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VOL. XLVIII — NO. 9

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*

^_

BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE

.^^ r

WEDNE SDAY, OCTOBER IS, 1969

CALENDAR
Thursday, Octobe r 16
Frosh Footba ll — Bucknell
Friday, October 17
Dead Heat on a Merry-GoRound
Carver — 9:00 P.M.
Saturday, October 18
Nobody 's Children
fivm — 9:00 P.M.

MO BE
Moves

Members of the Stud ent Mofrom
Committees
bilization
Dickinson College and several
other area schools will conver ge
on Carlisle on October 15 at
5 p.m. f or a mass marc h throu gh
town and past the U.S. Army War
College and -a rej apama rch by
'. '^if'
candl elight .
Officials of the War College had
ear lier refused to allow to join
with officers station ed at Carlisle Barracks in a dialogue on
American values and priorities.
In c letter dated October 6,
1969, C omman dant G. S. EckThis year' s cheer leading squad
hardt (Maj . Gen. USA) stated tc
the Dickinson College Student
is composed of eight girls . They
are : Captain Erva Benjamin from
Mobilization Comm ittee C5MC),
to
deny
necessa
ry
I
find
it
Towanda,
Pa ., majoring in Ele*
"...
your requests... to hold grou pdis- mentar y Phys . Ed .; Debbie Crone
from Allentown , also an Elemen cussion with our personnel ."
agree to tary Phys . Ed . major ; Sue Fich Eckhardt
did
Gen.
adults , $.50 for childr en, and a
representater from Langhorne , majoring in
special 10 per cent discount for a meeting with threeinsisting
that
tives
of
the
SMC
,
Elementary Art; Maryann Hart ,
groups of 10 or more . Mail order
presentatives
no
re
there
be
man from Bloomsburg, majoring
"...
tickets must include a self-adpresent
"
of
the
news
media
....
in Elementary Phys . Ed .; Rita
dressed stamped envelope.
R . May from Mount Joy , major ing
Speaking
for
the
students
,
The Players will present a
Marcson expressed in Business Education; Sandy Jo
colorful and delightful produc - Anthony
grave disappointment over the McClure from Troy , majori ng in.
t ion, and all our theater-going
War College, but Special Education — Speech Corfriends are cordially invited to decision of the
Mobiliz
ation leaders
added
that
rect ion; Kath y Novak from Stowe ,
atten d this musical comedy for an
to meet private * majoring in Secondary Education ,
would
be
willing
enjoyable evening of entertain *
ly with the Commandant.
Sociology; and Sandy Tr icoskle
ment .
any acts from Shamokln , majoring in Sec*
plannin
g
are
not
"We
Per formance dates will be Occivil disobediondar y Education .
tober 23, 24 , and 25 at 8:18 of violence or
"but
we
Marcs
on,
"
said
ence
,
p.m. in Haas Auditorium .
feel compelled nonetheless to enAll students may have two free
gage in some demonstration ditickets with their identification
recte
d toward th is symbol of
car d.
Amer ican military presence in
Vietnam ." Lead ers expect approximately 1,000 marchers , at
least 200 of the m coining from
l-'roQra m
Dickinson , Housing for 600 is
y
students
being made available b
and area res idents to those who
PR OGRAM FOR OCT OBER IB
wish to remain overni ght .
TEACH-IN
(ACP) - COLLEGIAN , KanOther activities at Dickinson
sas State, Manhattan. Kansas . that day include addresses by
Carver Hall — 9;0O a.m., Open ,
"Freshmen
women register Dr. Howard L . Rubendall , college
ing
Lecture.
here ." the sign outside Ahearn
president , and others , as well
Lectur e Hall (Hartline
Ouster
Field House read.
as movies on Southeast Asia.
134)

10:00
a.m., Historical
And during registration , apWar .
Approach
to
the
proximately 280 freshmen stu- seum durin g registration and
Hartline
72
- 10:00 a.m.,
dents filled out cards requestin g maybe this was J ust anot her tech gical
Warfare
L PropaPsycholo
personal Inform ation about them - nicality. And than was no fine
ganda
.
selves.
print to read explainin gthe cards
Haas Auditorium — 12:00p.m.,
Most of the m didn 't ask why ao they usually didn't ask ,
Speeches .
Keynote
filling
out
3x0
note
they were
But when they did ask, they
Lectu re Hall — 3:00
Custer
of
IBM
cards.
Nor
cards Instead
were told . The Informati onwas
p.m., Political & Economic As*
did. they wonde r why they were going to be used lor dates . And
listing their name , home and right now that dat a data Is on pacts of the War; 4tOO p.m.,
Philoso phical Outlook ; 7:00p .m.,
school addr esses, height , hair ill* at the Sigma Nu fra ternit y
Student Worksho p (Pa nel Discus*
& eye color , sororit y and where house.
they like to go on dates. .
The table was sponsored by lion).
Carver Ha ll - 8:00 p.m.,
Force of habit? After all.
(conti nued Wi pasi four )
Movies & Discussi on,
they'd filled out cards ad nau»

Mary Sunshin e
Set for Pick-up

The box office is now open at
BSC for the Bloomsburg Players
first production : Little Mary Sunshine . Tickets will be sold from
9 a.m . to 12 , and 1 p.m. to 4
p.m. every day except Saturday
and Sunday, and can be obtained
by calling 784*4660 ext. 317 or by
coming to the box office in Haas
Auditorium . Admission prices
will be as follows: $1.00 for
The BSC Ps ychology Club
will meet Wednesday aft ernoon ,Octob«r 15, at 4 p.m. in
Room 17, Ben Franklin , to
eloet five st udent officer s
and a faculty advisor. Off*
Ices to ba filled are President, Viet-President , Sec retary, Corresponding
Secreta ry, ind Treasurer.

^j r relan d
Dr . Ral ph R . Ireland , profes *
sor and Chairman of the Department of Sociology, has an article
entitled , "The Care and Educ ation of Preschool Nonwhites In
the Republic of South Africa ,"
in the October , 1969 issue of
YOUNG CHILDREN ,' the official
journal of the National Association for the Education of Young
Children. The article deals with
the effect of apartheid on the
organization and curriculums of
nurser y schools and creches for
nonwhitei , particularly the Bantu
,
people s,
. . ."

Date
Data

Cheerlea ders

^Jea clt - ^rn

The new 1969-70 freshm en
squad , which was chosen on Sep-"
tember 15, is composed of the following girls: Susan Krum from
Bloomsburg, majoring in Elementary Phys. Ed .; Kathleen Molnar from Kulpmont , major ing in
Secondary Education ; Pamela
Hamstra from Bloomsburg, majoring in Elementary Math; Bobbi
Wynn from Sunbury , majoring in
Elementar y Education; Theresa
Waskie from Bloomsburg, majoring in Elementary Education; and
Noreen Venn from Shamokin ,
majoring in Elementary Phys .
'
Ed .

Letters
tj untker

Kebuti

Dear Colleague:
Tact and good taste normally
prevent
academic colleagues
from carrying their disagree ments into a public forum. Since ,
however, you chose to attac k me
in THE MAROON AND GOLD , I
shall reply the same way.
Your ' appeal for "an honest ,
fullscale appraisal " of the Vietnam question on October 15
seems cur ious , because so man y
people opposed to the war have
chosen October 15 as the ¦
day to
discuss it. Obviously the Intent
f or that dat e is not mere debate
but opposition to our government 's policies. No euphonious
phr aseology can cover up that
fact .
On the day after publication of
your let t er , the Communist Vietname se negotiators in Paris published an encouragement to
Americans to put pressure on
President Nixon and to use October 15 for such public acts .
Does that not tell you something
about whose side you are on?
You claim I smeared you by
claiming that demonstrators
against our Vietnam war effort
are playing the Communist game .
I never claimed that all people
whose opinions on our Far East
commitments are adverse are
therefore
Communists. I am ,
however, saying that many are
dupes of propaganda and that
many more play unwittingly into
Communist hands . If you are as
stron gly anti-Communist as I am ,
I would suggest that you reexamine your stand throu gh
assiduous listening to Communist
rad io stations and reading Com munist literature . It might teach
you something about how Communists use well-meanin g libera ls.
As for identif ying me with McCarth yism , I think you engaged
in the ver y same smear tac ti cs
of which you falsely accused me .
Contrary to your statement , I
never made blizarre or irresponsible charges but I tend to
take people's words for their
intentions . It is facile though glib
and childish to call any opponent
of Communis m a McCarth yite.
I would suggest that such tactics
are unwort hy of academic debate .
The reason that our Vietnamese war bears some ana logy
to the F rench effort there in
1946-54 is that the Paris govern ment found itself facing a populace misled by demagoguer y and
pro- Communist prop aganda carefully manipulated to make France
fail . French law prohi bited sending draftees to Vietnam . Only
volunteers and Foreign Legionaires cou ld be sent . And France
failed , j ust as Amer ica is bound
to fail if the enemies of our
cause succeed in ending the draft
before the end of the war. Uncle
Ho needed his cohorts of snakedancers and window-smasher s In

MAROON
~
VOL. XLVIII

H I cJLau lyxlux

France just as hitr successors
need demonstr ato rs and student
str ikers in Amer ica. Without
them , they are bound to lose.
Well-intentioned men have always refused to believe in the
aggressi ve purpose of their pros pective conquerors . Isocrates
was not
believed in fourth centur y Greece with his warnings
against Philip of Macedon until •
Phili p swept down upon the Greek
sta t es . Cha mberlain and Daladier
¦
¦
¦
¦
thou ght
they ¦
could do
busines
s
with Hitler , and Benes believed
he could coexist with Stalin.
Dubeck compro mj&ea witii Ko&y
gin. Will well-intentioned liber als
ever learn ?
Yours sincerely ,
Hans Karl Gunther , Ph .D.
Professor of History

~"

NO. 9

Business Mana ger
Mana ging Editor
News editor
Co-Peature Idltors

dor Rs>mson
¦• . Bill Ttlttworth
Martin Klein er
Olnn y Fetter

Sports idltor
Photograph y Idltor
Copy idltor
Circulation Manager

Clerk Ruch
Jim BIH
Kathy *0>rt V
Pam Van Ippt
Mr . Mlehao l Stanley

Allan Maurer

ADDITIO NAL STAFF: Terr y Blast , L eona rd Hou se, Barbare M«mo ry, Janice Orlowsk y, Jsnies Schlndeler, Dave
Keller , Diann » Crane, Velma Avery, John St u rg rln , Tom
Punk , Bob Schul ti .
All opinions expressed by columnists and feature writers,
Includin g lettor s*to>the editor , ore not necessarily rhoe * of
this pufclleaHon but those of the Individuals.

it

v

$

*

. Don't you know you ean count
me out (in) US #2
by Blast

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Must be a Boxing Game!

Forum

Editor 's note: The M&G cites
a necessity for free expression .
Therefore , we are instituting the
oLetter of ~Jkank &
FORUM so that BSC students may
Dear Mr . Gorre y (Superin - have a column in which to exten dent , Building Ground s):
pre ss their opinions . Send your
On behalf of the PlanningCom - contributions to FORUM , c-o
mittee for the 23rd Annual Con- M&G , Box 301.
ference for Teachers and AdIt has been stated , over an d
ministrators an d on be hal f of
over, that there exists a good
the College, I wish to extend
deal of student apathy on the
our most sincere thanks and ap- campus of BSC . By this crit preci ation to you and the mem- icism one can assume that the
bers of your entire staff for
accusation is dire cted toward
exemplary supporting services in
the disinterest in , the non-par ticipa tion In, and the lack of atconnection wi th the C onference
held on our campus Saturday , tendance at the various activities
October 4, 1969 .
sponsored by or at the college
The quiet , effecient services
— be it an educational activity
ren dere d by y our work crews or a social activity such as
dances , concerts , «tc .
were a major contribution to the
outstan ding success of the ConAPATHY PRESE RVED
ference.
Perhaps it would be appro Let me add my own personal
priate at this time to point out
thanks for a job well done!
why SOME of this so-called
Sincerel y yours,
"apat hy " exists . It is approDr . Emory W . Rarig , Jr . priate now because this past
Director , Business Division weekend was homecoming. Naturally (and as usual) many students home«went or locked them (Sommu nicaf ion
selves
in their dorm room . Why ?
'
\~J aP
It appears that we have with us
on this college campus sever al
Dear E ditor ,
profe
ssors who are hell-bent on
What is wrong with the comPRESE
RVING an apathetic BSC
munications at our college? When
(perhap
s because they them our s t udents leave th e campus an d
selves are of this faith) . By thi s,
move out to a student teaching
center , are they suddenly forgot - one may stand behind his
whiskers and horns and snicker ,
ten ?
If I remember correctly, we "Te-hee class , they 'l l be a test
were re quired to put our STU- on Monday!" — all of which you
DENT-TEACHI NG address on our take in stride because of the devil
re gistratio n cards . Wh at ever he is. But then there is anhappened to those cards ? If those other prof who seems to truly
add resses aren 't used at all , why believe that the only things that
do we have to waste the time to exist in this world are his two
classes — and so — in wanting
write it down on all the cards?
to do them both justice , claims
We , as student -teachers are
that
both tests will be given on
supposed to get involved in the
Now, actuall y , he
Tuesday
.
extra- curricular activities of the
seems
li
ke
a
nice f ellow, so you
school and community in which
we are doing our teaching . But approa ch him with the facts:
homecoming: which takes up Friyet , when we do this , we are completely out of touch with the col- day night , all day Saturday, and
all day Sunda y (and if you're
lege community . When my mothworking
on the M&G you may
er called about tickets for the
well
scratch
the whole weekBNE for homecoming weeken d,
end
because
not
even the busishe was informed that everyone ,
ness department sends an y of
the ir "expert" typists to help
out!); and of course you also
AND GOLD

Michael Hock
Editor-in-Chief

Advisor

Shelf
*

including student teachers , got
notices in their MAIL BOXES
over the weekend and that all the
tickets were sold. But, what happens to the student teacher who
didn 't happen to go home that
partic ular weekend? How were we
to find out about getting tickets
for the concert ? I think it is
pretty bad when the student teachers are completely left out of the
college community due to a breakdown in communications . After
all , we are still students of the
college and we have a ri ght to be
kept informed . But apparently
the rest of the college doesn 't
feel that way! Maybe the students
who are still on the campus should
give some thought to this because you may find yourself in the
same position some time in the
near future . How would you like)
to be forgotten?
Evelyn Lweeey,
Student Teacher in
Mont gomery Count y

point out that there is already
one test scheduled for Monda y.
What is the nice guy 's res ponse ?
He said that we shall discuss
the matter . The discussion lasted no more than a matter of seconds . It consisted of one proclamation by the prof : the test will
be Tuesday . He explained that
after having "considered " the
situation , he believes that it will
be "good exercise " for you.
ATTITUDE PRE VAILS
This is by no means the only
example. On the contrary! On
the basis of the number of students who have experienced this
condition , it seems that this attitude is quite prevalent —or
at least was during the past week.
Perhaps this accounts for the
miniature audience at Bramwell
Fletcher' s excellent presenta tion of "Bernard Shaw."
Thus it seems that if you
your
don 't ta k e part in
share of act ivities , you're apath etic; and if you do, you may
flunk .
In writing this it is not suggested that there are too many assignments or tests given. It Is
suggested that the faculty consider the fact that studen ts doi
have more than one class f or
which to prep are , and a college
environment to enjoy — if they
find the time !

Memorial
Awards
The Joe
Awards:

Griffiths

Memori al

(He ain't not dead , but it don 't
matter much .)
Mike Hock and Allan Maurer Award s Committee.
To Hans Karl Gunther , One

Ba gel , no reason , we just think

he's earned it.

To James Perc y for not getting
elected to the Profess ional Affairs Committee , one loser but ton.
To George Turner , one copy of
Roget 's Thesaurus , for saying
"ram ifications" 9,000 times per
class.
To Bill Sander s, one Stan Ra kowsky; he deserves it.
To Stan Rakowsky , one Bill
Sanders; he deserves it.
To Glo Wilson, COA ParUmentarian , one copy of Robert 's
RULES OF ORDER , since She

claims she's too poor to buy one
and the CGA doesn't own a copy.
To Craig Hlmes, a can of John son's wax, or a toupee, his choice,
for carr yingpolarisation to Its
epitome.
A freesubscritplon of the latest
(continued on page four !

Don*t You Know That You Can
Count Me Out (J in) - US 2
By Blass
" This is my rifle , this is my
gun, one is for fightin g, one is
for fun. " The cover of US 2,
the "Back to School Issue/' Is of
long-haired Commie hippie yipple
kri pple freaks , armed and maybe
read y for anything the adminis trators can throw at them. Much
as I hate to adm it it , after
pannin g the first copy of the
paperback mag, US Is spread ing. It 's se llin g very well, even
at the atrocious price of $1;
an d somet i mes the e ditors are
flooded by a weekly 50-60 manu scr ipts from jmder -30-typewrit ers , poets , an d some who don't
even have cate gories yet. And US
is improving ; 2's cover says
that this book must be read , it's
cru cial an d there are some thin gs
that have to be said in here , so
pick it up and see where our
heads are at. And this time it' s a
worthw hile experience; there 's
not a bad piece in the mag.
THE NEW 50's...
Fir st , there ' s Richie Goldstein 's "The New *5O's: Bad
Moon Rising ," a prophecy of the
new roc k , whatever that may be,
which the NEXT Beatles and
Stone s will be doing. Says Goldste in , " ...expect the first 'author ized' superstar of the seventie s to
be a young man who is straight
enough to appear at Billy
Graham 's crusa de." Trouble is,
he could be right , and he goes
on to prove it with NASHVILLE
SKYLINE and Dylan "singing
about the de-mystification of pop
and the rise of a new cool."
There 's even a picture of the US
cover with a banner underneath
reading "Why is this man smiling? " Brr.
Then there 's Toby Thom pson's
odyssey to Hibbing , Minn., his report on Dylan 's school da ys ,
old girl friends , Mom , Jewish ness , college frat house , W oody
Guthrie worshi p, and his hush
puppies. (Hush puppi es?) And it's
kind of fun and scary too , to see
a '58 class photo of the god
when he was still meek and mild
Robert Zimmerman , ri ght along side Barbara Yeshne and Betsy
Zozgornlk . Good ol' Barb and
Betz , where are the y now?
And then th ere 's the well-wrlt ten but trivial stuff; Paul Williams boring me again , with "The
Great Astrology Essay " ; Victor
Moscoso 's cartoons , which , as
usual , I don't understand or care
to; " Hums ," poems by Tom
Clark ; Tom Nolan on "Leary in
Limbo/ * which is where he can
stay; and an amus ing William
Routt primer on Robert Mitchum .
(Mitchum , Smitchum , Rich ard
Burton 's my man . I don't think
too much of his clothes , but boy
would I like his Taylor.) Now
we're really Into the stuff which
demands readings :
Marv in Garson ' s "Whole Head
Catalogue ," a primer on what
to do until the Revolution comes.
"The solution Is not to slow down
the destruct ion of the old but to
speed up the constr uction of the

new. "

"M y Schools A Composition ,"
by Perry Brandst on, 12-year sold , who says "Sex and all the
related topics are not discussed
In Hygtne becau se Mr. B. would
be embaraased ." Twelve year s

old I

Fred Gardne r' s interview with
Robert Chrl stgau. organiser of
"Resistance in the New Action
Army/ '
Nikkl Giovanni 's "On Being
Asked Wh at It 's Like To Be
Blaok. " honest , brief , and so
trus it hurts .
"Up from Radicalisms A FtmU
(continued on page four )

If

Rams Wreck
Homecom ing II •••

West Chester State College
rolle d-up an Impressi ve 249
yards on the ground to defeat
BSC 38-13 tefor e a sellout homecoming crowd.
RAMS BUILD LEAD
The Rams kept the Huskies
bottled-u p In their own territory
through most of the game as they
piled-up a big lead . The Rams
built a 31-0 lead before the Hu skies broke into the scor ing column.
A 67 yard drive that req uired
9 plays opened the scoring for
the Hams. Following the successful PAT they led 7-0.
An attempted quick-kick that
was blocked at BSC' s 26 led
to the second score . Four plays
put the ball on the BSC 14 yard
line. From the 14 quarterback
Forchetti hit Bob Fisher on a
quick slant-in. It appeared that
Fisher never gained control of
the ball
, but when Dunkleberger
fell on the ball in the endzone it
was ruled a touchdown .
Before the end of the first
half , West Chester scored another touchdown and a 36 yard
f ieldgoal by Rick Stevenson to go
into the locker room with a 240 lead.
Stalled temporari ly in the second half , the Rams hit paydirt
on an 11 yard pass from For ehetti te halfback Randall Wyn nings. The touchdown was setup when Paul Dunkleberger returned a BSC punt to their own
38.
BSC ON THE SCOREBOARD
The Huskies finally got in the
scoring column when John Davis
intercepted a Forchetti pass at
the R ams 40 and returned it to
the 20. On the first play from
scr immage, Tom Schneider hit
tight end Bob Warner for the
touchdown. Ernie Vedral added
the PAT to make the score 31-7.
With 3:03 left in the game, Tom
Schneider scored on a QB sneak
from the one. The drive covered
74 yards and requir ed 10 plays.
The attempt at the two point conversion failed leaving the score
31-13.
West Chester capped the scor ing with a 10 yard touchdown pass
from Dilts to Wolfr um with only
6 seconds showing on the clock.
The placement was successful
making the final score 38-13.

By BOB SCHULTZ
This year I have been watching
our football games in the capacity
of just another BSC stud ent. A
well-informed and Interested student, but I'm no longer watching
the m as sports editor of the M&G.
Wa tching the games from this
viewpoint has its advantag es.For
one thing I no longer have to compute the yardage or ' catch the
player 's number on each play.
Also, I am able to hear the stu dent body 's opinion of the game
and team.
COMPLIMENTS?
W ith the season foorwweek-old
the student opinion has been all
thu mbs down. I have yet to hear
a complimentary re mark concerning our gridiron efforts.
Generally I don 't like to make
excuses. It is difficult to say
we should be 3-1 if.....But after
four losing efforts I would like
to voice some of those ifs.
ONE UNLUCKY TEAM
Despit e their record we have
a good team. An unlucky team
per haps , but a good team.
Lock Haven beat us 28-25 in
our opener. We were at full
stren gth with one exception —
Ernie Vedral , our PAT man ,
was not in the game. Although
we lost on the extra points it
still took some freak y TD's to
beat us. Anytime a defensive
back intercepts ap ass, then dro ps
it into the opponent 's arms when
the opponent is lying on the
ground , I would call it freaky.
Along came the Mansfield
game . Despite a great game by
the best quarterback in the league we were still in the- game
earl y in the fourth quarter. In
fact we were walking all over
the Mounties. But a pass that
just missed being a TD was intercepted and we ran out of time
and momentum.
DON'T UNDERESTIMATE FOE
Our first home game was
against a reportedly weak Adelphl
team. Unfortunatel y Adelphl had
never subscribed to that theory .
We with a 14-0 lead . That lead
could have easily been 28-0, but
for several ifs. W e came out
for the second half as flat as
a team can be. But again , althou gh the team real ly only played half the game ,
it took a

BSC Harriers
Down MSC & SU;
Outrun by LHSC
Last Thursda y BSC faced Susquehanna Universit y in the first
home cross-countr y meet of the
season. The Huskies are using
a 4.93 mile course located on
the old golf course. At 4 p. m.
the meet starte d and by 4:32
the victory was completed. Taking f irst place and establishing
a recor d 27:31 for the new course
was Tim Waechter. In second
place was last week's winner
Terry Lee, runnin g only a few
seconds behln g the leader, Scott
Rogers was the third man across
the line for the Huskies and was
In fifth place. He was followed
by Charlie Graham , seventh , and
Larry Strohl coming through with
some dutch running with ninth
place. The final score showed the Huskies winning It 24 to
31.
Due to sickness and injuries
among some of the team members Coach Nobel found himself
with only six runners to go on
the tri p to Look Haven on Fri day for a double-duel meet with
Lock Haven and Mansfield.
In the mtet against Mansfield

the harriers demorali zed them '
by a score of 21-35, Terry Lee
placed first , with Tim Waechter
In second place. Scott Rogers
was fifth , Bob Bentzing er sixth ,
Charlie Graham seventh , and
Dave Keiter tenth.
In the meet against Lock Haven
the Huskies were not so fortun ate . They dropped the meet 2236.
.
Terr y Lee and Tim Waechter
ran a good race , but not quite
good enough to beat the league's
two leadin g runners from Lock
Haven. Coach Nobel expects to
make a much stron ger showing
against Lock Haven in the championships. Tim and Terry are
bidin g their team for another
shot at the Lock Haven top run ners.
The Huskies now have four
home meets in a row, startin g
with ' a meet against Kings Col*
lego on Monda y. Coach Nobel
plans to sweep these next four
and get the momentum going
to sweep right through the cham pionship! next month at Look

Haven.

No. 47—Bob Warner Heads for the End Zone.

12 Second s to the half—BSC fwnMo loads fo S awnl WCSC points.

freak y and a deba table play to
beat us. Adelphi 's first score
came after the ir QB kept the
drive alive by completing a pass
while his eyes were shut and
he was runnin g backwards. The
debatable play came with the
score tied 14-14. The play was
a rollout for two points aiid was
Somehow
perfectly defensed.
Adelphi 's QB mana ged to fall
onto the flag marking the corner of the endzone and was given cred it for the two poin ts.
ASK THE OPPONENT
Students feel that the West
Chester game was a smear job .
Ask a West Chester player how
easy the game was? But, West
Che ster got all the breaks , put
us in the hole early , and was

^

able to dominate the enti re game.
If they had been forced to start
from deep in their own territor y
earl y in the game it would have
been a completelydifferent game.
All we have is a ledger that
reads 0-4, That is all many
people look at and it is all tha t
counts. But it doss not mean
that we have a poor team. Support the team. Be there when
the breaks star t to go our way.
Be objective the next time you
watch a football game.

29c A up
SKIRTS
39c A u p

Mon. \

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BLOOM
BOWL

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Mill er Office

• FMNCE MATCHAMUI
• aiZAKTH AROEN
• HELENA RUBENSTEIN
• DANA
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• MAX FACTO*
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Closed 1i30 to 3i00 p.m.
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486 W. MAIN ST

Pretcripf/on Specialist

GOODWILL STORE
154 W. Main, Bleemsbur f

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Thurs. >
Sat.
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Closed Wednesday
reasonably priced

Eppley's |
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Regular and King Site

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BLOOMSB URO

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ISC
IFC

Memorial
Awards...

(contin ued from pago two)

chain letter to Deake Porter , for
consumer interes t.
unabiding
' To Mrs. Donavan , a b ox of
Tiparil los, for her efforts to
promote W omen's emanc ipatio n.
To Dean Huns inger , a basketball , for old time s sake.
To John Mulka , a cantaloupe,
1 Just because we like you. Jack .
A free date with anyone on
the M&G staff to Miss Rosencratz for br inging a lot to this
c a mpus (remember , that' s a Dean
Hunsin ger quote.)

The Brothers of Pi EpsilonChi
are now accepting their third
pledge class which consists of
ten pledges. The members of the
class are Thomas Baltuskonis ,
John Feyrer , Robert Herb , Gary
Hitz , Alexander Horvath , John
Lines , John McElwee , Shelly
Partlon , Michael Saurers and
Richard Schildt . The Brothers
are looking forward to another
successful year in IFC competition and the intramural program .
They will be sponsoring a band
dance November 14 featuring NOBODY'S CHILDRE N .

To John Cooper , a bar of Ivory
soap, for possessing the dirtiest
mouth or campus (figuratively
speaking).
To David Ruckle and all the
securit y police , a kind word , because It was requested.
M artin Guildea receives our
special evil awar d for excessive
experimentation with grain deriv ative s (that' s his excuse).
Mr . Mur phy receives an amplified recordin g of Dr . Sat z rea ding WALDE N TWO , you know why,
Murph ,

Dates

( cont inued fr om page on»)

Sigma Nu pledges who wanted to
get to know the girl s before the
stu dent directories came out ,
according to Dave Kellenberger ,
Sigma Nu pledge.
"When they came in groups ,
they just lined up and didn 't
ask why," he said. "But when they
were alone or with another girl ,
somet imes they asked ."
Initiated by Larry Apt , Sigma Nu pledge , the project was
designated so the pledge s could
know the incoming freshmen.

Sp ecial

W ednesda y , October 15
Hartline 8 6 — 4 P.M.
Speaker — Dr. Rabb

Homecomin g

Topic — "Science Improvement Program In India "

I

wil l be Ser-

FETTERMANS

(
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BARBER SHOP

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— QUALITY —

"V
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Bloomtb urg Pa.

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Warn er
Deena

1 E. Main St. Bloomsburg

TOOK HIS GIRL
HopuMPurg

OVER 8000

Greeting Cards

HENRIES

Card and Book Nook
40 W. Main St.

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WHERE DAD

BOOKS...
N If s • book
wo Have it or wo can «*t H

Frida y

The
Texas

CORSET SHOP

TITLES IN STOCK

|

Thor « will be a mooting of
tho Vett Club on Thursday,
Octobe r 16, at 11:00 A.M. in
tho 2nd-floor loungo of WaiIt Hall.

EUDORA'S

WrW TEAM.SCORED
Trig FEWESTRUNS IK)
SERIES MISTORV ?

I ssue
I
J

¦comTIJ ^browse
S»» our lingerie from

I

We want to give something to
Jeff Prosseda , but we can't think
of anything to give him , or anything he 's done to deserve getting
anything, or anything he 's done
for that matter .
To ARA Slater , a picture of a
pig we took while at the fair . We
think you forgot what they look
like , fellas.
To Dr. Nossen, an I-v/anna-beyour -buddy button , for sycoph ant ic pur poses.
A box of lollipops to the case of
LITTLE MARY SUNSHINE for
courage ab ove and bey ond the
call of dut y to the Players.
To the CGA , six thousand dollars. You can't take it away,
we 're GIVING it back. We didn 't
want your dirt yold money anyway.
To Miss Console , our special
Smokey the Bear award , for being
a definite fire hazard.
All awards may be claimed at
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue , Wash ington , D.C., ask for Dick; or at
pier three , Hudson River , New
York, New York , ask for Harold.
If no one' s around, check under
the pier .
Al
l persons, places and thin gs
in the above art icle are fictional.
Any resemblance to rea l persons ,
living or dead is pure ly coincidental.

Proj iles

Student PSEA Meeting

Refreshments
ved

iBPwr

t^m ^mmmmmm ^mm ^mmmmmmim
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^mmm~ «—» ¦¦—

I9O9 PHILADELPHIA. A'S
SCOREDTHRgg RUMS IM
FIVE GAMES..nH&M£u ;
YORK GiAAns 'CHRiSTy
MATHBWSOJO SHUT 0UTTH&
A'S 3 "nM eS...THE 1965
OF FfcUR BUNS IN FOUR.
GAM&S ?

f.Harry Logan^
Fine J ewelry
AND

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5 W. Main St.
Bloomsbur o I
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t

nist Journal,*' Ellen Willis* adventures with the Redstockings
as th«y try (and continuall y fall)
to get sexual equality , as they
tr y to legalize abortions , as they
...re ad it.
I didn't like Lewis MacAdams '
poetry in US 1, but his "I Am
"The Children' Singing Off* is
poetry in pro se, a deliberately
Incoherent and therefore fright ening look at whites again st
blacks, or is it blacks against
whites? Or everybody against
everybody?
JAIL IS WHERE...
So aV last we come to the
c lassic , the piece worth the buck :
Katharine Dunn 's chilling "Jail
Is Where When You Have To Go
There They Have To Let You
In. " Goldstein says Dunn writes
like "falmi ng shit ," and there' s
no other way to descirbe it. Her
pri son scenes are so starkly
real: the holdin g it in so your
cell mate won't see you crap;
the screams in the night as a
young boy is raped in the men's
>all-block ("How' s that gag?...
Let' s seehis ass ...Let me onhim.
Hold him tight boys I'm going
to ride him hard. "); the night
the whole pri son cried and no
one heard; the pink walls, the
lesbians , the loss of self. And
then the endin g....
US 2 suffers from some of
the same p rob lems as 1 , but
this collection so outdistances the
first lt*s unbelievable. US is
finally what it is supposed to be:
dangerous visions . Read it. You
may not like what you read , but
it will challenge you, maybe even
make you aware of who US is
and what we demand.
See ya back in school.

MOYER
Pharmacy
Your Prescri ption Druggist
ROBERT G. SHIVE, R.P.
Free Prescri ption Deliver /

TOILET GOODS
COSMETICS
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES
GREETING CARDS
1 West Main St.
Phone: 784-4388

BLOOMSBURG, PA.

THE

VANK&BS SCOREDA 1QTAL

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(c ont inued from page *wo)

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l,:.il,iJlJ:!!!l ji:ll,,iii,il,::!!li nll!l,liJl»,Ij ,J
Jet. of Route 11 and Interstat e 80

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OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT FRI. & SAT.
Sundays & Dail y — 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.

We Invite You To Dine With Us
Everyday and Sundays Too
We Cater To Every one and Serve Only Choice

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*'