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Mon, 04/29/2024 - 14:49
Edited Text
Mi
,
j ujh e Student Newspaper of .Bloomsburg State College
AROON
OL C^TOLD
Volume XLVII , No. 5
BLOOMSBURG , PENNSYLV ANIA
Wed., Oct. 2, 1968
vote for Justice Fortas, but in view
of the defection of Senator Dirksen, reported in the paper this
morning, I don't think his chances
of confirmation are very good.
- -:;:-£ ?-
Clark: Well, Justice Musmanno
has been hurting me , and hurting
me badly with his one-man vendetta for the last four years.
Whether he's run out the string or
not, we'll know better on November fifth.
Clark
M&G: You plan to avoid further
Vietnams. How would you propose
that this be done?
Clark: I think there has to be a
vast degree of assessment of our
foreign policy in the light of those
areas of the world where military
interventions are worth thinking
about. For example, at the moment, we have men in uniform in
forty different nations all over the
world. My own view is, speaking of
Southeast Asia first , that we have
no business on the land mass of
Asia.
I think we should be conducting
our diplomatic public relations
from positions of strength created
by our Air Force and Navy on the
island chains starting with Japan
and running south to Okinawa,
Taiwan, the Philippines, islands of
the Indonesian archipelago, the
Malaysian peninsula , and backed
up by Australia and New Zealand.
Let's not forget that the limit of
our military reach in the Pacific at
the time of World War II was Pearl
Harbor. I've never seen any particular reason for going at least
any further than this island chain.
But I think also that it's high time
we took a hard look at our military ventures in other parts of the
world. I am not an isolationist, let
me make that clear. But I think
that with respect to our military
industrial complex , which is in advance of, instead of behind our diplomacy, our reach is exceeding
our grasp.
M&G: Do you think that your
ban on gun control will hurt you
in Pennsylvania?
Clark: It will certainly hurt in
some areas, on the other hand , my
mall is still running in support of
a strong control bill.
I believe that the women who
live in the cities of Pennsylvania
who nro afraid to go out on the
streets at night, and don't want
their youngsters out there for fear
of them being shot , wil l strongly
support my position. I'd like to
point out that my position so far
as voting is concerned, is identical
with that of my opponent , who's
zig-zag on gun control has caused
mo much amusement. The fact of
the matter is that ho voted exactly
the same for tho bill In the House
as I did in the Senate. And finally
let me sny that the Issue has become obsolete, because the legislation has been passed. It will shortly
be ngrood to in conference, will be
signed by President Johnson , nnd
thoro will be no opportunity to
deal with gun control , In my opinion , for several years to come.
M & G: Will you be in the Sonnte
to voto on tho Abo Fortas confir mation?
Clark: I'vo got to go back there
on Tuosday for that purposo , Interrupting my campai gn, I shall
M & G: Why does he have this
vendetta?
Schweiker
Saturday afternoon at the Bloomsburg Fair the Student Young Republicans from Bloomsburg State
College met Congressman Richard
SchAveiker, candidate for the U.S.
Senate. They escorted him around
the Fair as he greeted fair-goers.
Mr. Schweiker was extremely impressed with the enthusiasm shown
New York City's second annual by the Student Young Republicans.
Career Opportunities Conference, He expressed his appreciation to
sponsored by the New York Cham- their coordinator Mr. James Neisber of Commerce, will be held in wender and their advisor Dr. Hans
the Hotel Commodore, December Gunther. Following the touring of
the Fair, Mr. Neiswender accom26-28, 1968.
panied Mr. Schweiker to the Magee
The Conference is designed es- Estate where a dinner was served.
pecially for college seniors, gradAfter dinner Mr. Neiswender
uate students, and returning sertalked
to Mr. Schweiker about his
vicemen with degrees, permitting
experiences
and qualifications as a
them to explore first-hand the varState
Senator.
Mr. Schweiker has
ied careers available in America 's
served on various committees,
key business firms.
some of which include: House GovLast year's Conference, the first ernment Operations Committee and
of its kind ever to be undertaken the House Armed Service Commitin the area, exceeded advance esti- tee. Many honors have been awardmates both in numbers of com- ed to Richard Schweiker during his
panies and of career seekers par- four terms as a Congressman . In
ticipating. Students from 198 uni- 1961, Congressman Schweiker was
versities and colleges took part in voted "The Outstanding Young
the meeting. There were a total of Man of Pennsylvania " and as a
3,182 interviews by recruitment forerunner to this was awarded
staffs of the 61 companies who "outstanding Jaycee President in
took booths.
Pennsylvania."
A substantial increase in the
Schweiker Views
number of participating companies
At the dinner Mr. Schweiker reis expected at this year's Confer- lated his views on the issues conence. Almost all of 1967's cooper- cerning programs to afford less forating firms have already signed up, tunate a hand up through equal
and many other corporations are opportunity instead of j ust a handalso taking booths. Chamber staff out , . , proposes tax incentives to
attributes this response to the industry to help remedy ills of
number and quality of recruits ghettos . . . wants tax breaks for
hired subsequent to the Confer- parents sending youngsters to colence last year.
lege, Mr. Schweiker believes FedThe entire Grand Ballroom floor eral Government must share its tax
of the Hotel Commodore, 42nd revenues with State, local governstreet at Park and Lexington Ave- ments . . . he is a man of indepennues, will be taken over by the dent j udgment, votes his convicCareer Opportunities Conference. tions based on merits of individual
Students will proceed to pre-sched- bills,
uled conferences with key personnel representatives of the various
companies. These individual conferences will take place In booths on
the Grand Ballroom Floor from Wed ,, Oct. 2 . . .
Band Dance , "Chubby and Roy9:00 a.m. Thursday, through 5:00
als " — Centennial Gym 8p.m. Saturday, December 26, 27,
11 p.m.
and 28, 1968.
Careers
What's Happening
Chairm an of the Chamber 's advisory committee for the Conference is Merle A. Gulick , vice president , Tho Equitable Life Assurance Socloty of the U.S. Further
Information may bo secured from
William F. Gillen , membership dlroctor , Now York Chambor of Commorce , 865 Liborty Street, Now
York 10005, or from placement directors at the more than 450 cooperatin g universities and colleges
throu ghout Now Englan d and tho
Mlddlo Atlantic States,
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- -. -. - - - -9iH ^H ^MaH ^HaBI ^MB
Doable Dynamite
M&G: Have Justice Musmanno 's
attacks in the primaries hurt you?
Clark: Well, I've consistently re-1
fused to comment on that. I don't
think it's dignified to get into an
argument over the Justice of the
Supreme Court. I've j ust let him
t alk , and I haven't bothered to answer him. I think the fact is that
I've told the truth about him and
he did n't like it.
-
Frl. , Oct. 4 . . .
Football — Home — Susquo-
hanna
Snt. , Oct. 5 . . .
Movie in Carver at 8:30— " Torn
Curtain " . Alfred Hitchcock
presentation In color starrin g Paul Newman
Tuos, , Oct. 8 . . .
Literary and Film Societ y pr osonts "Wild Strawborrtos ,"
8:30 p.m., Carver Hall
Frl. , Oct. 1 1 . . .
Band Dance with "Lov o 's Sonic
Dream ", Centonnlal Gym,
8:30-11:30 p.m.
Hold on, BSC, Sam and Dave
are comin', Frid ay, October 18, in
Haas Auditorium. The Big Name
Entertainment Committee , under
the chairmanship of Ed Austin ,
have contracted the "Sam and Dave
Rev u e" for this year's Homecoming Concert.
Lorraine Alterman , of the Detroit Free Press, says of them ,
"Whoever called Sam and Dave
"Double Dynamite" understated
the case. Onstage they have few
equals when it comes to creating
extraordinary excitement." At the
Oly mpia Theater in Paris, France,
this excitement prompted an audience who understood very few of
the lyrics, to call them back for five
encores. They literally broke the
language barrier with the deep
down soulful feeling in their music.
In 1965 Stax Records of Memphis , Te nn essee , issued the first
Sam and Dave release, "It was
nice while it lasted." They gained
fame among rhythm and blues fans
with tunes like "You don't know
like I Know " and "Hold " on I'm
Comin'" but didn 't hit the charts
till they recorded "Soul Man ",
which won Sam and Dave a gold
record . The follow-up album "Soul
Men ", quickly burst into the best
selling classification and received a
Gra mmy Award .
Sam and Dave offer a simple explanation for their success: "We
simply try to do a little more than
required ." Often they do a lot more
than required. If they "get the
feeling" and the audience is moving with them, they may sing a
song for an hour , never ending
their exhausting choreography.
Otis Redding, who performed with
them on many occasions, stated,
"Sam and Dave put on one he]!
of a show."
Tickets go on sale for the Sam
and Dave Revue on October 9, in
the college council office. If you've
got soul or want to get it, buy one!
Eisenhower at B-S-C
Colonel John S. D. Eisenhower
will be the featured speaker at the
luncheon meeting of the TwentySecond Annual Conference for
Teachers and Administrators to be
held at Bloomsburg State College
on Friday, October 11, 1968. Over
5,000 invitations have been extended to teachers and administrators in Pennsylvania and nearby
states to attend the conference. Dr.
Royce O. Johnson, Director of the
Division of Elementary Education
at Bloomsburg State College, is
chairman for the conference.
At the general sessions program
at 11:30 a.m., Dr. Philip Lewis,
President of Industrial Dynamics,
Inc., Chicago and Dr. Wayne K.
16 Trofs
JPromolea
Promotions In rank for sixteen
members of the Bloomsburg State
College faculty was approved by
the Board of Trustees. The promotions became effective at the beginning of the 1968-60 college year ,
according to Dr. Harvey A. Andruss, President.
The following four associate professors were advanced to full professor status: Dr. Edson J. Drake,
History; Dr. Hans Karl Gunther,
history ; Dr. Andrew J. Karp inski,
Special Education; and Dr. Donald
A. Vannan , education.
The following ten assistant professors advanced to associate professors: M. Dale Anderson , English; William D. Eisenberh , EnRlish; Dr. George J. Gollos , biological science ; Leo C, Hopplo ,
geography; Lnvore W, McCluro,
ReoKrnphy; Ronald W. Novak,
mathematics; Dr. W. Benjamin
Powell , history ; Dr. Jordan P.
rtechman , EnKlto h; Robert R. Solenbcn'Ror , social science; nnd J, Cnlvin Wnlkor , psychology.
Doyio O. Dodson , Business Editcntlnn, and Scntt E, Mlllor , library,
wore promoted fro m Instructors to
ns.slstant professors.
Howell , Vice President , Fund for
Immediate Research , Chicago will
lecture and present demonstrations
on the topic "The New Technology
Comes to School."
Colonel Eisenhower , only son of
former President Dwight D. Eisenhower, will address the luncheon
session on the subj ect "The White
House Years" in the College Commons at 2:00 p.m. Few men have
had the opportunity to enjoy indepth exposure to decision-making
on military, national , and international levels as has had John Eisenhower.
Graduated 138th in a class of 474
from West Point in 1944, infantryman Eisenhower spent his first
month's furlough as an aide to his
father during the Normandy invasion. Two years later he commanded the U.S. garrison troops in
Austria , and In 1952 j oined the
15th Infantry Regiment , 1st Battalion , as Operations Officer on the
front line in Korea, where he received the Combat Infantry Badge.
Later he served as 3rd Battalion
Intelligence Officer and for his
work he was awarded the Bronze
Stnr.
As a researcher and editor he
aided In the writing of the Eisenhower memoirs, THE WHITE
HOUSE YEARS. More recently, he
served as Executive Vice President
of the Freedom Foundation nt Valley Forge. Ho is currently writing
a book on tho Battle of the Bulge
and has plans to continue writing.
Ills literary efforts are well-based
on a Master of Arts degree in English Literature and experience in
instructing English at West Point.
Teachers and administrators who
wish to attend the conference
should write or call Dr, Royce O.
Johnson , Bloomsburg State College,
BloomsburR, Pennsylvania 17815.
Join The
M&G
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3£.eview o f 1930 s 0d^\ l ^ii ^;^
Letters...
'
I
LETTER TO THE EDITOR:
After reading the report concerning the S.D.S. (Students for a
Democratic Society) printed in the
last issue of the M & G , I feel it
necessary to offer a few remarks.
Since the report came from the
great magazine of scholarl y endeavor, the Reader 's Digest, I shall
have to avoid making an outright
defense of the S.D.S. I certainly
wouldn 't want to be branded as a
Communist — they might decide to
revoke my subscription. There are,
however, a few things that I'd like
to clarify or take issue with.
First, Mr. Methvin, the author
of the report, is correct in saying
that S.D.S. represents a minuscule
minority of students, but he is incorrect in saying that the organization is involved in a nationwide
conspiracy aimed at "nothing less
than the destruction of society itself." Certainly it has played an active role in most of the U.S. campus uprisings, but the idea of an
organized conspiracy is far out If
anything, it is one of the most
loosely managed groups in the nation. Only about one-sixth of S.D.S.'s
35,000 members pay national dues.
Furthermore, there is remarkably
lit tle guidance from the S.D.S. national office in Chicago. How can
such an ill-coordinated group seek
to "destroy society itself"? In colleges aerogg the country the S.D.S.
has ai med its efforts at reforms of
Acc If ou Ready ?
By Alchy
As a graduate of Bloomsburg
State College, are you fully prepared to teach in any high school,
or as the case may be, elementary
school? This is a question any self
conscious student must delve into
before pulling out of this small college town as a graduate of this institution. Is the meager portion of
time spent in education classes during f our years sufficient to give any
student a wealth of knowledge
which , if used capably would lead
towa rd the educational goals transfixed by the department of Public
Instruction. We as students and
future teachers must ask questions
as to the latitude of our education.
I as an individual believe the
D.P.I, has seriously hampere d my
education through its persistence
to all but eliminate education
courses. If these actions continue
at the present, rate , future students
may well have one education course
which would be the conglomerate
of all the education courses that
still exist. Already three such education courses have fallen to the
conglomerate nemesis, Audio Visual , Problems of Secondary and
Elementary, plus Teaching of your
Majo r, which plague the D.P.I, and
So what did we learn from the
1930's Film Festival?
college practices and regulations.
I cannot condone some of the
means by which they sought this
change, but I believe the ends they
pursued were legitimate.
The Students for a Democratic
Society, says Methvin, "betray
growing signs of links to hard-core
professional Communists." Certainly it cannot be denied that
there are self-proclaimed Communists in its ranks , but this is a
small minori t y. It is estimated that
no more than 2% of all S.D.S.
members belong to the Communist
Par
ty, but rather, most members
are typically disenchanted young
liberals. They seek a means to voice
their obj ections and they feel that
a loud voice will be heard more
quickly than a quiet one.
The Methvin Report , in my opinion, smacks of the kind of flagwaving j ournalism which some people in right field constantly espouse. But my personal opinion
concerning the S.D.S. itself is irrelevant to my purpose. I am pointing
out that this report is both biased
and exaggerated. Therefore, it
should not have been printed as a
general news article. The logical
conclusion that one can make is
that it coincides with the official
position of the Maroon and Gold ,
and if this is the case, it should
have been stated as such in a statement by the editor.
Sincerely,
Michael Stugrin
College Administration. I don't
think a Bloomsburg graduate
dossier should read Education 101
conglomeratation of a previously
offered courses. This cheats the
grad, the community, the students
and most of all our future.
by adam
If the flag requires a CGA shield
to protect it from student misuse,
perhaps apple pie . Mom, an d God
also require their (CGA) protection. It is this columnist's opinion
that the CGA should also censure
swearing, orphans, and the unAmerican practice of eating apple
pie with ice cream. Go to it, ye
stalwarts of student conscience.
Ada m's Apple has a sore throat ,
thus , we part, in agony....
nup>\?lwte luck.
¦Krgiece ^e\te etfer
¦HT^seen a man
Ej 9jfeanta& a£nite
Wednesday. October 2. 1968
JOSEPH GRIFFITHS
Bdllor-ln-Chief
News Edilort .
Feature Editor
Spoilt Editon
Circulation Manager
Photography Editor
Attittant Editors
,..,...,
Copy Cdilar ,
Director of Publications
Faculty Business Consultant
Straight From Stan
Adam's App le
MA R O O N & G O L D
Vol. XLVII
In a recently televised film interview with John Huston, the Ireland-based American movie director of such films as The Treasure of
the Sierra Mndre and The Night of
the Iguana, Huston was asked why
he thought his 1941 The Maltese
Falcon was such a great movie.
"Because it was innocent," Huston
replied. There is no technical
by Stan Rakowsky
showing-off , no elaborate manipulaIf ever there was a time for a tion of plot and theme , no conscicha nge, it's now, and helping to ous symbolism, and according to its
change things are the Young Re- makers, any excellences found in it
publicans of BSC. Under the lead- by the critics were not deliberately
ership of a true stalwart of the Re- planned , but the accidental results
publican Party, Dr. Hans Karl Gun- of what seemed to them the only
ther, and the student co-ordinator, way to make the film.
Jim Neiswender, the Young ReInnocent: perhaps Huston has
publicans have started from scratch given the best description of all of
four short months ago into one of those films dating from 1931 to
the truly finest Y. R. organizations 1941 which more than four hunin this part of the state.
dred BSC students and faculty
viewed this past weekend. A courSchwciker Visits Fair
paLast Saturday, Y. R. co-ordinator, teous audience, putting up
one
blown
,
tiently
with
film
breaks
Jim Neiswender, interviewed four
term Congressman and candidate bu lb, and sometimes muddy sound
for the U.S. Senate from Pennsyl- tracks, they found films that were
vania, B.ichard Schweiker, who also not only innocent , but often downreceived a tumultuous welcome right naive. They mixed comedy
from thousands of Pennsylvanians, and deepest tragedy without hesias he paraded around the fair- tation: juxtaposed a comic relief
grounds led by a delegation of Cockney hospital orderly with a
Y. R. Schweiker, Neiswender, and crazed and tormented vampire vicseveral other prominent members tim in Dracula, a musical comedy
of the County Grand Old Party or- wedding festival with an anguganization , previous to the parade ished father's appeara nce carrying
had lunch at the home of million- his drowned daughter in Frankenaire industrialist Harry Magee and stein.
They mixed characters of all sodiscussed various aspects of the up
and coming campaign. Schweiker cial classes: the chorus girls of
expressed his appreciation to the Gold Diggers with old Boston
Y. R.'s for their tremendous turn- money, the riff raff Marx Brothers
out Saturday at the fair , and en- with hard-working opera singers
couraged their enthusiastic cam- and high society hangers-on , and
paign activity in the coming weeks. all seemingly taking each other serHe congratulated the student iously. They mixed slapstick with
Y. R. 's on their work , and offi cially high seriousness, seeing no absurdopened the Republican Campaign ity at all in switching from a zany
Headquarters in Bloomsburg, lo- vaudeville routine , like tearing off
cated next to Henrie's Book Store, unsuitable clauses of a contract till
the site of the old W.C.N.R. offices. only the signatures were left , to a
serious scene of grand opera, durInvitation To Y. R.'s
ing which the slapstick comedians
In my talk with Jim , he ex- glow with appreciation. Some of
pressed , on the behalf of the the juxtapositions seem absurd
Young Republican Party of Blooms- to a 1968 audience , but it is a tribburg, an open invitation to all ute to the art of Harpo Marx that
Young Republican men and women he makes them work. After cavortinterested in a change, to stop into ing, mugging, and bopping villains
headquarters and j oin the Nixon- with enormous mallets, he settles
Agnew Victory Team and work for down to a serious stint at the harp
a truly better America. Some of and reveals the tenderness of a
the state-wide offices and candi- poet, made more poignant for us
dates of great importance this year by his vocal muteness. Though in
are : U.S. Senator, Richard Schwei- 1935 no one was talking about
ker; State Superior Court Judge, "sou l," Harpo already had it.
Honorable John B. Hannum; State
The innocence of these 1930's
Treasure r, Frank Pasquerilla; Aud- films carries over to its treatment
itor General, Warren M. Depuy as of violence. In comedy, t here is
well as innumerable local offices to plenty of violence in its usual nonbe filled.
lethal manner—th e mallets are exAll their men are extremely well aggerated , the falls are prat, the
qualified and will certainly work blows more threatened than delivfov the betterment of all Pennsyl- ered , and then usually bloodless ov
vanians. So, men and women of applied to the seat of the pants.
the Bloomsburg area who are in- Even in serious scenes , our sensiterested in a sensible government, bilities are spared: as Dracula
j oin the Nixon-Agnew Victory bends over his sleeping victims to
Team and help bring this SENSI- suck the blood from their th roats
BLE government to our countiy.
and leave those two little tell-tale
,
NOTE: As close as schedules will marks, the scene mercifully fades
as
it
does
from
the
scene
of
Frankpermit, I will attempt to prepare a
creation playing with the
column for each Friday edition of enstein's
little girl he is shortly to murder,
the Maroon and Gold. Due to a
The Maltese Falcon, with the
change in production schedule of Even
sinister
Sydney Groenstreet , Peter
the Maroon and Gold, I was unable Lorre, and Humphrey Bogart
has
to submit the column in time for only two corpses on view and only
last week's paper.
two fist-induced knock-outs plus one
drug-Induced, Plus one kick in the
head.
No. 5
EUGENE IESCAVAGE
Business Manager
Bill Telttworth & Michael Hack
Dave Miller
Bob Schultz & Charlie Moyer
Robert Gadinski
Mike O'Day
Ron Adams, Mike Stugrin & Clark Ruch
,
Allan Maurer
Robert Hatler
John E. Dennin
The Maroon & Gold is located on the second floor of Waller Hall. News may be submitted by calling 784-4660, Ext. 323, or by contacting the paper through Box 301.
The Maroon t Gold l
i a member of the Pennsylvania State College Press Association.
Additional Stafli Charlei Macunai, Jeanne DeRoie, Sandy Deloplaine, Carol
Burnt, Sharon Topper , Sharon Sklaney, Fran Chobalko, Undo Dodion, Barbara Russell , Linda Ennis, Jacquie Feddock , Trudy Norcrois , Karen Mundy,
Catherine Surak , Janet Boyanoiki, Susan Schenck , Amy Raber, David Drucker ,
Linda Yohey, Carole Sorber , Susan Zalota, Kalhy Strolockii , Elizabeth Cooper ,
Abby Gorder , Barbara Peitengill, Priscilla Clark , Ruth Carpenter.
The Maroon t Gold l
i published at near bi-weekly at possible by, for, and through
the feet of the students of Bloomiburg Star* College, Dloomsburg, Pennsylvania.
All opinions expressed by columnists and feature writers , including letleri-to-theeditor , are not necesiiarilf those of this publication but those of the individual!,
Adam is
A U u c a nlti
d
UviUM&q
Otf Uc
Most of all , innocence marks the
characterization of these films. The
people aro good or bad; they end
up conveniently reformed or be«
In g carted off to jail. More often
than not , the good gu y is a good
"grou p," like the Marx Brothers or
that feist y bunch of chorines who
form the composite heroine of Gold
niggers of 1033, The groups do not
dis perse—oven nftor changes of
fortune for betto r or worse : the y
continuo to share the same apart ments or pnrk benches. Tho villain ,
rather , is the loner—as aro Frankenstein 's monster, Drnculn , tho connivin g Grovor of Tho Dig Store,
nnd ovon tho arro gant and cruel
tenor Laspurrl in A Night at the
Oporn, Although wo can see that
many serious thomos infiltrated
even the most lightheaded of
1930's movies—Groucho's remarks
about "scabs," the "draft," and the
Gold Digger's salute to "the forgotten man ,"—obviously the modern
theme of alienation had not yet
. occurred to the nation's movie makers. The moral conflict that does
not seem to bother Dracula, or Dr.
Frankenstein , or any of the comic
villains, catches up with Humphrey
Bogar
t, whose anguished decision
as Sam Spade to give up the lovely
but insidious Bridget (Mary Astor)
for the sake of his honor marks for
us the end of tho moral innocence
of the 1930's.
Most of us went to tne movies
last weekend prepared to laugh at
the corny decor, the flat bosoms
and square-cut suit shoulders, and
the simplicity of a bygone day.
Within minutes most of us were
engrossed in the business at hand:
Will all be well between Stanwyck
and McCrea? Will the monster kill
the kitten? (Never mind the kid.)
Who 's got the falcon anyway? Will
Warre n Williams unbend soon
enough to realize that Joan Blondell is the girl for him? Will the
show go on in spite of the creditor's inj unction? "Will Humph go
crooked? Will Tony Martin be shot
with the gun concealed in the camera? Will Groucho ever find happiness with Margaret Dumont?
Comments of viewers ranged
from "I can't hear the sound track,"
^
verdict,
to one second graSer's
"Cool!" Perhaps most significant of
all was a spontaneous burst of applause from Saturday night's audience at an inspired scene of mayhem in which two Marx Brothers
hastily camouflage themselves from
pursuers by draping one brother
as a rocking chair while the second
dons a doily for a cap, "rocks" on
his brother's lap, and serenely
knits the fringe of his shawl with
two forks. Apparently the age of
innocence in American films has
something to say to us in the age of
alienation.
by A. Donovan
It 's A Small World
Anyone who has spent any time
inside the study cubicles in the Andruss Library may come to observe
that these cubicles are a world all
their own.
Contact with the outside world is
limited but food for the imagination is not lacking. The modern
structu re of the library, when
viewed , looking outward into the
night sky, over the cubicle walls,
appears almost as a view from the
bridge of a space ship while one 's
ties with humanity are limited to
fleeting glimpses of the tops of
heads and the passage of an occasional body past the cubicle opening.
Truly, these study areas are ideal
in that they provide privacy, an
area for concentration , and just
enough contact with one's fellow
man and the universe to satisfy the
whole person,
David J. Drucket
70
Shopping
Days 'til
Christmas
4
New Improved
Freud And Football Husky
Harriers
pain" excitement of the hysterical
worshippers focuses entirely on the
The 1968-69 cross country team
actions of the libido-quarterback.
is
starting off their nine meet
Behind him are three priests repschedule
and this season looks like
The central priest crouches over resenting the male triad.
an interesting one. The new head
the egg, protecting it with his
At a given signal, the egg is coach, Dr. Noble, is showing much
hands while over his back quarters passed by sleight-of-hand to one of interest in the sport and the effort
hovers the "quarterback." The the members of the triad who en- he is putting forth is arousing the
transposition of "back quarters" to deavors to move it by bodily force psyche of the Husky team. Also the
"quarterback" is easily explained across the white lines of winter. new course is a welcomed change
by the Adler school. To the l ayman This procedure, up and down the for the harriers and it has some
the curious posture assumed by the enclosure^ continues through the kind of psychological effect on the
"quarterback", as he hovers over four quarters of the ritual.
squad. With a new head coach, a
the central priest, immediately sugAt the end of the second quarter, new cross country course, new rungests the Cretan origins of Mycena- implying the summer solstice, the ning shoes on their way, and a new
ean animal art , but this popular processions of musicians and semi- team morale, the Husky squad is
view is untenable. Actually, of
nude virgins are resumed. After ready mentally. But in this selfcourse, the "quarter-back" symbol- forming themselves into picto- torturing sport one must be ready
- Art Sell Picks Up Several Yards On End Sweep In Win Over MSC.
izes the libido, combining two in- grams, representing alphabetical physically and the Huskies are not
stincts, namely (a) Eros, which and animal fetishes, the virgins in A-l shape yet. This problem will
strives for even closer union and perform a most curious rite requir- handicap the team in their
first
(b) the instinct for destruction of ing far more dexterity than the meet
-with
Mansfield
but
the
outanything which lies in the path of earlier ph allic Maypole rituals come may depend on
whether
or
Eros. Moreover , t he "pleasure- from which it seems to be derived. not the Mansfield runners are in
Each of the virgins carries a wand tip-top shape. Chuck Bowman and
of shining metal which she spins Mike Horbal both feel that the
her fingertips, tosses playfully squad has many capabilities but
However, this time BSC's psyched on
into
the air and with which she inThe running ability of Bill Fire- possession of the pigskin. Mans- up defense couldn't stop them from terweaves her body in most intri- "... we need a little more time to
get in shape." The Husky squad
stine and Mike Koloj ej chick conv field could move the ball only 1 scoring. The touchdown came with cate gyrations.
has much potential and good depth.
bined with a psyched-up defense to yard in two line cracks and were less than four minutes gone in the
The
virgins
perform
another
imThe
team is not dependent upon
punt
shifty
to
the
third
quarter
and
put
Mansfield
give BSC their first victory of the again foTced to
portant
function
throughout
the
enone
or
two runners as in previous
right
Kolojejchick.
This
time
Mike
reback
in
the
game.
The
PAT
'68 football season, 24-6 over Mansmytire
service.
This
concerns
the
,
se
a
so
n
s
but all the men are solid
punt
to
Mansfield's
margin
21
mis-fired,
but
the
Huskies
turned
the
field Mountaineers. BSC wasn't
stical rite of "conversion" follow- contenders for the number one
able to mount a sustained drive yard line. A personal foul penalty had been slimmed to 10-6.
Early in the 4th stanza Hugh ing success of one of the young spot on the team. Tom Henry is
throughout the game, but long runs tacked another 15 yards onto that,
giving
BSC
a
first
down
on
the
6
Jones
picked off another Casterline priests in carrying the oval across shooting for the "most improved
by Firestine and Koloj ejchick repeatedly put the Huskies in scor- yard line. After a pitch lost two aerial and returned it 33 yards to the last white line of winter. As runner" award as he is putting hireyards, Bill Firestine skirted his Mansfield's 32. But Mike Koloj oj- the moment of "conversion" ap- self through some gruelling working position.
proaches, the virgins kneel at the outs. The "comeback of the year"
The first quarter ended in a right end for an 8-yard touchdown. chick fumbled a pitch on an end edge of the grass, bury their faces award is up for grabs, and Jimmy
split
PAT
kick
the
around
play
and
Mansfield
recovErnie
Vedral's
scoreless deadlock although both
ered possession of the ball. Again in the earth , then raise their arms Carlin may have his eye on this
teams drove deep into T.D. terri- uprights giving BSC a 7-0 lead.
BSC's
defense stopped the Moun- to heaven in supplication, praying award. Also much credit is due to
play
On Mansfield's next offensive
tory. The first time Mansfield retaineers for no gain and MSC was that "the uprights will be split" the rest of the men on tlie team beJim
Bonnacci
picked
off
a
Casterceived the ball they drove to the
"Conversion" is indeed a dedicated cause it is no easy task to force
forced to punt.
Hu skies' 22. The drive ended there line aerial and returned it to midyourself to go out and make yourceremony.
BSC received the ball on their
as QB Stu Casterline was dumped field. Following a first down on the
Freud and Breuer in 1895 ("Stu- self hurt and ache when you could
37
yard
line,
Lessman
fired
to
tight
own
39
and
moved
to
MSC'
s 19
for a 6 yard loss and a fourth down
end Bill Derr who rumbled to the yard line, but the drive stalled. dien uber Hysteria") described be enjoying a conversation in
pass went astray.
• 7 yard line. Once again a penalty Mike Vedral was short on a field "conversion" as hysterical symp- Husky or a snooze back in the
BSC took possession of the ball stalled the Huskies drive, but Ernie goal from the 19, but on MSC's toms originating through the en- dorm. Five miles is a lot farther
and drove to Mansfield's 10 yd. line. Vedral booted a 13 yard field goal third play from scrimmage, Stutz- ergy of a mental process being than you think! Here's wishing the
The big-gainer in the drive was Bill to increase BSC's margin to 10-0.
man intercepted a pass and re- withheld from conscious influence, new 1968-69 squad a very successFirestine's run of 43 yards. An offand this precisely accounts for the ful season.
With time running out in the turned it to the 29.
side penalty killed the Huskies half , Mansfield managed to drive
From the 29 yard line sub-QB behavior of the virgins in the footdrive forcing them to attempt a 20 to the Huskies' 27 yard line, but Tom Schneider hit on a 5 yard pass ball services.
yd. field goal that went wide.
Jim Bonnacci broke up a "last and after a QB keeper went for no
Early in the second quarter BSC gasp" pass and just missed holding gain hit Joe Lyons in the corner
drove to within 4 inches of the onto it with nothing but open field of the end zone for a 24 yard TD.
Mountaineers' goal. The drive was between himself and Mansfield's For the third time, Vedral conset up by Mike Kolojejchick's 44 goal.
verted giving BSC a 24-6 lead. The
yd. punt return. However, a fourth
Mansfield started the second half game ended with BSC losing 8
down line plunge by Rossi was as they had the first , by dr
iving yards after driving to Mansfield's
stopped forcing BSC to give up deep into the Huskies' territory. 7 yard line.
By Childe Herald (Thomas Ferril), reprinted from The Rocky
Mountain Herald.
Firestine Stars In
24-6 B.S.C. Victory
East Stroud
W. Chester
SHUMAN'S WORLD TRAVEL
37 EAST MAIN ST.
«
BLOOMSBURG
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FARMERS NATIONAL OFFICE • BLOOMSBURG , PA.
\
Member Federal Deposit Insuran ce Corporation
',
PHONE 764-3420
For All Your Trave l A rran gements
TWO WEEKS AT THE LONDON THEATRE — Including . . ,
Air Fare, Accommodation!.
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RESERVATIONS • TICKETS • TOURS • ETC.
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This winter we offer each week LONDON SUPER SHOW TOURS — from $300
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The Fondest
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Eppley's
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Big Republic an On Campus
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BLOOM
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Be A IL K. O .I .
Phone 784-6560
*"•" "
¦
Need Financial Advice !
Go fo the Young Republican 's Center at
the old WCNR Studio and Sign Up!
MAIN « IRON STRUTS
Prescription Specialist
The New Co-chairmen Are:
• CHANEL
• CUERLAIN
ED BARRETT
• FABEROE
• LANVIN
SUE O'NEILL
JOHN BILDER
• PRINCE MATCHABEUI
FLOWERS
S
• ELIZABETH ARDEN
784-4406
Jb
• DANA
• HELENA RUBENSTEIN
• COTY
• MAX FACTOR
Z Domlod World Wid e Deliver y 7
Qmn Slumpt
-- ini- i- .-- i.-i-i- .-.r. - .-^.-ir. - .iru- iril-
** - r- - i,
.hliljiJ '
•%FV-^L
W^lfl
i$^
The Coordinator is MR. NEISWINDER
Advisor — DR. GUNTHER
21
14
Notices
Notice: The parking lot behind
Elwell Hall is not a recreation area
and should not be used for such
games as football , soccer, or any
other activities.
ii<
in
#
Pinaf ore
Comp osers
Interviews .
Campus interviews will be held
in the new Placement Office, Ben ,
Franklin Building, 2nd Floor.
Army Medical Specialist Corps,
Under the direction of Allan Lo-
kos , the "Gilbert and Sullivan A La
Carle" will be presented in Haas
Auditorium on Wednesday, Oct obe r
9 at 8 p.m. Do not get the idea that
it is a catering service putting on
a big Smorgasbord dinner for the
college. It should be better than
that and more enjoyable. At least
you will not have indigestion. They
have presented their musical at the
Ford Auditorium in Detroit, at the
Utica Arts Festival, at Capital University, and at Hanover University.
The entire program is a collection of the great moments from
every one of the G & S operettas.
It is a definite must for the cultural minded and intellectual.
Students will be admitted on presentation of their I.D. cards and the
In honor of the new freshmen at
BSC 1hc Day Women Association
will hold a party on Wednesday,
October 2 , from 11 a.m. to 2:30
p.m. in the Day Woman 's Lounge.
* « *
Any students looking for off campus part or full time employment
are asked to please check with the
Placement Office , Ben Franklin
bu ildi n g, second floor. Information
on j ob opportunities is available
there.
* * *
The first big organizational meeting of the Newman Club will be
held at the Newman Center, 329
Iron Street, Wednesday, October 2,
at 8:00 p.m.
There will be a i*ug mass at
7:30 p.m
* * *
Students interested in handball
or paddleball , perhaps against one ^
of our smoother walls on campus, \
are asked to contact Dr. Eric W. :
Smithner in Room 225 Waller, or \
to leave their name and box num- :
ber on his door.
Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington , D.C. .. Oct. 4
at 10 n.m.
U.S. General Accounting
Washington, D.C
at S a.m.
Bethlehem Public Schools ,
hem, Penna
at 10 a.m.
Office ,
Oct. 15
BethleOct 22
^f * A *
OCUalO
Rls. 11/ 15
SELINSGROVE , PA.
743-1514
Fine J ewelry
I
I
?
Repairing
~~""s
i—5\
1
**
;
i
BLPQMSBURG,PA.
i
Quality
The
Texas
\
FOOT OF COLLEGE HILL
•
\
-i/
WHERE DAD
[
•
I
\I
—-7
^
\
\
\
TOOK HIS GIRL ^
Bloomsburg
j|
\\
i
Berwick Knitting Mills
BBSSJj? " *""* "
—
i
?
F^BBr ^HB{Es .
' ^I^^^^ BEH38BHJr
iH^^
S
I
"^6^'^
1
'™
"
*
M^^^^ Bl
"
u!*Hk*b 't I *
Chapel Auditorium
All seats reserved _ . $3.00
&
For tickets write to SUSQUEHANNA UNIVERSITY ,
Wok Office , Hox 4000, Sclinsgrovc, Pa. 17870. Enclose
remittances payable to Susquchanna University and include a .self-addressed stamped envelope.
.miHIIimtlHIIMIHI IIII HI 11 HI HI II HHII (111 HI I Mill HIHIIIIHHI III II11 HI I III) IMIIII HIM HI HHH Mil lit III Mil tHH£
| We need your help this
I Friday and Saturday!
FREE DELIVERY
8:30 to 11:30
Regular and King Size
HOAGIES
Phone 784-4292
127 W. Main
BLOOMSBURG
—~T
Marr ied
College Students
FURNISHED
APARTMENT
2nd Floor
Private Side Entrance
3 Rooms & Bath
Baseboard Heat
TV
1 Block from B.S.C.
105 IRON ST.
fnquir* at
111 Iron St. In Afternoon or Evening
MAROARBT MILLBR
I
\
I
OPERATION CLEANUP
j
j
{
"BYE THE BYE" COFFEE HOUSE located in
the old gymnasium of the Presbyterian Churc h ,
Fourth Street at Market.
This is a cooperative project between the students
at BSC and seven of the churches of Jiloomshurg.
WORK PARTIES scheduled on Friday from 1:00
to 4:30 P.M. Saturday— 10:00A.M. until 1::00 P.M.
Contact Bob Ycrger , Box 564 or Call
]''atlier Lloyd—784-4371—and ofTcr your assistance.
I
I
!
|.
!
j
I THIS IS YOUR COFFEE HOUSE. SUPPORT IT!
!
TlKIIIIMIill
IIIIMIM
MIKMMMMIIHHIIIMItlMMIMIIIMIIIIMMMIIIinilMMtKMIII
Ml
MM
j
i
|
|
|
I
|
|
|
I
|
¦
230 S. POPLAR ST., BERWICK
HOURS: 9-5 Dally / Thun. ft Fri. 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Help Celebrate YMCA' s 125th
Anniversary
Mon-Tue-Thur-Sat - 8:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Wednesday - 8:30 a.m. 'til noon
Friday - 8:30 a.m. 'til 9:00 p.m.
¦
¦
¦
]
KEEP YOURSELF IN SHAPE
J O I N THE YMCA 125 M I L E
RUN
Run a Mile a Day
REGISTRATION FEE — $2.00
(Phone 784-2104 for Information)
Persons Finishing Receive Tie Clip or Pin '
IMIIIMIMMIIM*
HOURS :
¦
** " ^MbIHR
(ONE BLOCK OFF RT. 11 — BEHIND SHOPPING CENTER)
COLUMBIA THEATRE
[
Now Playing
;
CENTER SI1.
BLOOMSRURG , PA.
Convenientl y Located at 124 E. MAIN ST,
¦
¦i^v ¦
* SWEATERS (National Brands)
* LADIES KNIT SUITS & DRESSES
* BERMUDA SHORTS - SLACK SUITS
* MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
* BATHING SUITS
Buy Where They Arc Made —
At "Factory-to-You " Prices !
I
CAMPUS CLEANERS & LAUNDERERS
¦ ¦¦ ¦¦ ¦
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t ' ' LfeaKfllHEif ¦!¦
^ ^^^^ BKSM fT" ^
Saturday, October 19, 1968
PIZZA
Available October 1
I
8:30 p.m.
Closed 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.
Every Day But Friday
¦
= Your J eweler Away from Home
| 5 W. Main St
Bloomsbvko
^
* THE RAMSEY LEWIS TRIO
Op e n 'til 12:00 p.m.
¦
§
All seats reserved __ $3.00
HOAGIES
•
•
•
•
•
•
784-4117
Chapel Auditorium
=J
-: '
One Block Above
Magee 's Mills
1 West Main St.
BLOOMSBURG , PA.
Phone: 784-4388
Tuesday, October 8, 1968
8:30 p.m.
Phone
V»^w> ^~ .
|
AND
presents .
* THE LETTERMEN
HALLMARK CARDS
GIFTS
OPEN 24 HRS.
BarberShop
SUSQUEHANNA
UNIVERSITY
BLOOMSBURG,PA.
Free Delivery Service
FETTERMAN'S
I
-IIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIII
18 West Main Street
5 to 7
\
I Harry Logan I
25 E. Main St., BIOOMSBURG
Miller Office
Supp ly Co.
Charlie ' s
{
(
TOILET GOODS
COSMETICS
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES
GREETING CARDS
lllllllllllllHIMIIUIItlllllllllltMlllliallltllMIMIIIlltllMltltlllllllltMIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIt?
I
<>
\
Made in U.S.A.
NESPOLI
jewelers
VOLKSWAGEN
,,
k
ft
Becker Motor Co.
784-2561
|
w—
^
Pewter
Tasty Home
Cooking
Free Prescription Delivery
CROWN and ROSE I
Made in England
z
WOODBURG MUGS
I
^h r\hi
v3ROp
^ (ll tUll llttlltlltlllltlltttttttltllttlltltllll
Your Prescription Druggist
ROBERT G. SHIVE, R.P.
members of the faculty will be admitted when they show the #4
stub of their activity books.
The Fin est in
CORNER
. LUNCH
MOVER
Pharmacy
W. T. Grant Company
October 24 at 10 a.m.
« l l t l t t i t t t t l t t- l- l-b. l-l _l l -f t- h
l l.i l. h
B_h_ l f lKiLLipfnnpniinnnniinniiiiinimiin
IfllillliBIi ¦¦¦¦>>>(¦¦«¦¦¦>
* ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦* * ¦* « iiiililliiiiiiliii1lllt»litllllllll>lllllllililliiainitiLllliiilllillllllli>
. _l k
. _
. _
iiiiinngininiffiiiinriiiiiiiiiiiKfiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii*!
^
Delta Pi Wins IFC Boat Race
¦
^¦
MICHAEL CAINE
M
GIAVANNI RALLI
DEADFALL M
IN COLOR
'i
.
!
j
:
,
j ujh e Student Newspaper of .Bloomsburg State College
AROON
OL C^TOLD
Volume XLVII , No. 5
BLOOMSBURG , PENNSYLV ANIA
Wed., Oct. 2, 1968
vote for Justice Fortas, but in view
of the defection of Senator Dirksen, reported in the paper this
morning, I don't think his chances
of confirmation are very good.
- -:;:-£ ?-
Clark: Well, Justice Musmanno
has been hurting me , and hurting
me badly with his one-man vendetta for the last four years.
Whether he's run out the string or
not, we'll know better on November fifth.
Clark
M&G: You plan to avoid further
Vietnams. How would you propose
that this be done?
Clark: I think there has to be a
vast degree of assessment of our
foreign policy in the light of those
areas of the world where military
interventions are worth thinking
about. For example, at the moment, we have men in uniform in
forty different nations all over the
world. My own view is, speaking of
Southeast Asia first , that we have
no business on the land mass of
Asia.
I think we should be conducting
our diplomatic public relations
from positions of strength created
by our Air Force and Navy on the
island chains starting with Japan
and running south to Okinawa,
Taiwan, the Philippines, islands of
the Indonesian archipelago, the
Malaysian peninsula , and backed
up by Australia and New Zealand.
Let's not forget that the limit of
our military reach in the Pacific at
the time of World War II was Pearl
Harbor. I've never seen any particular reason for going at least
any further than this island chain.
But I think also that it's high time
we took a hard look at our military ventures in other parts of the
world. I am not an isolationist, let
me make that clear. But I think
that with respect to our military
industrial complex , which is in advance of, instead of behind our diplomacy, our reach is exceeding
our grasp.
M&G: Do you think that your
ban on gun control will hurt you
in Pennsylvania?
Clark: It will certainly hurt in
some areas, on the other hand , my
mall is still running in support of
a strong control bill.
I believe that the women who
live in the cities of Pennsylvania
who nro afraid to go out on the
streets at night, and don't want
their youngsters out there for fear
of them being shot , wil l strongly
support my position. I'd like to
point out that my position so far
as voting is concerned, is identical
with that of my opponent , who's
zig-zag on gun control has caused
mo much amusement. The fact of
the matter is that ho voted exactly
the same for tho bill In the House
as I did in the Senate. And finally
let me sny that the Issue has become obsolete, because the legislation has been passed. It will shortly
be ngrood to in conference, will be
signed by President Johnson , nnd
thoro will be no opportunity to
deal with gun control , In my opinion , for several years to come.
M & G: Will you be in the Sonnte
to voto on tho Abo Fortas confir mation?
Clark: I'vo got to go back there
on Tuosday for that purposo , Interrupting my campai gn, I shall
M & G: Why does he have this
vendetta?
Schweiker
Saturday afternoon at the Bloomsburg Fair the Student Young Republicans from Bloomsburg State
College met Congressman Richard
SchAveiker, candidate for the U.S.
Senate. They escorted him around
the Fair as he greeted fair-goers.
Mr. Schweiker was extremely impressed with the enthusiasm shown
New York City's second annual by the Student Young Republicans.
Career Opportunities Conference, He expressed his appreciation to
sponsored by the New York Cham- their coordinator Mr. James Neisber of Commerce, will be held in wender and their advisor Dr. Hans
the Hotel Commodore, December Gunther. Following the touring of
the Fair, Mr. Neiswender accom26-28, 1968.
panied Mr. Schweiker to the Magee
The Conference is designed es- Estate where a dinner was served.
pecially for college seniors, gradAfter dinner Mr. Neiswender
uate students, and returning sertalked
to Mr. Schweiker about his
vicemen with degrees, permitting
experiences
and qualifications as a
them to explore first-hand the varState
Senator.
Mr. Schweiker has
ied careers available in America 's
served on various committees,
key business firms.
some of which include: House GovLast year's Conference, the first ernment Operations Committee and
of its kind ever to be undertaken the House Armed Service Commitin the area, exceeded advance esti- tee. Many honors have been awardmates both in numbers of com- ed to Richard Schweiker during his
panies and of career seekers par- four terms as a Congressman . In
ticipating. Students from 198 uni- 1961, Congressman Schweiker was
versities and colleges took part in voted "The Outstanding Young
the meeting. There were a total of Man of Pennsylvania " and as a
3,182 interviews by recruitment forerunner to this was awarded
staffs of the 61 companies who "outstanding Jaycee President in
took booths.
Pennsylvania."
A substantial increase in the
Schweiker Views
number of participating companies
At the dinner Mr. Schweiker reis expected at this year's Confer- lated his views on the issues conence. Almost all of 1967's cooper- cerning programs to afford less forating firms have already signed up, tunate a hand up through equal
and many other corporations are opportunity instead of j ust a handalso taking booths. Chamber staff out , . , proposes tax incentives to
attributes this response to the industry to help remedy ills of
number and quality of recruits ghettos . . . wants tax breaks for
hired subsequent to the Confer- parents sending youngsters to colence last year.
lege, Mr. Schweiker believes FedThe entire Grand Ballroom floor eral Government must share its tax
of the Hotel Commodore, 42nd revenues with State, local governstreet at Park and Lexington Ave- ments . . . he is a man of indepennues, will be taken over by the dent j udgment, votes his convicCareer Opportunities Conference. tions based on merits of individual
Students will proceed to pre-sched- bills,
uled conferences with key personnel representatives of the various
companies. These individual conferences will take place In booths on
the Grand Ballroom Floor from Wed ,, Oct. 2 . . .
Band Dance , "Chubby and Roy9:00 a.m. Thursday, through 5:00
als " — Centennial Gym 8p.m. Saturday, December 26, 27,
11 p.m.
and 28, 1968.
Careers
What's Happening
Chairm an of the Chamber 's advisory committee for the Conference is Merle A. Gulick , vice president , Tho Equitable Life Assurance Socloty of the U.S. Further
Information may bo secured from
William F. Gillen , membership dlroctor , Now York Chambor of Commorce , 865 Liborty Street, Now
York 10005, or from placement directors at the more than 450 cooperatin g universities and colleges
throu ghout Now Englan d and tho
Mlddlo Atlantic States,
-' .~=-i--J= «-.:- "«BHHiHIHHlHai
^BH« ^ ^
- -. -. - - - -9iH ^H ^MaH ^HaBI ^MB
Doable Dynamite
M&G: Have Justice Musmanno 's
attacks in the primaries hurt you?
Clark: Well, I've consistently re-1
fused to comment on that. I don't
think it's dignified to get into an
argument over the Justice of the
Supreme Court. I've j ust let him
t alk , and I haven't bothered to answer him. I think the fact is that
I've told the truth about him and
he did n't like it.
-
Frl. , Oct. 4 . . .
Football — Home — Susquo-
hanna
Snt. , Oct. 5 . . .
Movie in Carver at 8:30— " Torn
Curtain " . Alfred Hitchcock
presentation In color starrin g Paul Newman
Tuos, , Oct. 8 . . .
Literary and Film Societ y pr osonts "Wild Strawborrtos ,"
8:30 p.m., Carver Hall
Frl. , Oct. 1 1 . . .
Band Dance with "Lov o 's Sonic
Dream ", Centonnlal Gym,
8:30-11:30 p.m.
Hold on, BSC, Sam and Dave
are comin', Frid ay, October 18, in
Haas Auditorium. The Big Name
Entertainment Committee , under
the chairmanship of Ed Austin ,
have contracted the "Sam and Dave
Rev u e" for this year's Homecoming Concert.
Lorraine Alterman , of the Detroit Free Press, says of them ,
"Whoever called Sam and Dave
"Double Dynamite" understated
the case. Onstage they have few
equals when it comes to creating
extraordinary excitement." At the
Oly mpia Theater in Paris, France,
this excitement prompted an audience who understood very few of
the lyrics, to call them back for five
encores. They literally broke the
language barrier with the deep
down soulful feeling in their music.
In 1965 Stax Records of Memphis , Te nn essee , issued the first
Sam and Dave release, "It was
nice while it lasted." They gained
fame among rhythm and blues fans
with tunes like "You don't know
like I Know " and "Hold " on I'm
Comin'" but didn 't hit the charts
till they recorded "Soul Man ",
which won Sam and Dave a gold
record . The follow-up album "Soul
Men ", quickly burst into the best
selling classification and received a
Gra mmy Award .
Sam and Dave offer a simple explanation for their success: "We
simply try to do a little more than
required ." Often they do a lot more
than required. If they "get the
feeling" and the audience is moving with them, they may sing a
song for an hour , never ending
their exhausting choreography.
Otis Redding, who performed with
them on many occasions, stated,
"Sam and Dave put on one he]!
of a show."
Tickets go on sale for the Sam
and Dave Revue on October 9, in
the college council office. If you've
got soul or want to get it, buy one!
Eisenhower at B-S-C
Colonel John S. D. Eisenhower
will be the featured speaker at the
luncheon meeting of the TwentySecond Annual Conference for
Teachers and Administrators to be
held at Bloomsburg State College
on Friday, October 11, 1968. Over
5,000 invitations have been extended to teachers and administrators in Pennsylvania and nearby
states to attend the conference. Dr.
Royce O. Johnson, Director of the
Division of Elementary Education
at Bloomsburg State College, is
chairman for the conference.
At the general sessions program
at 11:30 a.m., Dr. Philip Lewis,
President of Industrial Dynamics,
Inc., Chicago and Dr. Wayne K.
16 Trofs
JPromolea
Promotions In rank for sixteen
members of the Bloomsburg State
College faculty was approved by
the Board of Trustees. The promotions became effective at the beginning of the 1968-60 college year ,
according to Dr. Harvey A. Andruss, President.
The following four associate professors were advanced to full professor status: Dr. Edson J. Drake,
History; Dr. Hans Karl Gunther,
history ; Dr. Andrew J. Karp inski,
Special Education; and Dr. Donald
A. Vannan , education.
The following ten assistant professors advanced to associate professors: M. Dale Anderson , English; William D. Eisenberh , EnRlish; Dr. George J. Gollos , biological science ; Leo C, Hopplo ,
geography; Lnvore W, McCluro,
ReoKrnphy; Ronald W. Novak,
mathematics; Dr. W. Benjamin
Powell , history ; Dr. Jordan P.
rtechman , EnKlto h; Robert R. Solenbcn'Ror , social science; nnd J, Cnlvin Wnlkor , psychology.
Doyio O. Dodson , Business Editcntlnn, and Scntt E, Mlllor , library,
wore promoted fro m Instructors to
ns.slstant professors.
Howell , Vice President , Fund for
Immediate Research , Chicago will
lecture and present demonstrations
on the topic "The New Technology
Comes to School."
Colonel Eisenhower , only son of
former President Dwight D. Eisenhower, will address the luncheon
session on the subj ect "The White
House Years" in the College Commons at 2:00 p.m. Few men have
had the opportunity to enjoy indepth exposure to decision-making
on military, national , and international levels as has had John Eisenhower.
Graduated 138th in a class of 474
from West Point in 1944, infantryman Eisenhower spent his first
month's furlough as an aide to his
father during the Normandy invasion. Two years later he commanded the U.S. garrison troops in
Austria , and In 1952 j oined the
15th Infantry Regiment , 1st Battalion , as Operations Officer on the
front line in Korea, where he received the Combat Infantry Badge.
Later he served as 3rd Battalion
Intelligence Officer and for his
work he was awarded the Bronze
Stnr.
As a researcher and editor he
aided In the writing of the Eisenhower memoirs, THE WHITE
HOUSE YEARS. More recently, he
served as Executive Vice President
of the Freedom Foundation nt Valley Forge. Ho is currently writing
a book on tho Battle of the Bulge
and has plans to continue writing.
Ills literary efforts are well-based
on a Master of Arts degree in English Literature and experience in
instructing English at West Point.
Teachers and administrators who
wish to attend the conference
should write or call Dr, Royce O.
Johnson , Bloomsburg State College,
BloomsburR, Pennsylvania 17815.
Join The
M&G
: ,
:
• ¦
'
' '} ' : : n\
3£.eview o f 1930 s 0d^\ l ^ii ^;^
Letters...
'
I
LETTER TO THE EDITOR:
After reading the report concerning the S.D.S. (Students for a
Democratic Society) printed in the
last issue of the M & G , I feel it
necessary to offer a few remarks.
Since the report came from the
great magazine of scholarl y endeavor, the Reader 's Digest, I shall
have to avoid making an outright
defense of the S.D.S. I certainly
wouldn 't want to be branded as a
Communist — they might decide to
revoke my subscription. There are,
however, a few things that I'd like
to clarify or take issue with.
First, Mr. Methvin, the author
of the report, is correct in saying
that S.D.S. represents a minuscule
minority of students, but he is incorrect in saying that the organization is involved in a nationwide
conspiracy aimed at "nothing less
than the destruction of society itself." Certainly it has played an active role in most of the U.S. campus uprisings, but the idea of an
organized conspiracy is far out If
anything, it is one of the most
loosely managed groups in the nation. Only about one-sixth of S.D.S.'s
35,000 members pay national dues.
Furthermore, there is remarkably
lit tle guidance from the S.D.S. national office in Chicago. How can
such an ill-coordinated group seek
to "destroy society itself"? In colleges aerogg the country the S.D.S.
has ai med its efforts at reforms of
Acc If ou Ready ?
By Alchy
As a graduate of Bloomsburg
State College, are you fully prepared to teach in any high school,
or as the case may be, elementary
school? This is a question any self
conscious student must delve into
before pulling out of this small college town as a graduate of this institution. Is the meager portion of
time spent in education classes during f our years sufficient to give any
student a wealth of knowledge
which , if used capably would lead
towa rd the educational goals transfixed by the department of Public
Instruction. We as students and
future teachers must ask questions
as to the latitude of our education.
I as an individual believe the
D.P.I, has seriously hampere d my
education through its persistence
to all but eliminate education
courses. If these actions continue
at the present, rate , future students
may well have one education course
which would be the conglomerate
of all the education courses that
still exist. Already three such education courses have fallen to the
conglomerate nemesis, Audio Visual , Problems of Secondary and
Elementary, plus Teaching of your
Majo r, which plague the D.P.I, and
So what did we learn from the
1930's Film Festival?
college practices and regulations.
I cannot condone some of the
means by which they sought this
change, but I believe the ends they
pursued were legitimate.
The Students for a Democratic
Society, says Methvin, "betray
growing signs of links to hard-core
professional Communists." Certainly it cannot be denied that
there are self-proclaimed Communists in its ranks , but this is a
small minori t y. It is estimated that
no more than 2% of all S.D.S.
members belong to the Communist
Par
ty, but rather, most members
are typically disenchanted young
liberals. They seek a means to voice
their obj ections and they feel that
a loud voice will be heard more
quickly than a quiet one.
The Methvin Report , in my opinion, smacks of the kind of flagwaving j ournalism which some people in right field constantly espouse. But my personal opinion
concerning the S.D.S. itself is irrelevant to my purpose. I am pointing
out that this report is both biased
and exaggerated. Therefore, it
should not have been printed as a
general news article. The logical
conclusion that one can make is
that it coincides with the official
position of the Maroon and Gold ,
and if this is the case, it should
have been stated as such in a statement by the editor.
Sincerely,
Michael Stugrin
College Administration. I don't
think a Bloomsburg graduate
dossier should read Education 101
conglomeratation of a previously
offered courses. This cheats the
grad, the community, the students
and most of all our future.
by adam
If the flag requires a CGA shield
to protect it from student misuse,
perhaps apple pie . Mom, an d God
also require their (CGA) protection. It is this columnist's opinion
that the CGA should also censure
swearing, orphans, and the unAmerican practice of eating apple
pie with ice cream. Go to it, ye
stalwarts of student conscience.
Ada m's Apple has a sore throat ,
thus , we part, in agony....
nup>\?lwte luck.
¦Krgiece ^e\te etfer
¦HT^seen a man
Ej 9jfeanta& a£nite
Wednesday. October 2. 1968
JOSEPH GRIFFITHS
Bdllor-ln-Chief
News Edilort .
Feature Editor
Spoilt Editon
Circulation Manager
Photography Editor
Attittant Editors
,..,...,
Copy Cdilar ,
Director of Publications
Faculty Business Consultant
Straight From Stan
Adam's App le
MA R O O N & G O L D
Vol. XLVII
In a recently televised film interview with John Huston, the Ireland-based American movie director of such films as The Treasure of
the Sierra Mndre and The Night of
the Iguana, Huston was asked why
he thought his 1941 The Maltese
Falcon was such a great movie.
"Because it was innocent," Huston
replied. There is no technical
by Stan Rakowsky
showing-off , no elaborate manipulaIf ever there was a time for a tion of plot and theme , no conscicha nge, it's now, and helping to ous symbolism, and according to its
change things are the Young Re- makers, any excellences found in it
publicans of BSC. Under the lead- by the critics were not deliberately
ership of a true stalwart of the Re- planned , but the accidental results
publican Party, Dr. Hans Karl Gun- of what seemed to them the only
ther, and the student co-ordinator, way to make the film.
Jim Neiswender, the Young ReInnocent: perhaps Huston has
publicans have started from scratch given the best description of all of
four short months ago into one of those films dating from 1931 to
the truly finest Y. R. organizations 1941 which more than four hunin this part of the state.
dred BSC students and faculty
viewed this past weekend. A courSchwciker Visits Fair
paLast Saturday, Y. R. co-ordinator, teous audience, putting up
one
blown
,
tiently
with
film
breaks
Jim Neiswender, interviewed four
term Congressman and candidate bu lb, and sometimes muddy sound
for the U.S. Senate from Pennsyl- tracks, they found films that were
vania, B.ichard Schweiker, who also not only innocent , but often downreceived a tumultuous welcome right naive. They mixed comedy
from thousands of Pennsylvanians, and deepest tragedy without hesias he paraded around the fair- tation: juxtaposed a comic relief
grounds led by a delegation of Cockney hospital orderly with a
Y. R. Schweiker, Neiswender, and crazed and tormented vampire vicseveral other prominent members tim in Dracula, a musical comedy
of the County Grand Old Party or- wedding festival with an anguganization , previous to the parade ished father's appeara nce carrying
had lunch at the home of million- his drowned daughter in Frankenaire industrialist Harry Magee and stein.
They mixed characters of all sodiscussed various aspects of the up
and coming campaign. Schweiker cial classes: the chorus girls of
expressed his appreciation to the Gold Diggers with old Boston
Y. R.'s for their tremendous turn- money, the riff raff Marx Brothers
out Saturday at the fair , and en- with hard-working opera singers
couraged their enthusiastic cam- and high society hangers-on , and
paign activity in the coming weeks. all seemingly taking each other serHe congratulated the student iously. They mixed slapstick with
Y. R. 's on their work , and offi cially high seriousness, seeing no absurdopened the Republican Campaign ity at all in switching from a zany
Headquarters in Bloomsburg, lo- vaudeville routine , like tearing off
cated next to Henrie's Book Store, unsuitable clauses of a contract till
the site of the old W.C.N.R. offices. only the signatures were left , to a
serious scene of grand opera, durInvitation To Y. R.'s
ing which the slapstick comedians
In my talk with Jim , he ex- glow with appreciation. Some of
pressed , on the behalf of the the juxtapositions seem absurd
Young Republican Party of Blooms- to a 1968 audience , but it is a tribburg, an open invitation to all ute to the art of Harpo Marx that
Young Republican men and women he makes them work. After cavortinterested in a change, to stop into ing, mugging, and bopping villains
headquarters and j oin the Nixon- with enormous mallets, he settles
Agnew Victory Team and work for down to a serious stint at the harp
a truly better America. Some of and reveals the tenderness of a
the state-wide offices and candi- poet, made more poignant for us
dates of great importance this year by his vocal muteness. Though in
are : U.S. Senator, Richard Schwei- 1935 no one was talking about
ker; State Superior Court Judge, "sou l," Harpo already had it.
Honorable John B. Hannum; State
The innocence of these 1930's
Treasure r, Frank Pasquerilla; Aud- films carries over to its treatment
itor General, Warren M. Depuy as of violence. In comedy, t here is
well as innumerable local offices to plenty of violence in its usual nonbe filled.
lethal manner—th e mallets are exAll their men are extremely well aggerated , the falls are prat, the
qualified and will certainly work blows more threatened than delivfov the betterment of all Pennsyl- ered , and then usually bloodless ov
vanians. So, men and women of applied to the seat of the pants.
the Bloomsburg area who are in- Even in serious scenes , our sensiterested in a sensible government, bilities are spared: as Dracula
j oin the Nixon-Agnew Victory bends over his sleeping victims to
Team and help bring this SENSI- suck the blood from their th roats
BLE government to our countiy.
and leave those two little tell-tale
,
NOTE: As close as schedules will marks, the scene mercifully fades
as
it
does
from
the
scene
of
Frankpermit, I will attempt to prepare a
creation playing with the
column for each Friday edition of enstein's
little girl he is shortly to murder,
the Maroon and Gold. Due to a
The Maltese Falcon, with the
change in production schedule of Even
sinister
Sydney Groenstreet , Peter
the Maroon and Gold, I was unable Lorre, and Humphrey Bogart
has
to submit the column in time for only two corpses on view and only
last week's paper.
two fist-induced knock-outs plus one
drug-Induced, Plus one kick in the
head.
No. 5
EUGENE IESCAVAGE
Business Manager
Bill Telttworth & Michael Hack
Dave Miller
Bob Schultz & Charlie Moyer
Robert Gadinski
Mike O'Day
Ron Adams, Mike Stugrin & Clark Ruch
,
Allan Maurer
Robert Hatler
John E. Dennin
The Maroon & Gold is located on the second floor of Waller Hall. News may be submitted by calling 784-4660, Ext. 323, or by contacting the paper through Box 301.
The Maroon t Gold l
i a member of the Pennsylvania State College Press Association.
Additional Stafli Charlei Macunai, Jeanne DeRoie, Sandy Deloplaine, Carol
Burnt, Sharon Topper , Sharon Sklaney, Fran Chobalko, Undo Dodion, Barbara Russell , Linda Ennis, Jacquie Feddock , Trudy Norcrois , Karen Mundy,
Catherine Surak , Janet Boyanoiki, Susan Schenck , Amy Raber, David Drucker ,
Linda Yohey, Carole Sorber , Susan Zalota, Kalhy Strolockii , Elizabeth Cooper ,
Abby Gorder , Barbara Peitengill, Priscilla Clark , Ruth Carpenter.
The Maroon t Gold l
i published at near bi-weekly at possible by, for, and through
the feet of the students of Bloomiburg Star* College, Dloomsburg, Pennsylvania.
All opinions expressed by columnists and feature writers , including letleri-to-theeditor , are not necesiiarilf those of this publication but those of the individual!,
Adam is
A U u c a nlti
d
UviUM&q
Otf Uc
Most of all , innocence marks the
characterization of these films. The
people aro good or bad; they end
up conveniently reformed or be«
In g carted off to jail. More often
than not , the good gu y is a good
"grou p," like the Marx Brothers or
that feist y bunch of chorines who
form the composite heroine of Gold
niggers of 1033, The groups do not
dis perse—oven nftor changes of
fortune for betto r or worse : the y
continuo to share the same apart ments or pnrk benches. Tho villain ,
rather , is the loner—as aro Frankenstein 's monster, Drnculn , tho connivin g Grovor of Tho Dig Store,
nnd ovon tho arro gant and cruel
tenor Laspurrl in A Night at the
Oporn, Although wo can see that
many serious thomos infiltrated
even the most lightheaded of
1930's movies—Groucho's remarks
about "scabs," the "draft," and the
Gold Digger's salute to "the forgotten man ,"—obviously the modern
theme of alienation had not yet
. occurred to the nation's movie makers. The moral conflict that does
not seem to bother Dracula, or Dr.
Frankenstein , or any of the comic
villains, catches up with Humphrey
Bogar
t, whose anguished decision
as Sam Spade to give up the lovely
but insidious Bridget (Mary Astor)
for the sake of his honor marks for
us the end of tho moral innocence
of the 1930's.
Most of us went to tne movies
last weekend prepared to laugh at
the corny decor, the flat bosoms
and square-cut suit shoulders, and
the simplicity of a bygone day.
Within minutes most of us were
engrossed in the business at hand:
Will all be well between Stanwyck
and McCrea? Will the monster kill
the kitten? (Never mind the kid.)
Who 's got the falcon anyway? Will
Warre n Williams unbend soon
enough to realize that Joan Blondell is the girl for him? Will the
show go on in spite of the creditor's inj unction? "Will Humph go
crooked? Will Tony Martin be shot
with the gun concealed in the camera? Will Groucho ever find happiness with Margaret Dumont?
Comments of viewers ranged
from "I can't hear the sound track,"
^
verdict,
to one second graSer's
"Cool!" Perhaps most significant of
all was a spontaneous burst of applause from Saturday night's audience at an inspired scene of mayhem in which two Marx Brothers
hastily camouflage themselves from
pursuers by draping one brother
as a rocking chair while the second
dons a doily for a cap, "rocks" on
his brother's lap, and serenely
knits the fringe of his shawl with
two forks. Apparently the age of
innocence in American films has
something to say to us in the age of
alienation.
by A. Donovan
It 's A Small World
Anyone who has spent any time
inside the study cubicles in the Andruss Library may come to observe
that these cubicles are a world all
their own.
Contact with the outside world is
limited but food for the imagination is not lacking. The modern
structu re of the library, when
viewed , looking outward into the
night sky, over the cubicle walls,
appears almost as a view from the
bridge of a space ship while one 's
ties with humanity are limited to
fleeting glimpses of the tops of
heads and the passage of an occasional body past the cubicle opening.
Truly, these study areas are ideal
in that they provide privacy, an
area for concentration , and just
enough contact with one's fellow
man and the universe to satisfy the
whole person,
David J. Drucket
70
Shopping
Days 'til
Christmas
4
New Improved
Freud And Football Husky
Harriers
pain" excitement of the hysterical
worshippers focuses entirely on the
The 1968-69 cross country team
actions of the libido-quarterback.
is
starting off their nine meet
Behind him are three priests repschedule
and this season looks like
The central priest crouches over resenting the male triad.
an interesting one. The new head
the egg, protecting it with his
At a given signal, the egg is coach, Dr. Noble, is showing much
hands while over his back quarters passed by sleight-of-hand to one of interest in the sport and the effort
hovers the "quarterback." The the members of the triad who en- he is putting forth is arousing the
transposition of "back quarters" to deavors to move it by bodily force psyche of the Husky team. Also the
"quarterback" is easily explained across the white lines of winter. new course is a welcomed change
by the Adler school. To the l ayman This procedure, up and down the for the harriers and it has some
the curious posture assumed by the enclosure^ continues through the kind of psychological effect on the
"quarterback", as he hovers over four quarters of the ritual.
squad. With a new head coach, a
the central priest, immediately sugAt the end of the second quarter, new cross country course, new rungests the Cretan origins of Mycena- implying the summer solstice, the ning shoes on their way, and a new
ean animal art , but this popular processions of musicians and semi- team morale, the Husky squad is
view is untenable. Actually, of
nude virgins are resumed. After ready mentally. But in this selfcourse, the "quarter-back" symbol- forming themselves into picto- torturing sport one must be ready
- Art Sell Picks Up Several Yards On End Sweep In Win Over MSC.
izes the libido, combining two in- grams, representing alphabetical physically and the Huskies are not
stincts, namely (a) Eros, which and animal fetishes, the virgins in A-l shape yet. This problem will
strives for even closer union and perform a most curious rite requir- handicap the team in their
first
(b) the instinct for destruction of ing far more dexterity than the meet
-with
Mansfield
but
the
outanything which lies in the path of earlier ph allic Maypole rituals come may depend on
whether
or
Eros. Moreover , t he "pleasure- from which it seems to be derived. not the Mansfield runners are in
Each of the virgins carries a wand tip-top shape. Chuck Bowman and
of shining metal which she spins Mike Horbal both feel that the
her fingertips, tosses playfully squad has many capabilities but
However, this time BSC's psyched on
into
the air and with which she inThe running ability of Bill Fire- possession of the pigskin. Mans- up defense couldn't stop them from terweaves her body in most intri- "... we need a little more time to
get in shape." The Husky squad
stine and Mike Koloj ej chick conv field could move the ball only 1 scoring. The touchdown came with cate gyrations.
has much potential and good depth.
bined with a psyched-up defense to yard in two line cracks and were less than four minutes gone in the
The
virgins
perform
another
imThe
team is not dependent upon
punt
shifty
to
the
third
quarter
and
put
Mansfield
give BSC their first victory of the again foTced to
portant
function
throughout
the
enone
or
two runners as in previous
right
Kolojejchick.
This
time
Mike
reback
in
the
game.
The
PAT
'68 football season, 24-6 over Mansmytire
service.
This
concerns
the
,
se
a
so
n
s
but all the men are solid
punt
to
Mansfield's
margin
21
mis-fired,
but
the
Huskies
turned
the
field Mountaineers. BSC wasn't
stical rite of "conversion" follow- contenders for the number one
able to mount a sustained drive yard line. A personal foul penalty had been slimmed to 10-6.
Early in the 4th stanza Hugh ing success of one of the young spot on the team. Tom Henry is
throughout the game, but long runs tacked another 15 yards onto that,
giving
BSC
a
first
down
on
the
6
Jones
picked off another Casterline priests in carrying the oval across shooting for the "most improved
by Firestine and Koloj ejchick repeatedly put the Huskies in scor- yard line. After a pitch lost two aerial and returned it 33 yards to the last white line of winter. As runner" award as he is putting hireyards, Bill Firestine skirted his Mansfield's 32. But Mike Koloj oj- the moment of "conversion" ap- self through some gruelling working position.
proaches, the virgins kneel at the outs. The "comeback of the year"
The first quarter ended in a right end for an 8-yard touchdown. chick fumbled a pitch on an end edge of the grass, bury their faces award is up for grabs, and Jimmy
split
PAT
kick
the
around
play
and
Mansfield
recovErnie
Vedral's
scoreless deadlock although both
ered possession of the ball. Again in the earth , then raise their arms Carlin may have his eye on this
teams drove deep into T.D. terri- uprights giving BSC a 7-0 lead.
BSC's
defense stopped the Moun- to heaven in supplication, praying award. Also much credit is due to
play
On Mansfield's next offensive
tory. The first time Mansfield retaineers for no gain and MSC was that "the uprights will be split" the rest of the men on tlie team beJim
Bonnacci
picked
off
a
Casterceived the ball they drove to the
"Conversion" is indeed a dedicated cause it is no easy task to force
forced to punt.
Hu skies' 22. The drive ended there line aerial and returned it to midyourself to go out and make yourceremony.
BSC received the ball on their
as QB Stu Casterline was dumped field. Following a first down on the
Freud and Breuer in 1895 ("Stu- self hurt and ache when you could
37
yard
line,
Lessman
fired
to
tight
own
39
and
moved
to
MSC'
s 19
for a 6 yard loss and a fourth down
end Bill Derr who rumbled to the yard line, but the drive stalled. dien uber Hysteria") described be enjoying a conversation in
pass went astray.
• 7 yard line. Once again a penalty Mike Vedral was short on a field "conversion" as hysterical symp- Husky or a snooze back in the
BSC took possession of the ball stalled the Huskies drive, but Ernie goal from the 19, but on MSC's toms originating through the en- dorm. Five miles is a lot farther
and drove to Mansfield's 10 yd. line. Vedral booted a 13 yard field goal third play from scrimmage, Stutz- ergy of a mental process being than you think! Here's wishing the
The big-gainer in the drive was Bill to increase BSC's margin to 10-0.
man intercepted a pass and re- withheld from conscious influence, new 1968-69 squad a very successFirestine's run of 43 yards. An offand this precisely accounts for the ful season.
With time running out in the turned it to the 29.
side penalty killed the Huskies half , Mansfield managed to drive
From the 29 yard line sub-QB behavior of the virgins in the footdrive forcing them to attempt a 20 to the Huskies' 27 yard line, but Tom Schneider hit on a 5 yard pass ball services.
yd. field goal that went wide.
Jim Bonnacci broke up a "last and after a QB keeper went for no
Early in the second quarter BSC gasp" pass and just missed holding gain hit Joe Lyons in the corner
drove to within 4 inches of the onto it with nothing but open field of the end zone for a 24 yard TD.
Mountaineers' goal. The drive was between himself and Mansfield's For the third time, Vedral conset up by Mike Kolojejchick's 44 goal.
verted giving BSC a 24-6 lead. The
yd. punt return. However, a fourth
Mansfield started the second half game ended with BSC losing 8
down line plunge by Rossi was as they had the first , by dr
iving yards after driving to Mansfield's
stopped forcing BSC to give up deep into the Huskies' territory. 7 yard line.
By Childe Herald (Thomas Ferril), reprinted from The Rocky
Mountain Herald.
Firestine Stars In
24-6 B.S.C. Victory
East Stroud
W. Chester
SHUMAN'S WORLD TRAVEL
37 EAST MAIN ST.
«
BLOOMSBURG
•
JVtmER
S
NATIONAL BANK
:
FARMERS NATIONAL OFFICE • BLOOMSBURG , PA.
\
Member Federal Deposit Insuran ce Corporation
',
PHONE 764-3420
For All Your Trave l A rran gements
TWO WEEKS AT THE LONDON THEATRE — Including . . ,
Air Fare, Accommodation!.
, Theatre Ticket! "and much more."
RESERVATIONS • TICKETS • TOURS • ETC.
All Airlines / Trains & Hotels Handled
This winter we offer each week LONDON SUPER SHOW TOURS — from $300
Call Ui or Stop In NOW For Any Information
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STONE CASTLE
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The Fondest
Remembrance
Eppley's
Pharmacy
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Big Republic an On Campus
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Be A IL K. O .I .
Phone 784-6560
*"•" "
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Need Financial Advice !
Go fo the Young Republican 's Center at
the old WCNR Studio and Sign Up!
MAIN « IRON STRUTS
Prescription Specialist
The New Co-chairmen Are:
• CHANEL
• CUERLAIN
ED BARRETT
• FABEROE
• LANVIN
SUE O'NEILL
JOHN BILDER
• PRINCE MATCHABEUI
FLOWERS
S
• ELIZABETH ARDEN
784-4406
Jb
• DANA
• HELENA RUBENSTEIN
• COTY
• MAX FACTOR
Z Domlod World Wid e Deliver y 7
Qmn Slumpt
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The Coordinator is MR. NEISWINDER
Advisor — DR. GUNTHER
21
14
Notices
Notice: The parking lot behind
Elwell Hall is not a recreation area
and should not be used for such
games as football , soccer, or any
other activities.
ii<
in
#
Pinaf ore
Comp osers
Interviews .
Campus interviews will be held
in the new Placement Office, Ben ,
Franklin Building, 2nd Floor.
Army Medical Specialist Corps,
Under the direction of Allan Lo-
kos , the "Gilbert and Sullivan A La
Carle" will be presented in Haas
Auditorium on Wednesday, Oct obe r
9 at 8 p.m. Do not get the idea that
it is a catering service putting on
a big Smorgasbord dinner for the
college. It should be better than
that and more enjoyable. At least
you will not have indigestion. They
have presented their musical at the
Ford Auditorium in Detroit, at the
Utica Arts Festival, at Capital University, and at Hanover University.
The entire program is a collection of the great moments from
every one of the G & S operettas.
It is a definite must for the cultural minded and intellectual.
Students will be admitted on presentation of their I.D. cards and the
In honor of the new freshmen at
BSC 1hc Day Women Association
will hold a party on Wednesday,
October 2 , from 11 a.m. to 2:30
p.m. in the Day Woman 's Lounge.
* « *
Any students looking for off campus part or full time employment
are asked to please check with the
Placement Office , Ben Franklin
bu ildi n g, second floor. Information
on j ob opportunities is available
there.
* * *
The first big organizational meeting of the Newman Club will be
held at the Newman Center, 329
Iron Street, Wednesday, October 2,
at 8:00 p.m.
There will be a i*ug mass at
7:30 p.m
* * *
Students interested in handball
or paddleball , perhaps against one ^
of our smoother walls on campus, \
are asked to contact Dr. Eric W. :
Smithner in Room 225 Waller, or \
to leave their name and box num- :
ber on his door.
Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington , D.C. .. Oct. 4
at 10 n.m.
U.S. General Accounting
Washington, D.C
at S a.m.
Bethlehem Public Schools ,
hem, Penna
at 10 a.m.
Office ,
Oct. 15
BethleOct 22
^f * A *
OCUalO
Rls. 11/ 15
SELINSGROVE , PA.
743-1514
Fine J ewelry
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Repairing
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BLPQMSBURG,PA.
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Quality
The
Texas
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FOOT OF COLLEGE HILL
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WHERE DAD
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TOOK HIS GIRL ^
Bloomsburg
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Berwick Knitting Mills
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Chapel Auditorium
All seats reserved _ . $3.00
&
For tickets write to SUSQUEHANNA UNIVERSITY ,
Wok Office , Hox 4000, Sclinsgrovc, Pa. 17870. Enclose
remittances payable to Susquchanna University and include a .self-addressed stamped envelope.
.miHIIimtlHIIMIHI IIII HI 11 HI HI II HHII (111 HI I Mill HIHIIIIHHI III II11 HI I III) IMIIII HIM HI HHH Mil lit III Mil tHH£
| We need your help this
I Friday and Saturday!
FREE DELIVERY
8:30 to 11:30
Regular and King Size
HOAGIES
Phone 784-4292
127 W. Main
BLOOMSBURG
—~T
Marr ied
College Students
FURNISHED
APARTMENT
2nd Floor
Private Side Entrance
3 Rooms & Bath
Baseboard Heat
TV
1 Block from B.S.C.
105 IRON ST.
fnquir* at
111 Iron St. In Afternoon or Evening
MAROARBT MILLBR
I
\
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OPERATION CLEANUP
j
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"BYE THE BYE" COFFEE HOUSE located in
the old gymnasium of the Presbyterian Churc h ,
Fourth Street at Market.
This is a cooperative project between the students
at BSC and seven of the churches of Jiloomshurg.
WORK PARTIES scheduled on Friday from 1:00
to 4:30 P.M. Saturday— 10:00A.M. until 1::00 P.M.
Contact Bob Ycrger , Box 564 or Call
]''atlier Lloyd—784-4371—and ofTcr your assistance.
I
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j
I THIS IS YOUR COFFEE HOUSE. SUPPORT IT!
!
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230 S. POPLAR ST., BERWICK
HOURS: 9-5 Dally / Thun. ft Fri. 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Help Celebrate YMCA' s 125th
Anniversary
Mon-Tue-Thur-Sat - 8:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Wednesday - 8:30 a.m. 'til noon
Friday - 8:30 a.m. 'til 9:00 p.m.
¦
¦
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KEEP YOURSELF IN SHAPE
J O I N THE YMCA 125 M I L E
RUN
Run a Mile a Day
REGISTRATION FEE — $2.00
(Phone 784-2104 for Information)
Persons Finishing Receive Tie Clip or Pin '
IMIIIMIMMIIM*
HOURS :
¦
** " ^MbIHR
(ONE BLOCK OFF RT. 11 — BEHIND SHOPPING CENTER)
COLUMBIA THEATRE
[
Now Playing
;
CENTER SI1.
BLOOMSRURG , PA.
Convenientl y Located at 124 E. MAIN ST,
¦
¦i^v ¦
* SWEATERS (National Brands)
* LADIES KNIT SUITS & DRESSES
* BERMUDA SHORTS - SLACK SUITS
* MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
* BATHING SUITS
Buy Where They Arc Made —
At "Factory-to-You " Prices !
I
CAMPUS CLEANERS & LAUNDERERS
¦ ¦¦ ¦¦ ¦
¦
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¦
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Saturday, October 19, 1968
PIZZA
Available October 1
I
8:30 p.m.
Closed 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.
Every Day But Friday
¦
= Your J eweler Away from Home
| 5 W. Main St
Bloomsbvko
^
* THE RAMSEY LEWIS TRIO
Op e n 'til 12:00 p.m.
¦
§
All seats reserved __ $3.00
HOAGIES
•
•
•
•
•
•
784-4117
Chapel Auditorium
=J
-: '
One Block Above
Magee 's Mills
1 West Main St.
BLOOMSBURG , PA.
Phone: 784-4388
Tuesday, October 8, 1968
8:30 p.m.
Phone
V»^w> ^~ .
|
AND
presents .
* THE LETTERMEN
HALLMARK CARDS
GIFTS
OPEN 24 HRS.
BarberShop
SUSQUEHANNA
UNIVERSITY
BLOOMSBURG,PA.
Free Delivery Service
FETTERMAN'S
I
-IIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIII
18 West Main Street
5 to 7
\
I Harry Logan I
25 E. Main St., BIOOMSBURG
Miller Office
Supp ly Co.
Charlie ' s
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TOILET GOODS
COSMETICS
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES
GREETING CARDS
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Made in U.S.A.
NESPOLI
jewelers
VOLKSWAGEN
,,
k
ft
Becker Motor Co.
784-2561
|
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Pewter
Tasty Home
Cooking
Free Prescription Delivery
CROWN and ROSE I
Made in England
z
WOODBURG MUGS
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Your Prescription Druggist
ROBERT G. SHIVE, R.P.
members of the faculty will be admitted when they show the #4
stub of their activity books.
The Fin est in
CORNER
. LUNCH
MOVER
Pharmacy
W. T. Grant Company
October 24 at 10 a.m.
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Delta Pi Wins IFC Boat Race
¦
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MICHAEL CAINE
M
GIAVANNI RALLI
DEADFALL M
IN COLOR
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