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Assorted Trivia
Consumes Meetin g
College Coun cil opened its
eighth meeting Monday with
several announcements
by
President Mike Pillagalli.
Regarding the "scrapped"
daily newspaper , three students
had expressed interest in
working on it. However , it was
felt that sufficient disinterest still
prevades and warrants th e
newspaper being set aside.
A constitutional
revision
committee had been suggested to
re-evaluate the CGA constitution .
However , one already exists its
members being Frank Pizzoli ,
Mr. John Walker , and Mike
Siptroth .
It was also announced that
members of College Council must
maintain a 2.00 average to
remain seated on council.

Several people who had been
dismissed from college had asked
for the policy regarding the
return of Activities Fees that
were alread y paid. This can be
found in the College Catalo g
under "refunds " .
After the announcements , Mike
Siptroth moved to return the
daily newspaper to the floor for
further discussion. The twothir ds vote
needed was not
attained.
. The Big Name Entertainment
report by dor Remsen showed
an income of $3,449.25 and expenses of $5,247.15. This required
that $1,747.00 be removed from a
subsidy from the 1969-70 budget.
Twenty-five hundred dollars
remains in the budget for the next
concert.
(continue don page four)

Brow nie
Points ?
points are assigned to the different activities , according to the
offices or services that a student
performs in each one.
In the past , a student reported
his activities at the beginning of
each semester at registration on
a computer card . This method
created problems. For one, it was
slowing down registration and
leading to complicati ons at
computer services. It also
amounted to a great deal of
unnecessary excess work for a
small number of people. Another

Because of this extreme difference and thtL ^>ther~ factors
involved the CGA adopted a
policy for the 1968-69 academic
year which went back to making
the system more personalized
and make it work effectively .
i

f

'

Painter, Jack Lamed, a nat lv* of Bloomtburg who now resld**
In Bonto n (second from loft) , is shown sup ervising
in* hanging of one of the painting s on the groun d floor of Bakol oss
Center for the Humaniti es on th« BSC eampu s while Dr. Pereival R. Roberts, Chairman , Art Department , look s on. Stud*
ents assisting in the hanging art William Cluley, studio assistant; John Glide *, English major , and Steve Dippery, studio
assistant. The showing of Mr. La mod' s paintings will be held
throughout the week and is open to the public at no charge for
admission .

Views Soug ht On
72-73 Calend ar
The Committee to Review and
Make Recommendations for the
1972-73 Academic Calendar (See
members below ) is in the process
of reviewing past calendars and
surveying calendars at other
colleges in an attempt to arrive at
a suitable program for this
college. "We are anxious to have
people from all parts of the
college community (i.e., administrators , students , and
faculty ) contact committee
members about any aspect of the
calendar in which they are interested. Our committee is
especially interested in arrivin g
at three or four programs which

B r esett
Gets PhD
Stephen M. Bresett , a member
of the Bloomsbur g State College
faculty since September , 1969,
has been notified *by Springfield
College, Massachusetts that he
has completed all of his
requirements for his" Doctor of
Physical Education degree which
will be awarded during the May,
1971 commenceme nt exercises.
The title of his dissertation was
"A Comparative Study of the
Athletic Capabilities of Deaf and
Non-Deaf Students " .

Under this new system , the
number of points assigned to
each activity has been reduced to * students who will be graduating
make the tota l more realistic in in May and August will have to
terms of the requirement. Also, fill out only one extracurricul ar
activities report , which they
must hand in by Ma rch 1. On this
form they list their name , dat e of
graduati on , th e names of t heir
activities , offices held , adv isor 's
or coach' s name f or each , and
committees
served
on.
Verifications will then be made
Haas Gallery , will be the site of by ph one t o t he p erson or pgersons
a poetry and painting workshop, li st ed on t he shee t i n re ard t o
Tuesday, March 2, at 1:30 p.m., performance and fulfillment of
featuring two wejl-known area responsibility in these activit ies.
artists - poet Joh n Wh eatcroft

Worksh op
Accents Art

A,
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Fin. Aid:
Apply Now
For 71-72

by Karen Keinard
Currently in use at B.S.C . is a
system by which graduating
seniors are rewarded for their
time and effort in extra
curricular activities. The Service
Key Point System is one in which

big problem of the old system
was that many students had
totals of 60 and 70 points by
graduation , muc h above the
required 20 points .

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Now is the time to plan for next
year 's Financial Aid. Within the
next two months , most applications are due for awards for
the 1971-72 academic year .
PHEAA State Scholarship
applications will be mailed to all
1970-71 r ecipients. Completed
applications must be sent to
PHEAA in Harrisbu rg ; the
deadline for applications is April
30. Those who did not receive an
award last year or did not apply,
should contact the Financial Aid
Office for an applica tion form .
Criteria chan ge from year to
year thus previously ineligible
students may qualify. Information from the 1970 income
tax return of students and thei r
parents is needed.
The Parent 's Confidentia l
Statement (PCS ) is the key to
most financial aid at Bloomsburg. Students who submit a
PCS in the spring (forms are sent
to the College Scholarship Service) are provided with a
package of aid , or the type of aid
requested (by a standard application ) upon arrival in September.
Freshman
PCS 's
automatically
reviewed to
determine awards to be offered to
the student in late summer. It
takes at least six weeks for a PCS
to be analyzed by CSS and forwarded to the Financial Aid
Office for consideration .
National Defense Student Loan
applications for the fall term
must be submitted before April 1.
Parent 's
Confidential
A
Statement must be on file in the
Financial Aid Office to be
eligible. Interest on a possible
$1,000 loan does-not begin until
nine months afte r graduation ;
then it is at a rate of seven percent. A unique feature is tha t
t eachers ma y cancel t heir debt at
a ra t e of t en or fif teen percen t per
year up to fifty percent , making it
hal f-scholarshi p.
(continued on page throe)

and painter Jack Lamed.
Students are invited to bring
some of t heir own work for
(student ) , Mr. John Choyka rev iew and discussion by t he
(student ) , Mr. Rober t Nor t on , visiting artists .
Mr ; A. J. McDonnell , Mr.
R ichard Brook , Dr. Edson Drake ,
Th e workshop wi ll be f ollowed
Dr. Hobart Heller and Dr. James bv a comb ined informal
Cole (chairman ).
discussion by Mr. Wheatcroft and
Mr. Lamed .

Ginsburg
To Read

Dr. Robert Ginsberg of the
Delaware Coun ty Cam pus , the
Pennsylvania State University ,
will read a paper entitled "The
R het or i ca l
Dllemna
of
Pacificism , " in the Alumni
Room , today, February 26, at
7:30 p.m. Sponsored by the
Philosoph y Department in
conjunction with the Philosophy

can be presented to the college
community in order to see which
program is most attractive. " If
you are interested please contact
one of the following members: Club , the program is open to
Misi
Beverly
Jungmann the public at no charge .

Pa i n ti n gs by Mr. Lamed are on
display th the Facult y Lounge in
t he basemen t of Bakeless and
will remain on exhib it un t il
Wednesda y, March 3.
The week-lon g program entitled Accent on Arts is sponsored
by the English Department with
the aim of giving students an
opportunity to talk and work with
outside artists .
Nat ional

Teache r 's Exam
application s mutt
be tent
to Princeton
befor e March
11. The test will be given
at BSC Saturda y, .April 3.

Father laniard Petrlna narrated the new rock opera Jews
Christ Super Star th lo Thursda y night , February 11V Mo program, presented In Northumberland Hall lounge, was simila r to
a radio pro gra m In which ho explained the sequence of act ion
In that muHI-r eterd album.

REALITY*/

SEX! In the issues of the1
Maroon & Gold which have appeared since the beginning of the
semester, approximately eightyfive column inches have been
devoted to the subject of malefemale relations. This is over
one-fourth of a typical Friday
issue. I assumed the first article
and the ensuing letters to be
satirical . But it would seem the
tone and spirit of the discussion
has changed considerably . I
believe the general trivia
discussed in the paper indicates
an underlying social problem.
Sociologists divide individual
human behavior into two
categories. An individual 's
personal likes and desires are
known as backstage behavior.
When a person must present a
different image for the benefit of
others he is said to be in the
frontstage. We spend most of our
waking hours in this frontstage,
pretending to be what we are not
and performing rituals void of
any logic. Perhaps this is why
Western culture is renowned for
its high rate of suicide.
Erich Fromm wr^te , "An
unhealthy society is one which
creates mutual hostility, distrust ,
which transforms man into an
instrument of use and exploitation for others , which
deprives him of a sense of self ,
except inasmuch as he submits to
an
others
or
becomes
automation." We claim to be a
society where freedom of choice
is the supreme value. In reality
we are slaves to the beliefs and
desires of others . Instead of
accepting a person for what he is
the group forces him to give a
performance which they will
approve of and enjoy . If he
doesn 't, he becomes the loneliest
man in town .
These performances are
manifest throughout the campus.
A primary example of this
phenomenon occurred just last
week at the showing of three
classical horror pictures. Several
individuals performed for their
groups by reading the captions of
the silent film aloud. Those who
shouted obscenities for no visibly
apparent reason were evidently
trying to impress someone, as
were those who chose to use socalled humorous comments as
their medium of expression . But
the best example of mass performance was the audience

reaction to the lov e scenes. One
could sense everyone reacting for
the benefit of those to either side.
All physical embraces or
gestures were reduced to symbols of lust rather than expressions of empathy for another
individual .
When the male and female
behavioral pattern s of BSC
students were discussed in the
M&G, many of the specific
references were
actually
manifestation s of frontstage
behavior. Drinking to get bombed, rather than becauseit tastes
good, is practiced because it is
the expected thing to do. Showing
off in the Commons. The various
rules of etiquette prescribed by
society . Beauty defined according to style of dress ,
anatomical proportions , and the
amount of outside aids used to
create television's idea of a sexy
human being. The idea that
females must play the passive
role in the establishment of a new
friendship. Do we really want our
personal behavior regulated
completely by what others expect? Can't we be natural?
"Male Call" by s.l.s. was the
most intelligent item written on
this whole subject. Although her
female character handles herself
in a perfectly natural and normal
manner, she doesn't even elicit a
response as a person , let alone a
female. The only choice left to
combat loneliness is to revert to
"the games people play. " The
one failing of "Male Call" was to
omit the fact that the opposite
situation occurs with equal
frequency .
The musical "Hair " calls for
everyone to "Be free , be
whatever you are, do whatever
you want to do just so long as you
don 't hurt anybody." If everyone
were to adopt such a philosophy
there would be no need for the
fraudulent
actions
which
characterize our present life
style. We would be able to choose
our friends for what they are
rather than what they pretend to
be. This would eliminate much
future unhappiness. We would be
better able to relate to one
another as human beings, which ,
in my opinion , is a prerequisite to
understanding and appreciating
each other as men and women.
Be yourself. It makes things a
lot easier for everyone.
A. Rekniht

VOL. IL THE MAROO N AND GOLD NO. 30
Bill Teitswort h
Editor-in -Chief
Buiintss M*n«0«r
Managing Editor
Ntw s Editor
Co-FMturo Editors
Sports

dor R»m»tn
Tom Funk
.
Sam Trapan *
Jim Sachott i
Torry Blast
Jac k Hoffman
Lind a En nis
.
Pat Hallor
Carold Kishb augh
Ma r k Poue art
John Stugrin
Ktnnoth C. Hoffman

Editor

Copy Edit or

Co-Circ ulation Mgr § .

Photo Editor

Art Editor
Advi sor

STAPP: flholla y Brunoui, Ka to

Calpin , Jim Chapman,
Carmon Ciullo, Lora Duckworth , Karon Gable , Pam
Hickt y, Androa4 Hoffman, Cathy Jack , K aron Ktinard,
Schoftold,
GUn Spotts , Sim
Cindy Mlchonor, Tom
SpragtM, Prank Plno lK Jost o Jamot , Harris Wolfo , Paul

favkc, Davo Kolttr , Stovo

Bargamo

Donna

Skomsky,

Mary Ann Potr uoa.
All opinions «x prostod i by colu mnists and faaturo writers,
Inclu ding latter-to-tha-odlto r, are not necessaril y those
of tht publica tio n but those of Individuals.
Call Ext. 323 or Write 301

To Anyb ody

Record Review

The Cry of Love
"The Cry of Love"
Jimi Hendrix
by SometimesJohn (S.B.)
with an introduction
by Glenn Lang
INTRODUCTION
Hello! It's just me. Got lonely,
and I thought that I'd drop in
again — and Jimi does. And Jimi
keeps going straight ahead — so
fast ; the voyage is over before
you know it , and leaves you down .
Steadily improvising, always
moving, never the same —
always changing, anytime .
Speeding as in "Freedom," and
in "Straight Ahead, " Jimi shows
where he is master of the acts.
Moderately , as in "Easy Rider,"
he just floats along. It's his trip so
just sit back and ride — slow, the
empty spot of most groups. When
they slow down — you turn the
stereo off or down ; it's a drag.
With Jimi here, you sit up and
listen drifiting in "Drifiting " and
"Angel." They are beautiful;
something people said he couldn't
do, and you end up looking out of
a "Belly Button Window ," a cute
little song that says something —
a song of a baby looking from his
mother out. "Straight Ahead!"
How I hoped for Jimi's last
album to be one of his best. "The
Cry of Love" is not good; it is
great — a beautiful black. Yeah ,
that black consciousness that
Percey , Turner , and Sylvester
teach so well in their black
studies. That black consciousness
so highly represented by Glenn
Lang, Alonzo Walker , Howard
Johnson , and all the blacks on
this campus. Jimi Hendrix
represents all that is black
consciousness , an d more — !
freedom . This album is freedom . <
Jimi' s guitar is freedom — such a
strong need to be free that he
died .
Flashback — Side One
"Freedom ," fetch it so I can
live. Explosive, sharp, and all
over your head from ear to ear.
You fade ; you faded — you 're out
of sight. Lead guitar cracking the i
walls inside your head , and Jimi
sings, "Keep on pushi n g stra igh t
ahead , ahead , ahead , fade, and
out. "
In a boat , Jimi takes you I
"Drifting," and sa ili ng through
a clouded sea of forgotten tears , i
Slowly and beautifully , the tears <
drop as your love sails you home.
Bruum , ba , bruum — motorcyle — here he comes ; "Ezy '
Rider. " His free wind takes you I
higher—all through your cere- '
bral brain , every passage of the
labyrinth . Your brain becomes a
guitar. Jimi fingerpicks your
brain : wa-wa , higher and higher ,
wa -wa , you are in heaven, wa-wa,
in and out .

Going to hell with bourbon and
coke, you pass that bottle, and
Jimi sings you a real song. You
are very lonely out on the road as
Jimi combs that breath right out
of your hair. In line with "Rainy
Day Women 12 & 35," you feel so
lonely ; your friend feels, talks,
and looks just like you , "My
Friend."
Flashback — Side Two
Scream guitar — scream !
Keep on "Straight Ahead !" You
change realitiesas the sun in gold
and brown sinks behind the
horizon , and Jimi sings :
We got to stand side by side
We got to stand together and
organize
They say power to the people
that's what they're screamin'
Freedom of the soul
Pass it on, Pass it on to the
young and old.
Hello my friend
So good to see you again
Been all by myself
I don't think I can make it alone
Keep Pushing Ahead.
Yeah , the sun died , but the
black moun tain remains.
"Astro Man ," Superman, and
Donald Duck. You take off into
outer space. Across your strands
of black hair , there he goes.
Taking a peace of mind with the
Last Poets, you forget dope.
Coming down from heaven to
rescue you and Jimi , "Angel"
sprea ds her wings. Slow and
beautiful , she flys on. Jimi's
music goes on above heaven, and

by Karen tteinard
There are many, many things
about this world I do not understand—things like ESP and
prejudice and love and
meaningless war and the list
could go on forever . But there is
one thing I am confused about
and find hardest to understand at
the moment—it affects most of
you reading this—simply, it's
Bloomsburg State College. I just
cannot understand this place and
the people who run it.
I think everybody by now
knows the problems we've been
having—they are all sick of
hearing about them and would
rather forget. That' s the
trouble—most would rather
forget than do domething about
it. Students around here seem
or
half-alive,
half-dead
whichever is worse. I just can't
understand this. Doesn't anybody
care how their lives are run?
Don 't they even care if somebody
else is running 80 per cent of it?
Why is it that those who do care
just seem to sit and argue and
write about it and don't DO
anything?
PeoDle here are slowly suffocating and don 't even realize it.
Pollution is in the air, and the air
is polluted with a lot more than
individual wastes—it is polluted
with the insensitivity and
ignorance of the administration,
and with apathy and alienation on
the part of the students. Why ?
Can anybody give me an answer?
«
maybe it's a bummer. As you
close your eyes, you can only see
black — pitch black ; a Jimi
Hendrix black , you can only see.
"In From the Storm," you and
Jimi suffer; lashing wind ,
plunging rain , jabbing lightning.
Thunderbolt, thunderbolt — is it a
bummer? Yeah , but your love
brings Jimi in.
Looking around up in this
room . Like an abortion, she takes
pills to kill. Frowns, f rowns, and
you know that Jimi will go down
that shoot in 200 days. Yeah
daddy, it's too late. Eating up all
those chocolates; laughing in the
dark . Can you dig it Mama?
"The Cry of Love" album is
beautifully black. Seeking
freedom in the pitch black room ,
you sing to Jimi, over and over ,
"I'm looking through that belly
button window wishing — wishing
that you were around ."

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"I don 't think there is any more
-likelihood of a local official
being corrupted than there is of
H
a Congressman being corrupted .
-Spiro Agnew

¦
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Husky
Pups
Trium ph

————«——^• ¦B

Bald Eagles
Scalped, 93-81

m

Led by the scoring of Gary
Petcavich , the freshmen Huskies
defeated Lock Haven to the tune
of 97-80.
The Bald Eagles played a nip
and tuck game with the Huski es
for about the first seven minut es
of the game. Then it was all the
Huskies.
Going into the half-ti me , the
Huskies enjoyed a comforta ble 19
point lead (47-28). This marg in
was due to the ability to draw
fouls . In the first half the locals
were 13-17 from the charity stripe
compared to the Eagles 4-6. In
the second half , the Bald Eagles
outscored the Huski es 52-50 but it Howie Johnson lets one fly wnile Platufcis and Kuhn look on
was not enough to overcome the
hometeams ' lead. In this half the from their positions in Tuesda y nighf s game with Lock Haven.
Eagles outscored the Huskies
from the foul line 14-19 compared
to the Huskies 11-17.
The Bloomsburg scoring att ack
was well balanced with five men
Bloomsburg State - College consecutive for the Maro on and
scoring in double figures. Gary basketbal l nipped Kutztown Gold squad of Earl Voss, and
Petcavich led with 21.
State , Saturday evening , 81-79, at brin gs them back to the .500 mark
Centennial gym , winning its for the season.
Jim Platukis topped the
fourth Perm Conference Com- Huskies in scorin g department
petition.
with 24 as Dennis Mumm ey and
The victor y marked the third Howard Johnson chipped in 15
East Stroudsburg
State 's followed with a 6-2 victory over apiece. Paul Kuh n and Art
wrestling contingent avenged an another Husky frosh , Dan Luptowski added 13 and 10
earlier triangular meet loss to Burkholder to give the home respectively.
The first half of the contest was
Blooms6urg State by edging the squad a 20-7 advanta ge.
close
with the Golden Bears
with
a
Floyd Hitchock started
Huskies , 20-18, Saturday night on
moving
out by 4 towards the end
strong 16-3 hammering of Glen
the Warrior mats .
which
gave
tham a 48-44 lead at
The Warriors scored in six of Eb y at 177. For the Husk y it was
intermission
.
the first seven matches and his 20th victory this season .
Doug Grady turned in a 8-2
fought off a late Maroon and Gold
The locals moved ahead 54-53
rally to send the locals to their thumping of Allen Brown at 190 until 16:10 was rema ining to be
but needed a pin here to clinch a played when Luptowski stole a
10th loss of the campaign.
tie. Bob Hummel closed out the pass and fed Tom Wilson .
local
spark with a quick 24 second
'
Wayne
Smythe
The Huskies
A see-saw battle continued
fal
l
over
Fred
Compeau
at
drou
ght
victory
broke the local
through the rest of the contest but
heavyweight.
with 6:50 to go, Gary Rich ,
with a stron g 6-3 decision over
The Houkmen close out the Kutztown 's top scorer of the
Tony Petak at 142.
Sportin g a 15-5 adva ntage regular season tomorrow night evening with 28, hit on two
Kevin Ha yes and the Wa rriors ' hosting the West Chester Rams straight to boost his team up, 66Tom Huber battled to a scoreless before the State Meet at Lock 62.
The Vossmen fought back and
standoff at 158 and Fred Epler Haven on March 5-6.
were up again at the five minute
mark 71-69 after fine shooting by
Flatukis. With two minutes
remaining in the contest Rich
drew his fifth foul and left the
contest with BSC on top , 77-73.
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-— -- -

BSC Nabs Penn Tourney

ESSC Revenge

In the closing moments the

Bear 's Marakovits hit on two
fi eld goals and W eigle hit one but
foul shots by Plat ukis and Wi lson
iced t he v ic tory for the Huskies.

Johnson and Platukis combined for 28 rebounds to spar k the
Huskies off the board while Rich
gathered in 13 strays for the
losers.

The Bloomsburg State Husky points as five of the Huskies
B-ballers extended their streak to reached double figures , Jim Platukis turned in a twenty
four by thumping th e Bald
point
effort and did a fine job of
Eagles of Lock Haven 93-81. The
blocking
out Bald Eagles from
first half of the game was a nip
the
boards.
and tuck battle with the Huskies
In The second haii the Huskies
entering the locker room with a
the game open and with
blew
narrow 40-39 lead. The revam eight
minutes rema ining the
ped , revised and rambunctious
Huskies
had amassed a ten point
Huskies did not look like a team
lead
and
from that poin t on the
that had won its .last three games
durin g the first half of the con- outcome of the game was obvious
with the mar gin of the Husky
test.
The Huskies were forcing their victory being the only uncertain
shots and the offense machine did stat istics.
The Hus kies at last have
not click as it has been known to
perform. Whether the "Pearl " become a new ball club but its a
gave them a Knute Rockne , "win shame that this favorabl e'turn of
this for the Gipper " talk at half or events had to occur so lat e in the
if someone took the lid off the season . The Huskies have only
basket is not known but in the one game remaining this season,
second half the Huskies played with the game being played at
Shippens bur g . The Huskies
like a team with hoopla.
(continued on pagt four )
Paul Kuhn , who alternates
between the guard and forward
position , t urned in a superb
performance by leading th e
(continued from peg* one)
Husky scoring with a twenty-nine
point effort. Paul , reverting to Student
employment
is
backyard basketball , outclassed available in several forms.
the Bald Eagle defense by con- Federal Work-Study funds are
tinuall y scoring on isolated one availabl e to needy students.
on one situations .
Specially talented students ,
Dennis Mumm ey, Bloom - regardless of need , may secure a
sburg 's Mister "O" turned in a job through the State Student
surprisingly strong game in the Employment Program. Both
rebound departm ent. The hoopla programs require a PCS , pay
Huskies employ a 1-3-1 defensive $1.60 per hour , and are limited to
alignmen t and Mummey plays 15 hours per week. Applications
the back position in this zone may be submitted at any time ,
defense. Dennis took advantage but advanced planning is more
of his board position and was a expedient for the student. Apvaluable asset in undermining plying in the spring (for the 71-72
the Bald Eagles ; he also con- year or for summer sessions) will
tributed fourteen points.
ensure early placement.
Art Luptowski , team leader
BSC Scholarships , provided by
and ball handler , looking more various
organization s are adimpressive each game , was- ministered through the , Financ
outstanding in that he con- Aid Office. Students who wish ial
tributed an innum erable amoun t apply must do so before March to
1.
of assists for the Husky cause. No PCS is needed.
Arties ' pa st problem was his lack
The Guaranty Loan Program is
of shooting confidence but he in effect thr oughout the year.
seems to have come out of his Students (accepted or enrolle d)
shell and his point production is may apply at any time for a loan
increa sing with every game. for that year . Applications are
Artie finished the game with available at most banks. The
thirteen points , a fairly adequate max i mum y early amoun t i s
performance f or a sophomore $1,500.
Interest
usual ly
Howard "Hojo " looked like he (depending on need ) does not
was on a pogo sti ck as he reached begin until after gra duation and
astronomical heights in blocking may be extended over a ten year
numerous shots and controlled period. Allow four to six weeks
the defensive boards. Howa rd for processi ng. No PCS is needed.
finished the game with fourteen

Fin. Aid

Kampus Nook

O_H_———¦¦ III
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"

" —

Prtthmen Husk y is head and hands above all opposition. It
was anot her* two poin ts added to Tuesd ay night 's defsat of the
LHSC Bald Eag les, 97-80.

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Election Rules ^ one
Monday night, College Council
approved the following rules for
election of Student Senators, CGA
officers and class officers. The
set of rules was formulated by the
Election Board Rules Committee . Sections regarding
"petitions " and "violations " will
be presented at a later date, after
they have been finalized ,
reconsidered , and approved by
Council
Article I. Election Voting Areas
1. Balloting for offices in all
campus-wide elections shall be
held in the main lobby of the
following
places :
Northumberland Hall , Elwell Hall,
Columbia Hall , Montour Hall,
Schuylkill Hall , Luzerne Hall,
and Student Union Building.
2. Campus residents may vote
only in their respective residence
halls.
3. Commuters and off-campus
students shall vote in the Student
Union Building.
4. Faculty shall vote in the
Student Union Building.
Article II. Voting Requirements
1. I D . cards must be presented
in order to be able to vote.
2. Students shall vote according to their social standings
based on the following number of
credits : 0-30
freshman , 3160 sophomore, 61-90 jun ior,
and 91-above senior .
3. All undergraduate students,
who are enrolled for at least 12
credits, have the privilege to
vote.
4. Voting must take place
within the assigned voting area .
Article III. Ballots
1. Voting for more than the
specified number of candidates
will invalidate the ballot(s).
2. Write-in votes will be valid if
each write-in voter has perprerequisite
formed
all
requirements. Voter must vote
for listed candidates. Failure to
comply will invalidate the ballot.
3. To be legal , a ballot must be
numbered .
4. All ballots found outside the
area from which they were
distributed will be judged invalid.
Article IV. Appeals
1. All appeals must be in
writing and forwarded to the
Chairman of the Election Board
Committee within 5 days after
the results have been officially
announced .
2. Appeals concerning preelection procedure (petitions ,
n ominations , etc.) shall be
referred to the Elections Board
Rules Committee.
3. In all appeals concerning
pre-election procedure , the
Appeals Board will be used if just
cause for such action is shown to
the Election Board Rules
Committee at a hearing . Such
hearings will be held before the
election . All other appeals cannot
be made until after the election is
held.
4. Appeals concerning election
procedure and election results
will be referred to the Elections
Board Appeals Committee. The
Elections Board Appeals Committee consists of the Election
Board Chairman , the Director of
Student Activities , and the
President of the Community
Government Association .
Article V. Ties
1. Primary Election — In case

Eagles Scalped
(continue d from p«g« thr«e)

cannot win any titles or reach any
con f erence plateaus by beati ng
Shippensburg but if the Huskies
do win , they will end pie season
wi th a f ive game winning streak
and gi ve some of the other teams
in the league something to think
about before the start of next
year 's baske tball campa ign.

of a tie resulting in the election of
more than two candidates for any
particular office, all persons
involved in a tie for first place
will be placed on the final ballot
and the second place candidate
eliminated . In case of a tie for
second place, the first place
candidate and those involved in
the second place tie will be placed
on the final ballot.
2. Final Election — In case of a
tie in a final election , a run-off
election will be held for the office
involved.
Article VI. Election Results
A majority of the votes cast for
any particular office is necessary
for a victory in a final election . In
the final election where two or
more people are running, the
plurality vote prevails.

(Tn Vw» rnntimi pri ni*vt issu p 1

Council

(continued from page one)

Jane Elmes was elected from
the student body to replace
Elmer Chase and Bev Jungman
was elected from Council to
replace Janice Orlowsky on the
Student Faculty Senate.
The report of the ad hoc Rental
Committee by Mike Siptroth ,
revealed that there is no set
rental procedure for off-campus
organizations.
All that is necessary is to check
with Mr. Buckingham's office
and pay the fee to Mr. Trathen .
Campus organizations need only
clear the request with Dean
Hoch's office.
Siptroth said Mr. Ben Alter
indicated the matter will be
looked into by a Senate committee.
John Mulka , moved that $200 be
appropriated from the Reserve
Fund for New Projects and be
used for the Awards Day Convocation. The money will be used
to purchase awards, certificates
and to plan a small reception .
The motion passed.
Le Circle i Francais was
allocated $50 from bookstore
funds for their International Day,
1971, a foreign language project
involving all four BSC language
clubs.
The proposed election code
containing regulations for the
election of student senators, CGA
officers , and class officers was
approved, with the exception of
two sections.
A motion to table the code was
defeated and a ten minute recess
was called to allow council
representatives time to review
the code. It appears, as approved, on page 4.
Tom Brennan moved that
College Council endorse the
proposal of Task Force A to increase from 12 to 20 the number
of student senators. They will be
elected from the entire student
body at large. The motion passed.
Brennan al so move d th a t
College Council
over-ride
Executive Council's decision to
eliminate the miscellaneous
portion of the agenda. The motion
needed a two-thirds vote and was
defeated .
Pillagali said that the rationale
for the move was to eliminate
some of the hassle of the
meetings. Small items submitted
to the Executive Council can be
researched before the meeting
and answere d w i t h a m i nimum
amoun t of discussion.
Brennan then moved to censure
(show disapproval of) the action
of Executive Council in the
removal of the miscellaneous
portion of the meeting. It passed
and was followed by the comment
that it would have been better to
set a t i me li m it rather than
eliminate the miscellaneous
business entirely .

Securit y Counc il
Set For Model UN

Underground
Innocent

(CPS ) — A Federal District
Court has dismissed obscenity
charges against the Nola Express , a radical bi-weekly
newspaper circulated primarily
in New Orleans.
The indictment was dismissed
on First Amendment grounds.
Nola Express publishers were
charged with mailing obscene
matter in a 1969 edition which
contained a photograph of a nude
man masturbating in front of a
wall covered with nude female
pin-ups. A caption under the
photograph read, "What sort of
man reads Playboy?"
Moreover, the Court did not
find the photo to be, in itself ,
obscene. Admitting that it was
"shocking and repellant," the
Court conceded that was exactly
what it was meant to do.
The opinion stated that the
photograph would be offensive to
a general audience, but that
"offensiveness alone does not
constitute obscenity in the constitutional sense. The firs t
requisite is that the dominant
theme appeal to prurient interest
the commentary* accompanying
the picture demonstrates that its
intent was to ridicule other
publications that do attempt such
appeal."'
The decision was won by attorneys of the American Civil
Liberties Foundation .

Elementary
Underground

(CPS) — Everybody's Doin' It!
Now , th ere is an undergroun d
paper put out by elementary
school students.
The Eye, is published by a
group of students at Philip
Rogers School on Chicago's Far
North Side. It currently has a
circulation of 50O, sold at a dime
each. The eight-page paper includes anti-war poetry, com ics ,
and a story criticizing the school
for putting in a new intercom
system when there was already
"a good system for getting
messages around. " There are
also articles about restrictions on
the use of restrooms and stairways.
Of course, und ergroun d papers
aren 't any more popular in the
elementary schools than they are
in high schools, and school officials have already "spoken t o "
some of the students responsible
for the paper. However , the
students are not going to be intimidated , an d are pl ann i ng
future issues of The Eye.

at the B.S.C. Security
The SecurityCouncil of the BSC discussion
(subject
to additions or
council
Model United Nations will be held
)
are:
deletions
on March 13th. The Council is
1. Admission of Red China
made ' up of five permanent
2.
Middle East Crisis
members : Nationalist China ,
Skyjacking
3.
France, United Kingdom, U.S.A.,
4. Kidnapping of foreign
and the U.S.S.R. and ten temdiplomats
5. South African Apartheid
porary seats, which rotate among
presidency of the Council
The
These
nations.
the other member
rotates
on a monthly basis and
Belgium
,
ten are Argentina ,
the
month of March , 1971,
during
,
Japan
Italy,
Burundi ,
the
U.S.A.
will hold the office.
Sierra
Nicaragua , Poland ,
selected
president for the
The
of
All
Leone, Samolia, and Syria.
Security
Council is Brian
B.S.C.
these countries are to be
preside
over the
will
Bower.
He
represented on the Security
meetings
and
discussion
held on
Council of the Model U.N.
morning
of
March
13th.
the
for
subjects
Tenative

Inte rest Stud y Done

In the October 1970 issue of the
pamphlet , EDUCATIONAL
TEST SERVICE DEVELOPMENTS, there is a report of a
four-year study about the interests of high school juniors in
twelve schoolsubjects. There
were 15,450 juniors in a nationally
representative sample who were
given the Academic Interest
Measures, an interest index that
has been revised by John French.
This comprehensive study shows
that school subject interest of
high school j uniors rank the

Secretarial ,
3.
Foreign
Languages, 4. Art, 5. English, 6.
Business, 7. Social Sciences, 8.
Music ,
9.
Biology,
10.
Mathematics , 11. Physical
Sciences, and 12. Industrial Arts.

To Make Amends
Amending procedures for the
Bloomsburg State College Joint
Statement On Rights, Freedoms
and Responsibilities of Students
is as follows:
1. Proposed amendments may
be submitted to the Executive
Council of the Committee on
Student Affairs in duplicate by
any member of the Faculty ,
Student Body or Administration .
One copy of the proposed
amendment shall be submitted ,
by the Executive Council, to the
Maroon and Gold for publication.
2. Amendments may be
proposed at any time. Those
proposals received before
February 1 will be considered
and acted upon before June 1.
Proposals submitted after
February 1 will be considered
after June 1 and action will be
taken before February 1 of the
subsequent year. Amendments
will
be
considered
in
chronological order as presented .
3. A 2-3 vote of the total
membership of the Executive
Council of the Committee on
Student Affairs will be required
for passage of the proposed
amendment.
4. Proposed amendments
which receive the required ap-

PHOTO SERVICES
34 I
. Main Str»«t
¦toomsbur o, Pa.
7I+1M7

Harry Logan
Fin e J ewelry
AND

Repairi ng

FETTERMA NS
BARBER SHOP

Your J iwiUr Away from Horn *

— QUALITY —
Poet of ColUgo Hill
•loomibur o/ P*.

subjects as follows: For boys: I.
Industrial Arts , 2. Physical
Sciences, 3. Business, 4. Biology ,
5. Social Studies, 6. Mathematics,
7. Secretarial , 8. Foreign
Languages, 9. Art , 10. English,
11. Music, 12. Home Economics.
For girls : I. Home Economics, 2.

i
I

5 W. Main St.

Bloomhum

proval by the Executive Council
of the Committee on Student
Affairs will be submitted to the
College Council of the Community Government Association
for action. A 2-3 vote of the total
membership of the College
Council will be required for
passage of the amendment.
5. All amendments approved as
indicated in items 1, 2, 3 and 4
above will become effective
immediately after they have
been approved by the President
of the College.
6. All amendments approved
before June 1will be included in
the Pilot and made public immediately through the Maroon
and Gold.
7. Public announcement of the
amending procedure shall be
made not less t han t w ice a
semester th rough the Maroon
and Gold. This announcement
will be the responsibility of the
Executive Council of the Committee on Student Affairs.

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1 I. Main St., Bleemburg

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