C.C. reader. ([Middletown, Pa.]) 1973-1982, October 09, 1975, Image 7

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    Oct. 9, 1975
REC/ATH NEWS
Fall Term 1975 Building Hours
Recreation/Athletics Building
Base Gym
The Soccer Team’s first home game will take place on
Thursday, Oct. 16, at 4:00 p.m. when they will kick-off with
the Northeastern Christian Junior College soccer team.
Prior to that game, they will travel to our Berks Campus on
Saturday, October 11. Kick-off time for that game will be
2:00 p.m.
On Saturday, Oct. 18 The Lincoln University soccer team
will come to Capitol. Kick-off time is 2:00 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 9 The Cross Country Team will head for
Schuylkill Campus and a tri-meet scheduled to begin at 4:00
p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 14 they will be off to NE Christian Jr.
College for a meet scheduled to begin at 3:30 p.m.;
Thursday, Oct. 16 to Lehigh County Community College at
3:30 p.m.; Saturday, Oct. 18 at 1:00 p.m. at Dickenson
Colleae.
Due to circumstances beyond our control at Capitol
Campus the lighted athletic field will not be used during the
present term. The field was completely renovated last spring
and because of various problems, some of the speeding will
have to be done over again. Everybody is asked to cooperate
by staying off the field!!!!
The Intramural Flag Football and Soccer Programs will be
conducted on the two new fields recently completed, one by
the university apartments and the other by the main
building.
VARSITY BASKETBALL
Mr. Phil Morgan has submitted his resignation as varsity
basketball coach due to a transfer in his job assignment.
Replacing Phil will be Mr. Fred Baker. Mr. Baker has prior
coaching experience with the Central Dauphin East High
School systym. He also serves as a basketball scout for the
West Chester State College.
Basketball practice is scheduled to begin Wednesday,
October 15 and will be held in the base gym every Monday
thru Friday from 5:30 to 7:00 p.m. Capitol travels to The
Williamsport Area Community College for a scrimmage
contest on Nov. 18, Tuesday and the 22 game schedule will
officially get.under way on November 25, Tuesday, at 7:30
when Capitol entertains the Schuylkill Campus team in the
Capitol Campus base gymnasium.
The varsity schedule for the fall term 1975 is as follows:
Tues.-Nov.lB-Capitol at Williamsport Area College 8:00p.m
Tues.-Nov. 25 -Schuylkill Campus at Capitol 7:30 p.m
Tues.-Dec. 2 - Phila. College of Pharmacy at Capitol 7:30p.m.
Weds.-Dec. 3 - Capitol at Delaware Campus 8:00p.m
FrirDec. 5 - Lackawanna Jr. College at Capitol 7:30p.m.
Plans are being made to start the following programs:
This range will be equipped with 5 targets beginning the
week of October 13. It is necessary that anyone using the
target area first report to the recreation/athletics building.
The Fencing Club will be meeting every Monday evening at
5:00 p.m. in the recreation/athletics building during the fall
term. Dan Janczewski will be the instructor for this club.
Classes will be held every Monday evening from 7:00 to
9:00 p.m. beginning Monday, October 6. If you are
interested in this program and have not as yet registered, it
is not too late. Fee: $lO.OO is still being accepted for this
class SLIMNASTICS CLASSES
Mnyone interested in participating in a slimnastics
program should attend a meeting at the recreation/athletics
building, Wednesday, October 15 at 3:30 p.m.
HALLMARK CARDS
STATIONERY
GIFTS
CANDLES
PLANT HANGERS
WOODEN WARE
Open Thur. & Fri. Eve
Opposite The
Post Office
Monday thru Friday-8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m,
Saturday & Sunday-2:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m
Tuesdays-6:00 to 10:00 p.m.
Thursdays-Fridays - 5:00 to 9:00 p.m.
Saturdays-Sundays - 3:00 to 9:00 p. m
Wednesdays - 2:00 to 9:00 p. m
SOCCER
CROSS COUNTRY
ATHLETIC FIELD
ARCHERY
FENCING
MARTIAL ARTS
Visit The
JliaWb jWartiri
STORE
During Our 80th ;
Anniversary !
Sale
Starting Oct. 9 \
"Clothing the Men <
In This Area Since 1895" !
Batoiti jHartin
STORE
52 E. Emaus St.
Middletown
Mondays-5:00 to 9:00 p.m
C.C. Reader
Oregon Students Gain Rights
(CPS)--ln a move that could
affect the entire nature of
academic decision making,
the Oregon legislature
passed a bill in early June
guaranteeing students a
more extensive role in
collective bargaining than
they have won in any other
state.
Previously, students a
cross the country have been
allowed to observe collective
bargaining negotiations be
tween their faculties and
administrations with the
permission of both parties.
But that permission has
often vanished, leaving
students outside the bar
gaining room door while the
parties inside decided issues
that directly affected tuition,
class size and governance
rights.
Last March, Montana
became the first state to
guarantee students a place
at the bargaining table as
members of the manage
ment team. The Oregon bill
does not tie students to any
one side, and allows them to
speak as “third parties” in
the negotiations.
According to the provi
sions of the bill, at each
campus where bargaining
occurs students may choose
three representatives to
attend bargaining sessions
Pinter’s One Acts
Performed in Hershey
By Rebecca Rebok ‘
Staff Writer
The Repertory Theatre Ensemble, an eight-member
professional theatre company,has begun its second season
at the Hershey Community Center. “Arsenic and Old Lace” a
well-known comedy, will have 12 performances until October
'lB. Two one-act plays, Harold Pinter’s “The Dumb Waiter”
and “Ludlow Fair”, are also being performed by the RTE until
October 23. A third show, a drama, “The Price” by Arthur
Miller will open October 17th with an eight-member cast.
The October 3rd performance of the one-acts, “The Dumb
Waiter” and “Ludlow Fair”, were outstanding. The
two-member cast of “The Dumb Waiter”, Jeff Glickman and
Michael Goldstein, worked diligently to perfect the English
accents needed for this Harold Pinter play. The RTE
program even provided a crisp and flat explanation of the
English lorrie to help the audience understand this one-act
play. “The Dumb Waiter’s” Ben is portrayed by Michael
Goldstein, a theatre major from Stanford, who is also one of
the founders of the RTE.
Agnes. Cummings, Susan Boulmetis and Jeff Glickman
are three good reasons why the one-act “Ludlow Fair” is
successful for the RTE. Agnes Cummings plays the part of
Aggie, a love-starved dumpy Philadelphia office girl.
Cummings’ performance was by far the most skilled and
artistically done. The sensitivity with which she interacted
with Susan Boulmetis made her a delight to watch.
“The Dumb Waiter” and “Ludlow Fair” are two
professionally performed one-act plays which will run until
Oct. 23. Theflepertery Theatre Ensemble can be reached for
reservations and information gt 534-1637.
who would (1) have access to
all written documents, (2) be
permitted to comment at any
time during the talks and (3)
be able to meet and confer
with both parties during the
sessions.
Students would be re
quired to maintain the
confidentiality of the negoti
ations and would not be able
to veto the final contract.
They also would not be
guaranteed a spot on any
pre-negotiation committees
that would determine what
issues would be bargained.
Passed in the final days of
an extended session of the
state legislature, the bill’s
last-minute success was due
to a concentrated effort by
the seven Oregon state
system schools which make
up the Associated Oregon
Student Lobby (AOSL).
Because political beliefs
within the student lobby
itself varied widely, said
Keith Lamoreux of the AOSL
chapter at Portland State
University, students were
able to successfully sway
both Republican and Demo
cratic legislators to support
the bargaining bill. In
addition the student lobby
won endorsements from two
local teacher unions and
three campus presidents.
Despite the bill’s over
whelming passage by the
legislature, it ran into some
last minute problems with
the governor’s office.
A few hours before Gov.
Robert Straub was sched
uled to sign the bill, one of
his aides announced that the
signing ceremony had been
cancelled and that he and
other executives were re
commending that Straub
veto the bill. But after a
meeting with student lobby
ists and some timely phone
calls by political sponsors of
the bill, the governor signed
the measure one day before
the deadline.
“Throughout the process
we’re going to be listened to
more than if we were
statutorally aligned with one
side,” said Kirby Garrett,
AOSL lobbyist from the
University of Oregon.
“When management says
one thing and labor another,
the student can sit back, do
some fact-finding and then
offer a cogent compromise.”
The Oregon bill is .due to
go into effect in October, but
will probably be delayed due
to a dispute over whether
academic collective bargain
ing in Oregon will proceed
on a campus-by-campus or
system-wide basis.
The following contests are
open to all poets. Write for
official entry forms and com
plete details.
WAGNER MEMORIAL
POETRY AWARD, Poetry
Society of America, 15 Gram
mercy Park, New York NY
10003. Deadline: January 15,
1976.
JESSE STAURT CONTEST,
Seven, 115 So. Hudson, Okla
homa City OK 73102. Dead
line: February 1, 1976.
UTAH HISTORY CONTEST,
The Salt Lake Tribune, 143
So. Main, Salt Lake City UT
84111. Deadline: February
22, 1976.
THE HELLRIC “SANITY”
POETRY CONTEST, Hellric
House, 39 Elliot St., Jamaica
Plain MA 02130.