rdunkelb
Fri, 04/05/2024 - 16:22
Edited Text
Christm as Spirit Covers Campus
t
The Christmas spirit is evident in eVery corner of the campus.
Though work continues as usual in the many offices ifs easier
for everyone knowing that a break is coming soon .
Christmas Edition
Raffles Terminated ,
Illega l In Penna.
John S, Mulka , Director
of
Student Activities , recently an*
nounced the termination of raffles on the Bloomsbur g State College campus .
Student organizat ions, up to
this time , hav e been permitted
to conduct various fund raisin g
events includin g raffles . After
researchin g student handbooks of
several colleges and universit ies , conversa ti ons w ith st udent
personnel administrators of the
college and other colleges, and
review of the Penns ylvania Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure M anua l, the Subcommittee on
Student Or ganizati ons voted unanimously on December 4, 1970 ,
to pr ohibit the sponsorship of
raffles by student organizations .
This will be effective at the beginn ing of t h e secon d semester
of the 1970-7 1 academic year .
The state law regarding raffles
rea ds as follows:
"M- Section 601 . Lotteries .
All lotteries , whether public or
pr ivate , for ihoneys , goods,
wares or merchan dise, chattels ,
lands , tenements , hereditaments ,
or other matters or things what soever , are here by declared to
be common nuisances . Every
grant , bar gain, sale , Conveyance
or transfer of any goods or chat tels , lands , tenements or hered itaments , which shal l be made in
pursuance of any such lottery , is
hereby declared to be invalid and
void .
"Whoever , either publicly or
pri vately, erects , sets up, opens , makes or draws any lottery,
or is in any way concerned in the
mana ging, conducting or carrying on the same is guilty of a
misdemeanor , and on conviction
th ereo f , shall be sentenced to
pay a fine not exceeding f i v e
hundred dol lars ($500), or under go impr isonment , by separate
or solitary confinement at labor ,
not ' exceeding one (1) year , or
both ."
If a president or advisor of any
stu den t or gan izat ion has any
questions regarding this matter ,
please feel free to contact Mr .
Mulka .
Bloomsbur g In Spain
Is Ready For Plane
"Bloomsburg In Spain - 1971"
is ready to go, according to A ,
F oureman , Chairm an of the Foreign Lang uages Depar t ment .
Six credit hours will be given
at the under graduate or graduate
levels and courses will be offer ed at the: University of Madr id
Spain , which will grant a certificate upon satisfactory completion of the courses.
You do not need to know the
langua ge to go, you will learn it
there , In Spain.
Departing from Kennedy inter na tion al Air por t 'm June 30 , the
Summe r In Spain pro gram for
1971 will Include regular week-
end tri ps , a bullfight , and a tour
of Andalucla (J aen , G ranad a , Malaga , Sevi lla , and Cordoba) .
Plans are also unde rway to
have a special ceremony with
students from Spanish universities and high officials of the
Spanish Government In the Pro vince of Lerl da (West of Barce lona ).
The grou p will return on August 20, Students from other colleges may participate .
For further information , contac t Dr. Alfred Tonolo. Box 283 ,
or see him at his office . Room
218 , Balwlt ss.
Second floo r North Hall was
bedecked in pine and paper
in keeping with the season.
This door is
one of many
original desi gns.
CGA Has
Project
Of
Relief
BSC 's Communit y Gover nment
Association , In conjunction with
the International Red Cross , has
been conducting a fund raising
project for victims of the recent
tidal wave disaste r in East Pakistan. The project began last
F riday evenin g, December 11.
Coin cans were placed in selected buildings on the college
c am p us an d in var i ous b us iness
establishments through the business district of Bloomsburg. Appro val for the latter was obtained
through the Downtown Bloomsburg Businessmen ' s Association .
From time to time C.G. A . volunteer members circulated in the
business district where coin cans
were locate d to encourage donations.
The fund raising project conclude s tonight , Wednesday , December 16, where there will be
a danc e in the Student Union
Build ing, the price of adm ission
being at least fifty cents . All
the proceeds from thi s danc e, after expenses have been met , will
be donated to the project.
It is estimated that at least
200 ,000 people have died as a
result of the tidal wave In East
Pak istan , and that another two
an d a half million are facing starvation , death bj disease , and
other hazar ds of such a catastro phe.
It is hoped by the CGA th at the
ent ire college community an d the
Town of Bloomsbur g will get behind th is much needed fund r aising proj ect. Michael Slptroth , a
sophomore from Delaware Water
Gap, is publ icity chairman for
the project .
Seventh floo r Elwell received many favorable comments on it' s
decorations but failed to place in A.RM . competition .
Flack Exhibits In Haas
The Art Exhibit featuring paint ings of Nelson Flack has opened
in Haas Art Gallery . Mr . Flack
has been present from 2:00 to
4:C0 p.m. to meet and talk with
visitors to the exhibi t which will
r emain on view until January 3,
197 1.
A native of Burlington , I owa,
Flac k is an artist living in Philade lphia , Penns ylvania . He stud ies painting w i t h Rac kstraw
Downes and Neil Welliver and
has exhibite d his paintings in the
H ouston Hall Bowl Room Gallery ,
(1969) and Philom athean Gallery, (1970) both under the auspices of the University of Pennsylvania ,
In terms of composition , his
works in the pre sent exhibition
can broadly be divided into pencil
drawings , color drawings and
formal paintings .
The pencil drawi ngs create tan .
gible linear shapes with precise
proportio ns possessing a rhyth mic pattern which , being repet .
itious, seems to refer to an infinite extens ion of the motif .
These sketch es Egyptian 2 and
Birthd ay are _ apparently deriv ed
from Egyptian and Chines e sour ces-parti cularly from
their
styles of ornamentation; the outcom e seems mere ly a result of
the artist' s acquaintance with the
art systems of the above mentioned countries and can be regarded
as a pa ssing pha se in his art
career .
Regarding his color drawings
it is easy to observe that linea r
structure an d var ied color are
intended to carry the effect of
light forms . The difference of
pigment suspended in the mater ial mediums , cra yon and wax pencil , are assigned progressions on
a linear grid . This process crea tes a visual reading of light and
f orm where no tan gibl e shapes
h ave been drawn . The force
creatin g this illusion is derived
from the material phenomena
that similar pigments in different mediums become * .sually dissonant .
Psych Film Presented
Last Wednesd ay December 9,
1970 the Bloomsburg Psychological Association presented a film
Interv iew with Arthur Miller ,
known for his book , "Death of a
Salesman " .
Dr . Richard Evans , »he film
Int erviewer , talke d to Mr, Mille r
about the inner feelings of the
characters in his various works .
Their concern s were with the development of eac h Individual , and
the social Interact ions of all human beings.
Mr . M iller seld that the artis t
was not inte rested in recor din g
facts - without * a personal ity,
without a sub j ective ref lection of
events , the re Is nothing.
Discussion then went into the
Freudian concepts Involved- the
Idea that the cha racte rs represent the author and that the
author actually want s to control
people thr ough his writing . Ar thur Miller did not agree with
th is at all. He doesn 't want
to control people — J ust to release them . He hplievac that
". • .anyone who writes is trying
to commun icate something , " but
thinks "It ' s an error to look at
any character the way one looks
at real people .1'
After the movie , there was a
shor t discussion of various thing s
Mr, "M iller said and some Ideas of
programs for future meetin gs.
They are considering a talk on
why students seem to be so ashamed of the label "B. S.C."
A nybody interested In any aspect of psychology Is encouraged
to J oin the Association . Fut ure
meetings will be announced .
Record Revie w
All Things Mus t P ass
George Ha rris on
by Stephen Ber gamo or
Sometimes John
Opening characteriz ations:
1) George is very emotional (passive).
2) Ggorge is v e r y religious ,
Christian .
3) The albumn is unsubstantial ,
very commercial .
4) George is passive,
5) His themes are love and Christ
(L-O-R-D).
6) Harrison 's good guitar work is
a myth .
7) Politically , he is status quo .
8) Harri son is not a McCa rtney,,
Lennon , Dylan , Hendrix , or
Clapton . He is not a super *
star .
9) George has become another
Donovan.
10) He needs the other Beatles .
The New Pot
Wh at is a chamber pot ?
A lot of people around here
would turn their nose s up In a
noticeab le grimac e and remember best forgotten days of their
youth , when indoor plumbing did
not mean a porcelain seat and
cold pipes. Rather it was a piece
of finely crafted wood , molded to
the peculiar shape of the posterior hum an anatom y.
But what could chamber pot
mean to aware students and faculty at a progressive education al
institution of the 1970' s? Well it
is not something which will con*
jure up expressio ns of pure nostalgic disgust .
It is an environment , and in
this sense linked to the past because as we all know the air we
breath e today Thoreau choked on
yesterday. But it is not polluted .
It migh t be called a breath of
fresh air in the sli ghtly stale
aesthetic environment of Bloomsburg 1970 . The creation of three
senior art students , Bill Clul? ir ,
Kathy Gentile , and Ed Th 'emann ,
VOL. IL
the chamberpot is an art gallery
located on Iron Street behind the
Sherwin- V' iliiams Paint Store. It
is an attem pt to revive the ancient
order of individualism and expr ession . Devote d to the exhibi tion of exclusively original art
work of B.S.C . students. Ther e.
Now that a gentle tr ansition
from yesterday to today has been
made a further clarif ication of
the pur pose of the chamber pot is
in order — to clean the air as
they say . It was the ide a of these
three senior art students to expand from the college and estab lish a beachhead downtown . They
are hoping to involve the community in the art students of
*B .S.C . and in their art . T h e
chamber pot is a gallery — a store front environment— but most at
all It is an effort to awaken the
aesthe tic appreciation of both the
college and town communities .
In an age of plastic-wra pped-in cellophane culture these students
' (continued on page eight }
THE MAROON ANfr OOLD
NO. 21
Bill T«Hsworth
E4itor-b»~CU *f
Sam Trapana
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Capy letter
Linda
lim it
HaHar
Carat Klahbaugh
Ce-Clr«ufaHen Mf ra.
Pat
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Mark Pawaar t
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Kamtattt c. Hafftwan
STAFF: Shelley Brunoni , Kate Calpln , Jim Chapman,
Carman Clullo . Lara Duckworth , Kath l Farr*ll , Jim
Plynn , Keren Cable , llama Hartu na. Pern Hlckey. Andree
Hoffman , Cathy Jac k,
Karen
Kelnard , Cindy
Mkhener ,
Randee
P r a y , Tom
Schofleld , Glen
D »y
Wri ght,
Sim
Joanna
Chowka ,
Spotts,
Sprague, Jod y Hoff , Mike Hock , Frank Pinoll , Dava Watt ,
Jatte James , Har ris Wolfe , Dava Kelter.
All opinions expressed by columnists and faahire writers,
Includin g lettir *ta-the- editor , are not nacassarlly th eseof the
publication bvt these of me Individual s.
Call¦& igUlW-rifr JW
of J oan Baez, who ruined a lot
bum cannot save the three-record set from being commercial ,
w h o can?
Geor ge's voice leaves a lot to
desire . It doesn 't have McC art ney 's beauty or depth; it lacks
Dylan's ra w and gutsy appeal.
Lennon has an explosive ness and
hopelessness that Geor ge can't
come near to . Geor ge's voice is
mono logue, always the same , and
ver y passive .
Side 1 begins with "I'd Have
You Anytime ." Dylan, co-wri ter
of the song, would have done
much more justice to the number than Geor ge did . An illustration of Geor ge's poor voice. One
almos t wishes that Paul woul d
hav e sung the song. "My Sweet
Lord " and "Wah- Wah " are
catchy nothings . Songs that you
listen to a couple of times and
don 't hear them after that , "Isn 't
It A Pit y " is the best song on
the album . "How we take each
other 's love , Without thinkin g
anymor e, For gettin g to give back ,
Isn 't it a pity? " and his best
lead guitar work plays and plays
as the music fades . It is George 's
"H ey Jude " — but Paul 's \s much
better , better — better .
of good Dylan songs. Cliches ar e
"Wh at is Life ," and "Behin d
that Locked Door ." "Run of the
Mill" is just that — run of the
mill. The music has no guts.
" Let I t Down " saves the side.
It is explosive , sens itive , substant ial, and a love song. "While
I occupy my mind , I can feel
you here ," and the music goes up
and down the scale . It' s soft explosion . Heavy chords . And Geo«
rge sings, " Let It Down — let it
down , let your hair han g all
aroun d me." Where is Janis
Joplin?
Side 3 is great when you don 't
listen to the music. It is mystify,
ing, hum orous , ro lling, passing ,
and gospel . But most of all , it
is superficial . What the' hell are
"Appl e Scruffs "? Does "Let It
Roll" mean "Let It Be"? And I
certainl y hope "All Thin gs Must
Pass ." It is funny how George
uses Lord for every God there is
— Jesus , Hare Krishn a, etc .
"Chantin g the nam e of the Lord
and you'll be free ." God Bless
ye!
The "Art of Dying " relieves
side four fro m the wah-wahs ,
George plays good lead guitar and
the song has a driving beat . Be*
sides, death is a common de.
The cover has George seated
like Rip Van Winkle holding his
(avoid ing hassle) pr ivates . Four
dwarfs lie on the ground laughing. Does it symbolize the death
of the four Beatles— the destruc tion of their myth ? Anyway, his
hair is very long and maybe he
is very seri ous .
The music is catchy but not
substanti al . How substantial can
Side 2 is unim pressive . "If
you get with Bad flnger backing Not For You," a great song by
you up? If Eric Clapton and Dave Dylan , • is ruined by Geor ge's
Mason on the "Apple Jam " al- voice . Sometimes , he reminds me
(continued on page three)
Recru i ter For Uncl e God
Uncle God has sent a recruiter . informed us that he was sent by from his "First Workin g Paper "
to BSC . Not necessarily to re- the Central Penns ylvania Senate of the Bloomsburg Campus Mincruit troops , but to . . .well , he of Lutheran Churches of Amer . istry , to "deliberately low-key
doesn 't really know . When Rev- ica .
our Lutheran background , and
erend Jay Rochelle wasasked why
seek
out all the existent organi But Rev . Rochelle 's stay here
he 's here in a recent interview
zations
in community and college
by the Feature Staff of the M&G , will be mor e than jus t the fulfill- which work in Prote stant Minishe answered , "Because I chose to ment of an assignment . H e said try to student s, and plug into
be here . In terms of jobwise , that he felt there was a need for
them ." R e v . Rochelle 's sercampus ministr y at
BSC. vices
I don 't know yet . I'll take a few a"There
, it seems , will lean toward
were enough people
mon ths here and find out what I around who
the
informal
. His services , alfelt the re was a
want to do ."
though he is an ordai ned Lutheran
need and convinc ed me that there
Ministe r , will be open to anyone .
Rev . Rochelle is a young man , was a nee d."
A servi ce held last Thursday
he 's been an or dained minister
What will Rev Rochelle 's actfor five and a half years . He has ual wor k be? , Well to quote
,
(continued on page eight )
a wife and three children , and he 's
come to set up a campus ministry
at BSC .
He ' s never been a
Campus Minister
before , but
Bl oomsbur g has never had one,
either , so th e two can ta ke their
initial steps together . Rev . Roch elle commente d , "I wantedapos ition like this , an d have wante d
one for five and half years ."
He and Bloom are going to jump
in head first and the results
should prove interesting . . .enlightening , too .
We asked Ja y (He 's the kind of
man who doesn 't like titles) if the
people of Bloomville have been
friendly thus far , and his answer
was a very definite " Yes, Every one that I 've met , meanin g facul ty, administration , have been
helpful , and tried to bend over
backwards to help. "
For Jay Roche lle coming to
Bloom was the logical choice.
He told us th at the re are two types
of ministry that he could have
really enjoyed , an d t h ose were
Cam pus Ministr y and I nter -City
•Min istry . Hi s reason : "I'd rath er deal with people in small
grou ps because that' s where the
growth is." H e also f eels that
" Y ou can teac h me a lot of
things "
...
We seem to be a lucky campus ,
for Rev . R oche l le 's er arlenMals
are impress ive . He is the author
of severa l b ook s , the f irst of
which will be published next
mont h,. The second in March ,
an d the third at a later date . At
present he is working on a "Hand *
book for Radical Christiani ty,"
wh ich he seems to feel will be
his best work . When asked , he
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'
"UNCLE GOD WANTS YOU"
The Hol e
in th e Wa ll er
Well , farewell to dear old
Waller Pall , welcome C olumbia .
No mor e alterna ting between
freezing showers in the evening
and scalding showers In the moro ing. The E xodus Is finally over .
The last suitcase has been moved ,
the last poster taken down and
re-hun g in the new dorm . It 's kind
of sad when you think about it. No
more midnight song fests from F
Troop , no more light s burning all
night long through the overhead
windows , no more mounds and
mounds of dust appearing mysteriously the day after th e' floor
has been swept.
girls aren 't really sleeping anyway because they 're all busy
•
flashing lights at the guys in
tri weH Hall. And gone foreve r is
the Fish Cheer , played by the il•
lustrious men of Elwell . Sometimes you have to wonde r If they
were trying to tell us something .
Or ask ? I suppose the question
is bette r left unasked .
Goodbye, Waller Hall , from the
3C0 girls who have left you. Just
one more group out of the thousands who have stayed in your
hallowed halls . W e're off to Columbia , which only has mice to
mak e it seem like home. The only
thin g left is a goodluck wish to
Gone forever (for those now in the men of Penn , Pine and Thorn• C olumbia) are the radi ators that ton houses , and the Probational
Freshmen. And the thousands of
neve r turn off , that make terrible
s.l.s.
banging noise s in the middle of others to follow.
the night . Gone also are the wide
and spacious halls so easy to grab
Record Review
people and dr ag them to the show(con tinued fro m page two )
ers (fully clothed , of course) ,
and filled with new freshmen , nominator . "I Dig Love " is mysoverwhelmed by the heady experitifying and interesting . Sentience of being away from home . mentally, "Come Together " type
Alone .
music . Can music type? Maybe , if
you "Hear Me Lor d ," you can
Forever in the pas t are the
think like feeling confession and
girl s hanging from their windows , church . "For give me Lord ," and
calling to th eir boyfr iends (how
every other song, is Christ -like .
can you holler from the ninth
Wow! Apple Jam ! George is
floor?) th at they 'll be down in a finally going to do some great
minute . In Columbia there ar e Inlead guitar work and prove his
tercom s. Now if you ask the girl
picking-fingers myth . What did
at the other end if it's that creep
you say — Clapton and Mason
that keeps following you around , too? Guitar city. It is a super and tell her to say that you ' re in , ficial , don't listen , commercial
the cre ep can hear you.
bummer . Even Clapton sounds
bad , if you can believe it . The
Lon g past are the muscular-in - music goes on and on. The same
chord over and over . N o exducing trek s up to fourth floor
plosions
or climaxes . No "All
Waller . Row the only proble m is
Along
The
Watchtower " Hendrix
if the elevators stop wor king .
volcanoes
to stir the imagina Then it'll be a muscul ar-inducing
tion
"Ha
ppy
Trails " by the
.
trek up NINE floors . Good grief!
Quicksilver
Messenger
Service
It ' s overwhel ming when you thin k
makes
the
jam
sound
elementary
.
about It,
Apple jam never tasted so Door.
Th ere ar e no "He y Jude "s or
Gone are the aggr avating trip s
Day in the Life "s on the al"A
to anoth er dor m to pick up your
bum
. No rea l tur n-on . George
mai l, and finding th at you didn 't
misses
the other Beatles . As for
get anything anyway , except for
me
I
dig
George and think the
,
aggravating notices fr om the colalbum
is
cool;
even though I don 't
lege te lling you about the overdue
agre
e
with
some
of his phibook s from the libr ary . Now th e
Geor
ge
losophy
.
is
NOT
a great
aggravating notices will be right
good
lead
guitarist
or
a
singer
downstairs .
but he is someone that we all
grew up with and who we try to
Gone are the RA'S running down understand I hope John comes
.
the stairs to ask M&G member s on heavy with
his new albu m He
to please keep the noise down so is my favorite Beatle I am. the
.
that the girl s can sleep, an d the Walrus
.
_aa^_iMaiBia
__
Ma
HliaB
^
_H_MBai^__
^B
Lett e rs*.•
Dear Editor:
Chri stmas Eve, A time of
warmth and hope* It could be
any ni ght of the year , but somehow
it seems that more of us look for
warmth and hope on December 24
than "jus t anytime ." And th ere
are a lot of problem s, in America
and in the world , that could use a
good dose of warmth and hope.
And not just on Christmas Eve .
"Bring us together ," "Hiat
small phr ase contains a lot of
what , Americans will be hoping
for thi s holiday season , as they
come together and enjoy the
warmth of family and friends .
And yet , as we wish and hope and
pray In our different ways for this
spirit of bringing Americ a together to come about , we mus t all
be aware that such a spiri t doesn 't
just happen. We can't hope to
hang our stockin gs by the fireplace and expect them to be filled
with brotherhood the next morning, it's people, people nice us,
who are going to have to answer
those hopes, to spr ead that
warmth among our fellow Ameri cans during the Christmas season
and the months to follow. Santa
C laus can 't do it for us.
The divisions in America and
in the world are very , very great .
The answer to man ' s separ ate ness , his alienation , his despair ,
has to start somewhere. We are
writing to you because we believe
that the answer , the warmth and
hope, has to start with you. And
with us. Somehow , Americans
have to begin to reach across
fie r. rrr j
t A I"W |Y
6 Us;
j Sflucke f'Ti'
^\ v ^
the barriers of age , of race , of
income , until they reach each
other with the kinds of feeling
that everyone can share. Somehow , we have to turn on to what
it means to be a human being in
a challengin g and difficult wor ld .
Candle- power. It 's not a slogan
written on a wall. It 's a measurement of light. And across
the country this Christmas Eve
many Americans will pause at
9:00 p.m. and walk out onto a
streetcorner , and light a cand le.
In small towns and big cities ,
people like you will take a break
from trimmin g the tree or talking
with old friends and walk outside
with a candle in their hands . Not
a demons tration , but a manisfestation of hope; each candle will
be a visual measu rement of the
light In men' s dreams and the
hope In men 's hearts. We call our
movement
"Candlelite " — a
movement toward bringing us
together.
Christmas Eve, A time of
warmth and hope. Perhaps this
time we can make those feelings
manifest . Maybe thi s time we can
make It last . Right now , while
you're beginning to wonder what
we'r e up to, or how much it' s going to cost , stop and think for a
moment. How long has It been
since you've let perfect strangers
on a street corner know how you
feel about brotherh ood?
Chairman: Thomas Flander s
The Candlelight People
Somethin g
Fro m Betty Lou
Hos es are re d
Vi olets are blue
When I look at you
I can smell your shoe
I am 6
I can count sticks
I am 7
I can look up in heaven
I am 8
I can go out on a date
I am nine and get it across my
behind
L ove is a burning fire
and talks like a Her
and I am 9 years old and
can not hardly stand
for love nocks me over
and then came a bolder
Hair Is curl y
and my name is sherrly
Hair Is strai ght
Editor:
Dear
and
I have gone out on a date
The letters you published FriHair
is wiggley
d ay, 11 December 1970 , from
I
am giggley
and
Professors Porte r and Skehan
Hair
twist y
is
r aise questions about the hear ing
Betsy
and
I
am
of record of their cases.
I
was
in
New
York
As chairman of the committee
I
saw
a
pink
stork
I
can
that conducte d the hearin g,
assure the College communit y
that 1) the proc eeding "was held 1 see a date
on the strong recommen dation of and try to be its mate
the nat ional office of the I see a star
A.A.U.P., 2) all principals were and I turn to a bar
notified well in advance tha t there I see a cow
would be a hearing and when it and say wowwould be held , 3) the rules to Wow
gover n the hearin g were estab- ,
The above state ments can be
lished before the hear ing and
suppor
ted by documentar y eviprincicopies were sent to all
dence
and by the testimony of
of
the
pals, 4) the membe rs
"Hie national
those
involved.
by
consid
ered
were
committe e
A
A
office
of
the
and the
.U.P.,
.
eligible
to
be
A
national .A.U.P.
President
of
the
Bloomsbur
g
mem
b
er
o
f
every
5)
t o serve ,
Stat
e
Fac
Association
College
ulty
all
availexamined
the committee
able evidence in both cases , in- received copies of all statements
cluding corres pondence and other issue d by the committee and sent
mater ial from Professo r s Porter to principals pri or to the hearing.
Louis F, Thompson
and Skehan.
^
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Players ' Prod uction...
make one sad or impatie nt with
the world , but only for a moment . The theatri cal moment is
fleeting and one easily slips
back into the warm and familiar
cocoon of popular morality and
commonplace speech — thin gs so
very
char acteristi c of the
"American " way of life.
"No Hero! No trag ic bout with
fate ! No cir cumstance that leaves
no way out . Ther e are ways out .''
In these words Cowen captures
the essence of the play. Beyond
the fact that the play is structured
around the commonpla ce , the
central dramati c situatio n involves the decision a young man
must make: to be tr ue to himself ,
or to try to fit into the little
him , the horr ors of war , being picture society ha s drawn to rep.
scared , ate . But what makes resent real ity. The young man,
this play and the Bloomsburg then , is engaged in a search for *
Player s production a great suc- the right course of actio n. The
cess is that the play is drawn avenues of act ion are clear and
from the trite moralities and the choice ha s been made and is
cliches which constit ute a large being made by millions of people.
portio n of our lives . Thanks to
the cinema- and television , war The tragedy is that the young man
is not br utal and bloody murder , is not given time to make a deit is battle s and tanks and cision and is swept helplessly incharism atic generals and gun-ho to the service ; society is insoldiers giving the enemy hell . tolerant of the undecided of the
And tha nks to the American con- searching people who aren 't so
cept of bra very and patrioti sm , ver y sure of themselves. The
dying in war, although unfor - play explodes with outb ursts of
tunate and messy, is but the anger and frustration —the young
man and his father loving and
hatin
g each other , the young man
price one must pay for democ- wreslUog like
a little
with
ra cy. A high price indeed — high- shadows and fears andboy
desires
,
.
er
anyway than that paid by n a rea l sense
, he is a modthe redcoats , the Japanese or the Iern-day
Hamlet who must make a
soldiers of Nor th Vietnam . It is
decision;
while Hamlet was a
a great help to have God on one's character but
of
side! And after all, boys aren 't and dignity, heroic proprotion
this character is a
simply boys , they are Americ an young man any
young man.
,
boys and their needless deaths be*
come fodder f or th e memor ies
But what is the resolution of
of parents who never understood
all
this indecision and tension?
them and the Legioners to talk
Is
it
indeed possible , given such
abou t and add the necessary demateri
al , to write ascr ibeanplay
a
tew
guts
over
tails of blood and
hundred beers at the club. War with a neat little moral dragging
is a game, the teams wear black at the end ? The play ends with the
and white , and youn g men and wo- boy' s death on the battlefiel d
men are given toke n when they in the arms of the great tree ,
turn eighteen ; the men go off to the tree which combines time
the game field and the women and place into one eternal momen t . The tra gedy is that the
wait .
boy 's life has been needlessly
The Players ' Summertree suc- wasted. "Waste ," says C owen ,
ceeds as theatre not so muc h as " is ver y common pl ace." Howa dazzlin g theatrical event , but ever , there is no promise of
as a medieval folk-play in which chan ge or improvement . Althou gh
the mysteries and tra gedies of the parents lament that thin gs
life are re-enacted and somehow would be different if they could
or ganized into a kind of coherency be given a second chance , their
which only heightens the tragedy ver y lament is a cliche and they
and grief . Stock melodrama and would probably repeat the same
cliches alone cannot succeed as mistak es. Perhaps hope lies in
theatre just as trite flag-waving the little boy, but he must go a
canrot succeed as constructive long way and , unfortunately, he
patriotism . What is needed to may never realize the lesson of
spark the rubble represents truth his older frien d' s death , or feel
— it is a hollow feeling, likely to again the tr agedy of his loss .
by Mike Stugrin
Ron Conwell' s play Summertree is bitter -sweet theatre . The
story itself is a trite melodrama:
The sensitiv e boy who wants to be
a pianist but whose father wants
him to "make something of himself" drop s out of college and is
draf ted . He goes to war , but not
before he says goodby to his
pare nts , his girl , his eight-year old neighborhood friend , his back yard , and , finally , to the tree
on which he played when he was
a child . The dialog ue is a massive assembly of cliches — about
the generation gap, his affair
with a girl who "believes " in
The tree is eternal , but it is
merely a spectator , a blind
Tiresias , but without the power
of speech to teach and warn men
of their foolishness . Waste is a
com monplac e thing , it is an eter nal reality .
Peter Gent ele and David Wright
as the youn g man — both are
sensitiv e and sufficient ly sure of
themselves . Fortunately, both
were allowed to develop an interpretation of their own and peeing the play, twice adds an interestin g dimension . Mr . Wright
was especially convincin g with
his slight touch of naivete which
brou ght an extra measure of in- /
nocence and pathos to the Ham *
let-figure . The character is, after all , scared . He says at one
point , "I' m still pretty young,
you know '' — his dilemna ra ges
not in his mind and spirit , but
in his heart . As the moth er ~ E1len Robinson and Shelby Treon—
Miss Robinson , althou gh she did
not develop her voice range adequately enough , contributed a
finely tuned delicacy of movement and facial expression which
further enhance the sense of sorrow and loss. Tom Cur tis as
the father captured the stock
figure of the self-made man who
both demanded and prayed that his
son make a better life for himself than his had been. He wanted
him to be a someone— anyone who
was successful . Amy Raber and
Cindy Griffith were cast as the
girlfriend who loved the body,
but , as the story goes, stopped
writing and after his death , had
only her memories . Both ladies
are very talented and were
paired well with Raber playing opposite Gentele , and Griffith opposite Wri ght. Miss Griffith was
especially plea sing. John Hilgar
as the youn g man in his childhood and as the youn g man of
tomorrow deserves great praise .
j
The cast for the Thursda y and Saturda y presentations , including
the lighting sr»w , stage manager , chairma n of thai prop c rew
and one of his assistants. Left to right , standin g, they are Allan
Klawitte r, Amy Raber , Scott Atherfon , John Hilgar , Pete Gentele, Shelby Treon, Bob Casey and Steve Weiss. Seated from left
to right are Lyn Naylor , Jean LeGates and Tom Curtis .
Michael McHale directed the
play using the threat re-in -theround technique which was very
effective . It gave the produc tion an immediacy and intimacy
— the audience was part of the
story; they are the story . This
rev iewer f eels that Summertr ee
is one of McH ale 's finest pro ductions — displayin g the combined effects of power , pathos,
irony , and gentle sensitivity . The
set was stark and simple and was
exactly what the play demanded ;
Harry Berkheiser did a fine J ob.
Sound and lighting effects were
handled with prec ision . All in
all , Summ ertree was a fine and
touching moment of theatre at
Bloomsburg .
Shelby Treon (Mothtr) and Peter Gentele (Young Man ) are shown In* • fl ashback
scon * fro m the BSC Player 's production Summort ree. Mother is doing a portrai t of tho
Young Man in pastels, a hobb y of hers.
Pete Gentele and Amy Raber embrace afte r the Young Man has
retur ned sa ying he was the ghost of Groundhog 's Day past. It
was to establish the closenes s betwee n the Young Man and the
wlrl t
Hilgar and Gentele are shown in one of the scenes where the
Young Man helps the Boy into a tree and asks " wha t can you
see? " He wanted to know what he was missing.
Photos
by
Fouc a rt
Mr. Michael J. McHale , director of Summertr — sits , possibly
pondering his. next succe ssful production. As one of th e cast
said of this picture , 'That is though tful."
The McHale Touch
by allan maurer
There is n o question that
Summertree , under the dire cti on
of Michael J. McHale was a solid
hit . (See Mike Stugrln 's review
elsewhere in this issue).
I remember two facult y members makin g very similar comments abou t Mr . McHale when I
was a lowly freshman and one of
his shows was underw ay.
"This McHale , he has the
touc h," they said . He does.
Wh at that touch is, how It wor ks ,
I am at a loss to explain. But
It was ver y much In evident In
his production of Summertree.
John Hilgar as the Little Boy, Scott Ath erton as the Soldier , and
Otnttl e ¦» the Youn g Man represent the three st ages of the boy 's
lift . It Is the end of ths show and th#< Young Man It dying . In
the back ground are: represented his life , as a Little Boy and a
Soldier.
Perhaps
one aspect of the
McHale touch is his continual
str iving to involve the audience
In a pitch of feeling near participation wi th the events on stage In
his shows. It is not unusual
to fin d actors in the aisles in a
McHale production . In Henry IV
he had messengers entering from
the aisles and member s of P alstaf f' s rag ged army crawling
over audience seats. He has
built ram ps from the st age to
the audience 's domain , and staged
'show s In Carver Hall rathe r than
Haas to decrease the distance and
Increase the relat ionship between
his actors and his audien ces.
The arena production of Summertree succeeded very well in
establishin g this bond between
the audience and the stage McHale
str ives for , and much of the play 's
success resul ted from this.
The actors of Summer tree car ried their share of responsibility
for its success of cour se, but in
the ir success too , the McHale
touch was nota ble. In the low,
casual notes of Peter Gentele 's
voice, and Amy Raber ' ssh adowllt
movements , the un derplaye d excellence of Tom Curtis , and the
dlrect-to-the-audlence
speeches
of Shelby Treon , McHale 's direct ion was evident.
Another aspect of the MoKale
touch at Its best Is swift action ,
and this also, was not able in
Summertxee . A gain , the arena
produc ti on aided Mr . McH ale in
kee ping the stage action nearly
cont inuous with the exception of
breaks between acts.
Even the very simple scenery
of Summertree In the BSC pro *
duct ion reflected the McHale
style , as anyone who saw hit
production of Henry IV or even
The Odd Couple , will at test to.
In short. Summert ree reflected
director McHale and his "touch "
at their best , and the results were
very good indee d.
Husk ies Dro p 2nd
to Chaney
by Jesse James
The Bloomsburg State Huskies
went down with their second can .
secutive loss of their 1970-71
campaign . This time the defeat
came from the hands of the Wolf
pack fr om Cheyney 123-88 . The
Hus kies played a fine game but
were just outclassed fr om the
field by the Wolves , who hit on
60 per cent of their shots .
Cheyney jumped to an early
lead which was never to be re .
linquished . The Huskies wer e
within striki ng distance through out the ' first 8 minutes but fell
behind by 11 at half time and
stayed out of the game,
Cheyney was led by Harrison
who hit on 13»of 15 fr om the fieid
and 4 for 4 from the charity
stripe . The Wolves also had four
other players in double figures —
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Eldrige 28 , Clifton and Kirkland
20, and Gr ier 15. The visitors
also controlled the rebounds with
Grier pulling in 15 , Kirkland 11,
and Eldrige 10.
The Huskies scoring leader
was Howard Johnson 24 , followed
closely by Jim Platukis 21 , Paul
Kuhn 19, Dennis Munny 16. Howard Johnson also led the Huskies in the rebound department
with 13.
*J*C^ •>
Tillma n
S ets
R ecords
by Jim Chapman
The Freshman Huskies rebounded from last week' s defeat
by overwhelmin g the youn g W olver ines of Cheyney 77-70. The
first half of the game had the
rese mblanc e of a seventh grade
CYO contest , as each team had
numerous tur novers an d refused
to capitali ze on the opponent 's
mistakes.
The fumblin g and bu mblin g
Husk ies left the floor at halftime after being hande d a 38-29
lead by the contin gent from Cheyney.
The Husk ies emerge d from
the locker room an d pr oved tha t
they are a team that clicks when
they work together . They dominated the boards mainly throu gh
the efforts of Gary Bockelman .
continuall y underm ined
and
every Wolverin e attem pt to slice
the lead. They played good defense , and work ed the ball well
but there Is one disastrous aspect connected with the Husky
offense. They are afraid to shoot
the basketball . I don 't know if thi s
has anyth ing to do with the Way
C oach Reese handles the tea m ,
but If the Huskies ar e going to
keep winning , then they better
start shooting.
Gary Bockelman led all scorers with thirty points and twenty two re bounds. Oth er Huskies In
double figures were Dave Jones
with sixteen , and field general
Tony Dare contributing ten. High
scorer for the Wolverine was
Bob Gallashaw with twenty- thr ee*
The Huskies will be seeking
the ir second consecutive victory
next Tuesda y as they tackle Kutt town away , and will return home
Thursd ay to host the team from
Bible Baptist . P.S. 13-32 from
the foul line; does It sound like
CYO statistics?
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Mighty Monmouth arrived an
hour late but wasted no time in
the water as All American Ken
Tillman set two new pool records .
He swam the 200 yard individual medley in 2:08 .3 and the 200
yard backstroke in 3:06 .7 . Ken
now has four records in Centennial pool since he already
held the records for 1000 yard
and 500 yard freestyle events .
Despite the lopsided score of 76
to 37 Coach McLaughlin was
plea sed with the steady improvement shown by the Huskies . Jack
F eyrer set a new BSC team record for the 500 yard freestyle
as he lapped .3 second off the
best time he did last season.
Dave Gibas set a new Centennial pool recor d of 22 .4 seconds
for the 50 yard freestyle , eras ing the old log of 22 .7 set by
Dennis Hovanec of Westchester .
In defeating Wilkes 65 to 44
no new team or pool records
were set . Coach McLaughlin was
making adj ustments in order to
test previously untried team
mem ber s. For exam ple , the winning 400 yard medley relay team
was com pose d of th ree f res hmen
and a senior makin g his first
varsity appeara nce. Fre d Steinh art , a f res h man wh o swam th e
100 yard backstroke leg of this
relay has had no pre vious high
school exper ience . Fred was also able to garner a 3rd in the
200 yard backstroke event . Denn is Schold swam the breaststroke
leg of the relay and mana ged to
take a third in the 200 yard individual medley. Jim Carlln Is a
senior but this was his first
varsity appearance as he did his
share In winnin g this relay . Jim
Clamon swam the butter fly leg
in the relay and showed his
stamina by winnin g two more
events , Jim took firs t In the 200
yard butterfly . The team record
now stan ds at two losses and
only one win , but with the stead y
Improvement in conditionin g the
• Huskies should be able to post
additional victories before the
end of the semester .
Starti ng the 1970 season ,
Jet quarterback Joe Na mat h
passing
had a life time
yardag e ave rage off 221.2
y ards per game, tops In the
history, according to »n article In SPORT Magailno.
Baltimore 's Johnn y Unltas ,
with 207.4 yards per game
throu gh the air, Is the onl y
passer to average better
tha n 200 yards per game
throughou t his career.
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The Huskies record of 1-2 does
not mean that we have a poor
team . We started the 70-7 1 season with two of our toughest
opponent s in the league . Th e rest
of the season should be a good
one for the Hu skies. They -will
have another chance at the two
teams who defeated them , East
Stroudsburg and Cheyney.
Frosh Tame
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Bob was a littl e > 11-American
for the Huskie s in 1967. His
diving , over-handed grabs kept
the fans on the edge of their seats
and led BSC to a 6-3 record .
Bob pulled in 77 passes for 1325
yards and 13 t ouchdowns for 101
p oints. Several of th ese figures
are current NAIA records.
Wh en at BSC Bob teamed with
quarterback
Rich Lichte l and
wide receiver Stan Kuharski to
give the Husk ies the most devasting aerial game in the Pennsylvania Conferenc e. Lichte l also
holds severa l NAIA records compiled while at Bloomsbur g.
This Sunda y Tucker and the
Giants take on the up and down
Los Angelas Rams. With their
devasting defense and bette r than
average offense the Rans will
give the Giants all they can handle. If the Giants win Sunday they
" will win the eastern division of
the NFC (the same is true for
Los Angeles in the West). With
this win goes an NFC playoff spot
and a possible Super Bowl engagement in Januar y.
As Tucke r said on Sunday 's
post-game show , "We 'r'e rea dy
and want th is game. " See , somebody from Bloomsbur g State can't
be all that bad .
Bob Tuektr—S ta r tight end off ,
tho Now Yor k Giants prove s
"An y on* from Bloomiburg
State collog t can 't bo all bad. "
by Clark Ruch
Former Bloomsbur g State College great , Bob Tucker , led the
New York Giant s to a major victory over the tauted St. Louis
Cardinals Sunda y. Tucke r put
the first points on the board with
a 15 yard square out pass from
Fran Tarkenton and played a
key role in several other scores
in leading the Eastern Division
co-ieaders to a 34-17 win.
\
Silv erman 's Book
"The Lord Is first , my fr iends ductio n by comedia n Bill Cosby,
are second , and I am third ."
For Sayers , who is recu perThat 's Chicago running back Gate at ing fr om knee surgery. I AM
Sayers ' philosophy and it pro - THIRD is his first lite r ary effort .
vldes the title for his soon-to - Sllverm an , in addi tion to editing
be-publlshed autobiography. I AM SPOR T Maga zine , has authored
THIRD .
or collabo rated In the writing of
10 sports book *. Includin g Pau l
Written In collabor ation with Hornun gs "Foot
ball and the
Al Silver man , editor of SPORT
8to
n
Fr
w
»
"
,.£
* Robinson's
i M agaelne , the book , which will be ?i!J
"My Life in Baseball
," and
released by Viking Pr ess on
DlMa «l0. »'• a°M«n
November 26th , la a moving ac- Yw.m
count of Sayers ' upbringing In a
ghetto neighbor hood and thro ugh
Silver man lives wi th his wife
the pain and glory of his brilliant
and th ree children
in Whi te
pr o carter . It Includes an Intro - Pla ins, New York .
¦
¦
'¦
¦
Baseball Manager
Survey
¦
¦
¦ -¦--
¦ —
..
.
.
.
.
.
. .
.
± _
-
__
—-
"Willie
leadershi p qualities:
M ays is probabl y one of the six
all-ti me great baseball players
The San Fr ancisco Giants ' in history, but I don 't feel he 's the
Willie Mays a n d the Atlanta kind of fellow who would instill
Braves' Hank Aaron don't rate ¦what I want as a manager. "
among the top six superstars as
As for Aaron , one of the few
potenti al mana gers , accordin g to
g
enera
l managers to consider
a surve y of baseball 's general
him
Atlanta
's Paul Richards , put
managers appearing in the cur;
**He comma nds the
way:
SPORT
Maga
zine.
it
this
rent issue of
player s but I don 't
of
the
respect
by
the
highly
Regarded more
he
wants
to manage. I
if
to
the
article
know
accordin
g
GMs ,
,
may be a little
ambition
Ernie
Banks
think
his
Al
Kaline
,
are
,
Frank Robinson , Maury Wills, higher tha n managin g, probably
Harmon Xillebrew and Mickey in the fron t office ," concludes
Richards in the SPOR T article,
Mantle.
San Diego general manager
Buzzie Bavasie, speaking of
Mays , says: "I teel he lacks a
Oakland Raider quarterstron g desire to mana ge. I don't
back Daryle Lamdnica has
mean to imply ihat he is not a
thrown more touchdown pasdedicated player , But he could
ses in the last th ree years
probably make so much more
than any quar terback in pro
money and have much more fun
football history over a simioutside of baseball he 'd probably
lar period , according to an
be better off."
article
in the cu rrent issue
Anoth er GM attacked May 's
of
SPORT
Magazine.
abilities «¦ more directly in the
SPORT article , challenging his
Mays , Aaron snub bed by GM' s
Potential Ma nagers
Smith makes NA IA
All-Sta r Team
Clark Boler , head baseball
coach at BSC received word that
one of his 1970 team member s ,
outfielder Dave Smith , was elected to the 1970 Topp s All-Star
Baseb all Team of the NAL A category of NCAA District I for superior performance on the playing
field contributing to the high standards of the nation 's favorite
pastime .
scored the team 's most hits and
most runs (17) and had 10 stolen
bases. The previous year he batted .343 with 11 hits for 32 times
at bat , and had a fielding aver age of ,866 . Statist ics on the field,
ing average for the 1970 season
for BSC are not available , but
coach Boler indicate d Smith had
another great year in this category .
Smith , a native of Temple , Pa.,
graduate d in August of this year
and is currently serving with the
National Guard . During the 1970
campaign , he batted .321 and
A Topps Award Citation has
been sent to coach Boler to be
pre sented to Smith with a dupli cate copy pro vided for display in
the college 's tro phy display case.
Playoffs
Changed
Baseball' s new playoff system
should be changed to feature inter -league play , suggests and editorial in the current issue of
SPOR T Magazine .
In the article , the SPORT editors review the attendance figures at the post-season playoffs ,
and point out that they fall far
short of the capacity houses attracted for most Wor ld Series
G ames.
"We think there would have
been considerably more drama
and excitement this year in Baltimore , the winner in the Ameri can League E ast , had been match ed in the playoffs agains t Pitts burgh , the winner of the Nation al League East ," conten ds
SPORTS editorial . "And a Cincinnatl-Minnesota series would
sure ly have offered more competition and interest than what
took plac e,"
As for the possibility of two
teams from the sam e league
winding up in the World Serie s ,
the SPORT editors answere d:
"It really wouldn 't matter because the World Series would still
be a match between the best
team s in ba seball , th e two havin g
just proved their superiority in
head-to -head combat .
In conclus ion they say: "We
think th is kind of system , league
vs . league , would enhance the
playoffs every way — artistically and financiall y — and that it
would not in the least detract
from the World Series , We would
like to see inter- league playoffs
begin in 197 1.
An extensive progra m of collegiate and prep baseball awards
are being presented each year to
All-American
players in five
categories under the sponsorship
of Topps Chewing Gum , Inc ., of
Brooklyn , New York . All-Ameri can baseball t eams are selected
for the Universit y Division and
the College Division and there are
awar ds to the All-American team
of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics . All-Star
teams are select ed in each of the
eight districts of the NCAA with
district Coaches «of-the .Year being selected .
Topps is active in the baseball field as a long-time sponsor
of the Maj or League All-Star
Rookie Team , the Minor League
Player -of-the-Year
and other
awards honoring baseball players . The compan y is known
throughout the country for its
Baseball Bubble
Gum Card s
which are a perennial favorite
w ith y oungsters.
B-Ball
Schedul e
Basketb all heads the holiday
sport s schedule at B. S. C, on
Dec. 15 , the H uskies travel to
mee t the Golden Bears of Kutz town State Colle ge, after which ,
on the 17th , Baptist Bible Invades the home hardboards and
on the 19th Earl Voss 's squad
takes on M illersville State C ollege away .
Following a ten day rest , the
Huskies will play host at the
Second Annual Berwick Invitational Tournament , a chari ty
fund raising pro ject , hold on
Dec. 29th and 30th,
"How Good Can You Tread W atar?"
Magazine Introd uced
A new magazine designed especially for the social-action oriented Individual will begin publication in Janu ary , '71. SOL
III , as its name implies , wtll be
a world affairs publication with
a heavy emphasis on social pr oblems and their solutions .
To encourage reade r participation , SOL III , is holding a
$1000 magazine contest with
prizes in writing , poetry , art ,
phot ography , and humor . Ent ries
from university student s and fac ulty members are especially
wante d . Contest rules may be
obtained by writing:
SOL III
C ontest , 1909 Gree n Street ,
Phila ., Pa . 19130. For fur ther
Informati on write : SOL III M agazine, 1909 Green Street , Phila .,
Pa , 19130 .
Tutoring Offe red
The following students have indicated a willingness to offer
their services as tutors for other interested at BSC . If anyone
should desire assistance in a problem area , individual arrange ments can be made by contactin g any of the students listed beblow . If anyone would like to be included on the list , plea se contact Mr , Zarski in Elwell Hall, The initials after the room numbers below stand for Elwell , Waller , M ontour, L uzerne and
Schuylklll Halls .
Bill Willis , Room 359E , PO 2445 , Subject • Gen . Chem , l&ll .
Linda Male , Room 346W, PO 2848, Subject - Beginning French ,
David Klees , R oom C ommuter , PO 449 , Subject • Math (be*
low Calc.), Spanish 10M04 , Phys, Sci., Bio. 101.
Georgianna Cherinchak , Room 447M , PO 1627 , Subject ¦
World Lit . I .
Bob Burnett , Room G10E , PO 2564 , Subject • Accountin g
I&II , C ost A ccount in g, Intermediate Accounting I&II .
Mark Scheffey, Room 154E , PO 2697 , Subject ¦Accounting
I&II .
George Hassel , Room 373E , PO 2252 , Subject • Intro to
Finite Math .
Thomas Price , Room 736E , PO 2396 , Subject • Calc . I&II ,
Tim Kniss , Room 729E , PO 2503 , Subject - Calc . I , II&III ,
College Algebra , Fundamentals of Math .
Denti ls Magargal , Room 713E , PO 2656 , Subject - Chem.
112. Physics 211.
BUI William s, Room 703E , PO 2628 , Subject • German ,
Beginnin g Russian .
„
Kobln Smith , Room Luzerne 1925 , Subject • Biology, En glish ,
Beginning Math ,
Cheryl Rice , Roo m 313S, PO 1322 , Subject • Pre.Calc .
Louise Kanouse , Room 434S ,, PO 1364 , Subject • Calc, I,
Carol Anderson , Room 120S, PO 1265 , Subject . Beginning
French , Elementar y Math ,
National
Ceremony
Planned
A quiet campus town is the
scene of great activity as the
Ch ristmas season arrives, Durham , home of the University of
New Ham pshire , is National
Headquarters for the first nation wide Christmas Eve candlelight
observance.
The idea of the national candle light came as an outgrowth of a
New York-based ecology group,
known as the Candle light People .
Its founder is folksinger Tom
Flanders , who says the whole idea
of the candleli ght observance is to
"brin g the people together ."
"The idea of the candleli ght , "
says Flanders , "is to call attention to the fact that Americans
are being subjected to too many
devisive means . We need to pull
together for the good of our
Country, for the good of Human ity. We rea lize that we must
care f or one another , before we
will be able to care f or nature."
"The only thin g we're askin g,"
adds Flanders , "is that at 9
Christm as
Eve ,
on
p.m .
Americans join together , out of
doors , and light a candle for unity .
There will be no marchin g, no
protests , no strikes , just a simple
expression of faith in mankind ."
Flanders and his committee
see the candleli ght observance as
a continuing project , not to be
forgotten after December 24, but
rather to serve as a point of
individu al initiative for all to
"work to brin g people back together " throughout the year.
Plans are alre ady underway for
a world-wide candleli ght obser vance und er the auspices of the
United Nations, f or next year .
You are cor dially invited to
join with your fellow men in the
Christm as Candlelight ,
First
Christmas Eve, 9 p.m., out of
doors .
Discussing
his pitching
staffs unusually high •arned-run aver age , Twins ' manager Bill Rigney says in the
currant issua of SPORT Magazi ne:
" It really wasn 't that trig if
yo u look at it fr om the point
of view of the national debt. "
I-Q
Quiz
By Tom Schofleld
WIN 1 WIN ! WIN ! PRIZES GAL ORE IN THE M&G' S INTELLI G ENCE TEST!
1st PRIZE : A FRE E DINNE R
FOR TWO IN THE L UXURIOUS
"BARCELONA R OOM" OF THE
SCRANTON CO MMONS !
2nd PRIZE: TWO FREE DINNERS (CO MPLETE WITH ALL
MEDI CAL SERVI CES NECES S-
ARY)
3rd PRIZE:
A STUDENT GIFT
PAK!
TO BE E LIGIBLE TO WIN,
SIMPLY
COMPLE TE
THI S
SH O RT TEST ,
Wh at Influenced your coming
to Bloomsbur g State C ollege ?
a) I was searching for an exciting educational exper ience.
b) I was searching for Mansfield andIt got lost,
had a pretty campus.
c^
d) The girls-boy s wer e "cute 1'.
e) It was chea p.
Wh at was your first (refrai n
from essay answers) disappoint ment when you arrived?
a) I felt like I never left high
school,
h) The food .
cS The people .
d) I found the whole situation
enti r ely sat isfactor y.
e) (essa y answer )
Tom SchofleW
Colum bia
N um bers
ARM Collects Toys
Inter-Sorority Christmas
DEB's
As their service project the
Sisters of Delta Epsilon Beta
are encouraging students to write
Columbia Residence Hall
letters to Hanoi to express their
Desk Ext. 379
concern for our Prisoners of
Miss Tolan , Head Resident , Ext. War . These letters are seeking
378
the release or at least reforF LOOR EXT. PAY PHONE
mation of treatment of POW 's.
784-9800
1
The Sisters will provide boxes
2
784-9762
at the Residence Halls where let3
392
784-9753
ters will be collected and sent to
4
394
the North Viet Nam government .
5
395
784-9747
Please do your part and show
6
396
your concern .
7
397
784-9763
The Sisters planned a pre.
8
380
rush party for all non-Greek
9
318
784-9829
coed's. This took place Sunday
night , December 13th at the Delta
Epsilon Beta house, located at
455 East Street .
Finally the Sisters would like
to thank Bob Miller and Al Decker for their Christmas tree, and
to extend their best wishes to the
BSC student body, faculty,
Kenneth T . Wilson , Associate administration for a M e r rand
y
Professor of art at Bloomsburg Christmas and a Happy New Year,
State College, has a one-man
exhibition of watercolors on view
Fail Sigm a Pi
at Mansfield State College.
The sisters of Tau Sigma Fi
The twenty-six paintings in- held
their annual winter formal at
cluding the "Envisage Series" the Hazelton
Holiday Inn on Decand "Lake Image Series," are ember 5. "Spirit
Christmas"
part of the latest investigations was the theme andof everyone
eninto the paintings of a landscape Joyed the affai r . President and
that were done during the last' Mrs. Nossen, alumni sisters Pegtwo years. The paintings are gie Rood and Sandy (Smith>(
hanging in the new Laurel Art McAndrews, and Mr . and Mrs t
Gallery that was opened this fall Verdekal were the honored
at Mansfield State College, and guests. The sisters and guests
will remain there until cne c .'••rist- agreed it was a terrific way to
mas holidays.
start the Christmas season.
Tau Sigma Pi would also like
SPSEA
to thank all the people who helped
Jack Corbiu, of the Penna, to make their fund raising proState Education Association 's ject a success. We hope we
Professional Rights and Respon- helped many students with their >
sibilities Committee will be fea- Christmas shopping.
tured at the SPSEA meeting, Dec. • A special thank-you from all
16 , today, at 4 p.m . in Haas Gal- the sisters is extended to George
lery. Everyone is invited and en- Bruchko , our beautiful legs concouraged to ask any questions testant. We all appreciated his
about the profession .
cooperation and his "beautiful"
legs.
Recruite r
A Christmas party was held
(continue d fro m page two )
at Mrs. Verdikal's house on Monnight , Dec. 10, was a folk mass day December 14. There were
"written by Rev . Rochelle.
refreshments, fun , and a special
What seems to be the real aim surprise for all the sisters.
of Rev . Rochelle is that he will
be able to hold a form of conmeans to speak .
temporary worship, including
Perhaps this means, if the stusmall-group education , counsel- dents of BSC come to Jay Rochling, and human relations train- elle, he will reach out with Christ,
ing.
in his silence, and teach us to
How can we sum up Rev . Roch- speak .
elle's mission to BSC? Well ,
this quote found hanging inside
his house will suffice:
Teaching about Christ
begins in silence.
36 E. Main Stroet
To speak of Christ
Bloomsburg, Pa.
means to keep silent .
784-1947
To be silent about Christ
Wilson
Exhibits
Approximately 300 children in
twelve regional hospitals and an
orphana ge are expected to benefit
from the ninth annual "Toys for
Tots " drive which was held last
week sponsored by the Associa *
tion of Resident Men ,.
A dance was held on campus
with the price of admission being
one toy and the Town of Blooms,
bur g was also canvassed for toys .
The schedule for Santa and his
helpers to visit hospital child ren 's wards is as follows : Mon.
day , December 14 , — 10:15 a.m .
Ashlan d Hospital ; 11:30 a,m,
Pottsville General Hospital 12:45
p.m . Good Samaritan # Hospital ,
Pottsville ; 2:15 p. m . Shamokin
State Hospital ; 3-.Q0 p. m . Sunbury
New Pot
(continu ed fro m page two)
are offering an alternative to
spoonfed art. In the organic
expression of ceramics and the
two dimensional expression of
canvas, they are offing individual expression .
Apart from the r ather unpleasant functional quality of the
chamberpots of memory , these
were often beautifully handcr afted pieces of wood , designed with
care and feeling — no pun Intended . In the same way the
handwork of today 's art students
are honest individual expressions. If you dig seeing the real
thing and not a Woolworth' sprint
then go to the Chamberpot. If
you can remember what a chamberpot was — then you can also
remember a time when artwork
was valued for its uniqueness,
not its mass production. If you
didn't know what a chamberpot
was , consider your education exp anded ju st a little bit , but don 't
stop there. See what is happening
with B.S.C. art students. At the
Chamberpot— in Bloomsburg.
Charles N. Yeager
Dispensi ng Opt ician!
120 E. Main St.
Preemptio ns f'riled & repairs
—
-
~*~
*—¦
Fine Jew elry and
Watch Repair
, 25 E. main St.1, Bloomsburg
©
WAFFLE
GRILLE
MOYER
Pharmacy
ROBERT G. SHIVE, R.P.
Free Prescri p tion Delivery
TOILET GOODS
COSMET ICS
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES
GREETING CARDS
1 West Main St.
Phono: 784-4388
BLOOMSBURG , PA.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ B^B^B^P^P^P^P^p^B^pajBjMpaajp^paajpj
Mill er Office
Eppley's
Pharmacy
Supply Co.
MAIN A IION StRf ITS
18 W.it Main Strot
Prtscr/pf/on Specialist
BLOOMSBURG, PA.
HAUMA1K CARDS
GIFTS
Mi on*
784-2561
• CHANEL
• GUflLAIN
• PAIEROE
• LANVIN
• MINCE MATCHAIEUI
• ELIZAIETtt ARDEN
• HELENA RUIENSTE IN
• DANA
• COTY
• MAX FACTOR
wlttff •fwlUjpf
ton , Penna., from 9 a.m . to 5
P.m .
In Lancaster , the program will
take place on Franklin and Marshall College .campus. Both programs will be held December 29 .
Ohio
E ach year , during the Christmas holidays , the Ohio County
Board of Education sponsors a
major recruitment program to
begin filling anticipated vacancies for elementary and secondary teachers.
This year their program will
be held Monday , December 28,
1970 , at 10:00 a.m . in the Ohio
County Board of Education offices .
Applications should be returned to Fred A . Hake, Administrative Assistant for Personnel ,
Ohio County Schools , 2203 National Road, Wheeling, West Virginia , 26003, Applicants will receive communication indicating
directions to the Board of E ducation offices
Lancaster- Scranto n
This year , the Operation Native Sons and Daughters programs will be held in Lancaster
and Scranton , which will provide
information about career potenti als in their respective areas by
interviews with employers .
In Scranton, the conference
will be held at the Jermyn Motor
Inn , 326 Spruce Street , Scran-
Summer Camps
Attention any teachers or college students interested in summer camp j obs as a director or
counselor in the following areas:
kindergarten, music , nature, pioneering, riding, tennis , or waterfront; jobs exist for you in Pennsyl vania summer camps. Those .
interested should call , write, or
register with a recruiter from
the nearest Pennsy State Empl oyment Service Office, Or, if
you live in the Pittsburgh area ,
recruitment will be held December 21-23 and 28-30 from 9 a.m .
- 4 p.m . in the profession and
clerical office , Bureau of Employment Security , 627 Penn Avenue, Pittsburgh , Pa. 15222 .
" Drugstore
of Service "
34 E. Ma in Street and
Scottown Shopp ing
C enter
Kampus Nook
Acros s from the Union
Hot
Platters
Every
Mini?
Midi?
Maxi
Gaucho?
Day
Plain A Ham Hoagits,
Cheese • Pepper on I • Onion
Plua. Our ow n Made lc«
Cream.
Take Out Orders :
Hours: Mon. • Thurs f:0011:00
9:00.12:00
Prida y
4 :30-12:00
Saturday
11: 00 11:00
Sunda y
Come see our
Lingerie
and Foundation
Lines . . •
Eudora's
Corset Shop
REA & DERICK INC.
1 E. Main St.
iM
H
H
iBHMMHaHiaaaiiaHii
^ii^M
^^
^^^^
^^^M
^^^ UH
^^^
^^^B
^^ PH
S3^^ 2Z2S ^5Z5^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
B^S^B^BBBBBBBB1
Harr y Logan
Fine J ewelry
AND
Do your thing at
Vour Prescription Dru gg ist
NESPOLI
jewelers
Opportunities Offered
i
PHOTO SERVICES
BLOOM
BOWL
Community Hospital ; an d 3:45 pital .
Wednesday, December 16, —
p.m . Danville Geisinger Medical
1:00 to 4:00 p.m . Selinsgrove
Center .
Tuesday, December 15, — 8:45 State School and Hospital .
The Association of Resident
a.m . Bloomsburg Hospital ; 9:25
Men
, sponsoring the "Toys for
a.m . Berwick Hospital; 10:30
Tots
" proje ct, is working in cona.m . Nanticoke St . Stanislaus Orphanage; 11:00 a.m . Nanticoke junction with the Dean of Students '
State Hospital; 11:45 a.m . Hazle- Office with Assistant Dean of
ton General Hospital ; and 12:15 Students Richard Haupt directing
p.m . Hazeltfon St . Joseph 's Hos- • the project .
Repairing
rtwrt
Your J twtltr A way fro m Home
5 W. Main St.
Bloomsburo
Main St., Bloomsb uro
SMORGASBORD
ALL YOU CAN BAT
Tu
.10
TuT
Ta»
.18
«3
tmMH 0 L l
Y B " F FET
LUNCHEON
H
ftfI
v
EACH
^ SUNDAY
TUESDAY Thni FRIDAY
•
TTj week 11 JO . 1 JO
"*°
*"
Children • $1.50
ON OUR 2nd FLOOR
HOTEL MAGEE Bloomsburg, Pa.
DICK BENEFIELD. Man—tr
Say
MER R Y CHR IS TMAS
with
FLOWERS FR OM...
"^S^t^lUiY
|^^W FLOW ERS
I^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
B
t
The Christmas spirit is evident in eVery corner of the campus.
Though work continues as usual in the many offices ifs easier
for everyone knowing that a break is coming soon .
Christmas Edition
Raffles Terminated ,
Illega l In Penna.
John S, Mulka , Director
of
Student Activities , recently an*
nounced the termination of raffles on the Bloomsbur g State College campus .
Student organizat ions, up to
this time , hav e been permitted
to conduct various fund raisin g
events includin g raffles . After
researchin g student handbooks of
several colleges and universit ies , conversa ti ons w ith st udent
personnel administrators of the
college and other colleges, and
review of the Penns ylvania Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure M anua l, the Subcommittee on
Student Or ganizati ons voted unanimously on December 4, 1970 ,
to pr ohibit the sponsorship of
raffles by student organizations .
This will be effective at the beginn ing of t h e secon d semester
of the 1970-7 1 academic year .
The state law regarding raffles
rea ds as follows:
"M- Section 601 . Lotteries .
All lotteries , whether public or
pr ivate , for ihoneys , goods,
wares or merchan dise, chattels ,
lands , tenements , hereditaments ,
or other matters or things what soever , are here by declared to
be common nuisances . Every
grant , bar gain, sale , Conveyance
or transfer of any goods or chat tels , lands , tenements or hered itaments , which shal l be made in
pursuance of any such lottery , is
hereby declared to be invalid and
void .
"Whoever , either publicly or
pri vately, erects , sets up, opens , makes or draws any lottery,
or is in any way concerned in the
mana ging, conducting or carrying on the same is guilty of a
misdemeanor , and on conviction
th ereo f , shall be sentenced to
pay a fine not exceeding f i v e
hundred dol lars ($500), or under go impr isonment , by separate
or solitary confinement at labor ,
not ' exceeding one (1) year , or
both ."
If a president or advisor of any
stu den t or gan izat ion has any
questions regarding this matter ,
please feel free to contact Mr .
Mulka .
Bloomsbur g In Spain
Is Ready For Plane
"Bloomsburg In Spain - 1971"
is ready to go, according to A ,
F oureman , Chairm an of the Foreign Lang uages Depar t ment .
Six credit hours will be given
at the under graduate or graduate
levels and courses will be offer ed at the: University of Madr id
Spain , which will grant a certificate upon satisfactory completion of the courses.
You do not need to know the
langua ge to go, you will learn it
there , In Spain.
Departing from Kennedy inter na tion al Air por t 'm June 30 , the
Summe r In Spain pro gram for
1971 will Include regular week-
end tri ps , a bullfight , and a tour
of Andalucla (J aen , G ranad a , Malaga , Sevi lla , and Cordoba) .
Plans are also unde rway to
have a special ceremony with
students from Spanish universities and high officials of the
Spanish Government In the Pro vince of Lerl da (West of Barce lona ).
The grou p will return on August 20, Students from other colleges may participate .
For further information , contac t Dr. Alfred Tonolo. Box 283 ,
or see him at his office . Room
218 , Balwlt ss.
Second floo r North Hall was
bedecked in pine and paper
in keeping with the season.
This door is
one of many
original desi gns.
CGA Has
Project
Of
Relief
BSC 's Communit y Gover nment
Association , In conjunction with
the International Red Cross , has
been conducting a fund raising
project for victims of the recent
tidal wave disaste r in East Pakistan. The project began last
F riday evenin g, December 11.
Coin cans were placed in selected buildings on the college
c am p us an d in var i ous b us iness
establishments through the business district of Bloomsburg. Appro val for the latter was obtained
through the Downtown Bloomsburg Businessmen ' s Association .
From time to time C.G. A . volunteer members circulated in the
business district where coin cans
were locate d to encourage donations.
The fund raising project conclude s tonight , Wednesday , December 16, where there will be
a danc e in the Student Union
Build ing, the price of adm ission
being at least fifty cents . All
the proceeds from thi s danc e, after expenses have been met , will
be donated to the project.
It is estimated that at least
200 ,000 people have died as a
result of the tidal wave In East
Pak istan , and that another two
an d a half million are facing starvation , death bj disease , and
other hazar ds of such a catastro phe.
It is hoped by the CGA th at the
ent ire college community an d the
Town of Bloomsbur g will get behind th is much needed fund r aising proj ect. Michael Slptroth , a
sophomore from Delaware Water
Gap, is publ icity chairman for
the project .
Seventh floo r Elwell received many favorable comments on it' s
decorations but failed to place in A.RM . competition .
Flack Exhibits In Haas
The Art Exhibit featuring paint ings of Nelson Flack has opened
in Haas Art Gallery . Mr . Flack
has been present from 2:00 to
4:C0 p.m. to meet and talk with
visitors to the exhibi t which will
r emain on view until January 3,
197 1.
A native of Burlington , I owa,
Flac k is an artist living in Philade lphia , Penns ylvania . He stud ies painting w i t h Rac kstraw
Downes and Neil Welliver and
has exhibite d his paintings in the
H ouston Hall Bowl Room Gallery ,
(1969) and Philom athean Gallery, (1970) both under the auspices of the University of Pennsylvania ,
In terms of composition , his
works in the pre sent exhibition
can broadly be divided into pencil
drawings , color drawings and
formal paintings .
The pencil drawi ngs create tan .
gible linear shapes with precise
proportio ns possessing a rhyth mic pattern which , being repet .
itious, seems to refer to an infinite extens ion of the motif .
These sketch es Egyptian 2 and
Birthd ay are _ apparently deriv ed
from Egyptian and Chines e sour ces-parti cularly from
their
styles of ornamentation; the outcom e seems mere ly a result of
the artist' s acquaintance with the
art systems of the above mentioned countries and can be regarded
as a pa ssing pha se in his art
career .
Regarding his color drawings
it is easy to observe that linea r
structure an d var ied color are
intended to carry the effect of
light forms . The difference of
pigment suspended in the mater ial mediums , cra yon and wax pencil , are assigned progressions on
a linear grid . This process crea tes a visual reading of light and
f orm where no tan gibl e shapes
h ave been drawn . The force
creatin g this illusion is derived
from the material phenomena
that similar pigments in different mediums become * .sually dissonant .
Psych Film Presented
Last Wednesd ay December 9,
1970 the Bloomsburg Psychological Association presented a film
Interv iew with Arthur Miller ,
known for his book , "Death of a
Salesman " .
Dr . Richard Evans , »he film
Int erviewer , talke d to Mr, Mille r
about the inner feelings of the
characters in his various works .
Their concern s were with the development of eac h Individual , and
the social Interact ions of all human beings.
Mr . M iller seld that the artis t
was not inte rested in recor din g
facts - without * a personal ity,
without a sub j ective ref lection of
events , the re Is nothing.
Discussion then went into the
Freudian concepts Involved- the
Idea that the cha racte rs represent the author and that the
author actually want s to control
people thr ough his writing . Ar thur Miller did not agree with
th is at all. He doesn 't want
to control people — J ust to release them . He hplievac that
". • .anyone who writes is trying
to commun icate something , " but
thinks "It ' s an error to look at
any character the way one looks
at real people .1'
After the movie , there was a
shor t discussion of various thing s
Mr, "M iller said and some Ideas of
programs for future meetin gs.
They are considering a talk on
why students seem to be so ashamed of the label "B. S.C."
A nybody interested In any aspect of psychology Is encouraged
to J oin the Association . Fut ure
meetings will be announced .
Record Revie w
All Things Mus t P ass
George Ha rris on
by Stephen Ber gamo or
Sometimes John
Opening characteriz ations:
1) George is very emotional (passive).
2) Ggorge is v e r y religious ,
Christian .
3) The albumn is unsubstantial ,
very commercial .
4) George is passive,
5) His themes are love and Christ
(L-O-R-D).
6) Harrison 's good guitar work is
a myth .
7) Politically , he is status quo .
8) Harri son is not a McCa rtney,,
Lennon , Dylan , Hendrix , or
Clapton . He is not a super *
star .
9) George has become another
Donovan.
10) He needs the other Beatles .
The New Pot
Wh at is a chamber pot ?
A lot of people around here
would turn their nose s up In a
noticeab le grimac e and remember best forgotten days of their
youth , when indoor plumbing did
not mean a porcelain seat and
cold pipes. Rather it was a piece
of finely crafted wood , molded to
the peculiar shape of the posterior hum an anatom y.
But what could chamber pot
mean to aware students and faculty at a progressive education al
institution of the 1970' s? Well it
is not something which will con*
jure up expressio ns of pure nostalgic disgust .
It is an environment , and in
this sense linked to the past because as we all know the air we
breath e today Thoreau choked on
yesterday. But it is not polluted .
It migh t be called a breath of
fresh air in the sli ghtly stale
aesthetic environment of Bloomsburg 1970 . The creation of three
senior art students , Bill Clul? ir ,
Kathy Gentile , and Ed Th 'emann ,
VOL. IL
the chamberpot is an art gallery
located on Iron Street behind the
Sherwin- V' iliiams Paint Store. It
is an attem pt to revive the ancient
order of individualism and expr ession . Devote d to the exhibi tion of exclusively original art
work of B.S.C . students. Ther e.
Now that a gentle tr ansition
from yesterday to today has been
made a further clarif ication of
the pur pose of the chamber pot is
in order — to clean the air as
they say . It was the ide a of these
three senior art students to expand from the college and estab lish a beachhead downtown . They
are hoping to involve the community in the art students of
*B .S.C . and in their art . T h e
chamber pot is a gallery — a store front environment— but most at
all It is an effort to awaken the
aesthe tic appreciation of both the
college and town communities .
In an age of plastic-wra pped-in cellophane culture these students
' (continued on page eight }
THE MAROON ANfr OOLD
NO. 21
Bill T«Hsworth
E4itor-b»~CU *f
Sam Trapana
Mtwt Idtter
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W^BrWm WmmtWm
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. •. « . • • •# • • • • • • • • • • • •« . . « •¦••• Mninni
Capy letter
Linda
lim it
HaHar
Carat Klahbaugh
Ce-Clr«ufaHen Mf ra.
Pat
HiaH latter
Mark Pawaar t
Ar? MHar
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Kamtattt c. Hafftwan
STAFF: Shelley Brunoni , Kate Calpln , Jim Chapman,
Carman Clullo . Lara Duckworth , Kath l Farr*ll , Jim
Plynn , Keren Cable , llama Hartu na. Pern Hlckey. Andree
Hoffman , Cathy Jac k,
Karen
Kelnard , Cindy
Mkhener ,
Randee
P r a y , Tom
Schofleld , Glen
D »y
Wri ght,
Sim
Joanna
Chowka ,
Spotts,
Sprague, Jod y Hoff , Mike Hock , Frank Pinoll , Dava Watt ,
Jatte James , Har ris Wolfe , Dava Kelter.
All opinions expressed by columnists and faahire writers,
Includin g lettir *ta-the- editor , are not nacassarlly th eseof the
publication bvt these of me Individual s.
Call¦& igUlW-rifr JW
of J oan Baez, who ruined a lot
bum cannot save the three-record set from being commercial ,
w h o can?
Geor ge's voice leaves a lot to
desire . It doesn 't have McC art ney 's beauty or depth; it lacks
Dylan's ra w and gutsy appeal.
Lennon has an explosive ness and
hopelessness that Geor ge can't
come near to . Geor ge's voice is
mono logue, always the same , and
ver y passive .
Side 1 begins with "I'd Have
You Anytime ." Dylan, co-wri ter
of the song, would have done
much more justice to the number than Geor ge did . An illustration of Geor ge's poor voice. One
almos t wishes that Paul woul d
hav e sung the song. "My Sweet
Lord " and "Wah- Wah " are
catchy nothings . Songs that you
listen to a couple of times and
don 't hear them after that , "Isn 't
It A Pit y " is the best song on
the album . "How we take each
other 's love , Without thinkin g
anymor e, For gettin g to give back ,
Isn 't it a pity? " and his best
lead guitar work plays and plays
as the music fades . It is George 's
"H ey Jude " — but Paul 's \s much
better , better — better .
of good Dylan songs. Cliches ar e
"Wh at is Life ," and "Behin d
that Locked Door ." "Run of the
Mill" is just that — run of the
mill. The music has no guts.
" Let I t Down " saves the side.
It is explosive , sens itive , substant ial, and a love song. "While
I occupy my mind , I can feel
you here ," and the music goes up
and down the scale . It' s soft explosion . Heavy chords . And Geo«
rge sings, " Let It Down — let it
down , let your hair han g all
aroun d me." Where is Janis
Joplin?
Side 3 is great when you don 't
listen to the music. It is mystify,
ing, hum orous , ro lling, passing ,
and gospel . But most of all , it
is superficial . What the' hell are
"Appl e Scruffs "? Does "Let It
Roll" mean "Let It Be"? And I
certainl y hope "All Thin gs Must
Pass ." It is funny how George
uses Lord for every God there is
— Jesus , Hare Krishn a, etc .
"Chantin g the nam e of the Lord
and you'll be free ." God Bless
ye!
The "Art of Dying " relieves
side four fro m the wah-wahs ,
George plays good lead guitar and
the song has a driving beat . Be*
sides, death is a common de.
The cover has George seated
like Rip Van Winkle holding his
(avoid ing hassle) pr ivates . Four
dwarfs lie on the ground laughing. Does it symbolize the death
of the four Beatles— the destruc tion of their myth ? Anyway, his
hair is very long and maybe he
is very seri ous .
The music is catchy but not
substanti al . How substantial can
Side 2 is unim pressive . "If
you get with Bad flnger backing Not For You," a great song by
you up? If Eric Clapton and Dave Dylan , • is ruined by Geor ge's
Mason on the "Apple Jam " al- voice . Sometimes , he reminds me
(continued on page three)
Recru i ter For Uncl e God
Uncle God has sent a recruiter . informed us that he was sent by from his "First Workin g Paper "
to BSC . Not necessarily to re- the Central Penns ylvania Senate of the Bloomsburg Campus Mincruit troops , but to . . .well , he of Lutheran Churches of Amer . istry , to "deliberately low-key
doesn 't really know . When Rev- ica .
our Lutheran background , and
erend Jay Rochelle wasasked why
seek
out all the existent organi But Rev . Rochelle 's stay here
he 's here in a recent interview
zations
in community and college
by the Feature Staff of the M&G , will be mor e than jus t the fulfill- which work in Prote stant Minishe answered , "Because I chose to ment of an assignment . H e said try to student s, and plug into
be here . In terms of jobwise , that he felt there was a need for
them ." R e v . Rochelle 's sercampus ministr y at
BSC. vices
I don 't know yet . I'll take a few a"There
, it seems , will lean toward
were enough people
mon ths here and find out what I around who
the
informal
. His services , alfelt the re was a
want to do ."
though he is an ordai ned Lutheran
need and convinc ed me that there
Ministe r , will be open to anyone .
Rev . Rochelle is a young man , was a nee d."
A servi ce held last Thursday
he 's been an or dained minister
What will Rev Rochelle 's actfor five and a half years . He has ual wor k be? , Well to quote
,
(continued on page eight )
a wife and three children , and he 's
come to set up a campus ministry
at BSC .
He ' s never been a
Campus Minister
before , but
Bl oomsbur g has never had one,
either , so th e two can ta ke their
initial steps together . Rev . Roch elle commente d , "I wantedapos ition like this , an d have wante d
one for five and half years ."
He and Bloom are going to jump
in head first and the results
should prove interesting . . .enlightening , too .
We asked Ja y (He 's the kind of
man who doesn 't like titles) if the
people of Bloomville have been
friendly thus far , and his answer
was a very definite " Yes, Every one that I 've met , meanin g facul ty, administration , have been
helpful , and tried to bend over
backwards to help. "
For Jay Roche lle coming to
Bloom was the logical choice.
He told us th at the re are two types
of ministry that he could have
really enjoyed , an d t h ose were
Cam pus Ministr y and I nter -City
•Min istry . Hi s reason : "I'd rath er deal with people in small
grou ps because that' s where the
growth is." H e also f eels that
" Y ou can teac h me a lot of
things "
...
We seem to be a lucky campus ,
for Rev . R oche l le 's er arlenMals
are impress ive . He is the author
of severa l b ook s , the f irst of
which will be published next
mont h,. The second in March ,
an d the third at a later date . At
present he is working on a "Hand *
book for Radical Christiani ty,"
wh ich he seems to feel will be
his best work . When asked , he
—
—
—
-
-—--—--- — *«*-^^ i mi i wv^B^HBHHH^^^V^^^^B^P ^ 1""*"*WHPV 1**™"-"*
'
"UNCLE GOD WANTS YOU"
The Hol e
in th e Wa ll er
Well , farewell to dear old
Waller Pall , welcome C olumbia .
No mor e alterna ting between
freezing showers in the evening
and scalding showers In the moro ing. The E xodus Is finally over .
The last suitcase has been moved ,
the last poster taken down and
re-hun g in the new dorm . It 's kind
of sad when you think about it. No
more midnight song fests from F
Troop , no more light s burning all
night long through the overhead
windows , no more mounds and
mounds of dust appearing mysteriously the day after th e' floor
has been swept.
girls aren 't really sleeping anyway because they 're all busy
•
flashing lights at the guys in
tri weH Hall. And gone foreve r is
the Fish Cheer , played by the il•
lustrious men of Elwell . Sometimes you have to wonde r If they
were trying to tell us something .
Or ask ? I suppose the question
is bette r left unasked .
Goodbye, Waller Hall , from the
3C0 girls who have left you. Just
one more group out of the thousands who have stayed in your
hallowed halls . W e're off to Columbia , which only has mice to
mak e it seem like home. The only
thin g left is a goodluck wish to
Gone forever (for those now in the men of Penn , Pine and Thorn• C olumbia) are the radi ators that ton houses , and the Probational
Freshmen. And the thousands of
neve r turn off , that make terrible
s.l.s.
banging noise s in the middle of others to follow.
the night . Gone also are the wide
and spacious halls so easy to grab
Record Review
people and dr ag them to the show(con tinued fro m page two )
ers (fully clothed , of course) ,
and filled with new freshmen , nominator . "I Dig Love " is mysoverwhelmed by the heady experitifying and interesting . Sentience of being away from home . mentally, "Come Together " type
Alone .
music . Can music type? Maybe , if
you "Hear Me Lor d ," you can
Forever in the pas t are the
think like feeling confession and
girl s hanging from their windows , church . "For give me Lord ," and
calling to th eir boyfr iends (how
every other song, is Christ -like .
can you holler from the ninth
Wow! Apple Jam ! George is
floor?) th at they 'll be down in a finally going to do some great
minute . In Columbia there ar e Inlead guitar work and prove his
tercom s. Now if you ask the girl
picking-fingers myth . What did
at the other end if it's that creep
you say — Clapton and Mason
that keeps following you around , too? Guitar city. It is a super and tell her to say that you ' re in , ficial , don't listen , commercial
the cre ep can hear you.
bummer . Even Clapton sounds
bad , if you can believe it . The
Lon g past are the muscular-in - music goes on and on. The same
chord over and over . N o exducing trek s up to fourth floor
plosions
or climaxes . No "All
Waller . Row the only proble m is
Along
The
Watchtower " Hendrix
if the elevators stop wor king .
volcanoes
to stir the imagina Then it'll be a muscul ar-inducing
tion
"Ha
ppy
Trails " by the
.
trek up NINE floors . Good grief!
Quicksilver
Messenger
Service
It ' s overwhel ming when you thin k
makes
the
jam
sound
elementary
.
about It,
Apple jam never tasted so Door.
Th ere ar e no "He y Jude "s or
Gone are the aggr avating trip s
Day in the Life "s on the al"A
to anoth er dor m to pick up your
bum
. No rea l tur n-on . George
mai l, and finding th at you didn 't
misses
the other Beatles . As for
get anything anyway , except for
me
I
dig
George and think the
,
aggravating notices fr om the colalbum
is
cool;
even though I don 't
lege te lling you about the overdue
agre
e
with
some
of his phibook s from the libr ary . Now th e
Geor
ge
losophy
.
is
NOT
a great
aggravating notices will be right
good
lead
guitarist
or
a
singer
downstairs .
but he is someone that we all
grew up with and who we try to
Gone are the RA'S running down understand I hope John comes
.
the stairs to ask M&G member s on heavy with
his new albu m He
to please keep the noise down so is my favorite Beatle I am. the
.
that the girl s can sleep, an d the Walrus
.
_aa^_iMaiBia
__
Ma
HliaB
^
_H_MBai^__
^B
Lett e rs*.•
Dear Editor:
Chri stmas Eve, A time of
warmth and hope* It could be
any ni ght of the year , but somehow
it seems that more of us look for
warmth and hope on December 24
than "jus t anytime ." And th ere
are a lot of problem s, in America
and in the world , that could use a
good dose of warmth and hope.
And not just on Christmas Eve .
"Bring us together ," "Hiat
small phr ase contains a lot of
what , Americans will be hoping
for thi s holiday season , as they
come together and enjoy the
warmth of family and friends .
And yet , as we wish and hope and
pray In our different ways for this
spirit of bringing Americ a together to come about , we mus t all
be aware that such a spiri t doesn 't
just happen. We can't hope to
hang our stockin gs by the fireplace and expect them to be filled
with brotherhood the next morning, it's people, people nice us,
who are going to have to answer
those hopes, to spr ead that
warmth among our fellow Ameri cans during the Christmas season
and the months to follow. Santa
C laus can 't do it for us.
The divisions in America and
in the world are very , very great .
The answer to man ' s separ ate ness , his alienation , his despair ,
has to start somewhere. We are
writing to you because we believe
that the answer , the warmth and
hope, has to start with you. And
with us. Somehow , Americans
have to begin to reach across
fie r. rrr j
t A I"W |Y
6 Us;
j Sflucke f'Ti'
^\ v ^
the barriers of age , of race , of
income , until they reach each
other with the kinds of feeling
that everyone can share. Somehow , we have to turn on to what
it means to be a human being in
a challengin g and difficult wor ld .
Candle- power. It 's not a slogan
written on a wall. It 's a measurement of light. And across
the country this Christmas Eve
many Americans will pause at
9:00 p.m. and walk out onto a
streetcorner , and light a cand le.
In small towns and big cities ,
people like you will take a break
from trimmin g the tree or talking
with old friends and walk outside
with a candle in their hands . Not
a demons tration , but a manisfestation of hope; each candle will
be a visual measu rement of the
light In men' s dreams and the
hope In men 's hearts. We call our
movement
"Candlelite " — a
movement toward bringing us
together.
Christmas Eve, A time of
warmth and hope. Perhaps this
time we can make those feelings
manifest . Maybe thi s time we can
make It last . Right now , while
you're beginning to wonder what
we'r e up to, or how much it' s going to cost , stop and think for a
moment. How long has It been
since you've let perfect strangers
on a street corner know how you
feel about brotherh ood?
Chairman: Thomas Flander s
The Candlelight People
Somethin g
Fro m Betty Lou
Hos es are re d
Vi olets are blue
When I look at you
I can smell your shoe
I am 6
I can count sticks
I am 7
I can look up in heaven
I am 8
I can go out on a date
I am nine and get it across my
behind
L ove is a burning fire
and talks like a Her
and I am 9 years old and
can not hardly stand
for love nocks me over
and then came a bolder
Hair Is curl y
and my name is sherrly
Hair Is strai ght
Editor:
Dear
and
I have gone out on a date
The letters you published FriHair
is wiggley
d ay, 11 December 1970 , from
I
am giggley
and
Professors Porte r and Skehan
Hair
twist y
is
r aise questions about the hear ing
Betsy
and
I
am
of record of their cases.
I
was
in
New
York
As chairman of the committee
I
saw
a
pink
stork
I
can
that conducte d the hearin g,
assure the College communit y
that 1) the proc eeding "was held 1 see a date
on the strong recommen dation of and try to be its mate
the nat ional office of the I see a star
A.A.U.P., 2) all principals were and I turn to a bar
notified well in advance tha t there I see a cow
would be a hearing and when it and say wowwould be held , 3) the rules to Wow
gover n the hearin g were estab- ,
The above state ments can be
lished before the hear ing and
suppor
ted by documentar y eviprincicopies were sent to all
dence
and by the testimony of
of
the
pals, 4) the membe rs
"Hie national
those
involved.
by
consid
ered
were
committe e
A
A
office
of
the
and the
.U.P.,
.
eligible
to
be
A
national .A.U.P.
President
of
the
Bloomsbur
g
mem
b
er
o
f
every
5)
t o serve ,
Stat
e
Fac
Association
College
ulty
all
availexamined
the committee
able evidence in both cases , in- received copies of all statements
cluding corres pondence and other issue d by the committee and sent
mater ial from Professo r s Porter to principals pri or to the hearing.
Louis F, Thompson
and Skehan.
^
V
^
j SSi
Players ' Prod uction...
make one sad or impatie nt with
the world , but only for a moment . The theatri cal moment is
fleeting and one easily slips
back into the warm and familiar
cocoon of popular morality and
commonplace speech — thin gs so
very
char acteristi c of the
"American " way of life.
"No Hero! No trag ic bout with
fate ! No cir cumstance that leaves
no way out . Ther e are ways out .''
In these words Cowen captures
the essence of the play. Beyond
the fact that the play is structured
around the commonpla ce , the
central dramati c situatio n involves the decision a young man
must make: to be tr ue to himself ,
or to try to fit into the little
him , the horr ors of war , being picture society ha s drawn to rep.
scared , ate . But what makes resent real ity. The young man,
this play and the Bloomsburg then , is engaged in a search for *
Player s production a great suc- the right course of actio n. The
cess is that the play is drawn avenues of act ion are clear and
from the trite moralities and the choice ha s been made and is
cliches which constit ute a large being made by millions of people.
portio n of our lives . Thanks to
the cinema- and television , war The tragedy is that the young man
is not br utal and bloody murder , is not given time to make a deit is battle s and tanks and cision and is swept helplessly incharism atic generals and gun-ho to the service ; society is insoldiers giving the enemy hell . tolerant of the undecided of the
And tha nks to the American con- searching people who aren 't so
cept of bra very and patrioti sm , ver y sure of themselves. The
dying in war, although unfor - play explodes with outb ursts of
tunate and messy, is but the anger and frustration —the young
man and his father loving and
hatin
g each other , the young man
price one must pay for democ- wreslUog like
a little
with
ra cy. A high price indeed — high- shadows and fears andboy
desires
,
.
er
anyway than that paid by n a rea l sense
, he is a modthe redcoats , the Japanese or the Iern-day
Hamlet who must make a
soldiers of Nor th Vietnam . It is
decision;
while Hamlet was a
a great help to have God on one's character but
of
side! And after all, boys aren 't and dignity, heroic proprotion
this character is a
simply boys , they are Americ an young man any
young man.
,
boys and their needless deaths be*
come fodder f or th e memor ies
But what is the resolution of
of parents who never understood
all
this indecision and tension?
them and the Legioners to talk
Is
it
indeed possible , given such
abou t and add the necessary demateri
al , to write ascr ibeanplay
a
tew
guts
over
tails of blood and
hundred beers at the club. War with a neat little moral dragging
is a game, the teams wear black at the end ? The play ends with the
and white , and youn g men and wo- boy' s death on the battlefiel d
men are given toke n when they in the arms of the great tree ,
turn eighteen ; the men go off to the tree which combines time
the game field and the women and place into one eternal momen t . The tra gedy is that the
wait .
boy 's life has been needlessly
The Players ' Summertree suc- wasted. "Waste ," says C owen ,
ceeds as theatre not so muc h as " is ver y common pl ace." Howa dazzlin g theatrical event , but ever , there is no promise of
as a medieval folk-play in which chan ge or improvement . Althou gh
the mysteries and tra gedies of the parents lament that thin gs
life are re-enacted and somehow would be different if they could
or ganized into a kind of coherency be given a second chance , their
which only heightens the tragedy ver y lament is a cliche and they
and grief . Stock melodrama and would probably repeat the same
cliches alone cannot succeed as mistak es. Perhaps hope lies in
theatre just as trite flag-waving the little boy, but he must go a
canrot succeed as constructive long way and , unfortunately, he
patriotism . What is needed to may never realize the lesson of
spark the rubble represents truth his older frien d' s death , or feel
— it is a hollow feeling, likely to again the tr agedy of his loss .
by Mike Stugrin
Ron Conwell' s play Summertree is bitter -sweet theatre . The
story itself is a trite melodrama:
The sensitiv e boy who wants to be
a pianist but whose father wants
him to "make something of himself" drop s out of college and is
draf ted . He goes to war , but not
before he says goodby to his
pare nts , his girl , his eight-year old neighborhood friend , his back yard , and , finally , to the tree
on which he played when he was
a child . The dialog ue is a massive assembly of cliches — about
the generation gap, his affair
with a girl who "believes " in
The tree is eternal , but it is
merely a spectator , a blind
Tiresias , but without the power
of speech to teach and warn men
of their foolishness . Waste is a
com monplac e thing , it is an eter nal reality .
Peter Gent ele and David Wright
as the youn g man — both are
sensitiv e and sufficient ly sure of
themselves . Fortunately, both
were allowed to develop an interpretation of their own and peeing the play, twice adds an interestin g dimension . Mr . Wright
was especially convincin g with
his slight touch of naivete which
brou ght an extra measure of in- /
nocence and pathos to the Ham *
let-figure . The character is, after all , scared . He says at one
point , "I' m still pretty young,
you know '' — his dilemna ra ges
not in his mind and spirit , but
in his heart . As the moth er ~ E1len Robinson and Shelby Treon—
Miss Robinson , althou gh she did
not develop her voice range adequately enough , contributed a
finely tuned delicacy of movement and facial expression which
further enhance the sense of sorrow and loss. Tom Cur tis as
the father captured the stock
figure of the self-made man who
both demanded and prayed that his
son make a better life for himself than his had been. He wanted
him to be a someone— anyone who
was successful . Amy Raber and
Cindy Griffith were cast as the
girlfriend who loved the body,
but , as the story goes, stopped
writing and after his death , had
only her memories . Both ladies
are very talented and were
paired well with Raber playing opposite Gentele , and Griffith opposite Wri ght. Miss Griffith was
especially plea sing. John Hilgar
as the youn g man in his childhood and as the youn g man of
tomorrow deserves great praise .
j
The cast for the Thursda y and Saturda y presentations , including
the lighting sr»w , stage manager , chairma n of thai prop c rew
and one of his assistants. Left to right , standin g, they are Allan
Klawitte r, Amy Raber , Scott Atherfon , John Hilgar , Pete Gentele, Shelby Treon, Bob Casey and Steve Weiss. Seated from left
to right are Lyn Naylor , Jean LeGates and Tom Curtis .
Michael McHale directed the
play using the threat re-in -theround technique which was very
effective . It gave the produc tion an immediacy and intimacy
— the audience was part of the
story; they are the story . This
rev iewer f eels that Summertr ee
is one of McH ale 's finest pro ductions — displayin g the combined effects of power , pathos,
irony , and gentle sensitivity . The
set was stark and simple and was
exactly what the play demanded ;
Harry Berkheiser did a fine J ob.
Sound and lighting effects were
handled with prec ision . All in
all , Summ ertree was a fine and
touching moment of theatre at
Bloomsburg .
Shelby Treon (Mothtr) and Peter Gentele (Young Man ) are shown In* • fl ashback
scon * fro m the BSC Player 's production Summort ree. Mother is doing a portrai t of tho
Young Man in pastels, a hobb y of hers.
Pete Gentele and Amy Raber embrace afte r the Young Man has
retur ned sa ying he was the ghost of Groundhog 's Day past. It
was to establish the closenes s betwee n the Young Man and the
wlrl t
Hilgar and Gentele are shown in one of the scenes where the
Young Man helps the Boy into a tree and asks " wha t can you
see? " He wanted to know what he was missing.
Photos
by
Fouc a rt
Mr. Michael J. McHale , director of Summertr — sits , possibly
pondering his. next succe ssful production. As one of th e cast
said of this picture , 'That is though tful."
The McHale Touch
by allan maurer
There is n o question that
Summertree , under the dire cti on
of Michael J. McHale was a solid
hit . (See Mike Stugrln 's review
elsewhere in this issue).
I remember two facult y members makin g very similar comments abou t Mr . McHale when I
was a lowly freshman and one of
his shows was underw ay.
"This McHale , he has the
touc h," they said . He does.
Wh at that touch is, how It wor ks ,
I am at a loss to explain. But
It was ver y much In evident In
his production of Summertree.
John Hilgar as the Little Boy, Scott Ath erton as the Soldier , and
Otnttl e ¦» the Youn g Man represent the three st ages of the boy 's
lift . It Is the end of ths show and th#< Young Man It dying . In
the back ground are: represented his life , as a Little Boy and a
Soldier.
Perhaps
one aspect of the
McHale touch is his continual
str iving to involve the audience
In a pitch of feeling near participation wi th the events on stage In
his shows. It is not unusual
to fin d actors in the aisles in a
McHale production . In Henry IV
he had messengers entering from
the aisles and member s of P alstaf f' s rag ged army crawling
over audience seats. He has
built ram ps from the st age to
the audience 's domain , and staged
'show s In Carver Hall rathe r than
Haas to decrease the distance and
Increase the relat ionship between
his actors and his audien ces.
The arena production of Summertree succeeded very well in
establishin g this bond between
the audience and the stage McHale
str ives for , and much of the play 's
success resul ted from this.
The actors of Summer tree car ried their share of responsibility
for its success of cour se, but in
the ir success too , the McHale
touch was nota ble. In the low,
casual notes of Peter Gentele 's
voice, and Amy Raber ' ssh adowllt
movements , the un derplaye d excellence of Tom Curtis , and the
dlrect-to-the-audlence
speeches
of Shelby Treon , McHale 's direct ion was evident.
Another aspect of the MoKale
touch at Its best Is swift action ,
and this also, was not able in
Summertxee . A gain , the arena
produc ti on aided Mr . McH ale in
kee ping the stage action nearly
cont inuous with the exception of
breaks between acts.
Even the very simple scenery
of Summertree In the BSC pro *
duct ion reflected the McHale
style , as anyone who saw hit
production of Henry IV or even
The Odd Couple , will at test to.
In short. Summert ree reflected
director McHale and his "touch "
at their best , and the results were
very good indee d.
Husk ies Dro p 2nd
to Chaney
by Jesse James
The Bloomsburg State Huskies
went down with their second can .
secutive loss of their 1970-71
campaign . This time the defeat
came from the hands of the Wolf
pack fr om Cheyney 123-88 . The
Hus kies played a fine game but
were just outclassed fr om the
field by the Wolves , who hit on
60 per cent of their shots .
Cheyney jumped to an early
lead which was never to be re .
linquished . The Huskies wer e
within striki ng distance through out the ' first 8 minutes but fell
behind by 11 at half time and
stayed out of the game,
Cheyney was led by Harrison
who hit on 13»of 15 fr om the fieid
and 4 for 4 from the charity
stripe . The Wolves also had four
other players in double figures —
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Eldrige 28 , Clifton and Kirkland
20, and Gr ier 15. The visitors
also controlled the rebounds with
Grier pulling in 15 , Kirkland 11,
and Eldrige 10.
The Huskies scoring leader
was Howard Johnson 24 , followed
closely by Jim Platukis 21 , Paul
Kuhn 19, Dennis Munny 16. Howard Johnson also led the Huskies in the rebound department
with 13.
*J*C^ •>
Tillma n
S ets
R ecords
by Jim Chapman
The Freshman Huskies rebounded from last week' s defeat
by overwhelmin g the youn g W olver ines of Cheyney 77-70. The
first half of the game had the
rese mblanc e of a seventh grade
CYO contest , as each team had
numerous tur novers an d refused
to capitali ze on the opponent 's
mistakes.
The fumblin g and bu mblin g
Husk ies left the floor at halftime after being hande d a 38-29
lead by the contin gent from Cheyney.
The Husk ies emerge d from
the locker room an d pr oved tha t
they are a team that clicks when
they work together . They dominated the boards mainly throu gh
the efforts of Gary Bockelman .
continuall y underm ined
and
every Wolverin e attem pt to slice
the lead. They played good defense , and work ed the ball well
but there Is one disastrous aspect connected with the Husky
offense. They are afraid to shoot
the basketball . I don 't know if thi s
has anyth ing to do with the Way
C oach Reese handles the tea m ,
but If the Huskies ar e going to
keep winning , then they better
start shooting.
Gary Bockelman led all scorers with thirty points and twenty two re bounds. Oth er Huskies In
double figures were Dave Jones
with sixteen , and field general
Tony Dare contributing ten. High
scorer for the Wolverine was
Bob Gallashaw with twenty- thr ee*
The Huskies will be seeking
the ir second consecutive victory
next Tuesda y as they tackle Kutt town away , and will return home
Thursd ay to host the team from
Bible Baptist . P.S. 13-32 from
the foul line; does It sound like
CYO statistics?
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Mighty Monmouth arrived an
hour late but wasted no time in
the water as All American Ken
Tillman set two new pool records .
He swam the 200 yard individual medley in 2:08 .3 and the 200
yard backstroke in 3:06 .7 . Ken
now has four records in Centennial pool since he already
held the records for 1000 yard
and 500 yard freestyle events .
Despite the lopsided score of 76
to 37 Coach McLaughlin was
plea sed with the steady improvement shown by the Huskies . Jack
F eyrer set a new BSC team record for the 500 yard freestyle
as he lapped .3 second off the
best time he did last season.
Dave Gibas set a new Centennial pool recor d of 22 .4 seconds
for the 50 yard freestyle , eras ing the old log of 22 .7 set by
Dennis Hovanec of Westchester .
In defeating Wilkes 65 to 44
no new team or pool records
were set . Coach McLaughlin was
making adj ustments in order to
test previously untried team
mem ber s. For exam ple , the winning 400 yard medley relay team
was com pose d of th ree f res hmen
and a senior makin g his first
varsity appeara nce. Fre d Steinh art , a f res h man wh o swam th e
100 yard backstroke leg of this
relay has had no pre vious high
school exper ience . Fred was also able to garner a 3rd in the
200 yard backstroke event . Denn is Schold swam the breaststroke
leg of the relay and mana ged to
take a third in the 200 yard individual medley. Jim Carlln Is a
senior but this was his first
varsity appearance as he did his
share In winnin g this relay . Jim
Clamon swam the butter fly leg
in the relay and showed his
stamina by winnin g two more
events , Jim took firs t In the 200
yard butterfly . The team record
now stan ds at two losses and
only one win , but with the stead y
Improvement in conditionin g the
• Huskies should be able to post
additional victories before the
end of the semester .
Starti ng the 1970 season ,
Jet quarterback Joe Na mat h
passing
had a life time
yardag e ave rage off 221.2
y ards per game, tops In the
history, according to »n article In SPORT Magailno.
Baltimore 's Johnn y Unltas ,
with 207.4 yards per game
throu gh the air, Is the onl y
passer to average better
tha n 200 yards per game
throughou t his career.
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The Huskies record of 1-2 does
not mean that we have a poor
team . We started the 70-7 1 season with two of our toughest
opponent s in the league . Th e rest
of the season should be a good
one for the Hu skies. They -will
have another chance at the two
teams who defeated them , East
Stroudsburg and Cheyney.
Frosh Tame
Wo lverines
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Bob was a littl e > 11-American
for the Huskie s in 1967. His
diving , over-handed grabs kept
the fans on the edge of their seats
and led BSC to a 6-3 record .
Bob pulled in 77 passes for 1325
yards and 13 t ouchdowns for 101
p oints. Several of th ese figures
are current NAIA records.
Wh en at BSC Bob teamed with
quarterback
Rich Lichte l and
wide receiver Stan Kuharski to
give the Husk ies the most devasting aerial game in the Pennsylvania Conferenc e. Lichte l also
holds severa l NAIA records compiled while at Bloomsbur g.
This Sunda y Tucker and the
Giants take on the up and down
Los Angelas Rams. With their
devasting defense and bette r than
average offense the Rans will
give the Giants all they can handle. If the Giants win Sunday they
" will win the eastern division of
the NFC (the same is true for
Los Angeles in the West). With
this win goes an NFC playoff spot
and a possible Super Bowl engagement in Januar y.
As Tucke r said on Sunday 's
post-game show , "We 'r'e rea dy
and want th is game. " See , somebody from Bloomsbur g State can't
be all that bad .
Bob Tuektr—S ta r tight end off ,
tho Now Yor k Giants prove s
"An y on* from Bloomiburg
State collog t can 't bo all bad. "
by Clark Ruch
Former Bloomsbur g State College great , Bob Tucker , led the
New York Giant s to a major victory over the tauted St. Louis
Cardinals Sunda y. Tucke r put
the first points on the board with
a 15 yard square out pass from
Fran Tarkenton and played a
key role in several other scores
in leading the Eastern Division
co-ieaders to a 34-17 win.
\
Silv erman 's Book
"The Lord Is first , my fr iends ductio n by comedia n Bill Cosby,
are second , and I am third ."
For Sayers , who is recu perThat 's Chicago running back Gate at ing fr om knee surgery. I AM
Sayers ' philosophy and it pro - THIRD is his first lite r ary effort .
vldes the title for his soon-to - Sllverm an , in addi tion to editing
be-publlshed autobiography. I AM SPOR T Maga zine , has authored
THIRD .
or collabo rated In the writing of
10 sports book *. Includin g Pau l
Written In collabor ation with Hornun gs "Foot
ball and the
Al Silver man , editor of SPORT
8to
n
Fr
w
»
"
,.£
* Robinson's
i M agaelne , the book , which will be ?i!J
"My Life in Baseball
," and
released by Viking Pr ess on
DlMa «l0. »'• a°M«n
November 26th , la a moving ac- Yw.m
count of Sayers ' upbringing In a
ghetto neighbor hood and thro ugh
Silver man lives wi th his wife
the pain and glory of his brilliant
and th ree children
in Whi te
pr o carter . It Includes an Intro - Pla ins, New York .
¦
¦
'¦
¦
Baseball Manager
Survey
¦
¦
¦ -¦--
¦ —
..
.
.
.
.
.
. .
.
± _
-
__
—-
"Willie
leadershi p qualities:
M ays is probabl y one of the six
all-ti me great baseball players
The San Fr ancisco Giants ' in history, but I don 't feel he 's the
Willie Mays a n d the Atlanta kind of fellow who would instill
Braves' Hank Aaron don't rate ¦what I want as a manager. "
among the top six superstars as
As for Aaron , one of the few
potenti al mana gers , accordin g to
g
enera
l managers to consider
a surve y of baseball 's general
him
Atlanta
's Paul Richards , put
managers appearing in the cur;
**He comma nds the
way:
SPORT
Maga
zine.
it
this
rent issue of
player s but I don 't
of
the
respect
by
the
highly
Regarded more
he
wants
to manage. I
if
to
the
article
know
accordin
g
GMs ,
,
may be a little
ambition
Ernie
Banks
think
his
Al
Kaline
,
are
,
Frank Robinson , Maury Wills, higher tha n managin g, probably
Harmon Xillebrew and Mickey in the fron t office ," concludes
Richards in the SPOR T article,
Mantle.
San Diego general manager
Buzzie Bavasie, speaking of
Mays , says: "I teel he lacks a
Oakland Raider quarterstron g desire to mana ge. I don't
back Daryle Lamdnica has
mean to imply ihat he is not a
thrown more touchdown pasdedicated player , But he could
ses in the last th ree years
probably make so much more
than any quar terback in pro
money and have much more fun
football history over a simioutside of baseball he 'd probably
lar period , according to an
be better off."
article
in the cu rrent issue
Anoth er GM attacked May 's
of
SPORT
Magazine.
abilities «¦ more directly in the
SPORT article , challenging his
Mays , Aaron snub bed by GM' s
Potential Ma nagers
Smith makes NA IA
All-Sta r Team
Clark Boler , head baseball
coach at BSC received word that
one of his 1970 team member s ,
outfielder Dave Smith , was elected to the 1970 Topp s All-Star
Baseb all Team of the NAL A category of NCAA District I for superior performance on the playing
field contributing to the high standards of the nation 's favorite
pastime .
scored the team 's most hits and
most runs (17) and had 10 stolen
bases. The previous year he batted .343 with 11 hits for 32 times
at bat , and had a fielding aver age of ,866 . Statist ics on the field,
ing average for the 1970 season
for BSC are not available , but
coach Boler indicate d Smith had
another great year in this category .
Smith , a native of Temple , Pa.,
graduate d in August of this year
and is currently serving with the
National Guard . During the 1970
campaign , he batted .321 and
A Topps Award Citation has
been sent to coach Boler to be
pre sented to Smith with a dupli cate copy pro vided for display in
the college 's tro phy display case.
Playoffs
Changed
Baseball' s new playoff system
should be changed to feature inter -league play , suggests and editorial in the current issue of
SPOR T Magazine .
In the article , the SPORT editors review the attendance figures at the post-season playoffs ,
and point out that they fall far
short of the capacity houses attracted for most Wor ld Series
G ames.
"We think there would have
been considerably more drama
and excitement this year in Baltimore , the winner in the Ameri can League E ast , had been match ed in the playoffs agains t Pitts burgh , the winner of the Nation al League East ," conten ds
SPORTS editorial . "And a Cincinnatl-Minnesota series would
sure ly have offered more competition and interest than what
took plac e,"
As for the possibility of two
teams from the sam e league
winding up in the World Serie s ,
the SPORT editors answere d:
"It really wouldn 't matter because the World Series would still
be a match between the best
team s in ba seball , th e two havin g
just proved their superiority in
head-to -head combat .
In conclus ion they say: "We
think th is kind of system , league
vs . league , would enhance the
playoffs every way — artistically and financiall y — and that it
would not in the least detract
from the World Series , We would
like to see inter- league playoffs
begin in 197 1.
An extensive progra m of collegiate and prep baseball awards
are being presented each year to
All-American
players in five
categories under the sponsorship
of Topps Chewing Gum , Inc ., of
Brooklyn , New York . All-Ameri can baseball t eams are selected
for the Universit y Division and
the College Division and there are
awar ds to the All-American team
of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics . All-Star
teams are select ed in each of the
eight districts of the NCAA with
district Coaches «of-the .Year being selected .
Topps is active in the baseball field as a long-time sponsor
of the Maj or League All-Star
Rookie Team , the Minor League
Player -of-the-Year
and other
awards honoring baseball players . The compan y is known
throughout the country for its
Baseball Bubble
Gum Card s
which are a perennial favorite
w ith y oungsters.
B-Ball
Schedul e
Basketb all heads the holiday
sport s schedule at B. S. C, on
Dec. 15 , the H uskies travel to
mee t the Golden Bears of Kutz town State Colle ge, after which ,
on the 17th , Baptist Bible Invades the home hardboards and
on the 19th Earl Voss 's squad
takes on M illersville State C ollege away .
Following a ten day rest , the
Huskies will play host at the
Second Annual Berwick Invitational Tournament , a chari ty
fund raising pro ject , hold on
Dec. 29th and 30th,
"How Good Can You Tread W atar?"
Magazine Introd uced
A new magazine designed especially for the social-action oriented Individual will begin publication in Janu ary , '71. SOL
III , as its name implies , wtll be
a world affairs publication with
a heavy emphasis on social pr oblems and their solutions .
To encourage reade r participation , SOL III , is holding a
$1000 magazine contest with
prizes in writing , poetry , art ,
phot ography , and humor . Ent ries
from university student s and fac ulty members are especially
wante d . Contest rules may be
obtained by writing:
SOL III
C ontest , 1909 Gree n Street ,
Phila ., Pa . 19130. For fur ther
Informati on write : SOL III M agazine, 1909 Green Street , Phila .,
Pa , 19130 .
Tutoring Offe red
The following students have indicated a willingness to offer
their services as tutors for other interested at BSC . If anyone
should desire assistance in a problem area , individual arrange ments can be made by contactin g any of the students listed beblow . If anyone would like to be included on the list , plea se contact Mr , Zarski in Elwell Hall, The initials after the room numbers below stand for Elwell , Waller , M ontour, L uzerne and
Schuylklll Halls .
Bill Willis , Room 359E , PO 2445 , Subject • Gen . Chem , l&ll .
Linda Male , Room 346W, PO 2848, Subject - Beginning French ,
David Klees , R oom C ommuter , PO 449 , Subject • Math (be*
low Calc.), Spanish 10M04 , Phys, Sci., Bio. 101.
Georgianna Cherinchak , Room 447M , PO 1627 , Subject ¦
World Lit . I .
Bob Burnett , Room G10E , PO 2564 , Subject • Accountin g
I&II , C ost A ccount in g, Intermediate Accounting I&II .
Mark Scheffey, Room 154E , PO 2697 , Subject ¦Accounting
I&II .
George Hassel , Room 373E , PO 2252 , Subject • Intro to
Finite Math .
Thomas Price , Room 736E , PO 2396 , Subject • Calc . I&II ,
Tim Kniss , Room 729E , PO 2503 , Subject - Calc . I , II&III ,
College Algebra , Fundamentals of Math .
Denti ls Magargal , Room 713E , PO 2656 , Subject - Chem.
112. Physics 211.
BUI William s, Room 703E , PO 2628 , Subject • German ,
Beginnin g Russian .
„
Kobln Smith , Room Luzerne 1925 , Subject • Biology, En glish ,
Beginning Math ,
Cheryl Rice , Roo m 313S, PO 1322 , Subject • Pre.Calc .
Louise Kanouse , Room 434S ,, PO 1364 , Subject • Calc, I,
Carol Anderson , Room 120S, PO 1265 , Subject . Beginning
French , Elementar y Math ,
National
Ceremony
Planned
A quiet campus town is the
scene of great activity as the
Ch ristmas season arrives, Durham , home of the University of
New Ham pshire , is National
Headquarters for the first nation wide Christmas Eve candlelight
observance.
The idea of the national candle light came as an outgrowth of a
New York-based ecology group,
known as the Candle light People .
Its founder is folksinger Tom
Flanders , who says the whole idea
of the candleli ght observance is to
"brin g the people together ."
"The idea of the candleli ght , "
says Flanders , "is to call attention to the fact that Americans
are being subjected to too many
devisive means . We need to pull
together for the good of our
Country, for the good of Human ity. We rea lize that we must
care f or one another , before we
will be able to care f or nature."
"The only thin g we're askin g,"
adds Flanders , "is that at 9
Christm as
Eve ,
on
p.m .
Americans join together , out of
doors , and light a candle for unity .
There will be no marchin g, no
protests , no strikes , just a simple
expression of faith in mankind ."
Flanders and his committee
see the candleli ght observance as
a continuing project , not to be
forgotten after December 24, but
rather to serve as a point of
individu al initiative for all to
"work to brin g people back together " throughout the year.
Plans are alre ady underway for
a world-wide candleli ght obser vance und er the auspices of the
United Nations, f or next year .
You are cor dially invited to
join with your fellow men in the
Christm as Candlelight ,
First
Christmas Eve, 9 p.m., out of
doors .
Discussing
his pitching
staffs unusually high •arned-run aver age , Twins ' manager Bill Rigney says in the
currant issua of SPORT Magazi ne:
" It really wasn 't that trig if
yo u look at it fr om the point
of view of the national debt. "
I-Q
Quiz
By Tom Schofleld
WIN 1 WIN ! WIN ! PRIZES GAL ORE IN THE M&G' S INTELLI G ENCE TEST!
1st PRIZE : A FRE E DINNE R
FOR TWO IN THE L UXURIOUS
"BARCELONA R OOM" OF THE
SCRANTON CO MMONS !
2nd PRIZE: TWO FREE DINNERS (CO MPLETE WITH ALL
MEDI CAL SERVI CES NECES S-
ARY)
3rd PRIZE:
A STUDENT GIFT
PAK!
TO BE E LIGIBLE TO WIN,
SIMPLY
COMPLE TE
THI S
SH O RT TEST ,
Wh at Influenced your coming
to Bloomsbur g State C ollege ?
a) I was searching for an exciting educational exper ience.
b) I was searching for Mansfield andIt got lost,
had a pretty campus.
c^
d) The girls-boy s wer e "cute 1'.
e) It was chea p.
Wh at was your first (refrai n
from essay answers) disappoint ment when you arrived?
a) I felt like I never left high
school,
h) The food .
cS The people .
d) I found the whole situation
enti r ely sat isfactor y.
e) (essa y answer )
Tom SchofleW
Colum bia
N um bers
ARM Collects Toys
Inter-Sorority Christmas
DEB's
As their service project the
Sisters of Delta Epsilon Beta
are encouraging students to write
Columbia Residence Hall
letters to Hanoi to express their
Desk Ext. 379
concern for our Prisoners of
Miss Tolan , Head Resident , Ext. War . These letters are seeking
378
the release or at least reforF LOOR EXT. PAY PHONE
mation of treatment of POW 's.
784-9800
1
The Sisters will provide boxes
2
784-9762
at the Residence Halls where let3
392
784-9753
ters will be collected and sent to
4
394
the North Viet Nam government .
5
395
784-9747
Please do your part and show
6
396
your concern .
7
397
784-9763
The Sisters planned a pre.
8
380
rush party for all non-Greek
9
318
784-9829
coed's. This took place Sunday
night , December 13th at the Delta
Epsilon Beta house, located at
455 East Street .
Finally the Sisters would like
to thank Bob Miller and Al Decker for their Christmas tree, and
to extend their best wishes to the
BSC student body, faculty,
Kenneth T . Wilson , Associate administration for a M e r rand
y
Professor of art at Bloomsburg Christmas and a Happy New Year,
State College, has a one-man
exhibition of watercolors on view
Fail Sigm a Pi
at Mansfield State College.
The sisters of Tau Sigma Fi
The twenty-six paintings in- held
their annual winter formal at
cluding the "Envisage Series" the Hazelton
Holiday Inn on Decand "Lake Image Series," are ember 5. "Spirit
Christmas"
part of the latest investigations was the theme andof everyone
eninto the paintings of a landscape Joyed the affai r . President and
that were done during the last' Mrs. Nossen, alumni sisters Pegtwo years. The paintings are gie Rood and Sandy (Smith>(
hanging in the new Laurel Art McAndrews, and Mr . and Mrs t
Gallery that was opened this fall Verdekal were the honored
at Mansfield State College, and guests. The sisters and guests
will remain there until cne c .'••rist- agreed it was a terrific way to
mas holidays.
start the Christmas season.
Tau Sigma Pi would also like
SPSEA
to thank all the people who helped
Jack Corbiu, of the Penna, to make their fund raising proState Education Association 's ject a success. We hope we
Professional Rights and Respon- helped many students with their >
sibilities Committee will be fea- Christmas shopping.
tured at the SPSEA meeting, Dec. • A special thank-you from all
16 , today, at 4 p.m . in Haas Gal- the sisters is extended to George
lery. Everyone is invited and en- Bruchko , our beautiful legs concouraged to ask any questions testant. We all appreciated his
about the profession .
cooperation and his "beautiful"
legs.
Recruite r
A Christmas party was held
(continue d fro m page two )
at Mrs. Verdikal's house on Monnight , Dec. 10, was a folk mass day December 14. There were
"written by Rev . Rochelle.
refreshments, fun , and a special
What seems to be the real aim surprise for all the sisters.
of Rev . Rochelle is that he will
be able to hold a form of conmeans to speak .
temporary worship, including
Perhaps this means, if the stusmall-group education , counsel- dents of BSC come to Jay Rochling, and human relations train- elle, he will reach out with Christ,
ing.
in his silence, and teach us to
How can we sum up Rev . Roch- speak .
elle's mission to BSC? Well ,
this quote found hanging inside
his house will suffice:
Teaching about Christ
begins in silence.
36 E. Main Stroet
To speak of Christ
Bloomsburg, Pa.
means to keep silent .
784-1947
To be silent about Christ
Wilson
Exhibits
Approximately 300 children in
twelve regional hospitals and an
orphana ge are expected to benefit
from the ninth annual "Toys for
Tots " drive which was held last
week sponsored by the Associa *
tion of Resident Men ,.
A dance was held on campus
with the price of admission being
one toy and the Town of Blooms,
bur g was also canvassed for toys .
The schedule for Santa and his
helpers to visit hospital child ren 's wards is as follows : Mon.
day , December 14 , — 10:15 a.m .
Ashlan d Hospital ; 11:30 a,m,
Pottsville General Hospital 12:45
p.m . Good Samaritan # Hospital ,
Pottsville ; 2:15 p. m . Shamokin
State Hospital ; 3-.Q0 p. m . Sunbury
New Pot
(continu ed fro m page two)
are offering an alternative to
spoonfed art. In the organic
expression of ceramics and the
two dimensional expression of
canvas, they are offing individual expression .
Apart from the r ather unpleasant functional quality of the
chamberpots of memory , these
were often beautifully handcr afted pieces of wood , designed with
care and feeling — no pun Intended . In the same way the
handwork of today 's art students
are honest individual expressions. If you dig seeing the real
thing and not a Woolworth' sprint
then go to the Chamberpot. If
you can remember what a chamberpot was — then you can also
remember a time when artwork
was valued for its uniqueness,
not its mass production. If you
didn't know what a chamberpot
was , consider your education exp anded ju st a little bit , but don 't
stop there. See what is happening
with B.S.C. art students. At the
Chamberpot— in Bloomsburg.
Charles N. Yeager
Dispensi ng Opt ician!
120 E. Main St.
Preemptio ns f'riled & repairs
—
-
~*~
*—¦
Fine Jew elry and
Watch Repair
, 25 E. main St.1, Bloomsburg
©
WAFFLE
GRILLE
MOYER
Pharmacy
ROBERT G. SHIVE, R.P.
Free Prescri p tion Delivery
TOILET GOODS
COSMET ICS
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES
GREETING CARDS
1 West Main St.
Phono: 784-4388
BLOOMSBURG , PA.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ B^B^B^P^P^P^P^p^B^pajBjMpaajp^paajpj
Mill er Office
Eppley's
Pharmacy
Supply Co.
MAIN A IION StRf ITS
18 W.it Main Strot
Prtscr/pf/on Specialist
BLOOMSBURG, PA.
HAUMA1K CARDS
GIFTS
Mi on*
784-2561
• CHANEL
• GUflLAIN
• PAIEROE
• LANVIN
• MINCE MATCHAIEUI
• ELIZAIETtt ARDEN
• HELENA RUIENSTE IN
• DANA
• COTY
• MAX FACTOR
wlttff •fwlUjpf
ton , Penna., from 9 a.m . to 5
P.m .
In Lancaster , the program will
take place on Franklin and Marshall College .campus. Both programs will be held December 29 .
Ohio
E ach year , during the Christmas holidays , the Ohio County
Board of Education sponsors a
major recruitment program to
begin filling anticipated vacancies for elementary and secondary teachers.
This year their program will
be held Monday , December 28,
1970 , at 10:00 a.m . in the Ohio
County Board of Education offices .
Applications should be returned to Fred A . Hake, Administrative Assistant for Personnel ,
Ohio County Schools , 2203 National Road, Wheeling, West Virginia , 26003, Applicants will receive communication indicating
directions to the Board of E ducation offices
Lancaster- Scranto n
This year , the Operation Native Sons and Daughters programs will be held in Lancaster
and Scranton , which will provide
information about career potenti als in their respective areas by
interviews with employers .
In Scranton, the conference
will be held at the Jermyn Motor
Inn , 326 Spruce Street , Scran-
Summer Camps
Attention any teachers or college students interested in summer camp j obs as a director or
counselor in the following areas:
kindergarten, music , nature, pioneering, riding, tennis , or waterfront; jobs exist for you in Pennsyl vania summer camps. Those .
interested should call , write, or
register with a recruiter from
the nearest Pennsy State Empl oyment Service Office, Or, if
you live in the Pittsburgh area ,
recruitment will be held December 21-23 and 28-30 from 9 a.m .
- 4 p.m . in the profession and
clerical office , Bureau of Employment Security , 627 Penn Avenue, Pittsburgh , Pa. 15222 .
" Drugstore
of Service "
34 E. Ma in Street and
Scottown Shopp ing
C enter
Kampus Nook
Acros s from the Union
Hot
Platters
Every
Mini?
Midi?
Maxi
Gaucho?
Day
Plain A Ham Hoagits,
Cheese • Pepper on I • Onion
Plua. Our ow n Made lc«
Cream.
Take Out Orders :
Hours: Mon. • Thurs f:0011:00
9:00.12:00
Prida y
4 :30-12:00
Saturday
11: 00 11:00
Sunda y
Come see our
Lingerie
and Foundation
Lines . . •
Eudora's
Corset Shop
REA & DERICK INC.
1 E. Main St.
iM
H
H
iBHMMHaHiaaaiiaHii
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^^
^^^^
^^^M
^^^ UH
^^^
^^^B
^^ PH
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B^S^B^BBBBBBBB1
Harr y Logan
Fine J ewelry
AND
Do your thing at
Vour Prescription Dru gg ist
NESPOLI
jewelers
Opportunities Offered
i
PHOTO SERVICES
BLOOM
BOWL
Community Hospital ; an d 3:45 pital .
Wednesday, December 16, —
p.m . Danville Geisinger Medical
1:00 to 4:00 p.m . Selinsgrove
Center .
Tuesday, December 15, — 8:45 State School and Hospital .
The Association of Resident
a.m . Bloomsburg Hospital ; 9:25
Men
, sponsoring the "Toys for
a.m . Berwick Hospital; 10:30
Tots
" proje ct, is working in cona.m . Nanticoke St . Stanislaus Orphanage; 11:00 a.m . Nanticoke junction with the Dean of Students '
State Hospital; 11:45 a.m . Hazle- Office with Assistant Dean of
ton General Hospital ; and 12:15 Students Richard Haupt directing
p.m . Hazeltfon St . Joseph 's Hos- • the project .
Repairing
rtwrt
Your J twtltr A way fro m Home
5 W. Main St.
Bloomsburo
Main St., Bloomsb uro
SMORGASBORD
ALL YOU CAN BAT
Tu
.10
TuT
Ta»
.18
«3
tmMH 0 L l
Y B " F FET
LUNCHEON
H
ftfI
v
EACH
^ SUNDAY
TUESDAY Thni FRIDAY
•
TTj week 11 JO . 1 JO
"*°
*"
Children • $1.50
ON OUR 2nd FLOOR
HOTEL MAGEE Bloomsburg, Pa.
DICK BENEFIELD. Man—tr
Say
MER R Y CHR IS TMAS
with
FLOWERS FR OM...
"^S^t^lUiY
|^^W FLOW ERS
I^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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