rdunkelb
Fri, 04/05/2024 - 14:01
Edited Text
Pilligalli-Hock
Win CGA

a margin of 132.
Mike Hock defeated Marty Morgis by 45 votes . Hock received
766 votes to Morgis ' 721, a total
of 1507.
Jodie
Runnin g unopposed ,
Koehler was elected recordin g
secretary, receivin g 1165 yes
votes . For corres ponding secretary, Jan Boyanowski defeated
Jac quie Feddock by a 210 vote
v
mar gin . Boyanowsk ireceived 818
votes and Feddock received 608.
Tom Baltuskonis was defeated
by Anne Peacock 852 to 617.
Polic e of Bloomsbur g arrested
Anne
won by a 235 vote mar gin.
three Bloomsbur g State College
Mark
Foucart , who ran unop posstudents on campus yesterday
received
1139 yes votes for
ed
,
morning at 11:45 char ging them
parlia mentarian.
the
office
of
with violating the state drug laws.
In
the
senior
class elections,
The trio , all nineteen and living
reelected as
Bill
Cluley
was
at the same Murra y Avenue add was
unopposed.
pre
sident
Cluley
.
with
their
along
ress , were listed
His vice president will be Susan
home addresse s, as follows:
Housenick , who also ran unopposDavid Martin Levie, Brewer
Avenue . East Hartford , Conn.; ed . Mr. Cortez was selected as
William John Lennartz , Sunbury ", Sr . class advisor .
Sandy Horvath defeated David
and Dudley Grant M ann , Bath .
Haas
for Jr. Class pre sident by
Pa .
a
slim
13 voter edge. John Lines,
Police reportedly found traces
unop posed, was elected
who
ran
of mari j uana in the suspect s
president
vice
.
apartment following obtaining a
sophomores
elected Mike
The
search warrant from the court.
Siptroth
Fred
Hetsko
, and Mary
,
Following a pr eliminar y ar president
Lou
Rouse
as
the
, vice
rai gnment before Ma gistrate R .
respecand
treasurer
pre
sident
,
Donald Holter , all t hree were
tively . All three ran opposed .
released on $500 ball each.
P olice said their investi gation
into the case will continue.

Mike Pillagalli was victori ous
in Monday and ,,Tuesday ' s CGA
pre sidential election . Pillagalli
defeate d Dudley.Mann to win the
highest student position at BSC .
A total of 159a stud ents voted
for CGA pre sident . Pillagalli received 861 votes to Mann 's 729,

BSC Trio
A rreste d

Bloom has
Debat e TV panel

During the weekend of March
6 , 7th the Debate Association
of Pennsylvania Colleges held
their cham pionshi p tournament
at
C arlow
C olle ge , Pitts burgh , Pa.
The recent death of Mr. James
O'Toole who had been a past
pr esident of D.A.P.C. prompted
the dedication of that specific
tourne y in his memory.
Attending from BSC wer e Brenda Knelly , Scott P eter man
(debat e), J ane E lmes (W omen 's
Exte mporaneo us Speaking) , and
M ar y Ellen Golgen (W omen 's Orator y). All BSC students in attendance at the state champion ship compri sed the youngest varsity team in the competition.
C onsidering this , the team did
ver y well and promises to be a
major threat next year to the
University of Pittsburgh , the
Sweepstakes winner .
In debate Knelly-Petermen end.
ed competition with a 1-5 record ,
but lost two very close decisions
to Villanova and St. Vincents
College.
Women 's Orator y found M ar y
Golden finishing in 4th place
with a 2,3, and 5 ranking out
of 5 competitors.
In W omen 's Extem pore Speaking, Jane Elmes won 4th place
with speaker ranks of 1, 2, and 4
in a field of 10.
Both girls finished behind compet itors from the Univ. of Pittsburgh. Jane defeated contestants
(continued on page four )

The week of the 8th Dr. Ju ie
Ayres and Reverend Richard Bevan contacte d the Bl oomsbur g
area minister Reverend Benjam in Jacobson to obtain his assistance in recru itin g interested BSC students to partici pate
in a WNEP TV panel discussion .
Reveren d Jacobson , a former assistant of Dr. Ayres, contacte d
the assistant Dean of Students at
BSC , Mr. James McCubbln , On
the evening of Tuesday 17th.
eleven interested students met
with the men (Dr. Ayres and
Reveren d Bevan voluntarily work
for WNEP ) to initiate ideas and
increase interest on the two
topics to be discussed: dru gs in
the student life and educati on
and teaching through the eyes of
newly-returned student teachers .
Anyone with fresh Insight or
ideas they wish to contribute (so
that the students may engage in
pertinent and meaningful discussion on the panel) may talk with:
Harr y Berkhelser , Kathy Cahill ,
Sandy Horoschak , Sandy Horvath ,
Caro l M cGee, Anne Peacock , Jeff
Prosse da , Janice Shindler , Fre d
Sides , Roy Under hill and Kathy
Wintersteen .
As It Is now planned , ten students will go to WNEP TV in
Wilkes -Barre to tape both 28 minute TV shows. These will be aire d
Sundays 12th and 19th on chan nel
(Continued en page feur)

Applications for the positions of Edito r-in-Chief and
Business Manager for the
1970-71 Maroon and Gold are
now being accepted. Persons
s u b m i t t i n g applica tions should state qualifications and plans or innovations for improvement of the
newspaper.
Send all applications to
Mike Hock , Editor-in-Chief ,
Maroon and Gold , Box 301.

News
Brie fs

THE GADFLY has made arrangements lor a group of students from a Philade lphia High
School to be on campus Monda y,
March 23. They will present an
informal panel discuss ion at 2
p.m. in room 17, Ben Franklin.
The discussion will be on the
problems and realities of the
modern urban high school .

oLibra ru0 *J4ou. r&

"^ iw

Wed., 25 March
OPEN 7:50 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Thurs. , 26 March
OPEN 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Fri . - Sun., 27 - 29 M arch
Closed
Mon. — Tues ., 30 — 31 Ma rch
OPEN 8:30 a .m. — 5:00 p.m.
Wed ., 1 April
OPEN 7:50 a.m. - 10:00 p.m.

2) UC

The First Ann ual Greater
Northeaste rn Pennsylvania Power lifting Tournament sp onsore d
by Delta Omega Chi , social fra tern ity at Bloomsburg State College , will be held In Centennial
Gymnasi um on Saturday , M arch
21 .
W eightl ifters from t hree states
are expected to part icipate in this
open tournam ent which will begin at 10:30 a.m. Jimmy Williams , the worl d record holder
in the bench pre ss at 620 lbs.,
will put on a special exhibition.
Williams was last month' s "Power Lifter of the M onth. "
Admission Is fifty cents and
tickets will be available at the
door .

Save the Earth
Day-April 22

Apri l 22 , 1970 is the day set
aside for the countr y to sit up
and become aware of the ecocatastrophy
that is growing
everyday. On this day there will
be lectures , films , mock burials ,
and demonstrations all centered
on the deterioratin g condition
of our environment .
Bloomsbur g State Col lege will
not be left out on this day. Alr eady plans are underway to insure that this campus will be
the site of more than a halfhearted ride on the band wagon.
Hourly progr ams are scheduled
to commence at 9 a.m. and run
throu gh to 5 p.m. The evening
pr ogra m will be a presentation
by Mr . Harr y Lefevre , Delaware
County Community
College ,
speaking on the topic : Walden
Pond: Then and Now.
Other projects in planning include a photogra phic survey of
the ColumbiaCounty environment
focusing special attention or. the
most obvious trouble spots. A
historical view of the pro blem
will be presented too. Water
samples of local streams will
dramatically emphasize the extent of our problems.
A great deal of work has been

Yale Pres.
Asks to
be Judged

by Joseph B . T reas t er
At the ur gingof Kingman Brewster Jr ., a committee of turstees has been selected to review
his tenure as president of Yale
Universit y.
Traditionally, the president of
Yale — and most other unive rsities in the county — serves
for an indifinite ter m, either until death or retirement .
But last fall Mr . Brewster
recommen ded that Yale adopt a
new policy of "accountabilit y" to
guard against "Incom petent and
un responsive administrati on ."
William McChesney Martin ,
the former chairman of the Fed *
Counsilin f
era l Reserve Board , will serve
In our last issue , we announ- as chairman of the committee
ced the opening of an additional with William P . Bund y, f ormer
counseling facility , Room 302 , Assistant Secr etary of State for
Waller Hall . This room has been East Asia and Paci fic Affairs ,
made available for conversation as his deputy.
and counselin g related to the
In a speech before the Yale
p ersona l re ligi ous concerns of Political Union last Sept. 24,
member s of the college com- Mr. Brewster said : "1 think Yale
mun ity.
would be better off if It were
Local clergymen and the staff understood that the trustees
of Newman Center will be in Room would make a systema tic reap203 on a rotation basis and sched- praisal and consideration of the
uled weekly as follows: Monday pre sident' s appointment at some
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. the Rev . Ber - specified interval . " .
nar d Petrina; 2 to 4 p.m. the Rev.
The effect of Mr. Brew ster 'a
Benjamin Jaco bson; Tuesday 11 proposal was to put his J ob on the
a.m. to 2 p.m. the Rev . Craig line , but becaus e he Is so highly
H . Dorwar d; 2 to 4 p m. the acclaimed on cam pus and across
Rev . Frank Ake; Wednesday 10 the nation for his skills In dealto 12 a .m. the Rtv . Char 1its
(Continued on page four)
(ConttnuM en pate few )

done , but a lot more remains to
be done . If you are interested in
helping in any way, come to
B-79 at 7:30 p.m. on March 23,
1970. If you want to help, but
cannot make it , write to Gil Longwell , P.O. Box 512 , Waller. But ,
whether you are interested or
not, remember this: the only way
your environmen t will improve is
throu gh a conscious effort to improv e it and if you don 't or won't
make the effort , you may not get
a second chance !

¦
I
I

B io-Workshop

Bloomsburg State College will
conduct a Biology Workshop for
secondar y school students on Saturday.
One hundred and eighty-fiv<:
students from thirty area high
schools have been invited to par ticipate in the program sponsor ed by the Department of Biology,
and the Biology Club. Under the
direction of John R. Flet cher ,
Department of Biology, the Biology Club has arran ged a full
day of activiti es designed to stimulate intere st in the stud y of
the blolgocial sciences and to
acquaint students with the educational and vocational opportunities in this increasin gly important area of study .
Registration will hoo-in at nina

a.m. in the lobby of Haas Auditor ium. At ten Dr . Rabb , chair man of the Department of Biology, will welcome the students .
BSC students Kathy Wintersteen ,
David Seybert , and James Wysor will give brief speech es concerning biology in educ ation , libera l arts , and relate d career s.
F ollowing these p resentat ions
the high school students will be
taken on a tour of the biology
facilities , which are located in
the Hartline Science Center. Luncheon will be served at the College Commons. After lunch , the
stu dents will meet in the Kuster
Auditorium
of the Hartline
Science Center to organize into
laborator y gro ups.
From then until 2:30 p.m., the
students will be working in their
first laboratory period. Dir ectly
after this first labor atory period ,
a coffee break will be held In
the lobby of the Hartline Science
Center until three p.m. During
the next hour and a half , students will work in their second
laboratory period. The workshop
will conclude following the ending
of this laboratory period . The
laboratories which will be offered Inclu de botany , genetics , embryology, invertebrate zoology,
limnology, microbiology , and
vertebrate physiology .
The operation of the workshop
Is under the supervision of a
steerin g committee consisting ol
Kathy Caporlettl , Kathy Win ter ,
steen , Ellen Glngalow , Pa ul Turner , Ltn Jago , Tom Beverldge ,
Ted Erwln , Bill Hlbschm ann, Davld Seybert and Mr . Fletcher.

f

M ovie R eview S ection |

'i &- v.j & _Aiu.

J im sachetu
Alice: "I'd like to propose a
f, toast: to four of the grooviest
people I know , to Bob and Carol ,

'« and Ted and Alice/'
That 's it: they 're groovy .
^
\Alice 's choice of adjective is per X feet. She is one fourth of the
'groovie st' foursome you'll ever
Jf^' meet in the year s' groovie st
>) fUck. A flick that takes a humorous and penetr ating look at the
, gre at search going on in our society today .
Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice are
symbols , representatives of the
beautiful people. You know who
I mean: the peopl e you read about
in the magazines , the jet set ,
the live for today now people ,
the playboy man , the Cosmopoli tan woman , the ski bunnies and
surfers , the M adison Avenue admen , the junior executives , the
middle class nine to fivers , the
pleasure seeker s and I could go
on forever . They come in a
y
fi

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• . . . mere is state law ,"
stated Professor Deake G . Porter (M&G , March 13), "which
says that public officials must
not consciously utter untruths
and must correct , publi cly , untruths which they inadvertently
spread ." It is, for this reason ,
that the M& G must clarify information which may have been
confusing , inadver tantl y spr ead
by the M&G when printing Mr .
Porter 's Forum article on recent
judicial events . Be assured that
the M&G is not accusing Mr .
Porter of spreading untruths or
copping out to the Deans , but
simply atte mpting to present both
sides of an issue and clarify
cloudy statements , all in the
interest of responsi ble and objective journalis m.
In the fourth paragraph of his
article Mr . Porter states that
"Dean
Hunsin ger suspended
three students . . . (violating)
the Joint Statement in three ways
(cf. pp. 15, 19, 20y"~ The first
of these pages refers to Double

Jeo pardy ("Students who violate
the law may incur penaltie s pre
scribed by civil authorities , but
college authority shall never be
used merely to duplic ate the function of general laws.") which
was thought to be violated by
Deans Nort on and Hunsinge r .
However , the next sentence state s
. . . "Only where the college ' s
interest as an academic communit y are distinct and clear ly
involved shall the special auth or ity of the college be asserted ."
Deans Hunsinger and Norton and
the Executive Council felt that
this was the case and advocated
suspending the boys. Mr. John
Walker , chairman of the Executive Counci l supports this fact
by indicating that he had polled
the committ ee member who subsequently supported the suspension . The Joint Statement grants
fina l power and decision to thi s
committee in disciplinar y cases.
Dean Hunsi nger , in an inter view Tuesday , indicated , as to
(continue d on page four )

Dear Dr. Nossen:
Your recent letter to the par ents of BSC students leaves me
appalled by your state of misinformation or your endeav ors to
misinfor m others. Possibly both .
Because it concerns a gross
error involvin g my efforts , I
especially want to cal l your attention to para gr aph four . It begins , "At the recommendat ion
of the Dean of Student s, followed
by extended discussion s with students , the College has relaxed
its 'Dre ss Code 1 ... 11
The abolition
of the Dress
C ode was the result of a petition ,
signed by 724 students , brou ght

befor e CGA , discussed , voted
on , and passed . Your approval ,
via the Pre sidents Reply to the
Minute s, finalized the motion .
The recom mendation
came
from the students , not from the
Dean of Students . As the petition
stated , we felt the right to set
and maintain our own standards ,
and that the Dress Code 's abolishment would not affect our professionalism . By your statement that
the results have been somewhat
disappointing , are you implying
t hat cam pus " radicals " ar e dressing in a manner so as not to
be confused with the "conser vatives "? Or are you referr-

*s

^^ B

__



1 — 1

*

_

_

*

»

_

mak *»R R & C &. T & A 'trraaw *

Natalie Wood and Robert Culp
as Bob & Carol in " Bob & Carol
& Ted & Alice. "

Lette rs , Letters , Letters

MAROON AND GOLD
VOL. XLVHI

NO. 37

MICHAEL HOCK
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Business Manager
dor Remsen
Managing Edito r
Bill Teitsworth
News-Edito r
Martin Kleiner
Cc«Feature Editor *
Ginny Potter , Allan Maurer
Sports Editor *
Clark Ruch & Jack Hoffman
Photogra phy Editor
Mark Foucart
Copy Staff
Kay Hahn, Carol Oswald , Irene Oulyci
Circulation Manager
Linda Ennis
Advisor
Mr . Michael Stanley
ADDITIONAL STAFF: Terry Blast , John Stugrln , Bob
Schul ti , Sally Swetland , Dave Keltt r, Stanley Buntlck ,
Jim Sachet t ), Frank Clifford , Velma Avery, Carol Kithbaugh, Pat Jacob *.
All opinion * expressed by colum nists and featur e writers,
includin g Utttrs-to-the-edltor , are not necessaril y those of
thi s publicatio n but those of the Individual *.

thousand different shapes and
sizes - but they 've all got one
thing in common : their sear ch.
They are searching for something that has become awfu l hard
to find in America today ; lookIng for something that modern society has left a lot of people
without. So Bob & Carol & Ted
& Alice are really a lot of people . Ma ybe that 's what mak es
them 'groovy*.
THE SEARCHERS
The stars i n B & C & T & A
are all young, ver y good , and fit
very well into those cate gories I
mentioned. First there 's-Rob ert
Cu lp, the ex-tenni s player and
secret agent , as Bob . He 's a composite'image of all those searchers complete with beads , long
hair and his newly acquired views
on extra -marital sex. If you
thought he was good with Cosby
you'll think he ' s great with Wood ,
Natalie that is. Amply endowed
and often quite visible , she ' s almost worth the price of admission . Her Carol is a bubb ling
and enthusiastic seeker , totall y
emanci pated and totall y funny too
as she jumps up and down like
a little girl while begging friend
Ted to try her out .
On the other half of this twin
bill we have Ted and Alice, the
skeptical
conservative
and
Elliott
Gould
as Ted
friends.
turns in a fantasticall y funny performance that should win him an
His 'arouse ' performOscar.
ance in bed, his preparatio ns before the orgy and his conversat ion
with El Taco make the confused
but eager Ted an unfor gettable
character and Elliot Gould a star.
Ted's wife Alice , played by Dyan
Cannon , is that most confused of
the four. Her failure to understand her friends behavior , her
unresolved fears and doubts , and
her final dru nken surrende r give
Miss Cannon plenty of chara cter
to handle , a job she does quite
well. It could be the acting that

ing to those who spit jello cubes
across the Commons? If either
of these are your contention , nothing has changed , therefore there
are no results in which to be
disappointed . These students displayed the same style of dress
and behavior even while the Dress
Code was In effect .
As I composed , typed , dittoed ,
circulated , and presented the petition before CGA myself , I have
no doubt that the students themselves made the recommendation . Among others , I believe
this was a misrepresentation of
facts to my pare nts , and the
parents of all BSC students.
Sincerely,
d or R emsen
C lar ification: Whether or not the
Dean of Stu dents ma d e , throu gh
tec h nica l processes , some sort
of recom menda tion , the students
were principally responsible for
the action taken . This should have
been made clear in the letter .
dor

(aju td tion
Dear Dr. Nossen:
Due to the fac t that I recently
withdrew from BSC this letter
ma y seem at fi rst to be out of
or der. I have , however , a few
questions to ask you , and these
days it Is gettin g increasingl y
more difficult to secure an appointment with you — as many
people know , you are very busy.
(Inclden tly — I wish to congratulate you on your recent election
to the Board of Trustees at the
(continued on page four ) *

THE SEARCH
While a chorus sings Handel 's
"Messiah" , Bob and Carol speed
into the California hills toward
"The
Institute " and an 'enc ount er ', a let-it-all-hang-out session in which fifteen people let go
of their emotions and learn to
be completely honest (*^Myjiame,
is Myrna and I'm here because I
want a better orgasm " .). So when

Bob and Carol return their lives
have been completely chang ed , or
so they think.
When Bob returns fr om his next
business tri p, he decide s, in the
spirit of the encounter , to tell
Carol he had an affair ("Affair ' s
not the right word. We had inter course. "). But Carol , in the same
spirit , refuses to get shook. Instead , she promp tly rewards him
and announces his Infidel ity to
friends Ted and Alice who ar e
more than slightly shocked.
Alice 's shock revea ls itself to a
sexually aroused Ted that night in
Y\at\ '

Ted: "Corae on , hone y "
Alice: "I don't feel like it. Would
you . want me to do something
that 's against my will?"
Ted : "YEAH "
Still unable to resolve the
doubts their friends have rai sed,
Ted and Alice seek help, Alice
sees a pschychiatrist and Ted
sees (a lot of) a beautiful gir l
whom he seduce.s in one of those
dream sequences that we all
have now and then.
Meanwhile , Carol has decided
that what 's good for the Bob is
good for her and when Bob comes
home he finds a tennis player in
her room:
B ob: "C ome on out . I won't hit
you. This isn't a violent home,
we don't even have any war toys
for the kid. We'll have a drink "
Mstiv Ihnff
c iinHa ^^ tonriino 1
fcUCM 0 U11UC4 (3 lOUUAUg.

•LI Vf VT

*

Finally , the four head for a
Las Vegas vac ation. In their hotel room , Ted and Carol tell a
slightly drunken Alice of th eir
recent affairs. Alice promptly
stri ps < down and invites Bob to
share her bed and before you
know it (but not before Ted
brushes his teeth) they ' re all in
bed , Bob with Alice and Ted with
THE DISC OVERY
But something 's wrong. Is this
what they 've been looking for ?
There 's something wrong about
the whole thing . What 's the mat ter ? They stop, think , and discover . Their search is over. The
music tells us what they found .
What the wor ld needs now ,
Is love , sweet love,
It 's the only thing ,
That there 's just too little of
That 's what makes Bob and
Carol and Ted and Alice 'groovy ',
they 've found what we 're all looking for .

^ - J u n n u Cj i r l
They wer e half a century apar t ,
but the careers of Barbr a Strei sand and Fanny Bric e , whose por trayal In the Willia m Wyler -Stark
production of "Funny Girl " won
Miss Streisand the Acade my
Awar d as Best Actress of the
Year , conta in many parallels.
Both raised in New York City ,
the girls were determined from
an early age to enter the thea trical world. Eac h possessed a
vivid Imagination . Both Fann y
and Barbr a first were launched
by winn in g talent contes t s , Fanny
at a loc al vaudeville house and
Barbr a at a smoky Gr eenwich
Village night club.
"Funny Girl" , in which the
Oscar -winnin g Barbra Streisand
stars with Omar Sharif , now at
t he C api tol Theatre , after more ,
than a year of record-breaking
reserve d seat p er formances on
Broadway and elsewhere .
Both Miss Brice and Miss
Streisand were definite and specta cular personali ties. Not being
rav ing beauties In the tradi tion
of their times , Fanny and Barbra were destined either to be
stars or to be totally obscure.
They were too different to be
chorus girls.
Each possessed a great come dlc talent , plus extr aordinary untra ined singing voices — the kind
that happens once in a decade .
The ir rise to stardom was
phenomenal. With in a few years '

time , both becam e the most popular entertainers of th eir day.
In addition to their separate
appearances on Broadway and
the Broadway s of the world , both
Miss Brice and Miss Streisand
made hit recordi ngs. Television
(cont inued on pago four)

Barbara Streisand , voted Best
Actress of the Year on her motion pictur e* debut as "Funn y
Girl 1'. Now at the Capitol.

Decade in Track - Review
1970 Outlook Promising

By Jack Hoffman
Track tradition at BSC is a
w inn ing one . In the past decade
the Huskie cindermen have posted a total meet record of 45-21-1
and have had twe nty P.S.C .C.
cham pions .
DECADE OF WINNERS

1960
In 1960 Coach Harold
Chelly 's
men posted a 4-1-0
slate and had two P .S.C .C . cham pions . Terry Engleman won the
two mile with a time of 9:42 .42
which earned him honors . Stanley
Hugo copped the pole vault record
with a 112»3'» leap. Terry Engleman also made the limelight in the
Penn Relay and broke the existing re cor d of Parro Nurmiwith a
14:25.6 effort .
1961
Coach Mike Flannagan
took the helm and posted the first
undefe ated season since 1941
(3-0) with a 5-0-0 slate . In the '61
season the Huskie trac kmen won
P .S .C .C . State Championshi p by
52% points and won five P .S.C .C .
events . Terry Engle man won P .S.
C. C . honors in both the one and
two mile races. EdCoccowon the

however , this year marked the
end of the on-cam pus tr ack . The
effects are evident even today.
Coach Geor ge Wilwohle was still
head coach .

1965
This was a banner year
for BSC trackmen and a fantastic
year for Jan Prosseda who had
looking twice at
timekeepers
the ir stopwatches. In P .S.C .C .
competition Jan won the one mile
with a 4:16. 2 and the two mile
with a time of 9:36.7. Our present Assistant Dean of Men , " Big"
John Zarski won the P .S.C .C . shot
put with a toss of 45'10" . In the
NCAA competitio n , in which BSC
placed second Jan Prosseda ran
wild settin g five school records
in the one , two, three and six
mile events and the 3000 meter
steeplechase .
1966
The team as a whole
lagged with a tenth place finish
in P .S.C .C . standin gs and only one
team record , that coming in the
jav elin with a wind-aided heave
of 210' 11 % " .
1967
This pr oved to be a

The end oS a decade , the
1970
start of a NEW!
Coach Ron Puh l is confident of
bigger and better things to come .
Coach Puhl said , "I have many
people on my squad who work and
are willing to get tough , when the
going gets tough . lam looking forward to excellent teams in the
future since I have a lot of good
competitor s on my team. "
Guys to watch: Jim Davis,
sprinter , Tim Waechter and Terry Lee , who put in approximately
150 miles collectively each week ;
Charles Shields who pushed the
shot put past our present school
record and John Ficek , Shield' s
wor kout partner , who is approachin g the same recor d. And Larry Strohl who came in second by
one tenth of a second at East
Stroudsburg in the mile .
All thin gs consider ed , the team
^ have now has the potential to
we
equal and sur pass any track squad
established at BSC in the past
decade .
Ed . Note: My deepest thanks goes
to Coach Ron Puhl for the infor mation and interview which
made the writin g of this article
possible .

BSC cinderman relaxes befor e a meet. Don't know what
he's doing to his feet , but whatever it is . Sensitivity
Training
says ifs good for him.

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Crosscountry trackmen , including BSC trackman Larry Strohl , far right , back , at
a meet last fall. Trackmen often participate in T & F event * other than College to
College scheduled com petition.

100 and 220 yard sprints and also set school records In these
rac es. Gary Edwards prevailed
against the P .S.C .C. competitio n
in the discus .

1962
Coach Mike Flanna gan
for the second consecutive year
had an undefeated season with a
record of 5*0-0. BSC again had
five P .S.C .C . champions and set
t hree sch ool recor d s. Ed Cocco
repeated as 100 yard and 200 yard
champion with times of 9.8 and
20.6 respectively . Gary E dwards
won the discus with a heave of 146
feet and also the shot put . Roy
Peffer set a school record in the
220 yard low hurdles with a 24.2
effort .
1963
Gary Edwards for the
th ird successive year was P .S.
C .C. cham pion in the discus and
shot put . Bill Feese established
a school record In the long J ump
with a leap of 23' l" and won in
P .S.C .C . competitio n . Jan Pros *
seda won championship In the two
mile run. George Wilwohle sue *
ceded Mike Flanna gan as head
coach .
1064
The boards men this
year had an 8-1 slate and finished
third in P .S.C .C. Two tea m recor ds were established this year ,

buildin g year for the new and
present trac k coach Ron Puhl .
The team posted a poor 2-7
recor d and had no champions
but placed eighth in P .S.C .C .
John Mont gomer y had a record
6'4% " in the highj ump and placed
third in NCAA Eastern Region*
als. The frosh team had an undefeated slate of 4-0-0.

1968
Coach Ron Phul' s squad
placed third in P.S.C.S. 's third
in Cedar Cliff Rela ys and were
NCAA Eastern Regional Champions. The varsity had a 4-3 record while the frosh team had a
5-1*0 slate . Thomas Houster ran
a 53. 2 in the 440 yard individual
hurdles. Two new team hurdles
recor d were set and the frosh
team tied for first position with
Ced ar Cliff
1969
The cindermen last year
p laced seventh in the P .S.C.C .
with Steve Ryzman taking honors
in the triple j ump . James Cavallero was a cham pion in the
javelin with a throw of 196' 5"
during the Wester n Frontier Re*
lay. In this year the frosh team
proved excellent . In the Wester n
Frontier Relay meet the frosh
won in the spr int medley relay
clocking a 3:38 and in the 880
yar d relay they turned in a 1:30
f lat . Boastin g a 7*0*0 record
the fr osh placed third in the
Penn Relay mile relay .

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CHANEL
GUEILAIN
FABEIGE
LANVIN
PRINCE MATCHABELLI
ELIZABETH ARDEN
HELENA RUBENSTEIN
DANA
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Greeks
On Campus

J ^ip ma

C..

The brother s of Phi Sigma
Epsil on are «ow in the midst
of assembling a new pledge
class for the spring semester of
19 70. The new pledge class consists of Timmy Pauman , Bill
"Gen eral" Hartfelder , John Cox ,
M ike "Briggs " Orlando , Augie
Pifer , Paul Gau ghan , Dan Carulli, Denny O'Donnell , Geor ge Lapore , Bill Woodell, Stash Tunney ,
and "Gypsy " Lyons .
_ The broth ers are also occupied
right now with securing plans for
their installatio n on April 18th

Jielten

(contin ued from page two )

yj .

as the Sigma Xi chapter of the ;
national or ganization of Phi Sigma Epsilon here at BSC . The
brothers were recently visited
by Mr . Gord y Amhaus , direc tor
of chapter services who deliver ed the good news in person at our
colony 's last meeting.
Brother Tom Wilson has just
complete d plans for this years
IFC basketbal l tournament which
is pre sently underway ; games
bein g played every Sunday night
for the duration of the double elimination tournament . In the
first round of action we have
Sigma Pi over Beta Sig, SIO
defeating PI . Epsilon Chi , and
Phi Sig over DOC .
Phi Sigma Epsilon would also
like to announce it's Greek of
the year candid ate as being Jim
McCabe and athlete of the vear
choice as being Mark "Cid"
Yanchek .

United Penn Bank . It must be
a very elating experience being
in so many position s of influence
and importance .)
Please excuse the digression
but occasionall y when one is
Sj r unn y Q if f
deeply troubled by pr oblems with(contin ued from page two )
in his environment it becomes
attractivel y easy to avoid the had not been a part of the scene 1
Perhaps
search for answers.
in Miss Brice 's time: she was
you can , at this time , supply one of Americ a 's favorite radio
for me some of the answers to stars , as Miss Streisand now is
the questions which disturb me. one of the favorites of the telea. Why were you so anxious to vision audience.
have me withdraw that you made
Herbert Ross directed the musmy withdrawal application offic- ical numbers for "Funn y Girl " ,
ial before I had completed all prod uced by Ray Stark and direc of the necessar y procedures for ted by William Wyler from a
an official withdrawal?
screen play by Isobel Lennart .
b. Why was I given unjust treat - Jule Styne wrote the music and
ment in my attempt to secure a Bob Merrill the lyrics. Walt er
state job as a facult y assistant ? Scharf supervised the music and
C. With respect to the job that Irene Sharaff cre ated Miss Strei I never received; did you know sand 's costumes.
that Dean Norton attached a note
to my application with "reasons" haps you could clear up the amwhy he could not recommend me biguity somewhat explaining
to
for the job AFTER I had received
me
how
the
word
applie
s
to
Deans
his signature of approval in ap- on this campus who
"bu y** and
plying for the job ?
chain
lett
er
"sell"
s
illegally
on
A/CCUJ
*WI bWli

&UV
* DOOVUO
this
campus
?
gave were stated, generall y , as
It seems that the questions
follows:
keep
piling up which may anWhy do Mr. McLaughlin and
swer
final question; Why
Mrs. Donovan both need a stud - are youmy
so
frightened?
ent assistant thi s term when
If people openly question the
they needed no such assistant
activities
of those who are given
last term?
the
priviledge
of serving them
To his knowledge the English
in
an
administrative
cap acity it
Department does not have adedoes
not
follow
that
a state of
quate funds allocated to it for
anarchy will result . If however
an additional student worker; and no satisfying answers ar e given
if anyone should receive an as- by those wno SHOU jlD be in a
sist ant , it should be he.
positi on to do so, perhaps tho se
e. Dr . Nossen , does this argu- individu als should be rep laced
ment , which was sent to Mr. Dun- by men who can give rea sonable
can of the Financial Aid Office answers. How can any governing
and cause d him to take NO ac- body expect Its constit uents to
tion on my application what so- re spond in an active and responever , seem rather suspecious? sible way when their questions
f. Is the Financial Aid Office are contin ually met with silence
generally subjected to this type or resp onses aki n to silence ?
of out-side pressure ?
Thank you for waking me up
g. The often used and seldom with your silence ,
understood word — "Profess Geor ge H. Hoffecker
ional" — needs clarif ying. Per - ,
BH
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town

Dean Hunsinger ,"' he said. He also indicated that the boys had
Jj rorun *
sufficient time to stud y their appeal
forms to know their rights .
( continued from page two )
(continued fro m page on*'*
Norton, in reference to para ing with students , faculty mem - the alleged violation of the Joint graph eight , stated that he had not
ber s and alumni , the drama of Statement on pages 19 and 20/ told the boys that they would get
the gesture was somewhat dimin- that Mr . Porter simply had not th e same treatment from the SPJ
finished readin g the paragraph thatlhey would get from him , but
ished .
which
covers supension and dis- had told them that an appeal .to
"Obviously
the review is
going to be favorable ," said a ru ption of education . The state - the SFJ would either duplicate
man who has been associated with ment allows the college to suspend or lessen their penalt y.
Yale for more than a decade . only when the studen t may be
Also in the para graph Mr .
''He 's on top of things . He' s deal- harmed or "for reasons relat - Porter states that "Nor ton had
ing from strength . When you 're ing to the safety , and well being just the previous week seen the
on top is when you want your of students. " The Pilot , page 18, S-F Judiciary throw out a case
boss to review what you've been states that "theft of any kind. . . against Elmer Chase . . ." Techis illegal and unacce ptable. Dis- nically, the SFJ had not thrown
doing. "
Mr . Bund y,who was reached by ciplinary action will be taken by out the case but had referred
and it to Mr. Corte z who mediated
telephone in Seattle where he was the pr oper authorities
attendin g the national Yale alumni suspension may follow . " Accord- between Elmer and Mr. Himes
meeting , said he would not predict ing to the Joint Statement (Stand- who subsequently dropped the
the results of the review . But ards of Conduct ) " standards. . . char ges.
he added: "It' s not a put-u p J ob. should be publ ished in advance
From this Information , relying
It' s a serious undertakin g. It was through such means as a stu- on the credibility of our Deans,
seriously proposed and we in- dent handbook. . ." By virture of it appears that proper procedures
his capacity as head disciplin- had been used in suspendin g the
tend to do a serious job ."
Edwin Foster Blair , a senior arian on this campus Dean Hun- three students. Perha ps all furthFellow of the late Cor poration singer had the right to make er attacks should be made on
that govern the universit y, said ¦what he felt was the proper ap- the state ments in the Joint
he expected the review to be nlicatinn of these rules
Statement and Pilot . If there ,
In para graph five , Mr. Porter
completed by the end of this
is any guilt it lies with these
academic year . Mr . Brewster had states " . . . they (the three documents.
by the
suggested that the trustees re- students) had been cleared
(M.L .H.)
»» The use of
civil
authorities.
.
.
appraise his appoint ment after
seven years or by June , 197 1, the word 'cleared ' may be misbut a spokesman
said
the leading in this case. It does not
pre sident was ' 'pleased' ' that the mean that charges had been dropZJau ^i y ma J - ^i
action would be take n sooner . ped , since each of the boys had
been fined 50 dollars for each
On March 16 the sister s of
of the 19 cars which they broke
l-ound clin g
intc . Later , in this paragraph he Tau Sigma Pi elected their new
states " even thou gh the parents . officers. They are president , Kay
( continued from page one)
. . questioned his (Dean Norton's) Ha hn; vice-president , Carol OsL eibig , 12 to 2 p.m . the Rev. actions they did not receive a wald; corresponding secretary ,
Vincent Siciliano; 2 to 4 p.m. hearing beforethe Student FaculBonnie Miller ; record ing secrethe Rev . James Ber ger; Thurs- ty Judiciary but were instead told tary, Ann Chesonis ; treasurer ,
day 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. the Rev . to take their appeal to Dean Hun- Irene Gulycz; directress , Rae
Bernard Petrina ; 1 to 2 p.m. singer ." The boys requested
Mitstiefer . The third pledge class
2 to 4 (signed affadavit) that Dean Nor- is now in the midst of pledgin g.
Sister Theresa Marie ,
p. m. the Rev . Wm. Walker ; Fri- ton try their case and no appeal
P ledges for . this semester are
day 11 a .m. to 2 p m . the Rev . (signed affidavit )was requested . Ann Marie Alloy, Joan Barnhard ,
Glenn Watterson . Adjustments
Dean Norton indicated that the Pat Kwatchko , Donna Motika , Maand extensions of this schedule pare nts had gone to Dean Hun- rie Reddin gton, and Ann Sipling.
will be made in response to the singer for counselin g. "The only Tau Sig has also acquired a forobserved needs.
eign member for their sorority
question asked by the parents
Individuals or small groups was
She
is 15 year old Bella An1
help
will
it
if we talk to
'
desiring to use this facility may
gelica Lopez Marquez from Ecwalk in during the scheduled
uador . We 're sponsoring this foshours , or they may make an apter child through the Christian
pointment by a telephone call to
(continued from page one)
Children 's Fund .
the Student C ounseling Cente r —
16 at 9:00 a.m. ami on channel
Extens ion 324 or 325.
.44 at 7:30 p.m. Senior Kathy
Eventually, Room 203 will in- Cahill will act as panel discusclude the furnishing of some sion leader for the educati on disbas ic library material s of theo- cussion and sophomore Sandy
logical and ethical content , ac- Horvath will lead the discussion
cessible to all who are Inter ested. concernin g drugs .

Harr y Logan
Fine J ewelry

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(continued from page one )
from Slippery Rock , Clarion ,
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College, and Penns ylvania .
from
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Erich
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Mr.
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man.

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