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Fri, 04/05/2024 - 17:55
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Picasso flick
opens series
*
4
" Picasso: War Peace and
In the first film of the series
Love, " a 55-minute color motion viewers will see the vital Picasso
p icture portraying artist Pablo at work in his studios at Mougins
Picasso and his works , will open and Cannes. The artist himself
the criticall y acclaimed film
concert series "Muse um Without
Walls ," Monday, Oct. 25 in
Carver Hall. Shdwings will be at
3:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m.
Sp onsored by the BSC
Department of Arts , the series
comprises eleven films to be
displa ys some paintings from a
grou p of 500 not yet*shown to the
public. French film dire ctor
Lucien Clergue photogra ph ed
and helmed " Picasso: War
Peace and Love , " visiting
twent y-two museums , seven
galleries , and eleven private
offered
in five separate collections to give viewers a
p rograms , Universal Studios ' deeper perspective on the ar tist 's
Education and Visual Arts work than ever offered before ,
Department produced the films covering Picasso 's fabulous
over the past four years under the output from Guernica to the
supervision of internationally- nr pspnt
known art historian Douglas
" Goya , " a 55-minute motion
Cooper .
picture featuring the Spanish
Sparked by a growing national artis t 's major works in Madrid 's
interest in the arts , the series ha s Prado Museum , will be screened
created a un ique art museum on with the Picass o film. Highlights
film . While transportation and of Goy a's work include portraits
insurance costs often make it of royalty and friends , etchings ,
difficult for the conventional the bullfight sequences , the
museum to display a large frescoes at the cathedral at
number of great works , the Salagossa and the Church of St.
medium of film creates a Anthony, and the "bla ck painmuseum without such limitations tings " from the walls of his own
— a museum without walls.
The Metro politan Museum of
Art in New York and the Los
Angeles County Museum joined
w i th p rivate collectors and
house . The film explores not only
Goy a the portr ait artist and
aficionado of the bullfight , but
Goy a the revolution ar y satirist of
man 's rage and insanity .
Other films in the seri es are
"Gi otto
and
the
Pre-
museums both here and abroad
to give Universal
production
teams access to their great works
(continuod
of art.
on page four)
In the October 15, 1971, issue
of the M&G there appeared an
"Op en Letter to College
Community " . The author ,
whose
name
was
unin -
tentionally omitted , is Mike
«
Siptroth , CGA president.
On the feature page of the
same issue there appeared a
letter signed "A Disgusted
Senior " . The name was
withheld on request.
Walk for
Hun gry
Students who are concerned
about the millions of starving
people in the world will have an
opportunity to help by participating in the Crop " Walks for
the Hungry, " Sunday , Novembe
7, at 12:15 in Town Park.
The "Wa lks for the Hungry " ,
which are being organized in
man y towns across the country
th is y ear , are designed to raise
money for the needy people of the
world . Each walker procures a
sponsor who pledges to donate a
specific amount of money for
each mile his particular walker
completes . The participants will
follow a 10-mile prescribed route
starting at Town Park . Upon
completion of the walk , each
walke r revisits his sponsor for
the collection of the money
pledged.
A meeting of all those interested in partici pating in this
walk will be held in Kuster
Auditorium , Wednesday, October
20 at 7:30 p.m.
San Juan Hill is ready for the
charge and the Panama Canal is
just waiting to be dug . The
Panama
nights beginning Thursday, Oct.
21.
Teddy Brewste r , alias Teddy
Roosevelt (how could we have a
San Juan Hill charge without
him) will be played by Dan
Boone. His madcap aunts ,
Brewster is a fairly normal
newspaper drama critic who
doesn ' t like his work . Dan
Demczko will play the poor boy
who has had a tough time keeping
his sanity . Then of course there 's
Dr . Einstein-Heman not Albertwho changes people ' s faces
whenever they need to hide out
Canal
(actually
Senate to meet
today in Kuster
"A Time for Assessment and
Plan ning " will be the main thrust
of Dr . Nossen's remarks to the
College Senate which will meet in
its eighth session today in Kuster
'Auditorium at 3:30 p.m.
Dr . Nossenmet on Sept. 27 with
various members of the college
community regarding the formation of a steering committe e to
deal with the top ic of " planning
and assessing " .
The Academic Affairs Committee is working on a new ad-
visemen t program to replace the
present system . Along with a
Other committee reports on the
agenda for this afternoon are the
committee on Student
Affairs ,
chaired by Mr . John Walker ;
Faculty Affa irs Committee ,
chaired by Dr . Robert Warren f
Cam pus Affairs and External
Relations , chaired by Mr. ;
Richard Stanislaw . The Com-
mittees on Facilities and
Finance , Office and Equipment
Security , and the committee to
Review Academic Calendar will
also re port .
STUDENT AMENDMENT
The Senate will move into in-
progress report on this new formal debate for discussing the
system by Dr. Hobart Heller , the amendment
student
on
committee will comment on its representation in the senate. The
general pr ogress and on a amendment will provide for
"P olicy for Curriculum Chan ge. " twenty-three
(23) student
from the
all
elected
,
senators
The BSC facult y along with the
large.
The
student
body
at
other state institutions of higher
the
spring
elections
will
be
held
in
learning elected APSCUF to be
their representative bargaining of the year . All student senators
agent. Dr. Robert Miller , would serve for one year terms. A
President of the BSC chapter of similar amendment proposed
APSCUF , will address the senate last year died for lack of sufon matters pertinent to collective ficient votes.
bargaining .
In an open letter to the college
community
, Mike Siptroth , CGA
The BSC faculty representative
endorsed
the amendPresident
,
to the board of trustees , Mr.
which
would
increase
the
,
ment
George Turner , will report to the
senators
total
number
of
student
senate today concerning actions
to 23.
taken by the body.
-'
the
celler of the Brewster 's old
Victorian house). These wack y
Bloomsbur g Players invite you to women will be played by Becky
attend these historic events as Ermisch ami Ann Brisk.
they p resent the m on the stage of
Of course there is a touch of
Haas Center , for three successive sanity in the family . Mortimer
Martha and Abby let him indulge
in the fan ta sy to suit their own
purpose . He ' s buried twelve
Tho fri ght tnln gly funny Brow- " yellow fever victims " in the
ser fa mily and tholr
scientis t (at Itft ) frland.
mad -
( Photos by Sehof ltld)
for a while . Sometimes he lacks
inspiration and uses faces tha t
look very familiar to everyone.
His latest victi m is Jonathan
Brewster whom he makes look
like Boris Karloff. These two
fugitives from the police will be
played by Lin Naylor and Bob
Harris.
Many other characte rs will be
seen on the beautiful set designed
by Tom Wheeler , the new
technical
director
for
the
Players , and the actors will be
illumina ted by the lights
Siblin g rivalry In tht Brtwttar household . Tha law (at Itft) It
about to butt In,
designed by Kathy Sim pson.
Making 1971 college students look
like older people in the 1940's is
I not an ea sy job , but Phil Davis ,
hea d of the makeup crew is doing
a splendid job.
Don ' t miss ARSENIC AND
OLD LACE. Tickets can be ob| tained by calling 717-784-4660 Ext.
317, or by wri ting Box 78,
Bloomsburg State College ,
Bloomsbur g, Pa , 17815.
Jonathan and idontli t deposit roeontl y dopart od frlond
(at cantor) In window seat ,
or T? o t 9 7t
Fif th Colu mn
THINK A' WHERE THE BLACK
DOG'S BEEN
Nicholson and Garfunk el
Carna l Knowledge
The four-letter word in films middle age. Miss Bergen does not
has come a long way since appear after the earlier portions
("Who 's Afraid of Virginia of the film, an oversight which is
Woolf?" (1966) , and Jules Feiffer remedied by Ann Margaret's
takes advantage of that fact in his entrance.
Giuseppe Rotunno used
original screen play for "Carnal
Knowledge". Producer-director Panavision and Technicolor to
Mike Nichols used new highlight New York City and
techniques
with
"Carnal Vancouver locations (the latter
Knowledge," with results which filled in most convincingly for
will make him as talked about as Manhattan). In a time of conever. A top cast, headed by Jack troversial films, the Joseph E.
Nicholson, Candice Bergen, Ann Levine presentation will be
Margaret, Arthur Garfunkel and among the most widely
Rita Moreno, responds well to criticized, maybe for its attitude
Nichols ' able direction. Ann toward women, maybe for its
Margaret, who has several highly attitude toward human beings.
exploitable nude scenes, really And there's only one way to tell a
shines in a part that calls for human being's reaction to these
dramatic ability as well as attitudes expressed toward
physical attributes. (Hello , women ai.d other beings: see it.
Women 's Lib). The singer- Start tonight at the Capitol.
dancer-actress proves she is
highly developed in both
qualities. (There is a conspicuous, rumor that this press
release was written by Norman
Mailer ) . Anyway , the story
focuses on the sex lives of
Nicholson and Garfunkel, their
college involvement with Miss Dear Editor :
Bergen, and Nicholson 's conwish to extend thanks to the
tinued search for fulfillment, a representatives
the Black
search he is still continuing in Student Society ofof the
College
by Blass
(a story — dedicated to Mr.
Richard Wilson, one of the few
people worthy of the forgotten
title Teacher, one becausehe was
there when I needed him and two
because he knows things might
come to — this — )
Maybe it's because Blacky is
sleeping on my crotch, but when
the purple explosion reaches
under my closed eyelids and
grabs my brains I am dreaming
of laying one of those green
Zangorian women that Zebulon
Brandoch keeps telling me about,
I hear him spitting and saying
"Don't make no dif what color
they are, thosewomen on Zangor,
because ain't no Earth-spawned
man living or dead who can resist
them even if he HAS heard the
stories about what they do to
their men afterward " even as I
take her with utter disregard for
the awful scar that old Zeb
showed me once (on a right
delicate part of the old bugger,
too) I am brought awake by that
flash.
I start, push Blacky away. He
crawls into the corner, nudges his
food dish. I pay no attention and
think of women, and when the
hell the Company will land down
again with one of their Hyperspace Houses. I've been saving
up for a long time, want a crack
at one of those greenskins
because already I've saved up
and figtu ed out just how I'm
going to avoid her particular
knife. Blacky knows his master is nnri hpat mp
So I lay here wondering these
angry, and he knows something is
wrong outside. He's seen pitfires thingswhile the red flicks race up
before , like when he tried to save my walls and make crazy
shadows which scare old Blacky
something awful. 1 wish I had a
woman , I wouldn't bother to get
up, I'd lay us down and stay here
and let whoever it is out there
burn, but I don 't have a woman
and Blacky ain't as much company as he used to be, so I get up.
I hear Ma saying something
who attende d the Black about what is it and I say "Pit fire
Literature and the Black Student again. " I hear her sigh and
programs of the college section of slowly roll over. I know she's
the annu al conference of the thinking about Pa , wishing she
Pennsylvania
Council
of had a man . But she doesn't
Teachers of English on Saturday, anymore, I keep telling her to
October 16, at Penn State.
find somebody, plenty of men
The second of these programs
was a panel-audience discussion
session lasting ninety minutes,
and our Black students really
brought it to life. Their
frankness , their penetrating
insights, that maturity of their
ideas, the good-humored but
resolute way they held their
positions , an d their articulateness very profoundly
affected the course of the
discussion—and, I believe, of the
thinking—of the predominantly
white audience. It was clear from
the discussion that by the excellence of their presentations
our students had won the respect
of the panelists and of the thirty
or more other Engl ish teachers in
the audience. Results of this kind
can on ly be posi ti ve contr ibut ions
to better racial relations—and to
better education.
I wish, too , to extend t han k s to
Dr. and Mrs. Walter Simon, who
accompanied the students to the
conference and helped make
their attendance possible.
Louis F. Thompson, Chairman ,
Department of Engl ish
(J !5Uin£S ^Mj ?
VOL. L
THE MAROON AND GOLD NO. 12
Editor-in-Chief
Business Manager
Co-Managing Editors
Jim Sachettl
Carol Kishbaugh
.. . Karen Keinard
Sue Sprague
Frank Pliiol l
* Terry Blast
.
News Bdltor
Feature Bdltor
Sport s EdHor
Art Idltor
Phot o Edit or
Photographer
Co-Copy Editors
..
Circula tion Manager
Contributing Editor
Adv itor
....
•¦ .
Bob Oliver
John Stvgrin
Tom Schofield
¦ ¦ Kate Calpln
Linda Bnnls
Nancy Van Pelt
Elaine Pongrat*
.Allan Maurer
Kenneth Hoffman .
STAFF:
Kay Boy let , Georgia n* Chorinchak , Steve
Connolley,
Ellen
Doyle ,
Mark
Foucart , Joyce
Keefer , Marty Kleine r, Sally Kurron , D/in Marosh,
Jo* McGavIn, Mike Meli lnger, Cindy Mlchener, Jo*
Mlklos, Rose Montayne , Ji m Nallo , Sue R*lch*nbach,
Tom Rockov l c h , Donis * Ross , Craig Ruble , Margie
Simons , Beth Yeakel, John Woodward , Mlk* Yarmey,
Ron Sefbeyr , Maria Carey, Ron Perry , Ed Cear, Donn a
MacDermot t.
The MAG i s loc a te d i n Room 234 Wa ller ; If y ou can 't
come op, call Ext , 32} or Writ * Box 301 .
Letters to the editor are an express ion of Hi* Individua l writer 's opinio n and do not n*c*ssarlly refle ct the
view s of the newspaper. All letters
must be signed,
name will be withheld upon request , The M A G reserve
the right to abrid ge, I n cons ul t at ion wi t h t he writ er , all
letters over 400 words in length.
*
Pa...
I don't see reason for Blacky
trying to save him, Pa never
treated him nice at all. Like I
remember how Gramps and Pa
always used to argue about
Blacky and all the others like
him. Seems Gramps had some
weird idea that hundreds of years
ago our Blarcky could have been
much more intelligent than he
can ever be now. Like Gramps
even said Blacky could have
talked then, before some experiments he never specified
happened. All I know is how Pa
and Gramps used to argue. All I
know is that Pa died in a mine
explosion, and that Blacky was
right there with him trying to dig
him out. Blacky always was one
of the best beasts we had, in the
whole mine even. He could dig
and find deposits real quick like,
he could smell gas seepage when
he was just so big. But I never
could figure why he tried to save
Pa , old Blacky was there
listening to all the shouting and
yelling that Pa and Gramps used
to do. Used to think he understood
some of it, too. Made me wonder
about Gramps' saying Blacky
should be able to understand
speech. So Gramps was crazy.
\ But at least he taught me how
to read, how to write. Started
giving me some strange books,
too, like one called City where
these dogs can think and
everything and run things like
humans would. And some books
that Gramps used to call
sociology, I almost read one of
those before Pa caught Gramps
Editor :
I have seen discrimination
practiced on thi s campus too
long. That is why I now call to all
my Italian brothers and sisters to
(continue d on pi gi four)
would want her, she's still young
kinda, but she says no, she
doesn 't want any man but Pa. I
don't understand that. Shit, I'd
settle for any woman. And Ma's a
good woman. So good I had to
wing old man Tyson when he
tried to sneak in here the other
week. Should have handed him
over to the Company for that, but
he's old, and I know what it's like.
"Are you taking Blacky with
vnn? "
"I didn 't intend to, Ma."
"Will you? Please."
"Yeah Ma." She doesn't like
me leaving her alone with him
unless I put the leash on him. I
don't like putting the leash on
him, though. So I say, "Yeah , I'll
take him. He may help dig or
something."
So we leave, a boy and his pet. I
get grief about walking him
without a leash or some sort of
restraint, but he did try to save
Pa and I like him toomuch. I only
use restraints when I really have
4.—
The pitfire's over the hill from
our place. We run up the hill side
by side and I'm grinningand he's
smiling as best as he can, wordless and toothy but way back to
the gums. Yep, this is one of those
times I wish Gramps hadn 't been
old and enfeebled and that his
tale about Blacky being able to
understand was true.
We're over the rise now. And
shit if it ain't old man Tyson's
place burning itself down.
"Pitfire , Blacky , under his
place," I say, and think I see
Blacky shake somehow as if he
wonders if our house has a pit
under it, too. It's one of those
things that when you found out,
it's too late. The gas seeps up
sometime and there's an ignite
and a purple blast and then it's
pure red heat until it's all over.
And it's always all over. Ain't
seen a place saved from a pitfire
yet.
But maybe they're trying to dig
people out .
The house is practically all
gone. Tyson and his brood must
have all fallen in the pit beneath,
but who knows, strange things
happen .
All us miners are out there, I'm
late. Too murh dreaming about
(continued on pace four )
R unn ers
sweep
tri-meet
Rams butt Huskies
The Rams of West Chester
State clobbered our Huskies last
Saturday at Athletic Park by a
whopping score of 56-7. The ioss
dropped the Huskies record to 3-2
for the year while the Rams are
now 5-0.
after we got the ball, Dave Fisher
intercepted a Geiger pass to
swing the momentum back to the
Rams.
The Rams' Merritt Kersey,
who incidentally had a superb
day rushing (118 yards in eight
carries ) , scored the next Ram TD
Ear]ier this week, Husky head from
eiglit yards out. Things
coach Bill Sproule said of .West went from bad to worse for the
Chester: "They are big, fast, Huskies from here on.
strong and extremely well
coached...playingagainst them is
The only bright spot for our
like playing Notre Dame, but we
guys
was a Bob Beiter aerial to
feel we have a chance".
Jeff White. The Huskies total
passing record was only 12 for 45,
His statement was extremely for a percentage of 27 per cent.
optimistic, for after only the first
quarter the game seemed out of
The conferences leading
reach. The Rams scored on their ground gainer, our own Bob
opening drive, when halfback Warner was held to only 32 yards
Alray Johnson went 2 yards for on 16 carries.
the score. He scored again a few
minutes later from three yards
The Rams came to win big, and
out . Both TD's were followed by that they did . They displayed a
Stevenson PAT's.
fine offense, led by quarterbacks
Ernie Forchetti and Tom
It looked as though the Huskies Pierantozzi,
a fine defense, and
began to j ell in the middle of the were, as coach
Sproule said,
quarter as Joe Geiger hit Johnny
strong".
"big,
fast
and
Jamesfor 45 yards up the middle.
Geiger then hit Joe Courier for 6 Next week our Huskies face
yards, but the WC defense held, Millersville away, then come
and they took over the ball on the home to meet Cheyney State the
Husky 26 yard line. We held them following week.
and forced them to punt, but right
rbo
—"'
****»~~————¦—
BSC's cross-country team
continued its winning ways last'
Thursday by posting a tri-meet
sweep over King's College, 16-47,
and East Stroudsburg State, 1936, on the Huskies course. The
Huskies were sparked by Terry
Lee and Tim Waecher, as both
ran stride for stride throughout
the meet. They finished in a tie
for first place with a clocking of
27:57.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^'^^^^^^^^^^^^^'^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^"^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^Wi^^^^^^^M^H^^^^^B^^^^^^^^^Mi^WMmiUMl^^^MIMIWIWB^MWIM^^BlBBH^^^^^B^^^^^^^^^^^flH^^^^^HiB
John Bucchioni
tackles a Ram
In tra mura l
Basketba ll
The double victories were
victories number three and four
of the year for the Huskies, who'
opened their 1971 season by
dropping a tri-meet, then winning
a double meet the next week.
announced. The team was chosen
by the vote of the players, and the
members are :
Willis-Woodstreet
1. John
2. George
Hamilton—
Woodstreet
3. Gary Choyka—SIO
4. Eric Houch—Woodsfcreftf
5. Charlie Hopkins—Question
Marks
6: Bob Walsh-SIO
7. Dave Suda—FCA.
McGinnis—Cougars
8. Bob
9. Ron Neely—FCA
10. Link Wells—North
11. Tony DaRe—Bandits __
13. Tim Bauman—Phi Sigma
Epsilon
14. Keith Lawson—Black Outs
COACH : Will Wyckof f—
Cougars
RBO
Men 's intramural basketball
(fall edition) ended last week
when SIO defeated Woodstreet,
36-34, in a bitterly fought game.
Woodstreet's big John Willis led
all scorers with 17 points and 16
rebounds, but this was not enough
to overcome SIO's all-around
hussle and luck. That's right,
luck....for both teams were very
capable of winning the title.
The same exhibited a tenacious
defense by both sides, as sh own
by the closeness of the
and
that
final
score ,
neither team could build
a lead of more than 3 points. For
that matter, no one could be sure
of the outcome until the final
whistle blew.
In other basketball intramural
news, the fall All-Star team was1
The Huskies' Paul Pelletier
and Larry Horwitz took fourth
and fifth spots, respectfully, only
16 seconds apart.
Mike Hippie iced the Maroon
and Gold sweep with a 29:10
finish for eighth place. Pete
Koury finished fourteenth while
teammate Bob Quairoll followed
nine seconds later. The Huskies
Rod Dewing and Rich VanHorn
ended twenty-first and twenty
sixth, respectively.
By the time this issue reaches
the public, the Huskies' home
season will be finished, but the
team will travel to Millersville
later this week. Later this month
will be the NAIA, Bucknell, and
the State Meets. We wish them
the best of luck.
RBO
Plans announced for
Black collo quim
"Plans for a colloquim on 'The
Black Experience,' are in initial
stages," Dr. Walter A. Simon,
Director of Educational Opportunity Program at BSC announced. The Black Student
Society is sponsoring the
proposed colloquim.
"The organizers hope that
several nationally known Black
spokesmen will be invited to visit
the BSC campus to inaugurate a
series of visiting lectures," Dr.
Simon said.
"mmmmm*^^^^ ^^ ^^^^ —mmmmam m^mamKnBm Several acad emi c d epartments
at BSC have indicated interest in
Rich Pterson go*t »tor Ioom ball
participating
in
indepth
discussion in classes following
fAWEWttN
lUMl
I
u6HTH e
each speaker. This program is
designed to insure meaningful
follow-up to the central ideas.that
will be contributed by each of the
speakers.
Among those persons who will
be sought as participan ts will be:
Dr. Kenneth Clark, Chairman of
the Department of Sociology at
the College of the City of New
York ; Bishop Stephen Gill
Spottswood, Chairman of the
Board , NAACP; Mr. Sammy
Davis, Jr., film star ; Mr. Dick
Gregory , black humorist; and
others. Further details and plans
fora the series will be announced
as they unfold.
Expedition
Pl ann ed
John Sabol, an Anthropology
major at BSC, has spent the last
three summers gaining experience for
his
future
profession. He has visited such
places as an Indian village where
.children drove him away with
rocks, a European cathedral ,
castle and palace, and Mexican
excavations dating from 800 B.C.
^|up to the Spanish conquest.
Sabol is president of M.A.N.
(the Archeology club) and has
helped to organize a tentative
tour of Mexico next summer. The
proposed itinerary will cover
twenty-five days in Mexico. It is
hoped that not only antropology
students, but students from other
academic fields will join in the
tour.
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Since you didn 't answer our
last plea, we 'll tr y again.
Where are you, lovely girl
sports wri ter? W e really do
need you, honest !
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To gather more interest for the
tri p a film will be shown by
M.A.N. on Thursday, October
21st in Room 116, Hartline. It will
highlight the places and events
that the tri p will cover . Anyone is
iwelcome.
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John's Food
Market
W. Main & Leona rd St.
| Open 8 a.m. to 12 midnight Daily
r
•
Delicate uen
(;
Full lin e of groce ries
A
anackt
Fif th Column
wou < be old Tyson...bastard maybe he was. Nobody has a
right to buy and hide a bitch like
dese ves to burn.
Bu I stand and do no better job that one..." And he walks away
than Tyson's urinating neighbor. without me hardly knowing.
(continue d from pag* two )
So I stand here as everyone
we all stand here, looking.
green banging Zangor thighs.But Fact
rushes
to meet the second onjust never seen a Blacky
I'm grateful for the fire because We've
slaught
of flame and gas. I stand
female before, and she's quite a
now that I'm awake I don't have bitch
here
thinking
of Blacky and the
, sleek, streamlined...I can
to use 5-Finger Mary or...
years
together
and how lonely I'll
see why the likes of her are kept
"Look out for that beam'."
sleep
and
how
now I'll have to
from Blacky...no work would
Up ahead a beam falls, a ever get done in the mines.
buy me another Blacky so's I can
volunteer fireman runs out of the
work safe and keep Ma going...
And then the shouts. "Stop that
way, barely makes it to safety .
...and someone, that same guy,
The beam hits the center of the damn cur!" "Grab him!" But -walks over to me with something
blaze inside down deep into the there's a big black shape leaping slung over his shoulder...it' s
pit and there's showers of spark over firemen and watered-down charred, it's twisted, it smells,
'heat and then a black nausea beams and ashes darting toward but it's Blacky...and the guy
smell pocket from the pit itself. the bitch. And that shape is my stands there waiting for me to
Poor old horny Tyson, even he pet!
say something appropriate, the
BiacKy.
didn't deserve this.
right thing, as I look at the corpBut he's in there with her as she se.
Me and Blacky are up to the
house. See Tyson's neighbors emerges from the pit. They circle
...I look at the corpse and think
frantically operating the too-olc each other as we watch in per- of buying a new Blacky and how
Company hoses hoping the flame verted fascination .*And very soon now all my money, which I've
won't reach their homes, too. See Blacky and the bitch are doing saved for seven long hard lonely
the black skeleton that once just exactly what you'd expect times when the Hyperspace
sheltered Tyson. Me and Blacky two such animals to be doing. House came down and I missed
And we watch.
stand and stare for a while.
it, how all that money will go
And then I see the purple light toward another Blacky instead of
"Grab a goddamned hose,
kid!" somebody yells. I jump. If starting again.
my beautiful green-breasted
"It's gonna blow again."
we put it out, if that beam didn't
foliage-haired Zangorian woman,
"Blacky," I yell, "get out of who has ways of loving which
hit somebody in the pit, if they
ain't dead from the smoke and there."
tempt all men who even know
"Yeah, kid," says the hose- how dangerous her very body is,
smell and fire, then Blacky and
his friends can start digging.. urinater, "as if he understands, that very body attracting them,
Small chance, but what the
and me, to her...
"My Gramps said..." and I
hell...I gra b the hose.
...and suddenly the words are
For a second I wish I had taken stop.
easy to say as I look down at
The purple light gets purpler. It Blaeky's corpse and spit before I
my marijay ration before I came
out because boy would this fire hurts to look. I only think how walk back to Ma...
look neat but that's an ugly lonely the mine, my bed, would
"Damn nigger."
thought, all this destruction being be without Blacky, and I start to
run forward before some idiot
beautiful. But it is kinda.
How long I duck around with pulls me back with a jerk just as
that hose I don't know. I lose the explosion comes forth with all
track of things pretty much. Too the furies of hell...
I am crying.
much smoke and shit. All the
There is a strong hand on my
voices that I been ignoring
suddenly fade and my ears pick shoulder. "Go home to your ma,
up one voice, one of Tyson's boy. There's more ya can do for
Fifty-five people were in atneighbors I forget his name. I her than ya can do here. "
tendance
I shudder. "Blacky's dead." of the at the second meeting
look toward the vibes and see him
"He sure is. Blown back to Thursday"I Quit Clinic" last
standing there holding the hose
night. Forty people
he has like he's urinating or Earth and then some. Right interested in
withdrawing from
something, just standing there where the likes of him came smoking, seven
group leaders,
gaping at something. I look from."
and
eigh
t
health
agency
"But he's dead."
around.
representatives
heard
Dr.
"You don't hear well kid.
I don 't believe it! I just don't.
Michael
Gaynor
of
the
BSC
They've just found one sur- Course he's dead. But you can Psychology Department
speak on
vivor. It isn't human . It's like always get a new one, ya know."
I look up at the guy who has a "Smoking A Psychological
Blacky. Except for one thing. It's
".
a female, and female Blackys hose for a penis and say, "It Process
In
his
talk Dr. Gaynor
just ain 't allowed on this here won't be the same. It won't."
discussed
the
behavior
planet. Unless somebody decides
"Sure it will. I know. Lost me motivation , and stimuli related to,
he wan ts to breed them for animal just the other week."
the smoking habit and its
himself. And that somebody
"Not like this. Blacky died practice. Dr. Gaynor stated that
with , with a female of his own." "Any ha bit can be changed ."
The man doesn't speak for a
Following the talk , seven group
long time. Then he says with an leaders
who have already
ugly smile, "Yeah , he died "kicked the
ha bit" conducted
happier than any of us. Too bad group sessions.
It was learned
(continued from paye one;
old man Tyson won't be brought that seven participants
to justice for that. But then again , clinic have graduated to in the
Renaissance , " "The Cubist
"nonEpoch," "Cre te and Mycena e, " —^—-——
^
^
^¦¦
¦¦¦ ^¦
¦ ¦¦^¦^
^^
"The Impressionists , " "Kinetic
Art in Paris , " "le Corbusier ,"
"Germany-Dada , " "The Art
Conservator ," and "The Greek
Temple."
The Art Department will offer
the five two-hour programs in
sequence in Carver Hall , with
FLOWER S
admission for facul ty $2.00 and
\ ^^
for students $1.00. Series ticket
prices are $4.00, facul ty and $3.00,
students . Additional information
W ^W p*liv*ry Worldw id e
may be obtained from the Art
Department office.
Down The Hill On East St.
I (j Ult
Clinic
Picasso
Say It With Flowers From
i0
^$$XM*v
Bucknell Concert Committee
Kampus Nook
pr esents
, Across from the Union
Hot Plattars Ev*ry Day
|
Plain and
Ham HoigUi,
Chats * • Ptpparoni • Onion
Pfzia. Our own Mad* le*
. Craafn.
Talc* Out Ord»r$ :
Hours : Man. • Thurs.
iliM
ttO Q.
PrMay
titM tiM
twwto y
ilitHM *
Satur day
4itt-11iM ,
CAT STEVENS
pl us
MINI FARINA & TOM JANS
Wednesday , October 27
8:45 p.m.
Davis Gym
Tickets $5.50
tickets availa ble :
Buckn ell Bookstore
University Center , Lewisburg , Pa.
or at the door
(cont inued from pag* two )
unite. Unite now before other
minority groups grab control of
this college, unite before the
discrimination spreads any
further, unite to get an equal
share of CGA funds.
Please don 't think that this is
an idle chatter for there are
many goals towards which
Italian students should work.
1) A recognized Italian
Student Society which will work
towards becoming a chapter of
the Italian-American Civil
Liberty League.
2) An Italian weekend with all
the food and drink of the Italian
tradition.
3) Italian speakers and entertainers (Note: one speaker I
have in mind is Joe Colombo Jr!')>
4) Banning of all references to
an Italian run underworld by any
campus publications.
5) Banning of the books "The
Godfather" and "The Gang That
Couldn't Shoot Straight" from the
College Book Store.
'6) An increase in qualified
professors of Italian descent.
7) An increase in the
recruiting of Italian-Americans
for enrollment into Bloomsburg.
8) A $110 allotment per Italian
Student from the C.G.A. budget.
9) Naming of the new Gym
"Giuseppe Garibaldi Memorial
Gymnasium."
10) We Italian Students do not
want special grade privileges as
we are an equal race and able to
compete with other students.
Any Italian Students that are
interested please contact me.
George Lapore
Box No. 665
KIsm S j pJifcY vl j w £/Tj
All confirmations or denials of
requeststo schedule a course on a
pass-fail basis for the current
semester have been forwarded to
the student's campus mailbox.
Please contact the Office of the
Registrar immediately ii you
should have any questions
regarding this matter.
p.m. until 5:00 p.m. October 27 to
complete applications.
All qualified students of
Geography and Earth Science
are invited to pledge Gamma
Theta Upsilon, the International
Honorary Geography Society .
Any Student who has had two
courses in Geography or Earth
Science and has a 2.5 cum in
Geography and a 2.5 overall cum
is eligible and welcome to attend
the pledge meeting Thursday,
Oct. 21, at 7:30 p.m. in room 235
Hartline.
Today, October 20, 1971, from
3:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. all
Elementary education majors
will meet in Carver Auditorium
to complete applications for student teaching.
Secondary education students
who intend to student teach in the
1972-73 school year will meet in
Freshman class officers and
Carver Auditorium from 3:30 advisors met last week to discuss
future
activities. Elected
smoker" status.
recently , the officers are : Steve
The next meeting of the "I Quit
president; Steve WrClinic" will be Thursday October Wagner,
vice-president; Sue
zesniewski,
21, 7:30 p.m. in room 79 of HarWerner, treasurer ; and Peggy
tline Science Center.
secretary. Anyone with
All those intersted are invited Beaver,
ideas for the class can contact the
to attend .
secretary at Box 2008 Luzeme.
^¦
¦¦ B
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B
B ^M
¦
UB TEWHERS WrajDU^
IN P ENNSY LV ANIA'.
[
II
I
I
¦
LESS
FOR
BORROW
¦
SERVICE
TEACHERS
at o ne of the
^m
¦
RATES
LOAM
LOWEST
I
ANYWHERE
BLE
AILA
AV
^M
wss\
to
a^H
of Servi ce
Year
out
a^ H
and Educators
^ HTeache rs
ffi$&L
¦klND
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All Bus in ess Tran sacte d
all
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" 'MJII«(»ll««<»ILI»
Picasso flick
opens series
*
4
" Picasso: War Peace and
In the first film of the series
Love, " a 55-minute color motion viewers will see the vital Picasso
p icture portraying artist Pablo at work in his studios at Mougins
Picasso and his works , will open and Cannes. The artist himself
the criticall y acclaimed film
concert series "Muse um Without
Walls ," Monday, Oct. 25 in
Carver Hall. Shdwings will be at
3:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m.
Sp onsored by the BSC
Department of Arts , the series
comprises eleven films to be
displa ys some paintings from a
grou p of 500 not yet*shown to the
public. French film dire ctor
Lucien Clergue photogra ph ed
and helmed " Picasso: War
Peace and Love , " visiting
twent y-two museums , seven
galleries , and eleven private
offered
in five separate collections to give viewers a
p rograms , Universal Studios ' deeper perspective on the ar tist 's
Education and Visual Arts work than ever offered before ,
Department produced the films covering Picasso 's fabulous
over the past four years under the output from Guernica to the
supervision of internationally- nr pspnt
known art historian Douglas
" Goya , " a 55-minute motion
Cooper .
picture featuring the Spanish
Sparked by a growing national artis t 's major works in Madrid 's
interest in the arts , the series ha s Prado Museum , will be screened
created a un ique art museum on with the Picass o film. Highlights
film . While transportation and of Goy a's work include portraits
insurance costs often make it of royalty and friends , etchings ,
difficult for the conventional the bullfight sequences , the
museum to display a large frescoes at the cathedral at
number of great works , the Salagossa and the Church of St.
medium of film creates a Anthony, and the "bla ck painmuseum without such limitations tings " from the walls of his own
— a museum without walls.
The Metro politan Museum of
Art in New York and the Los
Angeles County Museum joined
w i th p rivate collectors and
house . The film explores not only
Goy a the portr ait artist and
aficionado of the bullfight , but
Goy a the revolution ar y satirist of
man 's rage and insanity .
Other films in the seri es are
"Gi otto
and
the
Pre-
museums both here and abroad
to give Universal
production
teams access to their great works
(continuod
of art.
on page four)
In the October 15, 1971, issue
of the M&G there appeared an
"Op en Letter to College
Community " . The author ,
whose
name
was
unin -
tentionally omitted , is Mike
«
Siptroth , CGA president.
On the feature page of the
same issue there appeared a
letter signed "A Disgusted
Senior " . The name was
withheld on request.
Walk for
Hun gry
Students who are concerned
about the millions of starving
people in the world will have an
opportunity to help by participating in the Crop " Walks for
the Hungry, " Sunday , Novembe
7, at 12:15 in Town Park.
The "Wa lks for the Hungry " ,
which are being organized in
man y towns across the country
th is y ear , are designed to raise
money for the needy people of the
world . Each walker procures a
sponsor who pledges to donate a
specific amount of money for
each mile his particular walker
completes . The participants will
follow a 10-mile prescribed route
starting at Town Park . Upon
completion of the walk , each
walke r revisits his sponsor for
the collection of the money
pledged.
A meeting of all those interested in partici pating in this
walk will be held in Kuster
Auditorium , Wednesday, October
20 at 7:30 p.m.
San Juan Hill is ready for the
charge and the Panama Canal is
just waiting to be dug . The
Panama
nights beginning Thursday, Oct.
21.
Teddy Brewste r , alias Teddy
Roosevelt (how could we have a
San Juan Hill charge without
him) will be played by Dan
Boone. His madcap aunts ,
Brewster is a fairly normal
newspaper drama critic who
doesn ' t like his work . Dan
Demczko will play the poor boy
who has had a tough time keeping
his sanity . Then of course there 's
Dr . Einstein-Heman not Albertwho changes people ' s faces
whenever they need to hide out
Canal
(actually
Senate to meet
today in Kuster
"A Time for Assessment and
Plan ning " will be the main thrust
of Dr . Nossen's remarks to the
College Senate which will meet in
its eighth session today in Kuster
'Auditorium at 3:30 p.m.
Dr . Nossenmet on Sept. 27 with
various members of the college
community regarding the formation of a steering committe e to
deal with the top ic of " planning
and assessing " .
The Academic Affairs Committee is working on a new ad-
visemen t program to replace the
present system . Along with a
Other committee reports on the
agenda for this afternoon are the
committee on Student
Affairs ,
chaired by Mr . John Walker ;
Faculty Affa irs Committee ,
chaired by Dr . Robert Warren f
Cam pus Affairs and External
Relations , chaired by Mr. ;
Richard Stanislaw . The Com-
mittees on Facilities and
Finance , Office and Equipment
Security , and the committee to
Review Academic Calendar will
also re port .
STUDENT AMENDMENT
The Senate will move into in-
progress report on this new formal debate for discussing the
system by Dr. Hobart Heller , the amendment
student
on
committee will comment on its representation in the senate. The
general pr ogress and on a amendment will provide for
"P olicy for Curriculum Chan ge. " twenty-three
(23) student
from the
all
elected
,
senators
The BSC facult y along with the
large.
The
student
body
at
other state institutions of higher
the
spring
elections
will
be
held
in
learning elected APSCUF to be
their representative bargaining of the year . All student senators
agent. Dr. Robert Miller , would serve for one year terms. A
President of the BSC chapter of similar amendment proposed
APSCUF , will address the senate last year died for lack of sufon matters pertinent to collective ficient votes.
bargaining .
In an open letter to the college
community
, Mike Siptroth , CGA
The BSC faculty representative
endorsed
the amendPresident
,
to the board of trustees , Mr.
which
would
increase
the
,
ment
George Turner , will report to the
senators
total
number
of
student
senate today concerning actions
to 23.
taken by the body.
-'
the
celler of the Brewster 's old
Victorian house). These wack y
Bloomsbur g Players invite you to women will be played by Becky
attend these historic events as Ermisch ami Ann Brisk.
they p resent the m on the stage of
Of course there is a touch of
Haas Center , for three successive sanity in the family . Mortimer
Martha and Abby let him indulge
in the fan ta sy to suit their own
purpose . He ' s buried twelve
Tho fri ght tnln gly funny Brow- " yellow fever victims " in the
ser fa mily and tholr
scientis t (at Itft ) frland.
mad -
( Photos by Sehof ltld)
for a while . Sometimes he lacks
inspiration and uses faces tha t
look very familiar to everyone.
His latest victi m is Jonathan
Brewster whom he makes look
like Boris Karloff. These two
fugitives from the police will be
played by Lin Naylor and Bob
Harris.
Many other characte rs will be
seen on the beautiful set designed
by Tom Wheeler , the new
technical
director
for
the
Players , and the actors will be
illumina ted by the lights
Siblin g rivalry In tht Brtwttar household . Tha law (at Itft) It
about to butt In,
designed by Kathy Sim pson.
Making 1971 college students look
like older people in the 1940's is
I not an ea sy job , but Phil Davis ,
hea d of the makeup crew is doing
a splendid job.
Don ' t miss ARSENIC AND
OLD LACE. Tickets can be ob| tained by calling 717-784-4660 Ext.
317, or by wri ting Box 78,
Bloomsburg State College ,
Bloomsbur g, Pa , 17815.
Jonathan and idontli t deposit roeontl y dopart od frlond
(at cantor) In window seat ,
or T? o t 9 7t
Fif th Colu mn
THINK A' WHERE THE BLACK
DOG'S BEEN
Nicholson and Garfunk el
Carna l Knowledge
The four-letter word in films middle age. Miss Bergen does not
has come a long way since appear after the earlier portions
("Who 's Afraid of Virginia of the film, an oversight which is
Woolf?" (1966) , and Jules Feiffer remedied by Ann Margaret's
takes advantage of that fact in his entrance.
Giuseppe Rotunno used
original screen play for "Carnal
Knowledge". Producer-director Panavision and Technicolor to
Mike Nichols used new highlight New York City and
techniques
with
"Carnal Vancouver locations (the latter
Knowledge," with results which filled in most convincingly for
will make him as talked about as Manhattan). In a time of conever. A top cast, headed by Jack troversial films, the Joseph E.
Nicholson, Candice Bergen, Ann Levine presentation will be
Margaret, Arthur Garfunkel and among the most widely
Rita Moreno, responds well to criticized, maybe for its attitude
Nichols ' able direction. Ann toward women, maybe for its
Margaret, who has several highly attitude toward human beings.
exploitable nude scenes, really And there's only one way to tell a
shines in a part that calls for human being's reaction to these
dramatic ability as well as attitudes expressed toward
physical attributes. (Hello , women ai.d other beings: see it.
Women 's Lib). The singer- Start tonight at the Capitol.
dancer-actress proves she is
highly developed in both
qualities. (There is a conspicuous, rumor that this press
release was written by Norman
Mailer ) . Anyway , the story
focuses on the sex lives of
Nicholson and Garfunkel, their
college involvement with Miss Dear Editor :
Bergen, and Nicholson 's conwish to extend thanks to the
tinued search for fulfillment, a representatives
the Black
search he is still continuing in Student Society ofof the
College
by Blass
(a story — dedicated to Mr.
Richard Wilson, one of the few
people worthy of the forgotten
title Teacher, one becausehe was
there when I needed him and two
because he knows things might
come to — this — )
Maybe it's because Blacky is
sleeping on my crotch, but when
the purple explosion reaches
under my closed eyelids and
grabs my brains I am dreaming
of laying one of those green
Zangorian women that Zebulon
Brandoch keeps telling me about,
I hear him spitting and saying
"Don't make no dif what color
they are, thosewomen on Zangor,
because ain't no Earth-spawned
man living or dead who can resist
them even if he HAS heard the
stories about what they do to
their men afterward " even as I
take her with utter disregard for
the awful scar that old Zeb
showed me once (on a right
delicate part of the old bugger,
too) I am brought awake by that
flash.
I start, push Blacky away. He
crawls into the corner, nudges his
food dish. I pay no attention and
think of women, and when the
hell the Company will land down
again with one of their Hyperspace Houses. I've been saving
up for a long time, want a crack
at one of those greenskins
because already I've saved up
and figtu ed out just how I'm
going to avoid her particular
knife. Blacky knows his master is nnri hpat mp
So I lay here wondering these
angry, and he knows something is
wrong outside. He's seen pitfires thingswhile the red flicks race up
before , like when he tried to save my walls and make crazy
shadows which scare old Blacky
something awful. 1 wish I had a
woman , I wouldn't bother to get
up, I'd lay us down and stay here
and let whoever it is out there
burn, but I don 't have a woman
and Blacky ain't as much company as he used to be, so I get up.
I hear Ma saying something
who attende d the Black about what is it and I say "Pit fire
Literature and the Black Student again. " I hear her sigh and
programs of the college section of slowly roll over. I know she's
the annu al conference of the thinking about Pa , wishing she
Pennsylvania
Council
of had a man . But she doesn't
Teachers of English on Saturday, anymore, I keep telling her to
October 16, at Penn State.
find somebody, plenty of men
The second of these programs
was a panel-audience discussion
session lasting ninety minutes,
and our Black students really
brought it to life. Their
frankness , their penetrating
insights, that maturity of their
ideas, the good-humored but
resolute way they held their
positions , an d their articulateness very profoundly
affected the course of the
discussion—and, I believe, of the
thinking—of the predominantly
white audience. It was clear from
the discussion that by the excellence of their presentations
our students had won the respect
of the panelists and of the thirty
or more other Engl ish teachers in
the audience. Results of this kind
can on ly be posi ti ve contr ibut ions
to better racial relations—and to
better education.
I wish, too , to extend t han k s to
Dr. and Mrs. Walter Simon, who
accompanied the students to the
conference and helped make
their attendance possible.
Louis F. Thompson, Chairman ,
Department of Engl ish
(J !5Uin£S ^Mj ?
VOL. L
THE MAROON AND GOLD NO. 12
Editor-in-Chief
Business Manager
Co-Managing Editors
Jim Sachettl
Carol Kishbaugh
.. . Karen Keinard
Sue Sprague
Frank Pliiol l
* Terry Blast
.
News Bdltor
Feature Bdltor
Sport s EdHor
Art Idltor
Phot o Edit or
Photographer
Co-Copy Editors
..
Circula tion Manager
Contributing Editor
Adv itor
....
•¦ .
Bob Oliver
John Stvgrin
Tom Schofield
¦ ¦ Kate Calpln
Linda Bnnls
Nancy Van Pelt
Elaine Pongrat*
.Allan Maurer
Kenneth Hoffman .
STAFF:
Kay Boy let , Georgia n* Chorinchak , Steve
Connolley,
Ellen
Doyle ,
Mark
Foucart , Joyce
Keefer , Marty Kleine r, Sally Kurron , D/in Marosh,
Jo* McGavIn, Mike Meli lnger, Cindy Mlchener, Jo*
Mlklos, Rose Montayne , Ji m Nallo , Sue R*lch*nbach,
Tom Rockov l c h , Donis * Ross , Craig Ruble , Margie
Simons , Beth Yeakel, John Woodward , Mlk* Yarmey,
Ron Sefbeyr , Maria Carey, Ron Perry , Ed Cear, Donn a
MacDermot t.
The MAG i s loc a te d i n Room 234 Wa ller ; If y ou can 't
come op, call Ext , 32} or Writ * Box 301 .
Letters to the editor are an express ion of Hi* Individua l writer 's opinio n and do not n*c*ssarlly refle ct the
view s of the newspaper. All letters
must be signed,
name will be withheld upon request , The M A G reserve
the right to abrid ge, I n cons ul t at ion wi t h t he writ er , all
letters over 400 words in length.
*
Pa...
I don't see reason for Blacky
trying to save him, Pa never
treated him nice at all. Like I
remember how Gramps and Pa
always used to argue about
Blacky and all the others like
him. Seems Gramps had some
weird idea that hundreds of years
ago our Blarcky could have been
much more intelligent than he
can ever be now. Like Gramps
even said Blacky could have
talked then, before some experiments he never specified
happened. All I know is how Pa
and Gramps used to argue. All I
know is that Pa died in a mine
explosion, and that Blacky was
right there with him trying to dig
him out. Blacky always was one
of the best beasts we had, in the
whole mine even. He could dig
and find deposits real quick like,
he could smell gas seepage when
he was just so big. But I never
could figure why he tried to save
Pa , old Blacky was there
listening to all the shouting and
yelling that Pa and Gramps used
to do. Used to think he understood
some of it, too. Made me wonder
about Gramps' saying Blacky
should be able to understand
speech. So Gramps was crazy.
\ But at least he taught me how
to read, how to write. Started
giving me some strange books,
too, like one called City where
these dogs can think and
everything and run things like
humans would. And some books
that Gramps used to call
sociology, I almost read one of
those before Pa caught Gramps
Editor :
I have seen discrimination
practiced on thi s campus too
long. That is why I now call to all
my Italian brothers and sisters to
(continue d on pi gi four)
would want her, she's still young
kinda, but she says no, she
doesn 't want any man but Pa. I
don't understand that. Shit, I'd
settle for any woman. And Ma's a
good woman. So good I had to
wing old man Tyson when he
tried to sneak in here the other
week. Should have handed him
over to the Company for that, but
he's old, and I know what it's like.
"Are you taking Blacky with
vnn? "
"I didn 't intend to, Ma."
"Will you? Please."
"Yeah Ma." She doesn't like
me leaving her alone with him
unless I put the leash on him. I
don't like putting the leash on
him, though. So I say, "Yeah , I'll
take him. He may help dig or
something."
So we leave, a boy and his pet. I
get grief about walking him
without a leash or some sort of
restraint, but he did try to save
Pa and I like him toomuch. I only
use restraints when I really have
4.—
The pitfire's over the hill from
our place. We run up the hill side
by side and I'm grinningand he's
smiling as best as he can, wordless and toothy but way back to
the gums. Yep, this is one of those
times I wish Gramps hadn 't been
old and enfeebled and that his
tale about Blacky being able to
understand was true.
We're over the rise now. And
shit if it ain't old man Tyson's
place burning itself down.
"Pitfire , Blacky , under his
place," I say, and think I see
Blacky shake somehow as if he
wonders if our house has a pit
under it, too. It's one of those
things that when you found out,
it's too late. The gas seeps up
sometime and there's an ignite
and a purple blast and then it's
pure red heat until it's all over.
And it's always all over. Ain't
seen a place saved from a pitfire
yet.
But maybe they're trying to dig
people out .
The house is practically all
gone. Tyson and his brood must
have all fallen in the pit beneath,
but who knows, strange things
happen .
All us miners are out there, I'm
late. Too murh dreaming about
(continued on pace four )
R unn ers
sweep
tri-meet
Rams butt Huskies
The Rams of West Chester
State clobbered our Huskies last
Saturday at Athletic Park by a
whopping score of 56-7. The ioss
dropped the Huskies record to 3-2
for the year while the Rams are
now 5-0.
after we got the ball, Dave Fisher
intercepted a Geiger pass to
swing the momentum back to the
Rams.
The Rams' Merritt Kersey,
who incidentally had a superb
day rushing (118 yards in eight
carries ) , scored the next Ram TD
Ear]ier this week, Husky head from
eiglit yards out. Things
coach Bill Sproule said of .West went from bad to worse for the
Chester: "They are big, fast, Huskies from here on.
strong and extremely well
coached...playingagainst them is
The only bright spot for our
like playing Notre Dame, but we
guys
was a Bob Beiter aerial to
feel we have a chance".
Jeff White. The Huskies total
passing record was only 12 for 45,
His statement was extremely for a percentage of 27 per cent.
optimistic, for after only the first
quarter the game seemed out of
The conferences leading
reach. The Rams scored on their ground gainer, our own Bob
opening drive, when halfback Warner was held to only 32 yards
Alray Johnson went 2 yards for on 16 carries.
the score. He scored again a few
minutes later from three yards
The Rams came to win big, and
out . Both TD's were followed by that they did . They displayed a
Stevenson PAT's.
fine offense, led by quarterbacks
Ernie Forchetti and Tom
It looked as though the Huskies Pierantozzi,
a fine defense, and
began to j ell in the middle of the were, as coach
Sproule said,
quarter as Joe Geiger hit Johnny
strong".
"big,
fast
and
Jamesfor 45 yards up the middle.
Geiger then hit Joe Courier for 6 Next week our Huskies face
yards, but the WC defense held, Millersville away, then come
and they took over the ball on the home to meet Cheyney State the
Husky 26 yard line. We held them following week.
and forced them to punt, but right
rbo
—"'
****»~~————¦—
BSC's cross-country team
continued its winning ways last'
Thursday by posting a tri-meet
sweep over King's College, 16-47,
and East Stroudsburg State, 1936, on the Huskies course. The
Huskies were sparked by Terry
Lee and Tim Waecher, as both
ran stride for stride throughout
the meet. They finished in a tie
for first place with a clocking of
27:57.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^'^^^^^^^^^^^^^'^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^"^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^Wi^^^^^^^M^H^^^^^B^^^^^^^^^Mi^WMmiUMl^^^MIMIWIWB^MWIM^^BlBBH^^^^^B^^^^^^^^^^^flH^^^^^HiB
John Bucchioni
tackles a Ram
In tra mura l
Basketba ll
The double victories were
victories number three and four
of the year for the Huskies, who'
opened their 1971 season by
dropping a tri-meet, then winning
a double meet the next week.
announced. The team was chosen
by the vote of the players, and the
members are :
Willis-Woodstreet
1. John
2. George
Hamilton—
Woodstreet
3. Gary Choyka—SIO
4. Eric Houch—Woodsfcreftf
5. Charlie Hopkins—Question
Marks
6: Bob Walsh-SIO
7. Dave Suda—FCA.
McGinnis—Cougars
8. Bob
9. Ron Neely—FCA
10. Link Wells—North
11. Tony DaRe—Bandits __
13. Tim Bauman—Phi Sigma
Epsilon
14. Keith Lawson—Black Outs
COACH : Will Wyckof f—
Cougars
RBO
Men 's intramural basketball
(fall edition) ended last week
when SIO defeated Woodstreet,
36-34, in a bitterly fought game.
Woodstreet's big John Willis led
all scorers with 17 points and 16
rebounds, but this was not enough
to overcome SIO's all-around
hussle and luck. That's right,
luck....for both teams were very
capable of winning the title.
The same exhibited a tenacious
defense by both sides, as sh own
by the closeness of the
and
that
final
score ,
neither team could build
a lead of more than 3 points. For
that matter, no one could be sure
of the outcome until the final
whistle blew.
In other basketball intramural
news, the fall All-Star team was1
The Huskies' Paul Pelletier
and Larry Horwitz took fourth
and fifth spots, respectfully, only
16 seconds apart.
Mike Hippie iced the Maroon
and Gold sweep with a 29:10
finish for eighth place. Pete
Koury finished fourteenth while
teammate Bob Quairoll followed
nine seconds later. The Huskies
Rod Dewing and Rich VanHorn
ended twenty-first and twenty
sixth, respectively.
By the time this issue reaches
the public, the Huskies' home
season will be finished, but the
team will travel to Millersville
later this week. Later this month
will be the NAIA, Bucknell, and
the State Meets. We wish them
the best of luck.
RBO
Plans announced for
Black collo quim
"Plans for a colloquim on 'The
Black Experience,' are in initial
stages," Dr. Walter A. Simon,
Director of Educational Opportunity Program at BSC announced. The Black Student
Society is sponsoring the
proposed colloquim.
"The organizers hope that
several nationally known Black
spokesmen will be invited to visit
the BSC campus to inaugurate a
series of visiting lectures," Dr.
Simon said.
"mmmmm*^^^^ ^^ ^^^^ —mmmmam m^mamKnBm Several acad emi c d epartments
at BSC have indicated interest in
Rich Pterson go*t »tor Ioom ball
participating
in
indepth
discussion in classes following
fAWEWttN
lUMl
I
u6HTH e
each speaker. This program is
designed to insure meaningful
follow-up to the central ideas.that
will be contributed by each of the
speakers.
Among those persons who will
be sought as participan ts will be:
Dr. Kenneth Clark, Chairman of
the Department of Sociology at
the College of the City of New
York ; Bishop Stephen Gill
Spottswood, Chairman of the
Board , NAACP; Mr. Sammy
Davis, Jr., film star ; Mr. Dick
Gregory , black humorist; and
others. Further details and plans
fora the series will be announced
as they unfold.
Expedition
Pl ann ed
John Sabol, an Anthropology
major at BSC, has spent the last
three summers gaining experience for
his
future
profession. He has visited such
places as an Indian village where
.children drove him away with
rocks, a European cathedral ,
castle and palace, and Mexican
excavations dating from 800 B.C.
^|up to the Spanish conquest.
Sabol is president of M.A.N.
(the Archeology club) and has
helped to organize a tentative
tour of Mexico next summer. The
proposed itinerary will cover
twenty-five days in Mexico. It is
hoped that not only antropology
students, but students from other
academic fields will join in the
tour.
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Since you didn 't answer our
last plea, we 'll tr y again.
Where are you, lovely girl
sports wri ter? W e really do
need you, honest !
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,— ___
MAIN a IRON STREETS
Inscri ption SpmlolM
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!•*••««•»*&
_ _
•CHANEL
•OUERUIN
•FABERQE
•LANVIN
•PRINCE MATCHABHU
•ELIZABET HARDEN
•HELENA RUBCNSTEIN
•DANA
•COTY
•MAX FACTO*
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To gather more interest for the
tri p a film will be shown by
M.A.N. on Thursday, October
21st in Room 116, Hartline. It will
highlight the places and events
that the tri p will cover . Anyone is
iwelcome.
I MMMaawm
i
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^ MaMMMBaMaaBaaM
John's Food
Market
W. Main & Leona rd St.
| Open 8 a.m. to 12 midnight Daily
r
•
Delicate uen
(;
Full lin e of groce ries
A
anackt
Fif th Column
wou < be old Tyson...bastard maybe he was. Nobody has a
right to buy and hide a bitch like
dese ves to burn.
Bu I stand and do no better job that one..." And he walks away
than Tyson's urinating neighbor. without me hardly knowing.
(continue d from pag* two )
So I stand here as everyone
we all stand here, looking.
green banging Zangor thighs.But Fact
rushes
to meet the second onjust never seen a Blacky
I'm grateful for the fire because We've
slaught
of flame and gas. I stand
female before, and she's quite a
now that I'm awake I don't have bitch
here
thinking
of Blacky and the
, sleek, streamlined...I can
to use 5-Finger Mary or...
years
together
and how lonely I'll
see why the likes of her are kept
"Look out for that beam'."
sleep
and
how
now I'll have to
from Blacky...no work would
Up ahead a beam falls, a ever get done in the mines.
buy me another Blacky so's I can
volunteer fireman runs out of the
work safe and keep Ma going...
And then the shouts. "Stop that
way, barely makes it to safety .
...and someone, that same guy,
The beam hits the center of the damn cur!" "Grab him!" But -walks over to me with something
blaze inside down deep into the there's a big black shape leaping slung over his shoulder...it' s
pit and there's showers of spark over firemen and watered-down charred, it's twisted, it smells,
'heat and then a black nausea beams and ashes darting toward but it's Blacky...and the guy
smell pocket from the pit itself. the bitch. And that shape is my stands there waiting for me to
Poor old horny Tyson, even he pet!
say something appropriate, the
BiacKy.
didn't deserve this.
right thing, as I look at the corpBut he's in there with her as she se.
Me and Blacky are up to the
house. See Tyson's neighbors emerges from the pit. They circle
...I look at the corpse and think
frantically operating the too-olc each other as we watch in per- of buying a new Blacky and how
Company hoses hoping the flame verted fascination .*And very soon now all my money, which I've
won't reach their homes, too. See Blacky and the bitch are doing saved for seven long hard lonely
the black skeleton that once just exactly what you'd expect times when the Hyperspace
sheltered Tyson. Me and Blacky two such animals to be doing. House came down and I missed
And we watch.
stand and stare for a while.
it, how all that money will go
And then I see the purple light toward another Blacky instead of
"Grab a goddamned hose,
kid!" somebody yells. I jump. If starting again.
my beautiful green-breasted
"It's gonna blow again."
we put it out, if that beam didn't
foliage-haired Zangorian woman,
"Blacky," I yell, "get out of who has ways of loving which
hit somebody in the pit, if they
ain't dead from the smoke and there."
tempt all men who even know
"Yeah, kid," says the hose- how dangerous her very body is,
smell and fire, then Blacky and
his friends can start digging.. urinater, "as if he understands, that very body attracting them,
Small chance, but what the
and me, to her...
"My Gramps said..." and I
hell...I gra b the hose.
...and suddenly the words are
For a second I wish I had taken stop.
easy to say as I look down at
The purple light gets purpler. It Blaeky's corpse and spit before I
my marijay ration before I came
out because boy would this fire hurts to look. I only think how walk back to Ma...
look neat but that's an ugly lonely the mine, my bed, would
"Damn nigger."
thought, all this destruction being be without Blacky, and I start to
run forward before some idiot
beautiful. But it is kinda.
How long I duck around with pulls me back with a jerk just as
that hose I don't know. I lose the explosion comes forth with all
track of things pretty much. Too the furies of hell...
I am crying.
much smoke and shit. All the
There is a strong hand on my
voices that I been ignoring
suddenly fade and my ears pick shoulder. "Go home to your ma,
up one voice, one of Tyson's boy. There's more ya can do for
Fifty-five people were in atneighbors I forget his name. I her than ya can do here. "
tendance
I shudder. "Blacky's dead." of the at the second meeting
look toward the vibes and see him
"He sure is. Blown back to Thursday"I Quit Clinic" last
standing there holding the hose
night. Forty people
he has like he's urinating or Earth and then some. Right interested in
withdrawing from
something, just standing there where the likes of him came smoking, seven
group leaders,
gaping at something. I look from."
and
eigh
t
health
agency
"But he's dead."
around.
representatives
heard
Dr.
"You don't hear well kid.
I don 't believe it! I just don't.
Michael
Gaynor
of
the
BSC
They've just found one sur- Course he's dead. But you can Psychology Department
speak on
vivor. It isn't human . It's like always get a new one, ya know."
I look up at the guy who has a "Smoking A Psychological
Blacky. Except for one thing. It's
".
a female, and female Blackys hose for a penis and say, "It Process
In
his
talk Dr. Gaynor
just ain 't allowed on this here won't be the same. It won't."
discussed
the
behavior
planet. Unless somebody decides
"Sure it will. I know. Lost me motivation , and stimuli related to,
he wan ts to breed them for animal just the other week."
the smoking habit and its
himself. And that somebody
"Not like this. Blacky died practice. Dr. Gaynor stated that
with , with a female of his own." "Any ha bit can be changed ."
The man doesn't speak for a
Following the talk , seven group
long time. Then he says with an leaders
who have already
ugly smile, "Yeah , he died "kicked the
ha bit" conducted
happier than any of us. Too bad group sessions.
It was learned
(continued from paye one;
old man Tyson won't be brought that seven participants
to justice for that. But then again , clinic have graduated to in the
Renaissance , " "The Cubist
"nonEpoch," "Cre te and Mycena e, " —^—-——
^
^
^¦¦
¦¦¦ ^¦
¦ ¦¦^¦^
^^
"The Impressionists , " "Kinetic
Art in Paris , " "le Corbusier ,"
"Germany-Dada , " "The Art
Conservator ," and "The Greek
Temple."
The Art Department will offer
the five two-hour programs in
sequence in Carver Hall , with
FLOWER S
admission for facul ty $2.00 and
\ ^^
for students $1.00. Series ticket
prices are $4.00, facul ty and $3.00,
students . Additional information
W ^W p*liv*ry Worldw id e
may be obtained from the Art
Department office.
Down The Hill On East St.
I (j Ult
Clinic
Picasso
Say It With Flowers From
i0
^$$XM*v
Bucknell Concert Committee
Kampus Nook
pr esents
, Across from the Union
Hot Plattars Ev*ry Day
|
Plain and
Ham HoigUi,
Chats * • Ptpparoni • Onion
Pfzia. Our own Mad* le*
. Craafn.
Talc* Out Ord»r$ :
Hours : Man. • Thurs.
iliM
ttO Q.
PrMay
titM tiM
twwto y
ilitHM *
Satur day
4itt-11iM ,
CAT STEVENS
pl us
MINI FARINA & TOM JANS
Wednesday , October 27
8:45 p.m.
Davis Gym
Tickets $5.50
tickets availa ble :
Buckn ell Bookstore
University Center , Lewisburg , Pa.
or at the door
(cont inued from pag* two )
unite. Unite now before other
minority groups grab control of
this college, unite before the
discrimination spreads any
further, unite to get an equal
share of CGA funds.
Please don 't think that this is
an idle chatter for there are
many goals towards which
Italian students should work.
1) A recognized Italian
Student Society which will work
towards becoming a chapter of
the Italian-American Civil
Liberty League.
2) An Italian weekend with all
the food and drink of the Italian
tradition.
3) Italian speakers and entertainers (Note: one speaker I
have in mind is Joe Colombo Jr!')>
4) Banning of all references to
an Italian run underworld by any
campus publications.
5) Banning of the books "The
Godfather" and "The Gang That
Couldn't Shoot Straight" from the
College Book Store.
'6) An increase in qualified
professors of Italian descent.
7) An increase in the
recruiting of Italian-Americans
for enrollment into Bloomsburg.
8) A $110 allotment per Italian
Student from the C.G.A. budget.
9) Naming of the new Gym
"Giuseppe Garibaldi Memorial
Gymnasium."
10) We Italian Students do not
want special grade privileges as
we are an equal race and able to
compete with other students.
Any Italian Students that are
interested please contact me.
George Lapore
Box No. 665
KIsm S j pJifcY vl j w £/Tj
All confirmations or denials of
requeststo schedule a course on a
pass-fail basis for the current
semester have been forwarded to
the student's campus mailbox.
Please contact the Office of the
Registrar immediately ii you
should have any questions
regarding this matter.
p.m. until 5:00 p.m. October 27 to
complete applications.
All qualified students of
Geography and Earth Science
are invited to pledge Gamma
Theta Upsilon, the International
Honorary Geography Society .
Any Student who has had two
courses in Geography or Earth
Science and has a 2.5 cum in
Geography and a 2.5 overall cum
is eligible and welcome to attend
the pledge meeting Thursday,
Oct. 21, at 7:30 p.m. in room 235
Hartline.
Today, October 20, 1971, from
3:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. all
Elementary education majors
will meet in Carver Auditorium
to complete applications for student teaching.
Secondary education students
who intend to student teach in the
1972-73 school year will meet in
Freshman class officers and
Carver Auditorium from 3:30 advisors met last week to discuss
future
activities. Elected
smoker" status.
recently , the officers are : Steve
The next meeting of the "I Quit
president; Steve WrClinic" will be Thursday October Wagner,
vice-president; Sue
zesniewski,
21, 7:30 p.m. in room 79 of HarWerner, treasurer ; and Peggy
tline Science Center.
secretary. Anyone with
All those intersted are invited Beaver,
ideas for the class can contact the
to attend .
secretary at Box 2008 Luzeme.
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