rdunkelb
Fri, 04/05/2024 - 13:30
Edited Text
Booksto re Poll
Results Given

483 students and faculty of the
3400 polled responde d to the
student -opinion for m pertaining
to the Book Store operations.
This somewhat disappo inting return of slightly over one in ten
may however , be used as an
indicator of over all student opinion , assuming th at those individuals who replied did so due
to a desire to improve Book
Store operations through con»
striictive criti cisms and suggestions. Attention should therefore be given to the ways in
which those policies seen as inadequate or inefficient might be
adjusted to improved student and
faculty satisfacti on .
61 per cent of those students
responding had difficulty in getting a required text which had
been under -ordered. It should be
noted that this number represents
5.1 per cent of the entire student
body. 36 per cent of those fac ulty
responding also had trouble gett ing enough texts for their students.
This problem was discussed
with Mr . Trathan who felt that
this was due mainly to late ordering date s and low estimates
of course enrollments by pro fessors. The syste m in use now
calls for faculty to submit "Ques tionaires " of his course enrollments . As it stands now , pr eschedulin g cannot be used as a

guideline since orders cannot
be filled at this late date. By
scheduling
moving advanced
ahead two weeks , it could be
used as an indicator. Resale of
used books would still , however ,
cause some discrepancy between
the number enrolled and the number of books needed. It should
be noted that for some semesters
in the past thi s has caused overbuying, including an instance in
which although over 400 students
were enrolled in a particular
course , under 50 texts were purchased through the C ollege Store .
A partial solution may be the
practice of "swapping" book lists
among colleges in the particular
geographic area , in order that
shorta ges and surp luses in any
one indi vidual college might be
alleviated through tradin g rathe r
than reordering from the publisher.
On the question of packa ging
of books requirin g purchase of
all of the texts regardless of
whether or not the student ai.
ready owned one or more books ,
2u per cent of the students respondin g had had some trouble ,
while 7 per cent complained that
these bundles were not br oken
for individual book sales until
after the first assignment was
due.
As to chang es in Book Store
operat ions:
(1) 52 per cent of the faculty
and 23 per cent of the students
(total equals 29 per cent) wante d
a larger portion of the spac e
available devoted to educational
material as opposed to items of
a none d ucat i onal na t ure , suc h
as mugs and sweatshirts .
Mr . Tr athan offered to order
any items of this nature suggested.
An open citizen ' s meeting will (2) 76 per cent of the faculty and
be held on February 5 , 1970 , at 65 per cent of the students (total
7:15 p.m. in Kuster Lecture Hall , 68 per cent)requeste d an increas Room
134 Hartline Science
ed selection of paperbacks in all
Center , BSC. All Bloomsburg subject matter areas. Mr . Tra area residence are urged to at- than has already contacted each
tend. The meeting has a three- Dept. Chairman re questing a list
fold pur pose . First , it will Infor m of desired paperback book s rang the public in the Bloomsburg area ing in number from 50 to 200
,
of the general condition of their
depending upon the department .
envir onment. Secon d , it will make Although this was done app roxithe public aware of what can be mate ly a month ago only th ree
,
d one to lessen , stop , and p revent lists have been submitted
t he pollution of its environment . (3) 33 per cent of the faculty
Third , the questi on and answer
and 26 per cent of
period will provide a source of responding
the respon ding students (total
additional
Information . The 28 per cent) expressed a desire
speaker for tills meeting will be for an increase selection of hard Mr. William Lusher , who is the back books. Mr. Trathan said
Pennsylvania State Engineer on
Air Pollution for this are a. Mr . there Is difficulty In stocking
hardbac k books due to their high
Lus her ' s comments w ill deal pr
ice and low demand . He will
specifically with the greate r
or
der
single hardbac k upon
Bloomsbur g area environm ent re questany
.
an d all person s in this area are
An incre ased selection of magur ged to attend. However , all per - (4)
az
i
nes
represen tative of
sons with an Interest In their en- var ious, breadiy
acade
mic
fields , was recvir pnment should attend. The pro- ommen ded In SI per
cent of all
gram is sponsored by Gamma > facul ty replys
and
61
per cent
Theta Upsilon , the Biology Club. of all studen t
responses
(total
and the Sunbur y Tuberculosis and 99 per cent) .
Cancer
Society, who hop e to
The company stocking out mag.
bring the College and the com- azlne
sections In the Book Store
munity closer together while
(continued en page four )
meeting this common crisis.

Pollution
Program

3 Dog N ite
To Appear 19

All orders for the 1970
Obiter must be received before Feb. 10, 1970. The price
up until that ti me will be
TEN dollar s ($10.00). Seniors
need not purch ase thei r yearbooks since the price is covered by Senior Class Dues

L^CLdt

^rtnnounced

Mr . Robert Richey, director of
DARK OF THE MOON , the
Bloomsbur g Player 's third major
production of the year , has chosen his cast and rehearsals are
scheduled to get underway. The
play is abou t a witchboy who falls
in love with a human girl . In order
to marry her he must be chan ged
fro m a witch to a human , a task
tha t can be performed only by the
Conjour woman or the Con jour
man. The Conjour woman agree s
to chan ge him and the stor y involves the complications that
ar ise when the back mountain people discover he is real ly a witch .
John , the witchboy , is played
by Sam Zachary, John is the pr oduct of a witch and a buzzard
and is desttnexLlo live for 300
years - as a witch and then becomes just fog on the mountain .
He rides an eagle and dances in
the moonlight withthe witchgirls ,
played byAmyRabe r and Theresa
Previtti .
Mary Lou Boyle as Barbara Allan is the girl John falls in love
with . She is nineteen year s old
and one of the few unmarried
girls left in the hills of the Kentucky Mounta ins . Courtin g her is
a big brute of a man called Marvin Hu dgins , played by Dave
Wright . Marvin is the stron gest
man in the county and runs up
against the Witchboy several
times in his attempt to wed Bar bara Allen.
The Conjour man , played by
Dan Boone and the Conjour woman , played by Jean LeGates ,
live in a cave in the mountains
and prov ide the " spell" that
chan ges John to a human . They
ar e old and scra ggly and seem to
blend into the rocks and trees
and fog where they live.
Soul-Savin g Revival Preacher
Preacher Ha ggler , played by
Alan Klawitter , is the Evan gelist ic-type preacher who seems to be
mor e interest ed in drinking and
pers onal advanc ement . He is the
one who weds John and Barbara
and is known for his " soul saving" spirit ual church meetings
com plete with mour ners bench
and hymn singing.
The cast is filled out by towns people who will be singing, square
dan cing, and playin g guitars .
They range from old men who sit
ar ound the stor e playing checkers
and singing, to a young girl who
Is facing motherhood and is
forc ed to reveal her sin in a real
sw inging soul-session In a church
revival scene. These parts are
played by John Robbins , Kay
Kroeth e, Tony Kohl , Becky Ermlsh, Llllie Mauldln , Dave Ha rt ranft , Scott Atherton , James
Berkheis er , Tom Domin , Steve
Weiss, Mar y Ann Dowdell , Dave
Keifer , Shelby Treon , Frank Na{Centlnued •* *¦•§ Hur)

In an effort to combat the
everyday trend to music , three
talented singers -arran ger s-com*
posers , Danny Hutton , Cory
Wells , and Chuck Negro n, have
banded together to form Three
Dog Night . The effect is astound ing variet y in material , both live
and recorded. With three capable lead singers , Three Dog
Night audiences can hear th ree
different soloists , three different
duet combinations and a fully
harmonized trio sound , all of
high musical quality.
Add four hand-picked musicians , and you begin to under stand why Los Angeles audiences
wer e flocking to see Three Dog
Night months befor e they entered
a recording studio. Their fir st album was done live in the studio , '
with no over-d uDDin g. Five inousand albums wer e sold in its first
week of release .
The group 's debut at the Whiskey A Go Go led to a long-ter m

contract as headliners there
Three Dog Night' s first nationa
tour in the fall of 1968 coincid
ed with the success of their firs
single record , "Nobody. " Theii
firs t LP was arran ged by Danny
Cor y, and Chuck , and the boys
plan to write all the material foi
thei r second album .
Supporti ng the group with i
concert of his own will be Hoyi
Axton, who has been called "s
product of America , voice of his
times, a lanky huge man with a
big voice that is tender , gravel ;
ly, howling and gentle , full a'
ener gy and sound , fingers pul l
ing moans and yells from hi.
guitar , cr eatin g the atre with hi:
music.... is going to continue add
ing his voice and meanin gfu
songs to the voices of the prcs
ent gener ation who take the pre
servation of life , the pre serva
tion of the land , and the pr eser
vation of the love for man seri
ously ."

BSC Evaluate d

BSC was recently advised th at a voluntary one , and affirmatloi
the Commission on In stitutions
is an indication that the college
of Higher Education of the Mid- meets the academic and fisca
die States Associati on of Colleges standa rds , as established bj
and
Secondary
Schools had mem ber institutions , appropiratc
voted to reaffirm the college 's to J *$ educational pro grams anc
accreditation. Th e announcement objectives .
was made at the Annual Meetin g
The first step in the accre dit
of the Middle State s Association ation process is a Self Stud;
In Atlantic City, New Jersey which , at Bloomsburg, involvec
and confirmed by a letter from more than a year and includedal .
Dr . Frank P . Piskor , Chairman of segments of t he coll ege com
the Commission .
mun ity. The evaluation teair
"Regi onal accreditation ," said visited the campus durin g the pas*
Dr . Robert Nossen , "follows an spring and then submitted its
intensive on-campus analysis by forma l rep ort which served as tn«
an evaluation team composed of basis for Commission actio n . Ii
faculty , ad m in istrat ion , and staff his letter to Dr . Nossen , Dr. Pis
members from colleges and uni- kor wrote , "This action reflects
versities throu ghout the mid-At( continued on page tour)
lant ic states . The association is

THU HE N3EHT

,1

% sa
1"
IB

^
^^^^^^^
^^^^^^ HBm ^
^^^
st ^ BB^B^^BBBHBBBBBB ^^ B^^
slll ^ ""*

isdilJsl nLLJ\ft j i

I

wmm

^^^^^^^^^

¦ m^i^™
™^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^ •¦

Lette r

The following is a letter I
wr ote in reply to a student whp
wrote to me questioning the validity of the Introduction to Philo sophy Final I gave last semester. I make some point here
which I think will be valuable to
my students as well as to the
community at large.
Dear Miss Russell ,
Your feelings about the illicit
transactions that took place during the Philoso phy I Final , I'm
sur e, are shared by many olyour
classmates , andl 'm very glad you
made them known to me.
I w ant to let you k now that I was
not unaware of some of the thin gs
tha t were going on and that I am
taking action agains t a nu mber of
students whose illicit behavior
can , I think , be established beyond reasonable doubt.
Further , I want you to know
that given the nature of the
exam , it's questionable whether
the use of notes , switching of
papers , and the like was ver y
helpful . As you may recall I' ve
said many times that students
must de monst rate an understanding of the Issue s, not a mere
familiarit y with the m , in my
course. Consequently , it's hard to
see h ow someone cou ld sh ow an d
understanding of say, the difference between behaviorism and
the Identit y theory solely from a
few scribbled notes or whispered
remar ks.
It follows from this that If you
observe d one of y our c la ssmates
whispering to another , you had
as much cause for AMUSEMENT
as for mora l indignation. For t
what do you think was said? Pro -

_____MAROON

bably something like this:
"Pi sst . . . . What 's Behaviorism? "
"It' s the view that mind is to
body as punch is to fist.
"You're kidding/'
If you want a good laugh , let
me invite you to my office and
I'll show you some of the absurdities which result when students attempt to write ah essay
on such fragmentary inform ation .
Let me recount an Incident
which happened last summer to
support my point that cheating
on essay exams is often of little help. I had a student who received a low grade in my Philo sophy course. She was very
indignant. She complained to me ,
to Dean Hoch , and to a lot of other people. Kow could she get such
a low grade , she asked , w hen all
her answers came straight out of
her notes ? (I have reas on to believe they came straight out of her
notebook .) Borrow your room mate ' s lecture notes some time ,
and you'll see why. They don 't
make sense until he explains and
elaborates on them. If then , a
student copies his answers out of
his notebook (or other visual
aids) , it's easy to see how they
very well might not make sense ,
how he consequently could get
a low grade
and think the
course was Impossible .
Those who didn 't know should
hav e le arned by now that cheating
is of little help on a good essay
exam. And those who took the
exam and retained their Integri ty
should know that little was gain ed by those who lost It .
Oliver J. Larml

AND GOLD

SoT~5

MICHAEL HOCK
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Business Manager
Managing Edito r
Co-News Editors
Co-Feature Editor s
Sports Editor
Photogr aphy Editors
Copy Editor
Circulation Manager

..

dor R«mtm
Bill Taittworth
Tom Funk , Martin Kleiner
Ginny Potter , Allan Maurar
Clark Ruch
Ji m Blrt , Mark Fouoart
Kathy Roarty
Linda Ennis
Advisor
M r . Michael Stanley
ADDITIONAL STAFF: Terry Blass, Leonard House ,
John Stugrin , Bob Schuf tx, Sally Swetland , Omv9 Keller ,
Jeff Wlmmor, Stanley Bunslc k, Jim Sachoetl , Carol Os>
waj d, Irene Oulycs, Swan Zalota , Frank Cliffo rd, Kay
Hajtn.
All opinions expresses! by colu mnists and feature w riters,
Including letters -te-tfte-edltor , are not necessarily those of
mis publication but those of the Individuals.

FIFTH COL UMN

by Blass

(From out of the east; a clod
of dust , a cry of "Hi-Ho the
original drink you eat with a
spoon! " it's Blass again , and
the entire M&G reading public
wonders: "Who is this Blass
kid anyway ? Wher e does he come
from? Why doesn 't he go away ?")
Strange thing s went on , down ,
and through '69. On the good
strange side there was "Eas y
Rider ," "Medium C ool," "Pu tney Swope ," Laura Nyro , Arlo
Guthrie , Dylan going country sans
poetry, Bethel , "Tommy /* "Abbey Road ," "Volunteers ," "Let
It Bleed," David Steinber g, Ed
McMahon 's imitation of Spir o
Agnew , Dick Cavett' s show,
playboy 's article on the paramilitary
right , PLAYBOY 'S
rock -dominated Jazz & Pop poll ,
supergrou ps, the Moratorium ,
"Sesame Street ," the "Kiss the
beaver " segment on "Laugh -In ,"
Mailer getti ng the Pulitzer and
running for mayor. Even that
WASPian superphallus , ol' 007
himself , actually showed some
emotions other than bloodlust ,
though it took Diana Rigg to
change him. But the bad side :
Biafra; millions starving while
Klutzes going "Gee whi z'- raped
the moon; Agnew's vote for censorshi p ; Agnew's vote for the
ABM ; My Lai; the kids from
"H air " doing pimple commer cials; Abbie Hoffman eulogizing
violence and then dedicating
"Woodstock Nation " to Lenny
Bruce; Mai ler accepting the Pulitzer and losing the mayoralty
race; the farce in Chicago;
TIME 'S man and woman of the
year award. But...
The '60' s are over , the swinging, sexy, smoggy, smutty, spacy, slumm y , slashin g, sorr y ,
sicky, schmucking sixties. Already we look back , remove d , as
it looking- at a childhood toy:
we k now we can 't go back , but
by God despite everything it was
kinda fun . Seeing ourselves only
dimly , we turn to our folk her oes, of which the decade saw
quite a few. We saw them mar tyrized alive: the Smothers Brothers. We saw them martyrized
by death: the Kennedys , King ,
Evers , Bruce. We saw some be-

" M onster " is hard rock . It is
nothin g sensational , just better than-avera ge rock , at lea^tmusically, with the guitar , drum s , or.
gan , all blendin g and coming
acros s str ong and wicked with out tryin g to stop the world .
And there are wasted tracks a
queer little organ thing called
"Fag " which is so familiar I
can't place it (Small Faces , maybe?)* and the non- grou p-writte n
"What Would You Do (If I Did
That To You)." But the album
survives , mostly because of John
Kay 's passionate vocals and the
very anarchic lyric s.
For Instance , we have "Move
Over , " one helluva good single
which Top 40 usually avoided ; it' s
relativel y mild :
"Thin gs look bad from over
here , too much confusion and no
solution , everyone here knows the
fear . . . yesterday 's law won 't
help us today , ya oughta retire ,
get outta the way!" Which is
scary enough to WHLM- type
minds: how bout "If we» can get
together , look out for stormy
weather. . . I ain 't got much
time, I can 't wait in line ."
POWER PL AY
If "M ove Over " cause s over30 ulcers , "Power Play" will
cause cardiac failure ; it' s just
plain mean:
"What gives you the r ight , hey
you , to stand there and tell me
what to do? Tell me, who gave
you the power to stop me from
living like I do? " And into "Be
careful who you 're pus hing round ,
ya just might find you 're obsolete" and much more. That
sounds pretty definite . And then
there 's politics , hoo boy is there
politics , in "Dra ft Register ":
"Those who suffer for the
sake of honesty, all those who
rjafu se to follow traitors to humanity, here 's to all the draft
resisters who will fight for sanity , when they march 'em off to
prison , in this land of liberty. "
Now that' s quite a tribu te , and
here ' s a warn ing: "Heed the
t hreat and awesome power of
the might y Pentagon , which is
-wastin g precious millions on the
toys 'of Washington /' And , finally,
a last rememberance , a salute!"
. . . don 't for get the draft resisted and their silent lonely plea ,
when they march 'em off to
priso n , they will go for you and
me ."
Okay, so far the album has
per forme d some sor t of minor
mentally retarde d because of In- miracle by not getting itself bannfant protein deficiency , are only ,ed out of the country . But that' s
occasion ally able to attend
ju st a little long-hair ed anger
school . Those who can must and some politics, what we 've
usually drop out as soon as they
covere d. There' s " F rom H ere
are old enough to help In the To There Eventually, " whic h but chers that most sacred topic of
fields.
all: organized religion. (And if
you think that ain 't a dan gerous
HAPPY- GO- LUCKY
topic , ask Lenny Bruce ). The
A we ll-to-do farmer Interview - whole thing deserves copying:
ed by CBS , who employs migrant
(Continued on pig* four;
wor ke rs , explaine d tha t migrants
are rea lly hap pier than other
people. Accor ding to him , they
are hap py-go-lucky folk s who love
travel ing ar ound and who would n't
want a different life even if it
were possible . The faces of the The Olympian Is . . . (pick one)
a. a lofty, cloud - covered
m igrants , the ir words of despair , and the knowledge that a resort area recentl y bought and
migrant 's dally pay is often less renovate d by a Greek millionaire
than two dollars , convince one of for his new wife.
th i s man 's absolute idiocy.
b. a wor ld-wide tiddley -wlnk
championship , to be held this
A city audienc e seeing the film spr ing in Room 234 , second floor
today might be ab le to tell itself Walle r Hall .
that HARVEST OF SHAME Is ten
c. a literar y magazine , supyears old , and that no doubt , the por te d by and dedicate d to a stuhorr ible condition s of migrant dent body which hasn 't , as of
labor portrayed In It have been yet , shown much Interest In this
correcte d. Here In rural Penn - year 's extrava ganza. Due to lack
sylvania we know better .Migr ant of material , this year 's OLYM
cond itions In Columbi a County PI AN will be mimeographed on
are , if anything , worse than tho se the backs of old copies of the
shown In the movie. And the Ule TODAY .
ot the migrants will continu e to
If you picked "c ", send your
be wretched until citizens who p oem , short-story , or one-act
can vote (migran ts are , not al- play to the Olympian , Box 293.
lowed to) ar e aroused enough by Waller Hall . You might win 1
films such as this one to demand per cent of Harold Robbina' roythat the most elementary righ ts alties for the month of Januar y
of Americans be extende d to (approxi mately
$75,000 ,000).
those who harve st our crop s. Contest closes March 15.

ing born , and saw tuem str ive:
Dylan , the Beatles , Mick Ja gger. It 's the folk heroes , particularl y those in rock , who show
us what the '60»s were .
A POLI TI CAL FOR CE
Lessee, somew here al ong the
way rock became a political
force , and one to be reckone d
with. No longer was there Pat
Boone or any of those other
shams who allegedly spoke to
and of youth. Somewhere youth
(that 's us), turned off by rock ,
or rather what passed as rock ,
looked throu gh the arts for its
own voice, couldn 't find it , went
bac k to rock again and changed
it. Rock , stolen from the black
blacks , soon became the release
for the just-as -bad-off white
blacks , the middle-classe d longhaired kids who saw the Amer ican
dream as the world' s nightmare ,
middle-classe d kids who learned
the hard way that becomin g black
constituted nothing more than
dissent and looking different , perfectly legal but totally loathesome to The Powers Th at Were.
Whites were now black (i.e., beat
over the head and carted off to
jail for no real reason). So politics found its place in rock , the
time s they have a-changed , the
anger , idealism , frustration , rebellion , love, drugs , the fres hness of the decade and a new life
style all got rolled into a handful of rock albu ms: Dylan 's stuff
for himself; Dylan 's stuff for the
Big Pink album; "Sgt. Pepper ,"
the Doors ' first two , "The Notorious Byrd Brothers ," "Beggars Banquet ," Airplane sounds ,
"Alice 's Restaurant ," such albums were the '60s. And somewhere at the ver y bottom of
that list , but still there , must go
"M onster. "
I never liked Steppenwolf . I
thou ght Hermann Hesse deserved
better; and they reminded me of
the old Stones , still do . Sur e I
loved 'The Pus her " and could
listen to "Born To Be Wild ,"
but that was it. It took one play*
Ing of "Mons ter " to concert me;
in fact , I' ve kept the dam n thing
to myself ever since the week of
the last Moratorium ; but now,
with the single of "Mons ter "
beating Led Zeppelin in the Hu sky
hit parade , I may as well confess .

Harvest of Shame
by Louis I. Nau

A decade ago CBS News pro duced a documentary film about
migrant workers which caused a
sensation at the time of its ori ginal release on television and
which remains a classic of Its
kind. Wednesd ay evening HAR VEST OF SHAME was given a
screening at the College by the
local chapter of the American Association of University Women
by the BSC Literary and Film
Society.
HARVEST OF SHAM E has the
distinction , rare amon g such
documentaries on social prob lems , of being not only Inst ructive
but moving as well. Wedne sday
night ' s audie nce was visibly affecte d by the scenes of children
and babies left alone in rat-In fested shacks while their parents
wor k in the fields , of faces of
migrant women who look old and
worn out at the age of 25 , of scores
of people packed like animals
Into trucks for the long trips from
one picking area to another . The
late Edward R. Morrow , who nar rate d the film , brou ght out the
ma gnitude of the proble m by explaining that upwards of 600 ,000
Americ ans are migr ant agrlcuU
tural labore rs. More of these
have lar ge families and perhaps
the most tra gic aspect of the prob lem Is that the children of these
fam ilies have almost no hope of
breakin g the cycle and Improving
the ir lot. The children , always
on the move , Ineligible for most
kinds of welfare assistance , often

I

I - ^ich LJn e

BSC Falls Short ,
Rams Win 97 - 86

On the basketball courts this

week end, the Huskies didn 't fare

as well as the grapplers. The
Golden Rams of West Chester
State College , on their own c ourt,
nudged the BSC team 97-86.
Jim P latukis and Bob Snyder
dum ped in 24 points and 23 points
respectiv ely, while Yanchek add ed 14 , and Johnson dro pped in
another 11. High scorers for the
Rams were Hauer with 22 and
Founds who had 20 points.
It looked as though the Huskies
had a chance in the first half
when they chopped away WCSC 's
eight point lead and went ahead
by
one point. But the Rams
bounded back -and picked up a six
point lead over the visitors .
Closing in on the half time , the
Huskies caught up again , but
after a few fast breaks WCSC
pulled out ahead again and the
half time closed with the score
44-33.

The second half of the game
was much the same as the first .
Overall , the Huskie s put up a
good resistance to the much tall er Rams . With the tallest on the
BSC team 6»5**t compared to
6'9» and 6'6" on the WCSC team ,
Coach Voss's boys out rebound ed the Rams 42-40. -More prominent rebounder s for the night
were Yanchek with 12 and Schuster with 9.
From the field , BSC shot 42
per cent ot the time while the
Rams put through 54 per cent of
the shots. And from the goal
line , the Huskies had 30 for 34.
Bob Snyder and Mark Yanchek
both came through on assists
with 5 and 4 recorded respectively.
The loss has given the Huskie s
a nine to five record with four
wins and three losses in the
conference.

fi asM
Stzr '"X "> ¦ **¦< ' ¦ jgMJMtf ^Httk

This is the time of the year
when the big news in sports are
the baseball holdouts. This is a
rare breed of basebal lanimal who
thinks he is worth more money
than his team has offer ed to pay
him. Most of the time he does
deserv e a healthy rais e.
Now add to the displeasu re of
the front office executives the suit
against professiona l basebal l by
Curt Flood . Flood was tra ded bj
the St . Louis Cardina ls to the
Philade lphia Phillies after the
1969 World Ser ies. With this
trade Flood must leave his life ,
friends , and busin ess interests in
the St. Louis area.
W ith the help of Arthur Goldber g, for mer Supreme Cour t Jus tice and Ambassad or to the U .N.,
Flood is hoping to prove that the
reserve clause commits the player to the team as a piece of property . It is also his conten tion
that he should be able to deal
with any team he wishes, thou gh
they may be contrar y to the desires of his bosses.
The M&Gh as discussed the reserv e claus e with people at BSC
who are directly or Indirect ly involved with the clause and pr ofessional baseball. These Included
Intramu ral direct or Jer «y Medl ock , who spent several seasons
p itchin g in the minor leagues , and
Clark Boler , the Husky baseball
coach.
Mr. Medlock th inks th e reserve
clause is too strin ge nt in that it
take s away the r ights of the play er w hen he signs his cont ract.
"The reserve clause is alri ght
within limits , " Med l ock stated .

ttttflj

^^^^ K

California on Mats

'It goes beyond the rights of the
player . He should have the right
to renegotiate with any team after
an arbitrary period of say five
years ." Mr . Medlock is no
doubt sympathetic to Flood' s suit .
"The advant age is all to the
owner s because it creates more
equal competition ," he continued .
"Otherwise a team could buy all
of the best players in the U.S."
If the reserve clause Is done away
with a player could go the the
highest bidder . "If a team gets
all the best player s and becomes
No. 1,'* Medlock stated ," the atten dance at games will dro p off
and they will eventually lose
money. " And w ho wants to see
a team that does nothin g but win.
"Baseball should be able to recognize a player ' s personal
rights , but retain an amount of
jurisdiction on the player , so
baseball is not ruined , " Medlock
concluded.
Coach Boler 's thoughts on the
reserve clause are somewhat different . "I t is necessar y f rom t he
owner' s point of view as a liability. " "If he (Flood) doesn 't think
he ought to be traded , " he continued , "he shouldn 't play ball . "
It' s one of the hazards of the occupation .
If the clause were dro pped Mr,
Boler though there would be
more benefits for the player , but
In his words , "Players would
be sold every year . Th e clause
keeps ball players together and
works towar d unification of the
team. "
My own thou ghts differ somewhat from Mr. Medlock' s and

Retros pective Look At Wrestlin g

While my mentor Is confined to
the benches , the task has fallen to
i me to keep you, the aficionados .
Informed of what 's been happening on the mats.
Last week , the Huskies traveled to Kutztov/n where they tore

¦¦
•:; •¦ •¦•• •¦' ¦." '¦.'/v% *> y %

Week 's
Sports
Scene

February 4 (today)
Swimming — East Strou dsbur g
— Home
Basketball — Shlppensburg —
Away
Girl' s Basketball - Penn State
— Home, 3:30 p.m.
February 5
Wrestling - Millersville —
Away
February 6
Wrestling — Shippensbur g —
H ome
Swimming — Glasboro —
Away
February 7
Basketball — Cheyney — Away
Wrestling — Shlppensburg —
H ome
Coach Boler' s. The rese rve is
a detriment to professio nal base *
ball in that it takes away all rights
of the player and makes him the
property of the club . He must ,
if the bosses see fit , l eave his
life in one city to move to a new
and stran ge city to play. It also
keeps the richest clubs fr om
grabbing up the best players and
puttin g together a super-team
which can do nothing but win.
(continued on page four)


Jitmemkr
anct SJ s-

SHUMAN'S WORLD TRAVEL '
For All Your Travel Arrangem ents

6Tfc.

Applicat ion! for Youth Faro Cardi available
Ml t/« or Stop *> NOW ft Any Information mi Trovoll

up the Golden Beaver 's lodge and week , and at 150 Russ Scheuren
returned with a 30-5 win. Coach pinned Wayne
Gosilicy after going
Houk 's matmen recorded twoplns 2:37
into
the
3rd perio d. Arnie
(Wayne Symthe andRon Sheehan) Thompson
and
Floyd Hitchcock
and six decisions . Larr y Sones both record ed second
per iod pins.
drew at 118 and K-Town picked up
its additional 3 points in a decisThe last two bouts at 190
and heavyweight were a snap.
ion at 167.
Ron Skeehan won the 190 by deMore recently , the Huskies fault and Jim McC ue got a 15dropped California State College. 5 decision over Garee Pip er.
The locals did as good a job on
CSC , as they did on K-town ,
If the grapplers had been expectin g a busy weekend they were
downing the opposition 34-6.
soon disappointed . The Satur Recording 4 points , 3 decis- day night festivitie s slacked off
ions , and one win by default, consider ably when Coach Houk
BBC soon overc ame an early rece ived word that the Wayne s- '
341- lead by the Vulcans . From burg College team would be abl e
then on the Huskies piled on the to have only five wrestl ers due
points.
to injuries and a viru s. They
had to
Wayn e Smythe registered a and due forfeit Saturday 's match
tight schedules It Is
pin , his second in less than a: doubtf ul to
that it will be made up.

J oin
the

M&G
MOVER
Pharmacy
Your Prescription Druggist
ROBERT G. SHIVE,R.P.
Free Prescription Delivery

TOILET GOODS
COSMETICS
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES
GREETING CARDS
1 Wett Main St.
Phonot 784-4388
BLOOMSBURG, PA,

WONDERVIEW
SKI AREA

I7 IAIT MAIN ST. • UOOMIiMO • PHONI 714-3*20
«
RESERVATIONS • TICKETS • TdURS
Hotels Handled
All A/r/inoi / Tram* I

For 34-6 Loss.

FLOWERS
784-4406
Bondad World Wld» Dollvo ry

weekdays 7-10 p.m.
1-10 p.m.
Monday •—
ColUfe Night
only $1.00 per person

Charlie 's
PIZZA
ft
HOAGIES
Open tiM2 «00pan.
Closed 1,30to 3t00 p.m.
Every Doy But Friday

PM1 DIUVtlY
5 to 7

8=30 to 11,30

Regular and King Sizo
HQfVGIES
Phone 7844292
I27 W. Moin

BLOOMSBURG

BOOKS...
OVER 8,000

TITLES IN STOCK
If It's ¦ book
wo have It or wo can got It

Greeting Cards

HENRIE 'S

Card and Book Nook
40 W. Main St.

¦¦¦¦iHMMMaMMMHaaHaaH

^HMMii ^HHai ^BHBHaMHHHI

^aHaHaMHMMiiHHHMaiMHMMaMMN^MHaBHMi

Fifth Column
you 're really alright ; it's got

(continued from pago 1)

"Ya fill this nouse with things*
of gold while handing crumbs to
the old and poor , and then ya
preach about being pure , and
wonder why we 're laughing; yer
old way of trying to find us but
we can 't follow what's behind
us , too much blind faith ...blind
us, through sometimes it's a
blessing." To the chorus:
"But I remember when I still
embraced you , a little prayer
would ease my mind , till I saw
that you hide from the misery
outside, so I left you behind ,"
Other religions?" But a.11 the
other teachings were about the
same, one grain of truth mixed
with confusion. ' But there 's hope!
"... may as well get ya back
on yer feet again ." (soul, no
pun , chorus answering: "Get
back, back up on yer feet")
"Don'tcha know we need somebody to (do some work out in
the street), you just might touch
somebody (start to think about
today), throw your old stuff
away and (break away from yesterday), tell me, can we reach
you (still I don 't know, we
got to get from here to there
eventually)."
Now to more like the beginning, heavy sarcasm: "While mothers die up against the wall ya
take the time to tell us all
how we 're not supposed to ball,

nothing to do with heaven or
hell but I do admit I'm not gonna
tell what I' m talking about , ya
know damn well, ya really ought
to try it. " Eerie things start
happening, the organ jumps and
cascades in sounds, fiery hellish
sounds, whips slash and souls
scream and we end up with the
gospel of "Jesus will save, he 's
coming back and you better believe ." I ain 't telling what it
means either , don 't need to; all I
know is that this one will be
banned from the whole intercom*sing universe .
MONSTER

Heady stuff , right? Dangerous
visions indeed . But how about
Steppenwolf's masterpiece , the
"Monster " suite in three parts,
the opening cut which against all
odds is making it as a single .
It starts innocently enough, a
little history lesson, in case we
forgot :
"Once the religious, the hunted and weary, chasing the promise of freedom and hope , came
to this country to build a new
vision, faj from the reaches of
kingdom and pope; like good
Christians some would burn the
witches, later some bought slaves
to gather riches ... " but still they
came "to court the wild , " the
Redman got his, evil things went
on, but things went okay for
awhile, but the spirit's "protectors and friends have been
sleeping, now it's a monster and
will not obey. " Here the bass
sticks angrily, and into the second movement, "Suicide ":
"... its leaders were supposed
to serve the country, now they
don 't pay it no mind, cause the
lazy, now
Laurence Olivier 's Academy people grew fat and got
meaningless
their
votes
is
a
Award Winning
production of
's a monster on
Shakespeare1^ HAMLET will joke ...yes , there
got
the
loose,
our heads into
it's
open the 6th Film Series of the
the
noose,
and
it
just
sits there,
BS'C Literary and Film Society
watching...the
cities
have
turned
on February 18 at 8:00 p.m. The into jun gles and corruption
is
19' " film which Olivier directed strangling the land , the police
an. starred in was noticeable for force is watching the people, and
its marked use of Freudian in- the people just can understand;
ter , retation of Hamlet's dra- we don know how't to mind our
't
ma* c conflicts .
whole world
own
business,
The Series will offer five ad- has to be just the
like
us, now we
ditional films throughout the are fighting a war over
there,
term:
no
matter
who
s
the
winner
, we
'
March 4 — DR . JE KYLL AND can pay the cost
't
."
MR HYDE , in English , a classic of horror tales , with SpenAND THEN COMES
ce? Trac y in the title role.
And then comes "America ,"
Iwarch 18 - GRAND ILLU- a chant , an anthem maybe , a
SION , in French , "Renoir 's of- scream of pain , anguished and
fie U masterpiece " tells the tale desperate: "America , where are
of escape from a prisoner of war you now, don 't you care about your
car.p .
sons and daughters? Don 't you
April 8 - HE WHO MUST know we need you now, we can 't
DIE , in Greek , the controversial
alone against the monster . "
alHl fror y of the passion of Christ . Iffight
we ever have another Chicago ,
_Vril 22 - FREAKS , in that chant will figure in it .
English , a surrealistic murder
mystery set in a circus , lon g
So there we have it , "Mon suppressed in comnierical dis- ster , " one very commendable
tribution.
album from a group I never
"ay 13 - THE WORLD OF thought capable; sure it advocates
A Pj , in Hindi , modern and an- violence , and whether violence is
cient India , conflict in the life advocated by Steppenwolf , Abbi e
of :. young bachelor . Third in Hoffman , or even racist Eldridge
the famous Apu trilo gy.
Cleaver , it' s still the last reFilm showings are open to sort of the incompetent . Revmembers of the Society: mem- olution can be bloody, but it
bership may be obtained by send- doesn 't have to be: it can just
ing $3 for one person or $5 be freaky kids (or , in some
for two persons to Literary ami circles , "Commie preverts ")
Film Society, Box 306, Coll ege getting into established instituPost Office .
tions and turnin g them upside
down . Yet "Monster " reflects
something, an inability to reach
i me in and browt e .
the political beast , and a frustration which can only lead to
violence if things don 't let up.
The '60' s were bad enough , from
t .v , to James Bond to three

Films on
Campus

EUDORA'S
CORSET SHOP

1 I. Main ft . lloomtburf

¦A friendl y store in

I

tow n

¦^^^ HB^^ M^^^^^^^^

I
I
I

I

t

^^^^^^^^^^

^^^

^
FET TERMANS
BARBER SHOP
— QUALITY —
*oot of Collagt Hill
tlewntb ur g Pa.
^J

The
Texas
WHERE DAD

TOOK HIS GIRL
Bloomsburg

v^ anip u d ^r ntetviewd
Feb . 5 — 9 a.m., Bloomfield
Public Schools , Bloomfield , New
Jersey, Most area;
Feb . 5 — 9:30 a.m., Arlington Central School District,
Poughkeepsie , New York , All
areas; Present salary $7 100
Feb . 5 — 10 a.m., Pomeroy 's
Inc., Reading, Pa., Any curr .
or major (Non-teach positions)
Feb . 5 — 10:30 a.m., Liberty
Mutual Insurance Co., Bala-Cynwyd , Pa., Technical , non selling
positions - any curr . or major ;
Feb . 5 — 1:30 p.m ., New
Castle-Cunning Bedford Sch.
Dist., New Castle, Delaware,
Elem; Most areas of Secondary;
Feb . 5 — 2 p.m., Queen Anne's
County Bd . of Ed ., Centreville,
Maryland , All areas;
Feb . 6 — 2 p.m ., Franklin
Twp. School District , Somerset,
New Jersey, All areas; Present
salary $7000
Feb . 9 — 9 a .m., State Civil
Service Commission , Harris burg, Pa., Interviews in a.m .
Test given 1:30 - 5 p.m.
Feb . 1 0 — Q a.m ., Central

Cast

(continued from page one)

Dauphin School District, Harrisburg, Pa., All areas;
Feb. 1 0 — 9 a.m., Tredyff rinEasttown School District , Berwyn , Pa., All areas;
Feb. 1 0 — 2 p.m., Price , Waterhouse & Company, Baltimore,
M aryland , Business maj ors;
Opportunity for Liberal Arts
and Bachelor of Science
Graduates.
DEPARTMENT OF
HEALT H ,EDUCATION ,
AND WELFARE
GRADUATE STUDY W ITH

Athlete 's
Foot

This will hurt the gate, because
people go to a game hoping for
their team to win, but knowing
they could lose . Few people
would pay today 's inflation-raised
prices to see a team that wins 90
per cent of the time. It is the
suspense of the delicate balance
between victory and defeat which
makes the game of baseball the
great sport it is today and hopefully will continue to be.

PAY AND ALL EDUCAKJooltdtore
A L EXPENSES IN
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION. . (continue d from page ont )
Interested students should
are not pleased with our low
take the FEDERAL SERsales as it is, and Mr. Trathan
VICE ENTRANC E
feels
that any requests of this
EXAMINATION ( FSEE) as
nature
would probably not be
soon as possible. Those stuHowever , the poll did
accepted.
dent who have taken the
have
numerous
"write-ins" reGraduate Record Examinatmagazines,
such
various
questing
ion can bypass the FSEE if
as "Playboy " and "Esquire ."
they scored veil. For further
The sale of these magazines
information contact t h e
would result in a large enough
Placement office,Ben Frankprofit to cover the loss due to aclin.
ademic magazine sales.
'"Federal Service Entrance
(5) 70 per cent of the faculty
Examination will be given on
campus,February 21,T970.
and 67 per cent of the students
TIO N

tale, and Mary Ellen Spencer .
DARK OF THE MOON is a folk
Eva lu ation
drama and takes place in the
back hills of the Kentucky Moun(continued from page one)
tains. There is fog, witches dancing, and lots of singing. The set
confidence of your colleagues
will be rocks, mountains, trees , the
in
the
contribution you are making
caves , and the dialogue will be
higher education .''
to
mountain dialect . All factors con£>sC was originally accredited
sidered , this is bound to be one
1950 , and re-evaluations nori
n
of the most dramatic productions mally
occur at ten-year intervals.
the Bloomsburg Players have It is common,
however, for porever presented .
gress and other reports to be
during the interim, to
assassinations to Vietnam . The requested
followed
by informal visits
be
'60's were change- economic , when the Commission
considers
moral , social, anti- all those
them advisable . During its prethings- but never , never was sent period of rapid development
the change political . So, what in the area of the Arts and
will the '70' s bring? More blood, Sciences; its emerging graduate
more senseless war? More an- offerings; and its work towards an
xiety, hate, racism, facism . Al- academic master plan, can be exready the 70's have seen strikes pected to make an interim report
and very possible depression, within the next two years.
alon g with the usual militancy
"Regional accreditation is the
from all sides . (Even here at basic accreditation that an institBloomsburg we began the '70's ution must have before it seeks
with a very dubious question- other forms of specialized proaire and the giving-over-of-Car- gram recognition , " noted Dr .
ver to a John Bircher). And Nossen. "The College is already
even if we can sur mount all that recognized by NCATE , the natwill our ecology really revenge ional association for teacher eduitself and kill us within the next cation , and is taking steps to preten years as some predictors pare for appropriate accredipredict?
tation of its chemistry and busOne thing ' s certain. The po- iness programs ."
litical apparatus won 't change by
its own volition . Change lies
in the individual . And this change
should be non-violent yet . Whi ch
BLOO M
is one helluva big order , and
everything rests on our generaO
tion. Our generation , and ours
alone, because if we don't move
fast there 'll be no mor e generations at all . The odds are incredibly bad , but if our music
does reflect where our heads are,
if Bethel was only a beginning,
if we believe j ust a fraction of
albums Mke "Monster , " well ,
I'll let ya in on a little secret:

B WL

replies (total 68 per cent) favored initiation of a Book Store
Ordering Service for books not
in stock . Mr. Trathan has begun
ordering paperbacks requested , .
this is dons on a weekly basis,
however , and there is some difficulty ordering paperbacks already in stock with Mid Penn
due to the increased length of
time involved and higher prices.
(6) The largest positive response
was made in regard to the "Used
book sale" being moved nearer
outside of the Book Store.) 50
per cent of the faculty and 80.5
per cent of the students replies
(total 74 per cent). This must
be cleared with Mr. Gory, Security Head, rather than Mr .
Tr athan.

MAREE'S
DRESS

I

sho p

;

112 W. Main

!

!
*

1

©

WAFFLE
I
GRIL LE I

WE'RE

GOING TO MAKE IT!

THE STUDIO SHOP

L

59 E. Main St.
. . . for your personal needs in
gi fts and home decor

YOUR DOLLA R
BUYS MORE AT A

GOODWILL STORE

154 W. Main, Bloomsburg
SHOP AT GOODWILL
FOR YOUR CLOTHING
AND SAVi YOUR MONiY
FOR OTHIR THINGS

\
I
I

\

i

I

»

I

i

I

Harr y Logan
Fine J ewelry
AND

Repairing
Your J twtltr Away fro m Horn *
5 W. Main St.

Bloomsburo

11™1™
"
P
^TTSoroa
Tbord
I
ALL YO

U CAN EAT
1
$1.75
$3.00
Holiday Buffett
I
LUNCHE ON
I Tuesday thru Friday
EACH SUNDAY
¦
Evtry Wetk — 11:30 • 1:30
11:30 • 2:30
I
Children - $1.50
¦
— on our 2nd Floor —

IHOTEL MAGEE Bloom sburg ,Pal
B

Pick Btntfltl d, Mt nagT

I