in Vietnam ." I stand
accomplished
to
be
by cancelling
appalled at the application of
Defense
Depar
tments
pr evithe
such adjectives to an undeclarously programmed calls of 32,ed war conducted largely without
000 for November and 18,000 for
Congr essional advice and conBramwell Fletcher in "Be rn sent until the dissenters protes - December , and by spreadin gth e ard Shaw" will be pr esente d in
ted , a war involving massive 29,000 October call evenly over Bass Auditorium TONIGHT at
the three rema ining months of 8:15 p.m.
bombing of civilians while, in
the year .
pursuit of "suspectedVietcon g,"
Bramwell Fletcher was last
R eduction I llusion
a war punctuated by CIA-Green
seen on Broadway as "Henry
But the reduction is an illu- Biggins" in "My Fair Lad y",
Beret squabbles over who butchIn fact , without the cuts we playing opposite Julie Andrews
sion.
ere d whom.
would have had to massive in- and Sally Ann Howes. Since then
crease in draft calls for the year he has turned away from the
Realpolitik might of course
be invoked to ju stify such vic- as a whole.
increas ingly commerc ial New
From June through October of York theatre and created an enious conduct That is the ar 1969 the total draft quota was tirel y new career f or himself
gument to which in fact Dr. Gunther resorts , in quoting Winston 135,700, compared to only 79,- performing one-man shows of his
000 for the same period a year own devising at colleges and uniChurchill out of context. But one
might cite another statesman on earl ier . The inflation of nearly
versities across the countr y.
the dangers of Short-term solu- : 57,000 in those five months left
He began with BERNARD
tions to long-ran ge national seSHAW. While still a juvenile in
(continued on page four)
curity questions: 'Those who
try to ride the tiger often find
themse lves inside." Thus /John:
F . Kennedy, before the Saigon
black market began to swallow
up U. S. aid in quantities. One
all of this year' s songs will be
By VELMA AVERY
must question anew the longperformed with string bass and
Soul
rock
folk
and
spiritual
,
,
term practical '' advantages" f or
drum
accompaniment along with
these
will
be
the
sounds
of
—
the U . S. A . in being involved the BSC Concert Choir when they
piano
and
electric guitar.
in the Asian land war that even perform their
To
round
out their program the
annual
Pops
Conthe Pentagon repeatedly warned
Choir
will
also do several folk
cert
on
October
12
at
8:15
in
us against.
songs and Broadway show tunes ,
Haas Auditorium as part of the
Homecoming activities .paving but it' s the grand finale that no
Analogies to World War n and
one can afford to miss . If you've
warn ings about Communist ex- already received much favorable
seen the rock musical "Ha ir "
pansion elsewhere are mislead - comment on their Parent 's Day
or know anything about its "app
er
f
ormance
this
year
'
s C oncert
,
ing, especially when they ignore
peal
" you won ' t want to be lef t
Choir
should
prove
exceptional
.
the salutary evidence at Comout
o
f
the excitement which w ill
The
concert
will
be
conducted
munist debacles , as in Ghana
end
the
Concert Choir 's Pops
this
year
in
a
very
informal
atand Indonesia . Th e war under
Concert
as
they do several of
mosphere
with
many
popular
inexaminat ion is in Vietnam , the
the
num
b
ers
whicon
h excite d N ew
the
novat
i
ons
a
dd
e
d.
reAmong
conduct in question in American ,
the opening
fork
Audiences
cent
pop
numbers
to
be
offered
^J
and the time is now . Let us
use October 15 for an honest , will be "Do You Know the Way flight of that musical .
full-scale apprai sal of these mat * To San Jose?" and "Scarbor- |Faculty , students and alumni
ters , neither slurring the oppos . ough Fair ," with many Individual . fare invited to enjoy an evening of
itlon needlessly nor chanting our soloists doing numbers by their >> I real fun as the Concert Choir
own litanies mindlessly . It would favorite pop composers . Nearly ^jj takes off on its greatest year .
be a ver y strange "practice of ,
democrac y, " indeed , to accept ¦
muzzling out of a terrified re . (
action to possible mlsinter pre. !
tat ion by an alien pro paganda
machine . I have more faith in
Amer ica than to believe she needs
my cowed silence, *
UDerna rd -J haw id J 4ere
Concert Choir Presents
John McLaughlin
English Department
MAROON AND GOLD
VOL. XLVIII
NO.
7
i
]
Michael Hock
¦dltor-ln- Chlt *
Business Manager
Managing Idltor
News Idltor
Co-Feature IdHors
Sports Mltor
Photograph y idltor
Copy Miter
Circulation Manager . . . . .
Advisor
dor Remsen
Bill TeWtworth
Martin Kleiner
Olnny Potter
AlUn Maurar
Clark Ruch
Jim Blrt
Kathy *«>r*Y
P«m Van Bpps
Mr. Mlchatl Stanley
ADDITIONAL ITAFP: Jacqula Peddoek, Terry Blaaa,
Leonard Houm, Barbara Memory, J«i l«e Oriowsk y, Janice
fcMndo lar, Ragar Savaga, •*¦ ¦«"•¦•£ O** ****
Manna Crane, Valma Avary, John ttu grin, Tom Funk.
All opinions axprtssad by columnists and faaturo writers,
Including latfars *t»>fha editor, aro not nacassarlly fnoo *of
Mils publication but these of tha> indivi duals.
[
;
i
I
I
I
I
the Brit ish theatre , Fletcher met
Shaw , who made a deep impres sion on him. Thinking about the
extra or dinar y character , humor ,
and prophetic genius of Shaw
during MY FAIR LADY, he cowceived the idea of recreatin ghim
on sta ge and set to work compiling a dramatic por trait. After
at last rece iving permission for
the use of the Shaw mate rial,
published and unpublished, from
the Shaw Estate , he presented
the show to Impr esario Sol Hu rok.
Hurok undertook to produce it in
Dublin and in New York , where
reviewers gave Fletcher 's performance the highest pr aise ,
ranking it with Holbrooks ' recreat ion of Mark Twain.
a passion r or living
Encouraged by the great popularity of BERNAR D SHAW , Flet cher is now touring a new program as well, A PASSION FOR
LIVING — a dr amatization of
poetr y and prose selections on
the theme of the spirit of man.
It is based on a program he per forme d at the Anta theatre , New
York , about which Whitney BoLton (Dean of the New York Crit ics Circle) commented "I own
myself entranced by his per formance. " I found not a single
flaw In this one golden evening. "
Fletcher
was subsequently invited to present the program at
the Librar y of Con gress, and
they reported that It was " One
of the finest literary pr ograms
ever pr esented. "
C BS-TV televised Par t III of
the pr ogram under the title THIS
UNCERTAIN AGE as a special
on the "Camera Three " series ,
and received the large st mall response In the history of the pro gram . After the broadca st, Rob ert Frost remarked that "the
future of poetry Is in safe hands
with men like Fletcher to impart It to the young er generation."
Bramwe ll Fletcher has per formed leading roles in 32 Broad way production s, appeared In
nearly every major dr amatic series on television and , In the
early part of his care er , completed 25 motion pictures;
Auspicious Beginning
Born in York shire , En gland,
one of seven childre n of strict
Calvlnlst parents , it took fierc e
determ ination and a good bit of
luck
to get himself out of
"clerk ing" lnaDlckensl an insur- .
ance firm in London to which
he had been "condemn ed/* as
he says , in his early teens , but
his beginning In theatre was auspicious. One afternoon he found
himself selected as a juvenile
player in the Royal Shakespeare
Company at Stratford -on-Avon.
Success came quickly after
that. At 19 he was starred as
"Martin " in the enormo usly successful Lond on production of
Chri stopher MorUy 's THUNDER
ON THE LEFT . Tht American
pr oduoer Ai Wood s saw the show
and offered him a contract to
come to Amerl oa to play on
Broadway in SCOTLAND YARD,
( continued on pate four)
SHH HR
I X-Coontry
tss pujj iilj
I
Last Thursday, a team of three
I sophs and four frosh runners
journeyed to Mille rsville State
College to participate in their
I first varsit y competition .
Fros h Finishes First
I
It was a dismal day with intermittent
showers putting both
I
: teams at a disadvanta ge from
¦ the start. But it didn't seem to
.
; effect Bloomsbur gfreshman Tim
i Waechter since he made goodhis
'¦ varsit y Cross Country debut by
i taking first place for the Husk; ies. Followingclosei ybehind Tim
was another freshman Terr y Lee
After the first weekend of Penn-1
of a Western Division fight it is who took third place for this
sylvania Conference action , the favored to win. Former Penn untr ied tea m of freshmen and
following conclusions can be
State star Al Jacks ' eleven will sophomores.
But in spite of the tre mendous
made:
host Lock Haven (0*1 and 1-1)
efforts
of these two runners the
and if Jacks is confident of vic— Only a giant upset can knock
Huskies
couldn't quite pull it out
West Chester off a one-way track
tory, he's hiding it well .
drop
ped
and
their opener 24 to 31.
to the Eastern Division title;
"We think Lock Haven has a
is the winner in
The
low
-score
— A wild scramble between de- good football team ," he said ,
The other three
Cross
Country.
fendin g champion California , "and the way we played (against
placers
were freshfor
the
team
undefea ted Clarion and surpris - Geneva) we feel anybody can take
eighth , and
man
Bob
Benslnger
,
ing Edinboro appears likely in us to t he cleaners ." Clarion
Silvettl
and
ores
Mike
sophom
blanked Geneva last Saturd ay
the West ern Division .
minth
and
tenth
reS
cott
R
o
g
ers
,
Games t his weekend are not night , 14.0.
spectively.
Bob Erdel jac had his usual
likely to change the picture .
Nobel's Hopes High
fine performance — the quarter *
West Chester (1-0 and 2-1),
In
spite
of this tou gh loss
back went 14-for-26 for 202-yards
coming off an exciting 36-21 nod
Coach
Noble
was ver y optimi stic
over defending conference co- and one TD — but whatconcern '
Kutztowar
d
the
meet
champion
East Stroudsburg , ed Jacks were the three fumbles , town on Saturday. against
His
optimism
hosts Millersville this Saturda y one interception and four 15-yard seemed to be well founded since
at Henderson High School field , penalties .
"We figured out a way to do the harr iers of BSC defeated
West Chester . The Ranis ' new
20 to 40.
stadium is not expected to be it (stop the drive) each time ," Kutztown by a score of
mainly
Again
tills
score
was
the
,
he
said
.
completed now for another month.
resu
l
t
o
f
t
h
e
tremen
d
ous
runn
ing
Shippensbur
g
(1
-0
and
0-2)
East Stroudsburg (0-1 and 0-2)
of
two
frosh.
Coming
in
first
will try to rebound at Kutz- moves into conference action for
the first time this Saturday at place with a new Kutztown course
town (1-0 and 1-X). The Bears
just mana ged to get by Millers - Slippery Rock (0-1 and 1-2) in recor d w as Terr y Lee, having
ville, 21-18, last Saturday in a the other Western Division con* beaten last week's w inner Tim
Waecht er who again ran a great
three-hour plus game pockmark- test .
race
and finished second. The
California (1-0 and 1-1) and
ed with interceptions and fumnext
man
across t he line was
Edinboro (1-0 and 2-1) are enbles.
Bob
Bentsinger
in fourth place,
"1 hope that (Bill) Dukett got gaged in non-conference scra ps
impr
oved
over his eighth
much
tasting
satisfying
league
after
all those good passes out of his
place
Scott R ogers
last
week.
victories.
s ystem ," commente d Kutztown
was
fifth
and
Charlie
Graham was
The Vulcans of California emcoach, Bob Kinderman . He saw
displacement
for
eighth.
Runnin
g
the Stroud quarterback complete ploying the spri nt outs ofquarterDufra
yne
ninth
BSC
were
Mike
,
,
back Bob Keys for most of their
nine of 13 against West Chester
tent
h
A
lso
K
efter
an
d
D
ave
.
,
in a seven-minute blitz in the 216-yards rushing, spanked Lock
running were Larr y Strohl and R .
second period and go 22-for-46 H aven , 25*0, last Saturday . EdinEckersier.
boro — the Western Division
for 246-yards and three TDs for
Coach Noble was very pleased
doormat a year ago — put on
t he game.
with
yesterda y's results and sees
a
surprising
display of power
Mansfield' s Stu Casterline will
a
bright
outlook for future meets ,
in
routing
Slippery
Rock , 40-13.
be cranking up for another big
pa
rtially
because form er fresh Waynesburg
is
at Califor passing day at Cheyney in the
man
star
Paul Pellitier will be
nia
this
weekend
while
Edinb or o
other Eastern Division game .
off
the
sick
list and running on
trave
led
to
Indi
ana.
CLARION 'S RECORD
Monday
.
Bloomsburg of the Easter n DiUNBLEMISHED
The team is now looking forClarion (0-0 and 3-0), the only vision also had a non-league game
ward
to their next meet against
with Adelphi this Frid ay night at
undefeated team in the 13-memSusquehanna
on Thursday. The
home .
ber confer ence , gets into the thick
harriers have never beaten Susquehanna , but then they had never
beaten Kutztown either up until
now. Now they 're looking for ward to the ir second big upset.
BSC Drops Third
Impressive First Half
Dismal Second Half
A great first half , and a dis- again good and the Huskie s went
asterous letdown in the second into the locker room with a 14-0
half , add up to the Huskies * third lead.
stra ight loss of the 1969 season.
I don't knowwhat hap pened durBSC put 14 points on the score- ing the break. Maybe the Husk ies
board before halftime , but then spent too much time patting them couldn't control the Adelphi selves on the back , maybe not.
ground ' game after the break. But , one thing for sure — Adelphi
Adelphi scored two touchdowns came out of the locker room to ¦
and a pair of two-point conver- play for a win.
sions to win the game 16-14.
Adelphi Scores
Good First Half
The P anthers too k the opening
The Huskies started off like kickoff and drove 72-yards , all on
gangbusters on the first play of the ground , to score. They lined
the game. Tom Schneider faded up as if to kick an extra p oint ,
back and hit midget Mike Kolo- but the Panther 's quarterback
jejch ick with a bomb for 56- Dick Funke took the pass from
yards to the Adelphi 25. But two center and flipped it to his end.
play s later butterfingers pre vail- Bob Wolf, in the endzone for a
ed and BSC turned the ball ' over two-point
conversion.
The
on a fumble.
Huskies now led by only six, at
. The Huskies took over on their ¦ 14-8.
own 39 after Adelphi failed to
And Again
score. Using a solid running atThen with 13:39 left in the
tack , they drove 61-yards into game, disaster struck and Adelpaydirt. The only completed pass phi scored again to take the lead .
during the drive was a 22-yard The Panthers took the ball and
bullet to Bob Warner from Sch- drove 57-yards to add the winneider. Schneider very nearly ning score. This drive , however ,
had a touchdown pass when Greg they crossed up the Huskies and
Berger made a diving catch , but threw a pass , Fun ke to Siegel,
be' was out of the back of the good for 23-yards and a fir st
endzone when he made the re- down on the BSC 11. Four runception. It was second and ten ning plays later the Panth ers
on the Adelphi's 19, but the baby scored and tied the Huskies at
bull , Paul Skrimcovsky , rattled 14 all. This attempt for a twooff runs of 9, 9, and 1-yard to point convers ion did not involve
score. Vedral' s extra-point at- any fancy faking. Adelphi lined
tempt was good, and the Huskies up for an offensive play, and
led 7-0. Much later in the first Funke rolled to his left to score
half , after having a drive snuff- and put Adelphi a ahead to stay .
ed outbyafumble on the Adelphi's 16-14.
12, the Huskies pounced all over
The Huskies must hustle to
the Adelphi punter to give the save themselves from a disaster BSC offense the ball onthe Panth - ous season. It will take a 100per
er' s 17. It was again Paul Skrim - cent effort form the entire tea m
covsky who provided" the muscle to forge several wins out of the
and blew through the Adelphia rema ining games of the season.
line for a 6-yard touchdown with I hope they start this weekend
3:04 left in the half. The PAT was against Cheyney.
Stay f or Hom ecoming
BSC vs West Chester
— FOR SALE —
SPINET PIANO
Girls ' Hockey Begins
Play This Week
The student body of BSC , aa
well as the girls of the field
hockey team , can be proud of
Miss Eleanor Wray , the hockey
coach. Very tew people realize
it , but ahe has a very impr essive
background ,
A graduate of Lake Erie College In Cleveland , Miss Wray
has been associated with field
hookey for 20 years . It wag at
Lake Erie that she learned the
game. In her varflty years she
played the full-back position. She
began coaching at Hidelbur g College, and her team pr oduced an
excellent record. Before accepting the coaching position at
Bloom , she also coached at Cart hage College in Illinois.
WHY?
When asked her opinion of why
play field hookey, Wra y regirls
.
plied, "I frel that tat reason girls
come out for field hookey Is be*
cause they get & chines to run .
They fr#l tha t they oan "runoff1
1
¦
i
¦
•>
¦
*¦
' ¦
'
'
'
*'
all their frustrations built up
throughout the day, and they enjoy this. " Miss Wray also feels
that the reason why men don 't
play the game Is beca use It Is too
rough; it's a running game and it
require s cooperation and stami na.
This year' s squad Is promi sing In the eyes of Miss Wray .
She has 18 hard -working girls who
pr actice from 3 to 5 daily . But
she needs more team members.
All in all, It looks like it's
going to be a good season for our
field hookey team . (And if you're
not doing anything on October 20
or 23 at 4 p.m., why not take In a
girls hookey game , Who knows ,
maybe you'll enjoy seeing girls
running around chasing a little
bau:>
Gir l's Field Hookey Schedule
Oct. 8-Mlserloordl 4 p,m, Away
4p,m, Away
Oct. 13-Wilkes
Oct. 20-Mansfleld 4p,m. Home
Oct. 23-fiusquehanna4p,m,Homt
Oot. 29-Bucknell 4 p,m, Away
Wanted , re asonable part y to
take over low monthl y payments on a spinet piano . Can
be seen locall y. Write Credit
Manager, P.O. Box . 35, Cortland, Ohio.
^4
^
BOOKS...
OVER 8000
YOUR DOLLAR
BUYS MORE AT A
BLOOM
BOWL
GOODWILL STORE
184 W. Main, ¦loomtbur g
I
If if • a book
we have it or we can get It
Greeting Cards
¦ ¦ ¦€ >
FUR OOAT
FOR THI
FOOTBALL 9AMI
- ^99 U p -
TITLES IN STOCK
.
WAFFLE
GRILLE
HENRIES
Card and Book Nook
40 W. Malp St.
*
I
t*
-
¦
'
i
1
I
1
'
'
'
¦
.
APO
Sponsors
Conference
Aviation Administration to detect
illegal border crossin gs, and aircraft equipped with electronic
sensing devices capable of sniffing poppy field from the sky.
Massive number of customs inspectors— the exact number is a
government secret— are posted
at 27 air ports in southwestern
United States , at 31 places along
the Mexican border , where all
motor vehicles and pedestrians
XI Lambda Cha pter , Alpha Phi
are now stopped around the clock
Omega , recent ly hosted the Secto under go 2-3 minute searches
tion 90 Conference of Local APO
for contraband.
Cha pters in the Alumni Room.
The cause for this increased
The conference was well-att endsurve illance— comprising t h e
ed with six cha pters representmost intensive drug crackdown in
ed; Alpha Beta-Penn 1 State , Eta
US history— is a 55 Iota-Millersvi lie, Iota Omicronrelease d with President Nixon*s
Gett ysbur g, Lambda Lambdablessings by the Special Presi Shippens bur g, Nu Delta-Lebanon
Invitations had been extended
dential Task Force Relatin g to
p
ter
XI
an
d
h
ost
c
h
a
Valley,
,
to approximately 3 ,650 students
Narcotics, Mar ijuana and DangLambda-Bloomsburg State Col- to atten d the President
's
erous Drugs .
lege. Advisor y personnel and sec- tion which was held at the RecepPresi tional staf f, including sectional dent 's
residence
Buckalew
chairman Stephen C . Hayden , P lace on Iightstre ,et Road
Sun,
were also present .
day
,
October
5
from
2:00
to
,
The main pur pose was to estab - 5:00 p.m.
lish inter chapter relationships ,
reception line was com(co ntinued from page two )
communication, and organization priThe
sed
of Dr . Rob ert J. Nossen,
through the formati on of a sec- president
of the college, and Mrs.
That play failed, but the result
tional committe e.
Nossen; Dr. John A. Hoch , Dean for Fletcher was a motion picof I nstruction, and Mrs. Hoch; ture contract with Sam Goldwyn
Elton Hunsinger , Dean of Stu- — in the golden Hollywood of
dents, and Mrs. Hunsinger;
the 30's.
George Turner , Pre sident of the
He had already starred in
Faculty Association , and Mrs.
England in CHICK , the first
Turner; and two members of the
Edgar Wallace movie, and in the
College Community Government
first British talkie , TO WHAT
Association — J eff Prosseda ,
RED HELL with Dame Sybil
President , and J ean Reese, Sec- Thorndike . His early Hollywood
retar y.
successes include such favorites
Phi Sigma Pi, national honor
Following the rece ption, reas
BAFFLES with Ronald Colfratern ity, will meet Wedn esday , freshments were serve d to the
man
, SVENGALI with John Bar Oct. 8 at 7 p.m. in Hartline Scistudents on the spacious lawn ry more, and THE MUMM Y with
ence C enter, room 79. All mem- west of Buckalew Place . This
Boris Karloff .
bers are asked to attend since
was the first time that the Pres H owever, it is in the theatre
this is the deadline for dues .
ident 's Recption has been held in
that Fletcher has concentrated
this location; it was formerly held
his talents . He starred in WISeach year in Centennial Gymnasi TERIA TREES with HelenHayes ,
um.
LADY
WINDERMERE 'S FAN
with Cornelia Otis Skinner , THE
DOCTOR 'S DILEMM A w i t h
The BSC Psyc hology Depart*
Katharine Cornell , OUTWARD
ment announced that they will
BOUND with Laurette Taylor ,
host the Central Pennsylvan ia
THE CIRCLE with Tallulah Bank Psycholo gy Sorie s. Dr. Vytauhead, WITHIN THE GATE S with
tas Bieliaustcas , Chairman of the
Lillian Glsh , CANDIDA w i t h
psychology department at Xav*
Olivia de HavUland , PYGMALION
Elton Huns inger , Dean of Stu- ier College , will be the guest
with Carol Channing , GOODBYE
dents, has been Invited to serve
MY FANCY with Ann Harding ,
speaker. H* will speak on "Mot National Council for . Accredi - nesday, October 8, ( tonight ) at
on tour.
tation of Teacher Education . The S p.m. in Hartlin e Science CenHaving discovered the pleasure
team will visit Newark State ter , Roo m 134.
and challenge of performing to
College at Union , New J ersey ,
college audiences ,
Bramwell
October 5-8. Seven other prom Fletcher takes a great Interest in
inent educators , represen tingsix
the concerns of youth today and
different states , will serv e on
in educat ion. While on campu s
the NCATE committee . Dr. Irv he enjoys being part of the life
ing S. Starr , Dean of the School
of the college. His many inform(cont inued fro m page one )
of Education , Hart ford Univer al talks with students gave him
mari juana , Navy patrol boats in
sity, Hartford , C onnecticut, will
the idea of offering a series of
be the Chairman of the Evalua - the Gulf of Mexico, Air Force
lively seminars on English litera pur suit planes , a web of radar
tion Team ,
ture and on theatre , to be cliscreens installed by the Federal
maxed by a performance of eith Th* Art Rental Collect ion,
sponsored by CGA, will hang
its collection in Husky Loun ge
today, Wednesday, October 8.
There v/lU be approximatel y
fifteen works in the collecti on.
A'l are available to studen ts for
rental. The works may bo selected by stud ent* to hang In
their rooms or apartments for
the remainder of the term . Th*
rental fee? range from $.75 to
$2.50. The collection will hang
throu gh Saturday, October 11.
Receptio n
^naiv
Phi
Sigma Pi
Hunsinger
Moonli ghts
Intercept
Buy Tour Mums ler the Homecoming Game !
Price Is $1.25
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Center St. 784-6460
HALLMARK CARDS
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Phone
784-2561
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I/AN AWED ARTISTS
FILM |
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We Invite You To Dine With Us
Everyday and Sunda ys Too
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Exit 36
OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT FRI. & SAT.
Sundays & Dail y — ) 1 a.m. to 10 p.m.
GIFTS
SECOHO WO WEEK !
\v glliliiiliillwillliilll
'II h l I IllliitilliilMlI
Jet. of Route 11 and Interstate 80
BLOOMSBURG,PA.
COLUMBIA
room for a 50 ,000 reductio n.
Total draft calls for this year
will be only about 2 percent lower than in 1968.
I n effect, what appears as
benevolence to the young men who
might have been tak en in November and December is no more
than an announce ment that they
will not be called then becaus e
they have alread y gone. They
were pressed into service as
part of earlier quotas.
The President also . announce d
on Frida y his intention to move
forwar d on draft proposals which
will establis h a random system
of selecti on, to put chance in
the place of decisions presently
made by some 4,000 local draft
boards with the inspiration and
guidance of Selective Service Director Lewis Hershe y. The period of prime exposure to induction would be reduce d from as
much as seven years to twelve
months.
It is impossible to respond
negativel y to such a "proposal .
Strategy Will Fail
Indeed , from the standpoint of
If that is the strategy it is
the eligible pool of man power, bound to fail. It .amounts to a
lust about any change in the grave miscalculation on both the
Selective Service System would motives and the perception of
be an improvement. The present
those who seek a change in policy.
system seems to rest on the They object not so much beassum ption that exposure to com- cause of personal costs , tnit bepulsor y military service , Includ - cause they believe in the Id eals
ing a war whieh most Americans for which they have been told
now regard as a blunde r , is for this countr y stands. They can
some reaso n a health y process see no legitimate interest in
for youn g Americans. General Vietnam which could possibly
Hershey 's efforts to use the draft justify the loss of 40,000 lives
as a punitive device— without the or even the r isk of a single addelays and complications of due ditional American . They can see
•process— place it even more-m" no interest which demands
that
sharply in conflict -with the fun- we neglect crushing problems at
damental ideals of a free society. home while laying billions of dolNo one who believes in those lars at the feet of a corrupt
ideals can find grounds for ob- military government 10 000
ject ion to the chan ges planned by miles away, and they .can ,see
the President.
no reason why a nation founded
G overnment Dictates
liberty and professing human
But here again the illusion of on
dignit y as its goal should exmeaningful action outweighs the
involuntary service from
substance. The adjustments an- tract
any of its citizens .
nounced on Friday leave intact the
most pernicious single aspect
The draft will not be accept able until it is gone . The war
er A PASSION FOR LIVING or in Vietnam will not be accepta BERNARD SHAW. His talks have ble until it is over.
been a tremen dous success with
We have waited too long on
both students and faculty. He
both.
mana ges to communicate his own
intense love of poetry in particu lar , which prompted one educa - r
FETTERMANS "\
tor to pronounce that "In his four
BARBER SHOP
I
days here he made more converts than Billy Graham could
I
— QUALITY —
have, and the echoes are still
Hill
I
.Foot of ColUfl .
being heard! " (Univer sity
of
J
Bloom tbur g Pi.
Miami 's John Walker Powell) .
^
|ii n
iu
iii
18W««t Main Strtet
I
of the Selective 8<*rvice System.
With or witoewt the change ,-thousands of youngAmerican men each
year, will be compelled , willing
or riot, to serve in the armed
forces. Their right to liberty ,
their r ight to follow pursuit s of
the ir own choosing, will be
denied. Their occupations will
be determined not by the incentives required to attract man power in the competitive market ,
but by the dictates of intrusive
governme ntal authority.
Mr. President , it has been
widely speculated that the two
steps ann ounced last Friday are
part of an attem pt to defuse
youthful opposition , to the war
in Vietnam.
I n combinationwith the partial
troop withdrawls which are now
under way, it has been suggest,
ed that the attem pt to beautif ythe
and to briefly limit Its
draft
effect will muffle the voices which
are calling for a prompt end to
our involvement in Vietnamese
affairs.
from page two )
(continued
THE
Miller Office
Supply Co.
They'll B# Sold By The Women 's B Club Outold * HuikySlturda y Morning Botwotn 8 and 12 O'clock
Draft Adj usMttfFs
^.
ii
WEEK DAY SHOWS 7100-9:00
mmmm
V
iWltiBR
l^SJ
.j ^
J
Harry Logan
We Qatar To Everyone and Serve Only Choice
C HA RCOAL BROILED STEA KS
Fin e J ewelry
CHOPS , BEEF-BURGERS
Repairing
SANDWICHES & SALADS
AND
Your J twihr Away from Homt
5 W. Maim St,
BloomsbOro
Phone 784-7837
PAUL DIETER, Prop.
c^iMroo it& lrolJ
4^
Puckett Parade Dance
1
Highlights Annual
Homecomin g
"Oar American Heri tage "will
be the theme of the 42nd Annual
H omecoming
activities at
Bloomsburg State College on October 10-12. "Plans are well
-under way to pro vide one of th e
best Homecomi ng celebra tions
in_ the history of the college,"*
stated Boyd F . Bucking ham,
Chairman for the festivities.
Activities for the weekend will
get under way with a student pep
rall y on the terraces between
Walle r Hall and East Hall on
Thursda y evening, October ^; at
8 p. m. Hie following evening ,
Fr iday, October 10, the Big Name
Entertainment Committee of the
CGA will present "Gary Puckett and The Union Gap** in concert in Haas Auditorium at 8:30
p. m. During the intermission ,
the Homecomin g Queen will be
crowned and a plaque presented
to the fraternit y that has the
highest academic average for the
second semester of the 1968-69
college year.
Activities for a full day of
events will get under way on Saturda y with the judging of offcampus housing decorations and
the judging of parade floats in
Cente nnial Gymnastim Parkin g
Lot from 8 to 10a. m. The Home.,
coming Parade will leave the
^^
JHLB alHLl
CA LENDA R
Wednesday, Oct. S
Open Forum — Husk y Lounge
7.30 p.m.
Movie — Wal k Don't Run
Carver 8:30 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 9
Pep Rally — Terracas—7 p.m.
Dance — The Plaque
Centennial Gym—8-1 1 p.m.
parking lot at 10:15 and pro ceed
down Second and M ain str eets to
Market , south on Mar ket to Fif th ,
east on Fifth to East , nort h on
East to Town H all , up College
Hill and Second Street to the
Centennial parking lot.
Friday, Oct. 10
Big Nam* Entertainment
Cary Puckett & The Union Gap
Haas Aud. — 8:30 p.m.
Party Time 12 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 11
Parade — Centennial Parking
Lot — 10:15 a.m.
Football — BSC vs. W. Chaster
Town Athletic Park — 2 p.m.
Dance — Lee Vincenf t
Medernaires
Husky Lounge 8:30 to 11:30 p.m.
Dance — The Exact Change —
An overflow crowd is expected
at the Bloomsburg Athletic Park
at 2 p. m. to see the Huskies
in act ion against be R ams of
West Chester. During the half time act ivities, tbe winningfloats
College Commons—9 to U pm.
and off-campus housing decora tion winners will be announ ced.
Sunday, Oct. 12
Also, at that time, lifetime athle tic pass recipients of five years Qpen House — In all campus
ago, 1964, will be recogniz ed.
residents halls 2-5 p.m.
Russ Houk, Direc tor of Athletics , Pops Concert — Concert Choir
will present a plaque to the BSC
In Haas Aud.—8:15 p.m.
player judged to be the most
outstanding perform er , after the
game.
A cafeteria dinner for alumni
and visitors will follow in the
College Commons starting at 5:30
"What are your gripes, ideas
p. m. Two semi-formal dance s
or
suggestions for improving the
will be held at separate locations
fr
iendly
DUM P ON THE HUMP? "
in the evening. Beginning at
Let
CGA
hear
your ideas
8:30 , THE EXACT CHANGE will
the right
and
channel
them
In
be playing in the College Comdirection
for
action.
mons while the LEE VINCENT
Come to the OPEN FORUM toM ODERNAIRES furnish music
night
at 7:30 p.m, in Husky
for faculty and less recent grad Lounge.
uates in the Husk y Lounge.
P.O.'ed?
Dean Hoch Announces
Undergrad Record Exams
On November 1# 1969, begin ning at 8:00 a.ra. In Carver Hall ,
the Under graduate Record Exam inations for January graduating '
seniors will be administered. One
hundre d twenty one seniors are
re gistered lot these tests and ten
others have taken them earlier.
The tests will be administered
by the staff of the Research and
Evaluation Office, accor ding to
Dr. Merritt W. Sanders , direc tor of that office.
A letter from Dean A. Hoch
was sent to the seniors last
spring reminding them that the
results of the Under graduate Record Examinations are required
at this college.This is the third
year of th e use of the test bat Editor 's Note: This totHr
was received by Jeff Prosseda. President of Hie CGA.
October 1, 1W9
President
Board of Presidents
Pennsylvania State
Associat ion of Student
Governmen ts
Dear Pres ident :
October 14, 1969 Is a vary
Importan t day for you and
your constitu ents! Upon refrom Comcommen dation
Incorpotion
Services
munica
' rat«d, our public relat ions
consul tants, I have autho r!*them to schedule meetIed
ings between the Board of
Pr esident s and Influent ial
members of t he House and
Senate for that day. A meeting with the Governor Is also bein g planned for the afternoo n. This will bo our
chanc e to voice the sent iment
of our student bodies and
thus, cont inue tn our effor t t o
fulfil l the ob ligation we Incurred at the time of our
elect ion .
Tenta tivel y, I »nt plann ing
that wo moot In Carl isle at
the lmbers Motel for consultation with Communic ations
Servi ces Inc. on Monda y, Oetobor 13, at 8 p.m. and then
put In a full day In Harrisbur g on Tuesd ay, Octo ber 14.
I have asked Comm unications Services Inc. to Inform
the legislators that all fourwould be
teen Presidents
Ipresent for I am confiden t
that yo u w ill all welcom e the
op portunity to represent you r
studen ts In thess most Important meetin gs,
I res pectfully request that
you send me an Immedi ate
PRISIDPNTO receptio n attracte d students,
facul ty, and Adminis trator *. Pin* weathar,
food things to tat, and, many smiling faces
contributed to Its complete success.
I *
reply concernin g y«ur avalla *
blll ty for this date.
Since rely yours ,
J.
Bracken turn s
.
aaaaa
aaaaTsaaaaSsHBi
ter y. Eligible seniors completed
enrollment for the U.G.R.E. dur ing registration , September 8 and .
9. The next test date is March
21, 1970, for those students who
will graduate in May .
Seme students have inquired at
the Research Office , at the Grad uate Office , and In the Offices of
the Dean of Instruction about the.
Graduate Record Examination s
which are required by many grad uate schools. The Research Office in Ben Franklin 12 has information and will assist stud ents
who have been asked to submit
national program G.R.E. scores
as part of the app licationto grad uate school. That office is also
pr epar ed to assist those who need
such batteries as the National
Teachers Examination s, Law
School tests , and the Modern
Language Tests .
' i
H
Operation
Inte rcept
¦BSf
From the people who bro ught
you nerve gas, the moon flight
and ABM , we now have Opera tion Interce pt.
Operation Intercept is the Nix.
on
Administration 's
James
Bondlan title for an all-out air ,
land and sea assault It Is mount ing to reduce the traffic of mari juana and other drugs between
Mexico and the U.S. Its weapons
are hardly less Impressive than
those wielded by the fictitious
Gold finger or Dr. No of 007
fame .
The operation 's arsenal includes Ger man Shepherd dogs
trained to react to the scent of
(cont inued on page four)
Teach-in
J . W . Fulbrl ght: "We're not
bugging out . We're liquid ating a
tra gic mistake ,"
Charles Goodell ; "The as*
sumption under which the militar y is now operating will pr ob«
ably keep us fighting for year s,"
Eu gene McCarthy: "It' s almost
as thou gh we were back in 1966,"
Mike Mansfield: "If the spirit
is there , the details should not be
,
,
ilhard to overcome. "
Fred Harris : "It's time to takt .•£,&&
the gloves off on Vietnam, 1 '
/ ' ^ifM
Frank Church? "I*«sidtW N^>;;'i
on ¦••mi to b« slippln s tet ^ thA ^J
•am* tra p tnat ensnared Lynd ^Wl
' „ PL 311
John son." •
These men support th» •nd:fl |()#M
the war and aren 't afraid to i$W»
«
mit it. Octobtr iff it yJS ¦
^BSassssisa clunca , Support tU t«ach ^, Hc ^|g|
^—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Draft
Adjustments
Fall Short
i
Reply to Dr. Gunther
I must flatly reject the label
of "Communist" which Dr. H ans
Gunrher would like to pin on me
and others simply because we disagree with him on Vietnam . I
refer specifically to his rather
ugly smear concerning those interested in using October 15 to
re-examine American policy in
Southeast Asia: "Your proposed
October 15 demonstration is the
equivalent of the
American
Th orez demonstra tions against
anti-Communist forces." One
would have hoped that McCarthyism might have taught American
academics something about bizarre accusa tions and wild innuendo. Such smear-tactics obscure the real issues and mak e
impossible the calm, reasona bl e
discussion called for by Dr . Gunther .
We would be indeed naive if we
accepted whatever "C ommunist
radio stations " and "Communist
litera ture " have to say about
American dissent as represen ting actual Communist perce ption
of the American people. Propaganda should never , never be
confused with genuine , hard intelligence. Just because North
March
for Peace
The Student Mobilisation Com.
mittee of Dickinson College is organizing a "March For Peace "
again st the United States Army
War College in Carlisle on the
afternoon of Wednesday, Octo ber 15. The march will be held
in conjunction with the National
Vietnam Moratorium.
Outside of the Pen tagon, the
Army War College in Carli sle
houses the largest concentration
of military brass (senior officers) involved in the strategic
planni ng of war. Carlisle 'sposition in the top ten strategic nuclear attac k targets gives some
indication of the War College 's
importance.
The Dickinson SMC has stated
the effectiveness of this march
will be directly proportional to
the number of people who come
to Carlisle to participate. Car lisle is located at exit sixteen
on the Pennsylvania Turnpike .
Bus serv ice Is readily available
from any point in Pennsylvania .
For those who must stay over night , housing will be provided;
however , partici pants are urged
to bring sleeping bags, On arri val, marcher s will check in at the
Dickinson College Holland Union
Building before one p. m. For
furthe r
information , contact
SMC , box 769, Dickinson College, Carlisl e, Pa . 17013, or
phone 717-243-4011 and ask for
a member of the SMC Steering
Committee .
Vietnam would like to persuade
us — as Dr . Gunther is persua ded — * that there is an analogy
between French dissent (preced ing military humiliation at Dien
Bien Phu) and American dissent
(precedi ng what?), we need not
believe that the Northvietn amese
Eds. note — The following are
actually see such an analo gy in
the
remarks of Senator George
fact. North Vietnam has learnt ,
M
c
G
overn , D-South Dakota , In
by bitter experie nce, the differthe
U.S. Senate on Friday,
ence between French and AmeriSepte
mber
26, 1969.
can fire- power and air support .
Mr . President , notwithstanding
the fanfare of the past few days,
The question is not what North
the Nixon Administration 's adVietnam belives — or pretends
justments in the military draft
to believe — about American
will allow the survival of one of
dissent. The quest ion is whether
this country 's most obvious deor not that dissent is justified
and should be voiced. Clearly , nials of individual liberty .
Last Friday (Sept . 26) the
Dr. Gunther does not think so:
President
announced what ap "We are fighting a profoundly
peared
to
be
a reduction of 50,mora l, justified , and human000
in
draft
calls
for 1969. It Is
itarian war in Vietnam ." I stand
accomplished
to
be
by cancelling
appalled at the application of
Defense
Depar
tments
pr evithe
such adjectives to an undeclarously programmed calls of 32,ed war conducted largely without
000 for November and 18,000 for
Congr essional advice and conBramwell Fletcher in "Be rn sent until the dissenters protes - December , and by spreadin gth e ard Shaw" will be pr esente d in
ted , a war involving massive 29,000 October call evenly over Bass Auditorium TONIGHT at
the three rema ining months of 8:15 p.m.
bombing of civilians while, in
the year .
pursuit of "suspectedVietcon g,"
Bramwell Fletcher was last
R eduction I llusion
a war punctuated by CIA-Green
seen on Broadway as "Henry
But the reduction is an illu- Biggins" in "My Fair Lad y",
Beret squabbles over who butchIn fact , without the cuts we playing opposite Julie Andrews
sion.
ere d whom.
would have had to massive in- and Sally Ann Howes. Since then
crease in draft calls for the year he has turned away from the
Realpolitik might of course
be invoked to ju stify such vic- as a whole.
increas ingly commerc ial New
From June through October of York theatre and created an enious conduct That is the ar 1969 the total draft quota was tirel y new career f or himself
gument to which in fact Dr. Gunther resorts , in quoting Winston 135,700, compared to only 79,- performing one-man shows of his
000 for the same period a year own devising at colleges and uniChurchill out of context. But one
might cite another statesman on earl ier . The inflation of nearly
versities across the countr y.
the dangers of Short-term solu- : 57,000 in those five months left
He began with BERNARD
tions to long-ran ge national seSHAW. While still a juvenile in
(continued on page four)
curity questions: 'Those who
try to ride the tiger often find
themse lves inside." Thus /John:
F . Kennedy, before the Saigon
black market began to swallow
up U. S. aid in quantities. One
all of this year' s songs will be
By VELMA AVERY
must question anew the longperformed with string bass and
Soul
rock
folk
and
spiritual
,
,
term practical '' advantages" f or
drum
accompaniment along with
these
will
be
the
sounds
of
—
the U . S. A . in being involved the BSC Concert Choir when they
piano
and
electric guitar.
in the Asian land war that even perform their
To
round
out their program the
annual
Pops
Conthe Pentagon repeatedly warned
Choir
will
also do several folk
cert
on
October
12
at
8:15
in
us against.
songs and Broadway show tunes ,
Haas Auditorium as part of the
Homecoming activities .paving but it' s the grand finale that no
Analogies to World War n and
one can afford to miss . If you've
warn ings about Communist ex- already received much favorable
seen the rock musical "Ha ir "
pansion elsewhere are mislead - comment on their Parent 's Day
or know anything about its "app
er
f
ormance
this
year
'
s C oncert
,
ing, especially when they ignore
peal
" you won ' t want to be lef t
Choir
should
prove
exceptional
.
the salutary evidence at Comout
o
f
the excitement which w ill
The
concert
will
be
conducted
munist debacles , as in Ghana
end
the
Concert Choir 's Pops
this
year
in
a
very
informal
atand Indonesia . Th e war under
Concert
as
they do several of
mosphere
with
many
popular
inexaminat ion is in Vietnam , the
the
num
b
ers
whicon
h excite d N ew
the
novat
i
ons
a
dd
e
d.
reAmong
conduct in question in American ,
the opening
fork
Audiences
cent
pop
numbers
to
be
offered
^J
and the time is now . Let us
use October 15 for an honest , will be "Do You Know the Way flight of that musical .
full-scale apprai sal of these mat * To San Jose?" and "Scarbor- |Faculty , students and alumni
ters , neither slurring the oppos . ough Fair ," with many Individual . fare invited to enjoy an evening of
itlon needlessly nor chanting our soloists doing numbers by their >> I real fun as the Concert Choir
own litanies mindlessly . It would favorite pop composers . Nearly ^jj takes off on its greatest year .
be a ver y strange "practice of ,
democrac y, " indeed , to accept ¦
muzzling out of a terrified re . (
action to possible mlsinter pre. !
tat ion by an alien pro paganda
machine . I have more faith in
Amer ica than to believe she needs
my cowed silence, *
UDerna rd -J haw id J 4ere
Concert Choir Presents
John McLaughlin
English Department
MAROON AND GOLD
VOL. XLVIII
NO.
7
i
]
Michael Hock
¦dltor-ln- Chlt *
Business Manager
Managing Idltor
News Idltor
Co-Feature IdHors
Sports Mltor
Photograph y idltor
Copy Miter
Circulation Manager . . . . .
Advisor
dor Remsen
Bill TeWtworth
Martin Kleiner
Olnny Potter
AlUn Maurar
Clark Ruch
Jim Blrt
Kathy *«>r*Y
P«m Van Bpps
Mr. Mlchatl Stanley
ADDITIONAL ITAFP: Jacqula Peddoek, Terry Blaaa,
Leonard Houm, Barbara Memory, J«i l«e Oriowsk y, Janice
fcMndo lar, Ragar Savaga, •*¦ ¦«"•¦•£ O** ****
Manna Crane, Valma Avary, John ttu grin, Tom Funk.
All opinions axprtssad by columnists and faaturo writers,
Including latfars *t»>fha editor, aro not nacassarlly fnoo *of
Mils publication but these of tha> indivi duals.
[
;
i
I
I
I
I
the Brit ish theatre , Fletcher met
Shaw , who made a deep impres sion on him. Thinking about the
extra or dinar y character , humor ,
and prophetic genius of Shaw
during MY FAIR LADY, he cowceived the idea of recreatin ghim
on sta ge and set to work compiling a dramatic por trait. After
at last rece iving permission for
the use of the Shaw mate rial,
published and unpublished, from
the Shaw Estate , he presented
the show to Impr esario Sol Hu rok.
Hurok undertook to produce it in
Dublin and in New York , where
reviewers gave Fletcher 's performance the highest pr aise ,
ranking it with Holbrooks ' recreat ion of Mark Twain.
a passion r or living
Encouraged by the great popularity of BERNAR D SHAW , Flet cher is now touring a new program as well, A PASSION FOR
LIVING — a dr amatization of
poetr y and prose selections on
the theme of the spirit of man.
It is based on a program he per forme d at the Anta theatre , New
York , about which Whitney BoLton (Dean of the New York Crit ics Circle) commented "I own
myself entranced by his per formance. " I found not a single
flaw In this one golden evening. "
Fletcher
was subsequently invited to present the program at
the Librar y of Con gress, and
they reported that It was " One
of the finest literary pr ograms
ever pr esented. "
C BS-TV televised Par t III of
the pr ogram under the title THIS
UNCERTAIN AGE as a special
on the "Camera Three " series ,
and received the large st mall response In the history of the pro gram . After the broadca st, Rob ert Frost remarked that "the
future of poetry Is in safe hands
with men like Fletcher to impart It to the young er generation."
Bramwe ll Fletcher has per formed leading roles in 32 Broad way production s, appeared In
nearly every major dr amatic series on television and , In the
early part of his care er , completed 25 motion pictures;
Auspicious Beginning
Born in York shire , En gland,
one of seven childre n of strict
Calvlnlst parents , it took fierc e
determ ination and a good bit of
luck
to get himself out of
"clerk ing" lnaDlckensl an insur- .
ance firm in London to which
he had been "condemn ed/* as
he says , in his early teens , but
his beginning In theatre was auspicious. One afternoon he found
himself selected as a juvenile
player in the Royal Shakespeare
Company at Stratford -on-Avon.
Success came quickly after
that. At 19 he was starred as
"Martin " in the enormo usly successful Lond on production of
Chri stopher MorUy 's THUNDER
ON THE LEFT . Tht American
pr oduoer Ai Wood s saw the show
and offered him a contract to
come to Amerl oa to play on
Broadway in SCOTLAND YARD,
( continued on pate four)
SHH HR
I X-Coontry
tss pujj iilj
I
Last Thursday, a team of three
I sophs and four frosh runners
journeyed to Mille rsville State
College to participate in their
I first varsit y competition .
Fros h Finishes First
I
It was a dismal day with intermittent
showers putting both
I
: teams at a disadvanta ge from
¦ the start. But it didn't seem to
.
; effect Bloomsbur gfreshman Tim
i Waechter since he made goodhis
'¦ varsit y Cross Country debut by
i taking first place for the Husk; ies. Followingclosei ybehind Tim
was another freshman Terr y Lee
After the first weekend of Penn-1
of a Western Division fight it is who took third place for this
sylvania Conference action , the favored to win. Former Penn untr ied tea m of freshmen and
following conclusions can be
State star Al Jacks ' eleven will sophomores.
But in spite of the tre mendous
made:
host Lock Haven (0*1 and 1-1)
efforts
of these two runners the
and if Jacks is confident of vic— Only a giant upset can knock
Huskies
couldn't quite pull it out
West Chester off a one-way track
tory, he's hiding it well .
drop
ped
and
their opener 24 to 31.
to the Eastern Division title;
"We think Lock Haven has a
is the winner in
The
low
-score
— A wild scramble between de- good football team ," he said ,
The other three
Cross
Country.
fendin g champion California , "and the way we played (against
placers
were freshfor
the
team
undefea ted Clarion and surpris - Geneva) we feel anybody can take
eighth , and
man
Bob
Benslnger
,
ing Edinboro appears likely in us to t he cleaners ." Clarion
Silvettl
and
ores
Mike
sophom
blanked Geneva last Saturd ay
the West ern Division .
minth
and
tenth
reS
cott
R
o
g
ers
,
Games t his weekend are not night , 14.0.
spectively.
Bob Erdel jac had his usual
likely to change the picture .
Nobel's Hopes High
fine performance — the quarter *
West Chester (1-0 and 2-1),
In
spite
of this tou gh loss
back went 14-for-26 for 202-yards
coming off an exciting 36-21 nod
Coach
Noble
was ver y optimi stic
over defending conference co- and one TD — but whatconcern '
Kutztowar
d
the
meet
champion
East Stroudsburg , ed Jacks were the three fumbles , town on Saturday. against
His
optimism
hosts Millersville this Saturda y one interception and four 15-yard seemed to be well founded since
at Henderson High School field , penalties .
"We figured out a way to do the harr iers of BSC defeated
West Chester . The Ranis ' new
20 to 40.
stadium is not expected to be it (stop the drive) each time ," Kutztown by a score of
mainly
Again
tills
score
was
the
,
he
said
.
completed now for another month.
resu
l
t
o
f
t
h
e
tremen
d
ous
runn
ing
Shippensbur
g
(1
-0
and
0-2)
East Stroudsburg (0-1 and 0-2)
of
two
frosh.
Coming
in
first
will try to rebound at Kutz- moves into conference action for
the first time this Saturday at place with a new Kutztown course
town (1-0 and 1-X). The Bears
just mana ged to get by Millers - Slippery Rock (0-1 and 1-2) in recor d w as Terr y Lee, having
ville, 21-18, last Saturday in a the other Western Division con* beaten last week's w inner Tim
Waecht er who again ran a great
three-hour plus game pockmark- test .
race
and finished second. The
California (1-0 and 1-1) and
ed with interceptions and fumnext
man
across t he line was
Edinboro (1-0 and 2-1) are enbles.
Bob
Bentsinger
in fourth place,
"1 hope that (Bill) Dukett got gaged in non-conference scra ps
impr
oved
over his eighth
much
tasting
satisfying
league
after
all those good passes out of his
place
Scott R ogers
last
week.
victories.
s ystem ," commente d Kutztown
was
fifth
and
Charlie
Graham was
The Vulcans of California emcoach, Bob Kinderman . He saw
displacement
for
eighth.
Runnin
g
the Stroud quarterback complete ploying the spri nt outs ofquarterDufra
yne
ninth
BSC
were
Mike
,
,
back Bob Keys for most of their
nine of 13 against West Chester
tent
h
A
lso
K
efter
an
d
D
ave
.
,
in a seven-minute blitz in the 216-yards rushing, spanked Lock
running were Larr y Strohl and R .
second period and go 22-for-46 H aven , 25*0, last Saturday . EdinEckersier.
boro — the Western Division
for 246-yards and three TDs for
Coach Noble was very pleased
doormat a year ago — put on
t he game.
with
yesterda y's results and sees
a
surprising
display of power
Mansfield' s Stu Casterline will
a
bright
outlook for future meets ,
in
routing
Slippery
Rock , 40-13.
be cranking up for another big
pa
rtially
because form er fresh Waynesburg
is
at Califor passing day at Cheyney in the
man
star
Paul Pellitier will be
nia
this
weekend
while
Edinb or o
other Eastern Division game .
off
the
sick
list and running on
trave
led
to
Indi
ana.
CLARION 'S RECORD
Monday
.
Bloomsburg of the Easter n DiUNBLEMISHED
The team is now looking forClarion (0-0 and 3-0), the only vision also had a non-league game
ward
to their next meet against
with Adelphi this Frid ay night at
undefeated team in the 13-memSusquehanna
on Thursday. The
home .
ber confer ence , gets into the thick
harriers have never beaten Susquehanna , but then they had never
beaten Kutztown either up until
now. Now they 're looking for ward to the ir second big upset.
BSC Drops Third
Impressive First Half
Dismal Second Half
A great first half , and a dis- again good and the Huskie s went
asterous letdown in the second into the locker room with a 14-0
half , add up to the Huskies * third lead.
stra ight loss of the 1969 season.
I don't knowwhat hap pened durBSC put 14 points on the score- ing the break. Maybe the Husk ies
board before halftime , but then spent too much time patting them couldn't control the Adelphi selves on the back , maybe not.
ground ' game after the break. But , one thing for sure — Adelphi
Adelphi scored two touchdowns came out of the locker room to ¦
and a pair of two-point conver- play for a win.
sions to win the game 16-14.
Adelphi Scores
Good First Half
The P anthers too k the opening
The Huskies started off like kickoff and drove 72-yards , all on
gangbusters on the first play of the ground , to score. They lined
the game. Tom Schneider faded up as if to kick an extra p oint ,
back and hit midget Mike Kolo- but the Panther 's quarterback
jejch ick with a bomb for 56- Dick Funke took the pass from
yards to the Adelphi 25. But two center and flipped it to his end.
play s later butterfingers pre vail- Bob Wolf, in the endzone for a
ed and BSC turned the ball ' over two-point
conversion.
The
on a fumble.
Huskies now led by only six, at
. The Huskies took over on their ¦ 14-8.
own 39 after Adelphi failed to
And Again
score. Using a solid running atThen with 13:39 left in the
tack , they drove 61-yards into game, disaster struck and Adelpaydirt. The only completed pass phi scored again to take the lead .
during the drive was a 22-yard The Panthers took the ball and
bullet to Bob Warner from Sch- drove 57-yards to add the winneider. Schneider very nearly ning score. This drive , however ,
had a touchdown pass when Greg they crossed up the Huskies and
Berger made a diving catch , but threw a pass , Fun ke to Siegel,
be' was out of the back of the good for 23-yards and a fir st
endzone when he made the re- down on the BSC 11. Four runception. It was second and ten ning plays later the Panth ers
on the Adelphi's 19, but the baby scored and tied the Huskies at
bull , Paul Skrimcovsky , rattled 14 all. This attempt for a twooff runs of 9, 9, and 1-yard to point convers ion did not involve
score. Vedral' s extra-point at- any fancy faking. Adelphi lined
tempt was good, and the Huskies up for an offensive play, and
led 7-0. Much later in the first Funke rolled to his left to score
half , after having a drive snuff- and put Adelphi a ahead to stay .
ed outbyafumble on the Adelphi's 16-14.
12, the Huskies pounced all over
The Huskies must hustle to
the Adelphi punter to give the save themselves from a disaster BSC offense the ball onthe Panth - ous season. It will take a 100per
er' s 17. It was again Paul Skrim - cent effort form the entire tea m
covsky who provided" the muscle to forge several wins out of the
and blew through the Adelphia rema ining games of the season.
line for a 6-yard touchdown with I hope they start this weekend
3:04 left in the half. The PAT was against Cheyney.
Stay f or Hom ecoming
BSC vs West Chester
— FOR SALE —
SPINET PIANO
Girls ' Hockey Begins
Play This Week
The student body of BSC , aa
well as the girls of the field
hockey team , can be proud of
Miss Eleanor Wray , the hockey
coach. Very tew people realize
it , but ahe has a very impr essive
background ,
A graduate of Lake Erie College In Cleveland , Miss Wray
has been associated with field
hookey for 20 years . It wag at
Lake Erie that she learned the
game. In her varflty years she
played the full-back position. She
began coaching at Hidelbur g College, and her team pr oduced an
excellent record. Before accepting the coaching position at
Bloom , she also coached at Cart hage College in Illinois.
WHY?
When asked her opinion of why
play field hookey, Wra y regirls
.
plied, "I frel that tat reason girls
come out for field hookey Is be*
cause they get & chines to run .
They fr#l tha t they oan "runoff1
1
¦
i
¦
•>
¦
*¦
' ¦
'
'
'
*'
all their frustrations built up
throughout the day, and they enjoy this. " Miss Wray also feels
that the reason why men don 't
play the game Is beca use It Is too
rough; it's a running game and it
require s cooperation and stami na.
This year' s squad Is promi sing In the eyes of Miss Wray .
She has 18 hard -working girls who
pr actice from 3 to 5 daily . But
she needs more team members.
All in all, It looks like it's
going to be a good season for our
field hookey team . (And if you're
not doing anything on October 20
or 23 at 4 p.m., why not take In a
girls hookey game , Who knows ,
maybe you'll enjoy seeing girls
running around chasing a little
bau:>
Gir l's Field Hookey Schedule
Oct. 8-Mlserloordl 4 p,m, Away
4p,m, Away
Oct. 13-Wilkes
Oct. 20-Mansfleld 4p,m. Home
Oct. 23-fiusquehanna4p,m,Homt
Oot. 29-Bucknell 4 p,m, Away
Wanted , re asonable part y to
take over low monthl y payments on a spinet piano . Can
be seen locall y. Write Credit
Manager, P.O. Box . 35, Cortland, Ohio.
^4
^
BOOKS...
OVER 8000
YOUR DOLLAR
BUYS MORE AT A
BLOOM
BOWL
GOODWILL STORE
184 W. Main, ¦loomtbur g
I
If if • a book
we have it or we can get It
Greeting Cards
¦ ¦ ¦€ >
FUR OOAT
FOR THI
FOOTBALL 9AMI
- ^99 U p -
TITLES IN STOCK
.
WAFFLE
GRILLE
HENRIES
Card and Book Nook
40 W. Malp St.
*
I
t*
-
¦
'
i
1
I
1
'
'
'
¦
.
APO
Sponsors
Conference
Aviation Administration to detect
illegal border crossin gs, and aircraft equipped with electronic
sensing devices capable of sniffing poppy field from the sky.
Massive number of customs inspectors— the exact number is a
government secret— are posted
at 27 air ports in southwestern
United States , at 31 places along
the Mexican border , where all
motor vehicles and pedestrians
XI Lambda Cha pter , Alpha Phi
are now stopped around the clock
Omega , recent ly hosted the Secto under go 2-3 minute searches
tion 90 Conference of Local APO
for contraband.
Cha pters in the Alumni Room.
The cause for this increased
The conference was well-att endsurve illance— comprising t h e
ed with six cha pters representmost intensive drug crackdown in
ed; Alpha Beta-Penn 1 State , Eta
US history— is a 55 Iota-Millersvi lie, Iota Omicronrelease d with President Nixon*s
Gett ysbur g, Lambda Lambdablessings by the Special Presi Shippens bur g, Nu Delta-Lebanon
Invitations had been extended
dential Task Force Relatin g to
p
ter
XI
an
d
h
ost
c
h
a
Valley,
,
to approximately 3 ,650 students
Narcotics, Mar ijuana and DangLambda-Bloomsburg State Col- to atten d the President
's
erous Drugs .
lege. Advisor y personnel and sec- tion which was held at the RecepPresi tional staf f, including sectional dent 's
residence
Buckalew
chairman Stephen C . Hayden , P lace on Iightstre ,et Road
Sun,
were also present .
day
,
October
5
from
2:00
to
,
The main pur pose was to estab - 5:00 p.m.
lish inter chapter relationships ,
reception line was com(co ntinued from page two )
communication, and organization priThe
sed
of Dr . Rob ert J. Nossen,
through the formati on of a sec- president
of the college, and Mrs.
That play failed, but the result
tional committe e.
Nossen; Dr. John A. Hoch , Dean for Fletcher was a motion picof I nstruction, and Mrs. Hoch; ture contract with Sam Goldwyn
Elton Hunsinger , Dean of Stu- — in the golden Hollywood of
dents, and Mrs. Hunsinger;
the 30's.
George Turner , Pre sident of the
He had already starred in
Faculty Association , and Mrs.
England in CHICK , the first
Turner; and two members of the
Edgar Wallace movie, and in the
College Community Government
first British talkie , TO WHAT
Association — J eff Prosseda ,
RED HELL with Dame Sybil
President , and J ean Reese, Sec- Thorndike . His early Hollywood
retar y.
successes include such favorites
Phi Sigma Pi, national honor
Following the rece ption, reas
BAFFLES with Ronald Colfratern ity, will meet Wedn esday , freshments were serve d to the
man
, SVENGALI with John Bar Oct. 8 at 7 p.m. in Hartline Scistudents on the spacious lawn ry more, and THE MUMM Y with
ence C enter, room 79. All mem- west of Buckalew Place . This
Boris Karloff .
bers are asked to attend since
was the first time that the Pres H owever, it is in the theatre
this is the deadline for dues .
ident 's Recption has been held in
that Fletcher has concentrated
this location; it was formerly held
his talents . He starred in WISeach year in Centennial Gymnasi TERIA TREES with HelenHayes ,
um.
LADY
WINDERMERE 'S FAN
with Cornelia Otis Skinner , THE
DOCTOR 'S DILEMM A w i t h
The BSC Psyc hology Depart*
Katharine Cornell , OUTWARD
ment announced that they will
BOUND with Laurette Taylor ,
host the Central Pennsylvan ia
THE CIRCLE with Tallulah Bank Psycholo gy Sorie s. Dr. Vytauhead, WITHIN THE GATE S with
tas Bieliaustcas , Chairman of the
Lillian Glsh , CANDIDA w i t h
psychology department at Xav*
Olivia de HavUland , PYGMALION
Elton Huns inger , Dean of Stu- ier College , will be the guest
with Carol Channing , GOODBYE
dents, has been Invited to serve
MY FANCY with Ann Harding ,
speaker. H* will speak on "Mot National Council for . Accredi - nesday, October 8, ( tonight ) at
on tour.
tation of Teacher Education . The S p.m. in Hartlin e Science CenHaving discovered the pleasure
team will visit Newark State ter , Roo m 134.
and challenge of performing to
College at Union , New J ersey ,
college audiences ,
Bramwell
October 5-8. Seven other prom Fletcher takes a great Interest in
inent educators , represen tingsix
the concerns of youth today and
different states , will serv e on
in educat ion. While on campu s
the NCATE committee . Dr. Irv he enjoys being part of the life
ing S. Starr , Dean of the School
of the college. His many inform(cont inued fro m page one )
of Education , Hart ford Univer al talks with students gave him
mari juana , Navy patrol boats in
sity, Hartford , C onnecticut, will
the idea of offering a series of
be the Chairman of the Evalua - the Gulf of Mexico, Air Force
lively seminars on English litera pur suit planes , a web of radar
tion Team ,
ture and on theatre , to be cliscreens installed by the Federal
maxed by a performance of eith Th* Art Rental Collect ion,
sponsored by CGA, will hang
its collection in Husky Loun ge
today, Wednesday, October 8.
There v/lU be approximatel y
fifteen works in the collecti on.
A'l are available to studen ts for
rental. The works may bo selected by stud ent* to hang In
their rooms or apartments for
the remainder of the term . Th*
rental fee? range from $.75 to
$2.50. The collection will hang
throu gh Saturday, October 11.
Receptio n
^naiv
Phi
Sigma Pi
Hunsinger
Moonli ghts
Intercept
Buy Tour Mums ler the Homecoming Game !
Price Is $1.25
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Center St. 784-6460
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Everyday and Sunda ys Too
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Exit 36
OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT FRI. & SAT.
Sundays & Dail y — ) 1 a.m. to 10 p.m.
GIFTS
SECOHO WO WEEK !
\v glliliiiliillwillliilll
'II h l I IllliitilliilMlI
Jet. of Route 11 and Interstate 80
BLOOMSBURG,PA.
COLUMBIA
room for a 50 ,000 reductio n.
Total draft calls for this year
will be only about 2 percent lower than in 1968.
I n effect, what appears as
benevolence to the young men who
might have been tak en in November and December is no more
than an announce ment that they
will not be called then becaus e
they have alread y gone. They
were pressed into service as
part of earlier quotas.
The President also . announce d
on Frida y his intention to move
forwar d on draft proposals which
will establis h a random system
of selecti on, to put chance in
the place of decisions presently
made by some 4,000 local draft
boards with the inspiration and
guidance of Selective Service Director Lewis Hershe y. The period of prime exposure to induction would be reduce d from as
much as seven years to twelve
months.
It is impossible to respond
negativel y to such a "proposal .
Strategy Will Fail
Indeed , from the standpoint of
If that is the strategy it is
the eligible pool of man power, bound to fail. It .amounts to a
lust about any change in the grave miscalculation on both the
Selective Service System would motives and the perception of
be an improvement. The present
those who seek a change in policy.
system seems to rest on the They object not so much beassum ption that exposure to com- cause of personal costs , tnit bepulsor y military service , Includ - cause they believe in the Id eals
ing a war whieh most Americans for which they have been told
now regard as a blunde r , is for this countr y stands. They can
some reaso n a health y process see no legitimate interest in
for youn g Americans. General Vietnam which could possibly
Hershey 's efforts to use the draft justify the loss of 40,000 lives
as a punitive device— without the or even the r isk of a single addelays and complications of due ditional American . They can see
•process— place it even more-m" no interest which demands
that
sharply in conflict -with the fun- we neglect crushing problems at
damental ideals of a free society. home while laying billions of dolNo one who believes in those lars at the feet of a corrupt
ideals can find grounds for ob- military government 10 000
ject ion to the chan ges planned by miles away, and they .can ,see
the President.
no reason why a nation founded
G overnment Dictates
liberty and professing human
But here again the illusion of on
dignit y as its goal should exmeaningful action outweighs the
involuntary service from
substance. The adjustments an- tract
any of its citizens .
nounced on Friday leave intact the
most pernicious single aspect
The draft will not be accept able until it is gone . The war
er A PASSION FOR LIVING or in Vietnam will not be accepta BERNARD SHAW. His talks have ble until it is over.
been a tremen dous success with
We have waited too long on
both students and faculty. He
both.
mana ges to communicate his own
intense love of poetry in particu lar , which prompted one educa - r
FETTERMANS "\
tor to pronounce that "In his four
BARBER SHOP
I
days here he made more converts than Billy Graham could
I
— QUALITY —
have, and the echoes are still
Hill
I
.Foot of ColUfl .
being heard! " (Univer sity
of
J
Bloom tbur g Pi.
Miami 's John Walker Powell) .
^
|ii n
iu
iii
18W««t Main Strtet
I
of the Selective 8<*rvice System.
With or witoewt the change ,-thousands of youngAmerican men each
year, will be compelled , willing
or riot, to serve in the armed
forces. Their right to liberty ,
their r ight to follow pursuit s of
the ir own choosing, will be
denied. Their occupations will
be determined not by the incentives required to attract man power in the competitive market ,
but by the dictates of intrusive
governme ntal authority.
Mr. President , it has been
widely speculated that the two
steps ann ounced last Friday are
part of an attem pt to defuse
youthful opposition , to the war
in Vietnam.
I n combinationwith the partial
troop withdrawls which are now
under way, it has been suggest,
ed that the attem pt to beautif ythe
and to briefly limit Its
draft
effect will muffle the voices which
are calling for a prompt end to
our involvement in Vietnamese
affairs.
from page two )
(continued
THE
Miller Office
Supply Co.
They'll B# Sold By The Women 's B Club Outold * HuikySlturda y Morning Botwotn 8 and 12 O'clock
Draft Adj usMttfFs
^.
ii
WEEK DAY SHOWS 7100-9:00
mmmm
V
iWltiBR
l^SJ
.j ^
J
Harry Logan
We Qatar To Everyone and Serve Only Choice
C HA RCOAL BROILED STEA KS
Fin e J ewelry
CHOPS , BEEF-BURGERS
Repairing
SANDWICHES & SALADS
AND
Your J twihr Away from Homt
5 W. Maim St,
BloomsbOro
Phone 784-7837
PAUL DIETER, Prop.
Media of