rdunkelb
Wed, 05/01/2024 - 17:26
Edited Text
Students Co mment:
Sched ule Cha nges
By BARB WANCHISEN
Standing in the drop / add line
that stretched down the hall of
Centennial Gym , Don Miers said
"Its been this way for four years.
They 're not going to do
anything. " Yet . ins ide the
drop/ add office, Mr. Bunge said ,
"We Jhave made considerable
improvements in the last 4 or ¦5
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years ."
It doesn't make much difference who is right. If you had to
stand in that long line, or even if
you Know someone who did , then
you know there 's a problem .
I had a chance to ask some of
the students in line how.they feel
about the situation. Gary Hutchinson stated , "If you like
waiting in line it's okay." Or as
Walt Woolbaugh said , "I was
here 3 hours the other day and
didn ' t get in. "
Others became quite sarcas tic,
calling the system "screw ed up"
and the people workin g in the
office "subhumanal life forms. "
Steve McClellan asked , "Why do
they need.an hour and a half for
Lado , the Yugoslave National Dance and Folk Ensemble , will be presented Thursda y/ January 25
at 8:15 p.m. in BSC's Haas Center by the Civic Music Association.
The LADO compan y had its premiere in the Western Hemisphere in 1967 when it appea red at the
Montrea l Expo '47.
.
LADO presents folk dances and son gs from all parts of Yugoslavia and the Balkan count ri es , using
more than 500 colo rfu l costumes displa ying a wide range of ethnic origins/ LADO presents an evenin g
of enjoyment
.
This present tour of the LADO compan y is its third in the United States and will ta ke the troupe on a
month' s tour which will include New York , Pittsbur gh, Chicago , Milwaukee , Memphis and Ann
Arbor .
lunch? "
"Why the hell don't they have
more people working?" This
seemed to be th e general opinion
among the students. Vanessa .
Miller said, "This could have
been avoided by hiring more
people and havin g more rooms. "
Or Tom O'Donnell , "Not 4 people
to ha ndle an enrol lment of 4800."
It' s not just the fact that you
face waiting in an unbelievabl y
long line, but as Donna Wagner
admitted , "It' s a pain tr ying to
find the time to stand in line." .
Surprisi ngly , a number of
students were very apathetic
about this situation. . Robin '
Ratushn y said , "What can you do
about it? You just have to put up
with it. " Or as Ernie Fuce lla
admitted , "I don't have a better
solution. "
cut even tnougn me majority oi
wk
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students were disgusted about
the whole thing, they did come up
with some practica l solutions.
Angela Scaran tino said , "I
thought maybe they should have
(continued on page three )
Electricians, Woodrock
discussed at council
by Karen Keinard
A t the new year 's first meeting
of College Council Monday night ,
p roblems w it h p a yment of
electric ians were discussed a long
with the Woodrock project , and
the current restrictions policy in
the departments of Sp ecial
Education and Communication
Disorders. This last item was set
aside and discussed at the Senate
meeting yesterday , the results of
which will be availabl e in
Friday 's issue.
hand a t a t hlet ic events and other held at the same time.
studen t act ivit ies, have recentl y There was some discussion on
asked for $20.00 a night for each
event ($4.00 an hr. for a minimum
of 5 hrs. ) over their present ra te
of $11.00, which is $2.75 for four
hours . College Council voted to
make the electricians a counter
of f er of $4 .00 an hour for a
minimum of four hours ( $16.00)
which is what the union contract
calls for . An amendment was
then made statin g tha t only one
electrician will be requisitioned
ELECTRICIAN PROBLEMS
the building in the case that
The electricians that . are on for
two or more athletic events are
W ork-Load Cited in
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both semesters. In one semester ,
he does not hav e to prepare for
more than 3 different courses ."
The problem exists because the
state and APSCUF / PAHE can 't
seem to agree over a specific
point in the contra ct. It states
that the two parti es are to work
out the conditi ons under which a
greater number of prepar ations
can be assigned and the , com*
pensation to be paid for these
A contract betwee n AIV
8GUF/ PAH E and the state
signed In September , 107*,Stipulated tna t ;'a J acj ilt*
member 's norma l teachin g load
canndt exceed 1.4 credits in one
semester and 24 credi ts during,
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BSC Students
Help Children
adjust . the Instr uctor's schedu le.
This semester tha t excuse
cannot be used so some in.structors have had to schedule
less courses in order to comply
with the contract. This may have
caused the closing of some
courses or sections of courses.
The Child-Help Program offers Gar y Fetzer coordinated thiB "
an opportunity to Inter ested BSC program and work ing with him
student s to do volunteer work are Sharon Ouida (AWS), Sandy
with underprivilege d youngsters Schenck (SPSEA ) and Drew
In the elementary and secondar y Toborowsk l. Presentl y ther e are
How and when AP» ~ grades , The volun teer takes the 50 volunteers In Bloomsburg and
SCUF/ PAHE and the state can child to movies and ball games the progra m is expanding to
reach a working agreement is a and becomes his WendT For Include ..Berwick and other
good question. The bulletin ? example , in December a outlying areas. Any student that
Chr istmas parly was held and
Last semester some faculty ^St Mt ^^^ PAIffli^
was
terme d by partlcip ants.as a
had to prepare for more courses working for usr the students , In
great
success. J{ Is thro ugh opthan stipulated and therefore order to provide the best possible
portunities
sucji *s thew that '
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violitid th¥ T^irefehti , e because . thew wasn't time to *. 'K •¦ f( ;'
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Pianist John Couch performed In Carver Auditoriu m Sunday
. nite. Included in his progra m were Two Etudes by Liszt and two
Dances of Marom.ek .
IP. WMf Photo )
' Contract Problems
In the process of changing
schedules , stude nts have noticed
that classes in Which they wanted
to enroll this semester were
closed. In a recent bulletin , Dr.
Keller , chairman of the APSCUF/ PAHE negotiati ons
team , (the Association of State
College
and
University
'
Faculties Pennsylvania .Association for Higher , Education ) had attempte d to
explain why this condition exists.
'
why the electricians were
needed , but it was pointed out by
Dean Norton that an electrician
should be on hand in case of an
emergency. It was also pointed
out that $16 a night was not a
lar ge sum , as they could make
more on the open market if they
so-desired.
.
A quick decision was needed
due to the upcoming events that
might need an electrician , including BNE , whose contract
( continued on page eight)
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owns a car who is interested in
helping the Child-Help,Pro gram
should con^aqt Gary Pefzer at
389-3516 ' tor Information and
AMi&mM
editoria l
«
The beginning of a new
semester brings another round of
drop/add . If you ask a- student,
you get the usual curses and
mutterings. If you ask the
Registrar, you get more mutterings, but these in defense of
the system. But no matter who's
looking at the whole thing, they
can all agree that something's
wrong and should be changed.
I've heard people wish that
they could go back to the old
system, where you do your own
scheduling, but the Registrar
says that's impossible. That
would be "like going back to
horses and buggies".
So how about a suggestion?
There have been a great many
made so here's one more for the
record : what if drop / add were
Luzerne Hall
Another View
changed from one complex,
operation run solely by the
Registrar to a series of smaller
by Dale Alexander
operations run by each departWalking down the street or
ment? It would force the student sitting at a table in the Union or in
to do a lot more running around , just plain everyday gossip one
but a lot less standing in line.' might hear many different things
Also, if exceptions had to be being said about BSC's first co-ed
made, they could be made with dorm , Luzerne. I would like to
the permission of the professor in express my feelings and share
question and the chairman of the my experience concerning
department.
. Luzerne in the hope that it might
give the campus as a whole a
mis system wuuiu mean mure
work for each department , but it broader perspective.
What is a co-ed dorm, one
would lessen the burden for the
student and the Registrar. might ask? Simply, it is a
Students and secretaries could be
trained to control each department's registration.
So why not? Or better yet,
who's got a better suggestion?
Sue Sprague
To the Editor :
A TRIBUTE TO A WHITE
"CONSERVATIVE"
WHO
HELPED BLACKS, AND ALL
OF US.,
.Back in, I believe, 1969, after
H.E.W. had accused Pa. of
maintaining a "segregated State
College System", the Dept. of Ed.
set up programs at the "White
only" State Colleges for the
Who or what will the new recruitment of blacks.
messiah be? A question that I
At BJoomsburg the man put in
can't honestly answer. I can point charge of the recruiting program
out where it's germinating. It's in was Prof . Lee Aumiller (who died
the adolescent tank. The twelve- on January 5, 1973).
year-olds will make the new
Trustees, some faculty, and
messiah.
many townspeople expressed
We will become plagued with dismay at the idea of any inthe newcomer like another crease in the number of blacks in
generation despised the Beatles. the town of Bloomsburg,
And the new messiah will make predicting that they would bring
music which, like that of the very with them crime, addiction, and
early Beatles, is not all that good. other problems from the ghetto.
The pivot point will be the
In the face of this "hometown"
inherent talent that the new artist discouragement Lee worked very
will most likely possess.
strenuously and the number of
You might guess that the new blacks on campus increased
talent would be David Bowie. Not three or four times, giving them
likely; he's on the fringes of our enough numbers so that they
generation . Nor will it lie in could
man
their
own
jazz. Jazz has been too eclectic organizations and thereby gain
and intellectualized lately for positions of authority on the
adolescent consumption.
campus.
Right now rock is going
Lee was always disappointed
through a period of stolen riffs that it seemed impossible for him
and ready mades. Imitation is to increase through recruitment
rife in the scene. A really new the number beyond the level he
talent hasn't appeared in at least reached , but it wasn't his fault
three years. Bowie has been that , among other reasons, the
around for about four , likewise recruitment of blacks and other
with Rod Stewart. Of Loggins and poor students was blocked by
Messina , Messina played with repeated rises in tuition and by
Buffalo Springfield and Poco. the failure of the GSA to build
Kenny Loggins was with the Nitty dormitories, which forced up
Gritty Dirt Band. Even Cat rents in the town of Bloomsburg
Stevens has been around for at making it impossible for poor
least five years. (Anyone students (in both senses) to live
remember "New Masters"?)
away from their homes in the
So we 're slumping. We cities.
probably will for a few years.
I hadn 't talked to Lee much in
Even "Creem " magazine has the last year , so I don 't know
admitted that this year hasn't
the new messiah , "Rock is dead!
been particularly brilliant.
Long
live Rock!"
I hope I can ride out the slump.
For
the time being, I'll settle
Even more, I hope that I can see
for
the
best of what's out.
far enough to yell at the onset of
Lett er
Gettin g By
7O's Rock
by Joe Miklos
Rock. Where's it going?
Waiting for the new Messiah, is
the direction. Rock needs its
pinball wizard. If you want to
stretch a point, Townsend's idea
of a Messiah seems to indicate a
sort of cycle in the rock scene,
with Tommy as the rockin' heartthrob of millions. The time is
right, ripening.
Sometime in the very late
fifties and early sixties, rock hit
it's first slump. A thousand
Bobbies and Frankies were
slapping down process records,
loaded with bad vocals, instrumental
tracks
and
everything else. Elvis was
making a run of Grade B films —
he sold out. Rockabilly for all
intents and purposes was dead.
Ah, thf Beatles, first saviours
of rock n' roll. Ever notice that
people in their early and middle
twenties despised the Moptops?
They were SIN. The screaming
fourteen-year-olds loved them.
Even the guys. In that lax period
between the early rockers and
the Beatles, a lost generation
grasped the mores of those who
went before. They buried
themselves.
Here we are in the Second
Slump, between the blue we once
knew . For the first time rock has
critics and a few of us have
already been screaming DEATH.
I've said it, and now I admit I
jumped the gun. It is indeed a
slump that music is experiencing. If rock is the hardy
medium it seems to be, we are in
the first few years of a new dead
season . It even seems that a new
lost generation is in the making.
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building wherein both men and
women reside. It is a place where
guys pass gals on the stairs or
ride with them in an elevator
without staring at them as if they
were pieces of candy. It is a place
where a girl washes her bra and
panties beside a guy putting his
socks and jock into the dryer. A
co-ed dorm is a place where men
can walk down the hall on a
women's floor and see females
when they are stripped of their
make-up or perhaps the girl
might even pose a grim
resemblance to Medusa as they
pass by with their hair in curlers.
(Rather shatters the high school
image of pretty Suzie always so
pretty.)
It is a place where TV rooms
are congested with both men and
women as opposed to an all-male
audience as is the case in Elwell
Hall. It is a place where men and
women live together as people —
where they interact on an
everyday basis as human beings
— subject to being together not
only as male and female, but as
persons.
Letters to the editor are an
It is a place where "maybe" a
expressi on of the individua l
guy might meet a girl as she's
writer 's opinion and do not
buying cigarettes and he's getnecessarily reflect the views
ting chocolate milk and they,
of the newspaper. All letters
recognizing each other as people
they vaguely know ; there is a
, must be signed , names will be
withheld upon request. The
possibility that they might start a
M&G reserves the right to
conversation which might lead
1 abridge
them to get to know each other
or withheld,
in
devoid of any social "male - meet
consulta ti on with the writer,
- female - on - a - date - pressure".
all letters over 400 word s in
length.
This, in turn, could be the
beginning of a real and lasting
whether he was aware of his relationship. I feel Luzerne is
success in achieving one of such a place where this
^ in the possibility becomes more
the other goals involved
recruitment program ; which probable.
success might have assuaged his Luzerne offers a ground floor
' disappointment in not being able study area where intercourse on
to bring more blacks to the , an academic level can be
maintained by the co-ed residents
camDus than he did.
He and the black students have until the early hours of the
been completely successful in morning with soft drinks and
.teaching Trustees, faculty, and candy available. In an adjacent
townspeople what sociologists area , men and women can play
and the NAACP have been together by shooting billiards or
preaching for years. That is, the utilizing the ping-pong table or
integration ( the spreading out of can share their musical interests
the black 10 it evenly among the and talents in the laundry room.
Luzerne is my home; where I
white majority ) makes blacks as
can
come into the lobby and
law abiding, if not more so, as
possibly
see a pretty female
whites when the pressures,
receptionist
on duty. A person
temptations , corruptions , and
imitative closeness of the ghetto with whom I can talk to, share
my troubles with , or laugh
are removed.
( continued on page three)
D. Porter
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THE MAROON AND GOLD
Editor-in-Chief
Susan L. Sprague
Managing Editor
Robert Oliver
News Edltor
KarenKelnard
Assistant News Editor
Barb Wanchlsen
Copy Editor
Valery O'Conne ll
Cartoonist
JohnStugrin
Contributing Editors
Frank Piizoll, Ji m Sachettl
Staff : Don Em, Joanne Linn, Janlne Watkins, Tim Bossard, Kathy Jos eph, Marty
Wenhold
Business Manager
Elaine Pongratz
OfflceMana ger
Ellen Doyle
Advertising Manager
Frank Lorah
Circulation Manager
Nancy Van Pelt
Photo g raphy Editor
Dan Maresh, Jr.
Photographers: Dale Alexander, Tom Dryburg, Pat White, Suzi White, Sue Oreef,
*
Mike Williams.
Advisor
Ken Hoffman
The M&G is located at 234 Waller, or call 389-3101. All copy mutt be submitted by
no later than 5:00 p.m. on Tuesdays and Sundays for the Frid ay and Wednesday
papers, respectively. The opinions voiced in th e columns and feature article s of
the M&G may not necessarily be sha red by the entire staff, but they are bound by
thei r duty to defend the right to voice them.
Fina l approval of all content res ts with the Editor-in-Chi ef.
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New Union
by Tim Bossard
What , the new college union is
not done yet?
According to John Mulka ,
Director of Student Activities,
ninety percent of it is complete.
What's keeping them?
Electric wire-splicinrg, mainly,
which is expected to be completed by April 1. Then the
General State Authority will
inspect it and, if everything is in
order , the place will be furnished
and in full operation during the
summer. Wha t will it be like?
I
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^¦^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ¦^¦¦^ ¦¦^i^MWMW^^BB^^^HMBWiMM^M
The Mahavishnu Orchestra on stage. They will appear on Feb. 22 in Haas Center for the Arts.
MovieReview
Diary of a Mad H-W
By Ti m Bos sa rd
If the opening credits hadn't
told me otherwise, I'd have sworn
the mixed up matriarch of the
title was directing Diary of a Mad
House wif e. The picture is
thoroughly schizoid. No sooner do
we finish a scene of hysterically
unthoughtful satire than we
plunge into a scene of mundanely
unincisive intimacy ; the cutting
is so frenetic , the camera angles
so endless, it seems there are no
less than three separate personalities perceiving the same
action ; the soundtrack is amplified to nerve-shattering
proportions with bells, shouts,
and general confusion. Almost
like Howard Hawks' Bedlam told
from the inside.
Alas, the director is not a
housewife, it's Frank Perry ; and ,
in case you missed it, the said
housewife turns out to be the
sanest person on screen. It seems
she only thinks she's crazy
because she doesn't feel loved by
her bitchy, bossy hubby or her
cool, unpossessfve "sex partner". You see, Mr. Perry is
trying to tell us that love is being
drowned out from our decadent,
money-worshipping society.
This isn't exactly an original
theme. Welles; Fellini and Antonioni, to name a few, have dealt
with it in the past. In fact., Perry
often seems to imitate Antonioni's crowd groupings, long
shots and "sterile" white
backgrounds. Instead of saying
something original and personal
on the subject, Perry is giving us
a watered-down , simplified
version of something someone
else has said.
So much for style. What about
subtlety? Carrie Snodgress takes
honors here. She plays a nobody
to the point that the character
Think back to last year and the
dates you had that somehow
always seemed to end up at your
local movie house. Think hard
enough , and you might recall that
while you were mulling over your
prospects for post-movie entanglements, there were things
going on up on the screen.
Recall any of them? Well we
here at the M&G were sitting
around trying to forget our postmovie entanglements , s o we
decided we 'd do an art i cle on t h e
movies instead. What we came
up with was a list of sorts based
on a poll of sorts of the ten best
movies of 1972. See if you agree.
In no particular order :
"Frenz y " — Alfred Hitchcock ' s thriller about a young
man with a penchant for raping,
then strangling pretty girls with
his necktie.
wowee-zowee directing by
Stanley Kubric.
"The Last Picture Show " —
Peter Bogdanovich's black and
white journey into the past to
witness the death of the 50's in a
small Texas town.
"Nicholas and Alexadra " —
Another time trip, this time to
witness the fall of the Romanov
dynasty in Russia as seen by the
last of the Romanov 's themselves.
"The Candida te" — Robert
Redford stars as a young,
idealistic politician who fights to
wi n a Senate seat an d save hi s
ideals from the corrupting in-
adaptation of the long-running
Broadway musical about a
Jewish milkman with too many
daughters and not enough money.
"Straw Dogs " — Sam
Peckinpah's mind-gripping story
about the violence in us all.
Dust i n H off man stars as the
mild-mannered mathematician
f orce d to take a sta nd a ga i nst a
drunken crowd bent on murder.
"Lady Sings the Blues" — The
life of Billie Holiday, "Lady
Day," one of th e most impressive
of jazz singers. Fine production
by Gamble and Huff , even better
act in g by D i ana Ross i n the lea d
role.
'•Clockwork Orange " —
Violence and punkdom in a
futuristic setting, with the same
treatment ? Well , the Pennsyl van i a De partment of Healt h,
i n coopera t ion wi th the Shamok i n
State Genera l Hos pi ta l , has
opened a f ree treatment center
f or venerea l diseases i n th e
out pat ient department of th e
hospital. BSC students are entitled to use the servinps
The Clinic hours are every
Tuesday from 4:00 P.M. to 5:00
P.M. and every Thursday from
11:00a.m. to 12 noon . All records
are kept strictl y conf iden tial as
The completed building will be
three stories high, with $154,000 of
equipment, full of color and
people and things to do.
Like what?
Well, here's a breakdown :
On the ground floor is a formal
lounge with wall-to-wall carpeting to be used for faculty
recitals and the like. There will
also be a showcase for athletic
trophies, bowling alleys with
electric scoreboards, a large
game room for billiards, ping
pong, etc., student and faculty
mailboxes, a dividable TV lounge
with two color sets, a branch of a
major local bank, a U.S. post
office, and commuter's lockers.
Found on the first floor will be
two rooms serving as separate
meeting rooms or a combined
activity room for dancing and
movies, a snack bar with a lounge
almost vanishes. Richard Benjamin is shrill and fruity, but it's
not all his fault. The ' script is
accura te enough to tell us in the
first scene what he is like, that he
is abraisve and demanding. In
each succeeding scene the
character is in, we get more of
the same; shouts and criticisms.
All the subtlety of a foghorn .
Then the kids turn out to be just
like him ! Enough, for God's
(continued from page two )
sake!
together.
Luzerne is not perfect for it is
In total, the picture is divided
only
a building. The people inside
into halves. It can't make up its
are
what
it really is. Luzerne
mind whether to be satirical or
offers
many
activities which lend
straightforward. The satirical
themselves
to male-female inscenes (mostly those involving
teraction.
How
many of us men
the hunband) are numbingly
have
walked
into
the lobby of one
obvious; the straight ones (with
dorms
during the
of
the
women's
the "lover ") are too long, too
Christmas
season
or
stood
back
frequent and too boring. The final
and
marveled
at
how
they
could
irony confirms what one suspects
all along; the film is a sermon dream up ideas for Homecoming
decorating? Both men and
pretending to be Art.
women worked together at
Luzerne on those two projects.
Films have been presented both
to entertain as was done during
finals week or to inform as was
fluence of the political arena . done with Mrs. Camplese and her
"Mary Queen of Scots " — film on abortion , a subject
Vanessa Redgrave as the relevant to any college campus or
beautiful young queen who lost to any dorm. I feel that the Dean
her kingdom and spent twen- of Luzerne, Ken Peress, has done
ty years in exile before being an excellent job trying to provide
beheaded by her cousin Elizabeth new and varied programs for the
the First. Fun and games in residents of the dorm. I cut open
merry ol' England.
a pumpkin for the first time in my
And last but not least, not from life, October 30th, during the
1972, but surely destined to be one pumpkin cutting contest and
of the ten best of 1973:
learned much when I sat in on
"The Getaway " — Steve Mr. Carlin and Mr. Trathem's
McQueen and AH McGraw blaze ex pl anat i on of wh ere our
a trail of blood and sarcasm stu dents ' activities fees go. These
across Texas i n yet anot her were only two of severa l
action packed thriller from Sam programs that were held.
Peckinpah.
l believe Luzerne nail , users
first co-ed dorm, is the beginning
of a true co-ed dorm. As I said
before, th e dorm i sn't per f ect an d
students the only hassle could maybe my experience in the
dorm is somewhat unique. I
possibly be transportation.
If you 're i ntereste d i n gett i ng doubt it, though. There is so much
over to Shamokin from Bloom- potential for the dorm. I feel it is
sburg to use the free Clinic you growing and I feel BSC is
can start by dr ivi ng to th e fi rst growing, for it must. We as
red light down from Carver Hall. stu dents can no longer be j ust
From there get on Rt. 487 and "the friendly college on the mil"
continue to Cataw issa an d th en
Elysburg. Traffic signs at the
main intersection in Elysburg
will direct you on to Shamokin
( continued from page one )
which would be no more than a
forty-five minute drive.
2 lines : one f or people who j ust
The serv ice will be staffed by decided to drop courses and one
three doctor s f rom the hospital f or those who had to." Ann Marie
and assistance will be given by Alloy suggested they have difpublic health nurses. For in- ferent classes scheduled on
formation call the Sunbury differen t days the way it used to
Departmen t of Health at 286-4580 be. J udy Charles brought up the
or the Shamokin State Genera l fact that Penn State takes care of
Hospital
at 644-0321. Ap- this by departments. Or as Paul
pointments may be made but Baubl i tz stated , "At the end of
the previous semester they
walk-ins are also accepted.
Ano ther View
Film s of 72
" T?iAA] nr
nn tho
Pnnf "
An
VD Clinic Opens
Got a good case of the clap and
need a f ar off town where no one
k nows wh o y ou are to get
are all medical record s. With
recent legislation passed in the
state anyone 18 years of age or
older has the right to secure for
himself or herself any medical
treatment without paren tal
knowledge or consent . For BSC
containing tables in booths
suitable for numerous customers,
a typing room with electric
typewriters, a duplication room
with ditto machines and
materials for posters, and the
information desk.
The. second floor contains a
combination coffeehouse for
refreshments and entertainers of
the coffeehouse circuit and a
quiet study room , faculty conference rooms, offices for student
publication personnel and
equipment, a listening room with
several pairs of earphones for
individual listening.
Outside one will find a patio
area with picnic tables.
How will the new union be
operated?
By a governing board made up
faculty
of
students and
r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s . The
organization will be autonomous.
Activities will be planned by a
program board.
How will the rest of the campus
be rearranged?
Waller Hall will be replaced by
a high-rise dorm. Mr. Mulka says
that hopefully, the present union
will be converted to a bookstore
with a soda-ice cream shop.
The union will have something
for everyone, huh?
Yeah. Mr. Mulka said it'll be
aesthetically pleasing, too,
What's that mean?
Nice to look at.
i
where parents send their children
for four years to be pampered ,
but at the same time restricted
from really shaping our own
destinies ... questioning our past
... and searching for our own
identities , and subsequently
being handed a "sheepskin" and
a "role" to fill for the rest of their
lives.
How does Luzerne f it into that
search for identity? I feel it gives
male
and
us
students ,
female alike, an opportunity to
approach one another as unique
persons.
The sex drive in humans is
second only to the drive for food,
therefore, those instincts are
always present , but we all have to
go beyond our initial intersex
experiences of high school and
our plain animalistic drive to
learn to care for each other as
persons , accepted by other
persons. I feel the living experience provided by Luzerne
offers us students a place to take
the risks of male-female interaction and would sincerely
hope that other co-ed dorms
would be established on this
campus.
._
Previously, when I said
Luzerne is growing, I meant it ,
but the present set-up of malefemale alternating floors is still
an innovat ive step ta ken by many
ot h er cam p uses "fi ve y ears
ago". The dorm could easily be
set up for male-female wings on
th e same fl oor , thus providing the
co-ed residents with a greater
amount of interact ion on an
everyday basis.
This step can only be taken by
us if we want it. It takes adults,
men an d women, you and I.
Schedule Changes
should eliminate this problem ."
"It' s j ust like being in the
militar y .Like they say 'You have
to hurr y up then wait ,' claimed
Mike Popiak. But this isn 't the
milita ry . There are individual
students here with individual
problems that must be considered. Some good suggestions
came from concerne d students
and maybe if we keep trying, this
problem can be taken care of.
M&G goes to Inau gural
A Question of Attitude
Four M ore Years !
by jim sachetti
He was just sitting there, his their atti tude.'
very guts, his supproters loving
job done and done well. Very
"Officer, Officer , you come him , or at least respecting him.
patiently, very tolerantly, very here immediately and show me
But the real difference, the one
wisely, sitting and gazing out at how to get to this seat!" The I had expected to find , the one I
the gray winter Washington sky mink-wrapped, wrinkled old lady had hoped to find , wasn't there. It
when they attacked him.
wasn 't asking, or politely was the difference in attitude.
"Hey lady. How about me requesting, she was demanding.
The Nixon people; I had exerawlin' up there on his knee so's Like most of the other VIP's, she pected them to be arrogant,
a friend of mine can take my had nothing but distaste for the pushy , intolerant, self-centered,
picture?"
crowd she was in , and had no ego-tripping, unconcerned about
"I'm sorry sir, no one is..."
other wish than to be free of it. anyone but themselves. That was
"Hey look lady , I can go up And her wish, as she well knew, what I had always believed led
there, I got permission. 01' was the policeman's command. them to elect a man like him.
Tricky Dick , he said I could."
Other VIP's pushed and shoved
But the demonstrators ; well,
It was a ludicrous con- through the crowd, seldom if ever somehow I had expected a difversation : the big guy with the bothering to say "Pardon " or ferent attitude to prevail among
hard hat arguing with the small, "Excuse me." Thev bullied the people who claimed to be marlady Park Service Ranger ; he . cops who were there to help ching for peace. I had expected
very arrogantly telling her that them , and generally behaved them to be quiet , peaceful ,
he wanted to sit on Abraham with an arrogance that only tolerant, concerned for others.
Lincoln's knee , her, very politely comes with money or power.
Then I listened to that guy
telling him that it wasn't allowed.
Later that night , they would hassle that lady ranger , and
But what happened when the dance before the TV cameras, watched them perform a senlady Ranger returned to her post living testimony to the good seless and malicious act of
to the side of the huge statue was things that can come to good vandalism , and listened to that
even more ludicrous...and people in America.
crowd cheer.
disgusting.
As I walked the seven blocks
nuu wiicii i ncdiu iiicm iucci ,
Obviously afire with that between the scenes of these two and looked up into the marble
"revolutionary " zeal we've all incidents, between the people eyes of that man who did so much
heard so much about, another who had come to curse Nixon and f or this country and its people, I
demonstrator decided that it was the people who had come to cheer lost faith in a belief I had held for
time to "liberate" the one part of him , I felt as if I was walking a long time, the belief that a
the Lincoln Memorial that between two worlds. For some better day was coming.
remained unliberated. He walked reason , I thought the two crowds
Because the same arrogance,
across the low pedestal and would be different.
the same lack of respect for the
began to scale the statue 's base.
And to a certain extent, they rights of others , the sanVfe
He was hanging from Lincoln 's were. There were the obvious violence of spirit that put Nixon
shoe when the other guy hit him, differences in appearance — the in the White House put those guys
tackled him, brought both of demonstrators in their blue- on that statue. And if they were in
them tumbling to the floor. "Stay jeaned , Army-surplused con- his position, as some day they
off that statue, man. Leave him formity and the Nixonites in their might be, they too would bomb,
alone!"
king's court richness. There were and lie and cheat and steal and
But the "liberator " wouldn't be differences in age — the stomp on other people to get what
stopped. He hauled himself to his demonstrators
predominantly they wanted.
feet, rammed his assailant and young, the Nixon people mostly
And later on, as I watched
sent him sprawling into the old. And there was the very ob- Nixon go bv and an orange come
crowd. Picking up a club another vious difference in opinion about flying out of the crowd at him, I
liberator had dropped , he the man of the day, RMN himself couldn't help but feel sorry...for
threatened his attacker , "You — the demonstrators hatine his ' him , for the guy who threw
leave me alone, motherfucker,
it....for all of us.
The Washin gton Monument was the meeting place for a great
I'll do what I want!"
(Andris photo )
many of the marchers .
He resumed his ascent and was
soon joined by several other
freedom fighters. They hung
signs all over the statue and the
By Donald G. Enz
crowd cheered .
Saturday, January 20th, 1973,
Several hours later , they :President
Nixon
was
marched for peace. Uptown , iinaugurated , but for me that
Nixon was coming. Along the -wasn't the most important or
parade route , the common people most impressive event of the day.
were massed to get their one and What was? The National Peace
only glimpse of him. They hung Action Coalition 's (NPAC ) peace
on lamposts, perched on car demonstration .
bumpers and jammed the The purpose of the march from
sidewalks ten deep.
Lincoln monument to Washington
Restraining
the anxious monument was not to disrupt the
multitudes were Washington 's presidential inauguration , but to
finest...every one of them , ;show peacefully the concern of
supplemented by thousands of the thousands who marched that
servicemen and God only knows they are truly sincere in their
how many government agents. feelings against the war. The
To them had fallen the thankless npersons that I met and saw in the
task of threatening, pleading with !Lincoln monument were not the
and physically restraining the istereotyped protester the press
frozen and impatient crowds who itries to make us believe they are.
threatened to engulf the parade 'The marchers were not warriors
route. In addition to this, the police had also been assigned Ithey were parents , preachers ,
another task.
IDusinessmen and students that
On either side of Nixon 's bullet- i.vant out of a war not make one.
This view is from the top of the Washington Monument , looking down .
(Andris photo )
proof glass enclosed throne , 'rhey are people you meet
'
'<
:
I I m^mgmmmm ^mmmmm ^
bleachers and box seats had been <?veryday who dislike Nixon 's
set up for those who could afford \war policies, negotiations and the
to shell out the fifty dollar ad- mission to them. These were the 'Vietnamese to accept .
Con gressmen , the dignitaries , The NPAC wants the U.S.,
the rich Nixon supporters to ''ou t now ". The group believes
whom this Inauguration Day t he U.S. Government has no right
meant four more years of vir- t o negotiate or demand anything
tually unchallenged privilege and i n Southeast Asia. It is not our
wealth .
,
vvar or our country tha t is in
With plastic souvenir tickets in j hand , a ll th ese uncomm oners vve are weilding the power in
had to do was get to their seats F'ar is. It is our peace, our
and bask in the glow of power, dIeman d s, our welf are an d our
The crowds , however , had turned pieace that we are talking about in
t hei r j ourney onto P ennsy lvania VWashington , Par is an d Sout h east
Ave, into a problem and the Aisia , not the peace of the S.
poli ce had been ordered to hel p Vrietnamese people.
t hese p r ivileged get through the NPAC sees no reason tor our
peasants to their seats.
r egotiating terms and policies
What made the VI P ' s J /hich should be S. Vietnam 's
memorable , however , was not r esponsibility . We should get
the fact that they could afford «' out now " (we should have
those seats, or even their minks , a Irea dy been out ). We shoul d let
satins and $400 suits that set them s: . Vietnam negotiate , it' s their
off from the rest of the wf ar , it should be their peace.
Duri ng the "Death March " this paper mac he repli ca of the
( Fouca rt Photo )
president was carried.
crowd. The strikin g thing was
A v**m *«*l^ «v »« T 1% *¦*«^ **^J
"Out Now"
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Give Peace a Chance
Bv Frank Pizzoli
All we said was 'Give Peace A
Chance'. I don't think anyone
bothered to listen, at least anyone
who should have . listened.
D.
C.
on
Washington ,
its
day
with
inauguration
thousands of demonstrators ,
splinter groups, housewives, and
the rest of the lot was as big an
example of partisan politics as
Capitol Hill, if not bigger.
It seemed like every group
there had a separate goal, second
to which was peace in Indochina .
You should have seen it all with
your own eyes. No, maybe it's
better that you stayed home since
some jealous anti-system splinter
counter-insurgency group would
have used you to compute a
phony crowd estimate.
At each little knoll or cluster of
trees there was a gathering
giving out its side of things. The
Trotsky organization pleaded for
people not to sign a petition
requesting Richard Nixon to
accept the latest peace plan
becausje the North Vietnamese, to
their minds , made too many
People from all walks of life and nationalities prot ested the Viet
Nam war. These two gentlemen were fro m Puerto Rico .
( Photo by Foucart )
>
concessions. Probably to their
minds there will be too many
concessions. Concessions soar to
the top of the arguments , not
peace.
The Gay Liberation marched in
full swing. "Hey, hey, what do ya
say, why doncha try it the other
way ", they shouted. We've had a
decade of war, the other way
would be peace. I guess that's not
what they were referring to.
Sexism, not peace.
And then there were all the
people from different states who
had their personal gigs to get
over on you, like the ones from
Ohio. They went into all the
of
making
complications
demonstration signs, the hassles
they encountered with trying to
piece together a group to come to
the rally. "It takes too much time
to print nice neat letters so people
can tell where you're from and
what you want to say about the
war. We should have organized
ourselves earlier and sent out a
contract to a printing firm to do
our work." Peace, a scared idea,
becomes the secular.
I imagine someday That
'movement madness' will rank
with the big-time , lobbyists ,
general interest groups, budget
hearings and the like. Peace
becomes a commodity.
There were people at the
demonstration who gave some
humanness to the whole day. A
lot of older men and women
joined the crowd. Their faces
wore their feelings. One middleage couple with a child of no more
than seven shuffled along occasionally remarking that they
smelled something different but
sweet, dope. I couldn't find the
right words to tell them that some
people needed the stuff to get
through the day, couldn't let the
system get them down.
At one point their little boy
asked about a sign being carried
by a weary black man : "Nixon's
There Was
Snm AtVii« or
¦
¦*»
Amon g the more notable spea kers against the war was Paul McCloskey
Repub lican Representative from California.
Marchers clashed with oldor , more conservative citi zens durin g their trip through town.
(right on stage )/
(Andris Photo )
., _ m ,
tA
(And ris
Photo )
fty Sue Sprague
A hundred thousand marc hed ,
and a lot more watched the
parade . Somehow I couldn 't feel
a part of either. Nothin g made
sense , no matter what you came
to see.
Thousands of people , crudit y on
all sides. It didn 't matter if it was
the lady in fur coat pushing you
aside, or th e k id i n the f lannel
shirt tr ying to jump up on Lincoln 's knee.
But somehow , out of the
scream ing, pushing crowds at the
parade , and t he k ids st and in g on
a w indblown hi ll , t here was
something. Ma y be it was a belief
i n Ri chard Nixon , or ma ybe a
belief in George McGover n. For
each it was someth ing dif ferent.
But for me it was the old people
who were up on the hill with the
kids i n the freezing w i nd ,
carryin g signs , protestin g their
dead children , or the ch i ldren
the y didn 't want to have
, to watch die. A nd i t was the
little oriental guy who couldn 't
sp eak En glish , who pushed to the plunger , then to my
hand , then to himself. He moved
back several feet , posed right in
front of the par ade , and stood up
straight. I took the picture , he
smiled , nodded and left. And then
there was the parade cop who
took the time to be courteous,
even when people were shoving
forward .
For me, I'm still glad I voted
for George McGovern. But in
spite of the crudity , the hardness ,
and the selfishness , I' m also glad
I went to the Inaug uration. To
learn something about America .
secret plan killed my son, they
gave me $25,000".the tot wanted
to know what Nixon and $25.00
had to do with each other. And
there they were, trying to explain
things with their bare faces
hanging out, at a loss to explain
the ridiculousnessof equating life
with money.
The demonstration with its
50,000 or so people was like Naked
City's. 8 million people, each with
a separate story, none too good.
And the Cold
Winds Blow
By Elaine Pongratz
While Nixon was busy being
crowned , the nineteen contingents of the March Against the
Waf were forming sections at the
base of the Lincoln Memorial.
And while the Inaugural Parade
was plugging up Pennsylvania
Avenue , the March Against
Death began the semi-solemn
vigil toward the Washington
Monument.
The wind was freezing cold but
it was nothing compared to the
coldness that came from inside
as you watched the March
Against Death with their shrouds
and signs and coffins. There was
no thaw as you passed the aged
black man with the sign which
read "Nixon's secret plan Hlled
my son". Not even the levity of
the Gay Liberation's "Faggots
for Peace" signs and chants of
"Nixon destroyed the dikes now
the Dykes will destroy Nixon"
broke the ice. And it was not until
I was leaving the banners and
chants behind I realized that I
had just been a part of a blanket
of awareness that was 60,000
people thick. A blanket that could
only try to ease the chill.
We All Had
a Reason
By Ellen Doyle
The man with the loudspeaker
said 100,000, the news at 10
o'clock said 60,000, and the news
at 11 o'clock had the figure down
to 45,000. But whatever the exact
strange
a
coun t
was ,
conglomera tion of people braved
the cold in Washington January
20 to urge Nixon to end the
Vietnam war.
However, the variety of people
who were there represented a
wide range of different causes
and attitudes. Apparently , the
dream of total withdrawal from
Vietnam has become a utopic
goal for many people in the peace
movement. The sad thing is the
divergent ideas which everyone
has of this Utopia. To some, an
ideal society would mean
legalized marijuana..to others
the
end
of
homosexual
(or
discrimination
racial
discrimination or discrimination
because of sex). And still others
think the United States should
turn on to Jesus. I can 't q uite
feature the Nixon-less society
that would enbody all these
philosophies.
My react ions to the peace
marc h were varied. I was
disgusted by the people defacing
the Lincoln Memorial , amused by
the girls leading "Stop the War "
chants (they probably didn 't
make the cheerleading squad in
10th grade) , amazed by the
display put on by the Gay Libbers
and touched by the sincere attitude of middle aged people who
were right there with all the
crazies.
I guess it 's logical that I should
have mixed feelings about my
first and probably my last peace
demonstration . I went to find out
what it was all about , and found
out tha t it' s abou t anything you
want it to be.
1MB
Willis , DaRe lead Huskies to 1 lth in row
.
_
another DaRe basket. The half
The BSC Basketball Huskies ended with the Huskies up 33-30,
won two non-league games this still close enough for a
jp past week , dropping Lycoming Wilmington upset.
College 89-65 in Williamsport , and
Second Half
Wilmington College of Delaware
The Huskies started to pull
72-63 before 2,000 fans at the away in the earl y portion of the
! Nelson Fieldhouse. The Huskies second half , l ed by three buckets
have tied last year 's record for a piece from the hands of Willis
consecutive victories with eleven and DaRe. These baskets gave
straight wins.
the Huskies a 45-34 lead at the
}
John W i
l s, BSC's 6'8" junior 14:23 mark .
, led all scorers with 27 The Huskies were able to
I center
points , raising his seasonal per- maintain this lead of between 11| game average to near 24 points 15 points until the final minutes.
1 per-game. Willis a,lso led all
Forward Joe Kempski missed
\ rebounders with 18. Tony DaRe the game due to some personal
I supplied all the outside support problems, but Gary Choyka filled
needed , finishing with his in with seven rebounds and six
seasonal high of 23.
points. Gary Ty ler and DaRe also
Wilmington Surprises Huskies had seven rebounds.
The Huskies jumped to an early
Art Luptowski played another
6-4 lead at the 15:39 mark on a strong game in the backcourt ,
DaRe jumper , only to fall behind scoring 11 points and passing off
10-6 two minutes later.
for seven assists, to lead the club.
Wilmington kept their lead DaRe finished second in assists
until 4:47 when the Huskies with six.
rallied back to a 24-22 lead on
Chronister lauds DaRe
by b ob oJiver
Coach Charlie Chronist er
expressed happiness with the
play of DaRe , who now has 43
points , 16 rebounds , and 12 assists
in his last two ballgames.
The Huskies are home this
week , facing Lock Haven Wednesday night , and East Stroudsburg Saturday at the Nelson
Fieldhouse. A date to watch in the
future is February 3, when the
Cheyney Wolves make their
seasonal visit to Bloomsburg .
j v uame
The BSC JV's ran Goldey
Beaconi out of Nelson Fieldhouse
in the preliminary game by a 7958 score. Coach Reese's charges
played a strong game from start
to finish , exhibiting some flashy
passing in the process. High for
the Huskies were Dick Yanni
with 16 points, John Kesseg with
15, and Ron Keller with 14.
Kesseg was the rebound leader
with 14, while Porambo was
second with nine and led the team
with five assists.
BSC
Tops
Tony DaRe, who had 43 points in two games last week, is shown
shooting over Jim Britt of Wilmington.
Tony Da Re looking up-court for an open man.
( Keinard Photo )
Lycoming
By Bill Sipl er
The undefeated Huskies of
blew
Bloomsburg
State
Lycoming College out of the gym
Wednesday night 89-65 in a game
that was over before it started.
Led by center John Willis, who
turned in a great performance
both offensively and defensively
— 27 points, 14 rebounds, 6
blocked shots, and Tony DaRe,
who had 20 points, the Huskies
ran to an early lead of 24-4 before
Lycoming got organized. The
Warriors of Lycoming College
battled back , ripping off 11
straight points , to narrow the
score to 24-15, mainly due to a full
court press which caused the
Huskies to turn the ball over 3
times and kept them scoreless for
5:05. The Huskies ended the
drought at 7:41 left on a DaRe
basket. The game stayed fairly
even for the rest of the half with
the Huskies opening up a 13 point
lead at 44-31.
Second Hall Action
In the second half the Huskies
quickly broke to a lead mainly as
a result from the fatigue the
Lycoming players faced from the
wearing out of the fullcourt press
they had used in the first half. Art
Luptowski scored on a tap in
after "Toby " Tyler started a
break with a steal at 13:35. The
Huskies reached a 26 point lead at
the 13:00 mark on a basket by Joe
Kempski 65-39. The game stayed
that way the rest of the half with
the subs makin g two appearances the first of which
ended at 6:17 to go in the half and
returning with 3:09 to go.
John Willis led in points with 27,
followed by DaRe who had 20
points , 9 rebounds and 6 assists.
Art Luptowski also played well ,
with 12 points and 9 assists.
BSC's John Willis and Wilmingt on 's Dan Branch fig ht ing f or a
reb ound. Willis leads the Huskies with a 23.8 scori ng average/ and a
16 rebo und-per game ave rage.
( Keinard Photo )
:
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<-«.. :-*mm<. *»« **m-m~~
:
Top Husky Scorers
John Wil lis grabbing rebou nd over Wilmington 's Paul McOade.
(Keinard Photo )
Willis
DaRe
Luptowski
Choyka
Kempski
Ty ler
Pts .
262
138
n?
114
97
67
Ave.
23.8
12.5
io. i
10.0
9.7
6.0
Gary Ty ler, who has played strong at
fo rward for th e Huskies
this yea r, shown shooting over Larry Blon
g
,
(Ke inar d Phot o)
I
Even Record
m
tsy Mike Williams
I
Huskies Win Another
record of 4 wins and 4 losses.
Three of those losses came
against 3 of the best college
wrestling teams in the East:
Clarion State, Slippery Rock, and
Trenton State. A telephone chat
with Coach Sanders revealed the
feeling tha t if these three teams
would have com e late in the
season we would have taken
them. He also said the repeat of
our fourth loss to Mansfield will
not happen again. About the meet
against West Chester he said, "It
was the most satisfying victory of
my coaching and beating West
Chester, my old Alma Mater
made it that much better.He was
very proud of statem ents made to
him concerning the excellent
condition our wrestlers are in.
Coach Sanders also said that he
feels that Dan Burkholder is the
most improved wrestler since
October.
Looking ahead sees the Huskies
facing a tough weekend with
meets both Friday and Saturday
nights against Indiana University .
(Pa.) and California State
respectively . Sanders is con- :
sidering the move of Brian Berry i
from 158 lbs. to 142 lbs. to give our I
lighter weights more strength.
So far this year fan support has j
been great and a continuance
surely can help to give our
wrestlers even more spirit and j
assurance that we are behind ]
them.
118 — Longnecker , (SSC) ,
pinned Kocker, (BSC ) , 4:11.
126 — Mertz, (SSC) , pinned
O'Donnel, (BSC) , 1:29.
134—Edmonds, (BSC) , pinned '
Routsong,
(SSC) , 5:54.
stormed back to win a decision
I
142
—
Bria
, (SSC) , decisioned
from Walsh 8-3. Dan Burkholder
;
(BSC)
Beitler,
, 5-3.
i
. put the Huskies ahead to stay
150
—
Watts,
(BSC ) , pinned
\
with a superior decision over
(SSC)
Dean,
,
2 :18.
Dentz 12-2 at 177 lbs. Coach
:!\
Sanders then sent Ron Sheehan 158 — Novosel , (SSC), 1
out at 190 lbs. and the strategy decisioned Berry, (BSCJ, 5-4. ... j
"
worked as Ron gave our matmen 167—Hayes, (BSC ) , decisioned , I
a pin in only 1:31. At Hwt. was Walsh, (SSC) , 8-3.
%
Shippensburg 's best wrestler 177 — Burkholder , (BSC) ,
%
with a 13-1 record. Coach Sanders superior decisioned , Dentz ,
%
felt our Mr. Hitchcock could take (SSC) , 12-2.
H
| and take him he did as Shorty put 190 — Sheehan, (BSC) , pinned,
Swope, (SSC) , 1:31.
him away 6-1.
'
H
HWT. — Hitchcock, (BSC) ,
*$
Reflections...
Our wrestlers now have a decisioned Myers, (SSC) , 6-1.
|
|
¦ "The kids wrestled well". This
¦comment by B.S.C. wrestling
I
coach Rodger Sanders followed a
¦Husky victory over the Red
¦Raiders of Shippensburg State
¦last Friday night at Shippensburg
¦28-18.
¦ The electrifying Shorty Hit¦chcock again did his thing by
defeating
Shippensburg 's
I
¦heavyweight 6-1. The Red
B
Raider's heavyweight, Myers,
B
was 13-1 before meeting HitB
chcock. Shorty is now the owner
B
of a 6-0 including his two back-toB
back wins against the tough
B
opponents from West Chester and
Shippensburg. Several Husky
B
B
grapplers have fine records.
B
Lonnie Edmonds is 6-2 and is one
B
of our finest lighter weights.
B
Randy Watts is a strong conB
sistent performer and along with
¦ Ron Sheehan was again named
¦ wrestler of the week. Kevin
¦ Hayes at 167 and Dan Burkholder
h
also own 6-2 records, and Ron
Sheehan is 6-1.
S
»
.
The match started with the 118
M
and 126 wrestlers going down to
defeat. Lonnie Edmond put the
H
ra
Huskies first points on the board
by registering a fall against
B
Routsong of Shippensburg. Dan
B
M
Beitler was decisioned by the Red
Bria 5-3. Randy Watts
Raiders
„
H
" added to Bloom's tally by pinning
I!
Shippensburg 's Dean at 150 lbs.
M
This
set the match score at 15-12,
fl
Shippensburg
. Brian Berry who
P|
coach
Sander's
says is "just
H
on
the
brink
of starting
H
winning
ways,"
dropped a
pf
I
one point decision to S.S.C.'s
Novosel 5-4, Kev in Ha y es
f$
Randy Watts, BSC's 150 Ib. wrestler,shown against West Chester 's Nick Montello.
, (S. White Photo )
Ron Sheehan wrestling in the match winner against WC's Bruce Rennet.
(S. White Photo )
Girls ' g et in th e Swi m
The girls swim t eam t ra veled
to P enn State Universit y last
weekend to com pete in the f irst
girl ' s swim meet in B.S.C.
histor y . The girls swam against
Penn State and Madison College
i from Virginia in a tri-meet.
| Lynn KoCh placed first in the 50
t^
yd. Free style with a time of 29.0
for the initial first place finish.
Sue Nickiem placed third in the
200 yd. I.M. with a time of 2:59.3
for the Huskiettes ,
The final scor e of the meet was
P.S.U. 116, Madison College 74,
and B.S.C. 25.
The girls are coached by Miss
J ack ie A dam s. F uture meets are
Feb. 14 against Bucknell at 7:30
away , Feb. 17 against Lycoming
at 2 P.M. home , and Feb. 24
against Lehigh at 2 P.M. away .
This is the first year for girl 's
swimming at B.S.C. so let' s get
out and support the team.
CGA
(continued from page one)
stipulates that an electrician be
on hand during the program.
WO ODROCK
Council allocated $112.50 to the
Woodrock project for transportation and meals for the
underprivileged children coming
to B.S.C. The program will be
held the weekend of February 3,
with 30 students from the ages of
12 to 15, all from poor neighborhoods. There was some
discussion of this, also, since the
question of other money sources
was brought up, such as state or
federal aid. Also, it was mentioned that this project was not
really for the B.S.C. students and
therefore the students money
should not be used. However , Mr.
Jack Mulka stated that Jim
Nallo , the sponsor of this project
had tried the available alternatives and was turned down.
Someone also mentioned that
when Jim was here last
semester, council had led him to
believe that they would come
through with the "money .
LAMBDA FIRE AID
Dan
Burkholder ,
CGA
president announced that the
letters to downtown businessmen
were successful in bringing in
$148.00 for the Lambda Alpha Mu
fire victims. Council added
$602.00 to make the total $750.00
as planned.
OTHER BUSINESS
Other items mentioned briefly
were the General Budgetary
Policies to be discussed at the
next meeting, and the Senate passed
4-1-4 calendar. Vice
President Pickett in a letter to
faculty and administration
decided to postpone it another
year since the students really are
not aware of it's existence. It was
suggested that a committee be
set up for recommendations to
Dr. Pickett.
Also, the fact that student
trustee Mike Torbert has asked to
resign brought up the question of
how a replacement will be
selected . This is something that is
scheduled to be worked on at the
next meeting of the Pennsylvania
State College Association of
Student Governments (PSASG).
Doug McClintock stated that
BNE sales were lagging
somewhat due to the unfa miliarity of the college community with John McLaughlin ,
the show's headliner. He expressed confidence that sales will
increase with more publicity .
N ews
Briefs
Exotic Work Opportun ities ;
Travel ; Fame ; Fortune .
Begin your career in journa lism
with the Best ! The M&G
is.acceptin g all applications
for writers , typists, photo graphers ,
and proofr eader s . No experie nce
necessar y. We will train . Apply in
Antiwar Convention
person any Sunda y or Tuesda y
On Feb . 23-24 the sixth
National An tiwar Convention
will be held by the National
Peace Action Coalition . A
march on the capitol is Feb.
23. On Feb. 25 the Studen t
Mobilization Comm ittee is
holding a student antiwar
conference. Go down and get
involved .
night at Room 234, Waller .
world's greatest guitarists, will
appear with the Mahavishnu
Orc hestra in concert at B.S.C.'s
A slide and ta pe library
Haas Center for the Arts on
orienta tion prog ram will be
Friday, February 2 at 8:30 p.m.
shown once every fifteen
Tickets
are on sale at the Inminute s begin ning at 9:00
Desk in the College
formation
a.m. and runni ng until 9:00
Price
is $3 with I.D., and
Union.
p.m. on Thurs day, February
$3.50 without I.D. All seats are
l, 1973 in room L-35 on the
grou nd floor of Andr uss
MEN'S GLEE CLUB from 6:45 general admission .
Library.
to 8 p.m. on Thursday in Haas
rehearsal room 116. All men READ T H E BIBLE FOR
interested in singing are MEANING. Study Session on
welcome. No audition necessary. concepts of the Old Testament
this Thursday evening at 8 p.m.
at
ATTENTION ST U DEN TS : Community of the Spirit, 550 E.
winning the 400 yard freestyle
Second St. Come.
relay with a time of 3:28.58. John McLaughlin , one of the
Swimming for the Huskies on the
relay were Doug Yocum, Jon
Stoner, Bill Ewell , and Gibas.
Library Orientat ion
Environmental Committee
People
int erested
in
working on the Environ ment
committe e sho uld cont act
Karen Keinard at 389-3101 as
soon as possible. A meeting
should be held in the next
week or two .
INTEREST ED
.
!
Rush
for sororities
.
GIRLS' '
Jan. 25 with
Thursday,
begins
Kuster
House
in
Open
Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. (Notice
the change in location). Plan to
attend and get to meet the
sororities.
ATTENTION
Huskies lose to Clarion
B.S.C. traveled to Clarion State
College Saturday and suffered
their third loss of the season 7340. The loss evened the Huskies
record at 3-3 and snapped a three
meet win streak.
The defending state champions
held the Huskies to only four first
placements in the meet, two by
Ail-American senior Dave Gibas ,
one by freshman Rich Kozicki .
APSCUF/PAHE
(continued from page one)
the state colleges.
Mr. William Acierno, head of
APSCUF/ PAHE at Bloomsburg, had the following comment: "I concur with Dr. Keller 's
comments..the state is forcing us
to take it into arbitration and both
the students and faculty are
suffering as a result."
Eppley 's
Pharmacy
MAIN « IRON STREETS
|VL..ji.l. iil m.
rrsicnpnon
4n»rlntt
*t
spoaawiT
•CHAN&
•CUCRLAIN
•FABERQE
?LANVIN
•PRINCE MATCHABEUl
•ELIZABETH ARDEN
•HELENA RUBENSTEIN
•DANA
•Coi r
•MAX*ACTOR
QfWMt
wPBflt ^S
and the 400 freestyle relay team.
Kozicki scored his first place
finish first in the third event of
the meet, the 200 yard freestyle .
He also placed second in the 500
yard free.
Gibas followed with a first in
the 50 yard free with a time of 22.2
and came back later to swim the
100 yard free in 49.22 to claim
first place in that event also.
The relay finished off the meet
Miller Office
Supp ly Co.
18 West Main Street, Bloonubur g, Pa.
:
HEADQUARTERSOF
HALLMARK CARDS
AND GIFTS
Phone 784-2561
Hartzel's Music Store
72 N. Iron St.
Over 300 Guitars
and Amplifiers
HENRIE'S
Card and Book Nook
40 W. Main St.
The New Inn
Different
No Longer A Coffee House
NOW A GOOD
REST AURANT
Hatlan
Lobttir
Food
Clam s
Fondu e
544 East Sf., Bloomiburg
•
Coach McLaughlin commented
after the meet that the long layoff
was detrimental to the team and
he hopes for a speedy recovery by
the team.
Say H appy
Anniversary or
H appy Birthday
with
'^Et ifjU's
1 ^^^ FLOWERS
V^^MImr r WwMwMt
Dm TW HUI O> K*tf St.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^¦^¦^^^^^^^^^^B^U^H^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^—
John 's Food
Market
W. Main & Leonard St.
Open 8 a.m. to 12 midnight Daily
Delicate ssen
Full line of groceries
cV snacks
Ritto r's
Office Supply
112 E. Main Sf.
Bloomsbwg,
784-4323
t
L
U**- *'
''
ATTENTIONI A
TEAC HERS AND EDUCATORS IN PENNSYLVANIA : |
REWARD
s
:
10,000
[
W
I
yo urselves by saving money on costly
loan charges! Borrow up to
"
s TEACHERS SERVICE OBGANIZATION,INC.
I
h
I
I
at one of the
LOWEST LOAN RATES IN THE U.S.A.
Our rates are generally LOWER than banks ,
credit unions , finance companies , " revolving "
type credit , department store charges , etc.
For Loans up to $3,500:
Write or phone TSO at Willow Grove , Pa.
F Dial (215) 548-0300
'
J
^
J
j
j
J
i
- TEACHERS SERVICE ORGANIZATION,INC. -I
and TEACHERS SERVICE CONSUMER DISCOUNT COMPANY
Maryland & Computer Roidi , Willow Grove , Pt. 19090
I
(*
[
For Loans from $3,600 to $10,000:
Write or phone TSO at Wil mington , Del.
Dial (302) 798-6861
1
"A
4
-\
I
I TEACHERS SERVICE ORGANIZATION,INC. 1
P
I
I
C.
1104 Philadelphia Pike, Wilmington, Del. 19809
I
WE PAY THE PHONE WHEN YOU QET THE LOAN: <\
W« will refund your Initial phone call
A
K^-,
I "Nw
wn«n you 0«t the loan. A
L
Sched ule Cha nges
By BARB WANCHISEN
Standing in the drop / add line
that stretched down the hall of
Centennial Gym , Don Miers said
"Its been this way for four years.
They 're not going to do
anything. " Yet . ins ide the
drop/ add office, Mr. Bunge said ,
"We Jhave made considerable
improvements in the last 4 or ¦5
•
. <
years ."
It doesn't make much difference who is right. If you had to
stand in that long line, or even if
you Know someone who did , then
you know there 's a problem .
I had a chance to ask some of
the students in line how.they feel
about the situation. Gary Hutchinson stated , "If you like
waiting in line it's okay." Or as
Walt Woolbaugh said , "I was
here 3 hours the other day and
didn ' t get in. "
Others became quite sarcas tic,
calling the system "screw ed up"
and the people workin g in the
office "subhumanal life forms. "
Steve McClellan asked , "Why do
they need.an hour and a half for
Lado , the Yugoslave National Dance and Folk Ensemble , will be presented Thursda y/ January 25
at 8:15 p.m. in BSC's Haas Center by the Civic Music Association.
The LADO compan y had its premiere in the Western Hemisphere in 1967 when it appea red at the
Montrea l Expo '47.
.
LADO presents folk dances and son gs from all parts of Yugoslavia and the Balkan count ri es , using
more than 500 colo rfu l costumes displa ying a wide range of ethnic origins/ LADO presents an evenin g
of enjoyment
.
This present tour of the LADO compan y is its third in the United States and will ta ke the troupe on a
month' s tour which will include New York , Pittsbur gh, Chicago , Milwaukee , Memphis and Ann
Arbor .
lunch? "
"Why the hell don't they have
more people working?" This
seemed to be th e general opinion
among the students. Vanessa .
Miller said, "This could have
been avoided by hiring more
people and havin g more rooms. "
Or Tom O'Donnell , "Not 4 people
to ha ndle an enrol lment of 4800."
It' s not just the fact that you
face waiting in an unbelievabl y
long line, but as Donna Wagner
admitted , "It' s a pain tr ying to
find the time to stand in line." .
Surprisi ngly , a number of
students were very apathetic
about this situation. . Robin '
Ratushn y said , "What can you do
about it? You just have to put up
with it. " Or as Ernie Fuce lla
admitted , "I don't have a better
solution. "
cut even tnougn me majority oi
wk
*'
Mm
'
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*
*J.
f*
students were disgusted about
the whole thing, they did come up
with some practica l solutions.
Angela Scaran tino said , "I
thought maybe they should have
(continued on page three )
Electricians, Woodrock
discussed at council
by Karen Keinard
A t the new year 's first meeting
of College Council Monday night ,
p roblems w it h p a yment of
electric ians were discussed a long
with the Woodrock project , and
the current restrictions policy in
the departments of Sp ecial
Education and Communication
Disorders. This last item was set
aside and discussed at the Senate
meeting yesterday , the results of
which will be availabl e in
Friday 's issue.
hand a t a t hlet ic events and other held at the same time.
studen t act ivit ies, have recentl y There was some discussion on
asked for $20.00 a night for each
event ($4.00 an hr. for a minimum
of 5 hrs. ) over their present ra te
of $11.00, which is $2.75 for four
hours . College Council voted to
make the electricians a counter
of f er of $4 .00 an hour for a
minimum of four hours ( $16.00)
which is what the union contract
calls for . An amendment was
then made statin g tha t only one
electrician will be requisitioned
ELECTRICIAN PROBLEMS
the building in the case that
The electricians that . are on for
two or more athletic events are
W ork-Load Cited in
M
¦
l¦ ¦¦
¦
¦
mam
¦ mm
-
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both semesters. In one semester ,
he does not hav e to prepare for
more than 3 different courses ."
The problem exists because the
state and APSCUF / PAHE can 't
seem to agree over a specific
point in the contra ct. It states
that the two parti es are to work
out the conditi ons under which a
greater number of prepar ations
can be assigned and the , com*
pensation to be paid for these
A contract betwee n AIV
8GUF/ PAH E and the state
signed In September , 107*,Stipulated tna t ;'a J acj ilt*
member 's norma l teachin g load
canndt exceed 1.4 credits in one
semester and 24 credi ts during,
¦
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«
BSC Students
Help Children
adjust . the Instr uctor's schedu le.
This semester tha t excuse
cannot be used so some in.structors have had to schedule
less courses in order to comply
with the contract. This may have
caused the closing of some
courses or sections of courses.
The Child-Help Program offers Gar y Fetzer coordinated thiB "
an opportunity to Inter ested BSC program and work ing with him
student s to do volunteer work are Sharon Ouida (AWS), Sandy
with underprivilege d youngsters Schenck (SPSEA ) and Drew
In the elementary and secondar y Toborowsk l. Presentl y ther e are
How and when AP» ~ grades , The volun teer takes the 50 volunteers In Bloomsburg and
SCUF/ PAHE and the state can child to movies and ball games the progra m is expanding to
reach a working agreement is a and becomes his WendT For Include ..Berwick and other
good question. The bulletin ? example , in December a outlying areas. Any student that
Chr istmas parly was held and
Last semester some faculty ^St Mt ^^^ PAIffli^
was
terme d by partlcip ants.as a
had to prepare for more courses working for usr the students , In
great
success. J{ Is thro ugh opthan stipulated and therefore order to provide the best possible
portunities
sucji *s thew that '
;
violitid th¥ T^irefehti , e because . thew wasn't time to *. 'K •¦ f( ;'
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Pianist John Couch performed In Carver Auditoriu m Sunday
. nite. Included in his progra m were Two Etudes by Liszt and two
Dances of Marom.ek .
IP. WMf Photo )
' Contract Problems
In the process of changing
schedules , stude nts have noticed
that classes in Which they wanted
to enroll this semester were
closed. In a recent bulletin , Dr.
Keller , chairman of the APSCUF/ PAHE negotiati ons
team , (the Association of State
College
and
University
'
Faculties Pennsylvania .Association for Higher , Education ) had attempte d to
explain why this condition exists.
'
why the electricians were
needed , but it was pointed out by
Dean Norton that an electrician
should be on hand in case of an
emergency. It was also pointed
out that $16 a night was not a
lar ge sum , as they could make
more on the open market if they
so-desired.
.
A quick decision was needed
due to the upcoming events that
might need an electrician , including BNE , whose contract
( continued on page eight)
^^
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owns a car who is interested in
helping the Child-Help,Pro gram
should con^aqt Gary Pefzer at
389-3516 ' tor Information and
AMi&mM
editoria l
«
The beginning of a new
semester brings another round of
drop/add . If you ask a- student,
you get the usual curses and
mutterings. If you ask the
Registrar, you get more mutterings, but these in defense of
the system. But no matter who's
looking at the whole thing, they
can all agree that something's
wrong and should be changed.
I've heard people wish that
they could go back to the old
system, where you do your own
scheduling, but the Registrar
says that's impossible. That
would be "like going back to
horses and buggies".
So how about a suggestion?
There have been a great many
made so here's one more for the
record : what if drop / add were
Luzerne Hall
Another View
changed from one complex,
operation run solely by the
Registrar to a series of smaller
by Dale Alexander
operations run by each departWalking down the street or
ment? It would force the student sitting at a table in the Union or in
to do a lot more running around , just plain everyday gossip one
but a lot less standing in line.' might hear many different things
Also, if exceptions had to be being said about BSC's first co-ed
made, they could be made with dorm , Luzerne. I would like to
the permission of the professor in express my feelings and share
question and the chairman of the my experience concerning
department.
. Luzerne in the hope that it might
give the campus as a whole a
mis system wuuiu mean mure
work for each department , but it broader perspective.
What is a co-ed dorm, one
would lessen the burden for the
student and the Registrar. might ask? Simply, it is a
Students and secretaries could be
trained to control each department's registration.
So why not? Or better yet,
who's got a better suggestion?
Sue Sprague
To the Editor :
A TRIBUTE TO A WHITE
"CONSERVATIVE"
WHO
HELPED BLACKS, AND ALL
OF US.,
.Back in, I believe, 1969, after
H.E.W. had accused Pa. of
maintaining a "segregated State
College System", the Dept. of Ed.
set up programs at the "White
only" State Colleges for the
Who or what will the new recruitment of blacks.
messiah be? A question that I
At BJoomsburg the man put in
can't honestly answer. I can point charge of the recruiting program
out where it's germinating. It's in was Prof . Lee Aumiller (who died
the adolescent tank. The twelve- on January 5, 1973).
year-olds will make the new
Trustees, some faculty, and
messiah.
many townspeople expressed
We will become plagued with dismay at the idea of any inthe newcomer like another crease in the number of blacks in
generation despised the Beatles. the town of Bloomsburg,
And the new messiah will make predicting that they would bring
music which, like that of the very with them crime, addiction, and
early Beatles, is not all that good. other problems from the ghetto.
The pivot point will be the
In the face of this "hometown"
inherent talent that the new artist discouragement Lee worked very
will most likely possess.
strenuously and the number of
You might guess that the new blacks on campus increased
talent would be David Bowie. Not three or four times, giving them
likely; he's on the fringes of our enough numbers so that they
generation . Nor will it lie in could
man
their
own
jazz. Jazz has been too eclectic organizations and thereby gain
and intellectualized lately for positions of authority on the
adolescent consumption.
campus.
Right now rock is going
Lee was always disappointed
through a period of stolen riffs that it seemed impossible for him
and ready mades. Imitation is to increase through recruitment
rife in the scene. A really new the number beyond the level he
talent hasn't appeared in at least reached , but it wasn't his fault
three years. Bowie has been that , among other reasons, the
around for about four , likewise recruitment of blacks and other
with Rod Stewart. Of Loggins and poor students was blocked by
Messina , Messina played with repeated rises in tuition and by
Buffalo Springfield and Poco. the failure of the GSA to build
Kenny Loggins was with the Nitty dormitories, which forced up
Gritty Dirt Band. Even Cat rents in the town of Bloomsburg
Stevens has been around for at making it impossible for poor
least five years. (Anyone students (in both senses) to live
remember "New Masters"?)
away from their homes in the
So we 're slumping. We cities.
probably will for a few years.
I hadn 't talked to Lee much in
Even "Creem " magazine has the last year , so I don 't know
admitted that this year hasn't
the new messiah , "Rock is dead!
been particularly brilliant.
Long
live Rock!"
I hope I can ride out the slump.
For
the time being, I'll settle
Even more, I hope that I can see
for
the
best of what's out.
far enough to yell at the onset of
Lett er
Gettin g By
7O's Rock
by Joe Miklos
Rock. Where's it going?
Waiting for the new Messiah, is
the direction. Rock needs its
pinball wizard. If you want to
stretch a point, Townsend's idea
of a Messiah seems to indicate a
sort of cycle in the rock scene,
with Tommy as the rockin' heartthrob of millions. The time is
right, ripening.
Sometime in the very late
fifties and early sixties, rock hit
it's first slump. A thousand
Bobbies and Frankies were
slapping down process records,
loaded with bad vocals, instrumental
tracks
and
everything else. Elvis was
making a run of Grade B films —
he sold out. Rockabilly for all
intents and purposes was dead.
Ah, thf Beatles, first saviours
of rock n' roll. Ever notice that
people in their early and middle
twenties despised the Moptops?
They were SIN. The screaming
fourteen-year-olds loved them.
Even the guys. In that lax period
between the early rockers and
the Beatles, a lost generation
grasped the mores of those who
went before. They buried
themselves.
Here we are in the Second
Slump, between the blue we once
knew . For the first time rock has
critics and a few of us have
already been screaming DEATH.
I've said it, and now I admit I
jumped the gun. It is indeed a
slump that music is experiencing. If rock is the hardy
medium it seems to be, we are in
the first few years of a new dead
season . It even seems that a new
lost generation is in the making.
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building wherein both men and
women reside. It is a place where
guys pass gals on the stairs or
ride with them in an elevator
without staring at them as if they
were pieces of candy. It is a place
where a girl washes her bra and
panties beside a guy putting his
socks and jock into the dryer. A
co-ed dorm is a place where men
can walk down the hall on a
women's floor and see females
when they are stripped of their
make-up or perhaps the girl
might even pose a grim
resemblance to Medusa as they
pass by with their hair in curlers.
(Rather shatters the high school
image of pretty Suzie always so
pretty.)
It is a place where TV rooms
are congested with both men and
women as opposed to an all-male
audience as is the case in Elwell
Hall. It is a place where men and
women live together as people —
where they interact on an
everyday basis as human beings
— subject to being together not
only as male and female, but as
persons.
Letters to the editor are an
It is a place where "maybe" a
expressi on of the individua l
guy might meet a girl as she's
writer 's opinion and do not
buying cigarettes and he's getnecessarily reflect the views
ting chocolate milk and they,
of the newspaper. All letters
recognizing each other as people
they vaguely know ; there is a
, must be signed , names will be
withheld upon request. The
possibility that they might start a
M&G reserves the right to
conversation which might lead
1 abridge
them to get to know each other
or withheld,
in
devoid of any social "male - meet
consulta ti on with the writer,
- female - on - a - date - pressure".
all letters over 400 word s in
length.
This, in turn, could be the
beginning of a real and lasting
whether he was aware of his relationship. I feel Luzerne is
success in achieving one of such a place where this
^ in the possibility becomes more
the other goals involved
recruitment program ; which probable.
success might have assuaged his Luzerne offers a ground floor
' disappointment in not being able study area where intercourse on
to bring more blacks to the , an academic level can be
maintained by the co-ed residents
camDus than he did.
He and the black students have until the early hours of the
been completely successful in morning with soft drinks and
.teaching Trustees, faculty, and candy available. In an adjacent
townspeople what sociologists area , men and women can play
and the NAACP have been together by shooting billiards or
preaching for years. That is, the utilizing the ping-pong table or
integration ( the spreading out of can share their musical interests
the black 10 it evenly among the and talents in the laundry room.
Luzerne is my home; where I
white majority ) makes blacks as
can
come into the lobby and
law abiding, if not more so, as
possibly
see a pretty female
whites when the pressures,
receptionist
on duty. A person
temptations , corruptions , and
imitative closeness of the ghetto with whom I can talk to, share
my troubles with , or laugh
are removed.
( continued on page three)
D. Porter
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THE MAROON AND GOLD
Editor-in-Chief
Susan L. Sprague
Managing Editor
Robert Oliver
News Edltor
KarenKelnard
Assistant News Editor
Barb Wanchlsen
Copy Editor
Valery O'Conne ll
Cartoonist
JohnStugrin
Contributing Editors
Frank Piizoll, Ji m Sachettl
Staff : Don Em, Joanne Linn, Janlne Watkins, Tim Bossard, Kathy Jos eph, Marty
Wenhold
Business Manager
Elaine Pongratz
OfflceMana ger
Ellen Doyle
Advertising Manager
Frank Lorah
Circulation Manager
Nancy Van Pelt
Photo g raphy Editor
Dan Maresh, Jr.
Photographers: Dale Alexander, Tom Dryburg, Pat White, Suzi White, Sue Oreef,
*
Mike Williams.
Advisor
Ken Hoffman
The M&G is located at 234 Waller, or call 389-3101. All copy mutt be submitted by
no later than 5:00 p.m. on Tuesdays and Sundays for the Frid ay and Wednesday
papers, respectively. The opinions voiced in th e columns and feature article s of
the M&G may not necessarily be sha red by the entire staff, but they are bound by
thei r duty to defend the right to voice them.
Fina l approval of all content res ts with the Editor-in-Chi ef.
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New Union
by Tim Bossard
What , the new college union is
not done yet?
According to John Mulka ,
Director of Student Activities,
ninety percent of it is complete.
What's keeping them?
Electric wire-splicinrg, mainly,
which is expected to be completed by April 1. Then the
General State Authority will
inspect it and, if everything is in
order , the place will be furnished
and in full operation during the
summer. Wha t will it be like?
I
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^¦^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ¦^¦¦^ ¦¦^i^MWMW^^BB^^^HMBWiMM^M
The Mahavishnu Orchestra on stage. They will appear on Feb. 22 in Haas Center for the Arts.
MovieReview
Diary of a Mad H-W
By Ti m Bos sa rd
If the opening credits hadn't
told me otherwise, I'd have sworn
the mixed up matriarch of the
title was directing Diary of a Mad
House wif e. The picture is
thoroughly schizoid. No sooner do
we finish a scene of hysterically
unthoughtful satire than we
plunge into a scene of mundanely
unincisive intimacy ; the cutting
is so frenetic , the camera angles
so endless, it seems there are no
less than three separate personalities perceiving the same
action ; the soundtrack is amplified to nerve-shattering
proportions with bells, shouts,
and general confusion. Almost
like Howard Hawks' Bedlam told
from the inside.
Alas, the director is not a
housewife, it's Frank Perry ; and ,
in case you missed it, the said
housewife turns out to be the
sanest person on screen. It seems
she only thinks she's crazy
because she doesn't feel loved by
her bitchy, bossy hubby or her
cool, unpossessfve "sex partner". You see, Mr. Perry is
trying to tell us that love is being
drowned out from our decadent,
money-worshipping society.
This isn't exactly an original
theme. Welles; Fellini and Antonioni, to name a few, have dealt
with it in the past. In fact., Perry
often seems to imitate Antonioni's crowd groupings, long
shots and "sterile" white
backgrounds. Instead of saying
something original and personal
on the subject, Perry is giving us
a watered-down , simplified
version of something someone
else has said.
So much for style. What about
subtlety? Carrie Snodgress takes
honors here. She plays a nobody
to the point that the character
Think back to last year and the
dates you had that somehow
always seemed to end up at your
local movie house. Think hard
enough , and you might recall that
while you were mulling over your
prospects for post-movie entanglements, there were things
going on up on the screen.
Recall any of them? Well we
here at the M&G were sitting
around trying to forget our postmovie entanglements , s o we
decided we 'd do an art i cle on t h e
movies instead. What we came
up with was a list of sorts based
on a poll of sorts of the ten best
movies of 1972. See if you agree.
In no particular order :
"Frenz y " — Alfred Hitchcock ' s thriller about a young
man with a penchant for raping,
then strangling pretty girls with
his necktie.
wowee-zowee directing by
Stanley Kubric.
"The Last Picture Show " —
Peter Bogdanovich's black and
white journey into the past to
witness the death of the 50's in a
small Texas town.
"Nicholas and Alexadra " —
Another time trip, this time to
witness the fall of the Romanov
dynasty in Russia as seen by the
last of the Romanov 's themselves.
"The Candida te" — Robert
Redford stars as a young,
idealistic politician who fights to
wi n a Senate seat an d save hi s
ideals from the corrupting in-
adaptation of the long-running
Broadway musical about a
Jewish milkman with too many
daughters and not enough money.
"Straw Dogs " — Sam
Peckinpah's mind-gripping story
about the violence in us all.
Dust i n H off man stars as the
mild-mannered mathematician
f orce d to take a sta nd a ga i nst a
drunken crowd bent on murder.
"Lady Sings the Blues" — The
life of Billie Holiday, "Lady
Day," one of th e most impressive
of jazz singers. Fine production
by Gamble and Huff , even better
act in g by D i ana Ross i n the lea d
role.
'•Clockwork Orange " —
Violence and punkdom in a
futuristic setting, with the same
treatment ? Well , the Pennsyl van i a De partment of Healt h,
i n coopera t ion wi th the Shamok i n
State Genera l Hos pi ta l , has
opened a f ree treatment center
f or venerea l diseases i n th e
out pat ient department of th e
hospital. BSC students are entitled to use the servinps
The Clinic hours are every
Tuesday from 4:00 P.M. to 5:00
P.M. and every Thursday from
11:00a.m. to 12 noon . All records
are kept strictl y conf iden tial as
The completed building will be
three stories high, with $154,000 of
equipment, full of color and
people and things to do.
Like what?
Well, here's a breakdown :
On the ground floor is a formal
lounge with wall-to-wall carpeting to be used for faculty
recitals and the like. There will
also be a showcase for athletic
trophies, bowling alleys with
electric scoreboards, a large
game room for billiards, ping
pong, etc., student and faculty
mailboxes, a dividable TV lounge
with two color sets, a branch of a
major local bank, a U.S. post
office, and commuter's lockers.
Found on the first floor will be
two rooms serving as separate
meeting rooms or a combined
activity room for dancing and
movies, a snack bar with a lounge
almost vanishes. Richard Benjamin is shrill and fruity, but it's
not all his fault. The ' script is
accura te enough to tell us in the
first scene what he is like, that he
is abraisve and demanding. In
each succeeding scene the
character is in, we get more of
the same; shouts and criticisms.
All the subtlety of a foghorn .
Then the kids turn out to be just
like him ! Enough, for God's
(continued from page two )
sake!
together.
Luzerne is not perfect for it is
In total, the picture is divided
only
a building. The people inside
into halves. It can't make up its
are
what
it really is. Luzerne
mind whether to be satirical or
offers
many
activities which lend
straightforward. The satirical
themselves
to male-female inscenes (mostly those involving
teraction.
How
many of us men
the hunband) are numbingly
have
walked
into
the lobby of one
obvious; the straight ones (with
dorms
during the
of
the
women's
the "lover ") are too long, too
Christmas
season
or
stood
back
frequent and too boring. The final
and
marveled
at
how
they
could
irony confirms what one suspects
all along; the film is a sermon dream up ideas for Homecoming
decorating? Both men and
pretending to be Art.
women worked together at
Luzerne on those two projects.
Films have been presented both
to entertain as was done during
finals week or to inform as was
fluence of the political arena . done with Mrs. Camplese and her
"Mary Queen of Scots " — film on abortion , a subject
Vanessa Redgrave as the relevant to any college campus or
beautiful young queen who lost to any dorm. I feel that the Dean
her kingdom and spent twen- of Luzerne, Ken Peress, has done
ty years in exile before being an excellent job trying to provide
beheaded by her cousin Elizabeth new and varied programs for the
the First. Fun and games in residents of the dorm. I cut open
merry ol' England.
a pumpkin for the first time in my
And last but not least, not from life, October 30th, during the
1972, but surely destined to be one pumpkin cutting contest and
of the ten best of 1973:
learned much when I sat in on
"The Getaway " — Steve Mr. Carlin and Mr. Trathem's
McQueen and AH McGraw blaze ex pl anat i on of wh ere our
a trail of blood and sarcasm stu dents ' activities fees go. These
across Texas i n yet anot her were only two of severa l
action packed thriller from Sam programs that were held.
Peckinpah.
l believe Luzerne nail , users
first co-ed dorm, is the beginning
of a true co-ed dorm. As I said
before, th e dorm i sn't per f ect an d
students the only hassle could maybe my experience in the
dorm is somewhat unique. I
possibly be transportation.
If you 're i ntereste d i n gett i ng doubt it, though. There is so much
over to Shamokin from Bloom- potential for the dorm. I feel it is
sburg to use the free Clinic you growing and I feel BSC is
can start by dr ivi ng to th e fi rst growing, for it must. We as
red light down from Carver Hall. stu dents can no longer be j ust
From there get on Rt. 487 and "the friendly college on the mil"
continue to Cataw issa an d th en
Elysburg. Traffic signs at the
main intersection in Elysburg
will direct you on to Shamokin
( continued from page one )
which would be no more than a
forty-five minute drive.
2 lines : one f or people who j ust
The serv ice will be staffed by decided to drop courses and one
three doctor s f rom the hospital f or those who had to." Ann Marie
and assistance will be given by Alloy suggested they have difpublic health nurses. For in- ferent classes scheduled on
formation call the Sunbury differen t days the way it used to
Departmen t of Health at 286-4580 be. J udy Charles brought up the
or the Shamokin State Genera l fact that Penn State takes care of
Hospital
at 644-0321. Ap- this by departments. Or as Paul
pointments may be made but Baubl i tz stated , "At the end of
the previous semester they
walk-ins are also accepted.
Ano ther View
Film s of 72
" T?iAA] nr
nn tho
Pnnf "
An
VD Clinic Opens
Got a good case of the clap and
need a f ar off town where no one
k nows wh o y ou are to get
are all medical record s. With
recent legislation passed in the
state anyone 18 years of age or
older has the right to secure for
himself or herself any medical
treatment without paren tal
knowledge or consent . For BSC
containing tables in booths
suitable for numerous customers,
a typing room with electric
typewriters, a duplication room
with ditto machines and
materials for posters, and the
information desk.
The. second floor contains a
combination coffeehouse for
refreshments and entertainers of
the coffeehouse circuit and a
quiet study room , faculty conference rooms, offices for student
publication personnel and
equipment, a listening room with
several pairs of earphones for
individual listening.
Outside one will find a patio
area with picnic tables.
How will the new union be
operated?
By a governing board made up
faculty
of
students and
r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s . The
organization will be autonomous.
Activities will be planned by a
program board.
How will the rest of the campus
be rearranged?
Waller Hall will be replaced by
a high-rise dorm. Mr. Mulka says
that hopefully, the present union
will be converted to a bookstore
with a soda-ice cream shop.
The union will have something
for everyone, huh?
Yeah. Mr. Mulka said it'll be
aesthetically pleasing, too,
What's that mean?
Nice to look at.
i
where parents send their children
for four years to be pampered ,
but at the same time restricted
from really shaping our own
destinies ... questioning our past
... and searching for our own
identities , and subsequently
being handed a "sheepskin" and
a "role" to fill for the rest of their
lives.
How does Luzerne f it into that
search for identity? I feel it gives
male
and
us
students ,
female alike, an opportunity to
approach one another as unique
persons.
The sex drive in humans is
second only to the drive for food,
therefore, those instincts are
always present , but we all have to
go beyond our initial intersex
experiences of high school and
our plain animalistic drive to
learn to care for each other as
persons , accepted by other
persons. I feel the living experience provided by Luzerne
offers us students a place to take
the risks of male-female interaction and would sincerely
hope that other co-ed dorms
would be established on this
campus.
._
Previously, when I said
Luzerne is growing, I meant it ,
but the present set-up of malefemale alternating floors is still
an innovat ive step ta ken by many
ot h er cam p uses "fi ve y ears
ago". The dorm could easily be
set up for male-female wings on
th e same fl oor , thus providing the
co-ed residents with a greater
amount of interact ion on an
everyday basis.
This step can only be taken by
us if we want it. It takes adults,
men an d women, you and I.
Schedule Changes
should eliminate this problem ."
"It' s j ust like being in the
militar y .Like they say 'You have
to hurr y up then wait ,' claimed
Mike Popiak. But this isn 't the
milita ry . There are individual
students here with individual
problems that must be considered. Some good suggestions
came from concerne d students
and maybe if we keep trying, this
problem can be taken care of.
M&G goes to Inau gural
A Question of Attitude
Four M ore Years !
by jim sachetti
He was just sitting there, his their atti tude.'
very guts, his supproters loving
job done and done well. Very
"Officer, Officer , you come him , or at least respecting him.
patiently, very tolerantly, very here immediately and show me
But the real difference, the one
wisely, sitting and gazing out at how to get to this seat!" The I had expected to find , the one I
the gray winter Washington sky mink-wrapped, wrinkled old lady had hoped to find , wasn't there. It
when they attacked him.
wasn 't asking, or politely was the difference in attitude.
"Hey lady. How about me requesting, she was demanding.
The Nixon people; I had exerawlin' up there on his knee so's Like most of the other VIP's, she pected them to be arrogant,
a friend of mine can take my had nothing but distaste for the pushy , intolerant, self-centered,
picture?"
crowd she was in , and had no ego-tripping, unconcerned about
"I'm sorry sir, no one is..."
other wish than to be free of it. anyone but themselves. That was
"Hey look lady , I can go up And her wish, as she well knew, what I had always believed led
there, I got permission. 01' was the policeman's command. them to elect a man like him.
Tricky Dick , he said I could."
Other VIP's pushed and shoved
But the demonstrators ; well,
It was a ludicrous con- through the crowd, seldom if ever somehow I had expected a difversation : the big guy with the bothering to say "Pardon " or ferent attitude to prevail among
hard hat arguing with the small, "Excuse me." Thev bullied the people who claimed to be marlady Park Service Ranger ; he . cops who were there to help ching for peace. I had expected
very arrogantly telling her that them , and generally behaved them to be quiet , peaceful ,
he wanted to sit on Abraham with an arrogance that only tolerant, concerned for others.
Lincoln's knee , her, very politely comes with money or power.
Then I listened to that guy
telling him that it wasn't allowed.
Later that night , they would hassle that lady ranger , and
But what happened when the dance before the TV cameras, watched them perform a senlady Ranger returned to her post living testimony to the good seless and malicious act of
to the side of the huge statue was things that can come to good vandalism , and listened to that
even more ludicrous...and people in America.
crowd cheer.
disgusting.
As I walked the seven blocks
nuu wiicii i ncdiu iiicm iucci ,
Obviously afire with that between the scenes of these two and looked up into the marble
"revolutionary " zeal we've all incidents, between the people eyes of that man who did so much
heard so much about, another who had come to curse Nixon and f or this country and its people, I
demonstrator decided that it was the people who had come to cheer lost faith in a belief I had held for
time to "liberate" the one part of him , I felt as if I was walking a long time, the belief that a
the Lincoln Memorial that between two worlds. For some better day was coming.
remained unliberated. He walked reason , I thought the two crowds
Because the same arrogance,
across the low pedestal and would be different.
the same lack of respect for the
began to scale the statue 's base.
And to a certain extent, they rights of others , the sanVfe
He was hanging from Lincoln 's were. There were the obvious violence of spirit that put Nixon
shoe when the other guy hit him, differences in appearance — the in the White House put those guys
tackled him, brought both of demonstrators in their blue- on that statue. And if they were in
them tumbling to the floor. "Stay jeaned , Army-surplused con- his position, as some day they
off that statue, man. Leave him formity and the Nixonites in their might be, they too would bomb,
alone!"
king's court richness. There were and lie and cheat and steal and
But the "liberator " wouldn't be differences in age — the stomp on other people to get what
stopped. He hauled himself to his demonstrators
predominantly they wanted.
feet, rammed his assailant and young, the Nixon people mostly
And later on, as I watched
sent him sprawling into the old. And there was the very ob- Nixon go bv and an orange come
crowd. Picking up a club another vious difference in opinion about flying out of the crowd at him, I
liberator had dropped , he the man of the day, RMN himself couldn't help but feel sorry...for
threatened his attacker , "You — the demonstrators hatine his ' him , for the guy who threw
leave me alone, motherfucker,
it....for all of us.
The Washin gton Monument was the meeting place for a great
I'll do what I want!"
(Andris photo )
many of the marchers .
He resumed his ascent and was
soon joined by several other
freedom fighters. They hung
signs all over the statue and the
By Donald G. Enz
crowd cheered .
Saturday, January 20th, 1973,
Several hours later , they :President
Nixon
was
marched for peace. Uptown , iinaugurated , but for me that
Nixon was coming. Along the -wasn't the most important or
parade route , the common people most impressive event of the day.
were massed to get their one and What was? The National Peace
only glimpse of him. They hung Action Coalition 's (NPAC ) peace
on lamposts, perched on car demonstration .
bumpers and jammed the The purpose of the march from
sidewalks ten deep.
Lincoln monument to Washington
Restraining
the anxious monument was not to disrupt the
multitudes were Washington 's presidential inauguration , but to
finest...every one of them , ;show peacefully the concern of
supplemented by thousands of the thousands who marched that
servicemen and God only knows they are truly sincere in their
how many government agents. feelings against the war. The
To them had fallen the thankless npersons that I met and saw in the
task of threatening, pleading with !Lincoln monument were not the
and physically restraining the istereotyped protester the press
frozen and impatient crowds who itries to make us believe they are.
threatened to engulf the parade 'The marchers were not warriors
route. In addition to this, the police had also been assigned Ithey were parents , preachers ,
another task.
IDusinessmen and students that
On either side of Nixon 's bullet- i.vant out of a war not make one.
This view is from the top of the Washington Monument , looking down .
(Andris photo )
proof glass enclosed throne , 'rhey are people you meet
'
'<
:
I I m^mgmmmm ^mmmmm ^
bleachers and box seats had been <?veryday who dislike Nixon 's
set up for those who could afford \war policies, negotiations and the
to shell out the fifty dollar ad- mission to them. These were the 'Vietnamese to accept .
Con gressmen , the dignitaries , The NPAC wants the U.S.,
the rich Nixon supporters to ''ou t now ". The group believes
whom this Inauguration Day t he U.S. Government has no right
meant four more years of vir- t o negotiate or demand anything
tually unchallenged privilege and i n Southeast Asia. It is not our
wealth .
,
vvar or our country tha t is in
With plastic souvenir tickets in j hand , a ll th ese uncomm oners vve are weilding the power in
had to do was get to their seats F'ar is. It is our peace, our
and bask in the glow of power, dIeman d s, our welf are an d our
The crowds , however , had turned pieace that we are talking about in
t hei r j ourney onto P ennsy lvania VWashington , Par is an d Sout h east
Ave, into a problem and the Aisia , not the peace of the S.
poli ce had been ordered to hel p Vrietnamese people.
t hese p r ivileged get through the NPAC sees no reason tor our
peasants to their seats.
r egotiating terms and policies
What made the VI P ' s J /hich should be S. Vietnam 's
memorable , however , was not r esponsibility . We should get
the fact that they could afford «' out now " (we should have
those seats, or even their minks , a Irea dy been out ). We shoul d let
satins and $400 suits that set them s: . Vietnam negotiate , it' s their
off from the rest of the wf ar , it should be their peace.
Duri ng the "Death March " this paper mac he repli ca of the
( Fouca rt Photo )
president was carried.
crowd. The strikin g thing was
A v**m *«*l^ «v »« T 1% *¦*«^ **^J
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Give Peace a Chance
Bv Frank Pizzoli
All we said was 'Give Peace A
Chance'. I don't think anyone
bothered to listen, at least anyone
who should have . listened.
D.
C.
on
Washington ,
its
day
with
inauguration
thousands of demonstrators ,
splinter groups, housewives, and
the rest of the lot was as big an
example of partisan politics as
Capitol Hill, if not bigger.
It seemed like every group
there had a separate goal, second
to which was peace in Indochina .
You should have seen it all with
your own eyes. No, maybe it's
better that you stayed home since
some jealous anti-system splinter
counter-insurgency group would
have used you to compute a
phony crowd estimate.
At each little knoll or cluster of
trees there was a gathering
giving out its side of things. The
Trotsky organization pleaded for
people not to sign a petition
requesting Richard Nixon to
accept the latest peace plan
becausje the North Vietnamese, to
their minds , made too many
People from all walks of life and nationalities prot ested the Viet
Nam war. These two gentlemen were fro m Puerto Rico .
( Photo by Foucart )
>
concessions. Probably to their
minds there will be too many
concessions. Concessions soar to
the top of the arguments , not
peace.
The Gay Liberation marched in
full swing. "Hey, hey, what do ya
say, why doncha try it the other
way ", they shouted. We've had a
decade of war, the other way
would be peace. I guess that's not
what they were referring to.
Sexism, not peace.
And then there were all the
people from different states who
had their personal gigs to get
over on you, like the ones from
Ohio. They went into all the
of
making
complications
demonstration signs, the hassles
they encountered with trying to
piece together a group to come to
the rally. "It takes too much time
to print nice neat letters so people
can tell where you're from and
what you want to say about the
war. We should have organized
ourselves earlier and sent out a
contract to a printing firm to do
our work." Peace, a scared idea,
becomes the secular.
I imagine someday That
'movement madness' will rank
with the big-time , lobbyists ,
general interest groups, budget
hearings and the like. Peace
becomes a commodity.
There were people at the
demonstration who gave some
humanness to the whole day. A
lot of older men and women
joined the crowd. Their faces
wore their feelings. One middleage couple with a child of no more
than seven shuffled along occasionally remarking that they
smelled something different but
sweet, dope. I couldn't find the
right words to tell them that some
people needed the stuff to get
through the day, couldn't let the
system get them down.
At one point their little boy
asked about a sign being carried
by a weary black man : "Nixon's
There Was
Snm AtVii« or
¦
¦*»
Amon g the more notable spea kers against the war was Paul McCloskey
Repub lican Representative from California.
Marchers clashed with oldor , more conservative citi zens durin g their trip through town.
(right on stage )/
(Andris Photo )
., _ m ,
tA
(And ris
Photo )
fty Sue Sprague
A hundred thousand marc hed ,
and a lot more watched the
parade . Somehow I couldn 't feel
a part of either. Nothin g made
sense , no matter what you came
to see.
Thousands of people , crudit y on
all sides. It didn 't matter if it was
the lady in fur coat pushing you
aside, or th e k id i n the f lannel
shirt tr ying to jump up on Lincoln 's knee.
But somehow , out of the
scream ing, pushing crowds at the
parade , and t he k ids st and in g on
a w indblown hi ll , t here was
something. Ma y be it was a belief
i n Ri chard Nixon , or ma ybe a
belief in George McGover n. For
each it was someth ing dif ferent.
But for me it was the old people
who were up on the hill with the
kids i n the freezing w i nd ,
carryin g signs , protestin g their
dead children , or the ch i ldren
the y didn 't want to have
, to watch die. A nd i t was the
little oriental guy who couldn 't
sp eak En glish , who pushed to the plunger , then to my
hand , then to himself. He moved
back several feet , posed right in
front of the par ade , and stood up
straight. I took the picture , he
smiled , nodded and left. And then
there was the parade cop who
took the time to be courteous,
even when people were shoving
forward .
For me, I'm still glad I voted
for George McGovern. But in
spite of the crudity , the hardness ,
and the selfishness , I' m also glad
I went to the Inaug uration. To
learn something about America .
secret plan killed my son, they
gave me $25,000".the tot wanted
to know what Nixon and $25.00
had to do with each other. And
there they were, trying to explain
things with their bare faces
hanging out, at a loss to explain
the ridiculousnessof equating life
with money.
The demonstration with its
50,000 or so people was like Naked
City's. 8 million people, each with
a separate story, none too good.
And the Cold
Winds Blow
By Elaine Pongratz
While Nixon was busy being
crowned , the nineteen contingents of the March Against the
Waf were forming sections at the
base of the Lincoln Memorial.
And while the Inaugural Parade
was plugging up Pennsylvania
Avenue , the March Against
Death began the semi-solemn
vigil toward the Washington
Monument.
The wind was freezing cold but
it was nothing compared to the
coldness that came from inside
as you watched the March
Against Death with their shrouds
and signs and coffins. There was
no thaw as you passed the aged
black man with the sign which
read "Nixon's secret plan Hlled
my son". Not even the levity of
the Gay Liberation's "Faggots
for Peace" signs and chants of
"Nixon destroyed the dikes now
the Dykes will destroy Nixon"
broke the ice. And it was not until
I was leaving the banners and
chants behind I realized that I
had just been a part of a blanket
of awareness that was 60,000
people thick. A blanket that could
only try to ease the chill.
We All Had
a Reason
By Ellen Doyle
The man with the loudspeaker
said 100,000, the news at 10
o'clock said 60,000, and the news
at 11 o'clock had the figure down
to 45,000. But whatever the exact
strange
a
coun t
was ,
conglomera tion of people braved
the cold in Washington January
20 to urge Nixon to end the
Vietnam war.
However, the variety of people
who were there represented a
wide range of different causes
and attitudes. Apparently , the
dream of total withdrawal from
Vietnam has become a utopic
goal for many people in the peace
movement. The sad thing is the
divergent ideas which everyone
has of this Utopia. To some, an
ideal society would mean
legalized marijuana..to others
the
end
of
homosexual
(or
discrimination
racial
discrimination or discrimination
because of sex). And still others
think the United States should
turn on to Jesus. I can 't q uite
feature the Nixon-less society
that would enbody all these
philosophies.
My react ions to the peace
marc h were varied. I was
disgusted by the people defacing
the Lincoln Memorial , amused by
the girls leading "Stop the War "
chants (they probably didn 't
make the cheerleading squad in
10th grade) , amazed by the
display put on by the Gay Libbers
and touched by the sincere attitude of middle aged people who
were right there with all the
crazies.
I guess it 's logical that I should
have mixed feelings about my
first and probably my last peace
demonstration . I went to find out
what it was all about , and found
out tha t it' s abou t anything you
want it to be.
1MB
Willis , DaRe lead Huskies to 1 lth in row
.
_
another DaRe basket. The half
The BSC Basketball Huskies ended with the Huskies up 33-30,
won two non-league games this still close enough for a
jp past week , dropping Lycoming Wilmington upset.
College 89-65 in Williamsport , and
Second Half
Wilmington College of Delaware
The Huskies started to pull
72-63 before 2,000 fans at the away in the earl y portion of the
! Nelson Fieldhouse. The Huskies second half , l ed by three buckets
have tied last year 's record for a piece from the hands of Willis
consecutive victories with eleven and DaRe. These baskets gave
straight wins.
the Huskies a 45-34 lead at the
}
John W i
l s, BSC's 6'8" junior 14:23 mark .
, led all scorers with 27 The Huskies were able to
I center
points , raising his seasonal per- maintain this lead of between 11| game average to near 24 points 15 points until the final minutes.
1 per-game. Willis a,lso led all
Forward Joe Kempski missed
\ rebounders with 18. Tony DaRe the game due to some personal
I supplied all the outside support problems, but Gary Choyka filled
needed , finishing with his in with seven rebounds and six
seasonal high of 23.
points. Gary Ty ler and DaRe also
Wilmington Surprises Huskies had seven rebounds.
The Huskies jumped to an early
Art Luptowski played another
6-4 lead at the 15:39 mark on a strong game in the backcourt ,
DaRe jumper , only to fall behind scoring 11 points and passing off
10-6 two minutes later.
for seven assists, to lead the club.
Wilmington kept their lead DaRe finished second in assists
until 4:47 when the Huskies with six.
rallied back to a 24-22 lead on
Chronister lauds DaRe
by b ob oJiver
Coach Charlie Chronist er
expressed happiness with the
play of DaRe , who now has 43
points , 16 rebounds , and 12 assists
in his last two ballgames.
The Huskies are home this
week , facing Lock Haven Wednesday night , and East Stroudsburg Saturday at the Nelson
Fieldhouse. A date to watch in the
future is February 3, when the
Cheyney Wolves make their
seasonal visit to Bloomsburg .
j v uame
The BSC JV's ran Goldey
Beaconi out of Nelson Fieldhouse
in the preliminary game by a 7958 score. Coach Reese's charges
played a strong game from start
to finish , exhibiting some flashy
passing in the process. High for
the Huskies were Dick Yanni
with 16 points, John Kesseg with
15, and Ron Keller with 14.
Kesseg was the rebound leader
with 14, while Porambo was
second with nine and led the team
with five assists.
BSC
Tops
Tony DaRe, who had 43 points in two games last week, is shown
shooting over Jim Britt of Wilmington.
Tony Da Re looking up-court for an open man.
( Keinard Photo )
Lycoming
By Bill Sipl er
The undefeated Huskies of
blew
Bloomsburg
State
Lycoming College out of the gym
Wednesday night 89-65 in a game
that was over before it started.
Led by center John Willis, who
turned in a great performance
both offensively and defensively
— 27 points, 14 rebounds, 6
blocked shots, and Tony DaRe,
who had 20 points, the Huskies
ran to an early lead of 24-4 before
Lycoming got organized. The
Warriors of Lycoming College
battled back , ripping off 11
straight points , to narrow the
score to 24-15, mainly due to a full
court press which caused the
Huskies to turn the ball over 3
times and kept them scoreless for
5:05. The Huskies ended the
drought at 7:41 left on a DaRe
basket. The game stayed fairly
even for the rest of the half with
the Huskies opening up a 13 point
lead at 44-31.
Second Hall Action
In the second half the Huskies
quickly broke to a lead mainly as
a result from the fatigue the
Lycoming players faced from the
wearing out of the fullcourt press
they had used in the first half. Art
Luptowski scored on a tap in
after "Toby " Tyler started a
break with a steal at 13:35. The
Huskies reached a 26 point lead at
the 13:00 mark on a basket by Joe
Kempski 65-39. The game stayed
that way the rest of the half with
the subs makin g two appearances the first of which
ended at 6:17 to go in the half and
returning with 3:09 to go.
John Willis led in points with 27,
followed by DaRe who had 20
points , 9 rebounds and 6 assists.
Art Luptowski also played well ,
with 12 points and 9 assists.
BSC's John Willis and Wilmingt on 's Dan Branch fig ht ing f or a
reb ound. Willis leads the Huskies with a 23.8 scori ng average/ and a
16 rebo und-per game ave rage.
( Keinard Photo )
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Top Husky Scorers
John Wil lis grabbing rebou nd over Wilmington 's Paul McOade.
(Keinard Photo )
Willis
DaRe
Luptowski
Choyka
Kempski
Ty ler
Pts .
262
138
n?
114
97
67
Ave.
23.8
12.5
io. i
10.0
9.7
6.0
Gary Ty ler, who has played strong at
fo rward for th e Huskies
this yea r, shown shooting over Larry Blon
g
,
(Ke inar d Phot o)
I
Even Record
m
tsy Mike Williams
I
Huskies Win Another
record of 4 wins and 4 losses.
Three of those losses came
against 3 of the best college
wrestling teams in the East:
Clarion State, Slippery Rock, and
Trenton State. A telephone chat
with Coach Sanders revealed the
feeling tha t if these three teams
would have com e late in the
season we would have taken
them. He also said the repeat of
our fourth loss to Mansfield will
not happen again. About the meet
against West Chester he said, "It
was the most satisfying victory of
my coaching and beating West
Chester, my old Alma Mater
made it that much better.He was
very proud of statem ents made to
him concerning the excellent
condition our wrestlers are in.
Coach Sanders also said that he
feels that Dan Burkholder is the
most improved wrestler since
October.
Looking ahead sees the Huskies
facing a tough weekend with
meets both Friday and Saturday
nights against Indiana University .
(Pa.) and California State
respectively . Sanders is con- :
sidering the move of Brian Berry i
from 158 lbs. to 142 lbs. to give our I
lighter weights more strength.
So far this year fan support has j
been great and a continuance
surely can help to give our
wrestlers even more spirit and j
assurance that we are behind ]
them.
118 — Longnecker , (SSC) ,
pinned Kocker, (BSC ) , 4:11.
126 — Mertz, (SSC) , pinned
O'Donnel, (BSC) , 1:29.
134—Edmonds, (BSC) , pinned '
Routsong,
(SSC) , 5:54.
stormed back to win a decision
I
142
—
Bria
, (SSC) , decisioned
from Walsh 8-3. Dan Burkholder
;
(BSC)
Beitler,
, 5-3.
i
. put the Huskies ahead to stay
150
—
Watts,
(BSC ) , pinned
\
with a superior decision over
(SSC)
Dean,
,
2 :18.
Dentz 12-2 at 177 lbs. Coach
:!\
Sanders then sent Ron Sheehan 158 — Novosel , (SSC), 1
out at 190 lbs. and the strategy decisioned Berry, (BSCJ, 5-4. ... j
"
worked as Ron gave our matmen 167—Hayes, (BSC ) , decisioned , I
a pin in only 1:31. At Hwt. was Walsh, (SSC) , 8-3.
%
Shippensburg 's best wrestler 177 — Burkholder , (BSC) ,
%
with a 13-1 record. Coach Sanders superior decisioned , Dentz ,
%
felt our Mr. Hitchcock could take (SSC) , 12-2.
H
| and take him he did as Shorty put 190 — Sheehan, (BSC) , pinned,
Swope, (SSC) , 1:31.
him away 6-1.
'
H
HWT. — Hitchcock, (BSC) ,
*$
Reflections...
Our wrestlers now have a decisioned Myers, (SSC) , 6-1.
|
|
¦ "The kids wrestled well". This
¦comment by B.S.C. wrestling
I
coach Rodger Sanders followed a
¦Husky victory over the Red
¦Raiders of Shippensburg State
¦last Friday night at Shippensburg
¦28-18.
¦ The electrifying Shorty Hit¦chcock again did his thing by
defeating
Shippensburg 's
I
¦heavyweight 6-1. The Red
B
Raider's heavyweight, Myers,
B
was 13-1 before meeting HitB
chcock. Shorty is now the owner
B
of a 6-0 including his two back-toB
back wins against the tough
B
opponents from West Chester and
Shippensburg. Several Husky
B
B
grapplers have fine records.
B
Lonnie Edmonds is 6-2 and is one
B
of our finest lighter weights.
B
Randy Watts is a strong conB
sistent performer and along with
¦ Ron Sheehan was again named
¦ wrestler of the week. Kevin
¦ Hayes at 167 and Dan Burkholder
h
also own 6-2 records, and Ron
Sheehan is 6-1.
S
»
.
The match started with the 118
M
and 126 wrestlers going down to
defeat. Lonnie Edmond put the
H
ra
Huskies first points on the board
by registering a fall against
B
Routsong of Shippensburg. Dan
B
M
Beitler was decisioned by the Red
Bria 5-3. Randy Watts
Raiders
„
H
" added to Bloom's tally by pinning
I!
Shippensburg 's Dean at 150 lbs.
M
This
set the match score at 15-12,
fl
Shippensburg
. Brian Berry who
P|
coach
Sander's
says is "just
H
on
the
brink
of starting
H
winning
ways,"
dropped a
pf
I
one point decision to S.S.C.'s
Novosel 5-4, Kev in Ha y es
f$
Randy Watts, BSC's 150 Ib. wrestler,shown against West Chester 's Nick Montello.
, (S. White Photo )
Ron Sheehan wrestling in the match winner against WC's Bruce Rennet.
(S. White Photo )
Girls ' g et in th e Swi m
The girls swim t eam t ra veled
to P enn State Universit y last
weekend to com pete in the f irst
girl ' s swim meet in B.S.C.
histor y . The girls swam against
Penn State and Madison College
i from Virginia in a tri-meet.
| Lynn KoCh placed first in the 50
t^
yd. Free style with a time of 29.0
for the initial first place finish.
Sue Nickiem placed third in the
200 yd. I.M. with a time of 2:59.3
for the Huskiettes ,
The final scor e of the meet was
P.S.U. 116, Madison College 74,
and B.S.C. 25.
The girls are coached by Miss
J ack ie A dam s. F uture meets are
Feb. 14 against Bucknell at 7:30
away , Feb. 17 against Lycoming
at 2 P.M. home , and Feb. 24
against Lehigh at 2 P.M. away .
This is the first year for girl 's
swimming at B.S.C. so let' s get
out and support the team.
CGA
(continued from page one)
stipulates that an electrician be
on hand during the program.
WO ODROCK
Council allocated $112.50 to the
Woodrock project for transportation and meals for the
underprivileged children coming
to B.S.C. The program will be
held the weekend of February 3,
with 30 students from the ages of
12 to 15, all from poor neighborhoods. There was some
discussion of this, also, since the
question of other money sources
was brought up, such as state or
federal aid. Also, it was mentioned that this project was not
really for the B.S.C. students and
therefore the students money
should not be used. However , Mr.
Jack Mulka stated that Jim
Nallo , the sponsor of this project
had tried the available alternatives and was turned down.
Someone also mentioned that
when Jim was here last
semester, council had led him to
believe that they would come
through with the "money .
LAMBDA FIRE AID
Dan
Burkholder ,
CGA
president announced that the
letters to downtown businessmen
were successful in bringing in
$148.00 for the Lambda Alpha Mu
fire victims. Council added
$602.00 to make the total $750.00
as planned.
OTHER BUSINESS
Other items mentioned briefly
were the General Budgetary
Policies to be discussed at the
next meeting, and the Senate passed
4-1-4 calendar. Vice
President Pickett in a letter to
faculty and administration
decided to postpone it another
year since the students really are
not aware of it's existence. It was
suggested that a committee be
set up for recommendations to
Dr. Pickett.
Also, the fact that student
trustee Mike Torbert has asked to
resign brought up the question of
how a replacement will be
selected . This is something that is
scheduled to be worked on at the
next meeting of the Pennsylvania
State College Association of
Student Governments (PSASG).
Doug McClintock stated that
BNE sales were lagging
somewhat due to the unfa miliarity of the college community with John McLaughlin ,
the show's headliner. He expressed confidence that sales will
increase with more publicity .
N ews
Briefs
Exotic Work Opportun ities ;
Travel ; Fame ; Fortune .
Begin your career in journa lism
with the Best ! The M&G
is.acceptin g all applications
for writers , typists, photo graphers ,
and proofr eader s . No experie nce
necessar y. We will train . Apply in
Antiwar Convention
person any Sunda y or Tuesda y
On Feb . 23-24 the sixth
National An tiwar Convention
will be held by the National
Peace Action Coalition . A
march on the capitol is Feb.
23. On Feb. 25 the Studen t
Mobilization Comm ittee is
holding a student antiwar
conference. Go down and get
involved .
night at Room 234, Waller .
world's greatest guitarists, will
appear with the Mahavishnu
Orc hestra in concert at B.S.C.'s
A slide and ta pe library
Haas Center for the Arts on
orienta tion prog ram will be
Friday, February 2 at 8:30 p.m.
shown once every fifteen
Tickets
are on sale at the Inminute s begin ning at 9:00
Desk in the College
formation
a.m. and runni ng until 9:00
Price
is $3 with I.D., and
Union.
p.m. on Thurs day, February
$3.50 without I.D. All seats are
l, 1973 in room L-35 on the
grou nd floor of Andr uss
MEN'S GLEE CLUB from 6:45 general admission .
Library.
to 8 p.m. on Thursday in Haas
rehearsal room 116. All men READ T H E BIBLE FOR
interested in singing are MEANING. Study Session on
welcome. No audition necessary. concepts of the Old Testament
this Thursday evening at 8 p.m.
at
ATTENTION ST U DEN TS : Community of the Spirit, 550 E.
winning the 400 yard freestyle
Second St. Come.
relay with a time of 3:28.58. John McLaughlin , one of the
Swimming for the Huskies on the
relay were Doug Yocum, Jon
Stoner, Bill Ewell , and Gibas.
Library Orientat ion
Environmental Committee
People
int erested
in
working on the Environ ment
committe e sho uld cont act
Karen Keinard at 389-3101 as
soon as possible. A meeting
should be held in the next
week or two .
INTEREST ED
.
!
Rush
for sororities
.
GIRLS' '
Jan. 25 with
Thursday,
begins
Kuster
House
in
Open
Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. (Notice
the change in location). Plan to
attend and get to meet the
sororities.
ATTENTION
Huskies lose to Clarion
B.S.C. traveled to Clarion State
College Saturday and suffered
their third loss of the season 7340. The loss evened the Huskies
record at 3-3 and snapped a three
meet win streak.
The defending state champions
held the Huskies to only four first
placements in the meet, two by
Ail-American senior Dave Gibas ,
one by freshman Rich Kozicki .
APSCUF/PAHE
(continued from page one)
the state colleges.
Mr. William Acierno, head of
APSCUF/ PAHE at Bloomsburg, had the following comment: "I concur with Dr. Keller 's
comments..the state is forcing us
to take it into arbitration and both
the students and faculty are
suffering as a result."
Eppley 's
Pharmacy
MAIN « IRON STREETS
|VL..ji.l. iil m.
rrsicnpnon
4n»rlntt
*t
spoaawiT
•CHAN&
•CUCRLAIN
•FABERQE
?LANVIN
•PRINCE MATCHABEUl
•ELIZABETH ARDEN
•HELENA RUBENSTEIN
•DANA
•Coi r
•MAX*ACTOR
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and the 400 freestyle relay team.
Kozicki scored his first place
finish first in the third event of
the meet, the 200 yard freestyle .
He also placed second in the 500
yard free.
Gibas followed with a first in
the 50 yard free with a time of 22.2
and came back later to swim the
100 yard free in 49.22 to claim
first place in that event also.
The relay finished off the meet
Miller Office
Supp ly Co.
18 West Main Street, Bloonubur g, Pa.
:
HEADQUARTERSOF
HALLMARK CARDS
AND GIFTS
Phone 784-2561
Hartzel's Music Store
72 N. Iron St.
Over 300 Guitars
and Amplifiers
HENRIE'S
Card and Book Nook
40 W. Main St.
The New Inn
Different
No Longer A Coffee House
NOW A GOOD
REST AURANT
Hatlan
Lobttir
Food
Clam s
Fondu e
544 East Sf., Bloomiburg
•
Coach McLaughlin commented
after the meet that the long layoff
was detrimental to the team and
he hopes for a speedy recovery by
the team.
Say H appy
Anniversary or
H appy Birthday
with
'^Et ifjU's
1 ^^^ FLOWERS
V^^MImr r WwMwMt
Dm TW HUI O> K*tf St.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^¦^¦^^^^^^^^^^B^U^H^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^—
John 's Food
Market
W. Main & Leonard St.
Open 8 a.m. to 12 midnight Daily
Delicate ssen
Full line of groceries
cV snacks
Ritto r's
Office Supply
112 E. Main Sf.
Bloomsbwg,
784-4323
t
L
U**- *'
''
ATTENTIONI A
TEAC HERS AND EDUCATORS IN PENNSYLVANIA : |
REWARD
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:
10,000
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W
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Our rates are generally LOWER than banks ,
credit unions , finance companies , " revolving "
type credit , department store charges , etc.
For Loans up to $3,500:
Write or phone TSO at Willow Grove , Pa.
F Dial (215) 548-0300
'
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and TEACHERS SERVICE CONSUMER DISCOUNT COMPANY
Maryland & Computer Roidi , Willow Grove , Pt. 19090
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For Loans from $3,600 to $10,000:
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