rdunkelb
Mon, 05/06/2024 - 17:41
Edited Text
r i\l %f r % 9 0 r » » w r % w r - *r% B

Russian Poet Sp eaks

By Peggy Moran
"Joseph Brodsky is not only
the outstanding Russian poet of
our day , but also the foremost
poet of his generation. " So said
Mrs. Marylou Johns of
Bloomsburg 's Arts Council , as
she intro duced Russian poet ,
Joseph
Brodsky
in the
Multipurpose Room in Kehr
Union Tuesday
evening,
Februar y 6.
A native of Leningrad Russia ,
Mr. Brodsk y comes from a long
line of poets. His poetry is
contemporary in style , but
many of his themes are root ed
in the past.
Dr. Susan Rusinko of BSC's
English Department read his
poetry in English , then Mr.
Brodsky reread them in
Russian for the full impact of
their meaning.
Pensive , yet carrying a sense
of urgency was the fir st
reading , "Verses on the Death
-of T. S. Eliot" . Here Mr.
Brodsky concentrated mainly
on his impressions of Eliot and
certain events in his life that
affected his writing.
The second poem , titled
"Love ", was an emotional song
by a man who has lost the
woman he loves. He tells of his
hopes for the ir love when he
says, "I dreamt you were with
child...children justify our
nakedness ".
"I shall begin t o speak when I
am fed up wit h the dark ". This
line from "Still Life " tells abou t
Brodsk y's life, as does the
ent ire poem. This is also the
first of his p oems where he
addresses the audience as indiv iduals .
He continues ,. "Peo ple and
things move in...it is better to

live in the dark" . This is
Brodsky 's answer to how to live
with hollow people. He holds
that things are better because
they aren 't cruel and they won't
turn against you. But his final
resolve is found in the line "the
grave will render all' alike ".
In "Anno Donini " Brodsky
makes the first of numerous
allusions to and about God. He
talks of the Nativity and how
people "replace Jesus ' halo
with lies and the Immaculate
Conception with gossip".
During his first year of exile
in Russia , Brodsky wrote "I
was so much alone ". Here he
addresses both God and his
audience directl y.
He writes , "A shadow of
mindlessness has crossed my
eyes,...my shadow runs - loses
itself among its shadowy
doubl es as I could never do....
fate wounds me with a blunted
needle."
It is here that Brodsky 's
poetry reaches such a height of
personal
revelation
and
emotion. It is as if he were
pleading with you to understand
his feelings and thoughts.
In "Almost an Elegy "
Brodsky begins with "I too was
happy once" . From here he
makes man y Bi blica l allus ions
and keeps the listener in constant touch wit h the mon ths of
the year.
Continuing
with "Nunc
Diminitis", the stor y of the
Presentat ion of the I nfan t in the
Temple. This event is especiall y
significant to Brodsky because
he marks it as the transition
f rom the Old t o the New
testament in the Bible.
Brodsk y's final

poem was

(please .t urn to page two )

. k^AABA^ta-^*«^h.^A

«hb^mu^K.Mi

- ¦ ¦..> » ¦*¦¦
.¦ *l ",hj. _- -^ ¦ ¦ ». ¦.¦_ ¦' ¦ <
'

'.

^^^h>

¦> *^^h*

i ¦.
^
^
^

¦# • -w

J aycees select :

Man of th e Year

Dr. James H. McCormick ,
President of Bloomsburg State
College, has been selected as
one of the Pennsylvania
Jaycees "Ten Outstanding
Young Men for 1974." according
to Frank G. Santillo , State
Jaycee TOYM Chairman from
Norristown , Pennsylvania .
:
Dr.
McCormick
was
|
nominated by the Bloomsburg
Jaycees of which Albert
]
j
Whitenight is President. The
Bloomsburg chapter
was
ranked number one in Pennsylvania during 1973 for out<
standing service .
A candidate 's selection is
j
based on dedication to his
President McCormick
profession , family, church and
community. He may not be over
36 years of age. The "Ten
Outstanding Youn g Men "
Banquet was held on Saturday,
February 2, 1974, at the George
Washington Motor Lodge ,
Valley Forge , Pennsylvan ia.
In his acceptance speech Dr.
McCormick noted , "My success
as an educat ional leader is
dependent upon the work of
many people , community
Foreign Study Award s
leaders
such as the J aycees as
I n terna ti onal E du cat ional
well
as
college personnel who
awards will be ava ilable for
are
ded
i
cat ing themselves to
*
foreign study at th e unt
he
g
oal
of
quality educat ion at
dergraduate and - or graduate
Bloomsburg
State College. „
level for the college year 1975I
n
honorin
g my work th is
76.
even
i
n
g
y
ou
are , essentially ,
Rotar y Distric t 737 Inrecogniz
i
ng
t
he
efforts of these
ternat ional is plann ing to select
man
y
ind
i
v
i
duals.
"
one student f or a graduate
Dr. McCormick , at the age of
fellowship and anothe r applican t for an under graduate 34, assumed one of the most
scholarshi p before March 15. important and challenging
Each student must file the res pons ibilit ies in higher
necessary application blank , education — that of college
language ability form and president. He is currently the
recommendation cert ification youngest college president in
the Commonwealth' s system of
before March 1, 1974.
Any interested students t hirteen state colleges and
should contact Dr. Robert C. Indfana Universit y. His degrees
M iller , Office for International ¦ were earned at the Indiana
Wal ler "Ad- Universit y of Penns yVania and
Studies
in
ministration Building , Room 39 the University of Pittsbur gh. He
for forms or additional in- has taken additional p ost "
doctoral work at the Universit y
format ion.
¦•"
¦ ^^ ¦¦^^^^^^ ^¦¦fKWwWWaOBHWMiMBi ^BMBwWWMPBBBWtt

Ite ms
of
In terest

Round

Forenslcs

out

your

Winter

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8 —
Dance to Ha|i-Kehr Union , 9
p.m.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 9
— Swi mming
BSC
vs .
Oneonta—Nelson Field House,
2 p.m.
Basketball BSC vt. Mansfield — Nelson Field House,
6:15 p.m. & 8:00 p.m.
BNE Concert Featuring
Bill y Preston and Gra ham
Centra l Stati on — Haas
Au d itoriu m, 10:15 p.m. A

Bus To East Stroudsbu rg
M.E.N.C. is sponsor ing a bus to
the East Stroudsbu rg basketball game on Wedn esday,
February 13. Student s can sign
up in Kehr Union from 10-3
daily .
Speed Readin g Course
A Speed Readin g Course is
being offered on Monda ys and
Wednesda ys with three sections
(U-12; 1-2; 2-3.) If interested ,
contact the secreta ry of the
Reading Clinic at 389-3209. This
course will start Februar y 11.
The classes are limited so it will

be a first come first served
(pleaso turn to [page tour )

of Pittsburgh.
Columbia
University, and the Universi ty
of Michigan.
Dr. McCormick began his
teach ing car eer as a social
studies teacher in the Punxsutawney Area Joint School
system where he taught from
1959-1961. For the next three
years he was an Administrative
Intern to the Superintendent
and Secondary Administrator
at Baldwin-Whitehall schools in
Pittsburgh. The following year
he was Assistant Superintendent at Washington City
School in Washington , Pennsylvania. From 1965 until his
appointment at Bloomsburg in
1973, Dr. McCormick served
successively as Assistant Dean
of Academic Affairs , Acting
Dean of Teacher Education ,
Assistant to the President and
Vice President
for Administration at Shippensburg
State College.
At the age of 20, Dr. McCorm ick was awarded the Falk
Intern in Politics. As a result of
the award , which is granted
annua lly to a political science
studen t, he served as Assistant
to the Legislative Secretary of
Governor David L. Lawrence.
Dr. Mc Corm ick is a p ast
member of the American
Cancer Society , Cumberland
County Unit , serv ing on the
Board of Trustees and Chairman , Public Educat ion Committee; a past Elder of the
Central Presb yterian Church of
Chambersburg,
Pa. , and
currently a member of the First
Presb yter ian Church
of
Bloomsburg ; a past President
of the Chambersburg Kiwanis
Club and currentl y a member of
the Bloomsburg Kiwanis Club.
In 1973 he was appointed a
member of the Executive Board
of the Columbia-Monto ur
Council of Boy Scouts of
America. He is also a 32 degree
Mason.
The young administrator is a

member of the Executive

Winter Weekend
Schedule

. Weekend with a new forensics
and
exp erience.
Sat iric
humorous entertainm ent—free !
Sunda y, February 10, 9 p.m. in
the Coffeehouse 2nd floor Kehr
Union. Come and enj oy!

Jose ph Brodtk y at he appeared In the Union on Tuesday evening .
Dr. Susan Rusinko of the English Department who acted as tran(Photo by A. Berper )
slator js teen to his . right.

•/

limited number of ti cket s are
still available at the Kehr

Committee and Chairman of the
Budget and Fees Committee of
the Board of Pennsylvania State
College
and
University
Presidents and a member of the
Academic and Student Personnel Comm it tee , American
Association of Stat e Colleges
and Universities .
He has had articles published
in national and state journals
and is listed in several
biographical listings including
Who 's Who in the East and
Outstanding Educators of
America.

Union Informatio n Desk.
SPSEA Meeting
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10 There will be an import ant
Walter Simon 's Art Exhibit
SPSEA meeting Monday nighX
opens Haas Gallery of Art ' Feb. 11, ftOO p.m. in
Kuster
( Receptio n at 7:30 p.m.)
Aud , , Hart llne. The ApCoffee house spon sored by
palachia n Summer Study
Forens ic Societ y "Fun With
Program in Kentu cky will be

.

Words ' Speeches, Skits and
Surpri se

Guests

Union, 9 p.m.



Kehr

discussed and slides will be
shown. Every one is invited !

EDITORIAL

By some odd coincidence, a
minor problem seems to befall
the M&G each semester. But
like most journalistic enterprises, the staff of the M&G
usually arrives at an equitable
solution and takes the
necessary corrective action.
Our problem this semester is
an ageless one — Freedom of
the Press. For some people it
may have a very narrow
definition , while for others the
First Amendment is interpreted
very loosely. I prefer the latter,
for although I am not a
reporter , per se, I nevertheless
am deeply involved in all the
functions of the Maroon and
Gold News.
Therefore, I would like to
enumerate the editorial policy
of the M&G concerning
Freedom of the Press. (1) The M&G is given wide
editorial powers by the BSC
Joint Statement on Rights ,
Freedoms and Responsibilities
of Students ( Section IV-D).
Section IV-D states, in part,
"Faculty, administrators, and
students who are not staff
members may provide advice
and criticism but shall not
exercise any power of veto or
censorship over news or
editorial content. " Responsibility for final approval of all
content will rest with the
student editor.
(2) In a meeting earlier this
semester with Dr. McCormick ,

a promise not to try to persuade
Secondly is the news story
our reporting of the facts as we
covered by an M&G reporter. In
this case no proofing is required
saw them was given to us. Any
by anyone outside the staff ,
censorship of any kind would
not take place. If a college
unless the reporter feels it is
president can provide that
necessary to insure 100 per cent
promise, the editorial staff feels
accuracy.
that the rest of the college
I would hope that no incommunity can do likewise .
dividual misconstrues the
(3) We do not advertently
above policy as a "closed-door"
to outside opinion or advise. The
misprint the facts of any news,
feature or sports story. Our
M&G is not above the advice
given by those who may be
reporters make every attempt
to gain first-hand information ¦knowledgeable in a particular
from those in the know.
field. We ask that we be allowed
(4) There are two types of
to run the newspaper in an adult
news stories which are printed
fashion similar to the New York
in the M&G. First, campus
Times or the Morning Press —
with Freedom of the Press and
personnel submit press releases
which hopefully are accurate. If
a responsibility for what we
print.
a question arises as to its
content, an attempt is made to
We ask not a pat on the back
rectify errors prior to printing.
for doing good nor do we need a
slap on the fingers when we err ;
However, if the person sufc
we do, however, ask for your
mitting the article wishes to see
trust.
the final draft , the M&G will
Frank Lorah
provide a copy for proofing.

The Loch AA awr
Secret - Part V

(Part Five)
By Duane Long
On the morning of March
10th, 1942, Loch Mawr was as
still as a cemetery. The RAF
radar network had notified the
village of an unidentified aircraft in the vicinity.
The sighting was not a Luft-

Alaskan Job Rumor
Creates Hards hi p
¦

Rumors of summer jobs
available for college student
laborers in Alaska have created
quite a stir across the nation .
The recent signing into law of
the Trans-Alaska Pipeline
Authorization Act by the
President has produced a
misimpression that construction of the pipeline has
already begun. As many as six
hundred persons come each
month to Alaska in search of
these "well-paid" positions
which are non-existent. At best
these people are disappointed.
Usually whole families find
themselves stranded far from
relatives and friends.
Several months ago the
Alyeska Pipeline Service
Company in Anchorage began a
campaign through the news
media to correctly inform job
seekers about pipeline emby
Coverage
ployment.

television and radio commercials, newsclips and advertisements and free informational brochures is
rampant but still people flock
for jobs .
The truth is that construction
has not yet begun and will not
begin until the many legal and
administrative hurdles are
crossed. When these activities
do commence, contracts will be
awarded to various construction companies by Alyeska
and the hiring will be done by
them. Applications should not
be addressed to Alyeska. Interested persons shoul d watch
for announcements of the award
of contracts in the national
press and trade journals and
should apply directly to those
selected contractors.
Alyeska recommends that
"above all , do not come directly
to Alaska in search of a job."
The unemployment rate in the
( please turn to page four)

Boo k Donat ion As
Service Proj ect

The newly-developed libra ry
at Chase Correctional Institute
in Dallas, Pennsy lvania , has
req uested t he donation of any
new or used magazines and
books by BSC st udents and
facul ty. Delta Epsilon Beta and
La mbda Chi Alpha have undertaken this appeal as a service proj ect and will begin a
drive on Monday, Februer y 11
w hi c h w i l continue until
Frida y, February 22 .

*
The inmates of this institution

are in sore need of material to
fur ther their education and
broaden their Intellect. Paper
backs, novels and texts are
welcome , as well as cash

donations. Stories concerning
wea pons, guns or explosives
and children's literature are
requested not to be donated.
A goal sur passing one

thousand books and magazines
has been set up by DEB' s and
Lambda Chi Boxes f or deposits
will be placed in all dorms. A
st a ti on w i l be manned in Waller
Hall, adj acent to the old post
office from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.,
Monday
th rough
Fri da y.
P ersons wishing to donate an
overabundance of books w it h no
way of tr ansporting them to
cam pus may call 784-8378
any ti me.
G et rid of those old G eneral
Psycholog y texts and any
dogearred paperb acks cluttering up your rooms. They
would be much app reciated by
the occupants of Chase and
perhaps produce a wiser person
upon final discharg e.

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ MMnHMMMMMMMMM ^HMaaBHH

waffe bomber, however, but an
alien spacecraft . It was
dispatched after receiving the
distress signal sent out by the
rescue ship. The vessel soared
over the loch and hovered there,
searching for some sign of the
livestock carrier . Upon locating
it , a team of alien divers swam
down to the saucer, set the
automatic controls and rigged a
magnetic "towline," since the
additional weight of the flooded
compartment was too much for
the engines to handle.
As the saucer was raised from
the bottom , a squadron of RAF
Spitfires appeared from over
the horizon. The rescue ship,
with the livestock carrier in
tow, headed at great speed
along 50 degrees north latitude
to a point 5 miles off the coast of
Cape Sable, Nova Scotia.
It was the intent of the alien
commander to drain the water
from the flooded compartment,
and then leave the planet from
the North Pole where the
earth's magnetic field is the
weakest. He felt he had good
cover in the thick sea fog whicii
shrouded the coast.
U-214 captain Rudolph Von
Shilden considered the dense
fog ample protection for
recharging his submarine 's
batteries. Only minutes after
surfacing, h owever , the sub's
radarman informed him of two
moving
aerial - sightings
towards them. Von Shilden
ordered the 90mm deck gun
primed and loaded. The gun
crew stood ready. In all , five of
the ship's compliment of 41 men
were on deck.
Recon phot ographer H einrich
Troeder was j ust behind the
heavy machine gun mount, aft
of t he conning t ower. He had
j ust started taking pict ures
when the t wo alien spacecraft
app eared t hrough t he mi sts,
about 300 yards off the starboard bow.
The 90mm deck cannon

cracked like thunder. The shell

missed the lead ship but punched through the hull of t he
towed vessel. The internal blast
sent the saucer i nto t he fr igi d
waters. It hun g suspended in the
ripp ling waves for a moment,
then sank f orever int o the
depths of the Atlantic.
W ithin 20 seconds, t he breech
was cleared for a second shot ,
Von Shilden barked -out the
firing order
aga in. The
p roj ectile glanced off the
curved hull of the remainin g
ship and detonated harmlessl y
in the air. Before the Nazi U( please turn to page four )

presenti ng
Rich Lynn , President of BSC' s Veterans Club is shown
Vets Club
for
the
compl imentar y tickets to Dr. McCormick
Columbia
in
the
Basketball Classic. The proce eds wi ll be used
be held
w
ill
Count y United Fund Drive now under way. The Classic
Two
Gymnas
ium.
Monda y, Februa ry n at 8 p.m. in Centennia l
and
Faculty
games will be provided . The Vets Club wil l play BSC's
again st the
the WHLM Allstars and Sta te Police will com pete
(Photo by D! Maresh)
Sororit y Allstars.

¦¦

q

of the Trojan War and many

mythical allusions.

DfOOSkV
-

All of these poems are
available in Mr. Brodsky's book
"The Selected Poems of Joseph
Brodsky."

,#
-«\ *
( from page
- one)
"Odysseus to Telemicus". This
incorporates some of the story

THE MAROON AND GOLD
Susan L. Sprague, Editor-in-Ch ief
Frank Lorah , Assistant Editor

• • ^
d^
'
lo^o
....Ouij
M LmiB

Business Manager
Advertisemen t Manager

V er

Fe*«re Editor
Sports Editor

" »°5
iim MeiKK

SSSrSfil~ ::::::::::::::::: ::":r j &-ii-m~ȣ2C
-__„ cMunr

Kathy Jose ph

a^^ nager:::::: :::::::::::::

ys
"" Sffi
warn naas

Cartoonist
Director of Publications , Faculty Adviser

Mr. K. Hoffman

Photoaraohers: Dan Maresh , Jr., Patty White , Alanna Berger , Becky Jones,
Tom Leahy , Ron Troy. Donna Weller , Debbie Schneider , Susan Worley, Georg e
Gruber , Judy Scott , Lee Eggert, Ingrid Lou
Staff: Tom Kurtz, Craig Winters, Dale Myers, Debbie Bull, Germaine Germeyer, Eric Yamoah, Lorna Richey, Scott Zahm, Sandy Millar d, Sue Stig er,
Mary Ellen Lesho, Beth GibMe ,' Peggy Moran , Pat Farnack. Karen Stork, Sue
Williams, Ellen Doyle, Lise Fanelli, Anthony Creamer , Christ ine Szabo, Dan
Demczko
The M&G offices are locat ed on the second flo or of Kehr Union. The phone
number is 3W-310I. All copy and advertising sho uld be submitted by t p.m. on
Sunday for Wednesdays edition, and by « p.m. on Tuesday for Friday edition.
's
The M*G is governed by the Editorial Board, w ith final respon sibility for all
l>9 with m
r
Ed'»«as
state
d
-'n.Chie#,
in the Joint Statement on
^}
»,
^lFreedoms
Rights,
and Responsi bilities of Students of Bloomsburg Stat e College.
t
f0
re$?.n? *? rJ? h •*" ¦" letler » and e<*V "bmltted. A maxi mum
«iV£
oia» 2£S
word s will be palced
on all Letters to the Editor, with an allowan ce for
special exceptions.
NOTE s The opi nions voiced in the columns, featur e articles and edit orials of the
MftG are not necessarily share d by the entire staff.

Send the FTD
LoveBundle" and the
Extra Touch of
Joie de Fleur perfume.
When she's there
and you 're here"

^\x^^^ff^tl^MM
Mrl f ' (

lWy8^^
f
I
and it's Valentine's Day, j ^ O J S B Bs
(?''
S
I S K^

send her the FTD

KlSBBI f ^f/
LoveBundle Bouquet S^
C*fc^^^KJ?^Pi
A
-tender blossoms ^^jj j B^lSaB^
\
""Jlw^A
heart sachet with a
^^^
^
capsule of FTD's vK AM
O
j^
T
f
t
|
^
^|
l\
exclusive new W'-^^^HBHHK^ ^ 1pK \
perfume,Joie detQ f
x
\
C^x^nfFnv
1 ^Fleur. Call or visit your
FTD Florist today. He can
send your flowers across the
street or across the country.

\
NNQxtE/
'"
pip
'
^X
^J
( JT *K
x^^^i^
vr_J^ £\\\
^v

,

$1250# vMd

Usually available lor less Ihun JLbCmI

,
'As an in ck'fx.'ivitMit IhisIucsmiuim, each
FTD Member Floils l Mils his own prices.
1
O1974 Florists Transworld Delivery Association.

sSWi^/ v^ '

,

^^:*w
.oVmir .L 1 V . .-, iisl
lotl< :11 l' lo • ,,
*" '

, ,

'.

,

Seven fir sts , f our sec onds , Huskies win 6th
The

Huskies outsw im MSC

challenge

of

the

Millersville Mara uder swim
team proved to be a watereddown threat , as BSC's Husky
waterpu ps outsw am MSC in

their own pool last Saturday

with a score of 37-55.

With seven first- place finishes

and four seconds behind them,
Bloomsburg had less trouble
defeating MSC than the close
score indicates, as many of the
Huskies ' regulars swam only
unofficiall y.

Bloomsbur g State got off on
the ri ght foot with a win in the
400-yard medley rela y, where "
Geor ge King, Woody Jones, Ed
Ortals -and Dane Salde covered
the distance in 4:05.5 to give the
locals a seven-point margin.
BSC also got individual wins

from Bill Ewell, Tim Sopko,
Eri c; Cureton, Dave Salde and
Steve Packer .
Ewell copped first-place
finishes in both the 1,000-yard'
freestyle and the 200-yard
butterfl y events. He won the
1,000-yarder in 11:09.8 and the
butterfly in 2:08.9.

I

Millersville took the 200-yard

~

Ewell took the 200 butterfly
and Slade followed suit in the
100-yard freestyle , posting a
winning time of 51.4 and increasing the locals' lead to 4524.
Millersville won the 200-yard
backstroke
and
500-yard
freestyle but then Steve Packer
won the 200-yard breaststroke
in 2:32.7 and BSC led 53-43.

The three-meter diving was
won by the Marauders but
Cureton and Rick Walter took
second and third for the Huskies
to wrap up the win by giving
BSC a 57=48 edge.

The BSC swimmers now sport
a season mark of six wins
against just three defeats.

/SbeTTo ^^
hosts Oneota tomorrow at 2.

Borro we d Space

By Bill Sipler
As winter sports w i nd down,
one has to look at the playoff
picture in the NHL and NBA.
Play offs determine the Stanley
Cup in hockey and the " world
champ ionship" in the NBA. If

.-

free style to pull within thr ee
points at 14-11 but then Sopko
copped the 50-yard freestyl e
swim in 23.7 seconds to widen
the Huskies' mar gin to 19-15.
The 200-yard " individual
medley went to the Marauders
but then BSC' s Eric Cureton
compiled 199.50 total points to
win th e one-meter diving
compet ition and the score stood
at 29-23, Bloomsburg.

the rival leagues in each sport
merge, as is expected by the
negotiations between the NBA
and the ABA and the NHL and
the fledgling WHA , the old
honors of the pro vanguard will
t ruly
become national ,
although the Stanley cup is
world wide on the pro level as
there are only pro teams in

Canada and the United States .
NBA Basketball
NBA basketball , in fact pro
ball in general, has gone from
being a popular national sport
. to, at least attendance wise, a

second rate sport. It has
become hard to fill arenas for

pro teams when they have to
compete with the faster indoor
sport of hockeiy . Also pro

with the loser in the L.A.,
Golden State matchup filling
out the final slot.

The way the playoffs set up
New York will play Capital and
Boston will play Atlanta for the
semi-finals in the East with
Boston and New York advancing to the finals in the East.
In the West , Milwaukee and
Chicago will go against the L.A .
- Golden * State outcome .
Whoever matches up with
Milwaukee, Golden State, will
meet with Chicago in the finals .
The final outcome should be

Boston versus Golden State in
the final with Boston winning in

seven games.

NHL East vers us West
..(sur prise )
The NHL is known for its.
erratic idea of ha ving playoff s
so that two east teams meet for
the Stanley Cup. The playoff s

baske tball has cr imped its style
are set up so that t he fi rst and
of pla y with rules that f orce the
conce p t of t he game t o be , four t h and the second and third
place teams in each division
common place . Many feel that
pa ir off for the openin g seven
the game has degenerated into
game
series . Then the winners
a game of run and shoot , a game
of
the
series switch division
that is dominated by the big
with
the
winn ers of the first and
men like M ilwaukee 's Kareem
fourth
p
lace
ma t ch up pla y the
J abar.
o
t
her
dec
i
sion
second and third
In the NBA th is year (our
plac
e
winner
. These two
teams are looking at almost
playoffs
determine
the final
sure playoff bids . Milwaukee , playoff
contenders
.
This
year ,
Chicago Capital (Baltimore ),
however
,
there
is
a
catch
from
and Boston. Other teams that
the
Western
Division
.
are competin g for slots are New
York , Los A ngeles Golden State

I

¦

In the West , there are two
teams capable of reaching the
final s
this
year.
The
Philadel phia Flyers and the
Chicago Black Hawks are both
legitimate
contenders .
Currently the Flyers are in first
place and lead Chicago. The two
other slots are occupied by
Saint Louis and Atlanta with
Minnesota and Los Angeles in
close contention .

In the East , Boston is a
surprise leader over highly
favored Montreal . However ,
when you look a t t he lea gue
'scorin g stats , Boston has the top
three slots with Phil Esposito ,
Bobby Orr and Ken Hodge
supplying the scoring power for
the Bruins . World Champio n
M ontreal is in second , with New
York and Toronto in the last two
slots. Buffalo is the only team
tha t can challenge for a pla yoff
spot this year.
Depending on how the third

and four t h place slots work out.

The semifinals should be Boston
versus Philadel phia
and
Montreal or New York ver sus
Chicago. Montreal should win
out over the Black Hawks and ,
de pendin g on Bobby Orr 's
condiiton , the Fl yers could edge
Boston for the other final.
Mon treal should win the Stanl ey
Cu p again but not without some
challenge from the West.
Next week: ABA and WIIL

and Atlanta .
The way the pla yoffs work are
that the four teams that finish
second pla y t he first place

tearrt s in the opposite sections in
the warm up . series. These
sect ions are divided by the eastwest relationshi p. The winners
then p lay to decide who
represe nts the East and the
West for the f i nale series .
The wa y it a pp ears now
Boston , Milwaukee and Capital
should finish first in their
divisions. The Western Division
is hot ly contested between L.A,
and Golden State. Teams that
should finish second are Chica go, New York , and Atlant a

KSC
from
away
team.
team
pulls
rela
a
BSC
intently as their
y
)
B.Sipler
by
(Photo
... __
———

Eric Keoteritz clears the bar at 14 feet to set a new tea m record
last week at ESSC. Keoteriti is one of the fine young runners Coach
" ( Photo by D. Maresh )
Puhl has on his staff.

i i.i hi) t.fww p u M nwqTT

i

191.H1 . ,ijf>—tw )M^
. m l m *> n^w ' .1 y I. w p\ fy

' ¦•* / / - - l ^^ f ^f fff i.f^ ^j ^ ^
>
f
ic
*

i^i/JV***WAWTJ " w '^™*""'

-.^—^^ anim ^sf wvmf «y«">^c
'*v ¦^^ m "**' --.''

A9WJ

Jerry Radocha (above ) holds the ball durin g BSC' s rout of
Millersville last week. Below John Willis shoots over the Millersville center for two points. The Huskies host Mansfield tomorrow
night at e.
(Photos by R. Troy )

BLOOMS BURG STATE COLLEG E

PAGE POUR

Items

The Loch Mawr Secret
\irom page two ;
feet of the upper deck was instantly red uced to fused and
vaporiz ed steel by the deadly
apparatus. Troe der pulled a life
craft from -its collapsable davit ,
and pushed-off from the doomed
sub. He was joined by three
other crewmen , who managed
to leaVe the U-boat through the
aft escape hatch .

boat could fire again , a lens-like
object pr ojecting from th e
saucer 's outer hull released a
burst
of therm al
% lethal
neutrons .
The cannon , gun crew and 20

Alaskan Jobs

(from page two)
State is the highest in the
nation ; the winters are the
longest and most severe . There
is an Alaskan law giving j ob
preferenc e to Alaskans and job
seekers should make absolutely
certain that employm ent is
available for them before they
come to prevent severe hardships
.
^
MEN !—WO MEN!

The four sailors watch ed

sadly as the foreward torpedos
exploded, triggered by the heat

MARKET ST. SUNOCO
SERVICE CENTER
7th and Market Sts.
Proprietor
Rick Belinck v
7M-8644

I

BILL'S

JOBS ON SHIPS! No experience required.I
Excellent pay. Worldwide travel. Perfect !
summer job or career. Send $3.00 for !
information. SEAFAX, Dept. 2-L P.O. Box!
2049, Port Angeles. Washington 98362 1
^^^^ ^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

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

BB

Hartzel's Music Store
72 N. Iron St.

Over 300 Guitars
aad Amplifiers

of the flaming deck . A burning

mass of steel was all that was

left of U-214. Soon the surging
sea closed-in over the ship 's
decks and U-214 plunged to the
bottom .
Now the sleeping terror
rested on the rocky floor of the
Atlantic . It was only 10 miles off
the coast of the United States ,
and more poten tially dangerous
than ever .
To Be Continued

Rohrsburg, Pennsylvania
Used Furniture of
All Kinds
784-1063 or 784-0721

A trav eling ar t exhibit will be
on displa y in the Forma l

Lounge of the Kehr College
Union on Febr uary 1 - 2 1 . The
show , consist ing of Bat ik
Painti ng was created by Joa nne
Gigliotti-Valli . Her work has

been known all over the United
States , includin g a Natio na l Art

Compet ition in Florid a , shows
in Pitt sburgh , Penn. State ,
Indiana , Vermo nt and New
York. The art of Batikisa n

HOMEWORKERS
Homew orkers. Earn $1.60
each, mail ing enve lopes . Rush
25c and a self -addre ssed
stampe d envel ope. Gemco,
POB 21244-X28, Indpl s, Ind.
46221

P^^^^^^^^

USED FURNITURE

( from page one )
basis.

L^^ L
l L^^ L^^^ R^^^^^^^^^^^^^
^^^

ancient Javanese process of

colorin g silk hot wax and cold
dyes.

PJ

Guys & Gals needed for summer
employment at National Parks ,
Private Camps, Dude Ranches and
Resorts throughout the nation.
Over 50,000 students aided each
year. For FREE Information on
student assistance program send
self-addressed STAMPED envelope to Opportunity Research ,
Oept. SJO , 55 Flathead Drive ,
KaKspell, MT 59901.
....YOU MUST APPLY EARLY....
THIS STUDENT ASSISTANCE PROGRAM HAS BEEN
REVIEWED BIT THE FEDERAL TBADE COMMISSION

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

For Sept. 74 and
Summer Sessi on 74

RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.

11941 W ILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE #2
LOS ANGELES.CALIF. 90025
1213) 477-8474 or 477-5493

Answerin g Service Phone 784-8833

Our research material is sold for
research assistance only.

Eppley's
Pharmacy

Ideal working con ditions
Excellent Hours
Good Wages

2620 Carlton Court, York ,Pa., 17402

I

FLOWERS.

AW! CUT IT OUT
STUDENTS

(TMt

S12.5Q FTD LoveBundle
with Jole de Fleuf perfume

#£» -rssacx

Hearts and flowers

Am pui?,

j Shampoo
} Trim
I Stv le

C^^fi >5§rY\m

\^-^3l A ™ Do" 't ** dl8Bp J
pointed-sen d earlyl

sf ^ 3\ [
)

MMtMM MinrllO

'

tihaitwl
¦«•«¦¦•'» N.

tUt m

Reg. 5.00

Rt. 11 Bloo msburg , Pa.
784-7220

I

open 9-9 Mon. thru Fri.
9-5 Sat.

m- TWttoi f

FIG
DARKHORSE

Look for our

FREE BUS
TO

¦

CRACKER BARREL

-,
J

O./ O J
$

HAIRPORT

YOUREXTRA
^^
FLOR
IST
TOUCH

Z
' SZtW
rn*
rSL Fuwvm *


$q _ -

K^^^^^^^^^ K^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ K^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Catawissa , Pa.
356-2076

I

j

t -___—————_„_ -_— i
Original Cuts '7.00

pnone us
p ln orBut
C3B8JSi2instotoday.
hurryl

I

COUPON —

r

beautiful bouquet of
H22j^ fresh
flowers...w ith a
\wR ^
ur
r'se.
P de A capsule of
^_ *-nr
-k * Jole
^A
Fleur, FTD's
exclusive
7""* *^%. ;T*
we new
can
fo— ytt£ ) perfume. And
^
&Z ^ rjj bs. Mnd flowers to your
Valentine girl s
TV2CSM8r )
JD laKJTHwJ across the stree t or
ifSsUfGtfmrPsacross the countr y.

\

Fri . Nite :
Sat. Nite :

I KOHR'S FROZEN CUSTARD

WHERE THERE
ARE HEARTS,
THERE ARE

\

CRACKER BARREL

ILiving quarters provided at nominal charge if desired. Send
¦
for application to:

Qr*«t Stanai

I

_^^^ R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^R^Sa

On The Boardwalk — Openings: at Asbury Park, N.J., &
Seaside Heights, N.J.

I
I

J^^^/ ^^^^B^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

I
I

uSS^Hm CAPITOL THEATRE

THE ORIGINAL
HOUR'S FROZEN CUSTARD STORES

•CHANa
•GUERLAW
•FAKRGE
•LANVIN
•PJBNCE MATCHABRU
•ELIZABETHARDIN
•HELENA RUKNSTBN
•DANA
•COTY
•MAX FACTOR

I

I
Office Supp ly
I 112 E. Main Sf.
Bloomsburg,
I
I
784-4323

flT

Enjoy your summer vacation at a cool New Jersey Seashore
Resort working in one of

Prescription SptdaHrt

Ritte r's

A lUCASftMUD/COPPCXA CO. Production
-TmMr~ ™^_.
A UNIVWSAL PICTUW.TECHNICaOR' CPOJS^SSSS> I

GIRLS

MAIN t IRON STREETS

and participate in a question
and answer period concerning
retrenchment .

4S»

NOW ACCEPTING RESERVATIONS

$2.75 per page

college campuses and Indiana
University of Pennsylvania and
the role and position of SCUDon
that issue .
All members of the college
community are urged to attend

Where mere you in '62? Jit

WARHURST APTS
Thousands of Topics

I

. SCUD Chairman to Speak
Arthur B. Sinkler , Chairman
of the Board of State College
and Universi ty Director s '
(SCUD) will address members
of the academic community at
BSC on Monday , February 11,
1974 in Room 79 of Har tline
Science Center at 7:30 pm. Mr.
Sinkler will direct his remarks
towards the issue of retrenchment on the thirteen state

I

Friday and Saturday Feb. 15 and 16
Pickup will be at Long Porch
at 9:00 p.m.
Return time 1:00 a.m.
Dep endi ng upon respon se buses may

continue to run every weekend