rdunkelb
Wed, 05/01/2024 - 13:58
Edited Text
Dr. Lincoln delivers paper
on the New Blacks
"LOOK AT ME! I WANT TO
BE RECOGNIZED! I want you to
reinforce my own self-conviction
that I am somebody. That I make
a difference. That I don 't have to
look like you to be a person of
dignity and worth!"
These dramatic words brought
to a climax a paper entitled "The
- New Blacks in Search of a Self"
presented by Dr. C. Eric Lincoln
at the first session of the
Colloquim on the Black Experience sponsored by the Black
/
Student Society.
In his paper, Dr. Lincoln, who
is a professor of sociology at
Union Theological Seminary,
examined some cultural, social
and historical aspects of Blacks
in American society.
Commenting
on
white
America 's characterization of
Blacks as a collective problem,
Dr. Lincoln related the story of a
woman who asked him for some
material on the "colored
situation ". "...I sent her a
"colored" paint chart from the
hardware store," he said, "it was
the only 'colored situation' she
could handle in her thinking."
Dr. Lincolnstated that many of
the problems that Blacks have
trouble coming to grips with stem
from their problems of identity.
"The un-bridged chasm between
who they were in Africa and who
they are in America has crippled
the minds, clouded the dreams,
dulled the ambitions and bowed
the
heads
of
countless
generations of men and women
who were made to cringe like
slaves, wh en in a f ree democracy
they should have been able to
walk like princes."
The New Blacks
The emergence of "the N ew
Blacks", educated, informed and
aware of the awsome task bef ore
them was an important theme in
Dr. Lincoln's paper. He said that
this new emergence was the
result of the Black American's
"discoverv of his own ego".
Dr. Lincoln described the
essence of the Black ego as Soul.
"Soul is the Black man's most
positive estimate of himself ...It is
the connective skein that runs
through the totality of the Black
Experience, weaving it together
and infusing it with meaning."
The New Black's definition of
himself and his awareness that
his heritage is good and therefore
a source of pride and strength is a
starting point for a Black
Revolution. Dr. Lincoln stated
that this Black Revolution "intends to change the image of the
American society by changing or
destroying many of the concepts
and attitudinal strategies which
{unction to perpetuate the submerged status of the Black
people...I see the Black
Revolution as the united expression of 30 million Blacks in
search of identity, status ,
privilege and responsibility."
Q and A
During the question and answer period following Dr. Lincoln's presentation, he was asked
how long it would be before
Black's got full equality. He
stated that equality can only
come about when people who
have power concede it, either
voluntaril y or involuntarily.
"And ' , ne said, "power concedes
nothing."
When asked to comment on the
meaning of racism , Dr. Lincoln
said that racism implies insecurity on the part of the people
who have power. "It's knowing
who'll win before the race is even
run ", he said.
When asked why more Black's
weren 't behind the Presidential
campaign of Shirley Chisholm,
who incidentally is the next
speaker in the Black Colloquim,
Dr. Lincoln said that it. was
because too many whites were.
He later elaborated on the point
by stating that Blacks weren 't
interested in Women 's Liberation
because Black women will only
be liberated when their men are.
He observed that whenever the
Black movement in America
gathered momentum , some other
movement appeared to divert
power and energy away from it.
He said that he considered
Women 's Lib just such a diversionary movement .
When asked why only 17 of the
250 writers attempting to
describe the Black culture in
America were Blacks themselves, Dr. Lincoln replied that
he doubted the statistic because
he could think of 18 himself. When
told that the statistic was drawn
from an article in TIME
magazine,
Dr.
Lincoln
questioned TIME'S qualifications
and motives.
Both before and after the afternoon session in Haas, Dr.
Lincoln spent the day talking to
various classes and groups
around the campus. That night,
he attended a dinner in the
Commons given in honor of Dr.
Lincoln 's visit to the campus by
the Black Student Society.
Sena te to vote
on calendar cha nge
The College Senate, in a
meeting held February 8, moved
th at the Senate select , by means
of a vote, one of the five college
calendars presented by the Ad
Hoc Committee , headed by Dr.
James Cole, at the March Senate
meeting. The calendar selected
will go into effect for the 1972-1973
academic year.
CGA : New J udiciary:
Wres tling f unds returned
College Council heard a repo rt
from Mr. Mart y Kleiner ,
Chairman of the CGA Judicia l
Committee , concernin g possible
rev isions of the structu re of the
BSC Judic ial Boards. At the
February 7 meeting , Mr. Kleiner
suggested that all local J udicial
Boards be abol i shed and a
st udent j ud iciary committee be
formed to replace the present
student-facu lty judiciary comm i ttee.
The student j ud iciar y would be
composed of six student s and a
student cha i rman , selected at
rand om from the student body.
These students would serve on
the Committee for one month.
The accused student w ill have
an advisor of his own choice from
the faculty or student body. No
lawyers will be allowed at the
hearing. This is intended to take
campuB cases out of the civil
realm.
An Ad-Hoc Student-Faculty
Judiciar y Committee would be
Or. C. Eric Lincoln
formed "t o rule in cases wh ich between the upper and lower
pertain sp ecif i cally to those cam puses. These buses will be
ma tt ers i nvolvi ng students and used as an interim measure until
facult y. Only judicial members alternate measures of tran and the vice president of Student sportation can be investi gated.
Life will have access to student The state has already denied the
records. All disciplinary records request for a covered walkway to
will be d es t roy ed when the be constructed -for traffic between the two campuses .
student gra dua tes.
Mar y Pa t Truthait presented a
Council will review th e
proposed changes at the next motion to suspend classes from
1:00-4:00 p.m. on Monday,
meeting and vote on them.
Februar y 14 to allow students to
Wrestling Money
Bob Blair presented a motion to attend the C olloq u ium with
return the money previously
( continued on p««t lour )
alloca t ed t o the wrestling team t o
the reserve fund of the CGA. The
Bread Is coming Friday,
motion p assed pend i ng the
Ftb.
18, at 8:30. Tickets
payment of previous bills inalready
purchased can bo
curred by the team. A motion was
picked
up
in the Book Store
also presented to allocate $7,000
Fob.
14,
IS
and
U. They will go
to the athletic scholarship fund of
Public
Fob. 15 to
on
tale
to
tot
the Bloomsburg Foundation , This
11.
Ticket
pri
ce
is
$3.75.
For
motion will be researched and
further
information
contac
t
/
voted on at the next meeting.
John
Choyka,
B.N.E.
Council then passed a motion
Chalrm w , Box *34, phono:
requesting the Commonwealth to
714-5370,
purch ase two buses for traffic
In a poll taken by the Ad hoc
Comm ittee of all Senators, 72 per
cent of the 64 Senators who
responded favored ret ention of
th e two semester system, while
28 per cent favored chan ge to an
alternate system . Many of the 46
Sena t ors who f avored a ret ention
of the two semester system indicat ed a preference for a change
in the beginnin g and termination
dates of the fall semester. In
response t o these Senators, Dr.
Cole has provided four alternatives to the present semest er
system. Each of these alterna t ives has the terminati on date
of the fall semester prior to the
Christmas vacation . These four
alternatives plus the present
syst em represent the f ive choices
that the committee is presenting
to the Senate.
The first alternative , presently
employed at Shippensburg State
College, would have the fall
semester beginning immedia t ely
after Labor Day and endin g a few
days prior to the Chr istmas
vacat ion. The spring semester
would begin in mid-January and
end In late Ma y.
The second alternative ,
presently used by West V irginia
University, would have classes
beginning prior to Labor Day and
ending approximately one week
before Christmas vacation. The
spring semester would begin
early in January and terminate
early in May.
The third proposal is a combination of the fall semester
calendar of West Virginia
University and the spring
semester calendar of Ship-
pensburg State College.
The University of Delaware ,
from which the f ourth proposal
was chosen , begins its fall
semest er early in Sept ember and
ends a few days prior to
Ch r i stmas vaca ti on. A shor t
Winterim term begins early in
J anuary and ends la te in the
same month . The spring
semester begins late in January
and t ermina tes near the end of
May.
The fifth proposal wh ich will be
presentedto the Senate calls for a
retention of the College's present
system.
i ne senate men moved to set
up a commit t ee consisting of
three Senators , including one
st udent , to serve i n l iason wi t h
three appointees from the APSCUP Executive Committee . The
purpose of this committee would
be to work out any conflicts that
may arise and to insure smooth
interaction between the Senat e
and APSCUP bodies .
The Senate also elected eight
rep resenta t ives t o the special Ad
Hoc Committee for the selection
of a Vice-president for Academic
Affairs . The stude nt repres ent atives are M ichael Adams and
Maggie Ryan: Dr. Cole. Dr.
Vaughn , Dr. Sperry . Dr. Warren
(continu ed on pit* four)
Tho honorable
Shirle y
Chisholm *
Congrosswoman
from
N.Y.
and
mi
presid ential candidate , will
tpoak on "The Black Ex
perltn ct " at 2:00 P.M. thit
com ing Monday • February U.
It' s The
»— • Bloo min ' News
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>~>^^ r'^ H^aHi«ww
around the ank les and dra g you
throu gh the alleys up to Car ver
Hall and call out the president to
tell him your head was bare .
When College Council came of
age in the 30's to represent the
entire communit y, studen t s
found it easier to run for office. A
cumulative avera ge of 1.00 was
all that was needed to be eligible
to run for any of the studen t-held
offices .
Maybe the grade requirements
were lower since the students
ranking were lower. In 1935 the
. college failed to meet the standard in a test given on Current
World Affairs by Time magazine.
The highest possible score was
105 points with the college mean
at 55 and the high school mean set
at 45. Of the three hundred tested
the mean for our students came
to 48.26. It was probably embarrassing for the college to have
their students closer to the high
school mean than the college one.
Some of the editorials make it
sound like things have not
changed much either. One
pointed out that teaching was
grossly overcrowded
with
English and History being the
most populated areas. Another
cites the 1930-31 report of the
National Education Association
which polled over 300, 000
teachers in 1632 towns and found
that 54 per cent earned less than
$2000 yearly . New York and
California paid the highest
salaries to teachers
and
was
collective bar gaining
unheard of.
If our administration wants to
pull down barriers , t hey can rea d
a news story in the 1935 issue in
which it was repo rted that CGA
welcomed fre shman by host ing
them at a Tr ustee-Facu lty
Reception and Dance. The frosh
got ^ chance to meet the biggies
in a real life situation for a
change.
by John St ug rin
This is not an article on the
black experience. Rather , this is
one individ ual' s impressions of
comments made by those who
have been part of this experience : Dr. C. Eric Lincoln ,
Richard Wright , Robert Guthrie ,
and John Howard Griffith.
The last name , Griffith , is
notable. Joh n Howard Griffith is
qualified as a spokesman on the
black experience for the same
reason I am not : John Howard
today.
Bill Hanford
Griffith
is white. But , in the fall of
It
is
ridi
culous
Daniel Ellsberg is the man who
to try him for
,
1959
he
had his skin pigmeninforming
the public , for only by
leaked the Penta gon Papers to
tation
chemically
altered and
the press. On June 28, 1971 a having an enligh tened people can
superficiall
y
"became
" black in
federal grand jury in Los Angeles democracy continue. If we are to
an
attempt
to
learn
first-hand
returned a two-count indictmen t be a free citizen ry , we must have
what
it
was
reall
y
like
to
be black
accusing him of the theft of more Ellsbergs informing the
in
the
deep
south.
His
exgovernm ent property and the people of what is going on in
perience
s
are
compiled
in
the
to avoi d an
unauthorized
posession of gover nment
book
,
BLACK LIKE ME.
stat e . If Dr.
documents and writings related authoritarian
His skin alteration
was
Ellsberg is convicted and imto the national defense.
Did you know that this one priso ned , your first amendment superficial , but the superficiality
indictment of documents and rights will sit in prison with him. of his situ ation soon dissolved in a
My plan is to have people wri te cloud of undisguised hatred.
writings related to the national
letters
to President Nixon asking Griffith discovered wha t Dr . C.
defense is wrong since the
Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that the him to par don Dr. Ellsberg . The Eric Lincol n so aptly describes as
Pentagon Papers did not threaten P res iden t knows t ha t those who oblivion. The same clerks ,
na tional security? Furthermore , take time to write to him ar e the shopkeepers , and policemen who
the first of twelve edited volumes ones wh o w ill be concer ned had greeted him with smiles and
of the papers can now be pur- enou gh t o go t o the polls on greetings while he was still white ,
now confronte d him with abuse ,
chased by the public. Just for election day .
stares
of hat e, and unnerv ingly
If Dr. Ellsberg is freed from
being the first to secure the incasual
racist thre ats ( "You can
formation , Dr. Ellsberg is going th e char ges agains t hi m , then
kill
a
nigger
and 'toss him into
to be t r ied even thou gh thi s same freedo m of express ion in this
that
swamp
and
no one'll ever
infor mation is publicized widely country will be stre ngthened .
know what happened to him. ").
The ordea l affected Griffith
deeply:
"I had begun this exEditorial Staff : Editor-in-c hief , |lm sachettl ; Buiinos t
periment in a spirit of scient ific
Mana ger , Carol Kiihba ugh ; Co-Manag ing Editors,
detachme nt. I wanted to keep my
KarenKeinard and sue sprague ; News Editor, Frank Pizzoli;
feelings out of it , to be objective
Assis t ant News Edito r s, John Dem p sey and Michael
in my observation s. But it was
Meizin ger ; Co-Feature Edif on, Terry Blass and Joe Mikloi;
Sports Editor, Bob Oliver ; Art Editor, Deniie Ross; Cirbecoming such a profound perculation Manager , Elaine Pongrat z ; Co Copy Edit ors , Ellen
sonal experience , i t haunted even
Doyle and Nancy Van Pelt ; Photography Editor, Tom
my dreams. " And his. a white
Schofield ; Contributing Cartoonist, John Stugrln ; Adv isor,
man 's, conclusion was one which
Ken Hoffman.
bl a ck s had been pa i nful l y aware
of for over 200 years : " When all
Photo graphy Staff: Mark Foucart, Dan Maresh, Craig
t he t alk , all the propa ganda has
Ruble .
been cut away, the criterion is
Reporters : Cindy Mlchener, Leah Skladany, Mike Yar mey ,
nothing but the color of skin. My
Denny Guytr, Don Eni, Bob Me Cor mack.
ex per ience proved that. They
Office Staff : Kay Boyles, Barb Glllot t, Mary Gabriel, Joyce
judg ed me by no other quality .
Keefer, Ann Renn, Debby Yachym, Ruth MacMurray.
My skin was dark . That was
The MAO it located in room 234 Waller, Ext. 323, Box 301.
suff icient reason for them to deny
mo those ri ghts and freedoms
without which life loses its
significa nce and becomes a
matter of little more than anima l
surviva l. "
Griffith suffered from instances of both blata nt and subtle
racism in Louisiana , Mississippi ,
Alabama , and Georgia (althou gh
it would be a mistake to view
these cases as only southern
phenomena : witn ess what
Pontiac ,
happened
in
Michi gan this past autum n).
Unfortunatel y , lynchin gs and
unbrutali ty,
outright
,
are
not
auctions
like the slave
things of the past. As late as 1959,
a Mississippi grand jury refused
to look at FBI-compile d evidence
concerning the Mac k Parker
k idnap-lynch-mur der case.
Lynching thus re mained a
method
government-sanctioned
of "social control" , rea dy f or use
whenev er the blacks got out of
ha nd .
In 1963, when the assassin of
civil rights worker Med gar Evers
(brother of Fayet te mayor
Charles Evers ) was brought to
court , the governor of Mississippi
openly embraced him. No indictments were handed down.
And just last June , 18-year old JoEtha Collier was maliciously
gunned
down
in
Drew ,
Mississippi. The three white men
w ho had murdered her did so
bef or e a number of w itnesses.
The y made no at t em pt at a
getaway and were picked up four
hours later in a town only 18 miles
a way...as if they expected no one
to arrest them for killing a black
BSC's newspaper which was
originally called BLOOM-INNEWS has a little different
format than the M&G of toda y.
The newspaper provided , as the
editorial in the first issue , on
Wednesday, February 20, 1924
stated , "an opportunity to
become better acquainted with
each other , to feel as members of
a family and also to keep alive
the memory of our school days ".
In an age of instant news and
immediate broadcastin g of
events tha t effect us, it would be
hard for even a recent graduate
of BSC to read and fully comprehend the bi-weekly M&G
publications. To feel as part of a
family would be an, even harder
task.
The newspaper then was sold
and distribu ted on a subscr iption
basis. Besides the "Normalites ",
the student nickname back in the
days of the Bloorasbur g Normal
School , having a campus
newspaper , the alumni were told ,
"This is your paper " at $.75 a
semester . The stude nts got a deal
for $.50.
The editorial policy of the earl y
30's struck an unusual note as far
as editorials go. The 1934
editorial stated that
"no
editorials of national interests or
any interests outside our
collegiate walls " would be
printed. The staff stuck to their
policy but the paper was not
without some sort of political
comment .
Washington 's Birthday was
observed by having a discussion
and the central thought was that
in order "to prev ent war , statues
or monuments must be erected
and streets must be named , to
glorify peace rather than to
pra ise war in the traditional
way ". Their hearts were in the
right place , but foreign policy
was never made in the streets
and it probably never will be. But
imagine , signs of a peace
movement at BSC in 1924.
The Norma lites even had a
May Day but it had a muc h different meanin g than it does
today. It was held on the athletic
field and the community performed Old En glish Morr is
dances and chorus production s,
and even some light skits to liven
thin gs up a bit.
One top ic that is an issue on
campus toda y for all the wron g
reasons was writte n about for all
the right reasons. The autho r
stated that one thing should be of
major importan ce to the stud ent
body and "that thin g is our
athle tics ". It seems as if school
had dropped below the hysterical
point and people were worried.
But then the speaker at the
Fifth Annual Athlet ic Dinner , Mr.
M. H. Palm , a coach from
Georgetown Universit y, sparked
things up a bit by saying that
"some critics have been taking
unfair shots at athletes. " He said
about football , "It' s a grand
game. Some things we derive
from football which we can 't get
from books. One thing is the
control of the emotions " . He's
right about the books anyway.
Women 's Lib advocates will be
interested to know tha t the
womtn at BSC were "conducti ng
a plan of self government" while,
of the 6 leading Normal Schools in
Penna., Bloomsburg was the only
one in which the men students did
"not have student government. "
The women might have had self
governmen t in name only since
one of the rules mentioned in the
newspaper stated that they could
"not go without a hat unles s you
wish to be put on campus....alway s wear a hat or some
similiar head covering when you
wish to walk out ."
It wasn 't quite clear what "put
on campus " meant. Ma ybe if you
went down town without a hat
townspeople would tackle you
FO RUM
All in all , things have changed
though not at a par ticularly fast
rate at BSC. Conformist rules and
regulations are usuall y swept
away but some fundamen tal
questions will remain. Like what
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M^g^a
is or should be of primary importance to the student? What is
the most effective form of
government for both the men and
women of this college? That' s a
hot one right now. Will teaching ,
as it seems , always be overcrowded? How does an affluent
society achieve peace ? If only
namin g streets and statues would
do it , we'd probably all jump in
and help. And what is athletics
especially now, a maypole for
students to ra lly arou nd in its
present difficult ies, or a learning
experien ce for those involved ?
Yes, the quest ions remain the
same , only they wear different
clothes to confuse us.
R ecord R eview
Pictures At An
Exhibition...Emers on , Lake and
Palmer
A double review
Part i
by Joe Miklos
Emerson , Lake and Palmer
are a progressive rock group .
Sure , they like to mess around
with highly complex , classicalbased stuff , but they are and
remain a progressiv e rock group .
In handling Mussorgsky 's Pictures At An Exhibiti on they ha ve
accom plished a rock first: a
symphony performed by a small
rock band at high intensity. The
Blac k Exp erience
symp hony is not complete in its
inter pretation and Emerson ,
Lake and Palmer have added to it
liberally.
As rock music it is a triumph . It
moves , softens , and at times even
talks. It sets a nice mood; you
can have a party to it. Keith
Emerson is a fine technical
musician , his piano , moog and
organ soar , crash , and skim. He
doesn 't improvise all that much ,
but compensa tes in impact.
Classical music it is not. The
song "Tank" from the first ELP
album crops up in. the "Old
Castle " segment. Lake adds
words to several sections , and the
album ends on an entirel y
unrelated piece , "Nutrocker ,"
based on a part of the Nutcracker
Suite . It' s enough to make a
classical fan shrivel up and die.
The inside jacket also is a
departure from Mussor gsky ' s
concept . The pictures that
illustra te it are not what they
shoul d be. For example , the Hut
of Baba Yaga should not be a
scenario from sci-fi , but a
ramshackle affair supported by
the legs of a fowl. Likewise , the
Old Castle picture should depict a
minstrel scene and not an actual
casue.
But then , I' m gettin g away
from my point. Pictures At An
Exhibition is a fine rock albu m.
It' s loud and has a good beat even
if you can 't dance to it.
Needless to say, if you think it
IS classical music , you are the
victim of a huge deception . (I'll
never understand why Cotillion
records bills it as part of thei r
"Modern Classics " ser ies...)
N o one can den y the ultimate
perversity of these vicious ,
senseless murders . They were
open , outright incidents of racism
and , being so openly malicious ,
they are also easily perceived
and deplored. W hat is harder to
detec t and thus harder to understand is what Dr , Lincol n calls
"insti tutionalized racism " ...the
subtle , semi-v isible typ e of
racism which can paradoxicall y
Fart li
by Denise Ross
Did you ever hear the Boston
Pops orchestra do a Beatle song
or songs? You feel kind of proud
t hat your mus ic made i t i n t he
h ierarch y of mus ic but you also
ma y no tic e t he song sounds
mediocre , at least. It' s k ind of
like taking an abstract painti n g and turn i n g it i nt o
realism. The paintin g just
isn 't the same. Part of the
appeal of the painting was
the style , wh ich l ike the Bea t le
songs, van ished with the change.
I' m not sa y ing that an i mitation
of an orig inal is necessaril y bad ,
but the tr anslation better be good
or it' s no t goi ng t o be qualified
with its own identity , and if i t
can 't make jt on its own , it may
as well be an exact reproducti on
to give the piece ju stice.
E mer son , Lake and Palmer
doing Mussorgsk y's pictures At
An Exhibition do what Arthur
Fielder of the "Po ps" does to the
Beatles. They take the music ,
stick to the basic format , but
stylize it within the framework of
their own music. Somethin g was
(co ntinued en pa§e four )
(contin ued en *a«e four )
oirl
Hus kies roll Ra iders
The Husky Basketball team Willis was aided in the scoring
rolled over the Red Raiders of column by Howard Johnson with
Shippensburg Wednesday nite, 11, Paul Kuhn with 10, and Art
70-54, for their 6th straight vic- Luptowski with 9. Incidentally,
tory, and 12th overall against 3 Johnson was named to the ECAC
defeats. It was another team team for last week.
effort , with all of .Coach
Chronister 's healty players The Huskies were never
seeing action.
bothered by the Raiders, who
John Willis led the victors in were, as one player stated,
scoring with 19 points, playing "pressured into taking tough
another fine game, despite being shots".
handicapped with a nose injury
suffered in the Cheyney game. He The Frosh kept there unbeaten
blocked several shots and ef- streak alive with a 72-50 beating
fectively clogged the middle so of the baby Raiders in the
the Raiders had to fight for their preliminary game, behind four
scorers in double figures.
shots.
Varsity Scoring
G F PTS
Johnson
5 1 11
Kuhn
4 2 10
Luptowski
4 1 9
Mealey
3 0 6
Wil li s
7 5 19
Choyka
3 2 8
Concorti
l "5 7
Schwartz
0 0 0
Hamilton
0 (* 0
TOTALS
27 16 70
HALFTIME SCORE -BSC 34,
SSC 20
Freshmen
G F PTS
Woods
8 0 16
Datres
1 0 2
Tyler
2 5 9
Keller
5 4 14
Grace
5 1 11
Mikulski
2 3 7
Ognosky
5 2 12
TOTALS
28 15 72
HALFTIME SCORE — BSC 32,
SSC 29.
Swimmers
triump h
aga in
They 're off and swimming!
EDUCATOW
noB T MCHEBS MO
IN PENNSYLVANIA:
H
by Dan Ma resh
The Husky swimming team has
bested Lock Haven . The final
score was 89-23. This meet saw
the BSC team score the greatest
number of points than in any
other single contest. Coach
McLaughlin adjusted his lineup
so the Husky tankmen would be
forced to compete against each
other. Their record now stands at
seven wins and two loses.
Dale Alexander, who competes
in the 200 yard backstroke and
the 200 yard individual medley
was entered in the 50O-yard
freestyle. He put in a fine performance and came in second.
Dale was used to give Jack
Feyrer, who took first in the 500
yard free, competition.
The 400 yard free relay was
used as a testing ground for the
newer members of the team.
Dave Gibas led the Husky pack .
Fred Steinhart was on the second
leg, Tom Foss was third , and Joe
Hilger finished the race. The new
fellows swam a fine race.
Husky speedster Dave Gibas
set more records. He did the 100
yard free in 49.8—a new Lock
Haven pool record. Dave also set
a new BSC team record. That was
in the 200 yard individual medley
with a time of 2:13.4. Dave now
has come out of five straight
meets either equaling or
breaking records.
Bob Johnson missed the bus to
Lock Haven. Bob quickly found
two loyal BSC swimming fans
and rode to the meet with them.
He arrived in time to take first
place in the 200 yard breaststroke.
¦
less
roR
Hiowrow
^B
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SERVICE
II TEACHERS
at one of the
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WEST
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WHERE
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Husky Roo ks
m
The B.S.C. chess team ,
otherwise known as the Huskie
Rooks, traveled to Harrisburg to
compete in Saturday's Eastern
Intercollegiate Championship.
B.S.C.'s entries were divided
into an A team and a B team. The
A team was composed of first
board, David Kistler. Undefeated
in 5 matches, he is tied for first
board of championship with the
highest rating of any state college
player. Second board is David
Sheaffer, 3-2; third board James
Kitchen 3Vfe-lV< »; and fourth board
Ann Marie Shultz 3-2.
The tournament lasted five
rounds, with entries from a dozen
schools. Rochester came in first
place , Princeton second and
Penn State third. The B.S.C. A
team, Rutgers, Washington, and
Jefferson colleges were tied for
fourth , fifth , and sixth places.
The Huskie B team seized
eleventh place. An extra measure
of victory came when the Husky
Rooks humbled their arch rivals,
Lebanon Valley College to the
tune of 3 team points to two team
points.
The B.S.C. B team is composed
of first board, Jack Franks, 1-4;
second board, John Soniak, 14;
third board, John Roush, 1-4; and
fourth board Andrew Cherinka, 23.
The Husky Rooks will be
competing with Princeton this
month. In March they will take on
Brooklyn College and Moravian .
Dr. Gilbert Selders accompanied
and acted as advisor on the
Huskies' trip to Harrisburg.
by bob ohv er
Two of the Husky sports teams
have been very successful over
the last month. The last loss for
Coach Charles Chronister 's
troops occured over Christmas
vacation , while for Coach Eli
McLaughlin's Tankmen their last
defeat was early in the
season.
The Hoopmens record now
stands at 11-3 after there decisive
89-82 victory over previosuly
number 4 ranked Cheyney, and
are tied for the division lead with
them . They have five straight
victories following their loss to
East Stroudsburg in the Berwick
Tournament.
This is the finest basketball
season the Huskies have had
since the early 1960's under then
Coach Bill Foster, who is now at
the University of Utah.
The Huskies have had the
advantage of a balanced scoring
attack , led in conference games
by Paul Kuhn 's 16.9 average,
Howard Johnson 's 15.1, and Art
Luptowski's 14.1. Also in double
figures is John Willis, who's been
playing exceptionally well as of
late.
There is one problem the
Huskies have to face, a letdown.
Let's face it , they've beaten the
top conference teams, and over
the next week they are playing
mostly teams they have beaten
before, and should beat again.
But I remember Kutztown a
while back. There is no way that
the Bears play the Huskies close,
but they did. I hope the team,
realizes that everyone will be
gunning for them , now that they
are tied for the top spot. They
must get up for every game.
SWIMMING
The tankmen started off
slowly, but have come along of
late winning again and again.
Their last few performances
have included some recordbreaking times, led by AilAmerican Dave Gibas. Gibas set
Indiana pool records in both the
50 yard ( 22-0) and 100 yard (49-3)
events, and owns BSC team and
pool records in those events as
well as a number of pools of other
opponents. The likable sprinter is
undefeated in his college career
in the 50 yard competition and the
only time he has lost the 100 yard
event was last year in the NAIA
national competition when he
placed fourth against some of the
strongest college division
competition in the country.
Coach McLaughlin also gives
credit to the other team members
who have been giving some
outstanding performances. He
particularly pointed out the efforts of Bob Jones in the 200 yard
backstroke and the 100 yard
backstroke leg in the medley
competiton, and Ken Narsewicz
in the 200 yard freestyle and 200
yard butterfly competition.
Lock Haven 's veteran Coach
Harold Hacker features Kevin
Hammer in the 50 and 100 yard
freestyle events, divers Larry
Briggs and Gary Fogelman, Rich
Kacinko in the backstroke, John
McDaniels in the breaststroke,
and freshmen Mike Farren , Jeff
Holmes, and Tina Hinaman in the
distance freestyle competition.
The Huskies will be striving
hard to register victories 7, 8, and
9 this week in order to be in the
right frame of swimming mind
for the "big one" next week
against West Chester on
February 16 at home.
What s Happ ening
Any women interested in
playing soccer are asked to
contact Miss Auten at her
office in Centennial Gym as
soon as possible.
WKA Schedule
Place
dorms
dorms
dorms
dorms
small gym
small gym
Centennial Gym
dorms
•
dorms
small gym .
Centennial Gym
Activity
shuffleboard
table tennis
shuffleboard
table tennis
cage ball
cage ball
volleyball
shuffleboard
table tennis
cageball
volleyball
¦
•
;?¦
• ..I
I
Don Lewellyn
TV - STEREO SERVIC E
232 Iron St. 784-2274
I-sSaKisasr
Remember Your Valentine
¦
¦
' ¦¦
TIME
unscheduled
unscheduled
Week of Feb. 21 unscheduled
unscheduled
Tues., Feb. 22
6:30-8:30
Wed., Feb. 23
6:30-8:30
Thurs., Feb. 24
7:30-9:30
Week of Feb. 28 unscheduled
unscheduled
Mon., Feb. 28
6:30-8:30
Tues., Feb. 29
7:00-10:00
John 's Food
Market
W. Main A Leonard St.
Open 8 a.m. to 12 mid-
B,P»on. .nd M.»
W
X&'S££.
f ^P
HT
"
sSSggSrH
I
with
Date
We#kof Feb. l4
|^^^ FLOWER S
q^^^^^^^^ x^^^ r^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
,
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very
Worldwide
W^^P*U
Down The Hill On East St.
i
night Daily
Delicates sen
Full line of groceries
it
tnacki
Civil Serv ice
A State Civil Sorvieo Com•.r.ission representative will bo on
campus Tuesday. February 15. to
ihsouss career tMnployment
possibilities in State government.
Leonard J. Kramer , personnel
specialist from the Commission 's
recruitment office, will presen t a *
JO-niirmte slide and taped talk to
graduating seniors at 9:30 and
U 0 0 a.m. at the College
Placement Office, Ben Franklin
Building. Following the slide
t alk . Kramer will answer
students " questions on State job
requirements , salaries, working
and
employee
conditions.
benefits.
The civil service career test for
positions in administration and
the social services will be held at
2 p.m. Students interested in
taking the test and participating
in the question and answer
session may obtain further information fren-: the college
placement offices.
As of February 14, petition s
for the seats of C.G.A. of ficers , class officers , and
student senators can be picked
up in the C.G.A. and Mr.
Mulka 's offices. They must be
returned to the C.G.A. office
by 4:00 p.m., February 23. On
that same night, nominating
speeches for C.G.A. officers
will be given. Time and place
will be announced .
C.G.A. and Class officers
must have at least a 2.3
overall cumulative average
while studen t senators need a
2.0 overall cum. All candidates must be certified by
the offices of the VicePresident for Student Life ,
and the Vice-President, Dean
of the Faculties. The C.G.A.
President must be either a
j unior , or a senior during his
term of office . Those wishing
to run on a particular party
ticket should have the party
formulate d by February 23.
Senate to vot e
(cont inued fro m page one )
and Mr. Wolfe will represent the
faculty . Dr. Edwards will act as
an administrativ e representative.
The following student senators
were elected to variou s committees : Rules — Bob Anderson
and Mike Meizinger ; Elections —
Sue Wise and Maggie Ryan ;
Academic Affairs — Mike
Demarco, Maggie Ryan and Bill
Hanford; Faculty Affairs — Doug
McCtintock and Mike Meizinger ;
Studen t Affairs — Frank Pizzoli
and Connie Roberts ; Campus
Affairs and External Relations —
Joni Pietrowski ; Faculty and
Finances — Bob Parry and Tom
Seriani; Faculty Productivity
and Development — Tom Seriani
and Tom Beveridge;
International Education — Linda
Zyla and Peggy Christian.
The next College Senate
meeting will be held on Feb. 17 in
Kuster at 3:30 p.m.
BSC in Lobby
Annu al
This working relationship
depends upon communication
between the group in Washington
and the students in each campus>
Ernie Lund g uist
The NSL must find out how the
students of each campus feel
concerning issues of national
B eaut y Contest
importance. A referendum is
currently being drawn up by the
Executive Committee of the NSL
which will be used to poll the
Is Comin g
students at BSC in the near
The National Student Lobby is future. The results of this poll will
registered with the United States then be sent to Washington.
Congress. "The purpose of the
To BSC
The results of this referendum
Lobby shall be to represent, at
the national level of government, from all member campuses will
the member student govern- be studied and used as a mandate
ments and .associations of the to act as a lobby for students .
NSL , and to advocate in Congress From these over-all guide lines
¦those positions adopted b^ the the N SL will be able to speak with
students represented by the Congressmen and Senators about
member student governments of specific p ieces of legislation as
(continued fr om page one)
the NSL." (Chapter 11, Article the representatives of students.
11) .
They will follow this legislation to Shirley Chishom. Council passed
make sure students opinion is the motion in the form of a
The National Student Lobby is heard on all the bills which are recommendation to the President
dependent upon several elements important to them .
and the Academic Vicewhich , added together , provide
president.
an effective mechanism for the
expression of student interests
Reserved seats?
before Congress. The success of
John
Choyka
questioned the
the NSL depends upon a colegality of reserving seats for the
ordinated effort among the
faculty members at athletic
students on the member camevents . He stated that appuses, and the staff of the NSL in
proximately 40 students were
Washington.
denied their seats at the recent
Cheyney game to make room for
The
the reserved seats.
)
cont inued fro m page two
BSC has received word from
Peter L. Coye, Executive
Director , that it has become a
member of the National Student
Lobby ( NSL). The school has
joined 74 other colleges and
universities in 34 state s in
building a permanent Student
Lobby in Washington , D.C. The
lobby represents 427,000 students
in the Capitol .
CGA
Record
Re vie w
Maroon & GoJd
wishes ever yone a
Happy
Valentin e's Day
Black Ex perien ce
(con tinue d from page two
cut deeper than blatant Dixieland
racism because it is so of ten
transmitted non-maliciously.
The white person who approaches a well-dressed black
man in a restaurant , asking him
to please reserve a table , doesn 't
moan to be ca)) ous. It only appears natural to him that black
people should occupy jobs as
waiters or chauffers or doormen.
Again , the white man who blames
race riots on "Communist
agitators " unwittingl y insults
blacks by implying that they are
really too stupid to know what's
going on.
Robert Teauge writes, "All of
which is to say that white folk are
immersed in such a totally racist
climate that—like fish born in the
ocean— they have no reason to
suspect for a moment that they
might be all wet. Wherever they
look in this society, there are
white institutions , habits , signs ,
symbols , myths , and realities
that reinforce their notion that
black folk rank somewhere
between King Kong and
Frankenstein 's monster on the
scale of lower forms of life ."
A short time ago, a certain
corporation started manufacturing what they termed "flesh
colored" bandages and bandaids,
under the false impression that
all human flesh is white. Madison
Avenue
commercials
for
feminine beauty products are
conspicuously absent of blacks
(how can a black girl even have
"the skin you love to touch?").
When was the last time you saw
greeting cards adorned with
smiling black faces? (And if
there actually were such cards ,
would whites ever buy them.) At
Christmas time , all the plastic
angels are white. Even Jesus
Christ is traditionally Caucasian.
This list of examples would
continue indefinitely and I'm
sure many people would soon get
bored and stop reading...and that
would be the ultimate racist
attitude: to know the situation
oxists and to tolerate it. He who
tolerates oppression shares in the
act. And this is oppression :
psychological oppression. The
very fact that we systematically
Woman 's Baske tball
The
Ry Leah Skladan y
final r oster for
the
women 's basketball team was
selected by Miss McComb , the
February 22 — Millersville A,
8:00.
February 24 — Marywood A ,
4:00.
February 29 — Bucknell A,
4:00.
March 2 — Wilkes H. 4:00.
March 7 — Penn State A , 3:00.
Marc h 9 — Luzerne Comm.
College A, 7:00.
Marc h 13 — Buck nell H, 4:00.
Ma rch 14 — Misercordia H,
7:00.
March 16 - Baptist Bible H,
7:30.
March 23 — Keystone J ob corp ,
H , 7:00.
We wish Miss McComb and our
team coach. Seventeen girls were
selected to represent BSC in the
ex t ramural competition .
were
selected
Those
D
e
b
bi e
,
Nancy
Ariano
G
r
e
e
n
ly,
Carol
Artz ,
Edwina
Fran
Holgate ,
Hollaway, Julie Hop ple, Jackie
Long, Betsy Lucadamo , Pat
Lyons , Sandy Maurer , Sue
Moyer , Linda Perkins , Pat
Pursell , Janet Santo , Linda
Shepherd . Bev Sollenberger and
Marcia Wannemacher .
The game sched ule is as team much success
follows :
ning season ,
an d a win-
fhe . ' 1 it -
ostracize millions of people from
such seemingly insignifica nt
aspects of what some wit
depressingly labeled "the
America n way of life " underscores the sad reality that
deep down , a lot of we white
people are yet incapa ble of seeing
a black man as anything beyond
his blackness. We still refuse to
accept him as a human being.
And that is the worst tragedy of
all.
John Stu grin
'
lost in the transition from
classical to rock. All of
Mussorgsky 's colorings and
images of his friends' paintings
were gone with ELP's version .
Their version has almost no
resemblance to the original , with
of
the
the
exception
"Promenade " which doesn't
have the clarity and excitement
of the Ravel orchestration.
Because of the Promenade the
piece cannot be completely taken
away from the original , but the
remaining is so far apart from
the feeling and the music that the
version is invalid. I love the
original and could only feel chaos
and disunity in ELP's. I may
have been prejudiced for hearing
the original first , but it's a
prejudice granted with good luck.
Michael Siptroth presented a
report on the Board of Trustees
meetings A brief discussion of
various aspects of Act XIII
followed ; however, no action was
taken.
Allocations for the February 7
meeting totalled $4,830. Council
approved allocations of $4,450 to
the Maroon and Gold Band for the
purchase of 75 new uniforms. The
Awards Committee received $330
to finance the Spring Awards
Convocation. Council also
allocated $20 to the Bloomsburg
Am bu lance Association to meet
additional costs and $30 as a gift
in appreciation of their services
to the campus.
Kampus Nook .
Across from the Union
The
Plain and Ham Heaglet ,
Cheesa • Pepparo ni • Onion
Plua. Our awn Made lea
Craam.
Simula te d
Democra tic
Talca Out Order *—Dalivary
te Dorms, Fratt , .SareriHet.
Dial 7M4HS
Convention
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p. o. box eooe
u. B< APonsBB
Richm ond , va,. ist n *
on the New Blacks
"LOOK AT ME! I WANT TO
BE RECOGNIZED! I want you to
reinforce my own self-conviction
that I am somebody. That I make
a difference. That I don 't have to
look like you to be a person of
dignity and worth!"
These dramatic words brought
to a climax a paper entitled "The
- New Blacks in Search of a Self"
presented by Dr. C. Eric Lincoln
at the first session of the
Colloquim on the Black Experience sponsored by the Black
/
Student Society.
In his paper, Dr. Lincoln, who
is a professor of sociology at
Union Theological Seminary,
examined some cultural, social
and historical aspects of Blacks
in American society.
Commenting
on
white
America 's characterization of
Blacks as a collective problem,
Dr. Lincoln related the story of a
woman who asked him for some
material on the "colored
situation ". "...I sent her a
"colored" paint chart from the
hardware store," he said, "it was
the only 'colored situation' she
could handle in her thinking."
Dr. Lincolnstated that many of
the problems that Blacks have
trouble coming to grips with stem
from their problems of identity.
"The un-bridged chasm between
who they were in Africa and who
they are in America has crippled
the minds, clouded the dreams,
dulled the ambitions and bowed
the
heads
of
countless
generations of men and women
who were made to cringe like
slaves, wh en in a f ree democracy
they should have been able to
walk like princes."
The New Blacks
The emergence of "the N ew
Blacks", educated, informed and
aware of the awsome task bef ore
them was an important theme in
Dr. Lincoln's paper. He said that
this new emergence was the
result of the Black American's
"discoverv of his own ego".
Dr. Lincoln described the
essence of the Black ego as Soul.
"Soul is the Black man's most
positive estimate of himself ...It is
the connective skein that runs
through the totality of the Black
Experience, weaving it together
and infusing it with meaning."
The New Black's definition of
himself and his awareness that
his heritage is good and therefore
a source of pride and strength is a
starting point for a Black
Revolution. Dr. Lincoln stated
that this Black Revolution "intends to change the image of the
American society by changing or
destroying many of the concepts
and attitudinal strategies which
{unction to perpetuate the submerged status of the Black
people...I see the Black
Revolution as the united expression of 30 million Blacks in
search of identity, status ,
privilege and responsibility."
Q and A
During the question and answer period following Dr. Lincoln's presentation, he was asked
how long it would be before
Black's got full equality. He
stated that equality can only
come about when people who
have power concede it, either
voluntaril y or involuntarily.
"And ' , ne said, "power concedes
nothing."
When asked to comment on the
meaning of racism , Dr. Lincoln
said that racism implies insecurity on the part of the people
who have power. "It's knowing
who'll win before the race is even
run ", he said.
When asked why more Black's
weren 't behind the Presidential
campaign of Shirley Chisholm,
who incidentally is the next
speaker in the Black Colloquim,
Dr. Lincoln said that it. was
because too many whites were.
He later elaborated on the point
by stating that Blacks weren 't
interested in Women 's Liberation
because Black women will only
be liberated when their men are.
He observed that whenever the
Black movement in America
gathered momentum , some other
movement appeared to divert
power and energy away from it.
He said that he considered
Women 's Lib just such a diversionary movement .
When asked why only 17 of the
250 writers attempting to
describe the Black culture in
America were Blacks themselves, Dr. Lincoln replied that
he doubted the statistic because
he could think of 18 himself. When
told that the statistic was drawn
from an article in TIME
magazine,
Dr.
Lincoln
questioned TIME'S qualifications
and motives.
Both before and after the afternoon session in Haas, Dr.
Lincoln spent the day talking to
various classes and groups
around the campus. That night,
he attended a dinner in the
Commons given in honor of Dr.
Lincoln 's visit to the campus by
the Black Student Society.
Sena te to vote
on calendar cha nge
The College Senate, in a
meeting held February 8, moved
th at the Senate select , by means
of a vote, one of the five college
calendars presented by the Ad
Hoc Committee , headed by Dr.
James Cole, at the March Senate
meeting. The calendar selected
will go into effect for the 1972-1973
academic year.
CGA : New J udiciary:
Wres tling f unds returned
College Council heard a repo rt
from Mr. Mart y Kleiner ,
Chairman of the CGA Judicia l
Committee , concernin g possible
rev isions of the structu re of the
BSC Judic ial Boards. At the
February 7 meeting , Mr. Kleiner
suggested that all local J udicial
Boards be abol i shed and a
st udent j ud iciary committee be
formed to replace the present
student-facu lty judiciary comm i ttee.
The student j ud iciar y would be
composed of six student s and a
student cha i rman , selected at
rand om from the student body.
These students would serve on
the Committee for one month.
The accused student w ill have
an advisor of his own choice from
the faculty or student body. No
lawyers will be allowed at the
hearing. This is intended to take
campuB cases out of the civil
realm.
An Ad-Hoc Student-Faculty
Judiciar y Committee would be
Or. C. Eric Lincoln
formed "t o rule in cases wh ich between the upper and lower
pertain sp ecif i cally to those cam puses. These buses will be
ma tt ers i nvolvi ng students and used as an interim measure until
facult y. Only judicial members alternate measures of tran and the vice president of Student sportation can be investi gated.
Life will have access to student The state has already denied the
records. All disciplinary records request for a covered walkway to
will be d es t roy ed when the be constructed -for traffic between the two campuses .
student gra dua tes.
Mar y Pa t Truthait presented a
Council will review th e
proposed changes at the next motion to suspend classes from
1:00-4:00 p.m. on Monday,
meeting and vote on them.
Februar y 14 to allow students to
Wrestling Money
Bob Blair presented a motion to attend the C olloq u ium with
return the money previously
( continued on p««t lour )
alloca t ed t o the wrestling team t o
the reserve fund of the CGA. The
Bread Is coming Friday,
motion p assed pend i ng the
Ftb.
18, at 8:30. Tickets
payment of previous bills inalready
purchased can bo
curred by the team. A motion was
picked
up
in the Book Store
also presented to allocate $7,000
Fob.
14,
IS
and
U. They will go
to the athletic scholarship fund of
Public
Fob. 15 to
on
tale
to
tot
the Bloomsburg Foundation , This
11.
Ticket
pri
ce
is
$3.75.
For
motion will be researched and
further
information
contac
t
/
voted on at the next meeting.
John
Choyka,
B.N.E.
Council then passed a motion
Chalrm w , Box *34, phono:
requesting the Commonwealth to
714-5370,
purch ase two buses for traffic
In a poll taken by the Ad hoc
Comm ittee of all Senators, 72 per
cent of the 64 Senators who
responded favored ret ention of
th e two semester system, while
28 per cent favored chan ge to an
alternate system . Many of the 46
Sena t ors who f avored a ret ention
of the two semester system indicat ed a preference for a change
in the beginnin g and termination
dates of the fall semester. In
response t o these Senators, Dr.
Cole has provided four alternatives to the present semest er
system. Each of these alterna t ives has the terminati on date
of the fall semester prior to the
Christmas vacation . These four
alternatives plus the present
syst em represent the f ive choices
that the committee is presenting
to the Senate.
The first alternative , presently
employed at Shippensburg State
College, would have the fall
semester beginning immedia t ely
after Labor Day and endin g a few
days prior to the Chr istmas
vacat ion. The spring semester
would begin in mid-January and
end In late Ma y.
The second alternative ,
presently used by West V irginia
University, would have classes
beginning prior to Labor Day and
ending approximately one week
before Christmas vacation. The
spring semester would begin
early in January and terminate
early in May.
The third proposal is a combination of the fall semester
calendar of West Virginia
University and the spring
semester calendar of Ship-
pensburg State College.
The University of Delaware ,
from which the f ourth proposal
was chosen , begins its fall
semest er early in Sept ember and
ends a few days prior to
Ch r i stmas vaca ti on. A shor t
Winterim term begins early in
J anuary and ends la te in the
same month . The spring
semester begins late in January
and t ermina tes near the end of
May.
The fifth proposal wh ich will be
presentedto the Senate calls for a
retention of the College's present
system.
i ne senate men moved to set
up a commit t ee consisting of
three Senators , including one
st udent , to serve i n l iason wi t h
three appointees from the APSCUP Executive Committee . The
purpose of this committee would
be to work out any conflicts that
may arise and to insure smooth
interaction between the Senat e
and APSCUP bodies .
The Senate also elected eight
rep resenta t ives t o the special Ad
Hoc Committee for the selection
of a Vice-president for Academic
Affairs . The stude nt repres ent atives are M ichael Adams and
Maggie Ryan: Dr. Cole. Dr.
Vaughn , Dr. Sperry . Dr. Warren
(continu ed on pit* four)
Tho honorable
Shirle y
Chisholm *
Congrosswoman
from
N.Y.
and
mi
presid ential candidate , will
tpoak on "The Black Ex
perltn ct " at 2:00 P.M. thit
com ing Monday • February U.
It' s The
»— • Bloo min ' News
m^m
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¦
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¦
>~>^^ r'^ H^aHi«ww
around the ank les and dra g you
throu gh the alleys up to Car ver
Hall and call out the president to
tell him your head was bare .
When College Council came of
age in the 30's to represent the
entire communit y, studen t s
found it easier to run for office. A
cumulative avera ge of 1.00 was
all that was needed to be eligible
to run for any of the studen t-held
offices .
Maybe the grade requirements
were lower since the students
ranking were lower. In 1935 the
. college failed to meet the standard in a test given on Current
World Affairs by Time magazine.
The highest possible score was
105 points with the college mean
at 55 and the high school mean set
at 45. Of the three hundred tested
the mean for our students came
to 48.26. It was probably embarrassing for the college to have
their students closer to the high
school mean than the college one.
Some of the editorials make it
sound like things have not
changed much either. One
pointed out that teaching was
grossly overcrowded
with
English and History being the
most populated areas. Another
cites the 1930-31 report of the
National Education Association
which polled over 300, 000
teachers in 1632 towns and found
that 54 per cent earned less than
$2000 yearly . New York and
California paid the highest
salaries to teachers
and
was
collective bar gaining
unheard of.
If our administration wants to
pull down barriers , t hey can rea d
a news story in the 1935 issue in
which it was repo rted that CGA
welcomed fre shman by host ing
them at a Tr ustee-Facu lty
Reception and Dance. The frosh
got ^ chance to meet the biggies
in a real life situation for a
change.
by John St ug rin
This is not an article on the
black experience. Rather , this is
one individ ual' s impressions of
comments made by those who
have been part of this experience : Dr. C. Eric Lincoln ,
Richard Wright , Robert Guthrie ,
and John Howard Griffith.
The last name , Griffith , is
notable. Joh n Howard Griffith is
qualified as a spokesman on the
black experience for the same
reason I am not : John Howard
today.
Bill Hanford
Griffith
is white. But , in the fall of
It
is
ridi
culous
Daniel Ellsberg is the man who
to try him for
,
1959
he
had his skin pigmeninforming
the public , for only by
leaked the Penta gon Papers to
tation
chemically
altered and
the press. On June 28, 1971 a having an enligh tened people can
superficiall
y
"became
" black in
federal grand jury in Los Angeles democracy continue. If we are to
an
attempt
to
learn
first-hand
returned a two-count indictmen t be a free citizen ry , we must have
what
it
was
reall
y
like
to
be black
accusing him of the theft of more Ellsbergs informing the
in
the
deep
south.
His
exgovernm ent property and the people of what is going on in
perience
s
are
compiled
in
the
to avoi d an
unauthorized
posession of gover nment
book
,
BLACK LIKE ME.
stat e . If Dr.
documents and writings related authoritarian
His skin alteration
was
Ellsberg is convicted and imto the national defense.
Did you know that this one priso ned , your first amendment superficial , but the superficiality
indictment of documents and rights will sit in prison with him. of his situ ation soon dissolved in a
My plan is to have people wri te cloud of undisguised hatred.
writings related to the national
letters
to President Nixon asking Griffith discovered wha t Dr . C.
defense is wrong since the
Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that the him to par don Dr. Ellsberg . The Eric Lincol n so aptly describes as
Pentagon Papers did not threaten P res iden t knows t ha t those who oblivion. The same clerks ,
na tional security? Furthermore , take time to write to him ar e the shopkeepers , and policemen who
the first of twelve edited volumes ones wh o w ill be concer ned had greeted him with smiles and
of the papers can now be pur- enou gh t o go t o the polls on greetings while he was still white ,
now confronte d him with abuse ,
chased by the public. Just for election day .
stares
of hat e, and unnerv ingly
If Dr. Ellsberg is freed from
being the first to secure the incasual
racist thre ats ( "You can
formation , Dr. Ellsberg is going th e char ges agains t hi m , then
kill
a
nigger
and 'toss him into
to be t r ied even thou gh thi s same freedo m of express ion in this
that
swamp
and
no one'll ever
infor mation is publicized widely country will be stre ngthened .
know what happened to him. ").
The ordea l affected Griffith
deeply:
"I had begun this exEditorial Staff : Editor-in-c hief , |lm sachettl ; Buiinos t
periment in a spirit of scient ific
Mana ger , Carol Kiihba ugh ; Co-Manag ing Editors,
detachme nt. I wanted to keep my
KarenKeinard and sue sprague ; News Editor, Frank Pizzoli;
feelings out of it , to be objective
Assis t ant News Edito r s, John Dem p sey and Michael
in my observation s. But it was
Meizin ger ; Co-Feature Edif on, Terry Blass and Joe Mikloi;
Sports Editor, Bob Oliver ; Art Editor, Deniie Ross; Cirbecoming such a profound perculation Manager , Elaine Pongrat z ; Co Copy Edit ors , Ellen
sonal experience , i t haunted even
Doyle and Nancy Van Pelt ; Photography Editor, Tom
my dreams. " And his. a white
Schofield ; Contributing Cartoonist, John Stugrln ; Adv isor,
man 's, conclusion was one which
Ken Hoffman.
bl a ck s had been pa i nful l y aware
of for over 200 years : " When all
Photo graphy Staff: Mark Foucart, Dan Maresh, Craig
t he t alk , all the propa ganda has
Ruble .
been cut away, the criterion is
Reporters : Cindy Mlchener, Leah Skladany, Mike Yar mey ,
nothing but the color of skin. My
Denny Guytr, Don Eni, Bob Me Cor mack.
ex per ience proved that. They
Office Staff : Kay Boyles, Barb Glllot t, Mary Gabriel, Joyce
judg ed me by no other quality .
Keefer, Ann Renn, Debby Yachym, Ruth MacMurray.
My skin was dark . That was
The MAO it located in room 234 Waller, Ext. 323, Box 301.
suff icient reason for them to deny
mo those ri ghts and freedoms
without which life loses its
significa nce and becomes a
matter of little more than anima l
surviva l. "
Griffith suffered from instances of both blata nt and subtle
racism in Louisiana , Mississippi ,
Alabama , and Georgia (althou gh
it would be a mistake to view
these cases as only southern
phenomena : witn ess what
Pontiac ,
happened
in
Michi gan this past autum n).
Unfortunatel y , lynchin gs and
unbrutali ty,
outright
,
are
not
auctions
like the slave
things of the past. As late as 1959,
a Mississippi grand jury refused
to look at FBI-compile d evidence
concerning the Mac k Parker
k idnap-lynch-mur der case.
Lynching thus re mained a
method
government-sanctioned
of "social control" , rea dy f or use
whenev er the blacks got out of
ha nd .
In 1963, when the assassin of
civil rights worker Med gar Evers
(brother of Fayet te mayor
Charles Evers ) was brought to
court , the governor of Mississippi
openly embraced him. No indictments were handed down.
And just last June , 18-year old JoEtha Collier was maliciously
gunned
down
in
Drew ,
Mississippi. The three white men
w ho had murdered her did so
bef or e a number of w itnesses.
The y made no at t em pt at a
getaway and were picked up four
hours later in a town only 18 miles
a way...as if they expected no one
to arrest them for killing a black
BSC's newspaper which was
originally called BLOOM-INNEWS has a little different
format than the M&G of toda y.
The newspaper provided , as the
editorial in the first issue , on
Wednesday, February 20, 1924
stated , "an opportunity to
become better acquainted with
each other , to feel as members of
a family and also to keep alive
the memory of our school days ".
In an age of instant news and
immediate broadcastin g of
events tha t effect us, it would be
hard for even a recent graduate
of BSC to read and fully comprehend the bi-weekly M&G
publications. To feel as part of a
family would be an, even harder
task.
The newspaper then was sold
and distribu ted on a subscr iption
basis. Besides the "Normalites ",
the student nickname back in the
days of the Bloorasbur g Normal
School , having a campus
newspaper , the alumni were told ,
"This is your paper " at $.75 a
semester . The stude nts got a deal
for $.50.
The editorial policy of the earl y
30's struck an unusual note as far
as editorials go. The 1934
editorial stated that
"no
editorials of national interests or
any interests outside our
collegiate walls " would be
printed. The staff stuck to their
policy but the paper was not
without some sort of political
comment .
Washington 's Birthday was
observed by having a discussion
and the central thought was that
in order "to prev ent war , statues
or monuments must be erected
and streets must be named , to
glorify peace rather than to
pra ise war in the traditional
way ". Their hearts were in the
right place , but foreign policy
was never made in the streets
and it probably never will be. But
imagine , signs of a peace
movement at BSC in 1924.
The Norma lites even had a
May Day but it had a muc h different meanin g than it does
today. It was held on the athletic
field and the community performed Old En glish Morr is
dances and chorus production s,
and even some light skits to liven
thin gs up a bit.
One top ic that is an issue on
campus toda y for all the wron g
reasons was writte n about for all
the right reasons. The autho r
stated that one thing should be of
major importan ce to the stud ent
body and "that thin g is our
athle tics ". It seems as if school
had dropped below the hysterical
point and people were worried.
But then the speaker at the
Fifth Annual Athlet ic Dinner , Mr.
M. H. Palm , a coach from
Georgetown Universit y, sparked
things up a bit by saying that
"some critics have been taking
unfair shots at athletes. " He said
about football , "It' s a grand
game. Some things we derive
from football which we can 't get
from books. One thing is the
control of the emotions " . He's
right about the books anyway.
Women 's Lib advocates will be
interested to know tha t the
womtn at BSC were "conducti ng
a plan of self government" while,
of the 6 leading Normal Schools in
Penna., Bloomsburg was the only
one in which the men students did
"not have student government. "
The women might have had self
governmen t in name only since
one of the rules mentioned in the
newspaper stated that they could
"not go without a hat unles s you
wish to be put on campus....alway s wear a hat or some
similiar head covering when you
wish to walk out ."
It wasn 't quite clear what "put
on campus " meant. Ma ybe if you
went down town without a hat
townspeople would tackle you
FO RUM
All in all , things have changed
though not at a par ticularly fast
rate at BSC. Conformist rules and
regulations are usuall y swept
away but some fundamen tal
questions will remain. Like what
^a|p ^i^^HiMmaM *«HiHaHpBiHMiaHHmMnM
M^g^a
is or should be of primary importance to the student? What is
the most effective form of
government for both the men and
women of this college? That' s a
hot one right now. Will teaching ,
as it seems , always be overcrowded? How does an affluent
society achieve peace ? If only
namin g streets and statues would
do it , we'd probably all jump in
and help. And what is athletics
especially now, a maypole for
students to ra lly arou nd in its
present difficult ies, or a learning
experien ce for those involved ?
Yes, the quest ions remain the
same , only they wear different
clothes to confuse us.
R ecord R eview
Pictures At An
Exhibition...Emers on , Lake and
Palmer
A double review
Part i
by Joe Miklos
Emerson , Lake and Palmer
are a progressive rock group .
Sure , they like to mess around
with highly complex , classicalbased stuff , but they are and
remain a progressiv e rock group .
In handling Mussorgsky 's Pictures At An Exhibiti on they ha ve
accom plished a rock first: a
symphony performed by a small
rock band at high intensity. The
Blac k Exp erience
symp hony is not complete in its
inter pretation and Emerson ,
Lake and Palmer have added to it
liberally.
As rock music it is a triumph . It
moves , softens , and at times even
talks. It sets a nice mood; you
can have a party to it. Keith
Emerson is a fine technical
musician , his piano , moog and
organ soar , crash , and skim. He
doesn 't improvise all that much ,
but compensa tes in impact.
Classical music it is not. The
song "Tank" from the first ELP
album crops up in. the "Old
Castle " segment. Lake adds
words to several sections , and the
album ends on an entirel y
unrelated piece , "Nutrocker ,"
based on a part of the Nutcracker
Suite . It' s enough to make a
classical fan shrivel up and die.
The inside jacket also is a
departure from Mussor gsky ' s
concept . The pictures that
illustra te it are not what they
shoul d be. For example , the Hut
of Baba Yaga should not be a
scenario from sci-fi , but a
ramshackle affair supported by
the legs of a fowl. Likewise , the
Old Castle picture should depict a
minstrel scene and not an actual
casue.
But then , I' m gettin g away
from my point. Pictures At An
Exhibition is a fine rock albu m.
It' s loud and has a good beat even
if you can 't dance to it.
Needless to say, if you think it
IS classical music , you are the
victim of a huge deception . (I'll
never understand why Cotillion
records bills it as part of thei r
"Modern Classics " ser ies...)
N o one can den y the ultimate
perversity of these vicious ,
senseless murders . They were
open , outright incidents of racism
and , being so openly malicious ,
they are also easily perceived
and deplored. W hat is harder to
detec t and thus harder to understand is what Dr , Lincol n calls
"insti tutionalized racism " ...the
subtle , semi-v isible typ e of
racism which can paradoxicall y
Fart li
by Denise Ross
Did you ever hear the Boston
Pops orchestra do a Beatle song
or songs? You feel kind of proud
t hat your mus ic made i t i n t he
h ierarch y of mus ic but you also
ma y no tic e t he song sounds
mediocre , at least. It' s k ind of
like taking an abstract painti n g and turn i n g it i nt o
realism. The paintin g just
isn 't the same. Part of the
appeal of the painting was
the style , wh ich l ike the Bea t le
songs, van ished with the change.
I' m not sa y ing that an i mitation
of an orig inal is necessaril y bad ,
but the tr anslation better be good
or it' s no t goi ng t o be qualified
with its own identity , and if i t
can 't make jt on its own , it may
as well be an exact reproducti on
to give the piece ju stice.
E mer son , Lake and Palmer
doing Mussorgsk y's pictures At
An Exhibition do what Arthur
Fielder of the "Po ps" does to the
Beatles. They take the music ,
stick to the basic format , but
stylize it within the framework of
their own music. Somethin g was
(co ntinued en pa§e four )
(contin ued en *a«e four )
oirl
Hus kies roll Ra iders
The Husky Basketball team Willis was aided in the scoring
rolled over the Red Raiders of column by Howard Johnson with
Shippensburg Wednesday nite, 11, Paul Kuhn with 10, and Art
70-54, for their 6th straight vic- Luptowski with 9. Incidentally,
tory, and 12th overall against 3 Johnson was named to the ECAC
defeats. It was another team team for last week.
effort , with all of .Coach
Chronister 's healty players The Huskies were never
seeing action.
bothered by the Raiders, who
John Willis led the victors in were, as one player stated,
scoring with 19 points, playing "pressured into taking tough
another fine game, despite being shots".
handicapped with a nose injury
suffered in the Cheyney game. He The Frosh kept there unbeaten
blocked several shots and ef- streak alive with a 72-50 beating
fectively clogged the middle so of the baby Raiders in the
the Raiders had to fight for their preliminary game, behind four
scorers in double figures.
shots.
Varsity Scoring
G F PTS
Johnson
5 1 11
Kuhn
4 2 10
Luptowski
4 1 9
Mealey
3 0 6
Wil li s
7 5 19
Choyka
3 2 8
Concorti
l "5 7
Schwartz
0 0 0
Hamilton
0 (* 0
TOTALS
27 16 70
HALFTIME SCORE -BSC 34,
SSC 20
Freshmen
G F PTS
Woods
8 0 16
Datres
1 0 2
Tyler
2 5 9
Keller
5 4 14
Grace
5 1 11
Mikulski
2 3 7
Ognosky
5 2 12
TOTALS
28 15 72
HALFTIME SCORE — BSC 32,
SSC 29.
Swimmers
triump h
aga in
They 're off and swimming!
EDUCATOW
noB T MCHEBS MO
IN PENNSYLVANIA:
H
by Dan Ma resh
The Husky swimming team has
bested Lock Haven . The final
score was 89-23. This meet saw
the BSC team score the greatest
number of points than in any
other single contest. Coach
McLaughlin adjusted his lineup
so the Husky tankmen would be
forced to compete against each
other. Their record now stands at
seven wins and two loses.
Dale Alexander, who competes
in the 200 yard backstroke and
the 200 yard individual medley
was entered in the 50O-yard
freestyle. He put in a fine performance and came in second.
Dale was used to give Jack
Feyrer, who took first in the 500
yard free, competition.
The 400 yard free relay was
used as a testing ground for the
newer members of the team.
Dave Gibas led the Husky pack .
Fred Steinhart was on the second
leg, Tom Foss was third , and Joe
Hilger finished the race. The new
fellows swam a fine race.
Husky speedster Dave Gibas
set more records. He did the 100
yard free in 49.8—a new Lock
Haven pool record. Dave also set
a new BSC team record. That was
in the 200 yard individual medley
with a time of 2:13.4. Dave now
has come out of five straight
meets either equaling or
breaking records.
Bob Johnson missed the bus to
Lock Haven. Bob quickly found
two loyal BSC swimming fans
and rode to the meet with them.
He arrived in time to take first
place in the 200 yard breaststroke.
¦
less
roR
Hiowrow
^B
¦
SERVICE
II TEACHERS
at one of the
^m
RKTES
l
LOAN
WEST
I LO
WHERE
I
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AILABLE
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¦
Husky Roo ks
m
The B.S.C. chess team ,
otherwise known as the Huskie
Rooks, traveled to Harrisburg to
compete in Saturday's Eastern
Intercollegiate Championship.
B.S.C.'s entries were divided
into an A team and a B team. The
A team was composed of first
board, David Kistler. Undefeated
in 5 matches, he is tied for first
board of championship with the
highest rating of any state college
player. Second board is David
Sheaffer, 3-2; third board James
Kitchen 3Vfe-lV< »; and fourth board
Ann Marie Shultz 3-2.
The tournament lasted five
rounds, with entries from a dozen
schools. Rochester came in first
place , Princeton second and
Penn State third. The B.S.C. A
team, Rutgers, Washington, and
Jefferson colleges were tied for
fourth , fifth , and sixth places.
The Huskie B team seized
eleventh place. An extra measure
of victory came when the Husky
Rooks humbled their arch rivals,
Lebanon Valley College to the
tune of 3 team points to two team
points.
The B.S.C. B team is composed
of first board, Jack Franks, 1-4;
second board, John Soniak, 14;
third board, John Roush, 1-4; and
fourth board Andrew Cherinka, 23.
The Husky Rooks will be
competing with Princeton this
month. In March they will take on
Brooklyn College and Moravian .
Dr. Gilbert Selders accompanied
and acted as advisor on the
Huskies' trip to Harrisburg.
by bob ohv er
Two of the Husky sports teams
have been very successful over
the last month. The last loss for
Coach Charles Chronister 's
troops occured over Christmas
vacation , while for Coach Eli
McLaughlin's Tankmen their last
defeat was early in the
season.
The Hoopmens record now
stands at 11-3 after there decisive
89-82 victory over previosuly
number 4 ranked Cheyney, and
are tied for the division lead with
them . They have five straight
victories following their loss to
East Stroudsburg in the Berwick
Tournament.
This is the finest basketball
season the Huskies have had
since the early 1960's under then
Coach Bill Foster, who is now at
the University of Utah.
The Huskies have had the
advantage of a balanced scoring
attack , led in conference games
by Paul Kuhn 's 16.9 average,
Howard Johnson 's 15.1, and Art
Luptowski's 14.1. Also in double
figures is John Willis, who's been
playing exceptionally well as of
late.
There is one problem the
Huskies have to face, a letdown.
Let's face it , they've beaten the
top conference teams, and over
the next week they are playing
mostly teams they have beaten
before, and should beat again.
But I remember Kutztown a
while back. There is no way that
the Bears play the Huskies close,
but they did. I hope the team,
realizes that everyone will be
gunning for them , now that they
are tied for the top spot. They
must get up for every game.
SWIMMING
The tankmen started off
slowly, but have come along of
late winning again and again.
Their last few performances
have included some recordbreaking times, led by AilAmerican Dave Gibas. Gibas set
Indiana pool records in both the
50 yard ( 22-0) and 100 yard (49-3)
events, and owns BSC team and
pool records in those events as
well as a number of pools of other
opponents. The likable sprinter is
undefeated in his college career
in the 50 yard competition and the
only time he has lost the 100 yard
event was last year in the NAIA
national competition when he
placed fourth against some of the
strongest college division
competition in the country.
Coach McLaughlin also gives
credit to the other team members
who have been giving some
outstanding performances. He
particularly pointed out the efforts of Bob Jones in the 200 yard
backstroke and the 100 yard
backstroke leg in the medley
competiton, and Ken Narsewicz
in the 200 yard freestyle and 200
yard butterfly competition.
Lock Haven 's veteran Coach
Harold Hacker features Kevin
Hammer in the 50 and 100 yard
freestyle events, divers Larry
Briggs and Gary Fogelman, Rich
Kacinko in the backstroke, John
McDaniels in the breaststroke,
and freshmen Mike Farren , Jeff
Holmes, and Tina Hinaman in the
distance freestyle competition.
The Huskies will be striving
hard to register victories 7, 8, and
9 this week in order to be in the
right frame of swimming mind
for the "big one" next week
against West Chester on
February 16 at home.
What s Happ ening
Any women interested in
playing soccer are asked to
contact Miss Auten at her
office in Centennial Gym as
soon as possible.
WKA Schedule
Place
dorms
dorms
dorms
dorms
small gym
small gym
Centennial Gym
dorms
•
dorms
small gym .
Centennial Gym
Activity
shuffleboard
table tennis
shuffleboard
table tennis
cage ball
cage ball
volleyball
shuffleboard
table tennis
cageball
volleyball
¦
•
;?¦
• ..I
I
Don Lewellyn
TV - STEREO SERVIC E
232 Iron St. 784-2274
I-sSaKisasr
Remember Your Valentine
¦
¦
' ¦¦
TIME
unscheduled
unscheduled
Week of Feb. 21 unscheduled
unscheduled
Tues., Feb. 22
6:30-8:30
Wed., Feb. 23
6:30-8:30
Thurs., Feb. 24
7:30-9:30
Week of Feb. 28 unscheduled
unscheduled
Mon., Feb. 28
6:30-8:30
Tues., Feb. 29
7:00-10:00
John 's Food
Market
W. Main A Leonard St.
Open 8 a.m. to 12 mid-
B,P»on. .nd M.»
W
X&'S££.
f ^P
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sSSggSrH
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Date
We#kof Feb. l4
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,
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very
Worldwide
W^^P*U
Down The Hill On East St.
i
night Daily
Delicates sen
Full line of groceries
it
tnacki
Civil Serv ice
A State Civil Sorvieo Com•.r.ission representative will bo on
campus Tuesday. February 15. to
ihsouss career tMnployment
possibilities in State government.
Leonard J. Kramer , personnel
specialist from the Commission 's
recruitment office, will presen t a *
JO-niirmte slide and taped talk to
graduating seniors at 9:30 and
U 0 0 a.m. at the College
Placement Office, Ben Franklin
Building. Following the slide
t alk . Kramer will answer
students " questions on State job
requirements , salaries, working
and
employee
conditions.
benefits.
The civil service career test for
positions in administration and
the social services will be held at
2 p.m. Students interested in
taking the test and participating
in the question and answer
session may obtain further information fren-: the college
placement offices.
As of February 14, petition s
for the seats of C.G.A. of ficers , class officers , and
student senators can be picked
up in the C.G.A. and Mr.
Mulka 's offices. They must be
returned to the C.G.A. office
by 4:00 p.m., February 23. On
that same night, nominating
speeches for C.G.A. officers
will be given. Time and place
will be announced .
C.G.A. and Class officers
must have at least a 2.3
overall cumulative average
while studen t senators need a
2.0 overall cum. All candidates must be certified by
the offices of the VicePresident for Student Life ,
and the Vice-President, Dean
of the Faculties. The C.G.A.
President must be either a
j unior , or a senior during his
term of office . Those wishing
to run on a particular party
ticket should have the party
formulate d by February 23.
Senate to vot e
(cont inued fro m page one )
and Mr. Wolfe will represent the
faculty . Dr. Edwards will act as
an administrativ e representative.
The following student senators
were elected to variou s committees : Rules — Bob Anderson
and Mike Meizinger ; Elections —
Sue Wise and Maggie Ryan ;
Academic Affairs — Mike
Demarco, Maggie Ryan and Bill
Hanford; Faculty Affairs — Doug
McCtintock and Mike Meizinger ;
Studen t Affairs — Frank Pizzoli
and Connie Roberts ; Campus
Affairs and External Relations —
Joni Pietrowski ; Faculty and
Finances — Bob Parry and Tom
Seriani; Faculty Productivity
and Development — Tom Seriani
and Tom Beveridge;
International Education — Linda
Zyla and Peggy Christian.
The next College Senate
meeting will be held on Feb. 17 in
Kuster at 3:30 p.m.
BSC in Lobby
Annu al
This working relationship
depends upon communication
between the group in Washington
and the students in each campus>
Ernie Lund g uist
The NSL must find out how the
students of each campus feel
concerning issues of national
B eaut y Contest
importance. A referendum is
currently being drawn up by the
Executive Committee of the NSL
which will be used to poll the
Is Comin g
students at BSC in the near
The National Student Lobby is future. The results of this poll will
registered with the United States then be sent to Washington.
Congress. "The purpose of the
To BSC
The results of this referendum
Lobby shall be to represent, at
the national level of government, from all member campuses will
the member student govern- be studied and used as a mandate
ments and .associations of the to act as a lobby for students .
NSL , and to advocate in Congress From these over-all guide lines
¦those positions adopted b^ the the N SL will be able to speak with
students represented by the Congressmen and Senators about
member student governments of specific p ieces of legislation as
(continued fr om page one)
the NSL." (Chapter 11, Article the representatives of students.
11) .
They will follow this legislation to Shirley Chishom. Council passed
make sure students opinion is the motion in the form of a
The National Student Lobby is heard on all the bills which are recommendation to the President
dependent upon several elements important to them .
and the Academic Vicewhich , added together , provide
president.
an effective mechanism for the
expression of student interests
Reserved seats?
before Congress. The success of
John
Choyka
questioned the
the NSL depends upon a colegality of reserving seats for the
ordinated effort among the
faculty members at athletic
students on the member camevents . He stated that appuses, and the staff of the NSL in
proximately 40 students were
Washington.
denied their seats at the recent
Cheyney game to make room for
The
the reserved seats.
)
cont inued fro m page two
BSC has received word from
Peter L. Coye, Executive
Director , that it has become a
member of the National Student
Lobby ( NSL). The school has
joined 74 other colleges and
universities in 34 state s in
building a permanent Student
Lobby in Washington , D.C. The
lobby represents 427,000 students
in the Capitol .
CGA
Record
Re vie w
Maroon & GoJd
wishes ever yone a
Happy
Valentin e's Day
Black Ex perien ce
(con tinue d from page two
cut deeper than blatant Dixieland
racism because it is so of ten
transmitted non-maliciously.
The white person who approaches a well-dressed black
man in a restaurant , asking him
to please reserve a table , doesn 't
moan to be ca)) ous. It only appears natural to him that black
people should occupy jobs as
waiters or chauffers or doormen.
Again , the white man who blames
race riots on "Communist
agitators " unwittingl y insults
blacks by implying that they are
really too stupid to know what's
going on.
Robert Teauge writes, "All of
which is to say that white folk are
immersed in such a totally racist
climate that—like fish born in the
ocean— they have no reason to
suspect for a moment that they
might be all wet. Wherever they
look in this society, there are
white institutions , habits , signs ,
symbols , myths , and realities
that reinforce their notion that
black folk rank somewhere
between King Kong and
Frankenstein 's monster on the
scale of lower forms of life ."
A short time ago, a certain
corporation started manufacturing what they termed "flesh
colored" bandages and bandaids,
under the false impression that
all human flesh is white. Madison
Avenue
commercials
for
feminine beauty products are
conspicuously absent of blacks
(how can a black girl even have
"the skin you love to touch?").
When was the last time you saw
greeting cards adorned with
smiling black faces? (And if
there actually were such cards ,
would whites ever buy them.) At
Christmas time , all the plastic
angels are white. Even Jesus
Christ is traditionally Caucasian.
This list of examples would
continue indefinitely and I'm
sure many people would soon get
bored and stop reading...and that
would be the ultimate racist
attitude: to know the situation
oxists and to tolerate it. He who
tolerates oppression shares in the
act. And this is oppression :
psychological oppression. The
very fact that we systematically
Woman 's Baske tball
The
Ry Leah Skladan y
final r oster for
the
women 's basketball team was
selected by Miss McComb , the
February 22 — Millersville A,
8:00.
February 24 — Marywood A ,
4:00.
February 29 — Bucknell A,
4:00.
March 2 — Wilkes H. 4:00.
March 7 — Penn State A , 3:00.
Marc h 9 — Luzerne Comm.
College A, 7:00.
Marc h 13 — Buck nell H, 4:00.
Ma rch 14 — Misercordia H,
7:00.
March 16 - Baptist Bible H,
7:30.
March 23 — Keystone J ob corp ,
H , 7:00.
We wish Miss McComb and our
team coach. Seventeen girls were
selected to represent BSC in the
ex t ramural competition .
were
selected
Those
D
e
b
bi e
,
Nancy
Ariano
G
r
e
e
n
ly,
Carol
Artz ,
Edwina
Fran
Holgate ,
Hollaway, Julie Hop ple, Jackie
Long, Betsy Lucadamo , Pat
Lyons , Sandy Maurer , Sue
Moyer , Linda Perkins , Pat
Pursell , Janet Santo , Linda
Shepherd . Bev Sollenberger and
Marcia Wannemacher .
The game sched ule is as team much success
follows :
ning season ,
an d a win-
fhe . ' 1 it -
ostracize millions of people from
such seemingly insignifica nt
aspects of what some wit
depressingly labeled "the
America n way of life " underscores the sad reality that
deep down , a lot of we white
people are yet incapa ble of seeing
a black man as anything beyond
his blackness. We still refuse to
accept him as a human being.
And that is the worst tragedy of
all.
John Stu grin
'
lost in the transition from
classical to rock. All of
Mussorgsky 's colorings and
images of his friends' paintings
were gone with ELP's version .
Their version has almost no
resemblance to the original , with
of
the
the
exception
"Promenade " which doesn't
have the clarity and excitement
of the Ravel orchestration.
Because of the Promenade the
piece cannot be completely taken
away from the original , but the
remaining is so far apart from
the feeling and the music that the
version is invalid. I love the
original and could only feel chaos
and disunity in ELP's. I may
have been prejudiced for hearing
the original first , but it's a
prejudice granted with good luck.
Michael Siptroth presented a
report on the Board of Trustees
meetings A brief discussion of
various aspects of Act XIII
followed ; however, no action was
taken.
Allocations for the February 7
meeting totalled $4,830. Council
approved allocations of $4,450 to
the Maroon and Gold Band for the
purchase of 75 new uniforms. The
Awards Committee received $330
to finance the Spring Awards
Convocation. Council also
allocated $20 to the Bloomsburg
Am bu lance Association to meet
additional costs and $30 as a gift
in appreciation of their services
to the campus.
Kampus Nook .
Across from the Union
The
Plain and Ham Heaglet ,
Cheesa • Pepparo ni • Onion
Plua. Our awn Made lea
Craam.
Simula te d
Democra tic
Talca Out Order *—Dalivary
te Dorms, Fratt , .SareriHet.
Dial 7M4HS
Convention
Needs
Heyrt : Man. • Thurt. J:00I! :*
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