rdunkelb
Tue, 03/05/2024 - 15:41
Edited Text
Shafer Speaks

This is the final section of tho
M&G interview with Governor
Raymond P . Shafer . Questio ns
herein deal with BSC and other
State Colleges and with Penn sylvania as a whole.
The first question concerns the
future of Bloomsburg (as a University? , etc .) and other State
Colleges. The Governor replied
-ft iirmre ta
«*«
6M7 AVilVITOt

"No one can f orsee what 's
going to happe n to any of the
State Colleges; some will want to
move in one direc ti on, and others
will want to move in another dire ct ion. Some of the State Col*
leges will want to stay small ,
and or ientate d towar d v undergra duate
education.
Other
schools will want to get larg er
and want to get into Univers ity
status , but there are no specific
plans as far as Bloomsburg is
concern ed, at least at the present
time. W e have a State Boar d
of Education and we have a Department of Education and they
ar e constant ly ana lyzing our
needs and will be developing
policy for years to come. At
the present time , we 're working
on a master -plan for Higher Educat ion; and we want to update
the re port that was ma de some
year s ago; and we should have
that ready some time next year ."
Next , the M&G asked Governor
Shafer whom he thinks the next
Gover nor will be . After a brief
loncrh

ha ronl

"We have many fine possibilities in the Republican ranks ; and
I think on the basis of the treme ndous progress that this adminis trat ion has made, that whoever
runs on the Republican ticket will
have a great opportunity to win ,
because we've made more progress in the last thirty months
than in any comparable period in
histor y. We have a new Constitution , the finest in the country ;
we starte d the Golden Age Conservat ion in 1967 which is a
model for the nation; we' re considered first in highway construc tion ; we're considered first in aid
to the indi gent ; we are appare ntly
considered first in aid to Higher
Education , we've led the nation
for two strai ght years . Just look
at the economic opportunity —
1967 set the new record high for

empl oyment and a new recor d low
f or unempl oyment ; and we broke
that recor d in '68; and in '69,
we have set a new recor d f or
every single month , for that
month , high in employment , low
in unem ploy ment , and high in
per sonal income, This is a record that no other state in the
nation can match ; October , 1969
was the lowest mont h of any
month in the histor y of the Com*
monwealth in unem ployment .
Th ese are things that ma ke me
very proud ; I personally have
had to deal with some unpopularity because I had to suggest
ways to raise revenues to meet
the constant needs of Pennsyl van ia , and when I adopted the
recommen dat ion of ra y T ax Stu dy
and Revision Commission , which
suggeste d a persona l income tax ,
there was an immediate emotion *
al react ion. You all know that , and
I know it most of all . But. at lone
last , I think the people of Pennsylvania are beginning to realize
that I told them the truth . If we
want to continue to progress , if
we want to continue to give a
quality education , if we want to
continue to give the best possible
care of our senior citizens , for
our handicapped , for our blind ;
an d d o all the other thi n gs that
an enlightened society does for
its citizens — good recreational
facilities — we have to pay the
bill. We can 't pay the bill by
burying our heads in the sand
and sayin g no, we can't have that
revenue ra ising measure , or cut
the bud get. Inflation alone has hit
government just the same as it
has hit everyone else — we have
incr eased costs that have to be
met. The Legislature put certain mandates on and all I did
was tell the people what those
mandates were . And the roof fell
in. And now, at long last , I
think the people begin to realize
that these were honest decisions ,
truth ful decisions. A Governor
isn't elected Governor just to
make popular decisions . I could
take the path of the hippocrite ,
the path of the demagoge and
say nothing was needed , like some
of our own Republicans did —
some, of the Republican leaders in
the House , were just misrep resented by sayin g that those

revenu es weren 't needed when
they knew full-well that they were.
I don't believe in that kind of
politics , I don't believe in that
kind of government . This has
created some political problems ,
but I think in the long run the
people respect honesty and truth
rat her th an misre presentat ion;
and that's going to help us rather
than hur t us next year ."
The last question concerned
the planned march onHarrisbur g
in protest of the hike in tuition
costs.* The Governor answered:
"One of the fundamen tal rights
that we have in America is the
right of public assembl y, and the
right of dissent , and the right of
free speech . I see nothin g wrong
with that as long as its done
orderl y, properly ; and demon*
strat ing our interests and concern s. But if the march is put
together simply for the purpose of
creating a lot of hooplaw, then
it' s meaningless. But if you have
a march on Harrisbur g for the
pur pose of letting the Representat ives know you're feelings and
express them, there's nothing
wron g with that ."

Philosophy
Workshop

The Philosophy Club will pre- .
sent a worksho p on T-groups and
Sensitivit y Tra ining on Tuesda y,
November 18, at 7:30 p.m. in
the Day Women 's L ounge, basement of Old Science Hall. The
discussion leader will be Franc is
L . Bayer , of the Lycomlng
En glish Depart ment.
Mr. Bayer holds B.A . degrees
in English, Philosophy, Latin ,
and Physical Science , and an M .A.
in American literature; he is
presently engaged in a dissertation in linguistic s for the Ph.
D. As he describes himself , however , he is "an ex-farmer , pipe*
line layer , cement patio contractor , dishwasher , busboy, profes siona l pallbe arer , gardener ,
grease monkey, merchant sailor ,
truck driver , Catholic , Republican; " and is pre sently "a teach *
er , associate editor , card
carr ying National Democratic
Epsilon Beta . The disclosure Part y of Alabama rabble router ,
concern ed information regarding pacifistic anarchist , would-be
a rushee' s position In relation to novelist and poet ." His Interest
the sorority durin g the ru sh peri* in sensitivity training stems
from his conviction that there
Od.
Delta Epsilon Beta has been "Is still a possibility of genuine
put on probation for one year teaching and learning In the
under terms defined by ISC . The higher , education system."
Mr . Bayer will discuss the
fine of 1100 will go into the Har .
theor
y of sensitivity training, the
vey A.
And ruw ; Memorial
problems
and dan gers of it, and
Scholarship Fund set up by the
conduct
a pr actlcum . All
will
council last year .
Interested
members
of the col.
Further det ail!on this matter
levge
community
are
invited
have not been made available at '
¦ ' ¦: ¦ ' ¦ ¦ • tda k
• • ¦¦
' . .
. .
tend,
this time by ISC.

DEBs Charged
in "Dirty Rushing "
"Dirt y rushing " charges were
recently brought against Delta
Epsilon Beta by Theta Gamma
Phi , both social sororities . DEBs
was taken before the Judicial
Board of the Interior orityCounell where jud gment was made to
put the sorority on probatio n
and also fine it $100.
The arraignment of "dirty
rushing ", in this case, concerned
the br eaking of Silence Day, the
day on which no communications
should occur between Greeks and
rushees , by a sister of Delta

Dr. Nossm will speak at
the annual President 's Convocation Tuesday, Nov . 18, in
Haas auditorium. His top ic
will be "to Hear Old Triton
Blow His Wreathe d Horn ."
The program , beginni ng at
9:30, is as follows:
9:30 • 10:00 — Organ Reel
tal.; 10:00 - 10:45 — President 's Address ; Conclusion —
Selection by the Concert
Choir.

Kappa Delta Pi
Tuto rs Students
dents some of the learning diffiThe last regularly scheduled
meeting of Kap pa Delta Pi on culties childre n experience at an
Tuesday at 7:00 in L35 com- ear ly age. Also enterin g into the
bined with the members of the stu- talk given by Mr. Staber were
dent PSEA and was devoted large - new "learn ing programs " such
as te levision's "Sesame Street"
ly to discussion of two tutorial
programs . The meeting featured for youngsters three to five years
an elementar y school guidance old and the SRA reading procounselor , Mr . Richard Staber , grams. Central in the discussion ,
however , was the formative stawho discus sed plans for a tutorial
program to be in cooperation with ges of the tutorial program. In
the teachers at the Elysburg El- this res pect , problems arose.
ementar y School and at the Roar - Ellen Robinson , Janie Reed,
ing Creek Valley (Catawiss a) EL. Grace Nazaren k o, Dor een Kushementar y School. F or those ner , J ean M or gan , Karen Lau att ending , Mr. Staber alsoplay ed bach , Diane Melkosky , Mary
R ochko, and Frances Louise Sita ta pe-recor ding which pointed
out, via his conversation with 2 len were the students who expresfirst -grade and third-grade stu - sed interest in helping out , but
among these only three had cars
to get to the schools or help with
trans portat ion. Mr. Staber also
pointed out that as yet there were
no fun ds f or the re i mbursement of
gas money used by the ladles who
volunteere d.
The program (as outlined) will,
pr ovide help for youngsters who
fall below the average in tested
potential abilit y but do not have
Today there will be a series enough difficult y to qualify for the
of meetings on campus concern- special classes , as well as stud ing the Moratorium on Vietnam , ents with other learning pro under the general title of "An blems.
Anti-Moratorium Forum. "
Other volunteers for this "offFrom 9:00 a. m. on, there will campus elementary student asbe & discussion of "The So-Call(Continue d on pag* four)
ed 'March Against Death '" , in
Science Hall , Room 8. At 11:00
a. m. there will be a panel
discuss ion, "T he Moratorium
Pro and Con , " also in Science
8. At 1 p. m. there will be a lecThe CGA Dining Room Committure on "The Consequences of
tee recently conducte d a weekWithdr awal ," and at 3 p. m.
long studen t evaluation of the dinthere will be a lecture on "The
Consequences of the Mora - ing styles being offered in the
tor ium ," both in Hartline Science Common s ; however , because of a
lack of student partic ipation , the
C enter , Room 134.
In the evenin g there will be a Dining Room Committee Was deprogra m of USIA films on Viet- cided to extend its evaluation annam , amon g them "Vletnam-The other week from November 16
Unique War ," and "Outlook , to 22 includive for those students
Southeast Asia ," to be followed who have not yet res ponded . Following this liberal extensi on, the
by discussion . This program will
committee will .pr oceed to draw
be held in Carver Auditorium.
any
conclu sions from the returns
Volunteers are also being rethey
receive .
quested to go out into the area
Rather
than redi stributing the
super mar ket parking lots , to ask
evaluation
sheets individually in
area residents to "Vote on Viet*
each
studen
t' s mailbox as was
nam ." Anyone interested should
tr
ied
initi
ally,
a supply of thes e
please contact Mr . McLau ghlin,
forms will be made available in
Box. 284. Waller.
the Common s at each meal dur ing the seven-day period set
aside. The Dining Room Committee ur ges ever yoneinvolved to get
out and vote . Nobody else can do
The American Association of it for you.
University Women (AAUW) cordially Invites all senior women
Themes Punk , Idltor of
and women faculty member s to
the
1970 Obiter , hat announ its next meeting on Tuesday, Noced
that ¦limited numb er of
vember \B, at 8:00 p.ri i. in the
extra 1fe» Oblte re will be on
College Commons .
tele In the Yearbook office ,
The progra m will be a panel
tecend floo r Waller Hell . If
discussion on the top ic, "The
you wish to buy one It will
Academic community — A Look
be necessary to place your
from Differe nt Vantage Points ."
name on a reserved Net as
The parti cipants are: Mr . Wil.
teen as possible . The beeks
llam Lank, representing the
will be av ailabl e as toon at
Boar d of Trustee s: Dean Koch ,
mete who heve orders from
tat year have picked w
representing the administration;
their copy. Funk requests that
Dr . John Enman , representing the
everyo ne who hit en Obiter
facultyj Mr . Jeff Prosseda , rep .
en order* " , . . get the hell
relenting the stude nt body .

We. hope you willbe able to at.
.here and pet their beo kt,
I
don
't want th em,"
tend.

Anti Mobe

Commons

Jj I WJU

Letters . • .

Dear Editor:
Throughout the years we here
at Bloomsbur g constantly hear
the cry of apath y on the .part of the
studen t body. This may be the
case in man y instances , however ,
it was not the case thi s past
Thursday night .
Our brotherhood
was canvassing the college for contributions and of course , we were at
ever y dorm . Our usually apathetic college was not apathetic in
this case. Th e res ponse was
tremendous . We collected a large
amount of mone y f or the child ren
of Selinsgrove State Hospital and
many of the students at this
"apathetic " college were of tremendous help.
Special congratulations are in
order for the guys at Elwell
Hall .
Thank you all very much .
Very truly yours ,
Brothers of Delta Omega Chi

ZJn e

Commons

Dear Editor:
During the past week , the CGA
Dining Room Committee conduc ted an evaluation of the dining
styles being offered in the Commons. In this evalu ation there
was a questionnaire circula ted
individually through the mailboxes of every student (all 1875
of them) dining in the Common s.
H owever , only slightly more than
one-third of th ese students were
concerned enough to return their
questionnaires within that week.
Althou gh the committee has not
yet had the opportunity to meet
and discuss the re sult s of these
re lati vely few returns as I wri te
thi s letter , two imp ortant f acts
have become obvious to me as I
briefly read through the repli es.
The first is so common on cam.
pus that it seems it should be
too tr ite to ment ion; yet , it exists
as it has in the past and canno t
continue to be so naively ignored .
Our studen t body is lar gelyapath -.
etical. This is a charge I hat e to
hear , but I feel we must finally
recognize it as tru e. So I accuse the student body of an apathy ,
pathetic apathy to be precise because I cannot under stand why,
if a questionnaire Is printe d and
delivered through the privacy
of his own mailbox to each student , he could not take the opportunity to read the Information
given, mar k his selections and
take the completed form to the
Common s during any of the twen ty-one meals served that week
and place it in the box provide d
there.
I mean , what could be
easier ? Yet only thirty -three percent of our stu dent b ody wer e
concerne d. What about that large
vacant sixty-seven percent?May be the Dining Room Committe e
will extend the evaluation period .
But what if this does not happen? Will this group complain
when a decision they did not

contr ibute to is ultimately made?
Personally , I hope they are given
another chance to vote , and if
they are , I hope ALL .of the m will
use this rare , second oppo rtunity.
They canno t take things for gran ted. They must participate . They
must remem ber , if they like
someth ing, defend It . If they dislike something, seek someth ing
satisfyingly better . Decisions are
not made them selves.
Now , the second fact I have
noticed is something I have quiet ly feared too long, but now that
I have seen it to be true consistent ly on so many returns , I
must comment on it. The student
body is frequently and often ignorant . I refer to this in the
sense that they are uninformed.
In this case they are uninformed
about several significant points
concernin g the Commons , and
therefore are apt, as they h ave
demonstrated with their comments , to develop false assum ptions. In the following lines I
hope to cor rect these assump tions or at least , give information
on which valid responsible suppositions must be based.
me Dining Room Com mittee
has adapted a new dress code
for the Commons. It was appro ved through th e proper channel s
and now reads:
'appropriate ',
ne at, and clean casual wear is
permissable at all meals except
Sunda y noon and special occasions when informal wear is required. " It also acts to prohibit line cutting in cafeteria
lines,, but because the members
have been denied all reasonable
powers ot enforcem ent by CGA ,
they have resolve d to rel y on the
initiative of the average student
to stop line cutting whenever
it occurs. This committee has had
Saturday 's brea kf ast served* between 7:45 and 8:45 a. m., and
now Mr. O'Brien , Commons manager , is considering a half-hour ,
self-service coffee and donut extension to breakfast weekdays.
Now, more concern ing the evaluation itself. Several interestin g
comments have been given. Students must realize that the Commons , now servin g 1875 people ,
was designe d to serve only 725.
That 's about 250 per cent its
ideal capacity and where most
problems and students complaints arise . Stu dents comp lain
at not getting enough food. They
get as much as any other student
at any other state colle ge , and
ARA Services doesn 't operat e
all those dining rooms. Stu dents
complain of cold food or inadequately prepare d food. When I
consider the strain the excess
of students places on the produc tion line , some of these complaints , while true , must be excused unti l the new dining hall
is in operation. Many problems
are temporary "grow ing Pains *'.
The vast majority of the food
serve d in the commons meets
my stan dards. I come from the
middle class like most students
here. The food isn't always per (Continued on peg* four )

MAROO N AND GOLD
WO* 17

VOL. XLV1II
Edltor-ln Chlof

Co-Feature Editors ..

Spcrts Editor
Phot ography Editor
Copy Editor
Circulatio n Manager
Advisor

' 47#6%< f96 9

Tilghman Smith (right), licensed and accredited) NASA newsman ,lectured on the U.S. Space Program Nov. 3,at Hartline
Science Hall,BSC. With him,prior to program,are (from left)
Dennis Bohr, President of the Science Club; Dan TearGamma Theta Upsilon; Dr. Harold
pock ,President of
Lanterman ,advisor to Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society; Herbert Reichard, advisor of Society of Physics
Students;and Dr. Wendelin R. Frantz,chairman of the Geography and Earth Sciences department.

NASA Dis cussed

Tilgbman L. Smith, Northea stern Pennsylv ania 's only accred ited and licensed National Aer onautics and Space Admini stra tions newsman , presented a lecture on M onday, November 3,
1969 , in Hartline Science Center. Mr. Smith appeared under
the auspices of the Departments
of Georgraphy and Earth Science, Physics , Chemistry , and the
four student organiz ationsassociated with those departments
— Gamma Theta Upsilon (Inter national Geogra phical Frater nity), Society of Physics Students , Student Affiliates of the
American Chemical Society, and
the Science Club .
Smith , who is one of 189 NASA
licensed and accredited report ers in the world , has a var ied
background in industrial task
force training. He has experienced "Zero G" in parabolic
flight and one -sixth G In training facilities at Langley Research
Center , Ham pton , Va. In the covera ge of Merc ur y, Gemini, and
Apollo flights , his simulator time
allowed was a minimum of 50
hours per year . In nine years ,
he has had more than 500 hours
simulator time of which 200 hours
were in both the Apollo L-M and
Apollo CSM simulators at Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
Smith la a charter member of
the NASA Information Office Society which consists of 32 members . The only other member s
are Jules Bergman and Walter
Cronkite; the other 29 have covered every flight since the first
orbital flight of John Glenn .

BSC

Michael Hoek
Business Manager
Managing Editor
Co New s Edit ors

v
i
flPP

dor Remsen
Bill Teltsworth

To m Funk, Mar tin Kleiner

Ginn y Potter

Allan Maurer

Clark Rueh

Jim BIH
Ket hy Hearty

Pam Ven Bpps
Mr. Michael Stanle y

ADDITIONAL STAFF: Terry Blast, Leona r d House,
Velma Aver y, John Stur grln , Bob Schul ti , Susan Zatete,
Linda Bnnlt , Sall y Swetland , Dave Kelter.

All opinion s ex pressed by column ists and feature writers,
Includin g Ittten-to-the editor, are not necessarily tn ote-of
thi s publication but those of the Individuals.

SLIDE LECTURE

After giving a few brief intr oductor y remar k s, Smith began a slide lecture where he took
the audience on a journey through
the space program from the first
Mercury flight up to Apollo 11
and a glimp se of wh at is to come
in future Apollo missions.
He displayed two facts of the
lunar complex which the aud ience shall never forget. The
first had to do with the size of
the complex. The speaker stated
that the vehicle assembly building
is the largest in the world. The
doors of the building , through
which the Saturn V passes , are
so lar ge that the United Nations
buildin g could be passed through
them.
Secondly, due to its enormous
size, clouds for m inside the build ing followed by pr ecipitation
while on the outside the sun is
shining. The air vents of this
building were designed and constructe d in Berwi ck .
The second aspect administer ed by the complex is cleanli ness. Smith stated that the module is placed in what Is called
the "Clean Room " which is about
300 per cent cleaner than a hospital operation room. Cleanliness
must be maintained because bacter ia tends to erode the metals
which can cause a malfunction
In the instrumentation.
Probably one of the greate st
discoveries of our time in relationship to the moon are the
facts that through the seismic
exper i ment , man has learned that
the moon is very similar to the
earth in that It is layered and
it has a liauid core .
LOOKING AHEAD

no f inn

••¦¦M 'VBa s

Out people are not free . We
suppress the negro because he
is a threat to our job . We kill
his spokes man. We suppress the
hippie because he says our society isn't worth and he drops
out of it . He is freed to the hills.
We suppress the youth because
they are ideolistic and see us
as the molded , lifeless , insincere , worthless-plastic 'peopie we are . The youth aren 't given the right to vote .
Our society must make objects
to feel secure and it must sell
them to the people within its influence. Therefore , to make and
sell thes e objects we must playa
game. We must fit the corpor ate
image . That is we must all look
the same , do thin gs in a manner
outlined on page 32 of the company procedure booklet , belong to
favorable grou ps to extend company influence , assoc iate with the
right people to avoid undesirable
ideas from infiltratin g company
thought , and avoid controversy
which might place the company
in an unfavorable light . In other
wor ds we must be walk ing, talkIng dead .
WE SUPPRESS
We supp ress those that do not
conf orm , that is those who
threaten
our secur ity. Our
y
has
degenerated to such a
societ
suppress
ion has belevel that
come necessary to the establish*
ed structure if it is to survive .
We do not have a democratic
nation either . We have a govern *
ment which operates in response
to lobbies . Lar ge corporations ,
with greater money assets that a
great number of the countries
of the worl d , exert pressure on
con gressmen , senators, and the
pre sident . They also advertise ,
or more accurately
propa *
gandize , to mold public opinion,
To influenc e the officials of our
government grou ps , such as cor p«
orations , threaten the movement
of plants , the withholding of con*
trl butions from the war chests
of the candidate , and lack of
support In one form or another .
The costs of winning office, or
J ust running for office with any
degree of serious intention , de«
mands that large amounts of
mone y be gotten somewhere .

Looking ahead to Apollo 12,
Smith said the EVA (Extra Vehicular Activity) would consist
of two lunar walks each being
A growing level of sophistica - three hours In length , and a test
tion at BSC is shown by the fact of the lunar module In a thirty thai an orches tra is beingformed two hour stay .
People today, he said , complain
by Dr. Jack Eemls of the music
department .
Although some about the high price of food. To
str ing players are alre ady prac - give an example of how Insigticing , this Ib the area of prin - nificant their arguments ar e
The private citi zen doesn 't.,
cipal need , as is true with all Smith noted the price for one have a government . His vote la
orchestr as. However , Intere sted dehydrated meal on Apollo II cost pr ogrammed,
His candidate
wind-inatrument players should $160.
choice Is narrowed for .him, Th*
also apply.
following cne lecture , tne voter is therefore only of concern
The group will welcome any newsman consente d to a brief to those that control the govern *
string player , so dust off that
question and answer session ment when f or some reason,
fiddle in your attic and contact
which was followed by an invita - the y can't , pr ogram his vote.
Or, Bemis at Box 102 or In his tion to view the extensive dis- Under ordinary condition! the
office in Haas Auditori um. All play of model rockets and lunar import ance
of an organizat ion's
are invited to the rehearsals
equipment he brought with him. support in much
neater than that
which are held on Wedne sday
About three hundr ed persons of the average citizen,
The Indi .
evenings at 7.00 in the rehear - from the college and neighbor (Continue
d «n »w hvr)
sal hail In Haas.
ing commun 'tie o attended ,
¦ ' ¦¦
!

Orchestra

a
¦

«

By Elmer Chase
Since first grade (ja conservative estimate ) we have been told
that the United States is the
greatest countr y in the world .
We have been told that America
is the land of the free , the showcase of democrac y. H ave you
ever doubted its greatness.
The United States is a land
of suppression and government
by the elite . Does such a statement seem possible? Even with a
full awar eness that we vote for
repr esentat ives, senators , pres idents , governors , etc .; there is
evidence bef ore our eyes ever y
day that supports the above
attac k. The evidence suggest that
we must stilt stru ggle for our
freedom and insist on democracy .
C LINGS TO SECURITY
We are a nation that clings to
the security of the society that
exists h ere now . It is a society
that can not even descr ibe the
values it holds dear without contradictin g itself . F or example
we say, as Christians , turn the
other cheek , and also, love your
enemy. Yet in the same breat h
we say that we must always be
super ior in military power so
that we can defeat those that injure us and kill to preserve our

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1969-70 Grapplers Go for State Crown

^4mie

Dkomp ion

Head Wrestling Coac h, Russel E. Houk and his assista nt,
William Sproule have the making s
of a cham pionship team for the
1969-70 season. Only 28 men
(varsit y and freshmen) are
trainin g this year , but as Coach
Houk says they are quality
wrestlers and could be a strong ,
er team this year , barring any
injuries.
The top men of the team have
to be state cham pions, Arnie
Thompson and Jim McCue .Arnie
is a. senior and will captain
the 1969-70 grapplers . H e was

J im

1969 Pennsylvania Conference
Champion and finished 4th in the
NAIA tournament . Junior Jim
McCue , state conference champion at heavyweight , will alternate with 191 pound and heavyweight . Last year Jim weighed
250 pounds while he was wrestling. This year he weighs 200
pounds and will provide depth in
the two heaviest weight classes,
McClue also finished 4th in the
NAIA tourne y.
Rich Lepley , Milt Andr ews,
Jim Wallace , Wayne Smythe ,
R uss Scheur en , and Mike Schull

Tff c Cu e

are the remainder of the lettermen returning. Lepley will
not compete the first semeste r
because he is student teaching
and the distance to practice is
too far. Jim Wallace finished
4th in fee conference last year
at 167 pounds. Jim is a senior,
Juniors Mike Schull aid Wayne
Smythe will compete in the 118
and 134 pound weight classes
respectively. Russ Scheuren , 150
pounds , will provide strength for
the middle classes. Junior Milt
Andrews , who placed 4th in the
psc tournament last year , will

uli lt ^4n Jtreut&
te
H tik

41

10

1969 WlU
SP "?!? *?*
be back at 177.
^
10* better things to come for
The 1968-69 Huskies put on a f/
great show in the state tourna i V^Li
?*
It is
hoped that the great sup.
ment with three individuals chamrt
of
tne team wiU continue
pions to finish third . Thompson , £°
^om
1
year . The Huskies play
*st
McCue , and 1969 graduate Ron
excitln
aggressive brand of
Russo led the Husky charge The *° Uta e S>
wni< n can seldom be
^e
s
team could have finished second
;
but they had to travel to the toP& Q for excitement ,
Tne first matcn wil1 be a
tourney short banded . J ohnStutz quadrangular
meet on Saturday ,
man was injured an * couldn't
December
13
, with Ohio Unicompet e and anot her wrest ler
i
t
y
,
vers
I
n
di
ans
State at T erre
couldn 't make weight and was
Haute
and
the
University
of Mas,
disqualified , either man could
have given BSC the necessary sacnusetts to grapple the Husk points to finish second Coach Ies* L«*'« ge* ou* and support the
wrestlers from the beginning .

Harriers Place Second
In NAIA Competitio n
¦

Last week , disallowin g the two
games which I picked and were
not scheduled, I correctly pre dieted 16 out of 18. Over the year ,
I have totaled 101 of 128 for 79
per cent correc t . This week is going to be better.
Ohio State over Purdue — The
Buckeyes smashed the Boilermakers hopes for the big ten

crown ,

Texas over Texas Christian —
Lonhorns to stomp on the Hornfro gs.
Tennessee over Miss issippi
— The Volunteers cha rge over
the Rebels for the eight win of
1969.
Penn Stat e over Marylan d The Nittany Lions chew up the
Terps .
over Arm y Pittsburgh
Panthers squeak by the Cadets.
USS over Washington — Hu skies get mauled by the Tro jans .
UCLA over Ore gon — Ducks
get plucked.
Arkansas over SMU — Ra zorbacks cra wl the Mustan gs.
Geor gia over Auburn — Bull*
dogs take the Tigers by the tal l ,
Notre Dame over Georia Tech
- Irish smas h the Ramb ling
Louisiana State over Missis*
slppl State - Tigers ri p up the
Bulldo gs.
Florida State over Mem phis
State - Sumlnoles whip the
Tigers.
Missou ri over Kansas — Tig*
•tt olaw the Ja yhawks.

. Air For ce over Stanford 1 • Falcons (Hecate
• on the Fal•

cons.
Alabama over Miami — Cr imson Tide quells the Hurricane .
Dartmouth over Cornell — Indians bloody up the Big Red .
San Diego State over New Mexico State — Astecs smash the
A ggies.
Syracuse over Navy — The
Orangemen sink the Middles.
Ind iana over Northwestern —
The Hooslers sneak by the Wildcats .
Westchester
over Clarion
Golden Eagles — Rams gore the
Rockets to win the Pennsylvania
Conference Title ,

Women 's
Recreatio n
Associatio n

Results ofWomens ' Intramu ral
Badminton Tourna ment
Twent y-two teams partici pated
in a woman's double double badminton (single elimination; tour *
nament .
In the semi-finals , Nlna E ppley
and Holly Thomas defeated Jan *
et Santo and Linda Trainer while
Nancy Sherlock and Barbara Kul .
esa defeated Kathy Belling and
Marilyn Umlauf ,
To win the college championship Thomas and Eppley defeat *
ed Sherlock and Kulesa by the
scores of 15«a and 18-9,
"
'
¦
*
; ••
v. ,
. s > --

:-

On Tuesday the Harriers traveled to Millersvllle State College
for the . NAIA District 19 Championships , the last competition for
the team this season . The final
resu lts showed the top three
teams as Millersville 1st with
26 points , . BSC second with 37
points and York College thir d
with 84 points.
The standout for Bloomsburg
were as usual, two freshmen:
Terry Lee who took second place

Rooks
Win

and Tim Waechter in third place .
These two runner s have continuously placed high in the cross
countr y meets throughout the season and have been the number 1
reason for the 10 and 2 record .
The third runner for BSC was
Larry Strohl in 10th place who
has been steadily loweri ng his
time throughout the season.Coming in 12th , 13th and 14th respectively were Charlie Gr aham ,
Scott Rogers , and Paul Pelletler .
Also runn ing for the Huskies was
Bob Bentzinger in 19th place .
Coach Noble would have liked

to see the team beat Millersville ,
but the Marauders had too much
depth for the Harrier s and went
home with the victory . Coach
Noble was plea sed with the team
this year with the 10 and 2 record , far surpas sing his expectations in September . Coach is
now looking forward to next
year 's seasons and possibly
states.

Huskies Are
Copacetic!

iub oav nuBKy xujukb «m«r>

talned ShippensburgState College
here on Sunday , November 9,
Shippensburg is one of the top
state colleges competing for the
chess championshi p of Penna ,
The Rooks , in shutting them out
5-0 , seem rea dy for the upcoming
tournament at the end of April,
Dave Klstler , who is onlya freshman, has been rele gated to fir st
board where he defeated C,
Harves . Second board Ken Drake ,
a junior from Susquehanna , beat
Jack Geoalman . Ken , who fought
In the middle game to gain pieces ,
won easily in the end game.
Dennis Plymette , club treasurer
from Watsontown , defeated Jeff
Schmidt in a close middle game
battle . Dave Sheaffer kept his
undefeated season In tact by beat *
ing Bryan Long on fifth board
to complete the whitewash . Our
advisor , Doc Selders , and secre *
tary, Linda Clark , were there to
cheer us on to victory . The team
now stands at 3.1 in league play ,
The Rooks will travel to N .Y.c.
to compete in the sixth annual
Empire City Open over the next
weekend . The club meet * in *toi.

ence No, M. wed, l<0.¦ Beginner s are< welcome.
' ti
',

i

'V



• .• l ; i

Capt. Arnie and Coach Houk
¦* '„

.

.

¦¦ ¦

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Commo ns To A Student

(continued from page 2)

feet and the atmosphere and style
of dining may not be what you
could prefer; but if other wise,
the students would have to pay
much more for their meals.Quantity cooking just Isn 't as good
as Mom 's homecooklng.
ara has decided to hold a
minimum of one Sunday brunch
per month. But what about family style and cafeteria style.
In the evaluation , cafeteria
style was cut to shreds by student comment. The few criticisms of family style can be
easily dispelled. There is proof
that (1) students can get ju st as
much to eat and (2) and spend
less time in the Commons during family style than during cafeteria style (and these are the
main complaints.) During family
style meals, seconds are served
in vegetable and beverages.
Every night the waitresses serving hot food or coffee , tea and
milk are reminded this is Commons policy. All students have to
do is ask . I have to comment
here that because girls generally
eat less than guys it's desirable
to get some gjtrls into any dininggroup. Again, guy s only need
to ask!
students say many people miss
family style meals because they
dislike it. This is false. Since
the new dress code went into
affect, there has been a consistant, near perfect turnout. I can
give records as proof.
Some students say if ARA cut
down the labor needed In family
style that they could serve more
food in cafeteria style. ARA Services uses less food family style

3-or dBirtltdaif A
and

because. . . . there Is noticeably less WASTED food. We waste
less here and can supply approximately forty students with employment as a result.
Some students complain it
takes too long for family style.
False again. On the whole family
style Is a half hour faster than
cafeteria style; therefore ,. . . .

increased efficiency.

Contrary to some beliefs,
groups at the door are flexible .
If a student has to eat earlier
or later than usual, he can simply by telling the hostess at the
door his situation, go in and
eat at the time convenient to him
with another group scheduled for
that time. .
^\*« Ai « n _ * «v mm *\ M ** «*«•&•» _fc& j *m« _ aw«1 _ < ¦

vu uupa ue losier mail sex viug

lines if students learn to arrive
near their assigned times and use
the mealtime constructively or
at their leisure.
... Cafeteria style has its benefits but family style far outweighs those with advantages of
its own. If any student doubts
my. word, I welcome him to a
debate at the next dining room
committee meeting.

vidual is outside the sytem for
the most part .
EXAGGERATES
Tho United States is a nation
that exaggerates Its greatness.
We aren 't free and our government isn 't democratic. It seems
that we haven 't come very far
since 1776. Now just as then
there are those that are con-

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Wonderview
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Phone

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

I

We Invite Yo u To Dine With Us
Everyda y and Sundays Too

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REUIY'S
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Terr y .and Dave
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Cloaed Wed.

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Bloomsburo I

I SHUMAN'S WORtD TRAVEL I

aaa

\

VAN HEUSEN and
MANHATTAN
SHIRTS
BRENTWOOD SWEATERS

Dm. 15, 1969
PhoM i 79*9716

Bloomtbur g, Pa.

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I

BOWL

Tentati ve
Date

united Penn Bank
IIP
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PHONI 275.99M

a

tent. But now, just as then, we
are fighting for freedom and
democracy. We are not fighting
for these in foreign lands but in
our ghettos, our schools, our
homes, and even through marches on Washington. And now as
always the soldier is very young
and Idealistic. Freedom and democracy still seem worth fighting
for to these traitors and troublemakers.

App ly Now For Next Semester's
Loans

TO 12 P.M.

I

HAGGAR SLACKS
LEV IS

The bank you can grow with.

(Baked Tht Way You Llfca 111
OPIN SUNDAY - 5 P.M.

I
I

Staff

mm— ^m-mmmmmmi

Great Taating

BLOOM

CLOTHING

Fine J ewelry
Your J twelir Away fro m Home

to know if they can still be of
assistance might contact Mrs.
Marge Kroschewsky, secretary,
at 784-7915 during weekdays from
4:00 — 5:00 or may contact Mr.
Sylvester or Ellen Robinson.
But particularly welcome are
volunteers for Mr. Staber 's rewarding and challenging tutorial
program which is still being organized.

Chi would like to %elfc3roe the
new Brothers* of our, fraternity
and Introduce them to the, rest ,
of the student body.
This fall in our fifth pledge
class we accepted twelve pledges Into the brotherhood at our
banquet held at Briar Heights
Lodge. Our twelve new brothers
are as follows: Ken Klock, Charlie Hopkins, Jerry Walburn, Bill"
Nagy, Bud Rogerf, John BuccMono, Greg Parks; Jim Henning, Russ Lagudice, Mike Martin, Marty Morgis, and Bob Warner. This year's Timothy Lavelle
award (or the outstanding pledge
of his class was awarded to Greg
Parks by a vote of the brotherhood and the pledge master.Congratulations Greg!

MEN'S and BOYS'

The
Texas

Repairing

The Brothers of Delta Omega
Chi have completed their Third
Annual "Trick or Treating Project" for the children of Selinsgrove State School .
This year had been the most
successful yet for the brotherhood. The brothers established a
new record for their fund at the
hospital , beating their previous
record of $280 with $400 dollars
this year. Along with the monetary contribution the brothers
received a variety of toys and
candy for the children.
Helping the DOC lads canvas
the town and the campus were
the sisters of Theta Tau Omega;
without whose help this success-

r&M tfmB

for tbiM-iiffjm.t pmsgH"""

Join the '
Lee- Pat' s ^
M&G Sports

Harry Logan

AT THE NEW

I

sistance are welcome. They may
contact Doreen Kushner via Box
686 or may call Mr. Staber at
the school: 356-3131, leaving a
message if he is out.
A second tutorial program was
dealt with at this combined membership meeting, (which was also
opened to ANY interested students or faculty.) Participating
students in this second Kappa
Delta Pi local tutoring, service
received sheets informing them
of their student's name , age and
difficulty and of necessary information about the cooperating
teacher. In this program, unlike Mr. Staber 's, students desiring help come to the campus
at regular times settled upon
by their tutors, themselves and
their teachers. Anyone who wants

AND

DANVILLE
SUB SHOP

fro m page one )

Foru m ....

Beaded Werld Wide Delfter ?

¦

(continued

P.S. Compare the condition of
the dining room following family style sad ehgck Its condition after cafeteria style. It's
as different as night and day.

(continued fr om page 2)

-^rnnivsrd aried

DOC

KAPPA
DELTA
PI

Sincerely yours,
Gary Blasser

FLOWERS
784-4406

I

FR1E

MA RO QNAGOLP

PAGE FOUR

We Ca/er To Everyone and Serve Only Choke

CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS
CHOPS, BEEF-BURGERS
SANDWICHES & SALADS

Phone 784-7837

PAUL DIETER, Prop .