rdunkelb
Thu, 04/11/2024 - 17:48
Edited Text
SHAFER ELECTED
Raymond Shafe r received 64% of the votes cast f o r GoV'
erhor by Bloomsburg students in a mock election held on
campus last Friday ,
Toda y is Veterans ' or Armi stice
Day. For some, it is a meaningless
legal holida y; for others , it is a
t ime f or re lfect ion and eval uation ,
as well as a ti me to pay tr ibute to
the men an d women of our countr y
who h ave serve d in the ar med
f orces .
We find it difficult to reflect on
the past and honor our veterans
without our thoughts shiftin g to
the men who are serving the United
State s toda y in Viet Nam. We all
have friend s, relatives , or acquaintances who are daily risking their
lives, and in many cases losing
t hem , for a cause which a minori ty
of Americans entirel y discredit
We do not deny this minorit y the
right to disagree with United States
policy, whether it be by demonstration , speeches , or literature. But exactly what do they accomplish? In
our opinion , they have accomplished absolutel y nothing.
President Johnson , the Congress,
and the World are well aware that
some Americans are not exactly
jumping for joy with what is going
on in Southeast Asia. It seems
senseless to continue to "beat a
dead horse. "
The only way United States policy can chan ge is if the American
electorate -would select a President
and a Congress who would immediately withdraw American troo ps
from Viet Nam. We don't think the
major ity of Americans will do this.
No Americans (with few exceptions) like war , or the fact that
Amer ican soldiers are dying in Vi et
Nam , but most Americans are willing to place their trust in the dulyelected government offic ials of our
countr y.
What else can we do? Who can
we trust if we can 't place our fa ith
in the Pres ident and those in whose
hands rest the fate of us all? Are
we, instead , supposed to place our
faith and trust in the characters
who lead ant i-war demonstrations
on campuses like Berkele y and who
very dramaticall y burn little pieces
of paper?
Perha ps we are idealistic. Perhaps we are fools. Perhaps we are
stu pes. Only histor y will tell.
Advanced Aquatic s
Anyone schedulin g advanced
aquatics should contact Mr. MeLau ghlin regarding qualifica tions
for enroll ment in sections of Physical Educa tion 102.
Raymond P. Shafer captured an expected win in the race for Governor
of Pennsylvania defeatin g his Democratic rival , M ilton J. Shapp in an
elect ion this week.
Shafer entered the race for governor last sprin g, and easily receive d
both the Republican Part y's endorsement and nomination in a primar y
fight with Harold Stassen. His campaign for governor concentrated mainly on avowals to cont inue the typ e of adm inistrat ion that Penns ylvan ia
has had under William Scranton . "It is no accident ," rea d s the Sha f er
endorsed p latform , "that the Repu blican Party has gover ned Penns ylvania during this period of dynamic rebirth . O ur p art y is ded icated to t he
prop osition that governme nt is designed to bring about a better life for
all t he peop le. We do not govern accor ding to slogans . We do not submit
to the dictation of pressure groups. We study the needs of the people—
and t hen we act to meet those needs."
A res ident of Meadv ille in northwest Penns ylvania , Sha fer was tw ice
elected district attorney in that county and then state senator in 1958. In
1962 af ter serving one term in t he state senate , he became lieutenantgovernor under William Scranton , and now , at 48, is governor of the
state.
Dur ing th e past administration , he was Chairman of the committee
wh ich p re p are d the governor 's legislative program and pres ided over the
senate in his role as second in char ge in the administration.
Raymond Shafer was born in New Castle , Pennsylvania. His father
was a clergyman and his family poor , so Shafer had to work h^s way
through Allegheny College and Yale Law School. During that time, he
became president of his class, captain of the basketball team , and graduated with PM Beta Kappa honors.
During World War II , Sha f er was a PT boat comman der in t he Sout h
Pacific: then he practiced law in Meadville until elected District Attorne y.
Governor-Elect Raymond P. Shafer
Republicans Win
In Mock Election
The I nternational R elat ions Club
sp onsor ed a vot ing p oll on campus
Bergan Evans Analyzes Language
On Family and International Levels
By Doug Hippen stiel
Dr . Ber gan Evans , Northwestern
University English professor , fascinate d his aud ience on Wednes day
as he presented an amusin g and inform ing ana lysis of lan gua ge an d
its use. The interestin g address was
Mata and Hari
To Appear Here
Tomorrow evening MATA AND
H ARI brin g the ir show to the sta ge
of Carver Auditorium for the College Community and - the general
pub lic. Admission for the general
publ ic is $1.50 for adults and 50c
for students. The College Community is admitted free of char ge.
MATA AND HARI engage a
theme , idea , or emotion and capture its essent ial elements throu gh
dance and sati re. The veteran enterta iners do this throu gh movement , gesticulation , and ju st plain
mugging.
Exponents Of Mime
As exponents of the art of mime,
they can project an idea far more
realistically and hard hittin g than
the spoken word. Whether they
portray zany sur geons, wild cowboys, or fad-crazed teena gers ,
MATA AND HARI are equally entertainin g and amusin g.
Mata and Harl In "A Teenage Romance ,"
heavily spiced with humorous illustrat ions to support his points.
Dr. Evans state d that langua ge is
purel y human , a ver y clever th ing
through , which w express ideas,
emotions , and thou ghts throu gh
voluntar y symbols of speech. Using speech, man is able to generalize and conceptualize.
"Language is one of many forms
of commun ication,
we don 't
have to speak to commun icate ," the
author and television personalit y1
said. People talk all the time,
whether the y have somethin g to
say or not Much communication is
accom p lished throu gh silence or
such things as facial expressions or
a n emb race.
O ne of the more humorous p oints
of the speech occurred when Dr.
Evans evaluated the role of commun ication in marriage. He stated
little communication exists in marriage , and the audience response
indicated a lar ge number who can
identif y with this point.
Dr. Evans continued by makin g
some important points about writing and listening with relation to
speech. He stated most people talk
more in one week than they write
in a lifetime.
The importance of listening rests
on the basis that words and sentences mean what the listener , and
not the sp eaker , perceives them to
mean. The responsibility for understandin g therefor e rests to a great
extent on the speaker.
The speake r must employ the
right inflection , timing , emphasis ,
and word sequence in order to communicate accurately with his listener. The speaker is ver y often faced
with the problem of makin g decisions in mid-air. He may plun ge into a sentence and suddenl y be
forced to dip deeply into his vocabulary reservoir to complete his conv
municatlon. Th is "di p" is often inade quate , and sometimes futile , resulting in misunderstandin g or
fault y communication.
recent ly concernin g this week's
A compulsor y freshma n class
meeting will be held in Carver
Hall at 7:00 p.m. where nominations for class officers will be
accepted. The freshman class
election will be held on November 16 and 17.
Advance schedulin g will be
held on Thurs day, Dec. 8 in Cen-
tennial Gym.
Students now student-teachin g
will advance schedule in their
pr acticum classes before Dec. 8.
However , the y st ill must bu y a
red-to pped schedule card and
master class schedule booklet
available in the bookstore.
election.
Results
Mr. Mart in Gildea , adviser , rep or ted the distr ibution of 577 votes
as follows: Lt. Governor — Ra ymond Bro der ick , 344; Leonard Staisey, 233; Senator for the 27th District of Pennsylvania , General Assembly — Preston Davis, 356, John
L innet , 220; Secretary of Internal
Affairs—John Tabor , 294, Genevieve BlaH * 281; Representativ eilp!
Congress , 11th District •— Daniel
Flood , 381; Gerald Broadt , 213;
Representative
in Pennsylvania
General Assembly, 189th District—
Amin Alley, 281, Kent Shelhamer ,
275.
Beat ESSC
OFFICERS OF MRA : Pat Colgan, Gar y Freed , Ed Slusscr , Larr y Ward ,
and Bcrnie Schaefer. Advisers are Dean Elton Hunsin ger and Mr . Dave
Shaffer.
Jaycees Again Offe r BSC Women
Chance to Win Miss E. Pa. Crown
The Bloomsbur g Jaycees are
again offerin g Bloomsburg State
College girls a unique opportunit y
to broaden themselves as Individ *
uals throu gh partici pation in an official preliminary to the Miss America Pageant — The Miss Eastern
Penn sylvania Pa geant — to be held
in Bloomsburg this coming April.
Opportunit y
Misunderstandin g often results
Participants will meet and work
from fault y listening, however.
with
a host of person able young
Man y times the listener only catchadults
from the community durin g
es fra gments of speech, due either
pageant
prepa rations this sprin g.
to inattent ion or divided listenin g.
Each
girl
will also receive poise
Dr. Evans' presentat ion was an
and
stage
presence
instruction and
Internationally oriented approach
to language. He stated that "every be introduced to choreography by
language is the distillation of ex- a well-known profes sional. In addition to the personal rewards of
(Continued on p ag« 4J
such exper iences, participants will
share in a prize and scolarship list
which runs over $2 ,000.
Further Competition
The winner of the 1967 Miss
Eastern Pennsylvania Page ant will
go on to compete with twenty other
state preliminar y winners for the
crown of "Miss Penns ylvania" in
Philadel phia late next Jun e. The
victor there , in addition to receiving a $1,000 Pepsi-Cola scholarship,
will re pre sent Penns ylvania in the
Miss America Pa geant held in At*
lantlc City.
The eligibility requirements for
partici pation In the Miss Eastern
Pennsylvania Pa geant are as follows:
(Contlnutd on pagt 8)
Letters To the Editor
In the Diary of Anne Fran k
'
' .: TW
mS9SS8^^$£^
"The Americans Are Coining "- Tv^entY^i^MM^^^^i
Another War and Another Continent - Is It the^fj ^^p :^:
Counting Our Blessings -
by Lyle Slack
I would like to thank Mr. Phillips for his answer to my* editorial. A
few of his points were well taken but not convincing.
The scribbled notes of a thirteen
First of all, Mr. Phillips referred to drinking in four of his seven year-old Jewish girl were the subparagraphs as prerequisites to fun. I would like to refer, Mr. Phillips, to j ect of a late movie entitled "The
members of Sigma Iota Qmega, Beta Sigma Delta and the other proposed Diary of Anne Frank," that I sat up
^ social fraternities. They do not have to drink to have a "wild" time at and watched a few nights ago.
their fraternity parties. Someone will probably say now, that these fra- Wedged between the commercials
ternities represent a small fraction of the student body. At the present was the story of Anne Frank and
they do, but in the future the number of fraternities will grow and more her family and friend s, eight in all,
people will be able to take advantage of their non-drinking "wild" fra- who hid for two years in an Amsterdam attic during Nazi occupaternity parties.
The rest of Mr. Phillips' editorial refers, in general, to the second- tion, hoping to escape the box cars
ratedness of BSC. This STIGMA which has pervaded this campus for as that left daily for Aushwitz and
long as I have been here is psychological. People like Mr. Phillips who Dachau. There was one scene that
help spread this idea are causing their own downfall. I do not profess to struck me as being particularly
be able to stop this idea in the remainder of my term of office , but it strange.
It was June 6, 1S44, not only
must begin someplace.
their
twenty-third month in those
I agree with Mr. Phillips that many commuters are too far away to
attend social events. The people who live on campus and in the town of upstairs rooms but the beginning
Bloomsburg have no excuse. We all live here nine months out of the year of the D-Day invasion of Norand why shouldn't we make the best of what we have? We have a very mandy. The scene showed them
good football team, an excellent wrestling team, a fine basketball team, a frozen in motion as they listened to
good swimming team, one of the best academic standings in the state and the BBC reporting, and then one
a C.G.A. that is willing to do as much for the students as possible. In- of them choked out, "The Ameristead of knocking what we have here, why don't each of you look around cans are coming," with a relief so
and count your blessings? If more people did this more often, this stigma intense that he fell weeping into a
chair.
would begin its disappearance from this campus.
Rubbing my foot that had gone
I would like to refer Mr. Phillips to various organizations on campus:
to
sleep, I started to think about
Veterans' Association, Phi Sigma Pi, Varsity Club, the various social
others
in Europe besides the Frank
fraternities, Men's and Women's Resident Associations, Men's and Womfamily
who were glad that the
en 's Day Associations, to name j ust a few, who are finding out that if
they work a little harder their organizations can work near 100% effici- Americans were coming. There
ency. Some of you will say, "so what?" This resurgence of organizations were French women, wrinkled and
will cause people to take pride in what they do and will in turn be one scarfed, running out to kiss mudsplattered GIs marching into freed
method of removing this stigma from our campus.
villages. There were crowds of BelI have tried to answer Mr. Phillips as best as possible. We of C.G.A. gians cheering along roadsides as
will continue to offer the best possible events to you, the students. All we American columns filed into the
need now is your complete and thorough co-operation.
. country. The D-Day invasion
brought tears of relief from many
Thank You,
people.
Steve Boston,
Not Quite Relief
President of C.G.A.
Twenty-two years later only in
a different war and on a different
continent, the same words are
Operation: Campus
heard, "The Americans are Coming." But the scenes this, tune are
different; they are of ragged
women crying over the dead bodies
of their husbands and swearing at
American troops as they swarm inThe Lettermen appeared in concert at Mansfield State on November to the village; this time they are of
4... Peter, Paul, and Mary were featured at the Jazz Festival Concert at mute villagers standing before frusthe State University of New York at Buffalo recently... A special section trated lieutenants, questioning in
of The Spectrum was recently devoted to marijuana, with special com- vain, very often receiving indiffermentary by the poet Allen Ginsberg... Controversy is in evidence at ence at best. The fact that the
Millersville State over the way that their Homecoming queen is chosen,
as the choice is in the hands of a few rather than in the hands of the
entire student body ... The Four Seasons will be presented in concert at
Indiana University on Nov. 13 at 8:00, after the Lock Haven game—
admission: 50fzf... Basil Rathbone, probably best-known as the screen 's
Sherlock Holmes, was presented at Susquehanna University on November
2... Lou Neishloss of Lock Haven State is presently in training as a
"walker" in the 1968 Olympics, in the 50,000 meter walk... Sigma Phi
Epsilon captured Homecoming float honors at Bucknell University a few
weeks ago... The Wilkes College Colonels are on their way to a MAC
championship with 11 consecutive wins... Shippcnsburg State boasts a
freshmen coed from Kenya... The Exciters and the Rooftop Singers were
highlighted at East Stroudsburg 's fall weekend last week... Bill Bronin
has been appointed editor of King 's College 's literary magazine, "Scop "...
The dedication of Susquehanna University's new chapel will be attended
by Efrem Zimbalist, Jr
William War-field , a baritone featured at BSC
last year, will appear at Lock Haven State College on November 16.
— RSB
by Richie
and Toni
Matulis
Benyo
Lettermen To Be At Mansfield S*C;
Basil Rathbone Graces Susquehanna
Photographed by Larry Burrows and Co Rentmesster for LIFE magazine.
Americans are coming brings few family were ready after two years
tears of relief from the South Viet- to cry iri relief that the Americans
were coming. After not two but
namese.
And then our President shakes twenty years of war, the South
his head in aggravated bafflement , Vietnamese cannot cry for anything
unable to understand why Ameri- but the loss of a husband or a wife
cans and British and French and or a child, and after a while even
Germans and Soviets cannot see that loss they come to take with
that the conflict in Vietnam is a cold numbness, like a frozen foot
freedom war the same as was the that has been hurt so much it
D-Day invasion. Mr. Johnson can- doesn't feel the pain anymore.
not understand why there are so After twenty years of killing, the
many critics of his great policy to South Vietnamese . are not able to
"liberate the downtrodden Vietna- get excited about a great war to
mese from the merciless tyrannts liberate them that has been
of the North. The World, thinks launched by an overweight Texan
the President, is very, very unfair thousands of miles away.
to him.
What End?
A Different Kind Of Way
Whether it is a war to dominate
or
to free, it probably makes little
I believe the answer may be that
difference
to them. They 're very
Mr. Johnson has failed to grasp a
central difference between the war tired of all war. They want an end
we are in now and the one we to the twenty years of sleepless
were iu twenty-two years ago. The nights and hungry days.
difference is probably not, as might
But still we hear the overweight
be thought, that many South Viet- Texan pledging the"U-nited States"
namese are being killed as a nec- to help the South Vietnamese carry
essary part of guerrilla warfare, on the war — for however many
for there were undoubtedly as years it takes. If this war does drag
many Frenchmen and Belgians nec- out for more years, history will do
essarily if unfortunately killed be- something for Lyndon Johnson. It
cause of Allied bombing of Eu- may pronounce him either the most
rope.
courageous preserver of right, or
But a central difference might the most righteous perverter of
well be time; Anna Frank and her right in this country.
Fall Is the Time of Earthly Alterations and Similarities
twilight—the twilight of the seasons: Fall.
There are many opinions as to
exactly what Fall is. There are j ust
as many opinions as to whether it
is good or bad—or perhaps j ust indifferent.
It is, of course , the altering of
heat to cold, rain to snow, shortsleeve shirts to fur-lined j ackets,
and warm breezes to cold and bitter winds.
It is This And More
It is a good time to some people,
for there are those who prefer a
little more nip in the air than the
summer heat allows for, and who
would rather see a white blanket
of snow than a white beach of
san d, who see Fall as a step toIn These , The Days
ward their wants. Then there are
Of Wines and Roses
those who see the coming winter
The worl d is Nature , and Nature
as stuc k cars , howling winds biting
is composed of two factors— Birth
cars and nose, and overall inconand Death. In these two extreme s venience. These, though, like the
rest everything includin g love and Birth and Death mentioned earlier,
hat , and they are all we know from are extremes.
the time of our initial brea th to the Somewhere In Between
day of our last. The living world
The wise person is the one who
lies in the extended twilight be- can ben d enou gh so t h at h e does
tween these two worlds , In realit y, not breakr-one who can view Fall
the only world we actua lly know is as a time of color passing, or t h e
the twilight world , f or we do not time of that last hike before the
have memories of pre-blrth , nor do snows , or of j ust a little chilly day
we have advanced knowledge of our on a hill overlooking a valley of
specific positions after our ' death , making the eyes to the bleakness to
In The Middle
come.
We are now in the middle of a
flowing waters and mergin g colors
CONTEMPLATIONS
& REFLECTIONS
M A R O O N & GOLD
Vol. XLV
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11 , 1966
No. 10
Editor — DOUG HJPPENSTIEL
Business Editor — RONALD JACKSON
Dirtetor of Publication! — CLAUDETTE STEVENS
Contultant — RICHARD SAVAGE
Feature
Editor
.' Richie Benyo
Managing Editor: Scott Clarke
Sporti Editor: Paul Allen
AssistantEditor .' Lyle Slack
Copy Editor: Sharon Avery
Advertising Editor: Mary Lou CavalHni
Circulation Editor: Kenneth Brown
Typing Coordinators: Katfay Elliott, Kaye
Photography Editor: Dale Carmody
Kiienwether
Art Editor .' Edward Rhoadei
Reporters : Mary Lou Cnvallini , Richard
Ann MoczuUki, Vicki Mikcll , Alana MatIlartman , Walt Cox, Ton I Ma tul is, Carl
ter, Tereia Wagner, Pat Robbias, Peggy
Nnuroth , Mary Ann Kam!nnki. Dawn
Waiten, Kothy Bo wen.
Wagner , Terry Carver, Tom Fleiwhauer,
Typing jo
Staff: Eileen Gulnac, Beverly DonPat Robbira, Nancy Kelly, Peggy Walters.
'5,^ /ftm Luerezi, Sherie Veingit, Walt
Feature Staff t Toni Matulii, Beverly DonCox, Janine Brunuer, Carol Beanarek,
Linda LaFaver, Dixie Brindel , Verdun
chez, Bonnie Brobtt, Barb Wclliver, Larry
Phillip *, Sylvia Vargo, Gary Bloom.
Thomas, John Ondiih.
Advertising Staff: Richard ITartman , Dawn
Sports Staffs Norm Jonei, Ed McKay, Ron
Wagner, Nancy Kelly, Tereia Wagner. Pat
Ohriitina, Jim McSurdy, Tom Gfngher,
Gordon Sivell, Allan Baum, Ken Adami.
Robbini, Peggy Walters, Walt Cox, Elaine
'fMtmua>
eet * Stagt JWiy M *1*' MM1
Copy Staff : Richard Hartman (A»t. Ed.),
Mary Lou GavallinJ, Carl Nauroth, Mary
N
fl&a »,W 'ftta ^fcb ,
Denny
Bynu, Paul Walton, Rich Hartman,
Art Staff: Dave Gerhard.
Staff Secretary: Kathy Relmard.
William Howelli, Alice Chapman , Alana Matter, Judy Gtn , George Yaclna.
Th« Maroon and j9of Bloomsb urg, Pa. Tht paper it a member of »h# Columbia Scholastic Preii Association and
tht Colleglatt PrMi Strvleo. All opin ions •xpreued by columnis ts and feature writers
including lttt«rs-to-tht- »ditor art not ntctssaril y thoii of this publication but thost of
lh» Individual *.
A Student Personnel Conference
was held at Allonberr y last
weekend . Attend ing from BSC? ,
were Dean Riogel, Dean Hunsinger and Dr. Herre.
Photo by Kiohie uenyo
FALL IS... just a little chilly day
on a hill overlookin g a valley of
flowing waters and mer ging colors.
A Time For Pre parin g
Fall is the companion of the
sought-after Spring, a period for
chan ge, a t ime when one f eels
closer to the land that he walks
than he does at any other time,
for Fall calls his attention to the
color and the drabness of the earth ,
the soft and the harsh winds, the
smooth and the rou gh grass—all
thin gs contrastin g, and thin gs in
mutu al opposition—a time for man
io stop for a moment to review
his summer and its blessing, and
for him to look forward to a secure
winter from those blessings—it is
t h e t ime to h arvest Nature 's good
graces in preparation for its trials.
It is the twilight between Birth
and Death , and it is called Life.
i
BEST SELLER LIST FOR THIS WEEK
FICTION
1. Valley of the Dolte—Susann
2. The Secret of Canta Vittorla—
Crichton
3. Tal-Fan—Clavoll
, NON-FICTION
1. How to Avoid Probate—Dace y
2. Rush to Jud gment—Lano
3. Ever ythin g But Money—
Levenson
: 'GROUP1 . AGTI^liillll
Campus Happenings
Saturday:
Football—ESSC—Away—1:30
Mata and Hari—A-1—8:15
Monday:
Studio Band—7:30—C-31
College Council—7:00
Tuesday
Harmonettes—A-l—3:00
Concert Choir—F-6—3:00
Archeology Club—C
Wednesday:
Movie—A-l
Thursday: .
Chess Club—-C—3:00
Concert Choir—F-6—3:00
Harmonettes—A-l—3:00
Forensic—B40-11—3:00
Friday: /
Dance
Miss East ern Pa ,
(Continue d fro m page 1)
1. Entrant must be a resident of
the four-county franchised area
(Columbia, Montour, Northumberland, and Schuylkill) or
be enrolled as a full-time student in a college located within
the four counties.
2. College students must maintain at least a 2.3 average and
must not be on social probation.
3. Entrant must be of good character and possess poise, personality, intelligence, charm
and beauty.
4. Entrant must possess and display talent in a routine not to
exceed three minutes. (Talent
may be singing, dancing, music, dramatics, art, dress designing, creative poetry* writing, etc. or entrant may give a
talk on the profession she
wishes to pursue.)
5. Entrant must be single and
never have been married.
6. Entrant's age on Labor Day,
1967, must not be less than 18
nor more than 28 years.
7. Entrant may be either professional or amateur.
Nominations
Nominations may be made by
submitting a nomination !/ entry
form which are available at the bulletin board by the Book Store or
simply by writing the Miss Eastern
Pennsylvania Pageant, P.O. Box
101, Bloomsburg, Pa. Those interested in learning more about the
pageant may send in their own entry which is not binding.
MAREE'S Dress Shop
112 W. Main Straat
Players ' Try outs
IdW yffllllL KILlg ty 7€x*j CaRfe*
Without a doubt ,, this was very definitely a Republican election,year.
While Republicans scored stunning victories throughout the nation, I
shall concentrate on the Shafer victory in Pennsylvania. There were several factors, varying in importance, that contributed to the election of
Raymond Shafer.
One of the outstanding factors was the campaign strategy of both
candidates. Traditionally, candidates have won elections no later than
mid-October. Mr. Shapp believed that this standing principle was no
longer operative, and that the last two weeks of the campaign were the
most critical; this explains his historic blitz on television and radio. Mr.
Shafer governed his campaign along the traditional principles and they
served him well.
Pennsylvania historically has a moderately conservative character. In
the last ninety years only four Democratic governors have been elected.
Mr. Shapp campaigned as an ardent liberal in a state that has not proved
its liberal inclinations. This factor and the previously mentioned popularity of the present governor, William Scranton, would have made victory
difficult for any Democratic candidate.
Most elections are lost by a party rather than won by the other. This
is also true regarding this past campaign. Mr. Shapp made several mistakes in his campaign for election, the most important of whi,ch was his
refusal to use consumer protection as the maj or issue, rather than higher
education and the taxation of public utilities. He could have "sold" himself to the public much easier on this issue.
Francis Smith (the Philadelphia Democratic boss) , more than any
other man is responsible for the Shafer victory. Mr. Smith's predecessor,
William Green, was prehaps one of the greatest practical politicians in
the history of Pennsylvania, In 1960 Bill Green attained a 326,000 vote
plurality for Kennedy. Francis Smith has never achieved results. Smith
never attained a significant maj ority in Philadelphia for Dilworth in 1962,
for Blatt in 1964, and now for Shapp in 1966. (Shapp received a plurality
of slightly over 100,000 votes in Philadelphia.) A Republican was elected
District Attorney of Philadelphia in 1965. The fact that Mr. Smith has
never produced results for the Democrats in heavily Democratic territory
is ample cause for his removal as party leader in Philadelphia.
TOILET GOODS
COSMETICS
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES
, GREETING CARDS
1 West Main St., Bloomiburg
Madrigal Concerts
The Madrigal Singers under the
direction of Mr. William Decker
recently gave two performances in
the Harrisburg area.
They sang at Cumberland Valley
High School, located between Harrisburg and Carlisle and at Camp
Hill High School; Camp Hill. They
also visited an experimental government sponsored school for intermediate grades seven and eight
at Good, Hope, Pa.
MRA Toy Dance
The annual Toy Dance sponsored
by the Men's Resident Association
will be held on Wednesday, Dec. 7,
according to Dean Elton Hunsinger,
adviser to the MRA.
Admission to this dance will be
a toy. These toys will be distributed
at Christmas time by an MRA
"Santa" to the patients in Children 's wards of seventeen area hospitals including the Selinsgrove
Colony.
Office of Educat ion
Announces Twent y
Post -Doctoral Grants
? Twenty post-doctoral fellowships
are being offered by the U.S. Office
of Education for prospective educational researchers.
Those selected will receive a
year's training stipend«equivalent
to the salary they would have received in their regular employment. To be eligible, an applicant
must have a doctor's degree in education, a behavioral science such
as psychology or sociology, or a
subj ect matter area related to education and its problems, and must «
have demonstrated outstanding po' tential and capability as an educational reseacher.
Applications
Applications must be acquired
before December 31 from: Research Training s Branch, Division
of Research Training and Dissemination, Bureau of Research, U.S.
office of Education, Washington,
D.C. 20202.
Phi Sig Presents
"Battle of Bands"
A "Battle of the Bands," sponsored by the Iota Chapter of Phi
Sigma Pi, will be staged in CenPlay ers Tr ip
tennial Gymnasium on Monday, NoThe Bloerasburg Players are go« vember 21—right before Thanksing to New York this weekend to giving vacation with the "Conductors" pitted asainst the "Playboys, '
the North Branch Valley. Student Inc."
archeologists may well be able to Appearances
salvage an important part of this
The "Conductors," originating in
record by becoming familiar with Williamsport, recently appeared
these roughly-made early tool-types, with the "? and the Mysterians" in
which many archeologists formerly Williamsport.
discarded as more likely to have
The "Playboys,Inc. from Bloomsbeen produced by frost or glacial burg have appeared "at
many BSC
action.
events, and are well-known to the
BSC Excavation Site
college community.
Finds May Change History
While at the New York convenBSC students and faculty are
Recently some of these Ameri- tion, I also contacted Mr. Barry
cordially
invited and there will be
can "pebble tools" were shown to Kent, the new State Archeologist of
Dr. L. S. B. Leakey, renowned as the Pennsylvania State Museum, no admission.
the excavator of fossils, of early Harrisburg, Pa., who has promised
COLONIAL KITCHEN
man and his tools in East Africa, to visit the site being excavated
RESTAURANT
who declared that the American by our club to evaluate the work
(Across
from
The Columbia Theatre)
specimens were fully as primitive being done and help our underDairy Specials
as some of the oldest "pebble standing of what the "find s" mean
PLATTERS & SANDWICHES
tools." On display at the New York in terms of Susquehanna Valley
meeting were crude "pebble tools" v history several centuries before CoMEAL TICKETS AVAILABLE
collected in the lower Susquehanna lumbus. Evidence of several perValley!
iods of human occupation have alSpear points of the "fluted" type, ready been uncovered there. As an
NESPOLI
believed to be about 10,000 years aid to more accurate dating of the
old, are already known from this site, we hope that arrangements
JEWELERS
area. This means that we may be can soon be made to have labora25 E. MAIN ST., BLOOMSBURO
on the threshhold of a break- tory analyses made of several charthrough in pushing back the hori- coal specimens by means of radiozon of known human occupation in active Carbon 14.
Great Things Happening In World
In Terms of Archaeolo gy Findings
by Robert Solenberger
Archaeology Club Sponsor
A group of Anthropology students, who are also interested in
the BSC Archeology Club, recently
accompanied me to New York City
where we attended meetings of the
Eastern States Archeological Federation.
A highlight of the meetings was
the display and discussion of some
of the oldest and most primitive
stone tools ever made by man in
the New World. In addition to distinctively "fluted" or "channelled"
types of spear points, used by early
American Indians long before they
had bows and arrows to hunt now
extinct animals of the late glacial
age, such as the woolly mammoth,
crudely flaked "pebble tools" f or
chopping and scraping have now
been recognized in many parts of
the United States.
Placement Office Lists Interviews
November 16, 1966
Harry Logan
Free Prescri ption Delivery
Tryouts are being held for the
second major production of the
year, "The Troj an Woman" to be
directed by Mr. McHale. Anyone
interested may still try out for this
play by contacting Mr. McHale.
At tfte next meeting, the members of the Players workshop will
present student directed, one-act
plays, some of which will be selected for presentation to the student body.
see off-Brdadway snows. A^roximately--forty-five members frp in the
Players and the English Club are
going on the trip.'
November 18, 1966
November 19, 1966
FINE JEWEIRY
and
REPAIRING
December
Januar y
J anuary
Your Jw hr away
Pa.
1
— Mon trose , Pa
9:00 a.m. — Philadelphia , Pa
2, 1966
2:00 p.m. — Royenford , Pa
5, 1967
12, 1967
9:00 a.m. — Philadel phia , Pa
from hem*,
Eleme ntary,- En glish ' (12th);
World Cultur e (10th); French-Spanish ;
Spanish-En glish or French-English
Sp ecial Education
Federal Service Entrance
Ex amination Test, Nov. 19
Special Educa tion (Elem.);
General Science; Earth Science
9:00 a.m . — Plabfield , N.J
Any curriculum
Elementar y; Secondary
LARGEST SELECTION IN PENNA.
''Factory To You Prices "
LADIES KNIT SUITS, DRESSES, SLACKS,
MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS , SKI SWEATERS.
"Buy Where They Are Made"
Berwick Knitting Mills
Factory Store
230 S. Poplar St., Berwick
Mon.'Sah 9iOO • 5i00
Thuriday* 9i00 • 9i00
R A C If S I N' S
BSC CLASS RINGS
IW. Main St.
10:00 a.m. — Mechanfaburg,
SWEATERS
Eppley 's Pharmacy
Bloo miburg
Main and Iron Strttti
STUDIO SHOP
59 E. Main St., Blooms burg
Prescription Spacialitt
i
^
^
^
^
^
^
B
ii ^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
LOFT CANDIES
H
COSMETICS
For the Girls ...
SUNDRIES
EARRINGS—pierced and unpierced
1
For the Boys ...
,
MUGS—aluminum and pewter
V
¦ " ¦ :
.
Conveniently located to "Suit the Campus "
...
•
and
j
,
¦
,
TOBACCOS
OREEN STAMPS
'
Him 794*3033
i
¦
'
Huskies To Face
ESSCOn Gridiron
Coach Houk's Husky football
team wrap up their 1966 season
Saturday against East Stroudsburg
on the Warriors' home ground.
The Eastern Conference champ
for the last two years, East Stroudsburg is rebuilding this season having lost 22 players through graduation. That total included the entire starting backfield as well as
five first string linemen. The Warriors also lost coach Jack Gregory
who is now an assistant coach at
Navy. Replacing him is Charley
Reese.
ESSC didn't have a league contest last week but in previous
games had three of the conference's
top scorers. Jim Waite, quarterback, is high in the standings while
Trevor Lawrence and Nick Drosch
also hold places in the top ten.
Currently the Warriors are in a
three-way tie for second place with
BSC and Cheyney. A BSC win will
push ESSC to third in the standings as well as giving them their
first home loss in seven years.
Last week BSC scored a strong"
31-7 victory over Kutztown. coming
back from a 14-0 loss at the hands
of Cheyney.
In other league games, West
Chester marked Mansfield 51-7 to
protect their undefeated record in
league play. Clarion, the team that
will meet West Chester for the
league title, also had a field day"^
as they rolled to a 54-18 victors
over Shippensburg. Quarterback
Jim Alcorn led his team to victory
with five TD passes.
Surprising Cheyney won over
Millersville 17-14 on a field goal by
Karl Bivens with only three minutes left on the clock. The win
boosts their season record to 4-2.
In the West, Lock Haven having
a dismal season, scored a 22-6 win
over Slippery Rock to bring their
league record to 2-3.
The deadline for donations
and contributions to the United
States Olympic Fund has tentatively been set for tomorrow,
November 12. "If your club
wishes to make a donation but
it is impossible to make it before tomorrow, please let me
know immediately so that I can
hold up sending the check,"
commented Coach Houk.
FETTERM AN ' S
BARBER SHOP
• QUALITY •
FOOT OF COLLEGE HILL
Bloomtburg, Pa.
The
DIXIE SHOP
Bloomsburg 's Fa$hton Corner
Gerst Leads Huski es to 31-7
Win Over K-town Gridde rs
The Huskies kept their hopes
alive for a winning season last Friday night when the trounced the
Kutztown Golden Bears, 31-7 at
Athletic Park. The Houkmen, 4
wins and 3 losses, need only to defeat the East Stroudsburg Warriors
on Saturday to turn in their first
winning record since 1960.
Gerst Scores Two
Taking the ball on the second
play from scrimmage, Husky halfback Joe Gerst started the Maroon
and Gold onslaught by breaking
loose on a 76 yard scoring run. Moments later Gerst again startled the
K-town defense by returning a
punt 60 yards to the Bears onefoot line. The fleet-footed back*
from Danville then plunged in for
the tally on the next play to make
the score 12-0 Huskies.
Halfway through the first quarter a momentary scare came upon
the Husky forces when Golden Bear
halfback Charles Bricker ran 79
yards to paydirt on a well executed
draw play. The kick for the extra
point was successful to put the
score at 12-7.
The remainder of the first half
became a Kutztown nightmare as
the Huskies romped for three more
Pictured here are BSC's freshman cheerleaders. Top, 1. to r.: Ginny
Piledec, Debbi Fehr. Bottom, 1. to r.: Cherie Goodman, Beth Anne Kupsky.
Conference Standin g'
East
West Chester
Bloomsburg
East Stroudsburg
Cheyney
Millersville
Mansfield
Kutztown
West
Clarion
California
Shippensburg
Lock Haven
Slippery Rock
Edinboro
WLT
500
32 0
32 0
32 0
240
140
14 0
WLT
400
310
23 0
2 30
12 1
031
Compliments of
CATERING TO
COLLEGE
NEEDS
Special Ordering
Greeting Cards
HENRIE'S CARD
and
BOOK NOOK
40 W. MAIN ST.
BLOOMMUR 0, PA.
784-0392
touchdowns. With nine minutes ;emaining * in "the half, quarterback
Rich Lichtel scored on a one yard
plunge, completing a series of plays
highlighted by a Tucker pass reception covering 19 yards. The kick
for the extra point by Bruce Long
was true, raising the score to 19-7.
Art Sell Scores
Art Sell became the next Husky
to score as he took the ball over
from the one yard line. This ended
a 52 yard drive that included an
interference call against Kutztown
which gave the Huskies a sizable
gain into Bear territory.
Stan Adds TD
With only seconds remaining on
the clock in the second quarter
Stan Kucharski displayed his catching and running ability as he trot^
ted home to paydirt
after catching
a 17 yard Lichtel pass.
The halftime score of 31-7 was
destined to be the final total as
neither team could muster enough
momentum to cross the gQal line in
the 2nd half. Creditable performance by the second and third string
in the final quarter, however, made
up somewhat for the Husky failure
to hit the Scoreboard again.
The Waffle
Grille
BSC Rooks Continue
Winning; Beat Kings
The BSC Chess Team claimed a
6-1 victory at King's College this
week. The Rooks' only loss occurred
on the third board, where George
Underwood, playing in a higher
team position than he normally
does, lost to a tough opponent, Joe
Seeber.
Len Thomas defeated Steve Zapotok on the first board; Ray Depew
beat Wes Blakeslee on the second,
Len Latchford outplayed Charlie
Metroke on the fourth , Linda Hummel check-mated Joe Cicon on the
fif t h, Carl Nauroth won a game
from Francis Dougherty on the
sixth, and Joe Preletz beat Hank
Wozniski on the seventh. The Husky Rooks now have a 2-0 record for
the season.
Sports Figures
Of-the Week '
by Norm Jonei, & Ed Macfcay
One of the unsung heroes of this
year's gridiron campaign is Jerry
Schraeder, the small but tough
wingback on the Husky offensive
eleven. A senior from Nanticoke,
Jerry is now finishing his 3rd year
as a starter and 4th as a varsity
performer. The former bruising
fullback of Newport High School,
"Nipper " played outside linebacker
last year but this year moved in as
the Maroon & Gold's blocking back,
*
*
*
¦
"Ozzie" or "Boomer" as Jerry
is known, comes from a strongly
Bloomsburg - oriented background.
Jerry 's father, brother, and two
sisters graduated from BSC; in
fact, "Oz" will be the last of six
brothers and sisters to graduate
from college. Studies and football
don't take up all of his time, however, 'as the "Varsity Club," talented cooking, and baseball also fit
into "Nipper 's" schedule.
*
*
*
*
f
*
Looking to his final game, East
Stroudsbur?, Jerry Schraeder 's
comments were "I played the year
they beat us 69-0, when they took
advantage of what was left of our
injury-ridden team, but this year
the story will be different."
Terry Henry
Terry Henry is another one of
our senior backs who has been doing a fine j ob for Coach Houk's
Husky football squad. Terry won
three varsity letters at Milton Hershey High where he was both a
fullback and a quarterback.
.
¦
¦ •¦
_
¦
¦; & ¦
¦
» ¦;;
&
^^& ^
;
;
!
^-$L
^
M^mmMmm
Fifty candidates ^w^yj ^|fot ^
position oh the three varsit y yrin ter ;'
sports of basketball, wrestling, and
swimming at Bloomsburg State College, according to Athletic Director
Russell E. Houk. >'
Wrestling Team Works
Eioomsburg has been a powerhouse in small college wrestling
over the past several years. Assistant Coach Jerry Maurey, who
has been handling the team until
Head Coach Houk finishes the football season, has had 26 varsity
wrestlers working ou^. since October 10. Last year the Husky grapplers had a 10-1-1 record in dual
competition.
Voss Leads Netmen
New .Head Basketball Coach Earl
Voss reports that his squad is narrowed down to 12 candidates from
the group ttfat answered his initial
call on October 17. This includes
five lettermen, five from last year's
freshman team, and two transfer
students from junior colleges who
were ineligible last year. Voss, as
freshman coach, had a 17-2 record,
while last year's varsity posted an
8-11 mark.
Swimmers Practice
Swimming Coach Eli McLaughlin
has had 12 tankmen cutting the
water since October 10. Six are returning veterans from last year's
team, which was the best in the
history of BSC with an 8-4 record.
Five members of last year's freshman team, and a sophomore who
didn't compete last year, make up
the balance of the team.
Football wasn't the only sport BERGAN EVANS
(Continued from page 1)
for Terry while he was in high
perience
of a national group." He
school, he played baseball and basketball also. He attended Hershey continued that every language is
Junior College where he spent two unique and specialized in itself, a
undergraduate years. At the end of fact that often leads itself to mishis sophomore year Terry trans- understanding between national
ferred to Bloom where he has spent groups.
In the same vein, Dr. Evans
two years as a member of the vars*
stressed
the importance of translatity football team and a member of
ing
and
the problems which often
the varsity club.
result. Translators must be very
* * *
Terry Henry, nicknamed 3-by- careful to translate peculiar word
three, is hardly a man , of silence. patterns and colloquialisms correctCommenting on tomorrow's game, ly and in the right context. Gone
he said, "With a win tomorrow are the days of strict word by word
against East Stroudsburg we will translations.
It was clear from student and
have our first winning season in
many years. It has been a season faculty response during and aftef
of ups and downs due to the in- the assembly that Dr. Evans had
juries and a few mental letdowns." made a very significant impression
Terry said this about the time he upon his listeners.
has sent at BSC, "It has been an
Beat East Stroudsburg State
enriching experience for me. The
coaching, the team, and fans have
all been great and it has really
Whin Dad Took Hit Qirl
been an honor to have played ball
for the college."
77ie TEXAS
BART PURSEL
MEN'S CLOTHING
DRY CLEANING
120 W. Main St.
lloomikurg
Support M&G Advertise rs
Support "Battle of Bands"
MILLER OFFICE SUPPLY CO.
18 WEST MAIN STREET
AL'S MENS SHOP
Phont 784-2561
"For fh * Clothing that
maktt tht man "
BLOOMSBURG, PA.
Hallmark Cards / Gifts
We take Grea t Pride in:
• OUR TOWN
• OUR COLLEGE
• OUR STUDENT S
Therefore
we want them to look smart
at ALL times
Sho pARCUS'
"For a Pettier You "
PRPSS ^^^^^^^^^^
HHJ ^HMHHH ^^^^ IJ ^HI ^^ SlHlfflHHHBH ^^ I^^^^ H
2 W. MAIN ST.
Bloemibur Sf '¦•
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PRIMI WISTIRN BIIP • SIAPOOD
IPAOHITTI
Prive t* P«rff«i
Berry and il haisirt
"Beautiful Bride's Room" at ., .
SNEIDMAN'S J EWELERS
ftoprMon
7.30 A.M. -12.00 A.M.
7M-flf5
ET
11
130 EAST MAIN STREET - BLOOMSBURG
HH
Raymond Shafe r received 64% of the votes cast f o r GoV'
erhor by Bloomsburg students in a mock election held on
campus last Friday ,
Toda y is Veterans ' or Armi stice
Day. For some, it is a meaningless
legal holida y; for others , it is a
t ime f or re lfect ion and eval uation ,
as well as a ti me to pay tr ibute to
the men an d women of our countr y
who h ave serve d in the ar med
f orces .
We find it difficult to reflect on
the past and honor our veterans
without our thoughts shiftin g to
the men who are serving the United
State s toda y in Viet Nam. We all
have friend s, relatives , or acquaintances who are daily risking their
lives, and in many cases losing
t hem , for a cause which a minori ty
of Americans entirel y discredit
We do not deny this minorit y the
right to disagree with United States
policy, whether it be by demonstration , speeches , or literature. But exactly what do they accomplish? In
our opinion , they have accomplished absolutel y nothing.
President Johnson , the Congress,
and the World are well aware that
some Americans are not exactly
jumping for joy with what is going
on in Southeast Asia. It seems
senseless to continue to "beat a
dead horse. "
The only way United States policy can chan ge is if the American
electorate -would select a President
and a Congress who would immediately withdraw American troo ps
from Viet Nam. We don't think the
major ity of Americans will do this.
No Americans (with few exceptions) like war , or the fact that
Amer ican soldiers are dying in Vi et
Nam , but most Americans are willing to place their trust in the dulyelected government offic ials of our
countr y.
What else can we do? Who can
we trust if we can 't place our fa ith
in the Pres ident and those in whose
hands rest the fate of us all? Are
we, instead , supposed to place our
faith and trust in the characters
who lead ant i-war demonstrations
on campuses like Berkele y and who
very dramaticall y burn little pieces
of paper?
Perha ps we are idealistic. Perhaps we are fools. Perhaps we are
stu pes. Only histor y will tell.
Advanced Aquatic s
Anyone schedulin g advanced
aquatics should contact Mr. MeLau ghlin regarding qualifica tions
for enroll ment in sections of Physical Educa tion 102.
Raymond P. Shafer captured an expected win in the race for Governor
of Pennsylvania defeatin g his Democratic rival , M ilton J. Shapp in an
elect ion this week.
Shafer entered the race for governor last sprin g, and easily receive d
both the Republican Part y's endorsement and nomination in a primar y
fight with Harold Stassen. His campaign for governor concentrated mainly on avowals to cont inue the typ e of adm inistrat ion that Penns ylvan ia
has had under William Scranton . "It is no accident ," rea d s the Sha f er
endorsed p latform , "that the Repu blican Party has gover ned Penns ylvania during this period of dynamic rebirth . O ur p art y is ded icated to t he
prop osition that governme nt is designed to bring about a better life for
all t he peop le. We do not govern accor ding to slogans . We do not submit
to the dictation of pressure groups. We study the needs of the people—
and t hen we act to meet those needs."
A res ident of Meadv ille in northwest Penns ylvania , Sha fer was tw ice
elected district attorney in that county and then state senator in 1958. In
1962 af ter serving one term in t he state senate , he became lieutenantgovernor under William Scranton , and now , at 48, is governor of the
state.
Dur ing th e past administration , he was Chairman of the committee
wh ich p re p are d the governor 's legislative program and pres ided over the
senate in his role as second in char ge in the administration.
Raymond Shafer was born in New Castle , Pennsylvania. His father
was a clergyman and his family poor , so Shafer had to work h^s way
through Allegheny College and Yale Law School. During that time, he
became president of his class, captain of the basketball team , and graduated with PM Beta Kappa honors.
During World War II , Sha f er was a PT boat comman der in t he Sout h
Pacific: then he practiced law in Meadville until elected District Attorne y.
Governor-Elect Raymond P. Shafer
Republicans Win
In Mock Election
The I nternational R elat ions Club
sp onsor ed a vot ing p oll on campus
Bergan Evans Analyzes Language
On Family and International Levels
By Doug Hippen stiel
Dr . Ber gan Evans , Northwestern
University English professor , fascinate d his aud ience on Wednes day
as he presented an amusin g and inform ing ana lysis of lan gua ge an d
its use. The interestin g address was
Mata and Hari
To Appear Here
Tomorrow evening MATA AND
H ARI brin g the ir show to the sta ge
of Carver Auditorium for the College Community and - the general
pub lic. Admission for the general
publ ic is $1.50 for adults and 50c
for students. The College Community is admitted free of char ge.
MATA AND HARI engage a
theme , idea , or emotion and capture its essent ial elements throu gh
dance and sati re. The veteran enterta iners do this throu gh movement , gesticulation , and ju st plain
mugging.
Exponents Of Mime
As exponents of the art of mime,
they can project an idea far more
realistically and hard hittin g than
the spoken word. Whether they
portray zany sur geons, wild cowboys, or fad-crazed teena gers ,
MATA AND HARI are equally entertainin g and amusin g.
Mata and Harl In "A Teenage Romance ,"
heavily spiced with humorous illustrat ions to support his points.
Dr. Evans state d that langua ge is
purel y human , a ver y clever th ing
through , which w express ideas,
emotions , and thou ghts throu gh
voluntar y symbols of speech. Using speech, man is able to generalize and conceptualize.
"Language is one of many forms
of commun ication,
we don 't
have to speak to commun icate ," the
author and television personalit y1
said. People talk all the time,
whether the y have somethin g to
say or not Much communication is
accom p lished throu gh silence or
such things as facial expressions or
a n emb race.
O ne of the more humorous p oints
of the speech occurred when Dr.
Evans evaluated the role of commun ication in marriage. He stated
little communication exists in marriage , and the audience response
indicated a lar ge number who can
identif y with this point.
Dr. Evans continued by makin g
some important points about writing and listening with relation to
speech. He stated most people talk
more in one week than they write
in a lifetime.
The importance of listening rests
on the basis that words and sentences mean what the listener , and
not the sp eaker , perceives them to
mean. The responsibility for understandin g therefor e rests to a great
extent on the speaker.
The speake r must employ the
right inflection , timing , emphasis ,
and word sequence in order to communicate accurately with his listener. The speaker is ver y often faced
with the problem of makin g decisions in mid-air. He may plun ge into a sentence and suddenl y be
forced to dip deeply into his vocabulary reservoir to complete his conv
municatlon. Th is "di p" is often inade quate , and sometimes futile , resulting in misunderstandin g or
fault y communication.
recent ly concernin g this week's
A compulsor y freshma n class
meeting will be held in Carver
Hall at 7:00 p.m. where nominations for class officers will be
accepted. The freshman class
election will be held on November 16 and 17.
Advance schedulin g will be
held on Thurs day, Dec. 8 in Cen-
tennial Gym.
Students now student-teachin g
will advance schedule in their
pr acticum classes before Dec. 8.
However , the y st ill must bu y a
red-to pped schedule card and
master class schedule booklet
available in the bookstore.
election.
Results
Mr. Mart in Gildea , adviser , rep or ted the distr ibution of 577 votes
as follows: Lt. Governor — Ra ymond Bro der ick , 344; Leonard Staisey, 233; Senator for the 27th District of Pennsylvania , General Assembly — Preston Davis, 356, John
L innet , 220; Secretary of Internal
Affairs—John Tabor , 294, Genevieve BlaH * 281; Representativ eilp!
Congress , 11th District •— Daniel
Flood , 381; Gerald Broadt , 213;
Representative
in Pennsylvania
General Assembly, 189th District—
Amin Alley, 281, Kent Shelhamer ,
275.
Beat ESSC
OFFICERS OF MRA : Pat Colgan, Gar y Freed , Ed Slusscr , Larr y Ward ,
and Bcrnie Schaefer. Advisers are Dean Elton Hunsin ger and Mr . Dave
Shaffer.
Jaycees Again Offe r BSC Women
Chance to Win Miss E. Pa. Crown
The Bloomsbur g Jaycees are
again offerin g Bloomsburg State
College girls a unique opportunit y
to broaden themselves as Individ *
uals throu gh partici pation in an official preliminary to the Miss America Pageant — The Miss Eastern
Penn sylvania Pa geant — to be held
in Bloomsburg this coming April.
Opportunit y
Misunderstandin g often results
Participants will meet and work
from fault y listening, however.
with
a host of person able young
Man y times the listener only catchadults
from the community durin g
es fra gments of speech, due either
pageant
prepa rations this sprin g.
to inattent ion or divided listenin g.
Each
girl
will also receive poise
Dr. Evans' presentat ion was an
and
stage
presence
instruction and
Internationally oriented approach
to language. He stated that "every be introduced to choreography by
language is the distillation of ex- a well-known profes sional. In addition to the personal rewards of
(Continued on p ag« 4J
such exper iences, participants will
share in a prize and scolarship list
which runs over $2 ,000.
Further Competition
The winner of the 1967 Miss
Eastern Pennsylvania Page ant will
go on to compete with twenty other
state preliminar y winners for the
crown of "Miss Penns ylvania" in
Philadel phia late next Jun e. The
victor there , in addition to receiving a $1,000 Pepsi-Cola scholarship,
will re pre sent Penns ylvania in the
Miss America Pa geant held in At*
lantlc City.
The eligibility requirements for
partici pation In the Miss Eastern
Pennsylvania Pa geant are as follows:
(Contlnutd on pagt 8)
Letters To the Editor
In the Diary of Anne Fran k
'
' .: TW
mS9SS8^^$£^
"The Americans Are Coining "- Tv^entY^i^MM^^^^i
Another War and Another Continent - Is It the^fj ^^p :^:
Counting Our Blessings -
by Lyle Slack
I would like to thank Mr. Phillips for his answer to my* editorial. A
few of his points were well taken but not convincing.
The scribbled notes of a thirteen
First of all, Mr. Phillips referred to drinking in four of his seven year-old Jewish girl were the subparagraphs as prerequisites to fun. I would like to refer, Mr. Phillips, to j ect of a late movie entitled "The
members of Sigma Iota Qmega, Beta Sigma Delta and the other proposed Diary of Anne Frank," that I sat up
^ social fraternities. They do not have to drink to have a "wild" time at and watched a few nights ago.
their fraternity parties. Someone will probably say now, that these fra- Wedged between the commercials
ternities represent a small fraction of the student body. At the present was the story of Anne Frank and
they do, but in the future the number of fraternities will grow and more her family and friend s, eight in all,
people will be able to take advantage of their non-drinking "wild" fra- who hid for two years in an Amsterdam attic during Nazi occupaternity parties.
The rest of Mr. Phillips' editorial refers, in general, to the second- tion, hoping to escape the box cars
ratedness of BSC. This STIGMA which has pervaded this campus for as that left daily for Aushwitz and
long as I have been here is psychological. People like Mr. Phillips who Dachau. There was one scene that
help spread this idea are causing their own downfall. I do not profess to struck me as being particularly
be able to stop this idea in the remainder of my term of office , but it strange.
It was June 6, 1S44, not only
must begin someplace.
their
twenty-third month in those
I agree with Mr. Phillips that many commuters are too far away to
attend social events. The people who live on campus and in the town of upstairs rooms but the beginning
Bloomsburg have no excuse. We all live here nine months out of the year of the D-Day invasion of Norand why shouldn't we make the best of what we have? We have a very mandy. The scene showed them
good football team, an excellent wrestling team, a fine basketball team, a frozen in motion as they listened to
good swimming team, one of the best academic standings in the state and the BBC reporting, and then one
a C.G.A. that is willing to do as much for the students as possible. In- of them choked out, "The Ameristead of knocking what we have here, why don't each of you look around cans are coming," with a relief so
and count your blessings? If more people did this more often, this stigma intense that he fell weeping into a
chair.
would begin its disappearance from this campus.
Rubbing my foot that had gone
I would like to refer Mr. Phillips to various organizations on campus:
to
sleep, I started to think about
Veterans' Association, Phi Sigma Pi, Varsity Club, the various social
others
in Europe besides the Frank
fraternities, Men's and Women's Resident Associations, Men's and Womfamily
who were glad that the
en 's Day Associations, to name j ust a few, who are finding out that if
they work a little harder their organizations can work near 100% effici- Americans were coming. There
ency. Some of you will say, "so what?" This resurgence of organizations were French women, wrinkled and
will cause people to take pride in what they do and will in turn be one scarfed, running out to kiss mudsplattered GIs marching into freed
method of removing this stigma from our campus.
villages. There were crowds of BelI have tried to answer Mr. Phillips as best as possible. We of C.G.A. gians cheering along roadsides as
will continue to offer the best possible events to you, the students. All we American columns filed into the
need now is your complete and thorough co-operation.
. country. The D-Day invasion
brought tears of relief from many
Thank You,
people.
Steve Boston,
Not Quite Relief
President of C.G.A.
Twenty-two years later only in
a different war and on a different
continent, the same words are
Operation: Campus
heard, "The Americans are Coming." But the scenes this, tune are
different; they are of ragged
women crying over the dead bodies
of their husbands and swearing at
American troops as they swarm inThe Lettermen appeared in concert at Mansfield State on November to the village; this time they are of
4... Peter, Paul, and Mary were featured at the Jazz Festival Concert at mute villagers standing before frusthe State University of New York at Buffalo recently... A special section trated lieutenants, questioning in
of The Spectrum was recently devoted to marijuana, with special com- vain, very often receiving indiffermentary by the poet Allen Ginsberg... Controversy is in evidence at ence at best. The fact that the
Millersville State over the way that their Homecoming queen is chosen,
as the choice is in the hands of a few rather than in the hands of the
entire student body ... The Four Seasons will be presented in concert at
Indiana University on Nov. 13 at 8:00, after the Lock Haven game—
admission: 50fzf... Basil Rathbone, probably best-known as the screen 's
Sherlock Holmes, was presented at Susquehanna University on November
2... Lou Neishloss of Lock Haven State is presently in training as a
"walker" in the 1968 Olympics, in the 50,000 meter walk... Sigma Phi
Epsilon captured Homecoming float honors at Bucknell University a few
weeks ago... The Wilkes College Colonels are on their way to a MAC
championship with 11 consecutive wins... Shippcnsburg State boasts a
freshmen coed from Kenya... The Exciters and the Rooftop Singers were
highlighted at East Stroudsburg 's fall weekend last week... Bill Bronin
has been appointed editor of King 's College 's literary magazine, "Scop "...
The dedication of Susquehanna University's new chapel will be attended
by Efrem Zimbalist, Jr
William War-field , a baritone featured at BSC
last year, will appear at Lock Haven State College on November 16.
— RSB
by Richie
and Toni
Matulis
Benyo
Lettermen To Be At Mansfield S*C;
Basil Rathbone Graces Susquehanna
Photographed by Larry Burrows and Co Rentmesster for LIFE magazine.
Americans are coming brings few family were ready after two years
tears of relief from the South Viet- to cry iri relief that the Americans
were coming. After not two but
namese.
And then our President shakes twenty years of war, the South
his head in aggravated bafflement , Vietnamese cannot cry for anything
unable to understand why Ameri- but the loss of a husband or a wife
cans and British and French and or a child, and after a while even
Germans and Soviets cannot see that loss they come to take with
that the conflict in Vietnam is a cold numbness, like a frozen foot
freedom war the same as was the that has been hurt so much it
D-Day invasion. Mr. Johnson can- doesn't feel the pain anymore.
not understand why there are so After twenty years of killing, the
many critics of his great policy to South Vietnamese . are not able to
"liberate the downtrodden Vietna- get excited about a great war to
mese from the merciless tyrannts liberate them that has been
of the North. The World, thinks launched by an overweight Texan
the President, is very, very unfair thousands of miles away.
to him.
What End?
A Different Kind Of Way
Whether it is a war to dominate
or
to free, it probably makes little
I believe the answer may be that
difference
to them. They 're very
Mr. Johnson has failed to grasp a
central difference between the war tired of all war. They want an end
we are in now and the one we to the twenty years of sleepless
were iu twenty-two years ago. The nights and hungry days.
difference is probably not, as might
But still we hear the overweight
be thought, that many South Viet- Texan pledging the"U-nited States"
namese are being killed as a nec- to help the South Vietnamese carry
essary part of guerrilla warfare, on the war — for however many
for there were undoubtedly as years it takes. If this war does drag
many Frenchmen and Belgians nec- out for more years, history will do
essarily if unfortunately killed be- something for Lyndon Johnson. It
cause of Allied bombing of Eu- may pronounce him either the most
rope.
courageous preserver of right, or
But a central difference might the most righteous perverter of
well be time; Anna Frank and her right in this country.
Fall Is the Time of Earthly Alterations and Similarities
twilight—the twilight of the seasons: Fall.
There are many opinions as to
exactly what Fall is. There are j ust
as many opinions as to whether it
is good or bad—or perhaps j ust indifferent.
It is, of course , the altering of
heat to cold, rain to snow, shortsleeve shirts to fur-lined j ackets,
and warm breezes to cold and bitter winds.
It is This And More
It is a good time to some people,
for there are those who prefer a
little more nip in the air than the
summer heat allows for, and who
would rather see a white blanket
of snow than a white beach of
san d, who see Fall as a step toIn These , The Days
ward their wants. Then there are
Of Wines and Roses
those who see the coming winter
The worl d is Nature , and Nature
as stuc k cars , howling winds biting
is composed of two factors— Birth
cars and nose, and overall inconand Death. In these two extreme s venience. These, though, like the
rest everything includin g love and Birth and Death mentioned earlier,
hat , and they are all we know from are extremes.
the time of our initial brea th to the Somewhere In Between
day of our last. The living world
The wise person is the one who
lies in the extended twilight be- can ben d enou gh so t h at h e does
tween these two worlds , In realit y, not breakr-one who can view Fall
the only world we actua lly know is as a time of color passing, or t h e
the twilight world , f or we do not time of that last hike before the
have memories of pre-blrth , nor do snows , or of j ust a little chilly day
we have advanced knowledge of our on a hill overlooking a valley of
specific positions after our ' death , making the eyes to the bleakness to
In The Middle
come.
We are now in the middle of a
flowing waters and mergin g colors
CONTEMPLATIONS
& REFLECTIONS
M A R O O N & GOLD
Vol. XLV
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11 , 1966
No. 10
Editor — DOUG HJPPENSTIEL
Business Editor — RONALD JACKSON
Dirtetor of Publication! — CLAUDETTE STEVENS
Contultant — RICHARD SAVAGE
Feature
Editor
.' Richie Benyo
Managing Editor: Scott Clarke
Sporti Editor: Paul Allen
AssistantEditor .' Lyle Slack
Copy Editor: Sharon Avery
Advertising Editor: Mary Lou CavalHni
Circulation Editor: Kenneth Brown
Typing Coordinators: Katfay Elliott, Kaye
Photography Editor: Dale Carmody
Kiienwether
Art Editor .' Edward Rhoadei
Reporters : Mary Lou Cnvallini , Richard
Ann MoczuUki, Vicki Mikcll , Alana MatIlartman , Walt Cox, Ton I Ma tul is, Carl
ter, Tereia Wagner, Pat Robbias, Peggy
Nnuroth , Mary Ann Kam!nnki. Dawn
Waiten, Kothy Bo wen.
Wagner , Terry Carver, Tom Fleiwhauer,
Typing jo
Staff: Eileen Gulnac, Beverly DonPat Robbira, Nancy Kelly, Peggy Walters.
'5,^ /ftm Luerezi, Sherie Veingit, Walt
Feature Staff t Toni Matulii, Beverly DonCox, Janine Brunuer, Carol Beanarek,
Linda LaFaver, Dixie Brindel , Verdun
chez, Bonnie Brobtt, Barb Wclliver, Larry
Phillip *, Sylvia Vargo, Gary Bloom.
Thomas, John Ondiih.
Advertising Staff: Richard ITartman , Dawn
Sports Staffs Norm Jonei, Ed McKay, Ron
Wagner, Nancy Kelly, Tereia Wagner. Pat
Ohriitina, Jim McSurdy, Tom Gfngher,
Gordon Sivell, Allan Baum, Ken Adami.
Robbini, Peggy Walters, Walt Cox, Elaine
'fMtmua>
eet * Stagt JWiy M *1*' MM1
Copy Staff : Richard Hartman (A»t. Ed.),
Mary Lou GavallinJ, Carl Nauroth, Mary
N
fl&a »,W 'ftta ^fcb ,
Denny
Bynu, Paul Walton, Rich Hartman,
Art Staff: Dave Gerhard.
Staff Secretary: Kathy Relmard.
William Howelli, Alice Chapman , Alana Matter, Judy Gtn , George Yaclna.
Th« Maroon and j9of Bloomsb urg, Pa. Tht paper it a member of »h# Columbia Scholastic Preii Association and
tht Colleglatt PrMi Strvleo. All opin ions •xpreued by columnis ts and feature writers
including lttt«rs-to-tht- »ditor art not ntctssaril y thoii of this publication but thost of
lh» Individual *.
A Student Personnel Conference
was held at Allonberr y last
weekend . Attend ing from BSC? ,
were Dean Riogel, Dean Hunsinger and Dr. Herre.
Photo by Kiohie uenyo
FALL IS... just a little chilly day
on a hill overlookin g a valley of
flowing waters and mer ging colors.
A Time For Pre parin g
Fall is the companion of the
sought-after Spring, a period for
chan ge, a t ime when one f eels
closer to the land that he walks
than he does at any other time,
for Fall calls his attention to the
color and the drabness of the earth ,
the soft and the harsh winds, the
smooth and the rou gh grass—all
thin gs contrastin g, and thin gs in
mutu al opposition—a time for man
io stop for a moment to review
his summer and its blessing, and
for him to look forward to a secure
winter from those blessings—it is
t h e t ime to h arvest Nature 's good
graces in preparation for its trials.
It is the twilight between Birth
and Death , and it is called Life.
i
BEST SELLER LIST FOR THIS WEEK
FICTION
1. Valley of the Dolte—Susann
2. The Secret of Canta Vittorla—
Crichton
3. Tal-Fan—Clavoll
, NON-FICTION
1. How to Avoid Probate—Dace y
2. Rush to Jud gment—Lano
3. Ever ythin g But Money—
Levenson
: 'GROUP1 . AGTI^liillll
Campus Happenings
Saturday:
Football—ESSC—Away—1:30
Mata and Hari—A-1—8:15
Monday:
Studio Band—7:30—C-31
College Council—7:00
Tuesday
Harmonettes—A-l—3:00
Concert Choir—F-6—3:00
Archeology Club—C
Wednesday:
Movie—A-l
Thursday: .
Chess Club—-C—3:00
Concert Choir—F-6—3:00
Harmonettes—A-l—3:00
Forensic—B40-11—3:00
Friday: /
Dance
Miss East ern Pa ,
(Continue d fro m page 1)
1. Entrant must be a resident of
the four-county franchised area
(Columbia, Montour, Northumberland, and Schuylkill) or
be enrolled as a full-time student in a college located within
the four counties.
2. College students must maintain at least a 2.3 average and
must not be on social probation.
3. Entrant must be of good character and possess poise, personality, intelligence, charm
and beauty.
4. Entrant must possess and display talent in a routine not to
exceed three minutes. (Talent
may be singing, dancing, music, dramatics, art, dress designing, creative poetry* writing, etc. or entrant may give a
talk on the profession she
wishes to pursue.)
5. Entrant must be single and
never have been married.
6. Entrant's age on Labor Day,
1967, must not be less than 18
nor more than 28 years.
7. Entrant may be either professional or amateur.
Nominations
Nominations may be made by
submitting a nomination !/ entry
form which are available at the bulletin board by the Book Store or
simply by writing the Miss Eastern
Pennsylvania Pageant, P.O. Box
101, Bloomsburg, Pa. Those interested in learning more about the
pageant may send in their own entry which is not binding.
MAREE'S Dress Shop
112 W. Main Straat
Players ' Try outs
IdW yffllllL KILlg ty 7€x*j CaRfe*
Without a doubt ,, this was very definitely a Republican election,year.
While Republicans scored stunning victories throughout the nation, I
shall concentrate on the Shafer victory in Pennsylvania. There were several factors, varying in importance, that contributed to the election of
Raymond Shafer.
One of the outstanding factors was the campaign strategy of both
candidates. Traditionally, candidates have won elections no later than
mid-October. Mr. Shapp believed that this standing principle was no
longer operative, and that the last two weeks of the campaign were the
most critical; this explains his historic blitz on television and radio. Mr.
Shafer governed his campaign along the traditional principles and they
served him well.
Pennsylvania historically has a moderately conservative character. In
the last ninety years only four Democratic governors have been elected.
Mr. Shapp campaigned as an ardent liberal in a state that has not proved
its liberal inclinations. This factor and the previously mentioned popularity of the present governor, William Scranton, would have made victory
difficult for any Democratic candidate.
Most elections are lost by a party rather than won by the other. This
is also true regarding this past campaign. Mr. Shapp made several mistakes in his campaign for election, the most important of whi,ch was his
refusal to use consumer protection as the maj or issue, rather than higher
education and the taxation of public utilities. He could have "sold" himself to the public much easier on this issue.
Francis Smith (the Philadelphia Democratic boss) , more than any
other man is responsible for the Shafer victory. Mr. Smith's predecessor,
William Green, was prehaps one of the greatest practical politicians in
the history of Pennsylvania, In 1960 Bill Green attained a 326,000 vote
plurality for Kennedy. Francis Smith has never achieved results. Smith
never attained a significant maj ority in Philadelphia for Dilworth in 1962,
for Blatt in 1964, and now for Shapp in 1966. (Shapp received a plurality
of slightly over 100,000 votes in Philadelphia.) A Republican was elected
District Attorney of Philadelphia in 1965. The fact that Mr. Smith has
never produced results for the Democrats in heavily Democratic territory
is ample cause for his removal as party leader in Philadelphia.
TOILET GOODS
COSMETICS
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES
, GREETING CARDS
1 West Main St., Bloomiburg
Madrigal Concerts
The Madrigal Singers under the
direction of Mr. William Decker
recently gave two performances in
the Harrisburg area.
They sang at Cumberland Valley
High School, located between Harrisburg and Carlisle and at Camp
Hill High School; Camp Hill. They
also visited an experimental government sponsored school for intermediate grades seven and eight
at Good, Hope, Pa.
MRA Toy Dance
The annual Toy Dance sponsored
by the Men's Resident Association
will be held on Wednesday, Dec. 7,
according to Dean Elton Hunsinger,
adviser to the MRA.
Admission to this dance will be
a toy. These toys will be distributed
at Christmas time by an MRA
"Santa" to the patients in Children 's wards of seventeen area hospitals including the Selinsgrove
Colony.
Office of Educat ion
Announces Twent y
Post -Doctoral Grants
? Twenty post-doctoral fellowships
are being offered by the U.S. Office
of Education for prospective educational researchers.
Those selected will receive a
year's training stipend«equivalent
to the salary they would have received in their regular employment. To be eligible, an applicant
must have a doctor's degree in education, a behavioral science such
as psychology or sociology, or a
subj ect matter area related to education and its problems, and must «
have demonstrated outstanding po' tential and capability as an educational reseacher.
Applications
Applications must be acquired
before December 31 from: Research Training s Branch, Division
of Research Training and Dissemination, Bureau of Research, U.S.
office of Education, Washington,
D.C. 20202.
Phi Sig Presents
"Battle of Bands"
A "Battle of the Bands," sponsored by the Iota Chapter of Phi
Sigma Pi, will be staged in CenPlay ers Tr ip
tennial Gymnasium on Monday, NoThe Bloerasburg Players are go« vember 21—right before Thanksing to New York this weekend to giving vacation with the "Conductors" pitted asainst the "Playboys, '
the North Branch Valley. Student Inc."
archeologists may well be able to Appearances
salvage an important part of this
The "Conductors," originating in
record by becoming familiar with Williamsport, recently appeared
these roughly-made early tool-types, with the "? and the Mysterians" in
which many archeologists formerly Williamsport.
discarded as more likely to have
The "Playboys,Inc. from Bloomsbeen produced by frost or glacial burg have appeared "at
many BSC
action.
events, and are well-known to the
BSC Excavation Site
college community.
Finds May Change History
While at the New York convenBSC students and faculty are
Recently some of these Ameri- tion, I also contacted Mr. Barry
cordially
invited and there will be
can "pebble tools" were shown to Kent, the new State Archeologist of
Dr. L. S. B. Leakey, renowned as the Pennsylvania State Museum, no admission.
the excavator of fossils, of early Harrisburg, Pa., who has promised
COLONIAL KITCHEN
man and his tools in East Africa, to visit the site being excavated
RESTAURANT
who declared that the American by our club to evaluate the work
(Across
from
The Columbia Theatre)
specimens were fully as primitive being done and help our underDairy Specials
as some of the oldest "pebble standing of what the "find s" mean
PLATTERS & SANDWICHES
tools." On display at the New York in terms of Susquehanna Valley
meeting were crude "pebble tools" v history several centuries before CoMEAL TICKETS AVAILABLE
collected in the lower Susquehanna lumbus. Evidence of several perValley!
iods of human occupation have alSpear points of the "fluted" type, ready been uncovered there. As an
NESPOLI
believed to be about 10,000 years aid to more accurate dating of the
old, are already known from this site, we hope that arrangements
JEWELERS
area. This means that we may be can soon be made to have labora25 E. MAIN ST., BLOOMSBURO
on the threshhold of a break- tory analyses made of several charthrough in pushing back the hori- coal specimens by means of radiozon of known human occupation in active Carbon 14.
Great Things Happening In World
In Terms of Archaeolo gy Findings
by Robert Solenberger
Archaeology Club Sponsor
A group of Anthropology students, who are also interested in
the BSC Archeology Club, recently
accompanied me to New York City
where we attended meetings of the
Eastern States Archeological Federation.
A highlight of the meetings was
the display and discussion of some
of the oldest and most primitive
stone tools ever made by man in
the New World. In addition to distinctively "fluted" or "channelled"
types of spear points, used by early
American Indians long before they
had bows and arrows to hunt now
extinct animals of the late glacial
age, such as the woolly mammoth,
crudely flaked "pebble tools" f or
chopping and scraping have now
been recognized in many parts of
the United States.
Placement Office Lists Interviews
November 16, 1966
Harry Logan
Free Prescri ption Delivery
Tryouts are being held for the
second major production of the
year, "The Troj an Woman" to be
directed by Mr. McHale. Anyone
interested may still try out for this
play by contacting Mr. McHale.
At tfte next meeting, the members of the Players workshop will
present student directed, one-act
plays, some of which will be selected for presentation to the student body.
see off-Brdadway snows. A^roximately--forty-five members frp in the
Players and the English Club are
going on the trip.'
November 18, 1966
November 19, 1966
FINE JEWEIRY
and
REPAIRING
December
Januar y
J anuary
Your Jw hr away
Pa.
1
— Mon trose , Pa
9:00 a.m. — Philadelphia , Pa
2, 1966
2:00 p.m. — Royenford , Pa
5, 1967
12, 1967
9:00 a.m. — Philadel phia , Pa
from hem*,
Eleme ntary,- En glish ' (12th);
World Cultur e (10th); French-Spanish ;
Spanish-En glish or French-English
Sp ecial Education
Federal Service Entrance
Ex amination Test, Nov. 19
Special Educa tion (Elem.);
General Science; Earth Science
9:00 a.m . — Plabfield , N.J
Any curriculum
Elementar y; Secondary
LARGEST SELECTION IN PENNA.
''Factory To You Prices "
LADIES KNIT SUITS, DRESSES, SLACKS,
MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS , SKI SWEATERS.
"Buy Where They Are Made"
Berwick Knitting Mills
Factory Store
230 S. Poplar St., Berwick
Mon.'Sah 9iOO • 5i00
Thuriday* 9i00 • 9i00
R A C If S I N' S
BSC CLASS RINGS
IW. Main St.
10:00 a.m. — Mechanfaburg,
SWEATERS
Eppley 's Pharmacy
Bloo miburg
Main and Iron Strttti
STUDIO SHOP
59 E. Main St., Blooms burg
Prescription Spacialitt
i
^
^
^
^
^
^
B
ii ^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
LOFT CANDIES
H
COSMETICS
For the Girls ...
SUNDRIES
EARRINGS—pierced and unpierced
1
For the Boys ...
,
MUGS—aluminum and pewter
V
¦ " ¦ :
.
Conveniently located to "Suit the Campus "
...
•
and
j
,
¦
,
TOBACCOS
OREEN STAMPS
'
Him 794*3033
i
¦
'
Huskies To Face
ESSCOn Gridiron
Coach Houk's Husky football
team wrap up their 1966 season
Saturday against East Stroudsburg
on the Warriors' home ground.
The Eastern Conference champ
for the last two years, East Stroudsburg is rebuilding this season having lost 22 players through graduation. That total included the entire starting backfield as well as
five first string linemen. The Warriors also lost coach Jack Gregory
who is now an assistant coach at
Navy. Replacing him is Charley
Reese.
ESSC didn't have a league contest last week but in previous
games had three of the conference's
top scorers. Jim Waite, quarterback, is high in the standings while
Trevor Lawrence and Nick Drosch
also hold places in the top ten.
Currently the Warriors are in a
three-way tie for second place with
BSC and Cheyney. A BSC win will
push ESSC to third in the standings as well as giving them their
first home loss in seven years.
Last week BSC scored a strong"
31-7 victory over Kutztown. coming
back from a 14-0 loss at the hands
of Cheyney.
In other league games, West
Chester marked Mansfield 51-7 to
protect their undefeated record in
league play. Clarion, the team that
will meet West Chester for the
league title, also had a field day"^
as they rolled to a 54-18 victors
over Shippensburg. Quarterback
Jim Alcorn led his team to victory
with five TD passes.
Surprising Cheyney won over
Millersville 17-14 on a field goal by
Karl Bivens with only three minutes left on the clock. The win
boosts their season record to 4-2.
In the West, Lock Haven having
a dismal season, scored a 22-6 win
over Slippery Rock to bring their
league record to 2-3.
The deadline for donations
and contributions to the United
States Olympic Fund has tentatively been set for tomorrow,
November 12. "If your club
wishes to make a donation but
it is impossible to make it before tomorrow, please let me
know immediately so that I can
hold up sending the check,"
commented Coach Houk.
FETTERM AN ' S
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The
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Bloomsburg 's Fa$hton Corner
Gerst Leads Huski es to 31-7
Win Over K-town Gridde rs
The Huskies kept their hopes
alive for a winning season last Friday night when the trounced the
Kutztown Golden Bears, 31-7 at
Athletic Park. The Houkmen, 4
wins and 3 losses, need only to defeat the East Stroudsburg Warriors
on Saturday to turn in their first
winning record since 1960.
Gerst Scores Two
Taking the ball on the second
play from scrimmage, Husky halfback Joe Gerst started the Maroon
and Gold onslaught by breaking
loose on a 76 yard scoring run. Moments later Gerst again startled the
K-town defense by returning a
punt 60 yards to the Bears onefoot line. The fleet-footed back*
from Danville then plunged in for
the tally on the next play to make
the score 12-0 Huskies.
Halfway through the first quarter a momentary scare came upon
the Husky forces when Golden Bear
halfback Charles Bricker ran 79
yards to paydirt on a well executed
draw play. The kick for the extra
point was successful to put the
score at 12-7.
The remainder of the first half
became a Kutztown nightmare as
the Huskies romped for three more
Pictured here are BSC's freshman cheerleaders. Top, 1. to r.: Ginny
Piledec, Debbi Fehr. Bottom, 1. to r.: Cherie Goodman, Beth Anne Kupsky.
Conference Standin g'
East
West Chester
Bloomsburg
East Stroudsburg
Cheyney
Millersville
Mansfield
Kutztown
West
Clarion
California
Shippensburg
Lock Haven
Slippery Rock
Edinboro
WLT
500
32 0
32 0
32 0
240
140
14 0
WLT
400
310
23 0
2 30
12 1
031
Compliments of
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touchdowns. With nine minutes ;emaining * in "the half, quarterback
Rich Lichtel scored on a one yard
plunge, completing a series of plays
highlighted by a Tucker pass reception covering 19 yards. The kick
for the extra point by Bruce Long
was true, raising the score to 19-7.
Art Sell Scores
Art Sell became the next Husky
to score as he took the ball over
from the one yard line. This ended
a 52 yard drive that included an
interference call against Kutztown
which gave the Huskies a sizable
gain into Bear territory.
Stan Adds TD
With only seconds remaining on
the clock in the second quarter
Stan Kucharski displayed his catching and running ability as he trot^
ted home to paydirt
after catching
a 17 yard Lichtel pass.
The halftime score of 31-7 was
destined to be the final total as
neither team could muster enough
momentum to cross the gQal line in
the 2nd half. Creditable performance by the second and third string
in the final quarter, however, made
up somewhat for the Husky failure
to hit the Scoreboard again.
The Waffle
Grille
BSC Rooks Continue
Winning; Beat Kings
The BSC Chess Team claimed a
6-1 victory at King's College this
week. The Rooks' only loss occurred
on the third board, where George
Underwood, playing in a higher
team position than he normally
does, lost to a tough opponent, Joe
Seeber.
Len Thomas defeated Steve Zapotok on the first board; Ray Depew
beat Wes Blakeslee on the second,
Len Latchford outplayed Charlie
Metroke on the fourth , Linda Hummel check-mated Joe Cicon on the
fif t h, Carl Nauroth won a game
from Francis Dougherty on the
sixth, and Joe Preletz beat Hank
Wozniski on the seventh. The Husky Rooks now have a 2-0 record for
the season.
Sports Figures
Of-the Week '
by Norm Jonei, & Ed Macfcay
One of the unsung heroes of this
year's gridiron campaign is Jerry
Schraeder, the small but tough
wingback on the Husky offensive
eleven. A senior from Nanticoke,
Jerry is now finishing his 3rd year
as a starter and 4th as a varsity
performer. The former bruising
fullback of Newport High School,
"Nipper " played outside linebacker
last year but this year moved in as
the Maroon & Gold's blocking back,
*
*
*
¦
"Ozzie" or "Boomer" as Jerry
is known, comes from a strongly
Bloomsburg - oriented background.
Jerry 's father, brother, and two
sisters graduated from BSC; in
fact, "Oz" will be the last of six
brothers and sisters to graduate
from college. Studies and football
don't take up all of his time, however, 'as the "Varsity Club," talented cooking, and baseball also fit
into "Nipper 's" schedule.
*
*
*
*
f
*
Looking to his final game, East
Stroudsbur?, Jerry Schraeder 's
comments were "I played the year
they beat us 69-0, when they took
advantage of what was left of our
injury-ridden team, but this year
the story will be different."
Terry Henry
Terry Henry is another one of
our senior backs who has been doing a fine j ob for Coach Houk's
Husky football squad. Terry won
three varsity letters at Milton Hershey High where he was both a
fullback and a quarterback.
.
¦
¦ •¦
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Fifty candidates ^w^yj ^|fot ^
position oh the three varsit y yrin ter ;'
sports of basketball, wrestling, and
swimming at Bloomsburg State College, according to Athletic Director
Russell E. Houk. >'
Wrestling Team Works
Eioomsburg has been a powerhouse in small college wrestling
over the past several years. Assistant Coach Jerry Maurey, who
has been handling the team until
Head Coach Houk finishes the football season, has had 26 varsity
wrestlers working ou^. since October 10. Last year the Husky grapplers had a 10-1-1 record in dual
competition.
Voss Leads Netmen
New .Head Basketball Coach Earl
Voss reports that his squad is narrowed down to 12 candidates from
the group ttfat answered his initial
call on October 17. This includes
five lettermen, five from last year's
freshman team, and two transfer
students from junior colleges who
were ineligible last year. Voss, as
freshman coach, had a 17-2 record,
while last year's varsity posted an
8-11 mark.
Swimmers Practice
Swimming Coach Eli McLaughlin
has had 12 tankmen cutting the
water since October 10. Six are returning veterans from last year's
team, which was the best in the
history of BSC with an 8-4 record.
Five members of last year's freshman team, and a sophomore who
didn't compete last year, make up
the balance of the team.
Football wasn't the only sport BERGAN EVANS
(Continued from page 1)
for Terry while he was in high
perience
of a national group." He
school, he played baseball and basketball also. He attended Hershey continued that every language is
Junior College where he spent two unique and specialized in itself, a
undergraduate years. At the end of fact that often leads itself to mishis sophomore year Terry trans- understanding between national
ferred to Bloom where he has spent groups.
In the same vein, Dr. Evans
two years as a member of the vars*
stressed
the importance of translatity football team and a member of
ing
and
the problems which often
the varsity club.
result. Translators must be very
* * *
Terry Henry, nicknamed 3-by- careful to translate peculiar word
three, is hardly a man , of silence. patterns and colloquialisms correctCommenting on tomorrow's game, ly and in the right context. Gone
he said, "With a win tomorrow are the days of strict word by word
against East Stroudsburg we will translations.
It was clear from student and
have our first winning season in
many years. It has been a season faculty response during and aftef
of ups and downs due to the in- the assembly that Dr. Evans had
juries and a few mental letdowns." made a very significant impression
Terry said this about the time he upon his listeners.
has sent at BSC, "It has been an
Beat East Stroudsburg State
enriching experience for me. The
coaching, the team, and fans have
all been great and it has really
Whin Dad Took Hit Qirl
been an honor to have played ball
for the college."
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