c Thought For The Day < INSIDE MONDAY: The minute you think someone's on to your charade, throw In a screwball-cnd wear your boxer shorts ' Joe Allison backwards. I - - -Campus Shorts •Campaign 8 '4 International News Brief s STEHPEN M. KASSAB Voice Contributor Washington The United States and the Soviet Union have agreed to resume negotiations on reducing troops and convential arms in Central Europe, March 16 in Vienna. This agreement was the result of a meeting in Stockholm between Secretary of State George Shultz and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. House Democratic leaders agreed on a congressional resolution that would urge President Reagan to withdraw the Marine contingent from Lebanon. However, this resolution isn't binding and does not carry the force of law. The House Armed Service Committee accepted a report prepared by its investigations subcommittee, it concluded that the Marine commanders in Beirut and other officers up the chain of command has committed "very serious errors in judgment." These are what led to the lax security the morning of the bombing which took the lives of 241 American servicemen. Moscow Soviets leader Yuri Andropov responded to President Reagans call for improved relations between the superpowers. Andropov said that the Kremlin valued a dialogue with the United States but that it needed "Practical Deeds" from the Americans to convince it that Washington was serious. He added that the United Sta tes and its western allies would have to display a readiness to return to the situation that existed , before the initial deployments of Pershing II and cruse missiles in Central Europe last month. Adam Ant JOSEPH ALLISON Staff Reporter Friday, Feb. 24 at 8 p.m. in the Nelson Field House, Bloomsburg University will have an opportunity to experience the likes of Adam Ant and The Romantics. Headlining the event is Ant himself , who after seven years of recording, has shown the public his versatility, not only in the making of music but also in the directing and designing of videos. Ant's fifth album, "STRIP," is currently doing well in the stores as well as on the pop charts. "In a way," Ant says, "the title of STRIP was really me stripping down a lot of barriers that were there, with respect to not being able to say things publicly, or not being able to express myself because of the dangers of being misunderstood." Since the formation of his band in 1976, Ant has developed in many aspects of the music industry. Still with co-writer and guitarist Marco Pirroni,.Ant has hit the singles Top Ten five times, and has had four albums in the Top Five two of which were number one. His "Friend Or Foe" album, sparked by the hit single "Goody Beirut Lebanense Druse leader Walid Jumblat has called for the immediate resignation of President Gemayel government would result in the complete destruction of Lebanon. GemayePs cabinet. Jumblat said, "We will not stop fighting this time unless, and until- the Gemayel government resigns." Jumblat stated later that he was referring just to the Cabinet and not to President Gemayel himself. He added that the policies of the On January 30 one U.S. marine was killed and three others wounded during a bombardment of their compound by anti-government forces. The slain Marine was the 259th American serviceman to die in Lebabon, since the arrival of the Marines in August 1982. Announcement The Bloomsburg chapter of Phi Kappa Phi, the national interdisciplinary honor society, recently mailed membership invitations to juniors and seniors with grade averages of 3.65 or higher. Any junior or senior with such an average who did not receive an invitation should contact Dr. Nancy Gilgannon, 23 Old Science, ext. 4273, to correct matters. . Phi Kappa Phi will initiate new members March 25 following a dinner in the Scranton Commons. Previe w Two Shoes," went Gold in the United States, England, and Canada. "STRIP" itself was produced by Ant and Richard Burgress (who also works with Spandau Ballet) , though the title track and "Puss 'n ? Boots" were co-produced by Phil Collins of Genesis. With the release,of the new LP, Ant has begun preparing for another tour. Uiilike some performers, he still enjoys giving "live" concerts, preparing the choreography, costumes, and music carefully. "I believe," remarks Ant, "that the live show is something that people remember and talk about in a way that they don't about records or videos. They actually pay to be there and share an idea , an experience , live." "The artist gives life to something that is very precious and beautiful , called music. The heart of the record - the hearts of the people, is what matters to make people tingle." Quips Ant , "I want to touch people with "STRIP ," with the videos, with the live performance and with the , , ideas. '' \ Editorial BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathed Let the games begin! Doing laundry on campus has got to be one of the most unique sporting events of college life. The* very first step in deciding to clean up your act is to try to guess just when the laundry room is going to be most vacant. It seems" to be right around 7:00 a.m., shortly after midnite or 1:00 a.m., or in those midafternoon hours - right around the time that General Hospital goes on. No matter what time you get there, the game begins upon your entrance to the room. Your goal: to get a dryer. If you happen to be the only one there, you are IN LUCK ! Not only do you have your choice of washers, but you won't have to fight for a dryer when your wash is done. If you happen to be unfortunate enough to arrive at exactly the same time someone else does, the event turns into a race. Who can get their washer started first? The winner presumably gets their wash done first, which means they get a dryer first. Trouble arises when two people have washers that are destined to stop at the same time. What to do! ? Stand by your washer and be ready to pull your wash out at the first possible moment, that's what. Then , if all the dryers are full, you play "who can guess most accurately which dryer is going to be done first", and then you go and sit as close to it as you can, all the while trying to look inconspicuous at trying to beat your opponent to the goal. This phenomenon also tends to occur when all the washers are full only at this stage it is much worse, because it's a good bet you'll have to go through it again with the dryers. The "first come first serve" code is definately violated when people who are finished with their dryers give them to friends on the sly - hoping no one will dare to say anything. As they take their wash out, a piece or two of the friends wash goes in. And suddenly, the dryer is taken , without ever having been really empty. Then there is the competitor who takes their one or two washloads out of the washer and manages to spread them out over three dryers. Are they saving them for someone? Who knows. Do they think that no one else deserves a dryer? Who knows. Of course we run into the breed which takes the wash from the washer, puts it in the dryer, turns it on and leaves. Do these people think they are still at home where the dryers are timed? Or do they think that the wash will dry all by itself Once the dryer goes off? Or, horror of horrors, do they think that someone else in the laundry room will see to it that the dryer keeps running? I don't think we will ever know, because I've never been around long enough (even when I've been around for a while!) to see any of these people claim what is rightfully theirs. I, for one, would like to know the answer. People who go into the laundry room, take off their jacket, and place it in a dryer to "save it" don't even deserve the time of day, let alone a dryer. The whole sport of doing wash is mental as well as physical. You enter the arena a potential foe. Once the other participants discover that you are willing to wait your turn in line, or that you will not , under any circumstances, slide a dryer to a buddy, you will be accepted as an ally . If you screw up, forget it - may all your clothing burn with your next washing. I'm not saying all these things will happen, but if they do, just try to keep a good attitude and you'll make it to the finish line quicker than you think ! Executive Editor The Voice StaffStephanie Richardson E""nie Long . • Managing Editor Rob Flanagan Lori Leonard, ?.. Sassahi, Lynne . News Editors ¦ Wessner ... Gary ' ... . News Assistant . Jeff Bachman Nancy Schaadt, Pennypacker, Corty Feature Editors : > • ¦•_•.• • • • • • • John Staman Feature Assistant ' Wade Douglas , Mike Albright Sports Editors . ."TTTTT. Marty Hasenfuss Sports Assistant ' • ' • chris . • • Advertising Manager .... V\ " Mt,rv Mon' "•¦¦• ' ' . ..;:,....... • • • •• •¦• Advertising Assistant • Ken °! 0r Photo Editor uu tf H 5 .. Circulation Manager................ . • • • : • • .• • • • ;• • •; • • • • v, ,*"™ .. ?j! ¦¦• ,• • :: •¦; ;, ' •'•'. y • ' - Ne ,???"! . Business Manager . . . . . . . .. : . . . .....V. : - • -V • • • '. ', . .. ^""dSavage ...::::^:.. Advisor;::::.:.:.V......:.¦• • • • . : • • • • : Letters Red Cross Dear Students , Faculty and Staff: On behalf of the patients in the regional hospitals who will use the blood you supplied them with last Tuesday, January 31, I would like to express their appreciation for touching their lives. By sharing your "gift of life" with them, you have earned their heartfelt gratitude and"rtspect. Bloomsburg University has been one of the most cooperative, productive, and reliable colleges in the region served by the 19 county Regional Red Cross Bloom Program. The January 31 collection is one more example of Bloomsburg University's outstanding performance as our goal of 300 pints for this visit was exceeded by 77 pints. Bloomsburg University has the right to hold its head high and congratulate itself for their genuine humanitarian concern for their community and fellow man. The Bloomsburg Chapter of the Red Cross thank you and salute you, Bloomsburg University. Sincerely, Darlene Weidner Executive Director Pay Hike Dear Editor, A reaction to Mr. Buehner's comments regardingthe'7 percent pay hike given to Dr. Jones. It was indeed out of line in comparison to other state employees. It was exactly 3.7 times as great a percentage and based on a much grea ter base. 1 percent of 20,000 = $200 (400 annual) 3.7 percent of 51,400 = $1,900 (3,800 annual) I agree with Mr. Buehner 's comment regarding competitive salaries but it must certainly apply to faculty aad staff as well if the state system is to retain its intergrity. "State Employee" Teenage sl&i\ g test Slang, the common man 's language is often a teenage mechanism for society separation and identitybuilding, according to Judith Bernstein , a psychiatric social worker in Inglewood, Calif., who spoke recently at a n a t i o n a l c o n f e r e n c e in Washington , D.C. Think you have a pretty good handle on current slang? Test out your vocabulary on these (meanings follow in the next .paragrap h) : 1. Nerd , mingiis , gingusamingus , spud , geek 2. Tweaked 3. jelled 4. squid lips 5. nasal man 6. bag your face 7. bo-head 8. c o m b u s t i b l e 9. hellified 10. darvy 11. ragged out 12. jazzed , stoked 13. can 't hand 14. t h a t ' s cold 15. s n ak e 16. bodacious 17. -wussy, mark , wimp j 9A0i|snd pj e.v\oo E YI sno pep n e pus p|oq JO upfieurquioo . e *9i •.Suiqiaiuos p3>pus aq,, ui se '|E3}s *f I^ paismainq m J - f i adoa 1, UEO -£i SupiDxa JO A|3AI]. 'pOOUJ popS .E.'fct /Cd33[S 'H (OOD JO pooS -'OI ;;'P d UUl dll : bl ^'vl A]j ed ]eqjL„ v\ SE/ 'j adns "Gsai-PlEui Jo j aiqSij *g Euu .n jueiu sasn 'bijM auo •£ 3|quJ3? -9 A B.VV . ou :s qinouj 8iq. B -ftfuuapue.w si puiiu 'PEJUOO JO. }np ;f pooS ]ou JO psSeiuep 'z ^i '1 JO —Campus Shorts— PhotoDisplay The exhibits of photographer Marlyse Heaps and artist Jeffrey Alexander will be on display in the Kehr Union through February 9. Heaps , a self-taught photographer, has displayed a collection of scenic images of rural Pennsylvania in the Presidents' Lounge on the lower level. The Stillwater resident is a secretary to the academic vice president at BU. She has shown an increase of professionalism in her photography hobby . Alexander, a native of Hershey, has his exhibit of still life watercolors and charcoal figure drawings on display in the Cof- feehouse. A- 1983 graduate of nsylvania , New York , New Jersey, Bloomsburg Alexander maj ored in Delaware , Maryland , West studio art with a concentration in Virginia, District of Columbia , and drawing. He currently attends Ontario, Canada attended the York College for extended work three-day session in Hershey. The and plans to enroll at John total registration was nearly 950, a Hopkin 's Medical Center for record for CASE district conmedical illustration. ference in the United States. The exhibits can be viewed from Hippenstiel was also elected 8:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. daily. program chair for the 1985 conference which will hi held at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York Doug Hippenstiel, director of City. The progra m will include alumni affairs , served as alumni about 20 seminars of alumni track chair at the annual con- relations, annual funds , capital founference of the Middle Atlantic c o m p a i g n s , dationscorporations , independent District of the Council for the Advancement and Support of schools, institutional relations , Education (CASE). Over 100 alum- management, periodicals, planned ni professionals from Pen- giving, and publications. Also attending the conference in Hershey were John L. Walker, vice president for institutional advancement, and Anthony Ianiero, The Naitonal Center for Health director of development. A BU Education is a non-profit cor- senior, Scott Righter, was one of poration that focuses on improving six students in the district to the health of all Americans through receive a scholarship to attend the nationwide strategies and conference. cooperative efforts. Gambardella is currently on leave from the department of nursing and resides in Dover , Delaware. She is continuing her doctoral study at the University of Pennsylvania. John W. Stahl, assistant professor of chemistry, received his Doctor of Philosophy Degree from . the Pennsylvania State University at commencement exercises last month. His thesis Conf erence Professor Moves to "Center " Lucille Gambardella , associate professor of nursing, has been named a correspondent to the National Center for Health Education's publication "Center". "Center" is the nation's education for health servicenews magazine published in New York. In her role as correspondent, she will cover patient education news in care and treatment settings in - the Delaware area . Doctor of Philosophy was entitled "Lewis Acid-base C h e m i s t r y and A n a y l s i s Polysulfides by Thermometric Enthalty Penetration." Stahl joined the BU faculty in August, 1983. He earned a Bachelor of Science Degree in Chemistry from Geneva College in 1979. 377P ints Thanks to all of those who participated in the blood drive last Tuesday, the Bloomsburg Chapter of the American Red Cross was able to collect 377 pints of blood. "That' s fantastic for a one day visit," says Barbara Price, administrative assistant for the Red Cross. The last time BU participated in a blood drive was Nov. 16 and 17, when 623 pints were donated. Behavioral Experi ment Dr. Steven L. Cohen, professor of psychology, published an article in the recent issue of "Behavioral and Neural . Biology " entitled "Minimized Tolerance to the Suppressive Effects of CCK8 on Operant Responding." The article was co-authored with scientists from the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland. It is the third in a series of experiments testing the behavioral effects of the peptide cholecystokinin. NEW BUS SERVICE ; ^^^^^^ \ S I\ | ^^ Penn State, Lehighton, Allentown & Bethlehem J between Bloomsburg University 5 S«B^HMMgliM«MaM«i» "»iM«Mi« i^M«MMMiinMMM ! L H ffwfiii«jtri]¦^»^« ,BBBBBBHBHIBBHII^H*1'w W iVi^^^BytIIIJIBHBHKMCIIM3Mi^fl^Bwi /<—i"^f*ij iiiij i^BK// mMMS ^ K K^K^EKKE^Wmi^^EEE^m^QiMMK& * Days Before Holidays Will Follow FRI. Schedule. • Great Service & Reasonable Rates Designed with the Student in Mind! ! For further info, call or stop in at: j • "^^ ^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^ ^¦¦¦ ^¦¦ M Kent Hagedorn A BU student appears to be headed for real trouble as he attempts a flip off a diving board at the pool -' . - ¦ - • in the Nelson Reldhouse. - J \ j CARTERS CUT RATE 784-8689 "' ¦ ' ' Lines of Bethlehem) _ . • ¦ ¦. . ¦. , -.- (Service by .TransBridge ¦¦¦ . . _¦ '...,. iii. . •.¦¦:¦•.. • ..• MWC««; j J ^^^ BU-Chey ney Rivalry (Continued from Page 8) dling and missed shots, it looked as though the no shows knew something the rest of us didn 't. But once the Huskies broke the ice and the streamers made'their first appearance of the year one knew that the matchup was alive and well. The low score was indicative of the effective defenses both teams were employing. BU tried everything from a methodical passing game to the normally reliable alley oop to Francisco to penetrate the Wolve 1-3-1, while Cheyney has to resort to long jumpers against the Huskies packed in 2-3 designed to smoother seven foot Ed Geiger. The contrasting styles were sprinkled with occassional flashes of fast breaks made for a tense and exciting chess match. As the game wound down, the back and forth battle continued, the Huskies got a major break, in a season that everything seemed to break against them. Holding a two point lead , thanks to two clutch foul shots by Shane Planutis , Francisco picked up a steal and broke free down the right side with just over a minute left. Instead of pulling up and running the clock, the senior captain tried to put the Huskies up by four. However his layup from a tough angle caromed off the rim. The Wolves subsequently tied the game on a jumper and after BU ran the clock down to 13 seconds the stage was set for another memorable ending. With former Cheyney killers Jon Bardsley and Terry Conrad on the bench since graduation, there was only one choice for Coach Chronistecto make for a final shot. That being, of course, Francisco. After a timeout, Cheyney changed their defense to a 2-3 zone, crossing up the Huskies planned play. Instead of getting Francisco at the high post , where he was surrounded by three defenders, the senior captain was forced to break outside past the top of the key. With just three seconds left, Francisco squared around and launched a 30 footer. Even before it hit the net the crowd, anticipating his heroics, erupted and another BU legend was born. And all Cheyney's players could do was look in disbelief at the scoreboard . For Francisco, it was the third time he has saved a Husky win against the Wolves. Last season he victimized them twice in one game, first sending the game into overtime then winning it. ALPHA PHI OMEGA COED NATIONAL SERVICE FRATERNITY RUSH MEETINGS # I BU Tankmen Fall 68-43 I A sweep of seven.of the meet's final eight events allowed the visiting Monmonth swimmers to break open a tight match and hand the Husky tankmen their third straight loss, 68-43.- The defeat dropped BU's dual meet log to 3-4. The Huskies surged to victories in the 400 medley relay, 50 freestyle, and 200 individual medley to put most of their points on the board . But two 1-2 finishes by the visitors offset the efforts of the relay quarter, sprinteK Ken Chaney and freshman Dwight Franks and claim a 23-21 lead. A third Monmonth win in the one meter dive widened the margin to 2824 and started them on a winning streak that saw their advantage increase to 53-36, before diver Paul Savage recorded a win on the three meter board . However, Savage's win was an event too late. With BU trailing by just 9 points and still very much in contention, MU put another 1-2 finish in the 500 free to stretch the margin to 53-36 and effectively put the meet out of BU's reach. . . The Huskies travel to York College tomorrow night. Monmonth 68 BLOOMSBURG 43 400 medley relay - B ( Christian, Thran, Franks, Chaney ) 3:48.07 1000 free - McCartney, M; Einodi, M; Case, B10:47.06 200 free - Knap, M; Asay, M; DiMarco, B1:52.16 50 free - Chaney, B; Pescatorie, M; Mitchel, M 22.18 200 IM - Franks, B; MacGregor, M; Christian, B 2:09.49 I meter - Paulson, M; Savage, B 233.30 200 fly - Asay, M; Franks, B; DiMarco, B 2:06.21 100 free - Emodi, M; Chaney, B; Homer, M 49.18 200 back - Domenick, M; Christian, B; Case, B 2:09.02 500 free - McCartney, M; Knap, M; Fenton, B 5:00.21 3 meter - Savage, B; Paulson, M 224.15 200 breast - Macgregor, M; Thran, B; Homer, M 2:20.91 400 free relay - Monmonth 3:36.04 Women 's Basketball (Continued from Page 8) Kocher 1 M 2 Millen 7 8-11 22 Hackforth 2 0-0 4 Totals 25 22-20 61 Km g's fg ft t Andrews 2 0-14 „. Fries f eskl e^ ^ennan £ Thomas Uhrin Brandt Totals „ „ , , „ ¦• 5 3- 4 3 I "J" t , A ? 6l 5 3 30 1 2 °" '!1 0- 2 12 1- 2 11 0-0 6 4-10 64 Mon. Feb. 6 9:30 p.m. Green Ffm. KUB Wed. Feb. 8 9:30 p.m. Green Rm. KUB Tues. Feb. 14 9:30 p.m. Green Rm. KUB *All are welcome *No hazing policy *Help your college and community LEADERSHIP, FRIENDSHIP AND SERVICE on this campus for 20 years ifiMinnmi iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiM"™™"1'™"1"™"1™^ : W ^^^L^^^wB^SS^ '^R ^R9 i9HHHH^H '"rwmpf i^^^m take a closer look at RIVERVIEW APARTMENTS \ »j K »375/SEMESTER FALL '84 ' APTS. FOR4or 6 -784-0816-— — : —¦ I ¦ - ,/.-¦ / .; I . '•¦¦'7 I * Jean Millen battles underneath, $er 22 points and 13 rebounds were not enough as the Lady Huskies lot to King's 64-61 Bris bon, Plan utis Pace BU Over Wolve s (Continued from Page 8). but he missed the front end of a one-and-one and BU pulled down the rebqund. Shane Planutis was fouled with 1:03 left and he gave the Huskies a 46-44 lead by canning 2 more pressure tosses. Barry Francisco then stole an errant Cheyney pass and drove to the bucket to try to up the lead but he missed the shot which gave Cheyney one more chance. Cheyney's leading scorer Keith Smith then penetrated and hit a jumper with :42 left to tie the game once again at 46 which set up Francisco's heroics. BU called a timeout with :13 remaining to set up their strategy. "We expected them to be in a 1-31zone and I was supposed to drive to the middle," Francisco stated. "If I didn't have a shot I was supposed to dump off to Shane (Planutis), since he had the hot hand." Cheyney crossed up the Huskies by switching to a 2-3 instead of their 1-3-1 which had caused problems for the Huskies earlier in the contest. Jerome Brisbon was open momentarily but was covered quickly and he then passed out to Francisco who canned his 30-f ooter at the buzzer. "They outguessed us,'' said Head Coach Charles Chronister. "That wasn't exactly the shot we wanted Barry Francisco is congratulated by teammate Randy Colone after sinking a 30 foot shot as time expired to upset Cheyney. ... DIRECTORY LISTS SUMMER JOBS BARNSTABLE , Mass.—The seaside resort areas of Cape Cod , Massachusetts and the off-shore islands of Nantucket and Martha 's Vineyard are experiencing a growing problem in finding enough college workers to adequately service a rapidly expanding tourist industry. This summer Cape Cod and the Islands will be offering over 55,000 good paying jobs to college students and teachers. Many of these jobs require little or no prior experience. Because it is impossible to fill these jobs with local residents, most of whom make up the year 'round work force , it is necessary to draw from other geographic areas to satisfy this seasonal need. Jobs for Students and Teachers The Cape Cod Summer Job Bureau gathers all pertinent facts on available summer employment and publishes this information in a concise Job Directory which is available to college students and teachers by February 1st .each year. "Names- and addresses of individual • seasonal a employers are] listed , in /separate job categories from bartenders to yacht crews.'" x The Job Bureau is a service agencv. and therefore charges Knowing the Bloomsburg basketand I guess we were kind of lucky. But a less talented player " than ball tradition, that's exactly what Barry might not have made that will happen. CHEYNEY kind of shot, either.'' fg fs tp BU did a good job on the boards 8 2-4 18 Cheyney Smith against the much taller 2 2-56 team as Barry Francisco pulled Geiger 3 2-28 down 7 rebounds. Wes Wright did a Barnett 4 1-29 good job also as he muscled down 6 Robinson 2 1-1/5 carroms. 7-0 Geiger dominated the Dillard 19 8-14 46 boards for Cheyney as he pulled TOTALS BLOOMSBURG down 11. fg fs tp Cheyney, 9-6 on the season, was 5 2-2 12 led by Keith Smith who pumped in Brisbon 4 2-2 10 18 points to lead the Wolves along Francisco 2 0-0 4 with being their only scorer in Wright 6 2-2 16 Robinson double figures. Anthony Planutis 3 0-0 6 also added 9. Cheyney shot a Flanagan 20 8-8 48 horrendous 28 percent from the line TOTALS 1 2 f in the first half which proved to be 24 22—46 costly as they ended the game CU 26 22—48 shooting just 57 percent from the BU charity stripe. The Wolves alsoj shot a poor 37 percent from the | i i ¦HSflrrnTTiijTwTOiMHH IJ ^ m m J L A J J U Mj d O A A M¦ l M^ ^y floor ( 19-51) for the contest. Bloomsburg, which upped its >i HIPSIHRH!RlH5fflRffiHm9 flliiii rfllwmPn ^^ season record to 9-10, was led for ji I i I^^BSSxSKSSS^HH the second straight game by Shane | 1 jj^^^^BttfSVKf^S^^^Vk1 Planutis who canned 16 points on 61 of 11 shooting. Jerome Brisbon ac- j j^ff»i ^n^T*T**^^7sTi iMT»jh^ counted for 12 points which helped j *> 1^fl^^^|^^^^ ^^pH ^ HE^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ft |^pM» H p^HH^P^P^H^^^^H^H^BH ¦ him earn the Time MarketsMc- |va^^^^^^^^^^ Dowell Oil Player of the Game. J Berry Francisco added 10 points ' along with 5 assists and 3 steals. | BU shot a perfect 8 for 8 from the | foul line and 47 percent from the ! floor on.20 of 43 shooting. ' "I think we can still turn things around," stated Shane Planutis. "I | I certainly hope so after this." ini^^K Classified Ads ANNOUNCEMENTS no fees to employers or employees. An easy-to-use job app lica tion form , which is now familiar to the local employer, is included with the Directory along with important tips on how to land a good summer job. Housing Information Included This year the Job Directory has a section devoted to seasonal housing which lists addresses of people who lease rooms, efficiencies, cottages, apartments, and group rentals. . A useful reference . map of the area is included as is a summary of educational opportunities for college credit , and .cultural classes in the arts. ¦For a copy of the 1984 Directory, send $3 (includes 1st Class Postage & handling) to: Cape Cod Summer Job Bureau; Box 594 . Barnstable: MA 02630. INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY Five interns will be selected to participate in a legislative intern program in Harrisburg, during the fall semester. Students from all majors will be eligible to apply. Interns will receive a semi-monthly stipend. The application deadline is March 2, 1984. For more information and application forms, contact Dr. Brian Johnson, campus coordinator of internships, 389-4570, Rm. 118 Hartline. PERSONALS Phi Sigma Xi-lt's about time we had a real fraternity back in Bloomsburg. Good Luck. A fan in Phi lota Chi. "' * FOUND: Car key at party on Spruce St., on Friday 1-27. Call 784-6364 Cumquat...Quit leaving your tissues all over the floor! i i "~ ~ VOICE w "*** . I ' CLASSIFIEDS I . . .. . J . , . I I j- { ; ' // , I r ~' | J I ;j j — : i W|sh tQ p|ace a C|assj fie(j a(j ¦ '¦ un(j er I • the heading: y ¦ Announcements ¦ .1 Lost and Found J For Sale | )| Personals Services I Wanted | Other ' . j 1 enclose S - '''- ¦' * ¦" . for ''"¦ . -¦ WORDS I | ~_ v ,'-¦ . v 10t A WORD j Send to: Box 97 KUB or drop in the Voice' mail slot, Union before 5 p.m. on Sunday j .".r ,.0-",. r/. • . or'before 5 p.m. on Tuesday. All cjasstfed,^^ •,¦£¦» .V:'"*^7V&:;^- ¦¦:.:?.oi^i^wk^^-JL ^ ¦/ V ^y iWE Wl V JI C IO . . . . Husky Tankmen Wolves Still Under Francisco Jinx 30 Foot Buzzer Beater Stuns Cheyney 48-46 By MARTY HASENFUSS OK Bloomsburg University, how do you get right back in the hunt for. a Pennsylvania Conference Eastern division championship? What's that you say — use a last second 3 0 foot jumper by your senior sensation Barry Francisco to beat the current conference leader Cheyney University. Yea, that will do it. And do it they did. Bloomsburg University 's men's basketball team went out and won a thriller from 5-1 Cheyney University, 48-46, to raise their conference record to 5-3 and put themselves right back into the Eastern division race. Wednesday night saw Mansfield beat Kutztown which set the division race currently at Mansfield 7-2, Cheyney, 5-2, and Bloomsburg 5-3. The Huskies opened up an early lead and did a good job of holding it until Cheyney reeled off six unanswered points to take a 20-18 advantage with 6:02 left in the half. BU then received 2 straight long range jumpers by Pat Flanagan to put the Huskies up 24-22 but Ron Barnett answered for Cheyney to knot it up at 24 with 1:06 left. A Jerome Brisbon lay-in at the buzzer ended the first half scoring as the Huskies took a 26-24 lead into intermission. Cheyney then came out, and after a dry spell by both teams, grabbed a 4-point cushion on 4 separate occasions. Down 44-40, BU went to work to cut the deficit. Shane Planutis hit a jumper with 5:30 remaining to cut the lead to 2. The Huskies got possession again and 2 pressure foul tosses by Jerome Brisbon tied the contest at 44 with 4:13 to go in the contest. Bloomsburg again received possession and called a timeout at the 3:40 mark. BU decided to run some time off until a mishandled pass cost the Huskies their possession at 1:45. Cheyney's Anthony Robinson drove to the bucket and was fouled (Continued on Page 7) Monarchs Crown BU 64-61 SARAH HACKFORTH Staff Writer Even with the tough play and 22 points of Jean Millen the Lady Huskies were unable to overcome the outside shooting of King's last Wednesday night. Bloomsburg dropped the non- conference game 64-61. Play started with the Huskies looking lethargic. The intensity was lacking in the offensive and defensive ends of the court. Not until there were almost 10 minutes left to the half did the Huskies show any signs of life. Down by 14 points the Huskies scrapped and scraped their way back by playing tough defense and by taking good high percentage shots. With the end of the half , the game looked promising with a half-time score 36-30. The second half started like the first. Bloomsburg allowed the Monarch's to gain, at one point, a 20 point lead. The rest of the game showed the Huskies trading baskets with King's. With just over 5 minutes left in- the game the Huskies woke up. It was as though a bolt of lightening had been shot We Wright and Dave Kozlosky attempt to block Anthony Robert's shot The suffocating Husky defense forced the Wolves outside. BU-Cheyney The Rivalry through everyone on the floor. Pressuring the ball on the inbound, the Huskies caused King's to become flustered and turn the ball «¦ tm 4jL»< M—^Mfc m v * * ^*k. ^^ ^H over. Following up the pressure a string up defense the Huskies put WADE DOUGLAS of 9 unanswered points. Strong foul shooting by Millefi (8-11), kept the Sports Editor Huskies a shooting threat. Jeanne In this topsy-turvy hoop season, leave it to two of the year's unRadcliffe was an outside threat predictable teams to restore at least some sort of order to the scene. The racking up 12 points. Millen pulled Huskies 48-46 upending of Cheyney, thanks to Barry Francisco's 30 foot down only 13rebounds, much below buzzer beater, showed that no matter how much things change, some her average of 18per game. things will always stay the same. Fortunately, the Bloomsburg-Cheyney King's had 4 players in double rivalry is one of those unchanging events. figures while the Huskies only had The Huskies inconsistencies and miseries have been well documented Millen and Radcliffe. Kris Zim- but the Wolves, despite owning a quite respectable 9-6 (5-2 conference) merman, second highest scorer for record, are playing far below the form that parlayed them into a perenthe team this year was unable to nial national power. Maybe it is the absence of long time coach and BU play due to being hospitalized with nemesis John Chaney. Ever since the volatile headman departed for the pneumonia. greener pastures of Temple, the Wolves just aren't the same intimidating Tonight the Huskies host Wilkes squad of years past. Maybe Cheyney is just suffering an inevtiable off College in a non-conference game year after so many seasons at the top. Whatever the reasons, Cheyney at Nelson Fieldhouse. just hasn't been Cheyney this year. However, when the Husky-Wolve rivalry resumed for the 69th time last BLOOMSBURG ft ft t Wednesday, all of the recent developments were pushed aside, and it is Bressi 2 0 - 0 4 time to add another chapter of Husky heroes hitting last second shots to Pisco 1 0-0 2 decide forty minutes of push and shove ball. Although there were a few more empty seats than there ususally are King 3 0-16 Fawley 4 1 - 2 9 when the two teams collide, the crowd that showed was expecting the Radcliffe 5 2- 5 12 usual matchup. After four minutes of dropped passes, sloppy ball han(Continued on Page 6) (Continued on Page 6) A^UHUIIUCS