rdunkelb
Wed, 05/01/2024 - 14:51
Edited Text
He who loses wealth loses much ;
he who loses a friend loses more ;
but he that loses his coura ge loses
all .
CERVANTES
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M&G Interview

Bautz talks on Athletic Policies

playing and practice fields have
gone up above the origin ally
appropriated amount of money.
Dr. Conra d Bautz , newl y New bids were taken and the
chosen chairman of the Depart- contractor with the low bid is now
ment of Health , Ph ysical ready to do the job but the state is
Education and Athletics , spoke of holding up the funds.
his impressions of BSC, the new
Concerning the rumors cirgymna sium , his plans for the
culating
the campus that the new
athletic program , and the recent
swimming
pool is not regulation
NCAA development.
size, Dr. Bautz stated , the
concerning the new gym, Dr. swimming pool meets all PennBautz state d that it is in a shake sylvania Conference Standards in
down period where all the flaws all its measurements. He also
are being ironed out and fixed. As said that to incre ase the' seating
for the athletic fields, the state is capacit y mor e seats have been
holding back the money for the ordered to be used opposite the
time being. "As it is now, we have startin g line.
cut the complex to the bone,"
stated Dr. Bautz . For example,
The Gym should be fully
there will be no locker rooms oper ation al with
in a short time ,
under the football stands.
Dr. Conrad Bautz , Chairman of the department of Health , and
with the major ' pr oblem now
Physical Education .
the water supply. AcDr. Bautz further explained being
cording
to Boyd Buckingh am ,
(photography by Bob Oliver )
tha t construction on the new
Assoc.
V.
ent, the
football— baseba ll complex with water willP. for Developm
of
be
taken
care
by the
practice f ieldsis behind schedu le U.S. Army
of
Corps
Engineers
has
limited
GSA
because the
tanker system until the BSC tank
funds
of the recent floods is
tation committee for the secono. in thebecause
operation al.
DARKHO RSE
Since the recent
Darkhor se will perfo rm at the semester and-or the 1973 summer flooding,area.
Dr. Baut z said that although
the estimates for the
Omega Tau Epsilort banquet on orientation programs , please ,
September 27. Dar khorse made contact John Walker , Associate
such an impression last year that Dean for Freshmen.
Mr.
they were given a stan ding offer W alker 's office is on the first
to play at all future ban quets. All floor of the Ben Franklin buildin g
are invited to come and hear this and his extension is 3706.
Ca ndida t es fo r t he CGA final elections t o be held t his Thursda y
highly vers atile group.
and Friday, Septemb er 28 and 29 will be: from Elwell Hall; Larry
ATTENTION
Mayer, Jo hn Ficek, Stephen Andre|ack, and Rainbo Yudinsky ;
ABSENTEE S
Students
will
be
admitted
free
from
Luzer ne Hall, Charles Muskaus ky ;fro m Montour Hall, Peggy
Studen ts ma y re por t absences
of
charge
to
the
fairgrounds
on
Smith
and Bec ky Jones ; f rom Columbia Hall, Donna Bruder;from
of more than one day in length to
Thursday,
September
28
after
7
Schuykill Hall, Susan Hall and Janice Evans ; and fro m North Hall,
the Office of the Regist rar. The
Registrar 's Office will in turn P.M. Admission will be upon Michelle Noto. Off-ca mpus representative candidates will be Mary
notify each of the stud ents ' in- presentation of studen t ID card . Beth Lech, Georae Gruber, and Ronald Sheehan.
structors . Each of these absences
Candidat es for the Freshman Class will be: for president, Ralph
should be subs tan ti a t ed by a
WRESTLING CANDIDATES
Ferrie
and La ura Lea Grabowski ; for vice-president / Dee Medoctor 's med ical excuse or ot her
Any man interes ted in going
; and for treasurer, Dan Bechfel and I inda Prosper.
Cormick
legitimate document.
out for wrestli ng should report to
by Bob Oliver
and Frank Pizzoli

NEWS BRIEFS

Candida tes Announc ed

1973 ORIENT ATION
If you are inter est ed in bein g a
member of the stud ent orien-

the new field house on Tuesd ays
and Thursdays from 4-5 p.m. or
contact Coach Sanders any day in
room 247.

By Joe Miklos
The J. Geils Band will be appearing on October 20 in the new
gym at BNE for homecomi ng. If
they live up t o their rep utation ,
Bloomsburg is in for a rock n' roll
t reat .

and h igh sales. I n each case the y
presented music heavily influenced by some of the more
pop ular
soul arti sts and
tradition al blues great s like B.B.
King , J ohn Lee Hooker and Don
Covey.

A Boston-based band , J . Geils
has been popular with college
crowds and has ap peare d several
times on nation al tours . Their hit
si ngle , "Whammer Jammer ,"
didn 't climb ver y far on the
charts , but should have. It was an
exam ple of the kind of thin g a
good blues band can do.
In addition to the single, the J.
Getls Band has had two popular
albums , The J. Geils Band and
The Morning After. Both were
received with excellent reviews

After almost four years of one
nigh t stands in small clubs and
coll eges, th ey were spot ted by an
Atlant ic Records promo man.
That was the break they needed
to become one of the few good
bands w ith roots in the Boston
area t o become popular.
It' s blues with a shot of electricit y . It 's beer drlnkin ' music,
And J. Geils will be at BSC. Information on ticket sales will be
available sometime next week .

Elect ions for Freshman Class and CGA will be held f rom 8:00
a.m. until 4:00 p.m. both days in the respective residen ce halls and
in the Student Union.

the new tartan track in the new
gvm was excellen t, there were
some problems , the major one
being that the tartan track does
not resist heart , and cigarettes
will smolder in the tra ck.
Athletics And NCAA
Athletic pr ograms may have a
little differen t orientation in the
future , accordin g to Dr. Bautz.
"We want to have the type of
sports that the students want" ,
stated Dr. Bautz. He went on to
state that "there will be no
emphasis on one thin g to the
detrimen t of something else.
Since limited funds are available
we have to use funds carefully. " '
He thinks women's sports are
great and that there should be
more of them, such as Softball.
As to what can be done about
the two-year suspension imposed
on BSC by the NCAA, Dr. Bautz
stated , "I don't think of it as a
two-year suspensi on, but a oneyear one". Dr. Bautz is of the
'opinion that the NCAA is a slow
moving nature , and that an appeal might take longer than the
year BSC will be on suspension
from post-seas on play. The
second year BSC will just be on
probation , and will be perm itt ed
to take part in post-season play.
Why BSC?
After 12 years in the same
institution in NYC, Dr. Bau t z was
tired of the routine . His wife and
family enj oyed small-town
Amer ica , and Bloomsburg appealed to them. As for the people,
he sa id all the faculty and
students he has met have been
great t o him. He especially had
thanks f or t he ma in tenance crew
a t t he Gy m who are doing a fine
job .
Dr. Bautz conies from a school
tha t did elect depar t men t heads
at three-year intervals , and does
not expect an y difficulty .

/. Geils to p erform
at BNE

J. Gel!», the lirad group performing «t Homecoming .

ed ito ria l

The students of BSC have an
opport unity to make themselves
a viable force in the decision of
who teach es them. For the first
time in BSC history, a student evaluation of faculty members is
to take place.
Several weeks from now, CGA
will make available to all the
students forms by which they
may evaluate any and all faculty
memb ers .
These
student
evaluation s will be included with
faculty evaluations in a review of
all faculty members , both
tenur ed and un tenur ed. These
evaluations may make .the difference as to whether or nor a
professor retains his tenure , or
even receives a terminal contrait.

To say the least this is impressive. You, the student , may
have a voice — here 's your opportunity to defend the pro f who's
a good teacher or rap the teacher
who's bad. Maybe you just have a
criticism for an otherwis e good
teacher which may help him or
her in his ability to come across
to his classes. You must
remember that you aren 't doing
this for yourself , but for the
students who come after you .
If you choose to ignor e this
opportunity, and only a few
students
respond , in all
prob ability
the
student
evaluation will be branded as a
failure and ignored. But if enough
of us respond ,they have to listen.
Susan Sprague

Record Review

My Time
^w

Time" from his And Band album.
"My Time " is a very moving
slow number — it finishes the
record on a proper and moody
note.

There is an obvious differ ence
between the San Francisco stuff
and that from Muscle Shoals. The
soul music from San Fran cisco is
more commercial , and the foot
stompers are heavier. "Freedom
For The Stallion " is a social
comment a la new Tempt ations.
In context , it is highly successful;
even the lyrics fit the genre :

by Joe Miklos
My Time...Boz Scaggs
After almost a year (is that a
set date for album s any more? )
Boz Scaggs has finally returned.
It is apparent that severa l
changes have gone down , both in
his band and his music. But most
of all , this is his Muscle Shoals
album , an important step in his
development as a purveyor of
blue-eyed souL
Although he uses a horn section , his band no longer has such
a thing. What' s left is a threeman core from the original band ,
Dave Brown on bass , George
Rains on drums and ace
keyboard man Joachim Young.
Of course Boz himself is still
playing a more than adequate
lead. The band is f eaturedonly on
abou t four tracks , recorded at
CBS in San Francisc o.
The rest of the albu m features
the same Muscle Shoals back-u p,
less Dwayne Allman tha t appeared on his first album . To be
noted are Nashville Cats David
Hood on bass , Roger Hawki ns on
drums and Barry Bechet on
piano

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"Full-Lock Power Slide "
deserves mention , in that it is
almost out of place. Boz uses a
Who-type chord pattern th at
moves in Who-like directions .
Vocals , horns and a smoothly
flowing bridge prev ent that
bothersome imitativeness tha t is
evident on "Dinah Flo. "
This album , despite its few
st ruc t ural w eaknesses , is mighty
good. There are several potential
singles tha t probably will never
be released , and there is a lot of
good music. The quality is
perhaps not as high as that of Boz
Scaggs and Band , bu t almos t .
Tha t' s good enough for anyone.
Scaggs has lived up t o h is
pot en ti al. He st ill hasn 't cut a bad

Boz has moved away from
country music , and is now
pushing the music he is best at —
soul. He adds a heavy jazz influence to what he does. It was
apparent on Moments and even
more so on And Band. Now he's
settled solidly into a jazz-soul
groove, dropping the country
influence almos t entirely .

"Dinah Flo" is about the best of
the Muscle Shoals cuts , but is
vaguely disturbing in its vocal
resemblance to Van Morrison .
Boz Sca ggs has a d isti nc ti ve
voice, and some thin g l ike t h is
throws his fans . "Hello My
Lover " is more like i t. I t 's n ice
and choppy, si milar t o "Monkey album .

Editorial Start : Editor-in-Chief/ Susan Sprague ; Managing
Editor , Bob Oliver ; Assi stant Managing Edito r, Kartn
Keinard ; Feature Editor, Joe Miklos ; Art Editor , Dtnite
Ross ; Contributing Cartoon ist, John Stugrln ; Contrib utin g
Editors , Frank Plzzoli and Jim Sachtttl ; Staff: Don Em,
Mart y Kleiner , Joanne Linn , Linda Livermors t, Valery
O'Conn ell, Ltah Skladan y , Mary Btih Lech , Cindy Smith ,
John Woodward , Tim Bossard, Lorraine Roulato , Pat Fox.
Business Staff : Business Manager , Elaine Pongratz ; Office
Manager, Ellen Doyle ; Advertising Manager / Frank Lorah ;
Circulation Manager , Nanc y Van Pelt.
Photog raphy Staff: Chief Photogra pher , Dan Maresh ;
Photogra phers ^ Dale Alexander / Tom Dryburg , Pat White ,
Sue Qreef« Kay Boyles.
Advisor ': Ken Hoffman
Come to 234 Waller to find us. Or call at 389-3101. All copy
must be submitted by no later than 5:00 P.M. on Tuesdays
and Sunda ys.
NOTE: The opinions voiced In the columns and feat ure articles of the MAO are not necessarily shared by the entire
staff.
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freedom for the mare and the colt
Freedom for the baby child... "
Jus t sappy enough . . This song
would make a great hit single.
"We 're Gonna Roll" is a
rocker , with some nice catch y
picki n' in it. It' s a logical conclusion to the direction Chuck
Berry pushed music in the midfifties , featuring a soul horn
section tha t doesn 't really do
anything, just blasts solid notes
for effect.

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9-20-72. Tast y tidbits . Isn 't the Information Desk in the Stude nt Union to be used for th is purpose?
(Maresh Photo )

Mead' s Memoirs

The personal memoirs of Dr.
Margaret Mead , published in
part by Red book magazine ,
portray a woman thoroughl y
liberated from early childhood
who was "rejected" and "hurt"
by the "snobbery and cruelty of
the sorority system " and who
decided at an earl y age to use her
talents to fight such injustices.
Dr. Mead stated that she was so
ostracized by her fellow students
at DePauw University in Indiana
tha t , she actually was an "exile".
This may ha ve influenced her in
having chosen the problems of
contemporary civilization as a
career.
The gifted social scientist , who
has authored more than two

dozen books , also disclosed that
she decided against a caree r as a
writer because, "I did not have
the superlative talent for success."
Her age, at 70, she said , is
sometimes a "target" of critics .
When she advocates an unpopular point of view, "some
fanatic is likely to denounce me
as senile."
Taught from ear ly childhood to
be a "full human being," Dr.
Mead could not accept the "bitter
injustice " of the sororit y system
at DePauw nor the sexual
of
the
discrimination
coeducati onal college which
encouraged girls not to excel
scholastically if they wanted to

be popular with the boys.
She therefore , transferred to
Barnard at the end of her freshman year where , "I found—and
in some measure created—the
kind of student life that matched
my earlier dreams ."
Dr. Mead wrote , "It is very
difficult to evaluate how essential
it is to have one's soul seared by
the great injustice o>f one's own
time.. In justice experienced in
the deeply wounded flesh is the
stuff out of which change explodes...Some kind of experience
is necessary to open one's eyes.
"What did I learn from this
ver y mild experience of being
( continu ed on page four )

Since the days of Moby Dick ,
when Captain Ahab pursued his
prey with a hand-held harpo on ,
whaling has evolved into a highly
mechanized industry . From their
floating factori es in the Ant artic ,
Japa n and Russia , the two major
whaling nations , hun t the beasts
by sonar dev ices and heli copt er.
Only trouble is , t he world is
run ning out of whale s to ca t ch.
Marine biologists estimat e that
there are fewer tha n 300 righ t and
bowhead whales left in the seas.
Th e blue whale , t he larges t and
(bes ides man ) the most intell igen t mamm al , has decli ned
fr om a world popul ation of 200,000
to 6,000. There are only 10,000
gray whal es left. The only whales
hun ted commerciall y t hese da ys
are t he f in , the Sei, and the sperm
whale — virtuall y the only ones
left in an y number .
A t the UN Environm ental
Conference in Stockhol m las t
June , the U.S. called for a 10-year
moratorium on commercial
whaling . Such a resolution was
passed over vigoro us Japanese
opposition (the Rus sians were not
present at Stockholm ), but the
Interna tional Whaling Commission ( IWC ) has declined to

unilaterally quit the whaling
business.
The
Commerce
Department this year declined to
renew the license of the Del
Monte Fishing Company in Richm ond , California , wh ose 40
sailors and four ships were the
las t surv ivors of an indus t r y
which numbered 40,000 sailors

and 750 ships in its heydey .
The Del Monte crew took a last
catch of about 100 whales and
then quit before filling the rest of
the U.S. quota . "Maybe it' s bad t o
kill
anyt hing, " comments
Captain Gib Hunter , last of the
(cont inued on page four )

...

Whali ng Stori es
Pra nkis h Childr e n

t ha t feels ever yone should listen
- by Donald G. Enz
The new Ce n t rex sy stem has to music and perverted blabber
become f airl y r eliable since that at 4 a.m., just becaus e he 's
firs t horr ible week of school when listening to it.
you couldn 't even get a dial tone.

But all problems are not yet
solved , we have children supposedly educa ted to a college
level mak ing obscene and prank
phone calls. The ignorance of
these few have made t he Centrex
hell for t hose receivin g calls in
the middle of the night and hear
the Star Spangled Banner , or
birds chir ping. Na t ionalism is
great ; so is nature but not at 3
a.m.
The problem is mostly the guys
calling up girls and playing the
rol e of t he cool stud who 's had a
sex drive explosion in an empt y
enforce the ban.
bed. His horn y hand grasps the
The IWC , representing the student director y and searches
ma jor whaling nations , sets for his relief victim. Thus , he
yearly quotas on the number and proceeds to call his "true love"
type of whale that each nation and whispers gross phrases to
may catch. During the 1971-72 her.
season, for example , Japan 's
The older type of maniac Is the
quota was 9800, the Soviet Union " prankish scholar " who has
was allotted 10,000, and the U.S. trouble reading Winnie the Pooh
but loves Zap comics ; there 's
166.
,
The U.S., however , baa
picture s. This being is the one

You may thin k these are stories
f rom my head , but similar instances have been recorded late
at nigh t wh ile most people are
sleeping. It' s a disturbing thought
to know there are reall y weird
people around. I tho ught there
were just freaks .
One comnlaint nffAinat the
telephone company by the girls
receiving the calls is th at they
weren 't asked if they wanted
their phone numbers in the
director y. And I feel they have a
good point , but the telephone
company didn 't plan on children
using the phones . So girls, you'll
have to wait un til next year. Or
possibly you may be able to
change your number if calls
per sist.
If students have knowledge of
who these "midnight maniacs "
are , please turn them into
security , or some other avenue of
authorit y so the campus won 't be
bother ed by them .
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Sweet Gra bs
Huskies drop Heartbreaker , 24-22

by Mike Williams
B looms b ur g ' s Huskies ,
sustained a heart-bre aking
defeat at the hands of LHSC' s
Eagles. Being down 21-3 early in
the third quarter , Bloomsb ur g
staged a thrilling comeback that
just fell short.
Lock Have n scored first on a
two yard run by quar terbac k
Kline with six minutes gone in the
first quarter . Midwa y through
the second quarter
BSC' s
quarterback ueiger connected
with Devereux for a 53 yard
completion to the Lock Haven 25,
but all Bloomsburg could muster
' was a 19 yd. field goal by Kicker
Lock
Haven
Oberho ltzer.
responded to the field goal with a
scorin g drive culminated by a 36
yd. touchdown run by Kline.
Extra point was good and set the
score at 14-3 Lock Haven at the
end of the first half.
Lock Have n started the third
quarter with a 40 yard touchdown
pass. Here is where the real story
starts , with Bloomsbur g down 213 with 13:02 left in the third
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quarter. Sparked by a Charlie
Bender interception and fine
receiving of Chris Sweet ,
Bloomsburg marched to the Lock
Haven 7, where H usk y f ullback
Gruber took it in for the score. A
gamble for two points failed and
the score stood at Lock Haven 24Bloomsb urg 9. Lock Haven
started to march again late in the
third
quarter
when Dan
Greenland stole a pass that ended
the thr eat. Bloomsburg with bad
field nositi nn was forced tn mint

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and again Lock Haven started
down the field. The Huskie
defense stalled the Eagle drive at
Bloomsburg 's 16 yard line from
there Lock Haven kicked a field
goal to boost their total to 24.
The remainder of- the fourt h
quarter was all Bloomsburg 's as
Geiger took it over from the five.
Again Bloomsburg 's bid for a two
pointer failed and the score stood
at 24-15. The final score came
with 7:23 left in the game as
Gruber plunged for the last yard
and a score. Oberholtzer 's
placement was good and set the
final tally at 24-22.

BSC quarterback Joe Geiger followin g through after his pass is in the air . George Gruber (36) is
lead b locker.
. x .
(Dr yberg photo )

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BSC end Chris Sweet tack led by LSC linebacker Chuck Glass after a
recepti on.
Gruber sprint ing around end , sees an opening.

Field Hockey starts

(Dryberg photo )

Harri e rs dro p
Tri-Meet
by DALE ALEXANDER
The Bloomsburg Cross Country Harriers initiated their
season In a quadrangular meet
Saturday at Lock Haven.
At the conclusion of the 5 mile
hilly course the Harriers found
themselves finishing behind the
other three teams , Lock Haven ,
Shippensburg, and Clarion , each
being counted as a dual meet thus
our record is 0-3.
The first five scorers for BSC
were Terry Lee finishing a strong
fourth and Bart Grimm in his
first year of collegiate crosscountry placing eleventh , Mike
Hippi e twenty-second , Dale
Alexander twenty- gixth and Bob
Quaivoli thirtieth out of a field of
55.
W est Chester Next
Next Saturday the Harriers
shall once again run over hill and
dale on the treacherous West
Chester course against American
University and the host , West
Chester ,
Coach Clyde Noble will be
seeking his fourth consecutive
winning season. In 1980 and 1070
he posted 11-1 and 10-1 records

( Dryb erg Photc.

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respectively, the best CC records
in the history of the college. Last
year , w it h a less experienced
team ami plagued by injuries , his
charges had a 6-4 record.

by Linda Uvermore
"I am looking forwa rd to a
perfect season — all wins. " This
exem plif ies the op tim ist ic
outlook Miss J ac queline Adams
has for th is season's woman
hockey team.
Although the forward line
needs rebu ilding the coach feels
that the stron g back line can keep

the t eam unbe at able. M ost of t he
pla yers have had experi ence on
high school teams and therefore know the game skills. Now
th ey must work together , putting
these ab ilit ies in t o the form of a
team.
The hockey sq uad pra ctices
without fail Monday through
Friday from 4:00 unti l 8:00 p.m.

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at the new gymnasium. All home
games will be h eld at the new
gym too.
The girls , who M iss Adam s
f eels are the most pleasant she
has ever coached , will don gold
un iforms wit h blue nee socks f or
the seven games.
( continue d on page four )

Tough Schedule
Bloomsburg is fac ing probably
its toughest CC schedule in its
history. Most of the oppon ents
are expected to be strong squads.
The balance of the schedule is as
follows: Sept. 30 - at West Chester
with the American University 3:00 p.m.; Oct. 7 • Lock Haven •
2.00 p.m.; Oct. 11 • at East
oiruu usuurg - i;uu p.m.; uci.

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Mansfield - 2:00 p.m.; Oct. 19 - at
Cheyney - 4:00 p.m.; Oct. 21 Bucknell U. open • 10:00 a.m.;
Oct. 24 - NAIA District 19 Meet at
Millers villo ;
Oct.
28
Susquehanna U. - 2:00 p.m.; Nov.
4 • PSCAC Meet at Edlnboro ,
The BSC Harriers are coached
by Dr. Clyde Noble.
Roster : Terr y Lee , Bart
Grimm , Mike Hippie , Bob
Quairoli , Rick Eckersley, Rich
Van Horn , Dave Orgler , Bob
Smith , Don Nauss , and Dale
Alexander.
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BSC't two beit runners , Bart Orlm and Terry Lee, war ming-up btfora Saturday 's ma«t.
,
(Alex ander photo )

Lambda
House
has fire
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BSC YOUN G
REPUBLICAN S
..The
B.S.C.
Young
Republicans' second meet ing
will be at Hart line Room 83 on
Monday, Oct. 2, at 7:30 p.m..
Election of permanent officers, the report of the Fair
Committee / and activities of
other committee s are on th e
agenda.
There is no members hio fen.
YR goals incl ude commi ttees
in every dormitor y, the Day
Women ' s and Day Men 's
associations , and every other
possible organization to turn
OUT Tne voie ana neip nuueve a
Republican victor y.
..Al l interested students are
invited.
First Meeting
. . A t the first meeting , both
Guy Bangs and Jerr y DePo
informall y
on
spoke
registration . Both felt that the
You pg Republicans Club was
a fine place to get involved in
*
politics.
.. If you have any questions,
raise the m at the Oct. 2
meeting .
R. Oliver
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Swim Team
If you are inter ested in joining
the Women's Swim team, go to
the organizat ional meeting on
Wedne sday, September 27 at
4:00 p.m. The meeting will be
held in Office 6 of the Centennial Gym.

Hockey starts...
(continue d from page three )

from last year. Girls reappearing
Eleven Retur nees
There ar e 28 member s on the . are : Carol Borton , Aethea Ellis,
tea m, eleven of them returning Christie Fogel, Suzy Guall , Lee
H einemeyer , Claire Houpt , Linda
McCorkle , Li nda Reuo ss , Ann
Stoisits , Ma rc ia W annamacker
and Cathy Wilson.
Even though it is too late to join
the team there will be four home
games , giving every one tne
opportunity to see Bloomsburg
State 's woman varsity field
hockey team in action.

A fire of undetermined nature
caused $3500 damage at the
Lambda Alpha Mu House at
approximatel y 3:30 p.m. on Glen
Avenue Sunday. The apartmen t
was vacant at the time of the fire
and no injuries were reporte d.
One bedroom was completely
destroyed and all four apartments in the building were badly
dama ged bv the lar ge amount of
smoke.
The sisters left homeless by the
blaze are : Caro l Connor , Kathy
Clay, Joan Platko , Susan Pape ,
and Janice Ciccone. They will
temporaril y reside at an apartment made available to them by
a good Samaritan.
The sisters of Lamba Alpha Mu
wish to thank all the sororities
Harrier team mate , crossing the finish line during a toug h meet at
and fraternities who offered
Lock
Haven.
assistance in their time of need.

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•Bulletin

American whaleboa t skippers .
"But we kill cattle , we kill horses.
And the Russians and Japanese
still continue killing whales. "
Is there anythin g that can be
done to prevent these countries
from completely exterminatin g
this endangered species? The
U.S. for one has forbidde n the
import of all whale products ,
which range from cosmetic and

Boards • Loosel eaf Binder

•Address

Book •Desk Accessories

THE STUDIO SHOP
fm*T*

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look! -

a very earthv natural

Shampoo, Cut , Style

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I

Now Open 6 Days a Week for Your Convenience.
Call 784-7220

CROWNING TOUCH COIFFURES

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
mag^^^^^^^^mmgmm

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MMBH

Hartzel's Music Store
72 N. Iron St.

Over 300 Guitars
and Amplifiers
•B^K
B^
^
^
^
^
^
^

THE INDIFFERENT £_>) I

I

for onl y $2.50 with ID card
$3.00 without

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59 E. Main St., Bloomsbur g
784-2818

^No Wet Head — but £&£*

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Miller Office
Supply Co.

18 West Main Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.

HEADQUARTERSOF
HALLMARK CARDS

544 East St.

ISteamed Clams
ISliishkebob
¦Stuffed Peppers
¦
Whole Crab
I

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l

( continued fro m page two )

Expresso and Imported Teas

B^^——— ^——^^-——,———

t te
ot i
reject of my own society?" Dr.
Mea d asked. "Just enough to
t t
o
yt
this is not the way to organize
society...that today no ar gument
can stand that supports unequal
opportunity or any intrinsic
|
dis qualifi cat ion f or shar ing in the
whole of life. "
Dr. Mead' s memo irs are bei ng
ser ialized by Redbook , of which
she is a con t ribu it ng edit or , and
w ill be publ ished in book form by
William Morrow & Co. in
November .

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India Import!
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dally 10i3C to Si30, lot* on frlday

feed. Alternatives exist for all
presen t uses of the whale , conservationists explain .
Other groups are pressing for
direct economic sanctions
against whaling nati ons. The
International Society for the
Abolition of Data Pr ocessing
Machines , founded to protect
man from computer technology,
claims that several businesses
l already agreed to cancel
have
contracts with the Japanese

Sardine Platter I Mead
Cheese Plate I rea d as an u s der and a
Smoked Oysters!
know m re clearl han ever ha
Smoked Clams I

| Wanted: Folk or Blues Sligers S2.5D/hr.

AND GIFTS
Phone 784-2361

4:00
4:00
4:00
4:00
4:00
4:00
4:00

( continued from page two)

Denim Series

hair was a" strun 9 out! Till I

Misercordia K
Susquehanna A
lycoming H
Wilkes H
Lycoming A
Mansfield A
Keystone A
Jr. Coll.
Penn State Tournament

Whaling

Pottery b y Ron Bower

GET IT ON AT C.T.C.

Af/iilvKn
ma lll sAm m
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Nov. 4,5

(Alexande r phot o )

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ftevised Hockey Schedule

Sept. 28
Oct. 5
Oct. 10
Oct. 12
Oct. 19
Oct. 24
Oct. 26

I
I

I

Sheepski n Rug for sale.
Approxi mately 30" by 40".
Natural
White Austrai lianthick coat. Inquire : 764-0262.

¦

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CLASSIFIED

See you at
the Fair

^tfc JU's
W^^MIwry WwMwMt

Down in* Hill On Katf Si.

197 I Volk swagen
St at io n Wagon
H

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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^B^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

7 Paii«ng »r

Good Condition'4 N*w Tlrvi
¦••? OH»r Accepted

Call 784-3720

1