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Players

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CGA: Service
points up 10
by Karen Keinard
CGA
Burkholder ,
Dan
Preside nt , announc ed tha t
students are needed to serve on
the President' s Advisory Committee on Athletics at the fourth
meeting of College Counc il this
year . Represe ntatives ar e also
needed for a committee on higher
education for the state , so anyone
interested in either should contact Dan Burk holder.
Also at the meeting, the service
key point requirement for awards
at gradu ation was raise d from 20
to 30 points , the environ ment
committee was re-activa ted , and
a pro gram called the Woodrock
Project was considered to bring
under priviledged stude nts to

A MIDSUMMER NIGHT ' S
DREAM will be pr esented by the
Bloomsburg players in Carver
Auditorium on December 7, 8,
ind 9 at 8:15 p.m., including a
special matinee, on December 7 at
L:00 p.m. This pr oduction is
jnder the dire ction of. Mr.
Michael J. McHale.
The President of Bloomsburg
Players, Phil Davis, has two
•oles: Theseus , duke of Athens,
and Oberon, king of the fairies ,
lean LeGates, President of Alpha
Psi Omega , will be Titania, queen
)f the fairies. Tony Kohl , recently

COMMITTEE REPORTS

Doug McClintock gave a report
on BNE . A total of 3,117 tickets
were sold for the J. Geils and

Malo concert with an income of

$9,508.00. The amount of the 197273 subsidy used for the concert
was $2,718.65. He announced that
the next concert will be held in
Haas Center .
A ronnrt

nn 9f»fiviK«»a nf fVlP

Judicial Committee was given by
Dave Crabtree , Chairman. The
committee proposed lowerin g the
requirements from a 2.3 to a 2.0
average and no previous
semester attendance needed for a
position on the Judicial board.
There was some discussion of the
role of an advisor and doub le
standards in adminis tering
penalti es.
Mr. Mulk a announcedth at over
700 parents attended Pa rent' s
Weekend, making it a great
success ; however there was a
$142.65 deficit. The problem was
ref erred t o t he budget finance
committ ee f or the next meeti ng.

News Briefs
PILOT
Students interested in applying

for the position of Editor of the
Pilot , BSC's student handbook ,
may submit their applications in
writing
to
Director
of
Publications, Box 219.
Applications must be received
prior to December 12.

TERM PAPER HELP
The Undergraduate Committee
of English, Majors is willing to
answer any questions on content,
form or research of term papers.
Tables for this pur pose will be set
up every Monday durin g the day
in the Student Union and at night
in the library. The success and
continuation of the prog ram
depends oh» your interest and
participation.
Miss Nancy Gill is the chairman of the committee , composed
of two members from each under graduate class. Miss Ervene
GulTey, Mr. Richard Devlin and
Mr. Thomas Stur geon are also
facultv advisors .
CEC SALE

present

introduced by Jim Nallo, who
works with poor minori ty group
youths in Philadelphia. The
project would provide a different
experience for the inner city
students and the only funds
needed would be $115 for meals.
Council voted to refer the project
to the Budget Finance Committee
for the next meetin g.

BloomsDur g ior a weeKena .

There was a great deal of
debate on the Service Key point
system. Along with the ruling
point
total
raising
the
key,
a
service
for
requirements
awardin
g
,
Council voted for
per
three
points
student senators
semester . These-fevisions will go
into effect immediately.
Dr. Vaughn spoke in behalf of
the Environme nt Committee that
was begun last year. It will be
basically the same and if there
are enough volunteer s, the
committee can move towa rd
some const ructi ve action t o make
the campus more ecologically
sound.
The Woodrock Pr oject was

to

Items from SUNCOM , including ash tra ys, nick-naks ,
ri ngs, and tables , may be ordered
in The Union from December 4
until December 8. Members of
CEC will have some otthe Items
on display. Arti cles ran ge from

'
$1.00 to $40.00. All orders will be
delivered the following week ,
December 11 to December 15,
just in time for Christmas . The
supply of some items is limited ,
so hurry !
ART COUNCIL FILM

The principaI people in the "Mile of Pennies " cam paign are left
to right : (back ) Don Bechtel, Jessie Greco, Bev Turner, Jim
Reichley, (front ) Mike Popiak - Chairman, and Rs lph Ferrie.
(photo by Dan Maresh )

;appearing in the title role of
]LA ST OF THE RED HOT
1LOVERS, will be Egeus .

A "Mile of Pennies " campaign
sponsored by the Freshman Class
began Monday , November 27, in
conjunction with the ARM 's Toys
for Tots Project. The goal of the
campaign is to collect one mile of
pennies , $844.80, to be donated to
the Toys for Tots Fund to buy
Christmas presents for under -

Atherton , Debbie Hunt , Karen
,merriment of this comedy.
The basis of this pr oduction is
\ight entertainment . There is
,nusic and dancing along with
confusionbetweenlovers, and the
intics of elves and fairies .
Tickets are on sale now in the
jx>x office of Haas Center for the
,
\rts . BSC students may receive
t wo free tickets upon presen«tation of their ID card , and
i acuity who have the Communi ty

Miles of Pennies

privileged children in the area.
Cha irman of the campaign ,

Mike Popiak , reported that

money will be collected next
week in the College Bookstore
Lounge from 11 to 5 dailv.

will also be collected in
Bloomsburg on Fri day
Saturday afternoon of
and every night next

To date, one-eighth of a mile
has been collected , which in-

eluded 5,000 pennies

($50.00)
donated by the Sophomore Class.
Any fraternity, sorority -or school
organi zation
interested
in
making donations may contact
Mike Popiak at 389-3949. Now is
your chance to put your "twocents" into a worth-while pr oject ,

next week

Three ACTION representatives
and applications available on Dec. 6-7
from 9 a.m. • 5 p.m. in the SUB.
ACTION
is
the
new
organization built around VISTA
and the PEACE CORPS. It' s a
group of dedicated people trying
to counter the ignorance , apathy,
and prejudice that dominate the

world .

Joyce Bel ton , a VISTA
volunteer in Washingto n, D.C.,
Jerry Gorman , a two year
PEAC E CORPS veteran , and
Ma ry Mbugua an East African
PEACE CORPS volunteer , are
"™
"

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BUY A PIE
The M&G band of BSC, for their
summer of '73 trip to Spain, is
selling 10", 2H 1b. Mrs. Smith's
HORROR NIGHT
pies. These large pies sell for only
Thrill to Corru ption and Th
watchmakers. Lau gh at Oui r
Gan g in one of their funnies t
adventures and at a cartoon. Al1
this is for 75 cents in the Union oii
Monday, December 4th at 7:8))
by Kappa Kappji
SiI,, sponsored
Honorar y Band Fraternit y'

Donations
downtown
night and
this week
week. .

apple, cherry, mince, lemon,
coconut, pumpkin and chocolate
Boston cream. Buy a pie and help
send the M*G Band and the
name of BSC to Spain , Contact
any M&G band member or call
784-9830 CT 389-OT74,Than *you!

looking for BSC seniors with
majors in education , the sciences, nursing , and business .
VI STA offer s a one year
program serving in communities
at home. The PEACE CORPS has
a two year program and offers
volunteers a chance to serve in
developing nations arou nd the
world. ACTION is VISTA ,
providing health care to migrant
workers in California , counselling small business es in
Philadelphia , and providing
vocational auidance to exconvicts in Wisconsin. It' s the
PEACE CORPS teaching young
Africans modern method s of
farming , working with old people
in the slums of Nicara gua and
healing and teaching the sick of
an Indian ghetto.
ACTION service is difficult and
demanding, rewarding and
frustrating, and always an experien ce.
Interested persons una ble to
make it to the Union on Dec. 6-7,
may call Debbie Koop rtman ,
collect, in Philadelphia at (215)
597-0744 for informati on.

ctiwH ac .Tim

Berkheiser, Jack Matter, Marian
Yasenchak, Kevin Nee, John
Mattus , Barb Auch ey, Gail
Sprout, Rita Pryor, Gail Stank,
'Lin Naylor , Bob Harris , Scott

AC TION here I

The film THE RED DESERT 1 will have information

will be presented on December 6;
in Kuster Auditorium at 3 :30 PM[
and again at 7:30 PM in Hartlinc (
room 79, sponsored by the BSC!
Arts Council.
Directed by Michelangek >
Antonioni , who is best known foi•
BLOW UP and ZABRISKIE ;
POINT, THE RED DESER1•
concerns itself with a young\
woman's search for a meaningful I
life. It was Antonloni' s first coloi•
film and won the Best Picture $
Award at the 1964 Venice Filml
Festival.
Tickets for both showings of th<9
RED DESERT will be availabl yi
at the door. This event is opeii
only to BSC students and faculty .

fitfofii* w>rfftrmoro

Activities card will receive a

imited number of tickets free ,
Uso. Otherwise , the price is $2.00
for adults and $1.00 for youths .

Ford
FeUotvship s

A limited number of Graduat e
Fellowshi ps are being offered by
the Ford Foundation to various
minorit y gro ups ,
notably
A mer i can Indians , Mex i can
Americans, and Puerto Ricans.
The National Fellowship Fund is

also

making

available

fellowships to all qualified Black

Americans.

All applicants must meet the
following requirements : they
must be citizens of the Unite d
States, they must be enroll ed in
or planning to enroll in a U. 8.
graduate school, and they must
be planning a career in higher
education .
Eligibility
is
restricted to only tho se applicant * who plan to wor k in fulltime study toward s a doctoral
degree in the Arts or Sciences or
to those applicants who alr eady
hold a post-baccalaur eatedegree
and plan to continue on .to a
(continued on page eight)

Letters

Utters to tht editor «ro an
tx prossion of tttt individ ual
wri ter's opinion and do not
To the Editor :
twetssari ty rofloct iht vtews
I was repelled at first by your
of tht nows papor. All tet tors
recent piece of pop philosophy by
mutt bo signod, namos will bo
Don Enz oft the limitations of
withheld upon rtquost. Tho
book learning much as serious < AA*G rosorv o ttio rig ht to
musicians are oft en repelled by •bridgo, in consulta tion wit h
pop music. There was that , «ho writer, all tetters ovor 250
pompous theory, for instance ,
words in length.

which he sought to discredit , that
"Knowledge is the key to Wisdom
that unlocks the door to Truth ."
Then there was his own theory
that "...nothing in a thousand
libraries
can
equal
the
Knowledge , Wisdom , and Truth
that one finds in watching a bird
in flight , a bee in a flower , a
storm , a sunny day..."
The first struck me as silly for
if knowledge is always of the
truth , then it can 't be the key to
truth , because if you have
knowledge you already have the
truth and so don 't need a key to
find it. The second made me
wonder about what kind of
'kn owledge he gets as he watches
a bird in flight , a bee in a flower ,
and so on.
Once I got beneath his rhetoric ,
however , it became clear that
Enz was engaged in some serious
reflections on his college experience which ought not be put
down , but encouraged , so I
thought I'd offer a few of my own

mediately began his May or Rizzo
police tactics. First the police
were called , then the residen t
advisors were called to -ElweU's
lobby and were placed at
strategic points with instructions
not to let anyone in or out without )
identifying them selves. What
was his reason for this action? )
The only reaso n that we've been
able to find is that the noise woke
up his wife, Mary. (Sorry, Mary,
guess you've never been a B.S.C.
student. ) These past student
excurs ions were allowed to run
their course without difficulty.
Hau pt
Dean
We
think
overexerci sed his power and
showed that ElweO Hall, to him,
is nothing mor e than his selfmade cell block. How about it,
Dean, get off your high-horse and
quit thinking you have complete
control of Eiweii City. Even
Mayor Rizzo isn't God.
fr\ em
r
i
Kim run
In extolling experience over
(Names withheld
<
book learning, Enz forgets that
upon request )
books contain a distillation of the
experience of others. Consequently, he creates a false Dear Editor :
The Maroon and Gold Band
opposition in putting book
wishes
to recognize the Uplearning against experience.
perclass
bandsmen who - made
Still, he is right in saving that we
their
last
public appearance as
must validate our book learnin g
members
of
the Marchin g Unit at
in terms of our own experience
s Weekend game
the
Parent'
before we can reall y claim to
State College
against
Kutztown
know what we have read—if only
Saturda
y,
November
4. They
on
because past experience is not
Gar y
clarinet;
Deeter,
always a reliable guide for are Mollie
Herbert
,
trumpet;
Sue
present conduct as the chicken Geor ge,
trumpet;
Hetsk
o,
flute
;
Rick
rudely learned when the farmer
came out to the coop with an ax Henry Kipp, trum pet ; Kathy
one morning instead of a bag of Wir lr tonnr cav anrl Tim Klin p
alto sax. Also, Karen Kropinicki ,
r»nrn
to
this cymbals ; Gre g Reinecker , bass ;
One exception
generalization needs to be made Rich Schwanger , trombone ;
however. Reading a book is itself Deanna Shuman , trumpet ; Dave
an experience—just as watching Sowers , percussi on ; Pam
any bird fly is—an experienc e Westley, clarinet; Denise Young,
you need no f ur t her ex perience to alto sax ; and Elaine Zaru tskie,
val idate and one wh ich can be clarinet. And Car ol Conner ,
equally delightful if you've hit Conference Fla g Unit; Margie
upon the righ t books. Perhaps W arnke , majorette; and Mar y
E nz hasn 't been all that lucky. Ruth Boyd and Raphael Palucci ,
color guard .
0. J. Larmi
irVF

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The Music War

by Joe Miklos
Record prices are a variable
thin g. Up and down they go, and
much is at the whim of the
distributor and record store
chains.
But , and this is a mighty big
but , in the past year at Bloomsburg, the consumer has been at
the mercy of a record war. For a
while the competition made
things reall y good. Prices were
down to what would be considered normal in a bigger city.
Until the rumors started flying
sarrumH

It seems that the three major
record stores in Bloomsburg,
Arcus Brothers , Pandemoniu m
and the Record Ranch , were
engaged in some behind-thecounter cut-throating. There was
an alleged agreement between
the Record Ranch , which is a
chain store , and Arcus Brothers
to drive Pandemonium out of
business last January.
, This alleged agreemen t was a
failure. For one thing , Pan-

Th ese p eo p le have gi ven
willingly of their time and effort
t o the band. It was through their
leadersh ip t hat the march ing unit
succeeded i n present ing it s best
throu ghou t the '72 footb all
season.

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Deborah Young,
Band Secretary
Stephen C. Wallace ,
Direc t or of Bands

Man , for most of his existence
en this * earth , was a relativel y
scarce creature. He probably
never numbered more tha n a few
thousand at any one time while he
was surrounded by species more
numerically prolific and far
better ada pted to local en\ironments than he was. His
relatives among the tro pical and
outmid-latitude
animals
numbered him , and many of
extended
graduall y
tli em
themselves into distant regions of
the colder temperate climates
while man remained huddl ed
along the African grassfields in
small , scattered groups for
millions of years. Man 's
w«k» ^ h«w%«fc#«frf«

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prices over

also appeared to be a good move,
for Pandemoniu m still had the
selection and the Record Ranch
had a number of rare albums and
a damned good orde ring service .
In the past week, however , the
clincher has made itself evident.
Record prices in all three stores
have stabiliz ed ; the ru mors have
it that Arcus Brothers and
Pandemonium agreed to meet
roughly equal prices with the
Record Ranch. "Good!" you
think.
Wrong, because the prices have
stabilized at the same above
average prices in all three stores.
It appears tha t the owners have

re ached an agreement of sort s
that keeps them off of each others
backs. The only t hing wron g is
that the consumer is getting
screw ed.
Most of the business received
by "record st ores in town com es
from college students. We ar e the
ones who ha ve to pay high prices
th at we normall y w ouldn't pay
elsewhere. And there ' are only
three stores in Bloomsburg that
have any kind of selection . The
r esult? The avera ge consumer is
the victi m of a clandestine sort of
price fixing. The other thing to be
aware of is the fact that these
.acuons violate me price ireeze.
If an agreemen t, alleged or
otherwise , must be made , the
result should have been lower
prices. But the market is closed.
I, for one, will not be buying
records in Bloomsburg until
prices are down again. My
pocketbook is too lean to be
played games with .
I
And who says that the
customer is always right?

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OJ^ CVICO CAUW.UVU

were ver y good indeed, and it has
become increas ingly clear to
paleon t olo gi sts t hat seve ral
species of man did , in fact , cease
to ex ist ; poss ib le as recently as
200,000 years ago. That all " men "
didn 't become extinct is probabl y
as miraculous as it was that the

surv ivors would today become
the dominant form of animal life,
or that man 's numer ical s trength
should reach t he unl ikely
propor tions that it has...bil lions!!
From one pers pective , the
world — its land , its seas, its air
— would be better today if that
creature which survived had
been stam peded into extinction
along with his notor ious cousins.
Only Man believes in the efficacy
of his survival , but in the process

he has dealt harshly with other
animals. But it is particularly ,
man 's relationship with plants
which is the genesis of the human
population problem , and thus the
"problem " for all living thing s.
Committed for hundreds of
thousands of years to the life of
wandering, man settled down for
the first time 10,000 years ago
when ' he learned to satisfy his
hunger by growing most of his
food. The domestication of plants
created a new life of food
abundance but inexorable altered
forever the essential relationship
between man and nature. Now we
|M
II M
III I

face a new problem : How to
make the productivit y of the soil
match mankind' s rocketing
numbers by establishing a new
balance of nature. The old preagriculture securities are gone
and the species of man is
threatened.
Althou gh man is certainly a
product of nature , classified as a
mammal , he clearly can no
longer be considered a part of
nature. With his tools , his
chemicals , his trans portat ion,
and especially his powers of
reason and research , he has long
(continued on page three )

III

III

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THE MA ROON AND GOLD

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demonium carried a better
selection than either of the
competi tors. Ostensib ly, Arcus
Brothers kept up the knife-in-theback tactics. Their prices WERE
the lowest in town . At this point
there seemed to be some more '
funny business going on.
Pandemon ium agreed with the
Record Ranc h to stabilize their

A Prob lem of Numbers

**»* •

Editor ,
What the hell is going on in
Elwell Hall ? On Wednesday Nov.
15th., a group of students decided
to leave their cells of knowledge
and allev iat e their "boredom " by
trying to stage a panty raid. What
harm has happened here ? Wi thin
minutes Dean Haupt came out
ragi ng like a bear awakened
from his winter sleep and im-

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Everybod y 's In Sh ow Biz
by Jim Suchetti
Somewhere , Dick Cavett is
yawni ng in technicolor , or getting
quietly drunk , or may be just
chuckling to himself — a kind of
sad , all-knowing chuckle that is
probably barely loud enough to
be heard over the stupidity
pouring from the speaker of the
TV set he's seated in fron t of.
It' s 12:15 in the morning of
November 22 and Dick Cavett
and I are sick, AJ 11:30 we both
tuned our TV sets to our local
ABC stations , hoping to see the 90
minutes of stimulatin g conversation , interesting guests and
brilliant entertainment we had
come to associate with ABC late
night TV. Of the two of us, only
Cavett knew it wasn 't coming .
As for myself , poor frustrated
and manipu lated consumer , I
could only sit and watch with a
mixture of surprise and hor ror as
ABC trotted out their forthcoming replacement for the
Cavett Show. Billed as "a latevariety-en tertainment
night
show" (a media euphemism for
"give the idiots somethin g simple
they can understand "), the show
failed at even tha t.
The show is iron ically called
"Let' s Celebrate " — I say
"ironically " because there is
nothing spontaneous , joyous or
stimulatin g about it ; "ironic ,"
because the aDDearance of "Let' s
Celebrate " heralds the death of
what had to' be one of the finest
shows the great god TV has ever
seen fit to offer us.
But there's no point in my
catalo ging the fine points of "The
Dick Cavet t Show", the Neilsen
people aren 't going to read this
anywa y . So let me warn you
about this so-called celebration .
I kn ew we were al l doomed the
minute it started. Where I had
come to expect a Bob
Rosengarden dru m rol l and a wr y
Cavett monologue, t here was
only a face — a face (and you're

not going to believe this) topped
by curly hair and propped up by
jowls which were exact replicas
of the jowls which hold up the
face of Richard Nixon. To quote ,
quite appropri ately, Jack Parr ,
"I kid you not!!'
I considered the mass appeal of
those jowls, how thousands of
people would faithfully watch
them because of the confidence
they inspired , and decided tha t I
was a victim of post-elec tion
paranoi a. At least that' s what I
thought until "jowls " star ted
talking .
Again , I kid you not , he kicked
the show off with a rap about how
certain people are always running around running everything
down , "prophets of doom" he
called them , and about how it was
time that somebody started
celebrating the good things about
life here in America.
Then it hit me — that IS
Richard Nixon. The oV son-of-agun got bored with the presidency
now that he can 't run for it
anymore , so he decided to get
into show biz before he lost his
popular appeal . And they've
taken Cavett off so that Pa pa
Dick can entertain us for the next
four years. Aargh!
"GOODNIGHT, COLUM BUS!"

As if that wasn 't enough to send
me screaming mad into the
corner , the chicks came on.
Three of 'em. The first a dumb
Tricia blonde , the next a chubby
Julie , and the last a token Black
who really doesn't fit into this
ridiculous analogy I'm draw ing,
but for the sake of logical writing,
let's say that she was Pat Nixon,
in colored dra g.
The cast was rounded out by an
older guy who wore a tur ban and
talked to the fish in the bowl he
carried (I figure him to be Bebe
Rebozzo), and a sweet litt le guy
with curly ha ir who had to be
David Eisenhower with flats on.

There was also a special guest ,
Christop h er Co lumbus , who
appeared beca use the cast
decided to celebra te the 500th
anniversar y\ of his discover y of
America (which actuall y won't
happen until 1992, but the cast
decided to "be differ ent" ). Chris '
discovery that America had not
been named after him and his
resulting state of depression
served as the basis for most of the
show's material.
The cast spent the rest of the
show trying to cheer Chris up, a
task at which they failed
miserably . In fact , the only thin g
they succeeded in doing was
making me feel worse than poor
Chris . Their attem pts at gaiety
involved inane comic spots , inane
songs and the inane chubby Julie
who walked around throwing
confetti in the air (?).
The whole thin g was a
miserable bastardization of the
"Laugh-In " format , an idea
whose time had come and gone.
There were no attempts to break
new comic ground; the whole
show was an attempt to make it
with something safe , somethin g
"tried and proven " in the ratings
wars.
As if that wasn 't bad enough,
the writers had the audacity to
include a spoof of TV talk shows.
Once again , it not only failed to
amuse , but only succeeded in
reminding me that the week
before , at the same time, I had
been watching Cavett and David
Halberstam discuss the letter 's
new book on Vietnam. My heart

Thea tre * instead ?" That about
summed up the whole show's
idiot mentalit y.
The last high point (and I' m
being serious now) involved the
screening of two reels of an old
Flash Gordo n serial . Since I had
never seen a Flash Gordon serial ,
even "jowls " stupid suspensefilled questions at the end of each
reel didn't bother me. But if
you've seen Flash Gordon (or if
you don 't really care to) you will
find nothing here to celebrate.

Instead , he trie d to give his

aud ience something more than a

mindle ss parade of giggling
starlets and inflated old comics.
He sought out guests ranging far
fr om the en ter tainmen t business
into such far flung fields as anthro pology, psychology , journalism , criticism , politics and the
list could go on forever.
Instead of forsaking controver sy for the sake of laughs
(like a cert ain other late night
"OUK'MiS WUi IV
'triea 10 Diena me two ana otte r a
ishow that was both entertain ing
QUESTION WHY... "
Like America n politics , American television requi res that each of its "cand idat es" for -— with the axe.
in his place — "Let' s
commercial successappeal to we
Celebrat
e" ; a celebr ation of
<
denomina
tor.
lowest common
i
nediocrity
and mindless enfigure
of
,
Like a certain political
ertainment;
a celebration of the
recent fame , Dick Cavett failed *
lefeat
of
art
by the dollar : a
<
to appeal to that lowest
celebration
of
the good things
that
broad <
denominat or ,
ibout
life
here
in
America.
<
mediocre middle ground ,
L_.

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sank deeper and I cursed ABC.
The show "peaked" at two
other points. The first was a spot
called " Cap su l e M as t er pi ece
Theatre. " It involved "jowls "
sitti ng on a darkened sta ge,
staring into the camera and
summar izing "Gone with the
Wind" in sixty seconds. The bit
ended with "jowls" posing t he
question : "W hy read when you
can watc h 'C a psule M aster piece IiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiimiiimiuiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiMiii imiiiiHniMiiil

Veteran's Benefit s
universities rose by 16 percent
over the previous year (from
917,000 to 1.06 million).
Below college level enrollment
rose by 22 percen t (from 522,000
to 638,000).
The estimate is based on a
On-the-job training , throu gh
stat istical re port t hat revealed which v most trainees are
that 1.9 million veterans and prepari ng for trade and inserv icemen used G. I. Bill dustr ial occupat ions , rose by 11
educat ion benef it s durin g fiscal percent (from 146,000 to 162,000.)
year 1972, an 18 percent gain over
V ocational rehabil i tation
the previous year. Adm inistra tor training for service , disabled
of Veterans Affairs Donald E. veterans rose four percent (from
Johnson pointed out that 3.4
mill ion trainees had used their
benef its as of the end of August.
Veterans trainin g under the
Vietna m Era G.I. bill are expected to pass the t wo mill ion
mark in 1972, the Veterans Administ rat ion re port ed.

"Dur ing the first six years of

Stumped? Oh well , there 's onl y three weeks of drudger y left.
(preef photo )
v. ' .v • • ."

the Bill , the number of trainees
had exceeded the 13 year total for
the Korean Conflict G. I. Bill by
almos t a million. " Johnson
pointed out.
Durin g 12 years of the World
War II G, I. Bill , 7.8 million of the
15.3 million Worl d War II
veterans , or 45.3 percent ,
received some form of trainin g.
About 13.8 percent attended
college, compared to 21.9 percent
among Vietna m Era veterans
and 20.1 percent for Korean
Conflict veterans .
These additional enrollment
statistics were revealed in the VA
report:
veterans in colleges and

30,500 to 31,700) .

De p enden t ' s educa ti onal
assistance for wives, widows and
children of certain veterans and
serv icemen rose by almost nine

percent (from 8,800 to 9,600 for
w ives or 9 percent and from
50,700 to 55,000 for children or 8.4
percent ).
Eligibility for G. I. Educa tional
Assistance extends to vet erans
with 180 days activ e military
serv ice provided any part of It
was served afte r J an. 31, 1955.

Problems of Numbe rs

( contin ued from page two )
since become a force apart from
nature. This is particularly true
of man 's relationship to plants :
his role has to be considered
separa tely from that of any other
influence in their envir onment.
Man has, in effect, become a new
force where plan ts are concerned. As long as man gathered
food, collected the fruits of
juresut ana me seeoj ana roots oi

the fields, he did not differ from
ant or squirrel as a par t of nature
and his numbers wer e limited
accordin gly. Food for the
gatherer Is not very abundant. In
any type of vegetation ther e are
only relatively few plants which
provide nourishment , the others

are bitter , astrin gent, poisonous ,
low in food value or indigestible.
Thus , the carr ying {capacity of
natura l vegetation for man was,
and still is, very low. The most
pri mitive of natives of toda y, who
live entirel y on natural
vegetation and animals , are not
much better off than the gorillas
or oran gutans , of which there are
only several thousand alive.
Restricted lar gely to eatin g
fruits , leaves and shoots of young
trees , the numbers of these anthr opoid apes have steadi ly
declined (or mlllenia as have the
numbers of our most pr imitive
human tribes.
—Robert Reader

KiWants to go tolhe i
Beach in November? %
Did you ever spend two and a half hours on a cold, windy boat watching your science- I
minded classmates take salinity reading s and mud samples While your less science-minded I
classma tes lost breakfast over the side? Or did you ever 'sleep, in a dormitor y which was ¦
part of an old, unused fish factor y on a godforsa ken peninsula in Delaware? Well, such are ¦
the joys which await you if you elect to ta ke the cours e in Oceano graphy offer ed by the ¦
Ear th Science Department here at BSC.
H
A weekend trip to Lewes, Delawar e to study the ocean firsthand has become a n
requireme nt of the Oceanography cour se taught by Mr. J ames Lauffer and Mr. Lavere I
McClure . About five or six years ago these gentlemen were involved in the establishment of I
the Marine Science Consortium , a cor porati on made up of (at that time) ten Pennsylvania
I
State Colleges each contributing five thousand dollar s. The Consort ium rented an unused . I
Coast Guard Stati on as its headq uarte rs and offered courses in varyin g types of marine
I
science. The Consortium bought a boat and tau ght summer classes, with the weekend trip I
being offered as an optional part of the oceanogra phy course . Today, much to the chargin of I
non-science majors who take the course to fulfill science requirements for graduation , it is a I
requirement.
I
*

A not-too- anxious group boards theshi p The Delaware Bay for a two and a half hour trip.

Begin at the Beginnin g
The trip was one of those things that you put into the back of your mind like final exams.
When Mr. Lau ffer mentioned it to our class at the sta rt of the semester, it seemed like a faroff dream not to be worried about for quite a while. And when the first trip went in October ,
it was still a month away and pot worth considering. But when November 13 arrived , and the
trip was definite for that Friday, the sudden realization of a weekend in Delaware taking
salinity readings was like a bucket of coldwat er.
So with sleeping bags in hand , we met in Centennial parking lot onFridy, November 17.
The trip included a total of sixteen stud ents and Mr. Lauffer. Since he was late meeting us,
faint hopes geamed in the hearts of English , Sociology and Accounting majors that perhaps
the trip wouldbe cancelled: But he showed up after all, read y and eager for the trip.

I
I
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1
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I

BSC st uden ts talcin g one of man y salini ty readin gs off t he side of
r fie pier.



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The shi p made it safely into port as you can ask any ot these
acmanaaraohers.

Out onite Town
After a five and a half hour trip and a good dinn er (the food was one of the weekend's
major highlights )Mr. Lauffer met with us to impose the rules of the house. No booze in the
rooms, nomembersof the opposing sexes sharingquarters, no over-all hell-raising. But the
legal drinkin g age in Delaware is twenty, so we could go into town for it. And by the way,
we'r e going out on the boat on Sunday morning, so do your heavy drinking ,tonite. Fair
enough. And three quarters of the student personnel headed downtown.
DowntownLewesDelawareisn't toomuch, but it has a few good bars (and a few bad ones
m
I' told. Who ever hea rd of gett ing served with your meal ticket as proof of age? ) But a
good ti me was had by all, and there were only a few heavy heads at breakfast the next
morn ing.

worfhv

Saturday
Saturda y dawned bright and sunny after a night on what must have been the lumpiest set
of mattresses in existenc e. Breakfast was a quarter to eight with a full day ahead of us.
W e spent the morningvisiting a variety ef places.First , we inspectedt he tide gageset up
by the Consortium, and took salinity read ings over the side of the pier. These were to be
compared withthe salt content invarying depths, which we took late r. Then we had a tour of
the research vessel The Annandale . (It' s sur prising how many people can get seasick while
they 're still in port! ) We inspected the entir e ship , f rom the bridge to the galley to the
research labs. F rom there we went t o look at the f acilities used by the University of
Delaware for oceanographic work, more salinit y readings , some informationon currents,
*
and then back for lunch.
irito
groups of four, with as fair a mixture as
For Saturday afternoon we were split
possible so that no group would get stuck with too many English or Soc majors. Then to the

beach.

Each grou p took measureme nts with a strange pair of sticks so that a graph could be
made of the coastline. Fro m there we trav eled au the way around the tip of the cape so that
we could compare the ocean coastline to the bay coastline. The bay side had more marine
life and wind marks ripplin g the sand. Most of the students , however, were more interested
in picking up shells and the Bio majors had a field day ! From there we proc eeded to anoth er
coastline for more salinity read ings and a look at some sharks , then home to the fish factory
and dinner.
,
_,,
Saturday night was far less eventful than Friday. Apparently many kept the impendin g

BSC r

hnnfr frin in mind and nmrtant.1v
staved in that tllfiht .
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«T5l sali!!nity
anoUwr
reading
Laufftr with tht situ ation saf ely In
.
hand as. alwa ys.

- - ^g -

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Sunday

Earth Science major Mike Armstrong prepares the grab sampler
to be sen t down for mud samples.

Jim "Sea Legs " Lauffe r was the only one who managed to keep
his footing durin g the sometimes rock y boa t ride.

On* of the many buildings mad when the fish factor y was still in
operation.

Thret potenti al ocMnographert standing af tht rail ,

Story and P ictures
by Susan Sprague

Sunday morning dawned grey, and I heard man y prayers for rain or snow or a small
hurr icane. But Nature refused to comply, andat approximately nine o'clock we boarded the

good ship Delaware Bay.
|
samples.
tawe
deep-sea
salinity
readings
and
mud
The purpose of going out to sea was to
Either of these, along with other compar ative material could be used as a basis for a
research paper. So out we went , with a cold wind blowing and a fine rain beginning to fall.
Who 's Rocking the Boat?
questi on (n mind when the boat was brought to a halt for
was
the'Who's rocking the boat'
read ings. The ship rocked from side to side and mor e
salinity
mud samples and (again )
than one face turned white. But I can honestly say I only saw two who took to the rail . And,
oh, were they sorry for the greasy sausa gesind eggs they had enjoyedfor breakfast !
Two kinds of mud samples were token; first a grab sampler, which Is exactly what it
sounds like . It grabs some mud from the bottom , then you pull it back up. The second was a
core sample, which Is a long cylinder , whteh has to be sunk wildly into sea bottom , then
brou ght to the surface. Then a net was thrown over the back and some sea life br ought up.
This revealed a variet y of sea tr out ,flounder . crabs, jellyfishraiid snails. One student grew
sufficiently attached to a baby crab that he carr ied it arou nd on his tongue. He later took It
home and fed itto his amgato r (or so rm toW.)
We made It safely back to shore with out .losing a passenger (seasick or otherwise ) and
w«ntback to the fUh factory for luiieh. Afteflunch we all went home.
So. that weekend when it last snowed in Bloomsburg, sixteen BSC stud ents and one
teacher took yet another trip to Lewes, Delaware to visit the Marine Science Consortiu m
there. tf you like boat ridei , don 't get seasick , and have a few more credits to Earth
Science to fttj, Oceano gra phy might be the-cours etor you, And don't worry about the
weekend trip - you'll make it.
¦

i

,

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Lunch? No, biological specime ns, If you look closel y enough, * mere are crabs , flounder , sea trout ,(sll yflili an*•mils.

-

'

Niel Oberholtzer kicking
speeding downfi eld.

off with the Husky 'Bomb Squad '

Huskies Finish
2nd in Conference

Defensive Point leader Dan Greenl and (55 ) helps Glen DeWire and Joe Courier (back of pile ) haul
down a Shipp ensburg back.

The Huskies , doomed midway
through th e season , finished
strong with three straight victories to wr ap-up a second place
tie in the Eastern Division of the
1972 Varsity Football Statistics
(10 games )
Record: 5-5
BSC Opp.
14
28
Shippensbu rg
,
62
0
Scranton
22
34
Lock Haven
21
6
Mansfield
14
42
California
14
61
West Chester
15
16
MMersvil le
8
7
Cheyney
17
6
Kutztown
20
6
East Stroudsbur g
(tied 2nd place )
TEAM TOTALS
BSC OPP
151
First Downs
146
477 .
Rushing Att.
517
Rushing Ydg.
2123 1967
177-6? 204-84
Passing Att. -Comp.
Passes Interc.
17
23
1118
Passing Ydg.
973
Fumbles Lost
9
5
49-1549 (32.1)
Pun ti ng
53 1948 (37.1)
Penalties
55-496 45-321
Total Plays
694 . 701
Total Offense 2723 (272.3 Av. ) 2911 (W.I Av. )

Tota l Points
W7

Top-back George Grutoer

Head Coach Bill Sproule

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INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING
NAME
CAR. NET YD. AV G. TD
George Gruber
214 865 4.04 11
5
JoeGelger
116 329 2.83
2
Mlke Devereux
71 314 4.42
1
Ken Vanca s
50 181 3.6
2
Mark Consta ble
15 80 5.3
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS PASSING
NAME ATT. COMP. INTERC. PCT. YDS.
TD
JoeGelger
171 63 17 36.9 941 6
Mlke Devereux
4
1 •- 25.0 12 ¦
Jim Hippi e
2 0
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
NAME
Chris Sweet
MikeDevereux
Len House
Bob Grebb

RECEIVING
NO. YDS. TD
15 186 1
13 262 1
12 177 2
79 4

I NDIV IDUAL ST A T ISTICS PUNT ING
NAME
NO. YDS. AVG.
Line Welles
$3 1968 37.5
Mike Devereux
1
35 35.0

Pa. Conference .
Highli ghting the season were
sparkli ng defeats of favored
Cheyney and East Stroudsbur g,
both played in the mud and away.

KICKOFF RET.
NAME
Joe Courter
Mark Constable
Len House
George Gruber

NO. YDS. AVG.
18 289 16.0
10 160 16.0
2 32 16.0
,
6 66 11.0

PUNT RETURNS
NAME
Joe Courter
Mark Constable
Charles Bender

NO. YDS. AVG.
V 54 3.2
6 31 5.1
3 81 27.0

SCORING
POS. TD FG XPK XPR
NAME
RB 11 - George Gruber
QB 5
Joe Gelger
K - 2 21
NellOberholtte r
WR
3
Mike Devereux
RB
2 - Mark Constable
WR
2 - Len House
,NTER«PT.o. S
Charles Bender
Dan Greeland
Joe Cour ter
BIII Boy land
j oe semion
Ray Jol l

,

PTS.
- 66
1 32
¦ 27
- 18
- 12
- 12

N0 YDS. AVG r
7 45 6.4
3 10 3.3
5 30 6.0
4 32 8.0
* •' *».»
2 " 6.0

1972Tota l BSC Defensive Points
( 10 games )
GAMES T
T
NAMES
Unassls t. Ass it. F
UM PASSES INTER. BLOCK TP
KICKS
REC. BROK UP
10 35 90 0 6 4 0 192
DanGreenalnd
10 26 38 2 8 7 0 147
Charles Bender
10 17 70 2 2 0 0 114
Glen DewIre
10 25 5 3 2 2 0 0 1 1 3
Bill O'Donnell
10 24 51 0 1 0 1 106
Dave Pruett
9 14 30 1 7 2 0 85
Joe Semlon
10 13 30 0 2 5 0 85
Joe Cour ter
RayJ oll
9 8 4 6 0 4 2 0 80
10 12 18 0 2 4 1 71
Bill Boy land
JohnArrlgonle
10 11 48 0 0 0 0 70
10 17 26 0 2 0 0 64
Charles Devanney
7 7 21 0 3 0 1 46
John Cox
Rick DeMarla
5 12 19 0 1 0 0 45
10 8 16 0 3 0 0 40
Bill Tl erney
9 8 11 0 1 0 0 29
Tom Jacobs
Joe Slabert
6 4 IS 0 J 0 0 29
9 5 12 0 0 0 0 22
JohnChacoskl
8 2 13 0 2 0 0 21
Gene Relent
Chris Sweet
8 3 3 0 1 0 0 11

Soph line backer Ray Joll making an open-field tackle.

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Jo* Otlgtr wring downfleld .
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John Jam «i, ln|ur«d moit of ft * ym, lunging for a TD. (Ht
aion T make it).
(

Courtm eh
Op en
Season
strength will be provided by a
pair
of 6-5 seniors , Dave Lynch
Now that the basketball seasori
and
Martin
Brumme.
is tupon us, one can't help bu t
East
Stroudsburg
graduated
wonder if this is the year tha it
.
their
entire
front
court
from a
Bloomsb urg takes the P enn
,
team
that
had
40-8 two-year
sylvania State Confe rence
(PSCAC ) crown from long-time. record. The Warriors will rebuild
champion Cheyney. To in-. arou nd aggre ssive 6-9 Kevin
telligently -comment on this i Mornssey ( 14 ppg ) and top
possibility, one must try to, reserve 6-7 Skip Milford.
construct a preview of the PSCAC; Sophomore to watch is Roy Wohl
who has a br other playing in the
Eastern Division.
Nationally ranked and NCAA pro inba.
Athletic oriente d West Chester ,
tournament veteran Cheyney, 229-16
last year , continues to have
6 last year , loses t hree st art ers
difficulty
including league MVP Buff program. with their basketba ll
The Rams seek help for
Kirkland. Swift backcourters
(17 ppg ) and 6-3
6-5
Tom
Husser
Eddie Swain and Antoine
Harrison are superb; 6-10 Bill Benny Bonds (13 ppg ).
The other two division memAllen and 6-9 Vince Ellison are
bers
, Millersville and Kutzt own,
big. It seems like the Wolves
don't
figure to be contenders.
never run out of talented cagers.
However , the Marauders did
Last year 's 18-7 recor d was the i manage to pick up 6-10 Mike Fry,
best in Bloomsburg 's history, , a transfer from Philadelphia
thanks in a large part to 6-8 John i Textile.
Willis (14.5 ppg) , a Tare player
To summarize , one jnust
who can almost single-handedly concede that Cheyney is still the
dominate a game, and briliianl : team to beat with emergi ng
playm aker 5-10 Artie Luptowski i power Bloomsburg and veteran (11 ppg). With only two other laden Mansfield close behin d.
lettermen returning , guards 6-0 The Huskies ' PSCAC title bid will
Gary Choyka and 5-10 Tony depend on big Willis's ability to
DaRe , the Huskies aren 't without avoid foul trouble and the
their share of prob lems.
development
of
varsity
newcomers
like
6-4
Dick
Grace
, 6Traditionally strong Mansfield
is experienced and balanced 3 Joe Kempski and 6-6 Gary
beginning with guards 6-0 Dennis Beatty. Their first "key " game
Lomax and 6-2 Art Allen, a frosh will be at home against Mansfield
regular last year. Mountie board in early January.
by DALLAS HAR RIS

BSC vs. Rams

Bloomsburg will face wha t
could be one of the better West
Chester teams in recent years.
Although W alt F unk concedes
that his team 's most prominent
weaknesses are lack of height
and speed, the squad should be
showin g an imporvement in
defense. Leading ret urning
veterans tor me Hams are
seniors 6*3" Benny Bond and 6'5"
Tom Husser , both good shooters
and rebounders. One of the
team's chief scoring threats will
be 6'6" Bruce Bieder who is
extremely quick and agile for his
size. Bieder will also be added
stren gth on defense.
Ann that> votaran

on by Funk is 6'4" Gary Dickey,

who ^ could give much-needed
board strength. Fighting for the

quarterback position are 5'10"
Rusty Smith , 61" Dave Grande ,
a transfer and former AllCatholic choice from St. J oseph' s
Prep , in Philadelphia , and 6*2"

Dr yberg, Sue Greef/ Dan
Maresh, Bob Oliver , Pat
White, and Mike Williams.
THANX.

BSC' s
Coach
Charles
Chronister indicates his material
this year is possibly better than
last year 's team that posted a 18-7
record. Four veteran players are
back from tha t squad to form a
nucleus that is bolstered by a
transfer , five sophomores , and a
returning injured player.
A.W. S. is spo nsoring a
sho pping trip to New Yor k
City on Satur day Decembe r 2.
The but will leave 6:00 A.M.
f rom Waller Long Porch and
will leave New York at 6: 00
p.m. The tot al cost is $5.50.
Sign up at residence hall
desk or comm uter lounge.

Kodak Grant

A grant of $1,000 has been
awarded to BSC by Eastman
Kodak Compan y's program of
aid to higher education , announced Acting President , Dr.
Charles H. Carlson . The grant is
based upon graduates who joined
the company within five years
following graduation and are now
completing their fifth year of
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important pai * of Kodak's nigner
educatio n for nany years. Introduced in ii»o5 to assist
privatel y supported schools, the
plan was expanded in 1969 to
include publicly supported institutions . It is being enlarged
further this year to provide for
grant s to two year public and
private Colleges.

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we do u?

Jewelcor imports
its own diadesigners

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satisfied.

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lot The Jewe lcor catalog
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carries a of other merchandise
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savings
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recorders
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• Shopping
Center , Kdwardsville , Pa. 18704
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grant was based on the em*
ployment of Robert J. Donahue , a
1965 graduate who majored in
mathematics in secondary
education and now resides at 849
Whalen Road, Pennfleld, N.J.
Kodak grants benefit some 330
college and universities and
involve $3.3 million. These direct
grants have represente d an

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Football Photos
Football pictures were
taken this /ear by Tom

BSC lettermen returning this year , left-to-right , John Willis, Art Luptowski, Tony Da Rae, a^id Gary
(Oliver Photo )
Choyka .

y ^^

Girl' s Basketball
Girls Interes ted In trying out
for Varsity Basketball should
contact Miss McComb , office
10, Centennial before Monday,
Dtcembsr 4. She will be In
toda y from 10:30 a.m. to 1:00
p.m.

^^^B^M
UANCABTER

Vanity Fair/Jtwtloor
1234 Manor Shopping C«n Mlllertvlllt Pike
. Lancaster , Pa. 17603
Phone; (717) 397-7700
<>

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.

' ¦Address. —:
I

City

m Sohool
HARRI8BURQ

State

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:

J»w*loer
420 Amity Road
(Off Route 441 & Paxton Street)
Harrlaburg , Pa. 17111
Phone; (717) 232-9991

P
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WILKE8-BARRE

Jtwaloor
Gateway ^hoppin g Center
Edwa rdivttlo. Pa. 18704
Phone: (717) 288-7441

I

Ford Feli QWsaip&

Special Ed. Network
B.S.C. is aippng five colleges in
eastern Pennsylvania to participate in a pilot educational
project , Special Education
Student Information Networ k
(SESIN).
SESIN will provide current
information
r egarding
te chn iq ues and pract ices of
special educa ti on t o grad ua te and
under-graduate students who are
training to become special
educa tion teachers. Each of the
rive partici patin g colleges —
31oomsburg State College; Holy
Family College, Philadelphia ;
Wlillersville State College ,
Millers yille;
Pejnn
State
University Continuing Education
Program , King of Prussia ; and
West Chester State College, West
Chester — will appoint a student
representative to SESIN. These
representatives will tailo r the
services of SESIN to the particular college's needs-.
SESIN is a new concept of
service to special education
crainees. The information services of Regional Resources
Center and the Pennsylvania
Resource and Information Center
for Special Education in King of
Prussia have been available to
certified special education
teachers for sever al vears.

SESIN will extend theseservices
to students in eastern Pennsylvania , an innova t ive concept
that has received approval at the
state and federal level,
Services to students will include specialized research information services , publications
on significan t curre nt events in
special education , inf ormat ion on
SDecialized instructional
mater ials appropriat e for special
education , and information to
familiarize students with the
spect rum of service agenc ies '
which presentl y serve special
educators. Finally , students will
have an opportunity to participat e in on-the-job training
programs in one of these service

«*•

Friday

.....:.

O. and Lp

9:60-12:06

4:30 - 12;00
11:00-11:00

59 E. Main St., Bloomsbur g

i
j

KNITS

9:00 -11:00

THE STUDIO SHOP

18 West Main Street Bloomsbur f, Pi
HEA DQUARTERSOF
AND GIFTS
Phone 784-2541

Kampu s Nook Hours

Buy your Christmas Gift at
the

MUler Office
Supp ly Co.

HALLMARK CARDS

FACTORY OUTLET STORE

1.25-12"

Do you wont to be remembered
this year?

fiver 300 Guitars
.and Amplifiers

I

Dtjj vr y World wide ¦Hj ^^ HJQRQQHH QMQVHW

^^^a^^^^^^^^^a^a^a^a^a^^aB^aB^^a^p^a^a^a^^p^^^a^^^^^^^^w^i^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^M^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^a^p^p^>^p^i^>^i^p^^p^i^a^a^^a^>^p^p^p^^p^pjpjpy

Kampus Nook

Saturday
Sunday..

72 N. Iron St.

*r -

~ „

#35ptaiUfc

Cheese Pizza
e
99 Friday Only from 4 p.m. to 12
Mon. - Thurs

i-

submitted by January 5, 1973.
Winners wfll be notified by Mar ch
25, 1973. Additional information
may be obtained from The Ford
Foundation , 320 East 43rd Str eet ,
New York , New York , 10017 and
A
Di sser t a ti on
from
the National Fellowships
ava ilable.
,
Fund
795
Peachtree Street , N.E.,
and
applica
tions
leted
Comp
agenc ies, an area of professiona l supporting documents must be Suite 484, Atl anta , Georgia , 30308.
experience which collegesdo not
prov ide.
For the new and unusual
Kenne t h E. Schre ff ler is the
director of SESIN . Servin g with
in
Schreffler on the project staf f is
Miss Julie Snyder , Pro ject
Christma s Gifts see
Coordinator.
Schreffler and Dr. Andrew J.
Kar pinski, Professor of Special
Education atB SC, announced the
appointment of Miss Pat Rapposelli as the Bloomsbu rg State
College student representative
ife
|^^^ FLOWER S
for SESIN.

BIG SPECIAL

our replar

Hartzel s Music Store

'

PQW SD^ k«r <
, Wrs. EHwbeth B»1ttn ««r,
mother d fwo sons, one kilted
( continued from page onf)
and one prisoner of war , w ill
doctora l degree for a career in
speak on December, 7 at* p.m.
higher education.
Aud itorium.
in
Kus ter
Fellowshi ps provide assistance
Bra celets will be availa ble. ~
for a maximum of four years.
al l Mrs.
For information
Both Course of Study and
Hlmes at 784-7962.
wards
are

•Sweate rs Galore
•Capes — Ponchos

# Skirts — Jeans
•Suits — Dresses - Shirt s

[ special student disc ounts !

BERWICK KNITTING MILLS

230 So* Poplar St, Berwick
( One Block Off Rte. 11 — Behind Shopping
Center
9-9 Thurs . & Fri
Hours 9-5 Daily & Sat.

I
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(^QuePasa? IB^^r^r iJ

Christmas crentinns a la Black Forest , hnndmntlc in Hawaii from
original, three-dimensional designs to delight the
collector. For treasured gifts, choose from over 300
.
^
items , each hand-pninted in gay Christmas colors.
tM.
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.

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VrlWf •»

I QUE PASA ?
for thost who drwi at Individuals
Stt our collection of Vtlva tt
Handcrafttd Sllvar Rings and Such

th# Shtrwln
St<
ittp§
Juit
btWnd
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oft
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**

''Our catalo g ttnt on r«qiw«t- si.OO deposit refundable "

^

-' tW

ORDERS AIRMAILED WITHIN U HOURS OF RECEIPT '

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'

A. ALEXANDER Co.

98 Rlvartlda Drlva, Naw York , N.Y.

Gregg 's Music

Sherwood Village . - ,.
Old Berw ick Road Bloomsbur g, Pa.

Open
1 p .m. to 5 p.m.

Mon . thru Sat.
°\ 25c a Peace

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