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Wed, 05/01/2024 - 17:11
Edited Text
Hypnotis
t Baron
I
is Great Success
i

by Marty wennoiu

Edwin L. Baron , billed as the
world' s greatest hypnotist , gave
a fine evening of entertainment ,
Tuesday, October 31, in the SUB .
A capacity crowd literall y
jammed the Union to the rafters
for the hour and half of laughs ,
tears , and campaign promises .
( Read On! )
The quiet-voiced Mr. Baron
first gave a bri ef introduction on
hypnosis. He noted tha t habits
and personalities may be completely changed , disea ses may be
cured , and successful surgery
performed with no harmful side
effects. No person may be hypnotized against his will, and when
once under , no subject may go
against his religion or morals . A
successful hypnotic subjec t must
first of all , be sincere , secondly ,
Students being teste d by the Baron —if they could unloc k their
must concentrate and third , must
hands, they couldn 't concentrate well enoug h for hypnosis.
cooperate. Mr. Baron closed his
(Oliver Photo )
introduction with an assurance to
the audience tha t the hypnotic
experience would be one of the
most pleasant , exciting experiences of thei r lives. Mr.
Baron did note , however , that not
all people can be hypnotized .
Calling for volunteers , Baron
was stampeded by about thirty
wide-eyed , eager victims. A test
No indication , however of the was administered to the entire
strength or depth of this concern crowd , alon g with the subjects on
by Tony Stankiewicz
Because of a large influx of was indicated by Jones .
the stage. Everyone was told to
students into the departments of Lack of ample facilities and stand with their legs apart in a
Special Education and Com- faculty to ha ndle th e sudden
munication Disorders , f urther student interes t in the Special Ed.
admission of students and the and communication Disorders
continuation in tha t field by fields is the main reason for the
freshmen and sophomores is to restrictions. "Overloading the
mar ket" ... states Jones , is
be restrictive and selective.
another
reason
for
Tot al curren t enr ollmen t
the
VETS TO MEET
limitation
s.
consists approximately of 545
The
Veterans
Club will meet
Students
sensing
the
comstudents in Special Ed. and about
Monday
at
7
p.m.
in room 83
petition
are
voluntarily
chang ing
295 in Communication Disorders .
Hartline
to
discuss
information
These figures must be cut down their choice of concentration . To
f
rom
t
he
St
a
t
e
Co
nference
and
to 400 and 160 students respec- further red uce the student exthe
fund-raising
event.
tivelv.
cess , additional methods of
Current
a p p r o x i m a t e selec tio n based on overall and
SCHOLARSHIPS
point
enr ollmen t accor di ng to class specific cumulative
PHEAA
Scholarships for the
avera ges and i nd i v idual st uden t
standing is listed below .
fall
semester
may not arrive until
S. Ed. Com.Dis. compet ence w ill be u sed .
mid-November.
Notice will be
Freshm en
222
89 The a greemen t pu blished in t he publ ished in the Today
at B.S.C.
Sophom ores
157
61 college catalogue stating th at and t he M aro on & G old when
t he
Juniors
98
47 " ...adm ission t o course s of a checks are in the Financial Aid
Seniors
68
22 curriculum does not bind the
With the cutback figures , in School or t he College to official Office.
Special Ed., each incom ing class admiss ion of the studen t to t he
ARTS & CRAFTS AUCTION
will be limited to a 100 student curr iculum in cases where adThere will be a public Auction
q u ota p er y ear. L i kew i se , mission is selective or restri cCommunication Disorders will ted , " is t he me t hod of not if ica ti on of art and craft items on Sunday,
Nov. 5, at 2:00 pm. at Democratic
res t r i ct each incomin g class to 40 of t he selection pr ocess.
H ead quar ters , 150 W. Main St.
students Der vear.
W
orks b y Bonham , Hoch, LarNoticeably, sen iors and j un iors
HELPLINE
ned,
Martin , Rh odes, Roberts ,
w i ll not be a f fect ed by these
TRAINING
SESSIONS
Savage,
Simon , Smith , W ilson ,
res trictions. Junior transfers will
TRAINING
SESSIONS
for
and
others
will be included.
also rema i n un t ouched. Ma inl y
t
he
HELPLINE
will
be
g
in
on
Anyone
wishing
to donate artf reshmen and sophomores , inthe
followin
g
dates
:
Nov
.
B-10work
may
call
Mrs.
Florence at
clud ing sophomore transfers , will
13-15
from
3
P.M.
to
S
P.M.
784-2203,
All
sale
items
may be
be affec t ed by the l i m it a t ions.
y
each
session
.
Mandator
seen
at
the
Head
quarters
that
Dr. Wi lliam J ones of t he
a\ each session is day from 1-2 pm.
a
tt
endance
Academic A dv i sement O ffice
necessar y. Approximatel y 15
states t hat " ...s t udents and
are
needed to brin g the phone
ADVISEMENT HOURS
f acul ty are concerned and that
y
workers
to
the
necessar
The
Academic Advisement
the administration and parents
number
needed
to
comoffice now has a full time
are concerned too. " J ones also
fortably run the Helpline. The
secretary, Karen Funk , and will
said "The college is receiving
service begins this Sunda y.
be open regularly from 8:30 am.
calls from concerned pa rent *,"

Enrollment cut
may be problem

comfor table position , raise their
arms straight above their head s
and lock their hands together to
the count of three . If you couldn 't
unlock your hands , you could
j
effectively conentrate.
The first twelve people on stage
stood up for their entra nce into j
the world of hypnotic power.
Baron looked into their eyes and
performed the world 's fastest
hypnotic trance by simply
snappin g his fingers in front of
their eyes. Various trick s were
performed (arm raisi ng and
name and address ) , but the real
test came when a match was held
Edwin L. Baron himself as he
to the "asleep " palm. Seven mesmeri zes the crowd .
honest and singed people were
(Oliver Photo )
left of the twelve.
Other tr icks were performed applause from the audience . In
by the unknowing subjects on this wild farce , the personalities
stage : discernin g right hand s of Nixon and McGovern were
from left ; getting war m , then interchanged and campaign
cold; and swattin g the ants promises were exchanged by the
crawli ng up their legs. Per haps two confused subjects. The
the funnie s t performa nces of all slogan, "Win with Nick" and a
were connected with a movie raised victory sign literally
theater act , where the pa r- brought down the house.
ticipants all alternatel y laughed , Baron closed his performance
cried , screamed , and shrank in hv assurin g the subj ects that in
fear from the movie supposedl y the future , "Everything you see,
being projected upon the union everything you hea r will make
wall . The highlight came when such a deep impression...tha t the
some poor , unsuspecti ng male time you come to take your
ended up kissing the top of the examinations...you 'll be alert ,
sharp, and clear...the answers
micro phone stand.
debate
Nixon-McGovern
will immediatel y associate and
The
approval
and
you will immediately answer. "
brough t the wildest
(Certain subjects were noted
leaving the Union hurriedly with
protestations that , "I'd love to
talk about it , but I really think I
better study!" )
Mr. Baron and his many
to 4:30 pm., Monday through subjects are to be praised and
Friday. The office is located in thanked for providin g an evening
room 128 Waller Hall , near t he of unique entertainment and
entrance to the Bookstore and the laughs.
telephone no. is 389-2119. Along
with Karen Funk , Dr. Jones '
ARTS COUNCIL FILM
secreta ry , two student assistants ,
SERIES
Di ane B radl e y and M i ke
Ashes and Di amonds , a Polish
McHugh , will help with two-way anti-pol itical film , w ill be shown
communication between students at 3:30 p.m. and again at 7:30
and this office.
p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 7, in
Kuster Audi toriu m . The film will
FORENSIC TOURNAMENT
be presented by the Art s Counc il
The BSC Forensics Society's and tickets are now avail able in
Third Annual Indi vidual Tour- t he of fi ce of t he secret ar y of Haas
namen t , notabl y name d t he Cen t er for t he A rts. All studen ts
"Mad Hatter " tournamen t- will and fa culty will rece ive free
begin at 4 pm today with opening tick ets and this film is not open to
remarks in room L-35 of Andruss the public.
Librar y .
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~~

News Briefs

McGOVERN PARTY
ATTENTION : There will be a
part y at the Democratic National
Hea dquarters for those students
who worked for McGovern. Come
and watch the election returns.
ABSENTE E VOTE RS!
, Pennsylvania residents and
students who are voting by absentee ballot must mail the ballot
by today or place it in the

possession of their respective

Boards of Election by 8 P.M. on
Nov. 7, election day.

POP'S CONCERT

The BSC Women 's Chora l
Ensemble and Men 's Glee

Club will combine to perform
a Pop 's Conctr t in Haas
Center for th» Arts on Sunda y/
November 5, at 7 pm. It will be
the second Pop 's ' Conctr t
p erformed b y the Music
Department this season. The
Glee Club will perform such
p op ular
numbers
as
" Beautiful/ ' " Hey Olr l," and
"Song Sung Blue. " Sev eral
solos are planned by members
of the Glee Club .

I
'

"I

edi to ria l

On page one of this issue of the M&G is a story about the necessity
of applications to various curricula before being admitted to the
field which the sftiden t desires. The story on page one is straight
news — now let's talk about opinion.
The necessity of application to a specific curriculum has come
about because Bloomsburg has too many students in the fields of
Special Education and Communication Disorders.Whereas several
years ago these programs were among the smallest on campus,
they have suddenly swelled because of a tight job market in
Secondary and Elementary Education . New, my objection is not to
iiic idt i uicu uic nuciueiii u; ucyai uuu ii nas accu a pruu icm ana

chosen this method of alleviating it. It is obvious that a forced
application at the end of a sophomore year will help to screen out
students who aren 't sincerely interested in the work, and will keep
that field from getting crowded along with the others. There 's no
need to mention that this method will keep other fields crowded
because sophomore students who can 't get into their desired
program will turn to these. That is self-evident. As a method of
saving the Special Education and Communication Disorder
programs this is quite good.
My objection lies in lack of notification to students .
What happens to the student who entered school before this was

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year they might be forced to change to another program because of
lack of facilities? And what of incoming freshmen? All those people
whose,daddies have been telling them to get into MR and Speech
Path because that's how they'd get jobs? And all tho?e who were
told in their high schools that Bloomsburg was the second best
school on the east coast for Special Ed? Where in that paragraph so
inconspicuously placed in the catalogue does it say that by their
senior year their freshman class would have to be whittled down to
35 students?
Perhaps the solution will be sufficient to Academics,' but the
method of informing students has thus far been poor, and it would
not be an overstatement ' to say that a lot of kids are getting
screwed. Let us hope that a better method of notification can be
found.
fcue&prague
n
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~~

Gettin g B y

The Ginko Bandits
by Joe Miklos

Everyone talks about apathy,
but no one does anything about it.
And I'm not going to talk about it.
Instead, I'll tell a little story.
Once upon a time last week I
was sitting in the Student Union
with my fellow zombies, complaining about the coffee and
listening to "Hold Your Head
Up" for the fifth time. The
conversation had dulled to
comments like "duhhh..." and
"If I don 't study , I'm gonna
flunk. " Typical day.
Two things escaped my notice .
The first was that it was indeed a
beautiful day outside. The other
was the erinnine figures with
grocery bags in the lobby .
Typical day.
I was debating an attempted
salvation of the conversation and
not paying particular attention to
any one thing. That's when one of
my trusty sidekicks blurted ,
"What are those two doing?" He
looked so astounded that I
managed to glance toward the
lobby .
It payed.
The grocery bag kids were
dashing hither and yon, w i t h even
bigger grins on their faces,
scattering ginko leaves by the
handfuls all over everybody and
everything. No yelling, just
grinning like a couple of Cheshire
Cats and splattering the place
with brilliant splotches of green
and gold.

Needless to say, that short
event made my day. Suddenly it
was as beautiful inside as it was
out . Alive! Alive '. The whole
place felt alive; at least to me. It
had become a much better than
average day.
The reaction of the rest of the
place was appalling. Most of the
people just looked up, expressed
puzzlement , and returned to
contemplation of the swirls their
stirring sticks made in the caffeine-muck, A few gave the ginko
- bandits a withering look . And
most of the cleaning ladies
seemed to express a desire to
either faint or wreak vengeance.
Nothing came of it.
But the ginko-bandits kept
right on grinning and dashed out
of the door .
I guess the senses of the
Student Unionists had been
dulled to the point where nothing
short of a nuclear holocaust
complete with flash and
mushroom cloud could astound
them. All people have a tendency
to rely on old habit no matter
what the situation. So the Union
crowd reverted to past complacency.
Some janitors must have been
mighty angry...
But just once the Student Union
was alive. If people won 't go to
nature , nature comes to them in
rather startling ways.
I had a hard time suppressing a
whimsical grin akin to those worn
by the bandits that day.

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9
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THE MAROON AND GOLD

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Managing Editor
Robert Oliver
Karen Kelnard
News Manager
Joseph Miklos
Feature Editor
John Stugrln
Cartoonist
Contributin g Editors
Frank Pl/ioll. Jim Sachett i
staff : Don Enz, Joanne Linn, Lind a Llvermore , Valcry O'Connell, Janlne
Watklns, Tony Stank|lewlcz , Tom Boiiard , Barb Wanchlson, Kathy Joseph .
Business Manager
Blalne Pongrati
Off ice Manager
Ellen Doyle
Advertisin g Manager
Frank Lorah
Nancy Van Pelt
Circulation Manager
Chief Photographer
Dan Maresh, Jr.
Photographers ', Dale Alexander, Tom Dryburg, Pat White, Suiy White, Sue
Oreef, Annette KIms, Mike Wllllami, Marty Wenhold.
Advisor
Ken Hoffm an
The M&G Is located at 234 Waller , or call 309 3101. All co py must be submitted by
no later than 5;0O p.m. on Tuesdays and Sundays for the Friday and Wednesday
papers, respe ctively. The opinions voiced In the columns and feature articles of
the M8.0 may not necessarily be shared by the entire staff, but they art bound by
1h«lr duty to ddend the right 1o voice 1h»m.

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PREZ FORUM
Sense of Des tin y

by Jim Sachetti
You can read all the newspaper
accounts, listen to all the candidates, watch the TV* commercials and argue with
everyone you meet, but when it
comes time to put your X on that
ballot , to choose between those
two men, you just have to pause.
It's that feeling called "a sense
of destiny " by some, and indecision by others that does it.
There you are, Mr. Average
American Person , concerned
with little more than your grades,
or your family, or your job, or
your love life, being asked to
chart the destiny of your country.
There you stand, being asked to
choose between two almostmythical names, one of which
will shortly be installed in the
most powerful office in the world.
It's a strange feeling, and in
most other years, it would stop a
man of the staunchest conviction
for more than a few agonizing
moments. But this year is different. This year, as far more
important men than myself have

already pointed out, the choice is
clear.
So when that "sense of destiny"
hits you, when your pen pauses
for that fateful moment in
midair , ready to hit that ballot
and plunge on into the future of
America ... consider ...
An America in which the
Pentagon gorges itself on money
while the people starve; an
America in which the environment continues to die
because the polluters are
protected by their campaign
contributions; an America which
continues to parade across the
international stage as a superpower, while its people disintegrate into warring factions ; an
America in which the constitutional guarantees of civil
liberties are continually trampled by self-seeking politicians;
an America run not for the
people , the Mr. Average
American Persons, but for the
personal gain and glory of the
man who will rule it — Richard
Nixon .

There is another American
vision , one which has been
described by the man who will
work to make it reality — it
emphasizes people , not Pentagons; the environment , not the
big polluters ; domestic harmony,
not international fireworks; the
rights of the people, not of the
politicians ; an America in which
each one of us will find the
strength, the energy and the
harmony to work together to
make America a true superpower
—built not on the power of its
missiles, but on the power of its
people.
We can be more than 200
million schizophrenics, sulking
around inside the rotted shell of
an American dream turned
nightmare. George McGovern
has shown us the way.
So when the pause has ended
and the pen strikes, be sure that it
strikes a blow for the people, and
the great nation we can build.
George McGovern — four New
years.

I would like to express my
concern on two particular aspects
of Mr. McGovern 's campaign.
These aspects being Vietnam
and the proposed cut-back in
defenses. Though I'm not in favor
of overspending by the Pentagon ,
I can 't see Senator McGovern 's
stand on cutting defenses as
being in the best interests of this
nation.
During the speech to the nation
on October 10, Senator McGovern
stated tha t he would not only
withdra w all troops from Vietnam ; he stated he would remove
all U. S. military presence from
Laos, Cam bodia , and Thailand.
This would , in my opinion , create
a vacuum. As is well known a
vacuum is an unnatural state and

w ill , due to the law of physics, be
filled . In the case of Indo-China ,
this vacuum will be filled by the
strongest milita ry and political
presence, due to the laws of
nnMtifs For thp United States to
abandon the duly elected
governments of Laos, Cambodia
and Thailand would be illogical,
disastrous, and against the interests and policies of this
nation. To allow this region to fall
into unfriendly hands would be to
allow a major trade, navigation
and commercial route of the
world to be cut-off (much like the
present state of the Suez Canal) ;
and allow millions of people to be
subjuga ted and given a political
system they expressedly refused
to have.

In the case of the defenses,
Senator McGovern proposed a 40
per cent cut-back. This would
cause the Navy to be cut in half ,
and the Air Force to be cut by
more than half. Unlike the
President who proposed cutting
the fat off the Pentagon , the
Senator wants to slash all
branches of defense. At a time
when the U.S. and Russia are
battling for supremacy on the
seas, a move in the direction
Senator McGovern 's advocates
would be disastrous. As Senator
Humphrey states "No responsible President would think of
cutting our defenses back to a
level of a second class power in
the face of the expanding Russian
Navy and Air Force."

If after reviewing the two
major candidates , you find
neither one has what you want in
a President , John Schmitz may
be your thing.
Schmitz is the anti-communist
John Bircher running on the
America n Party platform. Their
planks are :
1. Never going to War unless we
intend to Win.
2. The right of law abiding
citizens to own firearms without
registration .
3. A strong defense posture to
defend America .
4. No ceiling on earnings of
those receiving social security.
5. Local control of schools. No
busing for racial purposes.
6. PRIVATE low cost medical
insurance.
7. Discontinuing all foreign aid
programs.
8. State & local programs to
enable t he aged , bl i nd & disabled
to live with dignity & economic
security.
9. The elimination of Government competition with free &
competitive institutions .
10. Laws providing criminal
penalties for presentation or
exhibition of obscenity including
any
public
display
of
Homosexuality .
11. Those who work living
bet t er t han t hose who won 't.
Schmitz , himself, is an exMar i ne f igh t er p ilo t, i f you like
t hat typ e of t hin g . He was elec t ed
to Congress on ly once , but was a
mem ber of the Cali fornia St ate
Legislature for 6 years. Prior to
his political career (such as it is) ,
he w as an i nstruc t or i n
philosophy , histor y, and political
science at Santa Ana. College.

(This is no interence on our own
faculty in these departments ; I
assure you.) For what its worth ,
Schmitz has been the recipient of
many far right wing awards such
as "Bulldog of the Year" and
"Watchdog of the Treasury."
(He'll probably receive other
"doggy" awards in the future.)
His running mate is Thomas
Jefferson Anderson , a graduate
of Vanderbilt University and now
a farmer in Tennessee. Anderson 's "early ambi t ion was to
buy a weekly newspaper to
crusade for individual freedom
and a better world". He bought a
farm magazine instead. (That
figures.) To his credit, h owever ,
he did build it into a chain of 14
magazines with a circulation of
750,000.
If you agree with Tom Anderson (That's the clown above,
if you forgot.) that "The greatest
danger isn 't fallout , it' s sellout. .
" then the American Party is for
you . Or , if you're like me, and

A Word on Defense

Third Party

nnviH r> 'Rri/»n

appreciate a good political joke
occasionally, you might read
some of their literature. It can be
obtained through me at Waller
box 589 or by calling 784-3691.
Now please , Mother of Mercy, do
not get the idea 1 am campaigning for Schmitz . I'm not ! I
just think that reading their
literature bea ts the hell out of old
comic books and maybe you'll
think so too.
—Rich Stillman

As soc. Prof. Percey 's class
"Politica l Parties , Pressure
Gr oups and Public Opinion '
po lled Col umbia Count y as
par t
of
t hei r
course
requirement. They predict a
Nixon-Kury landslide of 10,500
votes or more. We'll see iff
they 're right.

Of Interest

(ed. note: The following note
was sent in carbon copy to the
M&G by Dr. Hans Karl Gunther.
We felt that the students would
find it of interest. )
Dear Dr. Carlson ,
A letter from Karl C. Rove ,
Executive Director of the College
Republican National Comm i ttee ,
w i th whom I have been in
corres p ondence , informed me
that pa ge 3 of Oct. ll' s Maroon
And G old , featurin g the
"Presidential
Forum " with

articles by Tom. Beveridae and

myself , has gone t o the W hi te
House , the leaders of the Nationa l
Republican Committee , and the

comm itte e to Re-El ect the
preside nt.
I am ha ppy to report this occasion of national prom i nence for '
BSC and hope that next time the
accom plishmen ts of our athletic
teams are reported on the radio
network s , no sport s announcer
will playfully wonder — as they
often do now — where Bloomsburg is.
Sincerely yours ,
.. - . . Hans Karl Gunt l^r, Pitp, ,

SecondP lace Race

BSC-vs - Bears

The BSC Huskies return home
this Saturday for Parents '
Weekend following a stunning
upset over the previously fiveand-one Cheyney Wolves, 8-7. The
Husky win knocked Cheyney out
of the Eastern Division race and
assured West Chester of the Top
Spot.
Kutztown is coming off a 43-0
shutout at the hands of- West
Chester, dropping their total
record to 2-5. They are 2-2 in the
league, and need a win to stay
alive for the runnemp spot in the
Conference.
Kutztown is led by Quarterback
George Whary, who is the
leagues' number five passer.
Whary is a former All-State and
Big 33 quarterback. He took over
the quarterbacking chores this
year after last-years AllConference QB Terry Woginrich
was declared ineligible right
before the season.
The Kutztown running attack is
spearheaded by fullback Dave
Dennison, who stands sixth in the
Conference rushing race with 412
yards and a 59 yards-per-game

average. Dennison, who was used
only as a punt-returner and spare
wide receiver last year, started
off the year fast , but has tailed off
in recent weeks.
Whary has the Conferences'
number five receiver in Carl
Giosa, who has 18 catches good
for 328 yards and two - TD's for
the year.
The Bear defense ranks third in
the league, and is led by
linebacker Bob Kohler, safety
Dave Lehatto, and back Tom
Klepeisz. Klepeisz is fifth in
Conference interceptions with
three.
HUSKIES ARE 3-5
The Huskies, now 3-5 (2-2
league) , defeated Cheyney in the
rain last weekend, but lost
ground in the individual races.
George Gruber dropped two slots
in the rushing race to fourth, with
607 yards for a 76 yards-per-game
average. He will be out for a big
day this weekend. Quarterback
Joe Geiger had a good day,
throwing 8-18 in the passing
department, and also a two-point
conversion.

George Gruber , the Conferences ' number four rusher, looks for
an opening in the Cheyney Game.
(Maresh Photo )

The Husky rushing leaders,
after Gruber , are Mike
Devereux, (289 yards) and Ken
Vancas , (179 yards). Pass
receiving leaders include Cnris
Sweet, with 15 catches, and Mike
Devereux with 11 grabs.
The Husky defenders rank

Kistler lst-Class A

sixth in the league, and are at the
bottom of the rushing-defense
list. In the defensive backfield,
Bill Boyland snagged two interceptions Saturday to tie
Charlie Bender and Dan
Greenland for the club leadership
with three.
The Huskies punter , Line

Welles, jumped to the third slot in
Conference punting, with an
average of 36.8 yards-per-boot.
This should be another good
offense - vs - good defense match,
with the Huskies ability to
penetrate the Kutztown defense
being the key to the game.
Gametime is 2 PM.

Rooks at New Yo rk

The BSC chess team participa ted in the Empire City Open
last weekend in New York City.
Over 500 other players participated in this tournament.
The advisor of the Husky

Rooks , Doc Selders, accompanied the team. Because of
his past experiences with the
club, he kept the team amused
with anecdotes of former club
happenings. He was also very
r

Dave Ki stl er in action.

See Our
Christma s Hu t
Complete Holida y
Trimmi ngs

%

'^ipfof ius
1^^^

helpful in recovering missing
luggage.
Our top player, Dave Kistler,
took first place in the Class A
section, playing 4 experts. His
loss in the opening round to a
fellow expert stimulated him to
win the next 4 games. Three of
Dave's four games lasted over
four hours.
Jim Kitchen managed to pull a
couple of haves out of the fire by
several fantastic moves, giving
him a score of 3-2. Three games
lasted over 50 moves.
The teams fine sophomore
player, Andy Cherinka, scored
2M> out of 5 points. Andy picked up
several interesting items in his
continued learning of the game of
chess.
Mike Weinberg, a senior from
Danville, scored 2 points in this
tournament. This was the first
time Mike participated in a US
Chess Federation rated tournament.
The teams female player, Ann
Marie Shultz, didn't do as well as
usual . Under pressure from
tough competition, sh e received
only one point.
This weekend, the Rooks play
Drexel University on Nov. 4 and
Moravian on Nov. 5th. Both
games are away.

INCENSE BURNERS
New

potter y -meta l -ston e
owls-mush rooms-snails
(for the slower ones )

Miller Office
Supply Co.

THE STUDIO SHOP

18 WmI Main Strut Bloomtbui i, Pi

FLOWER S

i*Wv«ry woridwku m ^OEEEBttSBBMBWBnB

MICHAEL COONEY
one-man folk festival

8:00 P.M. THURSDAY , NOV. 9

HEADQUARTERS OF
HALLMARK CARDS

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

AND GIFTS

Phone 784-1561

Eppley 's
Pharmacy

"Coone y is a you ng performer of grea t vo cal and Instrumenta l accomp lishment, toppedoff by a deli ghtful stage
presence which engulfs the audien ce In his own belief and
en|oymen t of his material. " — NIGHT LIFE, Los Angeles

CWv«i Mmijn _

Kenny

Jim

LOGGINS " MESSINA
Openin g act - Casey Kell y

8:30 P.M. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11
S.D. Chapel Auditorium, Selinsgrove

¦

Ticket! $3.75 advance, $4.50 at the door
Advance tickets on tale at the Moomsbur g
Colle ge Union Informa tio n Desk, throu gh Nov. 9

t ¦BJ BJ BS
i
^\ ¦MM*¦«S¦B¦r
. •' ¦¦¦¦
^mm^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm

mh ^mm m+m ^

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§

presents

¦^^ _^J ^A|__
+m *m mtmiimA
rfWrncn
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eCHANHL
•GUIRLAIN
•FABCRQE
•LANVIN
•PPJNCIMATCHAKLU
•EUZABITH ARDIN
•HEUNARUBENSTBN
•DANA
•COTY
•MAXFACTO*

I

Susquehanna University
Entertain ment Associati on

MAIN 1 IRON STRUTS

Susque hanna University
Chapel Auditorium
Bloomsbur g students (1.00, Adults $2.00
tickets on sale at S.U. on Nov. 9 from 7-8 P.M.,
or call 374-1251 for reservations

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

The last game of the BSC Hockey Team was played Tuesda y < at
home. The Huskie tte s second team triumphed over Williamspor t
Communi ty Colleg e with a smashi ng 8-0 score. This gave the tea m
a very commenda ble record of 7-1-1. This weekend the Huskiettes
f ir s t t eam will be r epre sen t ing Blooms bur g Sta t e Colle ge at the
Penn State Hockey Tournamen t. There they will be playing games
agains t such teams as Lock Haven, Shippensbur g, etc . — all oi
which are exceedingly capable teams. Huskiettes — Good Luck!
(Mtresh Photo)
;

-. ¦,.,>; '¦
^mmmmmmmmmKmmm^

I FACTORY OUTLET STORE
I

KNITS

O-Q

¦
•Sweaters Galore
•Skirts — Jeans
¦
Ponchos
Capes
•Suits — Dresses - Shirts



11SPEC/At STUDENT DISCOUNTS ]

I BERWICK KNITTING MILLS

'^

261 W. Main St. 784-4016

M-T-W Eve, or by Appt.

^ESin^l

HENRIES

Card and Book Nook
40 W. Main St.

Christmas creations :i la Black Forest , h;mtlm;u!e in Hawaii from
ilcsigns to delig ht the
ori g ina l, thrcc-ilinicnsional
For traisu ml ifts , cJhmwc f rom mer 2 00
collector.
^J
^
ite ms, each Iv.uui-painted in j »uy Christmas colors.
ML
«?Nf

ORDHRS AIRMAILED WITHIN 48 HOURS Ol RtCtlPT

,V

A. ALEXANDER Co.

W. Main &. Leonard St.
' Open 8 a.m. to 12 midnight Daily
Delicatessen

98 Riverside Drive New York - NY>
'

9wv9

John 's Food
Market

'

"Ou r catalog sent on req uest- $1.00 deposit refunda ble"

.

230 So. Popla r St., Berwick
(One Block Off Rte. 11 — Behind Shopp ing
Center
9-9 Thurs . & Fri
Sat.
Daily
&
Hours 9-5

I
I
I
I

ra
pplM
j &i&rai A _ iUW

Got a mate? (or a date)
Undulate!!!
Kuss Waterbeds

Full line of groceries
A snacks

M^BMB»B ^fcB^HB^MMBMBi ^fcB^fcB^fcBlMi ^BMa ^B^ia^B^MB ^^ ia^^ i^B^i^i^B^B^B^i^^ ia^ia^ia

Ritter 's
Off ice Supp /y
112 E. Main St.
B/oomsbur g,

784-4323

Hartzel' s Music Store
72 N. Iron St.

(

Gregg 's Music

Over 300 Guitars
and Amplifiers

Sherwood Village
Old Berwick Road Bloomsburg, Pa.

HAPPJNESS

X

^Vs

is getting it
for
LESS!of
of

Scores

Thousands

Happy

$

X

SJEA CHERS and EDUCATORS q
BORROW
LESS &
af oneFOR
of
f
f/ie
V^.
*1

POSITION AVAILABLE
Ni ghts, 5-8 p.m. Mon.-Thurs.
Hours Available
Fri. & Sat. Nig hts

V LOWEST LOAN RATES #
|AVAILABLE ANYWHERE &
^

2^

V*
^W

^^

&*

J^

a

Teachers Service Organization , inc.

and TEACHERS SERVICE CONSUMER DISCOUNT COMPANY

TW
*k£

Work In a paper test lab . Must
be available Wednesday 8 - 12.
$2.25 per hour.

J*/


No need to come in person. Simply write or phone.



Data Com.
Supply Co.

P Dial (215) 548-0300 4
^^

All Business Transacted By Phone and Mail

.J[

X^i^^VS,
©!^^^!!^

¦
¦MBHHBa BJBJBM BflBflHii ^L^^^^^^^^^

I
I

I

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Part-Time Work
8-10 hrs. per week

Is generally LOWER than banks , credit unions ,
finance companies , revolving -type credit ,
department stores , credit cards , etc.

Route

«fcT

<^f

State

^
^

9th & Oak St., Berwick,
759- 1281

Z

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^^ HMHai

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S^ xj llyv-^illh—^*\
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^

.
School

GET IT ON AT

ffilfll Win

CARROLL'S

J

Maryland & Computer Rdt., Willow Grova , Pa. 19090

You'll be happy to find that our finance charge

APPLY IN PERSON

.

Send to:
National Student Travel Services
2025 Walnut Street
Philadelphia,Pa. 19103
/
^
V (215) 561-2939
S

N^I

Days 11-2 Mon. -Fri.
11:30-5, Sat. & Sun.

><^ Tr a

Address

PART TIME

^\

\

Name

Mon . thru Sat.
25C a Peace

%
^

^

National Travel Co. needs a rep.
on your campus to sell trips to
Europe e Ski Area • Islands e
High Commissions • Free Trips
e All promotional materials and
training provided.
For inform ption:

Open
1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
V*

WANTED *
TRA VEL R EP.

S

C.T.C.

have a hang up, my

*° a strung out ! Till I
' was
r)air
"
9ot tnis f arout tip and got
do n

"'

t0 CTC -

Wet Head — but CjSS'
** Novery
loo
a

k!

Shampoo, Cut , Style

for onl y $2.50 with
$3.00 without

earthy natural

ID card

it.

Mow Open 6 Days a Week for Your Convenience.
Coll

784-7220

CROWNING TOUCH COIFFURES
¦— -

THE REAL ISSUE

I
I

IN
CAMPAIGN 72: RICHARD M. NIXON

VOTE
McGOVERN-SHRIVER
NOV
.
7
1
I

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