Page 86 - TheGoldBug1973-74
P. 86
PAGE 2 GOLD BUG May 16 lII1ay 16 GOLD BU PAGE 3 Reflections on Exam Week God, your best poem is night Macke Mania Too oldI fear .rumpeters for the 1974-75 school are as alphabe S.G.A. Elections held on May 9 in the Grille .cally. follows: Joan Bailey, Debbie Day, Mary resulted as follows: SGA officers for the 1974·75 Through the coffee cups Like the line that goes summer emmill, Laura Lane, Beth McWilliams, Julie school year are President Mel Franz, vice- & cigarettes & speed Or the ones quiet sleep and love, I've got the super screaming munchies This house is old; too old I fear Mullen, and Susan Underwood. Dedicated t President Steve Mahaney, Recording Secretary to crash course & cram what I need from a loaded cannon kabong, It feels my presence Julie Mullen, Corresponding Secretary Debbie Ok &alll need it a 63.5 for a Ole" He walked into the picture God, we priests, your poets love Near again, But change don't exi.tt in my pocket and follows my foot am~us service, they are chosen "according t Baird, and Treasurer Kieth Ammon; A.C.C. one- He stayed the night within We see the silver pan cross out t Your words of love Cause my baby done me wrong. steps, a pOint system based on leadership ability, perso year term Becky Bloyer and Ned Aull, two-year And class it assembled & nervou$ly waits A world within the picture And dot a million silver points i Sound: so strange So I took out my wrench all , character, and otentiali ." term Ann Luckenbill and John Norment; Senior looking washed out, past bedtimes Composed of light and line. After these years And I hit the wench from room to room, Class-President Fred Deblasio, Vice-President no nursery rhymes God, your swirling voices tell f Of freedom without form, and stole away with her Tootsie Rolls. Methodically plotting to abort me, Ned Aull, Secretary Laura Lane, Treasurer Mary He did not know the meaning Namedyou God, andfint crow King; Carefree and easy. As if I were a child Season offered Gemmill; Junior Class-President Donna Cushen, And they make you listen to the speech Although he felt the soundj Adorned you in itll $able robes, Scott Diegel Vice-President Rick cess, Secretary Sandy Owens, Within the laughter of the artut Made you the jeweler of itll wri.t To hear your soft speech kicking Treasurer Ginny Merryman, Historian Ann "I dislike exams as much as you do, He saw the open wound. Makes the road once her tired gothic womb. some bright spots Luckenbill; Sophomore-President Steffi Lambert, take one copy & pass them back, --, Freely traveled not so free. First or last It_, rain soaked sills of aged wood Vice-President Scott": Hancock, Secretary Gay any quelltions - I'll be in my office" Each form was a tear r-------------- The bridge i.t built nOWj buckle Jewell, Treasurer (not"elected as of date of print) Any Questions? But the tear reflected light I The poetry on pages 3 and 4 ery : Toll is there to be paid upon the walls tho.t patiently wait Track Historian Jo Carol Hughes. From the pent up desire Or forever rejected without With pencil in hand While creaking floors and doors Treasurer has not been decided for the & You sit&you stare That it Art's second silfht. : small selection taken from re I I Regret or sorrow. Isithere Speak of times to come Mter winning their 24th consecutive meet to open Sophomore Class due to the absence of Jay Bod- &you sweat & you write ~_J2!.!..hi!~~eE~!r~.!.'L~ I prolific writer that 1am When they may rid themselves stein's name on the ballot. A revote for. the office & you want to cheat off Each color was a moon Say try again. and ponder the futility Of burderu that lie on dusty shellles. ~~~~~~~~~~~::~~~n~\r~:~~~~:?:ra~t~~~ what's her name woodwork of sitting here to finish with a three and five record. ;~~o:c~~ul:s a~::~ ~~al:e~~~' a~dw~b~rOUS~; But the moan became a line Say the gain is worth the loss. with pencil in ho.nd This house is oldj too old I fear Some of the bright spots on the season were the "stuffed" in the meantime. A- second revote was The determining factor is laid on the desk That tied a _'pirit to the board It only happens sometimes Where is the gain? trying to share For now it masters al~ running of Tom Enstice and Larry Clendaniel in the held on Tuesday, May 14,the results of this election head down mumbling you drift to the hall And made the thiTl1f to shine. feeling head, down at a party Only days alone can say, that which is too personal to sl:are . but one regretful tear. Diegel Mid-Distance events and Steve Vaughn in Scott lost in line at the arena Jesse Glass And the regretll are not yet known. & the Dean roys we can't play wall baIL my private though til distance events. In the field, there were the per. Many officers decided by this election ran un- Jack Tracey When you're down& they shaul Of what might ho.ve been fantasies 1remember ,formances of Rich Seid and Randy Day in the contested. Comes the soft smile, what's the Had I only known that then wag me. delusions I used to walk out into the unmoum grass di~us, Bu~key Horsey in the shotput, and Steve Tho! fooli.thness Mn.kes it worth it Different /Same Heals the hurt. Bill Geiger depreuioru myself Right before suruet to chil~ Bfornberg III the pole vault. . When the air was beginning Perhaps the highlight of the season came when exposing Winter-fly Voicebox I watched the solitary fly Lost in a lost land, Jack Tr of a thin-shelled egg And pick uiolets Junior Co-Captain Steve Wilson tied his own school with all the vulnerability Andfeel the damp ground I am but a stranger full of memories. record in the 120 yard high hurdles with a 14.6. half-dead One would think that reality could Disillusionment Its monolithic presence ready to crack Under my hands and knees. Steve was a runner-up in the Mid-Atlantic Con- beating himself against the frigid pane. be somewhat slower in times like this. halts without di.tpute. under the slightest pressure But now the violets are dying, ference, and will 'be competing in the National Dear Editor, Now I live like a transparetu gias No further, no way onward. ofcritb And the air it too cold, competition to be held May 29 at Eastern Illinois I realize that sometimes studentsat W.M.C. need If it were summer Tactless, it spreads it's sadness Seeing life's mysteries as less my And my knee/l and my heart ache. University . to vent their frustrations, but the rest of the I would grab the fly·swatter, across the once familiar scene. So you learn to fly. coldly attacking grammar and form . The young Green Terror squad sees only two of students should" not be subjected to reading unthinkingly. Allowing me only a glimpse of, I take them into me and let the Seott Diegel picking nits I wi.th I could be six again. Its teammembers graduate this summer. The ridiculous complaints about the college. Obviously - But looking out on the uninviting snow Scarcely a moment to shed a tear for, &ckward and through me in wi but never quite catching essence season of experience should help the team to better the writer of the letter believes college should be a that could chill both of us or laugh at .•. the pad. }" and still wesit'here And unto you will be born a child .•. its 3-5 record in 1975. - four year extension of high school. (he more than 1) my pencil and I And so 1came, If the writer is ,so aggravated by c1ay-colored I felt akin to the fly You can't go home again. groping for specificity And so will I pau, Golf walls, banging radiator pipes, shared toilets and and merely watched. Thats truer now than I care to believe. RIUM ending up with mush Having conducted Western Maryland College's Golf coach Greg streakers, my suggestion is to move into an Sue Blackman Gail A. Atherholt '76 wa n an auto accident on Thursday Sue Blackman The electricity Getty, was planning on the 1974season as a b~lding apartment. Apparently she is not capable of the Dave White ev y 9, 1974. Of love. bl~~ for the young golfers on the squad. For a sharing that must be if dorm living is to work. Sue Blackman bwldmg year, the Green Terrors carne out with a 4. I think the writer has overstepped her bounds in 7~nd 1record, not particularly impressive, but fair accusing W.M.C. of placing a puddle in front of the "fiddler" ;~:::p~~ar:n~ not very expe'-:ienced in intercollegiate Grill. If it concerns her so much, she should go to News Briefs .*************************** the S.G.A. to find out if the sidewalk can be evened One of the highlights of the season came during out to eliminate the puddle. The wrlter only showed the Mason·Dixon tournaments when number 1 her ignorance in blaming W.M.C. for the "triple matchmade great music and acting golfer Scott Mcreary came in with the lowest 18 helix" cafeteria line. Perhaps if she looked in the Beverley Harrison Zimmerman received the psychology and faculty advisor for the group. hole score of ~ll those competing with a second dictionary she would realize the difference between Alumni Citation from the Board of Trustees of Psi Chi was founded in 1929and is an affiliate 0 round 71. Durmg the last match of the season a helix lind a curved line. As for the "cute ice Western Maryland College at the institution's In- the American Psychological Association and th by Cindy O'Neal against Gettysburg Charlie Englemeir and Chuck storms" W.M.C. "lays on us in the middle of May" vestiture and Honors Convocation on May 5. Association of College Honor Societies. Its main It is difficult for one not at all versed in the art of sequence, helped to capture the mood. It seems the Hanson played well, comittg in with a 73 and a 74 ' respectively. - as of this writing it is May 3; the writer must be purpose is to advance the science of psychology and dramatic criticism to pretend to be a critic. But play's only downfall was its' stage in Big Baker. living in the future. The Alumni Citation is given by the Board to to encourage, stimulate, and maintain scholarshi when it comes to a combination of exam week, last- Seating arrangements were poor at best and Pe~haps the brightest moment during the season The writer has blamed all the hardships of recognize outstanding service by the recipient to of the individual members in all fields, particulaf3. minute finishes, and a drop of apathy, sometimes dangerous at worst. It is too bad that such a fine came during a match against undefeated Lebanon college life on the college itself, not on the ad- his or her community. Begun in 1950, the award in psychology. unqualified comment is better than none; or at performance could not have been scheduled to take Valley, and Delaware Valley. The Terrors lost to ministration or the maintenance department or took its current form three years ago when its least so it is with the case of Fiddler on the Roof. its place on the Alumni Stage where it belonged, but Lebanon Valley by only eight strokes, while beating perhaps where it should be - on her lack of maturity presentation became the privilege of the Trustees Accepted into membership were Roslyn D. The choreography, the musical numbers, and the as everyone realizes this is a busy time of the year Delaware Valley. Another bright spot was the in the last ma:tch. defeat of Gettysburg in realizing that college is for adult)::who are willing of the college. The recipient is chosen by the Board Davis, William Geiger III, and Carol Jenine acting made this a tripartite show - no complaints for Alumni. to cooperate with others and endure the in- of Trustees' Committee on Degrees and Hoyle of Baltimore; Cindy J. Cline, of. Wheaton; on any third. Chuck Long, cast·as.Tevye the main The outlook for the 1975season is bright as only conveniences' of college life and dorm living. Curriculum. Cathy Jenkins of Frostburg; Beth Eckhardt Mc father and the village dairy man caught the o~e of the starting six will graduate. The ~acancy College is for education, not fun and games. If the *** Williams of Reisterstown; Katrina Harner Mercer audience well with his musings and mutterings with COngratulations to- Lazopoulos and the entire wdl pro~.bly be filled by transfer Tom Boyle, who writer thinks there are no inconveniences in the Eleven students were recently inducted into the of Walkersville; Cheryl Eva Myers of West- God. His "on the other hands," played with the crew (whose names can be found on the Fiddler was meliglhle to play this year. In 1975,Coach Getty world she will be entering upon graduation from Western Maryland College chapter of Psi Chi, the minster; Linda Gay Wootten of Salisbury; Harold right amount of puzzlement claimed chuckles until programs) for a completely enjoyable experience. ~~':~:2t~~~~~ to, and perhaps eve~ better 1973's W.M.C., she is in for a rude awakening ... Oh yeah, national honor society for psychology, announced B. Wright of Linthicum Heights; and Penny A. his final pathetic "other hand" when he admitted just one more thing: what the hell can W.M.C. do Dr. H. Howard B. Orenstein, assistant professor of Parsons of Riverton, N.J. there was to be no other hand. Cathy Nelson who about the rain after sundown? played Tevye's wife Golde added spunk with her nagging and her expressions, and pathos with her leaves family Michelle Amyot . chin-up determination as the voice, Cathy has Aratevka. With a fine, strong the fiold Bug claimed a certain amount of well deserved since her debut in last year's distinction Junior Follies. Vente the matchmaker, alias Deborah Robinson? Editor.in.Chief Cindy O'Neal For a, verbally non·stop, stereotyped, and Associate Editor Gerry Philips demandmg character part she carried it off most Kurt Herwig as Motel-an apparently amusinglr. Photography Editor Baron Tayler weak ~ut mnately capable good man, Bill Corley as Advertising Manaoer Steve Boyd Perchlk an earth Shaking scholar and stron g man even by his rocky countenance, Tevye's new-world daughtersPat Nicholson, Lori Grimes, and Deborah Staff: Julie Mullen Gene Funk Buck, .front and. back wit~ all of the other per. formers made thIS productIOn almost professional. Leigh Rogoff, Jim Massey. Dave Marple, Cued by the orchestra, the musical numbers had Barry Watson Lori GrimH,Chip Wright the audiences tapping to familiar tunes and ad- Clayton McCarl, Jack Tracey" Suzi Paglee, mi~ing the dance n~mbers, especially notable of WhIChwas the RUSSian dance in the tavern. Bill Voerman Bob Toner The story itself is one of social change - for both Published by and for the students of WHtern Maryland good and. bad. The c(;mcept of love as a prerequisite College. The opinions expressed in this publication do to m~rrlage~ the Idea of some great political machme pulhng people apart because of religious not neccessarily refl~ those of the administration. attitudes, the idea of wealthy vs. poor all come We welcome your comments and/or fugQhtions, Please across. The production directed by Larry address ,II ma" to: Box 3A, Western Maryland College, Lazopoulos lasted three hours with one intermission. Fiddler dragged. never Vet de~pite its length, Westminster, Maryland 21157. Spirit rocked in Alumni Hall to put May Weekend off to a rousing start. CostumlOg throughout, especially in the dream
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