The capitolist. (Middletown, Pa.) 1969-1973, November 09, 1972, Image 4

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Social Committee
In recent meetings, the Social
Committee has been reorganized
into a more cohesive body by
which to effectively direct the
more enjoyable aspects of
campus life.
A nine member policy board,
composed of the co-chairmen
and the seven sub-committee
chairmen, aie the official voting
members of the committee. The
voting power has been limited to
these people as dictated by the
guidelines established by the
Student Government
Constitution.
Don Snyder and Ray
Nearhood serve as co-chairmen
of the central committee.
Sub-committee directors and
their specific duties include:
John Sheridan, Major Events;
Debbie Botts, Movie ; Fred
Manas, Dances; Deb Hasseman,
Weekend Events; Jim Quill,
Special Activities; Ed Ganssle,
Public Relations; and Paul
Mirable, Coffee house Circuit.
Ms. Nancy Colnes, campus
Student Activities Coordinator
under the Office of Student
Affairs, is advisor to the
committee.
At the November Ist
meeting, plans for the Rob
Wessel concert, scheduled for
Sunday, November 12 at 8:30 in
the Student Center, were
finalized. The committee will
also sponsor a hayride next
Rec/Ath
News
SHUFFLEBOARD competition
has begun with Ron Warhola
winning over Rick Geiger, 21 to
19 and 21 to 16. Mike Senovich
scored a win over Joe Chrin--no
scores available on this match in
time for the press. Games are
played at the Student Center.
BASKETBALL season will soon
be getting underway. Practice is
expected to begin in the very
near future. All team members
who have not as yet had their
physicals, please do so as soon as
possible.
VOLLEYBALL - Out of 3 games
scheduled to date only 1 game
has been played as scheduled.
The Hotshots, Tim Duke,
Captain won over the Senior
BCT, Ralph Romantine,
Captain: 11 to 6 and 12 to 7.
FLAG FOOTBALL - Winning
teams will soon be going into the
Championship games. Monday,
November 13, Preliminaries will
be played at 6:00, 7:00, 8:00
and 9:00 p.m. on the Capitol
Campus athletic field under the
lights. Tuesday, November 14 is
Semi-Finals at 7:00 and 8:30
p.m. Thursday, November 16
the Championship games will be
played at 8:00 p.m. Saturday,
November 18 the Capitol
Campus champions will play the
Middletown champions at 8:00
p.m. Tuesday, November 28 the
Invitational Tournament
Preliminaries will be played at
6:00, 7:00, 8:00, and 9:00 p.m.
Wednesday, November 29 the
Invitational Semi-Finals will be
played at 7:00 and 8:30 p.m.
Saturday, December 2 the
Invitational Championship game
will at 8:00 p.m.
** * *
organizes
Friday. The event will include a
bonfire along with food and
beverages after the ride. Tickets
will soon be on sale in
Vendorville. Other topics
discussed included a Music
Fesitval and Nostalgia Week. The
Social Committee voted
unanimously to accept a motion
calling for "consideration" of
holding such a music festival as
its major spring event. It was
generally decided the festival
cannot be one on the scale of
last May's Harrisburg Rock
Festival II which drew upwards
of 30,000 people to the campus.
Members of Good People
Productions, who were largely
responsible for staging last year's
rock festival, will work directly
with the sub-committee on
Major Events to plan the affair.
Details will be finalized at a later
date. A survey which would
allow other students to have
input into the planning of the
music festival is currently in
preparaTlON.
The committee voted to stage
a nostalgia week during the
period of January 26 through
February 3, 1973. The exact
nature of nostalgia week and its
various concepts will be further
discussed at the next meeting on
Wednesday, November 15 at
6:30 p.m. in the New Birth
coffee house, Meade Heights.
Journals
can't be sued
San Francisco, Cal. (CPS)-- A
U.S. court of appeals recently
upheld a decision that
newspapers are not employment
agencies, and are not prohibited
by the 1964 Civil Rights Act
from using sex designations in
classified advertising.
The three judge panel said it
could find no dictionary of
legislation support for the idea
that a newspaper is an
employment agency when it
runs classified job ads.
The court was upholding a
1970 decision dismissing a case
against the San Francisco
Newspaper printing company.
The suit had tried to stop the
use of sex designations in the
"SAN FRANCISCO
CHRONICLE" and the
"EXAMINER."
Field Trip
The Social Science and
Regional Planning program is
sponsoring a field trip to Reston
and Newton, Va., supposedly
two of the last ideally pollution
free cities in the country.
The excursion is scheduled
for Wednesday, Nov. 15 with an
approximate cost of $5 for the
round-trip by bus. The bus will
leave the rear parking lot of the
main building at 7:30 a.m. and
return from Reston at 6:00 p.m.
of the same day.
All are welcome - faculty,
staff and students. For
additional information contact
Prof. Ambrose Klain in W-257 or
phone 787-7953. Also you can
contact Cynthia Claroni at
944-1938 or phone radio station
WZAP between five and six p.m.
** * *
THE CAPITOLIST
Dr. Richard H. Heindel, Dean
of Faculty, has announced a
partial listing of undergraduate
and graduate courses to be
offered during the winter term
1973 in the area of Special
Topics.
At the undergraduate level
the following will be offered:
AFRAS 4 9 8 A
PRE-COLONIAL AFRICA -
Study of the history and culture
of the African people from the
dawn of man to the scramble for
Africa
AM ST 498 D THE
AMERICAN REVOLUTION
AND EARLY NATIONAL
EXPERIENCE - A survey of the
political and institutional history
of the revolutionary,
constitutional, and early
national periods of the new
nation.
BUS 4988 PERSONNEL
MANAGEMENT - Examination
of the problems in effectively
selecting, utilizing, developing
and managing human resources
from the viewpoint of the total
organization. Prereq. BUS 360
BUS 4 9 8 C
INFORMATION/DECISION
SYSTEMS - Examine the logic,
structure, design and
implementation of
information/decision systems in
organizations. Prereq. BUS 201,
310, 360, 380 and ECON 310 or
permission of instructor.
BUS 498 D ECONOMETRICS
- Application of statistical
methods to economic theory to
obtain numerical estimates of
Communal
Thanksgiving
Dinner II
This year, The Head Shop
will repeat one of last year's
most successful activities. It is
the Communal Thanksgiving
meal to be held Tuesday,
November 21, 1972 at 8 p.m. in
the Student Center. It is an
opportunity to enjoy
Pilgrim-style the culinary
specialities of the Capitol
Community, replete with
turkey, stuffing and
entertainment.
Participating in the meal will
cost $.75 and a dish of food.
Food categories include:
vegetables; potatoes (baked or
candied yams); salads; desserts;
condiments (cranberry sauce,
butter, salt and pepper); and
bread. A table will be set up in
Vendorville from November 8 to
15th from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
daily for the collection of
money and food sign-up. To
enable as- many people as
possible to participate, it is
suggested that residence hall
students sign up for items that
can be purchased rather than
cooked (breads, condiments,
de sse r t s)? and all others
volunteer to cook things.
Mr. Norman Gaut reau,
Manager, Department of
Housing and Food Services, has
volunteered to cook the turkeys,
and to provide china and
silverware. So come one and all
to the feast! Remember - sign up
in Vendorville from November 8
th 15th.
Special Topics Courses Announced
the economics relationships and
verify some economic theorems.
Prereq. ECON 310, 311 and
BUS 382.
BUS 498 E ADVERTISING -
Relationships of advertising to
modern business organizations
and its place in marketing and
distribution. Prereq. BUS 370
HUMAN 498 C CREATIVE
WRITING - Guided practice in
the writing of short fiction,
plays, poetry, or non-fiction
writing of a self-reflective or
disclosing nature.
MET 498 A METHODS IN
ELASTIC AND PLASTIC
DESIGN - Continuation of
Strength of Materials and
Machine Design with emphasis
on advanced methods of design
and analysis of machine
members. Prereq. MATH 221
SO SC 498 C HUMAN
SERVICES WORK-STUDY - A
work-study project in the Public
and Voluntary Social Agencies
in the Greater Harrisburg region.
SO SC 498 D CIVIL
LIBERTIES - The course
considers the fundamental
problems relating to civil
liberties and the administration
of justice. Specific attention is
given to the questions of
censorship and obscenity,
political rights and internal
security, criminal justice and the
politics of law and order.
Beta Chi
SLAVE DANCE
Featuring
Ridge Road
Nov. 14TH 9:00 - 1:00 am
stunt Center
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SO SC 4 9 8 E
ACCOUNTABILITY OF
PUBLIC BUREAUCRACIES -
Strategies of accountability for
public agencies with an analysis
of their rationale and
effectiveness in the urban milieu.
PS SC 498 B
INTRODUCTION TO
CONTEMPORARY
SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY -
Introduce the student to basic
sociological concepts and the use
of theory in the explanation of
current sociological problems
and developing empirical
research.
PS SC 498 C SMALL
GROUPS - To provide an
understanding of small group
process, and a firm background
in the experimental literature on
the psychology of groups.
At the graduate level, the
following will be offered: ED
597-Educational Research
Designs; Administration 597 -
Urban Problems; and
Administration 5978- Public
Service Systems.
A reminder that
pre-registration advisement for
the winter term begins one week
from today and will run until
November 22. Faculty advisors
will have a comprehensive listing
of Special Topics as well as a
definitive schedule of regular
courses to be offered.
ltdoesn't
amount
to much.
November 9, 1972
* * *