rdunkelb
Fri, 04/05/2024 - 17:13
Edited Text
Senior Prom Dies
Dinner-Dance Planned
The following statement was
recently received from Bill
Cluley, President of the Senior
Class.

of financial or medical help. In
the past its funds have helped
maintain the Migrant Worker

Day Care Center. It has provided
clothing
to victims of fire, and
"The senior class officers
provided
the Bloomsbur g
announce, the death of the Senior
its first incubator
with
Prom, its having died in child- Hospital
birth. For its wake there will be for pre-mature infants . An initial
the following event : The senior gift of $500 will be given to the
class will hold a buffet dinner- Carlough Fund with the
dance at the Gus Genetti Motor
Lodge in Hazleton on Friday May stipulation that any funds left in
28, 1971 from the hours of 9:00- the operating budget of the class
12:00. On one floor there will be a will also be diverted to the fund at
buffet dinner served con tinously the end of the year. The officers
and on the other floor there will of the class made this decision in
be a rock band-Auburn-also for
the three hours. The bar will be the hope of presenting the class in
on the same floor as the dance for the way in which we have tried to
those who don't."
impress our beliefs as students
upon the community for the four
"The dinner-dance will cost $2 years that we have all been
a ticket for any senior who has students here in Bloomsburg."
paid his class dues and $4 for any
guests of seniors. This is to coyer
"If there is one message that
the cost of the buffet dinner. The students all over the country and
atmosphere should be informal the world are trying to give it is
and the dress may be the same if that people mean more than
anyone feels strongly about possessions. We know that the
having it that way."
schoolwill survive the lack of one
more trophy ."
"In lieu of flowers for the
deceased Prom anyone who
"If any senior Has any
wishes may send a contribution questions
concerning the dinnerto the Carlough Fund care of Mrs.
dance or any other questions for
Tony Sylvester."
the officers of the senior class
"The Senior class gift will please contact Bill Cluley
undergo a similar degree of through box 290."
change this year. Instead of
donating another trophy to the
college's collection the senior gift
this year will be one of compassion and service to the
community . A fund" was
established last year in the name
of Dr. Carlough's wife, who was a

.

PHEAA Scholarship funds
have arrived!! Awards will
be distributed as soon as the
Business Office can make
the 2.
-258 individual checks
totaling over $400,000 for the
semester. Renewal applications for next year must be
sent to Harrisburg before
April 30,to be eligible.

Summ er
Registration
Next Week

All undergraduat e students
presently enrolled at BSC who
are planning to attend the 1971
summer sessions (Pre , Main , and
or Post) must pre-register
during the week of April 26
through May 1. Pre-registration
will be conducted in the Student
Union Lobby during the following
hours :
April 26 through April 30... 1:00
pm to 5:00 pm.
May 1
9:00 am to 2:00
pm.
Students will not be required to
pay fees at this time. Fees are
payable at session registration on
the Saturday afternoon before the
opening of each session . It is
important for students to preregister to insure a pl ace in the
classes they desire to schedule
and also to facilitate registration
b e f o r e each session. Students
are reminded that insufficient
( continued

on page eight )

respected and loved pediatrician
before her death over a year ago.
The fund was established in her
memory to aid the children of
Columbia County who are in need

r

—.«*—

Conference Centers
On Theoritician

"Economic Theory — Dead
End?" will be the topic of
discussion at the Second Annual
Economics Conference to be held
Saturday, May 1, 1971, at BSC.
Divided into four sessions, the
conference will center its
discussion on the economic
theoritician as a practitioner in
the solution of human problems,
both economic and noneconomic. Also, economic theory
will be amplified as an instrument for achieving socially
desirable goals.
The first session to be in Carver
Hall Auditorium , will feature Dr.
Robert L. Heilbroner who will
deliver a talk entitled "Towards
a Theory of Political Economy."
Heilbroner received his early
education in New York City and
was awarded the Bachelor of
Arts degree from Harvard
University where he graduated
summa cum laude. His Ph.D.
was earned at the New School for
Social Research where he is
currently a Professor of
Economics.

At 11:30 a.m., Dr. Robert
Dorfman will deliver a talk on "Is
Economic Theory Relevant?"
Dr. Dorfman , a member of the
faculty at Harvard University ,
has been extremely active in
statistical work pertaining to
employment ,
labor ,
an d

Concer t
Band
Present s

¦

unemployment. His talk will also
be in Carver Hall Auditorium .
Professor Kenneth Boulding
will talk on "The End of
Economic Growth and Its
Possible Consequences " in
Scranton Commons- Saturday
afternoon. Boulding, born in
Liverpool , England , received
several scholarships in England
and following the recept of
teaching assignments , went on to
receive his Masters from Oxford.
The fourth and final session of
the Economics Conference will
be a panel discussion with
moderator Dr. Grant N. Farr.
Panelists will be Prof. Kenneth
Boulding, Dr. Robert Heilbroner ,
Dr. Robert Dorfman, Dr. Philip
Siegel, Associated Professor of
Economics, Bloomsburg State
College.
Dr. Farr has been chairman oi
the Department of Economics at
the
Pennsylvania
State
University since 1963. He was
previously a member of the
faculty at the University of
Colorado for a period of thirteen
years.
The Department of Economics
cordially invites friends and their
families to the Conference. There
is no registration fee.
Registration and coffee will be
in the lobby of Carver Hall from
9:30 to 10:30 p.m.

People
Marc h

6r. Ltt ttr Kltft , Profess or of Chtmli try at BuckntH Unive rsity,

Ours is the government of the
people. That's what they say. But
our governm ent w ages war , our
government destroys , our
The Maroon and Gold Concert government kills. Yet we are not
Band of BSC will present a a nation of warlords, dest roy ers
program of "pops" music in and murderers. It is only a few .
Haas Center for the Arts on the Ours is the government of the
college campu s on Sunday, April people, and the people must be
25, 1971 beginning at 8:15 p.m. heard.
The public is invited and there is
no admission charge.
Join the peop le , the American!
who must be heard if the war is
The seventy-piece ensemble, ever going to end . How? The
directed by Stephen C. Wallace of Spring Movement to end the war
the Music Department , will has already begun . "It was a
perform light concert selections long, cold , reflective winter. Now
familiar to many concert-goers: it is time to come together and
"All Through the Night" ; "The renew t h e st ruggle f or human
Great Gate of Kiev ",, "Bugler's rights , civil rights and pea ce/'
Holiday ", a medley of wellknown Bur t Bach arac h tunes ,
The March to End the " War ib
and selections from the suc- tomorrow. The people are
mus i cal bringing their feelingsbefore the
Eng li sh
cess f u l
"Oliver. "
government. From April 26 until
May 4, the people will be lobbying
The "Warsa w Concerto ", within their government, trying
featuring piano with band ac- to gain the long-delayed access
companimen t, and directed by which will give the government
Nelson A. Miller , former director back to the people. The lobbying
of t he col lege ban d, will be a action will be followed by large
special item in the concert. Mrs. scale , non-v iolent demonSaundra Hopkins Kumpi, a piano strations in Washington which
student of Mr. Miller , will be the will culminate in a national
piano soloist .
moratorium on May 5.

Saturd ay Afterno on session of the Twentieth Annual Meeting of
the Pennsylvania Association of College Chemi stry Teachers ,
to bo hold on the BSC campu s on Friday and Saturday, A pril
23«24«

The college dance orchestra ,
the Studio Band , will also be
featured In four selections from
the jazz- dance medium .

Info
Cente r
Opens
At the beginning of this
t h e f our class
presidents met with various
administrators to explain the
idea of a central location where
stu dents could go to fi nd out
administra tive , faculty and
studen t information. The proper
steps were taken, and the administrators gave their full cooperation ; the physical materials
were provided, the only thing
lacking was the information.
Finally, some information hai
been provided. The center will be
open Tuesday and Thursday from
9:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. The
Student Information Center
(SIC) is located in room 319
Waller Hall , P.O. Box 366 Waller,
telephone 784-4660, extension 351.

n

sem est er ,

will deliv er a n address en "Joseph Priestly In Ame rica " at the

This is more than a Spring
Movement, it is the beginning of a
new country. A country of the
people. Your country.

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j im sachetti

Sophomore Field Experience

— sounds like a scientific term
for something two second year

students would have out behind
Haas . In reality it 's a trip home ;
back to your old high school or
one like it t o find out the awful
tru t h about that glorious career

called teaching. As any of the
Sop homores who experienced
their experience over vacation
can tell you , it's highly unusual ,
very frig h tening and a t t imes
depressing .
On March 4, all sop homores in
Secondar y Ed. were summoned
to Hartline for a meeting concerning this mysterious experience. As I was fighting my
way through the wind and snow
(remember ?) , I passed t wo
pledges pulling their rubber duck
up and down the icy sidewalk
behind the Union . It was an
omen.
At t he mee ting there was a nice
man (a Mr. Aumiller , I believe)
telling us t ha t t he Ex perience
was not " re quired " , but that " it
was strongl y reco mmended. "
Tha t was enough for me.
Knowin g bet ter than to ienore a

The Pill to end all pills

Well That 's What They Told Me...

Dictionary please . Thank
you...Let' s see, highball , hipp opotamus ,
h i s t o r y . ..hmmm.... " a statemen t of what
has ha ppened "...Oh that 's good, I
was afraid that there would be
something in there abou t it
having to be true: Well God Bless
America , there isn 't , we 're'
saved.
The American account of
events—as they happen— seems
to have difficulty in separ ating
the legends from the truth , and in
deciding who gets credit for
what. ..regardless of whether he
did it or not .
All throug h my " formal "
education I was under the impression that Paul Revere actuall y made that famou s ri deguess what! Thank s to Juicy
Fruits ' Fun Facts to Know the
tru th comes out ! He was cap-

tured and never made it to

Concord...Ah ha but Prescot t
did
? Prescott , nobody
mentioned a Prescott ...Credit
where credit is due ...the great
American way.
And t hen there 's good old /'
Georgie Washington ^who never ' *
chopped down a cher ry tree .

Countless American families
have 'seen their prize cherry tree
bite the dust because Jr . wanted
to be "j ust like Geor g ie
Washington "!!! Save the grief—
tell the kid the tru th . Whoever
said history had to be cute. ..it
would be nice if it was factual !
Ah—new field to strike at—
scientific history ( treading on
tender toes now, better be careful
what I say. ..) Galileo...famous
for his theories on gravity , and
the like...no, I' m not going to tell
you there is no gravit y...But do
you remember that little tale

about him dropping two weights

from the Tower of Pisa? Well I 'm
not saying he did n 't do it (see,
I' m being careful ) but he was a
mathematician as well as an
ex perimentalist—the
local
grapevine has it (with probably
more t ruth than most history
books) that he never performed
tha t experiment—i t was done by
a studen t of his...whatever his
name was—Credi t...yeah I know ,
I said it before .
I saved the best for last... Columbus , w e all kn ow him , he
discov ered America —yeah , and I
rowed the boat he came over

VOl«. IL THE MAROON AND GOLD
Bill Teitsworth
Editor-in-Ch ief
Business Manager
Managing Editor
Now* Editor
Co-PMturo Editors

Sports Editor
Copy Edit or



NO, 42

Linda Bnnts

Co-Circ ulation Mgrs.

Pat Halter

Carol Klshb augh
k
Photo Editor
Mark Poucart
Art Editor
John ftur gln
Adver tising Managor
Pam Hlckay
Konnoth C. Hoffman
Advi sor
STAFF: Katt Calpin , Jim Chapman , Carmon Clullo ,
Lora Duckworth , Karon Kt inard , Cindy Michansr , Tom
Schofiald, Glon Spot ts , Suo Spraguo , Fra nk Piuo li, Josso
Jamas, Davo Koltor , Donna Skomik y, Mary Ann Potrusa ,
ChoH nchak ,
A. Rok nht , Nancy Van Ptlt, Goorgianna
Spallman,
Mlko
Mlkloi,
Mlko Yarma y, Jim Nallo , Jo*
col umnists and faatura wrltors,
, All opinions oxprossad by
lMl*idtn g.lottor-to-t ho-oclltor , aro not nacatsar lly thoso
of tho pub lication but of Individual *.
Call Ext. 123 or Wri t* Ml

stron g recomm endatio n at BSC, I
rushed ri ght home to my old high
school ( the nam e of which shall
remain hidden due to the fact that
what I saw there probabl y goes
on in every high school).
After a shor t twenty minute
wai t , I got to see the princ ipal:
"Good Aftern oon, my name is
James Sachet ti and I used to go to

school here and now I go to
Bloomsbu r g Sta te College
BREATH and the college has this

program called Soph. .. "
"Yes , I' ve heard all about it
before . Of course if you want to
teach in my school y ou 'll have to
come neatl y dressed with your
hair cut and a clean shave. " On
the wa y out , I passed a teacher
taking be ts on the upcoming
Frazier -Ali fight. I figured I'd
better go get my hair cut.
So, on t he day af ter Eas t er , I
arrived wi t h a clean sha ve a

haircu t and a clean conscience.
Af ter mee ting the teacher whose
classes I would be teaching , he
informed me that he was free
firs t period and that I could go to
the teachers lounge for a smoke .
In case you 've forgotten (or
blotted ?ut ) your high school
day s, I'll refresh .your memory .

in...I t was named after Vespucci ,
Teachers aren 't allowed to
who arrived here after Colum - smoke in the halls or in class ; it
bus...bu t remember the Vikings? may corruptthe students. So they
They were here first , they tried t o congrega t e in a tiny room where
set up se t tlements in the they take secretive drags on the
900's. ..maybe the settlements evil weed.
swear
You 'd
didn 't make it...but they were cigarettes were illegal .
here—and above all they were
I decided to wait for lunch
here FIRST !
period when I could smoke with a
And we 'll go on following in the clear conscience and attended
footsteps of our forefathers in one of my old English teacher 's
falacious history ...right into 1971.
Wai t till the hist ory books come
in with the da ta on the Vietnam
Conflict (not war , children ,
thou sands of people died...but it
wasn 't a war. ) Think of the lies
we can tell a bout having not been
involved in a war of years. ..field
day. But maybe it won 't be like
"Hey , you 're standing on my
that....Maybe the conflict won 't head! "
end.. .Maybe it won 't end on t ime!
"Hel p, I can ' t br eathe !"
emp
"C-c-c an you see the door fr-frfrom here ?"
No, it isn 't a riot — just a mass
of disgusted stud ents who are
wai ting to get schedule changes .
Dear Sir:
Maybe you were one of the for Is justice served by punishing t unate st udent s who liked his
one man , Lt. Wm. L. Calley Jr., schedule ; but if you weren 't , then
for an act committed in a war like me you were one of those

? ^

* ¦

ii^Baa^BiB^Bsas ^sM

¦ *1

classes, it was a mstory class ;
with the tea cher market the way
it is today , you 've got to be
versa tile. He had a stud ent
teacher working with him so we
sat in the back and talked .
"You know all those theories of
teachin g they teach you in school,
well that 's about wha t they
are ...theories . You'll never learn
a thin g about teaching until you
get up in fron t of a class and
teach . "
Late r he informed me that a


^•

.

_

good tea cher has to have a good

sense of humor . He has to be an
en tertainer so to speak. Visibly
shake n , I went to m£et my first
,
class.

I arrive d at the class and found
my first educatio n theory lying
dead in the seats . Where were the
t hirty -two bright - eyed , bushytailed , eager to learn students?
Where was the intellectual

curiosi ty I had expected to find
wri tt en all over th eir faces ? The
only written thing I could find
was the graffiti on the desk tops .
And as far as bri ght eyes, I
suppose that was a bit much to
expect on a Monday morning.

Undau nted , I figured tha t the
show would go on . There was only
one problem , the actor was on

stage but where the hell was the
audience ? Back in the 19th
Century , some Sociologist
claimed that he could spot a
crimina l by looking at his face .

The theory

never held for

criminals but I'd like^o revive it
and appl y it to students. Sittin g in
the back were four or five of the
/ contin ued on pag* ; three)

To Schedul e or
Not to Sched u le .

Lette r

between nations ?
disgusted students waiting and
America is at the crossroads . I t waiting and waiting.
could do so much good for
A couple of weeks after I
humanity 's sake were we to take wonder why the mess-up—Penn
the following steps :
State has five times as many
1) Restore full freedom and

military

. dor Romson
Tom Funk
Sam Trapano
j .m Sachotti
Tarry Blast
J ack Hoffman

&^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^



¦K /

honors and pay to

Lieutenant William Calley Jr .
with the public apology due him .
2) Demand member s of
Congress and Presiden t Nixon to
exert every effort for the return
of our prisoners of war.
3) Settle an undeclared war at a
peace table and re turn our servicemen from Vietna m , Laos ,
and
Cambodia , etc., im-

mediately .

4) Instant use of our human

resources

in

making

and

restoring America and other
parts of the world .
Will you take the time to ask
your friend s, neighbors , clubs ,
churches , to write , telephon e or
wire without delay to Pr esident

Richard M. Nixon and members

of Congress , Washington , D.C.

And on behalf of our pri soners of
war , won 't you also write for
their relea se? To: President Tom

Due Thang , Democratic Republic
of Vietnam , Hanoi , c-o Ameri can

Red Cross Help Our P.O.W. 's,
Box 1600, Wa shington , D.C. 20013.
Let 's all keep writing , working ,
praying , until .victory
is
achieved .

Sincerely,

Margaret Gordon

students and I never heard of
their having problem s . Why the

been , the old system could take
days of standing in line .
A few students practiced
" unethical means of getting
schedule cards , " which was
unfair to others . "Boys went
through the girls locker room ,
and climbed through the windows
of the Men 's Room , " "athletes
pretended to be at practice and
would gain access to the
scheduling area , upperclass men
woul d pick up cards for friends
who were scheduling later , and
some students even fixed or
exchan ged admission cards to
get in earlier . "
Those of you who can

remember back to those da ys can
change anyw ay? Wha t was so also rememb er being searc hed
wron g with the old systems tha t a

change was warranted ? So I went

to the Registrar and asked .
You 're pro bably thinkin g that
this is an overwor ked subject an d
the poor thing should be lef t to die
in peac e. Well , you 're wrong —
halfway ,
any way .
With

scheduling coming up again

something needs to be done.
The Registra r , much to my
amazemen t , was frien dly and
completely answere d each of my
questions . Here are some of his
statement s. I 'll then let the
evaluation of scheduling up to
you .
1. Out of the 1,580 application s
received for schedule chang es ,
only 70 were rejecte d.
2. This is the first time for
computer scheduling and the fir st
time th at the Office of the
Registra r handle d all facet s of

schedul e
chang es
and
scheduling .
3. Why the chang e to «' computer sched uling "? The old
system was fine for a small

college with a few hund red

student s , but if Bloomsburg
keeps growing at the pa ce it has

for schedule cards as you went
out . Are th ese mature college

students?

Under the computer system
this pra ctice could be kept at a
minimum . The computer does
not give you the times you like
and your favorit e profess ors ,
however , it does give you ,
especially the lower classmen a
larger percen tage of the cours es
you first schedule , as compared
to the old system .
4. Wha t a bout changes ? There
are a lot being made tha t we
students will probably not even
hear about : (l) like mee tings
with different departments ( tha t
schedule favorite courses at the
same time , causing conflic ts ) to
find different times , add (2) more
organized change procedu res .
5. Want to help the new system
go along smoothly — or at least
smoother? No matter how much
you hate the unhuman computer ,
make sure you gr id your schedule
form correctly . •
4 The schedule you
foul may be
your own!"
B.Knelly

Record Review

Rod Ste wart Faces , and Sweet Ladie s

by Blass
(If this article is read in the
spirit it was conceived possibly,
namely a bottle of apple wine, it
can be a Boone to mankind )
—Small Faces.
—Look Blass, quit trying to
offend me.
—What offend you? What dc,
you mean? All 1 said was Small[
Faces.
—Yeah well, you think you 're
smart mentioning that for at
cheap laugh.

i

—Mentioning WHAT for a
cheap laugh?
—Rabbit turds.
—Cough. Ahem . Uh, rabbit
turds?
—Yeah. Rabbit turds. You said
it, I didn't.
—Oh yeah? When?
—Just now . When you said
about small feces .
—Schmuck , that' s Small
Faces !
None of the above ever happened. Which is called , at worst,
lying. At best it's called
storytelling. And that's w h a t
Rod Stewart and the Faces
exemplify best: storytelling.
Rememberance — Way back in
fifth grade or so I used to know
this Rod Stewart. No, not the Rod
Stewart this review's about , just
a rod stewart. Anyway, this kid
was always in trouble, always
rebelling, a n d he gave me my
first outlaw-hero image to look up
to. And like any rebel-outlawfifth-grade-hero, he had s o m e !
real great stories—like the one!
about his sister and Sonny Hubbs.
Now about Sonny Hubbs. About
ten years ago in Mt. Carmel a
young guy shot a bartender, or
something like that. The kid was
named Sonny Hubbs. Most people
said the bartender deserved
getting his shots back , but the
Blue Meanies didn 't seem to
think so. That poor kid was
hunted like a wild animal. A
regular manhunt was regulated,
and p a r e n t s warned their
kids "Go to bed early or Sonny
Hubbs will get you ." Needless to
say, the kids got to bed. But
Sonny wasn 't so lucky. He wasn't
caug h t , but they found him some
months later : cold-dead behind
the Park Restaurant in Shennadoah. Hardly a grand fate for
an outlaw. Coulda been worse
though, they could have found
the
Park
him
INSIDE
Restaurant.
You needed that to understand
rod Stewart's story . Ya see, rod 's
family had an outdoor toilet. Now
one dark night about the time of
the search for Sonny , rod is sitting on the throne enjoying his
privacy . Suddenly the outhouse
door crea k s open , rod stops ,
pou nding heart wondering.
Who—? Ah heck , it' s h is sister ,
the old coot , an d it's so dar k she
doesn't know he's inside too. And
the next thing he knows she's
about to occupy his seat with him
still in it. Thinking fast , rod
reaches u p , gra bs, and y ells
"SONNY HUBBS ! SONNY
HUBBS! " The timeliness of his
remark quite literally boweled
his sister over...she was released
some years later , having
somewhat recovered from the
nervous breakdown.
Now THAT'S a great story, a
true drinking story if I ever heard
one. Stories—that's Rod Stewart.
And Faces.

Faces—ya may know them
better as* Small Faces. They
never made it big in the States, no
matter how good a rock singer ol
Stevie Marriot was, and he was,
so they 're best known to some for
that single, "Itchycoo Park ,"
which has lately been drugged a
foul of the FU , uh , FCC. They had
three albums, the "Park " orje, a
double 'live one, and "Odgen 's
Nut Gone Flake," which was,
well, storytelling.
It never sold. Maybe because it
was round-shaped, designed to
look like a tin of Nut Flake. But
what an album , early British
rock , Cockney Cockney accents,
some of the loudest bass I've ever
heard , sounds so good you could
bathe in their afterg low. Such
songs, great dirty wine-swizzling
songs, like the one about
"Renee," the girl who's the
dockers' delight, who seems to
have kids of every shape and
color, who has love if ya want it,
just stand in line, fella , cuz with
Renee "Love is like a hole in the
wall." (Sound familiar? Never
fear — Mr. Sachetti has already
taken legal actions, and for quite
some time now he's been Sueing. )
And side two was this long fairy
tale told in the strangest accent
this side of Tolkien, all about
Happiness Stan and his search ;
his rideupon a giant fly ; the fly 's
song (like all fly songs, a real
zipper); his meeting with Mad
John, the cave hermit who has
the answer, which is "Life is like
a bowl of oatmeal, you wake up in
the morning and it's there." But
one morning Small Faces woke
and Marriot was gone, joined
with Humble Pie, and if you've
ever heard them ' you know why
they 're modest pies: They 're
crummy. So Small Faces faded
avuav •

Rod Stewart — he did two
albums with Jeff Beck, and ya
knew he was good when he pulled
off "Old Man River " without
having it sound its natural hokey
self. Ya knew he was a damn
good vocalist from his phrasings,
weird, twisted, out-of-joint , and
then ya figured out that he wasn't
out-of-joint-time-and-place , it
was the BAND. No mean feat
considering the band had Ron
Wood , Mickey Waller, Jeff Beck ,
and Nicky Hopkins. The split with
Beck came ; Stewart did a solo
album which used that distinctive
voice, the rasp of a front gate to a
New Orleans cathouse, to effects
only hinted at with Beck. Who
else would have had the balls to
inte rpret "Street Fighting
Man "? Who else could write a
lyric like "If I could live it all
again , I wou ld n 't change a
thing"? Time passed — a new
album , "Gasoline Alley, "
revealed
Stewart
as
a
songwriter and storyteller of
power. The title cut , the way it
gets into the feeling of a guy old
and dying and wanting to please
be buried back home where he
st arted f rom , nobody else could

make ya feel that. And nobody
else could steal "It's All Over
Now " from the Stones, "My Way
of Giving " from Marriot, and
"Country Comforts"from his old
buddy Elton John. \nd his own
"Lady Day " and "Joe 's Lament"
have been known to make grown
men cry in their drinks thinking
of one-sided love affairs , the girls
they knocked up and left behind ,
thp eirls who left them behind...
The session work on his albums
introduced Stewart and Wood to
drummer Jones , organist
McLagan , and guitarist Lane,
and Small Faces was reborn. The
"First Step" album wasn't bad , a
bit methodical , lik e 'they were
playing off sheet music. But ya
k n e w they 'd make it yet, the
way the banjo-picked "Stone,"
the wicked version they did on
Dylan 's messenger, the way
"Around The Plynth " sounded
light years away from the version
with Beck. ("Every night for a
year .I've slept alone... ")
Roger McGuinn says music is
stories. The Stewart Faces
album , "Long Player," is stories.
And this time they Vemade it , it's
a spontaneous record , even on
studio cuts. If "Flake " sounded
like it was recorded in a Lionel
Atwill dungeon , LP sounds like it
was done in Hess's Tavern .
Especially on the live cuts , lik e "I
Feel So Good " by Big Bill
Boozy...uh , Broonzy . A boozing,
storytelling album .
There's the party of "Had Me A
Real Good Time." There 's the
come-on to the chick "On The
Beach," and shute if the skinny
kid doesn 't make it. There's a
1:55 tra ditional , "Jerusalem ,"
which some people think too
artificial . Jerusalem is not
fake, Israel. There's the opening
rocker, "Bad N Ruin ," with
Stewart wailing "Mother don't
you recognize your son?" There's
a live version of "Maybe I'm
Amazed," that magnificient song
from a dull album, and Stewart's
introduction : "Here's one y a
may all know, ya may not know
it , and if ya don't know it, 1really
don't know where ya been." It's
scary . They follow McCartney so
closely ya think it's him , it's
really aPauling , an d t h en
Stewart comes in and eludes the
illusion. And how about Ronnie
Lane 's "Tell Everyone": "The
smile on your face comes straight
from your heart...to wake up with
y ou ma k es m y morn ings so
bright I wipe the sleep from my
eyes when you tell me your
dreams..." and so lovely on, as
the lover tells everyone a secret
he must share, a story.
Remember how freshly out of
place Richards' "You Got The
Silver " seeme d on "Let It
Bleed"? Wood 's "Richmond"
even sounds like "Silver ": "I
wish, I wish I was in Richimond , I do, I would, I wish, I, I
wish I was back home. I' m

waiting here in New York
City . The rain is falling .There's
no one cares^ There's no one
loves me here . The women, they
may look very pretty. And some
they know it..." to the sound of a
guitar gently weeping sliding as
Wood' tells us he has no need for
any chick but his...ah , you've a
rich mound * Virginia...a story .
And then, the resisting French
piece, the masterpiece of the
album , the v one track where
Stewart and Faces and lyrics and
song blend the best into the bittersweet "Sweet Lady Mary ":
"Sweet Lady Mary...wakes in the
morning with her breakfast in
Ibed . I tried to help her but I did
not know how . I tried to love her
but it's all over now . Nothing left
to comfor t me, Except a sunny
day. Steal away, steal away."
Crying guitar , ghostly organ , a
little philosophy: "All of the
stones along the dusty old
road, With every footstep one
more tale is told, With every
turning one more sight to
see. Sweet Lady Mary 's seen the
last of me. A lesson is learnt, I'll
never come this way again."
Man , I can hear those grown
men a-weeping, asking for
another shot (not the Sonny
Hubbs kind) . I can hear them
trying to tell Joe their biggest
problems, cuz nobody takes
small problems to a bar. And
Stewart sings on , how her
Spanish habits are so hard to
forget , how she lied with every
breath , how he knew all along
he'd have to quit...hoo yeah,
can'tcha see those guys grasping
for another drink , hands
shaking...
But wait...shades of Michael
Drayton, there's still hope. The
last stanza , Stewart's final try : I
think I'll go back home and start
all over again , where the Gulf
Stream waters tend to ease the
ipaln,, and on a new day when I've
mended the wound, Sweet Lady
Mary 's gate I swear I'll be
bound "...and they guzzle down
the drink, getting scared when
they remember too much ,
thinking of one-sided love affairs
and losing all they had , bout the
girls they knocked up and left
behind , about the girls who
knocked THEM up and left them
behind. What a song...the best
storytelling on an album of story
sung by one of the best
story tellers...a drinking album ,
but an album which deserves no
uuus.

Yes sir, those Rod Stewarts are
some spinners of tales. Particularly Faces ' Stewar t, who
did "Gasoline Alley " on one
bottle of brandy, who makes
"Long Player " sound like
something that belongs in every
pub in the land , even though we
don 't have any pubs...yessir,
makes me w a n t to go to
England , where they make those
great rocknroll bands, Stones,
Procu l H arum , Pink Floyd
(rocknroll?) , Faces. Makes a guy
a l most f or g et a bout t h ose
sweet lady maries and Gulf
Stream wa t ers , nta k es y a want t o
feel that warm wine settling
down there as ya rub elbows with
little people with big problems
...sure , why. not?...I know one
Rod Stewart already, did
any wa y , so why not THE Rod
Stewart , betch a he 'd appreciate
Sonny Hubbs.!.bet he's quite a
drinker.,.and I bet he knows
some damn good stories, top.
...hey , you think the rabbit
turds is funny , how about the guy
who thought the new Canned

(Continued from page two)
saddest looking characters I'd
ever seen. They were dressedlike
the guests of honor at a 1950 frat
party.and the only things on their
desks were their heads. 1 later
found out that they were all
Future Farmers of America and
not terribly interested in World
Cultures.
Nearer the front were several
people, busily working on their
French homework. Near the
windows, a couple too obviously
in love discussed whatever it is
couples in love discuss. The rest
of the class just sat there with a
kind of blank stare that betrayed
their disinterest.
After theteacher 'sintrodueuon,
the curtain went up and I decided
to start with a surefire opener:
"Well, it looks like you're stuck
with me for the rest of the week."
Silence, more blank stares and
a small moan from one of the
sleepers, I was off to a goodstart.
"Today we're going to talk
about the Nupe tribe. How many
have read the assignment?"
Not a hand went up. One of die
lovers whispered something and
they both giggled. Paranoia was
setting in.
"Well, let's begin with a short
history of the tribe."
I went on lecturing and after a
few minutes realized something
was wrong: nobody was taking
notes. They weren't even
following in the book because
most of them didn't have it with
them. I tried to remember some
of my Ed. Psych, and themit hit
me: start a discussion.
"The Nupe live in Nigeria.
Where is Nigeria located?" .
A hand went up, hooh ha ha, I
had succeeded
"Africa ."
"I know it's in Africa , tins
section of the book is on African
tribes. Where in Africa?"
"Dunno."
"Look in your book. There's a
map on page 790."
"I don't have my book, can I go
to my locker to get it?"
"No, forget it. Does any one
else know?"
N o one k new and even th ose
who had their books didn't feel
like opening them. I moved on
talking about the Nupe family
system, economy and customs.
My delivery was interrupted only
four more times ; twice for announcements ( "There will be a
track meet... ") , once f or a girl
with the absentee list, and once
when I went on a futile searchfor
chalk along the length of the
chalk tray.
After class, the teacher told me
that I had done well. He said that
he felt he was doing his job if he
reached one or two. Another one
of those educational theories lay
dea d i n the doorwa y of that
cl assroom as I f earlessly went to
meet my next class.

I'm happy to report that things
improved from there on in. By
th e end of the week I had gotten a
few discussions going, made
some friends anJ Earned a lot. It
was quite an experience (after
all, that's what the man told ua It
would be) ; it took away a lot of
my Idealism but replaced it with
a lot of practical advice : for
example , if you want to teach,
JHea t album with Joh n Lee was a don 't get married . You can't
rock opera about a sex-star ved afford to do both. Keep that in
prostit ute?...yeah...thought that mind you future teachers, you
on account of the title, ya bearers of knowledge, you lucky
see..."Hooker N Heat" ...
people.

Eart h Actio n Week April 19-25

I

Saturda y, Aoril 24, the Bloomsbur g Recycling Committee wil l
be workin g for one of their busiest days collecting your paper,
glass , and aluminum cans at the Recycling Cente r on Iron
(photo by Sch lesinger).
Street between 8th and 9ths Sts.

Beaches Shut Dow n

The Environmental Protection
Agency has instituted an annual
public report on the number of
beaches in the United States shut
down by health authorities
because of pollution.
A preliminary survey of beach
closing was launched last July
and the fragmentary reports
obtained in this initial effort
showed that 91 beaches have been
closed or posted as polluted in
recent years. Some were closed
or posted permanently, some

Solutions

Wi th several million leadpoisoned waterfowl headed
the
environmental
down
drainpipe in 1970, the Federation
found it difficult to accept that in
an age of moon-shooting
technology industry still could
not solve a century old problem
by finding a usable non-toxic
waterfowl shot.

temporarily , including the
nearby Lake Gene at Red Rock .
Also a total of 13 beaches were
classified as "not recommended"
for bathing and 10 as "unsatisfactory for use". In some
instances, reports said only that a
"num ber " of lakes, streams, and
reservoirs had been classified as
"not recommended" by State
Health Departments.
Beach closings also have an
vadverse economic impact.
Millions of dollars are lost each
year because of beach shutdowns.
Polluted water prevents the
opening of new beaches to meet
the ever increasing recreational
needs of a growing population.
Here 's one example : The
Arkansas River has no beaches.
Although about 30 recreational
area s along the river included
plans for beaches, none ar e
being constructed to avoid exposing the public to the polluted
river.

Man can live only a few
minutes without air to breathe.
And only a few days without
water.
Now both our air and water —
including our drinking water —
are dangerously polluted. In fact ,
a recent nationwide study of 969
water systems, conducted by the
U.S. Government's Burea u of
Water Hygiene , showed that
many Americans are actually
drinking water hazardous to their
health.
Arsenic, lead, and fecal bacteria were found in many
systems. They were most
frequent in smaller community
systems serving less than 100,000
people. Only 10 per cent of all
water systems in the study had
appropriate programs of bacteriological surveillance. 77 per
cent of the water plant operators
were inadequately trained in
fundamental
water
microbiology . And at least half
the systems had not been
examined for years by state or
county authorities.
There is evidence that pollution
is now affec ting almost all the
water on the planet . Mercury
pollution, for example , was
recently detected in the livers of
fur seals in the Pacific. The seals
are usually free from contaminants since they live in
unusually deep water and feed
several hundred miles off the
coast.
Smoke pours from the Milco plant in Bloomsburg as usual.
Foiiution ol the oceans can
The Air Pollution Control Bureau in WiHia msport assures us
destroy the plankton'that produce
that
the installation of filters has reduced the emission to a
70 per cent of the oxygen in the
atmosphere. Water pollution —
safe level. ( Photo by Max Schlesin ger).
let alone already prevalent air
pollution—can drastically
reduce the amount of oxygen in
the air necessary for human
survival.
To find out more about how
pollution affects the air we
breathe ,
contac t
the
The Environmental Protection the air has to be this clean. It's up
Susquehanna Valley Tuber- Agency has proposed air to the states to decide' how to do
culosis and Health Society . It's a pollution standards that would it. If they want to ban auto traffic ,
matter of life and breath.
outlaw the air in many of the we say 'Good Luck.' "
The air standards contained in
nation 's cities.
These standards have been set the proposals go into effect in
by law at levels required to 1975. Many states may choose to
protect public health and comply before that date. If a
welfare. So far six pollutants state fails to act by that time,
have been listed for control : however , EPA is authorized to
car b on monox id e , sul phur step in and develop imdioxide , hydrocarbons , par- plementation plans for it.
ticulate matter, nitrogen oxides
The 1970 Clean Air Act
and photoc hemical oxidan ts . Amendments which required the
Others may be named as in- new standards also provide that
formation becomes available.
sta t es ma y set stan dar ds stricter
The standard s proposed by than the national ones.
EPA' s Air Pollution Control
The EPA proposals were
This symbol , designed by Unu
Office
contain
no
recompublished
in the January 30
st
udent
Harversify of Florida
mendations
on
how
to
meet
the
F
e
d
era
l
R
eg
ister an d are open to
old E. Barcey, is being connew standards, leaving it up to comment for 45 days. Within
side red for use on a U.S. posthe states to figure out a way to another 45 days the agency will
tage stamp. It symbolize s the
clean up their air.
review the comments and publish
goal of man in balance with
A NAPCA spokesman said , a final set of standards. States
nature ; mankind' s most vital
"We're not telling the states they will th en h ave n ine months to
goal. It is currently being used
have to ban auto traffic or shut submit plans for controlling their
down factories. We're j ust saying sources of air pollution.
•s a symbol of environmental

Illegal Air

throu ghout th e United
reason
States and Canada . If you be*
lieve the symbol and its intr insic meaning deserve the recognition of use on a U.S. posta ge
stam p, pl»ate write : George
King, Director of Phil ately, c/o
Citizens Stamp .Advisory ComDepartmlttee . Post Office
ment. Washin gton , D.C., 20260.

Fi re
^^^^

An estimated

g
I
*
,
jj
'

i

s

j

130 person s I

annually lose their lives in litter-

•boms burg Isn 't too small to have pol lution . It Isn't too •matt
to do something about It elthtr. Are you willing to work for a
cleaner environme nt? (P.'ioto by Schleslngor)

fed fires ; every 12 minutes a
home is destroyed or damag ed by
a fire star ting in tra sh.
Adul ts between the ages of 21
and 35 litter three times as much
as people over fifty and twice as
much as those in till 35-49 age
bracket , says Keep America
Beautiful .

Orasi fires simila r to th i rodent on* at the Kaw nee r plant
naar the Bloomsburg Airp ort havt becom e a ma|or probltm
across the state . Governor Shapp has Isttra d a proclam ation to
limi t the us* of fir * during this critical period. (Trapan e phot o),

This Is Your Land So
Water

The water pollution pies are
part of a new publication by the
Eastern
Kodak
Company
designed to help individuals and
interested groups harness the
power of photography as a tool in
environmental action projects.
The title of this fifty-six page
pamphlet is "Improve Your
Environment...Fight Pollution
with Pictures" and is available
from photographic dealers or
directly from Kodak at a cost of
$1. Write to Eastman Kodak
Company,
Corporate
Information , 343 State Street ,
Rochester, N.Y. 14650.
"V

Koda k Cans Trash

Ocean
Dump ing

Facets of Pollution
Clarified

A continuing worldwide anti- which is available through the
litter, anti-pollution campaign company 's headquarter 's in
that will present one of the Rochester , New York. The
Ocean pollution is clearly a
largest volume anti-litter booklet takes its title from a threat
to worldwide fishing and
messages ever printed w a s statement by Dr. Louis K. Eilers, recreation
, but of basic
announced this week by Eastman company chairman : "At Kodak importanceindustries
to
all
life
on this
we have made a commitment to
Kodak Company.
planet
is
the
fact
that
the
The cure for the great
A new anti-litter symbol has the future to do our share — and microscopic phytoplankton in the I'hosphate problem may be
been designed for use by Kodak, more — in order to make the oceans produce a large portion of vvorse than the disease. There has
but is also being offered to other communities where we operate our oxygen supply. Estimates are t>een new concern about the
companies who share Kodak's better places in which to live, to that trees and other green plants pjremature substitution of certain
interest in this aspect of en- work, and to enjoy the fruits of within the borders of the U.S. rlew untested ingredients for the
our labors."
vironmental quality.
produce 60 per cent of the oxygen p>hosphate in some laundry
Kodak announced the program
we use up each year — the rest of tietergents to reduce water
the oxygen required to preserve lpollution.
in " a letter from Gerald B. ZorThe Melancholy Accident
the present level of about 23 pep
now, president, to the presidents
The effects of pouring billions
is a monthly environmental
of some of the country 's leading
cent oxygen in the atmosphere newspaper publi shed by the
corporations.
comes from the oceans. If ocean jsoda, or similar chemicals into
Mid-Atlantic
Studen
t
Council
dumping kills more of the marine <)ur lakes and streams may well
The symbol is a trash container
on
Pollution
and
life
that produces oxygen we i% a much greater threat to our
Environdesigned to spell the words
might
be in for real trouble, tenvironment than continued use
ment for students in the Mid"Litter Here."
Recognizing this threat to our c)f phosphates. Trading the better
The objective of the message is
Atlantic States. Free sub *
existence, a number of bills have Imown effects of a chemical that
simple — a plea for everyone to
scriptions
to the student
already been introduced in the (:ould .be easily removed from
use a trash container for litter . newspape r may be obtained
Congress
to ban ocean dumping ssewage, such as phosphate, for
"It is our hope," Zornow said, by writing to The Editor ,
(which
now
amounts to about 50 the unknown effects of hard-to
"that this symbol will become a
Melancholy
Accident , P.O.
million
tons
of wastes per an- r•emove chemicals may be a bad
visible reminder to all of us of the
Box
5504
Charlottesville ,
!).
num
ij argain , ecologically and
need to protect our en- Vi rginia 22903.
ieconomically.
vironment."
One prom inen t use of tne
!
symbol will be as a repeated ^
design on wrap material f or most m
varieties of Kodak film. Zornow ¦
indicated the hope that other I
manufacturers will also pick upi
the symbol . "We are noty
trademarking the design ,"|
Zornow in di cated , "and we will j
be happy to have others use it."I
George B. Hartzog, Director of I
the National Park Service , I
commented on the Kodak !
program as follows :
9
"Any effort to remind the I
Americans of the need to be |
concerned about preserving the I
beauty of their natural resources, I
deserves the support and ap- 1
preciation of all who use and I
enjoy our public park lands.
I
"A program of this magnitude I
should effectively support our I
continuing campaign to persuade 1
our visitors to take nothing but J
pi ctures , leave nothing but |
footprints."
Kodak will also offer the
symbol as a public service to j
news pa p ers an d te lev i si on ;
stations across the country . For j
television , there will be a 60About 40 million leg-hol d tra ps aro tot out,
try to chew off tholr own feet. They some *
second film clip that shows the
times succ eed and occasionall y survive.
repeatedly, each yoar In the Unltod Statoi
symbol . For several hundred
For ty coats tho site off raccoo n's aro nooded
and Canada alono. Placed in tho paths leadnewspapers, there will be a mat
t o m ake one coa t for a "h uman. " But befo re
Ing to wato r, every one of the m catches some *
of the ''Litter Here" trash contho " vatueblo " anim als (like beaver , fox , nuthing. If tho trapper chicks his t raps with
tainer.
t ria , muskra t, rabbit , mink ) aro caught,
some fre quenc y, the still living animal It blud
A considerable variety of other
hund reds of other " worthless " creatures have
floontd to death. Others , left for days, die of
company activities directed
stopped on tho lever and died, " worthless "
sufferin g and sta rvation in tho tra p. When the
toward aiding in the imthin gs like eagles , co y otes , tur t les , poreuvictim * ere females their young suffer the
provement of environmental
pines , groundho gs, cato , . dogi, anything that
quality are reported in a booklet
same fate back in tho neit.
walks or crawls.
entitled "Our Share and More ,"
Tho tra ps are so agoniiln g that tho animals

Facts

Phosphates

67 per cent of the Americans
living
in
212
standard
metropolitan areas have 9 per
cent of the nation 's land, but 99
per cent of the nation's pollution.
The waterfowl population
decreased by 8 per cent a year.
Population is expected to increase in the United States
between 1970 and 1980 by 35
million. Water demand is expected to increase by 30 per cent
over this period. Water supply
will not increase.
In 1965, 55 million fish were
killed by industrial waste.
Every year Americans junk 7
million cars, 20 million tons of
paper, 28 billion bottles , and 48
million cans. To collect this
garbage costs $2.8 billion a year.

Fish
The Env ironment Protection
Agency has reported that water
pollution killed an estimated 41
million fish in forty-five states
during 1969, an increa se of 170 per
cent from 1968 when about 15
million fish turned belly-up in
forty-two states .
The statistics compiled by
EPA's Water Quality Office —
formerly the Federal Water
Quality Administration — are
based on reported kills only and
do not include the un told billions
of fish dying unnoticed , or
unreported, because of ruined
, reproduction cycles and gunkfilled habitat.

I

| Your tuna fish
sandwich
j

/$ try ing
to tell you
somethin g .
Are you
' list enin g ?

Earth Action Week April 19-25

Saturda y, Aoril 24,the Bloomsburg Recycling Committee wil t
be working for one of their busiest days collecting your paper ,
glass, and aluminum cans at the Recycling Center on Iron
(photo by Schlesinger).
Street between 8th and 9ths Sts.

Beaches Shut Down

The Environmental Protection
Agency has instituted an annual
public report on the number of
beaches in the United States shut
down by health authorities
because of pollution.
A preliminary survey of beach
closing was launched last July
and the fragmentary reports
obtained in this initial effor t
showed that 91 beaches have been
closed or posted as polluted in
recent years. Some were closed
or Dosted Dermanentlv . some

Solution s

With several million leadpoisoned wa terfowl headed
environmental
dow n
the
drainpipe in 1970, the Federation
found it difficult to accept that in
an age of moon-shooting
technology industry still could
not solve a century old problem
by finding a usable non-toxic
waterfowl shot.

temporaril y, including the
nearby Lake Gene at Red Rock .
Also a total of 13 beaches were
classified as "not recommended"
for bathing and 10 as ''unsatisfactory for use". In sohie
instances, reports said only that a
"number " of lakes, streams, and
reservoirs had been classified as
"not recommended" by State
Health Departments.
Beach closings also have an
^adverse economic impact.
Millions of dollars are lost each
year because of beach shutdowns.
Polluted water prevents the
opening of new beaches to meet
the ever increasing recreational
needs of a growing population.
Here 's one example : The
Arkansas River has no beaches.
Although about 30 recreational
area s along the river included
plans for beaches, none are
being constructed to avoid exposing the public to the polluted
river.

Man can live only a few
minutes without air to breathe.
And only a few days without
water.
Now both our air and water —
including our drinking water —
are dangerously polluted. In fact ,
a recent nationwide study of 969
water systems, conducted by the
U.S. Government's Bureau of
Water Hygiene , showed that
many Americans are actually
drinking water hazardous to their
health.
Arsenic, lead, and fecal bacteria were found in many
systems . They were most
frequent in smaller community
systems serving less than 100,000
people. Only 10 per cent of all
water systems in the study had
appropriate programs of bacteriological surveillance. 77 per
cent of the water plant operators
were inadequately trained in
fundamental
water
microbiology. And at least half
the systems had not been
examined for years by state or
county authorities.
There is evidence that pollution
is now affecting almost all the
water on the planet. Mercury
pollution , for example , was
recently detected in the livers of
fur seals in the Pacific. The seals
are usually free from contaminants since they live in
unusually deep water and feed
several hundred miles off the
coast.
Smoke pours from the Miico plant in Bloomsburg as usual.
Pollution of the oceans can
The Air Pollution Control Bureau .in Willj amsport assures us
destroythe plankton that produce
that the installation of filters has reduced the emission to a
70 per cent of the oxygen in the
atmosphere. Water pollution —
safe level. ( Photo by Max Schlesinger).
let alone already prevalent air
pollution—can drastically
reduce the amount of oxygen in
the air necessary for human
survival.
To find out more about how
pollution affects the air we
breathe ,
contact
the
The Environmental Protection the air has to be this clean. It's up
Susquehanna Valley Tuber- Agency has proposed air to the states to decide' how to do
culosis and Health Society. It's a pollution standards that would it. If they want to ban auto traffic ,
matter of life and breath.
outlaw the air in many of the we say 'Good Luck.' "
nation's cities.
The air standards contained in
These standards have been set the proposals go into effect in
by law at levels required to 1975. Many states may choose to
protect public health and comply before that date. If a
welfare. So far six pollutants state fails to act by that time,
ha ve been listed for control : however, EPA is authorized to
carbon monoxide , sulphur step in and develop imdioxide , hydrocarbons , par- plementation plans for it.
ticulate matter , nitrogen oxides
The 1970 Clean Air Act
and photochemical oxidan ts . Amendments which required the
Others may be named as in- new stan dar ds also prov ide th at
formation becomes available.
states may set standards stricter
The standards proposed by than the national ones.
EPA' s Air Pollution Control
The EPA proposals were
This symbol, designed by Uni Office
contain
no
recompublished
in the January 30
versit y of Florida student Harmendations
on
how
to
meet
the
Federa l Reg ister an d are open t o
old E. Barcey, is being connew standards, leaving it up to comment for 45 days. Within
side red for uso on a U.S. posthe states to figure out a way to another 45 days the agency will
tage stam p. It symbolizes the clean up their air .
review the comments and publish
goal of man in balance with
A NAPCA spokesman said , a final set of standards. States
nature ; mankin d's most vital
"We're not telling the states they will then have nine months to
have to ban auto traffic or shut submit plans for controlling their
goal. It is currentl y being usod
down factories. We're j ust saying sources of air pollution.
•s a symbol of environmental

Illegal Air

throughout the United
reason
States and Canada . If you be*
lieve the symbol and its intrinsic meaning deserve 1 the recognition of use on a U.S. posta ge
•tamp, please write : George
Ki ng, Directo r of Phil ately, c/o
Citizens Stamp Advisory Com*
Departmlttee , Post Office
ment, Washington , D.C., 20260.

Fi re

•toomsbu rg Isn 't too small to have pol lution. It Isn 't too smaH
fa> do something about It either. Are you willing to work for a
•loaner environment? ( Photo by Schlesinger)

An estimated 130 persons
annuall y lose their lives in litter *
fed fires ; every 12 minutes a
home is dest royed or damaged by
a fire starting in tra sh.
Adul ts between t he ages of 21
and 35 litter thr ee times as much
as people over fifty and twice as
!much as those in tHe 3549 age
]bracket, says Keep America
Beautiful .

Orass fl rei simi lar to the reoent on* at me Kawne e r plant
tw *r the Bloo msburg Ai rport have becom e a major problem
across the state . Governo r Snapp has Issued a proclamation to
limi t the use of flr a during thi s critical period. (Trapane phot o).

This Is Your Land So
Wate r

The water pollution pies are
part of a new pu blication by the
Eastern
Kodak
Company
designed to help individuals and
interested groups harness the
power of photography as a tool in
environmental action projects.
The title of this fifty-six page
pamphlet is "Improve Your
Environment...Fight Pollution
with Pictures" and is available
from photographic dealers or
directly from Kodak at a cost of
$1. Write to Eastman Kodak
Company ,
Corporate
Information , 343 State Street ,
Rochester, N.Y. 14650.

Kodak Cans Trash

Ocean
Dump ing

Facets of Pollution
Clarified

A continuing worldwide anti- which is available through the
litter, anti-pollution campaign company 's headquarter 's in
that will present one of the ? Rochester, Nev, York. The
Ocean pollution is clearly a
largest volume an ti-litter booklet takes its title from a threat
to worldwide fishing and
messages ever printed w a s statement by Dr. Louis K. Eilers, recreation
but of basic
announced this week by Eastman company chairman: "At Kodak importanceindustries,
to
all
life
on this
we have made a commitment to planet
Kodak Company.
is
the
fact
that
the
The cure for the great
A new anti-litter symbol has the future to do our share — and microscopic phytoplankton in the Phosphate problem may be
been designed for use by Kodak, more — in order to make the oceans produce a large portion of worse than the disease. There has
but is also being offered to other communities where we operate our oxygen supply. Estimates are been new concern about the
companies who share Kodak's better places in which to live, to that trees and other green plants* premature substitution of certain
interest in this aspect of en- work , and to enjoy the fruits of within the borders of the U.S. new untested ingredients for the
our labors."
vironmental quality.
produce 60 per cent of the oxygen phosphate in some laundry
Kodak announced the program
we use up each year — the rest of detergents to reduce water
the oxygen required to preserve pollution.
in*a letter from Gerald B. ZorThe Melancholy Acci dent
now, president, to the presidents
the present level of about 23 per
The effects of pouring billions
is a monthly envir onmental
of some of the country 's leading
cent oxygen in the atmosphere of pounds of table salt, washing
newspaper publishe d by the
corporations.
comes from the oceans. If ocean soda, or similar chemicals into
Mid-Atlantic
Student
Council
dumping
kills more of the marine our lakes and streams may well
The symbol is a trash container
on
Pollution
and
life
that
Envir onproduces oxygen we be a much greater threat to our
designed to spell the words
might be in for real trouble. environment than continued use
"Litter Here."
ment for students in the MidRecognizing this threat to our of phosphates. Trading the better
The objective of the message is Atlantic States. Free subexistence,
a number of bills have known effects of a chemical that
simple — a plea for everyone to scriptions
to the student
already
been
introduced in the could .be easily removed from
use a trash container for litter.
newspape r may be obtained
Congress
to
ban
ocean dumping sewage, such as phosphate, for
"It is our hope," Zornow said, fay writing to The Editor ,
(which now amounts to about 50 the unknown effects of hard-to
"that this symbol will become a
Melancholy
Accident , P.O.
million tons of wastes, per an- remove chemicals may be a bad
visible reminder to all of us of the Box
5504
Charlottesville ,
num !).
bargain , ecologically and
need to protect our en- Virginia 22W3.
economically.
vironment."
One prominent use of the .
symooi win De as a repeaieu |
design on wrap material for most!
varieties of Kodak film. Zornow I
indicated the hope that other]
manufacturers will also pick up
the symbol. "W e are no t
trademarking the design ,"
Zornow indicated , "and we will
be happy to have others use it."
George B. Hartzog, Director of j
the National Park Service ,
commented on the Kodak
program as follows :
"Any effort to remind the
Americans of the need to be
concerned a bout preserv ing the
beauty of their natural resources,
deserves the support and appreciation of all who use and
enjoy our public park lands.
"A program of this magnitude
should effectively support our
continuing campaign to persuade
our v isit ors to t a ke noth i ng but
pi ctures , leave noth ing but
footprints."
K odak w i ll also offer th e
sy m bol as a publ i c service to
news p a p ers and t elev ision
sta t ions across t he coun try . For
television , there will be a 60try to chew off their own ftft. They someAbout 40 million leg-hold traps ar« set out,
second film cli p that shows the
times su cceed and occasiona lly sur vive.
repeatedl y, each year In the United States
symbol . For several hundred
For ty co ats the slie of raccoon 's are needed
and Canada alone. Placed in the paths lead*
newspapers, there will be a ma t
to make one coat for a "h uman. " But before
Ing to wate r, every one of thim catches someof t he " Litter Here" trash con(like beaver , fox , nu-

Phosp hates

tainer.

A considera ble variety of other
company activities directe d
toward aiding in the improv ement of environmental
quality are reported in a booklet
entitl ed "Our share and More ,"

thing. If the tr apper checks his traps w ith
some fre quency, the still living animal Is blud
geoned to death. Others , left for days, die of
sufferin g and starvation In the trap. When the
victims are ftm ales the ir young suffer the
same fate back In the neit.
The tra ps are so agonisin g that the animals

the " valuable " animals
t ria , muskr a t , rabbit ,

mink ) are caught,
hund reds of othe r " worthies! " creatures have
stepped on the lever and died , " worthless "
t hin g s Ilko oa glos , co y otes , tur t les , poreupints , groundho gs, cats , .dog* , anything that
walks or crawls.

Facts

67 per cent of the Americans
living
in
212
standar d
metropolitan areas have 9 per
cent of the nation's land, but 99
per cent of the nation's pollution.
The waterfowl population
decreased by 8 per cent a year.
Population is expected to increase in the United States
between 1970 and 1980 by 35
million. Water demand is expected to increase by 30 per cent
over this period. Water supply
will not increase.
In 1965, 55 million fish were
killed by industrial waste.
Every year Americans j unk 7
million cars, 20 million tons of
paper, 28 billion bottles, and 48
million cans. To collect this
garbage costs $2.8 billion a year.

Fish
The Environment Protection
Agency has reported that water
pollution killed an estimated 41
million fish in forty-five states
during 1969, an increase of 170 per
cent from 1968 when about 15
million fish turned belly-up in
forty-two states.
The statistics compiled by
EPA's Water Quality Office —
formerly the Federal Water
Quality Administration — are
based on reported kills only and
do not include the untold billions
[of fish dying unnoticed , or
unreported, because of ru ined
reproduction cycles and gunkfilled habitat.
i
!

1

|

Your tuna fish
sandwich
/$ fry ing
to tell you
something .
i

Are yo u
listening ?

¦

Don 't Just Sit There , Clean It Up!
COMPONENTS OF COLLECTED
SOLID WAST E BY PROPORTION OF WEIGHT

(
f

'

GARBAGE

GLASS

METAL

7%

8%

ASHES,

11%
;

I

.

SAND ,
D( RT & GRASS

WOOD ,

RAGS.

PLASTIC,
ETC .

XO/0

oor

O™

PAPER

50%
i

COMPONENTS OF LITTER BY PROPORTION
OF TOTAL ITEMS LITTERED

»«PPIffP «iPP^

BEVERAGE CONTAINERS 20.4%

KRi

B
i OTHER CONTAINERS 4.4%

H&P ^iil

MISCELLANEOUS 15.7%

WSS^^^^^^ i^ii ^^ i^^^i^^^ t^^^^^ Sm

paper
59.5%

»
¦

^
^™
" "^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^i^^^i^^^^^i^^^^ il^^^ea^^^^^SJl^P^ajMHPBSPeBi^

USAGE OF DISPOSAL METHODS BY PROPORTION
OF SOLID WASTE WEIGHT PROCESSED

¦
^
^^^^^^¦
^^^^^^^^

dumps 84.6% ing to garb yourself in the

agony of another , by refus|ng fo buy fh« skins of wild-

¦
SANITARY LANDFILL 5.4%

iH_
¦HINCINERATION 8.0%

B other 2.0%

Air
Air pollution officials in New
York City fear that lead from
automobile exhausts may be
causing t he " hi gh lead levels
showing up in the blood of city
residen ts.
Though no federal sa f e ty
standards have b een set on lead
levels in t he air , city officials are
alarmed at amounts indica t ed by
sampling stations in trafficclogged Manhatt an. The city 's
H ealt h Depar t ment has f ound
high lead levels in t he blood of
urban children which could not
havebeencausedfrom eati ng old
lead-based paints. Such paints ,
until recently , were blamed for
abnormally high lead levels in
children's blood.
The air p ollut ion officials have
asked the ci ty council t o ban all
leaded gasoline in the city under
a new air pollut ion code.

If you are one who canno t
be Indifferent to the suffering of othe r creatures . . .
YOU CAN HELP—by refus-

life.

Oil Sp ills
You 'v e read and heard about
severa l lately. The first one ,
January 18, i n San Franci sco
Bay. It' s been dubbed the Great
Oil Spill since the 840,000 gallons
of oil spilled into the Bay exceeds
the 800,000 blown out of underwa ter wells in the 1969 Santa
Barbara disaster.
The Sa n F ranci sco spil began
after two Standard Oil tankers
tangled in early morni ng fog
benea th the Golden Gate. The
tar-like '' bunker oil" that gushed
out of the Oregon Standard after
her colli si on w it h the Arizona
Standard drif ted out of t he Bay
and sp read along fifty miles of
the Pacific Coast.
Californians throughout the
gooed-up reg ion joined Standard
clean-u p crews and one week
lat er some 3,000 oil-soaked birds
—over half of them were Western
Grebes — had been overhauled in
emergency t reat ment centers.
But t he odds are heavily against
their survival. Only 3 t o 5 percent
of the birds treat ed during the
San ta Barbara spill survived .
Suits against Standard Oil of
California have mushroomed.

The company has promi sed to
replace all wildlife — buying and
importing it from elsewhere ;
support all volunteer rescue
efforts ; form a compact with
other Bay Are a oil companies to
deal quickly with future spills;
and support safer navigational
practices . As to why the tankers
collided beneath the bridge — no
one seems to know.
N or can any one fi gure out how
Humble Oil' s tanker , the Esso
Gettysburg , missed part of the
channel entrance t o New Haven
H arbor in L ong Island Sound, f ive
days after Standard 's mishap .O il
officials claimed the 360 ,000
gallons of light no. 2 heating oil
that leaked into #ew Haven
Harbor was " clean" ; tha t it
would evap orat e q uickly. But oil
spill expert Dr . Max Blumer , of
the Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution , has studied the effects of a simlliar spill and
doesn't agree. "A y ear and a half
later , " he sa ys , " we have
essentially a dead sea as far as
the bottom is conterned , It is
nonsense for anybody to call a
light oil 'clean."'

Kodak announced the anti-litte r symbo l In a lette r fro m Gerald B. Zornow , president , to the presidents of some of the country 's leading corporations The symbol is a tra sh container designed to spell the wo rds "Lit ter Here." The ob|ective of the
message Is simple —' a plea for everyone to use a trash container for Utter 1. That' s one of the thin gs your feet and hand*
are for.

Eight Athl ete s
Receive Honors

BSC was informed yesterday
that eight members of its varsity
athletic teams will be honored in
the 1971 volume of OUTSTANDING
C O L L E GE
ATHLETES OF AMERICA .
The following were nominated
by BSC earlier this year and were
chosen to appear in this award
publication on the basis of their
achievements : William Nagy,
Dunellen, N.J.—football ; James
McCue ,
Stevensville

wrestling; Michael Shull ,
Newport—wrestling ;
David
Gibas, West Mifflin—swimming;
Tim Waechter , Camp Hill—track
and cross country ; Terry Lee,
Malvern—track and cross
country ; Steven Ryznar , Pottstown—track;
and James
Platuki s, West Hazleton—
basketball.
Announcements of their
selection was made by the Board
of Advisors of OUTSTANDING
COLLEGE ATHLETES OF
AMERICA, an annual awards
volume published to honor
America's finest college athletes.
Coaches and athletic directors
from individual colleges and
universities across the nation
nominated the winning athletes
on the basis of their displayed
abilities, not only in athletics but
also in community service and
campus activities.
Other criteria for those selectee
for OUTSTANDING COLLEGE
ATHLETES OF AMERICA include strength of character,
leadership both on and off the
playing field, and scholarship.
According to the late Coach
Vince Lombardi, those chosen as
Outstanding College Athletes
distinguish themselves because
necessary traits for leadership
have been learned on the playing
field.

HELP
WANTED

These traits, Lombardi said ,
are "sacrifice, self-denial, love,
fearlessness , humility, and
perfect disciplined will."
Star Quar terback Johnny
Unitas said the year 's Outstanding College Athlete winners
can be looked upon with esteem
"because they know what hard
work and determination can
bring to them and their loved
ones."
Biographies of all Outstanding
College Athletes of America will
be included in the 1971 edition to
be published in July.

Nagy Signs
With Birds
Two outstanding rookie
defensive performers have
signed with the National
Champion
Pennsylvania
Firebirds of Hershey for the 1971
Atlantic Coast League season.
Bill Nagy, a 22-year-old
defensive lineman from BSC will
be wearing a Firebird uniform
this fall and is expected to move
right into a starting spot.
At six-foot-three and 255
pounds, Bill is expected to fill the
vacancy created by Joe Blake
who has signed with the Montreal
Alouettes of the Canadian
Football League.
Nagy also brings impressive
credentials with him, having
starred here at Bloom from 1967
through '70, where in his senior
year he made NAIA Honorable
Mention All-American , First
team All-Penn Conference and
voted by his teammates and
coaches as the best defensive
player on the squad.
Firebird head coach Ron
Waller said of his new
acquisition , "I am certain that
Bill will follow in the footsteps of
(continu ed on page eigh t)

REA & DERICK INC.

Spa reti me or ful l time opportu nity addressing
and/or
stuffing envelopes.
E a r n
$27.00 per thousan d and up,
hand written or. typed. Guaranteed
money
maki ng
deal. Send $2.00 for complete
instru ction s and list of firms
using addressors to C and S
Company , Deot. 471, P.O.
Box 53153, Oklahoma City,
Okla., 73104.

" Drugstore

of Service "

34 E. Ma in Street and
Scottow n Shopp ing
Center

Fondest Remembrance
Is...

r ora uo

H0A6IES

8:30 foil ,30

Regular and King Size
HQAGIES

Phono 7844292
127 W. Main

BLOOMSBURG

Thirty-two Teams were entered into Volleyball competition
to form four leagues.Teams were
awarded 2 points for a win and 0
team points for a loss. Teams 5,
12, and 27won leagues A, B and D
respectively with 7 wins and 0
losses (14 team points) and team
16won league C with 6 wins and 1
loss (12 team points).
In the finals , a double
elimination Tournament was
held with team 12 defeating team
26, in the finals, for the College
Championship by scores of 15-6
and lu-6.
The members of the Championship team are : Tania Smith
(Capt.) , Karen Willis , Linda
Radle, Becky Shuman, Betsy
Lucadamo, Janet Santo, Jessie
Welliven, Cs,rol Bolton and Ginny
Hyduke.
The Spring Activities being
planned include, Softball and
Archery which will begin on April
26, and Horseshoes, which begin
on Mav 3rd.

Bonded World Wide
'

Delivery

Home of the Dagwood

DICK'S MARKET
8 West Main Street

pregn ancies up to 12
weekr terminated fro m

ROBERT G. SHIVE,R.P.

Fr ee Prescri ption Delivery
TOILET GOODS

COSMETICS
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES
GREETING CARDS

'

1 Weil Main St.
Phono: 784-4388

Phone

784-2561

AB ORTION

Your Prescri ption Druggist

HALLMARK CARDS
GIFTS
'

Comey 's
Back

MOVE R
Pharmacy

BLOOMSBURG,PA.

*

5 to 7

V-Ball 1

Supply Co.

FLOWER S

BY JOHN HOFFMAN
On Tuesday, April 20th, BSC
r,acketmen of Coach Burt Reese
dropped their third straight meet
°f the season to a strong Lock
Vlaven team, being blanked by
yie Eagles 9-0 on the locals
courts.
SINGLES—
John Roth of LH defeated Curt
jj[annaman of Bloomsburg 6-1, 6j ; Jim Augustine JLH defeated
*;im Brewer BSC 7-5, 6-3; Joe
LH topped Dwayne
z.lastignola
rreenly BSC 7-5, 6-3; Ben
^:_/illiams LH beat Barry Greb 6-3,
¦1.Billy Johns, brother of Huskie
jTxrtball
standout Henry "Hank"
"
ohns, defeated BSC Freshman
T om Jones 6-0, 6-1. And in the
nal singles match Lock Haven 's
cott Koercher defeated Tom
eedom 6-4, 6-4 of the locals.
DOUBLES—
In the doubles competition, the
uj am of Roth-Augustine of Lock
defeated
Brewer^iaven
H[annaman of Bloomsburg 6-1, 6j The second match saw the
^j ani of Castignola-Williamsfor
^ock Haven beat BSC's duo of
Grreenly-Ackerman 6-4, 6-4. In the
^nal doubles match of the day,
£lagle duce's Johns-Koercher
Fauth-Hess
of
^jlefeated
Uoomsburg 6-3, 6-3.
The next home meet for the
r acketmen is tomorrow, 1:00
D .m. against the Golden Bears of
{j[utztown State. I'd like to take
_^ie time now to explain the town
ark situation . We don't own the
park Tennis Courts and can use
^»em only when they are free. If
Vldu want to play tennis, look at
^jur calendar or BSC TODAY
s leet to see if we have a home
nleet. If we do, please don't go to
^ie courts because you only hold
p play. So, if you want to aid the
^am, give them verbal support
fl]nd attend the matches but don't
^iterfere . OK?!!!

.

The triple jump was not run
due to the unfinished facility and
the undetermined hurdles were
cancelled due to the lack of
planning by Delaware according
'
to Puhl.

18 West Main Street

PIZZA

Mil DIUVIRY

Despite a poor start at the onset
of the race Bob Lacock recorded
a 6.2 high jump and supplied the
fourth Husky upset beating out
highly regarded Hayes of
Maryland.
Another strong performance
was chalked up by the Huskies'
Larry Strohl when he captured
the 880 run in 2.03.2 time nosing
out another favorite in Sherman
Lambery of Maryland.

John Ficek chalked up eight
points while Andy Kuzma and
Jim Davis recorded NAIA
qualifying performances to spark
the undefeated Husky Cindermen
to a tri-meet sweep over the U. of
Maryland and Delaware State on
the latter 's grounds on Wednesday April 14.
The twin victories gave the
Huskies of coach Ron Puhl a 7-0
record for the campa ign scoring
a one-point victory over MU,
591/2-58V2, and tamping DSU, 59^15.
Ficek , a sophomore from
Philadelphia , captured the shot
put event with a toss of 48 feet 9
inches and placed second in the
discus.
Davis and Kuzma scored "Mild
upsets" with the former tying
Maryland Carson in the 220 dash
with a 21.3 time and the latter tied
his own school record with a 14.5
clocking in the 120-high hurdles.
The times turned in by Davis
and Kuzma qualify both for the
national meet which will be held
this year at billings, Montana .
They are the first Husky
qualifiers for this event in three
years.
The locals had 9Vfe first
placements, three seconds and
6'^ thirds. Coach Puhl stated,
"The distance runners did a fine
job of pulling us through although
the overall team balance helped
keep us in the meet against
Maryland ."
Jim Cavallero, a senior from
Metuchen, N.J., pulled the "big
mild upset" when he threw the
javelin 194 feet, 2Vfe inches to beat
out favored Martin of Maryland.
The victory enabled BSC to nose
out Maryland.
Marin had a previous throw
this season of 220 feet but could
only muster a 181.1 toss against
Cavallero. The latters heave beat
the MU athlete by 13 feet, 1%
inches.

Miller Office

Charlie ' s

Open 'til 12iOO p.m.
Clotod1i30 to 3t00 p.m.
Every Day But Fridoy

M a Pk

RacketMen
Lose
Meet
To
Eagles

1

BLOOMSBURG , PA.

$175.00

Medication , Lab Tests , Doctors fees included. Hospita l
¦nd Hospital affiliated dinlet.
(212) TR 74809
24 hours — 7 days

Physicians Referral

Wo know we can help you,
ovon If It's |uit to talk to
someone.

TAKE A PEEK AT
OUR SENSITIVITY GREETIN G CARDS

THE STUDIO SHOP
A STORE WITH SENSITI V ITY
Mr ¦• Main M»f BiOOIWMMMT B'

94-2111* '
• DUtlncitive Gifts

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• Muti e

Clothesline Art Sale
For Carlough Fund

Members of the college community are invited to submit
their art work to the second
annual Clothesline Art Sale ,
which will be conducted Saturday, May 1st, weather permitting-alternate date will be
May 8th-at the Courthouse
Square from 10 to 4. Contributors
are requested to submit applications, which may be gotten
by contacting Bill Cluley or
Kenneth Wilson, Ronald Bower,
or Percival Roberts of the Art
Department, one week before the
sale. Artists are responsible for
all submitted works, and are
asked to bring their work to the
Courthouse between 8 and 10 the
day of the sale, and to collect
unsold items after 4.
This year the sale will benefit
the Carlough Fund , which gives
help
to
all
Columbia
County children who may
need assistance for educational , nutri tional , medical
or recreationa l purposes. Artists
may either donate the proceeds
from the sale of their work to the
fund, or may receive one half of
the returns. During the first year
of its operation , the fund , to meet
the diverse needs of the area 's
children , donated money for

Registration
(continue d from page one)

enrollment may result in
course cancellation and conversely , h i g h demand may
result in closed classes.
During the hours of pre registration , students will secure
a registration card and the official Summer Bulletin in the
Student Union lobby. After
completing the registration card
and obtaining the appropriate
Dean 's or Department Chairman 's signature, the card will be
turned into Room F-2 Benjamin
Franklin building) . Summer
session cards must be returned
by Wednesday, May 5, 1971.
Students are reminded that
registration for each session will
be on the Saturday before the
opening of each session in Centennial Gymasium between the
hours of 1.00 pm and 5:00 pm.
Pre Session — Registration on
Saturday, June 5 and classes
begin Monday, June 7.
Main Session — Registration on
Saturday, June 26 and classes
begin Monday, June 28.
Post Session — Registration on
Saturday, August 7 and classes
begin Monday, August 0.

Mini?
Midi?
Max}?
Gaucho?

Do your th ing at

c£ncu£
Main St.. Bloom tbur j

BLOOM
BOWL

©

WAFFLE
GRILLE

Applications
ar» now
being acce pted for the positions of Editor-in-Chief and
Business
Manage r of the
Maroon and Gold, the Obiter, and the Olympian.
In their letter of application, interested
pa r s o n s
should indicate their experetc.
ience, qualifications ,
Deadline for all applications
is Wednesday, May 5, 1971.
Applica tions
an to be
sent to Mr. Kenneth C. Hoffman, Director of Publication, Waller Hall, no later
than the above stated deadline.

recreational purposes to the
Migrant Day Care Center; for
nutritional purposes to families
at Christmas; -for educational
purposes to families with
children whose physicians
recommended nursery school
care, where such care could not
be available without outside
assistance; for clothing and toys
for families , including those who
lad lost their homes in fires.
Last year the sale earned close
to $500 for the Migrant Day Care
Center, which can still benefit
under the Carlough Fund .

Vets
Tak e
Notice

Saroyan
Plav Cast

The Bloomsburg players of
BSC have cast the roles for their
final play of the 1970-71 school
year. The five-act comedy, THE
TIME OF YOUR LIFE by
William Saroyan, is under the
direction of Mr. Robert D. Richey
and will be presented on May 13,
14, and 15.
The part of Joe will be played
by Sam Zachary. Tony Kohl will
be seen in the part of Tom. Velma
Avery will play Kitty , the
burlesque dancer. Tom Curtis
will play the part of Nick, the
bartender. The arab will be
portrayed by Jon Decker. Kit
Carson will be played by Ron
Klinetob. Dan Demczko will play
McCarthy . His friend Krupp will
be played by Tom Givvons. Steve
Weiss will be seen in the role of
Harry, the comedian . John
Walker will play Wesley, the
piano player. The part of Dudley
will be portrayed by Scott
Atherton . His girlfriend Elsie
w i l l be played by Michele
Baker. Lorene will be played by
Cindy Griffith. Amy Rater will
play Mary L. Lin Naylor will play
Willie, and Dave Hepford will
play the part of Blick .
Others in the cast include
Kathy Simpson, Rita Gerosky,
Elizabeth
Cooper , Phillip
Dumban, Robert Sluzis, John
Kemmerer, Edward Goman ,
Rebecca Ermisch , Kerry Ayers,
and Thomas Seriani. Jean
LeGates will be the stag e
manager .

Veterans in training under the
G.I. Bill were reminded by the
Veterans Administration that
they are entitled to more money
when they get married or have
children.
For example, VA said, a fulltime student in school will have
his $175 a month increased to $205
when he gets married and to $230
if he becomes a father .
Veterans taking cooperative,
apprenticeship, on-the-job or
farm cooperative training also
have their VA payments increased when they get married
and
have children. Apprenticeship and on-the-job
trainees get additional payments
for only two dependents, while
the others get them for all
dependents.
Previously, VA said , veterans
could be paid the additiona l
amounts only from the date they
notified the VA of their new
dependent. Under legislation
effective Dec. 24, 1970, however,
students ha ve one year from the
event to present the marriage
license or birth certificate to the
VA.
Since the new law is not
retroactive , veteran students
who were married or had a child
before Dec. 24, 1970, and failed to
Veterans who are eligible for
notify the VA , can be paid only increased payments were urged
from that date, VA said.
to contact their local VA office.

John 's Food Mark et

Harry Logan

W. Mai n & Leonar d St.
Open 8 a.m. to 12 mid
Daily
Delicatessen
Full line of groceries
& snacks

Fine J ewelry
AND

Repairing
Your J twtltr Away from Horn *

5 W. Main St.

Bloomsbubo

Kampus Nook

COLOR PRODUCTION
PRE SENTS

Across from the Union
Hot

Platttrs

Every

Day

Plai n & Ham Hoagits,
Cheese • Ptpper onl - Onion
Plxia. Our own Made Ice
Cream.
Delivery to dor ms, sororities, and fra ts.
Hou rs: Mon. • Thu rs

11:00

Frida y
Saturday
Sunda y

I

Farm Show Arena
Harrliburg , Pa,
Sat., May 15, 8:00 P.M.
A DVANCE - $5.00

9:00-

9:00-12:00
4:30-12:00
11:00-11:00

Three
Dog
Night

I
I

Send Self Addressed
Stamped Envelope Tot
Color Inc., Box 336
Harrltburo , Pa. 171M

Language Studen ts
Plan International Day

French , Spanish , and German
students from thirty high schools
in the Bloomsburg, Berwick ,
Danville , Hazleton , and WilkesBarre areas have been invited to
International Day 71 to be held at
Bloomsburg State College on
May 8.
The purpose behind International Day '71 is two-fold : to
provide high school students who
are studying a foreign language
with additional motivation ; and
to acquaint high school students
with the Foreign Languages
Department and Bloomsburg
State College .
The sessions will be held from
1:00 p.m . to 5:00 p.m. For those
students taking German , there
will be a German vocabulary
contest under the direction of the
BSC German Club. The Spanish
students will participate in a
Spanish vocabulary contest
under the direction of the BSC
Spanish Club; while the French
students will be involved in a
French irregular verb contest
under the direction of Le Cercle
Francais, the French Club on
campus.
After the contests, the students
will be conducted on a tour of the
BSC campus, followed by an
Awards Social at which time
refreshments will be served,
remarks will be offered by
various faculty members and
administrators of BSC, and
awards will be presented.
International Day '71 is an
outgrowth of last year's French
irregular verb contest sponsored
Kappa Delta Pi wants you !
Do you have a 3.0 cumulative average? Do you have a
sophomore or highe r status?
Are you in the field of education? If you answe r yes
to these thr ee questions ,
April 27th
come to the
Delta
meeting
of Kappa
Pi. Time and place will be
in the TODAY
announced
sheet.

Charles N. Yeager

Dispensing Opt ician!
120 E. Main St.
Preemption s filled & repairs

by Le Cercle Francais for five
area high schools in the
Bloomsburg Area . Joseph S.
Roinick , a senior from Hazleton,
Vice Presiden t of Le Cercle
Francais , is Chairman for the
day 's events , with the Coordinating Committee consisting of
the members of Le Cercle
Francais and Dr. Ariane
Foureman , Chairman of the
of
Foreign
Department
Languages , as advisor. The
Spanish and German Clubs will
also be playing an active part
along with faculty members of
the Foreign Languages Department. Sandy Rubenstein, a junior
from BSC, is President of Le
Cercle Francais. Thelma Detz, a
sophomore from W. Hazleton , is
President of the Spanish Club and
Joe Kelly a freshman from
Fairless Hills, is President of the
German Club.

Nagy Signs
other fine athletes from
Bloomsburg that have played for
the Firebirds."
"The most notable Husky being
Bob Tucker , now with the N ew
York Giants, and Greg Berger
who did a fine job in our defensive
secondary last season—we look
lor Nagy to move right into our
starting lineup, " Waller quipped.
The other Firebird signed is *
Big Frank Klassen, a weekly
standout for Albright College who
will be attempting to bolster the
defensive platoon of the Firebirds
tor the coming year.
Klassen played his high school
ball at Our Lady of Lourdes in
Shamokin where he graduated in
1967.

ABORTION

can be less cos tly than you may
t hink , and pregnancies of up t o
12 weeks can be terminated for

$175.00

including doct ors fees, laboratory test s , all medicat ion &
refer ra l fee. Hospital and Hospit al affiliated clinics only. Safe ,
Confiden t ial , Immedia te,
call

(212) 838-0710

24 hours - 7 days
Woman's Aid & Guidance Group
40 E. 54th St., N.Y. , N.Y. 10022

Eppley's
Pharmacy

BOO KS...
OVER 8,000

MAIN ft IION STIIITS

TITLES IN STOCK

Prescription SpecJo/i$t

If It's a book
we have it or -wo can get It

'

• CHANEL
• GUHIAIN

• FABERGE
• LANVIN

Gree ting Cards

HENRIE'S

• MINCE MATCHAIEUI
• ELIZABETH-AUDKN
• HELENA RUBENSTEIN

• DANA

Card and Book Nook
40 W. Main St.

• COTY
• MAX FACTOR

Qnm Sfempi

SMORGASBORD
Tut

•1.63
.10

"lit?T

ALL YOU CAN BAT

,

Ta»

'HOLID AY

L U N C H I O N
TUESDAY Thru FRIDAY
•wry weak 11d0 . lJ0

«2J2
.18

w3o

BACH SUNDAY
¦
"j 80 a -J°
Childrtn - $1.50

ON OUR 2nd FLOOR

HOTEL MAGEE

BUFFIT

Bloomsburg, Pa.

DICK BENSFIBLD, tftM fv