rdunkelb
Fri, 05/03/2024 - 17:28
Edited Text
"Winterim " calendar
under scrutiny
The Baroq ue Music.Ense mble wi th (1 to r) Suzanne Huffnagle on
viola, Gretchen Master on violin . Dr. Richard Brook on guitar,
Hester Huffnagle on violi n, Or. Eric Smithner on recorder, flute
and oboe , and Larry Mack on recorders was presented by Luzerne
Hall last Tuesday night. The ensemble 's repertoire included "A
Suite for Recorders and Strings " by Telleman, var ious selections
by J. S. Bach, and "Quartetino " by Scarlotti.
(Photo by Berger )
Elementary Ed. appr oved
Student teachers
to get 15 credits
A proposal to add a three credit
seminar to the present twelve
credits received for Student
Teaching has been approved by
Dr. Dayton Pickett , VicePresident of Academic Affairs
for Elementary Education
majors. The equivalent for
Secondary Education majors is
expected to go through by the end
of this week. After being fully
approved by the Senate the credit
increase will become policy effective for the 1973-74 Fall
Semester.
Petitioned in October
The program was originally
petitioned in October but was
shelved until this Spring
Semester. From Dr. Pickett, the
proposals will go to the Academic
Affairs Committee of the Senate
and then to Dr. C. Stuart Edwards, Dean of the School of
for
Studies ,
Professional
Brazil ian
w i ll be
colle ge
v i siting
Bloomsbur g in conjunction with
The Center for International
Stud ies Nation wide "Ex periment
in International Living. "
Mr. Ruy Carlos Stumpf , San
Paulo , will head the group of
students durin g their sta y in
Bloomsbur g from February 6 to
Februar y 18. Katia Mar ia von
Kathleen
Erlen , Rosanne
C
armen
Lid ia da
Mascor enhas,
Windmuller
,
Cunha , Claudia
,
Francesco
Ricardo de Reudiger
and Ha wy
Jose Armade
Alejand ro Erler von Erlea
The "4-1-4" ( Winterim)
Calendar Tentatively, the new
calendar will be:
' First 13weeks
September 10 — Registration
September 11 — Classes begin
November
21-26
—
Thanksgiving
December 12 — Classes end ;
3 day reading period
December 15-21 — Exam week
3 Week Winterim
January 7-25
Second 13weeks
February 4 — Registration
February 5 —Classes begin
March 22 — Spring recess
April 1 — Classes start
May 10 — Classes end ;
3 day reading period
May 15-21 — Exams
Class periods for all sessions
would be extended from 50 to 60
minutes each.
Advantages
The main advantage of the
calendar , according to Dr.
Bressett is that it can offer a
larger variety of learning experiences in a shorter period of
time. Also this period would be
ideal for three week research
programs and other unique
educational opportunities.
Disadv anta ges
It was brought up that the other
state colleges with this type
calendar (Edinboro and Slippery
Rock) have been having trouble
and that one of them, had decided
to drop it. Bucknell was also said
to be having problems with their
winterim calendar.
Economic disadvantage for the
students was another factor
against the calendar. To make it
work financially, 50 per cent of
the students would be forced to
attend the winterim session,
according to some APSCUF
members. Also, to fulfill the
requirements for graduation ,
students would have to attend two
'winterim sessions, due to the 15
credit hour limit in each of the 13
week semesters. Other problems
could include pressure to provide
additional courses that are not
innovative , to ma k e up the
decrease in the main semesters
departmental development.
Discussion Seminars
The Seminars will be three
hour periods devoted to a
discussion of topics encountered
in pre-student teaching activities
and in the actual student teaching
experience. A district supervisor
will conduct the seminar for
groups of approximately twentyfive students. Held in alternating
school buildings of a particular
district , the seminars will offer
the future teachers valuable onthe-job advice and training.
Legal aspects and organizations
encountered by the teacher will
also be examined.
The credit increase will help to
eliminate the need for excessive
overloading by students in
The Student Art Exhibit is an
The All-Student Art Exhibit activity undertaken solely by the
semesters preceding the student
teaching experience; over- . will be held in the Haas Gallery art students of B.S.C. Help
loading has so far been necessary opening Feb. 12 at 7:00 p.m. Art support the exhibit by submitting
in order to graduate in the ex- majors decided on an all-student your work or offering assistance
jury to determine what will be if possible. This is your exhibit.
pected period of four yea rs.
selected for the show.
Get involved .
For further information conAll students of B.S.C. are
tact
Jim Koehler (P.O. 428),
welcome to submit their works.
Mater ial s h ould be ta ken to Haas Chris Kovac (P.O. 486), or .Sue
Gallery and signed on the list Fulmer (P.O. 733).
provided. The deadline for
submitting work will be on
Wednesday. Feb. 7.
com p rise the remainder of the
The Pennsylvania Higher
group.
All work should be ac- Educa tion Assistance Agency
The Ex perime nt in in- companied by a 3 by 5 card with has numerous
off-cam pus
ternational Liv ing believes that name title , medium , year at summer job-opportunities open
the forthcomin g vis it will p rovide B. S.C. and monetary value. for eligible Students. The
an op p ortun it y f or forei gn P ai nti ngs must be suitab le for Financial Aid Office will review
vis i tors to share the academic hang ing and have eyescrews Parent's Confidential St atements
and extracurr icular life of attached to the back . All graphi c and refer students to their homeAmerican college students and w ork , drawin gs and photography , area Federal Work Study
facult y; also , it will provide an must be matted .
Program. Details may be obopportunity for the visitors to
tained
at the office on pay rate ,
Work not selected for the show
contribute an image of their own can
hours
p
er week , and application
he picked up at Haas Gallery,
cultures and values.
up unti l Monday ,
procedures
start ing Monday, Febr 12. Work
Co-ordlnator of the program is left beyond 5:00 p.m.
March
12.
Prompt
response is
on
16
Dr. Rob ert C. Miller , who will be will no longer be the Feb.
since
only
a limited
necessary
responassisted by Barbara Gillott. Both sibility of the Student Art Show number of BSC students will be
( continued on page six )
approved for the program.
Committee.
Brazilian studen ts
to visit ca mp us
Ei ght
student s
by Karen Keinard
Discussion of the new "4-1-4"
calendar was the subject of
lengthy debate at the last
meeting of APSCUF/ PAHE ,
which took place last Tuesday
afternoon.
One of the major points brought
up at the meeting was the need
for the entire college community
to be involved in making
decisions about the calendar.
General meetings for faculty
and students were suggested; however nothing definite
was decided. In order to
enlighten members of the college
community to some aspects of
this calendar , the tentative
format is listed below with some
of its advantages and disadvantages mentioned in the APSCUF meeting.
BSC s tudent art
exhibit set
Summer j obs
#
and the possibility of an adverse
effect on the summer sessions. It
was mentioned that since the
three-week sessions in the
summer were eliminated
because of short time and
cramming, this should be con-
<:irfor« *ri in the camo litrVit
Calendar
This calendar was supported
last year at a Senate meeting,
and this year's present calendar
was a step toward the "4-1-4"
program because for the first
time the semester ended before
Christmas. For this reason , the
administration has felt that it had
a mandate from the Senate to go
ahead and work on the implementation . However, according to Mr. Acierno, president
of B.S.C. APSCUF, "it could open
a Pandora 's Box." There were
some discussions about having an
open general meeting of the
faculty, but by that time there
was no longer a quorum to
vote on it The matter will be
discussed further in upcoming
meetings of the Senate and
APSCUF.
Forensics
active
The James O'Toole Memorial
Debate tournament will be held
this weekend by the Bloomsburg
State Forensic Society. Fifteen
schools will vie for trophies in
both varsity and novice team
speaking. The topic for
discussion will be "Resolved.
That the Federal Government
should enact a policy of comprehensive medical care for all
U.S. cities." (All debates will be
in Bakeless Center for the
Humanities.)
Schools
attending
are
Shepherd, The United States
Military Academy, University of
Pennsylvania , Brockport , SCICO
of Oswego, Temple, A mer i can
University , Georg e M ason ,
Edinboro , ' Kings College, Penn
State
University ,
Niagra
University , Genesc o, and Cl ar i on
State College , l ast y ear 's
defending sweepstakes winner.
Debate Society
The
Bloomsburg
Debate
Soc iet y has also been active. On
January 25 they travel ed to
Bowdoin , Maine , f or t he Bowdoi n
Freeze Tournament. The varsity
team of S. Peterman and M.
Kleiner finished 2-6, the novice
team of C. Vaughn and G.
Wisloski finished 3-5, wh i le the
novice team of J. White and K.
Kleiner finished 4-4. The squad
met such teams as Bowdoin ,
Tufts Universit y, Bates , The
Universit y of Mass., Norwitch
University , Lehman , St. Fr ancis Portland -Gorh am of Maine , and
Dartmo uth University.
FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 2. 1973
Getting By
"MEAT "
by Jo e Mikl os
The National Lampoon thinks
that meat is funny. In fact Henry
Beard payed upwards on $1000
for a picture entitled "The
Wonderful World of-Mea t," a
meat landscape. Not only that ,
but he also ran a picture (price
not mentioned) of David Frost
interviewing a pork chop.
This means very little to me,
since we all know that the
NatLamp is trite , boring, insipid
and insane. Nonetheless, meat is
funny . Just think about it ...
MEAT !
There, now that was funny ,
wasn 't it?
No?
Well , how bout hearty ground
chuck at thirty nine cents a 1b?
Sends you rolling, and if it
doesn't, think of all the things you
can do with hearty chuck at thirty
nine cents a 1b.
You can make meat loaf , tasty
hamburgs grilled to your taste, or
chili blended with finest quality
kidney beans. You can even stuff
a turkey with it, a big, plump,
juicy and succulent Butterball
turkey, swimming in gravy with
a tenderhearted giblet dressing.
Now fish isn 't funny. Just
compare the humor level of a
sardine with dark , rich liver,
loaded with the vitamins you
need and smothered with onions.
Yummy, yum yum.
Who could laugh at a halibut
staring you deadpa n in the eye
while swimming around in a pool
of oleo? That isn't funny . It's
disgusting. Same goes for jobster. How can you laugh at your
lunch when it's watching you and
contemplating revenge?
But lets get to the heart of the
matter. I cast fish back to the
sea in pursuit of the further
hilarity of animal protein.
Round rump roast , a tastetempting delight , fresh from the
butcher to you . Garnish with
quality bacon , packaged under
the purest and cleanest conditions for your health and
convenience.
Even better , your choice ,
quality pigsfeet or homemade
Polish keilbasa seasoned with r.n
unusual variety of spices.
Like garlic.
Poultry reaches new heights of
humor. Imagine a freshly
plucked broiler , right and ready
for the table, surrounded with
tasty vegetable delights and tubs
of 'slaw. Pheasant under glass
with a tempty truffle side dish
and claret wine sauce.
A tender ham fills the bill.
And what does all this prove?
That the Lampoon may be stupid ,
absurd , insulting and tired, but
that meat is really and truly
funny.
Rare fried steak , anyone?
Last chance : get your
Mahavishnu Orchestra
concert tickets today !
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THE MAROON AND GOLD
Edit or-in-Chief
Susan L. Spraaue
Robert Oliver
Managing Editor
Karen Keinard
New s Editor
BarbWanchlsen
Assistant New s Editor
Joe Miklos
Feature Editor
Valery O'Connell
Copy Editor
JohnStu gri n
Cartoonist
Frank Pinoli, Jim Sachetti
Contributin g Editors
Staff: Don Enz, Joanne Linn , Linda Llvermore, Mary Ellen Lesho, Janine
Watkins , Tim Bossard , Kathy Joseph, Marty Wenhol d
Business Manager
Elaine Pongratz
Ellen Doyle
Office Manager
Advertising Manager
Frank Lorah
Nancy Van Pelt
Circula tion Manager
Photog raphy Editor
Dan Maresh , Jr.
Photo graphers: Dale Alexander, Tom Dryburg, Pat White , Suzi White, Sue Oreef,
Mike Williams , Allana Bergor, John Andrit
Advisor
Ken Hoffman
The M&G is located at 234 Waller , or call 389-3101. All copy must be submitted by
no later tha n 5:00 p.m. on Tuesdays and Sunda ys for the Friday and Wednesday
papers, respectively. The opinions voiced in the columns and feature article s of
the M&G may not necessarily be shared by the entire sta ff.
Final approval of all con tent rests with the Editor-in-Chief.
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A Punball Sorceress : Women are beginning to enjoy the machines.
Neil Young
At The Spec tru m
by P. White
"Don 't Be Denied"
"Well all that glitters isn't gold
I know you've heard that story
told
But I'm a man in a pauper 's
disguise
A millionaire in a business
man 's eyes."
—Neil Young
We slosh across the parking lot
in the rain and head for the welllit entrances to this huge concrete
doughnut. Outside the glass
doors , the Hare Krishna people
descend upon us , and one of our
party purchases a stick of
odoriferous strawberry incense.
"Got a ticket you wanna sell?"
Not on your life , kid. I shudder at
the thought of giving up — for any
price—that computerized slip of
cardboard in my pocket that I
still can 't believe I'm lucky
enough to possess. No thanks,
friend , I do not wish to purchase
an 89c Neil Young T-shirt for two
dollars. Flash your ticket with a
smile and you 're through the
gate . Ooops! A uniformed guard
( does the scowl come with the
outfit? ) stops me, I must admit
that a plain brown bag does look
suspicious. He glances inside —
three quarts of strawberries pose
no discernible threat. He waves
me on , passive, nothing surprises
a Spectrum guard . So this is IT,
the SPECTRUM. Ah well , one
must go where the music is. It
looks amazingly like the State
Farm Show Arena in Harrisburg,
except that there are much fewer
farmers here and a lot more
heads. We're off to find our seats,
and-you guessed it — they're
poor. But .we've remembered a
good pair of binoculars, so we'll
be all right. God-popcorn ,
balloons, nut sundaes in a cone,
Pepsi in quart cartons - this is the
Farm Show Arena ! Except that
there are a few thousand freaks
on the floor instead of a few
hundred heifers. We watch the
mammoth Scoreboard flash
again and again that the Vietnam
War is over, the draft is over , and
the 76'ers will play here
tomorrow at 1:30. I feel like I
should be twisting in my seat to
see who's here , like at a high
school basketball game. We wait
and wait and feel sorry for the
poor schmucks who are climbing
still higher behind us — and these
are $6.50 tickets ! With a jolt I
realize that this is my maiden
voyage , my first superstar
concert. Each of my friends has
one or more supersta r gigs under
his belt, from the Jefferson
Airplane to James Taylor. I've
heard plenty of good live music,
but never anything like-God ,
think of it - Neil Young. I don't
know of anyone I'd rather lose
my figurative virginity to. At
long last, the lights dim , t h en
everything is black. Everyone is
screaming, my heart is pounding,
oh God, oh God , oh God, this
mother concert is about to begin.
Suddenly the stage glows red and
hpr hnvs ar<> havine a good time
anyway, and they sure can
boogie. She finishes her set and
the lights come up. The crowd is
excited and takes this opportunity to crawl to the stage.
After forever , the lights . dim
again , and we wait in the
blackness for some seconds.
From the cheers coming from the
stage area , we know what's
happening. And then there's a
flannel-shirted figure with a
guitar , sitting in a straightbacked , cane bottom chair and
that tortured voice is wailing "On
the Way Home " as though
nothing else had gone before. To
be so familiar with the features of
a man 's face without ever having
actually seen it , to know the pitch
of a man 's voice without ever
having heard it live , to hear so
often the same chords without
ever having seen the fingers on
the neck of the guitar, and now to
see and hear in reality what my
( continued on page eight)
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Shit.
Linda Ronstadt and musicians
are there to get us up. She is a
remarkably lovely girl with a
very special voice - the kind for
which I think much of countrywestern music was written. She
lays on those white blues, lyrics
with power and sensitivity. An
incredibly rude crowd often
destroys the m ood she's trying
for — a firecracker in the balcony
spoils what could have been an
intense moment. But Linda and
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A Look at Student Teaching
byjim sachetti
Part I*
"OK gang, let's settle down." I
waited, and after another 30
seconds of squirming and
laughing, they settled.
"Now, as you all know, my
name is Mr. Sachetti and I'm a
student teacher and I'm going to
be your teacher for the next five
weeks. Now, before we get
started..."
"How do ya say your name
again?" The unexpected question *
startled me and reignited the
class. Again I waited for order to
exciting; an experience that
restore itself.
"Sa.chet-ti." I said it slowly. taxes your knowledge, your atThe class thought it was funny, titudes and your ideas about a lot
but rather than wait for them to of things, especially yourself.
finish
rhyming
it
with Take for example, the incident
everybody's favorite pasta , I described above. Establishing
decided to plow on with my in- and maintaining a more or less
workable classroom order is the
troduction.
one
aspect of teaching I agonized
"Now before we get started, I
over
most before I started
think we all ought to get to know
teaching.
I spent hours woneach other, so I want you all to
dering
how
I could turn 30 kids
arrange yourselves in a big
into
a
functional
and happy
circle."
learning
unit.
With a mixed chorus of groans
and delighted squeaks, my first
class as a student teacher began
Beat them or
simultaneously to rearrange
free them?
desks and degenerate into chaos.
My anxieties started in Ed.
For the next 35 minutes, I Psych. Until I took it, I never
employed every
teaching knew that there was any
technique I could recall...every philosophy of working with kids
other than the one I had known as
one, that is, but the right one.
By the time the last paper a high school student: beat up on
airplane had hit the floor and the a few kids at the beginning of the
last student had left the room, I year, teach the kids what you
was ready to quit student have been told to teach them, and
teaching and hea d for parts respond to their complaints with
sarcasm and other forms of
unknown.
verbal abuse.
Then I was introduced to Carl
An experience to remember
Sound exciting? Scary? Does it Rogers and A. S. Neill. They said
make all you Education majors give students freedom to pursue
want to switch to Liberal Arts? their interests, let them interact
Well don't; the story has a happy — talk, move around, feel free—
ending. And the story itself — the and they'll be happier and better
story of 15 weeks spent student students. It made sense.
A year later in C&I, I learned
teaching — well, it's just about
the most interesting story tha t about interactional and group
you or I or anyone else who ex- techniques, and saw it used in
periences it will ever tell.
class. And darned if it didn't
If you're in education , stu dent make the class ten times more
teaching is the best course you'll interesting than any class I had
ever have. It's everything ever had before.
education should be but usually
And somewhere along the way,
isn't — challenging, interest ing , I forgot about my own high school
4
days: the way we turned off and
acted up in classes we didn't like;
the way some kids used to hassle
teachers for no apparent reason.
Then I walked "into my first
class as a student teacher and
watched in desperation as it
turned into a madh ouse. I
couldn't figure it out : I tried to be
tolerant of their ninth grade
enthusiasm, I h ied to come
across as a friendly guy, I tried
getting them to talk about
themselves (a subject they were
presumably interested in) , and
yet it failed...miserably.
Arid it was only after 24 hours of
concentrated soul searching and
hair pulling that I began to see
the light. And it was only after
about another 12 weeks that I
began to learn how to put the light
I had seen into practice.
Public schools
Public schools are different
What I had decided was that
the results Neill and Rodgers
obtained with their concepts of
freedom were great, but their
work had been done in private
and graduate schools; Both of
which are quite different from
the public schools student
teachers work in.
In the first place, stu dents don 't
choose to go to public school, they
are forced to. Most of them would
rather be doing something other
than sitting in your class,
Secondly , public schools have
been traditionally authoritarian,
and students learn from their
first day of kindergarten to ex-
Bloomsb urg Hikin g Club
The Bloomsbur g Hiking Club , go in car pool as directed to foot own risk " for any one.
sponsored by the Bloomsburg of mountain , then hike slowly up
Transportation — If you have a
Area YMCA , plans a series of trail to fire tower , staying hphinri car or need a ri de, please phone
Sunday after noon hikes of leader. , Most hikers will climb some days in advance to the
moderate difficu lty, to be down mountain to cars on foot , YMCA office (784-0188 ) , or to the
schedu led about once a mon t h. but we hope to have a jeep at the t emp orar y c onvenor and hike
We plan to hike — rain , shine or top for any who need a ride down. leader , Robert R. Solenber ger
snow. W ear heav y shoes or Chi ldren are welc ome , but ma y ( 784-0267). Volunteer leaders and
water proo f boots as needed. We not clim b t he fi re tower unless th ose w i th ideas f or f ut ure hikes ,
cu iaic
accom pani ed by adult s, "at your please get i n t ouch also.
SllfcWl i y w i ciui " uy
ternoon , but bri ng a snack and
water if you wish . Our meeting
place will be outside YMCA
headquarters at the old Fifth
Stree t School , 215 East 5th Street ,
near E ast St ree t , Bloomsbur g.
(over 20)
The f irst hi ke , up Catawissa
Mountain , will star t at 1: 45 p.m.,
f or unique space-age overnight summer boys camp in Penna .
Sunday, Februar y 18 and proceed
Able t o instruct In any one of the f ollowing:
and
the
at
"Y"
:
meet
foll
ows
as
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COUNSELORS
Lod g in g In
f urnished
Watersaf et y
Athletics
Chemistr y
room,
single occupancy , male, w ithin
one block of Carver Hall. Man y
attractive features , Call 7842039.
Miller Office
Supply Co.
II MM Main Strnt, Bloomi burf, H
H E A D Q UARTERS OF
HALLMARK CARDS
AND GIFTS
L
Phone 7M-2SH
Rlfler y
Ham Radio
~
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v. , ' . • vv/.v/.v/ '.'////.' / / / v
Boatlno
Golf
Tennis
.
Archery
Watersklln g
Ph y sics
Rocketr y
Pioneering
Lacrosse
Write CAMP DIRECTOR
138 Red Rambler Drive
Lafayette Hill , Pa. 19444
]pect teachers to be their not-to1be-questioned leaders, not their
iseparate but equal friends.
I decided that in such an environment, it was only natural
ithat when my students were
•presented with a novel concept —
jfreedom — they got drunk on it
,and ran hog wild. With that part
ifigured out, I still had the
jproblem of striking a balance
]between the way I had intended
;to teach and the way the kids
,expected me to teach.
Fortunately, I eventually did
jstrike a balance that worked. I
,offer it here, not as the right
approach, because every teacher
has to find the one that is right for
ithem, but as one approach.
i
Back to the battle
The next day I walked back into
the battlefield and started the
class off with a bang...literally . I
stood out in the hall until every
student was in , and then entered
and slammed the door as loudly
as I could. Having gained their
undivided attention (you could
hear a pin drop) , I proceeded to
lecture:
I was angry and I told them so
] in no uncertain terms. Then I
'boiled our future together down
into one statement , "We can have
peace in here, or we can have
^ var. It's up to you."
I had decided that for better or
worse,
I was a teacher now, and
'
ihat
for
better or worse, I did
'
lave
a
certain
amount of power
'
over my students. And although I
had been taught that the power of
grades, tests and sna p q uizzes
was illegitimate, it was .nevertheless, the only power I had. The
kids weren 't t here because t hey
wanted to be there, and they
hadn't elected me their leader; I
had been appointed. If thosewere
the rules of the game, those were
the rules we would play by.
So I put it in terms of
cooperation : we could cooperate
or we could battle. The decision .
was up to them. A replay of the
previous day's disaster would
bring down all sorts of academic
hassles on their heads, w hereas
cooperation would give them the
chance to choose what we studied
and how we studied it.
Being
intelligent
and
reasonable people, they chose
peace. From there it was up to
me; they already knew their job;
I still had to learn mine.
I had to learn the difference
between an uncooperative class
and a plain old rambuncious
class (Friday afternoon meant
rambuncious) ; I had to learn to
distinguish between a bored kid
and an angry kid; I had to learn
to respond to them, switching
topics when they were bored, starting off slowly on Monday
mornings and finishing early
Friday afternoons ; I had to learn
when to laugh with them, when to
laugh at them, and when to give
them a chance to laugh at me; I
had to learn to follow up on
threats; never promising a noisy
class a quiz and failing to follow
through.
And somehow , after what
seemed like endless weeks of
trying and failing and trying
again, it all started to f all into
place. And when it did ,
I dismissed all thoughts of
packing off to join the foreign
legion, and worked hard at being
a teacher.
Thirteen weeks later I hit on
what seemed to me the real
solution to effective teaching, but
that's part 2.
Cracker Barrel
IN CATAWISSA
Feb. 2 - Friday Night
JAY and the TECHNIQUES
9:30-1:30
COMING! FRI. & SAT. NIGHTS
ROCK BANDS !
•1910 FRUITGUM CO. •RASPBERRIES
•PLATTERS * BILL HALEY and THE COMETS
The Cracker Barrel Has A Hew linage!
EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT IS COLLEGE NIGHT
FEATURING "SPECIAL DEALS FROM 8 TO 1"
I
BLACK WEEK
Schedule of Even ts
Monday-February 5, 1973-7 :00 p.-Film
"The Black Experience in the Arts"
Carver Auditorium
Tuesday-February 6, 1973-8:15 pm
Broadway Production
"No Place to be Somebody "
H aas Auditorium
Wednesday-February 7, 1973-2:00 pm-Film
"The Black Experience in the Arts "
I .
Carver Auditorium
5:00 pm-Art Show Opening-Haas Gallery
7:00 pm -Dinner for Black Student Society
Scranton Commons
I
Thursday-February 8, 1973-2:00 pm
Mr. Chuck Stone
Carver Auditorium
8:00 pm-Poetry Readings-Carver Auditorium
Friday-February 9, 1973-2 :00 pm
Mr. Don L. Lee
Carver Auditorium
10:00 pm-3 :00 am-Dance "99!/2% Pure Poison "
I
Studen t Union
Saturday-Feb ruary 10 , 1973-2 :00 pm
Basketball Game
BSC "Blackou ts " vs. Buckn ell "Bro thers "
10:00 pm -Dance -
Student Union
Wednesday-Feb ruary 14, 1973-2 :00 pm
Ma ya Angelou
Carver Auditor ium
A bar, owned by Johnny Williams, is the setting for Charles
Gordone 's Pulitzer Prize winning play, "NO PLAC E TO BE
SOMEBODY" .
Part of Black' Week
Ghetto Story to be
Staged in Haas
The Black Student Society and
the Arts Council of Bloomsburg
State College will be presenting
the award winning play, NO
PLACE TO BE SOMEBODY , in
the Haas Center for the Arts on
Tuesday evening, February 6, at
8:15 p.m. as part of the coming
Black Week.
This is a strong piece of black
theatre, strong enough to have
won the Pulitzer Prize in 1970, the
first and only time the prize was
given to a black playwriter. Its
language is the speech of the
ghetto, unflinchingly rough and
unfailingl y pointed. So is its
humor .
In its hero, Johnny Williams,
and in his conflict with the white
underworld, the plav packs a
good bit of the black dilemma
and the black tragedy in
America.
The setting is the bar Johnny
owns in the West Village, the
place where he has bided his time
waiting for the return from
prison of the older man who has
taught him all there is to know
about crime. After ten years
behind walls, though , Johnny 's
ment or is a broken man , who can
only regret the bad case of
"Charlie fever " that grips the
young and angry Johnny.
"Charlie fever " is an obsession
for beating the white man at his
own game with his own rules, and
Joh nny is rea dy to contest the
rackets territory with the Mafia.
First produced in New York in
1967, NO PLACE TO BE
SOMEBODY won t he coveted
Pu litzer Prize f or Drama f or i ts
aut h or , Charles Gordone in 1970.
It is a play of today and today's
people.
As one cri t i c says, "This is one
play that you don't walk away
from ."
t* or an excitin g evening of
professional thea t re, come to
Haas Center for the Arts on the
Campus of Bloomsburg State
College on Tuesday evening ,
Tickets will be available at the
box office in Haas Center between the hours of 11 a.m. to 4
p.m. weekda ys.
BSC students may still obtain
free tickets upon presentation of
ID card and faculty u p on
presentation of Community
Activities card. Others may
calling (717) 389-3817. The charge
is $2.00 for adults and $1.00 for
students.
»
Proposed Nuclear
Power Plan t
The proposition of a nuclear
power plant to be located northeast' of Berwick will be
discussed at a public meeting
tonight at 8-:00. It will be held in
the Bloomsburg Area Senior High
School auditorium , which is
located at 12th and Railroad
Streets.
This meeting is being held to
inform the public about the
operational and other features of
this proposed plant , prior to the
upcoming public hearin gs.
The Environmental Plannin g
and Information Center of
(E.P.I.C. ) is
Pennsylvania
providing
a
panel
of
distinguished scientists for this
meeting. Mr. Thomas Dolan ,
P resi dent
and
Execut ive
Director of E.P.I.C.
and
Chairman of the Citizens ' Advisory Council on the Env ir onment , w ill be the moderator
of the meeting.
Th is meeting is open to the
publ i c f ree . of charge.
Summer Program
in Spain
A 6 credit summer program is *
being offered by BSC at Madrid
University, Spain. Courses are ,
open at all levels including
graduate.
Fees are set at $770 for undergraduate in-state students
and $890 for grad uate in-state
stud ents. This includes tuition ,
trans port ation , room and board
( 3 meals a day ), tri p costs to
museums and Cathedrals, and a
visit to a bull fight.
fwpHi iui c
id
liuiu
XmvlUICUj r
air port on J une 28 with return
dates
of Aug.
10 (undergraduat es) and Aug. 22
(gra duates ). Applications may
be addressed to Dr. Alfred
Tonolo, Director , Bloomsburg in
obtain tickets by writing the Arts Spain Program , Box
I Council at Box 78, BSC or by Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
283,
Concert Choir goes on tour
The BSC Concert Choir began
the first leg of a five day tour of
high schools, colleges, and
churches in the Pennsylvania,
New Jersey , and New York area
on January 8, 1973. The - 70
member choir under the
direction of William K. Decker ,
had been preparing for the tour
since last September. Musical
selections ranged, from pop tunes
and spirituals, to excerpts from
works by Bach and Orff.
Lower Dauphin High School in
Hummelstown. A late afternoon
arrival at Faith United Church of
Christ in Gcantville was followed
by a brief rehearsal and then a
meeting with hospitable church
members who had offered their
homes to tired choir members. A
full concert was given in the
church in the evening and
members left for a pleasant stay
(and good home cooking ) with
their hospitable hosts.
12:00 noon on Monday, January
8th in Haas Auditorium as the
choir completed preparations for
the upcoming ten concerts. At
5:00 p.m., a hungry choir
recessed for dinner and managed
to consume nine buckets of fried
chicken. Practice resumed at7:00 p.m. for rehearsal of Bach's
the Magnificat, with Thomas
Michalak , conductor of the
Pennsylvania
Northeastern
Philharmonic. This rehearsal
was in preparation for the
following week's concerts with
the orchestra in Wilkes-Barre
and Scranton. Exhausted choir
members lef t at 11:00 p.m. and
spent the night in the homes of
friends in the Bloomsburg area .
A brief rehearsal on Tuesday,
January 9th with Thomas
Michalak and a ' final meeting
with William Decker put the final
touches on the tour. After a noon
lunch break, the members were
on their way to concert number
one at Hughesville High School,
Pennsylvania. The school
assembly was very successful
and got the tour off to a good
start. A trip to Bucknell
University and more rehearsals
there resulted in the evening
performance at the University's
beautiful Rooke Chapel. Choir
members again stayed the
evening in Bloomsburg's homes.
Two chartered buses filled with
music, robes, luggage, and eager
choir members left Haas
auditorium on Wednesday,
January 10. The first stop was
Central Dauphin East High
School in Harrisburg and then
United at 7:45 a.m. on Thursday,
January llth , on the road to Blue
Mountain High School in
Schuylkill Haven. A replacement
bus was supplied after the failure
of the buses' air suspension
system and it w.as on to Southern
Lehigh High School in Center
Valley for another school
assembly . Here, former BSC
students and alumni came to see
the performance and to greet old
friends . By mid-afternoon, the
buses were well on the way to
New York City where the choir
would spend the night. Attending
the Broadway play Pippin ,
Sugar, and Jesus Christ Superstar, along with visits to Lincoln
Center and the "Met" promised
to make full evenings for
everyone.
A tired group of students slowly
left the luxury of the Royal
Manhattan Hotel and boarded the
buses for the last day of the tour.
A night on the town and the
illnesses pf eight choir members
took its toll but three school
assemblies still remained.
Somerville High School and two
performances at Hillsborough
High School in Belle Meade, New
Jersey brought the annual tour to
an end. Although many New
Jersey students had never heard
of BSC, the choir did much to
publicize the school name while
on tour. Traveling and performing together also molded the
members into a cohesive
working unit and provided a
wonderful opportunity for
members to grow in friendship.
As always, the tour was termed a
great success.
a live nour renearsai
uegan ai
Buck nell University 's Rooke
Chapel ; one of many places the
Concert Choir sang at during
their to ur.
The Choir as they trave l on their bus .
Rehearsal in Buckn ell' s Rooke
Chapel .
Some members of the Choir relaxing bef ore the con cert at
Hillsborough High School.
Pho to s cou rtesy
of
Martin Wh itta ker
Sploist Miche lle Seliga.
Wha t Do You Think Needs Improving In
i
J
I
a weii-resiea cnoir leit v aim
j
Do We Need...
1. More Sports
j
I
j
2. More Covera ge of Campus Organizatio ns
J
j
I
3. More Coverage of National Events
4 More Covera ge of Fra ternit y and Sorori ty News
j
I
l
5. More Notification of Campus Events
I
I
6. More Interviews with Campus Personne l
I
1
m
? Uttier... ^.
7
¦
Pieaw turn In to Inform ation Da«k In Collaga Union Building .
s\j .l_
I
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BLACK WEEK
Schedule of Events
Monday-February 5, 1973-7:00«. p.-Film
"The Black Experience in the Arts"
Carver Auditorium
Tuesday-February 6, 1973-8 :15 pm
Broadway Production
4 'No Place to
be Somebody "
Haas Auditorium
Wednesday-February 7, 1973-2:00 pm -Film
"The Black Experience in the Arts "
Carver Auditorium
5:00 pm-Art Show Opening-Haas Gallery
7:00 pm-Dinner for Black Student Society
Scranton Commons
Thursday-February 8, 1973-2 :00 pm
Mr. Chuck Stone
Carver Auditor ium
8:00 pm-Poetry Readings-Carver Auditorium
Friday-February 9, 1973-2 :00 pm
Mr. Don L. Lee
Carver Auditorium
10:00 pm-3:00 am -Dance"99 VS % Pure Poison "
Studen t Union
Saturd ay-Februar y 10, 1973-2 :00 pm
Basketball Game
BSC "Blackouts " vs. Buckne ll "Brothers "
10:00 pm-Dance -
Student Union
Wednesda y-Februar y 14, 1973-2 :00 pm
Ma ya Angelou
Carver Auditor ium
A bar, owned by Johnny Williams, is the setting for Charles
Pulitzer Prize winning play, "NO PLAC E TO BE
Gordone's
SOMEBODY" .
Part of Black Week
Ghetto Story to be
Staged in Haas
The Black Student Society and
the Arts Council of Bloomsburg
State College will be presenting
the award winning play, NO
PLACE TO BE SOMEBODY, in
the Haas Center for the Arts on
Tuesday evening, February 6, at
8:15 p.m. as part of the coming
Black Week.
This is a strong piece of black
theatre, strong enough to have
won the Pulitzer Prize in iy70, the
first and only time the prize was
given to a black playwriter. Its
language is the speech - of the
ghetto, unflinchingly rough and
unfailingly pointed. So is its
humor.
In its hero, Johnny Williams,
and in his conflict with the white
underworld, the play packs a
good bit of the black dilemma
and the black tragedy in
America .
The setting is the bar Johnny
owns in the West Village, the
place where he has bided his time
waiting for the return from
prison of the older man who has
taught him all there is to know
about crime. After ten years
behind walls, though, Johnny's
mentor is a broken man, who can
only regret the bad case of
••Charlie fever" that grips the
young and angry Johnny .
"Charlie fever " is an obsession
for beating the white man at his
own game with his own rules , and
J ohnny is ready to contest the
rackets territor y with the Ma fi a.
Fi rst produced in New York in
1967, NO PLACE TO BE
SOMEBODY won the coveted
Pul itzer Prize for Drama for its
au t hor , Charles Gordone in 1970.
It is a play of today and today's
people.
As one critic says, "This is one
play that you don 't walk away
f rom ."
For an exciting evening of
professional theatre , come to
Haas Center for the Arts on the
Cam pus of Bloomsburg Stat e
College on Tuesday evening.
Tickets will be available at the
box office in Haas Center between the hours of 11 a.m. to 4
p.m. weekda ys.
BSC students may still obtain
free tickets upon presentation of
ID card and facul ty upon
presentat ion of Community
Activities card. Others may
calling (717) 389-3817. The charge
is $2.00 for adults and $1.00 for
students.
Proposed Nuclear
Power Plan t
The proposition of a nuclear
power plant to be located northeast' of Berwick will be
discussed at a public meeting
tonight at 8-:00. It will be held in
the Bloomsburg Area Senior High
School auditorium , which is
located at 12th and Railroad
Streets.
This meeting is being held to
inform the public about the
operational and other features of
this proposed plant , prior to the
upcoming public hearings.
The Environmental Plannin g
and Information Center of
(E.P.I.C. ) is
Pennsylvania
providing
a
panel
of
distinguished scientists for this
meeti ng . Mr. Thoma s Dolan,
P res i den t
and
E xecut i ve
Director
of E.P.I.C.
and
Chairman of the Citizens ' Advisory Council on the Environment , wi ll be the moderator
of the meeting.
Th i s m eeting is open to the
public f ree. of char ge.
Summer Program
in Spain
A 6 credit summer program is
bei ng offered by BSC at Madrid
University, Spain. Cour ses are
open at all levels including
graduate .
Fees are set at $770 for undergraduate in-st ate students
and $890 for graduate in-state
students. This includes tuition ,
transp ortation , room and board
( 3 meals a day), tri p costs to
museums and Cathedrals , and a
v isit to a bull fi ght.
Depart ure is from Kennedy
air port on J une 28 with return
dates
of Aug.
10 (undergrad uates ) and Aug . 22
(gradu ates). Applications may
be addr essed to Dr. Alfred
Tonolo , Director , Bloomsburg in
obtain tickets by writing the Arts Sp ain Program , Box 283,
Council at Box 78, BSC or by Bloomsbur g' Pa. 17815.
Concert Choir goes on tour
The BSC Concert Choir began
the first leg of a five day tour of
high schools , colleges, and
churches in the Pennsylvania,
New Jersey, and New York area
on January 8, 1973. The 70
member choir under the
direction of William K. Decker,
had been preparing, for the tour
since last JSeptember. Musical
selections ranged from pop tunes
and spirituals, to excerpts from
works by Bach and Orff.
A five hour rehearsal began at
12:00 noon on Monday, January
8th in Haas Auditorium as the
choir completed prepara tions for
- the upcoming ten concerts. At
5:00 p.m., a hungry choir
recessed for dinner and managed
to consume nine buckets of fried
chicken. Practice resumed at7:00 p.m. for rehearsal of Bach's
the Magnificat, with Thomas
Michalak , conductor of the
Northeastern
Pennsylvania
Philharmonic. This rehearsal
was in preparation for the
following week's concerts with
the orchestra in Wilkes-Barre
and Scranton. Exhausted choir
members left at 11:00 p.m. and
spent the night in the homes of
friends in the Bloomsburg area.
A brief rehearsal on Tuesday,
January 9th with Thomas
Michalak and a ' final meeting
with William Decker put the final
touches on the tour. After a noon
lunch break , the members were
on their way to concert number
one at Hughesville High School,
Pennsylvania . The school
assembly was very successful
and got the tour off to a good
start. A trip to Bucknell
University and more rehearsals
there resulted in the evening
performance at the University's
beautiful Rooke Chapel. Choir
members again stayed the
evening in Bloomsburg's homes.
Two chartered buses filled with
music, robes, luggage, and eager
choir members left Haas
auditorium on Wednesday,
January 10. The first stop was
Central Dauphin East High
School in Harrisbur g and then
Lower Dauphin High School in
Hummelstown. A late afternoon
arrival at Faith United Church of
Christ in Grantville was followed
by a brief rehearsal and then a
meeting with hospitable church
members who had offered their
homes to tired choir members. A
full concert was given in the
church in the evening and
members left for a pleasant stay
(and good home cooking ) with
their hospitable hosts.
A well-rested choir left Faith
United at 7:45 a.m. on Thursday,
January 11th, on the road to Blue
Mountain High School in
Buc knell Univ ersity 's Rooke
Schuylkill Haven. A replacement
Chapel;
one of many places the
bus was supplied after the failure
of the buses' air suspension Conce rt Choir sa ng at during
system and it was on to Southern their tour.
Lehigh High School in Center
Valley for another school
assembly. Here, former BSC
students and alumni came to see
the performance and to greet old
friends. By mid-afternoon, the
buses were well on the way to
New York City where the choir
would spend the night. Attending
the Broadway play Pippin ,
Sugar, and Jesus Christ Superstar, along with visits to Lincoln
Center and the "Met" promised
to make full evenings for
everyone.
A tired group of students slowly
left the luxury of the Royal
Manhattan Hotel and boarded the
buses for the last day of the tour.
A night on the town and the
Rehearsal in Bucknell's Rooke
illnesses of eight choir members Chapel.
took its toll but three school
assemblies still remained.
Somerville High School and two
performances at Hillsborough
High School in Belle Meade, New
Jersey brought the annual tour to
an end. Although many New
Jersey students had never heard
of BSC, the choir did much to
publicize the school name while
on tour. Traveling and performing together also molded the
members into a cohesive
working unit and provided a
wonderfu l opportunity for
members to grow in friendship.
As always, the tour was termed a
great success.
Soloist Michelle Seliga.
The Choir as they travel on their bus.
Some members of the Choir relaxing before the concert at
Hillsborough High School.
Photo s cou rtesy
of
Martin Whittak er
¦
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1. More Spor ts
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2. More Covera ge of Campus Or ganizations
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¦
3. More Covera ge of National Events
4 More Covera ge of Fraternit y and Sorori ty News
J
I
l
5. More Notificatio n of Campus Events
I
I
6. More Interviews with Campus Personn el
I
1
H
. Utner..^
7
/\
,
Pleaw turn in to Inform ation Dtsk in Cofltg * Union Building.
*L
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Cagers top Edinboro ;
Cheyney tomorrow
by bob Oliver
The time was right for an upset
— unfriendly gym , your top
scorer on the bench with four
personal fouls , a long day of
traveling behind you — it was
now or never time for Edinboro
State College to come from
behind to top the Huskies. They
tried, but could only close to five
points behind. Result: the
Huskies pulled away and posted
their 14th straight victory , 75-66.
1he Huskies, who play Cheyney
State tomorrow night , and
Edinboro , a perennial Western
Division powerhouse in a
rebuilding year, traded baskets
though the first six minutes, until
Tony DaRe hit two 15-foot
¦;¦¦ ; ¦
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m ^^^^^^
baseline shots in a row. This put
the Huskies out in front for good,
with 13 minutes remaining in the
half.
BSC lead at 13
Led by DaRe and backcourt
mate Art Luptowski, who was the
number two Husky scorer with
17, the Huskies jump ed out to a
42-32 lead at the half .
The Huskies continued to roll
until the 12 minute mark , when
big John Willis was caught with
his fourth personal foul. The
score at this point was 54-42, with
the Huskies ahead.
The Huskies continued to keep
this margin until the six-minute
mark when the Scots started to
move, mainly dye to a full-court
( continued on page seven )
Art Lupto wski throws a pass to Tony DaRe (22) in the game
Saturday night against East Stroudsburg.
( Photo by Karen Keinard )
John Willis goes to the bask et in a game against Lock Haven State College. "To by " Tyle r (32 ) and a
Lock Haven Player look on.
(Oliver Photo )
Four Records
BSC dunks Kutztown
The swim team of BSC picked
up their 4th win in seven outings
by beating Kutztown 73-35 and
setting 4 Kutztown State College
records in the process.
The 400 yd. medley relay team
started things off by setting the
1st record of the day with a time
of 3:56.1 Jim Campbell , Jim
Koehler, Bill Ewcll, and Dave
Gibas, swam the relay for the
Huskies.
Rich Kozecki followed the relay
team 's example and set his own
record in the 1000 yd. freestyle.
The new time was 10:58.1.
In the 200 yd. freestyle Kozecki
again placed 1st for the Huskies
although he didn't set a record.
His time was 1:59.9. Dan Yocum
took second.
Dave Gibas , BSC's AllA mer i can
short
d istance
swi mmer set a new record in the
50 y d. frees ty le with a time of
22.3. This was the second record
settin g performance out of three
for G ibas.
I n the individual Medle y J im
Cam pbell placed 1st and Dale
Alexander second for BSC. The
winnin g time was 2:14.9.
Eric Ewell , who was the onl y
BSC swimmer in the 200 yd.
meter and Eric Aireton took
Tony DaRe (22) shoots over a Lock Haven player as John Will is gats ready to l«ap for possible
r ibound (Oliver Photo )
second place in both the 1-meter
and 3-meter dives to KSC's Kevin
Mc Cornac. Steve Coleman had
the flu and was unable to dive.
Dave Gibas also set a record in
the 100 yd. freest yle with a time
of 50.2. Yocum finished second.
Bill Ewell, who was the only
BSC swimmer in the 200 meter
butterfly took 1st with a time of
2:15.6.
BSC took 2nd and 3rd place in
the next two events the 200 yd.
backstroke and the 500 yd.
freestyle. George King took
second and Conrad Ayel 3rd in
the butterfly, while Dave Lill and
Dale Alexander took 2nd and 3rd
respectively in the freestyle .
The 400 yd. freestyle team of
Yocum , Lausch , Hilgar and
Ohlinger won with a time of
5:53.3.
Brazili an
Students
(continued from page one)
faculty and students aiding in the
progr am include : Dr. Ray Rost ,
Ms. Helen Oetzel , O ded Rotholz ,
Sand y Miller , Cry der Bankes ,
Scott Minn ich , Ann Sipling,
Georgi ann Cheung, Ray Ma nkey,
Debbi e Heckel and Jill Un-
beurest .
While on campu s, the grou p
will par tici pate in extracurric ular activitie s as well as
auditing classes tha t they may be
interest ed in.
Housing for the group will be a
combin ation of dormitory living
and off-cam pus housing. Any
faculty or students intereste d in
hel ping with the progr am is
asked to cont act Barbara Gillott
as soon as possible at 389-3100 or
784-1771.
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FRIDAY/ FEBRUARY S, 1973
Grapp lers drop
squea ker, 22-21
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Going for a win at Kutztow n is this Husky swimmer.
(Alexander Photo)
¦
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Coach Sanders feels that
having inexperienced wrestlers
in the lineup is killing them.
The only member of B.S.C.'s
lower weights to win was Lon
Edmonds who decisioned Ron
Patterson (C), 2-1. Sanders feels
that Edmonds is definitely a
contender for the sta te championship.
The grappler's next opponent is
Kutztown , on Saturday, at home.
¦
-
string of pins at four.
Kevin Hayes dropped a close
decision to Randy Haught (C) at
167, 3-2. Then Dan Burkholder
decisioned Carl Felice (C) at 177,
8-2.
Coach Sanders felt that
Burkholder 's match was the key
to a tie. They knew that they had
to get a four point decision. Felice
of Cal. stalled quite a bit. Dan did
a good job but just failed to win a
superior decision.
Sheehan and Hitchcock both
pinned their opponents to finish
the meet. Hitchcock extended his
unbeaten string to 9 with his pin
of Dick Munsen in 3:35.
¦
The B.S.C. wrestling team put
on a strong comeback Saturday
night coming up with two pins
and a decision but lost a heartbreaker to a strong California
State team , 22-21, at California
State.
The Huskies dropped all but
one of the first five matches to
fall behind California 19-3. They
then came back to win four of the
last five matchups but failed to
catch California and had to settle
with their fifth loss in ten outings.
Randy Watts started the long
uphill battle with a come from
behind victory over* Al Meredith.
10-8, at 158.
Watts, who is tied for the lead
in pins with Ron Sheehan and
Shorty Hitchcock — all with four
decisions by pins, trailed at the
end of the first period, 6-1. After a
scoreless second period , he
racked up 9 points to Meredith's 3
to pull out a decision. During his 9
point spree he was credited with
an escape, two take downs, and
one near fall.
Watts was moved up a weight
class and this decision snaps his
basketball head believes that
"every year is a new start" and
the new team should not be
burdened with the remembrance
of past teams successes or
defeats.
Even-if it is too late to Join the
squad there is plenty of time to be
one of its fans. The t eam w ishes
to send a " cord i al inv i tat ion " to
ever y student , f acult y mem ber ,
an d p erson who l ives in
Bloomsburg to see BSC' s
Huskettes i n act ion.
All games will be held i n the
Centenni al Gymnasium , w i th
f ree admi ssion.
chosen they will have to work
hard to sta y ahead of their
The basketball tea m belongs to
teammates.
both
the national and easter n
W hen the team f irst started
divisions
of the Association of
p rac t ice
after
C hr istmas
Intercollegi
vacat i on the y began with the W omen . N oate Athletics f or
fundamenta l drills and rules of given to an y scholarshi ps are
athletes
basketball , along wit h con- throu gh these orwomen
g
anizations.
di tion i ng exerc ises. The y are now
pol i sh i ng t heir special ta lents in
Miss Mc Comb is the fi rs t an d
pre para t i on for the ten game onl y woman 's basketball coach
season .
that BSC has ever had.
Asked what she f elt about the Belongin g to Bloomsbur g 's
team potential , Coach Mc Comb f acul ty f or tw elve years she
sim pl y said , 'it's there if they states that she has been the coach
put it all together. " The gym for "y ears. "
instructor senses that this will be
The slender , short haired
a ({pod vear due to havin g plavers tra i ner often works from 4 : 00 to
with much abil ity .
8:00 p.m. week nights with the
Although last year 's record varsity and junior varsity
was ar ound the 500 mark , no squads , drillin g two hours for
kept
strict accoun t of record s are
fr om previ ous seasons. The
each team.
(Williams Photo ) *
Swimmers win Fifth
The Husky swim team set five
pool records in a dual' meet with
the Warriors of East Stroudsburg
Wednesday afternoon to increase
their seasonal record to 5-3. The
score of the match was 77-36.
Dave Gibas was instrumental
in two Stroudsburg pool records,
winning the 50-yard freestyle
with a time of 22.2, and anchoring
the 400-yard freestyle event to a
time of 3:24.3. Team members
along with Gibas in the performance were Rick Kozicki,
Doug Yocum, and Jim Campbell.
Another Husky instrumental in
two records was frosh Kozicki,
who set a pool record in the 20^
freestyle as well as participating
in the victorious 400.
The 400-medley team of George
King, Jim Koehler, Bill Ewell,
and Doug Yocum took a first.
Dave Lill won the 1000-free with
a 12:05 clocking, while Campbell
won the 200 individual medley
and the 200-backstroke.
Gnnninl Tnm ArrAtir
upcviai
iu
v
ii
i vvt
Tomorrow the Huskies will
play Millersville , and Coach
McLaughlin has a treat lined up
— he's bringing back some
outstanding
former
BSC
swimmers. He's hoping for a big
crowd — so be there—two
o'clock.
¦
¦¦
Girls ' Basketba ll
By Linda Liver more
"We are going to have some
good solid basketba ll. We have a
good team ." These statements
explain Coach Joanne McComb 's
feelings concern ing th is y ear 's
basket b all team.
T he H usk i ettes , balanced
evenl y w it h ever y class
re presen ted, practice six days a
week , t wo hours each da y in the
Centenn ial Gy m.
Miss McComb pointed out that
each p la yer has her stren g ths ,
mak i n g f or a unified team wi t h no
stars . Th i s fa ctor means that
when the start ing five will be
Ron Sheehan going for a pin in a close meet against West Chester.
Linda Shepperd getting attended to during practice by team trainer Lorraine Roulston .
( Photo by Mare sh )
Caqers
(continued from page six)
press. They cut the Husk y lead to
tive points , 69-64, at the 2:25
mark. However , DaRe came up
wit h a clu t ch basket and two free
throws to put the game out of
reach.
Gar y Ty ler led the H usk ies
with 10 rebounds while Luptowski
led in assists with eleven . Double
figure scorers for the Huskies
besi des DaRe and Lu ptowski
were W ill i s with 15 and J oe
Kempski with 10.
Hot Shooting
BSC led in the early going
ma inly due to torrid (62 per cent)
sh ooti n g fr om the field , as well as
outhitting the Scots 15-8 from the
charity stripe .
Cheyncy Tomorrow
As a fi nale to the BSC home
triple-header , the Huskies p lay
host to the Wolves of Cheyney
College
tomorrow .
State
Cheyney, perennial Pa. Conference East Division champs ,
are led by V ince Ellison , who is
second in the d i visions ' scoring
race with a 17 .3 average , and Bill
A llen , G'10" , who is avera ging
10.0. John Chane y's Cheyney
team is now 11-3 (at press time) ,'
5-1 in league.
Chess Team in N.Y.
Over t he past weekend , the
C hess Team , accom panied by Dr.
Selders, went to New York .
Andy Cherinka , made a f air
showing with a 2-3-1 record.
Looking ahead tor next year ,
Dave Ki stler , our first board , Tim Hoffmier , a Sophomore , and
scored 2 wins , 2 losses, and 1 Bob Panusk i, a F reshman , made
draw. Th is ti me Dave was wa y their debut on the tourna ment
out-classed. Pictured is Dave scene. Ti m was astoundi n g w it h a
pla y in g N orm an Wei nstein , an 3 win, 3 loss record . Bob amazed
the tea m by posting a 2 win - 3
I nternat i onal Master.
l oss record.
Jim Kitchen , who went 3-3
We want to wish success to the
made a much better showing,
Chess
Team on future events.
then in pr evious tournaments.
B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^MkiiB ^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^H
Dave Kistler
matter.
playing
Norman
Wienstlen, an Internatio na l
and well aware of his impact on
audiences. He stops a song to tell
(continued from page two)
the freaks up front to "s i t down,
man!"
And he plays for the
senses had so often perceived
sinfully
short
time of an hour and
before — I must say that one
su
nc
,
,
twenty
minutes
and gets away
me
man
nas
us
nere
wen
suffers a sort of shock, a jolt of
old
very
with the
Some
with
it.
He
ends
new awareness that may be does his music.
brand-new
"Southern
Man
some
" and
inevitable
that our inexperience in the light peculiar only to cultures with tunes and
u
(
very
Are
You
a
single
encore
Rives
ones, all of them
weights with Bill O'Donnell and media like our own. Gods or not , dynamic
.)
Country
in
for
the
" Too
stated
Ready
Bob Cocher hurts us but that both the magnetism and intensi ty of persona] comments head
,
the
crowd
in the easil y appeased
are doing a great job considering emotion that rock performers such a way that every
part
shuffles out passively — Farm
how tough it is to wrestle in our can generate is awesome. Add to room can identify with some
For many Show Arena style. Incredibly, it's
of
what
he's
saying.
the
usual
celebrity
mania
the
strong conference with no attraction of elusiveness, and you the real show-stopper was the time for me to put my shoes on
background.
have thousands of fans like autobiographical number "Don 't and descend the stairs. I've just
the
intense
myself dying to pay $6.50 to sit Be Denied ", quoted in part at the experienced
For next season it's still too dangerously close to the ozone beginning of this article. It's humaBess of a man and his
early to tell but Sanders is op- layer and hear their performer in more food for thought for those music. I leave the building
timistic. He says he contacted concert. Indeed , "No other North who are try ing to understand wondering how he spends his
some good kids and has had American solo artist (with the what Neil Young is. Hard-nosed , money.
commitments from some and exception of Dylan who will not
others have expressed interest.
At Ma ts ide
by Mark A. Mehler
This week the BSC grapplers
take on powerful Kutztown and
Lock Haven at home in the
Nelson field house.
Kutztown is a strong team with
118 pounder Joe Hill and Hwt.
Chuck Dart. Two of the match
up's to watch are Lonny Edmonds vs. Kutztown 's Fiomic in
the 134 pound weight class.
Fiomic was a Catholic state
championship runner-up. Also at
the 158 lb. weight class, the
Bear's undefeated Lou Demyan
will be facing the always improving Brian Berry.
Against the Eagles of Lock
Haven Saturday might everyone
should keep an eye on 150 lb.
Randy Watts versus Gary
Ventamiglia, the defending state
champion . At heavyweight . Lock
Haven has Jim Schuster who will
most likely meet our own stand
out "Shorty " Hitchcock. Coach
Sanders praised the Lock Haven
squad as well-balanced and
excellent in the lower weights. He
stated, "We'll have to fight for
our lives to beat them."
Women 's Swim Team
swim
Women ' s Varsity
schedule as of December 15,
1972: Wed . Feb. 14, Bucknell
away , 7:30 p.m.; Sat., Feb. 17,
Lycoming home , 2: 00 p.m. ;
and Sat., Feb. 24, Lehigh
away , 2:00 p.m.
11
__
*.._._
1^. __ _ .. _ _ 1* M _^ ^^
«w ** l^ ^%
Kartzel' s Music Store
Sales Representatives
So ught!
72 N. Iron St.
Over 300 Guitars
and Amplifiers
Male or Female
Lovecraft Unlimited
1 or 2 Girls want ed
to sha re
large 4 bedroom apartment
near col lege
Call 784-5275 or 784-3365
I £»m§ 3kmes TtlnSto n. \
£
Freshmen - Sophomores of
Caree r Upperclassmen —
Waterbed and Bean bag
Furniture & all Head Items Posters - Jewelry
Send Short Resume' to
(-
p rxn ts
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$%
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P.O. Box 621
Lock Haven, Penna. 17745
or call 717-748-2813
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Lovecraft Unlimited
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Bloom Bowl
OUTLOOK
Due to our lack of balance and
our inexperience the remainder
of the season will be "nip and
tuck" all the way. "With a couple
of breaks we can go anywhere
from a .500 season to winning
them all." Coach Sanders feels
20,000 seat Spectrum for
I
l
OUTSTANDING
WRESTLERS CITED
In past weeks two wrestlers
have been , cited by Coach
Sanders
for
performing
admirably. The Coach stated ,
"Ron Sheehan is our best
wrestler as far as knowledge and technique and has
done a great job." He went on to
explain Sheehan has been
hampered by having to fill in our
vacant Heavyweight spot but will
be down in his proper weight
class for the state tournament.
Another grappler who has been
LOVE AFFAIR
is Randy Watts.
Coach Sanders seemingly has a commended
in the 150 pound
real love affair going with the Randy wrestles
class and has been wU
Bloomsburg student body. He weight
in all of our victories.
says he's "real impressed" with standing
Randy and Ron have been
the student involvement and feels Both
that his wrist lockettes are doing named "Wrestler of the Week."
a "great job."
Petitions for AWS offices
One of the lockettes has said,
are
available at all residence
"(Coach Sanders is) really
hall
desks and must be subterrific, concerned tremendously
mitted
by February 19.
about his wrestlers and about
getting spectators out to enjoy
matches. He is really a wonderful
man to work with...if his plans
Compliments
succeed we'll really have a
superior wrestling program here
of the
at BSC."
tour ) could sell out the entire
two
shows fea turing only himself and
back-up musicians." — Concert
Magazine.
Neil Young
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Jo h n 's Foo d
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Market
W. Main & Leonard St.
Open 8 a.m. to 12 midnight Daily
Delicatessen
^*
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*
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AifiiricJruJFri
Full line of groceries
Sl snacks
Just Arrived New Shi p ment of
Candles -dri p, dri p less , scented
and unsce nted and Soaps....
at the
THE STUDIO SHOP
59 E. Main St., Bloomsbur g 784-2818
STEADY
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
* >i '"-ud^z-
*
*
" w7^PIIWWnBBBMHWMBHBtBsM >ii>i T
WILKES POOL DEALERS NEED KEY
INSTALLERS FOR INSTALLATION
OF WILKES SWIMMING POOLS
iiptttiUfe
^
WILKES WILLTRAI N
EXCELLENT SALARY ARRA NGEMENT
MUST BE PREPARED TO WORK OUT OF TOWN
Representati ves Will Be On Campus:
Friday, Feb. 9th
9 am; 11 am; 1 pm & 3 pm
H&m
^Hf '
Waller Hall Alumni Room
INTERESTED STUDENTS SHOULD ATTEND MEETING
1 ^^^^
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^^^^^^^^
FLOWERS
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784-4406 m m m m
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under scrutiny
The Baroq ue Music.Ense mble wi th (1 to r) Suzanne Huffnagle on
viola, Gretchen Master on violin . Dr. Richard Brook on guitar,
Hester Huffnagle on violi n, Or. Eric Smithner on recorder, flute
and oboe , and Larry Mack on recorders was presented by Luzerne
Hall last Tuesday night. The ensemble 's repertoire included "A
Suite for Recorders and Strings " by Telleman, var ious selections
by J. S. Bach, and "Quartetino " by Scarlotti.
(Photo by Berger )
Elementary Ed. appr oved
Student teachers
to get 15 credits
A proposal to add a three credit
seminar to the present twelve
credits received for Student
Teaching has been approved by
Dr. Dayton Pickett , VicePresident of Academic Affairs
for Elementary Education
majors. The equivalent for
Secondary Education majors is
expected to go through by the end
of this week. After being fully
approved by the Senate the credit
increase will become policy effective for the 1973-74 Fall
Semester.
Petitioned in October
The program was originally
petitioned in October but was
shelved until this Spring
Semester. From Dr. Pickett, the
proposals will go to the Academic
Affairs Committee of the Senate
and then to Dr. C. Stuart Edwards, Dean of the School of
for
Studies ,
Professional
Brazil ian
w i ll be
colle ge
v i siting
Bloomsbur g in conjunction with
The Center for International
Stud ies Nation wide "Ex periment
in International Living. "
Mr. Ruy Carlos Stumpf , San
Paulo , will head the group of
students durin g their sta y in
Bloomsbur g from February 6 to
Februar y 18. Katia Mar ia von
Kathleen
Erlen , Rosanne
C
armen
Lid ia da
Mascor enhas,
Windmuller
,
Cunha , Claudia
,
Francesco
Ricardo de Reudiger
and Ha wy
Jose Armade
Alejand ro Erler von Erlea
The "4-1-4" ( Winterim)
Calendar Tentatively, the new
calendar will be:
' First 13weeks
September 10 — Registration
September 11 — Classes begin
November
21-26
—
Thanksgiving
December 12 — Classes end ;
3 day reading period
December 15-21 — Exam week
3 Week Winterim
January 7-25
Second 13weeks
February 4 — Registration
February 5 —Classes begin
March 22 — Spring recess
April 1 — Classes start
May 10 — Classes end ;
3 day reading period
May 15-21 — Exams
Class periods for all sessions
would be extended from 50 to 60
minutes each.
Advantages
The main advantage of the
calendar , according to Dr.
Bressett is that it can offer a
larger variety of learning experiences in a shorter period of
time. Also this period would be
ideal for three week research
programs and other unique
educational opportunities.
Disadv anta ges
It was brought up that the other
state colleges with this type
calendar (Edinboro and Slippery
Rock) have been having trouble
and that one of them, had decided
to drop it. Bucknell was also said
to be having problems with their
winterim calendar.
Economic disadvantage for the
students was another factor
against the calendar. To make it
work financially, 50 per cent of
the students would be forced to
attend the winterim session,
according to some APSCUF
members. Also, to fulfill the
requirements for graduation ,
students would have to attend two
'winterim sessions, due to the 15
credit hour limit in each of the 13
week semesters. Other problems
could include pressure to provide
additional courses that are not
innovative , to ma k e up the
decrease in the main semesters
departmental development.
Discussion Seminars
The Seminars will be three
hour periods devoted to a
discussion of topics encountered
in pre-student teaching activities
and in the actual student teaching
experience. A district supervisor
will conduct the seminar for
groups of approximately twentyfive students. Held in alternating
school buildings of a particular
district , the seminars will offer
the future teachers valuable onthe-job advice and training.
Legal aspects and organizations
encountered by the teacher will
also be examined.
The credit increase will help to
eliminate the need for excessive
overloading by students in
The Student Art Exhibit is an
The All-Student Art Exhibit activity undertaken solely by the
semesters preceding the student
teaching experience; over- . will be held in the Haas Gallery art students of B.S.C. Help
loading has so far been necessary opening Feb. 12 at 7:00 p.m. Art support the exhibit by submitting
in order to graduate in the ex- majors decided on an all-student your work or offering assistance
jury to determine what will be if possible. This is your exhibit.
pected period of four yea rs.
selected for the show.
Get involved .
For further information conAll students of B.S.C. are
tact
Jim Koehler (P.O. 428),
welcome to submit their works.
Mater ial s h ould be ta ken to Haas Chris Kovac (P.O. 486), or .Sue
Gallery and signed on the list Fulmer (P.O. 733).
provided. The deadline for
submitting work will be on
Wednesday. Feb. 7.
com p rise the remainder of the
The Pennsylvania Higher
group.
All work should be ac- Educa tion Assistance Agency
The Ex perime nt in in- companied by a 3 by 5 card with has numerous
off-cam pus
ternational Liv ing believes that name title , medium , year at summer job-opportunities open
the forthcomin g vis it will p rovide B. S.C. and monetary value. for eligible Students. The
an op p ortun it y f or forei gn P ai nti ngs must be suitab le for Financial Aid Office will review
vis i tors to share the academic hang ing and have eyescrews Parent's Confidential St atements
and extracurr icular life of attached to the back . All graphi c and refer students to their homeAmerican college students and w ork , drawin gs and photography , area Federal Work Study
facult y; also , it will provide an must be matted .
Program. Details may be obopportunity for the visitors to
tained
at the office on pay rate ,
Work not selected for the show
contribute an image of their own can
hours
p
er week , and application
he picked up at Haas Gallery,
cultures and values.
up unti l Monday ,
procedures
start ing Monday, Febr 12. Work
Co-ordlnator of the program is left beyond 5:00 p.m.
March
12.
Prompt
response is
on
16
Dr. Rob ert C. Miller , who will be will no longer be the Feb.
since
only
a limited
necessary
responassisted by Barbara Gillott. Both sibility of the Student Art Show number of BSC students will be
( continued on page six )
approved for the program.
Committee.
Brazilian studen ts
to visit ca mp us
Ei ght
student s
by Karen Keinard
Discussion of the new "4-1-4"
calendar was the subject of
lengthy debate at the last
meeting of APSCUF/ PAHE ,
which took place last Tuesday
afternoon.
One of the major points brought
up at the meeting was the need
for the entire college community
to be involved in making
decisions about the calendar.
General meetings for faculty
and students were suggested; however nothing definite
was decided. In order to
enlighten members of the college
community to some aspects of
this calendar , the tentative
format is listed below with some
of its advantages and disadvantages mentioned in the APSCUF meeting.
BSC s tudent art
exhibit set
Summer j obs
#
and the possibility of an adverse
effect on the summer sessions. It
was mentioned that since the
three-week sessions in the
summer were eliminated
because of short time and
cramming, this should be con-
<:irfor« *ri in the camo litrVit
Calendar
This calendar was supported
last year at a Senate meeting,
and this year's present calendar
was a step toward the "4-1-4"
program because for the first
time the semester ended before
Christmas. For this reason , the
administration has felt that it had
a mandate from the Senate to go
ahead and work on the implementation . However, according to Mr. Acierno, president
of B.S.C. APSCUF, "it could open
a Pandora 's Box." There were
some discussions about having an
open general meeting of the
faculty, but by that time there
was no longer a quorum to
vote on it The matter will be
discussed further in upcoming
meetings of the Senate and
APSCUF.
Forensics
active
The James O'Toole Memorial
Debate tournament will be held
this weekend by the Bloomsburg
State Forensic Society. Fifteen
schools will vie for trophies in
both varsity and novice team
speaking. The topic for
discussion will be "Resolved.
That the Federal Government
should enact a policy of comprehensive medical care for all
U.S. cities." (All debates will be
in Bakeless Center for the
Humanities.)
Schools
attending
are
Shepherd, The United States
Military Academy, University of
Pennsylvania , Brockport , SCICO
of Oswego, Temple, A mer i can
University , Georg e M ason ,
Edinboro , ' Kings College, Penn
State
University ,
Niagra
University , Genesc o, and Cl ar i on
State College , l ast y ear 's
defending sweepstakes winner.
Debate Society
The
Bloomsburg
Debate
Soc iet y has also been active. On
January 25 they travel ed to
Bowdoin , Maine , f or t he Bowdoi n
Freeze Tournament. The varsity
team of S. Peterman and M.
Kleiner finished 2-6, the novice
team of C. Vaughn and G.
Wisloski finished 3-5, wh i le the
novice team of J. White and K.
Kleiner finished 4-4. The squad
met such teams as Bowdoin ,
Tufts Universit y, Bates , The
Universit y of Mass., Norwitch
University , Lehman , St. Fr ancis Portland -Gorh am of Maine , and
Dartmo uth University.
FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 2. 1973
Getting By
"MEAT "
by Jo e Mikl os
The National Lampoon thinks
that meat is funny. In fact Henry
Beard payed upwards on $1000
for a picture entitled "The
Wonderful World of-Mea t," a
meat landscape. Not only that ,
but he also ran a picture (price
not mentioned) of David Frost
interviewing a pork chop.
This means very little to me,
since we all know that the
NatLamp is trite , boring, insipid
and insane. Nonetheless, meat is
funny . Just think about it ...
MEAT !
There, now that was funny ,
wasn 't it?
No?
Well , how bout hearty ground
chuck at thirty nine cents a 1b?
Sends you rolling, and if it
doesn't, think of all the things you
can do with hearty chuck at thirty
nine cents a 1b.
You can make meat loaf , tasty
hamburgs grilled to your taste, or
chili blended with finest quality
kidney beans. You can even stuff
a turkey with it, a big, plump,
juicy and succulent Butterball
turkey, swimming in gravy with
a tenderhearted giblet dressing.
Now fish isn 't funny. Just
compare the humor level of a
sardine with dark , rich liver,
loaded with the vitamins you
need and smothered with onions.
Yummy, yum yum.
Who could laugh at a halibut
staring you deadpa n in the eye
while swimming around in a pool
of oleo? That isn't funny . It's
disgusting. Same goes for jobster. How can you laugh at your
lunch when it's watching you and
contemplating revenge?
But lets get to the heart of the
matter. I cast fish back to the
sea in pursuit of the further
hilarity of animal protein.
Round rump roast , a tastetempting delight , fresh from the
butcher to you . Garnish with
quality bacon , packaged under
the purest and cleanest conditions for your health and
convenience.
Even better , your choice ,
quality pigsfeet or homemade
Polish keilbasa seasoned with r.n
unusual variety of spices.
Like garlic.
Poultry reaches new heights of
humor. Imagine a freshly
plucked broiler , right and ready
for the table, surrounded with
tasty vegetable delights and tubs
of 'slaw. Pheasant under glass
with a tempty truffle side dish
and claret wine sauce.
A tender ham fills the bill.
And what does all this prove?
That the Lampoon may be stupid ,
absurd , insulting and tired, but
that meat is really and truly
funny.
Rare fried steak , anyone?
Last chance : get your
Mahavishnu Orchestra
concert tickets today !
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THE MAROON AND GOLD
Edit or-in-Chief
Susan L. Spraaue
Robert Oliver
Managing Editor
Karen Keinard
New s Editor
BarbWanchlsen
Assistant New s Editor
Joe Miklos
Feature Editor
Valery O'Connell
Copy Editor
JohnStu gri n
Cartoonist
Frank Pinoli, Jim Sachetti
Contributin g Editors
Staff: Don Enz, Joanne Linn , Linda Llvermore, Mary Ellen Lesho, Janine
Watkins , Tim Bossard , Kathy Joseph, Marty Wenhol d
Business Manager
Elaine Pongratz
Ellen Doyle
Office Manager
Advertising Manager
Frank Lorah
Nancy Van Pelt
Circula tion Manager
Photog raphy Editor
Dan Maresh , Jr.
Photo graphers: Dale Alexander, Tom Dryburg, Pat White , Suzi White, Sue Oreef,
Mike Williams , Allana Bergor, John Andrit
Advisor
Ken Hoffman
The M&G is located at 234 Waller , or call 389-3101. All copy must be submitted by
no later tha n 5:00 p.m. on Tuesdays and Sunda ys for the Friday and Wednesday
papers, respectively. The opinions voiced in the columns and feature article s of
the M&G may not necessarily be shared by the entire sta ff.
Final approval of all con tent rests with the Editor-in-Chief.
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A Punball Sorceress : Women are beginning to enjoy the machines.
Neil Young
At The Spec tru m
by P. White
"Don 't Be Denied"
"Well all that glitters isn't gold
I know you've heard that story
told
But I'm a man in a pauper 's
disguise
A millionaire in a business
man 's eyes."
—Neil Young
We slosh across the parking lot
in the rain and head for the welllit entrances to this huge concrete
doughnut. Outside the glass
doors , the Hare Krishna people
descend upon us , and one of our
party purchases a stick of
odoriferous strawberry incense.
"Got a ticket you wanna sell?"
Not on your life , kid. I shudder at
the thought of giving up — for any
price—that computerized slip of
cardboard in my pocket that I
still can 't believe I'm lucky
enough to possess. No thanks,
friend , I do not wish to purchase
an 89c Neil Young T-shirt for two
dollars. Flash your ticket with a
smile and you 're through the
gate . Ooops! A uniformed guard
( does the scowl come with the
outfit? ) stops me, I must admit
that a plain brown bag does look
suspicious. He glances inside —
three quarts of strawberries pose
no discernible threat. He waves
me on , passive, nothing surprises
a Spectrum guard . So this is IT,
the SPECTRUM. Ah well , one
must go where the music is. It
looks amazingly like the State
Farm Show Arena in Harrisburg,
except that there are much fewer
farmers here and a lot more
heads. We're off to find our seats,
and-you guessed it — they're
poor. But .we've remembered a
good pair of binoculars, so we'll
be all right. God-popcorn ,
balloons, nut sundaes in a cone,
Pepsi in quart cartons - this is the
Farm Show Arena ! Except that
there are a few thousand freaks
on the floor instead of a few
hundred heifers. We watch the
mammoth Scoreboard flash
again and again that the Vietnam
War is over, the draft is over , and
the 76'ers will play here
tomorrow at 1:30. I feel like I
should be twisting in my seat to
see who's here , like at a high
school basketball game. We wait
and wait and feel sorry for the
poor schmucks who are climbing
still higher behind us — and these
are $6.50 tickets ! With a jolt I
realize that this is my maiden
voyage , my first superstar
concert. Each of my friends has
one or more supersta r gigs under
his belt, from the Jefferson
Airplane to James Taylor. I've
heard plenty of good live music,
but never anything like-God ,
think of it - Neil Young. I don't
know of anyone I'd rather lose
my figurative virginity to. At
long last, the lights dim , t h en
everything is black. Everyone is
screaming, my heart is pounding,
oh God, oh God , oh God, this
mother concert is about to begin.
Suddenly the stage glows red and
hpr hnvs ar<> havine a good time
anyway, and they sure can
boogie. She finishes her set and
the lights come up. The crowd is
excited and takes this opportunity to crawl to the stage.
After forever , the lights . dim
again , and we wait in the
blackness for some seconds.
From the cheers coming from the
stage area , we know what's
happening. And then there's a
flannel-shirted figure with a
guitar , sitting in a straightbacked , cane bottom chair and
that tortured voice is wailing "On
the Way Home " as though
nothing else had gone before. To
be so familiar with the features of
a man 's face without ever having
actually seen it , to know the pitch
of a man 's voice without ever
having heard it live , to hear so
often the same chords without
ever having seen the fingers on
the neck of the guitar, and now to
see and hear in reality what my
( continued on page eight)
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Shit.
Linda Ronstadt and musicians
are there to get us up. She is a
remarkably lovely girl with a
very special voice - the kind for
which I think much of countrywestern music was written. She
lays on those white blues, lyrics
with power and sensitivity. An
incredibly rude crowd often
destroys the m ood she's trying
for — a firecracker in the balcony
spoils what could have been an
intense moment. But Linda and
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A Look at Student Teaching
byjim sachetti
Part I*
"OK gang, let's settle down." I
waited, and after another 30
seconds of squirming and
laughing, they settled.
"Now, as you all know, my
name is Mr. Sachetti and I'm a
student teacher and I'm going to
be your teacher for the next five
weeks. Now, before we get
started..."
"How do ya say your name
again?" The unexpected question *
startled me and reignited the
class. Again I waited for order to
exciting; an experience that
restore itself.
"Sa.chet-ti." I said it slowly. taxes your knowledge, your atThe class thought it was funny, titudes and your ideas about a lot
but rather than wait for them to of things, especially yourself.
finish
rhyming
it
with Take for example, the incident
everybody's favorite pasta , I described above. Establishing
decided to plow on with my in- and maintaining a more or less
workable classroom order is the
troduction.
one
aspect of teaching I agonized
"Now before we get started, I
over
most before I started
think we all ought to get to know
teaching.
I spent hours woneach other, so I want you all to
dering
how
I could turn 30 kids
arrange yourselves in a big
into
a
functional
and happy
circle."
learning
unit.
With a mixed chorus of groans
and delighted squeaks, my first
class as a student teacher began
Beat them or
simultaneously to rearrange
free them?
desks and degenerate into chaos.
My anxieties started in Ed.
For the next 35 minutes, I Psych. Until I took it, I never
employed every
teaching knew that there was any
technique I could recall...every philosophy of working with kids
other than the one I had known as
one, that is, but the right one.
By the time the last paper a high school student: beat up on
airplane had hit the floor and the a few kids at the beginning of the
last student had left the room, I year, teach the kids what you
was ready to quit student have been told to teach them, and
teaching and hea d for parts respond to their complaints with
sarcasm and other forms of
unknown.
verbal abuse.
Then I was introduced to Carl
An experience to remember
Sound exciting? Scary? Does it Rogers and A. S. Neill. They said
make all you Education majors give students freedom to pursue
want to switch to Liberal Arts? their interests, let them interact
Well don't; the story has a happy — talk, move around, feel free—
ending. And the story itself — the and they'll be happier and better
story of 15 weeks spent student students. It made sense.
A year later in C&I, I learned
teaching — well, it's just about
the most interesting story tha t about interactional and group
you or I or anyone else who ex- techniques, and saw it used in
periences it will ever tell.
class. And darned if it didn't
If you're in education , stu dent make the class ten times more
teaching is the best course you'll interesting than any class I had
ever have. It's everything ever had before.
education should be but usually
And somewhere along the way,
isn't — challenging, interest ing , I forgot about my own high school
4
days: the way we turned off and
acted up in classes we didn't like;
the way some kids used to hassle
teachers for no apparent reason.
Then I walked "into my first
class as a student teacher and
watched in desperation as it
turned into a madh ouse. I
couldn't figure it out : I tried to be
tolerant of their ninth grade
enthusiasm, I h ied to come
across as a friendly guy, I tried
getting them to talk about
themselves (a subject they were
presumably interested in) , and
yet it failed...miserably.
Arid it was only after 24 hours of
concentrated soul searching and
hair pulling that I began to see
the light. And it was only after
about another 12 weeks that I
began to learn how to put the light
I had seen into practice.
Public schools
Public schools are different
What I had decided was that
the results Neill and Rodgers
obtained with their concepts of
freedom were great, but their
work had been done in private
and graduate schools; Both of
which are quite different from
the public schools student
teachers work in.
In the first place, stu dents don 't
choose to go to public school, they
are forced to. Most of them would
rather be doing something other
than sitting in your class,
Secondly , public schools have
been traditionally authoritarian,
and students learn from their
first day of kindergarten to ex-
Bloomsb urg Hikin g Club
The Bloomsbur g Hiking Club , go in car pool as directed to foot own risk " for any one.
sponsored by the Bloomsburg of mountain , then hike slowly up
Transportation — If you have a
Area YMCA , plans a series of trail to fire tower , staying hphinri car or need a ri de, please phone
Sunday after noon hikes of leader. , Most hikers will climb some days in advance to the
moderate difficu lty, to be down mountain to cars on foot , YMCA office (784-0188 ) , or to the
schedu led about once a mon t h. but we hope to have a jeep at the t emp orar y c onvenor and hike
We plan to hike — rain , shine or top for any who need a ride down. leader , Robert R. Solenber ger
snow. W ear heav y shoes or Chi ldren are welc ome , but ma y ( 784-0267). Volunteer leaders and
water proo f boots as needed. We not clim b t he fi re tower unless th ose w i th ideas f or f ut ure hikes ,
cu iaic
accom pani ed by adult s, "at your please get i n t ouch also.
SllfcWl i y w i ciui " uy
ternoon , but bri ng a snack and
water if you wish . Our meeting
place will be outside YMCA
headquarters at the old Fifth
Stree t School , 215 East 5th Street ,
near E ast St ree t , Bloomsbur g.
(over 20)
The f irst hi ke , up Catawissa
Mountain , will star t at 1: 45 p.m.,
f or unique space-age overnight summer boys camp in Penna .
Sunday, Februar y 18 and proceed
Able t o instruct In any one of the f ollowing:
and
the
at
"Y"
:
meet
foll
ows
as
«.1m ¦> 11
iua ¦
4-r*
HAiiiHM
!¦%¦ w
InrA
nf .
COUNSELORS
Lod g in g In
f urnished
Watersaf et y
Athletics
Chemistr y
room,
single occupancy , male, w ithin
one block of Carver Hall. Man y
attractive features , Call 7842039.
Miller Office
Supply Co.
II MM Main Strnt, Bloomi burf, H
H E A D Q UARTERS OF
HALLMARK CARDS
AND GIFTS
L
Phone 7M-2SH
Rlfler y
Ham Radio
~
;
'
,
l
¦ ¦
v. , ' . • vv/.v/.v/ '.'////.' / / / v
Boatlno
Golf
Tennis
.
Archery
Watersklln g
Ph y sics
Rocketr y
Pioneering
Lacrosse
Write CAMP DIRECTOR
138 Red Rambler Drive
Lafayette Hill , Pa. 19444
]pect teachers to be their not-to1be-questioned leaders, not their
iseparate but equal friends.
I decided that in such an environment, it was only natural
ithat when my students were
•presented with a novel concept —
jfreedom — they got drunk on it
,and ran hog wild. With that part
ifigured out, I still had the
jproblem of striking a balance
]between the way I had intended
;to teach and the way the kids
,expected me to teach.
Fortunately, I eventually did
jstrike a balance that worked. I
,offer it here, not as the right
approach, because every teacher
has to find the one that is right for
ithem, but as one approach.
i
Back to the battle
The next day I walked back into
the battlefield and started the
class off with a bang...literally . I
stood out in the hall until every
student was in , and then entered
and slammed the door as loudly
as I could. Having gained their
undivided attention (you could
hear a pin drop) , I proceeded to
lecture:
I was angry and I told them so
] in no uncertain terms. Then I
'boiled our future together down
into one statement , "We can have
peace in here, or we can have
^ var. It's up to you."
I had decided that for better or
worse,
I was a teacher now, and
'
ihat
for
better or worse, I did
'
lave
a
certain
amount of power
'
over my students. And although I
had been taught that the power of
grades, tests and sna p q uizzes
was illegitimate, it was .nevertheless, the only power I had. The
kids weren 't t here because t hey
wanted to be there, and they
hadn't elected me their leader; I
had been appointed. If thosewere
the rules of the game, those were
the rules we would play by.
So I put it in terms of
cooperation : we could cooperate
or we could battle. The decision .
was up to them. A replay of the
previous day's disaster would
bring down all sorts of academic
hassles on their heads, w hereas
cooperation would give them the
chance to choose what we studied
and how we studied it.
Being
intelligent
and
reasonable people, they chose
peace. From there it was up to
me; they already knew their job;
I still had to learn mine.
I had to learn the difference
between an uncooperative class
and a plain old rambuncious
class (Friday afternoon meant
rambuncious) ; I had to learn to
distinguish between a bored kid
and an angry kid; I had to learn
to respond to them, switching
topics when they were bored, starting off slowly on Monday
mornings and finishing early
Friday afternoons ; I had to learn
when to laugh with them, when to
laugh at them, and when to give
them a chance to laugh at me; I
had to learn to follow up on
threats; never promising a noisy
class a quiz and failing to follow
through.
And somehow , after what
seemed like endless weeks of
trying and failing and trying
again, it all started to f all into
place. And when it did ,
I dismissed all thoughts of
packing off to join the foreign
legion, and worked hard at being
a teacher.
Thirteen weeks later I hit on
what seemed to me the real
solution to effective teaching, but
that's part 2.
Cracker Barrel
IN CATAWISSA
Feb. 2 - Friday Night
JAY and the TECHNIQUES
9:30-1:30
COMING! FRI. & SAT. NIGHTS
ROCK BANDS !
•1910 FRUITGUM CO. •RASPBERRIES
•PLATTERS * BILL HALEY and THE COMETS
The Cracker Barrel Has A Hew linage!
EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT IS COLLEGE NIGHT
FEATURING "SPECIAL DEALS FROM 8 TO 1"
I
BLACK WEEK
Schedule of Even ts
Monday-February 5, 1973-7 :00 p.-Film
"The Black Experience in the Arts"
Carver Auditorium
Tuesday-February 6, 1973-8:15 pm
Broadway Production
"No Place to be Somebody "
H aas Auditorium
Wednesday-February 7, 1973-2:00 pm-Film
"The Black Experience in the Arts "
I .
Carver Auditorium
5:00 pm-Art Show Opening-Haas Gallery
7:00 pm -Dinner for Black Student Society
Scranton Commons
I
Thursday-February 8, 1973-2:00 pm
Mr. Chuck Stone
Carver Auditorium
8:00 pm-Poetry Readings-Carver Auditorium
Friday-February 9, 1973-2 :00 pm
Mr. Don L. Lee
Carver Auditorium
10:00 pm-3 :00 am-Dance "99!/2% Pure Poison "
I
Studen t Union
Saturday-Feb ruary 10 , 1973-2 :00 pm
Basketball Game
BSC "Blackou ts " vs. Buckn ell "Bro thers "
10:00 pm -Dance -
Student Union
Wednesday-Feb ruary 14, 1973-2 :00 pm
Ma ya Angelou
Carver Auditor ium
A bar, owned by Johnny Williams, is the setting for Charles
Gordone 's Pulitzer Prize winning play, "NO PLAC E TO BE
SOMEBODY" .
Part of Black' Week
Ghetto Story to be
Staged in Haas
The Black Student Society and
the Arts Council of Bloomsburg
State College will be presenting
the award winning play, NO
PLACE TO BE SOMEBODY , in
the Haas Center for the Arts on
Tuesday evening, February 6, at
8:15 p.m. as part of the coming
Black Week.
This is a strong piece of black
theatre, strong enough to have
won the Pulitzer Prize in 1970, the
first and only time the prize was
given to a black playwriter. Its
language is the speech of the
ghetto, unflinchingly rough and
unfailingl y pointed. So is its
humor .
In its hero, Johnny Williams,
and in his conflict with the white
underworld, the plav packs a
good bit of the black dilemma
and the black tragedy in
America.
The setting is the bar Johnny
owns in the West Village, the
place where he has bided his time
waiting for the return from
prison of the older man who has
taught him all there is to know
about crime. After ten years
behind walls, though , Johnny 's
ment or is a broken man , who can
only regret the bad case of
"Charlie fever " that grips the
young and angry Johnny.
"Charlie fever " is an obsession
for beating the white man at his
own game with his own rules, and
Joh nny is rea dy to contest the
rackets territory with the Mafia.
First produced in New York in
1967, NO PLACE TO BE
SOMEBODY won t he coveted
Pu litzer Prize f or Drama f or i ts
aut h or , Charles Gordone in 1970.
It is a play of today and today's
people.
As one cri t i c says, "This is one
play that you don't walk away
from ."
t* or an excitin g evening of
professional thea t re, come to
Haas Center for the Arts on the
Campus of Bloomsburg State
College on Tuesday evening ,
Tickets will be available at the
box office in Haas Center between the hours of 11 a.m. to 4
p.m. weekda ys.
BSC students may still obtain
free tickets upon presentation of
ID card and faculty u p on
presentation of Community
Activities card. Others may
calling (717) 389-3817. The charge
is $2.00 for adults and $1.00 for
students.
»
Proposed Nuclear
Power Plan t
The proposition of a nuclear
power plant to be located northeast' of Berwick will be
discussed at a public meeting
tonight at 8-:00. It will be held in
the Bloomsburg Area Senior High
School auditorium , which is
located at 12th and Railroad
Streets.
This meeting is being held to
inform the public about the
operational and other features of
this proposed plant , prior to the
upcoming public hearin gs.
The Environmental Plannin g
and Information Center of
(E.P.I.C. ) is
Pennsylvania
providing
a
panel
of
distinguished scientists for this
meeting. Mr. Thomas Dolan ,
P resi dent
and
Execut ive
Director of E.P.I.C.
and
Chairman of the Citizens ' Advisory Council on the Env ir onment , w ill be the moderator
of the meeting.
Th is meeting is open to the
publ i c f ree . of charge.
Summer Program
in Spain
A 6 credit summer program is *
being offered by BSC at Madrid
University, Spain. Courses are ,
open at all levels including
graduate.
Fees are set at $770 for undergraduate in-state students
and $890 for grad uate in-state
stud ents. This includes tuition ,
trans port ation , room and board
( 3 meals a day ), tri p costs to
museums and Cathedrals, and a
visit to a bull fight.
fwpHi iui c
id
liuiu
XmvlUICUj r
air port on J une 28 with return
dates
of Aug.
10 (undergraduat es) and Aug. 22
(gra duates ). Applications may
be addressed to Dr. Alfred
Tonolo, Director , Bloomsburg in
obtain tickets by writing the Arts Spain Program , Box
I Council at Box 78, BSC or by Bloomsburg, Pa. 17815.
283,
Concert Choir goes on tour
The BSC Concert Choir began
the first leg of a five day tour of
high schools, colleges, and
churches in the Pennsylvania,
New Jersey , and New York area
on January 8, 1973. The - 70
member choir under the
direction of William K. Decker ,
had been preparing for the tour
since last September. Musical
selections ranged, from pop tunes
and spirituals, to excerpts from
works by Bach and Orff.
Lower Dauphin High School in
Hummelstown. A late afternoon
arrival at Faith United Church of
Christ in Gcantville was followed
by a brief rehearsal and then a
meeting with hospitable church
members who had offered their
homes to tired choir members. A
full concert was given in the
church in the evening and
members left for a pleasant stay
(and good home cooking ) with
their hospitable hosts.
12:00 noon on Monday, January
8th in Haas Auditorium as the
choir completed preparations for
the upcoming ten concerts. At
5:00 p.m., a hungry choir
recessed for dinner and managed
to consume nine buckets of fried
chicken. Practice resumed at7:00 p.m. for rehearsal of Bach's
the Magnificat, with Thomas
Michalak , conductor of the
Pennsylvania
Northeastern
Philharmonic. This rehearsal
was in preparation for the
following week's concerts with
the orchestra in Wilkes-Barre
and Scranton. Exhausted choir
members lef t at 11:00 p.m. and
spent the night in the homes of
friends in the Bloomsburg area .
A brief rehearsal on Tuesday,
January 9th with Thomas
Michalak and a ' final meeting
with William Decker put the final
touches on the tour. After a noon
lunch break, the members were
on their way to concert number
one at Hughesville High School,
Pennsylvania. The school
assembly was very successful
and got the tour off to a good
start. A trip to Bucknell
University and more rehearsals
there resulted in the evening
performance at the University's
beautiful Rooke Chapel. Choir
members again stayed the
evening in Bloomsburg's homes.
Two chartered buses filled with
music, robes, luggage, and eager
choir members left Haas
auditorium on Wednesday,
January 10. The first stop was
Central Dauphin East High
School in Harrisburg and then
United at 7:45 a.m. on Thursday,
January llth , on the road to Blue
Mountain High School in
Schuylkill Haven. A replacement
bus was supplied after the failure
of the buses' air suspension
system and it w.as on to Southern
Lehigh High School in Center
Valley for another school
assembly . Here, former BSC
students and alumni came to see
the performance and to greet old
friends . By mid-afternoon, the
buses were well on the way to
New York City where the choir
would spend the night. Attending
the Broadway play Pippin ,
Sugar, and Jesus Christ Superstar, along with visits to Lincoln
Center and the "Met" promised
to make full evenings for
everyone.
A tired group of students slowly
left the luxury of the Royal
Manhattan Hotel and boarded the
buses for the last day of the tour.
A night on the town and the
illnesses pf eight choir members
took its toll but three school
assemblies still remained.
Somerville High School and two
performances at Hillsborough
High School in Belle Meade, New
Jersey brought the annual tour to
an end. Although many New
Jersey students had never heard
of BSC, the choir did much to
publicize the school name while
on tour. Traveling and performing together also molded the
members into a cohesive
working unit and provided a
wonderful opportunity for
members to grow in friendship.
As always, the tour was termed a
great success.
a live nour renearsai
uegan ai
Buck nell University 's Rooke
Chapel ; one of many places the
Concert Choir sang at during
their to ur.
The Choir as they trave l on their bus .
Rehearsal in Buckn ell' s Rooke
Chapel .
Some members of the Choir relaxing bef ore the con cert at
Hillsborough High School.
Pho to s cou rtesy
of
Martin Wh itta ker
Sploist Miche lle Seliga.
Wha t Do You Think Needs Improving In
i
J
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j
Do We Need...
1. More Sports
j
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2. More Covera ge of Campus Organizatio ns
J
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3. More Coverage of National Events
4 More Covera ge of Fra ternit y and Sorori ty News
j
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5. More Notification of Campus Events
I
I
6. More Interviews with Campus Personne l
I
1
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7
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Pieaw turn In to Inform ation Da«k In Collaga Union Building .
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BLACK WEEK
Schedule of Events
Monday-February 5, 1973-7:00«. p.-Film
"The Black Experience in the Arts"
Carver Auditorium
Tuesday-February 6, 1973-8 :15 pm
Broadway Production
4 'No Place to
be Somebody "
Haas Auditorium
Wednesday-February 7, 1973-2:00 pm -Film
"The Black Experience in the Arts "
Carver Auditorium
5:00 pm-Art Show Opening-Haas Gallery
7:00 pm-Dinner for Black Student Society
Scranton Commons
Thursday-February 8, 1973-2 :00 pm
Mr. Chuck Stone
Carver Auditor ium
8:00 pm-Poetry Readings-Carver Auditorium
Friday-February 9, 1973-2 :00 pm
Mr. Don L. Lee
Carver Auditorium
10:00 pm-3:00 am -Dance"99 VS % Pure Poison "
Studen t Union
Saturd ay-Februar y 10, 1973-2 :00 pm
Basketball Game
BSC "Blackouts " vs. Buckne ll "Brothers "
10:00 pm-Dance -
Student Union
Wednesda y-Februar y 14, 1973-2 :00 pm
Ma ya Angelou
Carver Auditor ium
A bar, owned by Johnny Williams, is the setting for Charles
Pulitzer Prize winning play, "NO PLAC E TO BE
Gordone's
SOMEBODY" .
Part of Black Week
Ghetto Story to be
Staged in Haas
The Black Student Society and
the Arts Council of Bloomsburg
State College will be presenting
the award winning play, NO
PLACE TO BE SOMEBODY, in
the Haas Center for the Arts on
Tuesday evening, February 6, at
8:15 p.m. as part of the coming
Black Week.
This is a strong piece of black
theatre, strong enough to have
won the Pulitzer Prize in iy70, the
first and only time the prize was
given to a black playwriter. Its
language is the speech - of the
ghetto, unflinchingly rough and
unfailingly pointed. So is its
humor.
In its hero, Johnny Williams,
and in his conflict with the white
underworld, the play packs a
good bit of the black dilemma
and the black tragedy in
America .
The setting is the bar Johnny
owns in the West Village, the
place where he has bided his time
waiting for the return from
prison of the older man who has
taught him all there is to know
about crime. After ten years
behind walls, though, Johnny's
mentor is a broken man, who can
only regret the bad case of
••Charlie fever" that grips the
young and angry Johnny .
"Charlie fever " is an obsession
for beating the white man at his
own game with his own rules , and
J ohnny is ready to contest the
rackets territor y with the Ma fi a.
Fi rst produced in New York in
1967, NO PLACE TO BE
SOMEBODY won the coveted
Pul itzer Prize for Drama for its
au t hor , Charles Gordone in 1970.
It is a play of today and today's
people.
As one critic says, "This is one
play that you don 't walk away
f rom ."
For an exciting evening of
professional theatre , come to
Haas Center for the Arts on the
Cam pus of Bloomsburg Stat e
College on Tuesday evening.
Tickets will be available at the
box office in Haas Center between the hours of 11 a.m. to 4
p.m. weekda ys.
BSC students may still obtain
free tickets upon presentation of
ID card and facul ty upon
presentat ion of Community
Activities card. Others may
calling (717) 389-3817. The charge
is $2.00 for adults and $1.00 for
students.
Proposed Nuclear
Power Plan t
The proposition of a nuclear
power plant to be located northeast' of Berwick will be
discussed at a public meeting
tonight at 8-:00. It will be held in
the Bloomsburg Area Senior High
School auditorium , which is
located at 12th and Railroad
Streets.
This meeting is being held to
inform the public about the
operational and other features of
this proposed plant , prior to the
upcoming public hearings.
The Environmental Plannin g
and Information Center of
(E.P.I.C. ) is
Pennsylvania
providing
a
panel
of
distinguished scientists for this
meeti ng . Mr. Thoma s Dolan,
P res i den t
and
E xecut i ve
Director
of E.P.I.C.
and
Chairman of the Citizens ' Advisory Council on the Environment , wi ll be the moderator
of the meeting.
Th i s m eeting is open to the
public f ree. of char ge.
Summer Program
in Spain
A 6 credit summer program is
bei ng offered by BSC at Madrid
University, Spain. Cour ses are
open at all levels including
graduate .
Fees are set at $770 for undergraduate in-st ate students
and $890 for graduate in-state
students. This includes tuition ,
transp ortation , room and board
( 3 meals a day), tri p costs to
museums and Cathedrals , and a
v isit to a bull fi ght.
Depart ure is from Kennedy
air port on J une 28 with return
dates
of Aug.
10 (undergrad uates ) and Aug . 22
(gradu ates). Applications may
be addr essed to Dr. Alfred
Tonolo , Director , Bloomsburg in
obtain tickets by writing the Arts Sp ain Program , Box 283,
Council at Box 78, BSC or by Bloomsbur g' Pa. 17815.
Concert Choir goes on tour
The BSC Concert Choir began
the first leg of a five day tour of
high schools , colleges, and
churches in the Pennsylvania,
New Jersey, and New York area
on January 8, 1973. The 70
member choir under the
direction of William K. Decker,
had been preparing, for the tour
since last JSeptember. Musical
selections ranged from pop tunes
and spirituals, to excerpts from
works by Bach and Orff.
A five hour rehearsal began at
12:00 noon on Monday, January
8th in Haas Auditorium as the
choir completed prepara tions for
- the upcoming ten concerts. At
5:00 p.m., a hungry choir
recessed for dinner and managed
to consume nine buckets of fried
chicken. Practice resumed at7:00 p.m. for rehearsal of Bach's
the Magnificat, with Thomas
Michalak , conductor of the
Northeastern
Pennsylvania
Philharmonic. This rehearsal
was in preparation for the
following week's concerts with
the orchestra in Wilkes-Barre
and Scranton. Exhausted choir
members left at 11:00 p.m. and
spent the night in the homes of
friends in the Bloomsburg area.
A brief rehearsal on Tuesday,
January 9th with Thomas
Michalak and a ' final meeting
with William Decker put the final
touches on the tour. After a noon
lunch break , the members were
on their way to concert number
one at Hughesville High School,
Pennsylvania . The school
assembly was very successful
and got the tour off to a good
start. A trip to Bucknell
University and more rehearsals
there resulted in the evening
performance at the University's
beautiful Rooke Chapel. Choir
members again stayed the
evening in Bloomsburg's homes.
Two chartered buses filled with
music, robes, luggage, and eager
choir members left Haas
auditorium on Wednesday,
January 10. The first stop was
Central Dauphin East High
School in Harrisbur g and then
Lower Dauphin High School in
Hummelstown. A late afternoon
arrival at Faith United Church of
Christ in Grantville was followed
by a brief rehearsal and then a
meeting with hospitable church
members who had offered their
homes to tired choir members. A
full concert was given in the
church in the evening and
members left for a pleasant stay
(and good home cooking ) with
their hospitable hosts.
A well-rested choir left Faith
United at 7:45 a.m. on Thursday,
January 11th, on the road to Blue
Mountain High School in
Buc knell Univ ersity 's Rooke
Schuylkill Haven. A replacement
Chapel;
one of many places the
bus was supplied after the failure
of the buses' air suspension Conce rt Choir sa ng at during
system and it was on to Southern their tour.
Lehigh High School in Center
Valley for another school
assembly. Here, former BSC
students and alumni came to see
the performance and to greet old
friends. By mid-afternoon, the
buses were well on the way to
New York City where the choir
would spend the night. Attending
the Broadway play Pippin ,
Sugar, and Jesus Christ Superstar, along with visits to Lincoln
Center and the "Met" promised
to make full evenings for
everyone.
A tired group of students slowly
left the luxury of the Royal
Manhattan Hotel and boarded the
buses for the last day of the tour.
A night on the town and the
Rehearsal in Bucknell's Rooke
illnesses of eight choir members Chapel.
took its toll but three school
assemblies still remained.
Somerville High School and two
performances at Hillsborough
High School in Belle Meade, New
Jersey brought the annual tour to
an end. Although many New
Jersey students had never heard
of BSC, the choir did much to
publicize the school name while
on tour. Traveling and performing together also molded the
members into a cohesive
working unit and provided a
wonderfu l opportunity for
members to grow in friendship.
As always, the tour was termed a
great success.
Soloist Michelle Seliga.
The Choir as they travel on their bus.
Some members of the Choir relaxing before the concert at
Hillsborough High School.
Photo s cou rtesy
of
Martin Whittak er
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1. More Spor ts
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4 More Covera ge of Fraternit y and Sorori ty News
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5. More Notificatio n of Campus Events
I
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6. More Interviews with Campus Personn el
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Pleaw turn in to Inform ation Dtsk in Cofltg * Union Building.
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Cagers top Edinboro ;
Cheyney tomorrow
by bob Oliver
The time was right for an upset
— unfriendly gym , your top
scorer on the bench with four
personal fouls , a long day of
traveling behind you — it was
now or never time for Edinboro
State College to come from
behind to top the Huskies. They
tried, but could only close to five
points behind. Result: the
Huskies pulled away and posted
their 14th straight victory , 75-66.
1he Huskies, who play Cheyney
State tomorrow night , and
Edinboro , a perennial Western
Division powerhouse in a
rebuilding year, traded baskets
though the first six minutes, until
Tony DaRe hit two 15-foot
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baseline shots in a row. This put
the Huskies out in front for good,
with 13 minutes remaining in the
half.
BSC lead at 13
Led by DaRe and backcourt
mate Art Luptowski, who was the
number two Husky scorer with
17, the Huskies jump ed out to a
42-32 lead at the half .
The Huskies continued to roll
until the 12 minute mark , when
big John Willis was caught with
his fourth personal foul. The
score at this point was 54-42, with
the Huskies ahead.
The Huskies continued to keep
this margin until the six-minute
mark when the Scots started to
move, mainly dye to a full-court
( continued on page seven )
Art Lupto wski throws a pass to Tony DaRe (22) in the game
Saturday night against East Stroudsburg.
( Photo by Karen Keinard )
John Willis goes to the bask et in a game against Lock Haven State College. "To by " Tyle r (32 ) and a
Lock Haven Player look on.
(Oliver Photo )
Four Records
BSC dunks Kutztown
The swim team of BSC picked
up their 4th win in seven outings
by beating Kutztown 73-35 and
setting 4 Kutztown State College
records in the process.
The 400 yd. medley relay team
started things off by setting the
1st record of the day with a time
of 3:56.1 Jim Campbell , Jim
Koehler, Bill Ewcll, and Dave
Gibas, swam the relay for the
Huskies.
Rich Kozecki followed the relay
team 's example and set his own
record in the 1000 yd. freestyle.
The new time was 10:58.1.
In the 200 yd. freestyle Kozecki
again placed 1st for the Huskies
although he didn't set a record.
His time was 1:59.9. Dan Yocum
took second.
Dave Gibas , BSC's AllA mer i can
short
d istance
swi mmer set a new record in the
50 y d. frees ty le with a time of
22.3. This was the second record
settin g performance out of three
for G ibas.
I n the individual Medle y J im
Cam pbell placed 1st and Dale
Alexander second for BSC. The
winnin g time was 2:14.9.
Eric Ewell , who was the onl y
BSC swimmer in the 200 yd.
meter and Eric Aireton took
Tony DaRe (22) shoots over a Lock Haven player as John Will is gats ready to l«ap for possible
r ibound (Oliver Photo )
second place in both the 1-meter
and 3-meter dives to KSC's Kevin
Mc Cornac. Steve Coleman had
the flu and was unable to dive.
Dave Gibas also set a record in
the 100 yd. freest yle with a time
of 50.2. Yocum finished second.
Bill Ewell, who was the only
BSC swimmer in the 200 meter
butterfly took 1st with a time of
2:15.6.
BSC took 2nd and 3rd place in
the next two events the 200 yd.
backstroke and the 500 yd.
freestyle. George King took
second and Conrad Ayel 3rd in
the butterfly, while Dave Lill and
Dale Alexander took 2nd and 3rd
respectively in the freestyle .
The 400 yd. freestyle team of
Yocum , Lausch , Hilgar and
Ohlinger won with a time of
5:53.3.
Brazili an
Students
(continued from page one)
faculty and students aiding in the
progr am include : Dr. Ray Rost ,
Ms. Helen Oetzel , O ded Rotholz ,
Sand y Miller , Cry der Bankes ,
Scott Minn ich , Ann Sipling,
Georgi ann Cheung, Ray Ma nkey,
Debbi e Heckel and Jill Un-
beurest .
While on campu s, the grou p
will par tici pate in extracurric ular activitie s as well as
auditing classes tha t they may be
interest ed in.
Housing for the group will be a
combin ation of dormitory living
and off-cam pus housing. Any
faculty or students intereste d in
hel ping with the progr am is
asked to cont act Barbara Gillott
as soon as possible at 389-3100 or
784-1771.
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FRIDAY/ FEBRUARY S, 1973
Grapp lers drop
squea ker, 22-21
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Going for a win at Kutztow n is this Husky swimmer.
(Alexander Photo)
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Coach Sanders feels that
having inexperienced wrestlers
in the lineup is killing them.
The only member of B.S.C.'s
lower weights to win was Lon
Edmonds who decisioned Ron
Patterson (C), 2-1. Sanders feels
that Edmonds is definitely a
contender for the sta te championship.
The grappler's next opponent is
Kutztown , on Saturday, at home.
¦
-
string of pins at four.
Kevin Hayes dropped a close
decision to Randy Haught (C) at
167, 3-2. Then Dan Burkholder
decisioned Carl Felice (C) at 177,
8-2.
Coach Sanders felt that
Burkholder 's match was the key
to a tie. They knew that they had
to get a four point decision. Felice
of Cal. stalled quite a bit. Dan did
a good job but just failed to win a
superior decision.
Sheehan and Hitchcock both
pinned their opponents to finish
the meet. Hitchcock extended his
unbeaten string to 9 with his pin
of Dick Munsen in 3:35.
¦
The B.S.C. wrestling team put
on a strong comeback Saturday
night coming up with two pins
and a decision but lost a heartbreaker to a strong California
State team , 22-21, at California
State.
The Huskies dropped all but
one of the first five matches to
fall behind California 19-3. They
then came back to win four of the
last five matchups but failed to
catch California and had to settle
with their fifth loss in ten outings.
Randy Watts started the long
uphill battle with a come from
behind victory over* Al Meredith.
10-8, at 158.
Watts, who is tied for the lead
in pins with Ron Sheehan and
Shorty Hitchcock — all with four
decisions by pins, trailed at the
end of the first period, 6-1. After a
scoreless second period , he
racked up 9 points to Meredith's 3
to pull out a decision. During his 9
point spree he was credited with
an escape, two take downs, and
one near fall.
Watts was moved up a weight
class and this decision snaps his
basketball head believes that
"every year is a new start" and
the new team should not be
burdened with the remembrance
of past teams successes or
defeats.
Even-if it is too late to Join the
squad there is plenty of time to be
one of its fans. The t eam w ishes
to send a " cord i al inv i tat ion " to
ever y student , f acult y mem ber ,
an d p erson who l ives in
Bloomsburg to see BSC' s
Huskettes i n act ion.
All games will be held i n the
Centenni al Gymnasium , w i th
f ree admi ssion.
chosen they will have to work
hard to sta y ahead of their
The basketball tea m belongs to
teammates.
both
the national and easter n
W hen the team f irst started
divisions
of the Association of
p rac t ice
after
C hr istmas
Intercollegi
vacat i on the y began with the W omen . N oate Athletics f or
fundamenta l drills and rules of given to an y scholarshi ps are
athletes
basketball , along wit h con- throu gh these orwomen
g
anizations.
di tion i ng exerc ises. The y are now
pol i sh i ng t heir special ta lents in
Miss Mc Comb is the fi rs t an d
pre para t i on for the ten game onl y woman 's basketball coach
season .
that BSC has ever had.
Asked what she f elt about the Belongin g to Bloomsbur g 's
team potential , Coach Mc Comb f acul ty f or tw elve years she
sim pl y said , 'it's there if they states that she has been the coach
put it all together. " The gym for "y ears. "
instructor senses that this will be
The slender , short haired
a ({pod vear due to havin g plavers tra i ner often works from 4 : 00 to
with much abil ity .
8:00 p.m. week nights with the
Although last year 's record varsity and junior varsity
was ar ound the 500 mark , no squads , drillin g two hours for
kept
strict accoun t of record s are
fr om previ ous seasons. The
each team.
(Williams Photo ) *
Swimmers win Fifth
The Husky swim team set five
pool records in a dual' meet with
the Warriors of East Stroudsburg
Wednesday afternoon to increase
their seasonal record to 5-3. The
score of the match was 77-36.
Dave Gibas was instrumental
in two Stroudsburg pool records,
winning the 50-yard freestyle
with a time of 22.2, and anchoring
the 400-yard freestyle event to a
time of 3:24.3. Team members
along with Gibas in the performance were Rick Kozicki,
Doug Yocum, and Jim Campbell.
Another Husky instrumental in
two records was frosh Kozicki,
who set a pool record in the 20^
freestyle as well as participating
in the victorious 400.
The 400-medley team of George
King, Jim Koehler, Bill Ewell,
and Doug Yocum took a first.
Dave Lill won the 1000-free with
a 12:05 clocking, while Campbell
won the 200 individual medley
and the 200-backstroke.
Gnnninl Tnm ArrAtir
upcviai
iu
v
ii
i vvt
Tomorrow the Huskies will
play Millersville , and Coach
McLaughlin has a treat lined up
— he's bringing back some
outstanding
former
BSC
swimmers. He's hoping for a big
crowd — so be there—two
o'clock.
¦
¦¦
Girls ' Basketba ll
By Linda Liver more
"We are going to have some
good solid basketba ll. We have a
good team ." These statements
explain Coach Joanne McComb 's
feelings concern ing th is y ear 's
basket b all team.
T he H usk i ettes , balanced
evenl y w it h ever y class
re presen ted, practice six days a
week , t wo hours each da y in the
Centenn ial Gy m.
Miss McComb pointed out that
each p la yer has her stren g ths ,
mak i n g f or a unified team wi t h no
stars . Th i s fa ctor means that
when the start ing five will be
Ron Sheehan going for a pin in a close meet against West Chester.
Linda Shepperd getting attended to during practice by team trainer Lorraine Roulston .
( Photo by Mare sh )
Caqers
(continued from page six)
press. They cut the Husk y lead to
tive points , 69-64, at the 2:25
mark. However , DaRe came up
wit h a clu t ch basket and two free
throws to put the game out of
reach.
Gar y Ty ler led the H usk ies
with 10 rebounds while Luptowski
led in assists with eleven . Double
figure scorers for the Huskies
besi des DaRe and Lu ptowski
were W ill i s with 15 and J oe
Kempski with 10.
Hot Shooting
BSC led in the early going
ma inly due to torrid (62 per cent)
sh ooti n g fr om the field , as well as
outhitting the Scots 15-8 from the
charity stripe .
Cheyncy Tomorrow
As a fi nale to the BSC home
triple-header , the Huskies p lay
host to the Wolves of Cheyney
College
tomorrow .
State
Cheyney, perennial Pa. Conference East Division champs ,
are led by V ince Ellison , who is
second in the d i visions ' scoring
race with a 17 .3 average , and Bill
A llen , G'10" , who is avera ging
10.0. John Chane y's Cheyney
team is now 11-3 (at press time) ,'
5-1 in league.
Chess Team in N.Y.
Over t he past weekend , the
C hess Team , accom panied by Dr.
Selders, went to New York .
Andy Cherinka , made a f air
showing with a 2-3-1 record.
Looking ahead tor next year ,
Dave Ki stler , our first board , Tim Hoffmier , a Sophomore , and
scored 2 wins , 2 losses, and 1 Bob Panusk i, a F reshman , made
draw. Th is ti me Dave was wa y their debut on the tourna ment
out-classed. Pictured is Dave scene. Ti m was astoundi n g w it h a
pla y in g N orm an Wei nstein , an 3 win, 3 loss record . Bob amazed
the tea m by posting a 2 win - 3
I nternat i onal Master.
l oss record.
Jim Kitchen , who went 3-3
We want to wish success to the
made a much better showing,
Chess
Team on future events.
then in pr evious tournaments.
B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^B^MkiiB ^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^i^H
Dave Kistler
matter.
playing
Norman
Wienstlen, an Internatio na l
and well aware of his impact on
audiences. He stops a song to tell
(continued from page two)
the freaks up front to "s i t down,
man!"
And he plays for the
senses had so often perceived
sinfully
short
time of an hour and
before — I must say that one
su
nc
,
,
twenty
minutes
and gets away
me
man
nas
us
nere
wen
suffers a sort of shock, a jolt of
old
very
with the
Some
with
it.
He
ends
new awareness that may be does his music.
brand-new
"Southern
Man
some
" and
inevitable
that our inexperience in the light peculiar only to cultures with tunes and
u
(
very
Are
You
a
single
encore
Rives
ones, all of them
weights with Bill O'Donnell and media like our own. Gods or not , dynamic
.)
Country
in
for
the
" Too
stated
Ready
Bob Cocher hurts us but that both the magnetism and intensi ty of persona] comments head
,
the
crowd
in the easil y appeased
are doing a great job considering emotion that rock performers such a way that every
part
shuffles out passively — Farm
how tough it is to wrestle in our can generate is awesome. Add to room can identify with some
For many Show Arena style. Incredibly, it's
of
what
he's
saying.
the
usual
celebrity
mania
the
strong conference with no attraction of elusiveness, and you the real show-stopper was the time for me to put my shoes on
background.
have thousands of fans like autobiographical number "Don 't and descend the stairs. I've just
the
intense
myself dying to pay $6.50 to sit Be Denied ", quoted in part at the experienced
For next season it's still too dangerously close to the ozone beginning of this article. It's humaBess of a man and his
early to tell but Sanders is op- layer and hear their performer in more food for thought for those music. I leave the building
timistic. He says he contacted concert. Indeed , "No other North who are try ing to understand wondering how he spends his
some good kids and has had American solo artist (with the what Neil Young is. Hard-nosed , money.
commitments from some and exception of Dylan who will not
others have expressed interest.
At Ma ts ide
by Mark A. Mehler
This week the BSC grapplers
take on powerful Kutztown and
Lock Haven at home in the
Nelson field house.
Kutztown is a strong team with
118 pounder Joe Hill and Hwt.
Chuck Dart. Two of the match
up's to watch are Lonny Edmonds vs. Kutztown 's Fiomic in
the 134 pound weight class.
Fiomic was a Catholic state
championship runner-up. Also at
the 158 lb. weight class, the
Bear's undefeated Lou Demyan
will be facing the always improving Brian Berry.
Against the Eagles of Lock
Haven Saturday might everyone
should keep an eye on 150 lb.
Randy Watts versus Gary
Ventamiglia, the defending state
champion . At heavyweight . Lock
Haven has Jim Schuster who will
most likely meet our own stand
out "Shorty " Hitchcock. Coach
Sanders praised the Lock Haven
squad as well-balanced and
excellent in the lower weights. He
stated, "We'll have to fight for
our lives to beat them."
Women 's Swim Team
swim
Women ' s Varsity
schedule as of December 15,
1972: Wed . Feb. 14, Bucknell
away , 7:30 p.m.; Sat., Feb. 17,
Lycoming home , 2: 00 p.m. ;
and Sat., Feb. 24, Lehigh
away , 2:00 p.m.
11
__
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Kartzel' s Music Store
Sales Representatives
So ught!
72 N. Iron St.
Over 300 Guitars
and Amplifiers
Male or Female
Lovecraft Unlimited
1 or 2 Girls want ed
to sha re
large 4 bedroom apartment
near col lege
Call 784-5275 or 784-3365
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Freshmen - Sophomores of
Caree r Upperclassmen —
Waterbed and Bean bag
Furniture & all Head Items Posters - Jewelry
Send Short Resume' to
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or call 717-748-2813
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Bloom Bowl
OUTLOOK
Due to our lack of balance and
our inexperience the remainder
of the season will be "nip and
tuck" all the way. "With a couple
of breaks we can go anywhere
from a .500 season to winning
them all." Coach Sanders feels
20,000 seat Spectrum for
I
l
OUTSTANDING
WRESTLERS CITED
In past weeks two wrestlers
have been , cited by Coach
Sanders
for
performing
admirably. The Coach stated ,
"Ron Sheehan is our best
wrestler as far as knowledge and technique and has
done a great job." He went on to
explain Sheehan has been
hampered by having to fill in our
vacant Heavyweight spot but will
be down in his proper weight
class for the state tournament.
Another grappler who has been
LOVE AFFAIR
is Randy Watts.
Coach Sanders seemingly has a commended
in the 150 pound
real love affair going with the Randy wrestles
class and has been wU
Bloomsburg student body. He weight
in all of our victories.
says he's "real impressed" with standing
Randy and Ron have been
the student involvement and feels Both
that his wrist lockettes are doing named "Wrestler of the Week."
a "great job."
Petitions for AWS offices
One of the lockettes has said,
are
available at all residence
"(Coach Sanders is) really
hall
desks and must be subterrific, concerned tremendously
mitted
by February 19.
about his wrestlers and about
getting spectators out to enjoy
matches. He is really a wonderful
man to work with...if his plans
Compliments
succeed we'll really have a
superior wrestling program here
of the
at BSC."
tour ) could sell out the entire
two
shows fea turing only himself and
back-up musicians." — Concert
Magazine.
Neil Young
» '<¦ "^'¦"^^ "^SSj SHBP^^v^SHP^^^* ~~ j» _ *
Jo h n 's Foo d
¦' < ^i^^<>iMsB ^HEi§BBKNMl ^^^ ^i **
•'
*
Market
W. Main & Leonard St.
Open 8 a.m. to 12 midnight Daily
Delicatessen
^*
^.
*d?
*
* AffU K"
*
^BMj ^tL
ij^JSj^ff^j^S^S^S^S^S^S^S^S^S^S^S^S^S^S^S^I^S^S^SJgjjriBB
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V V I • 11 /A' 1
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AifiiricJruJFri
Full line of groceries
Sl snacks
Just Arrived New Shi p ment of
Candles -dri p, dri p less , scented
and unsce nted and Soaps....
at the
THE STUDIO SHOP
59 E. Main St., Bloomsbur g 784-2818
STEADY
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
* >i '"-ud^z-
*
*
" w7^PIIWWnBBBMHWMBHBtBsM >ii>i T
WILKES POOL DEALERS NEED KEY
INSTALLERS FOR INSTALLATION
OF WILKES SWIMMING POOLS
iiptttiUfe
^
WILKES WILLTRAI N
EXCELLENT SALARY ARRA NGEMENT
MUST BE PREPARED TO WORK OUT OF TOWN
Representati ves Will Be On Campus:
Friday, Feb. 9th
9 am; 11 am; 1 pm & 3 pm
H&m
^Hf '
Waller Hall Alumni Room
INTERESTED STUDENTS SHOULD ATTEND MEETING
1 ^^^^
w
^^^^^^^^
FLOWERS
• ^S-v
Bl ooms b urg
784-4406 m m m m
lA ^^^^^^
l^^^^¥^ l^>^^V-M->JJV^Jru ^W-UXfO^^
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