rdunkelb
Fri, 04/05/2024 - 13:54
Edited Text
Bloodmobile On
the Move At BSC
Pr eparations are well under
way for the 18th annual Ameri can Red Cross Bloodmobile visit
to the campus of Bloomsburg
State College in Centennial Gymnasium on Thursda y, March 12,
1970, from 9:45 a.m. to 3:45
p.m. The Bloodmobile Committee , under the co-chairmans hip
of Anthon y Kohl , Nort hampton ,
and Mrs. Karen Bloom , Bloomsburg, launched its campaign this
weak to solicit students , faculty ,
and non-teachin g personnel to be
donors. The committee hopes to
at least matc h the 496 pints of
blood donate d at last year 's
bloodmobi le visit , accordin g to
George G. Stradtman , facu lty coor dinator .
A substantial turnout of donors
on the March 12 visit could assure the Bloomsburg area Priority 1 status. Over the years ,
partici pation has been largely
responsible for the Bloomsburg
area remaining in Priorit y 1
(I Dand Zre&t
Ward
13-15
Bloomsburg State is one of 35
Pennsylvania colleges and univers ities to be re presente d in th e
forthcoming 23rd Annual Pennsylvania Intercollegiate
Band
Festival to be held on the Wllkes
College campus , Wllk es JJarre ,
March 13 , 14, and 1.5. It is being
sponsore d by Pennsyl vania Bandmasters Association in cooperation with Pennsylvani a Music Educ ators Association with William
R. Gasbarro , chairman , Wilke s
College Department of Music ,
host of the festival.
R ep resent in g th e M aroon an d
Gold Band of BSC will be Mich ,
ae l Gulliver , son of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Gulliver , 531 West
Third Street , Bloomsbur g, Pa. ,
a junior in secondary education
who plays the tuba and Strate
Marlnak os, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Nick E. M arlnakos , 314Mulberry
Street , Berwick , Pa ., a freshman
in secondary education who play s
tne clarinet.
Following campus arriv al , the
mus ic educ ation conference will
take place Saturda y, March 14
from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
under the auspices of Studen t
Chapter 388 of Wllkes College
with Richard Probert , mem ber
of the mus ic faculty, as advisor .
The festival band concert comprising app roximately 130 musicians from the Pennsylvania colleges is scheduled for 2:30 p.m.
Sunday afte r noon , March 15 , conducted by Prof. Donald E. McGlnnls , director of Ohio State
Un iversity Concert Band .
Institutions rep resen ted are :
State ,
Albri ght)
Bloomsburg
Bucknell University, California
State , Carne gie-Mellon Univer sity, Clarion State , Drexel Univers ity, East Stroudsburg State ,
( continued on page tight )
J ¦_
_ ¦
» . _ _ J
status most of the ti me. Since
the first bloodm obile visit to
the BSC campus on Februar y 12A
1953 , when there were 183 pints
of blood collected , there has been
a total of 5,121 pints collected
from college community parti cipants.
Strad tman indicated that a
booth will be set up outside of
Husky Lounge to enlist the name s
of students who intend to donate
blood and faculty members wiU
be solicited through inter-col lege correspondence. An impor tant change starting with thi s
visit is that it is no longer necessary for a student under 21
years of age to have a signed
parental slip indicating permiss ion to donate blood.
In addi tion to the response
that is expected from the college community , it is hoped that
a substantial number of walk ins , compr ised oi residents of
the Bloomsburg are a , will par ticipate in the March 12 visit .
Stu dent members , in addition
to Kohl and Mrs. Bloom , servin g
on the 1970 Bloodmobile Commit tee are : Lee Harris , John Halle ,
C aro l Batzel , Joy Novak , John
Whi te bre ad , Kathy Novak , G race
Nazarenk o, M aureen Schaeffer ,
G ary Bl asser , Sue Maglll , Wayne
Herring , Mike Hokkanen , Bar bara Osinski , J ane Fell ln , J ames
Kelly, Linda Swank , Nancy Shaffer , James and Jos eph Pail and
Linda M alin ski.
At The Root
The oil painting "At the R oot"
will hang in the Waller Lobb y/or
two weeks then will be moved to
a more permanen t location in
Haas Aud itor ium . This painting is
a stron g addition to the growing
Permanent Collection of the College. It was given to the College by the American Society
of Arts and Letters in recogni t ion of the quality of the collection that has been started during
the past six year s and as an encoura gement to contin ue to enlar ge this collection in furthe r
yea rs.
The artist of the work , David
Lund , is a nati ve of New York
who atte nded Queens College ,
where he received his Bachelor
of Arts degree. He 13 currently
on the facul ty of Par sons School
of Desi gn , hav ing taught at C ooper
Un ion Art School and Washingto n
Un iversity in St. Louis , Missouri .
His work has been widely exhibited and la In the perm anent
collections
of the Whitney
Muse um of American Art , F inch
College , Baltimor e Maryland Mu seum and th e Chas e M anhattan
Bank in New York City , among
oth ers. .
Mr . Lund , who was awarde d a
Fulbrlght Gr ant to Rome for
two years , has had his work
exhibite d at the Whitney Museum
of Amer ican Ar t, Cooper Union.
Queens College , the Fort Worth
Art Center , and elsewhere.
Attention all Pres idents of
campu s organizations! 11 Has
your group been photographed for the 1970 OBITER????
If not yo u bette r get on the
ballll! The deadl ine is the
15 of March; all pictures
have to be taken before this
date, if not you r group will
not be in the yearbook
(again) . So get a move on
and make an appointment by
leaving a note in Box 291
Waller with the time and
place and we'll have a photo *
grapher there.
News
Briefs
f-^rom
L ^unctiled
Last week we conducted a last
ditch effort to find support for
a Junior Prom , by circulatin g a
questionairje . Out of a class of
about 750 students , we received
31 replies. Even tak ing into account the fact that some people
would not be aware ot the ques tionnaire and that others would
simply not take time to return
it , we still believe that 31 people is a pretty poor response .
If we wer e to disregard the
appare nt lack 'of interest and go
ahead and plan the prom , we
would have to make arran gements
for the entire class . It would
mean a tremendous loss of money to the class if we then did
not receive a major ity support .
We therefore have decided that
it would be foolish to go on with
any plans for this year , and in*
stead will try to learn from
this lesson and start planning
the prom for next year . To those
of you who said that you might
be able to help on a prom com*
mittee , we will ask your help
in planning next year 's sen ior
pro m. AGAIN THIS YEAR'S JUNIOR PROM IS CANCELLEDIU
Regretfully yours ,
Bill Cluley Junior C lass Pres .
Sophs To Discuss
Field Exp erience
All Sophomores in teacher edu- bi -lingual school in New York
cation who will attain Junior class (Spanish • English), or Canada
standin g by September of 1970 (French - English), a southern
will meet as scheduled below with inner-city school in Richmond ,
% their Divisional Director and Dr. Vir ginia , or an inner-cit y school.
Meetin gs will be held as foiAumiller to discuss the Field
lows:
Experience Program .
The Field Experience , which
Secondary — M onda y , Marc h 9
is designed to expose students to — 4:00 p.m. — Room 134, Hart actual classroom and commun ity line Science Center.
Elementar y — Tuesda y, March
situat ions , should be engaged in
10 — 4:00 p.m. — Room 134
pr ior to entering courses in professional education . H opefully, it Hartline Sc. Center .
Busin ess — Monday, March 16
will help students decide whether
or not they really want to follow — 4:00 p.m. — Room 134, Har tline Sc. Center .
a career in teachin g.
The Department of Field Experience , with the encouragement
and cooperation of the directors
of the various divisions , Dean of
Instr uction , and Dr . Nossen is in
the process of arran ging for students , who so desir e , to acquire
their experience in areas away
from their home . Students will be
asked if they have a desire to
Dr . Max Pr imack of the Philo work in their local area , a rur al sophy Department partici pated
deprived area in Appalachia , a in a debate at Southern Regional
High School -with Mr. A . Sylvester of the Histor y Department
on Thursda y, Februar y 26. The
debate dealt with the question
of the "jus t war " . The position
they took did not necessarily reflect thei r personal opinion . Mr .
Sylvester ar gued that all wars
wer e necessar ily immoral in that
The Lincoln Nationa l Life Inthey
involved the killing of innosurance Company and LNC Equity
people
. The killing of innocent
Sales Corporation will have two
it was agreed , ma de
people
cent
,
representatives at the Newman
innocent power inmost
even
the
Club on Wednesday and Thurs thereby negating
guilty
,
volved
day , the 11th and 12th , fr om 1:00
of
justice
which it might
any
claim
to 5:00 and from 7:00 to 10:00.
Primac
k held that
Dr.
ma
k
e
.
The highlight will be twenty minare
not just it
wa
rs
while
all
ute sessions at 1:30 , 3:30 , 7:30
possible
as well
theor
etically
is
and 9:00, but you are welcome
accurate
to talk
historica
lly
as
to drop by at any time . Linco ln
World
War
U was
of
"just"
war
s.
National is one of the few major
position.
illustrate
this
used
to
companies that has specialized
Countri es , as well as ind ividuals ,
Life Insurance programs for colhave the mora l right to violently
lege senior s as well as finanoppose aggression under certain
cial planning and equity services.
specified cond itions. It is necWith graduati on only a few
y, Dr. Primack concluded ,
essar
months away it is now time for
distin
guish betwe en a just war
to
you to think seriously about steps
unjust methods (such as
and
the
that should be taken to insure your
bombin
g of Dresden) which
the
future . This progr am is designed
sometimes employed in atare
(continued on page eight )
temptin g to achieve v ictory.
Primack Sylveste r
Insurance
Advice
C*con Sp eaker
There will be a J oint meeting
of the Economics Club and Phi
Beta Lambd a (Business Frater nity) in Har tline Science Center ,
room B-86 , on Thur sday , March
12 , at 7:30 p.m.
The guest speaker will be Mr .
Elmer Robinson , stoc kb ro k er f or
Jose phtha l & Co,, a mem ber of 1
the New Yor k and AmericanStock
Exchan ges .
A wide scope of topics will be
discussed , from the establishment and dealin gs of an investment club , to the implications
of the fiscal and moneta ry policy,
The Phi Beta Lambda Fratern ity and the Economics Club
will have separate business moetings after Mr. Robinson speaks.
Interested stu dents other than
the membe rs of the two organi zations are invited to attend .
Sam Zactter y end Mary Lou Boyle In a teene from " Dark of the
Moon " . See It toni ght!
Nagle Fe atured
At Conf e ren ce
John £. Nagle , Reading Edu cation Advisor , Bure au of General and Acade mic Educ ation ,
Department of Education , Common wealth of Pennsylvania , will
speak on "Or ganization and Administration of Secondary Reading Programs " at the Sixth Annual Reading Conference to be
held at Bloomsburg Stat e C ollege
on Frida y and Saturday , March
13 and 14 , 1970.
After attending AUentown High
School , Nagle received his Bachelor of Science degree in educa tion from Bloomsburg State College where he majored in English
and social studies. His Master
of Education degree in reading
psychology was earned at Te mple University, and he is currently a candidate at that Institution
for his Doctor of Education Degree in reading psychology.
In addition to being a teacher
and a re ading consultant in his
native school district at AUentown , from the period 1953
through 1968 Nagle also served as
developmental reading instructor
at Lehlgh University , as an offr
campus facult y member of The
Pennsylvania State University ,
as an evening school faculty member at Loyola College , and as an
electronics technician with the
United States Marine Corps.
H e is a memoer 01 tne Penn sylvania State Education Association , National Education Association , International Reading Association , Association of State Eng- *
lish and Reading Specialists , and
the Keystone State Readin g Association.
His public ations include ' Supervision in Language Instr uction " and
^Compr ehension
— Listening and Speaking ."
Mr. Nagle will speak in Hart line Science Cente r from 11:25
a.m. to 12;45 p.m. on Saturday ,
M arch 14, in a discussion group
chai red by Dr. Robert Mi ller ,
Professor of E ducation , BSC .
In Memory Of
Malcolm X
On a Sunday afternoon in New the shor t life of a powerful and
York City , February 21 , 1965 , respected black man . Some said
a hail of assassins' bullets ended that he deserved it,. Others said
that he was a black racist. Still
others said that he wa s a friend
to all. This man, who at his
death had in his pocket a list
of persons seeking to kill him;
this man , who fought ardently for
the black man in America ; this
'man , who had sacrific ed all for 1
his beliefs; thi s man was M alcolm X.
But wasn't he a Elac k Muslim? Didn 't he advocate separation of the races? Didn't he call
us white people the "white devils? " Didn 't he reject the middle class or bourgeoisie Negroe s who were trying to find a
place in society? Didn 't he advocate a type of violence ? The
answer to all of these que stions
is a yes but with some reserva nuns.
Wasn 't he a Black Muslin? Yes,
Malcolm X was a Black Muslim.
He devoted twelve years of his
life to preach ing the words and
teachings of Mohammed . M alcolm became second in line , only
inferior to the soleailed honorable Elijah Muhammed , leader
of the Musli m movement in America. After condemning Elijah Muhammed for disob eying many of
the devout Islam rules , M alcolm
X was banished from the organization. He then Initia ted his own
blac k organization known as the
Organization for Afro -American
Unity. To its members he pre ached the true Islam religion and
joined in praying to their one god
Allah . The dominant theme of the
true Islam religion was the common brotherhood of all men. Does
being a Black Muslim condem n
a man ? H ardly .
Didn 't he advocate separation
of the races and disapp rove of
integration? Again , yes. But was
this really bad? The white man ,
has been separating races tor '
centuries. The whit e society has
been seemingly functi oning alone
and not worrying about the red ,
(continued
on page th ree )
1970 OUt*r6
-srr *
f / o aLon a er
On Sa t.
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¦
.¦
•
*
—
Psychology
Lectures
'IT 6H/6& MB 6REAT PL^SURe TZ3
in/stau. THe Ai£W VCAH of sr wemv
t 't xNG,W*etucl q>*PV YiOH AiMgy kP/nr. Zfr y iS M 0/ C ZI 3Z.
MAROON AND GOLD
VOL. XLVIII
~
NO. 34
MICHAEL HOCK
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Business Manager
dor Rtmsen
Managing Editor
Bill Teitsworth
New s-lditor
Martin Kleiner
C*Foature Edito rs
Crin ny Potte r, Allan Mauror
Sports Edito r*
Clark Ruch & Jack Hoff man
Photv qraphy Editor
Mark Foucart
Copy Staff
Kay Hahn, Caro l Oswald , Irene Gulyc x
Circulation Manager
Linda Ennis
Advisor
Mr . Miehaal Stanloy
ADDITIONAL STAFF:: Terry Blast , John Stugrin , Bob
Schuto, Sally 3w.tl. nd Dava Ktlta r, Stanl ey Bunstc k ,
Jim Saehettl , Susan Zalota, Prank Cliff ord , Vefm a Avor y
^'
Carol Kl sbau gh, Pal Jac obs
All opinions expr essed by columni sts and feature writers,
Includin g l.tt.rs -to-tha-«dJt or, a ro not nocossar lly those of
Hilt publication but those of the Indivi duals .
i ne sevemn 01 me eignt lectures in the Centr al Pennsylvania Psych ology Lect ure Series
will be March 11 , 1970 at 8:00
P .M . at Bucknell Univer sity according to an announcement by
Dr . M . W . Sanders , Director
of Research and Evaluation at
Bloomsburg State College and
Chairman of the Series .
The lecturer will be Dr . Geor ge
A . C icala, Associate Profe ssor of
Psychol ogy at the University of
Delaware . Dr . Cicala 's topic will
be "PARAMETERS OF AVOIDANCE BEHAVIO R ." Dr . Cicala
received his Bachelor s and Mas ters degree s from the College of
William and Mar y and his Ph.
D . from Pri nceton In i960. He
serve d one year as a Public
Health Service Research Fellow
at Princeton and has been on the
Psychology staff at Delaware
since 1961 . His research has
dealt with the factors responsi ble for averslve learning. He
has al so wor k ed on the eff ects
of sleep deprivatio n , and he has
done research on the effects of
phar achological agent s on the
learning proce ss .
The Psycho logy Lecture Series
is under the co-sponsorshlp of
Bloomsbur g State College , Bucknell University , Ly com ing Col lege,
and Susquehanna Univers ity. In addition to the students and faculties of these
sc hoo ls , Interested profes sional
and lay persons are Invited to at tend . The local host for this lecture will be Dr . Donald Hartley ,
of Bucknell University .
Three R ivers Art
/
Festival May 29
The trl-st ate 's annual Three
Rivers Arts Festival will behe ld
May 29 throu gh June 7 at Gate way Center , it was ann ounced today by the Festiva l's execut ive
committee. The festival be gan in
1960, and has grown to one of the
largest events of its kind in the
United States.
j ne iu-aay eyeiu. win «d«u o
drawings , pr ints ,
paintin gs ,
sculpture and crafts pro duced by
artists in a 110-mile r adius of
Pittsburgh. There will be a photography show this year as well as
a poster competition and special
art exhibits . E ntert ainment will
include perfo rmances by the
Pittsburgh Symphony , jazz combos , poets , high school ban ds,
orchestras , choral grou ps,pup peteers , and a magician . Demonstrations of art and craft techniques will also be featured.
' All displays and performances
will be fre e to the public. Most
performances will take plac e on
a special stage built over the
fountain in Gatew ay Center. Displays will be spread throughout
all Gatewa y plazas and adjoining buildings .
Care will be taken to protect
works of art from the weather.
Framed and matte d works will
be hung in sheltered pavilions on
the plazas next to the Gatewa y
bui ldings . Sculpture will be on
display in the outdoor court near
Three Gateway Center. Crafts,
will occupy the lobby of the new
Westin ghouse building .
Works of art will be offered for
sale to the attendin g public. Last
year , 400 pieces were sold for
over $37 ,00C. Over 4 ,00 works
were submitted by appr oximately
1,000 artists. There were close
to 1,000 pieces on exhibition at
the 1969 Festival which drew over
200 ,000 visitors.
Judges for this year ' s ev ent
will be Edgar Kaufm ann , Jr .
and Willis F. Woods, Mr . ICaufmann Is professor of architec ture at C olumbia University.Mr .
Woods Is director of the Detroit
Institute of Art.
Paul
Rand , internationally famous graphic designer , will
serve as Ju dge for the poster
competition , which will be held
before the Fest ival opens. Deadline for entries in the poster
competition is March 14.
Entrance requir ements and
forms for the juried art exhibition will be made avai lable in
April to artists who wish to submit work s for judging. A rt ists
are requested to send a selfaddressed , stam ped, Number 10
business enve lope (4V4 " x 9% ")
to: Three Rivers Art s Festival ,
1251 N. Negley Ave., Pittsburgh ,
Do
IKOfiR
The Festival is the official
functions of Carnegie Institute.
Gateway Center is made available through the courtesy of The
E quitable Life Assurance Society
of the United States. Financing
come s from the city of Pitts burgh , Allegheny County , Pennsylvania Council on the Arts ,
corp orations , f oundations , and indivi dual donations. Over 1,500
volunteers are connected with the
planning and operation of the
Festival.
National Film
Competiti o n May 11
A national stude nt film competlon , a film festival , and an
institute , all in honor of silent
film pioneer D . W . Griffith , will
be held at the Univer sity of Louisville , Louisville , Ky., the week
of May 11 .
The announcemen t was made
on the anniversar y of the 95th
birthday of the late Griffith , the
internationally
famous filmmaker who was a Louisville native . The joint anno uncement was
made by Dr . Willia m C . Huffman , Dean of the University Col lege at the University of Louisville , and Lee Bro wning , Vice
President and station manager
of WAVE-TV , a Louisville stati on.
The D. W . Griffith Student
Film Festiv al is open to filmmakers from anywhere in the
United States . No Institutio nal
affiliation Is necessar y to enter
any of the five categor ies. A
total of $2, 500 in prize money
will go to the winners . The mon ey was made available by cosponsor WAVE -TV , which Will
also award at least one summer
Internship position In Us Special Projects Depar tment to entrants who evidence special taloiivb .
AmL ._,
The five categ or ies are dra matic , d ocumentar y , an imated ,
experimental , and silent films.
Judges for the 1970 competition
Include Richard Schicke l , film
critic for LIFE Magazine , and
Pauline Kael , New Yor ker film
critic . Other judge s will be added
at a later date .
Ru les for the competitio n and
entry blanks are avai lable by
contacting the D. W . Griffith
Student Film Festival , the Uni-
versity of Louisville , University
College , Belknap Campus , Louis ville , Ky ., 40208. Deadlin e for
entries is May 1, 1970. The J ud ging will take place May 14, 15,
16.
During the week of May 11-16 ,
concurrent with the competition ,
the University of Louisville will
sponsor the D.W . Griffith Film
Festival and Instit ute . Durin g
mornings , I nst i tute re gi strants
will participate In discussion and
pra ctical sessions in filmmaking
conducted by a national expert
on the Cjlnema. Afternoons will
featur e screeni ngs of major films
that relate to that morning 's activities . The Institute member s
will also view the screenin gs of
the competition films and hear
the judges ' res ponses and decisions . A public showing is planned for the outstanding films of
the competi tion . A small fee
will be charged for the noncredit Instit ute . Applic ations and
information may be obtained by
writing the D . W . Griffith Film
Institute at the above address.
The event s honoring Griffith
were originated by Walt Lowe
of WAVE-TV ' s Special Projects
Department . Mr. Lowe is an expert on Griffith , who directed
amon g the greatest early film
class ics, Including INTOLERANCE and BIRTH OF A NATION .
He worke d with Huffman , Morr is
Bein , Chairman of the University of Louisville 's Division of
Human ities , Robert
Doherty,
Chairman of the Department of
F ine Art s , Leon V . Driskell of
the En glish Department , and Rob *
ert McM ahan of the Music His*
tor y Department .
h_
Kay Dismisse d For
Questionable Reasons
Dr . Michael Kay, a pr ofessor
at We st Chester State College ,
was refused continuous employment at tha t college due to circumstan ces tha t ar e cons idere d
questionab le by many student s
and faculty at West Chester and
other Penna. Colleges. The Kay
Case has prompte d a student sitin coordin ated by the student
governm ent and a nu mber of
C ourt cases involving faculty ,
administr ators , and most notably, college President Rossey.
M any students and faculty at
this college consider the West
Cheste r situation to be reve lent
to situatio ns at Bloomsburg, particularly that concerni ng Dr .
Maxwe ll Prim ack. The following
article , repr inted by special arrangement from the West Chester student newspaper , was wr itten by Student Government Pres ident , Larry D»Antonlo. It sxpr esses student opinion in regard to the Kay case :
Dr. Mich ael Kay Is a leading
historian . He is an authority on
Afro -American History and the
State of North Carolina. He is
the most published member of
the history department and is
currently working on a book to
be published soon. Dr. Ka.y is
considered a superior teacher
by a majority of the student s
who have had the good fortun e to
be in his class. He is superior , in that , he is relevant ; he
instills a desire to know the
truth in his pupils. He is a
man who is so consummately
concerned with justice , that he
re semble s an evan gelist.
In short . Dr . Kay is different.
Dr . Kay has been fired.
There is no doubt that fear of
Dr . Kay 's ideas and activities ,
on the part of the Board members and top level administrat ors , was the leading motivation
behind the dismissal. What the
hell else could it be? The reasons given by the administration
are invalid and an effrontery to
Dr . Kay 's dignit y . Rumors has
it that Dr. Kay is a Marxist ,
and if you ever want to scare
# someone , just say the word
"Marxist . "
Dr . Kay assiste d the Black students in their requests before the
administration. If you ever want
to give an "Amer ican Patriot "
a double-wham my, say "Black
hi
__lj i
__.
.
¦¦
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ii
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Rossey
Inte rview
On Thursday mor ning,
8,
P ower " immediately after the President Rossey answeredJan.
queswor d "Marxist* ', and a ver y wor - tions concernin g the contro versy
ried look will dome over his face. surroundin g the failure of the
I must remind all who read this , West Chester State College adthat there Is no law in the "Amer- ministration to ren ew the conican Dream " which restricts Am- tract of Dr. Michael Kay of the
ericans from holding specific be- History Department .
liefs. Somehow , our fears and
anxieties have made us for get
Q. "Dr . Rossey, how many
the dream ot the American Revbeen reolution. So much for the founda- faculty members have
Dec. 15,
of
as
quested to resign ,
tions of fe ar .
1969?"
T oHon/ ^Arl lha mn/4A 4s\ AWrlAf *
* MbbvllMvVl M*v IlldUv ^V^^ Vt UVA •
A . "I DON'T have the exact
hurriedly-called Board meeting
here , but I belieye the
number
of December 11 , 1969, which deis
between 7 and 9 ., To
numb
er
cided Dr. Kay 's fate . Wh en my
only
one has refused to
date
,
turn ca me t o speak , I told the
resign.
members of the Board that over
Q. "Among the rumored rea1300 students had signed a petisons
for the non-renewal of Dr.
tion calling fdr the renewal of
s
contract was alleged use of
Kay
'
Dr . Kay 's contract; that fourprofanity
. Would you consider the
teen members ot the twentyprofanity
in the classroom
use of
four member history department
reason
for the dispro
per
had signed a petition calling for as
professor?"
missal
of
a
the renewal of contract; that the
A . "I DON'T believe that proIGA General Assembly had gone
fanity
is objectionable ., how on record in support of Dr. Ka y;
to me wouid not
obscenity,
ever
,
and that the man was a leading
and
I would expect
acceptablebe
historical scholar.
to the vast
acceptable
it
not
be
When Mr. DeBaptlste spoke, maj ority of our college com he said , "The man can teach. munity ."
The man can teach .'? (Mr. DeQ. "Would you consider memBaptiste is the only Black membershi
p in the Commun ist Party
ber of the Board of Trustees).
as
proper
reas on for the disThe othe r Boar d members spoke
professor?"
missal
of
a
in quasi-negative comments , sayA . "NO , I would say that meming little to counter what Mr, bershi
p in the Commu nist Party .
DeBaptlste or I said. Mr. Saltsshould
not , of itself , necessitate
man did add that he didn 't care
the
dismissal
of a professor . "
how many students signed petimembershi
p on. the
"Th
e
Q.
tions .
evaluation committee concern ing
After all the memb ers had an Dr . Kay was reportedly chan ged opportunity to speak , they voted. by actin g chairman Riley. Also,
Mr. DeBaptiste was the only it has been stated tha t the pronegative vote to Preside nt Ros- cedures under which it met were
sey 's recommendation to fire supposedly unorthodox . Is this
Dr . Kay . My hat is off to Mr.
DeBaptiste .
A . "IN REA LITY , there is no
A special High er E duc ation established pattern for the evaluCommittee Inq uiry was schedul - ation of a pr ofessor . And as acted for December 13, 1969 , in ing chairman of the department ,
Harrisburg . The decision of the Dr . Riley certainly had the authCommittee said that Dr . Kay's ority to decide wha t form the
dismissal was not as a direct evaluat ion committee
should
result of his testimony before take ."
the Higher Education Committee
Q. "Su pposedly , the result of
which visited West Chester on the evaluation committee found
Octo ber 30, 1969. In his testi- three in favor of dismissal and
mon y , Dr . Kay heavily criticized two against . Does the commit tee
President Rossey and the admin- itself decide the fat e of a profes istration . But the decision also sor?"
added that It was evident the adA . "NO , THE procedure here
ministration had decided to fire is that a chairm an may choose to
Dr . Kay before the Screening use a grou p of his colleagues in
comm ittee of the History De- the depart ment to get a broad partment had met to decide Dr . er view of the professor who is
( continued on page eight)
being evaluated . There is^nothin g
official about the committee
structure , there is no uniform
pattern establish ed in any qne
depar tment ., the evaluation of the
the individual
reactions
that
faculty members may give as
parts of a committee are simply
for the advisement of the chair man . It is the chairm an 's ro le t o
dec ide whether or not a person is
invited to remain.
Q. "Do you believe that , in order to insure clarit y and organization , some uni for mity in
the procedure concern ing evaluation committees should be established?"
A. "I THIN K it would be advisable for us to review extensively
with our professors and with our
var ious admin istrators , nam ely
the departmen t chairman , the
deans of the school s and with the
academic vice president this entire matt er of professorial evaluation , includin g the involvement
of students in th e evaluation progra m. Presentl y, I thi nk tha t one
of the most Import ant assets
for the Individual professor is for
him to reach a vast number of student reactions to his effectiveness in the classr oom . Theref ore , I think that we need to invest a good deal of time and effort
with our professors and with our
departmen t chairm en and the
deans in developing broad base
guid e lines for evaluation . I think
as a result of that , wtiat we will
do Is get some more similarity,
at least : if not uniformity. , but
iMN ^^ ^ ¦
If I alcolm A.
(continued from case two )
yellow , or black man that may
get trampled in the masses. But
is the white man being assailed because of this separation ?
But why was he against integration ? Isn't it trying to help the
blac k man? Yes , it is trying,
but is it ra pidly succeedin g?
M alcol m X saw the slow progress
of integration and wasn't impressed . His people had been
waiting, working , and strivin g
for four hundred years and what
had it achieved — a seat on a
bus , a chanc e to drink the, same
w at er as ever y one else , a ch ance
to vote
Were these small
steps worth four hundred year s
of waiting ? Did the white man
make the Irish immigrant and
Polish immigrant wait four hun dred years and then begin to integrate them? How could Mal colm X not be disillusioned by
this phenomena called integra 11U11.
WHITE DE V I LS
Did n 't he call us white people
the "white devils? " Yes , but
can we really blame him? When.
Malcolm was four year s old his
house was burned to the ground
by a grou p of white men. Malcolm, at the age of six learned
of his father being kille d and
evidence pointed to a grou p of
white persons . He left school in
the eighth grade mainly because
a white teacher told him he must
adjust his life to prepare for.
the low level in which he must
live. M alcolm saw white social
and welfare workers take his
mother away to a mental institution . M alc olm had to steal to live
in a white man 's society and
then was placed in a white man 's
prison . Can we blame him for
callin g tho white man a "white
devil " . No , but that was just a
minority of white people that did
him dirt. We as members of the
good white race wouldn't do such
things. But our just being members of the white race make s
us guilty as the actual house
burner s, wh ite tea cher , etc. that
affected the life of Malcolm X.
Didn 't he reject even those middle class and bourgeoisie Negroes who were trying to establish
a place in society ? The answer
is yes, but why ? Malcolm said,
and with j ustification , that , man y
of these Negroes were just pup pets of the white man. In their
r ace to the top they tr ampled
some blacks and made it harder
f or man y oth er mem bers of t he
black rac e to achieve a place
in society. Too many Uncle Tom
Negroes were being; created . Can
we even begin to ar gue ?
Didn 't he advocate a type of
violence ? Again , yes but why
did he advoc ate this violence?
M alcolm X said ,
"I am for violence If nonviolence means we continue postponing a solution to the American
b lac k man 's pr oblems — just to
within the broad base guide lines
(for evaluation of professors.)
Q. " You have state d t hat you
ha d some I nf orma ti on concern ing
Dr. Kay before the report of the
evaluation committee was completed . In the pr ocedur e of appeal
concern ing the non -renewal of
contracts of untenured profe ssor ,
the president Is an appeallate
author ity. Do you feel that the in*
formation you had prior to your
decision about Dr , Kay in any way
compro mised or biased your
position as an appellate authority?"
A. "No , NOT in any way whatsoever. As a matter of fac t the
only prior knowled ge (and 1 am
assum ing that when you are talking about prior knowled ge you are
saying of events that happened on
cam puses other than W .C .S.C .
cam pus) — I had was that which
was rea lly common around our
college community here anyway,
and that was dismissal from the
Alfred University campus; and
that was printed in the New York
Times and many other places . So
that 1 had no other prior information regardin g this particular
avoid violence. I don't go for
non-violenc e if it also means a
delayed , solution. To me a delayed solution is a non-solution.
If it mus t take violence to get
the black man his human rights
in this count ry, I'm for violence
exactly as you know the Irish ,
the Pole s, or the Jews would be
if they were flagrantly discriminated against . I am just as
they would ,be for violence — no
matter what the consequences ,
no ma tter who was hurt by the
violence."
Can Malcolm X be justifi ably
proved wrong for his belief in
violence? M ost likely not.
Malcolm X was trul y a messenger of and for the black race.
Although- many regarded him 'as
radical , his basic assum ptions
are hard to dispro ve. I , as a
member ot white society, feel a
shame and a guilt after realis ing the opp ression of 22 million
citizens of our countr y for so
many years .
Although Malcolm X honored
and solely respected and suppor ted most blacks and their
causes , he did have a few white
friends . He believed the white
man could help the black man
if only he (the white man) could
admit his guilt and regard all
people as human beings. Only
then can the white man begin to
better the lives ot all mankind .
Is it so hard for us to adn.it
our guilt ? Can we not start right
now and regard everyon e as our
brother?
Saturday , February 21 , commemorated the fifth year since
the death of Malcolm X. Can we,
the white society, not honor ibis
man with our admittance of shame
and guilt , and then set out to
strive for a better world for all
people ?
Yes , M alc olm X may be called
a radic al , but in the words of the
black actor Ossie Davis who
spoke at the funeral of Malcolm
X:
"Many will ask what Harlem has
to honor in thi s stormy , controversial and bold youn g captain. . ..They wiU say that he
is of hate — a fanatic , a racist — who can only bring evil
t o the cause tor which you strug gle !
"An d we will answer and say
unto them: Did you ever talk to
Brother Malc olm? Did you ever
touc h him or have him smile at
you? Did you ever listen to him?
Did he ever do a mean thin g?
Was he ever himself associa ted with violence or any public
disturbances? For if you did you
would know him: Malcolm was
our man h ood , our living black
manhood 1 This was the meaning
to his people . And in honoring
him , we honor the best in our selves. . .. .And we will know
him then for what he was and
is — a Prince — our own black
shining Prince! — who didn 't
hesitate to die , because he loved
us so."
Tom Henry
pro f essor . As a matter of proper
administra tive procedure this
case was reviewed many, many
times over as a result of our
antici pation of question s about
the decision. W e rev iewed I t as
a result of visitations I had with
members of the histor y department. Onc e again it was reviewed
and I feel that the entire matte r
of investigation , as far as the
president was concerned , uwiure
my decision was reached , had to
do solely with actions and pre formances on our campus alone .
Q, " Were any of the channels
of appeal blocked to Dr. Kay?"
A. "NO . "
Q. "Do you have any comment
of last night' s "Candlelight Process ion " (Wednesday, Jan. 7?)
A. "NO , TRUTHFULLY I did
not see it. The only thing I heard
about it was from Chief Ber ger ,
and he said it was very orderly. "
Q, "Would you consider action
by IGA or the students In general as a legitimate means of
showing suppor t for the rein statement of Dr. Kay?"
A , "\ES. "
PI UDAY,
15
BI.OOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
PAGE FOUR
Letters , Letters , Letters
Dear Sirs:
Being only a lowly undergrad uate I am a bit confused as to Dr.
Nossen 's response in the Presl dential Hotline column of Feb .
27 , 1970.
Dr . Nossen plea se check one ;
1 . Dr . Primack is being fired.
( ) Yes ( ) No ( ) Maybe
( ) Don 't Know
2 . If the answer in the above
question is yes , then is he being fired because of his political views?
( ) Yes ( ) No ( ) M aybe
( ) Don »t Know
One other questi on: Would you
please explain this quote from
your reply in the M&G. "Perhaps , most of all , it shows a lack
of understanding that the college
has and observes its own channels
to assure academic due process ,
and beyond the college, the profession offers appropriate chan nels. " Is this a misprint or
what?
C onfused ,
John Hankins
B^V
formed?
If you haven't , you ^^^ V^sj H-^^^^ A^^^^^ B
^^^^ H
should. If you want a simpl
^
example of how expressive an
dynamic we can be , recall th e s^B^B^sfca^B^^ HH
m «Va^aia^g^B^B^gl
a^B^B^a
spirit generated during
thi S
year 's wrestling meets and bas B^B^g^^B^g^La^H
^
ketball games. "We don 't mes
around 1"
We can apply this same actio n ^ PP^ ^^^ Vj m
t o our student government. Thi s
is the objective of my campaignit
to the presidenc y of CGA . I havi B
The following was sent to the
every faith and confidence our M&G by Professor Martin Gildea .
student government can becom much more effective if you, thi B at BSC and the entire academic
student body, will want to heljp community of this country.
m ake it so.
This year we have poor par
me university in Danger
ticipation with CGA and class5
officer aspirants. Many office*3
The University is in danger .
are being sought unopposed. Oth
It is endangered by those memers are not even being sought • bers of the student body whose
This may seem distressin g if yoi1 only consistent program is to
are at all interested in studen t wreck a virtually defenseless
government . It doesn 't have t<> institution through violence , cobe. OK. So only a few studen ts> ercion , threats , and arbi trary
are willing to represent theii • interference with the right s of
fellow students by seeking an of - other students .
fice. At least they want to repIt is endan gere d by those memresent you. This is a start. Yoi1 bers of the faculty who place
r\ *p ly _7j CJf/ mj itr * can make it a good start . First • their passion for popularit y
support elections. They 'll be helc1 amon g the students and their deAn open letter fco Dr . Robert March 4, 5 and 16, 17. Suppor • sire to be in the avant- garde
them. Second , continue that sup-• ahead of their obligation to the
Nossen
port when these officers assume i universit y 's integrit y and future.
Dear Sir ,
Your rep ly to fin? (jae sttoa in office next year . Keep informec I
It is endan gered by those adthe M<£ G coccerniuj f Dr . Pri - about campus activities .
ministrators whose refusal to
If I am elected CGA Pr esident ,, heed the peaceful pr otests , to
mack was not ocl? ioa<2eqpate
I »ill strive to work for the over-• negotiate just grievanc es, to lisit was offensive.
It was offensiveto me, per son- all good of the college communitj ' ten to reason , or to accept chan ge,
ally, because it suggests an atti - by making better , more effective s thereby makes violence predi ctude extreme ly dista steful to me interaction with students , fac ulty, , table , however unjustifiable .
as a college journalis t — that you and administration . To create and I
It is endangered by those trusconsider a question posed by the maintain a higher level of student : tees who seek to suppress disinvolve ment I will better use the sent and nonconformit y on the
student media as an attack rather
communication
resources we campus , who refuse to grant
than a question.
It is also offensive to me be- have. CGA meetin gs will be more students any voice in their own
cause it implies that discussing open, there will be more frequent
affairs and who , thereby, inthe hiring , firing, or profession - committee reports by students
vite an escalation of prote st tac al affairs of faculty members in on various committee s and our tics and an enlargement of the
the M&G ("a public forum ") pr ogress publicized in the school protesting groups .
is in "poor taste ," and damag - news media.
It is endan gered by those pubWe have the ability to progress. lic officials , law enforcement
ing to a profes sionals "selfWe have progressed. We will officers , and politicians who rer espect. "
It seems to me tha t when pr ogress , but I want to make us spond to popular disma y over
rumors of politic al pressure , all pr ogress together , unite d, student behavior by unleashing
a "g et the li berals " conspir - with understanding , with confi- a host of hard measures and
ac y , and other such unhe althy dence. Wh ether us (sic) do these methods , ra nging from swingfeelings become as rampant as things or not is up to you. Make ing billy clubs to cuttin g off
financial aid ; methods that do
they h ave on this camp us , par - your choice , take a par t.
Sincerely ,
not discr iminate between peaceticularly with respect to the Pri Gary Blasser
ful and violent demonstrators , or
mac k affair , a college pre sident
Candidate for CGA Pr esident between those who are committcould worry a bit less about deing outra ges against the univercorum and good taste and a little
sity and thos e who are prote st*
more about clearing the air .
ff / ann
ing outra ges by the university .
If t h e rea sons f or Dr . Pri The university is endangered ,
mac k' s di smi ssal ar e at least
pr imaril y as stated , bugetary
Dear Editor ,
and suc h like , than it should not
In regard to Dudley Mann ' s let.
be too difficult a task to put
ter on Dean Hoch ' s actions at the
these re asons into black and
Febr uary 9 CGA meeting, I would
white , accompanied by the ap- like to add an opinion , some compro priate fact s and thus put a
ment , and a little praise .
quick end to rumor and innu I was in att endance at that parendo.
ticu lar meeting and essentially
Wh en you dodge a question
agree with the blow-by-blow desas you did this one . with an cription Dudley gave. One imair of "well I J ust don 't have to por tant fact that was eliminated ,
tell you , and it is an imper - h owever , is that the meeting
tinent question anyway ," you add
h a d alre ady run overt ime , past
to confusion rather than clarify
10 p. m., an d ev er yone was eith er
t he situati on. Furthermore , you too tired to comment or too irat give adde d weight to the convicab le to be discrete . It is my
tions of th ose who believe this opinion that Dean Hoch acted
ent ire affair is premeditated pro - more out of impulse than intelli- '
fessional murder.
gency, but ONLY because he naa
And , this is what is most of- alrea dy put in a hard day.
f ens ive t o me . Gettin g at the
In my association with severa l r lculu m changes (how does "120
truth in a situation such as this
administrators , especially the undergraduate credits to grad is always difficult. It is not
Dean of Men ' s Staff , it has be- uate " sound , or more free elecmade any easier if one side of come apparent to me that there tlves-taken in place of some of the
th is many faceted diamond In- are entirely TOO MANY MEET - general
educa tion garbage).
sists on wearing a shroud.
There
's
always
pa ss-fail, and
INGS , considering what gets acAllan D. M aurer
grading
syste
m
change
s (which I
complished by them. Perhaps
am
against
as
my
faithful
read that 's ( why they don't get a lot
ers
know
),
and
more
in
the
way
,
d one , they don 't hav e time '
(Ideally the Chief Executive will of possible changes that could be
rea d this and issue a memoran- blocked by the second biggest
dum giving them a break) . Any- obstacle (power wise) on campus
way , I think the Dean had his — the Dean of Instruction.
To Every BSC Studen t ,
Keep tuned in lor further deMan y of us rightfully expect share of meetin gs ior one day and
velopments.
(Dean , ta k ea C om poz
acted
has
tily.
much of our college, Its student
next
time).
By the way kids , it
If Dudley will let me in on what
leaders , faculty and administrawouldn
be
a bad idea to go to
't
tion ; yet , many of us have not happened at his clear-the-air sesa
CGA
meeting
JUST ONC E and
contr ibuted to atta ining the se ex- s ion later on, maybe I will have
see
what
the
hell
Is going on
to change my mind (opinion) about
pectations. Why?
aroun
d
here
(besides
Kegger 's).
Student apathy is larg ely to the Dean 's behavior . I might menAt
least
read
the
minutes
posted
blame , and now It 's time to real - tion th at there is a small per outs
ide
Husky
.
(Even
APATHE
ize the situation and make up our sonal ity conflict between the Dean
TI
can
read).
C'S
minds to fight apathy . Did you an d Glo Wilson , but I won't say
I may not agree with every ever stop to think how much more who 's responsible. I' m J ust hopthin
g (anythin g), Dudley M ann
effective our student body could In g we're not in for a new Dean
says
or does , but at least , right
be it somehow It could be mot i- of Destruction , especially in light
or
wron
g, he does give a damn I
vated , drawn together , and ln- of the President 's planned cur -
J oin
the
M&G
CQJ
m ^ b ^^ b ^ Ib ^ b ^ b ^
^^BiS^
vBaHSB ^P
VbHp
finally, by those memb ers of the
general public whose reacti on to
continu ed disord er is all too likely to be one of repression instead
of reform , thereby increas ing
the power and popularity of those
alread y committed , even in the
absence of disor der , to cuttin g
back on university fu nds and
freedom, to holdin g back the
rights of the youn g and the black ,
and to boostin g the very causes
of militarism , racis m, and bosssim tha t most protestors stru ggle to end .
Policy
Stated
Editor 's Note: This memo was
received from Dr . Nossen concernin g the Dismissal of Dr .
Prima ck.
Because I have heard a number
of conflictin g reports concerning
appointment and re-a ppointment
pra ctices at this college, I am
offering the following synopsis
of prevailin g policies for the
information of all who are concerned . The full statement , as
adopted by the Board of Trus- ~
tees , dated April 26 , 1968 , is
available in the Library. It was
initiated by a faculty committee
and was approved by the faculty
during the Spring semester , 1968.
A new faculty member shall
receive an appointment for one
year , which MAY be renewed for
the remainder of the three -year
pro bationary per iod . During the
first academic year of the pr obationary per iod , however , the
President of the College shal l
infor m the faculty member at
least ninety days before the end
of the college year whether his
services will be desired for the
following academic year , September to May Inclusive .
Although not specifically writt en in the policies , it is generally
understood within the pr ofession ,
and accepted by outside pr ofessional organizations , that non-renewa l of a first-year ter m appoint ment need not be accomp anied by any state ment of justification .
After the expiration of the probationary period of three years ,
the faculty member may be granted cont inuous employment , subject to the ret irement policy
of the College , if , in the course
of the faculty member 's third
year of employment , the College
administration does not desire to
place him on continuo us employ ment , the President of the College
shall so notify the faculty member at least sixty days before
the end of that year , provided
that the Preside nt of the College
shall set up specific requirements on a yearly basis subjec t
to rev iew at the end of each
semester .
Bloomsburg state College observes the above procedures as
minimal ; whenever possible , it
exceeds the basic req uirements. Should a fac ulty member
at any time feel that his per sonal
or professio nal rights have been
violated , he has access to a
standing Committee on Profe ssional Affair s , consisting of elected teaching faculty, char ged with
the responsibility for hear ing ,
adjudicating, and recommend *
ing action on any approp riate
profe ssional matter brought be*
fore it .
Robert Nossen
FRIDAY , MARCH 6, 19?0
MARCH 6, 1970
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEG
Fif th Column
I Primack Speaks |
I have delay ed wr iting thi s
response to the Pre sidenti al Hot.
line column of Febr uary 27 be
cause I had hoped that Pre sident
btb ^ INossen would say someth
ing at
the Monda y Night Philo sophy Club
Forum on Academi c Freed om
which would make some of the
remark s I am going to say un .
necessary. Unfortun ately he did
not .
President Nossen» s c olumn
was in resp onse to the following question from a studen t: "i s
it true that Dr . Prim ack of the
Philoso phy Departme nt is being
dismissed due to his political
activities? If not , wh at ar e th e
reasons for his dismissal? "
Rather than answer the question , President Nossen cr iticized
t h e stu dent who ask ed it for ask ing
it in in the first plac e. He went I
into considerable detail concer ning the motivations of the student in quest ion, and suggest ed that she , by asking her question , had implied that I was being fired for political reas ons.
I believe this was both unfair
and unfortunate. Unfair because
askin g a question need not imply any answer. The person who
asked the question may hav e simply wanted reassuranc e from Dr .
Nossen that I am not being removed from Bloomsburg for political reasons. Certainly many
of the readers of the M&G would
have appr eciated such reas surance. President Nossen's refusal to answe r the question prob ably create d doubts in the minds
of many where none had existed
before.
President Nossen , after point ing out that Bloomsburg has regular procedure s for faculty removal , asserted somewhat stridently (IN CAPITAL LETTER S)
that no faculty members with any
self respect or professionall y ,
would want the question to be
answered as stated .
I believe that President Nossen was making a special ref erence to me even thou gh my
name was not ment ioned. (Individuals may be talked about without any use of pr oper names .
As far as I am concerned use
of Innuendo is no virtue. ) In
t he context of President Nossen 's remar ks at the last Faculty Meeting, concer ning a certain
faculty member who was using
stu dents by di ctat in g letters of
supp ort (H ere again I was not
mentione d by name ) I inte rpret
t he upper case portion of the Presidential Hotline to mean that:
Since there are establis hed pro cedures for deciding whet her or
not a faculty member should be
remove d, it is impr oper for students to ask questions about such
matters. And all decent faculty
member s should disassocia te
th emselves from such student
efforts . This suggests that student questioning of decision pro cedure s fr om which thev ar e excluded constitutes a threa t to
t hose proce dures , and an intent tcforce decisions in some other
way. (I am not sure of this ,
but this is the only way I can
make sense of what President
Nossen said in capital letters.)
I agree with this , in part . Question s of facult y removal or retention should be settled by regular procedures. And at present
regular procedures
the
at
Bloomsburg State C ollege exclude student participation .Hopefully in the future this will change
and students will have a significant role In determining such
questions. (I say thi s even though
I failed to get a job at the New
School of San Jose State College of California , which has
student partici pation , because the
students felt I was too old and
conservative.) But the fact Is
that at present students at
Bloomsburg do not participate
in such decisions , and there is
realistically no way in which
this can be changed in time to
affect my case .
H owever , I do not believe that
because students at pre sent are
excluded from the decisions mak ing pro cess that asking questions
and expressing their views is
illegitimate , or that they are incapable of doing so at their own
initi ative.
Pirtir a
CmUh
hoe*
4Ka
*•! n»lit l *\
ask whether or not any professor ' of • the school which she is
attendin g is being remove d for
reasons of his political activi ties even though she does not
partici pate in the pr esent decision pr ocess. She has a right
because such Issues are of concern t o ever y mem ber of the
Bloomsburg academic community , because it concerns the nature of BSC as an educational
institution and the quality of the
educ ation it pro vides. I would go
so f ar as to say that a lac k of
concern about such Issues is evidence of a stu dent' s disinterest
in his education .
Pres ident Nossen then goes on
to mak e a p ro f ession of hi s belief
in academic freedom and claim
that it exists on this campus. I
disagree. Academic freedom is
not guaranteed by rule s — although rules help. Academic freed om re quires a state of m ind,
an att itude of trust between people
who disagree that their disagree ments are not fatal to the possibility of commun ication and cooperation . This does not exist
ait Bloomsburg State C ollege.
Dr . Maxwell Primack
PRISSURI'S ON PRIMACK-leok where he's at. Actuall y, Dr.
Pri mack was parti cipatin g in a- dUcussio n group at North Hall
Lounge Tuesday night when photog rapher Mark Poucart sna pped
this pie.
l>y Blass
KU M Q UAT!
There , 1 hadda say it . And
it' s a good lead for what I' m
going to writ e about , namely
all the ugly things going on here .
And for what I' m thinking and
feeling. I' m scared and I' m sick
and I' m frustrated and I' m angry : Primack is getting dicked , and the administration acts
like there ' s nothing we can do
about it . Maybe they 're right ,
it looks bad , but damned if we're
not going to get some good reasons first . And if reasons aren 't
given but quick the friendly college on the hill may just plain
pvnl nHo
Principal Nossen , excuse me ,
PRESIDENT Nossen (I keep thinking BSC is some sort of glorified high school , sorry ) has yet
to give any good basis for his
decision. Perhap s he would have ,
had he not had a meetin g to go to.
Perhaps . Maybe he just doesn't
have any. Maybe he 's just another
pawn in the game , a game of no
rules , a game of lies passing
as truths , of personalities ver sus authorities , of rumor s and
power and God knows what else .
Rumor s. They have it that the
F .B .I , is in on this thing , that
they came to President Nossen
with files on Primack , files saying what demonstrations the man
was in , what politics he has , and
how he 's a part of The Vast International Conspiracy to Under mine Youth . Whew , and I thought
Fer
What ?
J im sachetti
NOTE : Any similarity between
the characters in this stor y and
actua l Bloomsbur g State C ollege
stu dent s, living (?) or dead , is
purely intentional.
M onday afternoon : March 2, 1970:
Bloomsbur g, Pa.; "Up on College Hill"
It 's 4:50 PJVI . Hartllne spit s
its final classes of the day out
into the late winter air and they
begin to trickle down the hill.
Stu dents , halfway through a semest er , with those "one down
and four to go" expressions . A
conversat ion , somewhere between Hartline and Elwell.
Bob: You guys goln ' to the meeting tonite ?
Jack: What meeting?
Bob: The Philosophy Club 's holding an Open Forum of Academic
Freedom over in Carver at
7:30.
Jack: I dunno.
Joe : Me neither
Hey Jack , tell
last
'im about that party
Saturday .
Jack: Yeah
now maybe if they
were holding something like
that I'd
Joe : What 'd you say It was gonna
be about again ?
Bob: Acade mic Freedom. You
know , when a pro f can express
his opinions openly, J ust like
anybody else , without havin ' to
worry
about losln ' his J ob
because some Dean-of-some thing-or-other t h i n k s he's
spoiling
the "Bloomsburg
Ima ge."
Joe : What do I car e abou t prof' s
opinions ? As long as 1 don 't
have to sit and listen to them .
Bob: OK . But can 't you see that
when they start telling the
profs what to say that pretty
soon nobody
Jack : Well , I gotta go, take It
easy.
Joe : Yeah , me too.
7:00 P.M . Bob's Room .
Joe : Hey Bob, we're getting a
Pin g-Pong tournament started
and we need another man, how
about It?
I was paranoid . Not anot her Infor
Cons piracy,
ternational
Chrissake . And one to Und er - ,
mine The System yet . Cri pes,
the system ' s doing a good enough
job of und erminin g ITSE LF , it
hardly needs any help . But the
F .B.I ., if they are Involved,
seem to have always seen a
Commie und er every bed; now
they 're seeing a Commie IN every bed . Thinkin g the F . B. I , is
behind all this is real ly scary,
almos t incredib le. But if anyone
would do it , why not them? They
can do anything, you know , they
have their own t .v. show .
But let' s just say that 's a ruPanelists at fit * Open Forum held Monday night. Front left they
mor . It still looks rank , smells
are .Anthony Sylveste r, BSC, History Department , Dr. Ro'j ert
worse . Until I' m inform ed other - ,
Nossen , President , BSC, and Dr. Robert Young, of West Chest er
wise, I still think Primac k is
in the right here , I can't see
State Ccllogo.
it any other way. Which hurts.
My college is wrong. MY col lege , my dear alma mater , my
own persona l refuge for academic
fre edom , is revealin g itself as a
stron ghold of hypocrisy and other
What is Academic Freedom? told of his experience s as a stuun-ni ce th ings. The disappointSeven panelists and a large aud- dent durin g the McCarthy era .
ment .
ienc e of stu dents , facult y and He stated that faculty did not
administrators metMonday even- stand up against politic al pressNot somebody will say I should
ing
for the Philoso phy Club 's ure then and indicated that ". . .
leave . Nope, but it was a good try .
open
forum to discuss Academic we may be coming to that again. "
Why leave? Primacks are happenDr. Nossen then offered a brief
philoso phically , as it
Freedom
ing all over: West Chester , F&M ,
applies to the dismissal of Mi- re buttal to Dr . Young 's remar ks.
that' s a star t . Which means either
chael Kay at West Chester State "There is another side of the
that there are a lot of bad colC ollege and to incidents at issue ," he said. He further statleges or a helluva lot of F .B .I ,
ed that he was not on trial but
Bloomsburg State College.
dossiers .
The panel , comprised of pro - had come to discuss the prin Which is just it . I'd like to
fessor Anthony Sylvester , Pres - cip le of Academic freedom.
Professor Deake Proter urg think it' s not Nossen doing all
ident Robert Nossen, Dr . Rob ed
the audience to congratulate
this , that it' s Somebody Higher
ert Youn g, Professor of HisNossen in some way for ofDr
.
Up, but that' s a damned horrible
George
tory at West Che ster ,
ferin
g to look into a case in
thought too . Gaah.
and
Joseph
Griffiths
Hoffecker ,
,
William Kelly, delivered state- which a student' s ri ghts may
ment s concernin g Academic have been violated by a Dean .
One thing, this can't go on .
Freedom
and then answe red ques- "This is a new era in justice
The peak is reached . There are
tions
from
the audience. Mr. for students ," Porter said. The
enough people , students , believe
Richard Brook of the Philoso phy audience applauded a blushing
it or not , who are willing to
Nossen.
C lub served as moderator .
forget the pledgings , the sports
Dr. Maxwell Primacl ; told the
Joseph Griffiths , BSC senior
events , the ping-pong meets , kids
audience
that he would not allow
and former Editor of the MAwho will dig to get to the truth
himself
to
become a mart yr, as
ROON AND GOLD , state d that
of this . And so far we 've only
Kay
and
Socrates
had .
Dr
.
the college exists to sat isfy a
uncovered more lies. Or are the y
"The
re
is
much
difference
beper
demand.
This
demand
is
,
just semi-lies? Or lies taken as
speech
f
ree
ha
ps
one
of
free
,
,
truth by thos e who speak them.
(continued on page eight )
inquiry or simply the freedoms
Or . . .enough alreadv.
guaranteed by the constitution.
The hard rain 's a-fallin. No
Obitu ary
the demand ," he said , "it falls."
turning back. Something 's going
Dr . Nossen , who was sufferto GIVE , goldurn it , it has to ,
ing from a cold , state d th at a Name: Norm Mode
this is too uptight , too kumquat Born: 1950
college is a place for constructin g ridic u lous.
Died:
1968
t ive dessent. "I' m not intereste d
Buried:
2019
in homogeneit y," he said. He inYeah , 1 want to find the truth
CAUSE . OF DEATH: Brokei
dicated that academic freedom is
somehow . The trouble is, the
comprised of the professor 's spirit with acute conformis t com
system won't allow for it. Possr ight in the classroom to go into plications along with star ved in
bily it' s just the school , no out tak
e
I
mean
it
did
tellect and deadened sense o
ever y phase of related matter
side hassles ,
a whole fifteen years for this
and outside of the classroom to individuality ,
place to liberalize itself enough pur sue knowled ge and to publish . PLACE OF DEATH: Bloomsburg
to sell PLAYBOY in its bookHe further indicated that the pro - Pennsylvania.
Born and raised in this city
stor e . Maybe I' m just imagining fessor is entitled to constitutional
all this. But the F . B.I. , whew.
rights , most notably those attri- Norm was graduated from Com
monwealth High in the spring o:
Is that thin g STILL run by
buted to the First and Fourteenth
H er bert H oover ?
amen d ments , Fre edom ot Speech 1968 and .enrolled at Bloomsbur t
and Press.
State College in the fall of ttu
Dr. Robert Young , who is ac- same year . While at BSC he dls
t ively Involved with forces oppos- tinguished himself in Kappa Ka
Bob : Ah , I dunno . I think I' m ing the dismissal of Dr. Michael ppa fraternity , the establishec
goin ' over to that meeting....
Kay , presented background In- Pseudo-Hippe colony and the lo
Joe : Fer what ? You can read
for mation concerning the Kay cal Che Guevara politi cal retv
about it in the paper.
case. He Indicated that reas ons toric club. Upon grad uating he
Bob: Well . I figured that this
for Kay 's dismissal were con- married the girl of his dreams
Forum might explai n some of
sidered invalid by students and (to whom he became engaged on
the things that have been goln ' faculty , subsequently causing a Christmas Eve of his junior year '
on aroun d this school and,... . lar ge number of students to "sit moved to Suburbia where he raisJoe : Ah , Kum quat the meeting . in " in the college 's administra- ed a family consisting of 2 .8
You should take It easy after
tion buildin g. "These students children .
a hard day In school. You were acting within the demoMr. Mode was active in var don 't want to spend the night crat ic process ," he said. "I ious civic , f raterna l , and polit over there ?
ical organizations throughout his
stand behind them. "
Bob : Well
Bill Kelly, a BSC student and adult life , "Liberals for Peace
W ell , Bob never made It to that
former contr ibutor to the GAD- at a Reasonable Price" , PTA .
meetin g. Neither did a lot of other
FLY , remin isced about the GAD- and Sparkling Springs C ountry
people . It scare s me to think that
F LY trials three years ago and Club being a few .
every day I see hundreds of peo- stated that BSC has gotten better
Norm was described by friends
ple , supposedly intelligent peo- then , through outside forces such and co-workers as being a shinple: students . Then I hear about
as the ACLU and AAUP . He urg * ing example to the youth of the
things happening: weird things , ed the group to deal with the par- commun ity who regarded him as
scar y thin gs, thin gs that should
ticulars concernin g the Primack the ultimate in secur ity.
He Is surv ived by his wife
worry these people. And I figure case and stated ". . .the adthat these "students " will at least ministration pays little attention and children .
Services are scheduled for
try to investi gate these thin gs, to what or how aprofessor teachMonday
morning after which the
find out why the y 're happening
es as long as he doesn 't cause
remains will be interred at Tran .
and how they affect the m. Then trouble ."
I go to a forum , and atte mpt to
Professor Sylvester read docu- qull Towers , 5th floor , row M.
investigate and clear the air . and
ments from the AAUP concern- Frien ds and relatives will then
see maybe a hundred out of three
Ing Academic Freedom which retire to the local Rotar y Club
thousand.
granted professors freedom to wher e a short buffet will be
Is It possible that this whole teach , publish and to be envolved served.
Ping-Pong ? in outsldA activities. Sylvester
by Mike Carroll
campus is playing
KJp en ^J~ orum ^rr e lci
• FRIDAY , MAR CH 6, 1970
OOMSBUR G STATE COLLEGE
Hoffman
Gets
Hyper
By Jack Hoffman
Before I start my column , I
only have one questi on to ask
you , "Have you ever received
an unnecessary psychological letdown?" Now let me explain my
gripe . On Thursday, F eb. 26,
which is the regularl y scheduled
day for swimming, myself and
twenty other guys assembled in
Centennial Gvmnasium with the
^y \uhn
rfum p &
Zror
Zswo
Huskies Los e
In Overti m e,
Snyder Nets 22
Heartbreak is one of the many
ways to describe the BSC loss to
M ansfie ld in the NAIA District
19 semi-finals. The Huskies were
down by as much as 12 points in
the second half but kept fighting
back to tie the score at 70-70 at
end of regulati on time. In the
first overtime period , Bloomsburg grabbed an earl y lead but
when that period had elapsed , the
score was again tie , now at 7676. In the second overtime per iod , Mansfield came up with the
breaks to pull out a 92-90 win .
M ansfield grab bed the earl y
lead but Bloomsburg went ahe ad
for
several
minut es midwa y
throu gh the first half . Then M ansfield took the controls and ran the
i TjTjq rLrun jxi ^J~Ln_rLri j -LrL rLr _ i
i
NESPOLI
jewelers
Fine Jewelry and
Psych Up
Wrest lers
pu t it up and in for what appear ed to be the winning two points.
However the referee blew his
whistle before the buzzer sounded and the basket was disallowed,
sending the game into overtime
ti ed 70-70.
It seemed this period that
Bloomsbur g would keep their momentum to win. After a Mans field bucket , the Huskies r attled
six straight points to lead by
four w ith less than two minutes
13 I. Main St., ItOOMStUftO
Epple/s
Pharmacy
JUm smiroMce$$»
MAIN IIRON STUITS
Fretcrfpffon Specfaf/if
• CHANEL
• GUEILAIN
• FABERGE
• IANVIN
• PRINCE MATCHAIELLI
• ELIZABETH ARDEN
• HELENA RUB8NSTEIN
• DANA
• COTY
• MAX FACTO*
Vf#6ft Wflt JM
\
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CLOTHING
McGregor sport wear
VAN HEUSEN and
MANHATTAN
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sho p
AT
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FLOWERS
784-4406
Bondtd Worl d Wide Delive ry
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N
r
MEN'S and BOYS'
HAGGAR SLACKS
LEVIS
Be
fashion able
n
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' Lee-Pat's
WHEttDAD
TOOK HtS G4KL
Uoomtfaurg
Let me also start this second
half of my column with a question , "H ow many of you would
have liked to have gone to the
Monday n ite B-ball game at Williamsport but couldn 't get a
ride?" Well , there were two big
beautifu l school-own ed buses just
sittin g by Centennial Gym NOT
in use . What was th e reason for
this? It wasn 't the cost becaus e
assumption of using the swim- I figured it would cost 12 dolming pool . Well , it so happened lars for the dr iver and 13 dollars
that the Frosh had a game at 6:00 for the gas which would run each
and Bucknell Frosh were using ctnHont $ R1
Those who attend ed and anyour girls ' locker room. At 7:00
when it was time for the pool one who listened to the game
to open , Dave Gibas , lifeguard , on the radio were impressed by
came and told us the JANI TOR , Mansfield' s cheerin g section
the Janitor no less, said , "H e mainl y because they took student
wouldn 't open the pool because it buses there which increased the
would be unfair to the female size of the crowd .
Since th ese buses were not in
popu lation of BSC if th ey weren 't
use
and students wer e willing to
allowed in the pool because there
pay
for their service , some oth was no where to chan ge . " I' m
should have been made
er
attempt
precednot blaming Gibas for the
ing orders; he was willing to be to use them as a means of transthe guard that evenin g without portation besid es those of Dean
being paid , I would just like to Norton . After all , how many times
know what author ity the janitor do we make it to District 19
has to say what is and what is Playoffs? Not very often.
p amoinlni r
lead up to 10 before settling for a
Mansfi eld fought back and dro phalf-time score .
ped
in two baskets to tie with
MSC looked just as tough tor
15
seconds
left. Monaghan again,
the first thir teen minute s of the
brought
the
ball
upcourt and tried
second half , as they dominated the
a
desperation
shot at the buzzer
boards and bombed from way out
which rimm ed the basket and
to keep their lead.
The Huskies began to mak e c a me out to send the game into
the second overtime tied at 76.
thei r move w ith seven minutes
The last period was all M ansleft , and 10 points separating field as they picked up several
them from victory. They kept easy baskets to lead by as much
whittling away at the lead until , as 6. W ith three seconds left
w ith fi ve sec onds left in the game Mark Y anchek put in a final
and the score tied , Larry "Hon - BSC basket
, but the
do" Monagh an took an Inbound s clock ran outunmolested
to
give
Mansfield
pass and bro ught the ball to mid- the 92-90 victory .
court where he called time .
Bob Snyder led
Th ere was some di screp ancy with 22 points andthe6 Huskies
assists .
over the tim e left. There ap- M ark Yanc ek du mped in 17 points.
peare d to be two seconds remain - Howard Johnson 15 , Monaghan
ing but the referee signale d time 12 and Bill M astro pletr o 10.
out after th e clock ran out. Johnson led the club in rebound *
Bl ooms b urg was award ed one ing with 14. Weir lstein led the
second to bring the ball down- Mountie s with 29 points.
court.
Jim Platukis thr ew the
Snyde r , Yanch ek , M astropl etro
ball in bounds , it hit the back - and Monagh
an have completed
board and Howard grabbed It and the ir college basketball careers.
All will graduat e in Ma y and
they will be missed from the
team.
This was a great team. They
have nothing to be asha med of ,
losing to Mansfield . Congratula tions to the team and good luck
to the senior s.
The
Texas
Watch Repair
¦ .
not fair .
w;
faathletic
Exam ine once the
Cut
BSC.
at
cilities we have
off the use of the swimmin g
pool and you cut off 50 per cent
of thes e facilities. There have
been other instances when the
swimming pool was in use and the
gymnasium was unab le to be
used .
Come on JANIT OR , wise up and
get in the BIG times.
^
Ztkt
Gorr > »/>
'
FETTE RMAN S "" N
BARBE R SHOP
— QUALITY —
J»oot of ColUg t Hill
Bloomtb urg Pi.
WONDERVIEW
SKI AREA
BREN'TWOOD SWEATERS
?
Formal Wear Rental Servi ce
week days 7*10 p.m.
1-10 p.m.
520 I. Main St.
College Night
Fhon»{ 714.97ft*
Monda y «—
only $1*00 per person
Rooks
Win 8th
BSC SNEAKS BY DICKINSON
In an exciting close match the
Rusky Rooks beat Dickinson on
College -3 -2 on March 1. A week
earlier the Rooks drew the same
team. So the team was psyched to
¦win . Dennis Plymette on 3rd
board won easily in a half hour .
Jim Kitchin , the Rooks 5th board
with a 6-1-1 record , the teams '
best record , won in 30 moves for
a 2-0 lead . All we needed
was 2 draws in the last 3 games
for a win . Everythin g looked
good as Dave Sheaffer was in a
draw n end game , Dave Kistler
was a pawn to the good and Ken
Drake was ain a "h air y " position . But things began to worsen .
Fourth board Dave Sheaffer overlooked a mate threat and lost his
tfw K h
^k
^^ ^^
Ljueeu
,
vSla
^rtoward
^^^ rf» ^n* .^M
Tab ^^^ L ¦
^k^b^
¦!¦
^^ a b
CM
^K
^^
^^
j LJctviu Kisiie r uui it esii-
man first board also missed a
mate threat and was forced to
lose his queen . With the score 2-2
it was up to "Mr . President"
Ken Drake to decide the outcome . His opponent , Mr . Snider
sacrificed many pieces to get
a fav orable position , but the position was inferior . Running out of
time , Ken attacked and mated
Snider with 5 minutes remaining
aJLets eJLooSe
on his clock. Dr. Gil Selders has
been a great asset as their adviser . He has yet to see them
lose this year . This is a record
of 8-1-1. The team faces tough
Lebanon Valley next week. If we
win we all but sewed up the west "I'll be giving' up an incred - ern division of the league champible amount ot money, more th an ionship of Penna .
I ever dre amed of making , but I
The club welcomes new memwill ," says Jerry. "And I think bers; beginners and experts are
maybe this is it. "
both invited . They hope to organize a B team next year . The
"When I have to say that I'm club meets Mondays and Wedneshot gonna play anymore , It 'll be days from 3 to 5 in Old Science
the hardest thing I'll ever have to 24
.
do in my life. It 'll kill me and
I don't look forward to it ," concludes the aching superstar.
Urgent Plea from Mrs.
Sport Shorts
Los Angeles Laker super star
Jerry West , enjoying the finest
season of his care er , may be quit ting pro basketball after this season , reve als an ar ticle in the cur rent issue of SPORT magazine .
"I always said the one thing I
never wante d to do was to go on
p laying when I was no longer at
my best ," says West . "And I
think maybe thi s is it. If! wind
up having a good year , I don 't
know if I'd take a chance in another one , on having a bad year. "
West , whose better than 30points will undoubtedly make him
the NBA scoring leader for the
first time in his career , has probably been thinking of quitting because of the recurrin g that have
sideline d him and sapped his
stren gth during 1969-70
Earlie r this season , W est sat
out a week at home while recover ing from a seri ous groin Injur y. Lending further cr edence
to the belief that he will quit is
his wife' s statement that he used
the week to work on him Income
tax and other legal matters , appr oaching them , she said , "as If
he might not be playing basket ball and making his Laker salary
next year " .
^L
BLOOM
BOWL
€>
¦ I
Haircut by
U£
^y
BIS8ET
Ba ft FRITZ
rber flM f
I
1'
DepesH Inturanct
(students of BSC only )
To be given eway on March 16, 1970
1st prize - Cassette Recorder and Tape
2nd prize - Two Cassette Tapes
3rd prize - One Cassette Tape
Cut out and bring to the College Store
Name
CASSETTEE RECORDER
plt att print
CerperaHeit
^^¦¦^r
~^^ v
( conti nued on page •ight )
SPECIAL
Need f inancialhe lp next year?^I
¦!
¦ A PP lV now.
Mamber " tdtral
By Clar k Ruch
It was a BSC first when the
Husky trackmen traveled to East
Str oudsburg for a triangular indoor meet. The Huskie s scored
43 points to finish second behind
East Stroudsbur g's 64. Urs inus
ran last with 18.
This was the first time many
of the cindermen had even seen
an indoor tr ack. C oach Puhl' s
optimism in the abi lity of the
team paid off as they made ad-
^^^ ¦> ~^m^
mirable perfor mance in their
first tr ip on the hardboards
Hus ky firsts were grabbed bj
Joh n Ficek with a 46'5" throw
in the shot put , and Jim Davis,
who. ran the 300 yard dash in
32.3 seconds .
Charles Sc hie Ids , 43'9 % " anc
second , heaved the shot 47' bui
fouled. The 1000 yard run was the
most exciting race of the day
when Welk ert of ESSC just bare-
* pre-recorded and blank
* Instant loading
* Long play
(doled Monda y) ,
TuMcta yt Ap pointment Only ,
lloomsburg , Pa.
At ESSC
CASSETT E TAPES
Open Dally
I:N A,M, 'til 1:11 P.M.
Sat. 8:00 a.m. tU S:M p.m.
Bank
Penn
united
II HI
^B^ Th« bank you can grow with.
Cindermen In
Indoo r Meet
Colle ge Store
YOUR
VR
ed the money, it took until November , 1969 to bring the issue
before the GSA executive everything . Then in early Jami &ry
construction began .
The football field has nearly
the same story as its history .
The money was gra nted to the
college in 1963, but due to technicalities on the contouri ng of
the land and underground fixtures , the plans are still not
finalized . However construction
is expected to begin this summer
and it will be ready for 1971
track season and 1972 football
reason .
I would like to thank Mr . Boyd
Buckingham , Director of Development and Public Relations
at BSC , who took his time to give
me the facts and figures for this
article .
Now available at the
. M Appoi ntment
M
Twidoys
W
784-7854
WAFFLE
GRILLE I
I
I
F ootball has a lot less action
than hockey and basketball , accordin g to an article in the current issue of Sport Magazine .
The article reveals that the
ball is actually in play for less
than 13V2 minutes in a pro football game, or less than 9 per cent
of the '2V2 hours it takes to play
the avera ge game .
College football fares even
worse , according to the study in
Sport , with the ball in play less
than 8 per cent of the game .
Contrastingly, the puck is in action the full 60 minutes in hockey
and the ball is in play the full
48 m i nutes in pro basketball.
Rita Hoffman : "Jack ,
my son , Pleas e Get
Your Hair Cut ."
L ove
Mother
This article is an updating of
Athlete 's Foot Febr uary 27 , when
I pointed out the poor athletic
facilities at Bloomsbur g.
First , the new fieldhouse is
under construc tion and will be
finished July 15, 1971. The delay
on the gym has been caused by a
multitude of technicalities
in in Jun e. The
1969,
^irst bids came
but they were $560,000 over the
$1, 850 ,000 that the state had allotted . So, bids were sent out
again in October , 1969, but this
time they were $572 , 000 over .
The college then contacte d the
General State Author ity (GSA)
for the extra money from the unallocated sur plus . This is a "kitty " of unused funds when bids
come in lower than money granted for construction .
Then after they were award^
BSC Box No.
Phone
Open Forum
(continued from page five)
tween drinking hemlock and being dismissed from this institution ," he said. Dr. Nossen told
Dr . Primack that he had not been
dismissed but had not been placed
for continuous employment. Primack then indicated that he was
unwii'Ingly leaving BSC because
n*> ivas considered to be detrimental to the Welfare of the college because he was a part of
some conspiracy to disrupt
college campuses. "Some, guy in
Chicago said, "Your assignment
i s BSC , Primack ," he facetiously remarked. Dr. Nossen indicated that these WERE NOT
the reasons Dr. Primack had
not been granted continuous employment . "I love to be wrong,*'
Primack then said. "I don 't want
to be right in this case."
CGA President Jeff Prosseda
urged the group to base opinions
on fact, not emotion. Dr. Nossen
thanked Jeff and left for another
meeting.
With Dr. Nossen1s exit , discussion was handicapped in regards to administrative "sides of
stories. " However, a number of
relevant remarks were made in
Nossen 's absence. Avarama Gingold of the Sociology Department
stated that dismissing a professor who has been favorably
evaluated by colleagues indicates
that the administration considers
only the dismissed professor to
be incompetant but also the col.
leagues who did the evaluating.
Subsequently, they offend students by indicating that they are
being taught by incompetence.
Michae l Hock added that administrators claiming that they
may remain silent on certain
issues further offened the students because, ''their opinions
are thus considered invalid and
their inquiries are considered
inpertlnant.
Tom Brennen , Editor of the
G ADF LY , in response to remarks
Dr . Nossen had made concerning vicious attacks made on him
by GADFLY , stated that he wished to publically challenge Dr.
Nossen to bring suit against his
publication.
At the end of the meeting,
*J\a y (continued from page three )
Kay 's future at West Chester.
Last spring, a screening committee met on Dr. Xay and recommended continuation of contract. Dr. Carlson , Chairman
of the History Department, formed that committee , but Dr.
Carlson was on sabbatical leave
for the fall semester of this year ,
and Dr . Riley, the Acting Chairman , formed a new committee.
How could Dr. Hay possibly be
judged by his peers when most
of the members of this new committee do not have their doctorates ? Why was a new committee
formed when the old committee
had recommended continuation of
Dr. Kay 's contract , and when
more than a maj ority of the history department supports him?
These questions go unanswered .
President Rossey said he welcomed dissent. Therefore, if we
are to assume this is true , Dr.
Kay and President Rossey should
be best of friends. If President
Rossey welcomes dissent , he
should welcome Dr. Kay, because
he is a dissenter .
It may be that Dr. Rossey
hears, but never listens; talks
but never speaks , hearing only
what he wants to hear. The time
has come for the President to
"listen to the warm ," because
the heat's on. A general studentfaculty meeting should be called
by Dr. Rossey where this issue
could be debated on the stage
and from the floor of the auditoriumIn conclusion, the firing of Dr.
Kay has led to two serious consequences. Cne, many good
people may leave in Dr. Kay's
wake. Second , by dismissing this
man Kay, the President is responsible for what will be the
gr adual destruction of free
thought , dissent, and involvement. If it can be done to Kay,
or Owens, or Sykes, it can be
done to anyone. And you all know
that.
me mbers of the Philosopy Club
decided to for m "F act finding " committees to find if there
has been a breach of Academic
Freedom in the case of Dr .
Primack. Findings will be released later.
News
Briefs
f J l o w ji our
Inte rviews
lOan d
3.6t
(cont inued from page one)
irlind
Edinboro State, Eli zabethtown,
Franklin and Marshall, Gettysburg, Grove City, Indiana University , Kutztown State, Lafayette', Lebanon Valley, Lehigh University , Lock Haven State, Lycoming, MansfleldState,Mlllersville State, Moravian , PennState,
Shippensbur g State, Slippery
Rock State , Susquehanna University , Swarthmore, Temple University , Thi el, University of Psnnsylvania , West Chester State,
Westminster , Wilkes, and York.
March 6 — 2:30 to 4 p.m. —
Baltimore County Pub. Schools ,
Towson, Maryland — All areas
March 6 — 1 1 a.m. — Boyer town Area School Dist . — Boyertown, Penna . — All areas
March 6 — 2 p m. — Windsor
Central Schools, Wind sor , New
York — Elem. 2 , 3, 6
March 9 — 1:15 p.m. — Pottstown School District , Pottstown,
Penna. — Elem. — all grades
Eng; Reading; Sci; Math; Span;
Sp ed; $6600
March 10 — 10:00 — Newark
Valley School Dist ., Newark Valley, New York — Elem. — all
grades; Math; German; Soc
Studies; possible other areas
March 10 — 1:30 — C ouncil
Rock School Dist ., Richboro,
Penna. — All areas
March 10 — 1:30 — Scotch
Plains-Fanwood Pub. Scl ., Scotch
Plains, New Jersey — All areas
$7000
March 1 1 — 9 a.m. — Westhill Centra l School Dist., Syracuse , New York — All areas
March 11 — 9:30 — Lancaster
Schools — Lancaster ,
City
Penna . — Elem. grades Most
areas of Sec .
March 1 1 — 1 0 a.m. — Penns bur y School District , Fallsington,
Penna . — All areas
March 1 1 - 2 p.m. - West
Chester Area School Dist., West
Chester , Penna . — All areas
The newly formed recorder
group invites new members to
bring their flutes and whatever
music they possess to 203 W .
5th Street, Friday March 6 at
7:30 p m. Five of those already
interested met last Friday and
enjoyed blending. W ith their combined library of Renaissance,
Classical , and folk music they
look forward to several ensembles . Please call 784-8567 evenings before Friday if you plan to
C in derm en
join them. Other interested
groups hope to announce meet (continued from page seven)
ings shortly in connection with
the Free School concept in ly beat Larry Strohl by one tenth
Bloomsburg.
of a second .
Jim Davis and Greg Berger
took second and third respectively in the 60 yard dash while Rich
^tudu trek
Brand
vaulted 11'6" for a secA " 1970 Summer Studytrek" ond in the
pole vault.
program for study in England
point scorers were
Other
BSC
is being conducted by Mrs. Mary Terry Lee, second
Tim
E . Banzhof, East Stroudsburg Waechter , second ,, mile;
two
mile;
State College , East Stcoudsburg,
Pa. 18301. Descriptive pamphlets Charles Graham, third , 600
are in the offices of Mr . Thomas yard; Andy Kusma, third , 70
Carl Wilde, fourth,
Davies, Placement (Ben Frank- high-hurdles;
lin), and Dr. Louis Thompson, pole vault; and Bob Lancock,
English Department (Waller 258). fourth, javelin .
The team should be commendInterested students may also
ed
for the fine job they did
write directly to Mrs, Banzhof.
and for their determination in the
face of facility pr oblems. On
their own, they laid out a 440
yard track in the parking lot to
Jsniurance
practice on . This kind of resourcefulness breeds champions .
(continued from page one)
Their next meet will be back on
not only for those soon to be the boards at East Stroudsburg
married but for single guys and on March 10. This time they
girls. Get your group together should come back winners.
and plan on attending.
The two representatives , JaThe following is the text of a recorded anmes E . Patrick and William Dounouncement prepared for national radio:
glas, have already been on campus ' of the following schools:
Announcer: Ladies and Gentlemen : The distinguish King 's College, Wilkes College
and Scranton University. In all
ed scientist and Nobel prize w inner, Dr. George
Wa ld, has an urgent statement for you and for Presof these schools they have had
great success in informing the
ident Nixon about the Vietnam War .
student body of the "Do 's" and
"Don 'ts " of not only life and
Dr. Wald : I have said at every opportunity what I
health insurance but equit ies as
think
of the Vietnam War. I think it is a national
well.
disgrace. So people ask me, "Have you got a plan,
The twenty minute sessions
will deal with an information
do you have a program?" And so I began to say
service only. An informal quesabout the Vietnam War , "Yes, I have a program.
tion and answer period will be
I will tell you how to get out of the Vietnam War.
held afterwards . Graduate students and young faculty memIn Ships."
bers are invited , also.
¦
" "
m
J oin
the
M&G
1
"Littl e Macolm
and his struggle
against (tie Eunuchs"9
Harry Loga n
Fin e J ewelry
AND
Repairin g
Your J twtUr Away f ro m Homt
I
5 W. Main St.
Bloomsburo
J
MOYER
Pharmacy
Your Pf itrlptlon Druggh t
'I V LIKE A WOfcD HHnH tfJ R.
WWC P.EIAT/0NS MAN !! '
ROBERT G. SHIVE,R.P. ;
Free Prescription Delivery
<£> < WW AHWCA COW,/ 1*64 AfHPY RD/ &T. lewl ,f A 0. /t W l.
u™
1^" WeTjtud.o shop ~~
I
59 E. Main St.
I
I
. . . for your personal needs in
gifts and home decor
T1
I
y
'
TOILET GOODS
COSMETICS
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES
GREETING CARDS
!
j
!
1 West Main St.
Phonet 784-438S
BLOOMSBURG , PA.
~a play about stude nt revolutio n
"We are hemmed In on
•very side by th e massed
hord s of an Impoten t Eunarchy , thos e who have cast rated themselve s and whose
sole aim is t o compromi se
the manhood of our society .
I know now th at we must
tak e matters into ou r own
hands ."
University Theatre
Buckneli University
March 6, 7, 12, 14
8:30 p.m.
tickets • $1.75 and $2.00
for reservati ons call 524-1235
Semi furnished
2nd floor apartment
for rent
3 room a n d privat e
bath , g a s baseboar d
heat , all utilitie s furn ished priva te entrance ,
one block fro m College.
call 784-4908
after 3 p.m.
CAMPUS CLEANERS
124 E. Main St.
At Your Servic e
*Shirts profe ssionally laundere d
*Sanitone Dry Cleaning
" ' Re.pairm ff r»nH Alteration * on Premises
We Aim To Please
m^
the Move At BSC
Pr eparations are well under
way for the 18th annual Ameri can Red Cross Bloodmobile visit
to the campus of Bloomsburg
State College in Centennial Gymnasium on Thursda y, March 12,
1970, from 9:45 a.m. to 3:45
p.m. The Bloodmobile Committee , under the co-chairmans hip
of Anthon y Kohl , Nort hampton ,
and Mrs. Karen Bloom , Bloomsburg, launched its campaign this
weak to solicit students , faculty ,
and non-teachin g personnel to be
donors. The committee hopes to
at least matc h the 496 pints of
blood donate d at last year 's
bloodmobi le visit , accordin g to
George G. Stradtman , facu lty coor dinator .
A substantial turnout of donors
on the March 12 visit could assure the Bloomsburg area Priority 1 status. Over the years ,
partici pation has been largely
responsible for the Bloomsburg
area remaining in Priorit y 1
(I Dand Zre&t
Ward
13-15
Bloomsburg State is one of 35
Pennsylvania colleges and univers ities to be re presente d in th e
forthcoming 23rd Annual Pennsylvania Intercollegiate
Band
Festival to be held on the Wllkes
College campus , Wllk es JJarre ,
March 13 , 14, and 1.5. It is being
sponsore d by Pennsyl vania Bandmasters Association in cooperation with Pennsylvani a Music Educ ators Association with William
R. Gasbarro , chairman , Wilke s
College Department of Music ,
host of the festival.
R ep resent in g th e M aroon an d
Gold Band of BSC will be Mich ,
ae l Gulliver , son of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Gulliver , 531 West
Third Street , Bloomsbur g, Pa. ,
a junior in secondary education
who plays the tuba and Strate
Marlnak os, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Nick E. M arlnakos , 314Mulberry
Street , Berwick , Pa ., a freshman
in secondary education who play s
tne clarinet.
Following campus arriv al , the
mus ic educ ation conference will
take place Saturda y, March 14
from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
under the auspices of Studen t
Chapter 388 of Wllkes College
with Richard Probert , mem ber
of the mus ic faculty, as advisor .
The festival band concert comprising app roximately 130 musicians from the Pennsylvania colleges is scheduled for 2:30 p.m.
Sunday afte r noon , March 15 , conducted by Prof. Donald E. McGlnnls , director of Ohio State
Un iversity Concert Band .
Institutions rep resen ted are :
State ,
Albri ght)
Bloomsburg
Bucknell University, California
State , Carne gie-Mellon Univer sity, Clarion State , Drexel Univers ity, East Stroudsburg State ,
( continued on page tight )
J ¦_
_ ¦
» . _ _ J
status most of the ti me. Since
the first bloodm obile visit to
the BSC campus on Februar y 12A
1953 , when there were 183 pints
of blood collected , there has been
a total of 5,121 pints collected
from college community parti cipants.
Strad tman indicated that a
booth will be set up outside of
Husky Lounge to enlist the name s
of students who intend to donate
blood and faculty members wiU
be solicited through inter-col lege correspondence. An impor tant change starting with thi s
visit is that it is no longer necessary for a student under 21
years of age to have a signed
parental slip indicating permiss ion to donate blood.
In addi tion to the response
that is expected from the college community , it is hoped that
a substantial number of walk ins , compr ised oi residents of
the Bloomsburg are a , will par ticipate in the March 12 visit .
Stu dent members , in addition
to Kohl and Mrs. Bloom , servin g
on the 1970 Bloodmobile Commit tee are : Lee Harris , John Halle ,
C aro l Batzel , Joy Novak , John
Whi te bre ad , Kathy Novak , G race
Nazarenk o, M aureen Schaeffer ,
G ary Bl asser , Sue Maglll , Wayne
Herring , Mike Hokkanen , Bar bara Osinski , J ane Fell ln , J ames
Kelly, Linda Swank , Nancy Shaffer , James and Jos eph Pail and
Linda M alin ski.
At The Root
The oil painting "At the R oot"
will hang in the Waller Lobb y/or
two weeks then will be moved to
a more permanen t location in
Haas Aud itor ium . This painting is
a stron g addition to the growing
Permanent Collection of the College. It was given to the College by the American Society
of Arts and Letters in recogni t ion of the quality of the collection that has been started during
the past six year s and as an encoura gement to contin ue to enlar ge this collection in furthe r
yea rs.
The artist of the work , David
Lund , is a nati ve of New York
who atte nded Queens College ,
where he received his Bachelor
of Arts degree. He 13 currently
on the facul ty of Par sons School
of Desi gn , hav ing taught at C ooper
Un ion Art School and Washingto n
Un iversity in St. Louis , Missouri .
His work has been widely exhibited and la In the perm anent
collections
of the Whitney
Muse um of American Art , F inch
College , Baltimor e Maryland Mu seum and th e Chas e M anhattan
Bank in New York City , among
oth ers. .
Mr . Lund , who was awarde d a
Fulbrlght Gr ant to Rome for
two years , has had his work
exhibite d at the Whitney Museum
of Amer ican Ar t, Cooper Union.
Queens College , the Fort Worth
Art Center , and elsewhere.
Attention all Pres idents of
campu s organizations! 11 Has
your group been photographed for the 1970 OBITER????
If not yo u bette r get on the
ballll! The deadl ine is the
15 of March; all pictures
have to be taken before this
date, if not you r group will
not be in the yearbook
(again) . So get a move on
and make an appointment by
leaving a note in Box 291
Waller with the time and
place and we'll have a photo *
grapher there.
News
Briefs
f-^rom
L ^unctiled
Last week we conducted a last
ditch effort to find support for
a Junior Prom , by circulatin g a
questionairje . Out of a class of
about 750 students , we received
31 replies. Even tak ing into account the fact that some people
would not be aware ot the ques tionnaire and that others would
simply not take time to return
it , we still believe that 31 people is a pretty poor response .
If we wer e to disregard the
appare nt lack 'of interest and go
ahead and plan the prom , we
would have to make arran gements
for the entire class . It would
mean a tremendous loss of money to the class if we then did
not receive a major ity support .
We therefore have decided that
it would be foolish to go on with
any plans for this year , and in*
stead will try to learn from
this lesson and start planning
the prom for next year . To those
of you who said that you might
be able to help on a prom com*
mittee , we will ask your help
in planning next year 's sen ior
pro m. AGAIN THIS YEAR'S JUNIOR PROM IS CANCELLEDIU
Regretfully yours ,
Bill Cluley Junior C lass Pres .
Sophs To Discuss
Field Exp erience
All Sophomores in teacher edu- bi -lingual school in New York
cation who will attain Junior class (Spanish • English), or Canada
standin g by September of 1970 (French - English), a southern
will meet as scheduled below with inner-city school in Richmond ,
% their Divisional Director and Dr. Vir ginia , or an inner-cit y school.
Meetin gs will be held as foiAumiller to discuss the Field
lows:
Experience Program .
The Field Experience , which
Secondary — M onda y , Marc h 9
is designed to expose students to — 4:00 p.m. — Room 134, Hart actual classroom and commun ity line Science Center.
Elementar y — Tuesda y, March
situat ions , should be engaged in
10 — 4:00 p.m. — Room 134
pr ior to entering courses in professional education . H opefully, it Hartline Sc. Center .
Busin ess — Monday, March 16
will help students decide whether
or not they really want to follow — 4:00 p.m. — Room 134, Har tline Sc. Center .
a career in teachin g.
The Department of Field Experience , with the encouragement
and cooperation of the directors
of the various divisions , Dean of
Instr uction , and Dr . Nossen is in
the process of arran ging for students , who so desir e , to acquire
their experience in areas away
from their home . Students will be
asked if they have a desire to
Dr . Max Pr imack of the Philo work in their local area , a rur al sophy Department partici pated
deprived area in Appalachia , a in a debate at Southern Regional
High School -with Mr. A . Sylvester of the Histor y Department
on Thursda y, Februar y 26. The
debate dealt with the question
of the "jus t war " . The position
they took did not necessarily reflect thei r personal opinion . Mr .
Sylvester ar gued that all wars
wer e necessar ily immoral in that
The Lincoln Nationa l Life Inthey
involved the killing of innosurance Company and LNC Equity
people
. The killing of innocent
Sales Corporation will have two
it was agreed , ma de
people
cent
,
representatives at the Newman
innocent power inmost
even
the
Club on Wednesday and Thurs thereby negating
guilty
,
volved
day , the 11th and 12th , fr om 1:00
of
justice
which it might
any
claim
to 5:00 and from 7:00 to 10:00.
Primac
k held that
Dr.
ma
k
e
.
The highlight will be twenty minare
not just it
wa
rs
while
all
ute sessions at 1:30 , 3:30 , 7:30
possible
as well
theor
etically
is
and 9:00, but you are welcome
accurate
to talk
historica
lly
as
to drop by at any time . Linco ln
World
War
U was
of
"just"
war
s.
National is one of the few major
position.
illustrate
this
used
to
companies that has specialized
Countri es , as well as ind ividuals ,
Life Insurance programs for colhave the mora l right to violently
lege senior s as well as finanoppose aggression under certain
cial planning and equity services.
specified cond itions. It is necWith graduati on only a few
y, Dr. Primack concluded ,
essar
months away it is now time for
distin
guish betwe en a just war
to
you to think seriously about steps
unjust methods (such as
and
the
that should be taken to insure your
bombin
g of Dresden) which
the
future . This progr am is designed
sometimes employed in atare
(continued on page eight )
temptin g to achieve v ictory.
Primack Sylveste r
Insurance
Advice
C*con Sp eaker
There will be a J oint meeting
of the Economics Club and Phi
Beta Lambd a (Business Frater nity) in Har tline Science Center ,
room B-86 , on Thur sday , March
12 , at 7:30 p.m.
The guest speaker will be Mr .
Elmer Robinson , stoc kb ro k er f or
Jose phtha l & Co,, a mem ber of 1
the New Yor k and AmericanStock
Exchan ges .
A wide scope of topics will be
discussed , from the establishment and dealin gs of an investment club , to the implications
of the fiscal and moneta ry policy,
The Phi Beta Lambda Fratern ity and the Economics Club
will have separate business moetings after Mr. Robinson speaks.
Interested stu dents other than
the membe rs of the two organi zations are invited to attend .
Sam Zactter y end Mary Lou Boyle In a teene from " Dark of the
Moon " . See It toni ght!
Nagle Fe atured
At Conf e ren ce
John £. Nagle , Reading Edu cation Advisor , Bure au of General and Acade mic Educ ation ,
Department of Education , Common wealth of Pennsylvania , will
speak on "Or ganization and Administration of Secondary Reading Programs " at the Sixth Annual Reading Conference to be
held at Bloomsburg Stat e C ollege
on Frida y and Saturday , March
13 and 14 , 1970.
After attending AUentown High
School , Nagle received his Bachelor of Science degree in educa tion from Bloomsburg State College where he majored in English
and social studies. His Master
of Education degree in reading
psychology was earned at Te mple University, and he is currently a candidate at that Institution
for his Doctor of Education Degree in reading psychology.
In addition to being a teacher
and a re ading consultant in his
native school district at AUentown , from the period 1953
through 1968 Nagle also served as
developmental reading instructor
at Lehlgh University , as an offr
campus facult y member of The
Pennsylvania State University ,
as an evening school faculty member at Loyola College , and as an
electronics technician with the
United States Marine Corps.
H e is a memoer 01 tne Penn sylvania State Education Association , National Education Association , International Reading Association , Association of State Eng- *
lish and Reading Specialists , and
the Keystone State Readin g Association.
His public ations include ' Supervision in Language Instr uction " and
^Compr ehension
— Listening and Speaking ."
Mr. Nagle will speak in Hart line Science Cente r from 11:25
a.m. to 12;45 p.m. on Saturday ,
M arch 14, in a discussion group
chai red by Dr. Robert Mi ller ,
Professor of E ducation , BSC .
In Memory Of
Malcolm X
On a Sunday afternoon in New the shor t life of a powerful and
York City , February 21 , 1965 , respected black man . Some said
a hail of assassins' bullets ended that he deserved it,. Others said
that he was a black racist. Still
others said that he wa s a friend
to all. This man, who at his
death had in his pocket a list
of persons seeking to kill him;
this man , who fought ardently for
the black man in America ; this
'man , who had sacrific ed all for 1
his beliefs; thi s man was M alcolm X.
But wasn't he a Elac k Muslim? Didn 't he advocate separation of the races? Didn't he call
us white people the "white devils? " Didn 't he reject the middle class or bourgeoisie Negroe s who were trying to find a
place in society? Didn 't he advocate a type of violence ? The
answer to all of these que stions
is a yes but with some reserva nuns.
Wasn 't he a Black Muslin? Yes,
Malcolm X was a Black Muslim.
He devoted twelve years of his
life to preach ing the words and
teachings of Mohammed . M alcolm became second in line , only
inferior to the soleailed honorable Elijah Muhammed , leader
of the Musli m movement in America. After condemning Elijah Muhammed for disob eying many of
the devout Islam rules , M alcolm
X was banished from the organization. He then Initia ted his own
blac k organization known as the
Organization for Afro -American
Unity. To its members he pre ached the true Islam religion and
joined in praying to their one god
Allah . The dominant theme of the
true Islam religion was the common brotherhood of all men. Does
being a Black Muslim condem n
a man ? H ardly .
Didn 't he advocate separation
of the races and disapp rove of
integration? Again , yes. But was
this really bad? The white man ,
has been separating races tor '
centuries. The whit e society has
been seemingly functi oning alone
and not worrying about the red ,
(continued
on page th ree )
1970 OUt*r6
-srr *
f / o aLon a er
On Sa t.
•>
¦
.¦
•
*
—
Psychology
Lectures
'IT 6H/6& MB 6REAT PL^SURe TZ3
in/stau. THe Ai£W VCAH of sr wemv
t 't xNG,W*etucl q>*PV YiOH AiMgy kP/nr. Zfr y iS M 0/ C ZI 3Z.
MAROON AND GOLD
VOL. XLVIII
~
NO. 34
MICHAEL HOCK
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Business Manager
dor Rtmsen
Managing Editor
Bill Teitsworth
New s-lditor
Martin Kleiner
C*Foature Edito rs
Crin ny Potte r, Allan Mauror
Sports Edito r*
Clark Ruch & Jack Hoff man
Photv qraphy Editor
Mark Foucart
Copy Staff
Kay Hahn, Caro l Oswald , Irene Gulyc x
Circulation Manager
Linda Ennis
Advisor
Mr . Miehaal Stanloy
ADDITIONAL STAFF:: Terry Blast , John Stugrin , Bob
Schuto, Sally 3w.tl. nd Dava Ktlta r, Stanl ey Bunstc k ,
Jim Saehettl , Susan Zalota, Prank Cliff ord , Vefm a Avor y
^'
Carol Kl sbau gh, Pal Jac obs
All opinions expr essed by columni sts and feature writers,
Includin g l.tt.rs -to-tha-«dJt or, a ro not nocossar lly those of
Hilt publication but those of the Indivi duals .
i ne sevemn 01 me eignt lectures in the Centr al Pennsylvania Psych ology Lect ure Series
will be March 11 , 1970 at 8:00
P .M . at Bucknell Univer sity according to an announcement by
Dr . M . W . Sanders , Director
of Research and Evaluation at
Bloomsburg State College and
Chairman of the Series .
The lecturer will be Dr . Geor ge
A . C icala, Associate Profe ssor of
Psychol ogy at the University of
Delaware . Dr . Cicala 's topic will
be "PARAMETERS OF AVOIDANCE BEHAVIO R ." Dr . Cicala
received his Bachelor s and Mas ters degree s from the College of
William and Mar y and his Ph.
D . from Pri nceton In i960. He
serve d one year as a Public
Health Service Research Fellow
at Princeton and has been on the
Psychology staff at Delaware
since 1961 . His research has
dealt with the factors responsi ble for averslve learning. He
has al so wor k ed on the eff ects
of sleep deprivatio n , and he has
done research on the effects of
phar achological agent s on the
learning proce ss .
The Psycho logy Lecture Series
is under the co-sponsorshlp of
Bloomsbur g State College , Bucknell University , Ly com ing Col lege,
and Susquehanna Univers ity. In addition to the students and faculties of these
sc hoo ls , Interested profes sional
and lay persons are Invited to at tend . The local host for this lecture will be Dr . Donald Hartley ,
of Bucknell University .
Three R ivers Art
/
Festival May 29
The trl-st ate 's annual Three
Rivers Arts Festival will behe ld
May 29 throu gh June 7 at Gate way Center , it was ann ounced today by the Festiva l's execut ive
committee. The festival be gan in
1960, and has grown to one of the
largest events of its kind in the
United States.
j ne iu-aay eyeiu. win «d«u o
drawings , pr ints ,
paintin gs ,
sculpture and crafts pro duced by
artists in a 110-mile r adius of
Pittsburgh. There will be a photography show this year as well as
a poster competition and special
art exhibits . E ntert ainment will
include perfo rmances by the
Pittsburgh Symphony , jazz combos , poets , high school ban ds,
orchestras , choral grou ps,pup peteers , and a magician . Demonstrations of art and craft techniques will also be featured.
' All displays and performances
will be fre e to the public. Most
performances will take plac e on
a special stage built over the
fountain in Gatew ay Center. Displays will be spread throughout
all Gatewa y plazas and adjoining buildings .
Care will be taken to protect
works of art from the weather.
Framed and matte d works will
be hung in sheltered pavilions on
the plazas next to the Gatewa y
bui ldings . Sculpture will be on
display in the outdoor court near
Three Gateway Center. Crafts,
will occupy the lobby of the new
Westin ghouse building .
Works of art will be offered for
sale to the attendin g public. Last
year , 400 pieces were sold for
over $37 ,00C. Over 4 ,00 works
were submitted by appr oximately
1,000 artists. There were close
to 1,000 pieces on exhibition at
the 1969 Festival which drew over
200 ,000 visitors.
Judges for this year ' s ev ent
will be Edgar Kaufm ann , Jr .
and Willis F. Woods, Mr . ICaufmann Is professor of architec ture at C olumbia University.Mr .
Woods Is director of the Detroit
Institute of Art.
Paul
Rand , internationally famous graphic designer , will
serve as Ju dge for the poster
competition , which will be held
before the Fest ival opens. Deadline for entries in the poster
competition is March 14.
Entrance requir ements and
forms for the juried art exhibition will be made avai lable in
April to artists who wish to submit work s for judging. A rt ists
are requested to send a selfaddressed , stam ped, Number 10
business enve lope (4V4 " x 9% ")
to: Three Rivers Art s Festival ,
1251 N. Negley Ave., Pittsburgh ,
Do
IKOfiR
The Festival is the official
functions of Carnegie Institute.
Gateway Center is made available through the courtesy of The
E quitable Life Assurance Society
of the United States. Financing
come s from the city of Pitts burgh , Allegheny County , Pennsylvania Council on the Arts ,
corp orations , f oundations , and indivi dual donations. Over 1,500
volunteers are connected with the
planning and operation of the
Festival.
National Film
Competiti o n May 11
A national stude nt film competlon , a film festival , and an
institute , all in honor of silent
film pioneer D . W . Griffith , will
be held at the Univer sity of Louisville , Louisville , Ky., the week
of May 11 .
The announcemen t was made
on the anniversar y of the 95th
birthday of the late Griffith , the
internationally
famous filmmaker who was a Louisville native . The joint anno uncement was
made by Dr . Willia m C . Huffman , Dean of the University Col lege at the University of Louisville , and Lee Bro wning , Vice
President and station manager
of WAVE-TV , a Louisville stati on.
The D. W . Griffith Student
Film Festiv al is open to filmmakers from anywhere in the
United States . No Institutio nal
affiliation Is necessar y to enter
any of the five categor ies. A
total of $2, 500 in prize money
will go to the winners . The mon ey was made available by cosponsor WAVE -TV , which Will
also award at least one summer
Internship position In Us Special Projects Depar tment to entrants who evidence special taloiivb .
AmL ._,
The five categ or ies are dra matic , d ocumentar y , an imated ,
experimental , and silent films.
Judges for the 1970 competition
Include Richard Schicke l , film
critic for LIFE Magazine , and
Pauline Kael , New Yor ker film
critic . Other judge s will be added
at a later date .
Ru les for the competitio n and
entry blanks are avai lable by
contacting the D. W . Griffith
Student Film Festival , the Uni-
versity of Louisville , University
College , Belknap Campus , Louis ville , Ky ., 40208. Deadlin e for
entries is May 1, 1970. The J ud ging will take place May 14, 15,
16.
During the week of May 11-16 ,
concurrent with the competition ,
the University of Louisville will
sponsor the D.W . Griffith Film
Festival and Instit ute . Durin g
mornings , I nst i tute re gi strants
will participate In discussion and
pra ctical sessions in filmmaking
conducted by a national expert
on the Cjlnema. Afternoons will
featur e screeni ngs of major films
that relate to that morning 's activities . The Institute member s
will also view the screenin gs of
the competition films and hear
the judges ' res ponses and decisions . A public showing is planned for the outstanding films of
the competi tion . A small fee
will be charged for the noncredit Instit ute . Applic ations and
information may be obtained by
writing the D . W . Griffith Film
Institute at the above address.
The event s honoring Griffith
were originated by Walt Lowe
of WAVE-TV ' s Special Projects
Department . Mr. Lowe is an expert on Griffith , who directed
amon g the greatest early film
class ics, Including INTOLERANCE and BIRTH OF A NATION .
He worke d with Huffman , Morr is
Bein , Chairman of the University of Louisville 's Division of
Human ities , Robert
Doherty,
Chairman of the Department of
F ine Art s , Leon V . Driskell of
the En glish Department , and Rob *
ert McM ahan of the Music His*
tor y Department .
h_
Kay Dismisse d For
Questionable Reasons
Dr . Michael Kay, a pr ofessor
at We st Chester State College ,
was refused continuous employment at tha t college due to circumstan ces tha t ar e cons idere d
questionab le by many student s
and faculty at West Chester and
other Penna. Colleges. The Kay
Case has prompte d a student sitin coordin ated by the student
governm ent and a nu mber of
C ourt cases involving faculty ,
administr ators , and most notably, college President Rossey.
M any students and faculty at
this college consider the West
Cheste r situation to be reve lent
to situatio ns at Bloomsburg, particularly that concerni ng Dr .
Maxwe ll Prim ack. The following
article , repr inted by special arrangement from the West Chester student newspaper , was wr itten by Student Government Pres ident , Larry D»Antonlo. It sxpr esses student opinion in regard to the Kay case :
Dr. Mich ael Kay Is a leading
historian . He is an authority on
Afro -American History and the
State of North Carolina. He is
the most published member of
the history department and is
currently working on a book to
be published soon. Dr. Ka.y is
considered a superior teacher
by a majority of the student s
who have had the good fortun e to
be in his class. He is superior , in that , he is relevant ; he
instills a desire to know the
truth in his pupils. He is a
man who is so consummately
concerned with justice , that he
re semble s an evan gelist.
In short . Dr . Kay is different.
Dr . Kay has been fired.
There is no doubt that fear of
Dr . Kay 's ideas and activities ,
on the part of the Board members and top level administrat ors , was the leading motivation
behind the dismissal. What the
hell else could it be? The reasons given by the administration
are invalid and an effrontery to
Dr . Kay 's dignit y . Rumors has
it that Dr. Kay is a Marxist ,
and if you ever want to scare
# someone , just say the word
"Marxist . "
Dr . Kay assiste d the Black students in their requests before the
administration. If you ever want
to give an "Amer ican Patriot "
a double-wham my, say "Black
hi
__lj i
__.
.
¦¦
¦
i r
ii
¦i i
i
i _¦¦^MMMMMMHHMHMM
Rossey
Inte rview
On Thursday mor ning,
8,
P ower " immediately after the President Rossey answeredJan.
queswor d "Marxist* ', and a ver y wor - tions concernin g the contro versy
ried look will dome over his face. surroundin g the failure of the
I must remind all who read this , West Chester State College adthat there Is no law in the "Amer- ministration to ren ew the conican Dream " which restricts Am- tract of Dr. Michael Kay of the
ericans from holding specific be- History Department .
liefs. Somehow , our fears and
anxieties have made us for get
Q. "Dr . Rossey, how many
the dream ot the American Revbeen reolution. So much for the founda- faculty members have
Dec. 15,
of
as
quested to resign ,
tions of fe ar .
1969?"
T oHon/ ^Arl lha mn/4A 4s\ AWrlAf *
* MbbvllMvVl M*v IlldUv ^V^^ Vt UVA •
A . "I DON'T have the exact
hurriedly-called Board meeting
here , but I belieye the
number
of December 11 , 1969, which deis
between 7 and 9 ., To
numb
er
cided Dr. Kay 's fate . Wh en my
only
one has refused to
date
,
turn ca me t o speak , I told the
resign.
members of the Board that over
Q. "Among the rumored rea1300 students had signed a petisons
for the non-renewal of Dr.
tion calling fdr the renewal of
s
contract was alleged use of
Kay
'
Dr . Kay 's contract; that fourprofanity
. Would you consider the
teen members ot the twentyprofanity
in the classroom
use of
four member history department
reason
for the dispro
per
had signed a petition calling for as
professor?"
missal
of
a
the renewal of contract; that the
A . "I DON'T believe that proIGA General Assembly had gone
fanity
is objectionable ., how on record in support of Dr. Ka y;
to me wouid not
obscenity,
ever
,
and that the man was a leading
and
I would expect
acceptablebe
historical scholar.
to the vast
acceptable
it
not
be
When Mr. DeBaptlste spoke, maj ority of our college com he said , "The man can teach. munity ."
The man can teach .'? (Mr. DeQ. "Would you consider memBaptiste is the only Black membershi
p in the Commun ist Party
ber of the Board of Trustees).
as
proper
reas on for the disThe othe r Boar d members spoke
professor?"
missal
of
a
in quasi-negative comments , sayA . "NO , I would say that meming little to counter what Mr, bershi
p in the Commu nist Party .
DeBaptlste or I said. Mr. Saltsshould
not , of itself , necessitate
man did add that he didn 't care
the
dismissal
of a professor . "
how many students signed petimembershi
p on. the
"Th
e
Q.
tions .
evaluation committee concern ing
After all the memb ers had an Dr . Kay was reportedly chan ged opportunity to speak , they voted. by actin g chairman Riley. Also,
Mr. DeBaptiste was the only it has been stated tha t the pronegative vote to Preside nt Ros- cedures under which it met were
sey 's recommendation to fire supposedly unorthodox . Is this
Dr . Kay . My hat is off to Mr.
DeBaptiste .
A . "IN REA LITY , there is no
A special High er E duc ation established pattern for the evaluCommittee Inq uiry was schedul - ation of a pr ofessor . And as acted for December 13, 1969 , in ing chairman of the department ,
Harrisburg . The decision of the Dr . Riley certainly had the authCommittee said that Dr . Kay's ority to decide wha t form the
dismissal was not as a direct evaluat ion committee
should
result of his testimony before take ."
the Higher Education Committee
Q. "Su pposedly , the result of
which visited West Chester on the evaluation committee found
Octo ber 30, 1969. In his testi- three in favor of dismissal and
mon y , Dr . Kay heavily criticized two against . Does the commit tee
President Rossey and the admin- itself decide the fat e of a profes istration . But the decision also sor?"
added that It was evident the adA . "NO , THE procedure here
ministration had decided to fire is that a chairm an may choose to
Dr . Kay before the Screening use a grou p of his colleagues in
comm ittee of the History De- the depart ment to get a broad partment had met to decide Dr . er view of the professor who is
( continued on page eight)
being evaluated . There is^nothin g
official about the committee
structure , there is no uniform
pattern establish ed in any qne
depar tment ., the evaluation of the
the individual
reactions
that
faculty members may give as
parts of a committee are simply
for the advisement of the chair man . It is the chairm an 's ro le t o
dec ide whether or not a person is
invited to remain.
Q. "Do you believe that , in order to insure clarit y and organization , some uni for mity in
the procedure concern ing evaluation committees should be established?"
A. "I THIN K it would be advisable for us to review extensively
with our professors and with our
var ious admin istrators , nam ely
the departmen t chairman , the
deans of the school s and with the
academic vice president this entire matt er of professorial evaluation , includin g the involvement
of students in th e evaluation progra m. Presentl y, I thi nk tha t one
of the most Import ant assets
for the Individual professor is for
him to reach a vast number of student reactions to his effectiveness in the classr oom . Theref ore , I think that we need to invest a good deal of time and effort
with our professors and with our
departmen t chairm en and the
deans in developing broad base
guid e lines for evaluation . I think
as a result of that , wtiat we will
do Is get some more similarity,
at least : if not uniformity. , but
iMN ^^ ^ ¦
If I alcolm A.
(continued from case two )
yellow , or black man that may
get trampled in the masses. But
is the white man being assailed because of this separation ?
But why was he against integration ? Isn't it trying to help the
blac k man? Yes , it is trying,
but is it ra pidly succeedin g?
M alcol m X saw the slow progress
of integration and wasn't impressed . His people had been
waiting, working , and strivin g
for four hundred years and what
had it achieved — a seat on a
bus , a chanc e to drink the, same
w at er as ever y one else , a ch ance
to vote
Were these small
steps worth four hundred year s
of waiting ? Did the white man
make the Irish immigrant and
Polish immigrant wait four hun dred years and then begin to integrate them? How could Mal colm X not be disillusioned by
this phenomena called integra 11U11.
WHITE DE V I LS
Did n 't he call us white people
the "white devils? " Yes , but
can we really blame him? When.
Malcolm was four year s old his
house was burned to the ground
by a grou p of white men. Malcolm, at the age of six learned
of his father being kille d and
evidence pointed to a grou p of
white persons . He left school in
the eighth grade mainly because
a white teacher told him he must
adjust his life to prepare for.
the low level in which he must
live. M alcolm saw white social
and welfare workers take his
mother away to a mental institution . M alc olm had to steal to live
in a white man 's society and
then was placed in a white man 's
prison . Can we blame him for
callin g tho white man a "white
devil " . No , but that was just a
minority of white people that did
him dirt. We as members of the
good white race wouldn't do such
things. But our just being members of the white race make s
us guilty as the actual house
burner s, wh ite tea cher , etc. that
affected the life of Malcolm X.
Didn 't he reject even those middle class and bourgeoisie Negroes who were trying to establish
a place in society ? The answer
is yes, but why ? Malcolm said,
and with j ustification , that , man y
of these Negroes were just pup pets of the white man. In their
r ace to the top they tr ampled
some blacks and made it harder
f or man y oth er mem bers of t he
black rac e to achieve a place
in society. Too many Uncle Tom
Negroes were being; created . Can
we even begin to ar gue ?
Didn 't he advocate a type of
violence ? Again , yes but why
did he advoc ate this violence?
M alcolm X said ,
"I am for violence If nonviolence means we continue postponing a solution to the American
b lac k man 's pr oblems — just to
within the broad base guide lines
(for evaluation of professors.)
Q. " You have state d t hat you
ha d some I nf orma ti on concern ing
Dr. Kay before the report of the
evaluation committee was completed . In the pr ocedur e of appeal
concern ing the non -renewal of
contracts of untenured profe ssor ,
the president Is an appeallate
author ity. Do you feel that the in*
formation you had prior to your
decision about Dr , Kay in any way
compro mised or biased your
position as an appellate authority?"
A. "No , NOT in any way whatsoever. As a matter of fac t the
only prior knowled ge (and 1 am
assum ing that when you are talking about prior knowled ge you are
saying of events that happened on
cam puses other than W .C .S.C .
cam pus) — I had was that which
was rea lly common around our
college community here anyway,
and that was dismissal from the
Alfred University campus; and
that was printed in the New York
Times and many other places . So
that 1 had no other prior information regardin g this particular
avoid violence. I don't go for
non-violenc e if it also means a
delayed , solution. To me a delayed solution is a non-solution.
If it mus t take violence to get
the black man his human rights
in this count ry, I'm for violence
exactly as you know the Irish ,
the Pole s, or the Jews would be
if they were flagrantly discriminated against . I am just as
they would ,be for violence — no
matter what the consequences ,
no ma tter who was hurt by the
violence."
Can Malcolm X be justifi ably
proved wrong for his belief in
violence? M ost likely not.
Malcolm X was trul y a messenger of and for the black race.
Although- many regarded him 'as
radical , his basic assum ptions
are hard to dispro ve. I , as a
member ot white society, feel a
shame and a guilt after realis ing the opp ression of 22 million
citizens of our countr y for so
many years .
Although Malcolm X honored
and solely respected and suppor ted most blacks and their
causes , he did have a few white
friends . He believed the white
man could help the black man
if only he (the white man) could
admit his guilt and regard all
people as human beings. Only
then can the white man begin to
better the lives ot all mankind .
Is it so hard for us to adn.it
our guilt ? Can we not start right
now and regard everyon e as our
brother?
Saturday , February 21 , commemorated the fifth year since
the death of Malcolm X. Can we,
the white society, not honor ibis
man with our admittance of shame
and guilt , and then set out to
strive for a better world for all
people ?
Yes , M alc olm X may be called
a radic al , but in the words of the
black actor Ossie Davis who
spoke at the funeral of Malcolm
X:
"Many will ask what Harlem has
to honor in thi s stormy , controversial and bold youn g captain. . ..They wiU say that he
is of hate — a fanatic , a racist — who can only bring evil
t o the cause tor which you strug gle !
"An d we will answer and say
unto them: Did you ever talk to
Brother Malc olm? Did you ever
touc h him or have him smile at
you? Did you ever listen to him?
Did he ever do a mean thin g?
Was he ever himself associa ted with violence or any public
disturbances? For if you did you
would know him: Malcolm was
our man h ood , our living black
manhood 1 This was the meaning
to his people . And in honoring
him , we honor the best in our selves. . .. .And we will know
him then for what he was and
is — a Prince — our own black
shining Prince! — who didn 't
hesitate to die , because he loved
us so."
Tom Henry
pro f essor . As a matter of proper
administra tive procedure this
case was reviewed many, many
times over as a result of our
antici pation of question s about
the decision. W e rev iewed I t as
a result of visitations I had with
members of the histor y department. Onc e again it was reviewed
and I feel that the entire matte r
of investigation , as far as the
president was concerned , uwiure
my decision was reached , had to
do solely with actions and pre formances on our campus alone .
Q, " Were any of the channels
of appeal blocked to Dr. Kay?"
A. "NO . "
Q. "Do you have any comment
of last night' s "Candlelight Process ion " (Wednesday, Jan. 7?)
A. "NO , TRUTHFULLY I did
not see it. The only thing I heard
about it was from Chief Ber ger ,
and he said it was very orderly. "
Q, "Would you consider action
by IGA or the students In general as a legitimate means of
showing suppor t for the rein statement of Dr. Kay?"
A , "\ES. "
PI UDAY,
15
BI.OOMSBURG STATE COLLEGE
PAGE FOUR
Letters , Letters , Letters
Dear Sirs:
Being only a lowly undergrad uate I am a bit confused as to Dr.
Nossen 's response in the Presl dential Hotline column of Feb .
27 , 1970.
Dr . Nossen plea se check one ;
1 . Dr . Primack is being fired.
( ) Yes ( ) No ( ) Maybe
( ) Don 't Know
2 . If the answer in the above
question is yes , then is he being fired because of his political views?
( ) Yes ( ) No ( ) M aybe
( ) Don »t Know
One other questi on: Would you
please explain this quote from
your reply in the M&G. "Perhaps , most of all , it shows a lack
of understanding that the college
has and observes its own channels
to assure academic due process ,
and beyond the college, the profession offers appropriate chan nels. " Is this a misprint or
what?
C onfused ,
John Hankins
B^V
formed?
If you haven't , you ^^^ V^sj H-^^^^ A^^^^^ B
^^^^ H
should. If you want a simpl
^
example of how expressive an
dynamic we can be , recall th e s^B^B^sfca^B^^ HH
m «Va^aia^g^B^B^gl
a^B^B^a
spirit generated during
thi S
year 's wrestling meets and bas B^B^g^^B^g^La^H
^
ketball games. "We don 't mes
around 1"
We can apply this same actio n ^ PP^ ^^^ Vj m
t o our student government. Thi s
is the objective of my campaignit
to the presidenc y of CGA . I havi B
The following was sent to the
every faith and confidence our M&G by Professor Martin Gildea .
student government can becom much more effective if you, thi B at BSC and the entire academic
student body, will want to heljp community of this country.
m ake it so.
This year we have poor par
me university in Danger
ticipation with CGA and class5
officer aspirants. Many office*3
The University is in danger .
are being sought unopposed. Oth
It is endangered by those memers are not even being sought • bers of the student body whose
This may seem distressin g if yoi1 only consistent program is to
are at all interested in studen t wreck a virtually defenseless
government . It doesn 't have t<> institution through violence , cobe. OK. So only a few studen ts> ercion , threats , and arbi trary
are willing to represent theii • interference with the right s of
fellow students by seeking an of - other students .
fice. At least they want to repIt is endan gere d by those memresent you. This is a start. Yoi1 bers of the faculty who place
r\ *p ly _7j CJf/ mj itr * can make it a good start . First • their passion for popularit y
support elections. They 'll be helc1 amon g the students and their deAn open letter fco Dr . Robert March 4, 5 and 16, 17. Suppor • sire to be in the avant- garde
them. Second , continue that sup-• ahead of their obligation to the
Nossen
port when these officers assume i universit y 's integrit y and future.
Dear Sir ,
Your rep ly to fin? (jae sttoa in office next year . Keep informec I
It is endan gered by those adthe M<£ G coccerniuj f Dr . Pri - about campus activities .
ministrators whose refusal to
If I am elected CGA Pr esident ,, heed the peaceful pr otests , to
mack was not ocl? ioa<2eqpate
I »ill strive to work for the over-• negotiate just grievanc es, to lisit was offensive.
It was offensiveto me, per son- all good of the college communitj ' ten to reason , or to accept chan ge,
ally, because it suggests an atti - by making better , more effective s thereby makes violence predi ctude extreme ly dista steful to me interaction with students , fac ulty, , table , however unjustifiable .
as a college journalis t — that you and administration . To create and I
It is endangered by those trusconsider a question posed by the maintain a higher level of student : tees who seek to suppress disinvolve ment I will better use the sent and nonconformit y on the
student media as an attack rather
communication
resources we campus , who refuse to grant
than a question.
It is also offensive to me be- have. CGA meetin gs will be more students any voice in their own
cause it implies that discussing open, there will be more frequent
affairs and who , thereby, inthe hiring , firing, or profession - committee reports by students
vite an escalation of prote st tac al affairs of faculty members in on various committee s and our tics and an enlargement of the
the M&G ("a public forum ") pr ogress publicized in the school protesting groups .
is in "poor taste ," and damag - news media.
It is endan gered by those pubWe have the ability to progress. lic officials , law enforcement
ing to a profes sionals "selfWe have progressed. We will officers , and politicians who rer espect. "
It seems to me tha t when pr ogress , but I want to make us spond to popular disma y over
rumors of politic al pressure , all pr ogress together , unite d, student behavior by unleashing
a "g et the li berals " conspir - with understanding , with confi- a host of hard measures and
ac y , and other such unhe althy dence. Wh ether us (sic) do these methods , ra nging from swingfeelings become as rampant as things or not is up to you. Make ing billy clubs to cuttin g off
financial aid ; methods that do
they h ave on this camp us , par - your choice , take a par t.
Sincerely ,
not discr iminate between peaceticularly with respect to the Pri Gary Blasser
ful and violent demonstrators , or
mac k affair , a college pre sident
Candidate for CGA Pr esident between those who are committcould worry a bit less about deing outra ges against the univercorum and good taste and a little
sity and thos e who are prote st*
more about clearing the air .
ff / ann
ing outra ges by the university .
If t h e rea sons f or Dr . Pri The university is endangered ,
mac k' s di smi ssal ar e at least
pr imaril y as stated , bugetary
Dear Editor ,
and suc h like , than it should not
In regard to Dudley Mann ' s let.
be too difficult a task to put
ter on Dean Hoch ' s actions at the
these re asons into black and
Febr uary 9 CGA meeting, I would
white , accompanied by the ap- like to add an opinion , some compro priate fact s and thus put a
ment , and a little praise .
quick end to rumor and innu I was in att endance at that parendo.
ticu lar meeting and essentially
Wh en you dodge a question
agree with the blow-by-blow desas you did this one . with an cription Dudley gave. One imair of "well I J ust don 't have to por tant fact that was eliminated ,
tell you , and it is an imper - h owever , is that the meeting
tinent question anyway ," you add
h a d alre ady run overt ime , past
to confusion rather than clarify
10 p. m., an d ev er yone was eith er
t he situati on. Furthermore , you too tired to comment or too irat give adde d weight to the convicab le to be discrete . It is my
tions of th ose who believe this opinion that Dean Hoch acted
ent ire affair is premeditated pro - more out of impulse than intelli- '
fessional murder.
gency, but ONLY because he naa
And , this is what is most of- alrea dy put in a hard day.
f ens ive t o me . Gettin g at the
In my association with severa l r lculu m changes (how does "120
truth in a situation such as this
administrators , especially the undergraduate credits to grad is always difficult. It is not
Dean of Men ' s Staff , it has be- uate " sound , or more free elecmade any easier if one side of come apparent to me that there tlves-taken in place of some of the
th is many faceted diamond In- are entirely TOO MANY MEET - general
educa tion garbage).
sists on wearing a shroud.
There
's
always
pa ss-fail, and
INGS , considering what gets acAllan D. M aurer
grading
syste
m
change
s (which I
complished by them. Perhaps
am
against
as
my
faithful
read that 's ( why they don't get a lot
ers
know
),
and
more
in
the
way
,
d one , they don 't hav e time '
(Ideally the Chief Executive will of possible changes that could be
rea d this and issue a memoran- blocked by the second biggest
dum giving them a break) . Any- obstacle (power wise) on campus
way , I think the Dean had his — the Dean of Instruction.
To Every BSC Studen t ,
Keep tuned in lor further deMan y of us rightfully expect share of meetin gs ior one day and
velopments.
(Dean , ta k ea C om poz
acted
has
tily.
much of our college, Its student
next
time).
By the way kids , it
If Dudley will let me in on what
leaders , faculty and administrawouldn
be
a bad idea to go to
't
tion ; yet , many of us have not happened at his clear-the-air sesa
CGA
meeting
JUST ONC E and
contr ibuted to atta ining the se ex- s ion later on, maybe I will have
see
what
the
hell
Is going on
to change my mind (opinion) about
pectations. Why?
aroun
d
here
(besides
Kegger 's).
Student apathy is larg ely to the Dean 's behavior . I might menAt
least
read
the
minutes
posted
blame , and now It 's time to real - tion th at there is a small per outs
ide
Husky
.
(Even
APATHE
ize the situation and make up our sonal ity conflict between the Dean
TI
can
read).
C'S
minds to fight apathy . Did you an d Glo Wilson , but I won't say
I may not agree with every ever stop to think how much more who 's responsible. I' m J ust hopthin
g (anythin g), Dudley M ann
effective our student body could In g we're not in for a new Dean
says
or does , but at least , right
be it somehow It could be mot i- of Destruction , especially in light
or
wron
g, he does give a damn I
vated , drawn together , and ln- of the President 's planned cur -
J oin
the
M&G
CQJ
m ^ b ^^ b ^ Ib ^ b ^ b ^
^^BiS^
vBaHSB ^P
VbHp
finally, by those memb ers of the
general public whose reacti on to
continu ed disord er is all too likely to be one of repression instead
of reform , thereby increas ing
the power and popularity of those
alread y committed , even in the
absence of disor der , to cuttin g
back on university fu nds and
freedom, to holdin g back the
rights of the youn g and the black ,
and to boostin g the very causes
of militarism , racis m, and bosssim tha t most protestors stru ggle to end .
Policy
Stated
Editor 's Note: This memo was
received from Dr . Nossen concernin g the Dismissal of Dr .
Prima ck.
Because I have heard a number
of conflictin g reports concerning
appointment and re-a ppointment
pra ctices at this college, I am
offering the following synopsis
of prevailin g policies for the
information of all who are concerned . The full statement , as
adopted by the Board of Trus- ~
tees , dated April 26 , 1968 , is
available in the Library. It was
initiated by a faculty committee
and was approved by the faculty
during the Spring semester , 1968.
A new faculty member shall
receive an appointment for one
year , which MAY be renewed for
the remainder of the three -year
pro bationary per iod . During the
first academic year of the pr obationary per iod , however , the
President of the College shal l
infor m the faculty member at
least ninety days before the end
of the college year whether his
services will be desired for the
following academic year , September to May Inclusive .
Although not specifically writt en in the policies , it is generally
understood within the pr ofession ,
and accepted by outside pr ofessional organizations , that non-renewa l of a first-year ter m appoint ment need not be accomp anied by any state ment of justification .
After the expiration of the probationary period of three years ,
the faculty member may be granted cont inuous employment , subject to the ret irement policy
of the College , if , in the course
of the faculty member 's third
year of employment , the College
administration does not desire to
place him on continuo us employ ment , the President of the College
shall so notify the faculty member at least sixty days before
the end of that year , provided
that the Preside nt of the College
shall set up specific requirements on a yearly basis subjec t
to rev iew at the end of each
semester .
Bloomsburg state College observes the above procedures as
minimal ; whenever possible , it
exceeds the basic req uirements. Should a fac ulty member
at any time feel that his per sonal
or professio nal rights have been
violated , he has access to a
standing Committee on Profe ssional Affair s , consisting of elected teaching faculty, char ged with
the responsibility for hear ing ,
adjudicating, and recommend *
ing action on any approp riate
profe ssional matter brought be*
fore it .
Robert Nossen
FRIDAY , MARCH 6, 19?0
MARCH 6, 1970
BLOOMSBURG STATE COLLEG
Fif th Column
I Primack Speaks |
I have delay ed wr iting thi s
response to the Pre sidenti al Hot.
line column of Febr uary 27 be
cause I had hoped that Pre sident
btb ^ INossen would say someth
ing at
the Monda y Night Philo sophy Club
Forum on Academi c Freed om
which would make some of the
remark s I am going to say un .
necessary. Unfortun ately he did
not .
President Nossen» s c olumn
was in resp onse to the following question from a studen t: "i s
it true that Dr . Prim ack of the
Philoso phy Departme nt is being
dismissed due to his political
activities? If not , wh at ar e th e
reasons for his dismissal? "
Rather than answer the question , President Nossen cr iticized
t h e stu dent who ask ed it for ask ing
it in in the first plac e. He went I
into considerable detail concer ning the motivations of the student in quest ion, and suggest ed that she , by asking her question , had implied that I was being fired for political reas ons.
I believe this was both unfair
and unfortunate. Unfair because
askin g a question need not imply any answer. The person who
asked the question may hav e simply wanted reassuranc e from Dr .
Nossen that I am not being removed from Bloomsburg for political reasons. Certainly many
of the readers of the M&G would
have appr eciated such reas surance. President Nossen's refusal to answe r the question prob ably create d doubts in the minds
of many where none had existed
before.
President Nossen , after point ing out that Bloomsburg has regular procedure s for faculty removal , asserted somewhat stridently (IN CAPITAL LETTER S)
that no faculty members with any
self respect or professionall y ,
would want the question to be
answered as stated .
I believe that President Nossen was making a special ref erence to me even thou gh my
name was not ment ioned. (Individuals may be talked about without any use of pr oper names .
As far as I am concerned use
of Innuendo is no virtue. ) In
t he context of President Nossen 's remar ks at the last Faculty Meeting, concer ning a certain
faculty member who was using
stu dents by di ctat in g letters of
supp ort (H ere again I was not
mentione d by name ) I inte rpret
t he upper case portion of the Presidential Hotline to mean that:
Since there are establis hed pro cedures for deciding whet her or
not a faculty member should be
remove d, it is impr oper for students to ask questions about such
matters. And all decent faculty
member s should disassocia te
th emselves from such student
efforts . This suggests that student questioning of decision pro cedure s fr om which thev ar e excluded constitutes a threa t to
t hose proce dures , and an intent tcforce decisions in some other
way. (I am not sure of this ,
but this is the only way I can
make sense of what President
Nossen said in capital letters.)
I agree with this , in part . Question s of facult y removal or retention should be settled by regular procedures. And at present
regular procedures
the
at
Bloomsburg State C ollege exclude student participation .Hopefully in the future this will change
and students will have a significant role In determining such
questions. (I say thi s even though
I failed to get a job at the New
School of San Jose State College of California , which has
student partici pation , because the
students felt I was too old and
conservative.) But the fact Is
that at present students at
Bloomsburg do not participate
in such decisions , and there is
realistically no way in which
this can be changed in time to
affect my case .
H owever , I do not believe that
because students at pre sent are
excluded from the decisions mak ing pro cess that asking questions
and expressing their views is
illegitimate , or that they are incapable of doing so at their own
initi ative.
Pirtir a
CmUh
hoe*
4Ka
*•! n»lit l *\
ask whether or not any professor ' of • the school which she is
attendin g is being remove d for
reasons of his political activi ties even though she does not
partici pate in the pr esent decision pr ocess. She has a right
because such Issues are of concern t o ever y mem ber of the
Bloomsburg academic community , because it concerns the nature of BSC as an educational
institution and the quality of the
educ ation it pro vides. I would go
so f ar as to say that a lac k of
concern about such Issues is evidence of a stu dent' s disinterest
in his education .
Pres ident Nossen then goes on
to mak e a p ro f ession of hi s belief
in academic freedom and claim
that it exists on this campus. I
disagree. Academic freedom is
not guaranteed by rule s — although rules help. Academic freed om re quires a state of m ind,
an att itude of trust between people
who disagree that their disagree ments are not fatal to the possibility of commun ication and cooperation . This does not exist
ait Bloomsburg State C ollege.
Dr . Maxwell Primack
PRISSURI'S ON PRIMACK-leok where he's at. Actuall y, Dr.
Pri mack was parti cipatin g in a- dUcussio n group at North Hall
Lounge Tuesday night when photog rapher Mark Poucart sna pped
this pie.
l>y Blass
KU M Q UAT!
There , 1 hadda say it . And
it' s a good lead for what I' m
going to writ e about , namely
all the ugly things going on here .
And for what I' m thinking and
feeling. I' m scared and I' m sick
and I' m frustrated and I' m angry : Primack is getting dicked , and the administration acts
like there ' s nothing we can do
about it . Maybe they 're right ,
it looks bad , but damned if we're
not going to get some good reasons first . And if reasons aren 't
given but quick the friendly college on the hill may just plain
pvnl nHo
Principal Nossen , excuse me ,
PRESIDENT Nossen (I keep thinking BSC is some sort of glorified high school , sorry ) has yet
to give any good basis for his
decision. Perhap s he would have ,
had he not had a meetin g to go to.
Perhaps . Maybe he just doesn't
have any. Maybe he 's just another
pawn in the game , a game of no
rules , a game of lies passing
as truths , of personalities ver sus authorities , of rumor s and
power and God knows what else .
Rumor s. They have it that the
F .B .I , is in on this thing , that
they came to President Nossen
with files on Primack , files saying what demonstrations the man
was in , what politics he has , and
how he 's a part of The Vast International Conspiracy to Under mine Youth . Whew , and I thought
Fer
What ?
J im sachetti
NOTE : Any similarity between
the characters in this stor y and
actua l Bloomsbur g State C ollege
stu dent s, living (?) or dead , is
purely intentional.
M onday afternoon : March 2, 1970:
Bloomsbur g, Pa.; "Up on College Hill"
It 's 4:50 PJVI . Hartllne spit s
its final classes of the day out
into the late winter air and they
begin to trickle down the hill.
Stu dents , halfway through a semest er , with those "one down
and four to go" expressions . A
conversat ion , somewhere between Hartline and Elwell.
Bob: You guys goln ' to the meeting tonite ?
Jack: What meeting?
Bob: The Philosophy Club 's holding an Open Forum of Academic
Freedom over in Carver at
7:30.
Jack: I dunno.
Joe : Me neither
Hey Jack , tell
last
'im about that party
Saturday .
Jack: Yeah
now maybe if they
were holding something like
that I'd
Joe : What 'd you say It was gonna
be about again ?
Bob: Acade mic Freedom. You
know , when a pro f can express
his opinions openly, J ust like
anybody else , without havin ' to
worry
about losln ' his J ob
because some Dean-of-some thing-or-other t h i n k s he's
spoiling
the "Bloomsburg
Ima ge."
Joe : What do I car e abou t prof' s
opinions ? As long as 1 don 't
have to sit and listen to them .
Bob: OK . But can 't you see that
when they start telling the
profs what to say that pretty
soon nobody
Jack : Well , I gotta go, take It
easy.
Joe : Yeah , me too.
7:00 P.M . Bob's Room .
Joe : Hey Bob, we're getting a
Pin g-Pong tournament started
and we need another man, how
about It?
I was paranoid . Not anot her Infor
Cons piracy,
ternational
Chrissake . And one to Und er - ,
mine The System yet . Cri pes,
the system ' s doing a good enough
job of und erminin g ITSE LF , it
hardly needs any help . But the
F .B.I ., if they are Involved,
seem to have always seen a
Commie und er every bed; now
they 're seeing a Commie IN every bed . Thinkin g the F . B. I , is
behind all this is real ly scary,
almos t incredib le. But if anyone
would do it , why not them? They
can do anything, you know , they
have their own t .v. show .
But let' s just say that 's a ruPanelists at fit * Open Forum held Monday night. Front left they
mor . It still looks rank , smells
are .Anthony Sylveste r, BSC, History Department , Dr. Ro'j ert
worse . Until I' m inform ed other - ,
Nossen , President , BSC, and Dr. Robert Young, of West Chest er
wise, I still think Primac k is
in the right here , I can't see
State Ccllogo.
it any other way. Which hurts.
My college is wrong. MY col lege , my dear alma mater , my
own persona l refuge for academic
fre edom , is revealin g itself as a
stron ghold of hypocrisy and other
What is Academic Freedom? told of his experience s as a stuun-ni ce th ings. The disappointSeven panelists and a large aud- dent durin g the McCarthy era .
ment .
ienc e of stu dents , facult y and He stated that faculty did not
administrators metMonday even- stand up against politic al pressNot somebody will say I should
ing
for the Philoso phy Club 's ure then and indicated that ". . .
leave . Nope, but it was a good try .
open
forum to discuss Academic we may be coming to that again. "
Why leave? Primacks are happenDr. Nossen then offered a brief
philoso phically , as it
Freedom
ing all over: West Chester , F&M ,
applies to the dismissal of Mi- re buttal to Dr . Young 's remar ks.
that' s a star t . Which means either
chael Kay at West Chester State "There is another side of the
that there are a lot of bad colC ollege and to incidents at issue ," he said. He further statleges or a helluva lot of F .B .I ,
ed that he was not on trial but
Bloomsburg State College.
dossiers .
The panel , comprised of pro - had come to discuss the prin Which is just it . I'd like to
fessor Anthony Sylvester , Pres - cip le of Academic freedom.
Professor Deake Proter urg think it' s not Nossen doing all
ident Robert Nossen, Dr . Rob ed
the audience to congratulate
this , that it' s Somebody Higher
ert Youn g, Professor of HisNossen in some way for ofDr
.
Up, but that' s a damned horrible
George
tory at West Che ster ,
ferin
g to look into a case in
thought too . Gaah.
and
Joseph
Griffiths
Hoffecker ,
,
William Kelly, delivered state- which a student' s ri ghts may
ment s concernin g Academic have been violated by a Dean .
One thing, this can't go on .
Freedom
and then answe red ques- "This is a new era in justice
The peak is reached . There are
tions
from
the audience. Mr. for students ," Porter said. The
enough people , students , believe
Richard Brook of the Philoso phy audience applauded a blushing
it or not , who are willing to
Nossen.
C lub served as moderator .
forget the pledgings , the sports
Dr. Maxwell Primacl ; told the
Joseph Griffiths , BSC senior
events , the ping-pong meets , kids
audience
that he would not allow
and former Editor of the MAwho will dig to get to the truth
himself
to
become a mart yr, as
ROON AND GOLD , state d that
of this . And so far we 've only
Kay
and
Socrates
had .
Dr
.
the college exists to sat isfy a
uncovered more lies. Or are the y
"The
re
is
much
difference
beper
demand.
This
demand
is
,
just semi-lies? Or lies taken as
speech
f
ree
ha
ps
one
of
free
,
,
truth by thos e who speak them.
(continued on page eight )
inquiry or simply the freedoms
Or . . .enough alreadv.
guaranteed by the constitution.
The hard rain 's a-fallin. No
Obitu ary
the demand ," he said , "it falls."
turning back. Something 's going
Dr . Nossen , who was sufferto GIVE , goldurn it , it has to ,
ing from a cold , state d th at a Name: Norm Mode
this is too uptight , too kumquat Born: 1950
college is a place for constructin g ridic u lous.
Died:
1968
t ive dessent. "I' m not intereste d
Buried:
2019
in homogeneit y," he said. He inYeah , 1 want to find the truth
CAUSE . OF DEATH: Brokei
dicated that academic freedom is
somehow . The trouble is, the
comprised of the professor 's spirit with acute conformis t com
system won't allow for it. Possr ight in the classroom to go into plications along with star ved in
bily it' s just the school , no out tak
e
I
mean
it
did
tellect and deadened sense o
ever y phase of related matter
side hassles ,
a whole fifteen years for this
and outside of the classroom to individuality ,
place to liberalize itself enough pur sue knowled ge and to publish . PLACE OF DEATH: Bloomsburg
to sell PLAYBOY in its bookHe further indicated that the pro - Pennsylvania.
Born and raised in this city
stor e . Maybe I' m just imagining fessor is entitled to constitutional
all this. But the F . B.I. , whew.
rights , most notably those attri- Norm was graduated from Com
monwealth High in the spring o:
Is that thin g STILL run by
buted to the First and Fourteenth
H er bert H oover ?
amen d ments , Fre edom ot Speech 1968 and .enrolled at Bloomsbur t
and Press.
State College in the fall of ttu
Dr. Robert Young , who is ac- same year . While at BSC he dls
t ively Involved with forces oppos- tinguished himself in Kappa Ka
Bob : Ah , I dunno . I think I' m ing the dismissal of Dr. Michael ppa fraternity , the establishec
goin ' over to that meeting....
Kay , presented background In- Pseudo-Hippe colony and the lo
Joe : Fer what ? You can read
for mation concerning the Kay cal Che Guevara politi cal retv
about it in the paper.
case. He Indicated that reas ons toric club. Upon grad uating he
Bob: Well . I figured that this
for Kay 's dismissal were con- married the girl of his dreams
Forum might explai n some of
sidered invalid by students and (to whom he became engaged on
the things that have been goln ' faculty , subsequently causing a Christmas Eve of his junior year '
on aroun d this school and,... . lar ge number of students to "sit moved to Suburbia where he raisJoe : Ah , Kum quat the meeting . in " in the college 's administra- ed a family consisting of 2 .8
You should take It easy after
tion buildin g. "These students children .
a hard day In school. You were acting within the demoMr. Mode was active in var don 't want to spend the night crat ic process ," he said. "I ious civic , f raterna l , and polit over there ?
ical organizations throughout his
stand behind them. "
Bob : Well
Bill Kelly, a BSC student and adult life , "Liberals for Peace
W ell , Bob never made It to that
former contr ibutor to the GAD- at a Reasonable Price" , PTA .
meetin g. Neither did a lot of other
FLY , remin isced about the GAD- and Sparkling Springs C ountry
people . It scare s me to think that
F LY trials three years ago and Club being a few .
every day I see hundreds of peo- stated that BSC has gotten better
Norm was described by friends
ple , supposedly intelligent peo- then , through outside forces such and co-workers as being a shinple: students . Then I hear about
as the ACLU and AAUP . He urg * ing example to the youth of the
things happening: weird things , ed the group to deal with the par- commun ity who regarded him as
scar y thin gs, thin gs that should
ticulars concernin g the Primack the ultimate in secur ity.
He Is surv ived by his wife
worry these people. And I figure case and stated ". . .the adthat these "students " will at least ministration pays little attention and children .
Services are scheduled for
try to investi gate these thin gs, to what or how aprofessor teachMonday
morning after which the
find out why the y 're happening
es as long as he doesn 't cause
remains will be interred at Tran .
and how they affect the m. Then trouble ."
I go to a forum , and atte mpt to
Professor Sylvester read docu- qull Towers , 5th floor , row M.
investigate and clear the air . and
ments from the AAUP concern- Frien ds and relatives will then
see maybe a hundred out of three
Ing Academic Freedom which retire to the local Rotar y Club
thousand.
granted professors freedom to wher e a short buffet will be
Is It possible that this whole teach , publish and to be envolved served.
Ping-Pong ? in outsldA activities. Sylvester
by Mike Carroll
campus is playing
KJp en ^J~ orum ^rr e lci
• FRIDAY , MAR CH 6, 1970
OOMSBUR G STATE COLLEGE
Hoffman
Gets
Hyper
By Jack Hoffman
Before I start my column , I
only have one questi on to ask
you , "Have you ever received
an unnecessary psychological letdown?" Now let me explain my
gripe . On Thursday, F eb. 26,
which is the regularl y scheduled
day for swimming, myself and
twenty other guys assembled in
Centennial Gvmnasium with the
^y \uhn
rfum p &
Zror
Zswo
Huskies Los e
In Overti m e,
Snyder Nets 22
Heartbreak is one of the many
ways to describe the BSC loss to
M ansfie ld in the NAIA District
19 semi-finals. The Huskies were
down by as much as 12 points in
the second half but kept fighting
back to tie the score at 70-70 at
end of regulati on time. In the
first overtime period , Bloomsburg grabbed an earl y lead but
when that period had elapsed , the
score was again tie , now at 7676. In the second overtime per iod , Mansfield came up with the
breaks to pull out a 92-90 win .
M ansfield grab bed the earl y
lead but Bloomsburg went ahe ad
for
several
minut es midwa y
throu gh the first half . Then M ansfield took the controls and ran the
i TjTjq rLrun jxi ^J~Ln_rLri j -LrL rLr _ i
i
NESPOLI
jewelers
Fine Jewelry and
Psych Up
Wrest lers
pu t it up and in for what appear ed to be the winning two points.
However the referee blew his
whistle before the buzzer sounded and the basket was disallowed,
sending the game into overtime
ti ed 70-70.
It seemed this period that
Bloomsbur g would keep their momentum to win. After a Mans field bucket , the Huskies r attled
six straight points to lead by
four w ith less than two minutes
13 I. Main St., ItOOMStUftO
Epple/s
Pharmacy
JUm smiroMce$$»
MAIN IIRON STUITS
Fretcrfpffon Specfaf/if
• CHANEL
• GUEILAIN
• FABERGE
• IANVIN
• PRINCE MATCHAIELLI
• ELIZABETH ARDEN
• HELENA RUB8NSTEIN
• DANA
• COTY
• MAX FACTO*
Vf#6ft Wflt JM
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CLOTHING
McGregor sport wear
VAN HEUSEN and
MANHATTAN
SHIRTS
sho p
AT
f] r cus '
FLOWERS
784-4406
Bondtd Worl d Wide Delive ry
^trom
N
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MEN'S and BOYS'
HAGGAR SLACKS
LEVIS
Be
fashion able
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WHEttDAD
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Uoomtfaurg
Let me also start this second
half of my column with a question , "H ow many of you would
have liked to have gone to the
Monday n ite B-ball game at Williamsport but couldn 't get a
ride?" Well , there were two big
beautifu l school-own ed buses just
sittin g by Centennial Gym NOT
in use . What was th e reason for
this? It wasn 't the cost becaus e
assumption of using the swim- I figured it would cost 12 dolming pool . Well , it so happened lars for the dr iver and 13 dollars
that the Frosh had a game at 6:00 for the gas which would run each
and Bucknell Frosh were using ctnHont $ R1
Those who attend ed and anyour girls ' locker room. At 7:00
when it was time for the pool one who listened to the game
to open , Dave Gibas , lifeguard , on the radio were impressed by
came and told us the JANI TOR , Mansfield' s cheerin g section
the Janitor no less, said , "H e mainl y because they took student
wouldn 't open the pool because it buses there which increased the
would be unfair to the female size of the crowd .
Since th ese buses were not in
popu lation of BSC if th ey weren 't
use
and students wer e willing to
allowed in the pool because there
pay
for their service , some oth was no where to chan ge . " I' m
should have been made
er
attempt
precednot blaming Gibas for the
ing orders; he was willing to be to use them as a means of transthe guard that evenin g without portation besid es those of Dean
being paid , I would just like to Norton . After all , how many times
know what author ity the janitor do we make it to District 19
has to say what is and what is Playoffs? Not very often.
p amoinlni r
lead up to 10 before settling for a
Mansfi eld fought back and dro phalf-time score .
ped
in two baskets to tie with
MSC looked just as tough tor
15
seconds
left. Monaghan again,
the first thir teen minute s of the
brought
the
ball
upcourt and tried
second half , as they dominated the
a
desperation
shot at the buzzer
boards and bombed from way out
which rimm ed the basket and
to keep their lead.
The Huskies began to mak e c a me out to send the game into
the second overtime tied at 76.
thei r move w ith seven minutes
The last period was all M ansleft , and 10 points separating field as they picked up several
them from victory. They kept easy baskets to lead by as much
whittling away at the lead until , as 6. W ith three seconds left
w ith fi ve sec onds left in the game Mark Y anchek put in a final
and the score tied , Larry "Hon - BSC basket
, but the
do" Monagh an took an Inbound s clock ran outunmolested
to
give
Mansfield
pass and bro ught the ball to mid- the 92-90 victory .
court where he called time .
Bob Snyder led
Th ere was some di screp ancy with 22 points andthe6 Huskies
assists .
over the tim e left. There ap- M ark Yanc ek du mped in 17 points.
peare d to be two seconds remain - Howard Johnson 15 , Monaghan
ing but the referee signale d time 12 and Bill M astro pletr o 10.
out after th e clock ran out. Johnson led the club in rebound *
Bl ooms b urg was award ed one ing with 14. Weir lstein led the
second to bring the ball down- Mountie s with 29 points.
court.
Jim Platukis thr ew the
Snyde r , Yanch ek , M astropl etro
ball in bounds , it hit the back - and Monagh
an have completed
board and Howard grabbed It and the ir college basketball careers.
All will graduat e in Ma y and
they will be missed from the
team.
This was a great team. They
have nothing to be asha med of ,
losing to Mansfield . Congratula tions to the team and good luck
to the senior s.
The
Texas
Watch Repair
¦ .
not fair .
w;
faathletic
Exam ine once the
Cut
BSC.
at
cilities we have
off the use of the swimmin g
pool and you cut off 50 per cent
of thes e facilities. There have
been other instances when the
swimming pool was in use and the
gymnasium was unab le to be
used .
Come on JANIT OR , wise up and
get in the BIG times.
^
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Gorr > »/>
'
FETTE RMAN S "" N
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— QUALITY —
J»oot of ColUg t Hill
Bloomtb urg Pi.
WONDERVIEW
SKI AREA
BREN'TWOOD SWEATERS
?
Formal Wear Rental Servi ce
week days 7*10 p.m.
1-10 p.m.
520 I. Main St.
College Night
Fhon»{ 714.97ft*
Monda y «—
only $1*00 per person
Rooks
Win 8th
BSC SNEAKS BY DICKINSON
In an exciting close match the
Rusky Rooks beat Dickinson on
College -3 -2 on March 1. A week
earlier the Rooks drew the same
team. So the team was psyched to
¦win . Dennis Plymette on 3rd
board won easily in a half hour .
Jim Kitchin , the Rooks 5th board
with a 6-1-1 record , the teams '
best record , won in 30 moves for
a 2-0 lead . All we needed
was 2 draws in the last 3 games
for a win . Everythin g looked
good as Dave Sheaffer was in a
draw n end game , Dave Kistler
was a pawn to the good and Ken
Drake was ain a "h air y " position . But things began to worsen .
Fourth board Dave Sheaffer overlooked a mate threat and lost his
tfw K h
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Tab ^^^ L ¦
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^^ a b
CM
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^^
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j LJctviu Kisiie r uui it esii-
man first board also missed a
mate threat and was forced to
lose his queen . With the score 2-2
it was up to "Mr . President"
Ken Drake to decide the outcome . His opponent , Mr . Snider
sacrificed many pieces to get
a fav orable position , but the position was inferior . Running out of
time , Ken attacked and mated
Snider with 5 minutes remaining
aJLets eJLooSe
on his clock. Dr. Gil Selders has
been a great asset as their adviser . He has yet to see them
lose this year . This is a record
of 8-1-1. The team faces tough
Lebanon Valley next week. If we
win we all but sewed up the west "I'll be giving' up an incred - ern division of the league champible amount ot money, more th an ionship of Penna .
I ever dre amed of making , but I
The club welcomes new memwill ," says Jerry. "And I think bers; beginners and experts are
maybe this is it. "
both invited . They hope to organize a B team next year . The
"When I have to say that I'm club meets Mondays and Wedneshot gonna play anymore , It 'll be days from 3 to 5 in Old Science
the hardest thing I'll ever have to 24
.
do in my life. It 'll kill me and
I don't look forward to it ," concludes the aching superstar.
Urgent Plea from Mrs.
Sport Shorts
Los Angeles Laker super star
Jerry West , enjoying the finest
season of his care er , may be quit ting pro basketball after this season , reve als an ar ticle in the cur rent issue of SPORT magazine .
"I always said the one thing I
never wante d to do was to go on
p laying when I was no longer at
my best ," says West . "And I
think maybe thi s is it. If! wind
up having a good year , I don 't
know if I'd take a chance in another one , on having a bad year. "
West , whose better than 30points will undoubtedly make him
the NBA scoring leader for the
first time in his career , has probably been thinking of quitting because of the recurrin g that have
sideline d him and sapped his
stren gth during 1969-70
Earlie r this season , W est sat
out a week at home while recover ing from a seri ous groin Injur y. Lending further cr edence
to the belief that he will quit is
his wife' s statement that he used
the week to work on him Income
tax and other legal matters , appr oaching them , she said , "as If
he might not be playing basket ball and making his Laker salary
next year " .
^L
BLOOM
BOWL
€>
¦ I
Haircut by
U£
^y
BIS8ET
Ba ft FRITZ
rber flM f
I
1'
DepesH Inturanct
(students of BSC only )
To be given eway on March 16, 1970
1st prize - Cassette Recorder and Tape
2nd prize - Two Cassette Tapes
3rd prize - One Cassette Tape
Cut out and bring to the College Store
Name
CASSETTEE RECORDER
plt att print
CerperaHeit
^^¦¦^r
~^^ v
( conti nued on page •ight )
SPECIAL
Need f inancialhe lp next year?^I
¦!
¦ A PP lV now.
Mamber " tdtral
By Clar k Ruch
It was a BSC first when the
Husky trackmen traveled to East
Str oudsburg for a triangular indoor meet. The Huskie s scored
43 points to finish second behind
East Stroudsbur g's 64. Urs inus
ran last with 18.
This was the first time many
of the cindermen had even seen
an indoor tr ack. C oach Puhl' s
optimism in the abi lity of the
team paid off as they made ad-
^^^ ¦> ~^m^
mirable perfor mance in their
first tr ip on the hardboards
Hus ky firsts were grabbed bj
Joh n Ficek with a 46'5" throw
in the shot put , and Jim Davis,
who. ran the 300 yard dash in
32.3 seconds .
Charles Sc hie Ids , 43'9 % " anc
second , heaved the shot 47' bui
fouled. The 1000 yard run was the
most exciting race of the day
when Welk ert of ESSC just bare-
* pre-recorded and blank
* Instant loading
* Long play
(doled Monda y) ,
TuMcta yt Ap pointment Only ,
lloomsburg , Pa.
At ESSC
CASSETT E TAPES
Open Dally
I:N A,M, 'til 1:11 P.M.
Sat. 8:00 a.m. tU S:M p.m.
Bank
Penn
united
II HI
^B^ Th« bank you can grow with.
Cindermen In
Indoo r Meet
Colle ge Store
YOUR
VR
ed the money, it took until November , 1969 to bring the issue
before the GSA executive everything . Then in early Jami &ry
construction began .
The football field has nearly
the same story as its history .
The money was gra nted to the
college in 1963, but due to technicalities on the contouri ng of
the land and underground fixtures , the plans are still not
finalized . However construction
is expected to begin this summer
and it will be ready for 1971
track season and 1972 football
reason .
I would like to thank Mr . Boyd
Buckingham , Director of Development and Public Relations
at BSC , who took his time to give
me the facts and figures for this
article .
Now available at the
. M Appoi ntment
M
Twidoys
W
784-7854
WAFFLE
GRILLE I
I
I
F ootball has a lot less action
than hockey and basketball , accordin g to an article in the current issue of Sport Magazine .
The article reveals that the
ball is actually in play for less
than 13V2 minutes in a pro football game, or less than 9 per cent
of the '2V2 hours it takes to play
the avera ge game .
College football fares even
worse , according to the study in
Sport , with the ball in play less
than 8 per cent of the game .
Contrastingly, the puck is in action the full 60 minutes in hockey
and the ball is in play the full
48 m i nutes in pro basketball.
Rita Hoffman : "Jack ,
my son , Pleas e Get
Your Hair Cut ."
L ove
Mother
This article is an updating of
Athlete 's Foot Febr uary 27 , when
I pointed out the poor athletic
facilities at Bloomsbur g.
First , the new fieldhouse is
under construc tion and will be
finished July 15, 1971. The delay
on the gym has been caused by a
multitude of technicalities
in in Jun e. The
1969,
^irst bids came
but they were $560,000 over the
$1, 850 ,000 that the state had allotted . So, bids were sent out
again in October , 1969, but this
time they were $572 , 000 over .
The college then contacte d the
General State Author ity (GSA)
for the extra money from the unallocated sur plus . This is a "kitty " of unused funds when bids
come in lower than money granted for construction .
Then after they were award^
BSC Box No.
Phone
Open Forum
(continued from page five)
tween drinking hemlock and being dismissed from this institution ," he said. Dr. Nossen told
Dr . Primack that he had not been
dismissed but had not been placed
for continuous employment. Primack then indicated that he was
unwii'Ingly leaving BSC because
n*> ivas considered to be detrimental to the Welfare of the college because he was a part of
some conspiracy to disrupt
college campuses. "Some, guy in
Chicago said, "Your assignment
i s BSC , Primack ," he facetiously remarked. Dr. Nossen indicated that these WERE NOT
the reasons Dr. Primack had
not been granted continuous employment . "I love to be wrong,*'
Primack then said. "I don 't want
to be right in this case."
CGA President Jeff Prosseda
urged the group to base opinions
on fact, not emotion. Dr. Nossen
thanked Jeff and left for another
meeting.
With Dr. Nossen1s exit , discussion was handicapped in regards to administrative "sides of
stories. " However, a number of
relevant remarks were made in
Nossen 's absence. Avarama Gingold of the Sociology Department
stated that dismissing a professor who has been favorably
evaluated by colleagues indicates
that the administration considers
only the dismissed professor to
be incompetant but also the col.
leagues who did the evaluating.
Subsequently, they offend students by indicating that they are
being taught by incompetence.
Michae l Hock added that administrators claiming that they
may remain silent on certain
issues further offened the students because, ''their opinions
are thus considered invalid and
their inquiries are considered
inpertlnant.
Tom Brennen , Editor of the
G ADF LY , in response to remarks
Dr . Nossen had made concerning vicious attacks made on him
by GADFLY , stated that he wished to publically challenge Dr.
Nossen to bring suit against his
publication.
At the end of the meeting,
*J\a y (continued from page three )
Kay 's future at West Chester.
Last spring, a screening committee met on Dr. Xay and recommended continuation of contract. Dr. Carlson , Chairman
of the History Department, formed that committee , but Dr.
Carlson was on sabbatical leave
for the fall semester of this year ,
and Dr . Riley, the Acting Chairman , formed a new committee.
How could Dr. Hay possibly be
judged by his peers when most
of the members of this new committee do not have their doctorates ? Why was a new committee
formed when the old committee
had recommended continuation of
Dr. Kay 's contract , and when
more than a maj ority of the history department supports him?
These questions go unanswered .
President Rossey said he welcomed dissent. Therefore, if we
are to assume this is true , Dr.
Kay and President Rossey should
be best of friends. If President
Rossey welcomes dissent , he
should welcome Dr. Kay, because
he is a dissenter .
It may be that Dr. Rossey
hears, but never listens; talks
but never speaks , hearing only
what he wants to hear. The time
has come for the President to
"listen to the warm ," because
the heat's on. A general studentfaculty meeting should be called
by Dr. Rossey where this issue
could be debated on the stage
and from the floor of the auditoriumIn conclusion, the firing of Dr.
Kay has led to two serious consequences. Cne, many good
people may leave in Dr. Kay's
wake. Second , by dismissing this
man Kay, the President is responsible for what will be the
gr adual destruction of free
thought , dissent, and involvement. If it can be done to Kay,
or Owens, or Sykes, it can be
done to anyone. And you all know
that.
me mbers of the Philosopy Club
decided to for m "F act finding " committees to find if there
has been a breach of Academic
Freedom in the case of Dr .
Primack. Findings will be released later.
News
Briefs
f J l o w ji our
Inte rviews
lOan d
3.6t
(cont inued from page one)
irlind
Edinboro State, Eli zabethtown,
Franklin and Marshall, Gettysburg, Grove City, Indiana University , Kutztown State, Lafayette', Lebanon Valley, Lehigh University , Lock Haven State, Lycoming, MansfleldState,Mlllersville State, Moravian , PennState,
Shippensbur g State, Slippery
Rock State , Susquehanna University , Swarthmore, Temple University , Thi el, University of Psnnsylvania , West Chester State,
Westminster , Wilkes, and York.
March 6 — 2:30 to 4 p.m. —
Baltimore County Pub. Schools ,
Towson, Maryland — All areas
March 6 — 1 1 a.m. — Boyer town Area School Dist . — Boyertown, Penna . — All areas
March 6 — 2 p m. — Windsor
Central Schools, Wind sor , New
York — Elem. 2 , 3, 6
March 9 — 1:15 p.m. — Pottstown School District , Pottstown,
Penna. — Elem. — all grades
Eng; Reading; Sci; Math; Span;
Sp ed; $6600
March 10 — 10:00 — Newark
Valley School Dist ., Newark Valley, New York — Elem. — all
grades; Math; German; Soc
Studies; possible other areas
March 10 — 1:30 — C ouncil
Rock School Dist ., Richboro,
Penna. — All areas
March 10 — 1:30 — Scotch
Plains-Fanwood Pub. Scl ., Scotch
Plains, New Jersey — All areas
$7000
March 1 1 — 9 a.m. — Westhill Centra l School Dist., Syracuse , New York — All areas
March 11 — 9:30 — Lancaster
Schools — Lancaster ,
City
Penna . — Elem. grades Most
areas of Sec .
March 1 1 — 1 0 a.m. — Penns bur y School District , Fallsington,
Penna . — All areas
March 1 1 - 2 p.m. - West
Chester Area School Dist., West
Chester , Penna . — All areas
The newly formed recorder
group invites new members to
bring their flutes and whatever
music they possess to 203 W .
5th Street, Friday March 6 at
7:30 p m. Five of those already
interested met last Friday and
enjoyed blending. W ith their combined library of Renaissance,
Classical , and folk music they
look forward to several ensembles . Please call 784-8567 evenings before Friday if you plan to
C in derm en
join them. Other interested
groups hope to announce meet (continued from page seven)
ings shortly in connection with
the Free School concept in ly beat Larry Strohl by one tenth
Bloomsburg.
of a second .
Jim Davis and Greg Berger
took second and third respectively in the 60 yard dash while Rich
^tudu trek
Brand
vaulted 11'6" for a secA " 1970 Summer Studytrek" ond in the
pole vault.
program for study in England
point scorers were
Other
BSC
is being conducted by Mrs. Mary Terry Lee, second
Tim
E . Banzhof, East Stroudsburg Waechter , second ,, mile;
two
mile;
State College , East Stcoudsburg,
Pa. 18301. Descriptive pamphlets Charles Graham, third , 600
are in the offices of Mr . Thomas yard; Andy Kusma, third , 70
Carl Wilde, fourth,
Davies, Placement (Ben Frank- high-hurdles;
lin), and Dr. Louis Thompson, pole vault; and Bob Lancock,
English Department (Waller 258). fourth, javelin .
The team should be commendInterested students may also
ed
for the fine job they did
write directly to Mrs, Banzhof.
and for their determination in the
face of facility pr oblems. On
their own, they laid out a 440
yard track in the parking lot to
Jsniurance
practice on . This kind of resourcefulness breeds champions .
(continued from page one)
Their next meet will be back on
not only for those soon to be the boards at East Stroudsburg
married but for single guys and on March 10. This time they
girls. Get your group together should come back winners.
and plan on attending.
The two representatives , JaThe following is the text of a recorded anmes E . Patrick and William Dounouncement prepared for national radio:
glas, have already been on campus ' of the following schools:
Announcer: Ladies and Gentlemen : The distinguish King 's College, Wilkes College
and Scranton University. In all
ed scientist and Nobel prize w inner, Dr. George
Wa ld, has an urgent statement for you and for Presof these schools they have had
great success in informing the
ident Nixon about the Vietnam War .
student body of the "Do 's" and
"Don 'ts " of not only life and
Dr. Wald : I have said at every opportunity what I
health insurance but equit ies as
think
of the Vietnam War. I think it is a national
well.
disgrace. So people ask me, "Have you got a plan,
The twenty minute sessions
will deal with an information
do you have a program?" And so I began to say
service only. An informal quesabout the Vietnam War , "Yes, I have a program.
tion and answer period will be
I will tell you how to get out of the Vietnam War.
held afterwards . Graduate students and young faculty memIn Ships."
bers are invited , also.
¦
" "
m
J oin
the
M&G
1
"Littl e Macolm
and his struggle
against (tie Eunuchs"9
Harry Loga n
Fin e J ewelry
AND
Repairin g
Your J twtUr Away f ro m Homt
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5 W. Main St.
Bloomsburo
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MOYER
Pharmacy
Your Pf itrlptlon Druggh t
'I V LIKE A WOfcD HHnH tfJ R.
WWC P.EIAT/0NS MAN !! '
ROBERT G. SHIVE,R.P. ;
Free Prescription Delivery
<£> < WW AHWCA COW,/ 1*64 AfHPY RD/ &T. lewl ,f A 0. /t W l.
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1^" WeTjtud.o shop ~~
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59 E. Main St.
I
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gifts and home decor
T1
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TOILET GOODS
COSMETICS
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES
GREETING CARDS
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1 West Main St.
Phonet 784-438S
BLOOMSBURG , PA.
~a play about stude nt revolutio n
"We are hemmed In on
•very side by th e massed
hord s of an Impoten t Eunarchy , thos e who have cast rated themselve s and whose
sole aim is t o compromi se
the manhood of our society .
I know now th at we must
tak e matters into ou r own
hands ."
University Theatre
Buckneli University
March 6, 7, 12, 14
8:30 p.m.
tickets • $1.75 and $2.00
for reservati ons call 524-1235
Semi furnished
2nd floor apartment
for rent
3 room a n d privat e
bath , g a s baseboar d
heat , all utilitie s furn ished priva te entrance ,
one block fro m College.
call 784-4908
after 3 p.m.
CAMPUS CLEANERS
124 E. Main St.
At Your Servic e
*Shirts profe ssionally laundere d
*Sanitone Dry Cleaning
" ' Re.pairm ff r»nH Alteration * on Premises
We Aim To Please
m^
Media of