rdunkelb
Fri, 05/03/2024 - 17:43
Edited Text
Discussion of "Winterim "
calendar continues
Discussion of the 4-1-4 "Winterim" calendar that began at a
meeting of APSCUF two weeks
ago was continued Monday at a
general faculty meeting called by
the organization. Again , no action
was taken, but the discussion
indicated some strong opposition
to the calendar. Dr. Dayton S.
Pickett , Vice President for
Academic Affairs , Dr. Hobart
Heller , ActingiDean of Graduate
Studies , and Dr. William
Williams, Special Advisor for
Campus Relations and Professor
of Business Law were there to
explain different aspects of the
calendar.
Pickett
Dr. Pickett stated that the
administration was not entirely
sold on the calendar , but that he
and others saw it as their task to
simply put "meat on the bones"
following Senate approval .
However, "The meat doesn 't look
like we thought it would" according to Pickett and it is now
being discovered that when the
Senate passed the calendar last
year, it probably did not have full
approval of the faculty and
students, as they had assumed.
Pickett had outlined the structure
of the calendar, explaining that it
would consist of two 13 week
semesters with the three week
"Winterim " between, and would
begin after Labor Bay and end
earl y in May.
Heller
Dr. Heller gave some basic
points to consider in the
establishment of a sound
calendar. The fact that community college transfers must
and will increase would
necessitate a consideration of
their needs. Also according to
Heller, the conventional meaning
of the semester hour must be
respected. Another point was that
the traditional academic year is
the nine months between Labor
Day and Memorial Day and the
calendar should go with the life
style in America , accounting for
the times spent in summer
employment and vacations .
Heller emphasized that the most
important criteria should be to
provide the optimum op-
portunities for both teaching and
learning experiences.
Williams
Williams stated that if the
Winterim was introduced at this
time , an overload problem
would occur in the second term
because of limits of the APSCUF
contract. There is already a
serious budget problem , according to Williams, and paying
professors for overload work
would make it worse so the
amount of overload work must be
kept to a minimum, A solution of
increasing class size and
decreasing sections would only
cause more problems, possibly
later hassles with the APSCUF
contract after negotiations in
August about restricting class
size. Also during his talk, it was
pointed out that with the Winterim , we automatically lose a
class period a day, so this in itself
worsens the problem anyway.
More discussion
Some faculty members thought
it was unfair for the students to
(continued on page four )
Gerhard Lan g
Study in Consumer Arts
"Take a hard, long look arouncI that all these aspects induce the
you — and I mean look with keeri customer to buy the product for
awareness —• you are being; its color and art work and not for
inundated with packaging - with i its contents. Lang added that the
package design." This statemenlt amount of color and design often
was part of Gehard Lang 's in ¦reflects the price of the product.
troduction to his program as; Think-tank sessions were held
artist-in-residence at BSC thisi Tuesday night and Wednesday
week .
morning in which students
participated in creating various
Lang began his program wit!> art designs and names for an
an overall view of the relation
ship between designer, client
and consumer. Also included ir
the lecture was a field trip to £
supermarket and discussion or
package design and employmen
opportunities.
Lang
product.
imaginary
discussed the potential of the art
design and the marketing and
advertising approach of the item.
Following the session Wednesday
morning, Lang concluded in the
afternoon with a talk about job
opportunities in the field of
design and packaging. He will
return to the campus February 27
to speak on Typography .
the field trip turned out to be
the highlight of the program.
With Lang, the group explored
the types of packages on the shelf
and their customer appeal. Lang
emphasized that the basic design
i n fl uences are t he bran d name ,
color franchise , and graphics,
and that products that are built
u p on t hei r bran d names are
bought by consumers with the
idea that he or she is purchasing
the item for its quality . According to Lang, the i mage
device becomes an unconscious
symbol of the effect of the
product on the consumer. He said
Will the person or persons
publishin g smut sheets under
the name of The Gadfl y ,
p lease contact Mar y Lou
Andris, Town P.O. Box 572/
Bloomsbur g, Pa.
Mar y Lou Andris
Editor , Gadfl y
Gerhard Lan g, artist in residence hare at BSC, during presenta tion of his program this week.
( Maresh Photo )
John Kolish
Second Hypnotist
to Make Appearance
The world's fastest hypnotist, to 11:00 pm in Haas Auditorium.
John Kolisch , will appear Kolisch, a 25 year veteran of
Tuesday, February 20, from 8:30 hypnotic experience, is a
frequen t guest on the Johnny
Carson, Steve Allen , and David
Susskind shows.
Billed as America's f unniest
show, Kolisch presents a laughfilled evening of bristling wit,
bawdiness .
College seniors will have an sarcasm , and
opportunity to take the Federal Amazing feats of mind-reading,
Service Entrance Examination ESP , and hypnotism have
distinguished
(FSEE) when it is given on a d e l i g h t e d
walk-in basis at our campus Sat., audiences all over the world and
Feb. 24, 1973 at 8:30 a.m. Com- continue to delight. Demonplete details and FSEE an- strations range from the idenn oun cements are now ava ilable tification of ten dollar bills,
concealed objects an d th e correct
at the Placement Office.
One test ta ken on t i me i n one telling of time to the willing
place opens the door to ap- participation of mesmerized
proximately 60 different and audience members in wild
challenging career fields in many displays of the "phenomena of
Federa l agencies at locations all the mind." In addition to this,
Kolisch will show you how you
over the country .
Open t o seniors an d gra duates may hypnotize yourself so that
i n an y aca demic maj or the you may h av e a greater control
program is appropriate for over your own m i n d, body and
stu dents i n a ll curr icula except destiny. Kolisch maintains an
Engineering, Physical Sciences, easy patter with his audience and
Account ing and a lim i ted num ber never f a il s to provok e wave u pon
of other technical fields. This wave of laughter.
The mentalist's sh ow is bei ng
examination is unquestionably
sponsored
by the Special Events
the most popular avenue for
Committee
of the College Union
Fed era l em pl oy ment ever
Program
Board.
There is no
devised.
admission
charge,
so come out
NOTE : Please obtain FSEE
Tuesday,
the
20th,
for an exbrochure from Placement
Center , Ben Frankl i n before perience th at is "amazing —
exciting as a trip to the moon."
taking the test.
FSEE to
be Given
.. As a result of the vacancy left on the Board of Trust ees by
the resi gnation of stud ent trustee Michael Torbert , letters
are being accepted by CGA as to the qualifications of possible
candidates. Mr. Torbert 's resi gnation was a result of his
graduati on in December.
..Stud ents intereste d In applyi ng for the posi tion should
write a letter to CGA stat ing their qualifi cations including
biograph ical informat ion and other appropriate data . These
should be sub mitted by Februar y 23. From the lette rs, three
to five will be chosen to be sent to Harrlsburg for fina l
selection and approva l of a candidate by the gover nor.
>Lett e r
Lett ers to the edit or are an
expres sion of the indivi dua l
i writer 's opi nion and do not
necessar ily refle c t the v iews
i of the newspaper. All lett ers
must be sig ned, names will be
withhel d upon request. The
i M&G reserves the right to
, abridge or with hold, in
; consult a ti on with the wr iter ,
, all lett ers over 400 wor ds in
j - length.
Dear Editor,
I would like to comment on the
series, "A Look at Student
Teaching" by Jim Sachetti. I feel
the articles were very well
written and in general Mr.
Sachetti has made some perceptive and pertinent observations concerning both the
problems and some possible
solutions to those problems that
are encountered , in student
. teaching.
However, I would take exception to Mr. Sachetti's conclusion that so much of what is
taught in "upper level " courses is
worthless as prepa ration for
student teaching. This need not
be so if the college course
whether "upper level" or "introductory " focuses on basic
concepts rather than emphasizing the learning of facts.
An effective teacher at the
elementary or secondary level is
not one who feels that college
courses should provide all the
facts or even the basic content for
the courses to be taught. Instead,
the prospective teacher realizes
that college courses enable one to
learn the basic principles that
must be understood before one
can teach them to students , at
whatever level. College courses
should also give the future
teacher a feel for what is important content for the course
being taught. Hopefully, the
teacher could then eventually
direct the students beyond the
question of why tribal people can
walk all day without shoes to the
larger questions of why are they
doing the walking, how do they
perceive the environment they
are walking through, and how
does this contribute to the culture
they have developed, and even
how can we better understand
our cul ture by better understanding theirs.
Brian Johnson
Dept. of Geography
and Earth Science
The Newlyweds
Blood, Sweat and Tears, says David Clayton Thomas , are getting back into form. A little
bad and
effort training for a challenging
lots of good.
What happens when Joe career , finds herself grossly
College and Suzie Coed, typical underemployed as a housewife.
BSC recently marrieds, venture The emotional letdown places Record Review
extra strains on the developing
forth into the world of work?
marriage
of Suzie and Joe.
Director
Mr. Thomas Davies,
A
variation
on this theme ochas
seen
many
a
of Placement,
curs
when
Suzie
is hired and Joe
class enter the job market. He
is
unable
to
find
employment of
has ample knowledge of the
any
kind.
Other
problems
to be
pressures and heartaches that
faced
are
the
repayment
of
the current tight job market will
tuition
loans
,
obtaining
perby Jo e Miklo s
place on the newlyweds.
manent
certification
and
whether
New Blood ... Blood, Sweat and
One unhappy situation cited by
or
not
to
have
children.
Tears
Mr. Davies occurs when Joe
Can anything be done to soften
BST has been in a steady state
lands a job in the Podunk school
district and Suzie finds herself these problems before they grow of decline ever since the
departure of Al Kooper. The
unemployed. Suzie , after
(continued
on
page
four)
particular problem had been the
devoting four years and much
vocalist , David
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Clayton Thomas.
3
S
Thomas' excesses were enough
=
THE MAROON AND GOLD
=
to drive the most astute fan up
Edltor-ln-Chlef
=
S3
Susan L. Sgraaue
=
5
the wall. His harshness and overt
RobertOllver
= Managing Editor
•
Kare
n
Kelnard
=
power were too much—he often
S New s Editor
Barb Wanchlien
s
ja Assistant News Editor
sounded
strained, with a conJoe Miklos
Feature Edltor
=
|
siderable
lack of timing. Thomas'
Vatery O'Connell
S
S Copy Edltor
ineptitude
had a detrimental
JohnStugrl
n
=
es Cartoonist
s
Frank Plzzoll , Jim Sachetti
S Con tributin g Editors
effect
on
the
band . They got just
s
M
.Staff: Don Em Linda Llvermore. Marv Ellen Lesho. Tim Bossard , Kathy
sloppy. And his
plain
loud
and
=> 'J ose ph, Marty Wenhold , Bill Sipler, Mike Williams, George Oarber.
=
=
3 Bus iness Manager
Elaine Pongrati
sent waves of
sudden
departure
Ellen Doyld 3
S OfficeMana ger
who knew
those
through
curiosity
Frank Lorah =
= Advertising Manager
talent.
Nancy
Van
Pelt
E
essential
that
BST
had
the
Circu
lation
Manager
3
by Da n Mar esh
The Right Direction
=
S
=
—;
s
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3
g
Dan Maresh . Jr.
Photog raphy Editor
I Phot ographer s: Dale Alexander, Tom Dryburg, Pat Whit e, SuiFWhlte, Sue'
j Greet, Alanna Berper , Joh n Andrls
,
Ken Hoffman
Advisor
The M&G Is located at 114 Waller , or call 189-3101. All copy must be submitted by
no later than 5:00 p.m. on Tuesdays and Sunda ys for the Friday and Wednesda y
papers, respectively. The opinions voiced in the colu mns and feature articl es of
the MAG may not necessarily be share d by the entire sf aH.
Fina l approval of all content rests with the Bdltor-in-C hlef .
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New Blood is an indication of
things to come; a somewhat
flawed step forward.
Jerry Fisher, the new vocalist,
has all the power of Thomas
without the excessiveness. In
particular his performances on
"Touch Me", "I Can't Move No
Mountains" and Carol King's
marvelous "Snow Queen" are
outstanding. He handles Dylan's
"Down In The Flood" in the right
way, with bloozepower.
Also new is guitarist George
Wadenius, who has a jazzy style,
more in fitting with the horns
than Steve Katz' violent fu zziness. His scat singing keyed
with a guitar solo on Herbie
Hancock's "Maiden Voyage" is
the highligh t of the album. Steve
Katz , fortunately, h as b een
reduced to the position of rhythm
guitarist.
Speaking of Katz , he's i n there
as usual, screwing things up. His
penchant for writing end singing
sparkly-eyed, sad, late af ternoon
ballads gets worse and worse.
"Velvet" is none other than
"Sometime In "Winter ''* in one of
New Blood may be referred to
as a comeback album. In effect,
the band has produced in New
Blood an album that is better
than anything they've done si nce
Child Is Father To The Man , but
th at doesn't approach the quality
and mass appea l of that album.
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its many disguises. This song is
the sort of thing that keeps
dragging BST down.
Another weak spot is "Over
The Hill". It has all the flaws and
earmarks of the worst material
produced by the group. Bluntly,
it's harsh , hefty and goes
nowhere.
With the mellowing out of BST,
the horn section has become
restrained and consequently
effective. The solos are dazzlingly beautiful and appropriately placed. The music
doesn't suffer the ill effects of a
blaring horn section. Dave
Bargeron 's tuba solo is an
unexpected and pleasant surprise
in "Alone".
All in all , New Blood is a nice,
listenable record, suitable for
playing almost any time. BST are
on the upswing, with a new approach. It may not be a
masterpi ece, but it's a step i n the
right direction. BST may once
more produce a truly great
album , but untilth en, this will do.
Just think , no more h eadac h es
from all that screaming.
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Huskies nip Kutz town
The Golden Bears threw
everything at the Huskies that
their cellar-dwelling five could
muster a snake voodoo dance to
bring the evil spirits on us,
throwing things, and shooting the
eyes out of the basket , but
somehow the Huskies overcame
all obstacles to squeak by the
Kutztown Bears, 78-76.
The Bears, sparked by Gary
Grimes 28 points and Benson 's 20,
as well as a 50 percent shooting
mark overall , stayed close
throughout what was thought to
Thejy had
be a runaway.,
numerous chances to knot the
game up and send the contest into
overtime, but their luck ran out
late in the game.
With 0:33 left, Tony DaRe
missed in a 1-1 foul shooting
situation , the Bears could have
evened the game. They stalled
until 12 seconds were left, when
they called a time-out. They
tried to work to the big man
Grimes when John Willis stole an
errant pass as the buzzer sounded
—or did it? The ref said John had
com mi ted a violation and it was
the Bears ball , with the clock
being reset at 0:02. Luckily , the
26* by Marakovits was nowhere
near the basket.
Kempski Solid
Willis Jed all scorers with 32
points and also had 14 rebounds.
Joe Kempski, playing his bestgame as a Husky, had 19 points
and 30 minutes of solid work.
DaRe was the. other Husky in
double figures with 12 points.
Tony also had eight rebounds.
Pups Win Again
In the JV game the Husky pups
captured a sound 78-51 decision
over the Bear JV's. Bob Porambo
led the Pups with 18 points
followed by Ron Kellers 17 and
Yanni's 13. Keller also led the
pups with 10 rebounds.
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Tomorrow night the Huskies j
tangle with Millersville at 8 P.M. ]
The 11-1 pups play at 6 p.m.
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Mike Ognoski , who has been filling in for his back co urt teammates, has been doing a fine job off the bench .
( Keinard Photo )
Grapplers come back
to win...again
BSC's Brian Berry tri es to escape from a leg hold.
(Greef Photo )
Preview: Swimmers*)s -JVC
The swimmers of BSC will be
aiming to upset the Rams of West
Chester State College in concluding their dual meet schedule
today at West Chester at 4 P.M.
The Huskies have won their
last six meets in a row by impress ive scores and hav e been
gearing their practice sessions
towards this big one with W.C.
BSC has only defeated the Rams
once since the series began in
1963 and that was during the 196768 season when the Huskies came
out on top 6242. This year appears to be BSC's best opportunity for the upset as WC has
a 6-5 record going into Wednesday's meet at Millersville.
The Rams won their first six
m eets an d t h en ha ve b een
downed in succession by LaSalle,
American U., St. John's, Temple,
and John Hopkins.
i nese iwo ieams nave met.
three common foes to date—East
Stroudsburg, Kutz t own , and
Temple. WC won over ESSC and
K-tow n by scores of 66-47 and 7042 while BSC posted scores of 7736 over ESSC and 75-36 over Ktown. WC' s loss to Temple was 7932 while BSC' s loss t o the Owls
was 76-41. So the scores are fairly
comparable against these op*
p onen ts.
C oach Eli McLau ghl in feels
Indoor Trac k
When the gun goes off at 7 :00
p.m., Friday , Februar y 16, BSC
sport ing history will be made as
Coach Ron Puhl 's chargers meet
up with Gettysburg 's best in
Bloomsburg 's first home indoor
tra ck meet. The clash will be held
in the new Nelson fieldhouse on
the 160 yard Tartan track this
Friday evening.
The 17 event schedu le follows,
list i ng the event and tentative
time it will be started .
" 6:30 - Shot Put , Pole Vaul t,
and High Jump; 6:45 — 50 yd.
High Hurdles (trials ); 6:55 - 45
ydT Dash (trials) ; 7:00 — 50 yd.
Dash (trials); 7:15 — Mile Run ;
7:30 — 440 yd. Dash ; 7:40 — 880
yd. Run; 7:50 — 50 yd. High
Hurdles (Finals) 8:00 - 45 yd.
Dash (Finals); 8:10 — 50 yd.
Dash (Finals); 8:15 — 600 yd.
Run; 8:25 — 1280 yd. Relay ; 8:35
— 2 Mile Run ; 8:50 — 2 Mile
Relay; and f :uu — Mile Relay.
An indooi track meet is a
colorful sporting event , putt i ng
man against man in a contest of
skill , stamina and speed. All are
invited to attend and hel p cheer
on the "Puhlmen " as they race to
their firs t home indoor victory.
that his team members are approaching the top shape they
experienced prior to the holiday
vacation when they set numerous
team and pool records. The
freshmen seem to be more
seasoned and confident now and ,
along with the other handful of
veterans, McLaughlin looks for
some great performances.
Seniors Steve Colema'n , Dave
Gibas, Jim Koehler, Jon Stoner,
and Doug Yocum , will be in their
l ast dua l meet appearances of
their college careers. They h ave
provided the backbone for the
succes sf ul sw i mm i ng seasons
BSC has experienced in the last
several years.
The Rams have several outstan ding performers in cocaptains Bob Hulme in the
sprints and Rick McCloy in
diving, along with Pa. Conf
cham pion
The Husky matmen evened
their seasonal record at 7-7 in a
BSC classic comeback victory
over the Millersville Mauraders
23-20, at Millversville.
Unbeaten Shorty Hitchcock
(12-0) continued his winning ways
by defeating last year 's 190 State
Champ, Jim Zoschg. This was
after Dan Buckholder decisioned
Eric Duyli 9-3 to cut the
Mauraders lead to 20-11.
After the Hitchcock victory,
which made the score 20-17, the
Huskies needed a superior
decision or pin to win-setting up
the nights ' finale Ron Sheehan vs
Avon Spriggs.
Kon took an early lead going
into the second period, when he
dropped Spriggs at the 6:29 mark
to win the match for the Huskies.
EARLY ACTION
Two other Huskies posted
decisions , Lon Edmonds and
Randy Watts. Edmonds defeated
Mike Kendig at 134 by a 5-2 score.
At 150, Watts won a 5-2 decision
over Rick Zinck.
Barb Donchez : 79 p ts.
Girls open wi t h "W"
by Deb Artz
and
Linda
Llvermore
JH ^k
Bl o omsbur g ' s Women ' s
basketball tea m opened the 1973
Coach Ed
m
^F
season with a 42-32 victor y over
„ : lf r
Norris , like
S
us q ueha nna Universi t y last
McLau ghlin,
:/J
y on the awa y court.
S
aturda
¦
_,.
will want to
Atter
each tea m earned seven
Dave Glbas
have his
points in the first quarter , the
tankmen at top form for the BSC Huskiettes took the lead
meet. Both are vetera n coaches early in the second quarter and
w i th McLaughl in being at the sta yed ahead for the rest of the
helm of the H uskies for 12 years night.
The Bloomsburg five comand Norris headin g the Rams for
13 years . In the past , WC has won pletel y dominated the boards ,
three Middle Atlantic Cham- leading in rebounds 49 to ten. The
pionships and nine Pa. Con- leading scorer for the Huskiettes
ference
C h a m p i o n s h i p s . was Barb Donchez with 19 points.
The BSC team will host its first
McLaughlin is alrea dy assured of
home
game against Geisinger
h is eighth consecutive winning
Medical
Center at 7:30 pm on
season while Norris must win the
February
20. GMC has a novice
BSC and Kings College meets in
team with 1973 being its second
(cont inued on page four )
y ear.
Ed Morett
mSm
Brian Berry drew an exciting 11 match with Tom Gribbon.
The Huskies are at East
Stroudsburg tomorrow in their
final dual match of the season,
before heading to the Pa. Conference Championships.
BSC 23, MILLERSVILLE 20
118 — Dave Whare, M, pinned
Bill O'Donnell, :50 seconds
126 — Tim Derosa, M, pinned
Mike Malozzi, 7 :29
134 — Lon Edmonds, B, dec.
Mike Kendig, 5-2
142 — Brian Berry , B, drew
with Tom Gribbon , l-l
150 — Randy Watts, B, dec.
Rick Zinck, 5-2
158— Mike Fenton, M, dec. Bill
Pasukinis, 8-1
167 — Joe Jacquelin, M, dec.
Kevin Hays, 8-1
177 — Dan Burkholder , B, dec.
Eric Duyli, 9-3
190 — Floyd Hitchcock , B,
pinned Jim Zoschg, 6:42
Hwt — Ron Sheehan, B, pinned
Avon Spriggs, 6:29
Official — Bob Craig
Coach
Joanne
Mc Comb
commented t hat the game
against Luzerne County Commun ity College will be tough ,
having alwa ys had good , excit ing
games with these rivals. BSC will
meet Luzerne next Thursday at
4 :00 pm on the home courts. All
home games are p layed in
Centenn ial Gy mnasium .
BSC
Stat ist i cs
Artz
Barna
Constable
Donchez
Holgate
Kovacs
Pursell
Shephard
Score by Quarters:
BSC
Susq.
pts.
6
3
2
19
2
3
2
5
7 12 14 9—42
7 5 10 10—32
for popular appea l, to acquire
The
attendance.
needed
into
the
telescopin g of courses
( continued from page one)
time was generally frowned
be paying for a Winterim sessionli short
but some members
,
u
p
on
that they mav not attend a total ol claimed tha t it was academicall y
seven weeks out i?f their year'sI1 sound in some cases.
tuition. It was argued that if there Another look into the Edinboro
is such a program , it should be and Slippery Rock 4-1-4 type
given to all students, since they; calendars revealed that because
are spending the money for it. . of the added financial hardship,
The question of the kinds oi[ they are both making a move to
courses that could be offered wai3 discontinue the Winterim. It was
brought up, but none of the in¦"
up. that maintenance for
dividual departments had brought
might be another
the
Winterim
anything definite to offer . Some\' burden in terms of the student life
faculty members claimed thai staff.
their departments did not lend[, Eventually the discussion led
themselves to innovative courses faculty members to suggest other
or that in order to be able to offeiI] calendars or ways to fit inspecial courses, regular ones novation into the present system,
would have to be offered , simplj\ but no agreement was made.
Calenda r
• •-/« ?
N
<
\
News Br iefs
-
Ca ncellat ion
T he BSC Madrigals
Madrigal Singers
in Concert
The BSC Madrigal Singers,
under the direction of William
Decker, w ill present a concert ,
"Renaissance to Now ," on
Sunday February 18, at 7:00 p.m.
in Carver Auditorium.
The first segment of the
program will include a number of
Renaissance^ madrigals sung in
various languages. The second
part of the concert will consist of
madrigals of later periods and
folk son?s
Following a brief intermission,
the Singers will present a staged
performance of highlights from
the Gilbert and Sullivan comic
opera , "H.M.S. Pinafore ."
This year's members of the
Madrigal Singers are: sopranos
Gail Oakum , Michelle Seliga,
Kathy Timalonis; altos Mary
Broyan , Mary Jean Casale ,
Dawn Sharbaugh ; tenors Ken
Garner , Bill Himelright, Norman
Rentschler ; basses Randy Gathman, Carl Kishbaugh, and Terry
Watts. Alternate singers who
perform in the absence of any
regulars are Lois Kollesar.
Michelle Randolph, and Eugene
Weller.
No tickets are required for
Sunday's concert , and there is no
admission charge,
.__
The Balalaika, the newly
for med Russian Club, will
hold its f irst orga nizational
meeting February 20 at 5:30
p.m. in the Bakeless faculty
lounge. At 6:00 p.m., Nicholas
Chudolij, a junior in BSC's
School of Business, will speak
about his trip to the Soviet
Union over Christmas. This
club is not limited to Russian
students.
Newlyweds
( continued from page two)
order to post his eighth consecutive winning season.
McLaughlin points out that
while BSC has had a rather easy
time of its last six meets, at the
sanv* time, WC has met some
strong competition which should
have helped the Rams improve
their times and performances.
WC, according to McLaughlin .
should be in great shape for BSC,
but the Huskies are still aiming
for the upset.
Last year WC finished two
points behind Clarion in the Pa .
Elect ric Factor y Concerts
presents
BLOOD , SWEAT
& TEARS
Friday, , February 16, 1973
8:45 P.M.
Bucknell
Gy m,
y,
Tickets:
$4.50 are
Universit
available at Informa tion Desk
Davis
of BSC Union or at the door
Mail Order: Send stam ped ,
self-addre ssed envelope with
check payable to: Concert
Box
2879,
Committee,
Universit y,
Bucknell
Lewlsburg , Pa. 17837
into full blown crises? The first
suggestion is a conference with
Mr. Davies . The Placement
Director can offer valuable
suggestions in regard to job
hunting, transportation , further
education , etc. And many other
areas ot interest.
So if you're a senior who is .
planning marriage, check some
things out, drop by the Placement
Office and save yourself some
headaches.
The five final ists in ARA Slaters search for the Valentine Sweethea rt were ( left to right ): Sharo n
Holland , Cathy Weidner, Mary Raphael Palucc i, Laura Warren / and Michele Webb. The winner was
(Greet Photo )
Michelle Webb.
Music Department
Male singers are wanted for the
Men 's Glee Club. No auditions
are necessary and rehearsals are
every
Thursday, 6:45 to 8 p.m. in
Conference Championships with Haas 116.
281 points while BSC was third
with under 200 points. The conference championships will be
held on Feb. 23 and 24 at
Millersville.
Swimming
(continued from page three)
Spears, Grace Walewski, Bonnie
Due to insufficient response to Cooper , Marianne Schmieder,
the Husky Lounge Take-out and Sue Thompson.
Service , delivery will be
Book
discontinued . However, orders
may still be called in on ext. 2602. As a service project , Phi Beta
Lambda will be collecting books
Tau Sigma Pi
Following the busy weeks of for libraries in the flooded areas
Spring Rush, the sisters of TAU until Feb. 20. Boxes are available
SIGMA PI would like to extend in the Union , residence halls, and
warm congratulations to their the commuter lounges. So please
new pledge class. Members of the contribute !
Tenth Pledge Class are : Marti
Art s Coun cil Fil m
Swales, Jeannie Egan, Patsy
"Investigation of a Citizen
Williams, Debbie McKeown, Jani above Suspicion " will be
presented Wed. 21 at 3:30 pm and
7:30 pm in L-35 of the library by
the Arts Council Film Series.
"The wielder of uncontrollable
power discovers that his psyche
has been unrecognizably r subverted... "
Furnished House
Special Education Majors
It is absolutely necessary tha t
all students enrolled in Special
Education who anticipate doing
their student teaching during the
next school year, 1973-74, be
present at a meeting to be held in
Room L35 of the Andruss Library
on Monday, February 19, from 4
to 5 p.m.
Room for 6 Girls
Available for June
or Sept. 1973
Call 784-6438
for Appointment
Miller Office
Supply Co.
Rock Bands
This Week FAITH 9:30-1:30
Coming in Pe rson *
1910 Fruitgum Co.
Jay and the Techni ques
Bill Haley and the Com ets
Coasters
Haji
72 N. Iron St.
HEADQUARTERS OF
HALLMARK CARDS
Over 300 Guitars
and Amplifier s
AND GIFTS
Phone 784-2561
See Our
\
New Minia tures
^twu
I ^^ H.OW6RB
W^^tWtwr r WtrWwUt
Dam Tfe HOI O» tatt St.
piWHSwasg
Guys & Gals needed for summer
employment at National Parks,
Private Camps, Dude Ranches
and Resorts throughout the nation. Over 35,000 students aided
last year. For Free information on
student assistance program send
self-addressed STAMPED envelope to Opportunity Research,
Dept. SJO, 55 Flathead Drive,
Kalispell.MT 59901,
.... YOU MUST APPLY EARLY
MHM^^^MH^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
CRACKER BARREL
Main St. Catawis$a
Friday and Saturday Night s
Hartzel' s Music Store
18 West Mwn Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
COUNSELORS
(over 20)
for uni que space-age overnight sum mer boys camp In Penna.
Able to instruct in any one of the following:
Watersafet y
At hletics
Chemistr y
Rlfler y
Ham Radio
Boating
Golf
Tennis
Archer y
Watersklln g
Physics
Rocketr y
Pioneering
Lacrosse
Write CAMP DIRECTOR
138 Red Rambler Drive
Lafayette Hill , Pa. 19444
H
calendar continues
Discussion of the 4-1-4 "Winterim" calendar that began at a
meeting of APSCUF two weeks
ago was continued Monday at a
general faculty meeting called by
the organization. Again , no action
was taken, but the discussion
indicated some strong opposition
to the calendar. Dr. Dayton S.
Pickett , Vice President for
Academic Affairs , Dr. Hobart
Heller , ActingiDean of Graduate
Studies , and Dr. William
Williams, Special Advisor for
Campus Relations and Professor
of Business Law were there to
explain different aspects of the
calendar.
Pickett
Dr. Pickett stated that the
administration was not entirely
sold on the calendar , but that he
and others saw it as their task to
simply put "meat on the bones"
following Senate approval .
However, "The meat doesn 't look
like we thought it would" according to Pickett and it is now
being discovered that when the
Senate passed the calendar last
year, it probably did not have full
approval of the faculty and
students, as they had assumed.
Pickett had outlined the structure
of the calendar, explaining that it
would consist of two 13 week
semesters with the three week
"Winterim " between, and would
begin after Labor Bay and end
earl y in May.
Heller
Dr. Heller gave some basic
points to consider in the
establishment of a sound
calendar. The fact that community college transfers must
and will increase would
necessitate a consideration of
their needs. Also according to
Heller, the conventional meaning
of the semester hour must be
respected. Another point was that
the traditional academic year is
the nine months between Labor
Day and Memorial Day and the
calendar should go with the life
style in America , accounting for
the times spent in summer
employment and vacations .
Heller emphasized that the most
important criteria should be to
provide the optimum op-
portunities for both teaching and
learning experiences.
Williams
Williams stated that if the
Winterim was introduced at this
time , an overload problem
would occur in the second term
because of limits of the APSCUF
contract. There is already a
serious budget problem , according to Williams, and paying
professors for overload work
would make it worse so the
amount of overload work must be
kept to a minimum, A solution of
increasing class size and
decreasing sections would only
cause more problems, possibly
later hassles with the APSCUF
contract after negotiations in
August about restricting class
size. Also during his talk, it was
pointed out that with the Winterim , we automatically lose a
class period a day, so this in itself
worsens the problem anyway.
More discussion
Some faculty members thought
it was unfair for the students to
(continued on page four )
Gerhard Lan g
Study in Consumer Arts
"Take a hard, long look arouncI that all these aspects induce the
you — and I mean look with keeri customer to buy the product for
awareness —• you are being; its color and art work and not for
inundated with packaging - with i its contents. Lang added that the
package design." This statemenlt amount of color and design often
was part of Gehard Lang 's in ¦reflects the price of the product.
troduction to his program as; Think-tank sessions were held
artist-in-residence at BSC thisi Tuesday night and Wednesday
week .
morning in which students
participated in creating various
Lang began his program wit!> art designs and names for an
an overall view of the relation
ship between designer, client
and consumer. Also included ir
the lecture was a field trip to £
supermarket and discussion or
package design and employmen
opportunities.
Lang
product.
imaginary
discussed the potential of the art
design and the marketing and
advertising approach of the item.
Following the session Wednesday
morning, Lang concluded in the
afternoon with a talk about job
opportunities in the field of
design and packaging. He will
return to the campus February 27
to speak on Typography .
the field trip turned out to be
the highlight of the program.
With Lang, the group explored
the types of packages on the shelf
and their customer appeal. Lang
emphasized that the basic design
i n fl uences are t he bran d name ,
color franchise , and graphics,
and that products that are built
u p on t hei r bran d names are
bought by consumers with the
idea that he or she is purchasing
the item for its quality . According to Lang, the i mage
device becomes an unconscious
symbol of the effect of the
product on the consumer. He said
Will the person or persons
publishin g smut sheets under
the name of The Gadfl y ,
p lease contact Mar y Lou
Andris, Town P.O. Box 572/
Bloomsbur g, Pa.
Mar y Lou Andris
Editor , Gadfl y
Gerhard Lan g, artist in residence hare at BSC, during presenta tion of his program this week.
( Maresh Photo )
John Kolish
Second Hypnotist
to Make Appearance
The world's fastest hypnotist, to 11:00 pm in Haas Auditorium.
John Kolisch , will appear Kolisch, a 25 year veteran of
Tuesday, February 20, from 8:30 hypnotic experience, is a
frequen t guest on the Johnny
Carson, Steve Allen , and David
Susskind shows.
Billed as America's f unniest
show, Kolisch presents a laughfilled evening of bristling wit,
bawdiness .
College seniors will have an sarcasm , and
opportunity to take the Federal Amazing feats of mind-reading,
Service Entrance Examination ESP , and hypnotism have
distinguished
(FSEE) when it is given on a d e l i g h t e d
walk-in basis at our campus Sat., audiences all over the world and
Feb. 24, 1973 at 8:30 a.m. Com- continue to delight. Demonplete details and FSEE an- strations range from the idenn oun cements are now ava ilable tification of ten dollar bills,
concealed objects an d th e correct
at the Placement Office.
One test ta ken on t i me i n one telling of time to the willing
place opens the door to ap- participation of mesmerized
proximately 60 different and audience members in wild
challenging career fields in many displays of the "phenomena of
Federa l agencies at locations all the mind." In addition to this,
Kolisch will show you how you
over the country .
Open t o seniors an d gra duates may hypnotize yourself so that
i n an y aca demic maj or the you may h av e a greater control
program is appropriate for over your own m i n d, body and
stu dents i n a ll curr icula except destiny. Kolisch maintains an
Engineering, Physical Sciences, easy patter with his audience and
Account ing and a lim i ted num ber never f a il s to provok e wave u pon
of other technical fields. This wave of laughter.
The mentalist's sh ow is bei ng
examination is unquestionably
sponsored
by the Special Events
the most popular avenue for
Committee
of the College Union
Fed era l em pl oy ment ever
Program
Board.
There is no
devised.
admission
charge,
so come out
NOTE : Please obtain FSEE
Tuesday,
the
20th,
for an exbrochure from Placement
Center , Ben Frankl i n before perience th at is "amazing —
exciting as a trip to the moon."
taking the test.
FSEE to
be Given
.. As a result of the vacancy left on the Board of Trust ees by
the resi gnation of stud ent trustee Michael Torbert , letters
are being accepted by CGA as to the qualifications of possible
candidates. Mr. Torbert 's resi gnation was a result of his
graduati on in December.
..Stud ents intereste d In applyi ng for the posi tion should
write a letter to CGA stat ing their qualifi cations including
biograph ical informat ion and other appropriate data . These
should be sub mitted by Februar y 23. From the lette rs, three
to five will be chosen to be sent to Harrlsburg for fina l
selection and approva l of a candidate by the gover nor.
>Lett e r
Lett ers to the edit or are an
expres sion of the indivi dua l
i writer 's opi nion and do not
necessar ily refle c t the v iews
i of the newspaper. All lett ers
must be sig ned, names will be
withhel d upon request. The
i M&G reserves the right to
, abridge or with hold, in
; consult a ti on with the wr iter ,
, all lett ers over 400 wor ds in
j - length.
Dear Editor,
I would like to comment on the
series, "A Look at Student
Teaching" by Jim Sachetti. I feel
the articles were very well
written and in general Mr.
Sachetti has made some perceptive and pertinent observations concerning both the
problems and some possible
solutions to those problems that
are encountered , in student
. teaching.
However, I would take exception to Mr. Sachetti's conclusion that so much of what is
taught in "upper level " courses is
worthless as prepa ration for
student teaching. This need not
be so if the college course
whether "upper level" or "introductory " focuses on basic
concepts rather than emphasizing the learning of facts.
An effective teacher at the
elementary or secondary level is
not one who feels that college
courses should provide all the
facts or even the basic content for
the courses to be taught. Instead,
the prospective teacher realizes
that college courses enable one to
learn the basic principles that
must be understood before one
can teach them to students , at
whatever level. College courses
should also give the future
teacher a feel for what is important content for the course
being taught. Hopefully, the
teacher could then eventually
direct the students beyond the
question of why tribal people can
walk all day without shoes to the
larger questions of why are they
doing the walking, how do they
perceive the environment they
are walking through, and how
does this contribute to the culture
they have developed, and even
how can we better understand
our cul ture by better understanding theirs.
Brian Johnson
Dept. of Geography
and Earth Science
The Newlyweds
Blood, Sweat and Tears, says David Clayton Thomas , are getting back into form. A little
bad and
effort training for a challenging
lots of good.
What happens when Joe career , finds herself grossly
College and Suzie Coed, typical underemployed as a housewife.
BSC recently marrieds, venture The emotional letdown places Record Review
extra strains on the developing
forth into the world of work?
marriage
of Suzie and Joe.
Director
Mr. Thomas Davies,
A
variation
on this theme ochas
seen
many
a
of Placement,
curs
when
Suzie
is hired and Joe
class enter the job market. He
is
unable
to
find
employment of
has ample knowledge of the
any
kind.
Other
problems
to be
pressures and heartaches that
faced
are
the
repayment
of
the current tight job market will
tuition
loans
,
obtaining
perby Jo e Miklo s
place on the newlyweds.
manent
certification
and
whether
New Blood ... Blood, Sweat and
One unhappy situation cited by
or
not
to
have
children.
Tears
Mr. Davies occurs when Joe
Can anything be done to soften
BST has been in a steady state
lands a job in the Podunk school
district and Suzie finds herself these problems before they grow of decline ever since the
departure of Al Kooper. The
unemployed. Suzie , after
(continued
on
page
four)
particular problem had been the
devoting four years and much
vocalist , David
ininiiniiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiuiniiiiiiiiiiuitiiiiii
B replacement
¦luiu iuuiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiim
Clayton Thomas.
3
S
Thomas' excesses were enough
=
THE MAROON AND GOLD
=
to drive the most astute fan up
Edltor-ln-Chlef
=
S3
Susan L. Sgraaue
=
5
the wall. His harshness and overt
RobertOllver
= Managing Editor
•
Kare
n
Kelnard
=
power were too much—he often
S New s Editor
Barb Wanchlien
s
ja Assistant News Editor
sounded
strained, with a conJoe Miklos
Feature Edltor
=
|
siderable
lack of timing. Thomas'
Vatery O'Connell
S
S Copy Edltor
ineptitude
had a detrimental
JohnStugrl
n
=
es Cartoonist
s
Frank Plzzoll , Jim Sachetti
S Con tributin g Editors
effect
on
the
band . They got just
s
M
.Staff: Don Em Linda Llvermore. Marv Ellen Lesho. Tim Bossard , Kathy
sloppy. And his
plain
loud
and
=> 'J ose ph, Marty Wenhold , Bill Sipler, Mike Williams, George Oarber.
=
=
3 Bus iness Manager
Elaine Pongrati
sent waves of
sudden
departure
Ellen Doyld 3
S OfficeMana ger
who knew
those
through
curiosity
Frank Lorah =
= Advertising Manager
talent.
Nancy
Van
Pelt
E
essential
that
BST
had
the
Circu
lation
Manager
3
by Da n Mar esh
The Right Direction
=
S
=
—;
s
S,
=
3
g
Dan Maresh . Jr.
Photog raphy Editor
I Phot ographer s: Dale Alexander, Tom Dryburg, Pat Whit e, SuiFWhlte, Sue'
j Greet, Alanna Berper , Joh n Andrls
,
Ken Hoffman
Advisor
The M&G Is located at 114 Waller , or call 189-3101. All copy must be submitted by
no later than 5:00 p.m. on Tuesdays and Sunda ys for the Friday and Wednesda y
papers, respectively. The opinions voiced in the colu mns and feature articl es of
the MAG may not necessarily be share d by the entire sf aH.
Fina l approval of all content rests with the Bdltor-in-C hlef .
iiiimmiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiii
iiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
=
E
==
—
=
=
=
=
=
New Blood is an indication of
things to come; a somewhat
flawed step forward.
Jerry Fisher, the new vocalist,
has all the power of Thomas
without the excessiveness. In
particular his performances on
"Touch Me", "I Can't Move No
Mountains" and Carol King's
marvelous "Snow Queen" are
outstanding. He handles Dylan's
"Down In The Flood" in the right
way, with bloozepower.
Also new is guitarist George
Wadenius, who has a jazzy style,
more in fitting with the horns
than Steve Katz' violent fu zziness. His scat singing keyed
with a guitar solo on Herbie
Hancock's "Maiden Voyage" is
the highligh t of the album. Steve
Katz , fortunately, h as b een
reduced to the position of rhythm
guitarist.
Speaking of Katz , he's i n there
as usual, screwing things up. His
penchant for writing end singing
sparkly-eyed, sad, late af ternoon
ballads gets worse and worse.
"Velvet" is none other than
"Sometime In "Winter ''* in one of
New Blood may be referred to
as a comeback album. In effect,
the band has produced in New
Blood an album that is better
than anything they've done si nce
Child Is Father To The Man , but
th at doesn't approach the quality
and mass appea l of that album.
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its many disguises. This song is
the sort of thing that keeps
dragging BST down.
Another weak spot is "Over
The Hill". It has all the flaws and
earmarks of the worst material
produced by the group. Bluntly,
it's harsh , hefty and goes
nowhere.
With the mellowing out of BST,
the horn section has become
restrained and consequently
effective. The solos are dazzlingly beautiful and appropriately placed. The music
doesn't suffer the ill effects of a
blaring horn section. Dave
Bargeron 's tuba solo is an
unexpected and pleasant surprise
in "Alone".
All in all , New Blood is a nice,
listenable record, suitable for
playing almost any time. BST are
on the upswing, with a new approach. It may not be a
masterpi ece, but it's a step i n the
right direction. BST may once
more produce a truly great
album , but untilth en, this will do.
Just think , no more h eadac h es
from all that screaming.
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Huskies nip Kutz town
The Golden Bears threw
everything at the Huskies that
their cellar-dwelling five could
muster a snake voodoo dance to
bring the evil spirits on us,
throwing things, and shooting the
eyes out of the basket , but
somehow the Huskies overcame
all obstacles to squeak by the
Kutztown Bears, 78-76.
The Bears, sparked by Gary
Grimes 28 points and Benson 's 20,
as well as a 50 percent shooting
mark overall , stayed close
throughout what was thought to
Thejy had
be a runaway.,
numerous chances to knot the
game up and send the contest into
overtime, but their luck ran out
late in the game.
With 0:33 left, Tony DaRe
missed in a 1-1 foul shooting
situation , the Bears could have
evened the game. They stalled
until 12 seconds were left, when
they called a time-out. They
tried to work to the big man
Grimes when John Willis stole an
errant pass as the buzzer sounded
—or did it? The ref said John had
com mi ted a violation and it was
the Bears ball , with the clock
being reset at 0:02. Luckily , the
26* by Marakovits was nowhere
near the basket.
Kempski Solid
Willis Jed all scorers with 32
points and also had 14 rebounds.
Joe Kempski, playing his bestgame as a Husky, had 19 points
and 30 minutes of solid work.
DaRe was the. other Husky in
double figures with 12 points.
Tony also had eight rebounds.
Pups Win Again
In the JV game the Husky pups
captured a sound 78-51 decision
over the Bear JV's. Bob Porambo
led the Pups with 18 points
followed by Ron Kellers 17 and
Yanni's 13. Keller also led the
pups with 10 rebounds.
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tangle with Millersville at 8 P.M. ]
The 11-1 pups play at 6 p.m.
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Mike Ognoski , who has been filling in for his back co urt teammates, has been doing a fine job off the bench .
( Keinard Photo )
Grapplers come back
to win...again
BSC's Brian Berry tri es to escape from a leg hold.
(Greef Photo )
Preview: Swimmers*)s -JVC
The swimmers of BSC will be
aiming to upset the Rams of West
Chester State College in concluding their dual meet schedule
today at West Chester at 4 P.M.
The Huskies have won their
last six meets in a row by impress ive scores and hav e been
gearing their practice sessions
towards this big one with W.C.
BSC has only defeated the Rams
once since the series began in
1963 and that was during the 196768 season when the Huskies came
out on top 6242. This year appears to be BSC's best opportunity for the upset as WC has
a 6-5 record going into Wednesday's meet at Millersville.
The Rams won their first six
m eets an d t h en ha ve b een
downed in succession by LaSalle,
American U., St. John's, Temple,
and John Hopkins.
i nese iwo ieams nave met.
three common foes to date—East
Stroudsburg, Kutz t own , and
Temple. WC won over ESSC and
K-tow n by scores of 66-47 and 7042 while BSC posted scores of 7736 over ESSC and 75-36 over Ktown. WC' s loss to Temple was 7932 while BSC' s loss t o the Owls
was 76-41. So the scores are fairly
comparable against these op*
p onen ts.
C oach Eli McLau ghl in feels
Indoor Trac k
When the gun goes off at 7 :00
p.m., Friday , Februar y 16, BSC
sport ing history will be made as
Coach Ron Puhl 's chargers meet
up with Gettysburg 's best in
Bloomsburg 's first home indoor
tra ck meet. The clash will be held
in the new Nelson fieldhouse on
the 160 yard Tartan track this
Friday evening.
The 17 event schedu le follows,
list i ng the event and tentative
time it will be started .
" 6:30 - Shot Put , Pole Vaul t,
and High Jump; 6:45 — 50 yd.
High Hurdles (trials ); 6:55 - 45
ydT Dash (trials) ; 7:00 — 50 yd.
Dash (trials); 7:15 — Mile Run ;
7:30 — 440 yd. Dash ; 7:40 — 880
yd. Run; 7:50 — 50 yd. High
Hurdles (Finals) 8:00 - 45 yd.
Dash (Finals); 8:10 — 50 yd.
Dash (Finals); 8:15 — 600 yd.
Run; 8:25 — 1280 yd. Relay ; 8:35
— 2 Mile Run ; 8:50 — 2 Mile
Relay; and f :uu — Mile Relay.
An indooi track meet is a
colorful sporting event , putt i ng
man against man in a contest of
skill , stamina and speed. All are
invited to attend and hel p cheer
on the "Puhlmen " as they race to
their firs t home indoor victory.
that his team members are approaching the top shape they
experienced prior to the holiday
vacation when they set numerous
team and pool records. The
freshmen seem to be more
seasoned and confident now and ,
along with the other handful of
veterans, McLaughlin looks for
some great performances.
Seniors Steve Colema'n , Dave
Gibas, Jim Koehler, Jon Stoner,
and Doug Yocum , will be in their
l ast dua l meet appearances of
their college careers. They h ave
provided the backbone for the
succes sf ul sw i mm i ng seasons
BSC has experienced in the last
several years.
The Rams have several outstan ding performers in cocaptains Bob Hulme in the
sprints and Rick McCloy in
diving, along with Pa. Conf
cham pion
The Husky matmen evened
their seasonal record at 7-7 in a
BSC classic comeback victory
over the Millersville Mauraders
23-20, at Millversville.
Unbeaten Shorty Hitchcock
(12-0) continued his winning ways
by defeating last year 's 190 State
Champ, Jim Zoschg. This was
after Dan Buckholder decisioned
Eric Duyli 9-3 to cut the
Mauraders lead to 20-11.
After the Hitchcock victory,
which made the score 20-17, the
Huskies needed a superior
decision or pin to win-setting up
the nights ' finale Ron Sheehan vs
Avon Spriggs.
Kon took an early lead going
into the second period, when he
dropped Spriggs at the 6:29 mark
to win the match for the Huskies.
EARLY ACTION
Two other Huskies posted
decisions , Lon Edmonds and
Randy Watts. Edmonds defeated
Mike Kendig at 134 by a 5-2 score.
At 150, Watts won a 5-2 decision
over Rick Zinck.
Barb Donchez : 79 p ts.
Girls open wi t h "W"
by Deb Artz
and
Linda
Llvermore
JH ^k
Bl o omsbur g ' s Women ' s
basketball tea m opened the 1973
Coach Ed
m
^F
season with a 42-32 victor y over
„ : lf r
Norris , like
S
us q ueha nna Universi t y last
McLau ghlin,
:/J
y on the awa y court.
S
aturda
¦
_,.
will want to
Atter
each tea m earned seven
Dave Glbas
have his
points in the first quarter , the
tankmen at top form for the BSC Huskiettes took the lead
meet. Both are vetera n coaches early in the second quarter and
w i th McLaughl in being at the sta yed ahead for the rest of the
helm of the H uskies for 12 years night.
The Bloomsburg five comand Norris headin g the Rams for
13 years . In the past , WC has won pletel y dominated the boards ,
three Middle Atlantic Cham- leading in rebounds 49 to ten. The
pionships and nine Pa. Con- leading scorer for the Huskiettes
ference
C h a m p i o n s h i p s . was Barb Donchez with 19 points.
The BSC team will host its first
McLaughlin is alrea dy assured of
home
game against Geisinger
h is eighth consecutive winning
Medical
Center at 7:30 pm on
season while Norris must win the
February
20. GMC has a novice
BSC and Kings College meets in
team with 1973 being its second
(cont inued on page four )
y ear.
Ed Morett
mSm
Brian Berry drew an exciting 11 match with Tom Gribbon.
The Huskies are at East
Stroudsburg tomorrow in their
final dual match of the season,
before heading to the Pa. Conference Championships.
BSC 23, MILLERSVILLE 20
118 — Dave Whare, M, pinned
Bill O'Donnell, :50 seconds
126 — Tim Derosa, M, pinned
Mike Malozzi, 7 :29
134 — Lon Edmonds, B, dec.
Mike Kendig, 5-2
142 — Brian Berry , B, drew
with Tom Gribbon , l-l
150 — Randy Watts, B, dec.
Rick Zinck, 5-2
158— Mike Fenton, M, dec. Bill
Pasukinis, 8-1
167 — Joe Jacquelin, M, dec.
Kevin Hays, 8-1
177 — Dan Burkholder , B, dec.
Eric Duyli, 9-3
190 — Floyd Hitchcock , B,
pinned Jim Zoschg, 6:42
Hwt — Ron Sheehan, B, pinned
Avon Spriggs, 6:29
Official — Bob Craig
Coach
Joanne
Mc Comb
commented t hat the game
against Luzerne County Commun ity College will be tough ,
having alwa ys had good , excit ing
games with these rivals. BSC will
meet Luzerne next Thursday at
4 :00 pm on the home courts. All
home games are p layed in
Centenn ial Gy mnasium .
BSC
Stat ist i cs
Artz
Barna
Constable
Donchez
Holgate
Kovacs
Pursell
Shephard
Score by Quarters:
BSC
Susq.
pts.
6
3
2
19
2
3
2
5
7 12 14 9—42
7 5 10 10—32
for popular appea l, to acquire
The
attendance.
needed
into
the
telescopin g of courses
( continued from page one)
time was generally frowned
be paying for a Winterim sessionli short
but some members
,
u
p
on
that they mav not attend a total ol claimed tha t it was academicall y
seven weeks out i?f their year'sI1 sound in some cases.
tuition. It was argued that if there Another look into the Edinboro
is such a program , it should be and Slippery Rock 4-1-4 type
given to all students, since they; calendars revealed that because
are spending the money for it. . of the added financial hardship,
The question of the kinds oi[ they are both making a move to
courses that could be offered wai3 discontinue the Winterim. It was
brought up, but none of the in¦"
up. that maintenance for
dividual departments had brought
might be another
the
Winterim
anything definite to offer . Some\' burden in terms of the student life
faculty members claimed thai staff.
their departments did not lend[, Eventually the discussion led
themselves to innovative courses faculty members to suggest other
or that in order to be able to offeiI] calendars or ways to fit inspecial courses, regular ones novation into the present system,
would have to be offered , simplj\ but no agreement was made.
Calenda r
• •-/« ?
N
<
\
News Br iefs
-
Ca ncellat ion
T he BSC Madrigals
Madrigal Singers
in Concert
The BSC Madrigal Singers,
under the direction of William
Decker, w ill present a concert ,
"Renaissance to Now ," on
Sunday February 18, at 7:00 p.m.
in Carver Auditorium.
The first segment of the
program will include a number of
Renaissance^ madrigals sung in
various languages. The second
part of the concert will consist of
madrigals of later periods and
folk son?s
Following a brief intermission,
the Singers will present a staged
performance of highlights from
the Gilbert and Sullivan comic
opera , "H.M.S. Pinafore ."
This year's members of the
Madrigal Singers are: sopranos
Gail Oakum , Michelle Seliga,
Kathy Timalonis; altos Mary
Broyan , Mary Jean Casale ,
Dawn Sharbaugh ; tenors Ken
Garner , Bill Himelright, Norman
Rentschler ; basses Randy Gathman, Carl Kishbaugh, and Terry
Watts. Alternate singers who
perform in the absence of any
regulars are Lois Kollesar.
Michelle Randolph, and Eugene
Weller.
No tickets are required for
Sunday's concert , and there is no
admission charge,
.__
The Balalaika, the newly
for med Russian Club, will
hold its f irst orga nizational
meeting February 20 at 5:30
p.m. in the Bakeless faculty
lounge. At 6:00 p.m., Nicholas
Chudolij, a junior in BSC's
School of Business, will speak
about his trip to the Soviet
Union over Christmas. This
club is not limited to Russian
students.
Newlyweds
( continued from page two)
order to post his eighth consecutive winning season.
McLaughlin points out that
while BSC has had a rather easy
time of its last six meets, at the
sanv* time, WC has met some
strong competition which should
have helped the Rams improve
their times and performances.
WC, according to McLaughlin .
should be in great shape for BSC,
but the Huskies are still aiming
for the upset.
Last year WC finished two
points behind Clarion in the Pa .
Elect ric Factor y Concerts
presents
BLOOD , SWEAT
& TEARS
Friday, , February 16, 1973
8:45 P.M.
Bucknell
Gy m,
y,
Tickets:
$4.50 are
Universit
available at Informa tion Desk
Davis
of BSC Union or at the door
Mail Order: Send stam ped ,
self-addre ssed envelope with
check payable to: Concert
Box
2879,
Committee,
Universit y,
Bucknell
Lewlsburg , Pa. 17837
into full blown crises? The first
suggestion is a conference with
Mr. Davies . The Placement
Director can offer valuable
suggestions in regard to job
hunting, transportation , further
education , etc. And many other
areas ot interest.
So if you're a senior who is .
planning marriage, check some
things out, drop by the Placement
Office and save yourself some
headaches.
The five final ists in ARA Slaters search for the Valentine Sweethea rt were ( left to right ): Sharo n
Holland , Cathy Weidner, Mary Raphael Palucc i, Laura Warren / and Michele Webb. The winner was
(Greet Photo )
Michelle Webb.
Music Department
Male singers are wanted for the
Men 's Glee Club. No auditions
are necessary and rehearsals are
every
Thursday, 6:45 to 8 p.m. in
Conference Championships with Haas 116.
281 points while BSC was third
with under 200 points. The conference championships will be
held on Feb. 23 and 24 at
Millersville.
Swimming
(continued from page three)
Spears, Grace Walewski, Bonnie
Due to insufficient response to Cooper , Marianne Schmieder,
the Husky Lounge Take-out and Sue Thompson.
Service , delivery will be
Book
discontinued . However, orders
may still be called in on ext. 2602. As a service project , Phi Beta
Lambda will be collecting books
Tau Sigma Pi
Following the busy weeks of for libraries in the flooded areas
Spring Rush, the sisters of TAU until Feb. 20. Boxes are available
SIGMA PI would like to extend in the Union , residence halls, and
warm congratulations to their the commuter lounges. So please
new pledge class. Members of the contribute !
Tenth Pledge Class are : Marti
Art s Coun cil Fil m
Swales, Jeannie Egan, Patsy
"Investigation of a Citizen
Williams, Debbie McKeown, Jani above Suspicion " will be
presented Wed. 21 at 3:30 pm and
7:30 pm in L-35 of the library by
the Arts Council Film Series.
"The wielder of uncontrollable
power discovers that his psyche
has been unrecognizably r subverted... "
Furnished House
Special Education Majors
It is absolutely necessary tha t
all students enrolled in Special
Education who anticipate doing
their student teaching during the
next school year, 1973-74, be
present at a meeting to be held in
Room L35 of the Andruss Library
on Monday, February 19, from 4
to 5 p.m.
Room for 6 Girls
Available for June
or Sept. 1973
Call 784-6438
for Appointment
Miller Office
Supply Co.
Rock Bands
This Week FAITH 9:30-1:30
Coming in Pe rson *
1910 Fruitgum Co.
Jay and the Techni ques
Bill Haley and the Com ets
Coasters
Haji
72 N. Iron St.
HEADQUARTERS OF
HALLMARK CARDS
Over 300 Guitars
and Amplifier s
AND GIFTS
Phone 784-2561
See Our
\
New Minia tures
^twu
I ^^ H.OW6RB
W^^tWtwr r WtrWwUt
Dam Tfe HOI O» tatt St.
piWHSwasg
Guys & Gals needed for summer
employment at National Parks,
Private Camps, Dude Ranches
and Resorts throughout the nation. Over 35,000 students aided
last year. For Free information on
student assistance program send
self-addressed STAMPED envelope to Opportunity Research,
Dept. SJO, 55 Flathead Drive,
Kalispell.MT 59901,
.... YOU MUST APPLY EARLY
MHM^^^MH^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
CRACKER BARREL
Main St. Catawis$a
Friday and Saturday Night s
Hartzel' s Music Store
18 West Mwn Street, Bloomsburg, Pa.
COUNSELORS
(over 20)
for uni que space-age overnight sum mer boys camp In Penna.
Able to instruct in any one of the following:
Watersafet y
At hletics
Chemistr y
Rlfler y
Ham Radio
Boating
Golf
Tennis
Archer y
Watersklln g
Physics
Rocketr y
Pioneering
Lacrosse
Write CAMP DIRECTOR
138 Red Rambler Drive
Lafayette Hill , Pa. 19444
H
Media of