rdunkelb
Wed, 05/01/2024 - 14:07
Edited Text
i

George McGovern: alive and
well in local primary.
The local McGovern for
President Committee , needs
the help of BSC students. Help
organize a campaign , st uff
envelopes , solicit support ,
trave l the district , knoc k on
doors.
Three candidate s
committed to McGovern are
running in the April 25th
They represent
election.
diverse groups in the voting
district — one of the changes
in delegate selection made by
the McGovern commission
after the Daley Debacle of '68.
They are Nanette Falkenburg ,
Bucknell student , representing YOU, the recent! / enfranchised ; Charles Long ley,
Bucknel l professor of Politica l
Science ; and Anne Va ughan,
wife of BSC pro f Joe Vaughan.
McGovern gets his major
support from colleges and
universities. To sign up, call
Anne Vaughan , 784-1242.
Sen. Harold Hughes of Iowa will speak on March 23, in Haas
Auditorium as part of the Democra tic Simulated Convention.

Convention speaker
Senator Harold Hughes to speak
on "Political part y reform "
Chai rman of the Commission on
Party Structure and Delegate
Select ion, which was appointed
by the Democratic Nationa l
Chairman to car ry out the 1968
conv en ti on 's manda te for open
participation in the delegate
selec tion process.
Born a t I d a Grove , Iowa , he
grew up as a small town youth
and became an arden t outd oorsman and a success f ul
bus inessman . Followin g his
graduat ion f rom high school, he
saw comba t service in Nor th
Africa , Sicily, and Ital y during
W orld W ar IT and later attended
the U niversity of Iowa.
HUgnes s inree verms »»
governor were characte rized by
emphasis on the humanitarian
issues , solving the problems of
people. The ab olishment of
the
pun i shment ,
ca pi tal
f
unds
to
quadru pling of state
p ubl ic school s , a vocationa ltechnical school system , and a
program f or the mentally ill were

United States Senator Harold
E. Hughes of Iowa will speak on
"Political Part y Reform " in
Haas Center on Thursda y, March
23 at 11:00 a.m. under the
aus pices of the Artis t and Lecture
Series in cooperation with the
Simulated Democratic Conventi on and H istor y Conf erence.
The publ ic is cord iall y invited to
attend the Senator 's address f ree.
The three-tim e govern or of
Iowa , 1962-68, is no stran ger to his
topic. During the summer of 1968,
Hu ghes served as chairman of
the C omm i ss i on on the
of
Sel ec t ion
Democra ti c
grou
p
,
a
Pres idential Nominees
of
ref
orm
organ ized to promote
Party ' s
Democrat ic
the
nominat ion process. At the 1968
Democratic National Convention , h e l ed a successf ul
fight for historic reforms
to give peop le m ore voice
in nominating a president. , He
is currently serving as Vice-

¦aw



t

A. •_

- — ^.

A.

^

— m

^k

am

a few of his accomplishments.
Even after his election to the
Senate, he a tt ained nat ionwid e
recogn it ion when hi s f ell ow
Democr a tic governors t wice
elected him chairman of the
Democrat i c G overnors ' Conference. The 49 year old Senator
previously served as a member
of the Executive Committee of
th e Na ti onal Governors ' Conference for two years , as a
member of the Publ ic Of f icials
Advisory Council to the U.S.
Office of Economic Opportunity,
and a Trustee of the States Urban
Action Center. In 1969 he was
named chairman of the newly
created special subcommittee on
Alcoholism and Narcotics ,
established to focus attention on
the extent of alcoholism and drug
dependence in this country and
on the absence of adequate
programs for treating and
rehab ilitating victims of the

S ena te recommends
new calendar p lan
The University of Delaware
calendar plan which begins the
Fall semester early in September
and ends a few days prior to
Christmas with the Spring
semester starting late in January
and term inating late in May was
recom mended by the College
Senate at a special meeting
Wednesday. The calendar includes a "Winterim " session of at
least two weeks in length between
the Fall and Spring semesters.
The new calendar plan is
proposed
for the 1973-74
academic year but the college
administration has agreed to try
and implement a calendar for the
next aca demic year that will
-come as close as possible to the
new proposal.
COURSE OFFERING
The main thrust of the
discussion at the meeting which
was opened to visitors centered
around the types of courses to be
taught during the Winteri m
period. Some departments felt
the types of courses they offer do
not lend themselves to a short
stud y term while other depart-

ments could easil y design
courses tha t could adequa tely use
the time.
The faculty will probab ly settle
through APSCUF-PAHE the
number of teaching hours and
salary adjustments tha t may be
needed to imp lement the new
calendar. Now the faculty will
have the possibility of teac hing
two semesters , the Winterim
period , and two sessions of the
Summer School. An equitable
distribution of teac hing loads will
have to be designed.
STUDENT FEES

Student fees are presen tly paid
for 18 week semesters . The new
calendar may change the num ber
of weeks in a semester . Some
senators felt that studen t fees
should remain the same since
just the approac h to education is
being reorganized within the
semester system.
Student teaching assignments
will not be affected by the plan
since presentl y the student
teacher follows the calendar of
the cooperating school district.

AWS sponsors
aborti on panel
The Association of Woman
Students (AWS ) will sponsor
their fourth sexuality prog ram
tonight at 8:30 p.m. in the studen t
union . The progra m will be on the
controversial subject of abortion .
Debbie Ward , head of the
sexuality programs , has formed
a panel of six specialists . They
are as follows : (1) Dr . Marga ri te
Dallabreda , a gynecologist from
Mt . Carmel , (2) Mr. William
Krusher , . a lawyer from
Bioomsburg , (3) Mrs! Johnson , a
psychiatric-so cial worker from
Geisinger Hospital , (4) Dr.
William Hun t , a gynecologist

from Geisinger , (5) Dr. Gerold
for
Griffis , vice-president
Student Affairs at BSC , and (6)
Mrs . Ray Camp lese, a counselor
at BSC.
Each pa nelist will spea k in his
own special area. Dr. Griffis will
state the administrative policy
concerning abortion and Mrs.
Camp lese will explain the

counciling center 's program.

After the panel discussion a
question and answer period will
follow.
All are invited and there is no
admission charge .

|
UUtttU MV^^HMMS ^^ tfKittWIftl ^tfttbMlfc ^^^^^ ¦ "MiibkM«|M| ^^^^^^ h^WfMM^ULW ]

disease.

Peiffer J azz Trio to appear
at Art ist and Lectu re series
The Artists and Lecture Series
of BSC takes great pleasure in
presenting the fabulous Bernard
Peiffer Jazz Tri o, T uesda y
evening, March 7. Internati onally
renowned jazz pianis t Bernard
Pe iff er is acc om pan i ed by Al
Stauffer on the bass fiddle and
James Paxson on percussi on .
uor p in upinni , r nance , Bernard Pei ffer came from a family
in which classical music was an
impor tant part of life , He was
im pr ovising on the piano at the
age of five. He attended the Paris
Conservatory and was graduated
from the Mar seilles Con*
servator y.

'

artist 's as Rex Stewart , Charl ie
Parker , Dizzie Gillespi e, Gerry
cer tainty to everyone but Ber- M ull ig an and Mi les Davis.
nard Peiffer. As a student , he Among the grea t jazz pianist who
discovered A merican jazz , with came to hear Bernard Peiffer in
it s rh yt hm i c and im provlsational P ar is durin g th ose yea rs were
f reedom , and emer ged a con- Oscar Peterson , E rroll G arner ,
fi rmed j azz pi oneer , a dangerous Mar y Lou Williams , Earl H i nes
callin g i n Paris during the la t e and Thelonious Monk. As his
war y ears.
fame s pread , Peiff er pla yed at
In spite of his family 's wish f or t he Sport i n g C lub in Mon te Carlo ,
him to become a classical concert Casino Knockke Le Zoute in
pi anist , Peiffer switched to jazz. Belgium and the Lido in Paris ; he
playing under ground concerts also gave recitals at the Salle
with the grea t Django Reinhardt Pleyel and the Papais de Challlot.
and other famous jazz musicians.
In 1950 Peiffer struck out on his
After the war he concerned In
( continued on page five)
Euro pe with such America n jazz
His future

as a traditional

vi rtuos o concer t pi an ist seemed a

Mr. Louli Bruct, Commlitlontr At Indian Affairs , add* tiling
itudtnti, and faculty at tht Social Stud ltt Irutltu tt, hald Friday.

Maxosh Photo

W

'

¦

""

l.rttrr * to the vdilnr are an
expression of the individual
writer 's op inion and do not
necessarily reflect (he views of
the newspaper. All letters must
be signed , names will be withheld
upon request. The M & Dear Editor ,
Governor Shapp 's Commission the right to abrid ge in conwriter
, all
with
*
the
sultation
on Abortion is currently hearing
400
words
in
length
.
letters
over
testimony from both pro- and
anti-abortion forces . Recent
public opinion polls, accord i ng to
a publication of the Pennsy lvani a A ud i torium was full Friday
Abortion Coalition , indicate that evening as were most of the
t hose persons opposed to abortion dances in the union .
f or an y reason re presen t onl y 6
Shennadoa h has a strong, clean
per cent of the total population . sound even when Ripple or shoeBut , of the letters being received string or Gold is scarce . Any
by the Commission , this view band which has the following tha t
outweighs the communications Ral ph or Shennadoah has after
f rom those favoring legalized p la yi ng here several times
abortion . The anti-abortionist are cer tainl y demands more respect
funded by various grou ps; those than some writers are willing to
fav oring abortion have limited give. Their voices and inf unds , hence minimal lobbying struments are together more
power . It 's urgent that letters than any local group (excluding
defending abortion be received U pr oar ) since the times Prince
by the Commission before the Charles and t he Royal Tones
last hearin g on March 28.
played in the gym.
Presentl y Pennsylvania has
pending in house or senate five
Aimosi an oanas mat nave
bills pertaining to abortion . They made
it big hav e made it through
cover the spectrum from one Top 40. After they
made it and
which denies a woman an established a name
(Ex.
a bortion for any reason , even Emerson ,
Lake
and
Palmer
ra pe or German measles , to S.B. Seatrain; Jeff Beck With Rod;
928 which simply removes these Stewar t; and the James Gang ).
secti ons pertainin g to abortion Then they condemned Top 40 as
from the penal code, leaving
abortion under the medica l teeny bopp er . The union juke box
is Top 40 ail the way . The kids like
regulat ions governing an y other it.
So why is AM a dirty word ?
surg ical procedure. Action on all
legislat i on has been post poned
unt i l the results of t he Com Heav y, hard rock is on its way.
missions hearings are known .
James Tay lor , Joni Mitchell ,
The Commission is hearing Gorden Lightfoot and Carole
much "expert " testimony, but it King will take over . Those who
i s especially i nteres t ed in the expected Bread 's soft ha rmonies
opinions and experiences of the and sim ple melodies enj oyed the
t rue experts i n th is f ield , women . concert. Those who expected a
sound
If you believe t ha t each woman Led Zepplin-Jethro Tull
Who
style
Funk-T
he
and
a
Grand
has t he r ight to control her own
concert
a
sh
o
w
called
t
he
life and re p roduc t ive processes "
the
and
a
ri
p-off
.
When
"fiasco
even if you f eel t ha t y ou would not Tem p ta tio ns and Sa m & Dave
have an abort ion y ourself ; if you a pp eared i n Haas with a Button
fea r an unwan ted pregnanc y G uinette st y le light show y ears
legal
because the current
wild rough sound and a
situation would not permit you to ago, , arough
, half -drunk audience
wild
get a n abortion legall y (and
was
in
vogue.
Recently, n o one
safely) ; if your life has ever been
was
on t heir fee t at the James
affec t ed b y an unwanted G ang concert and t he Steve
pregnancy ; or if you have ever Miller Blues Band didn 't even
had an ab ortion , please write tor half fill the aud itorium.
Mary Stack , Sta ff Direc tor
Pennsy lvania Abortion Law
In calling Bread a second-ra te
Commission
group, one should listen to the
O ffice of the Govern or
Rollin g Stones , who are just
Harrisburg , Fa. 17120
getting into 1965 Memphis -sty le
All informa tion is confidentia l. soul.

Denny Wal ter

Letters

Music Ma n

by Joe Miklos
Denn y Wal t er is a big man ; he
goes about 200 pounds and looks
like he m ight ha ve played football a t one t ime . But that isn 't
Denny 's angle . Denny is the
owner of Pande m onium , a record
shop , located on East Street.
ine customer wains imu urc
store and i s confronted by a small
waterbed , rows of candles , incense burners and revolving
l i ghts , boxes of posters , and what
looks like an infinite numb er ot
mas on j ar s filled with i ncense in
flavors from coconut to watermelon. A huge old fashioned desk
t opp ed by paraphenalia of the
same typ e and a goldfish bowl
full of fops bubble gum proud ly
boas t ing " free " blocks the wa y
like a wooden castle. Behind the
desk i s a Son y St ereo and racks of
comix. But the main pr oduct is
still most obvious . All the shelves

The best way to lear n about
music is t o listen carefu ll y.
O ften you can catc h Denn y
bullshittin g rock music with a

customer . He knows his stuff and
gives advice indescri mina tel y. In
h i s own words : "Anything I
know , I' m willing to pass on. "
and racks of two walls are
Pa ndemonium .seems to be in a
covered by an amazin gl y large contit/ual state of expansion.
assortment of rock recordings . Denny started wi th a small stock
It ' s like a pi ece of the Eas t of albums and one box of posters
Village 1968 time-space warped in Septembe r 1971. In a short time
into Bloomsburg .
he built up a regular clientele
Denn y himself has been arou nd that keeps coming back . The
t he rock scene for q uite some store is still expanding .
time. Like most fanatics , he 's
Of course a record store

'

dealin g to a youthfu l audience is
sure to run into trouble in
Bloomsburg . Denny has in one
minor incident involving the sale
of flavored snuff to someone
under 18. That put an end to that :
Denny still sells the stuff
( "Cokesnuff " by name ) but now
he watches who 's buying . It ' s a
rather petty* gripe against him ,
since a 16 year old can buy
cigare ttes anywhere in town , no
questi ons asked.
Denny caters , to a large extent ,
to the * students of BSC and
regulates his business accordi ngl y. He closes when the
college lets out , reopens a day
before students come back .
"W hen the stude nts aren 't here , "
he claims , " I don 't do much
business. "
As the customer leaves, Denny
smiles throu gh h is thin , droopy
m oustache and lights another
Pall Mall stra ight. He's a -good
exam ple of hip capitalism , and
d igs the work : "If I didn 't enj oy
it , I wouldn 't do it. I'd go back to
work for my father . The pay
there 's much better. "
But then it would be a lot
harder to expand »his own record
collection.

The Re turn of Alc ohol
For the past coup le of years ,
friends and acquaintances of
m i ne ,
and
friends
and
acq uaintances of theirs ha ve all
tried dope in some form.
N aturall y, previousl y to the
onslaught of drugs , the regular
Sa t urda y nigh t diversion was
beer or some other f orm of
alc ohol .
wit h the ready availability of
drugs in the past few years , those
thrill-a-minute types who always
are first to try t he current fad fell
i nt o dope. For awhile it looked
like suburbia was going to turn
int o a middle-class opium den .
Suddenly , and only quite
recently, The pendulum seemed
to reach its summit. Now, the
trend is returning to liquor .

Part of this phenoma is due to
t he recen t deaths of popular stars

as a result of drugs. Janis Joplin ,
a singing star , died of an overThe Commission itself was
Many, many people enjoy ed dose of heroin. Jimi Hendrix , a
appoi nted because women were Bread , too many people are popular guitarist and singer , died
writing letters to Governor Shapp asha med toadmit that they enjoy as a result of an overdose of
and to the legisla t ors , some of love songs and simple melodies. sleeping pills. These dea th
whom would like the issue to It ' s not cool to like love songs, frightened many of the small
remain an acade mic matter dress nicel y or be straight. time drug users back to
forever. Numbers count , and People think it 's cool to be something relatively safe like
what you could say is valuable. wrecked all the time , wear booze.
Sincerely yours ,
The others who have switched
flannel shirts and blue jeans and
back
were concerned ab out
Anne Vau ghan
tell people that the Allman
For more information call: 784- Brothers , King Crimson , and t hese deaths but chan ged for
1242
Pink Floyd are great even thoug h different reas ons .
One rea son was the lack of
t hey never actually hea rd Pink
Floyd . If people could let scruples on the part of the dope
themselves go. But many people dealers. In a survey taken by
Dear Editor :
couldn 't let themselves go. They Rolling Stone , a hip newspape r , it
After reading the articles about had to be cool . Another thing — in wn s found that 70 per cent of all
the dances in the union and the journalism , aren 't ther e more d ope b ought on the street was not
Brea d concert , I began to wonder descriptive words in the English what it claimed to be , and tha t
some of it was danger ous , even
wha t the writers of the articles language besides "fuck"?
are trying ' to say . Haas
Bruce Musser Box 748 fatal . An example , pushers were
selling a drug called PCP , an
unpleasant ani mal tranquilize r ,
Editoria l Staff: Editor-in-chief,
Urn sachtttJ ; Busi ness
which , in combina tion with LSD,
Mana ger, Carol Klshbaugh ; Co-Managing Editors .
caused a man to pull his eyes out
KarenKeinar d and sut s pragi * ; News Editor, Frank Piinoll ;
while he was under the influenc e.
Assist ant News Editors , John Dsmpsty and Michael
showed
O ther
examp les
Meizlnger; Co-Feat ure Editors , Terry Blass and Jos Miklos ;
strychnine , which , used in
Sport s Editor, Bob Oliver ; Art Editor, Daniss Ross ; Cirmoderation , is a mild euphoric
culation Manager, Elaine Pongratz / Co-Copy Editors, Ellen
but , was found in lethal quanti ties
Doyle and Nancy Van Pslt ; Photography Editor , Tom
in pills sold in the street. A friend
SchoHeld ; Contr ibuting Cartoonist, John Stugrln ; Advisor,
of mine said , "I had to quit: It
Kan Hoffmen.
was getting like playing Russia n
Photogr aphy Staff: Mark Foucar t, Dan Maresh , Craig
roulette. "
Rubl e, Bob Rosansartan.
Y oung people lurne a dbck w
Reporters : Suiyann Upousky , Cindy Mlchanar, Leah
Skladany, Mike Yarmey , Danny Ouy»r, Don Em, Bob MeCsrmick , Ross Montayne , Paul Hoffman.
Office Staff! Barb Olllott, Joyce Iteefar , Ann Renn, Dabby
Yachym, Rutyt MacMurray .
TheM4QUlocated In rootw W WHIer,Ext , ttl, Box Ml.

been listening and wa tchin g since
he was in juni or high. He was
never in or working closely with a
group, but in 1969 he worked as a
disc j ocke y i n a Dutch
disc otheque. Live music wasn 't
i n v ogue in H olland at the time , so
Denny had to kn ow his music
well. "The drinki ng age is 16
t here , so I was dealing with a
voung audience. "
He openl y admits tha t "most of
m y kn owledge comes from
maga zines... " More im portant
however is the fact that Denny 's
personal album collection contains well over 1000 recordin gs.

booze for simple reasons , then .
First , booze is pure , and the most
that can happen to you from too
much boozeis that you fall asleep
and wake , up with a hangover. It
won't kill you (unless you drive

with it) and it was pretty cheap.
movement ,
Not ing
this
distillers began inventi ng lighter ,
sm oother whiske ys and blends
and vineyards began pr oducing
"pop " wines (such as app le
strawberry-flavored
wines ,
wines ) trying to cash in on the
youth market. Relying on the
t he or y that younger people have
m ore sensitive t aste buds and
t hat ligh t liquors and wines t hat
drink like soda pop would be
m ore acceptable t han the harsh
bourbon and scotches . liquor
companies began to clean up.
And youn g people were turning

into near alcoholics.
And they still are. There are
tales of friends of friends that ,
like the beatniks of the late fift i es, sta y drunk almost all the
time. So although alcohol was
reducing one problem , it was
creat ing anot her of its ' own .
Personally, though , I am not
t oo alarmed by this trend. Once
the y oung people are out of
college and settle down , they will

find hangovers more of a bother
than they are wor th and we 'll
ma y be see the end of the drinking
and drug pr oblem combined .

At 11 a.m. in Haas Gallery
Dr. Joseph Price will speak on
"Hamlet as Renaissance
Pr inca " on Thurs., March 3.
Coffee Hour 3 p.m. by Dr.
Price .

mfl fcuuftN ft

Wo ke Up !
Be a Delega ie
to th e
Simula ted
Democratic
Convention I

uhEd

ui rTW

*"^
vo Tf®?
2

f

Burkhol der , Hanior d, McClinto ck

CGA Candida tes speak
Editor 's Note: The M&G
receive d th e following campaign state ment s fr om the
candida tes currency running
for the CGA offi ces of
president and vice-p resident.
The candi dates are Dan
Burkh older and Bill Hanford
who are seeking the office of
president, and Doug AAc Clintoc k who is running for
vjce-president.
The electio ns will be held on
March 13 and 14. We urg e
everyone to get out and vote.

DAN BURKHOLDER

F or the past seven months I
have served as a re presentative
of t he Community Govern ment

Associati on to College Counci l.
After t his ex p osure to our
communi t y government , it is my
opinion tha t the CGA will not be*
a vita l part of the college communit y unless STUDENTS show
m ore interest in prom oting the
CGA.
A portio n of tne community has
l ost faith in the CGA , and some
have invest igated other ty pes, of
governmental s t ructures for
dreams of bette r results. The
t ru t h is, the present CG A with

certain constitutional revisions
can be effective if the governed

ar e interes ted in its functi ons.
The C GA i n past years has had
financial allocat i ons as i ts
primary functi on. Most people in
our college communit y are not
thrilled about allocations to
organizations and small purchases such as pro jector lamps .
It is my belief t hat the CGA
should chan ge its outlook so that
m ore persons would be interested
rec omdecisions and
in
mendations wh i ch the C G A
origina tes.

The following are a number of
oints
which I believe would
p

increa se th e effectiveness of our

Co mmunit y
Government
Association . I will strive to
achieve the following if elected: 1) Establishing a separate

comm i t t ee to anal yze financial

alloca tions in order to limit the
l im e spent on financial affairs at
Council.
2) Become more involved in
academ ic affairs , encouraging
t eacher evaluations , course
evaluat ions
and
recommendat i ons for schedul ing and
calendar changes.
3)
Advertising
Council
m eetings and encouraging
members of the college commun ity to attend thro ugh the use
o f i ncen ti ves such as short
movies and refreshments.
4) Establish a committee to

evalua t e student opinion through
t he use of p olling and a
suggest i on box , in order to better
re present the members of the

commun ity .
5) Revisi on of the CGA consti tut ion is needed to make a
more effective CGA. As presiden t
I will work for that revision .
AS A MEMBER OF THE
COMMUNITY , I H OPE YOU
W I L L CO NSIDER VOTIN G FOR
ME AS PRE SIDENT O F THE
CGA.
BILL HANFORD

I w i ll n ot bore you with my list
of qualifications for president. If
you know me then t hat is enough
since for .« o long of a time I have
worked wh.i the nuts and bolts of
CGA.
Currentl y I am Co-Chairman of

Racism ? Patr iotism ?

(he
Constitution
Revision
Committe e in which we are rewriting th e Constitution of CGA

and turning it into a stronger

community to the Association for

consideration ," CGA will start
dealing with a lot more things
t han all ocating money . This will

org anization to better serve be the re-birth of student power
students. With thi s new con- at B S C .
situation , which will be ready in a
A rticle 8, Section 2, Clause (a)
few weeks , stron g leadership will which states tha t "The Presiden t
be t he essence of ma pping out the shall a ppoint all stan ding and
relationship of CGA to the Senate. sp ecial
committees ."
As
President I would appoint a
leadership is important in the re- STUDENT
GRIEVAN CE
birth of student rights and this CO MMITTEE to be established.
leader shi p shall not be controlled
by any one person or group of whereby students who get dicked
- persons , and no students will be in a course or flunk out would be
sold out like two years ago when able to come and talk to these
CG A ra ti f ied the Constitution of commi t tee members and find out
t he Senat e and thus gave away all what can be done . As it is right
it s i m port ant powers except the now there is no such committee
allocation of money.
a nd students often have no place
to turn. As President , CGA will
return
t o an organization for
One would think that all CGA
students.
For too long of a time ,
does is give away money , your
the
students
at B.S.C. have been
money, money you pay each year
getting
the
shaft
and run around
i n t he form of Commun it y Actreatment
by
the
administration.
tivities Fee. Currentl y it is $50 a
This
is
coming
to
an end .
year per student , I suspect that in
the nea r future this will go up due
I hereb y challenge Dan to a
to the present CGA spending . One deba te on the role of CG A , I hope
of my plank s on my platform for t he students sake , he accepts.
i s Budget Revision . Speaking in There is hope at B.S.C. to save
l i ne wit h Bud get Revision , CGA studen ts r ights which for so long
has a large amount of mon ey that have been t ram p led upon .
can be put to good use, I would
PEA CE
like to see CGA make loans
available to Fraternities and
DOUG MCCLINTOCK
Sor orit i es in order tha t they be
able to buy houses for them "So me people see things as
selves. It turns my stomach when they are and say why . I'dream
I see t he sha pe and condition of things tha t never were and say
current Fra t and Sororit y houses why not. "
for the amoun t of rent they pay.
For my cam paign as VicePresident
, I wish to use
In t he past , CGA has been no these wordsof bCGA
y
Robert
Kenned y
, more than a means of allocatin g
t
o
ex
p
ress
m
y
views
of the
money , but in the future with the
Community
Government
AssoSTR ONG enforcement of Artic le
n
io
ciat
.
7 , Section 1, clause (e) : " It shall
"Many students feel that
be the duty and responsibility of
(he Council to refer matters C ollege C ouncil i s j ust a
which effect the entire college budgetor y re q uest committee ,

where student

organ izations

come to us for money and CGA
will just rubber stamp these

requests. I believe that the
majority of students feel that this
is all that CGA does.
But according to the Constituti on of CGA , the potential is

there to do a lot of good for

students . This potential is just
waitin g to be ta pped . If we ado pt

a new and stronger Constitution
for our own studen t government

that th is will be the greatest asset

to the students at this college that
now CGA will be able to become
more involved in academic affairs (such as course and prof
evalua tions) , and also in administrative affairs.
The role of CGA Vice-President
i n this si tuation is to lose the
image of just being in char ge of
Big Name Entertainment; But
take a lead ing role in the
res ponsib ilit y along with the CGA
Pres ident to take the initiative to
develo p CG A to its fullest
potential as an instrument for
student government ; So that the
students of BSC can have a
student governmenfrtha t they can
believe in and take part in.

"Matrices "
" Grou ps of Matrices " is the
subject of a lecture to be spon-

sored by the mathematics
Department . Dr . Ja mes C .
Pomfret of Clemson University
will be the first speaker in a
series of three lectures for upper
level graduate studen ts and

faculty members .
This lectur e will be held
Monda y, March 13 at 3 P.M. in
Room 78, Hartline Science
Center .

of John Q. Timbrell in today 's
from Morning Press
Certain officials of the local Morning Press. If it is supposed
College published an an - to be a joke , I find it quite
nounce ment recent ly ; Re: the humorles s. Is it possible Mr.
visit of Black congresswoman Timbrell does not know that our
Chishol m to the campus . The country is mad e up of many
article reports her district to ethnic groups who are native
have 70 percent blacks and bor n Americans?
Puerto Ricans with the rest being America is Mrs . Chisholm s
Jewish , Polish , Ukranian , and home . She was invited here and a
Italian . What? No Americans ? guest in our community . She
Would it be bette r for her to stay should be as welcom e here as

hom e and get these people much as any other presidential
natura lized so that they can vote?
Or is this racism?
John Q . Timbrell , Bloomsbu rg .
Letter s to the editor.. .
Reply to Timbrell
I am dismayed over the letter

candidate

American .

or

any

other

Racism is what prompts letters

like Mr. Timbrell 's.
Geraldine

Orangeville.

T.

Percey,

~-

-



Drug Abuse Center
-



The for mal openin g of a dru g
abuse treatment center at
Veterans
AdBrookl yn
ministration Hospital , October 6,
brou ght the number of dru g
rehabilitation centers operated
by VA to 32.
Brooklyn was the 27th drug

The Iceberg Play In, ¦very different went In the way of entertainment at BSC, drtw an approciativ *audience to the Student
Union on Sunday. Tht rt was no lack of talent as heretofore hidden
musical talents emerged from hidin g for the three hour program.
f l»tmHal mhmtaaV
\
9%nUnWNft.|NIVI
9m I

treatment unit opened since June
when VA announ ced plans for a
six-fold increase in its specialized
units for veteran dru g abusers.
Flve.units were operating in June
1971, at the time President Nixon
called for a government wide
effort to deal with dru g abuse.
Administrator s of Veteran

^^



— --,

~~

— ^~ ~ — . ~ ~

.

^
v
^
p
^
^
H
^
^
.
H
^
^
n
f
H
^
B
^
i^
^
H
^

^
^ ^^i
i
^
H
B
^
p
m
m
v
m
v
iv
p

*
^

Aff airs , Donald E. Johnson , staffin g for these programs , and
noted that as a part of his total their
maximum
possible
attack on drug abuse, the utilization by veterans /' Johnson
President in his message asked added .
Congress to increase the VA
In another step to help veteran
budget by $14,000,000 "to permit dru g users , VA has classified
the immediate Initi ation of this dru g dependence as a medical
(VA) pr ogram. " With the extra emergenc y for purposes of admoney, Johnson said, VA has mission to VA Hospit als. Adavailable in its current budget ministrator Johnson has dire cted
$17 , 162 ,000 for its dr ug , all 165 VA hospitals to admit all
rehabilitation program s in /Jscal . eligibl e
applicants
for
yp v 1971
..; hospitallxatio nand to encoura ge

- niis money win m used ex* those >vho Inquire about treat cluiivelyfor VA drug tre atment ' ment to accept hospitaU utioa.
programs , and the . highest
"U a patient, afteradmlssion,
priorit y his been assigned to the
(continued on page eighty

Thursday

The Bloomsburg Players Present

» &**
thru

RICHA RD III

Gatesby (Lin Naylor ) corne rs Lord Hasting s (Tony Kohl ) con cerning Hasting 's allegiance to
Richard.

Photo s
by
Ruble
¦ ¦ ¦^
^
^

(Ralph Smiley ) confers
Richard
Buckingham ( Dan Pemcxko ).

wi th

con federate

his

¦ IIM ^HnKHii
M^

Clasping his rosary, King Richard plays the innocent prince,
"repenting and>qeditating" at the monastary.
^HKKBI

Kin g Edward (Kim Johns ) tries to consolidate his friendships before he dies .

~~
m^^^H MHm ^MHw ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

^^^^^^^^^

*

^s

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

^^^ ^^^"^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

King Richa rd forces Queen Elliab ttti (Kath y Simpson ) to glw up-her daught er, Lady Ann ,to be hit
bride.

' ""—^^^ i^B^mmmKmmmmmmi ^mmmmmmmmmmmmm

The first to ally himself with Richard, Buckingham Is the last to
suffer the loss of his hoad to bloody Richard' s axe .

Gradu at e gra nt s in
social work offered
The 1972-73 list of grants to
students in graduate schools of
social work is available to
students on request from the
College Placement Office. Offered by Family Service agencies
in membership of the Family
Service Association of America ,
" the grants vary in their conditions for eligibility and in the
amount of money they entail
Candidates must be accepted for
admission to- their graduate
schools and should inquire about
other grants available through
v the school.
The list of grants available in
Pennsylvania is as follows:
Family and Children 's Service of
Lancaster County, 630 Janet
Lancaster
17601
Avenue ,
Scholarship on basis cf need up to
$2 ,500 a year, for graduate study,
to present or prospective staff
members. ( Committed for 197273.) Jewish Family Service of
Philadelphia, 1610 Spruce Street,
Philadelphia 19103 Scholarship
available to first or second year
students. Work-study plans
available to third year and
doctoral students. Field work
placement at agency for period
required by school. Fixed amount
granted. No commitment.
Previous admission to accredited
school of social work required.
(JFS is a field work agency for

University of Pennsylvania
School of Social Wor k , and
Temple University School of
Social Welfare Administration.)
Apply to school. Family and
Children 's Service, 327 F if t h
Avenue, Pittsburgh 15222 Agency
usually has two stipends
available for each calendar year,
for two $3 ,000 scholarshi ps
depending on the budgetary
needs of the applicant . Work
commitm ent
re q u i r e d .
Preference given to applicants
who are successfully completing
a first .year in a graduate school
of social work. If possible ,
recipients are requested to work
in the agency during the summer
before the second year, at the
usual salary.
Agency also provides tuition
for staff members in the first
phase of a part time program
offered by the University of
Pittsburgh Graduate School of
Social Work and releasestime for
courses one day a week. Apply to
agency directly by writing to
Mary Ellen Hoffman , Director of
Casework.
For a list of accredited schools
and comprehensive information
about all sources of grants for
graduate students in social work ,
write: Council on Social Work
Education , 345 East 461h St reet,
New York , N .Y. 10017.

Alice Neel Art exhibit
in Haas during Marc h
Alice Neel, well known artist
from New York will be on the
BSC campus in residence from
March 20 to March 23. A large
exhibition of her work will be
hung in Haas Gallery during the
month of March.
Alice Neel's tentative schedule
while at BSC will include
critiques with students , visiting
the painting classes , informal
talks to other studio and art
history classes , a gallery talk
open to the campus community

'

~ ¦

"

¦

^^B^^^BM a^^MM^^^VWM^HB^BH^M^HtVBaBH^^^^^H^BOV^^HHWVIiaH^

^H^m ^VM^V

Who says all the M&G's wind up in the Husky trashcan?

Greek
» News

Three new members- were literature . One need not be a
recentl y admitted to Delta Phi German major to be eligible.
The Zeta Nu Chapter plans
Alph a , (he National German
Honor Society: Susan E. monthly meetings throughout the
Dy m eck , Judith Orman , and semester, and a picnic with the
William Williams. The BSC Phi Chapter at Bucknell
chapter is designated as the Zeta University this spring. The
Nu Chapter , and was founded in current student membership is
1967 by ils current faculty ad- five , while the faculty memvisor . Professor C. W. Carpenter.
bership is six.
Students must be at least
TR1-SIG
juniors , have had at least a 3.0
cumulative grade average in the
The following girls are
semester preceding induction , a members of the first pledge class
minimum average of 85 in two of the Delta Zeta chapter of
yea rs of college-level German , a Sigma Sigma Sigma sorori ty :
minimum a verage of 80 percent
in all non-Germanic subjects, and Debbie Belles, Carol Detwiier,
Karen Link , Bette Lithgow , Sue
a continued interest in the study ¦Kel
lerman , Luana Kowal , Sa ll y
of German language and

and public, and visits with interested students in the faculty
lounge.
Among her latest honors in 1971
were an Honorary Decorate
Degree from Moore College of
Art and the recipient of the
Altman
Award , National
Academy of Design.
The exhibition and week 's
progra m is under the sponsorship
of the Arts Council which is
( continued from page one )
supported by student activities
ii wii, formed a trio and settled at
fees.
the Club SI. Germain de Pres on
the Left Bank of Paris. While he
wj is I here, lie made records,
winning the Grand Prix du
Disque twice ; scored and played
t he scores of several movies, and
most important was heard
enough to achieve a reputation as
Europe 's greatest and most
important jazz figure .
Poiffcr came to America in
1954 , and astonished both
musicians and the public with
his originalit y , astounding
technique , and the immediacy of
his communication with his
listeners. Now he is recognized
not only for his amazing
technique al Ihe piano, but for his
innovations in the field of jazz
and jazz composition. As a true
pioneer of jazz , he was among the
first to combi ne the classical
forms ( from Bach to Schoenberg ) with Ihe jazz idiom ,
(•renting n unique , contemporary
sound which is widely imitated
nil over Ihe world by jazz
musicians.

Bernard Peiffe r

'

IVTill ar d , Ronda Punda (scribe ) ,

Paula Sarday, Dale Sawyer, Lois

Smi t h , Ann Turnbach and Amy

Jo Uhlenburg (p ledge class
president).
Pledging is an important event
of the spring semester, but Tri
Sigma has been busy in other
ways also. On Sunday, February
13, Ihe sisters initiated alumni
into the bonds of Sigma
sisterhood . They are : Miss
Margaret Kelly, Mrs. Christine
Whit more (a. Spanish professor at
BSC) and Miss Patti Dougherty
(allumnc of Theta Gamma Phi ) .
We welcome our new sisters. The
sisters and pledger , along with
the brothers of Phi Sigma Kappa ,

P eiffer J azz Trio
Village
Composer ,
The
Vanguard ) , Chicago (London
House ) , Los Angeles (Donte 's) ,
Washington , Philadelphia and
Boston. The Trio has appeared on
television with Sammy Davis ,
.Jr. ; on Ihe Tonight Show with
J ohnny Carson , the Captain
Kiingeroo Show , and on the
Nati onal Education Television
Network and on CBC (Canada ) ,
coast lo^ coast. Cheered in concerts all over Ihe United States ,
The Bernard Peiffer Jazz Trio is
a grea t favorite of college and
university audiences.
Mr. Peiffer has composed
music for a "special" on the CBS
Television Network , and for a
prize-winning film .
Bernard Peiffer has been
ta iled by critics as one of the alllime greats of jazz : "Peiffer , the
Astounding " '— "Peiffer , Ihe
Oroiitest ."

Ba rry Ulanov , one of the most
res pected and widel y read jazz
tri lls, has written : " There can
he lillie question about Peiffer 's
co mmanding p osition in j azz.
Nob ody I 've hea rd matches his
Bernard Peiffer has built a skill as an improviser and his
faithful following of fans thr ough thorough knowledge of his inconst to coast concert tours , strument . He ranges from simpl e
nppearnaces al the Newport Jazz lilues to the massive and
Festival and other jazz "mcc- maj estic; he is capable of wit and
ooa " , playing as soloist with the of sheer rhy thmic exuberance ,
Glenn Miller Band , Woody iris vigor is very much his own ,
Herman Quin tet , and the Benny developed under the impetus of a
Goodman Sextet. The Ber nard pers onality rich in the excellence
Peiffor Jazz Tri o has recorded of positive , direc t , unreserved
albums for " Decca , Pol ydor , statement. His music must be
Mercury and Lau rie Records , heard , and his name ought to be
and has played marath on runs in long rem embered. His arrival on
jazz rooms in New York (Bird- the scene is an event in American
land, Basin Street , The Embers . jaw. history. "

' continued on natie snvrn )

Al Stauffc r ( Bass Fiddle) , a
nnlive of Slowe, Pennsylvania ,
has .appeared with many of the
lending artists in the jazz and
popular music fields. He has
recorded with Savanah Churchill ,
Frankie Avalon , Bobby Rydell ,
nnd Buddy Greco. He has 'backed
up' such notable stars as Anthony
Newley , Tony Bennett , Stan Getz ,
Bill Evans, Billie Holiday, and
Bud Powell. Mr. Stauffer has also
played with the Ray McKinley —
Glen Miller Band.
James Paxson ( Percussion)
attended
the Philadelphia
Musical Academy. He has
worked with big bands , small
groups and experimental ensembles. He has won acclaim at
many jazz festivals throughout
the country, including the
Villanova , Ohio Stale , Miami and
SI . Louis Jazz Festivals. He has
played jazz as well as rock with
liis own group, and has appeared
with Delia Reese and Bobby
Rydel .
Tickets avnilable at the door on
Ihe evening of the concert.
Reservations may be made by
telephone or mail to M. J.
Mcllnlc , Rlo omsburg State
College.
BULLETIN
Ernk Lundguist, fame d
beauty judge, hat bnn tetn
walking t ht BSC camp us. Ho
told a reporter, " I likt what I
set/ so far. "
P.S. "G irl*, smi le when you
wal k. "

Huski es rebound ;
Kutztown the vi cti m
by bob Oliver
The BSC Huskies completely
annililated an outclassed Kutztown team, 122-71, before the first
less than capacity crowd at
Centennial this year . Led by

Again

it

was

a

case

of

Bloomsburg scoring at will . At
10:15, the bench was cleared , and

at 9:12, freshman Gary Tyler
scored his first varsity points . He
finished with 12 points in 10+
minutes.
At 8:56, the Huskies hit the
century mark , and the lead
varied from 45 points and up.
From early in the first half ,

substitute ballhandler Tony
DaRe, who scored 24 points and
had five assists, the Huskies just
ran through the Bear defense.
The Huskies started out with a
press, and this caused both teams there was no doubt who would
to run and shoot. Bloom moved win . The only question was by
out to an early 17-10 lead at the how much .
15:23 mark , which turned out to

Another new face playing his

be the closest the Bears would first varsity game was Dick
ever come for the rest of the Grace , who pulled seven
rebounds to end up second on the
game .
team in this department .
Coach
Chronister
wanted
a
big
.
STATISTICS
win , and with the pres s on,
<1 V UTS
started sending in fresh reserves
6 1 13
early . Bloom seemed to be Johnson
2 0 4
scoring at will , and held a 21 point Willis
6 4 16
lead at the 7:18 mark of the first Luptowski
^¦A

half. This went steadily up as
DaRe began to hit . The half
ended with a 70-36 Bloom lead.
The first string started the
second half , with Art Luptowski
getting 3 quick steals and soloing
twice. Kutztown was held
scoreless for the first 2:19 of the
second half , and many people
lef t

Kuhn
Choyka
Consorti
Mealy
DaRe
Schwartz

Hamilton

Grace
Tyler
TOTALS

Girl 's B-Ball team
dr op two

by Lea h Skl ada ny

The girls' varsity basketball
team began their season with a 02 record following defeats by
Millersville and Marywood.
In the first game of the season
t hey found themselves traveling
to Millersville to cope with an
unfamiliar court and a distinct
height disadvantage. As the
game began, Millersville won the
tap and put in 12 points before we
were able to capitalize on our
first bucket. They had problems
with a press which was an effective measure in Millersville's
victory. The game ended in a 5527 defea t .
The next game was at
Marywood College. Once again
the tea m had problems getting
started and the halftime score
was 21-3 in favor of Marywood .

7
4
3
3
9
2
2
0
4
48

-A

A

0
1
7
2
6
1
0
0
4
26

**S

14
9
13
8
24
5
4
0
12
122

The second half was an entirely
different ball game, however ;
and a full-court press enabled
Bloomsburg to pull within 2
points early in the fourth quarter.
This drive was not enough,
though , and the final score was
36-29 with Marvwood victorious.
Miss McComb, the team coach ,
feels this season's slow start is
due to a late organization of the
learn. She feels tha t compared to
the other league teams the tea m
had little time to work together.
This decisive fact is being
remedied with the increased
experience of the team.
The next game will be Thursday March 2 at 4 p.m. against
Wilkes College. It will be the first
home contest of the season and
the girls will be looking for vour

Howard Jo ^^
Coach Charles Chro nister talkin g to senior Co-Captains Paul Kuhn and
^
^

Huskies lose tw o in O-T
by Bob Oliver

This past week has been a
pinch on my nerves as far as the
BSC Basketball scene goes — a
70-68 squeeker over the Eagles of
Lock Haven , a double overtime
loss to East Stroudsburg, and an
overtime loss to the Mounties of
Mansfield , when the Huskies
could do nothing right.
Al Stroudsburg, it was a close
game from the beginning. A
quarter way through the half the
Huskies held a 5 point lead. The
Wa rriors tied the game 2 minutes
later , and went up by 6 a minute
later .
Art Luptowski had 3 fouls in the
first 15 minutes , and had to be
benched. The team had many
men in foul trouble, contributing
greatly to Strouds being able to
go to the basket.
The Huskies closed to 39-36 at
the half.
In the second half , Bob Consorti
tied the score, but Husky turnovers put them down by 5. John
Willis got his 4th foul at 15:59 and
had to sit out. With him went the
Husky rebounding for a while.
The Huskies narrowed , and
finally tied the score, at 7:55, but

the Warriors went back up by 6.
Howard fouled out at 3:36. Willis
t ook up the scoring slack with 6
quick points; but the Warriors
jumped ahead by 6. Art Lupt owski and Paul Kuhn both
scored to narrow to 76-74 with 18
seconds left. Consorti scored at
the 4 second mark to send the
game into overtime.
First Overtime
Early in the first overtime,
Consorti fouled out , and the
Huskies lost even more
rebounding. The game was tied
at 2:20, and Bloom held until they
could get the last shot. This was
in vain , and the game moved into
double overtime.
The Warriors jumped to a
quick 3 point lead as Griffin was
scoring. We closed to within 1 at
1 :24 , but Stroud scored again and
then added some garbage to win ,
90-85.
MANSFIELD
The game against Mansfield
started off sloppy , as the Huskies
didn 't score a bucket until 16:26.
In the early going, the lead
changed hands 7 times. The
Mounties jumped out by 8, but the

Huskies closed to 3 at the half.
The second half was as close as
the first , each team not being
able to jump to a substantial lead.
In fact , the game was tied at the
end of regulation.
In the overtime, with Willis out
on fouls, the Huskies were again
out-rebounded. A Kuhn bucket
tied the game at 74, and a Luptowski bucket gave us the lead.
Mansfield tied, and got the ball on
a Husky turnover at :57. Mansfield held for the last shot, and
scored with 6 seconds left. The
Huskies weren't able to call time
until 3 seconds were left , and a
desperation shot by Gary Choyka
from midcourt hit the back of the
rim. The final , 80-78.
What' s Wrong?

The Huskies have played three
bad games in a row . Why?
Nobody knows. They 've been
messing up on the fundamentals
too much. Could it be that they 're
looking past these games and
toward the District 19 playoffs?
At least subconsciously? Let's
hope not , they need momentum to
keep them up for the playoffs.
Time will tell.

(continue d on pag* «»v«n)

TRACK IS BACK

by Paul Hoffman

What do you think about the
sport of tra ck and field? Do you
enjoy watching it or participatin g
in it? How would you rate it with
other sports along the lines of
athletic ability involved? Is it up
(here with football , hockey,
wrestling, swimming, basketball
and baseball? It should be.
I've read and heard that the
people who compete in track and
field games are rated tops in all
around athletic abilities. Would
you like some names to back it
"up? Ok , how about Jim Thorpe ,
Jesse Owens , Bob Mathias and
Bill Toomcy .
What do you think about tr ack
and field here at B.S.C.? Do you
follow it like you do football ,
basketball or wrestling? Not too
many people do . In f act , \'d
wager that the tentative track
l earn roster outnumbers the
students who really follow the
team.
Our track team is good. Very
good . Last yea r their indoor dual
and quad , meet record was 17-0
establishing 19 new tea m records
for B.S.C. They were Ceda r Cliff
relay cham ps, league mile relay
champs at the Penn Relays,
runner up in 1971 B.S.S.C. invitati ona l indoor track meet with
other schools competin g such as

Lehigh , Lafayette , Saint Josephs, evident , I asked the coach what
and West Chester , and they took a keeps the team as good as it is.
3rd in state conference track and He mentioned one basic
credential : the love for the sport.
field.
A good track team has got to be He also said "My men are
l ed by a good coaching staff. In competitors . Our main job is to
this case it' s head coach Ron , be competitive and I can 't think
Puhl and assistant coaches Carl of one meet where we haven't
shown it. " Charlie Graham , a
Hinkle and Dr. Clyde Noble.
On Monday, Feb. 21, I talked member of the team , had been
with coach Puhl for about an hour standing in the doorway,
listening. He interrupted saying,
on the upcoming season .
If it
First we talked about some of "You can put this down.
,
't
for
the
coach
the
tea
m
wasn
the teams ' top performers that
't
be
what
it
is
and
that's
wouldn
were lost at graduation : Bruce
Bittner — 440 relay record the truth. "
Coach Puhl embarassedly
holder , Steve Ryznar — 2 time
lowered
his head and smiled .
state champ in the triple jump,
Right
there
I saw one of the
Rich Brand — pole vault , James
grea
t est assets a team can ever
Gayallero — Javelin and Rich
hav
e,
an inter-respec t and adGeise, a fine all around commiration
between the coach and
petitor.
team.
Nex t the topic of facilities came
Pressed for time , Coach Puhl
up. "Right now we have hope for
ended
our short meetin g by
the new facilities. We need a
"I want my men to get
saying,
place to call our own. A place
the
recognition
they deserve. I
where 35 guys can all work out
feel
fortunate
to
have
the type of
together. "
go
out
and
compete
the
guys
who
The tea m practices on all parts
against
a
lot
of
inway
they
do
of cam pus. Spr i nts are held on
odds,"
surmountable
t he sidewalk out side of Sutliff
B.S.C. students should feel
H all. Hurdlin g i s p racticed in t he fortunate
i n havin g t his fine tea m
bas ement of E lwell Hall. W hat and coachin
g staff representin g
room that' s available i n the gym them .
i s used to ever y extent and who
Coming up in future issues: a
knows where the distance runclose look at each event plus
ners go.
Interviews
with , team members.
With these and other ha ndicaps

Stnlon Paul Kuhn, Bo* Contort! , and Hftwwrtf .fetat ion.
(Ollvar photo )

Tankmen drop 4th
The Husk y Tankmen went
down before a strong Clar ion
State College Swimming team
Saturda y afternoon in Centennial
gym. The final score was 76-37.
Th is is (he end of the Husky 19711972 swimming season. The fina l
r ecord for the year is ten wins
a nd f our losses.
An usuall y large number of
rec ords were erased during the
last meet. Clarion set pool
records in the 400 yard freesty le
rela y, 3:24.5 ; the 500 yard
freestyle, 5:10.8; and the 400 yard
medley relay, 3:50.8.
The BSC team also set record s.
Eri C Cureton topped the team
record for the number of points
gained in the one-meter required
diving. Dave Gibas tied his team ,
pool and national record in the 50
yard freest yle. The 400 yard
f reest yle t eam of Dave Gibas ,
Jon Stoner , Doug Yocum , and
Bob Herb set a new team record
of 3:24.6."

intercollegia t e sw imming .
The 400 yar d freest yle relay
l earn of Dave G ibas , Jon Stoner ,
Doug Yocum, and Bob Herb will
be particularl y anxious to attend

(he state cham pionships. This is
because the Clari on 400 yard
f reest y le relay tea m beat them
by one-tenth of one second. This
was the firs t defeat suffered by
that team in the 400 yard
freesty le all year .
The same tea m pius nen
N arsewicz will be continuin g

training for the NAIA competition which will be held at
South West Minnesota State
College March 23, 24, 25. The

decision to send the relay team
has not been finalized at this

time. Much will depend on the
performance
at the state
cha m pionshi ps. Dave Gibas , who
holds the national record for the
50 yard freestyle and placed
fourth in the 100 yard free style
will be entered in the nationals
again this year.

The performances given were
extremel y competitive when
compared to that of the other

teams of the conference. BSC
scored more points against the
Golden Eagles than West Chester
did.
Defending cham pions , Clarion ,
ha d th e inside lane on re tainin g
t he swimming cham p ionship
crown. The real battle will be for
second place. East Stroudsburg ,
MHlersville , West Chester and

Bloomsburg will be contending

for tha t spot . Other teams expected to enter the champio nsh ips are California , Slippery
R ock , Lock Haven and Kutztown.
Ed i nboro , Shippensburg and
Mansf ield may have some entri es
as the y are in their first year of

Pages 7 & 8

Pics by
DAN MARESH

The ending of the fr eestyle.

^HI ^BMB ^^ i^B^^ BHa ^^^ l^HBB ^a^
IB ^HBH ^HHBH ^BHHU
Hai ^ Hi ^ iHaHHHHi

BOWLING SURVEY

BSC Results of Faculty Survey on Interest in Bowling
YES NO

60 U
1. I bowl occasionall y.
54 16
2. Members of my family bowl occasionally.
3. I and-or members of my family would probably use ttie
bowlin g lanes in the colle ge union if they were installed . 69 19
4.. I would be interest ed in partici pating in a fa culty bowling
47 29
league.
$.. I recommen d that bowling lanes be Installed in the colle ge
83 12
union.

Greeks

collected $200 for Cerebral Palsy
on Febru ary 14. Each Sigma also

made a small stuffed animal for

our national project , the Robbie
Page /Memorial. The toys were
sent to the North Carolin a
Memorial Hospital at Chapel
Hill. Here Tri Sigma has contributed nearly a quarter of a

Girls B-Ball
( continued from page six)
support.

Millersville statistics
FG F PTS
Lucadamo
3 0 6

Mover

Santo

Holgate

million
dollars
for
th e Artz
rehabilitation of seriously ill Shepherd

•children.

Only the Best Home
Cooked Food Served
behind Efwell Nightly

Insta

Wp
^
W^
^—
^^l«^^r
-Printe d
^WwHlf1

Sport swear

you choo t* your do)flgn...w# apply It right th«n , rig ht the>ro>.
tokos lost than a minutot croato a "o no-of-a-klnd " or special
group decorat ion.

NOW AT THE COLLEGE STORE

Hamburg Hoaglos
Cheeseburasr Hooglet
Casino Sandwich
Pleroglot

Corner
Lun ch
'that

Rolling

Kitchen

on Wheels"
"Come Down cmd eoo
our Fabulous Menu"

5:00 p.m. to Midnits

.. i .

¦*



14 6
0 2 2
3 2 8

10 2
1 1 3
TOTAL
27
Mary wood game statisti cs

Luca damo

Sano

Holga te
Shepherd

TOTAL

PTS

9

5

6
9
29

Guys & Otis needad for summer
•mploymm t at numerous loo*
tkm throughou t the nation In*
oludln i National Parka, Raton
Arm, and Privt ta Camps , far
fno Information lend esftad *
dnastd , STAMPED envelope to
Op pert unity Rtwaroti, Ot pt
W0 , Century Bldi., Poison, MT
»m0. APPLICANTS MUST
ArflY t A W L Y . . .

COLLEG E COM MUNITY
ORCHES TRA

The College Community orchestra will present a concert on
Sunday afternoon, March 5, 1972,
at 3:15 p.m., in Carver Hall. This
will mark the first appearance of
this newly formed organization .
A variety of music from the
Baroque period to compositions
of the present has been
programmed. A feature of the
concert will be a trio for three
violins, composed by Frederick
the Great. Violinists performing
this trio are Paulyna Voveris,
Karen Kropinicki, and Kathy
Kirk. Area music teachers
performing with the orchestra
are Miss Paulyna Voveris, Scott
Township, Mrs. Janet Knorr,
Bloomsburg, and Mrs. Helen
Gassier , Danville.
The public is cordially invited
to attend without charge.
All those interested in trying
out for the BSC golf team are
requested to be at a meeting
on Friday , at 4:00, in Mr.
Chronister * office in Centennial Gym.

Doi Leweflyi
TV-STEREO SERVICE
232 Iron St. 784-2274

Drug Abuse Cente r
(continued from page ihrrm )

requires services not available at
the admitting hospital , prompt
arrangements will be made for
transfer to a VA station that can
provide the needed care ,"
Johnson directed.
Three additional moves in me
stepped up VA program to help
veteran drug abusers are:
1) A follow-up program on
outpatients to insure that the full
range of veteran benefits (jobfinding assistance, training and
education, counselling, etc. ) are

used to assist drug users during
and after rehabilitation.
2) Specialized training for
physiciansand other allied health
workers from 28 additional VA
hospitals to broaden programs
for drug abusers beyond the 32
specialized treatment centers.
3) Alerting all VA Held stations
to assist veterans with "other
than honorable" discharges for
personal use of drugs in applying
for recharacterization of their
discharges under a recently I
announced Department of
I
Defense policy.
__aH__aB_B_ ^B____aBaaB_—!_ !__

aHHIH
iH

The mobile home industr y
now acco unts for more tha n 90
per cent of all single family
homts priced under $15,000.
Indus t rial P r ess Service

STEREO TAPE
SALES
Natio nal distrib utor needs
sc hoo l cove rage. Top 50 — 8track t apes whole sale prices ,
NO INlarg e earnings
VESTMENT Contac t:

Contact :

Mr. H. Harris

Lake Erie Intern ation al, Inc.
3441 West Braln ard Road
Cleveland , Ohio 44122

—WANTED—

Campus Representative
or Organization
To Earn
High Commissio ns
sellin g ski trips , island flings,
flights -to Europe , etc .

Cull or

Writ©:

NATIONAL STUDENT
TRAVEL SERVICE
2025 Walnut St., Phila. , Pa.
19103, 215-561-2939.

¦

I


THE STUDIO SHOP
59 E. Main St.
The cozy - Browsy - Frien dl y shop
for all your needs
personal gift decor atin g
framin g

Try our Week-end Specia l
'
|^^^ FLOWER S
^ P^ lWDelivery Worldwide

Down The Hill On East St.

50,000 JOBS

I

I
I
I
I
I

CAREER

OVER 8,900

TITLES IN STOCK

i

i
1

If Ift • book
wo havo tt or wo can ««t II

|

GmtiM f Card*

HENRIE'S

¦

! Card and Book Nook
40 W. Main St.

\

I \SJ tJ5 ^ SUMM ER EMPL OYMENT

I QLgysJ
w gJ

BOOK S...

M.00

¦

\

Kampus Nook

OPPORT UNITY

Across from the Union

PR OGRAM S

Plain and Ham Hoaalos,
Chaos* • Popptron l • Onion
Pint . Our own Mac)* Ico
Cream.

The National Agen cy Of Student Employment Has Recentl y
Com pleted A Nationwide Research Prog ram Of Jobs Available To
Colleg e Students And Graduates During 1972 . Catalog s Which
Full y Describe These Employment Positions May Be Obtained As
Follows :

I
I
I
I

( )

I
I
I

( )

I
I
I

( )

I
I

I
I
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Catalog of Summer and Career Positions Available
Throughout the United States in Resort Areas ,
Nationa l Cor porations , and Regional Employment
Centers . Price $3 .00 .

Tako Out Ordars—DtJIvary
to Dorms, Prars, .Sararitlos.

Mai nttm

HOURS t Mon - Thur » 9j 00 a.m.
11 p.m.
Friday 9:00 o,m,- l 2 p.m.
Saturda y 4:30 p.m. -12 p.m.
Sunda y 11:00 a.m. -HiOO p.m.

I
I

Eppley 's
Pharmacy

Forei gn Job Information Catalog Listing Over 1, 000
Emplo yment Positions Available in Many Forei gn
Countr ies . Price $3,00.
SPECIAL : Both of the Above Combined Catalo gs With
A Recommended Job Assi gnment To Be Selected For
You . Please State Your Interests . Price $6. 00.
National Agenc y of Student Emp loyment
Student Service s Division

*35 Erkenbrecher
Cincinnati, Ohio 45220

H^^^^ M^MA^g^d^^^ MM^^^ g^^MHAa ^BAflHa i^BB^AMaaHHA ^^HMfl ll^B^toA ^taMA ^^^ H^HM^^^ H^BKg^^ HH^BHta ^Mg^^^AagHta ^MMM^BM^^ B^^BdM ^

^^^^^^B^I^I^^^^^im^^^B^B^^^B^^^^^^^^H^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^HHlVi^lHMIB^BHH

MAIN t IRON STREETS
Prescri ption Spocfo// *f

|

.

•CHANEL
•GUERLAIN
•FABERpE
•LANVIN
•PRINCE MATCHABELLI
•ELIZABETHARDEN
•HEUNA RUKNSTKN
•DANA

•cor y

•MAX FACTOR

Of*«i AtomiM

'