rdunkelb
Mon, 04/08/2024 - 14:24
Edited Text
College Council
up holds decision
PHEA A
within
3 weeks
State scholarships, which were
denied to many this year because
of full-time use of unauthorized
automobiles, will be available to
students within three weeks,
according to the BSC Financial
Aid Office. Notices of scholarships will be posted on campus
bulletin boards.
Before issuing checks ,, the
Financial Aid Office was
required to review Security
Office records. It was discovered
t hat many stu dents hav e use of
an automobile without PHEAA
authorization. Scholarships for
these students have been cancelled.
Requests to PHEAA for permission to have a car on campus
may be submitted through the
Director of Financial Aid prior to
Nov . 1, 1971. Eligibility will then
be determined by PHEAA. If
eligible, these awards will be
processed with the second-half
awards and the total scholarship
for both the first and second
semester will be received in
March or April.
"PHEAA policy denies the fulltime use of an automobile without
prior authorization from the
PHEAA to any state scholarship
recipient (other than a veteran or
a married applicant) living away
from home in a dormitory or in
off-campus housing. The Agency
defines full-time use as owning or
having access to an automobile to
be driven at any time during the
academic year while away at
school. " Non-veteran , unmarried , dormitory, and offcampus students who have fulltime use of an automobile and
who have
not
received
authorization from the PHEAA
will be ruled ineligible for
scholarships until permission has
been granted.
Special forms for this purpose
are available in the Financial Aid
Office and also from the PHEAA,
Towne House , Harr is burg, Pa.
17102.
College Council , declared
Monday that Dan Burkholder and
Tom Beveridge will serve as
Elwell Hall representatives. This
action came about when Council
upheld the decision of the
Election Appeals Committee to
invalidate the first Elwell Hall
elections in which Mike DeMarco
and Bob Jacob had been elected
as Elwell's representatives to
Council.
Executive Counc il of CGA conducts the second meeting of the
(Phot o by Steve Connolley )
year in Kuster Monday.
The first election was appealed
on the grounds that the election
itself was held in the SUB rather
than in Elwell Hall as stated in
the election policies.
Mission and Purpose
th eme of comm ittee
i
At the Oct. 25 meeting of
Council w K en Siptroth announced
the results of the second election,
that
DeMarco
protested
Beveridge's original appeal
came six days after the election.
Appeals, according to the election policy, are to be submitted
within five days after the election. The argument centers on
whether or not Sat. & Sun. should
be counted as calendar days
since they are not school days.
.DeMarco's appeal, the second,
was referred to the election
committee.
The first election of Elwell Hall
representativeswas held on Oct.
4 & 5 in the SUB. The results
announced indicated that
DeMarco and Jacob won. Mr.
John Mulka received a written
"Mission and Purpose" is the and 2O0O, and make suggestions' appeal on Oct. 11, exactly six
theme of the recently formed towards a better college days after the election, f rom Tom
Also at this meeting, Bob Blair
Beveridge, Elwell resident. At asked Council to overturn the
Steering Committee, which held operation in its evaluation.
the Council meeting that evening decision of the Appeals Comits first meeting to discuss its role
The current members of the the appeal by Beveridge was mittee. This action would have
in this year of assessment and
Steering Committee are Dr. referred to the Election Appeals restored DeMarco and Jacob to
planning.
William Carlough , Michael Committee.
their positions as Elwell Hall
The Steering Committee, Siptroth, Dr. Don B. Springman,
representatives. Council upheld
composed of representatives Dr. Jerrold Griffis, Dr. John
The Election Appeals Com- • the decision of the Election ,
from the town, administration, Magill, Jack Naus, Mayor Lutz, mittee decided that the first
f a culty, and students, will serve Dr. Hobart ^Heller , George ElwellHall elections were invalid Appeals Committee.
as a coordinating body that will Thompson, and William Booth. for the reason cited by
College Council recommended
initiate projects , make a
Beveridge. The committee set allocation of $300 to the Town
progress review, and review the
Members who are not familiar Oct. 21 and 22 as dates for the Park Association , a private
final report. The members of this with the college community are next election. Also on the same organization which maintains the
committee will be assigned encouraged to live on campus for date a North Hall representative local town park used extensively
leadership roles in specific areas two days to get a pic ture of what was to be elected since that by BSC students . Council also
relating to their study and may campus life involves. Likewise, it vacancy had not been filled.
recommended a donation of $300
suggest new avenues of ap- is recommended that the
to
the Columbia County United
On Wednesday, Oct. 20, the
proach, new subjects for study, business people i nvite the
Fund.
A bid of $2358 was accepted
or new directions for the entire students unfamiliar with the election committee informed for a new station wagon.
proposal .
business world to come and Mike Siptroth , CGA president,
that most members of the
Council will sponsor Steve
observ e the
The report , to be published in businesses. operation of their Election Committee would not be Wagner , frosh class president, in
December of 1972 , will be
available to run the election.
aMMMM aM Siptroth , acting as CGA the "Walk for the Hungry" at $10
reviewed by the Committee, the pM
per mile on Nov . 7.
College as a whole, and the Board
of Trustees sometime before it is
released.
I JS|
{ NOVEMBER 13 |
The project will examine the
mission and purposes of the
College, planning for 1975, 1980,
Forum planned
on CGA Senate
Black students
w eJ1
plan programs I™™
I^MBf ,
|
The Black Student Soc iety with
an ex p ected subs idy from CGA is
p lann ing a number of events
dealing w ith Black culture op en
to the college communit y.
The main portion of the activities submitted Monday to
College Council center on a
collo q uium entitled " The Black
Experience " w ill i nclude t op
speakers and entertainers . Some
of the people contacte d by the
Soc iety i n the hopes of bring ing
them in on the program are Dick
Gregory and Sammy Davis Jr. ,
and Roy Wil kins , Executive
Secretary of the NAACP.
Other people in contact with the
Society are Dr. John Hope
Franklin , chairman , Department
of History , Universit y of
Chicago ; Dr. William H. Grier ,
president, gathered enough interested people to run the election.
On Oct. 22 Siptroth announced
that Beveridge and Burkholder
had carried the second election.
The results were certified by
Mulka and Dr. Griffis.
p s y chiatris t and author of " Black
R age " ; Dr. K enneth B . Clark ,
chairman , Department
of
Psycholog y, City College of New
York ; Bishop Stephen G. Spottswood , chairman of the board of
the NA A CP.
The Black stude nts also hope to
schedule a theat r ical performance in conj unction with the
Artist and Lecture series . There
are two possibilities : Donald
Mc Cayle Dance Group, the
choreo graphers for the Oscar
Award performance , or The
National Black Theatre Group
NYC, a company of fifteen.
Individual guests and artists
and lecturers from nearby
colleges arid universities is also
planned for Mar ch and April.
| An Open Forum to discuss the Jane Elmes, Senat e secretar y;
I relationship of CGA to the College John James, John Andris, and
I Senate in terms of campus Glenn Lang.
I governance is scheduled for
Wednesday, November 3, at 7:00
|p.m. in Carver Hall.
On November 15, 1971, the
I The forum , which calls for a
French
Faculty of the
I wide variety of the community to
D
e
p
artment
o f Fore i gn
come to gether , will deal with the
L
anguages
i
s
s
p
onsor
i ng a tr ip
possibility of
overlapping
to
Wilkes-Barre
to
attend
I jurisdiction between the Senate
'
s
c
l
ass
i
c
,
Le
Mo
li
ere
and CGA.
Bourgeois
Gentilhomme
in
II John L. Walker will serve as Frenc h presente d by the
mod erator of t he panel discuss ion
com p an y "Le Treteau de
w hi c h is open to t h e college
Par is ", from France.
|community. Each panel member
A BSC bus will be provided
will deliver a brief statement
that
evening. Students, and
concerning their feelings about
Faculty
are invited to join this
campus governance. The floor
yearly
experience
organized
I will then be opened for discussion
by
the
Department.
The
I between the audience and panel.
performance
is
sponsored
by
| Tentatively scheduled on the
K
i
ng
's
College
and
will
take
panel is Pres i dent N ossen , Vice
place at Irem Temple at 8
President Griffis , Cra i g Himes ,
p.m. The price of the ticket is
Martin Gildea, James Percey ,
$3.00,
Contact the Department
Joseph
Vaughn ,
William
for
additional
information.
Corlough , Senate president ;
Please
send
check
to Mrs .
Robert Miller, Richard Brook,
Mary
Lou
John,
Box
75 by
Rich Scott, CGA parlimentarian;
Oct. 29, 1971.
, Mike Siptroth, CGA president;
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edit o ri a ls
The faculty and students of
BSC have token an important
step toward a more meaningful
and representative community
government.By a vote of 147 to
44, the faculty approved the
amendmentto the College Senate
whichwill provide for a total of 23
.student senators. College Council
passedthe same measure by a
vote of 23 to 0. The faculty and
students are to be commended
for their foresight.
I Record Review]
Lazarus
...Blues Project
•
It can be invaluable as a forum
for discussion of issues which
have, up to now , been discussed
and decided upon behind closed
doors. It can act as an overseer of
college policy, and as a means of
preventing indiscriminate and
rash interpretations of college
policy .
The Senate can do all of these
things. But it won't, unless people
take an interest in its operation.
Right now this means students.
Elections to fill the 17 vacant
positions on the Senate are
pending. If you feel you can make
a contribution , if you feel you're
up to doing the work involved,
plan on submitting a petition .
We now have an opportunity for
students and faculty to work
together to determine the
direction in which the college
community will move. The
College Senate can be a body in
which the various segments of
This place can work. BSC can
the communitycome together to be a true academic community.
discuss, act upon and implement With a little bit of work and
thoseactions which will be in the cooperation, it can.
best interests of the community.
jim sachetti
Monday night, College Council
once again made me stop and
wonder if I was still in high
school.Totally disregarding their
own Election Procedures, they
allowed an administrator to
provide his own interpretation of
the procedures and then supported this invalid interpretation
by voting to accept an invalid
appeal, thus depriving two
council members of the position
to which they had been elected .
elections. The new elections were
held and Tom Beveridge & Dan
Burkholder were elected to
Council.
At the council meeting Monday
night, Bob Blair protested the
Rules Committee's decision and
the new elections. At this point,
Mulka stood up and proceeded, in
the manner of many administrators, to pass off his own
interpretation of the Election
Procedures as fact. Whereas the
Election Procedures allows "five
days" to file an appeal, Mulka
claimed that Saturday and
Sunday are not included in the
five day period.
Council (dominated this year
by the girls from Mulka's office
staff who sit in one row and giggle
throughout much of the meeting)
then proceeded to UDhold the
second elections and the new
members were seated.
The wholemess centers around
the Elwell Hall elections. On
October fourth and fifth , elections were held and Bob Jacob
and Mike DeMarco were elected
to Council. The Election Committee, due to a lack of help,
decided to place the Elwell
ballots in the Student Union. This
being a violation of the Election
Procedures, someone could have
filed an appeal within five days.
But, no appeal was filed and on
the fifth day after the election
results were announced , the
The whole affair raises a
election becamevalid.
number of questions. First, the
age old query, what the hell are
On the sixth , day Tom administrators doing on Council
Beveridge filed an appeal with in the first place? Why do many
Mr. Mulka, the administrator in Council representatives allow
question. At this point, Mulka administrators to do their
should have told Beveridge that it thinking for them? Why is it that
was too late to file an appeal. many CGA representatives are
Council should have done elected in high school fashion ,
likewise that night when that is, because they are popular
rather than qualified or inBeveridge appealed orally.
terested in student government? .
Unfortunately, the appeal went And finally, is CGA really student
through to the Election Board government? If it continues to
Rules Committee, of which operate in the manner it did
Mulka is a member. For reasons Monday night it hardlv deserves
unkn own , the Committee upheld the title,
jim sachetti
the appeal and arranged for new
OPEN LETTER
To all members of the college
commun ity, I feel that I can say
that we now ha ve a chance f or a
belter college commun i ty as a
resul t of the vote on the amendmen t to the Student-Faculty
Senate Constitution . I would like
to thank the members of the
f acul ty who vo t ed on t he
amendment , whether t hey voted
for or against , at least they
demonstrated thei r i nterest by
voting. To the members of
College Council, I must say that I
was extremely pleased to not e
that t he response was good and
t he vote unanimous. Now that
there will be twenty-three
students on the College Senate ,
pendin g a pp roval b y the
President and the Board of
Trustees, I feel that students can
regard the Senat e as trul y bei ng
the College Senate. Soon there
will be an election to the 17
va can t posit ions on the Senate
( six student members have
alread y been elected by the
studen t body) and I hope that
students will begin to think about
placing themselves as candidates. With the increase in
student membership, it should be
p oss i ble to a t tain a b road ,
representative cross-section of.
students to re present the student
body in the best possible manner.
I t is m y sincere wish , that
students take the init iative and
continue to str i ve f or a functional
college senate , truly re presen t
t at i ve of the entire college
commun i ty .
Mike Slptroth
CGA President
To all freshmen, sophomores,
juniors and seniors, academic,
social, or otherwise:
Those of you who attended
"Arsenic and Old Lace" Friday,
October 22 (which I'll add was
very good) saw our President in a
most unique position.
There has been a lot of
discussion recently on past
events that our President has
allegedly taken part in or instigated. I must admit, as others
should also, that I needed an
interpreter to explain the whole
heated situation to me. But it
seems both sides should have
given in an inch , both sides
should have admitted their guilts.
Dr. Nossen is trying to rebuild or
build some rapport with us
students. If he was such a tyran t
would women students ha ve the
lenient rules they have at this
time , would the College be
progressing at the rate it is, and
would Dr. Nossen have had the
"guts" to appear on stage Friday
night?
Dear Mr. Burkholder,
In reading your letter in the
Gadfly one question crosses my
mind. Why were you keyed on the
investigation of Dr. Nossen but
fearful of the investigation of Mr.
Houk? When you question ethics
who not check and see who else
violated whose ethics and get
your "FACTS" straight.
Democratically yours,
Marty Kleiner
Congratulations are in order to
the BSC Faculty . Approximately
95 per cent of those eligible voted
(continued on page eight )
VOL. L
by JoeMiklos
1971 is the year for rock
comebacks , surfacing, surfacing.
Moby Grape, the Airplane, Gene
Clark, folkie Dave Van Ronk and
now the long submerged Blues
Project. After many changes and
tremendous contributions to
music, the Project had split into
Andy Kulberg 's Seatrain , Al
Kooper moving on to Blood,
Sweat and Tears, the Super
Session jams and finally to a solo
career. The rest of the band just
sort of,faded. Last thing heard
was that Danny Kalb, speedfingered guitarist was busy
having a nervous breakdown.
That was about three years
ago. Now all that's left is a three
piece group, with only two
original members. Kalb is still
there, along with drummer Roy
Blumenfeld . Don Kretmar has
been added on bass and sax. With
only three musicians the Blues
Project is still an excellent experimental blues band , still
kickin' it in good and hard ,
and kissing softly.
A wide range of styles is and
always has been a mark of the
Project. In their tradition, the
band still comes out a BLUES
band. The title number ,
"Lazarus," is a trad blues closely
resembling "Two Trains Running '" from the Projections
album . There are several real
rockers , Chuck Berry style ,
with Kretmar b.&.ting away on
sax. Kalb's voice * both wicked
and on the acoustic numbers
incredibly soft. If he's cut down
on the speed-rage on guitar, it's
only because he's found that a
few tasteful licks emphasize the
blasts when they do crop up.
Blumenfeld keeps sneaking that
jazz into the beat he provides.
It took guts to incorporate folk
and classical into the blues about
four years ago. Kalb has
managed to keep his finger on the
original intent of the Blues
Project after that long a period. A
progressive, bendable form was
( continued
oh page eight )
THE MAROON AND GOLD NO. 15
Edltor-in-C Me*
Business Manager
Co.Managing Editors
New* Editor
Sports Editor
Feature Editor
Art Editor
Photo Edi t o r
Photographer s
Jin , fachettl
Carol Klshbav gh
Karon Kelnsrd
Sue Sprague
Frank Plioli
Bob Oliver
Torry Blass
John Stugrln
.
I'd just like to say we're all
human , we're all susceptible to
temptations , and we AL L make
mista kes . Th ose of you who
pointed a finger at Dr. Nossen
without any solid facts to back it
up, t hose of you wh o want h i m
re placed , are you sup erhuman ,
don 't you also make mistakes , do
you have some sort of hot line to
the truth behind it all , could you
do a bette r job? If so, there are
man y peop le who would like to
know .
Co-Copy Editors
BSC is growing very rapidly
an d decisi ons must b e made at
the same rate. Tak e a look at
y ourselves , are you without
f aults, do you have the abilit y to
foresee future events and make
decisions in accor dance with
them? If you fit this description ,
have your p ictures taken , posters
•
made , secret ballots run off
for
you
in
'
waiting
t here s a bed
the President 's mansion.
Th# M & G Is locate d in Roo m 234 Wal ler. Ext. 321,
C ind y Boll
1546 Montour
Tom Schofield
Kate Calpin
Steve Connolley
Dan Maresh
Craig Ruble
Linda Bnn ls
Nancy Van Pelt
Elaine Pungra ti
..
. Allen Maurer
Kennet h Hoffma n
Cir culation Manager
.
Contributing Edito r
.
Adviso r
STAFF: Kay Boyles , Georgians Cherin chak , Ellen Doyle ,
Joyce Keefor , Saily Kurren , J«e McGavl n, Mike Meizinger ,
Cindy Mlchener , Joe Mikloi , Rose Montay ne, Jim Nallo,
Sue Reichenbach , Tom kockovich , Denise Rots , Bet h
Yeakel , John Woodw ard,, Mike Yarmey, Ron Sefreyn,
Maria Carey, Ron Perry , Ed Coar , Donna MacDermott ,
John Dempsey . Ann Rtnn , Gins Mannella.
•
¦
¦
¦ox 301.
Letters to the editor ant an expr ess ion of the liMlir ' 9 °plnl on and d0 not
" •••••• rlly refl act the
.,
V!u
Ji ™
view
s ! of
the newspape r. .All
letter s must be ft gnod,
name will be withhel d upo n r«quest . The M & G reserve
the rig ht to abridgo , In co nsultstio n with the w riter , all
letters over 400 wor ds In lengt h,
A Pictur e
of Picasso
by Michelle Denlse Ross
In Bloomsburg the cultural
world is much lacking in,
everything. Specifically, art is |
lacking. There are no museums
such as there are in the N.Y.C.
area. Even if there were
museums in this area , they ju st
couldn't compare in depth with
the present series of art films
being shown on campus this fall.
The series is entitled "Museum
Without Walls" and it started out
with "Picasso: War, Peace and
Love" and "Goya." Both were were inspired by her.
shown on Monday, October 25, in
of
Another
illustration
Carver Hall.
The Picasso movie makes you Picasso's reasons for painting
think more of why Picasso something was the bullfighting
painted his paintings rather than scene. The film very effectively
giving you a cold, structural got you involved either with
study of the lines, color or , enthusiasm or with displeasure.
compositioq,which is helpful to an It got you aroused enough to
art student but more boring than understand Picasso's obsession
helpful to laymen. For example, with bullfighting. I can unthe painting "Guernica" was derstand more of his emotions in
painted by Picasso because of his his paintings, etchings, drawings
great sympathy for the people of or sculptures through this movie.
that town during the Spanish civil The film gave art a more
war. The movie showed closeups human quality , a more personal
ot the painting along with feeling for Picasso. It truly does
dialogue of Picasso's,feeling and take you out of the closed atthe history that brought on those mosphere of a museum into a
feelings. Again the movie con- more unrestrained atmosphere.
veyed Picasso's passionate love Not only Picasso was portrayed
for his wife, Jacqueline, by . as a master, but the film itself
showing many paintings that was a masterpiece.
Inner City
"Inner City ," a new Broadway
show directed by Tom O'Horgan ,
who did H A I R, LENNY , and
JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR ,
on the big street , is scheduled to
open for previews this month.
If past resul ts are any guide ,
O'Horgan direction is nearly as
assurin g of sm ash su c cess a s N eil
Si mon scripts. INNKR CITY is a
new musical a bout the perils and
l i f e today
pleasu res of city
taking pl a ce i n the h ea rt of t he
urb an world.
The production lias lyrics by
Kve Merriam wi th music by
Helen Miller and a hook by
Merria m and O 'Horg an. Miss
Merri ain is a poet and lecturer
who has writte n more than :H)
books spa n ning t h e fi elds of
poetry , social satire and
biography , and several books for
young people. Miss Miller has
done extensive composing for the
country 's top recordin g artists
and theme songs for many TV
shows .
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The eight performers in the
cast will span all ages, races, and
sexes and will include singers
and actors. Producers Kipness
and Kasha are currently
represented on Broadwa y by the
Tony Award winner , APPLA U SE .
O'Horgan has described INNER CITY a s a "sort of street
cantata. "
"1 hope i t's a new form . It
shou ld be a real c ross sect io n of a
ci ty , involving all t he hassles
we ' re all in t o . What w e 're try ing
to do . " lie said , "is not to show
j ust the problems of a city , but
also some sense of hope of how we
can get it all back together
again. "
Robin Wagner , who designed
the musical ' s scenery said the
show would have some small
scenes , some monologues and a
lot of songs.
If the show succeeds, plans for
mobile touring units will be put
into action.
Abort ions ,
Manslaug hte r ,
& WONAAC
by Patsy Truxaw (CPS)
Shirley Wheeler has been
convicted of manslaughter for
having an abortion.
Shirley Wheeler lives in
Florida , and in Florida abortion
is the sordid cloak and dagger
event women have heard stories
about since way back. The phone
call, the blindfolding, getting
switched from car to car , until
you reach some unrealiable
man's filthy table : that's a
Florida abortion.
Shirley went through all that,
but was unlucky. Nothing happened , except a little later she
began to hemorrhage and had to
go to her own doctor .
Her doctor completed the
process . Somehow a health
examiner found out about it. The
fetus was found with the catheter
still in it. Shirley was arrested.
She spent several days in jail ,
and was shown pictures of the
fetus.
"Here is your baby. Look at it.
This is your baby. How can you
deny having had an abortion?"
Shirley underwent , severe
emotional strain; the trial had to
be put off.
in Florida , women who nave
abortions and are found are tried #
under the manslaughter statute.'
After a two day trial , Shirley was
found guilty by a jury of three
men and three women. She has
not been sentenced, but she faces
up to 20 years for the conviction.
There have been no prev ious
abortion court cases in Florida.
Nor have there been massive
moves in the legislature or much
discussion at all. As a result,
Shirley Wheeler went throug h her
experience virtually alone. Just
as she was about to go to trial ,
Nancy Stearns , a feminist lawyer
in New York , heard of the case.
There are no ex peri en ced w omen
lawy ers in Florid a, and the New
York lawyers couldn ' t move last
eno ugh. Shirley ' s co n vic t ion
could n ' t be stopped .
The
Women 's
N a t i o na l
Abortion Action Coali tion is
w orking with Nancy Stearns now
to get support lor Miss Wheeler.
Peti tions have been dratted and
sent to (he governor and (he
j u dge .
The grotesqueness of Miss
Wheele r 's case is not unique .
Countless women ha ve their
own stories of horror , mutilation ,
degradation and forced shame.
Women luck y enough to liv e in
more "liberal" area s, such as
parts of California , New York,
and Washington, D.C., have their
own stories : of being ripped off—
by doctors, referral agencies,
and hospitals. Women have been
experimented on, like rabbits.
For these reasons, over 10O0
women
from
29 • states,
representing 253 organizations,
gathered together in New York
this past summer to form the
Women 's National Abortion
Action Coalition (WONAAC).
WONAAC is comprised of ALL
women who know they have their
rights, yet recognize that they
clearly do not exist how, and that
such rights will only be granted
by their own serious and consistent consolidated efforts .
WONAAC is organized around
three basic demands and has a
steadily developing program
working for their resolution. The
demands are : 1) the repeal of all
abortion laws and the corollary
demands of 2) no forced
sterilization , and 3) the repeal of
all restrictive contraception
laws.
The conference in July which
began WONAAC called for a
national show of massive force
around these demands to be held
November 20 in Washington,
D.C., and San Francisco. It will
be the first national demonstration ever demanding abortion-law repeal .
Plans for the demonstration
are well underway. Contingents
set to march include Women in
Psychology ( the radical women's
caucus of the American
Psychological Association ) ,
church women , Third World
women, high school women,
campus women , gay women , and
welfare mothers .
The Daughter You Love
Now , the daughter that you
lo v e , yeah , the daughter that
you love , the daughter that
you kill in the hack of a
t a x ica b bec a us e of a b a d
eurettage
that' s how y ou
lov e that dau g hter , bec a use
she ' s a tra mp, beca u se she 's
got lif e in her belly and she
ain 't got a hoop on her finger
that some w itch doctor
blessed --• that' s how you love
that daughter.
-Lenny Bruce
The Daughter You Kill
WONAAC is also involved, at
the local and national levels, m.
legislative and judicial pie&Mae
activities ; in investigating
abortion facilities on » -»mjmw.
in clinics, hospitals, and dorian*
offices; and in exploring
possibilities for litigation and
class action suits.
WONAAC is also laying the
ground work for a Womenfe
Commission. Dedicated to the
proposition that a womanhasthe
right to choosewhetheror notshe
will bear children, possible
recommendations the Commission might make, according
to WONAAC, are: the repealof
all anti abortion laws; the
passage Of an am pnihn pwf
tfiat no laws be passed abridging
women's right for abortion or
contraception ; a ruling by flic?
Supreme Court on the Texas and
Georgia laws (the two abortion
cases pending ruling by the
Supreme Court, for which
WONAAC lawyershaveprepared
an amicus curiae—friend of Cte
court—brief) ; repeal of the
President's decisionthat mifitary
women cannot receive abortion
on demand.
The week of hearing (a week
prior to the November 20
demonstraion) will include
testimony of women, giving their
accounts of abortion experiences.
Prominent women will come
forth and simply state that they
have had abortions. Anti-abortio n
groups will be asked to explain
and defend their positions.
Delegates from the Commission will then report on
November 20 of the success or
failure they encountered in
presentin g the Commission ~ s
recommendations
to
the
government.
It will take mountains of
testimony to save Shirley
Whe ele r , t h at is cl ear. And it will
take mountains to change
res trictive laws and unwilling
minds. Shirley Wheeler is talking
to salv age what she can oC her
life , and to make it less likely tha t
other women will experience
what she did .
And as Bernadine Garrett of
the Washington State Welfare
Ilights Organization so astutely
put it , "It is past time for women
to gain control over their own
bodies. "
Newman H o use to op en
Down around the corner from
Elwell . on E. Third St. stands a
two-story house that's a strange
color of green with bright orange
doors; orange and green striped
curtains hang in the back
windows. No , it isn't the original
Gingerbread House , what it
really is is the latest addition to
BSC's campus mininistries — the
new Newman House, scheduled
to open tonite.
The original Newman Center
was located on Iron Street, across
from Saint Columba's Catholic
Church. But Father Bernard
Petrina , the
Harrisburg
diocesan moderator for Catholic
Campus Ministry, and supervisor
of sixteen campus ministries,
wanted the Center moved closer
to the college in order "to be a
witness to the whole campus
community of the gospel."
The change of name from
Newman Center to Newman
House was to make known the
fact that it is no longer to be
considered the center of the
Catholic Campus Ministry 's
work, but is just a home where
people can come for counseling if
necessary , and can get together,
in the lounge and talk. But from
now on , the majority of the
Ministry's efforts are to be
concentrated on the campus.
The funding for the House
came from the Catholic diocese
at Harrisburg, plus parents '
donations . The house was bought
last May and Father Petrina ,
some student volunteers, and
skilled labor worked on it all
summer.
The lop floor of the two-story
house contains Father Petrina 's
apartment , a working and
printing room (with presses) ,
and a library and drawing room.
The ground level has a kitchen,
Father Petrina 's office, a dining
room, a sitting room (with spaceage furniture!), and a receptionist's office. The basement has
a lounge which has pale yellow
walls and black ceilings, which is
for students to get together and
rap any time, and a place for
commuters to come between
classes.
Also at BSC there is a Newman
Board , comprised of fourteen
students and approximately
seven facul ty members. The
members of this Board are
elected every Spring by the
congregation of the St. Columba
Church. The Board serves in an
advisory capacity on all Newman
matters, and helps to unite the
college with the church.
Father Petrina told this
reporter that the main emphasis
is "in working with students in
counseling, liturgy, discussions,
and anything that will help a
person to grasp what Christianity
means today."
The Newman House is
scheduled to open tonite with an
open house scheduled for
students. Any and all are
welcome. You can stop by for just
a few minutes, or you can stop
and stay awhile. But everyone is
invited. The opening will continue
to Saturday night, when faculty
are invited to come out and help
with the housewarming. So come
on out and see the House, and
stop and talk awhile. Tonite at
seven o'clock , just down around
the corner behind Elwell. It's the
one with the orange doors.
s.l.s.
Father Bernard Petrina hard at wor k preparing the new Newman House for opening .
p hotos by Schofield
Newman House whil e siding
was
still
being
put on in late September.
Chairman of Newman Boa rd Charlie Horvath
modern living room of Newman House.
sits
Ve %««
Charlie Horvath and Father Petrina
in Father 's offi ce loca t ed en t he
floor of the now Nowman Housa.
sittin g
ground
UewSff
In
new
Drama Class Trip
j l
The Modern Drama Class at
BSC is planning a theatre trip to
New York City, November 13 and
14. Plays students will be seeing
are OLD TIMES by Harold
Pinter, SLEUTH by Anthony
Shaffer , MARY STUART by
Schiller and adapted by Stephen
Spender. NO PLACE TO BE
SOMEBODY by Charles Gordone , THE EFFECT OF
GAMMA RAYS ON MAN IN THE
MOON MARIGOLDS bv Paul
Zindel. SOLITAIRE DOUBLE
SOLITAIRE by Robert Anderson, THE BASIC TRAINING
OF PAVLO HUMMEL by
DavidRabe, HAIR , and JESUS
CHRIST SUPERSTAR. It is
recommended that students see a
play on Broadway, one offBroadway at the new theatre
complex of the New York
Shakespeare Public Theatre, and
one at the Vivian Beaumont
Theatre of Lincoln Center. The
non-musical plays mentioned
above have either won awards
from drama critics or are new
plays by important playwrights.
The drama group will be
staying at
the
Century
Paramount Hotel and will travel
to New York by chartered bus.
Former drama students who are
interested in making the trip are
invited to contact Dr. Susan
Rusinko of the English Dept.
There are some seats still
available on the bus.
Mr. Richard C. Tyrrell of RCA
will be the guest speaker at the
second meeting of Phi Beta
Lambda—the Business Club—at
7:30 p.m. next Wednesday night,
November 3, in Hartline 86.
Mr. Tyrrell joined RCA in July
1967, as manager of campus
relations in RCA's college
relations department. Following
graduation from Bucknell
University in 1963, and military
service, he returned to Bucknell
and served in the admission and
alumni offices, while completing
his M.B.A. degree requirements.
He holds membership in various
data processing organizations
and has served as chairman of
various committees, including
the 1970 MAP A Recruiter
Workshop.
We had a very successful first
meeting, with an excess of 100
students and faculty in attendance to hear our guest
speaker, Mr. Rudolph Holtzman ,
an account executive of Merril ,
Lynch , Pierce , Fenner , and
Smith.
Any member who missed the
first meeting, please try to put
forth an effort to be in attendance
at next weeks' meeting—also,
any non-members who are interested in attending are free to
do so.
See You Wednesday Night!!!!
R CA
I Educational Conference I
Linguis t
James C. Bostain, Scientific
Linguist for the Foreign Service
Institute, Department of State,
Washington , D.C., will be the
featured speaker at the general
session of the Twenty-fifth Annual Conference for Teachers
and Administrators to be held at
BSC Saturday, October 30, in
Haas Auditorium at 12:15 p.m.
His topic will be, "Read Your
Neighbor."
Over 5,000 invitations have
been extended to teachers and
administrators in Pennsylvania
and nearby states to attend this
one day conference. Dr. C. Stuar t
Edwards, Dean of the School of
Professional Studies, is chairman
for the conference. An outstanding group of educators have
been seleeted as speakers for
v a r i o u s d e mo n s t r a t i o n s ,
seminars, and sessions of the
division of business, elementary ,
special
and
secondary,
education .
Bostain was the writer and
performer on several series
specials, including three series of
programs entitled 'EnglishFact and Fancy ', 'Investing In
The Stock Market' ; 'Message and
Image'.
Art Panel
A panel discussion involving
"Issues , Innovations and Insights" for art education in the
seventies will start off the art
section of the 25th Annual
Education Conference Saturday
October 30 at 9:30 a.m. in the
Haas Gallery of art.
Coordinated by Dr. Percival R.
Roberts, III, the panalists will be
members of the B.S.C. art
faculty, including Drs. Walter
Simon and Niranjan Goswami on
"International Art Education,"
Mr. Ronald Berchert on "Art and
Special Education," and Mr.
Alvin Salxman on "Inner City
Art. " Mr. Robert Koslosky will
serve as moderator with Dr.
Roberts.
From 10:30 a.m. until 11:15
a.m. a series of demonstrations
and an open house have been
scheduled. In the Haas Center
participants will be able to visit
an exhibition of contemporary
paintings and sculpture for the
Mid State Artists Association
Annual Traveling Exhibition, the
Department's African Art
Collection, works in the permanent art collection; including
a recent acquisition by noted
artist, Tetsuro Sawada.
In the Bakeless Center for the
humanities the following events
have been planned, arranged and
coordinated by members of the
studio faculty , Mr. Robert
Berchert, Mr. Ronald Bower,
Miss Barbara Strohman, and Mr.
Kenneth Wilson.
Students will be working in the
drawing, painting crafts , and
weaving, studios on the third
floor. In room 302 a continuous
exhibition of children's art work
will be held, arranged by Mr.
Koslosky. In room 303 two films
will be shown on the topic of art
and special education, "Painting
is Loving"j
and "Shape of a Leaf"
under the e ection of Mr. Ronald
Berchert.
A highlight of the late morning
activities will be the fpecial
firing of one of the newly constructed kilns outside of bakeless
erected during the recent kiln
building workshop sponsored by
the department of art.
Reading Clinic
by Cindy Mtchener
Perhaps the best way to find
out exactly what the reading
clinic is and does is to go up to the
second floor of the Benjamin
Franklin building one Saturday.
That is exactly what I did . The
reading clinic, directed by Dr.
Margaret Sponseller, offers its
services for children from kindergarten to twelfth grand and
adult illiterates every Saturday
morning from 9:30 a.m. to 12:00
noon .
The clinic was established and
approved by the state in August
1968. Doctor Sponseller stated
that it is an important part of the
graduate curriculum for the
professional preparation of
teachers w ho desire a Master of
Arts in the Education of Reading.
To achieve the M.A., the
graduate students must have two
clinical experiences both of
which are offered by the reading
clinic. Upon receiving certification the students will be
reading specialists . All of the
present clinicians are from areas
surrounding Bloomsburg, and
are teachers in service now.
Continuing, Doctor Sponseller
explained , "Referrals for indiv iduals to the clinic are accepted from parents, teachers,
guidance , directors, private individuals and school administrators. The clinicians work
with the individuals in the areas
of remedial , corrective and
developmental reading." Each
clinician works w ith two people a
Dr. Soldori of tho Reading Clinic ihowt apparatus to ttud ont.
day from 9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.
and 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon.
Through direct observation it
was clear that the clinic is very
well equi pped. There are
materials for diagnostic testing,
which finds the strengths and
weaknesses of the individual and
his present reading level. Tape
recorders are used with every
session to keep a record of an
individual improvement.
Also available are sight phrase
cards, verb games, other games
which include the Dolch
material , phonics books, SRA
labs and various reading books at
all levels.
The machinery includes a
telebinocular, used for testing the
eyesight since a problem in
eyesight may be a great
detriment in reading, Aud-X and
Flash X , projectors capable of
produc in g mater ia l on t he screen
at three different speeds, and the
listening lab. There is also a
curriculum library of basal and
individual reading materials.
"There is constant evaluation
of the individuals ", sa ys Doctor
Sponseller , "and a clinician
report and recommendation are
given to the parent and school
district after every semester."
In the summer the clinic is in
operation Monday through
Friday for six weeks. As Doctor
Sponseller explained , "Many
! times families will come back for
I summer school or are spending
the summer in the area . If they
have a child or know of one that
needs help, and if they write in
time , the child may be admitted. " The children in the
summer come from such different areas as Virginia ,
Delaware and Ohio. Many of
these ch ild ren are f r om other
programs and it gives the clinic a
means for comparison.
I n t he f utur e there are pl ans f or
a professional library and with
semesters planned till 1973 and
1 long waiting lists, there will be
more work for graduate and
undergraduate students.
Dr . Margaret Sponstllor
using Clinic apparatus.
(Comtollay
photo)
Listenin g Lab
The
new
"Listening
Laboratory," located in room F-8
of the Benjamin Franklin
Building, is now open to all
faculty and students, announced
Dr.
Margaret Spcnseller,
coordinator of the Readi ng
clinics.
The Laboratory will operate for
small group listening assignments ,
individualized
instructional listening assignm ents , genera l i nstruct i ona l
listening assignments , and
personal listening.
This facility has been made
possible through the joint
cooperation of Dean Hoch, former Vice-President of Academic
Affairs and Dean of the
Facul ties ; Dr. C. Stuar t Edwards, Dean for Professional
Studies ; Dr. Carlson , Dean of
Graduate Studies; and Mr.
Thaddeu s Piotrowski , Director of
the Learning Resources Center,
Andruss Library. Also aiding in
the project were the Reading
Staff and Graduate Student
Assistants.
It is advised that those wishing
to use these facilities preschedule their proposed listening
activities with the laboratory
student assistants , Edward
Gaughan and Jack White.
The hours that the listening
facilities will be available to the
college community , which are
determined by the availability of
th e stu dent a ssistants , are as
follows:
Monday : 8 to 10 a.m.
Tuesday: Uto 12a.m.; 1to4:30
p.m.
Wednesday: 8 to 9 a.m.
Thursday : 11 to 12 a.m.; 1 to
4 :30 p.m.
Friday: 8 to 10 a.m.
Other requirements for using
the laboratory are: (1) those
using the lab must bring their
own tapes ; (2) students may also
borrow materials from their
aca dem ic departments or f rom
the learning Resources Center
(Andruss Library) ; (3) requests
for "tem porar y reserve d "
mater ials from the learning
Resource Center should b
submitted to Mr. Piotrowski
whose office is on the groum
floor of Andruss Library ; (4)
Facul ty members wishing to
place materials on reserve may
do so upon a justific ation consisting of educational objectives.
Pr o f ootba ll
Profil e
Class
Sr.
Ht
5'10"
Wt
182
Age
20
Position
Defensive Back
H.S
Maine-EndwellN.Y. 68
You may ask why does a New
York boy come to little Old
Bloomsburg State? The answer is
football. It seems a lot of alumni
teach at Jack's high school, and
they recommended Bloom to
Jack probably telling him how
great Bloom was in football but
secretly wanting a good ball
player to help build Bloom into a
good football school.
Jack excelled as a running
back in high school but he was
switched to flanker as a senior
when his school switched to a protype offense. Though their
records weren't good 4-4, 2-6,
Bucchioni was still considered a
good flanker.
When he came to Bloom he
played his Fresh , and Soph, year
and sat out his junior year.
A senior this year , Jack now
plays defensive back where his
athletic abilities shine as they did
when he was a flanker in high
school. He says it was a hard
fight all season long, to gain his
position and he doesn't consider
his position in the bag . But he has
proven he can play the position
well. He caught an interception in
the Mansfield game and had an
impressive 14 tackles in the
California game.
Previe w
Jack Bucchio ni
Jack is very sports minded and
is grateful Bloomsburg gave him
an opportunity to play. Jack is a
football freak, he just likes the
game. He says he 's played
football since he was 11 and
developed a love for it through
the years. I asked him about his
social life on campus. He said he
doesn't get too involved. He
concentrates on football and his
studies. His graduation in May is
a "maybe."
Jack's major is social studies.
He says he'd like to teach but
then "so would a lot of people , "
After graduation in May (we
hope) he said he'd either go back
to N Y.or maybe Maryland for a
couple of years then on to the
West Coast. He's undecided about
graduate work.
Football was its exciting self
again this week. The "old man "
:ame through again , the low
iwellers scored upsets, two of the
iivision leaders fought it out ,
here was an unfortunate
•asuality, and the — get this —
Ragles won.
The "old man " who did it again
vas Oakland's George Blanda , a
pry 44 year-old quarterback and
>lacekicker. He came on to
eplace the injured Daryle
Lamonica and showed the form
that won him "Player of the Year
Award" last spring. He drove the
Raiders twice for TD's in the
fourth quarter, including his 231st
TD pass, as Oakland defeated the
Bengals .
Denver upset the Browns 27-0,
marking the first time in regular
season, since 1950, the Browns
have been sl.it out.
Baltimore won on the
statistical pads, but not on the
Scoreboard. The Eagles won their
first , helped by Happy Fellers 11
points.
My picks last week went 8-5 for
winners, 7-6 by the right score,
bringing my total picks to 27 for
39 winners (69 percent) , 20 for 39
by correct margins. My female
counterpart has also hit 20 of 39
while our faculty expert has hit 16
of 26 winners (61 percent) and
15 of 26 by correct margin , including a 7-6 record this week.
For the upcoming week ,
Washington will rebound to
defeat the Saints by 6. Curt
Knight is having a fine year wi th
his foot. (15 F.G.).
Baltimore by 7 over Pittsburgh
— Baltimore can rush , passing
not as good as in previous years,
while Pittsburgh's Bradshaw is
playing well , but not much more
hel p.
Minnesota by 10 over the New
York Giants . Minnesota has a
to u gh , tough , tough , defense. The
Giants arc floundering.
Oakland by 3 over Kansas City .
The Chiefs have been impressive,
and always play well against the
Raidars, but the Raiders have
luck.
St. Louis over Buffalo by 12.
Sooner or late r Buffalo will put it
together, but when?
Dallas b y 7 over Chicago.
Roger Stauback started and had
a great day . Chicago is fired up.
Dallas will run to make the difference.
Detro it by 10 over Green Bay.
Detroit wins big for Chuck
Hughes .
WOMEN KNOW THE
SCORE
Minnesota over N.Y. Giants
San Diego over N.Y. Jets
Cleveland over Atlanta
Houston over Cincinnati
Dallas over Chicago
Oakland over Kansas City
Denver over Philadelphia
L.A. over Miami
San Diego by 7 over New York San Francisco over New England
Jets.. The Jets are having their Washington over New Orleans
troubles . Had! will play well Baltimore over Pittsburgh
except for interceptions
St. Louis over Buffalo
Green Bay over Detroit
Cleveland by 3 over Atlanta .
Browns must rebound to stay on
FACULTY FIRSTS
top of the division.
for this week are :
My
picks
Houston by 3 over Cincinnati.
Houston is playing well but
losing, and are due for a victory . Minnesota over N.Y. Gian ts.+14
San Diego over N .Y. Jets
+3
Miami by 3 over LA. Miami has Cleveland over Atlanta
+7
two of the top four rushers in the Cincinnati over Houston
+10
American Conference. LA' s Dallas over Chicago
+7
coming off a romp, but could go
Kansas
City
over
Oakland
+3
either way.
Denver over Philadelphia
+7
+7
San Francisco by 14 over New Miami over L.A
San
Francisco
over
New
England. Pats are having trouble
+10
getting on the board , San England
Washington
over
New
Orleans
+7
Francisco has no such problem.
Baltimore
over
Pittsburgh
..
+10
Philadelphia by 3 over Denver.
+10
Eagles bag victory number 2 in St. Louis over Buffalo
Detroit
over
Green
Bay
+7
an upset over the Broncos.
Husk y
Pre view
It
Sport Short
(The Sporting News 11-1)
O akland
B landa ,
G eor ge
Raiders ' ageless placekickerq uarterback , asked if coachin g
enters into his future p lans : "I' m
not i nterested right now. Hell ,
I' m too old for coaching. I 'll be 45
next September. Who wants to be
a 45-year-old coach?"
ATTENTION!!
C ontributions
to
the
Olympian , BSC' s literar y and
art magaz i ne are now being
accepted. Place any work in
Box 293, Waller , or dro p off in
M&G office.
w as
a nothe r
gloo m y
,
Saturday for the Huskies as they
w ere bo m bed b y the Marauders
of Millersville State College. The
Marauders , CM confere nce , 4 2
overall) gained 'MK yards by the
airways and 229 yards on the
ground , and as a whole ate
through the Husky defense.
The bin difference seemed to be
the ability of the Marauders to hit
the third down plays freq uently.
Quarterbacks j erry Nau and
Mike Burke hit on 16 out of 25
passes while Joe Geiger completed only 9 out of 27.
The PC' s leading punter ,
Husky Dan Stellfox , again
avera ged over 40 yards per punt.
W hat ab out the upcom i ng game
aga i nst Chey ney ? I t h i nk the
Huskies will ta ke it by 14 points .
Cheyney , althou gh known for its
bad fo otb all t eam s i n recent
y ear s is tr yi n g to remed y that
situation. This year 's record
mig ht not p rove tha t , b ut the y are
playing tough. They went neck
and neck with Stroudsbur g, as
well as other teams. But the
Huskies are hungr y for a win , and
t h is w i ll be the week.
The game is HOME. Why not
go and enjoy yourself ?
LAST WEEK'S STATS
BSC Miller.
First downs
11
12
Hushing
168
229
Passing
Yds. lost
Net yds.
Completions
Interce ptions
Puntave.
Fum bles
Penalties
92
305
36
40
224
494
9-27 18-25
0
4
8-40.1 7-37.4
1
3
5-55
3-45
G ame photos
by Dan Mares h
Profi le phot o
by Tom Schofield
¦
Do you
want a
food change?
Freshmen class meeting —
Tues. n-2 7:00 Carver Hall.
Come meet class officers.
AEW
observed
What do lamb stew, jellied fruit
salad ,
tapioca
pudding,
Hungarian goulash, tuna noodle
casserole and french fried
eggplant have in common?
Besides being nutritious food ,
that is?
ARA Slater School & College
Services, originator of the food
preference survey on the nation's
campuses, admits its computers
feed back information that all the
delectable dishes listed above
have finished quite low in polls
taken at many of the 300 colleges
and universities the company
serves from coast to coast .
This week student PSEA
(Pennsylvania State Educational
Association) is observing
American Education week. The
theme for this October 24-30, 1971
observance is "Help Schools
Bridge the Gap."
But what will be the result here
at Bloomsburg State College
when students check their
reactions to some 200 dishes on
November 1, 1971? Different,
maybe?
We use these food preference
questionnaires to incorporate
your favorites in our menu
cycles,"says Mr. O'Brien, ARA's
dinging service director on
campus. "If you won't eat, or try ,
certain dishes, there is no reason
to offer them. We'll concentrate
on those foods that you prefer and
which we know are also highly
nutritious."
Universal favorites seem to be
entrees such as roast beef and
chicken...vegetables such as
potatoes , corn and string
beans...sandwiches such as
hamburgers, hot dogs and bacon,
lettuce and tomatoe...desserts
such as apple pie, ice cream and
strawberry shortca ke.
Cof fee generally rates low on
campus, with milk the beverage
champ.
We are conducting this survey
for your benefit — your
cooperation will be greatly appreciated.
As soon as the poll is taken on
this campus and the statistics are
available , Mr. O'Brien will
disclos e whether Bloomsburg
State College fits the norm or has
some unusual preferences.
i
Japanese
Art Gift
Housing Offic e
seeks op inions
Also with this challenge we
should "Help Schools Bridge the
Gap" between young people and
adults , between Americans of
different color and point of view,
between rich and poor, and
between promise and performance.
The Housing Office is currently
preparing a survey which will be
administered to all BSC students
(on a voluntary basis) who reside
in the residence halls located on
campus.The questionnaire was
developed by John J. Zarski,
Director of Housing and James J.
Carlin , Graduate Assistant. Dr.
Sanders , who coordinates
campus research at BSC also
offered assistance in the
development of the various
items.
The main purpose of the study
is to seek information about the
attitudes of campus residents
concerning the following areas:
co-educational living, tripling in
the residence halls, social makeup of residence halls, off-campus
housing, and flexibility in the use
of our campus residence halls in
order to meet changing malefemale ratios of our student
'population.
American Education Week ,
held annually since 1921, is
sponsored by the National
Educational Association , the
American Legion, the National
Congress of Parents and
Teachers, and the U. S. Office of
Education .
The members of Student PSEA
orge you as prospective teachers
and leaders of America to visit a
local school and observe classes.
Take notice of a sign on campus
and think about what education
really means to you.
IPando ra's I
t
¦
¦MBMSSBBHHHHHBii ^HBBM ^HHl
—
—:
VOTE
"RED" CANOUSE
^^^^^^^
¦^^^^^^^^^^
HB ii^^^^ HH i^HHBIHHHBBHBBHHIHIHIL
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
^^ ^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
^HIL ^IL ^IL ^Bi^lL^IL ^IL^IL ^IL ^IH
B
H
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^«
LALL I'S
CAMERA & HOBBY SHOP
112 N. Market Street , Berw ick
Ph: 7S9-94O1
All Popular Came ra * at Popular Price *
Darkroom
Pro jector *
Photo Finishing
Equipment and Supplies
Tape Recorders— Exclusive area Ampex dea ler.
Radio Controlled Model Plane * — Slot Car j
DUcount for B.S.C. Student *
232 Iron St. 784-2274
I
AATF meets
I need your vote
for County Commiss ioner
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^¦^¦^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ *
^^^^^^^^
the Housing Office recognizes
the need for student involvement
in the formulation of policies
under which they will reside.
Since a major portion of the
student' s time is spent in
residence, it is extremely importan t to develop a residential
situation favorable to social and
academic success.
During the next two weeks floor
meetings will be arranged in the
Dor Lewellyn
TV -STEREO SERVICE
for County Treasurer
B B
The Ski Club is presently
conducting a membership drive
to include all levels of skiers and
thoseof you who have never skied
before. It is to your advantage to
join our club. As a member of the
Ski Club you will have access to
all the latest skiing information
through our Ski Watch Committee. Information as to rates at
ski areas, student diseounfttays,
and club organized activities
such as overnight trips and group
discounts are yours for the small
price of $1.50 - semester.
An example of what we can and
are doing for our members is
Sunday, October 31. Our club is
Schools have become great
machines sorting and labeling
those who presumably will be
winners or losers as adults.
Noting this, we should help
schools bridge the gap between
"winners " and "losers " by
visiting the areas schools and
taking part in other activities.
VOTE
Boyd C. laycock, Jr.
¦ ¦
¦ ¦
¦
^¦
¦
Join the Ski Club
The Jr. Class will present the
movie 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY
in the Student Union on Wednesday, Nov. 3rd at 8:00 p.m.
taking all interested members to Tickets are $1.00 in advance or
the New York Colliseum for the $1.25 at the door.
1971 Ski and Tennis Show for a
price of $8.00. This $8.00 includes
bus transportation to and from
New York, Admission, PLUS
refreshments. As an individual
not associated with our club it
would cost $19.00. This is an $11.00
saving to you as a student interested in skiing as a member of
BSC became the recipient of an
our club. (I say interested
because we are recruiting people oil painting by the noted
who have never skied bef ore) . We Japanese artist Tetsuro Sawada
can do a lot for you so why not last week. The gift was made
drop in any Tuesday at 7:00 p.m. possible by the generous efforts
in room 79 Hartline, see a ski of Miss Toshiko Takaezu, well
film , and hear what it's all about. known African craftsman, and
Mrs. Kathryn Trubek, of the
Hundron Art Center in Clinton,
New Jersey. Selection of the
painting w.as made by Dr. Percival R. Roberts III, chairman of
the art department.
Dr. Roberts described the gift
as a "stunning example of
structured color field abstraction, ~.ie that will greatly
enhance our college's permanent
various residence halls in order art collection."
to distribute and collect the
Sawada has combined in a
questionnaires. IBM answer single canvas the best of both
sheets will also be used. This will cultura l traditions—East and
enable the office to expediate the West, clearly demonstrating the
compilation of the statistical universality of all great works of
results and make them availa ble art.
for campus examination. AdTetsura Sawada maintains his
ditional comments will also be studio in Tokyo, Japan . He
solicited on separate answer studied
under
Leonard
sheets. All inquires concerning ( Tsuguhara ) Foujits and has
this questionnaire should be exhibited widely in Japan ; most
directed to the Housing Office recently in the Tokyo Inlocated in Elwell Hall lobby.
ternational Biennial. His work is
represented in the National
Museum of Modern Art in Tokyo,
The Kamakura Museum of
Modern Art in Kamakura, The
Museum of Modern Art in New
York, Rochester Museum of Art,
University of Oregon, Cleveland
BSC was host of the Central Museum of Art, Japan Society,
Pennsylvania Chapter of the New York City , Asia House and
American
Associa tion
oi the private collections of Morris
Teachers of French. French Graves and Betty Parsons. The
teachers , administra tors and Hunderson Art Center featured
students from many high schools, an exhibition of his work in
colleges and universities of the March of 1971 and it was from
area met in the Bakeless Center this collection that the BSC
for the Humanities for the annual painting, valued at $4500, was
Fall meeting of the Chapter. selected .
Special guests at the meeting and
at the French-style luncheon held
at t h e Commons i nc lud ed General of the Federation of the
President and Mrs. Nossen, Dean Alliances Franchises in the
and Mrs . Hobart Heller, and United States , explained the
Dean and Mrs. Edson Drake. At functions and benefits of such an
t he lunc heon , President Nossen organ ization.
and Dean Drake addressed the
In t h e a f ternoon sess ions ,
group, reaffirming their belief in discu ss i ons were h eld concern ing
the importance of the study of the teaching of conversation,
f ore ign languag es as an aid to t h e with Mr. Claude Caujolle, of Penn
better understanding of mankind. State , an d Mrs . Constance
Since BSC would like to Griggs, of Wellsboro Senior High
establish an Alliance Franchise School, presiding. Mr. Alfred
for all people who are interested LeBIanc, of Penn State , t hen
in France and in French in their conducted a discussion about the
ar ea , Mr. Duca , Secretary- methods and materials to be used
for fourth-year students. Ushers
I for the meeting were provided by
"Le Cerc l e Franc i as ," and
arran gements f or lunc h eon
reservat ions were h andled by
Mr. Blaise Delnis, of the Foreign
Language Department.
JIM ROBERT S
for
Register & Recorder
I
Kampus Nook
Across fr om the Union
Ham Hoaglts,
Plain ind
Choost • Popporenl • Onion
Pfaa. Our own Mado to
Croaiw.
Takt Out Ordort —Dollvory to Dorms, Prats,
loro rltlM.
Di al 7844111
Houni M*h. - Thurt.
11,00
Frida y
Saturda y
frmda y
li OO.
9iOt-lliOO
4iS0*1ti0O
11,00*11.10
I
(conti nued from pago two )
in the recent election for a
bargaining agent. Several not
voting were in the hospital or at
meetings off campus. It seems
clear that we are not apathetic
about our future or about ; the
future of our role at BSC.
I would bj2 remiss if I didn 't
commend the many people who
worked diligently during the
election, for both APSCUF and
AAUP. Despite the intensity of
their effort , a professional
stature was maintained and
bitter personal differences did
not occur. As a result we can now
join forces in our efforts to bring
about an improv ement in our
academic and economic wellbeing without a millstone of
personal dislikes to hold us back .
All groups of faculty will be
represented on committees as we
move forward, without regard to
alliances prior to the election. We
are now in the process of
choosing a local negotiating team
as the first step in the procedure
and will select individuals only on
the basis of potential contribution.
Membership cards will soon be
sent to all eligible faculty . It is
vital that we have 100 per cent
membership at this time.
However, I must also say that
membership is not required in
order to be represented. I hope
that everyone joins the Faculty
Association. I promise that no
undue pressure will be used to
encourage that membership.
THANK YOU!!!
Robert C. Miller
order to be successful in ac- negotiating team should not be
cepting these new responsibilities appointed or elected from a
and obligations, unity among the membership 1 of twenty-five
faculty in supporting APSCUF- percent of the faculty .
PAHE becomes essential.
I sincerely hope that the
In any campaign of the nature leadership and members of the
we have just witnessed loyalties Facul ty Association will endorse
faculty the idea of the need to reorganize
contending
to
organizations become very the Facul ty Association and seek
strong. However , whichever ways to unify the faculty in this
faculty organization wins, its new important role.
first task is to bring the faculty
Sincerely ,
together as a phalanx of unity in
George A. Turner
collective
supporting
its
Associate Professor of
bargaining agent. Since the History
Faculty Association, as the local
affiliat e of APSCUF-PAHE, now
has a new scope of responsibility ,
there are some compelling
The annual Pennsylvania
justify
the Collegiate
reasons
to
Choir Festival was
reorganization of the Faculty held from October 21 to October
Association.
24 at West Chester State College.
On this campus APSCUF- Students from all of PennPAHE only won by a narrow sylvania 's
Colleges
and
margin of fifty-two percent. It is universities gathered in West
important that those faculty Chester for this year's festival.
members who did not support Representing BSC were: Kathy
APSCUF-PAHE be encouraged Surnicki, Sue Phillips, Michele
to do so. The membership of the Seliga, Margaret Herchik, Mike
Faculty Association is small, Brauner, Rod Bickert, Carl Kishwith only twenty-five percent of baugh and Al Swope.
the entire faculty as members. A varied program of musical
The present office holders of the styles and periods were
Faculty Association were presented when the festival
nominated and elected without concert was held Sunday, Ocopposition. There should be an tober 24 at 3 p.m. Compositions
attempt to bring talent of all are by such outstanding comcompeting faculty organizations posersat Stravinsky, Buxtehude,
into these important positions. Britten, and Mendelssohn were
The present constitution needs included.
revision in light of the local Three days of intensive
preceeded . the
chapter's new role as bargaining rehearsals
i
constitution
present
concert. Gregg Smith, noted for
agent. In the
are there provisions for selecting[ his Columbia recordings, was the
the local negotiating team? Thei guest conductor.
Choir
I
I
I
Congratulations are in order to
APSCUF-PAHE for winning the
election on Wednesday, October
6, as the collective bargaining
agent for the facul ty at BSC and I
the other state-owned institutions
for higher education. With the
question finally resolved, it is
now important to think about the I
need for collective support of the I
faculty to face the tasks and I
challenges that lie ahead. In
I
BOOKS...
OVER 8,000
TITLES IN STOCK
Iff If • • book
wo have it or wo can g«t H
Gmtiag Cards
HENRIES
Card and Book Nook
40 W. Main St.
I
Lett e rs
For Room Decor
Insense and Burners
Candles....
I
I
I
SEE US
THE STUDIO SHOP
59 E. Main St., Bloomsburg
784-2818
Gifts - Framin g - Music - Wal lsc&ping
I»-hh h h hhJ
Record Review
{ cont inued from pago two )
at first present and has stuck
with the Blues Project. The
number of forms and styles on
this recording is amazing. Like
earlier albums, the Project is still
pulling it off.
With an intent to take a shot
into the future, five musicians
took a chance. The Blues Project
is ever projecting. That shot was
a chain reaction. Too bad the
back-up musicians aren 't
credited. I'd like to know who
that funky pianist that slips on
and off this album is anyway...
See that? More contributions
from BP.
VOTE
Gailey Keller
for
I District Attor ney
I
¦Richard K. (Dick)
SERVICE
1I TEACHERS
¦
at one oMhe
¦
RATES
I LOWESTLOAM
Walton
mwm
I
awubu
,
I
for
County Commissioner
¦i^HHHH ^Hl ^
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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HBBBHH ^H ^Bi^^^ lft ^a^^^ iiiiiiiii ^«i ^________ .
^^^^^^^^^^
^^ MaM
*"^"""^^ B"^^^ HHB ^H^^H^|^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
HS^^^ HHHHI ^H
I"' SalT2wf548-0300
A» Builnes» Tranjaojed
^H
of Serv/oe «o $&&
Phone nnd Man
IlTM)Jl
y
Year
B
oi.t
and
^H
Educator.
^g^isf^
I
^ HufZr *
112 W. Main
November 16 & 17 — U. S.
Marine Corps Recruiting Student Union
November 16,1:00 p.m. to 4:30
p.m. Ernst and Ernst Accounting
Firm , Reading, Pa. January
Accounting Graduates
November 17, 1:00 p:m. —
Neshaminy School District ,
Langhorne, Pa. January : (2) Jr.
Hi Math; (2) Jr Hi Science Sept.
Special Ed (Emot. Dist.)
November 19*9:00 a.m. to 2:00
— Medina Central Schools ,
Medina , New York Teacher
Candidates
November 23,1:00 to 4:30 p.m.
— North Penn School District,
Lansdale , Pa. Teacher Candidates
^M
DRESS
SHOP
November 4 & 5 — NAVY
OFFICER'S TRAINING
Recruiting Student Union
November 4,9:30 a.m. to 4:30 —
Lower Dauphin School District
Hummelstovn , Pa. Teacher
Candidates
November 9,10:00 a.m. — InService
ternal
Revenue
Group
—
Washington , D.C.
Presentation of Job Opportunities with I.R.A.
November 10 & 11 — Peace
Corps
November llj 1:00 p.m. —
Easton Area School District
Easton, Pa. Teacher Candidates
November 13,9:00 a.m. to 3:00
p.m. — Anne Arundel County
Schools Annapolis , Maryland
Teacher Candidates
'borrow for less ¦ Re-elect
\H PENNSY LV ANIA:
MAREE'S
¦
Campus Interviews
^g^
Say It With Fb wers Fro m
*3ipfof|Us
|^N^
FLO WER S
Down The Hill On East St.
up holds decision
PHEA A
within
3 weeks
State scholarships, which were
denied to many this year because
of full-time use of unauthorized
automobiles, will be available to
students within three weeks,
according to the BSC Financial
Aid Office. Notices of scholarships will be posted on campus
bulletin boards.
Before issuing checks ,, the
Financial Aid Office was
required to review Security
Office records. It was discovered
t hat many stu dents hav e use of
an automobile without PHEAA
authorization. Scholarships for
these students have been cancelled.
Requests to PHEAA for permission to have a car on campus
may be submitted through the
Director of Financial Aid prior to
Nov . 1, 1971. Eligibility will then
be determined by PHEAA. If
eligible, these awards will be
processed with the second-half
awards and the total scholarship
for both the first and second
semester will be received in
March or April.
"PHEAA policy denies the fulltime use of an automobile without
prior authorization from the
PHEAA to any state scholarship
recipient (other than a veteran or
a married applicant) living away
from home in a dormitory or in
off-campus housing. The Agency
defines full-time use as owning or
having access to an automobile to
be driven at any time during the
academic year while away at
school. " Non-veteran , unmarried , dormitory, and offcampus students who have fulltime use of an automobile and
who have
not
received
authorization from the PHEAA
will be ruled ineligible for
scholarships until permission has
been granted.
Special forms for this purpose
are available in the Financial Aid
Office and also from the PHEAA,
Towne House , Harr is burg, Pa.
17102.
College Council , declared
Monday that Dan Burkholder and
Tom Beveridge will serve as
Elwell Hall representatives. This
action came about when Council
upheld the decision of the
Election Appeals Committee to
invalidate the first Elwell Hall
elections in which Mike DeMarco
and Bob Jacob had been elected
as Elwell's representatives to
Council.
Executive Counc il of CGA conducts the second meeting of the
(Phot o by Steve Connolley )
year in Kuster Monday.
The first election was appealed
on the grounds that the election
itself was held in the SUB rather
than in Elwell Hall as stated in
the election policies.
Mission and Purpose
th eme of comm ittee
i
At the Oct. 25 meeting of
Council w K en Siptroth announced
the results of the second election,
that
DeMarco
protested
Beveridge's original appeal
came six days after the election.
Appeals, according to the election policy, are to be submitted
within five days after the election. The argument centers on
whether or not Sat. & Sun. should
be counted as calendar days
since they are not school days.
.DeMarco's appeal, the second,
was referred to the election
committee.
The first election of Elwell Hall
representativeswas held on Oct.
4 & 5 in the SUB. The results
announced indicated that
DeMarco and Jacob won. Mr.
John Mulka received a written
"Mission and Purpose" is the and 2O0O, and make suggestions' appeal on Oct. 11, exactly six
theme of the recently formed towards a better college days after the election, f rom Tom
Also at this meeting, Bob Blair
Beveridge, Elwell resident. At asked Council to overturn the
Steering Committee, which held operation in its evaluation.
the Council meeting that evening decision of the Appeals Comits first meeting to discuss its role
The current members of the the appeal by Beveridge was mittee. This action would have
in this year of assessment and
Steering Committee are Dr. referred to the Election Appeals restored DeMarco and Jacob to
planning.
William Carlough , Michael Committee.
their positions as Elwell Hall
The Steering Committee, Siptroth, Dr. Don B. Springman,
representatives. Council upheld
composed of representatives Dr. Jerrold Griffis, Dr. John
The Election Appeals Com- • the decision of the Election ,
from the town, administration, Magill, Jack Naus, Mayor Lutz, mittee decided that the first
f a culty, and students, will serve Dr. Hobart ^Heller , George ElwellHall elections were invalid Appeals Committee.
as a coordinating body that will Thompson, and William Booth. for the reason cited by
College Council recommended
initiate projects , make a
Beveridge. The committee set allocation of $300 to the Town
progress review, and review the
Members who are not familiar Oct. 21 and 22 as dates for the Park Association , a private
final report. The members of this with the college community are next election. Also on the same organization which maintains the
committee will be assigned encouraged to live on campus for date a North Hall representative local town park used extensively
leadership roles in specific areas two days to get a pic ture of what was to be elected since that by BSC students . Council also
relating to their study and may campus life involves. Likewise, it vacancy had not been filled.
recommended a donation of $300
suggest new avenues of ap- is recommended that the
to
the Columbia County United
On Wednesday, Oct. 20, the
proach, new subjects for study, business people i nvite the
Fund.
A bid of $2358 was accepted
or new directions for the entire students unfamiliar with the election committee informed for a new station wagon.
proposal .
business world to come and Mike Siptroth , CGA president,
that most members of the
Council will sponsor Steve
observ e the
The report , to be published in businesses. operation of their Election Committee would not be Wagner , frosh class president, in
December of 1972 , will be
available to run the election.
aMMMM aM Siptroth , acting as CGA the "Walk for the Hungry" at $10
reviewed by the Committee, the pM
per mile on Nov . 7.
College as a whole, and the Board
of Trustees sometime before it is
released.
I JS|
{ NOVEMBER 13 |
The project will examine the
mission and purposes of the
College, planning for 1975, 1980,
Forum planned
on CGA Senate
Black students
w eJ1
plan programs I™™
I^MBf ,
|
The Black Student Soc iety with
an ex p ected subs idy from CGA is
p lann ing a number of events
dealing w ith Black culture op en
to the college communit y.
The main portion of the activities submitted Monday to
College Council center on a
collo q uium entitled " The Black
Experience " w ill i nclude t op
speakers and entertainers . Some
of the people contacte d by the
Soc iety i n the hopes of bring ing
them in on the program are Dick
Gregory and Sammy Davis Jr. ,
and Roy Wil kins , Executive
Secretary of the NAACP.
Other people in contact with the
Society are Dr. John Hope
Franklin , chairman , Department
of History , Universit y of
Chicago ; Dr. William H. Grier ,
president, gathered enough interested people to run the election.
On Oct. 22 Siptroth announced
that Beveridge and Burkholder
had carried the second election.
The results were certified by
Mulka and Dr. Griffis.
p s y chiatris t and author of " Black
R age " ; Dr. K enneth B . Clark ,
chairman , Department
of
Psycholog y, City College of New
York ; Bishop Stephen G. Spottswood , chairman of the board of
the NA A CP.
The Black stude nts also hope to
schedule a theat r ical performance in conj unction with the
Artist and Lecture series . There
are two possibilities : Donald
Mc Cayle Dance Group, the
choreo graphers for the Oscar
Award performance , or The
National Black Theatre Group
NYC, a company of fifteen.
Individual guests and artists
and lecturers from nearby
colleges arid universities is also
planned for Mar ch and April.
| An Open Forum to discuss the Jane Elmes, Senat e secretar y;
I relationship of CGA to the College John James, John Andris, and
I Senate in terms of campus Glenn Lang.
I governance is scheduled for
Wednesday, November 3, at 7:00
|p.m. in Carver Hall.
On November 15, 1971, the
I The forum , which calls for a
French
Faculty of the
I wide variety of the community to
D
e
p
artment
o f Fore i gn
come to gether , will deal with the
L
anguages
i
s
s
p
onsor
i ng a tr ip
possibility of
overlapping
to
Wilkes-Barre
to
attend
I jurisdiction between the Senate
'
s
c
l
ass
i
c
,
Le
Mo
li
ere
and CGA.
Bourgeois
Gentilhomme
in
II John L. Walker will serve as Frenc h presente d by the
mod erator of t he panel discuss ion
com p an y "Le Treteau de
w hi c h is open to t h e college
Par is ", from France.
|community. Each panel member
A BSC bus will be provided
will deliver a brief statement
that
evening. Students, and
concerning their feelings about
Faculty
are invited to join this
campus governance. The floor
yearly
experience
organized
I will then be opened for discussion
by
the
Department.
The
I between the audience and panel.
performance
is
sponsored
by
| Tentatively scheduled on the
K
i
ng
's
College
and
will
take
panel is Pres i dent N ossen , Vice
place at Irem Temple at 8
President Griffis , Cra i g Himes ,
p.m. The price of the ticket is
Martin Gildea, James Percey ,
$3.00,
Contact the Department
Joseph
Vaughn ,
William
for
additional
information.
Corlough , Senate president ;
Please
send
check
to Mrs .
Robert Miller, Richard Brook,
Mary
Lou
John,
Box
75 by
Rich Scott, CGA parlimentarian;
Oct. 29, 1971.
, Mike Siptroth, CGA president;
¦^^^^^^B ^^^^^^ J I
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^^^^^
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Lki
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^^
¦
i
|
I
¦¦¦¦
¦¦
¦¦
¦¦
¦¦
¦¦
¦I
"¦
edit o ri a ls
The faculty and students of
BSC have token an important
step toward a more meaningful
and representative community
government.By a vote of 147 to
44, the faculty approved the
amendmentto the College Senate
whichwill provide for a total of 23
.student senators. College Council
passedthe same measure by a
vote of 23 to 0. The faculty and
students are to be commended
for their foresight.
I Record Review]
Lazarus
...Blues Project
•
It can be invaluable as a forum
for discussion of issues which
have, up to now , been discussed
and decided upon behind closed
doors. It can act as an overseer of
college policy, and as a means of
preventing indiscriminate and
rash interpretations of college
policy .
The Senate can do all of these
things. But it won't, unless people
take an interest in its operation.
Right now this means students.
Elections to fill the 17 vacant
positions on the Senate are
pending. If you feel you can make
a contribution , if you feel you're
up to doing the work involved,
plan on submitting a petition .
We now have an opportunity for
students and faculty to work
together to determine the
direction in which the college
community will move. The
College Senate can be a body in
which the various segments of
This place can work. BSC can
the communitycome together to be a true academic community.
discuss, act upon and implement With a little bit of work and
thoseactions which will be in the cooperation, it can.
best interests of the community.
jim sachetti
Monday night, College Council
once again made me stop and
wonder if I was still in high
school.Totally disregarding their
own Election Procedures, they
allowed an administrator to
provide his own interpretation of
the procedures and then supported this invalid interpretation
by voting to accept an invalid
appeal, thus depriving two
council members of the position
to which they had been elected .
elections. The new elections were
held and Tom Beveridge & Dan
Burkholder were elected to
Council.
At the council meeting Monday
night, Bob Blair protested the
Rules Committee's decision and
the new elections. At this point,
Mulka stood up and proceeded, in
the manner of many administrators, to pass off his own
interpretation of the Election
Procedures as fact. Whereas the
Election Procedures allows "five
days" to file an appeal, Mulka
claimed that Saturday and
Sunday are not included in the
five day period.
Council (dominated this year
by the girls from Mulka's office
staff who sit in one row and giggle
throughout much of the meeting)
then proceeded to UDhold the
second elections and the new
members were seated.
The wholemess centers around
the Elwell Hall elections. On
October fourth and fifth , elections were held and Bob Jacob
and Mike DeMarco were elected
to Council. The Election Committee, due to a lack of help,
decided to place the Elwell
ballots in the Student Union. This
being a violation of the Election
Procedures, someone could have
filed an appeal within five days.
But, no appeal was filed and on
the fifth day after the election
results were announced , the
The whole affair raises a
election becamevalid.
number of questions. First, the
age old query, what the hell are
On the sixth , day Tom administrators doing on Council
Beveridge filed an appeal with in the first place? Why do many
Mr. Mulka, the administrator in Council representatives allow
question. At this point, Mulka administrators to do their
should have told Beveridge that it thinking for them? Why is it that
was too late to file an appeal. many CGA representatives are
Council should have done elected in high school fashion ,
likewise that night when that is, because they are popular
rather than qualified or inBeveridge appealed orally.
terested in student government? .
Unfortunately, the appeal went And finally, is CGA really student
through to the Election Board government? If it continues to
Rules Committee, of which operate in the manner it did
Mulka is a member. For reasons Monday night it hardlv deserves
unkn own , the Committee upheld the title,
jim sachetti
the appeal and arranged for new
OPEN LETTER
To all members of the college
commun ity, I feel that I can say
that we now ha ve a chance f or a
belter college commun i ty as a
resul t of the vote on the amendmen t to the Student-Faculty
Senate Constitution . I would like
to thank the members of the
f acul ty who vo t ed on t he
amendment , whether t hey voted
for or against , at least they
demonstrated thei r i nterest by
voting. To the members of
College Council, I must say that I
was extremely pleased to not e
that t he response was good and
t he vote unanimous. Now that
there will be twenty-three
students on the College Senate ,
pendin g a pp roval b y the
President and the Board of
Trustees, I feel that students can
regard the Senat e as trul y bei ng
the College Senate. Soon there
will be an election to the 17
va can t posit ions on the Senate
( six student members have
alread y been elected by the
studen t body) and I hope that
students will begin to think about
placing themselves as candidates. With the increase in
student membership, it should be
p oss i ble to a t tain a b road ,
representative cross-section of.
students to re present the student
body in the best possible manner.
I t is m y sincere wish , that
students take the init iative and
continue to str i ve f or a functional
college senate , truly re presen t
t at i ve of the entire college
commun i ty .
Mike Slptroth
CGA President
To all freshmen, sophomores,
juniors and seniors, academic,
social, or otherwise:
Those of you who attended
"Arsenic and Old Lace" Friday,
October 22 (which I'll add was
very good) saw our President in a
most unique position.
There has been a lot of
discussion recently on past
events that our President has
allegedly taken part in or instigated. I must admit, as others
should also, that I needed an
interpreter to explain the whole
heated situation to me. But it
seems both sides should have
given in an inch , both sides
should have admitted their guilts.
Dr. Nossen is trying to rebuild or
build some rapport with us
students. If he was such a tyran t
would women students ha ve the
lenient rules they have at this
time , would the College be
progressing at the rate it is, and
would Dr. Nossen have had the
"guts" to appear on stage Friday
night?
Dear Mr. Burkholder,
In reading your letter in the
Gadfly one question crosses my
mind. Why were you keyed on the
investigation of Dr. Nossen but
fearful of the investigation of Mr.
Houk? When you question ethics
who not check and see who else
violated whose ethics and get
your "FACTS" straight.
Democratically yours,
Marty Kleiner
Congratulations are in order to
the BSC Faculty . Approximately
95 per cent of those eligible voted
(continued on page eight )
VOL. L
by JoeMiklos
1971 is the year for rock
comebacks , surfacing, surfacing.
Moby Grape, the Airplane, Gene
Clark, folkie Dave Van Ronk and
now the long submerged Blues
Project. After many changes and
tremendous contributions to
music, the Project had split into
Andy Kulberg 's Seatrain , Al
Kooper moving on to Blood,
Sweat and Tears, the Super
Session jams and finally to a solo
career. The rest of the band just
sort of,faded. Last thing heard
was that Danny Kalb, speedfingered guitarist was busy
having a nervous breakdown.
That was about three years
ago. Now all that's left is a three
piece group, with only two
original members. Kalb is still
there, along with drummer Roy
Blumenfeld . Don Kretmar has
been added on bass and sax. With
only three musicians the Blues
Project is still an excellent experimental blues band , still
kickin' it in good and hard ,
and kissing softly.
A wide range of styles is and
always has been a mark of the
Project. In their tradition, the
band still comes out a BLUES
band. The title number ,
"Lazarus," is a trad blues closely
resembling "Two Trains Running '" from the Projections
album . There are several real
rockers , Chuck Berry style ,
with Kretmar b.&.ting away on
sax. Kalb's voice * both wicked
and on the acoustic numbers
incredibly soft. If he's cut down
on the speed-rage on guitar, it's
only because he's found that a
few tasteful licks emphasize the
blasts when they do crop up.
Blumenfeld keeps sneaking that
jazz into the beat he provides.
It took guts to incorporate folk
and classical into the blues about
four years ago. Kalb has
managed to keep his finger on the
original intent of the Blues
Project after that long a period. A
progressive, bendable form was
( continued
oh page eight )
THE MAROON AND GOLD NO. 15
Edltor-in-C Me*
Business Manager
Co.Managing Editors
New* Editor
Sports Editor
Feature Editor
Art Editor
Photo Edi t o r
Photographer s
Jin , fachettl
Carol Klshbav gh
Karon Kelnsrd
Sue Sprague
Frank Plioli
Bob Oliver
Torry Blass
John Stugrln
.
I'd just like to say we're all
human , we're all susceptible to
temptations , and we AL L make
mista kes . Th ose of you who
pointed a finger at Dr. Nossen
without any solid facts to back it
up, t hose of you wh o want h i m
re placed , are you sup erhuman ,
don 't you also make mistakes , do
you have some sort of hot line to
the truth behind it all , could you
do a bette r job? If so, there are
man y peop le who would like to
know .
Co-Copy Editors
BSC is growing very rapidly
an d decisi ons must b e made at
the same rate. Tak e a look at
y ourselves , are you without
f aults, do you have the abilit y to
foresee future events and make
decisions in accor dance with
them? If you fit this description ,
have your p ictures taken , posters
•
made , secret ballots run off
for
you
in
'
waiting
t here s a bed
the President 's mansion.
Th# M & G Is locate d in Roo m 234 Wal ler. Ext. 321,
C ind y Boll
1546 Montour
Tom Schofield
Kate Calpin
Steve Connolley
Dan Maresh
Craig Ruble
Linda Bnn ls
Nancy Van Pelt
Elaine Pungra ti
..
. Allen Maurer
Kennet h Hoffma n
Cir culation Manager
.
Contributing Edito r
.
Adviso r
STAFF: Kay Boyles , Georgians Cherin chak , Ellen Doyle ,
Joyce Keefor , Saily Kurren , J«e McGavl n, Mike Meizinger ,
Cindy Mlchener , Joe Mikloi , Rose Montay ne, Jim Nallo,
Sue Reichenbach , Tom kockovich , Denise Rots , Bet h
Yeakel , John Woodw ard,, Mike Yarmey, Ron Sefreyn,
Maria Carey, Ron Perry , Ed Coar , Donna MacDermott ,
John Dempsey . Ann Rtnn , Gins Mannella.
•
¦
¦
¦ox 301.
Letters to the editor ant an expr ess ion of the liMlir ' 9 °plnl on and d0 not
" •••••• rlly refl act the
.,
V!u
Ji ™
view
s ! of
the newspape r. .All
letter s must be ft gnod,
name will be withhel d upo n r«quest . The M & G reserve
the rig ht to abridgo , In co nsultstio n with the w riter , all
letters over 400 wor ds In lengt h,
A Pictur e
of Picasso
by Michelle Denlse Ross
In Bloomsburg the cultural
world is much lacking in,
everything. Specifically, art is |
lacking. There are no museums
such as there are in the N.Y.C.
area. Even if there were
museums in this area , they ju st
couldn't compare in depth with
the present series of art films
being shown on campus this fall.
The series is entitled "Museum
Without Walls" and it started out
with "Picasso: War, Peace and
Love" and "Goya." Both were were inspired by her.
shown on Monday, October 25, in
of
Another
illustration
Carver Hall.
The Picasso movie makes you Picasso's reasons for painting
think more of why Picasso something was the bullfighting
painted his paintings rather than scene. The film very effectively
giving you a cold, structural got you involved either with
study of the lines, color or , enthusiasm or with displeasure.
compositioq,which is helpful to an It got you aroused enough to
art student but more boring than understand Picasso's obsession
helpful to laymen. For example, with bullfighting. I can unthe painting "Guernica" was derstand more of his emotions in
painted by Picasso because of his his paintings, etchings, drawings
great sympathy for the people of or sculptures through this movie.
that town during the Spanish civil The film gave art a more
war. The movie showed closeups human quality , a more personal
ot the painting along with feeling for Picasso. It truly does
dialogue of Picasso's,feeling and take you out of the closed atthe history that brought on those mosphere of a museum into a
feelings. Again the movie con- more unrestrained atmosphere.
veyed Picasso's passionate love Not only Picasso was portrayed
for his wife, Jacqueline, by . as a master, but the film itself
showing many paintings that was a masterpiece.
Inner City
"Inner City ," a new Broadway
show directed by Tom O'Horgan ,
who did H A I R, LENNY , and
JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR ,
on the big street , is scheduled to
open for previews this month.
If past resul ts are any guide ,
O'Horgan direction is nearly as
assurin g of sm ash su c cess a s N eil
Si mon scripts. INNKR CITY is a
new musical a bout the perils and
l i f e today
pleasu res of city
taking pl a ce i n the h ea rt of t he
urb an world.
The production lias lyrics by
Kve Merriam wi th music by
Helen Miller and a hook by
Merria m and O 'Horg an. Miss
Merri ain is a poet and lecturer
who has writte n more than :H)
books spa n ning t h e fi elds of
poetry , social satire and
biography , and several books for
young people. Miss Miller has
done extensive composing for the
country 's top recordin g artists
and theme songs for many TV
shows .
^h^^^^I^^^^^^^^^
a^^ b^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
b^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
MM^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The eight performers in the
cast will span all ages, races, and
sexes and will include singers
and actors. Producers Kipness
and Kasha are currently
represented on Broadwa y by the
Tony Award winner , APPLA U SE .
O'Horgan has described INNER CITY a s a "sort of street
cantata. "
"1 hope i t's a new form . It
shou ld be a real c ross sect io n of a
ci ty , involving all t he hassles
we ' re all in t o . What w e 're try ing
to do . " lie said , "is not to show
j ust the problems of a city , but
also some sense of hope of how we
can get it all back together
again. "
Robin Wagner , who designed
the musical ' s scenery said the
show would have some small
scenes , some monologues and a
lot of songs.
If the show succeeds, plans for
mobile touring units will be put
into action.
Abort ions ,
Manslaug hte r ,
& WONAAC
by Patsy Truxaw (CPS)
Shirley Wheeler has been
convicted of manslaughter for
having an abortion.
Shirley Wheeler lives in
Florida , and in Florida abortion
is the sordid cloak and dagger
event women have heard stories
about since way back. The phone
call, the blindfolding, getting
switched from car to car , until
you reach some unrealiable
man's filthy table : that's a
Florida abortion.
Shirley went through all that,
but was unlucky. Nothing happened , except a little later she
began to hemorrhage and had to
go to her own doctor .
Her doctor completed the
process . Somehow a health
examiner found out about it. The
fetus was found with the catheter
still in it. Shirley was arrested.
She spent several days in jail ,
and was shown pictures of the
fetus.
"Here is your baby. Look at it.
This is your baby. How can you
deny having had an abortion?"
Shirley underwent , severe
emotional strain; the trial had to
be put off.
in Florida , women who nave
abortions and are found are tried #
under the manslaughter statute.'
After a two day trial , Shirley was
found guilty by a jury of three
men and three women. She has
not been sentenced, but she faces
up to 20 years for the conviction.
There have been no prev ious
abortion court cases in Florida.
Nor have there been massive
moves in the legislature or much
discussion at all. As a result,
Shirley Wheeler went throug h her
experience virtually alone. Just
as she was about to go to trial ,
Nancy Stearns , a feminist lawyer
in New York , heard of the case.
There are no ex peri en ced w omen
lawy ers in Florid a, and the New
York lawyers couldn ' t move last
eno ugh. Shirley ' s co n vic t ion
could n ' t be stopped .
The
Women 's
N a t i o na l
Abortion Action Coali tion is
w orking with Nancy Stearns now
to get support lor Miss Wheeler.
Peti tions have been dratted and
sent to (he governor and (he
j u dge .
The grotesqueness of Miss
Wheele r 's case is not unique .
Countless women ha ve their
own stories of horror , mutilation ,
degradation and forced shame.
Women luck y enough to liv e in
more "liberal" area s, such as
parts of California , New York,
and Washington, D.C., have their
own stories : of being ripped off—
by doctors, referral agencies,
and hospitals. Women have been
experimented on, like rabbits.
For these reasons, over 10O0
women
from
29 • states,
representing 253 organizations,
gathered together in New York
this past summer to form the
Women 's National Abortion
Action Coalition (WONAAC).
WONAAC is comprised of ALL
women who know they have their
rights, yet recognize that they
clearly do not exist how, and that
such rights will only be granted
by their own serious and consistent consolidated efforts .
WONAAC is organized around
three basic demands and has a
steadily developing program
working for their resolution. The
demands are : 1) the repeal of all
abortion laws and the corollary
demands of 2) no forced
sterilization , and 3) the repeal of
all restrictive contraception
laws.
The conference in July which
began WONAAC called for a
national show of massive force
around these demands to be held
November 20 in Washington,
D.C., and San Francisco. It will
be the first national demonstration ever demanding abortion-law repeal .
Plans for the demonstration
are well underway. Contingents
set to march include Women in
Psychology ( the radical women's
caucus of the American
Psychological Association ) ,
church women , Third World
women, high school women,
campus women , gay women , and
welfare mothers .
The Daughter You Love
Now , the daughter that you
lo v e , yeah , the daughter that
you love , the daughter that
you kill in the hack of a
t a x ica b bec a us e of a b a d
eurettage
that' s how y ou
lov e that dau g hter , bec a use
she ' s a tra mp, beca u se she 's
got lif e in her belly and she
ain 't got a hoop on her finger
that some w itch doctor
blessed --• that' s how you love
that daughter.
-Lenny Bruce
The Daughter You Kill
WONAAC is also involved, at
the local and national levels, m.
legislative and judicial pie&Mae
activities ; in investigating
abortion facilities on » -»mjmw.
in clinics, hospitals, and dorian*
offices; and in exploring
possibilities for litigation and
class action suits.
WONAAC is also laying the
ground work for a Womenfe
Commission. Dedicated to the
proposition that a womanhasthe
right to choosewhetheror notshe
will bear children, possible
recommendations the Commission might make, according
to WONAAC, are: the repealof
all anti abortion laws; the
passage Of an am pnihn pwf
tfiat no laws be passed abridging
women's right for abortion or
contraception ; a ruling by flic?
Supreme Court on the Texas and
Georgia laws (the two abortion
cases pending ruling by the
Supreme Court, for which
WONAAC lawyershaveprepared
an amicus curiae—friend of Cte
court—brief) ; repeal of the
President's decisionthat mifitary
women cannot receive abortion
on demand.
The week of hearing (a week
prior to the November 20
demonstraion) will include
testimony of women, giving their
accounts of abortion experiences.
Prominent women will come
forth and simply state that they
have had abortions. Anti-abortio n
groups will be asked to explain
and defend their positions.
Delegates from the Commission will then report on
November 20 of the success or
failure they encountered in
presentin g the Commission ~ s
recommendations
to
the
government.
It will take mountains of
testimony to save Shirley
Whe ele r , t h at is cl ear. And it will
take mountains to change
res trictive laws and unwilling
minds. Shirley Wheeler is talking
to salv age what she can oC her
life , and to make it less likely tha t
other women will experience
what she did .
And as Bernadine Garrett of
the Washington State Welfare
Ilights Organization so astutely
put it , "It is past time for women
to gain control over their own
bodies. "
Newman H o use to op en
Down around the corner from
Elwell . on E. Third St. stands a
two-story house that's a strange
color of green with bright orange
doors; orange and green striped
curtains hang in the back
windows. No , it isn't the original
Gingerbread House , what it
really is is the latest addition to
BSC's campus mininistries — the
new Newman House, scheduled
to open tonite.
The original Newman Center
was located on Iron Street, across
from Saint Columba's Catholic
Church. But Father Bernard
Petrina , the
Harrisburg
diocesan moderator for Catholic
Campus Ministry, and supervisor
of sixteen campus ministries,
wanted the Center moved closer
to the college in order "to be a
witness to the whole campus
community of the gospel."
The change of name from
Newman Center to Newman
House was to make known the
fact that it is no longer to be
considered the center of the
Catholic Campus Ministry 's
work, but is just a home where
people can come for counseling if
necessary , and can get together,
in the lounge and talk. But from
now on , the majority of the
Ministry's efforts are to be
concentrated on the campus.
The funding for the House
came from the Catholic diocese
at Harrisburg, plus parents '
donations . The house was bought
last May and Father Petrina ,
some student volunteers, and
skilled labor worked on it all
summer.
The lop floor of the two-story
house contains Father Petrina 's
apartment , a working and
printing room (with presses) ,
and a library and drawing room.
The ground level has a kitchen,
Father Petrina 's office, a dining
room, a sitting room (with spaceage furniture!), and a receptionist's office. The basement has
a lounge which has pale yellow
walls and black ceilings, which is
for students to get together and
rap any time, and a place for
commuters to come between
classes.
Also at BSC there is a Newman
Board , comprised of fourteen
students and approximately
seven facul ty members. The
members of this Board are
elected every Spring by the
congregation of the St. Columba
Church. The Board serves in an
advisory capacity on all Newman
matters, and helps to unite the
college with the church.
Father Petrina told this
reporter that the main emphasis
is "in working with students in
counseling, liturgy, discussions,
and anything that will help a
person to grasp what Christianity
means today."
The Newman House is
scheduled to open tonite with an
open house scheduled for
students. Any and all are
welcome. You can stop by for just
a few minutes, or you can stop
and stay awhile. But everyone is
invited. The opening will continue
to Saturday night, when faculty
are invited to come out and help
with the housewarming. So come
on out and see the House, and
stop and talk awhile. Tonite at
seven o'clock , just down around
the corner behind Elwell. It's the
one with the orange doors.
s.l.s.
Father Bernard Petrina hard at wor k preparing the new Newman House for opening .
p hotos by Schofield
Newman House whil e siding
was
still
being
put on in late September.
Chairman of Newman Boa rd Charlie Horvath
modern living room of Newman House.
sits
Ve %««
Charlie Horvath and Father Petrina
in Father 's offi ce loca t ed en t he
floor of the now Nowman Housa.
sittin g
ground
UewSff
In
new
Drama Class Trip
j l
The Modern Drama Class at
BSC is planning a theatre trip to
New York City, November 13 and
14. Plays students will be seeing
are OLD TIMES by Harold
Pinter, SLEUTH by Anthony
Shaffer , MARY STUART by
Schiller and adapted by Stephen
Spender. NO PLACE TO BE
SOMEBODY by Charles Gordone , THE EFFECT OF
GAMMA RAYS ON MAN IN THE
MOON MARIGOLDS bv Paul
Zindel. SOLITAIRE DOUBLE
SOLITAIRE by Robert Anderson, THE BASIC TRAINING
OF PAVLO HUMMEL by
DavidRabe, HAIR , and JESUS
CHRIST SUPERSTAR. It is
recommended that students see a
play on Broadway, one offBroadway at the new theatre
complex of the New York
Shakespeare Public Theatre, and
one at the Vivian Beaumont
Theatre of Lincoln Center. The
non-musical plays mentioned
above have either won awards
from drama critics or are new
plays by important playwrights.
The drama group will be
staying at
the
Century
Paramount Hotel and will travel
to New York by chartered bus.
Former drama students who are
interested in making the trip are
invited to contact Dr. Susan
Rusinko of the English Dept.
There are some seats still
available on the bus.
Mr. Richard C. Tyrrell of RCA
will be the guest speaker at the
second meeting of Phi Beta
Lambda—the Business Club—at
7:30 p.m. next Wednesday night,
November 3, in Hartline 86.
Mr. Tyrrell joined RCA in July
1967, as manager of campus
relations in RCA's college
relations department. Following
graduation from Bucknell
University in 1963, and military
service, he returned to Bucknell
and served in the admission and
alumni offices, while completing
his M.B.A. degree requirements.
He holds membership in various
data processing organizations
and has served as chairman of
various committees, including
the 1970 MAP A Recruiter
Workshop.
We had a very successful first
meeting, with an excess of 100
students and faculty in attendance to hear our guest
speaker, Mr. Rudolph Holtzman ,
an account executive of Merril ,
Lynch , Pierce , Fenner , and
Smith.
Any member who missed the
first meeting, please try to put
forth an effort to be in attendance
at next weeks' meeting—also,
any non-members who are interested in attending are free to
do so.
See You Wednesday Night!!!!
R CA
I Educational Conference I
Linguis t
James C. Bostain, Scientific
Linguist for the Foreign Service
Institute, Department of State,
Washington , D.C., will be the
featured speaker at the general
session of the Twenty-fifth Annual Conference for Teachers
and Administrators to be held at
BSC Saturday, October 30, in
Haas Auditorium at 12:15 p.m.
His topic will be, "Read Your
Neighbor."
Over 5,000 invitations have
been extended to teachers and
administrators in Pennsylvania
and nearby states to attend this
one day conference. Dr. C. Stuar t
Edwards, Dean of the School of
Professional Studies, is chairman
for the conference. An outstanding group of educators have
been seleeted as speakers for
v a r i o u s d e mo n s t r a t i o n s ,
seminars, and sessions of the
division of business, elementary ,
special
and
secondary,
education .
Bostain was the writer and
performer on several series
specials, including three series of
programs entitled 'EnglishFact and Fancy ', 'Investing In
The Stock Market' ; 'Message and
Image'.
Art Panel
A panel discussion involving
"Issues , Innovations and Insights" for art education in the
seventies will start off the art
section of the 25th Annual
Education Conference Saturday
October 30 at 9:30 a.m. in the
Haas Gallery of art.
Coordinated by Dr. Percival R.
Roberts, III, the panalists will be
members of the B.S.C. art
faculty, including Drs. Walter
Simon and Niranjan Goswami on
"International Art Education,"
Mr. Ronald Berchert on "Art and
Special Education," and Mr.
Alvin Salxman on "Inner City
Art. " Mr. Robert Koslosky will
serve as moderator with Dr.
Roberts.
From 10:30 a.m. until 11:15
a.m. a series of demonstrations
and an open house have been
scheduled. In the Haas Center
participants will be able to visit
an exhibition of contemporary
paintings and sculpture for the
Mid State Artists Association
Annual Traveling Exhibition, the
Department's African Art
Collection, works in the permanent art collection; including
a recent acquisition by noted
artist, Tetsuro Sawada.
In the Bakeless Center for the
humanities the following events
have been planned, arranged and
coordinated by members of the
studio faculty , Mr. Robert
Berchert, Mr. Ronald Bower,
Miss Barbara Strohman, and Mr.
Kenneth Wilson.
Students will be working in the
drawing, painting crafts , and
weaving, studios on the third
floor. In room 302 a continuous
exhibition of children's art work
will be held, arranged by Mr.
Koslosky. In room 303 two films
will be shown on the topic of art
and special education, "Painting
is Loving"j
and "Shape of a Leaf"
under the e ection of Mr. Ronald
Berchert.
A highlight of the late morning
activities will be the fpecial
firing of one of the newly constructed kilns outside of bakeless
erected during the recent kiln
building workshop sponsored by
the department of art.
Reading Clinic
by Cindy Mtchener
Perhaps the best way to find
out exactly what the reading
clinic is and does is to go up to the
second floor of the Benjamin
Franklin building one Saturday.
That is exactly what I did . The
reading clinic, directed by Dr.
Margaret Sponseller, offers its
services for children from kindergarten to twelfth grand and
adult illiterates every Saturday
morning from 9:30 a.m. to 12:00
noon .
The clinic was established and
approved by the state in August
1968. Doctor Sponseller stated
that it is an important part of the
graduate curriculum for the
professional preparation of
teachers w ho desire a Master of
Arts in the Education of Reading.
To achieve the M.A., the
graduate students must have two
clinical experiences both of
which are offered by the reading
clinic. Upon receiving certification the students will be
reading specialists . All of the
present clinicians are from areas
surrounding Bloomsburg, and
are teachers in service now.
Continuing, Doctor Sponseller
explained , "Referrals for indiv iduals to the clinic are accepted from parents, teachers,
guidance , directors, private individuals and school administrators. The clinicians work
with the individuals in the areas
of remedial , corrective and
developmental reading." Each
clinician works w ith two people a
Dr. Soldori of tho Reading Clinic ihowt apparatus to ttud ont.
day from 9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.
and 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon.
Through direct observation it
was clear that the clinic is very
well equi pped. There are
materials for diagnostic testing,
which finds the strengths and
weaknesses of the individual and
his present reading level. Tape
recorders are used with every
session to keep a record of an
individual improvement.
Also available are sight phrase
cards, verb games, other games
which include the Dolch
material , phonics books, SRA
labs and various reading books at
all levels.
The machinery includes a
telebinocular, used for testing the
eyesight since a problem in
eyesight may be a great
detriment in reading, Aud-X and
Flash X , projectors capable of
produc in g mater ia l on t he screen
at three different speeds, and the
listening lab. There is also a
curriculum library of basal and
individual reading materials.
"There is constant evaluation
of the individuals ", sa ys Doctor
Sponseller , "and a clinician
report and recommendation are
given to the parent and school
district after every semester."
In the summer the clinic is in
operation Monday through
Friday for six weeks. As Doctor
Sponseller explained , "Many
! times families will come back for
I summer school or are spending
the summer in the area . If they
have a child or know of one that
needs help, and if they write in
time , the child may be admitted. " The children in the
summer come from such different areas as Virginia ,
Delaware and Ohio. Many of
these ch ild ren are f r om other
programs and it gives the clinic a
means for comparison.
I n t he f utur e there are pl ans f or
a professional library and with
semesters planned till 1973 and
1 long waiting lists, there will be
more work for graduate and
undergraduate students.
Dr . Margaret Sponstllor
using Clinic apparatus.
(Comtollay
photo)
Listenin g Lab
The
new
"Listening
Laboratory," located in room F-8
of the Benjamin Franklin
Building, is now open to all
faculty and students, announced
Dr.
Margaret Spcnseller,
coordinator of the Readi ng
clinics.
The Laboratory will operate for
small group listening assignments ,
individualized
instructional listening assignm ents , genera l i nstruct i ona l
listening assignments , and
personal listening.
This facility has been made
possible through the joint
cooperation of Dean Hoch, former Vice-President of Academic
Affairs and Dean of the
Facul ties ; Dr. C. Stuar t Edwards, Dean for Professional
Studies ; Dr. Carlson , Dean of
Graduate Studies; and Mr.
Thaddeu s Piotrowski , Director of
the Learning Resources Center,
Andruss Library. Also aiding in
the project were the Reading
Staff and Graduate Student
Assistants.
It is advised that those wishing
to use these facilities preschedule their proposed listening
activities with the laboratory
student assistants , Edward
Gaughan and Jack White.
The hours that the listening
facilities will be available to the
college community , which are
determined by the availability of
th e stu dent a ssistants , are as
follows:
Monday : 8 to 10 a.m.
Tuesday: Uto 12a.m.; 1to4:30
p.m.
Wednesday: 8 to 9 a.m.
Thursday : 11 to 12 a.m.; 1 to
4 :30 p.m.
Friday: 8 to 10 a.m.
Other requirements for using
the laboratory are: (1) those
using the lab must bring their
own tapes ; (2) students may also
borrow materials from their
aca dem ic departments or f rom
the learning Resources Center
(Andruss Library) ; (3) requests
for "tem porar y reserve d "
mater ials from the learning
Resource Center should b
submitted to Mr. Piotrowski
whose office is on the groum
floor of Andruss Library ; (4)
Facul ty members wishing to
place materials on reserve may
do so upon a justific ation consisting of educational objectives.
Pr o f ootba ll
Profil e
Class
Sr.
Ht
5'10"
Wt
182
Age
20
Position
Defensive Back
H.S
Maine-EndwellN.Y. 68
You may ask why does a New
York boy come to little Old
Bloomsburg State? The answer is
football. It seems a lot of alumni
teach at Jack's high school, and
they recommended Bloom to
Jack probably telling him how
great Bloom was in football but
secretly wanting a good ball
player to help build Bloom into a
good football school.
Jack excelled as a running
back in high school but he was
switched to flanker as a senior
when his school switched to a protype offense. Though their
records weren't good 4-4, 2-6,
Bucchioni was still considered a
good flanker.
When he came to Bloom he
played his Fresh , and Soph, year
and sat out his junior year.
A senior this year , Jack now
plays defensive back where his
athletic abilities shine as they did
when he was a flanker in high
school. He says it was a hard
fight all season long, to gain his
position and he doesn't consider
his position in the bag . But he has
proven he can play the position
well. He caught an interception in
the Mansfield game and had an
impressive 14 tackles in the
California game.
Previe w
Jack Bucchio ni
Jack is very sports minded and
is grateful Bloomsburg gave him
an opportunity to play. Jack is a
football freak, he just likes the
game. He says he 's played
football since he was 11 and
developed a love for it through
the years. I asked him about his
social life on campus. He said he
doesn't get too involved. He
concentrates on football and his
studies. His graduation in May is
a "maybe."
Jack's major is social studies.
He says he'd like to teach but
then "so would a lot of people , "
After graduation in May (we
hope) he said he'd either go back
to N Y.or maybe Maryland for a
couple of years then on to the
West Coast. He's undecided about
graduate work.
Football was its exciting self
again this week. The "old man "
:ame through again , the low
iwellers scored upsets, two of the
iivision leaders fought it out ,
here was an unfortunate
•asuality, and the — get this —
Ragles won.
The "old man " who did it again
vas Oakland's George Blanda , a
pry 44 year-old quarterback and
>lacekicker. He came on to
eplace the injured Daryle
Lamonica and showed the form
that won him "Player of the Year
Award" last spring. He drove the
Raiders twice for TD's in the
fourth quarter, including his 231st
TD pass, as Oakland defeated the
Bengals .
Denver upset the Browns 27-0,
marking the first time in regular
season, since 1950, the Browns
have been sl.it out.
Baltimore won on the
statistical pads, but not on the
Scoreboard. The Eagles won their
first , helped by Happy Fellers 11
points.
My picks last week went 8-5 for
winners, 7-6 by the right score,
bringing my total picks to 27 for
39 winners (69 percent) , 20 for 39
by correct margins. My female
counterpart has also hit 20 of 39
while our faculty expert has hit 16
of 26 winners (61 percent) and
15 of 26 by correct margin , including a 7-6 record this week.
For the upcoming week ,
Washington will rebound to
defeat the Saints by 6. Curt
Knight is having a fine year wi th
his foot. (15 F.G.).
Baltimore by 7 over Pittsburgh
— Baltimore can rush , passing
not as good as in previous years,
while Pittsburgh's Bradshaw is
playing well , but not much more
hel p.
Minnesota by 10 over the New
York Giants . Minnesota has a
to u gh , tough , tough , defense. The
Giants arc floundering.
Oakland by 3 over Kansas City .
The Chiefs have been impressive,
and always play well against the
Raidars, but the Raiders have
luck.
St. Louis over Buffalo by 12.
Sooner or late r Buffalo will put it
together, but when?
Dallas b y 7 over Chicago.
Roger Stauback started and had
a great day . Chicago is fired up.
Dallas will run to make the difference.
Detro it by 10 over Green Bay.
Detroit wins big for Chuck
Hughes .
WOMEN KNOW THE
SCORE
Minnesota over N.Y. Giants
San Diego over N.Y. Jets
Cleveland over Atlanta
Houston over Cincinnati
Dallas over Chicago
Oakland over Kansas City
Denver over Philadelphia
L.A. over Miami
San Diego by 7 over New York San Francisco over New England
Jets.. The Jets are having their Washington over New Orleans
troubles . Had! will play well Baltimore over Pittsburgh
except for interceptions
St. Louis over Buffalo
Green Bay over Detroit
Cleveland by 3 over Atlanta .
Browns must rebound to stay on
FACULTY FIRSTS
top of the division.
for this week are :
My
picks
Houston by 3 over Cincinnati.
Houston is playing well but
losing, and are due for a victory . Minnesota over N.Y. Gian ts.+14
San Diego over N .Y. Jets
+3
Miami by 3 over LA. Miami has Cleveland over Atlanta
+7
two of the top four rushers in the Cincinnati over Houston
+10
American Conference. LA' s Dallas over Chicago
+7
coming off a romp, but could go
Kansas
City
over
Oakland
+3
either way.
Denver over Philadelphia
+7
+7
San Francisco by 14 over New Miami over L.A
San
Francisco
over
New
England. Pats are having trouble
+10
getting on the board , San England
Washington
over
New
Orleans
+7
Francisco has no such problem.
Baltimore
over
Pittsburgh
..
+10
Philadelphia by 3 over Denver.
+10
Eagles bag victory number 2 in St. Louis over Buffalo
Detroit
over
Green
Bay
+7
an upset over the Broncos.
Husk y
Pre view
It
Sport Short
(The Sporting News 11-1)
O akland
B landa ,
G eor ge
Raiders ' ageless placekickerq uarterback , asked if coachin g
enters into his future p lans : "I' m
not i nterested right now. Hell ,
I' m too old for coaching. I 'll be 45
next September. Who wants to be
a 45-year-old coach?"
ATTENTION!!
C ontributions
to
the
Olympian , BSC' s literar y and
art magaz i ne are now being
accepted. Place any work in
Box 293, Waller , or dro p off in
M&G office.
w as
a nothe r
gloo m y
,
Saturday for the Huskies as they
w ere bo m bed b y the Marauders
of Millersville State College. The
Marauders , CM confere nce , 4 2
overall) gained 'MK yards by the
airways and 229 yards on the
ground , and as a whole ate
through the Husky defense.
The bin difference seemed to be
the ability of the Marauders to hit
the third down plays freq uently.
Quarterbacks j erry Nau and
Mike Burke hit on 16 out of 25
passes while Joe Geiger completed only 9 out of 27.
The PC' s leading punter ,
Husky Dan Stellfox , again
avera ged over 40 yards per punt.
W hat ab out the upcom i ng game
aga i nst Chey ney ? I t h i nk the
Huskies will ta ke it by 14 points .
Cheyney , althou gh known for its
bad fo otb all t eam s i n recent
y ear s is tr yi n g to remed y that
situation. This year 's record
mig ht not p rove tha t , b ut the y are
playing tough. They went neck
and neck with Stroudsbur g, as
well as other teams. But the
Huskies are hungr y for a win , and
t h is w i ll be the week.
The game is HOME. Why not
go and enjoy yourself ?
LAST WEEK'S STATS
BSC Miller.
First downs
11
12
Hushing
168
229
Passing
Yds. lost
Net yds.
Completions
Interce ptions
Puntave.
Fum bles
Penalties
92
305
36
40
224
494
9-27 18-25
0
4
8-40.1 7-37.4
1
3
5-55
3-45
G ame photos
by Dan Mares h
Profi le phot o
by Tom Schofield
¦
Do you
want a
food change?
Freshmen class meeting —
Tues. n-2 7:00 Carver Hall.
Come meet class officers.
AEW
observed
What do lamb stew, jellied fruit
salad ,
tapioca
pudding,
Hungarian goulash, tuna noodle
casserole and french fried
eggplant have in common?
Besides being nutritious food ,
that is?
ARA Slater School & College
Services, originator of the food
preference survey on the nation's
campuses, admits its computers
feed back information that all the
delectable dishes listed above
have finished quite low in polls
taken at many of the 300 colleges
and universities the company
serves from coast to coast .
This week student PSEA
(Pennsylvania State Educational
Association) is observing
American Education week. The
theme for this October 24-30, 1971
observance is "Help Schools
Bridge the Gap."
But what will be the result here
at Bloomsburg State College
when students check their
reactions to some 200 dishes on
November 1, 1971? Different,
maybe?
We use these food preference
questionnaires to incorporate
your favorites in our menu
cycles,"says Mr. O'Brien, ARA's
dinging service director on
campus. "If you won't eat, or try ,
certain dishes, there is no reason
to offer them. We'll concentrate
on those foods that you prefer and
which we know are also highly
nutritious."
Universal favorites seem to be
entrees such as roast beef and
chicken...vegetables such as
potatoes , corn and string
beans...sandwiches such as
hamburgers, hot dogs and bacon,
lettuce and tomatoe...desserts
such as apple pie, ice cream and
strawberry shortca ke.
Cof fee generally rates low on
campus, with milk the beverage
champ.
We are conducting this survey
for your benefit — your
cooperation will be greatly appreciated.
As soon as the poll is taken on
this campus and the statistics are
available , Mr. O'Brien will
disclos e whether Bloomsburg
State College fits the norm or has
some unusual preferences.
i
Japanese
Art Gift
Housing Offic e
seeks op inions
Also with this challenge we
should "Help Schools Bridge the
Gap" between young people and
adults , between Americans of
different color and point of view,
between rich and poor, and
between promise and performance.
The Housing Office is currently
preparing a survey which will be
administered to all BSC students
(on a voluntary basis) who reside
in the residence halls located on
campus.The questionnaire was
developed by John J. Zarski,
Director of Housing and James J.
Carlin , Graduate Assistant. Dr.
Sanders , who coordinates
campus research at BSC also
offered assistance in the
development of the various
items.
The main purpose of the study
is to seek information about the
attitudes of campus residents
concerning the following areas:
co-educational living, tripling in
the residence halls, social makeup of residence halls, off-campus
housing, and flexibility in the use
of our campus residence halls in
order to meet changing malefemale ratios of our student
'population.
American Education Week ,
held annually since 1921, is
sponsored by the National
Educational Association , the
American Legion, the National
Congress of Parents and
Teachers, and the U. S. Office of
Education .
The members of Student PSEA
orge you as prospective teachers
and leaders of America to visit a
local school and observe classes.
Take notice of a sign on campus
and think about what education
really means to you.
IPando ra's I
t
¦
¦MBMSSBBHHHHHBii ^HBBM ^HHl
—
—:
VOTE
"RED" CANOUSE
^^^^^^^
¦^^^^^^^^^^
HB ii^^^^ HH i^HHBIHHHBBHBBHHIHIHIL
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
^^ ^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
^HIL ^IL ^IL ^Bi^lL^IL ^IL^IL ^IL ^IH
B
H
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^«
LALL I'S
CAMERA & HOBBY SHOP
112 N. Market Street , Berw ick
Ph: 7S9-94O1
All Popular Came ra * at Popular Price *
Darkroom
Pro jector *
Photo Finishing
Equipment and Supplies
Tape Recorders— Exclusive area Ampex dea ler.
Radio Controlled Model Plane * — Slot Car j
DUcount for B.S.C. Student *
232 Iron St. 784-2274
I
AATF meets
I need your vote
for County Commiss ioner
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^¦^¦^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ *
^^^^^^^^
the Housing Office recognizes
the need for student involvement
in the formulation of policies
under which they will reside.
Since a major portion of the
student' s time is spent in
residence, it is extremely importan t to develop a residential
situation favorable to social and
academic success.
During the next two weeks floor
meetings will be arranged in the
Dor Lewellyn
TV -STEREO SERVICE
for County Treasurer
B B
The Ski Club is presently
conducting a membership drive
to include all levels of skiers and
thoseof you who have never skied
before. It is to your advantage to
join our club. As a member of the
Ski Club you will have access to
all the latest skiing information
through our Ski Watch Committee. Information as to rates at
ski areas, student diseounfttays,
and club organized activities
such as overnight trips and group
discounts are yours for the small
price of $1.50 - semester.
An example of what we can and
are doing for our members is
Sunday, October 31. Our club is
Schools have become great
machines sorting and labeling
those who presumably will be
winners or losers as adults.
Noting this, we should help
schools bridge the gap between
"winners " and "losers " by
visiting the areas schools and
taking part in other activities.
VOTE
Boyd C. laycock, Jr.
¦ ¦
¦ ¦
¦
^¦
¦
Join the Ski Club
The Jr. Class will present the
movie 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY
in the Student Union on Wednesday, Nov. 3rd at 8:00 p.m.
taking all interested members to Tickets are $1.00 in advance or
the New York Colliseum for the $1.25 at the door.
1971 Ski and Tennis Show for a
price of $8.00. This $8.00 includes
bus transportation to and from
New York, Admission, PLUS
refreshments. As an individual
not associated with our club it
would cost $19.00. This is an $11.00
saving to you as a student interested in skiing as a member of
BSC became the recipient of an
our club. (I say interested
because we are recruiting people oil painting by the noted
who have never skied bef ore) . We Japanese artist Tetsuro Sawada
can do a lot for you so why not last week. The gift was made
drop in any Tuesday at 7:00 p.m. possible by the generous efforts
in room 79 Hartline, see a ski of Miss Toshiko Takaezu, well
film , and hear what it's all about. known African craftsman, and
Mrs. Kathryn Trubek, of the
Hundron Art Center in Clinton,
New Jersey. Selection of the
painting w.as made by Dr. Percival R. Roberts III, chairman of
the art department.
Dr. Roberts described the gift
as a "stunning example of
structured color field abstraction, ~.ie that will greatly
enhance our college's permanent
various residence halls in order art collection."
to distribute and collect the
Sawada has combined in a
questionnaires. IBM answer single canvas the best of both
sheets will also be used. This will cultura l traditions—East and
enable the office to expediate the West, clearly demonstrating the
compilation of the statistical universality of all great works of
results and make them availa ble art.
for campus examination. AdTetsura Sawada maintains his
ditional comments will also be studio in Tokyo, Japan . He
solicited on separate answer studied
under
Leonard
sheets. All inquires concerning ( Tsuguhara ) Foujits and has
this questionnaire should be exhibited widely in Japan ; most
directed to the Housing Office recently in the Tokyo Inlocated in Elwell Hall lobby.
ternational Biennial. His work is
represented in the National
Museum of Modern Art in Tokyo,
The Kamakura Museum of
Modern Art in Kamakura, The
Museum of Modern Art in New
York, Rochester Museum of Art,
University of Oregon, Cleveland
BSC was host of the Central Museum of Art, Japan Society,
Pennsylvania Chapter of the New York City , Asia House and
American
Associa tion
oi the private collections of Morris
Teachers of French. French Graves and Betty Parsons. The
teachers , administra tors and Hunderson Art Center featured
students from many high schools, an exhibition of his work in
colleges and universities of the March of 1971 and it was from
area met in the Bakeless Center this collection that the BSC
for the Humanities for the annual painting, valued at $4500, was
Fall meeting of the Chapter. selected .
Special guests at the meeting and
at the French-style luncheon held
at t h e Commons i nc lud ed General of the Federation of the
President and Mrs. Nossen, Dean Alliances Franchises in the
and Mrs . Hobart Heller, and United States , explained the
Dean and Mrs. Edson Drake. At functions and benefits of such an
t he lunc heon , President Nossen organ ization.
and Dean Drake addressed the
In t h e a f ternoon sess ions ,
group, reaffirming their belief in discu ss i ons were h eld concern ing
the importance of the study of the teaching of conversation,
f ore ign languag es as an aid to t h e with Mr. Claude Caujolle, of Penn
better understanding of mankind. State , an d Mrs . Constance
Since BSC would like to Griggs, of Wellsboro Senior High
establish an Alliance Franchise School, presiding. Mr. Alfred
for all people who are interested LeBIanc, of Penn State , t hen
in France and in French in their conducted a discussion about the
ar ea , Mr. Duca , Secretary- methods and materials to be used
for fourth-year students. Ushers
I for the meeting were provided by
"Le Cerc l e Franc i as ," and
arran gements f or lunc h eon
reservat ions were h andled by
Mr. Blaise Delnis, of the Foreign
Language Department.
JIM ROBERT S
for
Register & Recorder
I
Kampus Nook
Across fr om the Union
Ham Hoaglts,
Plain ind
Choost • Popporenl • Onion
Pfaa. Our own Mado to
Croaiw.
Takt Out Ordort —Dollvory to Dorms, Prats,
loro rltlM.
Di al 7844111
Houni M*h. - Thurt.
11,00
Frida y
Saturda y
frmda y
li OO.
9iOt-lliOO
4iS0*1ti0O
11,00*11.10
I
(conti nued from pago two )
in the recent election for a
bargaining agent. Several not
voting were in the hospital or at
meetings off campus. It seems
clear that we are not apathetic
about our future or about ; the
future of our role at BSC.
I would bj2 remiss if I didn 't
commend the many people who
worked diligently during the
election, for both APSCUF and
AAUP. Despite the intensity of
their effort , a professional
stature was maintained and
bitter personal differences did
not occur. As a result we can now
join forces in our efforts to bring
about an improv ement in our
academic and economic wellbeing without a millstone of
personal dislikes to hold us back .
All groups of faculty will be
represented on committees as we
move forward, without regard to
alliances prior to the election. We
are now in the process of
choosing a local negotiating team
as the first step in the procedure
and will select individuals only on
the basis of potential contribution.
Membership cards will soon be
sent to all eligible faculty . It is
vital that we have 100 per cent
membership at this time.
However, I must also say that
membership is not required in
order to be represented. I hope
that everyone joins the Faculty
Association. I promise that no
undue pressure will be used to
encourage that membership.
THANK YOU!!!
Robert C. Miller
order to be successful in ac- negotiating team should not be
cepting these new responsibilities appointed or elected from a
and obligations, unity among the membership 1 of twenty-five
faculty in supporting APSCUF- percent of the faculty .
PAHE becomes essential.
I sincerely hope that the
In any campaign of the nature leadership and members of the
we have just witnessed loyalties Facul ty Association will endorse
faculty the idea of the need to reorganize
contending
to
organizations become very the Facul ty Association and seek
strong. However , whichever ways to unify the faculty in this
faculty organization wins, its new important role.
first task is to bring the faculty
Sincerely ,
together as a phalanx of unity in
George A. Turner
collective
supporting
its
Associate Professor of
bargaining agent. Since the History
Faculty Association, as the local
affiliat e of APSCUF-PAHE, now
has a new scope of responsibility ,
there are some compelling
The annual Pennsylvania
justify
the Collegiate
reasons
to
Choir Festival was
reorganization of the Faculty held from October 21 to October
Association.
24 at West Chester State College.
On this campus APSCUF- Students from all of PennPAHE only won by a narrow sylvania 's
Colleges
and
margin of fifty-two percent. It is universities gathered in West
important that those faculty Chester for this year's festival.
members who did not support Representing BSC were: Kathy
APSCUF-PAHE be encouraged Surnicki, Sue Phillips, Michele
to do so. The membership of the Seliga, Margaret Herchik, Mike
Faculty Association is small, Brauner, Rod Bickert, Carl Kishwith only twenty-five percent of baugh and Al Swope.
the entire faculty as members. A varied program of musical
The present office holders of the styles and periods were
Faculty Association were presented when the festival
nominated and elected without concert was held Sunday, Ocopposition. There should be an tober 24 at 3 p.m. Compositions
attempt to bring talent of all are by such outstanding comcompeting faculty organizations posersat Stravinsky, Buxtehude,
into these important positions. Britten, and Mendelssohn were
The present constitution needs included.
revision in light of the local Three days of intensive
preceeded . the
chapter's new role as bargaining rehearsals
i
constitution
present
concert. Gregg Smith, noted for
agent. In the
are there provisions for selecting[ his Columbia recordings, was the
the local negotiating team? Thei guest conductor.
Choir
I
I
I
Congratulations are in order to
APSCUF-PAHE for winning the
election on Wednesday, October
6, as the collective bargaining
agent for the facul ty at BSC and I
the other state-owned institutions
for higher education. With the
question finally resolved, it is
now important to think about the I
need for collective support of the I
faculty to face the tasks and I
challenges that lie ahead. In
I
BOOKS...
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TITLES IN STOCK
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I
Lett e rs
For Room Decor
Insense and Burners
Candles....
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I
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784-2818
Gifts - Framin g - Music - Wal lsc&ping
I»-hh h h hhJ
Record Review
{ cont inued from pago two )
at first present and has stuck
with the Blues Project. The
number of forms and styles on
this recording is amazing. Like
earlier albums, the Project is still
pulling it off.
With an intent to take a shot
into the future, five musicians
took a chance. The Blues Project
is ever projecting. That shot was
a chain reaction. Too bad the
back-up musicians aren 't
credited. I'd like to know who
that funky pianist that slips on
and off this album is anyway...
See that? More contributions
from BP.
VOTE
Gailey Keller
for
I District Attor ney
I
¦Richard K. (Dick)
SERVICE
1I TEACHERS
¦
at one oMhe
¦
RATES
I LOWESTLOAM
Walton
mwm
I
awubu
,
I
for
County Commissioner
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112 W. Main
November 16 & 17 — U. S.
Marine Corps Recruiting Student Union
November 16,1:00 p.m. to 4:30
p.m. Ernst and Ernst Accounting
Firm , Reading, Pa. January
Accounting Graduates
November 17, 1:00 p:m. —
Neshaminy School District ,
Langhorne, Pa. January : (2) Jr.
Hi Math; (2) Jr Hi Science Sept.
Special Ed (Emot. Dist.)
November 19*9:00 a.m. to 2:00
— Medina Central Schools ,
Medina , New York Teacher
Candidates
November 23,1:00 to 4:30 p.m.
— North Penn School District,
Lansdale , Pa. Teacher Candidates
^M
DRESS
SHOP
November 4 & 5 — NAVY
OFFICER'S TRAINING
Recruiting Student Union
November 4,9:30 a.m. to 4:30 —
Lower Dauphin School District
Hummelstovn , Pa. Teacher
Candidates
November 9,10:00 a.m. — InService
ternal
Revenue
Group
—
Washington , D.C.
Presentation of Job Opportunities with I.R.A.
November 10 & 11 — Peace
Corps
November llj 1:00 p.m. —
Easton Area School District
Easton, Pa. Teacher Candidates
November 13,9:00 a.m. to 3:00
p.m. — Anne Arundel County
Schools Annapolis , Maryland
Teacher Candidates
'borrow for less ¦ Re-elect
\H PENNSY LV ANIA:
MAREE'S
¦
Campus Interviews
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FLO WER S
Down The Hill On East St.
Media of