rdunkelb
Mon, 05/06/2024 - 17:11
Edited Text
Financia l crisis
f ac ing state coll eges
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Make your f eelings known

Write to y our
repres entative
Representatives

The Honorable Joseph Bradley,
Jr.
9 East Avenue
17815
Mount Carmel, PA
( phone 339-2767)

District 107
Parts of Northumberland &
Schuylkill
Counties

The Honorable Anthony J.
Cimini
361 E. Mountain Avenue
S. Williamsport, PA
17701
( phone 323-lo47)

District 83
Lycoming

The Honorable James A.
Goodman
Pennsylvania National Bank
fifuilding _
Mahanoy City, PA
17948
( phone 773-1959)

Districtl23
Schuylkill Count y

The Honorable Joseph V.
Grieco
218 Kendall Avenue
Jersey Shore, PA 17740 ( phone
398-2021 )

District 84
Parts of Lycoming & Northumberland
Counties .

County

District 117
Luzerne County

. The Honorable George C.
Hasay
R. D. Shickshinny, PA 18655

f

pnune 004-.i
The Honorable William D.
H utchi nson
Seventh Floor
Schuylkill Trust Bldg.
17901 ( phone
Pottsville/ PA
622-5933 )

District 125
Schuylkill County

The Honorable William K.
Klingaman , Sr,
124 E. Broad Street
Tamaqua, PA I8252 (phone
668-1049 )

District 124
Parts of Lehigh and Schuylkill
Counties

Th e Honora bl e
McLane

District 112
Lackawanna County

I In case you 're lost . for words

Wi
l i am

2939 Birney Avenue
18505
Scranton, PA
(Dh one 342-8060)
The Honorabl e Ra phael Musto
260 Market Street
Pittston, PA 18640 ( phone 6541483)
The Honorab le Bernard F.
O' Brien
28 Hillard Street
Wilkes-Barre , PA 18702 (phone
823-6321 )

The Honorable Frank J .

O'Connell , Jr ,
J48 South Maple Avenue v
Kin gston , PA 1B704 ( photfe( 287-

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working class family students,
(and it is particularly appropriate nowadays to note, the
only colleges where the
majority of the students are
female) are those colleges
which operate on a lower per
student budget and which have
the highest faculty-student
ratio.
The Pennsylvania State
College system presently faces
a deficit of $12,600,000 for the
fiscal year 1974-75. The major
factors creating this deficit
are:
1 The original appropriation
approved by the General
Assembly was three million
dollars less than the amount
. which had been agreed upon by
the Secretary of Education and
the chairman of the Board of
State College and University
Directors as representing the
minimal needs of the system,
without meeting the needs in
the following items.
2. Pursuant to Commonwealth
instructions, ho provision was
made in the original budget
preparations for filling vacant
positions.
3. Since collective bargaining
negotiations with the faculty
were in the progress at the time
of the original budget submission and the financial appropriation by the General
Assembly, no provision was
made at that " time for
negotiated increase in wages,
salaries and benef its.
4. Pursuant to Commonwealth
instructions , the original
budgets made allowance for a
general inflation of only eight
percent.
The currently
projected costs, particularly
for fuel and utilities, far exceed
this allowance.
5.
The Commonwealth' s
commitment to affirmative
action
has
necessitated
creating positions and funding
special programs for which no
provi sion was made i n th e
original budgets.

The state colleges of Pennsylvania are facing their most
difficult fiscal crisis.
It is mutually agreed by the
Secretary of Education , the
Board of State College and
University Directors , the
Presidents of the Colleges, the
faculty and the students that a
minimum of $12.6 million is
needed to complete .this current
academic year.
Already students have been
presented with increased
charges for room and board.
Already students have been
warned that tuition will be
increased next vear.
Historically , the level of
support of higher education in
Pennsylvania has been among
the poorest of the states in
terms of the population and
wealth of this commonwealth.
While there has been a
significant percentage improvement in recent years it
started from such a low base
and the problem was so severe
that Pennsylvania still remains
far behind the rest of the nation
in this regard. Tuition to the
students at the state colleges is
already one of the highest in the
country and has more than
doubled in the last few years.
These students come from
families where the average
family
income
is approximately $11,000. These
students represent primarily
the first persons in their f amily
to have the opportunity of a
college education.
The cost per student for this
education is far less than at the
private colleges and state
related Universities in Pennsylvania. These students are
all facing grossly over-crowded
classes, cancellations of course
offerings , which they expect
and need to complete their
education , laboratories without
materials, closed infirmaries ,
etc. .
We still observe a system in
which the colleges which have
the overwhelming number of

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. District 118

Parts of Lackawanna , Luzerne,
and
Monroe Counties

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District 121

Luzerne County

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District 120
Luzerne County

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A sample letter
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Dear
:

¦ I am writing concerning the financial status of the Pennsylvania
¦
State Colleges. As both a student and a voting citizen of Pa. I want to
¦
express ny demands that the state schools receive the appr opriations
they need to continue to operate as quality institu tions of higher
II
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education. We need the $12,600,000 in order to properly staff the

, eq uip the labs, and keep the courses open tha t we need to
classrooms

complete
our
education.
II
We feel that we should have priority to *hese funds over schools
¦
which are state supported such as Penn State and Temple , since we
II are State Schools.
II Sincerely,

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Students become self-oriented out of necessity
College students seem to be much less interested in
politics and world problems than was true a few years
ago. Students are able now to choose careers and
pursue them, keeping worldly concerns as a side interest ,if that.
In a recent issue of Newsweek, I found that a survey
was done concerning this change in student priorities.
The survey showed that college students not only are
turning to academics more than politics, but also the
type of academics that students are interested in has
changed. College students are looking for security of
money in pursuing careers such as doctor , lawyer and
business-related areas.
Present college graduates who engaged in the liberal
arts program while in college are now driving taxicabs
as a source of income Y ou can't come to college just for
the purpose of general education anymore. There is no
conventional security in that. At least not while the
economy drains people with the possibility of depression
on their heads.
Somehow it would seem logica l to me that because of
the state of the economy that more students would get
involved in national as well as world affairs ;that selfpreservation would entail this type of driving interest to find out what's going on, letting your voice be heard
and trying to change things. Instead, students pursue
self- preservation in terms of job security.
Why is that?
/ think ihat people in the college-age group.have seen
the futility of trying to change the world. Demonstration
and peacefully trying to change the socio-politica l
problems of the country is a slow , often stagnant
process. Corruption in higher offices, assassinations of
leaders, all the raw deals people get handed to them can
be fought, but when there seems to be no satisfaction,
people become disenchanted then apathetic and look to
other means that appear to work at the moment for
them.
That is why there is disinterest on the part of college
students in worldly affairs. What' s the use? When
students were involved, they were fed a lot of crap. The
credibility of those in power went down. Students
concern themselves with themselves now.
Barb Wanchisen

H

on campus

enough to handle 24 hour
visitation , if we can't even
manage to live wit h o ut
breaking windows, mauling
soda machi nes, ripping up
couches or-jammi ng washers
and dryers?

in the wake of a tumbling stone,

is safety. Next time you take a

shatter into a billion tiny pieces
but this was when I was very

small. Now I can feel the
cnimng sensaTion Drougm on oy
the freezing- cold air that is
blowing t hroug h a broken
window in Elwel) Hal),
The statistics on broke n
windows on this campus are
What is the
appalling.
reasoning behind tossing a
snowball , a brick, or a beer
mug throug h a window ? After
all ,don't we have enough to do
without destroying things?
Don 't forget , that window has
to be paid for.
But there 's more to it than
that. A big issue on campus
right now is 24 hour visitation.

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edditor
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P
oord |na .ing Editor
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walk down the hall in your ba re
feet , try to imagine stepping

into a mass of sharp, jagged

glass slivers which lie waiting

for you as a result of someone
else's foolishness.
But the windows aren 't all
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minds here in Bloomsburg.
There are a few other habits
going around that don't make a
great deal of sense.
One such activity (and this
applies to Elwell Hall) is the
abuse of elevators by a few nuts
who insist on joy-riding on the
tops of the elevators. This is
really ridiculous. One of those
idiots could be electrocute d up

bathrooms minus the results of
last night's ph ysical abuse,

windows that keep the outside •
outside, trashcans with trash
i n them and not aroun d the m
and
el e vators
that
wor k
properly (if at all), I say grow
the hell up, or get the hell out!

Don *t p icket 9
P ickett s p lan
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"And you don't know what
you've got 'til it's gone . . ."
Alright, stop your bitching
about the '76 '77 aca demic
calendar.
I see too many students and
faculty bodies taking a ride on
the "We'all hate the calendar "
bandwagon. I wish a lot of
those people would fall off and
land on their feet.
We are looking at this
calendar plan as we might look
at modern art: "I don't know
much about art, but I know
what I like, and I don't like
THAT. "

THE CAMPUS VOIC E
Editor In Chief
Pro duction Manager
Business Manager

Another thing to thin k about

there, or they could be found at
the bottom of t he elevator shaft
the next mor ni ng with a sp lit
skull.
If they wish to be selfdestructive/ well that's .their
prerogative, but they shouldn't
do it at the expense of other
people. I, for one don't care
too much for the six story walk
to my floor, and I'm sure my
reelings are shared by others,
especiall y those who live in the
high-rise dorms (Elwell and
Columbia.) So to all of you
elevator
foy-riders, and
abusers, 1 say "grow up!"
As a matter of fact, to all of
you "children " who insist on
infringing upon the rights of
others to s uch things as
sanitary drinking fountains,

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How can we ex pect the Board of
Trustees to consider us mat ure

A few weeks ago, I wrote a
column about the pleasant lack
of violent crime on our campus.
I did mention, to some degree,
vandalism, and now I'd like to
elaborate on that point.
Why? Why do people break
windows? I can reme mber the
thrill of seeing a pane of glass

Barb Wanchise n
Mark D. Mullen
Dave CoMma n

Sfbu Ung Editor

"dKSER

Car toonis t

Ben Alter
fl
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Kathll Barren
Barrett

u.yj Hj iSu^rv.Mr.

V.ckleMears

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Circula tion
Manager
PUoto Editor
Randy M«son
,Mr. Ken Hoffman, Director of Public Relations and Publications Is the Advisor
Si aft: Linda Grusklewicz, Eric Vamoa h, Ed Hauc k , jo e Sylvester, Dale Myers, Karen St ork, Diane Casklns, Ca lhy
Holiday, Patty Dlckerson, Ouano Long .
Pho to Staff: Jim Burketl , Dave Slade, Debbie Germ ain , Jo Willlard , Al Pagltalunga, Jeff Thomas, Marie Perslano.
Tho Campus Voice is a publication of th o Maroon and Gold Newt.
Tho Campus Voice Is the official student publication of Bloomsb urg Stale College and Is printed on a weekly basis during
the academic year except during vacations and final exam week,
Tho Cam pus Voice is a member of tho Pennsylvania Newspapers Publishers Association under the name of the Maroon
and Gold News,
the Campus voice offices are loca ted on the second floor of the Kehr Union, The phone number . Is 389-3101. All copy and
adver ti sin g should be submi tte d by 6 pm on Sunday nights for Thursday ' s edi tion , News releases mus t be typed, double
spaced and with a 40 charac ter line,
Tho Campus Voice is governed by the Editorial Board, with final responsibility for all material resting wi th the Edflor-ln . ¦
Chlof, as stated In the Joint Statement on Rights, Freedoms, and Responsibilities of Students of Bloomsbur g State College ,
Tho Campus Voice reserves the right to edit all letters and copy submitted , A maximum of 400 words will be placed on all
le tters to the Editor, with an allowance for spoclal exceptions. All letters totho Editor musl be signed and have a telephone
.
. ¦ '
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number and address a ttached . Names will be withheld upon request.
NOTE: The opinions vloced in the columns , feature articles and editorials of the Campus Voice are not necessaril y
shared by the entire staff.

My ears are exhausted with
complaints of "It's not fair, it's
not what we want,we don't like
that because it's not what we
want."
Intro to Art students should
have learned that art and an
artist can't be judged without
an education in the subject.
And so, I am sneezing at
anyone concerning this issue,
who refuses to learn what an
academic calendar Is all about
and proceeds to selfishly bawl,
"But I don't like it!"
Dr. Pickett is not a bad man;
I find him capabte and an attractive administrator.
As
VIce-President for Academic
Affairs , he is capable of services we may be Ignorant of.
Students are comDlainirua

about this calendar because we
had no voi ce in if.
They 're
right, we didn't.
But the
student body was m ute because
we were slee ping as usual; the
snores of a pathy drowned out

the sound of the calendar
committee ' s a pp eals for

student Involvement.
The only sound f rom the
students came throu gh , their
elected volcebox, the CGA.
Althou gh
the
law
fro m
Harrlsbur g' s G.olden Dome
defined a thirt y week academic
y ear, BSC had been slipping by
with less than that: CGA expressed a demand for " our

money 's worth" of education.
Students are now complaining of unfairness, but I
think it's too late ;BSC students
have surrendered their chance
to decide for themselves •
they 've lost the freedom, to
choose.
After the last decade 's
struggle on campuses for a
voice in their own affairs,
students have nroved to be
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incapabl e
of
exercising
academic freedom.
The student body on this
cam p us is lost as fa r as a sense
of unity or identity.
With so
little character to support us,
we are r a p idl y becomin g
educated to adapt - to develop

herd instincts which leads to

our

inc apability

to

dlrklnn«L

make

And when the students on this
cam pus can't use the freed om
the y have been given, they w f //

be told what to do.
No parent can believe his .
child to be independent if the
kid has never sho wn any sig n of
inde pendence. Dad will make
all of Junior ' s decisions until
the kid grows up enough to talk
things over with his parents.

But if children show no interest
in their own . affairs and let

thin gs up to old Dad, they have
no retro-active right to suddenl y cry over the consequences.

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1975

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Bloomsburg State College

Letters to the editor
Ethica l employer?

The Campus Voice welcomes
all Letters to the Editor but
reserves the right to edit all
copy submitted. A maximim
of 400 words will be placed on
all letters , with an allowance
for special exceptions. All
letters must be signed and
have a telephone number and
address attached. Names will
be withheld upon request. The
letters should be typed on a 60
character line and double
spaced.

OOOOOOOOOOO
OOOfauUOftOOC

Dear Editor :
It appears that once again
Dean Pickett is going to try to
screw the student population
with his proposed calendar.
Dr. Pickett , don 't you recall a
few years back when your
same calendar was in effect ,
students didn't like it and we
fought to have it changed..
The change made, I feel, was
better for all, students and
faculty.
Vacations weren't
interrupted as before so we
could all injoy it.
Those students who were
here for the academic year 7172 will remember what a drag it
was leaving home in the middle
of a much needed vacation, just
to come back here and take
(What about those
finals.
students who are out of state. <
Does anyone take them into
consideration before policies
are drawn up.).
Listen, Dr. Pickett, listen to
what the students have to say
before anything is made finai.
Come out of that big brick
building of yours and see the
students.
Education is a commodity ,
we purchase and we should
have some voice in what's
going on. Honest, Dr. Pickett ,
we won 't bite. Listen to us ,
please.
Thank you,
Jeff Landes
Editor 's note: The calendar
has been made final. It is my
, hope that with enough student
unrest, a change may be made.

Dear Editor:
I am writing this lette r to
inform the studen ts of BSC of
certa in unfair practices by the
owner of "K issin ' Cousins "
restaurant. Another individual
and I had been working at the
restaurant since September,
1974 as cook and waitress.
During the past seve ra l months
we had also been managing the
restaurant.
Until last Thursday all feedback on our performance had been extremely ,
positive. On Thursday we were
informed that we were to be
replaced by an individual we
had hired as our night cook. It
person ,
seems
that
this
unknown to us, had offered to
manage the restaurant, along
with his wife, for about 75
percent of what we were being
paid. The owner jumpe d at the
opportunity
and suddenly

num erous
fabricated
allocations against us that had
been heretofore unmentioned .
So on the night of February 27
we we're laid-off with no notice
and no prev ious knowledge of
the situation.
We feel that this whole
situation represents unethica l
and unfair practices on the part
of the owner and the night cook
that we hired (literally from
the unemDlovment line ), and
would like to suggest thai the
students of BSC boycott the
"Kiss in ' Cousins " in protest.
We, w ho were working to put
our husbands through college ,
are not interested in a personal
vendetta , but feel that such
shoddy practices should not go
unnoticed . Perhaps if more
people responded as we are,
employers would not become
such unbridled and unethical ,,
materialists.
Name withheld

A little know ledge
could

save a life

What would you do if you
were walking along a deserted
country road and happened
upon a fallen body, still warm
and rosy pink in color, but not
breathing? In this situation, a
solution would be to perform
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation ( CPR).
A seminar explaining CPR
procedures will be held March
13 at BSC, at 6:30 p.m. in
Centennial Gymnasium. It is
sponsored jointly by the
American Trauma Society and

Some tips for

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spr
ingtim e

cycling
With spring almost here,
plenty of students on campus
are proba bly itching to get out
on the road with their ten-speed
bicycles , or any wheeled
vehicle for that matter. With a
little preparation and machine
technology , the first time out
this season can be even more
enjoyable than last season.
Here are some tips.
1. Make sure you're fitted to
your bicycle. The saddle of
your bicycle should be set so
that your leg is almost completely extended at the bottom
of the pedal stroke.
2. Set the handle bars so that
they are equal to the saddle top. .
3.
Disassem ble , cl ean ,
regrease an d reset th e f ron t
and rear hubs of your wheels.
Retighten them so that there is
no wobble and they spin freely.

4. Check to see if the wheels
run true. If they don 't, they 'll
rub against your brake and also
increase rolling resistance. To . _
check: hold a piece of chalk
inwards ; bumps will betray
their presence. Remove the
bumps by getting a spoke
wrench hand loosening the
spokes that lead to the hub in
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tighten the spokes on the other
side. But work slowly about
one half turn at a time.
5. Next , reset your brakes so
they are one-eighth of an inch
from the wheel with the brakes
off.
6. Pressurize the tires.
Clincher tires, with a car type
a ir va lve , need 75-85 pounds .
Tubular tires can handle 75-100
pounds. If you do it at a gas
stat ion , watch it! Inflate five

the School of Extended
Programs.
The rising number of accidental injuries and deaths is
an American disease of startling proportions which is
called trauma resulting in
more than 650,000 deaths
yearly, There are many causes
of this disease including
poisoning, drowning, suffocation , choking, electrocution
and smoke inhalation, but the
most prominent phase of
sudden .death is heart seizure.
In many cases, the victim could
have been saved if he had

pounds at a time with the
metering device.
7. Get your chain off every
month or so. Work it over , with
a stiff brush after you 've
soaked it in kerosene and
relube it with a lightweight oil.
Wipe off excess oil.
8. Next disassemble, clean ,

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crank assembly. This is the
most difficult job and not the
most essential but it's worth
doing.
Also important to remember
is your cycling form . Use the
correct gears. Try to maintain
a 60-75 RPM cadence at all
times, even on hills.
Learn how to ankle. Your toe
should point up slightly at the
top of a stroke an d downwar d at
the bottom of a stroke.

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heart attacks, if he had gotten
to the hospital quickly or if
someone near him could have
performed CPR.
The Susquehanna Unit ,
American Trauma Society, is a
group
organized
by
professional medical people
and citizens interested in
combating trauma in Snyder ,
Union , Northumberland ,
Montour
and
Columbia
counties. Formed last spring,
the unit has a board of directors
and is a member of the Pennsylvania Division oi the
American Trauma Society.
The unit's f irst pub liceduca tion
project has organized four
teams of professional CPR
specialists, each team headed
by a physician , to conduct a series of three hour seminars
for interested persons in the
five county areas on the fundamental of cardiopulmonary
resuscitation . By attending one
of the seminars, most persons
can be taught the fundamentals
of CPR. The seminars will
stress techniques of opening
a i rwa y s, and
restoring
. breathing and circulation.
The staff for the BSC seminar
will be provided from area
medical facilities through the
American Trauma Society. A
nominal fee will be charged.
For additional information ,
contact Dr. Richard Wolfe, •
Dean of the School of Extended
Programs at BSC.

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. . ... . .. .

Bloom sbur S Sta te Colleg e

A lusty piece of Comed y pre sented by Red Masquers
A lusty 18th century comedy,
"The Beaux Stratagem ," w ill
be presented tomorrow night
by the Red Masquers of
Duquesne University at 8:15
p.m. in Carver Hall.
"Stratagem ," written by
George Farquhar , is a good
example of a transition play,
one that wavers between the
cynical attitude toward sex and
marriage of the earlier
Restoration and the sentimental one of the later 18th
century. It includes disguises,
flirtations and the suggestion of
a separation or divorce for the
unhappily marrieds which
strikes an amazingly modern
note.
Under the direction oi Mr.
Jay Keenan, the Masquers
have
Pittsburgh
from
previously presented such
period plays as "The Rivals"
and "The Country Wife. " They
have established themselves as
masters of Restoration and 18th
century comedies.
Sponsored by the , CGA and
the Arts Council , the program
is offered as a continuing part
of the 18th Century Festival
during the month of March .
Admission for the performance
is $2 for adults , $1 for children

Bob O'Brien

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"P engu i ns an d

Publi c Op inion "

will intere st every one
A lecture entitled "Sampling
Penguins and Public Opinions"
will be offered to the public
today at 4 p.m. in the Kehr
Union Multipurpose Room. Dr.
Geoffrey S. Watson , Professor
and Chairman of the Department of Statistics at Princeton
University , will preside at the
lecture , which requires no
colleg.e mathematics or
statistics background. All
members of the college community are invited to attend.
Watson , a distinguished

o f o f i c f i / ^i on

u b U l l O t l V l C l I ly

and free with a BSC activities
card.
Choir on Tuesday
An All Mozart Concert
featuring the College Community Orchestra and the BSC
Concert Choir * will «lso be
presented as a part of the
Festival. The Choir will perform "Exsultate Jubilate" and
"Coronation
Mass "
on
March
18
at
8:15
in
Tuesdav.
Haas Center for the Arts.

Soloists include Mary
Decker , soprano ; Lucille
Rosholt , alto ; Kenneth Garner,
tenor ; and Barry Trumbaner ,
bass. John Couch , pianist and
faculty member of the BSC
Department of Music , w ill
accompany the group.
Admission is $2 for adults, $1
for children and free for all
students with a BSC activities
card.

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and B.S. from the University of
Melbourne , Australia and his
Ph.D. from North Carolina
State Univeristy. He has had a
great deal of experience in
using statistics , including
applications to the arts as well
as to economics and to science
and technology. When hot
involved in the arts, Watson
looks around in the sciences for
statistical problems whose
solutions may be scientifically
helpful and which don't require
much
computation
or
mathematics.
Watson 'will also speak with
students and faculty on

1 'Modern Uses of Statistics'' in
¦ Kuster
Auditorium at 11 a.m.
According to Joanne Growney
Department
of
the
of
Mathematics, any student who
is taking or has taken any type
of statistics course would
benefit from attendance at this
lecture. During lunch Watson
will be available from noon to 2
v\ m
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Room of the Scranton Com-,
mons to converse with students
concerning uses of statistics,
careers in statistics and the
availability of advanced
training in statistics.
Interested persons may come
for any or all of the allotted
times with their tray lunch ,
\ brown bag or no lunch at all.
Students who wish to attend but
have classes during this period
are encouraged to arrange with
their instructors so that they
can attend.
Watson will also meet with
tmaiviKAtir
l l l V / l U U t lO

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Ul

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H1C

ment of Mathematics to discuss
the curren t program in
statistics at BSC and the new
directions the program might
take 'to keep up with current
developments in and uses of
statistics.

A year book is like gold ;
a college career is mor e than that
^m

by Barb Wanchisen

Bob O'Brien is the editor of
t he OBITER
Who cares , you may think.
Most people don't care until
they 're trying to get their
picture in or if they 're a senior
and the yearbook didn't arrive
on time.
Bob O'Brien is an unusuallyaware student on campus. He
has a unique way of looking at
things, as you will see in his
answers.
Q. What good is a yearbook?.
A. Once a studen t is out of
college, a yearbook is like
GOLD. They start hammering
The various facets of a yearbook editor - Bob O'Brien contemplates- my office to get theirs if they
But while
where to place the 1003rd picture in the 1975 Obiter. Then he turns in didn 't get one.
still
here
at BSC,
ar
e
students
his swivel chair , abruptly throwing his hands up to the wind in
give
a
damn
about
't
y
d
o
n
the
des Deration, ( photos bv Mason )
yearbooks . It ' s an i nves t ment
that crows.

Q. What fs the purpose of u
year
A. The OBITKK , which I like to
call the O'BUIEN ; has, the
function of presenting a pictorial essay of the campus.
( prompted by a staff
Q.
member) What about your
staff?

*

A. I miss them . And if I did
m iss t h em , I'd reload !
Q. What do you observe in
student behavior? Different
yearbooks portray different
moods and attitudes of student
life.
¦

i

i

A. The attitudes of the students
is that they 're not as interested
in things outside of their own
person - they don't care about
things like black issues or
poverty .
Now that the Vietnam War is
over , there is a lack of issues
and the students became more
lethargic, more apathetic,
, They have a don't -give-a shit
sort of attitude , so it reflects in
the yearbooks of course.
People are getting into more
of the traditional college things
like
streaking
was a
* manifestation of this apathy. It
was like the goldfish eating or
the stuffing-yourself-in-phonebooths of the past generation.

Q. Thenwhatdo students at BSC
think about?
A.
At any given moment
th ey're more or less i nt ereste d
in what' s going on tonight.
They don 't car e about what
they 'll do in three years. I think
t hey don 't become worried
about that until two weeks
before they gr aduate , t hen
t hey don 't know what the hell' s
going on.
Q. You referred to apath y
before on the part of the
students. Why the big change
from the activis ts of the sixties .
to where we are now?
A. Money was coming out all
over the place in the, sixties but
how that the economy is as it is
now , people don 't have time for
riots and demo nstrat i ons and
all t he horsesh it t hat goes along
with it. Now they have to get

Bob O'Brien , King of the
Obiter, can be found daily in the
Obiter office, barking out the
orders and running his court
with an iron hand, ( photo by
' Mason )
out and work.
Students just don't care about
w h et h er s o me sc h muc k i s
gettipg screwed by the
government. 1 mean apathy in
that sense - social awareness.
Q. Let's get away from general
student trends for a while. How
do you view the BSC campus in
1075 and how are you planning
to bv the "mirror of the campus?"
A

Firs! nl all that "mirror

bus iness " 1 don 't like . It all
depends on how y ou look at it ,
d epend i ng on your pers pective.

You can get as man y points of
view as there are people. And I
think it should be done accord i ng t o h ow t he edi t or wan t s
it. The y earbook i s t o be a
pi ctor i al essa y of the colle ge o f
tha t year - from there you can .
take it to be what you want.
Q. Do you think that th is is for
you the bent form ol pxpres8l(mj
Cont'd on p. 14

" .noi Jurxw i iiufruj fi oumj • L—

-__„

'

Thursday, March 13, 1975

Bloomsburg State College

Students are involved in
B PanI Ba ,a Boston struggle

Last September courtordered busing began in Boston
high schools.
Since then ,
Boston's black community and
black students have been the
victims of violent attacks by
racists.
Over 130 people were injured
in September and October
alone, in such incidents as (1)
buses carrying black children
were attacked with bricks and
stones. (2) Two black men, in
separate incidents, were nearly
lynched by violent mobs in
south Boston.
In many other attacks on
blacks, police have failed to
arrest the racist criminals.
Nearly 21 years ago, the U.S.
Supreme Court ruled that
segregated schools are unconstitutional because they
riisoriminata

aaainet

hlar » tr

students.
This nation has .
witnessed for the past several
months the nurturing of a broad
movement intent on destroying
constitutional rights in order to
continue and expand the racist
oppression of all balck people.
Just as the early civil rights
movement found national focus
in the racist resistance in
Selma, Little Rock and Montgomery, the Boston busing
issue is the focal point of efforts
to defend and extend the gains
won through earlier civil rights
struggles.
What is being done to resist
the racists? Last December
was the first massive national
^^ response to this racist of-

Calendar Controversy
Dr. Pickett , known for implementation of the '76-'77
calendar will appear for
discussions at below dates and
times :
*
North Hall - Tuesday, March
18, at 8 P.M. in the maia
lounge.
Schuylkill Hall - ? Tuesday,
April 8, at 8 P.M. in the main
lounge.
Montour Hall • Thursday,
April 10, at 8 P.M. in the main
lounge.
Elwell Hall - Tuesday, April
15, at 8 P.M. in the main
lounge.
Luzerne Hall - Thursday,
April 17, at 8 P.M. irl the main
lounge.

Third World Awareness
The Third World Cultural
Society would l i ke t o share
with B loomsbur g State
College and the surroundin g
c o m m u n i ty
Cul t u r a l
A war eness:
Frida y - March 14 - dance ,
Kehr Union 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 ,
a.m. with Soul Pride fro m
C hester , Pa. A dmission Free.
Saturda y - March 15 - Uptown
Saturday Night , Carver Hall
7:00 p.m. Poetr y, Inter pretive
Dance - Fashion and Black
Folk music. Admission Free.

fensive. A National Student
Emergancey Committee built a *
'National Student Teach - In
Against Racism at Harvard
University attended by UOO
people on December 13. On
December 14, a Freedom
march was held in Boston
where 15,000 people demonstrated. Some speakers were
Rev . Ralph
Abernathy,
Johnathan Kozol, Julian Bond,
Dick Gregory, Imamy Buraka.
Immediately
after
the
December 14th demonstration,
over 300 students attended a
meeting called by the Student
Emergancy Committee and
issued a national call for a
conference against racism to
be held at Boston University
February 14-16.
This conference was attended b by over
2000 people, representing . 113
different organizations
throughout the nation .
Speakers at the conference
were : Dr. Benjamin Spock ;
Rev. Verson Carter of the All
Saints Lutheran Church in

Boston; Wade Wilson of the
Education
National
Association ; Thomas Atkins,
President of the NAACP in
Boston and others. The NAACP
is Boston has called for a May
17 National demonstration
around the demands :
"Desegragate the Boston
schools now ! Keep the buses
rolling ! Stop the racist attacks
against black students."
What
are Bloomsburg
students doing ? To further
l i l i u i in

aiuucuio auuui

we

struggle in Boston , the
Sociology Club and the Young
Socialist Alliajice sponsored a
presentation on March 6 in the
Multipurpose Room of the
student union by Jon Hillson.
Many of those who attended the
Hillson talk are forming a BSC
Chapter of the National Student
Committee Against Racism
which will be active in building
the May 17 demonstration. If
anyone else is interested they
sould call 784-4168 for more
information.

This was the view from the sidewalk last Friday after Elwell ''exploded." (photo by Mason ) .

Notorious feminist
to aro use BSC
Germaine Greer will appear at the Multipurpose Room of Kehr
Union on March 13th at 8 p.m. Her lecture is being spqnsored by the
Association of Women Students and the Arts Council.
Of all the women to come to prominence during the past decade,
none have provoked so much outrage, attention , enthusiasm, scorn,
trepidation , analysis or amusement as Germaine Greer. She and her
landmark book, The Female Eunich , seem to have been with us since
the beginning, although she was virtually unknown until its
publication in 1970. But in the few short years since, she has become a
verbal sparring partner for William F. Buckley (some say the
reverse) , castigator of the old guard at the Washington Press Club,
lionized , reviled, loved and hated by everyone from Norman Mailer to
Betty Friedan. That she provokes strong reactions is obvious. She has
been the subject of millions of words of praise and criticism , and yet
she remains a unique individual , untouched by the acclaim or the
myriad of labels that have been attached to her and subsequently
smashed by her unpredictable behavior.
The feminist movement' s most spectacular advocate , Ms. Greer
wa s ca tap ul t ed to stardom by h er st r iking presenc e as much as h er
energetic intellect. Her conversation is studded with the same wit ,
wide-ranging curiosity and erudition as her writin g. Her thoug hts are
expressed in terms as big, wild and positive as herself; she darts from
one topic to the next , exploring new avenues of thought all the time.
She also possesses a healthy dose of mischief. These qualities ,
combined with her notoriety, h ave ma d e h er p rese n ce on an y t alk
show , panel , lecture platform or interview a coup of crowd-pleasing
proportions. ,
Born in Melbourne , Australia , to middle-class parents , Germain e
Greer lived throu gh a childhood which she describes as "a shanbles. "
She worke d f ran ti call y hard a t sch ool i n an u n success f ul a tt em pt t o '
please her mot her , winn ing a j un ior Governmen t Scholarsh ip a t t he
a ge of twelve , to a conven t school in Mel bourne. She left home at t he
age of 18, graduating with honors from Melbourn e* Univers ity two
years later with a combined Englich and French degree , dabblin g i n
leftist politics all the way. She taught at a girl 's h igh school and la t er
became a Senior Tutor in Englich at Sydney University. She landed in
Cambridge , England , as a Commonwealth Scholar in 1964, spend i ng
time along 'the way as an actress in a British TV series. In three years
she took her PhD in Shakespeare and combined her first job - teaching
at Warwick Universit y - with television and journalism. The Female
Kunlcli , her first book , was a runawa y bestseller. Characterized as "a
flaunty fixture in the pop scene , " " spirited" and "saucy, " Germaine
Greer contributed regularl y to a number of periodicals and flouts
conven tion at every opport unity . But behind her wild behavior and
radical thought lurks what one reviewer calls " a good , old-fashioned
idealis t and humanist , who wants a world where children need not fear
adults ; where sex is pleasure , gentleness and nonp ossessiveness ;
where women do not use altruism as a club to induce guilt in their men
and children ; where men and women do not ake each other for granted
but ado pt a new set of values and joyful ways of living to produce a 1 ,
true human liberation . "
i

H illson discusses
Boston 's busing
by Bill Bahr

"Racism in the form of
segregation and organized
inequality and discrimination
toward people is illegal and
against the law. " This theme
dominated civil rights activist
Jon Hillson 's lecture , A
Socialist View: How to Stop the
Racist Antibusine Drive, held
in the Kehr Union March 6.
Since 1965 Hillson has been
active in the antiwar and civil
rights movements, served as a
member
ofthe
National
Executive Board of the U. S.
Student Press Association and
recently was program coordinator for the February 14-16
National Student Conference
Against Racism held in Boston.
Vs « 0 ^ 4 % M i s in l

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history of segregation int roduced Hi llson 's discussion of
the turmoil that has been
genera t ed by t he recen t cour t
orders busing decision to create
racial balance in South Boston.
The Supreme Court' s f amous
Brown vs. Board of Topeka
Kansas decision in 1954 which
overturned Ji m Crow , paved
the way for the equality of, all
men which is an inherit Constitutional right. Previo usly,
tha avstnm nf rrtH ps nnrf tnuia

know
as
J im
C row ,
dehuman ized black people by
den yi ng t hem the b a si c
democra ti c r ights which whit es
en j oyed.
Despite , the ga ins in emp loyment ,
housing
and
education
which
blacks
achi eved throughout the south
in the sixties , Hillson pointed
out that Boston has endured as
o racist haven. This lock of

i ! I ,

;

i l

l

l

1

reform has resulted in Boston 's
distinction of being the most
segregated city in the nation
today. The city is literally
divided with the northern end
being predominately white
while the blacks mostly reside
in South Boston .
Recognizing their plight the
black people of Boston sought
and received a court order
providing the desgregation of
the school system at the
beginning of the fall '74 term as
a nrst step torwar. Aware that
dese gre ga ti on movemen t s
woul d even t uall y reach Bost on
the 10 year Anti-Busing
M ovemen t was , prepared for
counter-resistance.
The
cultivated historical fear of
black equality was vivid during
the first day of classes , according t o Hi llson , who lives in
Boston , when mobs of white
people carrying baseball bats ,
throw in g rocks a t buses an d
shou ti ng rac i st obscen iti es such
as Bus 'em Back To A frica ,
Boneheads Beware , FrenchFr ied Niggers For Sale conver ged on South Boston.
Tensions in the f orm of
uemunsirtuions , violence

blockades of school buses and

ly nchings continued for most of

the rema ining year. Presently,
the
future
success
of
desegregation is dep endent on
a thaw in the deadlock between
both sides.

Hillson advocates that a

solution should not revolve
around
any
political
preferences but should focus on
the implementation of the laws
of the land , which declare
equality for all.

».—-, , ««.

Bloomsbur g State College

Bloodmobile visits BSC

Life - is it too much to ask ?

By Steve Styers

It only takes a little bit of time, and honest-to-God, it doesn 't hurt,
(photo by Mason )

Did you give blood last March
6th , at the Red Cross Bloodmobile in the Kehr Union
Multipurpose Room. If you did ,
you 'll read this with fond
memories.
If you didn't ,
maybe this will convince you to
donate next time.
The blood donors went
through the following process :
First, you give your name ,
address and other information
required of willing participants.
Then a drop of blood is taken ,
relatively painlessly, from your
earlobe, in order tocheck the
hemoglobin. Your temperature
and pulse are taken , and then
you can enjoy a cup of juice and
a cookie if you're hungry .
By the way, as you change
lines and seats and the nurses
do their specific jobs, you won't
find any drill sergeants among
them . They 're all friendly,
sympathetic and efficient.
The going is still smooth and
clear as you tell a nurse if you'd
had any of a wide variety of
bodily ailments, diseases or

Wr ite to your state rep
The Honorable Fred J. Shupnik
550 Charles Street
Luzerne, PA 18709 ( phone 2870812)

District 119
Luzerne County

The Honorable Carmel Sirianni
Hop Bottom, PA 18824 (phone
344-7637)

District 111
Sullivan and V/yoming Counties
and
Part of Susquehanna County

The Honorable Reno H.
Thomas
R. D. 1
Beavertown , PA 17813 (phone
658-7304 )

District 85
Snyder and Union Counties

The Honorable Janes J.
Ustynoski
710 W. Diamond Sttw.
Hazleton , PA 122A1 yej rxti
«Kr
0100)

District 116
Luzerne County

The Honorable G*xs:i*. O..
Wagner
12 West Market Stfwsr.
Danville , PAQH
- ,-m,
(phone ( phone 273-&V»*

District 108
Parts of Montour and Northumberland
Counties

Senator*
The Honorable Frederick H.
Hobbs
Suite 218
p 17901 (phone 622-4352)

~

-

District 29
Carbon and Schuyikill Counties
and Part
of Monroe County

The Honorable Franklin L.
Kury
800 North Fourth Street
Sunbury, PA
17801 (Phone
Sumbury 8-498-3288; Harrisburg
8-447-8928)

District 27
Columbia , Montour , Northumberland ,
Snyder, & Union Counties and
Part of
Juniata County

The Honorable Martin 4-..
Mur ra y
34 Mary Street
Ashley, PA 18706 (phone 8233145 &6426)

District 14
Part of Luzerne County

The Honorable T. Newell Wood
o. box 628
Wilkes-Barre , PA 18703 (phone

District 20
Pike , Su sq uehanna , Wayne ,
and W yom i ng
Counties and Parts of Bradford ,
,
>u t K t .«qfaM?W nft' and Monroe Counties

health problems. If you're in
good health and your blood
pressure is satisfactory, you
can go wait in the last line. This
is the final step before the
moment of truth , which really
isn 't so awesome at all.
As you wait , you don 't
become impatient. You have
more profound things to consider . And , again , they aren't
The
really that profound.
people around you joke about
"it " ; and very rare is the
person who goes into spasms of
fear. Everyone is there to help
everyone else, through the
donating of blood. Students and
others, men and women alike,
are there for the common
cause.
Finally, you lie on an
examination table; the nurse
tells you what to do and you do
it. And until you've experience,
there's no use describing what
little there is to experience.
Forget your .nightmares and
horrors ;
you're well taken
care of. A pint of blood is gone
and you're still alive. After a
while, or even right away,
you 11 feel as good as new.
You 're then lead to a table for
a choice of beverage, a cookie
and mints. You get a cute little
Red Cross pin put on your
collar. Now it's all over. For
all that , all you have to do is
drink extra liquids for the next
two days and keep your bandage on for four hours.
The following is actual
testimony from donors who
were there ; perhaps they'll
encourage you to be there in the
future. It is worth your while
and that of many other s, too.

Cathy Lucrezi said, "1 feel
that since it is such a simple
so
procedure
and
painless,everyone should do it.
It does so much good for so
little effort.",
Paulette Walmer : "This is .
my first time. I'm nervous, but
alright. I'm doing it because
Cathy Lucrezi talked me into
it."
Tom Golden : "There are
other people who need my blood
more than I do."
Rose DePbe : "I've been
donating regularly for about
twenty years; Somebody has to
give blood ; what if you needed
it and nobody gave."
One fellow was quoted as
"It makes me a
saying,
that he meant it
by
man."If
was a sign of maturity, then he
was probably right. Otherwise...
Ken Tierney remarked, "I
was pleased it didn't live up to
my expectations."
And this reporter says , "It's
all human blook, so even if you
are a sexist, bigoted misanthrope, give."
The goal for this bloodmobile
drive was three hundred pints.
It was surpassed by two. So it
was a success and the con- tributors are to be thanked and
given a round of applause. But ,
considering there are 5000
people on this campus, it could
be even better. The next time,
wouldn't it be magnificent if all
those eligible donated. A silly
dream , I know, but blood is a
very precious thing ; though
many of us can do without a
pint of it , many others can 't. Is
it really so much to ask.

Ps ych cours e
stresses
institutiona l
care
The School of Extende d
Progr ams at Bloomsburg State
Colle ge has rece i ved a pp roval . to offer a short course dealing
with the Psychological Aspects
of Insti tutional
Care .
Primarily for those interested
or i nvolved in nurs i n g h ome
administr ation , the 24-hour
course will be held thi s spring.
The course consists of two
meetings a week of three hour s
each an d w i ll b e con d ucted over
a four-week period beginning
April 15 and ending May 8, 1975.
The f our to pi cs covered in the
course will be: develop mental
as pects of a ging ; soci ologi cal
aspects of aging; major
geria t r i c proble ms of t he well
aged ; and practical methods
for impr oved geriatric care.
Dr. Jam es E. Cole, Professor

of Biology and Coordinator o
Health Sciences at Bloomsbur g, will servo as pro gra m
director. Inquiri es should be
directed to Dr. Richard 0.
Wolfe , Dean ol Extended
Programs. Faculty from the
Departments of Psycholo gy
and N urs i n g w i ll lead t he
seminars. Emphasis will be
pla ced by the instructors on
pra ctical appli cation of theor y
to those situations which
nurs ing home administrators
encounter in their doily
ope rat i ons.
Those interested should
conlac l the School of Extended
Programs at 389-3300 immed i atel y . A minimum of
twent y participants is required .
Tho course has been designed
and approved for 16 credits
toward sustainin g licensure.


*

»

i



t

i

Somethi ng to remem ber

Sher ry and Manny
reminisce
by Joe Sylvester
4

"It was just something we did
and something to remember."
Such was the opinion of Manny
Santayana and Sherry Warmkessel when a question was
put to the now-official record
holders for continuous dancing
concerning their feelings on the
dance marathon now that it is
somewhat in the back of
everyone's mind.
A I1V \,UU [/lt

(photo by

Manny and Sherry passed many hours of the marathon talking to Mark Mailer,
Paglialunga )
\

Elwell stages
mock disaster
I

mm

». » > *_ _ > •

oy wiarK lviuuen

Last Friday Elwell Hall
participated in a mock-isater in
conjunction with the Bloomsbiirg Hospital. The exercise is
designed to help the hospital
and various government
agencies to evaluate the
hospital' s preparation and
efficiency in the event of a
disaster.
The "disaster" was handled
like this : About twenty - five
Elwell residnets volunteered to
act as "casualties."Each was
given a card stating their
supposed injury and how it
occurred .
At eleven-thirty on Friday
morn ing, Dean Norton made a
telephon e call to the hospital allerting them to th e exercise .
A Bloomsbu rg ambulance unit
was despatched and it , alon g
with the BSC Campus Securit y ,
procee ded t o car t of the "injured" to the hospital .
Simultan eously, a few participants set out for the hospital
on foot to act as "walk- in "
casual ti es.
The sta ff of the hospital (who
were a t all t imes aware t ha t it
was an exerc ise ) acted as if it
was a real ca t astro ph y and
worked fast and hard to aid
t heir "patients. "
First , t he y tagged ever yone
who was supposedly injured.

They recorded the patient's
name, address, phone number
and next of kin. Then the
patients were taken for
treatment and observation .
A- doctor saw evrry victim
and each was admitted and
given a bed assignment. After
a short period of observation
the patients were released (in
time for their one o'clock
classes). Some patients were
even taken to surgery for
treatment.
From start to finish the
exercise Was handled as
realistically as possible, with
the exception of the breaks in
the procedure for the real injured , who got priority of
PAIIfCO

After the exercise was
completed , Mr. Harry Ward ,
Assistant Administra tor at the
Blo6"msburg Hospital , took
time to thank the participants
and to express his , and the
hospital' s gratitude for the
participa nt ' s patience and
sense of humor in this serious ,
but at times candid exercise.
On han d at Elwell Hall at the
beginning of the "disaster "
were Dean Ro be r t N or t on ,
Dean Elton H uns i n ger , Dean
Richard Haupt and , of course ,
twen ty-five half chuckling - half
moan i ng "victims " of Elwell' s
mock-d isaster.
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Bloomsburg State College
will be offering a summer study
tour of the .USSR from approximately May 9 to June 6.
1975.
The group will visit
Leningrad, Pushkino, Moscow,
Novgorod , Zagorsk , Kiev ,
Odessa, Lvov, and Budapest
and will conclude in Vienna. It
will also include an overnight
boat trip on the Baltic from
Copenhagen to Helsinki.
Students will be able to
remain in Europe following the
completion of the tour if they
desire.
Travel within the Soviet
Union will be by train in order
to permit the greatest contact
possible with Soviet citizens.
Excursions will be conducted
in the cities by English
speaking guides.
Visits to collective farms, the
Hermitage, the Winter and
Summer pa lace , the Kremlin,
Tretyakov Gallery, etc. and
meetings with political officials
and Soviet students will be
arra nged. Course credits can
be acquired by participation in
the tour. Knowledge of the
Russian language is not
required.
Contact A. Sylvester of the
History Department for further
information.
An early indication of your interest is
recommen ded as time is
re qu ire d for process ing visa
a ppl i cat ions an d arran ging f or
accommo d at i ons i n t h e
U.S.S.R. The approximate cost

O 1CLU1 U 1 d ^ llllJ T

became official when officials
at the guiness Superlatives
Limited sent out a letter
stating, "I confirm that 86
hours and 1 minute is a new
world recQrd for continuous
modern dancing beating the
existing record of 84 and one
quarter hours."
After dancing that long and
DreaKing tne world s record
you would think that Manny
and Sherry would be basking in
the glory of stardom. Wrong.
Actually, they confessed, they
both hate the celebri ty role that
they 've been more or less cast
into. However, they do enjoy
the benefits of their efforts.
TFor instance , they 've gained
countless friends from the
experience and also learned
about the good side of people.
To put it in the words of Sherry,
"I feel neater that I know a lot

more people. I met a lot more
people doing it." And people
are amoung their main interests. Sherry plan? to enter,
into social work in the future
and Manny either plans to
teach or go into social work.
Among their other interests
are camping, hiking, kayaking,
canoeing, or "out-of-doors ,
period."
When I asked the two if
people act differently towards
them because they are now well
known , Sherry responded with,
"Peopl e are more friendly and
everybody recognizes you.
People are friendlier because
they are happy for us."
The tables were then turned
as Sherry became the interrogator asking, "Aren 't you
going to ask the obvious
question."Perhaps it was so
obvious that I had forgotten to
ask, "What kept you going."
There was more to the answer
then one would expect. Not
only was it the live groups,
friends, pit crew and the not
thinking about it, but there was
also the psychological end of it,
the mental attitude. In the
words of Manny; "It was all
psychological. "
It was
something that they really
wanted to do.
With an attitude like that ,

The room selection lottery for resident students desiring residence
hall accommodations for the 1975-76 academic year will be held on
Tuesday, March 18between 10:00 a.m . and 7:00 p.m. in Columbia Hall
(for women ) and Elwell Hall ( for men). Each eligible studen t wishing
to participate in the room selection lottery and his or her 1975-76
roommate should plan to attend the lottery together , bringing with
them their residence hall contracts, completed in full and stamped by
the business office.
Questions regarding the room selection process should be directed
to John Abell , Director of Housing.

MMIWMl PSWillMM nro wwIW PWra iMWiaiwwWI ^^

I Germaine Greer
I tonite at 8 P.M.

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A FREE PIZZA from Luig i' s
If you can tell us Mozart' s f ull
name. Call 784-1819 Fri day
5:00-6 :00. Only one person
wins. Excludes music dept .
Facul ty. Mozart Concert
March 18 8:15 in Haas
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Shootln ' pool is just another way to relieve the strain of the post midterms blahs , (photo i b^ WUHard ),
I
L^_-___ .- .

THE MOZAR T FESTIVAL
MARCH 18th
/
-

The Mozart , Concert is in Haas on March 18th at 8:15.
Come and listen to his music to see if you can find some
of his personality in the music.
This concert is part of the 18th Century Festival sponsored
'
by the Art's Council.
,
The Music Dept and the Art's Council have worked hard to
put on their performances and would like to see a big crowd
to appreciate it.
Tickets are reserved and can be obtained in the lobby of
Haas which faces Bakeless.

mnftrtnrut

RY VICKIE MEARS

special thanks to all of his

extra effort in getting these photos

Mozart was born an Aquarian. Born Jan. 27, 1756, he is a good
representative of the sign. He was a complicated and talented individual.
When he was still in diapers , Mozart was playing the music of
famous composers with no difficulty !
One day, when he was four years old, he was outside playing or so
his father , Leopold thought. When Leopold looked at what he was
doing, he found the Mozart had composed a piece for clavier
( forerunner of the piano ) that was too difficult to be played! People
that listened to.Mozart play when he was six years doubted that he was
|
so young, until during one of his performances, a cat ran into the room . y
and he jumped down to pet the cat and refused to perform for the rest
of the day.
When he was young, Mozart was so serious Jthat people who knew
him , thought that he would die young, but as he grew older, he seemed
more child-like. In fact , the people who had etiquet as a big part of
their lives concidered his manners atrocious . He would sit with his
friends and make "rude or absurd jokes, then laugh so loud that
everyone heard him , even in a large, crowded room.'
Mozart was versatile in many areas, but his father continually
prodded him to learn as much music as possible, which Mozart
thoroughly enjoyed. Leopold recognized Mozart's great gift andj elt it
was too precious to waste.

Choir rehearsing for the Coronation Mass By Mozart , which was
published 196 years ago this month
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Johrn Master conducts the College Community Orchestra
in Eine Kleine Nactmusik (A Little Night Music). Some of
Some of the orchestra members are coming from the
Philadelphia Music Academy.

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Mozart was not respected by some people because he never had a
stead y job , and the positions tha t he. did hold paid so low, it could be
considered nothing. His employers were always mad at him because
he would take off to other parts of Europe on tours , hoping for better
posi t ions.
Mozar t was a deepl y relig i ous man , but not in the sense of going
stead i l y to church , but he felt that God was an integral part of his life .
He believed i n F a t e and t ha t G od ruled wha t was t o ha pp en. He
disliked hypocrisy and that was all he saw in the religious figures of
his da y . His rel igi ous feel i n gs came mainl y f rom his fa t her 's
teachings . He also looked at death as another step to happiness and
not of somethin g to be afraid , which i s the wa y that rel igi ous
preachers and books seem to say it should be.
Mozart ha d no other friends that were musicians except for Johann
Christ i an Bach , and possi bly one other f r i end w h o wasn 't a musician.
By most peopl e, he was misunde rs tood. He seemed to scare people by
. his talent or his frankness and others were too jealous to give him

credit that he deserved.

His mus ic wasn 't published until a fter his death , and only then did he
gain an y recogntion.
Mary Decker sing the soprano solo, fixultate Ublla te and joins with
the solists: Louise Rosholt , Ken Garner , and Barry Tra mbauer in the
.
.
Coronation Mass ,

V

his solo perfor mance

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prodding and yet he is one of the most prolifi c composers despite the
fact that he only lived to 36 years of age. Mozart was1 very opinionated
and respected , yet he was shy and easily taken advantage of.
Mozart never gave praise unless he really felt it was deserved . He
evaluted his best friends just as objectively. Throughout his life ,
Mozart never lacked female companionship because they all loved,
yet in one of his letters to a friend he wrote how he enjoyed parties but
was always too too shy to ask any of the women to dance! Ironically
enough , he married a woman that he probably didn 't love and who was
not half as faithful as any of his admirers whould have
Whenever Mozart had tried to find someone who would help him
publish his music or give him financial backing for his works, he never
succeeded. Even his so-called friends didn 't help him. In fact , he
composed music for them which they used in concerts but never paid
him or even gave him credit for the works. He had uncanny insight
into people, but it unfortunatel y didn 't help him in dealing with
msnonest people.
.
Mozart' s thoughts and ideas were independent , yet he depended on
his father through his whole life, to guide him in learning and in
business affairs. When Mozart was only six years old, his father
decided that he needed exposure to learn as much as he could and also
for the rest of the world to learn about him. Being a child prodigy had
its advantages because he never had formal schooling, but probably
learned much better through first-hand experience.
The novelty of a child genius quickly wore off and Mozart had no real
backing from anyone despite his talents. By age six he could sing
music from first sight, he Could play the piano , and he had already
• composed.
When he broke away fro m home at the age of 22, M ozar t h ad no
background in business manageme n t as can be guessed. He conti nuall y borrowe d m on ey f rom f riends wh ich h e never p a id because he
never got enough money from his endeavors . Most of his plans fell
through. It is surprising how loyal his friends were , because every
time he asked one of them to loan him some they always managed to
come through. Right before his death , he got some of h i s com positi ons
published and his widow was able to repay his debts.
Mozart loved to be in the center of things yet he was still a lonel y
man. Born in the small village of Salzburg, Germany, he felt too
stifled to stay there for long, and later moved to Vienna .
Mozart had a great sense of humor , He loved to tease. One time , he .
decided to play the piano back stage for one of his operas. The actor on
sta ge was pretending to play the piano for one of the scenes and then
stopped as was written in the scrip t, however Mozart kept on playing,
mak ing up the music as he went along . He flustered the actor so much
t hat the actor san g "Shut Up " to keep him from doing it again.

William Decker , Dept Chairman , will conduct the choir , soloists,
and orchestra in the Coronation Mass. Accompaniest , DKroll has
been rehearsing with choir and soloists in place of the orchestra.

Joh n Couch , practicing for
PIAN O Concerto in G Major .

^ - -^ ^

^ ^ i n n r i n i irir

Photos by Rand y Mason

His Life
*

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Ath letic injuries , tr eatment, prevention

Paul Slocum : Physical Therap ist
t

by Bill Sipler

For many students who
haven 't had the' pleasure of
meeting him , Paul Slocum is
the Physical Therapist for BSC.
Slocum's office is at the
Physical Therapy Room at
Nelson Fieldhouse where he
and his group of student
trainers provide treatment for
athletic injuries and the
. rehabilitation needed to return
members of the athletic teams '
of BSC to competition.
"Our goal is to return the
athlete to competition as
quickly and safely as possible,"
was Slocum 's reply to what the
main purpose of the training
room was. To accomplish this,
the treatment room is equipped
* with three whirlpool baths, a
diathermy machine and other
types of treatment equipment
neccesary for the treatment of
injuries that an athlete can get
durin e a game or at Dractice.
To help achieve this goaJ,
Paul has four student -trainers
who work with him. Terry
Wade is graduating this year
and will leave him with the
three other students, Wayne
Mehrer , Janet Stump and
Sandy Check, who is a volunteer . Terry, Wayne, and Janet
are all on the work-study
program and receive pay.
Students "who -work in the
Physical Therapy room have to
be dedicated and reliable as
they pla y an important roie in
the keeping the athletic
program healthy. Even a good
team can 't overcome a host of
crippling injuries if the team
can 't have the athletes back
quickly and in good shape.
Therefore , the college coaches
and the Physical Therapist
work hand in hand to keep the
teams running smoothly.
Various times of the year
give the training staff
problems. These times include
Christmas break , and the
summer football sessions that

m

start a few weeks before school. '
These times represent the
hardest times the Paul has to
deal with because of the lack of
student help available. Last
summer, for football workouts,
Terry Wade «nd Paul worked
between^ 80-90 hours a week
between taping and administering treatments to the
athletes.
The facilities at Nelson
Fieldhouse make the trainers
job easier by condensing the
area required to cover. Before
the new football stadium and
practice neias were put in , cue
trainers had to cover practice
sessions at t the facilities next
to the tennis courts, games at
athletic park and baseball
games at towm park. The
Redman facilities give the
trainers a ..break in that the
facilities are closer to the
treatment room and also if the
need for an ambulance arises
they have access to a phone call
for the help.
The other main problem that
arises is the lack of people
available for meets. This occurs when several teams are on
the road on the same day. In
that case, contact sports have
the priority over non-contact
sports. The reason for this is
that there is a greater
possibility of injury in a contact
sport and therefore they get
priority . The non-contact sport
will get coverage by the
training department of the
scnooj it is going to.
The busiest time of the year
is in the fall when there are ten
sports in session due to the
overlapping that occurs during
that time of theyear. Any time
there is an overlapping in
between two seasons there is
this problem.
The trainers work an average
of seven days a week trying to
keep the athletes healthy. The
main injury that requires the
most work is knee injuries.
BSC averages four to six knee

operations a year plus forty to
sixty injuries that require
treatment but no an operation.
Knee injuries brings up
another topic , how do you tell
when someone has sufficently
recovered from such an
operation to return to competition. At BSC , Slocum has a
criteria that an athlete must
meet before he is allowed to
return to action. This criteria
included various exercises and
drills the athlete must go
through without pain or limping
before he is declared ready for
competition. These drills include running, doing figure 8s
to see about the athletes
mobility on the injury and
- lifting various weights.
To rehabilitate the athlete
there are various machines and
exercises that are in the
treatment room specifically for
this purpose. These machines
include an exercise chair
designed to
specifically
rehabilate athletes with injured
Impp s.

To prevent injuries is also
part of the Physical Therapy
department. To accomplish
this the Physical Therapist and
the various coaches get
together and set up conditioning programs that are
designed to eliminate or
prevent certain injuries from
occur ing. An example of this is
that Paul has a program for
stretching muscles coming in
this year f rom the Pittsburg
Steelers. He also has another
program coming in from
another N.F.L. team that is
designed to accomplish the
same goal.
To accomplish thi s the
Physical Therapist needs the
cooperation of both the coaches
and the athletes. For the most
part this is usually the case
which helps keep injuries down.
In the case of an athlete who
continually suffers from the
same injury again and again , it
cont'd on page 13

Wayne Mehrer tapes the thigh of Mark Vahderbeck in preparation for
a practice session, ( photo by Sipler )

Handball

by Craig Winters

Handball is the tournament
oh this weeks agenda as the
Men 's Intramural schedule,
reaches the midway point for
the Spring semester.
The
matches will be held in the
courts located on the bottom
floor of Nelson Fieldhouse. The
courts will be reserved for
Men 's Intramural competition
on March 13, 17, 18, 19, 20 and
April 8 and 10 from 6:30 to 9:30.
Each
participant
is
responsible for furnishing his
own equipment during the
tourney.
These may be
checked out from the equipment room in the Field House.
Soft soled shoes are rermired tn
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be worn during play (basketball , tennis sneakers , etc.).
Contestance are reminded to

be prompt for the match.

Anyone later than 10 minutes
past the scheduled starting
time will forfeit the match. If
both opponents forfei t , a bye

will be advanced to the next

round.
This tournament will be a
single elimination type . Any
contestant losing a matc h will
be dropped from competition.
Two leagues will be included
with the winner of each vieing
for the championship. Both an
individual and a tea m winner
will be determined . The team
winner will be chosen on the
basis of total advances made by

Paul Slocum gives a treatment to the leg of Tony Moore , (photo by Sipler )
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the team 's two representatives.
Each match will be the best
two of three games of 21 points
each or until t h e 60 m inute t ime
limit runs out , whichever
comes first.
The zone between the service
line and short line is the serving
area. The server must start
and complete his service
between these two lines.
I nserv i n g , the player must drop
the ball and hit it on the first
rebound. The ball must strike
the back wall, after which it
can strike either the side wall
or the return front as long as it
rebounds past the short line
before it hits the wall. The
serve may only hit two walls
before it hits the fl oor.
During play any ball is
considered good as long as it
hits the front wall before it hits
the floor. After the ball hits the
fl oor more t h an once a f ter
hitting the fron wall, the ball is
dead. In such a case, either a
point is scored is a service lost
depending on who last played
the ball. Contestants can only
score on t he serve.
Th e f oll ow i ng i s the revise d
Men 's Intramura l Wrestling
Time Schedule :
.. Interested in Guitar lessons?
Times
available
Monday
through Friday.
.. Please call 784-1H08
ask for Jim
ill!

Thursday, March 13, 1975

r-age tieven

Bloomsburg State College

Hearibreaker fin ish for ECAC

Huskies Bow to Cheyney in Finals

by Dale Myers
The BSC cagers finished
their season as they took the
runner-up position in the ECAC
Southern Regional play-offs
last Friday and Saturday night
at Nelson Field House. The
Huskies qualified for the
championship by defeating
Slippery Rock ,- 71-70, but
dropped an 86-81 decision to
Cheyney in the title game.
- ,

BSC vs. Slippery Rock

Jerry Radocha 's jumper with
.55 to play in the game
provided the winning margin in
the Huskies' contest with
Slippery Rock.
BSC, who
trailed by two at halftime came
back to lead by nine in the
' second half , but the Rock
regained the lead and was in
the process of freezing the ball
when BSC again retaliated to
secure the win.
First half action saw BSC
jump to a 6-2 lead on two
- buckets by Mike Ognoskyand a
jumper by Steve Bright. The
Rock came ba with six straight
points to take the lead which
they held over the next nine
minnt pc

HnwAVAr

tht » Huskies

•bucketed six unanswered
markers to regain the lead, 2420, with 7:00 left in the half.
Slippery Rock then went on a
scoring spree depositing 13
points to the Huskies' four to go
on top by five with 2:50
remaining in the half. The
Rock was able to do this by
sending four men to the boards
and getting follow shots in
close. v The Huskies then
tightened up their defense and
Rich Evans pumped in a
jumper , Rick Joseph converted
both ends of a one and one and
Gary Tyler followed an errant
shot to put the Huskies back in
front , 34-33, vvith 1:50 left in the
half. Owen Long 's 20 footer and
a three point play by Bob
O'Conner made the lead change
hands again as Slippery Rock
moved ahead 38-36 at the
halftime buzzer.
Over the initial 10 minutes of
the second half Bloom

displayed a tough 2-3 zone and
some great hustle to gain a nine
point lead, 57-48, with 11:27 but
the Rock was not ready to roll
over and play dead. John
Thiebaud and Greg Munson
combined for 10 straight points
to give Slippery Rock a 58-57
lead at 8:53.
They maintained this lead
and widened it to three at 70-67
with 3:00 to play. At this point
Slippery Rock went into a stall
offense. They were successful
as BSC was forced to foul , but
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With 1:19 to play 'Joseph
followed and Al Williams miss
to pull the Huskies to within
one. The Rock had a chance to
regain the lead, but blew the
layup and were call§d for offensive goal tending. Radocha
then hit the clutch jumper to
put BSC in front , 71-70, at :55.
Slippery Rock .again muffed a
chance to lead as O'Conner
missed another one and one and
the Huskies held the ball until
:04 when Mike Ognosky was
fouled. He also failed to convert the one and one, but the
Rock was unable to get a shot
off before time expired.
BSC vs. Cheyney
In the championship game
the Huskies met rival Cheyney
who had defeated King's
College in the opening round.
BSC, who trailed by 15 points in
the first half , once again came
back to lead by three in the
second half , , but were unable
to hold off the Cheyney sharpshooting from the outside and
ca me out on the short end o! th e
86-81 score.
In the opening minutes
Cheyney threw everything but
the scorer's table into the
bucket. With Leon Bell and
Milt Colston sniping from
outside the BSC 1-3-1 zone
defense, the Wolves moved on
top 13-4. Jumpers by Steve
Bright and Jerry Radocha cut
the Cheyney margin to five, but
the Wolves then reeled 10
unanswere d point s t o as sume a
23-8 lead with 13:24 left to play

in the half.
BSC began to come back
gradually on the shooting of Al
Williams and Rick Joseph.
With 8:00 left in the half the
Huskies managed to reduce
Cheyney's lead to seven, 33-26,
but Bell and Colston again
began to burn the net from 20
feet out to put the Wolves in
front by 13 points, 39-26. They
widened their lead to 15, but
Radocha and Joseph combined
to cut the margin to 47-36 at the
half.
Apparently, thoughts of
Slippery Rock's problems with
the Husky 2-3 zone stuck in the
mind of BSC Coach Charlie
Chronister as his team switched defensive strategy and
preceded to outscore Cheyney
12-2 to pull within one at 49-48,
with 15:33 to play. During this
spree the Huskies had their
version of Cheyney's outside
shooting as they connected on
their first five shots from the
floor. With still another spark
proveded by Bell and Colston ,
the Wolves gained a five point
edge 55-50. They held this lead
until the Huskies canned six
straight points to assume their
first lead of the game, 62-61, at
10:10. Cheyney 's McKinley
Walker countered, but a pair of
fouls by Radocha and Gary
Tyler's tip-in gave BSC a 66-62
lead. However, the Huskies
then suffered a number of
costly turnovers and the
Wolves capitalized to move on
top, 74-68.
BSC staved within strikine
distance and cut the lead to
three, 78-75 oh an incredible
move by Radocha underneath
who drew a foul and converted
the three point play with 2:37
left in the game. Cheyney
began to freeze the ball and the
Huskies were forced to come
out of their zone and foul to stop
the clock. Cheyney responded
. by canning four successive one
and one attempts to keep them
in the lead.
Bell was the biggest nemesis
to BSC as he continually ignited
Cheyney 's scor ing b urs ts an d
fired home a game high 34
cont'd on page 13

Al Williams and Rich Evans go for a tip-in over Cheyney aeienders.

Cagebal l Tourney Ends
by Regina Reilly
T he ca ge b al l tournamen t ,
one of t he women's i n t ramural

activities sponsored by W.R.A ,
is completed . There were two
lea gues , totaling sixteen teams ,
The winner of League A is
Team 3. Their record is seven
wins and 0 losses. League.B
winner is Team 12, with six
wins and one loss.
The
cham pionship match was won .
by Team 3. Congratulations to
the members of Team 3: Rut h
Koch , C ind y Land i s , Karen
Felt y, Romaine Y akus , Sharon
G ettel , Be th Campbell , B,
Elzen i c , Sand y J ankiewicz ,
Deb Snyder , Marie Plunke tt ,
Pat Munley , Janet Stump and

Karen Sheff er.
Table

tennis

and

shuf -

(single
fleboard
doubles
elimination ) tournament is in
progress. Participan ts are to
submit results to Maryann.
Ostimchuk (ext 3840 ) before
noon on F r id a y s.
There are thirty-seven
t eams , totaling 445 women , in
t he
dou b le
el i mi na t ion
voll eyb all
t ournamen t .
C ham pi onships will be pla y ed
Wednesday, March 12 and
Thursda y March 13.
The followin g are remi nders
for W.R.A. represenatives and
members . Softball rosters are
due Wednesda y, March 12,
Sof t ball begins April 7 . Tennis
rosters are due Monda y, March
17. This will be a doubles
(single
tournament
elimination ). It will begin on
April 7 also. Archery and
horeseshoe rosters are due

Monda y, April 7.
Archery
begins April 21 and horeshoes .
begins April 28.
The next W.R.A. meeting will
be held on April 7. Election of
offi cers wi ll t ake place. All
re presenta ti ves are ur ged t o
a tt end.
At the last meetin g, Miss
J oan A uten , director of W.R.A.,
explained details about the
Lucy McCammon Scholarship ,
This scholarsh ip, estab li shed
by Mj ss Lucy McCammon , will
be awarded to a women partici p a ti ng in women ' s intramurals
and-or varsity
sports , who has achieved a
cumulative avera ge of 2.5 or
better. Interested women are
to see Mr. Duncan in the
financial aid office and Miss
Auten in office 10, Cen tennial
Gym ;

Jerry Radocha lays one off the glass for two versus lippery kock.
( photo by Mason )
.
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Page Twelve

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Bloomsburg State College —

Faculty N ips Eagles
by Bill Sipler

Led by some phenominal
outside shooting, the BSC
downed
the
faculty
67-66
in
the
Eagles
Philadelphia
sponsored
United Fund Classic
by the Vets Club.
The faculty lead throughout
the game as they lost the lead
only once, at the 6:07 mark of
the fourth period. At one point
in the third period the faculty
lead by eleven points before the
Eagles put on a shooting spree
uiai uruugm uieui <~iuac.

The Eagles were led by wide
receiver Harold Carmichal and
running back Ron Po James
who contibuted 24 arid 12 points
respectively. Carmichal also
blocked a host of shots and was
a dominant factor on the backboards.
The faculty were led by Dr.
Dave Washburn , Clark Boler
and NickDietteri ck amazed
Carmichal as he was ferocious

on rebounds , hit well on his
outside shooting and threw a
pair of devistating passes that
resulted in criticle baskets for
frit a if n
nn
l iif tir
viu
cii^
j .

The Eagles were impressed
with Dietterick as both Carmichal and Po James commented on his actions on the
court. Po James rated the
faculty as one of the top teams
they had faced. He felt that
they were more accurate than
any of the other teams they had
faced.

Carmichal commented that
Dietterick had kept him going
in the game. Carmichal stated
that Dietterick was "blessed."
He felt that for Nick's age he
played a great game and was in
fantastic shape. Carmichal
said that Nick was a "hell of a
guy " and was inspired to keep
pushing as he was tiring daring
the game. Harold felt that he
couldn 't let Nick "show him

up. "
The Eagles have between
fifteen and twenty more of
these nights in the next two
months. They have had twelve
before this one with as many as
six games* in a week.
Training Camp opens July 16
and both James and Carmichal
are looking forward to a good
year. James is shooting for a
starting berth and hopes to give
the fans a good showing.
Carmicha] is just looking for an
improvement over last year
alter which he feels that
"Things couldn 't get any worse
than they were last year."carm ichal had a difficult
season last year and definately
looks for improvement this
season.
The Vets were knocked off by
' the WHLM all-stars 74-47 in the
opener. Amounts that were
raised are unknown at this time
but it was felt that there was a
good tu nout.

Four All-Americans, »

Wa tts NCAA Champ

by Craig Winters

Randy Watts emerged as the
150 lb. national champ as he
paced the Husky grapplers to a
seventh place finish in the
NCAA Division II Championships in East Stroudsburg
last weekend. Watts recorded
two pins and a superior
decision before edging East
Stroudsburg's Gary Kessell for
the crown. Although the
Huskies fell a bit short of last
year 's fifth place finish in this
event ; they boasted a lineup of
four Ail-Americans as opposed
to a total of three last season.
The Husky AH Americans who
sparkled in the tourney were
Randy Watts (150 ) , Steve
Scheib ( 177) , Tom Fink (118)
and Matt Tydor ( 190).
The close match which
Northern Iowa captured with a
total of 107 points saw the third
and seventh place teams
seperated by amere 14 points.
Rounding out the top five
finishers in the field of over 200
teams were SIU with 74 and one
half points , University of
Tennessee-Chattanooga (67 and
one half pts.) , Northern Dakota
(66 and one half pts.) and San
Fran cisco Mate ( 59 points ).
The Huskies finished seventh
with a total of 53 points.
Watts , who en t ered t he
t ournamen t as t he second seed ,
b ec ame t he th i rd Husky
na t ional cham p in t w o y ears as
he dom i na t ed t he opp osit ion.
After drawing a bye in the firs t
round the Husky co-captain
pinned Brad Finch of Salisbury
State in 5:30. Randy followed
this opening round conquest by
trouncing Lou Chicado (C.W.
Post') 12-0. Watts remained
undefeated and unscored upon

as he pinned Dan Houtchens of
California-Bakersfield in 3:57
to earn his shot at the title.
In the championship bout
Watts dominated the opening
two periods as he took the fight
to East Stroudsburgs Gary
Kessell. However , Watts eased
up a little bit in the final period
and bacame more defensive
than in the previous two
stanzas. Kessell rallied to knot
the score before an escape by
the Husky senior captured the
match.
Freshman Steve Scheib
continued his amazing season
earning All-American status on
the strength of his third place
finish in this tourney . Scheib,
also second-seeded in the
tournament decisioned Lincoln 's Kevin Burke 8-5 in the
preliminary event and then
pinning Randy Park in 4:19.
Steve 's title hopes disappeared
with a 6-3 loss to David Leaks of
Tennessee-Chattanooga.
Scheib then entered the consolation round and defeated J.
Mulligan of Springfield and
then avenged the quater final
loss to Leaks with a convincing
12-0 victory to earn third place.
Tom F ink also excelled as he
captured fourth place honors .
Enterin g competiti on unseeded , Fi nk crushed J ohn
Ha gen ( Mantoac State ) 7-3 and
( Southern
Ern ie Munson
Illinois ) 7-1 before dropping a
close 8-7 decision to eventual
cham p M ark Batton of Western
Tennessee on riding time.
Batton was lat er chosen Outstand ing wrestler for his efforts.
Fink then conquered
Kevin Hannah (Lincoln ) 104,
Neil Seagren of Michigan 4-3

and Doug Gruber of St. Cloud ,
8-3. Fink then dropped the
consolation final , again on
riding time 3-2, to Richard
Molina
of
CaliforniaBakersfield.
Matt Tydor was another
Husky grappler excelling
during the tournament as he
rounded out the Husky quartet
Tydor
of All-Americans.
should
receive
special
recognition for he was
wrestling approximatel y 20
pounds above his weight class
against the finest wrestlers in
the country.
Tydor , who
finished fifth overall , drew an
openin g round bye , but suffered
a 14-2 loss to eventual cham p
Brad Rheingans of North
Dakota State in his firs t match.
Tydor compiled a 4-2 record
during the tournament earning
a 12-2 superior decision over
Ron Reab of Evansville.
Coach Roger Sanders was
extremely pleased with the
efforts of his grappler s and
thinks special congratulations
shoul d b e ex t ended t o h i s four
AH-Americans. Sanders was
particularly pleased with the
super efforts of Matt Tydor and
Tom Fink and felt the Huskies
could have finished high if not
f or a pa i r of rid i ng t i me losses
by Fi nk and an i nj ur y sust a i ned
by Chicky Carter.
On the strength of their
st ron g showings in the " tournamen t , Rand y Watts and
Steve Scheib have qualified for
the NCAA Division I Cham pionships held at Princeton
next week. This tourna men t .
w ill feature the powerful
Division I teams from all over
the country.
!

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^Hm^j ^^ yi
by Bill Sipler
Last weekend, BSC hosted the E.C.A.C. tournament at Nelson
Fieldhouse. Despite the fact that the Huskies made it to the finals, the
event was sparsely attended. This was in spite of the fact that BSC
faced one of their traditional rivals in the final game, Cheyney State
College.
For those of you who missed these two days of exciting basketball
action , you missed one of the most thrilling games this year as the
Huskies edged Slippery Rock 71-70. You also missed one of the worst
officiated games I have witnessed in two years of attending BSC
basketball.
The finals produced this as well as a heartbreaking loss tor tne
Huskies (see the story on the Tournament). Cheyney easily sailed
past the Huskies as the team couldn 't take the pressure, or couldn 't
take the officiating.
The officials obviously lost control of Saturday night's game early in
the contest. At least twice a year, a coach or player has argued with
an official on the court and no action has been taken. Something of this
type of event generally signifies that the officials have no control over
the same .
This lack of control was even more evident last weekend if one observed the "Battle" under the boards. Rebounds were contested with
every means available except fisticuffs and there was no effort to
control it. The officials made little or no attempt to control this and in
doing - so lost their control of the contest.
Another lack of control was observed in the calling of fouls.
Offensive fouls were evident on the play of both sides but no calls were
forthcoming. Bad calls were the rule last weekend as both sides
suffered from what had to be a lack of control or knowledge of the
same.
It's unfair to any team in the conference or connected with the
E.C.A.C. to have to suffer from officiating of this kind. The athletes ,
who play under this type of officiating suffer from the idea that the
refs robbed us or they didn't let us play which gives the winner a bad
taste for winning. It wasn't that the officials favored one team , they
cursed both teams with the poor quality of their work.
Both Cheyney and BSC were the victims of a bad joke as far as officiating goes. Teams playing in post season tournaments deserve
better than to suffer through amateur-like refereeing as the two teams
playing in the finals last weekend did. It seems as though bad officiating is slowly becoming the rule rather than the exception in BSC
basketball.
I' m not saying that better officiatin g would have changed the outcome, there is no way on earth that tyou can throw the ball away fes
many times as the Huskies did in the finals and come away as a
winner . But Cheyne y had an excellent game marred By the poor work
done by the officials. The students who didn 't see the finals missed an
excellent display of outside shootin g by the Wolves as they overwhelmed the Huskies. After watching them chop up the Husky
defense , it 's a shame the officiatin g was so bad as to detract from such
a brilliant performance.

Cagers Los e

by Dale Keen
The Women 's Basketball
Team participated in the
EAIAW ( Eastern Association
of Intercollegiate Athletics for
Women >
Invitational
Basketball Tournament , this
past weekend , at McComb
F ield House, Edinboro State
College .
mere were six teams entered
in the tournament. The host
and second seeded team ,
Edinboro State College. First
seeded , St. Joseph's College.
Villanova University, seeded
third , and having a record of 134. SUC at Buffalo , New York.
SUCwas ranked ninth in the
state of New York. Seeded fifth
was Millersville , an d si xt h was
BSC.
Ul/ mmuhilft uivjuiiia fvii £ o iii av gu u i u n u a

a gainst third seeded Villanova
Universi ty. At the end of the
first half BSC was up by one
poin t , ( 26-25). Final outcome
was : BSC 03 Villanova 57.
Mary
Scorin g for BSC :

Balaban had 14, Ellen French
with 11, Barb Donchez and
Julie Ludrof canned 7 each,
Sally Miller made 6, Pam Stehr
had 4, Judy Kovacs and Karen
Tamalenus had 2 each. Mary
Ellen Boylan paced Villanova 's
attack with 21 points.
Two hours later BSC had to
play Edinboro on their home
court. Edinboro, who had not
previously played' that day,
eventually went on to win the
Iniirn j imnnt

' Thn nnlonmn

n(

the game was Edinboro 84- BSC
52. Scoring for BSC were Ellen
F ren ch and Mar y Balaban ,
each hav ing 11 , Julie Ludrof lo,
K aren Tamalenus , Pam Stehr ,
Sall y Miller , and Kath y Hotchk i ss each made 4, R osanne
R a gnacc i and Barb Donchez
contribute d 2 points each.
Sheilah Collins , who was voted
the MVP of the tourname nt
poured In 24 for for Edinboro .
At 9:00 a.m . the next morning, (Sat ) , BSC t ook to the
court, going again st Millercont 'd on page 13

Handball Sch edu le
DATE
35

310

3-18

The BSC faculty edged the Eagles at Nelson Feildhouse 67-66. (photos
by Thomas )
C-

MATCH NO.
1 and 2
3 and 4
5 and 6
7 and 8
9 and 10
U and 12
13 and 14
15 and 16
17 and 18
19 and 20
21 and 22
23 and 24

TIME

DATE

6:30
6:40
6:50
7:00
7:10 x
7:20
7:30
7:40
7:50
8:00
8:10
8:20

313

.

25 and 26 7:30
27 and 28 7:40
29 and 30 7:50
31 and 32 8:00
33 and 34 8:10
35 and 36 8:20
37 and 38 8:30
39 and 40 8:40
41 and 42 8:50
43 and 44 9:00
45 and 46 9:10
47 and 48 9:20
9A and 97 7!30
98 and 99 7:40
100 and 101 7:50
102 and 103 8:00
104 and 105 8:10
106 and 107 8:20
108 and 109 8:30
110 and 111 8:40
112 and 113 8:50
114 and 115 9:00
116 and 117 9:10
118 and 119 9:20
120 and 121 9:30
122 and 123 9:40


~
«^ >| j ¦¦^- ¦rf— i>jTiw _nw _O«_»~ I~ J~~ I— I
^ ^— ^ ii ^
^

49 and
51 and
53-and
55 and
57 and
59 and
61 and
63 and
65 and
67 and
69 and
71 and

3i '

3-l»

¦

TIME

MATCH NO.
50
52
54
56
58
60
62
64
66
68
70
72

7:30
7:40
7:50
8:00
8:10
8:20
8:30
8:40
8:50
9:00
9:10
9:20

73 and 74
- 75 and 76
77 and 78
79 and 80
81 and 82'
83 and 84
85 and 86
87 and 88
90 and 91
94 and 95
124' and 125
126 and 127
128 and 129
130 and 131
132 and 133
134 and 135
136 and 137
138 and 139
140 and 141
142 and" 143
144 and 145
146 and 147

7:30
7:40
7:50
8:00
8:10
8:20
8:30
8:40
8:50
9:00
9:10
7:30
7:40
7:50
8:00
8:10
8:20
8:30
8:40
8:50
9:00
9:10
9:20

'
'
'
'

I— ii — <~

Carlo and Tina DeVries
much of their success and that
of the team to the superior
coaching abilities of Mrs .
Gardner. For example, Tina
holds the BSC backstroke
record in the 50 yard even with
a time 33.4, and the 100 yard
event with a time of 1:13.1
seconds. Carla has broken the
breaststroke record , and the
individual medley.
Both Tina and Carla felt one
team member Jan Crossmore,
helped them and spirited the
team a great deal. Jan is from
West Chester, and has participated in the YMCA
Nationals. Althnueh onlv a
freshman , Jan - already holds
some BSC records, and has
added alot of strength to the
team...
Tina , Carla , Jan , and another
team member, Connie Corso,
attended Easterns. They didn 't
win anything, but broke the
relay record previously held by
BSC individuals. The girls felt
this was a good experience.
They had a chance to meet '
people and see old friends.

by Dale Keen
Two
membersof the
Women 's Swim Team are also
members of the same family.
They are Carla and Tina
deVries, freshman and sophmore respectively. .
Carla and Tina are from
Bethlehem , Pa., and both girls
attended Freedom High School.
They have two younger
brothers, 10 and 14 years oid.
They began swimming through
the Red Cross when they were
very young. Neither Carla nor
Tina swam competitively until
they had reached the tenth
grade.
During Tina 's sophmore year
her high school captured the
district title. The women's
swim team always posted
winning seasons. Coaching the
girls through their high school
careers was Ms. Eileen Amble.
Although Ms. Amole was a good
coach , the girls showed high
regard for their presen t coach ,
Mrs. Gardner. They credit

Cagers Lose
cont'd from pg. 12
- sville. Bloom couldn 't get it out
of low gear , and the final
outcome was Millersville 48BSC 36. The loss was a costly
one for the Huskies as Ellen
Freeh was injured early in the
second half and will be lost for
the final game of the season, to
be played March 13, at 4:00
against Marywood at BSC.
Scoring for BSC were Barb
Donchez 12, Julie Ludrof 9,
Ellen French 7, Mary Balaban
4, Judy Kovacs and Pam Stehr
each with 2.
Coach McComb 's comments
were : The caliber of the ball
played at the tournament was
. extremel y good. The competition was , by far , the
st ron gest ever f aced by a BSC
women 's , basketball team.
Generally speaking, we played
well an d t he p la yers gained
invalua bl e experience , , Miss
Sue Pe t ers , t he head referee of
the tournament , who has seen
BSC learns lor the last 7-9
y ears , commen t ed t ha t she had
never seen Bloomsbur g paly as
well as the y did in this tournament , particularly against
Vi llanova .
?J 9«*flC? nn b'lfio v

0

For Sale:
1969 Cutlass S
2 Door Hardtop a-c Power
Brakes
Good Condition Call Patty 3893357
ri ^ ^ ^ i^ ^W
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K
V

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Hus kies Bow
cont'd from pg. 11

poin t s.
Steve Bright and R i ck J oseph
were to ps for Bloom as the y
scored 18 points apiece , wh i le
Radocha chipped in 17 tallies .
For Mike O gnosk y and
Tyler it was their last appearance in a Husky uniform
and both closed ou t their
careers in fine style.
The
Huskies ended their seaBon
with a 15-10 slate.
t Utiii

. ,/ r j i j

101

• Paul Slocum

cont d from page 10
ma y become n eccesar y to
check the athletes routine.
Paul will talk to both the ath lete
and t he coach and t r y and
de t erm i ne t he cause and
prevent ion of t he i njur y . Aga in
t he cooperation of th e a t hle t e i s
essential.
P aul t r ies to have t he inj ured
a t hle t e t ake t wo trea t men t s
each da y. This aids in speedin g
his return to action.

athlete.
Another aid tha t some people
t h i nk has a men t al eff ect rather
than a truely beneficial effect
on an athlete is tape. Paul feels
that tape adds support to an
injury and helps prevent add i tional ag g ravat i on of an
i nj ur y in l i gh t workouts.

thor
p is
Pau
l fools
that
a™»
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aw«v
••••*•*
• ¦*
* «•* V»«

decrease i n t he use of dru gs i n
college sports as well as pro

I n some cases , it pays to use
some psy cholo gy in dealin g

Other team memberss are
sophmore Linda Williams, who
swam free style, and was part
of the free style relay team,
Elaine Moreko, who swam the
backstroke, Roseann Kozichi,
who participated in the breast
stroke, and two divers, Pat
Sither and Sue White. Many of
ine

gins

nau

never

sum

". o
competitively before.
The entire team was comprised of freshman and sophmores, all of which improved
greatly over the season. Mrs.
Gardner is expected to recru it
some fine freshman to the
present squad , which should
create a fine, promising team
for next year. Two changes will
be, a bigger, more competitive
schedule, and a new practice
schedule. For two days a week,
practice will be held twice, with
only one practice on the
remaining days.
Tina and Carla feel they will
h ave a strong t eam n ext y ear ,
and a strong competitive attitude, instilled by Mrs. Gardner.

doct or.

There are no dru gs
used in the therapy room .
P aul i s alwa y s looking for
wa ys to improve the program.
To hel p out he i s curren t ly
look ing f or more stud ents t o
re place t hose he w i ll loose th is
y ear and next y ear to
gradua tion.
If the studen t
qualifies for the work-study
program he can get paid for his
work in the thera py room.
As injuries are an integral •

sports. He thinks this might be
nnrf nf nthl ptips It . holns to
due to the publicity that the use
have a good p rogram in
of dru gs on t he prolevel has
Ph ysical Therapy . Since there
rece ived.
Isn 't a Physic a l Education
To Paul' s knowled ge no one
major or minor at BSC , there
in the state college system ,
isn 't a feeder program to
usues drugs of any kind. The . re place people i n the training
onl y kind of athletic dru g used
room . If someone is interested
. at BSC that Paul knows of is
in Physical Thera py, tha t' s a
throu gh prescri p tion b y a
good place to get prac tice at it. vvvw w

with the athletes. The use of
su b stances known as hea t is a
good exam ple of this. While the
substance actuall y does little
good for the athle t e as it can 't
penetrate deep enough to have
much effect , the psycological
factor has some ef fect on the

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M< iCiSfc. Stctirviiii

Q.
Why not write for the
Campus Voice?
A. I wouldn 't write for your
p ublication because I write.
from a dif f erent perspectiveI
t han you do .
Take Uncle J im - you , the
President of the college. To me
he needs a more " real " personali ty to come across. I 'm
not say ing he isn 't real , he j ust
doesn 't come off that way. He
tries to be so honest - he tries to
get out of t he shadow of Nossen
and A ndruss , who overshadowed ever ybody . .
McCormick tries to app eal to
the studen ts but it comes across
fake, to me.
Idon't think t he C am pus Talk
would print the th ings I would
wr it e as i n m y exam ple wi th
Uncle Jim - you peopl e look at
h im through
rose-colored
glasses whereas I don 't.
Q. What do you think about the
Campu s Voice?
»
A. Well , f irst of all I t hink
chan ging t he name has it s good
and bad aspects Maroon and
Gold wasn 't a good nam e for
the paper . What is it - Campus
Talk or Cam p us Voice, I can 't
rem ember (rolls his eyes ) ,
It ' s iust
anvwav. its better.

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cont'd from page 4
that people were more familiar
with M&G.
The paper under Frank
Lorah was more conservative ,
more structured. He steered
away from controversy. And
'when Sprague and Oliver had
it , it wasn 't something you 'd
want to read.
Do yujj read the Campus Voice?
A. Sure I do ! What else would I
read ? 1 could read textbooks
but you know there are no jokes
in them . Atleast the Cam pus
Talk or whatever you call i t ,
has jokes , i n fact it is one .
Your ed it or i als hav e a
woman 's slant of course and
people are sure t o think you 're
a feminist j ust becasue you
wrote about women 's rights
and that cent er f old had all
WUlilCIl 111 I k .

Q. Well , tha t's bullsh it. I' m for
human rights.
A. Sure it's bullshit but I'm
t elling you t he wa y people
labeled it. People see things
the wa y they want regardless of
your intent .
All in all , t he paper is much
better than it used to be, no
thanks to somebody (side
glance accom panied answer ).

ST. PATRICK'S DAY

\
.

Cut Outs - Party Goods - Gifts
a lso

\

Easter Gif ts

Bh ^^^^^^ B^^^ B^^^^^^ B^^^ B^^^^ r ^^^^^ k

Party Goods - Cut Outs - Cards
at
L

Millions of men , women an d children are starving! You can save many
>
^5Ov ^*s+*mmtg00^£
lives throug h CARE — the non-sectarian , non- governmental link between
^P/L a T c p
^Tt <-» &J ^
generous Americ ans and poverty-stricken peo ple abr oad. CARE' s expert,
enced staff people ar e in 36 countries including many of the famine areas. They are
feeding 20 million per sons daily. But without your help they cannot cope with the mounting waves of
starvation. Won 't you skip or cut down on one meal a week and send the money saved to CARE?
Your "empty plate " will fill many empty plates overseas and send soeds, tools and equipment
to help hungry people grow more food. Please fill out the pledge coupon and
return it with your initial gift toda y.
! YOU CAN DO MORE TH»M YOU THINK
! Last year CARE pr ovided $5.85 I\
rl h O f a ' d '° r ° V ° ry d °" ar
'|
I aonatea...
d° |d
^
118 gives nutritious food to 270 J
¦
¦

children '

¦

growin g more food.

TnB "Empty Plate 11 Pledge:
"To save starving families abroad I will skip or reduce one meal a week for the
resl of thi * yoar ' l wiU Mnd the monoy 8avod t0 CARE for !he on"» r 8ency expansion of its programs to feed those families and hel p them grow more food. "
each month D
... mmmA nAUV , , ..
, will
send CARE at least $
each quarter D

I '

| If I save mare, I will tend more. My fi rit contribution (i enoloiad.
,
I 110 provides poor farmers two days !

my total "Empty Plate " contribution ao you can rush more aid immediately,
| of trainin g in techniques of I Horn

I •
,
;
I 125 delivers 375 pounds of food In I Namo
some areas.
| Addrosn
|
!
1 SBO equips a family with tools. ! City
Stat o
Zip
f l 9
Se
d equipment
Make
your
tax-deduotlble
eheck
out
to
OAK
UforW
Hunger
Fund.
!
%
! t O womW m Ore foo3
¦
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I CAREJ Lit Brothers , 8th & Market Streets , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania 1910S
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Collins-M usser Music
262 Iron St.
Bloomsburg 784-7378
Up to 50% off Everythin g
|
|
|
|

Fender Gibson . Sunn , others

!
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J ohn 's
Food
Market

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Open 'till 9

John 's Food Market Op en daily

8-12, 7 days a week NOW
SELLING H O A G IE S The
corner of Leonard and Main St.

p

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Going Out of Business

I
I

We will
" send you regular reminder envelopes for your convenience. Thank you. Ma ll cheek to:

N.

RITTER 'S OFFICE SUPPL Y
112 E. Main - Blooms burg

-— j 7 -.-

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...Scuttlebutt...
Hamilton
and
Kirkland
Colleges are sponsoring the
Second
Annual
Stephen
Fensterer Memorial Folk Festival to be held May 1-4, 1975. A
crafts fair , square dance and
free workshops will be held in
addition to the musical competition. Competition is limited to
the first fifty amateur ( non
union ) performers. April 15 is
the deadline for competition
applications. For information
concerning the festival applications write : Box 691, Kirkland College, Clinton , N,Y.
13323.

Everyone is invited to participate in an Easter egg hunt
that will be held on Saturday ,
March 15 at the Selinsgrove
State School and Hospital.
Buses will leave Navy Hall at
1:00 p.m. and will return no
later than 4:30 p.m. A sign up
choo f ic nnefarl

in

Nauv

Hal)

Summer Psych Course
This summer 's Psychological
Study of Social Issues < 48.454 ) ,
offered in session three, third
period by Dr. Larcom , will cover important social issues of
young adults, adults, and the
aging. The course will deal with
such topics as sexuality in adult
years
and
death.
The course will be conducted
in a seminar manner in that the
students will help lead discussions based upon their readings
from the literature. Students
should have at least nine hours
in Psychology or a background
in developmental psychology.
Please contact Dr. Larcom of
the Psychology Department for
further
course
details.

Mn7»rt rVinr prt.

The Department of Music and
the Arts Council are sponsoring
a Mozart Concert Tuesday,
March 18. Several young men
and women from—the Philaddelphia Musical Acadamy will
be playing in the orchestra . We
are looking for housing for these
people for the night of Monday,
March 17. If anyone is willing to
offer his or her home to one or
more of these people that night,
the hospitality would be
appreciated . Meals will be provided by the college.

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Kappa Delta , national forensics
fraternity, held their organizational meeting for new
pledges on Sunday, March 2 in
the formal lounge in the Union.
In attendance were Pi Kappa
Delta acting president-Cynthia
Gonshore, pledge person Marlene Jacobson , and the
pledges. The pledges for 1974-75
are Gay Cromis, Cathie Crust,
Betsy Dunnenburger, Neil
Hilkert, Steve Hinytzke, Denise
Kennedy, Betsey Miller, and
Regina Wild.

Summer Sessions 1975
Students interested in attending summer sessions 1975 may
preschedule in the Office of
Extended Programs-Administration Bldg until March 17.
Listings of courses are available at the Information Desk in
the Union , the desks in each
dorm and at the Office of
Extended
Programs.

The sisters of Theta Tan
Omega would like to welcome
their fourteenth pledge class
into sisterhood. They are Dawn
Davis , Marcia Freeman, Cin di
Gumpert, Sandy Heller , Carol
Lyons, Beckie McAfee, Val
.Mpnteith , Lynne O'Lear. Deb
Rodeheaver and Lee Ann
Stump.
Chess Master at Bucknell
International Grandmaster
Lubomir Kavaler will be at
Bucknell Univer sityon March 19
for a simultaneous Chess exhibition to be held at 7:00 p.m, in
Larison Dining Hall.
Kavalek is currently the third
rated chess player in the U.S.
and is among the top thirty in
the world. Last year, playing on
first board for ttje U.S. , in the
world Team Championship held

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CRAR SHOP
AND
YARN
MORGAN'
S
251 W#st 5th St. Bloomtburg
¦

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Wt h«vo:
Crewt l

String Art

Netdlt point
Beaded Fruit
Instruction . Books
Oodles of Buttons

1

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^
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^

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Supplie s for :
Rugs
Macrame '
Knitting
Bead-Work
Crocheting
Candle-M aking

Hours ; Mon. thru Sot. 10:30 5:00
Closod oil dqy Wodnosdoy
y

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Bloomsburg Rotary

PANCAKE DAY

|C 7 am to 6s30 pm

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bottoms
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rise low
Ri
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button
fronts

CNN
* to 42" WAIST
27"
^V>

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Saturday, March 19 /1

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Wesley Methodist Church
i
\ Third and Market Streets /
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Slm^wmiiMimwitt

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"All the cakes you can eat'1

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Stop In and irowte

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B^BV ^B^BS

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("PIEROGIES"
(
" FRENCH FRIES" )
( "ALL KIND
)
/
OF GOODIES" \

Blue Jean
Denim

Navy
KJ^

meia lau umega

Vets in Summer School
Attention Veterans : If you
are planning to attend any of the
scheduled summer sessions,
please inform the Veteran 's
> Office, Room 6, Ben Franklin
Building of the number of credits you will be taking and the
dates of attendance. This will
help to keep your V-A records
up to date and should be done as
soon as you have decided on the
number of credits you will be
ta king.

"_

(

— "SPER"
in Nice, France, he scored 8'^ 2 - CHEESEBURGERS " — .79
6> 2 .
(
Chess Club
$1.00
Any student wishing to play
HOT DOGS —
3
/
chess should contact Dr.
Selders - chess club advisor, or
.69
V 2 - HAMBURGERS —
Andy Cherinka - club president.'
The club meets on Wednesdays•
.79

and Thursdays from 3:00 - 5:.00 ( STEAK HOAGIE
p.m. in the Multipurpose
' / REGULAR HOAGIE — .45
room , Kehr .
(MADE FRESH TO ORDER)
V

Folk Festiva l

Easter Egg Hunt

; NITELY ¦¦BEHIND ELWELL /

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Page Sixteen

NMi
n OFFICI
SUPPLY CO.

PHOTO SERVICfS

a.
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Bloomtbur g. Pa.

ANDOIFTS

764-1947

M»OM7t4.SS«l

SLEEK , QUIETTHI NGS
TO GET YOU AWAY

FOR RENT: NEW MODERN
FURNISHED
EFFICIENCY
!
APARTMENT FOR ONE OR
TWO PEOPLE FOR SUMMER
CALL 784-1105
AFTER 4 p.m. ON WEEKDAYS

You 'll find na tural spring

canoes and kayaks
BY SAWYER AND MOORE

at

DELIVERANCE
PRODUCTS

^^^^^

THE STUDIO SHOP
Flity-nlne
Cast Main Sf reef

$2.50 towards your next State Inspection .

" ^

I
SKJRBmw i
«r write ^nASHMCiC " I
M w« WALNUT !?.
I
j fwm -

g

{JEg^usieAi.

^-^n

Our research materiel it told for
reiearcri axlitance only.

March Special - Fill-up and get a co upon worth

111 1

IfB lTOWTT {*0ftOftfTY )
88
ifJS&SS
1SSSSSin
otT

RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.

11941 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #2
LOS ANGELES,CALIF. 90025
(213) 477-8474 or 477-5493

all tires , batteries and repa irs.

I A DYNAMIC ROCK BAND PLAY INO SONGS |
JOF TODAY,TOMORROWAND YESTERYEAR. J

Living shamrocks
ana tiny - tiny
mini earrings
at

$2.75 per page

Send for your up-to-date, 160-page,
mail order catalog. Enclose $1.00
to cover postage (delivery time is
1 to 2 days).

Show ID and recieve a 15 Der cent discount on

_ *,
^^
^

Thousands of Topics

7th and Market - 784-8644
Faculty and Students...

Call : Riverside 275-0930

NEW...

Thursday, March 13, 1975

Market Street Sunoco '

RALPH DILLON 'S FLOWERS

26 N. Railroad St.
HUGHESVILLE , PA.
^

I ARCUS '
"Collegetown
coordinates "
exclusive ly for
the Junior

HARTZELL 'S MUSIC STORE
72 N. Iron St.
"Best For Less "
hours - 9 to 9 Mon. - Sat.
(717)-784-2992

36 K. Maia Stft

HIAQQUAimftOV
HALLMARK CAtM

r

Bloomsburg State College

Open - 8 am til 8 pm - Thurs and Fri till 9

j

24 hou r towing service

YOU WORKED H ARD
FOR YOUR STRIPE S.
KEEP THEM GOING IN
THE ARMY RESERVE.

¦S
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I
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B
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B
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i

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^^^^^^^A^^^^^^^^^
p^pMMH^pflBaBM pA^p^p^p^pB^pMM^^MpJ^p^p^BBABI^p^p^p^p^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

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.

We know how hard you worked to earn
those stripes.
And we'd like to help you cash in on
them in your spare time. ,
One weekend a month with us and an
e-5 with three years experience experience can pull down a nice $66.04.
Twelve of those kind of weekends
added to two weeks summer camp and
you've got a total of $1056.64 less tax, of
course but still more than enough to
keep the payments up on that new car
yoirre thinking about buying.
Something else. The px privileges
have just been liberalized for reservists.
Now reserv ists can hi t the px every da y
they attend a meeting.

MBBMBMA g^BHM^^^ BMBMMMMM ^^H^HH



4

We're also a good way to keep those
—.—^^^—,.M^^^ .^ ^..^,. ^
retirement points adding up.
Aside from all else, we give you a good
Interested in more information ? Write •
chance to keep your talent alive. You
" i
Arm y Reserve Opportunities
wouldn't have earned those stripes
Bloomsburg Army Reserve Center
unless you have a very special talent.
14^9 old Berwick Road
Expertise.
Leadership. Know-how.
Bloomsburg* Pa,' Nam** _
AHHrAgg
And these are qualities we urgently
. r _ _, r^- ^V^V^' r ~r '
^
^
need.
City
We're prepared to pay for them, too.
StRte^^^r Jlr > Vr/^ ^ ^. ~f Sj / ^_r~J L
Any branch of the service. One year *
zjp
enlistments.
Phone^^T^I^ So try us. Join us.
Age ~~~^
Visit, Write or Call in Bloomsburg
j
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Phone 784-4746
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