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March 1, 1968
£ ? : Vol; XLV^
Theater Paintin gs Coverin g Eleven Pennsylvania
Tw o Centuries Are On
To Send Convention
Eleven Pennsylvania colleges
Exhibit In Haas Galler y
~and universities will participate in
The Painters For The Theatre , Roman soldier 's costume in
an exhibition of 45 works by Shaw's Ceasar and Cleopatra.
well-known arti sts of the late Other costume sketches included
19 th and 20 th centuries are one by the Mexican painter
Diego Rivera for a ballet enti tled
specifically for th eatrical
purposes , opened on February 18 . H.P. , one by the Bauhaus painted
in Haas Auditorium and will Osfcar Schlemmer for The Triadic
remain, open till March 4. The Ballet and by the American
exhibit is under the direction of Florine Stettheimer for a ballet
William S. Lieberman , Curator of entitled Orphee of the Quat' z
Drawings and Prints at the Arts. "
In ballet , the great Russian
Museum of Modern Art , New
York and is circulate d by the impresario Serge Diaghilev was
Museums Department of the first director to commission
important artists to design
Circulating Exhibitions.
The works in the exhibition are costumes and sets; include d in the
exhibition are Michael Larionov 's
divided
i n t o three
categories—programs , costumes , designs for he Renard , those of
and decor. Three of the programs , Pablo Picasso for Pulcinella , those
the earliest dated works in the ' of Robert Delaunay for
exhibition , are .illustrated by Cleopatra , and those of Nathalie
Gontcharova for Le Cog d'Or.
three Fren ch post-impressionist
In the section devoted to decor,
masters—Toulouse— La u t ree,
Bonnard , Vuillard. The fourth , two of the best-known American
for Ibsen 's play John Gabriel artists working especially in this
Bor kman , is appropriately done field are represented ; Eugene
by his fellow-cpuntryman Edvard Berman with his sets for The
" Three penny Opera and Devil's
Munch.
In style," the " sketches and ^Holiday -and Pavel Tchelitchew
drawings in the costume section with his set for Paul Claudel' s The
vary from the delicate Tidings Brought to Mary.
Other artists represented in the
impressionistic drawings by
C hr ist ian Ber a rd for T he exhibition are: Horacio A. Butler ,
Paul CadYnus , Marc Chagall , Max
Madwoman of Chaillot through
Jim Dine's bizarre "Men in Erns t , Hap Greishaber , Red
Woman 's Costume , Woman in G rooms , Fernand Leger , El
Male ' s C ost ume " for h i s Lissitzky, Sidney Nolan , Gino
happening The Car Crash to a Severin i , Serge i Soude ik ine ,
lively and sardonically amusing Frank lin C. Watkins , and
sketch by George Gr osz for a Christopher Wood.
Council Passes Fund-Raisin g Events
And Mock Convention Budget
the mock Republican National
Convention to be held at BSC on
Saturday, March 16. The
Honorable Geral d R. Ford ,
minority leader of the United
States House of Representatives ,
will deliver the keynote address.
The participatin g institutions of
higher education and the number
of delegates expected from each
one are as follows : Penn State
University-20; St. Vincent 's
College-12; St. Francis deSales
C o l l e g e - 1 8 ; Susquehanna
Universit y-23; Miliersviu >20;
Lehigh Universit y-5; Mary wood
College-33 ; Kings College-86;
Keystone - Junior College-14;
Kutztown S.C.-4; and BSC will
make up the bala nce of delegates
to reach the required number of
1333 delegates.
Platform Committee
Platform committee chairman ,
BSC student Charles Blackenshi p,
has indicated the platform
committee , composed of 55
. delegates , will have nine
sub-committees. The following
• topics will be included in the nine
. policy areas:
;
Foreign policy—diplomacy, the
Un i ted Nations , foreign aid,
collective agreements unless
- exclusively military in character ,
policy toward Israel or other
specific nations , East-West
center.
Defense—conduct of the war
and military strateg y, the draft ,
living conditions of military
p ersonnel , weapons systems ,
milit ary research , civil defense ,
Un ited Nat ions armed forces,
d i sarmament an d t est ing of
nuclear weapons.
Taxation
Economic policy—control
and asked the Council for
p e r m i s s i o n to hold a
Money-Making Bonanza , on
either the 16th or 23rd of March ,
in the form of car-washes , bake
sales, rummage sales, and cand y
sale. The Council agreed on the
idea but said that It would have to
be on the 23rd of March because
of the Mock Republican
Convention on Ma rch 16. The
CEC said that would be alrigh t
and the motion was passed
unanimously .
The APO fraternity then asked
if they could have approval for
-"" thei r Fund Raising Event which is
to be the Ugly Man On Campus
contest. This to was passed by the
*
Colleges
Delegations
and minimum wages, retra ining
programs , employment services,
equal pay for women, farm
workers , standards in government
c o n t r a c t s o t h e r t han
non-discrimination.
Agriculture —farm commodity,
storage , loan and income p olicies,
f o o d reserves , fore i gn
d istribution o f agri cultura l
sur pluses, agr icultural research ,
production and marketing
controls , food stam p programs ,
school lunches , fisheries , rural
electrif ication.
of
business cycles, federal f iscal
policy and taxation , regulation of
business/ distribut ion of m ilitar y
procurement contracts , science
The C ollege Council held all physical and health education
meetin gs recentl y, the business re quirements , 2) permit veter ans
centere d arou nd the following to ma intain and operate motor
and non-mil itary research ,
Issues: Council for Exceptional vehicles on or near the campus , trans portation , including mass
Children , APO 's Fund Raising and 3) veterans could establish - trans i t and r ivers and harbors ,
Event , Veteran 's Association 's residence at the pla ce of their
depressed areas.
Resolution , and the Simulated choosing witho ut college
Labor —regulation of labor
Republican Convention. .
administration interference . The unions , employment conditions
The C EC p resented the , resolution received approval from
problem of a shortage of funds the Council but it will be
-•
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Air And Water Pollution
Resources —policies relating to
minerals , fuels and ot her raw
materi als, de pletion allowances ,
water , forest and game policy, air
and water pollution , conservat ion
and recreation , atomi c ener gy for
domestic pur poses, regional
necessary for it to go thro ugh
proper committees - before it
could be completel y accepted by
the College Coun cil.
The final major point of ,
discussion at the meeting was the
consideration
hydroelectrical power policy,
excluding ruial electrification.
Social welfare —all programs
rela t e d to health , hospitals ,
educati on and social welfare , .
social secur i t y, includ i ng
unem p lo y men t i nsurance ,
p ro grams for the aged and
hand i ca pp ed , consumer
p rotect i on , housing , urban
plann ing and renewa l other t han
trans p ortation , Department of
Ur ban Affairs , veterans.
Government —adm inistration ,
lo y a l t y p rograms and civil
liberties , management of the civil
service , federal ism in general
terms , including programs of
federal-state tax adjustment ,
federal budgeting and spending
levels apart from particular
programs , the national dep t ,
statehood , government of
territories and the District of
C o l u m b i a , regulation of
elections , legislative
ap p ortionment , Congressional
procedures other than Senate
cloture. ,
of the two
proposal s which required the
approval of the College Council;
They were: 1) a fee of $1.00 be
charge each parti ci pant of the
Mock OOP Convention; this fee
will Include a box lunch provi ded
by A.R.A. Slater and 2) that , an
amount of money,not to exceed
$650, be allocated from the
Endowed Lecture Fund to help
take care of the convention costs .
that cannot be paid for by the ¦
College bu dget. This motion was *
Council unanimously.
passed
unanimo usly;! V f j -f i
Association
The Veteran 's.
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After the dlscusslonT 'Of: some :
DIARY OF ANNE FRANK.v/aspresented by the Bloomsburg
then presented a resolution for
Players
last weekend to houses that literal ly overflowed
approval with the following: minor matters the meeting ' :;was
¦ ¦ ,¦ For the
¦
policies: 1) exempt veterans from adjourned and dismissed.'^"" - <- :' ¦ ;;' ¦ ' ¦ :%Vw ^ ni ,;#e ^a|e thr ^ i;- . ;¦- •> , v ^ , \ v ,;.' ¦ •:/.. . . • . ¦ . . ' ¦ ' . •• ¦ . V • ¦/ ¦:. ;- :- : - .
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dev elo p men t , electrical and
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Social Welfare
rights an d E thnic
Civil
policy-all provisions related to
discrimination again st Negroes .
i n c 1 u ding segregation in - , the
armed forces , schools , etc., social
welfare programs specifically
designed to deal with racial
discrimination , Senate cloture ,
immigration policy, American
Indians , discrimination against
women ,
The platform committee will
¦
attend a dinner at 5:30 p.m. In
the College Commons on March 8
which , will be followed by a
meeting a 7:00 p.m. for the ¦ , • '
completion of the final draft of
the platform
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Edi tor ials . • .*
¦
.r$.f f ^|y |lipiai|r --:fk^ 9SK9lli|l^- :-. Rumors seem to be the "in "
thing this semester.
The most recent one that has
reached us was to the affect that
material chosen to go in to this
year 's edition of the OLYMPIAN
was to be brought up before a
board of administrative and
faculty censors .
A pparentl y the printed word
this year is the prime topic of
many conversations.
Early this school year , there was
much comment , through above
and underground sources , as to
the bulletin board status of the
MAROON AND GOLD .
This was followed by beginning
of
the
Having checked into the rumor
of possible censorshi p of this
year 's OLYM PIAN , we drew a
blank. To our knowledge there is
no such actio n under foot , and no
s u c h a c t i o n has be en
(NEXT WEEK WE WILL
HAVE MORE DETAILED
INFORM ATION ON THIS
SUBJECT .)
GROWING AWAREN ESS
much
controversy
over
both specific articles and the
editorial policy in general.
It seems as if the only way td "go
to
ne^t was the literary magazine ,
for that is the source of criticis m
fro m many of the puritani cal
oriented elements on man y
American cam p uses because of
narrow-mindedness in regards to
certain words incorporated into
storie s by writers to gain mood ,
oreffect .
This Monda y, evening at the
regularly scheduled college
council meeting , the proposal to
serve greatly in advancing the
Grove , & the town park.
It means slacking on the books
and psyching for the turf .
Spring means many different
things to many different people.
. It means rain and puddles and
oceans in the parking lot .
ventured outside of the world of
ESC lately , it is also looking like
It means weekends at the shore
spring on the outside world.
with the sun and surf.
Arts Festival.
It means a million and one
things
to a million and one
It means outings to the golf people and the Maroon & Gold
,
course.
will be endeavoring to cover as
It means Easter Vacati on.
many of these happenings as is
It means flowers and rabbits and
blankets.
It means top-down convertable
weather.
It means Spring weekend.
It means April Fool's Day and
the Temptations.
It means road rallies , canoe trips
down the river.
It means Watkins Glen. Knobels
physically possible.
Be a part of the growing spring ,
join the Maroon & Gol d and make
spring Immortal , and make
yourself immortal at the same
time. Come to that House of
Spring , Dillon House , any Sunday
and sign up—and work yourself
up to Spring.
Friday 1, March
196S
No. 18
RICHARD 8ENVO
Editor-ln-Chlef
But intu Man ager
Adviser
Facul ty Business Con sultant
Direc tor of Publications
Feature Editors
Sports Editor
Monog lng Editor
Assistan t Editors
¦
Adver tliing Manager , , , ,
Circulation Mono ger
PhotoQfo pher
Senior Advise r
,
1) God is: a) dead , b) living in
Carver , c) drunk , d) L.B.J.
2) Jesus: a) saves, b) swears c)
plays baseball , d) is Lyle Slack.
3) B.B. is: a) sexy, b) an F.B.I ,
agent , c) a wrestler ; d) worried.
4) Sororities are: a) brothels , b)
sacreligious. c) a wrestler , d)
worried.
5) B.S.C: a) swings, b) is liberal ,
c) hurts , d) none of th ese.
6) C.G.A. is: a) active , b) him. c)
hilarious , d) non-existent.
7) Casper is: a) who. b) a ghost,
c) quiet , d) a hamburger.
Inadverted l y, due to
p ubl ishing errors , the by-line
for last week's "Point of
jHgroon atth (Salfr
Vel. XLVI
Since all students at B.S.C. must
be worth y of emulation , we have
devised a sure-fire method to
satisfy this requirement. Just pass
this test and you 're in , baby .
Spring is coming to the campus
of BSC—and , in case you haven 't
Gordon Sivell
Richard Savage
Frank B. Davis
Robert Holler
Bill Large b Joe Griffiths
Paul Allen
; , , , , Jim Rupert
,#
Bill Teltsworth b Clark Ruch
', . , , ' or y Lou Covolllnl
^
Mike Stugrin
Mike O'Day
'
Doug
Hippenstiel
,
. . . . . . . . ,. . , . . , , , . . . . . .
The Maroon b Gold is loc ated In the Student Publications Center in Dillon
Houier
News may be submitted by calling 784-4660, extension 272, or b y
contac ting the. poper throu gh Box 58. The Maroon b Gold Is a member of
tho Pennsylvania State College Press Association .
The Maroon & Gold is published as near weekl y as Is possible by, for, and
through the ' fees ' of the students of Bloomsburg State College . Bloomsbnrg ,
Bloomsbur g,
Ptnna. V .7 B15.
Additional Staff; Down Wagner , Dove Mil ler ,. Ron Adorns, Morgo Fetterolf
,
. .
John Graf , Donna Murroy, &¦ Ron Schultz.
<
and what it should and does mean
to him and to his readers . He is
nearing the mid-century mark in
his life, but he has not lost the
freshness which characteri zes
much younger writers —the major
>
difference is that his freshness is a
mature , confident , thoroughly
engrossing freshness : he lives his
characters , his situations , and he
does not merely present them. He
is {kitting himself into every
word , every phrase , every precise
re petiti on , as a master painter
re peats dolor pattern s of a
musician re peats chords at
strategi c p oints for a more
forceful pres entation -
introduced and passed. It has now
Upsurging Spring
It means two weeks of Spring
Br ing on "Little Red Riding Hood" "Th e Bible " and "Winnie
The Pooh" I'm done with "Lad ies' Home Journal" and
"Hum pty Dumpty Magazine. "
sanction off campus apartments
unconnected with the college for
students 21 years or older , was
gone to the office of the Presiden t
of the College , and the rein awaits
its fate .
\
We would hope that th e
President 's minutes will show
ap proval of the proposal on his
p art , for such a policy would
^
present who understands his art
A SIGN OF
columns alive for many a hairy
month .
arose
FATHERS. Herbert Gold.
Random House. 308 pp. 1967
Herbert Gold is destined , for
great rewards. He is rwriter who
has
worked his art hard , wfio
^
understands his art , and who
loves his art. He has sha ped
himsel f and . his art with loving
care , because he is one of the few
really stable American authors at
more so.
GADFLY which kept the news
r
Back Shelf
contemplated on the subject.
So, rest easy , literary minds , this
year 's OLYMPI AN will be an
unex p urgated edition as it has in
years past— perhaps even a litt le
muc h-talked-a bdut
Upon revamping the MAROON
AND GOLD in January, there
"' ^¦^K'^H^^ raB ^^^ H
View
**
article
on
s t u d e n t - t e a c h i n g was
omitted —the article was
written by Larr y Phillips.
Several other errors have
presented themselves in the
past weeks , such as scramblin g
of p i c t u r e s , im p ro per
placement of article s, etc.
Please bear with us in our
wrath unti l provi sions can be
made ;
-The Editors.
Stud ent
Class ified Ads
10c per line
8) The cam p us gestapo carries:
a) the Pilot , b) extra pens, c)
Play boy .
9) K. K. does: a) not swear , b)
swear , c) cry. d) all of these.
10) Which 4 of the following (a )
Harvard (b) Yale (c) Prince ton (d)
Bloomsburg are first-rate
colleges? a) a ,b,c. b) b ,a,c. c)
c,a,b.
11) Demonstration s at B.S.C.
are: a) well attende d, b) IFC
meeting s, c) useless.
12) The M&G is: a) subversive .
b) ridiculous , c) censored , d)
banned after this issue.
Essay , question : Wri te a five (5)
wor d essay .on the liberal
pollcy(s) of this college.
Committee in Support of
Administration Follies.
Chairman Ron Schulz
Members: Joe Pjokay, John
"Red" Wal chonski.
St udent
Scholarships
The deadline for Bloomsbu rg
State College Scholarships will be
March 15, 1968. Approximately
$3500 in awards will be made in
Spring of 1968 for use in
September 1968. AJ1 pre sently
enrolled students
are eligible
except seniors and entering
January
1 9 6 8 students.
Applications are available In the
Financial Aid Office,
Students who have already been
awarded Pennsylvania State
Scholarships (Group I, II , or III)
will be receiving renewal forms in
the near future which will have to
be completed by their parents
and returned to the agency with
notarized copies of the ' parents
and students 1966 federal income
tax statements (1040 or 1040A).
Gold is the true
Herbert
practitioner of his art , yet at the
same time he is a vibrant , living ,
throbbing person. He is not a
Proust , who would lock himself
up in a padded room and hash
forth ream after ream of
introspection understandable
.•
only to himself. He is not a
voyager of the streets like James
Joyce , who made every word a
study , a defiance, a challenge and
an impossibility to a reader. He is
not a flamboyant and shallow
sensationalist like William
Burroughs , nor is he quite a
Hemingway , broodingly pensive
in his shorts as he struggles over
the wording of a manuscript in
the early morning sunrise. Yet,
strangely enough , Herbert Gold is
all these , but all of these to a
reasonable degree. He Is a writer
alive with his words , in love with
his words. In "Fa thers " he
v
retrospectively states that "We
exist on a moving point in time ;
we emerge from the void and , we
rush into oblivion. " A few pages
further on he says , "Every sky has
its own magic if a man knows how
to put it there. " There Is no doubt
that Mr. Gold knows how to take
the magic from life and place it on
paper.
-
'
"Fathers " deals with the
ancestors of Herbert Gold , the
ancestors , speaking on a broader
level , of America , of the
American dream , the American
backbone. He traces his father 's
father , a Jew in Russia. His father ,
who , at age twelve , decided to
make the grea t voyage , against his
father 's wishes , to the " gold lined
streets of America. " And who ,
upon his arrival in this country,
faced the reality of 80 years of
(Cont'd on Pg. 5)
Editorials in the MAROON
the opinion of
the Editorial Board; all feature .
articles , letters-to- the-editor ,
columns , and signed piedes are
the opinion of tha 't ,writer , : ' ;;
& GOLD are .
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"We 're facing' problems no one
else ever had to fa^e before. " So
¦¦
- Twenty million Americans have said - Anna in. the Bloomsburg
u s e d M a r i h' u anna and Players productfon of DIARY OF
four-and-one-hal f million use it ANN FRANK , which played last
week in Carver Auditorium. Thus \
regularly .
was repeated an expression that
. According to many doctors , seems to be peculiar to the
Marihuanna , a mild narc otic, is 'younger generation ' of any and
unjustly categ orized with hard every era . Perhaps in Anna 's case
drugs of add iction , but can the. comment had more validity
become hab it forming like than usual since she was living in
alcohol and tobacco. Statistics times and under circumstances
prove marijuana does"not lead to that most 'younger generations '
heroin becau se there are too do not experience
many heroin add icts that never
The Sweet Secret
tried marijuan na and too many ?
DIARY
. is a compell ing,
marijuanna user s that never
heart-warming stor y of the
became heroin addicts.
change fro m childhood into
young
womanhood experienced
m
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effect
The
more than paid off during their be forgotten in her last line of the
by
a
young
Jewish girl under the
/¦
"Lei the jury consider the resembles that of alcohol , but most trying circum stances. The . period of hiding. So often we see show, "I still think , in spite of
evidence " , said the king "No , does not have alcohol' s P l a y e r s p r o d u c t i o n is this happen around us in our own everything, that people are good
no", said the Queen. " Sentence resounding aftermath. L.S.D. tremendous! Only the most
lives (perhaps not to the extent at heart ," she is telling us that she
and verdict first-e vidence makes one lose his senses, hardene d sophisticate fiad dry—, portraye d in DIARY) that we too , is good at heart and became
marihuanna does not. In essence
afterwards. "
..
accept it as part of l i f e . . . But , that way from being loved. Her
it relaxes and : lets thought and , eyes at the close of the show. when it is slammed home to us via visits with Peter
(Kenneth
"Stuff and nonsense ," cried emotion flow freely. According Only the unfeelin g, the blase, and the stage it makes us stop and Hassinger) are heartwarming and
Alice loudly.
to reports , it provides a deeper bored could have experienced
think. Stop and think is what remind us of. our early feeble
appreciation of aesthetic Values one of the trium phs of BSC many of us did.
¦¦¦»
attempts to understand each
"Off with her head ," cried the and a more satisfying sexual drama production without being
¦• ¦
A character role in drama is other at that age. Mr. Hassinger
Queen.
meeting. Marijuanna does not moved. Good acting, good always
a challenge to the actor gave us a Peter of sensitivity and :
affect everyone in the same way; . direction , good technical and
Poor Alice, or should we say, it's an individual thing, many backstage efforts plus ^ a fine and the others with whom he awkwardness so typical of our
poor you. Alice was only people get no effect what-so-ever. script , made DIARY an 'event to works. It is often a challenge to times. His concern for the
dreaming, b,ut , baby, for you it's
be long remembered , on this the actor and the others with unfairness of his lot , his
Despite the rigid penalties campus and in this community . whom he works. It is often confusion at trying to understand
true to life. Our present judicial
tempting to overplay such a role Anna , his frustration of not being
system at B.S.C. is archaic and against the sale and use of The community in particular
unconstitutional in many aspects. marijuana , it is readil y accessable. since it was a college-communit y and "steal the show" as it were. . sure of his father 's opinion of
It is not restricted to hippies venture into the realm of good Frequently it is created for the him , and his love lavished on a
purpose of comic relief and all torn cat for want of some other
The Student Judiciary Board is either , professional people are theater.
too often it is interpreted as much outlet all catch our sympathy .
composed of students and equally engaged in this form of
D I A R Y has just ab out
administrative "advisors " who relaxation and escape.
everything to offer to the by actor and audience alike. Mr. Anna and Peter are timeless; their
"suggest " the penalty a student is
Dussel (Bruce Hopkins) faced just performances , timely.
Many doctors and Congressmen theatergoer; comedy, pathos , such a dilemma in DIARY and
to receive. In a recent case, where
excitement , tension , and a
stealing was the issue, the advisors realize . the inadequ acies of our multitude of messages and brought it off : with- excellent
The Professional Touch
success. His timing was perfect ,
told the student members of the laws and proclaim that the use of morals. It was a fine cast that
Mr.
Richey can be proud of his
Board the penalty which would marijuanna should either have a imp lemented Goodrich and his interp retation outstanding work and that of his cast and
be a c c e p t a b l e to the lighter penalty or be legalized.
crew. Once again he has shown he
Hackett' s play. Few weaknesses and tempered with restraint.
and
"
Experience
talent
stood
Mr.
administration. They Were told
of any note were to be seen.. A
; knows his business; and that is
Hopkins
in
good
stead.
From
the
not to consider a sentence less
theater. We expect good
somewhat slow start was more
than a semester 's suspension from
than compensated for by the pace moment of his entrance until he productions from him and he
college. This psychological
and characterization that took packs his bag with resignation he doesn 't let us down. The tragedy
coercion is not in keeping with
place before our eyes as the play is in character. He did not of it all is that far too few of the
the "spiri t of the law " in most
progressed. Mr. Fran k (Brian 1 overstep the bounds of comedy college and community will avail
instances. Perhaps some feel that
McLernan) lived up to the nor avoid the rigors of drama. He themselves of a fine experience in
Bloomsburg is immune from
expectations of those who have brought to the loft a portrait of the theater.
too many of us when the going
accepted judicial proceedings.
seen his previous performances.
One cannot ignore the technical
As a cool-heade d father and gets tough. Mr. Hopkins made us
aspect
of DIARY. Mr. McCubbin
If the board is trul y a Student
husband he made us believe him. look at ourselves in weakness and
Judicial Board , let students run
His reactions to the others in his frustration but never so clearly has again provided the cast with a
agenda
and
decide
v
the
the
"family " were as varied as were that we were comfortable. An functional and unusual set which
creates the impression designed in
sentence themse lves, otherwise
their characterizations. He met excellent bit of acting.
i
t. He , like Mr. Richey , does not
change the name and stop this
the challenge firmly. His role ,
Sup
p
ort
ing
Roles
disappoint us. When one looks at
hypocracy . The Board can do
while not dynamic , was the
Miep (Jean Moulder) and Mr. a p ro gram he is st ruck by the
without administrative personnel
inf luence needed to med iate t he Kraler ( R ichard Bower ) ke p t us in
who give advice and tell the jury
varie ty of personalities, crowde d touch with the outside world be -number of people required to
t ha t a certa in sentence is out of
into one small loft . Phyllis means of the ir p er iodi c visits to moun t such an endeavor. These
are the unsung heroes of the
the question. If what is in the C.
Meeker
(Mrs.
Frank)
the
loft.
Both
did
more
than
G. A. prea mble is meaningful ,
complemented the role of Mr. adequate jobs with relatively stage. They make it possible for
"
govern
ourselves
by
t hen let us
McLernan. Her appearance , small roles. Therein lies a sizable handlin g the myriad of details
"
just and righteous laws.
character ization , and dress ( even p ortion of the success of an y behind the scenes and in the
to the stockings with seems) production. One expects the auditorium. Just , one of those
The admin istra tors who are part
made her real to us. Mothers of leads to carry a show and may details did slip by them , however ,
of the Board have no vote as such ,
teenage daughters today could often miss the minor roles and when a cake app eared on stage in
not
needed
in
the
ir
are
and
well identify with her in the characters unless they are poorly a local bakery 's box.
A
fair
judge
,
present capacit y.
angu ish she suffered at Anna 's done. Miss Moulder and Mr.
To " bagg y pants " . Dussel,
like the Dean of Students ,; nine
rejection of her in favor of Bower did not let t he cast down hungry Van Daan , good stable
studen ts who comprise the jury,;
Father. Miss Meeker captured the
Margo t , Tom , the cat , beautiful
a prosecut or ap pointed by the have to testify against himself sp irit of the role in her and rounded out a good Anna , and a cast
of top q uality,
performance.
. _
Dean of Men or Women ,; and c)and that the names of those performance.
we
say,
"Thanks
for
a memorable
council for the defendent are all bringing charges and , or ,
As the icing is last to go on the evening at BSC." From the
that is needed to make the Board information against him be
cake so too is the topping of a pro blems of growing up to a
Thesis and Antithesis
'
a student affair. The judge could known.
Margot Frank ( Karl a Klin off) show. The starring role of Anna magnificent "Ha " by Mrs. Van
not overru le the decision of the
undertook a role tha t could have was magnificently done by Miss Daan , and on to the sparkler by
T hese guidelines have been been lost in the ' shuffle and Bonnie Korngold. Her constant
j ury, * but both defendent and
Dussel, "Stop it , you 're spoiling
followed
at B.S.C. in some an d confusion of others around her chatter and irritable mannerisms
prosecutor could have the right of .
the
invasion ," the Players have
lately in most instances. on hostage. She gave us a most aided by the cramped set on stage
appeal to the Student-Faculty
shown
us poetry in motion on
However , they should apply to all reaKand wonderful Margot. The caught us up in the tension of
Board .
stage and brought a tear to the
cynic will aver tha t no one could eight people in a loft. But more eyeSof many via THE DIARY OF
Upon enr olling, in a' state students Irregardless of his be so sweet and understanding in important , she made the , ANN PRAN
K. They "caught" a
college, a studen t does not forfeit offe n se. The Authority and reality but Miss Klinof f showed transition from childhood to good one this
time.
Let
'
s
have
his constitutional rights , as was jurisdiction of the United Stat es us it could be done. She was the ma t ur ity a reality. Her more! !
¦ '{
recent ly stated in the Dickey v. Constitution does not , stop at perfect antithesis of Anna. Mr. movemen ts on stage were free,
Alabam a case. The recent Llghtstreet Road. Perhaps , in the and Mrs. Van Daan (Russel Walsh her sudd en changes frorri the ,
A.A.U.F. guidelines approximate future every disciplinary case will and Ruth Campbell) created morose t o the gidd y were all too
¦
'¦
¦¦
' <¦ ¦ <
.:
" ot
constitutional provisions in follow the guidelines , not just -cha racte rizations of the family real . When she said, "When I
d isc iplinar y cases. The those cases that may attract wide friends swho just don 't . quite t h i nk of ail t he good people we
recomm endat ions from the and unwanted publicity. Mr. realize ,an d appreciate the know , .. " and "Here we are,
ti| j euo *|j d p|«|
A.A.U.P. Include ; a)the burden of . Walker and the rest of his Board sacrifices made for them by act ing like a couple of stupid
proof Is on those brin ging charges are to be congratulated for a just others. An old personal debt grown-u ps," she is an adult and
8u|»q uij |d| *||
b), that the defenden t does,not , arid rational decision.
. ' ¦ ,
owed to them by Mr. Frank is child at the same time. And not to
•
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Join The
M&G
NOW
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Pa ge 4 Maroo n & Gold — ]Friday, March I, 1968
, CQttohomj *\&$$$^ %&t
i Sunday ?th %4Sfe#$^to
Archeolo gy
The ninth an nual Florence
Dornblaser
Memorial
Scholarships will be presented at
Bala-Cynwyd , Pennsylvania , on
Tuesday, June 4th at the Annual
Convention of the Pennsylvania
Federation of Democratic
Women , Inc. Three awards will be
made in the amounts of $250,
$150 and $100.
Any deserving woman in the
junior class of an accredited
college or university may app ly.
The awards are for use during her
senior year. She must be majoring
in government , political science,
economics or history or preparing
to teach one of these subjects.
She must have good scholastic
' standing; must be reasonable
active in student activities ; must
be a resident of Pennsylvania;
must establish the need for
financial help; and must possessa
Democratic family background
or be an active participate in the
affairs of the Democratic Party.
Applications may be obtained
by writing £o: The Florence
Dornblaser
Memraorial
Scholarship Committee , c/o The
Pennsylvania F ederation of
Democratic Women , Inc. , 510
North Third Street , Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania , 17101. All
applications must be postmarked
on'or before May l r 1968,
T h e purposes of the '
scholarships are two-fold. First ,
to encourage qualified young
women to pursue and to develop
interests in politics and
government. Second , to honor
the memory of the late Florence
Dornblaser , first Treasurer of the
Pennsylvania F ederation of
Democratic Women , Inc.
Recent information received
from the Pennsylvania Higher
Education Assistance Agency in
Harrisburg
indicates that
Pennsylvania resident students
interested
in r e c e i v i n g
Pennsylvania
G roup III
Scholarships should write to the
Pennsylvania Higher Educa tion
Assistance Agency and ask for a
group III application for the
1968-69 acade mic year. In
writing to the agency for the
application , the student should
furnish his name , address (home),
social securi ty number , and
school attended. Dr. Johnson , the
Assistant Director of the
Pennsylvania Higher Education
Assistance Agency would prefer
to have students write directly to
the agency for applications rather
than wait to obtain them in the
student Financial Aid Office in
March or April.
I
MENTAL
ANGUISH
NESPOLI
J EWELER S
ALERT DRIVERS
seldom have acciden ts!
LET'S GO
BOWLING AT
BLOOM BOWL
Route 11, North
Comp liments of
Feb. 28-Mar. S 'Billion Dollar Brain '
ROCKS
Steak House
Comtr East b Fifth Sti.
' PRIME WESTERN BEEF—SEAFOOD
SPAGHETTI
Home Cooked Foods
NOON-TIME SPECIALS
Private Parties
f
(
784-9895
"For a Prettier You "
m
Bloomsburg
J
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Men's and Boys '
Clothing
Levis
McGrego r Sporfwea r
Van Heusen and
Manhat tan Shirts
Haggar Slacks
Brentwood Sweaters
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Ph. 784-5766
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I"Corner Lunch" I
W. C. FIELDS FILM FESTIVAL
"The Bonk Dick" and "Neve r Give A Sucker An Even
Break"
Berwick (Formerly The Strand)
March 1 - Paul Newman In "Cool Hand Luke "
IShrimp in the
IBasket - - $1.29
BOYS RANCH CAMP
Opening now lor waterfron e (WSI), Arts and Crafts,
Sailing NRA Rlflerl y, Riding Tripping, Walter * Top Salaries for Top People
Contact
THUNDER MOUNTAIN RANCH
Arthur F. Cohen, Director
Home phono (201) 694-1636
27 Areendel Road, Wayne, NJ.
Took His Girl
¦¦HtMUWIIMUinBlllllHllinillllMIIIHllMIIIH
1 Fifth and West Streets
I (One block above the
I Mageo Carpet Mill )
WANTED:
Summer Camp Counsellors
O
<
We take Great
Pride in:
• Our Town
• Our Colle ge
• Our Students
X9 e% MOM Sf.f M#OMowW|
Where Dad
| Lee-Pat's
Shop ARCUS'
' CAPITOL THEATRE *
The
:: Texas 1j
J .
CARTER'S
Let No Action Of
CUT RATE
Ours Bring
March 6-9
!
reg &in the popul arity which
edit
. enjoyed when fit^t ppen a
year ago. * « ' .> £ .
Joellen ' Wa lsh, ^represen ting
the sisters of Delta Epsilon
Beta , presented an extre mely
uni que 15-minute program in
which she sanf over recor ded
back ground music. Joe llen
immedia tely impress ed the
gathering with her opening
song, "Mercy, Mercy , Merc y,"
a song made popular by "The
Buckingh ams," by using the
instrumen tal recording-of the
tune by Cannonball Adde rley
as background music. Making
sure to remove , her > chewing
gum wh ile singing each
num b er , Miss Walsh
completed her program with
two more tun es, the Academy
Award-w inning "Born Fr ee,"
and "Since I Fell For You."
F o l l o w i n g Jo ell en ' s
performance , Ralph Miller and
Kearns teamed to sing
1 Tom
three folk songs, "Early in the
M o r n i n g , " "Green back
Dollar ," and "House of the
Rising Sun."
was
Thi s r e p o r t e r
disappoint ed that Rebekah
Ward was unabl e to make an
appearance this night.
—Jim Rupe rt
The .BSC Archeology Club has
announce d that Mr. Russell
Royer will be the speaker at its
next meeting, to be held at 8:30
p.m., Tuesday, March 5, in room
8 Science Hall. All interested
persons are cordially invited.
Mr. Royer is one of the most
active and well-informed
archeologists in East Central
Pennsylvania. Although an
a m a t e u r , he operates in
archeology at the professional
level to terms of skilled
excavation of significant finds
and of sharing the results of his
investigations with fe llow
scientists.
As an employee of the U.S.
Radium plan t, Mr. " Royer has
extended his archeological
prospecting into Columbia
County, where he has made some
rich finds. It was he who first
called the attention of BSC to the
prehistoric Indian site at Lime
Ridge which has been under
excavation by student groups for
two seasons. This site, the first to
be systematically excavated in
Columbia County, has been
officially designated by the
Pennsylvania State Museum as
"36 CO 1". Theexhibi t of Indian
materials found there which was
held in the Haas Auditorium
gallery last month included some
notable pieces donated by. Mr .
Royer to the college, such as part
of a soapstone vessel of the kind
used before earthenware was
perfected.
Another article to be taken up
at the meeting on March 5th will
be announcement of possible
opportunities for summer
employment as archeological
excavator open to stu dents who
have obtained experience from
the college archeology project.
^
'
^^^^ Bt ^^ T
IChicken in the
IBasket - - $1.09
i
784-4117
I^ m
* ' t^b^kif Jf 'fi i p^jiJILa V ^fc^^^ ta
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IBroiled Delntonic o
ISteak-- $1.35
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SNEIDMAN'S JEWELER S
I
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Bloomtbur g
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Back Shelf
Pa ge 5 Mar oon & Gk>ld —-/F^idayv " Mardl ;^:i^6^§^^ :i||#|
¦' ¦;l)r,"; tVaniia ^:® l;i
l
Leaflets In
Johnson City Publishes Again
(Cont'd from Pg. 2)
't
toily successes and failures,
scattered evenly along the way,
always; looking forward , aever
behind, for he'd already been
there and there was no longer
anything to hold him there when
there was so much calling him
ahead.
"Fathers" is a chronicle of the
y o u n g H erbie Gold ,' his
experiences in his father's store,
his first romance, his memories of
the Depression, his breaking away
from binding family ties as his
father had done before him, his
sneaking away to the stockroom*
to read Edgar Allen Poe's, Spicy
Detective, and Lost Horizons, the
land of Shangri-la the land of his
dreams. America, with its streets
of gold: gold in the shape of
people, experiences, phases of
learning.
Herbert Gold presents every
character he introduces with
warmth and understanding,some
cynically, some lovingly, some
neutral, all very real. "Fathers*' is
Herbert Gold's "Remembrance
of T h i n g s Past ," in a
thoroughly-in-depth precision,
thorou ghly interesting
presentation, with no clutter, no
excess wordage , no dull
moments. From the day his
mother, carrying him in her belly,
drove the family Peerless into a
teetering position on the edge of a
wharf in Cleveland to the last day
at a summer camp where
17-year-old Herbie served'as a
counselor, an "Uncle," the book l
is full of nostalgia and the human
psyche hard at work.
"Fathers" deserves a place of
distinction on the modern
reader 's bookshelf, between
Bernard Malamud's "The Fixer,"
and John O'Hara 's "The
Instrument."
Miller Office
Suppl y Co.
18 West Main Street
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Hallma rk Canto — «H»
Phon e
—Richie Benyo
January 1968
;
WE WILL SPECIAL ORDER ANY
BOOK NOT IN STOCK
784-6580
For sad davs or
glad days send,
flowers from , . .
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FLOWER S
784-4406
'
Bonded World Wide Delivery
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Salary: $6,200-$10,210.
On Campus March 11, 1968
RACUSIN S
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felehle.Sen Prenalwe $141 Re«n4 Trie
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NOW
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party to take over low
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Comp liments of
FOR SAL&
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.Dr. Donald A. Vannah has,just
signed a contract with F.A. Owen ¦'
Publishing Company of Dansville,
New York, publishers of The
Instructor, for World Publication
Rights to his article "That
A m a z i n g Terrarium— What
Next?" The article is in-science
education and is applicable for
elementary, secondary, or college
instructional levels. The article
explains the large number of uses '
which the teacher can find for the
terrarium in the classroom in
teaching many different areas of
science.
Previous publications by * Dr.
Vannan are : "The Original
Machine" Science & Children,
"Three Reading Groups in
) Science?—Yes!" Instructor, and
"Automated Objective Test
Corrections " Audiovisual
Instruction.
S A N M A R C O S , TEXAS
(CPS)—The anti-war movement
has reached the alma mater of
President Lyndon B. Johnson.
At Southwest Texas State
College last week three students
began handing out anti-war
leaflets in front of the student
center after getting permission
from the dean of students. It was
the first antiwar effort on the
•
campus.
students
were
The three
surrounded by a hostile crowd in
the afternoon. Part of the crowd
took the anti-war pamphlets
handed them and burned them on
student center steps. There was;
also a brief scuffle in which one of
the protestors was pushed
around.
The student newspaper, the
COLLEGE STAR , defended the
two protestors, although the
editor said in a separate column
that he favors the war.
Dean Hoch almost thought that it wouldn't be a very happy
birthday when he noticed the slip of paper under his wiper.
However, the ticket was merely the security department's way
of congratulating the Dean, and he drove away smiling, not only
because it was a thoughtful gesture, but also because he didn't
have to make any contributions to the security office.
¦
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Musky Netrrien Lose to
MansfieI d State 98-76
Ha rry Logan
native who was too smalt to play
football in high school but "grew
up " to play for our Huskies , will
bid for a spot with the World
Champ ion Green Bay Packers as a
flanker back.
Kucharski , who graduated
FINE JEWEL RY
and
REPAIRIN G
BSC CLASS RINGS
^
,^£^
and said he is excited about his
^ f
ft
||
cam p at St. Norbert
College, Green Bay, in late June
opportunity .
BERRIGAN'S
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Ask your Placement Officer obou f* our
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Prescription
FOR
Close to the Campus
Send check or money ord er. Be
sure to include your Zip Code. No
posta ge or handlin g charges. - Add
•a les tax ,
r 7* t *
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A
READER'S D1GKST SAUCS & SERVICES, INC.
36O Lexington Ave., New York , N. Y. 1OO17
.
150 East Main Street
Prompt thlpmmt. Satisfaction Guaranteed
5 W. Main St.
REPRESENTED
Students Interested In Joinin g
Sports Staff - Contact Bob
Scholtz. Box #763 (please).
Sports Budget Ap proved
Support The Huskies
^^^ ^^^" ^^ S LINE TEXT C^h
•
Services iM^
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DIVISION OF
training
^sJ REGULAR
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win over Ma rv Weinburg , 5-4r ^
At 160 lbs. Arnie Thompson
Haven, the Huskie matmen were
lost a 9-4 decision s to ' WCSCV.
upset by a surprising West Chester
State College team , at West unorthod ox wrestler; Keri Biles.
WCSC's Cawley proved to be ^
Chester on Saturday afterno on.
too
much for sophomore Ji m
Seeing no pins in any of the
Owens
, and won the bout 7-2.
bouts, the Husk ies sustained their .
Owens
wrestled at 167 lbs.
third setback of the season, by
In
a
very exciting 177 lb.
the score of 20-14 .
sophomore
Jim Colem'an
match
,
Wrestling at 115 lbs. Wayne
Heim, p laying agressor, won a 3-2 was topped by Scott Gliscom ,
decision over WCSC's Ron Cru ys. 10-8. Coleman dominated the
Sophomore Je ff Prosseda , third period, but could not make
battling all the way, lost a 14-6 up the points to win.
decision at the hands * of Frank
Senior Dave Jones, going for
Carrozza in the 123 lb. class.
the pin to keep the Huskies alive,
In the 130 lb. bout , Kurt "' could only come up with a
Grabfelter fell to a 10-3 decision
lopsided 22-7 win over Gary
against WCSC's John Hart.
Lyons.
Ron Russo, wrestling 137 lbs.,
The final bout was an
pulled the match even with a 9-6
anticlimax
, and ended in a draw
win over Mike Moyer. At one
between
sophomore
Bob Ja ne t
point in the match Russo held a
and WCSC's Gene Funk.
five point lead over Moyer.
In the JV preliminary , BSC
WCSC came back into the lead
with a win by John DeMarco over scored a 25-18 win over the
Rams. Wayne Smythe and Milt
BSC's Steve Peters, 7-2.
Husky senior , Joe Gerst, at 152 Andrews both picked up pins for
lbs. tied the team score 9-9, with a the Huskies winning effort .
offers were similar.
He will rep ort t o the Packers
IT'S TMI RAOf
' v |Hf |fl ki ~ M ^m 'MmiBsl^BrV^ ' f . r'tf '",,
I£lVw\ ._, ,
IM
Following BSC'S loss to Lock
fro m BSC in January and is now
teaching seventh and eighth
grades at Manville, N.J., said he
has signed with the Packers for in
" the neighborhood" of $15 ,000
which in cludes his $1,500 bonus.
Now 6 feet , 180 pounds , he is
exercising regularl y to strengthen
the knee he injured on the first
p lay from scrimma g e at
Susq uehanna.
Up to. that time Stan had
scored 10 touchdowns on p asses
against Shi ppensburg, Lock
Haven , and Mansfield, and
promised to rewrite the record
book.
Kucharskialso received offers
from the Cleveland Browns , St.
Louis Cardinals, and Atlanta
Falcons, of the National Football
League , and the American
Football League Cham pions, the
Oakland Raiders. He said all the
STAMP IT!
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llMV lMAII
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Stan Kucharski, the Archibald
Jim Dufaney Hits for tw o of his 10 points in losin g
ca use against Mansfield.
Bloomsbuig lost a four game 10 p o i n t s respectivel y.
win streak last Satur day when Duncheskie led all scorers with 28
they suffered a 98-76 loss to a points. Griffing, Bartkowski , and
psyched-up Mansfield quintet. Briesel ripped the cords for 19,
Mansfie ld took an earl y lead on 17, and 16 points respect ively.
the outside shooting of
Mansfield has, by far, the best
Duncheskie and Griffing. The fan support of any of the State
Huskies , who have trouble Colleges. Not only do their fans
defending opponents on small contribu te considerable voice
courts , were forced to position support , but they also form a
themselves further from the tunnel for the team when it
basket which opened up the lanes returns from the locker room for
enabling Mansfield to drive for the second half. May be the BSC
layups.
fans who attended the game can
Palmer Toto led the Huskies teach our fans the "Mansfield
attack with 14 points. Larry
Monaghan , Rico Fertig, and Jim Student Method for Mayhem and
Dulaney contribut ed 12, 11, and Noise at a Basketball Game ".
W|S*C ^^P^^^^^^B
Kuchars ki Signs
$15,000 Contract
Thurt. A Fri. 9:00-9:0 0
Suits — Dresses — Sweate rs
all al
Factory io You Prices
;
M- Op«n 'til 12,30 a.m. ||
¦
Cletid 1t30 to 3tOO P.M. fl
Evtry Day But Friday |
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mi duivmy
I' t Rogutar & Kin o .
Hm
il
"Buy wh ere th ey are made "
I
Hoo*l*% IS
"
King . Siio Soft Drinks ||
8I
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Sov« Many Dollars on Your
School Wardrobe !
230 South Popla r Strett
1
Ph. 784-4292
1|
Ii37 W. Main Bloom»bur oH
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Hrwltk, f«.
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(one block off Rout# 11 behind Shopping Center )
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%fmWW&
rfPP^f^
cWBB
wmmm
v H^kiett ^s: Wm%>$1M}TO^;Swim Tourney
Lyco ming Warriors 50-44
Afte r Losin g To PSU & MC
The women's varsity met the the final period , *it was not
Lady Lions, from Penn State for enough to overcome the home
their first home game of the team. The final score stood at
season.
However , the tall ,
¦ ¦ . - e x p e r i e n c e d PSU cagers 35-22, i n favor of Muhlenberg.
Connie Jarrard was high scorer
;
overpowered the Huskiettes and for BSC with 11 points.
, ran away with the game righ t "¦ The Huskiette s, with
a 1-2
from the start. The final score was record , then played host
to
52-16, with three of the visitors Wilkes College. The game proved
scoring in double figures. Marlys to be the hardest fough t so far in
Pa l mer, Barbara DeWitt and the season. The big girls from
Marion Homers scored 18, 13. Wilkes could not match the
and 10 points respectively.
Huskiettes ' speed, scrap, or desire
. The BSC girls then traveled to to win. After 3 periods of play the
. Allentown to play the girls from BSC girls led by only 1 point.
Muhlenberg. Losing 24-7 at the However , they outp layed Wilkes
i
half, the Huski ettes came bach 11-5 in the final period and
and really showed some fine captured the victory 28-21.
playing in the second half. The Co-captains Connie Jarrard and
defense held Muhlenberg forwa rd Marg Boyer both scored in double
Sue Mensch , who had scored 16 figures with 10 points apiece.
points in the first Iiaif , to only 3 Wilkes ' Bartpletti led her team in
points in the second. The entire scoring with 6 points.
Mule team was unable to score
The BSC women have a 2-2
against guards Barb Chandl er , record and are half-way through
Ginny Swope , and Btenda their season. Games remain to be
Nafzinger in the fourth guarter. played with Susquehanna ,
A l t h o u g h the b u l k of Misericordia , Mary wood , and
. Blootnsburg 's score was made in Bucknell.
In a recent CG A meeting, three
budgets were submitted for
approval . Two were for Wrestling
Tournaments , the NAIA at
Almose , Colorado , and the
NCAA at Penn State Universit y;
and the other was for the NAIA
Swimming Tournament at St.
Cloud , Minnesota. After being
brought before the Council the
aforementioned budgets were
approved unanimousl y.
BSC Swimme rs Defeat
JOIN THE M&G
Support The Husk ies
Sport s Budgets Approved
The ' 9th annual Pennsylvania
State College Swimming and
Diving Championship meet will
be held at East Stroudsburg on
Saturday, March 9, 1968.
Teams that will enter:
Defending Champion: West
/ The BSC Huski es swim team the meet. Addit ional wins for the
,
Chester
bested the Lycoming Warriors at Huskies were p osted by Tim Carr
Runners-up: Slippery Rock , . Wiliiam sport on Saturday
in the 50 yard freest yle; and by
Millersville , E. Stroudsburg,
s ¦ afternoon by the score of 50-44. the 400 yard medley rela y team.
Lock . Ha ven , ' Cheyney -, This is the first win over the
Ralph Moers chbacher won again * /• •: .
California and Bloomsburg.
the
Huskies
in
the
last
by
Warriors
in the 500 yard freest yle, making
, The "Husky Swimmers" have
thirteen dual meets between the it his second win of the meet. ;
taken third place trop hies the two teams '
past two years. However they will
Vince Shiban , having ear be aiming for 1st place and are the
Two new team records were set
trouble , took part in the 400 yard ~
favorites based on the upset' win in the meet against the Warriors. . medley, but withdrew from the
over West Chester in dual meet R a l p h M o e r s c h b a c h e r ,
200 yard br eaststroke. Ray
competition this year.
sophomore from Camp Hill, set
Steppling jammed his leg on a v
Tickets will be on sale at E. one in the 200 yard ' freestyle,
turn , and it is uncertain how long
Stroudsburg:
with the winn ing time of 1:56.3.
he
will be sidelined , but Coach Eli
Morning Session (diving trials The other was set by junior Ed
McLaughlin
said
he
should
be
begir aing at 10:00) $. 50
McNert ney, in the 200 yard
ready for the PSCAC Tourney at
Afternoon Session (Beginning butterfly . His. winning time was
East
Stroudsburg on March 9.
at 1:00) $1.25 ,
2:16.8.
Students $ .50
This win over Lycoming
College
.makes the Huskie
The
Huskies
had
wins
in
only
BSC has been informed that
"
eleven
contests
but
swimmers
8-2 for the season in
five
of
,
it will be able to nominate two
possessed
better
depth
and
put
on
dual
meets.
Their last meet of the
members of the senior class for
performance
.
a
better
all
around
season
was
against Trenton on
consideration to teach abroad.
The BSC team had the victory
Wednesday afternoon , February
Normally two years of
clinched
before
the
final
event
of
28.
experience are required , but
under a special pilot program
initaited last year , highly
qualified candidates are
selected without prior
teaching experience.
Spor t s Staff
WE'RE
EDITOR
HEADED
PAUL ALLEN
STAFF
Roy T. Colley
OP
, .
Bob Schultz
Jim Mayer
Marg Boyer
Joe Griffirhe
RITTER'S
THE
486 W. Main St.
( Next to Quality Clean tit )
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112 East Main Street
Bloomsfaur g, Pa.
Mon. -12 Noon to 6 p .m.
Tues., Wed. & Sat. 8 a.m.
to 6 p.m.
Thurs , & Fri. 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.
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Psychedelic Decor
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Bloomsbu fgf Pa. m
DicK Btt HVrI9idi iV»ana0er
Wism
FEDERAL SCHOOL REPORT says: The Philadelphia public schools are engaged in "the most dramatic
revolution in a city school system in the post-war period/'
Reform in Philadelphia is "more widespread and far-reaching
than in any large school system in the country."
DR. MARK R. SHEDD, new Superintendent of Schools,says*. .
"I will continue to support teachers who are able to examine, in a
mature way, the gut issues of our day—war,sex,race, drugs,poverty.
:
If we divorce school subjects from the guts and hopes of human beings,
we can expect students,to find them gutless and hopeless."
RICHARDSON DILWORTH, President of the Board of Education,
says:"The city is where the action is, It's where the challenge is. It's where
we are facing the great moral and social issues of our day. If you want action,
come teach in Philadelphia, if you don't, go teach in the suburbs."
WE SAY: Come join our school revolution as a teacher. Get in on the action.
Teacher salaries are rising rapidly. So is our school system. Come on up the up staircase. For fprther information, see our Representative who will be at Bloomiburg ;
.:
Stiate College Thw riday, March 14, iwi
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SIGN UP AT YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR AN imjeRVIEW NOW.
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DKTRICT
LADELPHIA
CrM^ni
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swE irnii!ii...i rmi¦ :i- ; /
uyL Miy
inc avn
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W3*$®$ff l!8ff l?f r^ is ^W *» .fcS ftS
\\
Mrs. Harry Misfale r
New Faculty Member
The a ppoint ment of Mrs.
Harry Mishler , a 1955 graduate of
Bloomsburg State College, as
instructor of Business Education
at BSC for the second semester of
the 1967-68 college year , has
been approved by Dr. Harvey A.
Andruss , President , and the
Board of Trustees of the collegerMrs. Mishler will assume the
teaching duties of Walter Rygiel,
Associate Professor of Business
Education , who retire d at the
close of the college semester that
ended on January 26.
Born in Berwick , Penna., Mrs.
Mishler received her elementary
and secondary education in the
schools of that community. Her
Bachelor of Science degree was
earned in Business Education at
BSC. For the past three years she
has been a substitute teacher for
the Bloomsburg Area SchooL.
Prior to that she held secretarial
and stenographic positions in the
Philadel phia and Wilkes-Barre
areas.
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Meeting Of Aii
Freshman In
Teacher EducationCarver , 5:00,
Wed., March 6
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and it is requested that they be
prompt in attendence in order
that the meeting may be brief and
they will not be held over the
entire dinner hour.
The program as planned for this
year will again be on a voluntary
basis.
The meetin g of freshmen in
teacher education to be held in
on
Carver
Auditorium
Wednesday , March 6, will in part
deal with the September Field
Experience , as well as other
matters of importance to this
particular group. Attende nce at
this meetin g is required of all
freshmen in teacher education ,
kJuZty GtntBt
The Bloomsburg Jaycees,
sponsors of the "Miss Eastern
.Pennsylvania Pageant ," an
official preliminary to the Miss
America Pageant , have launched
th ei r annual sear ch for
contestants for the fifth annual
pageant which will be presented
on Saturday, April 20, 1968, in
Bloomsburg.
The girl who wins the title at
Bloomsburg in April will .
represent this area at the Miss
Pennsy lvani a Pageant th is
summer. In addi tion, t he w inner
will share with her runners-up and
court , a prize and scholarship list
totaling over $2,000.
In order to q ualify for the
c o n t e s t , Mi ss Eastern
Pennsylvania of 1968 must make
her home in Columbia, Mont our,
Northumberland, or Schuylkill
county or must attend college in
the four count y area. The entrant
must ' also be between the ages of
eighteen and twent y-eight as of
Sep tember 1, 1968, and never
have been married.
Any resident of the four
county area has the privilege of
nominating a girl for the
com p e t i t i o n . Names and
addresses should be forwarded to
the Entries Committee , P.O. Box
101, Bloomsburg, Pa. , 17815, at
once.
.The Entries Committee ,
comp osed of Junior Chamber of
Commerce members and their
wives, will inter view each girl
suggested for a p lace among the
Miss America ho pefuls. The
committee will also visit those .
entrants' parents who reside In
the four-county ar ea.
The Jaycees are already hard at
work laying plans for the 1968
production. Last year 's hit show ,
Interviews
March 4
9:00 a.m.
..
Massena Central Schools
Massena, N.Y.
March 4
10:00 a.m.
Newark Spec. Sch. Dist.
Newark, Delaware
March 4 v
Bethleham Area Sch.
Dist.—Bethleham , Penna.
Calvert Coun ty Bd. of
Ed.-Pr ince Frederick ,
Md.
March 5
9:00 a.m.
March 5
2:00 p.m.
Mar ch 5
3:00 p.m.
Mar ch 6
10:00 a.m.
March 6
2:00 p.m.
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Elmira City Schools
Elmira , N.Y.
Eastern York Sch. Dist
Wrightsville , Penna.
Daniel Boone Elem Sch.
Douglassville, Penna.
East Orange Sch. Dist.
East Orange
, N.J.
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March 6
3:00 p.m.
March 7
9:00 a.m.
Lock Haven H.S.
Lock Haven , Penna.
South Junior H.S.
Bloomsfield, N.J.
March 7
10:00 a.m.
March 7
2:00 p.m.
March 8 >
9:00 a.m.
March 8
10:00 a.m.
March 8
10:00 a.m.
Dade County Sch Bd.
Miami , Florida
Plalnf ield Public
Schs.-Plainfield , N.J.
Prince Georges Count y
Upper Marlb oro , Md.
West Islip Public Sch.
West Isllp. L.L , N.Y.
Mr. Carl Stiber
Sears Roebu ck Co.
Phila ,, Penna.
Hammondsport Central
Sch.-Hammondsport
¦ , N.Y,
March 8
2:00 p.m.
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Elem; Sp Ed; Bus;
Jr Hi;Math;Sci ;
Sr Hu Soc Std ;
JEng; Fr; Span ;
Bio; Math;
Sp Ed; Sp & Hearing; Soc. Work ;
Elem; Bus Ed;
Chem ;Eng;Gen
Sci;Math ; Read ;
Soc Stud; Span;
Elem; Most areas
of Sec ; Sp Ed;
Elem; Eng; Fr;
Sci;Math;Lan g
Arts /Soc Stud;
Soc Studies;
All areas;
Elem; Sci; Eng;
Bus Ed;
2nd; 3rd; 4th;
5t h; 6t h;
Elem; Jr Hi;
Math;S ci-Math ;
Most other areas
of Sed;
Bus Ed (Typ.
Bkpg. Bus Math );
Elem; Eng ; Math ;
Gen Sci;Phys
Scl ; Soc StudEngj SpEd;
All areas ;
All areas; Soc
work;
All areas;
Elem; Secondary ;
Bus;
Any curriculum; '
Kind; 1st; 2nd;
3rd ; Jr HI Eng; ¦
Math ; -/
V
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e ntitled " It's More than a
Pageant ," was acclaimed 6y a
capacit y audience which included
repre sentatives from the state and
nationaP pageants. Mistress of .
ceremonies /was the char ming:
Sharon Elaine Philllan , MissOhlo
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Linda Daugherty, a Special Education major , from Lewisbur g,
checks the work of Junior High School stud ents as part of her
¦
Field Experience.
Because of the positive
reaction of the students who
partici pated in a September Field
Experience last fail , the program
will be conducted again this
coming year , the Department of
Field Experiences announced
recentl y.
L a s t September 200
sophomores in teacher education
spent approximately two weeks
working in a public school of
their choice on a voluntary basis. <
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1. to r.: Janet Mover , a major in Elementary educat ion from
Mifflinbur g, Penna.,.worked with students in the second grade.
Watklni Oltnh Isn't Far Away . . .
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Art Exhibit h Haas
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Recently the BSC Physics Club
held a meeting at which Mr. Ray
Wolver to n, a first semester
student teacher , was to talk abou t .
An exhibition of drawings by
the teaching methods at the
secondar y education level. William D. Alabaugh , a new
Unfortunatel y, due t o a schedule member of the faculty of the BSC
conflict, Mr. Wol\eiton was art department , w il be held
Monda y, March 4 t hrough
unable to attend .
With the lack of the featured Thursday, April 4, in the college
speaker, t he meeti ng was turned art gallery on t he second level of
over to the club 's president who Haas Audit orium.
devoted much of the remaining
Mr. Alabaugh received his
time to noted p ersonalities in Bachelor of Fine Arts degree at
Physics.
Mary land Insti tute of Art in
The next meet ing is scheduled B altimore , in 1964. He has
for Wednesday, March 6, at 4:00 stud ied at the Pennsylvania
p.m.
A cadem y o f Fine Arts in
Philadlep hia, and received his
BSC has been informed that
Mast er of Fine Arts degree at t he
it will be able to nominate two
University of Colorado, Boulder,
members of the senior classfor
Colorado, in 1967. He has taugh t
consideration to teach abroad.
in p ublic schools on both the Normall y two years of
elementar y and secondary levels.
experience are required, but
At present , Mr. Alabaugh teaches
under a special pilot program
Introdu ction to Art and Drawing, 1
initiated last year , highly
A cordial invitation has been*,
q ualified candida tes are
extended by Mr. Alabaugh to ^
I
selected without prior
.. ¦A
residents
throughou
t
the
area
to
teaching experience.
view the exhibi t ion and to attend
For further information,
the reception the evening of
contact the Placement Office .
March 4 , from 7: 30-9:00 p.m.
' "
.
1'
Physics Club
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La Strada
La Strada , Ferderico Fellini' s
first internationally successful
film and a winner of the
American Academy Award for
Best Foreign Film will be shown
in Carver Hall this coming
Tuesday, March 5,. by the
Literary and Film Society.
Starring Ajnthony Quinn and
Fellini' s wife, Giulietta Masina ,
the film is the first of two the
Literary and Film Society is
screening to illustrate the
evolution of Fellini 's style. On
March 26 it will show his latest
movie, also starring his wife ,
Juliet of the Spirits.
,
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March 1, 1968
£ ? : Vol; XLV^
Theater Paintin gs Coverin g Eleven Pennsylvania
Tw o Centuries Are On
To Send Convention
Eleven Pennsylvania colleges
Exhibit In Haas Galler y
~and universities will participate in
The Painters For The Theatre , Roman soldier 's costume in
an exhibition of 45 works by Shaw's Ceasar and Cleopatra.
well-known arti sts of the late Other costume sketches included
19 th and 20 th centuries are one by the Mexican painter
Diego Rivera for a ballet enti tled
specifically for th eatrical
purposes , opened on February 18 . H.P. , one by the Bauhaus painted
in Haas Auditorium and will Osfcar Schlemmer for The Triadic
remain, open till March 4. The Ballet and by the American
exhibit is under the direction of Florine Stettheimer for a ballet
William S. Lieberman , Curator of entitled Orphee of the Quat' z
Drawings and Prints at the Arts. "
In ballet , the great Russian
Museum of Modern Art , New
York and is circulate d by the impresario Serge Diaghilev was
Museums Department of the first director to commission
important artists to design
Circulating Exhibitions.
The works in the exhibition are costumes and sets; include d in the
exhibition are Michael Larionov 's
divided
i n t o three
categories—programs , costumes , designs for he Renard , those of
and decor. Three of the programs , Pablo Picasso for Pulcinella , those
the earliest dated works in the ' of Robert Delaunay for
exhibition , are .illustrated by Cleopatra , and those of Nathalie
Gontcharova for Le Cog d'Or.
three Fren ch post-impressionist
In the section devoted to decor,
masters—Toulouse— La u t ree,
Bonnard , Vuillard. The fourth , two of the best-known American
for Ibsen 's play John Gabriel artists working especially in this
Bor kman , is appropriately done field are represented ; Eugene
by his fellow-cpuntryman Edvard Berman with his sets for The
" Three penny Opera and Devil's
Munch.
In style," the " sketches and ^Holiday -and Pavel Tchelitchew
drawings in the costume section with his set for Paul Claudel' s The
vary from the delicate Tidings Brought to Mary.
Other artists represented in the
impressionistic drawings by
C hr ist ian Ber a rd for T he exhibition are: Horacio A. Butler ,
Paul CadYnus , Marc Chagall , Max
Madwoman of Chaillot through
Jim Dine's bizarre "Men in Erns t , Hap Greishaber , Red
Woman 's Costume , Woman in G rooms , Fernand Leger , El
Male ' s C ost ume " for h i s Lissitzky, Sidney Nolan , Gino
happening The Car Crash to a Severin i , Serge i Soude ik ine ,
lively and sardonically amusing Frank lin C. Watkins , and
sketch by George Gr osz for a Christopher Wood.
Council Passes Fund-Raisin g Events
And Mock Convention Budget
the mock Republican National
Convention to be held at BSC on
Saturday, March 16. The
Honorable Geral d R. Ford ,
minority leader of the United
States House of Representatives ,
will deliver the keynote address.
The participatin g institutions of
higher education and the number
of delegates expected from each
one are as follows : Penn State
University-20; St. Vincent 's
College-12; St. Francis deSales
C o l l e g e - 1 8 ; Susquehanna
Universit y-23; Miliersviu >20;
Lehigh Universit y-5; Mary wood
College-33 ; Kings College-86;
Keystone - Junior College-14;
Kutztown S.C.-4; and BSC will
make up the bala nce of delegates
to reach the required number of
1333 delegates.
Platform Committee
Platform committee chairman ,
BSC student Charles Blackenshi p,
has indicated the platform
committee , composed of 55
. delegates , will have nine
sub-committees. The following
• topics will be included in the nine
. policy areas:
;
Foreign policy—diplomacy, the
Un i ted Nations , foreign aid,
collective agreements unless
- exclusively military in character ,
policy toward Israel or other
specific nations , East-West
center.
Defense—conduct of the war
and military strateg y, the draft ,
living conditions of military
p ersonnel , weapons systems ,
milit ary research , civil defense ,
Un ited Nat ions armed forces,
d i sarmament an d t est ing of
nuclear weapons.
Taxation
Economic policy—control
and asked the Council for
p e r m i s s i o n to hold a
Money-Making Bonanza , on
either the 16th or 23rd of March ,
in the form of car-washes , bake
sales, rummage sales, and cand y
sale. The Council agreed on the
idea but said that It would have to
be on the 23rd of March because
of the Mock Republican
Convention on Ma rch 16. The
CEC said that would be alrigh t
and the motion was passed
unanimously .
The APO fraternity then asked
if they could have approval for
-"" thei r Fund Raising Event which is
to be the Ugly Man On Campus
contest. This to was passed by the
*
Colleges
Delegations
and minimum wages, retra ining
programs , employment services,
equal pay for women, farm
workers , standards in government
c o n t r a c t s o t h e r t han
non-discrimination.
Agriculture —farm commodity,
storage , loan and income p olicies,
f o o d reserves , fore i gn
d istribution o f agri cultura l
sur pluses, agr icultural research ,
production and marketing
controls , food stam p programs ,
school lunches , fisheries , rural
electrif ication.
of
business cycles, federal f iscal
policy and taxation , regulation of
business/ distribut ion of m ilitar y
procurement contracts , science
The C ollege Council held all physical and health education
meetin gs recentl y, the business re quirements , 2) permit veter ans
centere d arou nd the following to ma intain and operate motor
and non-mil itary research ,
Issues: Council for Exceptional vehicles on or near the campus , trans portation , including mass
Children , APO 's Fund Raising and 3) veterans could establish - trans i t and r ivers and harbors ,
Event , Veteran 's Association 's residence at the pla ce of their
depressed areas.
Resolution , and the Simulated choosing witho ut college
Labor —regulation of labor
Republican Convention. .
administration interference . The unions , employment conditions
The C EC p resented the , resolution received approval from
problem of a shortage of funds the Council but it will be
-•
^wm^^^^ z
Air And Water Pollution
Resources —policies relating to
minerals , fuels and ot her raw
materi als, de pletion allowances ,
water , forest and game policy, air
and water pollution , conservat ion
and recreation , atomi c ener gy for
domestic pur poses, regional
necessary for it to go thro ugh
proper committees - before it
could be completel y accepted by
the College Coun cil.
The final major point of ,
discussion at the meeting was the
consideration
hydroelectrical power policy,
excluding ruial electrification.
Social welfare —all programs
rela t e d to health , hospitals ,
educati on and social welfare , .
social secur i t y, includ i ng
unem p lo y men t i nsurance ,
p ro grams for the aged and
hand i ca pp ed , consumer
p rotect i on , housing , urban
plann ing and renewa l other t han
trans p ortation , Department of
Ur ban Affairs , veterans.
Government —adm inistration ,
lo y a l t y p rograms and civil
liberties , management of the civil
service , federal ism in general
terms , including programs of
federal-state tax adjustment ,
federal budgeting and spending
levels apart from particular
programs , the national dep t ,
statehood , government of
territories and the District of
C o l u m b i a , regulation of
elections , legislative
ap p ortionment , Congressional
procedures other than Senate
cloture. ,
of the two
proposal s which required the
approval of the College Council;
They were: 1) a fee of $1.00 be
charge each parti ci pant of the
Mock OOP Convention; this fee
will Include a box lunch provi ded
by A.R.A. Slater and 2) that , an
amount of money,not to exceed
$650, be allocated from the
Endowed Lecture Fund to help
take care of the convention costs .
that cannot be paid for by the ¦
College bu dget. This motion was *
Council unanimously.
passed
unanimo usly;! V f j -f i
Association
The Veteran 's.
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.
After the dlscusslonT 'Of: some :
DIARY OF ANNE FRANK.v/aspresented by the Bloomsburg
then presented a resolution for
Players
last weekend to houses that literal ly overflowed
approval with the following: minor matters the meeting ' :;was
¦ ¦ ,¦ For the
¦
policies: 1) exempt veterans from adjourned and dismissed.'^"" - <- :' ¦ ;;' ¦ ' ¦ :%Vw ^ ni ,;#e ^a|e thr ^ i;- . ;¦- •> , v ^ , \ v ,;.' ¦ •:/.. . . • . ¦ . . ' ¦ ' . •• ¦ . V • ¦/ ¦:. ;- :- : - .
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Social Welfare
rights an d E thnic
Civil
policy-all provisions related to
discrimination again st Negroes .
i n c 1 u ding segregation in - , the
armed forces , schools , etc., social
welfare programs specifically
designed to deal with racial
discrimination , Senate cloture ,
immigration policy, American
Indians , discrimination against
women ,
The platform committee will
¦
attend a dinner at 5:30 p.m. In
the College Commons on March 8
which , will be followed by a
meeting a 7:00 p.m. for the ¦ , • '
completion of the final draft of
the platform
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Edi tor ials . • .*
¦
.r$.f f ^|y |lipiai|r --:fk^ 9SK9lli|l^- :-. Rumors seem to be the "in "
thing this semester.
The most recent one that has
reached us was to the affect that
material chosen to go in to this
year 's edition of the OLYMPIAN
was to be brought up before a
board of administrative and
faculty censors .
A pparentl y the printed word
this year is the prime topic of
many conversations.
Early this school year , there was
much comment , through above
and underground sources , as to
the bulletin board status of the
MAROON AND GOLD .
This was followed by beginning
of
the
Having checked into the rumor
of possible censorshi p of this
year 's OLYM PIAN , we drew a
blank. To our knowledge there is
no such actio n under foot , and no
s u c h a c t i o n has be en
(NEXT WEEK WE WILL
HAVE MORE DETAILED
INFORM ATION ON THIS
SUBJECT .)
GROWING AWAREN ESS
much
controversy
over
both specific articles and the
editorial policy in general.
It seems as if the only way td "go
to
ne^t was the literary magazine ,
for that is the source of criticis m
fro m many of the puritani cal
oriented elements on man y
American cam p uses because of
narrow-mindedness in regards to
certain words incorporated into
storie s by writers to gain mood ,
oreffect .
This Monda y, evening at the
regularly scheduled college
council meeting , the proposal to
serve greatly in advancing the
Grove , & the town park.
It means slacking on the books
and psyching for the turf .
Spring means many different
things to many different people.
. It means rain and puddles and
oceans in the parking lot .
ventured outside of the world of
ESC lately , it is also looking like
It means weekends at the shore
spring on the outside world.
with the sun and surf.
Arts Festival.
It means a million and one
things
to a million and one
It means outings to the golf people and the Maroon & Gold
,
course.
will be endeavoring to cover as
It means Easter Vacati on.
many of these happenings as is
It means flowers and rabbits and
blankets.
It means top-down convertable
weather.
It means Spring weekend.
It means April Fool's Day and
the Temptations.
It means road rallies , canoe trips
down the river.
It means Watkins Glen. Knobels
physically possible.
Be a part of the growing spring ,
join the Maroon & Gol d and make
spring Immortal , and make
yourself immortal at the same
time. Come to that House of
Spring , Dillon House , any Sunday
and sign up—and work yourself
up to Spring.
Friday 1, March
196S
No. 18
RICHARD 8ENVO
Editor-ln-Chlef
But intu Man ager
Adviser
Facul ty Business Con sultant
Direc tor of Publications
Feature Editors
Sports Editor
Monog lng Editor
Assistan t Editors
¦
Adver tliing Manager , , , ,
Circulation Mono ger
PhotoQfo pher
Senior Advise r
,
1) God is: a) dead , b) living in
Carver , c) drunk , d) L.B.J.
2) Jesus: a) saves, b) swears c)
plays baseball , d) is Lyle Slack.
3) B.B. is: a) sexy, b) an F.B.I ,
agent , c) a wrestler ; d) worried.
4) Sororities are: a) brothels , b)
sacreligious. c) a wrestler , d)
worried.
5) B.S.C: a) swings, b) is liberal ,
c) hurts , d) none of th ese.
6) C.G.A. is: a) active , b) him. c)
hilarious , d) non-existent.
7) Casper is: a) who. b) a ghost,
c) quiet , d) a hamburger.
Inadverted l y, due to
p ubl ishing errors , the by-line
for last week's "Point of
jHgroon atth (Salfr
Vel. XLVI
Since all students at B.S.C. must
be worth y of emulation , we have
devised a sure-fire method to
satisfy this requirement. Just pass
this test and you 're in , baby .
Spring is coming to the campus
of BSC—and , in case you haven 't
Gordon Sivell
Richard Savage
Frank B. Davis
Robert Holler
Bill Large b Joe Griffiths
Paul Allen
; , , , , Jim Rupert
,#
Bill Teltsworth b Clark Ruch
', . , , ' or y Lou Covolllnl
^
Mike Stugrin
Mike O'Day
'
Doug
Hippenstiel
,
. . . . . . . . ,. . , . . , , , . . . . . .
The Maroon b Gold is loc ated In the Student Publications Center in Dillon
Houier
News may be submitted by calling 784-4660, extension 272, or b y
contac ting the. poper throu gh Box 58. The Maroon b Gold Is a member of
tho Pennsylvania State College Press Association .
The Maroon & Gold is published as near weekl y as Is possible by, for, and
through the ' fees ' of the students of Bloomsburg State College . Bloomsbnrg ,
Bloomsbur g,
Ptnna. V .7 B15.
Additional Staff; Down Wagner , Dove Mil ler ,. Ron Adorns, Morgo Fetterolf
,
. .
John Graf , Donna Murroy, &¦ Ron Schultz.
<
and what it should and does mean
to him and to his readers . He is
nearing the mid-century mark in
his life, but he has not lost the
freshness which characteri zes
much younger writers —the major
>
difference is that his freshness is a
mature , confident , thoroughly
engrossing freshness : he lives his
characters , his situations , and he
does not merely present them. He
is {kitting himself into every
word , every phrase , every precise
re petiti on , as a master painter
re peats dolor pattern s of a
musician re peats chords at
strategi c p oints for a more
forceful pres entation -
introduced and passed. It has now
Upsurging Spring
It means two weeks of Spring
Br ing on "Little Red Riding Hood" "Th e Bible " and "Winnie
The Pooh" I'm done with "Lad ies' Home Journal" and
"Hum pty Dumpty Magazine. "
sanction off campus apartments
unconnected with the college for
students 21 years or older , was
gone to the office of the Presiden t
of the College , and the rein awaits
its fate .
\
We would hope that th e
President 's minutes will show
ap proval of the proposal on his
p art , for such a policy would
^
present who understands his art
A SIGN OF
columns alive for many a hairy
month .
arose
FATHERS. Herbert Gold.
Random House. 308 pp. 1967
Herbert Gold is destined , for
great rewards. He is rwriter who
has
worked his art hard , wfio
^
understands his art , and who
loves his art. He has sha ped
himsel f and . his art with loving
care , because he is one of the few
really stable American authors at
more so.
GADFLY which kept the news
r
Back Shelf
contemplated on the subject.
So, rest easy , literary minds , this
year 's OLYMPI AN will be an
unex p urgated edition as it has in
years past— perhaps even a litt le
muc h-talked-a bdut
Upon revamping the MAROON
AND GOLD in January, there
"' ^¦^K'^H^^ raB ^^^ H
View
**
article
on
s t u d e n t - t e a c h i n g was
omitted —the article was
written by Larr y Phillips.
Several other errors have
presented themselves in the
past weeks , such as scramblin g
of p i c t u r e s , im p ro per
placement of article s, etc.
Please bear with us in our
wrath unti l provi sions can be
made ;
-The Editors.
Stud ent
Class ified Ads
10c per line
8) The cam p us gestapo carries:
a) the Pilot , b) extra pens, c)
Play boy .
9) K. K. does: a) not swear , b)
swear , c) cry. d) all of these.
10) Which 4 of the following (a )
Harvard (b) Yale (c) Prince ton (d)
Bloomsburg are first-rate
colleges? a) a ,b,c. b) b ,a,c. c)
c,a,b.
11) Demonstration s at B.S.C.
are: a) well attende d, b) IFC
meeting s, c) useless.
12) The M&G is: a) subversive .
b) ridiculous , c) censored , d)
banned after this issue.
Essay , question : Wri te a five (5)
wor d essay .on the liberal
pollcy(s) of this college.
Committee in Support of
Administration Follies.
Chairman Ron Schulz
Members: Joe Pjokay, John
"Red" Wal chonski.
St udent
Scholarships
The deadline for Bloomsbu rg
State College Scholarships will be
March 15, 1968. Approximately
$3500 in awards will be made in
Spring of 1968 for use in
September 1968. AJ1 pre sently
enrolled students
are eligible
except seniors and entering
January
1 9 6 8 students.
Applications are available In the
Financial Aid Office,
Students who have already been
awarded Pennsylvania State
Scholarships (Group I, II , or III)
will be receiving renewal forms in
the near future which will have to
be completed by their parents
and returned to the agency with
notarized copies of the ' parents
and students 1966 federal income
tax statements (1040 or 1040A).
Gold is the true
Herbert
practitioner of his art , yet at the
same time he is a vibrant , living ,
throbbing person. He is not a
Proust , who would lock himself
up in a padded room and hash
forth ream after ream of
introspection understandable
.•
only to himself. He is not a
voyager of the streets like James
Joyce , who made every word a
study , a defiance, a challenge and
an impossibility to a reader. He is
not a flamboyant and shallow
sensationalist like William
Burroughs , nor is he quite a
Hemingway , broodingly pensive
in his shorts as he struggles over
the wording of a manuscript in
the early morning sunrise. Yet,
strangely enough , Herbert Gold is
all these , but all of these to a
reasonable degree. He Is a writer
alive with his words , in love with
his words. In "Fa thers " he
v
retrospectively states that "We
exist on a moving point in time ;
we emerge from the void and , we
rush into oblivion. " A few pages
further on he says , "Every sky has
its own magic if a man knows how
to put it there. " There Is no doubt
that Mr. Gold knows how to take
the magic from life and place it on
paper.
-
'
"Fathers " deals with the
ancestors of Herbert Gold , the
ancestors , speaking on a broader
level , of America , of the
American dream , the American
backbone. He traces his father 's
father , a Jew in Russia. His father ,
who , at age twelve , decided to
make the grea t voyage , against his
father 's wishes , to the " gold lined
streets of America. " And who ,
upon his arrival in this country,
faced the reality of 80 years of
(Cont'd on Pg. 5)
Editorials in the MAROON
the opinion of
the Editorial Board; all feature .
articles , letters-to- the-editor ,
columns , and signed piedes are
the opinion of tha 't ,writer , : ' ;;
& GOLD are .
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"We 're facing' problems no one
else ever had to fa^e before. " So
¦¦
- Twenty million Americans have said - Anna in. the Bloomsburg
u s e d M a r i h' u anna and Players productfon of DIARY OF
four-and-one-hal f million use it ANN FRANK , which played last
week in Carver Auditorium. Thus \
regularly .
was repeated an expression that
. According to many doctors , seems to be peculiar to the
Marihuanna , a mild narc otic, is 'younger generation ' of any and
unjustly categ orized with hard every era . Perhaps in Anna 's case
drugs of add iction , but can the. comment had more validity
become hab it forming like than usual since she was living in
alcohol and tobacco. Statistics times and under circumstances
prove marijuana does"not lead to that most 'younger generations '
heroin becau se there are too do not experience
many heroin add icts that never
The Sweet Secret
tried marijuan na and too many ?
DIARY
. is a compell ing,
marijuanna user s that never
heart-warming stor y of the
became heroin addicts.
change fro m childhood into
young
womanhood experienced
m
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effect
The
more than paid off during their be forgotten in her last line of the
by
a
young
Jewish girl under the
/¦
"Lei the jury consider the resembles that of alcohol , but most trying circum stances. The . period of hiding. So often we see show, "I still think , in spite of
evidence " , said the king "No , does not have alcohol' s P l a y e r s p r o d u c t i o n is this happen around us in our own everything, that people are good
no", said the Queen. " Sentence resounding aftermath. L.S.D. tremendous! Only the most
lives (perhaps not to the extent at heart ," she is telling us that she
and verdict first-e vidence makes one lose his senses, hardene d sophisticate fiad dry—, portraye d in DIARY) that we too , is good at heart and became
marihuanna does not. In essence
afterwards. "
..
accept it as part of l i f e . . . But , that way from being loved. Her
it relaxes and : lets thought and , eyes at the close of the show. when it is slammed home to us via visits with Peter
(Kenneth
"Stuff and nonsense ," cried emotion flow freely. According Only the unfeelin g, the blase, and the stage it makes us stop and Hassinger) are heartwarming and
Alice loudly.
to reports , it provides a deeper bored could have experienced
think. Stop and think is what remind us of. our early feeble
appreciation of aesthetic Values one of the trium phs of BSC many of us did.
¦¦¦»
attempts to understand each
"Off with her head ," cried the and a more satisfying sexual drama production without being
¦• ¦
A character role in drama is other at that age. Mr. Hassinger
Queen.
meeting. Marijuanna does not moved. Good acting, good always
a challenge to the actor gave us a Peter of sensitivity and :
affect everyone in the same way; . direction , good technical and
Poor Alice, or should we say, it's an individual thing, many backstage efforts plus ^ a fine and the others with whom he awkwardness so typical of our
poor you. Alice was only people get no effect what-so-ever. script , made DIARY an 'event to works. It is often a challenge to times. His concern for the
dreaming, b,ut , baby, for you it's
be long remembered , on this the actor and the others with unfairness of his lot , his
Despite the rigid penalties campus and in this community . whom he works. It is often confusion at trying to understand
true to life. Our present judicial
tempting to overplay such a role Anna , his frustration of not being
system at B.S.C. is archaic and against the sale and use of The community in particular
unconstitutional in many aspects. marijuana , it is readil y accessable. since it was a college-communit y and "steal the show" as it were. . sure of his father 's opinion of
It is not restricted to hippies venture into the realm of good Frequently it is created for the him , and his love lavished on a
purpose of comic relief and all torn cat for want of some other
The Student Judiciary Board is either , professional people are theater.
too often it is interpreted as much outlet all catch our sympathy .
composed of students and equally engaged in this form of
D I A R Y has just ab out
administrative "advisors " who relaxation and escape.
everything to offer to the by actor and audience alike. Mr. Anna and Peter are timeless; their
"suggest " the penalty a student is
Dussel (Bruce Hopkins) faced just performances , timely.
Many doctors and Congressmen theatergoer; comedy, pathos , such a dilemma in DIARY and
to receive. In a recent case, where
excitement , tension , and a
stealing was the issue, the advisors realize . the inadequ acies of our multitude of messages and brought it off : with- excellent
The Professional Touch
success. His timing was perfect ,
told the student members of the laws and proclaim that the use of morals. It was a fine cast that
Mr.
Richey can be proud of his
Board the penalty which would marijuanna should either have a imp lemented Goodrich and his interp retation outstanding work and that of his cast and
be a c c e p t a b l e to the lighter penalty or be legalized.
crew. Once again he has shown he
Hackett' s play. Few weaknesses and tempered with restraint.
and
"
Experience
talent
stood
Mr.
administration. They Were told
of any note were to be seen.. A
; knows his business; and that is
Hopkins
in
good
stead.
From
the
not to consider a sentence less
theater. We expect good
somewhat slow start was more
than a semester 's suspension from
than compensated for by the pace moment of his entrance until he productions from him and he
college. This psychological
and characterization that took packs his bag with resignation he doesn 't let us down. The tragedy
coercion is not in keeping with
place before our eyes as the play is in character. He did not of it all is that far too few of the
the "spiri t of the law " in most
progressed. Mr. Fran k (Brian 1 overstep the bounds of comedy college and community will avail
instances. Perhaps some feel that
McLernan) lived up to the nor avoid the rigors of drama. He themselves of a fine experience in
Bloomsburg is immune from
expectations of those who have brought to the loft a portrait of the theater.
too many of us when the going
accepted judicial proceedings.
seen his previous performances.
One cannot ignore the technical
As a cool-heade d father and gets tough. Mr. Hopkins made us
aspect
of DIARY. Mr. McCubbin
If the board is trul y a Student
husband he made us believe him. look at ourselves in weakness and
Judicial Board , let students run
His reactions to the others in his frustration but never so clearly has again provided the cast with a
agenda
and
decide
v
the
the
"family " were as varied as were that we were comfortable. An functional and unusual set which
creates the impression designed in
sentence themse lves, otherwise
their characterizations. He met excellent bit of acting.
i
t. He , like Mr. Richey , does not
change the name and stop this
the challenge firmly. His role ,
Sup
p
ort
ing
Roles
disappoint us. When one looks at
hypocracy . The Board can do
while not dynamic , was the
Miep (Jean Moulder) and Mr. a p ro gram he is st ruck by the
without administrative personnel
inf luence needed to med iate t he Kraler ( R ichard Bower ) ke p t us in
who give advice and tell the jury
varie ty of personalities, crowde d touch with the outside world be -number of people required to
t ha t a certa in sentence is out of
into one small loft . Phyllis means of the ir p er iodi c visits to moun t such an endeavor. These
are the unsung heroes of the
the question. If what is in the C.
Meeker
(Mrs.
Frank)
the
loft.
Both
did
more
than
G. A. prea mble is meaningful ,
complemented the role of Mr. adequate jobs with relatively stage. They make it possible for
"
govern
ourselves
by
t hen let us
McLernan. Her appearance , small roles. Therein lies a sizable handlin g the myriad of details
"
just and righteous laws.
character ization , and dress ( even p ortion of the success of an y behind the scenes and in the
to the stockings with seems) production. One expects the auditorium. Just , one of those
The admin istra tors who are part
made her real to us. Mothers of leads to carry a show and may details did slip by them , however ,
of the Board have no vote as such ,
teenage daughters today could often miss the minor roles and when a cake app eared on stage in
not
needed
in
the
ir
are
and
well identify with her in the characters unless they are poorly a local bakery 's box.
A
fair
judge
,
present capacit y.
angu ish she suffered at Anna 's done. Miss Moulder and Mr.
To " bagg y pants " . Dussel,
like the Dean of Students ,; nine
rejection of her in favor of Bower did not let t he cast down hungry Van Daan , good stable
studen ts who comprise the jury,;
Father. Miss Meeker captured the
Margo t , Tom , the cat , beautiful
a prosecut or ap pointed by the have to testify against himself sp irit of the role in her and rounded out a good Anna , and a cast
of top q uality,
performance.
. _
Dean of Men or Women ,; and c)and that the names of those performance.
we
say,
"Thanks
for
a memorable
council for the defendent are all bringing charges and , or ,
As the icing is last to go on the evening at BSC." From the
that is needed to make the Board information against him be
cake so too is the topping of a pro blems of growing up to a
Thesis and Antithesis
'
a student affair. The judge could known.
Margot Frank ( Karl a Klin off) show. The starring role of Anna magnificent "Ha " by Mrs. Van
not overru le the decision of the
undertook a role tha t could have was magnificently done by Miss Daan , and on to the sparkler by
T hese guidelines have been been lost in the ' shuffle and Bonnie Korngold. Her constant
j ury, * but both defendent and
Dussel, "Stop it , you 're spoiling
followed
at B.S.C. in some an d confusion of others around her chatter and irritable mannerisms
prosecutor could have the right of .
the
invasion ," the Players have
lately in most instances. on hostage. She gave us a most aided by the cramped set on stage
appeal to the Student-Faculty
shown
us poetry in motion on
However , they should apply to all reaKand wonderful Margot. The caught us up in the tension of
Board .
stage and brought a tear to the
cynic will aver tha t no one could eight people in a loft. But more eyeSof many via THE DIARY OF
Upon enr olling, in a' state students Irregardless of his be so sweet and understanding in important , she made the , ANN PRAN
K. They "caught" a
college, a studen t does not forfeit offe n se. The Authority and reality but Miss Klinof f showed transition from childhood to good one this
time.
Let
'
s
have
his constitutional rights , as was jurisdiction of the United Stat es us it could be done. She was the ma t ur ity a reality. Her more! !
¦ '{
recent ly stated in the Dickey v. Constitution does not , stop at perfect antithesis of Anna. Mr. movemen ts on stage were free,
Alabam a case. The recent Llghtstreet Road. Perhaps , in the and Mrs. Van Daan (Russel Walsh her sudd en changes frorri the ,
A.A.U.F. guidelines approximate future every disciplinary case will and Ruth Campbell) created morose t o the gidd y were all too
¦
'¦
¦¦
' <¦ ¦ <
.:
" ot
constitutional provisions in follow the guidelines , not just -cha racte rizations of the family real . When she said, "When I
d isc iplinar y cases. The those cases that may attract wide friends swho just don 't . quite t h i nk of ail t he good people we
recomm endat ions from the and unwanted publicity. Mr. realize ,an d appreciate the know , .. " and "Here we are,
ti| j euo *|j d p|«|
A.A.U.P. Include ; a)the burden of . Walker and the rest of his Board sacrifices made for them by act ing like a couple of stupid
proof Is on those brin ging charges are to be congratulated for a just others. An old personal debt grown-u ps," she is an adult and
8u|»q uij |d| *||
b), that the defenden t does,not , arid rational decision.
. ' ¦ ,
owed to them by Mr. Frank is child at the same time. And not to
•
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Join The
M&G
NOW
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Pa ge 4 Maroo n & Gold — ]Friday, March I, 1968
, CQttohomj *\&$$$^ %&t
i Sunday ?th %4Sfe#$^to
Archeolo gy
The ninth an nual Florence
Dornblaser
Memorial
Scholarships will be presented at
Bala-Cynwyd , Pennsylvania , on
Tuesday, June 4th at the Annual
Convention of the Pennsylvania
Federation of Democratic
Women , Inc. Three awards will be
made in the amounts of $250,
$150 and $100.
Any deserving woman in the
junior class of an accredited
college or university may app ly.
The awards are for use during her
senior year. She must be majoring
in government , political science,
economics or history or preparing
to teach one of these subjects.
She must have good scholastic
' standing; must be reasonable
active in student activities ; must
be a resident of Pennsylvania;
must establish the need for
financial help; and must possessa
Democratic family background
or be an active participate in the
affairs of the Democratic Party.
Applications may be obtained
by writing £o: The Florence
Dornblaser
Memraorial
Scholarship Committee , c/o The
Pennsylvania F ederation of
Democratic Women , Inc. , 510
North Third Street , Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania , 17101. All
applications must be postmarked
on'or before May l r 1968,
T h e purposes of the '
scholarships are two-fold. First ,
to encourage qualified young
women to pursue and to develop
interests in politics and
government. Second , to honor
the memory of the late Florence
Dornblaser , first Treasurer of the
Pennsylvania F ederation of
Democratic Women , Inc.
Recent information received
from the Pennsylvania Higher
Education Assistance Agency in
Harrisburg
indicates that
Pennsylvania resident students
interested
in r e c e i v i n g
Pennsylvania
G roup III
Scholarships should write to the
Pennsylvania Higher Educa tion
Assistance Agency and ask for a
group III application for the
1968-69 acade mic year. In
writing to the agency for the
application , the student should
furnish his name , address (home),
social securi ty number , and
school attended. Dr. Johnson , the
Assistant Director of the
Pennsylvania Higher Education
Assistance Agency would prefer
to have students write directly to
the agency for applications rather
than wait to obtain them in the
student Financial Aid Office in
March or April.
I
MENTAL
ANGUISH
NESPOLI
J EWELER S
ALERT DRIVERS
seldom have acciden ts!
LET'S GO
BOWLING AT
BLOOM BOWL
Route 11, North
Comp liments of
Feb. 28-Mar. S 'Billion Dollar Brain '
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Steak House
Comtr East b Fifth Sti.
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SPAGHETTI
Home Cooked Foods
NOON-TIME SPECIALS
Private Parties
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784-9895
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m
Bloomsburg
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Men's and Boys '
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Levis
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I"Corner Lunch" I
W. C. FIELDS FILM FESTIVAL
"The Bonk Dick" and "Neve r Give A Sucker An Even
Break"
Berwick (Formerly The Strand)
March 1 - Paul Newman In "Cool Hand Luke "
IShrimp in the
IBasket - - $1.29
BOYS RANCH CAMP
Opening now lor waterfron e (WSI), Arts and Crafts,
Sailing NRA Rlflerl y, Riding Tripping, Walter * Top Salaries for Top People
Contact
THUNDER MOUNTAIN RANCH
Arthur F. Cohen, Director
Home phono (201) 694-1636
27 Areendel Road, Wayne, NJ.
Took His Girl
¦¦HtMUWIIMUinBlllllHllinillllMIIIHllMIIIH
1 Fifth and West Streets
I (One block above the
I Mageo Carpet Mill )
WANTED:
Summer Camp Counsellors
O
<
We take Great
Pride in:
• Our Town
• Our Colle ge
• Our Students
X9 e% MOM Sf.f M#OMowW|
Where Dad
| Lee-Pat's
Shop ARCUS'
' CAPITOL THEATRE *
The
:: Texas 1j
J .
CARTER'S
Let No Action Of
CUT RATE
Ours Bring
March 6-9
!
reg &in the popul arity which
edit
. enjoyed when fit^t ppen a
year ago. * « ' .> £ .
Joellen ' Wa lsh, ^represen ting
the sisters of Delta Epsilon
Beta , presented an extre mely
uni que 15-minute program in
which she sanf over recor ded
back ground music. Joe llen
immedia tely impress ed the
gathering with her opening
song, "Mercy, Mercy , Merc y,"
a song made popular by "The
Buckingh ams," by using the
instrumen tal recording-of the
tune by Cannonball Adde rley
as background music. Making
sure to remove , her > chewing
gum wh ile singing each
num b er , Miss Walsh
completed her program with
two more tun es, the Academy
Award-w inning "Born Fr ee,"
and "Since I Fell For You."
F o l l o w i n g Jo ell en ' s
performance , Ralph Miller and
Kearns teamed to sing
1 Tom
three folk songs, "Early in the
M o r n i n g , " "Green back
Dollar ," and "House of the
Rising Sun."
was
Thi s r e p o r t e r
disappoint ed that Rebekah
Ward was unabl e to make an
appearance this night.
—Jim Rupe rt
The .BSC Archeology Club has
announce d that Mr. Russell
Royer will be the speaker at its
next meeting, to be held at 8:30
p.m., Tuesday, March 5, in room
8 Science Hall. All interested
persons are cordially invited.
Mr. Royer is one of the most
active and well-informed
archeologists in East Central
Pennsylvania. Although an
a m a t e u r , he operates in
archeology at the professional
level to terms of skilled
excavation of significant finds
and of sharing the results of his
investigations with fe llow
scientists.
As an employee of the U.S.
Radium plan t, Mr. " Royer has
extended his archeological
prospecting into Columbia
County, where he has made some
rich finds. It was he who first
called the attention of BSC to the
prehistoric Indian site at Lime
Ridge which has been under
excavation by student groups for
two seasons. This site, the first to
be systematically excavated in
Columbia County, has been
officially designated by the
Pennsylvania State Museum as
"36 CO 1". Theexhibi t of Indian
materials found there which was
held in the Haas Auditorium
gallery last month included some
notable pieces donated by. Mr .
Royer to the college, such as part
of a soapstone vessel of the kind
used before earthenware was
perfected.
Another article to be taken up
at the meeting on March 5th will
be announcement of possible
opportunities for summer
employment as archeological
excavator open to stu dents who
have obtained experience from
the college archeology project.
^
'
^^^^ Bt ^^ T
IChicken in the
IBasket - - $1.09
i
784-4117
I^ m
* ' t^b^kif Jf 'fi i p^jiJILa V ^fc^^^ ta
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IBroiled Delntonic o
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Pa ge 5 Mar oon & Gk>ld —-/F^idayv " Mardl ;^:i^6^§^^ :i||#|
¦' ¦;l)r,"; tVaniia ^:® l;i
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Leaflets In
Johnson City Publishes Again
(Cont'd from Pg. 2)
't
toily successes and failures,
scattered evenly along the way,
always; looking forward , aever
behind, for he'd already been
there and there was no longer
anything to hold him there when
there was so much calling him
ahead.
"Fathers" is a chronicle of the
y o u n g H erbie Gold ,' his
experiences in his father's store,
his first romance, his memories of
the Depression, his breaking away
from binding family ties as his
father had done before him, his
sneaking away to the stockroom*
to read Edgar Allen Poe's, Spicy
Detective, and Lost Horizons, the
land of Shangri-la the land of his
dreams. America, with its streets
of gold: gold in the shape of
people, experiences, phases of
learning.
Herbert Gold presents every
character he introduces with
warmth and understanding,some
cynically, some lovingly, some
neutral, all very real. "Fathers*' is
Herbert Gold's "Remembrance
of T h i n g s Past ," in a
thoroughly-in-depth precision,
thorou ghly interesting
presentation, with no clutter, no
excess wordage , no dull
moments. From the day his
mother, carrying him in her belly,
drove the family Peerless into a
teetering position on the edge of a
wharf in Cleveland to the last day
at a summer camp where
17-year-old Herbie served'as a
counselor, an "Uncle," the book l
is full of nostalgia and the human
psyche hard at work.
"Fathers" deserves a place of
distinction on the modern
reader 's bookshelf, between
Bernard Malamud's "The Fixer,"
and John O'Hara 's "The
Instrument."
Miller Office
Suppl y Co.
18 West Main Street
Bloomsburg, Pa.
Hallma rk Canto — «H»
Phon e
—Richie Benyo
January 1968
;
WE WILL SPECIAL ORDER ANY
BOOK NOT IN STOCK
784-6580
For sad davs or
glad days send,
flowers from , . .
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FLOWER S
784-4406
'
Bonded World Wide Delivery
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Salary: $6,200-$10,210.
On Campus March 11, 1968
RACUSIN S
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Comp liments of
FOR SAL&
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.Dr. Donald A. Vannah has,just
signed a contract with F.A. Owen ¦'
Publishing Company of Dansville,
New York, publishers of The
Instructor, for World Publication
Rights to his article "That
A m a z i n g Terrarium— What
Next?" The article is in-science
education and is applicable for
elementary, secondary, or college
instructional levels. The article
explains the large number of uses '
which the teacher can find for the
terrarium in the classroom in
teaching many different areas of
science.
Previous publications by * Dr.
Vannan are : "The Original
Machine" Science & Children,
"Three Reading Groups in
) Science?—Yes!" Instructor, and
"Automated Objective Test
Corrections " Audiovisual
Instruction.
S A N M A R C O S , TEXAS
(CPS)—The anti-war movement
has reached the alma mater of
President Lyndon B. Johnson.
At Southwest Texas State
College last week three students
began handing out anti-war
leaflets in front of the student
center after getting permission
from the dean of students. It was
the first antiwar effort on the
•
campus.
students
were
The three
surrounded by a hostile crowd in
the afternoon. Part of the crowd
took the anti-war pamphlets
handed them and burned them on
student center steps. There was;
also a brief scuffle in which one of
the protestors was pushed
around.
The student newspaper, the
COLLEGE STAR , defended the
two protestors, although the
editor said in a separate column
that he favors the war.
Dean Hoch almost thought that it wouldn't be a very happy
birthday when he noticed the slip of paper under his wiper.
However, the ticket was merely the security department's way
of congratulating the Dean, and he drove away smiling, not only
because it was a thoughtful gesture, but also because he didn't
have to make any contributions to the security office.
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Musky Netrrien Lose to
MansfieI d State 98-76
Ha rry Logan
native who was too smalt to play
football in high school but "grew
up " to play for our Huskies , will
bid for a spot with the World
Champ ion Green Bay Packers as a
flanker back.
Kucharski , who graduated
FINE JEWEL RY
and
REPAIRIN G
BSC CLASS RINGS
^
,^£^
and said he is excited about his
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cam p at St. Norbert
College, Green Bay, in late June
opportunity .
BERRIGAN'S
SUBS
Thfl fimtt INDESTRUCTIBLE METAL
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Bloo msburg, Pa.
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Ask your Placement Officer obou f* our
serv ice.
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Prescription
FOR
Close to the Campus
Send check or money ord er. Be
sure to include your Zip Code. No
posta ge or handlin g charges. - Add
•a les tax ,
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36O Lexington Ave., New York , N. Y. 1OO17
.
150 East Main Street
Prompt thlpmmt. Satisfaction Guaranteed
5 W. Main St.
REPRESENTED
Students Interested In Joinin g
Sports Staff - Contact Bob
Scholtz. Box #763 (please).
Sports Budget Ap proved
Support The Huskies
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Services iM^
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DIVISION OF
training
^sJ REGULAR
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win over Ma rv Weinburg , 5-4r ^
At 160 lbs. Arnie Thompson
Haven, the Huskie matmen were
lost a 9-4 decision s to ' WCSCV.
upset by a surprising West Chester
State College team , at West unorthod ox wrestler; Keri Biles.
WCSC's Cawley proved to be ^
Chester on Saturday afterno on.
too
much for sophomore Ji m
Seeing no pins in any of the
Owens
, and won the bout 7-2.
bouts, the Husk ies sustained their .
Owens
wrestled at 167 lbs.
third setback of the season, by
In
a
very exciting 177 lb.
the score of 20-14 .
sophomore
Jim Colem'an
match
,
Wrestling at 115 lbs. Wayne
Heim, p laying agressor, won a 3-2 was topped by Scott Gliscom ,
decision over WCSC's Ron Cru ys. 10-8. Coleman dominated the
Sophomore Je ff Prosseda , third period, but could not make
battling all the way, lost a 14-6 up the points to win.
decision at the hands * of Frank
Senior Dave Jones, going for
Carrozza in the 123 lb. class.
the pin to keep the Huskies alive,
In the 130 lb. bout , Kurt "' could only come up with a
Grabfelter fell to a 10-3 decision
lopsided 22-7 win over Gary
against WCSC's John Hart.
Lyons.
Ron Russo, wrestling 137 lbs.,
The final bout was an
pulled the match even with a 9-6
anticlimax
, and ended in a draw
win over Mike Moyer. At one
between
sophomore
Bob Ja ne t
point in the match Russo held a
and WCSC's Gene Funk.
five point lead over Moyer.
In the JV preliminary , BSC
WCSC came back into the lead
with a win by John DeMarco over scored a 25-18 win over the
Rams. Wayne Smythe and Milt
BSC's Steve Peters, 7-2.
Husky senior , Joe Gerst, at 152 Andrews both picked up pins for
lbs. tied the team score 9-9, with a the Huskies winning effort .
offers were similar.
He will rep ort t o the Packers
IT'S TMI RAOf
' v |Hf |fl ki ~ M ^m 'MmiBsl^BrV^ ' f . r'tf '",,
I£lVw\ ._, ,
IM
Following BSC'S loss to Lock
fro m BSC in January and is now
teaching seventh and eighth
grades at Manville, N.J., said he
has signed with the Packers for in
" the neighborhood" of $15 ,000
which in cludes his $1,500 bonus.
Now 6 feet , 180 pounds , he is
exercising regularl y to strengthen
the knee he injured on the first
p lay from scrimma g e at
Susq uehanna.
Up to. that time Stan had
scored 10 touchdowns on p asses
against Shi ppensburg, Lock
Haven , and Mansfield, and
promised to rewrite the record
book.
Kucharskialso received offers
from the Cleveland Browns , St.
Louis Cardinals, and Atlanta
Falcons, of the National Football
League , and the American
Football League Cham pions, the
Oakland Raiders. He said all the
STAMP IT!
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llMV lMAII
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Stan Kucharski, the Archibald
Jim Dufaney Hits for tw o of his 10 points in losin g
ca use against Mansfield.
Bloomsbuig lost a four game 10 p o i n t s respectivel y.
win streak last Satur day when Duncheskie led all scorers with 28
they suffered a 98-76 loss to a points. Griffing, Bartkowski , and
psyched-up Mansfield quintet. Briesel ripped the cords for 19,
Mansfie ld took an earl y lead on 17, and 16 points respect ively.
the outside shooting of
Mansfield has, by far, the best
Duncheskie and Griffing. The fan support of any of the State
Huskies , who have trouble Colleges. Not only do their fans
defending opponents on small contribu te considerable voice
courts , were forced to position support , but they also form a
themselves further from the tunnel for the team when it
basket which opened up the lanes returns from the locker room for
enabling Mansfield to drive for the second half. May be the BSC
layups.
fans who attended the game can
Palmer Toto led the Huskies teach our fans the "Mansfield
attack with 14 points. Larry
Monaghan , Rico Fertig, and Jim Student Method for Mayhem and
Dulaney contribut ed 12, 11, and Noise at a Basketball Game ".
W|S*C ^^P^^^^^^B
Kuchars ki Signs
$15,000 Contract
Thurt. A Fri. 9:00-9:0 0
Suits — Dresses — Sweate rs
all al
Factory io You Prices
;
M- Op«n 'til 12,30 a.m. ||
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Cletid 1t30 to 3tOO P.M. fl
Evtry Day But Friday |
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mi duivmy
I' t Rogutar & Kin o .
Hm
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"Buy wh ere th ey are made "
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Hoo*l*% IS
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King . Siio Soft Drinks ||
8I
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Sov« Many Dollars on Your
School Wardrobe !
230 South Popla r Strett
1
Ph. 784-4292
1|
Ii37 W. Main Bloom»bur oH
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Hrwltk, f«.
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(one block off Rout# 11 behind Shopping Center )
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%fmWW&
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cWBB
wmmm
v H^kiett ^s: Wm%>$1M}TO^;Swim Tourney
Lyco ming Warriors 50-44
Afte r Losin g To PSU & MC
The women's varsity met the the final period , *it was not
Lady Lions, from Penn State for enough to overcome the home
their first home game of the team. The final score stood at
season.
However , the tall ,
¦ ¦ . - e x p e r i e n c e d PSU cagers 35-22, i n favor of Muhlenberg.
Connie Jarrard was high scorer
;
overpowered the Huskiettes and for BSC with 11 points.
, ran away with the game righ t "¦ The Huskiette s, with
a 1-2
from the start. The final score was record , then played host
to
52-16, with three of the visitors Wilkes College. The game proved
scoring in double figures. Marlys to be the hardest fough t so far in
Pa l mer, Barbara DeWitt and the season. The big girls from
Marion Homers scored 18, 13. Wilkes could not match the
and 10 points respectively.
Huskiettes ' speed, scrap, or desire
. The BSC girls then traveled to to win. After 3 periods of play the
. Allentown to play the girls from BSC girls led by only 1 point.
Muhlenberg. Losing 24-7 at the However , they outp layed Wilkes
i
half, the Huski ettes came bach 11-5 in the final period and
and really showed some fine captured the victory 28-21.
playing in the second half. The Co-captains Connie Jarrard and
defense held Muhlenberg forwa rd Marg Boyer both scored in double
Sue Mensch , who had scored 16 figures with 10 points apiece.
points in the first Iiaif , to only 3 Wilkes ' Bartpletti led her team in
points in the second. The entire scoring with 6 points.
Mule team was unable to score
The BSC women have a 2-2
against guards Barb Chandl er , record and are half-way through
Ginny Swope , and Btenda their season. Games remain to be
Nafzinger in the fourth guarter. played with Susquehanna ,
A l t h o u g h the b u l k of Misericordia , Mary wood , and
. Blootnsburg 's score was made in Bucknell.
In a recent CG A meeting, three
budgets were submitted for
approval . Two were for Wrestling
Tournaments , the NAIA at
Almose , Colorado , and the
NCAA at Penn State Universit y;
and the other was for the NAIA
Swimming Tournament at St.
Cloud , Minnesota. After being
brought before the Council the
aforementioned budgets were
approved unanimousl y.
BSC Swimme rs Defeat
JOIN THE M&G
Support The Husk ies
Sport s Budgets Approved
The ' 9th annual Pennsylvania
State College Swimming and
Diving Championship meet will
be held at East Stroudsburg on
Saturday, March 9, 1968.
Teams that will enter:
Defending Champion: West
/ The BSC Huski es swim team the meet. Addit ional wins for the
,
Chester
bested the Lycoming Warriors at Huskies were p osted by Tim Carr
Runners-up: Slippery Rock , . Wiliiam sport on Saturday
in the 50 yard freest yle; and by
Millersville , E. Stroudsburg,
s ¦ afternoon by the score of 50-44. the 400 yard medley rela y team.
Lock . Ha ven , ' Cheyney -, This is the first win over the
Ralph Moers chbacher won again * /• •: .
California and Bloomsburg.
the
Huskies
in
the
last
by
Warriors
in the 500 yard freest yle, making
, The "Husky Swimmers" have
thirteen dual meets between the it his second win of the meet. ;
taken third place trop hies the two teams '
past two years. However they will
Vince Shiban , having ear be aiming for 1st place and are the
Two new team records were set
trouble , took part in the 400 yard ~
favorites based on the upset' win in the meet against the Warriors. . medley, but withdrew from the
over West Chester in dual meet R a l p h M o e r s c h b a c h e r ,
200 yard br eaststroke. Ray
competition this year.
sophomore from Camp Hill, set
Steppling jammed his leg on a v
Tickets will be on sale at E. one in the 200 yard ' freestyle,
turn , and it is uncertain how long
Stroudsburg:
with the winn ing time of 1:56.3.
he
will be sidelined , but Coach Eli
Morning Session (diving trials The other was set by junior Ed
McLaughlin
said
he
should
be
begir aing at 10:00) $. 50
McNert ney, in the 200 yard
ready for the PSCAC Tourney at
Afternoon Session (Beginning butterfly . His. winning time was
East
Stroudsburg on March 9.
at 1:00) $1.25 ,
2:16.8.
Students $ .50
This win over Lycoming
College
.makes the Huskie
The
Huskies
had
wins
in
only
BSC has been informed that
"
eleven
contests
but
swimmers
8-2 for the season in
five
of
,
it will be able to nominate two
possessed
better
depth
and
put
on
dual
meets.
Their last meet of the
members of the senior class for
performance
.
a
better
all
around
season
was
against Trenton on
consideration to teach abroad.
The BSC team had the victory
Wednesday afternoon , February
Normally two years of
clinched
before
the
final
event
of
28.
experience are required , but
under a special pilot program
initaited last year , highly
qualified candidates are
selected without prior
teaching experience.
Spor t s Staff
WE'RE
EDITOR
HEADED
PAUL ALLEN
STAFF
Roy T. Colley
OP
, .
Bob Schultz
Jim Mayer
Marg Boyer
Joe Griffirhe
RITTER'S
THE
486 W. Main St.
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112 East Main Street
Bloomsfaur g, Pa.
Mon. -12 Noon to 6 p .m.
Tues., Wed. & Sat. 8 a.m.
to 6 p.m.
Thurs , & Fri. 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.
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Lowe 's Barber Shop
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Psychedelic Decor
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Bloomsbur g. Pa,
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Bloomsbu fgf Pa. m
DicK Btt HVrI9idi iV»ana0er
Wism
FEDERAL SCHOOL REPORT says: The Philadelphia public schools are engaged in "the most dramatic
revolution in a city school system in the post-war period/'
Reform in Philadelphia is "more widespread and far-reaching
than in any large school system in the country."
DR. MARK R. SHEDD, new Superintendent of Schools,says*. .
"I will continue to support teachers who are able to examine, in a
mature way, the gut issues of our day—war,sex,race, drugs,poverty.
:
If we divorce school subjects from the guts and hopes of human beings,
we can expect students,to find them gutless and hopeless."
RICHARDSON DILWORTH, President of the Board of Education,
says:"The city is where the action is, It's where the challenge is. It's where
we are facing the great moral and social issues of our day. If you want action,
come teach in Philadelphia, if you don't, go teach in the suburbs."
WE SAY: Come join our school revolution as a teacher. Get in on the action.
Teacher salaries are rising rapidly. So is our school system. Come on up the up staircase. For fprther information, see our Representative who will be at Bloomiburg ;
.:
Stiate College Thw riday, March 14, iwi
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SIGN UP AT YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR AN imjeRVIEW NOW.
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DKTRICT
LADELPHIA
CrM^ni
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W3*$®$ff l!8ff l?f r^ is ^W *» .fcS ftS
\\
Mrs. Harry Misfale r
New Faculty Member
The a ppoint ment of Mrs.
Harry Mishler , a 1955 graduate of
Bloomsburg State College, as
instructor of Business Education
at BSC for the second semester of
the 1967-68 college year , has
been approved by Dr. Harvey A.
Andruss , President , and the
Board of Trustees of the collegerMrs. Mishler will assume the
teaching duties of Walter Rygiel,
Associate Professor of Business
Education , who retire d at the
close of the college semester that
ended on January 26.
Born in Berwick , Penna., Mrs.
Mishler received her elementary
and secondary education in the
schools of that community. Her
Bachelor of Science degree was
earned in Business Education at
BSC. For the past three years she
has been a substitute teacher for
the Bloomsburg Area SchooL.
Prior to that she held secretarial
and stenographic positions in the
Philadel phia and Wilkes-Barre
areas.
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Meeting Of Aii
Freshman In
Teacher EducationCarver , 5:00,
Wed., March 6
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and it is requested that they be
prompt in attendence in order
that the meeting may be brief and
they will not be held over the
entire dinner hour.
The program as planned for this
year will again be on a voluntary
basis.
The meetin g of freshmen in
teacher education to be held in
on
Carver
Auditorium
Wednesday , March 6, will in part
deal with the September Field
Experience , as well as other
matters of importance to this
particular group. Attende nce at
this meetin g is required of all
freshmen in teacher education ,
kJuZty GtntBt
The Bloomsburg Jaycees,
sponsors of the "Miss Eastern
.Pennsylvania Pageant ," an
official preliminary to the Miss
America Pageant , have launched
th ei r annual sear ch for
contestants for the fifth annual
pageant which will be presented
on Saturday, April 20, 1968, in
Bloomsburg.
The girl who wins the title at
Bloomsburg in April will .
represent this area at the Miss
Pennsy lvani a Pageant th is
summer. In addi tion, t he w inner
will share with her runners-up and
court , a prize and scholarship list
totaling over $2,000.
In order to q ualify for the
c o n t e s t , Mi ss Eastern
Pennsylvania of 1968 must make
her home in Columbia, Mont our,
Northumberland, or Schuylkill
county or must attend college in
the four count y area. The entrant
must ' also be between the ages of
eighteen and twent y-eight as of
Sep tember 1, 1968, and never
have been married.
Any resident of the four
county area has the privilege of
nominating a girl for the
com p e t i t i o n . Names and
addresses should be forwarded to
the Entries Committee , P.O. Box
101, Bloomsburg, Pa. , 17815, at
once.
.The Entries Committee ,
comp osed of Junior Chamber of
Commerce members and their
wives, will inter view each girl
suggested for a p lace among the
Miss America ho pefuls. The
committee will also visit those .
entrants' parents who reside In
the four-county ar ea.
The Jaycees are already hard at
work laying plans for the 1968
production. Last year 's hit show ,
Interviews
March 4
9:00 a.m.
..
Massena Central Schools
Massena, N.Y.
March 4
10:00 a.m.
Newark Spec. Sch. Dist.
Newark, Delaware
March 4 v
Bethleham Area Sch.
Dist.—Bethleham , Penna.
Calvert Coun ty Bd. of
Ed.-Pr ince Frederick ,
Md.
March 5
9:00 a.m.
March 5
2:00 p.m.
Mar ch 5
3:00 p.m.
Mar ch 6
10:00 a.m.
March 6
2:00 p.m.
., ' . ' -
Elmira City Schools
Elmira , N.Y.
Eastern York Sch. Dist
Wrightsville , Penna.
Daniel Boone Elem Sch.
Douglassville, Penna.
East Orange Sch. Dist.
East Orange
, N.J.
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March 6
3:00 p.m.
March 7
9:00 a.m.
Lock Haven H.S.
Lock Haven , Penna.
South Junior H.S.
Bloomsfield, N.J.
March 7
10:00 a.m.
March 7
2:00 p.m.
March 8 >
9:00 a.m.
March 8
10:00 a.m.
March 8
10:00 a.m.
Dade County Sch Bd.
Miami , Florida
Plalnf ield Public
Schs.-Plainfield , N.J.
Prince Georges Count y
Upper Marlb oro , Md.
West Islip Public Sch.
West Isllp. L.L , N.Y.
Mr. Carl Stiber
Sears Roebu ck Co.
Phila ,, Penna.
Hammondsport Central
Sch.-Hammondsport
¦ , N.Y,
March 8
2:00 p.m.
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Elem; Sp Ed; Bus;
Jr Hi;Math;Sci ;
Sr Hu Soc Std ;
JEng; Fr; Span ;
Bio; Math;
Sp Ed; Sp & Hearing; Soc. Work ;
Elem; Bus Ed;
Chem ;Eng;Gen
Sci;Math ; Read ;
Soc Stud; Span;
Elem; Most areas
of Sec ; Sp Ed;
Elem; Eng; Fr;
Sci;Math;Lan g
Arts /Soc Stud;
Soc Studies;
All areas;
Elem; Sci; Eng;
Bus Ed;
2nd; 3rd; 4th;
5t h; 6t h;
Elem; Jr Hi;
Math;S ci-Math ;
Most other areas
of Sed;
Bus Ed (Typ.
Bkpg. Bus Math );
Elem; Eng ; Math ;
Gen Sci;Phys
Scl ; Soc StudEngj SpEd;
All areas ;
All areas; Soc
work;
All areas;
Elem; Secondary ;
Bus;
Any curriculum; '
Kind; 1st; 2nd;
3rd ; Jr HI Eng; ¦
Math ; -/
V
.•
e ntitled " It's More than a
Pageant ," was acclaimed 6y a
capacit y audience which included
repre sentatives from the state and
nationaP pageants. Mistress of .
ceremonies /was the char ming:
Sharon Elaine Philllan , MissOhlo
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Linda Daugherty, a Special Education major , from Lewisbur g,
checks the work of Junior High School stud ents as part of her
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Field Experience.
Because of the positive
reaction of the students who
partici pated in a September Field
Experience last fail , the program
will be conducted again this
coming year , the Department of
Field Experiences announced
recentl y.
L a s t September 200
sophomores in teacher education
spent approximately two weeks
working in a public school of
their choice on a voluntary basis. <
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1. to r.: Janet Mover , a major in Elementary educat ion from
Mifflinbur g, Penna.,.worked with students in the second grade.
Watklni Oltnh Isn't Far Away . . .
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Art Exhibit h Haas
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Recently the BSC Physics Club
held a meeting at which Mr. Ray
Wolver to n, a first semester
student teacher , was to talk abou t .
An exhibition of drawings by
the teaching methods at the
secondar y education level. William D. Alabaugh , a new
Unfortunatel y, due t o a schedule member of the faculty of the BSC
conflict, Mr. Wol\eiton was art department , w il be held
Monda y, March 4 t hrough
unable to attend .
With the lack of the featured Thursday, April 4, in the college
speaker, t he meeti ng was turned art gallery on t he second level of
over to the club 's president who Haas Audit orium.
devoted much of the remaining
Mr. Alabaugh received his
time to noted p ersonalities in Bachelor of Fine Arts degree at
Physics.
Mary land Insti tute of Art in
The next meet ing is scheduled B altimore , in 1964. He has
for Wednesday, March 6, at 4:00 stud ied at the Pennsylvania
p.m.
A cadem y o f Fine Arts in
Philadlep hia, and received his
BSC has been informed that
Mast er of Fine Arts degree at t he
it will be able to nominate two
University of Colorado, Boulder,
members of the senior classfor
Colorado, in 1967. He has taugh t
consideration to teach abroad.
in p ublic schools on both the Normall y two years of
elementar y and secondary levels.
experience are required, but
At present , Mr. Alabaugh teaches
under a special pilot program
Introdu ction to Art and Drawing, 1
initiated last year , highly
A cordial invitation has been*,
q ualified candida tes are
extended by Mr. Alabaugh to ^
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selected without prior
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residents
throughou
t
the
area
to
teaching experience.
view the exhibi t ion and to attend
For further information,
the reception the evening of
contact the Placement Office .
March 4 , from 7: 30-9:00 p.m.
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Physics Club
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La Strada
La Strada , Ferderico Fellini' s
first internationally successful
film and a winner of the
American Academy Award for
Best Foreign Film will be shown
in Carver Hall this coming
Tuesday, March 5,. by the
Literary and Film Society.
Starring Ajnthony Quinn and
Fellini' s wife, Giulietta Masina ,
the film is the first of two the
Literary and Film Society is
screening to illustrate the
evolution of Fellini 's style. On
March 26 it will show his latest
movie, also starring his wife ,
Juliet of the Spirits.
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