rdunkelb
Fri, 04/05/2024 - 14:17
Edited Text
Ramsey to
speak at
Banquet
Dr . Ja ck Ramsey , Coach of the
Philadelphia 76ers of the National Basketball Association , will be
the featured speaker at the annual
all college sports ' banquet at
Bloomsburg
State College to
be held Tuesday, May 5, in the
Scranton Commons at 7:00 p.m.
In addition to being a promin ent coach in the NBA, Dr . Ramsey also had an outstanding record while coaching eleven seasons tor St. Jose ph s
' College of
Philadelphia , posting a 234-32
win-loss record . He should pre sent an interesting message to all
those in attendence at the banquet .
Russ Houk , Athletic Director ,
would like to extend a cordial invitation to all college sports part icipants at BSC , members of the
M aroon and Gold Band , Cheer learders , Maroon and Gold editors , "B" Club members , and
members of the College Council
to attend the banquet and hear Dr .
Ram sey.
Immediate ly following the banquet the coaches of the nine var sity sport s will pre sent awards
to various members of their
teams.

Choral
Presentation

BSC's W omen 's Choral Ensemble an d M en's Glee Club

under the direction of Richard J.
Stanls law will present their annual Spring Concert on Sunday ,
May 3, at 8:15 p.m. in Haas Auditorium. The program will include many popular tunes , folk
songs, Broadway hits , and a few
noted compositions of Jeno Takacs and Bela Bartok.
A unique twist has been added
to this year 's prog ram; the combined choirs will pre sent a few
segments of the Broadwa y show
" Paint Your Wagon " comp lete
with costu mes and solos. Anothe r highlight of the concert will
be Howard Hanson 's "Song of
Democracy ' pre sented with orchestra accompaniment. Mr. Stephen Wallace will be guest conductor .
This varied repertoire should
add up to an evening of delightf ul
enterta inment. The public is invited to attend; there is no admission char ge.

Applications are now being
accepted for the followin g
positions
on the 1970*71
MAROON AND GOLD:
Managing Editor , News
Editor , F e a t u r e Editor ,
Sports Editor , Copy Edito r,
Photogra phy Editor , Circulation Manager.
Applications
should state
the position they are applying for and their qual ificat ions. Send applications to the
Managing
Editor , Maroon
and Gold, Box 301. The
deadline is May 6, 1970.

Council Proposes
Const. Change

College Counci l recentl y reconsider ed the referen dum for
chan ging the membershi p of CGA .
This is the resu lt of a petition
initiated by Frank Pizzoli. Over
100 stud ents signed the petition
requesting a special meetin g to
r econsid er membershi p changes .
Fizzoli furt her state d "t he men
Wednesday , May 13, has been and women of this college ar e
selected as the day for Advanc ed res ponsible enough to evaluate
Scheduling for the fall semester opinions given to them by the pre of 1970.
sent administrators who exercise
All students who expect to or votin g rights on CGA . S h o u l d
even hope to return to Blooms- this chan ge appear in the constit burg next fall MUST register on ution I request that all adminisMay 13 . Any student who does trators who now re gular ly atten d
not pr epare a schedule that day meetings of CGA will continu e
(including those who expect to to do so. Many items br ought
perform studen t teachin g)will not before CGA do not directly inbe permitted to enro ll until the volve the Adminis tration and direct ly involve studen ts ."
sprimg semester.
JoAnn Lucrezi made the folStudents are advised to schedule routine medical and dental lowing motion which was later
app ointments so as not to inter- seconded by John Dasch: " the
fere with their schedulin g obliga - following chan ge be mad e in Artlons on May 13. Only emergen- icle VI, Section 4, Part C, of the
cies, with accepted documenta - Community Governm ents Assoct ion, can be considered as a valid iation 's const itut ion to r ead: Th e
reason to be excused from ad- Dean of Students , Dean of Instruvanced schedulin g. Telephone ct ion , Dean of W omen , Dean of
calls to administrative offices Men , the Director of Public Reare unnecessar y if one is 111 or lat ions , and the Director of Stuinvolved in a similar emergency , dent Activities are non-votin g
but certification to one 's absence members of College Council."
To clarify this point , the facmust still be provided to permit
a student to schedule after May ulty member still has a vote.The
13 .
administrators , however , will reTnose individuals wno must ma in as members , in an advisory
work (either on or off campus) on vnyavny.
The two clauses in the Conadvanced scheduling day should
ma k e arran gemen ts to be excused ut itution mentionin g the Presi dent of ARM and ARW , the Day
from work so they can be present
at the Centennial Gymna sium at Men and Day W omen , will be retheir appointed hour or soon tained .
after. Student athletes should not
The proposed Lucre zi motion
expect to enter the gymnasium at
any other hour than the time when
they are scheduled by virtue of the
number of credits earned .
One further obligation prior to
in keeping with current trends
pr e-registration Is the paym ent of in American higher education , the
the Community Activitie s fee of faculty of Bloomsbur g State Colfifty dollars for next year. These
lege have approved a new and
fees are to be paid according to more flexible General Educat ion
the following schedule : Wednes - progra m for all curricu la , acday , May 6 — All Freshmen ; cordin g to Dr . John A . Hoch , Dean
Thursday , May 7— All Sopho- of I nstruct ion. The program ,
mores;
Frid ay, May 8- All developed after a year of study by
Juniors and Seniors .
an ad hoc committee of the faculty
When reporting to Advanced
headed by Dr . Edson Drake , DiScheduling, students shoul d take rector of the Division of Liberal
the following items with thenv.(l) Arts , win become effective in
Community Activities fees re- September 1970.
ceipt for 1970-71, (2) "Credits
The new pro posalreflects less
Earned " Card , (3) Maste r Class rigidity than the present pro Schedule Booklet ,
gram , openin g many options for

^/ tdvan ce
•3 c n eau tin a

!
Mmticn j b J U
StuJmbl
mUo not f ory ttto p ay Community

Mbfy 3m ZAman Wd, Way 6
Soph., ZJhuut
daif , If l ay7, J unlart &" Smlon

3d*, W


...

would require only a majority
vote of Council but would require
a 2-3 majority vote of those students votin g in the referendum .
Further discussion of the motion brought out other views. Sandy Horvath said that if we don't
want to recommend to student s
to pass this change , then we
should not recommend the amend-

ment .

Mr . Walker wanted to know if
students were interested in cooperative government of an instit ution .
Jeff Prosseda entered the discussion sayin g that he felt we had
to accept the responsibility of
recommen ding or not recom mending this amendment .H e then
called for a roll call vote.
The vote yielded a 15-15 tie .
Sandy Horvath , in further discussion, felt that the ' majority
of students felt confident in the ir
constituents but the administra tors did not . He then called for a
revote . by roll call .
On t he revo t e, the motion car *
ried 18- 12.

The Dean of Students , Dean a
Instruction , Dean of W omen
Dean of Men, the Director of Pub
lie Relations , and the Directo
of Student Activities are non-vot
ing members of the College Coun
cil. The Presidents of ARM an<
ARW , the Day Men and Day Wo
men will be retained as votin i
members .
Referendum
election will be
conducted May 13 between 9:00 a.
m . and 5:00 p.m . in Centennial
Gym at the end of pre -schedulin g
procedure and on May 14, 9:00 a.
m . to 5:00 p.m. across from the
faculty lounge. All undergraduate
students and faculty who have paid
the activities fee are eligible tc
ywe,

FJ oAAmtS r&pfy

"I certainly have no objectior
to suggested amendments to the
operating organization ar policies of CGA , pro viding that such
chan ges are brought about by toe
duly constituted amending pro cess. The referendum is t h e
means by which students may exerc ise their role towards effecting any indicated change .
At the same time may I note,
Change in Constitution :
for the recor d, that the CGA. conArticle VI , Section 4, Para - cept has proved to be one of the
graph C
stren gths of the institution , brin g*
The Dean of Stude nts , Dean of ing together all segments of the
Instruct ion,
Dean of Women , College community for J oint deDean of Men , the Dire ctor of Pub- liberation and action . I trust and
lic Relatio ns, and The Directo r hope that each student qual ified
of Stude nt Activiti es are voting to vote will exercise his fran members of the College Council , chise, and that prior to rea chin g
also added are the Pre sidents his decision , he will consider
of ARM and ARW , the Day Men carefully the strengths and weakand Day Women ,
nesses of both and present to.the
To:
oroDOsed or ganization »'
i

Dk« Chanp Jk&Jf

New Gen. Ed. Program OK'd

which will enable the student to
enjoy a life that is satisfyin g to
himself as an individual and enable him to play a constructive
ro le in his community and in society without re spect to his pro fessional or vocational interest
or activity .
Required courses include: English Composition 101 and 102 for
six credit hours or English Com.
position 103 for three credit
hours; Health and Physical Edu*
cation (must include Aquatics)
for four credit hours . This pr ovides a total of seven or ten ere*
.
student choice of cours es within dltFhours
restri cted electives,
or
the traditional broad ar eas of the twelve credit hours in each of the
humanities , social sciences, and following grou ps from at least
nat ur al sciences. Only seven to two departments within any one
ten semester hours of credit are group are required:
mandated — in a sixty-hour re*
GROU P I - Biology, Chemisqu irement , rou ghly one-hal f of the try, M athemat ics, Physics , Earth
stu dent 's total college program. Science:
The General Educat ion proATTENTION S
gram , required of all students
in all curricula , is designed to
An Organizatio nal Meeting
encourage the development of
will be held at 7:30 tonight In
those understan dings, att itudes
the Book Store Loun ge for a
MC Student Action Orouo.
and values, and social skill*

GROUP II — Economics , Geogra phy , History, Political Science , Psychology, Sociology;
GROUP III — Art , English ,
Foreign Language , Music , Philosophy , and Speech . A total of 36
cre dit hours is required for restr ictive electives.

Four teen to seventeen credit
hours of free electives are required within any one or more of
the above three groups . It is
stron gly recommended that students in the Arts and Sciences
take twelve credits in either a
Modern Foreign Language (proficiency Examinat ion may be
substituted for part or all of these
credits) or in Statistic s and Computer Serv ices,
A minimum total of 60 ere*
dlt hours of required courses , restr ict ive elect ives, and free elee«
tlves is req uired .
Students will normally complete these General Education re*
quirements during their firsttwo
years of study from among those
courses which each Depart ment
(continue *on p«te three )

Monsio r Gerent e ( Dan Boone , left), and Sganarello
(Jack Marti n, right ) who is impersonating a doctor , consult. Dan and Jack gave outstanding performances. Monsier Geronte was easily the finest characte r Dan Boone
has created for a BSC audience. Jack , who is also seen
below , right , kept the responsive audience on his side
with hon ed double-takes , quick fingers and boistero us
slapst ick stylo.

_
B^
^ aflaaiH _ ^HHH Bi^^ _^H ^^ aflMMa ^^^^^^^^^^^^^

¦

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

<=Jj octor ^jrn J ^p ite of ^rrin idelf .

by allan maurer
I' m impressed . Impressed with
what happened to Moliere last
weekend as William Aceirn o pre .
sente d the Bloomsbur g Players in
a "doctored" version of THE
DOC TOR IN SPITE OF HIMSELF ,
Althou gh I missed some of the
Moliere in this Acierno -Hallau er
ada ption , I did not miss the
length that would have accompanied retainin g all of the
charac ters and plot twists of the
ori ginal . F urt hermore , by keeping the number of characters

MAROON AND GOLD
VOL. XLVIH

Lucas (Bob Casey), Valero (Tony Kohl) , and Sganarello (Jack Martin), moot
in the woods (top). Lucas and his wife , Jasqueline ( Lydia Henning ) had a good
thing going for them — they 're both stupid as helf — in the play that is. Lucinde
(Velma Aver y ) (top, right) was the cause of many of Sganarelies ' troubles. She
lost her voice. Sganarelle diagnosed her illness wit h great precision —< her trouble, he said, is that she cannot speak.

NO. 45

MICHA EL HOCK
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Business Manager
dor Rimnn
Bill Teitsworth
Managing Editor
News-Edi tor
Martin Klalntr
Co-Feature Editors
Ginny Pottor , Allan Mauror
Editor
s
Sport *
Clark Ruch A Jack Hoffm an
Photo graphy Editor
Mark Foueart
Copy Staff
Kay Hahn, Carol Oswald , Irene Oulyc x
Circulation Managor
Linda Ennis
Advisor
Mr . Michasl Stanloy
ADDITIONAL STAFF: Tarry fi lass, John Stug rln , Bob
Schuttx, Sall y Swct land , Dava Kaltar, Stanla y Bunslck ,
Jim Sachetr ), Prank Clifford; Vsl ma Avery, Carol Klihbawgh, Pat Jacobs, Sam Trapane.
AH opinions axpratsa d by columnists and faatur * writers ,
Includin g lef+ers'to-the-editor , art not nacossarlly fhos o of
Htls publication but thos« of tha Individuals .

• . . ^r f Review

aam ^m^mmm ^^mm^^^^^ /M

¦

was unbelievable . The whining , one of the funniest pieces of
high pitched voice he used with theatre I' ve ever seen. That incontrol and effectiveness , com- sane gr in on Amy Raber ' s f ace
bined with the finesse of his hands was pri celess , Fran Keller , Sheland the facial expressions by Treon , Kathy Simpson , Lillie
painted a solid Moliere char - Mauldin , Amy, and even Bill
Cluey CSaturday nite only cameo
acter .
rolleee
Martine , portrayed by Jean appea rence) were often less than
the criticism I heard most of- LeGates was a fine shrew , I' m gra ceful (Intentionally) but never
ten from others who say the play looking forward to seeing more less than hilarious .
was t hat t he set was unappealing of Jean .
A word , for those who didn 't
or unconvincin g or some such
Velma Aver y under goes some
care
too much for DOCTOR (recra p like that . I liked that set . some sort of transformat ion when
actions
I' ve hear d aren 't spread
Its primative , wild , style fit right s he get s on a sta ge. Off stage ,
out
too
much — people seem to
in with the charm of the play. she seems a bit shy. Up there
have
either
loved it or hated it).
Then too, its bri ghtness compli- she's con fid ent , animate d , and
One
of
the
reasons thi s show
mented the bright oran ges, lus lous . Velma gave Lucinde api
m
p
resse
d
me
is that see ing it
elegant
peal, taste , a white , white , pure
greens , and reds , of the
was
an
experience
quite unsim period costumin g.
appearance, a n d a naughty,
ilar
to
any
other
I
can think of.
ghty nature . Nice combina The acting in this show was tnau
This "different" sort of air
ion.
somethin g else again . Tony Kohl
Scot Atherto n
not bad . He alwa ys appeals to me. It seems
made me forget everything nasty may even have was
been
good. You to be a characteristic of Mr ,
I thou ght about his actin g after coul dn't really tell , consideri
ng Ac ierne 's shows — like beau *
seeing him in THE ODD COU- the company he was in.
tlfu l sets are a characteristic of
PLE . His performance in DOCMr . Richie 's shows, and some
TOR was often subtle , and exHM' mm . What do I say about sort of stage-audience intimacy is
cellent strai ght man stuff .
Sganarello? Those double takes a charac teristic of Mr . McHale 's
' Bob Casey, as the none too — yeah—he knows how to handle snows .
bri ght Lucas , was simply amaz - an audience . Blows a line , picks
What I'm leading up to , is that
ing. H is voice, his manner isms up quickly and well . Moves like BSC could stand a little more of
(like inspecting his foot, his stom- everything is real and everthi ng this difference . More DARK OF
ach , or his head) and his move- is weird and crazy . Sings hor- THE MOON 'S , more DOCTORS ,
ments were effective , funny, and ribly . Charms invisible snakes . and more HENRY IVs . But , of
convincing. Casey's almost al- Fences with Invisible partne rs. course , this would mean more
ways good, but I clapped extra Beats his wife . Is kind of wise chance ta king. It would mean fewhar d this time when he took his, under all the frivolity . He 's er old Broadway drawi ng cards ,
Urn ' mum , his bow ( ? ) at cur- crazy . He 's Jack Martin and he and more Indepe ndent , local crea tain cal l.
did one helluva fine job of being t ion .
Dan Boone's port rayal of Mon» Sganarelle .
But then all of this is prob sler Geronte was out of sight.
Can 't get out of this review abl y the bab ble of someone who
Sorry to use a cliche tut that without mentioning the nymphs loves theatre , has J ust seen a
sort of sums it up batter than (dancer s). The ir scene in the good show and would like to see
anyth ing else I can think of — he woods with Sganarelle is simply more like it .
down , the plot twists minimal ,
and the action furious and funny,
Mr , Acierno presented a play
that did not include so much as
one really rotten portrayal . And
that is someth ing I can 't say about
any other play I' ve seen at t hi s

Letters

Z) o tli0 £j U o r

Dk. Burial

UVSU. OH ,

On April 22, 1970, a car was
burled at BSC. This was one of
the events during Earth Day.
There are some question s and
state ments I would like to make
concer ning this burial.
1. H ow much, if any, was spent
on the burial ? Would it not have
been better to donate the money
to some pollution-control agency
or electric car research ? Why
was it wasted on this frivolous
activit y? ,
2. What possible significanc e
could there be in the burying of
a car with no engine ? A car body
does not cause polluti on. They
did
succeed in polluting the

FORUM... The Mann Case

I

-Jlnotlier P oint of View "

lssue of whether "due process "
has been met.
There are a numbe r of ways
"due pr ocess" can be violated ,
all of which I believe are involved
in the M ann rase.
(A) College procedures them selves, even If consistent , can
violate the civil rights a student
enjoy s as a citizen of the country. Now , if a student makes that
clai m , as he certainl y has a right
to , the validity of his clai m may
ultimately have to be tested in
the courts . No student can be
morally required to acqulese in
his own demise , particular ywhen
he believes he has f urther remedy, .EXPENSIVE as it is, in the

Since the administration has
made ' known its "point of view "
on the Dudley Mann case , it might
be helpful at this time to present
•' another point of view."
The substance of the admin istration-position , I gather , is
that the injunctio n against the
college was prem ature since
nothing had been done at this
point against Mr. Mann . One can
clai m this fundam entally begs
the question , since the very
prosecuting of Mr . M ann by the
college while the state of Pennsylvania is prosecuting for the
same substantial
offense is courts.
wrongly "doing something " to
(B) College procedure s, though
gi UUMU.
Mr . Mann . After some prelim - not violating civil rights , may
3. What did it prove? It pro ved inary rem arks I
will offer some in fact not be followed. Here the
the foolishness and egotism pre- arguments for ,thi
s position .
major issue is whether the Jo int
velant on this campus. This feat
It becomes increasingly clear
Statem
ent has been violated. I
was gre at for getting one 's pic- to me that
regardles s of docu- believe it has in many respects
ture in the paper .
ments , "due proc ess" is still but will not comment on this now.
If you want to do something for
judged
by the admini stration in
(C) Due proce ss can be viothe environment , write your leg- terms of
intentions
.
If
intenlated
due to confusion and conislators , contribute to the cause , tions are good
due
process
,
is
tradiction
in procedures , docubut do not participate or promote
met. So goes a certain theory ; a ments etc. This may be due to
frivolous acts of inconsequential
nice theory in a sense , for
not giving the Joint State ment
result. Again , as in the past , an very
then
if
one
doubt
s
that
due
pro
sufficient controllin g influence
entirely worthless symbolic act cess is met
he
can
be
accused
over all other documents. Some
has been committed when anothe r of doubting the
intentions
of
adOne of the elected
examples.
course of action , maybe not so ministrator s. Let
us
be
clear
members
to the Stufacult
y
sensational or publicity promot - then at the outset .
With respec t dent Facult y Judiciary Board has
ing, would have gained better re- to
all the men involved in the
since his election been appoint ed
sults *
Sincerely yours , case , we can assume in all that as Assistant Dean qf Students.
follows that they are honorable
Without questioning this particuRobert Jannette
men. The point is, that although
lar man 's Intentions (conversa good inten tions are importa nt , tions I have had with him conKemanher lite War
they may be , and in thi s case vince me that he is honest and
Dear Editor:
are , bastcaJly irrel evant to the
concerned about students ) there
Having attended many of the enis a question whet her there is
vironmental teach-in events on
some conflict of interest here.
Wednesday , and having come to
A second example. The present
the realization that pollution is an My Friends:
Dean of Students is a member
ever- increasing problem , I'd like
of the Executive Counc il on StuAll I can say at this time with
to ' take this opportunity to divert regard s to those letters printed
dent Affairs which make s decithe attention of the students , the in the MAROON AND GOLD on sions as to whether college infaculty, and the administration
Friday, April 24, is that in pro - terests are involved in a particuof BSC back to the war in Viet. mulgating your esoteric coagita - lar case; and on the basis of
raun .
tions or in articulating your sup- such decision a student may be
The Vietna m "police-action " erficial sentimentalities or psy- pr osecuted . Later he "sits in
is as pressing as ever . Troops chological observations beware
judgm ent" concerning the same
num bering 450 , 000 are stil l fight - of platitudinous
pondero sity. case at the Student Facult y J udiing and the threat of the draft Please let your conversations on ciary Board. Now one can point
persist s. I' m afraid however that (campus and your letters in the
to procedures which call In both
the governm ent and politicians by M&G possess clarified conexamples for the se dual roles.
creating an issue of the pollution \ciseness compacted comprehen But then turn to P. 20 (Joint
pro blem are succeedin g in tin- ,siveness,, coalescent cons istenc y
Statem ent) **No membe r of the
dermining the seriousness of the |and cocatinated cogency. Eschew
hearing committee who is biased
War and thrusting concern re- all conglomeration s goddam s
or OTHERWISE INVOLVED IN
,
,
sultin g fr om the war out of its blasphemous Incantation s
THE PARTICULAR CASE shall
, flatupro per per spective . I think that ilent garruli ty, Jejune
sit
in judgment durin g the pro babblement
this maneuver is especially aim- '
ceeding.
"
(contin ued on page fo ur )
ed at pacif ying dissentful college
The question to be asked is
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ na^MHMHi ^M^i^^
students and I admit that it is
1
wheth er the examples I have
Compli ment s
quite a diversionary tacti c.
mentione d constitute a violation
We can pro test against polluof
this section of the Joint Stateof
tion (and we should demonstrate)
ment.
and sign an endless number of
I would now like to present
petitions but until the money is
some ar guments with respect to
available to industries which the
point A . In the "M ann " case th e
"Stores of Sarvict "
federa l govern ment has prom ised
proc ess may have been violated
($1 billion for the purchasing of
anti -pollution equipment) little
can be done on a large scal e despite massive effort . Unfor tunately , the funds are not avail able and perhaps won 't ever be
CHOOSE FROM AMONG 3700 VACANCIES
availa ble to fight pollution until
Listed by 195 Public School Districts throughthe people of the U .S. can per.
suade the government that our
out Connecticut, New Jersey, and Nassau,
prioriti es should lie in domestic
Suffolk , Westchester & Rockland Counties in
affairs (including pollution) and
New York State.
that the $80,000 ,000,000 devoted
Hundreds of teaching positions in all areas
each year to defense should be
and fields of the Elementary and Secondary
rea llocated .
levels.
Barbara Anne Russell

Stan Rep lys!

REA & DERICK, Inc.

LOOKING FOR A
TEA CHING POSITION?

C/«n. da.

(continued from page ont )

designates as General Education
courses,, Any General Education
¦cour se req uired In a student' s
major area of study may be used
to satisfy the General Education 1
requir ements of that student .
Stude nts enter ing the college
In September , 1970, will be the
first grou p to partici pate in the
new program , althou gh upper*
classmen will be given the opport un ity to complete their General Education requirement un*
der the new plan. All departments will designate course offering s which may be used to meet
the General Education require ments.

--

Some vacancies for Department Chairmen ,
Assistant Principals, Principals, Supervisors
and Coordinators.
All these positions for September of 1970 are
listed in the Journal of Educational Listings.
Send for your copy now - Limited number available.
___
Mail to:
Journal of Educational Listings

BY THE VERY FACT that the
college chose to prosecute Mr.
Mann while the State simultaneously was prosecutlnghlmfor the
same substan tial offense; possession * of marijuana. The college
claims "automon y" here since
they say a college rule has been
violated . The Interestin g and disturbing fact here is that the same
evidence Is being evaluated by
both the State and the college,
evidence collected by the State.
The Collegethen ^llows evidence,
and make an independent decision
about the guilt or innocense of
Mr. Mann. This , in my judgme nt ,
is a striking misuse of the concept of autonom y , and is rather
a profound violation of the ethic al
spirit of "due process. "'
Let me state some reasons for
the above claim. It is not clear
(legal opinions differ) that the
College can protect Mr. Mann
from having statements in college
proceedin gs used against him in
State proceedings. It is clearly
esta blished that college authorities could not be subpoenaed to
give testimony for the state , or
that they could not VOLUNTEER
such testimon y. Mr. Mann by
PARTICIPATING in college hearings may be in a position where he
would be waivin ghis Fifth Amendment rights against compulsor y
self incrimination .
Equally import ant , it seems
clear that the state 's evaluation
of the evidence it has collected
is very relevant to Mr . Ma nn's
college case. Suppose that an application for a warrant is ultimately found to be invalid. The
College has based its case in part
on the legality of the application
for a warrant . (As the Joint State ment requires it to do.) But how
does one know whether it is legal
until the courts have ultimately
made their decision? (which
might be after appeal of a lower
court 's decision.) Suppose , under
further cross examination , a giv-

en chemist*s rep ort turns out to

be invalid , inaccurate or vague ?
What would we then say of the
COLLEGE 'S case agains t the stuaent /
Let us be blunt. The College
is not really independently
evaluating evidence. It is TAKING the EVIDENCE as evaluated
at a certain point in the criminal
proceeding (in this case even before a trial) and making a rather
arbitrary decision that "we have
heard enough ". Doesn't it seem
reasonable to expect that the College would defer proc eeding until the State had finished evaluat -

H

ing -Its evidence? Who is more
competent to evalua te it , particularl y when it is the only evidence
offered In either proceedin g?
The recent QUASHING of the
State case against Mr. M ann and
others (See Morning Press , Saturda y April 25 , 1970) gives substan ce, I believe to my arguments. Two points are worth
mentionin g. The " application for
a warrant " was f oun d to be in
a most blatant fashion to be illegal. Secondly, Jud ge Kreisher
ordered a particular "pipe " to be
returned to the accused , since...
"it is our understandin g the pipe
and tobacco conta ined no drug
and that they have a prop erty .
value so they should be return ed to the defendant owner. "
(M orning Press P . 2) Since the
C ollege's case re quire s the legality of the warran t AND the
existence of a na rcotic substance , one might think it has
little or no case.
It seems to me that the constructive lesson to be gained
from this issue , is that elementary fairness tew the sudent requires that there not be such double prosecutions . Is it fair for
example for the College to decide
th at a given Justice of Peace 's
decision about an application for a
warrant is sufficient even though
it might later be overturned. (In
this case overturned with an eight
page ruling pointing out the constitutional requirem ents for the
legality of an application for a
warrant?
Although protection of the college is sometimes raised as an
issue here , I do not believe it
is substantial. The Joint Statement allows action against a stu •
dent (suspension for example, if
a danger can be demonst rated)
while a case is being disposed of.
Now reasonable men might of
course disagree on this issue.
Some may be convinced that due
process is not violated by this
kind otsimultaneouspro secution.
Others , like myself feel that elementary fairness require s that
the college defer in such matters
until the civil or crimina l courts
have completed their work . Pro ced ure s then must be wor k ed
out (and they can be) for dealing
with the accused until the courts
have completed their work . The
inj unc tion , then , has its source
in part , in the belief that the
"wrong -doing" against Mr.Mann
BEGAN with the CoUe ge instit utin g procedure 's simultaneously
with the State.
Richard Brook

Rive MomaBiSSfe eari^
H
H
H
H
H
H

And make Mother's Day last longer.
Call or visit an FTD florist today. And .
order a BigHug Bouquet to arrive
early. He'll send it across the street.
Or country. A special arrangement.
F°r *' VCI7 special mother. Yours.

H
H
H
H
H
H

u
I^^BSb* """rt1'" & <12-5° I
t__
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Athlete 's Foot

This past weekend Jack Hoff.
man and I were gufests of the New
York Yankees at their first an*
nual "College Sports Editors
Day.'' The agenda inc luded a tour
behind the scenes with the Oakland Athletics.
As we entered the stadium at
about 11:30, the public relations
staff , passed out Yankee Yearbooks, press statistics sheets
and scorecards. The press sta»
listic sheet was a two page handout which was circulated to the
announcers and working press to
assist in the broadcasts and postgame writeups of the contest . It
contained standings in both
leagues, Yankee records up to
this point in the season, and many
m ore small bits of news to liven
the game 's presentation , whether
on paper or via the airways.
Robert Fishel , vice-president
in charge of Yankee public relations, conducted the tour under
the home side of the stadium .The
featured attractions were the
plush carpet of the Yankee clubhouse, TV and radio room and
the bar frequented by many team
members. Compared to high
school and college locker rooms,
the Yankees exist in a Taj Mahal.
Large individual .ubicles for
each player and thick wall-to-wall
carpeting are just two of the better features of this small para-

ri1«f>

The TV control room is the domain of the show's director.Seated before a battery of 6-10 television screens, each coming from
a different camera, the director
selects the camera which best
shows the play in progress. The
players frequent a bar in t h e
stadium after the game. T h e
tensions of the contest call for
small doses of alcohol to come
back to the human race.
Shortly after the tour, we filed
into a conference room behind
the mezzanine behind homeplate.
There a question and answer period between the students a n d
some of the Yankee executives
took place. The first to speak was
Lee McPhail, Yankee General
Manager . Following him came
Toney Roach, the sports editor
of the New York Times. Mike
Burke, Yankee chairman of the

board and president, and players
Dave Ellis and Lindy McDaniel.
Mr . Roach discussed the world
of the big city newspaper and
young thinking Mike Burke talked
and answered questions of the
relevance »of baseball in this era
in
Hmfi
JJl
b
V
l

After the press conference , and
lunch in the executive bar, we took
in a 3*0 Yankee loss to Oakland.
The Yankee's front office is
trying to establish better re«
lationships with the world outside
the stadium . This conference and
the meticulous planning which
must have gone into it to make
it a success of their new era.
Competing against the Mets and
Madison Square Garden, the
Yanks are gaining strength off
the field . If their team begins to
show improvements, Yankee Stadium will again shake from multitudinous crowds such as those
of the Ruth and Gehrig days.
I would like to publicly thank
the Yankees, Lee McPhail, Mike
Burke, Robert Fishel and his
staff, and the New York Times
for making Saturday a success
which I am sure was enjoyed by
all those Involved.

^tan

(cmHmi M tram page libra *)

and assinlne affectations. Let
your extemporaneous decantations and unpremediatedExpattaticns h*ve intelligibility without rhodomentade or thrasmonical bombast.Sedulously avoidall
polysyllabical profundity, pompus prelixity and ventrilequal
verbosity. Shun double enterdre
and prurient jocosity , whether
obscure or apparent-longorrhelc
or otherwise.
Yours most humbly,
Stan Rakowsky

^

; Watc h Repair
15 L Main St., alOOMUUM

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Blo oi mborg Pa.

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A
PENN
1W0
9
a
boy
and
girl
searching
for
lite
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/7
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i

By Jack Hoffman
BSC diamondmen following a
one day postponal split a doubleheader with Mansfield at
Bloomsburg on April 22. In the
first game Greg Stahora started
and pitched 6 - one-third innings
leaving the game tied at 3-3,John
Lepley releaved him for the final
two-thirds inning and was credited with the win. Bob Dileberto
started for the losers and was relieved by Steve Casterline and
was given the loss. Dileberto
gave up 8 hits while Casterline
2. BSC had 4 runs on 10 hits
while committing 1 error . Mansfield had 3 runs , 6 hits and 1 error.
For BSC Dave Smith and Tom
Fleeter had 2 hits apiece. Fleeger had 2 RBI's. M ike Costanzo
had 1 hit and 1 RBI. Joe Accardi, Bill Derr, Rich Gatchell,
Don Deitterick and Greg Stahora
each had basehits.Bloom left 10
on base while Mansfield left 9.
The Huskies scored 2 in the first ,
one in the second and one in the
seventh. Mansfield scored all of
their runs in the seventh.
r h e
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Mansfield

EMTMANO OLQII*

YOUR DOLLAR
BUYS MORE A T A

Good performances were turned in by: The 440 Relay team
thaf took fourth , the 880 Relay
team took 5th , Individual performances by Flcek , 5th in the
shot, CaveUero , 2nd in the javelin , Andy Kusma , 4th in the high
hur dles , and Tim Waechter 6th in
the 3 mile run.

EUDORA'S
CORSET SHOP
town

I

Repairing

SHOP AT GOODWILL
FOR YOUR CLOTHING

Your J tmtUr Awy from Horn *
5 W. Main St.
Bloom mum

1

The brothers of Phi Sigma Pi,
National Honor Fraternity in Education, at the suggestion of one
of their advisors, Mr. Richard
Donald , recently looked into the
possibility of sponsoring a "foster child" overseas. A committee was formed to gather information regarding the agencies
through which this could be done
and to coordinate correspon-

periodically. The brothers picked India as their first selection
and Korea as their second. The
Fu nd's Emergency List was the
third.
Approximately two weeks ago,
the fraternity was notified by the
Christian Children's Fund that
they would be sponsoring a child
from India. His name is Stanli
Bakaiynathan Gambram. He is
from Bangalore and goes to the
Seventh Day Adventist school
there. He is five years old and in
kindergarten. Kis favorite subj ect is "singing" and he likes
to play "group games."
The brothers are looking forward to the time when they will
receive their first letter from
Stanli. They hope that when Stanli
is old enough, they will be able
to bring him to college here at

The Brothers of Phi Sigma Pi
will be sponsoring a car wash
on Saturday, May 2 in order to
raise funds to support Stanli.The
car wash will be held at Bloomsburg Firestone Service , located
at the A & P shopping center ,between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and
4:00 p.m. The cost Is $1.00 per
car. The brothers say, "come
down and help us help Stanli to
Last month the brother 's de- a happier life."
cided to work through the Christian Children's Fund Inc., of
Richmond, Virginia. According
to the Fund's plans, the brothers
could choose the country that
their child would come from and
they would receive letters from
PIZZA
the child and progress reports |

Charlie 's

Eppley's
Pharmacy
MAIN ft IION STRUTS.

Pntcrlption Spiclalltt

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Open "til 12:00 pun.
Closed 1<30 to 3t00 p.m.
Evtry Doy But Friday

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f ill DIUVIIY

• CHANEL
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• PRINCE MATCHAIELLI
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• HELENA RUBINSTEIN
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8:30 te 11t30

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WAFFL E
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GRILLE

J I

by Jack Hoffman
BSC llnksmen, under Coach
Jack Jones, beat the Kutztown
College team, 11-8. T h e
State
'
first man Bob Snyder , lost to
K-town 's number one man, Dick
M ayer.
Number 2 man, John Marshall ,
tied his man. Bob Simons and
Jeff Hock both out-flogged their
opponents. Steve Neumger lost
in his number five position. The
sixth man of the squad , Ri c h
, Jurbala, won his match.
This year, instead of basing
won-ifps by holes won , the medalist system has been enacted.
Thereby, the person with the
lowest score on the front nine,
the back nine and the total course
wins the match. .

wflMMI #ffffffpf

[ bloom

AND

1S4 W, Main; 4tomsbur§

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Phi Sig Pi
"Adopts " Child

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1I
. Main ft. liMm sbur f

Harr yLogan

GOODWILL STORE

AND fAVI YOUR MONIY
POII OTHIR THINOt

10 1

the record for the 5th and final
time with a jump of 45» 7% " In
addition to the triple jump Andy
also won the 120 yd high hurdles
when he came in with a time of
15.2. Other winners for the Huskies were the 440 relay team,
Charlie Gr aham in the 440 I.M.
Hurdles, Jim Cavallero in the
j avelin and Tim Waechter in the
2 mile run. The real highlight
of the meet was the 1, 2, 3 sweep
of the 440 I. M. hurdles with
Graham , Herb, and Reeves all
turning in outstanding times. The
only other sweep was the j avelin
throw with Cavellero,Barton,and
Zern pulling off the 1, 2, 3, combo.
This was another strong showing for the Huskies who are making a strong push for the title this
year.

Opens today in Berwick.
Sunday, Capitol Theatre ,
Bloomsburg.
.

0 1 1 0 0 0 3 5 2 2

In the second game BSC dropped a tough 9-5 ballgame. Dave
M oharter started for the Huskies
and was relieved by Bob Parry.

a worlo wide picture

+

Dave Hagadern got the loss for
M ansfield. Bloom got 5 runs on
2 hits and had 2 errors. Mansfield had 9 runs on 7 hits and
posted 3 errors. Bill Derr and
Dave Moharter had the only two
hits for ' the Huskies. In the
seventh inning 5 bases on balls
and a wild pitch aided the Huskies in getting 3 runs. BSC acquired 13 bases on balls while
Mansfield had 10.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
r h e
M ansfield
7 3
2 1 0 0 0 3 3 9
Bloomsburg

0 0 0 0 0 0 3 3 6 1

Bloomsburg
2 1 0 0 0 0 1 4

Last Wednesday the BSC track
team traveled to Kutztown for a
Tri-Meet with: Kutztownand East
Stroudsburg. The Huskies ran
well taking 5 firsts and 9 second
places to come out of the meet
with two more victories. T h e
final score was BSC 70% , KSC
65 , and ESSC 45% . This makes
the 5th and 6th victories for the
trackmen and brings their record up to 6 and 1 on the way to
a tremendous season.
Top performances were turned in by Andy Kusma and Steve
Buffalo Relays
Ryznar who combinJkl to break
Bloom took 9th out of 22 teams
the school record in the triple
j ump 5 times. Andy Kusma broke In the Buffalo Relays.

; Fine Jewel ry and

»'

K*p ly &!

Track Team

NESPOLI
jewelers
\

,

Linesmen
Club
Kutztown

BATMEN SPLIT
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