rdunkelb
Wed, 05/01/2024 - 14:32
Edited Text
Eff ective thi s semester
College Senat e approve s
final examinati on policy
The monsoon season. . .will it ever end?
Chicano theme of
confer ence today
The Bloomsburg State College
Institute for Social Studies
Teachers and the Department of
Educational Studies and Services
will hold a confere nce on the
"Chicano " , Friday, May 12 in
Andruss Library audit orium.
George A. Turner , Director of the
Institute , indicated that this will
be the third conference to be held
thi s year on t he general t heme of
"Minori ties in American Life. "
The Chicano or MexicanAmerican is one of the nation 's
oldest immigrant groups , the
most deprived and oppressed
and the mos t
minority,
h i st or i call y neglec t ed and
d i sregarded segmen t of t he
different groups of people who
compr ise t h is na ti on of human
conglomera tes. This forgotten
minority, t he Ch icano , numbers
more than five million people
with approximately seventy-five
percent l i v i ng i n Texas and
California. From the introduction
of The Mexican-American
People : The Nation 's Second
Largest Min ority : "T he general
publ ic has onl y recentl y become
awa re of the f ac t that t he people
of M ex i can descen t f orm a
sizable and also a permanent
part of our population , and t his
awareness has not penetrated
deeply. School textbooks at both
the secondar y and college level
tend to ignore them. Because so
man y Americans have a limited
knowled ge of their country 's
histor y, the y are only dimly
of
the
early
conscious
colonization of parts of the Southwest by people of Hispanic Mexican origin. Or , if they know
about It , they are inclined to
shru g it off as a quaint accident of
histor y withou t consequence ,
because the experience of
Mexican - Americans in this
country never included outright
slavery or any other ex-
(Maresh Photo )
traordinary legal status , their
problems have never weighed on
the national conscience as have
those of the Negroes or even of
American Indians ." It is only
recently that the national media
ha ve begun to focus attention on
some of the problems of the
Chicano;
Cesar Cha vez '
organization of farm workers in
the Sout hwest and F lor ida and
t he crusade of Reies Tijerina 's to
re ga in t he land which i ndigenous
Spanish - Americans of New
M ex i co cla i med was t aken
illegall y .
The conference will begin with
registra tion at 9:00 a.m. in the
lobby of Andruss Library . Armando Rendon , author of the
Chicano Manifesto , w ill give the
keynote address at 9:30. There
w i ll be t wo panel discussions on
t he t opics of " Chicano Culture :
Ident ity and Acculturation " at
10:30 and "The Chicano-Risin g
Ex pectat i ons " at 2:00. Panelists
include Mr. Domingo Reyes,
E xecu ti ve Di rec t or of the
National Mexican - American
Anti - Defamation Committee ;
Dr. Julian Samora , professor of
sociology at the University of
Notre Dame and author of
numerous publicat ions deal ing
with Mexican-Americans , including Mexican - Americans in
the Southwest and Los Maj ados :
The Wetback Stor y. Mr. Edward
Casavantes of the United States
Commission on Civil Rights ; and
Dr. David E. Washburn , Post
Doctoral Fellow in multi-cultural
educa tion at the University of
Miami and author of Democracy
and the Education of the
Disadvantaged : A Dramatic
Inquiry. Mr. Reyes will present a
program on the depict ion of the
Mexican • American in textbooks
at 1:00.
Check the "Today " or look for
schedules around camp us.
The final examination policy,
submitted by Dr. James Sperry ,
was approved as amended at a
session of the College Senate , last
Tuesday. This policy will be
implemented , wherever possible
this semester .
There was a great deal of
discussion on the policy, and at
one point , Dr. Frantz , Chairman
of the Academ ic Affairs Committee , commented that the body
should discuss the proposed
policy and not the philosophy of
finals examinations. Mike Siptroth remarked tha t it is about
time that we did discuss the
philosop hy of finals.
The policy as amended reads :
Faculty shall give final
examinations , unless as determined by the department , other
methods of evaluation are
justi fiable .
Faculty shall give comprehensive examinations rather
than unit test s.
The final examination shall not
be the only means or method of
evaluation in a course.
Faculty shall not give tests
duri ng the last week of classes in
lieu of testing during the
prescribed examination period.
Unit tests shall be returned to the
students prior to the final
examination period.
Emphasis shall be on concepts
and ideas rather than on mere
memorization of facts.
Within the first three weeks of
the course , classes shall be ad-
CGA
Agenda
College Counc il will meet f or
the last time Monday, May 15 at 5
p.m. in Kuste r Auditorium to
discuss a number of i tems
remainin g from the May 1
meeti ng.
The cu t policy for members ,
t he alloca ti on request policy and
the policy requiring members to
work i n the CGA off ice will be
discussed and possibly ado pted
as by-laws .
Next year 's off icers of CG A will
be installed a t the meeting and
nom ination s will be accepted for
the summer Executive Comm i ttee.
C ounc i l will discuss allocation
requests for t he At hletic Grant
Fund , The French Club , the
Student - Faculty Judiciary
Commit t ee, t he cheerl eaders , an
outs tanding bill for basketball
f i lms and the Glee Club.
Allocation s have also been
requested to send a student to the
Nationa l Typing Competition and
to fund students planning to make
a film.
CGA member s will discuss
allocations to hire an Interior
decora tor for the new Union
Building, and install mailboxes
behind the Information desk.
Other requests include money to
buy bleach ers and to paint lines
in the new gym.
vised just how much weight the
final examination will have in
determining course gra des.
A final examination shall De
worth no less than twenty percent
nor more than forty percent of
the course grade .
No extra-curricular or faculty
administra tive activities may be
scheduled during the final
examinations week , except with
the consent of the individuals
involved.
No student shall be required to
take more than two tests in one
day. If he is scheduled for more
than two, he should take two and
arrange (at least one week before
classes end ) with the other
faculty to take the remaining
examination at mutuall y convenient times. Priority in the
scheduling of exams shall be as
follows : 1) Specialization , 2)
Professional areas , 3) Courses in
General Education.
The college library shall
remain open durin g test week
with expanded hours , when
possible.
Faculty are not expected to be
available to students for conferences during the Final
Examination Week .
Final examinations shall be
conducted within a two hour
period.
Graded final examinati on
papers shall be available for
student review and un less
returned to the students should be
kept on file for six months .
Fina l examinations shall be
conducted over a period of six full
days.
In case of non-compliance with
the provisions of this policy the
student has recourse to proper
procedures as established by the
college.
The next session of the college
Senate will be held Tuesday, May
16 at Kuste r Auditorium at 3:30
p.m.
Stud ents sur vey campus
and town on attitudes
Part one of a two par t study
Not long ago a small group of
students set out to uncover attitudes reflected in the college
community and the town of
Bloomsburg by sampling a
represent ative
number
of
students ,
faculty ,
administrators , non-instruction al
staff , and t ownspeople t hrough
the use of questionnaires and
personal interv iews. The work is
in parti al completion of the
re q u i remen t s of t he cours e
Feature Writing instr ucted by
M r. F uller of t he En gl ish
Department.
The response was grea t est
amon g the staff (86 per cent),
townspeople (80 per cent) , and
adm inistr ators (100 per cent)
wh b were contac ted personall y to
answer questions. Questionnaires
were distr ibuted to studen ts and
faculty with the largest ret urns
coming from the facul ty (36 per
cent) and the smallest from the
students (16.5 per cent) .
Similar q uest ions wer e asked
of more than one grou p in order
to fi nd a likeness or di ff erenc e of
opin i on on such topi cs as loyalt y
to the institut ion , BSC and how it
meets the educa tional standa rds
of those polled, the influence of
college-town relations on the
cam pus, and with whom do
students , faculty, and administrators associate.
LOYALTY
We asked all of the groups
whether they feu any sense of
loyalty to BSC. By loyalt y, we
meant a feeling of pride to be
associated with BSC as an
educational institution. It was
assumed that the people polled
understood it as such. We found
that , of the members of the
college admin istration that were
polled, 100 per cent felt this sense
of loyalty. We speculate that this
is due to the almost total commitment to BSC or to any in-
sti tutuion required of an administrator ; the institution in his
career , his job. Interpretation of
these results may prove fruitful
in light of the amoun t of commitment req uired of the members of each group to the institution. Of the faculty that wer e
polled , 95 per cent answered yes
to this question concerning their
loyalty or lack of it. Some
men ti oned a sense of loyal ty t o
t he i r p ro f essi on or to the ir
students in addi tion to loyal ty to
BSC. Of those who felt no sense of
loyalty (2 out of 36 who responded), both felt loyalty to their
profession . Eighty-fo ur percent
of the staff polled felt loyalty to
BSC . The st uden ts t ha t res ponded
t o t he poll showed a diff erent
story entirely. Fift y per cen t of
t hose who res p onded would
transfer out if given t he chance
to. Most would be proud to say
that t hey had grad ua t ed from an y
college. Twenty-nine per cent of
those polled would not be proud to
gra duate from BSC due t o its lack
of promin ence.
EDUCATIONAL STANDARDS
BSC is aver age for an
educational instit ution . This is
the consensus of opinion of the
people polled in the survey . The
most critical of the college are
the faculty who consider the
school to be bar ely adequate
compared to their standards but
still average as compared to
other instit utions. The adm i nistration also feels that
Bloomsburg is typical as far as
colleges go but they also see
much room for improvement .
The students and town speople
are much more optim istic of BSC
and feel that she is even above
average as far as education al
standards go. The staff feels th at
Bloomsburg is a success in its
academ ic standards and give it '
( continue d en page fear )
Letter ^ to (he editor ar e an
expressi on of the ind ividual
writer 's opinion and do not
necessar ily reflect the views of
the newspaper. All letter s must
Messrs. Smiley and Williman; be signed, nam es will be withh eld
I was sorry to rea d tha t your upon request .The M & G reserve
re ply to my lett er in W ednesda y's the right to abridge , in conBy JOHN DEMPSEY
pa per was a totall y * i rrelevant suUati on with the writer , all
What
we do now ? W hat do
res ponse to t he charge I had etters over «oo word s in length. you sa y do
to a pre sident wh o has
made , that is, your support of the
t
aken
a
militar
y ste p t hat even
Board of Trus t ees was prom p ted out to help others . At this college President J ohnson
re jected as too
solely by self-intere st.
we could try to be less hateful , r isky during his term of office.
I do not understand wh y you more forg iving. We would use our H ow do y ou get t hrough to a man
rep lied to m y lett er by making
intellect to become aware , and
ha s p ledged h i mself t o en assum pt ions about who I am , our emotions to feel and share. who
ding
t he war i n Vie tnam and t hen
abou t what I do concerning the Wh y must we be the bastion of shows his good faith by takin g a
Gadfl y, and by mentioning who anti-int ellectu alism , anti- r isk t hat could escalate wha t has
you think your friends are. In liberali sm , anti-humanism ? We been a small war into a global
d oi ng so you again i gnored t he should be working to chang e the conflict? What does it take to
issue wh i ch was raised firs t by evils of our society. If there are
J im Sachetti in an editorial and changes needed in the philosop hy conv i nce Ni xon t ha t t his countr y
is sick to its stom ach of supthen by myself in the letter of of our civilization then let us try porting, with the blood of
May 3.
to make the m. We can be the A mer i cans , a countr y t hat isn 't
I refuse to engage in a running guiding light in the darknes s, the interested in supporting itself?
ba tt le of words w i th your using t ower of hope, the seekers of A ren 't 50,000 dea d America n
the M&G as a medium . I have truth and wisdom . We may not sold i ers enough ? Isn 't the blood
stated my position so consider succeed , but at least we will have of coun t less V iet namese enough ?
this th e iast of our correspon- tri ed. I would like to shar e the Isn 't a countr y t hat has been
dence . I suggest that you crawl following song with you. Please dest ro y ed by more bombs t han
back i nto your holes from which think a bout it . Thank you .
t hose used i n W orld W ar II and
y ou emerged a little over a month
Pea ce,
Korea enough?
ago and let your case rest . I ho pe
Michael Siptroth
Do we pick up our litt le
you will not res pond to this
placards and go march i ng back
because it is not w6Vth anymore
LITTLE BOXES
t o Washington and stand on t he
of my time to comment on your
by Malv ena Reynolds
lawn chan ti ng "Give peace a
rambl ing .
Little boxes on the hillside
chance ," wh i le N ixon closes his
Left off!!
Little boxes made of ticky tacky windows and k ills some more ?
John A ndris Little boxes on the hillside
Do we sign more petitions , wri te
Little boxes all the same
some more letters to our
D ear b ro t hers and sis t ers There 's a green one
re presentat i ves who , despite
( students ,
ad- And a pink one
facult y,
what they say, haven 't got ' a
m i nistrators , non-instructional And a blue one, and a yellow one pra yer of get t ing throu gh to t he
emp loyees, in short — people). And they 're all mad e
t ough guy on t he . hill ? Do we sit
I hurt — becau se I' m sensit ive Out of % ticky tacky
around and ha ve discussions and
to pain , and I feel a grea t deal of And they all look just the same t alks about the imm oralit y of the
pain. I feeHhe.sufferin g of people
war wh ile men are dyi ng ? Should
here at t his college, in this And the people in the houses
we shout and yell and be im communit y, in the world. People All go to the univer sity
pressed wi th the fact that we are
are d y ing ; some visibly in And they all get put in boxes
" outraged youths " striking out
V i etnam , some hidden in our Little boxes all the same •
urba n slums , some liv ing lonel y And there 's doctor s and ther e's
lives next door , and yes I'm dyin g lawyer s
A nd the children go t o school
too. I feel my heart and guts And busi ness executives
A nd t he ch i ldr en go t o summer
being pulled a part because of And they 're all made out of ticky cam p
mans insensitivi ty to man. Why is tack y
A nd then go to the univers i ty
t his hap pening ? Perha ps because And t he y all look j ust the same And all get put in boxes
of a lack of aware ness , a lack of
A nd the y all come out the same
concern , a lack of our expression And the y all play on th e golf
of love. What can be done to course
change this ? We must start with And drink th eir martini s dry
And the girls in the houses
ourselves , though we must reac h And they all have prett y childr en all went to the university
where the y all found pretty
husbands
Editorial Staff: Editor-in-chief , j im sachetti ; Business
t hen raised a famil y
Manager , sue sprague ; Managi ng Editor/ Karen Keinard ;
There 's a kitchen and a bedroom
News Edi to r , Frank Pizzoli ; Assistant News Editors, John
and a vacuum and a typewriter
Dempsey and Michael Meizinger ; Co-Feature Editors , Joe
and they ' re made out of ticky
Lett ers
Comm en tor y
Polit ics of Despair
Miklos and Terry Blass ; Sports Editor , Bob Oliver ; Art
Editor, Denise Ross ; Circulation Manager , Elaine Pongratz ;
Co-Copy Editors , Ellen Doyl e and Nancy Van Petf ;
CarPhot ography Editor, Tom Schofield ; Contributing
toonist , Joh n Stugrin ; Advisor , Ken Hoffman.
Photograohv Sta ff : Mark Fouca rt . Dan Maresh , Craig
Ruble, P. Whit , S. Greef , A. Rennie.
Reporters: Suzyann Li pousk y , Cindy Michener, Leah
Skladany , Denny Guyer , Bob McCormick , Paul Hoffman.
Office Staff: Barb Gillott , Frank Lorah , Mary Beth Lech.
The M&G is located in room 234 Waller , Ext . 323, Box 301.
tacky
and they all look just the same.
And the boys go into business
A nd marr y and ra ise a family
And they all get put in boxes
Little boxes all the same
There ' s a green one , and a pink
aga i nst a system which doesn 't
even feel us?
Ni xon has dro pped the f a scade
of " w it hdraw i ng " and has admitted by his actions t hat his
H oly M i ssion of Vi et namiza tion is
failing. He is no longer giving the
peace sign with one hand while
holding a grenade in another.
Now t here are grenades in both
hands. He said tha t " abandoni ng
our commitmen t t o Vi etnam here
and now would mean tur ning 17
m i ll i on Sou l h V i etnamese t o
Communist terror and Tyra n ny ."
Why doesn 't he make sure ? Wh y
d oesn 't he drag out the atom
bombs and w ip e out the threat
comp letel y? F or t hat matter , as
l ong as he 's at it , wh y d oesn 't he
bomb C hina and Russ ia and
an y body else who possess a
Record Review
New
threa t to our grea f Democracy
wh i ch t akes moves with the lives
of its peop le , moves which the
peop le have alrea dy opposed?
Make t he world safe for
dem ocrac y by eliminating the
rest of the world.
I' m tired of killing. I' m tired of
leaders of the world playing
soldier with other people's lives.
I'm sick to my stomach of Nixon ,
Breshnev , and those who believe
t he y ha ve a right to decide wha t
people must or must not believe.
A nd most of all , I' m sick of heart
of seeing f r iends die , girls and
m ot hers I kn ow with broken
hearts because their husband s,
sons, and fiances come home
from Vietna m in a pine box . I'm
si ck because I don 't know what to
do to stop it , God hel p us.
" Mother "
powerfu l organ line , always
noticeable. The rest of the core
cons ists of Roy Michaels on bass
a nd M i chael Equine on drums , all
city fellers with a knack for ci ty
rock. After the first album ,
dimmed until vision was almost Cha rlie Chin (banjo and mangone , and rock , rock , rock . . .
dol in) left. Other changes came
Good loud rock was , and is , when lead guitarist Larry Packer
t heir theme , and when the y made called it quits after Albion Doot he m ove from New York Cit y to wah. So a clean guitarist left , and
Mar in Cou nty, the music one who could cru nch it a little
reflected the change . 1970 was the more popped in. Charlie Prichard
y ear for goin ' back to the ear th . adds j ust the right touch of growl
Unfor tunately , most of the people t o make Cat Mother a stron ger
wh o t r i ed it could not forge t their band. Also added was Steve
ci ty roots . Albion Doo-wah , Cat Davidson on congas and Cat
Mother 's second album , reflected Mother rounded itself out as a
this move and the mem ory of the good rock band on the third time
big city . No ma tter how hard the arnnnri
band tried to produce country
Cat Mother has to be one of the
flavored music , it came out most consistent bands going .
twinged with smog, big city rush , They 've regrouped twice , but
dirty and LOUD. The album was every album they put out has
successful , but it couldn' t kick been good. Char lie Chin played
shit . The few things tha t did come banjo on the Buffa lo Springfield 's
off as countr y music smelled of "Bluebird' , , tha t weird and sim ple
New York honky-tonks instead of little ending. The others made
cawHiict ft rtnrs
the ir own names by keeping a
So now Cat Mother have come very functional group going .
back to the city. This album was
O ne more record now . Cat
cut at Electric Lady studios , Mother has it. This new album is
by Joe Miklos
Cat Mother. . .Cat Mother
Cat M other started out as an
urba n rock group, and rock they
did. Their music befitted rooms
filled w it h smoke , the lights
without the help they had from
Hendrix on The Stree t Giveth and
The Street Taketh Away . And it 's
big city loud and dirt y rock.
Since Cat M other began
t hey 've gone throu gh some
changes , but have worked with a
basic core of rh ythm section and
keyboards . Bob Smith , the obvious leader of the group, kept
things going stron g with a
equal to and better
than the
others. It has traces of Moby
Grape , Santana , and Chica go's
"South California Purples "
smacking you in the face . Cat
Mother have lear ned their back
to the earth well enough to play
some country music quite well;
this time the folk influences have
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And a blue one, and a yellow one
And they 're all made out of ticky
tacky
And they all look just the same .
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Rockmen cop PC tourney
»
UNIVERSITY PARK , Pa.
AP)
— Slippery Rock survived a
<
heavy all da y rain and pulled
awa y from ll other teams
Tuesda y to w i n the Penns ylvania
St ate Colle ge Conference G olf
Tournament .
Dennis Pascarella of Mansfield
Slate took medalist honors .
Slippery Rock , which held a two st roke lea d over Edinboro after
Monday 's opening round , pulled
away to an 11-stroke victory over
Edi nboro and I ndiana State ,
which ti ed for second place.
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The tw o-day total for Slippery sudden-death playoff on the first
Rock 's five golfers was 771, hole for second place.
Ron Milanovich of Indiana and
followed by Edinboro and In's Bill Dudich fi ni shed
C
larion
last
diana with 782. Clarion ,
(
ied
at
153, bu t Mi lanovich t ook
y ear 's cham p ion , tied for fourth
fo
urth
after
defea t ing his opwith Kutztown at 803.
playoff on
ponent
in
sudden-death
Pascarella , with a 73, was four the first hole.
s t rokes behind Vince Zachetti of
Bloomsbur g Sta t e C ollege
Sli ppery Rock after the fi rst
finished
with a team tota l of 856.
round , but Pascarella shot a 76 Ind iv idual
f or t he f i nal
Tuesda y while Zachetti soared to round were scRoires
chard
P asco , 89;
a second da y 81. The latte r finish
83;
Tom
Terr
y
Maher
,
i n a second , place t ie w i th
LaTournous , 103; Greg Stahora ,
Cal i forn i a's Ron Skiles at 151. 92; Mi ke Kreglow , 85; and Bernie
Skiles defeated Zachetti i n a McHugh , 80.
Weightlift ing Champ
¦ ¦
¦:¦ ¦;:.: ¦::^vySy: ™
*
::
BSC golfer watching his shot.
(Pic by Bob Oliver )
Men's Intramural
The Men's Intramural Golf
Tournamen t is scheduled for
Monday or Tuesday, May 15 and
16. One may play in two 's,
three 's, or four 's. There should be
one person from anot her tea m
with each grou p. All pla y will be
at Briar Heights.
Four places will be awarded on
the basis of medal score for 18
holes.
your
Y ou mus t return
scorecards to Jer ry Medlock by
Wednesda y, May 17, by noon .
APO
Tim Guyer
Al Bigelow
Ron Stravinsk y
Tony Saracen o
COD
Dennis Matika
Dan Hochgertel
Sports Ed. Note : ( Seniors and
jun i ors ma y remember Charlie
Shields who attended BSC during
his f reshman and sophomore
y ears before transferring to
Shippe nsburg. )
C harlie Shields , a former
student at BSC, recentl y won the
NCA A Weightlifting championship in the 242 pound class.
. To win the crown , Shields lif ted a
total of 945 pounds , 15 more than
his nearest competitor. The
cham pionshi ps took place at
Cornell Universi t y.
Indiciduall y, Shields pressed
310 and snatched 270 pounds.
Officiall y, he was 365 in the clean
and jerk. The all-time NCAA
record is 380 pounds.
Shiel ds , now a student at
Shippensburg , does hold one
NCAA record. He pressed 310
SEVENTH FLOO R
Denny Magargal
SIGMA PI
.
BANDITS
Bob-Oliver
Mike Kudrich
Steve Neum yer
DIGITS
Larry Brussrau
SIO
Dave Pool
John B. Paul
LAMBDA CHI
Keith Boyd
Ross Steckel
J ack Fryer
PHI SIGMA KAPPA
Chr i s Elliot
Randy Mi ller
SNOWFLA KES
Charl ie Knight
Jim Whi teloc k
WOOD STREET
Bruce Leauby
J i m W i lloughb y
PHI SIGMA EPSILON
Bernard Brut t o
Art Pupa
???
ZETES
Tom Parry
Bill y Lennartz
Jack Wolff
Dave Burgess
G arth Specher
pounds in 1971 in the super heavy unlimited class.
Every good athlete has a set of
goals he is tr yi ng to attain and
Shields is no exception . His
ult imate aims center around the
clean and jerk .
"I would like to break the world
record ," he said. "It' s 478 pounds
and held bv Jan Talts of the USSR." Perhaps Shields will own
the record someda y.
"I figure by the time I' m ready
to break it , I' m going to have to
go over 500. Weightlif ters usually
reach their peak in their thirti es.
I just turned 22." That means he
should be ready for the 1976 and
1980 Olympics.
Charlie is curr ently a Senior at
Shippensburg and is now stud ent
teaching at Cedar Cliff .
END OF SEMESTER CELEBRATION SALE
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Week of May 15th
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Elections Monday & Tuesday
Stu dents seek
committee oosts
¦
The following students have
placed their names in contention
for the thre e student positions on
the recently formed committ ee of
nine which will search for and
screen candidates for the office of
the Presiden cy of BSC.
The election of thr ee students
will take place on Monday and
Tuesda y of next week . We krge
everyone to vote in this most
important election.
THE CANDIDATES
Doug McClintock , Thomas W.
Beveridge , Sherwin Albert ,
Maggie Ennis , Fra nk Lorah ,
Donald G. Enz ,
Michael Siptroth , Barbara
Pettengill , David G. Burgess , H.
Robert Hach , Felix D. Wisgo,
Edward Flemming, John Andris;
Michael J. Torbert , Rod
Morgans , Curt Hannaman , B.
Rainbo Yudinsky, Emory P.
GufjFrovich , Ronald J. Sheeha n,
Jeri Hoover ,
Gary E. Wilson , Mary Beth
Lech , Antonia R. Schnei der ,
Paula Maz ur , Susan C. Bayer ,
Kathy Moln ar , Robert A. Anderson , Rich Angerman.
A representataive of Merin
Photog raphy Studios will be in
the Bookstore Lounge Monday
and Tuesda y, May . 15 and 16,
to collect proo fs from students
who have had their portraits
ta ken on campus this ' year.
Hours will be from 1:30 to 6
p.m. Monday and from 9 a.m.
to 5:30 p.m. Tuesda y.
Any . student , junior or
senior , w ho has not returned
proofs may do so durin g these
two days.
Dr. Powell speaks on
Anthracite Business
Dr. H. Benjamin Powell ,
History Department , Bloom sburg State College addressed a
historical resea rch confer ence on
the topic "Busi ness and Entrepreneurs in the Anth racite
Industry "
in
Harrisb urg
recently.
Other scholars appearing on
the panel included Ralph
Hazeltine of the Wyomin g
Geological
and
Historical
Hoffman
of the
Society, John N.
Smithsonian Institute who spoke
on "Mine Engineering and
Technology, " and James P.
Rodechko of Wilkes College who
talked about "Immigr ation and
Ethnic Groups. " The conference
dealt with potential research
topics and resources in Pennsylvania history and was sponsored jointly by the Pennsylvania
Hist orica l Association and the
Pennsy lvania Historical and
Museum Commission .
Dr. Powell has been actively
engaged in doing research on the
anthracite industry for the past
decade . He wrote his master 's
thesis on John B. Jervis , a civil
engineer who supervised construction of the Delaware and
H udson Cana l t o take an t hracite
f r om Carbon dale t o t he H udson
River. His doctoral dissertation
exam ined t he relat ion between
P h iladel phia en ter preneurs and
t he develop men t of t he sou t hern
an thracite field. He published an
article on "Coal and Pennsy lvan ia 's Transportation Policy,
1825-1828" in the Apri l 1971 issue
of Pennsylvania History . Two
more ar ti cles by Dr. P owell wi ll
a pp ear i n t he near f uture.
"Pioneering the Anthracite Industry : The Case of the Smith
Coa l Company " will be published
in the Proceedings and Collections of the Wyoming Historical
and Geological Society and "The
Schuy lkill Coal Trade , 1825-1842"
will appear in the Berks County
Historical Review.
In October , 1972, Dr. Powell
will present a paper entitled
"Precursors of the AnthFacite
Coal Barons ," at the annual
meeting of the Pennsylvania
Historical Association. He is in
process of writing a monograph
on the origins of the anthracite
industry.
Dr. Powell earned his B.A. in
history at Drew University and
his M.A. and Ph.D. from Lehigh
University. He taught public
school in Port Jervis , New York ,
and joined the Bloomsburg
history department in 1966. At
Bloomsburg
he
teaches
American economic history,
American urba n history and
research methodology . For these
courses students have done
or igi nal resea rch and presen ted
papers on the anthr acite industry.
Dr. Powell and his wife reside
in Berwick .
(continued from page two )
been absorbed through the experience of actuall y liv i ng t he li fe
coun tr y music reflects.
So the music stom ps on. Three
albums ( though not grea t music)
of l istenable , fun rock are prett y
good for j es' a coupla ' city fellers.
FETTERMANS
BARBER SHOP
— QUALI TY—
Foot of Collogo Hill
•loomiburg , Pa.
(continued from page one)
an ab ove average ra ting if not an
excellent one. When the totals of
all the groups were combined the
classification of average was
seen as the most widel y used .
TOWN-COLLEG E INFLUE NCE
Percentages showed that the
tow nspeop le felt litt le "undue "
influence was exerted within the
following factions of the community : econom ics , politics ,
morals , and social interacti on.
Thirty-three per cent of those
polled , felt tha t moral influence
was present , and this was the
highest rating received by any of
the four factions. One quarter to
one third of those responding
appeared either unaw are or
indifferent to the students influence on the town.
CAMPUS ASSOCIATION
Of all the responses concerni ng
with whom do the groups
generally associate , it is interesting to note that the townspeople polled said they most
frequentl y associate
with
students rather than the other
three groups . Faculty members
ranked second on the town 's
social list with administrators
pulling in behind them with a
close ranking of third. Administrators rep lied that they do
fraternize with students for other
than professional reasons. This is
certainly a positive sign since
many . students feel it is advantageous
to meet
administrators informall y so they
can witness each other as people
free from the demands of
professionalism.
Faculty
members tended to socialize
more freque ntl y with other
'professors and townspeople but
did indica te by their comments
tha t student-faculty relationships
outside the classroom were
useful to both parties.
Vets !
"Mail in your certification of
attendance card for your final
month of training, or you can 't be
paid. "
That is the reminder the
Veterans Administration
is
sending to 752,000 veterans attending colleges and universities
under the GI Bill. It' s a message
VA mails to veterans each year
with their next to final check for
the enrollm ent period.
The idea is to induce the
veteran to fill out the "cert"
card , sign it , and re turn it immediately to his VA regional
office so he won 't be wondering
what happened to his education
allowance for his final month of
training . For most schools, this
means the month s of May or
June.
Here , specifically, is why
reminders are being sent to
veterans attending college:
VA cannot prepare the final
check for the spring 1971-72
school year until it receives the
"cert" card .
If the card is not returned at the
end of the current semester , the
vetera n cannot automaticall y be
enrolled under the GI Bill for the
upcoming summer or fall
semesters.
Senior
Dinner Dance
Host Hotel
Wilkes-Barre
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CROWNING TOUCH COIFFURES
PHONE 784-7220
Open til 12
YEAR
END
SPE CIAL
FLOWER
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Guest tickets — $7.50-ticket.
For tickets write to Karen
Gerst , Box 228, B.S.C., checks
made payable to "Senio r
Class 72." Deadline is May 12,
1972.
Dolkious Va Lb.
COLLEGE
STORE
'^^EfcllU's
^^
all seniors receive complimentary tickets If you have
paid your senior dues .
Kampus Nook
Fishburg Basket
69° Friday
The
editor
of
the
resurrected 1973 Olympia n
would like to thank all the
members off CGA who gave
their support to the Olympian
at the budget coremittee
meeting last evening .
Remember Mom
on Mofh er 's Day
Friday , May 26
¦¦¦
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Record Revi ew
Survey
The Editor of the Maroon
and Gold for the 1972-73 year is
now accepting applications for
all editorial positions for the
coming year. Please apply in
writing to either Box 301, or
Room 234 Waller. All application s must be submitted
by Monday, May 15, 1972.
_
BORROW FOR LESS
fI
\I
at on e of the
I LOWEST LOAN RATES I
\ AVAILABLE ANYWHERE /
Service Organization,inc. /
\\ andTeachers
TEACHERS SERVICE CONSUMER DISCOUNT COMPANY /
V
Maryland A Computer Rdi., Will ow Grov «, Pa. 19090 I
\ Dial (215) 548-0300 /
\ Saw Money on our LOWER Loan Rates w
\ which arc gantrally lowor than the rates w
% of banks , credit unions , finance com- w
X parties , auto dealers , revolving ' M
X typs credit , and depart ment M
X store , credi t card, and M
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other charges.
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22nd Year of X
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Service J
^
,
College Senat e approve s
final examinati on policy
The monsoon season. . .will it ever end?
Chicano theme of
confer ence today
The Bloomsburg State College
Institute for Social Studies
Teachers and the Department of
Educational Studies and Services
will hold a confere nce on the
"Chicano " , Friday, May 12 in
Andruss Library audit orium.
George A. Turner , Director of the
Institute , indicated that this will
be the third conference to be held
thi s year on t he general t heme of
"Minori ties in American Life. "
The Chicano or MexicanAmerican is one of the nation 's
oldest immigrant groups , the
most deprived and oppressed
and the mos t
minority,
h i st or i call y neglec t ed and
d i sregarded segmen t of t he
different groups of people who
compr ise t h is na ti on of human
conglomera tes. This forgotten
minority, t he Ch icano , numbers
more than five million people
with approximately seventy-five
percent l i v i ng i n Texas and
California. From the introduction
of The Mexican-American
People : The Nation 's Second
Largest Min ority : "T he general
publ ic has onl y recentl y become
awa re of the f ac t that t he people
of M ex i can descen t f orm a
sizable and also a permanent
part of our population , and t his
awareness has not penetrated
deeply. School textbooks at both
the secondar y and college level
tend to ignore them. Because so
man y Americans have a limited
knowled ge of their country 's
histor y, the y are only dimly
of
the
early
conscious
colonization of parts of the Southwest by people of Hispanic Mexican origin. Or , if they know
about It , they are inclined to
shru g it off as a quaint accident of
histor y withou t consequence ,
because the experience of
Mexican - Americans in this
country never included outright
slavery or any other ex-
(Maresh Photo )
traordinary legal status , their
problems have never weighed on
the national conscience as have
those of the Negroes or even of
American Indians ." It is only
recently that the national media
ha ve begun to focus attention on
some of the problems of the
Chicano;
Cesar Cha vez '
organization of farm workers in
the Sout hwest and F lor ida and
t he crusade of Reies Tijerina 's to
re ga in t he land which i ndigenous
Spanish - Americans of New
M ex i co cla i med was t aken
illegall y .
The conference will begin with
registra tion at 9:00 a.m. in the
lobby of Andruss Library . Armando Rendon , author of the
Chicano Manifesto , w ill give the
keynote address at 9:30. There
w i ll be t wo panel discussions on
t he t opics of " Chicano Culture :
Ident ity and Acculturation " at
10:30 and "The Chicano-Risin g
Ex pectat i ons " at 2:00. Panelists
include Mr. Domingo Reyes,
E xecu ti ve Di rec t or of the
National Mexican - American
Anti - Defamation Committee ;
Dr. Julian Samora , professor of
sociology at the University of
Notre Dame and author of
numerous publicat ions deal ing
with Mexican-Americans , including Mexican - Americans in
the Southwest and Los Maj ados :
The Wetback Stor y. Mr. Edward
Casavantes of the United States
Commission on Civil Rights ; and
Dr. David E. Washburn , Post
Doctoral Fellow in multi-cultural
educa tion at the University of
Miami and author of Democracy
and the Education of the
Disadvantaged : A Dramatic
Inquiry. Mr. Reyes will present a
program on the depict ion of the
Mexican • American in textbooks
at 1:00.
Check the "Today " or look for
schedules around camp us.
The final examination policy,
submitted by Dr. James Sperry ,
was approved as amended at a
session of the College Senate , last
Tuesday. This policy will be
implemented , wherever possible
this semester .
There was a great deal of
discussion on the policy, and at
one point , Dr. Frantz , Chairman
of the Academ ic Affairs Committee , commented that the body
should discuss the proposed
policy and not the philosophy of
finals examinations. Mike Siptroth remarked tha t it is about
time that we did discuss the
philosop hy of finals.
The policy as amended reads :
Faculty shall give final
examinations , unless as determined by the department , other
methods of evaluation are
justi fiable .
Faculty shall give comprehensive examinations rather
than unit test s.
The final examination shall not
be the only means or method of
evaluation in a course.
Faculty shall not give tests
duri ng the last week of classes in
lieu of testing during the
prescribed examination period.
Unit tests shall be returned to the
students prior to the final
examination period.
Emphasis shall be on concepts
and ideas rather than on mere
memorization of facts.
Within the first three weeks of
the course , classes shall be ad-
CGA
Agenda
College Counc il will meet f or
the last time Monday, May 15 at 5
p.m. in Kuste r Auditorium to
discuss a number of i tems
remainin g from the May 1
meeti ng.
The cu t policy for members ,
t he alloca ti on request policy and
the policy requiring members to
work i n the CGA off ice will be
discussed and possibly ado pted
as by-laws .
Next year 's off icers of CG A will
be installed a t the meeting and
nom ination s will be accepted for
the summer Executive Comm i ttee.
C ounc i l will discuss allocation
requests for t he At hletic Grant
Fund , The French Club , the
Student - Faculty Judiciary
Commit t ee, t he cheerl eaders , an
outs tanding bill for basketball
f i lms and the Glee Club.
Allocation s have also been
requested to send a student to the
Nationa l Typing Competition and
to fund students planning to make
a film.
CGA member s will discuss
allocations to hire an Interior
decora tor for the new Union
Building, and install mailboxes
behind the Information desk.
Other requests include money to
buy bleach ers and to paint lines
in the new gym.
vised just how much weight the
final examination will have in
determining course gra des.
A final examination shall De
worth no less than twenty percent
nor more than forty percent of
the course grade .
No extra-curricular or faculty
administra tive activities may be
scheduled during the final
examinations week , except with
the consent of the individuals
involved.
No student shall be required to
take more than two tests in one
day. If he is scheduled for more
than two, he should take two and
arrange (at least one week before
classes end ) with the other
faculty to take the remaining
examination at mutuall y convenient times. Priority in the
scheduling of exams shall be as
follows : 1) Specialization , 2)
Professional areas , 3) Courses in
General Education.
The college library shall
remain open durin g test week
with expanded hours , when
possible.
Faculty are not expected to be
available to students for conferences during the Final
Examination Week .
Final examinations shall be
conducted within a two hour
period.
Graded final examinati on
papers shall be available for
student review and un less
returned to the students should be
kept on file for six months .
Fina l examinations shall be
conducted over a period of six full
days.
In case of non-compliance with
the provisions of this policy the
student has recourse to proper
procedures as established by the
college.
The next session of the college
Senate will be held Tuesday, May
16 at Kuste r Auditorium at 3:30
p.m.
Stud ents sur vey campus
and town on attitudes
Part one of a two par t study
Not long ago a small group of
students set out to uncover attitudes reflected in the college
community and the town of
Bloomsburg by sampling a
represent ative
number
of
students ,
faculty ,
administrators , non-instruction al
staff , and t ownspeople t hrough
the use of questionnaires and
personal interv iews. The work is
in parti al completion of the
re q u i remen t s of t he cours e
Feature Writing instr ucted by
M r. F uller of t he En gl ish
Department.
The response was grea t est
amon g the staff (86 per cent),
townspeople (80 per cent) , and
adm inistr ators (100 per cent)
wh b were contac ted personall y to
answer questions. Questionnaires
were distr ibuted to studen ts and
faculty with the largest ret urns
coming from the facul ty (36 per
cent) and the smallest from the
students (16.5 per cent) .
Similar q uest ions wer e asked
of more than one grou p in order
to fi nd a likeness or di ff erenc e of
opin i on on such topi cs as loyalt y
to the institut ion , BSC and how it
meets the educa tional standa rds
of those polled, the influence of
college-town relations on the
cam pus, and with whom do
students , faculty, and administrators associate.
LOYALTY
We asked all of the groups
whether they feu any sense of
loyalty to BSC. By loyalt y, we
meant a feeling of pride to be
associated with BSC as an
educational institution. It was
assumed that the people polled
understood it as such. We found
that , of the members of the
college admin istration that were
polled, 100 per cent felt this sense
of loyalty. We speculate that this
is due to the almost total commitment to BSC or to any in-
sti tutuion required of an administrator ; the institution in his
career , his job. Interpretation of
these results may prove fruitful
in light of the amoun t of commitment req uired of the members of each group to the institution. Of the faculty that wer e
polled , 95 per cent answered yes
to this question concerning their
loyalty or lack of it. Some
men ti oned a sense of loyal ty t o
t he i r p ro f essi on or to the ir
students in addi tion to loyal ty to
BSC. Of those who felt no sense of
loyalty (2 out of 36 who responded), both felt loyalty to their
profession . Eighty-fo ur percent
of the staff polled felt loyalty to
BSC . The st uden ts t ha t res ponded
t o t he poll showed a diff erent
story entirely. Fift y per cen t of
t hose who res p onded would
transfer out if given t he chance
to. Most would be proud to say
that t hey had grad ua t ed from an y
college. Twenty-nine per cent of
those polled would not be proud to
gra duate from BSC due t o its lack
of promin ence.
EDUCATIONAL STANDARDS
BSC is aver age for an
educational instit ution . This is
the consensus of opinion of the
people polled in the survey . The
most critical of the college are
the faculty who consider the
school to be bar ely adequate
compared to their standards but
still average as compared to
other instit utions. The adm i nistration also feels that
Bloomsburg is typical as far as
colleges go but they also see
much room for improvement .
The students and town speople
are much more optim istic of BSC
and feel that she is even above
average as far as education al
standards go. The staff feels th at
Bloomsburg is a success in its
academ ic standards and give it '
( continue d en page fear )
Letter ^ to (he editor ar e an
expressi on of the ind ividual
writer 's opinion and do not
necessar ily reflect the views of
the newspaper. All letter s must
Messrs. Smiley and Williman; be signed, nam es will be withh eld
I was sorry to rea d tha t your upon request .The M & G reserve
re ply to my lett er in W ednesda y's the right to abridge , in conBy JOHN DEMPSEY
pa per was a totall y * i rrelevant suUati on with the writer , all
What
we do now ? W hat do
res ponse to t he charge I had etters over «oo word s in length. you sa y do
to a pre sident wh o has
made , that is, your support of the
t
aken
a
militar
y ste p t hat even
Board of Trus t ees was prom p ted out to help others . At this college President J ohnson
re jected as too
solely by self-intere st.
we could try to be less hateful , r isky during his term of office.
I do not understand wh y you more forg iving. We would use our H ow do y ou get t hrough to a man
rep lied to m y lett er by making
intellect to become aware , and
ha s p ledged h i mself t o en assum pt ions about who I am , our emotions to feel and share. who
ding
t he war i n Vie tnam and t hen
abou t what I do concerning the Wh y must we be the bastion of shows his good faith by takin g a
Gadfl y, and by mentioning who anti-int ellectu alism , anti- r isk t hat could escalate wha t has
you think your friends are. In liberali sm , anti-humanism ? We been a small war into a global
d oi ng so you again i gnored t he should be working to chang e the conflict? What does it take to
issue wh i ch was raised firs t by evils of our society. If there are
J im Sachetti in an editorial and changes needed in the philosop hy conv i nce Ni xon t ha t t his countr y
is sick to its stom ach of supthen by myself in the letter of of our civilization then let us try porting, with the blood of
May 3.
to make the m. We can be the A mer i cans , a countr y t hat isn 't
I refuse to engage in a running guiding light in the darknes s, the interested in supporting itself?
ba tt le of words w i th your using t ower of hope, the seekers of A ren 't 50,000 dea d America n
the M&G as a medium . I have truth and wisdom . We may not sold i ers enough ? Isn 't the blood
stated my position so consider succeed , but at least we will have of coun t less V iet namese enough ?
this th e iast of our correspon- tri ed. I would like to shar e the Isn 't a countr y t hat has been
dence . I suggest that you crawl following song with you. Please dest ro y ed by more bombs t han
back i nto your holes from which think a bout it . Thank you .
t hose used i n W orld W ar II and
y ou emerged a little over a month
Pea ce,
Korea enough?
ago and let your case rest . I ho pe
Michael Siptroth
Do we pick up our litt le
you will not res pond to this
placards and go march i ng back
because it is not w6Vth anymore
LITTLE BOXES
t o Washington and stand on t he
of my time to comment on your
by Malv ena Reynolds
lawn chan ti ng "Give peace a
rambl ing .
Little boxes on the hillside
chance ," wh i le N ixon closes his
Left off!!
Little boxes made of ticky tacky windows and k ills some more ?
John A ndris Little boxes on the hillside
Do we sign more petitions , wri te
Little boxes all the same
some more letters to our
D ear b ro t hers and sis t ers There 's a green one
re presentat i ves who , despite
( students ,
ad- And a pink one
facult y,
what they say, haven 't got ' a
m i nistrators , non-instructional And a blue one, and a yellow one pra yer of get t ing throu gh to t he
emp loyees, in short — people). And they 're all mad e
t ough guy on t he . hill ? Do we sit
I hurt — becau se I' m sensit ive Out of % ticky tacky
around and ha ve discussions and
to pain , and I feel a grea t deal of And they all look just the same t alks about the imm oralit y of the
pain. I feeHhe.sufferin g of people
war wh ile men are dyi ng ? Should
here at t his college, in this And the people in the houses
we shout and yell and be im communit y, in the world. People All go to the univer sity
pressed wi th the fact that we are
are d y ing ; some visibly in And they all get put in boxes
" outraged youths " striking out
V i etnam , some hidden in our Little boxes all the same •
urba n slums , some liv ing lonel y And there 's doctor s and ther e's
lives next door , and yes I'm dyin g lawyer s
A nd the children go t o school
too. I feel my heart and guts And busi ness executives
A nd t he ch i ldr en go t o summer
being pulled a part because of And they 're all made out of ticky cam p
mans insensitivi ty to man. Why is tack y
A nd then go to the univers i ty
t his hap pening ? Perha ps because And t he y all look j ust the same And all get put in boxes
of a lack of aware ness , a lack of
A nd the y all come out the same
concern , a lack of our expression And the y all play on th e golf
of love. What can be done to course
change this ? We must start with And drink th eir martini s dry
And the girls in the houses
ourselves , though we must reac h And they all have prett y childr en all went to the university
where the y all found pretty
husbands
Editorial Staff: Editor-in-chief , j im sachetti ; Business
t hen raised a famil y
Manager , sue sprague ; Managi ng Editor/ Karen Keinard ;
There 's a kitchen and a bedroom
News Edi to r , Frank Pizzoli ; Assistant News Editors, John
and a vacuum and a typewriter
Dempsey and Michael Meizinger ; Co-Feature Editors , Joe
and they ' re made out of ticky
Lett ers
Comm en tor y
Polit ics of Despair
Miklos and Terry Blass ; Sports Editor , Bob Oliver ; Art
Editor, Denise Ross ; Circulation Manager , Elaine Pongratz ;
Co-Copy Editors , Ellen Doyl e and Nancy Van Petf ;
CarPhot ography Editor, Tom Schofield ; Contributing
toonist , Joh n Stugrin ; Advisor , Ken Hoffman.
Photograohv Sta ff : Mark Fouca rt . Dan Maresh , Craig
Ruble, P. Whit , S. Greef , A. Rennie.
Reporters: Suzyann Li pousk y , Cindy Michener, Leah
Skladany , Denny Guyer , Bob McCormick , Paul Hoffman.
Office Staff: Barb Gillott , Frank Lorah , Mary Beth Lech.
The M&G is located in room 234 Waller , Ext . 323, Box 301.
tacky
and they all look just the same.
And the boys go into business
A nd marr y and ra ise a family
And they all get put in boxes
Little boxes all the same
There ' s a green one , and a pink
aga i nst a system which doesn 't
even feel us?
Ni xon has dro pped the f a scade
of " w it hdraw i ng " and has admitted by his actions t hat his
H oly M i ssion of Vi et namiza tion is
failing. He is no longer giving the
peace sign with one hand while
holding a grenade in another.
Now t here are grenades in both
hands. He said tha t " abandoni ng
our commitmen t t o Vi etnam here
and now would mean tur ning 17
m i ll i on Sou l h V i etnamese t o
Communist terror and Tyra n ny ."
Why doesn 't he make sure ? Wh y
d oesn 't he drag out the atom
bombs and w ip e out the threat
comp letel y? F or t hat matter , as
l ong as he 's at it , wh y d oesn 't he
bomb C hina and Russ ia and
an y body else who possess a
Record Review
New
threa t to our grea f Democracy
wh i ch t akes moves with the lives
of its peop le , moves which the
peop le have alrea dy opposed?
Make t he world safe for
dem ocrac y by eliminating the
rest of the world.
I' m tired of killing. I' m tired of
leaders of the world playing
soldier with other people's lives.
I'm sick to my stomach of Nixon ,
Breshnev , and those who believe
t he y ha ve a right to decide wha t
people must or must not believe.
A nd most of all , I' m sick of heart
of seeing f r iends die , girls and
m ot hers I kn ow with broken
hearts because their husband s,
sons, and fiances come home
from Vietna m in a pine box . I'm
si ck because I don 't know what to
do to stop it , God hel p us.
" Mother "
powerfu l organ line , always
noticeable. The rest of the core
cons ists of Roy Michaels on bass
a nd M i chael Equine on drums , all
city fellers with a knack for ci ty
rock. After the first album ,
dimmed until vision was almost Cha rlie Chin (banjo and mangone , and rock , rock , rock . . .
dol in) left. Other changes came
Good loud rock was , and is , when lead guitarist Larry Packer
t heir theme , and when the y made called it quits after Albion Doot he m ove from New York Cit y to wah. So a clean guitarist left , and
Mar in Cou nty, the music one who could cru nch it a little
reflected the change . 1970 was the more popped in. Charlie Prichard
y ear for goin ' back to the ear th . adds j ust the right touch of growl
Unfor tunately , most of the people t o make Cat Mother a stron ger
wh o t r i ed it could not forge t their band. Also added was Steve
ci ty roots . Albion Doo-wah , Cat Davidson on congas and Cat
Mother 's second album , reflected Mother rounded itself out as a
this move and the mem ory of the good rock band on the third time
big city . No ma tter how hard the arnnnri
band tried to produce country
Cat Mother has to be one of the
flavored music , it came out most consistent bands going .
twinged with smog, big city rush , They 've regrouped twice , but
dirty and LOUD. The album was every album they put out has
successful , but it couldn' t kick been good. Char lie Chin played
shit . The few things tha t did come banjo on the Buffa lo Springfield 's
off as countr y music smelled of "Bluebird' , , tha t weird and sim ple
New York honky-tonks instead of little ending. The others made
cawHiict ft rtnrs
the ir own names by keeping a
So now Cat Mother have come very functional group going .
back to the city. This album was
O ne more record now . Cat
cut at Electric Lady studios , Mother has it. This new album is
by Joe Miklos
Cat Mother. . .Cat Mother
Cat M other started out as an
urba n rock group, and rock they
did. Their music befitted rooms
filled w it h smoke , the lights
without the help they had from
Hendrix on The Stree t Giveth and
The Street Taketh Away . And it 's
big city loud and dirt y rock.
Since Cat M other began
t hey 've gone throu gh some
changes , but have worked with a
basic core of rh ythm section and
keyboards . Bob Smith , the obvious leader of the group, kept
things going stron g with a
equal to and better
than the
others. It has traces of Moby
Grape , Santana , and Chica go's
"South California Purples "
smacking you in the face . Cat
Mother have lear ned their back
to the earth well enough to play
some country music quite well;
this time the folk influences have
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Rockmen cop PC tourney
»
UNIVERSITY PARK , Pa.
AP)
— Slippery Rock survived a
<
heavy all da y rain and pulled
awa y from ll other teams
Tuesda y to w i n the Penns ylvania
St ate Colle ge Conference G olf
Tournament .
Dennis Pascarella of Mansfield
Slate took medalist honors .
Slippery Rock , which held a two st roke lea d over Edinboro after
Monday 's opening round , pulled
away to an 11-stroke victory over
Edi nboro and I ndiana State ,
which ti ed for second place.
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The tw o-day total for Slippery sudden-death playoff on the first
Rock 's five golfers was 771, hole for second place.
Ron Milanovich of Indiana and
followed by Edinboro and In's Bill Dudich fi ni shed
C
larion
last
diana with 782. Clarion ,
(
ied
at
153, bu t Mi lanovich t ook
y ear 's cham p ion , tied for fourth
fo
urth
after
defea t ing his opwith Kutztown at 803.
playoff on
ponent
in
sudden-death
Pascarella , with a 73, was four the first hole.
s t rokes behind Vince Zachetti of
Bloomsbur g Sta t e C ollege
Sli ppery Rock after the fi rst
finished
with a team tota l of 856.
round , but Pascarella shot a 76 Ind iv idual
f or t he f i nal
Tuesda y while Zachetti soared to round were scRoires
chard
P asco , 89;
a second da y 81. The latte r finish
83;
Tom
Terr
y
Maher
,
i n a second , place t ie w i th
LaTournous , 103; Greg Stahora ,
Cal i forn i a's Ron Skiles at 151. 92; Mi ke Kreglow , 85; and Bernie
Skiles defeated Zachetti i n a McHugh , 80.
Weightlift ing Champ
¦ ¦
¦:¦ ¦;:.: ¦::^vySy: ™
*
::
BSC golfer watching his shot.
(Pic by Bob Oliver )
Men's Intramural
The Men's Intramural Golf
Tournamen t is scheduled for
Monday or Tuesday, May 15 and
16. One may play in two 's,
three 's, or four 's. There should be
one person from anot her tea m
with each grou p. All pla y will be
at Briar Heights.
Four places will be awarded on
the basis of medal score for 18
holes.
your
Y ou mus t return
scorecards to Jer ry Medlock by
Wednesda y, May 17, by noon .
APO
Tim Guyer
Al Bigelow
Ron Stravinsk y
Tony Saracen o
COD
Dennis Matika
Dan Hochgertel
Sports Ed. Note : ( Seniors and
jun i ors ma y remember Charlie
Shields who attended BSC during
his f reshman and sophomore
y ears before transferring to
Shippe nsburg. )
C harlie Shields , a former
student at BSC, recentl y won the
NCA A Weightlifting championship in the 242 pound class.
. To win the crown , Shields lif ted a
total of 945 pounds , 15 more than
his nearest competitor. The
cham pionshi ps took place at
Cornell Universi t y.
Indiciduall y, Shields pressed
310 and snatched 270 pounds.
Officiall y, he was 365 in the clean
and jerk. The all-time NCAA
record is 380 pounds.
Shiel ds , now a student at
Shippensburg , does hold one
NCAA record. He pressed 310
SEVENTH FLOO R
Denny Magargal
SIGMA PI
.
BANDITS
Bob-Oliver
Mike Kudrich
Steve Neum yer
DIGITS
Larry Brussrau
SIO
Dave Pool
John B. Paul
LAMBDA CHI
Keith Boyd
Ross Steckel
J ack Fryer
PHI SIGMA KAPPA
Chr i s Elliot
Randy Mi ller
SNOWFLA KES
Charl ie Knight
Jim Whi teloc k
WOOD STREET
Bruce Leauby
J i m W i lloughb y
PHI SIGMA EPSILON
Bernard Brut t o
Art Pupa
???
ZETES
Tom Parry
Bill y Lennartz
Jack Wolff
Dave Burgess
G arth Specher
pounds in 1971 in the super heavy unlimited class.
Every good athlete has a set of
goals he is tr yi ng to attain and
Shields is no exception . His
ult imate aims center around the
clean and jerk .
"I would like to break the world
record ," he said. "It' s 478 pounds
and held bv Jan Talts of the USSR." Perhaps Shields will own
the record someda y.
"I figure by the time I' m ready
to break it , I' m going to have to
go over 500. Weightlif ters usually
reach their peak in their thirti es.
I just turned 22." That means he
should be ready for the 1976 and
1980 Olympics.
Charlie is curr ently a Senior at
Shippensburg and is now stud ent
teaching at Cedar Cliff .
END OF SEMESTER CELEBRATION SALE
ENTIRE STOCK OF THE TUNNEL 20% OFF
Week of May 15th
"
thr u
-
The largest selection
n'9 hst y e th reads
th
**^*" m l"T^
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entire area
May 20th ONLYL/ ^^^ f ^ HB^^ ^\
£ n e
stock
• x, up
fo r summer
vaca tion
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belts
boots
shoes
knit shirts
and
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double knit flare slax
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BLOOMSBUR G
20% OFF ENTIRE STOCK
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Elections Monday & Tuesday
Stu dents seek
committee oosts
¦
The following students have
placed their names in contention
for the thre e student positions on
the recently formed committ ee of
nine which will search for and
screen candidates for the office of
the Presiden cy of BSC.
The election of thr ee students
will take place on Monday and
Tuesda y of next week . We krge
everyone to vote in this most
important election.
THE CANDIDATES
Doug McClintock , Thomas W.
Beveridge , Sherwin Albert ,
Maggie Ennis , Fra nk Lorah ,
Donald G. Enz ,
Michael Siptroth , Barbara
Pettengill , David G. Burgess , H.
Robert Hach , Felix D. Wisgo,
Edward Flemming, John Andris;
Michael J. Torbert , Rod
Morgans , Curt Hannaman , B.
Rainbo Yudinsky, Emory P.
GufjFrovich , Ronald J. Sheeha n,
Jeri Hoover ,
Gary E. Wilson , Mary Beth
Lech , Antonia R. Schnei der ,
Paula Maz ur , Susan C. Bayer ,
Kathy Moln ar , Robert A. Anderson , Rich Angerman.
A representataive of Merin
Photog raphy Studios will be in
the Bookstore Lounge Monday
and Tuesda y, May . 15 and 16,
to collect proo fs from students
who have had their portraits
ta ken on campus this ' year.
Hours will be from 1:30 to 6
p.m. Monday and from 9 a.m.
to 5:30 p.m. Tuesda y.
Any . student , junior or
senior , w ho has not returned
proofs may do so durin g these
two days.
Dr. Powell speaks on
Anthracite Business
Dr. H. Benjamin Powell ,
History Department , Bloom sburg State College addressed a
historical resea rch confer ence on
the topic "Busi ness and Entrepreneurs in the Anth racite
Industry "
in
Harrisb urg
recently.
Other scholars appearing on
the panel included Ralph
Hazeltine of the Wyomin g
Geological
and
Historical
Hoffman
of the
Society, John N.
Smithsonian Institute who spoke
on "Mine Engineering and
Technology, " and James P.
Rodechko of Wilkes College who
talked about "Immigr ation and
Ethnic Groups. " The conference
dealt with potential research
topics and resources in Pennsylvania history and was sponsored jointly by the Pennsylvania
Hist orica l Association and the
Pennsy lvania Historical and
Museum Commission .
Dr. Powell has been actively
engaged in doing research on the
anthracite industry for the past
decade . He wrote his master 's
thesis on John B. Jervis , a civil
engineer who supervised construction of the Delaware and
H udson Cana l t o take an t hracite
f r om Carbon dale t o t he H udson
River. His doctoral dissertation
exam ined t he relat ion between
P h iladel phia en ter preneurs and
t he develop men t of t he sou t hern
an thracite field. He published an
article on "Coal and Pennsy lvan ia 's Transportation Policy,
1825-1828" in the Apri l 1971 issue
of Pennsylvania History . Two
more ar ti cles by Dr. P owell wi ll
a pp ear i n t he near f uture.
"Pioneering the Anthracite Industry : The Case of the Smith
Coa l Company " will be published
in the Proceedings and Collections of the Wyoming Historical
and Geological Society and "The
Schuy lkill Coal Trade , 1825-1842"
will appear in the Berks County
Historical Review.
In October , 1972, Dr. Powell
will present a paper entitled
"Precursors of the AnthFacite
Coal Barons ," at the annual
meeting of the Pennsylvania
Historical Association. He is in
process of writing a monograph
on the origins of the anthracite
industry.
Dr. Powell earned his B.A. in
history at Drew University and
his M.A. and Ph.D. from Lehigh
University. He taught public
school in Port Jervis , New York ,
and joined the Bloomsburg
history department in 1966. At
Bloomsburg
he
teaches
American economic history,
American urba n history and
research methodology . For these
courses students have done
or igi nal resea rch and presen ted
papers on the anthr acite industry.
Dr. Powell and his wife reside
in Berwick .
(continued from page two )
been absorbed through the experience of actuall y liv i ng t he li fe
coun tr y music reflects.
So the music stom ps on. Three
albums ( though not grea t music)
of l istenable , fun rock are prett y
good for j es' a coupla ' city fellers.
FETTERMANS
BARBER SHOP
— QUALI TY—
Foot of Collogo Hill
•loomiburg , Pa.
(continued from page one)
an ab ove average ra ting if not an
excellent one. When the totals of
all the groups were combined the
classification of average was
seen as the most widel y used .
TOWN-COLLEG E INFLUE NCE
Percentages showed that the
tow nspeop le felt litt le "undue "
influence was exerted within the
following factions of the community : econom ics , politics ,
morals , and social interacti on.
Thirty-three per cent of those
polled , felt tha t moral influence
was present , and this was the
highest rating received by any of
the four factions. One quarter to
one third of those responding
appeared either unaw are or
indifferent to the students influence on the town.
CAMPUS ASSOCIATION
Of all the responses concerni ng
with whom do the groups
generally associate , it is interesting to note that the townspeople polled said they most
frequentl y associate
with
students rather than the other
three groups . Faculty members
ranked second on the town 's
social list with administrators
pulling in behind them with a
close ranking of third. Administrators rep lied that they do
fraternize with students for other
than professional reasons. This is
certainly a positive sign since
many . students feel it is advantageous
to meet
administrators informall y so they
can witness each other as people
free from the demands of
professionalism.
Faculty
members tended to socialize
more freque ntl y with other
'professors and townspeople but
did indica te by their comments
tha t student-faculty relationships
outside the classroom were
useful to both parties.
Vets !
"Mail in your certification of
attendance card for your final
month of training, or you can 't be
paid. "
That is the reminder the
Veterans Administration
is
sending to 752,000 veterans attending colleges and universities
under the GI Bill. It' s a message
VA mails to veterans each year
with their next to final check for
the enrollm ent period.
The idea is to induce the
veteran to fill out the "cert"
card , sign it , and re turn it immediately to his VA regional
office so he won 't be wondering
what happened to his education
allowance for his final month of
training . For most schools, this
means the month s of May or
June.
Here , specifically, is why
reminders are being sent to
veterans attending college:
VA cannot prepare the final
check for the spring 1971-72
school year until it receives the
"cert" card .
If the card is not returned at the
end of the current semester , the
vetera n cannot automaticall y be
enrolled under the GI Bill for the
upcoming summer or fall
semesters.
Senior
Dinner Dance
Host Hotel
Wilkes-Barre
RECORDS
20% Off
Our Price
Sale Price
1.19
1.29
1.98
3.69
4.39
5.89
.95
1.03
1.58
2.95
3.51
4.71
S
:W^ ^p«llv«ry Worldwi de
Down The Hill On Ea»t St.
I Curly Hair Can Be Made Beautiful
Afro
^AttMtlonT ^V
i^^Atttntlon: ^V^
?
For The Long , Lean Layered Look
"Krympur "
X
TEACHERS !
EDUCATORS !
X
/ You 'll Like the Favorit e Way \
I
for teachers and educators to
\
For today 's sty los call:
CROWNING TOUCH COIFFURES
PHONE 784-7220
Open til 12
YEAR
END
SPE CIAL
FLOWER
\
Guest tickets — $7.50-ticket.
For tickets write to Karen
Gerst , Box 228, B.S.C., checks
made payable to "Senio r
Class 72." Deadline is May 12,
1972.
Dolkious Va Lb.
COLLEGE
STORE
'^^EfcllU's
^^
all seniors receive complimentary tickets If you have
paid your senior dues .
Kampus Nook
Fishburg Basket
69° Friday
The
editor
of
the
resurrected 1973 Olympia n
would like to thank all the
members off CGA who gave
their support to the Olympian
at the budget coremittee
meeting last evening .
Remember Mom
on Mofh er 's Day
Friday , May 26
¦¦¦
^
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^^^ "^
Record Revi ew
Survey
The Editor of the Maroon
and Gold for the 1972-73 year is
now accepting applications for
all editorial positions for the
coming year. Please apply in
writing to either Box 301, or
Room 234 Waller. All application s must be submitted
by Monday, May 15, 1972.
_
BORROW FOR LESS
fI
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at on e of the
I LOWEST LOAN RATES I
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TEACHERS SERVICE CONSUMER DISCOUNT COMPANY /
V
Maryland A Computer Rdi., Will ow Grov «, Pa. 19090 I
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22nd Year of X
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Media of