rdunkelb
Fri, 04/05/2024 - 16:04
Edited Text
Udall-Ray To Speak At
Annual Ed. Confe rence
Dr. Henry Ray
Dr . Henry W . Ray , Director of
Learning Resources for the Centennial Schools of Warminster ,
Pennsylvania , will prese nt a
stimulating multi-media progr am
entitled "Art Education For Perception and Insight " , announced
by Dr . Percival R . Roberts , III ,
chairman of the Bloomsbur g State
College art department.
The prograjn will be presented
at J l a.m., Oc tober 24, 1970, in
the Haas Gallery of Art , as part
Iff you go to BSC, try to locate yourself in this crowd. It's doubtful that you will succeed. This shot is of Thursday's State Collof the art education section of the
( Photo by Foucart )
ege Rally in Harrisburg
24th Annual Education Conference.
Dr . Ray received his ED. D.de,gree from Colu mbi a University
and has been active professionally in numerous educational capac itites , among the m teaching at
the college level at Teachers ColDr. Henry W. Ray
Columbia
University ,
Who
Have
Nothing
"
Sunday night , the BSC Concert
, "Com e Sat - lege ,
Glassbo/o State , Universit y of
Choir put a crowning finish on an ur day Mornin g", the Dionne WarHe was Project Direcor for
wick
h
i
t
"Paper
Mache
Homecoming
Week,
unforgetable
", Pennsylvania , Lehigh University USOE Title VIII B "Education al
end. A r ecordcro wd of over 1500 "Close to You " , and many more . and the Exte nsion division of Media and Heurstic Learning **
Those who attended were well Pennsyl vania State University . and a consultant to numerous
attended the Pops Concert pre pleased , In fac t , surprised to hear
othe r Federal programs and prosented in Haas Auditorium.
Mr , Stani slaw say, "That' s every
ject s in the area of the humanities.
Mr . Richard Stanislaw , new Di- song we know !" So surprised that
An Associate editor of the
rector of the seventy member they called for an encore and reJOURNAL
OF C OMMUNIC Achoir for 1970 , has been working peat of an almos t un-re peatable
TI ON , Dr . Ray . has also writte n
with the grou p since September . danc e routine.
If you missed the performance ,
numerous articles for AUDIO *
Sunday 's hour of continuous popyou
owe
it
to
yourself
to
catch
the
VISUAL INSTRUCTIO N, EASTular music included nine solos
Christinas
pr
ogram
being
preERN
ARTS BULLETIN , NEA
Am
ong
choreograph
y.
and unique
JOURNA L and most recently In
the numbers were songs like: "T pared now.
SMITHSONIAN magazine wher e
he describes his innovative ,
Oliver J . Larmi , Professor of multi • media experiment of
LEARNING IN THE ROUND conPhilosoph y at BSC , has recallThe first r egularly scheduled formal agenda be suspended and ed the highlights of the text of ducted in the "Special Expe rience
CGA meetin g took place last start with the fourth item-le gali- Professor Max well Primack' s Room " of Warminster , Penna .'s
Monday at 7:00 P . M . in Carver
zation of the Commun ity Govern- address . Dr . Primack spoke to new comprehensive elementary
Hall .
ment Association Constitution . the Philosoph y Club on Tuesday , school.
preliminaries , Tom
After
This remarkable audio-visual
A discussion followed regard- October 13, concernin g the " Mor suggested
that the ing the referendum of last year al Responsibility of Grou ps " .
Brennan
faculity uses an arra y of pr ojectand the results . In reviewin g Mr . Larmi' s summation follows: ors an d s tereo un it s to immer se
the past , Brennan said in last
If you 're white , are you guilty student viewers in a simulate d
year 's referendum , appr oxi- for the wrongs suffered by environment of an "ever-c hangmatel y 82 % voted in favor of blac ks ? Not necessaril y, said ing, tapestry of images , colors ,
Primack . If you're white , y ou and shapes " which adds a dim(continued on page eight)
have special respo nsibili ty to ension of enrichment not avai lable in textbooks or more standblacks which when discharged
ar d teachin g methods.
will free you from blame incurrAll und ergraduate students who
ed by white society.
wish to atte nd BSC for the Spring
Here is his theory . Special reSemester 1971 must attend ONE
sponsibilities are acquired if yotr
of the TEN meetin gs to be held
belong to a group and personal in Haas Auditorium Wednesday ,
ly benefit when it exploits anOctober 21. and Thursday , Octobother even though you don 't do
er 2 2.
any of the dirty wor k . For inIf you don 't have a class in stance , if you benefit from cheap
At these meet in gs stu dents will
Dr . Robert J . Nossen , Presifill out "mark- sense " f orms to be Bakeless make a point , an yway to food pr ices because of the exdent
of Bloomsburg State College ,
read by machine and tallied to de- visit the first floor . There you ploitation of black migrant farm
will
be inducted as an honorary
ter mine the courses to be offer- will find the wor ks of four stu - wor k ers , you incur special remem
ber of the Iota chapter of
ed next semester . An opportunity dent ceramicists on display in sponsibilities to help them . Now
Sigma
Alpha Eta , Professional
to pre pare a secon d an d fina l the showcases . Some of the pieces if you do what you can to help,
Speech
Hearing Frater nity
course selection will be provided have been purchased by the art you 're
not bein g nobl e or at BSC and
The
Induction will take
.
department for its permanent col- char itable anymore than you are
in November .
place
toni
ght
Oct . 21 , in the
,
lection
, but all are intended to In attem pting to pay any debt ,
The meetin g schedule is as folHearin
g and Commun center
for
create Interest in a busy, im- inasmuch as you are simply dislows:
ication
Disorders
on the ground
personal place .
Wednesday , October 2 1
char ging an obligation . But if an floor of Navy Hall , at 6:30 P M
. .
One showcase contai ns a han g- En glishman (who presumably
9:00 a.m.
In addition to the Honorary
ing piece by Bob Behr , who con- does not benefit from the exploita11:00 a.m.
centrates on hand-bu ilding ce- tion of American farm workers ) Level of membership , the loca l
1:00 p.m.
ramics . Th is slabware piece , one helps out , he woul d be noble or chapter has membership on the
3:00 p.m.
levels of Affiliate , Associate ,
of a ser ies which may remind
7:00 p.m.
char itable , because he ' s un d er no Key, and H onorary for
students .
the viewer of leather pouches special obligation to do so, If ,
Thursda y, October 22
The
Honorar
y
level
of
memberand shoulder bags , skillfully com- however , you benefit, but do noth9:30 a.m.
¦
bines texture and color with a ing, you stand guilty of not meet- ship is confered upon a profess11:00 a.m.
ional person who has demonstracomplimentary- material , a leath2:00 p.m.
ing your obligations .
outstanding Interest and serer stra p, to make people think
3:30 p.m.
Now some ar gue that unless you ted
vice
to the pr ofession of Comof materials othe r than ceramic s. actuall y succeed in rightin g the
7:00 p.m.
municat
ion Disorders .
If it is Impossible for you to However , his favor ite piece on wron gs of your group, you haven 't
During
the meetin g, Dr . James
atten d one of these meetings , display Is a small , white , ab- discharged your obligations . But
Bryden
Chair
man of the Depart ,
contact the Registrar Immedi- stract for m which is really a that' s not so, said Prima ck, It' s
ment
of
Communication
Diswheel'distorte d piece , found at sufficient If you've done all you
ately ,
Be sure to take along a suffi- the opposite end of the same can . To discharge your respon- orders , will present an award to
cient number o! soft lead pencils showcase . You'll have no trouble
sibility to blacks , tor example , the outgoing Chairman , Dr , Margaret Lefevre , John Dellegrotto ,
and the PRE -SCHEDU LING book- pickin g out either of these pieces, you need not actuall y end racism;
a sophomore from Berwick. Is
let , with course offerings and a
(continued en peg* seven )
(continued
tight
)
en
pa§t
President of the Iota chapter .
sam ple "mark-sense " form .
'70 Pop s Concert
Ends Homec oming
CGA Star ts Year
Meeti ng
Today !
Bakeless
Showc ases
Primack
Recapped
On Groups
Nossen
Inducted
Stewart Udall
Stew ar t Udall , former Secretar y of the interior and noted
author , will be the featured speaker at the General Session of the
24th Annual C onfere nce for Teachers and Administrators to Ix*
held at Bloomsburg State College
on Saturday , Cctober 24, 1970, in -^
Haas Auditori um at 12:15 p.m.
His topic will be , "Limits: The
Environmental Imperative ot the
1970' s."
Over 5 ,000 invitations have
been extended to teachers and
administrators in Penns ylvania
and nearby state s to attend this
Dr . C.
one day conference.
Stuart Edwards , Dean of the
School of Professional Studies ,
is chairman for the conference.
An outstanding grou p of educator s have been selected as speakers for various demonstrations ,
seminars , and sessions of the
divi sions of business , elementary , secondar y, and special education.
Durin g the luncheon in Scran ton Commons at 1:30 p.m., the
Bakeles s Center tor the Humanities , named for two generations
ot the Bakeless family aU ot whom
grad uated from the Bloomsburg
State Normal School , will be
dedicated. The presentation will
be made by William A; Lank ,
President of the Board of Trustees; the response by Dr. John
Bakeless , educator , sch olar , and
ret ire d arm y colone l.
Stewart Udall , who tor eight
year s as Secretar y of the Interior in both the Kennedy and Johnson Administrations fought for a
"new con serva ti on'* that would
In sure our coun t r y 's econom ic ,
social and moral he alth. Now ,
as head of The Overview Grou p,
which he formed in 1969 , he Is
dedicated to "creatin g a better
total environm ent for man " by
consulting and working with governmen ts and industries.
In addition to heading this pioneer ing international consulting
firm , Mr. Udall Is a Visiting
Professor of Environ mental Humanism at Yale Universit y and
the author of two Imp or t ant books ,
" 1976 Agenda For Tomorrow '*
and "The Quiet Crisis ."
A 1948 grad uate of the University of Arizona , Udall is a
lawyer by profe ssion and the son
of a Chief Justice of the Arizona Supr eme Court , Shortly
after his re-election to a fourth
term as a Unite d States Representative from Arizon a's Second
District , he was sworn in as
Secretary of the Interior , January 20 , 1961.
YOUR
OWN
THING
is Coming
Monday,
October 26,
Haas Auditorium
The H ole in the Wall
? R£.DicTlrtG
IS
j ^.
jim sachetti
^^
"Homeward bound ,
I I:p
i
T T rv r^-r T
^
~
1
r--\ j t g ms5 iot 4 r T~~"\
1
I wish I was homeward bound ... ''
"Hey! Anybody home? Mom ,
I' m home ."
"Tommy? Is that you?"
"Yep, it' s me all right ."
"I'll be right down honey
(SMACK) how are you dear?
You look fine."
"I' m OK Mom ."
"W ell , how does it feel to be
a college man? Is it hard? Do
they feed you good ? Are you doing your work?' '
"Oh , it' s pretty hard , I have to
study about seven or eight hours
every nite, just to keep up. But
I' m doing OK , and the food in the
Commons is great so I guess
I' m ail right . Say, is Dad»home
yet? I was..er wondering if he 's
still ..uh mad about that letter ."
"Well Tommy, he has cooled
off a bit but he'll still start on
you about it so if I were you I'd
j ust grin and bear it . It is for
your own good you "know."
"But Mom , if he'd just let
me "
"Here he comes now , you can
tell him about it at supper."
Later that evening, "at supper ".
"Son, I realize that this is your
first weekend home from school
and I hesitate to bring up anv
.. ..
....
(*0 John st oo ^ f/
Letters ....
of all
B .S.C. students,
To 95^
Are queens , floats , football
games, bee r , card games , and
body-snatching your prime (or
sole) interests? If so, you are
in deep trouble.
Think about it .
Dave Hartranft
Dear Editor:
I would like to commend Jim
Sachetti for his well written and
timely articles in his column
'The Hole in the Wall .' I especially enjoyed his article in the
Wednesday, October 14 paper . He
has been a bright spot in what I
consider a dismal situation .
Moving over to page three, I
would like to ask Jack Hoffman
if he knows anything about the
different things that can psych an
athlete for a game . I will admit
that his attempt to dig-up information on BSC opponents and deliver
it to students shows that he is
trying. But, to go as far as to
print names along with strengths
VOL. IL
and weaknesses is a little risky.
Does he realize that most of those
players get a chance (and they
take it) to read any M & G' s that
happen to be lying around? I
know that if I were Larry Hawkey
(M & G Friday, October 16) and
read what was printed there you
could bet your last penny that I
would not play poorly. Nothing
psychs an athlete like being told
in print , that he is the weak spot
on the team .
Sincerely,
Bob Schultz
To the Editor:
The recent issue of the
OLYMPIAN is for me a distinc tive and imaginatively conceived
piece of work. The artistry of
its layout and the quality of its
writing make it a pleasure to
look through the magazine.
Although the offerings are
slight and lack variety, this can
be remedied only by the students
themselves when they submit more
of the ir work to the magazine .
THE MAROO N AND GOLD
NO.
9
Bill Teitsworth
Editor-in-Chief
Business Manage r
Managing
dor Remsen
Editor
Tom Funk
Newt Editor
Sam Trapant
Co-Feature Editors
Jlm Steh#tf |
Terry Blast
Spor t s Edito r
J ack Hoffman
Copy Edito r
Li nda
Co-Clrcola tlon Mgr«.
Pat Heller
Carol Kith baugh
W»eto Editor
Mark Foueert
Art Editor
Advisor
E nnls
John Stug rln
Kenne th C. Hoffmen
STAFF: Shelley B r un oz xl , Kete Calpln , Jim Chapman,
Carmen Clull o, Lore Duckwo rth , Ksthl Farrell , Jim
Fl y nn , Ke ren Gable , Elaine Hartung, Pern Hickey , Andres
H offmen , Cethy Jack , Karen Kelnard , Suti Krett,
Deb
Mend ed, Cindy Michener , Jeenne M o r g a n ,
Rsndee Pray, Sonya Rutkowikl , To m Sc hofl eld , Gl en
Spottt , Dave Wright , Joanna Chowka , Sue Sprsgue, Jody
Hoff , Mike Hock , Frank Plsioll , Devo Watt , Jett e Jame s.
All opinion s expressed by columnists snd feat ure writers,
incl uding lett er-to *the- editor, »f not necessarily those of the
publication but those of the Individual !.
Call Ext , m or Writ e 301
This issue ought to give the incentive to do so.
Nonetheless, the way in which
the fine photography blends with
and complements the story and
poems creates a total effect that
is quite impressive—at least for
me .
My congratulations to Harris
Wolfe, editor of the current
OLYMPIAN , and to his staff and
to the contributor s for putting
together a magazine that is
quietly
and
beautifully
distinctive . It's an achievement
of which we all , I think, can be
fairly proud .
Sincerely,
Richard Savage
Respect and Consideration Letter
Some of the people who use
the college library have taken it
upon themselves to Indulge in
certain practices which are uncalled for . Before I continue ,
please note the use of the word
"some ", it is meant to imply
that a minority of people are
involved . The practices to which
I am referring concern the removal of periodicals from the
library (periodicals which are
designated "for use in library
only "), and the tearing of articles
from those periodicals which remain in the library. Not only
are these practices uncalled for ,
but they can be very irritating
to any Individual who is doing
research .
What can be done about such
practices? One possible solution
to the problem could be to search
people before they leave the
library, b u t such a practice
seems out-of-place on the college
level . There
is , nowever, a
simpler and much more appro pr iate solution to the problem .
The preferred solution calls for
nothing more than showing a little
res pect a n d
consideration;
respect f or someone else's property (in this case the library 's),
an d a little consideration for the
next person who might want to
use the periodic al .
Such an
att itude would
increase the
effectiveness of our library, and
benefit ever yone concerned .
So if you ' re tempted to indulge
In one of the practices mentione d,
stop and think for a moment how
you would feel If the article or
periodic al you were looking for
was missing, and then why not
try doing what a lot of other
people do • use the copy machine ,
or sit down with your pencil and
paper and copy the desired information ,
Brlnley J , Crahall Jr .
unpleasant subj ects. However, l
feel it is my duty as a fathe r to
steer my son straight . So, needless to say, I was disappointed
to learn that you had joined one
of those radical campus groups.
I mean, your mother and I realized that something like this could
happen in the best of families,
but we never thought that our own
son would go so low ."
"Hold it right there father . I
did n't say I had joined a radical
group, I only said that I went to
a meeting of CGA ."
"Aha , and what does that stand
Communist
for? Probably,
Groups of America ."
"No dad, it stands for Comm unity Government Association , "
"Aha , Government . You college kids have no business in
politics. Leave government to
competent elected officials like
President Agnew .'"
"No dad , not THAT kind of government .And Agnew is only VicePresident ."
"That 's what 1 said . And if it's
not that kind of government , then
what is it ."
"It' s the College government ,
dad . It' s elected students who take
care of college activities ."
"D on't give me that story son,
a college has Administrators to
do that . That' s the trouble with
colleges today, those administrators are too soft . They should
be in charge, not the kids ."
"But you see dad, at our school,
the Administration is in charge.
No one questions theirdecisions.
Why just last week they fired two
teachers without "
"Good , glad to hear it . Th ey
should get rid of anyone they sus pect of being a Communist . Too
damn many of them in our college s."
"But dad , these teachers
weren't Communists , all they
did
"
"Ah , don 't believe what you
hear son . You can't be too careful these days, it' s a tough life
son and if you j ust keep^ studyIng and working, in four years
you'll get your degree and ther
you can form your own opinions.
Until then, listen to your father
and stay away from those subversive meetings . You just keep
studying and don't worry about
government or what the Administration is doing. It' s none of
your business ."
Ed: Note: The following
article was reprinted from
The West-Minister Holcad,
October 2, 1970. ,
tential to be the very best country on earth .
...
....
"Gee dad , I never looked at it
that way, I guess you 're righ t .
Instead of thinking about everything, I'll go out for football instead ."
"W ay to go Tom , I knew you 'd
see it my way....You know Martha , we 've got a good boy."
"I know dear , they should all
be that good ."
Martha would be pleased to
know that most of them are.
PEACE INC.
The ideas in this column are
not necessarily those of Peace,
Inc , but are expressions of individual opinions by members of
Peace , Inc .
by Nick Padula
Meet you at the Holocaust:
My stand on current issues
may not seem very patriotic to
many Americans because they
fail to differentiate between
patriotism and nationalism .
Patriotism and nationalism differ on four key points: Patriots
want what is best for their country. Nati onalists think their country is best , no matter what it does,
Patriots want their country to
adhere to the highest laws of
man 's nature , and to the eternal
standards of j ustice and equality. Nationalists support their
country even if it violates these
eternal standards.
Patriotism means working for
the constant improve ment of your
country. It means speaking out
against your country 's leaders
and their policies when they become cruel , inhuman or incapable
of change. It means working for
the defeat of these leaders In the
next election. Nationalists blindly agree with a Hitler , a Castro,
or any other tyrant who waves
the flag, demands unquestioning
obedience to the "Fatherland ,"
and all the while undermines the
rights of the Individual.
Patriotism Is comparable to
faith or religion. It is based
on high ideals and .goodness.
Nati onalism compares to myth ,
superstition , and fantasy . Its
bases are Ignorance and hatred.
The following analogy serves
to clarify the role of the patriot .
Parents discipline their childr en and guide them along the
right paths not because they hate
them , but because they love their
children , and want them to become the best possible adults.
Just like parents, I and other
patriots disagree with the policies of our government not beca use we h at e A mer ica or are not
loy al , but because we trul y love
Ameri ca and what It originally
stood for - freedom , justice , and
equalit y - for all. We want
America to realize its full po-
In conclusion , we must realize
the difference betweenpatriotism
and nationalism. We must also
realize that America is pursuing
a very nationalistic course today. "We must learn what history has taught about other countries that have been very nationalistic , such as Nazi Germany ,
Tojo's Japanese empire , and
Facist Italy. None of these countries have come to any good end .
Nor will any country that pur sues nationalism. We must employ all legal and peaceful means
at our disposal to reverse the
trend tow ard nationalism in
America today, before it Is too
late .
0 lim p peo n
Love. Hate . Sex. Violence.
Nixon . Spiro T . Agony . These
may be among the subjects Included In th e 1971 Oly mpian ,
BSC » s literary magazin e. It 's up
to you.
W e need shor t stor ies, poetry,
essays, photo s, pencil , pen and
Ink drawing s . We have no taboos .
Any subject , an y style Is acceptable— our standard Is 'woul d we
like to read this story , poem ,
etc.. or look at this drawing if
we didn 't have to? "
We are looking for relevance.
We are looking for quality. But
what we find , again , is up to
you.
Submit your material to Box
293 , Waller Hall , marked "The
Olymp ian. "
Man uscri pts must be typed ,
prefer ably double spaced. Your
name should appear on a separate
sheet of paper. If mor e than one
page is enc losed , staple or paper
clip page s together .
This
year 's deadline is
Jan uary 1, An earli er deadline
may be announc ed If enough
materi al Is accep ted before that
date , so subm it early , like now.
The 1970 Olympian goes on
sale outside Hu sky Loungo this
week . It 's 40 cents , cheap . It 's
also klnda good. Bat I'm prejudiced . Why not buy a copy and
let us know what YOU think .
— Allan Maurer
Ho ora y For the Good
Old-Fashioned Way !
For th e Byrd
by Harris Wolfe
The canvas -covered floor of the
gym is already becomin g obnoxious and your neck is sore from
turning around to see who's coming in the doors . You rea lize
that there are more people here
than you ever thou ght would come
to see a jazz guitarist and the
two girls next to you are wondering what he 's going to be like
when the lights dim . Five unimposing musicians walk out and
mount the small stage . The y arran ge themselves in their respective positions , pick up their
instruments and begin.
The Charlie Byrd Quintet . No
747 could ever give you a tri p
like this . From the lilting melody
of a Bach gavotte to the rhythmic drive of "Aquarius ," this is
one stran ge bir d . At times it was
a sweepin g albatros s , gliding on
the long, open notes of th e alto
flute . Then they became somethin g else, with the trum pet 's
insistent voice sailin g over the
ocean . And yet another transforma tion prod uced an ur gent ,
excited sparrow , dar tin g out of
the underbrush , climbin g into the
sky.
For give me, I am obviously
new at this sort of thin g and
would not have attem pted to write
about it were it not for the fact
that no one else wanted to write
about it . Whe n someone yelled ,
"W ho was at the concert last
night ?" no one in the office replied . Hence this . 1 am una bl e to
give an authoritative dissertation on his music , but I feel
more than qualified to comment
on the juvenile behavior of so
many of Bloom sburg 's students .
No special training is required
(continu ed on page eight )
In this age of Nationwide controvers y concerning the illegal
use of dru gs, it is reassurin g
to know that Bloomsburg State
College has only been infiltrated
to a small degree . It ' s nice t o
know that there are still a few
of th ose good old-fashioned ,
schools left where the big kick on
Saturda y night isn't smoking
'gra ss', but 'is still getting .plain
old drunk.
It 's no unusual thin g to walk
aroun d campus on Friday or Saturda y night and pr acticall y stum ble across some over ly inebriate d male who has either had so
muc h he can 't walk , or jus t enough
that he's settling down for a long
nap. Nor is it unusual to head up
the stairs to the girls ' dor m and
be invited $o an all-night party by
one or more thoroughly soused
males spr awle d across the staircase , reeking to high heaven.
The reason they are thus soliciting dates is because their dates
(undoubtedly v e r y intelligent
young women) have abandoned
them , never to return , with the
stor y of how they must go up and
sign out for an overni ght I
I realize that B.S.C. has a
reputation for being a 'Suitcase '
college, and the social life can
be boring on weekends , but a per son can usuall y find something
to do. A gir l can wander around
until she gets an Invitation to
a booze party , or find a few
frat bro thers who need a date .
Jus t remember to take an over night beca use a girl never knows
what time she'll be getting back
if her escort happen s to get
drunk!
Okay , so y ou're a nice girl ,
and you don't drink , but you are
willing to make a personall y
guided tour of the Men 's dorms.
Isn 't it nice when your escort
deposits you in his room and runs
down the hall for a can (at fifty
cents a throw) before they run
out ? And if you don't want to
leave th e d orm , you can probably
find a little action down the hall
while your R. A. is at a frat
party !
When one of the girls in the
dorm happens to walk back and
f or t h in front of your room f our
or fi ve t i mes , and bids you goodnight with a little giggle and a
belch, you begin to wond er , and
ask her if she' s f eeling well .
"I don 't drink ," she protests ,
as you try to put her to bed. But
you begin to worry when she refuses to go to bed witho ut her little yellow ducky , and thr ows all
the other animals out of her bed ,
crying that she won't go to sleep
unti l you find it!
Fr eshme n fall victim to the older , more corrup ting Influences ot
the frat brother s. To see a girl '
tiptoein g down the hall and whisperin g *hi» to all people enro ute ,
and cursing out anyone who
wouldn 't return her salutation , is
the signal of an innocent young
freshman coming in after her
first frat party . Booze partie s
held by the side of a cre ek can
often result in daring fre shmen
coming in at two in the morni ng,
soaking wet up to their thigh s.
And the best example is. of
Racists
This Is just a few words from
an angry newcomer to Bloomsburg State College. When I entered BSC , I thought I was entering an insti tution where
mature adults acted in an openway toward social
minded
awareness. Appa rently I -was
mistake n, or bette r - naive . I
have since learned better.
It is about time that you people
who still have the words gook ,
spic , and nigger in your vocabulary grow up. It is reall y a
shame that you can refer to members of a different culture or rac e
only in derogator y terms.
M aybe the fact that I come
from an area that has a 35%
Black ' population gives me the .
maturity not to call a Black, a
coon, spade , or nigger, I tru ly
doubt that this is the case, thou gh ,
because had I been brought up
In a totally white Anglo-Saxon
envir onment , my parents would
still have tau ght me to respect my
b rot her , be he black , yellow, red ,
brown , or white.
The racism at thi s institution
should embarrass every student ,
faculty member , and administrator , an d ever y one wh o h as an y
self-res pect should take it upon
themselves to seek out this sickness - this cancer - and cut it
out before it grows out of proport ion.
Although you don't hear the
rac ism against orientals and
( continued on page eight)
cours e , the freshman afte r her
first real enc ounter with beer ,
par ading around in her floorlength nightgown pulling it up to
her bust , saying "Hi ! Want to
see my panties? Do you want to
know where beer goes? In here ,
and right down to here ! I have to
go to the little girls ' ro om !"
So it's reassuring to know that
while drugs on campus is a problem , the majority of the student s
at B.S.C. are still following the
heritage of th ousands of college
students before them; ruining
their livers and spendi ng Sunday
morning near a bathroom ,
by s.l.s., and stooge
FORUM
Frank M. Piz zoli
For the students who do excercise privileges as members
of thi s college community nothing is more upsetting than the
skepticism with which our motives for being involved in community affair s are viewed. As a
strong advocate and herald of a
new and open communication s
line , Dr . Rob ert J. Nossen somehow does not employ self-implemented methods designed to increase understanding .
During the C .G. A. meeting of
Oct. 13 , 1970, Dr . Nossen clinched unpro fessionalism by the roots
and openly questioned the motive
behind the amend ment to remove
the voting power of administrative members of C.G.A . App earing before a governmental body
and appr oaching actions on the
motiv ational grounds demonstrate not parliamentar y ineptness but rather a bad habi t of
aski ng the wrong things at the
wrong ti me . Dr . Nossen 's assumption that our motives for
p ursu ing t hi s p art ic ular issue are
not generated by genuine interest
In the educational process but
rather by othe r interests is incorre ct. After an unsuccessful
attem pt to exp lain moti ves t o our
President via an office appointment (April 10-70) I will again
tr y.
The intended rationale behind
suggesting a change in struc ture is to promote student responsibility and encourage student involvement on a meaning ( conti nued on page eight )
^HP ^BVST
Hi
BO I H I HOT
'
'
¦
Or ¦
U¦
I BoTaj
/ ¦!%# ¦^t mM ¦
¦
^k I ^B\ I Be
¦
¦#
¦
¦
¦ aj
Bm
WW
^CA^^ Wm ™ •¦•O^P'aBe^wTW ^ ¦^^^ ^^^ ^ ^*^ ^^^ ~^» ^ -^ -~- —w y
«• ¦»¦¦ -w •**¦
» ¦» ^^mm ^^ ^ » mimm ^^^ m^^ ^ ^ ¦- ^^
^^ a| ^¦^M ^ObVA ^ ISV A O)
^^"^^ — -^w ^^ —
^ W^ OJ ^^
—
—
—
— —
—
™
—
Co/d Wea th er Fails To Chili Spiri t of 43rd A nn ual Hom ecoming
L^-I__L^_^_^^_
*
BSC Band col or guard loads off tho 43rd annual Homecoming parade , Rout* began, in
the ' Centennia l Gym parking lot , followed ? tho major town streets, and concluded near
Athletic Park.
The Pueblo float was another of tho many in Saturday 's parade. SIO made tho float ,
and took first place.
Tho Charlie BVrd Quintet got it all tog ether , and, didn 't put on too bad of a show.
Jumping for joy at the ides of
March concert on Friday night ,
tho guitarist
seemed to bo
"fl ying high " .
Strumming
By rd.
¦¦JBhJBhJBJBJBJBJBJBJBJBJ^
along with Charlie
I
Bobbi Wynn and Homecomlna co urt we re tht center of this weeke nd's attention. Shown
above . Queen Bobhio received her crow n at the Ides of March concert on Friday night.
PHOTOS BY
MARK FOUCART
&
KATE CALPIN
Special Congratulati ons
are extended to the
Homocoming Committee
for a |ob well *
dono and a very
successful 43rd Annual
Homecoming .
Out of thai floats In Saturda y'* parade. Float * note* tho cute dells riding tho * float. A
Raaoedv Ann doll and a 'Pull' doll can bo soon slttlrw olde by sldo In tho fore ground.
Tho Idas of March show tM popul ar "V" for vic tory.
*t»ro yw» iaturday momlnoj by «re. All they cevtd do the n was
" pratfir? ' *••
Brokenshire
gain.
dro ps back to sand the pigskin screa ming for additional
Husky
yarda ge
Huskies Dump Mauraders
Bloomsburg State College football team, coming back from a
42-0 defeat last week at the hands
of West Chester , squeaked by the
Mauraders of Millersville State
College 23-17 Saturday afternoon ,
the Huskies Homecoming game
here at Athletes park in Bloomsburg.
Millersville scored first with a
37 yd . field goal Ly Karl Bivans ,
with 2:37 remaining in the first
quarter .
With 21 seconds remaining in
the first quarter , the Mauraders
moved out in front 10-0 when
quarterback Steve Lennox hit
split end Dave Rackovan with a
perfectly thrown pass covering
41 yds. Karl Bivans converted
the PAT .
In the second quarter , following
an inj ury to starting quarter-
BLOOM
BOWL
€)
WAFFLE
GRILLE
BOOKS...
OVER 8,000
back Mike Deveraux , Tom
Bloomsburg 's Bob Parry
Brokenshire moved the Huskies returned Karl Bivans punt after
85 yd s. in 9 plays to score safety 30 yds. to Millersville 48
their first touchdown . Fullback yd . line. Following passes of
Paul Skrimcovsky hit the,line at 20 and 9 yds . to Bill Firestine,
the two, bounced off , spun and Brokenshire passed to Firestine
scored with 10:05 remaining in on the 30 from where he raced
the first half . Bob ' Warner the distance to score with :56
attempted to run for the extra remaining. Neil Oberholtzer
point but was stopped at the kicked the extra point and the
1 yd . line. Score at half , MSC Huskies increased their win
10 , BSC 6.
record to 41, defeating Millersville State College 23-17.
Millersville posted the only Or der of scoring:
score in the third quarter, putFirst quarter ,
ting together an 80 yard drive in
12 pl ays, with Larry Hawkey
MSC: Bivans 37 yd . field goal;
scoring from the 5 on an end
Score
MSC 3, BSC 0 .
sweep. The point after touchdown
was good by Bivins and the MarauMSC: Rackovan 41 yd . pass
ders now lead 17-6.
from Lennox— Bivans PAT good.
Opening the second quarter
Second quarter ,
Mike Kolojejchick received a
pass from Tom Brokenshire good
BSC: Skrim covsky 2 yd .
for 23 yds . and a TD capping a
plunge
. Run att . PAT no good.
60 yd . effort by the Huskies , Bob
Warner took a pitch out and
Third quarter ,
made the 2 point conversion .
Score with 13:19 remaining, Millersville 17, Bloomsburg 14.
MSC: Hawkey 5 yd . sprout
left end TD - PAT Bivan .
Bloomsburg time now became
a factor for the Huskies . BloomsFourth quarter ,
burg moved the ball from Millersville 41 to the 1 where Paul
BSC: Kolojejchick 23 yd pass
Skrimcovsky had the ball Jarred fr om Brokenshire, Pitch to.Warloose and Millersville took poss- ner 2 pt conversion-good . Score
ession. Following three unsuc- MSC 17,.BSC 14.
cessful downs , Steve Lennox
deliberately scored a safety,
Safety on Lennox MSC's
making the score Millersville 17, QBBSC:Score
MSC 17, BSC 16.
.
Bloomsburg 16, BSC split end
with 1:56 remaining to be played .
BSC: Firestine pass 30 yds .
Brokenshire, Oberholtzer
from
With 7:30 left In the 4th quarter , Nell Oberholtzer attempted converted PAT good.
a 45 yd . field goal which hit the
Final Score: MSC 17, BSC 23.
rross bar and bounced back .
TITLES IN STOC K
I It's a book
w havt It tr wt can gtt It
Harr y Logan
Greeting Cards
Fine J ewelry
HENRIE'S
Card and Book Nook
40 W. Main St.
SHUMAN'S
WORLD TRAVEL
37 I. Main St., Bloomsbur g
PHONI 7M4420
For All Your Travel
Arran gements
R1SIRVATIONS , TICKltS,
TOURS, ITC.
AND
Repairing
All Alrllnts/Tr» ln»
« Hotels Handled
Application s for Yout h
Part Cards avi lit bit
your J twiltr Awttyfrom Horn *
fl W. Main St.
Bloomibum
' '
'
BSC's number 47, gets nailed as he heads for the goal lin e.
In another atte mpt, 47 seems to be clear but the tide is washing
In arou nd him. Ready to sweep him off his f«et.
Yanks May Leave
NYC
NEW YORK - The Yankees
may leave New York. The seriousness of their discontent with
New York City Is outlined In
excerpts from the following copyrighted editorial appearing exclusively In the November Issue
of Sport magazine , released on
October 15th:
"The editor s of Sport Magazine have learned from Impeccable sources that the Yankees
want to leave New York, Despite a fine won-lost record In
1970, the Yankees barely eked
out an attendance gain over last
year, Yankee management,which
means CBS, Is discouraged by
falling attendance , discouraged
by the artistic and financial clout
John 's Food Mtrkot
W. Mai n A Leonar d St.
Open 8 a.m. to 12 mid
Daily
Delicatt tie n
Full line of groceries
& snaeks
of the New York Mets , discour aged that they have to keep playIng In a ballpark they think Is obsolete. So the Yankees want out.
"The city of New York knows
of this ," the Sport article continues. "In fact , back In August,
M ayor Lindsay appointed a secret
task force to try and find a way
to keep Yankees In the city. If
this task force falls, If the Yankees do move , baseball will have
suffered Its worst blow ever,1*
Submit mattrlal t o tht
Maroon and Gold BSC Box
Ml or Ixt. 323.
Por Wtdntsday 's Id. —
Mutt bt tubmttttd by Sun*
day tvtnlng,
Por Friday 's Hd. — Must
bt aubmltt td by Tuttda y
tvtnlng.
Mattrlal
may alio bt
brought to tht offlet — WaiItr Hall, Room 234 ( Stcond
Ploor ).
^^^^^
^
^
^
^
^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^^^
P^
^ P^M
B
MeIW
^^^^^^ P
¦^^¦^
¦^
^¦¦ ^b
b^i
bibbbibPw
b P
BjB
FETTER MANS
BARBER SHOP
— QUALITY —
Psot of Colltg t Hill
¦lotmtbur g, Pt.
i
'**
"" ¦" ¦ ""
"
•»**»¦"" " r- 'T1Wwn i " III MBIII Ml—1—If
CG A
Amendin g
Procedure
i
^^"
-^^^r
~^^^v
~^^^^r
^^^^^^v
^^^^ ^^—
^^
^^^^^
To comply with CGA regulations and keep interested students
informed , the amending pr ocedures , accor ding to the Bloomsbur g State College Joint Statement on Rights , Freedoms , and
Responsibilities of Students , is
being pri nted below . This pr ocedure was adopted by College
Council last year .
(1) Proposed amendments may
be submitted to the Executive
Council of the Committee on Student Affairs in duplicate , by any
member of the faculty , Student
Body, or Administrati on . One
copy of the pr oposed amendment
shall be submitted , by the Executive Council , to the Maroon and
GnltLfor publicatio n.
This Saturday morning just before the Homecoming Par ade , theHarriers of BSC met the Warrlor s of Eas t Stroudsburg S.C.,
up on the old golf cour se. It wa s
cold with int ermitent periods of
snow accompanied by about a 30
m.p.h . wind. The results wer e
however , as expected , with
Blocflisburg winning by 13 pt s.
• (2) Amendments may be proposed at any time . Those proposals received before February
1, will be considered and acted
upon befor e June 1. Proposals
submitted after Febr uary 1 will
be considered after June 1 and
action will be taken before February 1 of the subsequent year .
Amendments will be considered
in chronological order as pre sented .
In a score of 21-34.
The placings for Bloomsburg
were: 1st Tim Waehter (his 6th
first place run in a row) , 2nd
Terry Lee , 4th Paul Pelletier
(who was running despite his
illness), 5th Larry Horwitz , and
coming in 9th was Charlie Graham.
(3) A 2/3 vote of the total membershi p of the Executive Council
of the committee on Student Affairs will be required for passage
of the proposed amendment .
Marat - Sade To Be At BSC
self as a martyr to liberty will
be played by Mimi Ault. Tony
Kohl will portray the herald ,
dressed as a harleq uin , who
announces the scenes and descri bes the action of Sade 's play.
Bob McCormlc k will be cast as
Dupperret , an derotomaniac who
is portra ying Charlot te's lover;
Pete Gente le will take the role
of a mad pr iest in a straight jacket; and Shelby Treon , Rob ert
Casey, Ron Klientob and Steve
Rubin will play the four singer s
who repres ent the revolutionary
mob in song, dance , and mime.
Also featured , will be a various
assortment of lunatics , atten dants v and musicians.
Due to the unusual nature of
this production , it Is not recommended for ever yone. It Is not
suggested for the timid , the weak ,
or for children . Life Magazine
has said of Mara ^Sade, "Here
the lunacy and horror reach such
a pitc h th at almost every night
In the middle of the performance
a pair of theatregoers start arguing. One person — usually the
man — says he can 't stand it a
minute longer and stomps up the
aisle. The other says she Is
absolutely fascinated and refuses
to budge ."
Ed. Note: Try your patients ?
eyes of their attendants , and ends
with the stabbin g of Mara t in
But it is
his famous bathtub.
not its import as historical drama
that pr ompted critics all over
the world to hail Mara ^Sade
as one of
the most soaring
theatrical events of the year , and
to lavish it with such epithets as:
"Total theatre , with no holds
(London Times);
barred ,"
"Unmistakeably brilliant ," (Walt er K err , N.Y. Herald Tribune);
"A towering theatric al presence...and unforgettable play ,"
(Norman Nadel , N.Y. World Telegram & Sun).
The Bloomsburg Pla yer s' production will be directed by Mr .
William Aclerno in a setting designed by Mr. Harry Berkheis er
to represent the bathhouse of the
as y lum where Sad e's play is to
be performed before the asylum
director , played by Dave Wright ,
his wife and daughter , and the
audience. Dan iel B oone w ill
create the wild assemblege of
costumes worn by the patient s
and their attendants .
Marat , to be portrayed by Linwood Na y lor , will remain seated
In his batht ub at the center of
the sta ge thro ughout the entire
prod uction and will be daref ully
attended to by his faithful mistress , Simonne Evard , played by
Amy Raber . Dan Demczko will
The Persecution And Assassination —Of- Jean-Paul- Marat As"
Performed By The Inmates Of
The Asylum Of Charenton Under .
The Dir ection Of The Mar quis
De Sade is the " title of the
extraordinary dramatic hit of
Berlin . London , and New York
that will be presented by th e
Bloomsburg Players on November 5 ,6, and 7 at 8:15 p.m.
campus in H aas
on
the
Auditorium.
The lunatic Asylu m of Charenton was the actual institution
which housed the diabolical Marqui s De Sade in his final days
and where he lies buried. Pete r
the
German - born
Weiss ,
Swedish citizen who is the aut hor
of Mara ty^ade, conceived of his
play when he learne d that the
director of the asylu m employed
t heatr ical per f ormances by the
Inmates as therapy long before
the science of psychiatry had been
developed^
Marat Sade concerns the pitting of two opposing philoso phi es
of revolut ion— the malevolent individualism of Sade against that
of the arch-revolutionary , JeanPaul Marat , who was murdered
by a young woman in order to
stop his violent oppr essions of
the people. The story Is presented as a play-within-a- play,
pr esumably written by Sade and
enac ted by a wild assortmenc
of deran ged patients In the institution — male lechers , renegade priests , hyster ical females — under the watchful(?)
Kampus Nook
be seen as Sade , the Infamous
nobleman whose name Is used to
signify the aberrant infliction of
pain . Mar at»s murderess , Char lotte Cor day, who thought of her -
"BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL VALUE"
Across from the Union
|
Portable Typewriter^^^BrSS!!^^** ^^3um
^
C \Ms\ V WJ ^Wi ^W ^BFa ^ ^ ^^ ^ ^^ ^*^ ^ ^ ^^"™^^^^^**"
I
\w\Uj
yb»u l9 Just perfect for students,ofLI *-~ tf l m m **V flee or home use. Many fea -
\ ... *... ,,...».........
j
r tures found in expensive machines.
'.
Platters
Every
Day
Plain « Ham Hoagltt,
Cheese • Pepperenl • Onion
Plua . Our own Made lee
Cream.
Take Out Orders :
Easy Terms ^ifiisii^
Z^^^ H i^s^i^Hl
14 W. Main &>.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 1781S
Hot
.'
Hours: Men. > Thurs 9:00*
11)00
Frida y
9:00-12:00
Saturda y
4:30-12:00
Sunda y
11:00-11:00
•» > • < : r
t < #. i
f t
i
i
<
i
(4) Proposed
amendments
which receive the required approval by the Executive council
of the Committee on Student Affairs will .be submitted to the
College Council of the Community Government Association for
action . A 2/3 vote of the total
membership of the College Council will be required for passage
of the amendment .
(5) All amendments approved
as indicated in items 1,2,3, and 4
above will become effective immediately after they have been appro ved by the Pr esident of the
College .
(6) All amendments approved
before June 1 will be included
in the Pilot and made public immediatel y through the Maroon an d
Gold .
(7) Public announce ment of the
amendin g pr ocedure shall be
made not less than twice a semester through the Maroon and
Gold . This announcement will be
the responsibility of the Executiv e Council of the Committee on
Student Affairs.
Fondest
Remem brance
Is...
Showcases
(continued fro m page one )
The display also includes three
slabware pieces by Ed Theiman ,
who likes to refine natural forms
to create organic feeling. Ed
showed his ability by forming
three slabs over different rocks .
The welded seam s of one may
remind you of metal welded together . All , however , will give
you organic feeling.
Ed' s non-objective work is
par alleled by an abstraction by
Paula
Demetriko poul us. Her
eagle , made of coils and slabs ,
glazed with copper oxide , shows
that natural objects can be abstracted in ceramics as well as
other media .
The exhibition is completed by
•two wheel-thrown pieces by a former stu dent , Lois Wettstone .
These show just what can be done
with a potter 's wheel and a ball
of clay.
Charlie 's
PIZZA
A
HOAGIES
Open ftU UtOO pjn.
Closed 1x30 to 3t00 p.m.
Every Doy But Friday
Pil
5 to 7
DIUVIIY
8:30 to 11,30
Regular and King Slie
HOAGIES
FLOWERS
784-4406
Phon e 7844292
Bonded World Wide
127 W. Moin
BLOOMSBURG
Delivery
Beads and Fish Nets
j ust arrived
THE STUDIO SHOP
5f I
. Main St. , Bloomsburg
794.1818'
e)
•
•
•
Distinctive Gifts
Framing
Wallsca ping
Music
An Open Letter ....
Editor 's Note: The following was
received from Dr, Joseph T.
Skehan , professor of economics
at Eloomsburg State College, on
Sunday, October 18, 1970. For
ease of presentation , the Maroon
and Gold Is presenting It In an
"open-letter11 form. This article
does not necessarily represent
the opinions of the M & G or its
editors.* Also, the Maroon and
Gold has not at anytime mentioned dismissal .
leges (AAC- Administrators national organi zation), and the
Association of Governing Boards
of Colleges and Universities
(AG3) — all members organs of
the American Council on Education.
This departure from professional academic procedures and
norms has produced the undesireable consequences they were designed to prevent. For example,
the Administration by its failure
to consult with the faculty in
question has fostered the repetition of much misinformation of
an elementary sort about this
matter.
Respectively on 1 October 1970
and 9 October 1970 the BSC
President informed Professor
Por ter and Dr. Skehan of their
suspension
from classroom
duties. The President was informed that this action was
il egal, because the Administration violated both the Bloomsburg
State College procedures regulating such matters as well as the
parallel standards of the AAUP
and AAC (1958 statement on dismissal procedural standards).
On Friday, October 16, 1970
the press and radio carried
stories emanating from the Administration of BloomsburgState
College concerning the suspension of Dr. Joseph T .Skehan
from his teaching duties.
At its formal meetings on 12
September 1970 and on 15 September 1970 the Economics Department, unanimously approved
final course assignments for its
professors. Us formal decisions
rested on several weighty
academic grounds. According
to academic standards the primary responsibility 'for this kind
of decision quite naturally rests
with the faculty.
On Friday October 16, 1970,
The Administration intervened
the
Maroon & Gold and the pubIn a clearly discriminatory
lic
media
, press and radio , pubmanner in the course assignlished
stories
based on one or
ments only of Professor Porter
more
Press
Releases
issued by
and Dr. Skehan-respectlvely the
the
Administration.
Senior Member of the Department
and the Secretary of the DepartBy this action the Administrament. The procedures used by
the
tion
violated Article 8 of the 1958
violated
the Administration
Statement on DisAAUP/AAC
GovernUniversity
College and
missal
Procedures.
This prothe
by
approved
Statement
ance
American Association of Univer- cedure clear ly limits publicity to
sity Professors (AAUP), the "time of the hearing" and the
Association o f American Col- lik e, until completion of all col-
Primack
(cont in ued f ro m page one)
The n. are two good reasonsfor
this. On the one hand , a college,
of all Institutions , should investigate before it speaks, so that
it knows what it is talking about ,
before it addresses the public at
large.
On the other hand tossing the
matter into the public media may
prejudice condtfct of the investigation. E mphasis shift from
lact-nnding and verification,pr ocedural issues and judicious reflection to press agentry and
public image manipulation — the
techniques of Madison Avenue,
not of a college.
Recently the ScrantonCommission reported to the President
of the United States that
restraint , understanding and
reconciliation were desperately
needed on campuses in the country . Academic procedures provide the necessary restraints.
But they must be followed.
BIOLOGY CLUB
There will be a social meeting,
Wednesday, October 21, at 7:00
p.m., outside room 134 in Hartline . The purpose of this meeting is to get acquainted with
each other and break from the
usual order of business.So wear
old clothes and be prepared for
a surprise, it will be worth coming to see what 's happening.
POETRY
Poetry can pay off . The Eight
Annual Competition of the Kansas
City Poetr y Contest is awarding
$1 ,600 in cash prii.es including
six $100 awards for single poems
by f ull time undergraduates .
For details , see the posters in
the English Department Office ,
first floor Bakeless .
SPANISH
Improve your Spanish comprehension and conversations .Learn
about the culture of one of the
many countries whose native
tongue is
- Argentina .
The President of the United Join BSC'Spanish
s
exchange
,
States recently appealed for a Graciela Maldonado andstudent
Mrs
.
return to the "rule of reason" Whitme for lunch at 12:00 Monin American colleges. It is day andr Wednesday
at the Scranindeed regrettable that Blooms- ton Commons For further
.
burg State College has violated mation call Extension 371, infor.
11:00
over and over again the pro- - 12:00 Monday, Wednesday,
or
cedural standards which consti- Frid ay.
tute the framework for the "rule
of reason."
WCTU
Joseph T . Skehan, Ph. D .
Congratulation s to Jane Elmes,
Associate Professor of
a
Junior from Berwick , the 1970
Economics
National Champion of (are you
ready for this) the Women ' s
seven day limit really applies Christian Temperance Union
CGA
to CGA minutes).
Oratory Contest held recently in
At this point, Pillagalli sus- Washington , Pennsylvania. Think
(co ntinued from page- one)
the referendum to suspend admin- pended the meeting to allow the
of all the f un Jane could have
up with
istrators as voting members of executive board time to clear
her $75 first prize!
CGA . Of the 17 % of the college this matter . The meeting was to
community voting, 18% voted be reheld the following night,
Tuesday, Oct . 13.
against the referendum .
Brennan then , asked why some
At Tuesday night' s meeting,
of these people were still on the
Town authorities announced
College Council . Over 2/3 of President Nossen was the main
that
the street sweeping schedule
center
of
attention
.
the students voting had voted tor ,
will
remain in effect , as posted
The
heart
of
his
delivery
was
and according to the Constitution ,
(supported
that
House
Bill
999
until all leaves are
on
streets,
this was enough to remove them .
the
Public
School
law)
passed
by
down
off
the
trees and gathered
IRREGULARITIES
gave
the
adminisup.
Feb
17
1970,
,
.
It was then pointed out by Mr .
Mulka that the referendum of trative heads full responsibility
last spring was considered full of for all that happens on the college
"irregularities ." John Hankin campus . Since he is responsible
asked that the irregularities be for all on campus , he is respon sible for the outcome of the elecpointed out .
Oct . 2 2 — 9 a .m , — Chenango
Mulka replied saying he had tions,
For
ks Central Schools , Chenango
debate
After
some
unscheduled
been in touch with several stuForks
, New York — Any ina
motion
was
on
the
matter
,
dents who did not vote, but had
terested
teaching candidates;
proposed
to
end
debate,
Mr
.
their names crossed from the
Oct
28
- 9:30 a.m . - Army
Norton
seconded
and
President
list . Also he said that names of
Medical
Specialist Corps . —
departed
Nossen
,
people who were student teaching
Army
Occupational
or Physical
Norton
then
made
a
motion
to
or had transferred , had also been
Therapy
Program
,
(Men
or woup
a
committee
of
three
to
set
crossed off .
men);
legalizing
study
the
matter
of
He further stated that the
Oct . 28 - 11:00 a.m . - New
President of the College and the the CGA constitution .
York
City Public Schools , New
Those appointed to the commitDean of Students have the right
York,
N .Y . - All areas .
to accept or reject the referen- tee were Mark Foucar t, Frank
Pizzoli , and Mr , John Walker .
dum .
There w a s considerable Mr , Norton suggested that Mr,
comment from the floor regard- Dadice be consulted as an advisor
ing a memo that was sent or to the legal aspects .
BUDGET DISCUSSED
Continental Breakfast (toast ,
not sent by the President of the
original
Getting
back
to
the
cereal
, juice , pastr y, etc .) is becollege to certify the referendum ,
a
motion
was
made
to
agenda
,
Mike Hock , Vice President of
bur g.
CGA , made a motion to table consider the budget at a later
In the miscellaneous business ,
the discussion until the matter date, Tom Brennan seconded
the motion , but it was defeated, it was asked If the preside nt of
of the memo was clarified .
After the budget was approved , the Student Union Committee
Dor Remsen then suggested
Pillagalli
asked whether or not
could be an ex-officio member of
that the enti re meeting be adthe
CGA
could
allot funds for a the council , it was decided that
journed until the voting order
bus to take students to State
he would be invited to all meet.
and who can vote be straightened
Ings , as a gues t , In the future ,
out . Hoc k made a motion to sus- College Day at Harrisburg.
Mr . Norten suggested that the
Mi ke Hock made a mot ion to
pend the meeting and it was
college pay the expense of at least abolish the present method of
seconded by John Hankin .
selling the BNE tickets . He said
H owever , Bob Medford was one bus . John Hankin wondered
if we'll be getting a worthwhile
that it was not as profitable as
stan ding and the motion could not
it's enough to be vigor ously fighting against it .
Here Primack digressed to
make an observation on the
Weatherman mentality . They believe that if you try one tactic
to right the wrongs of your group,
and it hasn't worked , e.g. mass
demonstrations , then you are under an obligation to do something
more drastic , like throwing
bombs . That , he said , does not
follow . What follows is that you
are under an obligation to do
something more effective like
or ganizing on a permanent basis
to gain access to the media to
get your views across,
Primack's remarks here were
presented on the backdrop of a
fable of a garden party held on a
lush green lawn in the middle of
a mismal swamp. The swamp
dwellers and seme of the party
goers begin to realize that the
swamp exists because of the party
and that all the world could really be a garden party. The fable
describes how party goers become upset and consider rude
those who no longer want to play
party games, but do not attempt
to dc something about the swamp.
For this they are called "Swampies " behind their backs. Out of
this conflict grew two moralities .
There was the party goer moral lty where goodness was defined in terms of one 's dress
and skill in party games, and
there was the swample morality
where it was defined in terms of
one 's committment to ending the
swamp.
The fable was advanced both to
illustrate his theory of the moral
responsibility of groups and to illuminate the polarization which
has taken plaice in America today. be recognized
.
The 1970-71 Obiter will hold a
•faff meeting thlt Thursd ay,
Oct. 22, 1970. The meeti ng
iftafl be held in the Obiter
office en t he second floor of
Waller Hall at 7:00 p.m.,
room 231. All those that
signed up at registra tion
should attend thlt mooting.
legiate procedural steps.
Brief s
Medford said that " ever yone
was grab bing at all kinds of
straws " a n d
looking for
loopholes ,
Brennan further questio ned the
validation of the referendum , Mr ,
Wal ker stated that there was a
seven-day provision In the con *
stitution saying that If In seven
days the president doesn 't reply,
the re ferend um Is approved (the
SWEEPING
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
BREAKFAST
return on our investment .
Janet Boyanoskl said we'll get
more back than we invested and
Bob Medford called it "a new experien ce."
M ike H ock , sittin g in (or President P lllagallL, recognlzed Plllagalli,who made a motion to accept
the PSASG statement , A motion
was then made to provide funds
for the cost of one bus to take
stu dents to the rally in Harris-
the previous method .
Norton stated that we should
not re-eva luate the new system
until it has been given a fair
trial . The motion was defeated ,
but Hock suggested that a comm ittee be established to study
the situat ion .
The meeting was adjourned by
Pilla galli. The next scheduled
CGA meeting is M onday, October
26 , 1070.
In g served Monday through Friday in Dining Room B of Scranton Commons f r om 8:15 to 9:00
a .m .
OLYMPIAN
Submissions are now being accepted for the 197 1 Olympian ,
BSC 's literary magazine , Allan Maurer , editor , announced .
Short stories, poetry, Hiaku,
and works in progress , are sought
for the student publication. Submissions may be made to Box
293 , Waller , See "Oli mp peon "
feature on page two for further information .
Byrd
(co ntinued from
page three )
to understand that one doesn't
interfer with another 's appreciation of such an involved , complex and engaging art for m as
modern jaz z or classical guitar
by discussing the attractiveness
of one"s date for the all-impor tant Ides of March concert the
following evening. And it was a
bit embarrassing when Mr . By r d
had to remark that there might
be better and more mutually
tolerable things to do in the darkness of the gym than talk .
The girls next to me found out
what he was like . One was wearing a "psychedellically " painted "Love" T-shirt . When someone behind her found it necessary to ask her to allow him to
enjoy the concert in silence, it
became quite obvious that the
most basic prerequisite for love,
respect , was sadly lacking.
Nevertheless, many students
did enjoy the concert . Many were
introduced to music far beyond
the self-imposed horizon of top
40 AM radio. In more ways than
one, it was an educational as well
as an entertaining experience.
Racists
(continued from page t hree;
peoples of Spanish descent as
often as that against Blacks , it
does exist , and subtle as it is ,
it is_ a sickness and it needs
curing. And my Jewish brother ,
don 't thi nk that " Kike isn 't used
around here.
I really don't know what the
reason for this racism Is , bu t 1
can speculate . It may be that
the upbringing of these sick
people is the cause of their
malday, but where there 's a wi ll ,
there 's a way , and man , you can
cure It.
One of my favorite myth s is
that one that goes through the
minds of some white guys when
they see a white chick with a
black guy. Myth : aw well , she
j ust wants a bigger penis than
white guys can give her. You
know the myth , don 't you men?
Did it ever occur to you that that
chick finds that guy more interesting, intriguing? Just might be I
Anyway, I think you racists
should take a look at yourselves
in the mir ror of the mind , and
if you look real hard , you may
find out that you just don 't understand your bro ther , and that can
only mean th at you don 't und erstand yourself ver y well.
Dave Watt
FORUM
(Co ntinued fr om page three )
ful level — something tried in
man y ar eas of the college , ^y
in itiati ng student involvement a
collect ive and genuine feeling of
pr ide can be Introduced to and
taken on by the student body.
Throug h this gr oup concern constructive chang e by wny of microscopic evaluation of issues confronting th e college can be accomplishe d. Comm unication Is
(or all sides If a community is
to advanc e in any direct ion. Communication br eeds understandi ng....understanding la conducive
to succesg....success scratches
the sur face of perfection .
Annual Ed. Confe rence
Dr. Henry Ray
Dr . Henry W . Ray , Director of
Learning Resources for the Centennial Schools of Warminster ,
Pennsylvania , will prese nt a
stimulating multi-media progr am
entitled "Art Education For Perception and Insight " , announced
by Dr . Percival R . Roberts , III ,
chairman of the Bloomsbur g State
College art department.
The prograjn will be presented
at J l a.m., Oc tober 24, 1970, in
the Haas Gallery of Art , as part
Iff you go to BSC, try to locate yourself in this crowd. It's doubtful that you will succeed. This shot is of Thursday's State Collof the art education section of the
( Photo by Foucart )
ege Rally in Harrisburg
24th Annual Education Conference.
Dr . Ray received his ED. D.de,gree from Colu mbi a University
and has been active professionally in numerous educational capac itites , among the m teaching at
the college level at Teachers ColDr. Henry W. Ray
Columbia
University ,
Who
Have
Nothing
"
Sunday night , the BSC Concert
, "Com e Sat - lege ,
Glassbo/o State , Universit y of
Choir put a crowning finish on an ur day Mornin g", the Dionne WarHe was Project Direcor for
wick
h
i
t
"Paper
Mache
Homecoming
Week,
unforgetable
", Pennsylvania , Lehigh University USOE Title VIII B "Education al
end. A r ecordcro wd of over 1500 "Close to You " , and many more . and the Exte nsion division of Media and Heurstic Learning **
Those who attended were well Pennsyl vania State University . and a consultant to numerous
attended the Pops Concert pre pleased , In fac t , surprised to hear
othe r Federal programs and prosented in Haas Auditorium.
Mr , Stani slaw say, "That' s every
ject s in the area of the humanities.
Mr . Richard Stanislaw , new Di- song we know !" So surprised that
An Associate editor of the
rector of the seventy member they called for an encore and reJOURNAL
OF C OMMUNIC Achoir for 1970 , has been working peat of an almos t un-re peatable
TI ON , Dr . Ray . has also writte n
with the grou p since September . danc e routine.
If you missed the performance ,
numerous articles for AUDIO *
Sunday 's hour of continuous popyou
owe
it
to
yourself
to
catch
the
VISUAL INSTRUCTIO N, EASTular music included nine solos
Christinas
pr
ogram
being
preERN
ARTS BULLETIN , NEA
Am
ong
choreograph
y.
and unique
JOURNA L and most recently In
the numbers were songs like: "T pared now.
SMITHSONIAN magazine wher e
he describes his innovative ,
Oliver J . Larmi , Professor of multi • media experiment of
LEARNING IN THE ROUND conPhilosoph y at BSC , has recallThe first r egularly scheduled formal agenda be suspended and ed the highlights of the text of ducted in the "Special Expe rience
CGA meetin g took place last start with the fourth item-le gali- Professor Max well Primack' s Room " of Warminster , Penna .'s
Monday at 7:00 P . M . in Carver
zation of the Commun ity Govern- address . Dr . Primack spoke to new comprehensive elementary
Hall .
ment Association Constitution . the Philosoph y Club on Tuesday , school.
preliminaries , Tom
After
This remarkable audio-visual
A discussion followed regard- October 13, concernin g the " Mor suggested
that the ing the referendum of last year al Responsibility of Grou ps " .
Brennan
faculity uses an arra y of pr ojectand the results . In reviewin g Mr . Larmi' s summation follows: ors an d s tereo un it s to immer se
the past , Brennan said in last
If you 're white , are you guilty student viewers in a simulate d
year 's referendum , appr oxi- for the wrongs suffered by environment of an "ever-c hangmatel y 82 % voted in favor of blac ks ? Not necessaril y, said ing, tapestry of images , colors ,
Primack . If you're white , y ou and shapes " which adds a dim(continued on page eight)
have special respo nsibili ty to ension of enrichment not avai lable in textbooks or more standblacks which when discharged
ar d teachin g methods.
will free you from blame incurrAll und ergraduate students who
ed by white society.
wish to atte nd BSC for the Spring
Here is his theory . Special reSemester 1971 must attend ONE
sponsibilities are acquired if yotr
of the TEN meetin gs to be held
belong to a group and personal in Haas Auditorium Wednesday ,
ly benefit when it exploits anOctober 21. and Thursday , Octobother even though you don 't do
er 2 2.
any of the dirty wor k . For inIf you don 't have a class in stance , if you benefit from cheap
At these meet in gs stu dents will
Dr . Robert J . Nossen , Presifill out "mark- sense " f orms to be Bakeless make a point , an yway to food pr ices because of the exdent
of Bloomsburg State College ,
read by machine and tallied to de- visit the first floor . There you ploitation of black migrant farm
will
be inducted as an honorary
ter mine the courses to be offer- will find the wor ks of four stu - wor k ers , you incur special remem
ber of the Iota chapter of
ed next semester . An opportunity dent ceramicists on display in sponsibilities to help them . Now
Sigma
Alpha Eta , Professional
to pre pare a secon d an d fina l the showcases . Some of the pieces if you do what you can to help,
Speech
Hearing Frater nity
course selection will be provided have been purchased by the art you 're
not bein g nobl e or at BSC and
The
Induction will take
.
department for its permanent col- char itable anymore than you are
in November .
place
toni
ght
Oct . 21 , in the
,
lection
, but all are intended to In attem pting to pay any debt ,
The meetin g schedule is as folHearin
g and Commun center
for
create Interest in a busy, im- inasmuch as you are simply dislows:
ication
Disorders
on the ground
personal place .
Wednesday , October 2 1
char ging an obligation . But if an floor of Navy Hall , at 6:30 P M
. .
One showcase contai ns a han g- En glishman (who presumably
9:00 a.m.
In addition to the Honorary
ing piece by Bob Behr , who con- does not benefit from the exploita11:00 a.m.
centrates on hand-bu ilding ce- tion of American farm workers ) Level of membership , the loca l
1:00 p.m.
ramics . Th is slabware piece , one helps out , he woul d be noble or chapter has membership on the
3:00 p.m.
levels of Affiliate , Associate ,
of a ser ies which may remind
7:00 p.m.
char itable , because he ' s un d er no Key, and H onorary for
students .
the viewer of leather pouches special obligation to do so, If ,
Thursda y, October 22
The
Honorar
y
level
of
memberand shoulder bags , skillfully com- however , you benefit, but do noth9:30 a.m.
¦
bines texture and color with a ing, you stand guilty of not meet- ship is confered upon a profess11:00 a.m.
ional person who has demonstracomplimentary- material , a leath2:00 p.m.
ing your obligations .
outstanding Interest and serer stra p, to make people think
3:30 p.m.
Now some ar gue that unless you ted
vice
to the pr ofession of Comof materials othe r than ceramic s. actuall y succeed in rightin g the
7:00 p.m.
municat
ion Disorders .
If it is Impossible for you to However , his favor ite piece on wron gs of your group, you haven 't
During
the meetin g, Dr . James
atten d one of these meetings , display Is a small , white , ab- discharged your obligations . But
Bryden
Chair
man of the Depart ,
contact the Registrar Immedi- stract for m which is really a that' s not so, said Prima ck, It' s
ment
of
Communication
Diswheel'distorte d piece , found at sufficient If you've done all you
ately ,
Be sure to take along a suffi- the opposite end of the same can . To discharge your respon- orders , will present an award to
cient number o! soft lead pencils showcase . You'll have no trouble
sibility to blacks , tor example , the outgoing Chairman , Dr , Margaret Lefevre , John Dellegrotto ,
and the PRE -SCHEDU LING book- pickin g out either of these pieces, you need not actuall y end racism;
a sophomore from Berwick. Is
let , with course offerings and a
(continued en peg* seven )
(continued
tight
)
en
pa§t
President of the Iota chapter .
sam ple "mark-sense " form .
'70 Pop s Concert
Ends Homec oming
CGA Star ts Year
Meeti ng
Today !
Bakeless
Showc ases
Primack
Recapped
On Groups
Nossen
Inducted
Stewart Udall
Stew ar t Udall , former Secretar y of the interior and noted
author , will be the featured speaker at the General Session of the
24th Annual C onfere nce for Teachers and Administrators to Ix*
held at Bloomsburg State College
on Saturday , Cctober 24, 1970, in -^
Haas Auditori um at 12:15 p.m.
His topic will be , "Limits: The
Environmental Imperative ot the
1970' s."
Over 5 ,000 invitations have
been extended to teachers and
administrators in Penns ylvania
and nearby state s to attend this
Dr . C.
one day conference.
Stuart Edwards , Dean of the
School of Professional Studies ,
is chairman for the conference.
An outstanding grou p of educator s have been selected as speakers for various demonstrations ,
seminars , and sessions of the
divi sions of business , elementary , secondar y, and special education.
Durin g the luncheon in Scran ton Commons at 1:30 p.m., the
Bakeles s Center tor the Humanities , named for two generations
ot the Bakeless family aU ot whom
grad uated from the Bloomsburg
State Normal School , will be
dedicated. The presentation will
be made by William A; Lank ,
President of the Board of Trustees; the response by Dr. John
Bakeless , educator , sch olar , and
ret ire d arm y colone l.
Stewart Udall , who tor eight
year s as Secretar y of the Interior in both the Kennedy and Johnson Administrations fought for a
"new con serva ti on'* that would
In sure our coun t r y 's econom ic ,
social and moral he alth. Now ,
as head of The Overview Grou p,
which he formed in 1969 , he Is
dedicated to "creatin g a better
total environm ent for man " by
consulting and working with governmen ts and industries.
In addition to heading this pioneer ing international consulting
firm , Mr. Udall Is a Visiting
Professor of Environ mental Humanism at Yale Universit y and
the author of two Imp or t ant books ,
" 1976 Agenda For Tomorrow '*
and "The Quiet Crisis ."
A 1948 grad uate of the University of Arizona , Udall is a
lawyer by profe ssion and the son
of a Chief Justice of the Arizona Supr eme Court , Shortly
after his re-election to a fourth
term as a Unite d States Representative from Arizon a's Second
District , he was sworn in as
Secretary of the Interior , January 20 , 1961.
YOUR
OWN
THING
is Coming
Monday,
October 26,
Haas Auditorium
The H ole in the Wall
? R£.DicTlrtG
IS
j ^.
jim sachetti
^^
"Homeward bound ,
I I:p
i
T T rv r^-r T
^
~
1
r--\ j t g ms5 iot 4 r T~~"\
1
I wish I was homeward bound ... ''
"Hey! Anybody home? Mom ,
I' m home ."
"Tommy? Is that you?"
"Yep, it' s me all right ."
"I'll be right down honey
(SMACK) how are you dear?
You look fine."
"I' m OK Mom ."
"W ell , how does it feel to be
a college man? Is it hard? Do
they feed you good ? Are you doing your work?' '
"Oh , it' s pretty hard , I have to
study about seven or eight hours
every nite, just to keep up. But
I' m doing OK , and the food in the
Commons is great so I guess
I' m ail right . Say, is Dad»home
yet? I was..er wondering if he 's
still ..uh mad about that letter ."
"Well Tommy, he has cooled
off a bit but he'll still start on
you about it so if I were you I'd
j ust grin and bear it . It is for
your own good you "know."
"But Mom , if he'd just let
me "
"Here he comes now , you can
tell him about it at supper."
Later that evening, "at supper ".
"Son, I realize that this is your
first weekend home from school
and I hesitate to bring up anv
.. ..
....
(*0 John st oo ^ f/
Letters ....
of all
B .S.C. students,
To 95^
Are queens , floats , football
games, bee r , card games , and
body-snatching your prime (or
sole) interests? If so, you are
in deep trouble.
Think about it .
Dave Hartranft
Dear Editor:
I would like to commend Jim
Sachetti for his well written and
timely articles in his column
'The Hole in the Wall .' I especially enjoyed his article in the
Wednesday, October 14 paper . He
has been a bright spot in what I
consider a dismal situation .
Moving over to page three, I
would like to ask Jack Hoffman
if he knows anything about the
different things that can psych an
athlete for a game . I will admit
that his attempt to dig-up information on BSC opponents and deliver
it to students shows that he is
trying. But, to go as far as to
print names along with strengths
VOL. IL
and weaknesses is a little risky.
Does he realize that most of those
players get a chance (and they
take it) to read any M & G' s that
happen to be lying around? I
know that if I were Larry Hawkey
(M & G Friday, October 16) and
read what was printed there you
could bet your last penny that I
would not play poorly. Nothing
psychs an athlete like being told
in print , that he is the weak spot
on the team .
Sincerely,
Bob Schultz
To the Editor:
The recent issue of the
OLYMPIAN is for me a distinc tive and imaginatively conceived
piece of work. The artistry of
its layout and the quality of its
writing make it a pleasure to
look through the magazine.
Although the offerings are
slight and lack variety, this can
be remedied only by the students
themselves when they submit more
of the ir work to the magazine .
THE MAROO N AND GOLD
NO.
9
Bill Teitsworth
Editor-in-Chief
Business Manage r
Managing
dor Remsen
Editor
Tom Funk
Newt Editor
Sam Trapant
Co-Feature Editors
Jlm Steh#tf |
Terry Blast
Spor t s Edito r
J ack Hoffman
Copy Edito r
Li nda
Co-Clrcola tlon Mgr«.
Pat Heller
Carol Kith baugh
W»eto Editor
Mark Foueert
Art Editor
Advisor
E nnls
John Stug rln
Kenne th C. Hoffmen
STAFF: Shelley B r un oz xl , Kete Calpln , Jim Chapman,
Carmen Clull o, Lore Duckwo rth , Ksthl Farrell , Jim
Fl y nn , Ke ren Gable , Elaine Hartung, Pern Hickey , Andres
H offmen , Cethy Jack , Karen Kelnard , Suti Krett,
Deb
Mend ed, Cindy Michener , Jeenne M o r g a n ,
Rsndee Pray, Sonya Rutkowikl , To m Sc hofl eld , Gl en
Spottt , Dave Wright , Joanna Chowka , Sue Sprsgue, Jody
Hoff , Mike Hock , Frank Plsioll , Devo Watt , Jett e Jame s.
All opinion s expressed by columnists snd feat ure writers,
incl uding lett er-to *the- editor, »f not necessarily those of the
publication but those of the Individual !.
Call Ext , m or Writ e 301
This issue ought to give the incentive to do so.
Nonetheless, the way in which
the fine photography blends with
and complements the story and
poems creates a total effect that
is quite impressive—at least for
me .
My congratulations to Harris
Wolfe, editor of the current
OLYMPIAN , and to his staff and
to the contributor s for putting
together a magazine that is
quietly
and
beautifully
distinctive . It's an achievement
of which we all , I think, can be
fairly proud .
Sincerely,
Richard Savage
Respect and Consideration Letter
Some of the people who use
the college library have taken it
upon themselves to Indulge in
certain practices which are uncalled for . Before I continue ,
please note the use of the word
"some ", it is meant to imply
that a minority of people are
involved . The practices to which
I am referring concern the removal of periodicals from the
library (periodicals which are
designated "for use in library
only "), and the tearing of articles
from those periodicals which remain in the library. Not only
are these practices uncalled for ,
but they can be very irritating
to any Individual who is doing
research .
What can be done about such
practices? One possible solution
to the problem could be to search
people before they leave the
library, b u t such a practice
seems out-of-place on the college
level . There
is , nowever, a
simpler and much more appro pr iate solution to the problem .
The preferred solution calls for
nothing more than showing a little
res pect a n d
consideration;
respect f or someone else's property (in this case the library 's),
an d a little consideration for the
next person who might want to
use the periodic al .
Such an
att itude would
increase the
effectiveness of our library, and
benefit ever yone concerned .
So if you ' re tempted to indulge
In one of the practices mentione d,
stop and think for a moment how
you would feel If the article or
periodic al you were looking for
was missing, and then why not
try doing what a lot of other
people do • use the copy machine ,
or sit down with your pencil and
paper and copy the desired information ,
Brlnley J , Crahall Jr .
unpleasant subj ects. However, l
feel it is my duty as a fathe r to
steer my son straight . So, needless to say, I was disappointed
to learn that you had joined one
of those radical campus groups.
I mean, your mother and I realized that something like this could
happen in the best of families,
but we never thought that our own
son would go so low ."
"Hold it right there father . I
did n't say I had joined a radical
group, I only said that I went to
a meeting of CGA ."
"Aha , and what does that stand
Communist
for? Probably,
Groups of America ."
"No dad, it stands for Comm unity Government Association , "
"Aha , Government . You college kids have no business in
politics. Leave government to
competent elected officials like
President Agnew .'"
"No dad , not THAT kind of government .And Agnew is only VicePresident ."
"That 's what 1 said . And if it's
not that kind of government , then
what is it ."
"It' s the College government ,
dad . It' s elected students who take
care of college activities ."
"D on't give me that story son,
a college has Administrators to
do that . That' s the trouble with
colleges today, those administrators are too soft . They should
be in charge, not the kids ."
"But you see dad, at our school,
the Administration is in charge.
No one questions theirdecisions.
Why just last week they fired two
teachers without "
"Good , glad to hear it . Th ey
should get rid of anyone they sus pect of being a Communist . Too
damn many of them in our college s."
"But dad , these teachers
weren't Communists , all they
did
"
"Ah , don 't believe what you
hear son . You can't be too careful these days, it' s a tough life
son and if you j ust keep^ studyIng and working, in four years
you'll get your degree and ther
you can form your own opinions.
Until then, listen to your father
and stay away from those subversive meetings . You just keep
studying and don't worry about
government or what the Administration is doing. It' s none of
your business ."
Ed: Note: The following
article was reprinted from
The West-Minister Holcad,
October 2, 1970. ,
tential to be the very best country on earth .
...
....
"Gee dad , I never looked at it
that way, I guess you 're righ t .
Instead of thinking about everything, I'll go out for football instead ."
"W ay to go Tom , I knew you 'd
see it my way....You know Martha , we 've got a good boy."
"I know dear , they should all
be that good ."
Martha would be pleased to
know that most of them are.
PEACE INC.
The ideas in this column are
not necessarily those of Peace,
Inc , but are expressions of individual opinions by members of
Peace , Inc .
by Nick Padula
Meet you at the Holocaust:
My stand on current issues
may not seem very patriotic to
many Americans because they
fail to differentiate between
patriotism and nationalism .
Patriotism and nationalism differ on four key points: Patriots
want what is best for their country. Nati onalists think their country is best , no matter what it does,
Patriots want their country to
adhere to the highest laws of
man 's nature , and to the eternal
standards of j ustice and equality. Nationalists support their
country even if it violates these
eternal standards.
Patriotism means working for
the constant improve ment of your
country. It means speaking out
against your country 's leaders
and their policies when they become cruel , inhuman or incapable
of change. It means working for
the defeat of these leaders In the
next election. Nationalists blindly agree with a Hitler , a Castro,
or any other tyrant who waves
the flag, demands unquestioning
obedience to the "Fatherland ,"
and all the while undermines the
rights of the Individual.
Patriotism Is comparable to
faith or religion. It is based
on high ideals and .goodness.
Nati onalism compares to myth ,
superstition , and fantasy . Its
bases are Ignorance and hatred.
The following analogy serves
to clarify the role of the patriot .
Parents discipline their childr en and guide them along the
right paths not because they hate
them , but because they love their
children , and want them to become the best possible adults.
Just like parents, I and other
patriots disagree with the policies of our government not beca use we h at e A mer ica or are not
loy al , but because we trul y love
Ameri ca and what It originally
stood for - freedom , justice , and
equalit y - for all. We want
America to realize its full po-
In conclusion , we must realize
the difference betweenpatriotism
and nationalism. We must also
realize that America is pursuing
a very nationalistic course today. "We must learn what history has taught about other countries that have been very nationalistic , such as Nazi Germany ,
Tojo's Japanese empire , and
Facist Italy. None of these countries have come to any good end .
Nor will any country that pur sues nationalism. We must employ all legal and peaceful means
at our disposal to reverse the
trend tow ard nationalism in
America today, before it Is too
late .
0 lim p peo n
Love. Hate . Sex. Violence.
Nixon . Spiro T . Agony . These
may be among the subjects Included In th e 1971 Oly mpian ,
BSC » s literary magazin e. It 's up
to you.
W e need shor t stor ies, poetry,
essays, photo s, pencil , pen and
Ink drawing s . We have no taboos .
Any subject , an y style Is acceptable— our standard Is 'woul d we
like to read this story , poem ,
etc.. or look at this drawing if
we didn 't have to? "
We are looking for relevance.
We are looking for quality. But
what we find , again , is up to
you.
Submit your material to Box
293 , Waller Hall , marked "The
Olymp ian. "
Man uscri pts must be typed ,
prefer ably double spaced. Your
name should appear on a separate
sheet of paper. If mor e than one
page is enc losed , staple or paper
clip page s together .
This
year 's deadline is
Jan uary 1, An earli er deadline
may be announc ed If enough
materi al Is accep ted before that
date , so subm it early , like now.
The 1970 Olympian goes on
sale outside Hu sky Loungo this
week . It 's 40 cents , cheap . It 's
also klnda good. Bat I'm prejudiced . Why not buy a copy and
let us know what YOU think .
— Allan Maurer
Ho ora y For the Good
Old-Fashioned Way !
For th e Byrd
by Harris Wolfe
The canvas -covered floor of the
gym is already becomin g obnoxious and your neck is sore from
turning around to see who's coming in the doors . You rea lize
that there are more people here
than you ever thou ght would come
to see a jazz guitarist and the
two girls next to you are wondering what he 's going to be like
when the lights dim . Five unimposing musicians walk out and
mount the small stage . The y arran ge themselves in their respective positions , pick up their
instruments and begin.
The Charlie Byrd Quintet . No
747 could ever give you a tri p
like this . From the lilting melody
of a Bach gavotte to the rhythmic drive of "Aquarius ," this is
one stran ge bir d . At times it was
a sweepin g albatros s , gliding on
the long, open notes of th e alto
flute . Then they became somethin g else, with the trum pet 's
insistent voice sailin g over the
ocean . And yet another transforma tion prod uced an ur gent ,
excited sparrow , dar tin g out of
the underbrush , climbin g into the
sky.
For give me, I am obviously
new at this sort of thin g and
would not have attem pted to write
about it were it not for the fact
that no one else wanted to write
about it . Whe n someone yelled ,
"W ho was at the concert last
night ?" no one in the office replied . Hence this . 1 am una bl e to
give an authoritative dissertation on his music , but I feel
more than qualified to comment
on the juvenile behavior of so
many of Bloom sburg 's students .
No special training is required
(continu ed on page eight )
In this age of Nationwide controvers y concerning the illegal
use of dru gs, it is reassurin g
to know that Bloomsburg State
College has only been infiltrated
to a small degree . It ' s nice t o
know that there are still a few
of th ose good old-fashioned ,
schools left where the big kick on
Saturda y night isn't smoking
'gra ss', but 'is still getting .plain
old drunk.
It 's no unusual thin g to walk
aroun d campus on Friday or Saturda y night and pr acticall y stum ble across some over ly inebriate d male who has either had so
muc h he can 't walk , or jus t enough
that he's settling down for a long
nap. Nor is it unusual to head up
the stairs to the girls ' dor m and
be invited $o an all-night party by
one or more thoroughly soused
males spr awle d across the staircase , reeking to high heaven.
The reason they are thus soliciting dates is because their dates
(undoubtedly v e r y intelligent
young women) have abandoned
them , never to return , with the
stor y of how they must go up and
sign out for an overni ght I
I realize that B.S.C. has a
reputation for being a 'Suitcase '
college, and the social life can
be boring on weekends , but a per son can usuall y find something
to do. A gir l can wander around
until she gets an Invitation to
a booze party , or find a few
frat bro thers who need a date .
Jus t remember to take an over night beca use a girl never knows
what time she'll be getting back
if her escort happen s to get
drunk!
Okay , so y ou're a nice girl ,
and you don't drink , but you are
willing to make a personall y
guided tour of the Men 's dorms.
Isn 't it nice when your escort
deposits you in his room and runs
down the hall for a can (at fifty
cents a throw) before they run
out ? And if you don't want to
leave th e d orm , you can probably
find a little action down the hall
while your R. A. is at a frat
party !
When one of the girls in the
dorm happens to walk back and
f or t h in front of your room f our
or fi ve t i mes , and bids you goodnight with a little giggle and a
belch, you begin to wond er , and
ask her if she' s f eeling well .
"I don 't drink ," she protests ,
as you try to put her to bed. But
you begin to worry when she refuses to go to bed witho ut her little yellow ducky , and thr ows all
the other animals out of her bed ,
crying that she won't go to sleep
unti l you find it!
Fr eshme n fall victim to the older , more corrup ting Influences ot
the frat brother s. To see a girl '
tiptoein g down the hall and whisperin g *hi» to all people enro ute ,
and cursing out anyone who
wouldn 't return her salutation , is
the signal of an innocent young
freshman coming in after her
first frat party . Booze partie s
held by the side of a cre ek can
often result in daring fre shmen
coming in at two in the morni ng,
soaking wet up to their thigh s.
And the best example is. of
Racists
This Is just a few words from
an angry newcomer to Bloomsburg State College. When I entered BSC , I thought I was entering an insti tution where
mature adults acted in an openway toward social
minded
awareness. Appa rently I -was
mistake n, or bette r - naive . I
have since learned better.
It is about time that you people
who still have the words gook ,
spic , and nigger in your vocabulary grow up. It is reall y a
shame that you can refer to members of a different culture or rac e
only in derogator y terms.
M aybe the fact that I come
from an area that has a 35%
Black ' population gives me the .
maturity not to call a Black, a
coon, spade , or nigger, I tru ly
doubt that this is the case, thou gh ,
because had I been brought up
In a totally white Anglo-Saxon
envir onment , my parents would
still have tau ght me to respect my
b rot her , be he black , yellow, red ,
brown , or white.
The racism at thi s institution
should embarrass every student ,
faculty member , and administrator , an d ever y one wh o h as an y
self-res pect should take it upon
themselves to seek out this sickness - this cancer - and cut it
out before it grows out of proport ion.
Although you don't hear the
rac ism against orientals and
( continued on page eight)
cours e , the freshman afte r her
first real enc ounter with beer ,
par ading around in her floorlength nightgown pulling it up to
her bust , saying "Hi ! Want to
see my panties? Do you want to
know where beer goes? In here ,
and right down to here ! I have to
go to the little girls ' ro om !"
So it's reassuring to know that
while drugs on campus is a problem , the majority of the student s
at B.S.C. are still following the
heritage of th ousands of college
students before them; ruining
their livers and spendi ng Sunday
morning near a bathroom ,
by s.l.s., and stooge
FORUM
Frank M. Piz zoli
For the students who do excercise privileges as members
of thi s college community nothing is more upsetting than the
skepticism with which our motives for being involved in community affair s are viewed. As a
strong advocate and herald of a
new and open communication s
line , Dr . Rob ert J. Nossen somehow does not employ self-implemented methods designed to increase understanding .
During the C .G. A. meeting of
Oct. 13 , 1970, Dr . Nossen clinched unpro fessionalism by the roots
and openly questioned the motive
behind the amend ment to remove
the voting power of administrative members of C.G.A . App earing before a governmental body
and appr oaching actions on the
motiv ational grounds demonstrate not parliamentar y ineptness but rather a bad habi t of
aski ng the wrong things at the
wrong ti me . Dr . Nossen 's assumption that our motives for
p ursu ing t hi s p art ic ular issue are
not generated by genuine interest
In the educational process but
rather by othe r interests is incorre ct. After an unsuccessful
attem pt to exp lain moti ves t o our
President via an office appointment (April 10-70) I will again
tr y.
The intended rationale behind
suggesting a change in struc ture is to promote student responsibility and encourage student involvement on a meaning ( conti nued on page eight )
^HP ^BVST
Hi
BO I H I HOT
'
'
¦
Or ¦
U¦
I BoTaj
/ ¦!%# ¦^t mM ¦
¦
^k I ^B\ I Be
¦
¦#
¦
¦
¦ aj
Bm
WW
^CA^^ Wm ™ •¦•O^P'aBe^wTW ^ ¦^^^ ^^^ ^ ^*^ ^^^ ~^» ^ -^ -~- —w y
«• ¦»¦¦ -w •**¦
» ¦» ^^mm ^^ ^ » mimm ^^^ m^^ ^ ^ ¦- ^^
^^ a| ^¦^M ^ObVA ^ ISV A O)
^^"^^ — -^w ^^ —
^ W^ OJ ^^
—
—
—
— —
—
™
—
Co/d Wea th er Fails To Chili Spiri t of 43rd A nn ual Hom ecoming
L^-I__L^_^_^^_
*
BSC Band col or guard loads off tho 43rd annual Homecoming parade , Rout* began, in
the ' Centennia l Gym parking lot , followed ? tho major town streets, and concluded near
Athletic Park.
The Pueblo float was another of tho many in Saturday 's parade. SIO made tho float ,
and took first place.
Tho Charlie BVrd Quintet got it all tog ether , and, didn 't put on too bad of a show.
Jumping for joy at the ides of
March concert on Friday night ,
tho guitarist
seemed to bo
"fl ying high " .
Strumming
By rd.
¦¦JBhJBhJBJBJBJBJBJBJBJBJ^
along with Charlie
I
Bobbi Wynn and Homecomlna co urt we re tht center of this weeke nd's attention. Shown
above . Queen Bobhio received her crow n at the Ides of March concert on Friday night.
PHOTOS BY
MARK FOUCART
&
KATE CALPIN
Special Congratulati ons
are extended to the
Homocoming Committee
for a |ob well *
dono and a very
successful 43rd Annual
Homecoming .
Out of thai floats In Saturda y'* parade. Float * note* tho cute dells riding tho * float. A
Raaoedv Ann doll and a 'Pull' doll can bo soon slttlrw olde by sldo In tho fore ground.
Tho Idas of March show tM popul ar "V" for vic tory.
*t»ro yw» iaturday momlnoj by «re. All they cevtd do the n was
" pratfir? ' *••
Brokenshire
gain.
dro ps back to sand the pigskin screa ming for additional
Husky
yarda ge
Huskies Dump Mauraders
Bloomsburg State College football team, coming back from a
42-0 defeat last week at the hands
of West Chester , squeaked by the
Mauraders of Millersville State
College 23-17 Saturday afternoon ,
the Huskies Homecoming game
here at Athletes park in Bloomsburg.
Millersville scored first with a
37 yd . field goal Ly Karl Bivans ,
with 2:37 remaining in the first
quarter .
With 21 seconds remaining in
the first quarter , the Mauraders
moved out in front 10-0 when
quarterback Steve Lennox hit
split end Dave Rackovan with a
perfectly thrown pass covering
41 yds. Karl Bivans converted
the PAT .
In the second quarter , following
an inj ury to starting quarter-
BLOOM
BOWL
€)
WAFFLE
GRILLE
BOOKS...
OVER 8,000
back Mike Deveraux , Tom
Bloomsburg 's Bob Parry
Brokenshire moved the Huskies returned Karl Bivans punt after
85 yd s. in 9 plays to score safety 30 yds. to Millersville 48
their first touchdown . Fullback yd . line. Following passes of
Paul Skrimcovsky hit the,line at 20 and 9 yds . to Bill Firestine,
the two, bounced off , spun and Brokenshire passed to Firestine
scored with 10:05 remaining in on the 30 from where he raced
the first half . Bob ' Warner the distance to score with :56
attempted to run for the extra remaining. Neil Oberholtzer
point but was stopped at the kicked the extra point and the
1 yd . line. Score at half , MSC Huskies increased their win
10 , BSC 6.
record to 41, defeating Millersville State College 23-17.
Millersville posted the only Or der of scoring:
score in the third quarter, putFirst quarter ,
ting together an 80 yard drive in
12 pl ays, with Larry Hawkey
MSC: Bivans 37 yd . field goal;
scoring from the 5 on an end
Score
MSC 3, BSC 0 .
sweep. The point after touchdown
was good by Bivins and the MarauMSC: Rackovan 41 yd . pass
ders now lead 17-6.
from Lennox— Bivans PAT good.
Opening the second quarter
Second quarter ,
Mike Kolojejchick received a
pass from Tom Brokenshire good
BSC: Skrim covsky 2 yd .
for 23 yds . and a TD capping a
plunge
. Run att . PAT no good.
60 yd . effort by the Huskies , Bob
Warner took a pitch out and
Third quarter ,
made the 2 point conversion .
Score with 13:19 remaining, Millersville 17, Bloomsburg 14.
MSC: Hawkey 5 yd . sprout
left end TD - PAT Bivan .
Bloomsburg time now became
a factor for the Huskies . BloomsFourth quarter ,
burg moved the ball from Millersville 41 to the 1 where Paul
BSC: Kolojejchick 23 yd pass
Skrimcovsky had the ball Jarred fr om Brokenshire, Pitch to.Warloose and Millersville took poss- ner 2 pt conversion-good . Score
ession. Following three unsuc- MSC 17,.BSC 14.
cessful downs , Steve Lennox
deliberately scored a safety,
Safety on Lennox MSC's
making the score Millersville 17, QBBSC:Score
MSC 17, BSC 16.
.
Bloomsburg 16, BSC split end
with 1:56 remaining to be played .
BSC: Firestine pass 30 yds .
Brokenshire, Oberholtzer
from
With 7:30 left In the 4th quarter , Nell Oberholtzer attempted converted PAT good.
a 45 yd . field goal which hit the
Final Score: MSC 17, BSC 23.
rross bar and bounced back .
TITLES IN STOC K
I It's a book
w havt It tr wt can gtt It
Harr y Logan
Greeting Cards
Fine J ewelry
HENRIE'S
Card and Book Nook
40 W. Main St.
SHUMAN'S
WORLD TRAVEL
37 I. Main St., Bloomsbur g
PHONI 7M4420
For All Your Travel
Arran gements
R1SIRVATIONS , TICKltS,
TOURS, ITC.
AND
Repairing
All Alrllnts/Tr» ln»
« Hotels Handled
Application s for Yout h
Part Cards avi lit bit
your J twiltr Awttyfrom Horn *
fl W. Main St.
Bloomibum
' '
'
BSC's number 47, gets nailed as he heads for the goal lin e.
In another atte mpt, 47 seems to be clear but the tide is washing
In arou nd him. Ready to sweep him off his f«et.
Yanks May Leave
NYC
NEW YORK - The Yankees
may leave New York. The seriousness of their discontent with
New York City Is outlined In
excerpts from the following copyrighted editorial appearing exclusively In the November Issue
of Sport magazine , released on
October 15th:
"The editor s of Sport Magazine have learned from Impeccable sources that the Yankees
want to leave New York, Despite a fine won-lost record In
1970, the Yankees barely eked
out an attendance gain over last
year, Yankee management,which
means CBS, Is discouraged by
falling attendance , discouraged
by the artistic and financial clout
John 's Food Mtrkot
W. Mai n A Leonar d St.
Open 8 a.m. to 12 mid
Daily
Delicatt tie n
Full line of groceries
& snaeks
of the New York Mets , discour aged that they have to keep playIng In a ballpark they think Is obsolete. So the Yankees want out.
"The city of New York knows
of this ," the Sport article continues. "In fact , back In August,
M ayor Lindsay appointed a secret
task force to try and find a way
to keep Yankees In the city. If
this task force falls, If the Yankees do move , baseball will have
suffered Its worst blow ever,1*
Submit mattrlal t o tht
Maroon and Gold BSC Box
Ml or Ixt. 323.
Por Wtdntsday 's Id. —
Mutt bt tubmttttd by Sun*
day tvtnlng,
Por Friday 's Hd. — Must
bt aubmltt td by Tuttda y
tvtnlng.
Mattrlal
may alio bt
brought to tht offlet — WaiItr Hall, Room 234 ( Stcond
Ploor ).
^^^^^
^
^
^
^
^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^
^^^^
P^
^ P^M
B
MeIW
^^^^^^ P
¦^^¦^
¦^
^¦¦ ^b
b^i
bibbbibPw
b P
BjB
FETTER MANS
BARBER SHOP
— QUALITY —
Psot of Colltg t Hill
¦lotmtbur g, Pt.
i
'**
"" ¦" ¦ ""
"
•»**»¦"" " r- 'T1Wwn i " III MBIII Ml—1—If
CG A
Amendin g
Procedure
i
^^"
-^^^r
~^^^v
~^^^^r
^^^^^^v
^^^^ ^^—
^^
^^^^^
To comply with CGA regulations and keep interested students
informed , the amending pr ocedures , accor ding to the Bloomsbur g State College Joint Statement on Rights , Freedoms , and
Responsibilities of Students , is
being pri nted below . This pr ocedure was adopted by College
Council last year .
(1) Proposed amendments may
be submitted to the Executive
Council of the Committee on Student Affairs in duplicate , by any
member of the faculty , Student
Body, or Administrati on . One
copy of the pr oposed amendment
shall be submitted , by the Executive Council , to the Maroon and
GnltLfor publicatio n.
This Saturday morning just before the Homecoming Par ade , theHarriers of BSC met the Warrlor s of Eas t Stroudsburg S.C.,
up on the old golf cour se. It wa s
cold with int ermitent periods of
snow accompanied by about a 30
m.p.h . wind. The results wer e
however , as expected , with
Blocflisburg winning by 13 pt s.
• (2) Amendments may be proposed at any time . Those proposals received before February
1, will be considered and acted
upon befor e June 1. Proposals
submitted after Febr uary 1 will
be considered after June 1 and
action will be taken before February 1 of the subsequent year .
Amendments will be considered
in chronological order as pre sented .
In a score of 21-34.
The placings for Bloomsburg
were: 1st Tim Waehter (his 6th
first place run in a row) , 2nd
Terry Lee , 4th Paul Pelletier
(who was running despite his
illness), 5th Larry Horwitz , and
coming in 9th was Charlie Graham.
(3) A 2/3 vote of the total membershi p of the Executive Council
of the committee on Student Affairs will be required for passage
of the proposed amendment .
Marat - Sade To Be At BSC
self as a martyr to liberty will
be played by Mimi Ault. Tony
Kohl will portray the herald ,
dressed as a harleq uin , who
announces the scenes and descri bes the action of Sade 's play.
Bob McCormlc k will be cast as
Dupperret , an derotomaniac who
is portra ying Charlot te's lover;
Pete Gente le will take the role
of a mad pr iest in a straight jacket; and Shelby Treon , Rob ert
Casey, Ron Klientob and Steve
Rubin will play the four singer s
who repres ent the revolutionary
mob in song, dance , and mime.
Also featured , will be a various
assortment of lunatics , atten dants v and musicians.
Due to the unusual nature of
this production , it Is not recommended for ever yone. It Is not
suggested for the timid , the weak ,
or for children . Life Magazine
has said of Mara ^Sade, "Here
the lunacy and horror reach such
a pitc h th at almost every night
In the middle of the performance
a pair of theatregoers start arguing. One person — usually the
man — says he can 't stand it a
minute longer and stomps up the
aisle. The other says she Is
absolutely fascinated and refuses
to budge ."
Ed. Note: Try your patients ?
eyes of their attendants , and ends
with the stabbin g of Mara t in
But it is
his famous bathtub.
not its import as historical drama
that pr ompted critics all over
the world to hail Mara ^Sade
as one of
the most soaring
theatrical events of the year , and
to lavish it with such epithets as:
"Total theatre , with no holds
(London Times);
barred ,"
"Unmistakeably brilliant ," (Walt er K err , N.Y. Herald Tribune);
"A towering theatric al presence...and unforgettable play ,"
(Norman Nadel , N.Y. World Telegram & Sun).
The Bloomsburg Pla yer s' production will be directed by Mr .
William Aclerno in a setting designed by Mr. Harry Berkheis er
to represent the bathhouse of the
as y lum where Sad e's play is to
be performed before the asylum
director , played by Dave Wright ,
his wife and daughter , and the
audience. Dan iel B oone w ill
create the wild assemblege of
costumes worn by the patient s
and their attendants .
Marat , to be portrayed by Linwood Na y lor , will remain seated
In his batht ub at the center of
the sta ge thro ughout the entire
prod uction and will be daref ully
attended to by his faithful mistress , Simonne Evard , played by
Amy Raber . Dan Demczko will
The Persecution And Assassination —Of- Jean-Paul- Marat As"
Performed By The Inmates Of
The Asylum Of Charenton Under .
The Dir ection Of The Mar quis
De Sade is the " title of the
extraordinary dramatic hit of
Berlin . London , and New York
that will be presented by th e
Bloomsburg Players on November 5 ,6, and 7 at 8:15 p.m.
campus in H aas
on
the
Auditorium.
The lunatic Asylu m of Charenton was the actual institution
which housed the diabolical Marqui s De Sade in his final days
and where he lies buried. Pete r
the
German - born
Weiss ,
Swedish citizen who is the aut hor
of Mara ty^ade, conceived of his
play when he learne d that the
director of the asylu m employed
t heatr ical per f ormances by the
Inmates as therapy long before
the science of psychiatry had been
developed^
Marat Sade concerns the pitting of two opposing philoso phi es
of revolut ion— the malevolent individualism of Sade against that
of the arch-revolutionary , JeanPaul Marat , who was murdered
by a young woman in order to
stop his violent oppr essions of
the people. The story Is presented as a play-within-a- play,
pr esumably written by Sade and
enac ted by a wild assortmenc
of deran ged patients In the institution — male lechers , renegade priests , hyster ical females — under the watchful(?)
Kampus Nook
be seen as Sade , the Infamous
nobleman whose name Is used to
signify the aberrant infliction of
pain . Mar at»s murderess , Char lotte Cor day, who thought of her -
"BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL VALUE"
Across from the Union
|
Portable Typewriter^^^BrSS!!^^** ^^3um
^
C \Ms\ V WJ ^Wi ^W ^BFa ^ ^ ^^ ^ ^^ ^*^ ^ ^ ^^"™^^^^^**"
I
\w\Uj
yb»u l9 Just perfect for students,ofLI *-~ tf l m m **V flee or home use. Many fea -
\ ... *... ,,...».........
j
r tures found in expensive machines.
'.
Platters
Every
Day
Plain « Ham Hoagltt,
Cheese • Pepperenl • Onion
Plua . Our own Made lee
Cream.
Take Out Orders :
Easy Terms ^ifiisii^
Z^^^ H i^s^i^Hl
14 W. Main &>.,
Bloomsburg, Pa. 1781S
Hot
.'
Hours: Men. > Thurs 9:00*
11)00
Frida y
9:00-12:00
Saturda y
4:30-12:00
Sunda y
11:00-11:00
•» > • < : r
t < #. i
f t
i
i
<
i
(4) Proposed
amendments
which receive the required approval by the Executive council
of the Committee on Student Affairs will .be submitted to the
College Council of the Community Government Association for
action . A 2/3 vote of the total
membership of the College Council will be required for passage
of the amendment .
(5) All amendments approved
as indicated in items 1,2,3, and 4
above will become effective immediately after they have been appro ved by the Pr esident of the
College .
(6) All amendments approved
before June 1 will be included
in the Pilot and made public immediatel y through the Maroon an d
Gold .
(7) Public announce ment of the
amendin g pr ocedure shall be
made not less than twice a semester through the Maroon and
Gold . This announcement will be
the responsibility of the Executiv e Council of the Committee on
Student Affairs.
Fondest
Remem brance
Is...
Showcases
(continued fro m page one )
The display also includes three
slabware pieces by Ed Theiman ,
who likes to refine natural forms
to create organic feeling. Ed
showed his ability by forming
three slabs over different rocks .
The welded seam s of one may
remind you of metal welded together . All , however , will give
you organic feeling.
Ed' s non-objective work is
par alleled by an abstraction by
Paula
Demetriko poul us. Her
eagle , made of coils and slabs ,
glazed with copper oxide , shows
that natural objects can be abstracted in ceramics as well as
other media .
The exhibition is completed by
•two wheel-thrown pieces by a former stu dent , Lois Wettstone .
These show just what can be done
with a potter 's wheel and a ball
of clay.
Charlie 's
PIZZA
A
HOAGIES
Open ftU UtOO pjn.
Closed 1x30 to 3t00 p.m.
Every Doy But Friday
Pil
5 to 7
DIUVIIY
8:30 to 11,30
Regular and King Slie
HOAGIES
FLOWERS
784-4406
Phon e 7844292
Bonded World Wide
127 W. Moin
BLOOMSBURG
Delivery
Beads and Fish Nets
j ust arrived
THE STUDIO SHOP
5f I
. Main St. , Bloomsburg
794.1818'
e)
•
•
•
Distinctive Gifts
Framing
Wallsca ping
Music
An Open Letter ....
Editor 's Note: The following was
received from Dr, Joseph T.
Skehan , professor of economics
at Eloomsburg State College, on
Sunday, October 18, 1970. For
ease of presentation , the Maroon
and Gold Is presenting It In an
"open-letter11 form. This article
does not necessarily represent
the opinions of the M & G or its
editors.* Also, the Maroon and
Gold has not at anytime mentioned dismissal .
leges (AAC- Administrators national organi zation), and the
Association of Governing Boards
of Colleges and Universities
(AG3) — all members organs of
the American Council on Education.
This departure from professional academic procedures and
norms has produced the undesireable consequences they were designed to prevent. For example,
the Administration by its failure
to consult with the faculty in
question has fostered the repetition of much misinformation of
an elementary sort about this
matter.
Respectively on 1 October 1970
and 9 October 1970 the BSC
President informed Professor
Por ter and Dr. Skehan of their
suspension
from classroom
duties. The President was informed that this action was
il egal, because the Administration violated both the Bloomsburg
State College procedures regulating such matters as well as the
parallel standards of the AAUP
and AAC (1958 statement on dismissal procedural standards).
On Friday, October 16, 1970
the press and radio carried
stories emanating from the Administration of BloomsburgState
College concerning the suspension of Dr. Joseph T .Skehan
from his teaching duties.
At its formal meetings on 12
September 1970 and on 15 September 1970 the Economics Department, unanimously approved
final course assignments for its
professors. Us formal decisions
rested on several weighty
academic grounds. According
to academic standards the primary responsibility 'for this kind
of decision quite naturally rests
with the faculty.
On Friday October 16, 1970,
The Administration intervened
the
Maroon & Gold and the pubIn a clearly discriminatory
lic
media
, press and radio , pubmanner in the course assignlished
stories
based on one or
ments only of Professor Porter
more
Press
Releases
issued by
and Dr. Skehan-respectlvely the
the
Administration.
Senior Member of the Department
and the Secretary of the DepartBy this action the Administrament. The procedures used by
the
tion
violated Article 8 of the 1958
violated
the Administration
Statement on DisAAUP/AAC
GovernUniversity
College and
missal
Procedures.
This prothe
by
approved
Statement
ance
American Association of Univer- cedure clear ly limits publicity to
sity Professors (AAUP), the "time of the hearing" and the
Association o f American Col- lik e, until completion of all col-
Primack
(cont in ued f ro m page one)
The n. are two good reasonsfor
this. On the one hand , a college,
of all Institutions , should investigate before it speaks, so that
it knows what it is talking about ,
before it addresses the public at
large.
On the other hand tossing the
matter into the public media may
prejudice condtfct of the investigation. E mphasis shift from
lact-nnding and verification,pr ocedural issues and judicious reflection to press agentry and
public image manipulation — the
techniques of Madison Avenue,
not of a college.
Recently the ScrantonCommission reported to the President
of the United States that
restraint , understanding and
reconciliation were desperately
needed on campuses in the country . Academic procedures provide the necessary restraints.
But they must be followed.
BIOLOGY CLUB
There will be a social meeting,
Wednesday, October 21, at 7:00
p.m., outside room 134 in Hartline . The purpose of this meeting is to get acquainted with
each other and break from the
usual order of business.So wear
old clothes and be prepared for
a surprise, it will be worth coming to see what 's happening.
POETRY
Poetry can pay off . The Eight
Annual Competition of the Kansas
City Poetr y Contest is awarding
$1 ,600 in cash prii.es including
six $100 awards for single poems
by f ull time undergraduates .
For details , see the posters in
the English Department Office ,
first floor Bakeless .
SPANISH
Improve your Spanish comprehension and conversations .Learn
about the culture of one of the
many countries whose native
tongue is
- Argentina .
The President of the United Join BSC'Spanish
s
exchange
,
States recently appealed for a Graciela Maldonado andstudent
Mrs
.
return to the "rule of reason" Whitme for lunch at 12:00 Monin American colleges. It is day andr Wednesday
at the Scranindeed regrettable that Blooms- ton Commons For further
.
burg State College has violated mation call Extension 371, infor.
11:00
over and over again the pro- - 12:00 Monday, Wednesday,
or
cedural standards which consti- Frid ay.
tute the framework for the "rule
of reason."
WCTU
Joseph T . Skehan, Ph. D .
Congratulation s to Jane Elmes,
Associate Professor of
a
Junior from Berwick , the 1970
Economics
National Champion of (are you
ready for this) the Women ' s
seven day limit really applies Christian Temperance Union
CGA
to CGA minutes).
Oratory Contest held recently in
At this point, Pillagalli sus- Washington , Pennsylvania. Think
(co ntinued from page- one)
the referendum to suspend admin- pended the meeting to allow the
of all the f un Jane could have
up with
istrators as voting members of executive board time to clear
her $75 first prize!
CGA . Of the 17 % of the college this matter . The meeting was to
community voting, 18% voted be reheld the following night,
Tuesday, Oct . 13.
against the referendum .
Brennan then , asked why some
At Tuesday night' s meeting,
of these people were still on the
Town authorities announced
College Council . Over 2/3 of President Nossen was the main
that
the street sweeping schedule
center
of
attention
.
the students voting had voted tor ,
will
remain in effect , as posted
The
heart
of
his
delivery
was
and according to the Constitution ,
(supported
that
House
Bill
999
until all leaves are
on
streets,
this was enough to remove them .
the
Public
School
law)
passed
by
down
off
the
trees and gathered
IRREGULARITIES
gave
the
adminisup.
Feb
17
1970,
,
.
It was then pointed out by Mr .
Mulka that the referendum of trative heads full responsibility
last spring was considered full of for all that happens on the college
"irregularities ." John Hankin campus . Since he is responsible
asked that the irregularities be for all on campus , he is respon sible for the outcome of the elecpointed out .
Oct . 2 2 — 9 a .m , — Chenango
Mulka replied saying he had tions,
For
ks Central Schools , Chenango
debate
After
some
unscheduled
been in touch with several stuForks
, New York — Any ina
motion
was
on
the
matter
,
dents who did not vote, but had
terested
teaching candidates;
proposed
to
end
debate,
Mr
.
their names crossed from the
Oct
28
- 9:30 a.m . - Army
Norton
seconded
and
President
list . Also he said that names of
Medical
Specialist Corps . —
departed
Nossen
,
people who were student teaching
Army
Occupational
or Physical
Norton
then
made
a
motion
to
or had transferred , had also been
Therapy
Program
,
(Men
or woup
a
committee
of
three
to
set
crossed off .
men);
legalizing
study
the
matter
of
He further stated that the
Oct . 28 - 11:00 a.m . - New
President of the College and the the CGA constitution .
York
City Public Schools , New
Those appointed to the commitDean of Students have the right
York,
N .Y . - All areas .
to accept or reject the referen- tee were Mark Foucar t, Frank
Pizzoli , and Mr , John Walker .
dum .
There w a s considerable Mr , Norton suggested that Mr,
comment from the floor regard- Dadice be consulted as an advisor
ing a memo that was sent or to the legal aspects .
BUDGET DISCUSSED
Continental Breakfast (toast ,
not sent by the President of the
original
Getting
back
to
the
cereal
, juice , pastr y, etc .) is becollege to certify the referendum ,
a
motion
was
made
to
agenda
,
Mike Hock , Vice President of
bur g.
CGA , made a motion to table consider the budget at a later
In the miscellaneous business ,
the discussion until the matter date, Tom Brennan seconded
the motion , but it was defeated, it was asked If the preside nt of
of the memo was clarified .
After the budget was approved , the Student Union Committee
Dor Remsen then suggested
Pillagalli
asked whether or not
could be an ex-officio member of
that the enti re meeting be adthe
CGA
could
allot funds for a the council , it was decided that
journed until the voting order
bus to take students to State
he would be invited to all meet.
and who can vote be straightened
Ings , as a gues t , In the future ,
out . Hoc k made a motion to sus- College Day at Harrisburg.
Mr . Norten suggested that the
Mi ke Hock made a mot ion to
pend the meeting and it was
college pay the expense of at least abolish the present method of
seconded by John Hankin .
selling the BNE tickets . He said
H owever , Bob Medford was one bus . John Hankin wondered
if we'll be getting a worthwhile
that it was not as profitable as
stan ding and the motion could not
it's enough to be vigor ously fighting against it .
Here Primack digressed to
make an observation on the
Weatherman mentality . They believe that if you try one tactic
to right the wrongs of your group,
and it hasn't worked , e.g. mass
demonstrations , then you are under an obligation to do something
more drastic , like throwing
bombs . That , he said , does not
follow . What follows is that you
are under an obligation to do
something more effective like
or ganizing on a permanent basis
to gain access to the media to
get your views across,
Primack's remarks here were
presented on the backdrop of a
fable of a garden party held on a
lush green lawn in the middle of
a mismal swamp. The swamp
dwellers and seme of the party
goers begin to realize that the
swamp exists because of the party
and that all the world could really be a garden party. The fable
describes how party goers become upset and consider rude
those who no longer want to play
party games, but do not attempt
to dc something about the swamp.
For this they are called "Swampies " behind their backs. Out of
this conflict grew two moralities .
There was the party goer moral lty where goodness was defined in terms of one 's dress
and skill in party games, and
there was the swample morality
where it was defined in terms of
one 's committment to ending the
swamp.
The fable was advanced both to
illustrate his theory of the moral
responsibility of groups and to illuminate the polarization which
has taken plaice in America today. be recognized
.
The 1970-71 Obiter will hold a
•faff meeting thlt Thursd ay,
Oct. 22, 1970. The meeti ng
iftafl be held in the Obiter
office en t he second floor of
Waller Hall at 7:00 p.m.,
room 231. All those that
signed up at registra tion
should attend thlt mooting.
legiate procedural steps.
Brief s
Medford said that " ever yone
was grab bing at all kinds of
straws " a n d
looking for
loopholes ,
Brennan further questio ned the
validation of the referendum , Mr ,
Wal ker stated that there was a
seven-day provision In the con *
stitution saying that If In seven
days the president doesn 't reply,
the re ferend um Is approved (the
SWEEPING
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
BREAKFAST
return on our investment .
Janet Boyanoskl said we'll get
more back than we invested and
Bob Medford called it "a new experien ce."
M ike H ock , sittin g in (or President P lllagallL, recognlzed Plllagalli,who made a motion to accept
the PSASG statement , A motion
was then made to provide funds
for the cost of one bus to take
stu dents to the rally in Harris-
the previous method .
Norton stated that we should
not re-eva luate the new system
until it has been given a fair
trial . The motion was defeated ,
but Hock suggested that a comm ittee be established to study
the situat ion .
The meeting was adjourned by
Pilla galli. The next scheduled
CGA meeting is M onday, October
26 , 1070.
In g served Monday through Friday in Dining Room B of Scranton Commons f r om 8:15 to 9:00
a .m .
OLYMPIAN
Submissions are now being accepted for the 197 1 Olympian ,
BSC 's literary magazine , Allan Maurer , editor , announced .
Short stories, poetry, Hiaku,
and works in progress , are sought
for the student publication. Submissions may be made to Box
293 , Waller , See "Oli mp peon "
feature on page two for further information .
Byrd
(co ntinued from
page three )
to understand that one doesn't
interfer with another 's appreciation of such an involved , complex and engaging art for m as
modern jaz z or classical guitar
by discussing the attractiveness
of one"s date for the all-impor tant Ides of March concert the
following evening. And it was a
bit embarrassing when Mr . By r d
had to remark that there might
be better and more mutually
tolerable things to do in the darkness of the gym than talk .
The girls next to me found out
what he was like . One was wearing a "psychedellically " painted "Love" T-shirt . When someone behind her found it necessary to ask her to allow him to
enjoy the concert in silence, it
became quite obvious that the
most basic prerequisite for love,
respect , was sadly lacking.
Nevertheless, many students
did enjoy the concert . Many were
introduced to music far beyond
the self-imposed horizon of top
40 AM radio. In more ways than
one, it was an educational as well
as an entertaining experience.
Racists
(continued from page t hree;
peoples of Spanish descent as
often as that against Blacks , it
does exist , and subtle as it is ,
it is_ a sickness and it needs
curing. And my Jewish brother ,
don 't thi nk that " Kike isn 't used
around here.
I really don't know what the
reason for this racism Is , bu t 1
can speculate . It may be that
the upbringing of these sick
people is the cause of their
malday, but where there 's a wi ll ,
there 's a way , and man , you can
cure It.
One of my favorite myth s is
that one that goes through the
minds of some white guys when
they see a white chick with a
black guy. Myth : aw well , she
j ust wants a bigger penis than
white guys can give her. You
know the myth , don 't you men?
Did it ever occur to you that that
chick finds that guy more interesting, intriguing? Just might be I
Anyway, I think you racists
should take a look at yourselves
in the mir ror of the mind , and
if you look real hard , you may
find out that you just don 't understand your bro ther , and that can
only mean th at you don 't und erstand yourself ver y well.
Dave Watt
FORUM
(Co ntinued fr om page three )
ful level — something tried in
man y ar eas of the college , ^y
in itiati ng student involvement a
collect ive and genuine feeling of
pr ide can be Introduced to and
taken on by the student body.
Throug h this gr oup concern constructive chang e by wny of microscopic evaluation of issues confronting th e college can be accomplishe d. Comm unication Is
(or all sides If a community is
to advanc e in any direct ion. Communication br eeds understandi ng....understanding la conducive
to succesg....success scratches
the sur face of perfection .
Media of