rdunkelb
Wed, 05/01/2024 - 16:55
Edited Text
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"Come . my friends , it 's not too
lat e to seek a n ewer wor ld. "
—Alfred Lord Tennyson
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CGA Meets
Dr. Charles H . Carlson , Actin g
Presiden t , op ened the fir st
meetin g of this year 's College
Council last Monda y night .
Discussed at the meeting was
allocatio n policy, election resu lts ,
Big Name Entertainment , and
the Searc h and Screeni ng
Committee 's report to pick a new
president .
Carlson Spoke
was p laced on two years '
probation . Carlson said that in
the re port some things were
documented ; for example , there
were grade changes and compensation and - or aid to athletes.
Also, all segments of the college
did not assist the observer in his j
work . Another objection was that j
pre-college athletes were allowed
to work out with the athl etes . Dr.
Dr . Carls on informed CGA that Par lsnn statfari
tho s>n11o0P miisf rpsnnnri to the
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these facts were documented ,
other points in the repo rt may be
false . These possibly doubtful
points will be sent back for
personal consideration and he '
screenin g committee to talk with feels that by late October we «
students and facult y about BSC 's. ( BSC ) will get some inkling o f ]
accreditati on . Dr. Hobart Heller how the NCAA feels . There may
is in char ge of the re port to be be a possibility of a reduced
sent to the committee from BSC. sentence.
Dr . Carlson stated that he had In closing, Dr . Carlson said he
traced BSC membershi p in the pledged his support for CGA, that
NCAA back to 1955, when we they shouldn't wor ry about the
agreed to live up to all the rules past but should worry about the I
set down . He went on to state that future.
Dan Burkholder , presiding over the first
Dr. Charles Carlson , Acting Preside nt, as he
Review of Budget
meeting off Colle ge Council for this year, held last last October the NCAA sent an
addresses
College Council last Monday.
investigator to our campus andI1 The budget for Community
Monday.
(Oliver Photo )
fOliver Photo ) upon the evidence compiled BSC Activities for the 1972-73 year was
reviewed , along with a stressing
Search and Screen ing
of the necessity to hold strictly to
Th e Search an d Screen ing
allocation policy. That policy
stands that all requests for Committee , which appointed Dr.
allocations must be submitted in Carlson interim president for this
writing to Michael Meizinger , year , has been and will be acapplication s until
Undergradua te courses may be the student to the Office of the studen ts wishing to pursue a Treasurer of CGA , at least two cepting
December
15 for position of
e
S
chool
o
f
th
scheduled for Spring Semester
curr
i
culum
i
n
Registrar .
weeks prior to being placed on
president
.
Tom
Beveridge , one of
now
and
Friday,
ud
i
es
ma
y
so
St
betwee
n
p
la
i
ned
1973
P ro f essi onal
P erha ps it should be ex
the agenda . This year voting will
t
he
studen
t
s
on
the commit tee,
"
Undergraduate
"Area
of
Study
October 27.
tha t the "Area of Study" includes indicate on their
be done on need and knowledge ,
stated
that
over
seventy-five
cur
rently
still
carried
in
students who are
cards , but they are
the School , Area of Certification
not on personality .
a
pp
licat
i
ons
have
been
the
sent in.
using
enrolled will schedule ,
and Curr iculum. There are three Arts & Sciences unt il formal
V acancies on Council
States Accreditation
Board by November 15 of this
year . Three members of the
Middle Sta tes will be sent as a
Middle
Inf o on Spring Scheduling
same procedure
as used last
spring . This means that full-time
students will receive a list of
Course Offerings for Spring
Semester 1973 throug h the
campus mail. Part -time students
should receive their materia ls at
their home address.
Ma jor
res ponsibility
for
follow i ng p ro p er scheduling
procedures rests with each
studen t. This includes following
the instruct ions on the Course
Listings : maki ng sure that they
meet with their advisor , completing the Official Course
Selection Form which the advisor
will then forward to the Registrar
by Friday , October 27. Pa rticular attention should be paid to
meeting prerequisites of certain
courses.
In addition to the Course
Listings , each student will
receive two copies of an "Area of
Study" card . Although simple to
complete , this is an Important ,
step in the implementation of a
coordinated advisement system .
These cards will indicate the area
of study in which you are
presently enrolled accordin g to
college records.
If the "Area of Study " cards
are correct as printed , students
will then sign their name and
leave both cards with their advisors. Should a chan ge or
correction be necessary, indica te
such in space provided on the
cards ; the Depar tment Copy will
remain with the Advisor along
with the Official Course Selection
Form i and the Registr ar'!Goby
will be carried immediatel y by
under graduate schools : Arts &
Sciences, Profess ional Stud ies
an d Business (in Business
Education ). Certification Areas
in the School of P ro fessional
Studies include Commun icat ion
nUANiliiNa
UlBUl uci s,
T\amIa1
vcuiai
UmffflAntai
ujr £*vi*j 0 » ,
a pplicat ion is made to said
school , probabl y durin g the
second semester of the i r
sophomore year , and accepted.
I t should be noted that some
curr icula re q u ire a certa in
Elementar y Educat ion, Medical sequence of courses that stiouid
Technolo gy , Public School be started as earl y as the second
Nursin g, Secondar y Educa t ion semester of the freshmen year.
Educati on. Students are encoura ged to seek
and
Special
Curr iculum refers to a ma jor , proper advice in this regard.
Students experiencin g difarea of emphasis or area of
specializati on within one of the ficulty with advisement should
contact
their
Department
above.
C
hairmen
or
C urricu lum
All freshmen who entered
Willia
m Jones ,
Coordinator.
Dr.
B.S.C. on or after September 1971
Acade
mic AdCoordinator
of
who did not enroll in the School of
(Undergraduate
) is
visement
Business have automa tically
Waller
also
available
in
room
128
been enrol led in the School of
Ar ts & Sciences. Anv of these Hall , telephone 389-2119.
Exchan ge Pro gram Planned
Virginia
Sta te
College
representatives , Mrs. Colon and
Mr. McCants will be visiting the
B. S. C. campus on October 10, 11,
& 12 to discuss a cooperative
exchange program between the
two colleges. Mrs. Colon is
currently
the Director of
Women 's Activities and Mr.
McCants is the Dean of Students.
The program has been in the
works since November of 1971
when B. S. C. applied for a grant
from the Department of Health
Education , & Welfare for expenses. The four-tiere d program
suggested in the application is as
follows: First Tier—an exchange
of two (2) professional staff
members from each camp us per
semester ; Second Tier — this
phase wHl place a Virginia State
College graduate extern counselor , preferably black , in a
situation at Bloomsburg State
College , which will provide for
, maximum int eraction with
' students , staff , faculty, and the
community ; Third Tier—this
phas ewill involve an exchange of
three ( 3) undergraduate students
from each college per semester.
These students coming to
Bloomsburg State College will
make a significant impact on the
total college community. Con(contin ued on page four )
New Business
Rod Morgans , Chairman of
Elections , stated that there are
Dou g Mc Cl i ntock made a
still vacancies on Council for the mo
ti on to instruct the Registrar
Day Women Representati ve,and
t
o
send
student grades only t o
the three commuter represen-
tatives. Executive Council seatsat-large were filled by the
election of Ron Sheehan and John
Ficek. Rod Morgans was appointed Historian and Tom
Beveridge Parliamentarian.
Big Name Entertainment
Doug Mc Clintock , Chairman of
BNE, stated that thin gs were
students
and
not tn narenta
except upon student req uest.
Voting was all in favor except for
fi ve absen tions.
Mc Clintock also moved that
complimentar y passes to BNE be
at the discretion of BNE committee. He stated that he wanted
to improve relation s with the
community, and that man y state
moving as scheduled for the and local officials would be
October 20 concert featuring the receiving them. This will be done
J. Geils Band and Malo. He went on an R.S.V.P. basis , in order to
on to state that all seats would be make all t ickets possible to
general admission , with the first students.
President Dan Burkholder said
300 purchasers being allowed
parking privile ges at the New that committees to update the
Gym. McClintock stated "We 're constitution and revise election
going to bring you the best proc edures were being formed at
this time.
concert BSC ever had. "
NEW S BRIEFS
REGISTE R!
Tuesday October 10 is the last TRANSPORTA TION NEEDED !
day to register to vote in the
Novemb er 1 election. The
A new non-graded elementary
Bloomsburg Court House will be school in Conyngh am is seeking
open from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. help arr anging transportation for
three stu dents from Wilkes-
Barre .
Mrs. Allen Dick would ap
IMAGES OF CONCE RN
pred
ate a call at 788-3313
There will be a reception
(collect)
from any commuter s
Tuesday , October 10, 7:80-10:00
who
travel
from WIlkes-Barre via
p.m. in Haas Gallery for students
Routes
81
and
80.
and faculty .
Zen Child
Their bellies bloated, their legs
badly bowed, the two little boys
made a pathetic ; sight as they
> slumped frog-like and lethargic
on their haunches throughout the
examination
at Children 's
Hospita l in San Francisco. One
was 2V2 , the other 1V2 ; neither
could walk or crawl ; the older
child had a vocabulary of two
words and weighed 16 pounds , the
younger just managed to tip the
scales at 11 pounds ; their hair
rc p anri
was
on/4 tv. ^.. ,
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^ B Hrittla
**ri f t b l > « V « y U I I U U lVJ
were extremely cranky.
Horrified , pediatrician Dr .
Josette Mondanaro and her
colleagues
made
bone
development tests of * the
children In these tests the 2V2year-old showed a bone age of six
months, and the 1V2 -year-old
registered
three
months.
Diagnosis showed that both little
boys were suffering from severe
cases of rickets and scurvy - and
that they had been living for
months on the Zen macrobiotic
diet of their hippi e parents.
Zen macrobiotics , a concept of
spiritual and physical enrichment through a diet based
ultimately on brown rice, is the
brainchild of the late George
Ohsawa, a Japanese-born , Parisbased philosopher who died six
years ago. The diet has come
under heavy attack from doctors
and nutritionists and has caused
at least one death plus an untold
number of cases of scurvy,
rickets, anemia and other forms
of advanced malnutrition. Now
pediaticians are becoming
concerned over growing evidence
that the risks posed by the hippie
generation to their children - with
more serious results.
balanced mix of
meats ,
vegetables and fruits , to-f-7, an
"ideal" diet consisting entirely of
grains and drastically limited
intake of liquids and salt.
In the case of Mondanaro 's two
small boy patients, the parents
had switched to Zen macrobiotics
as a way of kicking the drug
habit , and were raising their sons
largely on rice, soy products,
seaweed and Chinese cabbage.
"As they became older ," says
Mondanaro , "the children
became fussy eaters so their diet
became even more' restricted."
Ironically 'enough , the parents
brought their youngsters to
Mondanaro not because they
were concerned about the state of
their health - but to show the
doctor how well the Zen
macrobiotic diet worked . Concerned friends had tricked the
parents into visiting the clinic
with their children by telling
them tha t Mondanaro was "interested in Zen macrobiotics. "
The results of such a diet when
consumed regularly by a child
can be frightening, though the
number of children harmed in
this fashion is probably quite low.
Students and Faculty!!!!!!
Submit
to
the
Olympian
Box 293 Waller Hall
Deadlin e Novemb e r 22, 1972
Tennis
Courts
"We are men and women who
have suffered and endured much
and not only because of our abject poverty but because we have
been kept poor. The color of our
skin , the languages of our
cultural and native origins, the
lack of formal education , the
exclusion from the democratic
process, the numbers of our slain
in recent wars-all the.se burdens
generation after generation have
sought to demoralize us, to break
our human spirit. But God knows
we are not agricultural impliments or rented slaves . We are
men ."
—Cesar Chavez
is
Cesar Chavez referring to the
demoralization and degradation
which migrant farm workers
experience. Migrant farm
workers are people who travel to
different parts of the country ,
picking crops when they are
ready for harvesting. There are
migrants in the area right now.
They came from Florida ,
Virginia , Mississippi, Georgia,
and Maryland about the second
week of August. In the next two
weeks they will almost all have
left , working their way down
South. The crops they pick here
are tomatoes , beans and
potatoes. Sometimes you can iee
black people in the fields
surrounding the area but few
people know who they are and
what their life is like.
by Nancy V a n Pel t
"Why aren 't the new tennis
courts completed?"
"But they are completed."
"Then why can 't we play on
them .?"
". . .ahh. . ."
The construction on the tennis
courts is finished. The reason
students cannot play on them is
because one small , necessary
piece of equipment is missing. It
is a cap with a pulley welded to it
that sits on top of the posts to
keep the nets in place. The
construction company that built
the courts was suDDOsed to
deliver these caps. However,
they were unable to supply them
when the courts were being built.
Now they say they 're in the mail ,
but the mail service has been
ridiculousl y slow since then.
Where are those caps?
k
This delay is causing a lot of
incon venience. Four courts have
nets but they are held up in a
makeshift fashion. Also, over a
hundred students a day who are
taking tennis this semester are
torced to play on only four courts.
They really aren 't getting the
You could never see migrant
(co ntinued on page four )
camps from a main road . As a
a 1
The parents refused t macrobiotics altogether, but they
finally agreed to give their sons
oranges, meat, fi sh , eggs, and
dairy products. After six months,
the children no longer show the
painful , fragile bones of rickets,
nor the skin eruptions of scurvy.
The eldest is now starting to
walk. Even so, the future for the
youngsters is not promising.
ABUSE : Mondanaro says mat
most of the patients insist on
blaming their children's diseases
on the inferiority of the body,
by Donald G. Enz
IDEAL : A quick look at the rather than the inadequacies of
Clothes
are important to most
Ohsawa regimen provides reason the macrobiotic diet. "That they
college
students,
for looking well{or the concern . Adherents of Zen can ignore the obvious says a lot
groomed
eminates
an air of
macrobiotics progress from diet - about the people who are into the
pride
in
appearance
and
3, consisting of a fairly well- diet ," she notes.
cleanliness. There is only one
problem in achieving the wellEditorial Staff : Editor-in-Chief, Susa n Sprague; Managing
groomed look, where to get the
Editor, Bob Oliver, News Manager, Karen Keinard ;
money for nice clothes. Or where
Featu re
Editor,
Joe
Mikl os;
Art
Editor,
Denis
to get nice clothes cheap.
Ross ; Cartoonist , John Stug rin ; Contr ibuting Edit ors , Frank
Well , try Good-Will. There
Pizzoli and Jim Sachetti; Staff: Don Enz, Joann e Linn, Linda
you'll
always find a bargain.
Liver more , Valery O'Coniwll. Leah Skladany, Mary Beth
sometimes
quite good ones. They
Lech . Cindy Smith , John Woodward . Tim Bossard , Lorraine
have
items
from socks to briefs,
Roulato, Pat Fox , Barb Wanchi san, Cathy Joseph, Mike
shirts
to
coats,
buttons to books.
Meizinger.
Just about any item you could
Busi ness Staff: Business Manager, Elaine Pongratz; Offi ce
want. And what's so good about
Manager, Ellen Doyle ; Advertisi ng Manager, Frank Lorah ;
it? The prices. They are cheap.
Circulat ion Manager, Nancy Van Pelt.
Almost new clothes, in some
Photog raphy Staff : Chief Phot ographer, Dan Maresh ;
cases, for what you would conPhotog raphers, Da le Alexand er. Tom Drvb ura , Pat Whit e.
sider pocket change.
Suzy White , Sue Greef, Kay Boyles, Annett e Klos s, Mike
At Good-Will you can try
Williams.
everything on and not worry
Advisor : Ken Hoffman
about getting yelled at by a pushy
Come to 234 Waller to find us. Or call at 389-3101. All copy
salesman out to make a sale.
must be submitted by no later than 5:00 P.M. on Tuesdays
From shoes to skivies, you can
and Sundays ,
try on them all. If it doesn't fit ,
NOTE: The opinions voiced in the columns and feature arthrow it back. There are more
ticles of the M&G are not necessarily shared by the entire
bargains in the next bin.
staff.
A place better than Good-Will is
For Bargain Hun ters
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, *Hit \ /t^X Lmw^iA /WsTN
tA *
\**tteu*b-)
TEU l\ to rut \ tnt Atf *ts
\ tEft ftT^ , y l 1OU AB ft0 T i $Mb fit * / V' 11" —
V.
Slaves of Society
a rummage sale. At these you can
really have fun , if you like to
bargain. They're out for profit,
like everyone else, but they get
the goods for free and haven 't
much overhead. So the climate is
righ t for challenging a price.
Most times you can save a
nickel or two by talking a fast line
about how the item isn 't worth
the price. Another saver is to say
you only have so much money
and haven 't enough for the two
items vou reallv want. Th«v 'ri»
usually coopera tive if you trea t
them nice, and to save a penny
it' s worth being nice.
There are other places to find
bargains , but you 'll have to look
for those. Some houses in town
have signs out that say items are
for sale. Other s place ads in the
newspaper .
McGregor ' s has a factor y
outlet at their plant on the "ole "
Old Berwick Road wher e you can
pur chase n ew clot hes far below
(continued on page four )
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consequence , migrant farm
workers are out of sight and out
of mind. The roads leading
directly to the camps are often
rutty , stoney dirt roads . Getting
to the camps is not the only
Poor
housing,
problem.
inadeq uate diets, poor wages and
white racism are also enormous
problems.
The average farm worker's
housing consists of only two
rooms. Eigh teen and four tenths
percent of the workers' housing
does not have indoor electricity.
Ninety-five per cent do not have a
flush toilet. Ninety -six per cent
do not have tubs or showers.
Housing for the people may
consist of converted chicken or
duck coops, tarpaper shacks or
rooms of concrete blocks. There
is a state housing code for
migrant camps but its enforcement is slack because of
local political connections. The
migrants are the worst housed
group in the nation .
Their wages depend on how
much they harvest. Average
wages are $1300 per year. Out of
this they may have to pay rent,
transportation and food bills.
The farm workers do not sign
contracts. Without contracts they
do not have the protection of job
coAiirih?
hnlirlavc
ciMr nav
nr
overtime pay. They work hard in
the fields, stooping and bending
till their backs ache and sweat
runs down their faces. The work
day runs from ten to twelve
hours.
Children are often found
working in the fields ; if not they
are watching their younger
brothers and sisters at the
camps. With the work load so
high, the average life expectancy
of a farm worker is forty nine
years.
If social activities are bad at
BSC, they are worse at the
camps. The workers may have a
jukebox, pool table or television
provided, but they have to pay for
their use. So weekend booze
parties are their only resort. Can
you ma uie uieiu ;
Migrant workers bear the
brunt of ra scism in this area .
They are often referred to as
niggers or "those people," and
designated as being dirty, lazy or
just plain drunks. Their children
do not like being referred to as
black and are horrified at their
African ancestry.
These people are being slowly
strangled . They are trying hard
to survive but are slowly dying. It
is like a nightmare and upon
awakening, they find themselves
still in the same nightmare. What
is their future?
And the majority of the
towns people an d stu dents at th e
friendly college on the hill could
do so much to help them...
Cathy Beers
¦
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M I
Huskies ~vs - Califo rn ia St.
improve that since 30 lettermen
returned. Quarterback Gary
Dehainaut had a fine day against
the Eagles, rushing for two
scores and passing for another.
Backs Sargo and Kordich each
scored on short spurts , while
Gialames scored on a 21 yard
Thp Vninans Inet last wpplr to reception. Alberts added five
Lock Haven in a squeaker , as extra points.
Defensive standouts include
LSC's Steve Glass returned a
laviuc
oiiCAUi/ii m uc ^ , guai uo,
kickoff 85 yards for a touchdown
Tom
Dublinski
and Ed Oakley,
in the closing minutes. The
and
deep
backs
Joe Spiker, Don
Huskies lost two weeks ago to
and
Tim
Tracy .
Matthews,
LSC, 24-22. So if past games are to
The
Huskies
are
leading the
be thought of in thinking of
Eastern
Conference
in rushing
tomorrow 's game, everything
offense, averaging 237.8 yards
points to a close one.
California State had a dismal 1- per game, and are second in total
8 record last year, but hopes to yards behind West Chester.
Individually for the Huskies,
George Gruber stands sixth in the
conference rushing race with 258
yards on 67 carries for a 3.8
average. Joe Geiger is seventh
with 207 yards on 44 carries.
Geiger is third in the league in
passing, averaging eight comby bob Oliver
The BSC Huskies (2-2 ) travel
west to California State (0-2)
tomorrow in an east-west Pa.
Conference tilt. The Huskies won
last year 's game with the
Vulcans, 34-26, and lead the
overall series 5-1-1.
T*r» ^tl *1**
ban Greenland (55) getting read/ to down a Mount y.
(Pi c by Dry berg )
01*^* 1#4 s*m
A
mnn
rfiinruiP
pletions per game. Tom
Pierantozzi of West Chester is
tops in the division in total offense with a 206.3 average, while
Geiger has a 198.9 average..
Line Welles is third in punting
with a 36.9 average, while Gruber
is second in scoring with five
TD's.
Defensively
for the Huskies...
Ironically, while the Huskies
a rp
not
hohitvt
tnt\
mimh
in
scoring -vs- being scored upon,
they are fifth against both the
pass and rush. This goes to show
that the Huskies are tough near
the goal line.
Glen DeWire had a fine game
last week against the Mounties,
and now leads the Huskies in
tackles with 46, including 9 unassisted. Dan Greenland is right
behind with 44.
Tomorrow should be a fine
game, let's hope the Huskies
bring a victory home.
Tops of the Week
Offense: Mike Devereux
Defense : Glen DeWire
Mike Devereux has been
selected by the M&G sports staff
as the top offensive player in the
Mansfield game last Friday.
Mike gained 58 yards on 11
carries for a 5.2 average, including bursts of 13 and 11yards.
He also caught a pass that went
for 15 yards. Mike has been
continually gaining big yardage
on a 'sissors' play. With his
speed, he should have many fine
days in the future.
The Husky defense surr ounds and conquers a Mansfield runner.
(Pj c by Dry berg )
WRA News
By Leah Skladany
The scheduled WRA events for
the month of October include
Powder Puff football , gymnastics, teniquoit and badminton.
Sign-up sheets are now available
in respective resident halls for
those interested. Football is now
in progress and gymnastics .
begins October 11, 7:00 to 9:00
P.M. in Centennial Gym.
An organizat iona l meeting f or
the captains of teniquoit will be
held Monday, October 23, at 6:30
P.M. in room 12, Centennial.
Riflery, scheduled to be offered
f or thi s semester , was canceled
due to lack of interest. Those who
News Brief
Action in the intramura l soccer league.
Arts Co unc il
The Arts Council has signed the
last contract for the 1972-73
Cultural Series with the
Rochester Philharmonic Symphony O rchestra tor a concert on
Tuesda y, March 20, 1973.
Opening the series was the
black dramatist and poet , Admir
Baraka (Le Roi Jones ) on
Tuesda y September 26th. Two
major performing groups will
a ppear in November; the
Cologne Chamber Orchestra (a
Bloomsburg
Civic
Music
Association event ) and the
Joffrey II Ballet on November
15th. The Arts Council is
coop erating with two other
cam pus groups to bring cultural
events to campus. The Black
Student Society and t he Arts
Council will present a Pulitzer
Prize melodrama by Charles
G ordone , "No Place to Be
Somebod y "
on
Tuesda y,
February 6. And for the College
C oncert C hoir ' s sp ecial performance of Orff' s choral and
dance work , "Carmina Bur ana "
on Apri l l, the Arts Council is
im p orting
a
Broadwa y
choreogr apher , Gerald Teijello ,
Jr., to stage the dances.
Another facet of the Artists and
Contrary to common belief , the
G . I. Bill benefi ts are not going to
be increa sed. Friday at Wilkes's Veterans Administration
Barre
(Pic by Williams )
Building , an admin istrator said
there would be no pay increase at
Lecturers Programs will be a t his time and that a ra ise is very
series of painters , sculptors , and unlikely in the near future.
others working in various media.
October 10th is the last day to
These will live and work on register for the November 7t h
campus with public exhibitions election . Register Now.
and demonstrations at various
times throughout the semester.
An innovation this year is a Affairs in Haas Center. Stude nts
foreign f ilm series which will receive tickets on their I. D.
kick off with the French farce
starr ing Jacques Tati , "Mr.
Hulot' s Holiday, " on October 25.
Eight films in all will be shown
rangin g from Polish , Ja panese to
Italian recent master pieces. All
films will be English dubbed or
English subtitled .
A brochure with detailed information of time and place , and
ticket
exchan ge is being
prepared in the Office of Cultural
Glen DeWire was judged to be
the top defensive player on the
strength of his 25 tackles, including five unassisted. He also
blocked a pass, while continually
harrassing the Mounty Quarterback. Glen and the rest of the
defense deserve a lot of credit in
getting the offense the ball, and
should be commended for their
fine work. The Huskies are
number four in the conference in
total defense.
Best of luck to all the Huskies in
the Calif ornia game.
cards as do Faculty members
who have Activities cards. There
is a charge to the public.
The Arts Council is supported
by the Community Government
Association . Chairman of the
committee is Mr. Ken Wilson of
the Department of Art , Mr. M. J.
McHale who acts as coordina tor
is Direc tor of Cultura l Affairs.
For information call 389*3817
(Haas Center ).
may wish to participa te in the
future should look for further
information next semester, as
riflery will be offered again at
that time.
November 's program adds
basketball competition to the
agenda. All interested in intramurals should sign the rosters
available now in the dorms.
The Women 's Recreat i on
Association hopes for active
participation in all they offer .
They eagerly anticipate another
year of enjoyment and competition with the girls at
Bloomsburg .
Attention!
Basketball and
Wrestlin g Candidates
Coach
Charles
Chronister
announced that all those interested in pla ying BSC int ercollegiate baske t ball this
y ear wi ll have physicals on
Wednesda y, Oct. 1l,at 7 PM In
the trainin g roo m of the new
gym . This includes fres hmen .
For t hose interested in
wrestlin g/
Coach
Frank
Sanders
announced
that
p hysicals
will be give n
Tuesda y, Oct. 10, at 7 PM in
room 128 of the new gym.
You must have a physi cal
before playi ng a varsity sport.
.
¦
'
^¦
¦•
^
¦
"
^
•MM VMBVBHH ^BMHHHMHHHMaNMMnHHiHMHBHHMMIIiWMNMatWMMMiMMaMWHa
Selection Guidelines
for Dept. Chairman
In accordance with the recently
executed Collective Bargaining
Agreement it is necessary that
each department conduc t an
election to determine whether it
wishes to ret ain its present
chairman
or initiate
the
procedures contained in the
Agreement for the selection of a
new chairman.
The following
are
the
guidelines and procedures for the
selection of Department chairmen as determinebsby the B.S.C.
Faculty Association - APSCUFPAHE and the college ad-
Support
the
Farmworkers
ministration :
1. An official ballot shall be
distributed to each full - or parttime facul ty member in each
department by the chairman
within five (5) days of the receipt
of these procedures.
2. All faculty members of the
bargaining unit , full - or parttime , who are assigned to the
department , have the right to
vote on the retention of the
chairman this fall . Facu lty
members not on campus sha ll be
supplied , by the Departmen t
Chairman , with one (1) official
ballot which may be cast by mail
and shall be returned in an outer
and an inner envelope.
3. Departm ent
chairmen ,
themselves , have a similar right .
to vote.
4. A meeting for the purpose of
counting the ballots shall be
called by the Depar tment
Chairman , at which time the
ballots will be placed in
a container and one (1) of the
departm ent
members , as
determined by the departmen t,
shall count the ballots in the *
presence of the other depa rlmen t
members.
5. Sufficient time for the retu rn
of mail ballots shall be allowed
prior to calling the meeting as
specified above; however , the
meeting must be scheduled not
later than Oct. 11, 1972.
6. The individual counting we
ballots will be responsible for
reporting the results of ballotin g
on the attached forms no later
than October 13, 1972.
Sharon Steel recently placed second in Executive Typing at the
Phi Beta Lambd a National Confe rence in Houston , Texas. A second
semester senior * and Business Education major , Sha ron has at .
tained a speed of ninety words per minut e.
(Maresh Photo )
Vir g inia State
Exchange Pla nned
(continued from page one)
versel y, Bloomsburg State
College students will have an in
depth and natural association
with a black situation which will,
enable them , upon their ret urn , to
bro aden the perspective of the
college community and enhance
the fulfillment of the objectives of
the program ; Fourth Tier—th e
fourth tier will involve a
culturall y infused program which
will introduce the college community to black
artists ,
golf , etc . possibilit y of basketball
and football later ; exchan ge of
musical grou ps — Madrigals ,
Concert Choir , Band , etc.
Virginia State is a school very
(continued from pa ge two)
much like B. S. C. in many ways
— studen t enrollmen t, size of
the prices downtown . Another
college itself, course of studies ,
plant is the Berwick Knitting Mill
and even history. (Virginia State
with sweaters galore and most at
was once a Normal School, too).
below retail price.
This is one reason for the exIt' s fun to shop for bargains ,
change . B. S. C. is weak in many
especiall y at this type of barg ain
areas where Virginia State is
place . At the places I' ve menstron g, and vice versa. Also,
tioned , you can save from ten per
pHii f n t n r «
muctr»ianc
Virginia State College is
cent to maybe more than eighty
statesman , politicians , etc. These predominantly black while B. S.
per cent , and tha t makes cents !
persons will be invited to the C. is mostly white and this would
community to inter act and to achieve a better racial balance.
relate.
The Depar tment of Health ,
Also the following have been Education , & Welfare was inconsidered , some of which are terested in the pro gram when it
Today is the last day to vote
7. The Department Chairman merel y refinements of the was first presen ted, but as of yet ,
in the Primary Elections for
must receive over fifty per cent general proposal : exchange of no funds have been award ed.
Homecoming Queen .
(50 per cent) of the eligible votes teaching faculty on a visitin g Righ t now they are going ahead
For confirmation to continue in lecturer basis ; cooperative without the money . As an
Final Elections will be held
office. Absentions or blank research projects by Bloomsburg example, last March the Virginia
Monda y and Tuesday, October
ballots shall be counted as votes State College and Virginia State State College band performed at
9 and 10.
to initiate the procedure con- College students ; exchange of B. S. C. as part of the "Black
Pollin g p la ces a r e in each
tained in Article XI. A. of the consultants between the in- E xperience" sponsored by the
residen ce hall and the Union .
collective bargain ing agreement stitutions ; exchange of students Black Studen t Society. For infor selection of another chair- in specialized curricula (deaf formation on the coming visit ,
education ); exchange of athletic
man .
contact Dr. Simon.
programs in baseball , track ,
Bargains
BASS PLAYER
Hi t ter 's
and
Preferred
For Working Rock Group
Coll 925-2855-Goorg * Jr.
«a
%e ^^ ^>a *» v m \j y
72 M. Iron St.
Over 300 Guitars
and Amplifiers
784-4323
John 's Food
Market
ill Vv K7 * ^^ • v* • •
^^ f
Hartzel's Music Store
Office Suppl y
112 E. Main Sf.
Bloom sbur g ,
LEAD SINGER
Equipment
^^
Potter y by Ron Bower
Denim Series
W. Main A Leonar d St.
Open 8 a.m. to 12 midnight Daily
Delicatessen
Full line of groceries
A snacks
•Bulletin
Boards • Looseleaf Binder
•Address Book •Desk Access ories
THE STUDIO SHOP
59 E. Main St., Bloomtburg
784-2818
Eppley 's
Pharmacy
Friday Specials
Delicious Shrimp or Vz Ib. Filet of Fish
,
_
.
.
In a Basket
with tartar
sauce
.9:00-11:00
9:00 - 12:00
4:30 - 12:00
11:00-11:00
Watch tor oyr Specials every day
!
•LANVIN
•PRINCI MATCHAKLU
•EUZABETHAROBN
•HELENA RUBENSTEIN
•DANA
•COTY
»MAX FACTOR
Ormtri Jtampt
But the masters of the fates of
these neglected people will not
listen to Cesar Chavez and his
demands for a better way of life.
To effectively change conditions
and force the growers to listen to
the farmworkers there is the
necessity for a boycott on lettuce .
The gra pe strikers used such
methods in the middle sixties.
Lettuce harves ters have followed
(Uaim
uicii
1^iA*i
icau.
Cn#tti
uuvi i
?i
a
Krhimntf
wj >-" ii
ic
10
necessary if farmworke rs are to
win the simp le righ t of
negotiating with their employees.
It is essential to the farmworker 's success.
The farmworkers need your
support ! There will be a meeting
concernin g the Lettuce Boycott
on October 10 at 8:00 P.M. in
Auditorium .
The
Carver
speakers will be from the
Philadelp hia Boycott Office.
Tennis
(continued from page two)
greatest benefit from their class
because they must share courts.
The students who play tennis
for leisure are inconvenienced as
well. They aren't very happy
about hikin g to the town park
courts when we have our own on
campus.
So that' s the story. If you're a
tennis fan who can't play, now
you know why . And you're not
a one.
.
1971 Volkswagen
Station Wagon
7 Passenger
Good Condi tion-4 Now Tires
Best Offer Accepted
Call 764-3720
HE ADQUARTERS OF
HALLMARK CARDS
Jo bs Are Available. . . !
For FREE information
on studen t assistance and
placemen t pro gram send
Dollar Special
Ever y Weeken d
envelope to the National
Placemen t Registry, 1001
East Idaho St., Kalispell,
MT 59901
AND GIFTS
Phone 784-2561
self-addressed STAMPED
- NO GIMMIC KS -
"^ftt
itJU's
I^Sw '"UJWBRB
*J ^^^H«*ry WmMwI *
Dm* Tfc. Hill On latf It.
/b
iTSf
•PABERGE
Across from fhe Union
Hours: AAon. - fhurs
Frtday
Saturday
:
Sunday
18 Wist Main Sbwt , Bloomsbinj, Pa.
•CHANEL
•GUERLAIN
Kampus Nook
giuwcia.
Miller Office
Suppl y Co.
PretcripHon Specialist
8:00 P.M.
¦if ¦ r~> ¦¦¦n irBi " !
¦
or Write: Boi 63 Btoonuburf P*
MAIN ft IRON STREET S
wit h
French Frta, Pickled Cabbcg* arv l BrenW ft Suti er
Plotters till
LEARN TO FLY
with the Parlor .
City Flying Club
Call: 389-2814 or 784-8571
The migrant workers have
suffered a great deal in the "land
of opportunity ". Cesar Chavez is
trying ver y hard to brin g justice
to migrant farmworkers , by
campai gning for more than ten
years. To get decent housing,
decent wages, and equal opportunities , he has diligently
tried negotiati on with the lettuce
ffj ^ irTl
/
°\
N. y
^JVL ^
Compliments
of the
Bloom Bowl
FRESH DONUTS EVERY DAY
"Yumteei Varieties"
*¦***«
Dally Nawspavers
Weekdays 7 a.m. . 9 p.m.
S(rt
' * Sun. 9 am • 9 pm
THE DONUT MAM
^
^
¦
^
"Come . my friends , it 's not too
lat e to seek a n ewer wor ld. "
—Alfred Lord Tennyson
^^
CGA Meets
Dr. Charles H . Carlson , Actin g
Presiden t , op ened the fir st
meetin g of this year 's College
Council last Monda y night .
Discussed at the meeting was
allocatio n policy, election resu lts ,
Big Name Entertainment , and
the Searc h and Screeni ng
Committee 's report to pick a new
president .
Carlson Spoke
was p laced on two years '
probation . Carlson said that in
the re port some things were
documented ; for example , there
were grade changes and compensation and - or aid to athletes.
Also, all segments of the college
did not assist the observer in his j
work . Another objection was that j
pre-college athletes were allowed
to work out with the athl etes . Dr.
Dr . Carls on informed CGA that Par lsnn statfari
tho s>n11o0P miisf rpsnnnri to the
•*~r *^» ^ m *- v » m
*^v»v ^ #«B
that
v*«*f* w
aithmiffh
»*•
w m m - y m+mmmm I
these facts were documented ,
other points in the repo rt may be
false . These possibly doubtful
points will be sent back for
personal consideration and he '
screenin g committee to talk with feels that by late October we «
students and facult y about BSC 's. ( BSC ) will get some inkling o f ]
accreditati on . Dr. Hobart Heller how the NCAA feels . There may
is in char ge of the re port to be be a possibility of a reduced
sent to the committee from BSC. sentence.
Dr . Carlson stated that he had In closing, Dr . Carlson said he
traced BSC membershi p in the pledged his support for CGA, that
NCAA back to 1955, when we they shouldn't wor ry about the
agreed to live up to all the rules past but should worry about the I
set down . He went on to state that future.
Dan Burkholder , presiding over the first
Dr. Charles Carlson , Acting Preside nt, as he
Review of Budget
meeting off Colle ge Council for this year, held last last October the NCAA sent an
addresses
College Council last Monday.
investigator to our campus andI1 The budget for Community
Monday.
(Oliver Photo )
fOliver Photo ) upon the evidence compiled BSC Activities for the 1972-73 year was
reviewed , along with a stressing
Search and Screen ing
of the necessity to hold strictly to
Th e Search an d Screen ing
allocation policy. That policy
stands that all requests for Committee , which appointed Dr.
allocations must be submitted in Carlson interim president for this
writing to Michael Meizinger , year , has been and will be acapplication s until
Undergradua te courses may be the student to the Office of the studen ts wishing to pursue a Treasurer of CGA , at least two cepting
December
15 for position of
e
S
chool
o
f
th
scheduled for Spring Semester
curr
i
culum
i
n
Registrar .
weeks prior to being placed on
president
.
Tom
Beveridge , one of
now
and
Friday,
ud
i
es
ma
y
so
St
betwee
n
p
la
i
ned
1973
P ro f essi onal
P erha ps it should be ex
the agenda . This year voting will
t
he
studen
t
s
on
the commit tee,
"
Undergraduate
"Area
of
Study
October 27.
tha t the "Area of Study" includes indicate on their
be done on need and knowledge ,
stated
that
over
seventy-five
cur
rently
still
carried
in
students who are
cards , but they are
the School , Area of Certification
not on personality .
a
pp
licat
i
ons
have
been
the
sent in.
using
enrolled will schedule ,
and Curr iculum. There are three Arts & Sciences unt il formal
V acancies on Council
States Accreditation
Board by November 15 of this
year . Three members of the
Middle Sta tes will be sent as a
Middle
Inf o on Spring Scheduling
same procedure
as used last
spring . This means that full-time
students will receive a list of
Course Offerings for Spring
Semester 1973 throug h the
campus mail. Part -time students
should receive their materia ls at
their home address.
Ma jor
res ponsibility
for
follow i ng p ro p er scheduling
procedures rests with each
studen t. This includes following
the instruct ions on the Course
Listings : maki ng sure that they
meet with their advisor , completing the Official Course
Selection Form which the advisor
will then forward to the Registrar
by Friday , October 27. Pa rticular attention should be paid to
meeting prerequisites of certain
courses.
In addition to the Course
Listings , each student will
receive two copies of an "Area of
Study" card . Although simple to
complete , this is an Important ,
step in the implementation of a
coordinated advisement system .
These cards will indicate the area
of study in which you are
presently enrolled accordin g to
college records.
If the "Area of Study " cards
are correct as printed , students
will then sign their name and
leave both cards with their advisors. Should a chan ge or
correction be necessary, indica te
such in space provided on the
cards ; the Depar tment Copy will
remain with the Advisor along
with the Official Course Selection
Form i and the Registr ar'!Goby
will be carried immediatel y by
under graduate schools : Arts &
Sciences, Profess ional Stud ies
an d Business (in Business
Education ). Certification Areas
in the School of P ro fessional
Studies include Commun icat ion
nUANiliiNa
UlBUl uci s,
T\amIa1
vcuiai
UmffflAntai
ujr £*vi*j 0 » ,
a pplicat ion is made to said
school , probabl y durin g the
second semester of the i r
sophomore year , and accepted.
I t should be noted that some
curr icula re q u ire a certa in
Elementar y Educat ion, Medical sequence of courses that stiouid
Technolo gy , Public School be started as earl y as the second
Nursin g, Secondar y Educa t ion semester of the freshmen year.
Educati on. Students are encoura ged to seek
and
Special
Curr iculum refers to a ma jor , proper advice in this regard.
Students experiencin g difarea of emphasis or area of
specializati on within one of the ficulty with advisement should
contact
their
Department
above.
C
hairmen
or
C urricu lum
All freshmen who entered
Willia
m Jones ,
Coordinator.
Dr.
B.S.C. on or after September 1971
Acade
mic AdCoordinator
of
who did not enroll in the School of
(Undergraduate
) is
visement
Business have automa tically
Waller
also
available
in
room
128
been enrol led in the School of
Ar ts & Sciences. Anv of these Hall , telephone 389-2119.
Exchan ge Pro gram Planned
Virginia
Sta te
College
representatives , Mrs. Colon and
Mr. McCants will be visiting the
B. S. C. campus on October 10, 11,
& 12 to discuss a cooperative
exchange program between the
two colleges. Mrs. Colon is
currently
the Director of
Women 's Activities and Mr.
McCants is the Dean of Students.
The program has been in the
works since November of 1971
when B. S. C. applied for a grant
from the Department of Health
Education , & Welfare for expenses. The four-tiere d program
suggested in the application is as
follows: First Tier—an exchange
of two (2) professional staff
members from each camp us per
semester ; Second Tier — this
phase wHl place a Virginia State
College graduate extern counselor , preferably black , in a
situation at Bloomsburg State
College , which will provide for
, maximum int eraction with
' students , staff , faculty, and the
community ; Third Tier—this
phas ewill involve an exchange of
three ( 3) undergraduate students
from each college per semester.
These students coming to
Bloomsburg State College will
make a significant impact on the
total college community. Con(contin ued on page four )
New Business
Rod Morgans , Chairman of
Elections , stated that there are
Dou g Mc Cl i ntock made a
still vacancies on Council for the mo
ti on to instruct the Registrar
Day Women Representati ve,and
t
o
send
student grades only t o
the three commuter represen-
tatives. Executive Council seatsat-large were filled by the
election of Ron Sheehan and John
Ficek. Rod Morgans was appointed Historian and Tom
Beveridge Parliamentarian.
Big Name Entertainment
Doug Mc Clintock , Chairman of
BNE, stated that thin gs were
students
and
not tn narenta
except upon student req uest.
Voting was all in favor except for
fi ve absen tions.
Mc Clintock also moved that
complimentar y passes to BNE be
at the discretion of BNE committee. He stated that he wanted
to improve relation s with the
community, and that man y state
moving as scheduled for the and local officials would be
October 20 concert featuring the receiving them. This will be done
J. Geils Band and Malo. He went on an R.S.V.P. basis , in order to
on to state that all seats would be make all t ickets possible to
general admission , with the first students.
President Dan Burkholder said
300 purchasers being allowed
parking privile ges at the New that committees to update the
Gym. McClintock stated "We 're constitution and revise election
going to bring you the best proc edures were being formed at
this time.
concert BSC ever had. "
NEW S BRIEFS
REGISTE R!
Tuesday October 10 is the last TRANSPORTA TION NEEDED !
day to register to vote in the
Novemb er 1 election. The
A new non-graded elementary
Bloomsburg Court House will be school in Conyngh am is seeking
open from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. help arr anging transportation for
three stu dents from Wilkes-
Barre .
Mrs. Allen Dick would ap
IMAGES OF CONCE RN
pred
ate a call at 788-3313
There will be a reception
(collect)
from any commuter s
Tuesday , October 10, 7:80-10:00
who
travel
from WIlkes-Barre via
p.m. in Haas Gallery for students
Routes
81
and
80.
and faculty .
Zen Child
Their bellies bloated, their legs
badly bowed, the two little boys
made a pathetic ; sight as they
> slumped frog-like and lethargic
on their haunches throughout the
examination
at Children 's
Hospita l in San Francisco. One
was 2V2 , the other 1V2 ; neither
could walk or crawl ; the older
child had a vocabulary of two
words and weighed 16 pounds , the
younger just managed to tip the
scales at 11 pounds ; their hair
rc p anri
was
on/4 tv. ^.. ,
— — rnn
-— ¦—«» w v uia
^ B Hrittla
**ri f t b l > « V « y U I I U U lVJ
were extremely cranky.
Horrified , pediatrician Dr .
Josette Mondanaro and her
colleagues
made
bone
development tests of * the
children In these tests the 2V2year-old showed a bone age of six
months, and the 1V2 -year-old
registered
three
months.
Diagnosis showed that both little
boys were suffering from severe
cases of rickets and scurvy - and
that they had been living for
months on the Zen macrobiotic
diet of their hippi e parents.
Zen macrobiotics , a concept of
spiritual and physical enrichment through a diet based
ultimately on brown rice, is the
brainchild of the late George
Ohsawa, a Japanese-born , Parisbased philosopher who died six
years ago. The diet has come
under heavy attack from doctors
and nutritionists and has caused
at least one death plus an untold
number of cases of scurvy,
rickets, anemia and other forms
of advanced malnutrition. Now
pediaticians are becoming
concerned over growing evidence
that the risks posed by the hippie
generation to their children - with
more serious results.
balanced mix of
meats ,
vegetables and fruits , to-f-7, an
"ideal" diet consisting entirely of
grains and drastically limited
intake of liquids and salt.
In the case of Mondanaro 's two
small boy patients, the parents
had switched to Zen macrobiotics
as a way of kicking the drug
habit , and were raising their sons
largely on rice, soy products,
seaweed and Chinese cabbage.
"As they became older ," says
Mondanaro , "the children
became fussy eaters so their diet
became even more' restricted."
Ironically 'enough , the parents
brought their youngsters to
Mondanaro not because they
were concerned about the state of
their health - but to show the
doctor how well the Zen
macrobiotic diet worked . Concerned friends had tricked the
parents into visiting the clinic
with their children by telling
them tha t Mondanaro was "interested in Zen macrobiotics. "
The results of such a diet when
consumed regularly by a child
can be frightening, though the
number of children harmed in
this fashion is probably quite low.
Students and Faculty!!!!!!
Submit
to
the
Olympian
Box 293 Waller Hall
Deadlin e Novemb e r 22, 1972
Tennis
Courts
"We are men and women who
have suffered and endured much
and not only because of our abject poverty but because we have
been kept poor. The color of our
skin , the languages of our
cultural and native origins, the
lack of formal education , the
exclusion from the democratic
process, the numbers of our slain
in recent wars-all the.se burdens
generation after generation have
sought to demoralize us, to break
our human spirit. But God knows
we are not agricultural impliments or rented slaves . We are
men ."
—Cesar Chavez
is
Cesar Chavez referring to the
demoralization and degradation
which migrant farm workers
experience. Migrant farm
workers are people who travel to
different parts of the country ,
picking crops when they are
ready for harvesting. There are
migrants in the area right now.
They came from Florida ,
Virginia , Mississippi, Georgia,
and Maryland about the second
week of August. In the next two
weeks they will almost all have
left , working their way down
South. The crops they pick here
are tomatoes , beans and
potatoes. Sometimes you can iee
black people in the fields
surrounding the area but few
people know who they are and
what their life is like.
by Nancy V a n Pel t
"Why aren 't the new tennis
courts completed?"
"But they are completed."
"Then why can 't we play on
them .?"
". . .ahh. . ."
The construction on the tennis
courts is finished. The reason
students cannot play on them is
because one small , necessary
piece of equipment is missing. It
is a cap with a pulley welded to it
that sits on top of the posts to
keep the nets in place. The
construction company that built
the courts was suDDOsed to
deliver these caps. However,
they were unable to supply them
when the courts were being built.
Now they say they 're in the mail ,
but the mail service has been
ridiculousl y slow since then.
Where are those caps?
k
This delay is causing a lot of
incon venience. Four courts have
nets but they are held up in a
makeshift fashion. Also, over a
hundred students a day who are
taking tennis this semester are
torced to play on only four courts.
They really aren 't getting the
You could never see migrant
(co ntinued on page four )
camps from a main road . As a
a 1
The parents refused t macrobiotics altogether, but they
finally agreed to give their sons
oranges, meat, fi sh , eggs, and
dairy products. After six months,
the children no longer show the
painful , fragile bones of rickets,
nor the skin eruptions of scurvy.
The eldest is now starting to
walk. Even so, the future for the
youngsters is not promising.
ABUSE : Mondanaro says mat
most of the patients insist on
blaming their children's diseases
on the inferiority of the body,
by Donald G. Enz
IDEAL : A quick look at the rather than the inadequacies of
Clothes
are important to most
Ohsawa regimen provides reason the macrobiotic diet. "That they
college
students,
for looking well{or the concern . Adherents of Zen can ignore the obvious says a lot
groomed
eminates
an air of
macrobiotics progress from diet - about the people who are into the
pride
in
appearance
and
3, consisting of a fairly well- diet ," she notes.
cleanliness. There is only one
problem in achieving the wellEditorial Staff : Editor-in-Chief, Susa n Sprague; Managing
groomed look, where to get the
Editor, Bob Oliver, News Manager, Karen Keinard ;
money for nice clothes. Or where
Featu re
Editor,
Joe
Mikl os;
Art
Editor,
Denis
to get nice clothes cheap.
Ross ; Cartoonist , John Stug rin ; Contr ibuting Edit ors , Frank
Well , try Good-Will. There
Pizzoli and Jim Sachetti; Staff: Don Enz, Joann e Linn, Linda
you'll
always find a bargain.
Liver more , Valery O'Coniwll. Leah Skladany, Mary Beth
sometimes
quite good ones. They
Lech . Cindy Smith , John Woodward . Tim Bossard , Lorraine
have
items
from socks to briefs,
Roulato, Pat Fox , Barb Wanchi san, Cathy Joseph, Mike
shirts
to
coats,
buttons to books.
Meizinger.
Just about any item you could
Busi ness Staff: Business Manager, Elaine Pongratz; Offi ce
want. And what's so good about
Manager, Ellen Doyle ; Advertisi ng Manager, Frank Lorah ;
it? The prices. They are cheap.
Circulat ion Manager, Nancy Van Pelt.
Almost new clothes, in some
Photog raphy Staff : Chief Phot ographer, Dan Maresh ;
cases, for what you would conPhotog raphers, Da le Alexand er. Tom Drvb ura , Pat Whit e.
sider pocket change.
Suzy White , Sue Greef, Kay Boyles, Annett e Klos s, Mike
At Good-Will you can try
Williams.
everything on and not worry
Advisor : Ken Hoffman
about getting yelled at by a pushy
Come to 234 Waller to find us. Or call at 389-3101. All copy
salesman out to make a sale.
must be submitted by no later than 5:00 P.M. on Tuesdays
From shoes to skivies, you can
and Sundays ,
try on them all. If it doesn't fit ,
NOTE: The opinions voiced in the columns and feature arthrow it back. There are more
ticles of the M&G are not necessarily shared by the entire
bargains in the next bin.
staff.
A place better than Good-Will is
For Bargain Hun ters
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Slaves of Society
a rummage sale. At these you can
really have fun , if you like to
bargain. They're out for profit,
like everyone else, but they get
the goods for free and haven 't
much overhead. So the climate is
righ t for challenging a price.
Most times you can save a
nickel or two by talking a fast line
about how the item isn 't worth
the price. Another saver is to say
you only have so much money
and haven 't enough for the two
items vou reallv want. Th«v 'ri»
usually coopera tive if you trea t
them nice, and to save a penny
it' s worth being nice.
There are other places to find
bargains , but you 'll have to look
for those. Some houses in town
have signs out that say items are
for sale. Other s place ads in the
newspaper .
McGregor ' s has a factor y
outlet at their plant on the "ole "
Old Berwick Road wher e you can
pur chase n ew clot hes far below
(continued on page four )
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consequence , migrant farm
workers are out of sight and out
of mind. The roads leading
directly to the camps are often
rutty , stoney dirt roads . Getting
to the camps is not the only
Poor
housing,
problem.
inadeq uate diets, poor wages and
white racism are also enormous
problems.
The average farm worker's
housing consists of only two
rooms. Eigh teen and four tenths
percent of the workers' housing
does not have indoor electricity.
Ninety-five per cent do not have a
flush toilet. Ninety -six per cent
do not have tubs or showers.
Housing for the people may
consist of converted chicken or
duck coops, tarpaper shacks or
rooms of concrete blocks. There
is a state housing code for
migrant camps but its enforcement is slack because of
local political connections. The
migrants are the worst housed
group in the nation .
Their wages depend on how
much they harvest. Average
wages are $1300 per year. Out of
this they may have to pay rent,
transportation and food bills.
The farm workers do not sign
contracts. Without contracts they
do not have the protection of job
coAiirih?
hnlirlavc
ciMr nav
nr
overtime pay. They work hard in
the fields, stooping and bending
till their backs ache and sweat
runs down their faces. The work
day runs from ten to twelve
hours.
Children are often found
working in the fields ; if not they
are watching their younger
brothers and sisters at the
camps. With the work load so
high, the average life expectancy
of a farm worker is forty nine
years.
If social activities are bad at
BSC, they are worse at the
camps. The workers may have a
jukebox, pool table or television
provided, but they have to pay for
their use. So weekend booze
parties are their only resort. Can
you ma uie uieiu ;
Migrant workers bear the
brunt of ra scism in this area .
They are often referred to as
niggers or "those people," and
designated as being dirty, lazy or
just plain drunks. Their children
do not like being referred to as
black and are horrified at their
African ancestry.
These people are being slowly
strangled . They are trying hard
to survive but are slowly dying. It
is like a nightmare and upon
awakening, they find themselves
still in the same nightmare. What
is their future?
And the majority of the
towns people an d stu dents at th e
friendly college on the hill could
do so much to help them...
Cathy Beers
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Huskies ~vs - Califo rn ia St.
improve that since 30 lettermen
returned. Quarterback Gary
Dehainaut had a fine day against
the Eagles, rushing for two
scores and passing for another.
Backs Sargo and Kordich each
scored on short spurts , while
Gialames scored on a 21 yard
Thp Vninans Inet last wpplr to reception. Alberts added five
Lock Haven in a squeaker , as extra points.
Defensive standouts include
LSC's Steve Glass returned a
laviuc
oiiCAUi/ii m uc ^ , guai uo,
kickoff 85 yards for a touchdown
Tom
Dublinski
and Ed Oakley,
in the closing minutes. The
and
deep
backs
Joe Spiker, Don
Huskies lost two weeks ago to
and
Tim
Tracy .
Matthews,
LSC, 24-22. So if past games are to
The
Huskies
are
leading the
be thought of in thinking of
Eastern
Conference
in rushing
tomorrow 's game, everything
offense, averaging 237.8 yards
points to a close one.
California State had a dismal 1- per game, and are second in total
8 record last year, but hopes to yards behind West Chester.
Individually for the Huskies,
George Gruber stands sixth in the
conference rushing race with 258
yards on 67 carries for a 3.8
average. Joe Geiger is seventh
with 207 yards on 44 carries.
Geiger is third in the league in
passing, averaging eight comby bob Oliver
The BSC Huskies (2-2 ) travel
west to California State (0-2)
tomorrow in an east-west Pa.
Conference tilt. The Huskies won
last year 's game with the
Vulcans, 34-26, and lead the
overall series 5-1-1.
T*r» ^tl *1**
ban Greenland (55) getting read/ to down a Mount y.
(Pi c by Dry berg )
01*^* 1#4 s*m
A
mnn
rfiinruiP
pletions per game. Tom
Pierantozzi of West Chester is
tops in the division in total offense with a 206.3 average, while
Geiger has a 198.9 average..
Line Welles is third in punting
with a 36.9 average, while Gruber
is second in scoring with five
TD's.
Defensively
for the Huskies...
Ironically, while the Huskies
a rp
not
hohitvt
tnt\
mimh
in
scoring -vs- being scored upon,
they are fifth against both the
pass and rush. This goes to show
that the Huskies are tough near
the goal line.
Glen DeWire had a fine game
last week against the Mounties,
and now leads the Huskies in
tackles with 46, including 9 unassisted. Dan Greenland is right
behind with 44.
Tomorrow should be a fine
game, let's hope the Huskies
bring a victory home.
Tops of the Week
Offense: Mike Devereux
Defense : Glen DeWire
Mike Devereux has been
selected by the M&G sports staff
as the top offensive player in the
Mansfield game last Friday.
Mike gained 58 yards on 11
carries for a 5.2 average, including bursts of 13 and 11yards.
He also caught a pass that went
for 15 yards. Mike has been
continually gaining big yardage
on a 'sissors' play. With his
speed, he should have many fine
days in the future.
The Husky defense surr ounds and conquers a Mansfield runner.
(Pj c by Dry berg )
WRA News
By Leah Skladany
The scheduled WRA events for
the month of October include
Powder Puff football , gymnastics, teniquoit and badminton.
Sign-up sheets are now available
in respective resident halls for
those interested. Football is now
in progress and gymnastics .
begins October 11, 7:00 to 9:00
P.M. in Centennial Gym.
An organizat iona l meeting f or
the captains of teniquoit will be
held Monday, October 23, at 6:30
P.M. in room 12, Centennial.
Riflery, scheduled to be offered
f or thi s semester , was canceled
due to lack of interest. Those who
News Brief
Action in the intramura l soccer league.
Arts Co unc il
The Arts Council has signed the
last contract for the 1972-73
Cultural Series with the
Rochester Philharmonic Symphony O rchestra tor a concert on
Tuesda y, March 20, 1973.
Opening the series was the
black dramatist and poet , Admir
Baraka (Le Roi Jones ) on
Tuesda y September 26th. Two
major performing groups will
a ppear in November; the
Cologne Chamber Orchestra (a
Bloomsburg
Civic
Music
Association event ) and the
Joffrey II Ballet on November
15th. The Arts Council is
coop erating with two other
cam pus groups to bring cultural
events to campus. The Black
Student Society and t he Arts
Council will present a Pulitzer
Prize melodrama by Charles
G ordone , "No Place to Be
Somebod y "
on
Tuesda y,
February 6. And for the College
C oncert C hoir ' s sp ecial performance of Orff' s choral and
dance work , "Carmina Bur ana "
on Apri l l, the Arts Council is
im p orting
a
Broadwa y
choreogr apher , Gerald Teijello ,
Jr., to stage the dances.
Another facet of the Artists and
Contrary to common belief , the
G . I. Bill benefi ts are not going to
be increa sed. Friday at Wilkes's Veterans Administration
Barre
(Pic by Williams )
Building , an admin istrator said
there would be no pay increase at
Lecturers Programs will be a t his time and that a ra ise is very
series of painters , sculptors , and unlikely in the near future.
others working in various media.
October 10th is the last day to
These will live and work on register for the November 7t h
campus with public exhibitions election . Register Now.
and demonstrations at various
times throughout the semester.
An innovation this year is a Affairs in Haas Center. Stude nts
foreign f ilm series which will receive tickets on their I. D.
kick off with the French farce
starr ing Jacques Tati , "Mr.
Hulot' s Holiday, " on October 25.
Eight films in all will be shown
rangin g from Polish , Ja panese to
Italian recent master pieces. All
films will be English dubbed or
English subtitled .
A brochure with detailed information of time and place , and
ticket
exchan ge is being
prepared in the Office of Cultural
Glen DeWire was judged to be
the top defensive player on the
strength of his 25 tackles, including five unassisted. He also
blocked a pass, while continually
harrassing the Mounty Quarterback. Glen and the rest of the
defense deserve a lot of credit in
getting the offense the ball, and
should be commended for their
fine work. The Huskies are
number four in the conference in
total defense.
Best of luck to all the Huskies in
the Calif ornia game.
cards as do Faculty members
who have Activities cards. There
is a charge to the public.
The Arts Council is supported
by the Community Government
Association . Chairman of the
committee is Mr. Ken Wilson of
the Department of Art , Mr. M. J.
McHale who acts as coordina tor
is Direc tor of Cultura l Affairs.
For information call 389*3817
(Haas Center ).
may wish to participa te in the
future should look for further
information next semester, as
riflery will be offered again at
that time.
November 's program adds
basketball competition to the
agenda. All interested in intramurals should sign the rosters
available now in the dorms.
The Women 's Recreat i on
Association hopes for active
participation in all they offer .
They eagerly anticipate another
year of enjoyment and competition with the girls at
Bloomsburg .
Attention!
Basketball and
Wrestlin g Candidates
Coach
Charles
Chronister
announced that all those interested in pla ying BSC int ercollegiate baske t ball this
y ear wi ll have physicals on
Wednesda y, Oct. 1l,at 7 PM In
the trainin g roo m of the new
gym . This includes fres hmen .
For t hose interested in
wrestlin g/
Coach
Frank
Sanders
announced
that
p hysicals
will be give n
Tuesda y, Oct. 10, at 7 PM in
room 128 of the new gym.
You must have a physi cal
before playi ng a varsity sport.
.
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Selection Guidelines
for Dept. Chairman
In accordance with the recently
executed Collective Bargaining
Agreement it is necessary that
each department conduc t an
election to determine whether it
wishes to ret ain its present
chairman
or initiate
the
procedures contained in the
Agreement for the selection of a
new chairman.
The following
are
the
guidelines and procedures for the
selection of Department chairmen as determinebsby the B.S.C.
Faculty Association - APSCUFPAHE and the college ad-
Support
the
Farmworkers
ministration :
1. An official ballot shall be
distributed to each full - or parttime facul ty member in each
department by the chairman
within five (5) days of the receipt
of these procedures.
2. All faculty members of the
bargaining unit , full - or parttime , who are assigned to the
department , have the right to
vote on the retention of the
chairman this fall . Facu lty
members not on campus sha ll be
supplied , by the Departmen t
Chairman , with one (1) official
ballot which may be cast by mail
and shall be returned in an outer
and an inner envelope.
3. Departm ent
chairmen ,
themselves , have a similar right .
to vote.
4. A meeting for the purpose of
counting the ballots shall be
called by the Depar tment
Chairman , at which time the
ballots will be placed in
a container and one (1) of the
departm ent
members , as
determined by the departmen t,
shall count the ballots in the *
presence of the other depa rlmen t
members.
5. Sufficient time for the retu rn
of mail ballots shall be allowed
prior to calling the meeting as
specified above; however , the
meeting must be scheduled not
later than Oct. 11, 1972.
6. The individual counting we
ballots will be responsible for
reporting the results of ballotin g
on the attached forms no later
than October 13, 1972.
Sharon Steel recently placed second in Executive Typing at the
Phi Beta Lambd a National Confe rence in Houston , Texas. A second
semester senior * and Business Education major , Sha ron has at .
tained a speed of ninety words per minut e.
(Maresh Photo )
Vir g inia State
Exchange Pla nned
(continued from page one)
versel y, Bloomsburg State
College students will have an in
depth and natural association
with a black situation which will,
enable them , upon their ret urn , to
bro aden the perspective of the
college community and enhance
the fulfillment of the objectives of
the program ; Fourth Tier—th e
fourth tier will involve a
culturall y infused program which
will introduce the college community to black
artists ,
golf , etc . possibilit y of basketball
and football later ; exchan ge of
musical grou ps — Madrigals ,
Concert Choir , Band , etc.
Virginia State is a school very
(continued from pa ge two)
much like B. S. C. in many ways
— studen t enrollmen t, size of
the prices downtown . Another
college itself, course of studies ,
plant is the Berwick Knitting Mill
and even history. (Virginia State
with sweaters galore and most at
was once a Normal School, too).
below retail price.
This is one reason for the exIt' s fun to shop for bargains ,
change . B. S. C. is weak in many
especiall y at this type of barg ain
areas where Virginia State is
place . At the places I' ve menstron g, and vice versa. Also,
tioned , you can save from ten per
pHii f n t n r «
muctr»ianc
Virginia State College is
cent to maybe more than eighty
statesman , politicians , etc. These predominantly black while B. S.
per cent , and tha t makes cents !
persons will be invited to the C. is mostly white and this would
community to inter act and to achieve a better racial balance.
relate.
The Depar tment of Health ,
Also the following have been Education , & Welfare was inconsidered , some of which are terested in the pro gram when it
Today is the last day to vote
7. The Department Chairman merel y refinements of the was first presen ted, but as of yet ,
in the Primary Elections for
must receive over fifty per cent general proposal : exchange of no funds have been award ed.
Homecoming Queen .
(50 per cent) of the eligible votes teaching faculty on a visitin g Righ t now they are going ahead
For confirmation to continue in lecturer basis ; cooperative without the money . As an
Final Elections will be held
office. Absentions or blank research projects by Bloomsburg example, last March the Virginia
Monda y and Tuesday, October
ballots shall be counted as votes State College and Virginia State State College band performed at
9 and 10.
to initiate the procedure con- College students ; exchange of B. S. C. as part of the "Black
Pollin g p la ces a r e in each
tained in Article XI. A. of the consultants between the in- E xperience" sponsored by the
residen ce hall and the Union .
collective bargain ing agreement stitutions ; exchange of students Black Studen t Society. For infor selection of another chair- in specialized curricula (deaf formation on the coming visit ,
education ); exchange of athletic
man .
contact Dr. Simon.
programs in baseball , track ,
Bargains
BASS PLAYER
Hi t ter 's
and
Preferred
For Working Rock Group
Coll 925-2855-Goorg * Jr.
«a
%e ^^ ^>a *» v m \j y
72 M. Iron St.
Over 300 Guitars
and Amplifiers
784-4323
John 's Food
Market
ill Vv K7 * ^^ • v* • •
^^ f
Hartzel's Music Store
Office Suppl y
112 E. Main Sf.
Bloom sbur g ,
LEAD SINGER
Equipment
^^
Potter y by Ron Bower
Denim Series
W. Main A Leonar d St.
Open 8 a.m. to 12 midnight Daily
Delicatessen
Full line of groceries
A snacks
•Bulletin
Boards • Looseleaf Binder
•Address Book •Desk Access ories
THE STUDIO SHOP
59 E. Main St., Bloomtburg
784-2818
Eppley 's
Pharmacy
Friday Specials
Delicious Shrimp or Vz Ib. Filet of Fish
,
_
.
.
In a Basket
with tartar
sauce
.9:00-11:00
9:00 - 12:00
4:30 - 12:00
11:00-11:00
Watch tor oyr Specials every day
!
•LANVIN
•PRINCI MATCHAKLU
•EUZABETHAROBN
•HELENA RUBENSTEIN
•DANA
•COTY
»MAX FACTOR
Ormtri Jtampt
But the masters of the fates of
these neglected people will not
listen to Cesar Chavez and his
demands for a better way of life.
To effectively change conditions
and force the growers to listen to
the farmworkers there is the
necessity for a boycott on lettuce .
The gra pe strikers used such
methods in the middle sixties.
Lettuce harves ters have followed
(Uaim
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1^iA*i
icau.
Cn#tti
uuvi i
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Krhimntf
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10
necessary if farmworke rs are to
win the simp le righ t of
negotiating with their employees.
It is essential to the farmworker 's success.
The farmworkers need your
support ! There will be a meeting
concernin g the Lettuce Boycott
on October 10 at 8:00 P.M. in
Auditorium .
The
Carver
speakers will be from the
Philadelp hia Boycott Office.
Tennis
(continued from page two)
greatest benefit from their class
because they must share courts.
The students who play tennis
for leisure are inconvenienced as
well. They aren't very happy
about hikin g to the town park
courts when we have our own on
campus.
So that' s the story. If you're a
tennis fan who can't play, now
you know why . And you're not
a one.
.
1971 Volkswagen
Station Wagon
7 Passenger
Good Condi tion-4 Now Tires
Best Offer Accepted
Call 764-3720
HE ADQUARTERS OF
HALLMARK CARDS
Jo bs Are Available. . . !
For FREE information
on studen t assistance and
placemen t pro gram send
Dollar Special
Ever y Weeken d
envelope to the National
Placemen t Registry, 1001
East Idaho St., Kalispell,
MT 59901
AND GIFTS
Phone 784-2561
self-addressed STAMPED
- NO GIMMIC KS -
"^ftt
itJU's
I^Sw '"UJWBRB
*J ^^^H«*ry WmMwI *
Dm* Tfc. Hill On latf It.
/b
iTSf
•PABERGE
Across from fhe Union
Hours: AAon. - fhurs
Frtday
Saturday
:
Sunday
18 Wist Main Sbwt , Bloomsbinj, Pa.
•CHANEL
•GUERLAIN
Kampus Nook
giuwcia.
Miller Office
Suppl y Co.
PretcripHon Specialist
8:00 P.M.
¦if ¦ r~> ¦¦¦n irBi " !
¦
or Write: Boi 63 Btoonuburf P*
MAIN ft IRON STREET S
wit h
French Frta, Pickled Cabbcg* arv l BrenW ft Suti er
Plotters till
LEARN TO FLY
with the Parlor .
City Flying Club
Call: 389-2814 or 784-8571
The migrant workers have
suffered a great deal in the "land
of opportunity ". Cesar Chavez is
trying ver y hard to brin g justice
to migrant farmworkers , by
campai gning for more than ten
years. To get decent housing,
decent wages, and equal opportunities , he has diligently
tried negotiati on with the lettuce
ffj ^ irTl
/
°\
N. y
^JVL ^
Compliments
of the
Bloom Bowl
FRESH DONUTS EVERY DAY
"Yumteei Varieties"
*¦***«
Dally Nawspavers
Weekdays 7 a.m. . 9 p.m.
S(rt
' * Sun. 9 am • 9 pm
THE DONUT MAM
Media of