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Fri, 04/26/2024 - 19:19
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Highlights Weekend Activi ties On BSC Campus
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"Visit :to a SmidrPlanet/*the newscaster. He enters this house
; Brbadway stage hit to be pre- clad as a pre-Civi} WarjSouthern
gentleman^ because he has "come
sented
again
tonight and
tomorrow night, is a vivid proof to enjoy the spectacle of our
that an imaginative , fantastic, Civil War and thought it best
to dress in the period, When
story of the spacerfiction type
he finds he misjudged the time
can also be riotously funny. • .
This is not a tale oi Intrepid in traveling from the Fourth
adventurers traveling from the : Dimension, and is about a century
late, he thinks it might be fun
Earth to the Moon or Mars, but
of an elegant dilettante who visits to stir up some other war—a
bigger, atomic war appropriate
the earth from outer space.
With this basis for his plot, to the twentieth century-for the
the author , Gore Vidal, has a 'pleasure of watching the little
rich opportunity to present pur earth-people fight it.
When his hosts attempt to stop
civilization through the small
him, and especially when a sputend of a telescope, so to speak
tering general from the Penta—as it appears to an intruder
,
from a far more advanced culture gon tries to stop him , he demonstrates all the tricks of Superwho regards terrestrial habits
man in the comic strip in imand customs with the detachment
of an observer watching the ac- mobilizing his opponents. He
tivities of a beehive or a fish- makes the mistake , however , of
teaching the play 's heroine how
bowl.
The interstellar visitor 's main to send thought waves, and so
impression of "Earth Dwellers " she is able, in the end to foil
is that we are full of aggressive his wsr-mengeringmoves.
urges and seem to devote all
This outline of "Visit to a
our best inventiveness discover- Small Planet" makes it sound
ing ever more wholesale ways
like a pretty serious play. But
of killing each other in wars. actually , it is an uproarious comHe arrives in a flying saucer , edy at which the first-night audience at the Haas Auditorium
which he parks in a rose garden
behind
the
house
of
laughing constantly.
was
a famous
.
President And russ
Gives Comments
'
Mr , Geor ge Stradtman and Mr. | 40th Annual Homecomin g, was the
Tobi as Scar pino , co-chairmen of greatest event ever experienced
the 1967 Homecomin g com- by the town of Bloomsbur g, The
mittee , have received the follow- qualit y of this event will be difing commendation from Presi - ficult to mat ch, but certainl y
dent Harve y A. And russ: "The
40th Anniversary of the Home- it will have established a goal
coming Day, begun in 1927, was for facult y and students of the
to reach In future Homethe most successful to date . future
celebrations ,
coming
"While it is impossible to commany
students were in"So
ment all those who had a part
volved
in
the
many facets of
!
In this event , I am asking the
Homecoming
that it would
thi
s
co-chairmen of this Committee
Impossible
be
to
mention
them
to specifically thank those perall
and
commend
each
sepsons to whom we are sending
arate
ly.
There
must
have
been I
y
cop of this message.
hundre
ds
includin
g
facult
y
,
ad"The administrati on of the
bleache r section reserved at the visers, who-worke d on floats
and decorations of Husky Lounge ,
football game , the parkin g, the the
gym and off campus
fl owers, and the get-together , residences.
along ' With the semi-formal
dance , and of course, the Home- Regretfully , since we neit her
. corn ing Parade -theseevents were know their names nor have the
observed by the writer of > this space for such long lists we must
memorandum , but I feel sure that thank these many helpers col*
there were many others that were lectlvely for their valua ble efequally good that are worthy of forts .
special commendati on.
I t certain ly gives us pause to "We would especially commend
thin k of what we are going to Mr. Ell Me Laughlin for the splenbe able to do for an encore. " did work he did as a "Committee
In addition to President And- of One " in settin g up a complete
of
com- i program for the entertainment
russ' statement
men d ati on, Mr . Stradtman and of our honored guests , the reMr. Scar pino add their state- cipients of life-time awards five
ment of app reciation for the many year s ago, We hope that the sue-;
services given by the faculty and cess of this feature of our Homestudents. "We have heard many coming will merit the continuance
favorable comments from resi- of this as a tradition in future
Homedents of the town who have ex- Bloomsburg State¦ College
¦
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pressed th,e opinion that tnjs , the comings,"
^
What is so remarkable, about from the Pentagon who hardly
dares turn his back lest Jealous
the writing of the play is that
so much fun lies in a serious ", enemies there will get his corner
office with three windows. This
science-fiction type of story that
is loaded with social satire on convulsing caricature of a mil-...
our own lives and views. But no itary man trying to bluff his way
little credit for the amusing through a situation not covered
nature of the evening belongs by Army regulations whatsoever ,
is a riotously funny performance.
to the cast and to Mr. William
The entire cast gave fine perAcierno as the director.
formances. Larry Gerber is
Bruce Hopkins and Howie
Kearns, who are seen respective- . amusing as an egocentric radio
ly as the Visitor from Outer- newscaster who can explain all .
Space, and as the Army general the world's problems in fifteen ,
assigned to keep him under sur- minutes and deliver comveillance, are primarily re- mercials too. Sharon Bergeron » - .
sponsible for the evening's catches nicely the homemaking
hilarity . Mr. Hopkins dashes hap- instincts of a hostess who has
pily about in gaudy uniforms , a guest drop in unexpectedly
comments acidly on the low state from the solar system , and must
of earthly civilization , promotes worry about a daughter 's interest
a global conflict with the abandon in a man unsuitable for her to
of a child playing with toy marry.
Larry Grissinger and Iva Klingsoldiers, announces that of
aman
portray the confusions of
course he 's not from Mars, nobody who is anybody comes from a romatic young couple whose
Mars any more, and he has a future path is not too clear *
fine time chatting with a cat Ken Hassiniger, Steve Rubin, Ru s*
(whose thoughts he readily reads) sel Walsh , and James Berheiser
are seen advantageously in
on the subj ect of mice .
*
While he is neatly handling this smaller roles , and a word must
debonair character , Mr. Kearns also be given , in recognition of
huffs and puffs gloriously in a another member of the cast—
low comedy vein , as a general a cat whose performance was
purr-feet.
Mock Republican Convention
To Be Staged In Sprin g
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By Terry Carver
Bloomsburg State College will
sponsor a simulated Republican
National Convention on March
16, 1968. Mr . James Perce y,
Associate Professor of Political
Science , h as termed thi s venture
as "the greatest undertaking
ever attem pted by the students
of BSC ." A steering committee ,
comp osed of twenty stu dents and
three facult y members , met on
Monda y , October 23 , to discuss
the scope of this convention . It
was announced at thi s meeti ng
that the Social Science Depart ment has secure d Representative
Gerald R. Ford to deliver the
keynote address.
Mr. F ord has been a dynamic ,
figure in Republican politics
since his election In 1948. At
the opening of the 89th Congres s
on J anuary 4, 1985 , he was elected
Minority Leader of the U.S;
House of Represent atives , In Novem ber , 1963, he was appointe d
by President Johnso n to a sevenmember board to investigate the
assassinat ion
of
Pres ident , ,
Kenned y. As a result of these
experiences, Mr . Ford has auth ored (with John R, Stiles) the
book, "Portrait of an Assassin." Representative Ford, a recipient
of numerous awards , was
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Maroon and Gold
Pa ge 2
I Fro m The Desk Of
Feature Staff
President Andruss *
incons istent w it h t he p olicy of
the responsible authorities " it
would seem that items .held in
abey ance are held f or future
consideration and certainly are
not rejecte d or disapproved .
The Minutes of the First Regular Meeting of College Coun cil held Septembe r 25 , 1967 indicates marked deviation s from
par liamentary practice in at
least two (2) regards :
The editorial in the mos! recent I s sue of t he "Maro on and
Gold' 1 does not seem to distinguish between items "held
and
Items
in
abey ance "
"vetoed. "
Section 2., Article VII of the
Constitution of the Communit y
Government Association , Page
34 of the 1967 Pilot , provides
as follows:
"AH enactments shall be by
major ity vote of the quorum.
All measure s pas sed by the
Council must be appr oved by
the President of the College
before becoming effective ."
1, The President of the College
Council opened a discussion on
the College Com mons Service
Policy without previously consulting the Dining Room C ommittee and,
2. The fi nal act ion taken reads
as follows: "Motion passed by a
voice vote with several abstentions noted. " This raise s the
question of how many voted vocally and how many abstained.
Also Article V , Section 2., of
the Constitu tion reaps:
"All measures passed by the
Associati on must be submitted to the President of the
College for consideration , approval , or re jection before becoming effective. "
Since no ot her item on any
doc ket was so handled f rom t he
parl iamentary point of view and
the College is bound by an existing contract , t his item was
held in abeyance . The news story
seems to indicate that it was
vetoed. Such is not the case !
Since Secti on 1., Article V ,
provides that "It shall be the
duty of t he ent ire Assoc iation or
its const ituent bodies to elect
those who shall legislate on all
matter s pertaining to student
interests and life which are not
Featoridl. ..
W e are all, by this time , acutely aware of The Free Press Of
Bloomsburg State College, k nown
accuratel y as THE GADFLY .
By this time -we are also aware
of the various and sundr y positions held toward this publicat ion. They var /from the characteristic indifference held by
some students toward anythin g,
to shar p suppor t for the concept
(the concept , not the ideas expressed therein) , to ver y vehement oppo sition. It is, by far ,
one of t he most controvers ial
addi t ions to t hi s cam p us in some
years...perha ps since the incepti on of. family-style supper in
the College Commons.
None of these positions , however , make any value judgements on t he moonl ight , pub lication of BSC ....t hey are still
too taken up with the concept
of outright opposition to the establishments
of Bloomsburg
State that , t hey have not taken
t ime to evaluate t he publication
for what it is supposed to be,
and not for what it represents .
The name implies what it is
rep resentat ive of; t he supp ort
and opposition that it has received does not imply what value
it has as a publication.
It would be unfair to evaluate
GADF LY against campus organs
suc h as P enn State 's FROTH ,
in regards quality of pri nting,
f ormat , etc., so we 'll just ignore that part of it.
It is fair , however , to take
cons ideration of lay out , for in
a four- page phamphlet-magazinenewspaper such as the GADFLY ,
there is great varie ty available ,
with a consistent centerfold layout available, as well as a per fectl y-sized front-page arrangement for some interesting , if
not sim p le, layouts for the lead
stor y-article -satire , etc. In each
ff lmcoon mxb (f0I&
Vol. XLVI
Friday, Octobtr 27, 1967
Ho. 8
Editor-ln-Chlaf
................. .... ...
Business Manager
Director of Publications
Gordon Slvell
784-7361
Robert Halter
Ext. 272
Richard Savaoe
Ext. 205
Seott Clarke
784-736!
Richie Benyo
Poul Allen
Tom James and Jim Rupert
t
Consultant
Assistant Editor
.
Doug Hlppenstlet
784-8189
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
News Editors
Photo graphy Editor ,
Steve Hock
Copy Editor
.Richard Hartman
Assistant Copy Editor
James Carter
Asslstont Copy Editor
Sharon Avery
Advertisin g Manage r
Mary Lou Cavalllnl
Circulation Manager
Mike Stugrln
Typl»ts ., . , , ,. . , . , ,, . , , , ,
Kathy Reimard and Eileen Gulnac
Editorial Board—Dou g Hlppenstiel , Richie Benyo , Paul Allen . Richard Hartman,
Scott Clarke , Jim Rupert , Tom James , Sharon Avery.
Additional Staff
Wayne Campbell , Jeff Kleckner and Walter Cox
Bill Teitsworth, Grace Waznewko, Marlene Kanobln, John Nee, Carol
Batzel , M.'ke Stugr.n , Tina Arnoldin , Jan Pios, Jan Poux, Clark Ruch ,
Sandy Zubowicz , Ben Ciullo , Evelyn Lulezey, Wayne Campbell ,
Y
Dawn Wagner.
(Staff for eighth edition )
* * •
in the Student
The Maroon and Gold is located
Publicati ons Center In Dillon
House. News may be submitte d by calling 784-4660, Ext. 272 or by contacting
Post Office Box 58.
'
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The Maroon and Gold Is published weekly by the stude nts of Bloomsburg State
¦ .-> • ' "College ,' Bloomsbur g, Pa., for the entire College Community. All opinions ex'
pressed by column.sts and feature , writers , Including letters-to-the-editor , ore
not necessarily those of this publication but those of the Individuals.
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RICHIE BENYO
-editorCarol Batzel
Ben Ciullo
Joe Griffiths
Ron Kashlack
Bill Large
Carl Nauroth
Bar bOl uszak
Larry Phillips
Barbara Tommor
<-
issue . The GADF LY , h owever ,
does not take time to consider
this: they use a meager straight run layout , merely placing ar ticles in their supposed order
of imp ortance , and filling one
column until they must go to
t he next , maki ng it necessar y
for one-column headlines that
add nothing to the effect of the
publication. Very primitive .
As the "Free Press " of BSC
GADFLY would normally be a
"newspaper " that would rival
the college paper in cover age ,
simply interjecting their own
views of the situation s where ever there is room on the editor ial page, and w henever t heir
is a chance in the slanting of
a news stor y as happens with
the dailies at Columbi a Univers ity. They certainly fall short of
this , for the only news they give
^is week-old
excerpts from the
Nfew Visric Tjq }# «- which is of
course of paramount interst and
importance to the Free Press
of Bloomsburg State College.
The GADFLY pr ints satire .
If the GADFLY prop orts to being
a satire magazine t hey have again
fallen on their many -faceted eyeball. A satire magazine is a
sat ire magazine : it leaves no
room f or one piece of stra ight
wor dage ; It is subtle , it is accurate , it is conc ise , well-knit ,
timely, well-thought -out , and interest ing because of its own
mer its , and not merel y on the
mer its of alliterat ion to the
sounds of t he names of the peop le
that it would satirize. It is not
childish , ineffectual , and *«hung ud "—that is for junior high school
newspapers . A seventh grader
might be able to identify with
GADFLY.
Somehow one cannot help but
get the feeling that the editor of
the GADF LY would LOVE to put
his name to the little abortion
that it is , and there is no reason
why he shouldn 't-the editors of
true satire magazines on American campuses don't hesitate to
put a complete masthead In each
issue , for they are skilled enough
In their art to know what to
pr int , how to print It , and when
to print it , so that they need
not worry about after-effects :
some people apparentl y just
aren 't that skilled.
"We of The GADFLY are trying to reestablish chaos and
confusion In a becalmed wor ld."
True -to-form magazines of the
sort that GADFLY would emulate
are striving for some form in
a formless campus-they are
striving to brin g some meanin g
out of chaos. It Is comfortin g to
see that GADF LY is working
backwards when they preach
moving forward in matters of
Importance.
One cannot deny that the concept of a free-press here at
BSC Is a praise -worthy one-4f
it is handled well. One cannot
deny that there Is muoh to be
gained from such a free-press
-if it meets its obligations to
the people who read it and are
affected by It. One cannot help
but agree that any advance is
good-4f a movement is truly
an advance. GADFLY , though ,
seems to be none of these.
But, let it live while it can.
for at its present ra te It will
not be long before the novelty
wears aft of the old GADFLY
and it. becomes as interestin g
to the student at BSC aft last
;wwk»s, bulletin * board.* , /(Let
lMhM iA ^ lJt '
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, lm ' rj i x j r f h i
The View Fro m Here
When one hears the word "college," he usually forms a mental
picture of old red brick buildings
with cracked walls cover ed by
moss and ivy. Surrounding these
ancient edifices with the ir clock
towers and decades of tradition
are acre s of lus h green grass
scattere d w it h huge s hade trees
under which students lie reading
or mere ly enjoying the warm
autumn weather . This type of
college seems to be an ideal
environment for one v wh o not
only wishes to learn of nature 's
beauty through the word s of the
great romant ic poets , but also
wants to study nature 's attrac tiveness by placing himself in
direct contact with it.
These
college campuses on
w hic h nature 's greenness t hrives
are now being replaced by modern
I:
i]
centers of learning, which are
not concerned with natural
beaut y . The new colleges consist of cold gra y buildings which
either loom straight upward
or spread out hori zontally in
various shar ply cut geometric
shapes. Of course grass and
trees st ill ex ist on t he areas
arou nd these structu res. However , they did not grow the re
originall y, but were placed t here
by ffiefi under the direction of
an architect who had planned
the positions of every shrub and
blade of grass months * before
construction even began. If one
does wish to find a spot to rest
on the cool green turf of the
new campus on a sunny day,
he will notice another addition
to the scener y, a sign which
boldly states "KEEP OFF THE
GRASS" .
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Dear Sir:
A recent public -opinion poll, of the college students , I feel
concern ing the candidate for of- that those who knew nothing about
fice in the , 1968 elections taken the campaign and other current
by this writer resulted in some news should be considered. Mak definite conclusions.
ing the news available , throu gh
One, the majorit y of the people the widely-read college paper ,
questioned were eithe r unaware will perha ps help to keep every of t he candidates ' names , or un- one up-to-date , requiring little
sure of the political Issues in- time and producing good benefits .
volved. The reasons given for
Thank you for your time and
this lack of knowledge were 1.) consideration .
not enough time to read a newspaper , 2.) source of Information
Barb Stienhart
not available, 3.) general disinterest in the campaign .
(Editor 's Note: Your comments
It is apparent , then , that an have some merit . We have begun
available , concise analysis of the to attempt to do this thro ugh
news-makin g people and ideas the Tuesda y and Thur sday supwould perhaps benefit everyone. p lements , but , as you say, the re
This is what I am suggesting , is still a great need for a growing
that a weekly round-u p of news awareness of the politic al Issues
be compiled for the Maroon & of the day. It would seem good,
Gold , perh aps ju st a paragra ph as you mention , to p resent more
long, which can be enlarged as of this in the pages of this paper .
material presents itself , It could We are not , however , staffe d
be set upon an International , na- with paid editors or staff memtional , and-or local level, thus bers as many lar ger college
pro viding the students with a paper s, and can the refore acview of the world situation .
complish only so much with the
The other statement , dealin g little volunte er help that we preswith the poll Itself , pro vided ently enjoy . It you 've got an
these conclusions. Of the stu- hour or so a week you might
'
dents asked , 88 per cent backe d take some time to compile such
Johnson , 4 per cent Humphrey , a weekly summary , which we
and 8 per cent Robert Kennedy
would be only too happy to pr int.
for Pr esidential Nomination on Our box number Is 08 , and all
the Democratic ticket; 12 per material must be in by Friday
cent backed Robert Kennedy , 72 evening ,) .
per cent H. Humphre y, and 16
per cent were undecided for VicePresident -Democrat .
48 per cent backed Oov. Rom.
nay , 32 per cent Gov. Reagan
and 20 per cent undecided on the '
Republican ticket for President .
24 per cent chose Gov. Rocke feller , 4 per cent Gov. Reagan ,
4 per cent Gov. Shafer , 8 per
cent Mayor Lindsay , and 60 per
cent were undecided for VicePresident ial candidate in the Re;:
¦
publican party nominations . Al-i
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October 27, 1967
T>*& fe Vi.
^
Maroon and Gold
MBIia rM
By Richie Benyo
The big event of last weekend
(in addition to another win for
the BSC gfidders) was the Friday night concert of Miss Buffy
Sainte-Marie, the tempermeutal
folk singer who has risen to
success in less time than it
takes to tell about. It was very
gratifying to see the very heroic
turnout for the first of the
Evening Entertainment Series
program—it will probably go
down on record as the new Haas
Auditorium 's first full house.
But back to Buffy: it is a real
shame that due to her temper,
mental qualities she wouldn 't allow flash photography during the
concert , for she presents a
rather interesting study in expression. She certainly isn't beatiful , as far as beautiful women
go, but she does have a certain
quality about her which can fool
a person into believing her to
be a little more than they expected (this in addition to her
olde Englande forest-green mlnstral attire). Somehow it seems
impossible to enj oy her perform-
Lake front lots:
ances unless you have either
become, addicted to folk music
or you realize the complexity of
her performance of such a variety of songs that are indiginous to so many different races
of people throughout the world.
She seems to be so hugely successful because of the universal
appeal she has to so many different types of people: to a
sociologist she is a member
of a minority group, to a linguist she is a practitioner of
many languages, to a historian
she is a living symbol of a
dying race, to a musician she is
a person in possession of a very
versitile voice range and a grasp
of primitive and not-so-primitive
music forms and instruments ,
to the wit she is a person In
possession of a very basic humor,
to the folk buff (no pun Intended)
shej s an accomplished folk singer , to the social reformer she Is
a very able critic of our age-
Beginn ing at $89.95
to each person she is something
unique to that person alone: for
myself , I found her music most
interesting before the concert;
as a result of the concert I
can't help but be drawn to her
music, not so much for what
they say, or how they say it,
or why they say what they say,
but because Buffy says it.....
Speaking of music: Over homecoming weekend, Sunday afternoon to be exact, there was a
dance in the Waller Hall Lounge
with the Sophie Cyrle: a group
new to the circuit, but consisting of mostly veterans from old
groups, such as the Playboys
Inc. of Varsity Grille fame: it
has taken the Playboys many
years to really come along with
something solid and concrete ,
but the Lesters Jones & Glrton
have finally come up with a
truly good sounding group. They
did exceptionallywell that Sunday
under very adverse conditions:
there just seems to be something lacking in a dance-in-broadday light. Look forward to many
college engagements for this.,
bunch of guys—I hope that their
BSC engagements in the future
Buff y: Ifs Her Way
can be in the evenings, though,
so that they can really let loose..
Some people say that Blooms- cars left sitting in it looking
burg State is famous for its like so many islands dotting the
wrestling teams, or its Business lake surface. Now we must all
Education department, or its co-operate with the college In
making BSC beautiful again, so
Special Education department, or
its expansion, or more recently please don't park your cars there
for its football accomplishments, from now on when they're going
but that is all being dwarfed by to fill the lake: the architects
a new feature: Husky Lake.Every might have trouble bringing In
the concrete forms and the trucktime that it rains just slightly
heavily it comes out of nowhere, loads of vines so that they can
and forms in the lake-bed at give it the Hanging Garden effect
the top entrance to the Harvey A. as depicted in the triple-murals
Andruss Library. The only prob- on the walls of the College Comlems with it is that some stu- mons. After all It Is advice
dents make the mistake of taking for your own good-besides , you
it for a parking lot while it don 't really want to row out to
ydur island-car when you want
is being cleaned out , and then
when it is refilled there are to leave, do you?.
J \\oviest Sp eakingSummarily
The big news In the silver screen world happens to be novels
rather than original screen plays .
More and more books are in the
Hollywood mill being trans f orme d into successfu l moti on
pictures.
THE DIRTY DOZEN lends itself
easily to this transformation pro cess. It is a study in human nature
and person ality as well as an
action- packed thriller. There is
not one uneventful , d u ll moment
in the whole cour se of the picture. Acti on and excitement are
jam-packed into every scene.
This sequence of action follows
a pattern that evolves from comedy into suspense and drama.
Trainin g of the convicts is humorous , th en they are let loose
on the German high command
and the emotion changes. From
the n on it holds your spelLbould at tention.
Dirty Dozen is filled with sur pr ises , but the biggest of all
comes In the form of a husky
tan k name Jim Brown . His able
portr ayal was equal to any of
the seasoned stars. The Dirty
Dozen is a neat little package
of adventure , humor , action and
excitement at its highest,
The transformatio n process
was hot so kind to UP THE
DOWN STAIR CASE, It becomes
0
BhS
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personalitie s, situations , and
A tip to the person who may
problem children. Whether the get the nerve to attend -don't
stor y was to be a look at big walk out: it gets better (or wor se
city school life or a study of according to your modesty).
one teacher, I don 't know. The
movie sampled many situations ,
Also, on the first-run screen
but resolved few. "A Day In scene are: ENTE R LAUGHING ,
The Life Of Sandy Dennis As produced by Carl Reiner and
A School Teacher " would have blessed with glorious re views;
been a better title , for without THE TAMING OF THE SHREW
her all would have been lost. with Taylor and Burton (no more
J ames J oyce's ULYSSES was need be said); A MAN AND A
finally , brou ght to the screen WOM AN is a deep and per plexand shockin gly so. This master- ing model' of French re alism;
piece of cinematography can best THOROUGH LY M ODERN 1 MILL be compare d to movies of the IE hailed as the year 's best
BLOW UP variety . It is a movie musical.
th at commands your complete
In conclusion is GONE WITH
attention If you have the slightest THE WIND , back again for its
wish of understanding it. I was sixth run since 1939. This time
attentive and still didn 't under- it b oasts stereo sound and 70mm
film. Who knows-maybe next
stan d It.
The first half is a kaleido - time they, will alter the film
get rid of Gable and Leigh
scope of a day in the life of to
and replace then with Liz &
two men * and their imagin a- Richard
.
tions. The second part is a
travelouge of sex with no holds
*The two men are Stephen
barred , It seemed to be a nafc. Debelius and Bloom ,
tated rea ding of the novel using representing Ulysses and his son
the movie as illustrations . It in their wanderings : Stephen to
describes sex in about the frank - find his fathe r , Bloom to return
est and most descr iptive terms to his former homeland
.
imaginable . Unbelievable , it did
••The lady is not young, but
not become vulgar . The sex mono- quite Into middle-age, and is
logue comes from the poetic lips the wife of the afore -mentioned
of a young lady as a glance Bloom , and represented a slight¦
¦
J ntoHer mind.**" ' ' V 1
' " '/ ! ly ' unfaithful wife of- Ulysses.
"GILES GOAT ^BOY"-by John
Barth — Fawcett Publications ,
Inc.-1966-41.25 in paperback —
.776 pages.
John Barth 's "Giles GoaWBoy "
Is a gre at tra gi-comedy written
I n th e manner of such auth ors
as Proust , M ann , Joyce , and
Faulkner , His style is multitextured , his story multi -leveled.
The Ideas presente d make the
wor k a bowdy-philosophtcal one
with its existence justifie d by the
immensit y of the subject matter.
This "Revised New Syllabus "
of George Giles , goat-bo y and
G ran d Tutor , reflects the work
of an imagination so lar ge that
the novel must be of an all*
encompass ing nature . Geor ge
G iles , of course, Is the hero(?)
of the work and is followed from
his early days in the herd to
his late r position as unwholly
acclaimed Grand Tutor , or neomesslah.
Giles ' experience of learning
begins when he is a member
of the herd at a goat farm far
from the campus . His tutor 's
guidanc e and his own Intuition
lead him to believe that he Is
the son of W.E.S.C.A .C., the
compute r that controls the whole
West Campus . W.E .S.C.A.C. ar tlflcall y Inseminate d a librarian
who had been feeding its memory
banks , and the result was a child
who would be a messlah and who
could straighten out the problems
of the whole West Campus . But .
it seems that from his first
moment on campus George has
more trou ble than not , convincing
others of his special assignm ent.
Barth 's symbolism , and work
with psychology, philosophy , science , psychology, and d rama
always gives the reader a chance
to participate in the Intellect ual
exerc ises pr esented. His ideas
could be the subject of research
papers; his bowdiness the subject of the censor . But John
Bart h Indulges in the pre senta tion and examina tion of a symbolic character In a symbolic
setting.
As such , this work , rich in
language and content , but enjoyable enough for those who
wish to skip the intellectual finery (if the y can), can be an
entire ly pleasan t experience .
John Barth 's ton gue-in-cheek
ser iousness provide s a rewarding tune for about two weeks
of beautiful reading .
Pa ge 4
The Sports Column
PAUL ALLEN & RICH CAMOUSO
i
Houk can see only thr ee definite
wins. The rest , he. says , the team
will have to fight for .
In addition to the regular schedule Coach Houk is trying to organize an AAU meet for December 2. In such a contest the
competition would be open to any
AAU member and would give the
wrestlers va luable competition
before the regular season .
Turning to basketball , Coach
Earl Voss in his second year
is beginning to reap the benefits
of his personal building program
and should ' pl ace an extreme ly
str ong, team on the court . Currently there are about 22 players
vying for positions on the team
inclu ding the five starters f rom
last years squad : Jack Carney ,
P almer T oto, Jim Dulaney , Rico
Fertic , and Bob Matuza. Of the
five , Fertig is the only senior
and the other four mem bers are
juniors who began with Voss as
their freshman coach in his first
year at BSC. In addi tion , help
should come from last year 's
freshman team tha t, compiled a
16-3 record. Stars f rom that
team fighting for varsity berths
are Mark Yanchek , Jeff Hock ,
Bill Mastropietro , Bob Snyder ,
and Larr y Monogh an.
Coach Voss pointed out that we
should have a much improved
and better balanced team than
last year. He looks for an improvement on the team 's 9-5
record though the entire league
should be somewhat impro ved.
Again the team to beat will
be Cheyney although they lost
a couple of their stars. One of
their new acquisitions will be a
7'2" giant by the name of Filmore.
I nf ormal swimm ing p ract ices
begin October 2 , giving Coach
Eli McLaughlin only 25 days of
pr act ice in which to come up
with a strong grou p of swimmers to meet the Temple Owls
on December 2. Coac h McLaughlin re p orts th at t he p ros pects
loo k good with Senior lettermen
Jim Poechmann (captain) , Fred
Bausch , and Britt Jones returning. Juniors who won their letters
last year include Bruce Bendel ,
Tim Carr , T om H ouston , and
Ed McNertney. In addition there
are good men movin g up from
the freshman team.
Th e coac h i s ent husiastic ab out
t hi s year 's team and p oints out
that his swimmers will be shoot ing to knock off Temple in that
opening meet. The Huskies have
never beaten the Owls. He added
that he was pleased to have Britt
J ones, holder of the BSC record
in the 200 breast stroke , back
af ter a year 's lay-off.
It shoul d be a big year for
the swimmers and Coac h McLaughlin hopes that the team
With the fall sport s season
drawing to a close , the tempo
is beginning to quicken for the
* members
of the wrestlin g,
basketball , and swimming teams
as the y prepare for their coming
contests.
Currentl y the wrestling team
is holdin g informal practice sessions under the direction of Steve
Pet ers. Regular evening prac tices will be held by Coach
Houk starting October 30, and the
team will remain on the evening
schedule until the end of football
season , November 10.
At the conclusion of last season
the prospects were for an outstandin g team but at least thre e
key personnel will not be wre stling for the team placing the responsibilit y on the shoulders of
the remainin g members . C oach
Houk looks forward to an extremely tough season and re sts
his hopes on the attitude of the
team and excellent conditionin g
to pull the Huskies throu gh. He
adde d that three or four of the
teams we will meet should have
superior material but that , of
cour se , does not mean they will
be unbeatable.
A pre liminary roste r of the
team has Wayne Helm wrestling
at 123, Curt Grabfelter at 130 ,
Ron Russo wrestling at 137,
st udent coac h Steve P eters at
145 , National Champ Joe Gerst
returning at 152, Sophomore star
Arnie Thom pson at 160, John
Stut zman and Jack Wallace at
167 , Mike Cunningham at 177,
Dave J ones and B ob J anet at
191 , and Bill Moul at heavywleght , Others who could break
into the lineup are sopho more
Jeff Prosedda , Jim Owen , Ray
Tellier , and Mike Barnha rt . The
team will open at home in a
qua d ran gular on Decem ber 9 ,
with Indiana State , Miam i of
Ohio , and Appl achain State. All
are cham ps in their own regions
and should provide a good show
with which to start the season.
The rest of the Huskies ' home
sche dule include s such teams
as Southern Illinois , Clarion , will generate more enthusiasm
and East Stroudsburg. There are in competition swimming than
twelve mat ches in all and Coach in any other year .
'MBii ^MMnaMBHHHMMBMiMHiaMMMMiHMIHM
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SPORTS STAFF
Paul M. Allen
SPORTS EDITOR
CONTRIBUTORS
Rich Camoutt
Bob Shultz
Clark Ruch
'Tlit Bruto"
V^^HWWH^^^V^^^HV^V^^^l^^^V^H^B^^'
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^^HV. ^^ V
Bob Tucker pul ls in one of the four TD's he score d in leading the Huskies to a 28-19 victory
Huskies Roll To 28-19 Win
Over MSC. .Four TD Passes
The Huskies picked up their
fifth win of the season with an
easy 28-19 victory over theMauraders of Millersville State Col-'
lege as the Lichtel to Tucke r
pa ss combination hit for four
BSC touchdowns.
The Huskie s caught MSC off
guard on the first play of the
gam e with a 58 yd. pass from
Lichte l to Greg Berger . The
play carried from the BSC 20
yd. line to the 22 of the Mau ra ders. On the next play Lichte l
hit Bob Tucker in the end zone
and took an immediate 6-0 lead
as the PAT kick by Tucke r
was wide of its mark.
Th e H uskies came bac k to score
their second TD on a 73 yd.
drive that started when Tucker
intercepted a MSC pass on the
Husky 27. The long gaine r of
the ser ies was a 41 yd. completion and run with Bob Tucker
on the receiving end of the Lichtel pass. Edrman then added the
Baske tba ll Hopes
High At W-bu rg
The accent will be on youth
this season as C oach Hal King
of Waynesbur g College, Waynes bur g, Pa ., builds for the future .
Of the 20 squad members , 15
are freshmen. The remainder
of the squad is composed of four
lettermen -two who were starters
last season-end one squad member from 1966-47. For the first
time King will have numbers
and players with which to work ,
providing a competitive situa tion. Last year the re were only
10 players on the entire squad.
Also, the Yellow Jackets will
have a little more height this
year with only two of the 15
freshmen under six foot. However , only two tower over 6-5.
On the minus side of the ledger
will be the lack of experience
which might stand In the way
of Waynesbur g gainin g Its first
winning season In 19 years.
Chi ef amon g t he returnees are
a pair of guards-Tom Cunnin gham and Mike Flelschauer. Both
were starters
last season.
Fleischaue r was the number
three scorer on th e squa d, averaging 12,1 points per game.
He also hit on 44 per cent of
his shots from the floor. Cun ningham average 9,6 points per
outing last year , Heading the newcomers are a pair of 6.4 . lads,
Jack Kiger and Joe Sipe, along
with Jeff Collier and Larry Shef¦
I; .'T;: < n* C ' <• * '¦ • '¦
;
'V v > ''
'¦'; <. •' i' .,' >¦ * ' ¦•¦'¦¦ '¦-. '
'
two point convers ion on a pass
from Lichtel and BSC led 144)
early in the game.
Then it was Millersville 's turn
as sophomore half back Dick
Bar bacane led t he M arua ders
on a 47 yd. scori ng drive in
10 plays . The PAT attem pt was
unsuccessful and BSC led 14-6.
On the first play from scri mmage after the Maurader TD ,
Rich Licht e l hit Bob Tucker on
a 74 yd. pass for another Husky
touchdown . The pass for the
two p oint convers i on was good
and BSC took a 22-6 lead.
The rem ainder of the half was
scoreless although the Husky
defense was called up on to h alt
MSC dr ives deep in BSC territory
on two occasions.
Early in the third period the
Huskies took advantage of two
breaks to scor e their final touch down of the day. First MSC
f um bled on their own 2 7 losin g
the ball and then were called
f or pass inter feren ce on the
1 yd. line after it had appeared
they had turned back the Husky
threat. From that point Rich
Lichte l threw a flat pass to Bob
Tucke r who carried the ball in
for his fourth TD of th&> day
making the score 28-6 with an
unsuccessful PAT attempt .
MSC t hen turne d aroun d and
drove 64 yds. on the ground
to score t heir second touc hd own
of the game with Barbacane going
over on a fourth down play for
the score . The two point conversion was good and BSC led
28-14.
The remainde r of the game
saw neither team able to score
unt il Barbacane again drove into
the end zone from the 3 yd.
line with a little over a minute
rema ining on the clock. With
t he unsuccess f ul PAT attem pt ,
BSC was conten t to play out the
clock to claim the win.
Huskies To Host
Cheyney Toni ght
Featuring one of the fastest
backfields in the state and a
line averaging over 200 pounds
per man , the wolves of Cheyney
State College will be hoping to
mak e it two stra ight over t he
Huski es. Last year the Wolve s
turned in a startling 14-0 upset
victory over BSC and we nt on
to post a 4-3 recor d for the
season. So far this year Cheyn ey
has compiled a 3-2 record on
the gridiron . Their wins came
at the ex pense of Edi nboro in
the season opener , Gallaudet ,
and Kutztown while they lost to
Mansfield and East Stroudsb urg .
No longer a member of the
PSC AC , Cheyney plays freshmen
on their varsity and three of
them have found their way into
the starting lineup. Allen Phil lips starts at center , Ron Scott
at halfb ack , and N orm Burns
at defensive end.
Leading upperclassmen on the
team are return ing quarter back
p___
Ron Hollts , offensive captain Jer ry DlPhlll lpo an end , and flanker back J ack Lemon .
On the defense the standouts
Include captain Allen Hollis and
safet y man L onnie J oh nson w ho
doubles as a very quick punt
return art ist.
M * G NOW
a.
Octob er 27, 1967
,'
Maroon and Gold
Page fi
HARRIERS DROP OflE TO MILLERSVILLE STATE
4
'
¦
Charlie Moyer fir Chuck Bowman Cheer on a Determined Tom Henry
Last weekend the BSC harriers
travelled to Millersvllle in an
attem pt to share the victory
laurels with the Husky gridiron
team in the dual competition f or
the afternoon. The gridders came
home with the stuff , but the harr iers Just couldn 't break their
slump .
In the half-time performance on
the M auraders' new 4.5 mile
course, the always-dangerous
P aul R hoad s took fi rst p lace for
Millersville State with a time of
25:41 , setting the stage for the
25 to 30 win that was to follow.
Charlie Moye r , BSC 's number one di stance man, took a comfortable
second place with
a 27:38. Chuck "The F lying Parson" Bowman was slate d for
third , which would have brou ght
home the win for the Huskie s,
but had troubles with the course.
Having run amuck , he wasp assed
out by Millersvllle 's Elam Lawtz
?
ROCKS
Steak House
and Larry Linneman , putting :
Chuck Into a very embarassing
fifth place , followed strongly by
Tom Henry , who completed the
course in- 30:06 , and Larry Lai - ;
decker , a fairl y consistent run ner this year , who did the 4.5
in 50:10. .
Bill Bowers of MSC came In on
his tall , followed by his team mate Jay Jones. Big Jim Gauger
finished it out for the Hu skies
as number 10 with a time of
32:01.
Onc e again , some team running
would have helped BSC greatly ,
although there was some
evidence of a movement toward
that end in way of the Laidecker-
NESPOLI
J EWELE RS
Comtr East & Fifth Ste.
PRIM! WESTERN BEEF—3IAFO0D
SPAGHE TTI
Home Cooked Foods
NOON-TIME SPECIALS
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Private Portiti
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BARBER SHOP
8
784-9895
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FOOT OF
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.
. -——————
— — —-„ .
I{
Shop ARCUS'
ises to be an interestin g race .
the tale.
The Bucknell cancellation motivated
Coach
Herbert
to
schedule a meet with Lycoming
College at home on October 31,
next Tuesday. It will be the first
time that these two teams h ave
met with the thinclads and prom-
S!!!imillHI!l! VI!IUHI]in!UI!UinnipilU!ni! 11
|
IH!lI
25 I. Main St., Bloomiburg
as a result, but 4:00 will tell
Henry finish. Whether or not this
can be perfected by the time
the season end s remains to be
seen.
Yesterday the Husky harriers
trave lled to New Jerse y to face
the Jersey cross-country champions of Tre nton State . This
meet promises to be one of the
most difficult of the season.
Thi s afternoon they runontheir
home course against Ch eyney
State. They should be tired from
the long tri p to New Je rsey
the day before , and may have
their difficultie s with Cheyney
ww
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to* *
Pa ge 6
Rich Leahy , a BSC senior and
brother of Delta PI social fra ternity ,did not spend the summer
worki ng at the shore, and he did
not earn a small f ortune as a
summer playgro und director . He
,
was one of a cho&sn few college
stud ents w ho were I nvited to
spend a sum mer on Hubbard
Glacier , 8600 feet up in the St.
Ellas Mountains , Yukon Ter ritory , Canada .
Rich made the tri p as part of
the Ice Field Ranges Research
Project whose official task is
to study the "total environment "
of high mountains in a glaciated
environment.
Accompanying Rich on this excursion was BSC co-ed Patti
Derr , a senior in second ary education and an Earth and Space
Science Major .
They left Washington D.C. on
June 15 and wer e ten days enroute , but , due to bad weather ,
Rich did not reac h the glacier
until July 1. Patti remained at
the base camp at Kluane Lake ,
Yukon Territory .
Leahy 's personal task was to
maintain a constant vigil in
checking the complete weather
conditions on the glacier. This
included keeping tabs on wind
speed and direction , cloud typ es
and their coverage and height ,
precip itation , visibilit y, relative
N humidity , and dew point .
The purpose of all this was
to relay the inf ormation to the
base camp so that they. could
distribute this material to pilots
who might be planning to fly
throu gh the area . "Weatherwis e
it was a bad summer for the
pilots/* Leah y commented . "We
had several storm s and extreme ly poor visibility most of the
time. During one two-week
perio d , there was only one when we could see mere than a
hundred feet ahead. "
Needless to say, the weather
condi tions presented numerous
hazar ds and discomforts. "Sun
blindness
was a continual
danger ," said Leahy . "I had no
goggles so I had to wear my
prescr iption sun glasses, a pair
Roy T. Colley
Lowe 's Barber Shop
486 W. Main St.
INnt to Qualit y Cleaners )
Cont'd . fr om page I •
called a "Congressm an's Congressman11 in 1961 when he was
Dr. Donald Ecro yd , pro fessor
of speech at Temple Universit y
and hea d of graduate studie s in
the Department of Speec h, spoke
recentl y to interested students
and faculty on the topic of "Regional and Social Dialects. "
Stressing the imp ortance of
language Dr . Ecroyd commented ,
"When we speak , we are sh owing
the wor ld how we thi nk ." Of the
twent y-one English dialects ., the
one which is American contains
15 to 21 sub-d ialects, each of
which is considered "correct "
within its own region . "Lang uage ," pointed out Dr . Ecroyd ,
who is also president of the
Pennsylvania Speech Association
and co-auth or of a new book on
ora l inter pretation , "Is what we
say, not what we ought to say.".
To be formal ly correct , Wins ton Chu rchill was once heard
to say, "That is somethin g up
with which I will not put ." To
a cert ain extent , social standing
is still somewha t based on the
use of langua ge. If you find your self too bogged down with social
activities and would like to
eliminate yourself from being
aske d to accept further responsibilities , "Try using «hisself
instead of «himsel£' ," suggested
Dr . Eeroyd .
STUDfcNT AND ADVANCED
PILOTS
Join the area's most
progressive flying
club.
Fly Cessna 172 $9.00,
or Cessna ISO $7.00
per hour.
Wr it e Box 63
Bloomsburg for
Complete Details
e
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a division op
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Jjj
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sure to include your Zip Code. No
posta ge or handlin g charges. ' Add
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THB MOPP CO.
P. 0. Boi 1MZS Umi Square Station
i
ATLANTA, QA., 30326
^^
' g and TsJtwi/on and or*
Our rooms hav Air Up
j|
;i|
Now// Decorated.
Single Rooms — $4.00 - $5.25 - $5.50 - $6.00 |||
Double Rooms — $8.00 - $9.00 - $10.00
|||
'I 't't'i'i' -
M
•¦.
Ecroyd Speaks
Abo ut Language
College Council
Buys Planters
§|j
Mon. -12 Noon to 6 p.m.
Tues., Wed. & Sat. 8 a.m.
|
||
to 6 p.m.
||
|
Thurs.& Frl, 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.
HI
f§!
I
I
MAREE 'S j
^
^B Dress
Mock Repub
Convent ion
selected by the America n Political Science Association as
the Republican House member to '
receive its "Distinguishe d Congressional Service Awar d." In
Ma y, 1966 , he was given the
"George Was hington Award" by
the A merican G ood G overnment
Society.
I n addition to R ep resentative
Ford , important dignitaries , including Governo r Raymon d Shafer , John Reichley (former legislative assistant to Governor WiLUam Scranton and political author),and E. John Butc hi , a prom inent P ennsylvania p ollster , are
tentativel y scheduled to address
the convention.
In describing the framewo rk of
Leahy checked the instruments
t
h
e convention, Dr . Carlough ,
four times daily
Chairman of the Social Science
Department , stated , "We are
of. clip-on dark glasses over by this seemingly unexciting dally
going to try to keep this conthem , blinders , and a wide- schedule, Rich said they managed
vent
ion as c lose to the real thi ng t
brimmed hat . They kept warning to have several snowball fights
possibl
e. For ' guidelines it
as
1 us not to walk around outside to relieve the boredom somewhat.
will follow the H 1964 Republican
with our mouths open because
"We also found time to go mounNational Convention rule book.
it was too easy to burn the roof tain climbing twice and crevace
In addition to the speeches , there
of your mouth ."
exploring once. The crevace we
will be 1333 delegates, a platTh e temperature ranged f rom a explored appeared bottomless
f
orm, and ballotin g for a pres high of + 46 to a low of + 14 We went down two hundred feet
idential
nominee. To attain the
during Rich 's stay on the glacier . and had to stop because it was
required
1333 delegate s, thirty
."Gene rally it dropped from a getting too dark .
area
co
ll
e
ges, including BSC ,
daily average in tha low to middle
Surprising to this author , Mr ,
have
been
invited
to partici pate".
30' s to an evening average in Leahy is absolutely ecstatic
To
make
this
program a suc"
20>
the low
s," Rich added . about the possibility of going
c
e
s
s
h
owever
we
will need the
,
"Sometime s the heat from radia - back to the Yukon next summer.
help of ALL the organizations
tion caused by the sun 's reflecon campus. Fir st we will need
tion off the snow, caused the
700 delegates from Bloom and
temperature inside the tents to
they will have to generate the
soar into the 80's, while outside
necessary enthusiasm. It is of
it was only around f orty."
utmost
necessity for this pro - ,
Whe n asked about his dally
g
ram
to
be successf ul since
schedule , Ri ch related that he
The CGA , through the efforts
national
press
, radio , and telerose at 6:15 a.m. "cursing"; . of the College Council , has place d
vision
will
be
observing us at
made his first observation of a set of planters in the foyer
this
time.
"
the weather instruments and of Hass Auditorium which will
A registration fee of one dollar
radioed the figure s to the base be called the "Dedication Plant will
be charged to each delegate. .
stat ion at Kluane Lake ; ate bre ak- ers," and have been placed as
This
may be paid by the organ f ast; made another weather c hec k a gift of the faculty and student
ization
or by the Individual.
aroun d 10 a.m. and relayed the body.
Questions and answers from
results ; ate di nner; made another . The planters , which were not
check
of the Instrument s placed at the time of the Ded- organizations may be add ressed
to Terry C arver, Delegate Coat 1 p.m.; ate for the rest of the
ication cere monies because of
ordi nator, Box 411.
afternoon ; made his final weath er the trucking Industry strike , add
check of the day; and called It
a decorative touch to the f oyer
quits until morning.
that should be ap pr eciated by
Asked If he was bore d at all those using the auditorium .
IT' THE
REPRESENTED FOR NATIOXAU ADVCRTISINa BY
*
Octob er 27,"MOT
Maroon and Gold
BSC Stu dent Spends
Summ er In The Yuk o n
By Jim Ru pert
*
W»y«flp^ rj * '*" ll^ ' > '" lil| "^Bl^Mi i '
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COLUMBIA THEATRE
» 5 w. Main
HJSjba^*_ iB^HBjBJHM
RRRRRRRHRRnRRTiL
Now Playing
"To Sir, With Love"
I
Starrin g Sidn ey Poltler
^^^^^^^^^^^
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SNEIDMAN'S JEWELER S
1
130 East Main Strstt
BB^B^B
B^B>^BB^B^B^BB^BB^BB^BB<|^B^1^BB^B^B^B^B^BB^B^^ B^B1^B^B^B^
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Bloomsburg
1
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WWMWOTMNOTmwhm
^^^^^^^^^
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y
;¦¦> ¦¦¦ . : ¦;i> .m*$mmmmmmmmxl&m
m^^m
^
Data Process^^^
supervisor, Mr . Donald Housenick , "seems to be involved in
some way with every facet of
BSC."
__
———
. ...
i :
Mr. Housenlck commented on
how the center has grown and , improved in recent year js—much
to the advantage of the wh ole
college. For instance , before
Data Processing, it took six
mont hs to proces s the students
grades and send them to the
students. Students never received copies of their Qualitative Point Averages or their
projected averages at the midterm grading period . Now it
tak es only ten d ays to process
the 3200 grades (once the cente r- .
has the grades) and send the m .to the students.
. . :¦ . ,
Mr. Housenick also noted that
Bloomsburg State is the only
*
Pennsylvania state college that
allows a student to select hi s
own class hour and , in many
cases, his own professor at pre «
scheduling , which has been a college policy .
In the near future the center
expects to increase its effi ciency
with the acquisition of a new
computer.
The Date Processing Center
proces ses all the information on
all applicants of the college (last
ye^ar 3100 applic ations were pro .
.
in
i
mi
¦ ^^ ^a Mm
imm.
^.M.iaag—
^— UIHIim
Mrs. Hirleman , key punch operator , collects class lists
and makes necessary changes in the Tub-file.
The Data Processin g Center
provides invaluable service to
the whole college community.
Located on the basement fl oor
of the Ben Franklin building,
the center, in the words of its
•
Student employee Kurt Grabfelder proce sses grade report s
on the 1401 computer. This machine prin ts all the student
- grades (3200) in four hours. Of course many other oper ations
must be completed before grades can be computed which
,
takes about ten days.
5
Took His Girl
The
- •
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Bloomsburg
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cessedj 800 were accepted) , com*
piles the student dictionary ,
scores tests , reports student
sta tus to the selective service,
keeps track of student histories ,
and the list goes on and on.
Where Dad
•
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I
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44 4^ 4444^ ^ 4 ^ 4 ^ 44444^
^
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^^
Ron Brandt , a student in Intro duction to Data Processing ,
a business course initiated at
BSC during the summer , selects
a wiring panel from the board rack. BSC is the only Pennsyl vania State C ollege at which
each student has his own individual wiring pane l for each
mac hine .
^
^
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Miller Office :
Supply Co. ;
*
,
I
Hallmark Card* — Oiftt
;
'.
Phone
!
i
784-2561
J
2
J
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Mr . Donald House nlctc , supervisor of the Data Processing
C enter, op erates a 083 sorter , which sorts cards at the rate
of 1000 cards per minute.
Eppley 's
Pharmacy
Prescription Specialist
LOFT CANDIES
COSMETICS
SUNDRIES
ond
TOBACCOS
Phone
1
1
Qreen Itampi
p
Say Happy
Birthday
Hayyy Anniversary
<
with . . .
:
///
m
||
.
WORLDWIDE DELIVERY
'-,
miAmmt^mmmmmm ^mmmmm mmmmmmm
J oy£f
2
FLOWERS
784-4406
¦
,,i i
n,
^E
OflUfe
Main and Iro n Streets
784-3055
i1
I,
Charlie 's
,.f A^c?^f?rtrpT^f^rTWW|T 5rf^jwfl'!^!W!'WB'>1
., ^^PXSgSAnSSffSSff^f^v^^^^^^
piuo
Hoagies
win dilivIry
%i/ff
%}
'
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SHUMAN'S WORLD TRAVEL
37 EAST MAIN • BLOOMSBURG • PHONE 784-3620
^
^f
^
)f
)+>
~
^
FOR ALL TOUR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS
^>
R«Mrvationt
Tickets • Tourt
Etc.
ALL AIRLINES —•TRAINS fir HOTELS•HANDLED
1]
^T
Regular & King| |
I
I
|| ' Size Hoaglti
<
p
KNITTING MILL
1
Factory Store
A>
Open two evenings
ff
each week
v
Thurs. & Fri. 9-°
J
New Fall Merchandise
//
u
t
Facto ry to You Prices
L
Save Many Dollars on You r
School Ward robel
£»
5S
¦n " Buy w here they are made " n
King Size Soft Drinks |iV
I
I
'j'
¦ . Ph. 7-84-4292-.
"-Urq S A
|B
BERWICK
Suits - Dresses - Sweaters
$§
||
¦
' Hirm .^i, :^01?,,^,POm>^
London Show Tour
G
Hj Open 'til l 2»30 a.m. {4
i|
Clowd 1t30 to 3i00 P mZH PL
|i|Every Day But Friday <,. ; »S
m
»
^ ••••••••••**********^ -ft
18 West Main Street
Bloomsburg. Pa,
i
'
2 weeks at the London Theatres for as low as $300.
. Included in tou r price:
Orchestra seats to > top London hits
Round-tri p air transpo rtation 13 nights , hotel
Full breakfast each mor ning
Transfer to and from airport
j L.
A student operates a 402 accounting machine during a
class period.
.
230 South Popla r Street
'
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'
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. ¦ Itrwlck i N#
"¦
.
, ,
L«,
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Maroon and Gold
i-j
^ 1
inter-Fraternity
Council Enters
Year Of Trial
11
IChessflliiP
g
Over Muhlehpef
The^ Bsc Chess Team scored
their first league victory of the
season at Muhle nberg College
recentl y, extendin g their undefeated streak Into Its third season. The score was 3-2, but
the Huskies 1 two . losses came
from winning positions ,
Ray Depew , perhaps not accustome d to being first board
player , missed his only- chance
to hold off a determi ned attack ,
and lost despite .a sJjzeable mater ial advantage. Len Thomas
play ed a solid second-board
game, hanging on to a slim lead
to score the point. Dave Wal p,
on third board , forced his opponent to bring his king out into
the open, then checkmated him
there .
The newly establ ished Inter Fratern ity Council has begun its
first full year of operation at
BSC. Its success or its failure
to* fulfill its committments to the
college will be fair ly well determ ined this year , and the social future and prowess of
Bioomsburg State han gs in the
balance.
.
The main pur pose of the IFC
is to act as the governing body
of the social fraternities to provide* a common ground for discussions between the administra- :
tion and the individual fratern ities. As a .governing body of
Dean Elton Hunsinger, newtion, confers with Governor .
the fraternities , the council will
ly appointed Advisor to the
Raymond P. Shafer and Senreconc ile the social forces of the
Senate Committee on Educaator Preston B. Davis.
college with the student body, .
therefore creatin g a stimulating
social atmos phere at BSC.
With fraternity rushing nearly
completed , the IFC has run into
few difficulties. It has also created a competition between the
various fraternities with its volleyball tournament, the tug-of Only registered members of war and the proposed
The BSC Literary and Film
"ham,
the society may attend the films. ' burg-eating
Society will present the first
contest. "
of its planned serie s of films Any member of the . college comThe officers for the 1967-68
to its members on Thursda y, munity who is interested in these
aca
demic year are Bob Boose
Nov. 2, at 9 in Carver Auditori- films may join . Dues are $3
(Beta Sigma Delta) , president}
um. The feature will be "The a semester for one person and
Joe Deardorff (Sigma Iota OmeSeventh Seal."
$5 a semester for a couple. ga), vice-president; Bob Hinkle
Directe d by Ingmar Bergman , In addition to the first presen - (Delta Pi), secretar y; Denny Les"The Seventh Seal" is a bleak tat ion, four additional film pro - ko (Beta Sigma Delta), treasurer.
tale of a knight' s search f or the grams will be shown during the
Membership in the Inter-Fra truth about life..Against the back - semester. Pros pective members
tern
ity C ouncilis reserved f or
ground of plague ravaged Sweden , should > apply as soon as possible two represe ntatives of each -soMax von Sydow endeavors to out- by sending their dues . to Box cial fraternity. In addition to the
wit death and struggles with 141 in Waller Hall .
officers , the representatives inthe problems of faith , destiny ,
clude Lee Jones and Bruce BenPHYS. ED . ARE A
and death .
del , Phi Sigma XI; Cris Tom.
All students enrolled in the
Railroader ", a film
v"The
linson and Jeff Murr , Pi Kappa
short, will also be presented . phy sical education area, and Epsilon; Nelson Ramon and Mike
This film consists of 22 min- those planning to switch into DeF ranclsco, Delta Ome ga Chi ;
utes of Buster K eaton's sight the physical education area Bill Kelly, Delta Pi; Stan Kuch gags . It was made in 1965 , dur - should check with Dr. Moore
arski , Sigma Iota Omega.
ing the last year of his life , (H 10) before second semester
for the Canadian Film Board . re gistration.
Literary And Film Society
Schedules Motion Pictures
^ii!iiniiiiHiiiH!ii!niiiiniiiiniii!Hinni! ni|,
1 "Corner Lunch" I
I Fifth and West Streets
I (One block above the
I Magee Carpet Mill)
I Shrimp in the
IBasket - - $1.29
Sam and Son !
i Shoe Repair I
223 Iron Street
8 aim. *~ 5 p.m.
11
w,
Wed, until noon
•
rrt-i
Girls: If you're thinking of
your Fall Wardrobe , come
in and see all the latest
fashi ons In lingerie , ineludin g matched sets in all
the brilliant colors of Fall
. . . at
'
784-4117
|
| Men's and Boys'
!
Clothing
Haggar . Slacks
j
I Brentw ood Sweaters
20 E. Main St.
1
j
:
Ph. 784-5766
1
* ~7<
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Motel and Restaurant
' .
paESSJ
LET'S GO
BOWLING AT
B^B^B^B^B^^^ BflH^B^BBejKHB ^BniB^B^B^BH
;
;
^H^H^p^^^^ HB^H
^E^Iv^sa^B^nEI^R^nB^Bl
^^ SS^^ S^^^ KBBBBKBK ^M
BLOOM BOWL;
Fna PrtKri ption
Rautf 11. Nort h
^
Jr ^
.
Ocllvtry
TOILET GOODS
COSMETICS
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES
GREETING CARDS
HMDH s^^flS>^^kBB^aV
1 W> Main St., Bioo msburg
(
i
^^
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,
Midway between
Bioom sburg & Danvill e
Rt. 11, Pa.
Stone Castle
¦
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t^S^^ SiRff^^ wtfi ^S^^
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Bloomsburg-Berwick
Highway
Stone Castle
KARMBRS NATIONAL OFFICE • BLOOMSBTOO ,PBNNA.
''
'
|
Ch«*Mburg«rt, Hamburgers ,
lea Craom Treat *
-
^^ ^^^^^ ^^^^^^ r^^^ ^^^^^ ^^^^r^^ ^^^^^r^^ ^^^^^r^^r^^^ ^v
ff
i
:
{
Kampus Nook "
Tho Restaurant Across From the
Colle ge
f Built For The Stude nts
11
:j
ii
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Open 7 Days a Week
Serving Meals Dally
¦
-
.
l Ll
.
U
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.
.
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¦
|
§
i BQQQHQDQKfflQQDDEIESUSUSBDat
.i
CM
lIVERS
NATIONAL BANK
IBroiled Delmonlco
ISteak--$1.35
| Lee-Pat's
Eudora 's
Corset Shop
58D»Ium Units
'
Romeo 's
Today — 4 p.m.
frtt inlnt with any thta repaired T
,
There are still a few students
who have not picked up Selective
Service System Form SSS-104,
Request
for Student Seferrment ,
According to Mr . William Deck*
from
the
Office of the Dean of
er, director, this year 's M en's
Instruction
.
Glee Club promise s to be the
All
stu
d
ents
are reminded that
"largest and best yet." Although
it
is
imperative
that this form
the turnout has been quite good,
be
filled
out
and
mailed to the
the glee club propo ses to expand
student
'
s
h
ometown
Selective
membershi p even further. All
Service
System
board
.
men who are.intereste d are welcome to come to re hearsals
Tuesday nights from 7-8 in the
music rehearsal hall of H aas
Auditorium . No auditions are
necessar y.
vwt
The group is currently pre p aring two Ch ristmas concerts :
one with the Harmonettes and
one with the girls ' choir of
Fun & Food Center
Danville High School .
Pino, Barbaque, French Frits
Deadline:
All kinds of shoe repair 1
IChicken in the
I Basket - - $1.09
I
I
Deferment
Fprms-104
Ambitious Yr.
Friday, Nov. 3
f
The Husky Rooks face tougher
competition in the weeks ahead ,
notabl y Lebigh University (A and
B teams), P ennState, and a team
tournament in New York.
Men's Glee
Club Begins
Next Edition:
PLACEMENT OFFICE INTERVIEWS
October 31 to November 30 is as follows :
October
31 10 a.m.-r-Fallsin gton , Pa
All areas
November 8 9 :30 a.m.—U.S. Arm y Recruitin g
Philadel phia
All areas
November 8 2 p.m.—Royer sford , Pa. '.
Elem
Jan. 68'
Sept. 68
November 13 9 a.m.—Westminster , Md. ..All areas
November 14 9 a.m.—State YMCA
Harrisbur g
Any area
Al a reas
10 a.m.—La nsdale , Pa
Commercial
November 15 10 a.m.—Elkland , Pa
'
Business
$5500
November 18 9 a.m.—Federal Service Entrance
Exam
Any area
November 29
30 10 a.m .—Department of the Arm y
Officer Candidate Selection Team
Any area
Philadelphia
Carl Nauroth declined a free
pawn in the opening , which would
have been enough for the win. —
Instead , that same pawn led an
attack that soon spelled disaster .
Linda Hummell , roundin g out the
team at fifth board , won in the
end game when her adversary
was top careless with his rook
and promptly lost it. George
Underwood , playing an unofficial
sixth board, won his game
quickly, althou gh only the first
five boards count for ¦ league results.
.. - ' • '
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T»rti/£C QAV^ ^ MoVf rniagi^ i^ bi
to *O
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CHESS CLUB *
i
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Today -the third round of the five round chess tournament mil
be played in the Day Men 's Lounge in Science Hall* Playing begins - at Js OQ P.IT..
;
EOTOTIPRO^IA!.!;
MtaMMHHMMMM
i
t,«4MMtWMM4«<
in the Carver Hall Auditorium,four Nationally
&
f
c 7$30 ?•&. tonight
known speakers will present a program on *The Economy and Stock Market*1*
Tickets are available free to any one who is interested in this
program * The tickets may be picked up at any of the four offices of the
Bloomsburg Bank-Columbia Trust or at the door tonight*
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SPANISH STUDY COURSE ABROAD*
I
An organizational'meeting pf all those students interested in
I the Spanish Study Course Abroadyduring the summer of 19^8,will be held
I Tuesday, November 9, at 1**00 P»M» in room 21+ of Navy Hall*
Anyone who has even the slightest interest is invited and urged
I
I to attend this meeting*.
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I 22 !S£lmaroon and gold memberss
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AH members of the Maroon and Gold are asked to and" encouraged
I to attend a meeting at 7*00 P*M» on Friday night at p illion House The main
I substance of the meeting will be devoted to assignments for the P*S*C*P*A. .
I conference to be held on the tenth eleventh , and twelveth of November here
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Also scheduled will be a general staff meeting and an editorial
I board meeting*.
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I CONGRATULATIONS TO TEE PLAYERS:
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Fe at the Maroon and Gold wish to congratulate the Bloomsburg
I Players on their fine presentation of the play "Tisit To A Small Planet•" The
I acting was fine and the setting was well designed for the play. We hope they
I can turn out many more fine productions ?
H
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I NATIONAL NEWS *
I
Hashington»-president Johnson urged 5p .ngre.ss to4ay tp remain in
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session this year until it had "faced upM to the " nation1 s most compelling
I problems, especially the need for a tax increase* Also the Congress was to
I "face upWt to the urban problems*
¦
Washington—The Senate Finance Committee revised the House
¦
approved Social Security bill to bring it up to Administration requests,
¦
including an overall 1$% increase in benefits under old " age , survivors and
¦
disability insurance and a minimum $70 menthly benefits.The House had
I approved a 12j percent increase and a $$0 minimum* The present mimimum is $UU »
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M™AIi25iIi §91Slf
Secretary General Thant urged both Israel and the United Arab
Republic to assure "that in cases of alleged violations- of the cease-fire each
side wouldmaka use of the U»N» cease-fire observation system instead of
continuing to follow the practice of resorting to violence**
•
Former Secretary of the Treasury Robert Bo Anderson has been
serit to Cairo as President Johnson's unofficial envoy to see if President
Gama^.Abd«l Nasser will agree to talks with Israel^, initially through a
United Nations representative.,
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Quotat ion of the Day
^We are doing what we believe and what we know., to the best of
our knowledge P to be the right and proper thing to do; We are ' going to
cont..1j?»e to do what we believe is right. w —President Johnson,, on the
bombing cf North Vietnamo
MAROON AND GOLD. SUPPIEMENT FOR NC7EMBER 2 , 196?
Milce StiigriJi
Bill. Teitsrworth o Supplement Edit or
.
T echmcxans
Marlen« Karabin!, Typist
Tom James
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Highlights Weekend Activi ties On BSC Campus
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"Visit :to a SmidrPlanet/*the newscaster. He enters this house
; Brbadway stage hit to be pre- clad as a pre-Civi} WarjSouthern
gentleman^ because he has "come
sented
again
tonight and
tomorrow night, is a vivid proof to enjoy the spectacle of our
that an imaginative , fantastic, Civil War and thought it best
to dress in the period, When
story of the spacerfiction type
he finds he misjudged the time
can also be riotously funny. • .
This is not a tale oi Intrepid in traveling from the Fourth
adventurers traveling from the : Dimension, and is about a century
late, he thinks it might be fun
Earth to the Moon or Mars, but
of an elegant dilettante who visits to stir up some other war—a
bigger, atomic war appropriate
the earth from outer space.
With this basis for his plot, to the twentieth century-for the
the author , Gore Vidal, has a 'pleasure of watching the little
rich opportunity to present pur earth-people fight it.
When his hosts attempt to stop
civilization through the small
him, and especially when a sputend of a telescope, so to speak
tering general from the Penta—as it appears to an intruder
,
from a far more advanced culture gon tries to stop him , he demonstrates all the tricks of Superwho regards terrestrial habits
man in the comic strip in imand customs with the detachment
of an observer watching the ac- mobilizing his opponents. He
tivities of a beehive or a fish- makes the mistake , however , of
teaching the play 's heroine how
bowl.
The interstellar visitor 's main to send thought waves, and so
impression of "Earth Dwellers " she is able, in the end to foil
is that we are full of aggressive his wsr-mengeringmoves.
urges and seem to devote all
This outline of "Visit to a
our best inventiveness discover- Small Planet" makes it sound
ing ever more wholesale ways
like a pretty serious play. But
of killing each other in wars. actually , it is an uproarious comHe arrives in a flying saucer , edy at which the first-night audience at the Haas Auditorium
which he parks in a rose garden
behind
the
house
of
laughing constantly.
was
a famous
.
President And russ
Gives Comments
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Mr , Geor ge Stradtman and Mr. | 40th Annual Homecomin g, was the
Tobi as Scar pino , co-chairmen of greatest event ever experienced
the 1967 Homecomin g com- by the town of Bloomsbur g, The
mittee , have received the follow- qualit y of this event will be difing commendation from Presi - ficult to mat ch, but certainl y
dent Harve y A. And russ: "The
40th Anniversary of the Home- it will have established a goal
coming Day, begun in 1927, was for facult y and students of the
to reach In future Homethe most successful to date . future
celebrations ,
coming
"While it is impossible to commany
students were in"So
ment all those who had a part
volved
in
the
many facets of
!
In this event , I am asking the
Homecoming
that it would
thi
s
co-chairmen of this Committee
Impossible
be
to
mention
them
to specifically thank those perall
and
commend
each
sepsons to whom we are sending
arate
ly.
There
must
have
been I
y
cop of this message.
hundre
ds
includin
g
facult
y
,
ad"The administrati on of the
bleache r section reserved at the visers, who-worke d on floats
and decorations of Husky Lounge ,
football game , the parkin g, the the
gym and off campus
fl owers, and the get-together , residences.
along ' With the semi-formal
dance , and of course, the Home- Regretfully , since we neit her
. corn ing Parade -theseevents were know their names nor have the
observed by the writer of > this space for such long lists we must
memorandum , but I feel sure that thank these many helpers col*
there were many others that were lectlvely for their valua ble efequally good that are worthy of forts .
special commendati on.
I t certain ly gives us pause to "We would especially commend
thin k of what we are going to Mr. Ell Me Laughlin for the splenbe able to do for an encore. " did work he did as a "Committee
In addition to President And- of One " in settin g up a complete
of
com- i program for the entertainment
russ' statement
men d ati on, Mr . Stradtman and of our honored guests , the reMr. Scar pino add their state- cipients of life-time awards five
ment of app reciation for the many year s ago, We hope that the sue-;
services given by the faculty and cess of this feature of our Homestudents. "We have heard many coming will merit the continuance
favorable comments from resi- of this as a tradition in future
Homedents of the town who have ex- Bloomsburg State¦ College
¦
'¦)• :'. . ¦¦' ¦: ' . - . ' v ¦'.' . ' ¦'" • . <'
pressed th,e opinion that tnjs , the comings,"
^
What is so remarkable, about from the Pentagon who hardly
dares turn his back lest Jealous
the writing of the play is that
so much fun lies in a serious ", enemies there will get his corner
office with three windows. This
science-fiction type of story that
is loaded with social satire on convulsing caricature of a mil-...
our own lives and views. But no itary man trying to bluff his way
little credit for the amusing through a situation not covered
nature of the evening belongs by Army regulations whatsoever ,
is a riotously funny performance.
to the cast and to Mr. William
The entire cast gave fine perAcierno as the director.
formances. Larry Gerber is
Bruce Hopkins and Howie
Kearns, who are seen respective- . amusing as an egocentric radio
ly as the Visitor from Outer- newscaster who can explain all .
Space, and as the Army general the world's problems in fifteen ,
assigned to keep him under sur- minutes and deliver comveillance, are primarily re- mercials too. Sharon Bergeron » - .
sponsible for the evening's catches nicely the homemaking
hilarity . Mr. Hopkins dashes hap- instincts of a hostess who has
pily about in gaudy uniforms , a guest drop in unexpectedly
comments acidly on the low state from the solar system , and must
of earthly civilization , promotes worry about a daughter 's interest
a global conflict with the abandon in a man unsuitable for her to
of a child playing with toy marry.
Larry Grissinger and Iva Klingsoldiers, announces that of
aman
portray the confusions of
course he 's not from Mars, nobody who is anybody comes from a romatic young couple whose
Mars any more, and he has a future path is not too clear *
fine time chatting with a cat Ken Hassiniger, Steve Rubin, Ru s*
(whose thoughts he readily reads) sel Walsh , and James Berheiser
are seen advantageously in
on the subj ect of mice .
*
While he is neatly handling this smaller roles , and a word must
debonair character , Mr. Kearns also be given , in recognition of
huffs and puffs gloriously in a another member of the cast—
low comedy vein , as a general a cat whose performance was
purr-feet.
Mock Republican Convention
To Be Staged In Sprin g
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By Terry Carver
Bloomsburg State College will
sponsor a simulated Republican
National Convention on March
16, 1968. Mr . James Perce y,
Associate Professor of Political
Science , h as termed thi s venture
as "the greatest undertaking
ever attem pted by the students
of BSC ." A steering committee ,
comp osed of twenty stu dents and
three facult y members , met on
Monda y , October 23 , to discuss
the scope of this convention . It
was announced at thi s meeti ng
that the Social Science Depart ment has secure d Representative
Gerald R. Ford to deliver the
keynote address.
Mr. F ord has been a dynamic ,
figure in Republican politics
since his election In 1948. At
the opening of the 89th Congres s
on J anuary 4, 1985 , he was elected
Minority Leader of the U.S;
House of Represent atives , In Novem ber , 1963, he was appointe d
by President Johnso n to a sevenmember board to investigate the
assassinat ion
of
Pres ident , ,
Kenned y. As a result of these
experiences, Mr . Ford has auth ored (with John R, Stiles) the
book, "Portrait of an Assassin." Representative Ford, a recipient
of numerous awards , was
:< ; > : ¦' ¦ ' • ' ¦ . ¦" ' ;¦ • '/ ¦ •; COnt 'd PO. 6 Vv '¦¦' • •;: ; -;>!&viV. ' \
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Maroon and Gold
Pa ge 2
I Fro m The Desk Of
Feature Staff
President Andruss *
incons istent w it h t he p olicy of
the responsible authorities " it
would seem that items .held in
abey ance are held f or future
consideration and certainly are
not rejecte d or disapproved .
The Minutes of the First Regular Meeting of College Coun cil held Septembe r 25 , 1967 indicates marked deviation s from
par liamentary practice in at
least two (2) regards :
The editorial in the mos! recent I s sue of t he "Maro on and
Gold' 1 does not seem to distinguish between items "held
and
Items
in
abey ance "
"vetoed. "
Section 2., Article VII of the
Constitution of the Communit y
Government Association , Page
34 of the 1967 Pilot , provides
as follows:
"AH enactments shall be by
major ity vote of the quorum.
All measure s pas sed by the
Council must be appr oved by
the President of the College
before becoming effective ."
1, The President of the College
Council opened a discussion on
the College Com mons Service
Policy without previously consulting the Dining Room C ommittee and,
2. The fi nal act ion taken reads
as follows: "Motion passed by a
voice vote with several abstentions noted. " This raise s the
question of how many voted vocally and how many abstained.
Also Article V , Section 2., of
the Constitu tion reaps:
"All measures passed by the
Associati on must be submitted to the President of the
College for consideration , approval , or re jection before becoming effective. "
Since no ot her item on any
doc ket was so handled f rom t he
parl iamentary point of view and
the College is bound by an existing contract , t his item was
held in abeyance . The news story
seems to indicate that it was
vetoed. Such is not the case !
Since Secti on 1., Article V ,
provides that "It shall be the
duty of t he ent ire Assoc iation or
its const ituent bodies to elect
those who shall legislate on all
matter s pertaining to student
interests and life which are not
Featoridl. ..
W e are all, by this time , acutely aware of The Free Press Of
Bloomsburg State College, k nown
accuratel y as THE GADFLY .
By this time -we are also aware
of the various and sundr y positions held toward this publicat ion. They var /from the characteristic indifference held by
some students toward anythin g,
to shar p suppor t for the concept
(the concept , not the ideas expressed therein) , to ver y vehement oppo sition. It is, by far ,
one of t he most controvers ial
addi t ions to t hi s cam p us in some
years...perha ps since the incepti on of. family-style supper in
the College Commons.
None of these positions , however , make any value judgements on t he moonl ight , pub lication of BSC ....t hey are still
too taken up with the concept
of outright opposition to the establishments
of Bloomsburg
State that , t hey have not taken
t ime to evaluate t he publication
for what it is supposed to be,
and not for what it represents .
The name implies what it is
rep resentat ive of; t he supp ort
and opposition that it has received does not imply what value
it has as a publication.
It would be unfair to evaluate
GADF LY against campus organs
suc h as P enn State 's FROTH ,
in regards quality of pri nting,
f ormat , etc., so we 'll just ignore that part of it.
It is fair , however , to take
cons ideration of lay out , for in
a four- page phamphlet-magazinenewspaper such as the GADFLY ,
there is great varie ty available ,
with a consistent centerfold layout available, as well as a per fectl y-sized front-page arrangement for some interesting , if
not sim p le, layouts for the lead
stor y-article -satire , etc. In each
ff lmcoon mxb (f0I&
Vol. XLVI
Friday, Octobtr 27, 1967
Ho. 8
Editor-ln-Chlaf
................. .... ...
Business Manager
Director of Publications
Gordon Slvell
784-7361
Robert Halter
Ext. 272
Richard Savaoe
Ext. 205
Seott Clarke
784-736!
Richie Benyo
Poul Allen
Tom James and Jim Rupert
t
Consultant
Assistant Editor
.
Doug Hlppenstlet
784-8189
Feature Editor
Sports Editor
News Editors
Photo graphy Editor ,
Steve Hock
Copy Editor
.Richard Hartman
Assistant Copy Editor
James Carter
Asslstont Copy Editor
Sharon Avery
Advertisin g Manage r
Mary Lou Cavalllnl
Circulation Manager
Mike Stugrln
Typl»ts ., . , , ,. . , . , ,, . , , , ,
Kathy Reimard and Eileen Gulnac
Editorial Board—Dou g Hlppenstiel , Richie Benyo , Paul Allen . Richard Hartman,
Scott Clarke , Jim Rupert , Tom James , Sharon Avery.
Additional Staff
Wayne Campbell , Jeff Kleckner and Walter Cox
Bill Teitsworth, Grace Waznewko, Marlene Kanobln, John Nee, Carol
Batzel , M.'ke Stugr.n , Tina Arnoldin , Jan Pios, Jan Poux, Clark Ruch ,
Sandy Zubowicz , Ben Ciullo , Evelyn Lulezey, Wayne Campbell ,
Y
Dawn Wagner.
(Staff for eighth edition )
* * •
in the Student
The Maroon and Gold is located
Publicati ons Center In Dillon
House. News may be submitte d by calling 784-4660, Ext. 272 or by contacting
Post Office Box 58.
'
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The Maroon and Gold Is published weekly by the stude nts of Bloomsburg State
¦ .-> • ' "College ,' Bloomsbur g, Pa., for the entire College Community. All opinions ex'
pressed by column.sts and feature , writers , Including letters-to-the-editor , ore
not necessarily those of this publication but those of the Individuals.
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RICHIE BENYO
-editorCarol Batzel
Ben Ciullo
Joe Griffiths
Ron Kashlack
Bill Large
Carl Nauroth
Bar bOl uszak
Larry Phillips
Barbara Tommor
<-
issue . The GADF LY , h owever ,
does not take time to consider
this: they use a meager straight run layout , merely placing ar ticles in their supposed order
of imp ortance , and filling one
column until they must go to
t he next , maki ng it necessar y
for one-column headlines that
add nothing to the effect of the
publication. Very primitive .
As the "Free Press " of BSC
GADFLY would normally be a
"newspaper " that would rival
the college paper in cover age ,
simply interjecting their own
views of the situation s where ever there is room on the editor ial page, and w henever t heir
is a chance in the slanting of
a news stor y as happens with
the dailies at Columbi a Univers ity. They certainly fall short of
this , for the only news they give
^is week-old
excerpts from the
Nfew Visric Tjq }# «- which is of
course of paramount interst and
importance to the Free Press
of Bloomsburg State College.
The GADFLY pr ints satire .
If the GADFLY prop orts to being
a satire magazine t hey have again
fallen on their many -faceted eyeball. A satire magazine is a
sat ire magazine : it leaves no
room f or one piece of stra ight
wor dage ; It is subtle , it is accurate , it is conc ise , well-knit ,
timely, well-thought -out , and interest ing because of its own
mer its , and not merel y on the
mer its of alliterat ion to the
sounds of t he names of the peop le
that it would satirize. It is not
childish , ineffectual , and *«hung ud "—that is for junior high school
newspapers . A seventh grader
might be able to identify with
GADFLY.
Somehow one cannot help but
get the feeling that the editor of
the GADF LY would LOVE to put
his name to the little abortion
that it is , and there is no reason
why he shouldn 't-the editors of
true satire magazines on American campuses don't hesitate to
put a complete masthead In each
issue , for they are skilled enough
In their art to know what to
pr int , how to print It , and when
to print it , so that they need
not worry about after-effects :
some people apparentl y just
aren 't that skilled.
"We of The GADFLY are trying to reestablish chaos and
confusion In a becalmed wor ld."
True -to-form magazines of the
sort that GADFLY would emulate
are striving for some form in
a formless campus-they are
striving to brin g some meanin g
out of chaos. It Is comfortin g to
see that GADF LY is working
backwards when they preach
moving forward in matters of
Importance.
One cannot deny that the concept of a free-press here at
BSC Is a praise -worthy one-4f
it is handled well. One cannot
deny that there Is muoh to be
gained from such a free-press
-if it meets its obligations to
the people who read it and are
affected by It. One cannot help
but agree that any advance is
good-4f a movement is truly
an advance. GADFLY , though ,
seems to be none of these.
But, let it live while it can.
for at its present ra te It will
not be long before the novelty
wears aft of the old GADFLY
and it. becomes as interestin g
to the student at BSC aft last
;wwk»s, bulletin * board.* , /(Let
lMhM iA ^ lJt '
\%%hh A&k\i
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The View Fro m Here
When one hears the word "college," he usually forms a mental
picture of old red brick buildings
with cracked walls cover ed by
moss and ivy. Surrounding these
ancient edifices with the ir clock
towers and decades of tradition
are acre s of lus h green grass
scattere d w it h huge s hade trees
under which students lie reading
or mere ly enjoying the warm
autumn weather . This type of
college seems to be an ideal
environment for one v wh o not
only wishes to learn of nature 's
beauty through the word s of the
great romant ic poets , but also
wants to study nature 's attrac tiveness by placing himself in
direct contact with it.
These
college campuses on
w hic h nature 's greenness t hrives
are now being replaced by modern
I:
i]
centers of learning, which are
not concerned with natural
beaut y . The new colleges consist of cold gra y buildings which
either loom straight upward
or spread out hori zontally in
various shar ply cut geometric
shapes. Of course grass and
trees st ill ex ist on t he areas
arou nd these structu res. However , they did not grow the re
originall y, but were placed t here
by ffiefi under the direction of
an architect who had planned
the positions of every shrub and
blade of grass months * before
construction even began. If one
does wish to find a spot to rest
on the cool green turf of the
new campus on a sunny day,
he will notice another addition
to the scener y, a sign which
boldly states "KEEP OFF THE
GRASS" .
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Dear Sir:
A recent public -opinion poll, of the college students , I feel
concern ing the candidate for of- that those who knew nothing about
fice in the , 1968 elections taken the campaign and other current
by this writer resulted in some news should be considered. Mak definite conclusions.
ing the news available , throu gh
One, the majorit y of the people the widely-read college paper ,
questioned were eithe r unaware will perha ps help to keep every of t he candidates ' names , or un- one up-to-date , requiring little
sure of the political Issues in- time and producing good benefits .
volved. The reasons given for
Thank you for your time and
this lack of knowledge were 1.) consideration .
not enough time to read a newspaper , 2.) source of Information
Barb Stienhart
not available, 3.) general disinterest in the campaign .
(Editor 's Note: Your comments
It is apparent , then , that an have some merit . We have begun
available , concise analysis of the to attempt to do this thro ugh
news-makin g people and ideas the Tuesda y and Thur sday supwould perhaps benefit everyone. p lements , but , as you say, the re
This is what I am suggesting , is still a great need for a growing
that a weekly round-u p of news awareness of the politic al Issues
be compiled for the Maroon & of the day. It would seem good,
Gold , perh aps ju st a paragra ph as you mention , to p resent more
long, which can be enlarged as of this in the pages of this paper .
material presents itself , It could We are not , however , staffe d
be set upon an International , na- with paid editors or staff memtional , and-or local level, thus bers as many lar ger college
pro viding the students with a paper s, and can the refore acview of the world situation .
complish only so much with the
The other statement , dealin g little volunte er help that we preswith the poll Itself , pro vided ently enjoy . It you 've got an
these conclusions. Of the stu- hour or so a week you might
'
dents asked , 88 per cent backe d take some time to compile such
Johnson , 4 per cent Humphrey , a weekly summary , which we
and 8 per cent Robert Kennedy
would be only too happy to pr int.
for Pr esidential Nomination on Our box number Is 08 , and all
the Democratic ticket; 12 per material must be in by Friday
cent backed Robert Kennedy , 72 evening ,) .
per cent H. Humphre y, and 16
per cent were undecided for VicePresident -Democrat .
48 per cent backed Oov. Rom.
nay , 32 per cent Gov. Reagan
and 20 per cent undecided on the '
Republican ticket for President .
24 per cent chose Gov. Rocke feller , 4 per cent Gov. Reagan ,
4 per cent Gov. Shafer , 8 per
cent Mayor Lindsay , and 60 per
cent were undecided for VicePresident ial candidate in the Re;:
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publican party nominations . Al-i
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October 27, 1967
T>*& fe Vi.
^
Maroon and Gold
MBIia rM
By Richie Benyo
The big event of last weekend
(in addition to another win for
the BSC gfidders) was the Friday night concert of Miss Buffy
Sainte-Marie, the tempermeutal
folk singer who has risen to
success in less time than it
takes to tell about. It was very
gratifying to see the very heroic
turnout for the first of the
Evening Entertainment Series
program—it will probably go
down on record as the new Haas
Auditorium 's first full house.
But back to Buffy: it is a real
shame that due to her temper,
mental qualities she wouldn 't allow flash photography during the
concert , for she presents a
rather interesting study in expression. She certainly isn't beatiful , as far as beautiful women
go, but she does have a certain
quality about her which can fool
a person into believing her to
be a little more than they expected (this in addition to her
olde Englande forest-green mlnstral attire). Somehow it seems
impossible to enj oy her perform-
Lake front lots:
ances unless you have either
become, addicted to folk music
or you realize the complexity of
her performance of such a variety of songs that are indiginous to so many different races
of people throughout the world.
She seems to be so hugely successful because of the universal
appeal she has to so many different types of people: to a
sociologist she is a member
of a minority group, to a linguist she is a practitioner of
many languages, to a historian
she is a living symbol of a
dying race, to a musician she is
a person in possession of a very
versitile voice range and a grasp
of primitive and not-so-primitive
music forms and instruments ,
to the wit she is a person In
possession of a very basic humor,
to the folk buff (no pun Intended)
shej s an accomplished folk singer , to the social reformer she Is
a very able critic of our age-
Beginn ing at $89.95
to each person she is something
unique to that person alone: for
myself , I found her music most
interesting before the concert;
as a result of the concert I
can't help but be drawn to her
music, not so much for what
they say, or how they say it,
or why they say what they say,
but because Buffy says it.....
Speaking of music: Over homecoming weekend, Sunday afternoon to be exact, there was a
dance in the Waller Hall Lounge
with the Sophie Cyrle: a group
new to the circuit, but consisting of mostly veterans from old
groups, such as the Playboys
Inc. of Varsity Grille fame: it
has taken the Playboys many
years to really come along with
something solid and concrete ,
but the Lesters Jones & Glrton
have finally come up with a
truly good sounding group. They
did exceptionallywell that Sunday
under very adverse conditions:
there just seems to be something lacking in a dance-in-broadday light. Look forward to many
college engagements for this.,
bunch of guys—I hope that their
BSC engagements in the future
Buff y: Ifs Her Way
can be in the evenings, though,
so that they can really let loose..
Some people say that Blooms- cars left sitting in it looking
burg State is famous for its like so many islands dotting the
wrestling teams, or its Business lake surface. Now we must all
Education department, or its co-operate with the college In
making BSC beautiful again, so
Special Education department, or
its expansion, or more recently please don't park your cars there
for its football accomplishments, from now on when they're going
but that is all being dwarfed by to fill the lake: the architects
a new feature: Husky Lake.Every might have trouble bringing In
the concrete forms and the trucktime that it rains just slightly
heavily it comes out of nowhere, loads of vines so that they can
and forms in the lake-bed at give it the Hanging Garden effect
the top entrance to the Harvey A. as depicted in the triple-murals
Andruss Library. The only prob- on the walls of the College Comlems with it is that some stu- mons. After all It Is advice
dents make the mistake of taking for your own good-besides , you
it for a parking lot while it don 't really want to row out to
ydur island-car when you want
is being cleaned out , and then
when it is refilled there are to leave, do you?.
J \\oviest Sp eakingSummarily
The big news In the silver screen world happens to be novels
rather than original screen plays .
More and more books are in the
Hollywood mill being trans f orme d into successfu l moti on
pictures.
THE DIRTY DOZEN lends itself
easily to this transformation pro cess. It is a study in human nature
and person ality as well as an
action- packed thriller. There is
not one uneventful , d u ll moment
in the whole cour se of the picture. Acti on and excitement are
jam-packed into every scene.
This sequence of action follows
a pattern that evolves from comedy into suspense and drama.
Trainin g of the convicts is humorous , th en they are let loose
on the German high command
and the emotion changes. From
the n on it holds your spelLbould at tention.
Dirty Dozen is filled with sur pr ises , but the biggest of all
comes In the form of a husky
tan k name Jim Brown . His able
portr ayal was equal to any of
the seasoned stars. The Dirty
Dozen is a neat little package
of adventure , humor , action and
excitement at its highest,
The transformatio n process
was hot so kind to UP THE
DOWN STAIR CASE, It becomes
0
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personalitie s, situations , and
A tip to the person who may
problem children. Whether the get the nerve to attend -don't
stor y was to be a look at big walk out: it gets better (or wor se
city school life or a study of according to your modesty).
one teacher, I don 't know. The
movie sampled many situations ,
Also, on the first-run screen
but resolved few. "A Day In scene are: ENTE R LAUGHING ,
The Life Of Sandy Dennis As produced by Carl Reiner and
A School Teacher " would have blessed with glorious re views;
been a better title , for without THE TAMING OF THE SHREW
her all would have been lost. with Taylor and Burton (no more
J ames J oyce's ULYSSES was need be said); A MAN AND A
finally , brou ght to the screen WOM AN is a deep and per plexand shockin gly so. This master- ing model' of French re alism;
piece of cinematography can best THOROUGH LY M ODERN 1 MILL be compare d to movies of the IE hailed as the year 's best
BLOW UP variety . It is a movie musical.
th at commands your complete
In conclusion is GONE WITH
attention If you have the slightest THE WIND , back again for its
wish of understanding it. I was sixth run since 1939. This time
attentive and still didn 't under- it b oasts stereo sound and 70mm
film. Who knows-maybe next
stan d It.
The first half is a kaleido - time they, will alter the film
get rid of Gable and Leigh
scope of a day in the life of to
and replace then with Liz &
two men * and their imagin a- Richard
.
tions. The second part is a
travelouge of sex with no holds
*The two men are Stephen
barred , It seemed to be a nafc. Debelius and Bloom ,
tated rea ding of the novel using representing Ulysses and his son
the movie as illustrations . It in their wanderings : Stephen to
describes sex in about the frank - find his fathe r , Bloom to return
est and most descr iptive terms to his former homeland
.
imaginable . Unbelievable , it did
••The lady is not young, but
not become vulgar . The sex mono- quite Into middle-age, and is
logue comes from the poetic lips the wife of the afore -mentioned
of a young lady as a glance Bloom , and represented a slight¦
¦
J ntoHer mind.**" ' ' V 1
' " '/ ! ly ' unfaithful wife of- Ulysses.
"GILES GOAT ^BOY"-by John
Barth — Fawcett Publications ,
Inc.-1966-41.25 in paperback —
.776 pages.
John Barth 's "Giles GoaWBoy "
Is a gre at tra gi-comedy written
I n th e manner of such auth ors
as Proust , M ann , Joyce , and
Faulkner , His style is multitextured , his story multi -leveled.
The Ideas presente d make the
wor k a bowdy-philosophtcal one
with its existence justifie d by the
immensit y of the subject matter.
This "Revised New Syllabus "
of George Giles , goat-bo y and
G ran d Tutor , reflects the work
of an imagination so lar ge that
the novel must be of an all*
encompass ing nature . Geor ge
G iles , of course, Is the hero(?)
of the work and is followed from
his early days in the herd to
his late r position as unwholly
acclaimed Grand Tutor , or neomesslah.
Giles ' experience of learning
begins when he is a member
of the herd at a goat farm far
from the campus . His tutor 's
guidanc e and his own Intuition
lead him to believe that he Is
the son of W.E.S.C.A .C., the
compute r that controls the whole
West Campus . W.E .S.C.A.C. ar tlflcall y Inseminate d a librarian
who had been feeding its memory
banks , and the result was a child
who would be a messlah and who
could straighten out the problems
of the whole West Campus . But .
it seems that from his first
moment on campus George has
more trou ble than not , convincing
others of his special assignm ent.
Barth 's symbolism , and work
with psychology, philosophy , science , psychology, and d rama
always gives the reader a chance
to participate in the Intellect ual
exerc ises pr esented. His ideas
could be the subject of research
papers; his bowdiness the subject of the censor . But John
Bart h Indulges in the pre senta tion and examina tion of a symbolic character In a symbolic
setting.
As such , this work , rich in
language and content , but enjoyable enough for those who
wish to skip the intellectual finery (if the y can), can be an
entire ly pleasan t experience .
John Barth 's ton gue-in-cheek
ser iousness provide s a rewarding tune for about two weeks
of beautiful reading .
Pa ge 4
The Sports Column
PAUL ALLEN & RICH CAMOUSO
i
Houk can see only thr ee definite
wins. The rest , he. says , the team
will have to fight for .
In addition to the regular schedule Coach Houk is trying to organize an AAU meet for December 2. In such a contest the
competition would be open to any
AAU member and would give the
wrestlers va luable competition
before the regular season .
Turning to basketball , Coach
Earl Voss in his second year
is beginning to reap the benefits
of his personal building program
and should ' pl ace an extreme ly
str ong, team on the court . Currently there are about 22 players
vying for positions on the team
inclu ding the five starters f rom
last years squad : Jack Carney ,
P almer T oto, Jim Dulaney , Rico
Fertic , and Bob Matuza. Of the
five , Fertig is the only senior
and the other four mem bers are
juniors who began with Voss as
their freshman coach in his first
year at BSC. In addi tion , help
should come from last year 's
freshman team tha t, compiled a
16-3 record. Stars f rom that
team fighting for varsity berths
are Mark Yanchek , Jeff Hock ,
Bill Mastropietro , Bob Snyder ,
and Larr y Monogh an.
Coach Voss pointed out that we
should have a much improved
and better balanced team than
last year. He looks for an improvement on the team 's 9-5
record though the entire league
should be somewhat impro ved.
Again the team to beat will
be Cheyney although they lost
a couple of their stars. One of
their new acquisitions will be a
7'2" giant by the name of Filmore.
I nf ormal swimm ing p ract ices
begin October 2 , giving Coach
Eli McLaughlin only 25 days of
pr act ice in which to come up
with a strong grou p of swimmers to meet the Temple Owls
on December 2. Coac h McLaughlin re p orts th at t he p ros pects
loo k good with Senior lettermen
Jim Poechmann (captain) , Fred
Bausch , and Britt Jones returning. Juniors who won their letters
last year include Bruce Bendel ,
Tim Carr , T om H ouston , and
Ed McNertney. In addition there
are good men movin g up from
the freshman team.
Th e coac h i s ent husiastic ab out
t hi s year 's team and p oints out
that his swimmers will be shoot ing to knock off Temple in that
opening meet. The Huskies have
never beaten the Owls. He added
that he was pleased to have Britt
J ones, holder of the BSC record
in the 200 breast stroke , back
af ter a year 's lay-off.
It shoul d be a big year for
the swimmers and Coac h McLaughlin hopes that the team
With the fall sport s season
drawing to a close , the tempo
is beginning to quicken for the
* members
of the wrestlin g,
basketball , and swimming teams
as the y prepare for their coming
contests.
Currentl y the wrestling team
is holdin g informal practice sessions under the direction of Steve
Pet ers. Regular evening prac tices will be held by Coach
Houk starting October 30, and the
team will remain on the evening
schedule until the end of football
season , November 10.
At the conclusion of last season
the prospects were for an outstandin g team but at least thre e
key personnel will not be wre stling for the team placing the responsibilit y on the shoulders of
the remainin g members . C oach
Houk looks forward to an extremely tough season and re sts
his hopes on the attitude of the
team and excellent conditionin g
to pull the Huskies throu gh. He
adde d that three or four of the
teams we will meet should have
superior material but that , of
cour se , does not mean they will
be unbeatable.
A pre liminary roste r of the
team has Wayne Helm wrestling
at 123, Curt Grabfelter at 130 ,
Ron Russo wrestling at 137,
st udent coac h Steve P eters at
145 , National Champ Joe Gerst
returning at 152, Sophomore star
Arnie Thom pson at 160, John
Stut zman and Jack Wallace at
167 , Mike Cunningham at 177,
Dave J ones and B ob J anet at
191 , and Bill Moul at heavywleght , Others who could break
into the lineup are sopho more
Jeff Prosedda , Jim Owen , Ray
Tellier , and Mike Barnha rt . The
team will open at home in a
qua d ran gular on Decem ber 9 ,
with Indiana State , Miam i of
Ohio , and Appl achain State. All
are cham ps in their own regions
and should provide a good show
with which to start the season.
The rest of the Huskies ' home
sche dule include s such teams
as Southern Illinois , Clarion , will generate more enthusiasm
and East Stroudsburg. There are in competition swimming than
twelve mat ches in all and Coach in any other year .
'MBii ^MMnaMBHHHMMBMiMHiaMMMMiHMIHM
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SPORTS STAFF
Paul M. Allen
SPORTS EDITOR
CONTRIBUTORS
Rich Camoutt
Bob Shultz
Clark Ruch
'Tlit Bruto"
V^^HWWH^^^V^^^HV^V^^^l^^^V^H^B^^'
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Bob Tucker pul ls in one of the four TD's he score d in leading the Huskies to a 28-19 victory
Huskies Roll To 28-19 Win
Over MSC. .Four TD Passes
The Huskies picked up their
fifth win of the season with an
easy 28-19 victory over theMauraders of Millersville State Col-'
lege as the Lichtel to Tucke r
pa ss combination hit for four
BSC touchdowns.
The Huskie s caught MSC off
guard on the first play of the
gam e with a 58 yd. pass from
Lichte l to Greg Berger . The
play carried from the BSC 20
yd. line to the 22 of the Mau ra ders. On the next play Lichte l
hit Bob Tucker in the end zone
and took an immediate 6-0 lead
as the PAT kick by Tucke r
was wide of its mark.
Th e H uskies came bac k to score
their second TD on a 73 yd.
drive that started when Tucker
intercepted a MSC pass on the
Husky 27. The long gaine r of
the ser ies was a 41 yd. completion and run with Bob Tucker
on the receiving end of the Lichtel pass. Edrman then added the
Baske tba ll Hopes
High At W-bu rg
The accent will be on youth
this season as C oach Hal King
of Waynesbur g College, Waynes bur g, Pa ., builds for the future .
Of the 20 squad members , 15
are freshmen. The remainder
of the squad is composed of four
lettermen -two who were starters
last season-end one squad member from 1966-47. For the first
time King will have numbers
and players with which to work ,
providing a competitive situa tion. Last year the re were only
10 players on the entire squad.
Also, the Yellow Jackets will
have a little more height this
year with only two of the 15
freshmen under six foot. However , only two tower over 6-5.
On the minus side of the ledger
will be the lack of experience
which might stand In the way
of Waynesbur g gainin g Its first
winning season In 19 years.
Chi ef amon g t he returnees are
a pair of guards-Tom Cunnin gham and Mike Flelschauer. Both
were starters
last season.
Fleischaue r was the number
three scorer on th e squa d, averaging 12,1 points per game.
He also hit on 44 per cent of
his shots from the floor. Cun ningham average 9,6 points per
outing last year , Heading the newcomers are a pair of 6.4 . lads,
Jack Kiger and Joe Sipe, along
with Jeff Collier and Larry Shef¦
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two point convers ion on a pass
from Lichtel and BSC led 144)
early in the game.
Then it was Millersville 's turn
as sophomore half back Dick
Bar bacane led t he M arua ders
on a 47 yd. scori ng drive in
10 plays . The PAT attem pt was
unsuccessful and BSC led 14-6.
On the first play from scri mmage after the Maurader TD ,
Rich Licht e l hit Bob Tucker on
a 74 yd. pass for another Husky
touchdown . The pass for the
two p oint convers i on was good
and BSC took a 22-6 lead.
The rem ainder of the half was
scoreless although the Husky
defense was called up on to h alt
MSC dr ives deep in BSC territory
on two occasions.
Early in the third period the
Huskies took advantage of two
breaks to scor e their final touch down of the day. First MSC
f um bled on their own 2 7 losin g
the ball and then were called
f or pass inter feren ce on the
1 yd. line after it had appeared
they had turned back the Husky
threat. From that point Rich
Lichte l threw a flat pass to Bob
Tucke r who carried the ball in
for his fourth TD of th&> day
making the score 28-6 with an
unsuccessful PAT attempt .
MSC t hen turne d aroun d and
drove 64 yds. on the ground
to score t heir second touc hd own
of the game with Barbacane going
over on a fourth down play for
the score . The two point conversion was good and BSC led
28-14.
The remainde r of the game
saw neither team able to score
unt il Barbacane again drove into
the end zone from the 3 yd.
line with a little over a minute
rema ining on the clock. With
t he unsuccess f ul PAT attem pt ,
BSC was conten t to play out the
clock to claim the win.
Huskies To Host
Cheyney Toni ght
Featuring one of the fastest
backfields in the state and a
line averaging over 200 pounds
per man , the wolves of Cheyney
State College will be hoping to
mak e it two stra ight over t he
Huski es. Last year the Wolve s
turned in a startling 14-0 upset
victory over BSC and we nt on
to post a 4-3 recor d for the
season. So far this year Cheyn ey
has compiled a 3-2 record on
the gridiron . Their wins came
at the ex pense of Edi nboro in
the season opener , Gallaudet ,
and Kutztown while they lost to
Mansfield and East Stroudsb urg .
No longer a member of the
PSC AC , Cheyney plays freshmen
on their varsity and three of
them have found their way into
the starting lineup. Allen Phil lips starts at center , Ron Scott
at halfb ack , and N orm Burns
at defensive end.
Leading upperclassmen on the
team are return ing quarter back
p___
Ron Hollts , offensive captain Jer ry DlPhlll lpo an end , and flanker back J ack Lemon .
On the defense the standouts
Include captain Allen Hollis and
safet y man L onnie J oh nson w ho
doubles as a very quick punt
return art ist.
M * G NOW
a.
Octob er 27, 1967
,'
Maroon and Gold
Page fi
HARRIERS DROP OflE TO MILLERSVILLE STATE
4
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Charlie Moyer fir Chuck Bowman Cheer on a Determined Tom Henry
Last weekend the BSC harriers
travelled to Millersvllle in an
attem pt to share the victory
laurels with the Husky gridiron
team in the dual competition f or
the afternoon. The gridders came
home with the stuff , but the harr iers Just couldn 't break their
slump .
In the half-time performance on
the M auraders' new 4.5 mile
course, the always-dangerous
P aul R hoad s took fi rst p lace for
Millersville State with a time of
25:41 , setting the stage for the
25 to 30 win that was to follow.
Charlie Moye r , BSC 's number one di stance man, took a comfortable
second place with
a 27:38. Chuck "The F lying Parson" Bowman was slate d for
third , which would have brou ght
home the win for the Huskie s,
but had troubles with the course.
Having run amuck , he wasp assed
out by Millersvllle 's Elam Lawtz
?
ROCKS
Steak House
and Larry Linneman , putting :
Chuck Into a very embarassing
fifth place , followed strongly by
Tom Henry , who completed the
course in- 30:06 , and Larry Lai - ;
decker , a fairl y consistent run ner this year , who did the 4.5
in 50:10. .
Bill Bowers of MSC came In on
his tall , followed by his team mate Jay Jones. Big Jim Gauger
finished it out for the Hu skies
as number 10 with a time of
32:01.
Onc e again , some team running
would have helped BSC greatly ,
although there was some
evidence of a movement toward
that end in way of the Laidecker-
NESPOLI
J EWELE RS
Comtr East & Fifth Ste.
PRIM! WESTERN BEEF—3IAFO0D
SPAGHE TTI
Home Cooked Foods
NOON-TIME SPECIALS
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Private Portiti
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BARBER SHOP
8
784-9895
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FOOT OF
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, 5 W. Mala Bt.
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FINE JE WELRY
and
REPAIRING
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Comp liments of
The
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1 OFHCE SUPPLIES |
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We take Great 1
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Pride in:
• Our Town
I
• Our Colle ge I
• Our Students I i
"For a Prettie r You "
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I{
Shop ARCUS'
ises to be an interestin g race .
the tale.
The Bucknell cancellation motivated
Coach
Herbert
to
schedule a meet with Lycoming
College at home on October 31,
next Tuesday. It will be the first
time that these two teams h ave
met with the thinclads and prom-
S!!!imillHI!l! VI!IUHI]in!UI!UinnipilU!ni! 11
|
IH!lI
25 I. Main St., Bloomiburg
as a result, but 4:00 will tell
Henry finish. Whether or not this
can be perfected by the time
the season end s remains to be
seen.
Yesterday the Husky harriers
trave lled to New Jerse y to face
the Jersey cross-country champions of Tre nton State . This
meet promises to be one of the
most difficult of the season.
Thi s afternoon they runontheir
home course against Ch eyney
State. They should be tired from
the long tri p to New Je rsey
the day before , and may have
their difficultie s with Cheyney
ww
J^^^^^^^^
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Pa ge 6
Rich Leahy , a BSC senior and
brother of Delta PI social fra ternity ,did not spend the summer
worki ng at the shore, and he did
not earn a small f ortune as a
summer playgro und director . He
,
was one of a cho&sn few college
stud ents w ho were I nvited to
spend a sum mer on Hubbard
Glacier , 8600 feet up in the St.
Ellas Mountains , Yukon Ter ritory , Canada .
Rich made the tri p as part of
the Ice Field Ranges Research
Project whose official task is
to study the "total environment "
of high mountains in a glaciated
environment.
Accompanying Rich on this excursion was BSC co-ed Patti
Derr , a senior in second ary education and an Earth and Space
Science Major .
They left Washington D.C. on
June 15 and wer e ten days enroute , but , due to bad weather ,
Rich did not reac h the glacier
until July 1. Patti remained at
the base camp at Kluane Lake ,
Yukon Territory .
Leahy 's personal task was to
maintain a constant vigil in
checking the complete weather
conditions on the glacier. This
included keeping tabs on wind
speed and direction , cloud typ es
and their coverage and height ,
precip itation , visibilit y, relative
N humidity , and dew point .
The purpose of all this was
to relay the inf ormation to the
base camp so that they. could
distribute this material to pilots
who might be planning to fly
throu gh the area . "Weatherwis e
it was a bad summer for the
pilots/* Leah y commented . "We
had several storm s and extreme ly poor visibility most of the
time. During one two-week
perio d , there was only one when we could see mere than a
hundred feet ahead. "
Needless to say, the weather
condi tions presented numerous
hazar ds and discomforts. "Sun
blindness
was a continual
danger ," said Leahy . "I had no
goggles so I had to wear my
prescr iption sun glasses, a pair
Roy T. Colley
Lowe 's Barber Shop
486 W. Main St.
INnt to Qualit y Cleaners )
Cont'd . fr om page I •
called a "Congressm an's Congressman11 in 1961 when he was
Dr. Donald Ecro yd , pro fessor
of speech at Temple Universit y
and hea d of graduate studie s in
the Department of Speec h, spoke
recentl y to interested students
and faculty on the topic of "Regional and Social Dialects. "
Stressing the imp ortance of
language Dr . Ecroyd commented ,
"When we speak , we are sh owing
the wor ld how we thi nk ." Of the
twent y-one English dialects ., the
one which is American contains
15 to 21 sub-d ialects, each of
which is considered "correct "
within its own region . "Lang uage ," pointed out Dr . Ecroyd ,
who is also president of the
Pennsylvania Speech Association
and co-auth or of a new book on
ora l inter pretation , "Is what we
say, not what we ought to say.".
To be formal ly correct , Wins ton Chu rchill was once heard
to say, "That is somethin g up
with which I will not put ." To
a cert ain extent , social standing
is still somewha t based on the
use of langua ge. If you find your self too bogged down with social
activities and would like to
eliminate yourself from being
aske d to accept further responsibilities , "Try using «hisself
instead of «himsel£' ," suggested
Dr . Eeroyd .
STUDfcNT AND ADVANCED
PILOTS
Join the area's most
progressive flying
club.
Fly Cessna 172 $9.00,
or Cessna ISO $7.00
per hour.
Wr it e Box 63
Bloomsburg for
Complete Details
e
STAMP IT! |
(f^
^ -
_jfl k
^
S
Comp liments of
RAOE
CARTER'S
CUT RATE
National Educational Advertisin g Services "§£
a division op
READER'S DIGEST SALES ft SERVICES , INC.
f
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Tr
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The final! INDESTRUCTIBLE METAL
POCKET RUBBER STAMP. W « 2".
f*
II
LJ/^sTC!!
HL J I HI MA^
I \r\\r7CIT
n1n1
fSl
?m
The Most Convenient Location for Your
Parents and Friends
Jjj
p||
Send check or money order. Be
sure to include your Zip Code. No
posta ge or handlin g charges. ' Add
¦ales tax.
Prompt ihlpmant. Satisfaction Guaranteed
THB MOPP CO.
P. 0. Boi 1MZS Umi Square Station
i
ATLANTA, QA., 30326
^^
' g and TsJtwi/on and or*
Our rooms hav Air Up
j|
;i|
Now// Decorated.
Single Rooms — $4.00 - $5.25 - $5.50 - $6.00 |||
Double Rooms — $8.00 - $9.00 - $10.00
|||
'I 't't'i'i' -
M
•¦.
Ecroyd Speaks
Abo ut Language
College Council
Buys Planters
§|j
Mon. -12 Noon to 6 p.m.
Tues., Wed. & Sat. 8 a.m.
|
||
to 6 p.m.
||
|
Thurs.& Frl, 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.
HI
f§!
I
I
MAREE 'S j
^
^B Dress
Mock Repub
Convent ion
selected by the America n Political Science Association as
the Republican House member to '
receive its "Distinguishe d Congressional Service Awar d." In
Ma y, 1966 , he was given the
"George Was hington Award" by
the A merican G ood G overnment
Society.
I n addition to R ep resentative
Ford , important dignitaries , including Governo r Raymon d Shafer , John Reichley (former legislative assistant to Governor WiLUam Scranton and political author),and E. John Butc hi , a prom inent P ennsylvania p ollster , are
tentativel y scheduled to address
the convention.
In describing the framewo rk of
Leahy checked the instruments
t
h
e convention, Dr . Carlough ,
four times daily
Chairman of the Social Science
Department , stated , "We are
of. clip-on dark glasses over by this seemingly unexciting dally
going to try to keep this conthem , blinders , and a wide- schedule, Rich said they managed
vent
ion as c lose to the real thi ng t
brimmed hat . They kept warning to have several snowball fights
possibl
e. For ' guidelines it
as
1 us not to walk around outside to relieve the boredom somewhat.
will follow the H 1964 Republican
with our mouths open because
"We also found time to go mounNational Convention rule book.
it was too easy to burn the roof tain climbing twice and crevace
In addition to the speeches , there
of your mouth ."
exploring once. The crevace we
will be 1333 delegates, a platTh e temperature ranged f rom a explored appeared bottomless
f
orm, and ballotin g for a pres high of + 46 to a low of + 14 We went down two hundred feet
idential
nominee. To attain the
during Rich 's stay on the glacier . and had to stop because it was
required
1333 delegate s, thirty
."Gene rally it dropped from a getting too dark .
area
co
ll
e
ges, including BSC ,
daily average in tha low to middle
Surprising to this author , Mr ,
have
been
invited
to partici pate".
30' s to an evening average in Leahy is absolutely ecstatic
To
make
this
program a suc"
20>
the low
s," Rich added . about the possibility of going
c
e
s
s
h
owever
we
will need the
,
"Sometime s the heat from radia - back to the Yukon next summer.
help of ALL the organizations
tion caused by the sun 's reflecon campus. Fir st we will need
tion off the snow, caused the
700 delegates from Bloom and
temperature inside the tents to
they will have to generate the
soar into the 80's, while outside
necessary enthusiasm. It is of
it was only around f orty."
utmost
necessity for this pro - ,
Whe n asked about his dally
g
ram
to
be successf ul since
schedule , Ri ch related that he
The CGA , through the efforts
national
press
, radio , and telerose at 6:15 a.m. "cursing"; . of the College Council , has place d
vision
will
be
observing us at
made his first observation of a set of planters in the foyer
this
time.
"
the weather instruments and of Hass Auditorium which will
A registration fee of one dollar
radioed the figure s to the base be called the "Dedication Plant will
be charged to each delegate. .
stat ion at Kluane Lake ; ate bre ak- ers," and have been placed as
This
may be paid by the organ f ast; made another weather c hec k a gift of the faculty and student
ization
or by the Individual.
aroun d 10 a.m. and relayed the body.
Questions and answers from
results ; ate di nner; made another . The planters , which were not
check
of the Instrument s placed at the time of the Ded- organizations may be add ressed
to Terry C arver, Delegate Coat 1 p.m.; ate for the rest of the
ication cere monies because of
ordi nator, Box 411.
afternoon ; made his final weath er the trucking Industry strike , add
check of the day; and called It
a decorative touch to the f oyer
quits until morning.
that should be ap pr eciated by
Asked If he was bore d at all those using the auditorium .
IT' THE
REPRESENTED FOR NATIOXAU ADVCRTISINa BY
*
Octob er 27,"MOT
Maroon and Gold
BSC Stu dent Spends
Summ er In The Yuk o n
By Jim Ru pert
*
W»y«flp^ rj * '*" ll^ ' > '" lil| "^Bl^Mi i '
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COLUMBIA THEATRE
» 5 w. Main
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Now Playing
"To Sir, With Love"
I
Starrin g Sidn ey Poltler
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SNEIDMAN'S JEWELER S
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130 East Main Strstt
BB^B^B
B^B>^BB^B^B^BB^BB^BB^BB<|^B^1^BB^B^B^B^B^BB^B^^ B^B1^B^B^B^
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Data Process^^^
supervisor, Mr . Donald Housenick , "seems to be involved in
some way with every facet of
BSC."
__
———
. ...
i :
Mr. Housenlck commented on
how the center has grown and , improved in recent year js—much
to the advantage of the wh ole
college. For instance , before
Data Processing, it took six
mont hs to proces s the students
grades and send them to the
students. Students never received copies of their Qualitative Point Averages or their
projected averages at the midterm grading period . Now it
tak es only ten d ays to process
the 3200 grades (once the cente r- .
has the grades) and send the m .to the students.
. . :¦ . ,
Mr. Housenick also noted that
Bloomsburg State is the only
*
Pennsylvania state college that
allows a student to select hi s
own class hour and , in many
cases, his own professor at pre «
scheduling , which has been a college policy .
In the near future the center
expects to increase its effi ciency
with the acquisition of a new
computer.
The Date Processing Center
proces ses all the information on
all applicants of the college (last
ye^ar 3100 applic ations were pro .
.
in
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Mrs. Hirleman , key punch operator , collects class lists
and makes necessary changes in the Tub-file.
The Data Processin g Center
provides invaluable service to
the whole college community.
Located on the basement fl oor
of the Ben Franklin building,
the center, in the words of its
•
Student employee Kurt Grabfelder proce sses grade report s
on the 1401 computer. This machine prin ts all the student
- grades (3200) in four hours. Of course many other oper ations
must be completed before grades can be computed which
,
takes about ten days.
5
Took His Girl
The
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Bloomsburg
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cessedj 800 were accepted) , com*
piles the student dictionary ,
scores tests , reports student
sta tus to the selective service,
keeps track of student histories ,
and the list goes on and on.
Where Dad
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^
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Ron Brandt , a student in Intro duction to Data Processing ,
a business course initiated at
BSC during the summer , selects
a wiring panel from the board rack. BSC is the only Pennsyl vania State C ollege at which
each student has his own individual wiring pane l for each
mac hine .
^
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Miller Office :
Supply Co. ;
*
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Hallmark Card* — Oiftt
;
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Phone
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784-2561
J
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Mr . Donald House nlctc , supervisor of the Data Processing
C enter, op erates a 083 sorter , which sorts cards at the rate
of 1000 cards per minute.
Eppley 's
Pharmacy
Prescription Specialist
LOFT CANDIES
COSMETICS
SUNDRIES
ond
TOBACCOS
Phone
1
1
Qreen Itampi
p
Say Happy
Birthday
Hayyy Anniversary
<
with . . .
:
///
m
||
.
WORLDWIDE DELIVERY
'-,
miAmmt^mmmmmm ^mmmmm mmmmmmm
J oy£f
2
FLOWERS
784-4406
¦
,,i i
n,
^E
OflUfe
Main and Iro n Streets
784-3055
i1
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Charlie 's
,.f A^c?^f?rtrpT^f^rTWW|T 5rf^jwfl'!^!W!'WB'>1
., ^^PXSgSAnSSffSSff^f^v^^^^^^
piuo
Hoagies
win dilivIry
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SHUMAN'S WORLD TRAVEL
37 EAST MAIN • BLOOMSBURG • PHONE 784-3620
^
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^
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)+>
~
^
FOR ALL TOUR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS
^>
R«Mrvationt
Tickets • Tourt
Etc.
ALL AIRLINES —•TRAINS fir HOTELS•HANDLED
1]
^T
Regular & King| |
I
I
|| ' Size Hoaglti
<
p
KNITTING MILL
1
Factory Store
A>
Open two evenings
ff
each week
v
Thurs. & Fri. 9-°
J
New Fall Merchandise
//
u
t
Facto ry to You Prices
L
Save Many Dollars on You r
School Ward robel
£»
5S
¦n " Buy w here they are made " n
King Size Soft Drinks |iV
I
I
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¦ . Ph. 7-84-4292-.
"-Urq S A
|B
BERWICK
Suits - Dresses - Sweaters
$§
||
¦
' Hirm .^i, :^01?,,^,POm>^
London Show Tour
G
Hj Open 'til l 2»30 a.m. {4
i|
Clowd 1t30 to 3i00 P mZH PL
|i|Every Day But Friday <,. ; »S
m
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^ ••••••••••**********^ -ft
18 West Main Street
Bloomsburg. Pa,
i
'
2 weeks at the London Theatres for as low as $300.
. Included in tou r price:
Orchestra seats to > top London hits
Round-tri p air transpo rtation 13 nights , hotel
Full breakfast each mor ning
Transfer to and from airport
j L.
A student operates a 402 accounting machine during a
class period.
.
230 South Popla r Street
'
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Maroon and Gold
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^ 1
inter-Fraternity
Council Enters
Year Of Trial
11
IChessflliiP
g
Over Muhlehpef
The^ Bsc Chess Team scored
their first league victory of the
season at Muhle nberg College
recentl y, extendin g their undefeated streak Into Its third season. The score was 3-2, but
the Huskies 1 two . losses came
from winning positions ,
Ray Depew , perhaps not accustome d to being first board
player , missed his only- chance
to hold off a determi ned attack ,
and lost despite .a sJjzeable mater ial advantage. Len Thomas
play ed a solid second-board
game, hanging on to a slim lead
to score the point. Dave Wal p,
on third board , forced his opponent to bring his king out into
the open, then checkmated him
there .
The newly establ ished Inter Fratern ity Council has begun its
first full year of operation at
BSC. Its success or its failure
to* fulfill its committments to the
college will be fair ly well determ ined this year , and the social future and prowess of
Bioomsburg State han gs in the
balance.
.
The main pur pose of the IFC
is to act as the governing body
of the social fraternities to provide* a common ground for discussions between the administra- :
tion and the individual fratern ities. As a .governing body of
Dean Elton Hunsinger, newtion, confers with Governor .
the fraternities , the council will
ly appointed Advisor to the
Raymond P. Shafer and Senreconc ile the social forces of the
Senate Committee on Educaator Preston B. Davis.
college with the student body, .
therefore creatin g a stimulating
social atmos phere at BSC.
With fraternity rushing nearly
completed , the IFC has run into
few difficulties. It has also created a competition between the
various fraternities with its volleyball tournament, the tug-of Only registered members of war and the proposed
The BSC Literary and Film
"ham,
the society may attend the films. ' burg-eating
Society will present the first
contest. "
of its planned serie s of films Any member of the . college comThe officers for the 1967-68
to its members on Thursda y, munity who is interested in these
aca
demic year are Bob Boose
Nov. 2, at 9 in Carver Auditori- films may join . Dues are $3
(Beta Sigma Delta) , president}
um. The feature will be "The a semester for one person and
Joe Deardorff (Sigma Iota OmeSeventh Seal."
$5 a semester for a couple. ga), vice-president; Bob Hinkle
Directe d by Ingmar Bergman , In addition to the first presen - (Delta Pi), secretar y; Denny Les"The Seventh Seal" is a bleak tat ion, four additional film pro - ko (Beta Sigma Delta), treasurer.
tale of a knight' s search f or the grams will be shown during the
Membership in the Inter-Fra truth about life..Against the back - semester. Pros pective members
tern
ity C ouncilis reserved f or
ground of plague ravaged Sweden , should > apply as soon as possible two represe ntatives of each -soMax von Sydow endeavors to out- by sending their dues . to Box cial fraternity. In addition to the
wit death and struggles with 141 in Waller Hall .
officers , the representatives inthe problems of faith , destiny ,
clude Lee Jones and Bruce BenPHYS. ED . ARE A
and death .
del , Phi Sigma XI; Cris Tom.
All students enrolled in the
Railroader ", a film
v"The
linson and Jeff Murr , Pi Kappa
short, will also be presented . phy sical education area, and Epsilon; Nelson Ramon and Mike
This film consists of 22 min- those planning to switch into DeF ranclsco, Delta Ome ga Chi ;
utes of Buster K eaton's sight the physical education area Bill Kelly, Delta Pi; Stan Kuch gags . It was made in 1965 , dur - should check with Dr. Moore
arski , Sigma Iota Omega.
ing the last year of his life , (H 10) before second semester
for the Canadian Film Board . re gistration.
Literary And Film Society
Schedules Motion Pictures
^ii!iiniiiiHiiiH!ii!niiiiniiiiniii!Hinni! ni|,
1 "Corner Lunch" I
I Fifth and West Streets
I (One block above the
I Magee Carpet Mill)
I Shrimp in the
IBasket - - $1.29
Sam and Son !
i Shoe Repair I
223 Iron Street
8 aim. *~ 5 p.m.
11
w,
Wed, until noon
•
rrt-i
Girls: If you're thinking of
your Fall Wardrobe , come
in and see all the latest
fashi ons In lingerie , ineludin g matched sets in all
the brilliant colors of Fall
. . . at
'
784-4117
|
| Men's and Boys'
!
Clothing
Haggar . Slacks
j
I Brentw ood Sweaters
20 E. Main St.
1
j
:
Ph. 784-5766
1
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Motel and Restaurant
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LET'S GO
BOWLING AT
B^B^B^B^B^^^ BflH^B^BBejKHB ^BniB^B^B^BH
;
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BLOOM BOWL;
Fna PrtKri ption
Rautf 11. Nort h
^
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Ocllvtry
TOILET GOODS
COSMETICS
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES
GREETING CARDS
HMDH s^^flS>^^kBB^aV
1 W> Main St., Bioo msburg
(
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Midway between
Bioom sburg & Danvill e
Rt. 11, Pa.
Stone Castle
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Bloomsburg-Berwick
Highway
Stone Castle
KARMBRS NATIONAL OFFICE • BLOOMSBTOO ,PBNNA.
''
'
|
Ch«*Mburg«rt, Hamburgers ,
lea Craom Treat *
-
^^ ^^^^^ ^^^^^^ r^^^ ^^^^^ ^^^^r^^ ^^^^^r^^ ^^^^^r^^r^^^ ^v
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Kampus Nook "
Tho Restaurant Across From the
Colle ge
f Built For The Stude nts
11
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Open 7 Days a Week
Serving Meals Dally
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lIVERS
NATIONAL BANK
IBroiled Delmonlco
ISteak--$1.35
| Lee-Pat's
Eudora 's
Corset Shop
58D»Ium Units
'
Romeo 's
Today — 4 p.m.
frtt inlnt with any thta repaired T
,
There are still a few students
who have not picked up Selective
Service System Form SSS-104,
Request
for Student Seferrment ,
According to Mr . William Deck*
from
the
Office of the Dean of
er, director, this year 's M en's
Instruction
.
Glee Club promise s to be the
All
stu
d
ents
are reminded that
"largest and best yet." Although
it
is
imperative
that this form
the turnout has been quite good,
be
filled
out
and
mailed to the
the glee club propo ses to expand
student
'
s
h
ometown
Selective
membershi p even further. All
Service
System
board
.
men who are.intereste d are welcome to come to re hearsals
Tuesday nights from 7-8 in the
music rehearsal hall of H aas
Auditorium . No auditions are
necessar y.
vwt
The group is currently pre p aring two Ch ristmas concerts :
one with the Harmonettes and
one with the girls ' choir of
Fun & Food Center
Danville High School .
Pino, Barbaque, French Frits
Deadline:
All kinds of shoe repair 1
IChicken in the
I Basket - - $1.09
I
I
Deferment
Fprms-104
Ambitious Yr.
Friday, Nov. 3
f
The Husky Rooks face tougher
competition in the weeks ahead ,
notabl y Lebigh University (A and
B teams), P ennState, and a team
tournament in New York.
Men's Glee
Club Begins
Next Edition:
PLACEMENT OFFICE INTERVIEWS
October 31 to November 30 is as follows :
October
31 10 a.m.-r-Fallsin gton , Pa
All areas
November 8 9 :30 a.m.—U.S. Arm y Recruitin g
Philadel phia
All areas
November 8 2 p.m.—Royer sford , Pa. '.
Elem
Jan. 68'
Sept. 68
November 13 9 a.m.—Westminster , Md. ..All areas
November 14 9 a.m.—State YMCA
Harrisbur g
Any area
Al a reas
10 a.m.—La nsdale , Pa
Commercial
November 15 10 a.m.—Elkland , Pa
'
Business
$5500
November 18 9 a.m.—Federal Service Entrance
Exam
Any area
November 29
30 10 a.m .—Department of the Arm y
Officer Candidate Selection Team
Any area
Philadelphia
Carl Nauroth declined a free
pawn in the opening , which would
have been enough for the win. —
Instead , that same pawn led an
attack that soon spelled disaster .
Linda Hummell , roundin g out the
team at fifth board , won in the
end game when her adversary
was top careless with his rook
and promptly lost it. George
Underwood , playing an unofficial
sixth board, won his game
quickly, althou gh only the first
five boards count for ¦ league results.
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CHESS CLUB *
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Today -the third round of the five round chess tournament mil
be played in the Day Men 's Lounge in Science Hall* Playing begins - at Js OQ P.IT..
;
EOTOTIPRO^IA!.!;
MtaMMHHMMMM
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in the Carver Hall Auditorium,four Nationally
&
f
c 7$30 ?•&. tonight
known speakers will present a program on *The Economy and Stock Market*1*
Tickets are available free to any one who is interested in this
program * The tickets may be picked up at any of the four offices of the
Bloomsburg Bank-Columbia Trust or at the door tonight*
I
j
j
SPANISH STUDY COURSE ABROAD*
I
An organizational'meeting pf all those students interested in
I the Spanish Study Course Abroadyduring the summer of 19^8,will be held
I Tuesday, November 9, at 1**00 P»M» in room 21+ of Navy Hall*
Anyone who has even the slightest interest is invited and urged
I
I to attend this meeting*.
^B
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I 22 !S£lmaroon and gold memberss
j
I
AH members of the Maroon and Gold are asked to and" encouraged
I to attend a meeting at 7*00 P*M» on Friday night at p illion House The main
I substance of the meeting will be devoted to assignments for the P*S*C*P*A. .
I conference to be held on the tenth eleventh , and twelveth of November here
^
"
'
"'
I at BSC *
I
Also scheduled will be a general staff meeting and an editorial
I board meeting*.
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I
I CONGRATULATIONS TO TEE PLAYERS:
¦
Fe at the Maroon and Gold wish to congratulate the Bloomsburg
I Players on their fine presentation of the play "Tisit To A Small Planet•" The
I acting was fine and the setting was well designed for the play. We hope they
I can turn out many more fine productions ?
H
I
~"
I NATIONAL NEWS *
I
Hashington»-president Johnson urged 5p .ngre.ss to4ay tp remain in
¦
session this year until it had "faced upM to the " nation1 s most compelling
I problems, especially the need for a tax increase* Also the Congress was to
I "face upWt to the urban problems*
¦
Washington—The Senate Finance Committee revised the House
¦
approved Social Security bill to bring it up to Administration requests,
¦
including an overall 1$% increase in benefits under old " age , survivors and
¦
disability insurance and a minimum $70 menthly benefits.The House had
I approved a 12j percent increase and a $$0 minimum* The present mimimum is $UU »
i
M™AIi25iIi §91Slf
Secretary General Thant urged both Israel and the United Arab
Republic to assure "that in cases of alleged violations- of the cease-fire each
side wouldmaka use of the U»N» cease-fire observation system instead of
continuing to follow the practice of resorting to violence**
•
Former Secretary of the Treasury Robert Bo Anderson has been
serit to Cairo as President Johnson's unofficial envoy to see if President
Gama^.Abd«l Nasser will agree to talks with Israel^, initially through a
United Nations representative.,
w
Quotat ion of the Day
^We are doing what we believe and what we know., to the best of
our knowledge P to be the right and proper thing to do; We are ' going to
cont..1j?»e to do what we believe is right. w —President Johnson,, on the
bombing cf North Vietnamo
MAROON AND GOLD. SUPPIEMENT FOR NC7EMBER 2 , 196?
Milce StiigriJi
Bill. Teitsrworth o Supplement Edit or
.
T echmcxans
Marlen« Karabin!, Typist
Tom James
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Doug Hippenstiel Editor
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