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Fri, 04/05/2024 - 17:56
Edited Text
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CGA and faculty
voting on change
ASPCUF
to negotiate
Negotiations
for
higher
salaries and more attractive
benefits will be the main objective of the Pennsylvania
Association for Higher Education
( APSCUF - PAHE ) , the recently
elected bargaining agent for
state colleges and universities .
With advance ments in salaries ,
benefits , and other areas relating
to faculties , APSCUF hopes to
raise the quality of educationa l
opportunities in Pennsylvania ,
both for teachers and students.
APSCUF has dedicated itself to
three princ iples of academic and
(1)
professional
growth:
negotiation of a master contract
that will enable the Pennsylvania
state colleges and university to
retain and attract
highly
qualified personnel and to raise
the aca demic standards of theseinstitutions in a continuing effort
to provide scholarly excellence ;
(2) uniformity of rights and
benefits that will enable faculty
at all 14/ institutions to enjoy
greater roles in the life Of their
institutions ; (3) maintenance ,
within the framework of that
contract of a strong element of
local autonomy for individual
campuses .
Areas fallin g under the
jurisdiction of these three points
include academic excellence ,
fringe
benefits ,
salary,
professional
provisions ,
workloads , grievance procedure ,
and academic freedo m and
tenure. APSCUF also hopes to
improve the human rights of both
students and facult y, working for
the elimination of race and sex
discrimination .
APSCUF hopes that , with the
achievement of these goals ,
Pennsylvania will be able to
compete with the top ranking
institutions of othe r states , giving
citizens of this state the best
possible
educational
opportunities.
of tha
recant
Kiln-8uilding
Karen Karim , co-laadar
con
struction
of
a
salt kiln to
explains
tha
Workshop at BSC,
Robert Behr. Kiln builders from all over the vast gathered
hare to bui ld potter y ovens out of everything from clay to
cow dun g*
Casey : return
money to college
Auditor General Robert P.
Casey , in a letter to President
Nossen , recommended that
approximately $45,000 in cash
arid investments currently
deposited with the Bloomsbur g
Foundation , Inc., b e re turned t o
the control of the College. Casey 's
letter is a response to Dr.
Nossen's reply to the recently
completed audit of the Bloomsburg Foundation .
Council acceptin g
board nominees
The Executive Council of CGA
ha s b egun set ti ng up p rocedures
f or recommend ing f ive students
to Governor Shapp, one of whom
w ill b e nom inated to serve on the
Board of Trus t ees. Th is idea was
initiated by Gov . Shapp in his
recent visit.
I n the Governor 's letter to Mike
Siptroth , CGA president , Gov.
Sha pp sa id " the names submitted
should be arr ived at only after
the wid est consultat i on with
var ious segments of the student
bod y . " Also, the person must be
concern ed with the welfare of the
college, and understand that he is
a trust ee in the fullest sense.
HELP !
Man power is desperatelyneeded to help load trucks for
recycling. All volun teers will
meet in fron t of Carver Hall
today at 5:30 p.m. If you reall y
care about the environment ,
here is your chance to prove it.
Thanks !
I n an eff or t to con tact a var ied
sam p le of students , the
Executive Council has req uested
that the p res iden ts of the various
student organizat ions subm it the
name or names of st uden ts who
the y feel are q ual ified to serve on
the Board of Trustees. Application is open to any student
who feels he is qualified.
Any student who is nominated
by an organ ization or who wishes
to a pp ly on his own must state in
wr itin g why he feels he is
qualified and capable of serving.
The applicant must also submit
an autobiogra phy stating what
portions of his background would
qualif y him to serve.
All students , who are not on
academic and - or disciplinary
probation may apply. The
deadline for submitting all information is Monday , October 25.
All information is to be placed in
Box 302 Waller Hall. Nominees
will then be contacted as to when
they will be interviewed by the
CGA Executive Council.
Casey wrote , "We are pleased
to know that pursuant to our
re commendation No. 1, you will
return the balances from the 1970
and 1971 Freshman Orientation
Accounts to the Commonwealth ,
and that you have returned $6.00
to each of 959 students who
participated in the 1971 Freshman Program ."
As to the Bloomsburg Foundation , Casey stated that his
office recognizes the Foundation
as a legal entity, an d t ha t as such
it "is entitled to receiv e gifts ,
grants , and other mone y s it
solicits , a pp lies f or or rece ived in
it s own name as such separate
entitv ."
Casey goes on to state that
wherea s the Foundation may
soli cit and hold i ts own f unds , any
funds rece ived b y t he College not
sp ecifi call y designated for use by
the Foundation mus t rema in
under the control of the college
and should not be put under the
control of a pr ivate foundation.
The funds Casey says should be
returned by the Foundation to the
College were not reported in the
origina l a udit. In his letter ,
however , he lists investments
and cash totall ing $45,698.25 as
having been transferred to the
Foundat ion by the Endowed
Lecture Fund which was set up
Oct. 9, 1958.
Casey 's letter concludes by
ask i ng for a copy of the Attorne y
Genera l 's advice to Dr. Nossen
regarding possible conflict of
interest . The question of possible
conflict of interest had been
raised by the audit and Dr.
Nossen had re plied that prior to
accepting affiliation with the
local bank he had asked the
advice of the Attorney General
and that the response had been
negative.
The College Senate informally
debated Wednesda y a proposed
amendment that would provide
for "23 students elected by and
from the student body at large ".
The amendment , to pass, must be
voted on by a majorit y of the
membership of College Council
and a majorit y of the total faculty
membership .
The ballots which were placed
in the mail Wednesday will be
accepted until 5:00 p.m. Monday.
Executive Council of CGA in a
letter to all faculty, college
council members , and student
senators endorsed the amendment which they feel would
"increase student confidence " in
the college senate.
The increase in student
membershi p would allow student
members to serve " more effectively on senate committees ,
by reducing the numbers of
committees on which a student
must serve , Executive Council
stated in their letter. Currentl y
faculty members are permitted
to serve on only one standin g
committee while students must
serve on more than one because
there are 22 permanent student
positions on standing committees
and only twelve students to fill
them.
Other advantages of the
amendment cited by Executive
Council are that it would provide
f or a "greater diversity of
student opinion " and also increase studen t memb ersh ip on
¦
a
a ppavnnnwvvi-iinqpiv
" .¦
¦-
-w ^ »^—.
certain senate committees.
The Senate Comm ittee on
Student Affairs una nimously
endo rsed the amend ment on
Sept. 23 stating that "th e number
of students (12) now serving on
the Senate is inadeq uate."
A letter declaring mat the
proposed change would give the
students " a more significant role
in Senate operations" mas circulated by the Studen t Affairs
Committee of the Senate to the
faculty , college council , and
student senators.
Amendment ffista ry
The original proposal introduced on the Senate floor by
Rich Scott was refeare d to the
Senate Committee on Student
Affairs . The Student Affai rs
Committee , chaired by Sir. John
L. Walker , recommended afte r
lengthy discussion tha t the
number of student seaJU ms be
increased to 23.
In order to bring such an
amendment to a vote there are
three possible avenues. The one
chosen by the committee
required that they ntouit a
petition with «gn^w». of 15 per
cent of the faculty rrr nir nimr; the
amendment be brought to a vote.
This Would then enable College
Council and the facultyto vote on
the amendment. The Senate
g anjy
constitution can be f h i mpa
by such a vote. The amendmen t
vote is subjec t to final approval
by Dr. Nossen and the Board of
Trustees.
.
Worksho p attenda nts : fro m left, Roa Baguckl, Mary
Cavanau gh, Jon Dacka r and Mauraan Vastal.
UNn
Group at workshop
Four students from BSC attended the Fall Volunteers
Conference for the Experiment in
International Living , October 1-3.
The students attended workshops
and discussed such matters as
the problems during hosting
fore ign students , problems for
A merican students traveling
oversea s, and the variety of
programs sponsored by the
Experiment in International
Living .
Attending were Jon Decker, a
member of the Senate Committee
for International Education ,
Mary Ellen Cavanaugh , cochairman of the CGA subcommittee for International
Education , Maureen Vestal and
Roe Bagucki , members of the
CGA sub-committee for International Education.
The CGA sub-commi ttee for
International Education is one of
the newly-formed committe es
under the heading of Human
Relations. As an initial project
the members of tti is subcommittee are setting up an
International
Infor mation
C enter , designed to inform
students of opport unities for
international study and travel
and to help those who are interested to pr epare for such an
experience. The information
obtained at the fall conferen ce
will be availab le in the center as
soon as it opens.
Fif th Column
( continued from page two)
green banging Zangor thighs. But
I'm grateful for the fire because
now that I' m awa ke I don't have
to use 5-Finger Mary or...
"Look out for that beam!"
Up ahead a beam falls, a
volun teer fireman runs out of the
way, barely makes it to safety .
The beam hits the center of the
blaze inside down deep into t he
pit and there's sh owers of spark
heat and then a black nausea
smell pocket from the pit itself.
Poor old horny Tyson , even he
didn 't deserve this.
Me and Blacky are up to the
house.* See Tyson's neighbors
frantically operating the too-olc
Company hoses hoping the flame
won't reach th eir h omes, too. See
the black skeleton that once
sheltered Tyson. Me and Blacky
stand and stare for a while.
"Gra b a god d amned hose ,
kid!" somebody yells. I jump. If
we put it out , if that beam didn't
hit somebody in the pit , if they
ain 't dead f rom t he smoke an d
smell an d fi re , then Blacky an d
his friends can start digging.
Small chance, but what the
hell...I grab the hose.
For a second I wish I had taken
my mar ijay rat ion bef ore I came
out because boy would this fire
look neat but that's an ugly
th ough t , all this destruction being
beautiful. But it is kinda.
How long I duck around with
that hose I don't know. I lose
track of things pretty much. Too
much smoke and shit. All the
voices that I been i gnoring
suddenly fade and my ears pick
up one voice, one of Tyson's
neighbors I forget his name. I
look toward the vibes and see h im
standing there holding the hose
he has like he's urinating or
something, ju st standing there
gaping at something. I look
around.
I don 't believe it! I just don 't.
They 've just found one survivor. It isn't human . It's like
Blacky. Except for one thing. It's
a female , an d f emale Blackys
j ust ain 't allowed on this here
planet. Unless somebody decides
h e wants to b reed them f or
himself . And that somebody
wou i be old Tyson...bastard
desc v es to burn.
Bu I stand and do no better job
than Ty son's urinating neighbor.
Fact we all stand here, looking.
We 've j ust never seen a Blacky
female before, and sh e's quite a
bitch , sleek , streamlined...I can
see why the likes of her are kept
from Blacky...no work would
ever get done in the mines.
And then the shouts. "Stop that
damn cur!" "Grab him!" But
there 's a big black shape leaping
over firemen and watered-down
beams and ashes darting toward
the bitch. And that shape is my
net !
"Black y !"
But he's in there with her as sh e
emergesfrom the pit. They circle
each other as we watch in perverted fascination.'And very soon
Blacky and the bi tch are doing
just exactly what you'd expect
two such animals to be doing.
And we watch.
And then I see the purple light
starting aga in.
"It's gonna blow again."
"Blacky, " I yell, "get out of
there."
"Yeah , kid," says the hoseur inater , "as if he understands,
va
"
"My Gramps said..." and I
maybe he was. Nobody has a
right to buy and hide a bitch like
that one... " And he walks away
without me hardly knowing.
So I stand here as everyone
rushes to meet the second onslaught of flame and gas. I stand
here thinking of Blacky and the
yearstogether and h ow lonely I'll
sleep and how now I'll have to
buy me another Blacky so's I can
work safe and keep Ma going...
...and someone, that same guy,
walks over to me with something
slung over his shoulder...it's
charred , it's twisted , it smells,
but it's Blacky...and the guy
stands there waiting for me to
say something appropriate, the
right th ing, as I look at the corpac.
...I look at the corpse and think
of buyi ng a new Blacky and how
now all my money , wh ich I've
saved for seven long har d lonely
times when the Hyperspace
House came down and I missed
it, how all that money will go
toward another Blacky instead of
my beautiful green-breasted
foliage-haired Zangorian woman,
who has ways of loving which
tempt all men wh o even know
how dangerous her very body is,
that very body attracting them ,
an d me , to her...
...and suddenly the words are
stnn
easy to say as I look down at
The pur ple light gets pur pler. It Black y 's corpse and spit b ef ore I
hurts to look. I only think how walk back to Ma...
lonely the mine, my bed, would
"Damn nigger."
be without Blacky, and I start to
run forward before some idiot
pulls me back with a j erk j ust as
the explosion comes forth with all
the furies of hell...
I am crying.
There is a strong hand on my
shoulder. "Go h ome to your ma ,
boy. There's more ya can do for
Fifty-five people were in ather than ya can do here."
tendance
I shudder. "Blacky 's dead." of the at the second meeting
"He sure is. Blown back to Thursday"I Quit Clinic" last
Earth and then some. Right interested night. Forty people
where the likes of him came smoking, in withdrawing from
seven group leaders,
from."
an
d
e
i
g
h
t h ealth agency
"But he's dead."
representatives
heard Dr.
"You don 't hear well kid. M ichael G
aynor
o
f the BSC
Course he 's dead. But you can Psychology
Department
spea k on
always get a new one, ya know."
"Smoking
A
Psycholog
ical
I look u p at the gu y who has a
Process
"
.
h ose f or a penis an d say, "It
In his talk Dr. Gaynor
won 't be the same. It won't."
di scussed
the
behav i or ,
"Sure it will. I kn ow. Lost me mot i vat ion , and stimuli related to
an imal just the other week. "
the smo ki ng ha bi t an d its
"Not like this. Blacky died practice. Dr. Gaynor stated that
with , with a female of his own." "Any habit can be changed,"
Th e man doesn 't speak for a
Following the talk , seven group
l ong t i me. Th en h e sa y s with an l ea d ers who
h ave alrea dy
ugly smile, "Yeah , he died "kicked the habit" conducted
happier than any of us. Too bad group sessions. It was learned
( continued from page one ;
old man Tyson won 't b e brought t h at seven part icipants i n t h e
to justice for that. But then again , cli n ic h ave gra duate d to "nonRena i ssance ," "The Cubist
Epoch," "Cre te an d M y cenae,"
"The Impressionists ," "Kinetic
Art in Paris," "le Corbusier ,"
"Germany-Dada , " "The Art
Conservator , " and "The Greek
Temple ."
The Art Department will of fer
the five two-hour programs in
sequence i n Carver Hall , wit h
admission for faculty $2.00 and
|^^^^ FLOWER S
for students $1.00. Series ticket
^^ ^¦^a^JB^B^BMiBMBIBM MBBi ajiJSW^
prices are $4.00, faculty and $3.00,
students . Additional information
W^^^Delivery Worldwide
may be obtained from the Art
Down The Hill On East St.
Department office.
1 (j Ult
Clinic
Picasso
Say It With Flowers From
"^^XMoy^S
Bucknell Concert Committee
Kampus Nook
pr esen ts
, Across from the Union
Hot Platte r* Every Day
i
Pla in *nd
Ham Hoagiei,
Cheote • Popperoni ¦Onion
Plus. Our own Made ke
, Cream.
Take Out Ord»r$ :
Hours : Men. • Thurs. •»00.
Il/M
¦
ftOMtt OO
rMey
4iJt1 1iOO .,
fefurefc y
twwit y
n»im»«
CAT STEVENS
plus
MIMI FARINA & TOM JANS
Wednesda y, October 27
8:45 p.m.
Davis Gym
Tickets $5.50
tickets avail able :
Buck n ell Bookstore
University Center , Lewisburg, Pa.
or at the door
'
{continued from page two)
unite. Unite now before other
minority groups grab control of
th is college, unite before the
discrimination spreads any
further, un ite 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 recogn ized Italian
Student Society wh ich 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 CNote: one speaker I
have in mind is Joe Colombo Jr!) i
4) Banning of all references to
an Italian run underworld by any
campus publications.
5) Banning of the bopks "The
Godfather " and "The Gan g 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
"Giusep pe 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.
G eorge Lapore
Box N o. 665
All confirmat ions or denials of p.m. until 5:00 p.m. October 27 to
req uests to schedule a course on a complete applications.
pass-fail basis for the current
semester have been forwarded to
t h e stu dent's campus mailbox.
Please contact the Office of the
Registrar immediately if you
should have any questions
regarding this matter.
All qualified students of
Geography and Earth Science
are invited to pledge Gamma
Th eta 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 off icers and
Carver Auditorium from 3:30 advisors met last week to discuss
Elected
future
activities.
smok er " status.
recently, the officers are : Steve
The next meeting of the "I Quit Wagner , president; Steve WrClinic" will be Thursday October zesn iewski , vice-president; Sue
21, 7:30 p.m. in room 79 of Har- Werner , treasurer ; and Peggy
tline Science Center.
Beaver , secretary. Anyone with
All those intersted are invited ideas for the class can contact the
to attend .
secretary at Box 2008 Luzerne.
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CGA and faculty
voting on change
ASPC UF
to negotiate
higher
Negotiations
for
salaries and more attractiv e
benefits will be the main objective of the Pennsylvania
Association for Higher Education
( APSCUF - PAHE ) , the recentl y
elected bargaining agent for
state colleges and univ ersities.
With advancement s in salaries ,
benefits , and other areas relating
to faculties , APSCUF hopes to
raise the quality of educational
opportunities in Pennsylvania ,
both for teachers and students.
APSCUF has dedicated itself to
three principles of aca demic and
(1)
professional
growth:
negotiation of a master contract
that will enable the Pennsylvania
state colleges and university to
retain and attract
highly
qualified personnel and to raise
the academic standards of these
institutions in a continuing effort
to provide scholarly excellence ;
(2) uniformity of rights and
benefits that will enable facult y
at all 14/ institutions to enjoy
greater roles in the life of their
institutions ; (3) maintenance ,
within the framework of that
contract of a strong element of
local autonomy for individual
campuses .
Areas falling under the
jurisdiction of these three points
include academic excellence ,
fringe
benefits ,
salary ,
professional
provisions ,
workloads , grievance procedure ,
and academic freedom and
tenure. APSCUF also hopes to
improve the human rights of both
students and faculty, working for
the elimination of race and sex
discrimination .
APSCUF hopes that , with the
achievement of these goals ,
Pennsylvania will be able to
compete with the top rankin g
institutions of othe r states , giving
citizens of this state the best
possible
educational
opportunities.
The College Senate informally
debated Wednesday a proposed
amendment that would provide
for "23 students elected by and
from the student body at large " .
i The amendment, to pass, must be
voted on by a majority of the
I membershi p of College Council
. and a majority of the total faculty
! memhershin .
The ballots which were placed
in the mail W ednesday will be
co-taKter
of tht
racanf
Kiln-Suilding
Karen Kariws,
Workshop at BSC, explains th* construction of a salt kiln to
Robert Behr. Kiln builders from all over the east gathered
her* to build potter y ovens out of everything from clay to
cow dun g
*
Casey : return
money to college
Auditor General Robert P.
Casey , in a letter to President
N ossen , recommended that
approximately $45,000 in cash
and investments
currently
deposited with the Bloomsbur j ?
Foundation , Inc ., be returned to
the control of the College . Casey's
letter is a response to Dr .
Nossen's reply to the recently
completed audit of the Bloomsburg Foundation .
Council accepting
board nominees
The Executive Council of CGA
has begun setting up procedu res
for recommending five students
to serve on only one standing
committee while students must
serve on more than one because
there are 22 permanent student
positions on standing committees
and only twelve students to fill
tnern .
Other advantages of the
amendment cited by Executive
Council are that it would provid e
for a "greater diversi ty of
student opinion " and also increase student membership on
office recognizes the Foundation
as a legal entity, and that as such
it " is entitled to receive gifts ,
grants , and other moneys it
solicits , applies for or received in
its own name as such separate
entity . "
Casey goes on to state tha t
wherea s the Foundation may
In an effort to contact a varied solicit and hold its own funds, any
sample of students, the funds received by the College not
Executive Council has req uested specifically designated for use by
that the presidents of the various
will be nominated to serve on the student organizations submit the
Board of Trustees. This idea was name or names of students who
initiated by Gov . Shapp in his they feel are qualified to serve on
recent visit.
the Board of Trustees. Application is open to any student
In the Governor 's letter to Mike who feels he is qualified.
Siptroth , CGA president , Gov .
Any student who is nominated
Shapp said "the names submitted
by
an organization or who wishes
should be arr ived at only after
to
apply
the widest consultation with writing on his own must state in
why he feels he is
variou s segments of the student
qualified
and capable of serving.
body." Also, the person must be The applican
t must also submit
concerned with the welfare of the
an
autobiography
stating what
college , and understand that he is portions
of
his
background
would
a trustee in the fullest sense.
qualify him to serve.
All students, who are not on
HELP !
academic and - or disciplinary
Manpower is desperately probation may apply. The
needed to help load trucks for
deadline for submitting all inrecycling. All volunteers will
formation is Monday, October 25.
meet in front of Carver Hall
All information is to be placed in
today at 5:30p.m. If you really
Box 302 Waller Hall. Nominees
care about the environment, w ill t hen be contacted as to wh en
here is your chance to proveit.
they will be Interviewed by the
Thanks !
CGA Executive Council.
to Governor Shapp, one of whom
Casey wrote, "We are pleased
to know that pursuant to our
recommendation No . 1, you will
return the balances from the 1970
and 1971 Freshman Orientation
Accoun ts to the Common wealth ,
and tha t you have returned $6.00
to each of 959 students who
participated in the 1971 Freshman Program . "
As to the Bloomsburg Foundation , Casey stated that his
accepted until 5:00 p.m. Monday.
Executive Council of CGA in a
letter to all faculty, college
council members , and student
senators endorsed the amendment which they feel would
" increase student confidence" in
the college senate.
The increase in student
membershi p would allow student
members to serve ' more ef fectively on senate committees,
I by reducing the numbers of
committees on which a student
must serve , Executive Council
stated in their letter . Currently
faculty members are permitted
certain senate committees.
The Senate Committee on
Student Affairs unanimously
endorsed the amendment on
Sept. 23 stating that "the numbe r
of students (12) now serving on
the Senate is inadequate. '*
A letter declari ng that the
proposed change would give the
students " a more signifaraiwt role
in Senate operations" was circulated by the Student Affairs
Committee of the Senate to the
faculty , college council, and
student senators.
Amendment History
The original proposal introduced on the Senate floor by
Rich Scott was referred to the
Senate Committee on Student
Affairs . The Student Affairs
Committee , chaired by Mr. John
L. Walker , recommended after
lengthy discussion that the .
number of student senators be
increased to 23.
In order to faring such an
amendment to a vote mere are
three possible avenues. The one
chosen by the committee
required that they present a
petition with sigtMha eh of'15 per
cent o( the facultyrequesting the
amendment be brought to a vote.
This Would then enable College
Council and the faculty to vote on
the amendment. The Senate
constitution can be rhw ^ptf onJh r
by such a vote. The amendment
vote is subject to final approval
by Dr. Nossen and the Board of
Trustees.
the Foundation must remain
under the control of the college
and should not be put under the
control of a private foundation .
The funds Casey says should be
returned by the Foundation to the
College were not reported in the
original audit. In his letter ,
however, he lists investments
and cash totalling $45,696.25 as
having been transferred to the
Foundation by the Endowed
Lecture Fund which was set up
Oct. 9, 1958.
Casey's letter concludes by
asking for a copy of the Attorney
Genera l 's advice to Dr. Nossen
regarding possible conflict of
interest. The question of possible
conflict of interest had been
raised by the audit and Dr.
Nossen had replied that prior to
accepting affiliation with the
local bank he had asked the
advice of the Attorney General
and that the response had been
negative.
Worksh opattendants: from left , Res Baguckl , Mary
Cavana ugh , Jon Decker and Maureen Vestal.
llton
Group at workshop
Four students from BSC attended the Fall Volunteers
Conference for the Experiment in
International Living, October 1-3.
The students attended workshops
and discussed such matters as
the problems during hosting
foreign students, problems for
American students traveling
overseas, and the variety of
programs sponsored by the
E xper iment i n Internat iona l
Living.
Attending were Jon Decker, a
member of t he Senate Committee
f or I nternat i ona l Ed ucat i on ,
Mary Ellen Cavanaugh , cochairman of the CGA subcomm i ttee f or Internat i ona l
Education , Maureen Vestal and
Roe Bagucki, membera of the
CGA sub-committee for International Education.
The CGA sub-committee for
International Education hione of
the newly-formed committees
under the heading of Human
Relations. As an initial project
the members of tfiia subcommittee are setting op an
International Information
Center , designed to inform
students of opportunitie s for
international study and travel
and to help those who are interested to prepare for inch an
experience. The information
obtained at the fall conference
will be available in the center at
soon as it opens.
ed itoria l
Senate endorses amendment
At approximately 6:00 p.m. on
the evening of October 20,
George Turner rose and proposed
the following resolution to the
College Senate : "Resolve that it
is the sense of the Senate to endorse the proposed amendment
to increa se student representation in the Senate to 23." A
question was called and the
unanimous acceptance of the
resolution by the Senate provided
the endorsement for what £ould
be the most important step ever
taken by .the BSC community .
Why can this be an importan t
step? The answer lies first in the
importance of the Senate itself.
There once was a time when
universities were self-directed
communities of students and
faculty . Over the years however,
giantism and administrative
bureaucracy set in and governance of the university was taken
from the hands of the students
and faculty .
We can never return to the old
communities, but we now have a
new one; a cooperative body of
students and faculty that can set
goals and programs for the
College. That community is the
Senate. And if the Senate is to
VOL. L
play a truly meaningful part in
setting the best possible goals
and programs for BSC, students
must have a hand in setting them.
The approval of the amendment wiil be an important step
for a number of reasons :
1) Much of the Senate's work is
done in committee. The present
membership (12 students - 60
faculty ) often results in one
student serving on ' several
committees, thus reducing the
ability of that student to make a
meaningful contribution. Increasing the . number of student
senators would alleviate this.
2) Passage of the amendment
will go far toward eliminating the
current imbalance (12 for 4000 60 for 286) in the Senate. It should
increase the student body's faith
in the Senate.
Last year a similar amendment died , not because people
opposed it, but because not
enough students and faculty
members voted. We urge first
that all faculty members vote on
the amendment, and secondly,
that they consider its merits,
consider the fact that the Senate
has endorsed it, and vote "yes"
jim sachetti
THE MAROON AND GOLD
' Editor-in-Chief
^Business Manage r
Co-Managing Editors
[News Editor
Feature Editor
Sports EdHor
Art Editor
Photo Editor
Photographer
Co*Copy Editors
Circulation Manager
Contributin g Editor
Advisor • ¦ .
.
NO. 13
Jim Sachetti
¦ . ' . . . Carol Kishba ugh
. . . Karen Keinard
Sue Sprague
Frank Pizioli
." Terry Blast
"*
Bob Oliver
John Stugrin
Tom Schofield
• • Kate Calpfn
Linda Ennis
Nancy Van Pelt
Elaine Pongratz
Allan Maurer
•
Kenneth Hoffman
STAFF:
Kay Boyles , Georgian a Cherinchak , St«ve
Connolley,
Ellen
Doyle ,
Mark
Foucart , Joyce
Keefer , Marty Kleine r, Sally Kurren , Dan Maresh ,
Joe McGavin , Mike Meizinger , Cindy Michene r, Joe
Miklos , Rose Monta yn e, Jim Nallo , Sue Reichenbach,
Tom Rockovich , Denis* Ross , Craig Ruble, Beth Y«ake|,
John Woodwa rd, Mike Yarme y, Ron Sefeeyr , Maria
Carey, Ron Perry , Ed Coar , Donna MacDermott, John
'
Dempsey .
The M&G is located in Room 234 Waller; if you can't
come up, call Ext , 323 or Writ e Box 301 .
Letters to the editor are an expression of the individual writer 's opinion and do not necessarily reflect the
views of the newspaper. .AH letters must be aligned,
name will be withheld upon reque st . The M & G reserve
the right to abrid ge, in consultation with the wr iter , all
in lengt h.
htt ^rt over 400 words
Photo by Connelly
S.O.B. Story
by John Woodward
The Sigma Omega Beta flag, in
its weather-beaten green and
white glory , still flies from atop
Waller Hall where it was
heroically placed last year.
Although the flag may be
weather-beaten , the Sigma
Omega Beta spirit isn't, and it
takes up residence along with the
brotherhood at 223 Center Street,
Bloomsburg, across from the
Columbia movie house.
Yes, the founding brothers
came from Scranton , WilkesBarfe, and Levittown , and they
converged on BSC to find the one
and only existing chapter of the
Sigma Omega Beta fraternity,
better kn own as SOB, in the
second semester, year of our
Lord 1970.
Currently there are sixteen
brothers, with eleven of them
living at 223 Center Street, the
SOB House. Last year there were
thirty-five , and hopes are high for
the upcoming pledge class to
bolster SOB membership.
The organization is not
recognized by this school ;
therefore, they have no cum
requirement for pledges. According to Fran Massaro ,
president of the group, SOB
obtains pledges from friends of
the brothers who are invited
down to a party to get to know the
brothers and see if they want to
pledge. Primarily , pledging SOB
is getting to know the
brotherhood well. "We're a tight
bunch of friends who live
together and stick together in
intramurals and at parties,"
added Fran. "For Hell Night -we
just have the pledges buy us a keg
of beer."
The brotherhood is disappointed that they did not get
better recognition for their
athletic prowess; they won in the
intramural playoffs, but no one
knew about it. That was last year.
The SOB life is many faceted,
and female participation in all
SOB activities is encouraged.
"Girls are welcome anytime
down here — eight to eighty ,
blind , crippled, or crazy ," says
Juicy Jordan , Sergeant-at-Arms
for the group . The SOB life also
involves parties, for which they
are noted. So far this year they
have consumed fourteen kegs of
beer; the fraternity beer is Pabst
Blue Ribbon , of course. When
they can 't get Pa bst they get U.C.
The group throws at least one
humdinger of a party a week.
"We're a party organization ,"
relates Rick Twardzik.
SOB also travels ; last year the
brothers converged on a small
church in New Jersey for the
wedding of another brother. They
do get around.
For the coming year, Sigma
Omega Beta has high goals. They
would like to have the Moody
Blues play at one of their parties.
The officers of SOB for this
year are president , Fran
Massaro; vice-president, Paul
Vanore ;
secretary,
Rick
Twardzik ; treasurer, Lou Parri ;
sergeant-at-arms, Phil Jordan .
You can see the green and grey of
SOB at 223 Center Street, where
popular people congregate.
Letter
Editor M&G,
I was at the Rock Ensemble
Concert October 8th . I also read
Mr. Oliver's article in the October 13th issue of the M&G that
my brother brought home. It's a
good thing I read it in my
bathroom 'cause throwing up
anywhere else is definitely uncool.
H ow an yone can p ri nt , let alone
write, such a piece of mediocre
journalism , is beyond me. Maybe
I'm so vehement beca use I've
personally been immersed in the
rock scene so long that it really
(continutd on pagt four)
| Pro Footba ll
| PREVIEW
by AREBEO, PEN, ELOG
This week our experts figured
! prett y well after a poor start last
j week . I picked at a 10-3 clip for
winning teams., 7-6* for right
scores. My female counterpart
struck 7-6 , and the newest
member of the ex pert team , a
I faculty member of the science
1 department hit 9-4 on games , 8-5
on scores . Not bad , eh?
The overall percen tages for my
Three BSC finishers
p icks now stand at 73 percent for
winners , 50 percent for scores.
" Pen 's" record is now 46 percent.
M y losers last week were
the C owbo y s , Broncos and
New York Jets . The Cow by DAN MARESH &
Incidentall y, Waechter holds the boys played ter ribly. Craig
BOB OLIVER
BSC recor d of 27:32 , at the home Morton
threw
er aticall y
The BSC cross country team is course , which Lee was only 13 through the fir st half and
having another successful y ear seconds behind .
surel y was not aided by three
under the lea dership of Dr. Clyde
BSC' s Pete Koury took sixth fumbles and three interce ptions .
Noble of the chemistry depart- and Box Q uairoli took spot New O rleans , behind Mannings ,
ment . The team soared to their number nine . The final two made th is game the upset of the
second victory in three days Husky finishers were Rod week. Buffalo , with OJ and
Monda y
by
defeating Dew ing in tenth and Don Nauss in Dennis Shaw , was supposed to
Susq uehanna University at the twelft h place.
have a big day against the
Husk y course .
Gi ants . They didn 't , but N.Y.'S
for
Monday was a special day
Last Saturday the * Huski es
No.
3 QB, Davis , and back
and
Pellitier
stomped on the Bears of Kutz- BSC's two seniors ,
Emerson
Boozer did , resulting in
for it marked their last
town State behind the record - Dewing,
's
28-17 victory.
Buffalo
meet.
breaking clocking of Terry Lee at home cross-country
Denver
and San Diego, both
A team 's score is determined
Kutztown . Lee broke the old
first five futile teams , played to a 20-16 SD
standard by a minute and three by addin g together the
team . victory . Denver had a bright spot
seconds. Paul Pelletier was in finishin g positions of each score in running back Anderson , who
with
the
lowest
The
team
second place 33 seconds later .
rushed 25 times for 105 yards , but
Rounding out the BSC finishers wins.
the Broncos still came out on the
were No. 4 Larry Horwitz , No. 5
Dr. Barret Benson of the bottom end of the score.
Pete Kour y, No . 6 Mike Hi p pie , Chemistry de p artment , Dr.
tor this next week : uakian a oy
No . 7 Bob Quairoli , No. 8 Rod James Cole , Biology department 3 over Cincinnati . Lamonica ,
Dewing .
and Head Track Coach Ronald back in form , hits Biletnifoff
Monday 's meet again brought P uhl , Ph y sical Education aga in and again ...Cincinnat i is
forth Terr y Lee in firs t , with department aid the cross-countr y tough but Raider experience pays
Husky-mate and co-captain Paul team by officiatin g in the meets . off this time .
Tomorrow the Huskies travel
Pelletier in second place ,
Los Angeles by 3 over Green
finishing the five mile course 58 south to Millersville in search for Bay . Packers have been pla ying
seconds later. Horwitz finished victory number seven. Earl y tough , but the Rams behind
third with Tim Waechter only a mext month will be a tough meet Gabriel to Snow combination
second behind him in fourth . against Bucknell .
should click through the Green
Bay secondary for long yardage .
San Francisco by 7 over St. Louis.
Ha rriers win
Husk y
Pre view
Last
Saturday
the
Hot and cold Pete Beathard is
Husky
gridders were stomped by the
Golden Rams of West Chester
State . The game stats really don 't
prov e how bad we were , but then ,
who has done well against the
Rams? They were every bit as
good as they were touted to be .
They surely will be the Eastern
division champion barring
forseen circumstances .
un-
What about our Huskies ? The
coming off a good passing day,
but he shouldn 't get much yardage off the 49'ers .
Brodie is still sharp , and with
Willard
rushin g
and
Washington receiving , San
Francisco will be tough .
Dallas by 10 over New
England . If Landry settles on
Stauback , once and for all , the
Cowboy s will be tough . You just
can 't be consistent with two
number one quarterbacks in the
NFL . New England' s Plunkett
gets good testin g from Dallas
defense.
Detroit by 10 over Chicago .
Landr y is pla ying well at GB ,
but Chicago is hurting, with NIX
and C onconnon out , not to
mention Sayers . Detroit 's Owens
coming into his own .
New Orleans b y 3 over Atlanta .
A rchie Mannings scrambling
ways will drive the Saints to
victory again this week . Atlanta
is tough , despite its record. The
San Diego over Buffalo
Kansas over Washington
Minnesota over Baltimore
Faculty Firs ts :
Buffalo over San Diego by 3
N.Y. Giants over Philadelphia
by 3
Miami over N .Y. Je ts by 10
Detroi t over Chicago by 7
Oakland over Cincinnati by 3
Cleveland over Denver by 10
Green Bay over L.A . by 3
Pittsburgh over Houston by 7
Dallas over New England by 17
Atlanta over New Orle ans by 7
San Francisco over St. Louis by
3
Kansas City over Washington
by 7
Baltimore over Minnesota by 3
young defense is gaining the
experience it takes to be winners ,
and Coach Sproule is sure that
the Huskies will rebound this
gridders.
Stats for BSC — West Chester
I game
Frist downs
Yds. rushing
Yds. passing
Yds. lost
Net Yds.
Pass completions
Pa sses int. by:
Ave. for kickof fs
Kick return ave.
Ave. punts
Penalty yards
field have earned him the
distinction of being a specialist
and being good at it . He is on the
kicking team . His toughness at
this position allowed him to force
a Mansfield runner to fumble the
ball on the opening kickof f, In the
California game his ha rd hitting
put number 28 out of the game .
" For my first year varsity I
think I 've played a lot , " he said .
But he admits that it 's not as
much as he would like to. Mucker
would play every minute of every
game if allowed . His idol is Dick
prince of clowns , easy to laugh at
and with , but on the field he is
mean . Ask anyone who plays
against him .
22
14
368
117
155
184
9 " 50
514
251
14-27 12-41
5
1
9-49 2-48
2-48 9-152
4-39 7-34
6-80 4-50
This semester he 's pledging
SOB. Afte r grad uation in May
(maybe ) he intends to go out and
make a lot of money " . His major
is Business Administration.
TRACK PHOTOS
BY DAN MARESH
Since this week 's game is
awa y , we want to remind
everyone that next week 's game
FOOTBALL PHOTO
is hom e against Cheyney . Lets
give the team some support , be
BY TOM SCHOFIELD
there .
A fine endin g after • long race
talent and desire to play and
reputation as a hard hitter on the
When off the field Muc ker is the
WC BSC
The Girls ' Gym will be
reserv ed every Sunday this
1 semester for faculty recrea tion
from 2: 00 p.m. till 5:00 p.m.
Even though he lacks college
football experience , his natural
Butkus considered by many to be
the toughest man in Pro Football
When a sked wha t he thought of
his defensive line Coach Bolar , he
answered in one word : "Fantastic. "
I week against Millersville State
I
Profile
Dutchman is a good coach. Look
for more Saint rushing (marching).
Pitt sbur gh hv 9 over Houston.
Bradshaw , is beginnin g to lead
By MIKE YARMEY
the Steelers , while Pa storini is
G
eorge
Ellis
still learnin g.
Class
:
S
enior
NY
Jets.
Miami by 10 over
Height:
5 ft. 9 in.
!
Their
Miami has an offense
Weight:
200 pounds
rushin g is superb , their defense
Age:
21
tough. The Jets are coming back
with Bob Davis , their No. 3 QB. Position: Defensive End
Middle Guard
Eagles by 1 over NY Giants —
High
School
: Hanover Township
pride comes out and triumphs
(Mucker
) Ellis is
George
somehow. Tarkington stunned.
considered
the
toughest
utility
This will be upset of the week.
man
on
the
team
.
When
asked
Buffalo by 3 over San Diego —
wh
y
he
pla
y
ed
he
said
"Because
,
like the . Eagles , Buffalo has to
win sorffetime. I' m sure Shaw I like to hurt people."
and OJ will click this week.
Muck pla yed football in his
Kansas Cit y by 3 over
freshman
year but sat out his
Washington — Kansas City
soph
omore
and juni or years
pla ying well. Washington has to.
't like the coach
because
he
didn
lose sometime .
of
the
football
team
. He regrets
u^r o uvci T
lG
i a
uia*
u
o
u
iu
iu
i
^
his
decision
now
because
, "I
Both teams strong . Morrall
shouldn
't
have
let
my
personal
triumphs over Cuozzo .
feelings about a coach interfere
Women Know the Score
with my wanting to play footOakland over Cincinnati
Los Angeles over Green Bay ball. " However , the fact that
San Francisco over St . Louis Mucker didn 't play football
during those two years had
New England over Dallas
nothing
to do with his abili ty
Detroit over Chicago
because
while in high school,
Atlanta over New Orleans
Mucker
started
for three years
Houston over Pittsburgh
pla
ying
either
offensive
guard or
Miami over N.Y. Jets
linebacker
.
N.Y. Giants over Philadel phia
Praettae la var y lonely for a distance runner
Pass-f ail basis confirma tion or
denials of reque sts have been
forwarded to your mailboxes. If
you have questions contact the
Office of the Registrar immediately .
I
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Intense and Burners
Candles....
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figuratively . . . and give you a bette r chance to
make it—meaningfully—in this changing wo rld.
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VOTE
Boyd C. Laycock , Jr.
TEACHERS: Summer travel with credit (or teachers and administrators .
for County Treasurer
.
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SORORITIES
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Theta Tau Omega
MI^^^^ M^B^BMBMBMBiBB ^MI
Delta Epsilon Beta
The sisters of Delta Epsilon
It' s been "back to school" after
a great summer f or the sisters of Beta are proud to announce- the
Theta Tau , with a great year
ahead of us.
An i mportant time on our list of
activities is our fund raiser to be
held December 13. Theta Tau will
be sponsoring a dance-concert
f eaturi ng the "Bouys", a popular
group and p rod ucers of the songs
"Timothy " and "Give Up Your
Gun ." We hope everyone will
plan on supporting our fund
'raiser while enjoying a terrific
eveninff.
The year so far has found
Theta Tau busy with rush and
meeting with all the rushees.
Seven rushees have entered the
Greek World by becoming
pledges of Theta Tau Omega.
Th ey are : Dianne Baker, Carol
Drake, Marian Gessic , Mary Ann
Kwait kawski , Kathy Lamm ,
Annette Slesinski and Vicki
Waugh. The sisters and all
pledges are looking forward to
the many'pledging activities and
mixers that are planned.
We extend an open invitation to
everyone to stop by and vwit witn
us in our new sorority house at
427 E. Third Street, and may we
with everyone at BSC a
promising and fun year,
ribboning of their pledges. The
newly elected members of the 7th
pledge class are : Mary Jo
Spinoza , pledge class president,
Michele Noto, Debbie Columbine,
Susie Flame, Jennifer Jones,
Denise Mullins, Carol Faustner,
Debbie Kern , Kristi Elody,
Smoke Small, Janie Ry an, Ruth
Ann McClosky , and Claire
Schlosser.
We 'd lik e to congratulate th em
f or their success i n taking first
soror i ty
pl ace
in
the
Homecoming skits. Further
congratulations go to the six
sisters w h o were h omecoming
queen candidates and especially
1971
to
Lori
Joh nson,
Homecoming Queen.
The sisters are uusy planning
their service project for fall
semester. A Halloween party will
be held for brain damaged
children October 29. The sisters
also plan a hoagie sale for October 27. Other future plans involve the 2nd annual Black and
White Formal wh ich will be held
on November 20th at the Holiday
Inn in Hazleton.
VOTE
"RED" CANOUSE
for County Commissioner
•
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LETTER
( continued from p«g« two)
pisses me off when someone
blatantly neglects his homework.
How someone can leave out
entirely a member of a group is
ludicrous. And from a four man
group!! What the hell was Clif
Nivison doing on stage?
I don't wnat to go into song
titles but the only correct one was
"Whiter Shade of Pale." All the
others sounded like Mr. Oliver
copied a line from a song they did
in order to identify it. (Very
poor).
Contradictions abound, (i.e.,
h ow can a "quiet classical
group...play loudly"?) And
bef ore some musically unaware
students go home asking Daddy
to buy them an organ to simulate
j ungle and mountain sounds,
please let it be known it was NOT
an organ BUT a synthesizer.
The article ended on a halfhearted attempt at a dope rap. I
guess some people haven 't h eard
that .concerts can be held without
dope being smoked — and if dope
is smok ed th e last place you want
it mentioned is in print — unless
Of course you 're LOSING
STATUS - but then PLASTIC
people smoke STYROFOAM
JOINTS.
All in all, the article should
never have been printed — a
picture is worth a thousand
words.
Yours in peace ,
L. Russel,
Wilkes-Barre
P.S. Looking forward to SEEING
this letter PRINTED .
Council
to meet
On Monday, October 25 at 7:00
p.m., CGA will hold its second
meeting in Kuster Auditorium .
Prominent on the agenda will be
the reports of the standing
committees of CGA, including
election, finance (BNE ) , student
organizations, and judicial.
Up for consideration is the
adoption of Sturgis Standard
Parliamentary
Code
of
Procedure in place of Robert's
Rules of Order as the rule book
parliamentary
regarding
procedure to be used by College
Council.
The definition or on-campus
h ousing and a decision on th e
validity of the current off-campus
representatives w i ll also be on
the agenda. A question was
ra ised at the last meeting as to the validity
of the current off-campus
representatives. This question
arose due to the fact that the
college recently changed the
classifications of off-campus and
independent housing. The current
representatives all live in inhousing,
a
dependent '
classification for which the CGA
constitution does not provide
representation.
Other topics on the agenda for
this meeting include the election
of two council members to the
Executive Committee of College
Every Day
Plain and
Ham Hoagks,
ChOM • Pspporont • Onion
Plxia. Our own Mads *«•
Cmm.
Tako Out Ordsrs —Dsllv *
to
Dorms, Frats ,
•ry
Sorori ties.
Dial
Hours:
11:00
Frida y
Saturda y
Sunday
7844813
Mth. ¦• Thurs.
t:00 -
?:00-ll:00
4:10*11:00
11:00.11:10
PLAGUE !
"A Plague on Your Children" is
not a pretty film to look at. It is a
disturbing, factual investigation
into chemical and biological
(ca lled CB) warfare. It shows
what t he chemical and biological
weapons are, what they can do,
and what ki nd of scientific work
is being done to produce or
counteract them. The film will be
shown Wednesday, October 27 at
6:30 p.m. in Kuster Auditorium.
It is alarming that there has
been little public discussion of
these lethal weapons. There are
many questions and answers that
should be pursued. That they
need to be pursued — urgently —
is the most important message in
the film.
The film is being shown as part
of the course on contemporary
issues In United States History.
Students and faculty are
welcome to attend.
Council, allocation for a new
station wagon for CGA, and an
allocation to the Town Park
Association.
iL
' '/M/inr 00iM^«« i
CGA and faculty
voting on change
ASPCUF
to negotiate
Negotiations
for
higher
salaries and more attractive
benefits will be the main objective of the Pennsylvania
Association for Higher Education
( APSCUF - PAHE ) , the recently
elected bargaining agent for
state colleges and universities .
With advance ments in salaries ,
benefits , and other areas relating
to faculties , APSCUF hopes to
raise the quality of educationa l
opportunities in Pennsylvania ,
both for teachers and students.
APSCUF has dedicated itself to
three princ iples of academic and
(1)
professional
growth:
negotiation of a master contract
that will enable the Pennsylvania
state colleges and university to
retain and attract
highly
qualified personnel and to raise
the aca demic standards of theseinstitutions in a continuing effort
to provide scholarly excellence ;
(2) uniformity of rights and
benefits that will enable faculty
at all 14/ institutions to enjoy
greater roles in the life Of their
institutions ; (3) maintenance ,
within the framework of that
contract of a strong element of
local autonomy for individual
campuses .
Areas fallin g under the
jurisdiction of these three points
include academic excellence ,
fringe
benefits ,
salary,
professional
provisions ,
workloads , grievance procedure ,
and academic freedo m and
tenure. APSCUF also hopes to
improve the human rights of both
students and facult y, working for
the elimination of race and sex
discrimination .
APSCUF hopes that , with the
achievement of these goals ,
Pennsylvania will be able to
compete with the top ranking
institutions of othe r states , giving
citizens of this state the best
possible
educational
opportunities.
of tha
recant
Kiln-8uilding
Karen Karim , co-laadar
con
struction
of
a
salt kiln to
explains
tha
Workshop at BSC,
Robert Behr. Kiln builders from all over the vast gathered
hare to bui ld potter y ovens out of everything from clay to
cow dun g*
Casey : return
money to college
Auditor General Robert P.
Casey , in a letter to President
Nossen , recommended that
approximately $45,000 in cash
arid investments currently
deposited with the Bloomsbur g
Foundation , Inc., b e re turned t o
the control of the College. Casey 's
letter is a response to Dr.
Nossen's reply to the recently
completed audit of the Bloomsburg Foundation .
Council acceptin g
board nominees
The Executive Council of CGA
ha s b egun set ti ng up p rocedures
f or recommend ing f ive students
to Governor Shapp, one of whom
w ill b e nom inated to serve on the
Board of Trus t ees. Th is idea was
initiated by Gov . Shapp in his
recent visit.
I n the Governor 's letter to Mike
Siptroth , CGA president , Gov.
Sha pp sa id " the names submitted
should be arr ived at only after
the wid est consultat i on with
var ious segments of the student
bod y . " Also, the person must be
concern ed with the welfare of the
college, and understand that he is
a trust ee in the fullest sense.
HELP !
Man power is desperatelyneeded to help load trucks for
recycling. All volun teers will
meet in fron t of Carver Hall
today at 5:30 p.m. If you reall y
care about the environment ,
here is your chance to prove it.
Thanks !
I n an eff or t to con tact a var ied
sam p le of students , the
Executive Council has req uested
that the p res iden ts of the various
student organizat ions subm it the
name or names of st uden ts who
the y feel are q ual ified to serve on
the Board of Trustees. Application is open to any student
who feels he is qualified.
Any student who is nominated
by an organ ization or who wishes
to a pp ly on his own must state in
wr itin g why he feels he is
qualified and capable of serving.
The applicant must also submit
an autobiogra phy stating what
portions of his background would
qualif y him to serve.
All students , who are not on
academic and - or disciplinary
probation may apply. The
deadline for submitting all information is Monday , October 25.
All information is to be placed in
Box 302 Waller Hall. Nominees
will then be contacted as to when
they will be interviewed by the
CGA Executive Council.
Casey wrote , "We are pleased
to know that pursuant to our
re commendation No. 1, you will
return the balances from the 1970
and 1971 Freshman Orientation
Accounts to the Commonwealth ,
and that you have returned $6.00
to each of 959 students who
participated in the 1971 Freshman Program ."
As to the Bloomsburg Foundation , Casey stated that his
office recognizes the Foundation
as a legal entity, an d t ha t as such
it "is entitled to receiv e gifts ,
grants , and other mone y s it
solicits , a pp lies f or or rece ived in
it s own name as such separate
entitv ."
Casey goes on to state that
wherea s the Foundation may
soli cit and hold i ts own f unds , any
funds rece ived b y t he College not
sp ecifi call y designated for use by
the Foundation mus t rema in
under the control of the college
and should not be put under the
control of a pr ivate foundation.
The funds Casey says should be
returned by the Foundation to the
College were not reported in the
origina l a udit. In his letter ,
however , he lists investments
and cash totall ing $45,698.25 as
having been transferred to the
Foundat ion by the Endowed
Lecture Fund which was set up
Oct. 9, 1958.
Casey 's letter concludes by
ask i ng for a copy of the Attorne y
Genera l 's advice to Dr. Nossen
regarding possible conflict of
interest . The question of possible
conflict of interest had been
raised by the audit and Dr.
Nossen had re plied that prior to
accepting affiliation with the
local bank he had asked the
advice of the Attorney General
and that the response had been
negative.
The College Senate informally
debated Wednesda y a proposed
amendment that would provide
for "23 students elected by and
from the student body at large ".
The amendment , to pass, must be
voted on by a majorit y of the
membership of College Council
and a majorit y of the total faculty
membership .
The ballots which were placed
in the mail Wednesday will be
accepted until 5:00 p.m. Monday.
Executive Council of CGA in a
letter to all faculty, college
council members , and student
senators endorsed the amendment which they feel would
"increase student confidence " in
the college senate.
The increase in student
membershi p would allow student
members to serve " more effectively on senate committees ,
by reducing the numbers of
committees on which a student
must serve , Executive Council
stated in their letter. Currentl y
faculty members are permitted
to serve on only one standin g
committee while students must
serve on more than one because
there are 22 permanent student
positions on standing committees
and only twelve students to fill
them.
Other advantages of the
amendment cited by Executive
Council are that it would provide
f or a "greater diversity of
student opinion " and also increase studen t memb ersh ip on
¦
a
a ppavnnnwvvi-iinqpiv
" .¦
¦-
-w ^ »^—.
certain senate committees.
The Senate Comm ittee on
Student Affairs una nimously
endo rsed the amend ment on
Sept. 23 stating that "th e number
of students (12) now serving on
the Senate is inadeq uate."
A letter declaring mat the
proposed change would give the
students " a more significant role
in Senate operations" mas circulated by the Studen t Affairs
Committee of the Senate to the
faculty , college council , and
student senators.
Amendment ffista ry
The original proposal introduced on the Senate floor by
Rich Scott was refeare d to the
Senate Committee on Student
Affairs . The Student Affai rs
Committee , chaired by Sir. John
L. Walker , recommended afte r
lengthy discussion tha t the
number of student seaJU ms be
increased to 23.
In order to bring such an
amendment to a vote there are
three possible avenues. The one
chosen by the committee
required that they ntouit a
petition with «gn^w». of 15 per
cent of the faculty rrr nir nimr; the
amendment be brought to a vote.
This Would then enable College
Council and the facultyto vote on
the amendment. The Senate
g anjy
constitution can be f h i mpa
by such a vote. The amendmen t
vote is subjec t to final approval
by Dr. Nossen and the Board of
Trustees.
.
Worksho p attenda nts : fro m left, Roa Baguckl, Mary
Cavanau gh, Jon Dacka r and Mauraan Vastal.
UNn
Group at workshop
Four students from BSC attended the Fall Volunteers
Conference for the Experiment in
International Living , October 1-3.
The students attended workshops
and discussed such matters as
the problems during hosting
fore ign students , problems for
A merican students traveling
oversea s, and the variety of
programs sponsored by the
Experiment in International
Living .
Attending were Jon Decker, a
member of the Senate Committee
for International Education ,
Mary Ellen Cavanaugh , cochairman of the CGA subcommittee for International
Education , Maureen Vestal and
Roe Bagucki , members of the
CGA sub-committee for International Education.
The CGA sub-commi ttee for
International Education is one of
the newly-formed committe es
under the heading of Human
Relations. As an initial project
the members of tti is subcommittee are setting up an
International
Infor mation
C enter , designed to inform
students of opport unities for
international study and travel
and to help those who are interested to pr epare for such an
experience. The information
obtained at the fall conferen ce
will be availab le in the center as
soon as it opens.
Fif th Column
( continued from page two)
green banging Zangor thighs. But
I'm grateful for the fire because
now that I' m awa ke I don't have
to use 5-Finger Mary or...
"Look out for that beam!"
Up ahead a beam falls, a
volun teer fireman runs out of the
way, barely makes it to safety .
The beam hits the center of the
blaze inside down deep into t he
pit and there's sh owers of spark
heat and then a black nausea
smell pocket from the pit itself.
Poor old horny Tyson , even he
didn 't deserve this.
Me and Blacky are up to the
house.* See Tyson's neighbors
frantically operating the too-olc
Company hoses hoping the flame
won't reach th eir h omes, too. See
the black skeleton that once
sheltered Tyson. Me and Blacky
stand and stare for a while.
"Gra b a god d amned hose ,
kid!" somebody yells. I jump. If
we put it out , if that beam didn't
hit somebody in the pit , if they
ain 't dead f rom t he smoke an d
smell an d fi re , then Blacky an d
his friends can start digging.
Small chance, but what the
hell...I grab the hose.
For a second I wish I had taken
my mar ijay rat ion bef ore I came
out because boy would this fire
look neat but that's an ugly
th ough t , all this destruction being
beautiful. But it is kinda.
How long I duck around with
that hose I don't know. I lose
track of things pretty much. Too
much smoke and shit. All the
voices that I been i gnoring
suddenly fade and my ears pick
up one voice, one of Tyson's
neighbors I forget his name. I
look toward the vibes and see h im
standing there holding the hose
he has like he's urinating or
something, ju st standing there
gaping at something. I look
around.
I don 't believe it! I just don 't.
They 've just found one survivor. It isn't human . It's like
Blacky. Except for one thing. It's
a female , an d f emale Blackys
j ust ain 't allowed on this here
planet. Unless somebody decides
h e wants to b reed them f or
himself . And that somebody
wou i be old Tyson...bastard
desc v es to burn.
Bu I stand and do no better job
than Ty son's urinating neighbor.
Fact we all stand here, looking.
We 've j ust never seen a Blacky
female before, and sh e's quite a
bitch , sleek , streamlined...I can
see why the likes of her are kept
from Blacky...no work would
ever get done in the mines.
And then the shouts. "Stop that
damn cur!" "Grab him!" But
there 's a big black shape leaping
over firemen and watered-down
beams and ashes darting toward
the bitch. And that shape is my
net !
"Black y !"
But he's in there with her as sh e
emergesfrom the pit. They circle
each other as we watch in perverted fascination.'And very soon
Blacky and the bi tch are doing
just exactly what you'd expect
two such animals to be doing.
And we watch.
And then I see the purple light
starting aga in.
"It's gonna blow again."
"Blacky, " I yell, "get out of
there."
"Yeah , kid," says the hoseur inater , "as if he understands,
va
"
"My Gramps said..." and I
maybe he was. Nobody has a
right to buy and hide a bitch like
that one... " And he walks away
without me hardly knowing.
So I stand here as everyone
rushes to meet the second onslaught of flame and gas. I stand
here thinking of Blacky and the
yearstogether and h ow lonely I'll
sleep and how now I'll have to
buy me another Blacky so's I can
work safe and keep Ma going...
...and someone, that same guy,
walks over to me with something
slung over his shoulder...it's
charred , it's twisted , it smells,
but it's Blacky...and the guy
stands there waiting for me to
say something appropriate, the
right th ing, as I look at the corpac.
...I look at the corpse and think
of buyi ng a new Blacky and how
now all my money , wh ich I've
saved for seven long har d lonely
times when the Hyperspace
House came down and I missed
it, how all that money will go
toward another Blacky instead of
my beautiful green-breasted
foliage-haired Zangorian woman,
who has ways of loving which
tempt all men wh o even know
how dangerous her very body is,
that very body attracting them ,
an d me , to her...
...and suddenly the words are
stnn
easy to say as I look down at
The pur ple light gets pur pler. It Black y 's corpse and spit b ef ore I
hurts to look. I only think how walk back to Ma...
lonely the mine, my bed, would
"Damn nigger."
be without Blacky, and I start to
run forward before some idiot
pulls me back with a j erk j ust as
the explosion comes forth with all
the furies of hell...
I am crying.
There is a strong hand on my
shoulder. "Go h ome to your ma ,
boy. There's more ya can do for
Fifty-five people were in ather than ya can do here."
tendance
I shudder. "Blacky 's dead." of the at the second meeting
"He sure is. Blown back to Thursday"I Quit Clinic" last
Earth and then some. Right interested night. Forty people
where the likes of him came smoking, in withdrawing from
seven group leaders,
from."
an
d
e
i
g
h
t h ealth agency
"But he's dead."
representatives
heard Dr.
"You don 't hear well kid. M ichael G
aynor
o
f the BSC
Course he 's dead. But you can Psychology
Department
spea k on
always get a new one, ya know."
"Smoking
A
Psycholog
ical
I look u p at the gu y who has a
Process
"
.
h ose f or a penis an d say, "It
In his talk Dr. Gaynor
won 't be the same. It won't."
di scussed
the
behav i or ,
"Sure it will. I kn ow. Lost me mot i vat ion , and stimuli related to
an imal just the other week. "
the smo ki ng ha bi t an d its
"Not like this. Blacky died practice. Dr. Gaynor stated that
with , with a female of his own." "Any habit can be changed,"
Th e man doesn 't speak for a
Following the talk , seven group
l ong t i me. Th en h e sa y s with an l ea d ers who
h ave alrea dy
ugly smile, "Yeah , he died "kicked the habit" conducted
happier than any of us. Too bad group sessions. It was learned
( continued from page one ;
old man Tyson won 't b e brought t h at seven part icipants i n t h e
to justice for that. But then again , cli n ic h ave gra duate d to "nonRena i ssance ," "The Cubist
Epoch," "Cre te an d M y cenae,"
"The Impressionists ," "Kinetic
Art in Paris," "le Corbusier ,"
"Germany-Dada , " "The Art
Conservator , " and "The Greek
Temple ."
The Art Department will of fer
the five two-hour programs in
sequence i n Carver Hall , wit h
admission for faculty $2.00 and
|^^^^ FLOWER S
for students $1.00. Series ticket
^^ ^¦^a^JB^B^BMiBMBIBM MBBi ajiJSW^
prices are $4.00, faculty and $3.00,
students . Additional information
W^^^Delivery Worldwide
may be obtained from the Art
Down The Hill On East St.
Department office.
1 (j Ult
Clinic
Picasso
Say It With Flowers From
"^^XMoy^S
Bucknell Concert Committee
Kampus Nook
pr esen ts
, Across from the Union
Hot Platte r* Every Day
i
Pla in *nd
Ham Hoagiei,
Cheote • Popperoni ¦Onion
Plus. Our own Made ke
, Cream.
Take Out Ord»r$ :
Hours : Men. • Thurs. •»00.
Il/M
¦
ftOMtt OO
rMey
4iJt1 1iOO .,
fefurefc y
twwit y
n»im»«
CAT STEVENS
plus
MIMI FARINA & TOM JANS
Wednesda y, October 27
8:45 p.m.
Davis Gym
Tickets $5.50
tickets avail able :
Buck n ell Bookstore
University Center , Lewisburg, Pa.
or at the door
'
{continued from page two)
unite. Unite now before other
minority groups grab control of
th is college, unite before the
discrimination spreads any
further, un ite 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 recogn ized Italian
Student Society wh ich 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 CNote: one speaker I
have in mind is Joe Colombo Jr!) i
4) Banning of all references to
an Italian run underworld by any
campus publications.
5) Banning of the bopks "The
Godfather " and "The Gan g 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
"Giusep pe 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.
G eorge Lapore
Box N o. 665
All confirmat ions or denials of p.m. until 5:00 p.m. October 27 to
req uests to schedule a course on a complete applications.
pass-fail basis for the current
semester have been forwarded to
t h e stu dent's campus mailbox.
Please contact the Office of the
Registrar immediately if you
should have any questions
regarding this matter.
All qualified students of
Geography and Earth Science
are invited to pledge Gamma
Th eta 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 off icers and
Carver Auditorium from 3:30 advisors met last week to discuss
Elected
future
activities.
smok er " status.
recently, the officers are : Steve
The next meeting of the "I Quit Wagner , president; Steve WrClinic" will be Thursday October zesn iewski , vice-president; Sue
21, 7:30 p.m. in room 79 of Har- Werner , treasurer ; and Peggy
tline Science Center.
Beaver , secretary. Anyone with
All those intersted are invited ideas for the class can contact the
to attend .
secretary at Box 2008 Luzerne.
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TEACHERS
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CGA and faculty
voting on change
ASPC UF
to negotiate
higher
Negotiations
for
salaries and more attractiv e
benefits will be the main objective of the Pennsylvania
Association for Higher Education
( APSCUF - PAHE ) , the recentl y
elected bargaining agent for
state colleges and univ ersities.
With advancement s in salaries ,
benefits , and other areas relating
to faculties , APSCUF hopes to
raise the quality of educational
opportunities in Pennsylvania ,
both for teachers and students.
APSCUF has dedicated itself to
three principles of aca demic and
(1)
professional
growth:
negotiation of a master contract
that will enable the Pennsylvania
state colleges and university to
retain and attract
highly
qualified personnel and to raise
the academic standards of these
institutions in a continuing effort
to provide scholarly excellence ;
(2) uniformity of rights and
benefits that will enable facult y
at all 14/ institutions to enjoy
greater roles in the life of their
institutions ; (3) maintenance ,
within the framework of that
contract of a strong element of
local autonomy for individual
campuses .
Areas falling under the
jurisdiction of these three points
include academic excellence ,
fringe
benefits ,
salary ,
professional
provisions ,
workloads , grievance procedure ,
and academic freedom and
tenure. APSCUF also hopes to
improve the human rights of both
students and faculty, working for
the elimination of race and sex
discrimination .
APSCUF hopes that , with the
achievement of these goals ,
Pennsylvania will be able to
compete with the top rankin g
institutions of othe r states , giving
citizens of this state the best
possible
educational
opportunities.
The College Senate informally
debated Wednesday a proposed
amendment that would provide
for "23 students elected by and
from the student body at large " .
i The amendment, to pass, must be
voted on by a majority of the
I membershi p of College Council
. and a majority of the total faculty
! memhershin .
The ballots which were placed
in the mail W ednesday will be
co-taKter
of tht
racanf
Kiln-Suilding
Karen Kariws,
Workshop at BSC, explains th* construction of a salt kiln to
Robert Behr. Kiln builders from all over the east gathered
her* to build potter y ovens out of everything from clay to
cow dun g
*
Casey : return
money to college
Auditor General Robert P.
Casey , in a letter to President
N ossen , recommended that
approximately $45,000 in cash
and investments
currently
deposited with the Bloomsbur j ?
Foundation , Inc ., be returned to
the control of the College . Casey's
letter is a response to Dr .
Nossen's reply to the recently
completed audit of the Bloomsburg Foundation .
Council accepting
board nominees
The Executive Council of CGA
has begun setting up procedu res
for recommending five students
to serve on only one standing
committee while students must
serve on more than one because
there are 22 permanent student
positions on standing committees
and only twelve students to fill
tnern .
Other advantages of the
amendment cited by Executive
Council are that it would provid e
for a "greater diversi ty of
student opinion " and also increase student membership on
office recognizes the Foundation
as a legal entity, and that as such
it " is entitled to receive gifts ,
grants , and other moneys it
solicits , applies for or received in
its own name as such separate
entity . "
Casey goes on to state tha t
wherea s the Foundation may
In an effort to contact a varied solicit and hold its own funds, any
sample of students, the funds received by the College not
Executive Council has req uested specifically designated for use by
that the presidents of the various
will be nominated to serve on the student organizations submit the
Board of Trustees. This idea was name or names of students who
initiated by Gov . Shapp in his they feel are qualified to serve on
recent visit.
the Board of Trustees. Application is open to any student
In the Governor 's letter to Mike who feels he is qualified.
Siptroth , CGA president , Gov .
Any student who is nominated
Shapp said "the names submitted
by
an organization or who wishes
should be arr ived at only after
to
apply
the widest consultation with writing on his own must state in
why he feels he is
variou s segments of the student
qualified
and capable of serving.
body." Also, the person must be The applican
t must also submit
concerned with the welfare of the
an
autobiography
stating what
college , and understand that he is portions
of
his
background
would
a trustee in the fullest sense.
qualify him to serve.
All students, who are not on
HELP !
academic and - or disciplinary
Manpower is desperately probation may apply. The
needed to help load trucks for
deadline for submitting all inrecycling. All volunteers will
formation is Monday, October 25.
meet in front of Carver Hall
All information is to be placed in
today at 5:30p.m. If you really
Box 302 Waller Hall. Nominees
care about the environment, w ill t hen be contacted as to wh en
here is your chance to proveit.
they will be Interviewed by the
Thanks !
CGA Executive Council.
to Governor Shapp, one of whom
Casey wrote, "We are pleased
to know that pursuant to our
recommendation No . 1, you will
return the balances from the 1970
and 1971 Freshman Orientation
Accoun ts to the Common wealth ,
and tha t you have returned $6.00
to each of 959 students who
participated in the 1971 Freshman Program . "
As to the Bloomsburg Foundation , Casey stated that his
accepted until 5:00 p.m. Monday.
Executive Council of CGA in a
letter to all faculty, college
council members , and student
senators endorsed the amendment which they feel would
" increase student confidence" in
the college senate.
The increase in student
membershi p would allow student
members to serve ' more ef fectively on senate committees,
I by reducing the numbers of
committees on which a student
must serve , Executive Council
stated in their letter . Currently
faculty members are permitted
certain senate committees.
The Senate Committee on
Student Affairs unanimously
endorsed the amendment on
Sept. 23 stating that "the numbe r
of students (12) now serving on
the Senate is inadequate. '*
A letter declari ng that the
proposed change would give the
students " a more signifaraiwt role
in Senate operations" was circulated by the Student Affairs
Committee of the Senate to the
faculty , college council, and
student senators.
Amendment History
The original proposal introduced on the Senate floor by
Rich Scott was referred to the
Senate Committee on Student
Affairs . The Student Affairs
Committee , chaired by Mr. John
L. Walker , recommended after
lengthy discussion that the .
number of student senators be
increased to 23.
In order to faring such an
amendment to a vote mere are
three possible avenues. The one
chosen by the committee
required that they present a
petition with sigtMha eh of'15 per
cent o( the facultyrequesting the
amendment be brought to a vote.
This Would then enable College
Council and the faculty to vote on
the amendment. The Senate
constitution can be rhw ^ptf onJh r
by such a vote. The amendment
vote is subject to final approval
by Dr. Nossen and the Board of
Trustees.
the Foundation must remain
under the control of the college
and should not be put under the
control of a private foundation .
The funds Casey says should be
returned by the Foundation to the
College were not reported in the
original audit. In his letter ,
however, he lists investments
and cash totalling $45,696.25 as
having been transferred to the
Foundation by the Endowed
Lecture Fund which was set up
Oct. 9, 1958.
Casey's letter concludes by
asking for a copy of the Attorney
Genera l 's advice to Dr. Nossen
regarding possible conflict of
interest. The question of possible
conflict of interest had been
raised by the audit and Dr.
Nossen had replied that prior to
accepting affiliation with the
local bank he had asked the
advice of the Attorney General
and that the response had been
negative.
Worksh opattendants: from left , Res Baguckl , Mary
Cavana ugh , Jon Decker and Maureen Vestal.
llton
Group at workshop
Four students from BSC attended the Fall Volunteers
Conference for the Experiment in
International Living, October 1-3.
The students attended workshops
and discussed such matters as
the problems during hosting
foreign students, problems for
American students traveling
overseas, and the variety of
programs sponsored by the
E xper iment i n Internat iona l
Living.
Attending were Jon Decker, a
member of t he Senate Committee
f or I nternat i ona l Ed ucat i on ,
Mary Ellen Cavanaugh , cochairman of the CGA subcomm i ttee f or Internat i ona l
Education , Maureen Vestal and
Roe Bagucki, membera of the
CGA sub-committee for International Education.
The CGA sub-committee for
International Education hione of
the newly-formed committees
under the heading of Human
Relations. As an initial project
the members of tfiia subcommittee are setting op an
International Information
Center , designed to inform
students of opportunitie s for
international study and travel
and to help those who are interested to prepare for inch an
experience. The information
obtained at the fall conference
will be available in the center at
soon as it opens.
ed itoria l
Senate endorses amendment
At approximately 6:00 p.m. on
the evening of October 20,
George Turner rose and proposed
the following resolution to the
College Senate : "Resolve that it
is the sense of the Senate to endorse the proposed amendment
to increa se student representation in the Senate to 23." A
question was called and the
unanimous acceptance of the
resolution by the Senate provided
the endorsement for what £ould
be the most important step ever
taken by .the BSC community .
Why can this be an importan t
step? The answer lies first in the
importance of the Senate itself.
There once was a time when
universities were self-directed
communities of students and
faculty . Over the years however,
giantism and administrative
bureaucracy set in and governance of the university was taken
from the hands of the students
and faculty .
We can never return to the old
communities, but we now have a
new one; a cooperative body of
students and faculty that can set
goals and programs for the
College. That community is the
Senate. And if the Senate is to
VOL. L
play a truly meaningful part in
setting the best possible goals
and programs for BSC, students
must have a hand in setting them.
The approval of the amendment wiil be an important step
for a number of reasons :
1) Much of the Senate's work is
done in committee. The present
membership (12 students - 60
faculty ) often results in one
student serving on ' several
committees, thus reducing the
ability of that student to make a
meaningful contribution. Increasing the . number of student
senators would alleviate this.
2) Passage of the amendment
will go far toward eliminating the
current imbalance (12 for 4000 60 for 286) in the Senate. It should
increase the student body's faith
in the Senate.
Last year a similar amendment died , not because people
opposed it, but because not
enough students and faculty
members voted. We urge first
that all faculty members vote on
the amendment, and secondly,
that they consider its merits,
consider the fact that the Senate
has endorsed it, and vote "yes"
jim sachetti
THE MAROON AND GOLD
' Editor-in-Chief
^Business Manage r
Co-Managing Editors
[News Editor
Feature Editor
Sports EdHor
Art Editor
Photo Editor
Photographer
Co*Copy Editors
Circulation Manager
Contributin g Editor
Advisor • ¦ .
.
NO. 13
Jim Sachetti
¦ . ' . . . Carol Kishba ugh
. . . Karen Keinard
Sue Sprague
Frank Pizioli
." Terry Blast
"*
Bob Oliver
John Stugrin
Tom Schofield
• • Kate Calpfn
Linda Ennis
Nancy Van Pelt
Elaine Pongratz
Allan Maurer
•
Kenneth Hoffman
STAFF:
Kay Boyles , Georgian a Cherinchak , St«ve
Connolley,
Ellen
Doyle ,
Mark
Foucart , Joyce
Keefer , Marty Kleine r, Sally Kurren , Dan Maresh ,
Joe McGavin , Mike Meizinger , Cindy Michene r, Joe
Miklos , Rose Monta yn e, Jim Nallo , Sue Reichenbach,
Tom Rockovich , Denis* Ross , Craig Ruble, Beth Y«ake|,
John Woodwa rd, Mike Yarme y, Ron Sefeeyr , Maria
Carey, Ron Perry , Ed Coar , Donna MacDermott, John
'
Dempsey .
The M&G is located in Room 234 Waller; if you can't
come up, call Ext , 323 or Writ e Box 301 .
Letters to the editor are an expression of the individual writer 's opinion and do not necessarily reflect the
views of the newspaper. .AH letters must be aligned,
name will be withheld upon reque st . The M & G reserve
the right to abrid ge, in consultation with the wr iter , all
in lengt h.
htt ^rt over 400 words
Photo by Connelly
S.O.B. Story
by John Woodward
The Sigma Omega Beta flag, in
its weather-beaten green and
white glory , still flies from atop
Waller Hall where it was
heroically placed last year.
Although the flag may be
weather-beaten , the Sigma
Omega Beta spirit isn't, and it
takes up residence along with the
brotherhood at 223 Center Street,
Bloomsburg, across from the
Columbia movie house.
Yes, the founding brothers
came from Scranton , WilkesBarfe, and Levittown , and they
converged on BSC to find the one
and only existing chapter of the
Sigma Omega Beta fraternity,
better kn own as SOB, in the
second semester, year of our
Lord 1970.
Currently there are sixteen
brothers, with eleven of them
living at 223 Center Street, the
SOB House. Last year there were
thirty-five , and hopes are high for
the upcoming pledge class to
bolster SOB membership.
The organization is not
recognized by this school ;
therefore, they have no cum
requirement for pledges. According to Fran Massaro ,
president of the group, SOB
obtains pledges from friends of
the brothers who are invited
down to a party to get to know the
brothers and see if they want to
pledge. Primarily , pledging SOB
is getting to know the
brotherhood well. "We're a tight
bunch of friends who live
together and stick together in
intramurals and at parties,"
added Fran. "For Hell Night -we
just have the pledges buy us a keg
of beer."
The brotherhood is disappointed that they did not get
better recognition for their
athletic prowess; they won in the
intramural playoffs, but no one
knew about it. That was last year.
The SOB life is many faceted,
and female participation in all
SOB activities is encouraged.
"Girls are welcome anytime
down here — eight to eighty ,
blind , crippled, or crazy ," says
Juicy Jordan , Sergeant-at-Arms
for the group . The SOB life also
involves parties, for which they
are noted. So far this year they
have consumed fourteen kegs of
beer; the fraternity beer is Pabst
Blue Ribbon , of course. When
they can 't get Pa bst they get U.C.
The group throws at least one
humdinger of a party a week.
"We're a party organization ,"
relates Rick Twardzik.
SOB also travels ; last year the
brothers converged on a small
church in New Jersey for the
wedding of another brother. They
do get around.
For the coming year, Sigma
Omega Beta has high goals. They
would like to have the Moody
Blues play at one of their parties.
The officers of SOB for this
year are president , Fran
Massaro; vice-president, Paul
Vanore ;
secretary,
Rick
Twardzik ; treasurer, Lou Parri ;
sergeant-at-arms, Phil Jordan .
You can see the green and grey of
SOB at 223 Center Street, where
popular people congregate.
Letter
Editor M&G,
I was at the Rock Ensemble
Concert October 8th . I also read
Mr. Oliver's article in the October 13th issue of the M&G that
my brother brought home. It's a
good thing I read it in my
bathroom 'cause throwing up
anywhere else is definitely uncool.
H ow an yone can p ri nt , let alone
write, such a piece of mediocre
journalism , is beyond me. Maybe
I'm so vehement beca use I've
personally been immersed in the
rock scene so long that it really
(continutd on pagt four)
| Pro Footba ll
| PREVIEW
by AREBEO, PEN, ELOG
This week our experts figured
! prett y well after a poor start last
j week . I picked at a 10-3 clip for
winning teams., 7-6* for right
scores. My female counterpart
struck 7-6 , and the newest
member of the ex pert team , a
I faculty member of the science
1 department hit 9-4 on games , 8-5
on scores . Not bad , eh?
The overall percen tages for my
Three BSC finishers
p icks now stand at 73 percent for
winners , 50 percent for scores.
" Pen 's" record is now 46 percent.
M y losers last week were
the C owbo y s , Broncos and
New York Jets . The Cow by DAN MARESH &
Incidentall y, Waechter holds the boys played ter ribly. Craig
BOB OLIVER
BSC recor d of 27:32 , at the home Morton
threw
er aticall y
The BSC cross country team is course , which Lee was only 13 through the fir st half and
having another successful y ear seconds behind .
surel y was not aided by three
under the lea dership of Dr. Clyde
BSC' s Pete Koury took sixth fumbles and three interce ptions .
Noble of the chemistry depart- and Box Q uairoli took spot New O rleans , behind Mannings ,
ment . The team soared to their number nine . The final two made th is game the upset of the
second victory in three days Husky finishers were Rod week. Buffalo , with OJ and
Monda y
by
defeating Dew ing in tenth and Don Nauss in Dennis Shaw , was supposed to
Susq uehanna University at the twelft h place.
have a big day against the
Husk y course .
Gi ants . They didn 't , but N.Y.'S
for
Monday was a special day
Last Saturday the * Huski es
No.
3 QB, Davis , and back
and
Pellitier
stomped on the Bears of Kutz- BSC's two seniors ,
Emerson
Boozer did , resulting in
for it marked their last
town State behind the record - Dewing,
's
28-17 victory.
Buffalo
meet.
breaking clocking of Terry Lee at home cross-country
Denver
and San Diego, both
A team 's score is determined
Kutztown . Lee broke the old
first five futile teams , played to a 20-16 SD
standard by a minute and three by addin g together the
team . victory . Denver had a bright spot
seconds. Paul Pelletier was in finishin g positions of each score in running back Anderson , who
with
the
lowest
The
team
second place 33 seconds later .
rushed 25 times for 105 yards , but
Rounding out the BSC finishers wins.
the Broncos still came out on the
were No. 4 Larry Horwitz , No. 5
Dr. Barret Benson of the bottom end of the score.
Pete Kour y, No . 6 Mike Hi p pie , Chemistry de p artment , Dr.
tor this next week : uakian a oy
No . 7 Bob Quairoli , No. 8 Rod James Cole , Biology department 3 over Cincinnati . Lamonica ,
Dewing .
and Head Track Coach Ronald back in form , hits Biletnifoff
Monday 's meet again brought P uhl , Ph y sical Education aga in and again ...Cincinnat i is
forth Terr y Lee in firs t , with department aid the cross-countr y tough but Raider experience pays
Husky-mate and co-captain Paul team by officiatin g in the meets . off this time .
Tomorrow the Huskies travel
Pelletier in second place ,
Los Angeles by 3 over Green
finishing the five mile course 58 south to Millersville in search for Bay . Packers have been pla ying
seconds later. Horwitz finished victory number seven. Earl y tough , but the Rams behind
third with Tim Waechter only a mext month will be a tough meet Gabriel to Snow combination
second behind him in fourth . against Bucknell .
should click through the Green
Bay secondary for long yardage .
San Francisco by 7 over St. Louis.
Ha rriers win
Husk y
Pre view
Last
Saturday
the
Hot and cold Pete Beathard is
Husky
gridders were stomped by the
Golden Rams of West Chester
State . The game stats really don 't
prov e how bad we were , but then ,
who has done well against the
Rams? They were every bit as
good as they were touted to be .
They surely will be the Eastern
division champion barring
forseen circumstances .
un-
What about our Huskies ? The
coming off a good passing day,
but he shouldn 't get much yardage off the 49'ers .
Brodie is still sharp , and with
Willard
rushin g
and
Washington receiving , San
Francisco will be tough .
Dallas by 10 over New
England . If Landry settles on
Stauback , once and for all , the
Cowboy s will be tough . You just
can 't be consistent with two
number one quarterbacks in the
NFL . New England' s Plunkett
gets good testin g from Dallas
defense.
Detroit by 10 over Chicago .
Landr y is pla ying well at GB ,
but Chicago is hurting, with NIX
and C onconnon out , not to
mention Sayers . Detroit 's Owens
coming into his own .
New Orleans b y 3 over Atlanta .
A rchie Mannings scrambling
ways will drive the Saints to
victory again this week . Atlanta
is tough , despite its record. The
San Diego over Buffalo
Kansas over Washington
Minnesota over Baltimore
Faculty Firs ts :
Buffalo over San Diego by 3
N.Y. Giants over Philadelphia
by 3
Miami over N .Y. Je ts by 10
Detroi t over Chicago by 7
Oakland over Cincinnati by 3
Cleveland over Denver by 10
Green Bay over L.A . by 3
Pittsburgh over Houston by 7
Dallas over New England by 17
Atlanta over New Orle ans by 7
San Francisco over St. Louis by
3
Kansas City over Washington
by 7
Baltimore over Minnesota by 3
young defense is gaining the
experience it takes to be winners ,
and Coach Sproule is sure that
the Huskies will rebound this
gridders.
Stats for BSC — West Chester
I game
Frist downs
Yds. rushing
Yds. passing
Yds. lost
Net Yds.
Pass completions
Pa sses int. by:
Ave. for kickof fs
Kick return ave.
Ave. punts
Penalty yards
field have earned him the
distinction of being a specialist
and being good at it . He is on the
kicking team . His toughness at
this position allowed him to force
a Mansfield runner to fumble the
ball on the opening kickof f, In the
California game his ha rd hitting
put number 28 out of the game .
" For my first year varsity I
think I 've played a lot , " he said .
But he admits that it 's not as
much as he would like to. Mucker
would play every minute of every
game if allowed . His idol is Dick
prince of clowns , easy to laugh at
and with , but on the field he is
mean . Ask anyone who plays
against him .
22
14
368
117
155
184
9 " 50
514
251
14-27 12-41
5
1
9-49 2-48
2-48 9-152
4-39 7-34
6-80 4-50
This semester he 's pledging
SOB. Afte r grad uation in May
(maybe ) he intends to go out and
make a lot of money " . His major
is Business Administration.
TRACK PHOTOS
BY DAN MARESH
Since this week 's game is
awa y , we want to remind
everyone that next week 's game
FOOTBALL PHOTO
is hom e against Cheyney . Lets
give the team some support , be
BY TOM SCHOFIELD
there .
A fine endin g after • long race
talent and desire to play and
reputation as a hard hitter on the
When off the field Muc ker is the
WC BSC
The Girls ' Gym will be
reserv ed every Sunday this
1 semester for faculty recrea tion
from 2: 00 p.m. till 5:00 p.m.
Even though he lacks college
football experience , his natural
Butkus considered by many to be
the toughest man in Pro Football
When a sked wha t he thought of
his defensive line Coach Bolar , he
answered in one word : "Fantastic. "
I week against Millersville State
I
Profile
Dutchman is a good coach. Look
for more Saint rushing (marching).
Pitt sbur gh hv 9 over Houston.
Bradshaw , is beginnin g to lead
By MIKE YARMEY
the Steelers , while Pa storini is
G
eorge
Ellis
still learnin g.
Class
:
S
enior
NY
Jets.
Miami by 10 over
Height:
5 ft. 9 in.
!
Their
Miami has an offense
Weight:
200 pounds
rushin g is superb , their defense
Age:
21
tough. The Jets are coming back
with Bob Davis , their No. 3 QB. Position: Defensive End
Middle Guard
Eagles by 1 over NY Giants —
High
School
: Hanover Township
pride comes out and triumphs
(Mucker
) Ellis is
George
somehow. Tarkington stunned.
considered
the
toughest
utility
This will be upset of the week.
man
on
the
team
.
When
asked
Buffalo by 3 over San Diego —
wh
y
he
pla
y
ed
he
said
"Because
,
like the . Eagles , Buffalo has to
win sorffetime. I' m sure Shaw I like to hurt people."
and OJ will click this week.
Muck pla yed football in his
Kansas Cit y by 3 over
freshman
year but sat out his
Washington — Kansas City
soph
omore
and juni or years
pla ying well. Washington has to.
't like the coach
because
he
didn
lose sometime .
of
the
football
team
. He regrets
u^r o uvci T
lG
i a
uia*
u
o
u
iu
iu
i
^
his
decision
now
because
, "I
Both teams strong . Morrall
shouldn
't
have
let
my
personal
triumphs over Cuozzo .
feelings about a coach interfere
Women Know the Score
with my wanting to play footOakland over Cincinnati
Los Angeles over Green Bay ball. " However , the fact that
San Francisco over St . Louis Mucker didn 't play football
during those two years had
New England over Dallas
nothing
to do with his abili ty
Detroit over Chicago
because
while in high school,
Atlanta over New Orleans
Mucker
started
for three years
Houston over Pittsburgh
pla
ying
either
offensive
guard or
Miami over N.Y. Jets
linebacker
.
N.Y. Giants over Philadel phia
Praettae la var y lonely for a distance runner
Pass-f ail basis confirma tion or
denials of reque sts have been
forwarded to your mailboxes. If
you have questions contact the
Office of the Registrar immediately .
I
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SORORITIES
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Theta Tau Omega
MI^^^^ M^B^BMBMBMBiBB ^MI
Delta Epsilon Beta
The sisters of Delta Epsilon
It' s been "back to school" after
a great summer f or the sisters of Beta are proud to announce- the
Theta Tau , with a great year
ahead of us.
An i mportant time on our list of
activities is our fund raiser to be
held December 13. Theta Tau will
be sponsoring a dance-concert
f eaturi ng the "Bouys", a popular
group and p rod ucers of the songs
"Timothy " and "Give Up Your
Gun ." We hope everyone will
plan on supporting our fund
'raiser while enjoying a terrific
eveninff.
The year so far has found
Theta Tau busy with rush and
meeting with all the rushees.
Seven rushees have entered the
Greek World by becoming
pledges of Theta Tau Omega.
Th ey are : Dianne Baker, Carol
Drake, Marian Gessic , Mary Ann
Kwait kawski , Kathy Lamm ,
Annette Slesinski and Vicki
Waugh. The sisters and all
pledges are looking forward to
the many'pledging activities and
mixers that are planned.
We extend an open invitation to
everyone to stop by and vwit witn
us in our new sorority house at
427 E. Third Street, and may we
with everyone at BSC a
promising and fun year,
ribboning of their pledges. The
newly elected members of the 7th
pledge class are : Mary Jo
Spinoza , pledge class president,
Michele Noto, Debbie Columbine,
Susie Flame, Jennifer Jones,
Denise Mullins, Carol Faustner,
Debbie Kern , Kristi Elody,
Smoke Small, Janie Ry an, Ruth
Ann McClosky , and Claire
Schlosser.
We 'd lik e to congratulate th em
f or their success i n taking first
soror i ty
pl ace
in
the
Homecoming skits. Further
congratulations go to the six
sisters w h o were h omecoming
queen candidates and especially
1971
to
Lori
Joh nson,
Homecoming Queen.
The sisters are uusy planning
their service project for fall
semester. A Halloween party will
be held for brain damaged
children October 29. The sisters
also plan a hoagie sale for October 27. Other future plans involve the 2nd annual Black and
White Formal wh ich will be held
on November 20th at the Holiday
Inn in Hazleton.
VOTE
"RED" CANOUSE
for County Commissioner
•
* plus
MIMI FARINA & TOM JANS
Down Tbe Hill On East St.
NEHRU'S
112 N. Market Street , Berw ick Ph: 759-9401
All Popular Came ra * at Popular Prices
Dark room
Pro j ectors
Photo Fin ishing
lies
Supp
Equi pment an d
Tape Recorde rs—Exclusive are a Ampex dealer .
Radio Controlled Model Planes — Slot Cara
Discount for B.S.C. Students
CAT STEVENS
FLOWER S
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Gr*«tiag Cards
CAMERA & HOBBY SHOP
pre sents
Z
' g Bt Wert
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TI TLES IN STOCK
LAW'S
Bucknell Concert Committee
M.00
OVER 8,000
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StiSrag J Write Today to:
/is cpy?\ Chapman College ,
vSjgg ? Box CC26, Orange , California 92666
Try our Week-end Special
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The most
Meanin gful Semester
you'll ever spend...
could be the one on
World Cam pus Afloat
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Blooasluii^ Pa
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Wednesday, October 27
8:45 p.m.
Davis Gym
Tj^ets $5.50
tickets availa ble :
Bucknell Bookstore
University Center , Lewisburg, Pa.
or at the door
Kampus Nook
A cross f rom the Union
Hot Plattors
'
If you need typing done, call 784-8606 — Gail Briesch.
LETTER
( continued from p«g« two)
pisses me off when someone
blatantly neglects his homework.
How someone can leave out
entirely a member of a group is
ludicrous. And from a four man
group!! What the hell was Clif
Nivison doing on stage?
I don't wnat to go into song
titles but the only correct one was
"Whiter Shade of Pale." All the
others sounded like Mr. Oliver
copied a line from a song they did
in order to identify it. (Very
poor).
Contradictions abound, (i.e.,
h ow can a "quiet classical
group...play loudly"?) And
bef ore some musically unaware
students go home asking Daddy
to buy them an organ to simulate
j ungle and mountain sounds,
please let it be known it was NOT
an organ BUT a synthesizer.
The article ended on a halfhearted attempt at a dope rap. I
guess some people haven 't h eard
that .concerts can be held without
dope being smoked — and if dope
is smok ed th e last place you want
it mentioned is in print — unless
Of course you 're LOSING
STATUS - but then PLASTIC
people smoke STYROFOAM
JOINTS.
All in all, the article should
never have been printed — a
picture is worth a thousand
words.
Yours in peace ,
L. Russel,
Wilkes-Barre
P.S. Looking forward to SEEING
this letter PRINTED .
Council
to meet
On Monday, October 25 at 7:00
p.m., CGA will hold its second
meeting in Kuster Auditorium .
Prominent on the agenda will be
the reports of the standing
committees of CGA, including
election, finance (BNE ) , student
organizations, and judicial.
Up for consideration is the
adoption of Sturgis Standard
Parliamentary
Code
of
Procedure in place of Robert's
Rules of Order as the rule book
parliamentary
regarding
procedure to be used by College
Council.
The definition or on-campus
h ousing and a decision on th e
validity of the current off-campus
representatives w i ll also be on
the agenda. A question was
ra ised at the last meeting as to the validity
of the current off-campus
representatives. This question
arose due to the fact that the
college recently changed the
classifications of off-campus and
independent housing. The current
representatives all live in inhousing,
a
dependent '
classification for which the CGA
constitution does not provide
representation.
Other topics on the agenda for
this meeting include the election
of two council members to the
Executive Committee of College
Every Day
Plain and
Ham Hoagks,
ChOM • Pspporont • Onion
Plxia. Our own Mads *«•
Cmm.
Tako Out Ordsrs —Dsllv *
to
Dorms, Frats ,
•ry
Sorori ties.
Dial
Hours:
11:00
Frida y
Saturda y
Sunday
7844813
Mth. ¦• Thurs.
t:00 -
?:00-ll:00
4:10*11:00
11:00.11:10
PLAGUE !
"A Plague on Your Children" is
not a pretty film to look at. It is a
disturbing, factual investigation
into chemical and biological
(ca lled CB) warfare. It shows
what t he chemical and biological
weapons are, what they can do,
and what ki nd of scientific work
is being done to produce or
counteract them. The film will be
shown Wednesday, October 27 at
6:30 p.m. in Kuster Auditorium.
It is alarming that there has
been little public discussion of
these lethal weapons. There are
many questions and answers that
should be pursued. That they
need to be pursued — urgently —
is the most important message in
the film.
The film is being shown as part
of the course on contemporary
issues In United States History.
Students and faculty are
welcome to attend.
Council, allocation for a new
station wagon for CGA, and an
allocation to the Town Park
Association.
Media of