rdunkelb
Wed, 05/01/2024 - 17:23
Edited Text
Song Kong Flu - Far ce
Entio-Viru ses:Culprit

PresidentsBrother
KilledIn Collision

Photo by Holler

McHale Directs Henry IV
December 12, 13, 14
On December 12, 13, 14 the
Bloomsbur g Players will present
Henry FV , their second major production of the college year , under
the direction of Mr. M ichael McHale. The wealth of life, both
heroic and comically anti-heroic , is
packed into the chron icle of Henr y
IV, Shakes peare 's major contribution to the Eliza bethan sta ge in the
years 1597-98.
Playing Kin g Henry IV is Al
Wendell Jr. of Bloomsbur g. Henry
attained his crown with "by-paths
and indirect crook'd ways ," so that
his supporters , later to become his
enemies , believed he was a subtle
king. He was , however , so filled
with mistrust that he saw its reflection in his own son, Prince Hal. Al
made his debut on the Bloomsbur g
stage this summ er when he starred
with Miss Lilia Skala in I Remember Mama.
Prince Hal is portrayed by Brian
McLernan. Ha l is a noble , highspirited , and chivalrou s youth —
the incarnation of the most gracious and generous elements in English manhood. His love for fun ,
how ever , is misconstrued by his
father to be of a corru pt and riotous nature which is in no sense a
part of his character. Brian is a
senior at BSC and is majo rin g in
Theatre. He is a veteran of the
sta ge, a s was evinced by h is fin e
pe r f orman ce la st year in The Diar y

Pol icies Changed
Several important changes in the
academic policies of Bloomsbu rg
State College, which directl y affect
students who ent ered the college
in Septembe r 1968, will become effective durin g the second semester.
These chan ges, develo ped by the
Facult y-Student Committee on Academic Affa irs durin g the college
year 1967-1968 , were recentl y approved by the administration.
O ne of tho new re gulations states
that a student ma y not repeat a
course In which he has earned a
passin g grade , Furtherm ore , durin g his under graduate years a student may re peat only four (4)
courses In which he has earned a
grade of "E " (falling ) .
In orde r to provide greater opportunities for new students to
achiev e a qualit y point avera ge of
will bo
2.0 or better , a fr eshman

yr.To.l S
^"*'

of Anne Frank. This role should
certainly prove an exciting and difficult challenge to Brian 's actin p
abilities.
Henr y Percy, also known as Hotspur, is the hot-headed but chivalrous "infant warrior " played by
Tom Kearns. Hotspur is portrayed
as a high-spirited foil of Prince Hal
who despises idleness, riot , and
sentimentalism. ToYn is also an experie nced actor of the Bloomsburg
stage . Last year he was chosen to
play the major roles in the productions of Catch Me If You Can and
The Devil and Daniel Webster.
Playing the role of Sir John Falstaff will be Russell Walsh. Falstaff
will be seen as an irresponsible and
merry companion of Prince Hal. He
is an amazin g bundle of contrasts ,
a liar without malice , a lover of
wine , w omen , and song, and the
most irrepressible of mortals. Russ
is a senior at BSC with a major in
history. He is a veteran actor at
Bloomsbur g and was featured in
two majo r roles last year in the productions of Catch Me If You Can
and The Diary of Anne Frank.
Others in the cast will be Jim
Berkheiser , Sam Zachary, Amy Raber , Carol DeWald , Dave Boyd , Bill
Cluloy, Mike Adams , Tony Vigil ante , Carl Nauroth , Al Maurer ,
Robert Casey, Ken Has slnger , Ed
Hunl ey, C ar l Askew , Mike Weinber g, R u ss Henne , Mar y Lou Boyle,
Pam Van E pp s, C arl Ro sa , Ton y
Nauroth, Dan Boonc , and Joh n

Hnrer.

av era ge of 1.75 or better. All student s will be required to earn a
cumulative quality point ave rage of
2.0 or bette r In at least 64 semester
hours of credit in order to be gin
their junior year of studies ,
A chan ge in the method of computing quality point averages applicable to students who bega n
their college prog ram in September 1D 68, has also been approved.
St udents will now be "char ged" for
all credits scheduled , including
credits for courses re peated; the
avora go will then be computed by
dividin g all credits schodule d into
the quality points earned . Students
who were enrolled last year (19871968) will have tholr ave rage s computed In the some manne r as In the
past years.
If students have question s to
ralso about these changes , they
should consult tho director s of

tholr curriculum!.

Morris E. Andruss , brothe r of
Dr. Harvey A. Andruss , President
of Bloomsburg State College, was
killed in a two-car collision in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, on Sunda y,
Dec. 1, 1968.
Funeral services for Mr. Andruss
were held on Wednesda y, Dec. 4,
1968, at the Smith Kernke Funer al
Home , 1401 Northwest Twent ythird Street , Oklahoma City.
Mr. Andruss was comptroller of
the Knox Division of the Kerr-McGee Oil Company.
Surviving are his wife , Grace C.
Andruss; two sons, Eugene , of
Cherokee , Oklahoma , and Michael ,
of Oklah oma City; two daughters ,
Mrs. Robert Agee, of Oklahoma
City, and Mrs. W. R. Washington , of
San Jose , California; two brothers ,
Robert W. Andruss , of Sapulpa , Oklahoma and Dr. Harvey A. Andruss ,
Bloomsburg; and his mother , Mrs.
E. H. Andruss , of Sapul pa , Oklahoma.

ScfCSLuD
Jj e GfooLlsked

Ed. Note: The following article
is a reprint from the Philadelphia
Sunday Bulletin.

by Martin L. Gross
On Dec. 7, 1968, a date students
have come to dread as "Black Saturday, " hundreds of thousands of
distraught youngsters throu ghout
the nation were subjected to an
assinine trial-by-multiple-choice designed to determine their fitness
for college.
Well-crammed and apprehensive
high school seniors and junio rs
took the SAT, the Scholastic Aptitude Test , better known among
tense hopefuls as "The College
Boards. "
The SAT exam has become one of
the major academic latchke ys th at
open or closes a student' s way to
the college of his choice .
H arm f u l To Educat ion
It is becoming increasin gly apparent that the College Boards are
dama ging our youth and American
h igher education .
The indic tment against the SAT
is two-fold: it has discriminated
against man y bright , mature student s with poor skill at multiplechoice exams , and it has hel ped to
p op ulate our leadin g colle ges with
young men and women of insufficient matu rity and character-traits
not measured on this test.
A massive enterprise is involved
here . The Educational Testin g Service of Pri nceton , N.J. developed
the College Entrance Examination
B oard tests , whose results ore eagerly subscribed to by 780 colleges.
Each year approxim ately 1,250,000
students cram and pray their way
through the verb al and mathematical exams.

A score of 880 to 800 wins the
smiling approb ation of parents ,
teachers and oven test-happy fellow
students. Scores below 500 generally assign tho student to acadomla 's lower depths.
Comparison of student' s SAT
scor es an d f reshman college grades
show that the y do not correlate
well at all,
An experlmon t at one prestigio us
eastern universit y Illustrate * the
general inaccuracy of the SAT in

The type of flu currently plaguing the campus of Bloomsburg
St ate College is not the "Hon g
Kong" flu as many students seem
to think. Rather , it is a 24-hou r
variety of intestinal virus belonging to the group known as Entroviruses.
The clinical signs and symptoms
ar e stomach and intes t inal distress
with diarrhea and vomiting generally accompanied by chills and
sometimes an intermittent rise of
temperature. It will usually run its
course in 24 to 48 hours.
During the period of distress and
to facilitate recovery, students
should try to remain in bed and
limit their intake of fluids as this
will minimize the diarrhea. In addition , they should avoid eating fried ,
fatty, or greasy foods.
Since it is a virus of intestinal
origin , students would be wise to

reinforce their hygenic habits. In
part icular , wash their hands before
eating and after using lavatory facilities. Also, avoid puttin g inanimate objects , such as pencils and
pe.ns, into their mouths.
I n anticipat ion of an outbreak of
"Hong Kong " flu , a vaccine is commerc ially available and it is recommended that stude nts and facult y
see their family physicians for immunization shots.
The BSC school physician suggests if you have the above symptoms , you remain in bed for 24
hours.
If you are within a reasonabl e
distance of your home it is advised
that you return home.
If the vomiting and fever last
more than 24 hours , you should see
the nurse in the infirm ary and receive the care of a physician.

Pa. State Colleges
No Short-chan ging

Freshman Class Profiles " will show
you that the aver age student at
Bryn Mawr College, for example ,
by Dr. Henry Klein
had a high school class rank , grade
Director , American College
point average , and College Board
Admissions Cen ter
scores which are higher than those
QUESTION—What is your opin- of the avera ge student in a state
ion of State colleges in general and college.
Bloomsburg State College in parBecause of this elite student
ticular?
body, the teachin g at Bryn Mawr
Our daughter graduated among College is pitched in greater depth
the top 10 in a large class from and at a higher level than at the
Ridley Township High School and state college—with a wider student
has just completed her freshman
abilit y ran ge.
year at Bloomsbur g.
But I am sure there are many
She was accepted by all three
students at Bryn Mawr College who
colleges to which she applied , but are not workin g up to expectations ,
selected Bloomsburg because it was and therefore are not getting every within the family pocketbook.
thing they could get out of attendWe are happy, she is happ y, but ing that college. They are shortshe gets very annoyed with the changing themselves.
attitude
generally
encountered
And the quality of their work
when telling the name of her alma
at Bryn Mawr College is probably
mater.
lower than the quality of some of
The public seems to look down the hard-pushing, top-ranking stuon a state university. This takes dents at our state colleges.
the edge off of our satisfaction and
The public really has no way of
good marks which our dau ghter had
measuring the quality of instruc achieved.
tion at any college. But that doesn 't
Is anyone reall y being shortstop it from forming opinion s,
changed?
m a in ly thr ou gh re putations which
ANSWER — Certainly no one is might be long outdated.
It is important that a student be
short-changed in any of Pennsylhappy at his college. The 50 pervania 's State colleges.
cent drop-out rate in American colBecause you speak of downgradleges is not caused solely by acaing, I presume you are referring to
t he q ualit y of education th e r e, demic failure . The student 's dissatisfaction with his college is a mara ther than the social conditions.
jor cause of dropping out.
Educationally, the "Manual of
Ask y our dau ghter to imagine
herself sever al years from now,
predicting academic college perfacing her first job intervie w.
formance.
Sevonty-two students
who had scored in the low 500's on Would she be proud to tell her
t he SAT verba l were admi tt ed p ros pe ctive empl oyer that she
fl unked out of Bryn M awr College
nevertheless and their progress
after two years?
watched.
Or would she rather say that she
Instead of predictable failure , 69
completed the freshman year satis- graduated from Bloomsbur g State
factoril y; one-third of the SAT low- College cum laude?
If you were hiring a youngste r,
scores finished in the top half of
which one would you choose?
their competitive freshman class.
The root causes of student unrest
are man y, but the unproductive
All Day Women are invited to
stress of competition for college
attend
the luncheon which will be
canno t help but contribu te to the
served
this Friday, December 13,
sometimes near- psychotic student
at
t
he
Christmas
Party sponsor ed
desire t o "get away from it all , "
by
the
Day
Women
's Association.
even at the cost of irrationalit y and
Sto
p
into
the
Lounge
anytime benihilism.
tween 11:00 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.
Future Generat ions
Friday to enjoy a hat lunch , a
Education must serve the stubeautiful tree and amiable com dent , parent and society. If It bepany. All in the spir it of wishing
comes merel y an orgy of over-comyo u a very happy holiday season.
v
petitive exams such as the College
Boards , there is l i ttle chance th at
any subsequent generati ons can be
Advanced scheduling has been
educated to ros poct responsibility
changed fro m Wednesday, Deand Intellectual maturity .
comber 11 to Monday , December
Tho solution is obvious: Do awa y
16.

with the College Boards!
Ed. Note:- The following article
is a reprint from the Philadelphia
Sunday Bulletin.

Michael Harrington will not be
at BSC on Thursd ay , December 12.
He had been origi nally scheduled
for November 20 and was later
resched uled for December 12. It
is not now positive whether Harrington will be able to appear
here in the near htort.

This is due to the fact that the
Mag Men art to be in the gym
until midnight and there it no
chance to set up for scheduling.

For Whom the
BeU Tolls...
8«» "Uh Tum"
Pag* 2

Editorial . . .

Left Tun

One is sure that several people have not iced tha t the M&G was not
published during the week immediately following the end of Thanksgiving vacation. This was not due to any trips or anybody 's birthday,
but was the result of sheer laziness on the part of the M&G staff.
Just because the staff had worked for nineteen issues, const an t ly
laboring to meet the twice-a-week deadlines , they assumed that they
could have a week off. This idleness is rid iculous—why should the staff
of the M&G have a rest period when other students are lying in their
rooms listening to records , playing cards , or throwing "bull" in Husky
Lounge? The answer to this question is simple—the M&G should come
out every Wednesday and Friday because of unlimited funds in the
budget , and because of the huge amount of interest and help offered by
BSC students.
In order to compensate for this idleness , the staff has spent fourteen
hours putting together this six-page issue. Of course , this is not a sever e
punishment for such an outlandish offense, and one might propose a penalty more fittin g to the crime. A good suggestion might be that students
stop contributin g articles to the M&G , and in thi s way increase the
volume of work for the staff.

CounselingCenter
The Counselin g Center of BSC is
an addition to the stud ent personnel service. It provides , without
char ge, the services of experienced
counselors to all students desiring
help in the solution of personal
problems. The student can bring to
the counselor any problem that
troubles him or her, whether it is
difficult y in study, boy-girl problems, uncertainty about one 's choice
of vocation or just vague feelings
of dissatisfaction and tension. Such
problems and disturbances
are
common occurrences among college
students.
Primary Aim
The primary aim of counseling
is the development of the student' s
own initiative and independent
thinking. As the student and faculty must feel free to talk about
all personal matters , absolute confidence is a necessar y condition of
counseling. The Counseling Center
has worked out the following policies in order to insure confidence:
students can contact the Center directly. All referrals to the Center
are on a voluntar y basis. The student' s communications are held in
strict professional confidence , and
so are the names of the students
counseled. If a situation arises requiring communications with the
parents , Health Service , or Dean
of Students , this is discussed with
the student.
If any member of the college
community wishes help in finding
the best way to handle the problem
of a student about whom he is concerned , the Center will provide an
informal consultation , but without
disclosing whether or not the student discussed is known to the
counseling staff. Regular appointments can usually be offered to the
student as soon as he contacts the
Center and counseling sessions are
provided on a weekly basis. They
may extend for a period of time as
determined by the needs of the individual student. If , after a period
of counseling, the student wishes to
continu e with off-cam pus services ,
he can be helped to make arrang e-

MAROON
VoL XLVfl

ments with an off-campus clinic or
professional person. The Counseling Center has available a consulting psychiatrist , Dr. Terren ce Fi er ,
chief psychiatrist at the Geisinger
Medical Center , who works with
the staff of the Center in providing
mental health services for the colicge.

First Year
This is the first year BSC has had
the counseling service. Previo usly,
two counselors worked , largely independent of each other . Aside
from counseling, the service will
ultimately provide a program for
the assessment of individual intellectual , interest , and personality
charac ter istics and will prov ide a
vocational-educational materials library. These services will enabl e
the doubtful student to realize his
main interests and set himself some
vocational goals. Thus far , the Center has been fairly successful. The
counselors expect to see over 1200
students about the summer testing
results and interpretations. In a six
week period beginning in September , they consulted with about 120
men and 145 women.
The Counseling Center , under
the direction of Mr. Charles
Thomas and assisted by Miss Mary
MacDonald and Mr. Robert Davenpor t, is located on the second floor
of Waller Hal l, room 210. Appointments to see a counselor may be
made between 8:30 a.m. and 5:00
p.m., Monday through Friday. The
telephone number of the Center is
784-4660 College Ext . 324.
All geography and/or earth
science majors (Elementary, Secondary, Liberal Arts)are reminded
that they must contact their advisors prior to prereg istration on
December 16, 1968.
Any geograp hy and/or earth
science majo r who does not know
his advisor , or who has not been
assi gned an advisor should contact Dr. W. R. Frontz at 265
Waller Hall as soon as possible.


W»da«»d JOSEPH GtimTHS
Cdltot 'ln -ChM

N»wt Editors
Feature Ed/lorj
Spor ti Editors
Circulation Manager

^holography Editor
Auit lanl Editors

Copy Editor

No. 20

EUGENE IESCAVAGE
0ut/n eii Manager
Bill Ttitiworlh & Michael Hock
Dave Miller & Allan Mavrtr
Bob Schulti & Chorlii Moyt r
Rob ert Cadlntki

Mlkt O'Day

Ron Adami & Clark Rueh

Tom Funk

Dir ector of Publications . . , . . , . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . , . , , , , , . .Robed
,,
Haller
Faculty Buiinni Comul lanl
John E. Dmnmn
Publication! Comullont
Richard Savage
The Maroon & Gold It lo cated on Ihe second floor of Waller Hall. Newi may be subml tled by calling 784-4660, Ex t, 323, or by contacting the paper through Box 301,
The Maroon & Gold It a mtmbir of the Pennsylvania State College Preii Association ,
Additional StorTi Tim Shannon , Charlei Macunai , Vfc Keeler , Fran Cfiabalka ,
Undo Ennli, Jacqule Fedock , Trudy Norcross, Karen Mundy, Susan Sehenck ,
David Drucker , Carole Sorber , Susan Zalota , Kathy Streleckli, Elizabeth
Cooper , Pritcltla Clotk , Ruth Carpent er , dor Remt en, Chrli Borowtkl , Vtlmo
Avery, Miriam Steffen , Ginny Potter , Mary Lou DelRosto, Mike Koehkodln ,
Ann Brady.
The) Maroon 6 Gold Is published at ntar bi-weekly at possible by, for , and through
the* fees of the students ol Bloomsburg State College , Bloomsburg, Pinmylvonla ,
All opinio ns expressed by columnists and feature writers, Including Uttm-to-theeditor , are not necessarily tho ie of this publication but those of the Individuals ,

by Bill Sanders

For Whom the Bell Tolls..,
Times of crisis and conflict inevitably give rise to pressure on our
civil liberties and a disre gard for
due process. These' days are certainly times of crisis and incidents
like that at Cheyney State College
clearly demonstrate that our civil
rights are in obvious jeopardy becaus e of thi s coun t ry's growin g impatienc e and disapproval of dissent.
It was ironically only two days
after Thanksgiving that Dr. Wade
Wilson , President of Cheyney State
C ollege, announced .tha t nine students were being expelled for repeated threats to and terroristic
tactics at the college community.
Probably the last straw was when
several activists from the Black
Student Union threatened an administrator and allegedly said that
they would burn the school down.
My purpose is not to defend those
who would destroy what they willingly have come to; but likewise I
could never stand up for an authoritative system which zealousl y
pr eaches that we must follow
prope r channels , but when they are
forced with a dilemma turn their
backs on due process and fall
rather on emotional platitudes
rather than their established judicial tradition.
Because of my concern for the
possible ramifications of this on
other state campuses , particularly
ours , I asked President Ron Schulz
if he could possibly do sometliing
from his position. It is both the sincerity and coura ge that Schulz has
shown which makes this stor y partially gratifying.
Last Sunda y a monthl y meeting
of the Penns ylvania State Association of Student Governments (the
student presidents ) met in Harrisburg. After much trivia and boredom Schulz brou ght up what everyone was unsuccess fully tryin g to
forget: Cheyney. He gave the bleak
history of the "nine angry students "
case and very persu asively ar gued
that a stron g reprimand be placed
upon Cheyney for its blatant disregar d of due process and students
i ignis.

After little debat e , a resolutio n
was passed to the effect that the
BSC President had requested. A
fact-findin g committee was also established of Gar y Dologite , West
Chester President , and Schulz. The
resolut ion reads: "Wh ereas the
Pennsylvania State Association of
Student Governme nt is firml y committed to the necessity of due process on every college and university campu s and whereas it appears
that a recent incident at Cheyney
State College represents a total disregard for such due process , therefore let it be reso lved that the
Board of President s, of the P.S.A.
S.G., meetin g December 8, 1088, in
Harri sburs , Pa. , will appoint a commission of Board members to investigate the incidents and further let
it be resolved that in the investigat ion if such due p rocess has been
violated then the board stron gly
condemns that administ rative action of Cheyney State College."
To fur th er am p lif y t heir act ions
it was agree d to mak e the resolution avai lable to the State College
Press Association , both of the national wire services , UPI and AP.
Copies of this resolution will be
sent to all state colle ges and to the
G overnor , Ra ymond Shafer.
The good that will come from

this is the j ob of a speculator not

a columnist ; but one cannot holp
but feel that Administrators must
now learn to live by laws and established procedures rathor than
their own likes or dislikes.
Certainly civil liberties are always in jeopard y as long as people
in power regard thorn as a threat;
but as lon g as there are men like
Daniel Walker to report and condemn the horrors of Chica go, and
students , like those at Harrlsburs
last Sunday, the battle will neve r
be won by those who think that the
best way to extin guish a flre Is to
remove all air, even If It oxtlngulshes life Itself ,

Letters ,,.
De ar Editor:
If you wish ' you may print my
comments on Bob Medford' s question 2 on comprehensive exams in
your November 22 issue: "Does the
facu lty su pp ort t he final week of
exams because it gives them a week
of sitting on their cans?"
I object to the inference in the
poor choice of word s: " ...sitting
on their cans. "
Faculty members do spent a lot
of time sitting. But while they are
sitting, they are writing recommendations for students , assist ing wit h
studen t or ganizat ions, advis ing students in their scheduling, participa ting in commit t ee wor k, attending professional meetings , and
spending time in an endless amount
of professional reading. '
If faculty members have any free
time during examination week , we
are entitled to do a little sitting in
which we do nothing but relax.
Not all of us faculty members
are in favor of final exams. However , if the majority of the students and faculty want final exams,
we will do our best to prepare
wor th w hile exams and evalua t e
them properly.
A Facult y M ember
As I sat with my cups of coffee
and copy of the Gladfly, this morning, I became alternately perplexed
vand aggravated at
tlie unethical
character so often evidenced by the
irresponsible and irrational trash
which the staff of the Gladfly confuses with journalism. These people, whoever they are , obviously
share my opinion of thei r literary
masterpiece , or they would not be
ashamed to sign thei r smut.
The Gladfly staff , as is clearly indicated by their letter to the editor
of the Gladfly ( vol. 2 no. 8) , are
merely interested in fostering pettiness and disunity within the college communi ty. The style and
flavor of their writing is all too
similar to the attitude shown by a
certain , recently defeated presidential candidate , who not unlike the

to
"
lead
ership.
"level-headed
Those of you who are responsible
for the productio n of the Gladfl y
have very little right to accus e others of dishone sty or sneak iness.
But since you feel yourselves qualified to pass judgement upon the
capability and mor als of others , I
feel justified In examinin g the capibility and moralit y which you have
used in the produ ction of that lowgrade toilet tissue, which is distriDuted only durin g hours usually reserved for acts th at would be embarrassing, if done in the public
eye.
if you had or have any skill In
the use of the English language ,
you have yet to show it The peopl e you slan der are not ashamed to
associate their names with their actions. Why are you?
I would like to add two questions
to the list composed by the staff:
1) Do you reall y think you express a majority opinion?
2) Will the "Glad-comode " ever
make a valid or responsible contribution to life at BSC? .
Brian McLernan

Gladfl y, advocate d a return

May I have an inch of your space
to thank all the people who helped
the Literary and Film Society make
a success of its first Coffee House
weekend: the M & G for its publicity; Dave Boyd, Mike Stugrin , Norm
Teitsworth , John Latshaw , Franc is
Keller , and Harris Wolfe, th e host
committee; Father Kennit L. Lloyd,
for his cooperation and encouragement; Carl Pueul of the Coffee
House committee; Mr. Piotrowski
and A/V; Hon LaPorte and Mrs.
L auer for br inging our guest , Don
Lewis; and all those kindly souls
like Dale Carmody, who leaped up
out of the darkness to help us confused projectionists.
Also, of course , to all the students and faculty who attended
and offered vociferou s comments,
thanks! Your enthusiasm has us already seeking out some exciting
films to show you next term.
Anita A. Donovan

(Wkere tit's G\t
The only reason you got out of
your seat in Lit lecture and left at
1:52 is because everyone else got
up and shuffled around a bit. That
classical stuff never did faze you
much but this afternoon you hadn 't
heard a word said. It had been one
of those not too neat mornin gs—so
you were still a little glazed over
what you had said .

Wh en questioned as to your desire to vacate , you answer j ust to
get a coke. Ooo. A dozen "get me
one " fellows. "And a ham burg. "
"Cigarettes ." "Cupcak es, please."
"And a package of Carmel Cr eams"
(uk !). After a ridiculously complicated exchang e of crumpled bills
and chan ge you make your way to
the front of Husky .

As a sort of reflex reaction to the
end of a class you make a path
from Carver to Husky (where
else?;. Blindly you head down the
aisle of booths. "Hey! " you hear
over the din of the jukebox. Oh.
And you slide Into a seat next to
three guys and a girl. Shortly a few
others arrive and they begin a
game of Chinese Checkers with the
seats. You guess they ' re going to
play cards since everyone is trying
to sit across from one another ,
someone is alternately stackin g
books and empty coke cups on the
shelf behind you , and someone is
sweeping crumbs and ashes into
_ Ian
vour
v
—a .

You seem to have lost sight of
Him . Scanning the elbowing crowd
you realize to your horror that He
isn't the re. Where is He!? Where
did He go? ! Now He won 't get to
see you. You won't get to talk to
Him. He'll hate you forever for
what you said this morning !

" Aren 't you going to play?" Ahno. Again seats are exchan ged.
From you r present stuffed-in position in the corner of the booth you
have a perfect view of the door and
Snack Bar. Ma ybe if you ' re su p er
fortunate He 'll come in. Maybe.
Holy shit !! There ho Is! I at the
snack bar. Maybe he'll look this
way. Ma ybe. You can go up and
buy a coke . That 's it , you can buy
a coke. You di g In your jacket for a
dime and nud ge the kid to your
ri ght to let you out.

That freedom of expression and
duo process — are fundamenta l
rights , valuable to each individual ,
and Indispensable safeguards of a
nation whose government derives
Its power from the consent of the
governed , should alwa ys be treasured .

"I said, HAVE YOU BEEN
WAITED ON YET?" Absently you
give your order. What can you do?
What can you do? You exchange
the various monies for the goods
and de part , juggling your purchases as your corne as become
misty. When you reach the booth
you aimlessly distribute the refreshments. Oops the re. A coke in
the lap. A helluva day. " Get some
na pkins. " Exit.
You catch a friendly sort of smile
as you grab a bunch of napki ns. He
smiled . "Hey, nice goin' " .
As the last section of table and
comrade is mopped you sink down
in a chair across from the booth.
You smile as "Hey Jude 's" last da
da-dat dah fades out.

by dor

l l f M M I I I M t l M M I I H M M I I H I I I t f f l M H I M I I H I H I I I I I I I I IH
I HHIIH

HAL Is a
character In
(1) Henr y IV
(2) 2001

(l IIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIMI4IIIIIII

Stantey,I Presume

Adam's Apple
by allan maurer

by Mike O'Day
We left Stanley on the wild and
wily streets in Terre Haute, Indiana. Cleverly disguised as a crossing guard he was attempting to
infiltrate the numbers racket in one
of the elementary schools.
I had gained the confidence of
the president of the sixth and was
about to break the whole system
open. I had intended to stage my
raid the week before the Thanks' giving vacation, but while on duty
at my intersection 1 was clipped by
a young hoodlum riding an American Flyer. Needless to say I was
forced to take hospitalization, and
had to take a medical leave from

the primitive atavistic texture of
Non-perspicuous observations
the sculpture — mentally. Dr. Robthe
colBecause of this inj ury I had to
playing
SURGE has been
lege government game as if they erts' exhibit is recommended as an leave active work and signed a contract to become Bloomsburg State
were the only team in the ball park. experience.
College's super sleuth. Don't laugh.
Chuck Blankenship, campaign manCommunications Foul Up
ager for STP, threw a few well
An experience recently available There is a great deal of time inturned curve balls at them in the to BSC stu de n ts , that of hearing volved in j ust the administrative
Freshman elections and STP won Michael Cooney, a folk singer who duties that I must perform. I am
both student rep spots, with an ef- is a modern troubadour doing his the man that assigns the serial
fective, well organized campaign. best to keep pure folk music alive, numbers to the liquor bottles that
Looks like the SURGE leaders will was dampened by a communica- are kept by those on campus who
have to climb down from the tions foul up. Mike was going cling to memories.
bleachers and go to batting practice strong is his evening performance
Another of my official duties is to
if they want to survive.
make
sure the drapes- in the girls
as >1 p.m. neared. Then girls beHenry IV, which plays December gan walking out. In many cases the dormitories are closed at sunset.
12,13 , 14, is shaping up nicely. The
walk out was reluctant, but the gals This j ob does cut into my sleeping
set is mildly cubistic, or perhaps thought they had to be in at 11 time, but I don't mind. And you
must remember that I am at the
impressionistic, the costumes are p.m. that night.
beck and call of THE MAN.
sim ple , yet suggestive, and a few
Freshmen did not know that in
As I seclude myself in my pentstrange and sundry technical effects
add a touch of the experimental to the case of a college activity run- house room, I am always ready to
ning overtime, women's curfew is rush to stop the evil members of
fhe show.
Percival Roberts' one man show extended until immediately after the college community that are connow on exhibit, 2nd floor Haas, has the close of the event. Similarly, stantly giving THE MAN a hard
aroused some intriguing comments. not all women had been notified time.
Born in Vietnam, one of the works that Unit Meetings would begin folin the exhibition, elicited these re- lowing Cooney's concert, rather
marks ( overheard ) on opening than at 11 p.m. In both instances,
insufficient communications ruined
night).
an otherwise smoothly running and
"I like the nails."
entertaining evening.
"Do you think it's morbid?"
Had the ARW personnel (i.e.
The Bye-the-Way Coffee House,
"Nah , it turns me on."
RA' s and Dorm Council officers),
house,
hosted by the Literary and
The best reaction though , ca me informed the resident women of Film Society the weekend of Nofrom a rather gentle looking lady the curfew extension rule no one vember 23 and 24, drew more than
who, wandering to and fro among would have had any grief. One 75 students both evenings to view a
the works, came upon Born in Viet- would think that any rule applying program of experimental undernam unexpectedly. Her eyes grew to an upcoming situation, (such as ground films. Shown several times
two inches, outward and open , the extension of a curfew for spe- during the course of the two eveseemingly locked in place. She cial events ) would be reiterated on nings were: Horse Over Teakettle
whispered a quiet "Oh my God ," every occasion that it applies to by Robert Breer, Snapshots of the
and quickly tottered off to another (such as the Cooney concert), if City by Klaus Oldenberg, and Songs
work.
only for the sake of the freshmen. Without Words by Yoram Gross.
Many of Dr. Roberts' paintings
Some viewers were pleased by the
Further, when the ARW decides
sculptures, and colleges are done in
films and others were not; however ,
acrylic, a plastic paint that lends to move all their Unit Meetings to everyone seemed to be stimulated
itself to sharp effects. His works 11, and stipulate an and/or situa- by them.
offer an excellent chance to do tion , such as "whenever the conOn Sunday evening, in addition
some drugless mind-expansion. One cert is over," they should be re- to the experimental films , Don
can look at the huge triangle works sponsible enough to notify all con- Le w is , a student from the Baltias sq u a res , or revolve them in the cerned. RA's are paid and the other more Institute of Art, sho w ed his
mind. Stare for a bit at contrasting members of the ARW, are elected, experimental film-poem to the Cofcolored acrylic lines and they will they owe the students this small fee House gathering. The film-poem ,
vibrate like a guitar string. Feel responsibility.
entitled You Pig, was composed of
words and segments of film from
motion pictures and various candid
sho t s.
The success of the Coffee House
film progra m has led the Litera ry
emerge since the war. Although he and Film Society to begin plans for
Up Against The Screen
Doubleday has published four has only directed four feature films a similar event second semester.
new volumes in its highly praised —Hiroshima Mon Amour (1950) ,
Cinema World Series. The new Last Year at Marienbud (1961) , filming It Happened Here, a comtitles, which are available in hard- Muriel (1963 ) , and La Guerre est plex , brilliant, and dramtic film
Finie (1966 ) — each has won him about the Nazi occupation of Engcover and paperback, are:
ALAIN RESNAIS or The Theme major critical attention because of land; it took eight years to comtheir originality and style. Resnais plete and had Its first commercial
of Time by John Ward .
HOWARD HAWKS by Robin is fascinated by the whole concept release in London in 1966, ten
of time, and John Ward examines years afte r it was begun. The book
Wood.
HOW IT HAPPENED HERE by this and traces Resnais' consistent is the story of the making of that
philosophy throughout the four f ilm, and no reader, whether he has
Kevin Brownlow.
, the influence of France's seen the movie or not,
films
Critical
LandTHE NEW WAVE
can fall to
avant-garde writers on Resnais' be enthralled by this hair-raising
marks selected by Peter Graham.
,
the unity of social and but charming narrative — and he
The Cinema World Series was In- work and
political
attitudes
which emerges.
will learn a great deal about the
augurated in January of 1968 with
—HOWARD HAWKS Is by Robin artistic, technical , production , and
the publication of tho first three
volumes. Books in the series in- Wood , Howard Hawks, a veteran commercial problems Involved In
clude critical studies of Individual director from the days of the silent film-making.
directors and stars, analyses of gen- movies, is the first purely Holly— THE NEW WAVE: Critical
re of films and of national cine- wood director to be Included In this Landmarks selected by Peter Gramas, and explanations of the tech- series, His notable successes in- ham. La Nouvelle Vague ("The
niques of filming. The authors arc clude Scarface (1932 ) , Bringing New Wave ") of French directors
chosen from tho top ranks of pro- Up Baby (1938) , Sergeant York was formed from a nucleus of film
fessionals In or associated with the (1941) , To Have and Have Not critics who shared common clno(1944), Red River (1948) , Gentle- matic Ideals and who wrote for the
film world.
men
Prefer BlondcH (1053) , and film j ournal, Canters du Clnemn.
Published in association wun tnc
(1961). While his best This group of men, which lncludos
Rio
Bravo
Institute
and
Sight
British Film
und Sound ma gazine , each book films are all examples of Hollywood Truffaut and Godard, broke into
contains a biography and up to 100 genre — westorn , gangster movie, production almost ton years ago
comedy—they happen to be among with a series of startling, low-budblack and whlto Illustrations. The
tho bost In those gonro. Wood Is get films: thus was tho Nouvelle
the
four
now
volumes
addition of
a film critic and lecturer in visual Vague formed. Peter Graham hns
brin gs tho total numbor published
arts at London University and Is selected the most significant writto seven.
ing of both the New Wave writers
— ALAN RE SNAIS or The the author of the much acclaimed
HITCHCOCK'S FILMS.
and their opponents, ten essay s
Themo of Time Is by John Ward.
—HOW IT HAPPENED HERE is that give a vivid impression of the
Itosnais , the film-mak er 's filmby Kevin Brownlow. At the age of intelloctual forment that has takon
make r and a searchin g perfectionist, is one of th e flnost directors to olghtoen Kevin Brownlow started place in the cinema.

Bye the Way Where Were Yon?

Bookworm

Straight From Stan
by Stan Rakowsky

Report of ARM activities
Today's column is a report on the
activities of the Association of Resident Men.
The ARM in a move intended to
instill a little more student participation into the running of the organization has scheduled an open
meeting of the group for Sunday,
Dec. 15, at 9:00 p.m. in the main
TV lounge of Elwell Hall. Too
many men feel left out of things,
and this feeling of being left out of
things, leads to apathy and we intend to help remedy this situation.
This lack of support leads to disenchantment with other college functions also. That's why next Sunday
we urge all men to come to the
meeting and take an active part in
affairs. Most of our wing-reps are
doing a great j ob, but this is a
chance for the men who have something to say to say it directly and
bring whatever is bothering them
to the forefront themselves. This
is your chance. Don't sit in a bull
session in some room and brood
and moan about something, feeling
that by telling your roommate
about it, something will be done
and then when you have a chance
to be heard, sit back and let another guy do it. COME TO THIS
MEETING AND SAY IT YOURSELF . Again , this meeting is open
to all resident men of BSC on Sunday, Dec. 15, at 9:00 p.m. in the
main TV lounge of Elwell.

and Elwell Halls are the doing of
the ARM under the direct supervision of Mr. Mike Bonacci in North,
and in Elwell through the supervision of a number of chiefs. (I've
got to admit, we did have an ample
amount of Indians though). One or
two of us started the decorating in
Elwell with *he forlorn belief that
we would be there all day alone,
But before we knew it, we had
more volunteers than we knew
what to do with. The guys saw this,
THEIR tree being decorated and
pitched in to feel a part of things
with the results speaking for themselves. A terrific job in both places
if I must say so myself!
And finally in the Christmas
vein, don't forget that next Sunday
the ARM, through the co-operation
of the Dean of Men's office , will
have the Christmas Open-House, in
both North and Elwell Halls from
2 until 5 o'clock. The primary purpose of the open house is to see
the Christmas decorations in both
buildings, and in spite of some of
the SCROOGE'S herebaouts, I' m
sure the decorations will be terrific.
(NOTE: the ARM is sponsoring
the prizes for the best decorated
door on each floor to get to it guys
Judging begins after 5:00 p.m. on
Saturday the 14th.)
And in conclusion, don't forget
tomorrow Coach Eli McLaughlin 's
tankmen open their home season
against Monmouth at Centennial
Pool. That's Thursday, December
12 at 4:00. Make plans to see one
of the finest teams in the state
compete in their first home meet.

Page Notes

Perhaps you have noticed the insane little fillers using "2001." The
first issue of the M&G following the
Christmas vaction, January 10, wil
carry a full page on the film
In speaking about the meeting 2001, A Space Odyessy. All reasons
may I also remind the men that for giving 2001 this coverage will
directly after the meeting we will be explained in that issue,
Various students have requested
have the annual Men's Christmasi
Party. In the past I moaned and us to print stories questioning cergroaned why we couldn't have tain practices of the administration
something besides watered-down of BSC, the student body (whoever
hot chocolate and stale doughnuts. she is) , and many other questionWell this year when in a position able subj ects. We would like to sugto affect change, we did change the gest a wise, and for a BSC student,
menu a little. MENU CHRISTMAS strange remedy to your need for
1968: Bar-b-cue, chips, cookies, ju n- the articulation of ills , and our
gle j uice all seasoned with a lot of shortage of articulators — WRITE
Christmas spirit. Now it' s not filet- A LETTER. We promise not to critmignon but you have to admit it's ise it (oh mortification!) on the
a thousand per-cent improvement basis of g rammar, spelling or weirdover past years. But the most im- ibilty rating.
portant thing is you people. COME
WE leave you , in the epitome of
TO YOUR PARTY AND PARTICI- Gadfly style , with a quote .
PATE!
"Vice in defence of Virtue,
* * *
sounds interesting, but doesn't
And still in the Christmas mood: make much sense."
the trees which you see in North
The Feature Editors

JANUARY GRADUATES
Let us prepar e your personal resu me , each in ori g inal
t ype , to properl y introduce you and your qualifications
to emplo yers of your choice.
Ask your Placement Officer about our service.

FUTURE AMERICA

RESUM E SERVICE

MIllVME , PA. 1 7846

r J COLUMBI A L-,
$

THEATRE

\

• Now P laying •

\

* GEORGE PEPPARD *

SS

« j
S

\ "What 's So Bad About
Feeling Good?"
\
^



IN C O L O R


i

I

\
\
I
^

BEGIN SEASON WITH 3 - 0 RECORD

Husky Wrestlin g Team
Wins Quadran gular

The BSC wrestling team opened
their 1968-1969 season with threevicto ries in a quadrangular meet
which they hosted at Centennial
Gym last Saturday .
The Husky grapplers opened with
an 18-15 win over Appalachian
State (N .CJ and closed the afternoon 's matches with a 27-5 trouncing of Old Dominion, in the iinal
round Saturday night BSC again
came out on top with a 27-11 victory over Ashland College of Ohio.
The first round match against
Appalachian featured a typical Ron
Russo win at 137 lbs. against Andy
Seidel. Russo repeatedly threw his
man down and let him up while
forging a 14-3 decision . BSC led
16-13 going into the last match ,
which meant a pin for Appalachian
in the heavyweight would give
them the victory . But Jim McCue
drew Andy Schlegel to give Bloomsburg the 18-15 victory.
Going into the second round the
Huskies were in a great position to

take the meet if they could boat
Old Dominion. This they did handily with Jim Owen and Jim McCue
picking up pins along the way to a
27-5 victory. McCue had the obviousedge in weight in his match. He
slummed Frank Venson to the mats
and showed him the lights af ter
only 36 seconds of the first period.
In the 3rd round against Ashland
College, the Huskies built up an
early lead in the light and middleweights to outlast a late Ashland
surge , to win 27-11. Ron Russo
pinned Mark Morrow at 1:55 of the
firs t period. Then in the next match ,
Russ Scheuren put Fidel Martinez
on his back for the count at 1:45 of
the second p*eriod . Ashland pulled
out 3 victories and a tie in the last
4 matches, but it was too late to
avoid the loss.
In the other matches Old Dominion tied Ashland and lost to Appalachia n , and Appalachian lost to
Ashla nd.

BSC Swimmers
Nipped by Temple

Bloomsbur g Netmen Lose To
West Chester and Shippensborg

i he Husky hoopmen , unde r Coach
have an 0-2 record following a 9Z-77 loss to West Chester
and a 78-77 loss to Shippensbuxg
during last week's action.
Last Wed nesday the Huskies
opened their season with a 97-77
loss to a strong West Chester quintet.
West Chester used a height adva ntage and some hot outside shooting to lead 49-37 at the halfway
mark. BSC drove to within one
point midway through the half , but
the Rams look control of the boards
and built their halftime lead.
Early in the second half , West
Chester's Brown and Schuster began to hit fro m underneath and
Founds was hitting from the outside enabling WCSC to open up a
15 point margin.
vvitn six nunuies left in the game ,
the itams had widened their margin lo 24 points. West Chester began to suosutute lreely, out ine
Huskies were unabie to close the
Ea r l Voss ,

o^ V-

xn their home opener last Friday,
the huskies lost a 78-77 overtime
decision to ihe visiting Ked Haiders
of Sluppensburg.
i lie nusKies look a 38-34 lead iniu uie locker room alter leading
ior ail bui iwo minutes oi tne nau.
.Palmer 1010 scored me mm. six
punus in me games anu the Huskily snoi oa'/r Irom ine lloor, bul
oiuppensourg snoi i>z'/c ana outbtortu me Huskies Horn ine tiee
uuow line lo stay with tsSC.
in the seconu Hail the Huskies
cooit'd oil lo 41% from the lioor,
out Shippensuurg continued their
not shooting anu led most of the
second half.
With two minutes remaining in
the game BSC was trailing by three
points. A basket by Mark Yanchek

moved the Huskies to within one
poi n t , but Ray Moyer tapped in a
shot to open up the margin to three
points. Palmer Toto then converted
a foul try and with 26 seconds left
Bob Snyder hit a 20 foot j ump shot
to tie the game 68-68 and send it
into overtime.
Shippensburg opened the five
minute overtime with two points on
a shor
t j umper by Don Snare.
Palmer Toto then hit two 15 foot
j umpers to give the Huskies a 72-70
lead with 3:07 left in the overtime.
Following a five footer by Ron
Finley, the Huskies again regained
the lead on a basket by Mark Yanchek. Two free throw conversions

Team Scoring
BSC
Player
DuJaney
Toto
Snyder
Mummey
Yanchek
Mastropietro
Platukis
Carney
Monaghan

F.G.
7
7
5
3
2
... 1
2
1
0
28

Player
Toto
.Yanchek
Dulaney
Platukis
Carney
Mummey
Snyder . . ?

F.T.
8-10
4-4
2-4

2-5
2-5

1-3
2-2

Tot.
22
18
12
6
8
4
4
3
2

21-33 77

BSC
F,G. F.T. Tot.
4-5 18
7
7
2-3 16
5
2-4 12
6
0-3 12
5
1-1 11
4
2

4
2

34

9-16 77

Wrestlers Pr epared
, For 1968-69 Season

1968-69 BSC SWIMMING TEAM—1st row, 1. to r.: Bruce Bendel, Heading;
Henry Peplowski, Readi ng; Kerry Hoffman , Reading; William Manner,
Bethlehem; Edwin Beidler , Heading. 2nd row: Ronald Brown, Philadelphia; David Kclter , Philadelphia; Gary Hltz , Hershey; Robert High , Reading; Timothy Carr , Grcensburg ; Couch Eli McLaughlin. 3rd row: Vincent
Shiba n, Coatesville; Edward McNcrtncy, Hazleton; Lee Barthold , Bethlehem; Robert McClosky, Brookevillc, Md.; Thomas Houston , Waverly, N.Y.;
William Fonner , York; Ralph Moerschbaehcr , Camp Hill.
Bloomsburg State College swim- and third . In the 200-yard breastmers gave up their Thanksgiving stroke Kd Beidler , a sophomore
vacation in order to prepare for f rom Reading, led fo r 7 laps and
their swim meet with Temple , but the n lost in the stretch to Whelan ,
the extra devotion wasn 't enough as a product of Philadelphia 's West
the Owls nipped the Huskies 54-50 Catholic High. Whela n also won
the 1,000-yard f reestyle and the
in Conwell Hall Pool last Saturday.
500-yard freestyle.
This was the closest the Husky
In the 12-event program BSC
team ever came to defeating the
won
both relays but only one other
Owls, but on Saturday things just
, Ralph Morsechbacher's trievent
into
place.
As
the
weren't fallin g
umph
in the 200-yard freestyle. In
varsity was nipped again by the
seven
of
the other 10 events they
Temple splashers , t he B SC f rosh
finishing
had
boys
second and third.
were defeated 60-29 by a strong
Bloomsburg had a meet schedTemple team that includes two allAmerican scholastic swimmers. It uled at Howard University of Washwas the first Husky pup loss to the ington , D.C., but a schedule error
caused the meet to be canceled.
young Owls.
The first home meet will pit the
Temple is using its present pool Huskies against Monmouth College
for the last season and the Huskies on Thursday.
are happy about that. It is narrow
The frosh squad is composed of
and filled high so that making tu rns but 8 boys this season. They won
is especially difficult; there is dan- 5 of tho 11 events. One was the
ger of kicking above the top of the 400-yard medley relay. Tim Shanor,
pool , as some of the Huskies did.
Pottstown , took both the 50 and
The big disappointment was in 100-yard freestyle, John Fryer,
the butterfly. Husky times had in- Bethlehem won the 200-yard butterdicated they could pile up points fly and John Elwood , Lovittown,
but they could only record a second the 50-yard freestyle.

An Axe In The Door
Is Worth Two In The Floor

The Bloomsburg Husky wrestlers
have been training since the last
week of September. The 13 weeks
of training before the first match
is longer than the entire season for
any of our spring sports or fall
sports.
They had an exciting season last
yea r with a 7-4-1 record in which
they pulled two big upsets by defeati ng East Stroudsburg 19-18 and
Southern Illinois 15-14. Most of the
boys th at participated last year
were inexperienced with the exception of two or three grapplers.
The highlight of last year 's team
was coining in as the top NA1A
.school in the eastern part of the
United States with Joe Gcrst placing second at 152 and Ronald Russo
placing second at 137. Ron Russo
put on an excellent performance
in the Olympic trials placing fourth,
higher than any athlete that ever
participated in any sport from
uioomsDurg.
Some of the other excellent boys
on the varsity team are : Wayne
Hoim , Senior , 123 lb., placed second
in the state confe rence and sixth
in the NA1A at 115; Richard Lepley, Junior , who wrestled most of
the season at 145; Arnold Thompson , Junior , who wrestled varsity
at 160; Jim Wallace , Junior , who
wrestled varsity at 145; Arnold
Thompson , Junior, who wrestled
vars ity at 160; Jim Wallace , Junior,
who wrestled varsity at 167 ; John
Stutzinan , Junior , w h o wres tl ed f ur
varsity 187 until receivin g an elbow
injury; Jim Colemun , J unior , who
wrostJed 177, placed third in the
state college conference; and Bob
J anet , Senior , wh o wrestled HWT.
Keith Taylor has returned ufter
two years of abs ence and will be
competin g for the U5 lb. class.
Koith wiin runnor-up in tho state ' s
in I 960. JnmoH Owen placed in the
stato college conference last your
at 187,
Sophomores who look extremely
promisin g arc : 115-Mike Shull; 123-

and a basket by Moyer then put
SCC in front 76-74.
With only 1:16 showing on the
clock Yanchek rebounded a shot by
Bob Snyder and put the ball in the
basket to tie the score. Palmer Toto then drew a foul and completed
the free throw to give the Huskies
a 77-76 lead with only 16 seconds
remaining in the game.
SSC's Ron Finley received the inbounds pass, dribbled the length
of the court, and drove for a shot
which went in with only 4 seconds
left. A desperation shot by the
Huskies hit the rim and the Raiders left the court with a one point
victory.

Larry Sones; 130-Wayne Smythe
and John Weiss; 145-Russ Scheuren; 177-Vincent Christina; and
HWT-J ames McCue.
Their first test was last Saturday
and most of the boys are in excellent condition with the exception
of John Stulzman and James McCue, who were out for football. Jim
Owen is recovering from an ankle
injury, and Vincent Christina is recovering from pneumonia.
They have an excellent schedule ,
and it should be another exciting
year for wrestling. The teams that
they defeated last week, Ashland
College f rom Ashland, Ohio, had an
11-1 record defeating Waynesburg,
who defeated us in a dual meet.
Appalachian returned from North
Carolina with an 8-3-1 record, and
they drew with our squad last year.
Old Dominion from Norfolk, Virginia, is the champion from their
conference, and they finished last
season with a 10-2 record .

Freshmen Defeat
Bucknell & SSC
BSC's fr esh man baske t ball t eam
opened the 68-69 season with two
convincing victories over Bucknell
and Shippensburg last week.
P au l Kuhn and Howard J ohnson
led the Husky Pups to an openin g
game 75-81 win over Bucknell.
With Johnson scoring 7 straight
points early in tho first half and
t he H u skies em p loying a tou gh
man-to-man dofonse , the Pu ps went
out to a 35 to 25 ha lftlmo lead.
The second half wan all BSC.
Th ey widened their lead consistently and led by 18 points with 1:20
lef t In the game.
Kuhn, u graduate of Leb anon
C atholic , scored 14 points In the
first half and dro pped in 12 In the
second half for a game high of 26

WCSC
F.G.
Player
8
Founds
7
Brown
4
Hauer
4
Greenwood
4
Schuster
4
Bower
4
Nagle
4
Holland
1
Mackay
40

F.T. Tot.
1-1 17
2-5 16
4-8 12
3-4
11
3-3 11
1-4
9
1-1
9

8

2
15-26 97

SSC

F.G. F.T. Tot.
Player
4-8 18
Finley . . . . , . , , . 7
6
4-4
16
Moyer
5
3-4
13
Morrow
6
0-2
12
Smith
5
1-1
1
1
Snare
2
4-5
8
Parowski
31

16-24 78

Chessmen Defeat
Mnhlenbe rg S-,0
The BSC Chess Team shut out
Muhlenberg 5-0 in a recent home
match to take a slim lead in the
Eastern Pa. College Chess League.
If two teams finish with identical
won-lost records, the championship
is decided by the number of individual board victories, which
means that Lehigh University, who
beat Muhlenberg 4 1/2-1/is , has fallen
half a point behind in the standings.

The visitors could field only four
men , so anchor man Dave Shaeffer
had to settle for his win by forfeit.
H owev er, no matter what his results may be, Dave cont ribut es t o
t h e team 's success in every mat ch.
As the only freshman on the team ,
he does a l l th e m enial chores and
lu gs th e eq ui p ment from place t o
place. Class of '73 , watch out—
Dave will be in charge of recruiting !
T he rest of the H usk y R ooks, Len
Thomas , C arl Nauroth , K en Drake
and Dennis Ply met t e, had littl e
trouble with John Wa gner , James
Fister , John Berezny, and Bill
St auffer of the Muhl en b erg sq ua d .
A match with the Lewisb urg pris-

on t eam , postponed from an earlie r

date, was sched uled for Dec. 8, and
Dickinson C olle ge comes to BSC for
a match the following Satu rday.

points , Johnson contributed
22
points as the scoring duo accounted
for 48 of the Huskies 75 points.
In their second game of the season , the Frosh rolled to their second win with an 80-87 win over
Shippens burg.
, Afte r 15 minutes of tho first half
it was still anybody ' s ball game , but
the Husk ies, loadin g by 5 at that
p oint , moved out to a 37-22 lead as
the Bab y Raiders hit a cold shooting spell late In the half.
Shlppensb ur g pulled to within
nine points midway thr ough tho
second half , but Joo Dudock the n
poure d in 10 of his game high 18
points to Ice tho game for tho Pups,

AGAC Educati on Program



me American ovuid oi Authors
ana computers (,/Uj nO Has lrunaied a stuueai euucaium prugiaui
ueMgneu io reacn a&pning auuiuia

uiiu cuui tJoaeib OI on t j y t i a \ji lUUaiu

vma lmonuauou auuui me new
Vvond ui songwrunig uiey will ue
entering , me program is servicing
conege music uepai Uiienu. uiruugnuui me country wnn free mloi uialion auout me practical business
aspects oi pruiessionai songwuung,
mciuuin g information aoout tne
vaiuaoie rights to which songwriters are entitled when placing a
song with a publisher , how to receive full payment lor their woik ,
and what to look for in a contract.
In connection with the program ,
AGAC has completed two radio
shows on "Music—An Art and a
Business" which they have made
available to AM , FM , and college
radio stations. The first program
covers the jazz field , with the panel
consisting of moderator John Lewis
of the Modern Jazz Quartet , Columbia's A&R Director John Hammond ,
AGAC Royalties Administrator John
Carter , and noted composer , pian-

i Does

I

|CONSUMER
REPORTS
fI have
anything to

I say to the student?
1 You bet it does!

1
11

ist, and recordin g artist. The second
program deals with the music business as it applies to the Nashville
scene. It is moderated by John
Mur divant , and panel members include: Billy Edd Wheeler , United
Artists music mana ger in Nashville
who is also a writer and a Kapp
artist ; Nashville Capitol A&R man
and songwriter Billy Graves , who is
on the Nashville Steerin g Committee of AGAC ; Thomas Wayne , artist, writer and engineer who is
A&R producer for Starda y; and
Larry Lee, well-known writer who
heads up AGAC in Nashville. Future AGAC panel shows are being
set up to cover serious music, musical theater , films, TV> and rock.
Another segment of the AGAC
student education pro gr am is a series of seminars at various colleges
across the country where established members of the Guild , notables such as Ernest Gold and Henry
Mancini , appear before student
group s and convey their thou ghts ,
advice and experience to fledgling
writers.
Students or schools interested in
more detailed information about
AGAC and its many programs for
young writers may address their inquiries to the Pu blic Relations Office of the American Guild of Authors and Composers , 50 West 57th
Street , New York , N.Y.

|
I



C


784-2561

i

486 W. MAIN ST.
Jj

3

I..IU....i.

l
i
u
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
;
S

I
I
{

Fri. 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.
Closed W»dn»sday

4llltlll(llllllllllll,lllllllll(llllllllllllll1lllllll

mm

*lllllllltlll(ttlll1lltllll

i
I
I

Fine J ewelry
and
Repairing

}

|
§

Your J eweler Away from Home
Bloomsburo 1
5 W. Main St.

j

IIIIIHIIIItlllHIIIIIHMIIIIIIIMIIHIIHIIIIHIIIIItlMIIIIIIUIIl
*tlllUtllllllllll(llll«llllltlllltll

HB

*lllllltllllllllllllllltlllll«l

^

:

3

I

|Merry Christmas shopping at The STUDIO I

., ,

a gift for anyone—a tt any pric e

lllllllllll>llllltlllllttllltt1tl

SHOP

VOLKSWAGEN

ttt. 11/15
SfUNSGROVE, PA.
743-1314

/?

|
::

g9 £ ^
^

EUDORA' S
Corset & Lingerie
Shop
Come in an d
browse —

where you are
always welcome.

The Scott caps and gowns, marketed through its DTI subsidiary,
are available in white , black , blue
and red. They match up in looks
with the regular outfits because of
the tailoring; shirred sleeves, cloth
bindings , and pleated front and
back. The mortar-boards are complete with a white nylon tassel.
Manufactured of 100 per cent
rayon , they are said to be lint and
static-free , as well as fire-retardant.
Through use of special measurement cards , the gowns can be almost custom-fitted.
erature. Althou gh no definite list
has been formed yet, some of the
writers studied will probably include James Bald-win, Herbert Gold,
and Leroi Jones.
In addition to the section on
Negro literature , time will also be
devoted to contemporary
white
authors who will include £. B.
White and James Thurber. As a
result of these chan ges, the course
will now concentrate on more varied genre: novel, short story, and
essay. Th e f ormer structure of the
course placed emphasis on essays
in American philosophy and criticism.

=

Statistics Prove:

f ^K/l ^

A 10c bag of

Vw y
^ lAFlC Jl *
Wise Potato Chips ^-^ vY f Jt.

fits between two classes

potato chi ps

Plan your financing for next semester,

BLOOM
BOWL

1

*l*IHIt*tl *ttt *t»llllltttttlll«lllllltttttHII«ll»llllllllt«lll>IIUIIIII«tlllUIUUtlll«lllllt«lttll«llllltll»t

Becker Motor Co.

Phone: AT6-4379 or
473-9408

|

\ Harry Logan i

Mon. 1

;

Union Scale

thonm

More than 2400 Unive rsity of
Cincinnati graduates wore disposable caps and gowns at their June
grad uation ceremonies , and the
University of Massachusetts also
used disposable outfits , along with
other colleges and high schools,
Klein said.

The course , English 386—Later
American Prose , which will be offered durin g the sprin g semester, is
currently undergoing revision. The
catalog description of the course
states that it "covers representative
writers of the late 19th Century to
the present... (and ) stresses political , social, and artistic milieu. "
In order to reflect and study the
large amount of creditable literature written by American Negro
authors , it has been decided to devote approximately one half of the
course to contemp&rary Negro lit-

"Transparent Mirage "

HALLMARK CARDS
GIFTS

And, of course, school officials
are relieved of the extra-curricular
duty of processing, handling and
storing a few hundred caps and
gowns.

Eng, 386
Emphasizes
Negro Lit

Rock & Roll Group
Available

|

Tues.
.
Q
_.
9 a.m. - 6 p.m.
>
Thurs. j
Sal.

MOO.

A study of the development of
American education in the perspective of history. The focus is
upon the variety of forces—social ,
political , economic, religious , intellectual — which have shaped
the educational system, and emphasis is placed upon a critical
examination of primary source
materials .
Ed. 394 - Education in Urban Society.
A careful and systematic study of
the problems of education in urban setting. An analysis of conditions of life in urban society
with special reference to social
and economic deprivation as they
relate to education. Curriculum
problems resulting from socialtechnological and cultural upheaval. The course is primarily
designed for students planning to
teach in urban schools.

BLOOMSBURG,PA.

cloth outfit , Klein claimed, and
there is no need for a deposit fee.
Another
time-consuming and
frustration chore—to both the graduates and the school administrators
—which is eliminated Klein says, is
the necessity of checking in and
checking out the rental outfits.
When the graduate gets his diploma , he is finished; he doesn't
have to worry about standing in
line for 30 or 40 minutes to turn in
his rental outfit in order to get
back his $15 deposit.

Twenty some years from now
middle-aged fathers and mothers
may be digging out old graduation
outfits from dust y attic storage
spaces.
With a little pulling-in of the
stomach and standin g up straighter , chances are the outfits will look
just as good then as they do n o w . . .
even though they are inexpensive
disposable "pape r " caps and gowns
from Scott Paper Co. .
The "throw-away " caps and gowns
that nobody throws away are fast
replacing conventional cloth cap
and gown rentals at many of the
country 's universities , colleges, and
high schools, according to Scott
Pa per.
And , the souvenir aspect of the
disposable caps and gowns is only
one reason for their growing popularity, according to Thomas W.
Klein , Scott vice president and
president of the company 's Disposable Textiles, Inc. subsidiary.
The cap and gown the student
keeps costs no more than the average $5 rental fee for a returnable

Ed. 392 - Historical and Intellectual
Foundations of American Educa-

18 West Main Street

m, ..urn

COLLEY BARBER
SHOP

As an alte rnative approach to the
required , proiessional education
course, Ed. 393—Social f oundations of Education , two additional
courses have been scheduled tentatively for the fail semester , 1969.
students may select eithe r Ed. 392
—Historical and mteuectuai Foundations of Education or Ed. 394—
Education iu Urban society as a
substitute for Ed. 393 on the 1969
' Cours e Survey Card ," which is included in the advance registration
materials.
Course descriptions , as they will
appear in the new college catalog
are as follows:

Miller Office
Suppl y Co.

See the current issue
1
for detailed reports on
|
I
IGUITARS • PORTABLE
|
I ELECTRIC TYPEWRITERS - f
I RECORD CHANGERS •
|
I
I SCOTCHES

I

Toss - Away Caps & Gowns

Ed."393 Supplemented

JV
tlNEBS
NATIONAL BANK

©

WAFFLE
GRILLE

FARMERS NATIONAL OFFICE

• BLOOMSBURG , PA.

^^^^^^^^^^^

H^nni |inii |pi|jjj LM^ ..

|

¦

I

I

The
Texas

i

WHERE DAD
TOOK HIS GIRL
Bloomsburg

^M^M^fe^K^ M^M^M^te^b^fc^ta^b^B^to^M^te^B^*^*^*^* ^
*
^
1

Seniors and
Graduate Stud ents
Career hunt with 90 of the finest companies

havin g ope rations located In the New Jersey /New
York metropo litan area. On December 26-27 at the
Marriott Mo t or Hotel , Intersec tion of Garden State
Parkwa y and Route 80, Sad d le Brook , New Jerse y.
For mo re details , Includin g a listing of sponsoring comp anies , see your college placemen t
dire cto r or w rite to the non-profit sponsor of the
second annu al "Career -In " : Industrial Relations
Associat ion of Bergen County, P. O. Box 533,
Saddle Brook , New Jersey 07662.

',

'Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Berwick Knittin g Mills

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

_ FUQ~

HH ^^^^ H^^^^^ R^^H^^H^H||P|||HMpMMMffl ^W^r ^P^ Tinil™ "Illl(I IIIWfllN

^^^ MBffifiB
¦w
r
HBjBJBJRHHISHpfflrliM pP^*1"1

"WHMHri ^^ W^^^^^^^

I I I 11 ' I'' '" bmrnMuLg ^^ImM

m^^ HP^piHi I

^^V>nNMBMMnUmBf|s

^BJPJnM ^inSjnMSflp|||BjBjn|j

^nnMHOHHfl P|HPIMi

* SWEATERS (Nation al Brands)
* LADIES KNIT SUITS & DRESSES
* BERMUDA SHORTS . SLACK SUITS
* MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
* BATHING SUITS
Buy Where They Are Made —

At "Fact ory-to-You " Prices !

230 S. POPLAR ST., BERWICK

(ONE BLOCK OFF RT. 1 1 — BEHIND SHOPPING CENTER)
HOURti 9*S Doll y / Thun. ft Frl . 9 o.m. -» p.m.

CORN ER
LUNCH
Tasty Home
Cooking
Fr§9 Dilhary Serv/ct

OPEN 24 HRS.

One Block Above
Magee 'i Mill s
784-4117
I

\

'

i
i
;

(JIR Cf Offers
tp oDs cf or Cf raos

k

~

over

6000

December 11 Library, room 35. Please attend.

interviews. One ambitious student
managed 27 which made him high
man for the year.
Officials of the IRA further stated
that they are earnestly seeking the
aid of College Placement Personnel
in this effort since the "Career-In"
offers an additional outlet to oncampus recruitment activities in
the placement of college seniors
and graduates.
A partial list of the participating
companies includes: Aetna Life &
Casualty Company; The Bendix
Corporation; Curtiss-Wright Corporation; Ford Motor Company;
Geigy Chemicals Corp.; Merck &
Co., Inc.; Western Electric Company, Inc. and Western Union.
Students who wish to attend this
year's "Career-In" may contact
their college placement directors
for information on the two day program.

titles in stock

\ f
H
I|

WE WILL SPECIAL ORDER

^»~*

^^^ E=s===

Fast / EXPERT PRESSING

is our

Most Importan t Du ty.

;i

\

FETTERMAN'S

SHOPPING CENTER

i

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

f~

• CHANEL
• GUERLAIN

• FAB0RGE

FOOT OF COLLEGE HILL

Twenty Openings In Pennsylvania

BLOOMSBURG , PA.

For Information or Interview Appointment

• HELENA RUBENSTEIN
• DANA

P.O. Box 35
Cortland, Ohi o

784-2 104

SHUMAN'S WORLD TRAVEL


BLOOMSBURO



""

J

'

¦

' ¦

-

"v

NESPOLI
j ewelers

PHONI 784-3620

RESERVATIONS • TICKETS • TOURS • ETC.
All Airlines / Trains & Hotels HandM

• ELIZABETH AROEN

CREDIT MANAGER

Phone : MR. CLARK , District YMCA Executive

For All Your Travel Arrangements

• PRINCE MATCHABELII

WANTED: Responsible party to
take over low monthly payments
on a spinet piano. Can be seen
locall y.
Write:

*

37 EAST MAIN ST.

• LANVIN

FOR SALE: Spine t Piano

Detached Worker Positions Available.



Prescription Specialist

^

YMCA Group Work • Ph ysical Education
Business Administration , Camping, Youth Work and

• Qualit y •

MAIN ft IRON STREETS

Phone 784-6560

Opportunities For Grad uating Seniors

Barbe r Shop

- -*

Eppley 's
Pharmacy

Be
fashionable

1

TWO WEEKS AT THE LONDON THEATRE — In cluding . . .
Air Far* , Ac commodation!, Thta lr* Ticket * "and much mor e."

• MAX FACTOR

Qrttn Stamp *
i-u-i j -

r j _ - r i - _ _ - j -i.-

Call Ut or Stop In NOW for Any Information

..

Charlie ' s

**
Zr
-¦ —

iJlMMBILlflEwM " 'ft

¦¦'
' ; V ^aai3
rim Hi^^'t ^^^^^
g^^ HflMj ^W^^"'
^BP^ff
* 1 *-mHP^^^^^

^^^^^^^^^^^

PIZZA
&

i ' ¦*&*
" '
i*
¦- - (•>"" • ' ' *'*^^^^^^^K^^E^*
-;, fw>'it^Ji t j BBBHJilfli Mn
f- Vwii.

^^^ E^^H '

HOAGIES

''

Open 'til 12:00 p.m.
Closed 1130 to 3:00 p.m.
Every Day But Friday

IV^^ |^J |^B

'^d^*
*^^^^^ bB99t^3^^
. _ ^^ 2^ 5

IV*^ JKL .-—^^^ 3Sph2^5S5hRSS^^^S

FREE DELIVERY
5 to 7

SIMM 'S JEWELERS
Visit Our Showroo m ...

130 East Mai n Stre et

8.30 to 11.30

Phone 764-4292

v

y

.

_

t

f


.,-

r

_

j /

- .-

_i

-

I

CWuk-

I

I}

s
^i^rD^o
vy
'
FLOWER
^S^
S

\

A

BLOOMSBURG

i

v

S ay Jnerri j Ukrlstmas

^

127 W. Main

¦j ., .
i .
i .
i _i .
i

JV

I

Regular and King Slit
HOAOIES

Blooinsburg

for a prettier You

on Travoll
'- .- .
.
i. i

¦
V '" i' tf^KyflnH ' ' • t"' ; ^K'''
I- ¦& ^H*VN^I p
^B J
ljw*{." ^^ K2^ M* '^^
__.** ***

25 I. Main St., ¦LOOMSBURG

-i
.-h U
.
V

SHOP

AT

j
\

Irc us ' I

Thli win ter wt oflftf oath w *k LONDON SUPER SHOW TOURS — from $300

• COTY

ju

. . . on the premises

¦

6

34 E. MAIN and SCOTTTOWN

iij.j.
ii-1 r j i.i..
u
ij
ii
S.

=^

.

Offers . . .

41

GUS ED1VAN Manager

~

^^^^=

There is one hitch. Five or six
more traveling companions are
needed to justify the program ,
therefore anyone who can scrape
up $800 and wants to earn from
3-6 credits (three whether he
speaks French or not because there
is a course for beginners) please
contact Professor Smithner immediately, Ext. 329.
You have nothing to lose but your
provincialism.

Conveniently Located at 124 E. MAIN ST.

Compounding of
Prescriptions

¦

_,__

route of Madrid. The plan is to accompany their Spanish colleagues ,
under the direction of Dr. Tonolo ,
to Madrid where the French and
Spanish travelers will spend two
days sight-seeing. Then the Francophiles will proceed North across
the Pyrenees mountains to the
French city of Pau. Dr. Smithner
will supervise the course work in
France and travel with the Bloomsburgers to such places as Biarritz *
on the Atlantic and Montpellier on
the Mediterranean coast of France.
As a reward for the faithful study
and cultural absorption , the group,
which will have to be fifteen in
number if the tour is to take place
at all , will then proceed to Paris
to exhaust its remaining funds in
the "city of light."

CAMPUS CLEANERS & LAUNDERERS

"The Stores of Service "

- ...»... -

"\ f
«4
[_[_

A DIVISION OF
READER'S DIGEST SALES » SERVICES. INC.
36O Lexington Ave.. New York . N.Y. 1OQ17

F= ^

i

?

Rea and Derick

s -~

BY

The team of Jack Carney and
Palmer Toto recently "pooled"
their efforts to give Sigma Iota
Omega a first place in the I.F.C.
pool tournament held at Bob's Billiards. Palmer and Jack had a combined total of 896 (out of a possible 900), while Phi Sigma Xi nosed
out Delta Omega Chi for second
place by a slim 5 balls.
At the end of four events, Delta
Omega Chi is in first place with 26
points. Sigma Iota Omega and Phi
Sigma Xi are tied for second with
22 points.
The I.F.C. competition is far from
over with many sports yet to come.
Basketball, bowling, badminton ,
and tug-of-war are in the near future.

¦

Henri e's Card
and Book Nook

1

Jan. 17, 10 a.m.— Scotch Plains—
Fanwood Public School, Scotch
Plains, N.J. (Elem: Art, Miteic.
Jr. Hi.: Math . Sr. Hi.: Eng. Sp.
Ed.—Jr. Hi. Educable. January
[68-69 ] $6500.

SI0 Team
Pool Champs

¦

Greeting Cards
? ~~

Jan. 14, 2 p.m.— Newark Valley
Central School, Newark Valley,
N.Y. (Elem; Second Bus; Sp Ed) .

Eight French students at BSC

are zealously looking f orward to a
voy age to France by the circuitous

Call: (717) 421-4080, Ext. 234 for
information.

Jan. 10, 10 a.m.—Dist. Recruitment
Coordinator, Internal Revenue
Service, U.S. Treasury Dept.,
Philadelphia, Penna.

j ^
t) National Educational Advertisin g Services " yjft
"^jf

See Us for Your
Book Needs

i

Jan. 9, 10 a.m.—Plainfield Sch. Dis-.
trict, Plainfield , N.J. (Sr. High :
Math ; Jan. 1969 Elem: Prira . &:
Intern. All areas in Sept. 1969).

REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL. ADVERTISING

_^ k

MASK 8, ZANY AND ALPHA PSI
OMEGA present "A Funny Thing
Happened On the Way to the
Forum." Book by: Burt Shevelove
& Larry Gelbart. Music & Lyr ics
by. Stephen Sondheim. Thursday,
Friday and Saturday—December
12 , 13 and 14. College Auditorium,8 p.m. Specia! Student Rates.

Dec. 13, 2:00 p.m.— Queen Anne'si
County Bd. of Ed., Centrevilh,
Md. (BUs. [Shtd . & Typ.]; 11thi
January; $6000. )

Jan. 13, 9 a.m.—Dade County Public Schools, 1410 N.E. 2nd Ave.,
Miami, Fla. (All areas—Sept.
'69).

Students P lan
Visit To France

Academic Affairs Council ,
E.S.S.C. Speech Dept.

Dec. 12, 9 a.m.—Hazleton Area Sch.
Dist., H azleton, Pa. (Jan: Elem.
1st, 2nd, 3rd; 4-5-6 departmental.
Sept.: All elem. grades.)

tend an important meeting on

The Industrial Relations Association of Bergen County, has announced its second annual "Careerin" to be held December 26 and 27
at the Marriott Motor Hotel at the
intersection of Route 80 and the[
Garden State Parkway.
The idea behind the "Career-In"
is to bring together college seniors'
and graduates and corporate recruiters under one roof. This year,
over 90 national companies will be
on hand to interview an anticipated
2000 college seniors and graduates
home for Christmas vacation. Last
year 56 major companies participated, Interviewing more than 1,400
interested young men and women.
Records of the Industrial Relations Association indicate that in
1967 the average student participated in as many as ten corporate

BOOKS

Campus Interv iews...

All Spanish Students must at-

\

The home of Petal Perfect g ifts .
CORNER EAST & THIRD STS.

|

J

jf c
784-4406

ft