rdunkelb
Fri, 04/26/2024 - 19:09
Edited Text
Revised Commi ttee
Syste m Announced
This is the Architect 's sketch for the nine-story women 's dormitor y to be erected
between Mo rth Hall and the new Auditorium . The dorm will be the residence for 400
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women.
Husky Hours , BNE, Bud get
Di scussed At Meetin g
(Students are reminded that all
actions of council must be approved by the President of the
college before becoming eff ective.
The President s' reply to these
minutes will be printed in the M & G when it is available.)
" Husk y Loung e hours , dress
policy, the college budget and
Big .Name Entertai nment were
the maui topics of discussion
at the first special meeting of
college council.
Concernin g H usky Lounge it
was st ated t h at the closing of
it at 10 p.m. was becoming a
ser ious problem. Coun cil will
try to arrive at an immediate
solution concerning the hours.
In the ensu ing discussion, '
Dean Riegel explained the reason for closing the loun ge was
an estimated $ 15 00 dama ge
done ' last year.
A motion was made to reopen the loun ge from 10 t o 12
Sunday throu gh Friday and to
1 a.m. on Saturday on the following basis:
Winter Weekend was discussed.
(1) that council recognize officially the seriousness of the
It was decided that no definite
pr oblem and officers of council
committment on this would be
seek student co-operation;
made until the results of the
(2) that a committee be esDionne Warwi .Jc concert during
tablished to- find a solution to
Homecomin g can be reviewed.
Members of council were in- .
the vandalism problem; council
troduced
and a discussion of
noted that "it was the general the committee on committees (see
consensus that greater personal
related article in this issue) conprid e, discretion , and the respect
cluded council's agenda.
for the right of others must be
promote d. "
Council spent most of the meeting discussing the budg et for
the college y ear and adopte d a
budget of $197,070. (Ed. Note:
This budget will be prin ted in
a future issue after approval by
Dr. Cecil Seronsy, professor
Dr. Andru ss. )
of. English at Bloomsbur g State
College for the p a st fourteen
An invitation to attend counyears , is the author of a book
cil meetings was extended to Mr.
ju st published , SAMUEL DANRober t Bender , direc tor of stuIEL , ava ilable at local bookdent activities; and to Bill Tomstore s.
linson, social recreation committee chairman. They will be able
In th is volume , Issued b y
to express opinions , but the y
Twa yne Publishers of New York ,
would not have the voting privProfessor Serons y has made a
ileges.
critical and biogra phical stud y
Contractin g "The Temptaof Samuel Daniel (1562-1619),
tions "- as the entertainment for
a renaissance En glish p oet , critic, and historian , and a contemporary of Shakespeare and
Spenser. Daniel, a man of modest and retirin g nature , was nevertheless an Im p ortant innovator
in literar y forms and ideas , and
.Twenty-six seniors have merit- i Ta ylor , Ga il Wa gner and James
undoubtedl y influenced Shake sed mention in the 1967-68 edi- Worth.
p eare and others of his time
tion of Who 's Who Among Students in Amer ican Univer sities
and Colleges. A committee of
Bloomsbur g administrators , social deans and department heads
evaluated the candidates on the
basis of pa rticipation in co-curricular activities , services to the
school , citizenship, respect of fellow students and promise of future usefulness and scholarshi p.
Following submission to a n a
approv al by the Who 's Who Organiza tion i in Tuscaloosa , Alabama , the followin g received the
SAMUEL DANIEL
Published
Thomas - Free , Douglas Freeb y,
Sherrell Fruit , Rober t Glbole,
Mark Goldman , Mrs. SusanMlllor , Douglas Hl pp enstlel , Tim- i
oth y Hoffman , J oy ce J ohnson ,
Kowalskl , Stanle y
Christine
Ku charikl , RuthMcG lnley, Stev- .,
en Messner , Mar y Molacava ge,
John Ondlih , Mar y Saueri , Gar y
SJ huey) * ;Lyle Slack; , Leahetta
Dr. Seronsy
in many ways. He was a lit-
erar y man of high prestige in
his own da y and has since then
held a respectable place a s writer down to our own times.
What Professor Seronay has
done is to examine and appraise
Daniel's development as an artist , as an innovator in En glish
literature , and as a philosopher ,
historian , and critic. The stud y
of Daniel has long interested
Professor Serons y, who has discovered a variet y of Daniel manuscripts and other materials
which make important changes
in our understanding of the poet .
Much of the research and writing of this book was done by
Professor Seronsy during the academic year 1963-64, when he
was on sabbatical leave from
Bloomsburg State College. He
then worked In the libraries of
Harvard Universit y, the British
Museu m, the Bodleian at Oxford Universit y, the Universit y
of Edinbur gh , and Huntin gton
in Californi a*
lege Will take a variet y of forms ,
at least two general lines" of effort seem warranted : (1) impor tant areas of action will require
the initiating capacit y and decision - making participation of
all institutional components , and
(2) differences in the weight of
each voice will be determined by
the responsibility which each
committee bears in regard to the
nature of the question at hand.
The Committee on Committees consists of Dean Hock , chairman; Mr. Boyd Buckingham ,
Doctor Louis Thom pson, Dr.
Robert Warren , . Dr. Charles .
Kopp, Dr. Margaret LeFevre ,
Mr. Donald Bashore , and Dr.
Paul Rieael.
Membership on the four general committees is composed of
members of the facult y who indicate interest throu gh a questionnaire which they are asked to
fill out. The facult y members are
also requested to indicate specific areas of concern.
<
Nominees must qualify for
committee membershi p according to policies appearing in the
body of this report Non-Voting
observers , who show interest in
a specific area are allowed to att e n d committee meetin gs.
Thr ough this voluntar y attendance -the facult y member will
gain experience for future nomination , for committee membership.
.
The Committ ee on Committ ees
should prepare a list of qualified nominees and non - voting
observer s for each of the four
general committees from the result of the faculty poll. The first
election should be held before
Cond 't. pg. 2
Soc. Fraternities
Complete First
Organized Rush
A significant step forward was
taken this week by the social
fraternities of BSC as they completed their first organiz ed rush
period.
A total of ninety eligible men
re gistered as p erspective pledges
throu gh • the Inter-Fr aternit y
Council.
All of these candidates were
invited to attend open meetin gs
of the six social fraternities on
campus. These frate rnities are
Delta Pi, Sigma Iota Omega,.
Phi Sigmu Xi, Beta Sigma Delta, Delta Omego Chi , and Pi*
Ka ppa Epsilon.
After meeting with the candidates at these individual functions , the brothers of the respective fraternities met and decided ,
which ones the y will invite to
pledge their brotherhood. Bids
will be sent out Saturda y to
those chosen.
Applicants for fraterni t y membership
who receive a bid from
Professor Serons y is the au thor
of some fort y art icles, notes , and more than one or ganiz ation
reviews. These include not only must choose which one they will
Daniel but also Shakespeare , pledge. All fr aternities will hold
¦
Swift , Jane Austen , Colerid ge, another meeting next week to
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Keats. At the moment he Is acquaint those who wish to
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doing some Investigat ion into pledge their organizatio ns with '
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ThlBi> is the rtpry us the .scot ebocjrd told ,it at tKe enj fof the r y what he callr " a few minor prob- their ' r espective¦ '' pledge pro¦' ' ¦' ' ¦
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lems In the texts of the Shakes- ; gra ms.
Who ' s Who-BSC
hono r : Sharon Ber ger on, Patr ick Colgan , Vir ginia Curr y,
Sally Ertwine , Stevonn F echer ,
A call to mutual understanding regarding the proposed
of the
Committee structure
Bloomsbur g State College has
been voiced by the Committee on
Committees. The revised structure of the facult y and student
committees of Bloomsburg State
College has been submitted to
the facult y for their approval.
This structure report was prepared by the Committee on Committees , which was selected b y the
college facult y. The purpose of
their work wa« to brin g to full
understanding
the committee
structure. This is important for
two reasons. First , since more
and more decisions concernin g
college affairs are being made on
the legislative and governmental
level, it is vital that the academic
structure be prepared to meet
these decisions with a generally
unified and knowledgeable view
of its own. Second, a college in
which all components are fully
aware of their interdependence ,
of the usefulness of communication themselves , and of the force
of j oint action will enjoy increased capacity to solve educational problems confronting it
The variet y and complexity of
^ife if^
p eare 'playi." He lg also workin g
Inter -Fraternit yCouncil plans
on materials for a book on to make the rush period an an*
Shakes peare 'g comedies.
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Students , Faculty and Admin istrators
To Participate in New Committee Struct ure I
i/Ona i. irom pg. i
the end oFthe present semester; .
subseq uent elect ions should be
held annually.
Following is a list of the Comm itt ees. The number of members
on each committee is indicated
by a number in parenthe sis (0)
followin g the title of the commit1. Committ ee on Professional
/\ffairs (9)
a. Function: It is recognized
that the success or failure of the
Professional Affairs Committe e
rests in the nature of the procedures it will follow. To be successful , it must reflect the general
will of the faculty ; moreover , it
m ust ha ve complete hegemony in
certain areas; - while in other
areas it should have the power
of " advise and consent " Its procedures or functions need the
most careful deliberation.
b. Subcommittees :
( 1) Function:
( a) To make a complete study of all matters that
come within its purview.
(b) To meet with other
committees , department heads
and administrative officers as
may be requir ed.
(c) To mak e recommendations to the full Committee
on Professional Affairs , which
would then act on the recommendations to be made to the faculty
or administration , as may be
suitable , for ado ption or endorsement.
( 2) Subcommi ttees Include
(a) Employment and
Dismissal Policies
(b) Salary Increments ,
Promotions in Rank ,
& Leaves of Absence
(c) Professional Standards & Practi ces
( d) Professional Relationshins
• 2. Committee on Acad emic Affairs (9)
a. Function: Alth ough the
focus of academic organization
has long been on the teach ing
function of the college faculty,
what is to be taught are questions
which directly involve a college
faculty. Faculty "citizenship ",
Le., the particip ation of the faculty member in the daily details
in keeping the institution a growing concern , implies membership
on a variety of committees that
are directly concern ed with academic affairs. Members of a college faculty should assume responsibility and their share in
making and carrying out more
making and carrying out decisions on academic policies.
b. Subcommittees :
( 1) Function:
(a) To make a complet e
study of all matters that come
within its purview.
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I Sam and Son
I Shoe Repair
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223 Iron Street
8 a.m. — 5 p.m.
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Wed. until noon
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Study With A Bag
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2 weeks at the London Theatres for as low at $300.
Included In tour prlcei .
Orchestra seats to 6 fop London hits
Round-tri p air transportation 13 nights , hotel
full breakfast each morning
Transfer to and fro m airport
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IHUMAN'f WORLD TRAV1L
If IAST MAIN O ILOOMSIURO O "HONI 784>I62O
POR ALL TOUR TRAVIL ARRANOIMINTS
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RtiervalloM O Ttoinft O:Toun
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A ff fte ' thlna with any ihott repaired.
with Eieort
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Bloomsbur g, Pa,
Hallmark
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SUPPLY CO.
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NESPOLI
JEWEL ERS
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p.m. for those interested in bowling.
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Shop
Saturday, Sept 23—Football at Lock Haven 8 p.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 26—Association of Resid ent Women—
3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Thur sday, Sept 28—Freshmen Women Fun NightGym 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. .30— Football at Mansfield 2 p.m.
Cross Country, K ings College
at Bloomsburg 2 p.m.
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5. -Admini strative Ailairs Commus
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acult
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mittees:
(b) To mee,t with other policies
the
and
ooUcies,
the
with
a. Function: The nat ure of
live
committees , departm ent heads
certa in institutional respo nsibiliand administrative officers as admin istration who must
* may be required.
tips requires the establi shment of
the policies work.
b. Subcommittees Include: •
adm inistrative committe es to
(c) To make recommen1I) Athlet ics & Recreation
deal with specific policy matter s.
dations to the full Committee on
(2) College Council
The following committee stru cAcademic Affairs , which would
Or
ganizatio
ns
Student
(3)
is designed to meet thesQ reture
then act on the recommendatio ns
Orien
tatio
n
(4)
Student
sponsibilities.
These committ ees ,
or
adfacult
y
to be made to the
Publi
cation
s
(5)
Stude
nt
others
as may, from
and
such
,
be
suitable
may
ministration , as
(6) Student Fina ncial Aid
time to time, be deemed necesfor adoption or endorsemen t.
(7) Stude nt Discipline
sar y are to be establish ed in the
(2) Subcommittees include
4. Committ ee on College and
following manner.
( and will function in named
.
Commu nity Affairs (46)
b. Committees include:
area ) (a) Admissions
a. Funct ion: Educa tiona l in(1) Committees Appointed
- (b) Library Policy
stitution s have responsib ilities
Responsible to, the Pr esand
by,
(c) Curriculum
extend beyond
and
which
affect
College
ident
of
the
(if
(d) T estbooks
sphere of their own
the
immediate
(a)
President' s Coun cil
needed )
memb ershi p. If the Collimited
(b)
Administra tive
(e) Academic achievelege communit y is to function efCoun cil
ment.
fectively, we must have the under3. Comnri ttee on Stude nt Af( c) Auditing & Accountfairs (35), Executi ve Council (9)
standin g and support of our • m
' &
(d) Dedication
stu- man y publics. The development
a. Function: The area of
us
(2)
Committees Appoin ted
dent affair ^demands serio atand review of policy in the area
Responsible
to, the Dean
by,
and
tention within a college. Students
of college and communit y affairs
(with
the
Instruct
ion
of
Appr oval
spend only a fraction of their
can be coordinated most effec- of the President of the College)
college years in the classroom;
tively through the efforts of rep(a) Academic Council
the educational climate which exresentatives of those groups most
(b)
Graduate Council
* ists elsewhere on the camp us ob- . directly affected.
(c)
Commencement Polviously leaves its mark upon the
b. Subcommittees include :
icy
total academic experience. Policy
(3) Committees Appointed
(1) Convocations
review and formulation in the
by,
and
Responsible to, the Dean
(2) Concert , and Lecture
area of student affairs may best
of
Students
(with the Approv al
Series 3 Fre8hmah Parents Day
be achieved through the efforts
^(4)^ All Sports Banque t
of the President of the College)
of representatives of those mem(a) Parking
(5 ) Alumni Activities
bers of the college communit y
(b)
Who 's Who
(6) Spring Arts Festival
most directly affected: the stu(c)
International
Student
(7) Education Conference
dents who must live under the
Relations
Calendar
Bowlin g
There w ill be a meeting in the
lobb y of New North Hall on
Monda y, September 18, at 7:30
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Students Seem Interested
In Special Ed. Curricu lum
According to Dr. William !,.
-Jones, ,head of the Special 10du cation department, ihe number
of freshmen entering Special Kducation has risen considerably.
Dr. .Jones expressed the Department's interest in this rise saying,
"There is a great need for capable people in this field."
Furthermore he reports that
there will be further orientation
for fr eshmen pursuing either of
•- the fields in Special Kducation.
On September 19th, through
the Special Kducation gate, the'
College Chapter of C. K.C.
( Council for Exceptional Child-
,
ren ) held a meeting. The Sigma
Alpha Ktu ( Honor Speech and
;. Hearing Fraternity ) will hold a
meeting in the near future. Students who-aren't members and
are doing college work in these
areas are asked to contact either
Dr. Ileuwsaat of C.E. C. or Mr.
Kberhart of Sigma Alpha Ktu
for more information.
Dr. I ones also reported that
he , Dr. Farber, Dr. Reuwsaat,
and Dr. Gensemer, at tended the
Regional IV Area Workshop of
the Council for Exceptional
Children at Mary wood College
recently.
—— ___. . .. .
Clark Favored Tci
Keep Senate Seat
Despite A ge
Business Administration
"The four year pattern of.
courses for a curriculum , sequence iii. Business Administration i*> now being developed ,"
said Dr. Shepherd , director of
business education. The new curriculum sequence wilj appear in
the Catalogue , 1'iill 1968.
Students presently enrolled in
other maj ors wilJ be rcq uired to
huve a formal evaluation of their
earned credits at IJSC before
th ey, will be considered for the
new pattern. Such evaluation will
not be made before February 1,
1968. First year students who
are interested in business should
follow the pattern of courses for
"First Year-All Sequences " as
shown in the Catalogue for Fall,
1967.
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wants '*old" nien representing
them in Congress. If they nominated a. man like John Tabor,
Pennsylvania Secretary of Interior, and if he were to sound
and act like Senator Clark—
only younger, enough Republicans and Independents may
vote for him to give the Republicans another Senate seat.
To be sure, there are problems that Senator Clark will have
to meet to gam re-election. First,
there is the question of his recent divorce and remarriage.
This, however, is not nearly the "
political liability it would have
been ten years ago; for the public has matured enough to realize that this is a superficial issue
that has no relevance to a Senatorial contest.
A second potential source of
tr ouble for Senat or Clark is his
outspoken "Dovish" views on
Vietnam. A potential opponent,
Congressman Richard Schweibe
of Montgomery County, ,is avidly "Hawkish." This may cause
some embarrassment to Clark ,
if President Johnson has not solved the Vietnam me§§by election
time. It would appear that his
Republican opponent, Schweibe,
would be in greater agreement
with the Democratic Presidential
candidate.
Karely have- Pennsylvania's
Democrats had much to cheer
about. Their party has continued
to be split between reform elements and the regular organization. Since Pennsylvania is a
Republican state, the Democratic
candidate must gather votes from
Independents and regular Republicans to be victorious. Their
one bright spot, Joseph Clark,
can achieve this and therefore
should be victorious in the 1968
Senatorial contest.
•As the incumbent, Clark is a
familiar figure to most Pennsylvanians. Hehas effectively maintained an independent and popular image through the mass
media , particularly the television
program , "Your Senator's Report." Unlike most Democratic
candidates in Pennsylvania, he
has strong grass roots support
in the upstate areas.
The Republicans' best chance
of success would be to run a
campaign similar to that of
Charles Percy's against Paul
Douglas in 1966. That is to
capitalize upon an age~differentatlon between the candidates.
Clark is 67 (he would be 73
by the end of the next term ).
This is one deficiency Clark cannot counter becau se our "youthcentered cultu re " no longer
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The cheerleader* are shown in action during last week's game with Shippensburg.
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The varsity cheerleaders are
presently working with the pep
committee on plans for Homecoming weekend.
Among the other varsity cheerleaders are Lynn Rhret, Elysburg; Debbie Fehr, Hellertown;
Cheryl Goodman, I Iawley; Beth
Ann Kupsky, Berwick; Kath y
May, Mount Joy; Judy Urso,
Reading; and l.inda Watts, Millville.
\
CARTER'S
CUTRATE
1 W. Main St., Bloomsburg
Luncheon
Holiday Buffer
Every Week 11:30-1:30
11:30 - 2:30
Chlldren-$1.25
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Each Sunday
Tuesd ay thru Friday
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$2.40
\ Hotel Magee
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" Kampus Nook "
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See you at
the Fair
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Compliments of
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Bloomsburg, Pa.
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784-4323
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BERWICK
KNITTING MILL
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Factor y Sto re
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Grill
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* Jr. Knit Dresses
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* A-Line Suits
* Slacks & Slark Suits
* Men's Sport Shirts
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! Built For The Students
0p«« 7 Days a W«ek
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1 The Restaurant Across From the !
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TOILET GOODS
COSMETICS
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES'
GREETING CARDS
$1.50
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112 East Main Street
|
Delivery
SMORGASBORD
All you can eat
;
Compliments of
PreierlpHon
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IOFFICE SUPPLIES 1
B^BB^BjsiffiSHiBKiMB
Fret
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B. J. Russel Named Head Wjj tj rrr^
Cheerleader For 1967-68
Miss Barbara .lane Russell, a
j unior business education major
fro'm Clarks Summ it, has been
chosen head varsity cheerleader
according to Joanne McComb,
varsity cheerleading advisoiv
The varsity cheerleaders attended Mrs. Houk's cheerleading
camp at Forksville this summer
and they are now in the process
of teaching the straight arm*
cheerleading method to the freshmen girls who are trying out
for the freshman squad. There
arc about thirty girls trying out
and from them four will be
chosen for the freshman squad.
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Save Many Dolla rs on Your
School Wardrobel
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230 South Poplar Street
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ton * block off Routt 11 behind Shopping iCwit r )
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Noetling Lost To Posterit y
,
by Joe Griffiths
4
As time pusses, the old m us t
eventually give way to the new,
and so old Xoetling [{nil was
torn down forcibly this summer
to provide space for a new dining hall. In past years old Xoetling served the college well, as a
classroom and office building,
but it had become outdated and
its facilities no longer were sufficient to satisfy the needs of faculty and students.
In 1886 when Xoetling was
constructed, students probably
looked upon it as a "sturdy modern building which would provide a place for the advancement
of edu cation , but its timber and
mortar had deteriorated over the
decades, and if it had not been
tor n down it would have become
a hazard to the campus. To
many upperclassmen and alumni , Noetling was an ancient landmark that brought back memories of the past, but the incoming students who perhaps never
even had a glimpse of Xoetling
Hall look forward with anticipation to the erection of the new
air-conditioned dining hall.
The new dining hall will feed
2,000 students and will seat
1,000. Surely this building will
aid the campus much more than
#
old Noetling Hall, but surely
Do you remember, that hectic someday, probably after standweek last spring when every male ing for a much shorter span of
resident in this institution fought time than did Xoetling, the dinto get ahead in line, that they ing hall will also fall victim to
might secure a precious suite in the wrecking crews in order to
the new, deluxe hotel-on-campus make spacefor something newer,
known as South Hall? And do more efficient, and able to seryou remember the early birds vice more students, but is is unsnatching up all the first-floor likely that any other building,
rooms? Well , here we are, the with the exception of Carver
elite, living in our grandiose ac- Hall, will ever achieve Xoetling's
vault of tradition.
commodations.
The fourth flo or , which wasn ot
very popular at the room-grabThe first floor residents were
bing session, is well on the way to really the smart ones. It will be
completion. In another few a while before they move in;
weeks, we are t old, the towel
meanwhile they are lounging
rucks will be available. Other- around in swank quarters downwise, the top - floo r residents town. Just think, though : when
(most of them fr eshmen, natur- they move in, they will have the
ally) are in #ood shape.
dust fr om floors t wo, three, and
Then comes the third floor. Al- four! Just grit your teeth, fellas.
ready one can detect the pres- I Xext year we'll all ru sh over t o
ence of something in the air, on the desk when room registration
the floors , everywhere. It is dust,
roll s around , so we can latch
gentlemen, it is dust. You walk on onto a first-o r second-floor room
it , sleep in it , brush it into the in th e new , complex, ultra-modcavities in your teeth, comb it ern , huge, seven-floor garganinto (and out of) your hair , write tuan edifice which is riding so
on it , and listen to it scratching
swiftly with each passing day.
your stereo LP's. You can do a
Seems to me this is where I
soft-shoe shuffle , complete with came in.
sound effects.
— Carl Nauroth
We hear that the third floor
will soon have chairs.
1968 GRA DUATES
The second floor is really
Make your appointment fo« your
shaping up fast. The last few
SENIOR PICTURES!
desks are even now being
« ««
screwed into place. Work is proDEAD LINE
ceeding at u breakneck pace. A
September 30, 1967
story is going around to the efReturn your ACTIVITIES LIST. If
fect that we will have all the
needed, extra copies aro available.
plumbing in before HomecomOBITER
ing.
Dillon Houm
Box 215
Go South,
Young Man
t
ff lnxaon atth (ifoU*
V4. XLVI
Monsoy, Soptomfeor 25, 1WJ
Doug HippflnstM
784.8189 >
Gordon Slvtll
784-7361 I!
Robtrt Holltr
Ext. 272 J
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Rlehord Scvoo *
Ext. 205 I
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,. . Scott Clorkt I
Iditor-ln-Chltf
Buiintu and Advertising
H: II
Editor . . . . . ., ,
Director of Publication *
Consultant
'AMlitont Editor
784-7361
Rlehja Btnyo
Feature Editor
Paul Alltn
,
Sport * Editor
Rupert
and
Jim
Tom
Jam—
Editors
New*
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784-3422
7€*-i761
Stove Hoek
Photo graphy Editor
,
Rlehard Hortmon
Copy Editor
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Sharon Avtry
Aulitant Copy Editor , , . .
,
otn y Rt'wo 'd
Typltt . . . . . . . ., " . . . . . ., . . . .
*
Down Wogntr and Mary Lou Cqvdllnl
Adw rtlsln s StaVf . , . , . . . ., .
(Staff for third edition )
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The Moroon and Gold I* located In the Student Publication * Center In Dillon
Houie. New* may be submitted by colling 784*4660, Ext. 272 or by contactlna
Pott Office Box SB.
• * •
The Moroon and Gold I* published weekly by the ttudents of Bloomtbur c State
College, Bloomtburg , Pa., for the entire College Community. All opinion * expraise d by co lumnar * and feature writer *, Including letter» *to-the-edlt«r , ort
not necessarily thoie of rhl* publication but those of the individual *.
Xoetlin g Hall in the process of being demolishe d this summer , after 81 years of service; below it, the new cafeteria that will replace it—a spotless phoenix rises from the
aged ashes.
Stud y Of Etiquette Begun By Commons
By Carl Nauroth
A new course is being offered
this year — one that will not be
found in t he college cat alo g or the
master schedule book. Perhap s
it will be included in next semester 's master book. The title of the
course is Dining 101. There ar c
several sections from which to
choose; all meet f i ve t im es a
week, starting at 5:00 (perio d
10), and 15 - minute Intervals
thereafter.
The first lecture , last Monda y
at 5:00, was well attended. The
WHAT KIND
OF A MAN
READS THE M&G?
TUNE IN NEXT
WEEK TO
FIND OUT!
pr ofessor (attempts to lear n his
identity have so far proven futile, thou gh it Is believed he is
connected with the administration) apparently discour ages ,
cuts, because the roll was t aken
as each section arr ived.
Mimeographed sheets -- complet e w ith dia gramsfor easy note
taking - were distributed to all.
Amon g t he mater ial covered in
Lecture #1 were the rul es for passing plates , silverware , and the
like , t ogether with some general
rules of condu ct.
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THE M & G
NOW
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Student s are anxiously await ing the mid - term exam , to be
given some time dur ing Thank sgiving week. Rumor has it that
the test will be ver y hard.
Although the class meets for
five clock - hours per week , the
number of credit hours assigned
to the cours e has not been deter mined as of this writin g. There is
one comfortin g thought: no outside work, collateral reading, or
term paper will be require d.
Gradin g will be on apass-or-f ail
basis. Good luck , ever ybod y —
y ou ma y need it!
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By Richie Benyo
IT WOULD SEEM best to present some type, of policy at the
beginning of the year under
which i can studiously run about
bumping into things in this column (which is taking the place
of last year's Schitzophrenia ),
but on thinking about it, i can't
see how it would be a column if
it is bogged down with policy
statements, so please disregard
this entire paragraph ... THIS
PAST WEEK witnessed the reopening of 'Bye the Way !BSC's
coffee house. For newcomers to
the college this year, the coffee
the California highways: a ton house is located in the basement '
of car always has the upper of the Presbyterian Church on
hand at 65 mph over a 400-lb. the. northeast corner of Market
stripped-down Harley 74, or a and Fourth Streets. It is opened
"hog" to an Angel, who would each Saturday and S u n d ay
rather part with an arm, a leg, night; volunteers are needed as
or his wife than with his cycle. waiters and as entertainers; Beta
Thompson attempts, an d does Sigma Delta, one of BSC's foreto some great degree succeed, most social frats , offered their
in presenting the truth about services one weekend last year,
the Angels , after he has, by re- which was a great type help, and
lating personal experiences, in- other frats, servic e, social, honterviewing witnesses to Angel- orary, or whatnot, would cercrimes, running down statistics, tainly be welcomed . . . EARLY
and riding his limey BSA among LAST ISH we reviewed Andrei
them , gotten an inside pictureVoznesensky's "Antiworlds".
one never attained by the news Andrei , as we mentioned then,
media that turned them to over- is one of the top contemporary
night stardom.
He exposes wrongs on both
sides; he corrects TIM E, LIFE ,
and POST; he admonishes the
Angels themselves; he takes his
chances from both the angels and
the police, and makes it out
to set the black legend straight.
He is not overly smooth in
Feature Staff
his presentation, however, and
one would think, at a casual
for this issue:
reading, that he is an Angels
Ben Ciullo
spokesman presenting their case
before a jury, relying on the
Joe Griffiths
sympathy of the court, to find
BUI Large
them a little less offensive than
Carl Nauroth
they really are. He is not quite
so narrow, though, in that he
Mike Stugrin
does make trips into almost
epistles extolling the demerits of
the cycle gangs.
One cannot help feeling, at the
end of the book, that ThompHe offers facts, figures , preson found them a living legend
sents episodes, but nowhere ofhimself, and . was just faintly
fers either a solution to their
position or for the people who
over-awed by their habits—his
unexpected explusion from the
live with them.
group in the final chapter seems
There is no better, no more
to bring him for cibly down to
colorful picture of the nomads
earth after pleading their case
of the highways than in Thompvery enthusiastically, giving the
son 'b book—his first-hand exbook a rather strange flavor of
perience makes it doubly readuncertainty.
able.
The Back Shelf
"HELL'S ANGELS" - by
Hunter S. Thompson — Random
House — 1967 —
Just as there is something magical that catches the imagination
when one looks at a pretty girl,
there is some magic transformation that comes over a person
when he sees, he ars , or thinks
about a motorcycle. Something
primitive, basic, emotional.
Something clicks in his head
and he is either taking a devilmay-care j oyride in his mind,
the pistons throbbing steadily
betwe en his legs, the wind rushing p ast him, muffling the roar
of his exhausts, or he is mentally or verbally cursing the
father of inv ention, who in some
long-gone era, was so rash as
to produce what has come to be
called the wheel.
The cycle-urge is much stronger in some people than in others,
especially when a motorcyclecan
make a prince of a pauper, or
a man of a misfit. This is the
urge that drives clans of bushyhaired, straggly-bearded, unkempt fraternity-brother s-of-theabsurd to turn a motorcycle into an extension of themselves.
This is the urge that makes a
man a Hell's Angel.
Having spent a year among
the by-now-infamous Hell's Angels of California, having shared
their beer and their bumps, Hunter Thompson is well prepared
to make an accurate, if not overly original, study of their particular sub-culture. .
Because of their unkem pt appe arance , the public has brand ed the An gels as an ou tlaw
group, u splinter of society that
would be better disposed of than
allowed to clutter the highwa ysand some motor ist s have t aken
direct act ion t o clear them from j
portio n of
TRIBUNA L '67-The harassment
Freshm en Orient ation Week at BSC ended with the ,
tradit ional Tribunal-the call lo their J uat desert f of
Russian poets. Knowing how
our. office was filled with letters
last year begging for more poetry " quotes for the rhyme starved masses, i' ve succumbed
to popular demand and present
this quote from Vdznesensky's
poem of 1963, called ' Hunting
a Hare"; "The urge to kill, like
the urge to beget,/ Is blind and
sinister." This might seem rather
narrow and common - ground,
unl ess we fini shed off th e rest of
the stan z a:* "Its craving is set/
Today on the flesh of the hare:
tomorrow it can/ Howl the same .
way for the flesh of a man."
Maybe he reads either George
Orwell or "Saturday Evening
Post" . . . IF YOU'VE BEEN
AROUND the campus you've
noticed the mentions of Dionne
Warwick for Homecoming. Was
too bad she couldn't come last
year over Spring Weekend when
she was supposed to; Jay and the
Americans filled in very ably,
tho. Whatever you're doing the
nite of Friday on Homecoming
weekend make sure it is being
done in the Warwick concert —
hear she puts on, a good show
. . . IF YOU'VE LISTENED
to pop music for the last few
years you're quite aware of agroup called The Association.
No, not the Frank Nitty type
Association, i usually can 't see
giving plugs without some type
of* a kick - back, but their third
album, "Insight Out", is on the
market, and for a new approach
to pop music, you just can 't beat
this group — you're bound to
hear them on the juke box in the
Feature Staff
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' This scene of late August of this year in front of the library
has been lately trimmed, sculptured, and landscaped, so one .
need not fight through the dense underbrush to find a window.
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those Froah who wetcilisb craas as to talk back to
Orientation Committee Members, or who In tome
way
did
co-oper' ate with
the¦ "ver y worthwhile
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Husky Lounge, and if you haven 't yet, you rush right down there with your sweaty pennies
in your hand, take them to the
women working in the shack
bar (They'll love to give you ,
change. . .) and get a grubby
nickel and give them a spin —
the tone quality that comes out
of the juke box isn't anything to
beat your cymbal about, but the
songs are works of art — social
criticism, even . . . IF, BY
CHANCE, you're still going to
take a trip to Expo 67 before it
closes in late October, besides
taking some heavy clothes, drink
beer, but not the local water —
it seems to have some sort of adverse effect on the American stomach — maybe it's some sort
of new scientific gimmick to give
your stomach a lube job, but it
isn't overly pl easant — besides,
drinking beer like water isn't so
bad — there's no way to ride a
monorail quite like the tipsy - "*
trip special — Weeeee!... DON'T
SMOKE the American Tobacco
Company 's answer to the Edsel:
Colony Hundreds — UGH . ..
ORIENTATION WAS OVER
ON THE 9th to a great extent
with the Tribunal, altho the
clean-up there wasn't — some of
the by-products are still in evidence — the leaders ofthe Frosh,
the Orientation Committee, and
the local militia should all be
commended for the orderly and
mature way in which the Tribunal ( always a sore spot in any
college's orientation program )
was handled — Congrats freshmen . .. !
; ;¦
learning experie nce of Orie ntation. Bill Fir eitlne
Is called forth from the Fr oth auemble go to receive hit day-ln-co urt} he U quj te jtiit ly fdiuj d gttUt y
of the infamous deeds a* charged;
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BSC Cross Countg|Stfi« :
Preps For Coming Season
BSC faces an uphill buttle-in
the cross country competition
during the coming campaign but
has a core of returning veterans
around whom to build a teum.
The returnees include: Jim Gauger, Pottstown; Charles Moyer ,
Central Valley; and Bob Morrow
from Springfield. Counted on
heavily but lost to the tcum were
Dick Yost whose student teaching
assignment t akes him to Montgomery . County, and Charles
Shupe who decided not to pnrticiputc this year.
Many of the candidates for the
freshman squad have impressive backgrounds and should be
a bitf boost to the team next season. Some of the outstanding
frosh are: Jim Carlin from Drexel.
I1 ill and.lohn Rewe from Philii.^both were all - Catholic; Mark
Sophowski and Mike Horbul
who were both all-county in N*cw
.Jersey and Don Dubudwuy from
Phoenixville, a Coaches -Award
winner. Candidates who were
team captains in their respective
high schools are: Mike Kngel,
Dick McKeurn , and C i e o rg e
Mrochks. Other candidates are:
Dave Kelten, Tom Wisle, and
Dick Barbe.
N'oiie of the freshmen will be »
eligible for the varsity this year
because of the NCAA freshmen rule but enthusiasm is high and
the team is working hard to p repare for their first meet under
the new head coach, Dr. Herbert.
RICH LICHTEL LOOKS FOR A RECEIVER
Huskies Beat S-Burg, 31-20;
Kucharski Scores Four TD' s
The aerial team of Rich Lithtel ; remaining in the first half the
and Stan Kucharski clicked for j Husky line again showed its
fo ur TD's giving BSC a 31-20 ; strength by twice dropping the
win over Shippensburg in season I hurraassed Bumgarner after he
opener.
'i had spearheaded a drive to the
The Red Haiders of Shippens- I\ Huskies 13 yard line. '. The Husburg drew first blood on a quur- |; kies then took the ball on downs
terback keeper play by Steve • and ran out the few remaining
Bumgarner. The score came af- ; seconds. The half ended with
ter the Huskies were held to no I BSC clutching on to a shaky 14-6
gain on a fourth down plunge lead.
„
deep in their own territory. The
iCarly in the third period
Raiders took over on the 26and Bloom again gambled on fourth
used eight plays
culminated by j1 down and inches deep in their
Bumgarner % s plunge to score. i own territory. Denny Weir's
The PAT was blocked by Mike I plunge into the line was stopped
Barnhart.
j for no gain and the Raiders took
Before the end of the period ( over on the BSC 34 yard line.
Stan Kucharski caught the first i Bumgarner then hit Pandell Stoi*&f his TD passes on a 13 yard j ches for the TD. Bob Tucker
Lichtul aerial. Bob Tucker ' blocked the PAT pass attempt.
caught the PAT pass giving BSC '• Bloom then put the game on ice
) as a cool and collected Lichtel
an 8-6 lead.
Late in the second quarter the fired to end Stan Kucharski for
I luskies drove to the Red Raiders TD passes of 55 and 58 yards
27 yurd line, but a stiff Raider I within sixty seconds of each othline stopped four running plays ! er. The Husky defense then
and the Raiders took over.
added insult to injury by blitzing
A hard-hitting BSC line led by I Bumgarner causing him to fumlinemen N'agy, Moul, and Sur- j ble with BSC recovering the loose
ridge then caused halfback Kd ' pigskin. The Huskies then called
I lummcrs to fumble with Bloom on Bob Tucker and he split the
recovering on the Raider 's 2i) < uprights on a 28 yard field goal
yard line. Bloom wasted no timi attempt.
in taking advantage as Lichtel | With the clock showing less
and Kucharski teamed for a than u minute remaining the
sparkling TD. The PAT pass ' Raiders pushed the ball across
went incomplete. With seconds ' one 2 yard plunge by halfback
'"^ ^ "• •' " '••" '•' "• ••" ¦•^^^'
Kd Hammers. Bloom allowed
the clock to run out and left the
field with a 31-20 win.
Bloomsburg
8 6 6 11-3 1
Shippensburg
6 0 6 8—20
Touchdowns— Kucharski < 13,
2i), 55, 58), Bumgarner (2 ) ,
! Stoichess (34 ), Hammers \2) .
; Points after touchdowns—Tucker
| ipass ); Lichtel ( run );_ Hicks
( pass ). Field goal
Tucker
:¦
(2 8 yds. )
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Statistics
*'' ' ' ' Bloom Ship
First downs
12
24
Rushing yardage
68
47
Passing yardage 353
264
Passes
8-16
27-54
Passes intercept.
2
1
Fumbles lost
2
1
Punts
-2-32 4-38
Yards penalized
41
50
OTinininiiiiiiiiiiii
SUPPORT
THE
HUSKIES
;
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The Dix ie Shop
i
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"Tho Store of Fritn dly Sorvlct "
1
nmiiiimn
Charlie 's
Famous for
Campuf OIH Fashions
Bloomsburg,
26 E. Main St.
iiiiii
Pa/
Wit ^B
Hoagfot
So* U» For All Your Fina ncial Notch
Closod 1i30 to 3iOO P.M.;
Every Day But Friday
Rtgular & King Slzt Hoaglei
King Size Sof t Drinks
JVdElNEB
S
JVATI0NJ1L BANK
FRII DIUVIRY
Open 'til 12i30 a.m.
FARMERS NATIONAL OPHCE • BLOOMSBURG, PBNNA.
A
157 W. Main Ph. 784-4292
Bloomib urg
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The Sports Column
Paul Allen
Back in 1949 a couple of guys
from Cornell decided it would
be a good idea to revive sports
car racing in the United States.
The result of their effor ts was
a series of races on a course
that ran right down the main
street of Watkins Glen , N . Y.
and wound t hr ough t he hills
surroundin g the town. It was
sports car racin g in the best
European tradition and it was
grea t . A ser ious accident , however, forced the races off Jthe ¦
p ubl ic roads and in 1959 a new
rac ing facility was opened. Since
t hen " t he Glen " has been goin g
stron g and the race s gettin g
better ever y year.
The next race weekend, and
t he b iggest of the year will be
the U.S: Grand Prix. It' s the
las t race on the Formula One
circu it and carr ies a pur se of
over S 100,000.
It' s also the biggest blow-out
in the East. This year they expect over 100,000 spectators
most of whom will be . college
students , graduates , or dro pouts.
The races last all weekend and
the parties go on twenty-four
hours a day. Standard procedure is to get there as early as
possible on Friday, set up a
makesh ift camp , and stay all
weekend, sleeping on the ground
when you drop from exhaust ion.
It' s pretty wild, but that' s the
way things are done.
In past years we set up our
camp at the " Ch icane " . It used
t o be the gat her ing place of the'
college group. Now it' s a catch
basin for every nut who ever
dreamed of st art in g a rio t or
burn ing an outh ouse. It' s a real
zoo and the state police are the
keepers.
We chose the area outs ide the
"9 0" for the two weekends held
earlier th is su mmer and plan
to return for the Gran d Prix.
It' s ever y thin g the " Chicane "
used to be.
If y ou aren 't bus y the weekend of Oct. 1, get a group together and J oin In the fun.
It' s only a thr ee-hour drive
and all y ou need are a few
dollars , a sleep ing ba g, some
warm clothes , and a raincoat.
I
NEW UNUSUAL JEWELRY
j
!
Earr ing* Pierc ed and Unpierced
I
!
$1.00 up
VLSiUioSLp
¦• '
.
;
j
: gxxxxxft ^^
59 E. Main St. , ,
| ¦
. • ;. , •.
¦ "
¦
r:
-^ - ; " - ;.Obiter ¦' ./¦:.... T. This year , for the first time,
the OBITER staff *ts Invitin g all
students ^ with artistic talent to
share in designing the cover of
the 1968 OBI TER. The only
requirement is that the_words
and 1968 appear
OBITER
somewh ere on the face of t h e
book.
.
As a reward to the whinin g
artist , the OBITER will devote
a page in the book to his or her
picture with written recognition
of the designer 's contribution.
He or she will also, naturally,
.
receive a fr ee OBITER.
The deadline for the contest
is October 18, 1967. All entries
will be judged by Dr. Paul Riegel, adviser to the OBITER; Mr.
Robert Haller, publica tions director; and Sharon Aver y,
editor. For furt her information ,
contact Sharon Avery, in care
of the OBITE R , box 2 15.
• Lists Interviews^?* f|
Deferments For
Male Commuters
Stan Kucharski
Williams Shoe Clinic
Paul Allen
120 E. Main Street
Sports Editor
.
*C!ose to the Campus
'Fast Dependable Service
'Reasonable Rates
CONTRIBUTOR
Bob Shultz
Yearbook
1
Lee-Pat's
|I
¦Van Heusen and Manhat-f
¦tan Shirts
1
Haggar
Slacks
I
I
§ Brentwood Sweaters I
1 formal Wear Rental If
1 Service" v ¦
I
I
20 E. Main St.
I
I
Ph. 7B4-5766
-I
HiHiiwininiiiiiHiiiBiiiiiwiiiiBiiiiaiini I
Over 6000 Book
Titles In Stock
;
;
LET'S GO
BOWLING AT
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BSC CLASS RINGS
ijj
6 W. Main. St.
Bloomsbur gj
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ROCKS
Steak House
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(Atron from Th« Columbia Thtctr *)
Daily Specials
PLATTERS
&
"For¦ ¦a Prettier You "
"¦
-
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FOOT OF
COLLEGE HILL
BLOOMSBURG i PA.-
SANDWICHES
i
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MmI Ticktta Available
i
FETTERMAN' S I
Home Cooked Foodi
COLONIAL
KITCH EN
Shop AROJSV jj
BARBER SH OP
BERRIGAN'S
SUBS
j
j
150 East Main Stride ?
CIom to tha Campm
784-4182
• QUALITY *
NOON-TIME SPKIALS
Prlvott Parfitp .
7 :30 A,M. — J2:00 A,M.
B^m^^^B^^ Bv^B^B^Bb
'
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vania State EmploymentAgency
in the dorms and Waller Hall
v
bulletin boards.
The Placement Office also announced that the United States
Marine Corps will be located outside Husk y Lounge . at 10 am,
September 27 and 28 for interviews. The Army Medical Specialization Corps will talk to students concerning recruitment of
officers for various fields at 10
am on September 29.
October 's schedule for interviews was also released. Boyer- .'
town Area School District , Boyertown , Pa., has scheduled a
meeting for 11 am, October 11.
Madison Township School Dis•-•
trict , Old Bridge , N. J., will be
here at 11 am October 17. At 10
am, October 23, a representative
of the Lehighton School District ,
Lehighton , Pa., will visit the campi is. Scheduled for 10 am, October 25, is the Neshaming School
District , Langhorne , Pa. The
North Allegheny School District
from Pittsburgh , Pa. will be here
at 2 pm, October 26.
All student teachers are reminded to return papers for confidential folders to the Placement
Office as soon as possible.
Detailed information about
any of these openings is available at the Placement Office.
BEHY and BILL HASSERT
Proprietors '
r
,
FINE JEWELRY
and
REPAIRING
PRIME WESTERN BlfF-^-SEAFO0I>
SPAGHITTI
M BOWL!<
BLOO
R«Ht« 11. North
i
Greeting Car ds
\ # Pride in:
I Our Town
| * Our College
% • Our Students
Harr y Logan
Corn ir fart fr Fifth Stu
We will special
order any boo k
not In stock
Stud y Outlines
And Guideline s
Mona rch Barriste r
Barnes & NobleStud ymaster
Cliff Notes
. Anyone seeking part -time en> ",
plpyment in the Bloomsburg
area should check the bulletin '¦
board hi the Placement Office or v
the posters from the Pennsyl-
1
We fake Great I
S
i
All students interested in becoming members of BSC' s yearI
book staff are invited to sign ( Men's and Boys'
anytime
in
up at Dillon House
Clothing
I
the * near future. Freshmen and I
¦
Levis
I
all students able or willing to¦McGregor Sportwear I
type are especially welcome.
I
HENRIE S
All commutin g male students
should pick up Form SSS-104,
Request for Student Deferment ,
as soon as possible from the
Office of the Dean of Instruc tion. This form must be completed and mailed to the student' s home town selective service system office by the student.
Form SSS-104 will not replace
Form SSS-109, but is required
to be on file at the student 's
home town selective service system office.
Carries For B S C
¦ rtq£ei^nt| #fci 01
.
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RACUSIN'S
^^^^^^
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1
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784-9895
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. ^^Kvii- lOHBBjwBjPIB^^^ y^^WT^BBBMewmi ^^to^H^^ Mir r^BBBBl^Bln^^^^^^^
^^^ * ' ^J*|
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C&W
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Sutt the Camfius1' . ^,
^ #
Part time
_
Employment
. . Men and Women
I
I
I.
Hanover
I
Canning Company
,
contact
Mr. Henry Fosse
I
I
I
¦
¦
Hoffman Has
S pec imens
On Bios 11
"
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The dedication of the new auditorium and library will take
place on Thursday, October 12,
at 2 pm in the new auditorium:
Guest speaker will be the Hon-
Mr. Albert C. Hoffman , u 1964
graduate of BSC, is one of a
group of biologists who have
experimental organisms aboard
the space satellite; Bios 11, which
was successfully launched from
Cape Kennedy on September 7,
1967. '
Notices To AH
Off-Campus Men
Personal Jottings
Sue Harper , a secondary English maj or from Berwyn, Pa.,
and David M. Miller, an arts
i and sciences psychology maj or
jI from Xewtown, Pa.
Dick Keefe, a business education maj or from Plymouth, Pa.,
and Evelyn Morley, a business
major from Blossburg, Pa.
Janice Fapper, an elementary
physical education major from
Hazleton , Pa., and Charles Bowman, a special education major
j from Bloomsburg, Pa.
Tom Miller, president of CGA
1964-65, a secondary science
major from Centralia, Pa., and
Darlene Wroblewski, u speech
correction major from Uniontown, Pa.
•
Rea and Derick
•
•
_
Compounding of Prescriptions is Our Most Important
Duty
i
"" ^mc
Motel and Restaurant
38Deluxe Unit *
,
Midwa y between
Bloo mibur o & Danvi lle
Rt. 11, Pa.
Stone Castle
.
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The 1967-68 Maroon and Gold band was on hand last week
at the Shippensburg game to provide entertainment and cheering
music. Although small in number, their efforts result in a good
sound. (Photo by Hock)
Special Ed. Coffee
Attentio n Staff
A "Coffee" for graduate students of Special Education will
be held Saturday, September
23rd in the Special Education
Auditorium.
A special six-week course will
be offered to new members of the
Maroon and Gold staff begin-"
ning Monday, September 25, at
7:30 pm. The one-hour class on
newspaper fundamentals will be
conducted by Mr. Richard Savage, consultant to the M&G, and
will be held in conjunction with
the regular work nights of the
newspaper. All new members of
the staff are urged to attend these
classes which will be held in Dillon House.
Graduate School
A panel discussion concerning
graduate school will be held at
7:30 pm, October 5, in Carver
Hall Auditorium. The panel will
be made up of faculty personnel.
All juniors and seniors are invited'to attend this informative
meeting. ¦
Eppley 's
Pharmacy
^^^ HSE,
4
*
I^Ht
V
*
*
Main and Iron Streets
I
Prescription
Specialist
LOFT CANDIES
COSMETICS
SUNDRIES
and
TOBACCOS
I£ I -. New!
I^Bp
$
peLeens
Phone
784-3055
Green Stomps
^ BMa
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K6-PR6ST
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COLUMB IA
Theatre
• Now Playing •
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<*»
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.,
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(Indt Tuts., Sept. 26)
slim-tapered
permanent
preis casua l
- slacks that
never need
ironi ng... by
the makers of
Leesures by
Lee
^^ y^^^ i
mMNHHHr
fc : «¦*
'v f r
psiMk.
— WINNER OF.6 ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING—
KDRATROM
^MF'
BEST PICTUREOFTHEYEAR! U|n*ra t#7]m [ ' : . - .
B
Columbia POUBES FIJ ED ZI NNEMANNS **«.
^
j ^
P— iw ,i., br llOliEUT HOLT;TECHNICOLOR11 [f]
I
A MAN FOR
I ALL SEASONS
784-4117
jiHiiimiiiinlj
AitiniitfMiniiBuiiiMiiJiwiiJiBiiiiim
NM^BMHiiBifiHeaHmewnneM/ir
.
___
J i
IBroiled Delmonlco
ISteak - - $1.35
IBIMIlMUnHHBRnlHnnlleMMHieW
¦
for the latest in fashions in lingerie and the
best known name in t own
in foundations and niceties.
IChicken in the
IBasket - - $1.09
I
¦
Eudora 's Corset
Shop
Shrimp In the
Basket - - $1.29
,
¦I
Bloonubur g
-
¦
The Harmonettes, BSC vocal
group, has announced that it will
rehearse every Tuesday and
Thursday, 3 pm to 4:30 pm, in
room 19 of the Ben Franklin
building.
Recently, the Harmonettes held
their first meeting of the school
year, however, any girl interested is still urged to join. Auditions will be held on Tuesday and
Thursday, Sept. 26 and 28 in
room 19 of the Ben Franklin
building.
^P
The TEXAS
•
Harmonettes
J
Fifth and West Streets
(On* block above the
Magee Carpet Mill )
r i
«- 784-6560
[
I
Took His Girl
"Ceraer lawfe"
| Stone Castle
1 ,
<• > " —
• j
|HiiiiiHniiiiiiiiiiiiiniiHiuiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiii| .
34 I
. Main St. and Scottown
Shopping Center
if "n
Where Dad
^P
"The Store * of Service "
• ¦—-^ ^^
'•
I
•
I
;¦
orable Robert L. Kunzig, executive director of the General State
Authority, Pennsylvania's multimillion dollar construction company. Mr. Kunzig is a nationally
known lawyer and was a government prosecutor against former - Xazi war criminal lisa
Koch , "The Beast of BuchenwaldV , who died recently.
Greetings from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania will be
by Senator ' Preston B. Davis,
fr om the Twenty-seventh Sena- torial District.
The Honorable Martin C.
Lut z, mayor of Bloomsburg; Dr.William Charlesworth, representative of the Department of Public Instruction; and John Ondish,
BSC student body representativ e, will deliver brief greetings.
Mr. William A. Lank, member
of th e Board of Trust ees, and
President Harvey A. Andruss *
will give the dedications and
n a mes f or the new audit orium
and library .
Providing music will be the
Maroon and Gold Band, with
MT. Steven Wallace directing.
This program will conclude
the required attendance for the
Freshman Orientation Program.
Classes will be dismissed at 1:30
pm in order that the student body
may attend the ceremonies. One
, thousand seats will be available
for the student body. After the
ceremony, classes will resume at .
4 pm.
The capsule was sent into space
to study the effects of radiation
All men living in off - campus
on the millions of tiny organ- housing are to turn their housing
isms within the capsule and there- contract s in to the office of the
by predict the radiation effects Dean of Men immediately if they
on future astronauts. Scientists I hav e'not already done so.
reported that the organisms were
Men who live in group housing
in satisfactory condition, af ter in the town of Bloomsburg are
.,- the capsule was picked up.
urged by the homecoming comMr. Hoffman, a native of Sun- mittee to participate in the Homebury , Pa., was an outstanding coming Parade and to take part
biology major us an undergrad- in the decoration of houses. Any
uate at HSC.
house of six men or more is eliHe is taking a program of gible to participate. The homegraduate studies leading toward comin g* committee has made the
a Ph. D. degree in Genetics at financial awards inviting in
North Carolina State Univer- hopes that all will take part.
sity, Raleigh, X. C. He is conDean Elton Hunsinger has urducting genetics research on a ged the men to participate with
tiny parasitic wasp known as the following statement, "We are
Habrobracon under the guid- hoping that all eligible men will
ance of Dr. Daniel S. Orosch. participate."
As u special service to students
and faculty, the Maroon and
Gold will print items concerning
student and faculty marriages,
engagements, obituaries of college personnel or their relatives,
college - affiliated social events,
and other announcements of this
type. Anyone wishing to submit
such material may do so by calling the M&G office, ext. 272, or
by depositing it in PO Box 58 in
Waller Hall.
Married:
Gall Orndorf, a speech correc* (Ton maj or from Huntingdon,
Pa., and Steven Kauffman , Mifflintown, Pa.
John Wardigo, a secondary
mathematics maj or from Frackville, Pa., and Barbara Howe,
a secondary English maj or from
Danville, N. .J.
¦
Speakers Slated
For Convocation
• :•
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All Students 8Sc
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"PLAYBOY , the Rabbit Head and
PMOC art the reglitere d .trademark *
of , and med with permliilon of ,
HMH Publlihlng .Co,, Inc, "
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Syste m Announced
This is the Architect 's sketch for the nine-story women 's dormitor y to be erected
between Mo rth Hall and the new Auditorium . The dorm will be the residence for 400
•
women.
Husky Hours , BNE, Bud get
Di scussed At Meetin g
(Students are reminded that all
actions of council must be approved by the President of the
college before becoming eff ective.
The President s' reply to these
minutes will be printed in the M & G when it is available.)
" Husk y Loung e hours , dress
policy, the college budget and
Big .Name Entertai nment were
the maui topics of discussion
at the first special meeting of
college council.
Concernin g H usky Lounge it
was st ated t h at the closing of
it at 10 p.m. was becoming a
ser ious problem. Coun cil will
try to arrive at an immediate
solution concerning the hours.
In the ensu ing discussion, '
Dean Riegel explained the reason for closing the loun ge was
an estimated $ 15 00 dama ge
done ' last year.
A motion was made to reopen the loun ge from 10 t o 12
Sunday throu gh Friday and to
1 a.m. on Saturday on the following basis:
Winter Weekend was discussed.
(1) that council recognize officially the seriousness of the
It was decided that no definite
pr oblem and officers of council
committment on this would be
seek student co-operation;
made until the results of the
(2) that a committee be esDionne Warwi .Jc concert during
tablished to- find a solution to
Homecomin g can be reviewed.
Members of council were in- .
the vandalism problem; council
troduced
and a discussion of
noted that "it was the general the committee on committees (see
consensus that greater personal
related article in this issue) conprid e, discretion , and the respect
cluded council's agenda.
for the right of others must be
promote d. "
Council spent most of the meeting discussing the budg et for
the college y ear and adopte d a
budget of $197,070. (Ed. Note:
This budget will be prin ted in
a future issue after approval by
Dr. Cecil Seronsy, professor
Dr. Andru ss. )
of. English at Bloomsbur g State
College for the p a st fourteen
An invitation to attend counyears , is the author of a book
cil meetings was extended to Mr.
ju st published , SAMUEL DANRober t Bender , direc tor of stuIEL , ava ilable at local bookdent activities; and to Bill Tomstore s.
linson, social recreation committee chairman. They will be able
In th is volume , Issued b y
to express opinions , but the y
Twa yne Publishers of New York ,
would not have the voting privProfessor Serons y has made a
ileges.
critical and biogra phical stud y
Contractin g "The Temptaof Samuel Daniel (1562-1619),
tions "- as the entertainment for
a renaissance En glish p oet , critic, and historian , and a contemporary of Shakespeare and
Spenser. Daniel, a man of modest and retirin g nature , was nevertheless an Im p ortant innovator
in literar y forms and ideas , and
.Twenty-six seniors have merit- i Ta ylor , Ga il Wa gner and James
undoubtedl y influenced Shake sed mention in the 1967-68 edi- Worth.
p eare and others of his time
tion of Who 's Who Among Students in Amer ican Univer sities
and Colleges. A committee of
Bloomsbur g administrators , social deans and department heads
evaluated the candidates on the
basis of pa rticipation in co-curricular activities , services to the
school , citizenship, respect of fellow students and promise of future usefulness and scholarshi p.
Following submission to a n a
approv al by the Who 's Who Organiza tion i in Tuscaloosa , Alabama , the followin g received the
SAMUEL DANIEL
Published
Thomas - Free , Douglas Freeb y,
Sherrell Fruit , Rober t Glbole,
Mark Goldman , Mrs. SusanMlllor , Douglas Hl pp enstlel , Tim- i
oth y Hoffman , J oy ce J ohnson ,
Kowalskl , Stanle y
Christine
Ku charikl , RuthMcG lnley, Stev- .,
en Messner , Mar y Molacava ge,
John Ondlih , Mar y Saueri , Gar y
SJ huey) * ;Lyle Slack; , Leahetta
Dr. Seronsy
in many ways. He was a lit-
erar y man of high prestige in
his own da y and has since then
held a respectable place a s writer down to our own times.
What Professor Seronay has
done is to examine and appraise
Daniel's development as an artist , as an innovator in En glish
literature , and as a philosopher ,
historian , and critic. The stud y
of Daniel has long interested
Professor Serons y, who has discovered a variet y of Daniel manuscripts and other materials
which make important changes
in our understanding of the poet .
Much of the research and writing of this book was done by
Professor Seronsy during the academic year 1963-64, when he
was on sabbatical leave from
Bloomsburg State College. He
then worked In the libraries of
Harvard Universit y, the British
Museu m, the Bodleian at Oxford Universit y, the Universit y
of Edinbur gh , and Huntin gton
in Californi a*
lege Will take a variet y of forms ,
at least two general lines" of effort seem warranted : (1) impor tant areas of action will require
the initiating capacit y and decision - making participation of
all institutional components , and
(2) differences in the weight of
each voice will be determined by
the responsibility which each
committee bears in regard to the
nature of the question at hand.
The Committee on Committees consists of Dean Hock , chairman; Mr. Boyd Buckingham ,
Doctor Louis Thom pson, Dr.
Robert Warren , . Dr. Charles .
Kopp, Dr. Margaret LeFevre ,
Mr. Donald Bashore , and Dr.
Paul Rieael.
Membership on the four general committees is composed of
members of the facult y who indicate interest throu gh a questionnaire which they are asked to
fill out. The facult y members are
also requested to indicate specific areas of concern.
<
Nominees must qualify for
committee membershi p according to policies appearing in the
body of this report Non-Voting
observers , who show interest in
a specific area are allowed to att e n d committee meetin gs.
Thr ough this voluntar y attendance -the facult y member will
gain experience for future nomination , for committee membership.
.
The Committ ee on Committ ees
should prepare a list of qualified nominees and non - voting
observer s for each of the four
general committees from the result of the faculty poll. The first
election should be held before
Cond 't. pg. 2
Soc. Fraternities
Complete First
Organized Rush
A significant step forward was
taken this week by the social
fraternities of BSC as they completed their first organiz ed rush
period.
A total of ninety eligible men
re gistered as p erspective pledges
throu gh • the Inter-Fr aternit y
Council.
All of these candidates were
invited to attend open meetin gs
of the six social fraternities on
campus. These frate rnities are
Delta Pi, Sigma Iota Omega,.
Phi Sigmu Xi, Beta Sigma Delta, Delta Omego Chi , and Pi*
Ka ppa Epsilon.
After meeting with the candidates at these individual functions , the brothers of the respective fraternities met and decided ,
which ones the y will invite to
pledge their brotherhood. Bids
will be sent out Saturda y to
those chosen.
Applicants for fraterni t y membership
who receive a bid from
Professor Serons y is the au thor
of some fort y art icles, notes , and more than one or ganiz ation
reviews. These include not only must choose which one they will
Daniel but also Shakespeare , pledge. All fr aternities will hold
¦
Swift , Jane Austen , Colerid ge, another meeting next week to
' ¦ ¦ * ;¦;. , : [ : ^- ' - / •% ^:: .' ^i } l ^ '?^i'\ ^:.j. \:: - r " ' ; j' i f $ i ¦ ;. /¦, and
Keats. At the moment he Is acquaint those who wish to
v
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doing some Investigat ion into pledge their organizatio ns with '
'
•
ThlBi> is the rtpry us the .scot ebocjrd told ,it at tKe enj fof the r y what he callr " a few minor prob- their ' r espective¦ '' pledge pro¦' ' ¦' ' ¦
¦
'
; nSCrSfe gaihe -at
:. ¦; . . : ¦ . . . • • ?. -:' ' ,
lems In the texts of the Shakes- ; gra ms.
Who ' s Who-BSC
hono r : Sharon Ber ger on, Patr ick Colgan , Vir ginia Curr y,
Sally Ertwine , Stevonn F echer ,
A call to mutual understanding regarding the proposed
of the
Committee structure
Bloomsbur g State College has
been voiced by the Committee on
Committees. The revised structure of the facult y and student
committees of Bloomsburg State
College has been submitted to
the facult y for their approval.
This structure report was prepared by the Committee on Committees , which was selected b y the
college facult y. The purpose of
their work wa« to brin g to full
understanding
the committee
structure. This is important for
two reasons. First , since more
and more decisions concernin g
college affairs are being made on
the legislative and governmental
level, it is vital that the academic
structure be prepared to meet
these decisions with a generally
unified and knowledgeable view
of its own. Second, a college in
which all components are fully
aware of their interdependence ,
of the usefulness of communication themselves , and of the force
of j oint action will enjoy increased capacity to solve educational problems confronting it
The variet y and complexity of
^ife if^
p eare 'playi." He lg also workin g
Inter -Fraternit yCouncil plans
on materials for a book on to make the rush period an an*
Shakes peare 'g comedies.
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Students , Faculty and Admin istrators
To Participate in New Committee Struct ure I
i/Ona i. irom pg. i
the end oFthe present semester; .
subseq uent elect ions should be
held annually.
Following is a list of the Comm itt ees. The number of members
on each committee is indicated
by a number in parenthe sis (0)
followin g the title of the commit1. Committ ee on Professional
/\ffairs (9)
a. Function: It is recognized
that the success or failure of the
Professional Affairs Committe e
rests in the nature of the procedures it will follow. To be successful , it must reflect the general
will of the faculty ; moreover , it
m ust ha ve complete hegemony in
certain areas; - while in other
areas it should have the power
of " advise and consent " Its procedures or functions need the
most careful deliberation.
b. Subcommittees :
( 1) Function:
( a) To make a complete study of all matters that
come within its purview.
(b) To meet with other
committees , department heads
and administrative officers as
may be requir ed.
(c) To mak e recommendations to the full Committee
on Professional Affairs , which
would then act on the recommendations to be made to the faculty
or administration , as may be
suitable , for ado ption or endorsement.
( 2) Subcommi ttees Include
(a) Employment and
Dismissal Policies
(b) Salary Increments ,
Promotions in Rank ,
& Leaves of Absence
(c) Professional Standards & Practi ces
( d) Professional Relationshins
• 2. Committee on Acad emic Affairs (9)
a. Function: Alth ough the
focus of academic organization
has long been on the teach ing
function of the college faculty,
what is to be taught are questions
which directly involve a college
faculty. Faculty "citizenship ",
Le., the particip ation of the faculty member in the daily details
in keeping the institution a growing concern , implies membership
on a variety of committees that
are directly concern ed with academic affairs. Members of a college faculty should assume responsibility and their share in
making and carrying out more
making and carrying out decisions on academic policies.
b. Subcommittees :
( 1) Function:
(a) To make a complet e
study of all matters that come
within its purview.
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I Sam and Son
I Shoe Repair
T
1
223 Iron Street
8 a.m. — 5 p.m.
J
Wed. until noon
T
Study With A Bag
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MtMto TtitriA D*padt laMirtMt CwyonUM
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LoBdon Siiow fooi ^
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2 weeks at the London Theatres for as low at $300.
Included In tour prlcei .
Orchestra seats to 6 fop London hits
Round-tri p air transportation 13 nights , hotel
full breakfast each morning
Transfer to and fro m airport
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130 East Main Street
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IHUMAN'f WORLD TRAV1L
If IAST MAIN O ILOOMSIURO O "HONI 784>I62O
POR ALL TOUR TRAVIL ARRANOIMINTS
111
RtiervalloM O Ttoinft O:Toun
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!"" HANOLID ,
AU AIRLINII — TRAIN! flr H0TIU
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Oatn WMkrfays
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iMj ifty ij oo ¦-- n »oo ¦
Cards .— Qjftt
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A ff fte ' thlna with any ihott repaired.
with Eieort
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18 West Main Street
Bloomsbur g, Pa,
Hallmark
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^^^^^^^7^H^^TF^^^^^B^^^H^P^I^P^^^I^^^Iv^IH^^^^|vB^|V^''^p"*"I^h^^^B
JC^^c^^^^^^^^^jI^^^^^^^
i^^^^^^^^L^^h^B^^^^E^IS^m^^^^^^h^^^^^^
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I All kinds of shoe repair
^
MILLER OFFICE
SUPPLY CO.
mS W.
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^Wp^^ Bloomsburg, Pa .
|/^^
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—Ladlt * Free
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I " "JKAREE 'Sj
NESPOLI
JEWEL ERS
¦
p.m. for those interested in bowling.
¦
Shop
Saturday, Sept 23—Football at Lock Haven 8 p.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 26—Association of Resid ent Women—
3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Thur sday, Sept 28—Freshmen Women Fun NightGym 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Saturday, Sept. .30— Football at Mansfield 2 p.m.
Cross Country, K ings College
at Bloomsburg 2 p.m.
^
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5. -Admini strative Ailairs Commus
t
y
w
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mittees:
(b) To mee,t with other policies
the
and
ooUcies,
the
with
a. Function: The nat ure of
live
committees , departm ent heads
certa in institutional respo nsibiliand administrative officers as admin istration who must
* may be required.
tips requires the establi shment of
the policies work.
b. Subcommittees Include: •
adm inistrative committe es to
(c) To make recommen1I) Athlet ics & Recreation
deal with specific policy matter s.
dations to the full Committee on
(2) College Council
The following committee stru cAcademic Affairs , which would
Or
ganizatio
ns
Student
(3)
is designed to meet thesQ reture
then act on the recommendatio ns
Orien
tatio
n
(4)
Student
sponsibilities.
These committ ees ,
or
adfacult
y
to be made to the
Publi
cation
s
(5)
Stude
nt
others
as may, from
and
such
,
be
suitable
may
ministration , as
(6) Student Fina ncial Aid
time to time, be deemed necesfor adoption or endorsemen t.
(7) Stude nt Discipline
sar y are to be establish ed in the
(2) Subcommittees include
4. Committ ee on College and
following manner.
( and will function in named
.
Commu nity Affairs (46)
b. Committees include:
area ) (a) Admissions
a. Funct ion: Educa tiona l in(1) Committees Appointed
- (b) Library Policy
stitution s have responsib ilities
Responsible to, the Pr esand
by,
(c) Curriculum
extend beyond
and
which
affect
College
ident
of
the
(if
(d) T estbooks
sphere of their own
the
immediate
(a)
President' s Coun cil
needed )
memb ershi p. If the Collimited
(b)
Administra tive
(e) Academic achievelege communit y is to function efCoun cil
ment.
fectively, we must have the under3. Comnri ttee on Stude nt Af( c) Auditing & Accountfairs (35), Executi ve Council (9)
standin g and support of our • m
' &
(d) Dedication
stu- man y publics. The development
a. Function: The area of
us
(2)
Committees Appoin ted
dent affair ^demands serio atand review of policy in the area
Responsible
to, the Dean
by,
and
tention within a college. Students
of college and communit y affairs
(with
the
Instruct
ion
of
Appr oval
spend only a fraction of their
can be coordinated most effec- of the President of the College)
college years in the classroom;
tively through the efforts of rep(a) Academic Council
the educational climate which exresentatives of those groups most
(b)
Graduate Council
* ists elsewhere on the camp us ob- . directly affected.
(c)
Commencement Polviously leaves its mark upon the
b. Subcommittees include :
icy
total academic experience. Policy
(3) Committees Appointed
(1) Convocations
review and formulation in the
by,
and
Responsible to, the Dean
(2) Concert , and Lecture
area of student affairs may best
of
Students
(with the Approv al
Series 3 Fre8hmah Parents Day
be achieved through the efforts
^(4)^ All Sports Banque t
of the President of the College)
of representatives of those mem(a) Parking
(5 ) Alumni Activities
bers of the college communit y
(b)
Who 's Who
(6) Spring Arts Festival
most directly affected: the stu(c)
International
Student
(7) Education Conference
dents who must live under the
Relations
Calendar
Bowlin g
There w ill be a meeting in the
lobb y of New North Hall on
Monda y, September 18, at 7:30
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Students Seem Interested
In Special Ed. Curricu lum
According to Dr. William !,.
-Jones, ,head of the Special 10du cation department, ihe number
of freshmen entering Special Kducation has risen considerably.
Dr. .Jones expressed the Department's interest in this rise saying,
"There is a great need for capable people in this field."
Furthermore he reports that
there will be further orientation
for fr eshmen pursuing either of
•- the fields in Special Kducation.
On September 19th, through
the Special Kducation gate, the'
College Chapter of C. K.C.
( Council for Exceptional Child-
,
ren ) held a meeting. The Sigma
Alpha Ktu ( Honor Speech and
;. Hearing Fraternity ) will hold a
meeting in the near future. Students who-aren't members and
are doing college work in these
areas are asked to contact either
Dr. Ileuwsaat of C.E. C. or Mr.
Kberhart of Sigma Alpha Ktu
for more information.
Dr. I ones also reported that
he , Dr. Farber, Dr. Reuwsaat,
and Dr. Gensemer, at tended the
Regional IV Area Workshop of
the Council for Exceptional
Children at Mary wood College
recently.
—— ___. . .. .
Clark Favored Tci
Keep Senate Seat
Despite A ge
Business Administration
"The four year pattern of.
courses for a curriculum , sequence iii. Business Administration i*> now being developed ,"
said Dr. Shepherd , director of
business education. The new curriculum sequence wilj appear in
the Catalogue , 1'iill 1968.
Students presently enrolled in
other maj ors wilJ be rcq uired to
huve a formal evaluation of their
earned credits at IJSC before
th ey, will be considered for the
new pattern. Such evaluation will
not be made before February 1,
1968. First year students who
are interested in business should
follow the pattern of courses for
"First Year-All Sequences " as
shown in the Catalogue for Fall,
1967.
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wants '*old" nien representing
them in Congress. If they nominated a. man like John Tabor,
Pennsylvania Secretary of Interior, and if he were to sound
and act like Senator Clark—
only younger, enough Republicans and Independents may
vote for him to give the Republicans another Senate seat.
To be sure, there are problems that Senator Clark will have
to meet to gam re-election. First,
there is the question of his recent divorce and remarriage.
This, however, is not nearly the "
political liability it would have
been ten years ago; for the public has matured enough to realize that this is a superficial issue
that has no relevance to a Senatorial contest.
A second potential source of
tr ouble for Senat or Clark is his
outspoken "Dovish" views on
Vietnam. A potential opponent,
Congressman Richard Schweibe
of Montgomery County, ,is avidly "Hawkish." This may cause
some embarrassment to Clark ,
if President Johnson has not solved the Vietnam me§§by election
time. It would appear that his
Republican opponent, Schweibe,
would be in greater agreement
with the Democratic Presidential
candidate.
Karely have- Pennsylvania's
Democrats had much to cheer
about. Their party has continued
to be split between reform elements and the regular organization. Since Pennsylvania is a
Republican state, the Democratic
candidate must gather votes from
Independents and regular Republicans to be victorious. Their
one bright spot, Joseph Clark,
can achieve this and therefore
should be victorious in the 1968
Senatorial contest.
•As the incumbent, Clark is a
familiar figure to most Pennsylvanians. Hehas effectively maintained an independent and popular image through the mass
media , particularly the television
program , "Your Senator's Report." Unlike most Democratic
candidates in Pennsylvania, he
has strong grass roots support
in the upstate areas.
The Republicans' best chance
of success would be to run a
campaign similar to that of
Charles Percy's against Paul
Douglas in 1966. That is to
capitalize upon an age~differentatlon between the candidates.
Clark is 67 (he would be 73
by the end of the next term ).
This is one deficiency Clark cannot counter becau se our "youthcentered cultu re " no longer
|pil!IIBIIIIHIIIIM!IIIMIIIIHIIIIHI!IIHII!IUIIII!Mllllig
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The cheerleader* are shown in action during last week's game with Shippensburg.
,
' . .• ¦ I'hotn by - Hocfc >
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The varsity cheerleaders are
presently working with the pep
committee on plans for Homecoming weekend.
Among the other varsity cheerleaders are Lynn Rhret, Elysburg; Debbie Fehr, Hellertown;
Cheryl Goodman, I Iawley; Beth
Ann Kupsky, Berwick; Kath y
May, Mount Joy; Judy Urso,
Reading; and l.inda Watts, Millville.
\
CARTER'S
CUTRATE
1 W. Main St., Bloomsburg
Luncheon
Holiday Buffer
Every Week 11:30-1:30
11:30 - 2:30
Chlldren-$1.25
|
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Each Sunday
Tuesd ay thru Friday
!
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1
$2.40
\ Hotel Magee
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" Kampus Nook "
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See you at
the Fair
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WORL DWIDE DELIVER Y
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Servin g Meals Dally ¦
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Compliments of
The
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Waffle
1
Bloomsburg, Pa.
[
784-4323
3
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BERWICK
KNITTING MILL
1
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Factor y Sto re
A>
A
Grill
I
* Sweater *
* Jr. Knit Dresses
C*
*1
* A-Line Suits
* Slacks & Slark Suits
* Men's Sport Shirts
rl
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! Built For The Students
0p«« 7 Days a W«ek
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1 The Restaurant Across From the !
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TOILET GOODS
COSMETICS
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES'
GREETING CARDS
$1.50
^i
i
112 East Main Street
|
Delivery
SMORGASBORD
All you can eat
;
Compliments of
PreierlpHon
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IOFFICE SUPPLIES 1
B^BB^BjsiffiSHiBKiMB
Fret
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B. J. Russel Named Head Wjj tj rrr^
Cheerleader For 1967-68
Miss Barbara .lane Russell, a
j unior business education major
fro'm Clarks Summ it, has been
chosen head varsity cheerleader
according to Joanne McComb,
varsity cheerleading advisoiv
The varsity cheerleaders attended Mrs. Houk's cheerleading
camp at Forksville this summer
and they are now in the process
of teaching the straight arm*
cheerleading method to the freshmen girls who are trying out
for the freshman squad. There
arc about thirty girls trying out
and from them four will be
chosen for the freshman squad.
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Save Many Dolla rs on Your
School Wardrobel
¦
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230 South Poplar Street
'
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P«,
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JS
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ton * block off Routt 11 behind Shopping iCwit r )
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Noetling Lost To Posterit y
,
by Joe Griffiths
4
As time pusses, the old m us t
eventually give way to the new,
and so old Xoetling [{nil was
torn down forcibly this summer
to provide space for a new dining hall. In past years old Xoetling served the college well, as a
classroom and office building,
but it had become outdated and
its facilities no longer were sufficient to satisfy the needs of faculty and students.
In 1886 when Xoetling was
constructed, students probably
looked upon it as a "sturdy modern building which would provide a place for the advancement
of edu cation , but its timber and
mortar had deteriorated over the
decades, and if it had not been
tor n down it would have become
a hazard to the campus. To
many upperclassmen and alumni , Noetling was an ancient landmark that brought back memories of the past, but the incoming students who perhaps never
even had a glimpse of Xoetling
Hall look forward with anticipation to the erection of the new
air-conditioned dining hall.
The new dining hall will feed
2,000 students and will seat
1,000. Surely this building will
aid the campus much more than
#
old Noetling Hall, but surely
Do you remember, that hectic someday, probably after standweek last spring when every male ing for a much shorter span of
resident in this institution fought time than did Xoetling, the dinto get ahead in line, that they ing hall will also fall victim to
might secure a precious suite in the wrecking crews in order to
the new, deluxe hotel-on-campus make spacefor something newer,
known as South Hall? And do more efficient, and able to seryou remember the early birds vice more students, but is is unsnatching up all the first-floor likely that any other building,
rooms? Well , here we are, the with the exception of Carver
elite, living in our grandiose ac- Hall, will ever achieve Xoetling's
vault of tradition.
commodations.
The fourth flo or , which wasn ot
very popular at the room-grabThe first floor residents were
bing session, is well on the way to really the smart ones. It will be
completion. In another few a while before they move in;
weeks, we are t old, the towel
meanwhile they are lounging
rucks will be available. Other- around in swank quarters downwise, the top - floo r residents town. Just think, though : when
(most of them fr eshmen, natur- they move in, they will have the
ally) are in #ood shape.
dust fr om floors t wo, three, and
Then comes the third floor. Al- four! Just grit your teeth, fellas.
ready one can detect the pres- I Xext year we'll all ru sh over t o
ence of something in the air, on the desk when room registration
the floors , everywhere. It is dust,
roll s around , so we can latch
gentlemen, it is dust. You walk on onto a first-o r second-floor room
it , sleep in it , brush it into the in th e new , complex, ultra-modcavities in your teeth, comb it ern , huge, seven-floor garganinto (and out of) your hair , write tuan edifice which is riding so
on it , and listen to it scratching
swiftly with each passing day.
your stereo LP's. You can do a
Seems to me this is where I
soft-shoe shuffle , complete with came in.
sound effects.
— Carl Nauroth
We hear that the third floor
will soon have chairs.
1968 GRA DUATES
The second floor is really
Make your appointment fo« your
shaping up fast. The last few
SENIOR PICTURES!
desks are even now being
« ««
screwed into place. Work is proDEAD LINE
ceeding at u breakneck pace. A
September 30, 1967
story is going around to the efReturn your ACTIVITIES LIST. If
fect that we will have all the
needed, extra copies aro available.
plumbing in before HomecomOBITER
ing.
Dillon Houm
Box 215
Go South,
Young Man
t
ff lnxaon atth (ifoU*
V4. XLVI
Monsoy, Soptomfeor 25, 1WJ
Doug HippflnstM
784.8189 >
Gordon Slvtll
784-7361 I!
Robtrt Holltr
Ext. 272 J
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Rlehord Scvoo *
Ext. 205 I
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,. . Scott Clorkt I
Iditor-ln-Chltf
Buiintu and Advertising
H: II
Editor . . . . . ., ,
Director of Publication *
Consultant
'AMlitont Editor
784-7361
Rlehja Btnyo
Feature Editor
Paul Alltn
,
Sport * Editor
Rupert
and
Jim
Tom
Jam—
Editors
New*
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784-3422
7€*-i761
Stove Hoek
Photo graphy Editor
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Rlehard Hortmon
Copy Editor
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Sharon Avtry
Aulitant Copy Editor , , . .
,
otn y Rt'wo 'd
Typltt . . . . . . . ., " . . . . . ., . . . .
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Down Wogntr and Mary Lou Cqvdllnl
Adw rtlsln s StaVf . , . , . . . ., .
(Staff for third edition )
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The Moroon and Gold I* located In the Student Publication * Center In Dillon
Houie. New* may be submitted by colling 784*4660, Ext. 272 or by contactlna
Pott Office Box SB.
• * •
The Moroon and Gold I* published weekly by the ttudents of Bloomtbur c State
College, Bloomtburg , Pa., for the entire College Community. All opinion * expraise d by co lumnar * and feature writer *, Including letter» *to-the-edlt«r , ort
not necessarily thoie of rhl* publication but those of the individual *.
Xoetlin g Hall in the process of being demolishe d this summer , after 81 years of service; below it, the new cafeteria that will replace it—a spotless phoenix rises from the
aged ashes.
Stud y Of Etiquette Begun By Commons
By Carl Nauroth
A new course is being offered
this year — one that will not be
found in t he college cat alo g or the
master schedule book. Perhap s
it will be included in next semester 's master book. The title of the
course is Dining 101. There ar c
several sections from which to
choose; all meet f i ve t im es a
week, starting at 5:00 (perio d
10), and 15 - minute Intervals
thereafter.
The first lecture , last Monda y
at 5:00, was well attended. The
WHAT KIND
OF A MAN
READS THE M&G?
TUNE IN NEXT
WEEK TO
FIND OUT!
pr ofessor (attempts to lear n his
identity have so far proven futile, thou gh it Is believed he is
connected with the administration) apparently discour ages ,
cuts, because the roll was t aken
as each section arr ived.
Mimeographed sheets -- complet e w ith dia gramsfor easy note
taking - were distributed to all.
Amon g t he mater ial covered in
Lecture #1 were the rul es for passing plates , silverware , and the
like , t ogether with some general
rules of condu ct.
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THE M & G
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Student s are anxiously await ing the mid - term exam , to be
given some time dur ing Thank sgiving week. Rumor has it that
the test will be ver y hard.
Although the class meets for
five clock - hours per week , the
number of credit hours assigned
to the cours e has not been deter mined as of this writin g. There is
one comfortin g thought: no outside work, collateral reading, or
term paper will be require d.
Gradin g will be on apass-or-f ail
basis. Good luck , ever ybod y —
y ou ma y need it!
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By Richie Benyo
IT WOULD SEEM best to present some type, of policy at the
beginning of the year under
which i can studiously run about
bumping into things in this column (which is taking the place
of last year's Schitzophrenia ),
but on thinking about it, i can't
see how it would be a column if
it is bogged down with policy
statements, so please disregard
this entire paragraph ... THIS
PAST WEEK witnessed the reopening of 'Bye the Way !BSC's
coffee house. For newcomers to
the college this year, the coffee
the California highways: a ton house is located in the basement '
of car always has the upper of the Presbyterian Church on
hand at 65 mph over a 400-lb. the. northeast corner of Market
stripped-down Harley 74, or a and Fourth Streets. It is opened
"hog" to an Angel, who would each Saturday and S u n d ay
rather part with an arm, a leg, night; volunteers are needed as
or his wife than with his cycle. waiters and as entertainers; Beta
Thompson attempts, an d does Sigma Delta, one of BSC's foreto some great degree succeed, most social frats , offered their
in presenting the truth about services one weekend last year,
the Angels , after he has, by re- which was a great type help, and
lating personal experiences, in- other frats, servic e, social, honterviewing witnesses to Angel- orary, or whatnot, would cercrimes, running down statistics, tainly be welcomed . . . EARLY
and riding his limey BSA among LAST ISH we reviewed Andrei
them , gotten an inside pictureVoznesensky's "Antiworlds".
one never attained by the news Andrei , as we mentioned then,
media that turned them to over- is one of the top contemporary
night stardom.
He exposes wrongs on both
sides; he corrects TIM E, LIFE ,
and POST; he admonishes the
Angels themselves; he takes his
chances from both the angels and
the police, and makes it out
to set the black legend straight.
He is not overly smooth in
Feature Staff
his presentation, however, and
one would think, at a casual
for this issue:
reading, that he is an Angels
Ben Ciullo
spokesman presenting their case
before a jury, relying on the
Joe Griffiths
sympathy of the court, to find
BUI Large
them a little less offensive than
Carl Nauroth
they really are. He is not quite
so narrow, though, in that he
Mike Stugrin
does make trips into almost
epistles extolling the demerits of
the cycle gangs.
One cannot help feeling, at the
end of the book, that ThompHe offers facts, figures , preson found them a living legend
sents episodes, but nowhere ofhimself, and . was just faintly
fers either a solution to their
position or for the people who
over-awed by their habits—his
unexpected explusion from the
live with them.
group in the final chapter seems
There is no better, no more
to bring him for cibly down to
colorful picture of the nomads
earth after pleading their case
of the highways than in Thompvery enthusiastically, giving the
son 'b book—his first-hand exbook a rather strange flavor of
perience makes it doubly readuncertainty.
able.
The Back Shelf
"HELL'S ANGELS" - by
Hunter S. Thompson — Random
House — 1967 —
Just as there is something magical that catches the imagination
when one looks at a pretty girl,
there is some magic transformation that comes over a person
when he sees, he ars , or thinks
about a motorcycle. Something
primitive, basic, emotional.
Something clicks in his head
and he is either taking a devilmay-care j oyride in his mind,
the pistons throbbing steadily
betwe en his legs, the wind rushing p ast him, muffling the roar
of his exhausts, or he is mentally or verbally cursing the
father of inv ention, who in some
long-gone era, was so rash as
to produce what has come to be
called the wheel.
The cycle-urge is much stronger in some people than in others,
especially when a motorcyclecan
make a prince of a pauper, or
a man of a misfit. This is the
urge that drives clans of bushyhaired, straggly-bearded, unkempt fraternity-brother s-of-theabsurd to turn a motorcycle into an extension of themselves.
This is the urge that makes a
man a Hell's Angel.
Having spent a year among
the by-now-infamous Hell's Angels of California, having shared
their beer and their bumps, Hunter Thompson is well prepared
to make an accurate, if not overly original, study of their particular sub-culture. .
Because of their unkem pt appe arance , the public has brand ed the An gels as an ou tlaw
group, u splinter of society that
would be better disposed of than
allowed to clutter the highwa ysand some motor ist s have t aken
direct act ion t o clear them from j
portio n of
TRIBUNA L '67-The harassment
Freshm en Orient ation Week at BSC ended with the ,
tradit ional Tribunal-the call lo their J uat desert f of
Russian poets. Knowing how
our. office was filled with letters
last year begging for more poetry " quotes for the rhyme starved masses, i' ve succumbed
to popular demand and present
this quote from Vdznesensky's
poem of 1963, called ' Hunting
a Hare"; "The urge to kill, like
the urge to beget,/ Is blind and
sinister." This might seem rather
narrow and common - ground,
unl ess we fini shed off th e rest of
the stan z a:* "Its craving is set/
Today on the flesh of the hare:
tomorrow it can/ Howl the same .
way for the flesh of a man."
Maybe he reads either George
Orwell or "Saturday Evening
Post" . . . IF YOU'VE BEEN
AROUND the campus you've
noticed the mentions of Dionne
Warwick for Homecoming. Was
too bad she couldn't come last
year over Spring Weekend when
she was supposed to; Jay and the
Americans filled in very ably,
tho. Whatever you're doing the
nite of Friday on Homecoming
weekend make sure it is being
done in the Warwick concert —
hear she puts on, a good show
. . . IF YOU'VE LISTENED
to pop music for the last few
years you're quite aware of agroup called The Association.
No, not the Frank Nitty type
Association, i usually can 't see
giving plugs without some type
of* a kick - back, but their third
album, "Insight Out", is on the
market, and for a new approach
to pop music, you just can 't beat
this group — you're bound to
hear them on the juke box in the
Feature Staff
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' This scene of late August of this year in front of the library
has been lately trimmed, sculptured, and landscaped, so one .
need not fight through the dense underbrush to find a window.
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those Froah who wetcilisb craas as to talk back to
Orientation Committee Members, or who In tome
way
did
co-oper' ate with
the¦ "ver y worthwhile
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Husky Lounge, and if you haven 't yet, you rush right down there with your sweaty pennies
in your hand, take them to the
women working in the shack
bar (They'll love to give you ,
change. . .) and get a grubby
nickel and give them a spin —
the tone quality that comes out
of the juke box isn't anything to
beat your cymbal about, but the
songs are works of art — social
criticism, even . . . IF, BY
CHANCE, you're still going to
take a trip to Expo 67 before it
closes in late October, besides
taking some heavy clothes, drink
beer, but not the local water —
it seems to have some sort of adverse effect on the American stomach — maybe it's some sort
of new scientific gimmick to give
your stomach a lube job, but it
isn't overly pl easant — besides,
drinking beer like water isn't so
bad — there's no way to ride a
monorail quite like the tipsy - "*
trip special — Weeeee!... DON'T
SMOKE the American Tobacco
Company 's answer to the Edsel:
Colony Hundreds — UGH . ..
ORIENTATION WAS OVER
ON THE 9th to a great extent
with the Tribunal, altho the
clean-up there wasn't — some of
the by-products are still in evidence — the leaders ofthe Frosh,
the Orientation Committee, and
the local militia should all be
commended for the orderly and
mature way in which the Tribunal ( always a sore spot in any
college's orientation program )
was handled — Congrats freshmen . .. !
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learning experie nce of Orie ntation. Bill Fir eitlne
Is called forth from the Fr oth auemble go to receive hit day-ln-co urt} he U quj te jtiit ly fdiuj d gttUt y
of the infamous deeds a* charged;
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BSC Cross Countg|Stfi« :
Preps For Coming Season
BSC faces an uphill buttle-in
the cross country competition
during the coming campaign but
has a core of returning veterans
around whom to build a teum.
The returnees include: Jim Gauger, Pottstown; Charles Moyer ,
Central Valley; and Bob Morrow
from Springfield. Counted on
heavily but lost to the tcum were
Dick Yost whose student teaching
assignment t akes him to Montgomery . County, and Charles
Shupe who decided not to pnrticiputc this year.
Many of the candidates for the
freshman squad have impressive backgrounds and should be
a bitf boost to the team next season. Some of the outstanding
frosh are: Jim Carlin from Drexel.
I1 ill and.lohn Rewe from Philii.^both were all - Catholic; Mark
Sophowski and Mike Horbul
who were both all-county in N*cw
.Jersey and Don Dubudwuy from
Phoenixville, a Coaches -Award
winner. Candidates who were
team captains in their respective
high schools are: Mike Kngel,
Dick McKeurn , and C i e o rg e
Mrochks. Other candidates are:
Dave Kelten, Tom Wisle, and
Dick Barbe.
N'oiie of the freshmen will be »
eligible for the varsity this year
because of the NCAA freshmen rule but enthusiasm is high and
the team is working hard to p repare for their first meet under
the new head coach, Dr. Herbert.
RICH LICHTEL LOOKS FOR A RECEIVER
Huskies Beat S-Burg, 31-20;
Kucharski Scores Four TD' s
The aerial team of Rich Lithtel ; remaining in the first half the
and Stan Kucharski clicked for j Husky line again showed its
fo ur TD's giving BSC a 31-20 ; strength by twice dropping the
win over Shippensburg in season I hurraassed Bumgarner after he
opener.
'i had spearheaded a drive to the
The Red Haiders of Shippens- I\ Huskies 13 yard line. '. The Husburg drew first blood on a quur- |; kies then took the ball on downs
terback keeper play by Steve • and ran out the few remaining
Bumgarner. The score came af- ; seconds. The half ended with
ter the Huskies were held to no I BSC clutching on to a shaky 14-6
gain on a fourth down plunge lead.
„
deep in their own territory. The
iCarly in the third period
Raiders took over on the 26and Bloom again gambled on fourth
used eight plays
culminated by j1 down and inches deep in their
Bumgarner % s plunge to score. i own territory. Denny Weir's
The PAT was blocked by Mike I plunge into the line was stopped
Barnhart.
j for no gain and the Raiders took
Before the end of the period ( over on the BSC 34 yard line.
Stan Kucharski caught the first i Bumgarner then hit Pandell Stoi*&f his TD passes on a 13 yard j ches for the TD. Bob Tucker
Lichtul aerial. Bob Tucker ' blocked the PAT pass attempt.
caught the PAT pass giving BSC '• Bloom then put the game on ice
) as a cool and collected Lichtel
an 8-6 lead.
Late in the second quarter the fired to end Stan Kucharski for
I luskies drove to the Red Raiders TD passes of 55 and 58 yards
27 yurd line, but a stiff Raider I within sixty seconds of each othline stopped four running plays ! er. The Husky defense then
and the Raiders took over.
added insult to injury by blitzing
A hard-hitting BSC line led by I Bumgarner causing him to fumlinemen N'agy, Moul, and Sur- j ble with BSC recovering the loose
ridge then caused halfback Kd ' pigskin. The Huskies then called
I lummcrs to fumble with Bloom on Bob Tucker and he split the
recovering on the Raider 's 2i) < uprights on a 28 yard field goal
yard line. Bloom wasted no timi attempt.
in taking advantage as Lichtel | With the clock showing less
and Kucharski teamed for a than u minute remaining the
sparkling TD. The PAT pass ' Raiders pushed the ball across
went incomplete. With seconds ' one 2 yard plunge by halfback
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Kd Hammers. Bloom allowed
the clock to run out and left the
field with a 31-20 win.
Bloomsburg
8 6 6 11-3 1
Shippensburg
6 0 6 8—20
Touchdowns— Kucharski < 13,
2i), 55, 58), Bumgarner (2 ) ,
! Stoichess (34 ), Hammers \2) .
; Points after touchdowns—Tucker
| ipass ); Lichtel ( run );_ Hicks
( pass ). Field goal
Tucker
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(2 8 yds. )
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Statistics
*'' ' ' ' Bloom Ship
First downs
12
24
Rushing yardage
68
47
Passing yardage 353
264
Passes
8-16
27-54
Passes intercept.
2
1
Fumbles lost
2
1
Punts
-2-32 4-38
Yards penalized
41
50
OTinininiiiiiiiiiiii
SUPPORT
THE
HUSKIES
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The Dix ie Shop
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"Tho Store of Fritn dly Sorvlct "
1
nmiiiimn
Charlie 's
Famous for
Campuf OIH Fashions
Bloomsburg,
26 E. Main St.
iiiiii
Pa/
Wit ^B
Hoagfot
So* U» For All Your Fina ncial Notch
Closod 1i30 to 3iOO P.M.;
Every Day But Friday
Rtgular & King Slzt Hoaglei
King Size Sof t Drinks
JVdElNEB
S
JVATI0NJ1L BANK
FRII DIUVIRY
Open 'til 12i30 a.m.
FARMERS NATIONAL OPHCE • BLOOMSBURG, PBNNA.
A
157 W. Main Ph. 784-4292
Bloomib urg
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The Sports Column
Paul Allen
Back in 1949 a couple of guys
from Cornell decided it would
be a good idea to revive sports
car racing in the United States.
The result of their effor ts was
a series of races on a course
that ran right down the main
street of Watkins Glen , N . Y.
and wound t hr ough t he hills
surroundin g the town. It was
sports car racin g in the best
European tradition and it was
grea t . A ser ious accident , however, forced the races off Jthe ¦
p ubl ic roads and in 1959 a new
rac ing facility was opened. Since
t hen " t he Glen " has been goin g
stron g and the race s gettin g
better ever y year.
The next race weekend, and
t he b iggest of the year will be
the U.S: Grand Prix. It' s the
las t race on the Formula One
circu it and carr ies a pur se of
over S 100,000.
It' s also the biggest blow-out
in the East. This year they expect over 100,000 spectators
most of whom will be . college
students , graduates , or dro pouts.
The races last all weekend and
the parties go on twenty-four
hours a day. Standard procedure is to get there as early as
possible on Friday, set up a
makesh ift camp , and stay all
weekend, sleeping on the ground
when you drop from exhaust ion.
It' s pretty wild, but that' s the
way things are done.
In past years we set up our
camp at the " Ch icane " . It used
t o be the gat her ing place of the'
college group. Now it' s a catch
basin for every nut who ever
dreamed of st art in g a rio t or
burn ing an outh ouse. It' s a real
zoo and the state police are the
keepers.
We chose the area outs ide the
"9 0" for the two weekends held
earlier th is su mmer and plan
to return for the Gran d Prix.
It' s ever y thin g the " Chicane "
used to be.
If y ou aren 't bus y the weekend of Oct. 1, get a group together and J oin In the fun.
It' s only a thr ee-hour drive
and all y ou need are a few
dollars , a sleep ing ba g, some
warm clothes , and a raincoat.
I
NEW UNUSUAL JEWELRY
j
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Earr ing* Pierc ed and Unpierced
I
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$1.00 up
VLSiUioSLp
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59 E. Main St. , ,
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-^ - ; " - ;.Obiter ¦' ./¦:.... T. This year , for the first time,
the OBITER staff *ts Invitin g all
students ^ with artistic talent to
share in designing the cover of
the 1968 OBI TER. The only
requirement is that the_words
and 1968 appear
OBITER
somewh ere on the face of t h e
book.
.
As a reward to the whinin g
artist , the OBITER will devote
a page in the book to his or her
picture with written recognition
of the designer 's contribution.
He or she will also, naturally,
.
receive a fr ee OBITER.
The deadline for the contest
is October 18, 1967. All entries
will be judged by Dr. Paul Riegel, adviser to the OBITER; Mr.
Robert Haller, publica tions director; and Sharon Aver y,
editor. For furt her information ,
contact Sharon Avery, in care
of the OBITE R , box 2 15.
• Lists Interviews^?* f|
Deferments For
Male Commuters
Stan Kucharski
Williams Shoe Clinic
Paul Allen
120 E. Main Street
Sports Editor
.
*C!ose to the Campus
'Fast Dependable Service
'Reasonable Rates
CONTRIBUTOR
Bob Shultz
Yearbook
1
Lee-Pat's
|I
¦Van Heusen and Manhat-f
¦tan Shirts
1
Haggar
Slacks
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§ Brentwood Sweaters I
1 formal Wear Rental If
1 Service" v ¦
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20 E. Main St.
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Ph. 7B4-5766
-I
HiHiiwininiiiiiHiiiBiiiiiwiiiiBiiiiaiini I
Over 6000 Book
Titles In Stock
;
;
LET'S GO
BOWLING AT
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, WKtKKKtUKKM KMKtMK t^KtlK ^I^K^tKK ^tB
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BSC CLASS RINGS
ijj
6 W. Main. St.
Bloomsbur gj
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ROCKS
Steak House
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(Atron from Th« Columbia Thtctr *)
Daily Specials
PLATTERS
&
"For¦ ¦a Prettier You "
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FOOT OF
COLLEGE HILL
BLOOMSBURG i PA.-
SANDWICHES
i
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MmI Ticktta Available
i
FETTERMAN' S I
Home Cooked Foodi
COLONIAL
KITCH EN
Shop AROJSV jj
BARBER SH OP
BERRIGAN'S
SUBS
j
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150 East Main Stride ?
CIom to tha Campm
784-4182
• QUALITY *
NOON-TIME SPKIALS
Prlvott Parfitp .
7 :30 A,M. — J2:00 A,M.
B^m^^^B^^ Bv^B^B^Bb
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vania State EmploymentAgency
in the dorms and Waller Hall
v
bulletin boards.
The Placement Office also announced that the United States
Marine Corps will be located outside Husk y Lounge . at 10 am,
September 27 and 28 for interviews. The Army Medical Specialization Corps will talk to students concerning recruitment of
officers for various fields at 10
am on September 29.
October 's schedule for interviews was also released. Boyer- .'
town Area School District , Boyertown , Pa., has scheduled a
meeting for 11 am, October 11.
Madison Township School Dis•-•
trict , Old Bridge , N. J., will be
here at 11 am October 17. At 10
am, October 23, a representative
of the Lehighton School District ,
Lehighton , Pa., will visit the campi is. Scheduled for 10 am, October 25, is the Neshaming School
District , Langhorne , Pa. The
North Allegheny School District
from Pittsburgh , Pa. will be here
at 2 pm, October 26.
All student teachers are reminded to return papers for confidential folders to the Placement
Office as soon as possible.
Detailed information about
any of these openings is available at the Placement Office.
BEHY and BILL HASSERT
Proprietors '
r
,
FINE JEWELRY
and
REPAIRING
PRIME WESTERN BlfF-^-SEAFO0I>
SPAGHITTI
M BOWL!<
BLOO
R«Ht« 11. North
i
Greeting Car ds
\ # Pride in:
I Our Town
| * Our College
% • Our Students
Harr y Logan
Corn ir fart fr Fifth Stu
We will special
order any boo k
not In stock
Stud y Outlines
And Guideline s
Mona rch Barriste r
Barnes & NobleStud ymaster
Cliff Notes
. Anyone seeking part -time en> ",
plpyment in the Bloomsburg
area should check the bulletin '¦
board hi the Placement Office or v
the posters from the Pennsyl-
1
We fake Great I
S
i
All students interested in becoming members of BSC' s yearI
book staff are invited to sign ( Men's and Boys'
anytime
in
up at Dillon House
Clothing
I
the * near future. Freshmen and I
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Levis
I
all students able or willing to¦McGregor Sportwear I
type are especially welcome.
I
HENRIE S
All commutin g male students
should pick up Form SSS-104,
Request for Student Deferment ,
as soon as possible from the
Office of the Dean of Instruc tion. This form must be completed and mailed to the student' s home town selective service system office by the student.
Form SSS-104 will not replace
Form SSS-109, but is required
to be on file at the student 's
home town selective service system office.
Carries For B S C
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Hanover
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Canning Company
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contact
Mr. Henry Fosse
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Hoffman Has
S pec imens
On Bios 11
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The dedication of the new auditorium and library will take
place on Thursday, October 12,
at 2 pm in the new auditorium:
Guest speaker will be the Hon-
Mr. Albert C. Hoffman , u 1964
graduate of BSC, is one of a
group of biologists who have
experimental organisms aboard
the space satellite; Bios 11, which
was successfully launched from
Cape Kennedy on September 7,
1967. '
Notices To AH
Off-Campus Men
Personal Jottings
Sue Harper , a secondary English maj or from Berwyn, Pa.,
and David M. Miller, an arts
i and sciences psychology maj or
jI from Xewtown, Pa.
Dick Keefe, a business education maj or from Plymouth, Pa.,
and Evelyn Morley, a business
major from Blossburg, Pa.
Janice Fapper, an elementary
physical education major from
Hazleton , Pa., and Charles Bowman, a special education major
j from Bloomsburg, Pa.
Tom Miller, president of CGA
1964-65, a secondary science
major from Centralia, Pa., and
Darlene Wroblewski, u speech
correction major from Uniontown, Pa.
•
Rea and Derick
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Compounding of Prescriptions is Our Most Important
Duty
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Motel and Restaurant
38Deluxe Unit *
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Midwa y between
Bloo mibur o & Danvi lle
Rt. 11, Pa.
Stone Castle
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The 1967-68 Maroon and Gold band was on hand last week
at the Shippensburg game to provide entertainment and cheering
music. Although small in number, their efforts result in a good
sound. (Photo by Hock)
Special Ed. Coffee
Attentio n Staff
A "Coffee" for graduate students of Special Education will
be held Saturday, September
23rd in the Special Education
Auditorium.
A special six-week course will
be offered to new members of the
Maroon and Gold staff begin-"
ning Monday, September 25, at
7:30 pm. The one-hour class on
newspaper fundamentals will be
conducted by Mr. Richard Savage, consultant to the M&G, and
will be held in conjunction with
the regular work nights of the
newspaper. All new members of
the staff are urged to attend these
classes which will be held in Dillon House.
Graduate School
A panel discussion concerning
graduate school will be held at
7:30 pm, October 5, in Carver
Hall Auditorium. The panel will
be made up of faculty personnel.
All juniors and seniors are invited'to attend this informative
meeting. ¦
Eppley 's
Pharmacy
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Main and Iron Streets
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Prescription
Specialist
LOFT CANDIES
COSMETICS
SUNDRIES
and
TOBACCOS
I£ I -. New!
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peLeens
Phone
784-3055
Green Stomps
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slim-tapered
permanent
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never need
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the makers of
Leesures by
Lee
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— WINNER OF.6 ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING—
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BEST PICTUREOFTHEYEAR! U|n*ra t#7]m [ ' : . - .
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Columbia POUBES FIJ ED ZI NNEMANNS **«.
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A MAN FOR
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784-4117
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IBroiled Delmonlco
ISteak - - $1.35
IBIMIlMUnHHBRnlHnnlleMMHieW
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for the latest in fashions in lingerie and the
best known name in t own
in foundations and niceties.
IChicken in the
IBasket - - $1.09
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Eudora 's Corset
Shop
Shrimp In the
Basket - - $1.29
,
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Bloonubur g
-
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The Harmonettes, BSC vocal
group, has announced that it will
rehearse every Tuesday and
Thursday, 3 pm to 4:30 pm, in
room 19 of the Ben Franklin
building.
Recently, the Harmonettes held
their first meeting of the school
year, however, any girl interested is still urged to join. Auditions will be held on Tuesday and
Thursday, Sept. 26 and 28 in
room 19 of the Ben Franklin
building.
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The TEXAS
•
Harmonettes
J
Fifth and West Streets
(On* block above the
Magee Carpet Mill )
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«- 784-6560
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Took His Girl
"Ceraer lawfe"
| Stone Castle
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34 I
. Main St. and Scottown
Shopping Center
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Where Dad
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"The Store * of Service "
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orable Robert L. Kunzig, executive director of the General State
Authority, Pennsylvania's multimillion dollar construction company. Mr. Kunzig is a nationally
known lawyer and was a government prosecutor against former - Xazi war criminal lisa
Koch , "The Beast of BuchenwaldV , who died recently.
Greetings from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania will be
by Senator ' Preston B. Davis,
fr om the Twenty-seventh Sena- torial District.
The Honorable Martin C.
Lut z, mayor of Bloomsburg; Dr.William Charlesworth, representative of the Department of Public Instruction; and John Ondish,
BSC student body representativ e, will deliver brief greetings.
Mr. William A. Lank, member
of th e Board of Trust ees, and
President Harvey A. Andruss *
will give the dedications and
n a mes f or the new audit orium
and library .
Providing music will be the
Maroon and Gold Band, with
MT. Steven Wallace directing.
This program will conclude
the required attendance for the
Freshman Orientation Program.
Classes will be dismissed at 1:30
pm in order that the student body
may attend the ceremonies. One
, thousand seats will be available
for the student body. After the
ceremony, classes will resume at .
4 pm.
The capsule was sent into space
to study the effects of radiation
All men living in off - campus
on the millions of tiny organ- housing are to turn their housing
isms within the capsule and there- contract s in to the office of the
by predict the radiation effects Dean of Men immediately if they
on future astronauts. Scientists I hav e'not already done so.
reported that the organisms were
Men who live in group housing
in satisfactory condition, af ter in the town of Bloomsburg are
.,- the capsule was picked up.
urged by the homecoming comMr. Hoffman, a native of Sun- mittee to participate in the Homebury , Pa., was an outstanding coming Parade and to take part
biology major us an undergrad- in the decoration of houses. Any
uate at HSC.
house of six men or more is eliHe is taking a program of gible to participate. The homegraduate studies leading toward comin g* committee has made the
a Ph. D. degree in Genetics at financial awards inviting in
North Carolina State Univer- hopes that all will take part.
sity, Raleigh, X. C. He is conDean Elton Hunsinger has urducting genetics research on a ged the men to participate with
tiny parasitic wasp known as the following statement, "We are
Habrobracon under the guid- hoping that all eligible men will
ance of Dr. Daniel S. Orosch. participate."
As u special service to students
and faculty, the Maroon and
Gold will print items concerning
student and faculty marriages,
engagements, obituaries of college personnel or their relatives,
college - affiliated social events,
and other announcements of this
type. Anyone wishing to submit
such material may do so by calling the M&G office, ext. 272, or
by depositing it in PO Box 58 in
Waller Hall.
Married:
Gall Orndorf, a speech correc* (Ton maj or from Huntingdon,
Pa., and Steven Kauffman , Mifflintown, Pa.
John Wardigo, a secondary
mathematics maj or from Frackville, Pa., and Barbara Howe,
a secondary English maj or from
Danville, N. .J.
¦
Speakers Slated
For Convocation
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"PLAYBOY , the Rabbit Head and
PMOC art the reglitere d .trademark *
of , and med with permliilon of ,
HMH Publlihlng .Co,, Inc, "
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