rdunkelb
Wed, 05/01/2024 - 14:00
Edited Text
'I've been mapping '
stresses Chisholm
BY DEMPSEY.
AND PIZZOLI
"While the others have been
rapping, I' ve been ma ppi ng " ,
stated Shirj ey C h i sholm at a
press conference held Monday at
which she highlighted the main
points of her campaign for the
presidency.
Mrs. Chisholm
op ened her remarks by stating
that most people have not gotten
over the "psychological shock"
of her ca nd idacy si nce she i s both
a woman and black.

W

¦—

~

~———¦

'

"

w—



r——.— -

——'-

«

-

.

.

.,.

.

—.

. .
^

^

,.____

.—__

.

,

T


.

.


—,

.

.

^

^v^^^^^^^^^^^M^^^p

Shirley Chisholm drives home a point fo an overflow crowd in Haas Aud itorium Monday aftern oon.
( Photo by Ruble )
Mrs. Chisholm visited BSC as part of her campaign tour of college campuses.

Harrisburg Defense Committee
Member speaks on Organization
Richard Turner , a member of
the " Crossroads" group with the
Harrisburg Defense Committee,
spoke to a small grou p of people
in the Bookstore lounge , Tuesday

number of authorities in various
aspects of the Vietnam War as

well as the Harrisbur g trials.
A description of p ossible
programs about the Harrisburg

Feb. 15 at 7 p.m. A student at Defense which
could be
Bloomsburg
Ithaca College, Mr . Turner is p resented at
currentl y conducting an in- followed. The possibilities independent
study
in clude speakers , films and a play .
organizational work with the Turner also mentioned that
People 's Coalition for Peace and Thomas Hayden will be speaki ng
Justice in Harrisburg .
at Gettysburg College on Feb. 24.
Mr . Turner explained that his He outlined a Mass Pilgrimage
major affiliation is with the and a week of workshops which is
" Crossroads " movement which being planned for Holy Week .
is trying to " turn the trial inside Mr . Turner then explained the
nut " through use of the media . He various legal aspects of the
outlined for BSC students and Harrisburg Eight trial .
faculty who attended
the
The first indictment handed
meeting , the variety of programs down against the Harrisburg
which are being conducted in Eight in January , 1971, carried a
Harrisburg for the duration of the possible life sentence for contrial proceedings . These include : spiracy to kidnap Henry
Repressi on Week (Feb . 14-19) , a Kissinger , the alleged plot vicpanel on war crimes , Feb . 28, and tim .
Even
conservative
a pr ogram on military weapons . columnists like Evans and Novak
All these programs will feature a pointed out that the indictment

Part of the capacity crowd at Haas Auditorium listening to
Shirlt y Chliholm. Mn. Chisholm ipokt at tho roqutst of tho Mack
Studtnt Societ y.
(Photo by Ruble )

had been hastil y prod uced
because of J. Edga r Hoover 's
extralegal charges against the
Berrigans. Unable to substantiate its wild charges of
violence against non-violent
people, yet not wanting to drop its
case , the government brought a
supereeding indictment , adding
two defendents to the original six
on April 30, 1971. The new indictment weakened the original
bomb-kidnap plot charge (now
carrying a maximu m sentence of
five years , if proven ) making it
part of a broad conspiracy including the destruction of dra ft
files.
In many ways the "Kissinger
Kidnap " case is a prot otype in
the world of political repres sion
— dem onstratin g many of the
government 's favorite weapons :
Informers — FBI Agent
P r ovocateur Boy d Douglas was
in prison with defendent Phil
Berrigan. Though a three-time
conv i ct , Douglas was on a workstudy program allowing him to
allegedly smuggle letters between Berri gan and Sister
Elizabeth McA llister , an ot her
defendent. Douglas , bel i eved t o
| be the government' s ke y w it ness ,
has been h i dden awa y si nce
January of '71. The defense
lawyers have br ought a motion
i before the court to nave Douglas
made availab le to them for
; questioning. No action has yet
j been taken on this motion .
Illega l Electr onic Surveillance
— Defense m otions have charged
tha t t h e go vernment used
w i reta ps extens ivel y i n mountin g
its case . The disregard for the
' right to privac y is an integral
part of the campa ign of fear of
the United States government

against its people.

power , wh i te power or Indian
power ; the only k ind of power
t hey are going to understand is
h ow many delegates you have. "
UNBOUGHT AND UNBOSSED
Active in politics for the past 15
years , Mr s. Chisholm collected
petitions , wrote speeches and
spoke Spanish for many New
York politicians. Now that she
has moved onto the national
scene she says , "I refuse to allow
myself to be manipulated , I
refuse to allow myself to become
a par t of dev i ous mach i nations
which would rebound to the
detriment of people".

SERIOUS CANDIDATE
"I am runn ing for the
presidency of this country " , said
Mrs . Chisholm when questioned
as to the seriousness of her
RURAL FOLK
campaign . She noted , however ,
The Appalachia and Southern
that the office of the presidency
regions with their poverty and
has traditi onally been dom i nated lack of adequate
medical
by white males . In the event of facilities sparked a heavy note of
her no t w inn ing t he presiden t ial concern as she said , "I' m connomination , she wants the forces cerned about man 's humanism to
she represents "to have a voice in man " . To alleviate such .
putti ng together the entire ticket situations will be a prime concern
f or t he good of all Americans" . of Mrs . Chisholm in the event of
Mrs . Chisholm counts as her her election. Mentioned as
const i tuents the black , the Puerto reasons for poverty situations is
R i can , t he Ch icano , and other that past presidents have not

minorities whom she refers to as
"the peop le" .

FAIR CHANCE
" It is a gross understatement
to sa y that I will not receive fair
treatment at the Democratic
Convention , " said Mrs . Chisholm

who was recently endorsed by

over 1000 women leader s of New
York City and is one of the

founders of the National
Women 's Political Caucus. Both

the Mc Govern and O'Hara
Commissions have stated that the
Democratic party must begin to
"democrisize itself from th e
bottom up " and insure that the
convention delegates proportionally represent a cross section
of America , according to Mrs .
Chisholm .
"The power structure at the
convention is only going to understand one thing ; it ' s not going
to understand black power , pink

been responsive to the people and
that there are no lobbying groups
for the ordinary man as there
were for large business interests.
Concerning large interest groups ,
Mrs . Chisholm challenges all her
opponents to defend the interest
group s they espouse.
FOREIGN POLICY

President Nixon's trip to Red
China is "long overdue " and a
"very clever political move",
stated Mrs . Chisholm. "How in
heavens nam e can we overlook a
coun try that has millions of
people and occupies one-fifth of
the world' s surface and pretend
that we are going to sweep them
under the rug, they are here to
stay. " Mrs. Chisholm also felt
there must be a curt ailment of
arms to all coun tries in the
Middle East , and that the plight
of the Palestinian refugee is at
the heart of the mat ter there.

Richard Turner , a rtprtstn tatlvi of tht Harrisburg Dtftntt
Commltttt, points out tht numirout prog rams underway in btfwlf
of tht Htrrlsburg Eight.
( Photo by Scho fltld )

LETTERS LETTERS LETTERS

Editor .
Subject : Corrections
and
clarifications of article "Senate
to Vote on Calendar Change "
which appea red in Last Friday's
issue of the M&G.
The article states that the
calendar selected by the senate
at its next meeting will'go into
effect for the 1972-73 academic
year . This should be corrected to
read that the selected calendar
will be recommended to the
President of the college, and if
approved, will go into effect for
the 1973-74 academic year.
The calendar for next year
( 1972-73) is "in the hands " of a
committee chaired by Dr. Hobart
Heller. Although I am not a
member of that committee, I
anticipate that a decision on that
calend- r will be made soon.
Some minor clarifications that
I think are appropriate (They are
my blunders, by the way) involve
the use of the words "Christmas
vacation ". Since the dates of this
vacation may fluctuate considerably, it would have been
better if the word "vacation " had
been left out. Hence, the summaries of the various calendars
should read:
The first alternative , presently
employed by Shippensburg State
College, would have the fall
semester beginning immediately
after Labor Day and ending a few
days pri or to Christmas. Etc....
The second alternative ,
presently used by West Virginia
University, would have classes
beginning prior to Labor Day and
ending approximately one week
before Christmas Etc....
Dr. James E. Cole
Chairman , ad hoc Committee
to Review Calendar
To the Editors of the M&G :
On behalf of the AWS, I find it
rather sad that our college
newspaper is not able to write
reviews and make reports on the
events which occur on campus.
I' m writing in reference to the
AWS Sexuality Program. This
progra m is not the easiest thing
in the world to put together and
present. It requires a lot of work
and effort , but I believe the end
product is worthy of this w ork .
Educating people is what it's all
about , something that seems to
be pretty important.
But , it is not very encouraging
to put on these programs without
receiving any feedback with the
exception of a few individuals.
And to top it off , there wasn 't
even a review in the paper. I hate
to ask , but was there even a
reporter there?
If not please let me review the
last sexaulity program. But let it
be understood th at I'll be
somewhat
prejudiced . My
responsibility is to present the
programs, not to also review
them for the college newspaper.
The program was Wed., Feb. 2,

at 8:00 p.m. in the Union. The
topic was the Natural Methods of
Childbirth . A new film , Not Me
Alone was shown on the subject,
and well received by the
audience. Then a Panel
discussion followed bringing in
the medical , psychological and
personal points of view on the
subject. Guest speakers were
Mrs . Doroth y Tribus , R.N.,
Supervisor of O.B. at Nesbitt
Hospital , Dr. Martin Satz ,
Chairman of the Psych. Dept.
here at B.S.C., Mr. and Mrs. Al
Salzman and Mrs. Paul Thomas.
The Union was filled to
capacity and though I' ve no
knowledge of how many it holds,
the audience was numbered far
over five hundred. It should also
be noted that a number of
townspeople were in attendance.
How many events , besides
sports, that this college presents
draws the townspeople? And isn't
this important, bringing the two
populations together? To sum up
my review I feel it is one of the
best
Sexuality
programs
presented to date, but again be
reminded I'm somewhat pre-

J UUitVU.

To put it midiy, I'm disturbed.
It seems that AWS deserves
attention and coverage as much
as the sports, record reviews, and
surely the "rancid space fillers"!
There will be two, possibly
three more Sexuality Programs
this semester. I realize this absurd negligence by your reporters will not occur again but
rather the remaining programs
will receive full coverage.
With hope for improvements
in the future ,
Deborah Ward
Chairman of the Sexuality
Programs and the Officers of the
AWS.
Dear Miss Ward et al ,
I don 't make it a habit of
replying to letters but I think
your 's is in need of a few
clarifications. Firstl y, the reason
a review of your last program
didn 't appear in the paper is
because the reporter who
covered it would have said about
as much as you said in your
"review", that is, approximately
nothing. Everything that happened at the program was
covered in the advance story .
Reporting on the event would
have entailed a simple change
from future to past tense since
the reporter informed us that the
question and answer period at
this particular program was
worthless.
Secondly, your intimation that
the M&G has been ignoring your
program is absurd . We checked
back and discovered that we've
devoted over 70 column inches
(all on page 1) to your programs
over the course of the year. AWS
deserves attention , and attention
is what it' s getting.
Finally, I can assure you that
this "a bsurd negligence" won 't

Edi torial Staff : Editor-in-chief ; |im sachettl ; Business
Manager , Carol Kiihbau gh; Co-Managing Editors/
KarenKeinard and sue tprague i News Editor, Frank Pizioli ;
Assistant News Editors/ John Dempsey and Michael
Meizin ger ; Co-Feature Editors, Terry Blass and Joe Mlklos ;
Sports Editor/ Bob Oliver ; Art Editor, Denise Ross ; Circulation Manager/ Elaine Pongratz ; Co-Copy Editors/ Ellen
Doyle and Nancy Van Pelt ; Photog ra phy Editor/ Tom
Schofield ; Contributin g Cartoonist/ John Stugrin ; Advisor /
Ken Hoffman.
Photograph y Staff : Mark Foucart , Dan Martin , Craig
Ruble , Dick Nixon.
Reporters! Suzyann Llpoutky , Cindy Michtner , Lean
Sklada ny, Mike Yarmt y, Denny Ouytr, Don Enz, Bob MeCor mack , Rose Monta yne.
Office Staff s Kay Boylti, Barb Olllott , Joyce Ktefer, Ann
Renn, Dabby Yach ym / Ruth MacMurr ay,
The MAO l» toc attd In room 134 Waller / Ext . 313/ Box 301.

happen again , although you 'd
have a hard time convincing me
tha t people who fly off the handle
because of one instance are
deserving of anything better.
jps

TO THE EDITOR ,
This is meant to be more or less
a follow up letter in regards to
Joe Miklos' article of February 2,
entitled "They Call This Entertainment?" First of all , I must
disagree with Joe regarding
Shenandoah and Ralph because
in a musician's perspective, I feel
they both operate in quite the
professional manner. It takes a
lot of work to get the efforts of 10
individuals into a tight sound as
in Ralph, and equally hard for 3
guys to sound like 10 as in
Shenandoah. Both bands also
have unbelievable harmony
capabilities. I must agree ,
however , that Ral ph doesn 't
know when to use their Moog
Synthesizer, and that Shenandoah is sometimes too loud.
It's true that the Student Union
Board is somewhat limited as to
which bands are available, but
thanks to Carol Drake, so called
head of the board and master of
the decision making process
regarding hiring, the good bands
are getting fewer. To put it
bluntly, she treats the bands like
shit . I play with Granite, and
thoug h we've played here our
share of times, each time we had
to set up our own stage — nothing
was ever ready for us on time.
Drake seems to make an awful
lot of promises to her bands that
in the end just aren 't kept. Our
band was to play here Jan. 28, but
due to her adverse belief of the
rumor mat we were breaking up,
we never got the job despite our
informing her that we were
ready . Another instance involved
her screwing Shenandoah out of a
certain amount of cash , and I
don 't think you 'll see them here
at B.S.C. for a while. A person
like this shouldn 't fill the position
she does. She's inexperienced ,
and half the time hasn 't heard the
band she hires .
She renders quantities of
dances rather than quality, and
due to this fact , the bands play for
practically nothing if they carry
road men. B.S.C. with the exception of one bar in Shamokin is
the lowest paying place we've
played in the year we've been
together. It' s truly a shame that
one person has the power to ruin
the whole musical perspectives
and capa bilities of this college. If
you want the situation to improve , I urge you to become
acquainted with the people
running for president of the
S.U.B. next election . I don 't need
the hassle and I' m sure th e
student body doesn't either . One
more thing. App lauding for a
band because of the song they 're
performing rather than how they
do it creates misconceptions on
the part of the musicians as well
as the people who hire them. I
advise the entire student body to
learn to jud ge quality , because I
certainly wouldn 't expect applause a fter playing a set of
contemporary garbage.
Thank you ,
Bob Barry
Ed. Note: The following letter
originally appeared in the
Morning Press on Feb. 9. It was
submitted to the M&G by Doug
McCHntock.
•:I C" CLUB RESPONSE
The press release by Dr.

Letters to the editor are an
expression of the individual '
writer's opinion and do not
necessarily reflect the views of
the newspaper. All tetters must
be signed, names will be withheld
request. The M & G reserve
Nossen criticizing the "3-C Club" upon
to abridge, in conright
the
for their interest in athletics at sultation with the writer, all
Bloomsburg State College and letters over 40© words in length.
revealing the personal letter
from Mr. A. O. Duer is not only
inexcusable , but unprofessional. cleaned within the institution and
It becomes more evident open hostility only contributes
everyday that Nossen has lost the toward the already strained
faith of the general public and is relations between town and
now "grasping at straws " in a gown. The members of the
C
final attempt to survive. To Club" are proud of their club"3
and
in- what it stands for , including the
confidential
publicize
of
the
expense
formation at
intent behind their philosophy —
far
nation
is
character assassi
that of encouraging college
from» ethical and below the vouth.
dignity of the m oral standard of a
As
for
the
present
college president.
assassination
of
coach
Russell
It is evident the President has a Houk , we resent this. This
man
personal vendetta for certain has become a trademark in
individuals and is using accepted athletics throughout the entire
standards to fortify himself. nation. He has an army of
Bloomsburg is a friendly town followers simply by the nature of
and has strong associations and his continued success. What more
feelings toward the Sta te College. could any fairminded adWe are fearful the President is ministrator ask for — United
attempting to destroy the happy States Olympic Committee,
union by continued and un- manager of United States
favorable methods. Why does the Wrestling Team at Munich ,
President want control of this Germany next summer, former
small budget?
president of NAIA , former
The 3-C s originated several president of Pennsylvania State
years ago and quickly developed College Athletic Association and
a healthy relationship between producer of many state and
the town and the college. It national
champions .
Mr.
should be remembered every President , what do you want?
institution of learning, both high
The "3 C's" have always stood
school and college, has a club for integrity and honesty and we
comparable to the "3-C *Club." think of Coach Houk primarily as
The life blood of athletics is spirit an astute and dedicated coach.
and enthusiasm and to cut it off He has rendered memorable
rneans a severing of national service to an institution he loves
.
publicity for this college — this is and to discredit
him by slanted
a tragedy . It is our desire to personal correspondence obcontinue friendly cooperation , tained through false information
but Dr. Nossen's recent actions reveal's one's character.
substantiate the belief that he
In closing we feel , by tradition ,
opposes this. It is difficult to Bloomsburg
State College is the
conceive why any person is so finest small college in the
determined to undermine a fine country. Don 't do anything more
institution and penalize the to tarnish or discredit the instudent body. The difficulty at the stitution .
college is not athletics alone, but
Very truly yours, Leonard N.
goes far beyond that point and Nespol
i , William C. Hidlay Jr.,
must be resolved.
"Red" Canouse, Edwin
Open aggression through the Carl
"Bud"
Miller , Jack A. Eble, Jr.,
press has no place in higher A. J. Lenzini
.
education . Linen should be

Dealin g With Str ength
BY JOE MIKLOS
"You can only deal with
strength ."
—Shirley Chisholm
Haas Auditorium is a mass of
people, all waiting, all watching.
And it's the same damn thing .
Camera guns cocked, loaded , and
the crowd is going to pounce on
another speaker , devour every
word and regurgitate yells of
fawning adoration.
What is it? Something 's
dreadfull y wrong. Pizzoli and
Meizinger are dressed in their
neat-as-a-pin-press-conference
sports jackets and Blass is
muttering things like, "I don 't
like it like this..."
Oh yeah , you can feel it all
right. Someone's trying to lay the
hoopla on us again. Just like
when Shapp was here. That piano
is banging, the hoopla is going to
kill it.
But wait , this isn 't Milton
Shapp. This is Congresswoman
Shirley Chisholm , and the old
political rigamarole just isn 't
going to work.
Shirley takes the stage, the
fireworks arc going flat. There's
an aura of strength about her ,
cool , calcu l atin g an d proud ,
simultaneously paradoxical. No,
the slam bang crowd politics are
sputtering , dying. It's all right.
For once I 'm starting to renew
my faith in a politician , in the

basic idea of democracy again.
Shirley Chisholm hasn 't been
swallowed by the machine yet ,
nor has she given up her individualism, She's restored my
faith in the intellectual , (not the
wishy-washy compromising sort ,
but a strong and princip led ;
conquered hoopla and all.
And where's Nossen? Oh , he's
at Middlestate Evaluation in New
York , a job he couldn't get out of.
Hobart Heller is taking his place
and perhaps it's a good thing.
Perhaps the President would
have melted under the heat of
Shirley 's onslaught ... Jari
Hoover , president of the Black
Student Society, is sitting as tall
and proud as possible. This is it ,
the Black Experience and a hunk
of charismatic flak are about to
hit Bloomsburg State College
over the head.
The speech starts ; Shirley 's
knocking and socking us, laying it
right on the line so honestly and
h eav ily t h at the f lag waving
stops. She's black , she's proud
and she's HUMAN. Her speech is
sublley sarcastic , nailing racism ,
power plays , under-the-table
politics and h ypocr i sy to
proverbial wall In one astounding
blow . There 's no schlocky left
wins rhetoric , j ust a straight( con tinued en page four )

FRIDAY . FEBRUARY 19. 1972

BLOOMSBURG STATE COLIE<

....Another Cage Win

by bob Oliver
The Huskies romped to their
fifteenth victory against ihtt*e
losses (10-1 league) , 88-67, <>v . • a
weak Millersville team.
Led by John Willis ' 31 points, a
Husky high for the year , and 13
rebounds, the Huskies dominated
the scoring from the start.
The Huskies played without the
services of Art Luptowski , who
still has an injured ankle.
Yesterday Art was taken to
Geisinger Medical Center for
t reatment, and it is doubtful Art
will play tomorrow. Ironically,
Art was named for the second
time to the all-ECAC Division HI
(earn for his play against West
Chester and Shippensburg.
ROMP FROM THE
START

After the Millers scored ,
Howard Johnson hit two layups,
and Willis hits seven quick tallies
and the Huskies built up an early
19-4 lead.
The Maurauders cut to a 27"19
at the seven minute mark , as
Bert Powell started popping for
Millersville.

Millersville 's fouling kept the
Huskies way ahead for the half
44-27. The Maurauders had 12
fouls-vs. only 5 for the Huskies.
SECOND HALF
Huskies jump*out to a 54-34 lead
as the Maurauders ' were cold.
Tony Da Re and Paul Kuhn kepi
finding Willis open underneath
and John kept hitting. Later ,
reserve Gary Choyka, hit four
jumpers to,up the Husky lead to
28. The last ten minutes were
sloppy ; there were numerous
steals and missed shots.
Da Re , who filled in admirably
for Luptowski , finished with 7
points and 10 assists.
Willis was named to the ECAC
honorable mention team for the
second straight week.
Box.Score
G F Pts.
Johnson
40 8
11 9 31
Willis
Consorti
25 9
31 7
Mealey
30 6
DaRe
Choyka
40 8
3 7 13
Ku hn
20 4
Schwartz
10 2
Hamilton

FROSH GAME
The baby Huskies defeated the
baby Maurauders 7S-69 in the
preliminary. Mike Ggnosky led
the Huskies with 23 points
followed by John Mikulski with
17, Joe Woods with 12, and Rick
Grace with 11.
The Huskies were getting beat
early off the boards , but Mikulski
started hittin g and getting
rebounds , and the Huskies took
the lead at the 3:56 mark. The
half ended with a 38-33 Bloom
advantage.
The Maurauders speeded to a
53-49 lead at the midway point of
the second half.
Bloom narrowed the score, and
at 7:05 the Huskies went ahead on
an Ognosky bucket , never to trial
again.
Scorers
G F Pts
6 11 23
Ognosky
5 1 11
Grace
Woods
5 2 12
11 3
Tyler
Keller
X6 8
10 2
Datres
7
3 17
Mikulski
Coach McLaughlin talkin g to Bob Herb.

TANKMEN:
Lose 1st Meet
in Last Nine
by Dan Maresh
The Husky Tankmen went
down in defeat before a strong
West Chester team Wednesday .
The final score was 65-48 in favor
of the Rams. The BSC swimming
record stands at nine wins and
three losses.
The closeness of the meet is
belied by the final score.
Throughout half the meet ten
points or less separated the two
teams.
^B^BB^BB^B^eB^B^ea
»SB^B^ejB JBBB^e^^^B^^e^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^

The divers are off at the start of the race .

SoBr
Wo
nACHEBS
K
j jNjIEMMSYLVMMft ;

¦
LESS
FOR
BORROW

WHW-S""* I

ass»1

I
.^^^^feelI
¦
UO§H3EANMi|3gphfi»

Kampus Nook .

Plain and Ham Hoasias,
Cheat* - Peppero ni . Onion
PIin. Our own Made let
Cream.
Take Out Orders—Del ivery
to Dorms, Frats , .Sororities.
Dial 7*4111
Hours : Man. • Thur «. 2:0011:01
JrWay
9:00.12:00
Satu rday
4.10-12:00
fcmtJiy
n**»tl :00
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^

' mSm 548-0300
1
aV
dre^k *« Bu"nMt uTm'"

l^gg ^
bb^b^bbV

[¦^¦MaMa^a^a^a^a^a^a^a^a^BS^BS^BS^BS^BSM

Bloomsburg will compete in the
PSC Championships at Clarion on
March 10 and 11.

The 400 yard medley relay
team of Bob Jones, Jim Koehler,
Doug Yocum , and Dave Gibas
SPORTS SHORTS
swam to a new team record in
(The Sporting News)
this event with the time of 3.54.4.
Jackie Brant , the former major In the 400 yard free relay Dave
leaguer who now manages in the Gibas tied his pool record with a
Houston chain and works as an time of 48.8 seconds. Eric
electrician in the off-season : Cureton dove to a new BSC
"The first house I wired , record in the 1-meter optional
somebod y pushed the doorbel l diving with 202.55 points.
When asked what he thought of
and ali the toilets flushed. "
the meet Coach McLaughin
replied that the fellows had done
their best. The next meet will be
away at Trenton State February
23. The next , and last meet will be
Across from the Union
home February 26 at 2 p.m.

¦
^1

McLaughlin went on to say.
"both teams were keyed up for
this one , this probably ied to the
fine performances. We didn 't
have the depth to dea l with the
fine West Chester team.

John 's Food
Market

Jack Feyrer placed second in
the 1000 yard free. Jon Stoner
seized first and Ken Narsewicz
was third in the 200 yard free.
Dave Gibas grabbed first and
Bob Herb was third in the 50 yard
free. Dale Alexander took second
in the 200 yard medley . In the one
meter required diving Eric
Cureton seized second and Steve
Coleman was third. Jack Feyrer
was third in the 200 yard butterfl y. Doug Yocum grabbed first
and Bob Herb got third in the 10O
yd, free . In the 200 yd. backstroke
Bob Jones made second place
with Dale Alexander at third .
John Feyrer placed third in the
500 y d. free. In the 200 yd.
breast stroke Jim Koehler came
in second. The one meter optional
diving ended with Eric Cureton in
second and Steve Coleman in
third.

Kutztown
Tomorro w!

W. Main & Leonard St.
Open 8 a.m. to 12 midnight Daily
1
Delicates sen
¦ Soccer practi ce will be held
Full line of groceries
¦
Saturday , February 19 from 1

I

I- 3 p.m., at the gy m.

St anacks

¦¦^¦
¦¦¦^¦
¦ ¦^¦
HHHHiHII ^^ BHH HHHMHHlBHM

ii^^^^^^

Say H ^ppy Birthday
and H appy Anniversary with

¦^Ipfciyus
|^\s L FLOWER S

H

Don Lewdlyn
TV-STERE O SERVICE
232 Iron St. 784-2274
FETTERMA NS
BARBER SHOP

— QUALITY —

Down Th« Hill On En.t St.

Foot of College Hill
Bloomiburg Pa.

I
I
I
I

Demo, committee to talk
on youth registration
The next College Council
meeting will take place Monday,
February 21 at 6:30 in the Student
Union. Representatives from the
State Democratic Committee will
present a program immediately
following the CGA meeting at
8:00 in the Union Building. They
will discuss the youth vote and
registration .
The Budget Committee will
present a report on the Book
Store Fund. Reports will also be
presented by the Constitutional
Revision Committee, the Environmental
and
Athletic
Committees and also the Committee on Athletic Scholarships.
Michael Siptroth , president ,
will confirm the appointment of
two new , Council members .
Council will also vote on
allocation s for ASCO, painting
improvements on the new
gymnasium floor , and money for
Sigma Alp ha Eta members to
attend a convention. Mr.
Buckingham has been invited to
explain an allocation authorized
by President Nossen for use in
the new gymnasium .

I

I

All those interested in
speaking with the three-man
board that was recently
established to investigate the
college are asked to send their
name/ address, and phon e
number to either William
Zurick , care of Zurick and
Zurick
Lumber
Co.,
Shamokin, R.D. 1, 17872, or to
President Nossen, care of his
office.

The Executive Council of CGA
has authorized the lowering of the
cumulative average currentl y
required to run for CGA officer or
Senator from 2.3 to 2.0. This
motion will also be placed before
Council for confirmation.
John Choyka will announce the
new policy of the Student Union
Progra m Board regarding admission to its events. Also, Steve
Wagner will present a motion to
increase the number of student
representatives on the StudentFaculty Senate. Council will
discuss this motion and vote.
They will also discuss and vote on
the proposed amendment to the
Student-Faculty Senate Constitution which would require a
two-thirds vote to close a
meeting.
A meeting of all freshmen and
presidents
of
campus
organizations will be held Feb. 29
at 8:00 p.m. in Carver
Auditorium . The meeting will
serve a two-fold purpose, to inform both these groups and
evaluate their relationship with
CGA.

Strength
(conti nued from page two)
forward stand.
The audience is chagrined . The
power is too, too much. She's
made her move, backing herself
up with a record tha t can't be
argued with . The charisma has
helped and the crowd pays her
the highest compliment as she
finishes. No cheers, no yells and
no whistling. The response to all
that power? Subdued , respectful
and longdrawn applause.
She answers questions from the
floor. The conviction holds up. No
matter what is said , she's serious
and will stand by what she 's
spoken of.
H er c ool nev er lef t her , ev en
when that clod of a photographer
started falling around behind her .
She's moderate, but not quiet .
She bites and attacks, sounds
brilliant and is not afraid (an
understatement) of being black ,
of being a woman, or of being
witty. In her own words: "I am
the dark horse candidate literally
and figuratively. I am running."
She is.

ERNIE LUNDQUIST
1st Annual

I INVITATIONAL BEAUTY CONTEST
I
I

He would have wanted it this way stay tuned for mor e.

I

Housing office announces
summer and 72-73 regula tions
The Housing Office , directed by
Mr. John Zarski , h as esta blished
the housing regulations for the
Summer Sessi on , 1972, and t h e
1972-73 academic year.
GENERAL RULES

hall assignment
printed
in the PILOT
procedure
and in the residence hall
manuals.
Details of rules and regulations
for on-campus housing are also
available in these publications,
APPROVED OFF-CAMPUS
HOU SING
Approved housing is subject to
the standards of the College and
the safety requirements of the
Pennsy lvania Department of
Labor and Industry. The list is
available in the office of the *
Director of Housing.
Fraternity and sorority houses
are on the list of approved
housing; they are under the
supervision of the Office of
Student Affairs.
Men or women who find accommodations in approved
housing must file a copy of the
housing contract with the
Director of Housing prior to
registration .

.residence

The College reserves the right
to assign rooms and roommates
in residence halls; personal
preferences are considered when
possible.
Housing and food services are
provided on a combined basis
onl y for students living in
residence halls. Housing and food
service contracts are binding tor
a period of one academic year (or
the remaining portion thereof)
and may not be transferred or
assigned.
Freshmen resident students
are assigned on-campus housing
whenever possible.
students
are
Freshmen
required to live on campus during
summer sessions while housing
on-campus f or all other students
is optional. Students desiring
summer housing accomodations
must complete the application for
housing which appears in the
Summer School Bulletin each
year.
RESIDENCE HALLS
Freshman men and women are
required to live in residence halls
unless they are 21 years of age or
older by the date of registration,
or extenuating circumstances
exist. Sophomores , Juniors and
who desire acSeniors
commodations on campus are
assigned rooms according to the

INDEPENDENT HOUSING

Students residing off campus in
housing
are
independent
regarded as both citizens of the
town and members of the college
community. The College cannot
provide sanctuary from the law
nor can it be indifferent to its
reputation in the community. The
College cannot supervise the
health , safety, living standards,
and contractual arrangements of
students living in independent
housing.
The independent housing list is
available in the Office of the
Director of Housing.

Precinct on College Campus Now you can buy Fisher stere o
campus.
right
here
on
Weighed by Commissioners
Columbia County commissioners yesterday tabled until their
next Tuesday meeting a question of "whether or not to establish a new Bloomsburg voting
precinct on Bloomsburg State
College «ampus.
Commissioners Bicbard Walton, Carl Canouse and John Creasy received reports of campus
registration from Grace Smith
of the voting registrar's office.
She reported that 223 had registered in two sitting-out registrations on campus and that
there had been 129 previously
registered for the last election.
Biggest in Town
This would send the total registration for Bloomtfturg 's 3rd
Ward to 957 — the largest in

town.

It would still not come up to
Berwick's 3rd Ward, and District, where there are 973 registered. Berwick Conncil has taken no definitiv e action toward
breaking up that district. Its
predecessor counc il's action, esta blishing a commission to study the situation , is reported still
on the record in Columbia County court.
Walton reported that the count y solicitor , Joh n Kuch ka , had
inf orme d him there were two
avenues to establish a new district. Twenty registered electors
could petition for such action, or
the county can petition the court
directly.
Not AU Will Vote
Creasy observed that not all of
those registered would vote and
that a sixty-five per cent turnout
would be good.
Mrs. Smith said that only
throe per cent of those under
twenty-one "who were eligible to
vote in the last election had
gone to the polls.
Walton stated there would not
ba much cost in the operation of

a new district and his chief concern was the burden upon the
election board. He said one election official had resigned because tallyin g the vote in the
last election had taken so long.
It was poi nted out th at more
students could register prior to
the March 6 deadline.

FOR BIG DISCOUNTS ON FISHER STEREO EQUIPMENT,CONTACT:

DAVID E. WALT E R

RD 2

Danvil le, Penn sylvania 17821
Tel. (717) 437-2776

BSC Band Concert
The concert program to be
presented on Sunday, by the
Maroon and Gold Concert Band
of Bloomsburg State College is
open to the public at no charge
for admission and will begin at
3:15 p.m. in the Haas Center
f or t h e Arts on the college
campus.
The program , entitled "A
Sunday Afternoon With the
'Pops* " will include : Colossus
of
Columbia ' March
by
Alexander; River J o r d a n
Fantasy by Whitney ; "M arch
to the Scaffold " from Symphonic
Fantastique by B c r J i o z ;
•Pawanne by Gould ; An Ellington
Portra i t , setting by Werle; A
Trumpeter 's. L u l l a b y
by
Anderson; Boston Pops March
by Gold.

^H^^ L^l^^^^^ M

PSK^^^^^^ SIB
From now on,there's a better way to buy

stereo equipment at tremendous discounts
f Which ca lendar would you Ithan consulting a mail order catalog .
I prefer for 72-73:
|
You just consult Fisher 's student
,
I
I
I l) same as this year
representative , instead.
yes no I
I
He 'll show you a catalog of Fisher equipI 2) exa ms completed before !
and give you advice on the equipment
men
t,
I Christmas
I
suits your needs. And, if you want , he'll
yes no Ithat
I
arrange
for a demonstration so you can hear
I 3) an extended period !what you'll
be buying. Then,he'll process your
|
I between Christmas
and I

I semester break

I

i^^^^^ H

I

ye* no I

I Boxes will be availabl e In the!
I Union , or all dorms. Or place !
I in box 302.
I

order, a t a t remend ous d iscount
Fisher selected t '' s st udent because he
is uniquely qualified to act as your Fisher
representative. He knows a lot about high fidelity,
He's a reliable persoo. And since he's a st udent 1
himself , he knows what students need in the
way of stereo equipment.
And since he 's the Fisher representative,
he's got what you need. Because Fisher
makes practically everything.

Fisher @a

We invented high fidelity.

^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
^
M
M
M
S
M
M
M
pH
M
B ^P
^
B^I^IJIB
jB
j ^IJIJI^I^BB
j ^BB
jB
jB
j jBJB|B ^B^B^B^BS^B^B^B^e^B^B^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
r
t
*

,